The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 14, 1954, Image 3

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    Friday, Iflay 14, 1954
THE BATTALION
Page 3
Aggies Split
Against TCU
A&M split a doubleheader with
TCU yesterday in the season finale
for both clubs.
The Frogs took the first game,
8-2 and the Aggies won the 7-in
ning nightcap 6-2 behind Lefty Joe
Hardgrove.
Tommy Hill started for TCU in
the second game and was taken out
with an injured ankle in the fifth
when a foul tip off his own bat
struck him. His wildness in the
first inning cost him the decision
to Hardgrove.
The Aggies scored three runs off
Hill in the first without, a hit and
without an official time at bat.
Hill walked four, hit one batter,
First Game
TCU (8) AB
Paschal, ss 4
Stapleton, 2b 5
Mattinson, If 5
White, rf 4
Mayfield, lb 3
O'Roark, lb 2
Holland, 3b 3
Freeman, cf 2
Windegger, cf X
Frick, c 3
McDaniel, p 5
Totals . 37
A&M (2) AB
Ellis, If 4
Little, rf 4
Stockton, cf . . . 4
Nelson, p
Vanzura,
Schero, 3b 4
Williams, c 3
Leissner, 2b 4
Byrd, lb 3
Dishman, ss 1
Northrup, ss 2
O
1
0
2
0
10
27 17
O A
Totals
TSU . .
A&M .
33
020 200 004-
020 000 000-
7 27 15
-8 9 1
-2 7 6
gave up two sacrifice hits and one
sacrifice fly.
Righthander Bob McDaniel went
the distance in the first game for
TCU, limiting A&M to seven hits
and striking out eight. He bested
Jerry Nelson who allowed nine
hits and six walks.
After both clubs scored a pair
in the second inning of the first
game, TCU went ahead to stay
with two in the fourth on an error
and McDaniel’s single. The vis
itors cinched the opener with four
in the ninth on hits by Jimmy May-
field and A1 Paschal plus three con
secutive 'walks by Nelson.
TCU (2)
Second Game
AB
Paschal, ss
Stapleton, 2b
Mattinson, If
White, rf . .
Mayfield, lb
Holland, 3b . .
Freeman, cf
Roseborough,
Hill, p . . . . ,
1. O’Roark . ,
Duvall, p . . ,
Miles, p
Totals 25
A&M (6) AB
Ellis, If 1
Little, rf 2
Stockton, cf 3
Schero, 3b 2
Williams, c . . . 2
Leissner, 2b 2
Byrd, lb 1
Hardgrove, p 2
Northrup, ss 1
Totals 16
1. Flied out for Hill in 6th.
TCU 000 002 0-
A&M 310 002 X-
-2 8
-6 4
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WALT DISNEY’S GREATEST
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with its wondrous Pirates, Indians
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live you’ll never forget it!
Walt Disney s
PETER
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With BOBBY DRISCOLL as the Voice of Peter Pan
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IN THE STRETCH—John Hoyle, Fish first baseman, stretches for a throw in a simula
ted play. Hoyle finished the season with the third highest batting average on the
freshman squad and the second highest fielding average. He hit .333, with 13 for 39.
He scored eight runs and hit four RBIs. His fielding average is .970. Hoyle is a physical
education major from Tulsa, Okla. /
Hickman Hurls One
I litter; CHS Wins
By CLIFTON BATES
Consolidated Correspondent
A&M Consolidated’s Tigers
notched their twelfth straight win
this season in an 18-1 slaughter of
Tomball yesterday.
It was the Tigers third district
50-B win. They have previously
beaten Cypress-Fairbanks and
Tomball.
Pete Hickman was winning
pitcher for Consolidated, giving up
only one hit. The first mati up in
the fifth frame singled between
shortstop and third base for Tom-
ball’s only safety. Hickman has
a four and nothing record this year.
He beat Tomball onye before, 7-0.
Pinky Cooner was pitching when
ATTENTION
AGGIE GOLFERS
Buy one. bag of balls at the
regular price and the second
bag for . . .
10c
From 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Monday thru Friday
at the
K & B
Hriving Range
the Tigers beat Tomball 16-0 in
their first game this season.
Leading hitter for the Tigers was
Bolpby Carter who went three for
four at the plate, including a 300
foot home run and two singles.
Carter’s vyas the first homer hit
by a CHS player this season.
J. B. Carroll also went three for
four at the plate with three singles.
Carroll had four RBIs. William
Arnold, Tiger third baseman, had
three for four and one RBI.
The game was ended at Tom-
ball’s request after five innings
with the Tigers ahead 18-1. This
is legal under the ten-run rule
adopted by schoolboy baseball
leagues in the state.
The ruling reads any team which
is ten runs behind after four and
a half innings of play shall have
the option of calling the game off
and declaring the team leading the
winner.
The Tigers play Cypress-Fair
banks this afternoon on Tiger
field at 2:30. The game is a re
match of a protested match com
pleted April 29 at Cypress-Fair
banks.
CHS : 2 0 11 0 5—18
Tomball- 0 0 0 0 1—1
BOOKS WANTED
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“Serving Texas Aggies”
— ■ ■ ' ; i
Rodeo Club Names
H-SU Show Team
A&M will be represented in the
final championship NIRA rodeo
by a team elected Tuesday night
by the Rodeo club.
The team will be composed of
Aggies Bobby Rankin, Lowie Rice,
Billy Steele, Kenneth Beasley,
George Vincent and Charlie Bouse.
The rodeo will be held in Abi
lene at Hardin-Simmons Univer
sity on June 10, 11, and 12.
The 12 top teams in the nation
this year will be invited to attend,
along with the top five men in each
event, if they are not on one of
the top 12 teams.
Tommy Steiner will be the stock
producer.
’Mural Managers
Receive Watches
Intramural Director Barney
Welch was presented a rod and
reel, a minnow pgil, a tackle box
and six lures last night by the in
tramural managers at tlje spring
barbecue.
Other awards made at the bar
becue were wrist watches for all
senior managers, white sweaters
for junior managers and maroon
sweaters for the sophomore man
agers. The barbecue was; sponsor
ed by the intramural department.
HARVARD LIBRARY HAS
21,800 BOOKS ON FISH
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — (A>) — A
fishing enthusiast who likes to read
about fishing would do well to keep
away from Harvard University’s
great Widener library. If he tried
to read Harvard’s 21,800-plus books
about fishing, he’d have no time to
fish.
Harvard’s books and articles
range from a “Ti'eatise on Fishing
with an Angle,” written in 1496,
to advice on catching whales. It
has various first editions of Izaak
Walton’s famous work, “The Com-
pleat Angler.”
Thousands of illustrations, rang
ing from engr-avings and Chinese
paintings to modem photographs,
show the arts of angling including
the uses of baits and flies.
Perhaps no fishing enthusiast
ever collected more books on fish
ing than Daniel Butler Fearing of
Providence, R.I. His 11,500 vol
umes were the biggest contribution
to the Harvard collection.
TEAMS TOO SPEEDY
CONCORD, N. C.—OP)—This is
not the place for fast basketball
teams, unless the playex-s are on
the basketball court. Within a
month drivers of automobiles bear
ing Geoi'ge Washington Universi
ty’s team and players with the
Hai-lem Globetrotters wei-e arrested
for speeding.
G*-£> good
LUCK
to
Class of
’54
Come by with your dates this
week end and enjoy our fine
foods.
ZARAPE’S RESTAURANT
OPEN SAT. — 5 P.M. - 11 P.M.
SUNDAY — 11 A.M. - 11 P.M.
Four Blocks East of Hwy. 6
on Sulpher Springs Rd.
— CLOSED MONDAYS —
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Phone 4-5324
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855
\
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103 N. Main Bryan
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Mr. Businessman
Save Time-Money, to
SAN ANTONIO
for information or reservations call 4-1129
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