sports O'Connor uses advice to grab British Open lea • By 808 GREEN AP Golf Writer SANDWICH, England A bit of advice from "Himself" helped Christy O'Connor Jr. to a spectacular, record-breaking 64 and a four-stroke lead yesterday in the first round of the British Open Golf Championship. "He's a hero in Ireland, a very brave player with nerves of steel," O'Connor said of his uncle, Christy" O'Connor, a boiste rious, carousing figure who reached the status of a legend during the 50s, 60s and 70s, and was known throughout the land simply as "Himself." "He told me how to win the Open," said Christy Jr., a journeyman pro who has played his life in the shadow of his famous uncle, winner of scores of European tourna ments and in 1965 the runner-up in the British Open. "He said you must be brave enough to attack the course, brave enough to be posi tive and not negative, brave enough to play each hole and each shot one at a time. "I kept that in mind," said the younger O'Connor, 36, a veteran of 16 years of unremarkable activity on the European circuit. And it worked so marvelously well this chilly day on the rainswept links of the Royal St. George's Golf Club course. "I just tried to make as many birdies as I could. I tried to keep going the way I was. I never played safe," said O'Connor, who had 10 birdies, four bogeys and only four pars. Christy Jr. reeled off a British Open record of seven consecutive birdies, on the fourth through the 10th holes. , He broke, by one stroke, the course record set by Henry Cotton in 1934 and was re warded by a "well done, lad; did you play all 18?" from the 78-year-old Cotton. And he matched the largest first round lead ever established in this ancient event. The last to lead the first round of this tournament by four shots: Cotton in 1934. "That's the best I can play," O'Connor said. While O'Connor, whose last individual Loree hopes to reach University Games By JIM SAUNDERS Collegian Sports Writer Years of intensive training are beginning to pay off in a big way for Lady Lion Gymnast Pam Loree. The senior from Port Washing ton, N.Y. is at the University of Florida today where she will com pete for one of only six positions on the team which will represent the United States at the World Univer sity Games to be held in Japan next month. Loree earned a chance to try out for the U.S. Team by placing elev enth in the Individual All-Around at the NCAA Championships held in Salt Lake City, Utah last April. • The top ten Americans at the NCAAs were chosen to compete for the six positions on the U.S. team. Loree was selected as the tenth candidate the third place finisher in the NCAA's was a Canadian citizen. In addition to the ten NCAA fi nalists, six other gymnasts were invited by the organizing commit tee to try out for the squad: "It's one of the goals that I've had since I was young and this is my last chance," said the senior about the chance to represent her country in international competition. While her teammates have been spending the summer working on new tricks and routines, Loree has continued to train at a competitive level and will perform the same routines that earned her a 37.20 in the all-around competition at the NCAA tournament. Little progress made in baseball talks By HAL BOCK AP Sports Writer NEW YORK Negotiators for the Major League Baseball Play ers' Association and baseball own ers met for three hours yesterday, reported little if any progress, and then recessed their talks until Mon day. The meeting was the first since the players set an Aug. 6 strike date, saying they would shut down the sport if no collective bargaining agreement is reached by that date. Don Fehr, acting executive direc tor of the union, said the talks presented no new ideas. "We had hoped to begin a dis cussion of the basic issues, salary structure and the benefit plan," he said. "We had a brief discussion but there is still no offer on the benefit plan. We reviewed a lot of other issues, not fundamental issues, but important ones." First round British Open leader Christy O'Connor (left) with three•time British Open winner Henry Cotton victory came in the 1975 Irish Open, was major professional titles, hit a tee shot out enjoying his finest hour, some of the game's of bounds on the 14th and had to make a more famous figures were thrashing and three-foot putt for double bogey. He finished scowling in damp, bedraggled misery with a 77. through the knee-deep rough and over the wet dines. • Jack Nicklaus, who counts three British Open crowns in his record collection of 17 "Pam has displayed an excep tionally mature, professional atti tude over a tough summer of training," said Lady Lion Assistant Coach Marshall Avener. "If she makes this team it won't be because she was lucky." Loree feels that the competition is pretty even and her chances of Lee MacPhail, president of man agement's Player Relations Com mittee, said the negotiators had dealt with 25 issues that had been placed on the table by one side or the other. "It's hard to measure progress," MacPhail said. "We didn't reach final agreement. We've got to do a lot of work in a lot of areas." The basic issue in the dispute between the two sides deals with baseball's television revenue and the share given to the players for their pension and benefit plan. Tra ditionally, the players' association has received one-third of that pack age about $l5 million this year. However, baseball's new TV pack age jumped from $250 million to $l.l billion last year, and the owners have balked at maintaining the one third percentage for the players, which would produce payments of about $6O million. "We have not made a specific Seve Ballesteros of Spain, the defending titleholder and pre-tournament favorite, bogeyed five out of six holes during the worst of the rain and came in with a 75. Pam Loree qualifying hinge on 'hitting' all four events. Called a team leader by Assistant Coach Avener, Loree says, "I will be competing alone but I know that the rest of the team will be with me in spirit and that's important to me." If she qualifies today, Loree will offer on television money," Mac- Phail said. "It depends on how the whole financial issue will be han dled. The economic state of base ball is the most important issue to be considered." Management has claimed to have lost $43 million in 1984, a figure disputed by an accounting profes sor hired by the owners, who saw the losses at closer to $27 million. The players claim, after an ex amination of the books, that base ball actually made about $lO million last year. At yesterday's bargaining ses sion, the union presented a report from Roger G. Noll, a Stanford University economics professor, entitled "The Economic Viability of Professional Baseball." • Fehr said that it made more sense to use an economist, rather than an accountant, to study the economic issues. "This is something economists become the first Lady Lion to com pete in international competition since 1979. "My Wife (Head Coach . Judi Avener) and I are both extremely proud of her having a chance to represent her country," said Assis tant Coach Marshall Avener, who is in Florida with Loree today. do, not something accountants do," he said. "Trend lines must be stud ied. They (owners) say salaries are going up by 15 percent and that means large losses, but the market conditions have changed and it will rectify itself. That was the end of the discussion." Countered MacPhail, "That's very nice to say, but he's basing it on his own hopes and beliefs. We have hard figures to show what our losses are." Fehr said that despite the new television package, players had not received any more money . for the 1985 All-Star Game than the $2 million -plus generated under guidelines contained in the old agreement, which expired last Dec. 31. "Not a single additional nickel has been offered." The union boss said there had been no significant progress and, "yes, the clock is ticking." And Lee Trevino had it two under par after three holes, then took a double bogey on the fourth and came in with a 73. Former U.S. Open and PGA champion David Graham, an Australian now living in the United States, led a group of five tied for second at 68. Also at that figure were Sandy Lyle, Phillies snap streak against Soto, Reds CINCINNATI (AP) Juan Samuel had three hits and knocked in two runs last night as the Philadelphia-Phillies snapped a five-game losing streak with a 6- 3 victory over slump-ridden Mario Soto and the Cincinnati Reds. Soto, 8-11, has lost his last eight decisions, the longest losing streak of his carrer. The right-hander hasn't won a game since June 4. Samuel tripled in a run in the second inning, singled home an other in the eighth and also had a double for the Phillies, who also got • a solo homer from Mike Schmidt and a two-run double from Glenn Wilson. Jerry Koosman, 4-2, won his 220th career game with 7 2-3 in nings of pitching, with Kent Te kulve finishing for his ninth save. The 42-year-old Koosman allowed three runs and seven hits, struck out three and didn't walk a batter. Samuel led off the game with a double and Von Hayes walked before a double-steal set up Wil son's double. Samuel's triple and Schmidt's 12th homer, into the second deck in left field in the fourth, made it 4-0. The Reds loaded the bases on singles by Nick Esasky, Dave Con cepcion and Ron Oester in the fifth before Soto's sacrifice bunt scored Esasky. The Phillies added a run in the sixth and filed a protest. With Steve Jeltz on second and Koos man on first, Samuel bunted and was thrown out, then was called for interference after knocking the ball out of first baseman Tony Perez's glove. . Without the interference call, a run would have scored, but Jeltz ultimately scored anyway when Von Hayes singled. Padres 3 Pirates 2 SAN DIEGO (AP) Carmelo Martinez belted a two-out home run in the bottom of the eighth inning yesterday to give the San Diego Padres a 3-2 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates. Martinez's 12th homer of the year came off John Candelaria, 2- 4, who relieved starter Rick Reus chel after seven innings. Winner Craig Lefferts, 5-4, worked two innings in relief of Dave Dravecky with Rich Gossage pitching the ninth for his 19th save. The Pirates got a first-inning run when Bill Almon doubled, went to third on Johnny Ray's bunt single and scored when Bill Mad lock grounded into a double play. Sixto Lezcano, subbing for the injured George Hendrick in right The Daily Collegian Friday, July 19, 1985 Philip Parkin and Robert Lee, all of Britain, and Tony Johnstone of Zimbabwe. The leading Americans were Fuzzy Zoel ler and D.A. Weibring, in a group at 69, one under-par and five back. Larry Nelson, Corey Pavin, Payne Stew art and Mark O'Meara, a two-time winner on the American tour this year, had 70s. Peter Jacobsen had a 71 despite a fat nine on the 19th hole, *here he suffered a lost ball and a tee shot out of bounds. Tom Watson, a five-time winner of this title, pulled his first shot of the tournament into deep rough, opened with a double bogey and came home with a 72 that, he said, "isn't too far back." Andy Bean also shot 72. So did Bernhard Langer of West Germany, the Masters champion. Tom Kite, Ben Crenshaw and Lanny Wad kins were with Trevino at 73 with the rest of the Americans spaced through the rest of the field. O'Connor had three-putt bogeys on the first and third sandwiched around a 12-foot birdie putt on the second. He started his string of seven birdies with a pair of 12-foot putts on the fourth and fifth. He dropped in a 25-footer on the sixth then hit a three-iron second shot to the green on the par-five seventh and two-putted for birdie-four. A 20-footer on the eighth provided him with a fifth consecutive birdie. "Until the eighth, I wasn't really aware what I was doing," he said. He hit a six-iron two feet from the cup on the ninth and birdied, reaching the turn without a par on his card. An eight-iron set up a 10-foot birdie putt on the 10th, his seventh in a row. He two-putted from about 90 feet for par on the 11th then birdied the 12th from 15 feet. A drive into the rough produced a bogey on the 13th and he bogeyed the 15th after missing the green with a three-iron. He dropped a 20-footer on the 17th to get back to six under for the day and made par on the last. field, made it 2-0 in the fourth when he hit his third home run of the season. The Padres tied it in the bottom of the fourth on Kevin Mcßey nolds' two-out, two-run opposite field double into the right-field corner. Steve Garvey opened the inning with a bunt single and Reuschel walked Graig Nettles with one out. Orioles 8 Royals 3 BALTIMORE ( AP) Cal Rip ken, Mike Young and Wayne Gross clouted solo home runs and Eddie Murray rapped a two-run double as the Baltimore Orioles defeated the Kansas City Royals 8- 3 last night. Ripken, 12-for-28 in his last sev en games, singled prior to Mur ray's double in the first inning and hit his 16th homer to give Balti more a 4-1 lead in the fifth, giving him 21 RBI in 24 games. Scott McGregor, with three in nings of relief from Sammy Stew art, who notched his seventh save, upped his record to 8-7. Murray's double scored Lee Lacy, who had singled, and Rip ken, making it 2-0 in the first inning. Young's ninth homer, the first of three off Bret Saberhagen, 10-5, came in the fourth and made it 3-1. A two-run homer by Hal Mcßae, who ended an 0-for-16 slump against Baltimore this season, pulled the Royals to within 4-3 in the sixth, but Gross responded with his ninth homer in the bottom of the inning. The Orioles tacked on three runs in the eighth. Pinch-hitter Jim Dwyer singled with two outs and the bases loaded for two runs, then Lacy singled home another run. Mets 7 Braves 6 NEW YORK (AP) Darryl Strawberry keyed New York's five-run fifth inning with a two-run single and the Mets went on to notch their fourth straight victory yesterday, a 7-6 decision over the bumbling Atlanta Braves. Ron Darling, 10-2, got credit for the victory with five innings of pitching. Reliever Roger McDow ell allowed Bob Horner's two-run homer in the ninth before Jesse Orosco got the last two outs for his ninth save. • Rick Mahler, 13-8, was the loser, but he was victimized by four Braves errors that led to six un earned runs. Newcomers lead Quad Cities Open COAL VALLEY, 111. (AP) Steve Jones and Bob Tway, rela- tive newcomers to the PGA tour and once college competitors, each eagled to tie at six-under par 64s yesterday for the lead after the first round of the $300,000 Quad Cities Open The pair's showing erased an early lead by Texan Dave Eichel berger, whose hole-in-one on the 17th, after a 20-yard chip-in on the 16th, put him two strokes off the pace at 66. Jack Nicklaus Jr., meanwhile, son of the all-time PGA money winner Jack Nicklaus, shot a 75 11 strokes back and worrying about making today's second round cut. Nicklaus, an amateur in his first Professional Golfers' Association tourney, birdied once, but double-bogeyed once and suf fered four bogeys. Jones turned pro in 1981 follow ing graduation from the Universi ty of Colorado at Boulder, but was sidelined later that year by a bro ken thumb. He returned to the PGA tour last year. Besides his eagle on the par-five 10th hole, Jones hit seven birdies and seven holes at par to offset his three bogeys on the 6,514-yard, par-70 course. Tway, born in Georgia, said he played against Jones several times while at Oklahoma State University. He eagled the par-five sixth hole, grabbed four birdies • 'GREAT FOR A DATE NOTICE Championship Miniature Golf 250 W. Hamilton Ave. behind the Collegian Inc. reserves the State Store. right to release the names of individuals who place advertis ing in The Daily Collegian, Colle gian Magazine and The Weekly , Collegian DEPENDABLE, HARDWORKING FARM HOUSE WITH 5 bed. The decision on whether to INDIVIDUAL for deliveries and release this Information shall be rooms, fireplace and swimming general office duties. 40 hrs, M-F. pool. Located 2 miles from north Call 238-5051. made by the management of FEMALE ROOMATE NEEDED to end of State College bypass. Collegian Inc. share one bedroom apartment. GOVERNMENT JOBS $15,000- Desire individuals to rent rooms The purpose of this policy Is to Fall semester. $l7O month. Call $50,000/yr possible. All occupa for $l5O/month plus shared utill discourage the placement of ad- 862.7536. tions. Call 805-687-6000 ext. R vertising that may be cruel or ties beginning August 1. Ca 11956 8 to find out how. - unnecessarily embarrassing to Julie 237.1062 or Skytop Farm FEMALE ROOMATE NEEDED for 238-4562. FaillSpring 1985- Downtown- 1/4 INTERVIEWER, FULL OR part individuals or organizations. - call Holly 234- time, fee basis. Send resume, FOR RENT 112 apartment 0' Bri- 2981 P.O. Box 81086, Pittsburgh, PA an Place, 3 blocks from campus. Large two bedroom apt. (703) TWO FEMALE ROOMMATES 15217 369.7124. Matt - or Jay (call eVe. • wanted non-smokers for 85.86.' • flings). $107.00 each per month. Call 237- _ _..... 1886. 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(AP) Lau ra Baugh, a nine-time runner-up but never a winner in 12 years on the LPGA tour, sank a hole-in-one and grabbed the first-round lead at the $225,000 Boston Five Classic with a five-under-par 67 yester day Baugh, who also had six birdies and three bogeys, had a one-stroke edge over Therese Hession, anoth er non-winner. Hession finished at 68, one stroke ahead of Silvia Ber tolaccini, Rosie Jones and Myra Blackwelder. Kathy Baker, who won the U.S. Women's Open last Sunday for her initial tour victory, was two-un der-par after nine holes on the par 72, 6,008 -yard Tara Ferncroft course. But she put her tee shot into the water on the next hole, took a double bogey and came in at even par. Defending champion Laurie Rinker was among eight players at one-under-par. Baugh got her ace with a five iron on the 156-yard, par-three, 16th hole. COLLEGIAN CLASSIFIED ADS FOR RENT Grad/prof couple looking for a place to sublet or house-slt for .. . * ' AUDIO , fall semester. Non-smokers, de '., -.. .. ... ... , • , pendable, references available. ' Please call 237.3225 afternoons or weekends. AUTOMOTIVE Connors cruises to reach quarterfinals WASHINGTON, D.C. Number 'downed Spain's Fernando Luna 6-1, 6- only to watch helplessly as they fell one seed Jimmy Connors breezed into 4; Mark Dickson, No. 15, beat South inches inside the baseline. the quarterfinals of the $200,000 D.C. Africa's Christo Steyn 6-4, 6-2, and With the victory, Clerc advances National Bank Tennis Classic last Switzerland's Jakob Hlasek won over into the third round, where he will night easily defeating Lawson Dun- France's Guy Forget 3-6, 7-5, 7-6. meet countryman Guillermo Vilas on can, 6-1, 6-2. Yesterday's results were not totally Friday. The meeting will be a re- Taking control at the outset, Con- unexpected as over the last 10 years, match of the 1981 finals here, where nors held serve and then broke his Argentine players have dominated Clerc won his first championship, 7-5, opponent at love to take a quick two play here, reaching the finals seven 6-2. games to none lead. times and winning the clay court Earlier in the day, sixth-seeded championship on five occasions. Jose-Luis Clerc stopped Yugoslavia's Clerc, who has two of those Slobodan Zivojinovic 7-6, 6-2 to lead a championships, most recently in 1983, parade of Argentine's into the third was pushed hard yesterday by the 21- round that included Martin Jaite, a - year-old Zivojinovic. The two players 3, 6-4 winner over Peru's Jaime Yza- held serve thru the first set. Clerc ga, and Marcelo Ingaramo, who oust- won it by taking the tiebreaker 7-3. ed Spain's Diego Perez, 7-5, 6-3. Zivojinovic contributed to his own In other matches, eighth-seeded downfall in the tiebreaker as he mis- Libor Pimek of Czechoslovakia takenly let two balls go over his head Strike could throw baseball into disarray By JOHN NELSON AP Sports Writer The temptation here is to make an assumption that can't be made that there will be no strike by major league baseball players: • The St. Louis Cardinals and New York Mets would fight it out for the National League East title, meeting for the last time at Shea Stadium in a crucial three-game series Sept. 10-12. • The Los Angeles Dodgers would slowly pull away from San Diego in the NL West, winning by perhaps as many as eight games, while the Padres struggled with none of the team speed that helped them win the pennant last year. ' • • The Toronto Blue Jays, New York Yankees WANT TO BORROW negatives from Phila's Llve-Aid concert. My pictures got ruined. I'll pay you TAKE OVER OUR lease for next to borrow them. Call 238-7757. year. One block past Beaver on Pugh. Good for 4 or 5 people. Call Jay or Matt (703)369.7124 SUBLET ROOMMATES ROOMS tigusgs , .i: : .:-.H . .i.' WANTED: TO RENT sports analysis HELP WANTED LOST PSU CLASS RING 1985 init. T.A.M. on inside. Call 234-8357 anytime if found. Townview Apartments Still available 2 and 3 bedroom apartments Pugh St and Bradley Ave. • FREE HEAT • FREE CABLE • FREE PARKING • FREE BUS PASSES CALL 237-3270 and Detroit Tigers would make a three-team race of the American League East, while Baltimore and Boston fought it out for fourth place. • The California Angels would hold off a Sep tember rush by the Kansas City Royals to win the AL West for the second time under Gene Mauch, only to lose in the playoffs, for the second time under Gene Mauch. Such post All-Star Game speculations, while at the heart of the game's popularity, must be hedged this year against the very real likelihood of base ball's second midseason players' strike. The last strike, which cut seven weeks from the middle of the 1981 season, forced then-Commis sioner Bowie Kuhn into some very unpopular scheduling gymnastics. The season was,split into two halves, with the first-half winners going into a miniplayoff with the second-half winners to decide the division champions But since the last strike ended near or before the date this one would begin, a split season is not an option for 1985. SPECIAL LIMITED OFFER! Does $lOO off your first month's rent plus your choice of FREE HBO or a MICROWAVE OVEN in your apartment sound tempting? It's all yours if you rent in July! • NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) Chris Evert Lloyd was not at her best yesterday, but she was good enough to beat Hu Na 6-2, 7-5 in the second round of the $150,000 Virginia Slims of Newport. Third-seeded Wendy Turnbull, sixth-seeded Gigi Fernandez and sev enth-seeded Elizabeth Smylie also advanced to the quarterfinals. The Daily Collegian Friday, July 19, 1985-11 Hu is the 22-year-old Chinese tennis player who defected to the United States three years ago. Ranked No. 106 in the world, she had to qual ify for this event by defeating Canadi an Marianne Groat, 6-0, 6-0. Lloyd broke Hu's serve three times in the first set. She lost her own serve once. In the second set, there were seven service breaks, and Hu saved five break points to hold serve in the fifth game. She actually broke ahead 4-2 in the second set, but Lloyd broke right back. Lloyd broke in front in the 11th game and held serve in the 12th for the match. Lloyd will play Fernandez in the quarterfinals today. Second-seeded Pam Shriver will meet Antonoplis. If a strike is brief, the season simply could be resumed. Some games would be lost, and the remaining schedule might have to be reworked. But right now, this might represent the most optimistic hope. There are two more frightening possibilities: • A strike is more lengthy, and the two sides do not come to an agreement until the eve of the playoffs. At that point, the teams that were leading their divisions when the strike began would be declared the winners. The playoffs would begin, eliminating the most entertaining and telling part of the season the pennant stretch, when trailers often overtake first-place teams or at least make it a close race The union negotiates past its deadline, push ing a strike date back to early October. On the day before the playoffs, a strike is called. Depending on when a new contract is agreed upon, the playoffs and World Series are held in December in a domed stadium or next March in Florida as spring training is going on. Or not at all.