©IBSON’S AND PHARMACY REDMOND TERRACE SHOPPING CENTER 1420 Highway 6 South College Station, Toxas OPEN 9 A.M. to S P.M. MONDAY THRU SAT. PRICES GOOD: THUR., FRI., and SAT. DRUGS Hazel Bishop 6 oz. CONTINENTAL COLOGNE IN DECORATOR BOTTLE $1.50 Value Silk N Satin LOTION Rich Lotion in Decorator Bottle $1.35 Value Scotty TRAVEL KITS Shaver Kit for Traveling $1.98 Value 19 Gillette Sun Up SHAVING SETS Adjustable Razor and after Shave $2.29 Value COLOGNE For Men $2.50 Value Calgon I lb. 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Special With This Coupon 8x10 Color Enlargement Made From Your Kodacolor Negative or Slide $2.99 Value Clip & Bring With You $1oo ST8vir/stirrsvir>svitxsvir/8vifi |v]^ir7s^ir78*ir7SYi' HH HIIBMIIHIH1IIII81 tasy Payments • No Down Payment Up to $150.00 12 Months to Pay • Use Your Present Credit Card INQUIRE ABOUT GIBSON’S NEW Instant Credit Plan Model 156H Rhynecliffe MEN'S TIES All Silk, in Assorted Patterns & Colors FINE GIFT FOR THE MALE GRADUATE $2.75 Value 24” JR. PULLMAN $9.75 Value ELITE LINE LUGGAGE *6 27 *5 27 21” WEEK ENDER $8.50 Value The Luggage that Travels First M # “Fruit of the Loom” SOCK AND HANDKERCHIEF SETS Style 625-2A $1.50 Value ELY WALKER CUSTOM TAILORED SPORT SHIRTS Style 8071-26 in Plaid, Gingham, Tapered Body, Longer Length, Small, Medium and Large $3.50 Value $ 1 8 8 FOR GRADUATION GIVE A WATCH Model 21995 MENS GRUEN DATE O GRAPH Waterproof WATCH 17 Jewels with Calendar $59.50 Value Model 107 Poloroid FILM In Black & White Size 3 % x 4 % $2.65 Value Kodak Instamatic M60 PROJECTOR Has fast 28MM FI 15 lumenized lens. Self cased. Threads film automatically. Rewinds the film. $84.50 Value $ Carnwall Model 444 FOUR CUP ELECTRIC COFFEE MAKER $6.95 Value Dominion Model 1033 TRAVEL IRON Complete with zipper carry ing case. 1 Vs Pound. $10.50 Value THE BATTALION Thursday, May 19, 1966 College Station, Texas Page 7 FROM THE SIDELINES By Gerald Garcia “Well, I’m all alone now until he throws,” said Baylor’s Jim Lancaster after he had just heaved the shot put over the 52-foot line. The he Lancaster was referring to was Texas A&M’s Randy Matson, then a lanky shot putter who had the track world in a whirl because all the experts believed he would someday break Dallas Long’s record of 67 feet, 10 inches and later become the first 70 footer. What the experts did not know was that their predictions would come true this calm, cloudless night in May, 1965. It was the 8th day of the month to be exact and it was during this meet — the Southwest Confer ence meet in Kyle Field — that Mr. Matson woul record the greatest weight “double” ever. The maroon and white giant pushed the shot to a record 70 feet, 714 inches and the discus 199 feet, 71/2 inches. Lancaster must have known something that night others didn’t because as it turned out he was still all alone after Matson threw. The crowd swarmed Randy and left Lan caster and the other putters just standing there all alone. For Matson his dreams were coming true. The silver medal winner in the 1964 Olym pics always had dreamed of being the world champion. His second dream — of winning the gold medal — will have to wait until 1968 in Mexico City. Now Matson had one of his dreams so in the fall of 1965 he again shook the sports W'orld by reporting to basketball with the Texas Aggies. Everybody thought the move was great until Matson in juried a knee which had bothered him before. Then, the criticism started. People who had at first thought the move was great called Matson’s decision stupid. They said that the injury would hamper his shot putting. And how right they were. Except that it was a multitude of things that made the world champion just an aver age weightman this spring. After basketball Randy had trouble re gaining his throwing weight, and his put ting suffered. The criticism grew, and Randy was not alone anymore as Lancaster had described him before. Now he was just an average putter and Neal Stienhauer from the University of Oregon and John Cole from Arizona State had better throws than the Aggie in the shot and discus, respectively. But Randy and Emil Mamaligia, A&M’s weight coach, did not lose faith. Both knew that it would just be a matter of time before the strength and form would come back. “I just can’t do any weight training with the knee and without the training I can’t get my strength back,” Matson said after baseketball season. “This is what is holding me back.” But Randy kept pushing and scrapping until last weekend at the Coliseum Relays in Los Angeles he regained his old form and threw 69 feet, 21/2 inches to beat Steinhauer and in the same evening he flipped the iron platter 195 feet, 6 inches to best Cole. So in the same night, A&M’s pride pushed aside both of his challengers. Now Mr. Matson has shaken the sports world three times. First, when he threw 70 feet. Secondly, when he decided to par ticipate in basketball. Thirdly, when he came back fv m a dismal start to top the other challen t > i .T Mamaligia thinks that another shock is •. ^ming. “All Randy hi, to do is to get up to about 260 (what he weighed when he threw 70 feet) and stari; doing deep squats with weight,” Mamaligia said. “After this, he should be at full strength and there is no telling what he can do.” Mamaligia is not making any predictions on how far Matson will throw this year, but the weight coach does think that his prize pupil will throw 70 feet again this summer and again shake the world. What about other sports for Matson? Even Randy does not know what he is going to do. “Right now I am just concentrating on track,” he said. “Nothing else is on my mind.” Matson still has several meets this year in which he could reach 70 feet again. He will participate in the California Relays at Modesto, Calif., May 28, the District Feder ation Meet in Houston, June 4, the NCAA meet, June 16-18, and several meets this summer in which the United States will com pete against foreign teams. It could well be that at one of these meets another shot putter like Lancaster will say, “Well, I’m all alone now until he throws.” That shot putter does not know how right he is because Randy Matson is the world’s best. READ BATTALION CLASSIFIEDS BOLD NEW BREED •zi/t/tOH^Cum Laude Speak softly and wear a good looking sport shirt. . . like this one, for example. Boldly stated antique gold and brown boxed in with burgundy. The button-down collar features a gentle flare. Back collar button and box pleat. Tapered throughout .. .“Sanforized” labeled too.