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Gene Marek or Jessie Ward at the Memorial Student Center between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. today and tomorrow Page 6 College Station, Texas Thursday, April 27, 1972 THE BATTAU Aggies take on Longhorns in basebal With the Southwest Conference baseball championship hinging on the outcome, the Texas Aggies travel to Austin this weekend for a season-ending series with the University of Texas Longhorns. A&M, now 26-11 for the season and 9-6 in SWC play, is third in the league chase for the title. Texas and Texas Christian are tied for the lead, 10-5. The Homed Frogs will be in action this weekend against Southern Methodist. For the Ag gies to win the crown, they need to sweep the Texas series while SMU takes two from TCU. An interesting feature of the series will be the head-to-head battle for the league’s batting championship between A&M cen ter fielder R. J. Englert and Tex as third baseman David Chalk. Englert currently has a con secutive string of 27 games in which he has hit safely this sea son. His SWC streak is 15. Eng lert has hit safely in 32 of the 35 games he has played this year. Englert and five other seniors will be closing out their college baseball careers this weekend. First baseman Butch Ghutzman, second baseman Jim Langford, shortstop Carroll Lilly and pitch ers Bruce Katt and Charlie Kelley play their last A&M baseball games Friday and Saturday. Other starters for the Aggies will be catcher Tommy Haw thorne, third baseman Jim Hack er, left fielder Jim Atterbury and right fielder Karl Bystrom. Be sides Katt and Kelley, the other starting pitcher will be Jim Wallace. The Longhorns will be going for their eighth straight SWC title this weekend. Texas was car ried the past few seasons by fine pitching, but this year’s squad, picked to win the championship in pre-season polls, was supposed to be blessed with great hitting. Tennis agreement reached between forces involved LONDON (A*) — Warring ten nis factions made peace again Wednesday and paved way for the world’s top players to com pete in the major championships as well as the Davis Cup. Impact on the Davis Cup prob ably will prove the most signifi cant feature of the agreement reached between Texas million aire Lamar Hunt, proprietor of the World Championship Tennis troupe, and the International Lawn Tennis Federation. The agreement was announced simultaneously in London and in Brookline, Mass. In London, Allan H e y m a n, Danish president of the ILTF, said under the pact, which still must be ratified by the full mem bership, the confusing distinction between contract pros and inde pendent pros will disappear. This will make such pros as Rod Laver, John Newcombe, Ken Rosewall and Arthur Ashe eligi- TIRES pm [UNJ ROYAL TIRES TIRES ■11 i UNIROYAL' TIRES UNIROYALj] -JBE UNIROYAL ■ 4-PLY POLYESTER CORD TKSEFUPXIW PL- $1.81 and smooth tire off your car. 4-PLY NYLON CORD UNIROYAL 800 Black. •rail Prita riu. I rJ. Li. T.i 6.5013 12.95 1.75 775-U 17 95 2.12 825 1 4 19 95 2 79 855-14 20.95 2.45 12” 650-13 All pr,«. pi- .nd .moo* Blackwall Tubeless WHITEWALLS ADD *3.00 MORE EACH Plus Fed. Ex. Tax $1.75 and smooth tire off your car. WHEEL ALIGNMENT $095 THURS.-FRI.-SAT. HERE’S WHAT WE DO: • Adjust camber and caster • Set toe-in • Check steering •Any additional parts ot aervices n«*ded but not listed will carry a supplemental charge. Watch For Our Grand Opening in Our New Location 400 E. UNIVERSITY DR. COLLEGE STATION TIRE CO. Free Pick-up & Delivery Just Say Charge It. UNIR0YA I 1219 So. College Bryan, Texas 823-0613 822-0812 ■WfifliH BANKAMEBICARD.I first introduced The rain tire & TJGEJR MIA/ ble for the Davis Cup as soon as their present contracts with Hunt expire. Hunt will become a pro moter instead of a tour conduc tor and owner. Hunt said some of the contracts have four years to run. In the past, professionals un der contract to Hunt have been ineligible for the Davis Cup, the competition for world suprem acy. However, the Davis Cup is governed by the Davis Cup na tions and not the ILTF. Hunt, in London, said: “The game is now truly open, and WCT’s goals are intact. All the world’s great tennis players will be able to play on the high est artistic levels ever offered in the sport. “The spectator is the big win ner, for now opponents will be determined by tennis playing ability rather than by politics.” Because ratification must be approved by the entire member ship in Helsinki, Finland, in July, the agreement cannot affect the 1972 Wimbledon tournament, scheduled June 28-July 8. Thus Wimbledon, the grand dame of all tennis championships, will have to be played without the 32 pros in Hunt’s stable, in cluding the 1971 winner, John Necombe. However, ratification is expected to come in time to benefit the U.S. Open at Forest Hills Aug. 30-Sept. 12. This distinction has created considerable confusion, particu larly among fans. Tennis players of all classes will be free to compete in both ILTF and WCT tournaments and WCT players will be encouraged to compete in the four major championships — Wimble- ton, French, Italian and the U.S. Open at Forest Hills — by mak ing them qualifying events for the WCT final. The truce was greeted enthusi astically by tennis officials throughout the world. Cepeda frustrated, angry, but will not quit baseball ATLANTA

— Orlando Ce peda is frustrated. He is angry. But he is not quitting baseball. “I want to play and soon,” the strapping first baseman for the Atlanta Braves said Wednesday while denying reports that he will retire from baseball because of an ailing left knee. “I didn’t say I was going to quit,” the 34-year-old native of Ponce, Puerto Rico said. “I did say I was tired of all the needles and pain. And that some days I feel like quitting but the knee is getting better each day. “I want to play, I’ve played baseball all my life. It is my life.” So far this season, Cepeda, a hulking 6-foot-2 and 205 pounds, has been to bat twice. Last year the former San Francisco Giant and St. Louis Cardinal managed to play in 71 games and batted .276 with 14 home runs and 44 runs batted in before his injured knee had to be operated on in August. “I was on a weightlifting pro gram after the operation,” the 1967 National League Most Val uable Player said. “Then I played winter ball and the knee was coming along. “In spring training in Florida the doctor told me not to continue with the weights. I did what he said and the knee got worse. “I saw my own doctor in New York and he said to go back to the weights.” Cepeda’s scheduled comeback was placed about three weeks behind, he says and only now is the ailing knee starting to come back to normal. “It feels much better but I have to wait and see. Luman Har ris, Braves manager, has been great. He doesn’t want me to rush it. “When I return I want to come back on a regular basis,” said Cepeda, who earns a reported $90,000 a year. “Luman told me to be sure it’s okay before I play.” Cepeda, a 14-year major league veteran with a .309 career batting average, is in his fourth season with the Braves after being traded from St. Louis for Joe Torre, and says the sitting is killing him. “I sit and watch. It’s very frus trating and makes me angry sit ting o nthe bench,” he said. Something New — Something Different the Maroon Bippy BEER POPCORN SETUPS SOFT LIGHTS GOOD MUSIC Touch Dancing Nitely Ages 18-80 Welcome * Special — Tuesday Night, Beer 25^ ♦ Special — Thursday Night is Ladies Night All Drinks Vk Price For All Ladies 1313 S. College Ave. Bryan Phone 822-2204 For Information The trio of Mike Markl, Chalk and John Langerhans was billed as the “Murderer’s Row” of the league, but their bats have been tamed in single games against Texas Tech and TCU. April 7-8, the Rice Owls swept a three-game series in Houston, one of the ma jor upsets ever pulled off on the Austin school. Texas has back many of the top players from the team that a year ago swept an SWC series from the Aggies to win the title. The Longhorns won 9-6, 3-0 and 10-9, due mainly to the pit of Burt Hooton. This season, junior co!]| transfer Ron Roznovsky has tablished himself as the at( the Longhom pitching staff, Texas attempts to win its foi seventh title in 57 years of S| baseball. Friday’s games begin at l in Clark Field. The doublehi will he followed by a 1:00 aitj game Saturday. The entire ssa will be broadcast by KORA Raj 1240. Vol. Blues coach picks Bosk in match against Rangen 5' ST. LOUIS WP> — “You’d have to rate Boston among the great est teams the game’s ever seen,” the coach of hockey’s vanquished St. Louis Blues declared. A1 Arbour, seemingly relieved his team was through with the high-scoring Bruins, made the assessment Wednesday following a 5-3 Boston victory on Arena ice the night before. Asked to comment on the Stan ley Cup finals starting Sunday between Boston and the New York Rangers, Arbour added, “If New York is going to do well, its defense is going to have to be super. And their goaltending is going to have to be super, too. “It’s difficult to size up any one series and predict the out come,” Arbour said, however. Boston's got so much experi ence. They don’t have any rookies, and I think the Rangers have only one.” Backing Arbour’s praise of Boston was a seven-goal pace with which the Bruins marched through St. Louis in four games. Flourishing a deadly power play, they scored on half of 20 opportunities with St. Louis a player short and poured in 28 goals for a four-game series cup record. Taking over as the Bruins’ most devastating line were Fred Stanfield, Johnny Bucyk and Johnny McKenzie, who combined for 10 goals and 32 points in the sweep. The line, which set a Cup rec ord of 52 points in 14 games two years ago, now has 46 in nine games entering the finals. “The thing about Boston is you can’t concentrate on stopping just one player or just one lit; Arbour said. “They all set from just about any placeat« time.” “The only guy we’ve got Id is Bucyk,” said Boston coachli * Johnson before the Bruins ij nomi ed for home. “He’s got eithe hip injury or a charley hoe it-wee Kl( fust We don’t know for sure.” Johnson, like Arbour, lalni the finals against the Ranp hard to predict. ^ “We know they’ve been pk] ing well,” he said in respect ln j m0 iions New York, which Boston bes; five of six games and outscos TL 25-8 during the regular seas:: ^ ^ “We handled them prettyi: all year,” Johnson noted, sometimes in a series it w down to who’s hot and who the breaks.” the se oe att ilstoi) By Atl Cuozzo traded for wide receive! the R 1 Kli itiadii nmitt t w< bpenec Ea sch Moor ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOUS — The Minnesota Vikings ( ed veteran National Foota ItJL League quarterback Gary Cm to the St. Louis Cardinals If nesday for wide receiver awi Gilliam and two draft choices ng cc Cuozzo, who shared the q« ssiden terbacking duties a year agofe Acad played out the season withe:'l“ contract to become a free aps esenl had asked the Vikings to p!i peve him or trade him. He would h become a free agent May 1. In addition to Gilliam, the ings get the Cardinals’ No, draft choice and the No. 4 in! Mi choice they gave to St. Louisi ; San Pats trade Dryer for 1973 draft pick FOXBORO, Mass. UP) — The New England Patriots of the Na tional Football League traded un signed defensive end Fred Dryer to Los Angeles Wednesday in ex change for the Rams’ No. 1 pick in the 1973 draft and veteran defensive tackle Rick Cash. The Patriots surrendered their first and sixth draft choices this year and their No. 2 pick in 1973 to acquire Dryer from the New York Giants. Dryer played out his option with the Giants last season and the Patriots were unable to sign him. Unless he signs with Los Angeles by May 1, he will become a free agent. year when Dale Hackbart« to the Cardinals for Bob Brci and Nate Wright. The trade of Cuozzo seem imminent after the Vikings 9 quarterback Norm Snead, n receiver Bob Grim, running h Vince Clements and two di choices to the New York Gfe for scrambling Fran Tarkentf who started his career in B nesota. The departure of Grim, »! led the Vikings with 45 re«l tions and for 691 yards and# en touchdowns, and the sus[«i sion of A1 Denton created a.heal ailabl for a receiver such as Gilliam. Gilliam has played five # ild ca sons in the NFL, the last tlf with the Cardinals. Cuozzo has played nine seas^t’s f in the NFL with Baltimore, Nf Orleans and Minnesota. ad P bram lian inque CSC ard ji >n foi an pi rst ■ n * if * i 'lew A&M thorn Save This Ad $50° Discount On First Month’s Rent • Individual Storage Units • Fireproof • 24 Hour Security Attendance. Individual Spaces Available 3x4 5x10 10x20 £ E Aft lOx 15 10x10 10x30 A Month The