The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, August 28, 1984, Image 6

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    10—The Daily Collegian Tuesday, Aug. 28, 1984
Anderson set to endorse
Mondale at rally today
WASHINGTON (AP) - John B.
Anderson, who organized an indepen
dent presidential campaign against
Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter in
1980, is set to endorse Democratic
presidential nominee Walter F. Mon
dale.
There is also a possibility that the
National Unity Party that Anderson
heads will nominate Mondale, and
thus provide him with about $7.8
million in public funds, according to
knowledgeable sources.
A Mondale campaign official, who
spoke on condition he not be identi
fied, confirmed that Anderson will
endorse Mondale when the Demo
cratic nominee appears at a rally at
the University of Illinois today.
However, Mondale aides said no
arrangement had been discussed un
der which the Anderson party would
provide the Mondale organization
with money.
More than 7 per 'cent of the vote
cast in 1980 went to Anderson, al
though he peaked at about 30 per cent
in public opinion polls taken early in
the campaign.
Under federal election laws, Ander
son qualified for public funding for a
possible 1984 race if he met the re
quirements for the formation of a
third party.
; In 1980, Anderson moved into a
Official blasts Bush for
By EVANS WITT
AP Political Writer
. QUEENS, N.Y. Geraldine Ferraro and her
husband may be wealthier than Archie Bunker
would have guessed, but one Democratic official
says that’s no cause for comment from Vice
President George Bush, who was “born with a
silver spoon so far back in his mouth you couldn’t
get it out with a crow bar.”
While Alabama Lt. Gov. Bill Baxley was reach
ing for new rhetorical heights in introducing the
New York congresswoman, Ferraro received an
enthusiastic reception in Alabama except from a
bird or two, even when she ran right into the
dangers of “running mate.”
In Montgomery,'Ala., Democratic vice presi
dential nominee Ferraro pressed Walter F. Mon
dale’s case and her own. But amid the glare of the
television lights, her note cards were a little hard
to read:
“When Fritz arid I were moving along and he
had chosen me as his mate, some people . ..
running mate.”
She stopped as the crowd chuckled.
LADY LI
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vacuum created by many voters dis
satisfied with both Carter and Rea
gan. But there is no such vacuum this
year, and last spring Anderson an
nounced that he would not run again
in 1984.
He did, however, say he would go
ahead with formally organizing the
third political party.
More recently, sources said, Ander
son has been talking with Mondale
directly about a public endorsement.
Meanwhile, Mondale’s aides and for
mer Wisconsin Gov. Patrick J. Lu
cey, who was running
mate in 1980, have been negotiating
about the possible third party nomi
nation which would be voted in much
the same way the Liberal Party in
New York state supports Democratic
candidates.
One source familiar with the dis
cussion said there was concern that
even if possible legal hurdles could be
overcoine, the political implications
for Mondale to accept a large amount
of money intended to encourage the
formation of a third political party
could be dangerous.
. Mondale aides, who spoke on condi
tion they not be identified, said em
phatically that there had been no
discussions about such an arrange
ment.
“The glare is incredible up here,” she explained,
Then the New York congressworrian picked up
where she left off, talking about Democratic
chances in the South.
“Some of the so-called experts said ‘Will she
campaign in the South?’ We 11...”
Just then came a loud “squawk.” An exotic bird
a parrot perhaps or a mawcaw among the many
housed in cages in the hotel lobby where the rally
was held had decided to speak up.
Ferraro turned toward the offender and
quipped:
“One of the non-believers.”
Occasionally through the rest of her speech,
another bird would sound off as well.
During the Alabaina rally, Ferraro’s congres
sional district in Queens which includes the
mythical home of Archie and Edith Bunker from
the .televison series “All in the Family” was
mentioned.
Bush, son of a prominent and wealthy Connecti
cut clan, referred to that series about a working
class family after Ferraro revealed she and her
husband have a net worth of several million
dollars.
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A crocodile tamer prepares to pin his 400-pound opponent during ,an
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remark about Ferraro
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That was too much for Baxley, who is obviously
aiming to succeed George Wallace in colorful
rhetoric not to mention in,the Alabama gover
nor’s mansion in 1986.
“The nominee of the other party said, ‘Well, that
shows that they are not really an Edith and Archie
household,’ ” Baxley said in introducing Ferraro
in Montgomery.
“When I heard that this man had made a
statement like that, I thought a pin-striped, polo
playing, umbrella-toting Ivy Leaguer like George
Herbert Walker Bush who was born with a silver
spoon so far back in his mouth you couln’t get it out
with a crow bar for him to make that kind of
statement about a family who had to work for
everything they have is as ironic and shows as
much gall as a fellow we had to prosecute for
killing his mother and father,” Baxley said. “And
his statement was he was going to throw himself
on the mercy of the court because he was an
orphan.”
At a voter registration rally in Amangansett,
N.Y., the hosts presented Ferraro with a giant
blueberry muffin so big an aide could not get an
arm around it.
Dianne Fellman, 36, appeared in
Santa Clara Superior Court, where
her request for a new attorney was
denied, resulting in a delay in sen
tencing, a court clerk said'. Sentenc
ing, originally scheduled for Monday,
was reset for Sept. 11.
Fellman was convicted Aug. 13 of
first-degree murder in the death of
her husband, Elroy Fellman, 39.
Prosecutor Richard Gardner said
at the-trial that Fellman shot her
husband repeatedly with a .22 caliber
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Sentencing delayed for
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SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - Sentenc
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automatic pistol because he had mul
tiple sclerosis and she didn’t want to
care for him.
“She told people she didn’t want to
push a wheelchair,” Gardner said.
“His body was sawed into pieces,
parts of his body were put into a fire
and according to one of the gals she
confessed to, she actually took a bite
out of his arm as he was being
cooked,” he said. (
A neighbor testified he saw Fel
lman sitting near a foul-smelling fire
at her rural cabin just south of San
Jose Jan. 3,1983.
Bones, identified as Elroy Fel
lman’s were found in February and
March of 1983.
Fellman’s attorney, James McKit
trick, has said she would appeal her
conviction.
PILOT
sports
Miami edges No. 1 Auburn in 'classic' game
By HERSCHEL NISSENSON
AP Sports Writer
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. -
Bernie Kosar passed for 329 yards
and two first-half touchdowns and
freshman Greg Cox kicked a pair of
field goals, including the game-win
Miami’s Willie Smith (right) dives to pull in a pass in the second annual than 300 yards in the air en route to a 20-18 win over Auburn. The win
Kickoff Classic last night at Giants Stadium. The Hurricanes racked up more stretched the Hurricanes’ winning streak to 12 games.
Holmes vs. Coetzee:
Fight scheduled for Nov. 16
ATLANTA (AP) - The long
awaited heavyweight fight be
tween International Boxing Feder
ation champion Larry Holmes and
World Boxing Association cham
pion Gerrie Coetzee will be Nov. 16
at the Mack Athletic Center in Las
Vegas, a television network re
ported yesterday.
Although no firm dollar figure
was released, the bout, to be pro
moted by Don King and Steve
Wynn, will reportedly be worth $5
million to Holmes and $3 million to
Coetzee, Cable News Network re
ported yesterday.
The meeting of Holmes and Co
etzee has been scheduled before
but problems always arose to stall
the confrontation.
The original date of the fight
was June 8 in Las Vegas, but that
fell through. On June 18, Holmes
announced that he and King, with
McEnroe, Connors eye Open title
By 808 GREENE
AP Sports Writer
NEW YORK Two brash left
handers, John McEnroe and Jim
my Connors, have made the U.S.
Open tennis championships their
own private preserve.
Between them, McEnroe and
Connors have won every men’s
singles title since America’s pre
mier tennis event moved from the
clubby confines of the West Side
Tennis Club to the hard courts of
the National Tennis Center in
Flushing Meadow.
The $2.55 million Open begins its
two-week run today with McEn
roe, who grew up just a few miles
from the site, the top seed. Con
nors is seeded No. 3 behind
Czechoslovakia’s Ivan Lendl.
In the women’s singles, No. I
seed Martina Navratilova will be
seeking her sixth consecutive
Grand Slam title.
Connors will be going for his
sixth Open title, a record sur
passed only by Bill Tilden, Rich
ard Sears and Bill Lamed, each of
whom won seven titles. Connors
holds one record that may never
be broken he has won the U.S.
Open on all three surfaces on
which it has been contested:
grass, clay and hard court.
Since both are in the top half of
the draw, if Connors and McEnroe
meet, it will be in the semifinals on
Sept. 8. In July, McEnroe, who has
won three U.S. Open crowns, de
molished Connors 6-1, 6-1, 6-2 in
the most lopsided Wimbledon final
in 46 years.
The last time the two met at
ning 25-yarder with 6:08 remaining,
as defending national champion Mi
ami stunned No. 1-ranked Auburn
20-18 last night in the second annual
Kickoff Classic.
The victory in the first college
football game of the season made a
winner of Jimmy Johnson in his
whom he has had public battles
over the promotion of his fights,
had signed an agreement for a
fight with Coetzee in either Sep
tember or October.
The fight will be seen on closed
circuit television in areas
equipped for it, and weeks later on
Home Box Office and ABC, CNN
reported.
Holmes, who is undefeated, re
linquished his World Boxing Coun
cil title last December rather than
take part in a King-promoted de
fense against Greg Page for $2.25
million. Holmes won the WBC title
on June 9,1978.
Holmes, of Easton, Pa., has not
fought since last November when
he knocked out Marvis Frazier in
the first round of a fight not pro
moted by King.
■ Coetzee could be stripped of his
WBA title if he fights Holmes.
Flushing Meadow was 1980, when
McEnroe solved Connors during a
fifth-set tiebreaker in their four
hour semifinal. McEnroe then
went on to defeat Sweden’s Bjorn
Borg for his second of three con
secutive titles.
Lendl, who came from two sets
down to stun McEnroe in the final
of the French Open in June and
win his first Grand Slam event,
has never captured the crown on
the show court at Louis Armstrong
Stadium. But he has reached the
last two finals, losing to Connors
each time.
Connors also was victorious in
1974,1976 and 1978 the latter the
first year the U.S. Open was
staged at Flushing Meadow.
If the top three falter, there are
several other players who have
the tools and credentials to cap
ture the crown.
Mats Wilander of Sweden, win
ner of the 1982 French Open and
1983 Australian Open, took the title
at the ATP Championships Sun
day, a tournament that is played
on the same type surface as the
U.S. Open. The victory showed
that Wilander apparently has fully
recovered from an. injury that
hampered him earlier this sum
mer.
Then there are 1983 semifinalist
Jimmy Arias, 17-year-old Aaron
Krickstein and Wimbledon semifi
nalist Pat Cash of Australia.
Krickstein, a right-hander from
Grosse Pointe Shore, Mich., is the
youngest pjayer to be seeded in the
Open era.
debut as Miami’s head coach and
stretched the Hurricanes’ winning
streak to 12 games, longest in the
nation.
Although Miami won the 1983 na
tional championship by edging
No. 1-ranked Nebraska 31-30 in the
Orange Bowl, the Hurricanes were
Phillies, Mets pick up ground on Cubs
By RALPH BERNSTEIN
AP Sports Writer
PHILADELPHIA (AP) —lvan
DeJesus’ two-run double high
lighted a four-run fourth inning,
keying the Philadelphia Phillies to
a 9-1 rout of the San Diego Padres
last night.
Winner Jerry Koosman, 14-10,
pitched seven innings and gave up
six hits before relievers Bill Camp
bell and Tug McGraw finished up.
The only run off Koosman came in
the seventh on Alan Wiggins’ RBI
double.
The victory was the eighth in 11
games for the third-place Phillies,
who trail the National League East
leading Chicago Cubs by 5% games.
The Phillies took a 1-0 lead in the
first when Juan Samuel doubled,
moved to third on Von Hayes’ bunt
single and scored as Mike Schmidt
hit into a double play.
They made it 5-0 in the fourth with
the help of three walks by Tim
Lollar, 10-11. Schmidt and John
Wockenfuss walked with one out.
Sixto Lezcano then singled home
Schmidt. Ozzie Virgil ' walked to
load the bases and Wockenfuss
scored on John Russell’s sacrifice
fly. DeJesus then doubled home
Lezcano and Virgil.
The Phillies made it 6-0 in the
fifth. Koosman opened with a sin
gle, reached second on a single by
Samuel, took third on a fielder’s
choice by Von Hayes and scored on
Schmidt’s sacrifice fly.
After the Padres scored in the
seventh, the Phillies made it 9-1 in
the bottom of the inning. Samuel
reached first on a strikeout-wild
pitch, stole his National. League
leading 59th base and scored on Von
Hayes’ infield single and a throwing
error by second baseman Wiggins.
Hayes, who reached second on
the error, scored on a single by Kiko
Garcia, who took second on the
throw to the plate. Garcia scored
when shortstop Templeton booted
Francisco Melendez’ grounder.
Mets 5
Dodgers 1
NEW YORK (AP) - Rookie sen
sation Dwight Gooden, the major
league strikeout leader, fanned 12
batters and scattered five hits and
Kelvin Chapman keyed two rallies
as the New York Mets beat the Los
Angeles Dodgers 5-1 last night.
Gooden boosted his National
League-leading strikeout total to
214 as he outdueled Fernando Va
lenzuela in a battle of the 1-2 strike
out pitchers in the league.
Valenzuela, 10-15, struck out seven
to remain behind Gooden with 198.
Gooden, who now has 11 games
with 10 or more strikeouts, allowed
only one walk in beating the Dodg
ers for the third time in three deci
sions. The 19-yeai*-old right-hander
only No. 10 in the 1984 preseason
Associated Press poll and were
three-point underdogs against Au
burn, which felt it should have won
the national crown in 1983 but set
tled for a third-place finish.
Miami carved out its latest shock
er on Kosar’s scoring passes of 17
struck out the side in the eighth. It
was the 11th time Gooden has
struck out the side this season.
Chapman highlighted a four-run
third inning by driving in two runs
with a bases-lOaded single and also
had a double that led to the fourth
run in the sixth, which he scored.
Mike Scioscia spoiled Gooden’s
bid for a shutout with his fourth
homer of the season leading off the
Dodger seventh.
The Mets scored three runs in the
fourth inning after two outs. Keith
Hernandez drew a two-out walk,
one of seven off Valenzuela, and
George Foster singled. Darryl
Strawberry then walked to load the
bases before Hubie Brooks singled
home one run. Chapman then fol
lowed with a two-run bloop single to
left.
New York added a run in the sixth
on a throwing error by Dodger
catcher Scioscia, and made it 5-1 oh
a home run by Brooks in the eighth,
his 13th.
The victory was the fourth
straight for Gooden.
Indians 7
Brewers 1
MILWAUKEE (AP) - Cleve
land’s Bert Blyleven pitched a four
hitter and Joe Carter walloped two
home runs last night to help the
Indians snap a four-game losing
streak with a 7-1 victory over the
Milwaukee Brewers.
Blyleven, who has won five
straight games to improve his re
cord to 15-5, walked three and
Philadelphia’s Sixto Lexcano (right) Is tagged out by Padres' catcher Terry Kennedy at home plate during last night’s
game. The Phillies went on to post a 9-1 victory, their eighth win in their last 11 games.
and eight yards to flanker Stanley
Shakespeare in the first 20 minutes,
fourth-quarter field goals of 45 and
25 yards by Cox and a rebuilt but
fierce defense that held Bo Jackson,
Auburn’s All-American halfback, to
96 yards on 20 carries.
Meanwhile, Miami got 140 yards
on 21 rushes from sophomore Alonzo
Highsmith and stymied Auburn’s
last threat in a see-saw fourth quar
ter when defensive end Julio Cortes
recovered a fumbled pitchout by the
losers’ Brent Fullwood at the Au
burn 49 with 2:57 left to play. The
game ended with Miami on the
Auburn 2-yard line, where Kosar,
who completed 21 of 38 passes, let
the clock run out.
Auburn scored its only touchdown
on a 31-yard pass from Pat Washing
ton to wide receiver Clayton Beau
ford in the second period. Redshirt
freshman Robert McGinty kicked
field goals of 42,36 and 45 yards and
the Tigers added a safety after a
high snap from center Bruce Flem
ing to punter Rick Tuten.
Wide receiver Eddie Brown
grabbed eight of Kosar’s passes for
157 yards.
The game drew a crowd of 51,131
including 5,000 New Jersey high
school players as guests to 76,891-
seat Giants Stadium. Last year’s
inaugural Kickoff Classic, in which
Nebraska crushed Penn State 44-6,
attracted 71,123.
Despite the two-point margin, Mi
ami’s triumph could have been
greater. Kosar was intercepted at
the Auburn 10-and 5-yard lines, he
failed' to make a first down on a
fourth-down quarterback sneak, at
the Auburn 12 and Highsmith fum
bled at the Tigers’ 32 after an 18-
yard gain.
Cox and McGinty traded field
goals and four lead changes in the
AP Lasorphi
struck out three in completing his
seventh game of the season.
Carter’s first homer came with
one out in the sixth off Mike Cald
well, 6-12, to break a 1-1 tie. One
pitch later, Andre Thornton con
nected on his 28th, a drive over the
left-field fence, to give the Indians a
3-1 lead.
After Chris Bando blasted a two
run homer in the seventh, Carter
smashed a a solo homer in the
eighth, his sixth of the season.
Thornton’s RBI double in the ninth
capped the Indians’ scoring.
The Brewers took a 1-0 lead in the
fourth on an RBI double by Cecil
Cooper, but Cleveland tied it in the
fifth on Bando’s run-scoring single.
Royals 7
White Sox 4
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Pat
Sheridan and Darryl Motley
slugged doubles in a wild seventh
inning last night that carried the
Kansas City Royals to a 7-4 victory
over the skidding Chicago White
Sox.
The score was tied at 1-1 with one
out in the seventh when first base
man Greg Walker bobbled Buddy
Biancalana’s routine grounder. Bi
ancalana went to third on Willie
Wilson’s single, then both scored on
Sheridan’s drive into left field.
Motley followed with an RBI dou
ble for a 4-1 Kansas City lead and
LaMarr Hoyt, 10-15, was replaced
by Dan Spillner after intentionally
walking Jorge Orta.
Motley scored the fifth run a
The Daily Collegian
Tuesday/ Aug. 28/ 1984
final 21>/2 minutes before Cox, a
lanky 6-foot-5 rookie from Fort Lau
derdale who was a high school All-
American last year, decided the
struggle.
Cox’s 45-yard field goal had given
Miami a 17-15 lead with 14:09 re
maining. The score came four plays
after Fleming atoned for his bad
snap by recovering Jackson’s fum
ble at the Auburn 31.
Auburn quickly regained the lead
18-17 with 10:17 to play on McGinty’s
three-pointer from the same dis
tance after the Tigers drove from
their 32 to the Miami 28, with Jack
son rambling for 28 yards on his one
big burst of the game.
Miami, however, was not to be
denied. Just as the Hurricanes did
most of last season, they found a
way to win.
Brown returned the kickoff 16
yards to his 17 and the Hurricanes
drove to the Auburn eight in six
plays, with Highsmith and fresh
man Warren Williams each reeling
off 12-yard carries and Kosar hitting
Williams with a 34-yard pass. Cox
drilled his game-winning field goal
three plays later.
For good measure, Kosar
whipped a 44-yard pass to Brown at
the Auburn four-yard line with 54
seconds left. But after one running
play gained two yards, Miami let
the clock tick away and with it
perhaps Auburn’s dream of its first
national championship in 27 years.
Kosar, as expected, came out
winging the ball. He completed four
of four passes for 57 yards as Miami
drove 66 yards on its second posses
sion. The Hurricanes took a 7-0 lead
when Shakespeare got behind Au
burn cornerback Jonathan Robin
son and made a tumbling catch of
Kosar’s 17-yard pass just 4:41 into
the game.
moment later when Frank White hit
a hot smash behind third base and
Roy Smalley’s throw to second base
sailed into right field.
Orta went to third on the play and
made it 6-1 when Spillner was
charged with a balk. The last run
scored when Greg Pryor singled
home White. Four of the six runs in
the inning were earned.
Winner Bret Saberhagen, 7-9,
scattered four hits through seventh
innings. Joe Beckwith relieved Sa
berhagen starting the eighth and
gave up a two-run double to Carlton
Fisk and RBI double to Walker
before Dan Quisenberry came on
for his 35th save.
The defending American League
West champion White Sox have lost
five of their last six games and 13 of
their last 17. They went ahead 1-0 in
the fourth on Walker’s 18th home
run. White made it 1-1 with his 14th
in the sixth.
Blue Jays 5
Twins 2
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Ranee
Mulliniks set a Toronto record for
consecutive hits and Ernie Whitt
and Willie Aikens homered as the
Blue Jays continued their mastery
over the Minnesota Twins with a 5-2
victory last night.
Mulliniks collected three hits in
his first three at-bats, giving him
eight straight hits over four games,
before being replaced by a pinch
hitter in the seventh inning.
With the count 3-1 on Mulliniks,
the left-handed hitter was taken out
AP Laserphoto