Thursday, March 13, 1986/The Battalion/Page 11 ( YOU Fl VON YOUR. fellov/s just out Hene SPRING VACATION ? Geigei j wo sinj nlktolo iced ii two passed ii I moved | 'gle. ] at inch-1 id out, i lit onil week. (MSl')i e senes| . The.I le sen I witl WE'RE ON OUR WAY TO NEW YORK. AND WE'RE G-ONNA SHdOT A FEW cowaoYs, COUGARS, GRIZZLY BEARS, AND LOBOS ALONG THE WAY.. AND ANY NCAA ora/c/als we see ! D T) >o^ THE SWC TE-AtAS G-O WEST TO START THE N./.T. TOURNEY tA vs. WYOIAING ■t.u. vs. NEW MEXICO SMU vr. 8YU tc\j vs. Montana dp iqsfc e gami tei g women club Hogs; men ease by Tar Heels d is w e DeV ■200-w Eddied ind Dji ,ed to h, an T he* Texas A&rM men’s and wom- n’s tennis team overcame separate bstacles on their way to Wednesday inatch victories. The A&M women crushed Ar ansas 9-0 at Omar Smith Tennis detiter. In singles play, the Aggies (12-3) lost the first set in four of the six latches, but " — ■ ■ ebounded in Tennis |he last two sets ‘all six times. I “We did expect to win all nine latches,’’ A&M Coach Bobby Klei- lecke said. “But when we lost those lour first sets in singles, 1 became a little skeptical. We fought back well h gave us some confi- i" ■line pi n H Ihough whi( 1 i'»ence." No. 1 seeded Vanne Akagi and ifth seeded Helen Christiaanse were the only Ags that didn’t run nto any trouble. Akagi cruised to a 7-5, b-3 win over Betsey Meacham Iwhile Christiaanse whipped Sandy Bchwan 6-2, 6-1. Meanwhile, the A&M men had to bvercome the abscence of t heir No. 1 ilayer in a 6-3 win over North Caro- inaat Royal Oaks Racquet Club. While Kimmo Alkio was sitting on |he sidelines with an ankle injury, Mark Smith moved into the No. 1 Spot and upset UNC’s Jef f Cham bers, 5-7, 6-4, 6-3. ! “Mark Smith did a great job,” A&M Coach David Kent said. “1 J think that’s the first time we’ve evei I beaten Jeff.” The Ags (11-6) won three of four ; three-set matches in singles play. Photo by PA ULA SA YRE A&M’s Vanne Akagi, the Aggies’ No. 1 singles player, slams a back hand across the net during Wednesday’s-match with Arkansas. Ranger perfects ‘knuckler’ Associated Press POMPANO BEACH, Fla. — Texas Rangers pitcher Charlie Hough has been winning games with 60 mph pitches for 16 years and he can’t understand why the knuckle- ball gets no respect. “If you’re getting hit, it doesn’t make any difference how hard you’re throwing,” Hough said. “I’ve sat back there with the gun (a device to clock the speed of pitches) on Dave Stewart. He was throwing ev ery pitch 92-93 miles per hour and they were hitting them out 103-104 miles per hour.” Stewart, a hard-throwing Ranger reliever last season, is. gone and Hough, 38, is still around, throwing up an assortment of diving, dipping lluttet balls that have made him the ace of the staff. “A guy throws 90 miles per hour and he’s getting killed anti the first thing they say is ‘Wow, how'are they hitting that good stuff,”’ Hough said. “I get hit and they say, ‘This guy stinks.’” Hough actually has learned to ac cept the pitch’s lack of respect just as he’s learned to remain placid when the knuckler isn’t working. That’s why they call him “Happy.” “Sitting on the sidelines and see ing some guy out there without much talent getting killed throwing 60 miles per hour, you don’t think much of it,” Hough said. Hough started throwing the knuckler in 1970, when he was with the Los Angeles Dodgers. It’s been the salvation of his major league ca reer. A shoulder injury forced Hough, in desperation, to attempt to master the knuckleball. “I went to (Tommy) Lasorda and told him I wanted to try it and he said I’d better learn it quick because I’d be gone otherwise,” Hough re called. Even after he came to the Rangers in 1980, his position wasn’t solid ified. “T hey could have cut me based on my performance that spring,” he said. “Heck, they could almost do that any spring.” But (he Rangers have allowed Hough to prepare for the season his way, giving him the amount of time to pitch, whether it be in B games or simulated games. “The thing about a knuckle ball is you have to throw it a lot in the spring.” he said. “You have to get more work than the normal pitcher.” Hough led the American League with 17 complete games in 1984 and he finished 14 more games last sea son. He had a 14-16 record on the last-place team in the Western Divi sion. “I don’t think of it as a trick pitch,” he said. “For me, it’s Nolan Ryan’s fast ball, Don Sutton’s curve, Goose Gossage’s fast ball or some body else’s forkball. “It’s my best pitch, so I throw it.” UCLA tries to establish new tradition Associated Press UCLA, which established an awe- jsome tradition under Goach John I Wooden in the NCAA basketball [tournament, hopes to begin another |one — on a smaller scale.in the Na- [tional Invitation T ournament. During 1964-75, the Bruins were 'the NCAA tournament, winning it in lOof those 12 years. More often than not, as the de- ifending champion with players like Walt Hazzard (a senior on that first championship team), Gail Goodrich, Lew Alcindor, Bill Walton, Larry Farmer and Marques Johnson, UCLA was all but conceded the title as the tournament began. Now the Bruins, with Hazzard as their coach instead of their play- maker and 1964 NCAA Player of the Year, are the NTT defending champions — and hoping to become only the second team in the 49-year NIT Roundup history of the tournament to win the title twice in a row. . St.'John’s, now more preoccupied with trying to return for the second consecutive year to the NCAA’s Fi nal Four, won the NIT in 1943 and 1944. Nobody before or since has achieved that feat. The Bruins begin the pursuit of that quest Thursday night at home in Pauley Pavilion against Gal-Irvine. The Anteaters are 16-12, the Bruins 15-13. No UCLA team has lost that many games since the 1947-48 squad went 12-13. Upstarts McNeese State and Southwest Missouri State used their home courts to good advantage Wednesday night and beat a pair of big-time programs in first-round National Invitation Tournament games while Boston University fell just short of duplicating that feat. At Lake Charles, La., Jerome Ba tiste and Kenny Jimerson combined for 45 points as McNeese’s South land Conference champions re corded its 21st consecutive home vic tory with an 86-75 triumph over Dayton. And at Springfield, Mo., Winston Garland scored 15 points and had eight steals to lead Southwest Mis souri over Pittsburgh 59-52. However, Providence, playing at home, sank 12 of 13 free throws in the last 3V-2 minutes and withstood a last-minute scoring binge by Jeff Timberlake to edge Boston Univer- sity 72-69. Batiste, an honorable mention All-American, scored 24 points and led McNeese with 12 rebounds. Ji merson scored 21 points and Mike Marshall had 15. F0RMALS Long, Short, & Tea Length from $59 new arrivals daily '&jxdlU.4 900 Harvey Rd. • Post Oak Village Dresses • Accessories • Tuxedos Open 10 a.m.-7 p.m. Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m.-6 p.m.. Sat. 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DDIdcxbystereor /\ PARAMOUNT PICTURE |f| T PICTURES CORPORATION ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Starts Friday 7:30/9:45 ^SSUH " * j POST OAX MAU 7(4461 S 1 PtmT.INFORMATIONE THEATRE GUIDE 1 Aprff 3-6, 1986 The LARGEST Science Fiction Conven- lion in (he Southwest includes ALL this and more: 8 Blockbuster Movies The Black Cauldron Wizards Ladyhawke Cocoon E.T. 3 Dances Art Show Star Trek Trivia Amateur Video Contest SCA fighting demos Lots of Parties Gaming Banquet Masquerade Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome Mad Max The Road Warrior Panels and Readings Name That Sound Effect TIO table Dealers' Room Live Lovecraftian Quest Secular Humanism Revival Meeting A&M Students pay only $7.50 til Mar. 15 Buy Tickets Now in Rudder Box Office W? Secular Humanism Revival Meeting Live Lovecraftian Quest Animation Demo Name that Sound Effect Dealers' Room Amateur Film Contest Halley's Comet Watch Hall Costume Contest Fan Club Meetings Filksinging SCA Demos Banquet Parties Dances Movies (old and new) Panels & Readings Masquerade Art Show , Auction Gaming ^ A 0 .c?