The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 30, 1973, Image 7

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

    THE BATTALION
Wednesday, May 30, 1973
College Station, Texas
Page 7
:ccessful Ian
to forget^
' experiencn
Texas Worlj
amo 500 wit|
will win,
bic inch Foij
veteran %
Personal rights took a terrific leap backwards this past month
Isaac hasjiks to “Texas Coach” magazine and that well-known, highly touted
ond placeij.
id will be
t the Alaitt
U
JA
572
etic champion, Tony Simpson. Who? If you don’t know, don’t feel
out, for Simpson is a junior high football coach at Galena Park
thshore.
He wrote the lead article in this month’s “Texas Coach” titled
le Hair Length is a Doctrinal Issue.” The article concerns itself with
theory that long hair on boys and men is the sign of a “sissy” and
uld be banned from American playing fields.
The article was written publicly answering the questioning as to the
vance of not allowing the state’s top athletes to participate in this
mer’s all-star football and basketball games.
Getting back to Simpson, he says, “It is time that American
ches stopped allowing themseleves to be personally represented by
e athletic teams and individuals that look like females. Only in the
nal world is the male designed to be the attractive.”
He also portrays long hair with that “pinko element” in our nation,
male with long hair is cute, he is pretty, he is sweet,” he sneers. “If
coaches of America would grow long hair like their athletes, we
ht be able to scare the Russians and Chinese Communists to death
lour lack of masculinity.”
“It should be pointed out that the only reason males are free to
! like females and their coaches are free to permit this is because we
real men that were not cute, not sweet, and not pretty, with the
rage and sense enough to kill our enemies all over the globe.”
You’ve got to be kidding! I respect idealism but this guy’s really
out. To keep one’s coaching job, one must win games. Even at the
iorhigh level. The higher one climbs in coaching, the more dedicated
liat effort. If Eddie Owens was at his school, you can bet he’d be
ing even though he is black and has long hair because with Owens
our team, you will win many many games.
Simpson upheld, with great admiration, the hair-ban used by the
[ targame committee. “A good hair code will get the abnormals out
ithletics before they become coaches and bring their “losers” stand-
>into the profession.”
If they’re any “losers” in the profession, it’s Mr. Simpson. No one
the right to subtract one’s personal rights because of some mental
ilem he might have in accordance with lengthened locks. Having
jrthair doesn’t automatically put you into the “winners” category
any means. People with short hair murder, rape, steal, overuse
lulants, etc., just like people with long hair.
This final quote from Mr. Simpson should be one we all hold dear
along time placing it in one’s mental file marked “really freaky”.
He says that men who wear short hair are “in submission to warped
ms and standards of females who like to set the dress and grooming
idards for their mousy husbands, their pantywaist boyfriends, and
ir feminine sons.”
God, he also adds, made man to dominate women and that God
not mean for man to wear long hair. If any of the likenesses of
ist are accurate, he had long hair. As did people like George
shington, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, Joe Namath, John
Kennedy, Mark Spitz, etc.
If you’re worried about a son being infiltrated with Simpson’s
ist, militant, chauvanistic teachings, don’t,'for the poor fellow has
resigned his post. Could it have been by pressure???
MS
ns
ies”
fia-nas
SANCTIOI
WINSTON CUF
GRAND NATIONS
STOCK CARS
^ 500 MILES
b°a Y kV d PETTY * A LUS<
JOH N COC K ? Y A R BO RCH
Sun., Jun.l
1:30p.m.
allege stTTonTex
mi0'S MSTfSr SPEEDi
TEXAS A&M SPECIAL
R ?MCT r fo lnfield Ticke l
JUST $3 TO AGGIES
Available ONLY AT MSi
Relay Teams Hopeful
Tracksters Enter National Meets
After a brilliant second place
finish in the Southwest Confer
ence Meet in Austin two weeks
ago, the Texas Aggie track team
show its wares to the nation
when it partakes in two national
meets the next two weekends.
This weekend the team travels
to Wichita, Kansas to compete in
the National Track and Field
Federation Meet, tuning up for
the National Collegiate Athletic
Association Meet set for June
17-19 in Baton Rouge, La.
Coaches Charley Thomas and
Ted Nelson will accompany the
13-man squad and are placing
most emphasis on the relay teams
which rank high in best national
Texans Enter
Alamo 500
Three former winners at Texas
World Speedway have entered the
Alamo 500 scheduled for Sunday,
June 10.
Richard Petty, Buddy Baker
and Gordon Johncock are the
three drivers entered in the
$100,000 Classic who have tri
umphed at the $7 million motor-
sports facility in previous events.
Petty, who ranks as the win-
ningest driver in the history of
NASCAR, is the only two-time
winner at Texas World Speed
way. The Randleman, N. C.,
Dodge driver scored his first vic
tory at the Texas oval in the
1971 Texas 500, and again took
the checkered flag in the NAS
CAR 500-miler last June for
back-to-back wins. During his
fifteen year racing career, Petty
has won over 150 races, earning
almost $1V4 million.
Last November’s Texas 500
winner, Buddy Baker, hopes to
equal Petty’s win record at Texas
World Speedway with a second
consecutive victory in the Alamo
500. The popular Dodge chauf
feur already holds the qualifying
record for stock cars at TWS
with a speed of 176.284 miles-
per-hour.
USAC driver Gordon Johncock
is the most recent winner at the
high-banked course. Johncock re
ceived first place honors in the
stock car segment of the Texas
Twin 200’s on April 7.
times.
“Our sprint relay team showed
what it could do in the conference
meet and now have the confidence
to make a run at the national
title,” Thomas said. “With some
good workouts next week, the
mile relay team could be a con
tender also.”
Gerald D’Ambrosio, Sammy
Dierschke, Billy Porter and Don-
ny Rogers make up the sprint
relay team while Harold Davis,
Willie Blackmon, Horace Grant
and Doug Brodhead are members
©f the mile relay team.
The sprint relay team has the
fourth best time in the nation
thus far with a 39.9 which it ran
at the conference meet.
Scotty Jones, holder of the
fourth best national time in the
120-yard high hurdles, with a 13.5,
is hoping a nagging leg injury
will be relieved and enable him
to go all out at the national
meets. The best time in the na
tion so far is 13.4.
Also entered are Rogers in the
long jump, Ben Greathouse in
the high jump, David Peterek in
the pole vault. Porter in the 100-
yard dash, Willie Blackmon in the javelin and Craig Carter in the
880-yard run, Bill Newton in the shot put.
LAKEVIKW CLUB
3 Miles N. On Tabor Road
Saturday Night: Johnny Lyons & Janet Lynn &
The Country Nu-Notes
From 9 - 1 p. m.
STAMPEDE Every Thursday Nite
(ALL BRANDS BEER 35*)
With LIDLE EVA (In Person)
EVERY SUM)AY
Kiddies, Bring Mom & Dad Too!
Free Balloons and Prizes
11:00 a. m. - 1:15 p. m.
“QUALITY FIRST”
Nonesuch Catalog
Test your record collection.
(Check the best sellers that you already own.)
e
Score: 30 to 40 checks: You must be a music connoisseur. 10 to 14 checks. Good.
25 to 29 checks: Superior taste. 5 to 9 checks: Not bad.
20 to 24 checks: Take a bow. Under 5 checks: Needs improvement.
15 to 19 checks: Better than average.
H 71002 THE BAROQUE TRUMPET Corelli, Purcell, etc.
H 71005 ALBINONI: Adagio for Strs & Organ; 3 Ctos*
H 71011 BACH: Magnificat in D. BWV 243; Cantata,
BWV 51*
H 71015 HAYDN: Sym No 6 (Morning), No 7 (Noon),
No 8 (Night)
H 71018 VIVALDI: 3 Ctos; Suite
H 71019 BACH: 4 Ctos for Harpsichords & Orch*
H 71020 FRENCH ORGAN MASTERPIECES OF THE 17th &
18th CENTURIES*
H 71022 VIVALDI: 5 Ctos*
H 71029 BACH: Cantatas, BWV 140 & 57
H 71034 C.P.E. BACH: 6 Sonatas for Flute & Harpsichord
H 71041 MOZART: Coronation Mass, K. 317; Vesperae
solennes, K. 339
H 71064 BAROQUE MUSIC FOR RECORDERS*
H 71069 JAZZ GUITAR BACH*
H 71070 VIVALDI: The Four Seasons*
H 71073 LITURGICAL MUSIC FROM THE RUSSIAN
CATHEDRAL
H 71091 THE SPLENDOR OF BRASS*
H 71093 STRAVINSKY: The Rite of Spring; 4 Etudes for Orch
(Boulez, Cond)
H 71127 HANDEL: Water Music (complete) (Boulez, cond)
H 71137 BACH: Lute Music, BWV 996, 999, 1000, 1006a,
1007*
H 71161 MUSIC FOR THE CLASSIC GUITAR (Presti &
Logoya)*
H 71174 SUBOTNICK: Silver Apples of the Moon, for
Electronic Music Synthesizer*
H 71240 MAHLER: Symphony No 1 in D Major
(Horenstein, Cond)
H 71248 JOPLIN: Piano Rags (Rifkin. Piano)*
H 71257 HELIOTROPE BOUQUET: Piano Rags 1900-1970
H 71264 PIANO RAGS BY SCOTT JOPLIN. Vol II*
H 71007 RAVEL/DEBUSSY: Str Qts
H 71028 MOZART: Cto for 2 Pianos, K. 365, Cto for
3 Pianos, K. 242
H 71030 IBERT/GLAZOUNOV/VILLA-LOBOS Works for
Saxophone. Ch Orch
H 71031 HAYDN: Sym No 31 (Hornsignal), No 19, No 45
(Farewell)
H 71036 FRENCH DANCES OF THE RENAISSANCE
H 71042 VIVALDI: 6 Flute Ctos
H 71044 SCHUMANN: Konzertstucke: 4 Hns & Orch, Op 86;
Piano & Orch, Op 92*
H 71047 MOZART: Sym No 40, K. 550; Sym in D (aft Ser
No 9, Posthorn, K. 320)
H 71057 BACH: Ctos (3 Vlns, aft BWV 1064; FI, Vln, Hps.
BWV 1044)
H 71075 MILITARY FANFARES, MARCHES & CHORUSES FROM
THE TIME OF NAPOLEON
H 71104 VIVALDI: 5 Concertos for Diverse Instruments
H 71107 BACH: Sonatas for Cello & Harpsichord, BWV 1027,
1028, 1029
H 71111 RENAISSANCE MUSIC FOR BRASS
H 71117 18th-CENTURY ITALIAN HARPSICHORD MUSIC
H 71120 IN A MEDIEVAL GARDEN
H 71122 MILHAUD: Le Boeuf sur le toit; La Creation
du monde
H 71144 BACH: 2- & 3-part Inventions (complete)
H 71145 BAROQUE FANFARES & SONATAS FOR BRASS
H 71158 FAURE: Requiem
H 71203 SIBELIUS: 4 Legends from 'The Kalevala," Op 22
(Foss, cond)*
H 71203 SIBELIUS: The Wild Bull, for Electronic Music
Synthesizer*
H 71217 THE ART OF THE BAROQUE TRUMPET
H 71225 WUORINEN: Time's Encomium, for Synthesizer &
Processed Synthesized Sound (Pulitzer Prize Winner, 1970)
H 71227 MANDOLIN MUSIC by Beethoven & Hummel
H 71229 THE BAROQUE LUTE
H 71056 MOZART: Vln Ctos, No 3, K. 216; No 4, 218
H 71065 TELEMANN: Chamber Music with Recorder
H 71072 MOZART: Piano Ctos, No 20, K. 466; No 23, K. 488
H 71079 MOZART: Sym No 35 (Haffner), K. 385; No 38
(Prague), K. 504
H 71094 D. SCARLATTI: 16 Sonatas for Harpsichord
H 71098 FOUR CENTURIES OF MUSIC FOR THE HARP*
H 71126 MOZART: Ctos for Flute, K. 313, K. 314; Andante
in C, K. 315
H 71139 BRUCKNER: Sym No 7 in E (Schuricht, cond)
H 71171 VOICES OF THE MIDDLE AGES
H 71173 HAYDN: Mass in D minor (Nelson Mass)
H 71183 BIZET: Sym in C; Jeux d'enfants; Patrie Overture
(Munch, cond)
H71200 YANKEE ORGAN MUSIC (Ellsasser, organ)*
H 71202 CAGE: Cto for Prepared Piano & Ch Orch/
FOSS: Baroque Variations (Foss, cond)*
H 71222 AMERICAN BRASS MUSIC (American Brass Quintet)
H 71224 CAGE & HILLER: HPSCHD, for Harpsichords & Tapes/
JOHNSTON: String Quartet No 2*
H 71233 SPANISH MUSIC FOR THE CLASSIC GUITAR. Works
by Albe'niz, Falla, Granados, Nin-Culmell, Orbon, Rodrigo
H 71234 CARTER: Sonata for flute, oboe, cello & harpsichord;
Sonata for cello & piano
H 71236 NIELSEN: Sym No 5, Op 50; Saga-Drom, Op 39
(Horenstein, cond)
H 71241 MASTER WORKS FOR ORGAN, Vol 8. Works by
J. S. Bach
H 71246 XENAKIS: Electro-Acoustic Music
H 71249 CARTER: String Quartets, Nos 1 & 2
H 71255 CRUMB: Ancient Voices of Children
H 71266 MARCHES BY JOHN PHILIP SOUSA
H 71268 SONGS BY STEPHEN FOSTER
HB 73002 BEETHOVEN: Missa solemnis
* Available on cassette.
$1.88 per disc or 3 for $5.00
$3.59 per cassette tape or 3 for $10.00
MUSICLAND
Manor East Mall Phone 822-5985
Store Hours: Mon., Thurs., Fri.—9:30 a. m. - 8:30 p. m.
Tues., Wed., Sat.—9:30 a. m. - 6:00 p. m.
»v** c *».