Friday, February 19, 1954 THE BATTALION Page 3 All-Star Track Meet Brings Mexico’s Best The track meet with the inter national flavor comes to Kyle field tomorrow when the Aggies and the Gulf Coast Women’s AAU team meet the national track and field team of Mexico. A&M, winner of the Southwest conference title six times in the past seven seasons, takes on a 20- player squad composed of the best male track stars in Mexico. The Texas women will meet a 10-member squad of the Mexico’s best female runners and throwers. Mexico Has 15 Champs Mexico’s team has 15 national record-holders. Tickets are 50 cents for adults and 25 cents for students. Student season tickets will not be good. The meet is sponsored by the College Station Kiwanis club, and events ENDS TODAY Tarzans fSavageJph. S slnrrlnR i&lEX BARKfR-DOROIHV HART V&MIHC KN0WU5•CHARLES KORYIH, end Introducln Tnuiiw ruDITftN will be staged in meti’ic distances. Field events will begin at 2:30 p. m., with running events starting at 3. Blake Out The Aggies have 13 lettermen back from last year’s team, but one will not compete and another will be slowed down. Glenn Blake is out with a sprained ankle and Jim Blaine, recovering from a bad knee, will only run the 800 meters. A&M’s team will be: 1,500 meters — Dale DeRouen, Verlon Westmoreland and Bob Boles. 400 meters — Carroll Libby, Gerald Stull and Terry Vetters. 100 meters — Pete Mayeaux, Don Watson, Stull, Bob McCarn and Sid Goyer. 200 meters — Larry Kennedy, Bill Holloway, Watson, Stull and McCarn. High hurdles — Tom Dollahite, ^Harley Hartung, and James Holl ingsworth. 800 Meters — Blaine, Wallace Kleb, and Carl Wilmsen. 3,000 meters—DeRouen, West moreland and Bill Cocke. 400 meter hurdles — Stull, Ken Fry and Don Tedder. Dash relay — Hartung, McCarn, Goyer and Watson. Shot put and discus — Bobby Goss, Bob Bonorden, Harry Cox, Jim Cavitt and Fred Hartman. SATURDAY ONLY Double Feature -— CARY MYRNA SHIRLEY IMHOHEMPlt RUDY VALLEB COIUN^HARRY DAVENPORT • JOHNNY SANDS RAY COU'Ni* MARK T ■ ™ Til SCHABYraooucnoM LUm BALL fiTmy m BESIARNAZ CIRCLE LAST DAY The FAEMiST ip TAKES A — A L S O — “Lure of the Wilderness’ 9 Jean Peters Jeffrey Hunter SATURDAY ONLY ^Son of Belle Starr” Peggie Castle Keith Larsen — A L S O — ^Indian Uprising” George Montgomery PALACE TONIGHT 11 P. M. THE STORY OF A LOVE THAT MADE WONDERFUL MUSIC l JAMES STEWART JUNE ALLYS0N GLENN MILLER STORY" €©te» / *r = / r ^ / * S? CHARLES DRAKE • GEORGE TOBIAS HENRY MORGAN Guest Stars/ __ o and these Muttcal Greats as Guest Stars/ HWiCES U.W0RD-LOUIS ARMSTRONG • GENE KRUPA-BEH POIHCK'THE WODERNWRES [ Lawl Day - *TALL TEXAN” QUEEN NOW SHOWING BARBARA FRED Stanwyck PHOTOGRAPHED IN NATURAL VISION Javelin — Mayeaux, Dollahite, Geoi’ge Knipple and Joe Wilson. Pole vault-Billy Tutor and Ed ward Reeder. High jump—Marvin Swink and W. J. Post. Broad jump —- Jerry Thomas, James Stansel, Bobby Robinson and Tommy Strait. Hop, step and jump—Strait. Fish To Open Tennis Season Here Saturday The freshman tennis squad opens its 1954 season tomon-ow against San Angelo high school on the courts by the Grove. A TK , Game time is 2:30 p. m. The Fish will be minus two play ers, Thurman Watson and Alton Crenwelge, because of ineligibility. “Claude Wooley, San Angelo coach, usually comes up with a good squad,” said W. M. Dowell, Aggie tennis coach. , Don Dixon, Jake Harper, Tom Morrison, Gorden Glover and Bill Davis will compete in the singles matches. Dixon and Morrison will team up in the doubles, as will Harper and Glover. The varsity’s first match is with Southeastern State at Durant. Okla, March 3. “Our varsity is in the rebuilding stage,” said Dowell. Only Ronald Wolff returns from last year’s team that finished behind Texas and Rice in conference play. Jack Bessellieu and Ed Paschall, 1953 lettermen, have been declared in eligible. The varsity will play a 16-game schedule befma entering the- S-wulh- west conference tournament at Waco, May 14. Krueger To Lead Bowlers in Arkansas High scoi-er Doug Krueger will lead the A&M Bowling club in a dual match with the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville Sunday. Krueger’s average of 176 is high for the 10-man squad. PREVUE TONIGHT SAT. thru WED. P. M. yif l X IN SHOCKING mm G. ROBimMCHN FCSSYTKE WAiC’i KOKEKSCK - StSTOT icsnumarnsj ^JOHNSON-MARTIN l C0dets Polish Up For TCU Saturday The Aggie basketball team puts on the finishing touches today for the TCU game in Fort Worth to morrow night. After a thorough practice ses sion last night the Cadets will take things easy today. They play Ar kansas in DeWare field house Mon day night and meet the University of Houston here Wednesday night. The non-conference game with Houston will be the third game in five days for the Aggies. They close out the season with Baylor in Waco a week from Monday. Coach John Floyd will start James Addison in his new center post, Roy Martin and John For tenberry at forwards and probab ly Joe Hardgrove and Pat Mc- Crory at guards. Hank Ohlen, TCU’s center, has a sprained ankle and missed Wed nesday’s SMU game. Forward Ray Warren, the other top Frog player, has an injured knee and played little against the Mustangs. Both should see some action agaisnt the'Aggies. t TCU has beaten A&M twice this season. The Frogs took a 69-41 win at the Southwest conference pre-season tournament and defeat ed the Farmers, 69-52, in DeWare field house. Fish Swimmers Try for Third Straight Win A&M’s Fish swimming 1 team pushes off tomorrow in a triangular meet with the San Antonio Aquatic club and the Houston YMCA in P. L. Downs jr. natatorium. ■ Starting time is 2:30 p. m. Ad- ipi§§ipn : Will be frpp- . • - . No varsity meet will be held. Plans fbr a dual meet with St. Thomas college of St. Paul, Minn., could uot be completed. Strengthened by the addition of Ripey Woodard, state high school 209 yard freestyle champ at Hous ton’s Lamar, the freshmen -will be out for their third win of the sea son without a loss. The Fish won a meet with their two opponents earlier in the season and defeated the Texas Shorthorns last Saturday. Dick Hunkier and Norman Ufer will pace the freshmen. Hunkier, state 100 yard freestyle champ at Houston’s Reagan, set a freshman pool record in that event in the Shorthorn meet. Ufer, state 100 yard backstroke champ, set a pool Fish record in that event last Saturday. Shutouts Feature ’Mural Handball Intramural handball was high lighted Wednesday by three shut outs. Squadron 7 blanked A field ar tillery, 3-0. Squadron 15 and B in fantry shutout A chemical and squadron 3, respectively, by iden tical scores. Squadron 4 squeezed past squad ron 2, 2-1, in the other game. In ping pong, White band, squad ron 5 and squadron 9 won 3-2 de cisions. The band beat squadron 2, squad ron 5 edged B field artillery and squadron 9 defeated A engineers. Company K and company B won iorfeits from squadron 20 and company E, respectively. GUION 1st Run in This Are;. SATURDAY PREVIEW _ „ SUNDAY and MONDAY ' M ' iwBjg STS SFsnS Hi-y k-jwtF, ,. Vp CArnT Lewis MILESTONE P ‘ EAQ ~~ , ~ ] ^ - "vTrn.Tr-- ^ FO ADVANCE In the 66-49 loss to Texas, Ad dison scored 26 points for A&M, but the other four starters got on ly 16 points between them. If Hardgrove, playing in his home town, and McCrory are hitting their outside shots and Addisop continues his streak the Aggies can make a close game of it. Ag Wrestlers To Take 27 To Dallas Meet Twenty-seven members of the A&M Wrestling club will travel to Dallas this weekend to compete in the Southwest ern Amateur Athletic union meet, said Coach J. W. Griffith. Seven lettermen return from last season’s team. They are Bob Beattie, 123 pounds; Dick Cappel, 137 pounds; Rudy Henson and Jer ry Pyle, 147 pounds; John Johnson, 157 pounds; Bob Poteet, 177 pounds; and John Huff, heavy weight. Beattie won second place in the 130 pound class at last year’s tourney. Cappel was the Louisiana state high school champ in the J 27 pound division. Henson was the 1952 state AAU 147 pound champ, and Pyle was second at the ’63 SWAAU meet in that class. Poteet was the ’52 state AAU 177 pound title-holder. Others making the trip are: 123 pounds—Dave Riemer, Paul Breen. 130 pounds—Taylor Green. 137 pounds —Don Burchard, A1 Crow. 147 pounds — Dub Bailey, Bill Gilbert, Charles Jenkinsy ^ tf .i 157 pounds — Carl MeGee, Jim Witcher, Sam Ray. 167 pounds — A1 Rial, Gene Myers, Ronnie Hayes, F. W. Heldenfels. 177 pounds — Kenneth Jones, Bill Nourie. 191 pounds — Don Kachtik. Heavyweight—Lawrence Wink ler, George Fehrmann. Igers Lose 11-34} To Tomball; Tonight for Title A&M Consolidated high school saw an eight point half-time lead waste away last night and lost 41- 34 to Tomball as the district 25-A basketball title playoff was evened at one game each. Consolidated plays Tomball at 8 tonight in Sealy for the district championship. The winner will meet Sweeny in the bi-district round. The Tigers had beaten Tomball, 49-28, at home Tuesday night, but couldn’t turn back a surging last- half rally last night. Playing on their home court, the Cougars out- scored Consolidated, 24-9, in the last half. Roy Ford scored 13 points for Tomball and was the game’s high scorer. Danny Nicholson scored 11 for Tomball, while Bobby Jackson and Fred Anderson had 10 each for Consolidated. After averaging 20 points a son couldn’t find the range in the vital last half. James Earle, Castillo Win Lightweight James Earle, one of two Aggies fighting in the state Golden Gloves tournament at Fort Worth, won a close decision last night over Frankie Corpus of Aus tin. Eddie Castillo, the other A&M student in the tourney, won a hair line decision over Ray Hernandez of El Paso Wednesday night. Earle now has a career record of 31 wins in 33 fights. He won the lightweight title at the Waco re gional tournament. Castillo re placed Paul Terrill as Waco’s light-heavy representative. Castillo’s fight Wednesday night was called a tie by the three judges game in his last seven starts. Jack- but one gave him a plus point. FOR DINING in COMPLETE COMFORT p When you want to rela,x_ over a delicious i 4? i i 5 ^ i "■ ‘J t- •• $ i ■> 'j; • meal, come and enjoy our fine service and ' y atnjosphere. - We specialize in both Mexi can and American Dishes. 4 Blks. East of Hwy. 6 On Sulphur Springs Rd. ZARAPE’S A CAMPUS-TO-CAREER CASE HISTORY Fresh out of school, Bob Wilson, ’53, was put to work on a Transistor project at Bell Laboratories. He explains why he never had time to be awed. (Reading Time: 39 seconds) Bob Wilson works on a “breadboard” circuit, study ing the electrical properties of a carrier system. “In some ways it was hard to believe. I had received my B.E.E. at the Univer sity of Delaware in June, 1953, and a week later I was working in the world- famous Bell Laboratories. “But I didn’t have time to be awed be cause they put me right to work. They gave me responsibility fast. “My group was working on the experi mental application of transistors to carrier systems. My assignment was the elec trical design of a variolosser for the com pressor and for the expandor to be located in the terminals. * “The supervision I received and the equipment I had were tops. I quickly dis covered that I had to rely on my ingenuity as much as on the college courses I had taken. Perhaps that’s one reason for the great new discoveries continually turned out by the Labs. “Now, I’m in the Communication De- j velopment Training Program, continuing my technical education and learning what 4 all the Laboratories sections do and how; their work is integrated. “In a year I’ll be back working with the group with which I started.” • • • n> Assuming responsibility fast is a common experience among the engineering, phys ical science, arts and social science, and business administration graduates who join the Bell System. Bob Wilson went with Bell Laboratories. There also are job op- j portunities with the operating telephone I? companies, Western Electric and Sandia ^4 Corporation* i .... BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM