The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, April 19, 1990, Image 11

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    c mE, ca^PEViim
201 Live Oak College Station, TX 77840
Behind La Quinta
696-3411
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Thursday, April 19,1990 The Battalion Page 11
City council votes
on Raider move
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OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Silver
and black T-shirts proclaiming the
Raiders were back sold like crazy,
and thousands of seats were re
served for the 1992 season. But the
shirts may be collectors’ items and
tickets refunded after officials vote
Tuesday on rescinding their deal
with the NFL team.
The apparent defeat of the deal
between the Raiders and the city of
Oakland has been reluctantly ac
knowledged by team and local offi
cials as the City Council prepared to
vote to withdraw a $428 million of
fer to lure the team back.
The controversial arrangement
negotiated during the last 14 months
seemed swiftly undone by an end
run of petitions to place the football
pact before Alameda County voters.
Oakland mayor Lionel Wilson an
nounced Monday that he would ask
for the vote, saying that if the deal
“isn’t dead, it’s dying.”
Alameda County Board of Super
visor Don Perata said he, too, saw
the petition drive as a yellow flag
killing the play to get the Raiders to
leave Los Angeles and return to the
Oakland Coliseum, where they
played from 1960 to 1982. The
team’s lease in the Los Angeles Me
morial Coliseum expires at the end
of the 1991 season.
“In my judgment, the deal is over
with,” Perata said. “We can get on to
other matters. The mayor has an
election and I have other business.”
It was the business end of the
Oakland-Raiders game plan oppo
nents questioned. They feared local
taxpayers already strapped with
huge expenses and debts would be
stuck paying millions to the NFL
team if the games didn’t sell out over
the 15-year term of the proposed
contract.
Oakland already owes the Raiders
more than $8 million in damages
and legal fees as a result of losing a
lawsuit to keep the team from leav
ing town.
Jack Brooks, a partner with Raid
ers managing general partner A1 Da
vis, said the package the team had
agreed to orally was different from
the city’s and county’s final offer,
and he wasn’t sure there was any
thing for voters to cast ballots about.
The city and county reduced
ticket sale guarantees to the Raiders
by $174 million after March 30.
“You can’t pull something off the
table that’s not there,” said Brooks.
“If the various politicians running
political campaigns come up with
one common agreement, I will listen
to them, but that would be some
thing of a miracle,” Brooks said.
Davis was unavailable for com
ment Tuesday.
l |iiilSf^KattdBraves
imli consecutive loss
HOUSTON (AP) — Houston’s do.’’
sajik back . in the first a (|
against the Atlanta Braves on
Davis hit a three-ron homer.
the bases smiling to lead the As
tros to a 16-5 victory over the
Craig Biggie and Bill Doran
singled off Derek UHiqimt (0-2)
T was telling Doran that this is
what's so much fun about this
game,’* Davis said. “1 told him
now we can have a little fun.”
Davis didn’t have much fun
Tuesday night when he struck
out four dmes in Houston’s 5-3
■ i funny game. One night
like you never played the
id the next night you’re
Jfjll kinds of things/’ Davis
said>~ : ;•?:
I Davis had three straight bits,
md run in the Astros’
four-run second Inning.
The Braves scored two runs in
the first inning off Bill GuHickson
but they couldn’t keep pace with
the Astros’ 13-bit attack and suf
fered their seventh loss In eight
games this season.
. ‘T got a curve up and inside on
him and hejust hit it out," Lilliqu-
ist said of Davis’ homer. “I didn’t
feel right tonight. 1 couldn’t con
trol the ball the way I normally
was not in a talkative mood, HPI
M The way it started out I
thought it was going to be a pleas
ant night/’ Nixon said, ’*That
feeling didn’t last too long, Lilly
usually works himself out of a
jam. He just didn’t have it
night."
After Xavier Hernandez got
the final out in the third Inning in
relief of GuHickson, winner Dan
Schatzeder (1-0) jpitched four
perfect innings for Houston.:
Danny Darwin and Jim Clancy
each added one perfect ibhufj| as
the last 19 Atlanta hatters were
retired,
The Braves took a 2-G lead in,
the first inning on Odd the Mc
Dowell’s leadoff single, Lonnie
Smith’s triple and Gullickson’s
wild pitch. Alter Davis’ homer
put the Astros ahead in the hot- /
tom of the inning, Atlanta tied it
in the second on an RBI single by.
lilliquist. : 'y^
Houston went ahead to stay
with four runs in 'the bottotn of
the second on a run-storing dou
ble by Mark Davidson and RBI
singles by Eric Yelding, Doran
and Davis.
The Braves made it 7-5 in the:
third on Jim Bresley’s RBI double
and Dale Murphy's RBI single.
But Houston scored twice in
the bottom of the third on RBI
groundnuts by pinch hitter David
Rohde and Yelding, The Astros
added a run in the seventh on
Yelding’s RBI single.: ;
Rangers humilated in 11-6
pounding from Brewers
ARLINGTON (AP) — Robin
Yount’s infield single scored two
runs to highlight a seven-run, fifth
inning as the Milwaukee Brewers
pounded the Texas Rangers 11-6
Wednesday night.
The Brewers chased starter Jamie
Moyer (0-2) in the 35-minute half in
ning as the Rangers went through
four pitchers. Milwaukee sent 13
batters to the plate and only had
four hits.
Yount’s single bounced off the
right leg of reliever Gary Mielke and
scored Gary Sheffield and Edgar
Diaz, putting Milwaukee ahead 4-2.
Rob Deer and Dale Sveum had sacri
fice flies, right fielder Ruben Sierra
dropped a ball for an error and the
Brewers also had four walks and a
hit batter.
Milwaukee starter Jaime Navarro
couldn’t take advantage of a 9-2 lead
to get the victory. He gave up three
straight singles in the bottom of the
fifth and was yanked with no outs in
favor of Bill Krueger. Tony Fossas
(1-2) wound up the winner, working
1 2-3 scoreless innings.
Julio Franco hit an RBI single in
the Texas fifth and the Rangers
scored twice in the sixth on run-scor
ing singles by Jeff Kunkel and Ra
fael Palmeiro that made it 9-5.
Billy Bates had an RBI single in
the Milwaukee seventh and Texas
scored in its half on Mike Stanley’s
pinch-single. The Brewers made it
11-6 in the eighth on Rob Deer’s
RBI single.
Milwaukee took a 1-0 lead in the
first on a walk to Sheffield and a
controversial double by Greg
Vaughn. The ball appeared to bo
unce off the top of the fence, but the
umpires ruled it hit a concrete wall
behind it and called it a home run.
After a long conference, the um
pires decided it was a double.
CLASS OF '91
Committee Chair
Applications Available
in MSC 216, 2nd floor Pavilion, Guard Room
Ring Dance
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D ^ = ‘Applications Due April 20 by 5pm, MSC 216
Applications also available for Class of '92
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^COLLEGE STATION HILTON
801 University Drive East, College Station, Texas 77840
409/693-7500
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