X, Toronto Tops Montreal For Stanley Cup Title X. •* 2D j y pas !t ; new i iE D >agn: ;ed at ah % has •y $5«o f thisi, budget e the eai lotential pace foil! rUNITl Engravers: active, or; s or prod* Jold Prinl- il ic Lanin igrapti, L rent, Herr Space, ■ n, gadget ture or n r mine. 8 i and ME essful iw ide) i»* luipment n ither prod* Motel, Mi FANCY FOOTWORK BY MANTLE Mickey Mantle, now a first baseman for the Yankees, dives to get Reggie Smith, Boston Red Sox, after fielding bunt at Boston, Mass. New York won, 7-5. (AP Wirephoto) iates •hoc Hicks, 8 ^ Hicks ( a, Tex,, l he Air Ui ficer Sdi! one of); ; NEW YORK <£>>—It may be ed the I bit early for Tommy Davis to ficer trail start thinking about a third Na- I. He ii tional League batting title but the cor® the trade that sent him from Los Angeles to the New York Mets seems to be doing him a world of Off-Season Trades Looking Good In Early C ompetition itor, is It ^ ood- ittle R« Don Mincher and Jimmie Hall of the California Angels, Maury Wills of Pittsburgh, Jim Landis and Ed Mathews of Houston, Roger Maris of St. Louis and Cap Petersen of Washington are among the others who appear to have profited from last winter’s deals. Davis had a .419 average, third highest in the NL, through Mon day's games. He had 13 hits in Major League Standing National League 11 letii ^ MaM ^ its OH* or Ro«« ISlil 3HC0. II on terriW' «(!• •S’, . APP?J An dr#* .lion* I • C °n ilPfl W. L. Pet. G.B. [ St. Louis 8 3 .727 Vz Cincinnati 10 4 .717 Phila’phia 7 4 .636 iy 2 Atlanta 6 4 .600 2 Chicago 5 5 .500 3 Pittsburgh 4 5 .444 3% New York 5 7 .417 4 Los Angeles 4 7 .364 4y 2 San Fran. 4 7 .364 4y 2 Houston 3 10 .231 ey 2 American League W. L. Pet. G.B. New York 6 4 .600 Baltimore 7 5 .583 Detroit 7 5 .583 Boston 6 5 .545 Vz California 7 6 .538 Vz Chicago 6 6 .500 1 Cleveland 5 6 .455 iy 2 Kansas City 5 7 .417 2 Minnesota 4 6 .400 2 Washington 4 7 .364 2% 31 times at bat. The 27-year-old outfielder, troubled by leg in juries in recent seasons, won the league batting title while with the Dodgers in 1962 and 1963. Mincher and Hall are giving the Angels the long ball they ex pected when the two and pitcher Pete Cimino were acquired from Minnesota for pitcher Dean Chance. Mincher, a first baseman, and Hall, an outfielder, each have hit three homers. Their averages are impressive too, Mincher’s .357 and Hall’s .304. Wills, sent to Pittsburgh from Los Angeles for Bob Bailey and Gene Michael, is hitting .371 with 13 hits and two stolen bases. Landis has been a pleasant sur prise for the Astros. He has 10 hits in 29 tries for a .345 mark. Cincinnati Loses League Lead In 6-1 SAN FRANCISCO (A 5 ) — Juan Marichal scattered seven hits for his first victory of the season and Jim Hart supplied the power as the San Francisco Giants trimmed Cincinnati 6-1 Tuesday night, snapping the Reds’ win ning string at five games. Marichal, a 25-game winner last year but a loser in each of his first three 1967 starts, breezed past the Reds. A sixth-inning homer by Tony Perez spoiled the Giant ace’s shutout bid. Hart belted a two-run home run off Rers’ rookie Gary Nolan in the first inning, and also sin gled and scored the first run in a three-run sixth inning rally that chased the 18-year-old right hander. Cincinnati 000 001 000—1 7 3 San Fran. 210 003 OOx—6 7 0 BUILD YOUR LIBRARY AT LOU’S EXPENSE... ICE .TV ired # D | ei 3l0j| j.iPJ 2000 PAPJERBACKS 50% OFF OUT OF DATE TEXTBOOKS 95c each 10 for $7.50 iSHS Loupot's north gate He was obtained from Cleveland for Lee Maye. Mathews also is off to a good start with the Astros after 15 years as a Brave in Boston, Mil waukee and Atlanta. He has a .289 batting average with one homer and seven RBI. A hitless performance in seven trips in Monday night’s game against Los Angeles dropped Maris’ batting slate to .318. How ever, he is doing considerably bet ter than third baseman Charley Smith of the New York Yankees, for whom he was traded. Smith is hitting only .189. Peterson, who played in 89 games for San Francisco last season, is responding to regular work in Washington. He has 11 safeties in 38 times at bat for .289. The Dodgers’ Ron Hunt is hit ting .270 and Michael is at .273. Bailey, however, is way down at .119. Hunt was obtained in the Tommy Davis deal. Several other players involved in winter transactions are having a rough time getting started. They include Clete Boyer of At lanta, who has a .174 batting av erage, Bill Robinson of the Yanks .158, Don Bosch of the Mets .139 and Bernie Allen of the Senators, .167. TORONTO )_Bob Pulford’s goal at 8:26 of the second sudden- death overtime period gave To ronto a 3-2 victory over Montreal Tuesday night and a 2-1 lead in their Stanley Cup final playoff series. The fourth game in the best- of-7 series will be played in To ronto Thursday night. Pulford’s goal, with assists from Pete Stemkowski and Jim Pappin, came after the clubs had battled through two scoreless periods with Montreal’s rookie goalie Rogatien Vachon and To ronto’s 42-year-old Johnny Bower turning away shot after shot. Montreal had fought back to a 2-2 tie with just &0 seconds left in the second period on John Ferguson’s goal, which came off Stemkowski’s stick just after a faceoff to the left of Bower. Pappin had given the Leafs a 2-1 edge at 10:34 of that period, taking a pass from Tim Horton before Montreal could clear the puck out of a scramble. The period was marked by rugged play and both Brian Conacher of Toronto and Claude Larose of Montreal drew five minute penalties for fighting. Larose suffered a cut during the scramble, which needed seven stitches. He remained in the game, however. The opening score came with just 2:27 gone in the first period when with Horton in the penalty box, Jean Beliveau took a pass at the goal from Bobby Rousseau and pushed it in for a 1-0 Mon treal lead. But with Ferguson off the ice Philadelphia Pro Dynasty SAN FRANCISCO (A?)—“You have to look to the 76ers for the next few years,” declared Coach Bill Sharman of San Francisco’s Warriors. “They will be tough to beat.” So a Philadelphia dynasty pow ered by 7-foot 1-inch Wilt Cham berlain looms on the professional basketball picture. The 76ers, having ended the reign of Bos ton’s Celtics, took the National Basketball Association crown by beating San Francisco 125-122 Monday night. for interference, the Maple Leafs mounted a power play that suc ceeded when Stemkowski tipped in a sizzling drive from just in side the blue line by Larry Hill man at 8:39. The third period and the first overtime were played at a slower pace than the first two, with neither team able to capitalize on several good shots at the goal. A shot from the open by Ron Ellis of the Leafs shortly after the five-minute mark of the third period hit the post and rebounded away. In the first overtime period. J. C. C. Tremblay and Henri Richard gave Bower some trou ble, but the Toronto goalie kept knocking the puck away. The Leafs mounted a two-on- one attack midway through the period, but, with Vachon sprawled on the ice, Bob Pulford fired the puck over the net. Yvan Cournoyer narrowly missed a shot after faking Bower out of position and Dave Keon hit the post in a scramble around the Montreal goal in which Vachon again fell to the ice. THE BATTALION Wednesday, April 26, 1967 College Station, Texas Page 5 BREAKTHROUGH IN BASKETBALL Bill Cunningham (32) of the Philadelphia 76ers charges after a rebound under hands of Nate Thurmond (42) and Rick Barry (24) of San Francisco Warriors in fifth game of National Basketball Association finals in Philadelphia, Pa. San Fvancisco won, 117-108. Philadelphia now leads in games by 3-2. (AP Wirephoto) Mtnlci/lvt Supply 'piotuAe pAcwiat- •TtS SaColUj# Av*'5ry«K,7Wuj PALACE NOW SHOWING SEVEN *STS/RAT STARK in «ssocmii min PARAMOUNT PICTURES pkscnis OhlteillWDact Mamma's HungYouiln The Close) And Tm Feelin'So Sad «RICHARD QUINE moucncift ncMncoi.or a nummt hctik NOW SHOWING Elke Sommers In ‘DEADLIER THAN A MALE” QUEEN LAST NITE 7:15 - 9:15 “LOVE STATUE” UH N UfcOI R I i Xl Alls VRI l STARTS TONITE 7:00 P. M. Robert Stack Elke Sommers In “THE CORRUPT ONES” CIRCLE TONIGHT AT 7:00 P. M. Ian Fleming’s “POPPY IS ALSO A FLOWER” ‘WOMAN OF STRAW” &(& We/fcnm 0he i HIS EXCELLENCY THE AMBASSADOR by Erico Verissimo This major novel probes underneath Washington’s red carpet to explore the private lives of diplomats, ambassadors, congressional dignitaries and others within the Capitol’s disarming, charming and charmed “inner circle.” Keyed to the tempo of today’s headlines, the book encompasses two worlds—Washington, where social suavities often disguise ruth less politicking, and El Sacramento, a South American country wracked by revolutionary chaos. Readers will be fascinated by the central figure, Don Gabriel Alvarado, El Sacramento’s Ambassador to the U.S. A man of enormous physical power and insatiable sexuality, he is encircled by a constellation of characters which include a beautiful mistress, a homosexual Second Secretary, a Minister Counselor who has lost his faith in God, a cold American beauty and a young attache who has still preserved his political ideals. Alvarado, in Washington seeking arms and money for a counter revolution within his own country, finds betrayal, passion and violence. The action avalanches to a climax as jolting as a pistol crack. Descriptions of El Sacramento’s internal havoc give readers a keyhole view of the ax-and-whip machinations which mold a dictatorship. L h Iv % e Nlor t£ N \ 0 .VOVKL HV VbS&o His Excellency the Ambassador has already won pre publication acclaim from the critics: “Verissimo has done more than write a novel with a colorful background. The fiction is absorbing, but the real import here is the insight he brings to the tensions at work in many Latin American countries . . . Mr. Verissimo has written a meaty novel!” . . . Publishers’ Weekly “Verissimo can handle this passionate mixture of the personal and political; he has undoubtedly lived in this kind of world. The novel . . . gives a dramatic tale sharp focus.” . . . Virginia Kirkus’ Bulletin Publisher: The Macmillan Company, New York, N.Y. 448 pages, price $6.95. lavailable now at The Exchange Store ‘Serving Texas Aggies since 1907”