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About The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (June 9, 1987)
SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE A AM CO. We fix it to last a lifetime. • Now honoring most extended car warranties Open weekdays 8-6, Sat. 8-1 Bryan 779-2626 1215 Texas Ave. Page 8/The Battalion/Tuesday, June 9, 1987 Astros fall below .500 with 5-4 loss to Padres IntUHlucing "TCBV." Qiocoiale Waffle Cones Welcome Bach Aggies FREE DELIVERY 846-0379 MISjik HOUSTON (AP) — San Diego’s Luis Salazar drove in two runs with a home run in the second inning and a game-winning single in a four-run eighth Monday night, leading the Padres to a 5-4 victory over the Houston Astros. It was only San Diego’s 15th win of the season. The Padres started the eighth tra iling 4-1 against Astros starter Bob Knepper, 2-7, but Randy Ready and Shane Mack opened with singles. Both runners scored on a grounder by Carmelo Martinez to shortstop Craig Reynolds, who overthrew first base. yfol ITAD^X Pizza • Italian Dinners * Salads Stroinboli’s • Hoagies Large One Topping Pizza $5 ! + tax ivvpirrs B-14-87 SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE 1 Contact Lenses 1 Only Quality Name Brands (Bausch & Lomb, Ciba, Barnes-Hinds-Hydrocurve) m $79, 00 -STD. DAILY WEAR SOFT LENSES Spate pr. Only $1 0 with purchase of 1st pr. at reg. price m $99. 00 -STD. EXTENDED WEAR SOFT LENSES $99.' m 00 -STD. TINTED SOFT LENSES DAILY WEAR OR EXTENDED WEAR m SALE ENDS JUNE 30, 1987 AND APPLIES TO CLEAR STANDARD m DAILY WEAR STOCK LENSES ONLY Call 696-3754 For Appointment Eye exam and care kit not included CHARLES C. SCHROEPPEL, O.D., P.C. DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY 707 South Texas Ave., Suite 101D College Station, Texas 77840 1 block South of Texas & University SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE SALE \ \ \ l / summer sale MEN'S FRAME RALEIGH CAPRI 10-Speed Oops! Raleigh Painted These The Wrong Color! Save $40. 00 Reg. color $169.95 Special Color $129 95 Raleigh Technium Truckload Sale Technium 440 Reg. 299 95 Special 249 95 Technium 420 Reg. 299 ,s Special 269 9S Technium 480 Reg. 389 95 Special 319 95 Bikes are fully assembled & adjusted to fit rider. Free 30 day service checkup. AGGIELAIXID SCHWINN 9 809 S. Texas Ave. 696-9490 $tudent Specials $2. 49 All You Can Eat Breakfast Buffet or Lunch Buffet w/current ASM or Blinn I.D. good thru June-87 at All Biyan/College Station Kettle Locations Benito Santiago doubled to left, scoring James Steels, who ran for Martinez, to tie the game 4-4. San tiago then stole third and scored the winning run on Salazar’s single to right field. Craig Lefferts, 1-2, got the vic tory, pitching one inning in relief of starter Andy Hawkins, and Rich Gossage got the final six outs for his third save. Houston’s Kevin Bass highlighted a three-run sixth inning with a dou ble prior to San Diego’s comeback. Denny Walling singled and Jose Cruz walked to start the sixth against Hawkins. Bass’ double went to the deep right field corner, scoring Wal ling and breaking a 1-1 tie. Sacrifice flys by Craig Reynolds and Knepper scored Cruz and Bass. Knepper, who gave up four home runs in a 22-7 loss to Chicago in his last start, fell behind 1-0 in the sec ond inning when Salazar hit his sec ond home run of the season. Houston tied it in the fifth when Reynolds led off with a single and went from first to third on Knep- per’s slow-rolling sacrifice bunt. He scored on Billy Hatcher’s ground- out. Tate It Ftqj Me. w Wywr H-JV 1 i*rm Omrxfci Va/fU Cmw A fwnfc. mm f O+vnW Cone- Wi rf*» eirird pWaem of *»*J dtoroU*. tnjor ik* rwo TCfY OiofUl Co*w •'wfc few lii-onw Ajrvor <ir4c*oa» TC8Y f«« trm ff—m rofon fonn* W« M “TCBV” Th* C^ntfrfS BrU thqwrt. AlOCThe rtnm** Of Thr GuUU 404 University 693-6479 25<£OFF CHOCOLATE WAFFLE COM, One coupon per purchase al TCBY stores. Void where proM “TCBV" l he Country)* Iks Xpi Reds rally from 6-0 deficit, top 2nd place Giants 7-6 CINCINNATI (AP) — Dave Par ker’s single in the bottom of the ninth drove in two runs and capped a comeback from a 6-0 deficit as the Cincinnati Reds beat the San Fran cisco Giants 7-6 Monday night. The Giants squandered a 6-0 lead after three innnings as the Reds scored five times in the middle in nings and added the two in the ninth. The Reds increased their lead over second-place San Francisco to three games in the National League West. The winning rally began as Kal Daniels and Eric Davis chew walks from reliever Scroll Garrelts, 5-4. Parker, then singled off left-handed reliever Keith Comstock to score both runners. Left-hander John Franco, 3-1, the filth Reds pitcher, wot it with one inning of relief. Twin City Honda Why Rent When You Can Own! At a nev Jtliat t slice, a ft $398. + TT&L ,ita c ollet I i,t |p<)lice en < xpos se d Natui a te ny en . , ilimm 1 yr. warranty [4, unlimited mileagefX 11 ' 903 S. Main Bryan, Tx. 823-0545 Fjrst in: For Quick inexpen sive convenience Qnn< in a full service Shop, Kw rurlfl: * AI 11 ^ cyci«4 Y‘; Rodriguez on big roll offer fourth straight win Etc. for all your cycling in a needs. Its just acrosspelui.mc the street from cain-jj^j, DALLAS (AP) — Look out Byron Nelson: Chi Chi Rodriguez is on a roll. “How many did Nelson win in a row?” Rodriguez asked Sunday after winning his fourth consecutive se nior golf tournament. “I’ve been thinking about calling him.” Nelson, who lives at Roanoke, Texas, won a record 11 consecutive PGA Tour tournaments in 1945. Rodriguez thrives on falling be hind, then rallying. He erased a three-stroke deficit starting Sunday’s Quantities Limited Across from A&M (next to Red Lobster) “This isn’t no old mans tour. The scores are in credible out here. All you see are red numbers. And the way Rodriguez is play ing he would be winning on the regular tour. ” — Gary Player final round to win the Senior Players Reunion Pro-Am by one shot over Bruce Crampton. In the past 30 days, Rodriguez has won four tournaments and $138,843 on the PGA Seniors Tour. “Winning is a habit I got into and I don’t plan to stop,” Rodriguez said. “I’m playing without any pressure. I got a good contract from Jack Nick- laus with MacGregor (golf equip ment company) so I don’t have to worry about the money.” Three weeks ago, Rodriguez do nated $10,000 of his winnings to the victims of the tornado that struck Sa- ragosa in West Texas May 22, killing 29 people. Sunday, he bought champagne for the press room. “This is for remembering me when I was down,” said Rodriguez, who joined the Seniors tour last year. ‘“Drink up, guys,” Rodriguez said as he celebrated a final-round 7-un der-par 65. Rodriguez posted a record 15-un- der-par 201 for 54 holes over the Bent Tree Country Club course and earned $30,093. Peter Thomson held the old tour nament record of 202, set in 1985. Rodriguez never led until holing a 15-foot putt for a birdie two on the 183-yard 17th. Crampton, who won last week’s Denver Champions of Golf while Rodriguez was on vacation, just missed a 30-footer on the final hole for a tie. Rodriguez, who has earned $242,133 for the year, predicted the score he would have to shoot for the victory. “I told my wife I was going to have to shoot 65 to win and I did,” Rodri guez said. “I lost this tournament to Don January on the 17th hole last year, and I won it on that hole this year.” January didn’t play because of the deat h of his father-in-law. “If January had played, he proba bly would have won again,” Rodri guez said. “I dedicate this victory to Julius Boros, who is in the hospital sick, and January.” Crampton said Rodriguez de served to win. “Chi Chi hit some really great shots,” Crampton said. Rodriguez now has eight regular tour victories and has shot 70 or be low in 12 consecutive rounds. He has finished fifth or better in every Se nior event but one this year. “This isn’t no old man’s tour,” Gary Player said. “The scores are in credible out here. All you see are red numbers. And the way Rodriguez is playing he would be winning on the regular tour.” Rodriguez quipped: “Right now I feel like Clark Kent.” Rodriguez rallied from six shots behind to win both the PGA Seniors title and the United Hospitals Se niors. “I prefer coming from behind,” he said. “It gets me charged up.” Next target on the Rodriguez roll: The Senior Tournament Players Championship at the Canterbury Golf Course in Cleveland. pus We got What it Takes When it Comes to Bikes teaman, if Fast I ommissio ished in it “II this hoice qu< tavc inclu Reagan >f the vot< uestion a teleph £n Jan was i Iried m lent. Tied foi 4 were !uel W< hepherd Vhitney I ipal; Lin Her, wl .oni Ande Condominiums apartment prices •Covered parking •Furnished available •Walking distance to A&M • Washer/Drycr Connections or units WASHU ■T Cen. onday hi ‘ong whet tarings a B was tnily of Ol NEwryr & NORMANDY SQUARE 402 Nagle 846-8960 Great SUMMER rates! REMA Coupon Reel fcjuau rrvrrv o' Arnrri^M Inr ■cord, ms sales capons to P the fu edical bil •t all main I s - This inc res sucl K dang INTERNATIONAL HOUSE ^ PANCAKE^ RESTAURANT v. Kite lacks top recognition but continues winning ways POTOMAC, Md. (AP) — Several players on the PGA Tour are more well known than Tom Kite. But no one is more consistent than Kite. Consistent means winning $3,244,074 to rank fifth on the all- time money winning list, just behind fellow Texan Lee Trevino, who is fourth with $3,270,425. It means 10 tournament titles since 1976. And it means at least one championship in each of the past seven years — a feat no one else on the tour can match. Kite’s seven-stroke victory Sunday in the $700,000 Kemper Open kept the streak alive and earned him $126,000, the biggest payday in his 15-year career. Even when he doesn’t win, the 37- year-old Kite often is among the leaders. He finished in the money 24 of 26 times last year and is going at a similar pace this season. Yet Kite never has won a major ti tle and has trouble envisioning him self as ever dominating the tour. “If I was 28, I might think so. But it’s hard to think ot a guy ap proaching his 40s dominating the tour,” he said. “I’m capable, but dominating is tough. That means four wins a year.” Kite got No. 1 of 1987 by clipping four strokes off par on the back nine, including birdies on Nos. 1 1 and 12 and an eagle on 13. In those three holes, Kite’s lead went from two strokes to six, and he coasted from there. Kite was the only player to break par in all four rounds of the initial PGA Tour event at the par-71, 6,864-yard Tournament Players Club course at Avenel. That’s an other example of consistency. And while much of t he gallery was watching one of the more notable players, Greg Norman, only a few hundred were on hand to watch Kite play the key hole of the tournament. At No. 13, a 524-yard par-5, Kite canned a 40-footer for an eagle. It sent him on the way to the biggest margin of victory on the tour this vear. Mon: Burgers & French Fries Tues: Buttermilk Pancakes Wed: Burger & French Fries Thur: Hot Dogs & French Fries Fri: Beer Battered Fish Sat: French Toast Sun: Spaghetti & Meat Sauce "Hav right effect: All You Can Eat $2" 6 p.m.-Sa^ 1 no take outs must present this Cc [International House of Pancake Restaurant 103 S. College Skaggs Center Call