: I..... SKI* BBIIfflDrallHBBHBHiBDn Despite bad luck THE BATTALION Page 7 TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 1975 Ags make respectable showing at Drake By PAUL McGRATH Managing Editor DES MOINES, Iowa — Per forming before a capacity Drake Re lays crowd of 18,000 and competing against some of the top teams in the nation, the Texas A&M cinder men proved their trip to Des Moines was worthwhile. Shilton Baker, the Aggies’ sophomore hurdler, captured third in the 120-yard highs. He was the only A&M participant to have his efforts rewarded as he received a bronze plaque for his 14.1 time. He finished behind LSU’s Allan Misher (13.7) and Larry Shipp (13.8). The distance medley team of CAM RUSI IONITE SNEAK PREVIEW Come in as early as 8 pm to catch our sneak & stay to see our regular show afterwards: “Our Big Sneak NOMINATED FOR 4 ACADEMY AWARDS. See you at 8 pm — Campus O U R B I G S N E A K lasterpr The Best Picture Of The Year!” -Pit Collin., CBS-TV ‘‘Best Actress of the Year” H . NATIONAl. BOARD OF REVIEW FIUK/GENJU. Adolph Tingan, Doug Brodhead, Manfred Kohrs and Bruce Smith set a school record with a 9.59.9 clock ing in the two and one-half mile event. Tingan, proving he is on the way back from an ankle injury, gathered a 1.53.7 first leg time in the 880 yard portion of the race. He was in third place when he handed the baton to quartermiler Brodhead. The Aggie captain put the foursome in second place with a 47.9 dash around the oval. Kohrs ran the 1320-yard third leg and al ternately moved from the second spot to the lead in his three laps. He posted a fine time of 3.04.5 and A&M had the lead position with Bruce Smith anchoring in the mile. Smith was unable to maintain the spot as A&M fell to eighth. He posted a 4.13.0 on the clock as the quartet shattered the previous school barrier. “They all ran good,” said Head Track Coach Charles Thomas about the relay squad. A&M qualified for finals competi tion in two other relay races — the 440 and the 880 — but had to scratch out of one and was disqual ified in the other. They also had to scratch the mile baton excursion be cause of an injury to Chuck Butler. The 880 relaymen posted a third place 1.23.6 but were disqualified when Butler was caught stepping on his lane line with more than three steps. Ray Brooks and Sam Dierschke had 19.8 marks on their 220 legs. The sprint relay was eliminated because Brodhead’s knees were bothering him. The Aggies clocked a 41.6 in the prelims as five South west Conference schools (Baylor, TCU, UH, Rice and A&M) qualified for the finals in that event. Baker also qualified for finals competition in the 440-yard inter mediate hurdles with a 53.1 in the preliminaries. He finished seventh in the finals with a 52.4, his second best time ever in the intermediates. His time could have possibly been better he said, but fatigue from the earlier races overtook him and he was unable to make his kick. Long jumper Tom Owens had his best jump of the year with a 23-11 leap although he was unable to qual ify for the finals. The Relays featured some of the top track athletes on the globe as world record holders Ivory Crock ett, Jim Bolding, Dave Roberts, Dwight Stones, Al Fuerbach and Francie Larrieu competed for the enthusiastic crowd. It was a bad weekend for most of them however. Fuerbach, trying for MEMORIAL STUDENT CENTER BUILDING STUDIES QUESTIONNAIRE The Building Studies Committee of the Memorial Student Center Council and Directorate has been delegated the responsibility of determining policies that will lead to more efficient use of the space in the MSC. Although we are unable at this point to determine what areas we have jurisdiction over, the committee is in a position to recommend usage of the facilities. To assist us in our recommenda tions, we would appreciate your views on how to use the MSC. Please fill out the questions below and return to the secretaries at the Student Programs Office on the second floor of the MSC. Thank you. 1. How often do you use the MSC? 2. Have you ever used the Browsing Library? If so, how often? 3. Do you ever come to the MSC other than to check your mail? If so, what for? 4. How would you use the space along the corridors on the first and second floor? 5. What would you like to see added to the recreational area in the basement (near the bowling alley)? 6. Have you ever used the Beverley Braley Travel Service? If so, often? What were the results? 7. What are your comments about the snack bar and cafeteria? 8. Do you feel there is an adequate information center? If not, what is lacking? 9. What facilities do you feel are lacking in the MSC? 10. What facilities do you feel are unnecessary or being misused? 11. Would you like to see the Basement offer beer and/or mixed drinks at its performances? 12. Have you ever attended a banquet held at the MSC? If so, what did you think of the service and price? Who presented the banquet? 13. How would you attempt to increase usage of the student union? 14. Have you ever used the Arts and Crafts Center? If so, what was your opinion? a mark over 70, managed only a 66-0 shot put. Roberts could not clear 17 feet in the pole vault, a height which is a foot and a half under his world mark. Stones made his best high jump ever at Drake with a mere hop for him of 7-2. Bolding glided to a 49.9 win in the special 440 intermediates and Lar rieu made the mile look easy in her 4.29.9 jaunt. Crockett was disqualified in the special 100-yard dash. However his departure from the blocks drew a chorus of boos from the crowd. The race was unable to continue as the vociferous fans jeered and shouted “We want Crockett” each time the other dashers stepped into their lanes. Finally, Crockett quieted the crowd by asking them to let the race continue. Several Aggies were unable to go to Drake but competed in local pick up meets anyway. Charles Dawson, A&M’s 100-yard specialist, tied his best dash time of the year with a 9.5 in Houston. He defeated Olympic Silver medalist Robert Taylor in the process. Dawson’s time was actually a 9.45 which was rounded up to the next tenth. Horace Grant ran the quarter and 220-yard dash, posting times of 49.0 and'22.3 respectively. Thomas hopes to have all of his people ready for this Thursday’s meet in Austin. The twi-night con test matches the Aggies, Texas, Rice and TCU. TEXAS CANOE TRAILS, INC. a system of canoe and kayak camps on — RENTAL RATES* One day — $15.00 Two days — $26.00 UPPER GUADALUPE LOWER GUADALUPE NECHES RIVER FOR RESERVATIONS — Contact your local booking agent: LTD. Don’t hassle with transporting equipment. Let T.C.T. be waiting lor you at the canoe camp. 'Rental fee includes canoe, paddles, life jackets, and shuttle service. Dr. Mickey Little 1212 Berkeley College Station, Tx (713) 846-7307 (dip & save) Hunter, Aaron thrill Shea Stadium fans NEW YORK (AP) — They came from the suburbs. They came,from the inner city. They came with gloves, bag lunches and dreams of seeing baseball’s most famous pitcher and baseball’s most famous hitter spin some new folklore. They weren’t disappointed. Thousands of kids, taking advan tage of Cap Day, streamed into Shea Stadium for Sunday’s doubleheader between the Milwaukee Brewers and the New York Yankees. At least, those were the two teams playing. But everyone knows the doubleheader was really Catfish Hunter and Hank Aaron. They were the main attractions, each had top billing and each contributed to a big afternoon of baseball. Hunter held Milwaukee hitless for 72-3 innings and finished with a three-hit 10-1 victory over the Bre wers in the second game for his first triumph in four decisions with the Yankees. In the first game, Aaron hogged the limelight, knocking in two runs to tie Babe Ruth’s career RBI record and lead the Brewers past the Yank ees 7-0 behind Pete Broberg’s three-hitter. Hunter put a collar on Aaron in the nightcap, sending baseball’s home run king back to the bench empty handed in four trips to the plate. “He was all I expected him to be,’’ said the 41-year-old Aaron. “He was a $3 million pitcher.” Indeed, Hunter proved why baseball went absolutely crazy last December when the American League’s Cy Young Award winner became a free agent and was availa ble to the highest bidder. Hunter said the victory would remove a heavy load from his shoulders. Mustangs rap TCU in net tilt FORT WORTH, Tex. (AP) — George Hardie defeated Randy Crawford 7-5, 6-4 in the top singles match of the day here Thursday and Southern Methodist University went on to post an 8-1 victory over Texas Christian to secure the Southwest Conference Tennis championship. The victory gave the Mustangs a 51-12 record for the year, just one match over the Texas Longhorns who finished the season at 50-13. “We expected to do it and we did, SMU Coach John Gardner said. “I would have preferred to play Texas for the final where both teams could have had equal pres sure, but we are happy to win.” Hardie and John Muller com bined to win the doubles match over Crawford and Jim Allin 6-4, 6-2. ... , . ■ ——’ W^ve got it! The great new Hewlett-Packard HP-21 Scientific Pocket Calculator. Uncompromising quality at only $125. Now you can own a Hewlett-Packard scientific pocket calculator at a popular price—with traditional HP performance and quality. The remarkable new HP-21 gives you all these features: □ More power than the popular HP-35. 32 pre-programmed functions and operations, including rectangular/polar coordinate conversion, register arithmetic, common log evaluation and two trig operating modes. □ Full display formatting. You can choose between fixed-decimal places displayed. When a number is too large or small for fixed-decimal, the HP-21 automatically switches to scientific. U HP's error-saving RPN logic- system with 4-memory stack. You solve all problems your way—without copying paren theses, worrying about hierarchies or re-structuring beforehand. □ HP quality craftsmanship. One reason Nobel Laureates, astro nauts, conquerors of Everest and over 500,000 other profes sionals own and depend on HP calculators. □ Smaller size. Weighs only six ounces. See the new HP-21 scientific pocket calculator today. Challenge it with your problems right in our store. You’ll be amazed at the high performance you can take home for only $125. TEXAS A&M BOOKSTORE In the Memorial Student Center