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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (April 26, 1972)
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THE BATTALION Page 6 College Station, Texas Wednesday, April 2S, Aggies get late-inning win over Rici By JOHN CURYLO Battalion Sports Editor A&M overcame a Rice lead and an eighth inning tie to down the Owls, 8-6, in the third game of their Southwest Conference se ries here Tuesday. The win gives the Aggies a 26-11 record for the year and 9-6 in league play. It was the last home game for A&M, with the weekend series with the Texas Longhorns in Austin slated to finish the season. Jim Langford scored the go- ahead run in the eighth after smashing a double to left. Catch er Tommy Hawthorne tried to sacrifice, but Rice third baseman Bryan Boyne threw it away, al lowing Langford to score and Hawthorne to move to second. A sacrifice fly and a base hit brought Hawthorne in with an insurance run. Center fielder R. J. Englert was two for five, and his hitting streak was extended to 27 games. He has hit safely in 32 of A&M’s 37 games, and he did not play in two of the contests. Englert’s SWC hitting streak now stands at 15 games, tying the all-time conference record set by Mickey Sullivan of Baylor in 1954. Should Englert get a hit in the first game Friday, he will have the longest conference streak in the 57-year history of SWC baseball. If he hits safely in all three Texas games, he will be only the third player in con ference history to get base hits in all the SWC games played by his team in one season. In addi tion to Sullivan, Randy Jackson of the 1946 Texas team hit safely in 14 games that year. Pacing the Aggies at the plate Tuesday wei'e Langford and Karl Bystrom. The little second base- man got two hits, including a double, in four trips to the plate. He scored three runs and drove one in. Bystrom had a double and a triple in three official times at bat, scoring twice and driving one run in. A&M got off to an early lead in the second inning, scoring two runs on a pair of hits and an er ror. Bystrom was safe on an er- ELECT MICHAEL B. CALLIHAM JUSTICE OF THE PEACE ■ Age 34 ■ With wife Peggy Lynn and children Michael Brooks and Sean Patrick, resides at 1110 Marsteller Street, College Station. PRECINCT 7, BRAZOS COUNTY IN THE MAY 6 DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY H Graduate of A&M Consoli dated High School, Univer sity of Texas and Baylor Law School. VOTE FOR THE MAN- Practicing attorney with firm of Goode and Jones. Served as secretary, Bryan- College Station Jaycees; on the Administrative Board of First United Methodist Church; campaign chairman. College Station United Chest; and as a member, Board of Directors, College Station United Chest. • Who is knowledgeable as to complevities of, and changes in, criminal and civil law. • Who is a practicing attorney. • Who pledges fair and speedy disposition of cases brought before Justice Court. The following individuals are among those who endorse and support the candidacy of Michael B. Calliham Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lacey Dr. and Mrs. Leo Berner Dr. and Mrs. A1 Price Mrs. Russell Kohel Walter S. Manning: Ira E. Scott Dr. Stanley H. Lowy Mr. and Mrs. William E. Beach Mrs. Ida Frazer Dr. V. A. Little Dr. and Mrs. Charles Bridgres Dr. and Mrs. Haskell Monroe Dr. and Mrs. Page Morgan . Sr :obi . Roger Dr. William L. Hoover »m 1 Mr. and Mrs. James E. Poore George R. McCarthi Mrs. Mrs. R. E. Snuggs obinson Dr. Roger G. Feldi John F. Robi Mrs. Clara Sandstedt D. A. “Andy” Anderson W. K. Kckles Roy W. Hagler Dave M. Moehrir Ron Woessnr Robert S. Bo Mr. and Mrs. Harry Gooding Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Bonnen R. R. Rhodes tillip B. Go< Joyce Dr. John K. Riggs Dr. Leslie V. Hawkir W. H. Badgett and Rev. Bill Oxley Larry A. Schulze Ernest Langford H. L. Heaton Dr. George ttunze Dr. Cliff Ransdell Dr. and Mrs. Cecil Ryan Mrs. Jim Walla Lane B. Stephenson Dr. W. N. Williamson Mrs. Susie Kuttler Mrs. John Ashton Rev. L. W. Flowers Dr. Gary Halter O. O. Haugen Dr. and Mrs. John B. Beckham A. G. Searcy Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Rogers Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Lancaster Eli Whiteley Mrs. Jim Wallace Mrs. E. B. Reynolds Mr. and Mrs. Dan Davis Mrs. D. A. Anderson V. E. Schember Dr. Edwin S. Ho iwin S. Holdredge Howard L. Vestal Phillip B. Goode A. E. Denton Mr. and Mrs. K. A. Manning Dr. and Mrs. Sidney Brown Bruce N. Clay Col. and Mrs. Robert Melcher Mr. and Mrs. Herb Thompson Ernest M. Long William B. Shanks Willard P. Worley W. Kennedy Upham Mrs. Jeanette Duncan Mr. and Mrs. Tom Williams Dr. Charles L. Leinweber C. I. Miller Dr. Joseph McGraw Dr. and Mrs. IcG Tom W. Rowell Mrs. I. G. Adams Doyle Gougl Mrs. Ruby Morse Dr. R. G. Merrifield The Doyle Gougler Douglas R. Royder Dr. J. D. Lindsay Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Donaldson Dr. Charles C. Gemwt Mrs. R. L. Hunt, Sr. Dr. A. M. “Tony” Sorensen Codie Wells Mr. and Mrs. George Wilcox Dr. R. B. Bossle Bill C. Mo Dr. George Thompson Dr. and Mrs. Carl W. Landiss Dr. ar Philip Steen, Jr. Dr. E. D. McMurry Ir. and Mrs. Allen Madeley Dr. C. C. Doak ttoore Dr. Charley V. Woo tan Frank G. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. George Litton Dr. Walter Varvel rson Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Pledg Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sch Dr. and Mrs. M. R. Calliham Thomas K. Chaney Dr. and Mrs. F. L. Tho . and Mrs. R. P Dr. Jack D. Gray Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Hickerson Dr. Jack D. C Carl E. Patto John Haislet Smith W. A. Neal M. Randolph Robe E. Dr. and Mrs. L. P. Gabbard Dr. and Mrs. Everett E. Jar Bruce R. Miles Maj. Stanley D. Cass r. ant Dr. E. C. Holt Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Gaines Miss Sadie Hatfield Loyd H. Keel Dr. and Mrs. A. B. Wooten Dr. Charles Pinnell Bob J. Griffin Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Hornsey E. V. Walton ’ledger Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schiffhaver rs. K Sam B. Lewis Mrs. Robert O. Reid Mrs. Stuart J. Burns Dr. and Mrs. R. J. Freund Dr. and Mrs. H. P. Hobson Dr. and Mrs. R. B. England Mr. and Mrs. Lee Ion Jones Weddle Carol Haynes Mr. and Mrs. Billy Mac Miller Mr. and Mrs. Joe Woolket Mrs. Emma Wils< Mrs. Emma Wilson Dr. and Mrs. John Quisenberry Mrs. It. J. Dunn lac Dr. and Mrs. Dean Wallace Mr. and Mrs. John Howard Dr. and Mrs. Richard H. Davis, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Richard H. Davis, Capt. and Mrs. James O. Hull Dr. Otto R. Kunze Paid Political Advertising • Committee for Election of Michael B. Calliham, D. A. Anderson, Chairman ror by shortstop Sheldon Kauf man. Langford blasted a long base hit, scoring Bystrom. Lang ford then moved to second on a hit by Hawthorne. Aggie pitcher Jim Wallace attempted a sacri fice, but Rice pitcher Bruce Hen ley threw it away, and Langford crossed the plate. Things quieted down for awhile, but Rice got on the board in the fifth. After one man was out, first baseman Bobby Potter got a broken bat single to short left center. Wallace walked Henley to put runners on first and sec ond. Leadoff man Joe Zylka tapped a grounder between first and sec ond for an infield hit, but Aggie first baseman Butch Ghutzman made a late throw which went into the Rice dugout, scoring Pot ter and moving the runners to second and third. Ted Nowak drove two men in with a hit to center. A force play at second was missed on an error by Langford on a throw which hit the sliding base runner. Steve Janda was brought in to put out the fire, and he started by strik ing out the first batter he faced. The next Owl hit a drive to left, scoring Nowak, but Rice catcher Len Shelby was thrown out at second after overrunning the base. A&M tied it up in the sixth with a pair of unearned runs. Bystrom walked and moved to second when Henley made an er ror on Langford’s grounder. Both runners advanced on an infield out, and a pinch - hit single by Jim Atterbury brought both of them home-to even the score at 4-4. In the seventh frame, Englert got a base hit with one out and moved to second on an infield out. A single by Sandy Bate scored Englert, and a triple by Bystrom brought John Woods, Bate’s pinch runner across for a 6-4 lead. Bystrom was thrown out trying to score on a pitch that got away from Shelby. Rice retaliated by tying the total in the top of the eighth. A base hit by Tommy Lasater and consecutive fielder’s choices by Kaufman and Boyne preceded a single by Donnie Brogna which put runners on second and third with two out. A base hit by Bob by Potter scored both of them to tie it again. Charlie Kelley was brought in as the fourth Aggie pitcher. He struck out a pinch hitter and got the side out in order in the ninth to get credit for the win. Kelley hurled a two-hit shutout against Rice Monday. Bruce Katt, who pitched six innings Monday against the Owls, worked an inning and two thirds, allowing three hits, two runs and walk, striking out one. He was lifted in favor of Kelley in the eighth. Katt and Kelley are expected to go against Texas Friday. A rhubarb occurred in the eighth inning when Ghutzman, running in for a pop fly, was bumped by the batter, Boyne, who was on his way to first base. Ghutzman argued that interfer ence should have been called, but the umpire ruled it a foul ball, since no one touched it in fair territory. In the ensuing argument, Ghutzman went to the Rice bench and challenged an Owl player who had been heckling him. Las ater grabbed Ghutzman, and a slight amount of shoving Aggies from the playing and the stands to the Ricel No scuffle took place, and( man was ejected from the ■I. A six-m fcM this A pair of defensive r! Natioi Skeet T ssouri I [Linn O cheduk 'he teai lomas, T from starting anything. Tit | nn ' S ^ batter, Zylka, hit a longj U ^ rc left. Atterbury went bxi' | t ' the shrubbery growing 01 ^ c ^ u ' fence to make the catch. ’ s * two out, Shelby hit a close to the backstop neii i ren Aggie bench. Hawthornes 100I and with the trickly hit, finally! f' oUr e ' ing and falling to grab it,g the game. Local bowler at LA tourney Ag rifle teams end season William H. Kettler, A&M fresh man from Bryan, will be among 30 of the nation’s top collegiate bowlers in the American College Unions-International tournament this weekend in Los Angeles. Kettler won the expense-paid trip by placing second in the re gional A C U I tournament in Houston last month. The freshman accounting major will be in Los Angeles Saturday, Sunday and Monday. The ACUI tourney, co-sponsored by the American Bowling Congress, will host two bowlers each from 15 ACUI regions. Kettler represents A&M a nd the Texas - Arkansas - Louisiana region. He is the son of Lt. Col. William H. Kettler, 905 Esther, Bryan. A&M men and women rifle teams closed out the year with trophy-winning shooting at San Antonio’s Fiesta matches. The girls placed second with Nancy Jordan and Suzan Can non winning second and third in dividual places. Wayne Jordan, Jimmy Lowe, Ernie Threadgill and Paul Hess took fifth place among 20 competing teams. A&M’s women shot 2,025 be hind a 2,060 by TCU. It was the girls third time to outshoot the University of Texas-Austin men’s team. Mrs. Jordan scored 527 out of 600; Miss Cannon, 516; Kassie Reeves, 496, and Annette Jensen, 486. Men’s scores were 555 by Jor dan; Lowe, 554; Threadgill, 540, and Hess, 539. The University of Houston took the first place men’s trophy with 2,292. My vote for Governor will go to BRISCOE, a man Texans can trust! Expense MIKE WEYNAND Iff 1 By The A J Home r B bre tast Something New — Something Different the dishe [“That’s iill I’ll si kid Aaro elped th St. 1 uesday i Maroon Bippy Gibson, or hittei iddle tch- BEER POPCORN SETUPS SOFT LIGHTS GOOD MUSIC Touch Dancing Nitely "He wi wn,” si Ages 18-80 Welcome * Special — Tuesday Night, Beer 25^ * Special — Thursday Night is Ladies Night All Drinks 1/2 Price For All Ladies 1313 S. College Ave. Bryan 0 take a throw: The he is year, oser to cord of irrently ihind \ lays. In the Smes, tl |ated th ig innini rimmed le New t)iego P Kies D< Montreal jhiladelf San Fra 1 Aaron’ raves i ings. I Phone 822-2204 For Information B: AND ARE PREPARED TO PAY FOR THEM L Our $5.27 Get the most for the least at LOU POTS We will be in our New Location, across from P. 0. — Come and have a cup. “Where Aggies Trade” Our business has been built on friendship and fair dealing. If there’s any way we can be of better service to you, please let us know.