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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (April 26, 1957)
served the day will by Mrs. C. H. ng- in the pro- /. C. Jones of Church and e of the A&M to attend are salad and 25 cost of bread, rt. A nursery /e steps »ut may has not apacity nation ? jain for grade r, rollick- .. And out of ia May 'ordte*. r/ ng hap- ndicant mu give )s I will. r! How of badi- ing fun taut and will play ahontas. sponsor, lave you - zestful Hmmm ? a. Light ig story. Indian hears a startle- are you Ips. But leaving on the at heads olic, for ool cats, rimscott. day. See m Cullen of Philip tobacco, ulman, 1957 it — long is! Made Al Capp . Schulz; Aggie, Longhorn Reds, Bosox, Chisox, Golfers Rained Out Indians Win in Majors The postponing of a dual golf meet with the University The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas Friday, April 26, 1957 PAGE 3 The postponing of a dual golf meet with the University of Texas because of poor green conditions places the Aggies farther behind in a schedule which finds them already lagging behind other SWC schools. Coach Joe Fagan announced today that “the recent rainy weather has prevented the ground crew from trim ming the greens and the fair ways are in poor condition.” The meet with Texas has been rescheduled for Thurs day, May 2, on the Aggie course. The Aggies meet TCU Monday in Fort Worth. A fresh man meet with Texas Thursday was also postponed and rescheduled for Tuesday. Playing of the Texas series will he an important factor in deter mining the conference champion since Baylor and Texas are tied for the lead at 17% to 6% while A&M finds itself in second place with a 6-6 record after competing in only two dual meets. A decisive victory over the Steers would place the Aggies in a strong contending position since they have already topped Baylor, 4% to 1%. A&M lost its only other meet to the Rice Owls in Houston, 4% to 1%. To fill in the weekend, Coach Fagan has arranged a 36-hole med al play qualifying round at the Bryan country club for Friday, Sat urday and Sunday with the top performers making up the four some and alternate to play Texas. Top linksmen for the Cadets this year have been Bobby Nichols, Marcelino Moreno and Gary Fletch er with Jerry Durbin and Binky Mitchella alternating in the other slot. Invite Your Friends to . . . DINE OUT LUNCH OR DINNER at the Beautiful M.S.C. DINING ROOM —Serving at any time - Choice Steaks (to your order) or Jumbo Shrimp MEMORIAL STUDENT CENTER DINING ROOM — SERVING — LUNCH—11:30 A.M. - 2:00 P.M., 7 Days a Week DINNER—6:00 P.M. - 8:00 P.M., Mon. thru Fri. Shaffer's (Booh St North Gate ore College Station Open 8 A.M. to 6 P.M. Six days a week WE’RE GIVING AWAY WORTH OF RCA VICTOR RECORDS ABSOLUTELY r-nrx That’s right ... in ■■ n J" both July and Octo- i Mmmm Baa her we will give you 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! CINCINNATI, (A 5 )—The Cincin nati Redlegs bunched their six hits and, taking advantage of four er rors, defeated the Chicago Cubs Thursday, 6-3. It was the Redlegs’ fourth consecutive victory. They also have lost four. Brooks Lawrence was the win ning pitcher and Dick Drott, 20- year-old Cincinnatian, was the los er. Chicago outhit the Reds, get ting 9 safeties. Consecutive errors by Ernie Banks and Casey Wise gave Cin cinnati an unearned run in the first inning. Banks dropped Bob Thur man’s high fly for a two-base mis- play and Wise let Gus Bell’s grounder go through his legs, Thurman scoring. Cincinnati added three more runs in the second inning on a single, two doubles and a hit batsman. With George Crowe and Ed Bailey on second and third, Don Hoak doubled off the scoreboard in left center to drive in two of the runs. He scored on Alex Grammas’ long fly. Lawrence retired the Cubs in Welch, Not Penberthy Decided Boxers Fate “I, not Mr. (W.L.) Penberthy, wrote the letter to Andy York”, said Barney Welch, director of intramural athletics in a letter to the BATTALION about the censorship of the A&M Boxing Club yesterday. “It is true that Mr. Penny signed it and I tried to get him to let me sign it, but being the type of man he is, he was willing to take the blame for the letter rather than for me to take the blame,” continued Welch in an effort to clarify the point. The letter was to York, coach of the boxing team, instructing him that the Department of Student Activities would cease recognizing the club as a student activity at the close of the current semester. “I kept after Mr. Penny to call a meeting of various members of the college to discuss boxing on the A&M campus and finally he did call a meeting at which time boxing was discussed and I pro posed that boxing be discontinued and I was instructed by the com mittee, with my concurrence, to initiate a letter pertaining to the discontinuance of boxing,” said Welch in the letter to the Batt. Much turmoil has resulted over the disqualification of the Boxing Club and members of the team, led by Captain Bill Goode, are circu lating a petition that they will bring before Dean Robert Kamm in an attempt to get a hearing and a review of their case. Welch and Penberthy led the committee that included Kamm, Pete Hardesty, Dean Walter H. Delaplane and Carl E. Tishler. York was not included at the meet ing that decided the fate of the club. Athletics' Carver Hopeful For Comeback After Win KANSAS CITY, UP) — Ned Garver, still one putout away from pitching his first complete base ball game in over a year, got ci’edit for Kansas City’s 17-6 rout of Cleveland Wednesday night, and hopes it means a comeback for him. “When you sit out a whole year, you forget how to do your work,” he said. “What I want to do is 1 get plenty of pitching so I can get back in the groove.” It was the 32-year-old veteran righthander’s first victory since mid-1955. He was with Detroit at the time, and had been bothered by arm and back trouble since In the Southern Assn, in 1956 there were seven games during which one pitcher issued at least nine bases on balls. order until the fourth when they got two hits but were unable to score. ~ WASHINGTON, (A>) — Boston battered five Washington pitchers for 15 hits, including three each by Ted Williams and Dick Gernert, and crushed the Senators, 12-7 yes terday. Williams walked three times, smashed a double and two singles, and lifted his batting average to .455. CHICAGO, (A 5 ) — The Chicago White Sox raked five Detroit pitch ers for 16 hits, including six doub les, Thursday for a 9-4 victory that bolstered their top spot in the American League and buried the Tigers deeper in the basement. Grabbing their fifth decision in six starts, the Sox spotted the Ti gers two runs in the second inning, then knocked starter Billy Hoeft out with a three-run third and were ahead to stay to hand Detroit its third straight setback and sixth in eight games. KANSAS CITY, (A*)—The Kan sas City Athletics, who humiliated Cleveland with a 17-run outburst Wednesday night, got their come uppance yesterday as the. Indians took a 5-3 decision with the help of a clutch double by Vic Wertz and fine relief pitching by Ray Narleski. NATIONAL LEAGUE Cincinnati 6, Chicago 3 New York at Brooklyn night, postponed, ain Only games scheduled \X L Pet. Behind G 1 .857 6 1 .857 4 4 .500 4 4 .500 3 4 .429 3 5 .375 2 5 .286 2 6 .250 2% ■2y 2 3% 4 41/2 late 1954. Garver pitched three-hit ball for eight innings Wednesday night and retired 15 batters in order before the Indians got to him for five runs in the ninth. At that point, Manager Lou Boudreau yanked the stocky Ohio an and sent in Virgil Trucks for the final out. WHITE “WINDSOR WALKERS” (You have to see them to appreciate them.) CHEAP! COMFORTABLE HARD to WEAR OUT! See them at LOU’S Brooklyn Milwaukee 6 1 New York 4 4 Cincinnati 4 4 Philadelphia 3 4 Chicago . 3 5 St. Louis 2 5 Pittsburgh. 2 6 AMERICAN LEAGUE Cleveland 5, Kansas City 3 Boston 12, Washington 7 Chicago 9, Detroit 4 Only games scheduled. W L Bet. Behind Chicago 5 New York 5 Boston 5 Kansas City 5 Cleveland . 3 Baltimore . . . 3 Washington . 3 Detroit 2 AtM MENS SHOP 103 MAIN NORTH GATE AGGIE OWNED ABOVE ALL ELSE... you want to be POSITIVE < about your glasses! You can be ... choose Experienced ISO Doctors of Optometry to Examine Your Eyes. FINEST QUALITY $20 VALUE SINGLE VISION GLASSES $1385 INCLUDING EXAMINATION Wear while you pay $1 WEEKLY | PRECISION VISION | •"••W. 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Kotutd-ttp §f Western Tiqs Here Is Where The West Begins’ Authentically western as a cowpuncher’s drawl are these durable duds. Come, rope good buys! IN BRYAN See “The Tracer” Wednesday, 7:30-8 p.m., KWTX-TV, Channel 10 Levis and Lee Blue Jeans — $3.65 H-Bar-C Western Pants $6.95 — $8.95 SHIRT SALE 1 lot Western Shirts — ^ Reg. $8.95 . . . Special $2.98 Regular Priced Western Shirts —Featuring H-Bar-C and Kar- man Line. $4.95 and $6.95 WOOL WESTERN COATS $29.50 WESTERN HATS $2.95 — $8.95 LEON B. WEISS North Gate Next to Grannie’s Restaurant & Campus Theatre