The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 23, 1956, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    B Infantry Wins Freshmen
Intramural Handball Title
B-Infantry copped the freshman
handball championship last night
edging B-Field Artillery 2-0. Clyde
Tew and James McKnight provided
the deciding win in a closely
matched third game, defeating ar
tillerymen Clo La Flur and Ray
Perkins.
The Infantry wallsmackers drop
ped the first tilt as Porter Everts
and John Speedie lost a 2-0 tussle
with Davis Glickman and Marvin
McCree. The Infantrymen bounded
back in the second game when Wi
ley Sonnier and Glen Hindman
blanked John Zeigler and Bob Bar
ker 2-0.
In the crucial Tew-McKnight
vs. La Flur-Perkins match the In
fantry team drew first blood with
a 21-4 victory. La Clur and Perkins
rallied in the second tilt to return
the slap 21-8 and even up the con
test. Tew and McKnight took the
final win and the Corps champion
ship.
OPEN FOR ALL BANQUETS, DINNERS
RECEPTIONS, WEDDINGS AND LUNCHEONS
MAGGIE PARKER DINING HALL
TA 2-5089
“The Oaks” — TA 3-4375
BRYAN
Viceroys
are Smoother
Here is the reason: Only VICEROY has 20,000
filters in every tip—twice as many filters as the
other two largest-selling filter brands—to give
that smoother taste—that VICEROY taste!
VICEROYS are Smoother than
• any other cigarette. Because
Viceroys have twice as many
filters as the other two
The exclusive Viceroy filter is made
' from pure cellulose — soft, snow-white, natural!
TCU Rules All-SWC;
Toby Newton Only Ag
TOBY NEWTON—only Aggie picked for All-SWC
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Champion Texas Christian land
ed five players on the All-South
west Conference Baseball Team,
three of them being unanimous
selections.
BOB McDANIEL, who pitched
the Horned Frogs to the title; A1
Paschal, who led the league in
batting, runs, hits, doubles and
tied for the lead in total bases,
and Bob White, talented outfielder,
were the Texas Christian contribu
tions for the unanimous circle.
Only one other player got all
the votes of the coaches. He was
John Wolda of Rice,
BAYLOR PLACED four on the
all-conference team. Rice three,
Southern Methodist two and Texas
and Texas A&M one each. South
ern Methodist’s Bryan Bush lacked
only one vote of being unanimous
at a catching position. There were
two ties—Don Berry of Baylor and
Carl Reynolds of Rice share the
first base position; Toby Newton
of Texas A&M and Mai Shaw of
Southern Methodist tied for a
pitching post.
Here is the all-conference team:
Pitchers—Bob McDaniel, Texas
Christian; John Wolda, Rice; Mai
Shaw, Southern Methodist, and
Toby Newton, Texas A&M.
Catchers—Bryan Bush, Southern
Methodist, and Jerry Sims, Rice.
The Battalion .... College Station (Brazos County), Texas
Wednesday, May 23, 1956 PAGE 3
First base—Don Berry, Baylor, ! ly, Baylor,
and Carl Reynolds, Rice. Left field—Allen Lucas, Baylor.
Second base — L Charles Quick, Center field—Carl Warwick, Tex-
Texas Chxistian. | as Christian.
Third base—Jerry Good, Texas. | Right field—Bob White, Texas
Shortstop—A1 Paschal, Texas Christian.
Christian. : Utility outfielder — Jack Davis,
Utility infielder—Wayne Connal- Baylor.
BRAZOS MOTOR COMPANY .
Studebaker — Packard
wishes to invite you
OUR A&M COLLEGE GRADUATES
to visit our show room and see the 1956 models
before you decide to buy — SEE . . .
H. L. WHITLEY, SR.
1211 Texas Ave. Bryan
SENIORS NOTICE
We have cap and gown for your
graduation portrait
Don't Wait . . .
Come In Now . . .
AGGIELAND STUDIO
PCC Penalizes
8 of 9 Schools
VICTORIA, B. C.—The Pacific
Coast Conference slapped fines up
to $1,550 on eight of its nine mem
ber schools Tuesday and tightened
the strings on alumni and booster
clubs.
Washington State College was
the only school given a clean bill
of health.
California drew the top fine of
$1,550 and beleaguered UCLA and
Washington did not escape.
Already hit with a financial de
duction of close to $95,000, the Uni
versity of California at Los An
geles drew an additional fine of
$350. Washington, which stands to
lose $52,000 in Rose Bowl money
while on two-year probation, has
to dig up $250 for minor violations
under today’s ruling.
These fines all were in the nor
mal line of conference business for
the spring meeting. There was
nothing in the line of the probation
actions which marked previous con
ference sessions this month.
| Sport Shorts
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BROOKLYN — Home runs by
Johnny Logan, Ed Mathews and
Hank Aaron, who glso banged a
double and two singles in a 13-hit
barrage, powered the National
League-leading Milwaukee Braves
to a 7-3 victory over the Brooklyn
Dodgers tonight.
★ ★ ★
CLEVELAND—Tom Brewer,
Boston Red Sox right-hander,
pitched his sixth straight victory'
over the Cleveland Indians last
night, beating them 5-3 with the
aid of a two-run homer by Billy
Goodman, his first in 184 games.
ROPED IN BY
WASHDAY WOES?
LET US SET YOU FREE!
Thanks to our cruick efficient
service, your laundry is done in
a jigtime.
I
Whafs doing
at Pratt & Whitney
Aircraft
Today’s leadership ... a
reflection of policies established
in aviation’s infancy
Back in The Roaring Twenties, the magic dream pictured Ameri
can families someday using the light personal airplane as freely as
the family car. Among the realists, however, was a handful of men
who were unshakable in their conviction that the real future of
aviation lay with bigger aircraft, higher speeds, greater ranges —
all possible only through engines of higher power and more relia
bility than those of that era.
In the spring of 1925, six of these men of vision founded a
company in Hartford to undertake the development of a new air
craft engine—an air-cooled type. The year's end heralded their
first success — Pratt & Whitney Aircraft's "Wasp”
This talented group of men continued to improve their power-
plant designs, developing engines of steadily mounting power that
operated efficiently and dependably. They contributed much to
aviation’s progress — so much so that currently three-quarters of
the world's commercial airliners and many of our nation’s first line
military aircraft are P & W A-powered.
Today’s P &: W A powerplant designs are supported by the
very finest research facilities and equipment, and a technical staff
that is continually being strengthened. That nucleus of six men has
grown into one of the world’s leading engineering organizations.
Yet to this very day, engineering achievement at Pratt & Whitney
Aircraft is guided by its founders’ simple policy . . . the best air
planes can be designed only around the best engines.
World’s foremost
designer and builder
of aircraft engines
RRATT & WHITNEY
DIVISION OF UNITED AIRCRAFT CORPORATION
EAST HARTFORD S, CONNECTICUT
The Original Wasp, the first P & W A engine — designed,
fabricated and assembled in less than seven months. Weigh
ing under 650 pounds and officially rated at 410 horse
power, this lightweight, air-cooled radial engine was a
milestone in aviation history and set the pattern for almost
three decades of record-breaking advances.
The Double Wasp, an 18-cylinder, two-row piston engine
rated at 2400 horsepower for basic use. Its rating increased
by water injection to 3400 horsepower, the Double Wasp
was instrumental in turning many a military crisis^ into an
aerial victory in the decisive battles of World War II.
The Wasp Major, a 28-cylinder engine with pistons arranged
in four rows of seven each and a 3HOO-horsepowcr rating.
Its power and performance having never been equalled, the
Wasp Major represents the apex of the art of building
reciprocating engines.
The J-57 Turbojet, first jet engine in history to be officially
rated in the 10,000-pound-thrust class. In quantity produc
tion since early 1953, the J-57 has continuously undergone
progressive development. It gives every indication of having
almost unlimited growth possibilities.
The Engines Of Tomorrow, advanced jet, rurhopiop, and nucle.tr.
Already in various stages of development, these aitira.t
engines of the future will further contribute to the long
history of leadership that Pratt & W hitney Aircraft has
established in the field of aviation.
Get the Most For Your Books — See LOU Before You Sell Or Trade