The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 15, 1976, Image 10

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    THURSDAY, APR. 15, 1976
Dairti
Queen
Located on S. Texas
Ave. between
K-Mart and Gibsons
V
*
SPECIALS
WED. & THURS. APRIL 14 & 15
D.Q. Dude 79c
FR/.-SUN. APRIL 16-18
HungerBuster & French Fries $1.09
MON. & TUBS. APRIL 19 & 20
Country Basket $1.39
FAMILY NIGHT SPECIAL
Every Wed. Night — 5:00-11:00
Hunger Buster,
French Fries, Small Drink
$ 1.19
Texas A&M to host
women s track meet
By DEBBY KRENEK
Battalion Staff Writer
PRECISION HAIR CUTTING
FOR MEN AND WOMEN.
707 TEXAS
846-6933
ACROSS FROM A&M
Baylor, Sam Houston State and
Texas A&M women tracksters will
meet Saturday at Kyle Field as the
Aggies host the Texas Association of
Intercollegiate Athletics for Women
zone track meet.
Field events will begin at 9 a.m.
with running events starting at 10
a.m.
Fresh off a sixth place finish in the
Denton track meet, the Aggie
women are hoping for a second place
in this zone meet. Coach David
Williams said.
“Baylor has to be the favorite.
They’ve won zone the last couple of
years and they’re the strongest team
coming into the competition,
Williams said.
“I look for Sharon Boyle to take
first in both the three-mile and
two-mile competition because she is
a strong runner,” Williams said.
Boyle scored 18 out of the 26 points
the Aggies accumulated in the De
nton meet.
Darcy Ehmann and Sandra
Lyman are A&M’s strongest field en
tries, Williams said.
“Both Sandra and Darcy have
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3806-A Old College Road
Next to Triangle Bowl 846-3517
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday 10:00-5:00
Thursday & Friday 11:00-7:001
qualified for nationals in discus,”
Williams said. To meet the qualify
ing standard takes a throw of 125
feet. Ehmann qualified with a throw
of 130 and Lyman with 128.
The top three finishers in each
event in the zone meet will qualify
for state competition which will be
held here at Kyle Field April 30-May
1. Women may also qualify for the
state meet by making the qualifying
standards set up for each event.
A&M has previously finished sec
ond in the Abilene Wildcat meet and
the Stephen F. Austin meet in
Nacogdoches.
Texas A&M entries are: 3-Mile —
Sharon Boyle, Kay Kingsberry; 440
Relay — Darcy Ehmann, Martha
Sartain, Debbie Timmons, Liz War
ren; Mile — Boyle, Diane McCrady;
100-meter Hurdles — Timmons;
440-yard Dash — Sartain, Brenda
Snyder; 100-yard Dash — Warren,
Ehmann, Barbara Rowe; 880-yard
Run — Sartain, McCrady; 400-
meter Hurdles — Timmons; 220-
yard Dash — Warren, Ehmann,
Rowe; 2-mile Run — Boyle, Snyder;
2-mile Relay — Kingsberry,
Ehmann, Lyman, McCrady; Mile
Relay — Boyle, Timmons, Warren,
Sartain; Long Jump — Rowe, Sar
tain; Shot Put — Ehmann, Lyman,
Kim Walker; Javelin — Ehmann,
Lyman, Walker; Discus — Ehmann,
Lyman, Walker; High Jump —
Bovle.
Partly <
Uperati
|ght 6-
Saturd
Hnce c
m
Sunday
nildwith«
ain
m
A&M’s Billy Weiser competes in the Aggies’ recent tournament win on the Neches River nearl
UT eager fined for peekii
Skiers take first
in final tourney
The Texas A&M ski team took first
in overall competition against a nine
team field last weekend in what was
the Aggies’ final tournament of the
University of Texas basketball
player Carl Belcher was fined
$36 by Municipal Court Judge
Sarah Denton after pleading
guilty to two counts of criminal
trespass.
Belcher, a freshman from
Houston Kashmere, was charged
by two UT coeds of “peeking into
the girl’s shower” at Gregory
Gym, Lt. Leonard Young of the
university policy said. The
maximum for criminal trespass is
$200.
How this will affect Belcher’s
status as a scholarship athlete is
unknown. Bill Little,
tant sports information (
said.
Former Texas Headbasl
coach Leon Black had only
comment. “I am speec
truthfully speechless.”
year.
The A&M men’s ‘A’ took first in
jumping and a second and third in
trick and slalom skiing. The women’s
squad took firsts in all three
categories, finishing on top in their
division.
The University of Houston and
Oklahoma State University finished
second and third respectively.
Ags travel to AAII
Coach Bob Ellis’ golf team con
tinues competition today in the 22nd
Annual All-America Intercollegiate
Invitational tournament at the Atas-
cocita Country Club.
The tourney, perhaps the most
prestigious college meet in the na
tion, lasts through Saturday.
Six of the nation’s top 10 collegiate
golf teams, including favored Okla
homa State, continue competing for
the team title.
Oklahoma State, ranked No. 2 na
tionally, headed the 25-team field
followed by Texas, No. 4, Houston,
fifth, Georgia sixth, Auburn seventh
and New Mexico eighth.
Dave Williams, coach of host Uni
versity of Houston, said Phil Han
cock, who lost the individual title; in a
playoff last year, will he the favorite
along with Jaime Gonzalez of Okla
homa State.
“But the team aspect is what
makes it the most exciting tourna
ment anywhere,” Williams said.
“Ben Crenshaw told me it reminded
him of a Texas-Arkansas football
game and it’s all because of the team
thing.”
Crenshaw, now a touring pro, is a
former participant in the AAII.
a
Phil Hancock of FloridaltL.|
tabbed as the individual lav—
II ancock, who lost theinlB
title last year in a suddenB
playoff to teammate And) Bfl B
the leading returnee. Jaiimiii year’s
zales of No. 2 nationally s are not
Oklahoma State, finished me,* Studi
vear and also returns.
all races
dment
amission
UH’s Keith Fergus, the^
Amateur runnerun and an d
... . . , ‘ , tenii
participant in last weeks , r
tournament at Augusta, CiKp SS . °
also be among the fluorites li
vidual honors. ,k Ihen t]
Chip Beck, who finishedliSl the race
last week, will return to lea letjed 197
gia s bid for team honors. LimliH
lei joins Gonzalez in Ol , t
State’s attempts to repeat tliei imits
championship.
Williams said at least 5(|
amateur champions will bei
field. Williams UH teamshffl
the team title 16 times
Cage star’s father prefer
quiet, small town life
i By
! .n addition
Associated Press
Like many impoverished young
sters whose athletic talents make
them millionaires, pro basketball
star Artis Gilmore vowed to make
life easier for his family.
But things became a hit compli
cated.
w
1403 UNIVERSITY DRIVE
Above McLaughlin’s
Gilmore, the 7-foot-2 center of the
American Basketball Association’s
Kentucky Colonels, brought his par
ents a three-bedroom home in
Panama City after signing a $2-
million contract in 1971.
His mother and the remainder of
his eight brothers and sisters still at
home picked up and moved from the
family’s two-room shack in this
northwest Florida town.
'Clure spe
ut body pi
ll leader c;
But not Gilmore’s father,
“I’m a Christian and I All candid
make it that way, so mone)F> | excep
change me, said the 75-ytiriphead v
Gilmore, who prefers livinsPy Hien
town where he has someho" 6 Position
ends meet since 1906.
He prefers the quiet lifej
shack, driving his pick™
around town to collect alulf
cans for recycling, fishingonita
with friends. The elder Gilww
joys the solitude and quiet I
shack, where two action ptJ
Artis share wall space witlif
outdated calendars and a pid®
the Virgin Mary.
A transister radio is coOTCORPUS
tuned to the Louisville station® inibled it
ing the Colonels’ games. ilejbefore ;
ind-wl
id dead
elL
ftr
I
vh
ZACHflRIfl
qreennoiis
the C
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