Wednesday, February 27, 1985/The Battalion/Page 11 m*W' MM TANK M‘ i\/V>IA1LV by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds "ta nation! 1 66.1 per.| its and 131 st year. | Monica;! Bukins hi tots on [)| ( S”' Lamb's:■ ( L. Fhat'i' , ril 'g. Voj 'to mat(l ''oblemhJ Houstom I overs thaJ m to malt | o'tsisteno | ark. The, 'g guardi them and •' ...THE WHOLE TOWN MJPFORTEP me RWMLY for ‘ TEN YEAR€> INI Rj. ■■ 5 ■ EXCHANGE FOCS RIGHTS-TO TME K ■' KIP'S ILLEGAL I!* ‘ RECRUITING r t INPUCEMENTS../' I ^ 1 & JALE ^ *~ 27 T0OY WA9K1'T NO MORG'N V LlTtUE SUCKER COUU7 EI&MT WHEN WE REOOON1ZEP \ PUY A BALL TMRDOGhA A MiM AS AN INVESTMENT IN twlE 1 TRACTORTRE AT 40 VARPS. TOWN'S FUTURE. the inside, f’ve gott# itside and fy worked s it won! rked Iasi ne or not k “We are i U look on open. We 2-3 zone, shirigs we been one tgies. For- ;gies have tning for- be put to Longhorns rise to No. 2 in ESPN’s baseball poll ima City day at 3 ill make iouston WC) C) st West a dual- he only held in e field, .mond- vnipeti- le and ho also thodist • Rink. e M US- Associated Press TUCSON, Ariz. — Mississippi State, scoring wins in its first two games of the 1985 season, remained atop the latest ESPN collegiate base- 1 poll this week, and Texas, 7-2, climbed from fourth to second place. Miami, Fla., 12-5, held onto third, but Arizona, which wasn’t even men tioned in preseason, shot from 12th place last week to fourth in posting a 19-3 season mark. The Wildcats, winners of 18 of their last 19 games including taking three straight from last week’s No. 7 team, San Diego State, 7-3, were the nation’s hottest team, according to the newspaper. Florida State, 12-2, dropped from fourth to fifth, while Oklahoma and Oklahoma State, both 0-0, dropped from fifth and sixth to sixth and sev enth, respectively. Stanford, 1 1-3, remained in eighth place, followed by California-Santa Barbara, 10-4-2, and Florida, 8-2, jumped from 15th to 10th, replacing New Orleans. Others in the top 20: Lamar, 6-2; San Diego State; UCLA, 1 1-5; North Carolina, 5-3; Georgia Tech, 2-0; Pepperdine, 6-3-1; New Orleans, 3- 3; Texas-Arlington, 6-3; California, 14-6, and Hawaii, 13-5. The poll rates teams on the basis of strength of schedule, returning players, voting by a nationwide panel of coaches, sports writers and sports information directors, as well as other information. ESPN Top 20 Baseball Poll 1. Mississippi State 2-0 2. Texas 7-2 3. Miami (Fla.) 12-5 4. Arizona 19-3 5. Florida State 12-2 6. Oklahoma 0-0 7. Oklahoma State 0-0 8. Stanford 11-3 9. Cal-Santa Barbara 10-4-2 10. Florida 8-2 11. Lamar 6-2 12. San Diego State 6-2 13. UCLA 11-5 14. North Carolina 5-3 15. Georgia Tech 2-0 16. Pepperdine 6-3-1 17. New Orleans 3-3 18. Texas-Arlington 6-3 19. California 14-6 20. Hawaii 13-5 Ex-Ranger not happy as a Yankee Associated Press POMPANO BEACH, Fla. —Toby Harrah, the first shortstop the Texas Rangers ever had, is unhappy about his future with the New York Yan kees and says he would like to return to Texas. Harrah said Monday that he has asked the Yankees to trade him. Rangers General Manager Tom Grieve mid the Fort Worth Star- Telegram that he has had dis cussions with the Yankees about a possible trade. “Under the right circumstances,” Grieve said, “it’s an interesting thought, and it’s one we’ve dis cussed. I haven’t been in touch with the Yankees today, but we have talked in general with them before.” Harrah, who still maintains an off-season home in Fort Worth, said he’d “love” to come back to Arling ton, where he played for seven sea sons. Although Harrah said he would like a shot at second base, he added that a starting job would not be a necessity. “I’d play anywhere for them,” Harrah said. “To get to go back and play for the Rangers would be the chance of a lifetime. “I absolutely believe I could play second.There’s not a doubt in my mind. But if I could get back to Texas, I’d be satisfied just to be on the grounds crew.” Harrah, who is unhappy with the Yankees’ plans to platoon him in the outfield with Ken Griffey, hit just .217 with one home run and 26 RBIs last season. [IBM) O O J / ]Tbm] unmiimiif i J MID-TERM CRISIS? Workload too much to handle alone? No free time? Share the load with a super PC. It’s faster than a speeding slide rule, more powerful than a pocket calculator, and loves to tackle large obstacles. It’s affordable! It’s easy to use! , It’s IBM! See the IBM PC Family on Campus at The Pavilion, March 4-8. PJ litt; EATRES 12 40 Tin id • •at * w.tr . 0 ••mm •* * aKECEti EmpiiJ \3isCollege n m-enr) | in the mah-»«<-o«h | WEEKNITE8 th g BREAKFAST CLUB ft » o—T» r -'MM* •»*i PtctMT* Tm [ • ' Tor;™ Wdt WEEKNITES: 7:49-»:45 ^ THE MEAN § SEASON I WEEKNITES; 1:00 Only W NOM'HATIO *OA 11 OSCAAt ! fl mSSWGif lATO INPIft EE WEEKNITES: 7: