The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 26, 1975, Image 9

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    WHATABURCfR
RESTAURANT
Mish
ears.
cries
iculd
goes
night
igfor
f last
it for
ion,
♦
That’s your nearby Whataburger j
restaurant. Stop in any time and fill ft
up on a juicy quarter pound of pure '
ground beef. Top it off with an order ft
of crisp golden french fries and a ”
\Ss7 super shake and discover that ft
W Whataburger is Whataburger should *
v T be. ft
■ College Station Bryan
105 Dominik Dr. 110l Texas Ave. |
H/nfs it will be major bout
Ali undecided on date
for next crown defense
THE BATTALION
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 26, 1975
Page 9
Tlantatiomt
Oaks
TENNIS
COURT
PARTY
MUSIC BY:
THE FAMILY JEWELS
FROM
7:30 - 12
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 9
ALL THE FREE BEER YOU CAN DRINK.
ADMISSION: $2 PER MAN
$1 PER LADY
ADVANCE TICKETS AT:
PLANTATION OAKS
DOUX CHENE
CLEVELAND (AP) — A sub
dued Muhammad Ali said Tuesday
he wasn’t sure when he would next
defend the heavyweight champion
ship. But speculation was that his
next fight would be a major one.
“I’ll fight in eight weeks against
Joe Bugner the European champ
ion, ” Ali had said after his mismatch
victory against Chuck Wepner
Monday night at the Coliseum.
But Ali, who was in such a quiet
mood he did not hold a day-after
news conference, said at breakfast
Bills’linebacker spot
open for McCrumbly
pent house 1
Located at Briarwood Apts, above the leasing oflice.
Now has their own disc jockey to play your records by request.
LADIES (UNESCORTED)—ALL DRINKS
HALF PRICE—ALL OF THE TIME.
Starting Monday, March 10,
these will be our weekly specials.
WEDNESDAY-HAPPY HOUR NIGHT
All drinks Vi price all night long
THURSDAY-LADIES NIGHT
Free drinks to all ladies
NEW HOURS STARTING MARCH 26
OPEN WEDNESDAY — SATURDAY 5 P.M.
A Buffalo Bill newsletter named
former Texas A&M football player
John McCrumbly as a top candidate
for the middle linebacker spot on
the NFL team.
The Bills were impressed with
the size, strength and quickness of
the 6-2, 253-pound Dallas native
and they wasted no time in grabbing
him in the draft, taking him in the
5th round.
McCrumbly played an important
part in making the Aggie defense
the best in the Southwest Confer
ence and second best in the nation.
You might say he was the glue that
made the front line cohesive.
The Buffalo coaching staff has
been trying to improve their
linebacking for the past couple of
years and apparently they think that
McCrumbly along with teammates
Tom Ruud and Bob Nelson of Neb
raska may be the solution to their
problem.
“We went into the draft hoping to
improve our linebacking and we feel
we have definitely done so,” said
Buffalo Head Coach Lou Saban.
Ruud and Nelson are both strong
and talented young men who played
extremely well in the tough Big 8
Conference. McCrumbly has tre
mendous size and, from all reports,
plenty of potential to develop,” he
added.
Ags, UM
square off
in twinbills
The Texas Aggies take a break
from Southwest Conference play
today and tomorrow to take on the
Minnesota Gophers in a couple of
doubleheaders. Game time both
days is 1:00 at Kyle Field.
The Aggies are currently in sec
ond place in the SWC behind the
Texas Longhorns. The Aggies are
6-3 in SWC play and 16-4 for the
season. Minnesota is 2-2 for the year
after splitting a twin bill with the
Longhorns in Austin Monday.
After Thursday’s doubleheader
with the Gophers the Aggies travel
to Fort Worth for an important
three game weekend series with the
TCU Horned Frogs. The series with
TCU will decide who can stay close
to the Longhorns who are 12-0 in
the SWC. Texas hosts the Arkansas
Razorbacks this weekend.
In today s first game James
“Hoot” Gibson and Kirk Campbell
are scheduled to pitch for the Aggies
with David Lockett and Jeff
Scheumack slated to go in the night
cap.
If the “Train performs as ex
pected there may be an engineer’s
cap visible on the Buffalo sideline
next season.
r msc a.
Cafeteria J
New and Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With
These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods.
Each Daily Special Only $1.29 Plus Tax.
“Open Daily”
Cafeteria: 11 AM to 1:30 PM - 4:30 PM to 7 PM
Snack Bar: 7 AM to 10 PM
MONDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
Salisbury Steak
with
Mushroom Gravy
Whipped Potatoes
Your Choice of
One Vegetable
Roll or Corn Bread and Butter
Coffee or Tea
TUESDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
BREADED FISH
FILET w/TARTAR
SAUCE
Cole Slaw
Hush Puppies
Choice of one
vegetable
Roll or Corn Bread & Butter
Tea or Coffee
WEDNESDAY
EVENING SPECIAL
Chicken Fried Beef
Steak w/cream
Gravy
Whipped Potatoes and
Choice of one other
Vegetable
Roll or Corn Bread and Butter
Coffee or Tea
THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL
Italian Candle Light Spaghetti Dinner
SERVED WITH SPICED MEAT BALLS AND SAUCE
Parmesan Cheese - Tossed Green Salad
Choice of Salad Dressing - Hot Garlic Bread
Tea or Coffee
Our meat and fish are processed in Government inspected plants.
QankAmericard
im ft ■/, tut ‘,// : ,f
FRIDAY EVENING
SPECIAL
Mexican Fiesta
Dinner
Two Cheese and
Onion Enchiladas
w/chili
Mexican Rice
Patio Style Pinto Beans^
Tostadas
Coffee or Tea
One Com Bread
SATURDAY
EVENING
SPECIAL
“Yankee Pot Roast
Texas Style”
Tossed Salad
Choice of one
vegetable
Roll or Corn Bread & Butter
“Quality First”
JOHN MCCRUMBLY
Houston Astros
clobber Braves
COCOA, Fla. (AP) — The Hou
ston Astros roughed up Atlanta pit
cher Boric Harrison for nine runs in
two innings and went on to defeat
the Braves, 11-0 in a spring exhibi
tion baseball Tuesday.
The Astros paraded 12 players to
the plate in the first inning and pro
vided Houston starting pitcher
Larry Dierker with a 6-0 lead.
Dierker blanked the Braves on
two hits in seven innings and re
liever Mike Cosgrove allowed only
one hit the rest of the way.
Jose Cruz hit a three-run home
run in the first for Houston and Milt
May, Enos Gabel and Greg Gross
also drove in runs in the inning.
The Astros produced three more
runs in the third on Gross’ single,
Dierker’s triple and Cliff Johnson’s
sacrifice fly.
Mike Easier hit a home run for
Houston in the seventh and Ken
Boswell hit a sacrifice fly to score the
final Astro run in the eighth.
For Battalion
Classified Call
845-5211
SUNDAY SPECIAL
NOON and EVENING
ROAST TURKEY DINNER
Served with
Cranberry Sauce
Cornbread Dressing
Roll or Corn Bread - Butter - Coffee
or Tea
Giblet Gravy
And your choice of any
One vegetable
Tuesday, “I don’t know if I’ll fight in
eight weeks. I’m sore.”
“Ali’s thinking of the big fight —
Frazier or Foreman,” trainer
Angelo Dundee said.
While Ali said he did not expect
to fight in June, in another breath he
talked of a bout against Bugner in
Chicago’s Soldier Field as a giant
tribute to the late Elijah Muham
mad — a fight for the masses with
$25 tops.
Promoter Don King said, how
ever, that nothing definite had been
decided along that line. He agreed
with Dundee that there is talk of
going for the “big fight.”
“If Ali fights Bugner, it would be
in June,” King said. “But a bout
with Joe Frazier or George Fore
man would not he staged until the
fall.”
A third fight against Joe Frazier
could bring Ali as much as $10 mill
ion, twice the amount he earned
when he regained the title by knock- i
ing out George Foreman in Zaire
last Oct. 30.
He got $1.5 million against
Wepner, whom he knocked down
and stopped with 19 seconds left in
the 15th and final round of a fight
which was dull much of the time.
Ali had maintained he wasn’t in
top condition. And he did fight as
though he were saving himself,
doing little in the first eight rounds.
The champion showed no real in
terest in lighting until he tripped as
he backed away from a right-hand
punch to the body in the ninth
round.
Referee Tony Perez ruled it a
knockdown. Ali became angered
and punished the exhausted
Wepner the rest of the way.
Wepner went to a hospital after
the fight to have a cut on his left
eyebrow stitched and cleaned. He
later returned to his hotel.
The 35-year-old Wepner got
$100,000 for his part in the main half
of the closed-circuit television
doubleheader.
Jerry Quarry reportedly got
$185,000 and Ken Norton $l(k),000 |
for the first half, in which Norton
stopped Quarry in the fifth round of
a scheduled 12-round heavyweight
bout at Madison Square Garden in
New York.
The first heavyweight title fight in
the United States in almost four
years drew 14,847 people to the
22,000-seat Coliseum, and the es
timated gate was $324,000. The
crowd at the Garden was 15,397 and
the gate a little more than $200,000.
AGGIE CINEMA
The Aggie Cinema Committee is currently recruiting new
members for the remainder of this spring semester and for the
upcoming fall. Membership is open to all who are willing to be
active participants in film programming on the TAMU Cam
pus.
Please come by the student programs office and fill out an
information sheet by Friday, March 28th and turn it in to the
secretaries if you are interested.
step into the msc circle
Gl
OPAS presents:
Alicia de Larrocha
Pianist
(TiERLE noRmon
COSmETIC STUDIO
University Square Shop will be open
until 8:00 p.m. Monday through Fri
day. Saturday: 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
March 2b 8 p.m.
Rudder Auditorium
for tickets call MSC Box Office 845-2916
Claude kipnis
MIME THEATRE
"BRAVOS AND LAUGHTER
THE HOUSE ALL EVENING.”
FILLED
TPUMtl
— Now York Times
OPAS SPECIAL ATTRACTION
April 1, 1975, 8 p.m.
Rudder Center Auditorium
Tickets & Information, MSC Box Office,
845-2916
Seminar by Claude Kipnis
Sat., March 29, 8 p.m.
Rudder Center Theatre
Free Admission
Sponsored by Town Hall — OPAS, TAMU
^ <S o <?w
ot TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY
Applications for membership and officer positions are available in the
Student Programs Office, Room 216, MSC, and will be accepted until
5:00 PM Friday, April 4. After completing the forms please schedule an
interview with the Student Programs Office secretaries.
To answer questions, call either the Student Programs Office at
845-1515 or Cindy Murray at 846-5102.
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