The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 82, No. 189, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 29, 1983 Page: 4 of 28
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Brand (Hereford, TX) and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Deaf Smith County Library.
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Wing $126,000
Semifinals set Saturday
Sutton claims TPC title
SPORTS
Page +The Hereford Brand-Tuesday, March a, 1983
Failin
Olson headed
for Arizona?
In U
(
Eliminators win
YMCA cage title
THEMANFROM
K THE MAN FROM YTower Drive In Opens April 1^
I SNOWY RIVER | April 1 & 2 Fast Times At I
I l*i\ -a I Ridgement High" and a
I .8 Ar "Nice Dreams----1
I One Showing 7:30 | April 3 Rosita Alvirz |
Ends Thurs. 4 Vestina LangentA'^J
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Current Rates
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2,500 minimum balance
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Announcing the Association
Signups extended
CHECKING
6%
V
w
• Good Neighbor Service
Hereford Texa Federal
Credit Uni
364-7350
on
I ike a good nfNghtMit
State Farm iS there
Real Estate & Investments
V
i
THEATRE
EARLY SHOW
b_t ’
Hereto
after i
Kevin
Distric
330 Schley
Hereford
Boys and girls,
ages 6 through 16,
who missed out on
last Saturday's
Kids Inc. signups,
will still be able to
do so before the
Money Market
Certificates
YMCA Cage Champs
The Eliminators did just that to
the Silver Bullets Monday night to
claim the championship of the
YMCA's high school basketball
league. Members of the winning
212 Bedford
Dimmitt 647-5169
State»arm 1 de insurane » Compa ‘y
MomeOtce Bioomngton iInos
team included (front from left)
Vernon Carroll, Melvin Kalka,
and Robert Gamboa, and (top
from left) Brian Frederick, Keith
Bridwell, and Jeff Shelton.
(Brand Photo).
tryout and draft
are completed.
Late registration
will be held this
coming weekend.
More details will
follow.
Lisa
honors
finishe
trackn
Miss
meter
the He
with 13
Whil
12.5) m
the disi
Here
by Mar
finish t
place s
Here
They si
place I
Killeen
Here!
Eras
Craig .
efforti;
4:48.25
Terry i
300 IH 1
Both
girls tn
Pumas
for Sail
•Competitive Rates
•Guaranteed Lifetime Income
• Waiver of Premium for Disability Ontion
Ski buffs. wishing to partake in New Mexico, will have
to do so quickly.
In fact, this will be the final weekend of skiing this
season at three New Mexico areas - Santa Fe, Siera Blan-
ca and Taos Ski Valley. They'll close for the season at 4
p.m. Sunday
One final ski area < Sandia Peak, located just outside
Albuquerque i will close for the season April 17 at 4 p.m.
Every other New Mexico ski area is already closed.
Kalka. five points: Keith
Bridwell, four; Jeff Shelton,
three; and Robert Gamboa,
two.
Robbie Chrsitie and Coby
Kriegshauser added three
points each to the losers'
total, while James Payne. Ar-
mando Rodriguez, and Bowie
Neumeyer each had two
holes tor 74-291.
Masters champ Craig
Stadler’s 84 included a nine
on the ninth hole.
Journeyman Bob Eastwood
came on to take second with a
no-bogey 69 and a 294 total.
The 175,600 prize for second
was, by far, the biggest check
of his non-winning 12-year
career.
Cook's double bogey on he
19th, his second of the day.
finished off a 75 and dropped
him back into a tie for third at
295 with John Mahaffey and
Bruce Lietzke. Mahaffey's 67
was the best of the tourna-
ment Lietzke shot 71.
Doug Tewell, with a 70, and
Vance Heafner. with a 74.
were next at 286
The tournament's schedule
was thrown a day late when
rains washed out Thursday's
play
4
And, the accolades keep coming for Dimmitt's Kevin
Cleveland.
The 5-11 guard, a first-team all-state selection last year
and expected to be named again this year, was picked the
player of the year on the Globe-News Super Boys' Basket-
ball Team this past weekend.
And, in the near future he is expected to be named the
outstanding basketball player in the state by the Amarillo
Chamber of Commerce, accoding to his dad Ken. who told
a crowd last week in Dimmitt that honored this year's
state champions.
made double bogey
Ed Fiori, leading alone on
the 17th tee, finished double
bogey-double bogey and tied
for eighth.
Crenshaw, one of nine men
who either led or shared the
lead at one time or another,
had a final-round 75. It includ-
ed four double bogeys — one
of themona4-putt.
Watson played the last
three holes four over par He
had a 72-291. Nicklaus never
really got in contention, had
to birdie two of the last three
K 3
we
A
7
were settled by 11 points, or more.
When the tournament began, my choices to reach Albu-
querque were Villanova. Louisville, UCLA and North
Carolina.
Since the Cardinals are the only one to get there. I’ll
stick with them Saturday. By all standards, the Houston-
Louisvile winner should be favored to win it all.
But, N.C. State and Georgia have it going. That game
could be a classic.
If Houston goes on to win it all, it'll be the second
straight year the top-rated team in the AP poll at the end
of the regular season went on to capture the big prize.
BY LES GILES
Sports Editor
And the dream' still lives on.
It lives on for Houston, again trying to become the first
Southwest Conference team in history to capture the na-
tional collegiate basketball championship.
It lives on for Louisville, in the final four for the third
tune in four years, and going after its second national title
during that span.
And, it lives for North Carolina State, a group
designated this year's "Team of Destiny" and Cinderella
Georgia, not only making its Final Four appearance, but
in the NCAA tournament for the first time ever.
The national semifinals are set for Saturday in Albu-
querque Houston and Louisville will meet in one game ...
N.C. State and Georgia in the other
The two winners will play for the big prize Monday
Of the four, only North Carolina State was not seeded by
the NCAA selection committee.
Two of the four - Houston and Louisville - were the top
seeds in their regions. Georgia, although seeded, was not
expected to make it. with the likes of defending national
champion North Carolina and top-seeded St. John's in the
East region.
The Bulldogs got there, though, with 2.3 and 5-point vic-
tories They beat Virginia Commonwealth, 56-54. on a last-
second shot; nipped St. John's 70-67 and disposed of North
Carolina, 82-77.
North Carolina Stale didn't have it easy, either.
The Wolfpack had to play four games They opened with
a 69-67 win over Pepperdine, before edging UNLV, 71-70.
Then came a breather against Utah, winning by a 76-56
margin, before nipping top-seed Virginia, 63-62
Houston, the nation's top-ranked team since UNLV lost
late in the regular season, beat Maryland by 10 points
60-501: Memphis State by seven 170-631 and Villanova by
18 i89-711 to make the trip to Albuquerque
Louisville got there by beating Tennessee (70-57»,
Arkansas 65-63 on a tip-in at the buzzer) and Kentucky
80-68 in overtime, although the final outcome was much
closer than the score might indicate).
Of the 44 games played thus far in this year's NCAA
tournament, 11 were decided by one or two points; 10 were
3 to 5-point games; 11 were of the 6 to 10-point range and 12
See me,
M.D. GENTRY
810 South 25 Mile Ave.
$10,000.00 minimum
balance
6 month maturity
Dr. Milton
Adams
Optometrist
335 Miles
Phone 364-2255
Office Hours:
Monday - Friday
8:30 to 5 pm
PASSBOOK
SAVINGS
7%
%
IRA?
Check with State Farm
BETTY LADY, GR1
Betty is a life-long resident of Deaf Smith County, having
graduated from Hereford High School.
Betty's real estate career began in 1972 while with the of-
fice of Ralph Owens. She became a licensed Tezas Real
Estate Salesperson in 1974.
In 1978. she studied Real Estate Finance at Amarillo Col-
lege During the same year she graduated from Course I,
II, and III of the Texas REALTORS Institute and secured
the G.R.I. designation
Betty received her Texas Real Estate Broker license in
January, 1977.
We are sincerely proud to welcome Betty to our organiza-
tion where she is an Associate Broker. Betty welcomes
k
M.A.M.A. Accounts
8.782%
$
. • ■
center around severe rolls,
slopes and undulations on and
around the greens.
Sutton was one of very few
to escape the course without
major disaster He did not
have a 3-putt and did not hit a
ball in the water throughout
the week. He finished with a
5-under-par 283 and collected
the biggest prize yet offered
on the American tour.
6126,000
It was secured only when
John Cook, in a tie for the
lead, hit his tee shot in the
water on the 18th hole and
) a. your calls for assistance in buying or selling real estate.
- "M whether residential, farm, ranch or commercial property
JW A Office 364-1251
EgSdA dEmm Home 364 4056
I
Vernon Carroll's short
jumper with about eight
seconds provided the heroics
as the Eliminators captured
the YMCA's high school
baketball league title Monday
night with a 30-29 win over the
previously unbeaten Silver
Bullets
Carroll's bucket were his
only two points in the contest,
but provided his team with
the slim one-point margin of
victory Brian Frederick led
the winners with 14 points as
the champs overcame a 22-14
halftime deficit to claim the
league title.
The Silver Bullets, the class
of the league all season with a
perfect 8-0 record, had a
balanced scoring attack led
by Tim Martin's seven points.
Jay Hodge added six, while
Steve Beene added four
Beene had the opportunity
to ice the game for the losers
with a pair of free toss tries
with about 20 ticks left in the
game. He missed both
chances, however, setting up
Carroll's last-minute heroics
Rounding out the scoring
for the winners were Melvin
DENVI
reunion o
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head coa
winning
history ol
ball Leag
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spite of th
John
Miller ar
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coaches v
experiene
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Miller's
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In a
game pl
fans und
(earns <
penalties
if you missed last night's first installment of the WTBS
feature "It's A Long Way to October", you can catch
part two tonight, beginning at 7:05 p.m.
It tells the story of the 1962 Atlanta Braves, who set a
major league record by winning their first 13 games of the
season, then going on to win the NL West on the final day
of the season.
The four-hour presentation is one of the best-ever about
a baseball season, and for those who enjoy the game it
shouldn't be missed.
PONTE VEDRA, Fla. (API
- Hal Sutton knew there was
potential disaster lurking on
every shot with gusty, shif-
ting winds blowing over the
controversy-ridden Players’
Club course.
"I was just fortunate I was
able to steer clear of most of
the trouble," Sutton said
after his closing 69 had pro-
vided him with a one-stroke
victory Monday in the day-
late wind-up of the Tourna-
ment Players Championship.
The 24-yesr-old tour
sophomore's victory in this
prestigious event established
him as one of the game's
most promising young stars.
But the home course for the
PGA Tour and the permanent
site for the annual champion-
ship of the tounng pros had a
certain nightmare quality for
many of the game's leading
lights.
Even before they fell vic-
tim to the varied frustrations
and tribulations, woes and
patience-shattering bad
bounces of the final round,
several of them signed and
presented to Commissioner
Deane Beman a formal peti-
tion asking that changes be
made in the course.
The Jacksonville Journal
said supporters of the petition
include Tom Watson, Jack
Nicklaus, Hale Irwin, Johnny
Miller. Tom Weiskopf, Ben
Crenshaw and Craig Stadler
Generally, the complaints
fered the job.
But Henry confirmed that
Arizona officials received
permission from Iowa
Athletic Director Bump
Elliott to talk to Olson last
Thursday and Arizona's
athletic director, Cedric
Dempsey, flew to Kansas Ci-
ty to talk to the Iowa coach.
The Hawkeyes, who finish-
ed 21-10, were eliminated
from the NCAA tournament
Friday in a 55-54 loss to
Villanova in the Midwest
Reghional.__________________
IF
b
NCAA climax near
DOWNTOWN A CT AD LA, PHONE
HEREFORD N •IHN N 364 2037
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) -
Lute Olson, who built a highly
successful program in Iowa,
was expected to be handed
the challenge of reviving the
University of Arizona's
basketball fortunes
A press conference at
which Olson's appointment
would be announced was an-
ticipated today. the
Associated Press has learn-
ed
Olson met with Arizona of-
ficials during the weekend
and met with his players in
Iowa City Monday night to in-
form them of his dec ision.
A Tucson television station
reported Monday night that a
high university official" had
confirmed that Olson had
been offered the job and that
he had accepted the offer
I can't confirm or deny
anything, " Orville Butch"
Henry, Arizona's sports infor-
mation director, said Monday
night when asked by The AP
whether Olson had been of-
Jerry Shipman
~gr.~ 801 N. Main
7 \ 364-3161
ff HEALTH )
1 INSURANCE^, Autamebile
L toheippay Insurance (ompany
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Accounts Accounts y
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Nigh, Bob. The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 82, No. 189, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 29, 1983, newspaper, March 29, 1983; Hereford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1430219/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Deaf Smith County Library.