The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 12, 1963, Image 4

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Page 4
THE BATTALION
College Station, Texas Tuesday, March 12, 19G3
Ags Take 1st Win
Over Houston, 5-1
First baseman Frank Stark con
nected for his second home run of
the 1963 season and outfielder
Robert McAdams got his first of
what coach Tom Chandler hopes
will be many as. the Aggies beat
the Houston Cougars on Kyle Field
Saturday, 5-1.
The victory evened up the score
for the Cadets at one win and one
loss after Thursday’s misfire
against TLC.
Aside from the two round trips,
it was mostly a defensive effort
by the Ags, who chalked up their
second and third double plays of
the season.
A&M’s first two runs came in
the first inning when second base-
man Jerry Ballard singled, and
then McAdams clouted his homer.
Ballard scored again in the third
when Stark lined a grounder down
the third base line to drive in
pitcher Chuck McGuire.
The final runs came in the ninth
when Ballard made first on an
error and went to second on a
sacrifice by George Hargett. Stark
drove Ballard and himself in with
his second homer, a 350-ft. sailer
over the right field wall.
First baseman Clifton Jubala of
Houston scored the lone run for
the Cougars. In the second inning
he walked, stole second, went to
third on a passed ball and then
came in on third baseman A1 Cam-
po’s ground ball to first.
Cadets Hold 1st Scrimmage,
FoldbergHappy With Effort
Next season’s Aggie football
team held its first scrimmage Sat
urday during spring training and
Coach Hank Foldberg told report
ers that he was happy with the
team effort made this early in the
drills.
Hard-running Jerry Rogers
scored one touchdown for the Ma
roon unit. The Corpus Christi
(Ray) fullback looked well-healed
after the knee injuries that
plagued him last season.
Halfback Travis Reagan scored
a touchdown for the Whites. Fold
berg was most happy, however,
about the showing of the Maroon
line, which was composed of men
who saw most of the action in
1962.
The coach praised ends Ronnie
Carpenter and John Brotherton,
tackles Melvin Simmons and James
Craig, guards Jerry Pizzatola and
Ray Gene Hinze and center Ray
Kubala.
Kubala, the biggest man on the
squad, a 238-pounder who gave
AIKSWC Jerry Hopkins a run for
his money all through last season,
intercepted one pass and broke up
several others as he led 1 the Ma
roon defense from his linebacker
position.
Young Tennis Ace
Signs With Aggies
Robert Fann of San Antonio,
one of the state’s outstanding
high school tennis players, has
announced he will attend A&M
next September.
Tennis coach Omer Smith said
Fann will graduate from Texas
Military Institute in San Antonio
in June.
Last season Fann was ranked
13th in the state in junior tennis
by the Texas Tennis Association.
He was a member of the Texas
Davis Cup team for two years
and won the state Junior Cham
ber of Commerce championship
last season.
A&M Netters
Win 1, Lose 1
Coach Omay Smith’s Aggie ten
nis team kept the slate even last
weekend by defeating St. Edwards
University in Austin Friday and
dropping one to the. formidable
Trinity Tigers in San Antonio Sat
urday.
A&M’s netters now own a 3-3
record for the season.
The number two and three men
for the Cadets were missing from
the action Saturday because of ill
ness and Chuck McKinley and the
rest of the nationally - ranked
Tigers blanked the Ags, 7-0.
Top-ranked Aggie Richard Bark
er played the feature match on
Saturday with McKinley, who is
currently number one in the na
tion. McKinley won, 6-1, 6-1.
The Aggies play their first
home matches of the season this
weekend. They meet the Univer
sity of Corpus Christi at 1:30 Fri
day and the University of Houston
at 1 Saturday.
Tmnclads, Golfers Take 2nd
At Laredo’s Border Olympics
Coach Charles Thomas’ track
team accumulated 51% points to
end up second behind Abilene
Christian College’s 71% in the uni
versity division of the track and
field competition at Laredo’s Bor
der Olympics Friday and Saturday.
The Aggies took four first plac
es and had high finishers in sev
eral other events to lead Rice, Tex
as and Houston in that order.
Coach Henry Ransom’s golf team
was second in the pre-meet touima-
ment, 25 strokes behind the Uni
versity of Houston. The Aggies
were 33 strokes ahead of their
nearest contender, North Texas.
JUNIOR WEIGHTMAN Danny
Roberts was a winner in two
events for A&M. The 6-3, 245-
pounder from Cleveland lobbed the
shot 56-2 and the discus 164-6.
Andrews speedster Ted' Nelson
took the open 440 with a 47 flat
effort. Teammate Jerry Anderson
copped second behind Nelson with
a 48.0. Aggie co-captain George
Tedford was fourth with 48.3.
The Aggie mile relay team
turned in a 3:13.9 time and won
the fourth A&M first. The mile
team consists of R. E. Merritt,
Tedford, Anderson and Nelson.
ACC’s Jerry Dyes was the high-
point man in the meet with 14. He
was voted the outstanding per
former at the outing.
Dyes set two division records at
Stringfellow, Beasley Make
All-SWC Freshman Team
Fish cagers Dicky Stringfellow
and John Beasley were Aggies
named to the 1962-63 All-South
west Conference freshman basket
ball team last weekend.
Stringfellow. was voted to the
first team and Beasley made the
second.
SMU’s Carroll Hooser was the
only unanimous choice to the myth
ical team. Texas Tech’s 5-11 Dub
Malaise was runner-up.
Completing the first team were
Baylor’s Darrell Hardy, who only
joined the Cubs between semesters
when he was graduated from a
Houston high school, and Rice’s
6-5 Doug McKendrick.
Beasley’s teammates on the sec
ond All-SWC squad were TCU’s
Dale Abshire, Texas Tech’s Nor-
The story of a classic
In many ways the story of the Thunderbird is one of
the most unusual in the automobile business. The
whole idea of the car was bom at one of the great
European automobile shows. The then president of
our company pointed to some of the small, lush sports
cars that are always a center of attention at such
shows and asked his companion, "Why can't we build
something like these?"
The companion, who later became a vice president
of the company, said, "It just so happens I have one
on the boards. I'll show it to you when we get back to
Detroit." Then as fast as he could discreetly get to a
transatlantic telephone he called his assistant and told
him, "Remember that car we've been talking about?
Finish those sketches on it."
The Thunderbird became one of the few cars ever
built that was produced essentially as the original
sketches presented it. Most cars undergo countless
changes in the design period. But there was a natural
clarity and cleanness to the Thunderbird design that
immediately captured all of us at Ford.
■; ..s, V. r AI..
1959
It was probably this clean, sharp look that won so
many friends so fast when the car went into produc
tion. That first Thunderbird had its drawbacks. For
example, it was too soft-sprung for true sports-car
handling. But, the truth is, it was not designed in the
European tradition of the fast performance car. Some
people called it a sports car but we never did. We
called it a "personal" car; a small, fairly luxurious car
that was fun to look at and fun to drive. It had its
own integrity: it was one alone.
We built the Thunderbird as a bellwether car for
Ford. It was our intention to test new ideas before
we put them into our Fords, Fairlanes and Falcons.
The new Ford ride and Swing-Away steering wheel
appeared first on the Thunderbird, for instance. How
ever, we never foresaw the extraordinary influence
Thunderbird would have on the whole automobile
business here and abroad. Almost everybody offers
the Thunderbird bucket seats these days. And the
Thunderbird look is the most decisive styling of the'60s.
The Thunderbird is a classic, made so by a peculiar
blend of magic ingredients of which we would love
to know the secret. We're building cars right now we
hope will become classics, but the truth is, we don't
make classics, we make cars. People make the car a
classic. And that's the story of the Thunderbird.
America’s liveliest,
most care-free cars l
7963
FORD
EM.COM • FAIRWNE . FORD • THUNOU0MO
FOR 60 YEARS THE SYMBOL OF DEPENDABLE PRODUCTS
MOTOR COMPANY
man Reuther, Texas’ Paul Oliver
and Baylor’s Tommy Hatfield.
the Olympics with a javelin toss
of 243-3% and a broad jump that
spanned 24-0.
RICHARD HALL, Merritt, Nel
son and Tedford were bested by
only two-tenths of a second by
ACC in the 440 relay. Their time
was 41.4.
Soph John Collins took the other
Aggie second place with a 6-2%
leap. Don Deaver tied for third
in the high jump with a jump one
inch shorter. James Daniels tied
for fourth with 5-11.
Another soph, Jim Sebastion,
turned in a 1:55.2 for a fifth place
in the 880-yard run.
Co-captain E. L. Ener took a
fifth in the two-mile run with a
9:20.0 time.
PARDNER
You’ll Always Win
The Showdown
When You Get
Your Duds Done
Volume
CAMPUS
CLEANERS
COACH NORTON’S PANCAKE HOUSE
35 Varieties of finest pancakes, aged heavy KC steaks,
shrimp, and other fine foods.
Daily .... Merchants lunch 11 to 2 p. m.
■ jl ■ gjjm 11111
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rive room uniumn
kitchen and bath, cl
26th.
ished apartment, tile in
to town. 404 East
Unfurnished roomy two bedroom apart
ment. Near Crockett School. VI 6-6660.
Clean, neat, private, bachelor house.
Suitable for graduate student. $40.00 per
month. Call VI 6-6311. 70tfn
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
Hill Top Lake for fishing, picnicing,
shade, tables, oven. Children under 12
ttee. 9'% miles from College on Highway
6 South. VI 6-8491. 66tfn
HOME & CAR
RADIO REPAIRS
SALES & SERVICE
KEN’S RADIO & TV
303 W. 26th TA 2-2819
• ENGINEERING AND
ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES
• BLUE LINE PRINTS
• BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS
SCOATES INDUSTRIES
608 Old Sulphur Springs Road
TEXAS
BRYAN,
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T. V., Radio, Phono., Car Radio
Transistor Radio Service
713 S. Main TA 2-1941
TYPEWRITERS
ADDING MACHINES
RENTALS
ASK ABOUT OUR
RENTAL OWNERSHIP
PLAN
OTIS MCDONALD’S
429 South Main St.
Bryan, Texas
FOR SALE
Golf clubs and bag - 2 woods, 5 iro
putter. Several good balls. $15
63(
361 after 5 p. m.
ns,
VI fi-
79t2
Western Holly apartment size gas range.
Call VI 6-7838 after 5. 79t2
’61 Volkswagen. Must sell to stay in
college. C-13-X College View Apts. 76t7
S ECURITY FOR YOUR FAMILY:
E UGENE is my moniker, or
R USH is quite okay:
tr r- *
V erily I say to you,
I nsure tomorrow today!
sail this advice;
C orn you may
E pitaph is bet
:ter, I say.
Tuxedo, size 42, like new, $35.00. Call
VI 6-5701 or VI 6-6504. 66tfn
Baker,
CHILD CARE
Will keep children in my home 8-5. VI 6-
6536. 79tfn
HUMPTY DUMPTY NURSERY. Licens-
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TA 2-4803.
Ave.,
6-ltfn
Will keep children, all ages, Will pick
and deliver. VI 6-8151. lilt
WORK WANTED
Student wife wants ironing.
VI 6-6306.
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LOST
Ladies watch “Cyma” gold with 4 eul-
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DR. G. A. SMITH
O P T O M { T W | S T
V •f»«OLAUZIN« * _
V to «Vt PAMWATtCWt
I* COWTAgT
tlRYAN OPTICAL CLINK
•Ot. Mo. VAIN • BRYAN T ftt A ^
AGGIES NOTICE
To Rent Brazos County A&M Club For
Mixed Parties,—S<
lee Joe Faulk
SAE 30 Motor Oils 150 Qt.
Major Brands Oils 27-310 Qt.
For your 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
TRADE WITH CADE
and
SAVE ON REPAIRS
Trained Mechanics
All Make Autos
Automatic Transmissions
Satisfaction Guaranteed
Say: “Charge It”
CADE MOTOR CO:
47 Years with Ford
1309 Texas Ave.
YOUR DISTRIBUTOR FOR
• EICO KITS
• Garrard Changers
• HI-FI Components
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Use Our Time Payment Plan
BRYAN RADIO & TV
TA 2-4862 1301 S. College Ave.
MALE HELP WANTED
Final plans
reer Day, 1
eetimated '
campus Fr
^ are bein
jiigh rooms
se the v
Retail sales clerk and checker. M ■®®itmentS
Saturdays and Sundays. Must be hereto ^ 175 to 2(M
summer. Minimum age 21. Phone P
4 p. m., VI 6-6215.
FEMALE HELP WANTED
siding; to G
Hugh Magt
i Inter-Counc:
—
Waitress want.-d, experience not r.ttt JhILE NOT
Apply at 3S1! i
sary, must be over 18.
College Ave., TA 2-1362.
PERSONAL
I. Q. TESTS. Accurate, home-!
istered, professionally
data needed. Universit
R-39, Box 6744, Stanford,
,e, ;
.^ored. ,
Tcstinp; InstW
Calif. 1*
OFFICIAL NOTICES
M td for use n
Sped to the
it these roorr
led.
igistration f
in at 1 p.i
Borial Stude
tinue throuj
rainp;.
Neleoming 1 th
Official notices must be brought, Stothe eampi
telephoned so as to arrive in the Offi ,
of Stud
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loned so as to arrive in the OB |
ent Publications (Ground Fits n
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tio
ALLOWING
An English proficiency exam forpM Students wi
Juniors will be held on Monday 18 M»l
iors will be held on Monday 18 Man ,
i!ilj3 in room 145 between 2 PMandlPl RfOUpS H'
Students taking the exam will needwiitj fee fjglds
materials. Use of dictionaries is permw ,
a I then move
An English
be held for
dents on Friday,
Nagle ~ M
h Proficiency Examination ^ and de;
* ^ high schc
Mo lunch ii
^ by memb
TV-Radio Hi-Fi
Service & Repair
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Used Car Headquarters
for
Central Texas
All Makes & Models
Quick Credit—Bank Rates
CADE MOTOR CO:
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1700 Texas Ave.
TYPEWRITERS
Rentals-Sales-Service
Terms
Distributors For:
Royal and Victor
Calculators &
Adding Machines
CATES
TYPEWRITER CO.
909 S. Main TA 2-601
MASTER’S TRANSMISSION SERVICE
Complete Transmission Service
TA 2-6116
27th St. and Bryan Bryan, Tei.
b
ooms
Rudder, v
jthirday afte
Aggies are
2403 S. Collect ige facilities
tots Will
within thi
Day aeti
^ at 4 p.i
By The As
WORL
%ICH, G<
'Ur debate
! % George
Tuesda;
**1 asylum
1,lr ian autho
jtoi certain
.Sit went
S,r Ministry,
t{ guest fo
session i
jWters.
6 conditioi
"lould be
disclosed
^ent appj
to long ses:
SHIPLEY DONUT & COFFEE SHOP
For The Best Coffee & Freshest Donuts
ANYWHERE
Hamburgers — Short Orders — Fountain Service
Cash Available For Books, Slide Rules & Etc.
5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG
JJashingi
toed Servi
[toved Tu
toting the i
yearly p;
fiore tha
. fecommei
% Carl V
of the f
,N appro'
^ an exe
to dis<
bin ti,
(toment alt
>g, pro\
K in
LOUPOTS
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“No promissory^ note to a bank to mortgage your future income.”
Total premium is $3.00 to $4.00 per month (depending on your age) as long as you are a student. Within 6 months after graduation you begin paying the regular premiums
on the permanent insurance plan of your choice. For a man of 23 (your age last birthday before start of regular premiums), the popular Whole Life policy would cost
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"ZHZ EUGENE RL T SH, North Gate (Office hours 2 to 5 P. M.): VI 6-6611. Or call at night for appointment for any hour, office or home: VI 6-5656.
ret
several
*r what
; Propose
* subcor
,'Mllion b
S rangi
^ for n
for to
to $5
^ts md I
Mfjcers.
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