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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (May 6, 1959)
The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas Wednesday, May 6 1959 PAGE 3 Dartmouth basketball coach Dog gie Julian coached the sport at Ashland, Pa., High School and once refereed 24 high school games in a 28-day period. SAM HOUSTON ZEPHYR 10:08 a.m. 12:47 p.m. Lv. N. Zulch Ar. Dallas . . Lv. N. Zulch Ar. Houston 7:31 p.m. 9:25 p.m. FORT WORTH AND DENVER RAILWAY N. L. CRYAR, Agent Phone 15 • NORTH ZULCH Aggies Tackle Texas Thursday, Friday; Series Win Is Must for Pennant Hopes Fighting to stay alive in the Southwest Conference baseball race, the Aggies have a tough row to hoe in the coming five days. First comes a crucial two-game series with Texas in College Sta tion Thursday and Friday and fi nally a twin bill with the Rice Owls in Houston Monday to make up for a couple of rained out con tests. The Texas games, originally scheduled for Friday and Satur day, have been moved up one day in order to make room for the Southwest Conference track and field meet that opens Friday on the Kyle Field track. Rice helped the Aggies’ cause last weekend when they split their series with the Longhorns, bring ing the Cadets within three games BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES an day 3* per worn 2* per word each additional day Minimum charge— DhiAurxtVias 4 p. m. day before publication Classified Display SO* Per colunui inch each Insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 SPECIAL NOTICE SUL. ROSS LODGE NO. 1300, A.F. & A.M College Station, Texas Called meeting Thursday, May 1 at 6:45 p. m. E. A. Degree will be conferred, and F. C. Examination will be given. C. H. Ransdell, WM Joe Woolket, Sec. Register your child for September in WEE AGGIELAND kindergarten under experienced and qualified teachers. Visit by appointment. Limited enrollment. VI 6-4052. AltWF Plastic binding service for thesis, re ports, papers, etc. AGGIELAND STUDIO. 72tfn Let me keep your children for you by hour, day or week. Will pick them up and bring them home. VI 6-5506. 63tfr Electrolux Sales and Service. G. C Williams. TA 3-6600. 90tfl For Tops in Western Wear and the Famous Moore “Bulldogger” Straws visit the KETCH PEN 1223-A North College Bryan WORK WANTED TYPING WANTED. 15 years experience. Reasonable rates. Satisfaction guaranteed, ball TA 2-4812. 80tfn Your reports will be typed quickly and accurately on electric typewriters at the Bi-City Secretarial Service, 3408A Texas Avenue, Phone VI 6-5786. 71tfn OFFICIAL NOTICES Official notices must be brought, mailed »r telephoned so as to arrive in the Offics »f Student Publications (Ground Flooi If MCA, VI 6-6415, hours 8-12, 1-5, daily Monday through Friday) at or before the deadline of 1 p.m. of the day preceedlng publication — Director of Student Publica tions. Regalia For The Baccalaureate- Commencement Exercise All students who are candidates for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy are re quired to order hoods as well as the doc tor’s cap and gown. The hoods are to be left at the Registrar’s Office no later than 1:00 p. m., Tuesday, May 19 (this ar rangement will be accomplished by a repxesentative of the College Exchange Store). The Ph.D. hoods will not be worn in the procession since all such candi dates will be hooded on the stage as a part of the ceremonies. Candidates for the Master’s Degree will Wear the master’s cap and gown; those who are candidates for the Bachelor’s De gree, except Military students, will wear the bachelor’s cap and gown. All Military students who are candidates for degrees will wear appropriate military uniforms. Rental of caps and gowns may be ar ranged with the Exchange Store. Orders may be placed between 8:00 a. m., Mon day, April 10 and 12:00 noon, Saturday, May 16. The rental is as follows: Doctor’s cap and gown, $5.00; Master’s cap and gown, $4.50; Bachelor’s cap and gown, $4.00. Hood rental is the same as that for cap and gown. C. E. Tishler, Chairman Convocations Committee 100t20 EARLY BIRD SHOPPE TOGS — GIFTS AND TOYS for Girls and Boys FABRICS — SHOES Ridgecrest Village 3601 Texas Are. • ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • BLUE LINE PRINTS • BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS SCOATES INDUSTRIES M3 Old Sulphur Springs Road BRYAN, TEXAS RADIO—PHONO—TV Service By SOSOLIK TUBES TESTED FREE BY EXPERTS 713 S. Main TA 2-1941 Bryan TYPEWRITERS Rental - Sales - Service Distributors For: RoyaJ and Olivetti Typewriters Olivetti & Odhner Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main TA 2-6000 FUR SALE Air-conditioned, modern, 27-foot house trailer. A steal. MUST SELL BEFORE GRADUATION. TA 3-4544. 113t4 14000 BTU Mathes one-ton air-condi tioner. Bought new, used one summer. Walnut finish. VI 6-7504 after 5:00 p. m. 112t3 Child’s swing set. TV antenna with 40- foot mast. VI 6-8187. 112tfn SENIOR BOOTS—bought new, worn one year. Size 7-7y 2 , Calf 15-151/2. VI 6-7504 after 5:00. 112t3 FOR SALE: New panel walls for your den, bedroom, or halls. Call "DOCTOR FTXIT” for an estimate on wood paneling for your home. Nothing down, 6 years to pay. Call "DOCTOR FTXIT” at MARION PUGH LUMBER CO. today. Phone VI 6- 5711. 112t4 Couch makes down to bed, $15. Crosley- Shelvador refrigerator, $45. VI 6-7129 after 5:00 p. m. 112t4 1955 STUDEBAKER COMMANDER. Two-door, hard-top, radio, heater, auto matic transmission, new whitewalls, ex cellent condition. VI 6-4065. Illt4 Two bedroom home, fenced back yard. Apartment-size cook stove, refrigerator, two space heaters, window fan. VI 6-6003. 110t7 4000 BTU evaporative air-cooler, $99.88. WHITE’S AUTO STORE, 216 N. Bryan Street. 109tfn BY OWNER. Three bedrooms, screened porch with patio, lots of storage space, double garage. Near College, 1020 Walton. Call VI 6-7043 for appointment. 104tfn STUDENT DIRECTORIES .... $1.00. OFFICE OF STUDENT PUBLICATIONS, YMCA, BASEMENT. 61tfn Texas’ leading life Insurance company aas a special plan for senior Aggies. See fiugene Rush at North Gate for details. 22tfn HELP WANTED Counter women needed. Must have neat, pleasant appearance. Experience not neces sary. Apply in person. HOTARD’S CAFETERIA. 102tfn FUR RENT Nice, four room, furnished apartment in College Park. Unusually large, cool rooms. Garage. Available end of term. $48-$50. See at 603 Montclair or phone VI 6-5340. 113tfn. OUR HOME FOR THE SUMMER. 715 Park Place. Near A&M campus. Two air- conditioners, TV, washing machine. VI 6- 4052. 113AltWF Bedroom for Parents’ Day weekend. 910 E. 30th St. TA 2-7913 after 6:00 p. m. 112t2 AVAILABLE JUNE 1. Garage apart ment. 2108 Echols. TA 2-5539, VI 6-4721. 112t8 Air-conditioned, clean, attractive one bedroom apartment with stove and refriger ator. Close to college. $50. VI 6-6638 or VI 6-5711. 109tfn Two bedroom furnished apartment. 1012A Foster Avenue. Weekdays, VI 6-5424. Weekends VI 6-5993 108tfn Newly decorated small furnished apart ment for one person. Just off campus. VI 6-6638 or VI 6-5711. 108tfn Available June 1. Unfurnished brick apartment. One bedroom, carport. North Gate. Call VI 6-4526. 104tfn Nice, clean, completely furnished apart ment. Two blocks from post office. Small and reasonably priced. Ideal for some boy who really wants to study. Call VI 6-7248. 102tfn Unfurnished three room duplex on Boy- ett St. Two blocks north of Campus Theatre. Inquire 807 Dellwood in Bryan or call TA 3-3380. 83tfn Bedroom with kitchen privileges. VI 6- 5334. 62tfn Sewing machines. Pruitt Fabric Shop. 98tfL, it. / * Z'? f) . Where the Art of | J^otard & Cafeteria Cooking h Not Lost | of the leaders and into a tie with Rice for second place, both teams boasting a 6-4 conference record. Texas has a 9-2 mark. A&M’s double-header with the Owls Monday is a SWC must if the Aggies win one game from the Steers. That is, if Rice manages to win both of their tilts with Bay lor, ranked low in the second di vision in the conference race. If the Farmers do lose one tilt with Texas they are eliminated from the race, although two vic tories Monday could let them finish the season in second place ahead of Rice. Righthanders Percy Sanderson and Wayne Schaper are the logical moundsmen for the Aggies against the Steers, although co-captain Donnie Hollum or sophomore Lar ry Ayres could move into a start ing role. Hollum has missed most of the season with a sore throwing arm while Ayres turned up with his sore shoulder last month in the middle of conference play. Ayres was the leading hurler for the Ca dets before his injury. Another strong factor in the Ag gies chance for victory in the two- game series is catcher-co-captain Gary Herrington. Herrington in jured his shoulder sliding into sec ond against the SMU Mustangs and has been out of action since that date. The lefthanded swinging Randy Wortham has replaced Herrington behind the plate and has proved very capable, rapping out four hits in the TCU series last week. Records May Fall In Annual Relays Eight records in the varsity di vision will be in jeopardy this weekend as the 44th Southwest Conference track and field cham pionships come off on Kyle Field. Exactly half of the 16 varsity events could have new standards when the finals end around 5:15 p.m. Saturday. Preliminaries in the varsity and freshman divisions begin Friday with the running prelims going at 2:30 p.m. Finals begin Saturday at 1:30 in the field events and 2:30 with the first race. The race expected to draw the most attention is the 440-yard dash. Eddie Southern will go for the 9-year old record of 46.9 set by Tom Cox of Rice in 1950. De fending champion in the 100 and 220-yard dashes, Southem, a Tex as senior, will not enter any open race except the quarter-mile. He will also run on both Texas relays. Southern has dipped under the ex isting standaz-d several times in his star-studded career and has been shooting for this weekend all season. Other records that could go by the boards: 440-yard relay—40.0 by Texas in 1957. Texas again fa vored. One-Mile Run—4:10.5 by Joe Villarreal, Texas, 1957. Has done 4:10.0 this year. , Two-Mile Run—9:24.4 by Jim Brown, Arkan sas, 1951. SMU’s sophomore, Jan Ahlberg has run 9:09.0 this spring. Mile Relay—3:11.6 by Texas, 1958. Texas has run 3:10.0 this year. Javelin—220-7% by Bruce Parker, Texas, 1957. Parker threw 246-9 last week and has been over the mark consistently. High Jump— 6-10% by Don Stewart, SMU. Stewart and^W. L. Thornton of Texas Tech both could better the mark. Each has topped 6-9 this spring. Bi-oad Jump—25-1 by Em mett Smallwood, A&M, 1957. Dale Moseley, Rice, has a 25-% effort to his credit this spring. Coaches Set Winning Example; Hold Many Conference Marks Exactly one-half of the eight Southwest Conference track and field coaches expect very little back-talk from their pupils during the daily practice grind. They’re champions in their own right! Four of the head coaches can pull out the conference record book and show the erring student where his coach won at least one first place medal in a SWC championship. A&M’s Charley Thomas is among the most recent of the coach rec- oi'd holders, and his conference sidekicks are Clyde Littlefield of Texas, Emmett Brunson of Rice and Jack Patterson of Baylor, all first place winners in past con ference championships. Thomas, in addition to running legs on the winning Longhoi-n spi'int relay champs, won the 220- yard dash three straight years— 1952 thz-ough 1954—and his 20.4 as a sophomore in 1952 was a SWC mark until all wind-aided records were thrown away last year. An interesting sidelight on Thomas is that he was the first University of Texas graduate to be nominated and accept a coach ing position at A&M since the ath letic history of Aggieland began. Littlefield, dean of conference coaches, took the high hurdles in 1915 and 1916 while z’unning for the Longhorns. He ran a 15.6 flight the fii’st year and 15.4 the second. Bi'unson was mile champion in 1928 and 1929 and copped the half- mile crown in 1928. His mile times were 4:21.8 and 4:40.5 while he turned in a 1:57.5 880-yard run effort. Patterson was high hui’dles king in 1936 (14.8) and in 1937 (14.5) and won the 1937 low hurdles race in the time of 23.7. Sm t u rnj/our- Shaffer J (Booh Store North Gate Open 6 days a week 8 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. JUNIORS BOOT BREECHES TIME IS HERE. KHAKI— SUMMER SERGE— PINKS— ALSO SPURS — CHAINS — BELTS AND BUCKLES Z U B I K' S Uniform Tailors North Gate STUDENT FLORAL CONCESSION \\ Flowers By Aggies for Aggies" AGGIES! See us for flowers for your MOTHER Mother’s Day Is May 10 CARNATIONS WHITE ORCHIDS LAVENDER ORCHIDS DOUBLE CYMBIDIUM ORCHIDS • SINGLE CYMBIDIUM ORCHIDS Order from your Dorm Representative through Wednesday night. Come by the Floriculture Building Friday or Saturday.