The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 24, 1959, Image 5

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    The Battalion College Station (Brazo» County), Texa*
Tuesday, March 24, 1959
PAGE 5
Farmers Crush Longhorns, 7
Eat just what you like . . .
HOTARB’S
Cafeteria
11 a.m. - 2:30 p.m.—5 p. m. - 8:30 p.m.
The Aggie nine matched the
Texas Longhorns, defending South
west Conference champions, run
for run Saturday in Austin before
The A&M track team will be
busy on two fronts this week.
Coach Charley Thomas will en
ter his varsity and freshman teams
in the A&M-Rice-Texas triangular
meet at Houston Thursday and
then will take the varsity to Big
Spring for the ABC Relays Satur
day.
Although the Cadets have not
won a meet in four starts they
have shown steady improvement
and Thomas, in his first year of
rebuilding Aggie track fortunes, is
well pleased with the progress.
With two of his top field men
sidelined with injuries a junior
javelin thrower—Newton Lamb of
Houston Lamar—has been the big
surprise for the Aggies.
pushing across a score in the top
of the eighth to post a 7-6 SWC
victory.
It was the first conference game
Lamb has been over the 200
mark twice this spring with tosses
of 206-6 at Shreveport and 204-6%
at Baton Rouge.
Discus man Owen Hill of Dallas
and pole vaulter Jerry Davis of
Lubbock have been slowed with in
juries and have not reached their
potential.
Henry Bonorden of Port Lavaca
has improved weekly in the shot
put. His best put to date was at
Baton Rouge last week, a toss of
51-4% that took second behind
LSU’s Billy Cannon.
Thursday afternoon’s A&M-Rice-
Texas tri meet for years has been
held the week before the South
west Conference meet but was
moved up due to schedule conflicts.
of the season for both clubs and
the win shoved the Aggies into a
three way tie with Rice and Bay
lor for first place honors.
Righthander Percy Sanderson
was the winning slinger for the
Farmers, receiving credit after he
relieved sophomore Larry Ayres in
the sixth and allowed only one run.
Loser was Bob Suddeth.
Sanderson gave up four hits dur
ing his stint on the mound, struck
out one and walked none. Ayres
was touched for eight hits and
struck out five.
Little J. B. Carroll, 5-6 junior
center-fielder, led the Aggie slug
gers at the plate with a single,
double and triple while knocking
in four runs.
The Aggies opened the scoring
parade in the top of the first
when left-fielder Byron Barber,
lifted a high drive over the left
field fence for a homer.
Texas countered in their frame
when they pushed across a tying
run on three hits, all of them
being singles off Ag starter Ayres. 1
A&M hit their big inning in the
third when they scored three runs.
Dink Patterson opened the inning
by walking and then scored on
Ayres’ double to right. Ayres came
home when Carroll hit his first
double and Carroll crossed home
base on Barber’s second hit, a
single to left.
The Longhorns refused to be
left behind and scored three runs
in the fifth, two of them via the
home run route. A&M went ahead
in the next frame when Patterson
and Ralph Plumlee scored on Car
roll’s triple to right.
Texas was still in the race, be
hind one run in the bottom of the
sixth when George Myers slammed
a 400-foot plus home run all the
way across Red River Street in
back of center field.
The Aggies winning run was
pushed across in the eighth when
Patterson managed to reach first
on a single to right and made sec
ond base on a sacrifice by Sander
son. Carroll then took his swings
for the fifth time that night and
' connected on a single scoring Pat- I
Ag Track and Field Squad
Enters Two Area Meets
Aggie Line Biggest Problem
As Spring Drills Draw Near
Developing a strong line will
be the top item on the agenda
when the Aggies begin spring
football practice March 31.
Coach Jim Myers expects 70
hopefuls to report including 20
returning lettermen and a host of
sophomores-to-be from the frosh
team that had a 3-1-1 record last
fall.
Myers, beginning his second
year at Aggieland after posting
a respectable 4-6 mark, figures if
a football team “hasn’t got it up
front—it just hasn’t got it.”
“Our biggest problem is to de
velop a strong; line,” he said this
week as he and his busy staff
make final preparations for the
opening practice session.
“If we improve it will have to
be in the line,” he said, but plans
to work a lot on defense and the
running attack, too.
The Cadets had one of the best
passing attacks in the nation last
fall but “didn’t have it up front”
to make the running game go.
Myers will have several sopho
mores to sprinkle in with his let
termen and has added a multiple
offense to go along with the single
wing. This, along with a better
line, should give A&M better run
ning.
“All positions will be wide
open,” the Aggie chief declared.
“We’re hoping the sophs will win
out but they’ll have to beat out
the veterans first,” he added.
The annual Spring game and all
sports day will be Saturday, April
18. The night grid game will cli
max a full day of sports as the
Aggie track, baseball, golf and
tennis teams will compete at home
before the several hundred high
^GetWILDROOT
CREAM-OIL Charlie!
J. PAUL Sheedy,* hair expert, says:
"Wildroot tames those cowlicks!”
♦of 1S1 So. Harris Hill Ed., Williamavilte. N.Y.
\ in
Just a little bit
of Wilcfroot CyV")
and... WO W
school students and other guests.
A clinic for high school coaches
will be held April 10 and 11.
The 20 retuiming lettermen will
be led by Charlie Milstead, cap
tain and senior from Tyler. Gale
Oliver, letterman center from Re
fugio is the alternate captain.
Oliver will be a tackle this spring.
Other lettermen back include
backs Gordon LeBoeuf of Port
Neches, Powell Berry, Snyder; Ro
bert Sanders, Seadrift; Randy Sims
Houston; Jon Few, Midlothian and
Bill Cau,thorn, Del Rio and line
men Roy Northrup, Amarillo;
Wayne Labar, Haidingen; Joe
Munson, Angleton; Allen Goeh-
ring, San Marcos; Buddy Payne,
Houston; Carter Franklin, Kerens;
Bill Godwin, Orangefield; Bill
Darwin, Houston; George Gray,
Amarillo; Robert Garner, Pales
tine; Ralph Smith, Phillips and
Jack Estes, Olton.
Myers lost one lettermen back
when he dropped Luther Hall, sen
ior from Dallas, from the squad
for disciplinary reasons. Myers
considered Hall “the most improv
ed player last fall.”
Among the other losses, all by
graduation, include backs , Dick
Gay and Ed Dudley; ends John
Tracey and Don Smith and tackle
Carl Luna.
Condensed Statement of Condition
FIRST STATE BANK & TRUST COMPANY
Bryan, Texas
At the Close of Business March 12, 1959
ASSETS
Cash and Due from Banks..
...$2,711,593.83
U. S. Government Obligations
... 2,800,825.00
Municipal Bonds
12,000.00
Lonas and Discounts
... 2,931,356.87
Banking House, Fixtures and Parking Lot
69,082.47
* Stock of Federal Reserve Bank
... ‘ 9,000.00
Other Real Estate
2.00
TOTAL ASSETS
...$8,533,860.17
LIABILITIES
Capital Stock -----
....$ 150,000.00
Surplus
.... 150,000.00
Undivided Profits
.... 212,399.37
Deposits
.... 7,984,940.86
Reserves
36,519.94
TOTAL LIABILITIES
...$8,533,860.17
FIRST STATE BANK & TRUST COMPANY
OFFICERS
W. J. Coulter, President
W. S. Higgs, Vice President L. E. Nedbalek, Assistant Cashier
Pat Newton, Vice President Williard E. Williams, Assistant Cashier
Curtis Mathis, Cashier Randal Brewer, Assistant Cashier
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
Now paying 3% Interest on Savings Accounts
Compounded Semi-Annually
terson and icing down the game. I today at Kyle Fie’d for the'r sec-
A&M meets the Baylor Bears | md SWC game of the season.
Frosh Nine Rip Shoriherm
11-0 in Conference Qpenei
The freshman baseball team,
paced by a sprinkling of football
ers, ripped Texas Shorthorn pitch- j
ers for 14 hits and a 11-0 victoi’y
on Kyle Field Saturday.
Bill Vincent, a 235-pound tackle-
turned pitcher, scattered six hits
and struck out eight men in post
ing the victory for the Farmers.
Only two of those hits ever got
past the infield.
Third baseman Johnny Burton
was the leading slugger for the
Cadets, bashing out four hits in
five trips to the plate for two
doubles and two singles that scored
four runs.
Five of the A&M starters are
football players and they account
ed for six hits and three RBI’s,
just about all that Burton left un
accounted for.
The frosh squad, coached by
Shelby Metcalf, moves into action
today when they face the Baylor
Cubs in Waco. I.
TRY THEM . . .
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Arriving: Daily.
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. A
softl What taste from
yonder I FILTER-BLEND ...
ITS WHATS UP FRONT THAT COUNTS
This filter, be it e’er so pure and white
Must needs give flavor too, full clear and bright
Else would the trusting smoker, filled with hope
Again be dashed, dejected be ... and mope.
And thus we come to Winston’s obvious truth
It’s what’s up front that counts— and ’tis, forsooth
In that the fine tobaccos, in the end
Are by exclusive process—Filter-Blend —
Become the tastiest taste that e’er hath played
Across your dancing taste-buds, man or maid'
Be ye not slow, therefore, to test the wit
Of what we say: that Winston, friend, is /t;
For that with ev’ry smoke ye do delay
Ye are not gath’ring rosebuds while ye may!
“ We are advertised by our loving friends..*”
KING HENRY VI. PART III. ACT V. SC. Ill
R- J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO.. WINSTON-SALEM. N. C.
I
AGGIES ENJOY YOUR EASTER HOLIDAYS . . .
BE CAREFUL AND DON’T FORGET TO START TALKING TO YOUR HIGH SCHOOL SEN
IOR BUDDIES ABOUT ATTENDING A&M.
ZUBIKS
Uniform Tailors
North Gate