The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 24, 1974, Image 10

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    A place
happy to eat.
The Tokyo Steak House is a place happy to eat.
The menu is traditional, the atmosphere authentic,
the service polite, the food
terrific.
In the Teppan Yaki (iron
grill) room, your choice of
steak, shrimp, or chicken (plus
bean sprouts, onions, zucchini and
mushrooms) are cooked right on
your table. Chef Toshio is a master of the
Japanese cooking ceremony which makes
cooking an adventure and eating a delight.
There are chopsticks for purists, forks for
those with hardy appetites and fortune cookies
for everyone. Come as you are —but come
hungry and in the mood to have a relaxing,
happy dinner.
Page 10
THE BATTALi
WEDNESDAY, APRIul
Rain slows tracksters times
Wieather hinders Aggies at Kansas, Baylor meets
Increas
day ev
mornin;
TOKYO
STEAK HOUSE
Townshire/Texas Avenue/Bryan
for reservations call 822-1301
Chinese Feast (7 traditional dishes for 2.95) Tuesday-Thursday
By TED BORISKIE
Assistant Sports Editor
The A&M track squad battled
rainy weather in competition al
though the squad was split into
two units participating in meets
hundreds of miles apart.
Eleven members were forced to
run through wind and rain at the
Kansas relays Saturday while the
rest of the squad suffered simi
lar inclement weather at the Bay
lor Invitational meet in Waco.
The wet track didn't seem to
bother hurdler Scottie Jones as
he ran to his best performance of
the season in the 120-yard highs,
copping a wind-aided 13.6 to take
third place in the top flight field.
His previous best of the year was
a 13.7, also wind-aided, but he
holds a share of the school rec
ord of 13.5 which he set last year.
That record could be in jeopardy
as Jones said last week he feels
he could run a 13.4 this year.
Also impressive in the 120-yard
hurdles was freshman Shifton
Baker, who turned in a 14.1 in the
preliminaries but was eliminated
in the quarterfinals.
The mile relay team of Harold
Davis, Horace Grant, Craig Mc-
Phail and Doug Brodhead turned
in their top time of the season,
winning their preliminary heat
with a 3:11.7. In the rain-marred
finals, the team could run but a
3:15.1, still good enough for third
behind Texas’ winning 3:14.0.
The two-mile relay team suf
fered a bit of bad luck as Ron
McGonigle threw a shoe on the
first turn of the second leg. After
a fine opening leg by Pat Brad
ley, McGonigle took the baton in
third place, five yards out of first,
10 yards ahead of the fourth
place team and 25 yards ahead of
Texas, the nearest SWC team.
Aggie golfers
4th place
in
take
SWC
Henry Ransom’s Texas Aggie
golf squad managed a tie for
fourth place with Texas Tech in
the Southwest Conference champ
ionships in Houston yesterday.
A&M was fifth after first day
play. Texas’ Jim Mason sank
a 45-foot putt on the final hole
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Tuesday to rally the Longhorns to
a tie with the University of Hous
ton for the title.
The defending champion Long
horns had started the final day
of the 54-hole tournament with a
six-stroke lead over the deter
mined Cougars.
Texas still had the lead going
into the final nine holes of Tues
day’s 27-hole series but then the
Cougars started their charge.
When Mason came up to the
final hole lead and Mason cooly
plopped in a birdie to tie the
score.
Houston’s Keith Fergus, who
won the individual honors with a
final 27-hole total of 106, then
missed a 14-footer that would
have given the Cougars the cham-
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Help!
Caddies needed
Sixty volunteers are still need
ed to caddy in the News Media
Golf Tournament Friday.
Members of the A&M coaching
staff and media personnel from
throughout the state compete in
the annual event starting at 11
a.m.
Caddies receive free lunch and
cakes and are tipped by the par
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All those interested should re
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845-5725, as soon as possible.
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pionship anyway.
Fergus finished with a 54-hole
total of 216, even par for the
par 72 Bear Creek Golf World
west of downtown.
Texas and Houston finished
with 903 totals and Southern Me
thodist was third with 921.
Mason finished the tournament
at two over 218. He was tied for
the individual lead going into the
final day with SMU’s Mark De
bolt. DeBolt faded to a 78 Tues
day and finished with a 54-hole
total of 222.
The shoe slipped off as Mtfi
igle entered the first turn]
he hobbled to a 2:02 withthij
gies far back in the 22-team
A fine third leg and ancht:
Adolph Tingan and Grant
the Aggies up a few placeJ
not enough to finish in the if
ey.
“I thought we did real J
said coach Charles Thomas t
looked good in all the relaji
ran together well as a tearj
While Thomas and his
were getting wet in Kansas,
sistant coach Ted Nelson anj
remainder of the squad wen
fering the same kind of fiti
Waco.
The wind and rain keptmta
the athletes from perform^
tonight
84°.
1
li-j
to par but Craig Carter stilli fecomn
aged to have a good day it
ning the shot put with a tos lading
53-4.
Pole vaulters David Pet
and Brad Blair managed to
third and fifth places, its
tively, with sub-par vaults ol
6.
Tim Brown tossed the
154 feet 5 inches to take!
place and round out the so;
for the Aggies.
Pd. Pol. Ad.
—STUDENTS—
From Maverick County
Re-Elect
ENRIQUE LOPEZ
County Clerk
GET INVOLVED—VOTE!
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published In compliance witn Texas Klee
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