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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (May 15, 1962)
; !Pji»e 4 THE BSTTSCIOR College Station, Texas Tuesday, May 1F>, 1962 COLLEGE MASTER VI 6-4988 PARDNER You’ll Always Win The Showdown When You Get Your Duds Done At CAMPUS CLEANERS College Students For Summer Work International firm to hire 30 stu dents for summer months—June - July - August to assist man ager of New Products Division. Must be free to travel in Texas. Must be free to travel in Texas — Have drivers license. Must be personable with pleas ant speaking voice. OVER AND ABOVE WEEKLY PA1 CHECKS: COMPETE WITH FELLOW STUDENTS FOR: (A) $2,000 Cash Scholarship Additional $1,000 Cash Scholarships Awarded Weekly. To win one of many jet plane trips around the world (D) To win one of the Austin- Healy sportcars. Win One Or All Write immediately for appoint ment: Personnel Director. Suite 929 Bankers Mortgage Bldg. 70S Main Street, Houston, Tex. or Call CA 8-9S04 for Personal Appt: Interviewing Saturdays 10: a- m. and Sunday 11:00 a. m. (B) (C) It A YLOJt COPS 1ST Ags Take 3rd In SWC Meet, A shrew rn weigh in seed.; period. i devour during a half its 24-houi COLLEGE MASTER| \ 1 (>-4988 Roberts Sets Shot Record A Memo Mr. COLLEGE MASTER VI 6-4988 Aggie thinclads braved the wind, dust and 6500 Baylor fans to take third place in the 47th SWC track meet behind the Bears and Texas. The Cadets came back with three gold medals and one of the two records set in the meet. Danny Roberts shattered the conference shot nut record when he threw the sixteen pound ball 57 feet, IV'a inches. Fred Hansen of Rice broke the other record by clearing 15 feet, 5 inches in the pole vault. E. L. Ener, junior from Jasper, won the 2-mile race in 9:32.8 run ning in a wind that gusted up to 20 miles an hour. The Ags third winner of the meet was Terry Robinson who up set teammate Roberts to win the discus with a throw of 165 feet, 5 inches. Don»Deaver took third in the high jump behind Eddie Curtis of Baylor and Jacky Upton of TCU who tied fo\^ first at 6-8. Deaver jumped 6-6, his best of the year. Two other second places were Lively Fires 284 To Win SWC Title _ tET VITALIS^KEEP YOUft HAIR HEAT AIL DAY WITHOUT GREASE! | ^ Keep the oil in the can. In your hair, use Vitalis with V-7®, the I 'greaseless grooming discovery. Fights embarrassing dandruff, prevents dryness—keeps your hair neat all day without grease. Senior golfer John Lively had a fitting ending to his last season Friday by winning the Southwest Conference individual golf championship in Waco. He beat back strong challenges by teammate Jim Fetters and Arkan sas’ R. H. Sikes at the Ridgewood Country Club and carded a 4-over 284 for the 72 holes. Fetters led during most of the Friday play, turning in 69 and 73 for the last two rounds and sec ond place four strokes behind Lively. Sikes was ti’ailing Lively by eight strokes after the first round but came back to make an inspired bid on the front nine of the next I’ound. He fired a 30, with five birdies, for the lowest nine hole score of the tourney. Trouble caught up with Sikes on the next nine, however, and he landed in third at the end with a 289, one stroke behind Fetters. This was Lively’s second title. He shared the I960 honors with teammate Dickie Duble and Terry Dill of Texas. Texas Tech’s Chris Blocker won the individual honors last year with a 5-over 289. END OF SCHOOL MAY SALE BOOTS—Justin - Nocona - Texas - Acme Reduced To Clear 20% OFF SHOES Up To $22.95 Value NOW $11.90 WEMBLEY TIES $1.50 Value NOW 99c $2.00 Value .... NOW $1.24 . $2.50 Value .... NOW $1.44 ALL WESTERN SHIRTS 20% OFF WESTERN STRAW Nationally Advertised HATS WATCHES 20% OFF y 2 PRICE FANCY Cigarette Lighters SOCKS Up To $2.50 Value 33c per Pair 50c turned in by the Farmers as the mile relay team was edged by Baylor' and Thad Crooks fell a stride short to Brian Bolton of SMU in the 880. Point totals gave Baylor 73 9-10, Texas 50 2-5, and A&M, 44. SMU was fourth, Rice fifth, TCU sixth, Texas Tech seventh and Arkansas eighth. The Aggie freshman squad came in fourth in their division behind Baylor, Texas, and Rice. Ted Nelson, Andrew’s flash, was the standout for the Fish as he turned the quarter in a fine 47.3, four-tenths of a second fast er than the winning varsity time. Had not the wind been more than the allowable 4-plus miles an hour, Nelson’s time would have been a new division record. SMU’s Billy Foster, a formida ble opponent of Nelson’s though not competing against each other in the meet, took the 100 yard dash in 9.6 and the 220 in 20.7. With the completion of the spring sports schedule, the picture looks bright for Coach Charlie Thomas’ cindermen as only three men will be lost through gradua tion—Crooks, weight man Charles Tiemann and javelin thrower John Long. Added to the varsity team will be speedster Nelson and pole vaulter Lewis Poland who holds the school record with 14-112. “Life insurance is largely a mattes^ •f dollars and sense.^ Albert W. Seller Jr. 2601 Texas Ave. Bryan, Texas TA 2-0018 Voli / Repraaantlno Merson Stanilaii IMtUSANCI COM’AMT } J H»-« 0«<«» 3-in-1 HOME ENTERTAINMENT By Curtis Mathes Corps Field Goal Is 12th Man Edge Civilian students went down to defeat in the annual 12th Man Bowl in a 10-8 victory for the Corps on Kyle Field Friday night. The ball seesawed back and forth during the first quarter, with the Civilians in scoring posi tion once on the eight yard line. But they lost the ball on downs. The Corps made no serious threat to the civilian goal during this quarter. In the opening minutes of the second quarter, the Civilians drove to the Corps 24 yard line, but again lost the ball on downs. They wrestled the ball away again by an interception by the Corps Quar terback Idis Goddard, and were stopped on the three yard line at the end of the half. Kenneth Bush, the corps’ 180- pound fullback made the first score of the game, with a field goal from the civilian 35 yard line. The Corps scored again in this quarter with an end run by Frank Haynes, the quarterback. This made the score 10-0 at the end of the third quarter. The non-regs made their only score in the fourth quarter with a 70 yard run by Dave Low man the 150-pound halfback. The Ci vilians then ran for the two extra points, and were able to score. The climax of the game came not on the playing field, hut in the stands. It resulted from a “misunderstanding” about a sign that the civilian yell leaders car ried over to the corps section. 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