I6—The Daily Collegian Friday, April 13, 1984 FBI cautions beauty officials Fugitive may pose as photographer to By ROBERT WADE Associated Press Writer ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. At the request of the FBI, Miss America Pageant officials warned organizers of state contests yesterday to look out Re a fugitive posing as a photogra pher who is wanted in a series of slayings and disappearances of young women. A letter and an FBI wanted poster for Christopher Bernard Wilder, who is on the bureau's Ten Most Wanted list, were sent to the 51 field exec utives of the Miss America Pageant, said Albert A. Marks Jr., executive director of the national contest. ` "This isn't intended to scare," Marks said. "It's ordinary prudence." Wilder, 39, is being sought in the murders of three women and the disappearance of four others in Southern and Westerh states. The Australian-born race car driver also is being sought in the kidnapping of a Florida woman and the stabbing of a 16-year-old girl in upstate New York, . : .,: . ..... : .ilEyewgAß.:::=:splEci:A‘::::.::::.:: - : authorities said Walter Mangiacotti, in charge of the FBl's Atlantic City office, said he asked Miss America officials for help because Wilder is "consistent" in seeking out attractive women. "He poses as a fashion and-or mod eling-type photographer," said Mangiacotti, adding that Wilder ap pears to have "an affinity for shore areas." Marks said he told field executives in each state and the District of Columbia to warn pageant officials at the local and county level about Wild er. "The reason for the involvement of the Miss America Pageant on a na tional basis is that his modus operan di is to . . . offer to photograph, for any number of reasons, attractive young women, notably at pageants, aspiring models, fashion shows and similar operations," Marks said in his letter. About 80,000 women will compete this year in local contests for a chance to become one of the 51 wom en to reach the nationally televised ov nin MOT® Nutcracker Fuzzy Bunnies ;he Eggs from Kashmir. . ed Eggs Chinese Hopping • Mexican Bark Paintings )ze Crocks Porcelain : gs Painted and Unpainted Delft Pins and Earrings : Kites Wooly Lambs • rds and much much more. • 11'11.6a0 InGBP @ITGEOGU harm contestants finals here in September, Marks said. "I don't want to read a story where anybody's hurt, let alone one of our women," Marks said, noting the FBI was "obviously quite concerned." Agent Joseph DeMarco in the FBl's Miami bureau said the agency would contact all groups running pageants for young women. Harold Glasser, president of Miss Universe Inc., was not in his New York City office yesterday and could not be reached for comment on whether his organization would notify local pageants, his secretary said. Miss Universe Inc. runs the annual Miss Universe and Miss USA pag eants. Wilder is described as white, nearly 6 feet tall, 180 pounds, with a •neatly trimmed mustache and beard, thin ning brown hair and blue eyes. He has a five-inch scar on his right ankle and is believed to be driving a 1981 Mer cury Cougar. The FBI said Wilder was seen shortly before young women disap peared in Florida, Texas, Colorado and Nevada. AX,S2 • AX • AM). • AX • AXS2 • 6,X • AXS - 1 • AX • AXSI • AX • AXS - 1 • 6,X • AXCI• a p. Delta Chi and Alpha Ch i .l we don't `!just want to have fun." During Greek Week 'B4 we're out to be • UXV • XV • 25XV • XV • 25XV • XV • UXV • XV • tSXV • XV • T.TXV • XV • UXV RHYTHMS 'B4 An Ice Show Featuring Guest National 'Competitors and Local Skaters DATES: April 13 and 14, 1984 7:30 p.m. both dates 1:00 p.m. - matinee April 14 PLACE: The Penn State Ice Pavilion (Saturday) SPONSORED BY: The Penn State Ice Pavilion & McDonalds Restaurants TICKETS: Advance tickets will cost $2.00 for students/youth and $3.00 for adults - AVAILABLE AT THE PENN STATE ICE PAVILION MAIN COUNTER TICKETS AT THE DOOR: $2.50 and $3.50 Court overturns ruling that divided twins' custody between teen parents By The Associated Press TYLER, Texas An appeals court yesterday over turned a ruling that split the custody of 3-month-old identical twins between their teen-age parents, who have filed for divorce. A three-judge panel of the 12th State Court of Appeals gave the mother custody of both infants until a final decision is made at the couple's divorce hearing. The appeals court overturned State District Judge Virgil E. Mulanax's March 28 order that said one of the twins should live with Stan Carter, 17, and the other with Dena Denise Carter; 16. Carter's attorney, Ric Freeman, defended Mula nax's order, saying the divided custody would help the couple reconcile their marital differences. "I'm not sure my client really wanted the divorce. With her being in Houston and my client in Upshur County, this was the judge's way to bring one child to Upshur County," Freeman said. Denise Carter's attorney, Mike Hatchell, said he was shocked by Freeman's justification, "which uses the babies as a pawn to get the mother and father back together." The children were born Jan. 24. Three weeks later Stan Carter filed for divorce and the mother took the #1! 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In a brief filed with the appeals court, Dale Long, the divorce lawyer for Denise Carter, called Mulanax's decision "insensitive and barbaric. "At the very least, it shocks human sensibility to the point of being unconscionable, and for that reason cannot be anything but an abuse of discretion," Long said. He said no evidence was presented to show the children were abused or neglected or that Denise Carter engaged in any moral or physically detrimental conduct. Long filed a motion Wednesday in state district court asking Mulunax to excuse or disqualify himself from presiding over the divorce. T.Bon e.. $5.99 1630 S. Atherton St. (At University Drive) ts spor Baseball By RON LEONARD! Collegian Sports Writer Penn State first baseman Randy Simcox says the baseball team con sists of a bunch of individuals that like to "just go out and hit." And hit they have. Since jumping back into action last weekend, the Lions have been wacking the cover off the ball and Simcox's flaming lurhber has been a prime contribu tor to the Lions' success. Yesterday afternoon at Beaver Field, Simcox, who entered the game with a team high .381 aver age, banged three more hits and continued his mastery at the plate, as the Lions (10-7) won their fifth and sixth straight games, pounding Lock Haven by scores of 9-2 and 12- 2. The Lions pounded 19 hits in the double-header, 11 coming in the nightcap. Lock Haven, which split a twinbill with Mansfield yesterday, fell to 5-7 on the year. In the opener, Penn State right hander Tom Bart went the distance, picking up his third win against one loss, but experienced control prob lems and had to pitch out of several jams. The senior walked seven to go with seven strikeouts. The same could be said of Lion southpaw Eric Hohn (1-0), who won the nightcap. Hohn ran into trouble several times, not through walks the sophomore struck out seven and walked only two but relinquished 11 hits. I S 1 1 1 , Despite the pair of lopsided wins and the Lions' recent success, Penn State Head Coach Shorty Stoner is concerned with his pitching staff's control. "We're pitching behind way to often," Stoner said. "It hasn't haunted us because we're hitting good but in a tight ballgame, those are the things that decide ball games." However, when a team is stroking the ball and winning it some- Lady taxers take on Rutgers Lady Lion Betsy Williams (19) looks to pass the ball during action earlier this season against West Chester. The No. 1 women's lacrosse team will host Rutgers tomorrow at 1:00 at Lady Lion Field. By RICK STOUCH Collegian Sports Writer No one could blame the women's lacrosse team if it did not get psyched up for the game with• unranked Rutgers at 1:00 tomorrow afternoon at Lady Lion Field. After all, the No. 1 Lady Lions (6-0) have already met five of the other teams in the top eight and treated all but No. 4 Temple, who they nipped 6-5, with the same courtesy the Los Angeles Raiders gave the Washington Redskins in this year's Super Bowl. Penn State beat No. 5 James Madison by 16-4, No. 7 Virginia by 16-7, No. 8 William & Mary by 23-3 and No. 3 Delaware by 19-7. They've also beaten West Chester, 15-3. In addition, the other two squads in the top eight, No. 2 Maryland and No. 6 Massachusetts, come up next on the schedule on April 19 and April 21, respectively. So the Lady Lions not only have past successes over top teams to remember, but games against top teams coming up to look ahead to. The Lady Lions should feel confident not just from their own success, but from the lack of success on Rutgers' part. The Lady Scarlet Knights (3-3) opened the season with wins over Swarthmore, 16-7, and Ursinus, 7-6. But Rutgers then fell to Temple 13-2 and to Delaware 21-3 before beating Montclair 14-3 and losing to Har vard 7-5. Last year, the Lady Scarlet Knights lost to Penn State, 20-5, and have never won in the seven-game series between the two schools. Penn State Head Coach Gillian Rattray said Rutgers team runs win streak to 6 •• 1 Nittany Lion Todd Hostetler (right) rounds the bases following his first•inning grand slam in the opener of yesterday's double•header against Lock Haven at Beaver Field. how• tends to overshadow other as pects of a club. Simcox has been one reason for this, but despite his three-hit afternoon, the Lion cap tain had to take a back seat to third baseman Todd Hostetler, who was the Lions' man of the hour with a strong offensive performance. Hostetler, a junior from Hol sopple, led • the Lion surge in game one, going three-for-four with five RBIs and two runs scored. With one swing of the bat in the first inning of yesterday's opener, Hos tetler turned Lock Haven's 1-0 lead into a three run deficit with a two out grand slam over the right field fence. He doubled and scored in the =CIE ME= has improved since last year and has a good goaltender and some good scorers. She also thinks Rutgers could present a good zone defense. And despite the previous results that might make it understandable for the Lady Lions not to be psyched up for the game, Rattray thinks her team will be ready. "It's tough to get up because Rutgers is not as tough as some of the teams we have played and some of the teams we will play," Rattray said. "No one should ever underestimate a team, but if we continue to play as well as we've been playing, I think they'd have a tough time beating us. "But I think the best thing about this year's players is that they're level-headed. I don't think they take any game lightly because they realize that the total is important as far as post-season seedings goes." Point Karen Rickards agrees that she couldn't see the team having any trouble getting ready for Rutgers because of the opportunity to iron out some problems. "Rutgers won't be one of the top teams we'll play, but it'll be a good game for us to regroup and to work on some of the things we've been having trouble with," Rickards said. "It'll also be good just for the game sense because this is our only game between lasi Tuesday and next Thursday." Penn State is up for Rutgers, despite the possibility of looking back at the Delaware game or looking ahead to Maryland. On the other hand, this is one contest the Lady Scarlet Knights should have no trouble getting up for. "We're the big one to beat, especially with our high scores and with our reputation going around now," Rattray said. third and knocked in a run with a single in the fourth. In the nightcap, Hostetler picked up his sixth RBI on the afternoon with a bases loaded walk in the Lions' three-run first. His seventh RBI came in the third on a sacrifice fly. Hostetler's performance brought back memories of his 1982 season when he led the Lions with a .356 average. "My swing has been coming around but it's still spotty," Hostetl er said between games. "It's just good to be playing day-by-day and I'm getting my eye back. I've been up and down at the plate. I'm just trying to keep my eye on the ball ~~: `; ;: . - N\ • ' r 'V • ~: '! z ''.''. Photo by Jeff Bustraen Photo by Daniel Rogers and level off at the plate." Simcox, the Atlantic 10 ,co-player of the week for his seven-for-eight performance in last weekend's three-game series with George Washington, has usually been a slow starter but the Lion captain credits his success to an off-season weight training program and a posi tive attitude. "I went thiough a lot of hard work in the off season and now it's just a _ matter of being relaxed and keeping the concentration at the plate," Simcox said. "And we (team) don't expect to be any where but where we are right now." Please see related'story, Page 18 Tigers stay unbeaten with 9-4 win DETROIT (AP) Alan Trammell, Chet Lemon and one in seven innings. He got relief help from Aurelio Lou Whitaker hit home runs as Jack Morris and the Lopez and Willie Hernandez. unbeaten Detroit Tigers defeated Texas 9-4 yesterday, Trammell walked in the first inning, went to third on extending Detroit's winning streak to seven games, the best start in the club's 84-year history. a single by Barbaro Garbey and scored on a two-out single by Larry Herndon. Frank Tanana, 0-1, then The Tigers' best previous start was 6-0 in 1911. Morris, 3-0, in his first start since his no-hitter last walked Chet Lemon to load the bases and Rod Allen Saturday in Chicago, yielded a single to leadoff hitter singled Garbey home. Mickey Rivers on a 2-2 pitch, one minute into the game. In the fourth inning, . Trammell singled, Garbey Morris allowed seven hits, struck out two and walked walked and, Lance Parrish singled to make it 3-0. Laxers hope to upset No. 6 Rutgers By RICH BRADLEY Collegian Sports Writer Upset another top-ranked team That's what the men's lacrosse team will try to do tommorrow night when it hosts sixth-ranked Rutgers under the lights at Jeffery Field starting at 7:15. The Lions (4-4) will try to upset their second consecutive Top 10 team after beating seventh-ranked Hofstra 11-10 in overtime last Sat urday. Tommorrow night's game will mark the 37th meeting between the two teams. with Rutgers (3-0) holding a 31-5 series lead. The last time Penn State won was in 1981 by a 12-11 score. "Rutgers is the biggest rivalry we have," Penn State Head Coach Glenn Thiel said. "It's a very in tense game, even when we played them in the fall (a practice game the Lions won 5-4)." "This game will be much differ ent, but it won't lack in intensity," he added. "It'll be the same type of game it has been the last three years. It'll be two teams that will really go after the win." Defenseman Marty Coyle, who scored his first collegiate goal in the Hofstra contest, remembered the first Rutgers game as a hard fought battle. "That game was pretty excit ing," Coyle said. "It was close down to the end. It was a pretty heated game there were almost a few fights. They should coming out firing (Saturday) and I hope we do, Thiel said Rutgers is a very good team, a team he would rank as the fifth-best in the country. "Rutgers is on the verge of being in the top four teams in the coun try," Thiel said. "There's four ex cellent lacrosse teams: Hofstra, Johns Hopkins, Virginia and North Carolina, and then there's a drop off. They're the next best team." Like all good teams, Rutgers is solid both on offense and defense. "They're a very good offensive Crenshaw takes lead in Ist round of Masters By 808 GREEN AP Golf Writer AUGUSTA, Ga. Ben Crenshaw played an almost-error less 5-under-par 67 and took the lead, one stroke in front of Lee Trevino, after the first round of the 48th Masters golf tournament yesterday. "It was a very good round of golf today," said Crenshaw, so often a challenger but not yet a winner in golf's Big Four events. "But," said the man who is noted among his peers as one of the finest putters in the game, "it could have been better. "I felt like I left a few shots out there. It easily could have been two or three shots better and that's conservative." He hit 17 greens, reached two par-5s in two and did not make a bogey. - The problem, . said Crenshaw, lay with the putter, often the most potent weapon in his arsenal. This time, however, he made only two putts longer than 30 inches. "I'm perplexed," said Crenshaw. "I `lad the putts at the right angle. I was putting from where I wanted to be. But I just missed 'em. The putter hasn't beeri that good this year." Trevino, like Crenshaw fas cinated with the possibility of win ning this title which ranks with the U.S. and British Opens and the PGA as the game's major events scattered seven birdies across his card in a swaggering, arm swinging journey over the rolling hills of Augusta National. It was, he said, his best effort ever over the course he once vow ed he'd never play again. But Trevino, 44, a runnerup in the Tournament Players Championship, said he's changed Stu Helgeson (28) of the men's lacrosse team tangles with a defender In action earlier this year at Astroturf Field. The Lions will face No. 7 Rutgers at 7:15 tomorrow night at Jeffrey Field. team, very poised, very confident," last week until the offense got Thiel said. "They play together started. After allowing two early . very well. Their forte is probably goals, the defense got on track and defense. They have lots of de- grounded the Flying Dutchmen for fensive talent, and play a lot of the rest of the afternoon. different kinds of defenses." "I think we'll be pretty solid on The Scarlet Knights are paced on defense," Thiel said. ".We'll have to offense by freshman attackman Ed have a great job in the goal (from Trabulsy (14 goals, five assists in goaltender Tom Florence), but we three games) and senior Bill Nas- know that. Rutgers will get their lonksi (seven goals, seven assists). shots and if Florence can shut them On defense, All-American goalie down the way he did in the fall, John Naslonski has allowed just 17 we'll be OK." goals in three games. Coyle added that the defense had "We will have to penetrate their its best game of the year against zone defense and beat John Hofstra. Another upset is possible if Naslonski in the goal and handle it continues to play as well. the other Naslonski on offense in "Against Hofstra, that's the best order to be successful," Thiel said. we've looked yet," Coyle said. "If The Lions' defense kept Penn everyone plays that well again, we State in the game against Hofstra should beat them." The Daily Collegian Friday, April 13, 1984 his mind and now ranks a victory in the Masters as one of his prime goals. "After the way I played the last three rounds in the TPC, I reached way back and decided there's no place I can't play," he said. The international group of four at 69, one back of Trevino and two behind Crenshaw, included Tom Purtzer, Mark Lye, the Japanese veteran Isao Aoki, and David Gra ham. Graham, an Australian now liv ing in the United States who has scored previous victories in the U.S. Open and PGA, had a share of the lead until he drove into the woods on the 18th, rattled around in the trees for a while and emerged with a double bogey-6. Ray Floyd, a former winner here, holed out from the fairway for an eagle-2 on the 14th and topped the group at 70. Also at that figure were George Archer, Tom Kite, two-time U.S. Open champion Hale Irwin, Nick Faldo of England and Gary Koch, the only two-time winner on the PGA Tour this season. There were some other late challengers. Hut they found that Augusta National, wet from early week rains but still possessing very fast greens, was not com pletely without its teeth. Gary Player, the South African who has won this title three times, once got to four under for the sunny day. But he played the next two holes three over and drifted back, finishing witb a 71. And there was portly Billy Casp er, now a regular on the Seniors Tour and the winner of this tourna ment 14 seasons ago. He got it four under par for a while then ran afoul of the little 16th.
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