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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 14, 1961)
I Look your best at formal affairs Look your best on gala occa sions in formal clothes cleaned tp perfection by us. Your “audience” 'will applaud! Try us soon. Campus Cleaners Page 4 College Station, Texas Tuesday, February 14, 19G1 THE BATTALION Deaver, Frosh Shine At Will Rogers Games Don Deaver, sophomore from Giddings, showed signs of bril liancy at the Will Rogers Indoor Games in Fort Worth Feb. 9 as he won the university-college di vision high jump with a leap of 6-5 3 A. As a team the Aggies finished in eighth place with 71/2 points while ACC won the meet with 42% points. The Aggie Fish made a fine showing in the open division as they were the unofficial champions. Two other Aggies placed in th6 university-college division outside The Ground Hog Said “Six Weeks” But Loupots Says SPRING HAS ARRIVED In The New Clothes On Display Now. You Are Invited To Come In And See These Nationally Advertised Lines: Bud Berma Sport Shirts Bub Berma Beach Wear Hartag Knit Shirts (In The New “Mad” Colors) H.I.S Cotton Walking Shorts H.I.S. Cotton Sport Coats H.I.S. Washable Slacks BUY YOUR SPRING CLOTHES NOW While AH Sizes and Colors Are In Stock. Don’t Wait Until The Best Is Gone. SHOP TODAY AT Jloupatk of Deaver. Ike Frazier tied for third place in the high jump with 6-2 and Thomas Johnston placed fifth in the two-mile run with a time of 9:51.1. In the open division, Danny Roberts, James King and Robert Martin were the standouts for the Fish. Roberts beat several highly touted shot-putters, Frank Mazza of Baylor and Robert Young of Texas, in winning the shot-put with a toss of 52-10. King out-ran teammate R. E. Merritt in taking the 440-yard dash with a time of 51.8. Merritt finished second with a time of 52.4. Martin won the 60-yard dash with a buzzing clock of 6.4. Fish Ian Rilgutay took second place in 1,000-yard run with a clocking of 2.20.0. In the university-college divi sion, Richard Menchaca of North Texas won the 880-yard dash with a time of 1:56.5, followed by Charles Draper of Texas and Elvis Istre of ACC. In the two-mile run, Ian Stewart of Lamar Tech finished ten seconds ahead of Bob Mellgren of Baylor with a clock ing of 9:34.0. Muscleman John Fry of Baylor heaved the shot 56-6% in beating teammate Buddy Tyner, Jim Alli son of Texas and Tracey Byrd of McMurry. Sprinter Ralph Al- spaugh of Texas sped to a 6.3 tim ing in the 60-yard dash in winning over Dennis Richardson of ACC and Bud White of ACC. Bill Miller of McMurry leaped 23-10% in taking first place in the broad jump over Dudley Haac of East Texas and Jack Sides of Texas. The next Aggie track meet will match them in a triangular meet against Texas and the University of Houston in Austin, March 4. SPORTS Ag Wrestling Team Performs in Big H Ohio State Leads For Ninth Week By The Associated Press Two more victories last week stretching its unbeaten streak to 23 games over two seasons, kept Ohio State solidly entrenched Tues- das as the No. 1 team in college basketball. Led by Jerry Lucas, the Buck eyes won over Indiana 100-65 and Michigan State 83-68. This was enough to convince every member of the Associated Press special panel of sports writers and broad casters that the Big Ten power house deserved top rating. This marked the ninth straight week that the Buckeyes had been a unanimous choice for the No. 1 spot. . St. Bonaventure trounced Ten nessee State 104-87 for its 18th triumph in 19 starts. The Bonnies collected all but one of the 36 second place votes, the exception going to Mississippi State. West Virginia, which beat NYU 75-60 at New York’s Madison Square Carden and then toppled Richmond 93-88, moved into the No. 10 spot replacing Louisville. Duke, 17-2, held third place, fol lowed by Cincinnati, Bradley, Kansas State, North Carolina, Southern California, Iowa and West Virginia in that order. Cincinnati, winner over St. Louis 61-52, moved ahead of Bradley, which lost to Drake 86-76 and then beat Tampa and St. Louis. Kansas State, which edged Iowa State 66-65, leaping into sixth place over North Carolina, beaten by South Carolina 89-82. Top Ten 1. Ohio State, 18-0 2. St. Bonaventure, 18-1 3. Duke, 17-2 4'. Cincinnati, 17-3 5. Bradley, 16-4 6. Kansas State, 15-3 7. North Carolina, 15-4 8. Southern California, 16-3 9. Iowa, 13-3 10. West Virginia, 18-3 PEANUTS VfS, THEVRE F0r\ ALL THE £0VS By Charles M. Schulz (jJAlT...V0(J -DROPPED ONE..; IT HAS TK£ INITIALS T.B." ON IT. U)E WOOLDN T (jUANTTO LOSE THAT ONE, (jOOOLD U)E? HA HA HA HA HA HA ir NO, X GDESS N0T...CRAK3 BOCOERMAN WOULD BE VERV- DISAPPOINTEDJ The A&M wrestling team took fifth place in the sixth annual Houston Downtown YMCA invita tional wrestling meet last week end. Taking top honors was the Duncan, Okla., YMCA. Placing for the Aggies was: Mickey McDonald, third place, in the 114 lb. class; Joe Rodriquez, third, in the 136 lb. class; Harold Brent and Victor Mikulec, third and fourth, in the 147 lb. class. Harley Hansen, third, in the 160 lb. class; Fred Alexander, third, 91 lb. class. A] Hoyt and Gary Terzian tied for third in the over 200 lb. class. TUESDAY “IT STARTED IN NAPLES” with Clark Gable Plus “LET NO MAN WRITE MY EPITAPH” with Shelley Winters PALACE Bryan 2‘S#79 LAST DAY “ESTHER & THE KING’' STARTS TOMORROW the nm ISll® HAD TO HURT SOMEONE! HE LOVED! ELVIS PRESLEY AS PACER, THE HALF-BREED! co-starring BARBARA EDEN STEVE FORREST DOLORES DEL RIO JOHN . MclNTIRE COlOR^ofLUXE ’ OAvId’wE&tIdON SIEGEL Screenplay by CLAIR HUFFAKER & NUN HALLY JOHNSON STAR ’■ :ii*; 7 .w.. QUEEN LAST DAY Dolores Hart In “WHERE THE BOYS ARE” Big Crowds Expected for Cage Carnes Near capacity crowds of 8,500 are expected for two A&M basket ball games at G. Rollie White Coliseum this month. Pat Dial, athletic business man ager, said reserved seat ticket sales for tonight’s Texas Tech game and the Texas game on Fef). 24 “are heavy.” “We have had a large number of mail order requests for tickets to both contests and may end up with all of the reserved seat tickets sold,” said Dial. The Coliseum has 1,340 reserved and 7,160 “general admission” seats which are sold on a first- come, first-served basis. Of this number, about one-half is allotted to the members of the student body. Only one Coliseum sellout is on 8,500 witnessed the Aggie-Texas game last year. Top crowds this season have been 6,500 for SMU and 6,700 for Rice. OSU Edges A&M In Rifle Tourney By The Associated Press NEW ORLEANS — Oklahoma State University edged A&M, 3,860-3,835, to win the fourth an nual Mardi Gras Invitation rifle tournament last weekend. Arlington State College took third with 3,828. Individual winners were Roy Hodges, A&M; 'prone; James Frazer, Oklahoma State, sitting; flruce Meredith, West Virginia record. An estimated 400 persons University, kneeling; and Hodges, were turned away at the door when standing. Corps Juniors & Sop^, Year book Portrait Self, JUNIORS & SOPHOMOU the corps will have thtit traits made for the ".{i LAND ’61” according toft, lowing schedule. Portrait, be made in CLASS A ^|\ UNIFORM at the Studio, between the k- 8:00 AM and 5:00 PMjj V< days scheduled. Feb. 13-14 14- 15 15- 16 16- 17 20-21 21-22, A-l, B-l C-l, D-l E-l, F-l |J G-l, H-l A-2, B-2 B-2, C-2 22- 23 K-2, F-2 23- 24 G-2, G-3 27-28 H-2,1, K, LI I 8,000 Management Opportunities! A That’s right. There will be 8,000 supervisory jobs filled from within the Western Electric Company by college graduates in just the next ten years! How come? Because there’s the kind of upward movement at Western Elecfric that spells execulive opportunity. Young men in engineering and other professional work can choose between two paths of advancement- one within their own technical field and one within over-all management. Your progress up-the-ladder to executive positions will be aided by a number of special programs. The annual company-wide person nel survey helps select management prospects. This ties in with planned rotational develop ment, including transfers between Bell Com panies and experience in a wide variety of fields. Western Electric maintains its own full time graduate engineering training program, seven formal management courses, and a tui tion refund plan for college study. After joining Western Electric, you’ll be planning production of a steady stream of communications products —electronic swilii ing, carrier, microwave and missile guidann systems and components such as transislo% n( j j diodes, ferrites, etc. Every day, engineers c our manufacturing plants are working tobriE OU p new developments of our associates at j Telephone Laboratories into practical realto.^j, In short, “the sky’s your limit” at Wester, p Electric. eces Opportunities exist for electrical, mechanical, ininfrom trial, civil and chemical engineers, as well as phyikiyhe f science, liberal arts, and business majors. For information, get your copy of Consider a Career e Western Electric from your Placement Officer. Or wrt a Ulil College Relations, Room 6106, Western Electric Ctfjjcens pany, 195 Broadway, New York 7, N. Y. Be arrange for a Western Electric interview whenllieliS System team visits your campus. -Steph Wester* Electric!^ ^ ^ Theol MANUFACTURING AND SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SVill* Principal manufacturing locations at Chicago, III.; Kearny, N. J.; Baltimore, Md.; Indianapolis, Ind.; Allentown and Laureldale,!!: Winston-Salem, N. C.; Buffalo, N. Y. ; North Andover, Mass.; Omaha, Neb.; Kansas City, Mo. ; Columbus, Ohio; Oklahoma City, OH Engineering Research Center, Princeton, N. J. Teletype Corporation, Skokie, III., and Little Rock, Ark. Also Western Electric «• bution centers in 3? cities and installation headouartprs in Ifi cities. General heariouarters: 195 Broadway. New York 7J.t FINAL CLEARANCE! Tue. c eral with of v duct Thanks - Aggies and Faculty for your response to our recent sale of Winter Sport Clothing. As a result our patterns and sizes are badly broken so we are offering the remainder at even further and drastic reductions. These prices are far below our cost. If you can find your size this is the opportunity of a life time. EVERYTHING MUST GO! THE EXCHANGE STORE SERVING TEXAS AGGIES men first fuse saim day the race stiti favo that thei thm in t’ men men