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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (April 12, 1961)
i ! il mm : ■:: : :: ; ; ; ■ g» ; ;, m fi Mmi I t J ’ a l A I ImM ■ Ai; tipil: y.r ■/■ *.; ■; .-J., •, / • '■ : t ; •‘;^ v 6';.; i •'. '/'"s > wm • : V3& ^iiiip y \ , ■km fea '.a--" B _ . Wiimm s^pf'a Wm^MM wmmmm^ mmMM: mM § ~ IlfaaBBBBB AFTER SHAVE LOTION Refreshing antiseptic action heals razor nicks, helps keep your skin in top condition. 1.00 plus tax SHULTOM New York • Toronto . Ellison Pharmacy 101 S. Main Bryan, Texas 28th at Sterling North Gate Bryan, Texas College Station Prompt, Free Delivery Service 3511 Texas Ave. Bryan, Texas THE BATTAUON -Page 4 College Station, Texas Wednesday, April 12, 1961 Top Stars Invade Dallas For Relays Top Southwest Conference per formers in every event will be fea tured in the Dallas Invitation Track and Field Meet Friday night along with Oklahoma University stars who assure a battle for team as well as individual laurels. Injury may sideline Ray Cun ningham, Texas’ conference record- holder who is credited with the best clocking in both hurdle events this season. Top flight competitions is assured even for these events, how ever. SMU has an ace in Bob Johnson, runner-up at the Texas Relays last week, and Baylor has quality and depth in David Ben nett and Jerry Nason. Johnson has been timed at 14.2 in two successive meets and ranks behind only Cunningham (14 flat) and TCU’s Bobby Bernard (14.1) in top SWC performances for the season. The SMU sophomore set the conference freshman mark (14.4) last year and finished ahead of such aces as Bernard and ACC’s Calvin Cooley at Austin last week. With Cunningham and his hurd ling teammate Rex Wilson due to miss the meet, Baylor is a slight favorite for team honors over Ok lahoma. SMU, which may capture as many blue ribbons as any of the contenders, and Texas A&M com plete the cast. Oklahoma provides the chief competition for the league’s top performers of this season—Bay lor’s John Fry in the weights and SMU’s Dexter Elkins in the pole vault. The Sooners offer J. D. Martin, the meet record-holder in the pole vault, and Mike Lindsay in the shot and discus. Martin leads the nation’s col- BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES One day 3t per word 2i per word each additional day Minimum charge—40^ DEADLINE 4 p.m. day before publication i. day before pub Classified Display 804 Per column inch each insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 FOR RENT Three bedroom house, 908 Fairview, bath, tak floors, $41.00, VI 6-7334. 94t8 U-Haul & Kar-go trailers for rent, local or one way. Anderson’s Service Station, Hitchc furnished free. 2010 S. Collej TA 2-3546. 9' FOR SALE DISCOUNT PARTS Our Everyday Low Prices Be sure to shop our store—■ You’ll be glad you did! NO LIMIT ON QUANTITIES 184 buys a qt. of SAE 30 motor oil. 244 buys a qt. of Gulf Lube, Supreme, Sinclair Opaline. 294 buys a qt. of Gulfpride, Esso, Havoline, or Conoco. EC Champion Spark Plugs Fully guaranteed 294 ea. or your money back. Filters 40% discount. Mufflers — 30% minimum discount on —■ We sell ’em all. any car — We sell em all. Chevrolet—’54-’60, List $13.75—Dis count $6.80. Ford—’54-’60, List $14.20 — Discount $7.10. Shock absorbers — installed price $5.97, most cars. Brake shoes, water pumps, fuel pumps, 30% to 40% off list. 30% to 40% Brake Cylinder Kits 50% off. MARK IV CAR AIR CONDITIONER- Commuter Dash Model $229^ Terms Plus Tax & Installation Inside rubber base paint $2.98 gal., $5.39 for 2 gals., this week. Outside white paid regular $2.98 gal., now $1.98 gal. Odd lots DeSota paint reg. 4.95 gal. Now $1.98 gal. Tune up kits—40% discount. Sealed Beam Headlamps — Everyday discount price $1.79 each. Brake fluid — 12 oz. 70RI—394. Vista car care polishes, list less 30i wih this ad. Turtle wax polishes, list less 40% with this ad. Speed Queen automatic washers just keep washing along — no troubles. And they cost no more. Speed Queen wringer washer — 10 lb. capacity, alumir capacity, aluminum agitator, ex tra large tube. A good buy at $129.95. Compare anywhere. Our discount price $89.95 and your old washer. BRING US YOUR IRONS, TOASTERS, MIXERS and OTHER SMALL APPLIANCES FOR REPAIRS Parts for any Standard Brand Small Appliance DISCOUNT AUTO PARTS TA 2-1669 214 N. Bryan at Joe Faulk’s Big Discounts to All FOR RENT FOR SALE Clean large one bedroom furnished apartment with garage. Utilities paid. Near East Gate. Call VI 6-4657 or VI 6- 4531. 93tfn Eight weeks old toy fox terrier pups, $15.00 and $20.00. TA 2-3431. 95t3 Roll away bed, like new, $35.00, C-3-D College View. 95t3 Two blocks from College Station Post Office, completely furnished apartments, four walk-in closets, good refrigerators »nd stoves. VI 6-7248. 61tfn Cheap. Formals, party dresses, dinner jacket, phone VI 6-5580 after 5 p. m. 94t3 Unfurnished two bedroom apartment, 120 wiring, attic fan, panel ray heat, near jrockett School. Phone VI 6-6660 after f p. m. 61tfn Two stenographic desks. Dictaphone dic tating units, No. 22 and 22-b screwbase and midget base gas filled flashbulbs, and Grafflex camera without lens, back or track. May be seen at Room 306, System Administration Building. Sealed bids will be received in the office of the Texas Forest Service, Texas A. & M. College System, College Station, until 10:00 a. m., Friday, April 28, 1961, on forms available upon request. Address the Director, Texas Forest Service, College Station, Texas, or telephone Victor 6-4771 for further infor mation. 94t2 A one and two bedroom modem fur nished apartment. Air conditioner if de sired. Call after 4 p. m., TA 2-3627. 1300 Antone Street. 68tfn Small well furnished apartment, ideal .or student who wants quiet place to study. VI 6-7248. 61tfn OFFICIAL NOTICES 1955 Chevrolet, Del Ray, R & H., white tires, W. W., 6 cyl., Std. Trans, Butane carburetion optional at extra cost. Very clean. Mechanically good. Only $495. VI 6-5409. 93tfn Official notices must be brought, mailed or telephoned so as to arrive in the Office of Student Publications (Ground Floor YMCA, VI 6-6415. hours 8-12, 1-5, daily Monday through Friday) at or before the deadline of 1 p.m. of the day preceding publication — Director of Student Publica tions. Rare Car Lovers. Must sell my GM- Experimental 175 Skylark convertable. Only 120 of these custom beauties were built. Need $500 but will take best offer. New tires, good top, all power, electric doors. VI 6-7829. 92tfn Ph.D. LANGUAGE EXAMINATION Examinations for meeting the foreign language requirement for the Ph.D. degree will be given Wednesday, May 3rd at 8:00 a. m. and 1:00 p. m.. in Room 129, Academic Building. Students wishing to take this examination should leave the material over which they wish to be ex amined with the Secretary in the Depart- men of Modem Languages not later than 5:00 p. m. Monday, May 1st. J. J. Woolket, Head, Department of Modern Languages 94tl2 FOUND Tagged racing pigeon in vicinity ot Crockett School. Call VI 6-6202 and identify bird. 94t2 FOR RENT OR LEASE Building, North Gate, office, sales store etc. Phone W. S. Edmonds, VI 6-7033. 93t3 JIM M. PYE ’58 REPRESENTING Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. VI 6-5055 TA 2-6232 401 Cross St. C. S. SOSOLIK’S TY - RADIO - PHONO SERVICE 713 S. Main TA 2-1941 Gulfpride, Esso, Havoline, Sinclair Oils 29c Qt. RC Champion Sparkplugs....29c Discount Auto Parts AT JOE FAULK’S 214 N. Bryan SAE 30 Motor Oil 18c Qt. • 24 Hour Wrecker Service • Whitley’s Auto Parts WE BUY BURNED & WRECKED CARS & TRUCKS 3 Miles West of Courthouse on Highway 21 BRYAN, TEXAS H. L. WHITLEY, JR., OWNER Phone TA 2-6840 TV - Radio - Hi-Fi Service & Repair GILS RADIO & TV TA 2-0826 2403 S. College • ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • BLUE LINE PRINTS • BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS SCOATES INDUSTRIES 603 Old Sulphur Springs Road BRYAN, TEXAS TYPEWRITERS Rentals - Sales - Service - Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Matchines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main TA 2-6000 HOME & CAR RADIO REPAIRS SALES & SERVICE KEN’S RADIO & TV 303 W. 26th TA 2-2819 III J 7 0 , . Where the Art of 8 -m^Jotard J K^ctj etcria. Cooking is not Lost Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules, & Etc 5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG LOUPOTS WORK WANTED Will baby sit in my home, $8.00 per child or $15.00 for two children from same home. TA 2-4726. 95t3 DAY NURSERY by the week, day or Call Mrs. Gregory, 602 Boyett. 120tfn hour. VI 6-4005 Our nursery for children all ages. Pick up and deliver. VI 6-8161. . No answer call back. 42tfn Why wait until last minute to get your mg, negatives and me 3408 Texas Ave. VI 6-1 6786. HELP WANTED Waitress wanted. Must be over 18 old. Experience not necessary. Apply 3606 South College Ave. TA 2-1352. 94tfn yea SPECIAL NOTICE SUL ROSS LODGE NO. 1300, A.F. & AM. Stated Meeting Thursday, April 13 at 7 p.m. Re-dedi cation and oblii igation night. All members are requested to attend. C. W. Trossen, WM Joe Woolket, Sec. 95t2 Hilltop Lake, located on Hwy. 6 South, 91/2 miles from College. Sould be good fishing soon. Clean picnic grounds. 76tfn picnic grounds. Electrolux Sales an Williams. TA 3-6600. d Service. G. C. 90tfn EXCEPTIONAL VALUES! MARK IV CAR AIR CONDITIONER Commuter Dash Model TERMS ?229 95 P1US Installation And Tax Cycling clutch, thermostatic tempera tore control, rheostate controlled fan Twin squirrel cage blowers moves U] Twin squirrel cage to 300 cu. ft. of air per minute. TIRES— justme based on % of tread wear. Opening special 6.70x15 black tube type $9.88 spei plus $12.8: tax & recappable tire. Only 8 plus tax with no trade-in. All other sizes at comparable dis count prices. We undersell ’em Check us before you buy. ’em all. TELEVISION & STEREO: Television and Stereo — best buys anywhere — we rent — sell — trade. 23” hand wired—-23,000 volt chassis hardwood cabinet, now only $189.95 with playing trade. speakers, oiled walnut hardwood cab inet. $570 value for $439.95 or $399.95 with trade. 3% state tax. DISCOUNT AUTO PARTS TA 2-1669 214 N. Bryan at Joe Faulk’s Big Discounts to All legians at 15-3 for the season, while Elkins is in the No. 3 posi tion with his 15-%. Both cleared 14-6 in widely-separated meets last week. They have a competent challenger in Baylus Bennett, Tex as’ junior who is rounding back into form after an injury in the Sugar Bowl meet in which he set a school record of 14-4%. Lindsay is one-quarter inch ahead of Fry in their two-three standing among the top collegiate shot putters. The Sooner senior, who set the Dallas Invitation rec ord of 57-2% as a soph, has a best throw of 58-10% this season, achieved just a week after Fry hit his 58-10%. Jim Allison of Texas (56-7%) and Buddy Tyner of Bay lor (56-6) also rank among the na tion’s ten best. Fry moved ahead of Lindsay as the eleventh-ranking collegiate dis cus tosser last week with 167-10% for runner-up honors at the Texas Relays. Lindsay’s best for the year is 167-7. The Sooners claim superiority over their SWC rivals in only one other event, the broad jump. They have two men (Steve Swafford, 24-4 1 /i and Don Warrick, 23-10%) who have bettered the best record ed by a conference jumper. Larry Harbour of Baylor and Jack Sides of Baylor, who will compete here, have done 23-7 but the league’s best leap was made in Austin Fri day by Fred Hansen of Rice (23- 9%). Eddie Curtis of Baylor, who ranks only one-half inch behind league-leading Jackie Upton of TCU, will duel here with Okla homa’s Mark Brady, who has a best of 6-5. All three of these rank among the nation’s top ten. Friday night’s sprinting will match Ralph Alspaugh of Texas, defending champion in both the 100 and 220; Bill Kemp, the Baylor soph; Joe Hill of SMU and Curtis Roberts of A&M, who have had wind-assisted 9.5’s, and Richard Sinclair of Oklahoma. SPORTS Russell Again Leads Celts To World Title By The Associated Press BOSTON —Incredible Bill Rus sel], the man who made basket ball world champions of the Bos ton Celtics, kept them there by sparking a 121-112 victory over the St. Louis Hawks Tuesday night. The star centers all-around ex cellence enabled the Celtics to close the best-of-seven National Basket ball Association playoff finals in five games before a capacity 13,- 909 Garden fans. Former All-America and Olym pic wonder, Russell scored 30 points, grabbed 38 rebounds and stole the ball frequently in carry ing the dazzling Celtics to their third straight NBA title and fourth in five years since he ar rived. But the never-say-die Hawks fought back from a 99-82 deficit and pulled to within 5 points be fore veteran Tom Heinsohn, Bob Cousy, Frank Ramsey and Sam Jones finished the job. Cousy, putting on his fantastic dribbling show when it got close, and feeding for the late baskets, flopped to the floor in complete exhaustion at the final buzzer as pandemonium broke loose. While the crowd bore the rest of the team off to the dressing room and Coach Red Auerbach happily and helplessly watched the clothes torn from his back, the 11-year NBA veteran Cousy needed assist ance to make it from the arena. Fish Baseballers Have Much Talen This year’s Fish baseballer squad is one of the best crops of talented ballplayers to hit Aggieland in quite some time. Fish Coach J. B. Carroll, former star centerfielder for the Aggies, is the man who has been given the privilege to coach such a group. “We have several potentially good hitters on the team concern ing both averages and power,” said Carroll. It is very seldom that a fresh man team has these qualities. Usually the first year team has only two or three extraordinary performers, but on this team there isn’t a weak spot, added Carroll. The first and second teams of the squad are just about equal and they both are good, said their coach. There are four football players on the squad that should help the Fish even more. They are Ronnie Carpenter, Jim Linnstaedter, Jerry Pizzatola and Eddie Hall. “These football boys are still tight from playing football and it will take about another two weeks before they get used to baseball and loosen up. A baseball player is loose and he actually flows,” said Carroll. Carroll wishes that the Fish could play more games than their allotted 12. “We just don’t get a chance to see our pitchers show their stuff,” said Carroll. Thursday afternoon on Legion Field in Bryan, the Fish go ail their sixth straight victory ast! take on the Allen Academy Eau lers. The Fish have already feated the Ramblers twice season—12-2 and 4-3. Anotli game was play but was callei account of rain after three in® Little Leagu Sets Meeting For Thursth The College Station Li League will hold a public a# ing tomorrow night at 7:31 i the cafeteria of the A&M (i solidated School where plans t) be discussed for the 1961 seaa iii th to be At this meeting the off® for the coming season will I fill b elected and the operation of II up,” Little League baseball profiifferem for boys 8-12 will be discusset Registration cards for all li ,, nor League and Major Lea] players will be distributed at It morrow’s meeting. im, I'nion 1 s P e But Dr. W. A. Varvel urges parents and boys interested i the 1961 Little League pro?™ Soviei to attend this organizalitii meeting. Following the business sessi# a thirty-minute film, “Bastli for Millions,” will be shown, INTRAMURALS Twelve games were played yes terday in intramural sports. In Class A Rifle, H-2 won over Sq. 6 by forfeit. In the two games played in Class A Softball, F-2 and H-2 fought to a 6-6 deadlock and will resume play later in the season. G-3 edged E-2, 6-5. In Class C Softball, Hart won an easy victory over Pan American by forfeit and Puryear blast# Leggett for a 21-1 win. In Class B Softball, C-2 E-2, 11-7 and G-2 downed G-3, 111 F-l blanked Sq. 3, 3-0 in 111 only game played in Class A Tn nis. In Class B Tennis, F-2 won on H-2 by the score of 2-1; G-l sit out Sq. 9, 2-0; Sq. 1 took Sq.lib forfeit; and B-2 defeated A-2tj forfeit. LUCKY STRIKE PRESENTS DQiR.'DRiRgoD i dr. frood's thought for the day: The best defense is a good offense, unless you’re weak or cowardly, in which case a good hiding place is ujibeatable. DEAR DR. FROOD: Every guy I go out with thinks he’s Casanova. What should a girl do? Chased DEAR CHASED: Ask each one to roll up his sleeve. If there is a small birthmark just above the left elbow, you’ve got the real Casanova. DEAR DR. FROOD: I am a sophomore majoring in architecture. Our college has just completed a magnificent carillon tower. Yesterday, while examining the blueprints, I was horrified to dis cover that the tower will collapse at 3:30 P.M., June 3, 1964. I have taken my calculations to the dean, to the architects, to the builders, to the president of the college. No one will pay any attention to me. I am desperate. What can I do to avert disaster? Frantic DEAR FRANTIC: You’ve done your best, son. Now, for your own peace of mind, won’t you join me in a short trip to Las Vegas to see what kind of odds we can get? DEAR DR. FROOD: A tackle on the football team likes the same girl I do. He says that if I see her any more, he’ll mop up the floor with me. I refuse to be intimidated! What should I do? Ninety-nine Pounder DEAR NINETY-NINE: You’d better let your hair grow long. DEAR DR. FROOD: I've been writing poems to a certain girl for about five months. Yesterday I found out that this girl and her friends get together to read my poems and laugh at them. Do you think I should stop writing to her? Upset “Nt and r lind.” He “the Sovie: lafelj “A achie' and o mire. But lonce: loosti aloft nik, t low i “Tl with oedy Thf regar Of till “W other Kenn bring henef Th, and t the tnce. *ith the 1 took Ke ands gravi finge i It 1\ DEAR UPSET: Definitely not. There are all too few humor ous poets writing today. FROOD TO WASHINGTON! Dr. Frood has been called by government officials to unveil his extraordinary “Luckies for Peace Plan.” Questioned about this plan, Frood replied: “The details are still classified, but it all started when I discovered that college students smoke more Luckies than any other regular. This led me to believe that if all the world’s peoples would but lean back and light up a Lucky, they would be too happy to be belligerent.” CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change! Product of idnue/uzan — (Jufrcteco- is pur middle name ■^5 4* T. Co, No ofth tilTi tr,ch tomn Ea seleci Year servi aim her s dent Th latio noth Prese must Bay Sir toirii been ■rntin hono: days A1 of le they he h< the] in ca Aetii ter. Po Plica eonfi tion and he rr festi 1