The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 02, 1963, Image 4

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    Page 4
THE BATTALION
College Station, Texas Tuesday, April 2, 1963
First Loss Costly
To Soccer Team
A&M’s 1962-63 Soccer Team suf
fered its first defeat of the season
Sunday and it was a costly one.
The Aggies lost the state champ
ionship to International of San
Antonio, 4-2, in Houston’s Memor
ial Park.
The Ags were able to put on a
late surge in the first half and tie
the contest at 2-2 when the teams
took a break. But a penalty shot
put the Alamo City club in front
in the second period and the young
er A&M team could never catch up.
With International leading, 2-0,
in the first half, Carlos Valarezo
recovered the ball from the foul
line and scored the Aggies’ first
point. Inside right forward Rodri-
g-o Palacios booted in the score
that tied things up.
Another A&M goal in the first
period was rubbed out by an off
sides penalty.
Center halfback Ewald Koegle
of International scored two of the
champions’ goals. He got the
first one in the game on a 20-foot
corner shot. His second came on
a 12-foot penalty shot early in the
second half.
Skip Rutherford and Robert Per-
ruzzi connected for the other San
Antonio points.
International players received a
championship trophy and medals
from Texas State Soccer Associa
tion President G. H. Chatrou and
the Aggies were given runnerup
medals.
Ag Thinclads Lead Stragglers
As Dyes & Co. Fake 3rd Win
Jerry Dyes and his powerful
teammates from Abilene Christian
College walked off with their third
consecutive San Angelo Relays title
Saturday, leaving the Aggies to
head a pack of stragglers.
ACC netted 60 points — 13 and
one-third of them Dyes’. A&M
had 30 y 2 , Texas 26, SMU 24, Tex
as Tech 1914 and North Texas
State 16 in the university division.
THE AGS HAD three first places
in the meet with John Collins
topping the high jumpers, Danny
Roberts in the shot put, and a
3:14.9 winning mile relay effort.
Collins, the versatile sophomore
from Liberty, jumped 6-2. ACC’s
James Neeley and A&M’s Don
Deaver cleared 6-0 but Neeley
earned second place on fewer
misses.
A&M Golfers
Beat Raiders
Coach Henry Ransom’s title-de
fending Aggie golfers got off to
a good SWC start Saturday with a
4-2 win over a visiting Texas Tech
squad.
The Cadets took both team
matches and shared the doubles
honors. Mike Higgins, a senior
squadman from Tomball, and Harry
Hoskins, one-year letterman senior
from Fort Worth, turned in a
pair of three-under 67’s for medal
ist honors.
Saturday results:
Bruce Dobie of Texas Tech de
feated Ralph Johnston, 3 and 2;
Higgins beat Richard Yates, 2 and
1; Johnston-Higgins defeated Do-
bie-Yates, 2 up.
Houston Brewer of Tech defeat
ed Eugene Byrd, 1 up; Hoskins
defeated Gary Littlejohn, 5 and 4;
Byrd-Hoskins defeated Brewer-
Littlejohn, 4 and 3.
A&M’s golfers go to Fayetteville,
Ark. Monday, for a match with the
Razorback squad.
—JUNIORS & SENIORS—
A Special GIFT for You.
Due to the heavy response to my offer
last week, you may ayain choose one
of the followinp gifts: 1. A high grade
” ", fii e> 2. A sleek all metal
lighter.
clipper &
cigarette
enter, 3. Kayex sun glasses,
and 4. 18 carat gold-plated tie bar
link set. Underline your
/ '"ip and mail to Bernie
3815 Old College Road,
deice
Bryan,
"\
PAEDNER
You’ll Always Win
The Showdown
When You Get
Your Duds Done
CAMPUS
CLEANERS
A 23-10% was only good enough
for third in the broad jump for Col
lins as Dyes sailed a record 24-1014
and North Texas State’s Donald
Fox honned 24-1%.
ROBERTS LOBBED the steel
sphere 56-11. He copped a second
place for A&M in the discus throw
with a 159-% toss. ACC’s Roger
Orrell had the best discus throw at
159-214. Aggie soph David Glover
took fourth in the discus with 150-
7.
R. E. Merritt, George Tedford,
Jerry Anderson and Ted Nelson
were teamed up on the mile relay
effort.
Dyes was the high point man in
the meet and voted most valuable
for the third straight meet this
season. Besides his record broad
jump, he set a new mark of 248-
11% in the javelin throw, ran a
leg on the winning 440-yard relay
effort, and took fourth in the
shot put.
Netters Top TCU
In League Opener
It took a drawn-out No. 1 dou
bles match for Coach Omar Smith’s
varsity tennis team to finnally
end up on top of TCU, 4-2, in the
SWC opener for A&M Saturday.
More than 50 spectators watched
the College Station matches as
Richard Barker and Ricky Wil
liams finnally outlasted TCU’s
Paul Christian and Earl Van Zandt
in the deciding match.
The Cadets took three singles
and one doubles. In the No. 1
singles match Barker came back
from being three set points down
to take a 9-7, 6-1 victory.
In the only freshman pair-off
of the afternoon, Robert Nichols
of A&M clipped Kenny Roach, 6-2,
2-6, 6-4.
Base ha l levs Shut out SMV
For Fifth Straight Victor]
“Hello, Ground”
Maroon quarterback Bill Uzzell heads earthward with the
help of Jerry Nichols (25) after gaining five yards over
left tackle in the first quarter of the Maroon-White spring
grid game. Jim Stabler (45) and Jerry Kachtik (37) look
on. The intra-squad contest marked the end of spring foot
ball training for the Cadet gridders as the White team
emerged with a 6-3 triumph.
Whites Surprise
Strong Maroons
The undermanned Whites out-
hustled and out-played the strong
er Maroons for four quarters Sat
urday night and in the process
earned a 6-3 victory in the intra
squad football game in Kyle Field.
Junior Danny Mellhany, con
verted from halfback to quarter
back, was the key man in the
only touchdown of the tilt. The
speedster from Pasadena turned
left end with 6:34 left to play for
the six pointer that overcame a
3-0 Maroon lead.
The White drive started on the
Maroon 47 when the light-colored
jerseys took over after a 10-yard
punt by Travis Reagan. Mellhany
passed to Tommy Meeks and Mike
% Bennie’s Brother#
Signs With Ags |
HOUSTON, Tex. GT> — Dwayne
“Curly” Lenox, the 6-foot-4 all
stater who led Clear Creek High
School to its first Class AAA bas
ketball championship last season,
signed with the Texas Aggies Mon
day.
He follows his older brother
Bennie to Aggieland. Bennie, a
junior with another year of eligi
bility, was an all-Southwest Con
ference selection and finished the
season in a tie for the conference
scoring title.
Cotton
Raglan Sleeve Traditional Shirt
. . . May we suggest yo,u try this for comfort.
All the assets of a dress shirt plus the free
and easy movement of a raglan sleeve. You’ll
be sartorially pleased with this tapered body
cotton oxford cloth shirt. Moderately priced
for such a find. Sizes 14 to IG 1 ^.
I OPEN TONIGHT’TIL 9
5.95
yfarsi'H
Town
lop
Townshire
Bryan, Texas
TA 3-5051
Pitman for a pair of first downs
to the Maroon 19.
An end sweep by the little play-
caller netted 13 yards and another
first down on the Maroon 6. Fol
lowing a four-yard pass to Pitman,
Mellhany scooted around left end
for the score. The conversion at
tempt failed when the pass from
center went astray.
The Maroon score came on a
40-yard field goal by sophomore
Bob Lee with 5:45 left in the third
puarter. Lee got his chance after
Jerry Pizzitola recovered a White
fumble on the 26. The Maroons
couldn’t move the ball and Lee’s
fourth boot split the uprights aided
by a 15 mile-an-hour wind.
Coach Tom Chandler used pitch
ers Ed Singley and Johnny Crain,
who gave up one hit each, to shut
out SMU 7-0 in Dallas Saturday
afternoon.
It was the fifth straight win for
the Ags, leaving them with a 3-0
slate in conference and 8-3 for the
season.
LITTLE SECOND baseman Bill
Grochett and shortstop Jerry Bal
lard had four hits apiece to lead
the Aggie hitting., One of Bal
lard’s was a double.
Singley, who went seven innings
on the mound, went two for four
and had a two-base hit. He walked
six and struck out nine. Joe Mil
ler went all the way for the Ponies,
giving up 17 hits. He walked four
and struck out nine.
It was a Ballard single in the
third that got things rolling for
A&M. He went to third on a
single by third baseman Bill Han
cock and scored asi SMU shm-tstop
Bob Smith hobbled Frank Stark’s
Freshmen Win
Doubleheader
From Rangers
A&M’s Fish baseballers took
four hours of batting pi-actice Sat
urday afternoon in handing a pair
of drubbings to the charity-minded
Rang-er Junior College Rangers.
The Rangers committed 18 er
rors in losing the doubleheader by
scores of 11-0 and 12-1. The jun
ior colleg’e crew garnered only one
hit off Steve Hillhouse in the first
game and managed a meager four
from Ed Eichman in the second
tilt.
Meanwhile, the Cadets smashed
five doubles, a triple and five
home runs off three Ranger hurl-
ers. Shortstop Lance Cobb led the
parade with a pair of four-baggers
and a double while right fielder
Allan Koonce chipped in a brace
of roundtrippers.
The double win put the frosh
record at 3-1 and left the Rangers
without a decision in three games.
grounder. Then Robert McAdams
singled to score Hancock.
THE AGS PICKED up two un
earned runs in the sixth after two
were away, with Ballard and Stark
scoring on a Me Adam’s single and
a hit by DeWayne Stewart.
Grotchett singled in the smi
and got around on a wild pi!
and a Ballard single. A basti
balls, two singles, twostolenks
and an error gave the Aggies!
two final runs in thetopofl
eighth.
«r r« wim lit ronrarmnii
ri ■ b ■ its nri * snmnjf ■rom t it k i k K Ki viinrii
COACH NORTON’S PANCAKE HOUSE
J
35 Varieties of finest pancakes, aged heavy KC steaks,
shrimp, and other fine foods.
Daily
Merchants lunch 11 to 2 p. m.
SUMMER JOBS
MR J. B. PARKS WILL BE IN ROOM 303, PLACEMEN!
OFFICE IN THE Y.M.C.A. ON THURSDAY, APRIL 4th FRO!
4:00 TO 6:00 P. M. TO SELECT FIVE FRESHMEN OR SOW
MORES FOR SUMMER WORK. AVERAGE MAN PAID $M
PER WEEK.
>V
J y
J
Going Out Of
Business SALE
All Merchandise
^Sfjrr*
- ,
Assignment: build supi
into aureus!
- : ■ : ■. V
Result: Ford-built cars demonstrate outstanding durability
in competitions like the Daytona 500
Results of recent competitive events prove dramatically the
durability and reliability,of today’s Ford-built cars. Our cars swept
the first five places in the Daytona 500 for example. More important
to you—Ford-built entries had the highest ratio of finishers in
this grueling test of stamina! Less than half—just 23—of the 50
starters finished; 13 of them were Ford-built!
Competitions such as the Daytona 500 are car killers. Piston
rings can fail, transmissions can be demolished and engines
blow up under these maximum efforts. It’s a grinding demand
for toted performance and Ford-built cars proved they could take
it better than any of the others.
Quite an eye-opener for car buyers. And conclusive proof that
superior engineering at Ford Motor Company has produced more
rugged engines and transmissions, sturdier bodies and frames
and better all-round durability for today's Ford-built automobiles.
MOTOR COMPANY
The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan
WHERE ENGINEERING LEADERSHIP
BRINGS YOU BETTER-BUILT CARS
Volume 6(
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Joseph S.
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