f (t ' ■ / • .* •. ii> mi. ti it*••*'*'* • ■' lis§ 8 ' ear olds tr lf?i 'ssday and^ ! a 'm.; andj Tuesj! ' ‘ay from g ln 'sessions > a ^it Theatsi on M fo r |j CADE MOTOR COMPANY lt0i Jm for I, 3r 11 e Pretit iion dll be Jn o. irtheFal), rodudon, by JonPatu, July m, ’■ayersissij 'vorkshp-^ I la >-s raherii, t sssociatd iJj s /’ WeKkss did ‘Tie illiam ustin fors 1 Creativ ^ | Station is School M ation fe«| ion fees in? ses in thet said. “All I in goesto) and buys iphus Olsoi ? donated |i e to help j Creative ft e,” Esten a to try to; rom the i ; any child er may rt{ i, whether I :s or not. ficer’s 125 s Blues tion IS G n JO - 9:30 Make The BIG TRADE With CADE L i prep star Arceneiga inks with Ags Joe Arceneiga, a 6-3 guard from Lenwood High School in Los An geles and Tim Tiechelman, 6-6 transfer from Blinn Junior Col lege and Hutto have become the fifth and sixth players to sign with the Texas A&M basketball team for the 1970-71 season ac cording to basketball Coach Shel by Metcalf. The Aggies had earlier an nounced the signing of four other prospects; Johnny Mayo 6-7 from Taft; Jack Vest 6-8 from Kerr- ville Tivy; Bruce Ott 6-11% from Livingston and Bob McKey 5-10 from Dallas Thomas Jefferson. THE BATTALION Wednesday, May 20, 1970 College Station, Texas Page 7 Mets move back on top BUSIER AGENCY REAL ESTATE • INSURANCE F.H.A.—Veteran* and Conventional Loans ARM A-HOME SAVINGS ASSOCIATION Home Office: Nevada, Mo. 353S Ttefcaa Avr. (in Ridgecrest) 846-3708 ATTENTION SUMMER SCHOOL STUDENTS 7 DAY Summer Board 1st Session $104.40 June 1 - July 10 2nd Session $104.40 July 13 - August 21 And for the First Time 5 DAY Summer Board 1st Session $93.90 2nd Session $93.90 You can’t eat for less anywhere else! ! Very few of the experts picked the New York Mets to repeat as world or even National League or even National League East champs because their hitting was considered to be an over the head sort of thing that came along with the fact that the Mets were in the thick of things and every body had the little extra blood flowing every time they took the field. It was thought that the Mets would have the pitching with the great young staff led by Tom Seaver, Jerry Koosman and Gary Gentry but the hitting would be the downfall. Tuesday night the Mets moved back to the top as they beat the Montreal Expos 7-4 while the Chicago Cubs were being nipped by the Cincinnati Reds 3-1. The two teams are tied in games but the Cubs having play ed two less games have a one percentage point edge on the miracle men from the big city. The Mets win was a typical Met victory of the ’69 variety as they hit five home runs to whip the Expos. Tommy Agee started it all with a leadoff homer in the first and a little later in the inning Ron Swoboda slammed a two-run shot out of Jarry Park. Cleon Jones, Donn Clendenon and Agee homered later in the contest as one of the Mets other pitchers veteran Ray Sadecki tossed a eight-hitter. Yes, the Mets having been getting the pitching that was expected having already got three one-hitters and at one stage three straight shutouts but the hitting could again be the difference if the Mets perform another miracle next fall. In other National League games Tuesday night, it was Philadel phia shutting out Pittsburgh 2-0, Cincinnati over the Cubs 3-1, St. Louis bombed Houston 12-3, Los Angeles defeated San Diego 8-3 and Atlanta bested San Francisco 4-2. In American League play Bal timore trimmed New York 5-1, Boston edged Detroit 5-4, Min nesota clipped Kansas City 5-4, Milwaukee slugged Oakland 6-3 and California shutout the White Sox 3-0. Chris Short helped the Phillies snap a 10 game losing streak by tossing a four hit shutout at the Pirates. Mel Garbo’s seventh inning triple knocked in two runs in the three run inning that pro pelled the Reds and Gary Nolan to 3-1 over the Cubs. Richie Allen poled a three run homer off Astro pitcher Scipio Spinks to highlight a six run fourth inning as the Cards helped rookie Santiago Guzman win his major league debut with a five hitter, 12-3. A three-run homer by Bill Su- dakis and a two-run double by Wes Parker ignited the fire for the Dodgers to defeat the Padres 8-3 as Don Sutton won his sixth game of the year. Milt Pappas, sidelined since April 21 with a fractured finger, tossed a five hitter at the San Francisco Giants and Juan Mari- chal as the Braves won 4-2. The Orioles ended a six game losing streak in Yankee Stadium that dates back to May 4, 1969 with a 5-1 win behind the four hit pitching of Jim Palmer and red hot bat of Frank Robinson. Robinson, who has hit .432 in his last 23 games slammed two doubles and a single to drive in two runs. Tony Conigliaro drilled a bases loaded single in the bottom of the ninth as the Red Sox trimmed the Tigers 5-4 extending the Tigers losing streak to six games. Rod Carew, scored the winning run on a wild pitch in the tenth inning as the Minnesota Twins edged the Kansas City Royals 5-4. The Milwaukee Brewers spark ed by four hits from Tommy Harper clubbed the Oakland Ath letics 6-3. Harper slammed a homer and a double in his four hits for the game and also stole his 17th base tops in the league and his double gives him 12 for the league lead in that department. Rudy May, hurled a two hitter and struck out 11 to pitch the Angels to 3-0 win over the White Sox. Roger Repoz paced the An gel attack with double and a home run. Brown breaks playoff record as Pacers win By JACK STEVENSON Associated Press Sports Writer ANAHEIM (A*) — Roger Brown shot an American Basketball As sociation playoff record 53 points Tuesday night, leading the In diana Pacers to a 142-120 victory over the Los Angeles Stars and a 3-1 lead in their best-of-seven championship series. A crowd of 7,027 in the Ana heim Convention Center saw the former Dayton star hit 18 times from the floor, including three three-pointers from outside the 25-foot range. The 6-foot-5 for ward hit 14 of 16 from the free throw line. The Pacers, champions of the Eastern Division, now return home for a Saturday afternoon televised game which could bring them the ABA crown. The Pacex-s had six players in double figures, Brown, with his 53—which bettered the play off record of 52 set by Rick Barry of Washington this season against Denver—Bob Netolicky, 18; Fred Lewis, 17; Bill Keller, 16; Mel Daniels, 14, and Art Becker, 11. Andy Anderson led the Stars with 20 points while George Stone and Craig Raymond netted 19 apiece. In addition to his high-scoring effort, Brown snared 13 rebounds and contributed six assists. Both clubs showed the effects of three games in as many nights. The Stars, however, committed 27 turnovers, hastening their own downfall. AN ACADEMY RIVALRY AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. ) — Beginning in 1971, the Air Force and Army football teams will meet annually. In five games through last season each has won two and one ended in a tie. FLOWERS Complete Store Baby Albums - Party Goods Unusual Gifts Aggieland Fl6wer & Gift Shoppe 209 University Drive College Station 846-5825 The Chicken House 3 Pc. Order of Chicken 89< FREE DORM DELIVERY 846-4111 MAY 29 WILL BE OUR FINAL DAY OF OPERATION Please pick up your clothes before that time. 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