Major league standings National League East W L Pet. 50 29 .633 46 32 .590 44 38 .537 42 38, .525 37 43 .463 31 49 .388 West Los Angeles 54 27 .667 Cincinnati 44 35 .557 Houston 37 45 '.451 San Francisco 35 48 .422 San Diego 35 50 .412 Atlanta 30 51 .370 Night games not included Wednesday's Results Chicago 8, Montreal 6 ' • Philadelphia 4, New York 3 Pittsburgh 11, St. Louis B Cincinnati 15, Atlanta 13 Houston 2, Los Angeles 1, 14 innings San Diego 7, San Francisco 5, 12 innings Chicago Philadelphia Saint Louis Pittsburgh Montreal New York Yesterday's Games Chicago 2, St. Louis 0 ,San Francisco 5, San Diego 1 ' New York at Philadelphia, n Houston at Los Angeles, n -- Only games scheduled Today's Games St. Louis (Rasmussen 6.10) at Chicago (Burris 9.8) 'Montreal (Twitchell 1-5) at New York (Swan 441),n Philadelphia (Christenson 7.5) at Pittsburgh (Kison 6-4), n Cincinnati (Capilla 141), at Houston (Bannister 4-6), n San Diego (Freisleben 1.5) at Los Angeles (Hooton 7-3), n Atlanta (Niekro 8.9) at San Francisco (Barr 8-6), n Tomorrow's Games St. Louis at Chicago Philadelphia at Pittsburgh Montreal at New York Atlanta at San Francisco Cincinnati at Houston, n San Diego at Los Angeles, n Mansfield/retires spikes PITTSBURGH (AP) --Ray League, and all but one of Mansfield, the Pittsburgh them was with the Steelers. Steelers' oldest veteran at 36, He began his career in 1963 announced his retirement with the Philadelphia Eagles from pro football yesterday. - and his contract -was pur- The 6-foot-3, 260-pound cen- chased the, following' Oar by ter said he would leave the Pittsburgh. game to devote his time to Mansfield never missed a selling insurance, an off- game and played 186 con season job until now. - secutive regular ,season Mansfield played 14 seasons games, 182 of them with Pitts with the , National Football burgh. American League East W L Pct. GB 46 35 .568 46 36 .561 ii/i New York Baltimore 3 1 / 2 7 1 / 2 8 1 / 2 13 1 / 2 191/2 Cleveland 37 39 .487 Milwaukee 38 42 .475 Toronto 9 17% 20 21 24 Chicago Minnesota 45 36 .556 3 Kansas City 43 36 .544 4 California 39 38 . .506 • 7 Oakland Seattle Yesterday's Games Toronto at Boston, n Cleveland at New York, n California at Minnesota, n Milwaukee at Kansas City, n Oakland at Texas, n Only games scheduled Today's Games Chicago ,(Knapp 7-4) at Detroit (Fidrych 6-3), n Toronto (Lemanczyk 7-6) at Cleveland (Eckersley 7-7), n New York (Guidry 6-4) at Baltimore (May 10-7), n Oakland (Langford 6-7) at Kansas City (Colborn 10-8), n Seattle (Abbott 4.7) at Minnesota (Thormodsgard 6-4), n Boston (Cleveland 6-4) at Milwaukee (Augustine 9-9), n California (Tanana 11-5) at Texas (Ellis 4-7), n . Tomorrow's Games Boston at Milwaukee Toronto at Cleveland, n New York at Baltimore, n Oakland at Kansas City, n Seattle at Minnesota, n I ' California at Texas, n Chicago at Detroit, n There are buys that will go to your head in Collegian Classifieds dt.hryCollegian 11:CI:E=1::1:1:11:1 43 34 .558 1 36 44 .450 30 49 .380 47 32 .595 Vegas bout set 38 41 .481 9 39 45 .430 13 35 50 - .412 15 NEW .YORK (AP) Ken Norton and Jimmy Young will shoot for a chance at heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali when they fight Nov. 5 not far from the dice, cards, slot machines and roulette wheels at Las Vegas' gambling palaces. "We took the fight because it's the best fight anybody can make in the heavyweight division, and that includes an Ali fight," Sid Gatherid of Caesars Palace said yesterday at a news conference to formally announce the 12-round fight. The site a 5,000-seat sports pavilion at the hotel-casino was ' the only thing not known before the news conference opened. The participants and the television arrangement for the Don King promotion were an open secret, and it was also known that each fighter will get at least $1 million. Neither King nor the fighters' connections would give an exact amount. Most insiders agreed that the No. 1-ranked Norton will get $1.5 million plus $lOO,OOO in expenses while the second-ranked Young will receive $1 million plus $lOO,OOO. "I suddenly have amnesia," said King when asked the exact purses for the promotion, which he is calling his comeback as a major fight promoter. - , "I came very close to being removed friim the'scene, not from action but from innuendos," King said of the various charges made in connection with his United States Boxing Championships, a tournament suspended by ABC and which still is being investigated by a federal grand jury and the network. Then, in keeping with the gambling motif of a Las Vegas fight, the former numbers banker from Cleveland noted the bout was being announced on July 7, '77 and said, "If I was in the numbers business that would be a triple 7." Both Norton and Young stated that they would have fights before meeting each other in November. ABC annouced that the fight, which could provide Ali with an opponent for a final "big-money" bout, will be part of a televised tripleheader which will be shown during 2'/2 hours of prime time. The other fights have not been determined, a network _ spokesman said. , .. Is anything ~, 4 A worth the terror of • -.,:: .. 1 THE ': ,...3 ', , .) ~ : f - v. : . : „ DEEP - .n i ffE; :. : - , ..;.. ,::. I t H".• 1:00,3:15,5:30,7:45,10:00 126 Carnogle : 9:30400 IT'S FOUR EXORCIST II YEARS LATER.. 11THE HERETIC , Daily 7:45 & 10:00 Sat. &Sun. 1:30-3:30-5:30-7:45-10:00 1.25 til 2:30 . • 11,6 Flel;ler SI. ' CINEMA ~ 2F-7657 . ~ THE INCREDIBLE SPECTACLE OF MEN AND WAR! • Ak:),:: losvplt 1.1 c% Un.d "IS A A 11.11tHX;E 011: • 1(X) FAR 404! Daily 8:30 Sa t.&Sun. 2:30, 5:30, 8:30 • $1.25 Matinee Boston, Chicago win Phillies' streak still alive PHILADELPHIA (AP) Mike Schmidt socked a three run homer in the third inning and Greg Luzinski's single and 'an error produced the winning runs in the fourth last night as the Philadelphia Phillies beat the New York Mets 6-4 for their eighth straight victory and the Mets eighth consecutive loss. . Garry Maddox opened the Phillies', third with a single and took third on Larry Bowa's double. Schmidt then hit his 25th homer of the season to give the Phillips a 3- 0 lead against Met loser Nino Espinosa, 4-7. The Mets raked Philadelphia starter Randy Lerch for four hits and four runs in the fourth. Steve Hayes hits low TURNBERRY, Scotland (AP) Mark Hayes, with the best score ever in this 106-year-old event, a 63, and Roger Maltbie led a talented group of Americans who turned the second round of the British Open yesterday into a shoot-out more typical of the U.S. tour. Maltbie, meanwhile, romped to a 66 and sole control of the lead of 137, three under par on Turn berry's Ailsa course, 6,875 imposing yards that were stripped of their terror by COMPLIMENTS OF THE PENN STATE BOOKSTORE Henderson started it with a_ triple and scored on John Stearns' single. Doug Flynn later doubled across a third run and Espinosa singled home two more for a 4-3 Met lead. The Phillies came back in the last of the fourth to knock out Espinosa and go ahead 5- 4. Maddox and Bowa singled and Schmidt walked to load the bases with two out. Luzinski then singled off Lenny Randle's glove at third, scoring Maddox, and when the ball bounced to Bud Harrelson at short and he threw past first for an error allowing Bowa to score. CHICAGO (AP) Rich Reuschel recorded his 12th unusually warm sunshine and the absence of the prevailing gales off the Irish Sea. U.S. Open champion Hubert Green had a hole in-one and a string of five consecutive birdies for a 66 that left him in a four-way tie with three other Americans. Sharing second with Green one shot out of the lead at 138, were Jack Nicklaus, Lee Trevino and Masters champ Tom Watson. (answers to page 4 puzzle) The Daily Collegian Friday, July 8, 1977-7 victory and Larry Biittner smacked his second homer in as many games yesterday as the Chicago Cubs defeated the St. Louis Cardinals 2-0. Staked to a first-inning unearned run, Reuschel, who has lost twice, struggled all the way, allowing nine hits, and retired the side in order only twice, in the eighth and ninth innings. The shutout ran his streak of scoreless innings to 16 2-3. BOSTON (AP) Carlton Fisk drove in three runs with a homer and a sacrifice fly and Jim Rice drilled three hits, including his 20th homer last night as the Boston Red Sox completed a three-game series sweep over the Toronto NADS crumble Rocks, stay undefeated in IM's The NADS added another game to the win column and remained undefeated after scoring a 5-0 victory over the Rolling Rocks in Intramural softball action Wednesday night. After a no hit, no run first inning, the NADS came out strong in the second with three runs. Henry John drove in the first two runs while the other score came from Tim Graham on an overthrow. • Play moved along quickly with no runs and relatively few hits until the bottom of the sixth when Tom Ashcom of the NADS drove in two runs. The Rolling Rocks were unable to come back in the seventh. The win gives the NADS a record of 4-0 while the Rolling Rocks are 2-2. To stay in the running for first place, the Rocks must win the remainder of their games this season. "It was a tough defensive game. They're a good solid team and the toughest we've faced so far," said Michael Durkot of the NADS after the win. U m ) .:", 234 E. College Ave. Under Mid-State Bank Blue Jays with a 5-2 victory. Fisk, who broke an 0-for-14 slump . Wednesday night, drove in a run with a sacrifice fly in the first inning and beat out an infield single in the third inning. Then he lined his 16th homer in the seventh after Rice had led off with a double. Rice singled to set up a run in the third, hit a long home run to start the fifth, before doubling in the seventh. Boston relief ace Bill Campbell, who hiked his record to 7-5 with victories in the first two games of the series, blanked the Blue Jays for three innings, preserving the victory for Bob Stanley, 5- 3. Campbell earned his 16th save.