The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 07, 1954, Image 3

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    Wednesday, April 7, 1954
THE BATTALION
Page 3
Cougars Slaughter Ags 14-0
As Scliultea Hurls Two-Hitter
By JAMES CARREL
Battalion Sports Writer
Sidearming Jack Schultea set the
Aggies down with only two hits,
while his University of Houston
teammates were blasting a quartet
of Aggie pitchers for 16 hits and
a resounding 14 to 0 victory Tues
day in Kyle Field.
It was a brilliant performance
for Schultea as he stopped the
Aggies cold in the hitting depart
ment. Only Bob Pendor was able
to touch his offerings with a sin
gle in the first inning and a double
down the left field line in the
fourth.
’MURALS
A QMC will play Sqd. 7 and A
Ord will play Sqd. 14 today in the
intramural volleyball league cham
pionship playoffs. Sqd. 19, Co. A
and Co. I won their respective in
tramural volleyball leagues today
and will begin their league cham
pionship playoffs next week.
Co. A defeated Sqd. 22 Tuesday
2-0. Outstanding players were
Bryon King and Bill Hobbs of
Sqd. 22 and Don Mott and Kermit
Wahrmund of Co. A. This win
places Co. A in league champion
ship playoffs.
The Newman club defeated the
Plant Pathology club 2-0 Tuesday.
Tony Specia and Jerry Munster
were outstanding for the winning
team.
Sqd. 21’s John Janak and Bryan
Dedeker led their team to victory
over Co. L 2-0 Tuesday. Heads-up
performers for Co. L were Charles
Shreve and Charles Sanders.
Sqd. 20-2; Co. K-0
s*]d. 10-2; Sqd. 17-0
Co. 1-1; Sqd. 18-0 (forfeit)
Monday’s Itifle
A Ord—402; Sqd. 6—432
Sqd. 4—524 ; B Inf.—469
Sqd. 10—516; A Inf.—302
Sqd. 14—459; B Arm.—419
Sqd. 0—413; A Field—271
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Schultea struck out six Cadets,
walked four, and allowed only Pen-
dor to get past first base in turn
ing in his victory.
Tex Vanzura started on the
mound for A&M and was greeted
rather warmly by Cougar lead-off
man Carlton Hanta when his first
pitch of the game was nailed and
driven 330 feet over the left field
fence by the 5-7 All-America short
stop.
It was the only earned run off
Vanzura in his three-inning stint
but it was the one that gave him
credit for the defeat. A single by
Wayne Tucker and two errors by
A&M accounted for the other Hous
ton run in the first inning.
Ed Hennig came on in the
fourth for the Aggies. Two walks
and singles by Allen Shipley and
Ken Langford brought in a run
off Hennig in the fourth.
Shipley with three hits and
Langford with two hits were the
leading hitters for the Cougars and
they wrecked Hennig in the fifth,
with Shipley doubling in one run
and scoring on Langford’s three-
run homer over the right field
fence in the fifth.
Coach Beau Bell of the Aggies
brought in Lou Little to pitch in
the sixth and he blanked the Cou
gars in that inning. But Houston
opened the door and greeted him
with eight hits and three runs in
the seventh and four more in the
eighth before Jerry Nelson, ace of
the A&M staff, came on to retire
the last batter in the eighth and
the side jn order in the ninth in
ning.
Tigers Shutout
Huntsville 6-0
By CLIFTON BATES
Consolidated Correspondent
The A&M Consolidated Ti
gers blanked the Huntsville
Hornets 6-0 Tuesday after
noon, aided by the one-hit
pitching of Pinky Cooner.
Eight walks by Clements were
the cause of many of the Tiger
runs. His eight strikeouts did not
make up for the bases on balls de
ficit. Cooner struck out 11 and
walked only two Hornets.
In the third inning, Jimmy Bond
led off for the Tigers with a strike
out. J. B. Carroll walked, then
stole second. David Bonnen walk
ed. Bobby Carter walked. Cooner
struck out. Pete Hickman walked,
scoring Carroll. Melvin Free, Ti
ger receiver, blasted a ground sin
gle through shortstop to score Bon
nen and Carter. William Arnold
completed play for the Tigers in
the third by grounding out to the
second baseman.
For Huntsville, Joe Clements
pitched three-hit bull. Cooner and
Clements will play for the South
team in the Texas high school all
star game in August. Cooner is
a center and Clements is a quar
terback. i
The Tigers beat Huntsville 3-1
in the first meeting 6f the two
teams this season on March 26.
Consolidated ....103 001 0—6 3 2
Huntsville 000 000 0—0 1 2
CIRCLE
TODAY thru FRIDAY
“TUMBLEWEED”
Audie Murphy
—ALSO—
“FORT
ALGIERS”
Y'vonne De Carlo
But, don’t blame all the woes on
the pitching staff. Seven errors
in the field and a lack of hitting
was more evident in causing defeat
than any other factor.
HOUSTON (1)
Hanta, ss
Osborn, 3b
Tucker, lb
Shipley, If
Dean, cf
Langford, rf
Vickers, 2b
Arrington, c
Schultea, p
Totals
AGGIES (0)
Dishman, ss
Ellis, If
Pendor, 2b
Stockton, cf
Byrd, lb
Hubbard, rf
Williams, c
Northrop, 3b
Vanzura. p
Parrish
Hennig, p
Little, p
Nelson, p
Totals
AB
6
6
6
5
6
4
5
4
4
45
AB
3
4
4
4
3
3
2
0
0
0
1
1
H
2
2
1
3
1
2
2
1
2
16
H
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
O
2
2
11
3
0
1
1
7
0
27
O
1
2
7
4
9
1
2
1
0
0
0
0
0
27
28 2
Parrish walked for Vanzura in 3rd
U of H 200 140 340—14
A&M 000 000 000— 0
KBI—Hanta 2, Osborn 2, Shipley, Lang
ford 3, Vickers, Arrington 2, Schultea.
2B Shipley, Pendor. HR Hanta, Lang
ford. SB—Ellis.HBP—Hanta (Little). LOB
Houston 1, A&M 5. H and R—Off
Schultea 2 and 0, Vanzura 2 and 2 in 3
innings, Hennig 6 and 5 in 2 innings, Lit
tle 8 and 7 in 2-2/3 innings. Nelson 0 and
0 in 1-1/3 innings. ER—Vanzura 1, Hen
nig 1, Little 4. SO by—Schultea6, Hennig.
BOB Off Hennig 2. Little 1, Nelson,
Schultea 4. Winner-—Schultea, Loser —
Vanzura. WP—-Schultea. UMP—Bryant
and Martin. Time: 2:10.
A&M Softball Squad
Blasts BAFB 16-5
The A&M softball team opened Lemons went all the way for
A PITCHER WHO HITS—Jack Schultea besides holding the
Aggies to two hits yesterday, went two for four at the
plate. Schultea, hit a single down the right field line in
the fourth inning moving Cougar receiver Claude Arring
ton to second. Others in the picture are Aggie catcher
Jimmy Williams, umpire Bryant and the Cougar third base
coach.
the season by walloping the Bryan
air force base airmen 16-5 last
night behind the six-hit, eleven
strikeout pitching of Curtis Lem
ons, Cadet hurler.
Faulk and Stephens, BAFB
pitchers, gave up 13 bases on balls
and seven hits between them. The
Aggies had two big innings, the
fourth when they scored six runs
on three hits and three Bryan er
rors and the sixth when they scor-
cci five runs on two hits and one
Bryan error.
A&M, striking out 11 airmen and
giving up six hits and walking
only one Bryan batter.
Aggies 021 625x—16 7 6
Bryan 010 0202— 5 6 8
Golfers To Play N
UH Here at 1:30
The Aggie golfers will face the
U of H for the second time here
today. The six-player match be
gins at 1:30 p.m.
Texas A&M June Graduates
Army and Air Force ROTC
To help you conveniently select all your military
needs, we have arranged to display our fine line of
regulation —
Made-To-Measure Uniforms
MONDAY, TUES., WED. 12, 13, 14 APRIL
Memorial Student Center — Room 233
Our representative will be happy to take your order
and explain our easy payment plan which requires no
deposit, and no remittance until you receive your
clothing allowance check.
A. JACOBS & SONS, INC.
TAILORS OF FINE UNIFORMS SINCE 1891
107 W. Fayette St. — Baltimore 1, Maryland
We Also Carry a Complete Line of Accessories
Down The Alleys
Bowling With Bill
By BILL SHEPARD
Battalion Bowling Writer
Saturday is the day for the third annual Intercollegiate
bowling tournament.
Seven teams have been entered by five southwestern
schools. Trinity, TCU, San Antonio college, University of
Arkansas and A&M are entering at least one team.
Invitations to Baylor, U of H
and UT have not been answered.
In the list of hopeful entries are
St. Mary’s of San Antonio, Okla
homa A&M and SMU.
The 10 men that will make up
the two teams for A&M and their
averages are as follows:
Doug Krueger 179, Corkey
Crowley 169, Bill Shepard 167,
Taylor Wong 167, A1 McClellan
160 will be the first team.
Carl Muller 157, John Janek 156,
Ben Blankenship 156, Frank (Pan-
cho) Willis 154 and Dick Correll
154 will be the second team. These
teams are subject to change after
the averages are figured for to
night’s bowling.
Trophies in the tournament are
a large team trophy to be put up
each year in the tournament.
(A&M has won it for the last two
years.)
Smaller trophies will be given
for doubles, singles, single high
game, single high series and over
all high average for the tourna
ment.
With four weeks left to go in the
College Station-Bryan All-star
league here are the standings:
Team
Won
Lost
Conway & Co.
57 Ms
20 Mi
Faulk’s Auto ..
..57
21
Student Co-Op
46
32
Coca Cola
..391,4
3 8 Ms
Riverside
• 59 Ms
38 Ms
Bruetrsreman ....
..26 Ms
51Ms
< !a rrol 1
..25
63
Wallace
..21
57
John Geiger,
manager
of the
bowling alleys, has donated a new
bowling pin to the bowling club.
It is painted as a trophy and will
be presented to the man who has
high series of the week in the
club. The pin will be presented for
the first time tonight after the
regular club meeting.
RASCHI CAN HIT
NEW YORK UP)—Vic Raschi,
ex-Yankee pitcher now with the
Cardinals, always will remember
Aug. 4, 1953. No, he didn’t hurl a
no-hitter. That was the day he set
a major league record for a pitcher
by batting in seven runs during
one game.
YOU ARE INVITED TO THE
Grand Opening
In Our New Location
SHAFFER’S COLIEGE ROOK STORE
Monday, April 12
OPEN ’TIL 9 P. M.
Register For
FREE PRIZES!
• Reiflcr Drawing Set 0 R.C.A. Victor Record Changer
0 Sheaf fer Snorkle Fountain Pen
0 $20 Worth of Books—Your Choice
0 Model Airplane Motor Kit
DRAWING 9 P.M. MONDAY
You Do Not Have to Be Present to Win
North Gate — Two Doors East of Present Location
RISE STEVENS says: “Not ’til high school was my ^
voice ‘discovered’. (I unwittingly sang an octave low
in class.) From that day, singing was my love —
at weddings, parties, on the radio. I studied all over
Europe before the Met and the movies accepted me.”
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