Page 4 College Station, Texas Friday, April 1903 THE BATTALION Providence won 34 of its 28 basketball games last season, topping the campaign by beating Canisius for the National in vitation crown, in Madison Square Garden. ATTENTION SENIORS Vanity Fair Contestants will be accepted from now until April 19th. Pictures must be turned in at the Student Publications Office, basement Y.M.C.A. Bldg. One glossy black & white 8 x 10 head and shoulder picture and one snapshot must be submitted. AGGIELAND ’63 A&M College of Texas College Station, Texas ATTENTION: Hometown and Professional Club Representative In order to meet our deadline we must require that president’s pictures, sweetheart pictures, activity pictures, club write-ups (hot to exceed 200 words) all be submitted to the Student Publi cations Office, on the ground floor of the YMCA, no later than April 5, 1963. You are also requested to con tact John Finks, Dorm 4, Room 206, for professional club group picture identification, and Joe Cancellare, Dorm 4, Room 207, for hometown club group picture identification. Those clubs with page in the AGGIELAND are reminded that they may have either a president or a sweetheart’s pic ture but not both on the page. If the required information is not submitted by April 5, your page will be printed with avail able information. Sincerely, John Finks, Editor Professional Clubs and Joe Cancellare, Editor Hometown Clubs Farmers Lose 2nd At Ft. Worth, 3-1 A&M fell to one and a half games out of first place in the Southwest Conference baseball race as they dropped the second of a two-g-ame series to TCU in Fort Worth, 3-1. Both teams braved a soggy field and misty rain to finish nine innings. They had four hits apiece off exceptional pitching for the weatheiv LANCE BROWN, the TCU hurler who only threw seven innings last season, went all the way to chalk up his sixth win with no losses for the year. Chuck McGuire suffered his first loss for A&M this year. He pitched six innings and was relieved by Ed Singley. McGuire gave up three hits. He got in trouble in the third when he walked two with one man out. Then TCU leftfielder Jay Walrath tapped out the first hit of the day. Billy McAdams, the second baseman, tried to score from second but was thrown out by Bill Hancock at the plate. BUT THE FROGS’ cleanup man, Don Reynolds, hit a grounder to Aggie first sacker DeWayne Stew- —JUNIORS & SENIORS— A Special GIFT for You. Due to the heavy response to my offer last week, you may again choo! last week, you may again choose one of the following gifts: 1. A high grade clipper & file, 2. A sleek a.ll metal cigarette lighter, 3. Rayex sun glasses, and 4. 18 carat gold-plated tie bar and cuff link set. Underline your choice . . . Clip and mail to Bernie Lemmons, ’52, 3815 Old College Road, Bryan, Texas. Name Dorm or Street art. As Stewart threw to second, shortstop Jerry Ballard saw Bob Bigley trying to go home. He turned to throw before the ball got there and the error scored Bigley. TCU shortstop Ronnie McLain skipped a single through the hole scoring Walrath and Reynolds. Aggie catcher Bill Puckett punched out a home run over the right field fence in the top of the seventh for the Cadets’ sole counter. Easter Egg Hunts Slated This Sunday Two Easter’s egg hunts for stu dents’ children are scheduled in Hensel Park Sunday afternoon. The Apartment Council’s annual event will be held at 5:30 p.m. in areas No. 2 and 3 for children of students living in college apart ments or day students. The Biology Graduate Wives’ Club will have a hunt at Hensel at 3:30 p.m. for families of biology graduate students. Children will hunt in special areas according to age at the Apartment Council’s hunt. Free cokes will be available and prizes will be awarded. Admission will be by Apartment Council activity cards or. for 25 cents per family. Families of biology graduates will each bring one dozen eggs for their hunt. Prizes will also be awarded. SPORTS SECTION Handball Team 2nd At SWC Matches A&M’s newly-revived handball team recently took second place in the annual Southwest Conference Handball Tournament in Houston. Texas was the leader among seven competing schools. Rice, Baylor Medical School, University of Houston, Midwestern, and South Texas Junior College were also represented in the meet. Ed Merritt won the Class A singles trophy for A&M and Jerry Levy turned in what Merritt called a “real fine performance” to take the Class B singles award. The classes in the tourney were set up according to players’ abili ties. Also representing A&M at the SWC event were Bill Altman, Tommy Fine, Lyman Hardeman, Ray Allen and Ernest Reesing. With the completion of the new handball courts in DeWare Field- house renewed interest in the sport at A&M brought about the revival, in September, of a club popular at during the mid-fifties. get Lots More from E more body in the blend more flavor in the smoke dCQ more taste through the filter Mel Myricks, Jim Pazerski and Francis Peay, all from Pitts burgh, Pa., are promising sopho mores on the University of Ari zona football squad. Top Performers In West pg Compete In Texas Relays A&M’s varsity and freshman track teams will join more than 1,500 athletes, several of whom have cracked the “impossible” bar riers is feature events, in Austin Friday for the annual running of the Texas Relays. Oregon’s Dyrol Burleson and Kansas’ Bill Dotson have both run the mile in under four minutes and will be shooting at the meet re cord of 4:00.5. The high jump has Colin Ridge way of Lamar Tech who has gone over seven feet along with Colora do’s Leander Durley who has 6- 10Vz to his credit. GERALD PRATT of Texas Southern will be the favorite in the pole vault haying* already brok en the 16-foot barrier. And A&M’s Danny Roberts will have some tough competition in the shot put competing- against the champions of three other major conferences. Oklahoma’s Richard Inman, Big Eight champ; Roy Hernandez of LSU, Southeastern champ; and Elmars Ezerens, Wis consin’s Big Ten champ, will be chunking at the meet record of 59-9. A&M VARSITY ENTRIES in the meet: 880-yd. relay: Richard Hall, George Tedford, R. E. Merritt, Ted Nelson. 100-yd. dash: Richard Hall, Gene Dornak. 440-yd. relay: Richard Hall, Ted Nelson, R. E. Merritt, George Ted ford. One-mile relay: R. E, 51i George Tedford, Jerry Am Ted Nelson. Distance medley relay: I Fulkerson, Jim Sebastian,! Campbell, Ilhan Bilgutay. Two-mile relay: Earl !(i E. L. Ener, Herbie Camp! Sebastian. 3000 meter steeplechase: Ener. Shot put: Danny Roberts,& Hoppe. Discus: Danny Roberts,! Glover. High jump: John Collins, Deaver, James Daniel. Broad jump: John Collins, Pole vault: Louis Poland, READ BATTALION CLASSIFIED Aggies... TRY OUR FRIED CHICKEN CHICKEN FRIED STEAKS STEAKS — BARBECUE — SEAFOODS SPECIAL LUNCH DAILY For The Week-End Picnic With Your Date Fried Chicken In A Foil-Lined Box —Complete Order— $1.20 Y oung blood's Rock Building South College Phone TA 2-4557 Midway Between Bryan & College solid comfort FORD PICKUPS ARE BUILT ESPECIALLY FOR TEXAS-TYPE DRIVING! What Texas ordered, ’63 Ford pickups have got! A long-wheelbase ride that hugs those high- crowned Texas roads. Two-stage leaf springs for smoother going, light or loaded. A Custom Cab that cradles you on 5 inches of foam cushion . . . and compared to another make, puts twice as much insulation around you to seal out heat and noise. 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KEEP YOUR FORD ALL FORD WITH GENUINE FORD PARTS AND SERVICE SEE YOUR NEAREST AUTHORIZED LOCAL FORD DEALER \ Mil fur »>i' WVl Na the event c n The A grit nical College - M University, be the first purchase senit name inscril he ring con ient junior c ice of the old be name-chai s legislative B, Hervey, mittee, said Hues will be icli was initia SI some fi9 y 'HE PRESEN 1 be the firs red to purch: :ribed ring, H 111 previous g ! new rings \ them if the stab mittee decide ig favors le procedure i : announced, iirther action i must be de ton is made 1 iteming the n posal is now ire-man Hous F THE legis action tow; tige, the rinj ions will take 1864. kher faculty members ar any Zinn, B. E. McQuiller Student cc arles Blaschke Paul Dve: it; James Lo\ sident; and stiman prexy. oard I A&M ejects Changes in tw •erams were the Texas Co Education, hi Wge was reje The commissi ®d for Texas *1 universities reorgani Cultural pro ^ program ir Ology. Ejected vveri Programs ir Son and edi ^r of educa commissi * 5 nimendation appropriat %es’ develo' ^ staff recor “Wti's meetir lte funds for ^s drew he diversity < Nation w * ke commissi -^ommendec continue V s to sup 7 Qf college proved a ^nv in dr; ■Jersity of 1 Jarred to Nnate progr; Katies, as chain ' at Texas ^ leCte<1 1 u Beaurr Elected ] s *cretar y .