The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 22, 1956, Image 3

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    'Read Battalion Classifieds Daily
Passing must be passe at Tulane.
When the Greenies defeated Geor
gia 14-0 this year they did not
complete a pass.
Yogi Berra has
iri 1,200 American
since breaking in
ees in 1946.
made 1,322 hits
League games
with the Yank-
SENIORS NOTICE
We have cap and gown for your
graduation portrait
Don't Wait. ..
Come In Now . ..
AGGIELAND STUDIO
COLLEGE STUDENTS
Summer Work
Our company needs several men to work
from June 1 to Sept. 1. Good earnings,
plus Cash scholarship at end of summer.
Must be free to work all summer and
have a car. Work in North & East
Texas.
For interview call:
MR. DAWSON, MSC, VI 6-5721
10 AM to 1 PM; 3 PM to 8 PM
Wednesday, May 23
B Athletics Run Away
With Intramural Track
The Battalion .... College Station (Brazos County), Texas
Tuesday, May 22, 1956 PAGE 3
Not a single record was ei'ased
in yesterday’s intramural track fi
nals as B-Athletics copped overall
championship honors, with 39
points leading their nearest con
tender by 10 points.
Squadron 17 took the runner-up
slot in upperclassman action with
29 points. A-Transportation was
third with 23.
John Crow anchored B-Athletics
440-relay winning with 44.0. This
was .6 second short of the 1941
record set by E-Field Artillery.
Other members of the relay were
George Gillar, Bobby Conrad, and
Lloyd Taylor.
B-Athletics failed to match their
own 1:33.0 record in the 880 relay
set in Thursday’s prelims. Yester
day’s Robert Marks, John Crow,
Bobby Conrad, and Lloyd Taylor
combination finished at 1:33.4.
Marks also topped the 880 run for
B-Athletics with a 2:09.4 time.
Gillar edged B-Infantry’s Don
Wise in the 100-yard dash falling
short of record time with 10.2. A-
Transportation’s Bud Fichte was
third. Bobby Conrad put the shot
47-1 Mi for second place in the up
perclassman shot put division.
SUMMAKIKS
Upperclassmen:
120-yard Hurdles: 1) Blackwell, A TC;
2) Goodbrake, Dorm 16: 3) Rouse, Leggett;
4) Southworth, Sqd. 17; 5) Balke, A Ord
nance. Time, 14.5.
440-yard Relay: 1) B Athletics (Crow,
Gillar, Conrad, Taylor) ; 2) Sqd. 17; 3)
A TC; 4) D FA; 5) D Infantry. Time,
44.0.
In ’Mural Softball Finals
Dorm 16 in 25-17
Victory Over CV
EVAPORATIVE
COOLER SALE
Dearborn
THE QUALITY LINE
Squirrel Cage Coolers complete with pumps,
2-speed motor, adjustable louvers, right & left,
up or down.
2000 cfm .
3000 cfm .
4000 cfm
2200 cfm P
. . . $109.95
. . . 149.95
. . . 169.95
. . . 59.95
(No pump prop, type)
JOE FAULK’S
Auto & Appliance Store
214 N. BRYAN
TA 2-1669
Keith Presswood clouted three
home runs last night as Dorm 16
buried College View in a 25-17
slugfest for the civilian softball
championship. Bill Cook was the
winning pitcher going all the way
for the champions.
The game opened with Dorm 16
taking a first inning 5-4 lead. In
the second, catcher Robert Bean
UCLA May Lose
All 1956 Seniors
VICTORIA, B. C.—<A>)—Belea
guered UCLA went into voluntary
athletic exile for a few moments
Monday by declaring all its ath
letes ineligible, then was x’eprieved
by the Pacific Coast Conference.
The Uclans were slapped with k
three-year probation Saturday.
Despite today’s reprieve, the
mighty Bruin football team took a
crushing blow. It could lose all the
seniors' from its 1956 squad, and
many of the younger members of
the team may drop a year of eligi
bility.
The bombshell was set off by
grey-haired and harried Dr. Jo
seph Kaplan, the UCLA faculty
representative, who advised he was
declaring ineligible all athletes who
had participated in sports of any
category at UCLA in 1955.
The action shocked the confer
ence, although it had directed
UCLA to get its athletic house in
order. The representatives of the
eight other member colleges be
lieved this “is too harsh a pen
alty” and voted to limit the scourg
ing to the football squad and to
lessen its severity.
To The Following Merchants of Bryan and College
Station:
Aggie Auto-Tel
A & M Photo Shop
A. M. Waldrop Company
Bil-Bera Drive Inn
Black’s Pharmacy
Bonnie’s Grocery
Brazos Company Produce Cooperative
Bryan Tractor and Implement Company
Caldwell Jewelry
Central Texas Hardware Company
Central Texas Truck and Implement
Company
Conley and Locke Seed Company
Conway and Company
Dish man Pontiac Company
Dr. Pepper Bottling Company
Early Bird Shoppe
First National Bank of Bryan
Griesser Electric Company
Hohlt, Theo., Realtor
Hotard’s Cafeteria
Hudson Fence and Awning Company
Majestic Cleaners
Martin’s Place
Midway Cleaners
Midway Motel
Miller’s Supermarket —
Montgomery Ward Company
Norton-New man Printers
Parker Astin Hardware Company
Parker Lumber Company
Penny, J. C. Company
Shaffer’s Distributing Company
Sinclair Distributing Company
Smith-Seibert Produce Company
Soursares Distributing Company
Sugar and Spice Drive Inn
Swindler Poultry Farm
The Texas Drive Inn
Triangle Drive Inn
U-Pak-M Food Store
Van Dyke Studio
Vincent Gulf Service Station
Wallace Printing Company
White Auto Store
The Poultry Science Club of Texas A. and M. College wishes to thank the above
named merchants of Bryan and College Station for their bid authorizations on entries
at the Annual Chick, Poult, and Egg Show held at DeWare Field house, Saturday, May
12. You helped make it a very successful show and your assistance will help send
the Junior Judging Team to Mississippi State College, the Senior Judging Team to
Chicago, and pay a $100 scholarship to some deserving junior or senior. Again, may
we say “Thank You’’.
accounted for the only Dorm 16
run, getting on base via a walk.
College View promptly managed
three runs for a 7-6 lead which
was erased in the third when Dorm
16’s second sacker Bryan Day ini
tiated a three-run series to vault
ahead 9-7.
The College View nine also fin
ished the third inning with three
runs, again commanding the lead.
The champions broke away in the
fourth as runs came in with pitcher
Bill Cook, catcher Bean, second
baseman Day, and shortstop Press-
wood building up their first real
lead 13-10. Cook retired the Col
lege View side three up, three
down in the fourth.
Dorm 16 held a 17-12 lead going
into the seventh inning. Five quick
runs evened the game up again as
College View threatened seriously
by loading the bases with two men
out. Cook filled the count on the
next man up who grounded out to
second retiring the side.
An eighth inning barrage netted
eight runs for Dorm 16 headed by
Presswood’s final homer. This
proved to be the payoff inning as
Cook took the mound for the
champs with a 25-17 lead. It was
three up and three down again as
the three College View leadoff
men flew out.
Well, Mr. Smarty, who knows
a good way to clean clothes with
gasoline. . . . Maybe next time
you’ll send them to —
CAMPUS
CLEANERS
3)
A Ord-
440-yard Dash: 1) Heald, Sqd. 1;
2) Ayers, Sqd. 3: 3) Mehaffey Sqd. 25;
4) Garner, Sqd. 17; 5) Posz, A TC. Time,
880-yard Relay; 1) B Athletics (Marks,
Crow, Conrad, Taylor); 2) Sop- 17,
Maroon Band; 4) D Infantry; 5)
nance. Time, 1:33.4. ,
880-yard Run: 1) Marks, B Athletics;
2) Heald, Sqd. 1; 3) Flores, Sqd. 16; 4)
Smith, D FA; 5) Sheppard, C Armor.
’Time 2 ;09 4.
400-yard bash: 1) Gillar, B Athletics;
2) Wise, B Infantry; 3) Fichte A TC; 4)
Wheat, A Ordnance; 5) Hundley, D ha.
Time, 10.2. „ _
Shot Put: 1) Hartman, Hart, 2) Con
rad, B Athletics; 3) Erp, Sqd. 7; 4) Lock
ett, Sqd. 25; Pardee, B Athletics. Distance,
48 pole Vault: 1) Grey, Sqd. 15; 2) Car
ter, Sqd. 11; 3) Reeder, A Engineers; 4)
Budwine, Leggett. Height, 12 feet.
Broad Jump: 1) Morton, Sqd. 17; 2)
Robinson, Sqd. 22; 3) Duplantis, Sqd. 17;
4) Tom Mitchell; 5) Hillard, Sqd. 16. Dis-
tance, 21-5%.
High Jump: 1) Sudderth, B AAA; L)
Hallister, A TC; 3) South, A TC; 4) Par
dee, B Athletics; 5) Cander, Maroon Band.
Height, 5-11.
Freshmen:
120-yard Hurdles: 1) Medley, Sqd 25;
2) Carey, Sqd. il; 3) Stacha, A Ordnance;
4) Bendele, C AAA; 5) Speedie, B In
fantry. Time, 14.3.
440-yard Relay: 1) B Athletics; 2)
Sqd. 14; 3) Sqd. 17; 4) D Infantry; 5)
A TC. Time, 45.7.
440-yard Dash: 1) Powers, A FA; 2)
Sorrell, A TC; 3) Barker, B FA; 4) Rob
ertson, Sqd. 10; 5) Schmidt, A Engineers.
Time, 54.3.
880-yard Relay: 1) Sqd. 17, 2 D In
fantry; 3) B AAA; 4) Sqd. 10; 5) B
Engineers. Time, 1:36.8.
880-yard Run: 1) New, Sqd. 22; 2)
Locke, Sqd. 6; 3) Tew, B Infantry; 4)
Robertson, B Engineers; 5) Parson, Sqd.
10. Time, 2:08.9.
100-yard Dash: 1) Tracey, Walton; 2)
Thompson, A Signal; 3) Cain, B Engineers;
4) Guthrie, Sqd. 14; 5) Smith, Sqd. 25.
Time, 10.4.
Shot Put; 1) Beck, B Athletics; 2)
King, B Engineers; 3) Evans, Sqd. 5;
4) Scott. Sqd. 16; 5) Zeigler, B FA. Dis
tance, 46-1.
Pole Vault: 1) Hullum, A Athletics;
2) Hart, A QMC; 3) Porter, A Armor; 4)
Brop, A Ordnance; 5) Martinez, B AAA.
Broad Jump: 1) Byar, Sqd. 17; 2) Gas
ton, A Cml; 3) Green, Sqd. 14; 4) Hearne,
Sqd. 10; 5) Maryan, Sqd. 20. Distance,
19-4.
McCALL’S
Humble Service Station
“Where Service
Is First”
East Gate VI 6-4922
Hy 6
OPEN FOR ALL BANQUETS, DINNERS
RECEPTIONS, WEDDINGS AND LUNCHEONS
MAGGIE PARKER DINING HALL
TA 2-5089
“The Oaks” — TA 3-4375
BRYAN
HEY AGGIES — DON’T DELAY
Now Is The Time To Buy Your New 1956 . . .
MERCURY or FORD
GOOD DISCOUNTS ON STRAIGHT SALES
MORE FOR YOUR TRADE IN
For your convenience we have tried to work out some finance
plans whereby it will make it easier for you to get your new car.
For Example:
TWO 310NTHS GIVEN FROM DELIVERY
MAKE YOUR FIRST PAYMENT.
DATE UNTIL YOU
— Or -
YOUR FIRST THREE PAYMENTS
REGULAR PAYMENTS STARTING
TIME YOU TAKE DELIVERY.
AT ONLY $40.00 WITH THE
FOUR MONTHS FROM THE
— Or —
NO DOWN PAYMENT AT ALU IF YOU ARE A GRADUATING
SENIOR IN R.O.T.C. AND HAVE YOUR ORDERS TO GO INTO THE
SERVICE.
Don’t say I can’t buy a car, come by and see one of our sales
men at Bryan Motors, Highway 6 South. You will be surprised at
some of the deals I can work out for you. Call at TA 2-1605 in the
daytime or VI 6-7305 at night. Call for a demonstration ride at
any time. If you dont’ want a new car we always have a large
selection of clean used cars priced right.
BRYAN MOTOR CO.
Highway 6, South
Bryan, Texas
P O G O
By Walt Kelly
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