The Battalion College Station (Brazo* County), Texa* PAGE 4 Friday, April 12, 1957 E GIVING AWAY WORTH OF RCA VICTOR RECORDS ABSOLUTELY ST Ifli IT SC That’s right ... in Ir lair iL b°th July and Octo- I 1H ma Hia ^ er we w jll gj ve y 0U a brand new RCA Victor 12" L.P. album worth $3.98—or its 45 EP equivalent. You’ll have your choice of classical or pop each time. Each record is a regular $3.98 value ... a total value of $7.96 FREE! Just come in and ask us about the RCA Victor Save-On- Records Coupon Plan. There’s nothing to join . . . no obliga tion to buy anything ... noth ing ever to mail. And you’ll get $7.96 worth of RCA Victor records absolutely free! Shaffer's (Booh St North Gate ore College Station Open 8 A.M. to 6 P.M. Six days a week Maj or Leagues in North By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Exhibition baseball finally made its way back to major league ball yards yesterday with the Kansas City Athletics making themselves right at home with a four-run rally in the last of the ninth that beat Brooklyn’s Dodgers 5-4. The game drew 8,531 fans, 34-degree temperature and a light snow. A single by Irv Noren, late of the New York Yankees, brought home the winning runs for the A’s in a hectic ninth for Dodger right-hander Don Bessent. Three singles loaded the bases with one out and Brooklyn ahead 4-1. Gus Zernial singled for two runs and the tying run then came home when Bessent threw wildly on a roller by Johnny Groth. Noren’s clincher fol lowed. Vic Power, the A’s first baseman, was knocked out and carried off the field on a stretcher in the fifth inning when hit on the head by an attempted double play throw by Dodger shortstop Don Zimmer. It was the same sort of accident that benched Philadelphia’s Willie Jones for a few days recently. In other day games, Richmond rallied with two runs in the ninth to defeat the world champion New York Yankees 6-5; Jack Sanford and Angelo Lipetri held Boston to four hits as Phila delphia defeated the Red Sox 7-1; the Pittsburgh Pirates walloped the Detroit Tigers 10-2; the St. Louis Cardinals whacked southpaw Billy Pierce to whip the Chicago White Sox 5-0, and the Chicago Cubs out lasted Baltimore 7-6. Cold weather canceled Milwaukee’s game against Wichita at Wichita. The Yankees had home runs by Mickey Mantle and Hank Bauer while coming from behind to give Tom Sturdivant a 5-4 lead going into the ninth. But the champs’ farm club, which rapped Sturdivant for four runs on homers by Gordy Windhorn and Harry Chiti in the first inning, tied it on a walk and CT CATERING FOR If^'SPECLVL OCCASIONS Leave the Details to me. LUNCHEONS BANQUETS WEDDING PARTIES / Let Us Do the Work — You Be A Guest At Your Own Party Maggie Parker Dining Hall W. 26th & Bryan TA 2-5069 two singles, one by Chiti, and then bagged it all on a pinch single by Neal Watlington. Sturdivant gave just four hits until the ninth. Sanford went the first seven in nings for the Phils and gave up only Ted Williams’ home run and a single by Gene Mauch. The Phils tagged Boston starter Tom Brewer for four unearned runs. And Rip Repulski rapped a two- run homer off reliever Russ Kem- merer. A three-run homer by Paul Smith and a two-run poke by Dale Long got the job done for the Pirates, who smacked rookie righthander Don Lee for eight hits in the first five innings. Charlie Maxwell homered with a man on for the Tigers against Dick Hall. The Cards also used a pair of home runs in touching Pierce for seven hits and three runs in seven frames. Stan Musial and Hobie Landrith supplied the power. The two-home-run bit paid off for the Cubs, too, with the help of two rally-killing doubleplays. Dee Fondy hit both homers, good for four runs. The Orioles, who lost the spring series to the Cubs 10-8, got some thing good out of the day, however, with word that out fielder Bob Nieman had suffered only a bruised shoulder-not a possible fracture- in a tumble during Wednesday’s game. Milwaukee learned, however, that catcher Del Rice would be out for from 10 days to two weeks with a fractured right thumb, in jured Wednesday. Don Lee, a pitcher in the De troit Tiger organization, is the son of Thornton Lee, former star hurl- er for the Chicago White Sox. H Who rates what for performance and smoother riding in the low- priced three? Chevrolet has laid the answer and the proof on the line! First, Chevrolet won the Auto Decathlon over every car in its field, and over the higher priced cars that were tested, too. This rugged ten-way test (right, below) showed Chevrolet was the champ in handling ease, braking, acceler ation, passing ability, smooth ness of ride and other driving qualities you want in a car. Then, Chevy won the Pure Oil Performance Trophy at Daytona {left, below) as “best performing U. S. automobile.” It’s quite a feeling to know that you are driving a car that performs so well, responds so beautifully and is so finely built. You feel proud, of course. But you also enjoy a surer, smoother, steadier way of going, a keen cat-quick response of power, and the easiest handling you’ve ever experienced behind a wheel. Just try this Chevrolet (V8 or Six) and see! Chevy showed it's still the champ... at Daytona... and in the Decathlon! ENTER CHEVROLET’S $275,000 "LUCKY TRAVELER” CONTEST! Come in now—get a winning deal on the champion! /aH ' I yi: I»I ^ r 4 w/ Only franchised Chevrolet dealers display this famous trademark N. See Your Authorized Chevrolet Dealer AGGIE OUTFIELDERS—(top, left to right) Behn Hubbard and James Smotherman; (bottom, same) Dickie Thomas and Cliff Tuttle. Smotherman owns a .320 batting aver age and leads the Southwest Conference in hits with eight. He also heads the A&M RBI list with five. Hubbard has hit for a .273 percentage and blasted a 450-foot homer against TCU. Thomas, appearing in four games, has three for 12 and a .250 average. Thomas and Tuttle are sophomores, while Hubbard is the only senior. MSCto Host First Annual City Bowling Crowns The Memorial Student Center will be the scene of the first an nual Bryan-Colloge Station Bowl ing Association’s City Champion ship April 27-28. Approximately 150 bowlers will be shooting for the titles in singles, doubles, team and all-events bowl ing, according to Fred McDonald, Aggie Bowling Club president. The tournament will be handi capped, with the handicap figured at 80 per cent of 200. This will enable the lower average bowlers to have a shot at the current average and .team leaders in all events.' Team entries are expected from all the participating leagues in the association, including the Park Cleaners team, currently tied for sixth in the national standings of the American Bowling Congress World Championships. All mem bers of the association are eligible to enter. caricatures by Juan R. Avila “See yourself as others see you.” Days — Exchange Store Evenings — M.S.C. ($1.50 each) STRAW HATS Get them Early — $1.95 to $5.00 All Styles! All Sizes! L O U P O T ’ S Your eyes deserve the finest professional care. At T S 0 they are thoroughly and scientifically examined for possible dis ease as well as for visual defects. If glasses are needed, they will be precision-fitted for clear, comfortable vision at the lowest cost possible. ONLY EXPERIENCED DOCTORS OF OPTOMETRY EXAMINE YOUR EYES AT T S O. Directed by: Dr. S. J. Rogers, Dr. N. Jay Rogers, Optometrists ScUiA^CuUUut