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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (April 20, 1972)
THE BATTALION Page 6 College Station, Texas Thursday, April 20,1 STUDENTS Speak Up ami Be Heard Do you want your voice to be heard by the establishment? If you are fed up with the way things are going and want a voice in State Government— SPEAK UP AND BE HEARD Saturday, April 22, 11)72 — «:30 - 7:30 at the RAMADA INN Ballroom B “Let’s make a BETTER WORLD to live in.” Gome and bring a friend. Pd. For By Ed Stephenson What More Could You Ask for? Brushed Denim Bush Jeans, Sta-Prest® Nuvo 1 ' Flare Sueded Sateen Bells, Blue Den im Bells, Fatique Bells, And Colors! Khaki, Olive, Faded Blue, Navy, Beige, Lava, Loden, Burgandy, Plum, Awol Wine, R&R Blue, K.P. Brown, Detention Blue, Delta Brown. W33 of course at the OK 801 Texas Ave. P.S. We also carry Brand “X” 822-2512 Weekend activities spotlight visitor By JOHN CURYLO Battalion Sports Editor A busy weekend has been plan ned by the A&M athletic depart ment in conjunction with the Maroon-White game, the final football scrimmage of spring training for the Aggies. A golf touranment for the news media, a luncheon for the wives of the visiting sports writers and a banquet at the Ramada Inn highlight Friday’s activities. Coverage of the game will in clude 27 Texas newspapers, both wire services, 16 radio stations and 10 television stations. By comparison, the Texas-Penn State Cotton Bowl game this year was covered by 25 Texas newspapers. Friday’s golf tournament gets off to a shotgun start at noon, with 72 news media and 23 A&M personnel in the field. Nine of A&M’s football coaches, seven of the athletic department staff members, three members of the Athletic Council, three coaches of other varsity sports and one mem ber of the A&M Board of Direc tors will play in the tourney, hut they will not compete for prizes. The newsmen will he playing for a first place prize of a full set of new golf clubs. Second through fifth place finishers will be awai’ded a set of new irons, while sixth through ninth placers win sets of new woods. New golf shoes will be given to the tenth through nineteenth place finish ers. All the golfers will receive souvenir hats and golf balls. golf tournament will be given at a buffet dinner at the Ramada at 7:30 Friday night. The Maroon-White game will feature the presentation of Wish bone football to Aggie fans. Many of the Aggie football recruits will be here for the game and will be introduced at halftime. Also, some visiting basketball recruits will he introduced. Admission for the game will be $2.00 for adults and $1.00 for students high school age and un der. A&M students will be ad mitted on their activity cards, and A&M faculty members will be admitted on the covers of last year’s season ticket books. Among the newsmen and their wives attending the functions will be Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Waggoner and Hal Taxel of The Eagle, Bub- ha Kruse of the Pictorial Press, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Mistovich and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Greer of KORA Radio, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Watkins of WTAW Radio, Dave Williams of KAMU-TV, Mr. and Mrs. Bud dy Wilson of BCS-TV, and Mr. and Mrs. Wes Eddleman, Mr. and Mrs. Steve Harris, Mr. and Mrs. Ulman McMullen and Mr. and Mrs. Gary Smyrl of KBTX-TV. Visiting newsmen and wives include Clark Nealon, Mr. and Mrs. John Hollis, Jack Gallagher, Chuck Myers, Joe Whittington and Harv Boughton, Houston Post; Dick Peebles, Charles Car der, John Wilson and Mr. and Mrs. Bill McMurray, Houston Chronicle; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Pel ham and Mr. and Mrs. Martin Russo, KNU.Z Radio, Houston; Pat Rymkus, KTRH Radio, Hous ton; John Smith, Humble Radio Network, Houston; Doug Brown, KHOU-TV, Houston; and Lee Gordon, Channel 26 TV, Houston. Others are Jim Woodruff, Dav id Casstevens, Bob Galt and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Taylor, Dallas Times—Herald; Harless Wade, Dallas Morning News; Mr. and Mrs. John Lumpkin and Jim Mor gan, Associated Press, Dallas; and Mr. and Mrs. Gary Edwards, United Press International, Dallas. Also expected to be here are Galyn Wilkins, Mr. and Mrs. George Wallace, Gerald Garcia and Charles Clines, Fort Worth Star-Telegram; Tony Pederson, Mr. and Mrs. Dave Campbell and Mr. and Mrs. Hollis Biddle, Waco Tribune-Herald; Frank Fallon, KWTX Radio, Waco; Mr. and Mrs. Jim Lewis and Chris Need- urn, KCEN-TV, Waco; and Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Williams, KWTX- TV, Waco. Other visiting newsmen and wives include Mr. and Mrs. Karl O’Quinn, San Antonio Express; Mr. and Mrs. Bob Ostrum, San Antonio Light; Mr. and Mrs. Jim Wiggins, Humble Radio Network, San Antonio; Mr. and Mrs. Ken Carr, Conroe Courier; Mr. and Mrs. Ken Hineman, KNRO Radio, Conroe; and Mr. and Mrs. Rusty Reynolds, KMCO Radio, Conroe. Also in attendance will be Car los Deere, Brenham Banner-Press; Mr. and Mrs. Tom Whitehead and Lou Spurger, KWHI Radio, Bren ham; Mr. and Mrs. David Frank, Beaumont Enterprise - Journal; Mr. and Mrs. Cy Hurst, KLVI Radio and KFDM-TV, Beaumont; Bob West and Larry Bodin, Port Arthur News; Mr. and Mrs. Gary Snyder and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Kazmar, Orange Leader; and Archie Whitfield and Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Ellis, Tyler Courier- Times-Telegraph. Others are Bill Rawlan, Cle burne Times-Review; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Murray, KCLE Radio, Cleburne; J. C. Chatmas and Wes ley Allen, Marlin Daily Demo crat; Victor Fain and Terry Bran non, Nacogdoches Sentinel; Mr. and Mrs. Terry Hopkins, Athens Daily Review; Boyd Porter, KYLE-FM, Temple; Steve Sin clair, Lufkin News; Lewis Yoa kum, Vernon Daily Record; and Mr. and Mrs. Steve Cowan, KGBC Radio, Galveston. The remainder of the group in cludes Mr. and Mrs. Dick Gibbs, Corsicana Sun; Bill Kennedy, Snook Publications, Refugio; Dennis Key, Burleson Star; Mr. and Mrs. Benny King, Tomball Tribune; Mr. and Mrs. Bill King, Gainesville Register; Charles Manning, KSIX Radio and KZTV, Corpus Christi; John Platzer, Brazosport Facts, Freeport; and Mr. and Mrs. Waylon Ward, KIMP Radio, Mt. Pleasant. Caddies for the tourney will be members of A&M’s Corps of Cadets. An added incentive in the tour nament, which will be scored on the Blind Callaway system, is the special prize of a 1972 Cadillac for the player who scores a hole- in-one on the 155-yard, par three ninth hole. The white car with a maroon interior is offered by C. J. Allen of Allen Oldsmobile- Cadillac of Bryan. Wives of newsmen will be en tertained by wives of A&M per sonnel while the men are playing golf. A luncheon is scheduled at the Briarcrest Country Club. Prizes and other awards for the Marks set in ’mural meet Keathley Hall edged the White Band and White Hall by six points to capture the freshman track competition in Monday’s an nual intramural meet. Keathley ran up 34 points for first place as White Band and White Hall shared second place with 28 apiece. Brad Kohls led the winners’ as sault with 18 points as he and Grier tied for freshman high point honors. Kohls and Grier traded first and second place finishes in the 880-yard run and the 440- He drives the Texas way What do Ed McMahon, Bob Lilly, Bob Hayes, Phyllis Diller, The Car penters, The Lettermen and Charley Pride have in common? They all “Drive Friendly.” And they’re telling Texans of their own personal ways of driving friend ly on a new series of radio public service announcements now being dis tributed to more than 400 stations by the Texas Office of Traffic Safety Administration. In one of the announcements, Ed McMahon, Johnny Carson’s food-and- Ed McMahon drink-loving sidekick on the “To night” show, admits that he does “en joy a nip every once in a while. “But,” he says, “I never drink when I’m going to have to do the driving home. If you plan to drink, let some one else drive. That’s just one more way to ‘Drive Friendly’—the Texas way.” The entertainers and athletes on this new record, which is third in the series, join a long list of state and national personalities who support the Governor’s traffic safety program. yard dash to accomplish their feat. In the upperclass division, Com pany A-2, led by Henry Oster- mann’s 30 point performance, out distanced L-l, 31-25, for that di vision’s title. Black-Awareness finished a close third with 24 points. Monday’s competition saw meet records set in the freshman 120- yard intermediate hurdles with Jim Bremer’s 15.3 and in the 880-yard run as Kohls ran a fine 2:02.7. Upperclassman rec ords came on Ostermann’s 13.9 in the hurdles and a 2:03.0 880 performance by Squadron 1’s Joe Wa]fz, who tied the previous mark. The meet, sponsored by the Intramural Department and con ducted by Dr. George Jessup’s P.E. 255 Coaching of Track class, saw 346 students participate, making it the largest IMA meet ever held. Upperclass Division 120 Yard Intermediate Hurdles: (1) Henry Ostermann, A-2, 13.9 (new record) (2) Gary Terry, Puryear, 14.8 (3) Roy Shepherd, Sq. 2, 15.7. 440-Yard Relay: (1) Black Awareness, 44.6 (2) L-l, 45.2 (3) F-l, 45.9. 880 Yard Dash: (1) Bill Shef field, Davis-Gary, 2:03.2 (2) Joe Waltz, Sq. 1, 2:03.4 (3) Jim Mc Bride, Utay, 2:05.2. 100 Yard Dash: (1) Van Horn, Law, 10.1 (2) Gary Miller, Crock er, 10.1 (3) Derron Patterson, Sq. 12, 10.2. 440 Yard Dash: (1) Harold Vagtborg, Sq. 1, 52.1 (2) Bill Crist, Sq. 4, 62.8 (3) Howard Vinson, BA, 53.4. 880 Relay: (1) L-l, 1:35.9 (2) BAG, 1:38.1 (3) Davis-Gary, 1:38.1. Broad Jump: (1) Henry Oster mann, A-2, 21’0” (2) Larry Redd, Milner, 20T1!£” (3) John Begnoud, Sq. 6, 20’6”. Shot Put: (1) Mitch McVey, Crocker, 52’1” (2) Richard Os- burn, Hart, 49’4^” (3) Bennie Gill, Legett, 48’8”. High Jump: (1) Henry Oster mann, A-2, 6’2” (2) Gerald Mc Millan, B-2, 5’9” (3) Charles Mahler, L-l, 5’8”. FOR BEST RESULTS TRY BATTALION CLASSIFIED From ESTABLISHMENT ANARCHY SPEECH WRITER FOR BARRY GOLDWATER 1964 PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN CHIEF WRITER FOR I960 REPUBLICAN PLATFORM AND 1962 REPUBLICAN STATEMENT OF PRINCIPLE KARL STAUNCH SUPPORTER AND HONKIE MASTER OF CEREMONIES FOR BLACK PANTHER PARTY CONTRIBUTING EDITOR OF RAMPARTS MAGAZINE CONSULTANT TO WHITE HOUSE STAFF DURING EISENHOWER ADMINISTRATION CONSULTANT TO SPECIAL TASK FORCE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE HESS VISITING FELLOW AT THE INSTITUTE FOR POLICY STUDIES IN WASHINGTON Th EDITOR OF FULL-SCALE CONGRESSIONAL REPORT ON AMERICAN STRENGTH AND STRATEGY ursJay - Dpril 20 fr00P.Nl."N\SC Ballroom -pre.e. net mission Great Tssues PresenhirtoA EDITS NEWSLETTER ON POLITICAL REPRESSION WASHINGTON EDITOR OF THE LIBERTARIAN FORUM MONEY Loaned on Anything of Value Sports equipment Stereo equipment Guitars-Amps Jewelry-Tools Guns-Cameras No credit record require* Come to see us. GetapajT loan of $30 and receiij $2.00 free on your fin loan. Texas State Credit y 0 i > | 1014 Texas Ave. Weingarten Center THE RED LION 3606 S. College Ave. Proudly Presents The Country Five Featuring A Wide Varietj of Music EVERY FRIDAY NITE 8:30 TIL 12 LADIES ALWAYS FREE NOW SHOWING DOUBLE FEATURE Dennis Hopper In ‘THE LAST MOVIE” And Peter Fonda In “HIRED HAND” ptaoss 1 |War d, J a do |o viol, e Maryl Stit as 2 >th tv s and ■ss can QUEEN -bout ] krlier e that 10 and FIESTA NITE — TONITE ‘EL JUICIO DELOS HIJOS k ^er ■he uni EAST SCREEN AT 7:20 PJt “DIAMONDS ARE FOREVER’ With Sean Connery wIM At 9:20 p. m. ‘SUPPORT YOUR LOCALflotorcj SHERIFF” With James Garner WEST SCREEN AT 7:15 P. M “PICNIC ANGELS” (R) At 9:00 p. m. “WILD RIVERS” (R) ^ Satt ction ek. anctio torcyc] n eve- TAM fessioi rth, i ston, TONITE AT 7:15 P. M. 2 Clint Eastwood “PLAY MISTY FOR ME” lls At 9:15 p. m. “BEGUILED” ■ace c saic dew t 1‘niver °n the