Page 4 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, May 5.1954 KU Coasts Past Hawks For 9th Victory,12-6 The KU baseball team jumped on Rockhurst's starting pitcher, Arnold Briggs, for nine runs in the first four innings and coasted to its ninth triumph in 12 games in a non-conference game played here yesterday. Left hander Tiemeier got credit for the 12-6 victory. KU scored two runs in the second innning, five in the third, and two in the fourth. Bill Pulliam opened the third innning with a single and Bill Heitholt followed with a double driving Pulliam in. John Perry drew a walk and John Trombold drove Heitholt and Perry home with a long triple to left center field. Don Aungst walked and then pulled a double steal with Trombold. Then Augst早 later stole home. After knocking out Briggs, KU went to work on his relief Dave Laugh by scoring three runs on four hits in the bottom of the fifth inning. Consecutive singles by Harold Bergsten, Bob Shirley, and Heitholt followed by Perry's triple did the damage. In the last three innings Lausch was effective allowing only one hit and no runs, and he faced only 11 men. The only inning in which Briggs was effective was the first when he set Kansas down in order. The only home run of the game came in the eighth inning when Gary Embleau homered over the right center field fence with Bert Keys and Ed Grosdidir on base. Keys had drawn one of the two walks issued by John Brose, who pitched the final two innings of the game, and Grosdidir had singled. In all KU used three pitchers, Tiemeiler pitched the first five innings, Ben Dalton pitched the sixth and seventh innings and allowed only one hit, and Brose hurled the last two frames. The KU team resumes conference play Friday and Saturday when it meets the Colorado Buffers in two games at Boulder, Colorado as yet has played no conference games. - The box score: Kansas AB H PO A Pullium, 2b 5 1 4 6 Heitholt, cf 5 3 0 1 Perry, lf 4 3 1 0 Trombold, 1b 5 1 12 1 Hoggund, 3b 5 0 0 2 Aungst, c 3 2 5 0 Kaak, e 1 0 3 0 Hixon, rf 5 0 0 0 Bergsten, ss 2 2 2 7 Tiemier, p 2 0 0 1 Shirley, x 1 1 0 0 Dalton, p 1 0 0 0 Brose, p 0 0 0 0 Totals. 39 13 71 12 x batted for Tiemier in 5th Rockhurst AB H PO Willey, cf 5 0 2 Grantham, ss 3 1 1 Williams, 3b 5 0 1 Keys, 1b 2 2 15 Grosdidir, c 4 1 1 1 Kosorog, rf 3 0 1 0 Bland, 2b 3 0 2 6 Embleau, lf 3 1 0 0 Briggs 2 1 1 0 Lauch, p 2 0 0 1 Totals 32 6 24 15 Rockhurst .010 020 030—6 Kansas .025 230 x0—12 R-Keys 2, Lauch, Bland, Gros- didir, Embleau, Hoglund, Trombold, Perry 2, Heitholt 3, Pulliam, Shirre- y, Bergsten, Aunstig 2, E-Grantham 2, Briggs, Grossidir, Hogu- nd. RBI-Bland, Briggs, Wille, Embleau 3, Aunstig 3, Bergsten, Heitholt 2, Trombard 2, Perry 2, 2B —Aunstig, Heitholt 3B—Trombold, Perry, HR —Embleau, SB—Aunget 2, Trombold, Bergsten. DP—Pulliam- Bergsten-Trombold, Bergsten-Pulliam-Trombold, BB—Briggs 3, Laugh 1, Tmeier 4, Dalton 2, Brose A&M Favored To Win Track Championship Houston, Texas—(U.P.)-Oklahoma A&M, defending Missouri Valley conference champion in track, looked like a sure shot to repeat. Of the conference's six teams, only Houston appeared strong enough to rate a chance against the strong Aggie aggregation in track and field events, although all others could make a show of strength in one or more events. Judging from early-season performances, and the fact that nine of the loop's defending champions were back this year, it was generally believed the 1954 track and field event would lead to a mass revision of the record books on Saturday. The current titleholders in the pole vault, two-mile and 880-vard runs, put put, discus and 440-vard dash and co-holders of the high jump mark are all entered. Here again the Aggies were in front, with five of these "returnee" stars to three for Houston and one for Tulsa Record Number In Ardmore Open Ardmore, Okla. — (U.P.)— A record field of golfers tee off here tomorrow in the Ardmore Open, hoping oilman Waco Turner will pay about $47,000 in prize money as he did last year. The entry list this year exceeded the 1953 total by more than 100, but pre - qualifying rounds yesterday over the Dornick Hills Country club cut the field to about 145 pros and 20 amateurs. The Ardmore Open is listed with an official purse of $15,000, but Turner, local oilman who sponsored the tourney, shells out special bonuses for almost everything. Last year the prize money and bonuses totaled $47,000. Turner has already promised $2,500 for a hole-in-one, $500 for each eagle and a like amount for each day's low score. 2. SO—Briggs 1, Tiemeier 2, Dalton 2 Brose 2. HO—Briggs 8 in 4, Lauch 5 in 4, Tiemeier 3 in 5, Dalton 1 in 2 Brose 2 in 2, HBP—Perry by Lauch. W—Tiemeier. L—Briggs$. Chisox May Win First Pennant Since Scandal New York —(U.P.)— The Chicago White Sox haven't won an American league pennant since 1919-longest flag drought in the big leagues—but it begins to appear today as if this may be the year at long last. The windy city warriors have been struggling up the comeback trail ever since the "Black Sox" scandal. They came close in 1951 when the "Go-Go" Sox led the circuit for 44 days until their mid-July collapse. But baseball men agree generally with tall Paul Richards that this is the best team he ever had. It is a team, some sources caution, which lacks power. But you can't prove it with the early records. It works out, actually, quite the opposite. The supposedly weak-hitting White Sox are leading the league in team production of home runs. In their first 18 games, only once were they held to less than six hits, five times going into double figures. Their average has been close to nine hits per game, which is quite a distance from complete anemia. Thus it would seem that the Sox have sufficient power and certainly they have the pitching. Billy Pierce isn't rolling yet but it is inconceivable that he won't. Virgil Trucks is after another 20-game year on the strength of a brilliant one-hitter. Bob Keegan didn't throw a complete game last year until late August. Already he has gone two full games and needed only ninth-inning help in another. Don Johnson is added help, having acquired a slider at Toronto last year which sony won games. Sony hit a consignor gained the effort with a two-hitter against the A's, and Harry Dorish, with a new delivery he calls a "slip" pitch, looks like a first class fireman. Among the new faces, in addition to Johnson, are third baseman Grady Hatton from the Reds, outfielder Johnny Groth from Baltimore, outfield rookie Bill Wilson, and outfielder Willard Marshall from the Reds. The caliber of some of these additions has yet to be proved but the three men they gave the Reds for Marshall aren't even in Cincinnati any more, proving there was some profit in the deal. Defensively the Chisox are tops, with Ferris Fain, Nellie Fox, and Chico Carrasquill sparking an infield in which Hatton alternates with Cass Michaels at third. For the ONE Movie Maker in 100 Who Can Appreciate the finest! Professional Results With Ease The Bolex is a precision instrument built like the finest Swiss watch by Swiss craftsmen. with f1.9 Lens only $26950 Take your own fades, dissolves, trick shots. Climate-proof, weather-proof, usage-proof. Automatic threading. Variable speeds, 8 to 64 frames per second. Hand cranking, forward or reverse action, for 100 ft. film. 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