/ ^GE 4 Thursday, February 20, 10S8 The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas Regional Meet To Be Held In Coliseum G. Rollie White Coliseum will -*ce again be the scene of the an- :al high school regional basket- ill tournament to be held on Sat- •day, March 1, as regional win- ;rs vie for further state prep hon- ■s. Four teams each in conference A and AA will play during the one-day tourney. The winners will play in the state meet in Austin the following Saturday. Large crowds enjoyed watching Smiley take the regional tourna ment last year. The excellent fa cilities of White Coliseum added to the crowd’s enjoyment of the hard- fought game. Heliopolis, one of the country’s leading stallions, has provided two Selmina winners at Laurel in At hene (1945) and Aunt Jinny (1950). BETTER FOOD FOR LESS! Miuu&tfenfa BILLION DOLLAR STORY The Finest of All The Nations Brands = FLOUR 5 - 29 c as COFFEE Lib. TT c Can J as TUNA FISH No. Vi % C Can | jy COCA COLA 12 Ml. etn. 3^C ^ j™ U. S. No. 1 Red Delicious 9S. IJ California Large Head 2s25 c BANANAS Go ' den mpe ion CARROTS U. S. No. 1 Texas Golden / 1 lb. cello 19 GROUND BEEF Extra Lean BACON Lockwood Sliced PORK STEAKS 59 59 49 TOP FROST OCEAN PERCH FILLETS j 37 c BOLOGNA Sliced 35S. PACK FRANKS SamuersFami,y 2 &t 89 c WISCONSIN longhorn ASSORTED CHEESE By the piece 59fb COLD CUTS 0 ? ' ! 59 G lb Ags Take On SMU Tankers In Conference Preview Meet Cadet Tankers Prepare Members of Coach Art Adamson’s fine for the coming 1 meet with conference-favo- swimming squad are shown sharpening up rite Southern Methodist this Friday. Venturi Favored In Classic Ken Venturi, the lone double-win ner on the winter tour, and two hometown idols, Jimmy Demaret and Jack Burke Jr., are the top favorites today for copping the $30,000 Houston Classic Golf Tour nament. Venturi, winner of the Palm Springs Thunderbird and the Phoe nix Open, has had sub-par scores while inspecting the Memorial Park Course, longest on the winter tour, since arriving here last Friday. Demaret and Burke have been play ing the 7,200-yard, par 72 layout for years. Ranked behind the three favor ites are Arnold Palmer, the de fending champion, and another hometown product, Dave Marr. Palmer won $7,500 here a year ago with a 72-hole 279, nine under par. Marr, the leader through 54 holes in last week’s Texas Open at San Antonio, studied golf sev eral years under Robie Williams, the head pro at Memorial, before turning professional five years ago. Others drawing high rankings by the oddsmakers included Rob- Handball Gloves and Handballs STUDENT CO-OP SUPER-WETTING Yardley Shaving Foam keeps the beard saturated throughout the shave. Gives a professional shave in one-half the time. $1 YARDLEY OF LONDON, me. Yardley producls for America are created in England and finished in the U.S.A. from the original English formulae, combining imported and domestic ingredients. 620 Fifth Ave., N.Y.C. YARDLEY PRODUCTS MAY BE SECURED AT ELLISON PHARMACY YOUR REXALL STORE College Station erto de Vicenzo, the long-driving Argentine now playing out of Mex ico City. Dick Mayer, National Open champion and golf’s leading money last year, was missing yesterday as a field of 134 players took final practice rounds. Tournament offi cials, however, were still hopeful Mayer would report before the first threesome had moved out this morning. THROWN FOR A LOSS OKLAHOMA CITY (A’)—Every thing except the locale resembled a football game when a 16-year-old Fort Worth, Tex., youth snatched a woman’s purse. Police said he tucked the purse under his arm and started running. Three men threw flying tackles at the youth as he passed, knocking him down. Then they sat on the squirming suspect until the police arrived. By BOB WEEKLEY Coach Art Adamson’s swimmers, unbeaten in three matches to date, play host to the double-tough SMU tankmen Friday at 4 p. m. in what may prove to be a preview of the ’58 Southwest Conference champ ions. The Mustangs, ’57 champions, have already taken on the Aggies once in the SWC Relays in Decem ber, squeezing past the second place Cadets 116 points to 110. Tetsuo Okamoto, the All-Ameri can swimmer from Sao . Paulo, Brazil, will lead the Farmers in their bid for an upset over the Ponies. The stocky Brazilian captured three first places and set one new record to lead the Aggies’ drive for second place in the 27th annual SWC swimming championship at Houston last year. Okamoto has received an All-American swim mer nomination for two consecu tive years. Depth, or rather the lack of it, is the big problem Adamson faces in trying to build a championship team. That was the problem the team faced last year, and it hasn’t improved since then. Only four men are returning from the team that placed runner-ups to the champion Mustangs. Besides Okamoto, there will be Charles Cook, backstroke ace from Dallas; Jerry Mount, freestyle and breastroke man from San Antonio; and Walter “Dubby” Godfrey, diver from Brownsville. Orlando Cossani heads the- list of those swimmers up from the freshman team. This season, the young swimmer has posted the time of 1:02.5 in the 100 yard but terfly event, a time that would have won first place in conference competition last year. Adamson also expects Nick Kuich, sophomore from Houston, to provide the team with much- needed depth. The Aggies will take on the Tech Red Raiders Saturday afternoon in P. L. Downs Natatorium for one of the easier contests the Cadets have faced this year. The Raiders aren’t expected to display much this season, but since they did not compete in the Decem ber tournament they will be some thing of an unknown quality. INTRAMURALS Puryear won the class C foot ball championship yesterday by de feating Dorm 16 in the dreary weather and on a water-soaked field by a close score of 6-0. It was a game highlighted by good defensive play as neither of fense could seem to click in the humid 40-degree weather. The play that spelled the differ ence in the game was a 60-yard pass play from Pete McKinney to Richard Peacock. After that well- executed play, the scoring was over for the day and Puryear walk ed away with the victory. Squadron 1 defeated Squadron 14 in class A handball by a narrow margin, 2-1. Ronald Ruth and Ben Williams won the first match for Squadron 1 and Ray Morris and Robert Brown won the second. A1 Zambrano and Hubert Oxford were the winners for Squadron 14. Squadron 1 is now tied with three other teems for the lead in class A handball. “B” Infantry defeated “A” Ord nance in class B volleyball, 2-0. The members of the winning team were Pat' Henry, Jake Avant, Mickey Burke, John Meyer, Ralph Christ, and Gordon Montgomery. “A” AAA defeated Squadron 5 by the same score, 2-0. Norman Ayers, Sebrow, Richard Hoff, Ross Leidy, Pat Wright, and James Wy lie were members of the winning team. “A” Chemical squeezed by “B” FA by a score of 2-1. The mem bers of the winning team were Rob ert Isaacs, Paul Lokey, James Klehm, Ellis Waller, William Crockett, and James Jackson. “C” Engineers defeated “B” Ar mor, 2-0. The winning team was composed of Marty Herzik, Mickey Crawford, Emil Pawlik, Pete Ha mel, Ralph Hendricks, and John Pogue. Squadron 20 edged White Band by a score of 2-0. Charles Davi- doff, George Hamilton, Edward Gregg, Jack Burns, Charles Cole, and Jesse Pate were the winners. In other games, “B” Composite edged “A” Signal in a close one by a score of 2-1. “C” FA defeated Squadron 7, 2-0, and “A” FA de feated Squadron 18 by the same score, 2-0. More wrestling took place last night. The sweating in the cold gym was evidence enough of the spirit of the grapplers. What Would YOU Do If You LOST YOUR CAR KEYS? Don’t Get In A Jam When You Lose Your ROOM OR CAR KEYS — Save Hours Of Frustration By Only Seconds Of Thoughtfulness Now! Get Duplicate Keys Made At LOUPOT'S