page a I Hb bAI I ALIUN FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 1977 Rice hosts A&M for 3-game series A&m track squad travels to Austin meet Olympic stars highlight relays By STEVE MARTAINDALE Still riding high from a 4-3 upset of previously undefeated Texas, the Rice Owls will be at home this weekend to host Texas A&M in Southwest Conference baseball ac tion. The Aggies, currently tied with Texas for the lead, will take a 29-10 season and 12-3 conference record into the series. Rice is 5-7 in SWC play games from Baylor in College Sta tion earlier in the week. The Bears handed A&M their worst defeat of the season when they shut out the Ags in the series final game, 8-0. Two Aggie records will be on the line this weekend. Catcher Buster Turner will carry a 16-game hitting streak into Hous ton, attempting to catch the record set by Robert Bonner last year (19). Rice, behind the pitching of Allan Ramirez, broke the Longhorn’s 34- game winning streak last Sunday, a collegiate record. The scheduled seven inning game went 14 innings with Ramirez pitching 13 of them, striking out 12 batters. He set the conference record for strikeouts in a season last spring with 86. Turner, in the opening game with Baylor, hit the team’s 37th home run, tying a record set in 1961. The next Aggie homer will break that record. Turner and centerfielder Mike Hurdle lead the team in home runs with seven each. Hurdle has the best batting average with a .357, fol lowed closely by Turner s .355. Ramirez is expected to meet the Aggies in the Saturday opener at 1 p.m. The series starts on Friday with a single game at 3 p.m. The Aggies took two of three Mark Thurmond will enter the Aggies’ sixth SWC series as the team’s leading pitcher. Taking a 9-8 nine inning win over Baylor in the first game, Thurmond raised his season record to 8-0. By PAUL McGRATH Battalion Sports Writer The 50th running of the Texas Re lays may well resemble a small-scale Olympics. More than 10 Olympians will spice the field as the Relays cele brates its golden anniversary. As if the competition wasn’t tough enough, also present will be 12 Na tional Collegiate Athletic Associa tion indoor champions. Texas’ Johnny Jones and Cana dian Paul Craig both of whom com peted at Montreal, will be among the favorites in the sprints and dis tance races respectively. Jones owns the nation’s fastest time in the 100- yard dash this year with a 9.21. He also has run a 20.6 in the 220-yard dash. Jones will be challenged by Arizona’s Dwayne Evans, a bronze medal winner in the 200-meter dash at Montreal. Arizona State’s Her man Frazier brought back some gold from Montreal as one member of the United States mile relay team and will probably anchor the Sun Devil quartet at the Relays. Rutherford, Johncock duel again in tomorrow’s Texas Grand Prix By BO GRIFFIN Saturday, April 2, in College Sta tion is the date for the Southwest’s fastest race, the Texas Grand Prix. The Texas Grand Prix is a 200 mile United States Auto Club Na tional Championship Race for Indy cars. It is one of only 13 such races held, two of which are held at the Texas World Speedway, for the Citicorp Cup and approximately 3 million dollars in prize money. The Texas Grand Prix is a prelim inary for the world famous In dianapolis 500 and is the fastest such preliminary with speeds of up to 210 miles per hour. There are only eight speedways in the United States holding such events and the Texas World Speed way is the only such speedway in the greater Southwest. Some of the top-notch USAC drivers vying for the win on Texas ground are Houston’s A. J. Foyt, a three-time Indy 500 winner and six-time National Champion; Ft. Worth’s Johnny Rutherford, the 1974 winner of the Indy 500; Bobby Unser, twice an Indy 500 winner and twice National Champion; Roger McCluskey, the 1973 Na tional Champion; A1 Unser, twice an Indy 500 winner and 1970 Na tional Champion; Gordon Johncock, the 1973 winner of the Indy 500. Qualifying runs for the pole posi tion in the Texas Grand Prix will start at 12:30 p.m. Saturday and end at 2:30 p.m. The Grand Prix itself will start one hour later. The track will be hot, and tem pers may flare as they did between Rutherford and Johncock in last Sunday’s Phoenix 150 which ended in a fist fight. People spending Saturday night in the speedway infield will be entertained by a live on-stage per formance by Augie Meyers and the Western Head Band beginning 7:30 Saturday night. Texas World Speedway is located seven miles south of the College Station City limits on Highway 6. General Admission tickets sell for $10 and are sold on a first-corne- first-serve basis. Reserve tickets cost $15, $20 and $25. Tickets to the Texas Grand Prix are good for ad mission for all events. Johnny Jones The distance races include sev eral former Olympians. In addition to Craig, Arkansas’ Irish lepre chaun, Niall O’Shaughnessey and Kenyan Wilson Waigwa of the Uni versity of Texas-El Paso, two of the world’s fastest milers, will duel head to head. Brigham Young’s Henry Marsh, who competed in the steep lechase at the Olympics, will com pete in that event at the Relays. Olympians also add sparkle to the field events with Canadian Olym pian Jim MacAndrew competing in the long jump. Frenchman Patrick Abada, now at UTEP and a fourth place finisher at Montreal, will compete in the pole vault and Canadian teammate Greg Joy may compete in the high jump depend ing on the condition of his neck in jury. The Texas Relays, perennially held in Austin’s Memorial Stadium, PIPES — CUSTOM BLENDED TOBACCO CIGARS — DOMESTIC & IMPORTED Wp now carry imported cigarettes: DUNHILL, BALKAN SOBRANIE & SHERMAN 29th St. Town & Country Center Bryan A Night At the Movies” 3-C CORRAL THE BEST BAR-B-Q IN TOWN! Chicken-Fried Steak and Salad Bar $2.75 1808 BARAK LANE (East of 29th St.) featuring: aquatic art presented by: Texas A&M Aquatians April 4, 5, 6 Carla Dee Beauty Salon OFFERING 10% DISCOUNT WITH I D. CARD - ON HAIR CUT AND BLOW DRY - QUICK SERVICE ONLY. UNIPERMS, AFROS AND ALL LATEST STYLES. SUNNYLAND SHOPPING CENTER BETWEEN CAVITT AND TEXAS AVENUE 1700 Texas Ave. (Hwy. 6) Bryan 822-2623 We Appreciate Your Business 8:00 P. L. Downs Natorium $1.00 each ftipfnamba Eddie Dominguez ’66 Joe Arciniega ’74 Greq Price If you want the real thing, not frozen or canned ... We call It "Mexican Food Supreme." Dallas location: 3071 Northwest Hwy 352-8570 £Rcom Top of the Tower Texas A&M University Pleasant Dining — Great View SERVING LUNCHEON BUFFET 11:00 A.M. - 1:30 P.M. Each day except Saturday $2.50 DAILY $3.00 SUNDAY Serving soup ir sandwich 11 m A.M. - 1:30 P.M. Monday - Friday $1.50 plus drink Available Evenings For Special University Banquets Department of Food Service Texas A&M University “Quality First” will host over 2()0 teams in the six divisions: univ ers jty, collegiate, junior college, high school, col legiate women {* n d high school wo men. More than 70 teams are entered in the University division. Each of the nine Southwest Con ference schools, along with track powers UTEP, Arizona, Arizona State, Kansas, Kansas State, Okla homa, Oklahoma State, Arkansas State, Wisconsin and Minnesota will be represented. The Texas A&M track squad, coached by Charles Thomas, will not take a full te a m of 28 athletes to Austin, allowing several to rest their (injuries. Shifton Baker will compete in the high and intermediate hurdles, fac ing his toughest challenge of the year in the quarter-mile race. Baker thus far is undefeated in the inter mediates this Season with a best time of 51.56 arid a career best of 50.6. Baker will be A&M’s only com petitor in the individual running events. Lynn By r d will compete in the high jump; Reggie Jamerson in the long jump; Frank West in the shot put. Brad Blair and Jerry Strong are slated for the pole vault and Steve Stewart and Tim Scott will compete in the discus. The Aggies will enter five of the seven relays. In the sprint medley, Philip Steen and Sam Dierschke will run the 220-yard legs with Ron McGonigle and Karl Figgs handling the 440 and 880-yard legs. Chuck Butler, Jamerson, Steen, and Dierschke will run in the the 880-yard relay. The Aggies’ top 220 man, Ray Brooks, has a leg injury and will miss this week’s acfc Jim Brannen, Tom Glaa Vogt and Tony Wheeler w| pete in the two-mile relay.~ tance medley will com Wheeler in the 880, Butler 440, Lane Mitchell in the 11 Vogt on the mile leg. Some of the finals events run tonight at 7:30 p.m maining finals will start at Saturday. All of the races in meters except the milenn VOTE April 6 & 7 FOR JOE A. MARTINEZ v.p. EXTERNAL AFFAIRS mn »UI KA AA ******** ** ** ** ******** AA K* ** ** CHICANOSf and other interested students A recruiter for the Harvard School of Med icine, Dentistry and Public Health will b in Rm. 141, Memorial Student Center on Api 4, Monday from 9:30-12:00 noon. All majors and classes are encouraged to at tend on an informal walk/in basis. per the I attention graduating seniors! I ♦ i BEER “DRINK & DROWN” EVERY TUESDAY, 8 ’til MIDNIGHT Guys — $2 Girls — $1 ALL THE BEER YOU CAN DRINK FREE & ALL OTHER DRINKS HALF PRICE Birdwell, a Well Logging Service Company WILL BE ON CAMPUS FOR INTERVIEWS April 7, 1977 ! AUS promis bill is : major r •ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS Contact Your Placement Office For Appointment promis ment t ;million The piillioi Birdwell Division Jenato “We Seismograph Sendee Corporation A SUBSIDIARY OF RAYTHEON COMPANY ' O BOX 1690 • TULSA. OKL AHOMA 741Q? • (91B) C»27 3330 EARN EXTRA CAS The against lent S I [approx lack V\ As A Blood Plasma Donor At Plasma Products Inc. 313-C College Main Relax or Study in our Comfortable Beds While You Donate — Great Atmosphere — Trained Professional Help on Hand at all Times. 'ears Supi Hours 9:30 to 5:30 Bring this coupon and receive $2 Bonus on your first donation. Effective Til April 8, 1977. Con thi IS Wi J.R. ville, > summ 0n( Routt the co The struct c omm Peopl Call For More Information 846-4611 mFmmm