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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 14, 1967)
Hogs Here Tonight Aggies Seek Revenge By GARY SHERER The Aggie basketball team will be looking for revenge in to night’s game at G. Rollie White Coliseum when they take the floor against the Arkansas Raz- orbacks at 8 o’clock. LAST MONTH at Little Rock, the Aggies dropped a heartbreak- er to the Hogs in a 47-46 count. Since that game, Arkansas has lost four in a row, while the Ag gies have come out winners in two of five games. Regardless of their records, the two teams must look to the any thing - can - happen theory of Southwest Conference games and expect an even game. IT WAS LACK of shooting consistency, the season-lpng men ace, that spelled defeat for the Aggies in the first Arkansas game. But perhaps being back in the friendly area of College Station, the Maroon and White can extend their winning home record. at a 14.5 pace in the SWC and is 17.8 for the season. Rowland is given scoring support from 6-3 senior Wally Freeman and 6-5 David Self. Freeman whose final seconds foul shot nipped out the Aggies in the first game has a 12.4 mark in the SWC and a 12.5 totals for both teams, they also have had their all-time highs against each other. The Aggies pumped in 104 in 1965 and Rice blitzed the cords for 110 in 1956. season average. Self, a junior from El Dorado, Ark., is the third scorer in Ar kansas' SWC campaign with a 12.3 norm and has a 10.8 season count. The Rice win broke a fifth- place tie in the SWC, leaving the Owls in a tie with Baylor for third with a 4-4 record while the Aggies are now in fourth with a 3-5 mark. The Razorbacks, under Coach Duddy Waller who is in his first year at the head spot after nine years as assistant, have had bright spots in an otherwise re building year. ONE OF THESE bright spots has been Tommy Rowland. Row land a 6-4 senior from Little Rock has been the Hogs leading scorer all year. He is currently , hitting THE RAZORBACKS are now 2-6 in the SWC after losing to the Texas Longhorns 67-61 at Fayetteville Saturday night. Ar kansas has a 4-13 season record and is tied with Texas Tech for the SWC cellar. As the Razorbacks came out on the short end this past week end, so did the Aggies as they met Rice at Houston. IN THE PAST few seasons, when the Aggies and the Rice Owls get together there are usu ally a lot of points scored. Saturday night was no excep tion, as the Owls tumbled the Maroon and White 101-79 at Au try Gym on the Rice campus. THE AGGIES HIT 52.8 from the floor, which usually is good enough to win in any league. Rice, however, hit a fantastic 39 of 63 for a 61.9 reading which always will be good enough to win with. The two teams put on an out standing first half show, as the Aggies hit on 14 of 23, for 52.8, and Rice was 18 of 31 for a fine 58.1. After this onslaught on the basket, the halftime score was 45-38. Page 6 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas Tuesday, February 14,195' * Cubs On Top W ill Fish Close Behin SONNY BENEFIELD The 6-1 sophomore from Sweeny was the hig-h point man at Rice Saturday night. THIS WAS THE highest point production for Rice this year and it also was the highest total for the Aggies this season. In addi tion to this game being the high Where the first-half shooting was fairly even, Rice shot the Aggies off the floor in the second half. The Owls hit 21 of 32 from the floor for 65.6 and during one period, threw in 12 straight bas kets. With shooting like this, the Aggies just could not keep pace and the game was decided. THE PACKED HOUSE of 4,- 500 added a lot of noise to the hot shooting and they were treat ed to some good player perform ance in answer to their vocal sup port. Rice put five players in double figures, with 6-4 senior Marty Ivey leading the Owl attack with 22 points. Next for Rice was Mike Inselmann with 18. Bill Doty, Greg Williams and Larry Miller added 14, 13 and 12, re spectively, to put the entire Owl starting lineup into double fig- THE AGGIES were led by Son ny Benefield’s 19 points. BATTALION CLASSIFIED WANT AD RATES On* day i« < tt per word each additional da)' Minimum charge—50* 4* pe tional r word large Classified Display 90c per column inch sch insertion each insertion DEADLINE 4 p.m. day before publication FOR RENT FAIRWAY APARTMENTS • Two bedrooms • Furnished or unfurnished • Carpeted and draped • T.V. cable connections • Close to A&M, elementary schools and golf course • Central air and heat • Built in stove, refrigerator and disposal. From (99.50 3300 S. College Resident Mgr. Apt. 3-B 846-4713 822-8022 Normandy Manor Apartments -Central atr cor -Colored-electric appliances -Swimming pool -Large patio area -Drapes and carpeting -Carports and laundry facilities -Furnished and unfurnished -1-2 bedroom apartments -Walking distance to downtown -Located near churches and schools All Utilities Paid Manager—Apt. No. 9—Mrs. Mann 823-8492 366tfn THE BRYAN ARMS APARTMENTS ‘Congenial Living” Separate Adult & Family Areas "Children Welcome" Model Apts. Open For Inspection From (120 - All Utilities Paid 1602 S. College Avenue Resident Manager - Apt. 55 Phone 823-4250 Make Your Deposit Now 366tfn STATE MOTEL, rooms and kitchen, day the University, 846- 262tfn and weekly rate, near 6410. GM Lowest Priced Cars $49.79 per mo. With Normal Down Payment OPEL KADETT Sellstrom Pontiac - Buick 2700 Texas Ave. 26th & Parker 822-1336 822-1307 PRESTONE $1.59 gal. No Limit. Havoline, Enco, Ama lie, Conoco 30c qt. Where low oil prices originate. Quantity Rights Reserved Parts Wholesale Too Filters, Oil, Air - Fuel 10,000 Parts - We Fit 96% of All Cars - Save 25 - 40% Brake Shoes $2.90 ex. (most cars) Auto trans. oil - --25tf Autolite plugs AC - Champion Tires—Low price every day — Just check our price with any other of equal quality. All approved Credit Cards accepted Your Friedrich Dealer Joe Faulk Auto Parts 220 E. 25th Bryan, Texas JOE FAULK , 32 20 years in Bryan fer FOR RENT THE FRENCH QUARTER APARTMENTS A 2 Bedrooms nished Fully Fun Central Heat A Air Electric Kitchens Carpets A Drapes Swimming Pool Laundry Facilities ALL BILLS PAID 661 Cross St. College Station 846-8981 VICTORIAN APARTMENTS Midway between Bryan A sray between Brya AAM University All General Electric built-ins 1 A 2 bedrooms with 1 or 1 V4 baths Central heat A air Large walk-in closets Beautiful courtyard with swimmVg pool • Carpets A Drap • Carports • Furnished or unfurnished pes jndr facilities Resident manager. Apt. 1 401 Lake Phone 822-2035 154tfn WORK WANTED Ironing done in my home, REASON ABLE, 822-5054. 399t2 Have your typing done on the newest IBM Selectric, COSTS NO MORE. 846- 4944. 391tfn Typing, 846-3576 after 5 :00 p. m. 379tfn Typing. 823-6410. REMODELING, REPAIR WORK AND JENERAL CONTRACTING, after 6:00 JENEKAL COjNTKAE 11JNG, after b :UU call 846-5918. DON MARABLE. 290tfn OFFICIAL NOTICE Official noti of Student Pu 1 p. m. 1 notices must arrive in the Office it Publications before deadline of of the day preceding publication. degre< the Registrar’s are now being Office from all who expect to complete their de- uirments by May 1967. Candidates Applications accepted ‘ students gree reguirmem foi catiom Graduate deadline date for filing application is March 1, 1967. H. L. Heaton Director of Admissions and Register r advanced degrees must file their appli- tions with both the Registrar’s Office and the Graduate Dean’s Office. The SPECIAL NOTICE Buy your toys and gifts from WHITE AUTO SUPPLY, College Station. CASH OR LAY-A-WAY. 846-6626. The Jackson Radio Hour to pay tribute to Foreign Students. Rev. R. L. Jackson 'he Fo will spea Radio H WTAW, pay 1 L. Ji Jackson morn' ev. has in his home near campu! Students for several years, will be "One Key for Si All people in this a ill speak to Foreign Studen r, Sunday morning 1160 g, 8:30 a. m., your dial. Rev. Jack ipus irs. The subject eventy Nations.” > invited to listen. kson Foreign that w listen. people in this area arc No Foreign Student should miss the tribute rill be paid them. 400t2 Horses Boarded, 846-7028 after 6 :00 p. m. 399t5 WE BUTCHER LIVESTOCK For Your Food Locker and Home Freezer. Satisfaction Guaranteed Hanson’s Frozen Foods Inc. Bryan, Texas 341tfn OTIS MCDONALD’S Typewriters • Adding Machines • Cal culators • Cash Registers • Electro static Dry Copiers Sales • Service • Rentals static • Servtc Norelco dictating equipment 429 South Main Street • Phone 822-1328 Bryan, Texas 77802 HOME & CAR RADIO REPAIRS SALES & SERVICE KEN’S RADIO & TV 303 W. 26th 822-2819 FREIGHT SALVAGE • Brand Name Furniture • Household Appliances • Bedding ^ Office Furniture • Plumbing Fixtures All damaged items restored to full utility by our repairs department. C & D SALVAGE CO. 32nd & S. Tabor Streets — Bryan AUTO REPAIRS All Makes Just Say: “Charge It” Cade Motor Co. Ford Dealer All of Liberal Arts ma; Academic Building Distinguished Students in the Collei Liberal Arts may come J —^ pick lege come by Room 101, up their cards. “SPRING AWARD SCHOLARSHIPS” Application forms for Spring Award Scho larships may be obtained from the Student Financial Aid Office, Room 303, YMCA Building during the period February 13 - March 31, 1967. All applications must be filed with the Student Financial Aid Office by not later than 5:00 p. m. April 1, 1967. Late applications will not be accepted. pe to NOTICE—PRE-VETERINARY MEDICINE STUDENTS Pre-veterir ect to qua o the professional curricul lege of Veterinary Medicine in September HELP WANTED lead quitar player semi-professional combo. Wanted, experienced to play in a semi-; (Sorry no country and western) For audition call 823-4950 as soon as possible. 400t3 Experienced Florist, 822-1658 before 6 :30. 396ttfn WAITRESS OR WAITER: Apply in person only, Coach Norton’s Pancake House, Hwy. 6 South, C.S. 394tfn CHILD CARE Child care all ages. 846-8161. 341tfn Child care experience, 8-5 and hourly, 846-6536 or 846-6648. nouriy, 336tfn Gregory’s Day Nursery—846-4005. 218tfn HUMPTY DUMPTY CHILDREN CEN TER, 3406 South College, State Licensed. 123-8626. Virginia D. Jones, R. N. 99tfn FOR SALE Three bedroom house, brick, 2 bath, built-ins, central air and heat, convenient to A&M and elementary schools, (18,700 Call 846-5997. all nvenient Zenith stereo phonograph on Deluxe stand, uaranteed. $69.95. GIL’S RADIO & T.V., S. College, 822-0826. Volkswagen, good condition, must sell, $700 or nearest offer. 846-3286 1962 after 5. 397t7 Motorcycle, ’63 Triumph, 200 cc, good condition, 710 AA E. 32nd, Bryan. 823- 6801. 400t3 1967 may secure application forms Registrar’s Office beginning Monday, Feb ruary 20, 1967. May X, 1967 is the deadline for filing applications and transcripts with the Registrar. L. H. L. Heaton, Director of Admissions and Registrar 396tl2 The 1966-67 official directory of offices, staff and students is now available. You send your orders (interdepartmental Student Publications ng. The price is $1.0 rt nay srder ers. Office, per diri to YMCA B ectory. ord the uildir For BEST RESULTS TRY BATTALION CLASSIFIED BLOCKER TRANT INCOME TAX 4015 Texas Ave. 846-7842 DONAHO SALES CO. 207 W. 28th 823-6666 Damaged & Unclaimed Freight, Quality Merchandise At Substantial Savings. ATTENTION May Graduates! Deadline For Ordering Graduation Invitations Feb. 28 Orders Taken From 9-12, 1-4, Mon. - Fri. At The Cashier’s Window Memorial Student Center Watch Repair Jewelry Repair Diamond Senior Rings Senior Rings Refinished C. W. Varner & Sons Jewelers North Gate 846-581G For all your paint and lumber needs see your local lumber dealer, MARION PUGH LUMBER CO. Reject slab doors for desk table legs, celotex, upsom 3 and cut ply- Kyle Field on 6-5711. THE MARION 395tfn tops, masonite. e I of all wood. Four blocks so Hwy. 6, Ph. VI 6-6 PUGH LUMBER CO. board, molding: wood. Four bl< PIANOS ORGANS BAND INSTR. Back to school music sale. New pianos, $16 per month. Used pianos, $10 per mth. New band instr., $10 per month. mo Used pianos & band instr., $95 an Tuning, repairs, and refinishing. itr., ?iu pel instr., $95 and up. B & M Music Co. 213 W. 26th — Bryan TRANSMISSIONS REPAIRED & EXCHANGED Completely Guaranteed LOWEST PRICES HAMILL’S TRANSMISSION 118 S. Bryan —Bryan— 822-6874 FEATURING: CURTIS MATHIS Color T.V. With 8 Year Picture Tube Warranty GIL’S RADIO & T.V. 2403 S. College 822-0826 AUTO INSURANCE FOR AGGIES: Call: George Webb Farmers Insurance Group 3400 S. College 823-8051 SOSOLIKS TV & RADIO SERVICE Zenith - Color & B&W - TV All Makes - TV - Repaired 713 S. Main 822-1941 TYPEWRITERS Rentals-Sales-Service Terms Distributors For: Royal and Victor Calculators & Adding Machines CATES TYPEWRITER CO. 909 S. Main 822-6000 Cassius May Fight Tokyo Exhibition CHICAGO (A*) — A proposed heavyweight title defense in Tokyo April 29 by Cassius Clay — Muhammad Ali — was turned down Monday by his manager, Herbert Muhammad, but an ex hibition bout may be arranged. Herbert Muhammad said a Japanese promotor — Art Life Association — began negotiations for a title fight between Clay and possibly Floyd Patterson or Zora Folley. Two Ex-Coaches To Be Honored NEW YORK <A>) — Joe Lap- chick and Everett Dean officially will be made members of the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame at the Metropolitan Basket ball Writers’ Association’s 34th annual dinner in New York March 12, it was announced Mon day. Lapchick coached St. John’s of New York for 20 years while Dean served in the same capacity at Indiana and Stanford for 34 years. The election of Lapchick and Dean raises to 62 the number of members of the hall, now being constructed at Springfield, Mass., College, the birthplace of basket ball. It is scheduled to be fin ished this summer. By JERRY GRISHAM Saturday night’s action in the freshman ranks of Southwest Conference basketball saw the two leaders, Baylor and Texas A&M, pull off impressive victor ies to set the stage for a major confrontation here next Tuesday night. The Baylor Cubs pushed their conference record to 4-0 with a lopsided 86-66 win over the Southern Methodist Colts. The Cubs have played, one less con ference game than the second- place Aggie Fish, (4-1), but will remedy that this week as they play two games while the Fish are idle. THE CUBS play the Texas Christian Wogs tonight in Waco and the Texas Shorthorns Satur day afternoon in Austin. They will visit the Fish next Tuesday, either still in the lead with a 6-0 or 5-1 record or in second place behind the Fish with a 4-2 mark. All depends on this week’s en counters with two teams the Cubs have already defeated once this season. The Fish won their fourth con ference game of the season Sat urday night as they blasted the Rice Owlets 84-70 in Rice’s Autry Gym. Early in the contest the Fish built up an eight-point lead, but saw it wiped out by a Rice surge with six minutes to go in the first half. The Owlets took a 25-24 lead and then traded baskets with the Aggie freshmen until a three- point play by Mike Heitmann put the Fish out in front to stay at 31-29. HEITMANN SCORED on a driving layup, then added a third point when a technical foul was called on the Owlet coach, Guy Lease. Mike Hazel gave the Fish a wider margin with another three-pointer. At halftime the Fish led 43-35. In the second half the Aggies adopted a more deliberate style to bring the Owlets out of the zone defense which had held the Fish scoring down in the first half. The trend was immediately re versed and the Fish went on to build a 20-point advantage, 80- 60, late in the game. BILL BROWN, the 6-2 guard from Galveston, led the Fish scoring with 21 points in what Fish Coach Jim Culpepper “.. . his best floor game of tin year.” The other four starters sit; scored in the double figi% Hazel had his best game of ft: season, with 16 points, befon fouling out with a minute to plat Heitmann scored 16, Oliver Bi;, gers added 15 and Mac Hooft. accounted for 10. The Owlets’ Fred Hand toft the game’s scoring honors »|| 27 points, his best for the seasft THE FISH are idle the restt; this week, but next Tuesday, game will be a crucial one for ft, Aggies. The Cubs are the oft) conference team to beat the Fift The decision came in a overtime contest in Waco. Cowboys St Ticket Marl DALLAS (A>> _ The 1% sale of season tickets on oneiit was recorded Monday as the Dft. las Cowboys gave the public ft, privilege of buying for the ISf season. There were 2,910 new orders which was more than 10 tinu as many as the previous recoti day last year when 278 chased tickets. There are 17,000 season tid ets being held for renewal prit. ileges. A total of 60,000 tickets ws on sale Monday, so there « about 40,000 left to be bought. “We’ll be willing to sell« the entire Cotton Bowl of 75,S( seats if the people want then,' said A1 Ward, publicity directe of the Cowboys. Tuesday, F Ti T; By G Even tl the recor of Randy squad the Rogers I Dallas Im in fine s Thomas. In the Aggies W' spots in t to Matsc 69-2, fres tossed th< third plai fourth ph monopoly i Coach Th New Site Named For North-Soutl WICHITA, Kan. UP) — Becau of scheduling problems spoustj of the North-South college tl star basketball game announcti Monday a shift to Albuquerqtt N.M. and a coaching change. The game originated here lit year and is now scheduled ft April 8 at the University Ara in Albuquerque. DOW re a ’67 Grad... YOU’VE GOT A DATE FEB. 27 & 28 with the Man from Dow mile reh Mike Sj Chris Co riguez, e; A&M inc a 7:50.6, behind w College. Other Dallas m ley, secoi behind w yea r’s champion placed tl and Larr in the 60 Thoma team in g Matson, great sh: season, i predictin the seas< Even t 70-7 Mi, farther t new rec< dally. “WE : count if the outd probably ^record if indoor si Thome disconce] counting “He’ll the reco make ev Matso: portunit lor Unit thin-clac At thi If you really want to do something, be somebody and use your ability, you won’t risk missing this one. Regardless of your field — Chemical, Mechanical, Industrial, Electrical or other disciplines of Engineering, Chemistry, Marketing, Business Administra tion, Liberal Arts — if you like doing and accomplishing, chances are there's a unique spot for you in our diversified research, development, manufacturing, marketing or related areas. This is ONE DATE you’ll want to make — and KEEP! Contact your Placement Office today. All and ' who I picture gielane By Fel versitj A 1 ] Cor Pictur land ’< Unive: Gate. Feb. Feb. Feb. Marc!