The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas Tuesday, April IS, 1958 PAGE 3 Cadets Sag To Third Place The Texas Longhorns continued their athletic dominance over the Aggies this season by defeating the Farmers 12-1 Saturday after noon at Kyle Field. The loss dropped the Cadets to third place, their lowest position on the conference rung this, season. The Horns’ victory tightened their grasp on first place, one game ahead of the SMU Mustangs. Texas chased Ag starter Donnie Hullum from the mound in the first inning with six runs on three hits, four walks and an error. Toby Newton came out of the bullpen to retire the side, but al lowed five more runs in the next four and a third innings. The sen ior lefthander was touched for four hits and gave up eight walks dur ing his stint for the Aggies. Lanky Wayne Schaper then came in to put out the Longhorn’s fire, allowing only one run in the four innings he pitched. Schaper gave up four hits and one base on balls. Round Trip! Second Baseman Dink Patterson rounds third base after smacking the ball over the left field fence for a home run and the sole Ag score Saturday against the Texas Long horns. SERVING BRYAN and COLLEGE STATION ^ SAM HOUSTON ZEPHYR Lv. N. Zulch 10:08 a.m. Ar. Dallas . . 12:47 p.m. Lv. N. Zulch . 7:28 p.m. Ar. Houston .9:15 p.m. FORT WORTH AND DENVER RAILWAY N. L. CRYAR, Agent Phone 15 • NORTH ZULCH SALE Shirts and Slacks Half Price ... LEON B. WEISS Next To Campus Theatre FISHERMEN Received New Supply Of Fly Rod & Spinning Lures STUDENT CO-OP STORE TEXAS (12) AB R H RBI Woodman, 2b 3 110 Von Rosenberg, sS 4 2 10 Menge, cf 3 2 10 Good, lb 3 112 Baxter, lb 10 11 Alvis, Sb 6 2 4 1 Embry, rf 4 2 0 1 Arnette, rf 10 0 0 Myers, p 5 2 14 McDonald, If 4 0 12 Elam, c 3 0 0 1 TOTALS 37 12 11 12 A&M (1) AB R H RBI Carroll, 3b 3 0 0 0 Thomas, cf 4 0 0 0 Herrington, c 4 0 2 0 Smotherman, x-f 3.0 0 0 Stoine, If 4 0 0 0 Paradowski, lb 2 0 0 0 Reed, lb 2 0 10 Plumlee, ss 4 0 0 0 Patterson, 2b 4 111 Hullum, p 0 0 0 0 Newton, p 10 0 0 Schaper, p 10 0 0 TOTALS 32 1 4 1 Texas 600 203 001—12 A&M 001 000 000— 1 E-—Alvis, Myers, Smotherman, Paradow ski. PO-A—Texas 27-9; A&M 27-7. LOB —Texas 13, A&M 7. 2B—Baxter, Alvis, McDonald. HR—Myers, Patterson. SB—■ Carroll. S—Von Rosenberg, Woodman. ip h r er bb so ers ■ Hullum (L. Newton’'4 Schaper 2-2) 9 4 % 3 4% 4 4 4 Tex- U—Garcia, Burdick. Time—2 :40. THIS WEEK’S SCHEDULE Tuesday—Rice vs. Texas at Austi: vs. Baylor at Waco, Tex; idis Texas Lutheran at ern Methodist vs. at Dallas (night), lay—Kice vs. Baylor at Houston, Texas A&M vs. Southern Methodist at Col lege Station, Texas vs. Texas Christian at Fort Worth. n, ie: as A&M vs. Baylor at Waco, Texas Chri tian vs. Southern Methodist at Dallas. Wednesday—Rice vs. Texas Lutheran i Seguin (night). Southern Methodist vs Dallas (Texas League) at Dallas (night). Saturday—Ric " There are more ways than one to be a leader AS OUR NAME clearly indicates, we are in the telephone business. We own and operate 1,696 central offices in 30 states. We manufacture telephones, switches, relays and other communications equip ment, for our own use—and for the 4,400 other “independent” telephone companies in the United States. And while — by the yardstick of size — we cannot claim to be the leader, we find ample opportunity for lea.dpr S ^ip i n other ways. Take the telephone pictured here as an example. It is our own design. At first glance, it may look quite a bit like other modern telephones. But you will find three important differences* The surfaces just above the dial on each side are contoured to guide the mouth piece-receiver or “handset” into place unerringly. * An extra quarter of an inch is added to the tapered mouthpiece and earpiece. And the cradle which receives the “hand set” is lower in front than in the rear. The result: It is almost impossible for an “off-the-heok” interruption to service to happen. This is, as we said, one example of how we seek to do whatever we do better than it has been done before. And this same ambition guides every phase of our operation, from the develop ment of better equipment for telephone central offices, to the courtesy-training of the people who represent us in dealing with our customers- GENERAL TELEPHONE W One of the World's Great Communications Systems The Steers’ George Myers went the distance for the win and helped his own cause with a bases-loaded homer in the first inning. Myers allowed but four hits and walked three. He gave up a homer in the third to Dink Patterson for the only Cadet run. Third baseman Max Alvis was the game’s big bat, racking up four hits in six trips to the plate, one of them a double for ’the Long horns. Gary Herrington, Cadet batting ace, accounted for half of the Farmers hits, collecting a pair of singles out of four times at the plate. Aggie Thinlyclads Place Third In Field Of Three Southern Methodist University captured eight first places to win the triangular track meet with Rice and A&M in old Rice Stadium Saturday. SMU piled up 74 points to Rice’s 50 and A&M’s 46 in a cold, drizzly meet in which the Ponies failed to place in only four events. High individual scorer was James Charnquist of Rice, who won first in the javelin, second in the pole vault, and third in the discus, giving him a 10-point total. Emmett Smallwood was runner-up in the individual scoring with seven points gathered on a first in the 220-yard low hurdles and third in the broad jump. Ernesto Uribe led the Aggies in the dashes, taking second in the 220-yard dash and third in the 100-yard dash. Merrill Witt took second in the 120-yard high hurdles while teammate Homer Smith fol lowed Smallwood in the 220-yard low hurdles in third place. Other Aggie firsts were recorded by Freddie Dulock in the two mile run and Owen Hill, who threw the discus 151-0Vs. In the field events, the Aggies’ Newton Lamb took second in the javelin with a heave of 166-7, while teammate Charles Merka placed third in the high jump followed by Bobby Thomas and Frank Madura in a tie for fourth place. Henry Bonorden also took second in the shot put with a 49-8 heave. The Colts copied their older run ning mates, winning the freshman division with a total of 62 points to Rice’s 47 and A&M’s 44. The Fish took first places in four events in their division. The mile relay team of Purvis Hunt, Robert Connaway, Don Isett, and Harvey Cash won the event in 3:25.9. Lee Martin leaped 5-10 to win the high jump and Ray Vance went over at 12-0 for a first in the pole vault. A 172-1 foot heave put John Lang in first place in javelin competition. Inj ured Nichols Hot In Saturday Golf A&M’s golfing mainstay, Bobby Nichols, limping from a badly-cut foot, fired a 67 on the A&M links Saturday as the Aggies tied Ar kansas, and then moved to the Bryan Municipal course and shot a blistering three-under par 67 to lead the field in the First Annual Brazos Golf Ass’n tournament. In the SWC match, Nichols and Binky Mitchella teamed to defeat the Porkers’ Ray Barnes and Louis Henderson. Nichols’ effort enabled him to down Arkansas’ Barnes. The results follow: Binky Mitchella, A&M, tied Louis Hen derson, Arkansas. Nichols-Mitchella, A&M, won over Barnes-Henderson, Al'kansas, 2 and 1. Jerry Breckenridge, Arkansas, won over Buck Prewitt, A&M, 4 and 3. A1 Jones, A&M, tied Bob Waldron, Ar kansas. Breckenridge - Waldron, Arkansas, won over Prewitt-Jones, 1-up. SPORTS SCHEDULE Tuesday A&M Fish vs. Baylor Cubs, Kyle Field, 3 p.m.; Texas A&M vs. Bay lor Bears, SWC baseball, Waco, 3 p.m.; Texas A&M vs. SMU, var sity golf, Dallas. Friday Texas A&M vs. SMU, Tennis at Dallas. Saturday Texas A&M vs. SMU, SWC base ball, Kyle Field, 2 p.m.; A&M vs. TCU, SWC tennis at Fort Worth; A&M vs. Texas Tech, SWC golf at Lubbock; Texas A&M varsity track team in Kansas Relays in Lawrence, Kansas. Deluxe Hamburgers Thick Malts Delicious Shakes THE TEXAN Drive-In Restaurant 3204 College Rd. LEVI JEANS LEVI JACKETS COURT’S Shoes — Shoe Repairs North Gate Make Your Selection From Our Smart Collection Of ... Popularly Priced SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS FOR SPRING AND SUMMER SEE THEM NOW AT THE . . . A&M MEN'S SHOP HOME OF SMART MEN’S WEAR Dick Rubin, "59 103 North Main North Gate Our Baby's First Seven Years RECORD BOOK OF BIRTH AND DEVELOPED America’s most treasured record book—96 colorful, illus trated pages. Beautiful - Durable » Handsomely boxed (9Fa” x 12”) . WASHABLE ROXITE CLOTH 2.98 pink, blue, yellow, mintgreen WASHABLE ROXITE CLOTH 3.98 pink, blue, yellow, mintgreen PADDED SILK MOIRE cushioned.... 4.98 pink, blue, yellow The proceeds from the sale of this book support maternity research that benefits mother and babies the world over. Shaffer's North Gate CHESTERFIELDW MEN OF AMERICA: MISSILE ENGINEER Missile blasting off, And climbing high! det trail blazing brighf , .| Against the sky 1 Stops to take big pleasure |; || When and where he can . CHESTERFIELD ! Sill#!! ——* Ml Nothing satisfies like the BIG CLEAN TASTE OF T0P-T0BACC0 pEGUt&B KING