i- • - -• - : COMMENT OF A McMAHON GRADUATE In March, 1971 I graduated from McMahon College and immediat ely accepted a position as a Court Reporter. Currently I am making $13,500 per year. For a fascinat ing career that really pays off, I suggest you look into Court Re porting by contacting McMahon College, 2601 Main, Houston, Texas 77002. Call collect 713/228-0028’ Lorene B. Brooks Re-Elect B. H. DEWEY, JR. (The People’s Judge) Justice of the Peace, Precinct 4, Place 1 (All Bryan Voting Boxes except Travis & Bonham) BRYAN, BRAZOS COUNTY “The Peoples Court" Subject to the Democratic Primary Saturday, May 6, 1972 GRADUATE—Bryan High School, Texas A&.M University, University of Texas Law School LAWYER—Practicing law in Brazos Cbunty since 1941 MEMBER—Traffic Courts Study Committee VETERAN—41 months service in World War II LEGISLATOR—1953-1962 JUSTICE OP THE PEACE—Since 1965 “An Aggie & friend of Aggies" YOUR VOTE AND INFLUENCE WILL BE APPRECIATED Pd. Pol. Ad Page 4 College Station, Texas Tuesday, May 2, 1972 THE BATTALIlfHE B> , Englert wins with arm rather than ba By JOHN CURYLO The Aggies battled the Texas Longhorns in the late innings of all three games in Austin last weekend, but only a throw to the plate by A&M center fielder R. J. Englert saved the Aggies’ lone victory, a 7-6 win in Friday's nightcap. Umpires who admittedly were not calling corner strikes caused A&M to use 11 pitchers, only two of them twice, in the season finale. Texas used nine, two of them twice, also. There were 40 walks in the 25 innings played, with only 23 batters going out on strikes. Mike Markl was probably the biggest offensive thorn in the side of the Aggies. The senior second baseman sealed his bid for another berth on the all-con ference team by getting seven hits in 11 times at bat. He walked four times and scored three runs, in addition to getting credit for five putouts and 12 assists. In the opening game in Clark Field, noted for its center field cliffs and a pair of walls in left field just above a slight rise and just short of the fence, Texas scored a run in each of the first two innings to get ace Ron Roz- novsky an early lead. A walk to 5-3 shortstop Ama dor Tijerina and a double by Markl to the base of the moun tain in center field produced a run on David Chalk’s fielder’s choice. Bruce Katt toughened up, striking out the next two batters to end the inning. In the second, Terry Pyka put one above the cliffs, and while Aggie outfielders were scaling the eight-foot protrusions, Pyka went to third with a triple. A sacrifice fly by Roznovsky brought him home. In the sixth, Carroll Lilly walk ed on four pitches after two men were out. Englert got his only hit of the series, a 370-foot homer over the wall in right-center. The blast extended his hitting streak to 28 season and 16 conference games. The Longhorns came back in the bottom half of the inning with a walk to Bill Berryhill, a single by Ken Pape and a double by Steve Clancy. A fly to center by Roznovsky brought Clancy rum bling to the plate. Englert’s peg nailed him, but catcher Tommy Hawthorne dropped the ball after making the tag. The run didn’t matter, as Roznovsky got the Aggies out with only a base on balls in the seventh. Charlie Kelley ended his career at A&M on the happy note of the series, giving up five hits and four runs in five innings of the nightcap. The right hander hit two doubles and a single for three runs batted in. His hit output was the best of the weekend, with Jim Hacker being the only other Aggie to get three hits. Kelley was used as a pinch hitter in Sat urday’s game, and Hacker played the entire series. A&M scored twice in the sec ond when one of Kelley’s two baggers scored Gene Reinarz and a sacrifice fly by Butch Ghutz- man brought Mike Frazier home. The Aggies added two more in the fourth when another double by Kelley pushed Frazier and Jim Langford in. Texas got a pair in the third on a single by Markl and a triple by Chalk which ended up on the plateau in left field. Chalk scored on an infield out. In the fourth, a pair of walks preceded by a strikeout and another walk. A throw to third by Frazier after Look at this line-up of □DOftOG'SSft * ^ i . Wk gj a II 1 ■ Whatever your savings goal, there’s a savings plan for you at Bryan Building & Loan! Check the rate chart here, to see how much more money earns at BB&L! There's more going for you at Bryan Building & Loan! Passbook accounts compounded, paid quarterly 0% Annual yield 5.09^ 1“ 1/0/ 90-day passbook *1 r" 0/ 0/4/° Annual yield 0.3 BB&L compounds interest continuously on Certificates, for more earning power! ANNUAL INTEREST RATE ANNUAL YIELD WITH CONTINUOUS COMPOUNDING 3 month to 1 year Certificates ($1,000 min.) 5X% 5.39% 1 year Certificates ($1,000 minimum) 5 3 /4% 5.92% 2 year Certificates ($5,000 minimum) 0% Amounts to mx—y-Kx;, ; x BRYAN BUILDING & LOAN ASSOCIATION 2800 Texas Ave. 114 South Bryan 713/822-0181 Free S&H Green Stamps One stamp gift per account holder per year per Federal regulations SaveMobile: FRANKLIN MADIS0NVILLE CALDWELL NORMANGEE the strikeout nailed Pyka, who was attempting to steal. Tijerina singled to left to drive in one run before Markl walked. Chalk singled in another, and Kelley got John Langerhans to ground out to first with the bases loaded. Langerhans holds the Texas record for career home runs. A&M scored in the fifth on a sole home run by Sandy Bate to the same spot as Englert hit his blast, but the Longhorns got an other run to even it again in the sixth. Steve Janda, pitching in relief of Kelley, walked Langer hans with the bases full to push the tying run across. The two teams traded runs in the seventh with A&M’s Karl Bystrom knocking a drive to that same place, right-center, for an other round tripper. Texas used a walk, a sacrifice and a wild pitch to set up a run on Clancy’s double. The Aggies came back in the eighth with an inside-the-park homer by Charlie Jenkins, who took over the mound chores from Janda in the seventh. Jenkins hit a long fly which stayed on the ledge underneath the 363-foot marker in right-center. Jenkins ran in with the winning run while the Steer outfielders found their footholds to go up the cliff and attempt in vain to throw him out. The Longhorns got it going in the ninth after Jenkins struck out Ken Pape and got Clancy to fly out to center. Pinch hitter Gary Erskine singled and Tijerina walked. Markl hit a line drive single to center, but Englert nailed Erskine at the plate with a throw which hit near the mound Ags break string with medley finish Coach Charlie Thomas came back somewhat pleased with his Aggie track team after a week end at the tough Drake Relays. In a season marred with in juries, freak incidents, and just hard luck, the Aggies looked like a team to be reckoned with at the SWC meet coming up May 22-23. A&M’s sprint medley relay team of Willie Blackmon, Horace Grant, Donny Rogers and Alan Swagerty copped fifth place in a time of 3:18.5, while tough luck hit the mile relay team, whose year’s best time of 3:09.2 was disqualified when Grant for got a new NCAA lane rule that was in effect for the first time this year. The Aggies have three weeks until the conference meet in which to heal injuries of Scott Jones and Marvin Mills, among others. Coach Thomas and the track team travel to El Paso this week end to compete with Texas and Texas-El Paso before returning to College Station for a quad rangular meet with Baylor, SMU and TCU on the 12th and 13th of May. Thomas feels in order for the Aggies to have an outside chance of beating favorites Texas and defending champion Rice in the SWC meet, all injuries must re spond to treatment. and got to Frazier with fivi to spare for an easy tag on The Aggies were behind >11 Saturday, with Texas np twice in the first on a wait three base hits. In the inning, three more singles x another run. The Longhorn one in the fifth on a solot run by Berryhill, and they > to the total in the sixth Bate fell on the rise in left( while trying to guess ontheli ing spot of a high fly by J1 The double drove in Tijerina the fifth Steer tally A&M got two runsinthefo on two singles, a walk, afielj choice and an infield out. Ai to Langford, a wild pitch two-out single by Ghutzttat it momentarily in the filth the two Texas runs in the > two frames made it 5-3 h disaster and lack of controlsii in the eighth. Four consecutive walksas fice fly, a single, a douhlt, infield out and an error Texas five runs on only twoi and 10 Longhorns went to plate and four Aggies tookl turns on the mound. A&M scored three timeaii ninth, while Langerhans lie his versatility by pitching el tively for the Longhonn, though he tired in that in walking the first two bate A pinch hit double by Irei Mike Schraeder brought ia run before Kelley and Ghiita struck out. Lilly drove twoi in with a single to left, bull gerhans returned to the m to end the game by strikky Englert. , The series gave A&M a^ record, the second highest of wins for an Aggie teams year. An 11-7 conference netted A&M a fourth place finish. FOR BEST RESULTS TRY BATTALION CLASSIFIED ie team:: [erence ’ I ,h place hi NOW OPEN! 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