Pflp:e 4 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Friday, March 1, 1963 Track Team Opens Outdoors Saturday At Rice-Texas Meet Coach Charles Thomas’ Aggie track team will open its outdoor season in a triangular meet with Rice and Texas in Houston Satur day. The 16-event competition, will begin at 2:30 p.m. at Rice Univer sity. Featured in the meet will be such Southwest Conference stand outs as A&M weightman Danny Roberts and quartermiler Ted Nel son, Rice’s Fred Hansen in the pole vault and Ed Red with the javelin, and Texas miler Loy Gun ter. Roberts was undefeated in in door shotput competition until this spring at Lubbock. He holds the SWC record with a 57-3% K. K. DodRer says: By Euscnc Rush* “Don’t mind what your roommate says. Just sign right here. Why walk all the way to the North Gate to compare policies with another company before you buy?’’ *Insuranceman, North Gate When a man says “no” to life in- , surance, one of three things will happen . . . 1. He will buy it later and pay a higher rate for it because he will be sacrifices. xd bought more life insurance 10 years to. Don’t delay, see BERNIE LEMMONS ’52 today or phone VI 6-5800. 3. He le will not and find insurance toss last season. Last season he took second in the league discus. NELSON HAS already earned a place in the public eye this year by winning special 500-yard dashes over some of the nation’s best sprinters at Dallas and Fort Worth recently. The Andrews speedster owns school records of 9.4 in the 3 00 and 46.8 in the 440 set last year as a freshman. The Aggies will not have entries in the hurdle events or javelin throw at the Houston meet. They will be giving up 33 points by do ing so. Hurdlers Pat Mitchell and John Collins will not get into ac tion in those events until later in the season. OTHER AGGIE entries in the triangular: 440-yard relay: Robert Martin, Ted Nelson, R. E. Merritt, Curtis Roberts. 100 and 220-yard dashes: Mar tin, Roberts, Gene Dornak, Richard Hall. 880-yard run: Jim Sebastian, Earl Myers, John Fulkerson, Her bie Campbell. One-mile run: E. L. Ener, Ilhan Bilgutay, Campbell. Two-mile run: Ener, Bilgutay, Larry Clancy. 440-yard dash: Nelson, Merritt, George Tedford, Jerry Anderson, Pat Mitchell, John Collins, Bob Paulson. One-mile relay: Merritt, Mitch ell, Tedford, Anderson, Nelson. Shot and discus: Roberts, Charles Hoppe, David Glover. High jump: Collins, Don Den ver, James Daniel. Pole vault: Louis Poland, Gail McDaniel. Broad jump: Bill Park, Leo Holub. SPORTS SECTiON Intramurals Winning wrestlers Thursday in intramurals, upperclass division: 123 class; Bateman, D-3; Templer, B-l; Beard, 1-3; Collins, G-l. In the 130 class: Dunkerley, Sqd. 7; Rowland, G-2; Anderson Sqd. 15; Wolff, F-l. Riner, Law Hall; McDowell, E-l; Post, G-l, and Adams, G-l were the winning wrestlers for the 137 weight class. In the 147 class: Finkelstein, Milner Hall; Sanderfer, Mitchell Hall; and Breur, of Dorm 15. Bey er of Sqd. 8 took the only win in the 157 class. Results for the 167 class: Eller, B-l; Arnold, Sqd. 9; Cancellare, A-2; Leltner, F-l; Boe- hck, Sqd. 1; and Dollinger of G-l. Winners in the final class, the 177: Acklen, A-2; and Reeves, Sqd. 2. BOWLING BOWLS 206 HUNTSVILLE, Ala. <&) — Ten- year-old Larry Bowling takes his name seriously. The lad rolled a nifty 206 in the Bantam League. Jack Nicklaus at 22 was the youngest golfer to win a tourna ment on the PGA tour in 1962. He won the U. S. Open, his first win as a pro. BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES One day 34 per word 24 per word each additional day Minim xmum charge- DEADLINE -40d p.m. day before publication Classified Display 80^ per column inch each insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 FOR RENT Attractive two bedroom unfurnished house, close to campus. VI 6-4251. 73tfn Two bedroom house, $35.00, 502 Thomp son, VI 6-7334. Open for inspection. 73t2 Clean, neat, private, bachelor house. Suitable for graduate student. $40.00 per month. Call Vi 6-6311. 70tfn WANTED TO BUY 20" girl’s bicycle, good condition. T-2-H Hensel Apt. 72t3 TV - Radio - Hi-Fi Service & Repair GILS RADIO & TV TA 2-0826 2403 S. College 1 DR. G. A. SMITH OPTOMETRIST V •PCOLAI.IZIN* lL_ \ «l M CXAMMAVMM* CONTACT BRYAN OPTICAL CLINK • V iS C KJ rs LAAlfcJ A no V A II rev A, 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 TRADE WITH CADE and SAVE ON REPAIRS Trained Mechanics All Make Autos Automatic Transmissions Satisfaction Guaranteed r Say: “Charge It” CADE MOTOR CO: 47 Years with Ford 1309 Texas Ave. FOR SALE USED CARS S ECURITY FOR YOUR FAMILY: E u.scene is my moniker, or R ush is quite akay ; V erily I say to you, I nsure tomorrow today! C orn you may call this advice; E pitaph is hetter, I say. 74tfn 1947 De Sota 4-door. Good transportation. $65, Call VI 6-4943 after 5 p. m. SPECIAL NOTICE $2.00 TV service calls for students and faculty. Radio repair, too. EE student with experience. Call VI 6-6611, 2-5 p. m. 72tfn 1958 black Jaguar convertible XK 150, red leather interior, radio and heater, white wall tires, hard and soft tops, excellent condition, will take trade. VI 6-8337. 72t3 Senior boots, size 10%-A, excellent con dition, $25.00. R. P. Bechler, 7209 Winnell Way, Fort Worth 18. Phone BUTLER 1-1866. 61t43 Hill Top Lake for fishing, picnicing, shade, tables, oven. Children under 12 free. 914 miles from College on Highway 6 South. VI 6-8491. 66tfn Tuxedo, size 42, like new, $38.00. Call Baker, VI 6-5701 or VI 6-6504. 66tfn CHILD CARE Must sacrifice. Sell or trade 1962 Ford Falcon club wagon, similar to VW bus, 15,000 miles, metallic blue, R&H, white tires. Ideal for camping, vacationing, com muting. Call R. L. 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Main TA 2-1941 • ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • BLUE LINE PRINTS • BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS SCOATES INDUSTRIES 808 Old Sulphur Springs Road BRYAN, TEXAS AGGIES NOTICE To Rent Brazos County A&M Club For Mixed Parties,—See Joe Faulk SAE 30 Motor Oils 150 Qt. Major Brands Oils 27-310 Qt. For vour parts and accessories AT a DISCOUNT See us— Plenty free parking opposite the courthouse. DISCOUNT AUTO PARTS Brake shoes. Fuel pumps, Water pumps. Generators, Starters, Solenoids, etc. Save 30 to 50% on just about any part for your car. Filters 40% discount AT JOE FAULK’S 25th and Washington Used Car Headquarters for Central Texas All Makes & Models Quick Credit—Bank Rates CADE MOTOR CO: 47 Years with Ford 1700 Texas Ave. YOUR DISTRIBUTOR FOR • EICO KITS • Garrard Changers • HI-FI Components • Tape Recorders Use Our Time Payment Plan BRYAN RADIO & TV TA 2-4862 1301 S. College Ave. TYPEWRITERS ADDING MACHINES RENTALS ASK ABOUT OUR RENTAL OWNERSHIP PLAN OTIS MCDONALD’S 429 South Main St. Bryan, Texas SHIPLEY DONUT & COFFEE SHOP For The Best Coffee & Freshest Donut* ANYWHERE Hamburgers — Short Orders — Fountain Service Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules & Etc. 5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG LOUPOTS ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■I Aggies Face Tech In Season 9 s Home Friday Finale Texas Tech visits G. Rollie White Coliseum Friday night in a game that holds many sidelights of interest for Aggie cage fans. The A&M-Red Raider contest will be the final home game for the 1962-63 edition of the Cadet hoopsters and also farewell bow for three seniors - - Jerry Wind ham, Lewis Qualls and Lee Wal ker. Another interesting item which has captured the imagination of Aggie supporters is guard Ben nie Lenox’s assault on Carroll Broussard’s school records. THE JUNIOR from League City has already shattered the records for most points in a single game, most free throws in a season and most free throws in a conference season. Lenox needs 28 points in two more games to break the season scoring record of 538; 45 .points to break the SWC season high of 399; 15 fields goals to hold the season record of 189 in that de partment; and 26 field goals to break the school record of 119 in SWC season. But Lenox will not be the only Aggie shooting at records. Wind- ‘Gymkhana 9 Derby Slated For Sunday The Chaparrel Sports Car Club will have a “Gymkhana” car derby at 2 p.m. Sunday on the parking lot of Albritton Engineering Corp. at 615 Carson St. in Bryan. A “Gymkhana” derby is a moderate speed event in which precision, car handling over an obstacle course in a small area, such as a parking lot, is required. The cars will compete in classes according to size. The club will sponsor a road rally March 17, another “Gym khana” April 1, a road rally April 28 and a night rally May 19. ham, 6-6 forward from Hamilton, needs 15 rebounds in the final two contests to break the school record of 218 set by Broussard. He currently has 204 though mis sing three games this season with a leg injury. PROBABLE STARTERS for the Aggies, who hold second place in the conference with an 8-4 re cord and stand 15-7 for the season, will be Walker at center, Lenox and Paul Timmins at guards and Windham and Bill Robinette at forwards. The visitors from Lubbock stand 6-6 in SWC play and are 6-15 for the season. Th.e Cadets beat Tech 60-53 in Lubbock earlier in the season. The Red Raiders will probably go with a lineup of Glen Hallum Aggie Tennis Team Goes North Friday The varsity tennis team heads north this weekend for matches against East Texas State and the University of Oklahoma. Coach Omar Smith’s Aggies will meet the Lions at Commerce Friday at 2 p.m. and the Sooners at Norman Saturday at 1:30 p.m. A&M and East Texas broke even at 3-3 last season, while the Aggie-Oklahoma meeting will be the first in several years. Richard Baker of San Saba, 1-1 for the campaign, is Smith’s num ber one singles player, followed by Carroll Kell of San Antonio (Jefferson), Ricky Williams of Austin (Austin High) and Doug Sassman of Falfurrias. Barker will team with Albert Aldrich of Houston (Beaumont High) and Williams with Sassman for double competition. A&M stands 0-2 after losing to the University of Houston and Lamar Tech by identical 2-5 scores. and Tom Patty at foiwards, Harold Denney at center and Bob by Gindorf and Sid Wall at guards. March 8 — 6:30 p, m. G. Rollie White Coliseum Admission $1.00 A giant tar tine, on wa? 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End result: a smooth, quiet ride you’ve got to try to believe! FORD TRUCKS SEE YOUR FORD DEALER THE TRUCK IS RIGHT! THE PRICE IS RIGHT! AND SO IS THE DEALER ’63 Ford pickups may ride like cars, but there it ends. Everything else is big-truck tough. Where durability counts—in axles, frames, springs, engines—Ford pickups give you the same kind of long-lived design as big trucks. You get extra durability and reliability, extra savings on upkeep and operating costs. So start your extra Ford savings right now — during our Texas Tradin’ Time. Come on in! F.D.A.F. KEEP YOUR FORD ALL FORD WITH GENUINE FORD PARTS AND SERVICE SEE YOUR NEAREST AUTHORIZED LOCAL FORD DEALER TI I AUSTIN ■°Use com: d; y two dif Conns B iong-rang ifation need: Sena ■onday wh 25 nn V study edi ■hool.