The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 28, 1956, Image 3

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    For ^Sports Day^ Events
800 High School
Seniors Due Here
By BARRY HART
Assistant Sports Editor
The names of more than 800 outstanding' high school
seniors have been submitted by about 40 home town clubs
on the campus to be invited to A&M’s annual High School Day
program this weekend.
“Sports Day", scheduled to begin Saturday at 1 p.m., is
expected to get most of the attention from the young guests.
Tickets to this full day of*
sports activities are $1 and
can be purchased at the Stu
dent Activities Office, MSC,
Athletic Office or from any
T-Association member.
A&M’s GOLF TEAM, winner of
its opening- match with Southwest
State Teachers College last week
end, gets the athletic events undei’-
way at 1 p.m. Saturday, entertain
ing Lamar Tech on the A&M
course. A&M was second in SWC
golf last year.
High school seniors and A&M
students get a prevue of this year’s
fine track team at 1:30 as the Ag
gie thinly-clads host the University
of Texas and the University of
Houston in a triangular meet on
Kyle Field.
The Cadet tracksters were nosed
out by the Longhorns last year in
the Southwest Conference meet,
and both teams are expected to be
top contenders for this year’s
crown. There will also be a meet
between the freshmen teams from
all three schools.
A&M’s TENNIS TEAM goes in
to action at 2, meeting the Hous
ton Cougars on the clay courts
west of the MSC. The Cadet net-
men finished fourth in conference
standings last year behind power
ful teams from Texas, SMU and
Rice.
The Aggie baseball team, de
fending SWC champions, open
their home season on the Kyle
Field diamond at 3 p.m. Saturday,
clashing with the Cougars of Hous
ton. Coach Beau Bell’s nine is
ranked as one of the strong con
tenders for this yeaT’’s title, and
will have 11 returning lettermen to
hack up its claim.
FOOTBALL, COACH PAUL
Bi-yant style, winds up the action-
packed day as the Maroon and
White elevens tangle on Kyle Field
at 7:30 p.m. in their annual battle.
There are 24 lettermen back from
the team that was runner-up for
the loop championship.
ENROLL NOW
Spring Term Opens Monday, March 5th
DAY and NIGHT SCHOOL,
HY-SPEED LONGHAND will be offered for the
first time in a special ten-week course at night. This
is an ideal system for taking notes in college and for
taking light office dictation. Typing will be given
with this special course.
Phone TA 3-6655 for information or call at 702 South
Washington Avenue, Bryan, Texas
McKenzie-Baldwin Business College
Engineering
GRADUATES • UNDERGRADUATES
SET YOUR COURSE
NOW
FOR A CAREER AT
SPERRY
Now is the time to look ahead, to
plan ahead, to get ahead with Sperry. This
is a young-minded organization with a solid
history of engineering achievement dating back to
1910. It has contributed a notable list of engineering
"firsts". It is engaged in many diversified and fascinating
projects. Read here all that Sperry has to offer you, then
get full details in person from
OUR ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT HEADS
WHO WILL BE AT YOUR SCHOOL
MARCH 1
Arrange an appointment at your placement office
Bert Ate Some of tho Fields
You Way Choose at Sperry
Electronics . • Microwave . •
Radar . . Seryo-Mechanisms . .
Computers . . Aircraft Naviga>
tion . . Electronic Tube Devel
opment . . Fractional H.P.
Motors and Transformers . .
Communications Equipment . .
toran . . Sonar ... Fire Control
Equipment . . Guided Missiles
Controls .. Technical Writing . .
Standards for Engineering
Work . . Digital Computers . •
Solid State Devices ......
Hero Are Some of tho lomflfv
You Can Count On at Sperry
9 near-by graduate school* for
further studies through com*
pony paid tuition rofund pro*
gram . . Modern lab facilities
available for the further devel*
apment of your technical odu*
cation . . Association with top
men in the field .. Top rates . •
Full employee benefits . . Mod*
ern plant In suburbs, 45 min*
vte* from New York City « «
Attractive housing evoiloblo*/'
cmscops coMPMr
Division of Sperry Rand Corp.
Great Neck/ Long Island, New York
Tuesday, February 28, 1956
THE BATTALION
Page 3
Aggie Five Encounters
Longhorns At Austin
I^P AND IN—Ted Harrod (above) goes high off the floor
to sink a lay-up shot in last Friday’s game with the Rice
Owls. The Owls won the game, though, 85-67. A&M
finishes its season tonight at Austin against Texas.
Sport Shorts
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ST. PETERSBURG—M a n a g e r
Casey Stengel yesterday called his
New York Yankees pitching staff
stronger than the one which helped
win the pennant last year. He
named five certain starters, listing
Whitey Ford, Bob Turley, Tommy
Byrne, Mickey McDermott and Don
Larsen.
★ ★ ★
TAMPA, Fla.—When Chicago
traded Chico Carrasquel to
Cleveland in the Larry Doby deal.
White Sox fans asked the ob
vious. Who plays shortstop now?
It could be Jim Brideweser or
Carl Peterson, but it’s more like
ly to be Luis Amaricio, a dashing
Latin from Venezuela who won’t
be 22 until 10 days after the
season opens.
* * it
HOUSTON—Rice closes a “dis
appointing” basketball season to
night trying to down the team that
won the Southwest Conference
Championship—^unbeaten Southern
Methodist./
it it it
NEW YORK —The men who
pull the strings on American ten
nis deelined to panic yesterday
over the poor U. S. showing in
the National Indoor Champion-
Aggie Golfers
Club Cats 8-1
A&M’s golf team clubbed
Southwest Texas State’s Bob
cats, 8-1, last weekend in a
practice meet on the Aggie
golf course. It was the Cadets
first outing against another school
this Spring.
The Aggies took all three doub
les matches and lost but one sing
les match. Bob Nichols of A&M
downed Walt Smith, 3-2 in the
opening round. Marcelino Moreno
dumped John Smith, 2-1, and Dave
Vandei-voort beat Bob Jery, 3-2.
Dick Chapman dropped Bill
Mickler, 1-up, Jerry Durbin thump
ed Lawrence West, 6-5, and Roy
McCarty provided Southwest Tex
as with its lone win, by downing
A&M’s Gary Fletcher, 4-3.
ships. They confidently predict
ed the Yanks again would make
the Davis Cup Challenge Round.
it it it
BATON ROUGE, La.—The na
tion’s top golfers are arriving for
the $12,500 Baton Rouge Open Golf
Tournament, which opens Thurs
day. Heading the entry list is Ted
Kroll, who is now the leading
money winner of the 1955-56 win
ter circuit.
With Southern Methodist’s un
beaten quintet already occupying
the Southwest Confei'ence throne
room, A&M and Texas meet at
Austin tonight in a game that could
see the Aggies and Longhorns wind
up the season in a fourth place tie.
Tonight’s game will be broad
cast over KORA starting at 8.
Mike Mistovich will bring a play-
by-play description of the action.
The Aggies, currently fifth in
SWC standings with a 3-8 mark,
end their season tonight as do the
Steers. Texas is only one game
in front of the Cadets with a 4-7
record, and rests in fourth posi
tion.
Austin, long a nemesis for Ag
gie athletic teams, lends its ad
vantage to a Longhorn team that
has been very impressive in its
last few outings. Last Saturday
night at Austin the Steers
trounced Baylor, 101-95, in a
free-scoring affair. All-South-
CONFERENCE STANDINGS
Team W E Fct. Ft. Op.
SMU 11 0 1.000 901 723
Rice 8 .3 .727 863 778
Arkansas 8 3 .727 777 712
Texas .......... 4 7 .364 843 872
Texas A&M 3 8 .273 786 916
x—Baylor 3 9 .250 885 916
TCU 2 9 .182 738 843
x—Finished season.
East Week’s Results
Texas 94, Rice 82; SMU 89, Baylor 68;
TCU 91, Texas A&M 67; Rice 85, Texas
A.&M. 61; SMU 80, Arkansas 72; Texas
101, Baylor 95.
This Week’s Schedule
Tuesday — Rice vs. SMU at Houston;
Texas vs. Texas A&M at Austin; Arkansas
vs. TCU at Fayetteville.
Thursday—Arkansas vs. Tulsa at Tulsa
(non-conference).
March 5 — Arkansas vs. St. Louis at
Fayetteville (non-conference).
INDIVIDUAL SCORING (CONFERENCE)
Flayer, Teab FG FT TP
Ray Downs, Texas 85
Dick O’Neal, TCU 35
west Conference Raymond Downs
poured in 49 points, one shy of
the record set by SMU’s Jim
Krebs earlier this year.
The Aggies haven’t beaten Texas
in Gregory Gym since 1951, and
can boast only two conference wins
over the Horns in their last nine
meetings. A&M edged by Texas
here in White Coliseum, 75-74, in
a January meeting this year.
Downs’ 49 point performance
against Baylor last Saturday
vaulted him into the top spot
among conference scorers in both
season and loop play. He has a
26.3 point average in league
games and 25.7 for the season.
Bill Brophy, A&M’s 6-3 senior
Louis Estes, Baylor .... 93
Temple Tucker, Rice 83
Manuel Whitley, Ark. ..... 59
Joe Durrenberger, Rice .... 70
Jim Krebs, SMU 73
Norman Hooten, Texas .... 69
x—Jerry Mallett, Baylor . . 65
Ken Hutto, Texas A&M ... 52
x—Finished season.
119
105
49
50
80
58
40
34
39
01
289
275
235
216
198
198
186
172
169
165
KEYS MADE
While You Wait
For
Dorms
Autos
Etc.
LOUPOT
scoring artist, was one of 15 play
ers mentioned on all-SWC cage
teams. Brophy is tied with soph
omore Ken Hutto for the individual
scoring lead on the A&M squad
with 294 points over the season.
Brophy and Hutto are tied for
ninth and 10th in SWC season
scoring.
Three seniors, Brophy, Don
Bilbrey and John Fortenberry,
will be playing their last game
for the Maroon and White to
night. All three have been start
ers at one time or another this
season. Besides these three sen
iors, Coach Ken Loeffler will
probably start Hutto and George
Mehaffey.
U-PAK-M
Don’t forget . . .
• SANDWICH MEATS
•COLD BEVERAGES
• CRUSHED ICE
• ASSORTED NICK-NACKS
OPEN 7 A.M. to 11 P.M.
U - PAK - M
3800 So. College
Gus Ellis, ’37
OPEN FOR ALL BANQUETS, DINNERS
RECEPTIONS, WEDDINGS AND LUNCHEONS
MAGGIE PARKER DINING HALL
TA 2-5089
“The Oaks" — TA 3-4375
BRYAN
Well, Mr. Smarty, who knows
a good Way to clean clothes with
gasoline. . . . Maybe next time
you’ll send them to —
CAMPUS
CLEANERS
HERE’S FORD’S
RECORD AT
NASCAR’S NATIONAL
SPEED WEEKS
FIRST
In Sports Car Acceleration
A Ford Thunderbird set a
new record for American pro
duction sports cars.
FIRST
In Top Speed—'Class 4
• A Ford “Six” took top hon
ors in the flying mile for
class 4 American Prodviction
passenger cars.
FIRST
In 160-Mile Convertible Race
Ford V-8s took 1st and 2nd
place in National Convertible
Championship Race.
FIRST
In Over-All Performance
Ford won the Pure Oil
Manufacturer’s Award for
the most consistent perform
ance.
The Ford V-8 again showed its taillight to
all competitors in the “Olympics” of stock car
racing at Daytona Beach, Florida.
In blazing across the finish line Ford
demonstrated once more the sizzling per-
formance that keeps it the largest-selling V-8
in the world. No other car in the field could
match Ford for getaway “git” . . . for straight
away acceleration . . . for all-around road
ability. To see exactly how the other cars
trailed behind Ford, see the chart at the top
of this page.
One of the secrets of Ford’s performance
is the tremendous torque (wheel turning
Ijower) developed by Ford engines. For
Phone TA 2-1333
example. Ford’s new 225-h.p. Thunderbird
engine develops more torque than any other
engine in the low-price field. This means
quicker response, smoother running in the
kind of driving you do! Just nudge Ford’s
accelerator and whoosh! You pass in instants
when instants countl
Ford now offers this mighty 225-h.p.
engine with any Ford Fairlane or Station
Wagon model withFordomatic. What’s more,
these engines are coming off the assembly
lines right now! So why wait? Come in today
for a Test Drive. Find out for yourself about
Ford performance. Find out why Ford is the
V-8 with the biggest following!
FORD
World's largest-selling’
V-8
Test Drive the V-8
Champion!
Bryan, Texas