ecords fall as Ags place cond to Bears at Relays THE BATTALION TUESDAY, MAR. 23, 1976 Page 7 •>) Stall [By PAUL McGRATH Battalion Sports Editor b Charles Thomas’ track team |t a handful of points short of an the Baylor Bears success- lefended their reign as champ- Jfthe College Station Relays. Bears of Coach Clyde Hart [■ed 68 points to the Aggies’ 62 take their third straight out- tictory and second straight win 9 9 ! 9 OS lulls is ami: Charles Thomas exas A&M Track Coach (Relays. Rice followed with 53, ton 22, Louisiana Tech 18, ir 17 1/2 and TCU 15. le meet records fell, including 2-1 fc I® ' n the running events. MiJudir. h man Tony Wheeler and 15-3, la! jmore Manfred Kohrs, both chipaiK^h Africans, established new and school marks in the 880- run, mile and three-mile, sler erased Willie Blackmon’s record of 1:49.0 with a blister- 1:48.7 performance. Wheeler In command the entire race and pffalast gasp charge by Baylor’s [McClendon. |ohrs, who ran a total of five miles le day, set school marks in both nee races. His 4:07.2 mile cut ly three seconds off the old mark 09.8 by Frank Ybarbo in 1971, (Ugh he finished third behind tf'/ells of Rice and Walker Lea of ir. ihrs then returned a few mo- Islaterto run in the three-mile, the Ags needed to place well in y were to challenge the Baylor He finished second, again to , at 14:00.0; chopping seven ds off the week-old record of mate Kyle Heffner. However, or placed fourth in the event to ide enough cushion to hold off the surpising A&M thinclads. Charles Cottle ran a 14:08.0, but was unable to grab any points. The Aggies fared well in the field events, winning the discus, shot put and javelin and placing strongly in the pole vault. Frank West had his best put of the year, 55-5 1/2, to take his third win in a row. Teammates Craig Carter (52-3) and Randy Scott (51-10) placed third and fourth. Bill Newton won the javelin with a throw of 223-9 feet, his best of the year, and Steve Stewart outdis tanced the Rice weightmen in the discus with a throw of 169-8 feet. Brad Blair placed second in the pole vault at 16-0 feet with fellow vaulters Jon Harrington and Pat Ruehle plac ing third and fifth. Despite bad handoffs, the A&M sprint relay team of Charles Butler, Gregory Clark, Charles Dawson and Ray Brooks posted a 40.5 clocking, their best thus far in the season. Hurdler Shifton Baker continued to bring his times down with a 14.0 in the 120-yard highs and a 52.9 in the 440-yard intermediates. Craig Mac- Phail also had a 52.9, good for third place. Walter Jachimowicz ran his hest mile ever in the prelims, a 4:11.63, despite having been asleep until 25 minutes before the race. The freshman ran a 4:11.9 in the finals for fifth place. Brooks, who anchored the sprint relay, ran a 21.3 for fourth in the 220-yard dash. Baylor used their strength in the high jump, long jump, quarter, half-mile and mile relay to edge the Ags. The Bears finished one-two in the high jump and long jump, one- two-four in the 440, two-three-four in the 880 and ran the Southwest Conference’s best time thus far in the mile relay. The Bears qualified five of the eight runners in the 440 with Mark Collins leading the Green and Gold parade with a 46.11, the best in the SWC this year. The Bears then ran a 3:09.35 in the four lap event without Collins amongst the quartet because of a cramp. It was a two-man show for the Rice Owls as Wells and sprinter Zoe Simpson emerged double winners. Wells’ diving effort in the mile nip ped Lea, and his 13:45.1 in the three-mile set a meet record. Simpson also set two marks with a 20.5 in the 220 and a 9.27 in the 100-yard dash. Thomas was pleased with the per formance of his team and cited the good weather as being one reason for the drop in times. Thomas said he hopes to get sprinter Sam Dierschke off the sick list soon and to have his high jumpers and longjumpers come around. He also noted with some pleasure that half of the Aggies’ points were scored by freshmen and sophomores, encouraging for next year, he said. The Aggies travel to Dallas this weekend for the Dallas Invitational along with Baylor, SMU and Texas as well as perennial national power Tennessee. This meet, which was canceled last year due to foul weather, will determine qualifiers for the Texas Relays one week later. A&M Consolidated finished fourth in the high school division to three AAAA teams with 55 points, the most for a AAA team at the Re lays. Coach James Giese’s Tigers placed second in the 880-yard relay (1:29.6), third in the two-mile relay (7:56.6), third in the four-mile relay (18:39.78) and fourth in the 440-yard relay (43.4). Reggie Carr took third for the Tigers with a 9.9 clocking in the 100-yard dash. Dallas Lake Highlands won the prep division while taking firsts in the high jump, two-mile relay, dis tance medley relay, four-mile relay and the mile. Richland’s Tim Scott was a double winner in the shot and discus with throws of 60-1 1/4 and 174-4 feet. Navasota’s Jesse James and Houston Sterling’s Kent Figgs thrilled the fans with their duels in the 120-yard high hurdles and 330- yard intermediate hurdles. Figgs won the highs in . 05 of a second over James and lost to the Navasota senior by .1 of a second in the inter mediates. our tax questions aren’t wered in the tax instruc- is or a free IRS pamphlet the IRS toll-free for p. Consult your tax tructions or local direc tor the correct number, irnal Revenue Service 1 £ Michelangelo Antonioni’s first English language film Vanessa Redgrave BLOW-UP David Hemmings Sarah Miles I COLOR I Aggie Cinema International Film Series presents Blow-Up one of the most controversial films of the 60 s. Wednesday, March 24 Rudder Theater, 8 p.m. $1 plus TAMU I.D. TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY TOWN HALL YOUNG ARTISTS SERIES presents THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS WIND ENSEMBLE TUESDAY, MARCH 30, 1976 8:00 p.m. RUDDER THEATER A&M STUDENT FREE NON A&M STUDENT-DATE $1.00 Qmc) GENERAL PUBLIC NO RESERVED SEATS $2.50 TICKETS AND INFORMATION AVAILABLE AT MSC BOX OFFICE ON THE FIRST FLOOR OF RUDDER TOWER. 845-2916. No Cameras or Recording Equipment will be allowed. HOUSTON BALLET “THE CITY OF HOUSTON HAS GOOD REASON TO CELEBRATE THE BICENTENNIAL IN ’75-76, AND ITS OWN BALLET TROUPE IN ALL THE YEARS AHEAD " WALTER TERRY, SATURDAY REVIEW Tuesday, March 23, 1976 8:00 P.M. Rudder Auditorium Ticket prices A&M Student/Date $4, $3, $2 Regular $6, $5, $4 Tickets and information — MSC Box Office — 845-2916 AN 0*5 SPECIAL ATTRACTION SENIORS Check our special prices for full length portraits for the Centennial Class of ’76. UNIVERSITY STUDIO 115 College Main, Northgate 846-8019 Srlly?;!; . pis ' A vi - ■ SHl : h ■ T, ^ •"TsV:-;;. -•-T-V" 3 Miles N. on Tabor Road Saturday Night: Johnny Lyons, Janet Lynn and The Country Nu- Notes From 9-1 p.m. Ladies $1.00 STAMPEDE Every Thursday Nile (ALL BRANDS BEER 40 cents) Men $2.00 Every Tuesday Nite LADIES $1.00 All Brands Beer 40c 8-12 Dance every Tuesday and Thursday MEN $2.00 Photo by Chris Svatek Polevaulter Pat Ruehle is silhouetted against the evening sky as he takes his warm-up attempts. Dowd selected as UT assistant Associated Press AUSTIN, Tex. — Barry Dowd, former head basketball coach at the University of Texas-Arlington, was named Monday an assistant coach at the University of Texas at Austin. Athletic Director Darrell Royal, who earlier hired Abe Lemons of Pan American to be the Longhorns’ head basketball coach, said Dowd would be Lemons’ chief assistant. Dowd is the incoming first vice president of the American Basketball Coaches Association. Lemons is the current first vice president and the incoming president of the organiza tion. So, the next two presidents of the coaches association will come from the University of Texas. Earn extra cash as a plasma donor at Plasma Products, Inc. 313C College Main College Station SUMMER EMPLOYMENT Student Manager - GROVE MOVIE SERIES May 31st - August 10 APPLY: Student Programs Office, Room 216 MSC DEADLINE: 5:00 P.M. MARCH 26, 1976 APPLICATIONS NOW BEING TAKEN FOR 1976-77 OPAS HOST COMMITTEE APPLY IN STUDENT PROGRAMS OFFICE (RM. 216, MSC) BY APRIL 2. IT’S A ME AL! The real goodness of a Kentucky Fried Chicken Extra Crispy meal—so tender and juicy on the inside, so crunchy on the outside that your first bite just naturally leads to one delicious crunch after another. Kentucky Fried Chicken 110 Dominik Dr., College Statiorv 3320 Texas Avenue, Bryan U.S.D.A. Grade A Chicken Grown in Texas