Players need print THE BATTALION Paqe 13 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1979 ; with hisai well as lit! the kid u ost every I| record s Viking qu sr. one of a he coachts K hack Jol ■hes and a fought sol Rouge, li uicknessU it he show! tterbug sh| to losett* 1 overcoms imild best freshmen inie Jameti s very det| ;ks now. ho dreir ien he to* images w idard s ig his sn’t : he has a jpeg IU1 hurt.1 li howed a they bra >lem of tliii me. It mi riend. <1 « %J Johnny Be Good all indications, this young man named Johnny Hector New Iberia, La., will be more than good during his ir-year career at Texas A&M. Hector, a freshman tail- , has continually impressed Aggie coaches throughout workouts with his quick feet, moves and ability to escape rtain tackles. Hector highlighted the final scrimmage of fall aturday rushing for 81 yards on six carries and one mchdown. Battalion photo by Pat O’Malley By MILTON RICHMAN UPI Sports Editor NEW YORK — Sparky Anderson received his earliest baseball educa tion the same place all of us did — from the newspaper. Growing up in the Los Angeles area when the Pacific Coast League had one of its franchises there, An derson would go get the paper every morning, turn to the sports section first as a matter of course and study the box scores of both the Angels and Hollywood Stars. And while the ballplayers, of course, are the ones responsible for all the drama and excitement in the game. Sparky Anderson agrees with me the newspapers serve as the basic historic record of all that drama and excitement, and in so doing, they quite naturally generate fan interest in both the players and the game. Some ballplayers can’t see that. They show a tendency to become unhappy when their version of the truth doesn’t coincide with the re porter’s, and lately, they think they have discovered the most effective way of hampering a newsman is by not talking to him. It never dawns on players who do this they are hurting themselves much more than they are hurting any reporter. He’s going to get his story, anyway, no matter how many obsta cles he encounters along the way. And this concept has certainly crossed the mind of Sparky Ander son. With most ball clubs, the trainer’s room is off limits to all members of the media, so that’s the first place some of the players head for in the clubhouse and it was one of the first things Anderson talked about to the Tiger players when he became their new manager eleven weeks ago. “I told them I didn’t want them running into the trainer’s room,” he said. “I held a meeting with the players and said to them it was up to each one of them to be a man here. I said, ‘If you do not wish to speak to a writer, it’s up to you to tell him, “I’d rather not speak at this time.’” If he doesn’t accept that, you have the right to walk away.” “I got upset over a headline once, ” he remembers. “The story was 100 percent the way I told it to the writer, it was only the headline that was at variance. Seeing the headline made it sound like I was badmou- thing the Dodgers, which I wasn’t. I told the writer about it and he told me the truth — he did not control the headline. For me, that was a learning process. I learned some thing by that.” The former Reds’ manager feels that escalated salaries are as much responsible for some players avoid ing newsmen as anything else. “When they say money is the root of all evil, they are stating a fact,” Anderson says. “Society is changing and so is baseball. When you sud denly take people making relatively ordinary salaries and start paying them better than presidents of long-established, successful com panies, then you get a backlash. We have some people thinking they have the money now, so they don’t need anything or anybody else. How wrong they are. “Now you take my case. I signed a contract with Detroit that has five years to go after this. I’ll be 50 when that contract runs out and I could probably live ok on my pension. But next to my family, this game is the most important thing in my life. I need this game, it doesn’t need me. This game can survive without George Anderson. I suggest to all the players, general managers, farm di rectors and right down to the equip ment men and groundskeepers that this game is so great, it doesn’t really need any of us. ” Sparky Anderson is a throwback to those days, not that long ago, when players played professional baseball primarily because they loved the game and secondly for the money. “Let’s face it, where do you get an opportunity to live in the style you do in the big league?” he asked. 10 dgers blank Astros 1-0, S angers sink Mariners veek is liki Aggies •e time fori mist heal ically reaq mtly, mei OUSTON —Jerry Reuss fired a igis theli! i now for t’s all the* United Press International and Joe Ferguson singled eseventh inning to drive in the isonlyrun Monday night, lift- fie Los Angeles Dodgers to a 1-0 )ry over Houston that dropped Astros out of first place in the JonalLeague West. | W .pss,J-12, retired the first 14 • ^ »rs he faced and got Luis Pujols ad out and end the Astros’ yin the fifth inning after Jeff |iard and Jose Cruz had singled. heAstros, who hit only two balls IG SCOll °^ e ' n fi e fo> fell a half game md Cincinnati with the Reds ling a 6-5 victory over Atlanta pay night. struck out seven and did not |abatter in recording his first int of the season. Starter and Joe Niekro failed in his bid to become the first 19-game winner in the NL despite a strong five-hitter. Niekro, 18-9, threw two wild pitches in the seventh and one of them al lowed Dusty Baker, who had walked, to advance to second base. Baker scored on Ferguson’s two-out single to left. In Seattle, Bump Wills went 4-for-5 with a home run and two RBI Monday night while the Texas Ran gers hit three homers en route to a 4-1 victory over the Seattle Marin ers. Solo homers by Willie Montanez and rookie Greg Mahlberg helped starter Doc Medich improve his rec ord to 7-6. Medich was relieved by Jim Kern, who pitched shutout in nings to register his 23rd save. Loser Floyd Bannister, 7-14, was the victim of all three homers. Lawrence’s Hair Styling — presents — — Beverly & Susan — • Hair Shaping • Custom Coloring • Men’s & Women’s Hair Design • Perms tw aw. Call 822-1183 Mr. Lawrence — Stylist & Owner 301 Bizzell & Cavltt Coll*g« Ava. ALTERATIONS' IN THE GRAND TRADITION OF OLD TEXAS WHERE MOTHER TAUGHT DAUGHTER THE FINE ART OF SEWING — SO HELEN MARIE TAUGHT EDITH MARIE THE SECRETS OF SEWING AND ALTERATIONS "DON'T GIVE UP — WE LL MAKE IT FIT!" AT WELCH’S CLEANERS WE NOT ONLY SERVE AS AN EXCELLENT DRY CLEANERS BUT WE SPE CIALIZE IN ALTERING HARD TO FIT EVENING DRESSES. TAPERED SHIRTS. JEAN HEMS. WATCH POCKETS, ETC. (WE RE JUST A FEW BLOCKS NORTH OF FED MART.) WELCH’S CLEANERS 3819 E. 29th (TOWN & COUNTRY SHOPPING CENTERJ P ie iy of UPCOMING SPORTS Tennis Singles Field Goal Kicking Home Run Hitting Golf Singles Water Polo URAL FOOTBALL. WHO PLAYS? TAMU Men and Women — Students, Faculty or Staff ENTRIES CLOSE: TUESDAY, SEPT. 11 1979 — 5:00 P.M. DeWARE FIELDHOUSE LIM ITED ENTRIES AVAILABLE. PLAY BEGINS: MONDAY, SEPT. 17, 1979 DIVISIONS: Recreational (enter just for fun), Corps, Fish, Men’s & Women’s Dorms & Independent, and Co- Rec. ENTRIES CLOSE Sept. 11 Sept. 11 Sept. 18 Sept. 18 Sept. 18 “Your hotel is paid for, your food is paid for, and the expenses are paid for your travel. This is apart from your salary. Sure, this is the free enterprise system, and everyone in every industry is emped to make a good salary, but it seems to me that some people in baseball are only try ing to feed a fake ego with dollars. ” In so far as those players who re fuse to talk to the press are con cerned, the ones who amuse me most are those who believe that without them, we reporters won’t have anything to write about. I’m afraid they’re not up on their history. When Is Your Selling No Secret^ At All? WHEN OVER 30,000 PEOPLE READ IT IN \mm r )t THE BATTALION ** you've got something to sell . . . we'll get your mes- HWflflSJIilJJI r * a 9 e across! And our big uJTi readership guarantees y ° U lo,$ ° f prospectsl " S 845-2611 Barcelona APARTMENTS NEWLY REMODELED ! ALL UTILITIES PAID and... 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