The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, July 05, 1956, Image 3

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    White Sox Down Red Sox
In Second Half Opener
The second half of the College
Station Little League got underway
Monday with the first-half champs,
Marion Pugh White Sox, downing
the VFW Red Sox 5-2 and the
Black’s Pharmacy Senators, who
have been getting into the mood of
things recently by being as “hot as
a fire-cracker,” bouncing the Stu
dent Co-op Orioles 7-3.
The White Sox came out of hi
bernation (they had their six-game
winning streak thoroughly broken
last week by dropping three
straight battles) in the very first
inning Monday afternoon, as the
initial five batters pounded out sin
gles good for four runs. Jimbo
Bevans, Hal Delaplane, Harold
Cooner, Danny Feldman, and John
Stark touched Red Sox starter
Reeky Howard for a quintet of
safeties to account for all the runs
they needed. The White Sox add
ed their final tally in the third
inning due mainly to Stark’s single
and three walks.
Two runs on two hits were push
ed home by the Red Sox in the third
inning, but it was not nearly
enough to catch the White Box.
A double by Thomas Taylor and a
single by Eldon Hagler coupled
with three costly errors did the
damage.
Stark led the winners’ attack
with 2-for-3. Taylor also belted
out 2-for-3 to pace the Red Sox.
Ozzie Burke went the distance to
pick up his third win to go with two
losses. He doled out five hits,
walked only one, and fanned seven.
After his rough start, Howard
settled down to pitch fine ball. He
gave up six hits, walked four, and
struck out three.
In the second fray of the night,
the Senators pounded out a steady,
methodical victory. They scored
two runs in the first, second and
fourth innings, and added a single
tally in their third time at bat.
Three bases on balls, Jody Rush’s
scratch single, and Johnny Wil
liams’ well-pasted sacrifice fly
brought home a pair of runs in the
opening inning. Williams’ single,
two walks and two errors punched
two more runs across in the next
Miss Lucy Rogers
FHA Delegate
Lucy Jean Rogers, 17, daughter
of Dr. and Mrs. John S. Rogers,
211 Suffolk, is a delegate to the
1956 National Convention of Fu
ture Homemakers of America be
ing held at the Conrad Hilton Ho
tel in Chicago, Ill.
A senior at A&M Consolidated
she has been an FHA member since
1953 and has served as chapter re
porter and social chairman and will
serve as vice-president this year.
Adviser for the local chapter is
Mrs. Mildred Byrd.
frame.
The Orioles finally brought out
their heavy artillery in the top half
of the third. They scored three
times on singles by Larry Ran
dolph, George Outlaw, and Charles
Roeber, and a costly miscue.
The Senators padded their lead
in the bottom half of the third
with one run on one hit, Harry
Lewis’ one-base blow. Two more
“insurance runs” were accounted
for in the fourth inning due chiefly
to singles by Sidney Coufal and
Larry Lewis.
Jackie Ross took over mound du
ties for the Orioles in the second
frame after Randolph’s control de
serted him. Ross hurled creditably,
giving up four hits, walking three,
and whiffing one.
For the Senators, Larry Godfr-ey
started, but ran into “hot water”
in the third-inning uprising and
was yanked. Joe Olian turned in
a fine relief job. He pitched 2%
innings of no-hit ball, fanned four,
and walked one.
In Friday’s double-header, the
Senators meet the Red Sox in the
lid-lifter. The White Sox battle
the Orioles in the night-cap.
Standings
Teams W L GB
White Sox 6 3 —
Senators 5 4 1
Orioles 5 4 1
Red Sox 2 7 4
Senators 9 Joe Olian Leads
In Little League Batting
Board Appointments ConVd
Biochemistry and Nutrition, Sha
ron J. Hart, technical assistant;
Tollie Williams Jr., laboratory
helper; Wid P. Crawford, Billy G.
Creech, Maharudra V. Kulkarni,
Leonard V. Packett Jr., Richard L.
Svacha, all research assistants;
Bennie J. Camp, assistant profes-
Jor; Mary F. Sorrels, technician;
Dairy Husbandry, Ralph R. Harris,
research assistant; Entomology,
Charmayne S. Klett, clerical; Feed
Control, Rosemary Wallin, clerical;
Plant Physiology and Pathology,
Betty L. Hulse, clerical.
Poultry Husbandry, Richard L.
Phelps, feed mill operator; John
Watters, technical'assistant; Dan
iel N. Smith Jr., Jimmy N. Taylor,
research assistants; Steve R. Pra-
zak, chicken trapnester; Range and
Forestry, Richard D. Porter, re
search assistant; Rural Home Re
search, Phyllis Drake, assistant
ADVERTISEMENT
FOR THE
CONSTRUCTION OF
THREE SCHOOD PROJECTS
FOR THE
H & M CONSOLIDATED INDEPENDENT
SCHOOL DISTRICT
COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS .
Sealed proposals for the construction of
a Home Economics Building (wood frame
construction approximately 1,000 S.F. >, a
Dressing Room Addition to a Gymnasium
(wood frame construction approximately
1,100 S.F.l and a Vocational Agriculture
Shop Building (masonry construction ap
proximately 4,300 S.F.) for the A&M
Consolidated Independent School District,
College Station, Texas will be received at
the office of the Superintndent of Schools,
College Station. Texas until 5:30 P.M. July
17th and then opened and read publicly the
same date and time. Any bid received
after closing time will be returned unopen
ed.
Lump sum bids including general con
struction. electrical, plumbing and heating
work will be received on any one of the
three projects or on any combined group
of projects.
Information, plans. specifications and
proposal forms may be obtained at the
office of Charles J. Godwin. Architect and
Engineer. 1903 A. South College Avenue,
Bryan. Texas. A deposit of ten dollars
($10.00) which may be in the form of a
check made payable to the Architect will
be required for each set of plans and
specifications. Plan deposit will be refund
ed when the plans and specifications are
returned within 10 days after the opening
of bids.
The Board of Trustees for the A&M
Consolidated Independent School District
reserves the right to reject any or all bids
and to waive formalitis.
S/L. S. Richardson, Supt.
147t2
professor; Statistical Laboratory,
Imogene K. Bradley, clerical; Vet
erinary Medicine, Robert T. DuBose
and John R. Watkins, instructrs;
Substation No. 4, Beaumont, Rob
ert J. Butscheck, research assist
ant; Substation No. 8, Lubock, Eth
el F. Perryman, clerical; Substation
No. 11, Nacogdoches, Hollis R.
Barnhart, laborer; Substation No.
15, Weslaco, James W. Biggar, as
sociate soil physicist; Augustine V.
Gonzales, field assistant; Reuben
M. Torrez, laborer; Substation No.
17, Ysleta, Maria Tierre, clerical.
TEXAS ENGINEERING
EXPERIMENT STATION
Charles E. Gosper, chief clerk;
Edwin S. Holdredge, Wesley W.
Smith, W. F. Adams, R. E. Schil
ler, assistant research engineers;
Leon S. Scott, William D. Harris,
Charles E. Neeley,' research as
sistants; Silvio O. Navarro, Paul
M. Mason, assistant research engi
neers; Joseph H. Sorrels, Donald
F. Weeks, research engineers; C.
Kinney Hancock, research chemist,
Barbara H. Cargill, laboratory
technician.
TEXAS FOREST SERVICE
Administration, Nancy Anne
Blacklock, clerical; fire control de
partment, Arthur L. Brock, spec
ialist in woodworking; forest man
agement department, Carl F. Hen-
ninger Jr., section head, nursery
section; research and education de
partment, Angelina D. Clark, cler
ical; District No. 5, Kirbyville,
Wesley C. aBtes, assistant forest
er.
TEXAS TRANSPORTATION
INSTITUTE
B. F. K. Mullins, research engi
neer; L. E. Stark, C. J. Keese, as
sociate research engineers; Charles
A. Ford, H. G. Stallings, research
assistants; Herbert G. Thompson,
Dan R. Davis, associate research
economists; Herbert A. Luther, re
search economist; Teddy J. Hirsch,
research assistant.
Center News
“A Star Is Born” will be pre
sented by the MSC Film Society
Friday night in the Assembly
Room. Judy Garland stars in the
movie accompanied by James Ma
son, Jack Carson and Charles Bick
ford. The movie begins at 7:30
p.m. and admission is by season
ticket or 25 cents per person at the
door.
A Hide-a-Way Dance will be held
on the MSC Terrace Monday night
from 8 p.m. until 11. Music will
be furnished by the Aggieland Trio.
A Floor Show will be presented.
Admission will be 25 cents per per
son, stag or drag.
The batting leadership of the
College Station Little League
changed hands during the past
week, as the present leader, the
Senators’ Joe Olian, had a “hot”
week, while the ex-leader, the
White Sox’ Danny Feldman, had a
“cold” one. Through Monday’s
games, Olian was thumping the
ball for a .586 mark; Feldman was
batting .481.
Only seven regulars are now hit
ting over the .300 mark—Olian,
Feldman, Jackie Ross, of the
Orioles .375, the Senators’ Jody
Rush .375, the White Sox’ Jimbo
Bevans .360, Larry Randolph, of
the Orioles .353, and the Senators’
Harry Lewis .350. Rounding out
the top ten are the Senators’ Larry
Lewis .292, and the Orioles’ Bill
Berry and George Outlaw, both at a
.290 clip.
Olian leads the loop in base hits
with a total of 17, a healthy margin
over Feldman, Randolph, and Ross.
He also paces the league in stolen
bases, eight, which is barely ahead
of Feldman’s seven.
Feldman and teammate Harold
Cooner have each scored a total of
13 runs to lead in that department.
In R.B.I., Outlaw and Randolph
each have 11 to top the loop.
Randolph’s six two-base hits,
which he has had since early sea
son, is far ahead of the rest of the
batters. Still no triples have been
clouted, but Berry and Feldman
have two homers apiece. Feld
man’s 20 total bases is one more
than Olian’s 19.
In slugging percentage, Feld
man’s fine .741 paces the league.
Then come Alian, .655; Randolph,
.529; Berry, .516; and Ross, .469.
The loop’s top earned run aver
age is owned by Olian, a good 1.18.
Close behind is John Stark, of the
White Sox, with 1.38; the Senators’
Johnny Williams, 1.95; Ricky How
ard, of the Red Sox, 2.57; and Lar
ry Godfrey, of the Senators’, 2.95.
Percentage-wise, Feldman and
Godfrey are the leaders with 1.000
records, each having won two and
lost none. Trailing them are Wil
liams, Stark, and Berry, all with
2-1 slates for .667. The White Sox’
Ozzie Burke has the most wins,
however, with three.
Through Monday’s games, How
ard had worked the most innings,
21, which was slightly ahead of
Olian’s 20%. Burke, Stark, and
Howard all have three complete
games to share the top spot in that
department. Feldman’s 33 strike
outs still lead the league; following
him are Randolph, 28; Olian, 23,
and Williams, 19.
The Battalion .... College Station (Brazos County), Texas
Thursday, Ju 1 y 5. 1956 PAGE 3
RENT A TENNA
All Wave Antenna
, with Rotor
— CALL —
The Radio Shop
TA 2-2819 303 W. 26th
BRYAN
Avera Enters
TennisTourney
Don Avera was the lone entry
for the College Station Recreation
al Council in the Baytown Open
Tennis Tournament during the past
week-end, and he competed in a
total of three divisions in the
tourney.
In 15-and-under singles, Avera
was seeded number four. He drew
a first-round bye, won his second-
round match over Port Arthur’s
Tommy Wilton 6-2, 6-3, and lost
his next battle to Dave Roemer,
of Houston, 2-6, 3-6.
Austin’s Frank Bertram was his
partner in the 15-and-under doub
les, and they were seeded number
two in their division. After an
opening bye, they bested Baytown’s
Wallace-Carpenter 6-0, 6-0, but
were then thwarted by Houston’s
Roemer-Rhodes 2-6, 4-6.
The 18-and-under doubles found
Avera pairing with Lufkin’s Gogie
Gibson. They out-lasted Bay
town’s Chadick-Stricker 13-11, 7-5,
but they were eliminated by the
second-ranked tandem of Ronnie
Fisher-Jimmy Moses 1-6, 3-6.
The Grove
Schedule
The Grove has an abbreviated
movie schedule for the coming
week due to the showing of “The
Mikado.”
Thursday
“Yellow Sky,” starring Gregory
Peck.
Monday
Mikado rehearsal—no move.
Tuesday and Wednesday
“The Mikado,” with an all-star
local cast.
Gates open at 7 p.m. and movies
begin at 8 p.m. Admission will be
activity fee slip, season ticket or
admission at the gate.
av?ois...
(the GREEKS had a word for it)
the word is
FORT
yours when you fly
CONTINENTAL AIR LINES
DALLAS 1 hr. 40 mins.
LUBBOCK 4 hrs. 8 mins.
NEW YORK*8 hrs. 21 mins.
*Via connecting airline
Call Continental at VI 6-4789.
Continental 1
READING TIME 45 SECONDS
PORTABLE
TYPEWRITERS
OLYMPIA—Remington Office Writer—Royal—
Smith-Corona and Underwood
As long as you are in A & M, bring your portable in. We
will blow the dust and lint out with compressed aii-, lubricate
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ENGINEERING STUDENTS
The Olympia Portable Typewriter has a standard keyboard,
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Use our Rental Purchase Plan $6.00 per month, rent applies
on purchase of machine, also late model standard TYPEWRITERS
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The OLYMPIA Standard Typewriter
is catching on fast.
L. H. ADAMS
Bryan Business Machine Co.
SALES — SERVICE — RENTALS — TERMS
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