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McCull Texas A&.M The Battalion Sports April 8, 1982 /Page 13 . ;»V ' ; I -Vt!-,':’'! 1 'ii? « S «s, ' ' f ilk:.‘*«S8ill A&M tennis Aggies travel to Dallas for meet with No. 2 ii buildings,"kj rage, there arei le per operatinJ rout 90,000 pers ed to this." i: estimate u people could tionwide. net veteM st became inlets in liealth hatati t buildings wm I signs of bronti ig in a hogcoii ag for severalIm come out couglf ould feel vetfi have a lotofes phlegm,” he eI ere not the st ealthy envirom red it worthyi said a preiiil ered about 7I)| ifmement bui, I respiratory s|| ver, most anl ions. itial findings v an in-depth! e National and Health during zovered a frig aw occasional* is develop,priiy It of hydrogeiij h is liberated! re stored in ie said. “As ptated, it liheif s of this toxieff: found nine pel mi such poisot. smilhern Wis United Press International ,4 people were - SAN ANTONIO — After los- death frcniflpg four games in a row — the Spurs’ worst streak in two years I —the coach of the Midwest Di- fjwis - Aff'' ~ ' ' " ■ - . A, , - -a- /va/sIIL by Denise S. Sechelski Battalion Staff The No.2-ranked SMU tennis team is waiting in Dallas for the Aggies, and the Mustangs’ assis tant coach says his team will be physched up and ready to play Friday. “The word is out that the Aggies have a tough team,” Pe ter Rudy said, “and we know we have to be ready to play. “We play TCU on Saturday and they’re ranked 8th in the country. We definitely have a rough weekend of tennis com ing up. We’re just trying to get mentally prepared. We need to get ready and try our best.” Southern Methodist Univer sity has been playing strong dou bles lately, Rudy said, but it’s the depth of the singles players that probably give the team its greatest advantage. “We have seven really good players that can beat anybody,” Rudy said. “They’ve been play ing some exceptional tennis lately.” But records and rankings speak for themselves and teams playing SMU hear the statistics loud and clear. The Mustangs’ Rodney Har mon is the No. 1 singles player in the nation and has a 21-4 record. SMU’s overall record is identical to Harmon’s, and the team’s ranking was also the same until a 7-2 loss last week to No. 3- ranked UCLA dropped them to second. The victory moved UCLA to the No. 1 position nationwide. Rudy said being the top team in the country was not one of SMU’s goals at the beginning of the year. “We started out at No. 5 in the pre-season polls, but those don’t really mean much,” he said. “We weren’t really trying to get a No. 1 ranking. We really had our sights on the NCAA champion ships at the end of the year. WeTe gearing up for that tour nament and hope! ully we’ll come home winners. “We know we have a good team that could win it all, so we’re just trying to play every match at our best.” However, the players are not the only high quality members of the SMU team. Tennis professional Dennis Ralston is in his second year as head coach of the Mustangs and Rudy said it was great to have such a high caliber player coaching at the college level. “This is his first job as a uni versity coach,” Rudy said. “He’s coached many pros — Stan Smith, Roscoe Tanner, Dick Stockton, Brian Gottfried. Right now, he’s also working with Chris Evert Lloyd. He’s really a great coach. ? PHt; PiwsVj ■ s 'SIHh Dallas holds Jazz Dantley in check staff photo by Eric Mitchell Van Barry, a member of the Texas Texas A&M, ranked 18th in the nation, Aggie tennis team, rests on the court plays New Mexico here today at 1:30 during a practice session this week. before playing SMU Friday in Dallas. SA’s Mitchell picks up scoring slack in victory ) percent e the cap; il would line whether If nanent luneS] dng in thebif ision’s No. 1 team decided it |vas time for a new approach, ute toxic spall perhaps taking some of the ? is agitatedw pressure off the NBA’s leading imount,” Donif |corer. is type of mu George Gervin was held to 14 haven’tbeem ‘points, but Mike Mitchell took up the slack with 40 points to make it all come together for the id the cqncff®>an Antonio Spurs in a 1 18-1 13 jperations isf ./victory over the Kansas City Kings Tuesday night, f “Tonight we made the crucial plays,” Coach Stan Albeck said. “I thought (Dave) Corzine, Mitchell and (Johnny) Moore all /ill probabl) s; played important roles. We got — as it did ill more contributions from a lot textile and/ ' more people tonight. — before res® “The team kept its confi- itect pernw dence and we finally got the har- jpness from around our necks, s study found* Hopefully the albatross has been e who hadL lifted.” »nic brondifl San Antonio forward Mark iringdisease! Olberding said the Spurs “cre- ests, which'f al;e d a new look. We’ve got a cou- 41 the wor.it pie of new plays and we did led, were 4 some things different tonight.” lunteers hdf ■ The Spurs took a 57-56 half- nfinementslf time lead beind 21 points from they had wod Mitchell and held on for a 94-90 edge after three periods. Mitch ell also pulled down 10 re bounds. “We hit the crucial shots an made the plays when we had to,” Mitchell said. “Our concen tration was high and we went after every rebound and every loose ball. We just made up our minds toplay hard.” San Antonio outrebounded Kansas City 45-36 and out shot the Kings 30-19 at the free- throw line. Kansas City was also flanked by foul trouble and ended up with four of its front line play ers hitting the bench for good in the fourth quarter. United Press International DALLAS — The Dallas Mavericks and Utah Jazz deli vered an excellent example Wednesday night of that old Na tional Basketball Association ad age — ’ just because it happened last night doesn’t mean it will happen again tonight.” On Tiesday evening the Jazz clobbered Dallas in Salt Lake City, 129-114, with Adrian Dantley scoring his normal 40 points against the Mavericks. Twenty-four hours later the same two teams stumbled into each other at Reunion Arena and the results were quite diffe rent. Dallas not only ran away from the Jazz, 123-109, but Dantley was held to the unusual ly low total of 14 points. Dantley, the NBA’s third leading scorer with an average of 30.5 points per contest, scored only two points in the first half Wednsday night as the Mavericks opened their largest first-quarter lead ever. Dallas’ rookie combination of Jay Vincent and Mark Aguirre combined for 52 points — 31 of them coming from Vincent. “We were embarrased last night,” said Aguirre, who had made a futile attempt to guard Dantley in the Jazz’ victory. “We didn’t show anything. Coach (Dick) Motta said we had to get going tonight.” Dantley showed his frustra tion by picking up three fouls in the first half and was never a factor in the game. Utah had won three in a row coming into its second straight meeting with the Mavericks, but Dance The N IGHT Away . . . With a dress from! m. 2305 S. Texas Ave. College Station, Tx. M-F 10-6 Sat.'9-4 hours, significant il ich means! lity forairio heir lungs at exposu 1 /Vhatthisnif nent lungdi -ARTINU ■ 00 5 unP, 0 1 les Residence Hall Association Presents A NIGHT OF GAMBLING, PRIZES, AND ENTERTAINMENT Friday, April 16 8:00-12:30 th Major prizes donated by DIAMOND ROOM 707 AND TOTAL PRIZE WORTH OVER $3000! 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