ice »s officials he design was conceived Commandant Thomas and Assistant Coniman. laid “Buck” Henderson led to Houston seams a Ray. ho has made other flags jOrps, was told the flag sat NASA headquarters lys to be packed for the hen scheduled for Feb- istronaut is allowed to united number of per ns and Springer chose momento to accompany ace. ;ry was launched March ve day mission to deploy illion tracking and data un satellite. on media p.m. Thursday in 501 doeller will talk about lia coverage and the islation. The public is ittend. tiel to A&M rum will be about .iug and savings and ems in the past, and ntions to those prob- aei Bitter, the forum's ms director, said, leaker will make his narks, then the mod- step in and ask some stions to the speakers e floor will be opened ions f rom the audien- lid. “We want to gen- ice participation." m is f ree and open to t reception will follow )cal talent the show: the Texas liers, the barbershop er Class, the Kappa me of Your Business uins. ts scheduled to per- litarist Hank Towns- ered dulcimer player r, vocalist Jill Setina, ihanie Eiswirth, fla- cer Roxane Cuellar m Chris Rand, g duo called Throw mce quintet called In will perform, gie Wranglers and ns, Miss Texas A&M 1 be featured per- tit of their acts were le 1988 variety show, e on sale at Rudder student tickets are$4 nr the general public ’ charity run iy or $10 on Satur- n ticipant will receive ts may pick up race the Kappa Alpha e, 1503 Athens, Fri- -8- p.m. or Saturday a.m. 11 be placed in divi- trophies will be te top three finishers ion for the 3.1-mile isions for both male idude under 19,20- ver 40 and overall, vill be drawings for g the awards cere- nutes after comple- :e. 'ephyr Club is theti- for the run. Other ors include Tom’s Fajita Rita’s, 31 ert Shoppe, Wolf Vash, Carney’s Pub FM radio station, ill broadcast live on ;e. Lerested in the race Chamberlin at 696- appa Alpha Theta -5289 or John Tur ing and Multisport ants at 846-3361. CLE my as ^2 Bath Ketball, shuttle. The Battalion SPORTS 7 Thursday, April 6,1989 Ags down Bearkats again Hickey: A&M women’s sports Knoblauch, Thompson keys to 9-6 victory can reach national prominence FROM STAFF & WIRE REPORTS HUNTSVILLE — Kirk Thomp son extended his hitting streak to 25 games as No. 1-ranked Texas A&M defeated Sam Houston State 9-6 Wednesday in non-conference ac tion. The Aggies improved to 35-1 on the season, while the Bearkats dropped to 24-15. Thompson was issued a base on balls by Sam Houston starter Jerry Tyson to start the game. He stole second and Terry Taylor knocked him in with a single to give A&M a quick 1-0 lead. Chuck Knoblauch and John Byington walked to load the bases and Tyson left was pulled with no outs. Reliever Kevin Baker hit A&M’s Eric Albright to force in Taylor. Knoblauch scored on a sacrifice by Mike Easley. After the Aggies scored three runs in the first inning, Thompson led off with a double in the top of the second and Terry Taylor fol lowed with a two-run home run. Thompson walked in the fourth for A&M and Knoblauch hit a two- run home run, his fifth of the year, to put A&M up 7-0. Aggie Update • Score: Texas A&M 9, Sam Hous ton State 6. • Record: 35-1. • Ranking: First. • Next games: Friday and Saturday at Rice in Houston. Knoblauch highlighted the Aggie attack by going 2-for-4 on the day with two runs batted in. Chris Burton hit a two-run home run for the Bearkats in the bottom of the fifth after Greg McGill walked, to dose the gap to 7-2. A&M’s Tim Herrmann raised his record to 3-0 with the victory, while Sam Houston’s Jerry Tyson fell to 0- 2 with the loss. Herrmann worked four innings and allowed two hits, one walk and struck out five. A&M used five other pitchers to close out the game as A&M Head Coach Mark Johnson followed his plan to work several pitchers to keep them fresh for con ference action. “I thought Tim Herrmann did a good job of taking it right to the bat ters,” Johnson said. “He was aggres sive and had good command of his pitches.” A&M continues Southwest Con ference play Friday and Saturday in Houston against the Rice Owls. Kerry Freudenberg, Sean Law rence, Ronnie Allen, Anthony DeLa- Cruz and Scott Centala all saw pitch ing action in the final innings for A&M. A&M scored another run in the seventh when Andy Duke clubbed his sixth home run of the season over the left field wall. The Bearkats closed to within 8-6 in hte eighth before A&M added an insurance run in the ninth when Byington tripled and scored on a sacrifice fly by Eric Albright. Centala worked out of ninth-in ning jam to end the game as a pair of singles to open the inning were ne gated by a rally-killing double play. By Stan Golaboff SPORTS WRITER Ever since Title IX was approved back in 1972, women’s athletics has been fighting an uphill battle for funding, respect and an equal op portunity. As part of the Education Amend ment of 1972, Title IX was intended to prevent schools receiving federal funding from discriminating on the basis of sex. Within months, wom en’s athletic programs sprang up all over the country. No longer were women forced to play sports only through sports clubs. At the University of Texas, school adminstrators made an early com mittment to women’s athletics. To day, Texas has the top women’s pro ram in the country. They have a 3.3 million budget, a 1,600 member booster club and national power house teams in volleyball, basketball, swimming and track. When one considers the rivalry between Texas and Texas A&M, one would assume that A&M would have also made an early committment to women’s athletics. However, it has not been until recently that the ad ministrators at A&M have made the committment. In 1984, A&M lured the head women’s basketball coach of Kansas State, Lynn Hickey, to A&M to be the head coach for the Lady Aggies and the athletic director for women’s athletics. Hickey did not have an easy task. The budget for women’s athletics was $951,636 in 1984 and only A&M’s softball team was considered a national power. Since then, Hickey and her staff have built — with the support of the administration — a program that many think can com pete nationally. The softball team won the na tional championship in 1987 and last year Melinda Clark and Alissa Bell became the first Lady Aggies named as NCAA All-Americans in track. Donna Roper was a preseason All- American in basketball. Volleyball Head Coach A1 Givens and Swim ming Head Coach Mel Nash have fielded competitive teams the last couple of years. “We have made a lot of headway in women’s athletics here at A&M since 1984,” Hickey said. “People now know that we exist and that ad- minstration has helped us as much as they can.” Many coaches in the Southwest Conference agree that A&M has the potential to compete with Texas, es pecially in basketball, the most visi ble sport in women’s athletics. “The only school I see with the re sources to do it (catch Texas) is A&M,” Houston Women’s Basket ball Coach Greg Williams said. A&M does seem to have the re sources to be competitive. The wom en’s athletic budget for 1988-89 is $1.6 million. A&M has a full-time di rector of promotion, a full-time sports information assistant and has some games broadcast on local ra dio. A&M also has its own booster club, the Maroon Club, and has some corporate sponsors like Coca- Cola and Domino’s Pizza. See Hickey/Page 8 American pros should be playing basketball in the Olympics If all goes well on Friday, the 1992 U.S. Olympic basketball team in Barcelona, Spain, could contain NBA superstars like Magicjohnson, Michael Jordan, Dominique Wilkins and Larry Bird. That’s right, professional basketball players coupled with some of the country’s top college talent on a team that could potentially dominate international basketball. All that separates this dream from reality is the vote of the Federation Internationale deBasketball (FIBA), a 178-country organization that will decide on Friday whether to allow NBA players to participate in world-class events, including the Olympics. What’s ironic about this situation is that officials involved with the FIBA support the move, while the NBA and the American Basketball Association USA (ABAUSA), Steven Merritt Assistant Sports Editor the ruling body of U.S. international basketball teams, have been extremely low- key in their support of the plan. Boris Stankovic, secretary-counsel of the FIBA, said that the time has really arrived in basketball to stop the hypocrisy in the distinction between amateur and professional players. Stankovic said that amateur players do not exist in the real sense of the word. International competition has not been good to the U.S. basketball program over the years, especially the past five. The basketball final in the 1987 Pan- American Games was supposed to be a cakewalk for the U.S. team, but it was soundly defeated by a Brazilian team that was led by Oscar Schmidt, a guy who reportedly makes $300,000 playing in Italy. Then the 1988 Olympics rolled around, and the team built by John Thompson was supposed to be invincible. The long awaited matchup between the U.S. and the USSR was set. The U.S. team was the best in years, and what happened? The Russians won with what seemed to be purely amateur talent. But in fact, the Russian players were subsidized by the government. It was no big secret that many Soviet athletes were paid, but the basketball players that won the gold medal in 1988 reportedly received $30,000 each from the Soviet sports federation. Dave Gavitt, commissioner of the Big East Conference and president of the ABAUSA, said that he also sees hypocrisy in the system, but that current members of the ABAUSA are opposed to open competition. This opposition by ABAUSA member organizations such as the NCAA, NAIA and AAU is probably warranted if the NBA players are allowed to compete. But once guidelines are established, there should be no reason why the so-called amateur and professional players couldn’t coexist. Granted, there will be problems to iron out if the pro players are accepted, but these problems aren’t beyond a solution. Questions as to whether the next Olympic coach should be from the NBA or a college, or what the correct ratio of college to pro players would be justified, is secondary to a bigger concern — injury to the pro player. That’s the big reason why allowing the professional player to compete is not as big of an issue as everyone thinks. Not many pro basketball players are going to jeopardize their careers playing international basketball. If the pro plavers are accepted, the situation will probably be more appealing to the younger, inexperienced players. Veterans like Magic Johnson and Bird will probably be more concerned with finishing their careers without major injury than playing in Buenos Aires. So let the pros play, it’s just a way for the United States to keep up with the international Jonses. Texas A&M 30th Anniversary Blood Drive April 10-14 BLOOD CENTER at Wadley Commons 10-8 MSC10-6 SBISA10 —6 Med. Sci. Library 10-6 Another Service of Student Government, Alpha Phi Omega and Omega Phi Alpha GATHRIGHT AWARDS AND BUCK WEIRUS SPIRIT AWARDS ANNOUNCEMENT AND PRESENTATION 9:00 A.M. SUNDAY, APRIL 9 RUDDER AUDITORIUM All applicants should attend! - Call battalion Classified 845-2611 Mi