BUSIER AGENCY REAL ESTATE • INSURANCE F.H.A.—Vet*ran* and Conveational Loans ARM 4 HOME SAVINGS ASSOCIATION Home Office: Nevada, Mo. S523 Texas Are. (in Ridgecrest) 846*3708 TONITE “THE BASEMENT” FOLK, ROCK, JAZZ FRIDAY & SATURDAY 8:00-12:00 MSC AIRLINE RESERVATIONS & TICKETS COLLEGE STATION MEMORIAL STUDENT CENTER 846*3773 30-Day Charge On Your Personal Account Or Use Your BankAmericard Free Delivery $3everlei£ d3raie . . .tours . . . travel Bonded ASTA Agent ’*111 V*' Page 4 College Station, Texas Friday, February 12, 1969 THE BATTALION Aggies Face Kent State In Houston By Richard Campbell Battalion Sports Editor The Texas Aggie basketballers take to the road for the first time this season Friday night when they skip down Highway Six about ninety miles to the newly opened Hofheinz Pavilion to do battle with Kent State (2-1) in the Bluebonnet Classic. The Houston Cougars are play ing host to the affair as A&M, Kent State, and Nebraska all try to take advantage of their hos pitality. The Golden Flashes from Kent, Ohio, are a strong member of the Mid-American Conference in the nation’s basketball belt and return two starters from a 14-10 season. They finished 1968-69 with a 6-6 league mark with 6-7 senior Tom Lagodich a cog in the Flash attack. He av eraged 16 points last year and was picked on some All-America preseason squads this year. The Aggies face the Golden Flashes in the first round Friday at 9 p.m. following the Houston- Nebraska clash at Houston, now 3-0, faces a strong Cornhusker five which this year has been the surprise in the Midlands. They have knocked off Wichita State and Duquesne, both highly regarded, nationally ranked teams. The Aggies are coming off a 109-80 win Monday night as they bombed Midwestern University to even their season mark at 1-1. In running up their top non conference point total in history, the Aggies finally got the per formance out of junior Steve Niles that everyone had been ex pecting. Niles, the 7-0 postman from San Antonio Lee, hit 31 points and dragged 16 rebounds down to completely dominate the game. All five A&M starters will be averaging in double figures with Niles leading the way with a 20.0 norm. Senior captain Mike Heitmann has a 17.5 mark, Rick Duplantis 14.0, Chuck Smith Strong Track Squad Goes To Monroe, La. Today Texas A&M’s track squad, win ners of three relay races in an outdoor meet at Pasadena, Tex., last Saturday, travels to Monroe, La., this weekend to compete in the Northeast Louisiana Indoor meet. The afternoon session Saturday starts at 1:30 p.m. and the night session commences at 6:45. The meet’s final event is scheduled for 9:05 p.m. The Aggies, under coach Char lie Thomas, are entered in num erous individual events this week but will compete in only one re lay race, the mile relay in which Tony Munson, Marvin Mills, Wil lie Blackmon and Curtis Mills will comprise the baton foursome. Last Saturday the same four some ran a 3:15.6 to win that event at Pasadena. Scotty Hen dricks, Curtis Mills, Marvin Mills and Rockie Woods ran a glitter ing 40.5 to win the 440-yard re lay, while Glen Blahuta, Woods, Donny Rogers and David Prince ran the shuttle hurdle relay in 61.5. World champion quartermiler CHARLIE THOMAS Curtis Mills did not run the open 440 last week and will not com pete in his specialty this week. In addition to the mile relay group, A&M’s entrants this week by events include: 60-yard high hurdles — Donny Rogers, David Prince and Rockie Woods. 60-yard dash — Rockie Woods, Scotty Hendricks and Steve Barre. 440-yard dash — Willie Black mon, Don Keller and Harold Mc Mahan. 2-mile run — Sammy Skinner. 880-yard run — Robert Brew. Teams entered include Grum bling, Arkansas AM&N, Lamar Tech, Houston, Mississippi State, Dallas Baptist, Arkansas State, Oklahoma University, Southeast ern, McNeese, Southern State, Mississippi University, Northeast Louisiana, Austin, McMui-ry, Northeast Oklahoma, Harding and Texas A&M. Aggie Fish Host Wharton In Tuesday’s Prelim Game By Mike Wright house, are priming for Tuesday The Texas Aggie Fish, led by night’s shoot out with Wharton the hot scoring trio of Bob Go- County Junior College here at bin, Bill O’Brien and Jeff Over- 5:30. CHRISTMAS SALE DEC. 1 TO DEC. 24 AR SEP - 9800 ■wmmmmmmm AR SED - 9060 . ■ ■ $69.95 $39.95 SPECIAL: 4 or 8 Track Stereo Tapes $6.95 Tapes Only $4.98 ea. AR HMX - 4000 $149.95 Only A Few Of The Many Specials At: S STERLING ELECTRONICS 903 South Main ‘YOUR SOUND NEIGHBOR IN BRYAN” the zip In the season opener against Blinn Junior College, the trio ac counted for 51 points, as Gobin chipped in 21, O’Brien sank 17, and Overhouse crammed in 13 points. The production equaled the exact total of scores tallied by the entire Blinn team. Charlie Jenkins came off bench in the second half to the coads with nine points in the brief time that he played. Wharton is led by returning letterman John Tucker, 6-7; Burt Griffin, 6-2; Art Lockett, 6-5; Lester Dickinson, 6-3; Ty Pate, 6-1; and Gerald Tennison, 5-9. The Pioneers play an agres- sive man for man defense with a run-and-shoot offense. The Pio neers were edged by the Univer sity of Texas at Austin Fresh men by one point in the final second last week. Wharton is coached by Eugene Bahnsen, who in 10 years at Pioneerland has produced five Texas Junior College Champions. There have been several Wharton players who have transferred to other colleges and made accred- itable showings for themselves. The most recent one being Earl Dow, a star guard for the Lamar Tech Cardinals, who played here against A&M last fall. Fish Coach Jim Culpepper will probably start the contest with Wayne Howard and Gobin at the forwards, Bill O’Brien at point, with Bryan Mezger and Over house at the post slots. The Fish will layoff until Jan uary 10, when they play the Bay lor Cubs here preceding the Var sity game. 13.0, and Bill Cooksey 10.5. Heit mann and Cooksey are both graduates of Sam Houston High School and will be returning home to Houston. A&M has outrebounded its two opponents by 15 per game with Niles leading the way again with a 12.5 average. The Aggies have also been accurate at the charity stripe with a .750 percentage. “These five look like our best lineup,” Coach Shelby Metcalf said. “We have Pat Kavanaugh for outside help, but we need to come up with some depth in side. We were encouraged with the play of Byron Chandler.” Chandler is a 6-10 senior squadman who backs up Niles at the low post position. He scored 13 points and grabbed eight re bounds in relief of Niles. Vol. There will be two rounds foi the tournament with the winners] meeting each other Saturday 9 p.m. with the consolation match at 7 p.m. A&M’s next home contest will be Tuesday at 8 p.m. against the Colorado State College Bears, Golf Club Snack Bar The Golf Club Snack Bar will be serving our many friends who will be on campus during the Christmas and New Year Holidays. Open Daily from 10:30 a. m. to 4:30 p. m. CLOCKS . . GIFTS Is There Anything More Traditional Than GRANDFATHER CLOCKS AND BLUE DANUBE CHINA? We stock both of these as well as many other types of Clocks, Imported Linens, Hamilton Watches, and Gifts for all occasions. See all of this and more at— Ed Donn iiM sti rith Dor iraith, I; Ictivities Thomas Clock & Gift Co. 901-A Gordon At East 33rd Street Bryan, Texas Ph. : 822-6122 m “Christmas Eve Through the Centuries” CHRISTMAS EVE FOLLOWING THE REFORMATION The first religious songs used by the early Protestants were Psalms set to music. The following carol, “Joy to the World,” written by Isaac Watts in 1719, is a para phrase of Psalm 98. A Litany in Words and Song Joy to the World; the Lord is come; Let earth receive her King; Let every heart prepare Him room, And heaven and nature sing. Joy to the world, the Savior reigns; Let men their songs employ; While fields and flocks, rocks hills and plains Repeat the sounding joy. God was in Christ At first (the contemporaries of Christ) may have said, God sent him. After a while that sounded too cold, as though God were a bow and Jesus the arrow. That would not do. God did more than send him. So I suspect they went on to say, God is with him. That went deeper. Yet, as their experience with him progressed, it was not ade quate. God was more than with him. So at last we catch the reverent accents of a new conviction, God came in him. That was not so much theology at first as poetry. It was an exhilarating insight and its natural expression was a song. God can come into human life! Divinity and humanity are not so separate that the visitation,? of the Eternal are impossible. n u( Jay F. itlalion 5> The Coll d Zonin ned actic propert wday ni* The pro ibrovolny st of tv feet; Sc eet and 'rage ta y 6. The reqi ages fr< luces to ires and I 'es. f. W. \\ owners l rezoned Wie’re Paying CASH for used books that will be used during the spring semester Loupot's North Gate ie !' Jay F. bttalion S better p Won effoi fins to w “■College :ol ogist tc timing ; ion. The ecoh , "welcom '&n west a slid tanday n: ®'dauf p 0 ‘‘ffl and u ea. \ Canon m “get pei to ar 'ental ity,” ELECTRONIC CALCULATOIIH Types of Calculations: Addition, sub traction, multiplication, division. Con tinual multiplication and division. Product sum and difference. Individ ual quotient. Sum and difference of continual multiplication and division. Constant multiplication and division. Involution. Extraction of square roots. Mixed calculations. Standard deviation calculations. OTIS MCDONALD’S 429 S. Main — Phone 822-1328 Bryan, Texas A Baldauf Pr , Th e hil 1[ ame” M Nay i n 'torium. T he 8 j ‘ Present) Sty Se 'tall. Sheila ’W screen ^ised by ^0; France adway, I