Me d kid T suspects s.but these, b> c ydes ami oards i> suspeae SlO,000f^ ■ningtol loritiesby ignated« icycles. rny Sh< 7 said u Crocker] und deni c‘d in the | g°ll coitnei off at theh ‘U'ctives,. officials! I paper to livereditto mited. ? up on [ha arrested rtion. ishingtoy t a bankes# irdenedci nd-written! 000 incasS -oldsandai up on si or the moil lonor nlernatioul Prince Chi example s a donorc orizingdoo his bods ints when ’a lace told Sunday l r conscious' ent ofthel sociation i example, >r card all rove hishd ys for til cesaveryli ical advais people is i pokesman ice. .; als espeoi nors ford Texas A8cM The Battalion Sports August 3, 1982/Page 5 = Reds snap LA’s four-game winning streak Vail’s two RBI propel Soto, Cincy to victory Jerry Reuss Steve Garvey Reserved seat football tickets available at A&M Ticket Office Reserved seat tickets for the Texas Aggies’ 1982 home foot ball schedule are now on sale over the counter and by mail through the Texas A&M Athle tic Ticket Office. A season ticket (seven games) costs $77 and individual game tickets can be purchased for $ 11 apiece. Over-the-counter sales are at Window 7 in front of G. Rollie White Coliseum, and tick et office hours are 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Mail orders may be sent to the Texas A&M Athletic Ticket Office, College Station, Texas, 77843-1228. Orders should in clude a note specifying the order and should include $1 for hand ling and mailing costs. The Aggies’ 1982 home sche dule includes the following games: Sept. 4, Boston College” 6:10 p.m.; Sept. 18, UT- Arlington, 6 p.m.; Sept. 25, Louisiana Tech, 6 p.m.; Oct. 2, Texas Tech, 6 p.m.; Oct. 16, Baylor, 2 p.m.; Oct. 23, Rice, 2 p.m.; Nov. 20, TCU, 2 p.m. J PR SERVICE a AL Foreign & Domestic jjnEXACO] 5 TOTAL PERFORMANCE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE CENTER 696-3775 FULL CAR CARE • Air Conditioning • Tune Ups • Brakes • Charging Systems • Engine Rebuilding • Si OWNER J. BITTLE ATM 78 4 Pelican'* Wharf * Parts 'll 1800 Welsh & S.W. Pkwy* College Station 'COUPON GAMES Qalote BUY 4 game tokens GET 4 game tokens FREE Limit 1 per Customer per day Coupon Valid at Northgate Only Expires July 31,1982 Culpepper Plaza 693-7711 SoundlAfewes LOWEST PRICED TIDDIES IN THE WORLD! 2 Layers — 14.95 3 Layers — 17.95 \ $1 off with this ad. We also carry a complete line of car stereos BEST SELECTION IN TOWN Tuesday night Bar drinks for ladies No Cover 7-11 p.m. 693-2818 United Press International Mario Soto’s six-hitter and Mike Vail’s two sing les led the Cincinnati Reds to a 5-1 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers Monday night at Riverfront Stadium in front of 16,000 fans. The Reds’ triumph ended the Dodgers’ four- game winning streak, during which they had swept a weekend series from the division-leading Atlanta Braves. Soto, in pitching his seventh complete game of the season, struck out 10 and raised his record to 9-7. The Cincinnati pitcher has led the National League in strikeouts during the entire season. Soto has pitched double-figure strikeout games eight times this year. The Reds, who outhit the Dodgers 9-6, scored off LA loser Jerry Reuss, 10-9, in the fourth in ning. Rookie second baseman Tom Lawless beat out an infield hit and moved to third on teammate Eddie Milner’s sacrifice and a groundout. When Reuss intentionally walked third baseman Johnny Bench, Vail followed with an RBI single to right field. After a double by Dave Concepcion and another walk to Bench, Vail drove in the Reds’ second run in the sixth inning. The third-place Dodgers, who now trail the Braves by IV* games as a result of the Braves’ victory over the San Francisco Giants Monday, scored in the seventh. First baseman Steve Garvey and catcher Mike Scioscia hit back-to-back dou bles, one to left field and one in front of right fielder Paul Householder. The Reds scored three more runs in the eighth inning, as Duane Walker hit an RBI single and another tally crossed on an error by Garvey. The final run scored on a bases-loaded walk to Soto. In other NL games, Atlanta defeated San Fran cisco, 7-3, Philadelphia nipped Montreal, 2-1, Houston stopped San Diego, 6-4, and Pittsburgh toppled St. Louis, 4-2. In the American League, it was Boston 5, Balti more 2; Cleveland 6, Texas 2; Toronto 9, Mil waukee 4; Kansas City 6, Detroit 5 in 10 innings; Minnnsota 9, California 7; and Oakland 6, Seattle 5. BRAVES 7, GIANTS 3 — At Atlanta, Bob Walk, 10-7, and Steve Bedrosian combined on an eight-hitter and Jerry Royster and Bob Horner drove in two runs each for the Braves. PHILLIES 2, EXPOS 1 — At Philadelphia, Bo Diaz homered and drove in the goahead run with a fifth-inning sacrifice fly to lead the Phillies. PIRATES 4, CARDINALS 2 — At St. Louis, Pittsburgh scored two runs in the top of the 17th inning against veteran reliever Jim Kaat to defeat the Cards. Tom Herr led the losers with five of his team’s 13 hits. AL managers Ralph Houk and Earl Weaver know better than to talk of pennants before the stretch run. “It feels good, but it doesn’t mean a whole lot,” Houk said after John Tudor and Bob Stanley combined on a seven-hitter to lead the Boston Red Sox to a 5-2 victory over the Baltimore Orioles. “Every team in this division is having its ups and downs, but they are all capable of beating you.” Tudor’s victory, his seventh against eight los ses, and Stanley’s ninth save, broke a three-game losing streak for Boston and dealt the Orioles their fifth straight loss. Boston is tied with Mil waukee for first place. “We’re just not fighting back,” Weaver said. ” But, we can catch Boston by mid-week. Our prob lem now is that we’re not just hitting enough balls hard enough, often enough.” Boston took a 4-1 lead in the fifth. Jerry Remy, Dwight Evans and Jim Rice singled and Carney Lansford hit a sacrifice fly. The lead went to 5-1 in the sixth on Cary Allenson’s double, Rick Miller’s fly ball and Remy’s single. Eddie Murray, who hit his 15th homer in the second, singled in the seventh. Cary Roenicke singled Murray to third and John Lowenstein hit a sacrifce fly. “It was just one of those games in which no thing went right,” loser Scott McGregor said. BLUE JAYS 9, BREWERS 4 — At Toronto, Alfredo Griffin drove in three runs and Damaso Garcia and Buck Martinez drove in two each to lead the Blue Jays. ROYALS 6, TIGERS 5 — At Kansas City, Mo., Don Slaught’s looping, opposite-field double to right scored Frank White from first base in the 10th to give the Royals their fifth straight triumph. TWINS 9, ANGELS 7 — At Anaheim, Calif., Ron Washington’s two-run single triggered a three-run ninth inning that lifted the Twins." A’s 6, MARINERS 5 — At Oakland, Calif., Rickey Henderson keyed a four-run seventh in ning by stealing his 100th base and scoring the go-ahead run to lift the A’s. 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