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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (May 9, 1986)
Friday, May 9, 1986/The Battalion/Page 11 lues snuff lames 5-2 tie series TANK MCNAMARA® by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds s uggei ^vers i >T. LOUIS (AP) — Rick Meagher I two goals, the second while his joints in m L as shorthanded, to help the St. rayeiteltljs Blues to a 5-2 victory over the isndv.d |gai v Flames Thursday night and isive Hoi » n |their Stanley Cup semifinal nmttol jes a t two victories each. ''"Mai fhi fifth game of the best-of- 'en Campbell Conference final will out()1 Saturday in Calgary. Game six will here next Monday. 11K | ( Danny McDonald scored both Cal- •u-oi ry goals, each on a power play. “^Bnald’s second goal, in the open- ^■inute of the final period, fol- itrep Meagher’s second by 26 :onrls. But it was not enough to i off ll) ercpme the lead St. Louis had built, the thin Meagher and Mark Hunter con- yd gettircted for Blues goals four minutes ito a63-t jartlin the opening period. St. Louis had M ade it 3-0 on Gino Cavallini’s re- the Nu^ iunp at 16:03 of the second session, produce en outlasted a Calgary surge which ig intoiemrned from defenseman Rob I'c^Bge's six minutes in penalties late th< second period. Ramage was Ck 1 lle<l for a double minor for aigfnng and a two-minute penalty 'r hooking. 'Bernie Federko, who ended the ime with an empty-net goal with ^■conds to play, won a faceoff in e fflames’ zone to set up Hunter’s jening goal, a slapshot that sailed ||Calgary goalie Mike Vernon at 33 of the first period. Rookie Herb ^^■n helped St. Louis make it 2-0 at , ™‘|f37 when he sent a pass from the ", ght corner onto the stick of eagher, who had Vernon at his erc\ at the goalmouth. ^■vallini, a former Flame, scoring is fourth goal of the playoffs, beat ernon on a rebound of Lee Nor ood s blocked shot, sending home a I" 1 ' 1 3-foot drive after Calgary’s Paul einhart failed to clear the puck. Tile Flames then began to stir. [cDpnald capitalized on the penal- ES assessed Ramage by referee Bob [yers with a 20-foot blast past Blues irC oaltender Rick Wamsley with 54 W :conds left in the period. Bui Meagher, who is in his sixth HL season but had never been with team which made the playoffs, ne tted that on a pass from Ric Nat- essi who stole the puck from the fostonRfd'lames and skated into the Calgary red M . me. By winning, St. Louis atoned for a tch M. 3 setback here in Game Three, dhasdivV Scrappy Blues’ penalty killing make the dif ference. St. Louis within ale®trolled the early action and killed inor penalties to Raglan and Doug igels 6 ilmour before McDonald got his iwer-play goal. Bud MarrjlB eiorufl Weekend Schedule rnia Angel' ■ Friday, May 9 Rangers at Montreal, 6:35 p.m. Saturday, May 10 Louis at Calgary, 7:05 p.m. c in 6c Sunday, May 11 :>ntrealat N.Y. Rangers, 6:35 p.m., necessary. lie Lake lead ovei icks. le open: ut never old Ab ;t he Lai shot thef TCU may accept penalties riners2 ■nett’swiM the sen FORT WORTH (AP) — NCAA penalties assessed Texas Christian University’s football program prob ably won’t be appealed, the Fort Worth S t a r - T e 1 e g r a m said Thursday. There has been no announcement outlining the penalties or the school’s response, but a TCU press confer ence is expected Friday, the news paper said. TCU officials declined to com ment to The Associated Press Thursday. The Star-Telegram quoted an un identified source as saying the penal ties had been adjusted somewhat from those previously discussed be tween TCU of ficials and the NCAA’s Committee on Infractions. But TCU officials disagree as to the public response they will make. Indications are that the adjustments were insignificant and that TCU sees the penalties as too harsh in light of its self-disclosure and self- chsc'tpYmary measures. The investigation began after coach Jim Wacker permanently sus pended seven players when he learned last September they had been taking illegal cash payments from boosters and had been illegally re cruited. Five were key figures, including All-America running back Kenneth Davis. Previous reports said the original penalties involved a ban on television and bowl appearances for one year, a loss of 35 scholarships over a two- year period and a three-year proba tion. The television ban could cost the school more than $340,000 based on last year’s shared revenue in the Southwest Conference. Ricky Peele of the Raycom Net work, which has the rights to SWC football games, said Wednesday TCU was not included on the 1986 Raycom TV schedule on orders from the NCAA and the SWC. That sche dule is to be Finalized at the SWC spring meetings later this month. “About a week ago, the NCAA cal led and said to leave TCU off the schedule in football,” said Peele, who works in the network’s promming de partment. “I’ve seen the final sche dule and TCU is not on it.” SWC Commissioner Fred Jacoby said, “We’re just trying to cover al eventualities.” TCU has 15 days to appeal the NCAA’s decision. Cubs hold off Dodger comeback to win 6-5 6 cU at CHICAGO (AP) — Shawon Dun- . on’s leadoff home run started a i J/PCur-ruti rally in the fifth inning 1 hursday, and the Chicago Cubs •ingmi fora 6-5 victory over the Los ngeles Dodgers. Scott Sanderson, 2-1, was the win- :r although he was rocked for four C , |, ms in the first inning. Jerry Reuss, OCtUd, was the loser. Lee Smith, the ird Chicago pitcher, came on to d ilta rally after the Dodgers drew to thin a run in the eighth. He got his cond save. With the Cubs trailing 4-2, Dun- >n opened the fifth with his fifth nnei into a 22-mile-an-hour wind ainst Reuss. Gary Matthews dou- piand scored on a single by Keith stauranl 0reland - Pirates 8, Giants 2 PITTSBURGH (AP) Mike Bielecki allowed four hits over seven innings and Sid Broam drove in three runs with a double and a single as the Pittsburgh Pirates defeated the San Francisco Giants 8-2 Thursday night. Bielecki, 3-0, lost his shutout bid and a 15-inning scoreless streak when Joel Youngblood hit a pinch-hit homerun leading off the eighth. He struck out four and walked four and held the Giants hitless for six innings until yielding solo homers in the eighth to Youngblood and Will Clark. Jim Winn relieved Bielecki and finished with two hitless innings. Braves 10, Reds 5 CINCINNATI (AP) — Dale Mur phy hit two home runs to account for five runs as the Atlanta Braves whip ped Cincnnati 10-5 Thursday, hand ing the stumbling Reds their 10th loss in the last I I games. Murphy’s three-run, first-inning homer, followed by Bob Horner’s fifth home run of the season, gave the Braves a four-run lead. Both belts came off John Denny, 1-4, who gave up six runs in three innings. Craig McMurtry 1-1, blanked the Reds until he walked two batters in the eighth. Paul Assenmacher gained his first save with two perfect innings of relief. CONTACT LENSES $7900 t $99 00 00 pr.* - daily wear soft lenses pr.* - extended wear soft lenses pr.* - tinted soft lenses j /wefi# 5 !t erS ' .Ml ,0P< jieexacW fjustke# ire. alway ! jjd call 696-3754 FOR APPOINTMENT ' EVE EXAM AND CARE KIT NOT INCLUDED OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D.,P.C. 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LOUIS (AP) — Pitcher Tim Conroy tossed a five-hitter and drove in four runs Thursday as the St. Louis Cardinals emerged from a slump with 20 hits in a 13-3 rout of the San Diego Padres. Left-hander Conroy, 2-1, hit a two- run double in a five-run seventh and added a two-run single in a three-run eighth as St. Louis won consecutive games for the first time since April 19. The Cards won for only the fourth time in 17 games while hand ing San Diego its fifth loss in six games. Dave Dravecky, 2-3, surrendered 1 1 of the St. Louis hits. Offer valid through May 18,1985 at participating Bryan & College Station Arby's Not Valid with other offer. Pre Lease Now and Pay No Security Deposit Lease Now and Save $$ 5 Packages Taillored to Your Tastes, Needs and Comfort. Freshman Package $39.00 Sophomore Package $49.00 Junior Package $59.00 Senior Package $75.00 Graduate Package $85.00 (Add S15-$25 for each additional bedroom) All Packages consist of a complete Living Room, Dining Room and Bedroom. 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