* PAGE 4 Thursday, March 6, 1958 TAe Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas Linksmen Leave For Laredo Meet Joe Fagan’s varsity golfers de parted for Laredo yesterday to en ter the golf meet which is being held in connection with the Border Olympics. The Aggie club is sending Bob by Nichols, Binky Michella, A1 Jones, and Buck Pruitt against the other Southwest Conference teams entering the tournament. They will try to cop the championship from the University of Houston team, last year’s champions. The University of Houston var sity and freshman golfers defeated Texas A&M here last Saturday in the opening matches for both schools. The Kittens defeated the Aggie Fish, 7-0, while the Cougar varsity downed the Aggies, 7-2. Bobby Nichols, Aggie star, was the only point-winner for A&M as he defeated Phil Rodgers of Hous ton, 3 and 1, and teamed with Prewitt to down Rodgers and Jackie Cupit, 2 and 1. BETTER FOOD FOR LESS! ROUND STEAK RIB ROAST Choice Bonded Beef Choice Bonded Beef RUMP OR D/^ACT PIKES PEAK KLJAO I Tenderized Stcoks RIB STEAKS SHORT RIBS SLICED PICNICS Choice Bonded Beef Choice Bonded Beef Choice Bonded Beef Choice Bonded Beef Fry or Boil 79* 67" 73* 895 895 39S. 43?* CANDY SPECIAL Brach s 39c Value Chocolate Peanuts 8! ^ 35c BAKERY SPECIALS / Made With Delicious Spiced Apples FRENCH APPLE PIE Each 55° 2 Spicy Layers BANANA NUT LAYER CAKE Each 49C GIANT TIDE Per Box ^ ^ C COCA-COLA nBou,e ^ 39 c J. W. SPECIAL Z"7 c Coffee Pound # I 1 Jlk. Royal Hawaiian B H- ,3 1 ® um ^ e ^ ee No. OCC Vi Can Armour Star PICNICS ■ l Canned J AQ 4-lb. Can T\ X 47 SLICED SANDWICH SIZE HAM - 79< BRAUNSCHWEIGER OR CERVELAT - 65' BOILED HAM & * T U. S. No. 1 California Jumbo CALAVOS U. S. No. 1 California, Sunkist Jumbo LEMONS U. S. No. 1 Texas, Ruby Red GRAPEFRUIT 2 s 19 12: 35 4:29 -1 i n ■ n* f • U. S. No. 1 Washington, Red WINESAP APPLE 14 wm- Leading Aggie Scorer -Battalion Staff Photo Junior college transfer Archie Carroll from Redlands, sneaks in a hook shot against TCU—one of the few points scored—but enough to give him the edge over Neil Swisher in the Aggie scoring race. Carroll outbid Swisher, 186 points to 185. Campus Greets Athletes With Future Aggie Views Each weekend outstanding high school athletes from across the state are visiting the campus ac cording to A1 Simmons, two-year varsity letterman and commanding officer of “B” Athletics. “Top football and some basket ball players are being contacted by athletic department officials or members of Aggie booster clubs and invited to visit the campus for the weekend,” said Simmons. AIR PLANES Everything For The Flying Model Builder For We Also Build And Fly. Featuring • OS MAX • FOX • TORPEDO • THIMBLE-DROME • RADIO CONTROL EQUIPMENT • AIR PLANE KITS FOR ANY TYPE OF FLYING Everyone Is Invited to COULTER FIELD Every Sunday For Informal Model Flying Courtesy J. D. Trissel, Mgr. John and Charlie’s Flying Models 109 E 26th TA2-4200 Bryan, Texas He pointed out that the athletes cannot sign a letter of intent un til March 15, but they are permit ted one all-expenses paid trip to a college campus under Southwest Conference recruiting rules. Jim Myers and the new athletic dormitory are proving to be the two big drawing cards in recruit ing the athletes Simmons said. Present outlook is that next year’s crop of athletes will be as good as any in the past few years, Simmons said in outlining the pro gram. Last weekend some 30 athletes from San Antonio, Sweetwater and parts of South Texas visited the campus. Stars from Abilene, Breck- enridge and other points in Texas will visit next weekend. While on the campus the ath letes eat at the training table, are shown around the school including the athletic facilities and the new dorm. They also attend some ac tivity such as a basketball game, usually, with an athlete from their hometown or that area. Simmons said the program be gan last month and will continue until the end of the year. Scrappy Ags Show Statistic Boost Wrapping up the basketball sea son for the Aggies in waxed paper we can see the scorebooks read that the Cadets posted a 7-7 record in conference play and wound up in a tie for fifth place with the once mighty Rice Owls. It was the Farmers’ best effort since 1952 when the Old Corps racked up an 8-4 record in a three way tie for the conference crown. Actually it wouldn’t be fair to compare today’s Ags with those of the past because of the entrance of yearling Texas Tech into the con ference this year and the extra two game load that was added to the win-loss column. Junior college transfer Archie Carroll, playing his first year for the upset minded Cadets, cap tured the team’s scoring laurels in conference competition with 186 points, one more than last year’s champ Neil Swisher. Car- roll and Swisher both averaged out with 13.2 points per game. Sophomore Wayne Lawrence was third in totals with 142 points in 13 games. The 6-8 rebounder led the team in the scoring department until he injured an ankle against the Baylor Bears in mid-season and never completely regained his form. Senior Fritzie Connally, the Ca det’s floor captain, ended his last season of college competition with 79 points for an average of 5.6 points per game, followed by big Jim McNichol with 64 points. Bob Johnson racked up 56 points in 14 games for an average of 4.0. Jack Collier pasted the nets for 18 points in nine games followed by Dave (Bull) Corson’s 16 points. Corson was the man who outjumped and outfought TCU’s H. E. Kirch- ner, the conference’s leading scor er, in Tuesday night’s contest at Aggieland. Sammy Myers and Senior Ken Hutto complete the Aggies scoring totals with seven and six points re spectively. Carroll was the leading re bounder for the Cadets as he swept the backboards clean 107 times. Lawrence, one of the most heralded sophomores in the con ference, was second with ah even 100 grabs. Percentagewise, it was the lanky Lawrence who made most of his shots from the floor count as he hit 39.1 per cent of his floor shots. Swisher was a close second as he pasted the basket for a 38.4 per cent. Corson, playing in only six games hit 72.7 of his shots. Sharpshooter Swisher was the free throw ace for the Farmers, toeing the white line 65 times and sinking 53 of the charity tosses. There was not an Aggie on the team that did mot make over 50 per cent of his free tosses. The Cadets sank 236 of their free throws compared to the opponents 218. In over-all scoring the Farmers meshed the cords for 800 points to their opponents 806. The Ags aver aged 57.1 points per game to 57.5 for their conference opponents. The Freshman five, lacking the height of their ’57 predecessors, managed to scrape by the season with a 3-8 record. Two of these wins were posted in overtime periods. The luckless Fish failed to win a conference contest, losing six of them by the total of eighteen points, an average of three points per game. They played five over time games. High scorer for the Cadets wag 6-1'/i Don Mercer with 164 points. Speedy Elliot Craig grab bed off second place honors for the Farmers with 146 points, an average of 13.2 points per game. Steve Van Winkle, 6-4 from Peoria, 111., scored 107 points and snared 91 rebounds to load the Farmers in that department. Henry Kitzman, a 6-0 muscular athlete, scored 41 points for an av erage of 5.4 while taking 41 re bounds. Dale Ethridge, 200 pound er from Ropesville, hit the bucket with 50 points and a 4.5 average. VARSITY STATISTICS Player G FG FT RB PF-D TP AVE Archie Carroll 14 08-188 36.2 60-68 78.5 .107 • 34-1 186 13.2 Neil Swisher 14 66-169 38.4 63-65 81.5 79 36-0 185 13.2 Wayne Lawrence 13 66-146 39.1 30-43 69.8 100 37-2 142 10.9 Fritzie Connally 14 24-73 32.9 31-42 73.8 53 41-3 79 '6.6 Jim McNichol 14 16-58 25.9 34-48 70.8 57 26-1 64 4.5 Bob Johnson 14 ' 22-69 37.3 12-19 63.2 21 23-1 56 4.0 Ernie Turner 13 15-67 26.3 11-16 68.8 32 26-0 41 8.1 Jack Collier 9 6-24 20.8 8-16 53.3 16 7-0 18 2.0 Dave Corson 6 8-11 72.7 d-4 00.0 9 6-0 16 2.6 Sammy Meyers 8 2-3 66.7 3-4 76.0 3 3-0 7 0.8 Ken Hutto 8 1-4 26.0 4-4 100.0 2 4-0 6 0.7 Jack Schwake 2 0-0 00.0 0-1 00.0 0 1-0 0 0.0 Team RB 56 A&M 14 282-792 36.0 236-329 71.7 534 243-8 800 67.1 Opp. 14 294-800 36.7 218-328 '66.4 533 233-7 806 67.5 FRESHMAN STATISTICS Player G FG FT RB PF-D TP AVE Don Mercer 11 64-178 36.0 36-49 73.6 86 24-0 164 14.9 Elliott Craig 11 62-149 41.6 22-31 71.0 65 23-1 146 13.2 Steve Van Winkle 11 41-147 2719 25-33 75.8 91 34-2 107 9.7 Henry Kitzman 11 23-61 37.7 14-30 46.7 41 24-1 60 5.4 Dale Ethridge 11 21-47 44.7 8-22 36.4 36 25-2 60 4.5 Jim Duffer 11 10-27 37.0 12-20 60.0 24 13-0 32 2.9 Joe Thompson 11 11-25 44.0 8-10 80.0 10 6-0 3.0 .2.7 Dick Hickerson 10 7-29 24.1 4-10 40.0 34 16-Y 18 1.8 Tommy Smith 6 4-14 28.6 3-4 75.0 5 2-0 11 1.8 Bill Dufur 4 2-9 22.2 1-1 100.0 4 8-0 5 1.2 Others dropped 27-67 9-26 42 19-0 63 Team RB 72 Fish 11 272-763 36.1 142-236 60.2 500 189-7 686 62.8 Opp. 11 266-691 38.3 168-248 67.7 497 180-8 698 63.4 NOW at Shaffer's 6 All the Latest Records ALL the NEWEST FLYING MODELS ALL the NEWEST PLASTIC KITS • ALL the LATEST BOOKS SLffeA Bool St, North Gate Open 8 a. m. to 6 p. m. ore 6 Days A Week Del Flanagan, St. Paul middle weight, won two Golden Gloves boxing titles as a 126-pounder. 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