! I Thompson remains Pirate United Press Internationa) , PinSBURGH — Slugger Jason Thompson will be wearing Pittsburgh black and gold instead of New York Yankee pinstripes, and pul xhe 6-foot-4 first baseman’s The lie jp 0 t on the Pirates’ roster, at first r riday night! fesigned to be momentary, will 11-106 victo jecome more permanent, jul-Jabbarii Jthough at least the New York unds. Mets still may be interested in ac- , who finish, j U j r j n g Thompson, a California west Divisii \ngel un til this week, lar-season # The Pirates Friday said they halftime iei diy the trade that sent Thomp- itscored the i0n to the Yankees for first base- id took a 77 ftian Jim Spencer, pitchers Greg minutes Iff Cochran and Freddy Toliver and ore on a pair: 8850,000. »ert Reid s Baseball Commissioner Bowie urphy, 'A iKuhn had held up the trade be nts, put Ho® ause the cash sum far exceeded with 6:45 if the guidelines of the $400,000 limit he had previously imposed on all transactions. jot guard, hai Peterson, in Florida, said he able perfont- proposed sending “five, six or He hadatjseven minor leaguers to the while scoriiS Yankees, but Kuhn also rejected 4minutesasf that concept. The teams had but ue game fr® ;f foul troublf ed, Dunleao ton wanted one course — to select a player worth the money difference. “We tried to continue negotia- iohs with the Yankees,” Pirates’ pokesman Tom Bird said Friday. General Manager (Harding) Pete was con® Peterson had set a 1 p.m. Saturday [deadline on completing the trade. The Yankees called us and asked us to extend the deadline until |:15, which we did. They called lack again and asked us to extend Until 2 p.m., which we did. “We then got another call from ill Bergesch, a vice president of the Yankees, who said (Yankee :h Paul Wesit owner) George Steinbrenner felt ve were not being above board, ’ete then told him the deal was the key I ot was is fifth yearost The only thin! ou just naw >e out at a tin: isy to efense won. e playing e® utious on >aid. “Theft ed. There in Steinbrenner also reportedly y difficult fe nas furious at the commissioner’s nythingdow office for the failure of the deal’s there and it completion and accused Bill Mur- defense. Ill fay, an administrator in the com- urately ho*'l nissioner’s office and a former mployee of the Mets, of sabotag- ngthe deal. The Mets at one time we interested in obtaining hompson when he was with Cali- omia and might make another ch to land him. A spokesman for the commis- ioner’s office said both Murray id Kuhn worked very hard to try to get the Pirates and Yankees to agree on a deal. “This wasn’t a deal the commis sioner could have approved,” said the spokesman. “The amount was $850,000 which would have gone to the Pirates, $450,000 of which would have paid Spencer’s salary. They thought that amount would have been accepted since the ex tra money was $400,000. But, they should have realized the commissioner wouldn’t have accepted it.” Pittsburgh acquired Thompson from the Angels Wednesday, only 70 minutes before they tried to swap him to the Yankees. The Bucs traded catcher Ed Ott and pitcher Mickey Mahler to the Angels for Thompson. The three- team deal was designed to meet the needs of each team. The Pirates expect Thompson, who hit .288 with 21 homers and 90 RBI last season with Detroit and California, to report as soon as possible to their Bradenton, Fla., training camp. “Pete and (Pirate manager) Chuck Tanner are reportedly very happy with having Thompson,” Bird said. Tanner had said he needed Spencer for duty only “until (in jured first baseman) Willie Stargell gets better.” Astros win 10-8 United Press International The Brewers took a 6-1 lead SUN CITY, Ariz. — Jeff after three innings, with Gorman Leonard, who had sent the game Thomas putting Milwaukee on top into extra innings with a ninth- by five with a solo home run in the inning single, singled in Gary third. But the Astros came back Woods in the 11th inning Sunday and tied it at 7-7 in the ninth on to give the Houston Astros a 10-8 Leonard’s RBI single, exhibition victory over the Mil waukee Brewers. In the 10th, Dennis Walling Woods led off the 11th with a put Houston ahead with an infield double off loser Frank DiPino and grounder but Milwaukee tied the advanced to third on a bunt by score on Thomas’ second homer. Craig Reynolds. Leonard followed Thomas went 4-for-6 with four with his game-winning hit. RBI. The Corps of Cadets gets its news from the Batt. 51 % 0 Association of Former Students Spring Senior Induction Banquets April 13 & 14, 1981 6:30 p.m. Brazos Center All May and August graduates are invited to attend. Com plimentary tickets will be available April 6-10 in the lobby of the Forsyth Alumni Center. Banquet is free — but you must have a ticket to attend. TICKETS GIVEN ON FIRST COME - FIRST SERVED BASIS Netters split in weekend play; 4-5, 8-1 The Texas A&M men’s tennis team, after losing to TCU Satur day in Fort Worth, bounced back with a 8-1 victory over Texas Tech Sunday in Lubbock. In Saturday’s loss, Brian Joel- son, Tom Judson and Max King lead the way for the Aggies with wins, defeating Greg Amaya, David Zimmerman and George Lee, respectively. In doubles action Kowal and Judson lost to David Tate and Karl Richter, Freeman and Joelson lost to Corey Wittenberg and Zim merman. Trey Schutz and King beat Amaya and Lee for the only doubles win for the Aggies. The Aggies played the 14th- ranked Horned Frogs close before losing 5-4. “Brian, Tom and Max played well against TCU. Against Lee, Max was down and came back to win,” Head Coach David Kent said. In Sunday’s action the Aggies won all of the singles matches. Joelson defeated Mark Thomp son, 6-3, 6-2; Reid Freeman beat Caltid Mahyia, 6-1, 6-1. Trey Schutz beat Fred Ziacons, 6-2, 6- 2; King beat Jeff Bramblett, 6-2, 6-1. Judson beat David Earhart 6-4, 6-1; and Ron Kowal defeated John Langan, 6-1, 6-0. In doubles, the Aggies’ Joelson and Freeman defeated Mahyia and Langan, 6-2, 6-3. Judson and Kowal defeated Ziacons and Bramblett, 6-2, 5-7, 6-3. “We played really well against Tech. We needed it very badly,” Kent said of Sunday’s win. The men’s team increased their season record to 17-8 with Sun day’s win. The Aggies return to action Saturday when they host the Uni versity of Arkansas at 1:30 p.m. THE BATTALION MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1981 TANK MCNAMARA Page 13 by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds Ags bring home one first By RITCHIE PRIDDY Sports Editor The Texas A&M University men’s track team competed in the prestigious Texas Relays over the weekend in Austin and came away with one first, one second and one fifth place finish. Coach Charlie Thomas’ injury- riddled team pulled off one of the biggest surprises of the meet with a first place finish in the shuttle hurdle relay, edging out Houston by 1/100 of a second. Mike Glaspie, Graig Moody, Rick Thomas and Billy Busch made up the relay team which finished with a time of 56.14. Pole vaulter Randy Hall finished second with a jump of 17- 244 to Abilene Christian’s Brad Pursley. Both men cleared the same height but Pursley won on fewer attempts. Elsewhere, Billy Busch finished fifth in the 110-meter hurdles with a time of 14.17 and was the only other Aggie to place in the meet. Due to injuries. Coach Thomas took only 14 competitors to Au stin. “We only ran two relays in the meet (shuttle hurdle and mile). DON’T FORGET!! Schmaltz’s Special is Tonight A SCHMALTZ — ICE TEA — CHIPS Only After 5 p.m. Culpepper Plaza 693-8276 The mile relay team ran the ninth fastest in the meet but failed to qualify for the finals,” Thomas said. Only the eight fastest teams qualify for the finals. “We ran a couple of guys that had been hurt. But we think they will be back to full strength soon,” Thomas said. Thomas said that although sprinters Rod Richardson and Floyd Furlow had been hurt they had improved and were on their way back to full strength. “Rod ran a real strong leg in the mile relay, as did Floyd. They are on their way back,” Thomas said. The Aggies take the week off to let injuries heal and prepare for the Baylor Invitational meet in Waco April 17. Thomas also said that he felt all of the team’s injuries were healing and that the team would be back at full strength soon. Forty-five teams competed in ; the University division in the Au stin meet, which is considered one of the top track events in the Un ited States. Tl; o F^'riCAI^ Prescriptions Filled Glasses Repaired 216 N. MAIN BRYAN Mon.-Fri. Sat. 822-6105 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 8 a.m.-1 p.m. Lunch Specials Monday — Pepper Steak « Tuesday — Lasagna y Wednesday Fried Fish $125 Thursday — Mushroom Steak Friday Pork Chops Happy Hour — 4:30-6:30 p.m. (Mon.-Fri.) woodstone commerce — center = ==== on hwy. 30 Coon Intramural Festival 16055 Ventura Boulevard Suite 700 Encino, California 91436 (800) 423-3074 CAMPUSFEST TO BE HELD AT TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY Coors Central of Bryan, along with Texas A&M University, Intramural De partment, will sponsor a Campusfest April 8th at TAMU as part of the 1981 Texas Coors-Austin Natural Science Association Intramural Festival Program. Campusfest will consist of a day-long series of games and activities to be conducted at the Polo Fields between Zachry parking and the golf course from 3:00 p.m. until. The 1981 Coors-Austin Natural Science Association Intramural Festival is a precedent-setting activity of the Coors College Marketing Department to work with the colleges and universities in Texas to aid intramural programming. The Austin Natural Science Association was organized in 1960 to provide education al and recreational activities in the natural sciences through the operation and maintenance of a nature center. In doing so, it promotes understanding, protection and conservation of the environment. From this local Campusfest, a co-ed team will be selected to represent Texas A&M at the Regional Intramural Festival on April 25th at Trinity University in San Antonio. The sponsors will provide up to $200 in travel reimbursement for the Regional Festival team. Also, Texas A&M will receive a $500 certificate for General Sportscraft equipment to be selected by the Intramural Department. Coors Intramural Festivals were conducted at 11 locations in 1980 with 213 colleges and universities represented. All prizes are given by the Austin Natural Science Association. AUSTIN NATURAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT