The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 20, 1977, Image 12

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    Page 12 THE BATTALION
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1977
ALLIED INSURANCE AGENCY
Bill Pipkin, Agent
AUTO • HOMEOWNER • RENTERS
» MOBILE HOMES & RECREATIONAL
VEHICLES
• COMMERCIAL • BOAT • BONDS
• MOTORCYCLE
LIFE • HOSPITALIZATION
OFFICE: 846-4774 HOME: 779-9361
4103 S. TEXAS BRYAN PLACE
SUITE 206
GOING OUR WAY?
PEACE CORPS * VISTA
REPS ON
CAMPUS:
Apr. 25-27
INTERVIEWING
SENIORS/GRADS:
Placement Office
10th Floor, Rudder
Tower
INFORMATION TABLE:
Student Center
Permanent - Campus Office
105 Agronomy Bldg.
EXP
OPE
COLLI
C
We Acc
FINE*
Kyle Hawthorne waits anxiously for the ball as a Texas Longhorn base runn er
dives back safely to first base. Hawthorne led the Ags past Texas, and will lj e
Battalion photo by Jim Henii
a crucial man in the upcoming series with the Houston Cougars. The three-
game series will begin Friday at 3 p.m. in Houston.
Maroon-White contest Saturday
TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY
OPERA AND PERFORMING ARTS SOCIETY
NEW STUDENT RATES
Zone 1
$18.70
Zone 2
$17.10
Zone 3
$13.40
APRIL
18-29
Booth 1st Floor MSC
The annual Maroon and White
game will be played Saturday, April
23. The contest will pit the first
team offense and defense against
the second team offense and de
fense.
Tickets for the game are being
sold all this week. Admission is free
with TAMU activity card, $3.00 for
adults and $1.50 for high school age
and under.
Gates open at noon, with the
game starting at 1:30 p.m.
You know we have Bar-B-Q.
But did you know about
our Steaks?
Our Banquet Facilities?
Our Catering?
YOU SHOULD!
ACROSS THE
3-C BAR-B-Q
TRACKS/NEARLY
DOWNTOWN
OPEN 11-9
CLOSED MONDAY
AGGIES!
LET’S BOOGIE DOWN
s
offers
Student ID Discounts!
15% off of $ 50 00 or more
10% off of under $ 50 00
CASH PURCHASE ONLY
We reserve the right to regulate the use of this privilege.
212 N. MAIN
DAN&E
feat*
INSTA'fj&JNKTION”
8-Midnw Basement Coffeehouse
5^- — " —
£ (
AdmissW 50c Friday, April 22
822-3119
DOWNTOWN BRYAN
Sponsored by Basement and Black Awareness
Committees
f m/c
summw^a«av
i Win $1,000;
jiejlACeS
you, AGGIES
iq qi ikaMEP
SAYS: ask
■ — — *
ABOUT OUR SUMMER
ROOMMATE PLAN
)
all BILLS paid
FOR ONLY $50. = PER MONTH. YOU CAN
LIVE IN A FURNISHED APARTMENT WITH ALL
BILLS PAID; WITH SWIMMING POOLS, LAUNDRY
FACILITIES, SHUTTLE BUS, SECURITY FORCE. .
,hv^.^° s - BANGE
700LS
WRITE YOUR OWN SUMMER LEASE!
d south Apartments
jjood 3
,er\t housing
YOU TELL US WHEN YOU WANT TO MOVE IN. AND WHEN YOU
WANT TO MOVE OUT . . .
4U Hi 9 hwaV# 30
College
Phone,
JA0}IaC0 ’ apts
^ 306 REDMOND DRIVE
Yankees actually losm{
UnitetJ press International
NEW YOj^j[ — There have been
no loud sc^ nes , no angry words
among the y an kees, but do a little
digging ben^ a th the surface and you
find the dee^, u nspoken anguish.
The worst imaginable calamity
has befallen tjyem. They are losing
hall games, f ou r in a row and seven
out of nine, an d they’re wallowing
in last place j n the American League
East.
Billy Martin feels the anguish
most of all because he’s the man
ager. It’s his n eck if everything goes
to pot, not the ballplayers’. He
knows that.
One of th e big things he learned
from his tdd manager, Casey
Stengel, w^ s how to handle the
team when it’s in a rut like this.
When hi s team was winning,
Stengel was a tyrant. Keep after ’em
he’d urge alf his players. Don’t let
’em up. Wh e n the Yankees were
losing, though, when they couldn’t
do anything right, he was an
entirely diff ere nt person. Suppor
tive, understanding and above all,
patient.
None of this was lost on Bill Mar
tin during all the time he played for
the old man, and now that the Yan
kees are having so much trouble,
he’s using the same soft Stengel
technique, hoping it will help both
him and the ball club.
“You don’t push when you’re los
ing,” he said before yesterday’s
game with Toronto’s expansion-
horn Blue Jays. “The most impor
tant thing for a manager to have in a
case like this is patience.”
Sometimes, that comes hard. Be
fore the game, Martin was given
another piece of bad news. Catfish
Hunter, his ace pitcher, had to be
placed on the 21-day disabled list
because of a bruise he incurred on
his instep on opening day.
“Nothing is ‘unsettled 4
what the press says, Mai
sisted. “Now they’ve got me
Steinhrenner and theyvej
against Reggie. But it s nottn
It had been reported that]*
felt he could play in Milwaukt
Friday night after he told wife
elbow bothered him, and then
tin didn’t play him.
“They, the press, forget to
that wherever I manage, I
play a guy who’s hurt, said Mi
Jackson informed Martii
elbow still was giving him In
yesterday, so he was used as tk
sigated hitter.
Martin had other troubles as well.
The New York press, he said, was
trying to stir up trouble between
him and Reggie Jackson and be
tween him and team owner George
Steinhrenner. Stories had been
written that he and Jackson and he
and Steinhrenner had some ‘unset
tled’’ differences.
Someone wanted to
whether the Yankees arehavinj
kind of “ego problem, and 11
shook his head no.
nA/dS and dtorffL
SpcMored by
Cmjts and Arts
Committee
. 26 th | xi (ixics. i UoL
qdin. to 5mo both daus
ir^jrorjfoj' '
1 ROSS
“This all goes hack to the
practice we had this spria?
said. The first thing Reggie®
go out to right field and®
thing Thurman Munson did
behind the plate. After the v
a writer said to me. “Did you
Reggie and Munson didntti
each other?’ I said to him You
be kidding! All spring Ion
'that, the writers would
around and ask me “what about
internal problems?’ What
problems? We don t have anr
Martin has begun changing^
around, not with his ball c
with the press. From now
writers and other members d
media would only be allowed!
clubhouse until 25 minutes#
game time, he said.
“And if they abuse that
on five more minutes each timf _
warned. “If they’re gonna hero
in the paper. I’ll be a bleep®
clubhouse. ...”
Sitgn. up d( Ik
Cm\{ 5V\op .April,,
InriM spa.ee 1 available
Cull <34bU63l for
more rnformafton
One of the things Martin
terday was shave off the moust
he had been wearing since W
tober and cut his upper lip si'-
doing it.
“I thought it would chang
luck,” he said, unsmiling.
It didn’t.
Fruit
Bel-air Ap;
Frozen, Ind
Cream
Fried <
Meat
Fish S1
Bel-i
6 Count, I
Store your
uniforms
for the summer
FREE
University Cleaned
112 College Main
MSC VIDEO
PROGRAMMING BALLOT
Rent Your
Prom or Wedding
TUXEDOS
Aggie Cleans
Le
Fresh
Crisp I
Roc
6 Oz. Ci
Avo<
Carr
Potc
Pot
U.S. No
Russet:
Please number one through six in order of prefer
ence:
111 College Main
_A. Comedy - Robert Klein, TV Madness,
etc. . . .
_B. Concerts - KC & The Sunshine Band,
Rod Stewart, Jim Croce, etc. . . .
_C. Sports - Super Bowl, Olympics 1972,
etc. . . .
D. Short Subjects - Three Stooges, W.C.
Fields, Charlie Chaplin, etc. . . .
THE \ AGGIELAND
DISCS — OASIS
WEDNESDAY NlTE
BEER NITE
NACHOS — 75C/D0Z
E. Cartoons - Bugs Bunny, Popeye, etc.
F. Documentaries - The Kennedys, Gerald
Fords America, etc. . . .
Ballots will be collected in a box located next to our
TV monitor in the MSC lounge.
0f 1
3-C
CORRAH
THE BEST BAR-B-0
IN TOWN!
Chicken-Fried Steak
and Salad Bar
$2.75
1808 BARAK LANE
(East of 29th St.)
Yegeft
from viti
v *9*tabli
m *lonj, fc
■ow vege
Cerea
°f whol*
reitored
FOl