The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 20, 1957, Image 3

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Dee Leads Houston Golf
HOUSTON, —OP)— Harry Dee,
31-year-old Hartsdale, N. Y., pro
fessional, scored a four-under-par
68 in the rain and a cold wind
Tuesday to take medalist honors in
JUST RECEIVED
NEW SHIPMENT
SOFTBALL
BATS
LOUISVILLE SLUGGER
ADIRONDACK
BATRITE
at the
Student Co-op
qualifying play for the $36,000
Houston Open.
While Dee was leading a field of
129 players on the 7,200-yard, par
72 Memorial Park course, Peter
Thomson, British Open Champion
from Australia, posted a five-un
der-par 66 at the Houston Golf
Club to win $450 in top money in
a preliminary pro-amateur event.
Tied at 67 for the 6,289-yard,
par 71 golf club course and win
ning $213 each were Stan Leon
ard of Canada, Howie Johnson of
Houston, and Ted Kroll, who will
be defending champion Thursday
when the 72-hole Houston Open be
gins at Memorial.
McNichol
as A.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 7:30 P.M.
ALSO SEVEN BIG ACTS
$2.5@, $2.00 & $L25
TICKETS AT
STUDENT ACTIVITIES
Lose to SMU, 71
By BARRY HART
Despite the tremendous effort
of Jim McNichol, the SMU Mus
tangs held onto their two-year
home court win streak, downing
the Aggies 71-55 last night ' in
Dallas.
McNichol, the 6-6 Philadelphia
sophomore who improves with
every game, out-scored Jim Krebs,
supposedly the finest eager in
Southwest Conference history, 21-
20, and tied SMU’s Bobby Mills
for high-point honors. McNichol
also gathered in eight rebounds to
pace the Aggie board sweepers.
The Ponies of Coach Doc Hayes
came a step closer to their third
consecutive conference crown as
Ricq, took * Arkansas 82-69, in
Fayetteville to erase the Razor-
backs as title contenders. SMU
stands 8-1 in league play and 18-3
on the season, good enough for
fourth in the national standings.
With sophomores hitting 40 of
A&M’g total, the Aggies carried the
battle to the confident Mustangs
throughout the game, pulling to
within five points, 43-38, with 13
minutes left, but the SMU sharp
shooters put the game on ice with
six quick points while holding the
Cadets scoreless.
Meadowlark Lemon—Globe Trotter Clown
in Engineering.. . Physics.. . Mathematics
LOCKZXIEEnD
A ircraft Corporation
California Division • Georgia Division
Lockheed Representatives of the Californid
Division and the Georgia Division
will be on campus
Thurs. & Fri., February 21 & 22
You are invited to consult your
placement officer for an appointment.
Separate interviews will be
given for each division.
Both divisions of Lockheed are engaged in a long-range expansion program in their fields of endeavor.
11
California Division activities in Burbank
cover virtually every phase of commercial
and military aircraft. Seventeen different
models of planes are in production, including
cargo and passenger transports, high Mach
performance fighters, jet trainers, radar
search planes, patrol bombers.
B. S. graduates who wish to attain a Master’s
Degree will be interested in the California
Division’s Masters-Degree Work-Study
Program. In the program, participants achieve
their M.S. while working concurrently
on Lockheed’s engineering staff.
INR
At Lockheed in Marietta, Georgia, new
C-130A turbo-prop transports and B-47 jet
bombers are being manufactured in the
country’s largest aircraft plant under one
roof. The division is already one of the
South’s largest industries. Moreover, a new
engineering center is now in development as
part of the division’s expansion program.
In addition, advanced research and develop
ment are underway on nuclear energy and
its relationship to aircraft. A number of
other highly significant classified projects
augment the extensive production program.
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.
A ircraft Corporation
California Division, Burbank, California • Georgia Division, Marietta, Georgia
Neil Swisher, with seven, and
Ernie Turner, with 12, managed
72.7 per cent of the Aggie score
as Ted Harrod contributed nine
and Ken Hutto six.
George Mehaffey, limping oh an
injured ankle, did not play and
certainly his shooting and rebound
ing could have made the score
much closer. Mehaffey will be
ready for the Texas game in
Austin Saturday.
A&M now owns a 2-8 conference
record and are 6-16 for the season.
The Aggies meet Texas and Rice
in their final games
A&M (55) Fg Ft Ft Tp
Hutto, g 2 2 4 6
Harrod, g 3 3 2 9
Swisher, g 3 1 3 7
Turner, £ 5 2 4 12
McNichol, c 8 5 5 21
Schwake, f 0 0 0 0
Totals 21 13 IS 55
SMU (71)
SITowalter, f
Herrscher, f ............ 4
Duncan, g 4
Mills, g 8 5 1, 21
Krebs, c 6 8 3 20
McGregor, C 0 0 0 0
Totals 23 25 9 71
A&M 32 23—55
S M U 37 34—71
Free throws missed: Harrod, Turner,
McNichol, Showalter, Herrscher 2, Krebs 3.
Thn Rntta linn College Station (Brazos County), Texas
Wednesday, February 20, 1957 PAGE 3
I TERRIFIC VALUES
Fg Ft I*f Tp
.13 15
.4 5 3 13
.4 4 1 12
4 D’ FA Takes
Grid Semi-final
“D” FA upperclassmen won a
semi-final 1 berth in football yes
terday by defeating “A” Engineers
13-0.
The first TD of the game came
early in the first half on a pass
from Jim Spencer to Harry Mc-
Brierty. The second tally came
when Charlie Smith intercepted an
“A” Engr. pass and went over for
the score.
In other quarter-final action,
“A” Qmc. won. over “A” Cml. 15-0
and “B” Engr. squeezed by Sqd.
17. by a score of 7-6.
Gruntin’ and groanin’ was a fa
miliar sound as wrestling got un
derway yesterday. The wrestlers
showed a lot of interest and hustle
in their matches and there was
evidence that plenty of action is
in store.
Wash and Wear
Slacks
SHORT SLEEVE
SPORT SHIRTS
Student Charge Accounts Invited
A&M Mens Shop
103 Main North Gate
DICK RUBIN, ’59, Owner ki
p ”
$
mi::
A Campus-to-Career Case History
Ken Boekeloo (center foreground) at the scene of a cable installation project in Detroit.
Ten years ^Icng in
his telepho
After graduation in 1947
Kalamazoo College with a B.j
Physics and Mathematics, Ken
Boekeloo joined Michigan Bell Tele
phone Company as a trainee.
Today, ten years later, Ken is a
Division Plant Superintendent in
Detroit. Eight district supervisors
report to him, and they supervise
some 1700 people. Ken is responsi
ble for the installation and mainte
nance of plant facilities valued at
$135,000,000 including more than
500,000 telephones.
A big jump in ten years? Here’s
r®er
says about it:
e telepho
(g, you «tf» adv(
’just as far, as
ill along the w
"period through o
mmfc, Ahe training and experienc
you get really prepare you for at
vancement.
“If you like to make contributions
and take responsibility, and if you
value the opportunities a growing
business can offer, then the tele-
,phone company’s the place to look
for a career.”
Ken Boekeloo Is one of many young men who
are finding rewarding careers in Bell Telephone
Companies, Bell Telephone Laboratories, West-
ern Electric and Sandia Corporation. Your place
ment officer can give you more information
about all Bell System Companies.
vRELL TELEPHONE
SYSTEM