T v.; • . \ , ’y “ ; -r .-.t. .w^-asaStfej; ness ents in St, fi icipated intlf mival, has il 3 are interests wn Fink cauj erry’s 2 Hearts , qual Good Lungs the Steve A N. Vine Sfe l lif., for an oils 1 that in tlit cross the mj| vi ;h that ie a high sd r Fink!” prat elii late iry rinary student! ist nts. east wing of cine Building >pen from 81 kdays and fi aturdays. 1949 with« 678 bound p ,ry has gi'on l volumes, ire than 51 brary, Mrs,Ci llins College ,e University VIrs. Card' il. assistant. 'dARY Librarl Medical Librfl tause he had only one-half of mgs, Jerry Anderson was of- only a one-half scholarship Southwest Conference track fever, A&M’s Charlie Thom- ieving that “two hearts” and nng are just as good as a pair mgs, took Anderson into his without question, eiy event in which Jerry per- s looms as a cinder nightmare he coach who lost Anderson & Mbecause he did not trust lung and the potential of the y former state champion. SPRINTER at Gorman High el, the 145-pound Anderson the state Class B 220-yard his senior year (22.4 seconds a strong wind) and placed id in the 100-yard dash, iring his sophomore season year, Anderson cut his 440 to 48.1 and had turned in a leg on the mile relay before iesOPFake” eel Decision 4 Clay Wins know i ^ Rocked in !]]t| first round, cocky Cassius Clay (d to gain a narrow, unpopu- over Doug 5 of New York at Madison _ ire Garden Wednesday night. “greatest, se,” she wei in her fifth)! |(|_ roun( j (j ec j s j 0I1 brarian here. Before coming ed at the Bif , . , Library. She * self-proclaimed ston State Te< « ht of them a11 ” looked from that as he failed to even e a knockdown over his small- W. ie capacity crowd of 18,732 let Tom Disin! ! w '^ a sd)rm koos and of “fake” seconds after the limous verdict was announced. three officials all had Clay jviiuier by the following scores: rnge, to whic), ^ jv ran k Forbes and Judge feAidala 5-4-1 each in rounds; Referee Joe Loscalzo 8-1-1. AP card had Jones in front, 1 libraries ben ership fee ofil ■y to secure m y their ptulil of the exchsj is of its duplii he lists are posite list, Ak volumes froffli r has some for the excltfl W ily a sweep of the last two carried the undefeated Clay the brink of disaster. He won dfltwo rounds from all of the and that won it. salzo’s verdict was the last iflUe announced and the crowd that with boos and then tei throwing things. a leg injury put him out of com mission. The 20-year-old Gorman flash had a 48 flat open 440 at the Bor der Olympics last weekend. He was a member of the mile relay team that took one of A&M’s four first places at the Laredo affair. Thomas attributes Anderson’s success to determination and hard work. He said: “JERRY IS a great competitor —one of those athletes with a big heart. His having only one lung is certainly no handicap to this boy, for he makes up for it with drive.” Jerry was bora at Oceanside, Calif, with one good lung (his left), and moved to a farm five miles from Gorman with his par ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Anderson at the ag-e of two years. The family still resides on the 400-acre farm and Jerry got in his very earliest workouts on the dirt roads which parallel the tract. It was in the fourth grade that Jerry’s swiftness and quickness began to blossom. He inevitably won the informal tag races on the playground with his class mates, and as a sixth grader was the only boy his age to win a place on the eighth grade track team. He ran the 50 and 75-yard dashes. HIS FIRST coach was Jack Davenport, now at Stephenville High School, and later he was tu tored by Roy Byrd, now at Gold- thwaite. “I was the only freshman on the Gorman High School team and was lucky enough to be the first runner from Gorman ever to par ticipate in the state meet. In fact, my biggest track thrill is being able to run in the state meet,” Jerry said. Jerry, who lettered in football his final two years at Gorman, has a younger brother, Larry, who is keeping up the Anderson track tradition. He is a junior at Gor man High, and runs the open 440. Jerry also has two older sisters who are track fans, Mrs. Pat Mar ble of Houston and Mrs. James Nash of Fort Worth. Anderson came to A&M on a half-scholai’ship in 1960, the only portion of a scholarship Thomas had to offer at that time. But from here on out it is a safe bet that Jerry will be on a full scholarship. For although he has only one lung—he has “two hearts.” THE BATTALION Thursday, March 14, 1963 College Station, Texas Page 7 a&p Crusaders? 6-1 For Second Win: Horns Next GORMAN FLASH only one lung but two hearts Ag Center Jerry Hopkim Picked For Summer Game, Jerry Hopkins, A&M’s All- Southwest Conference center from Mart, will play in the annual All America Game at Buffalo, N. Y., next June 29. Hank Foldberg, A&M athletic director, announced that Hopkins had accepted an invitation to par ticipate in the game from Tuss McLaughry, executive secretary- treasurer of the American Foot ball Coaches Assn., co-sponsor of the contest with the National Foot ball Foundation. Hopkins will be a member of the West team to be coached by John McKay of Southern California, Frank Broyles of Arkansas and Bob Devaney of Nebraska. The East squad will be coached by Milt Bruhn of Wisconsin, Bill Murray of Duke and Charley Mc Clendon of LSU. Hopkins, 6-2 and 230, won three varsity letter's at A&M and was co-captain of the 1962 Aggie team. He has signed a professional foot ball contract with the Houston Oilers of the American Football League. Sports Car Club Plans ‘Road Rally’ A “road rally” will be held by the Chaparrel Sports Car Club Sunday at the roadside park near the entrance to Easterwood Air port. All drivers will meet at the park at 1:30 p.m. to receive instructions and get their rally schedules. The course for the rally will cover about 80 miles and will be inside the boundaries of Brazos County. o belongs to 1 ■y Loan Sen* ■s. CardwelN! ; get what 0 he Bibliogra|li , the library]* imited supply licals. 4 the some * the branch s* •eign publicatio inguages. > Veterinary B are Dr. R Jr. A. G. Keid loore, along' r l all over ^ ■laim that IB best veteria* nation,” )!* out. :am Plan Fo Mecl ;e Team will p* 1 h Annual Low* ament at Nod* liege in Narf uough Saturn .nd their eveq and Paul Hid neous speaki>f io speaking, ^ •y. Frank ; will compete n debate, ffl r will compete* fon zephm Change April 26 10:08a.ni' 12:47 p.ifrl . 7:31 p.i*' . 9:25 p.m WORTH AlJ ER RAILWJ CRYAR, Ag#' l . NORTH ZW "TareytorTs Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!” says Lucius (Poppa) Marius, he-man historian and author of Inside Caesar. “Homo sapiens today sure appre ciates fine flavor,” quoth Poppa. “Nota bene the popularity of Dual Filter Tareyton. Reason: flavor—de gustibus you never thought you’d get from any filter cigarette.” Dual Filter makes the difference *' DUAL FILTER Product cj J/IZ Ji^acco-Fc’yxmf — dvduzo is our no me SAT Co Tareyton zero- is our middle name (SA.T.Co- By JIM BUTLER Battalion Ass’t Sports Editor Third baseman Bill Hancock slashed a two-run double and catcher Bill Puckett slammed a bases-loaded home run to give pitcher Chuck McGuire all the sup port he needed as the Aggies coasted to a 6-1 victory over the University of Dallas Crusaders. McGuire was bothered by wild ness early in the game as he walked two Crusaders in the first inning but one was thrown out attempting to steal and Third sacker Smitty Duke strack out to end the inning. DALLAS’ JERRY Gramly set the Cadets down in 1-2-3 order in the first two innings before the gate opened in the third. Jack Singley led off with a double and Puckett walked. McGuire hit a hard liner to third and Singley was doubled off second. Jerry Ballard lined the second pitch over second base to put run ners on first and second with two out. Then Hancock sliced a drive down the rightfield line to score Ballard and Puckett. The Big D crew threatened in the fourth, loading the bases on two singles and a walk, but failed to score. THE AGS came back in the fourth with four insurance runs when Puckett hit his four-bagger over the right field fence, scoring DeWayne Steward, Ray Hall and Forty-Seven Fish Footballers Win Letters For ’62 Season Forty-seven freshman football players won letter awards during the 1962 season. The honorees were announced by Hank Foldberg, A&M athletic di rector and head football coach. The lettermen: Larry Bates, Houston (Jones); Ed Breding, Jacksboro; Ray Brown, Dallas (Kimball); Thomas Byer, Marlin; Ken Caffey, Thorn- dale; Lenward Caraway, DeLeon; Bob Cissell, Waco (High); Mike Colbert, Clarksville; Bubber Col lins, San Antonio (MacArthur); Bill Connell, Orlando, Fla. Also, Jerry Crow, San Benito; Marvin Dawkins, Orlando, Fla.; Mike Devine, Corpus Christi (Ray); Bob Dosher, Hobbs, N. M.; Albert Dwarshus, Corpus Christi (Ray); Harold Fletcher, Kerrville; Larry Florence, Abernathy; Jeff Harden, Chagrin Falls, Ohio; Ira Hillyer, Houston (Reagan); Burl Hintze, Dallas (South Oak Cliff). Also, Dan Houston, Bartlesville, Okla.; Tommy Jackson, Waco (High); Jerry Kachtik, Rio Hon do; Jim Kauffman, Geoi'getown; Donald Koehn, Brenham; Charles LaGrange, Rio Grande City; Bob Lee, San Antonio (Jefferson); Marty Leonard, Monroe, N. Y.; Glynn Lindsey, Mineral Wells; Bill McBryde, Shamrock. Also, Mike McCullough, Fort Worth (Paschal); Eddie McKaug- han, San Benito; Jim McMurty, Rio Hondo; Tom Murrah, San An tonio (Jefferson); Ray Patterson, Mineral Wells; John Raymer, Mo naco, Pa.; Jay Robinson, Corpus Christi (Academy); Jim Singleton, San Antonio (Alamo Heights); Frank Sloan, Odessa (Permian). Also, Ted Sparling, Jal, N. M.; Jim Stabler, Dallas (Hillcrest); David Tolleson, Celina; Donell Vit- tetoe, Fort Worth (Paschal); Bill Ward, Austin (High); Jim Wat son, McLean; Joe Wellborn, Hous ton (St. Thomas); Don West, Cor pus Christi (Ray). Singley ahead of him. Dallas tallied its only ran in the seventh off Richard Beller who replaced McGuire. Troy Miller hit a bases-loaded sacrifice fly to drive in Richard Gaffney. Hall and Steward each had two hits in four at-bats to pace the Aggies. Leading swatter for UD was the pitcher Gramly with 3-for- 4. The Cadets open the conference season Saturday in Austin when they play the Texas Longhorns. Dallas Morris, cf-lf Miller. 2b Lezaery, lb Duke, Sb Turner, rf Sharp, cf Ackles, rf Dettmer. c Haynes, c Patterson, If Gaffney, If Cheves, ss Boyett, ss Boeding, ss Gramly, p TOTAL A&M Ballard, 2b Hancock, 3b Hargett, 3 b Stark, If McAdams, rf Stewart, lb Hall, cf Singley, ss Puckett, c McGuire, p Beller, p TOTAL BOX SCORE Ab 4 3 3 4 2 1 1 1 2 2 1 2 1 1 4 S fl■ ■ ■■B■NI “Sports Car Center” Dealers for Renault-Peugeot & British Motor Cars Sales—Parts—Service ■“We Service All Foreign Cars” 1422 Texas Ave. TA 2-4517 BESIDES MEXICAN FOOD ZARAPE RESTAURANT will serve from March 2 on Mrs. Andert’s Wiener Schnitzel, Chicken Fried Steaks and Austrian Style Fried Chicken. We Reserve The Right To Limit All Sales - GROCERIES - Hunts—14-Qz. 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