The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 20, 1961, Image 5

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Bob Korose
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32U Texas Avenue * P. O. Box 888 * Phone: TA 2-3307
BRYAN, TEXAS
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USE OUR CONVENIENT DRIVE IN WINDOW
Open 8 a. m. to 7 p. m. Weekdays
2 p. m- to 6 p. m. Sundays
Eighteen Schools Expected
For Ag Bowling Tourney
THE BATTALION
Thursday, April 20, 1961 College Station, Texas
Page 5
Eighteen schools are expected
to be on hand at the Memorial Stu
dent Center Bowling Lanes this
weekend for the 11th Annual A&M
Intercollegiate Bowling Tourna
ment that starts tomorrow and
lasts through Sunday.
Teams entered include A&M,
Baylor, TCU, New Mexico State,
Sam Houston, Blinn Junior Col
lege, Arlington State, St. Thomas
University, Texas Tech, Texas,
SMU, Mississippi Southern, San
Antonio Junior College, Del Mar,
West Texas State, Lamar Tech,
Rice and University of Houston.
Last year the Aggies shot 2,818
to run away from a field of con
tenders almost as big as the 1961
competitors.
Larry Dantzler
Larry Dantzler paced the Cadet
team victory in the 1960 tourna
ment and will have to defend three
records he established. He scored
in all events with 1,822 pins, sing
les with a 249 and a high series
with a 649. Besides holding these
records, Dantzler is the highest
average for the Cadets with a 192
average. His highest game is a
299 and his highest series is 744.
Probably the highlight of Dantz-
ler’s bowling career was the 1959
American Bowling Congress tourn
ament in St. Louis. He won the
trip by winning the Region IX
Tournament of the Association of
College Unions.
Frank Pearce
The newest member of the Ag
gie Match bowling team this year
is Frank Pearce, a sophomore from
Corpus Christi. Last year Frank
was a member of the Aggie team
that won the Texas Intercollegiate
Bowling Conference, and ran away
with the team event in the 10th
A&M tournament. This year Pearce
sports a fine 180 league average
and is being counted on to help
the cadet keglers win their second
tournament crown.
Bob Korose
The youngest member of the
A&M bowling team is a freshman
3 Cinder Greats
Cited in Texas
By HAROLD V. RATLIFF
Associate Press Sports Writer
Emmet Brunson, long-time track
coach of Rice, was discussing the
stars of the cinder path in Texas.
He agreed that there had been
three truly great ones—Fred Wol
cott of Rice, Bobby Morrow of
Abilene Christian and Eddie South
ern of Texas.
Wolcott isn’t very well known
to the present generation but he
has a big spot in the heart of
every track fan and coach of two
decades ago.
Fred came along at an inoppor
tune time for glory. He was the
greatest hurdler of his day, hold
ing virtually all the world records
and winning the national collegiate
every time he tried. He also was
a fine sprinter. But at the time
he was at his peak the world was
at war and there were no Olym-
pice Games. He never had a
chance to show his wares in track’s
big show.
Wolcott lost only three hurdles
races in his long career and each
was because he hit the hurdle and
fell. ‘One time,” recalled Brunson,
“he was leading Ed Dugger by 10
yards when he hit a hurdle and
sprawled on the track. But he got
up and caught Dugger at the tape.
They gave the race to Dugger and
I’m still mad about it.”
Brunson says he has no doubt
but that Wolcott would be the
leading hurdler in the world if he
was running today. Flying Fred
die called “The Blond Blur,” just
refused to be beaten. He always
ran fast enough in the last 20
yards to make up any deficit.
Brunson recalled the first time
Wolcott ever ran aginst Boyce
Gatewood, a hurdles great at the
University of Texas. Wolcott was
a freshman and his high school
record hadn’t indicated he could
give the heralded Gatewood even
a mild workout. But Wolcott beat
Gatewood and never lost to him in
the four years the two were the
scourge of the nation’s hurdlers.
Gatewood became known as “the
world’s greatest hurdler—next to
Wolcott.”
“That guy in blue!” was all
Gatewood said the day Wolcott
beat him for the first time.
Morrow won more fame in track
than either Wolcott or Southern
because he gbt to compete in
three events in the Olympics. He
won the 100 and 200 meters and
then ran on the winning 400-me
ter relay team, thus was a three-
gold-medal winner in the Olympics,
an astounding feat. But Morrow
lost a lot of races, especially when
he tried to make a comeback to
the Olympics.
Southern was probably the most
versatile track man of them all.
He went to the Olympics and was
second in the 400-meter hurdles
as a freshman. But Southern was
in much the same shape as Gate-
wood—he had a jinx. The jinx for
Southern was Glen Davis of Ohio
State, who happened to be the
greatest quarter-miler and 400-
meter hurdler ever at the same
time Southern was the second
best.
Brunson wouldn’t rank his Bill
Commins of the late forties as a
greater trackman than Wolcott
but he would call him probably the
greatest athlete. Cummins did
everything, even pole vault, and
was good at all.
Spring Sate
BRAND NEW
1961
FORD SIX PASSENGER SEDANS
$1795.00
$295.00 DOWN CASH OR TRADE
$11.35 Per Week
Cade Motor Co.
»
1309 & 1700 Texas Ave.
chemistry major from Houston-
Bellaire, Bob “Possum” Korose.
The possum has been the spark
of the Aggie match team activi
ties this season. The 18 year old
Bellaire High School graduate led
the Texas Intercollegiate Bowling
Conference in average, with a fine
194, and was responsible for the
Aggies’ championship, their second
straight!
Lee Wilson
Another member of the A&M
Match Bowling team is Lee Wil
son, a fifth year student majoring
in Business and Education. At 22,
Lee already sports a fine bowling
record. Besides bowling a 289 on
television, he presently has the
high three game set of 656 in the
Texas Intercollegiate Bowling Con
ference which boasts the finest
collegiate bowlers in the Lone Star
State. He has a lifetime high se
ries of 720 and is presently hold
ing a 180 average in the college
league. He will be one of the
bowlers depended on to bring A&M
its second straight intercollegiate
title.
Parks Mahaney
The tall, skinny member of the
Aggie match bowling team goes
by the handle of Merle Parks Ma
haney, the third. Parks throws a
ball that is as big as his name.
Recently he represented A&M and
Region Nine at the National In
tercollegiate Bowling Tournament
in Detroit, Michigan, bowling on
the championship team. Currently
carrying a 190 average in league,
Parks is chairman of the bowling
committee at A&M and bowled on
the match team that repeated as
champions of the Texas Intercol
legiate Bowling Conference. His
lifetime game is a 267 and series
of 669.
Frank Pearce
. . newest member
Player, Palmer Return To Houston
By The Associated Press
HOUSTON — Gary Player and
Arnold Palmer returned to the
tournament trail today for an un
official rematch in the $40,000
Houston Classic.
Palmer is a slight favorite over
the South African star despite be
ing edged out by Player in the
April 10 Masters.
Palmer retained 7-2 odds for the
$7,000 in top money.
The starting field for the 72-hole
attack on the 7,122-yard, par 35-
35-70 Memorial Park course in
cludes 107 pros and 5 amateurs.
Included are all the 1961 tourna
ment champions. Also included
are Bill Collins, the defending
champion, and five other former
winners of the classic — Palmer,
Mike Souchak, Dave Douglas,
Marty Furgol, and Jack Burke Jr.
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