THE BATTALION THURSDAY JANUARY 31, 1974 Page 5 H -f ^ at and isher • fenced ;xas AGGIE COACH Shelby Metcalf’s calm dissolves during the Rice-A&M basketball game Saturday. Metcalf will have even more to worry about as the Aggies have dropped to a 2-3 conference. (Photos by Gary Baldasari) SWC holds debut indoor track meet in Fort Worth MAZB4 HARRY DISHMAN Sales & Service 603 Texas Ave. C.S. across from campus — 846-3316 The Southwest Conference will crown its first indoor track and field champions here Friday and the feeling is that Texas’ dis tance-deep Longhorns will take home the family jewels. The initial SWC Indoor Cham pionship will get underway with preliminaries at 2:30 p.m. in the Tarrant County Convention Cen ter. The first final event will be the distance medley relay at 3:35 p.m. with finals in the other run ning events scheduled to start at 7 p.m. The new SWC championship will be run in conjunction with the 14th annual Fort Worth Coaches Indoor Games and the co-sponsoring Fort Worth Coaches Association will also con duct a meet for area high schools in conjunction with the SWC competition. Texas will rank as favorite among the nine SWC entries with Rice, A&M, Houston and Baylor among the top contenders for team honors in the 15-event meet. Arkansas brings a strong distance field into the meet, while SMU, TCU and Texas Tech are expect ed to show well in shorter races. One of the meet’s top features is expected to be the mile relay, scheduled as the night’s final event at 10 p.m. A&M, Texas, Rice and TCU all return strong teams from last year’s outdoor season. Among outstanding quar- ter-milers expected to duel it out on the final lap are Texas’ Don Sturgal, Rice’s Lin Bingham, A&M’s Horace Grant, Baylor’s Tim Son and either Bill Collins or Gary Peacock of TCU. In addition to such outstanding men as SWC mile champion Paul Craig and runner-up Reed Fisch er and SWC 880 champion Ru dolph Griffith, Texas entrants in clude two 60-foot shot putters, outstanding hurdlers in Randy Lightfoot and Nate Robinson and strong relay teams. The 60-yard dash field is head ed by Rice’s Zoe Simpson, who won the open division of the Fort Worth meet last year in 6.1 sec onds by defeating Olympic sprint er Robert Taylor of Texas South ern. But the Rice sprinter isn’t a clear favorite because the field also includes SWC 100 champ Roaches opts to run track Carl Roaches, A&M’s premier wide receiver and kick returner during the football season has an nounced he plans to run track be fore and after spring training this year. He won the state 4A 100-yard dash title in 1972 while competing as a sprinter at Houston Smiley. “Anyway, I hope to be back after spring football,” he said, “if I’m not too beat up.” Handball visits UT tournament TAMU’s Handball Club team is traveling to Austin this weekend to participate in the United States Handball Association Regional In tercollegiate Tournament. The tourney takes place in Gregory Gymnasium on the University of Texas campus Feb. 1 and 2. Finals will be at 4 p. m. Saturday. All Aggie contestants are en tered in Class B singles. Students representing A&M are Jeff Car ter, Robert Almon, Charles Bock- elman, Louie Zingery, John Whit ing, Klay Hughes and Jack Gres- set. Mike Mistovich Business Machines presents FOR STUDENTS AND FACULTY-STAFF CALCULATORS, ADDERS AND TYPEWRITERS, AND COPIERS VICTOR PRINTERS AND DISPLAY CALCULATORS AND ADDERS UNICOM PRINTERS AND THE NEW 202SR, 30 FUNC TION ELECTRONIC SLIDE RULE UNICOM 201 MINI CALCULATOR WITH A MEMORY COLUMBIA SCIENTIFIC WITH SQUARES, MEMORY AND PERCENT KEYS COLUMBIA III MINI BASIC WITH PERCENT KEY CORVUS MODEL 312, WITH SQUARES AND PER CENT KEYS THE CASIO CALCULATOR WITH TAPE AND DIS PLAY ON ONE MACHINE Wayne Johnson of Houston, two- time SWC 100 champ Gene Poun- cy of SMU and TCU’s Bill Collins. Strong competition is also lin ed up in the mile run where Ar kansas' Randy Melancon ran a 4:08.3 on the boards last weekend at Missouri to offer a challenge to Fischer, Houston’s Ronald Newcomb and a field of experi enced outdoor milers. The two-mile field includes SWC three-mile runner-up Steve Houk of Arkansas, third-place finisher Jeff Wells of Rice and Tim Patton of Texas. Houk ran a 9:04.1 at Missouri and team mate Ron Hendee has been cred ited with a 9:09. Among the other outstanding individual performers entered are Rice weightman Ken Stadel, who has been over 60 feet along with Texas’ Bishop Dolegiewicz and Dana LeDuc; A&M hurdler Scot- tie Jones, winner of the SWC 120 high hurdles last spring; A&M’s Sammy Dierschke, the schoolboy sensation of 1972 who will run in the mile relay; high jumpers Gary Kafer of Baylor, Wyatt Tompkins and Silverio Bosch of Texas and Glenn Ray of Rice; 25-plus long jumper Ricky Thompson of Baylor; and Baylor freshman Alcy Jackson in the high hurdles. 2:30 p.m.—440 dash and high jump preliminaries. 2:45 p.m.—660 dash prelimina ries. Wrestlers set Saturday meet The TAMU wrestling team be gan its ’74 season on the right foot by defeating Richland Junior Col lege. The Ags showed well in matches at the Richland Open Invitational. The Ags are starting their fifth season in the 12-team league with their strongest team ever. A&M’s masters of the mat will host Texas University and Steph en F. Austin at 2:00 p. m. Sat. in DeWare Field House. Admin- sion is free. 3 p.m.—880 dash preliminaries. 3:15 p.m.—1000 run prelimina ries. 3:25 p.m.—distance medley re lay finals. 4 p.m.—60 high hurdles prelim inaries. 4:10 p.m.—60-yard dash prelim inaries. 6:30 p.m.—pole vault finals. 7 p.m.—60-yard high hurdles finals. 7:15 p.m.—60-yard dash finals. 7:40 p.m.—1000-yard run finals. 8 p.m.—mile run finals. 8:25 p.m.—440-yard dash finals. 8:35 p.m.—600-yard dash finals and high jump finals. 9:10 p.m.—two-mile relay fi nals. 9:45 p.m.—two-mile run finals. 10 p.m.—mile relay finals. YOU CAN MISS MANY THINGS AT A&M . . . BUT Don’t Miss Aggie BSU Spring 1974 MISSIONS TRIP TO MEXICO January 3 - 12 Howdy Night Feb. 1-7:30 p.m. at BSU LEADERSHIP TRAINING CONFERENCE February 15, 16, 17 - Fort Worth, Texas SPRING RETREAT April 5 & 6 at Pineywoods Encampment SANDWICHES SUBMARINES “Where no two sandwiches are alike!” Situated Right at Northgate jlbsamt jS'ljoppc Kesami ORIGINALS coming soon. Even more to ummmm over. 329 University Dr. 11 a. m. til 1 a. m. 846-6428 OUT-A-SITE SALADS CHEESECAKES Freshmen Ball Corsages Buy your orchid from Student Floral Concession Best Buy In Town Wed. Noon>-5 - Thurs. 8-5 In The Floriculture Greenhouse Girls! Don’t Forget His Boutonniere Look lane Look Look Dick Look! See The Light, The Light Is Green, Green Means Go, Go, Go, Go! We’re not telling you to speed. We simply believe that if more drivers were alert at traffic lights, we would have fewer traffic jams, less air pollution and save fuel, too. So watch the light and when it turns green, look both ways and gcs, GO! • W ■ ;r -——— 909 S. Main, Bryan Phone 822-6000 Governor’s Office of Traffic Safety