(engineering)! id Friday RE & RUBBEE interviews in- y, business ai jmics and age. majors for poi! . A group meet- \ hursday at 7:|j j ’ the MSG. Fii-j be arranged at! \ T PETROLEIJJ; interviews pet-' , civil, chemicai! gineerfng, Geo- i, physics, ac- less administra-! positions. Pet! , civil, chemical 1 eering, geologj physics majors! Friday for sum. f OF"THE CAINE MUTINY"! IUUSDAY 2 Matinee Performahf 1:00 — 4J One Evernng Performance ONLY 8 05 P.M. 'EORGE , YENS’ ' OUCTION FERBER VARNERCOLOR 1 JAMES >N • DEAN 1 Capp Schulz ii Hutchinson Sees 5 Team Race in NL By ED WILKS ST. PETERSBURG, G3P)—Fred Hutchinson, the St. Louis Cardinal manager who always looks as though he just got up, watched Cincinnati’s power guys in the batting cage and observed “Naw, we’re not going to pitch these guys any dif ferent this year. We know how to pitch to ’em. The trick is to do it.” The former Detroit pitcher and manager sat with his arms stretched along the back of the dugout bench, jawing with a trio of newsmen. One was asking how the Cards shaped up. Another was curious about Cardinal pitching. The third wanted to know what you do to stop the Redlegs and their power hitters. Hutch was answering all three. “My four pitchers are Mizell and Jones and Dickson and Wehmeier. Sure, I think of Dickson as a 27-year-old, but at 41 I can’t move him back. I have to give him a regular rotation, ev ery four or five days.” Someone wondered ab^ut Weh- ineier. He was 0-2 with Philadel phia, but after the Cards got him in a mid-May trade last year he was 12-9. Had Hutch, picked by the Cards because he can handle pitchers, done anything special for the 30-year-old righthander? “No, not much,” said Hutch. “We helped his motion a little. We think maybe he’s arrived as a pitcher. Some guys arrive late, you know.” There came a question of wheth er the National League race was really going- to be a wide-open thing with maybe five clubs in on it. Or are Milwaukee, Cincinnati and Brooklyn going to be the class again—with the three of them at least 15 games better than the rest as last year ? “It’ll be close. Maybe five teams,” said Hutch, doffing his cap and running his hand through a bushy clump of black curly hair. “1 don’t think those three will be away out ahead of us. I think we’ll be up there. Blit Jm If ilfP' a,/ * / MP GOLF CHAMPION. SAYS: I ' *1P 'VICEROY HAS THE SMOOTHEST TASTE OF ALL!’ COACH BEAU BELL—takes his Aggie nine to Waco Fri day to battle the Baylor Bears in their second Southwest Conference contest. Tigers Batter Rockdale, 17-2 In Second Win A&M Consolidated’s Tigers punished three Rockdale Lion pitchers for 10 hits and a one sided, 17-2 victory yesterday. The Tigers, who lost three consecutive games to AAA clubs, ran their 1957 win streak to two. Consolidated mauled Hearne, 11-0, last Friday. CHS used 14 bases on balls off Brooks, Buetow and Knight coupl ed with four errors and their 10 timely base knocks for their runs. The Lions, on the other hand, man aged only one hit and both their runs off of starter Alton Arnold, who hurled five frames, and got nothing off the offerings of Edgar Feldman, who pitched the final two innings for the Tigers. Steadman Davis led the Consoli dated hitters with three singles in five trips followed by John Mar tinez with two in four times to the plate. The Tigers got enough to win in the top of the first with back- to-back doubles by Feldman and Bill Kavanaugh which drove four runs across the plate. Consolidated got two more in the second, three in the fourth and fifth, two in the sixth and three in the seventh. SMOOTH! From the finest tobacco grown, Viceroy selects only the Smooth Flavor Leaf.. . Deep-Cured golden brown {ox extra smoothness! Indians Upset Over Injured Early Wynn TUCSON, OP)—Early Wynn can hardly walk, let alone pitch, and that has the Cleveland Indians worried. The 37-year-old righthander may not be ready when the season opens three weeks from today. Wynn pulled a hip tendon while warming up for an exhibition against the New Yoi’k Giants on March 17. He hasn’t been in uni form since. Part of the time he has been unable to walk. His injury is the most serious of a rash of ailments that have heckled the Indians. Viv Wertz, a cinch to start at first base, was ill with a fever. Herb Score, the ace southpaw pitcher, wrenched a knee. Ray Narleski, speedy right-handed re liefer, broke a finger on his pitch ing hand. Larry Raines, a top rookie shortstop prospect, broke a toe. Jim Hegan, the veteran catcher, has a bruised and in fected hand. But the injury to Wynn really worries Kerby Farrell, the In dians’ new manager. Wynn has been taking X-ray treatments, and he stayed in his Tucson hotel room while the team went to California over the week end. He said yesterday he felt better. “Perhaps the treatments are just beginning to work,” he said. “There isn’t as much pain and I can walk a little bit.” SUPER SMOOTH! Only Viceroy smooths each puff through 20,000 filters made from pure cellulose — soft, snow-white, natural! © 1957, Brown Sc Williamson Tobacco Corpj BROWSING THRU SHAFFER’S What are you reading during Lent? Norman Vincent Peale’s new book is now in stock. “Stay Alive All Your Life”, a worthy successor to the “Power of Positive Think ing”, number one best seller for three years. The only non-fiction book to ever receive this distinc tion. This book goes deeper and further than the “Power of Posi tive Thinking”. Thinking about joining the RCA Victor Save on Records Club? Here’s an inside tip. The April releases will be Hugo Winterhalter’s “Eyes of L o v e.” Monteux -conducting Stravinsky’s “The Rite of Spring” and Lee Wi ley vocalizing “West of the Moon”. If you join right now, at no cost v you, you will be able to purchase any or all of these brand new re cordings for only $2.98 each. Find yourself with a little spare time on your hands ? Why not use it to an advantage? Teach your self a foreign language with the help of our self-teachers. There’s Spanish, German, French, Italian and Russian. Dictionaries and “Travel Phrase” books are avail able too. Siia.^f'er’d (J3ooL ^tore North Gate College Station Store Hours 8 AM to 6 PM Six Days a Week. (Adv.) Sullivan’s No-Hitter Opens Corps Baseball By GAYLE McNUTT John Sullivan, C-AAA senior from Fort Worth, pitched no-hit ball to lead the 2nd Battalion, 2nd Regiment to a 2-0 win over the 1st Battalion, 2nd Regiment, in the second game of Corps League Baseball Friday afternoon. Sullivan was the big gun all the way as he homered with one man on to provide the winning margin and also struck out 12 men on the way to his no-hitter. The game was played on Teen-Age Park, in Bryan. In the first league game, the 7th Group edged the 2nd Group, 3-2, with Clyde Stinson the win ning pitcher. Harold Warnek drove in Bill Fuller with a single to provide the winning margin. Wendell Edwards pounded out a triple for the losers for the day’s longest hit. Corps League Games will be played in the future on Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday, with a minimum of two games per day scheduled and a maximum of four. When the league gets in full swing, approximately 10 games per week will be played. So far play has been held up by bad weather and lighting’ said Mel vin Driskill, senior B.A. major from San Antonio, who is manag ing the league. r hf‘ Rnttnlinn College Station {Brazos County), Texas Wednesday, March 27, 1957 PAGE 3 Six of Seven Wins Tigers Dominate 21A Tennis Titles Sweeping all four senior division titles for the first time in history, A&M Consolidated captured six of the sev en events entered to run away with the District 21-A tennis crown yesterday at Blinn Junior College in Brenham. The Tigers and Tigerettes won both boys and girls sing les and doubles in the senior division while their junior coun terparts added both singles ti tles and the boys took second in doubles. Don Avera opened the Con solidated domination with an easy, 6-0, 6-0, warm-up match ov er the Navasota entry, then swept past Bellville’s Jimmy Gattis, 6-3, 6-0, in the finals. Jerry Mills and Maurice Olian teamed up to take Navasota, 6-1, 6-3, in the semifinals, then mauled Dennis Masar and Joe Brobonosky, of Bellville, 6-3, 6-1, for the title. The Tigers’ Susan Dowell blast ed her way to the singles crown with a convincing 6-2, 6-0, win ov er Bellville, then took her Nava sota opponent, 6-1, 7-5, for the championship. In the girls doubles, Margaret Manthei and Betty Mead got to gether, after a bye in the semis, to down Bellville, 6-1, 7-5, in the finals to complete the senior sweep. Consolidated’s Jack Armistead fought his way past Navasota, 6-4, 5- 7, 8-6, then captured the jun ior boys singles from Caldwell, 7-5, 6- 3, while teammates Joe Olian and Andy Adams were knocked out of a complete Tiger monopoly by Caldwell in the doubles finals, 4-6, 6-3, 3-6. All the senior winners will qual ify for the regional tourney slated for April 12-13 in Houston. FISHING SEASON IS HERE! We Carry a complete line of Fishing Equipment — Special price on a com plete set-up. STUDENT CO-OP New Light-weight SLACKS Cool and Comfortable $6.95 to $9.95 A&M Mens Shop 103 Main North Gate DICK RUBIN, ’59, Owner Student Charge Accounts Invited II A big company works for me • II “I began working on a training program for General Electric in the summer of ’52. Right now, I’m ‘Em ployee and Plant Community Relations Manager’ of my company’s new plant in Burlington, Iowa. One of the advantages I found in working for a big company such as General Electric is that, because of its size, it is able to give me, and other college-graduate em ployees like me, a wide variety of training and experi ence in any one of 159 plants all over the country. Through an extensive on-the-job training program, it is providing me with the opportunity to become one of the top men in my field, and I know that as long as I apply myself to each job, I’ll keep moving up. The way I look at it, General Electric is helping me help myself. That’s why I say I’m working for a big company, but a big company works for me, too.” This wide framework of opportunity is a unique characteristic of a company of General Electric’s JOHN D. EVANS, University of Pennsylvania, 1952 size. 27-year-old John Evans is just one example of the thousands of college graduates at General Electric, each being given the opportunity for self-development so that he may grow and realize his full potential. As our nation’s economy continues to expand in the years ahead, thousands of young people of leadership caliber will be needed to fill new positions of responsi bility in American industry. General Electric feels that by assisting young people like John Evans in a planned program of personal growth, we have found one way of meeting this need. A Manager of Employee and Plant Community Relations at General Electric holds a responsible position: he handles em ployee benefits, health and safety, training, wage and salary administration, and community relations. Progress fg Our Most /mporfanf Product GENERAL lH) ELECTRIC