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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (April 28, 1977)
Pf id Page 10 THE BATTALION THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 1977 Oke FABRIC Skoppe Fashion Fabrics Sports c United Prei For Spring and Summer Sewing "In Our 30th Year of Selling Fabrics” Downtown Bryan 822-2433 201 Main St. Sprinters gather at Drake Relays By PAUL McGRATH The Texas A&M track team, in cluding newcomer Curtis Dickey, heads for Des Moines, Iowa today for the 37th running of the Drake Relays. The Relays, hosted by Drake University, will be high lighted by a stellar field of sprinters. 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BROOKE & TAYLOR YOUNG Its- Featuring many never before seen erotic beauties UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL 315 N. Main — 846-6637 Hubert Beck, Pastor tiasdied iwrfiiiW THIS IS IT. ..UiriSr RESURRECTION WLLmme ..••• faith iot aQam FAITH Dull it isn’t. WORSHIP SERVICES AT 9:1$ AJ*. AMO 10:4$ A.M. WORSHIP CELEBRATION AT • P.M. LAST DAY TODAY! FINAL SHOWS AT 7:40 & 9:40 FUN WITH DICK& JANE” § - THE DAVIS BABY... PtctUTM HELD OVER! Announcing the opening of JflHEAlL CILAJfjf & > i€cmio , r». /xtit eteffin/jj fo'i men and tvcmen Veronica, Judy, Jerry and Elise will give your hair that extra touch. It’s an experience you won’t forget Featuring ^a***/^ Hair Products GET OUR UNIQUE T-SHIRT WITH A HAIRCUT (We dare you to wear it!) 209 UNIVERSITY 846-4771 Next to the new Bank of A&M Texas’ Johnny "Lam” Jones and Au burn’s Harvey Glance, both Olym pic medalists, will receive most of the spotlight because of their ex ploits in the 100-meter dash earlier this spring. Jones ran a 9.85 in the century race at the Texas Relays and then a week later Glance ran a 9.75. Both times were under the world record of 9.95 held by Jim Hines, but be cause each race was timed by hand, neither is official. Ironically, the electronic timers malfunctioned in both races. Glance will also anchor Auburn’s 880-yard relay team which has a shot of breaking Texas A&M’s American record of 1:21.7. Jones will anchor Texas’ sprint relay quar tet which has the best time in the Southwest Conference this year, 39.77. Oklahoma, which won the sprint relay at the Texas and Kansas Relays, is looking for a sweep in this, the third meet of the Triple Crown of collegiate track. Arkansas’ Niall O’Shaughnessey, the diminutive miler from Ireland, will be seeking to crack the four- minute barrier, a feat that has never been accomplished at Drake. O’Shaughnessey ran a 3:55.4 anchor leg for the Razorbacks’ four mile relay unit at Texas. Glance and Jones will not be the only Olympians present. Mac Wil- kens, a gold medal winner at Montreal, will compete in the dis cus and go against Al Fuerbach in the shot put. Kenyan Mike Boit will go head to head with Chicago insurance sales- Rick Wolhuter in the 800- LAS — Tl ium — hor boys — and ogress. levision vi< try have jus 1 but while through tl le screen su< man meter race. Although Wolhuter holds the American record, he and Boit will have to contend with Kel ley Marsh of Ball State. Marsh won the 1,000-yard run at the NCAA in door meet and is undefeated as a collegian. Marathon ace Frank Shorter will compete in the 5,000- meter run and the nation’s top woman distance runner, Francie Larrieu Lutz will defend her title in the 1,500-meters. Bruce Jenner, who set a world record in the decathlon at Montreal, will be on the sidelines as marshal of the annual Relays parade. The Aggies of Coach Charles Thomas will run teams in the sprint, sprint medley, mile, two-mile, 880-yard and distance medley re lays. Dickey will anchor the sprint re lay, Thomas said, and may also run on the 880-yard relay foursome. Chuck Butler, Ray Brooks, Phillip Steen and Shifton Baker prise the other legs of th Baker will also run in the! P' n g f° r the intermediate hurdles Tony Wheeler, Jim Tom Glass and Joel Vi pected to form the two-i unit. Manfred Kohrs and run in the 1,500-meter Frank West, Tim Si Scott and Craig Carter wii in the shot put and Steve Stewart entered discus. Lyn Byrd, Ron Keys Riggs will participate in jump. Brad Blair, Pat Hi Jerry Strong are slated for! vault. Strangely enough, while! the early pick to win the outdoor meet in mid-Ma man, Blair, leads the S’ specialty. West is second thus far, while Baker rani in both hurdles races. The preliminaries for Relays will start tomorrow] with the finals scheduled day afternoon. Following the Relays, track team will be off to May 5 for a quadrangular then go to the SWC meet 13-14. % Randle with Mets United Press International NEW YORK — The market for Lenny Randle had dwindled to practically nothing. A couple of clubs which had been interested previously, to a degree, anyway, backed off after his assault on Frank Lucchesi a month ago. They were afraid of the negative publicity that would follow if they took on Randle because after all, some sense of law and order still prevails among most people in the land and how much approval can you reasonably expect for picking up a ballplayer who goes and beats up the manager because of losing the second base job to someone else? The Mets figured they’d take a chance. Their pitchers have been holler ing for a hitter so much, any kind of hitter to help big Dave Kingman, the Mets felt they have nothing to lose. They haven’t been going well to begin with and need more punch so badly, they’re willing to risk whatever criticism follows by add ing someone like Randle, who hit .224 for the Texas Rangers last year. In giving up a chunck of cash, which they can certainly spare, plus a player to be named later, who doesn’t figure to be much, the Mets are dealing for what they hope will turn out to be an entirely difierent Lenny Randle. They’re hoping all the publicity over his attack on Luc chesi eventually will die down and that a change of leagues will bring out in him something closer to the .304 he hit for the Rangers three years ago. Nothing wrong with hop ing, is there? Randle’s departure from the Ran gers, one day before his 30-day sus pension with them was up, came shortly before he surrendered to police in Tempe, Ariz., Tuesday on an Orange County, Fla., warrant charging him with aggravated bat tery on Lucchesi. If convicted, he could draw 15 years in the slammer, a $10,000 fine, or both. The Ranger players learned Ran dle had gone to the Mets shortly after arriving in Kansas City from Arlington, Tex., for a two-game se ries with the Royals. None of them were shocked. They all were aware he wasn’t going to play with the Rangers anymore. One of those who knows Randle as well as anybody is Toby Harrah, the Rangers’ shortstop. Everybody likes Toby Harrah because he’s a straight kind of guy, exceptionally open and sincere. He has a genuine friendly way about him and it was perfectly natural that a fellow like Lenny Randle, or anybody else with the Rangers for that matter, would naturally gravitate toward him. Frank Lucchesi likes Toby Harrah, too. ballplayer who mindedl business and hustled hist always tries so hard. Leim'l actually is an easy persontoi( He’s a very proud individi never seen him give up, t of the circumstances.” None of the Rangers cansi specifically provoked tion against Lucchesi. The night after Randle had the trouble in Orlando last month, Har rah had dinner with him. ‘‘A lot of pressure seei building up inside him I three weeks before that seemed to come to a hi Harrah. “Lenny isn’t one anything in. He’ll confront] ation. Frank is the same a very proud person." Eddie Har lardin re Harrah said he hoped l| “has learned something [ [exas A&M “He knows I didn’t agree with him with what he did, but he also knows I wouldn’t turn my back on him,” said the Rangers’ shortstop when he heard Randle had gone to the Mets. “All of us on the club agreed that you just don’t hit an older person like that. I felt sorry to see the whole thing happen be tween Frank and Lenny. “I enjoyed playing baseball with Lenny. He always has been a whole thing” and that the he was involved in ultimate n wi ]j be forgotten. “I talked to him the nig happened and I know he was t Conferenc ope :-season tou 19 in Aust he Aggies w said Harrah. “He was sk Arkansas, th in confe Now that he’s with them,, he’ll help the Mets if theyu ' ^ as a right. He can play secondi “jd-place T can play left field, and he’sM to embarrass you at the likes to play baseball. in the toi :r second or m. he tournami Intramurals ch-Falk Fie elimination INTRAMURAL WATERPOLO MEN A Division: Porkers vs. Hatchetmen, 6-5; N.F.N. vs. SQ-12, 10-0; Lostco vs. Nad Poles, 0-10. Slyl “ihul CO REC 8th Man vs. Barracudas, 10-0. INNERTUBE A Division: Mudshark vs. Sitting Ducks, 9-0. B Division: B Bobbers vs. Briarwood Apts., 0-10; WFS vs. Twinldes, 10-1. INTRAMURAL 3-MAN VOLLf PLAYOFFS MEN A Division: Spikers vs. SHK, 1-i BMF's, 2-0; K-l vs. Muckrakers, r Birds vs. Utay (Love), 2-1; NoM Boyett Bombers, 0-2. B Division: Three Stooges vs, iv I CC i R r? C • n a v M ANSAS cn A Division: Candy As vs. Ker«- , . „ , BMF’s vs. Mud Turtles, 2-0;Aimsv>! u* 5 mSt not 2-0; The Gang vs. Spanky’s Gang,)’ ee-run shot B Division: Gage’s Gang vs. Ne«i rj ve Tex 0-2; Newman II vs. Ocean., 1-2. United I INTRAMURAL SOFTBALL PLAYOFFS MEN A Division: BSU #1 vs. F-l, 21-2; SQ-2 vs. Buckhorns, 2-11; Over the Hill Gang vs. L-l, 11-2; Walton #2 vs. F-l, 9-5. B Division: Alchemist vs. F-l, 13-8; Hot- rocks vs. Moore Red, 0-10. INTRAMURAL SOFTBALL PUl MEN INDEPENDENT A Division: BSU #1 vs. Over the 2-4; Buske’s Buckhorns, 10-4. B Division: Hotrocks vs. Alchen# WOMEN INDEPENDENT B Division: Vet Wives vs. Catch- ory over th I night be! :hing of Bei g ieniquez, v "fas order, e .150 and h in his thr it all last s< after beinj first For the June bride, love leads to Wed-Lok®-— our exclusive matching wedding bands in 14 karat gold. 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