The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 18, 1958, Image 3

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Hustle Is The Word!
Spring Gridders don’t get a chance to walk, huddle to showers. It pays off in condition
The Ags run everywhere they go, from and increased speed.
Cadet Victory Can Move
Aggies Into Second Place
The spirited Aggie baseball team
can move back into a tie for second
in the conference if they can out-
score the rampaging Southern
Methodist Mustangs in the Kyle
Field action Saturday afternoon at
1:30.
Last Tuesday the Ags knocked
down Baylor for the third time to
stay two games behind the first
place Texas Longhorns. The
Steers beat Rice the same day and
no* have a 7-1 record. The Mus
tangs, second member of the top
three, beat TCU for their sixth
conference win against two losses.
3?he leading batter for the Ca-
iets this year has been their catch-
FRIDAY
VICTOR *»«
MATURE0
" - jug
mm
where
PASSIONS
BLAZE!
c- c Op£
b^$kov°»*
Released thru United Artists
SATURDAY
GOMEL
Wilde
DOOM
Reed
leoGENN
Beyond
Mombasa
RON Randell
„ rODON PRODUCTION • A COLUMBIA picture TECHNICOLOR®
Plus
Sb Cinemascope c 3S
In STEREOPHONIC SOUND
Preview Saturday Night 10:30
p. m. Also Sunday & Monday
The comedy of the year is here!
^ GREGORY PECK
LAUREN BACALLt»
‘DESIGNING WOMAN”
co-stamng DOLORES GRAY
In CinemaSropo and METROCOLOR
er, Gary Herrington. With half
the season gone Herrington has a
.364 batting average.
Although Herrington owns the
best average and has 19 total bases,
Dink Patterson, the Ag second base-
man, has the most runs batted in,
seven, and homeruns, two. Patter
son is only three behind Herrington
in total bases.
Ralph Plumlee is second in runs
batted in with six. In Tuesday’s
game Plumlee went to the plate
five times, hit three times, knocked
in three runs and scored twice him
self. His average is an improved
.242.
CIRCLE
FRIDAY
t COLUMBIA PiCTUft
TECHNICOLOR
Plus
‘‘The Young Don’t Cry’
With Sal Mineo
SATURDAY
“Last Of The Badmen”
With George Montgomery
“Voodoo Island”
With Boris Karloff
SHORTCUT
aIsta'/mn to hell
ROBERT IVERS • GEORGANN JOHNSON
SUNDAY & MONDAY
GLENN FORD
GIA SCALA- EARL HOLLIMAN
ANNE FRANCIS • KEENAN WYNN
FRED CLARK-EVA GABOR '
A METBO-GOlPyVYN-MAVeg PICTURE
Plus
A Rebel From the
Word
"GO"!
■■
It is the batters that bring across
the runs, but every team has to
have a good pitching staff to win.
The fact that the Aggies are in
third place and pushing close be
hind the leaders, is proof enough
of the Cadet pitching staff. Three
of the group are Toby Newton 2-1,
Don Hullum 2-2 and Percy San
derson 1-0.
Coach Beau Bell has not said
who will start for the Fanners to
morrow afternoon on the mound.
Probable starters in Saturday’s
game:
Player AB It H Ave
HerrinEtofl.,,,43 33 4 12 .364
Thomas, cf 15 5 5 .333
Stone, If 28 6 8 .286
Plumlee, ss 33 5 8 .242
Patterson, 2b 31 2 7 .226
Paradowski, lb 10 2 2 .200
Smotherman, rf 35 4 6 .171
Carroll, 3b 33 6 6 .182
CONFERENCE STANDINGS
Team Won Lost
Ttocas U 7 1
S. M.U 6 2
Texas A&M 5 3
Rice 3 4
T. C.U 1 6
Baylor 1 7
Saturday’s Karnes—Texas A&M vs South-
n Methodist at ColleKe Station, Rice vs
Chris-
ern
Baylor at Houston, Texas
tian at Fort Wo
on,
rth.
TejXa
Aggies on Duty
Eugene E. Schilhab, ’52, of
Houston, recently graduated from
Officer Basic School at Quantico,
ya., as a second lieutenant.
Army 2nd Lt. Winford H. Ho
gan, ’57, of Winters, recently com
pleted the airborne course ^t the
Infantry School, Fort Benning,
Ga.
DRIVE-IN
RESTAURANT
■TOEOE PARKING
Deluxe Hamburgers
Thick Malts
Delicious Shakes
THE TEXAN
Drive-In Restaurant
3294 College Rd.
tmm
FRIDAY
“Henry
The Eighth”
SATURDAY
“Out of the Clouds”
FRIDAY
“The Tall Stranger”
With Joel McCrea
Plus
‘Action Of The Tiger”
With Van Johnson
SATURDAY
“Variety Night”
“Bop Girl”
“Far Horizons”
“The Black Sleep”
The Battalion College Station (Brazos County). 77vm> Friday, April 18, 1958
PAGE 3
Myers Impress
Work Hard: Give
;gies
Aggie Aides
By BOB WEEKLEY
Bone-weary and bruised after a rugged two-hour practice
session yesterday, A&M’s spring gridders rumbled off Kyle
Field with the news of a holiday today from Coach Jim
Myers.
After Thursday’s session Myers said: “At this stage
of the game the squad has worked as hard as any I’ve seen.”
The personable young coach continued: “I told the boys not
to think of football tomorrow. We’re throwing so much at
them so fast there’s lots of confusion. The rest will do us
good.”
Myers singled out two boys up from the red team for
special praise: “Charles Martell and George Gray are fine
boys. Martell will make a good
linebacker and blocking back
and Gray showed up well de
fensively as a guard.” Mar
tell was a halfback on the ’57
freshman team and Gray a tackle
on the same squad.
The broken-nose era of football
at Aggieland is off to a good start,
but, according to Myers, the Cadets
are still rough in many places. Pass
defense is the problem the Farm
er’s staff is working on now.
Pass defense was stressed
throughout most of the day for
the backfield. Coach Willie Zapalac
had the backs woi’king on “one on
one, one on two and team defense”
agaist the pass.
Several changes were made posi
tion-wise among the ball carriers
during the period. Robert Sanders,
junior letterman from Seadrift,
was again moved to blocking back,
and Ronnie Fontenot, sophomore
squadman, was shifted back to the
wingback position.
Myers was pleased with the
passing ability displayed yesterday
by Ed Dudley and Charles Mil-
stead. Milstead, still working out
only in a sweat suit, threw for
45 minutes today. Dudley, working
with the white team, hit his re
ceivers consistently during the
workout.
In a pre-workout punting drill,
freshman Star Jon Few was get
ting off booming kicks of 40 yards
or more.
The line was put through its de
fensive paces in a scrimmage ses
sion near the end of practice. Mm - -
ray Trimble, Ken Beck, John
Tracey, Joe Munson and Don Smith
were singled out for their aggres
sive line play.
Nine more days ’till the end of
spring training and the Squad
Game.
Bud Sherrod
Top assistant to Head Coach
Jim Myers at Texas A&M is Bud
Sherrod, former all-American end
at the University of Tennessee and
an assistant at Texas Tech the
past five years.
Sherrod, 30, is a native of Knox
ville, Tenn., and is a member of
the all-time, all-Tennessee grid
team.
His final season at Tennessee
was 1950 and he was named out
standing lineman in the Volun
teers’ victory over Texas in the
1951 Cotton Bowl game.
Following graduation in 1951,
Sherrod entered the Air Force and
played service ball at Carswell Air
Force Base in Fort Worth in 1951
and 1952. He joined the Tech
staff in 1953 where he has served
until coming to A&M in 1958. He
will work with the ends at Aggie
land.
INTRAMURALS
A Chemical won their game with
Squadron 9 in class A, league A
volleyball yesterday. Squadron 8
took Squadron 7 in class A, lea
gue D play, while C Armor won
over B Infantry in the same lea
gue. In league H, Squadron 5 won
the first two over Squadron 1.
Two more volleyball games in
class C, league C-A, saw Milner
win over Bizzell by a forfeit and
College View B take Mitchell the
same way.
On the firing line, Squadron 16
won over A Veterinary 356-267 in
class B, league B. Squadron 2 shot
down Squadron 11, 408-361. Squad
ron 12 received a forfeit from
Squadron 10 in league E rifle.
League F saw another forfeit when
A Engineers did not show up to
challenge Squadron 17. In league
K, Squadron 6 romped over Squad
ron 15, 402-209.
The softball diamonds were full
yesterday, with twelve games play
ed in the afternoon.
In class A ball, league A saw
Squadron 14 win 15-4 over Squad
ron 11, and Squadron 19 took
Squadron 15 by a score of 15-5.
Two games were played in league
B also. Squadron 16 romped over
Squadron 18, 15-5, and Squadron
12 won over Squadron 13 with a
14-2 tally.
Two games in league C saw the
White Band play an easy game
with C Engineers, winning to the
tune of 11-4, while Squadron 2 slid
by A Infantry 6-4. A Ordnance
won an easy one over C-AAA 19-4.
BASEBALL GLOVES REDUCED
Reg. 12.00 Now 8.45 Reg. 10.95 Now 6.95
Other Gloves Also Reduced
STUDENT CO-OP
PENNY PARKER says:
In Spring a young man’s lady slightly
yearns for something new and color
ful .. .
Renewed Flame Red 6 piece
dinette $66.00
QUALITY FURNITURE CO. 316 N. Bryan
In Bryan TA 2-6446
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SHORT SLEEVE
SPORT SHIRTS
Make Your Selection From
Our Smart Collection
The A&M Men's Shop
HOME OF SMART MEN’S WEAR
Dick Rubin, ’59
103 North Main North Gate
Air Conditioning—temperatures made to order—for all-weather comfort. Get a demonstration!
III
£|i$
XvX;.'
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Precision roadability was vital on this wild trail!
CHEVY TAMES
THE TOUGHEST
TRANSCONTINENTAL
HIGHWAY!
Atlantic to Pacific and back, across
the towering Andes, in 41 hours..
Grade Retarder gave extra braking on corkscrew descents:
With hood sealed shut by the Automobile Club of Argentina^
a ’58 Chevrolet station wagon hustled from Buenos Aires to
Valparaiso, Chile, and back over the highest transcontinental
road in the world! Twice it rocketed two miles high in the
sky—and not one drop of oil or water was added, nor was
the mighty Turbo-Thrust V8 ever shut off! Here was an
all-out test of Chevy’s new engine, of the Turboglide trans
mission, Jumbo-Drum brakes, Full Coil suspension and Ball-
Race steering—triumphant proof of all the advances that
have made Chevrolet great in ’58!
You’ll get the best buy on the best sellerl
Don’t miss your Chevrolet dealer’s:
APRIL SALES SPECTACULAR*
See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer for quick appraisal—prompt delivery!
; FOSWASa
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