The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, August 08, 1980, Image 4

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    6—The Daily Collegian Friday, August 8,1980
Carlton wins 17th game
PHILADELPHIA (AP) Pitcher
Steve Carlton drove in the eventual
winning run and became the National
League’s first 17-game winner last night
as the Philadelphia Phillies beat the St.
Louis Cardinals 3-2.
Carlton had help from a superb
defense and a two-run single by Larry
Bowa.
The Cardinals’ John Fulgham, 3-4,
pitched four perfect innings before the
Phillies fell on him in the fifth for all
their runs.
Mike Schmidt walked to open the
inning and was forced by Garry Maddox.
Manny Trillo doubled Maddox to third
and Bowa then sliced a single down the
left field line, sending the Phillies ahead
2-1 and taking second on the throw to the
plate.
Carlton, 17-6, allowed just six hits in
82-3 innings and added four strikeouts to
his league-leading 191. He singled Bowa
home with what proved to be the winning
run.
Pirates 11 Cubs 3
CHICAGO (AP) Bill Madlock hit a
two-run homer, highlighting a 16-hit
attack that carried the Pittsburgh
Pirates to an 11-3 victory over the
"Walrus' leads PGA tourney
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) Craig
Stadler, the chunky guy called “the
Walrus” by his fellow touring golfers,
shot a solid, 3-under-par 67 and took
the lead yesterday in the storm
delayed first round of the 62nd PGA
national championship.
Stadler, who carries 220 pounds on
a 5-foot-10 frame, had to wait for 36
minutes during a late-afternoon
thunderstorm delay before finishing
par on the two toughest holes on the
course for sole control of the lead.
Defending champion David
Graham of Australia and the man he
beat in a playoff for the 1979 title, Ben
Crenshaw, were at 69, l'-under par on
the 6,964-yard Oak Hill Country Club
course that, most leading players
agreed, played about as easily as it
ever will.
Phillies'Smith a blooming talent
PHILADELPHIA (AP) Lonnie Smith has stolen
just 22 bases in the major leagues, so nobody is
speaking his name yet in the same breath with Lou
Brock or Maury Wills. Maybe not even Omar Moreno.
But anybody who knows baseball, and can recognize
a talented base stealer, will tell you that Smith, the
rookie Philadelphia Phillies’ outfielder, looks like the
game’s next great base thief.
Smith insists that he doesn’t pattern his base stealing
after Brock, Wills, Moreno or anybody else. He says
candidly that he never has studied any other base
stealer. He’s just doing what comes naturally to Lonnie
Smith.
“My philosophy is just to get a good sized lead, the
best jump I can and go. I haven’t worried about many
catchers, maybe Johnny Bench a little,” Smith con
ffded.
Smith says he knows a little about the pitchers, but
hasn’t really studied them to any great extent.
“I get one foot on the turf and that most times is good
enough to steal a base.”
He admits that Phillies’ coach Bill DeMars gave him
one valuable tip the Phillies’ batting instructor learned
from Brock that is to open the lead foot so when you
make the pivot to run you’re already turned around.
An important factor in base stealing is the batter who
comes up after Smith. In this case it’s Pete Rose.
Every good base stealer has a disciplined batter
hitting after him, one willing to sacrifice a few pitches
to give the runner- a chance to go.
Wills had the late junior Gilliam. Brock had Teddy
Sizemore among others.
“The second hitter plays a big role for any base
Pirates gain on Expos
Chicago Cubs yesterday.
It was the third straight triumph for
the Pirates, who moved within P/2
games of first-place Montreal in the
National League East. The Expos were
beaten by the New York Mets 7-1.
The Cubs got solo home runs from
Mike Tyson in the first inning and Jesus
Figueroa in the second, his first in the
major leagues. The Pirates tied the
score with two runs in the bottom of the
second on a wild pitch and Phil Garner’s
triple, then went ahead 3-2 in the third on
Dave Parker’s double and Willie
Stargell’s single.
Larry Biittner doubled and scored on a
single by Figueroa in the fourth before
Madlock broke a 3-3 tie in the fifth with
his fifth home run of the season and his
first since May 17.
Mets 7 Expos 1
MONTREAL (AP) Ray Burris
pitched a six-hitter in his first start since
returning from the 21-day disabled list
and Joel Youngblood and Jerry Morales
hit home runs as the New York Mets
defeated the Montreal Expos 7-1
yesterday.
Burris lost his shutout bid when
Hale Irwin, a two-time U.S. Open
titleholder, also was at 69.
“If you’re ever gonna shoot a
decent score here, this is the day to do
it,” said Twitty, the recent winner of
the Hartford Open.
But the pre-tournament favorites,
Tom Watson, Lee Trevino and Jack
Nicklaus, weren’t able to take ad
vantage of the relatively easy scoring
conditions: soft greens which held the
approach shots,. soft fairways that
kept the ball from running into the
deep, treacherous rough, and the
absence of wind.
Nicklaus, who broke his long slump
with a dramatic victory in the U.S.
Open a couple of months ago,
managed a round of par 70.
“I played fairly well, but I missed
stealer,” Smith observed. “Pete (Rose) has told me he
doesn’t mind taking a few pitches to give me,a chance.
He likes to hit with two strikes.”
Smith explained that he doesn’t study the pitchers or
the catchers that much because as a rookie he’s con
centrating on all phases of the game. He’s looking for
some things to help his overall game. Mostly a center
fielder in the minors, Smith has had some problems in
left and right.
Smith is playing left these days in place of the in
jured Greg Luzinski, and his speed has bailed him out
of some rough situations. He’s still learning to listen to
the sound off the bat and admits that sometimes he
misreads it, and has to rush back or in to make the
catch, which at times makes him look clumsy.
Smith has the “green light” from manager Dallas
Green to steal whenever the player thinks he can pilfer
a base. Green has cautioned him, however, to be
careful in certain situations. Don’t run the team out of
a rally, or run when they’re two or three runs down.
Smith has hit in nine of his last 11 games, getting 16
hits at 48 at bats for a .333 average. He scored 13 runs.
He’s stolen 10 straight bases and 17 of his last 18 at
tempts to take the club lead. Only three catchers have
thrown him out this season Pittsburgh’s Steve
Nicosia, Chicago’s Tim Blackwell and St. Louis’ Ted
Simmons.
Rose is enthralled with young Smith. The 39-year-old
first baseman views the outfielder as a great young
talent.
While Rose is doing everything he can to help the
youngster, the infielder claims it hasn’t changed his
philosophy of a lifetime as a top hitter.
Rowland Office slammed his fourth
homer of the year leading o£f the seventh
inning. Burris struck out two and walked
none in raising his record to 5-6.
Padres 5 Astros 1
HOUSTON (AP) Jerry Mumphrey
rapped out three hits and drove in three
runs and Bob Shirley hurled a four-hitter
for his first complete game of the season
as the San Diego Padres defeated the
Houston Astros 5-1 last night.
Mumphrey drove in San Diego’s first
run with a third-inning single following
walks to Shirley and Gene Richards.
He added a two-run double in the sixth
against Houston starter Joe Niekro, 11-
10, to help break the Padres’ 10-game
losing streak in the Houston Astrodome.
Mumphrey’s double was preceeded by a
single by Richards and a walk to Ozzie
Smith..
Orioles 2 White Sox 1
BALTIMORE (AP) Ken Singleton
drove in Baltimore’s second run of the
sixth inning, giving the streaking Orioles
a 2-1 victory over the White Sox last
night.
an awful lot of putts,” said Nicklaus,
seeking to add a record-matching
fifth Professional Golfers Association
title to his record collection of 16
major-tournament victories.
Trevino said he was far from being
discouraged after a 74 and Watson
was disappointed but far from out of
it after a 75.
Watson, a five-time winner on the
U.S. tour this season and making his
first start since winning the British
Open two weeks ago, didn’t make a
birdie in his effort that left him eight
shots off the pace.
“But that doesn’t put me out of it. I
still think the winning score is going
to be around 280 (par). But it means
that this has to be my bad round. I
can’t afford another one. It means I
have to play three good rounds.”
Pittsburgh Pirate Bill Madlock seems undaunted by boos from Chicago Cub fans as he is congratulated by Dave Parker, left,
and Lee lacy, center, after he hit a home run to left field in the fifth inning of yesterday’s game which ended with an 11-3
victory for the Pirates.
Madlock's
CHICAGO (AP) Bill Madlock
doesn’t mind the Wrigley Field boo birds
at all. In fact, he seems to take devilish
delight when Chicago Cub fans get on
him.
Madlock responded with a single in a
two-run second inning, then broke a 3-3
tie with a two-run homer in the fifth to
launch the Pittsburgh Pirates to an 11-3
victory over the Cubs yesterday.
“The boos don’t bother me,” Madlock,
a former Cub, said. “I understand. The
“I don’t think I’ve changed my swing,” Rose said. “I
do have to have more patience. . . .don’t hack at the
first pitch. I can do it. I’ve never been asked, but my
personality is a desire to win.”
Rose makes it clear that he doesn’t go to bat with the
thought of sacrificing himself for Smith.
“My philosophy still is to get a hit every at bat,”
Rose emphasized. “I remember when I led off at
Cincinnati and got on base so often it gave a lot of guys
a chance to build their RBIs. So, if Smith helps my RBI
production it’s an about face.”
Rose says he doesn’t expect Smith to keep hitting in
the .350 area, but that he doesn’t see any weakness in
the youngster’s swing.
“I’d like to see him wait a bit more. He has some
power and he’s going to develop that. But he likes to
run and that’s what is important. A lot of guys in the
league can, run like deer but don’t like to run,” Rose
explained.
Rose said Smith adds a dimension to the Phillies that
is changing the philosophy of the team. He also noted
that Smith doesn’t ask many questions, and that Rose
reserves his talking to the rookie to advising him on the
opposing pitcher.
“I don’t want to confuse him by talking too much,”
Rose said. “I just relate to him what the pitcher
throws. It’s a lot easier for him to go up there and not
get behind the pitcher. The important thing is that he is
relaxed when he’s playing.”
Smith sums his outlook this way:
“I run to satisfy myself. I like to steal because it
gives me satisfaction. I like to challenge the pitchers,
to see if I’m capable of doing the job. I really don’t like
tips. I like to do things on my own.”
bat responds to boos
fans are frustrated. They’ve never had a
winner and they have to take it out on
somebody.”
Madlock’s homer was his fifth this
season and first since May 17. “I expect
to finish strong and I expect the club to
finish strong and win the pennant,” he
said.
“Really, it’s fun when the fans boo me
here,” added Madlock, who Wednesday
knocked Cubs shortstop Steve Macko out
Montreal
Pittsburgh
Philadelphia
New York
St. Louis
Chicago
Houston
Los Angeles
Cincinnati
San Francisco
Atlanta
San Diego
Thursday's Games
New York 7, Montreal 1
Pittsburgh 11, Chicago 3
Philadelphia 3, St. Louis 2
Atlanta 4, Los Angeles 3
San Diego 5, Houston 1
Only games scheduled
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SUNDA Y 1:00 - 1:50A.M. Next to Mr. C’s
of the game while breaking up a double
play. “The things they boo me for now
are the things they cheered me for when
I was here. I can’t hold it against them.
The main thing now is for us to win the
pennant.”
The Pirates unloaded a 16-hit barrage
against the Cubs, with pitcher Eddie
Solomon cracking a pair of doubles and
Tim Foli driving in three runs with a
double and two singles.
Pet. GB
New York
CO 46 .566
59 48 .551 11-.l 1 -. 1 Baltimore
55 48 .534 3'-. Detroit
52 55 • .486 B'.a Cleveland
47 58 .448 12'a Milwaukee
43 61 .413 16 Boston
Toronto
59 48 .551 - KamasCity '
59 49 . 546 'a Oakland
58 51 .532 2 J“ as
52 56 .481 71a Minnesota
48 59 .449 11 Ch ' c , a 6°,
48 61 .440 12 California
Seattle
Late game not included
- l.*A h/u.r’iiu
Thursday’s Games
Baltimore 2, Chicago 1
Boston 7, Milwaukee 3
Cleveland 7, Toronto 6
Minnesota at California, (n)
Only games scheduled
UPI photo
W I. Pci. GB
67 39 .632
61 44 .581
56 47 .544
54 49 .524
56 51 .523
55 51 .519
45 60 .429
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46 60
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39 68
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25 * \k
Clinger: registration
may not mean draft
By LYNDA ROBINSON
Daily Collegian Staff Writer
Registration of 19- and 20-year-olds
will not automatically lead to a
peacetime draft, Rep. Bill Clinger, R
central Pa. said yesterday.
A poll he and congresswoman
Geraldine A. Ferraro, D-NY., con
ducted among congressmen who
voted in favor of registration
revealed they would vote to defeat a
peacetime draft in the absence of a
national emergency, he said.
At yesterday’s “constituents
hour,” Clinger told about 30 State
College citizens he voted for
registration for two basic reasons.
“I think it is important to identify
what the manpower pool is and what
is available,” he said. “I also knew
that there would be constitutional
challenges that shouldn’t be decicded
during a national emergency.”
Clinger supports registration of
women, but qualified that support
with the stipulation that the Equal
Rights Amendment be passed first.
On the issue of compliance, Clinger
did not know what action Congress
will take if compliance is below the 99
percent, estimate of the National
Selective Service System.
“Prison sentences are not the
answer, and I hope that an equitable
solution can be worked out,” he said.
However, a more important issue
than registration is the personnel
problems of the volunteer army,
Clinger said. '
“I have become concerned about
losing trained people at an alarming
pace,” he said. “A more pressing
problem is how to retain those people
and make the military more at
tractive.”
Often after the government spends
$900,000 to train a pilot, that pilot
leaves the military and finds em
ployment in the private sector,
Clinger said.
“Even the most dedicated soldier
needs to make a living, and the in
dications are that military personnel
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are leaving most often because they
can make more money in the civilan
world,” Clinger said in a published
statement Tuesday.
The congressman is co-sponsoring
legislation that would increase pay
for several categories of military
personnel.
In regard to energy problems, he
said the country cannot afford to
shutdown nuclear power plants.
“I really consider energy the most
critical long-term problem that we
face,” he said. “We do not have the
luxury of an option between solar,
nuclear, geothermal and wind power.
The crisis is so serious that we must
proceed in all directions.
“Nuclear waste is a big problem,
but I don’t think you can turn your
back on it,” Clinger said. “I think
there can be safe 1 nuclear power
plants.”
Another issue Clinger addressed
was the use of a tax cut as a means to
stimulate the economy.
“If we permit people to keep more
of what they make, they will save a
portion or invest a portion and that
will stimulate capital investment,”
he said.
“One constituent told me, ‘Don’t do
anything for me when you get to
Washington because I. can’t afford
it,’ ” he said. .
The problem of public tran
sportation for the handicapped was
also raised at the meeting.
Clinger said there is really no need
to make every bus equally accessible
to the handicapped. He favors the
Cleveland Amendment which would
give the locality alternatives to
mandatory handicapped accessibilty
on buses.
“It does, to some extent come down
to a question of cost,” he said.
A freshman congressman seeking
re-election in November, Clinger said
he has concentrated on two areas:
public buildings and economic
development of the private sector.
326 E. C
liege Ave.
Former student promotes anarchy movement
He wears an ankh, his name
By MIKE IIEIMOWITZ
Daily Collegian Staff Writer
Urban riots exploding in the South.
Young men registering for the draft. Ku
Klux Klan members and American
Nazis on trial for murder. An anarchist
at the University trying to organize a
student demonstration at the
Democratic National Convention. Sound
like the ’6os? It is happening right now.
'lpersonally believe the
idea that people should
maintain power over other
people through violence is
the greatest problem this
world faces. Anarchy is the
freedom of all people to
love each other.'
He has long, blonde hair and a
moustache and goatee framing his. face.
He wears a neclace around his neck
called an “ankh.” The ankh symbolizes
“free love,” he says. He just returned
from a few months spent in Seabrook,
N.H., protesting ntfclear power. He will
depart soon for New York City and the
Democratic Convention.
His name is Rainbow. “My name is
neither legal or illegal,” he says. “It’s
simply my name.”
Rainbow’s political philosophy is one
of anarchy. He was a University student
from Fall Term ’77 until this Spring
Term when he dropped out. While a
student he initiated a Free U course on
anarchy, but didn’t get much response.
Expressing his political philosophy
Rainbow said, “I personally believe the
idea that people should maintain power
over other people through violence is the
greatest problem this world faces.
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Smart people read Collegian ads.
Anarchy is the freedom of all people to
love each other.”
Major demonstrations are planned for
New York during the Convention there
August 11 through 14, Rainbow said. The
Youth International Party (Yippies), :
Rock Against Racism, War Resisters
League, Gay Rights and Women’s
Rights groups are among the many
organizations planning demonstrations.
Occupying Central Park, clogging the
streets during rush hour and a blockade
of a post office are among the items on
the agenda for the demonstrators, he
said.
“Hopefully it won’t turn into a riot,”
Rainbow said.
Rainbow held a meeting in the HUB
Monday night to organize University
students interested in going to New York
next week to join the demonstrations.
The turnout was sparse. Counting The
Daily Collegian photographer, its
reporter and Rainbow, six people
showed up.
Before the meeting began, Rainbow
said the University student body is
“completely unconscious,” and that he
has heard the University itself is the
‘ ‘most fascist in the country. ”
Comparing the ’6os to what is in store
for the ’Bos, Rainbow said, “The parallel
I see is to an earlier period in American
history. During the 1840 s, abolition and
other social protest movements became
powerful. The 1850 s were like the 19705.
People were apathetic and apolitical. In
the 1860 s there was civil war.” Civil war
in America “is not beyond the realm of
possibility” in the 1980 s.
A “forced decentralization” of the
country or collapse of the system from
within is probable, he said.
Rainbow does not have a very positive
opinion of the current presidential
candidates. He characterized Jimmy
Carter as a “closet fascist.” He called
Ronald Reagan “just a fascist,” and
said he didn’t “consider John Anderson
a realistic alternative.”
—Rainbow
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His name is Rainbow, and his political philosophy is one of anarchy. Despil
lack of large-scale support from University students, Rainbow plans to promol
anarchy as he demonstrates at the Democratic National Convention beginnin
Monday in New York City.
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The Daily Collegian Friday, August 8,
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