The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 02, 1966, Image 6

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Page 6
College Station, Texas
Wednesday, March 2, 1966
THE BATT/
TONIGHT 1st Show 6:45 p.m.
Ann Bancroft
In
“7 WOMEN”
&
George Peppard
In
“OPERATION
CROSSBOW”
- In'
* -A * -*■ — _ ^
y .rtaoetN uNDtBiz vtAcs-rKtt
TONIGHT 1st Show 6:45 pjn.
Robert Mitchum
In
“THUNDER ROAD”
&
Burt Lancaster
In
“YOUNG SAVAGES”
Ags Gain Share Of Lead By Blasting Bears
Seniors Instrumental In
By GERALD GARCIA
Battalion Sports Editor
John Beasley, Dick String-
fellow, Eddie Dominguez and Tim
Timmerman played their last
home basketball game. And the
foursome turned in outstanding
performances.
The quintet combined for 65
points as the Texas Aggies gained
a share of the Southwest Con
ference lead with an overwhelm
ing, 95-78, win over the Baylor
Bears before 6,500 fans in G.
Rollie White Coliseum.
Southern Methodist and A&M
now have identical 10-3 confer
ence marks with one game to
play. SMU will host Texas Tech
in Dallas Thursday, while the
Aggies will journey to the Ozarks
and tangle with the Arkansas
Razorbacks the same night.
If both teams win or lose
Thursday night, a playoff to de
termine the conference champion
and a representative to the Na
tional Collegiate Athletic Associ
ation playoffs will be staged in
Wado Monday night. If one wins
and the other loses, the winner
will go to the NCAA playoffs in
Lubbock March 11 and 12.
Fish End Season
With 71-61 Win
Over Baylor Cubs
By LARRY UPSHAW
Battalion Sports Staff
The tables are turned and
justice is done. For the first
time in history a Fish caught a
Bear, a Baylor Cub that is, re
sulting in a season-ending 71-61
win for the Aggie Fish.
A&M also stole the boards with
a 64-36 rebounding bulge to
register their seventh victory
against five defeats.
From the outset, the action
came in lightning doses, but
neither team could gain the ad
vantage. Baylor’s Hugh Fletcher,
who led his team with 17 points,
made friends with the basket on
a jumper and a free throw and
A&M’s Ronnie Peret, with 23
points, did likewise on a trio of
charities for a 3-3 tie.
This sameness prevailed six
times until Billy Bob Barnett,
Gary Ditto and Curley Hallman
added two-pointers and the Fish
led 21-16 with 9:26 to play.
The scoreboard belonged to
A&M from then on, and an 11-
point lead, 39-28, ruled with 1:20
on the clock. But a layup and two
free shots by the Cubs’ Steve
Bartells narrowed the edge to 39-
32 at intermission.
The second half began as
Barnett, Peret and Sonny Bene
field hooped one gokl each around
a single Cub bucket and 45-34
stood the score.
But the Cubs were by no means
dead and buried as the Aggie
lead slid to four points, 54-50,
and 9:10 remained. The Fish
allowed Baylor just four points
in seven minutes as the maroon
and white tallied 17 for a 71-54
difference and 1:57 left.
Now the Cubs were caught. As
Coach Jim Culpepper emptied
the bench, Baylor’s David Belew
stole the ball for a layup. Richard
McCall bucketed a free throw and
Ray Nunn swished a jumper and
a free shot for a respectable final
margin of 71-61.
Peret, who crashed into the
press table while hustling for a
loose ball and finally left the con
test in the final seconds, drew
the accolades of Culpepper.
Ag Swimmers
Lose 2 Meets
It was a long weekend for the
varsity swimers of Texas A&M.
After dropping a meet to Okla
homa State University by the
score of 60%-34%, they ran into
an equally tough varsity squad
from Texas Tech. Tech out scor
ed the Aggie 65-29.
The freshmen team looked a
little better. Although they lost
to the Texas Tech freshmen, 55-
41, Coach Arthur D. Adamson was
very pleased with their perform
ance. The outcome of this meet
was not decided until the final
match of the afternoon. All
three meets were in P. L. Downs
Natatorium.
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Lawarance Olivier As
“OTHELLO”
Beasley, who usually plays his
best against the Bears, turned in
another superb performance. The
6-9 Aggie forward from Linden-
Kildare hit on 15 of 25 floor shots
and seven of 11 free shots for
37 points.
Big John connected on his first
six floor tries, two after he had
grabbed an' offensive rebound.
Beasley’s hot hand shot the
Aggies to a seven-point lead five
minutes deep in the game and
A&M kept increasing it through
out the contest.
After Beasley broke a 2-2 tie
60 seconds deep into the game,
the Aggies were never headed.
The Bears did reduce the lead to
one point with 11 minutes to go
in the first half, but a layup by
Dick Rector on a feed by Beasley
put the Aggies out of reach.
Besides Beasley’s 37 points, the
other Aggie seniors Contributed
in this fashion:
Dominguez, the little Aggie
playmaker frdm Dallas’ Thomas
Jefferson, hit on five of nine field
goal attempts and three of three
free shots for 13 points. String-
fellow, Aggie defensive wizard
from Paris’ Cooper, sank three
of eight field tries and two of
three Charity shots for eight
points, while Timmerman, who
is a top reserve and only played
10 minutes in the second half,
made three of five floor shots and
one of one free shot for seven
points.
Coach Shelby Metcalf played
all of his players and all con
tributed at least one point to the
Aggie cause.
Beasley not only had one of his
hottest nights from the field, but
he also broke the Aggie rebound
record in the process. Big John
had 254 rebounds going in to the
game and when he picked off his
eighth rebound in the first he
broke his own 261 mark set last
season.
The big Aggie forward grabbed
19 for the night, 12 in the first
half.
had]
“We played a very good)
Metcalf said, “because
moving the ball well and the h
were getting their shots.”
“I also thought we had a |
defensive game. Baylor
rush their shots and we
gave them a clear shot.”
The Aggies’ defensive m
held Baylor to only 32.9 pero
of their floor shots. In the ms
time, the Aggies were shooting
65.7 per cent clip, hitting an:
cellent 60.6 per cent the sect:
half.
Randy Matson also was inst:
mental in the win. The
Pampa giant contributed
points and 11 rebounds.
If You’ll Soon Be a Member Of The
Modern Army—
College Master By
Fidelity Union Life Insurance
OFFERS full coverage
WHILE IN MILITARY SERVICE.
The IBM interviewer
will be on campus
March 9-10
Interview him. How else
are you going to find
out about new ways to
use your talents and
skills in an exciting
go-places” career ?
You could visit a nearby IBM branch office. You could write
to the Manager of College Relations, IBM Corporate Head
quarters, Armonk, New York 10504. But we would like to see
you on campus. Why not check at your placement office
today? See if you can still make an appointment for an
on-campus visit with IBM. Then interview the IBM inter
viewer. Whatever your area of study, ask him how you might
use your particular talents at IBM. Ask about your growth
potential in America’s fastest-growing major industry.
You’ll never regret it. IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
IBM
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