The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 11, 1955, Image 3

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Friday, February 11, 1955
THE BATTALION
Pa^e 3
TODAY
“Riot in Cell
Block 11”
SATURDAY
Ml TONY CURTIS
mJZM JOANNE DRU
llwSfll LYLE BETTCEW
* UNIVERSAUNTERNAnONAt PICTURE
PREY. SAT. 10:30 P.M.
Sunday & Monday
«ouo^ .."TECHNICOLOR
with AGNES M00REHEAD
_ OTTO KRUGER • GREGG PALMER
CHILLY CADETS LOSE
TO OKLAHOMA CITY 55-34
Rosburg Shoots 65
For Tuscon Lead
TUCSON, Ariz., Feb. 11—(A 5 )—
Bob Rosburg of Rochester, Minn.,
left a sick bed yesterday to shoot
his best golf of the year and share
the lead at the end of the first
round of the $10,000 Tucson Open
golf tournament.
Rosburg came in late in the aft
ernoon with a 65 to tie Tony Hol
guin of Midlothian, Ill. Both were
five under par for the 6,409-yard
El Fio Golf and Country club lay
out.'
George Bayer, Glen Head, L.I.,
held third place by himself with
a 66. Rated the longest hitter in
the business, Rayer credited his
score to fine putting.
Rosburg, 28, had been in bed
with the flu since he arrived ear
lier this week.
The Baltimore Orioles’ farm sys
tem is now reduced to six clubs—
half of what it was a year ago.
CIRCLE
TODAY thru FRIDAY
STOW'
Bany
SULLIVAN
— Also —
“SUSPICION”
CARY GRANT
SATURDAY ONLY
“Silver Whip”
KORY CALHOUN
— Also —
"Mighty Joe Young’
* MOORE
A REAL
FUTURE
AWAITS YOU
WITH A GROWING
Weapons System Organization
At TEMCO a two-fold opportunity awaits
engineers, physicists and mathematicians
who want to grow professionally.
I irst, the entire engineering department is organized
under the systems concept. This necessitates the combined
services of civil, electrical, mechanical and aeronautical
engineers, physicists and mathematicians, all of whom will
have the opportunity — indeed, will be required — to be-
come familiar with all areas in the aeronautical sciences.
Highly specialized work will be demanded, of course, but
it will be conducted within the stimulating framework of
a broader background in related fields. Your opportunities,
here, for professional growth are unlimited.
Second, TEMCO offers a Master Engineering Training
Program designed to develop today’s engineering grad
uates into the systems engineers of the future. This program
includes a Graduate Study Plan leading to Master of Science
degrees, and a Job Rotation Plan which permits you both
to specialize without confinement and to diversify without
loss of direction.
L. W. Jones and A. R. Tcasdalc of the TEMCO Engineer
ing Department will be on your campus Wednesday, Febru
ary 16, to interview
qualified applicants.
Appointments can be
arranged through your
Placement Officer.
Varsity, Fish Meet
Texas Here Saturday
Special to The Battalion
OKLAHOMA CITY—Oklahoma City university turned
in its best defensive performance of the season to down A&M
55-34 here last night in a non-conference basketball game.
The Chieftains were especially masterful on the back-
boards, grabbing off 53 rebounds compared to 29 by the some
what shorter Texans. It was on the A&M offensive board
where the true tale was unfolded, with OCU picking off 53
of the 40 caroms there.
Hence, the invaders seldom got more than one pop at
the basket, and since the Aggies were as cold as the frigid
air which spread across the state yesterday, it was strictly
“no contest” after the second half began.
Lowest Since 1953 for A&M
A&M hit only nine of 48 shots while the Chiefs made
good on 15 of 57 from the field. It was the lowest number
of points the Cadets had scored since a 34-52 loss to Rice in
1953.
.M , jfc. ■ >>h.
Saturday night, A&M meets University of Texas in a
White coliseum Southwest conference game. Both are tied
for the cellar with 1-5 conference records. The Fish meet
the Shorthorns in a 6 :30 p.m. curtain raiser.
With OCU also experiencing a poor shooting first half,
the Cadets were still in contention at the intermission, trail
ing only 25-18. It was evert closer than that through the
early stages. Midway through the first half the score was
tied 6-6, and with 7:30 remaining the Aggies were still even
at 12-12.
However, three quick baskets shot OCU in front, 18-12, . Wlth the t } lst ” c , t 25 ' A caj?c title
they never trailed after that. hangmg m the balance, A&M Con-
Aggie Fencers
To Hold Meet
Here Saturday
A&M freshmen fencers
play host to five Amateur
Fencing league of America
teams Saturday in room 3B of
the Memorial Student Center.
Matches wall begin at 2 p.m.
Other teams in the meet are
Texas, University of Houston,
Rice, Houston Fencing club, and
Galveston Fencing club.
The Aggie varsity has been con
ference champion the last two
years. Since the Cadets have all
but three members of last year’s
squad back, and they will be strong
favorites to repeat.
Members of the varsity include
co-captain Art Gamer, Jerry
Ramsey, Don Roth, Carl Hill, Bill
Swan, John Shanks, Jim Pigg, Don
Burton, Russ Goodale, Walter An
derson, co-captain Bill Huettei and
Bill Fink.
and they never trailed after that.
Chiefs Build Lead to 26 Points
While A&M remained cold, OCU warmed up in the sec
ond half and soon held a comfortable 33-18 margin. The
Chiefs extended it to 17 points before a brief A&M flurrv
sliced it to 36-25.
But that was as serious a threat as the Texans, now
losers of 14 games in 18 starts, could mount, as OCU boomed
its lead to 45-25 and at one time boasted a 26 point spread,
53-27.
A pair of sophomores, 6-6 Bob Holloway and 6-4 Lyndon
Lee topped the Chief attack with 14 points each. Holloway
also led the rebound brigade with 14, and 6-5 Larry Brad
shaw, another soph, picked off nine.
John Henry, an Oklahoma City product, led A&M with
nine points. George Mehaffey added eight and bagged three
of his team’s nine field goals.
The Chiefs made 25 of 34 free throws. A&M sank 16 of
19.
Box sco re
A AM (34) f B . ft. fl. Ip.
Henry i 7 5 9
Btlbrey 0 O 3 0
Fortenberry 1 3 1 5
Gattis 0 2 2 2
Meliaffcy 3 2 4 S
Smith 1 0 0 2
Harrod 2 0 2 4
Phipps 0 0 1 0
Love 0 0 0 O
Brophy 1 2 4 1
TOTALS . ... r"9 16 22 34
OCU (55) fK. ft. fl. tp.
Lee 3 8 3 14
Bradshaw 1 2 1 4
Dicrs 1 2 1 4
Holloway 6 2 3 14
Reeves 1 0 0 2
Cassidy 0 1 1 1
Nath 0 3 0 3
Magana 2 0 1 4
Bullard ' 1 o 1 2
Juby 0 4 1 4
Jeter . 0 3 0 3
TOTALS 15 25 12 55
Halftime Score: OCU 25, A&M 18.
Kree throws missed: A&M — Harrod.
Mehaffey, Henry. OCU—Lee 3. Holloway
2. Nath. Bradshaw. Jeter. Cassidy.
Officials Bo McAllister and L»on Rossi.
Boxer Charges
Official Doped Him
AUSTIN, Feb. ll—UP»—A 29-
year-old health club official was
chai'ged in 'county court at law
yesterday with possession and de
livery of a drug to a Golden Gloves
boxer before his fight last Friday.
George Elias Trad, 25, accused
Charles F. Hill, operator of the
Austin Health center, of drugging
him with amphetamine tablets.
In a signed statement to police,
Trad said he took two pills that
Hill gave him about four hours
before his Golden Gloves tourna
ment fight against Bei'gstrom air
force base airman Don Vogel.
Valentines N
Candy
Jewelry '%
Christian Dior
Perfume
It’s more fun to shop for
Valentines that are more
fun to get! Let us help
you select the “Perfect”
Gift from our wide selec
tion.
Mailing—Gift Wrapping
MEMORIAL STUDENT CENTER
GIFT SHOP
Consolidated Plays
C JP ress-Fairbanks
solidated’s i-ed-hot Tigers meet Cy
press-Fairbanks tonight on the
road.
Both are tied for first place with
8-1 district records following Tues
day night wins. CHS downed Katy
60-55 while Cypress-Fairbanks was
beating Waller.
Norman Floeck, top scorer for
the Tigers, dunked in 10 points to
spark a rally that brought the local
crew ahead in the fourth quarter
after they had trailed much of the
game. CHS has won 11 of its last
12 games.
■■HI!
CIGARETTES
ODERN SIZE
• .v^m.wA*.*nrvAftw wnMtow#*
FILTER TIP TAREYTON
gives you the full, rich taste
Quality tobacco
and real filtration, too!
PRODUCT OF
SHIPLEY DONUT SHOP
Now — A Drive-in Window for
YOUR Convenience
“YOU ARE ALWAYS WELCOME”
Open 7:00 A.M. Close 1:00 A.M.
Sunday 10:00 A.M. to 1:00 P.M.
3312 So. College
Bryan
A Campus-to-Career Case History
Manager Ray New explains the importance of good service to one of his assistants
His individual training paid off
When Ray New—Business Administration, Buffalo. *51 —
started with New York Telephone Company, he never suspected
his work would face him with problems of this sort—
66 My job as business office manager
is to see that the customer gets the best
possible service. One*of my assignments
look me into a section of Manhattan that
had a large Puerto Rican population.
46 Frequently our people would get
somebody on the line w ho couldn't speak
a word of English. So 1 saw to it that
each of my representatives learned a few
standard Spanish phrases—enough to get
somebody to the telephone who could
speak English.
64 There are no two da\s alike in tins
work, with new problems coming up all
the time. The best part of it is that the
training program here is tailor-made to
the job. First you get a general back
ground in the business, then you go into
what I call ‘individual training.’ That's
where your own special abilities are de
veloped and you’re encouraged to think
out new ways to solve everyday prob
lems—like the one I just described.
44 Right now 1 m Business Manager
in charge of an office doing 8250,000
worth of business a month.’’
Nou’H fiml these things true of college men, like Ray
New, who go into telephone work. They’ve been well
trained, they* enjoy their present jobs, and they're
beaded for responsibilities and greater rewards. If
you'd be interested in a similar opportunity witli a Bell
telephone operating company, or with Sandiu Corpora
tion, Bell Telephone laboratories or Western Electric,
see vour Placement Officer for full details.
BELL
TELEPHONE
SYSTEM
I