■ r Page 6 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Thursday, September 28, 1961 JACKY CUPIT TOPS New Crop Of Texas Golfers May Rival Hogan and Crew Memories At 85, Nick Altrock poses in a farewell gesture at Griffith Stadium in Washington where he pitched baseball 68 years ago. Altrock, who w r on 63 games in a three-year span for the Chicago White Sox before joining the Washington American League club in 1912, said the first time he pitched in Griffith Stadium was in 1898 while playing for Louisville. He watched the Minnesota Twins beat the Washington Senators 6-3 in what may be the last major league game in the park—the Senators may open next sea son in a new municipal stadium. (AP Wirephoto) By HAROLD RATLIFF Associated Press Sports Editor Back in the thirties and forties Texas was supreme in golf. It had Ben Hogan, Byron Nelson, Jimmy Demaret, Lloyd Mangrum and Chances Are That TU-OU Contest Will Be Televised AUSTIN (IP) — Chances are good the Texas-Oklahoma football game will be televised in Dallas and Austin, Ed Olle, University of Texas athletic director said Wed nesday. Olle said televising the game must be approved by the National College Athletic Association and accepted by the ABC television network. He said an oral agreement has been made by phone, and formal confirmation was expected from the NCAA and ABC in a few days. Olle said ABC already has scheduled another football game for nationwide showing the week end of Oct. 14, but, if the NCAA approves, ABC will substitute the Texas-Oklahoma game for the na tional contest in Dallas and Aus tin only. Winners Lead In SWC Statistics Special To The Battalion Baylor, Rice, TCU and Texas, the only victors last Saturday, mo nopolized the greatest gains and the longest plays, leaving only a few consolation prizes for the less fortunate. Texas A&M, which tied Houston in one of the eight cur tain-raisers, ran the most rushing plays (54); SMU did the best punting (averaging 44.2), while Arkansas had the best kickoff re turn average. Familiar names like James Sax ton (Texas), Billy Cox (Rice), Sonny Gibbs and Buddy lies (TCU), Bobby Ply and Ronnie Bull (Baylor) dominated the high mai'ks for players, but unheralded performers such as Jeri’y Cook (Texas), Butch Blume (Rice), Jerry Spearman (TCU), Lewis Al bright (SMU) and Garry Thomas (TCU) grabbed some of the laur els. Cook was the leading ball car rier for the opening week (110 yards) and was a close runner-up to TCU’s Gibbs in total offense. Blume was one of the more versa tile leaders, taking second-best honors in longest field goal, long est punt return and longest inter ception runback. Spearman, son of a former TCU great, kicked the game-winning 36-yard field goal against Kansas to lead that category, while Al- bi’ight, promoted this week to first-string duty at SMU, posted the longest punt return (20 yards) in the opening round. Garry Thomas, one of TCU’s sophomore twins from Athens, was credited with the longest punt (55 yards). Nixon To Run For Governor In California LOS ANGELES CP) — For mer Vice President Richard M. Nixon announced Wednesday night he will run for governor of California next year. He also declared he will serve the full four-year gubernatorial term, if elected, and not enter the 1964 presidential race. Nixon told a news conference: “I have two decisions to an- “First I shall not be a candi date for president in 1964. “Second, I shall be a candi date for governor in 1962.” The 48-year-old Californian said: “The next governor must be a man who will devote not part but all of his energies to this job.” BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES Dne day per word 24 per word each addi i rn ii in charjre- DEADLINE er wor Minim ire—404 ore put Classified Display 804 per column inch each insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 FOR RENT om with private bath, formerly occupied by 6-5006. 9t2 years. Vi loom for student near college wi kitchen privileges if preferred. Sha P bath with other studen B-4154. with .. VI preferred it. Call Adults ; - three room and bath furnished apartments (CQ). Rental $42.50. TA 2- 1244. 8t4 Two bedroom apartment. 1010 Welsh, $38.00 with utilities furnished. VI 6-7334. 7t4 FOR SALE Frigidaire electric range, dition, $50.00. Reason for built-in range. VI 6-5196. years dividual. Wri all an an in- % The Battalion. 9t2 1960 MGA Coupe, black interior, red leather interior, wirewheels, whitewalls, radio reasonably priced, must sell im mediately. 201 Patricia, Apt. 4, North Gate, CS. 7tfn i cyclopedia B450 set sells for $200. Must stay in Contact at Puryear 3-H. edition, school. 6t5 Refrigerator, excellent condition, wonder- ekend guest rooms, twin ful buy. also wee beds. TA 2-6888. Bedroom, near East Gate, VI 6-5968 after or weekends. 2tfn Something nice in one bedroom furnished apartment, bath: mg t, largi hs, close in, TA 2-7860. e room, plenty closets, lenty garage. No dogs. Phone 133tfn Room with private entrance and privati r without kitchen privilege Call VI 6-4164 after 5 p. m. bath with Rockies. ilege. 131tfn HELP WANTED Four or five men needed with 3 free hours in the evening for sales work. Trans portation furnished. Call TA 2-1944, 8-5, TA 2-2367, evenings, for interview. 8t3 HOME & CAR RADIO REPAIRS SALES & SERVICE KEN’S RADIO & TV 303 W. 26th TA 2-2819 TYPEWRITERS Rentals-Sales-Service- Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main TA 2-6000 OFFICIAL NOTICES 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 Mi ' . l-o. dally bnday through Friday) at or before the deadline of 1 p.m. of the day preceding ibllcation — Director of Student Publica- Students desiring to apply for a Rhodes Scholarship should confer with Ballinger, 302-C Aca October 10. confer with R. H. demic Bldg., prior to • ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • BLUE LINE PRINTS • BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS SCOATES INDUSTRIES 608 Old Sulphur Springs Road BRYAN. TEXAS SOSOLIKS T. V., Radio, Phono., Car Radio Transistor Radio Service 713 S. Main TA 2-1941 WORK WANTED CHILD CARE - hour, day or week. Balanced meals, fenced yard, playroom, ivities and companionship of Experienced. Convenient $10.00 (Limit 6). 9t8 mce creative activi other children, to campus. Week Student wife would like to keep children for working mothers. Mrs. Verna Miller, B-20-A College View. Babysitting, Monday thru Friday, VI 6- 7936. ISItfn hou VI i DAY NURSERY by the week, day or Boyett Call 6-4006. Mrs. Gregory, 602 loyett 20tfn Our nursery fot children all ages. Pick up and deliver. VI 6-8151. No answer call back. 42tfn SPECIAL Music lessons. NOTICE instruments piano and lessons given in my home on campus. Mrs. William D. Franklin, Apt. 6-B Graduate Housing. Phone VI 6-6151. 8t4 (ATTENTION ALL ARMY OFFICERS) The 4-19tb Artillery Battalion has TO and E vacancies for qualified Lts. Artil lery qualified will be considered first. sver other For information cor TA 2-0149 or VI 6- e con ntact Lt. Col. 4711. sidered. Butli ler. 6t3 Electrolux Sales and Williams. TA 8-6600 Service. O. G 90tf» li! I top Highw TV - Radio - Hi-Fi Service & Repair GILS RADIO & TV TA 2-0826 2403 S. College Gulfpride, Esso, Havoline, Sinclair Oils 31c Qt. RC Champion SpHrkplugs....29c Discount Auto Parts AT JOE FAULK’S 214 N. Bryan SAE 30 Motor Oil 18c Qt. Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules, & Etc 5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG loupots Read Battalion Classifieds Babe Zaharias winning- just about everything; offered. But Nelson retired, Hogan fi nally gave up all except a few tournaments per year, Demaret and Mangium took things easy and played only occasionally and the great Zaharias died. New Crop Of Golfers So another crop of golfers had to come up. They finally have ar rived in a bunch and Texas is on the way back to the top again. Jacky Cupit, Dave Marr, Butch Baird, Rex Baxter and other youngsters have been showing- up well on the tour. Cupit, especial ly, gave signs of becoming one of the top men. He won one tourna ment and placed high in a flock of others. Old reliables Billy Maxwell, Jack Burke and Don January won tournaments, Maxwell taking three and having his best year yet. Even the stay-at-homes are doing well. For instance, Earl Stewai-t, a resi dent pro now, won the Dallas Open against one of the strongest fields for any tournament of the year. Betsy Rawls still is one of the greats of women’s golf and Mick ey Wright, the kingpin of the ferns, now is a Dallas resident. Amateurs Are Dazzling The amateurs are beginning to look like that dazzling array of 25 years ago. Dudley Wysong of McKinney has just finished going to the finals of the national ama teur, Herb Dui-ham won the Trans- Mississippi, Ed Hopkins showed up well in several tournaments, in cluding the national amateur, and Richard Crawford and Homero Blancas were among the top col legiate golfers. Texas may never again have five like Hogan, Nelson, Demaret, Mangrum and Babe Zaharias at one time but it could have twice as many whose pooled talents would exceed that great five and would at least be the most top players from one state. Texas Is Tops Texas takes a back seat to no one in golf and probably never will. Its players have won all the great championships — the Na tional Open, PGA, national ama teur, national collegiate, British Open and the national titles for women. O’Toole Will Probably Start For Redlegs Tn World Series By The Associated Press And the current crop to repeat those feats. going CINCINNATI — Jim O’Toole, power-throwing southpaw of the National League kings, the Cin cinnati Reds, is the best prospect to start the World Series, Mana ger Fred Hutchinson indicated Wednesday. Hutch didn’t pick a series start er against the New York Yankees, because the Reds have three more regular-season games to play at Pittsburgh this weekend. But he tabbed O’Toole to start Friday and said he would continue his regular rotation, w i t h Joey Jay, 21-game winner, pitching Sat urday and veteran Bob Purkey wrapping up the season Sunday., That puts O’Toole squarely on the spot Oct. 4 for the first series game in Yankee Stadium. The Reds whipped Chicago Tuesday afternoon, 6-3, then sweat out a twi-night doubleheader be tween second-place Los Angeles and Pittsburgh. The Dodgers won the first®. 6-3, ami it wasn’t until lO Ei when Pittsburgh prevailed,&