I The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas Tuesday, May 12, 1959 PAGE 3 Farmers Deflate Steers, 4 - 2; Face Rice Tuesday, Thursday Coach Tom Chandler’s Aggie nine tackles the Rice Owls today in a rematch at Houston with both teams needing the victory to stay the better students use barnes & noble for review famous educational paperbacks average price 1.50 over 140 titles on the following subjects: anthropology art bus iness drama economics educa tion eng i neering english etiquet te government handicraf ts history languages % ma thematics music philosophy psychology recrea tions science sociology speech study aids on display at Skaffer d Eooh Store North Gate — Open 6 days a week 8 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. in the conference race. The Farmers are a half game behind the Steers who boast a 9-4 record. A&M is 8-4 in the confer ence trailed by Rice who is 7-5. The Cadets second game with the Owls is scheduled for Thurs day at College Station with game time set at 3:30 p.m. Big Wayne Schaper was the vic tor in the Friday contest that saw the Aggies down the Steers for the third time this season, 4-2. The senior from Galveston faced only 30 batters and gave up four hits, one of them a homer, Aggie scoring started in the fourth inning when reliefer Paul Zavoi’skas, credited with the loss, hit Byron Barber with a pitched ball to send the left-fielder to first. First baseman Bo Paradowski tripled down the right field line to score Barber and then trotted home on a single to left by Stuffy Davis. Texas tied up the game in the seventh when Butch Crain, pinch hitting for Roy Enderlin, reached first on an error. Pete Embry then latched onto a pitch for a homer over the right field fence to score the two runs. The Cadets went ahead to stay in the eighth on three errors and a single. Windel Reed reached first on an ei'ror by Texas’ second baseman Phil Hipps and scored on Barber’s bunt that was fielded by Zavorskas and thrown into right field. Barber took third on the throw back from first and an error by Embry and then scored on a single by Randy Wortham. CONFERENCE Team W L Pet. R OR xexas y 4 .692 70 43 Texas A&M 8 4 .667 79 53 Rice .. 8 5 .583 64 53 Baylor 6 8 .492 61 90 SMU . 5 8 .385 65 75 TCU . 4 10 .286 60 82 SEASON Team W L Pet. R k)R Texas 15 6 .714 149 90 Texas A&M 15 7 .682 167 114 Rice ... 12 9 .571 112 91 SMU . 12 10 .545 119 130 Baylor 12 12 .500 126 138 TCU 10 14 .417 126 144 This Week’s Schedule Tuesday—Texas VS. SMU at Dallas : A&M vs. Rice at Houston. Tech, SMU Linksters Tie For Title in SWC Tourney John Farquhar of Texas Tech shot a 2-under-par 68 on the final 18 holes Saturday to tie Gene Teter of Southern Methodist for the championship of Southwest Con ference golf. Each wound up with 284 for 72 holes and will be co-champions. Teter had a 72 on the final 18. Farquhar, making a great finish, could have won the title had he sunk an 8-foot birdie putt on the last hole. Don Kaplan of Texas Tech was third with 288. Don Massengale of Texas Chris tian, the defending champion, fin ished well down the list with 294. John Paul Cain of Texas Tech’s championship team tied Billy Mar- tindale and Binky Mitchella of Texas A&M for fourth place at 290 while Charles Goody of Texas Texas Relay’s Champ Blustery winds failed to halt the Texas Longhorns Friday and Saturday at College Station as they swept to their sixth straight Southwest Conference track and field championship. The Steeds won nine events and tied for first in the 10th to run away with the title, collecting 87% points while runner-up SMU gar nered 42% trailed by the Aggies with 37%. A&M, Texas Tech, Rice and TCU each provided one winner in the track and field carnival. Owen Hill was the gold medal winner for the Farmers with a heave of 165-8% in the discus. Tech’s James Pettit won the low hurdles, Dale Mosely won the broad jump while TCU’s James Livergood scored a first in the 880-yard run. Eddie Southern, the Texas flash, failed in his bid to set a new conference record in the 440-yard dash with strong winds in the back stretch holding him to a timing of 47.0. Only one runner managed to beat the wind for a new record, and it was SMU’s Jan Ahlberg CLEARANCE SALE NOW IN PROGRESS Name Brand DRESS SHIRTS . . . . . 20% off One Group Short Sleeve SPORT SHIRTS . ... 2 for $5.00 SUITS . . . . 20% off SPORT COATS ... 33 1/3% off One Group Lightweight JACKETS . . . 50% off A&M MEN’S SHOP who raced home for a new mark I winner, Southern. Ralph Alspaugh in the two-mile run in 9:18.7. was runner-up with 12% points. High point man of the meet was Gainey finished second in both Texas’ Hollis Gainey with 13 dashes and x-an on two winning points, dethrowning last yeax*’s | relay teams to collect his points. SWC Relay’s Summaries 440-yard relay—1) Texas (Wally Wilson, Eddie Southern. Hollis Gainey, Ralph Als- pautrh). 2) Texas A and M. 3) Baylor. 4) Southern Methodist. 5) Texas Tech. 0 :41.2. Mile run 1) Joe Villarreal, Texas. 2) Jan Ahlberg, Southern Methodist. 3) Ron ald Weber, Rice. 4) Pete Dyson, Texas Tech. 5) Jack Nelson, Arkansas. 4:16.7. 440-yard dash—1) Eddie Southern, Tex as. 2) John Emmett, Southern Methodist. 3) William Palmer, Texas A and M. 4) Lafayette Heath, Texas Christian. 5) Jack McCaslin, Southern Methodist. 0:47.0. Shot put- 1) Jim Allison, Texas, 53 feet one-quarter-inch. 2) Henry Bonorden, Texas A and M, 52-8’yi. 3) John Fry, Baylor, 52-2 VG. 4) Buddy Tyner, Baylor, 51-7. 5) Johnny Warren, Texas, 50-3%. Broad Jump—-1) Dale Moseley, Rice, 24 feet 6% inches. 2) Jack Sides, Texas, 23-7%. 3) James Pettit. Texas Tech, 23-6%. 4) Terry Arenz, Arkansas, 22-3%. 5) Denny Pederson, Rice, 22-3. 100-yard dash—1) Ralph Alspaugh, Tex as. 2) Hollis Gainey, Texas. 3) Mickey Hollingshead, Rice. 4) Billy Hollis, Bay lor. 5) Bobby Clark, Texas A and M. 0 :09.6. High Jump—1) Don Stewart, Southern Methodist, 6 feet 8 inches. 2) W. L. Thornton, Texas Tech, 6-6. 3) Billy Weiler, Texas, 6-4. 4) Tie among Frank Madura, Texas A and M ; Bobby Thomas, Texas A and M ; and Aubrey Linne, Texas Chris tian, 6-2. 120-yard high hurdles—1) Donald Beard, Texas. 2) Dick Murphy, Texas Tech. 3) James Pettit, Texas Tech. 4) Ernie Uribe, Texas A and M. 5) Ken Osbourne, Texas Tech. 0:14.6. Javelin throw 1) Bruce Parker, Texas, 226 feet, 1% inches (new record—old rec ord 220 feet 7% inches by Bruce Parker, Texas, in 1957). 2) Fallon Gordon, Texas, 193-4. 3) Newton Lamb, Texas A and M, 190-7%. 4) John Long, Texas A and M, 5) Gary Wisener, Baylor, 180-0. 880-yard run—1) James Livergood, Tex as Christian. 2) Drew Dunlap, Texas. 3) Charles Draper, Texas Tech. 4) Billy Wal ker, Southern Methodist. 5) Joe Villarreal, Texas. 1 :53.7. . Pole vault—1) Tie among Gerry Peters, Southern Methodist; James Leonard, Texas Tech: Mike Howell, Texas Christian, and Charley Bankhead, Texas. 13 feet 6 inches. 5) Tie between Ray Vance, Texas A and M, and Alan Sugg, Arkansas, 13-1. 220-yard dash 1) Ralph Alspaugh, Tex as. 2) Hollis Gainey, Texas. 3) Mickey Hollingshead, Rice. 4) Bobby Clark. Texas A and M. 6) Allan Uhrig, Rice. 0:20.5. (Equals record of 20.5 set by Chink Wnl- lender, Texas, in 1936, and tied by Eddie Southern, Texas, in 1968, hut not allowed because of 12-miIe-per-hour favoring wind.) Two-mile-run—1) Jan Ahlberg, Southern Methodist. 2) Tommy Oakley, Arkansas. 3) Joe Garcia, Baylor. 4) Freddie Dulock, Texas A and M. 6) Joe Bessenbacher, Ar kansas. 9:18.7. (New record -old record 9:24.4 set by Jim Brown, Arkansas, 1961.) 220-yard low hurdles—1) James Pettit, Texas Tech. 2) Bobby Bozman, Southern Methodist. 3) Terry Arenz, Arkansas. 4) Joe Hill, Southern Methodist. 5) Ernie Uribe. Texas A and M. 0:23.2. Mile Relay- 1) Texas (Hollis Gainey, Johnny Gotten, Drew Dunlap, Eddie South ern. 2) Southern Methodist. 3) Arkan sas. 41 Texas Christian. 5) Texas A and M. 3:13.9. It’s so much faster to FLY! CONTINENTAL ■ V AttiUMMs; \ i : fST i \ liBr / DAUAS ABILENE For reservations, call Continenfal at VI6-4789. PEANUTS PEANUTS By Charles M. Schulz kYOUfeE UjiSH/N UJASHr, CHARLIE ^ BROWN! s/n AND, BESIDES THAT, YOU'RE SPINELESS AND COWARDLY/ 7mATS GOINSVOH,NOTHING 1 IJON HERE? MUCH... 1/ I'M JUST TRYING TO GIVE CHARLIE BROWN A LITTLE DESTRUCTIVE CRITICISM/ —V — ts^L. PEANUTS I'M BUILDING N upaprettvgoodI COLLECTION OF DISHES.. CA WATER DISH,a SUPPER] DISH, A DESSERT DISH, ^7 A SNACK DISH... f A special plate for n (^TWENTY-SI X-INCH PIZZA/, — The Texas Yearlings won the freshmen division of the meet with 76% points, trailed by Tech with 48 and Baylor with 41%. The Ag gie frosh were fourth with 28% points. Texas’ Ray Cunningham shar ed high point honors with TCU’s Bobby Barrett, each man scoring 10 points. Cunningham won both hurdle events while Barrett won the mile and 880-yard run. Christian was seventh with 293. Massengale and Chris Blocker of Texas Tech tied for eighth with 294, Johnny Arreaga of Baylor was tenth with 295 while Don Har mon of Baylor finished 11th with 296. Other scores: Beryl' Anthony, Arkansas, 304; Frank Mackey, Texas Christian, and Bob Nelson, Texas, 307; Tom Williams, Rice, 315. Teter’s card for the tournament showed 71-70-71-72-284. Farqu- har’s was 74-70-72-68-284. Norm Van Brocklin of the Phil adelphia Eagles was the fourth leading National Football League passer last season with Los An geles. Attention Seniors! ! ! Aggie Diploma Frames Ready to go % inch Black molding with glass and backing $2.39 each MINK ARTCRAFT 923 So. College Ave., Bryan Give a gift that will be remembered .... Elgin Bulova Hamilton AND UP WATCHES Culpepper Jewelry Townshire Shopping Center TA 2-3119 WmM JUST YOUR TYPE That's why more people buy Smith-Corona Portables than any other Portable Typewriter! What a campus beauty! Always letter-perfect — and has figures to match! 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