Page 4 College Station, Texas Friday, March 15, 1968 THE BATTALION Pi p ALL JUNIORS and 1 ALL SOPHOMORES Pictures for 1968 Aggieland K - N Mar. 4-9 0 - S Mar. 11-16 T - Z Mar. 18-23 UNIVERSITY STUDIO Aggies At Fort Worth By GARY SHERER Coach Tom Chandler’s 3-3 Texas Aggie baseball team will be in Fort Worth Saturday afternoon for a Southwest Conference game with pre-season favorite Texas Call 822-1441 Allow 20 Minutes Carry Out or Eat-In THE PIZZA HUT 2610 Texas Ave. ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SENIORS! Your Future is Unlimited in LOS ANGELES $807 A MONTH TO START Electrical engineers are needed for the challenging work of designing, building and operating one of the largest electric and water systems in the world. Arrange with Placement Office to talk with our engi neering representative who will be on campus MARCH 22, 1968 DEPARTMENT OF WATER AND POWER City of Los Angeles An Equal Opportunity Employer Christian. The Horned Frogs are 2-1 in SWC play thus far with their one loss coming last Tuesday to the Rice Owls, the same team that knocked off the Aggies last. The Aggies were unable to play Tues day because of wet grounds. CHANDLER AND his TCU counterpart Frank Windegger hope that the weather man will be nice tomorrow, as neither team can afford to lose another game to the elements. With the controversial SWC no- rescheduling rule this season, eve ry game has to be played. The Aggies have lost one game as have the Horned Frogs. TCU is blessed with probably the best pitching staff in the con ference. The staff, headed by do- everything lefthander Mickey Mc Carty, includes seniors Bing Bing ham and Chuck Machemehl. McCarty brings back bad me mories to Chandler from last sea son. The Frogs came back to Bry an’s Travis Park about this time last season and McCarty shutout the Aggies 6-0. If the shutout wasn’t bad enough, the record 17 men that the Aggies left on base was. FORTUNATELY, the Aggies won’t have to worry about the 6-5 Pasadena senior, he is in Wichita, Kans. with the SWC bas ketball champion Frogs where they will meet Big Eight champ Kansas State tomorrow night in the NCAA’s midwest regionals. Windegger has a capable hand to handle all these pitchers in footballer Bill Ferguson. The 6-3 catcher from Corpus Ohristi also adds a potent bat to the TCU lineup. The Aggies have not yet found the hitting* groove this season. They are hitting .179 as a team for the year, with only one regu lar at .300. That player is versa tile centerfielder Bob Long. The all-conference footballer is hitting an even .300 for the season and the same in the SWC. CATCHER JOE Staples leads the Aggies’ conference h i 11 i n g with a .375 norm but the Houston backstop has only a .222 mark for the full six games played. Right- fielder Boyd Hadaway, a pitcher, is hitting at .286 for the season and .300 in the SWC. Utility-man Pete Maida has a .273 and .333 marks for season and conference respectably. With the exception of these four, the rest of the team is either around or below the .200 mark. Chandler will most likely se lect Fish southpaw Doug Rau or junior righthander Walter Varvel to start against TCU. This two some were the only pitchers who didn’t see action in the Aggies 10-3 setback to Rice last week. Two weeks from today, TCU comes here for a Friday-Satur- day series followed by Missouri for a two-game set April 1-2. CLASS A HEAVIES Two Aggie contestants in the Class A unlimited weight wrestling class square off in petition held this week. Jim Taylor (white trunks) defeated Tommy Ward trunks) for the unlimited title. (Photo by Mike Wright) Spring Sports By JOHN PLATZER McNeese State Cbllege of Loui siana became the Aggie tennis team’s third straight victim Thursday as Coach Omar Smith’s netters recorded a 7-0 triumph. It was the first outside home FRESHMEN! Go First Class To The Ball give her a CORSAGE from THE FLORAL CENTER 2920 E. 29th St. 823-5792 FREE DORM DELIVERY • Corsages Color Coordinated To Accent Your Dates Dress. Or Drive By and Select From “The Corsage Bar” • Orchids, Roses, Carnations Others • Yes, We Wire Flowers, Also. tr, s>Jb. JL 4 ta & Tex, ■ 3^ J 'i A & M Aggie Netters Rip McNeese For Third Straight Victory VICTORY BOOST Ohio State’s Bruce Schnabel gets a boost from teammates as he cuts down net after Ohio State’s Big Ten playoff victory over Iowa at neutral Purdue court in Lafayette, Ind. Ohio beat Iowa, 85-81, and will meet East Tennessee in NCAA regional playoff tournament at Lexington, Ky. (AP Wirephoto) match of the season for the gies, who have compiled a record at home. Jon Ragland defeated Carlos Madrado in day’s first single match 7-5, 6-3 while the Aggie’s Marcus Beleck whipped Jes Ste wart 6-3, 5-7, 6-0. A&M swept the other three single matches with Joe Tillerson topping Ernest Weafer 6-2, 6-0 while Mike Hickey ripped Victor Zaldo 6-2, 7-5 and Bruce Crumley knocked off Wayne Bono 7-5, 6-1. The team of Ragland and Till erson won their doubles match for the Aggies 6-1, 6-2 and Beleck and Jerry Oliver prevailed 6-3, 6-2. Howard-Payne will provide the next competition for A&M Satur day at College Station. ★ ★ ★ A chapter of Sigma Delta Psi, an honary athletic fraternity, is being started at A&M in co-oper ation with the Physical Education Department. The fratemity; which is affili ated with the American Associa tion for Health, Physical Educa tion and Recreation; has in ex cess of 140 chapters in colleges, universities, and junior colleges in the United States. Membership in the fraternity is gained by passing 15 athletic re quirements. When these require ments are passed, a certificate of membership is issued to the candi date. Billards Jointed Cue Sticks Pinball Wildwest Ray Gun Shocker Machine Gripper Machine Magazines Magic Supplies Bumper Stickers Decals Novelties Comic Cards Sundries Also AGGIE THEATRE AGGIE DEN “The Home of the Aggies” (Next to Loupot’s) 8 a. m. til midnight 7 days a week Drive one of these dressed-up Chevrolets instead of a stripped-down something else. GM MARK OF EXCELLENCE —■ ; WM1MM Foreground: Chevrolet Impale Sport Sedan; right background: Chevelle Malibu Sport Coupe; left background: Chevy II Nova Coupe ’68 CHEVROLET prices start lower than any other full-size models. Look at it. Chev rolet’s 4-door sedan is roomier than any other American car except one luxury sedan. Drive it. You tell by its smooth and silent ride that Chevrolet quality runs deep. Buy it! Get a Chev rolet instead of a medium-priced name and you can have, say, power steering, power brakes and a radio besides! ’68 CHEVELLE prices start lower than any other mid-size models. Obviously nothing’s newer in mid-size cars than Chevelle. There’s fresh styling, the long-hood, short-deck look. There are two nimble footed wheelbases now—both on a wider, steadier tread. You get big-car power, big-car ride in a quick-size package. No wonder Chevelle outsells everything in its field. ’68 CHEVY II NOVA prices start lower than any other economy car so generously sized. Nova is big enough for a family on va cation, yet it slips into parking spaces others pass by. With its new wide stance and computer-tuned chassis, Nova rides as silent and steady as cars costing a lot more, and it comes with the biggest standard V8 in its field. Nova’s the not-too-small car. Read Classified ne of ve of Signature Loans $10 to $100 Prompt Confidential Service UNIVERSITY LOAN COMPANY 317 Patricia North Gate Tel: 846-8319 T H E A S S 0 c 1 A T I O N Proudly Presented By The Town Hall Series MARCH 15. 1968 8:00 P. M G. ROLUE WHITE COLISEUM Admission Prices: A&M Student Date or Spouse $1.50 General Admission 3.00 Public School Student 2.00 # A&M Student Activity Cards and Town Hall Season Tickets Will Admit Holder To This performance. .2 Pi