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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (March 9, 1965)
College Station, Texas Tuesday, March 9, 1965 THE BATTALION AP ALL SOUTHWEST 1965 !iH! £ • t ED HORNE Baylor CARROL HOOSER S M U LARRY FRANKS Texas JOHN BEASLEY HAROLD DENNEY Texas A&M Texas Tech DUB MALAISE Texas Tech Cindermen Take Second^ Fish Win In Triangular The Aggies outpointed Texas in a triangular track meet Saturday but were edged out for first place by the Rice Owls, 77-63-25. The Fish dominated the fresh man portion of the meet with a 77-point total. The Yearlings had 36 while the Owlets came up with 28. Randy Matson was the only in dividual to break any meet records, as a wind gusting up to 25-miles- per-hour hampered all the entrants. He heaved the shot 65 feet, seven inches and the discus 170 feet, seven and one-half inches. Besides Matson’s triumphs, sprin ters James White and Gilbert Smith took first in the 100 and 220- yard dashes. They teamed up with Billy Schmidt and Robert Martin to win the 440-yard relay. Aggie firsts in the field events included Bob Brown in the broad jump and Mike Schrider in the high jump. The Owls scored firsts in the mile run, 440-yard dash, 120-yard high hurdles, 880-yard run, 440- yard hurdles, three-mile run, mile relay and the pole vault. Texas did not score a first place in the meet. The Owls are the defending Southwest Conference Champions. The Fish had nine first in the freshman division of the meet, led by Drew Hemphill, who took the 100 and 220-yard dashes. Ken An derson, Scott Blessing, Steve O’Neal and Hemphill teamed up to DIAMOND RINGS i-i . ,# 3 'JSZ# w/W : -9 If Jb .O’ V’ ; MONACO AT THESE FINE STORES llo. Wag Suburban Austin, Joe Koen & Son Bay City, Teets Jewelers Corpus Christi, Roberts Jewelers Corpus Christi, Taylor Brothers Dallas, Owens Bros, Jewelers El Paso, Holdsworth Jlrs. El Paso, Sheldon Jlry. Fort Worth, Haltom’s Jewelers Galveston, Xsenbergr’s Jewelry Stores Downtown - Medical Center Henderson, Mitchell’s Jlrs. Houston, Billings Jewelry (2 stores) Houston, Walzel Jewelry Kileen,, Keen’s Jewelers Lubbock, Anderson Bros. Downtown & Monterrey Center McAllen Jones Jlry. Port Arthur, Turnbull’s Jewelry San Antonio, Shaw’s Jewelers - Down town Gunter Hotel - Suburban, Wonderland Shopping City Temple, L. S. James Jewelers Texas City, Kings Jlrs. Tyler, Dickason Jewelry Co. Waco, Armstrong Jewelers win the 440-yard relay. Blessing took first in the 440-yard dash, O’Neal captured the blue ribbon in the high hurdles and Dewey Helm- camp won the 440-yard hurdles. Willie Rodriquez of A&M and Greg Peters tied for first in the 880-yard dash and Max Mainord and Russell Hanna tied for the Aggies to take first in the high jump. George Resley took first in the shot and Thomas Upton won the javelin throw. Varsity Summaries 440-relay - 1) A&M (Schmidt, Smith, Martin, White; 2) Rice, 41.4; 3) Texas, 42.4. Mile Run - 1) Timberlake, Rice, 4:24.2; 2) Sunderland, Texas, 4:25.0; 3) Saddler, Rice, 4:28.8; 4) Cosper, A&M, 4:30.5. 440-dash - 1) Ellington, Rice, 48.6; 2) Aldmon, Rice, 49.0; 3) McGough, A&M, 49.0; 4) O’Brian, Texas, 49.4. 100-dash - 1) White, A&M, 10.1; 2) G. Smith, A&M, 10.5; 3) Epps, Rice, 10.7; 4) Schmidt, A&M, 10.7. 120-high hurdles - 1) May, Rice, 15.1; 2) Wilkerson, Rice, 15.7; 3) Brown, Rice, 15.8; 4) Kooser, A&M, 17.2. 880-run - Moss, Rice, 1:54.1; 2) Frawley, Texas, 1:54.9; 3) Timber- lake, Rice, 1:58.3; 4) Westmoreland, A&M, 1.59.3. 220-dash - 1) Smith, A&M, 22.1; 2) White, A&M, 22.4; 3) Epps, Rice, 22.7; 4) Mason, A&M, 22.9. 440-hurdles - 1) May, Rice, 53.5; 2) Collins, Rice, 55.2; 3) Strong, Texas, 56.1; Ginsbach, 4) A&M, 56.5. 3-mile run - 1) Stroup, Rice, 14:50.4; 2) Sunderland, Texas, 15:05.0; 3) D. Smith, A&M, 15;27.5; 4) Clifton, A&M, 16:10.5. Mile Relay - 1) Rice (Wende, Moss, Aldmon, Ellington), 3:14.0; 2) Texas, 3:17.7; 3) A&M, 3:21.2. Pole Vault - 1) Brattlof, Rice, 15-0; 2) King, Texas, 14-6; 3) Ed wards, A&M, 13-6; 4) Marshall, Rice, 13-0. Broad Jump - 1) Brown, A&M, 23-1; 2) Weldon, Rice, 22-9; 3) Strong, Texas, 22-6; 4) Gilbert, Texas, 21-9%. Discus - 1) Matson, A&M, 170- 7%; 2) Glover, A&M, 167-0y2; 3) Williams, Rice, 152-2%; (only entrys). Shot Put - 1) Matson, A&M, 65- 7; 2) Belt, Texas, 54-0; 3) Wil liams, Rice, 46-6%. Ag Terp 6th In U. S. Race A great stretch drive carried A&M to a sixth place finish in the Intercollegiate Turtle Racee in Washington D. C. last week. The Aggie terrapin, Frank, fin ished higher than any other SWC entry. The turtle from the Univer sity of Texas didn’t place in the top 30 and was likely in the group that didn’t finish and had to be cleared off the track to make way for the next heat. Winner of the grand daddy of all turtle races was Goy, the fav orite son of American University. The gutty reptile staved off a last-second rally by Vassar’s Matty to claim the victory in a time of 58 seconds. Sips Get Tight Collars Monday As Mustangs Capture Playoff WACO (A>) — Denny Holman had his shot blocked but recov ered the ball and fed to Bob Begert for a layup with one second left Monday night and Southern Metho dist beat Texas 80-78 to roll into the NCAA regional tournament at Manhattan, Kan. The score was tied and the crowd of 4,000 in Heart O’Texas Coli seum thought there was going to be overtime when Holman had his shot knocked down. Then he dived for the ball, threw to Begert and Southern Methodist had won its way into the NCAA for the first time in a playoff. Texas and Southern Methodist had tied for the Southwest Con ference championship. In the crowd was Verlyn An derson, assistant coach at Wichi ta, champion of the Missouri Valley Conference. Southern Methodist will meet Wichita in the first round of the regional tournament Fri day night. Southern Methodist led most of the way in the first half with the biggest margin 10 points at 27 -17 with 9:38 to go. masculine .. .that’s the kind of aroma she likes be ing close to. The aroma of Old Spice. Crisp, tangy, persuasive. Old Spice . . . unmistakably the after shave lotion for the untamed male. Try it soon .. .she’s waiting. 1.25 & 2.00 .. .that's the way it is with Old Spice SHU LTO N ?But Texas came back strong in the second half and it was nip- and-tuck as Texas finally went in front at 47-46 with 18:27 left, on a jump shot by Tommy Nelms. Ag Baseballers Launch Seaso On Right Foot With 2 Win By GERALD GARCIA Junior righthander Billy Crain pitched one-hit ball for six in nings, but it took strong relieving by sophomore Tommy Chiles to ease the Aggies to a 3-2 win over Sul Ross at Bryan’s Travis Park Monday afternoon. The victory gave the Cadet diamondmen a 2-0 record. Wtih a little luck Crain, who looked in midstream form, could have hurled six perfect frames. He did not allow a hit until Sul Ross’ catcher Mike Compton lined a single over second base starting the fifth. The only other man to reach base on Crain was first baseman Paul Pasquia, who was safe on an error by short stop Dennis Williams. Between Williams error and Compton’s hit, Crain retired nine consecutive batters. He fanned seven and did not walk a batter. Chiles, on the other hand, kept getting himself in jams, but three good pitches—one in each of the last three frames—got him out of trouble. In the ninth, after second base- man Ken Richardson singled and stole second, Chiles struck out the Trinity Netters Down A&M, 6-1 The Aggie tennis team dropped a 6-1 decision to the Trinity Tigers Saturday in San Antonio. The only contest the Aggies won was the second doubles match. Dean Dyer and Doug Sassman turned this trick by downing Chip Massey and Jimmy McCabe 6-4, 6-4. Andy Lloyd defeated A&M’s Luis Rojas in the feature match of the afternoon 10-8 and 6-2 after Rojas had led in both sets. The other singles matches saw Cliff Buckholz down Albert Aldrich 6-0 and 6-2 and Butch Newman defeat Sassman 6-0. 6-0. Also in the singles matches La mar Roemer edged Ray Salazar 6-1 and 6-3, while A1 Hill bombed Dyer 6-3, 6-3. In addition to the Aggie victory, the doubles competition saw Steve Cevvas and Newman team up to put down Rojas and Aldrich 6-2 and 6-3. Saturday’s setback was the sec ond straight in three games. next two batters, but he hit Carthel to put runners at first and second. Coach Van Cleef then surprised everybody — probably his team most—by pulling a double steal. The play worked as Aggie catcher Ralph Beckner threw wildly in his attempt to catch Richardson going to third. Richardson scored with Carthel going from first to third on the error. Now the Lobos were only one run behind with two out and a runner on third, but again Chiles fired his high, hard one and made the batter pop out. The Ags produced single tallies in the second, fourth and fifth. Crain started a string of three hits in the second. Cobb and right fielder Fred Carlton then rapped bingos with Carlton get ting the RBI. Carlton ignited the fourth inning rally with a single. Third baseman Mike McClure drove Carlton home after he had moved to second on a miscue. Cobb scored what proved the winning run after getting base on a fielder’s choice moving around on a Sul f error. Besides Crain’s and Chiles’ formance, Carlton and fielder Neal Thompson weret standing for the Aggies ton collected three hits in i trips and Thompson turned the game’s outstanding defers play. He made a headlong, dit catch of Pasquia’s drive into centerfield in the fourth. In a game Friday, A&M feated St. Mary’s of San Anto 10-8 to open the 1965 seas Alan Koonce blasted two roi trippers out of Travis Park drove in five runs. Last years SWC sophomore the-year, Steve Hillhouse, the win for A&M. The Aggies, now 2-0, were host the Lobos again at 1:30[ today and will play the Univen of Houston Thursday at Tn Park. Fidelity Union Life College Master Policy holders on the A&M campus— unnam pinion Reue Spencer Designed for and offered only to college men. For Information Call 846-8228 SWEET MUSIC FOR TELEPHONE SWITCHING Add electronics to telephone switching, and some pretty exciting things happen. Such as a fast-action push-button phone that "dials” numbers by a suc cession of short, musical tones instead of a lengthy sequence of impulses. And beyond the “Touch Calling” phone is a new Electronic Automatic Telephone Exchange developed inde pendently by GT&E scientists. It will make many new telephone services possible. General Telephone & Electronics Lab oratories contributes the basic support to the GT&E family of companies for product innovations such as this. In fact, basic research is our solid base for con tinued future growth. If research is one of your goals in life, you might want to know moreabout Gen eral Telephone & Electronics. Full infor mation is available from your Campus Placement Director. Or write to General Telephone & Electronics Laboratories, 730 Third Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017. GEE GENERAL TELEPHONE & ELECTRONICS W 730 THIRD AVE.. N.Y. 10017 • GT&E SUBSIDIARIES: General Telephone Operating Cos. in 33 states • GT&E Laboratories • GT&E International • General Telephone Directory Co. • Automatic Electric • Lenkurt Electric • Sylvama Electric