THE BATTALION TUESDAY, MARCH 19, 1974 Page 5 ' HARRY DISHMAN Sales & Service 603 Texas Ave. C.S. across from campus — 846-3316 VTS From apts, lent, tl :ampin for t»i| t ol ij 4. nobilt | SO. Cq An tral iiti &dtapi iity Skt| il Ceult 5 furaij ingcaik >r 1737 PENISTON CAFETERIA OPEN SUNDAY THROUGH FRIDAY BREAKFAST — 7:00 a.m. - 9:00 a.m. COFFEE & PASTRY — 9:00 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. FEATURING Klechka’s Kolaches each morning — A dining treat from old Europe you will never forget. DINNER 11:00 a.m. - 1:15 p.m. SUPPER 4:30 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. “Quality First” Aggie holiday baseball trip successful Perfect 6-0 record gives A&M SWC lead By KEVIN COFFEY Sports Editor Six hours of torrential rain cast an unclimatic ending to the Texas Aggies’ holiday baseball trip. A&M covered three cities and almost 1,400 miles and when the fumes of the Greyhound bus cleared, the Aggies found them selves with a 18-4 record and in first place in Southwest Confer ence play. The rain wiped out a scheduled double header with Pan Ameri can Saturday. The Citrus baseball title and a lot of pride were at stake as the Broncs are toting a 22 game win streak. The wash out gave the holiday title to Pan Am with a 6-0 record. A&M finished the tourney with a 3-1 mark after splitting a dou bleheader with Missouri and sweeping Kansas. A&M also split with St. Mary’s in San Antonio and swept three games from SMU for a 6-0 league mark. Coach Tom Chandler termed the trip “successful” and express ed disappointment in not getting to face Pan Am. “If the national rankings came out tomorrow I feel that both A&M and Pan Am would be rat ed quite high,” said Chandler. “They expected 5,000 fans and it would have been a real experience for the boys.” The Ags kept pounding the ball and finished the trip with a .360 team batting average. Fred Russ led all hitters with 16 hits in 28 6 mile! 846-1® 3UPIfi tmen’i, ta th of tie; > os pm R. Ciii or i!M « A- >:30p,a Sat. . 4.60 lange 'Xchanti ■ators ange 1 most Dme er prici ealer lercharft' lone Parts ice For /an If EA. TEX. «nart'>x' Aggieland Revue A TALENT SHOW Presented By The CLASS OF 76 -HI TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY FEATURING ROCK BANDS INDIVIDUAL MUSICIANS SINGERS COMEDIANS Friday, March 29, 7:30 P.M. RUDDER CENTER AUDITORIUM /\/\ CHILDREN ADULTS UNDER 12 Rated G—Bring The Family $ .75 trip plate appearances. The JC transfer tallied eight RBI, second only to Jim Bratsen’s 11. Jackie Binks racked up two wins to pace the pitching staff. He downed SMU on a five hitter and Missouri one week later while running his record to 5-0 on the year. Clint Thomas also stopped the Mustangs on five hits as A&M pounded the Ponies 20-0. Thom as’ shutout performance dropped his earned run average to a team leading 1.42. Perry Arthur picked up his second win of the season with a 10-5 win over SMU. Arthur has a 2.66 ERA. David Lockett, a freshman from La Grange, picked up his first win as an Aggie 8-2 win over St. Mary’s. The Rattlers handed JC transfer Don Bravenec his first loss in the first game of the doubleheader. Aggie hurlers put together a string of nine complete games over the holidays. Chandler, not wanting to break his conference rotation of Binks, Thomas and Arthur, threw his relievers and younger pitchers at the beginning of Edinburg’s Citrus tournament. Missouri nipped the Ags and Jim Wallace 5-4 after A&M handed the Tigers a 7-1 lashing. Scheumack allowed just two hits in hurling the Aggies to their first tourney win. He suffered strings of wildness as the lanky frosh walked eight batters but three A&M double plays kept all Missouri rallies from flourishing. Russ’ 2 of 2 and three RBI paced the Aggie offensive at tack. A1 Thurmond wielded the big A&M bat in the second game. His first inning home run gave A&M a 2-0 lead but the Tigers picked up three runs in the bot tom of the third to spell Wallace’s defeat. Wallace, A&M’s No. 2 relief pitcher, almost doubled his total innings for the year with 5% in taking his first loss of the season. The Ags, perked up by the im pending contest with Pan Amer ican and some needling from the Kansas players the night before, blasted the Jayhawks 7-2 and 8-2. Binks gave up a season’s high of nine hits to the Jayhawks b\it the Ags pounded out 12. John Woods, who battled a mild slump the entire trip, seemed to break loose with three hits in four ap pearances. Juhl, the only hurler to make two starts on the trip, collected the win in the second game. He held the Birds to six hits and his teammates collected another dozen. Russ continued his hitting streak with a 2 for 3 day, in cluding a home run. Overall the Aggies registered 102 hits in 283 appearances. “We hit the ball real well but we were a little disappointed with some SWC standings Conference AH Games of the pitching,” said Chandler. “We did get to use the warm weather to get into better shape. I hope we just keep improving and swing the bat good. Russ’ .571 average for the trip led all hitters, followed by Thur mond with .421 and Paul Miller at .416. Miller took the team home run lead, his third round tripper of the year. Thurmond hit the first and second four baggers of the year. The Aggies return to confer ence action Friday and Saturday against Arkansas on Kyle Field. Chandler said his league lead ing Aggies “will have to roll up our sleeves and work hard. We can’t just sit on our lead.” Texas A&M Texas TCU Rice Baylor Arkansas Texas Tech Houston SMU L Pet. W L Pet. 0 1.000 18 4 .818 2 .777 24 2 .923 3 .667 14 7 .667 4 .555 12 6 .667 3 .500 12 9 .571 3 .500 8 6 .571 4 .260 4 11 .266 6 .167 7 13 .350 9 .000 5 14 .264 LAST WEEK’S RESULTS Monday — Baylor 4-3, Kearney State 3-0. Tuesday — Kansas State 2-2, Arkansas 1- 1 ; Sam Houston 6-8, Houston 2-7 ; Southeast Oklahoma 8-14, SMU 5-8; Texas 3-13, Texas Lutheran 0-1 ; St Mary’s 3-2, Texas A&M 2-8 ; Rice 5-12, St. Edward’s 0- 4 ; TCU 9-10, Learney State 2-1. Wednesday — Kearney State 7-9, SMU 2- 7. Thursday — Texas A&M 7-4. Missouri 1- 6. Friday — Arkansas 4, SMU 2, Texas Tech 5, Texas 3 ; Rice 4, TCU 0 ; Texas A&M 7-8, Kansas 2-5 ; Baylor at Houston, ppd., rain. Saturday — Arkansas, 11-6, SMU 3-2 ; Texas 5-16, Texas Tech 0-1 ; TCU 9-1, Rice 0-1 ; A&M versus Pan American, cancelled, rain ; Baylor at Houston, ppd. rain. THIS WEEK’S SCHEDULE Monday — Mankato State at Arkansas (2), Baylor at Houston. Tuesday — Washington at Rice (2), Nebraska at TCU (2) ; Baylor at Houston (2). Wednesday — William Jewell at Ark ansas (2) ; Nebraska at SMU (2) ; St. Mary’s at Rice (2). Friday — Arkansas at Texas A&M ; TCU at Baylor; SMU at Texas; Texas Tech at Rice. Saturday — Arkansas at A&M (2) ; TCU at Baylor (2) ;.SMU at Texas (2) : Texas Tech at Rice (2). FOR BEST RESULTS TRY BATTALION CLASSIFIED A VW goes o long way in relieving gas problems — by getting terrific gas mileage It also relieves those little headaches —by needing pints of oil instead of quarts. And not needing antifreeze because of its air-cooled engine. Plus it gets nd of nervous upsets due to owning a new car. With Volkswagen's Owner's Security Blanket, you're provided with the best care any car can have...in sickness and in health. The fact is that Volkswagen can cure lots of problems that most cars can't. Maybe you should take two. RICHARD BARTON VOLKSWAGEN, INC. 1701 South College Ave. Open 8 til 7 Mon.-Fri. 8 til 6 Sat. 822-0146 (.a Ufe ibMh>matpttert -.aiu.tnop jp* t ,? .!*>rn on Ri:. ROAD TRIP BOX AB R SCORE H RBI AVE.* Miller 34 8 14 9 .416 Woods Hacker 25 10 5 2 .328 31 7 10 4 .362 Bate 27 6 9 3 .333 Bratsen. 33 7 10 11 .264 Schraeder 34 10 13 2 .366 Russ 28 11 16 8 .413 Raymer Thurmond Frazier 15 4 6 6 .392 19 17 3 4 8 6 8 6 .481 .341 Hawthorne 12 1 4 7 .414 Buxkamper 3 2 1 0 .222 Hodges 3 1 0 0 .273 PITCHERS IP H R ER W SO ERA* Binks 16 : 14 3 3 4 14 1.62 Thomas 7 5 0 0 3 6 1.42 Arthur 9 8 5 3 2 2 2.66 Lockett 7% 6 2 2 3 6 2.41 Schumack 7 2 1 1 8 5 6.58 Bravenec Wallace 6 7 3 3 2 2 3.12 5 Vs 7 6 4 2 1 3.27 Juhl ♦Season’s ave includes th 7 6 3 3 3 8 2.16 rages ree games with SMU and doubleheaders with St. Mary’s, Kansas and Missouri. challenge you. ^ i JUNIORS and SOPHOMORES 1974 AGGIELAND CLASS PICTURE SCHEDULE MAKE-UPS . . thru March 27 Pictures will be taken from 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. At UNIVERSITY STUDIO 115 N. Main 846-8019 (Bring fee slips) North Gate tv. >• t r' Our Officer Selection Officers are looking for a few good college men— maybe 3 out of 100—who will make good Marine officers. If you’re one of them, we’ll give you a chance to prove it during summer training at Quan- tico, Virginia. Our program is Platoon Leaders Class, PLC. With ground, air and law options. You might even qualify for up to $2,700 to help you through college. But if money is all you’re looking for, don’t waste your time. The challenge is leadership, if you want it, work for it. If you’ve got it, show us. It’s one hell of a challenge. But we’re looking for one hell of a man. Box 38901 Los Angeles, California 90038 ^ MUM »«■ ■■ Hi i The Marines i i i i CP 2.74 Please send me information on Marine Corps Platoon Leaders Class. (Please Print) Name. .Age. Address. City .State _ ■ - I Z I If you are a senior, check here for information on Officer Candidates Class □. (tl H MB ■■ Hi IHi lUt ■■ IMN HU ■■ ■■ ■■ HI ill School. Phone .Class of. .Social Security #.