Page 16/The Battalion/Thursday, March 8,1984 TANK MCNAMARA* by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds APPARENTLY ftTEP. t^DP^c^OTT S. COURT BEHAVIOR IS> GOIWG TO GET Him pu ' “ PUT ON S’U&PEKfcOO PtMJKJ lAJPER., ffereR OUTPIC? HiMGGLP THlG TiME. ■ THE AUSewES? HAVE. SOMETHING A UTTl£ MDPEPRepTlC IN MlNP THAN SUs^ejOSIOKT ‘Doc’ going strong at 80 United Press International Mavs blast Cavs United Press International DALLAS — Rolando Black man scored 22 points and Mark Aguirre added 18 as the Dallas Mavericks moved within a half game of first place in the Mid west Divison with a 115-103 vic tory over the Cleveland Cava- SPRING BREAK BLOWOUT SPECIALS Budweiser 12 oz. cans 12 packs * -¥■ -K * * * * -jt ^ Bacardi 80° Light Rum .750 ml + -K M c Cormick Vodka M 80° 1.75 I * Canadian L.T.D. 80° $C49 * * M M M * * * $ 5 99 t $797 * * * * * * M * * * Canadian Whiskey 1.75 $ 10 49 Coldest longnecks in town Great selection of Imports While supplies last MIKES DISCOUNT LIQUOR 900-2E. Harvey Rd. College Station * * * * * * * * M ■k M ■k ■k * -k 693*8012^ liers Wednesday night. The victory was the Maver icks’ fourth in the last six games and their ninth in 14 outings. Dallas (34-29) gained a full game on first place Utah, which dropped a 117-106 decision in Boston Wednesday night. The Cavaliers (22-39) lost their sixth straight on the seven-game road trip which will conclude Sunday night in Houston. The Mavericks entered the fourth quarter with an 84-80 lead and extended it to 105-87 while holding Cleveland to just seven points in the first seven minutes. Blackman and Derek Harper led the spurt with four points each. Dallas reached its biggest lead at 111-92 on a jumper by Dale Ellis with less than three minutes to play. Cleveland’s leading scorer, World B. Free, was held to 24 points, his lowest output ever at Reunion Arena. TAMPA, Fla. — He’s nearly 81, has been officially retired for 13 years and he uses old- fashioned words like “suppling” and “stamina” instead of “flexi bility” and “cardio-vascular con ditioning.” But W.C. “Doc” Eberhardt, former director of physical edu cation at St. Louis University, looks 60, acts 50 and runs cir cles around 40-year-olds 13 years after suffering the second of two severe heart attacks. No wonder the Cincinnati Reds’ players are so enthusiastic about the new exercise and con ditioning program Eberhardt has been hired to teach them at spring training. The trim little man with the elegantly groomed salt-and- pepper moustache is living testi mony to the benefits of the regi men. “If I hadn’t been in good shape, I don’t think I’d be here today,” Eberhardt says. He still exercises 12 to 15 minutes daily, albeit not so rig orously as he makes the Cincin nati players. “As you get older, you do mostly flexibility or what I call suppling exercises,” he ex plains. Both Eberhardt and a formal conditioning program run by someone other than a coach are new to the Reds, but not to baseball. Hall-of-Famer Stan Musial introduced both to the St. Louis Cardinals back in 1960. “Stan Musial had a bad year in 1959,” Eberhardt recalls. “After the season he came down to the university to see me, and he said, ‘Doc, I’m either going to quit baseball or I’m going to get in shape.’ “And he worked with me, and I said, ‘Let’s work at least five days a week for about seven weeks before spring training. We worked at the university, and by the end of the first week we had at least 11 different bal- Iclubs represented by 41 men.” At Musial’s suggestion, Eber hardt says, the Cardinals hired him to handle the team’s spring-training conditioning. It was a part-time job he held through 1980, except in 1973, when Eberhardt says he took a leave of absence to follow fit ness freak Steve Carlton to the Philadelphia Phillies in order to teach the team his conditioning philosophy. Retired from the university in 1971, Eberhardt also left baseball two years ago, though he continued to act as an ad viser to the Senior Olympics program in St. Louis and to teach exercise classes for senior citizens. “I dislike retirement immen sely,” Eberhardt complains. When he heard that his old friend Vernon Rapp had been hired to manage the Reds, Eberhardt couldn’t resist tack ing on the following postscript to his letter of congratulations: “The old professor is avail able if you need any help.” Rapp got in touch. Eberhardt’s program is de signed to improve what he ref ers to as “the three S's:”a ness (flexibility), strengtl stamina (cardio-vascular tioning). He stresses the "sui exercises for baseball “If I were handlingfooth stress the power, or sin factor,” he says. Eberhardt’s regimen I with a quick warmu| around Cincinnati’s “Rd training center in Tamp proceeds through a sen “springing exercises" (jui jacks), stretching mow geared to various joinii muscles in the body, “siri ening” exercises suchasci cated pushups and knee and coordination routines Throughout the w» Eberhardt mixes hisbarli structions with conversati he walks through thegro athletes, checking their gress. Colts’ destiny still up in air United Press International BALTIMORE — Baltimore Mayor William Schaefer said Colts’ owner Robert Irsay told him Wednesday there is no fi nal deal to move the NFL team Indianapolis — a transfer to Say. meineke that had been reported as immi nent. Schaefer, who talked to Irsay in a three-minute phone con versation Wednesday morning, said he also asked the team owner if he should continue va rious efforts to keep the Colts in Baltimore, and was told to do so. said. “I am a little more opti mistic now that he called.” The mayor’s comments came in the wake of various reports that the deal to move the team was expected to be announced Wednesday. DISCOUNT MUFFLERS AMERICAN AND FOREIGN CAR SPECIALIST KmaMe mi * FITS MANY SMALL CARS * AT PARTICIPATING DEALERS BRYAN .... 408 South Texas Ave. (Corner of 30th St.).... 775-01 88 Individually Owned & Operated IN AND OUT IN 30 MINUTES IN MOST CASES OPEN DAILY AND SAT.8 6 PM Copyright©1 984 Meineke Me “I asked Mr. Irsay if I should keep up my efforts, and he said, ‘yes,’” Schaefer said. “I then asked him if it was all right to tell the press of the conversa tion, and he said, ‘Sure, go ahead.’ There isn’t much more to say.” the The mayor, who said Irsay called him from Chicago, said the owner planned to meet with him on the matter next week. But that does not mean, Schaefer said, that a deal to move the team might not be completed before then. The mayor’s com merits came in wake of various re ports that the deal to move the team was ex pected to be an nounced Wednesday. “I will admit that I was down (Tuesday) because I didn’t get a call from Mr. Irsay,” Schaefer Those reports followed the arrival in Indianapolis Tuesday night of several Colts’ officials — coach Frank Kush, Jimmy Ir say, son of the owner and an as sistant general manager, and Michael Chernoff, general counsel and vice president. Indianapolis Mayor William II ml nut agreed with that a final contract to team had not been signed “There is nothing fii — it’s still iffy," he saklj have no agreement on side. (The news repa jumping to conclusions." Officials in Indiana reportedly offered “modest" rent at the $78 Hoosier Dome, a new seat complex. Indiana) portedly also will build tl a new practice f acility andl ish, through private bai' municipal funds, a $15 loan at 8 percent interest To counter the Indi; proposal, Baltimore is arrange the same type and change a city chart says the (’.oils may not their home games before! NFL owners, stingingfi $49 million federal coun sion resulting fromtheOJ Raiders’ move to Los m two years ago, voted Frii to block an Irsay attem move the Colts. M to 78 No. \ tiummmsmm The Most Sophisticated Training Ground For Nuclear Engineering Isn’t On The Ground. It’s on a Navy ship. The Navy has more than 1,900 reactor-years of nuclear power experience — more than anyone else in America. The Navy has the most sophisti cated nuclear equip ment in the world. And the Navy operates over half of the nuclear reactors in America. With a nuclear program like that, you know the Navy also offers the most compre hensive and sophisticated nuclear training. 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