The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, January 12, 1983, Image 8

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    14—The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Jan. 12, 1983
Martin back with Yankees
A chronological look at the man
agerial career of Billy Martin:
Oct. 11, 1968 Major league man
agerial career begins as he is named
manager of the Twins.
Oct. 13, 1969 Fired as Twins
manager, after leading club to Amer
ican League West championship.
Oct. 2, 1970 Named manager of
the Detroit Tigers.
Sept. 2, 1973 Fired as Tiger
manager, after leading club to 1972
AL East title.
Sept. 8, 1973 Named manager of
the Texas Rangers.
Oct. 24, 1974 Named AL Manager
of the Year by The Associated Press
after leading Rangers to second
place finish.
July 21, 1975 Fired as Ranger
manager.
Aug. 2, 1975 Named manager of
The
Brickhouse,
Tavern tonight
Terry Whitlock
Attitude Adjustment
Hours: 4-7 pm
Humes Alley around the corner
from Uncle Eli's
***** * * * * *
An
Informal Discussion
of the
Organizational Structure
of the
North Atlantic
Treaty Organization
with
LTC JOHN H. MATTHEWS
Operations simulation analyst
- Department of War Gaming
United States Army War College *
Thursday 8:00pm HUB Main Lounge
Presented by the Office of Student Activities in cooperation with the Public Affairs Office, U.S. Army War College *
***************** * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Atk otis4,s
bkh
4'"V kN
t'‘ t9SN S
~,ovs 30 to 50%
ALL Winter Merchandise
ellire Tarriagp
Rouse
109 S. Pugh St. % ,
• "Vir
0 4 IV
The Brothers and Little Sisters of Phi Sigma Kappa
are proud to annouce their newest initiates
Steven D. Rath
Mark W. Robinson
And warmly welcome their winter Pledges
Randy G. Carr
Robert M. Glass
Thomas W. Gresham
Kristine Barczak
Lisa Bustinger
Congratulations and welcome to the Triple T's
the New York Yankees
May 14, 1977 Fined $2,500 for
remarks directed at Yankee owner
George Steinbrenner.
June 18, 1977 -- Involved in dugout
altercation in Boston with slugger
Reggie Jackson.
Oct. 18, 1977 Leads Yankees to
first World Championship in 15 years,
as they beat Los Angeles in sixth and
final World Series game.
July 24, 1978 One day after mak
ing the "One's a born liar, the other's
convicted" comment about Jackson
and Steinbrenner, Martin resigns as
Yankee manager.
June 18, 1979 Replaces Bob Lem
on as Yankee manager.
Oct. 25, 1979 Involved in alterca
tion in Minnesota with businessman
Joe Cooper.
Oct. 29, 1979 Fired as Yankee
************ * * * * * * * * * * *
ff ff , *
T m 411
STOREWIDE
Start the New Year right by saving
Joseph M. Masterson
Qraphic,Arts
Center
ilk FREE - 410 i
copy of Your Wedding, how to plan and
enjoy it, by Marjorie Binford Woods
for the pleasure of showing you
our wide selection of contemporary
wedding stationery. No purchase
necessary!
123 Coal Alley 237-2304
(next to Unlimited Rent-Ails)
SALE
4r ,,.
and
Calder Way Ar.
Dante S. Terrana
manager.
Feb. 22, 1980 Named manager of
the Oakland A's.
Nov. 20, 1980 Named AL Man
ager of the Year by The Associated
Press after leading A's to second
place finish.
June 1, 1981 Suspended by the AL
for one week after bumping umpire
Terry Cooney.
Nov. 12, 1981 Named AL Man
ager of the Year by The Associated
Press for the fourth time after lead
ing A's to AL West title.
Oct. 20, 1982 Fired as A's man
ager.
Jan. 11, 1983 Named Yankees
manager for the third time, becoming
only the fourth modern major league
manager to have as many as three
separate tenures with the same team.
************ * * * * * * * * * * *
All .agriculture and related majors welcome
Rush tap at:
Tonight at 9:oopm .
Ray Anthony plays any and all
corner of W. College and N. Patterson Sts.
****** * * * * *
G ~~~E
♦.~r
OFF
FRS
John R. Rogers
John L. Russ, IV
Scott D. Grezeszak
Richard Oakes
Matthew C. Rose
Gloria J. Collins
Laura M. Martell
kinds of music!
Delta Theta Sigma
****** * * * * * *
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We , not allfificult
ifs not the U,B.
it 9 s :INTER=
CCUILTURAL
AWAR LZNI,OO
waxing re:relAments
lounge t travel Ups
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Memphis St. No. 1 despite loss
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) For the first time ever,
Memphis State is ranked No. 1 in college basketball,
and Coach Dana Kirk said yesterday that a 69-56 upset
loss to Virginia Tech won't spoil it.
"In college basketball these days, no one is going to
be undefeated," Kirk said. "We were beaten by a
pretty good basketball team."
The loss to Virginia Tech, now 13-1, came just three
hours before The Associated Press released its weekly
poll listing the Tigers as No. 1 in college basketball.
Memphis State was 11-0 entering the game.
"I don't know how people will react," MSU forward
Derrick Phillips said after the loss. "I really don't care.
Our fans will understand."
In gaining he No. 1 spot, Memphis State got 42 of 60
first-place votes and 1,164 points from the sports
writers and broadcasters who set the weekly rankings
for The AP.
Last week Memphis State pounded the University of
Baltimore 103-57 and defeated St. Louis University 78-
64.
61
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tA irtiii irteato
ea
I,e,f cio outt
LArg•••7l
r;)d
repp) or punk. 4omi(y or-friends your (trod of grinder!
Penn State's Artificial Hearts
will be demonstrated during a
Bioengineering Open House
on
Thursday, Jan. 13, from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m,.
Tours begin in Kunkle Activities Center
(or go directly to Room 24 Hammond Building)
Every Wednesd
Bluegrass Nig
Tonight . . .
LOWER FORTY
GRASS
No Cover
The Tigers held a 54-point advantage for first place
over No. 2 Virginia. At 11-1, the Cavaliers got 13 first
place votes and 1,110 points overall.
Kirk said he was disappointed by Monday
/ night's
loss, but wasn't too upset by the timing of the loss and
the announcement of a No. 1 ranking.
"I really don't concern•myself and the players don't
concern themselves with ratings. It's just something
that happens," he said.
St. John's, 13-0, was selected No. 3 this week. Gaining
the highest ranking in the school's histoky, St. John's
got three votes for first place and 1,028 points.
The Redmen, off to their best start since the 19405,
moved up four places in the ratings because of a 79-62
victory over Seton Hall and 76-67 defeat of Georgetown.
Despite a weekend loss, Indiana, 10-1, got two votes
for for first place. But with 994 points overall, the
'Hoosinrs dropped three places to No. 4.
UCLA, 9-1, moved up a spot to No. 5 after beating
Arizona 92-87. The Bruins polled 994 points.
I WAY PIZZA
No Cover
NCAA toughens standards
By DOUG TUCKER
! AP Sports Writer
SAN DIEGO Following more than three hours of
emotionally charged debate that saw the issue sharply
divided along racial lines, delegates to the NCAA conven
tion passed a rule yesterday to toughen academic stan
dards for incoming athletes.
The measure, clearly approved by a show of hands, was
bitterly opposed by black educators; who asserted that it
would be racially and regionally discriminatory. Drafted
by a select all-white committee of university presidents,
the measure which applies only to the 277 Division I
schools was hailed by supporters as an answer to the
deterioration of American higher education.
The proposal, No. 48, says athletes must , have com
pleted a "core curriculum" of math; English, social and
physical sciences, as well as score a minimum of 700 on
the SAT college entrance test and 15 on the ACT exam.
Moments after adopting No. 98, the delegates voted in
what could be viewed as a loophole. It specifies that
athletes who do not meet the new requirements will be
permitted an athletic scholarship but cannot compete
'their first year. •
After a two-hour lunch break, delegates resumed their
Is Nuclear War Inevitable?
This may be today's most OBSCENE question because: • •
(1) Most people answer "yes" to it, and
(2) Most people can't talk about it.
There is a better way than silence and denial to deal with the horror and despair which the possibility of a nuclear
holocaust raises. It lies in talking through the despair and making some personal decisions about how to live con
structively with the possibility of disaster.
The Free University course on
"Freedom. from . Nuclear Despair"
at the Wesley Student Center, 256 E. College Ave.
Wednesdays at 7:30 —Jan. 12, 19, 26, Feb. 2
Leader: The Rev. Don Davis, Director, The United Ministry at Penn State
Get in touch with hope. Take charge of your emotions. This course can save your "life".
One of these prizes could be yours.
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'4, 0( All Day
11 am-tam HoppyHoury
9 All Night Happy
gatsbY s Hours...featuring
music by "APPLE f3E I IY" and
a continuous showing of the 1983
u•ar . _ I!! No Cover from 8-2
IN CONJUNCTION WITH BACK THE LIONS ORGANIZATION, CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
AND LION COUNTRY VISITORS & CONVENTION BUREAU OF STATE COLLEGE.
• $25 Gift Certificate from The Student Bookstore
• $2O Dried Flower Arrangement from George's Floral Boutique
• $lO Gift Certificate from The End Result
• $l5 Gift Certificate from Cheap Thrills
• $l5 Gift Certificate• from Moyer Jewelers
Pay the full $lB for your 1983 LaVie Jan. 17-21 and your
name will be entered in a random drawing for one of these prizes!
So, order your yearbook Jan. 17-21, in 209 HUB and . . . BE A
WINNER!
(Winners will be contacted by phone, and their names will be published in the Collegian.)
100 VV. College Ave.
orhe earner "Pric e
on All Food Items ALL
DAY LONG!
debate and one of the most eloquent pleas was made by
Father Edmund P. Joyce of Notre Dame.
"Far more criticism can be leveled at the system which
places the 17-year-old in an environment he is ill-prepared
for," he said.
Earlier yesterday, Penn State football Coach Joe Pater
no charged during the pre-vote debate that black athletes
have been "raped" for more than 15 years by a system
that exploits their talents without developing their minds.
"We've raped 'em," Paterno told more than 1,300
delegates. "We can't afford to do that to another genera
tion." •
Meanwhile, one black delegate called the proposal,
drawn up by the American Council on Education, "a black
and white issue."
"I'm really surprised that so many black educators
have gotten up and sold their students down the river,"
said Paterno, whose team just won the national
championship. "I think you're underestimating their
pride and competitiveness. •
"More and more of our black athletes are frustrated
later in life because they never got what they should have
out of college," said Paterno. "If No. 48 is passed, they'll
take up the challenge."
84+U s eeN "
The ORIGINAL'
Happy Hours
From E3pm-2am No. Cover
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£:9
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Ewing, Sampson crybabies?
By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Sports Writer
Elbows to the left of them, elbows
to the right of them, elbows behind
them. It's been a frustrating year
for college basketball's pre-emi
nent big men.
Ralph Sampson of Virginia and
Patrick Ewing of Georgetown have
spent less time playing basketball
than pushing and being pushed,
shoving and being shoved, pummel
ing and being pummeled. For
them, life on the court is fighting off
swarms of attack gnats gnats
who come in 6-7 and 6-8 packages.
"Pat and Ralph are targets of
double standards," says Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar of the Los Angeles
Lakers, who has had similar prob
lems in both college and the Nation
al Basketball Association. "They
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are not allowed the protections of
the rules of players of lesser size. It
can be frustrating and it makes it
impossible to relate to the rules of
someone else."
Sampson and Ewing both
reached a boiling point in games
last Saturday.
Sampson was called for two tech
nical fouls in Virginia's 83-64 Atlan
tic Coast Conference win over
Maryland after throwing an elbow
at three players surrounding him.
Virginia Coach Terry Holland sub
sequently threatened to pull his
team off the floor unless the offi
cials called the game more tightly.
Ewing got into two fights with
Kevin Williams of St. John's in a
Big East Conference game won by
St. John's 76-67.
"I'll tell him to go hardship (go
pro) if he's continued to be
The Daily Collegian Wednesday. Jan. 12, 1983-1 5
grabbed," Georgetown Coach John'
Thompson said after the game.
"Ern sick of the double standard on '
defense."
But the people who must face
them suggest that Sampson and
Ewing are like the town bullies who
run to the cops when the victims
start fighting back.
, "Let him throw elbows like that
next year in the NBA and he'll get
his head split open," said Maryland
Coach Lefty Driesell of Sampson.
Maryland center Ben Coleman
asks: "What's he going to do when ,
he plays the Bullets and Rick Ma-
horn sets some picks and knocks
him into Row Q?"
"To beat Georgetown, all we've
got to do is get Ewing upset and
he'll punch somebody," says Wil
liams, who suffered a split lip in his .
fights with Ewing.
TELEPHONE REGISTER NOW!
We are now accepting
registrations by
telephone for our Feb.
LSAT class.
Class begins Feb. sth
Call today 234.6645