The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 24, 1981, Image 11

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    \£.n* ?
s
MAtm
;/f I
Men s tennis
Senior Trey Schutz will be out of tennis action indefinitely due to a
roken bone in his foot. Schutz broke his foot in a match in Houston
gainst Rice on March 24.
“It is a real shame,” said coach David Kent. “Trey is a real team
ader and it is a severe blow for us to lose him. We don’t know right
now how long he will be out.”
The Texas A&M tennis season will end in another five weeks.
Men’s Gymnastics
The Texas A&M gymnastics team will host its first and only home
£ieet of the year Saturday evening at 7 p.m. in 307 East Kyle.
Competing in the meet along with Texas A&M are the University
f Texas-Arlington and Lamar University.
Team captain Mark Hartwell said the meet will comprise six
Events beginning with the floor exercise, followed by the pommel
horse, rings, vault, parallel bars and high bar.
! The gymnasts currently are ranked third in the state with a record
of 3-3.
The home meet will be the first in nearly ten years for the Aggies
as little equipment has been available in the past. However, with
the completion of East Kyle addition to G. Rollie White Coliseum
the team has modern facilities and equipment.
There is no admission charge for the meet.
Women’s track
The Texas A&M women’s track team returned from the Texas
Southern Relays in Houston over the weekend with several awards,
O C' including a school record in the 400-meter dash.
VV . Trackster Sandra Cooper set a new school mark in the 400-meter
Idash with a time of 56.51, good enough for third place in the event.
! deserve a lot bete | Vickilee Coben finished second in the discus with a throw of
;ason and sodotk 145-7i/ 2 . She placed highest among the Aggies competing in the
change that wl i fceet.
at quarterback,!! fi| Becky Deetz placed third in the high jump, while Cooper again
sspite the eiprea ^finished in third place in the 200-meter dash. Suzanne Sheffield also
Oakland s Dan h; Placed third in the 800 meter run.
g to New Orleans! | Earlier in the week, at the AIAW national indoor meet in Pocatel-
old Houston pah Bio, Idaho, the 800-meter and 1600-meter relay team established
a Saint, it appares:tew marks.
) the detriment of' I The team, made up of Cooper, Ellen Smith, Evelyn Smith and
; Manning, Thaw Jana Graves, ran the 800-meter relay in 1:41.50 and the 1600-meter
e many times in P pie lay in 3:47.00.
iths,” he said. 1® The women will return to the track Saturday when they will travel
: and I have futuref«. to Houston for a dual meet with the University of Houston. The
tn footballtogetheiBjneet will be held at Robertson Stadium,
nk I would care I
working with nii Women's Softball
that s playingforij The Texas A&M Women’s softball team will host the University of
Indiana in a doubleheader beginning a 1 p.m. Wednesday at Bee
Creek Park in College Station.
The Aggies will travel to Denton Friday and Saturday to compete
in the Texas Women’s University tournament.
The women returned from the Oklahoma Invitational Tourna
ment at Norman where they finished in third place, winning four
hile losing two.
Western Illinois defeated the Aggies 2-1 in the tourney opener.
The Ags then battled back to beat Kansas State, 1-0, New Mexico
State, 2-0, and Oklahoma State, 2-1, before losing to tourney run-
nerup Oklahoma, 1-0.
The women beat Illinois State, 7-1, to finish third.
Wednesday’s twinbill was originally scheduled to begin at 6 p.m.
W,
B’NA! B'RITH HILLER FOUNDATION
“The PLO
and the
Russian Connection”
(film)
March 26 7:30 P.M.
Room 701 Rudder Tower
Open to the Public — no charge.
(sponsored by the Hillel Club)
rr
NG:
CARICATlfl
ARTISTS
in msc gallei)
2 BANDS j
isc main
COUNTRY & WESTERN
DANCE LESSONS
AT
VALERIE MARTIN’S GALLERY
OF DANCE ARTS
REGISTER NOW! NI0N.-THURS. 5-7 P.M.
CLASS STARTS TUES. MARCH 24TH
693-0352
RESENTED BY
iRTS COi
AM?
DEMIt
nisi
?uld expect f
but you
3 exam <
word
' prehensions
in an
•n and gensri
STERING M
UR,
ENT OFFICE
rr, IFNECE
"o discuss p
w might tellp
■ ven pass!
Our
haircuts
come with
a guarantee.
Guaranteed haircuts. The professionals at both
That Place locations guarantee you’ll get a
professional haircut — one that fits your
personality and lifestyle. It's that simple.
Call today for your guaranteed haircut.
Sorry, no cash refunds.
THAT PLACE II
696-6933
693-0607
NCAA finals
winding down
United Press International
Philadelphia’s Liberty Bell will
peal for only two of the Final Four
Saturday when Virginia, Louisi
ana State, North Carolina and In
diana struggle to pursue the hap
piness that comes with being
crowned NCAA champion.
Seventh-ranked Indiana has a
Tiger by the tail and it will take a
supreme effort by Bobby Knight’s
crew to tame No. 4 LSU, which
looked ferocious in mauling un
ranked Wichita State 96-85 Sun
day to capture the Midwest Re
gional final.
A few hours earlier, the
Hoosiers used pinpoint shooting
and typically rugged man-to man
defense to embarrass unranked
St. Joseph’s 78-46 in the Mideast
Regional final.
In the other semifinal matchup,
No. 3 Virginia, with Player of the
Year Ralph Sampson, resumes its
Atlantic Coast Conference rivalry
with sixth-rated North Carolina,
having already beaten the Tar
Heels twice during the regular
season.
Last Saturday, the Cavaliers
won the East Regional by downing
17th-rated Brigham Young 74-60
and North Carolina earned a semi
final berth by taking the West Re
gional with an 82-68 triumph over
unranked Kansas State.
Knight takes pride in his team’s
grasp of the fundamentals, but the
Big Ten champions are meeting
their match in defense and re
bounding: the SEC champion Ti
gers led their conference in de
fense during the regular season
and never let Wichita State come
close to fulfilling the promise of its
nickname — the Shockers.
LSU’s Durand Macklin, the
SEC Player of the Year, missed
the last 10 minutes with a dislo
cated and bleeding finger but he
inflicted a season’s worth of dam
age on the Shockers. Macklin
scored 17 of his 21 points in the
opening half and also grabbed 9
rebounds as the Tigers took a 48-
33 lead and coasted to their first
berth in the Final Four in 28
years.
St. Joseph’s Coach Jim Lynam
rated Indiana as strong as any
team he has played this season —
including DePaul and North
Carolina.
Indiana All-America guard Isiah
Thomas scored only 8 points, but
he dished out 12 assists and broke
down the Hawk defense con
tinually. Landon Turner hit 7-of-8
shots for Indiana, which hit 69
percent from the field compared
to only 33 percent for St. Joseph’s.
Virginia beat North Carolina
63-57 at home and 80-79 at Chapel
Hill, N.C., in the regular season.
Sampson, held in check for the
first 20 minutes by BYU, asserted
himself in the second half, wind
ing up with 22 points, 12 rebounds
and 4 blocked shots — all game-
high figures.
If any team in the nation is im
mune from the psych-out powers
of the 7-4 sophomore, it’s the Tar
Heels — whose front line of fresh
man center Sam Perkins and for
wards Al Wood and James Worthy
did some terrorizing of their own
against the Wildcats.
Wood, the tournament’s MVP,
scored 21 points and grabbed a
game-high 17 rebounds; Perkins,
who holds all the freshman scoring
and rebounding records for North
Carolina, added 16 points and 11
rebounds; Worthy chipped in 15
points.
The victory sends a Dean
Smith-coached UNC team into
the Final Four for a sixth time, but
Smith is still plagued by what he
perceives as a loser’s image.
“Maybe you shouldn’t go to the
Final Four at all,” he said, “be
cause only one team will win. If
you lose, then they’ll say you can’t
win the big ones.”
The final will be played in Phi
ladelphia March 30.
YESTERDAYS
entertafmm'.nt
HOUSE DRESS CODE
^
The
Wednesday
Special!
good MOO.
kadHS.
This little ad is nothing special.
But our food is. And every
Wednesday it’s even more special.
Our Wednesday specials offer
great deals on our most popular
Mexican meals. Every Wednesday-
MONTEREY DINNER
W/ $4.55
FIESTA DINNER
<fcrz £ia/REG.
$4.15
ENCHILADA DINNER
Or^/REG.
$3.35
Hi
6U4C
1816 Texas Avenue 823-8930
907 Highway 30 693-2484
GREAT MEXICAN FOOD. LOUSY ADVERTISING.
THE BATTALION Page 11
TUESDAY, MARCH 24, 1981
TANK ftPNAMARA by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
...ANPIM1UELR&N'*
OFFICIAL MAGAZINE,
TOO! HA9.NT WOMENS
GOLF OUTOBmi THE
USE OF et* APPEAL
TO <3>EU- THE PB3PUCT..?
LF&A
PRO GOLF
TOUR
• MOW APOUT' NANCY
LOPEZ-MELTONS PUTTING*
TlP&'AMP’IRON e-UOTS-
1UE JOANNE GARNER. WAV'
FOR COVER BLURge>,K»>?
Pistol team places second;
qualifies for nationals
The Texas A&M University pis
tol first team placed second in a
National Rifle Association pistol
match March 15 to qualify for the
national match to be held in Cam
bridge, Mass. April 4.
Pistol team coach Curtis Bums’
first team, consisting of Chip
Miles, Edward Koster, Lee Alex
ander and Buck Sullivan, finished
second behind Sam Houston State
University with a score of2038 out
of a possible 2400.
Sam Houston won the match,
shooting 2,053 out of a possible
2,400.
Individual scores for the Aggie
team were: Miles, 519 out of 600;
Koster, 514; Alexander, 508; and
Sullivan, 497.
Bill Little, although not on the
first team, was the high-point man
with a score of 529, good enough
for second place.
In the free pistol competition
Alexander finished second with a
score of 451 out of 600. Mike Ste
wart of SHSU won the free pistol
competition, finishing with a score
of 481.
Stewart also won the standard
pistol competition hitting 550 out
of 600.
With the second place finish in
the match, the first team qualified
for the national match to be held at
the MIT campus in Cambridge,
Mass. April 4.
The top seven teams qualify for
the national match. Texas A&M
received the seventh bid,
finishing in seventh place.
BOOKSTORE
PROFITS WORKSHOP
Wednesday, March 11, 1981 4:00-5:15 p.m.
Wednesday, March 25, 1981 5:15-6:30 p.m.
Room 164 East Kyle
All eligible student organizations planning to request funding from Bookstore
Profits for the 1981-82 academic year must plan to send a representative to one
of these workshops. This representative should be the individual who will make
the actual request. Please plan to attend this important workshop; procedures
for this year’s requests will be explained. The deadline for all requests, is 4 p-m.
Tuesday, March 31, 1981 in the Student Finance Center, Room 217 MSC.
NO REQUEST WILL BE ACCEPTED AFTER THIS DATE.
Announcing
the end of
$10.00 overdraft
charges and
returned checks.
Suppose you accidently write 8 checks and only
have money in your account for 3. That
could cost you $50.00 in overdraft charges
plus the embarassment of the returned checks.
Right?
Not at College Station Bank. Our Preferred
Overdraft Protection will keep you in the black
for $5.00. Here’s how it works.
If your account becomes overdrawn, we
automatically make a deposit for you using the
available credit from your Mastercard/VISA.
Deposits are made in $50.00 increments to cover
your overdraft (for a $75.00 overdraft, we
would deposit $100.00).
Best of all, the total cost is only
$5.00 per deposit.
Preferred Overdraft Protection saves you money
when you really need it! Call or
come by for details.
College Station
sink
National Association
MEMBER FDIC
1501 S. Texas Avenue College Station, Texas 693-1414
MPflCT PEOPLE HOURS
24 HU. TELLER