Recheck Gives Aggies Cougars With MILER PAUL HARRINGTON—who once again captured the four-lap race and ran second in the two-mile as the Aggies tied the University of Houston Cougars, 68-68, on Kyle Field Saturday. The University of Houston cinder men left Aggieland with a dual meet victory over Coach Frank G. (Colonel Andy) Anderson’s final Kyle Field appearance, but a re check of the totals brought the score to 68-G8 yesterday. A&M’s Fish edged the UH Kit tens, 63-62, with a victory in the mile relay. Colonel Andy, who will retire at the end of the current season, saw his Aggies for the last time on the cinder oval of Kyle Field. Ander son is in his 25th season as Aggie thinlyclad mentor. The Cougars thought they had wrapped up the dual affair in the next to last event of the day—the low hurdles — with Jim Bingham and Joe Bob Smith taking the first two places for a nine-point lead with only the mile relay remaining. A&M’s fine weight man, Herman Johnson, and the Houston sprinter, Jerry Beck, were the only double winners. Johnson captured the shot put with a 50-9% heave and slung the platter 153-8. Beck strode the century in 9.6 and took the 220 with a 20.7 timing. Cadets Take Baylor in 2nd On Smoiherman’s Homer Dependable J i m Smotherman i The Baptists, one strike away I frame with the Bears scoring their lashed a Rudy Roughton pitch over from defeat, tied Friday’s -contest pair on Jacky Davis’ four-bagger SUMMARIES VARSITY RESULTS 440-yard relay—1) Houston (Tim Lun- day, Jimmy Bigham, Jerry Beck, Bobby Diebitsch ; 2) A and M. Time 42.4. Shot put—A) Herman Johnson A and M (bO-O^/i) ; 2) Buster Johnson, Houston, (48- SYi) ; 3) Fred Hartman, A and M (47-8). One-mile run—1) Paul Harrington, A and M; 2) Don Loadman, Houston; 3) A1 Bosman, Houston. Timg 4:29-6. 440-yard dash—1) Tony Whittington, Houston; 2) Eddie Bussa, A and M; 3) David Rickey, Houston. Time— :49.9. 100-yard dash -1) Jerry Beck, Houston; 2) Tim Lunday, Houston ; 3) King Buck ner, A and M. Time— :9.6. Discus—1) Herman Johnson, A and M (153-8) : 2) Lee Newman, A and M (153- 6) ; 3) James Roberts, A and M (140-0). Pole vault—1) Winton Thomas, A and M (13-6%) ; 2) James Clark, A and M (12-8) ; 3) Sam Nave, A and M (9-0). High hurdles—1) Earl Kaiser, Houston ; 2) Merrill Witt, A and M ; 3) Joe Bob Smith, Houston. Time -:15.0. 880-yard run—1) Don Loadman, Hous ton ; 2) —Jack McRoberts, Houston ; 3) Leo Weise, Houston. Time—1:58.7. High jump—1) Fritzie Connally, A and M (6-14) : Bobby Carter, A and M (5- 10%) ; 3) Frank Madura, A and M (5- 9%). 220-yard dash— 1) Jerry Beck, Houston ; 2) Tim Lunday, Houston ; 3) Ronnie Kirk- patrick, A and M. Time—:20.7. Javelin—1) Fred Hardman, A and M' (168-1) ; 2) John Henry, A and M (162-1 ; 3) Dale Elmore, A and M (149-6). Broad jump l) Jack Smyth, Houston (23-31%) ; 2) Dale Elmore, A and M (22- 6%) ; 3) Fritzie Connally, A and M (22-%.. Two-mile run—1) Mario Garcia, Hous ton; 2) Paul Harrington, A and M; 3) Leonard Penny, Houston. Time- 9 :59.2. Low hurdles—1) Jim Bigham, Houston ; 2) Joe Bob Smith, Houston; 3) James Roberts, A and M. Time :23.5. Mile relay—1) A and M. (Ronnie Kirk patrick, Eddie Bussa, Bob McKnight, Andy Erisman) ; 2) Houston. Time 3:21.6. FRESHMAN RESULTS 440-yard relay—1) A and M (Buzzy Muenter, Charles Echols, Ed Lewis, Bill Palmer) ; 2) Houston. Time— :44.0. Discus—1) Bobby Weise, Houston (155- 3) ; 2) Owen Hill, A t)nd M (144-10) ; 3) Spiro Cosse, A and M (131-2). One-mile run—1) John Macs, Houston; 2) Reginald Darley, Houston ; 3) Freddie Dulock, A and M. Time—4 :17.4. Thp Hfittnlinn College Station (Bruzo* (,aunty), lexu* Tuesday, April' 2, 1957 PAGE 3 Williams Assails Marines 440-yard dash—1) Wjlliam Palmer, A and M ; 2) William Hajovsky, A and M ; 3) Winford Mauldin, A and M. Time — :52.5. 100-yard dash -1) Jere Bice, Houston ; 2) Joe Cleveland, Houston; (3) Arnold Leunes, A and M. Time— :10.0. Pole vault 1) Donnie Douglas, A and M (11-6) ; 2) Harold Hooks, A and M (10-0). High hurdles—1) Olen Garrison, A and M; 2) Ray Butler, Houston; 3) Hillyer Ward, Houston. Time :15.4. 880-yard run—1) John Macy, Houston ; 2) Richard Hickman, A and M ; 3) John Blake, A and M. Time—2 :01.3. High jump—1) Tie between Charles Merka and Bobby Thomas of A and M and Ray Butler of Houston (5-10%). Shot put 1 ) Eddie McDowell, Houston (48-1) ; 2) Gale Oliver, A and M (43-9) ; 3) Henry Bonorden, A and M (41-9%), 220-yard dash—1) Jere Bice, Houston; 2) Joe Cleveland, Houston; 3) Charles Echols, A and M. Time— :21.7. Javelin—l)Steve Slonac, Houston (108- 6); 2) Jackie Crawford, Houston (159- 2%) ; 3) Bobby Weise, Houston (142-10). Broad jump—1) Ed Lewis, A and M (22-11%) ; 2) Manuel Rodrigues, A and M (20-6%) ; 3) Hillyer Ward, Houston (20 4). Low hurdles—1) Hillyer Ward, Houston ; 2) Olen Garrison, A and M; 3) Ray But ler, Houston. Time— :24.9. Mile relay—1) A and M (William Pal mer, Winford Maudlin, William Hajovsky, Buzzy Muenter). Only entry. Time—3:36.7. SARASOTA, Fla. GP)—Baseball star Ted Williams affirmed today that he told a New Orleans editor the lat Sen. Robert A. Taft (R- Ohio) was a “phony” and that he had “no use for the Marine Corps” as the result of his recall to service in 1953. “I’ll tell you about the Marines,” he said. “They got the government to appropriate a lot of money. They said they had all the pilots they needed but needed planes for them. WHITE BOXER GYM SHORTS $1.00 Student Co-op Store NEW SUMMER SLACKS for CASUAL WEAR Reasonably Priced Cool, Comfortable SPORT SHIRTS in Silk and Cotton Reasonably Priced A&M MEN s bnUP 103 Main North Gate DICK RUBIN, ’59 ,Owner Oh, Spike I'm So Happy You're Csoinq To the boards with a pair of mates on in the ninth and won it in the base to give the Aggies a 4-2 vic tory over the Baylor Bears Sat urday and a split in the series. CIRCLE TUES. & WED. “Bad Seed” Nancy Kelly —Also— “No Place to Hide” twelfth, 4-3, putting their South west Conference record at 2-1. A&M stands 1-2. Baylor scored twice in the ninth after two were out, then scored an other after midnight for their win, beating Donnie Hullum for his first decision of the year. Smotherman’s blast gave the Ag gies of Coach Beau Bell a three- run cushion. Wendell Reed drove home Dickie Thomas with A&M’s fourth and final run in the fourth THRU WEDNESDAY Brynn M* LAST DAY 'COLUMBIA PICTURES presents THE 'UC |L GRANT WILLIAMS RANDY STUART PAUL LANGTON QUEEN TODAY One Matinee Performance 2 P.M. Evening Show Doors Open 7:30 Show Starts 8:00 _ GEORGE M STEVENS' with Jerry Mallett aboard in U— sixth. BOX SCORE A.&M. ib h po Reed, 3b 1 0 Mullins, 2b . O' 1 Tuttle, If < Smotherman, rf 4 4 Harrington, c ....4 1 5 C Schaper, lb 4 0 0 C Munday, p ‘3 0 0 2 Hullum, p 1 1 0 1 Fraga, . 3 ■ ' •*—a .y \ 7 V4, Vt.4* jA ik. V- ■ V„ 1 . ^ ■a. u. kJ V .V L »- N-e* ' A Thomas, cf 4 Totals 33 6 27 10 Baylor ab U po a Traylor, 2b 5 1 1 4 Marberry, ss 5 0 0 3 Mallett, cf 2 1 0 0 Davis, rf ; 4 1 2 0 Davis, rf 4 1 2 0 Oliver, c 3 0 10 0 Sisk, If 3 0 0 0 Jones, 3b 3 0 1 6 Berry, lb 4 0 13 0 Roughton, p 4 2 0 1 Totals 33 5 27 14 A&M 300 100 000—4 Baylor 000 002 000—2 Runs—Reed, Mullins, Smotherman, Thom as, Mallett Davis. Error—Roughton, Sisk, Marberry, Fraga. Runs batted in—Smoth erman 3, Reed, Davis 2. Two-base hit— Mallett. Home run—Smotherman, Davis. Sacrifice-r-Tuttle. Stolen base —- Sjsk. Earned runs—A&M 2, Baylor 2. Base on balls—Off Munday 3, Hullum 2, Roughton 2. Strikeouts—By Munday 4, Hullum 1, Roughton 10. Left on bases—A&M 5, Bay lor 9. Wild pitch—Roughton. Pitcher’s record, 2 runs 5 hits off Munday in 6% innings; 0 and 0 off Hullum in 2 1/3. Win ning pitcher—Munday. Losing pitcher -— Roughton. TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY “The Kettles in the Ozarks’ with MARJORIE MAIN —Phis— “Yellow Mountain” with LEX BARKER U U 4:; % a TODAY & WEDNESDAY "©© TO SEE 'ISBFiyP"... Crowther, N. Y Times I ... means Trouble! & PRODUCTION FROM THE NOVEL BY EDNA FEEDER ^ sv Warner .Bros, .nWarnerColori ELIZABETH ROCK JAMES TAYLOR • HUDSON • DEAN “This French melodrama of a daring Paris jewel rob bery contains a 30-minute sequence of wordless movie-mak ing that is the most suspenseful ever filmed” — New York Critics Review “The Colonel’s lady and Rosie O’Grady are sisters under the skin.” They all want security and Spike’s doll, Rosie is a case in point. Psychologists say that one of a woman’s first concerns security and that she either consciously or uncon sciously looks for it in her man. That’s You, dad! One of the best ways to provide for future security is to take advantage of the National College Life Plan of investments and savings. We deal only with college men which enables us to provide a better savings plan PLUS a fine investment program. 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