The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 19, 1963, Image 4

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Page 4
College Station, Teras
Tuesday, March 19, 1969
THE BATTALION
Ag Swimmers
Take Fourth
At SWC Meet
Coach Art Adamson’s varsity
swimmers finished fourth in the
Southwest Conference meet at Aus
tin Friday and Saturday as the
SMU Mustangs rolled to their
seventh consecutive league cham
pionship.
The Ponies racked up 17514
points. Texas was the closest com
petitor with 155. Next came Tex
as Tech with 4414, A&M with 29
and Baylor with 8.
A&M’s Bob Baker equaled a
48.9 SWC record set Friday by
Tech’s Phillip Simpkins in the
100-yard freestyle. But Simpkins
set another record of 48.6 in the
finals and Baker had to settle for
second.
Pool or conference records were
set in all 15 of the events during
the course of the meet.
Aggie - S teer SWC Open er
Has Dark, Peaceful Ending
By JIM BUTLER
Battalion Ass’t Sports Editor
The first Southwest Conference
baseball games for the Aggies came
to a peaceful ending in the dusky
evening of Clark Field in Austin
.Saturday with neither .the Cadets
ffl’or the Longhorns having the up-
jwer hand.
The umpires called the game be-
cavuse of darkness at the end of
Varsity Net Team
Loses 2; Fish Win
A&M’s varsity tennis team was
disappointed in its home openers
when it fell, 5-1, to the University
of Corpus Christi Friday and to
the University of Houston, 4-3, Sat
urday.
A bright spot in the weekend’s
activities came for Coach Omar
Smith when his Fish netters shut
out the Houston Cubs, 3-0
Smith said the varsity match
with Houston was the closest one
yet this season. Most matches
were split and more games wei’e
played than in any meeting yet
this year.
In the freshman match Mike
McCarty beat the Cubs’ Richard
Nesmith, 7-5, 6-2; Bob Nichols de
feated Danny Dezso, 6-1, 6-1; and
McCarty-Nichols clipped Nesmith-
Dezso, 6-2, 6-4.
Ags Bash Sul Ross
With Three Homers
The A&M diamond men handed
Sul Ross its first defeat of the
season, taking a 10-1 decision on
Kyle Field Monday.
Aggie pitchers Ed Singley and
Kenny Floyd combined for a fine
four-hit performance, missing a
shutout by Dayle Gibbons home
run in. the fourth.
The Cadets clobbered Lobo hurl
ing for 13 hits and three home
runs. Robert McAdams opened the
scoring with a long blast that
missed only inches of clearing the
west stands of the football stadium.
Ray Hall smashed a round-trip
per in the fifth with one man
on and Bill Hancock closed out
the scoring with a two-run shot
in the seventh.
The blows were McAdams third
of the year, Hancock’s second and
Hall’s first. Sophomore Jerry Bal
lard contributed to the scoring
parade with a bases-loaded triple
in the fourth.
Hall also had three rbi’s while
six Aggies had two hots. Gary
Cavasas was the only starter be
side the pitcher to go hitless, but
was on base four times from
walks.
11 innings with the score knotted
at 5-5. The game will not be
replayed unless it has a bearing
on the conference standing, which
it probably will since A&M and
UT are the title favorites.
A full house watched Texas take
a two run first inning lead on a
single by all-American Chuck Knut
son and a pair of miscues by Ag
gie shortstop Jack Singley.
Coach Tom Chandler’s crew
evened the score in the second on a
long home run by Robert Mc
Adams and a steal of home by
Gary Cavasas. The second run
came as the result of a mental
lapse by Steer shortstop Wayne
Bethea.
The situation arose when catcher
Bill Puckett hit a high fly with
Ray Hall on first and Cavasas
on third. Bethea caught the ball
behind second base and held it
while Cavasas streaked home.
A&M took the lead in the fifth
on a two-run homer by Bill Han
cock. But the Longhorns came
right back to knot the score again
in the sixth. The big blow was
Butch Thompson’s solo four-bag-
ger.
Each team tallied a run in the
eighth to complete the scoring.
Tracksters Finish Second
Back Of Undefeated ACC
As if in a repeat performance
of the Border Olympics, Coach
Charles Thomas’ varsity tracksters
again took second place behind
Jerry Dyes and unbeaten Abilene
Christian College at Odessa’s West
Texas Relays Friday and Saturday.
ACC had 69 points (1314 of them
were Dyes’), the Aggies had 50
and Baylor finished a close third
with 47 in the university division.
The Cadets’ soph speedster from
Andrews, Ted Nelson, churned in
with a 47.0 anchor leg to give the
Ags a winning mile relay time of
3:13.5 His mates in the relay were
R. E. Merritt, John Collins and
Jerry Anderson .
The Aggies’ other two first
places came in the weight events
at the hands of junior Danny Ro
berts. The 6-3, 245-pounder from
Cleveland lobbed a winning throw
of 56-214 in the shot put and sailed
the discus 164-8.
Dyes set an overall record in
the javelin throw with a 244-2 ef
fort. He took another first in the
broad jump with a 23-914 leap and
helped ACC’s sprint medley relay
team take that event.
Sophomore John Collins took a
second for the Ags in the high
jump. His 6-214 hop was as good
as Fred Rath’s of Baylor, but Rath
was first on fewer misses. Bay
lor’s Rick Loudermilk also jumped
6-214 and came up third on the
miss count.
Another Aggie second place came
from soph Louis Poland, who tied
with ACC’s Frank Foglesong at
13-6 in the pole vault. Abilene
Chidstian’s Bill Pemelton took first
at 14 feet.
The Ags took third in both the
880 and 440-yard relays. David
Glover had third place throw of
157-614 in the discus. In the dis
tance medley relay (440-880-1320-
mile) the Ags got another third
with 10:22.6.
i> i » m vui*
LM/uiUc team wins
3rd At Tournament
The A&M Debate team, coached
by Dr. H. E. Hierth, won third
place in the Louisiana Speech
Tournament last weekend. The sen
ior division team heat the Univer
sity of Arkansas and Louisiana
Polytechnic to win third place in.
the final rounds.
“Schools from five states were
represented, and we are naturally
very proud of our record in this
tournament,” team captain Robert
Denney reported.
Denney, ’64 from San Atitonij,
went on to say that debate will 1*;
offered as a regular Departmeii
of English course beginning not
semester, and the college has i
ready hired a full-time debate
coach for next year. In addition,
several scholarships will be malt
available to debaters next year,
(NAME OF COLLEGE) STUDENTS ONLY!
Individuals,. Campus Clubs and Groups!
MflN VALUABLE
mu PRIZES
FOR SAVING
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