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Offer good while supplies last. 1HC0 BElili Sheehan TANK MCNAMARA* by Jeff Millar & Bill Hint shares the ‘good life’ United Press International MALVERN, Pa. — When Patty Sheehan says, “I’m having a pretty good life,” no one doubts her in the least. After her victory Sunday in the $350,000 LPGA Kids’ Classic, Shee han leads the 1984 women’s tour in f; Wrr4 rjg small pi iTGRCMce, of cou^e, ThlAT we/LL SELLTUg RIGHT TO CARRY THE TORCH TO AJONOME WITH ENOUGH RJCKG TO R\Y FOR IT... victories, three, and official money winnings at $164,982. The tournament was sponsored by McDonald’s Corp. But it isn’t just the money. The 27-year-old Californian showed gritty determination in the sauna like conditions at the White Manor Country Club to outduel Amy Alcott Sunday in the final round. In addi tion to Alcott, there was the pressure of a $500,000 bonus that was peck ing away at her concentration. Simpson takes usual position at U.S. Open United Press International Away from golf, Sheehan also has a keen awareness of her life and those around her. Her involvement with a home for troubled teenaged girls in northern California means as much to her as the money and rec ognition she gets from golf. The facility, known as “Tigh Sheehan” which means “House of Sheehan” in Gaelic, offers counsel ing and education in a home envi ronment. She purchased the house two years ago. “I’m having a pretty good life and I’d like to share it with others who aren’t so fortunate,” said Sheehan, sipping champagne Sunday after collecting the $52,500 first-prize check and the bonus. “I’m real fortunate to be able to give back a little bit. I picked it (Tigh Sheehan) because it’s close and I can see the progress the kids are making. There are quite a few real success stories and it means a lot to me to know that maybe I had something to do with them. The house is a very special part of my life.” MAMARONECK, N Y. — The star of the show a few miles down the road, Scott Simpson took on his more familiar role as just another anonymous face in the crowd Mon day when golfing’s elite gathered for the U.S. Open. It is ludicrous, of course, to sum marily dismiss a $500,000 tourna ment, but because of unfortunate scheduling, the Westchester Classic merely served as a tuneup to the grand show which starts Thursday at Winged Foot. The distance between the West chester Country Club and Winged Foot is little more than 5 miles, but many of the game’s top names, such as Jack Nicklaus, Tom Watson, Ben Crenshaw, Hale Irwin and Lee Tre vino, elected to bypass the Westches ter to give themselves more prepara tion time for the Open. For Simpson, though, the detour was well worth the trip and in his subdued, easy-going manner, win ning the Westchester was just about as good as winning the Open. When you haven’t been able to win any where on the circuit in four years, winning something is all that mat ters. “I had about five second-place fin ishes since winning the Western (in 1980), but I couldn’t quite get over the edge,” Simpson said Sunday af ter his 6-under-par 65 gave him a five-stroke victory and the $90,000 first prize, only $4,000 less than the Open winner will earn. “I Figured it would come around, and I’m glad it came around today.” The 28-year-old Californian knows full well the value of winning the Open, and it is a title he dearly would love to have, but Simpson isn’t about to place added pressure on himself. “I hate to say it, but if I don’t play well or don’t win it, it’s not the end of the world,” he said. “I’ve got a great wife, I’ve got a great little girl and I’ve got a great house in San Diego. I enjoy my golf, but I don’t won about it. I’m not rich by any men I’m well off. It’s just the satisfact* of winning.” From an original list of 5,1 tries for the 84th U.S. Open,: of 156 will tee off early Thursd: morning over the 6,930-yard Course. The total purse is :il: ■ Opt: WASH oted Ti tewed te This will be the fourth time Winged Foot is hosting the On the last occasion, in 1974, son took a one-shot lead into the nal round but Irwin came ontolalBweapon the first of his two national crow with a 7-over-par 287, the winning score in relation to pars! 1963. 1(lr tha Winged Foot, with itsdeeproiij will favor the golfer who can long and straight, and among people who rate highly areNid Watson, Crenshaw, Irwin,Tomfc and Calvin Peete, who probablt the most accurate of all off thetee makes reemei .atellite-c On a idopted ; esting o! at put idministi Another special part of her life came Sunday when she took home what officials said was the biggest one-day payout in the history of pro fessional golf. The $500,000 bonus was awarded to Sheehan for her vic tories here and in the LPGA Championship the previous week end. Ex-Cowboy sentenced to jail for sexual assuall United Press International “This is a thrill that ranks up there with my first tour victory (a 1981 event in Japan), my first major (the 1983 LPGA) and my first half-mil lion dollars in winnings,” she said. “It’s nice to know I’ll have a nice re tirement.” The bonus money, put up by sponsors of this tournament, the LPCA and the Corning Classic, is payable in 10 yearly installments of $50,000 each beginning in 1994. LONG BEACH, Calif. — Former Dallas Cowboys linebacker Thomas “Hollywood” Henderson was sen tenced Monday to five years in prison for sexually assaulting two teenage girls and offering them a bribe to stop them from testifying. Superior Court Judge Ernest Kelly could have sent Henderson, a two-time All-Pro linebacker, to prison for as long as 18 years. Kelly, who revoked Henderson’s $16,000 bail, also recommended Henderson serve his four-year, eight-month sentence in a minimum security prison. Henderson, a member of the Dal-' las Cowboys’ Super Bowl teams in 1976, ’78 and ’79, pleaded no contest to four charges stemming from a November abduction and sexual as sault on a 17-year-old quadriplegic and her 15-year-old girlfriend. The former football player, who retired in 1981, had also pleaded no contest to charges he offered the two girls a $10,000 bribe to testify he had not molested them. In California, a “no contest” plea carries the same penalties as a guilty plea, but does not admit to guilt. Prosecutors said Henderson lured the two girls to his Long Beach apartment on Nov. 2, forcedtte gunpoint to disrobe, subjectedtk to oral copulation and gave drug! the teenagers. Henderson originally claimed picked up the girls after they ited him on the street. He claimed he pulled his unloadedg on the girls when he found out them stealing his money. The police confiscated a So her handgun from his residence. diseto Following his 1979 release the Cowboys, Henderson he had a cocaine habit that cost It as much as $ 10,000 per week Detroit Tigers not just leading AL East United Press International NEW YORK — The Detroit Ti gers, who have held a large lead in the American League East for most of the season, have three players leading and another in second place in the first weekly report on voting for the All-Star team, the AL an nounced Monday. The 1984 All-Star Game will be played on July 10 at San Francisco’s Candlestick Park. Balloting contin ues through June 30 at all major-and minor-league ballparks and at thou sands of retail stores around the country. Second baseman Lou Whitaker, catcher Lance Parrish and center fielder Chet Lemon, three-fourths of Detroit’s potent up-the-middle defense, are bidding for their first All-Star starts. The fourth defensive stalwart, shortstop Alan Trammell, is runner- up to last year’s AL Most Valuable Player, Cal Ripken Jr. of Baltimore. Whitaker’s closest pursuer is To ronto’s Damaso Garcia, who has helped the Blue Jays to the second- best record in baseball. Parrish’s main competition comes from Chi cago’s Carlton Fisk, a seven-time All- Star starter. Two other leaders — California first baseman Rod Carew and Kan sas City third baseman George Brett — are bidding to continue consec utive selection strings. Carew is seek ing his 15th in a row while Brett is after his ninth. Bill Buckner, traded on May 25 from the Chicago Cubs to Boston, ranks sixth among AL first basemen. His name appears on the National League side of the ballot, but so as not to deprive Buckner of votes re ceived, his NL total and AL write-ins are being combined. California’s Reggie Jackson leads the outfield vote-getting, which is the tightest race of all. The 10-time i foil!! electee is followed by DaveWini of New York and Lemon. Jack® teammate Fred Lynn ranks Lynn, who hit the first grand slam last year, has four hoi runs and 10 RBI in his nineap| ances. These are the total number votes that have been cast for a outfielder: 1, Reggie Jackson, Califorr (DH), 245,728. 2, Dave V ‘ New York, 240,090. 3, Chet Leu® Detroit, 213,076. 4, Fred Lynn,& fornia, 199,977. 5, Ron Kittle, cago, 186,124. One Bdrms. from $335 Two Bdrms. from $395 FREE Cable and HBO • Pool • 24-Hr. Emergency Maintenance • On Shuttle Bus Route • Laundry Rooms ■ Large Walk-In Closets •-Small Pets Welcome 811 Harvey Road College Station 696-9638 m METRO PROPERTIES MANAGEMENT INC TAQS One Bdrms. from $290 Two Bdrms. from $390 FREE Cable and HBO • Pool •24-Hr. Emergency Maintenance • On Shuttle Bus Route • Laundry Rooms • 3 Floorplans: • Lofts • Flats •Studios 1505 Park Place College Station 693-6505 m METRO PROPERTIES MANAGEMENT INC 9 OUT OF 10 PUPPIES PREFER THE BATTALIOI Vol. ’ Se St Un irms agr :eed furl em. The ions foil iecret ses ans and “ There funds fo Fense Init iram of i rosed Iasi igainst er The c Tw b€ Un WAS! shooting place” w< dering V official during a celebrate Neithe any dang returned his schedi The ir team that accompai cade to s but it retu The tw is Carlos berto Her El Salvad Naval Ob their nor Police sai English. The tw the fence pansive e EOT, s; spokeswoi She sai thought ti and called lice.” Poli found the 'Rea St B) Readin tivity are greatest b related \ head of says. Stewart mittee set dowment study the ties in edt and langi fered gre; tion. One ca said, is I rage. The raj emphasis which, he: “Amerii more fadd the world, was new nr think thi another pa This ii training ti< foreign la: said.