THE BATTALION FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1980 Page 9 sports H4i£v face Miami-Fla. other pnoff The young Texas A&M baseball >ee pncf am w jjj £ ace j ts bjggggt ^his rease an ! ie ] ten( j w h en they play host to o/.S’ and f ianii-Fla., the No. 1 team in the ablessW | 0 „. good new The Hurricane will take a 36-7 re- I retail prd into the series, which begins II duringfenight at 7:30. The Ags, 27-5 on the ^ Bn, moved up a notch in this ;ek’s national poll, securing the R) slot in the nation. Aggie coach Tom Chadler plans to stay with his winning combination of three freshmen starting on the mound, beginning with David Flores tonight and following up with Rick Luecken and Robert Slavens on Saturday. Flores will be making his third start since wresting the position from sophomore Bobby Taylor a month ago. He has a 2-0 record this season. junting an? , be leavin?' gs running in California ning frott Six Texas Aggies will face world- nia, said: .sfcopposition Saturday when they ides abouUnp ete in the Bruce Jenner Olym- r n hewf sTnvitational track meet in San BushinttA Calif. v He surprint ace Curtis Dickey will be primary, t busiest of the six Aggies. He’ll are on the® 6 100-meter dash, anchor the c futurewff tieter relay and lead off the 800- ter relay. In the 100 meters he’ll icing such speedsters as Houston dependei .’j’g.j,. Hart, Don Quarrie, im bysoinrjgs s an f orc [ anc j pranee’s ace, Pat- ble. It ■ s F'<"Barre. sntuate anl The Aggies’ 400-meter relay team of Steve Willis, Leslie Kerr, Vernon Pittman and Dickey ran a 39.21 last week in the Texas Relays. USC has the nation’s best time of 38.6 this year. Other teams in that race will be France’s Olympic team, the Los Angeles Striders, Arizona State, Phi ladelphia Pioneer Club, UCLA and the Bay Area Stirders. France, featuring Barre as its top runner, reportedly will be going for a world record in the 800-meter relay. Texas A&M will run Dickey, Willis, Kerr and Pittman, the same group that makes up the 400-meter relay team. The other two Aggies entered are Tim Scott in the shot put and discus and Randy Hall in the pole vault. The remainder of Texas A&M’s track team will engage in a dual meet with Baylor at Waco on Friday. F£i has no tin T in on an i» m L ation THERAN Cyclers to old race lis weekend ^By ANGELIQUE COPELAND Campus Staff fniis weekend you’ll have a chance bicycle racing at its best when Jexas A&M Cycling Team hosts Second annual Aggieland Stage bre will be two days of racing |a time trial and road race on Jay, followed by a criterium on nday. Racers must be licensed litied States Cycling Federation ers and will compete for overall ndings in the three events. Tfe 60-mile road race will begin at *]30 p.m. Saturday in front of the el World bicycle shop and Pas- Pizza with a police escort out of ®e feature event of the weekend. Senior Men’s Open Criterium, ^1 start at noon Sunday. This 40- Rrace will be held around the field in front of Puryear and Law ith the start-finish line by the fe entrance. fere will be a short tourist race irjthis event open to all specta- tarting time will be around 2 and prizes will be awarded to top finishers. :e promoter Gene Kraft said he xpecting 60-70 racers from ind the state to come and bid for more than $600 dollar prize list, his is the fourth year the cycling fejhas sponsored a USCF race on Texas A&M campus and five ers of the Aggie team will be ipeting in the weekend races. We hope a lot of people will come and support our riders as well as some exciting racing,” said Kraft. Swensen’S Gone Bananas Special Order a cone with any of our 4 Bananas Flavors and get a Double Scoop (V2 lb.) for the price of one Scoop (SA VE 51 * ) ANYTIME WE'RE OPEN Culpepper Plaza • College Station Open: 11:30 Mon.-Sat. • Noon Sunday fern ti'n'n^i'n'n'trn'n'nTTT :ee N HAPPY HOUR AT THE STUDIO 4 for 1 Starting at 4 p.m. Tuesday thru Friday 1401 FM 2818 Come out to the Doux Chene Complex! Residence Hall Association presents... Friday, April 18 th 8:00-12:30 A Night of Gambling, Prizes, and Entertainment Major prizes donated by Diamond Brokers Int’ PLACE: MSC,2nd4loorandLounge TICKETS: $2.50 presale $3.00 door Ticket sales: April 14-18 MSC, Sbisa, Commons, Duncan, Acad. bldg. Richard’s blowing smoke; Astros beat Dodgers, 3-2 Luecken is 7-1, has the best earned run average on the team (1.58), and leads the team in strikeouts with 38. Slavens is 9-0 and has an ERA of 3.00. At the plate, the Ags are led by junior first baseman Rodney Hodde, who is hitting .367 and has nine hom ers and 30 runs batted in, all of which are tops on the team. The double-header Saturday will begin at 1 p.m. United Press International HOUSTON — The scouting re port rookie Rudy Law had hastily put together on strikeout Icing J.R. Richard before the Los Angeles Dodgers’ season opener proved to be good advice. But Law, the fleet center fielder with a quick bat, still was not totally prepared. “I was nervous, real nervous,” he said after his first encounter of the worst kind. “Let me tell you, stand ing in front of a pitcher who throws 100 mph is no fun.” Richard blew his 98 mph fastball and 94 mph slider “better than I ever have to start a season,” striking out 13 Dodgers Thursday night and allowing two hits — none until Law’s one-out single in the seventh inning. Houston won 3-2 with some unex pected offensive firepower in home runs by Terry Puhl and Jose Cruz, and Art Howe’s triple. “It was a good feeling just to break up the no-hitter, ” Law said. “I hated to think of starting the season with no hits.” Law was the only Dodgers starter who was not fanned. Ron Cey went down swinging three times. Steve Garvey was so desperate by the fifth inning that he tried to bunt for a hit. Law had never faced Richard be fore. “I never faced nobody who threw the ball like that. It was unbeliev able,” he said. Law had asked his teammates be fore the game for advice and he was told to have patience at the plate and wait for Richard to throw strikes. However, Richard did not walk a batter and he let the count go to 3-2 only twice in the eight innings he pitched. He was replaced by lefthander Joe Sambito to start the ninth inning af ter Richard strained his back on a play at second base in the eighth. He said the injury was not serious. Sambito retired the side in the ninth, a feat not uncommon to Astros fans in 1979. What was unusual were the home runs hit by a team which hit 49 all last season, only 15 of them in the spacious Astrodome. Third baseman Enos Cabell asked, “Are we leading the league in home runs? That’s what I want to know. ” Dodgers starter Burt Hooton, who was bothered by a sore right shoul der this spring, was lifted for a pinch hitter after giving up the home runs and two other hits in the first two innings. Afterward he said he was BILL’S AND JAY’S AUTO TUNE UP ^ % v7. / Z) parts Oil change filter^ oil $4.00 Tune up & oil change plus oil a parts j-j 2 yg By appointment only 846-9086 3611 South College Ave. TTk^c AS o Prescriptions Filled Glasses Repaired 216 N. MAIN BRYAN 822-6105 Mon.-Fri. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Sat. 8 a.m.-1 p.m. ZACHARIASl GREEN HOUSE! CLUB & GAME PARLOR 1201 Hwy. 30 (In the Briarwood Apts.) ENJOY the spring weather and HAPPY HOUR ON OUR OUTDOOR PATIO from 4 P.M.-7 P.M. ONLY AT ZACHARIAS! is-. MSites. -■«« aJsSR-** • - «)>c>oo!>ooo«>soocooo<: MSC OPAS proudly presents Byron Janis — Pianist April 17/8:15 p.m. Rudder Auditorium/TAMU Tickets available at MSC Box Office or Telephone VISA/MASTERCHARGE orders & pickup at the door 845-2916 X disappointed that he was taken out. “The shoulder was not bothering me at all,” he said. “Red (Adams, pitching coach) knew it wasn’t hurt ing. He knew I’d be the last one to lie to him about it.” The victory for Richard was his 12th straight against the Dodgers, who have not beaten him since May 1976. GSC GRADUATE STUDENT PARTY FRIDAY APR-11 5:00 PM BRIARWOOD APT’S BLUER00M FREE BEER-SNAX For All Graduate Students and Dates CHILE PARLOR &BEER GARDEN presents BUD HAGER, DJ / playing your Country favorites SUNDAY (7 p.m. - lO p.m.) DRAFT BEER Open Sunday 4 p.m.-Midnight SATURDAY & SUNDAY 4 $2.00 4410 College Main 846-9438 15