The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 02, 1981, Image 11

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    L
ert Slavens, whowoi
last season, was slid
; his control andgiviiij
irned runs in four it-
hed and issuing thei
he hitting was suiprii'
1, only the pitchingof
iiecken and reliever
aott was encouraging
itched 2!/3 innings,
in two games, anil
'0 hits and three wall
ring out three,
rod, said Davis, wb
ed as the surprise
rter late last weeL
: or four innings Hell
I guess 1 was a lii
he fifth inning). 1
en you have a les
to hang in there as;
kes. We won, thafs
itters.
out with a good aft
; getting aheadofilt
rly ... using maid
id curves.”
r was high on Davis'
ce.
served a chance to
said. “He’d world
oked good. HepitA
in a JV contest, aid
I good.”
who played in tie
inois League during
■r and came back tlis
ich stronger andm
1 is tic about the yen,
ching’s gonna come
said after Saturday’s
Fhe hitting’s coining
good. We’re playing
1 defensive ball, Its
: good when people
bearing down.
ies will play at Pal
I Saturday in a don-
against St. Mary’s
beginning at lp.a
THE BATTALION Page 11
MONDAY, MARCH 2, 1881
Texas A&M wins own meet
By RICHARD OLIVER
Sports Editor
Rod “Rocket” Richardson is tak
ing off for Texas A&M.
The speedster won two events
Saturday to lead the Aggie men’s
track team to an impressive vic
tory in a triangular track and field
meet at the newly-revamped Kyle
Field.
Running on the brand new Kyle
Field track, Richardson, a fresh
man from Shreveport, La., ran a
10-second 100-meter dash and
then came back to win the 200-
meter dash in 20.87 as the Ags
compiled 109 points to easily de
feat Lamar University and UT-
Arlington.
Another Louisiana product,
Johnny Hector, the Aggies lead
ing rusher on the 1980 football
team, also had a double-win day,
as he won the long jump with a
25-4 leap, and the triple jump at
49-4.
Texas A&M had 14 first places
total on the day under somewhat
blustery skies, hut after a year and
a half of not competing at home
while Kyle Field was under re
novation, the Aggies had a good
homecoming.
Senior Leslie Kerr won the 400-
meter dash in 46.05 and anchored
the winning 1600-meter relay
team in a 3:11.05 group effort.
One surprise was the failure of
NCAA Indoor and Outdoor pole
vault champion Randy Hall to
place in the meet. He passed to
16-0 in the event and then failed to
clear that height on three tries.
On a scoring system of 5-3-2-1
for individual events and 5-3-0 for
relays, the Ags tallied 109 to
Lamar’s 45 and UTA’s 35.
Aggie results:
10,OOO-meter run—-M Yt, Ray Muenich,
32:08.5; 3, Jimmy Sterling, 32:55.12; 4,
Ralph Havens, 33:19.59.
400-meter relay — 1, A&M (James
Washington, Leslie Kerr, Mike Glaspie,
Rod Richardson), 39.73.
Javelin — 1, Richard Lamb, 240-6 (73.3
meters).
Long jump — 1, Johnny Hector, 25-4
(7.73 meters); 3, James Washington, 24-2Vi
(7.38).
1,500-meter run — 1, Andy Elliott,
3:59.84.
110-meter hurdles — 1, Rick Thomas,
13.80; 2, Mike Glaspie, 13.86; 3, Billy
Busch, 14.00; 4, Craig Moody, 14.29.
400-meter dash — 1, Leslie Kerr, 46.05.
Shot put — 1, Kevin McGinnis, 56-10
(17.32); 2, Robert Windsor, 56-4 (17.17); 3,
Mark Isenmann, 54-9 1 /2 (16.70).
Pole vault — 1, Rob Montgomery, 16-0
(4.88); 2, Mike Mullins, 15-6 (4.71).
100-meter dash — 1, Rod Richardson,
10.00; 2, James Washington, 10.26.
High jump — 1, Jimmy Howard, 6-11
(2.105); 3, Don Jones, 6-11.
800-meter run — 2, Darrell Shoemake,
1:52.44; 4, John Sexton, 1:52.86.
Triple jump — 1, Johnny Hector, 49-4
(15.04).
400-meter hurdles — 1, Bart Daniel,
51.76; 2, Rick Thomas, 51.78; 3, Craig
Moody, 51.94; 5, Billy Busch, 52.21.
200-meter dash — 1, Rod Richardson,
20.87; 4, Larry Kerr, 21.65.
5,000-meter run — 3, Jim Bolleter,
15:14.38.
1,600-meter run — 1, A&M (Larry Kerr,
Bart Daniel, James Washington, Leslie
Kerr), 3:11.05.
Discus — 5, Mark Isenmann,
(46.86).
153-9
Edwards claims title
in Aggieland races
Texas A&M employee Kay Ed
wards was the women’s star Satur
day in the third annual Little
Aggieland Bicycle Races, winning
the women’s individual class and
leading her team to a first in that
division.
Edwards, who is also a state
champion in kayak and canoe com
petitions, outdistanced second
place finisher Carol Choice in the
women’s individual and joined
Deven Anthony and Marie Elise
Jarreau in the team victory.
Anthony also won the men’s in
dividual over Richard Goelz and
Terrance Spencer.
In second place in team com
petition were Roger Lee Madson,
Dave Albergine and Chuck
McFerrin. Bill Kilgore, Mike
Eliades and Scot McLure finished
in third.
The races, held on the streets
bordering the drill field across
from the Memorial Student Cen
ter, attracted 10 teams (three
members on each team) and 10
men racers.
The event was sponsored by the
Texas A&M Cycling Team.
Men 5 golf team takes 1st
Texas A&M shot a 15-under-par 849 Saturday to squeeze past the
University of Houston’s three-under 851 to win the two-day Border
Olympic Golf Tournament.
Leading the pace for Texas A&M and the tournament was Danny
Briggs, who shot a 207, nine under par.
Fellow Aggie Gary Kruger and Houston’s John Slaughter tied for
second in individual honors with a five-under 211s.
The University of Texas came in a distant third with an 875, 11 over
par; followed by Texas Christian University, 882; North Texas State
887; Arkansas, 895; Lamar 901; Baylor, 911; and Pan American, 944.
Finishing fourth in the medalists competition was Arkansas’ Bruce
Jenkins with a 213; followed by Lamar’s Ronnie Black with a 213.
I
1 [Aggie trackster Mike Glaspie concentrates as
' he approaches a hurdle during the 110-meter
two
hurdles Saturday in a triangular meet at Kyle
Field. Glaspie finished second in this race in
Staff photo by Greg Gammon
13.86, Rick Thomas won the event and Texas
A&M scored 109 points to defeat Lamar, 45
points, and UT-Arlington, 35 points.
I.
Mifle team finishes second
2 red 32 to the Cotij
•e due to the quid
ntercepted poor A(5
illowed Houston to? By RITCHIE PRIDDY
|ng. Battalion Staff ^
lalfandactuallyledf The Texas A&M rifle team returned to College
he second half ho«® tion Sunday with a second place trophy it won at
Aggie boat | e Third Annual Mardi Gras Invitational, held in
New Orleans.
sized it after the jMIt was the third year in a row for the Aggies to finish
onsistent all yearl( mseconc ] place in the rifle match.
:ould notgettoonK|'j’| 1 j rt y_g ve co ll e ges and universities from around
(he country participated in the event with Eastern
iking toward next )* w \{ ex j co winning it with a score of 2,177.
eplace the seniors>'| j exas finished with a team score of 2,160 and
exas A&M. Auburn University finished in third place with a
:oo badly with gra®re of 2,150.
to bring in someM Mike Winzeler paced the Aggies with a total score
our seniors and 11:^556 out of a possible 600. Winzeler shot 176 out of
in the standing position, good enough for second
Fammy Grafton, Tff
rainer Bobby Mcfc
heir season 7-22.
ieet;
ick
, DanaBeckely, UTA,$ :
a Spier, A&M, 28-M 1 '
Vickilee Cobern, AMU*
lash — 1, Samira Cof
2, Kathy Leggett, AW
lash — 1, Evelyn S«< ;
2, Kathy Leggett, At'
la Lake, A&M, 26.!):'
son, UTA, 27.56.
uh — 1, Suzanne SbeS*'
2, Paula Lake, LOO*'
kM, 1:01.87; 4,1
!.47; 5, Nancy Chany, 0 l
ody Dennis, UTA, H
re/ay—1, UTA,4:11,
3, A&M, 4:26.85
•s — 1, Lisa McCoisf*
; 2, Beverly Porter, At'
— 1, Barbara Collins*^
2, Diane Harrell, At'
— 1, Lorie Scott, Ml)
* — 1, Marilee
; 2, Adelaide Bratton, At'
Thad Everheart shot 540, John Heye 529 and
Glenn Park, 535 for the first team squad.
Texas A&M took two teams to the match, the
second team finished in sixth place with a score of
2,043.
Kurt Nauck led the team with a score of 534; he
also finished in second place in the prone position
with a score of 198 out of 200. Troy Smith shot 521,
Harvey Haney, 495 and Renee Ruth, 493.
The team will have a few weeks off before they
participate in the Central Texas Invitational match in
Austin.
The Aggies have participated in nine matches this
year and have not finished below first or second in
any of them.
Third Annual
Your Worn-Out
& Uncomfortable Shoes
Worth
Clean Out Your Closets
Of Forgotten Shoes
SWEnsen*s
re a high school
ucational aid foi
you can learn a
an extra $1,000
17 or older and
m.
Buy a sandwich and have
a Super Soda on us.
Our food is just as good as our ice cream. And here’s your chance to
enjoy both for less. Right now when you order any of our delicious sand
wiches, you’ll get a Super Soda on us. That’s our idea of a good old-
fashioned treat.
Special good Monday through Friday only.
Offer expires March 22, 1981.
Trade In Your Old Shoes * on
Any Shoe of Your Choice at Lewis’
OPEN
11:30 a.m. Mon.-Sat.
12 noon Sun.
CLOSE
10:30 p.m. Sun.-Thurs.
11 p.m. Fri. & Sat.
See below
I’ll bet you can find an old pair of shoes under the house or in the closet you
haven’t worn in months. Or maybe you’ve worn it once or twice and gave up on
the comfort. Makes no difference. We’ll give you a discount for each new pair you
buy (one discount per pair). Our Spring selection is arriving daily, and we’ve got
some new styles you’re going to like. Choose from famous name brands. LEWIS’
can deliver style, comfort, and fit, for a modest price. So go ahead, clean out the
closet. We’ll take ’em! No limit to the number of pairs you can purchase. Nothing
held back.
TRADE IN YOUR OLD SHOES FOR THESE DISCOUNTS:
Men’s Shoes Trade-In $ 5
Women’s Shoes Trade-In $ 5
Children’s Shoes Trade-In $ 4
Canvas & Athletic** Trade-In. . $ 3
OLD SHOES TO BE DONATED TO SALVATION ARMY
Trade-In Discounts for This Week Only
* Pairs Only
**Men’s Women’s
& Children’s
S IPIS'
£ S to-'ieA.
The GOOD FIT SHOE STORE
Culpepper Plata
Open 10-8, hton.-Fri. |
Open 10-8, Sat
693-3577,
e
d
:s
i,
ts
af
st
r-
le
2n
ed
N.
up
he'
he
. of
out
ted
“all
op-
res,
t or
1 or
y or
ban
it of
L It
onal
jany
■ink.
d in
i the
;lson
amar
uglas
ston,
filed
s the
npor-
r cur-
d gas
;d by
it the