The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, July 13, 1982, Image 10

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    ^sports
Battalion/Page 10
July 13,1982
TANK MCNAMARA
by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
Jones, Saldi file lawsuit
over salary negociations
United Press International
NEW YORK — The agent for
Dallas Cowboys’ defensive end
Ed Jones and tight end Jay Saldi
Monday filed a suit in U.S. Dis
trict Court in an attempt to block
the NFL Players Association
from handling their contract
negotiations.
Don Cronson, a New York
attorney, filed the suit against
the NFLPA and the NFL. He
said the suit was filed on behalf
\ of the two Cowboys as well as
Tim Wrightman, a rookie tight
end with the Chicago Bears.
The NFLPA has the right to
negotiate salaries for players but
has waived the right in the past
and allowed players to negotiate
their own contracts. The play
ers’ collective bargaining agree
ment with the owners expires
Thursday and the NFLPA now
says veteran players and rookies
who have not signed by mid
night Thursday cannot sign un
til management and the NFLPA
reach a new agreement.
The NFLPA has also said un
signed veteran players can play
for their clubs for 110 percent of
their 1981 contracts, or for the
club’s last written offer,
whichever is higher. It also said
unsigned rookies could not re
port to camp.
Both Wrightman and Jones
are unsigned and Saldi is in the
option year of his contract. The
suit seeks to bar the NFLPA
from preventing the players
from negotiating and signing
new pacts.
Orioles’ Flanagan expresses joy over
nation’s fourth-ever test-tube baby
United Press International
B ALTI MORE — The thrill of
winning the 1979 Cy Young
Award was nothing compared to
the joy Baltimore Orioles’ pitch
er Mike Flanagan felt when he
watched the birth of his first
child — the nation’s fourth test-
tube baby.
“I witnessed the whole thing
and it was amazing,” Flanagan,
30, said at a Monday news con-
Now
You
Know
ference. “Winning the Cy
Young was a lot more physical
effort on my part. But when you
talk about thrills, nothing com
pares to this.”
Mrs. Flanagan gave birth to
the 8-pound, 8-ounce girl,
named Kerry Ellen, Friday at
Greater Baltimore Medical Cen
ter following eight hours of
labor.
The infant was the first test-
tube baby to be delivered by
“normal, spontaneous vaginal
delivery,” rather than by Caesa
rean section, doctors said.
Mrs. Flanagan was seated in a
wheelchair holding the baby
during the news conference.
“This makes me believe in mira
cles,” the new mother said. “I
never thought I’d have one.”
The dark-haired baby, dres
sed in a white lace dress trimmed
with pink satin ribbons was obli
vious to the platoon of reporters
and cameramen and slept
through the entire event,
“Kathy had the courage and
determination to go through
with this. I’m very proud of her
and the baby. All we wanted was
a chance to have a baby and we
got a square deal, as you can
see,” Flanagan said with an
approving nod.
The baby was conceived by
the in-vitro fertilization method
at the Eastern Virginia Medical
School, in Norfolk, Va.
United Press International
Soap’s secret ability to cleanse
is linked to its role as a molecular
middleman. It forces water and
oil-substances which normally
shun each other to mix together.
When you wash your hands
with water alone, oils on the skin
shed the water before you can
get every wet — or clean. But
soaps change this because one
end of its molecule attaches to
grease and oil, while the other
end attachs to water molecules.
When scrubbing, you break
oil and grease into particles that
don’t normally stay mixed with
water. But the soap molecules
surround each soil particle,
attracting the dirt into the water.
Linked, the particles remained
together long enough to be
rinsed away.
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The Aerobic Club
presents
Dr. Cass Ryan - Crowe
and
Mr. Tom Wells
to speak on
DIET & EXERCISE
RUNNING IN THE HEAT
Wednesday, July 13, 1982
Room #274 East Kyle at 7 p.m.
All participants in the Aerobic program, faculty, staff and
students are welcome!
Vilas, Lendl to open today
United Press International
BROOKLINE, Mass. — The
top two seeds will take the court
in the $200,000 U.S. Profession
al Tennis Championships today
fully aware of the fact two other
seeded players have already
packed their bags for home.
Top-seed Guillermo Vilas of
Argentina and No. 2 Ivan Lendl
of Czechoslovakia will begin ac
tion in a tournament in which
fifth-seeded Raul Ramirez of
Mexico and No. 16 Juan Aven-
dano of Spain fell in first-round
action Monday.
Glenn Holroyd, a relative un
known from Phoenix, Ariz.,
used a tough serve-and-volley
game to upset Ramirez. Hol
royd, 27, had two first-round
losses in Association of Tennis
Professionals tournaments and
was ranked 243rd in the world
before stunning Ramirez, 7-6 (7-
5), 6-4.
The serve-and-volley tactic
was unusual on the slow clay sur
face, but Holroyd said: “I knew
if I hit it on the baseline, he’d
run it down.”
“I never had a big win against
a player like Ramirez on his best
surface.”
Unseeded Harold Solomon,
once ranked in the top five in the
world, defeated practice partner
Rick Fagel, 6-4, 6-1, in the fea
tured evening match.
“This is my first regular
match in six weeks,” said Solo
mon, who has lost twice in the
Longwood final. “In fact, I’ve
been practicing hard with Ricky
and I’ve been beating him easily.
He played better in the first set
tonight. However, I was confi
dent from our practice ses
sions.”
In the Grand Masters singles
final, Mai Anderson of Bris
bane, Australia defeated Alex
Olmedo of Encino, Calif., 6-0,
5-7, 3-0 (retired) to take the
$3,450 first prize.
In other action, Mike Cahill of
the U.S. defeated South African
Danie Visser, 6-3, 3-6, 6-3;
Jonathan Canter, U.S., defeated
Drew Gitlin of the U.S., 6-3,6-4;
and Mark Dickson, U.S., defe
ated Mark Bauer, U.S., 6-3, 6-0.
Two other seeds survived,
No. 13 Alejandro Ganzabal of
Argentina, defeating American
John Ross, 6-4, 6-3, and No. 9
seed Van Winitsky, beating
Spain’s Gabriel Urpi, 4-6, 6-1,
6-4.
In other matches, ZanG\/ n I 7R
ry, U.S., defeated Jay Lapl*^ '
U.S., 7-5, 3-6, 6-3; JeffTui]
U.S., defeated Bruce Kltj
U.S.. 6-1, 6-3-
Ik***************************
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