The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 21, 1961, Image 4
Page 4 THE BATTALION College Station, Texas March,21, 1961 Ags Shine In Only Home Meet Of Year The Aggie thin-clads made an Impressive showing last Saturday in their only track meet at home as they decisively defeated Fvice and LSU. A&M racked up 72 points in 16 events to 57 V 2 for LSU and Rice’s 40 y 2 . The Cadets took six first places while LSU won six and Rice took four. The one important aspect that helped the Ags was their amazing depth, mostly with the help of the sophomores, as they continued to stack up the second and third prizes. In the first dash of the meet, the Aggies zipped to a fine time of U .5 in the 440-yard relav as Ed Williams fought off Rice’s Tay lor Jones on the home-stretch for the victory. The Aggies almost made a clean sweep in the one-mile run as E. L. Ener won over Thad Crooks, Mal colm Hardee and LSU’s Glen Hart- sell in the time of 4:26.5. Hardee and Hartsell tied for third. Crooks, who won the 880-yard run with the time of 1:55.8 and ran a fine leg on the second place mile relay team, fell down on the final curve SUMMARY 440-yard relay: 1—A&M (Roberts, Bor- nak, Clark, Williams). 2—Rice. 3—LSU. Time 41.5. Shot put: 1—Bnndaries, LSU (55-3). 2— tin, A&M (50-2 1/2 LSU (4913'5/8) Tiomann, A&M (50-2 1/2). 3—Hernandez, 4—Hoppe, A&M (48- 1 1/2). One-mile run: 1—Enor, A&M. 2—- Crooks, A&M. 3-4—.(tie) Hardee, A&M and Hartsell, LSU. Time 4:23.5. 440-yard dash: 1—Hollingshead, Rice. 2—Windham, Rice. 3—Tedford, A&M. 4— O’Neill, LSU. Time 48.7. 100-yard dash: 1—Fornaris, LSU. 2—■ Clark, A&M. 3—Jones, Rice. 4—Constant, LSU. Time 9.8. 120-yard high hurdles: 1—Durham, LSU. 2—Charlton, Rice. 3—Bradley, Rice. 4— Rippstein, A&M. Time 14.4. 880-yard run: 1—Crooks, A&M. 2— Clearman, LSU. 3—Kerenek, A&M. 4— Hardee, A&M. Time 1:55.8. High Jump: —Daniel, A&M (6-2). 2-3— (tie) Frazer and Pawlik, A&M (6-0). 4— Constant, LSU’ (5-10). 220-yard dash: 1—Fornaris, LSU. 2— Jones, Rice. 3—Constant, LSU. 4—Dornak, A&M. Time 21.8. Discus: 1—Tiemann, A&M (143-2). 2— Bandaries, LSU (141-0). 3—Robiuson, A&M (139-3). 4—Hernandez, LSU (133-3). 220-yard low hurdles: 1—Durham, LSU. 2—Byington, LSU. 3—Bradley, Rice. 4— Rippstein, A&M. Time 24.4. Javelin: 1—Edwards, Rice (214-8). 2— Brewer, A&M (191-8). 3—John Long, A&M (180-0). 4—Oliver, A&M (177-2 1/2). Broad jump: 1—Hanson, Rice (22- 111/4). 2—Constant, LSU (22-7 1/8). 3— Arnold, A&M (21-3 1/2). 4—McKeller, LSU (21-2 1/2). Two-mile run: 1—Johnston, A&M. 2— trier, A&M. 3—Hartsell, LSU. 4—Comer, kice. Time 9:48.5. One-mile relay: 1—Rice (Windham, Cherry, Jones, Hollingshead). 2—A&M. 3—LSU. Time 3:18.1. Pole vault: 1—Harris, LSU (14-71/2). 2—Fatheree (13-8). 3-4—-(tie) McDaniel, A&M and Hanson, Rice (13-4). Tuesday = “NORTH TO ALASKA”' with John Wayne plus “A DOG OF FLANDERS” with David Ladd PALACE Bryan 2-SS79 LAST DAY “BLACK SUNDAY” STARTS TOMORROW Glenn Ford & Donald O’Connor in “CRY FOR HAPPY” QUEEN NOW SHOWING AH Passes Discontinued 2 Performances Daily 2 p. m.-7:30 p. ADMISSION Day NITE (Sat. & Sun.) MATINEE ADULTS :1.00 ADULTS $1.25 CHILDREN. .50 CHILDREN .50 Students (AH Shows) 80c of the mile run, got up and with a tremendous second effort, fin ished second. In the 100-yard dash, it was a fight to the tape among five men —James Fornaris of LSU, A&M’s Bob Clark, Taylor Jones of Rice, Doug Constant of LSU and Curt Roberts of A&M. Roberts W’as knocked off stride about five yards from the finish and. came in fifth. The others finished in the above order and Fornaris was clocked in 9.8. Running in their first mile relay of the year, the Aggies finished second about eight yards behind | the wanner, Rice, w'ho posted a clocking of 3:18.1. On the team for the Cadets was Gene Dornak, Thad Crooks, Hubert Nelson and George Tedford. The Aggies journey to Beau mont this week for a tri-meet 11 with Lamar Tech and Northwest Louisiana. The Fish venture over to Austin where they will meet I the Texas Shorthorns and the Uni- | versity of Houston Kittens. History Could Repeat in Cage Championship By DON WEISS Associated Press Sports Writer KANSAS CITY—History could repeat itself in the NCAA basket ball championships here this week end. In 1957, the last time the cham pionships were held in spacious, imposing Municipal Auditorium, North Carolina—then rated the No. 1 team in basketball, played second-ranked Kansas in the final. By the margin of a single point in the third five-minute overtime, the Tarheels upheld the validity of the pollsters, 54-53. Through the luck of the draw, No. 1 could be matched against No. 2 next Saturday when the 'NCAA tournament, which began a week ago with 24 teams involved, reaches its climax. Ohio State, top-ranked and the defending champion, must get past St. Joseph’s (Pa.) in Friday’s semifinals. Cincinnati, second- ranked, has Utah’s Skyline Con ference champions as its semi final hurdle. The way the Cincinnati Bearcats have been looking forward to a crack at Ohio State, it might take a triple overtime to pry them apart. Although they’re practic ally neighbors, the schools haven’t met in basketball since 1922. Maroons Whip Whites In Annual Spring Tilt Jerry Rogers a score for the maroons Baseballers Tie Texas, 6 - 6; Three Straight Games Slated The sun went down to soon last Friday in Austin as A&M and Texas battled to a 6-6, 10-inning deadlock in both teams’ Southwest Conference opener. A&M chalked up two runs at their first time at hat, but Texas evened things in their half of the first inning. The game w^as looking good for the Cadets as they picked up one run in the third and two more in the fifth. This comfortable lead was short-lived as Texas came back in the seventh inning to take a 6-5 lead. All scoring was ended in the Terry Cobb poled an inside-the- park homerun that Texas’ “moun tain goat” outfielders couldn’t get in time. The Aggies have a full week of baseball here through Thursday as they meet Baylor today and the Minnesota Gophers Wednesday and Thursday. Baylor is an expected challenger for the SWC crown this year along with Texas and A&M. The Bears at the top of the conference are as they topped the Rice Owls last Thursday, 9-4. The win left Bay lor with a 6-0 season record. eighth as Aggie second baseman Minnesota is the defending BOX SCORE TEXAS (6) AB R H RBI A&M (6) AI R H RBI Adams ss 2 1 1 0 J. Singley ss 5 0 0 0 a—Bethea ss 1 1 1 0 Burton 3b 4 2 2 0 Rigby 2b 4 1 1 2 Barber If 4 1 1 1 Skinner 3b 6 0 0 1 Hall rf 4 2 1 0 Brazelton lb 5 1 1 2 Puckett c 5 0 3 1 Wakeland rf 2 0 0 0 Davis cf 4 0 1 1 Alien rf-cf 3 0 1 0 Watkins cf 1 0 0 0 Knutsdn ef-lf 4 0 0 0 Hickerson lb 3 0 2 0 Rossen If 4 0 0 0 Cobb 2b 5 1 1 1 c—New 1 0 0 0 E. Singley p 1 1 0 0 Thrash rf 0 0 0 0 Collins p 2 0 0 0 Ginn c 1 0 0 0 Warren p 1 0 0 0 Pinckney c 1 1 0 0 — — — — Callaway p 2 0 1 • 0 Totals 39 6 11 4 Grenewald p 0 1 0 0 A&M 201 020 010 0—6 b—Hipps 1 0 0 0 Texas 200 000 400 0—6 Belcher p 0 0 0 0 ip H R ER BB SO — — — — Singley 2 1/3 3 2 1 1 1 Totals 37 6 7 5 .. Collins 4 1/3 2 4 3 6 1 Warren 3 1/3 2 0 0 4 3 a—Walked for Adams in 5th : b— filed Callaway 4 1/3 8 5 3 4 5 out for Grenewald in 8th; c—fanned for Grenewald 3 2/3 2 1 1 0 2 Rosson in 9th. Belcher 2 1 9 0 1 2 ATTENTION AGGIES! Announcing the opening of the most modern laundry in the Southwest Featuring: ★ Expert laundry and finishing of MILITARY SHIRTS MILITARY PANTS DRESS SHIRTS ★ One Day Service on laundry & cleaning ★ Two locations to serve you ”38 W. L. AYERS LAUNDRY & CLEANERS 313 College and W. L. AYERS “One Hour Martinizing” 1315 Texas Ave. at Coulter NCAA champion and left last Sat urday for a tour of Texas. This year’s Minnesota squad has eight returning lettermen from the 1960 championship squad. The Gophers will split into two teams for their “visit” and one faction or the other will be playing every day. They will meet Texas, St. Mary’s of San Antonio, Fort Sam Hous ton, A&M and Houston. The supposedly underdog Ma roon team killed a last-minute White drive Saturday to grab a 12-7 victory in the Annual Maroon- White Intrasquad game on Kyle Field. The White drew first blood with 3:45 left in the first quarter after Eddie Van Dyke skirted left end for a touchdown. Mike Clark con verted to make the score 7-0. The drive had covered 40 yards in nine plays behind the quarterbacking of John- Erickson. In the second quarter Pat Lath am intercepted an Erickson pass arid returned it to the White four yard line. A 15-yard penalty did n’t slow the Maroon very much though, as in five plays Jerry Rog ers romped over from the one-yard line for the first Maroon score. Bob Caskey was the big man in covering the ground to the goal as he ran the ball three straight times for 13 yards. The Maroons final score came late in the fourth quarter as Jim Linnstaedter fumbled a Babe Craig punt when he was hit hard by Ray Kubala on the White 32- yard line. It took the Maroons only three plays to turn the break into a game winning score. The highlight of the 32-yard drive was a leaping catch by Latham on the three yard line. Two plays later Ronnie Led better was in the end zone for a touchdown. The Whites were threatening in the final seconds behind the pass ing of Erickson, but Jim Keller pulled the threat up short as he intercepted a pass in the end zone with eight seconds left on the clock. Leading ground gainer of the game was a promising soph-to-k, George Hargett from Linden. Har gett picked up 41 yards on 10 car ries while Van Dyke had the same amount on 11 carries. Coach Jim Myers cited the play! of both Brice and Erickson ai quarterback and Guard Jim Phil lips and Center Kubala. BLUEBONNET PETITE PRIX Sports Car Race BRYAN AFB MARCH 25th & 26th 3.53 MILE COURSE LAID OUT FOR MAXIMUM SPEED Races start: SATURDAY AT 2:45 SUNDAY AT NOON Race Sponsored by— BRYAN JUNIOR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE and SPORTS CAR CLUB OF AMERICA For The Best Banquet Service Anywhere Plan Your Banquet At THE TRIANGLE RESTAURANT £ FOR CHOICE DATES PLAN NOW DIAL TA 2-1352 Triangle Restaurant 3606 S. College Tareyton delivers the flavor... r - ■'■A THE TAREYTON RING MARKS THE REAtTRlINGf Here's one filter cigarette that’s really different! The difference is this: Tareyton’s Dual Filter gives you a unique inner filter of ACTIVATED CHARCOAL, definitely proved to make the taste of a cigarette mild and smooth. It works together with a pure white outer filter—to balance the flavor elements in the smoke. ACTIVATED CHARCOAL inner filter Tareyton delivers-and you enjoy-the best taste of the best tobaccos. : '• .wlL DUAL FILTER Tareyton Pure white outer filter Product of <J/ie J^nwiceun — Jo&uvur is our middle name © * i Volo N Si 0 R( Moveir eling a will sp tordiall; They auspices Christia Christia midst o lution. Juare lution b control now a 1 sity of Mens represei violent and in t ly invol ment. / sity, he the Yal of abse Mens he pres {roup \ toon at ler, Th of the ment, ii World’s tion. Also IN Tc Dr. I Alfred ment of Institut Sylvani: of Cher Zwoli and ass ly, of t stitute Chemis The . their n negie I ects co: dynami tons i Pounds, A pc Buildin wive f Project Zwol chemist profess additioi tors of Zwol till ; COME DOWN LOU'S WAY TRADE YOUR WAY I