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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 22, 1967)
Page 4 College Station, Texas Wednesday, February 22, 1967 THE BATTALIOK 2 Fish Use Foul Shots To Bounce Cubs 75-66 PALACE Bmj:in TODAY & THURSDAY Haley Mills In “GYPSY GIRL” QUEEN LASTNITE - 7:15 P. M. ADULT ART SERIES ‘1RENT A GIRL” STARTS TODAY Marcelo Mastroianni & Raquel Welch In “SHOOT LOUD, LOUDER-I DO NOT UNDERSTAND” (In Color) £vwva>:t" . t.1 On H UKOI B i; Ml ABS VRfl TONIGHT AT 6:45 P. M. Ann Margaret In “THE SWINGER” & “PARADISE, HAWAIIAN STYLE” CIRCLE TONIGHT AT 6:45 P. M. / Elke Sommers In “THE VENETIAN AFFAIR” & “VIVA LAS VEGAS” By JERRY GRISHAM Several times during this bas ketball season the Aggie Fish cagers have used their accuracy at the free throw line to come out ahead on the scoreboard. Last night in G. Rollie White Coliseum the Aggies demonstrat ed their hot hand with the foul shots as they took advantage of a foul-prone Baylor freshman squad to knock the Cubs out of the ranks of the unbeaten in league play with a 75-66 victory. MmlctArl Supply yiduuJv*, ptaMue*- •TM SaColUjeAvc-Bcywa.Tvtof ATTENTION Corps Sophomores and Juniors Picture schedule for Aggie- land '67 to be taken at the University Studio in North Gate. Feb. 20 to Feb. 25 - G-L Feb. 27 to March 4 - M-R March 6 to March 11 - S-Z ATTENTION Civilian Sophomores and Juniors Pictures scheduled for 1967 Aggieland to be taken at University Studio. Feb. 20 to Feb. 25 - J-T Feb. 27 to March 4 - U-Z and make-ups % OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT NOW! 5 Per Annum Paid Quarterly on INSURED SAVINGS FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION 2913 Texas Ave. TWO FOR THE FISH Mike Heitmann (22) throws in a jump shot in Tuesday night’s 75-66 Fish victory over the Baylor Cubs. Other Fish players are Bill Brown (12) and Tom Miller (54). Soccer Tournament Matches Players From Twenty Nations By CHARLES ROWTON Four soccer teams from Texas A&M will compete in a six-week soccer tournament beginning Sunday. The teams are composed of stu dents from South America, Cen tral America, North America, and Tunisia. With at least 20 countries represented on the teams, each squad has more than 15 players. Interest and feelings among the players are running quite high. Many of the members of the Texas A&M soccer team are playing on one of the teams in the tournament. The captains of each team are on the varsity squad. Two complete rounds will be played with the tournament win ner determined on a point basis. Three points will be awarded for a win, two for a tie, one for a loss, and none for a forfeit. Action will begin each Sunday at 1:30 p.m. on the soccer field located next to the tennis courts. Two practice games were played Sunday with the Central America squad defeating South America, 3-2, and North America taking a 3-1 victory from Tunisia. The tournament is the brain child of the Texas A&M Soccer Club. Co-captain Samuel Brent had a two-hour discussion with representatives of each team re cently and decided on the rules' for the tournament. The other co-captain is Gilbert© Garza. The varsity soccer team is sponsored by Dr. Kurt Irgolic, an assistant professor for the Department of Chemistry. Both teams hit 24 field goals during the game, but the Fish connected on 27 of 33 free throws while the Cubs made 18 of 27. THE LOSS for the Cubs gives them a 9-2 record for the season and a 6-1 Southwest Conference mark. The Aggies are now close behind the first place Cubs with a 5-1 conference record and two games remaining to be played. The Cubs finish the season this week against the Southern Meth odist freshmen and a victory would insure at least a tie for the conference championship. Over three minutes had elapsed in last night’s contest before the Fish were able to get on the scoreboard. The Cubs led 5-0 when Mike Hazel for the Fish capitalized on the first of the night’s many fouls and hit two free ones. The young Farmers were un able to overtake the visiting bruins until with 6:22 remaining in the first half Hazel again hit a crucial shot to tie the game. THE LEAD exchanged h^inds four times during the next four minutes before, with 2:24 left in the half the Fish took over the lead for keeps. At halftime the Aggies owned a 39-30 advantage. The second half of action was opened by the Fish who built their lead to 15 points after four minutes. A rally by the Cubs rapidly shrunk the Aggie lead to three points midway in the half. It was as close as they could come to the front running Fish who then pulled away to their final nine-point margin. High scoring honors for the Aggies were shared by Hazel and Bill Brown who both hit for 18 points. Hazel was also the game’s top rebounder with 12. Mike Heitmann scored 17 points for the Fish and Oliver Biggers rounded out the double digit scor ers with 14. THE CUBS’ David Sibley was the game’s high scorer with 20. The Fish play the Texas Short horns Saturday in Austin, win is a must for the Aggiei; they are to stay up with the Bi; lor five in the conference race, WHATABURGER 1101 S. College — Across From Weingarten “WORLD’S LARGEST PURE BEEF BURGER” • 1/4 Lb. Pure Beef In Every Whataburger 1 • MADE WITH 100% PURE BEEF GROUND DAILY AT WHATABURGER PHONE 823-1864 — Your Order Will Be Ready AN OPEN LETTER Hello Aggies, For several weeks we have been running our adver tisement in the Battalion telling you about Aggieland Recreation Center located behind Betty’s Fashions in the Redmond Terrace Center, College Station, Texas. We’ve told you that we have two five by ten billiard tables, two five by ten snooker tables, sixteen four by eight billiard tables, seven pin ball machines and other games. That we are open 7 days each week from 8 a. m, till midnight. That no alcoholic beverages are sold or allowed. That we sell billiard supplies, jointed cue sticks, etc. Hundreds of Aggies have visited our Recreation Center, and we believe most of them were impressed. If you have never visited the Aggieland Recreation Center, we hope you will very soon. We believe you will like what you see. AGGIELAND RECREATION CENTER Redmond Terrace Center College Station, Texas P. S. By the way, the girls play here! YOUR SAFETY is our r^ire$tont niimiirnn li ~ BUSINESS Our expert mechanics adjust brakes and add brake fluid if needed. BRAKE ADJUSTMENT Also repack front wheel bearings as recommended by car manufacturer. ANY AMERICAN CAR All work done by skilled brake mechanics FRONT FLOOR MAT Each 6-Q-326 DOOR-TO-DOOR • Heavy duty molded rubber • Fits most cars—full contour • Black, white, red, blue, green Limit 2 per customer Additional $2.50 ea. TRANSPORT Nylon TRUCK TIRES Rugged 6-ply rated nylon construction. Long mileage Sup-R- Tuf rubber. Gear grip non-skid tread design. <8> Sup-R-Tuf Tinston* nylonaire ANY SIZE Tubeless Blackwalls 7.50-14 (7.75-14) 6.70-15(7.75-15) 8.00-14 (8.25-14) WHITEWALL ADD $3 $ Plus $1.88 to $2.05 per tire Fed. excise tax depending on size, sales tax, and trado-iw lira ■your'ca r. FIRESTONE STORES Phone 822-0139 HOURS 8 A. M.—6 P. M. Corner College Avenue & 33rd Street