Tuesday, March 22, 1955 THE BATTALION Page 5 Aggies Battle Pelicans; Wi ii Pair Last Week After First Win By RONNIE GREATHOUSE Battalion Sports Staff Big righthander Jerry Nelson tries for his second straight win |over the powerful New Orleans Pelicans today at 3 p.m. on Kyle field. The Texas Lutheran game sched- iled to be played here yesterday (was called off due to bad weather. l&M dumped the Lutherans earlier this season 6-3 at Seguin. A&M’s team turned in two close vfiqtories over the weekend, throttl ing New Orleans 5-3 at Huntsville Friday and edging University of [Houston 3-2 at Houston Saturday. l&M now sports a 5-1 record. Nelson turned in a brilliant five [hit performance against the Peli cans, runner-up in the Southern dissociation last year, while fanning WONDERFUL BOOK to own . . . to give COME IN AND SEE OUR COMPLETE SELECTION GENUINE LEATHER $10.00 BUCKRAM 6.00 ILLUS. EDITIONS 3.25-3.50 The Revised Standard Version—a Bible so clear and powerful, so easy to read, you'll turn to it twice as often. Give your loved ones this magnificent Bible * for Easter. USE THIS COUPON TO ORDER ^ - SHAFFER’S ROOK STORE North Gate Please send me: I I I NAME I ADDRESS I CITY STATE My remittance is enclosed. 11. He now has a 1-1 season mark. New Orleans slaughtered Sam Houston State the day before play ing A&M, 16-1. Dick Munday posted his second straight win of the season against no losses Saturday in stopping the Cougars. Captain Les Byrd sparked the Aggie win by getting two of A&M’s four hits and driving in all three runs. He also figured in the play that nipped the Cougars’ tying run at the plate with two out in the last of the ninth. Byrd hiked his batting average to .412 by collecting four hits in nine trips in the two games, and continues to lead A&M batsmen. His booming bat also brought in five of A&M’s eight z-uns. Stocky right fielder Fred Ablon has nailed down a starting role on the strength of his fine play in the last three gajnes, and has a healthy .333 batting average. Coach Beau Bell’s Aggies spot ted New Orleans a run in the AGGIES - HOUSTON TEXAS A&M (3) AB K H O A E Ablon, rf 3 1 0 0 0 0 Schero, 3b 3 1 0 1 2 1 Byrd, If 4 0 2 1 1 0 Stockton, cf 4 0 O 0 1 0 Williams, c 4 0 1 6 1 0 Boring, 2b 3 0 0 3 2 1 Hoyle, lb 4 0 0 12 0 0 Bleckner, ss 4 0 1 4 4 1 Munday, p ... 1 1 0 0 6 0 TOTALS 30 3 4 27 17 3 HOUSTON (2) AB K H O A E Arnold, If 4- 1 1 2 0 0 Price, ss 4 O 1 1 5 2 Osburn, 3b 4 0 1 1 3 0 Tucker, lb 4 0 0 10 0 0 Dean, cf 4 O 0 4 0 0 Vickers, 2b 4 0 1 3 1 0 Temple, rf 2 0 0 0 0 0 Langford, rf 1 0 0 0* 0 0 Rankin, c 4 1 2 6 1 O Schindler, p 3 0 0 0 1 0 Zeller, p 1 0 1 0 1 0 TOTALS 35 2 7 27 12 2 A & M 002 000 010—3 Cougars 000 000 101—2 3B—Price. SB—Schero. SH — Boring, Munday. LOB—A&M 5, Houston 9. RBI —Byrd 3, Price 2. Walks off — Munday 2. Schindler 3. SO by—Munday 3, Schind ler 6. Hits off—Schindler 3 in 8 2/3; Zel ler 1 in 1 1 /3. Runs and earned runs—- Munday 2 and 0; Schindler 3 and 2; Zeller 0 and 0. Loser—Schindler. Umpires— Schroeder and Moleskie. fourth inning, then exploded in the sixth with six hits and five runs before the battered Pelican pitch ers could end the rally. Ten men came to bat for A&M in the uprising. Byrd led off with a double, and Williams singled him home after one out. Singles by Joe Boring, John Hoyle, Ablon and Byrd, and walks to Dick Bleckner and Joe Schero figured in the rest of the Cadet scoring activities. Two perfect throws from deep in the Aggie outfield cut off U of H’s last of the ninth bid for a tie. Cougar shortstop Don Price tried to stretch a three base hit into an inside the park homer, but Byrd fired to center fielder John Stock- ton, who relayed a perfect throw to Williams at home for the out to end the game. A&M scored first in the third inning with two out. Munday, Ab lon and Schero drew free passes to load the bases and Byrd smashed a solid single to drive in two runs. The Aggies counted after two outs again in the eighth. Schero gained first on a fielder’s choice, stole second and steamed home on a single by Byrd. NEW ORLEANS - AGGIE Texas A&M (5) AB K H O A E Ag' Track Team Meets Oivls Again With their first meet win of the 1955 season under their belts* the A&M track team goes to Houston Saturday for a return engagement with Rice. The Aggies scored 84 ^ points here Saturday in winning their first Kyle field appearance of the year. Rice, though taking eight first places to A&M’s six, totaled 60V<>. LSU ♦trailed with 25. A fTl * rf! In Houston, the Aggie Fish com- Ag tennis I earn Takes Third Win A&M’s varsity tennis team won its third straight decision of the season Thursday defeating East Texas State 4-2. The Cadets won three of the four singles matches and divided the two doubles. Jack Bessellieu took a 6-4, 9-7 singles win from ETS’ Mac Bane, and Aggie Don Dixon defeated Fred Kester, 6-3, 6-4. Bob Kerr downed Glen Hull, 6-2, 6-3, for the other A&M singles victory. Barry Pelton beat Cadet Gene Kinard, 7-5, 6-3. In doubles, Kerr and Bessellieu teamed to defeat Pelton and Bane, 4-6, 8-6, 7-5. Dixon and Kinard beat Hull and Melvin Stezer, 6-2, 6-3. NEW ARRIVAL? Coll "The House Doctor" HE BUILDS — New Rooms, Porches, Cabinets, Roofs. Garages, etc. HE CONVERTS—Porches to Bedrooms, Dining Areas, Hobby Rooms, Break fast Nooks, etc. NO DOWN PAYMENT - UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY "The House Doctor” is Prompt, Efficient, Available. Courteous. Economical / MARION PUGH LUMBER CO. Wellborn Road Phone 4-4236 or 6-5211 PROFIT BY PRIORITY—ORDER BY MAIL NOW Good Seats Still Available MONDAY, APRIL 11 — COLISEUM Houston, Texas • ABE SAPERSTEIM’S FABULOUS GLOBETROTTERS 1955. VS COLLEGE ALL-AMERICANS PLUS WORLD FAMOUS THEATRICAL ARTISTS IMMEDIATE ATTENTION TO MAIL ORDERS. Send your check or money order with self-addressed, stamped envelope to Ted Roggen, P. O. Box 1151, Houston 1, Texas. Admission: $1.50, $2.50, $3.25, and $4.00, taxes included. I'nder the local management of Ted Jioggen Ablon, rf 5 Schero, 3b 4 Byrd. If 5 Stockton, cf 4 Williams, c 4 Boring, 2b 4 Hoyle, lb 3 Bleckner, ss 1 Nelson, j> 4 TOTALS .... 34 NEW ORLEANS <3) Koshorek, ss 5 Rice, 3b 1 Stuart, If 4 Stevens, lb 3 Gass, cf 3 a. Graff O Corso, rf 3 b. Bush 1 Weaver, 2b 4 Boyce, c 1 Falls, c . 3 Mehan, p o c. Babcock l Greed, p l Bangles, p 1 Daniels, p o d. Taylor 0 1 12 1 2 2 6 0 0 AB R II O A E 10 10 0 13 0 0 110 2 3 10 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 TOTALS .... 31 3 5 27 7 0 a. Walked and scored for Goss in 0th. b. Struck out for Corso in 9th. c. Struck out for Mehan in 3rd. d. Walked for Daniels in 9th. Aggies . . . 000 005 000—5 Pelicans . . .» 000 100 002—3 2B—Schero. Byrd. 3B—Weaver. HR— Stevens. RBI—Ablon, Schero. Byrd. Hoyle 2, Stevens. Weaver. DP—Schero, Boring, Hoyle. PB—Williams. Wild Pitch—Nelson. LOB—A&M 9, New Orleans 7. Hits off— Mehan 1 in 2; Greed 5 in 3 1/3; Bangles 4 in 2 2/3; Daniels 1 in 1. Runs and earned runs off—Nelson 3 and 3 in 9 • Mehan 0 and 0 in 2; Greed 5 and 5 in 3 y, Walks off—Nelson 6, Mehan 1. Greed 3 Bangles 1, Daniels X. SO by—Nelson 11, Mehan 2, Greed 5, Bangles 5, Daniels 1. Umpires—Johnson, Graham. McMurray. SB - Ablon, Hoyle. SH—Bleckner. Soccer Team Wins Over Bryan 4-2 With five first stringers out with injuries, the Aggie soccer team downed Bryan air force base 4-2 Sunday. The Cadets built up a 4-0 lead before BAFB scored. Jacintho lacovone booted the first three goals, then Roberto Ildarraz rammed one in from 40 yards out. Backs Emilio Medina and Charles Horgan and halfs Hector Marciacq and Guy Fernandez also stood out for the Aggies. INDIANS ARE VETERANS CLEVELAND—6P>—T h e Cleve land Indians, champions of the American League, also lead the circuit in the number of 10-year veterans. The Tribe has nine. Four are pitchers—Bob Lemon, Bob Fel ler, Early Wynn and Hal New- houser. The others are catcher Jim Hegan, outfielders Ralph Ki- ner and Dave Philley, and infielders Hank Majeski and Vic Wertz. Reds End Drills With 46-0 Victory SAVE $100.00 MATHES I TON AIR CONDITIONER now only — $199.95 10,500 Btu per hour—220v—Flush to window sill mounting — Aluminum housing. Squirrel Cage Blower — Directional Louvres — Tecumseh Unit -—5 Yr. Warranty. *Plus Installation & Service $20.00. America’s finest Air Conditioning at the lowest price anywhere. Units available in % — 1 Ton — 1 '/2 — 2 & 3 Ton. BUY NOW AT OFF SEASON PRICE JOE FAULK’S 214 X. Bryan AIR CONDITIONING HEADQUARTERS Phone 2-1669 Closing out A&M’s spring foot ball practice, the experienced Ma- rooms crushed the UCLA single wing Blues 46-0 on Kyle field Sat urday night in a three hour game- condition scrimmage. 3 955 sophomores scored all the touchdowns. The Maroons, comprised of all the returning lettermen and the top 1954 Fish, rolled up a 21-0 halftime lead, then punched out three touchdowns in the foui-th quarter after a 60-minute third quarter had worn down Elmer Smith’s hard fighting Blues. The veterans got one touchdown in the third. In the second and third periods, the Reds had to stave off Blue drives inches from the goal line. Tailback Luther Hall played the top role for the Blues, gaining 82 yards on 20 rushes and completing 5 of 19 passes for 66 yards. He was carried to the dressing room on a stretcher after being taken out late in the game, but was recovering all right yesterday. Fullback Bobby Ewell ground out 67 yards on 23 tries for “UCLA.” Soph quarterback Jimmy W'right scored on a keeper from the one in the first period after Ed Dud- ; ley’s 26-yard run. Quarterback | J Bobby Conrad, another ’55 soph, j ! sneaked over from the 2 after his i 45-yard dart on an option set it up. ! Pint-sized Billy Dendy scored | [ the only second period touchdmvn, ' an 88-yard dash over left tackle j behind key blocks from Jack Par- | dee and Henry Clark. Halfback Loy'd Taylor, another | midget, retumed a punt 61 yards late in the thiiM quarter for a 27-0 lead. Wright scored from the 1 in the fourth, completing an 80-yard march started by fullback Roddy j Osborne’s 40-yarder. Fullback Ken Hall intercepted a ! Luther Hall pass and returned it 11 yards for the sixth touchdown, and halfback John Crow returned [ a punt 55 yards late in the period for the final score. Quarterback Elwood Kettler and end Bobby Keith missed the game because of injuries. “I thought we looked sharp of fensively,” said Head Coach Paul Bryant. “Our blocking and run ning was real good, but we needed better linebacking and a lot better end play. “Downfield blocking was real good, and all of the line looked good offensively. I thought the UCLA team did an excellent job, and a damn good job offensively. Dudley, Crow and Conrad were tough back there on defense (for the Maroons).” Dendy led all rushers with 103 yards on two carries, Conrad was second with 97 yards on 10 rushes. Dudley had 60 on 8, Ken Hall 58 on 8, Donald Grant 56 on 6, Osborne 47 on 2 and Crow 35 on 5. Grant was the leading passer for the Maroons, completing 4 of 8 for 111 yards. pete in their second meet, taking on the Rice Owlets. Varsity foot baller Tommy Strait and freshman Ken Hall are due to join Coach Frank Anderson’s forces this week. The Cadets swept to victory in the first five events Saturday, threatening a runaway, before Rice, sparked by Harold Griffin, narrowed the gap. Griffin, third in the NCAA 440 last year, didn’t run his specialty, but won the 100 and 220 and ran the anchor leg on the winning mile relay team. Pole vaulter Stephen James, an Owl junior, provided the meet’s top thrills, however, going over the bar at 13-11 as he and Aggie soph Winton Thomas hooked up in a red- hot duel. James’ leap bettered the confer ence record of 13-10%, set in 1936 by Earl Weichert of Rice, but does not count since it was not set in the conference meet. Thomas leaped 13-8 before going out. James failed in two tries at 14 feet, quitting after the bar near ly fell on him the second time. A&M sophomore Herman John son threw the shot 52-1, and Tom Bonorden had a 51-11% put, good for second. Johnson has taken first in the shot in all meets the Aggies have entered this year ex cept the Pan-American games warmup. Fritzie Connally won his third first plaqe of the season in the high jump, leaping 6-3. Biggest upset of the day was in the discus, where Rice’s Ed Jackson beat the Aggies’ Lee Newman and John son. Jackson had 137-4%, an inch and a half better than Newman. Gymnastic Meet Set for Saturday A&M’s Gymnastic team will sponsor a meet here Saturday with University of Texas, Dallas Ath letic club. New Orleans Athletic club, Fort Worth Athletic club and the Baton Rouge YMCA. The junior session will begin at 1:30 p.m., the seniors at 7 p.m. in White coliseum. Girls will be en tered in tumbling and tramp line events. Other events scheduled are par allel and horizontal bars, tumbling and free calisthenics. FENWAY WAS HOMER HAVEN BOSTON — GP) — Fenway park, home of the Boston Red Sox, was homer haven in the American League during 1954. Sluggers hit 139 home runs there and here’s how the clubs fared: Boston hit 69, Cleveland 25, Philadelphia 13, New York 12,' Baltimore and Chi cago 5 each, Washington 6 and Detroit 4. COMPLETE STOCK OF LEE’S Be Ready lor the Rodeo LOUPOT’S North Gate FRESHMEN/ make BARNES & NOBLE COLLEGE OUTLINE SERIES ur BIG BROTHER SHAFFER’S HOOK STORE North Gate LOOK OUT BELOW—Aggie high jumper Fritzie Connally shows the form he used to get over the bar at 6-3 in Sat urday’s track meet here with Rice and LSU. Only a soph omore, Connally has twice leaped 6-4 already this season and figures to be a strong contender in the conference meet. He was the leading scorer on the 1955 Fish basket ball team until the spring semester, when he ended his freshman eligibility. CIGARETTES ODERN SIZE FILTER TIP TAREYTON Gives-You True. .Tobacco Taste And Real Filtration, Too!. PRODUCT OF J&njVU&an. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS CIVIL ENGINEERS MECHANICAL ENGINEERS ACCOUNTING AND El NANCE MAJORS Looking for A Career With A Fast-Growing Electric Company? Texas Electric Service Company, one of the largest utility companies in Texas, (but not so large that an ambitious young man wouldn’t be noticed) offers numerous opportunities for col lege graduates. Representatives of the com pany will be glad to give you more details about the type of job opportunities in this rapidly growing electric utility firm. REPRESENTATIVES OF THE TEXAS ELECTRIC SERVICE COMPANY WILL BE AT TEXAS A&M TUESDAY AND WEDNES DAY, MARCH 22 & 23. ARRANGE WITH THE PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR AN AP POINTMENT.