College of San Mateo - Campus Yearbook (San Mateo, CA)

 - Class of 1930

Page 77 of 140

 

College of San Mateo - Campus Yearbook (San Mateo, CA) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 77 of 140
Page 77 of 140



College of San Mateo - Campus Yearbook (San Mateo, CA) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 76
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College of San Mateo - Campus Yearbook (San Mateo, CA) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 78
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Page 77 text:

SAN MATEO JUNIOR COLLEGE 65 IlllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllHllIHIIlllllllllIlllllllllIIIIII!IllIlllnllllillllllllllllllil lllll lllllllli I lllll'l'l ' Fred West, captain and firstg Crown, second, Olmo and Belvel, shorts, Coats, thirdg Moore, Lipschultz and Wood, right Held, Gerughty, left, Miller, An- selmo and Nicolaides, center field. PICKUPS FROM THE DIAMOND Norman Smith resented being called Kewpie, but doesn't he merit the nickname? Wally Schultz had the strongest arm on the ball team-when in a rumble seat. Don Cooper, known familiarly as Cecil, is destined to pitch in the Sally League next year. Cliff Wysinger likes to hurl when the bases are loaded and none are out. Such confidence is not to be denied. Skip Couden had the most substantial curve-ball of all the pitchers. lt never broke. Captain Fred West's pep talks inveriably began: All that glitters is not gold, it may be the curve of a pitcher boldf' Dave Crown says life is one ball game after another, with a double-header every day. Dave Belvel is one infielder who'd look good on Lydia Pinkham's ball clubg he's a small package which guarantees results. g Frank Olmo certainly covered the short-patch like poison oak does a victim, but the only ones he stung were the opposition. Windy Coats' weakness was to hold conversations with the rival coaches. Vin Anselmo will continue to roam the daisies, he is to sell buttonhole cactus on the thirtieth floor of the Russ Building. Spetial trade to aviators. Dave Nicolaides will stat in a Mack Sennet comedy, singing Oh, How I Miss You Tonight, a number in three strikes-four balls time. Harold Wood learned to finger an instrument during sojourns in right held. Now he will spend the summer playing third ukelele in the Belmont Community Band. , jerry Riddell was not a flat tire in the wheel of progress, not a false step in the dance of life, but a pitcher going wild. Stan Gerughty's weakness was high-balls on a hot day. Johnnie Moore refused to bat second in the lineup, because he hated to sacrihce. a Boris Lipschultz, the danger lamp of the ball team, says he has made more good catches than Isaac Waltoiu. Harry Miller was called soapy by Coach Taggart, because he just bubbled over with joy when he got a basehit.

Page 76 text:

62 The CAMPUs f 1930 The Varsity tossers routed the Card Frosh in a game featuring Wysinger's pitching, and Gerughty's homer. Score: 12-5. The Cards started strong, marking up 4 runs in the first inning off Mumford's delivery, but were unable to score after Wysinger took up the mound duties. The Cal. Frosh diamond contest, scheduled for February 22, was shelved on acount of a wet field, but the game was played on March 1, and ended in a 4--1 tie. Errors played an important part in the scoring. Belvel led the San Mateans in hitting two safeties in four times at bat. On March 8, with the first conference game scheduled to take place the following week, the Bulldogs demonstrated their readiness for the contest by smothering the San jose Teachers 10-6 and 12-1 in two cyclonic games. In the first game, the Taggartmen staged a rally in the ninth inning which turned a seeming 6-5 defeat into a 10-6 victory. To Captain West goes the credit for startinv the rall . His tri le with one man out, ut the tiein run on base. U o Y . U 1 P g Safeties by Belvel, Miller, Riddell, Gerughty and Smith, Olmo's base on balls, and Crowns sacrifice accounted for the 5 runs. The fourth inning of the second game saw another triple and a double by Captain West, a homer from Coats, and a safety from Olmo before the end of the Canto. Olmo turned in a good game behind the bat, Norm Smith being forced by a hurt finger to play left field. Belvel held down Olmo's place at short. . A game with Sequoia Hi ended 14-1 in favor of the Bulldogs. , Cooper, Magid, Couden and Riddell pitched, allowing only 5 hits. The first conference game, scheduled for March 15, was postponed because of a wet held. Little competition was expected as Marin only recently entered the Conference. A fast game with the Mission nine resulted in a 7-5 win for the San Mateans. Cooper and Riddell pitched, Olmo caught. Coats and Olmo led the hitting with 5 and 2 hits respectively. ' The last' game of the practice season ended with a defeat for jefferson High School, 12-1. Battery, Couden and Olmo. The Bulldogs opened their 1930 Conference season by administering a 15-4 defeat to Modesto C. on the San Mateo city park grounds. The much-touted Modestans proved easy pickings for the Taggartmen, who knocked Chase and Moore, Modesto's pitching aces, out of the box. Don Cooper baffled the oppo- sition with his delivery, allowing only six hits. Stan Gerughty headed the batting average, with a triple, a double and two singles out of hve trips to bat. Frank Olmo, catcher, secured a double and two singles in four times at bat. The squad, as lined up during the season, and with the exception of a few temporary changes caused by injuries, is as follows: Norm Smith, catcher, Cooper, Wysinger, and Couden, pitchers, Riddell, pitcher and center held,



Page 78 text:

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