The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 01, 1955, Image 6

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    Pa£e 6
'I r FTS BATTALION
Friday. April 1. 1955
Ags Meet Baylor in Crucial Test
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’MURAL HIGHLIGHTS
Dave Kerry and Glen Rice broke
u 11-11 deadlock and went on to
it Gary Leslie and Ken Brig-g-s
§>14 as Squadron 1 captured the
iss A handball championship
vning A antiaircraft artillery 2-
jnst night.
SKorry and Rice overcame a 3-11
licit in the first game, finally
[ming 21-17. Leslie and Briggs
A’S WANT AREA FANS
% KANSAS CITY—hT)—“The Ath
letics will be an area team with fan
o)ubs in every community of more
than 1,000 population throughout
thts section of the country,” pre
diets A’s general manager Parke
phi-roll.
‘The area would extend from Co-
ijjmbia, Mo. on the east to the Col-
<jll&do line west and from Tulsa,
tajjiBa. on the south to Mason City,
Ipwa on the north.
WORLD SERIES DRIVE
^VlCHITA, Kas. (A*)—The Wich-
Chamber of Commerce has
^Wired its membership drive this
y4ar to the enthusiasm of World
Series fans. To the four members
bringing in the most new member
ships by the deadline—three days
the series opens — it will
;g?Y e tickets and expense money for
tiyo days.
pulled up even 21-8 in the second.
Johnny Johnson and Kurt Nauck
easily beat Jerry Ash and Ralph
Pettit, 21-13 and 21-10, for the ar
tillerymen’s point while John Dil
lard and Irv Ramsower swept two
from A1 Rial and Jim Blackstone,
21-6 and 21-12.
Squadron 5 edged squadron 18
2-1 to gain the quarterfinals in
freshmen volleyball.
Buck Allbritton fired yesterday’s
best score in upperclassmen rifle
match with a 129 to lead B armor
to a victory over C antiaircraft ar
tillery, 474-462. Two other rifle
matches found D infantry out-
shooting squadron 18, 557-530, and
C infantry winning on a forfeit by
squadron 5.
WHAT A DEAL! — 1954, All-
steel constructed, kox-tubular
frame, 35 ft. House Trailer—
"Rollo Home" (Modern Wise.)
Under floor heating — 2 bed
room, modern bath <5, shower,
picture-type windows, like new
—sleep “7" — Purchased and
lived in for 6 months—New it
cost $4995.—will take $550.00
and you pay the balance of
$2675.00—it can't be beat! —
you can see it at Sunset Trail
er Park, Lot No. 4, Bryan, Tex.
Phone — 25672 after 5 p.m.
OLYMPIA
Portable Typewriters
IMPROVE YOUR GRADES
Use our rental purchase plan. $6.00 per month. Rent
applied on purchase of machine. Also late model stand
ard typewriters and adding machines for rent.
| Buy your portable typewriter from BRYAN BUSINESS
MACHINE CO. We maintain a service department to
; place your machine in good operating condition before
it is sold, and to give you your guarantee that the manu
facturer wants you to have.
As long as you are in A&M, bring your portable in.
We will blow the dust and lint out with compressed air,
lubricate and install a new ribbon, and only charge
you for the ribbon.
| ENGINEERING STUDENTS!
I The OLYMPIA TYPEWRITERS has a standard key-
board, plus two extra keys (! over % and + over =),
also half spacing for writing exponents, subscripts, and
formulas. Furnished in a QV2” and 13” carriage. We
carry a complete line of special type which is installed
here in our shop.
We offer new ROYAL and SMITH CORONA PORTA
BLES for $25.00 off.
i Bryan Business Machine Co.
SALES — SERVICE — RENTALS — TERMS
429 South Main Street
Bryan, Texas Phone 2-1328
By RONNIE GREATHOUSE
A&M relies on the clutch pitch
ing of southpaw Joe Hardgrove
against Baylor here tomorrow to
try to grasp undisputed posses
sion of the conference lead.
Game time is 3 p.m. on Kyle
field.
SMU’s fast moving Mustangs
pulled into a tie with the Aggies
for the conference lead yesterday
at Austin by dumping Texas for
the second straight day, 5-4. The
Ponies won the opener 5-3.
The Cadets and SMU now have
identical 2-0 records in confer
ence warfare, followed close by
Baylor with a 1-0 mark.
Baylor shattered Rice at Waco
earlier this week 8-0, behind the
two-hit pitching of junior Fred
Gottlieb. The Aggies bumped
Rice last week 7-5 at Houston.
TCU dropped the Bruins 4-1
last week in a non-conference
game.
The Bears’ mound choice for
tomorrow narrows down to three
men—Gottlieb, Matt Miller and
Jack Goodwin. Gottlieb, the
Longhorns
Blank A&M
6-0 in Tennis
A&M’s tennis team fell be
fore a power laden University
of Texas net team yesterday
6-0, at Austin.
The Longhorns, with a team
rated as the strongest in the
school’s history, swept through
four singles and two doubles
matches with apparent ease.
Texas’ sophomore sensation
Sammy Giammalva downed
Gene Kinard in the first sin
gles match, 6-2, 6-1. Johnny
Hernandez, defending S W C
singles champion, dumped Don
Dixon, 6-0, 6-0; Tommy Sprin
ger defeated Jack Bessellieu,
6-2, 6-0 and David Snyder beat
Bob Kerr, 6-1, 6-1.
Bruins leading hurler with five
straight SWC wins, could pitch
despite having only three days of
rest this week because of the
game’s importance. He had a
4-0 record in conference play last
season.
Big gun in the Baylor attack is
shortstop Wayne Connally. He
swatted at healthy .370 in con
ference games last year to rank
sixth and led in runs scored
with 19.
A familiar face to basketball
fans is center fielder Jerry Mal-
lett, who led the conference in
rebounds and was fourth in scor
ing last season with 230 points.
Coach Beau Bell’s Aggies Sat
urday’s clash with a 7-2 season
record, tops for the conference.
The Beaus ^re locked in a three-
30 Cadets Enter
28th Texas Relays
Fifteen A&M track men left this morning for Austin to
compete in the 28th running of the star-studded Texas relays.
The rest of the 30 man squad leaves at 8 a.m. tomorrow.
The Aggies will be up against a field which includes some
of the best track talent in the country. Miler Wes Santee,
one of the best in the world, pole vaulter Earl Poucher of
Florida, best in the nation last year, and high jumper Ernie
Shelton of Southern Califor-
way tie for second place with
SMU and TCU, as all have 5-4
records.
The probable starting lineups
for tomorrow’s game:
Baylor A&M
Dykeman, 3b Ablon, rf
Anderson, 2b Schero, 3b
Lucas, If Byrd, If
Freeman, rf Stockton,’ cf
Connally, ss Williams, c
Liston, c .. Boring, 2b
Mallett, cf Hoyle, lb
Haney, lb . ' Hardgrove, p
Gottleib, p Hardgrove, p
RED WIGGLER
WORMS
ALL KINDS OF BAIT
STUDENT CO-OP
STORE
4-4114 — North Gate
nia, who has threatened Bud
dy Davis’ world record, are
due to enter.
Best chances the Cadets have for
gathering points are in the shot
put, discus, high jump, pole vault
and four mile relay.
Aggie entries are sprints Carol
Goyer, Don Watson and Bill Hol
loway; hurdles, James Hollings
worth, Harley Hartung, Jim Sny
der; 440, John Roberts, Bob Mc-
Knight; 880, Wallace Kleb, David
Hogan, S. L. Sullivan;
Mile, Verlon Westmoreland, Bob
Boles, Bob Hooper, John Whitwell;
two mile, Bill Cocke, Ed Blake, F.
L. Rul; shot put and discus, Tom
Bonorden, Herman Johnson, Lee.
Newman; pole vault, Winton
Thomas, James Jackson;
High jump, Fritzie Connally, Joe
Schiraldi; broad jump, Tommy
Strait, James Stansel, Dale El
more; javelin, John Henry and
Fred Hartman.
Boles, Cocke, Whitwell and West-
Westmoreland form the four mile
relay entry.
■■
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OYEgS-FUR STORAGE HATTERS
Students . . . Use Our Convenient Pick Up Stations
At Taylor’s Variety Store — North Gate
LUCKY DROODJ.ES! LOADS OE LAUGHS!
SMALL GIRL SKIPPING ROPE
OUTSIDE WINDOW
Pierre Midol-Monnet
Lehigh University
LAST SUNSET SEEN
BY PIRATE WALKING PLANK
Ernest Gorospe
University of Hawaii
Robert L. Wright
University of Virginia
FAT MAN AND FAT LADT
BEHIND BEACH UMBRELLA
Judy Gendreau
Marquette University
"/rt TOASTED
-fo faste- beffer -
NO MATTER WHERE YOU ARE, you’ll get more pleasure from
your cigarette if it’s a Lucky Strike. That’s the point of the
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Better taste Luckies... LUCKIES TASTE BETTER
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