The Rice Thresher (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 31, 1966 Page: 6 of 6
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Fresh Tie For Stcni At Aislii
Rice's varsity trackmen pull-
ed down a third place at the
Corpus Christi Relays under the
lights last Saturday night.
The Owls, with 43% points,
faltered behind Abilene Christ-
ian's 67 and the Aggies' 54%.
Trailing were Texas, Baylor,
and SMU. The meet was
plagued throughout by light
rain.
First places were grabbed by
Jim Wilkerson, with a 14.5
clocking in the high hurdles, and
the mile relay team of John
Moss, Bob Thompson, Fred
Cloud, and Jimmy Ellington,
which turned in a 3:15.5.
Field Events
Ricki Jacobs threw 211'7" in
the javelin; Joe Williams twirl-
ed the discus 155'2%"; Elling-
ton circled the track in a 48.1
quarter; and Tommy Marshall
managed a tie at 13 feet in the
pole vault. All were good for
second place trophies.
Cloud sped through the 100
in 10 flat for third place, then
joined the quarter-mile relay
team of Ronny Conner, Elling-
ton, and Jimmy Epps for an-
other bronze medal with a time
of 41.9.
Texas Relays
The Owls join UT and some
40 other teams in the renowned
Texas Relays this weekend.
Prelims begin Friday with the
finals starting Saturday after-
noon.
In concurrent action, the Rice
freshmen tracksters scored 41
points in a quadrangular meet
with Baylor, Abilene Christian,
and Texas in Austin Saturday.
Rice's one-mile relay team,
composed of Tommy Maupin
(50.0), Mike Casey (47.7), Dale
Bernauer (47.4), and Conley
Brown (47.3), set a new South-
west Conference freshman rec-
ord with a 3:12.4. This mark
betters by 3.1 seconds the rec-
ord set by the 1960 Baylor
freshman team.
Mike Casey, Mike McKee,
Doug I'Jelzung, and Dale Ber-
nauer set a new Rice freshman
record of 41.8 seconds in the
440 relay, besting- the second
place Texas team by a second.
In the individuals, Rice cap-
tured four firsts, two seconds,
two thirds, and a fourth, Doug
Belzung raced to a new Rice
freshman record with a 21.6 in
the 220-yard dash. Dale Ber-
nauer edged teammate Doug
Belzung's 10.0 with a 9.9 in
the 100-yard dash.
In the 440-yard dash, Conley
Brown edged ACJC's Ronnie
Crawford with a 47.8 to take
first. Steve Montoya squeezed
past Max Gordon of AOC with a
4.17.9 in the mile. David Har-
iston placed second with a 57.0
in the 440 intermediate hurdles.
Other meet points came on
Mike Casey's 48.2 third in the
440 dash, Tommy Maupin's 1:-
55.6 third in the 880 and Jim
Metzger's 4:25.4 fourth in the
mile.
Friday April I
2 pm EG Coll 'Microwave Inter grated
Circuit* in Phaaed Array Radara'
Dr Frank R Emery Texas Instru-
ments S01 Ryon
8:15 pm 'Phaedra' Racine Attic
Theatre Cullen Bldg. U of H
Saturday April 2
12 Noon Easter Recess begins
Monday April 4
4:30 pm 'Space Sci Sem' R Kova 106D
GL
8 pm 'Messiah' Handel U of H Con-
cert Choir Music Hall
Tuesday April 5
12 Noon Alumni Exec Board Luncheon
Conference Room RMC
8 pm 'Messiah* Handel U of H Concert
Choir Music Hall
Wadaaiday April I
T pa American Society for
Lee «1 PL
Thursday April 7
7:80 pm Baseball Astros-Detroit Tigers
Astrodome
Tuasday April 12
8 am Classes resume
12 pm Students return
April II
4 pm Lwtura Dr Rhea Williams 1
Operation of the Interseholastio
I^ngoi1 FLU*
Thursday April 14
4 pm English Coll Dr George Ford U
of Rochester Nineteenth Century
Literature FLLL
4:80 pm Math Coll Paul Halmoe V of
Michigan 104 AH
WISHES TO RENT FACULTY
HOME FOR SUMMER
Biology professor (Ph.D. Rice, 1960) and family
(wife and two boys) would like to rent a furnished
home or apartment from early June through late
August.
Please Contact: Dr. Robert J. Taft
Cornell College, Mount Vernon, Iowa 52314
or Dr. Talmage, Biology Department
2429 Times Blvd. JA 3-3436
"In The Village"
Attention Graduate Students
MULTHilTHING THESES
OUR SPECIALTY
WE STOCK MULTILITH MASTERS
BREAK THE STUDY HABIT
WITH A SNACK AT
DUTCH KETTLE
HERMANN PROFESSIONAL BLD6.
BREAKFAST — LUNCH — DINNER
CHARCOAL BURGER
STEAKS — HAMBURGERS — HOME MADE PIES
OPEN 24 HOURS
SHORT ORDERS TO GO — JA 8-9121
A +i +A) Q, +A *£)
If communications were good enough
you could stay in the sack all day
Moving your body around
is highly inefficient.
If communications were perfect,
you would never have to.
Of course, you would still
have to get exercise.
But that's your problem.
We want to make, it easier for you
to contact people, learn,
get information, attend lectures,
and hold meetings.
We developed Picturephone*
service so you can see as well as talk
when you call. And be seen, too.
We introduced Tele-Lecture service
(two-way amplified phone calls)
to let you hear lecturers
in distant locations. And so you
could ask them questions
no matter how far away they were.
... •
Right now, many students can dial
from their dormitories to a
language lab. Soon a student
will be^able to dial into a
computer thousands of miles away
to get information for his courses.
Depending on the nature
of the information, he might get
his answer back audibly,
printed on a teletypewriter,
as a video jmage,
or a facsimile print.
Some of these services
are available now.
Others are being tested.
For the next week or so,
better get a move on.
* Service mark of the Bell System
Bell System
American Telephone & Telegraph
and Associated Companies
THE RICE TH RE SB BR, MARCH SI, 1 9 6 6—P A G E 8
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Durham, John. The Rice Thresher (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 31, 1966, newspaper, March 31, 1966; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth244970/m1/6/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rice University Woodson Research Center.