The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 31, 1953, Image 3

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    Sint
^i|*ack Team
3rd litle
Tuesday, March 31, 1953
THE BATTALION
Page 3
rht
an
r a
ng
The Si :
State Colij^m /• ^
Nv ‘ll perfJ i $
MSC Ba; L - S1 - ^ '
Organi:
army catac-k tc;ini won its
World W.Texas -Relays title
have a^rday Iwith 1 153/4
before lBt' r runr r-up 'Texas,
zations arpr not only emerg’-H
Their inner .for the third !!l
around sp the|shot put and
tunes and )U t also set a new
Director of 56 feet, 23/^ in-
rick of tied his own record,
formerly, of 54 feet, 7 % I
church am first places made
radio in lint man for the re-
Miss Glints.
Antonio, , . , , .
her Aggie taking
; in the relays was
3, who soared 1.2
in the pole vault,
n Spradlin was se
tt roup.
of
nd
id
iee Wins
ne trophy for the
ilete pf the relays
fansas distance ace,
/ho probably could
, the message to
the [time. Santee
of four winning re-
of which broke the
record in the sprint
The four mile relay
f .the American mark
jiile relay team tied
jays mark.
Jents, j Aggie teams
in the 440 relay,
wo-mile relay, third
prOVe| L y, third in the mile
Style If: the distance medley
nd in the four mile
’oint Makers
point makers in the
ition events were
ho was third in the
shot and fifth in the discus events;
Dan Pratt, fourth in the shot;
James Blaine, third in the 3,000
meter run; Pete Mayeaux and Roy
Dollar, third and sixth in the javel-
Bobby Ragsdale, second in the
bi’oad jump and Ed Thomas, tied
for fourth in the high jump.
The Aggies demonstrated their
team strength when they produced
point makers in 13 out of the 17
university division events, compet
ing against a collection of the na
tion’s best track-performers.
Winners in the four track meets
entered thus far this season, the
Aggies journey to' Corpus Christ!
to meet Texas in a dual meet Sat-
oirday.
POLE VAULT ACES—Malcolm Marks (right) and Glenn
Spradlin took first and second places in the Texas Relays
pole vault event. Marks cleared 13’ 6” and Spradlin 13’
to furnish the only one-two finish for any school competing
in the university division of the relays.
LAST DAY
<®:ure Stai-ts—
■ %04 - 4:48 1 6:32
\ \L6 - 10:00
Mi
m
— CARTOON
h
•WEDNESDAY
JftlUANDf
i — CARTOON
RCLE
Ideal
and; 4-1250
in su;'
of yo.
;ght & WED.
Under 12 Admitted
ten Accompanied By
OUT LAW
OTHER”
Starring
key Rooney
and
nda, Hendrix
FS THURSDAY
STEAKS Cesar Marie
'T ROMERO-WINDSOR
ALK WITH
"ZOMBIE”
r Starring
"raiieis Dee
,, .and
mi Conway
First Annual
High
Held
School Golf Tourney
Here April 3 and 4
The First Annual Invitational
High School Golf Tournament will
be held on the A&M golf course
this Friday and Saturday, April 3
and 4.
The high school golfers will play
a total of 72 holes, playing 36
each day.
Six trophies will be given, three
team championship trophies and
three individual champion trophies.
The Aggie golf course is a par
70, 6,700 yard course. The course
has just undergone a face lifting
which lowered the par 71, 6,715
yard course.
A&M GOLF COURSE—The first annual A&M state high
school golf meet will be held here Friday and Saturday.
Today ^ Wednesday
M-G-M’s love and
laugh riotj . //'.
GLENN FORD
-^•RUTH ROMAN k
'" DENISE DARCEL /
CLOSED
THURSDAY & FRIDAY
Bryan £*££79
LAST DAY
M-G-M presents
. BARBARA _ BARRY
Stanwyck Sullivan
Ralph Meeker
STARTING WED.
fREDERICX BRISSON prisints
Rosalind Russel! A,« ,
Paul Douglas ■
Marie Wilson
\WtkWE AT]
QUEEN
WED. — THURS.
“PROMOTER”
—with—
Alex Guinness
EASTER
HOLIDAYS
Going Some
Place?
LET US SUGGEST —
HART
SCHAFFNER
& MARX'
SLACKS
*15.00 to *25.00
The beauties
in color,
weaves
and fit.
We have
sizes
and colors
you want.
Leon B. Weiss
Boyett St.
North Gate
Also a new Pro shop between
the new 9 and 18 greens has been
completed.
Balanced Course
“The new course is better bal
anced,” said Joe Fagan, pro mana
ger of the golf course.
No bad weather is expected for
the tournament , and everyone is
invited to come out and watch the
players, who are the best high
school boys in the state, no admis
sion will be charged.
“The course is in fine shape for
the tournament,” Fagan announc
ed The course is three years old
with long grass greens.
The tournament will be medal
competition, which means the golf
er with the fewest strokes for the
72 holes is the winner.
The entry fee for the tournament
is ten dollars and will cover hous
ing and meals, which will be pro
vided by the college.
“So far we have receivec^62 en
tries,” Fagan said, “and we ex
pect a field of 100.”
The classes for which the tro
phies will be given are interschol
astic league, class AA, class A,
and class B.
Some of the entries received are
from Lamar high school of Hous
ton, Edinburg, Freeport, Beau
mont, and Fort Worth.
A&M Golfing Team
Leaves for TCU
The A&M Golfing team left for
Fort Worth, yesterday for a match
with the TCU golfers.
This will be the second confer
ence match of the year for the Ag
gies. Last week the Cadet links
squad defeated the Baylor squad
in their first conference match.
After the TCU match, the Ag
gies will rest until April 8, when
they take on the University of
Houston golfers here.
Making the Fort Worth trip for
the Farmers are Bill Baker, John
Barrett, Homer Calloway, R. D.
Carpenter and Malcolm Douglas.
Aggies
Games
Drop Two
To Gophers
A&M dropped two games to the
University of Minnesota baseball
team, Friday and Saturday.
In the first game, Aggie Pitcher
Melvin Work pitched good ball,
but errors gave the Gophers two
unearned runs. The Cadets bat
ters were unable to bunch their
seven hits to produce a score.
Paul Giel, the Gopher’s hurler,
struck out 16 men in winning the
first game 2-0. Both Work and
Giel went the whole distance, with
First Game
MINNESOTA (2) AH
Wallfred, cf 4
Yackel. rf 3
Elder, 2b 4
Steiger, c 3
Sullivan 3b 4
Anderson, lb 4
McCrudden, rf 3
Cloutier, ss 4
Giel, p 3
Totals 32
A&M (0) AB
Munnerlyn, lb 4
Leissner, 2b 4
Lastelick. 3b 3
Miller, rf 1 0
1. Verble, rf 3
Farmer, cf 4
Byrd, If 4
Williams, c 3
2. Ellis 1
Heft, ss 2
3. Parrish 1
Work, p 3
27
O
8
3
1
0
0
5
1
7
0
1
0
1
7 27 12
Totals 23
1. Substituted for Miller in the 3rd.
2. Ellis struck out for Williams in the 9th.
3. Parrish struck out for Heft in the 9th.
Minnesota 110 000 000—2
A & M 000 000 000—0
R—Wallfred, Steiger. E—Leissner, Las
telick, Heft. RBI—Steiger. Geil. 2b—
Giel, Farmer. LOB—Minnesota 6, A & M
8. BE offGiel 1, Work 1. SO by—Giel
16, Work 7. H&R off—Work 6 and 2 in
9; Giel 7 and in 9. Wild Pitch,—Work.
Winner—Giel. Loser—Work. Umpires—-
Lary and Sullivan. Time: 2:10.
Weick, Adamson
Return From Meet
Dickie Weick, A&M’s star breast
stroker, placed 14 among the top
100 yard breaststroke swimmers of
the' nation in the National AAU
swimming meet in Columbus, Ohio.
Weick swam the distance in a
time of 1:03. 6 The winning time
was 1.00. 7, chalked up by Bob
Clemons of Illinois State.
Weick recently won the 100 yard
and the 200 yard breaststroke in
the SWC swimming meet held at
Rice. Weick broke the old SWC
breaststroke record, held by John
Crawford of Texas.
Swimming coach Art Adamson,
a member of the National Rules
Committee, attended the annual
meeting held in Columbus this
year.
Adamson was head timer for the
swimming meet. Adamson did not
reveal any rules changes for the
1954 season, when he and Weick
returned early Monday evening.
SUPPLIES
To Fit the Need
For Every Home
Battle’s
PLUMBING CO.
109 Walton Dr. Ph. 4-4686
College Station
Giel giving up seven hits and Work
allowing six safeties.
In the first inning of the first
game, the Gophers 1 got one run on
two singles and two errors. In the
second inning of the same game,
the Gophers got their other ran an
error and a double. In the third,
fifth and eighth innings, the Ag
gies got two men on but could not
bring them around.
Gophers Score
The Gophers scored in the second
frame of the second game on a
double, fielders choice and an er
ror. In the third frame, Gopher
(See BASEBALL, Page 4)
Second Game
Box Score:
MINNESOTA (8) AB II O A
Yackel, rf 2 1 0 0
1. Buro, rf 2 1 0 OY-
Wallfred, cf 1 0 1 0
2. Koemptgen, cf 4 0 1 0
Elder, 2b 5 3 2 1
Stieger, c 5 0 10 0
Sullivan, 3b 4 2 0 1
3. McCrudden, If 0 0 0 0
Anderson, lb 5 3 6 3
Shmitt, lf-3b 4 2 1 1
Cloutier, ss 5 1 4 3
Streeter, p 4 1 2 0
Totals 41 14 27 9
A&M (2) AB H O A
Munnerlyn, lb 4 0 12 0
Leissner, 2b 3 0 1 2
4. Pollard, 2b 2 0 1 1
Lastelick, 3b 3 1 0 4
Russell, rf 2 0 0 0
5. Verbel, rf 2 0 1 0
Farmer, cf 4 1 1 0
Byrd, If 2 0 1 0
6. Fuchs, If 2 0 0 0
Williams, c ...,1 0 6 0
7. Robinett, c 1 0 1 0
Heft, ss 2 0 3 2
B. Ellis 0 0 0 0
Little, p 0 0 0 1
9. Parrish 1 0 0 0
Hardgrove, p ..1 1 0 1
10. Rowland 1 0 0 0
Paul Giel
Fanned 16 Aggies
Totals 31 3 27 11
1. Buro substituted for Yackel in the 4ts.
2. Koemptgen substituted for Wallfred in
tse 4th.
3. McCrudden ran for sullivan in the 7th
and went into left field.
4. Pollard substituted for Leissner in the
5th.
5. Verbel substituted for Russell in the
5th.
6. Fuchs substituted for Byrd in the 5th.
7. Robinett substituted for Williams in
the 7th.
8. Ellis walked for Heft in the 9th.
9. Parrish struck out for Little in the 3rd.
10. Rowland got a fielders choice for Hard
grove in the 9th.
MINNESOTA 013 000 103—8
A & M . 000 000 002—2
E—.Cloutier, Heft 2. R—Wallfred, Elder,
Sulllivan, McCrudden, Anderson 3, Shmitt,
Robinett, Ellis. RBI—Sullivan. Anderson
2, Shmitt 3, Streeter 2, Munnerlyn, Row
land. 2B—Anderson. HR—Anderson. SB
—McCrudden 2. SH—Buro. LOB—Minne
sota 12, A&M 9. BB off-—Streeter 7, Little
2, Hardgrove 3., SO by—Streeter 10, Little,
1, Hardgrove 4. H&R off—Streeter 3 and
2 in 9, Little 6 and 4 in 3, Hardgrove 8
and 4 in 6. ER off—Streeter' 1, Little
3, Hardgrove 4. DP—Lastelick to Pollard
to Munnerlyn. Winner—Streeter. Loser—
Little. Umpires—Hodge, Griffen. Time:
2:30.
Letsos Wins As
Aggies Suffer
Loss to Rice
Eugene Letsos, A&M’s No.
1 netman, is still undefeated
as Aggies lost to Rice net-
ters 4-2 under terrific heat
here Saturday.
Errorless Letsos showed specta
cular grace while smashing Wayne
Bennett of Rice in straight sets
6-0, 6-1.
Tom West of the Aggies, weak
ened in the final set to lose to
Compton Rees of Rice 6-2., 3-6, and
4-6.
. Cadet Ronald Wolff was beaten
by the Owl’s No. 3 man, Robin
Robinson 6-1, 6-2.
A&M’s Jack Jacobson was down
ed in the final singles match by
Dale. Miller 7-5, 6-3.
Letsos and West, the Aggies
to doubles duo, remained unbeaten
while setting down in the final
sets to over take the Owl’s Rees
and Miller 4-6, 6-0, and 6-3.
Aggies Wolff and Jacobson lost
the No. 2 doubles to Robinson and
Bennett of Rice 6-2, 6-3.
The A&M tennis squad will meet
the University of Texas longhorns
in Austin at 1 p. m. today for
the Aggie’s second conference
match.
EASTER SPECIALS
56c
BELTSVILLE HEN TURKEYS
6 to 8 Libs. Each Per Lb
A&M MEAT LINE BAKING HENS
3 to 5 Lbs. Each Per Lb.
DRESSED — WRAPPED
AND FROZEN
49c
FRYERS
EGGS
A&M College Poultry Plant
Phone 4-9044
Easter Gifts!
FOR MEN ON THE GO!
r €uun
TRAVEL
KIT
Waterproof plastic folding kit
(FITS COAT POCKET)
Ideal for away-from-home use:’,
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pencil, comb. Wonderful, practical
gift for men.
Take Dad a Sport Shirt . . . Mom
some Fancy Writing Paper. Your
little Bud a T-Shirt, and Sis some
College Jewelry. Come in and see
our line of EASTER GIFTS today.
omsioM limit..
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