The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 08, 1975, Image 8

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Page 8 THE BATTALION
TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1975
1975-76 TOWN HALL
SELECTION COMMITTEE
QUESTIONNAIRE
The TOWN HALL COMMITTEE is conducting a survey to help schedule
performances for the 1975-76 season. This survey is to find out who you
are interested in hearing.
CIRCLE FIVE
Chuck Berry
Preservation Hall Jazz Band
Bachman Turner Overdrive
Ohio Players
Burt Bacharach
Linda Ronsted
America
Rufus
Jimmy Buffet
Helen Reddy
Chicago
Rare Earth
Carpenters
Seals & Crofts
John Denver
Doc Severinsen
Tony Orlando
Carly Simon
Ooobie Brothers
B. W. Stevenson
Mac Davis
Cat Stevens
Emerson, Lake, & Palmer
Steely Dan
Eagles
Charlie Rich
Fifth Dimension
Johnny Rodriquez
Guess Who
James Taylor
Merle Haggard
Three Dog Night
Albert Hammond
ZZ Top
Humble Pie
Average White Band
Carole King
Bill Cosby
Leo Kottke
Hues Corporation
Gordon Lightfoot
Willis Alan Ramsey
Lynyrd Skynyrd
Ray Price
Rich Little
Loretta Lynn
Henry Mancini
Tammy Wynette
Anne Murray
Allman Bros. Band
Joni Mitchell
OTHER SELECTIONS
Rick Nelson
Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
Charlie Pride
Do you live: On Campus Oft Campus
What would you be willing to pay for a good performance?
Circle one: $1-2 $3-4 $5-6
Would you rather listen to: Circle 2
Jazz
Hard Rock
Comedy
Easy Listening
Country Western
Rock’n Roll
Progressive Country
Classical
Oth er
Please return this survey to the Town Hall Cubicle in the Student Programs Office by April 19. Thank
you.
Texas Relays too tough
i
Ags place
in 5 events
A
By 1
By PAUL McGRATH
Staff Sports Writer
Texas A&M thinclads placed in
five events as the 48th annual
Texas Relays came to a close last
Saturday.
Sophomore hurdler Shifton
Baker took sixth in the 440-yard
hurdles with a 52.7 clocking. Bill
Newton also took a sixth in the
javelin with a short toss for him of
215-2. Both men finished their e-
vents on Friday.
Saturday at Memorial Stadium
saw pole vaulter Brad Blair finish
in a three-way tie for fourth place
with a vault of 16-0. The mile
relay foursome of Chuck Butler,
Baker, Horace Grant and Doug
Brodhead ran a 3.13.4 time for
fourth place. Dashman Charles
Dawson was clocked at 9.8 in a
photo-finish 100-yard dash to cap
ture sixth.
“I thought we all did real
well,” said Head Track Coach
Charles Thomas. “Just to qualify
for finals is doing pretty good.”
The University of Texas at El
Paso was named the outstanding
team of the Relays and world rec
ord holder in the pole vault, Dave
Roberts, was voted the most out
standing individual by the writers.
The 69 team field included five
world record holders including
Roberts. A1 Fuerbach took the
shot put as expected and hurdler
Jim Bolding ran away with the
440-yard hurdles. Dwight Stones
had a comparatively mediocre
leap of 7-1 (his world mark is 7-6
,5/8) to take first in the open high
jump. Roberts had a vault of 18-1
to take a first and then made
three unsuccessful attempts at 18-
8, nearly two inches off the rec
ord he set just a week before. Wo
men’s mile specialist, Francie Lar-
rieu, captured that event with a
4.35.4 time.
One highlight of the meet had
to be the narrow victory of TCLFs
Bill Collins in the 100. Thomas
said all eight challengers finished
within a foot and a half of one
another and second to fifth place
was within a foot. Collins won
Women thinclads
take 3rd in meet
Grid scrimmage
proves physical
(continued from page 6.)
By PAUL McGRATH
Staff Sports Writer
The women tracksters took
third as they hosted the first an
nual Texas A&M Women’s Invita
tional Track Meet.
The Aggies came off the lanes
with 83 points to Baylor’s 11814
and West Texas State’s 10614. The
A&M women took two firsts and
five seconds to bring in the major
ity of their marks.
Marsha Mitchell took first
place points in the 440-yard dash
and Lucy Neiman used her
119-514 discus throw to take first
in that event. Her toss was six and
one-half inches short of qualifying
for nationals.
The 880-yard medley
(220-110-110-440) team of Jane
Weisenfelder, Rita Kuntz, Debbie
Wootan and Mitchell took second
with a 1.58.6. Margaret Grant
leaped to second with a 4-6 high
jump.
Sharon Boyle ran the mile to
the tune of 5.44.7 for another Ag
gie second repeated that finish in
the half mile with a 2.32.3. Mardi
Alexander grabbed the last A&M
second points with a 15-014 long
jump.
Sandra Lyman took third be
hind Neiman in the plate toss with
a 111-6 throw. Wootan finished
fourth in the 100-meter high hur
dles at 16.6 and the mile relay
quartet also took fourth with a
time of 4.39.1. Neiman finished
fifth in the shot after a throw of
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31-714 and the 440-yard relay
squad took fifth with a 54.1.
The last event the Aggie wo
men placed in was the javelin,
where Ruth Whiteley had a toss
of 98-114.
“I was very pleased with their
performance,” said women’s
coach Connie Karcher. “This was
the first time we had competed in
a lot of events so the times we did
get I was very satisfied with.
‘‘The running events really
came through for us,” said Karch
er. The field events had previously
been the women’s strongpoint. “I
was really excited about it.”
Karcher said she was especially
pleased with Boyle, who took two
seconds, and Mitchell, who won
the quarter and anchored the sec
ond place half mile medley relay.
Karcher also spoke well of Nei
man and Alexander. This was the
first time Alexander had high
jumped for A&M.
Ag golfers
take second
at ’Doches
13 yards on six runs and Jay collect
ing 21 on eight carries.
The passing game didn’t go well
for the No. 1 unit as they connected
on two passes in 14 attempts with
two interceptions. Wilson said
breakdowns in blocking and missed
passes were the main problems.
Both starting receivers, Carl
Roaches and Richard Osborne,
grabbed one aerial.
The defense played their usual
aggressive style and made quite a
bit of noise themselves. All-
Americans Pat Thomas and Ed
Simonini stole a pass each for the
No. 1 unit with cornerback Tony
Blankenship doing the same for the
reserve unit.
Assistant Head Coach Melvin
Robertson probably felt a lot better
about the middle linebacker spot
vacated by John McCrumbly as
both Robert Jackson and Grady
Wilkerson had great days. Jackson,
a transfer from Henderson Junior
College, was in on 16 collisions and
caused a fumble and Wilkerson
made ten stops.
The whole defense performed
well with Thomas, Simonini, Blake
Schwarz, Jimmy Dean, Garth Ten
Napel and Edgar Fields drawing
special praise from the coaching
staff.
The Aggie football team will rest
Monday and get back to action
Tuesday afternoon at 4:30.
with a 9.5 on the chronometer
The University of Texas
broke the sprint relay recoii
by A&M in 1970 at 39.7. !|
Longhorns were first timed
39.6, but it turned out the
was in haste as their actual
was recorded as 39.8.
Thomas had kind words:!
nearly everyone of his ti
“We’re real proud of the
(Gerald) D’Ambrosio ran.
was some question whether
could run all out but he
through. I was pleased with,
way (Ray) Brooks ran and Bit
ran real well.” All three
sprinters had 220-yard times
der 21 seconds in the prelimii
ies. “Horace Grant is coming
real strong,” he said.
Thomas also spoke welloflft
distance men, Bruce Smiths;
Manfred Kohrs. Smith ran
4.14.0 leg and Kohrs a 4.10.0 .
the four-mile relay.
In addition to the meet war ;
26-mile marathon in which ft:
ard Adams, from A&M but nr
ning unattached, finished sect:
with a time of two hours andt
minutes. Charles Cottle came:
second in the half-maratk
Thomas says he may take Adr
to the Drake Relays after he gt
his eligibility.
“Overall, I’m pretty please;
The relay teams did real well. 11
mile relay was not quite as fas!
we’ve had,” said Thomas.
Three Aggies remained on i
sidelines in Austin with a varie;
of leg ailments. Sprinters Si
Dierschke and Robert Harris ho
ever are expected to be ready!;
the Baylor dual meet in t*
weeks. Stellar hurdler Scota
Jones “is not coming around ra
fast, but he’s a little bit bette:
He may return to action in tte
to four weeks. “Adolph TIe
can run now, but he’s not inta
shape,” Thomas said about AM
top half miler.
A&M was scheduled to haver
open date this weekend butt*
cause of two previously cancels
meets, Thomas said he will tail
the team to Lafayette, La.,
compete in the Southwestern Ri
lays. The Aggies will leave Fridi)
for the trip to Bayou country.
Last X
dent Ser:
sponsor ii
bility of j
The t
Vol. 6£
After playing a fine weekend
of golf, the Texas Aggies finished
no better than second at the re
cent Stephen F. Austin Tourna
ment, in Nacogdoches.
The University of Houston
Cougars, who seem to be at the
top every weekend, set the win
ning pace with a team total of 736
for the 36-hole, 12-team affair.
The Aggies, led by Steve White-
side, finished with a team score of
772. McLennan Community Col
lege came in third at 785 ahead of
Wharton County Junior College
which finished at 793.
Whiteside finished third in the
individual scoring, with a 147, six
strokes behind tournament winner
Keith Furgus of Houston, who
posted a 141 total. Van Gillen, of
Houston, finished second at 145.
Other Aggies and their scores
at the tournament included Ed
Pennington at 152, Monte Schau-
er at 154, Tom Sutter at 159 and
Bobby Baker at 160.
TUESDAY AGGIE SPECIAL
Bar-B-Cue Chicken
1/2 chicken $1.85 Chicken Platter $2.10
Platter served with beans, slaw & garlic bread
Bandy Sims coulege y sta™,s
B&r-B-Cue House best bar-b-cue
3824 Texas Ave., Bryan 846-8016
BILL’S BARBER & STYLE SHOP
Layer Cuts,
Wash & Wear Cuts, Styling
FOR MEN AND WOMEN .
INTRODUCING BEA AYALA
Formeriy of Wilson's
Walk-in
or
appointment
846-2228
215 University
Across from 4AM
Next to Cempvs
Theater
MONDAY EVENING
TUESDAY EVENING
WEDNESDAY
SPECIAL
SPECIAL
EVENING SPECIAL
Salisbury Steak
BREADED FISH
Chicken Fried Beef
with
FILET w/TARTAR
Steak w/cream
Mushroom Gravy
SAUCE
Gravy
Whipped Potatoes
ooi© oiaw
Hush Puppies
Whipped Potatoes and
Your Choice of
Choice of one
Choice of one other
One Vegetable
vegetable
Vegetable I
Roll or Corn Bread and Butter
Roll or Corn Bread & Butter
Roll or Corn Bread and Butter
Coffee or Tea
Tea or Coffee
Coffee or Tea
( MSC A,
New and Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased With
These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Foods.
Each Daily Special Only $1.39 Plus Tax.
“Open Daily”
Cafeteria: 11 AM to 1:30 PM - 4:30 PM to 7 PM
Snack Bar: 7 AM to 10 PM
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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
EATING OUT IS FUN”
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
NOON and EVENING
SPECIAL
“Yankee Pot Roast
Texas Style”
Tossed Salad
Choice of one
vegetable
Roll or Corn Bread & Butter
“Quality First”