Page 8 THE BATTALION TUESDAY, APR. 20, 1976 The Outlaws “Lady in Wait ing LP 3:99 Doobie Brothers “Taking It To The Streets LP 3.99 "v PARAPHENALIA ULTRAGRAPHICS POSTERS SHIRTS CONCERT PICTURES i 315 UNIVERSITY OPEN MON.-SAT. 10 A.M. - 7 P.M. ALBUMS Reg. $6.99 - Only $4.99 TAPES Reg. $7.99 - Only $5.99 IMPORT ALBUMS QUAD ALBUMS & TAPES NORTHGATE 846-5515 harl l Aggies record four firsts A&M second in Baylor track tm By PAUL ARNETT Battalion Sports Editor The Aggies had four firsts and finished a strong second to Baylor at the Baylor Invitational Track and Field Meet in Waco this past Friday night. The Bears, who won this same event last year, had firsts in three relays and five individual events. Baylor would have swept all four re lays, but were beaten in the sprint relay by 0.05 of a second by North Texas State. The Aggies’ strongest showing was in the field events. Three men finished first, second and sixth in the discus. They were Steve Stewart, Randy Scott and Frank West respec tively. Stewart’s toss was 186-3 and ec lipsed the old record of 175-2 set in 1974 by Rice’s Buddy Briscoe. Three Aggies also finished in the shot put. They were Scott, Craig Carter and West who finished sec ond, third and fourth behind North Texas State’s Phil Hall. Another key victory for the Aggies in the field events was in the pole vault. Brad Blair won the event with a jump of 16-6 and narrowly missed at 17-0, which would have qualified him for the Olympics. Joe Har rington placed sixth with a jump of 13-6. Bill Newton was the only Aggie who was a repeat winner at the meet. He tossed the javelin 210-10, while Stewart finished sixth with a toss of 156-8. Baylor won the event with a record meet time of 40.3. The 120 high hurdles found the Aggies’ Shifton Baker finishing third with a time of 14.1. This was the time he ran last year when he set the meet record. The record was broken by Dave Duncan of Baylor who ran a quick 13.8. The Aggie thinclads held first place through the field events, but found the running events belonging to Baylor. The Aggies finished fourth in the sprint relay with a time of 40.9. The Aggies’ best effort in the run ning events came in the 440 inter mediate hurdles. Curtis Collier and Bilker finished 1-2 and only 0.05 of a second apart. Collier’s time was 52.8 and Baker’s was 52.85. Baseball rankings at stake this weekend file shootout of the meeL,, tween the Bears and the Jhe 1 the two-mile relay. Atthelparinj lays Baylor had defeated,:t|nt to wire. Friday night was a ending, finding the Beard 30 yards ahead of the se«J Aggies. Rice’s Jeff Wells tookoirl individual honors. Hevvasinber double winner of the nilayers home victories in the miltHls- three-mile runs. The Aggies’ next stofHfp, Moines, Iowa, where they®; 1 pete in the Drake Relays.p, ,, c H Sl A probable NCAA berth and sec ond place in the S.W.C. will be on the line this weekend when the Texas A&M baseball team hosts Houston in a three-game series. The Aggies are currently in third place boasting a record of 27-7 for the season and 10-5 in the conference. Houston is in second place with a season mark of 29-12 and 15-6 in the conference. The Aggies must win two out of the three games from the Cougars to tie for second place with a week remaining. The teams will play a single game at 3 p.m. on Friday and a doub leheader on Saturday scheduled to begin at 1 p.m. Clint Thomas, with a record of 6-3, will receive the nod on Friday. He will be after his 22nd career win in an Aggie Uniform. The Ags ace, James Gibson, will pitch the opener of the twinbill, with David Lockett going the nightcap. Gibson has the best record among the Aggie pitchers, supporting an 11-1 mark. The Aggies were off this past weekend, while Houston lost two out of three to first place Texas. Montreal Canadiens be in four NHL play-off conte rwan rhe c Spur Associated Press The Montreal Canadiens took the shortest route to the National Hoc key League’s semifinals. Now they have some time to kill. The Canadiens eliminated Chicago in four straight games, wrapping up their quarter-final se ries with a 4-1 decision Sunday Media golfers to play Aggies Seventy-four members of the news media and 22 A&M-connected golfers will make up the field of the Texas A&M Media golf tournament scheduled for a shotgun start at the university course this Friday at 11 If some lucky golfer makes a hole- in-one on the 11th hole, he will re ceive the use of a new Cadillac for The prizes for this tournament in clude a full set of new golf clubs to the winner. There will also be four sets of irons, four sets of woods and 10 pairs of golf shoes given to the next 18 finishers. one year. Volunteer caddies are needed for the tournament. Caddies should sign up this week at the golf shop and should be at the course no later than 10:30 a.m. Friday. Documentary film to be shown tomorrow Tlv© SH-P© Tilings Hair Shaping Emporium For Men And Women 846-7614 331 University [Upstairs above KesamigB Statewide telecasts of “That Cer tain Spirit,’ a documentary pro duced by Texas A&M for the cen tennial, have been scheduled, said Roger Miller, A&M’s centennial coordinator. The 30-minute film will be shown locally by both KBTX and KAMU at 6:30 p.m., April 21, Aggie Muster. Miller said the film will show on 21 Texas stations. The film will also be seen in portions of Louisiana, Arkan sas, Oklahoma, Kansas, New Mexico and Mexico. The documentary begins in 1876 when only six students showed up for the first classes in October, and contrasting that dubious start with today’s Texas A&M. “After opening with some vintage frontier footage to depict the col lege’s founding in a light-hearted vein,” Miller explained, “the film settles down to a look at Texas A&M today. ” night. Now Montreal must wait to see what happens in the other three series. Game Five in all three series are scheduled for Tuesday night with Los Angeles at Boston, the New York Islanders at Buffalo and To ronto at Philadelphia. All three se ries are tied 2-2 and the sixth game in each of the best-of-seven series are scheduled for Thursday night. That means the earliest the semi finals can begin woidd be Saturday night. And if any of the current quarter-finals stretches to seven games, the Canadiens would have to wait until Tuesday, April 27, for the semifinals to begin. That would mean nine days between games for Montreal. Whatever the result of the other three series, Montreal will play the survivor with the fewest number of regular-season points. The Cana diens will also have the home-ice edge in the semis as well as the finals; if they get that far. The Canadiens, earned those advantages by posting a league-leading 127 points during the regular season. And they looked every bit that strong in eliminating Chicago. “It’s pretty tough to win four straight from anybody, observed Montreal Coach Scotty Bowman. “We certainly did not overpower the Black Hawks.” The Canadiens defense surren dered only three goals in the lour games against Chicago. In two of the other series, momentum has switched with the home-ice advantage. Buffalo and Philadelphia hope that trend con tinues. Buffalo won its first two games at home, then dropped the next two at New York. Philadelphia’s defending Stanley Cup champions won their first two at home, then lost Games Three and Four in Toronto. Boston and Los Angeles, mean while, split two games apiece on each other’s ice. Two straight losses to the Islan ders hardly bothered Punch Imlach, Buffalo’s general manager. “If they get the next game, then I'll start to worry,” said Imlach. “I never ex- A pected four straight. I woijj but there was no wayh Philadelphia Coach FrS thought criminal charge® against three of his playersilp^’ a brawl-filled third gam ^ feeted the Flyers’ playiBf Four. “What has trampfl bothered this club toadegH 6 * Shero. Tm confident 1' back home we ll be more Hd c ble. We ll feel better and :a fi <)n; better.” ■> e l Boston Coach Don thought winning the fourtll 111 ( ^ a their series against the Kir: | in,,A a big boost for the Bruins If ° dropped two straight toL after winning the opener. H ec “That was a big victonH said Cherry. “It momentum back tons. Nor have to keep it going. Tlrel| a good team and it’s tough from here on in. B have two out of three game I ton, and we re ready. Tli 01 AT 1 .A N TA — The Altanlr will play their first 1976 |med Football League home game against the VVashin?.Pm skins on July 31. Pistons stop Bucks, 107-104 Braves down 76ers Associated Press It was a short but rough road the Buffalo Braves and Detroit Pistons traveled. Now they’ve got to try and scale a couple of cliffs. The Braves squeezed past Philadelphia in the best-of-three preliminary round of the National Basketball Association playoffs, beat ing the 76ers 124-123 in overtime Sunday. Now they run smack into the Bos- CHARLIS BOUTIQUE cUsiTlf JUST ARRIVED! LARGE SHIPMENT OF JEANS. Cafe Crowd and Gotcha Covered 707 TEXAS 846-9626 ton Celtics, the winningest team in the Eastern Conference. That best- of-seven quarter-final series starts Wednesday night in Boston. But perhaps an even tougher task confronts the Pistons. First of all, a lot of fans think they shouldn’t have been in the playoffs to begin with, considering they finished the season 10 games under .500 — matching the worst record an NBA team has ever taken into the playoffs — and two games behind Midwest Division winner Mil waukee. Then they had to go down to the wire before taking their best-of- three series from the Bucks with a 107-104 victory Sunday. And now they have to play the Golden State Warriors who happen to be not only the winningest team in the Western Conference but the winningest team in the league — and the NBA defending champion to boot. That best-of-seven quarter final opens Tuesday night in Oak land. A UK In the other alrea quarter-final matchups, tin SuperSonics are at Phoeni night with the Suns leai| games to one and, on night, Cleveland visits the? ton Bullets with the Cavalit ing a 2-1 series edge. “Just another dull series Braves guard Ken Charles after his two free throws seconds to go in overtime falo its winning edge a| 76ers. “It’s a good thing we wes| so much fun, cause if we thinking about the pressures like this one, we 11 prow Charles added. The odds-makers and H probably think the Pistons to Golden State — but M Coach Larry Costello isnt “The Pistons match up Golden State, he said Bucks fell from post-season think they’ll give the Warrid tie.” MONDAY & TUESDAY NIGHT BICENTENNIAL SPECIAL TRADE IN A $2.00 BILL FOR A PITCHER OF OLD MILWAUKEE (REG. $2.75) PLUS... “SAVE A BUNDLE’ Remember the old, Cash and Carry, money saving trick? Buy a pizza at the Commons Snack Bar and eat it there or take it anywhere you wish. Prices are right, and the pizzas are great. 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