The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 12, 1957, Image 5

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LIFE
ine Entertains
Rains Hold Off
By JIMMY CARRELL
The rains came and farmers are
appreciative, but baseball players,
interested in playing ball, find
Kyle Field conditions more suitable
for growing crops.
The Aggies play host to Texas
Lutheran College at 3 p.m. Wed
nesday, the weatherman permit
ting, and as the case has been for
the past week, Coach Beau Bell
will probably pitch Donnie Hul-
lum and Bo Paradowski.
Rained out for three straight
games, the Aggie baseball team
looked for competition from the
Fish in an intra-squad game Sat
urday, and unexpectedly found
the going tough.
A two-run homer over the right
centerfield fence by left fielder
Cliff Tuttle in the last of the tenth
inning broke a 5-5 tie and gave
TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY
the Aggies a 7-5 victory over their
own freshmen in a game reminis
cent of a year ago.
Under the same conditions last
year, the Fish, holding a 4-4 tie
with the varsity, saw a home run
by Joe Boring in the tenth inning-
give the Aggies a 6-4 win.
Through five innings this was a
pitcher's duel, with righthanded
Percy Sanderson of Nederland
throwing for the Fish, opposed by
Aggie captain Dick Munday.
Sanderson, after five innings,
held Aggie bats to only two hits,
doubles by Tuttle and Lyle Gibson,
but tired in the sixth to yield a
run to varsity batters.
Munday gave up four hits in five
innings and was relieved by Paul
Lang who gave up three hits the
rest of the way. Lang’s wildness,
coupled with timely hitting by the
Fish, gave the freshmen a 4-1 lead
at the end of the sixth.
The varsity tied it up in the next
inning scoring three runs and in
the eighth both teams scored once.
The game then ran into an extra
inning witn Tuttle’s two-run homer
winning for the varsity in the
tenth.
Tuttle led Aggie hitters, bang
ing out a double and homer, with
Gibson singling and doubling.
Norman Stutte doubled in two
runs and Dennis Chandler singled
twice to pace freshman batters who
outhit the Aggies, 7-6.
WIH HOWARD ST. JOHN • A UNIVERSAL INTERNATIONAL PICTURE
CIRCLE
THRU TUESDAY
“Dakota Im'kleEil”
DALE ROBERTSON
— Also —
“While The City
Sleeps'”
DANA ANDREWS
— T IT E S D A Y —
“GUYS AND DOLLS”
with MARION BRANDO
— Plus —
“VIRGINIA CITY”
with MIRIAM HOPKINS
THRU THURSDAY
"" A LAN VIRGINIA
LADD • MAYO
EDMOND O’BRIEN
Sipe g#j€p
WarnerColor |
CHS Golfers
Capture Meet
With Bastrop
A&M Consolidated golfers,
with a top foursome score of
316, won a dual meet with
Bastrop on the A&M course
Saturday.
Other Tiger athletes were not
so fortunate, the track team tak
ing only one place in the Bronco
Relays at Dayton, and the tennis
team, with five performers in the
quarterfinals of the Centex Tennis
Tourney at Austin, saw each mem
ber eliminated at that point.
Jerry Holland fired a par-72 to
post the lowest score of the dual
meet with Bastrop, the Tigers win
ning 18-3. In the junior high
division the Kittens whipped Bas
trop 20V2 to Ms, with Ronnie Ray
having the low score of 85.
Donald Tax placed second in the
broad jump at the meet*staged in
Dayton, leaping 19-7%. Tax
qualified in the 120-yard high
hurdles, but failed to place in the
finals.
Don Avera, was the outstanding
tennis performer for the Tigers,
winning three matches, before bow
ing to Paul Como of Baytown, 6-3,
7-5. Avera had Como down 5-2
in the second set before losing.
Como has twice been state champ
ion in doubles, and was the eventual
winner in boy’s singles.
rhe Battalion .... College Station (Brazos County), Texas
| Tue?dg.y Mm'ch 12, 1957 PAGE 5
Johnson, Thomas
Win at Laredo Meet
Putting on a better showing than
anticipated, A&M picked up two
firsts and a pair of seconds in the
Border Olympics in Laredo last
Saturday.
Herman Johnson pitched tihe
discus 156-3 to capture first in
that event, then heaved the shot
put 49-914 for a second. Winton
Thomas, A&M’s great vaulter,
leaped 13-1 for first in the pole
vault with teammate James Clark
tying Texas’ John Novey for the
runner-up spot with a 12-714 jump.
Texas ran away with the uni
versity division, scoring 92 points.
Bobby Morrow, Abilene Christian
College’s Olympic sprinter who won
three gold medals in the 1956
games, took first in the 100 and
220-yard dashes and anchored
ACC’s winning sprint relay to a
40.8 clocking, erasing the 40.9 rec
ord set by Baylor in 1956.
The Steers’ great Eddie South
ern, another Olympic performer
who took second in the 400-meter
hurdles at Melbourne, swept both
relays, setting a new 22.8 record in
the 220-yard lows, and tying the
old mark of 14.3 set by Rice’s Fred
Wolcott in 1939, and equalled by
John Rowland, SMU, in 1949.
A Campus-to-Career Case History
Leader of an exploration
Ovyen Williams leads a team of re
search and development specialists at
Bell Telephone Laboratories. His is one
of many teams set up at the Labs to ex
plore the frontiers of electronics and com
munications. In the picture above, Owen
(right) discusses modulation problems
in electron tubes with Robert Leopold,
M.S., Electrical Engineering, University
of Michigan, 1949.
Owen himself is thirty-one, and a
B.E.E. from Rensselaer Polytechnic In
stitute, class of ’49. He joined the Labs
upon graduation, and was assigned to
communications development training —
the equivalent of a two-year postgraduate
course in communications. Mixed with
his classes were various assignments in
the Chem Lab, the switching and wave
filter departments, and work on transmis
sion systems and cogxial cables.
In 1954 Owen was promoted to super
visor. He works with two electrical en
gineers, both systems analysts, and four
technical assistants. Their current job is
exploratory development of submarine
cable systems, looking towards great new
transoceanic communications links.
Owen is one of many engineers and
scientists in the Bell System whose prin
cipal responsibilities include those of
leadership. The work of improving tele
phone service in the Bell System is
guided, and decisions are made, by men
who understand the problems involved
at first hand.
♦
Many young men like Owen Williams are finding
inleresling and rewarding careers in the Bell
System — at Bell Telephone Laboratories, in Bell
Telephone Companies, Western Electric and
Sandia Corporation. Your placement officer can
give you more information about career oppor
tunities in all Bell System companies.
BELL.
TELEPHONE
SYSTEM
THE PAUL ANDERSON OF A&M—Henry Heatherly,
captain of the Aggie Weightlifting team who took first
in the 198-pound division at the Houston Odd Lift Contest
recently. Heatherly takes his team into the regional YM-
CA Meet this weekend in Houston.
Giants ’Hof man Gets Chance
As Replacement for Sarni
PHOENIX, Ariz., — Al
though Bobby Hofman has re
ceived in only 20 major league
games, the New York Giants’
handyman may get his big chance
as a catcher this season.
Hofman, who shares the big
league mark for pinch-hit home
I’uns with nine, isn’t even on the
Giant roster at present, having
been assigned to the Minneapolis
Millers last year after escaping
waivers.
But with regular catcher Bill
Sarni lost because of a heart at
tack, Wes Westrum is the only
experienced Giant receiver.
And Manager Bill Righey con
ceded today: “Hofman could wind
up at least our No. 2 catcher.”
The only other Giant receiver
is rookie Bob Schmidt, up from
Dallas, who still has to prove he
can hit major league pitching.
That provides a.golden opportun
ity for Hofman, because, as Rig-
ney says of 34-year-old Westrum,
“our Iron Mike” can’t catch them
all.
DINE OUT
A Sure Way to Your
Family’s Heart
(The Wife You Save May Be Your Own)
WEDNESDAY DINNER MENU
SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN
(Served Family Style)
$1.35 ■
PER PERSON
MEMORIAL
STUDENT’ CENTER
DINING ROOM
SERVING
LUNCH — 11:30 A.M. - 2:00 P.M., 7 DAYS A WEEK
DINNER — 6:00 P. M. - 8:00 P.M., Mon. thru Fri.
Metallurgical Instrumentation
Atomic Reactor Controls
^|pr | f | ™,* ** *
T| I I t! L t
m' I rr
Design; Manufacture, etc., of L&N Products
©fep info
fhe lExpaneSing Field
of Instrumentation
Automatic control, or automation, or data reduction are
all Instrumentation, and offer some of the broadest and most
satisfying careers available to today’s engineers and scientists.
Atomic energy, iron and steel, aircraft and automobiles,
chemicals and chinaware, petroleum and electric power are
only a few of the many industries which need instruments.
This need creates permanent opportunities in many of our op
erations, including research and development, product engi
neering, industrial engineering, production, inspection, mar
ket development and customer contacts.
The products with which you would be concerned include
automatic, high-precision instruments for controlling, record
ing and indicating temperature, chemical concentration, radi
ation phenomena, frequency and load and many other con
ditions. For heat-treaters we make furnaces and process
equipment. For the worker in science—whether student or
researcher—we make both automatic and manual laboratory-
type instruments, with which you may already be familiar.
The Company has about 3000 people—is one of the biggest
in its field, yet is compact enough for you to be able to “follow
the score.” Its reputation for progressiveness in industrial
relations, and for quality of product is world wide.
Russell E. Hansen, our Manager at Houston, will be on the
campus on March 15, 1957 with information which he will
cordially share about our very modern opportunities and
rewards for engineers and scientists. Your placement bureau
will arrange an appointment with Mr. Hansen, at your request.
11111
NORTH RUP
Instruments J Automatic Controls • Furnaces
4850 Stenton Ave., Philadelphia 44, Pa.
Atlanta
Boston
Buffalo
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Denver
Detroit
Hartford
Indianapolis
Houston
Los Angeles
Milwaukee
New York
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
San Francisco
Seattle
St. Louis
Tulsa
Integra, Leeds
& Northrup,
Birmingham, Eng.
System Control for Utilities
PERSONAL INTERVIEWS ON CAMPUS MARCH 15TH
Contact your Placement Office for Appointment