The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 13, 1956, Image 3

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    Tuesday, March 13, 1956
THE BATTALION
Page 3
CHS Athletic Teams Have
Long Weekend of Activity
A&M Consolidated sports moved
into action in a big way last week
end. Among six sports taking - the
field were baseball, track, tennis
and wrestling.
Consolidated’s wrestling team
won the state championship here
last Saturday with David Lloyd,
John Hamner, John Cay wood, Car
los del Gado, John Wayne Todd,
Bo Linton and Mark Nye gaining
victories.
At the Bronco Invitational Re
lays at Dayton the Tigers’ speedy
medley relay team of Bill Hall,
Don Tax, Dick Hickman and Jack
McNeely won first place. CHS’s
tennis team took four matches and
jC
dropped four at Rosenberg.
Jo Ann Walker and Pam Sperry
won singles matches while Mar
garet Manthei and Betty Mead took
doubles-laurels along with Don
Avera and Jerry Mills.
In baseball the Tigers lost their
opening game to the Hearne Eag
les at Hearne, 1-3, with CHS pitch
er Edgar Feldman going all the
way and giving up but three hits.
Consolidated couldn’t push across
a run until the top of the seventh
against the tough Eagles.
Hearne dented home plate for
two runs in the first inning and
added a third in the third.
OPEN FOR ALL BANQUETS, DINNERS
RECEPTIONS, WEDDINGS AND LUNCHEONS
MAGGIE PARKER DINING HALL
TA 2-5089
“The Oaks” — TA 3-4375
BRYAN
m
SALE
PAWN MERCHANDISE
Many Interesting Items Never Picked Up Such As:
WATCHES GUNS CAMERAS
RINGS TYPEWRITERS RADIOS
STUDENT CO-OP
0
WANT AD RATES
One day 2^ per word
If per word each additional day
Minimum charge—40£
DEADLINES
5 p.m. day before publication
Classified Display
80£ per column inch
each insertion
PHONE VI 6-6415
For Sale
Apartment size range.
Bargain.
Call VI 6-4117.
101t2
’52 Chevrolet, fleetline tudor.
New black paint, white side walls,
new seat covers. Very clean. Noti
fy Vernon Frank, Dorm 7—room
210. 101t8
Tomato plants, 307 Cherry St.,
Walter Johnson, VI 6-6653. 97T Th
A Voightlander Reflex Camera, ex
cellent lens, filters, leather case.
Uses 120 or 620 film. Makes
2 1 /4 x 214 negatives. See Clem
ents, Hart C-9, $40.00. 100t2
(22) desks, (6) tables, (1) draw
ing table, (5) chairs, (3) wood fil
ing cabinets, (7) cabinets—stor
age and mailing, (1) card file, (2)
bookshelves, (1) Underwood type
writer, (1) flood light, (15) infra
red lamps, (1) typewriter stand,
(2) trash baskets, (2) transfer
cases, (1) bulletin board, (1)
smoking stand, (1) addresser.
Above items may be inspected at
Student Publications, Goodwin
Hall, Texas A&M Campus or
call VI 6-6415. Sealed bids will
be received in the Office of the
Business Manager, College Admin
istration Building until 10:30 a.m.,
March 19, 1956. The right is re
served to reject any and all bids
and to waive any and all techni-
talities. Address Business Man
ager, A&M College of Texas,
College Station, Texas, for fur
ther information. 99t4
j • ENGINEERING AND
i ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES
• BLUE LINE PRINTS
• BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS
SCOATES INDUSTRIES
603 Old Sulphur Spring? Road
BRYAN, TEXAS
Dr. Carlton R. Lee
OPTOMETRIST
303A East 26th
Clall TA 2-1662 for Appointment
(Across from Court House)
★ FINE FOOD ★
Z A R A P E
Mexican-American
4 blks. E. of Hwy. 6
Work Wanted
Guaranteed radio and appliance
repair. C-13-D College View.
81tf
Typing wanted to do in my
home. Mrs. C. E. Carlson, Jr.
t’hone TA 2-3532 after 5 p.m. lOOtf
Pets
Dogs, cats boarded—low daily,
weekly, monthly rates. Grooming,
Puppies. Free pickup, delivery.
8AYARD KENNELS, Highway 6
South, College. VI 6-5535. 70tf
For Bent
Front bedroom, adjoining bath
for weekend activities at A&M.
910 E. 30th St. Phone TA 2-7913
after 5:30 p.m. 101t2
Sewing machines, Pruitt Fabric
Shop. 98tf
Lost
Philmont chain tieclasp on cam
pus Thursday. Reward. VI 6-4267
or VI 6-5734, Mr. Fletcher. 101t2
W ristwatch, round yellow-gold
Bulova with black suede band, be
tween Engineering Building and
day parking lot. Reward, TA-
2-5091. 101t3
Special Notice
Four-hour service on cleaning
and pressing on request. Aggie
Cleaners. North Gate. 93tl8
Persons interested in joining an
A&M European Tour should con
tact Dr. Breitenkamp, Room 101A
Academic Building. 90t23
OFFICIAL NOTICES
Official notices must be brought, mailed,
or telephoned so as to arrive in the Office
of Student Publications (207 Goodwin,
VI 6-6415, hours 8-12, 1-5, daily Monday
through Friday) at or before the deadline
of 1 p.m. of the day preceding publication.
— Director of Student Publications.
“All students who expect to receive a
degree in June are reminded that orders
will be taken for graduation announcemnts
at the Department of Student Activities
through March 22nd. 97t8
ALL DEPARTMENTS: Copies of the
i955-56 Student Directory are available
(75 cents each) at the Office of Student
Publications, 207 Goodwin Hall. 72tf
K&B DRIVING RANGE
— Is Now Open —
Mon. thru Fri. — 4 P.M. till?
Sat. & Sun. — 10 A.M. till?
Fin Feather Rd. Bryan
PROMPT RADIO SERVICE
— Call —
SOSOLIK’S RADIO AND
TV SERVICE
713 8. Main St.
(Across from Railroad Tower)
PHONE TA 2-1941 BRYAN
If Weather Permits
Ag BasebalL Team
Hosts Lutherans
Weather permitting', A&M’s unbeaten baseballers go af
ter their fourth straight victory tomorrow afternoon at 3
on Kyle Field when they take on tough Texas Lutheran.
“If the weather is still bad tomorrow,” we’ll postpone
the game until Thursday or Friday,” said Coach Beau Bell.
The Cadets are scheduled to meet Texas Lutheran again Sat
urday at Seguin.
Bell named four candidates
for the starting mound as
signment tomorrow, including
Wendell Baker, Dick Munday,
Paul Lang and Doug Mullins. All
are righthanders.
Baker, junior fireballer, hand
cuffed Texas Lutheran last year
at Seguin, 6-3, and in his only
outing this season gave up one run
to the University of Houston in
five innings. Munday has a 1-0
record this year, having turned
back Sam Houston, 6-3, in the sea
son opener at Huntsville.
Lang took credit for the Aggies’
7-6 win over Houston in a spark
ling relief role while Mullins pitch
ed four and two-thirds innings of
no hit ball to gain a 4-1 decision
over Sam Houston here last Thurs
day. In six and two-thirds innings
of relief work this season Mullins
has allowed no hits, no runs, struck
out six and issued only three walks.
One of Coach Beau Bell’s sore
spots at the beginning of the sea
son was finding a replacement for
two-time all-Southwest Conference
catcher Jimmy Williams. James
Smothermon, a sophomore, appears
to have solved that problem for the
present at least.
“He’s still got a lot to learn,”
said Bell, “but he’s been improving
steadily since the season started.
I’m pleased with his progress thus
far.”
Joe Worden, who landed the
third' base job at the beginning of
the season and sat out last Thurs
day’s game with a sore leg, is
scheduled to return to action
against Texas Lutheran tomorrow.
A good hitter, Worden is a Florida
junior college transfer.
Tech Knocks Aggies
Out of Olympics Title
Georgia Tech entered only two
men in the Border Olympics last
Saturday in Laredo, but they were
enough to knock A&M out of the
meet title.
Carl Vereen and Fred Berman
of the Southern conference school
won the discus and shot put to
take six valuable points away from
the Aggies and drop the Cadets to
third place, with 51 % points. Okla
homa A&M took the championship
for the second straight year, edg
ing Texas, 56 to 53 Vz.
“We would’ve won,” said head
track coach Frank Anderson, “if
those Georgia Tech boys had stay
ed home.” Ironically, it was first
time Tech had entered men in the
big Laredo meet.
Tom Bonorden, Bobby Gross and
Herman Johnson placed second,
third and fourth in the shot, and
repeated in the discus with Gross
second, Johnson third and Bonor
den fourth.
Bill Cocke ran perhaps the two
finest races of his collegiate ca
reer, missing second place in the
mile by two feet and, minutes la
ter, repeating with a fine third
in the 8^0.
The Aggies, who led in the point
totals right down to the finish,
lost the final race, the mile relay,
by one stride to champion Okla-
home A&M with Texas taking
third.
Winton Thomas tied for first in
the pole vault, at 13-6, James
Clark tied for third and Jim Jack-
son took fifth.
Oran Helvey and Joe Sehiraldi
ran third and fourth in the javelin
and Emmett Smallwood placed
third in the 220-yard low hurdles.
JAMES SMOTHERMON has
switched from outfield to catch
er this year and is now holding
down the No. 1 back-stop job.
James got three hits in four
trips to the plate against Sam
Houston last Thursday.
Soccer Team Undefeated
Unbeaten in four starts., the. Ag- | Field at 2 p.m. Sunday. Admission
gie soccer team dumped Chance to the games is free.
Vaught Aircraft of Dallas here last
weekend, 2-1. The Aggies’ offense
was paced by Carlos Salinas and
Jacintho lacovone, who each scored
one goal. The defense was led by
Ernesto Alvarez from Santa Ana,
El Salvador.
The Cadets play host to Okla
homa here on the Aggie Soccer cinnati last season,
Smoky Burgess hit 20 homers for
Cincinnati last season and tied
Ernie Lombardi’s record for most
homers ever hit by a Redleg catch
er. Burgess also hit one home for
the Phillies before he went to Cin-
J. Paul Sheedy* Was Up A Tree Till
Wildroot Cream-Oil Gave Him Confidence
That “new suit” I “bought”
for Dad is really an old one
I had rejuvenated at . . .
CAMPUS
CLEANERS
"Gorilla my dreams, I love you,” said Sheedy outside his sweetie’s window.
But she was playing it cagey. “Get lost Gargantua,” she said. “I’ve seen
better heads on coconuts.” Then Sheedy got wise to Wildroot Cream-Oil.
Now he has confidence in his <«/>e-earance because
Wildroot keeps his hair handsome and healthy looking
the way Nature intended... neat but w0/ greasy. Contains
heart of Lanolin, Nature’s finest hair and scalp con
ditioner. So don’t monkey around with messy hair. Get
Wildroot Cream-Oil,America’s largest selling hair tonic.
In bottles or unbreakable tubes. It gives you confidence
in any situation. Use Wildroot Cream-Oil every day
and you Congo wrong.
WILDROOT
CREAM-OIL
* of 131 So. Harris Hill Rd., Williamsville, N. Y.
Wildroot Cream-Oil
gives you confidence
CtOOMS TH! HAM!
*IIHV!J ORYNHS
■ IMOVIS
100SI DAHORUR
• uMoor «l, n»t.
/
Graduates
riftrt l
in Engineering.., Physics... Mathematics
:
.L. •
■ 1
Used Car
Sprinf
Specials
1955 Ford Customline Fordor
Overdrive, Heater
Lie MH 4198 $1550.00
1954 Ford Crestline Fordor
Heater <& Radio
Lie NW 3530 $1295.00
1953 Customline Ford Tudor
FOM, Lie NU 4943 $1050.00
1950 Plymouth Fordor
Lie NV 4214 $425.00
1950 Mercury Club Cpe
Lie NU 8787 $425.00
1950 Pontiac Tudor
Lie MU 9628 $400.00
1952 Ford F250 Express
Lie 3A 4393 $550.00
MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM
E Z TERMS
THESE ARE JUST A FEW
SEE THE REST AT
Cade Motor Co.
Your Friendly Ford Dealer
Texas Ave & Burnett
LOCKHEED
Aircraft Corporation
California Division
Missile Systems Division
Staff Representatives
Will be on campus to discuss your future
Wednesday, March 14
in Lockheed’s expanding research
and development program
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Both divisions of Lockheed are engaged in a long-range expansion program in their fields of endeavor.
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California Division activities in Burbank
cover virtually every phase of aircraft, both
commercial and military. 46 major projects
are in motion, including 13 models of aircraft
in production — extremely high-speed
fighters, jet trainers, commercial and military
transports, radar search planes, patrol
bombers. The development program is the
largest and most diversified in the
division’s history.
NeW positions have been created for
graduates in: Aeronautical, Civil, Electrical
and Mechanical Engineering and
Mathematics and Physics.
Illililiil
V
II
IHIlilfi
Ilf
■
Missile Systems Division, Van Nuys,
California specializes in the technology of
guided missiles. Its research and development
cover virtually every field of scientific
endeavor, and offer Engineers and Scientists
problems of increasing complexity.
Positions are open for B.S., M.S. and Ph.D.
candidates in: Aeronautical, Electrical
and Mechanical Engineering and Mathematics
and Physics. In addition, a scholarship program
leading to M.S. Degrees has been established
for those able to qualify for graduate standing.
This broad expansion program is creating new positions in each division.
Graduates in fields of Aeronautical Engineering, Electrical
Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Mathematics and Physics are
invited to investigate their role in Lockheed’s expansion.
Separate interviews will be given for each division.
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Lockheed
Aircraft Corporation
California Division, Burbank, California • Missile Systems Division, Van Nuys, California