« The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas Tuesday, March 3, 1959 PAGE $ Rice Topples Cadets, 74 - 67; Owlets Defeat Frosh, 73-70 Rice’s resurging Owls, led. by the towering Tom Robitaille, downed the wilted Aggies, 74-67, Saturday night in Houston. Robitaille, a 6-9 center, set a Bearkats Trip Ags In Season Opener The Sam Houston State Bear kats, utilizing six weeks of prac tice, a pair of walks and two in field hits, defeated the Texas Ag gies, 4-2, in Huntsville yesterday afternoon. Scoring three runs in the third, the Bearkats insured their victory over the Ags, who have been work ing out but two weeks and alter nated three pitchers in the season opener. Pat Centilli went the route for Sam Houston, while the Farm ers employed Percy Sanderson, who took the loss, Wayne Schaper and Larry Ayers. Dick Hickerson paced the Cadet attack with two hits in three trips and Byron Barber shone defen sively. A&M 001 100 000-2-6-1 SHS 030 100 OOx—4-6-3 Sanderson (L), Schaper, Ayres and Herrington; Centilli 1W) and Walling START RESERVING YOUR FORMAL WEAR NOW for the CIVILIAN BALL COTTON BALL RING DANCE %B'WWW\ RENT A FORMAL A&M Men’s Shop new conference game scoring rec ord for the Owls when he dumped in 42 points to lead the scoring. Kelly Chapman came to life for the Aggies that night to lead the scoring for the home team with 15 points. Senior Ernie Turner was second high scorer for the Cadets with 14 points. Rice opened up the game by jumping to a quick nine point lead before the Aggies could catch fire and close the gap to one point. Rice led at the half, 37-32. In that first period the Owls hit 59.1 per cent of their shots from the floor while holding the Cadets to 33.3 per cent of their shots. The Aggies committed 14 fouls that first period. Archie Carroll, guarding the tall Robitaille, had three to his credit while Jim Mc- Nichol and Wilmer Cox collected four. In the second period the Farm ers managed to come within two points of Rice but a succession of shots, most of them by Robitaille, pulled the Owls away from the Ca dets and on to victory. In the second half Rice made 14 of 28 shots from the floor for a shooting percentage of 50.0 while the Aggies improved their aim somewhat to hit for a 40.5 per cent. Chapman hit for 10 points that period. The Rice Owlets edged the Ag gie frosh, 73-70, in the prelimi nary game to give Rice a clean sweep for the day. Talented Carroll Broussard of the Fish was high scorer for the game with 30 points, connecting on 11 of 14 shots from the field. Mike Maroney, 6-8 center, paced the Owlets in scoring with 23 points, despite playing the entire last half with four fouls to his credit. The game was the final one of the season for the freshman and the loss left them with a 7-5 sea son mark. The varsity will face the SMU Mustangs at A&M to night in their final game of the season. Texas Wins Triangular Meet; Ags Second by Scant Margin The Tex,as Longhorns outran the Aggies and University of Hous ton track teams to win the seventh annual triangular meet at Kyle Field Saturday. Texas finished the meet with 73% points to 48% for the Aggies and 48 for the Cougars. Ernie Uribe of A&M won the 220 low hurdles and Charles Vance and Jerry Davis of A&M tied for first in the pole vaulting to score the lone victories for the Aggies. Varsity Summaries: 440-yard relay—1) Houston (Andy And erson, Jack Farrington, Stan Levenson, Charles Gary)- 2) Texas A&M. Time: 42.4. Mile run—1) Joe Villareal, Texas. 2) Reg Darley, Houston, 3) Leo Weiss, Hous ton. 4) Ken Lyon, Texas. Time: 4:20.5. Shot put -1) Jim Allison, Texas, 51-10. 2) Henry Bonorden, A&M 49-10. 3) John Warren, Texas, 49-5. 4) Owen Hill, A&M, 44-8%. 440-yard dash—1) Wally Wilson, Tex as. 2) Norman Jehle, Houston. 3) Danny Frey. Houston. 4) John Gotten, Texas. Time: 48.3. (New record.) Old record of 48.4 set by Wilson of Texas 1957 and Eddie Southern, Texas, 1958. 100-yard dash—1) Eddie Southern, Tex as. 2) Ralph Alspaugh, Texas. 3) Jack Farrington, Houston; 4) Hollis Gainey, Texas. Time: 9.8. 120-yard high hurdles—1) Don Beard, Texas. 2) Ernie Uribe, A&M. 3) Lee Dan iels, A&M. 4) Olin Garrison, A&M. Time: 15 :2.5. Javelin—1) Brude Parker, Texas, 213- 8%. (New record. Old record of 204-10 set by Parker in 1957.) 2) Fallon Gordon, Texas, 196-11%. 3) John Long, A&M, 192-7%. 4) Newton Lamb, A&M, 178-3. 220-yard lows—1) Ernie Uribe, A&M. 2) Jack Smyth, Houston. 3) Donald Whitley, A&M. 4) Charley Neblett, Texas. Time: 25.2. Pole Vault—1) Charles Vance and Jer ry Davis, A&M 13-6%. 3) Tom Kasper, Texas, 13-0. 4) Bill Hinkle, Texas and James Gayle, Texas, 12-6. Broad jump—10 Jack Smyth, Houston, -3%. 2) Andy Anderson, Houston, 21-4. Clifford Davis, A&M, 21-0%. 4) Don 22-3 3) Tax, A&M, 21-0. Mile relay—1> Texas (Hollis Gaine; ap. son) 2) Houston. Time3 :20.2. John Gotten, Drew Dunlap, Wally iney, Wil- real. Tinu 880-yard dash—1) Drew Dunlap, Texas. Charles Hajovsky, A&M. 3) Joe Villar- Texas. 4) Don Loadman, Houston. me: 1:55.2. High jump—1) Billy Weiler, Texas, (New record, old record of 6-5 set by Alvie Ashley, Texas, 1957. 2) Char les Merka, A&M, 6’4”. 3) Bobby Thomas, A&M, 6’2”. 4) Clifford Davis, A&M, Paul Madura, A&M and Barry Stone, Texas. Tied at 6’. 220-yard dash—1) Eddie Southern, Tex as. 2) Ralph Alspaugh, Texas. 3) Stan Levenson, Houston. 4) Norman Jehle, Houston. Time: 21.5. Discus—1) Bobby Weise, Houston, 159-1. 2) Owen Hill, A&M, 148-4. 3) Jim Alli son, 142-11 Texas. 4) Bruce Parker, Tex as. 142-3. Two mile run—1) John Macy, Houston. 2) George Rankin, Houston. 3) Freddie Dulock, A&M. 4) Don Carver, A&M. Time: 9:23.5. (New record. Old record of 9:35.2 set by Jerry Smartt, Houston, 1958. Also betters Southwest Conference record of 9:24.4 set by James Brown of Arkansas in 1951.) ATTENTION ART LOVERS! Since our very successful color print and brush stroke painting sale in December we have had many requests to carry an assortment of these in open stock. We have recently made* an arrangement with the largest print house in America to supply us with a ro tating selection of both prints and brush strokes. Our first shipment has just arrived and is now on display. Periodically, unsold numbers will be returned and a complete new selection will go on display. COME IN AND SEE THEM TODAY ALL PRINTS . . . . . 99c ALL BRUSH STROKES . . $1.98 We Also Have Matching Frames and Mat Boards The Exchange Store ‘Serving Texas Aggies” Freshman Summaries: 440-yard relay — 1) Texas (Robert Wyatt, James Richardson, Stanley Gray, Pat McDonald), 2) Houston. Time; 42.1. Mile run—1) A1 Lawrence, Houston. 2) Pat Clohessy, Houston. 3) John Eschle, Texas. 4) Morgan Maxfield, Texas. Time: 4 :16.2. Shotput-*-!) James Nixon, A&M, 47-5. 2) Charles Tiemann, A&M, 42-10%. 3) Jim Smith, Texas, 41-10%. 4) John Strad4 inger, A&M, 41-3 1 ,4. 440-yard dash—1) Pat McDonald, Tex as. 2) Barry Almond, Houston. 3) Bob Bryant, A&M. 4) Myron Anderson, Tex as. Time: 50.5. 100-yard dash 1) James Richardson, Texas. 2) Stanley Gray, Texas. 3) John Shockey, Houston. 4) James Parkhurst, Houston. Time: 10.0. 120-yard high hurdles—1) Tain Cunningham, Texas. 2) Rex Wilson, as. 3) Bob Waterman, Houston, 4) rt Nelson, A&M. Time:15:l ;on, .5. Talmadge Tex- Hu- 880-yard dash—1) Barry Almond, Hous ton. 2) A1 Lawrence, Houston. 3) Thad Crooks, A&M. 4) John Eschle, Texas. Time: 1 :56.2. High jump—1) Ray Cunningham, Tex as, 6’. 2) Tie, David Thornton, A&M, Jer ry Bain, Texas, Rex Wilson, Texas, 5’ 10”. 31 Tie. Ed Price. A&M. "Willinm Oliver ry jjain, Texas, Kt 3) Tie, Ed Price, A&M, William Oliver, A&M, S’S”. 220-yard dash—1) James Richardson, Texas, 2) James Parkhurst, Houston. 3) Robert Kepke, A&M. 4) Frank Schmal- steig, A&M. Time: 23.2. Discus—1) Jim Smith, Texas, 137-6. 2) James Nixon, A&M. 3) Charles Tie mann. A&M, 125-8. Javelin—-1) Bob Gardner, Texas, 18-5. ng, .'ext )%. low . 2 an, ton, A&M. Time: 24.3. tvenn—i) uod Uardner, Texas, 2) Jim Long, A&M, 167-3%. 3) John 4) Jim nadge Cu im, Texas. 2) Larry Pike, A& Bob Waterman, Houston. 4) David Thorn- 21 „ Ferguson, Texas, 166-6. 4) Jim Smith, exas, 164-0%. 220-yard lows—1) Talmadge Cunning ham, Texas. 2) Larry Pike, A&M. 3) xas, 220-y Mile relay—1) Texas (Stanley Gray, Pat McDonald, Rex Wilson, Raymond Hiller). 2) A&M. Time: 3:25.4. Pole Vault—1) Baylus Bennett, Texas, 13-6%. (New record. Old record of 12-3 set by Don Earle of A&M in 1956. Betters SWC record of 13-3 set by Olen Davis, 2) Tie Sam White, A&M ner, Texas. 12-6. 3) Tie Ed Blackburn, Texas, Hubert Nelson, Baylor, in 1958. 2) Tie i and Robert Gardner, Texas. 12-6. kburn, Tex; 0. Broad Jump—1) Bobby Wyatt, Texas, 23-1%. 2) Don Brown, 22-10. 3) James Parkhurst, 22-1. 4) Hubert Nelson, A&M, 21-3%. To err is human... , . , to erase, divine witn EATON’S CORRASABLE BOND Typewriter Paper Try it! Just the flick of a pencil-eraser and your typing errors are gone! It’s like magic! The special surface of Corrasable Bond erases without a trace. Your first typing effort is the finished copy when Corrasable puts things right. This fine quality bond gives a handsome appearance to all your work. Saves time and money, too! Erasable Corrasable is available in light, medium, heavy weights and onion skin. In convenient 100-sheet packets and 500-sheet ream boxes. A Berkshire Typewriter Paper, backed by the famous Eaton name. EATON’S CORRASABLE BOND Made only by Eaton EATON PAPER CORPORATION **E’$ PITTSFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS *♦«•*** AGGIES GET YOUR . . . EATON’S CORRASABLE BOND THE EXCHANGE ~ “Serving Texas Aggies” Cadet Golfing Team Ties UH Crew, 5 Up The Aggie golfing team split 5-5 with the University of Houston team Saturday in a match on the A&M course. Billy Martindale of A&M and the Cougars’ Bob Pratt tied for medalist honors with two under par 72’s in the Varsity division. Aggie Freshman Johnny John son tied the Kittens’ Buddy Nor- rethel for medalist with each hit ting an even par 70. Martindalp won his match with Jackie Cupid 2 and 1 while A&M’s Buck Prewitt lost to Pratt 6 and 4. Houston won both of the next rounds, Richard Dickson downing Binky Mitchella 3 and 1 and Ron Weber defeating Ed Tripplett 4 and 3. Wmmm. • 1 ■ name IPI I ■ Mm. « ■ii m ...... Jl i ■ ; £ £ VV : £ : - m £ Pill 1^:." |v, : C£: • v tip XWsK-',' <• /V\ ' £'t : . ■■ k, SSil t#® I v "'31 liili .£' tips It ££■ .£££ fii P?£ : ! in industry wants. iop talent MISSILEMEN AC SPARK PLUG, THE ELECTRONICS ’ DIVISION OF GENERAL MOTORS, has IMMEDIATE openings for permanent positions iq MILWAUKEE and FLINT for engineers and designers on Thor and Mace missiles as well as other advanced projects. If you hav« a BS, MS or Ph.D. degree in EE, Physics, Math, or ME, you may qualify for one of the positions listed below. You can exploit your talents to the fullest degree at AC. For every AC engineer has access to the finest equipment... at all AC facilities. AC and GM gladly assist your career progress through financial assistance for graduate study at first class engineering schools in nearby locations. In addition, you will have the opportunity to take exclusive on-the-job course work on the advanced state of the art. DIGITAL COMPUTER ENGINEERS-^Logic design of special purpose computers . . . Pulse Circuit Design . . . Airborne Digital Computers . . . Memory Design ... Analog-to-digital and digital-to-analog conversion. Milwaukee ^ TRANSISTOR APPLICATION ENGINEERS —Applied development in the field of transistor circuitry. Flint and Milwaukee GYRO ENGINEERS-Worlc on floated, integrating gyroscopes and gyro-accelerometer* for inertial guidance systems for missiles. Milwaukee INFRA-RED DEVELOPMENT-Development of the theoretical concepts that will advance the state of the art of infra-red system applications. Flint SYSTEMS ENGINEERS-Systems desigts analysis and instrumentation of inertial guidance. Milwaukee OPTICS—The development of optics and optical instrumentation. A general knowledge of military optical systems and commonly used optical and mechanical components is required. Flint PRODUCT DESIGN ENGINEERS-Design, development and test of electronic components, servos and circuits. Flint and Milwaukee TEST ENGINEERS-Design and development of production test equipment . . . environmental test instrumentation and data reduction ... ground support equipment, flint and Milwaukee FIELD ENGINEERS FOR FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC ASSIGNMENTS-Electronics technicians or recent technical graduates may qualify for top training on inertial guidance, bombing navigational systems, gyro computers, etc. ’ ‘ TECHNICAL WRITERS-Electro-rrtechanlcat or electronic writing experience. Must be able to work with engineers in the writing of service manuals. Flint and Milwaukee SEE YOUR PLACEMENT OFFICER TO SCHEDULE GENERAL MOTORS [ INTERVIEW MARCH 17, 1959 i,. ^ the Electronics Division' of General Motors Milwaukee i.w,scon&>; Hint 2, Michigan