C.C. reader. ([Middletown, Pa.]) 1973-1982, June 10, 1982, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Page 9
p.m.; Saturday, June 12, 11:00 a.m., 3:30
******l o l•4************** p.m., 8:00 p.m.; Sunday, June 13, 1:00
= p.m., 5:30 p.m. • Tuesday, June 15, 7:30
=
= p.m.; Wednesday, June 16, 4:00 p.m.,
. CIRCUS 8:00 p.m.; Thursday, June 17, 4:00 p.m.,
8:00 p.m.; Friday, June 18, 4:00 p.m.,
41 4
=
=
ATTRMTIONS 8:00 p . m.;
8:00
p.m.;.; Saturday, June tm sue e I d 9 e , y, 11:
J Oo un a e 20 . m .:
E
3:30
p.m., L. 1 1 :00 a.m., 300 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. 30,
E
E
*Cuts should
g Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey During a 1968 engagement of Ringlings(
=Circus takes up where the 76ers leave off
Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus at * be
= be made in
when championship stlye basketball on Madison Square Garden, the troupe
-The grim reaper was about to again do E unicycles moves into the Spectrum with waited outside for Irvin Feld, producer ofigsPortS
away with the Philadelphia 76ers. _the Greatest Show on Earth for 22 perfor
. the Greatest Show On Earth, and audi-*
Campus Digest News Service
However, the team finally has shown its i mantes Wednesday, June 9 through Sun- tioned on the sidewalks of Manhattan.
true character. To those who would still I day, June 20. Feld, impressed by the troupe's potentia Funds for athletic programs should
run the team down: what more proof dol . , The King charles Troupe, the only all- and athletic prowess, offered them a con- the first to go when the budget ax
you need? A championship? If Magic andE black basketball unicycle act in ex- tract on the spot. 7 tarts swinging. That's according to a
Kareem don't screw it up, perhaps that i istence, celebrates its 14th year with The 12-man King Charles Troupe in4majority of college and university ad
will come true. I Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Cir
. eludes Valerie Valentine, the first female.kministrators surveyed in a recent na
-An,_
interesting note on the recent Indy 'I cus. The talented group of 11 men and a member of the troupe, along with v'tional poll.
500: The late-race battle betweenE woman duplicate on unicycles many of 13-year-old Greg Rone, the troupe'sit More than 3,000 were asked which
Johncock and Mears is only a continua-E the spectacular dunks, dribbles and Youngest member. * funds should be cut first and which
tion of the on-going battle both on and off =passes normally found on the basketball The all-new production of the Greatest r" ast as their institutions faced reduced
the track between the Roger Penske and E hardwood. Show On Earth also features , daredevil amounts available for operations.
Pat Patrick racing teams. Another ex-E Created by unicyclist Jerry King and Elvin Bale, performing atop the "VVhee The survey also probed opinions
ample is the war of the words between g his son, Charles, the original King of Death"; the smallest man in th e *
and characteristics of administrators
Mario Andretti and Kevin Cogan ith-E Charles Troupe was formed on the world, 33-inch Michu, debuting a train
mediately after the race. The competi- i streets of the Bronx, N.Y., as a p on y and poodle act; famous ti ger e n higher education.
Money for sports was picked by
tion on the tr..;-; - .Y. between the two grouts! neighborhood unicycle club. During a trainer Charly Baumann; the world'sy,,
may be good for the sport, but the war off Er. daily practice, someone tossed one of the greatest trapeze artist, Miguel Vazquez,7 4 .over 61 percent of those responding
the track may once again tear Indy rac-E riders a basketball—thus began their new attempting a quadruple somersault*as least essential to their institutions.
ing asunder. =act. Christopher Adams, the "Humany Those items that most ad
-While Americans worry a boutE ./ILAILAILAILII***** Rocket," who is blasted 150 feet through`m,_ inistrators rated as the last to go in
baseball, the rest of the world will be[ . The ban of beer in executive or.. the air across the arena; dancingg c luded funds for teaching (62
following soccer's World Cup, which ices, which was done in the name o dromedaries, strutting stiltwalkers percent), faculty salaries (57 percent),
begins on June 13. For those interested, eeping up with modern decorum and amazing acrobats and gorgeous financial aid to students (56 percent),
Brazil, with a superior midfield including urrent management practices,' af- showgirls.
and funds for libraries (50 percent).
Diego Zico and Socrates, should be fected thousands of employees at Tickets at $9, $7.50, $6 and $4.50 are
Other areas tagged for first cuts
favored to win, along with the talented :Anheuser-Busch's 11 plants around 7 1
h ho available at the Spectrum box office andii
Argentine and West German squads. i he country. L
_all Ticketron locations, including Spec- were clerical and other support staffs
nlllMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll# 1E trum Showcase stores at the Deptfordtrand funds for research.
Although management will be per- (N.J.) Mall and the Court at King off Asked Asked about issues with which
No more drinks forming with dry throats, the union Prussia (Pa.). Tickets may also belkthey expected to be concerned in the
members at the plants can still quench charged by phbone through the Spec* next five years, a majority of the ad
in the brewery their thirst any time. A clause in theirar trum's Charge Line by calling (215 tkministrators responding to the survey
contract includes the privilege of par "" LINE-555. r l gave great importance to recruiting
taking of the foaming beverage the y Special discounts are available for( new students and retaining those
produce. schools, senior citizens, youngster, an* already enrolled.
other groups of 25 or more by calling the,_
Campus Digest News Service The management did not lose out Over 60 percent said collective
Spectrum's group sales department at'
The order came down at Anheuser- all around however, in lieu of their (215) 463-4300. bargaining was likely to have little or
Hirsch in St. Louis. The management drinking during office hours, they are Performances are: Wednesday, June 9no importance at their institutions.
would no longer be allowed to drink permitted to take home two free cases
at 7:30 p.m.; Thursday, June 10, 10: An interesting sidelight to the
on the job. It was a move that of beer each month as long as they ica.m.; Friday, June 11, 10:30 a.m., 7: survey revealed that the molt COM
disrupted a long brewer' tradition. don't sell it.
of administrators'
***************** ~ * **********************4*********.*************-*********************/ mon occu pati on
41 spouses Was homemaking„ followed
Thoro
ghbred Rac • ng 4,
*by kindergarten or preschool
*
* teaching. The survey found that over
+ 91
* percent of the adminstrators
4 * responding are white and less than 20
or overseas, it seems a rather grim year : percent are women.
in the horse racing world. The races will, t A major increase in competition for
indeed, still be run and may end up mat-
*students in recent years was reported
ching the excitement of past years. The : by about a third of the respondents.
performances, however, will not match +A4, A third also reported a moderate
that of the Seattle Slews and Spectacular
*decrease in faculty morale.
Bids of the past.
* The study was conducted by the
Blame is irrelevant in this case. A •
Center for the Stud of High
word to the wise, however; as you watch : y er Educa
and follow the Belmont and the other ma- : tion at Pennsylvania State Universi
jor thoroughbred races this year, don't : ty, in cooperation with the American
expect any greatness. It's just not there. I ti Council on Education.
Sports
By Joe Sucec
CLEANING OUT THE NOTEBOOK
By Joe Sucec
For those in the thoroughbred horse
racing world, every late winter and early
spring means one thing- the preparatory
races for the Kentucky Derby. There's
the Gotham and the Wood Memorial at
Aqueduct in New York, the California
and Santa Anita Derbys at Santa Anita,
the Flamingo and Florida Derbys at
Hialeah, and the Louisiana and Arkansas
Derbys at the Fairgrounds and Oaklawn
respectively.
Every year, the above races whittle
down the thousands of fast three year
olds to but a few for the Derby and the
other two Triple Crown races. The horses
that answer the call to post at Churchill
for the Derby are supposedly the best
that North America's stables have pro
duced in a given year. The older horses
get their chance later in the year, in
races like the Marlboro and the Arlington
Million. For the time being, however, the
Derby starters are considered the best
thoroughbred racing has to offer.
They were until this year.
In said preparatory races, no less than
three odds-on Derby favorites went down
with various injuries and ailments. First
there was D'Accord, the great New York
hope-he collapsed in training for the
Wood and was retired to stud. Then, out
of Florida, was Timely Writer-after the
Florida Derby, that colt turned up with a
rather untimely and rather suspicious
leg injury. Scratch Timely Writer.
The favorites' role then fell to Hostage,
the surprise - winner of the Arkansas Der
by. Less than ten days before the Derby,
he, too, went down, the victim of another
suspicious leg injury.
Count em. Three off-on favorites-three
injuries, all sudden, two of a rather
suspicious nature. Now this reporter is
not going to make any rash accusations,
but it sure sounds as if somebody
desperately wanted to win that race.
Whether or not you agree with that line
of thinking, you do have to agree that the
horses that did start this year's Derby
are among the weakest in fifteen years.
The winner, Gato Del Sol, finished in
2:02.1, a slow time at 1 1 / 2 miles for even
the kind of stock Penn National has been
running of late. The best three year old
this year may well be Conquistador
Cielo, who did not even run in the Derby
or the Preakness. Conquistador Cielo set
a track record of 1:33 on Memorial day in
the Metropolitan Mile at Belmont.
Moreover, Linkage and Aloma's Ruler,
along with Conquistador Cielo, have not
been able to consistently match the per
formance of the great horses of the past
(Secretariat, Affirmed, seattle Slew, et
al) in the same races over the same
courses.
So, what about the older horses? Will
they be able, like the great John Henry
last year, to overshadow the three year
olds and provide race fans with
something to be optimistic about this
year? Well, last year's good three year
old, Pleasant Colony, has already been
retired to stud. As has Temperance Hill,
the New York-based distance king of two
years ago. The great filly of that same
year, derby winner Genuine Risk, has
also been retired and is currently being
bred to the greatest thoroughbred in
history, Secretariat. John Henry himself
has reached the age of eight and, like the
great Forego at that advanced age for a
racehorse, has shown some signs of slow
ing down.
Barring any surprises in this country
Solution—To Page 11
June 10, 1982