Image provided by: Texas A&M University
About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 8, 1964)
Page 4 College Station, Texas Wednesday, January 8, 1964 THE BATTALION m i Ags Knock Off TCU, 92-64 Meet UT Longhorns Saturda BY JIM BUTLER Battalion Sports Editor A clawing, sagging Aggie de fense and a guy named Lenox smothered the Texas Christian University Horned Frogs, 92-64, to remain tied for first place in the Southwest Conference basketball race. Rice eked out a last-minute 61- 60 win over Texas Tech to share the lead with the Cadets, both with 2-0 records. RIFLEMAN STRIKES AGAIN Bennie Lenox guns in two-pointer over TCU defender. BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES ne day 3d per word 2d per word each additional day Minimum charge—40d DEADLINE 4 p.m. day before publication Classified Display 80d per column inch each insertion PHONE VI 6-6415 FOR RENT Nicely furnished one bedroom house, $40 185tfn monthly, KE 7-6241. One bedroom furnished apartment, avail- ble January 20, $65 per month, bills paid, adults only, no pets, 318 First St, VI 6-6332. CHILD CARE Sixteen months experience, child should be at least 2 years old, indoor and outdoor equipment, 7:30 till 5:30 or later, 25d an hour, VI 6-8343. Couple or 2 students, extra large room, twin beds, private bath, private entrance 185tfn win beds, private Datn, irith ice box, TA 2-3619. Completely furnished apartments, adults only, close in Bryan, L. G. Beaumont, TA- 2-1244. 184t2 HUMPTY DUMPTY NURSERY, Li censed by Texas State Dept, of Public Welfare. Children of all ages. Virginia Welfare. Children of all ages. Virginia D. Jones, Registered Nurse, 3404 South College Ave., TA 2-4803. 61tfn FOR SALE Will keep children, all ages, will pick up and deliver. VI 6-8161. llltfn British 303 Rifle in very good condition with one ten cartridge clip and new five cartridge ” J ‘ >0 ° VI 6-8167. e clip and box of cartridges, $28., 185tl SPECIAL NOTICE Refrigerator and stove, $80., good con dition, call VI 6-4822 between 8:00 and 5 :30 only. SLEEP-LEARNiNG, Hypnotism I Tapes^ Ze Ty remote contro , 19 „ $180 FriK _ records books, equipment. Aston,shing de- a( . $180 ($g0 down)> -59 Peugeot ^!i 8 ’ ' Rn * P '^.np' S600. 910-B Fairview. C. S. 184t2 1 ! Tapi ge catalog free! Sleep-Learn- ig Research Association, Box 24-CP Olympia, Wash. 2 4—a , 185tl Stated communication, Thurs day Jan. 9 at 7 :00 p. m. J. H. Reese, wm Joe Woolket, secy. 185t2 Batteries, tires and seat covers for all makes of cars. Discount prices Whites Auto store in College Station 184t4 —THE A&M SPECIAL- LOW cost checking account for students. Bank of Commerce Across from Main Gate College Station, Texas 184t8 AUTO INSURANCE—place your auto insurance with Farmers Insurance Group Dividends increased 50% over last year. We accept persons, single and under age 25. Call today FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP, 3510 South College Road, Bryan, 146tl07 phone TA 2-4461. WORK WANTED idaire $600. 3000, Company, Bryan. VI 6-5694 after 9 a. m. HELP WANTED 17-34 wanted to start training at once Teletype, Telegraph, Train Orders and Freight F ~ ’ ‘ ' Graduate student—Let us type—pr your thesis and dissertation. IBM Execu tive typewriter. Fast dependable and top quality work. Prices very reasonable. We have paper plates and paper in stock. Price includes running as many as 15 copies. Photographic reproduction of large tables, charts or drawings. Thesis print 3 1/4 bv 4 or 2x2 lantern slides, TA 3-1693. 182tfn Typing, experienced, VI 6-5900 156tfn TV-Radio-Hi-Fi Service & Repair GIL’S RADIO & TV TA 2-0826 2403 S. College HOME & CAR RADIO REPAIRS SALES & SERVICE KEN’S RADIO & TV 303 W. 26th TA 2-2819 TYPEWRITERS ADDING MACHINES RENTALS ASK ABOUT OUR RENTAL OWNERSHIP PLAN OTIS MCDONALD’S 429 South Main St. Bryan, Texas AGGIES Do you change your own oil—? —or work on your car—? Then, why not save more on your parts at JOE FAULK’S DISCOUNT AUTO PARTS Chev-Fd brake shoes 36-58 List $5.85 set of 2 wheels $2.90 Gulfpride and Havoline Qt. 37<f Your choice -— Enco, Amalie, Mobil- Pennzoil, Conoco Qt. 33(1 Texaco, Gulflube-Opaline Qt. 30C SAE 30-40 Recon. Oil Qt. 15(1 Seat Belts 3.95 Filters-Save 40% RB Spark Plugs Ea. 29<t Mufflers-Tail Pipes 30-40% disc. Muffiers-Tail Pipes 30-40% disc. Installed for $1.00 Wheel Bearings 30 to 60% discount We,..have 95% of the parts you need at Deailer price or less. Latex inside paint Gal. $2.98 2 Gals $5.49 4 New 670-15 tires $36.00 plus tax lus tax 750-14 $44.00 p Kelly Springfield Plastic Vinyl trim seat covers $19.95 value now only $13.88 Not off-brand ow '-bn Autolite batteries 6V only $12.95 12V at dealer price. Plenty of Prestone at our usual lowest price. JOE FAULK’S 25th and Washington 5978, nterv Dali; as 22, Texas. OFFICIAL NOTICE loor YMCA, VI 6-6415, hours 8-12, 1-5, daily Monday through Friday) at or before the deadline of 1 p. m. of the day preceding NOTICE TO JANUARY GRADUATES At 8 a. m. Thursday, Janu . . Rich a list of those candidates who lie reaui • ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURAL SUPPLIES • BLUE LINE PRINTS •BLUE PRINTS • PHOTOSTATS SCOATES INDUSTRIES 608 Old Sulphur Springs Road TEXAS BRYAN, See us for your COINS for Hobby or Investment Texas Coin Exchange Ramada Inn Room 108 VI 6-6065 Bob Boriskie ’55 TYPEWRITERS Rentals-Sales-Service Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding- Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main TA 2-6000 AUTO REPAIRS All Makes Just Say: “Charge It” Cade Motor Co. Ford Dealer OFFICIAL NOTICE All students majoring in Education or ’83 a ig will be offered from 3 :00 to 5:00 p.m. on ring required to take and glish proficiency during their junior year. The examination ogy are reqi pass an English proficiency examination December 19, 1963 (Thursday). The ex amination will be offered again from 3:00 to 5 :00 p.m. on January 10, 1964 (Friday). The tests will be administered in Room 404, Academic Building. Candidates should bring a dictionary. TCU Wogs Topple Aggie Fish, 88-64 In Varsity Prelim GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS January graduates may begin picking up Graduation Announcements at the M.S.C. Building Cashier Window from 9 to 4. ISIS. 180tfn igiish Proficiency examination for Modern Language Majors has been scheduled for 2 :30 p. m. Tuesday, December 17, 1963 in Room 129 Academic Building. All Junior and Senior Modern Language Majors are required to take this exam and should register for it immediately in the Modern Language Offce. J. J. Woolket Concours condition, 1962 Austin-Healey 00, must sacrifice, see at Halsell Motor Head Department of Modern Languages 178tfn Regalia For The January 1964 Commencement Exercise :op, new ch throughout. New tires and electrical sys tem. $350.00 or best offer. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Crabb, TA 2-6124. 178tfn ry ■rcii All students who are candidates for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy are required to order hoods as well as the Doctor’s caps and gowns. The hoods are to be left at the Registrar's Office no later than 1 :00 p.m., Tuesday, January 14 (this will be Two bedroom house. Garden Acres, Edge- more Street, large yard, no down payment. $85 monthly, including taxes and insurance, 172tfn Tuesday, accomplished by a representative of the College Exchange Store). The Ph.D will not be worn in the procession all such candidates will be hooded < stai for such candidates will be hooded on ge as part of the ceremony. Candidates the Master’s Deg 5gree will wear the cap and gown ; all civilian students who are Five students part-time apply Mr. Crank, VI 6-4112, College Hills Laundry 902 Foster. 184t6 and gown ; ail civilian students wno are candidates for the Bachelor’s Degree will wear the cap and gown ; ROTC students who are candidates for the Bachelor’s D< gree will wear the appropriate uniform. All military personnel who are candidates are for the degrees, graduate or undergraduate, will wear the uniform only. Rental of caps and gowns may be arranged with the Exchange Store. Orders may be placed between 8:00 a.m., Wednesday, December RAILROAD COMMUNICATIONS: Men ... ----- ■- in ilegrap Rates. For personal interview give age, address, phone and time available for interview. Write MITTC, P. O. Box ones 11 and 12:00 noon, Saturday, January 11. The rental is as follows : Doctor’s cap and gown $5.25, Master’s cap and gown $4.75, Bachelor’s cap and gown $4.25. Hood rental is the same as that for the cap and cap i A 2% sales tax is required in Official notices must be brought or mailed so as to arrive in the Office of Student Publications (Ground Fh gown. addition to these rentals. Payment is re quired at the time of placing order. C. E. Tishler, Chairman, Chairman Convocation Committe- ' r ’°* A devastating attack headed by high scoring Wayne Kreis and Rodney Chitsey spoiled the Aggie Freshman’s bid for a victory as the TCU Wogs defeated them, 88- 64 last night in G'. Rollie White. Seeking its first victory of the year, the Fish found the Wogs too much to contain as they were over whelmed by the sparkling shooting of Kreis and Co. Kreis, a 5-10 guard from Pampa paced the victors with an outburst of 22 points which was tops for the night. He just barely nipped out his teammate, Rodney Chitsey for scoring honors as Chitsey fin ished the night’s work with a total of 21 points. Rich Sauer, a 6-3 forward scored 18 points while the other starters, Garvin Isaacs and Stan Farr dumped in 15 and 6 points respec tively. Pacing the attack for the Fish was the young Clear Creek ace, Curley Lenox who dumped in 17 points with seven field goals and three free throws to his credit. Forward Larry Kirk finished as the second high scoring Fish with 11 points with five field goals and one free throw. Lawson Howard was next highest as he scored 10 points. Curley Lenox put the Fish in the lead in the opening minutes of the game with a six foot jump shot. Richard Prugh added an other field goal making the score, 4-0 before TCU got on the score- board as a result of Garvin Isaac’s jump shot. The score was tied at six all when Chitsey put the Wogs in front to stay. COACH SHELBY Metcalf's crew confiscated the backboards like they were credit cards for grade points pulling down 61 re bounds to 46 for the Frogs. Bill Robinette gave an outstanding per formance clearing the boards 11 times while sophomore Dick Stringfellow had 10 rebounds along with several steals. All-American candidate Bennie Lenox pumped in 27 points on nine of sixteen field goals and nine of 11 free throws. Lenox played only 28 minutes. TCU OPENED the scoring on a foul shot by 6-6 sophomore Gary Turner and kept the game close for the first six minutes. The score was tied three times before A&M’s Cecil Ferguson sank a free throw to put the Aggies ahead to stay with 13:53 left in the half. The ball-hawking and sharp shooting of Lenox paced the Ca dets to a 19-point lead, 42-23, with a minute to play and the same margin lit the scoreboard when the teams left the floor for inter mission. TCU TRIED a full-court press in the second-half but to no avail as A&M pulled out to a 34-point bulge with 10 minutes to play. With the Aggie reserves on the court, the Frogs closed the gap to 23 points late in the game before running out of fuel. BOBBY McKINLEY and Turner each tallied 15 points to lead the Frogs. Turner had 10 rebounds to pace TCU in that department. John Beasley chipped in 16 points for runner-up honors to Lenox while Timmerman addell Paul Timmins had nine points^ Robinette had eight. A&M HIT 44.7 percent fror:,J floor with TCU hitting 36.1) cent. The Frogs had troiiy the free throw line missing! shots while the Aggies madelij 32 foul shots. The 3500 fans received a l from the action as the pli| knelt on the floor to look kj contact lens apparently lost I Ferguson. Eagle, as FergisJ referred to by teammates, f*j the lens in the corner of his? The next game for the Ca: now 7-4 on the season, comes i; urday afternoon in Austin agii^ the Texas Longhorns. The Sta were upset by Arkansas, 58-5!| Fayetteville Tuesday night. A rkansas Upse ts L ongh orm; Owls, Mustangs Snare Wim FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. CP) — The Arkansas Razorbacks battled to the end Tuesday night and came from behind to whip favored Texas 58-53 in basketball at Fayetteville. Arkansas trailed through most of the game but managed to stay close until Orval Cook sank a free throw to put the Porkers in front with 1:57 left. THE LEAD was the first of the evening for the Razorbacks but the Longhorns went quickly back in front 51-50 with 1:25 left. Jim Magness sank a long jump shot to give the Porkers the lead once again and as Texas came back down the court, Arkansas regained possession in a wild scramble for the ball. TEXAS WAS forced to foul and Cook calmly sank two free throws to wrap it up for Arkansas. Warren Vogel led the Porkers with 17 and boe Fisher got 17 for the Texans. The game was the first confer ence victory for the Razorbacks and gave them a 4-6 season rec ord. Texas went 7-4 with the loss, its first in conference play. *** WACO (A*)—Big Gene Elmore poured 23 points through the hoop and snared 17 rebounds in pacing Southern Methodist to an 85-65 victory over Baylor in Southwest Conference basketball Tuesday night. Baylor’s Winston Moore paced the Bears with 20 points although he accumulated four fouls well be fore halftime and fouled out with 9V2 minutes to play. THE SMU Mustangs cashed 34 of 64 field goal attempts for a flashy 53.1 shooting percentage. Baylor posted a respectable 24 of 51 for 47 per cent. Moore’s foul handicap prompted Baylor to pull him off the floor six minutes before intermission and the Methodists quickly padded a six-point lead to a 44-32 halftime margin. ELMORE, hitting superbly, made good nine of 18 field goal tries and teammate Bill Ward, who scored 20 points, hit on six of nine shots from the floor. The Bears’ Moore plumped eight of 12 field goal attempts through the basket in a vain effort to keep Baylor in contention. Spencer Carlson of Baylor tallied 15 points and grabbed seven rebounds. ★★★ HOUSTON (A*)—Barry Rodrigue drove down the free throw lane with 24 seconds left Tuesday night to flip in the layup that gave Those undergraduate students who have hours of credit mas’’ purchas idline of 1 p. m. of the dasr pi publication—Director of Student Publica tions. At 8 a. m. Thursday, January 16, 1964, there will be posted on a bulletin board in the lobby of the Richard Coke Building ve com- for :e Building have com pleted all academic requirements for de- be conferred Js 95 semester hours of credit may purchase the A&M ring. The hours passing at the time of the preliminary grade report on November 11, 1963, may be used in satis fying the 95 hour requirement. Those students qualifying under this regulation may leave their names with the ring clerk in the registrar’s office in order that she may check their records to determine their eligibility to order the rings. Orders for the rings will be taken between November 18 through November 27 and December 9 through January 7-. These rings will be returned for delivery, on or about February 14, 1963. The ring clerk is on duty from 8:00 a. m. to 12:00 noon, Monday through 14, 1963. Friday of each week. H. L. Heaton Director of .ton . and Registrar 161t25 TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY THE GRADUATE COLLEGE Announcement of Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree (Defense of the Dissertation) Full Name of Candidate: Kitchen, James William Candidate for Degree of Doctor of Philos ophy in Horticulture Title of Dissertation: “A Study of Some Nutritional and Metabolic Factors Affecting the Formation of Oxalates in Spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) Time of Examination: Jan. 10, 1964 at 1 :30 p. m. Wf ayne C. Hall Dean of Graduate Studies TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY THE GRADUATE COLLEGE Announcement of Final Examination for the Doctoral Degree (Defense of the Dissertation) Full Name of Candidate: Sheldon, John Candidate for Degree of Doctoi ophy in Nuclear Engineering Title of Dissertation : “Semiclas Doctor of Philos- n : “Semiclassical Calcu lation of the Differential Scattering Chi Cross Section with Charge Exchange: Cesium Ions in Cesium Vapor.” Time of Examination: Friday, Jan. 10, 1964 at 2 :00 p. m. Place of Examination: Room 201F, W. T. Doherty Petroleum Engineering Building Wayne C. Hall Dean of Graduate Studies 184t3 GRADUATE COLLEGE CALENDAR, SPRING SEMESTER 1964 proposal for Masters degree February 21 Last day for registering for Graduate Record Examinations February 24 Last day for filing applica- ay 1 tions for advanced degrees March 14 Graduate Record Examinations April 27 Last day for Ph.D candidates to register with the Department of Modern Languages for foreign language examina tions May 1 Last day for filing original and two copies of theses and dissertations in final form May 1 Foreign language examinations for advanced degrees May 23 Commencement Note 1: Candidates for advanced degrees should file degree programs prior to their second registration in the Graduate Col lege. Note 2: Candidates for doctoral degrees reminded that the scheduling of final inations is now published under examinations is now published undei "Official Notices” in The Battalion. Forms for this purpose must be submitted to tht purpo Graduate College no later than one wee prior to the day of the examination. 184t7 SOSOLIK'S T. V.. Radio. Phono., Car Radio Transistor Radio Service 713 S. Main TA 2-1941 CASH AVAILABLE FOR BOOKS, SLIDE RULES & ETC. 5,000 AGGIES CAN’T BE WRONG LOUPOT'S New Store Hours — 8 a. m. ’til 5:30 p. m. — 6 Days A Week. 1963 - 1964 TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY DIRECTORY of Offices — Staff — Students Price $1.00 Now On SALE At The Student Publications Office YMCA Bldg. Volui Rice’s rallying Owls a 61-60 : ketball victory over Texas Te When Tech’s Tom Patty got( one last desperate shot mo® later, it was Rodrigue who; bounded for Rice and clutcklj ball as the buzzer sounded, THUS WAS climaxed am back by the Owls, who had tn’J by 11 points in the first by three with just 51 seconds;: to play. Rice, squeaking to its straight Southwest Conference:: tory, had trailed most of the r-| Three times in the second half,!3 Owls held one-point leads, but| were quickly wiped out Murren, Tech’s 150-pound pianj IT WAS Rodrigue who hit! shot with 1:22 left in the | that tied the score at 57-all, a set the stage for the breaths] finish. Tech led by 30-19 at one J in the first half, as the Owlssiil fered through a four-minute so:sI less period. But with lem Rhine, Larry Phillips and fcj Siegmund finding the range, sI Owls cut the lead to 33-31 attiij half. Phillips and Tech’s Hal Derai tied for high point honors witlii;| and Rhine was held to 16. The A rection < sent thei year, Lu acters i: Monday p.m. at “Six ( tion ma “Pirande tragi-coi author ( ity and The s Charact highest depth, v moment sional a a play, in them theatric Fon Disc Ci Mi St civil Spri the thei agei T p.m ing slip and er : A dor corr a.m