The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 13, 1969, Image 7

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    E BATTALION
Thursday, March 13, 1969
College Station, Texas
Page 7
4ggie Height Vs. Drake Speed In Manhattan Tonight
By JOHN PLATZER
The Aggies will match their
(eight and muscle against the
peed and quickness of the Drake
lulldogs tonight at 7 p.m.
Coach Shelby Metcalf’s Aggies
reached the tournament by virtue
of an 81-66 victory over Trinity
University in Fort Worth Satur
day while Drake sacked up the
Missouri Valley Conference
crown with a 77-73 win over
Louisville. The other two teams
meeting in the Midwest Regional
will be Colorado and Colorado
State in the Kansas State Field
House.
At a press conference in Man
hattan’s Ramada Inn last night,
Coach Metcalf rated Drake as
the best team the Aggies have
played this season and “among
the five best clubs in the nation.”
“We are real concerned with
Drake,” Metcalf said.
No. 1
In College Sales
“We have not played anyone
that quick or fast and I’m sure
that their speed presents more
problems for us than our height
will for them.”
Maury John, Drake head coach,
said his team would “have real
problems with A&M on the back-
boards.”
“We made a mistake,” John
joked at the press dinner. “We
showed A&M’s team roster to
our boys and they’re still in Kan
sas City. Now we have to con
vince them to come out tomor
row.”
The MVC’s coach of the year
last season conceded that al
though his team is comparatively
small, “they jump pretty well
and move pretty well.”
COFFEE LOFT
Friday, 14th: 8 p. m. to 12 p. m.
Folk singrer. Jack Abbott
Do it yourself.
Table talk starters.
Saturday, 15th: 8:30 p. m.
Panel, “Alternatives to Bureaucracy”
Dr. George Rice, Management, on his
forth coming book about democratic
organizations. Other panelists will respond.
Wednesday, 19th
Encounter Lunch
Dr. Wendell Landman, “How do you like
your steak?”
Fidelity Union
Life
Insurance Company
303 College Main 846-8228
Willie McCarter, the 6’3” sen
ior, was the only Drake player
to be named to either the first
or second team All-MVC squad.
McCarter, however, was named
the loop’s most valuable player.
— BATTALION CLASSIFIED
WANT AD RATES
On* day 14 p«r word
word each additional day
Minimum charge—50tf
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um
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DEADLINE
4 p.m. day before publication
FOR SALE
Complete Air Force mess dress uniform,
immer and winter. 42 long-. $75. 846-
55. 84t3
1966 Honda 160cc Scrambler. Silver and
ack. Very good condition. $335. 845-
10 after 5. 83t4
Yamaha 250cc 5-speed tachometer. In-
ides windshield, rack cover. Excellent
ndition. $390.00 846-2372. 82t4
1968 Kenmore, 2-speed washer. Excellent
ndition. $100. 17,600 BTU air-condi-
tner, excellent running condition. $100.
litre portable stereo, needs cartridge, $25.
S-8397 between 5 p. m. and 9 p. m..
82tfn
1965 Chevrolet, Super-Sport Impala V-8.
bn, excellent condition, good tires. $1395.
6-4028. 80tfn
Chihuahua puppies. $25 each. 846-8327.
78tfn
10
S-year-old Sorrel Mare. Good rein spirited
rt gentle, would make good barrel racer,
all 822-3980 after five.
1964 Corvair Convertible. Call after 7
m. 846-9036. 75tll
Bargains in all kinds of radios, watches,
wling balls, portable typewriters, guitars,
co Tester, electric shavers, tool sets.
odak cameras,
cks, cassette car
track & 8 track tape
and home players,
jgraphs, stereo record play-
quets, like new 4 & 8 track
pes, metal folding chairs—these items
e all fantastic bargains. Aggie Den 307
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Child care, Call for information. 846-8151.
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(t)1 HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CEN-
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Black purse in Lecture Room Bolton
all, March 10. Reward offered. If
»nd call 846-5185. 84t2
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REPAIRED & EXCHANGED
Completely Guaranteed
Lowest Prices
HAMILL’S TRANSMISSION
33rd. & Texas Ave. Bryan 822-6874
WE RENT
TYPEWRITERS
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Bryan, Texas
Use Your BANKAMERICARD
33c qt.
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We stock all local major brands.
Where low oil prices originate.
Quantity Rights Reserved
Wheel Bearings
50% Off
Parts Wholesale Too
filters, Oil, Air - Fuel, 10,000
Parts - We Fit 90% of All Cars
W 25 - 40%.
Brake Shoes $3.19 ex.
2 Wheels — many cars
toto trans. oil 254
AC - Champion - Autolite plugs
Starters - Generators
All 6 Volt - $11.95 Each
Most 12 Volt - $12.95 Each
Pires—Low price every day —
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Your Friedrich Dealer
I
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^20 E. 25th Bryan, Texas
JOE FAULK ’32
22 years in Bryan
SPECIAL NOTICE
WE BUY MOST ANYTHING — AGGIE
DEN. Sltfn
WORK WANTED
Tutoring in French for college, high
school levels. Certified N.J. teacher. 846-
4616. 83t2
Have electric typewriter. Will do your
typing. Reasonable rates. 822-3889 after
6 :30 p. m. 78t8
Typing wanted by professional typist on
IBM Selectric. Call Mrs. E. D. Maxson
after 5 p. m. 846-3192. 76tfn
TYPING — Electric, Very Reasonable,
Mrs. David R. Miller. 822-2048. 56tfn
Typing. 823-6410 or 822-5053. 30tfn
STUDENTS ! SERVICES UNLIMITED
is ready to help you with your typing,
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liting. LET “SU WORK FOR YOU.’
1907 S. College, Bryan, Texas. 823-5362.
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Typing. Thesis and Dissertation ex
perience. 846-8335. 603tfn
———-—
FOR RENT
Furnished room close to campus. $30
per month. 846-2275 after 5 p. m. 82t4
For rent. 1. 2. and 3 bedroom apartments
New with central air. Some carpeted. Call
846-47X7 or 846-8286. 596tf*
VICTORIAN
APARTMENTS
Midway between Bryan &
A&M University
STUDENTS ! !
Need A Home
1 & 2 Bedroom Fur. & Unfur.
Pool and Private Courtyard
3 MONTHS LEASE
822-2035 401 Lake St. Apt. 1
Why not stop by the CASH
CAFETERIA on your way to
the office and pick up a fresh-o-
package of doughnuts?
GM Lowest Priced Cars
$49.79 per mo.
With Normal Down Payment
OPEL KADETT
Sellstrom Pontiac - Buick
2700 Texas Ave. 26th & Parker
822-1336 822-1307
SOSOLIKS
TV & RADIO SERVICE
Zenith - Color & B&W - TV
All Makes B&W TV Repairs
713 S. MAIN 822-1941
Cade Motor Co.
1309 & 1700 Texas Ave.
FORD
LINCOLN
MERCURY
SALES & SERVICE
REjjgJER
For Spring Term
Sta'.ting March 18th
Fine positions await the grad
uates of our classes in typing,
shorthand, accounting, office ma
chines, etc. Free job placement.
Modest cost. Short time required.
Co-educational.
Beginning and advanced levels.
Those wishing only typing will
have a special class.
Act Now
Dial 823-0152
McKenzie-
Baldwin
BUSINESS COLLEGE
702 S. Washinaton Ave.
BRYAN, TEXAS
OFFICIAL NOTICE
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Official notices must arrive in the Office
of Student Publications before deadline of
I p.m. of the day proceeding- publication.
The English Proficiency Examination re
quired to be taken before the end of the
junior year by persons majoring in History
will be given March 18 and 19, from 4 to
5 p. m., in Room 204 Nagle Hall. Students
are to register for this examination at the
departmental office in History prior to 5
p. m. March 17.
J. M. Nance
According to the stipulation on page 89
of the catalog, each student in Liberal Arts
must demonstrate his ability to express
himself in acceptable English by taking
an English Proficiency Examination. This
examination must be taken not later than
the Spring semester of the junior year.
The English Proficiency Examination for
Political Science majors will be held Tues
day, March 18, and Wednesday March 19,
from 4 to 5 p. m. in 308 Nagle. Come
by and sign up before March 17.
Those undergraduate students who have 95
semester hours of credit may purchase the
A&M ring. The hours passed at the time
of the preliminary grade report, March 31,
1969 may be used in satisfying the 95
hour requirement. The students qualifying
under this regulation may leave their name
with the Ring Clerk in the Registrar’s
Office, in order that she may check the
records to determine their eligibility to
order the ring. Orders for the rings will
be taken April 21 through May 28. All
rings will be returned to the Registrar’s
office on or about July 10, 1969 for
further delivery. The Ring Clerk is on
duty from 8:00 to 12 :00 noon Monday
through Friday, in the Richard Coke
Building - Room 7.
APPLICANTS FOR
VETERINARY MEDICINE
A meeting of students who have applied
or plan to apply for admission to the
professional curriculum in the College of
Veterinary Medicine will be held in the
Auditorium, Veterinary Medical Science
Building, Monday, March 17, 1969 at 7 :30
p. m. Representatives of the Selection
Committee will outline the procedures of
selection and answer questions. 83t3
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree
Name: Kerr, Walter Langston
Degree: Ph.D. in Education
Dissertation: THE IMPACT OF TITLE
ONE, THE ELEMENTARY AND SEC
ONDARY EDUCATION ACT OF 1965,
ON THE LUFKIN INDEPENDENT
SCHOOL DISTRICT.
Time: Friday, March 14, 1969 at 1 :45 p. m.
Place: Room 442 of Academic Building
George W. Kunze
Dean of Graduate Studies
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree
Name: Morse, Richard Arden
Degree: Ph.D. in Petroleum Engineering
Dissertation: A NUMERICAL MODEL
STUDY OF GRAVITATIONAL EF
FECTS AND PRODUCTION RATE ON
SOLUTION GAS PRIVE PERFORM
ANCE OF OIL RESERVOIRS.
Time: March 24 at 1 p. m.
Place: Room 201-A in W. T. Doherty
Building
George W. Kunze
Dean of Graduate Studies
The English proficiency examination re
quired of all junior students majoring in
education will be offered from 2 to 4 p. m.
on April 15 (Tuesday), 1969, and again
from 4 to 6 p. m. the same day. Students
may take the examination at either time
by reporting to Room 308 Nagle. Exam
inees should bring pen, pencil, dictionary,
and composition paper. 76tfn
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree
Name: Dean, Eugene Alan
Degree: Ph.D. in Physics
Dissertation : INVESTIGATION OF
SHOCK FORMED IN THE FLOW OF
PLASMA INTO A MAGNETIC FUN
NEL.
Time: March 19 at 2 p. m.
Place: Room 233 of Physics Building
George W. Kunze
Dean of Graduate Studies
“SPRING AWARD SCHOLARSHIPS”
Application forms for Spring Awards
Scholarships may be obtained from the
Student Financial Aid Office, Room 303,
YMCA Building during the period Feb
ruary 17th - March 31, 1969. All appli
cations must be filed with the Student
Financial Aid Office by not later than
5:00 p. m. April 1, 1969. Late applica
tions will not be accepted. 66t26
THE GRADUATE COLLEGE
Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree
Name: Geldbach, Arthur Robert
Degree: Ph.D. in Inludstrial Engineering
Dissertation : POLYNOMIAL FORECAST
ING UTILIZING EXPONENTIAL
SMOOTHING ON SUCCESSIVE CO
EFFICIENT DETERMINATIONS.
Time: March 25 at 3 p. m.
Place: Room 201-H of Engineering Bldg.
George W. Kunze
Dean of Graduate Studies
Pre-veterinary medicine students who
expect to qualify as applicants to the
Professional College of Veterinary Medicine
in September 1969 may obtain applications
at the information desk in the Registrar’s .
Office. April 1, 1969 is the deadline for
filing applications and transcripts with
the Registrar.
H. L. Heaton, Dean of
Admissions and Records 65t29
WHITE AUTO STORE Bryan
and College Station will rent
you the Catalina “Big Tex” Air
Conditioner—If you decide to
buy, your rent becomes your
down payment. 846-5626.
HOME & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
ZENITH RADIOS & PHONOS
KEN’S RADIO & TV
303 W. 26th 822-2819
m
STERLING ELECTRONICS
sound equipment
Ampex Roberts
Fisher Sony
Scott Panasonic
tape decks Harmon-Kardop
903 South Main, Bryan
822-1589
TYPEWRITERS
Rentals-Sales-Service
Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators &
Adding Machines
CATES
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909 S. Main 822-6000
• Watch Repairs
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• Senior Rings
Refinished
C. W. Varner & Sons
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North Gate 846-5816
Personal Loans
LOANS 'o' $100
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Loan Service
University Loan Co.
317 Patricia
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Telephone 846-8319
ENGINEERING & OFFICE
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402 West 25th St. Ph. 823-0939 Bryan, Texas
Career OPPORTUNITIES AWAIT ’69 ‘Aggie’ GRADUATES Thru
We Are Specialists In Professional, Managerial, Administrative, Scientific and Technical Job Placements. ♦Call
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•Employers Pay For Our Services
The fiery guard from Gary,
Ind., has averaged 19.8 points
per game for the 23-4 Bulldogs
while connecting on 44 per cent
of his shots.
McCarter, a two-time honor
able mention All-American, is
tabbed as a “great pro prospect”
by his coach.
Handling the other guard slot
for the Des Moines, Iowa, team
is Don Draper, a 5’11” senior.
Draper scored at a 12.5 clip this
season while leading the famed
Drake fast break.
Dolph Pulliman, a 6’4” senior,
and A1 Williams, a 6’5” junior,
man the forward slots for the
Bulldogs. Pulliman, who aver
aged 13.6 points per contest, is
described as the “nation’s best
defensive forward” by Coach
John.
The turning point in Drake’s
season, according to Coach John,
was when he inserted Williams
into the starting lineup in place
of Gary Odom, a 6’8” senior. At
the time of the move, the Bull
dogs were three games out of
the MVC lead and since the move
they have reeled off ten straight
wins. Williams has averaged 9.7
points and 8 rebounds per game.
Despite losing his starting job,
Odom is expected to see a lot of
action against the Aggies.
“Odom will see considerable
action tomorrow,” Coach John
said. “We have to have him to
combat the extreme size that
A&M will present to us.”
Drake’s fifth starter is Willie
Wise, a 6’5” senior. Wise, the
junior college roommate of South
ern California’s O. J. Simpson,
has scored at a 14.7 clip while
pulling down 11.3 rebounds per
game.
Coach Metcalf is expected to
(See Aggies, Page 8)
AGGIE WINNER
A&M’s star quartermiler Curtis Mills breaks the tape ahead of his big-gest rival, Dave
Morton of the University of Texas. Mills was clocked in 47.0 as the Aggies roared to a
77-66 victory over the injury-ridden Longhorns in the Border Olympics Saturday. (Photo
by Tom McCullough)
Ag Cinder men Face Rice 9
LSU In Triangular Meet
By RICHARD CAMPBELL
The Texas Aggie track team
will be in Houston Saturday fresh
from its Border Olympic victory
over the University of Texas to
compete in a. triangular meet with
Rice and Louisiana State Uni
versity.
For the second time in the last
two weeks, Aggie quartermiler
Curtis Mills bested Texas sensa
tion Dave Morton in the 440-yard
The Texas A&M Gymnastics
team competed twice last week,
first defeating Sam Houston
State on its home grounds on
Thursday and being edged out
by University of Texas here at
G. Rollie White Coliseum on Sat
urday.
The Aggies travel to Sam
Houston State College Thursday
where they handed the Bearcats
their first defeat of the season,
winning by a slim margin as
A&M’s Mickey Stratton took
first place in the last event of
the evening, the high bar. Mike
Kyler took second place in the
high bar and Lee Reeves cap
tured fourth place to help the
Aggies make the strong finish
that gave them their victory over
Sam Houston, 111.75 to 111.55.
Even though A&M took only
two first places in the high bar
and vaulting, their consistency
dash, labeled as the duel of the
sophomores. Mills was clocked in
47.0 seconds while Morton ran a
47.1. Last week in a dual meet
in College Station, both were
timed in 47.1 but Mills got the
victory by a bare yard over his
Longhorn rival.
These are the A&M entrants:
440-yard relay—Scott Hendricks,
Rockie Woods, Jack Abbott, Cur
tis Mills; 100-yard dash — Rockie
in placing one or two men in each
event allowed them to stay in
the running throughout the meet.
Outstanding in the meet were
Mickey Stratton’s winning the
all-around competition and Lee
Reeves taking first place in
vaulting.
The Longhorns performed well
at G. Rollie White on Saturday
as they beat the Aggies in a
high scoring meet. The A&M
team turned in their highest
team score of the season with
an average of 6.8 per man, but
it was not good enough to win,
as Texas scored 129.7 to A&M’s
123.7. Lee Reeves of A&M, pos
sibly the best vaulter in the state,
again took first that event
while Mickey Stratton came
through with another first in the
high bar as he won all-around for
the second time in one week.
Woods, Scott Hendricks, Steve
Barre; 220-yard dash — Rockie
Woods, Scott Hendricks, Curtis
Mills, Steve Barre, Jack Abbott;
120-yard hurdles — Jack Abbott,
Deward Strong, David Prince,
Glen Blahuta; 440-yard hurdles—
Deward Strong, Richard Ball.
David Prince, Tony Munson, Glen
Blahuta; 440-yard hurdles—Cur
tis Mills, Mike Boyd; 880-yard
run — Steve Bancroft, Bill Shaw.
Also, mile run—Chris Conley,
Charles Barton; 3-mile run—John
Heffner, Paul Shimon, Charles
Barton; Mile relay — Johnny
Gardner, Mike Boyd, Steve Ban-
crot, Curtis Mills; Shot put—Ron-
ny Lightfoot, Clifton Thomas,
Bubba Vincent; Discus — Ronny
Lightfoot, Bubba Vincent, Clifton
Thomas; Broad jump — Johnny
Gardner, Philip Shupp, Gary
Grassman, Kim Sutton, Marc
Black; High jump — Ben Great-
house, Kim Sutton, John Taylor;
Javelin—Marc Black, Scott Bless
ing; Pole vault—Larry McIntyre,
Robert Hoffman, Billy Hoffman.
Field events start at 2 p.m.;
running events start at 2:30 p.m.
AUTO INSURANCE
FOR AGGIES:
Call: George Webb
Farmers Insurance Group
3400 S. Collefre 823-8051
r i
STUDY IN
CUERNAVACA
Gymnasts Beat SHS,
Lose To Longhorns
ATTENTION
STUDENTS AND STAFF MEMBERS
ENGAGED IN RESEARCH!
Did you know that your Research efforts may qualify
you for tax benefits?
FOR THIS AND OTHER TAX INFORMATION
CONTACT:
BLOCKER TRANT, Income Tax Consultant
4015 Texas Avenue — Bryan, Texas
Phone 846-7842
fflumihcck
EMPLOYMENT SERVICE — COLLEGE DIVISION
331 UNIVERSITY DRIVE AT NORTH GATE
846-3737 — Jos. B. Collerain ’37, Owner
Learn to speak SPANISH
• Intensive courses, with drills,
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Study in the INSTITUTE FOR
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Cuernavaca, Mexico
K