The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 24, 1948, Image 3

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    WEDNESDAY 1IAE.I
58-42il
'NEW YORK, Mafrih J2
cats wbn the Nl-jCl A
whelmiing Baylor
‘ Square Garden, f !
, ; The smart,4slia
' country succeed H<)lj
i jeaders, !who triuniph4d
< sas State,-60-54, li .
consolation game toi third
Page 2
er;
4 pifelir
Baylor
Finals
(#)]—Kentucky’s classy Wi d'
qall championship by over-
16,174 fens at Madison
boys from the Blub Grass
■
* •
■
will mark homecoi
Pete Dow
i J”.
. Kentucky and Baylor teay
again this season slice 1 -''‘
participants in the 01 w
’ ‘ *’ ” ’4n
vjon
te hy
Holy Cross here Si turiday ni,
while Baylor, chftwpiop of
Southwest conferehcq, was ainliC'
ing the Western division !at Kiniaf
City with a •finakiwiri over iunwi
State.
Adolph Rupp'si Sow theastefn
conference chaaiipions ste|^pf' ,
off to an earlji |13-1 lead Jttt
were never headed, leading
16 at the half. || 1 ?
] Ij! ' ,
* Baylor, scoreless folk; thfc W:
five ; minutes, pullbd up to 144
after intermissionii Hut
cats'staged another api
breezing. [■ nj
Alex Groza, Keritu ik
seven" center, dumped
to lead the scoring-
11 the Wildcats’ AU-jArt erifm sUi
I - lied 12 in additictii t5
a fine floor "game.;
Bill Johnson «f
tered 10 points, b
field goals', the iniaxjim|jm petn|it
4 ted hy the clos|^-lg " J! “ ' “
tuckians.
It was not until! !7J
. gone that Baylor cjon
the field—an ea)s|y
Heathington.
!EF' J j
itchar for
agaiiuti. s
stopping
Conferen.
Dowling 1
Florida Track
I Meet Staged
i*:Ko paces in pre-season practice while
was All-Conference
qt for the Farmers for two
a | conference record of 32 runs
against SMU and did the back
_ for the 1937 Sou
rence A&M nine.
- ing led the league in
Four Aggie baseballera, Sonny
Bollman, Bob Graham, Bill War-
riner . and Joe Savarino, perform
ed on Coach Dowling’s team last
year. The Ponies lost the district
race in a post-season playoff.
Tomorrow’s contest will be the
second for the Junior Aggies this
season. The Farmers Opened the
campaign last week with!a 17-6
wiii over Southwestern Umver-
ch Charlie DeWare his taken
7^ bi IRm
to? »
'IP
if at
|! j
(AI^ESVILLE, Fla—'TP)
attlletes from 20 colleges a
,ning in a track and field mm vnl DeWare was occupied with football
.originated and
foumer world record holder in
track events.
Shown crossing the plate for the Aggies' fiftlrrun against Ohio
State Monday is 3EKE STRANGE, after a single by PECK VASS.
JIM CALVERT is standing at the (date waiting for his turn at bat.
M
Lanky easy-going Percy Beard
one-time Auburn and New York
Athletic Club great, started the
Florida Relays in 1931 ah
the season.
DeWare stated that his jstarting
line-up probably will be the same
which began the Southwestern tilt.
That means John Detyitt will be on
first base, Savarino at second and
Trackmen Meet
Texas
Corp
Florida Relays in 1939 ah an
grly-season proving grounds for Bollman at third. Guy Wallace will
outhern trackmen. The war handh
stopped the event for five yeajrs.
Beard set a new world record
of 14.2 seconds for the 120 yard
hi^h hurdles at the National AAU
nWet in Lincoln, Nebr., in 1;931.
Georgia’s Fonrest (Spec) Tdwna
lotvered the mark to 13.7 second
in 1936 and Rice’s Fred Woplco
h£ s since equaled Townes time;
Running for the NYAC,
- at one time held jthe world mi
fei the 120 yards and 110 meters
^ligh hurdles, the 70 yard ih-
oor, 60 yard indoor, and: 6b >
eter indoor, i j
handle the shortstof) spc
I*
ANERS & DYERS
A&M’s undefeated Track Team
will go to Corpus Christi this week
for a triangular meet with Texas
University and Ride Institute.
Col. Andy declined to make any
statement as to the outcome of the
meet, but he said that the Farm
ers were in good mental and phy
sical shape. *
Rice may rob the Aggies in a
few events. Owl August Erfurth
specializes ju thej high and low
hurdles and may cop these two
races Sutprday. Erfurth was sec
ond to Arkansas’ Clyde Scott in
the conference meet last year.
Another question mark is sprint
er Perrjt Samuels) jBainuels took
the conference lOlD-yard da$h last
year after a very poor start early
in the season. In. addition, Allen
Lawler is temporarily lost to the
Longhorn raters because of an ap
pendectomy a few weeks ago.
The week-end following this meqt
the -Farmers Vdll ltiM%'el to forty
Formers and Wildcats is jslated to * cres ^ Steers in the
™ place in thcf University of Texas Relays:
. ' '".7, i ■
.! -V llV
^ iso m* u
tppWlii
.... SSC'»
• 6 , t j 25JS S 11 *
IMJ IJ?? ' aiB |3 BG«J
li6 " 1 . *5119 s ?S2 lSh8 ^
. eie if*'ISE *sw » BS '
liSa SiBtiB \ia9»
.pajKii S8 !S “ ll"
jijd SHi»» r
: ^:au n» »i| :pL?|L'8
iili si: siifts: i v:
■ th .1 ■■
Athletic Chief
Of Vittanova
* On Campus
Willjhm Connelly, director of
athletics at Villinova is now on the
A&M Campus completing jarrande|
meats for the football gaine scl ie-
dule between the Aggies ajnd .Wi d-*
dtts in Philadelphia next Sept. 8.
Connelly said, *%e ane proud
to be scheduled against a team
like the Tbafts Aggie eleiven and
hoP|i||A this will be tlhe first
of' many games between the two
'Wtfss-hi
Farr
take
Pennsylvania stadium, ! Franklin
j Field] ■ fT .. T
Franklin Field has a capacity of
72,600 ,apd some 50,000 to 60,000
spectators ai^, expected tjo see the
clasih,' This is the first big college
game of the year there and no
otheiH spbrting event has been sche
duled Sor-that dayi«fc - ] . - * T.
Villinova is located 14 miles west
of ■ Philadelphia and thoiigh it ik
a Cathhlic institution, an estimated
one-fourth of the students are non-
Catholics. A Catholic was elected
captain of the football team laqt
year for the first time in eight
years.
A proponent of the T forma-
on 4 Villanova last season won
>x games, lost two, and tied two
24t7 decision to the
Sports Calendar
Wednesday— Baseball game
at 3 p. ra. against Ohio State.
Thursday— Fish . Baseball
team plays Austin High School.
ers Limit Ca
End
T ■ j j ?T
ANDA MATULA
Bunching their hits neatly in two seperate innifks,
Ohio State Buckeyes took their second straight gart^ froi
the Texas Aggies Tuesday afternoon by a score ofi (
The game was an anti-dimax to Monday’s strugglf
only nine innings and lasting two and a half hours.
The Aggies’ lack of base hits kept them fjrom
Only four bingles were poled by —i—t-
the Farmers. Little Red Burdltfc I "truck out four <rf the B
who has been the slugging standby tare him. In the fi^st ii
in the past four games, again led Ohm team greeted Fret*
the hitting department Out of foui <juick hits and scoi-ed on
times at bat, he banged out two Aggies, not to be outd
hits, one a double. Jim Calvert an§i med two hits in thgir h
Russell Mays picked Up the other'
two hits. Seven Aggies died on the
bases.
Boby Fretz started for the Ag
gies and completed the game. He
gave up four bases on balls and
brought in
' '
Mr
.•if ! i
H;
Hr I '
11
; r
first and
the score.
Buckeye starting pity
Dick Magato^ In the flf
he was relieved by Genic
who was the winning
Both Buckeye hurlers shq
f r. W 5
Bro
1'H
••!
*
4.
to keep tRe
for the er
jl
l'ball game until the
James Campbell,
fielder, beat opt a
land stole sec-
_JPHiSte next-two
■ to- fhre ^im. Shortstop Bob
d, j who; was tosse<l oi(t of
ganie, sent - a double
10ft field fence
red. The rally
as Raymond Ge'
sitigle into center jfiel
»me in.
inning, Allen Aarr
nil walked, then went to third on
a hard hit single to left field by
pitcher Gene Brown. He hesita
te!, then scored on Stan Holmig’s
rXihU.
by
■7'
l ^"
jTSR’o 0 2 0 1 111 ,
1 0 Q 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 4 ! t'
batteries; tbf A&M—Fretz am|f'
Calvert: For Ohio State—Magatb,
JMwn, Dudley, Ranz. T ..
Official: P«gh, Guerna, .Colson.
ime time: !
Guerra, Cojson.
hours, 29 minutes.
OVERS FUR
MIG.
iltmreii
1 "
1
—
> -I!
Vr 7
4-
P4
! ‘ ir t!’ h I : ■ V
Ready-Mad
dropping a 24-7 decision to the
University of Kentucky in the
Knights of Columbus Bow]
Cleveland.
The Wildcats began a fpur-weeks
spring training period last Wednes
day and will take up again August
18, in preparation for tljie opener
with the Aggieji. Nineteen letter-
men reported for practice.
TCU Wins 10 to 8;
TjijfTTjy ' j
FORT WORTH,! Texas, March 23
UP)—Texas Chrisjuan University’s
baseball team broke loose for six
runs in the fifth lihning yesterday
and went on to defeat the Univer
sity of Minnesota, 10-8.
Minnesota’s big 1 inning was the
fourth when it scored Si* runs.
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