The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 10, 1962, Image 6

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    Papre 5
roltegp Station, Tp^ns
TTiursflay, May m, 19B2
THE B^TTAUDN
Water Polo Team
Goes To Nationals
Coach Art Adamson’s water
polo team left last night for West
Point, N. Y. to compete in the Jr.
National Water Polo Tournament.
The tourney will he contested
among: about 12 teams, including'
Army, Navy, New York Athletic
Club, Princeton, Yale and other
eastern schools.
COLLEGE MASTER
VI (J-4988
XcHItORtN UNDER 12 V? ARS" VRcfc
NOW SHOWING
“HOUSEBOAT”
wi>h Cary Grant
“THE MAN WHO SHOT
LIBERTY VALANCE”
with John Wayne
PALACE
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NOW SHOWING
‘MOON PILOT’
QUEEN
NOW SHOWING
THE
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A&M is the only southern team
entered and the Ags will field a
powerful team in an all-out effort
to bring a National trophy back
to College Station.
The team is undefeated in the
last five years, with victories over
Texas Tech, New Mexico Military
Institute, Air Force Academy and
the Houston-Aggie exes.
A&M team members are:
Micky McGrady, goalie, Ron
Miller, centerback, Bob Baker,
right back, Mike Carey and George
Mulanovich, left back.
Bob Hipp, center forward, Bill
Baker, left forward and Oscar
Cordon, right forward.
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Dealers for
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11416 Texas Ave. TA 2-4617;
SERVING BRYAN and
COLLEGE STATION
SAM HOUSTON ZEPHYR
Lv. N. Zulch 10:08 a.m.
Ar. Dallas . . 12:47 p.m.
Lv. N. Zulch
Ar. Houston
Burlingfor
Route
7:31 p.m.
9:25 p.m.
FORT WORTH AND
DENVER RAILWAY
N. L. CRYAR, Agent
Phone 15 • NORTH TUICH
NOW SHOWING
Warren Beatty
In
“ALL FALL DOWN’’
CIRCLE
TONIGHT 1st Show 7:25
Doris Day & Rock Hudson
In
“LOVER COME BACK”
&
“BATTLE HYMN”
with Rock Hudson
Major Leagues
Trim Rosters
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Major league baseball clubs
were trimming their rosters
Wednesday with the teams limited
to 25 players after the midnight
deadline.
Several teams were already
down to the player limit although
each had been allowed to carry
28 men for the first 20 days of
the season.
Milwaukee sold Don McMahon,
veteran relief pitcher, to the Hous
ton Colts of the National League
in a straight cash deal. The trans
action came as no great surprise
because the 32-year-old McMahon
told newsmen he wanted a change
of scenery while he was involved
in a holdout campaign last winter.
McMahon had an 0-1 record,
pitching only three innings for the
Braves.
Casey Stengel pared the !N •'w
York Mets’ roster by optioning
Sherman Roadblock Jones to che
Syracuse farm of the International
League. Jones, 26, had an 0-4
record with the Mets after show
ing promise in spring training.
Last year with the Cincinnati Reds,
Jones had a 1-1 record.
Baltimore farmed out Billy
Short, 0-0, a left-handed pitcher,
and Ossie Virgil, 29-year-old utility
man, to Rochester of the IL.
The Orioles made room for the
return of pitcher Jack Fisher from
the disabled list by selling first
baseman-outfielder Marv Throne-
berry to the Mets in a cash deal.
Throneberry will join the Mets in
New York Friday. At that time
the Mets will have to cut one
player.
The Cincinnati Reds cut their
roster to 25 by optioning rookie
pitched Sammy Ellis to San Diego,
subject to recall on 24 hours
notice.
Ellis, 21, worked in four games
and compiled a 1-1 record and an
earned run average of 12.52.
Tunney Hunsaker
Leaves Hospital
BLUEFIELD, W. Va. <A>) —
Heavyweigh fighter Tunney Hun
saker, smiling and waving from
an ambulance cot, left a hospital
Wednesday, bound for his home
at Fayetteville, W. Va. He was
accompanied by his wife, Phillis.
Hunsaker, 32, was hospitalized
Apr. 6 after 1’eceiving a brain in
jury in a fight with Joe Shelton
of Cleveland.
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onTHe
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A lighter look in the traditional geometric
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Long sleeves $5.00
Short sleeves $4.00
<§>
From the
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in casual fashion
Arrow sport shirts with authentic flair...
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Short sleeves $4.00
i
MENS WE/m
SINCE 1&33
BRYAN TEXAS
■ ^
AGS TIA VE CHANCE
SWC Track Meet Is Frida'
By VAN CONNER
Battalion Sports Editor
Southwest Conference sports for
the 1961-62 season will end this
weekend at Waco with the track,
golf and tennis finales. The high
light of the activities will be the
SWC track meet.
That no one team in the con
ference can be safely picked to
win the track meet, is the general
consensus of sports writers and
coaches across the state. A few
have picked Texas, perhaps the
strongest contender, but others
mention A&M, SMU and Baylor
as teams to watch.
All things taken into considera
tion, Coach Charlie Thomas’ thin-
elads will enter the season termi
nator with a good chance to sneak
away with the top honors. They
have depth, which has showed up
as they placed high in all but three
events last week in Austin, and
top overall performances through
out the season.
And they have great perform
ances in sophomore weightman
Danny Roberts, senior 880-man
Thad Crooks, junior distanceman
E. L. Ener, and a 440 relay squad
consisting of Curtis Roberts, Ed
Williams, Gene Doi-nak and George
Ted ford.
Roberts lends a crew of three
formidable weightmen; himself,
Terry Robinson and Charles Tie-
mann. The trio has dominated
weight events in all the intra-con
ference meets so far this season.
Roberts has yet to lose against
SWC competition. He broke the
A&M shot put record this season
with a 57-1 Vi toss at the A&M-
Rice-Texas triangular (old record
was 57-114 by Darrow Hooper in
the 1952 Olympic trials).
Crooks has spent the season
shaving time off records for A&M
that he set last year and this year.
Last week at the Austin triangu
lar, he turned the 880 in 2.6 sec
onds faster than the first record j
he set his junior year. He came j
in with a 1:50.2 behind Longhorn
Loy Gunter’s sizzling 1:50.0 (best
SWC 880 time this season). Crooks
had already set an A&M murk of
1:51.4 earlier this year.
Ener is another school record-
setter in the distance events. He
turned in a 9:17.9 at the Drake
Relays three weeks ago. Ener
finished second in the mile run
last week with a 4:19.8 behind
Longhorn Steve Strickland’s 4:17.5.’
High jumper Don Denver has yet
to be defeated in an SWC meet
this season. His best effort has
been 6-4 in the Dallas Invitational,
A&M-Rice-Texas triangular and
the A&M quadrangular. James
Daniel gives depth in the high
jump, having placed high in most
competition this year.
The Ags are pretty well out of
the picture in the pole vault with !
SMU’s Dexter Elkins, Rice’s Fred i
Hanson and Texas’ Baylus Bennett
dominating the scene. All eyes
will turn on the vaulters, however,
as theirs will be one of the high
light events of the afternoon.
A&M will be a strong contender
in the relays, both 4*»i. and mile.
Williams, Dornak, Tedford and
Curtis Roberts have placed high
in their events all season, and will
be sure point-getters Friday.
The only safe picks for winning
performance in the meet will be
Longhorn Ray Cunningham In the
hurdles and Rice’s Ed Red in the
javelin.
It’s points that count for over
all honors, however, and the meet |
will probably go to one of the I
consistent depth squads like Ai)[
or Texas.
Entering the season finale, SWC
track and field marks stand as
follows:
SWC Varsity Records
440 relay — T<-xu* (Wally Wilson. &
die Southern, Hollia Gainey, Bobby Wki.
den). IH.VT, 40.0.
Mile run — Joe Villareal, Texas 1!
4 :10.5.
440 duah — Tom Cox, Rice, 1950; Mid?
Ho) I i r>sex head. Rice, 1960, 46.9.
ini rd il. —h Ralph Ahpauyh, Te.
us. l*u;o. i Wind iiKHixteil. Hobby WhiMa,
Tcnbb. 1050 ; Ralph AIxputiKh, Tur,
9.2w l
120-yurd hirhx Ray Cunningham, Tti
as. 1060, J.Y.K i Wind assisted. Hay Gig.
niriKhum. 1061, 13.7w)
HMO-ynril ilnsh run — Jim Parr, SHU,
1961, 1:40.0.
220-yard dash — Chink Wnllemler, Tti'
aa, 1035 : Chink Wnllender. 11
Kddic Southern, Texas. 1958, 20.6.
Two-mile run — Jan Ahlberfc, SMI',
1959. 9:1*.7.
220-yard lows — Roy Thompson, Ritt,
1957. 22.6; Ray CunninKhum, Texas, HO,
22.6,
Mile relay — Texas (Wally Wilsm,
Southern), 195K, 3.11.6.
Drew Dunlap. Jimmy Holt, K<MI(
Shot put — John Fry, Baylor, Hit
56-1I-1/4.
Discus — John Fry, Raylor, 1961, 1”M.
Javelin — Bruce Parker. Trxu, HO.
226-1 'i.
H eh Jump — Don Stewart, SMU, 135.,
N
i»-10 *
Vale
Dexter Elkina, SMU. l«i,
Broad
A M. 1957
Emmett Smilhnxi
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