The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 25, 1975, Image 12

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    Do they want equality or not?
Page 12 THE BATTALION
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, If.
NCAA’s stand on women’s sports ambiguous
By DEBORAH LACY
Staff Sports Writer
Well, it looks like the NCAA is
being hypocritical again in the sub
ject of women’s athletics.
Just last month they printed some
guidelines that gave their senti
ments concerning their positive
feeling toward women in sports.
Now this month they are objecting
to female competition in contact
sports and the application ofTitle IX
Education Act of 1972 regulations
that provide equal educational and
athletic opportunities.
Houston
escapes
LA, 6-5
Houston relief pitcher Wayne
Granger made a swift move to
third base to pick off the Dodgers’
tying- run in the seventh that left
Los Angeles hanging, as the As
tros stunned the California team
with a 6-5 victory Monday night.
Ron Cey never knew what hit
him as he was caught off base
and tagged by Doug Rader after
Granger’s pickoff throw. The
young Houston hurler saved a
win for Dave Roberts, who left
the game in that same inning.
Picking off runners at third
seems to be a hobby for Granger,
who has executed his third base
move with success three times
this season. “Doug (Rader) has
a way of letting me know when
he thinks we’ve got a chance for
a pickoff and I’m not going to
tell you what it is, but he showed
me the sign tonight and it work
ed,” said Granger.
The young Astro gave most of
the credit for his save to the
Houston infield. “I wouldn’t trade
the left side of our infield for any
in baseball. I wasn’t all that pleas
ed with my pitching tonight. It
was the fielding that pulled me
through.”
Granger’s seventh inning per
formance halted a three-run rally
by the Dodgers. Cey’s single
scored one run and Joe Ferguso
paved the way for two more with
another single, cutting the Astro
lead to 6-5.
A dynamite second inning gave
the Astros all six of their tallies
and Bob Watson put the icing on
the cake when he hit his 10th
homerun to score three.
Houston’s other three runs
came on singles from Cesar Ce-
deno and Roger Metzger and an
error by LoS Angeles second base-
man Davey Lopes.
The Dodgers struck once in the
second when Cey walked and
scored on Rick Auerbach’s single.
Tom Paciorek opened the fifth
with a double and later scored off
Steve Garvey’s grounder.
“He has such a smooth motion
on his pickoff attempts,” Houston
Manager Preston Gomez said of
Granger. “With his sidearm mo
tion, he and Rader really have
perfect timing together.”
I.OS ANGELES
HOUSTON
ab r li bi
ab r b bi
Lopes 21)
3 1 0 0
Gross If
4 110
Paciorek If
5 110
Met/.ger ss
4 111
Marshall p
0 0 0 0
Cedeno cf
2 111
W\ nn cl'
3 110
Watson 11)
3 113
Garve\ ll>
5 110
CJohnson c
3 0 0 (1
Cev 31)
4 12 1
Cabell rl
4 0 0 0
Lergnson rl
3 0 2 2
DoRader 3b
3 1 0 0
Yeagerc
4 (1 0 0
RAndrws2b
4 0 10
Auerbach ss
3 0 2 1
DaRobrts p
.3110
Dejesus ss
0 0 0 0
J Xiekro p
0 0 0 0
Buckner pb
0 0 0 0
Granger p
0 0 0 0
Dies 2b
0 0 0 0
Hooton p
1 (1 0 0
McMullen pb 0 0 0 0
Rhoden p
1 0 0 0
U-c If
1 0 0 0
Total
33 5 9 4
Total
30 6 6 5
_ _opes,
Angeles 9, Houston 5. 2B—Paciorek. 3B—DaRob-
erts. FIR—Watson (101. SB—Cedeno2.
IP H R ER BB SO
3 5 6 6 3 2
4 10 0 10
1 0 0 0 1 0
5 5 7 5
0 0 0 0
0 0 1 0
Flooton (L, 6-6)
Rhoden
Marshall
DaRobrts (W, 4-9)
J. Xiekro
Granger
6 1-3 7
0 2
2 2-3 0
Save — Granger (5). YVP—DaRoberts. F—2:28.
-12,472.
Let’s begin with what the NCAA
said last month. One of their so cal
led “rules ’ was that the “existing
rules of law and NCAA policy con
template that qualified females will
participate on teams which formerly
were exclusively male. The NCAA
can not legally or practically limit
its services and programs so as to
exclude such qualified females.
They also made it clear that it is
not permissible or plausible for the
NCAA to enter into agreements
with other organizations (AIAW)
which for example would accord the
NCAA exclusive authority over
male competition and accord a like
monopoly position to an organiza
tion for the control of female inter
collegiate athletics.
The Association for Intercol
legiate Athletics for women (AIAW)
has “consistently argued for sepa
rate but equal programs and ad
ministration,’ the NCAA proposal
said.
“The NCAA’s plan in no way sug
gests that the AIAW should aban
don its program or that those NCAA
member institutions which are
AIAW members should not support
and participate in programs of the
AIAW, the NCAA made clear.
But what the NCAA proposals
make clear in one paragraph they
change in the next. The AIAW
wants to make separate the sponsor
ship of male and female athletics. I
believe they feel that if the NCAA
intervenes it will take over the
women’s athletic organization and
not treat them as fair as they would
treat the men’s athletic organiza
tion.
“The NCAA, however, does not
believe it is practical or desirable to
attempt to create exclusive arenas
for the separate operations of men’s
and women’s organizations and ser
vices and to do so would deny
NCAA services to the female stn-
dent athletes of 331 NCAA mem
bers (45.8%) which are not AIAW
members,” the proposal stated.
The statement above gives the
impression of the NCAA’s feeling
toward women’s organizations. But
after they give their views on why
they don’t believe it is practical for
women to have special organiza
tions, they said that it was possible
that the NCAA might develop
cooperative arrangements with the
AIAW in certain areas of mutual in
terests.
“The NCAA must first satisfy its
own obligations in the area of
women’s intercollegiate athletic
and, once having done that, it
should be in a position to cooperate
with a variety of other organizations
interested in the development ol
female athletics,” the proposal said
It's kind of hard to keep up w|
what the NCAA is trying to get ac
ross because they are contradicting
themselves all through the prop
osal.
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Wings to have
intrasquad game
(continued from page 11)
Opening home game for the
Wings, to be played at San An
tonio’s Alamo Stadium, will pit
the new WFL team against the
Memphis Southmen, which boasts
such football superstars as Larry
Csonka, Jim Kiick and Paul War-
field. Their first pre-season game
will be against the Southern Cal
ifornia Sun at Anaheim July 5.
Season tickets for the Wings’
home games, including one pre
season and nine regular season
games, are on sale at the team
office, 10300 Heritage Drive, and
at North Star, Southpark, McCre-
less, Wonderland and Central
Park Malls from 11:30 a.m. until
6 p.m.
LOW PRICES!
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