i i Page 8 THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 1976 Sport Shorts 99 Former Texas A&M gridders con tinue to fare well in the pro ranks as Jackie Williams has been awarded a berth with the Buffalo Bills. The multi-talented, but underpublicized Williams starred in the Aggie sec ondary for four seasons. He joins former teammate John Paul McCrumbley on the Buffalo defen sive unit. The Bills were the worst team against the pass in all of pro football last season and Williams will be called upon to help shore up their leaky secondary. Bubba Bean, now the property of the Atlanta Falcons, returned to practice sessions recently after MANOR EAST 3 THEATRES MANOR EAST MALL HAPPY HOUR TILL 7:00 ALL THEATRES 6:15-8:00-9:45 ‘“M*A*S*H’on wheels! N.Y. Daily News 99 BILL COSBY RAQUEL WELCH HARVEY KEITEL PG PAN AVI SION 9 COLOR BY DELUXE 9 7:00-9:15 pg11976 WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS PLUS-8:10 (G) ‘Snow White & The Seven Dwarfs STARTS FRIDAY He’s got to face a gunfight \ \ once more to live up to his legend once more TO WIN JUST ONE MORE TIME. JOHN WAYNE LAUREN BACALL l\ \ MEC,f l HIM THE SHOOT1ST’ Go-Starring RON HOWARD Gut-sl Si.hs |AMES STEWART RICHARD BOONE |OHN CARRADINE SCATMAN CROTHERS RICHARD LENZ HARRY MORGAN SHEREE NORTH HUGH OBRIAN Music by ELMER BERNSTEIN Screenplay by MILLS HOOD SWARTHOUT and SCOTT HALE Based on the novel by GLENDON SWARTHOUT Produced by M | FRANKOVICH and WILLIAM SELF PGlPMtatlAL GUHMNCE SUGGESTED Ditccied by DON SIEGLL Technicolor A P,ir«\mocjnt Release ' -■ • Call For Times Call For Times The Revenge of the Cheerleaders Rated R LAKEVIEW CLUB 3 Miles N. on tabor Road Saturday Night: Tommy Allen and The Brazos Sounds From 9-1 p.m. Ladies $1.00 STAMPEDE Every Thursday Nile (ALL BRANDS BEER 40 cents) Every Tuesday Nile LADIES $1.00 MEN $2.00 All Brands Beer 40c 8-12 Dance every Tuesday and Thursday ^Tf| I HOP'S own ^Texas Style CHICKEN FRIED STEAK with delicious cream gravy golden french fries crispy green salad with choice of dressing roll and butter $2 103 North College Ave. 5:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. being sidelined for several days with a throat infection. Bean was the top draft choice of the Falcons. **-¥• The Houston Oilers waived cen ter Ricky Seeker Monday as Bum Phillips’ crew begins their first full week of drills. Seeker finished his career at A&M two years ago and was drafted by the Oilers in 1975. The College all-Stars go up against the world champion Pittsburgh Steelers this Friday night to signal the beginning of the end of the six month long football drouth. The collegians have been domi nated by the pros in recent years, but should field a highly talented and competitive squad. Top names such as Joe Washington, Leroy and Dewey Selmon, Ed Simonini and Heisman trophy winner Archie Griffin will take on Joe Greene, Jack Lambert, Franco Harris, Terry Bradshaw and the rest of Coach Chuck Noll’s Super Bowl champs of two years running. Chicago’s Soldiers Field will host the game which will he televised na tionally by ABC starting at 8:30 p.m. Former Notre Dame Coach Ara Parseghian will lead a group of 56 all-Stars against Pittsburgh and feels confident his squad will make a good showing against the pros. The collegians have won only two games in the last 20 meetings. Further whetting the football ap petite will be the professional’s Hall of Fame Game in Canton, Ohio this Saturday at 1 p.m. The contest pits Denver against Detroit and also will be televised nationally. The Texas Football and Basket ball Coaches Clinic will be held next week in Houston and concludes with the high school all-Star games in both sports. Texas A&M will have eight repre sentatives in the North-South foot ball clash, four on each squad. Only a skeleton crew of Texas A&M coaches are on campus these days as the majority of assistants have gone to California to visit sev eral pro training camps, including the Dallas Cowboys. Keith Spiers “fastest human Keith Speirs won the Brazos Val ley Joggers Club’s “World’s Fastest Human” title with a time of 4:52 for the mile run. Speirs, 19, was relatively alone at the finish, but he had a lot of com- pany overall on the Kyle Field track Saturday when 33 participants showed up, the most ever for a BVJC event. It was a fast field, with 15 runners recording times of under six minut es. Runner-up was 39-year-old Mike Christiansen, club president, who was clocked at 5:01. He was fol lowed by Jacques Martin, 5:04; Don Kirby, 5:05; and John Crompton, 5:06.' Tim Parker checked in with 5:19, one second ahead of David Barrow, who finished a tick ahead of Jay Wotton. The trio of David Allen, Bill Timmins and Rusty Rush leg ged it out in 5:27, with Bill Perry in at 5:31, Jimmy Sterline at 5:40 and Bartley Braden and Leigh Martin at 5:53. Molly Allen was the top finisher among the women, with a time of 6:29. the VARSITY SHOP Prairie View sends four to Olympics Prairie View A&M University has sent four of the eight members of its national championship women’s track team to Montreal to compete in the Olympics. Meanwhile, the university has paused to honor the coach that built the team to a powerhouse that has won three Association of Intercol legiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) titles and two United States Track and Field Federation cham pionships since 1974. Coach Barbara Jacket Day, held recently, saluted the high school athlete from Port Arthur who came to Prairie View A&M to lead the Pantherette tracksters to 159 season wins in six years, the last three as undefeated champions of the AIAW. University President Dr. A.I. Thomas called her a “fine example,” and pointed to her accomplishments since joining the PVAM staff in 1964. Debra Sapenter, a PVAM En glish teacher who graduated in 1974, will represent the U.S. in the 400-meter run while Temple freshman Arthurine Gainer runs the 600-meter relay for America. Wearing the trappings of their homeland, Jamaica, will be junior Andrea Bruce (PVAM Athlete of the Year in 1976) and Carol Cummings, a 1976 graduate. Sapenter, the world s fastest En glish teacher, is a favorite in the 400-meter dash at Montreal as she holds the current world record in the 440-yard dash at 52.2 seconds. She set the American record in the 400-meters at 51.6 seconds, 1.7 sec onds off the world mark. One of 60 athletes on an AAU goodwill tour of China last year, Sa penter won two silver medals for the U.S. at the 1975 Pan American Games for her efforts in the 400- meter run and the mile relay. Gainer helped set four national records this past season in the 600-meter relay and she set a 57.25 second national record in the 400- Embrey’s Jewelry We Specialize In Aggie Rings. Diamonds Set — Sizing — Reoxidizing — All types watch/jewelry Repair Aggie Charge Accounts 9-5:30 846-5816 meter hurdles at the National AAU Outdoor Meet this year in which PVAM placed second overall for the second consecutive year. The school’s top athlete, Bruce, will compete for Jamaica in the pen tathlon. She won a bronze medal for her country in that event at the Pan Am Games last year. If she seems a little more familiar with Olympiad pomp than the others, that’s because Bruce went to the 1972 Munich Olympics. She won the USTFF’s 100-meter hurdles last year with an effort of 13.7, the federation’s high jump with a 5-8 jump and the long jump with a leap of 21-1 feet. Cummings is' scheduled for the 200-meter run. She was victor of the 100-and 200-yard dashes at the USTFF meet last year with times of 10.8 and 24.4 seconds. Coach Jacket’s transformation of the PVAM club into a powerful na tional perennial was recognized in recent issues of Black Sports and Jet magazines. The all-around athlete put the shot, threw the discus and played baseball in her hometown of Port Arthur. In later years at Tuskegee Institute, she expanded her efforts to the 440-yard relay and high and long jumps. Coach Jacket was picked twice as a coach on AAU teams that went abroad for competition, once in 1973 and again in 1976. She was selected Southwestern Athletic Conference Coach of the Year in 1974 and Billie Jean King Award winner in 1975. Her squads have swept the Gulf AAU and college conference cham pionships the past several years. Top of the Tower Texas A&M University Pleasant Dining — Great View SERVING LUNCHEON BUFFET 11:00 A.M. - 1:30 P.M. Each day except Saturday $2.50 DAILY $3.00 SUNDAY Serving soup i? sandwich 11:00 A.M. - 1:30 P.M. Monday - Friday $1.50 plus drink Available Evenings For Special University Banquets Department of Food Service Texas A&M University “Quality First” We’d like to take you for a ride Hey, Mr. suave and sophisticated . . . try this on for size. It’s the Raleigh Sports. Think bikes are for kids? Think again! This one’s spe cially made for the guy who’s a mover. Three speeds, safety- quick brakes, genuine leather saddle, touring bag . . . every- \ thing you need to travel in \ style. See your Raleigh dealer, he’s got a set of wheels waiting for you. Come on along! CENTRAL CYCLE & SUPPLY Sales • Service • Accessories 3505 E. 29th St. — 822-2228 — Closed Monday Take East University to 29th St. (Tarrow Street)_