■ ..V..,-..,-- -v. v v.v. .VV ■'V.- V .• - '• • r- Staples Leads Hitting By JOHN PLATZER Joe Staples, A&M’s senior catcher who has made all-South- west Conference both his sopho more and junior years, is the official 1968 SWC batting cham pion with a .391 mark. Staples’ bat paced Coach Tom Chandler’s squad to a conference leading .296 team mark. This average was 20 points above Texas Christian University’s .276 mark, which was good for second. Texas University, which will represent the conference in the NCAA playoffs, finished third with a .259 average. MSC Table Tennis LoopBeingFormed Harry Teng took first place in the First Annual Table Tennis Tournament in the Memorial Stu dent Center recently. Sam Rehim took the tourna ment’s second spot, while Frank Storey finished third and Jim Cain, fourth. Gold, silver and bronze medals were awarded the first three places in the tournament. At present, a table tennis league for A&M is being formed, with the intent of eventually competing with other Southwest Conference schools. The tables for the competition were in the basement of the MSC. LET THE BALL ROLL Atlanta Brave catcher Bob Uecker, discussing how to catch the knuckleball in the current issue of SPORT Magazine, says: “Just wait until the ball stops rolling. Then pick it up.” Despite playing fewer games than Baylor and Texas Tech, the than Bylor and Texas Tech, the Aggies scored more runs than any other school. A&M runners crossed the plate 115 times during conference play, while TCU scored 100 runs and Texas had 90. Only TCU, with 170 hits, col lected more safeties than the Aggies’ 145 total. TCU had the advantage of 125 extra at-bats. Staples tied for the SWC indi vidual lead in runs with 16, along with Dave Elmendorf and Bob Long, both of A&M, and Dick Turner, Ed Driggers and Jeff Newman of TCU. Elmendorf, the Aggie’s fresh man outfield star, paced the con ference hitters in runs batted in, with 21, a lead of 5 over his near est competitor, Newman. Three Aggies besides Staples topped the .300 mark in SWC play. Elmendorf hit .364, while Terry Dailey hit .340 and Bob Long .328. Bob Arnold just missed the magic level with a .293 average. Rick Schwartz was the Aggies’ busiest hurler in conference, pitching 37.2 innings. During the time he posted a 3-2 record, with a 2.39 earned run average. He recorded 35 strikeouts and 19 walks. Rocky Thompson was the team’s most effective pitcher with a 2.12 ERA while posting a 3-1 record. Dave Benesh had a 2.57 ERA and a 2-0 won-lost mark. The SWC pitchers were paced by Baylor’s John Bevil, who de feated the Aggies twice to take them out of the championship race. Bevil posted a 1.15 ERA while recording a 4-3 record. A&M and TCU were the only conference teams to lose just one series during SWC play. TCU lost all three of its games against the Aggies while Chandler’s squad lost both their contests against Baylor. Texas, which won the conference with a 12-4 record, lost its season series to both TCU and A&M. TCU was second with a 13-5 record and A&M was third at 10-5. Aggies also paced the confer ence in homeruns and triples. Elmendorf, currently partici pating in football spring practice, led the long-ball hitters with five homers, while Long, also cur rently involved in football, was the leader in triples with three. TCU’s Driggers paced the SWC in doubles with seven. k JOE STAPLES The Aggies’ all-SWC catch er, from Houston, finished the 1968 Southwest Con ference baseball season with a .391 mark, tops in the SWC. Aggie Gymnasts Take 4th Place Perry Lee Reeves, a freshman from the Washington, D. C. area, won third place in the long horse competition to pace the Aggie gymnastics team at the Gulf AAU Gymnastics Championship meet in Huntsville last weekend. A&M recorded 65.87 team points to finish fourth behind host school Sam Houston, L. D. Bell High School of Hurst and Odessa College. Sam Houston’s winning point total was 156.81, while Bell had 142.07 and Odessa scored 140.95. “I thought that the team per- Hiiiftitiiim mm CALIFORNIA CREW WINDS UP THIS WAY Varsity shell is swamped near start of 2,000-meter race of Redwood City, Calif., and Cali fornia cre\.men struggle in water. Stanford crew, the opponent, managed to negotiate the full distance with four men rowing, four bailing, while California crewmen, rescued aboard press boat, watched. No winner was declared. (AP Wirephoto) formed well under the circum stances,” Lindy Baer, coach and club sponsor, said. The circumstances concerned A&M having only one performer entered in four events, while each of the other schools had a number of different entries in each event. Besides the four teams, a number of individual performers from throughout the Southwest were entered in the two-day tounament. Reeves took home the third-place trophy in his event by chalking up an 8.56 score out of a possible 9.5. Besides the long horse, Reeves competed in the vaulting, parallel bars and floor exercise events. The AAU championship was the second official competition of the year for the young Aggie team. They lost a dual meet with Texas earlier in the season and have participated in several joint meets with other schools in prac tice sessions. Club president is Mickey Strat ton, who competed in the six international events: parallel bars, side horse, floor exercises, horizonttal bars, rings and vault ing. Other members entered in the Huntsville meet were Rex Strat ton in the parallel bars, Barrett Smith on the still rings, Patrick Scott in the floor exercises and tumbling and Bill Wood on the trampoline. The lone female on the team, Evelyn Marshall, competed in the balance beam and floor exercise events. Baer, an instructor in the A&M Physical Education Department, announced the club will sponsor a gymnatic clinic in G. Rollie White Coliseum this summer. The program has been formed and dates and arrangements for the summer program will be an nounced later. THE BATTALION Thursday, May 16, 1968 College Station, Texas Page 9 READ BATTALION CLASSIFIEDS Littler And Player Tops At Colonial FORT WORTH, Tex. _ Gene Littler and Gary Player clipped two shots from par with 68s Wednesday and shared first place in a pro-am preceding the Colonial National Invitation Golf Tournament. Littler, eagling the tough par 4 seventh by holding a three-iron from 185 yards out, tacked to gether a 33-35 over the par 35- 35-70 Colonial course. Player had a 34-34-68 and said the greens were “playing tough” but otherwise the course was in beautiful shape. He and Littler won $462.50 each. Former Colonial champion Billy Casper was the only other player among the 60 pros partici pating in the pro-am to break par, carding a one-under-par 69. He earned $375. COLLEGE GRADUATES CONGRATULATIONS Now, HOUSTON is the place to go. So, for that challenging and profitable career position, try “HOUSTON’S EMPLOYMENT HEADQUARTERS” Shamrock Colleens EMPLOYMENT SERVICE TEMPORARY SERVICE Visit or write either office Downtown — 1200 Travis St. Rm. 2334 Southwest — 3411 Richmond Ave. Rm. 103 Call 822-1441 Allow 20 Minutes Carry Out or Eat-In THE PIZZA HUT 2610 Texas Ave. C&S Sales £ Service The Radiator Shop 1308 CAVITT BRYAN, TEXAS 822-3298 Major Company Credit Cards Accepted. Same Day Service 15% Discount With This Ad. Ride WIDE with Tire$fone SUPER SPORTS 100 HIGH PERFORMANCE NEW TREADS RETREADS ON SOUND TIRE OOOIES ON ON Y0UN OWN TINES AS LOW AS your car. 1 yuui v-ai . WHITEWALLS] 1 Other sizes proportionately I NO MONEY DOWN Take months to pay! 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