The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 20, 1953, Image 3

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    Friday, March 20, 1‘53
THE BATTALION
Page 3
-S Si
Open Diamond Season
fith 7-6 Win Over Rice Owls
;
Aies
Sundar
Jesus Ci'i
will be
10:30
^ inent serr
P- m. i B : BORISKIE
will be b; S r ews Editor
Meeting,
lushed across a run
Chrisli;,f the ninth to down
The 17 to Hi on the Kyle
^‘Matter" ,/esterday in the sea-
Clhristian both teams.
IMSCatlion seven hits gave
the win, while the
rni to spore six times
i I) tl'* YV The S(juads showed
1V 6 "I'Hissed practice ses-
n nday,
11-1250
Last Night
UNDER 12 AD-
1EE WHEN AC-
|> BY: AN ADULT
DAY m
Platter J-ALSO—
RANEE
)Rur
Starring
)nve:
LICA HAUFF
and
JSDER CARLOS
r ~:.I)AY only"
EOPLE
■ AIN ST
HARA
Starring
iccr Tracy
-ALSO—
H I T E
IK A G E ”
r Starring
IA MON PEZ
and
» ( ON HALL
; & SATURDAY
: ature Starts—
52:39 - 4:25 - 6:11
J:57 - 9:43
danger-spot
OF THE
ORIENT!
SlfitP Nancy GATES
[CARTOON
PREVUE
)NIGHT
C Saturday 11 PAL
Y thru SA1URDA\
Regular Prices
-• '""’S
n lIGaTilST OF ;
»PfTftcus;i
SCOTTY Famed Novei
,R • TAYLOR
w FONTAINE ■«
;S WILLIAMS
pandrosberwam
sions by producing ragged play on
several occasions.
Going into the fifth inning with
out a base hit, the Cadets had the
first three batters walked by J o e
Wylie, the Rice pitcher. With Bob
by Farmer, Jimmy Williams and
Lester Byrd parked on third, sec
ond and first, Jerry Robinett was
sent in to pinch hit for Jerry Nel
son.
Robinett Homers
Robinett let the first pitch go
by, then lofted the next one over
the right field fence for the first
Aggie hit and four Aggie runs.
The blow overcame the three run
lead enjoyed by the Owls who had
scored one run in. the second on one
hit, and two runs in the fourth on
no hits.
The Aggie lead was short-lived,
as the Owls started off the sixth
inning by manipulating two base
hits, a walk and two errors into
three runs to take a two run lead.
Three walks in the sixth inning
produced a run for A&M, When
with one down, Williams, Byrd and
Don Heft were passed to first. The
Rice catcher, Parke Davis, tossed
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the ball out to the pitcher who let
the ball get away from him, and
Williams scampered home. Melvin
Work and Bill Munnerlyn struck
out to end the inning.
In the eighth inning, the Farm
ers scored the tying run. Farmer
led off by flying out to center, Wil
liams grounded out, third to first,
and the fans started looking ahead
to the ninth inning. However,
Byrd wa4 safe when Owl third
baseman Tommy Reckling hobbled
his grounder and then threw wide
to LaVon Cox on first. Cox drop
ped the ball in trying to make the
tag as Byrd went by.
Byrd stole second, advanced to
third on Heft’s infield hit and
scored when Work singled sharply
to left.
Winning Run
With the score tied, Leissner
started the Aggie half of the ninth
with a fly to left. Jerry Lastelick
poled a long double down the third
base line, Eric Miller then slashed
a single between third and short,
and the game was over.
Nelson started for the Aggies
and gave up a single hit, but walk-
KICE (6)
Box Score
A&M (7)
Alt
Ii
II
o
Alt
Ii
II
o
Dungn, ss
5
0
0
0
Mrln, lb
5
0
0
9
Fielder, cf
3
0
0
2
Lsnr, 3b
1
0
0
4
Fnmkr, cf
1
0
0
0
Lstk, 3b
4
1
3
2
Rcklns, 3b
4
0
1
0
Mller, rf
5
0
1
1
Cox, lb
3
0
0
8
Frmr, cf
3
0
0
0
Costa, If
4
0
0
1
Wlms, c
2
2
0
9
Witt, 2b
2
2
1
4
Byrd, If
2
2
0
0
Cox L, rf
1
2
0
4
Nhrp, ss
0
0
0
2
Davis, c
3
1
1
G
1—Ells
1
1
0
0
Wylie, p
3
]
1
0
Heft, ss
1
0
1
0
Leget, ss
1
0
0
0
Nlsn, p
1
0
0
0
—
2-Rbnt
1
1
1
0
Totals 30
0
4 2
15*
Work, p 2
Totals 31
0
7
1
7
0
27
*—One out when winning run scored.
1— Ellis hit into force play for Northrop
in 5th
2— Robinett homered with bases full for
Nelson in 5th.
Rice 010 203 000—6
A & M 000 041 Oil—7
E—Lavon Cox, Davis, Northrup 2, Work.
RBI-—Robinett , 4, Davis, Fielder, Work,
Miller. 2B—Witt, Lastelick. HR—Robinett.
SB—Byrd, Northrup. SH—Davis. HP—
Fielder and Ladon Cox by Nelson. H&R off
—-Nelson 1 and 3 in 5; Wylie 2 and 5 in
5 1/3. BOB off—Nelson 4, Work 1. Wylie
8, Leggett 1. SO by—Nelson 1, Work 7,
Wylie 3, Leggett 2. ER off—Nelson 1,
Work 1, Wylie 4 Leggett 1. Wild pitch:
Nelson. PB—Williams. DP—Nelson, Leiss
ner. Munnerlyn;; Williams, Northrup. Wil
liams, Lastelick, Leissner; Reckling. Witt,
Lavon Cox. LOB—Rice 5, A&M 8. Winner
—Work. Loser-—Leggett. Umpires—Hodge
and Griffin. Time—2:17.
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MITZI GREEN-TOM £WEIL
ed five, hit two batters, and gave
up two runs on wild pitches in five
innings He struck out one batter.
Work pitched the last four in
nings for the Farmers and allowed
three hits, walked one, whiffed
seven and was the winning pitcher.
Bobby Leggett, who relieved
Wylie in the sixth for Rice, was
charged with the loss.
v Meet Again Today
The teams meet again this af
ternoon on the Rice field in Hous
ton.
Coach Dell Morgan said that
John Gibbs, a lefty, and Richard
Floyd, a right-sider, would prob
ably share pitching chores for the
Owls in today’s game.
“I don’t,,, think I could pick out
any one standout,” Morgan said
concerning yesterday’s game, “and
we did miss Aldred Jochec at
short.” Jochec was spiked in a
Rice practice session.
Morgan said that Rice has six
good pitching prospects, with Gibbs
the only left-hander.
Aggie Coach Beau Bell was
pleased with the victory but said
the squad needs a lot of work.
“Our hitters are ‘way behind the
pitchers right now,” Bell said, “but
we’ll be all right after we play a
few games.”
The Aggies’ next home game
will be Monday against the Univer
sity of Houston Cougars.
AF-Army Meet In
Campus Chest Tilt
Help the Campus Chest and see
a full program of sports at De-
Ware Field House Tuesday night.
For the small sum of 35 cents
you will be able to see the Air
Force-Ground Force basketball
game and the Intramural Fite Nite
and wrestling finals combined.
Coaches for the basketball teams
will be Don Heft for the Air Force
and LeRoy Miksch for the Army.
Air Force men are giving five to
one odds that they will avenge the
gridiron defeat they suffered at
the hands of the Army last semes
ter.
Eight boxing finals will be stag
ed after the basketball game ivhich
begins at 7:15 p. m. Upperclass
men wrestling crowns will be de
termined after the boxing.
“The program is for a good
cause,” said John Heff and Har
old Hudspeth, Campus Chest com
mittee chairman,” and we hope
everyone will come and see the
show.”
Track Team Competes
In Tri-Meet Saturday
A&M trackmen face LSU and
Rice in a triangular meet in Baton
Rouge, Saturday.
Darrow Hooper, last year’s
Olympic star, will again be the
Aggie’s top man in the shot put
and discus. Two other weightmen
will be Dan Pratt, who placed
second to Hooper in the conference
on the shot, and Bobby Gross, who
placed second to Hooper in last
week’s Border Olympics.
There ivill be a shift in. the
A&M sprint relay team. Robert
Scarborough replaces Bill Stalter
as the team’s number two man.
The relay group is now composed
Ag Swimmers
Compete In
SWC Meet
The Texas A&M Swimming
Team will compete in the South
west Conference Swimming Meet
in the Rice Natatorium in Houston
this weekend.
Distance races were held Thurs
day afternoon and sprints today
and Saturday with the finals each
night.
The Aggie team will meet the
strong Texas and S.M.U. teams,
along with Baylor. “It will be
close,” says Art Adamson, A&M
swimming coach, “but we hope to
take two or three firsts.”
Texas A&M will be strong in
both the medley and freestyle re
lays. Adamson hopes to gain
points with Dick Weick and Wayne
Strickler in the breaststroke.
“Weick may win,” said Coach
Adamson.
A&M should pick up points, with
top sprint men Bert Koegl^-J 1 7> ; h n
Speich and Jimmy Burns,,* Don
Horne and Lee Pepping will be
strong contenders for the distance'
races Thursday.
Swimming backstroke for A&M
will be Wynne Snoots, John Dav
enport, and Aggie Captain Don
Crawford.
“With Bobby Johnson back after
a shoulder injury and John Camer
on and John Malcome in good
form, the A&M divers will make a
good showing,” said Emil Mamal-
iga, Aggie diving coach.
The swimming team leaving
Thursday with coaches Art Adam
son and Emil Mamaliga will be:
Crawford, David Gajewsky, J o h n
Buetelschies, Weick, Pepping, Dav
enport, Koegl,, Byron B 1 a c k,
Snoots, Horne, Paul Wallin, Strick
ler, Casbeer Snell, Speich, Burns,
Sherwin Rubin, Cameron, Malcome,
Johnson and Singleton.
of George Hartung, Scarborough,
Pete Mayeaux, and Bobby Rags
dale.
Ragsdale, fresh from his last
week’s victory over Texas’ Charles
Thomas, will again run the 220
yard low hurdles.
The A&M entries will be as fol
lows:
100 yard dash: Bobby Ragsdale, Robert
Scarborough /
220 yard dash: Scarborough
120 yard high hurdles: Glenn Blake,
George Hartung, Tom Dollahite
220 yard low hurdles: Ragsdale, Blake,
Hartung
440 yard run: James Baker, Carrol Lib-
oy. Gerald Stull
880 yard run: Wallace Kleb, Hobson
Whitmore, Edwin Wilmsen, Robert Col
lins.
Mile Run: Charles Hudgens, Dale De-
Rouen. James Blaine
Two mile run: Blaine, Franklin Whit-
well
440 relay: Hartung, Scarborough, Pete
Mayeaux, Ragsdale
Mile relay: Frank Norris, Libby, Stull,
Baker
Shot & Discus: Darrow Hooper, Dan
Pratt, Bobby Gross
Javelin: Mayeaux, Dollahite, Roy Dollar,
Marvin Swink
High jump: Ragsdale, Dollahite
Pole Vault: Malcolm Marks, Glenn
Spradlin, James Earle
D I A M O N b R I N G
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with a future vjm
.w' 'j'// MfL
Mitchell to Preside
David Mitchell, senior archi
tecture major from Albuquerque,
N. M., will preside over the execu
tive council of the Baptist Student
Union, announced Cliff Harris,
Baptist student director.
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