The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 07, 1959, Image 3

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    The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas
Tuesday, April 7, 1959
PAGE 3
Owls Deflate Aggies, 4-3
o; e.irrpund jai^ouB pappu aory
A&M’s slowly deflating baseball
balloon Saturday when they push
ed across three runs in the sixth
and one more in the seventh to
edge the Aggies, 4-3.
The win pushed the Owls into
undisputed first place position in
the Southwest Conference race
with a 3-1 record while the Farm
ers sank into the gloom of the
second division with a 2-2 confer
ence mark and an 8-4 season recox ; d.
A total of some 2,000 fans
crowded Rice’s baseball field to
watch the two teams battle for the
No. 1 spot among the conference
giants, and it was a tight battle
until the sixth.
Percy Sanderson, junior from
Nederland, toed the mound for the
Aggies and completely baffled the
Owl hitters until that fateful
sixth, yielding only two singles up
to that point and facing only 20
batters.
Richard Kristinik, Rice third-
baseman, opened the action for the
Ag Fish Paste Owlets
For Fifth Victory, 7-3
The Aggie Fish took advantage
of steady pitching by Gary Priddy
and a leaky defense to down the
Rice Owlets, 7-3, here Saturday.
The win was the freshmen’s
fifth of the year against one de
feat.
Priddy, left-hander from Fort
Worth, went the distance for his
third straight victory without a
loss. Although he gave up 13 hits
and had the bases loaded twice, he
tightened up in the clutch.
START RESERVING
YOUR FORMAL
WEAR NOW
<-
for the
JUNIOR BALL
COTTON BALL
RING DANCE
RENT A FORMAL
A&M Men’s Shop
The Fish collected nine hits off
Bill Flynn who went all the way
for the Owlets. John Burton was
the big gun with three hits and
three runs driven across. Outfield
er A. L. French hit a solo homer
for the Fish in the second to tie
the score at one all.
Rice counted in the first on Lee
Raesner’s double and a single by
Gary West, one of four for the
afternoon for the Owlet center-
fielder. After French’s homer tied
the score in the second, the Fish
went ahead to stay in the third on
two consecutive walks and an er
ror on a ground ball.
Rice scored single runs in the
sixth on Flynn’s single and in the
eighth on a walk, single and wild
pitch.
A&M sacked up the game with
three in the seventh, all unearned.
Two errors, a walk, hit batsman
and two singles did the damage.
We’re quick when
time is short
Use our extra-fast Same Day
Service for spotless clean clothes
in a hurry! You can count on
us to be prompt. Modest prices.
CAMPUS
CLEANERS
PALACE
LAST DAY “HOUSE ON HAUNTED HILLS”
QUEEN
pf 'its
’.p’-v
DOUBLE FEATURE
STARTS TODAY
11 ■ I
BRIGITTE
BARDOT
(rwrci'i mpst turitts expert
lytripteaSe
sstSr
OAKIEL GELIM • BRIGITTE BARDOT in “Mademoiselle Striptease"
»(tk ROKRT HWSCK • D«*r COM • Dimtrt by lUiMCT
by IIS mMS ( G ( HOCME VtOOUCTiONS
Beautiful and Proud.
yet more savage
than the black
jungle she ruled!
in EASTMAN COLOR
starring
Marion Michaels
A not •‘Sox KiHan" :
i la BRIGITTE BARDOT
and
sh« FoogM tust wirfi the Hardy Kruger
Clawing fury of a Tormented Tigreu
4 Q C A ■te&u?
Sleet end Cunning e
a Jungl* Ammo/
Owls in the sixth with a single
and then advanced to second on
a steal. Lynwood Stallings, Owl
stortstop, walked and both ad
vanced on Fred Burns’ single to
load the bases.
Sanderson walked the next man
up scoring one run. A slow ground
ball to Aggie shortstop Ralph
Plumlee was then thrown over the
first baseman’s head, allowing
another run to cross the plate.
A&M’s first baseman, Dick
Hickerson managed to grab the
ball and throw to third, trying to
nail the runner, but another mis-
cue on the play allowed the third
run to cross the plate.
In the seventh, Rice’s lone run
was scored on singles by Murray,
Jerry Epstein and Burns.
A&M’s scoring began in the
second when Garry Herrington,
Plumlee and Dink Patterson slash
ed out singles to score two runs.
Their final tally came in the sixth
when Plumle^ walked, stole sec
ond and was singled in by out
fielder Stuffy Davis.
The Farmers again jump into
SWC action when they face the
TCU Horned Frogs today at 3
p.m. at College Station.
Box Score':
A&M (3)
Carroll, cf
Reed, 3b
Barber, If
Herrington, c
Hickerson. lb
Plumlee, ss ....
Davis, c, If ....
Patterson, Hb
a Stone
b- Houchin ....
Sanderson, p
Ayres, p
c -Chase
TOTALS ..
RICE (4)
Purdue, If
Murray, rf
E. P. Stein, cf
Kristnik, 3b
AB
.. 3
...4
.. 4
.. 4
.. 3
.. 3
.. 3
.. 3
.. 0
. 0
.. 2
.. 1
.. 1
AB
.. 4
. 4
. 2
. 4
H RBI
1 0
2 .0
1 0
1 0
Two Tourneys Set for Bryan Course;
Play Slated Friday, Saturday, Sunday
The Brazos Golf Assn, and the
Bryan Jaycees are co-sponsoring
an Invitational Golf Tournament
to be played on the Bryan Munici
pal Golf Course Saturday and Sun
day.
This is a stroke play event with
54 holes in the Championship
Flight, 36 holes in all other flights.
All flights will play 18 holes on
Saturday and 18 on Sunday, with
the exception of the Championship
Flight who will tee-off for 36 Sun
day.
More than $1,000 in prizes will be
awarded to the winners with prizes
going to the first four' places in
each flight. Prizes will be sets of
irons, woods, golf shoes, cameras
TODAY THRU SATURDAY
“GIRL IN THE BIKINI”
Brigitte Bardot
CIRCLE
TONIGHT
“THE BADLANDERS”
Alan Ladd
Also
“THE LAST HURRAH”
Spencer Tracy
and other golf merchandise.
Entrants are requested to regis
ter for the tournament as soon as
possible, but not later than 10 a.
m. Saturday. Entry fee is $12.50,
which includes green fees. There
will be free drinks and barbecue
Saturday night with drinks and
sandwiches served during play Sat
urday and Sunday.
There will also be a Pro-Am
event Friday. The majority of the
pros will be from the Golf Coast
PGA, but the event is open to all
pros. More than $500 will be award
ed in this event.
All tournament entrants who
have registered for the tournament
by 10 a. m. Friday are eligible for
the Pro-Am. All amateurs are re
quested to mail or bring an attested
score card from their home pros.
Entry fee is $5 for amateurs and
$10 for pros.
Stallings, ss 3 1
Burns, 2b 3 1
Mitchell, lb 4 0
Donaldson, c 4 0
Brock, p 2 0
Timme, p 2 0
TOTALS 33 4.
a—Hit by pitcher for Patterson
b Ran for Stone in ninth,
c- Flied out for Ayres in 9th.
Score by inning:
A&M 020 001
Rice 000 003
1
1
0
0
0
0
2
9th.
Cadet Golfers Drop Lamar,
In Saturday Game at A&M
Texas A&M golfers defeated Danny Mason, 1-up. A1 Odom,
000—3
10x—4
Lamar Tech, 4 1 / 2 -2%, Saturday
on the A&M course.
Results:
Billy Martindale, A&M, def.
Jerry Scott, Lamar, 1-up. Bob
by Bluhm, Lamar, def. Ralph
Toland, ^f&M, 3 and 2. Best
ball tied.
Tomas Fonseca, A&M def.
The Stanleys, Inc.,
Sign A&M Letter
The fabulou Stanley twins of
Buna and Kilgore Junior College
announced Saturday they will play
their future basketball for A&M.
The identical, 6-3% cage stars—
Pat and Don—were sought by sev
eral universities outside the state
and nearly all in Texas. They led
Coach Joe Turner’s Rangers to the
national Junior College champion
ship a year ago and both were
named to the NJC All-America
team for 1959.
Pat carried a 20.8 scoring aver
age his final season at Kilgore
and averaged 14 rebounds, while
Don had a 20.1 per game mark
and 16 rebounds.
They were the stars at Buna
High as Coach Cotton Robinson’s
team won state titles in 1955, ’56
and ’57, winning 66 consecutive
games. In the 1957 first round
game of the Class AA tourna
ment, Pat set a record with 36
points. Two nights later in the
final game brother Don hit an all-
time high of 51 points.
As freshmen at Kilgore the
twins led the Rangers to a 27-2
record and the NJC title. This past
season Kilgore posted a 20-6 mark.
Two of their teammafes a year
ago went on to star for major col
leges, as Sid Cohen played for the
University of Kentucky and Wil-
mer Cox of Houston played his
junior season for A&M.
V • ./to
TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY
John Gavin in
“A TIME TO LOVE AND A
TIME TO DIE”
Plus ^
Richard Burton in
“BITTER VICTORY”
*
TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY
EVERY SIGHT A FRIGHT!
Sewn Piny by DAVID ODNCAN and #0BE8I BlttS-Sioiy by PABl m\l
Ouecltd by EDWARD lbDWIG'pro*, WARNER BROS.^
Plus
yr WARNER BROS, presents
RICHARD ANNE HERBERT!
T0D0-BAXTER-LONI
Chase a
CROOKED
SHADOW
A
Doi'glas fairtianks. Jr. Production
Ule Stairinq llt)WI0tR WOMinH BROOK
Screenplay by DAVID OSBORN
and CHARLES SINCLAIR
DirecM by
MICHAEL ANDERSON
MOTHERS DAY—MAY 10
She deserves the best.
Make your appointment
NOW!
A&M Coach Bob Rogers calls
the Stanley twins “two of the fin
est players I have ever seen.”
The twins will join Cox, their
former Kilgore teammate, at A&M
next season along with Wayne
Lawrence, Kelly Chapman and El
liott Craig from the varsity and
Lamar, def. Binky Mitchella,
A&M, 3 and 2. Best ball tied.
A1 Jones, A&M, def. James
Wright, Lamar, 5 and 4.
In haste or leisure . . .
HOTARD’S
Cafeteria
11 a.m. - 2:30 p.m.—5 p. m. - 8:30 p.m.
BASEBALL CAPS
Maroon & White &
Other Colors
At
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