, 1 EVERBODY GETS INTO THE ACT ITangle of three St. Louis Cardinals occurs in 7th inning at New York while chasing foul ore'deadto )a ^- 1° sequence starting at left, Orlando Cepeda, left, St. Louis first baseman, and right -- pubii* fielder Roger Maris merge with second baseman Julian Javier, center. Top right, nobody ?ets the ball in flurry of elbows and gloves; bottom right, ball rolls away. Action occurred ! NOTICE students andine fe Is seme* ation quasi nlesc are urfd flee beta mation lot ested rsc ILLEGE Joctoral Re >phy in * ition of Leaves s malvaci J NitroneH Sciences Bi dies llege loctoral K iy in Mec j rol f° r ^ Hall, I lies l 1966 At nay pick :: Publicity 25, tbere,' Richard t l indidates' requireC .e is urfK his stats must 3y, Roo* for vaoj i grade?' e.TheH ce M®) * 'AGE -nitur« *nces in game which St. Louis won, 3-2. (AP Wirephoto) Major League Results NEW YORK <#>—Ed Charles collected four straight singles, in tituling one that put New York ahead to stay, as the Mets de feated Los Angeles 5-2 behind the five-hit pitching of Tom Seaver onday night. The crowd of 15,250, the smallest to see the Dodgers in New York since they left Brook- yn, watched the Mets end a five- ;ame losing streak. Charles’ first-inning single put Ed Kranepool in position to score on the first of Tommy Davis’ hree singles. Then in the fifth inning, after Ron Fairly’s second-inning homer tied the game, Kranepool doubled ,nd Charles sent him home with another single. ★ ★ ★ HOUSTON >—Tommie Sisk litched a four-hitter and Willie Stargell hit a two-run homer, ending the Pittsburgh Pirates to a 3-1 victory over Houston Mon day night. On his way to his second vic tory, Sisk fanned eight and walked only two. Sisk has lost ;hree. The Pirates started with an unearned run in the third when Bob Aspromonte’s throwing error on Roberto Clemente’s grounder enabled Matty Alou to score from second. Alou had reached second on a bunt single and an infield out. Stargell’s homer, following Clemente’s single, made it 3-0 in the sixth. The Astros struck for a run in their sixth on Ron Davis’s triple and Joe Morgan’s single. ★ ★ ★ BALTIMORE OP)—Rookie Tom Phoebus of Baltimore held the New York Yankees hitless for six innings, wound up wtih a two- hitter and coasted to a 7-0 vic tory Monday night behind the early inning long-ball attack of the Orioles. Steve Whitaker’s slicing single to left-center, leading off the seventh, was the first hit off the 25-year-old Baltimore right hander who struck out 11. The Orioles, winning seven of their last nine decisions, clouted three home runs and a triple in the first two innings off loser Fred Talbot. Frank Robinson started the barrage in the opening inning, clouting No. 10 wtih a runner aboard. ★ ★ ★ PHILADELPHIA (A>) — Jim Hart cracked a two-run, tie breaking double in the ninth inning and Gaylord Perry pitched a five-hitter, leading the San Francisco Giants to a 3-1 victory over Philadelphia Monday night. Perry blanked the Phillies over the final eight innings to gain his first victory since April 13. Bob Schroder started the Giants’ winning rally in the ninth with a lead-off single against Philadelphia’s Jim Sun ning. After Tom Haller walked, Willie Mays bunted to the mound and Haller was safe at second on Bunning’s wide throw. Willie McCovey fouled out, but Hart lashed a double over center fielder Tony Gonzalez’s head, scoring Schroeder and Haller to break the tie. Bunning gave up only two hits until the ninth, but one of them was a towering seventh inning homer by McCovey that tied the game 1-1. Eagle Car Ruled Legal At Indy 500 INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. ) _ Austrian Jochen Rindt’s American Eagle car was ruled legal Mon day and that apparently ended the preliminary arguments over ex otic new vehicles entered in the 51st 500-mile auto race May 30 at the Indianapolis Motor Speed way. Rindt’s car, only one of the 33 starters with a semi-stock en gine, was weighed under the per sonal direction of chief steward Harlan Fengler and referee Don Cummins, who reported it tipped the scales at 1,370 pounds — 20 over the minimum. =(J to I .partm 3 CO. — BrJ ll | Am ic n -braB rigi®. srvw the nation’s largest" Tcollege marketing 1 [firm needs an enter- |prising,| am bi-l t i o n s studentlto rep-l resent |over a^dozen ^nationally- know fT" ^products on this 1 campus. Gain] invalu ness adver- - i n g , -able experi-l tisi ng.| and bu s i - -nee in [market [Public relations. JSarn over 8 1000. ’or information ’ational Student Marketing Service l.00 Pennsylvania Avenue. N.W Washington. D C. 20006 NEED CASH Money Gone After 9 Months of School? Then see us for a personal loan. Take advantage of our prompt, confidential loan service now. UNIVERSITY LOAN COMPANY 317 Patricia (North Gate) College Station, Texas Telephone: 846-8319 LET US ARRANGE YOUR TRAVEL... ANYWHERE IN THE U. S. A. ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD Reservations and Tickets For All Airlines and Steamships — Hotel and Rent Car Reservations Tickets Delivered —Call 822-3737— Robert Halsell Travel Service 1016 South College Avenue Bryan Russell, Hopkins THE BATTALION Tuesday, May 23, 1967 College Station, Texas Page 7 Miss Smith Wins Tournament HOUSTON (^) — Amateur Arthur Russell of Lake Jackson, Tex., and pro Mark Hopkins of Texas City had 146 cards Monday in two trips over the par-72 Brae Burn Country Club course to lead eight local qualifiers moving to sectional play for berth in the U. S. Open at Springfield, N. J., next month. Russell was 72-74 and Hopkins, 73-73 on the 6,423-yard layout. Following at 147 were pros Tony Marmion of Houston, 75-72, and Jackson Bradley of Conroe, Tex., 74-73, and amateurs Randy Geiselman of Houston, 73-74, and John Grace of the University of Houston, 76-71. Pro Alvin Odom of Galveston was 72-71 to stand alone at 148. Don Collett, a Houston pro, carded a 78-71-149 to tie with pro Buddy Weaver of Lake Jack- son, 75-74. Collett won the play off for the eighth spot and Weav er was designated alternate. BEAUMONT ) _ Marilyn Smith came back with a par 70 Monday at Bayou Din Golf Club and won the $10,000 Babe Zaha- rias Women’s Open Tournament with 210. Miss Smith was the leader after the first round Friday but took a 73 in Sunday’s second round and was one stroke back of Kathy Whitworth going into Monday’s final 18 holes. Satur day’s round was rained out. Miss Whitworth dropped to a four-over-par 74 Monday and settled for a second-place tie at 213 wtih Shirley Englehorn who had a 70. Miss Englehorn won the tour nament with a 209, one under par, in 1966. Par for this year’s tournament was 212 since the second round was played only on the front round because rain had flooded the back side. Miss Smith had four consecu tive birdies on the front nine Monday and held a five stroke lead going into No. 15. She “then got too conserva tive,” she said, and bogeyed the next three holes before parring 17 and 18. “I really wanted to win this Clay Cools Heels On Traffic Rap MIAMI, Fla. UPl — Former heavyweight champion Cassius Clay, who faces a possible five- year prison term if convicted of draft evasion, cooled his heels in the Dade County Jail for an hour Thursday on a traffic charge. Clay was arrested as he drove his 1967 Cadillac along a Miami street with his chauffeur at his side. He accompanied the ar resting officer to jail without incident. tournament,” Miss Smith said after collecting her $1,500 first place money. “Babe and I were good friends and she meant a lot to me. Without Babe Zaharias the ladies tour wouldn't be as big as it is today.” Miss Whitworth shot a 69 in Sunday’s rain-hampered round but had trouble with her irons Monday. However, the $1,100 she received boosted her into first placein official money winnings for the year. Sandra Haynie, who was in third place going into the final round, took an 81 and finished 10th. Sybil Griffin had the low round Monday with a 68 and placed fifth with 217. She was in 16th place going into the round. Carol Mann was fourth with 216 and Mickey Wright had a 75 Monday to take sixth place with 219. REWARD. TOP CASH FOR USED ROOKS at SHAFFERS north gate Pre-vacation offer. ; r* * ■J**- All the travelers checks you want—up to $5,000 worth— for a fee of just $2^ At banks everywhere, during May only. 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