Y id i •: u ' Ifw f-w—— *- V ' * ■ j! • i ' •' [!)• f; T*i [, + /[ »' ii | ! ir Iftfw ,sa .j|^' IH- ...LJ.. eplacts Ludwick for Kansas Re — ijjgi II ill Leading with a l igjHt is R DARE KEEXAN is on ti ERMAN is keeping a i: m l ! - , i 1, » r > - Oklal track , Kanaaa BUI Wp? oppoeiti iN, April 15— its largest time to the iY G( LDEN (left) of A Infantry. recei\|ng end, and Referee CLIFF ACK- eye rtn the two fighters. GOLDEN Won. ^ I ij^jf eani Makes Home In Floridja: Name lt Dodgertown By BROOKL to Brooklyn There was 1 outfielders —hit to the o' , big worry wi cm the nog, ,P About one Fla., there’: base. Some passed thr March. The placti town and Dodgers in ■ ; ave i| uniusual. Dodger of' fly ballp- my th *if ing h:t re wary laid; But 1 to avoid g by: oiiarig< ile from Vefb Be^ch: u forme r Mavy a r 0‘Dodger fjtrna banc s gh the plate'dUrin gj is known is Dodger ._.llj!bf used jib y future years to come!. Broo|- will ever taain theto Okla., will take d of kll lays, ritoving on Lawr- in and bus. ner entry, including who is facing terrific n li ving “Moon” Mon- New (York University’s thlon champion . is up against big league competition from a field ' thPt is drawing the best athletes i in the ftafron. First Oklahomlan into Lawrence will be Mary LeFlore, brunette Sooner | track queen from Tulsa, e itj-jp to the meet is financed university student senate. LeFlore will leave Thursday now '"iyn’s Afarsit^ , . for a few Weeks next gpnng. Out on tile,lawn they: had gall Ions of ice fold oranj e jjuice and you just helped your isj|f. On the porch were dozens tit pinball machines Ihd a juke box blasted a way from 8 in m. / after darkpeiss. , For the ifot’e adult ij . Was aJarg«! living ro in lould readj'artdj write,| k »nly things the athktet Were riot taught' by Prpffssor Bjranch Jqc-; their soiled traj^-to key and nni«5fe I ¥ jjjl '■ , 1 • ! - J — For the h Mpeslick tlieilp jevas e\fen i handy jf^st -office Which m|ay lomoday gertoWn’ »f a soda itoimtain who j e you stili ;ould get f nkdcel candy bar for five cents land a glasis of seltzer for a pewit. ■ \\ ' | Rickeyjwhile not nhv for e,\- .travagenc®,' left nothihg undone fii 'makir^' l ft|ii8 j 'forn|er Najry the po3tOTark:“D|d- wajs Set in Ihe coxipr base one of the best, if not the best, training camps in the coun try. The Dodgers have a 10-year leise on the place. If you had trouble finding a i colter button or a ballplayer all you) had to do was find Spencer Harris. He’d cut in on, the juke box with an announcement that could be heard thrbughout Ijhe many acres of Dodgertown. | I Dodgertown was a real demo- ■cratic place. Everybody was treat- i ed | alike and all members of the Dodger official family lived on the “reservation” during their 3- days there. j Chow was served cafeteria style. You got a tray and utensils and took, your pick of food that Cdtojr- er Harry M. Stevens prepairdd. Stevens caters to the New Ydik and Florida horsd racing pjarits and many big league ball parks. After Manager Leo Durocher’s first meal at Dodgertown he and his wife, movie actress liaraine Tteiy, prepared to leave-one of the foiir long tables without bringing the di|sh washer’s window. .“Hey, Lee,” shouted a rookie. “There’s a fine for doing that.” jDurocher promptly brought his empty tray to the place. He also to6k his wife’s. No one could say that Durocher was looking to b<> firied before the season began, j Coach John Jacobs and Weaver who recently Won the Colorado Wr er can cdipipeti im in the first (ilon program, ind, t h jm Relays septathlon, will irsday night by train so Weaver can compete Friday af* tejrnobn in the. first half of the :atjMon program, the 100 and 40 teeter runs, broad jump, shot P9t add High jump. lb 'Sooner gll-around ace suf- fened "a slight muscle pull in his i|ie|ht leg pole-vaulting this week and hajs (rested virtually ever since Mtetdaflr.' ;? j.1 J^laihoma’s entries in the indi- 'j (Continued on Page 4) ; I By DOfi ENGELKI Don Garden will rej nally Ludwick on the relay team in the this weekend accordi..*, est information released by heai traf k e. ach Col. Frahk Anderaor The recent change! was due i the fact that Cardon considerably in the pi Don’s showing in the and in the dual me prompted the change. He no capable of running a 49 flat ick has by no mea his speed. It is judt faster. | Other members of the team will be Ervin Blilderback, Holbrook and Art Harnden. will leave for Lawrence, R tonight by train. Bob Goode,| who will enter Decathlon jm the KaribMLjjqli will leave tonight - with the relay team. The Aggie four mile relay champions of the Texas Rel: four mile event, left this mo: by car for Kansas. As things standi now the fpur mile team will not enter the Drake Relays the following weekend but will confine their efforts to the Kansas Relays this week-end. Consisting of jWebster §tone, tinder the record alt the Kansas Re lays. After the Kansas meet the four mile team will come home while the mile relay team and Goode will go on to Dies! Moines, Iowa! where: they will 'enter the Drake! Relays. , ; ' j ; , j j ' J ' - T,:’ 1 i i fi rff: m mm® h TBE BM SPO [talioIi RTS mijRSDAY, A Ur-^-r PRIL 15, 1(4 M jtet irexas U. lere Fridayf | f- i j |j | j. j.. j | j| Baseball Team B Pitehindwi S' ‘ i 1 exas A&M Golf'tbam will its stiffest tests of season it the Bryan Country Hub Friday w tin they meet Tex- Universlty. The four-ball mat es will be played in the mom- ng and the Ifwo-ball matches in jthe afternoon. teams are undefeated in west Conference play and 'Will be striving to keep tnat clean jiwOTdi I - ITT i T | i J f- i 1. . I': I ; The Texas golf team seetns to iis match very ser- be taking iously bee !l Bfiyaji day getting The Lo; favorites they Were 0n Thursday and Fri- accustomed to the ' •. : •!" Tin ins were pre-season win the conference Carrol Hahn, Joel McGlothlin and championship, but the A&M links- T D. Hampton, the four mile team mpn hnv<1 Hf,en shnwimr steadv capable of running the distance 17:30 which ip seven seconds men have tjeen showing steady the gp yther Nowell improvement under the guidance of Coach Ga and could easily take the title if they beat T U to Uni imorrow. The University has foor top- notch performers on their team, any one Of them capable of shooting siti-par golf. Frank Neimeyer fired a twja^; under par 69 last Friday to leac' the Longhorns to a four, to tw< victory over Arkansas University, Bob Watson of Palestine play ed Igi the. tpam last year and is I oy The Associated Press NASHVILLE, Tetln., April 14 t-T’i —Hal Newhouser was slated for his final tuneup here today as the Detroit Tigers met Nashville of the Southern Association. The game will be the last for the Ti gers against minor league oppo sition this spring. They play & pair with the Pirates of Pitts burgh this week-end prior to their American League open against Chicago on Tuesday. ★ NEWARK, N, J., April 14 fAb— Red Barrett, who must have a good season if the Boston Braves hope to win the pennant, was nam ed to start todsly against the New ark Bears. The contest is the ... t most valuable National Leaguer in 1947, is in a batting slump and piobably won’t Play. While the ace At spell, the Bryan Botnti Bomber Stadiuhi Wedr Coach Marty Karojf j Jet E and Bobby f’ret* play to turn .the game into a roi Nixon started on the mo the Aggies followed b Morrise And Zeke St Nixon pitched fine a$ o Atula I 1 look tribe’s last road exhibition — The New York Giants sought to regain their home run power here today against the Cleveland In dians. Bobby Feller and rookie Gene Bearden have held the New Yorkers in check and without a four bagger in their last two the Lbnghofns to a four, to two r games. Bob Lemon drew the start- ’ ■ r ' 1 * ! * « ..i i - lng assignment for the Indians to day. The series is deadlocked at six-all. * and ob Watson of Palestine play- , the. team last year and is back this yehr with a new and im proved swing. Blackie Dahlberg, the number one man for the Longhorns, may not play for Texas tomorrow. He failed to come with the team on their practice round. IN egr,Q Flash Beaten B y immm i||: i t More people visit Hialeah it track during iht off-season tr during the racing meet. \i (Ilea r*- fG l:— PRESSING ALTERATIONS j j ■ :1 : Afr THEIR BEST — AT ffluent vf" • GLEANERS '* The Exchange Store ■Jl sh'P " :V ; ^ ■ j ii ZacK'Taylor, Jto'ss, Jelce Earty and Frtd Sftftlprc ‘ 1 !■ tel Ft AggieU Wendall" about six ijnehes yesterdaiy after noon on K de Field in ap exhibi tion 100 jard dash. Col. Amler- son^ Aggie track coach who acted as timer, gave the time as 9.8 3/8 second j. j I ? i 'f; ! The Bi-: ? an flash, who has a| c ' quired a fast start under the tutorship of Col. Andy, was in of the w BROOKLYN, April 14 '/Pi-Leo Durocher made his first official appearance in a Brooklyn uniform at Ebbets Field today since the 1946 season as his Dodgers met the Montreal Royals. The Dodgers have a two-game set with tlte Royals and then meet their first P'u' Major League opposition of the |- the spring when the New York Yan kees visit Friday, apd Saturday, the lead, most Jay pdf •’f.- m ii MANAGER ZACK TAYLOR, left, talks to three of the few ‘. players with this year’s) St. Louis Brown (earn who Vere with thfe clhb last year. Catchers Les Moss and Jake Early and Hurler Fred Sanford are the players. j ' j J Brownies Will Be HI. J 4 -I I . •I I ' ■ j: | | In Shape Anyway By BOB MYERS I j j j • I j SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. — This may come as striall solace for what following the St! Louis Browns maih- jftain, but Manager Zack Taylor will promise pn6 thing. lii The Brownies, he pledges will be in good physical condi- die Pollagrlni at short and D’iUin- t|on when the American. League wars begiiji. I.jj ; ger at third, which, with Stevens id most of the way until tiled ahead at the finish. The rim icrs were slowed down conkiderab y by the wet track, Davis, 'i fho has recorded a i >15 hundred already this year, will probably have a return race with Jay in thj; near future.; He Made A Hit 1T1 :T " : I j, I; j | When the Chicago White Sox checked ihto their hotel at San Antonio, Tex., the hotel’s “greeter” welcomed Manager Ted Lyons: “Right this way, Mr. Lyons, I’ll show you to your room.' It’s 630.” Whereupon ex-pitchfer Lyons solemnly replied: “I’d Hke to con- giutulate you, young man. I didn’t realize anybody still remembered my batting average.” ' ~ —— Tennis Team Plays Arkansas Saturday The Texas A&M Tennis Team will take 1 on| its fourth opponent Saturday afternoon at 2:0 whdn it meetsjthe Arkansas Netters on the boards at! DeWare Field House. The boys from Fayetteville have requested that all the matches be played on the wooden floor of the gym. : I • | :: I J In their Only encounter so far this season the Razorbacks were beaten by the Orange Smd White of Texas. Texas won all six njatch- es in that tilt, but the Arkansas team put up quite a fight before going down. The Aggies will be out fpr their third win in the conference race this weekend. Of the three conference games played thus far the A&M team has won two and lost one match. If the team keeps working out on the boards and showing im provement as they have thus far this week they should come out this weekend with another con ference victory to their credit.. jve innings he was on thei He struck out five men, three bases on balls and pdd. for only three hitk the walk/i worked against when he left the game I was tied 5 to 5. Bruce Morrise BtU)l 1: Control to handle the The Bombers made 12 ru: him in five hits, eleven wi one err6r. 2eke Strange up the game for the Ai lowing two runs off foi and one hit , J I !. .j; , Leroy Gibbens, who last year for A&M and clared ineligible by thje this season, started on the mound. Gibbei time being is trying out Bombers. He struck o< o Ot the nine men to face walked only one. The Aggies waited til cessor came to the moui they began tallying. Dea: Heved Gibbens in the fou qnd the maroon and bunched five bite into after the Bombers comni error. A double steal by ham and Vass further’ the Bryan club. Stan Hollmig pushej runs on a sure fire doub i didn’t get credit for a hit .slapped a ball against field fence to score Maysf ditt but neglected to base and was called out] The Bombers had th ntng in the seventh rise issued his nine plus three hits tallied Ij Bombers. Hitt walked one Ag the ninth and then bases loaded, j Herod put a triple over rig head to push three moj and total the score 19 (Ik S m \ ! - r for< |itt re frairu j nim )! hiri ?d on r illingj infuse) In twi it sti lollmi ie Id' jtd BU "'I Be ft breathing: 19 to 9 at first base proceeded 1 pew record^ wej*e set last in the IntramuYal Swimming Compton «et the first 4he night in the 10- time of the* old our-tenths of a second. athletes put on yanTbaclistroke with a 4).6 (eebiids, lowering teprjk by four-ti Hart Hall’. (he best! display of swimming iite b ’ br “ k - \ yard^Aedldy Relay I ill- 1 Jii J j I 1 ■ , ;J : , ' V It' ’ ■ Dealy swam the back- b Bates took the gruel- oke, and Marion Set- in the free style, line was 1:QL8, compar- ic old mark oif 1:03.2. site led the-Corps lea- 8 points, followed by C ofcje with 14. Hart Hall won the Veteran’s league and took high honor, for the night with 20 points. Dorm 14 wm second with 14 points. B .Field took the opening 400- yakdf Relay. Bobby Sykes, James Isenihower, Bob Hyatt,| and Mal colm V^iliiams were on the win ning teajm. Dorm 14 fihlshed sec ond: and B Composite came In elude Geijry Priddy at second, Ed- I m II ■im ii i m I c A Ii, ■.ij m iVEH i ; jnrM deli' favored HOSTESS A| toss ICE CUE/ . i r* . wfiei dub, business) acquaintances ; u jtritiouS, to her the weekly v ; !,!. for Jinner, oi unexpected guests - the smalt ho;fess hqsjthe right an* »w«r in' H i, ;)V ■■': 'i'l Jl. CREAM -4C. •! ! jj' ; Aside from that the venerable Taylqr declines to make eoitnment; be won’t even list his i leading candidates for the team “1 intend tt> give everyone on the aejuad a rcbl chance to make the Chib, and that means I'll use as marly possible in the exhibition ghmes left, before we start the regular season,” he says. “Until then, I’d rather not name anyone 0 a reguter. It wouldn’t lie fair tq the players, or to the club.” Taylor, of course, took over »I last place hall clbb that had further depleted by the Hale of sttch plavers as Pitchers; ack Kramer, Ellis Kinder and b Muncrief, and a pair of ought • after infielders, Verne Stephens and Johnny Horardine. Actually, all he seemed to have eft Of any note was Boh Dillin- rer, a fine defensive map and a 294 hitter last year, which is ood swatting for any third seman in the business. ^ THUMBNAIL PEYIEW ST. LOUIS BROWNS Pitching—Dubious Catching—Fair Infield—Fair Outfield—Unimpressive Hitting—Doubtful Finish—7 or 8. he began to warm te prospects. Perhaps) it was out lfljf pure desperation, bujt he began to notice the better things—and ig nore some of the more obvious faults. Being an old catcher! of good reputq, he saw some charac teristics he liked in Tommy Jof'- dan, a husky, hard swinging back stop who batted .309 for: San An tonio in Zack’s old stamping grounds, the Texas League. ; : He was surprised at the smooth ' J * e Assembled in the Brownie camp here wove some 47 other ball play- ers, the large majority of whom on paper haiven’t been world beaters. Taylor is u smart baseball man and he (must have been discour aged at; the outset. But, club in- ; siders sky, as the weeks weqt by ; I n....— ii ...(te—ii' . ■».. . .1! ■ is surprised at tpejsmdp first sacking displaced by Ceor w McDonald, who has spent the last nine years or so in the Pacific Coast league. Ulcers, may it; be known, have been the main reason why McDonald has beep perform ing in the lower classed field. Tay lor used Chuck Steven^, up team Toledo, at first in most of : the spring games, but McDonald still has a fat crack at tho regular job. At one time the BroWns bad 21 pitchers in camp, and Taylor and his aides, Coaches Fred Hof mann and Ralph Mlnegarnet* carefully examined each pros pect. Of the more probable^to- stick crew, observers list j Al Gerhcauser, a 15-game winner with Montreal last season; Vet erans Nelson Potter, Sam Zol- dak, and Sandy Sanford, land several rookies, as the leading) candidates., Seasoned infieljd talent would in- ald at first, probably will be the starters unless one of the over several' nameiiou * bookies turn into sur- prises) Taylor apparently his leined toward Raul Lehner and Whitey Platt in the outfield, but Al Za- rilla, ' George MetKovich from Cleveland, Ex-Football Star Pete Layden from Texas aid New Or leans) can’t be overlooked. | Five catchers are battling for iduty,! Including Les Moss, Roy Partee, Jake Early and Jordan. In the hitting depart ter Willingham with three and Russell Maj out of five lead the Aj Score by innings: A&M 0 0 0 5 0 0 Bryan 0 0 1 ,13 2 Batteries: For A& Morrise, and Vass. Fi Gibbens, HRtj Hattf] chaild. if Officials: Berrera, Cison!. Time: 2:40. 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Jimniy Flowers (was the official stejrterj Diving Copch Emil Mam- aliga vias head diving judge, with Bepnett, Bill Stra(t and Joe Can ning helping him. 1 J "-"-j--*: H ' |I jfM m I I I ' / ■ i- X lx: T I ■fl I - : I A t j | t GUT H. DEATON Exchange & Used Typewriters _ aaranteed Repairs lib S. Main Bryan f f For Your Sporting Goods Needs JONES. SPORTING GOODS 803 S Main 1 h. 2 .1832 ! ( ' Bryan THE I ELEC A P P L STORE 1 ijj ffi: [ : ; ; j Come in and see us for large dr small applianceal:> j RADIOS, STUDENT LAMPS. PRF COFFEE KEL\l|NATOR . . L . ( j. j, ... HOTPOINT and many other useftll* | UNITED Ii APPLIANCE? 2-1490 ,! i , j : : tmtua bararau/mm L' * ^ : \ ’I •.! ■([ j • Colorful Formica kitchen cabinet tops are the current leaders ht popularity. They come in shades and patterns that harmonize with kitchen walls and kitchen drapes. Such sparkling beauty never before invaded the kitchen. . Better still, these tops do not spot or stain with foodHaclds br derntng olkJies. 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