Comics/SB fheaters/7B , ngels win again/6B · PDF file, ngels win again/6B fheaters/7B...

4
, ngels win again/6B fheaters/7B Comics/SB JIM MURRAY J Oregon enters the underworld AMERICA THE Beautiful is tuing into the world's biest bookie parlor. The numbe racket used to be run by Murder, Inc. Now it's run by the state. Co on the take used to cul in on the crap games and the slot machin. Now, City Hall do. You used to get hauled before a grand ju for shaking down high stakes poker gam. Now, you get elected mayor. Rememr when they raided the gambling shi offshore? State co, wieldmg ax, used to board them. Today, they'd ny the state nag. Nathan Detroit would be flabbergted. Sleep-Out Louie wouldn't believe his ey. Today, they'd be govement officials. Damon Runyon wouldn't have any material. Tbe vice squa will be out of busin. There's no more vice. The stale of Oregon is the latt to join the undeorld. They'll book your football beʦ, pay the !me, spot you the spread, do all the thin that ud to get you one-lo-ven if you did it in a loſt five years ago. The soverei state of Oregon is now just another guy on a river boat with h1Sown deck and a gold watcb. The really ironic note is that the profits from this wheel will go lo the athletic proams ol slate univeiti. In other words; the state IS tung into a guy in a pinchbacked su1l in order to provide football playe to keep the system going. Jimmy the Greek You have to pinch He's no founding father youell to believe it. I aJways thougbt c1vilizt1ons were bro"ght low by the decadeoce of the ruling cl. h\s one seems to be on the br\n of co\\ae becau of catering to the ber instincts ot the low lit. I once bad a gambling uncle who made book, shot cra, played pool, cheated at cards. He wouldn't work. He didn't believe tn it. But he wanted eveone el to. He considered eveone else in the world a "mark," someone to be separated from tbeir hard- eaed wag by someone slicker. THIS IS THE role lbe state tak on today. It's in the busin of gulling the gullible, taking advantage or sucke. The stale was Uncle Ed's swo enemy in the days. Ed w always making bail, seing time, on the lam, paying Im, leavrng by the window. His whole life w a cat-and-mou game with the vice squad. He w bo 40 yea too soon Not too long ago, historians were teaching us that state lotte were a blot on civilition, that one of the reaso Napoleon's early campaigns were so succful in nohe Italy and Ausia w because the cizenry were all sitting around daydreaming, waiting for their ship to come in, 1.e., their number to hit The state bas apparently succumbed to the argument that gambling is always going to be around, so why not get in on it? OK. But, why stop there? People are always going to rob banks. So, why not get in on that? Let's license bank robbe for a percentage or the take. Humanity is always going to sell dope, embele funds, cheat widows and orpha, rig the stock market Should the government get in on that, too? Why put Ivan Boky in prin' Just get him to let the Treasury Department in on his latest insider information. They'll take it from there. WHY NOT GET in on cal burgla· take, !ecracke, jewel thiev' Maybe auttheft rin should be govementperated. Old-fhioned morality Is in headlong retreat anyway. why not nuke it into oblivion altogether' It'sonethinglo decriminalize an aclivity.ll's another to join ,t. If gambling w bad for the guys with the bent nos and the gray fedoras, and the submachine guns, why is it OK for guys in three-piece suits withbriefcases? Nolbmg ud to make me madder than to read a "spos" story written by some spo handicapper that would read something like "the Cincinnati Bengals are 60/40 to the number at home but are 70/30 on the road and I wanted the Jets to run out the clock without attempting a field goal." Or, "the Rams are 0-5-l in mtradivisional gam against the spread." No mention of who won or lost. Or bow they played the game. No human bein were mentioned at all.The NFL a wheel. SOMEHOW I DON think this is whal the Founding Fathe had in mind for the Republic. Jimmy the Greek instead or Thom Jeffeon as model. The preamble should be amended to read, "We the people, In order to form a more perfect union, establish Justice - and beat the spread - do ordain and establish this Constitution of the United States of America." The government is In the business of pandering to the worst instincʦ of iʦ citizens. It's not a government it's an accomplice.It now qualifi as a profional gambler. And we all know what a profional gambler ,s - no gambler al all. The profeional doesn't gamble. He ri lhe wheel, stacks the deck, gets the edge. That's the trouble with big-money gambling. Like any other racketeer. the government might want more than the vigorish, too. Arnold Rothstein fixed the last ried World Seri. Maybe the Secreta or the Treury will fix the next one. 1,m Murray ,s a columnt for the s Angeles Times SPORTS B Eu gene, Oreg on, W ed ne sda y , July 26 , 1989 * st oto bv Gr enny Moore - noted writer �nd a former UO star and Olympian - gets an ultrasound tratmenT from Larry Stan ifer prior to his first masters' meet Jt embers from the old fire By DA VE KA YFES The Register-Guard The competitive desires wane for Kenny Moore some adrenalin and ran my 15:39, l would lose to Anto- nio Villanueva by 55 seconds." A strange feeling overcame Kenny Moore as he waited for his turn at the registration desk al bustling McArtllurCouearly this week. It's not that Moore hasn't been training. He b - in Hawaii, where he liv with his wife (Mercedes Desho- tel) of two yea. He had �tood in lme m the me bu lidmg 27 yea ago, his knees perhaps a little weak as he registered for his !Jt clsat the Un1ver1ty or Oregon Yet. at the me tJme, there was the naing notion that he didn't lit amid the clatter of forei languag and talk of age-group records. More to the point is the fact that his running prime is past. He is more a writer than a runner now. Surely, he didn't feel as small as he did back then when he was 18 yea old, just out of North Eugene High School. A twme United Stat Olympian, a past national cro count champion and a celebrated writer for Spos Illustrated, the nation's foremt weekly spo magane, Moore had the credentials to keep h bead high be picked deJor e.Y-eraos ' Champtobips. wbicb sta Thuday al McAhur Cou. This would be his first official appearance in a mas- te' running event. He ha run in The Legends , ' _ Mile two years ago at Hayward Field, but it was not affiliated withthe masters'movement. Somehow, he felt like a newcomer all over again. Villanueva of Mexico, on the other hand, is one of the bright sta or the me age group. His winning time or 14:44.18 for 5,000 meters lt year in Australia was lter than that of John Dixon, the brother of former world record-holder Rod Dixon of New Zealand, for the 40-yearld age group (15:04.75). "In theory I ' m supd to run ft." be id of the tect tt be ls at e fQUng end of his 45-yearld age oup tur hts race.-tt1e 5,000 mete. "If I took a wild gue at what I could run, and if I really came up with Moore, who sold Sporʦ Illustrated on the i.dea of running a lenhy piece on the event this week, will be Turn to MOORE, Page 58 Canseco reins his control A's star wants to put legal problems, injury out of the picture By RICHARD JUSTICE eWasblngtonPost OAKLAND, Calif. - The smile is boy- ish, the answe polite, the availability seemingly unlimited. This then 1s where Jose Canseco has chosen to begin the healing. This is where he begins the maive job or rebuilding a public image that's in tatters, of recovering from an eight· monthstretch wbenhis , life seeminglyhas been a string of broken appearances and scrapes with the law. "The person I've read about," be ys, "is not the pen r know. But l believe the public is behind me because all they want is for a player to go out and play Other than that, I don't want to get into that stulf.I want it behind me." Indeed, the person he has read about hardly resembles !his smiling, friendly kid with the cantaloupe biceps and the Beaver Cleaver haircut. While his team- mat defend him in their public com- ments,some are overly critical i npn vate. His boss, Oakland A's General Mana- ger Sandy Aldeon, speaks sim U arily through tight lips and a thm tight smile. clear Jose has some growing up to do. Will this stuff be a slap in the face? I have no idea." Here's the rub: At 25 Canseco's one of the game's brightt, youngt stars, an tounding mixture of power and speed A year ago, he became the fit player to have 40 or more home ru and 40 or more steals in the me seon and only the seventh to be the unanimous choice for the American League's Most Valuable Player award. He be by smiling and making him- self available, by looking qutione in the eye and keeping the answer; vague, yet in!ormative.He bens by looking and soundmg sincere. "We don't check Boy Scout merit badges before we sign a player, but we' re not going to comprom1Se our pnnc ,ples, either," Alderson said . "I think it's pretty Here's the rest of the rub: He's 25 and making $1.8 million. He's 6-feet-3, 230 pounds, and people notice him. They n tice even more because he lik fast ca, and until he w married to a former Miss Miami last winter, corted a string Turn to CANSECO, Page 58 i@� Jose Canseco's woes have been a PR fiasco Ems lose key p la y e r while falling two bac k te check inju::; :; b v Wovne tbu Eugene Manager Paul Kirsch (4) and tra ine r f r a nk y T u nis on By BOB RODMAN The Register-Guard From the ve sta, thin didn't look like they were going lo go the home team's way Tueay night. Spokane jumped all over the Emer- alds and starting pitcher Kirk Baldwin in the llrst inning, culling a leadff double, three walks, a wild pitch and two runs from the left-hander. But the guys wearing while weren't going without a fight.In Eugene's half or the first, Rich Tunison was safe on a o-out error, David Solseth was hit by a pitch and Pat Muhy singled up the middle. That's when the trouble staed and seldom stopped as the Indians jammed a 10-4 Northwt League baseball beat- ing down Eugene's throat at Civic Sta- dium, bringing to an abrupt halt the Emeralds' twgame win streak. Tunison who earlier had stolen his 14th base �f the season lo tie team- mat Kirk Thompson and Sean Col- lins for third i n the league, was given lhe green light to go for hOme on Mur- phy's single. The light, and Tunin, went out as he was cut down at the plate by Spo- kane second baseman Kevin Hiins' throw lo catcher Rod Billinley. Thal the Ems would go on to lose the game w disturbing enough. But they also may have lost Tunison, the fi t baseman who leads Eugene in runs batted in with 23. The colllson at home plate put Tun- 0 r:i� 0 :� r:: �t::�!:: r 1t cials id Tunison was scheduled for X-rays late Tuday night, and it appeared bis retu to the lineup would be a day-lday decision. The Indians, the league's leading team with the bat, entered the game with a .284 average. It rose to .287 af- ter Tuesday night, thanks to a lO·run, 14-hll barrage. Eugene didn't help iʦ cause a whole lot by losing its ip on the base- ball the tune of five errors. Four Eugene pllche also lost their grip on the strike zone, Iuing nine walks. "It wasn·t the prettit game," Spo- kane Manager Bruce Bochy understat- ed, "hut we do have a gꝏd-hitting club. We will get our hits." If it's any coolation to the Emer- alds, the Indians were due. On Sunday, Spokane bad been held to only three hiʦ: on Monday, only one hit. In the first five innin, the Spo- kane leadf/ batter not only reached base fely, but eventually scored.The Indians put numbe on the score- board In every inning but three . And not once In the game were the Emeralds able to get the India out in order. At a time when Eugene w only a game back or Southe D!Vlon-lead· ing Salem and Southern Oregon and making a play for a piece of the top st's action, the Emeral did not Turn to E�S, Page 48

Transcript of Comics/SB fheaters/7B , ngels win again/6B · PDF file, ngels win again/6B fheaters/7B...

Page 1: Comics/SB fheaters/7B , ngels win again/6B · PDF file, ngels win again/6B fheaters/7B Comics/SB JIM MURRAY J Oregon enters the underworld AMERICA THE Beautiful is turning into the

, ngels win again/6B

fheaters/7B

Comics/SB

JIM � MURRAYJ Oregon enters

the underworld AMERICA THE Beautiful is turning into the

world's biggest bookie parlor. The numbers racket used to be run by Murder, Inc.

Now it's run by the state. Cops on the take used to cul in on the crap games

and the slot machines. Now, City Hall does. You used to get hauled before a grand jury for

shaking down high stakes poker games. Now, you get elected mayor.

Remember when they raided the gambling ships offshore? State cops, wieldmg axes, used to board them. Today, they'd ny the state nag.

Nathan Detroit would be flabbergasted. Sleep-Out Louie wouldn't believe his eyes. Today, they'd be government officials. Damon Runyon wouldn't have any material.

Tbe vice squads will be out of business. There's no more vice. The stale of Oregon is the latest to join the underworld. They'll book your football bets, pay the !me, spot you the spread, do all the things that used to get you one-lo-seven if you did it in a loft five years ago. The sovereigo state of Oregon is now just another

guy on a river boat with h1Sown deck and a gold watcb.

The really ironic note is that the profits from this wheel will go lo the athletic programs ol slate universities. In other words; the state IS turning into a guy in a pinchbacked su1l in order to provide football players to keep the system going.

Jimmy the Greek You have to pinch He's no founding father yoursell to believe it. I

aJways thougbt c1viliz.at1ons were bro"ght low by the decadeoce of the ruling classes. 1'h\s one seems to be on the br\n\t of co\\apse because of catering to the baser instincts ot the low lites.

I once bad a gambling uncle who made book, shot craps, played pool, cheated at cards. He wouldn't work. He didn't believe tn it. But he wanted everJone else to. He considered everyone else in the world a "mark," someone to be separated from tbeir hard­earned wages by someone slicker.

THIS IS THE role lbe state takes on today. It's in the business of gulling the gullible, taking advantage or suckers. The stale was Uncle Ed's sworn enemy in those days. Ed was always making bail, serving time, on the lam, paying Imes , leavrng by the window. His whole life was a cat-and-mouse game with the vice squad. He was born 40 years too soon

Not too long ago, historians were teaching us that state lotteries were a blot on civilization, that one of the reasons Napoleon's early campaigns were so successful in northern Italy and Austria was because the citizenry were all sitting around daydreaming, waiting for their ship to come in, 1.e., their number to hit

The state bas apparently succumbed to the argument that gambling is always going to be around, so why not get in on it?

OK. But, why stop there? People are always going to rob banks. So, why not get in on that? Let's license bank robbers for a percentage or the take. Humanity is always going to sell dope, embezzle funds, cheat widows and orphans, rig the stock market Should the government get in on that, too? Why put Ivan Boesky in prison' Just get him to let the Treasury Department in on his latest insider information. They'll take it from there.

WHY NOT GET in on cal burglars· take, sa!ecrackers, jewel thieves' Maybe auto-theft rings should be government-operated. Old-fashioned morality Is in headlong retreat anyway. why not nuke it into oblivion altogether'

It'sonethinglo decriminalize an aclivity.ll's another to join ,t. If gambling was bad for the guys with the bent noses and the gray fedoras, and the submachine guns, why is it OK for guys in three-piece suits with briefcases?

Nolbmg used to make me madder than to read a "sports" story written by some sports handicapper that would read something like "the Cincinnati Bengals are 60/40 to the number at home but are 70/30 on the road and I wanted the Jets to run out the clock without attempting a field goal." Or, "the Rams are 0-5-l in mtradivisional games against the spread." No mention of who won or lost. Or bow they played the game. No human beings were mentioned at all. The NFL as a wheel.

SOMEHOW I DON'T think this is whal the Founding Fathers had in mind for the Republic. Jimmy the Greek instead or Thomas Jefferson as model. The preamble should be amended to read, "We the people, In order to form a more perfect union, establish Justice - and beat the spread - do ordain and establish this Constitution of the United States of America."

The government is In the business of pandering to the worst instincts of its citizens. It's not a government it's an accomplice. It now qualifies as a professional gambler. And we all know what a professional gambler ,s - no gambler al all. The professional doesn't gamble. He rigs lhe wheel, stacks the deck, gets the edge. That's the trouble with big-money gambling.

Like any other racketeer. the government might want more than the vigorish, too. Arnold Rothstein fixed the last rigged World Series. Maybe the Sec retary or the Treasury will fix the next one.

1,m Murray ,s a columnv;t for the Los Angeles Times

SPORTS B Eugene, Oregon, Wednesday, July 26, 1989 *

staff photo bv Grevorv Scot1 enny Moore - noted writer �nd a former UO star and Olympian - gets an ultrasound tr.eatmenT from Larry Stan ifer prior to his first masters' meet

Just embers from the old fire By DA VE KA YFES The Register-Guard The competitive desires

wane for Kenny Moore

some adrenalin and ran my 15:39, l would lose to Anto­nio Villanueva by 55 seconds."

A strange feeling overcame Kenny Moore as he waited for his turn at the registration desk al bustling McArtllurCourtearly this week.

It's not that Moore hasn't been training. He bas - in Hawaii, where he lives with his wife (Mercedes Desho­tel) of two years.

He had �tood in lme m the same bu lid mg 27 years ago, his knees perhaps a little weak as he registered for

his !Jrst classat the Un1ver,;1ty or Oregon

Yet. at the same tJme, there was the nagging notion that he didn't lit amid the clatter of foreign languages and talk of age-group records.

More to the point is the fact that his running prime is past. He is more a writer than a runner now.

Surely, he didn't feel as small as he did back then when he was 18 year; old, just out of North Eugene High School.

A two-time United States Olympian, a past national cross country champion and a celebrated writer for Sports Illustrated, the nation's foremost weekly sports magazine, Moore had the credentials to keep hiS bead high as be picked up..hjs.p,,deJ.Jor .tlle.l!l<>rld..Y-"'eraos' Champtonsb.ips. wbicb start Thursday al McArthur Court.

This would be his first official appearance in a mas­ters' running event. He ha� run in The Legends,' _Mile two years ago at Hayward Field, but it was not affiliated withthe masters'movement.

Somehow, he felt like a newcomer all over again.

Villanueva of Mexico, on the other hand, is one of the bright star; or the same age group. His winning time or 14:44.18 for 5,000 meters last year in Australia was laster than that of John Dixon, the brother of former

world record-holder Rod Dixon of New Zealand, for the 40-year-old age group (15:04.75).

"In theory I'm supposed to run fast." be said of the tect tno.t be ls at .t!le fQUng end of his 45-year--old age group tur hts race.-tt1.e 5,000 meters. "If I took a wild guess at what I could run, and if I really came up with

Moore, who sold Sports Illustrated on the i.dea of running a lengthy piece on the event this week, will be

Turn to MOORE, Page 58

Canseco regains his control A's star wants to put legal problems, injury out of the picture

By RICHARD JUSTICE TbeWasblngtonPost

OAKLAND, Calif. - The smile is boy­ish, the answer; polite, the availability seemingly unlimited. This then 1s where Jose Canseco has chosen to begin the healing.

This is where he begins the massive job or rebuilding a public image that's in tatters, of recovering from an eight· monthstretch wbenhis,life seeminglyhas been a string of broken appearances and scrapes with the law.

"The person I've read about," be says, "is not the per;on r know. But l believe the public is behind me because all they want is for a player to go out and play Other than that, I don't want to get into that stulf.I want it behind me."

Indeed, the person he has read about hardly resembles !his smiling, friendly kid with the cantaloupe biceps and the Beaver Cleaver haircut. While his team­mates defend him in their public com­ments,some are overly critical in pnvate.

His boss, Oakland A's General Mana­ger Sandy Alderson, speaks simUarily through tight lips and a thm tight smile.

clear Jose has some growing up to do. Will this stuff be a slap in the face? I have no idea."

Here's the rub: At 25 Canseco's one of the game's brightest, youngest stars, an astounding mixture of power and speed A year ago, he became the first player to have 40 or more home runs and 40 or more steals in the same season and only the seventh to be the unanimous choice for the American League's Most Valuable Player award.

He begins by smiling and making him­self available, by looking questioner; in the eye and keeping the answer; vague, yet in!ormative.He begins by looking and soundmg sincere.

"We don't check Boy Scout merit badges before we sign a player, but we're not going to comprom1Se our pnnc,ples, either," Alderson said. "I think it's pretty

Here's the rest of the rub: He's 25 and making $1.8 million. He's 6-feet-3, 230 pounds, and people notice him. They no­tice even more because he likes fast cars, and until he was married to a former Miss Miami last winter, escorted a string

Turn to CANSECO, Page 58 Associated�

Jose Canseco's woes have been a PR fiasco

Ems lose key player while falling two back

.. te check inju::; :; bv Wovne ll;ntburn Eugene Manager Paul Kirsch (4) and trainer frank J(y Tunison

By BOB RODMAN The Register-Guard

From the very start, things didn't look like they were going lo go the home team's way Tuesday night.

Spokane jumped all over the Emer­alds and starting pitcher Kirk Baldwin in the llrst inning, culling a lead-off double, three walks, a wild pitch and two runs from the left-hander.

But the guys wearing while weren't going without a fight. In Eugene's half or the first, Rich Tunison was safe on a two-out error, David Solseth was hit by a pitch and Pat Murphy singled up the middle.

That's when the trouble started and seldom stopped as the Indians jammed a 10-4 Northwest League baseball beat­ing down Eugene's throat at Civic Sta­dium, bringing to an abrupt halt the Emeralds' two-game win streak.

Tunison who earlier had stolen his 14th base �f the season lo tie team­mates Kirk Thompson and Sean Col­lins for third in the league, was given lhe green light to go for hOme on Mur­phy's single.

The light, and Tunison, went out as he was cut down at the plate by Spo­kane second baseman Kevin Higgins' throw lo catcher Rod Billingsley.

Thal the Ems would go on to lose the game was disturbing enough. But they also may have lost Tunison, the first baseman who leads Eugene in runs batted in with 23. •

The colllson at home plate put Tun-

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:i1t cials said Tunison was scheduled for

X-rays late Tuesday night, and it appeared bis return to the lineup would be a day-lo-day decision.

The Indians, the league's leading team with the bat, entered the game with a .284 average. It rose to .287 af­ter Tuesday night, thanks to a lO·run, 14-hll barrage.

Eugene didn't help its cause a whole lot by losing its grip on the base­ball to the tune of five errors. Four

Eugene pllcher; also lost their grip on the strike zone, Issuing nine walks.

"It wasn·t the prettiest game," Spo­kane Manager Bruce Bochy understat­ed, "hut we do have a good-hitting club. We will get our hits."

If it's any consolation to the Emer­alds, the Indians were due. On Sunday, Spokane bad been held to only three hits: on Monday, only one hit.

In the first five innings, the Spo­kane lead-of/ batter not only reached base safely, but eventually scored. The Indians put numbers on the score­board In every inning but three.

And not once In the game were the Emeralds able to get the Indians out in order.

At a time when Eugene was only a game back or Southern D!Vlsion-lead· ing Salem and Southern Oregon and making a play for a piece of the top spot's action, the Emeralds did not

Turn to E�S, Page 48

Page 2: Comics/SB fheaters/7B , ngels win again/6B · PDF file, ngels win again/6B fheaters/7B Comics/SB JIM MURRAY J Oregon enters the underworld AMERICA THE Beautiful is turning into the

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The Rev. Barrett can call you out · · · or knock you out akes, ·ame lon·t hat. ind

By BOB RODMAN Th,R,1lsltr·Guard

Ted Barrett has a story lrom which movies, 1f not tegends,are made.

A 6-foot-4, 240-pound fellow lrom upstate New York who nov. calls Mountain View, Calif , his home, the 23· year-<>ld Barrett 1s an umpire In the Northwest League

this summer Nothing too s trange

about that But he's a former boxer who has the legal power to mar­ry people in California

Barrel! Is a former h lgh school and college (Cal Stati,-Hayward) lootbalt player who thought boxing might be a good way to stay in shape !or rootball

"I also thought at -==----'-------' one lime 1 might be able

Ted Barren

Rings and diamonds

onnngsas wett as diamonds

to beat (heavyweight champion Mike) Tyson," Barrett said the other day, his thoughts

His !am1ly wasn't exactly thrilled at Barrett's way of Joining the work lorce, and hIS w1fi,-to-be (they were marned last New Year's Eve> made no secret of her distaste !or boxing as a career

As an amateur super heavyweight (more than 201 pounds) boxer he was 36-6 with 20 knockouts. He never fought as a pro, but sparred a tot against guys like Greg Page and James Broad, and worked out with George Foreman and Greg Haugen

"Then one night in a Las Vegas hotel room. after getting bounced around pretty good while sparring with a l1ght heavyweight, I thought 11 was about time I be honestwlthmysel!"

Bye bye boxing. Hello umpiring. "My lam1ly says I was the greatest pro fighter who

never was," Barrett said. In January, he went to umpire school, worked dur·

ing spnng training, and was as.signed to the Northwest League

As far as marrying people "Oh, yeah," he gnnned. "I'm a religious person I

hke to study the bible. My friends used to call me Rever· end Ted. One day 1 sent 1n the apphcat1on and got the legal credentmls to be a reverend in Cahforn,a

"I could marry people." The reverend umpire Ted Barrett He can pass the

plate as wellas work behmd it . . . A s tory m th IS week's Sports Illustrated discusses the

possible dem,se of wooden bats Bob Beban. general manager of the Eugene Erner·

aids. 1s not so sure the wooden bat - which 1s made from ash - is about to be broken !or the last hme

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- a�d�.an extra-inning game, the odds are with the Emer-

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·50, or SI 74 a . The Emeralds have won both or their two overtime oullngsthls season

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bats , lngs, the Hawks are winless and that would change the game." ·

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corning orr college seasons using metal bats, the Ems "usually get through a year with the 15 dozen," Beban said . . . sat o���ie �:���;,,�

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at Eugene this week It seems Staton. who 1s the league's leading hitter,

shares the home-run lead, and 1s second ,n runs batted :g::i, ��1�

y1 a pllch thrown by Salem's Bill Bene during

Staton went !or Bene and the light ensued. The league frowns on such acllvtty, and Staton had

no defense One or witnesses was Jack Cain, president of the league. in Salem to watch the game .

No w,ns are guaranteed, but if Eugene gets itself

. . . Baseball stattsucs come and go The game,winning RBI 1s gone, but taking ,ts place

is samethmg referred to as "rehef pitcher points " and the accompanying standings - or course.

H�re's the formula· Saves times three, plus rehef w,ns limes two, minus relief losses times two.

Example Through Sunday's game, Eugene's Scott Centala has four saves (plus 12 points), three wins (plus six points), and one toss (minus two points). All or that gives the nghl-hander 16 points

Something for the old resume, perhaps .

NOTABLE - Former Eugene pitcher Kevin Ap· pier has returned to Omaha, Kansas City's Class AAA!arm club in the American Associallon, after a stint with the Royals. Appier was a first-round draft pick by KC in 1987 and played that summer !or the Emeralds Francisco Henderson, an outhelder who was with ·Eu­gene last season, has been released by the Royals after spending most or this season at Appleton, Wis., a long­season Class A farm club or the Royals ,n the Midwest League.

,ng to 'II·

11· e

MORNING BRIEFING Borg's out of business in Sweden A different view of Gamblin' Rose From otwsservlctreports

Bernie Carbo. a teammate of Pete Rose at Cincmnat, in 1969-72 told Jim Donaldson of the ProVJdence Journal-Bulletin he was surpnsed at the gambhng accusations because he atwavs consid-ered Rose to be a cheapskate

"Early in bis career he wanted to know where every penny was going," Carbo said "He was so tight with a dollar

"When 1 Joined the Reds, we had a team meeting where we decided to pool the money we received from pregame and post, game shows and use 11 to throw panies at the All-Star break and at the end of the season

"Rose stood up and said, I'm going to be the star of the game a ma1onty of the umes, so why should I pay !or the party>· and wa\\ted out of the room

"Whenever he was named star ol lhe game after that, we'd take a roll of pennies and break 1t open in his locker There'd be pennie5 everywhere

"So what did Pete do' He went out and bought himself a big ol' piggy bank By the end of the season. 11 was hlled • Add Carbo

"Pete Rose IS a very egot1St1cal person. he said 'He wasn·t tnterested m winning or losing, He was only interested in Pete Rose ." Change of course

From Blackie Sherrod or the Dallas Morning News "The old Texas Longhorn. Terry Dill. on why be tell his South Carohna law prachce to Join the seniors· tour 'Tm a better golfer than 1 am a lawyer I spent 20 years training to be a golfer, and only three to be a lawyer" Nothing to fear

8) TheAs-.oclated Pre� STOCKHOLM, Sweden - Former

tennis star BJorn Borg. harried by debt. personal problem,. and appJrent connict with his partner.. announced Tuesda) that he .,a, going out or busi­ness 1n h1s nat1\·e countn

Borg sa1d in a publ1r statement that his Scandtnanan businrs...,;; partner. had reJected his ofrer to buy 25 per cent or the BJorn Borg Design Group, and that he "ould shut ,t do"n

"Although I had hoped the compa· ny could continue in Scandinavia which 1s my home market ;.rnd I woull1 have given the compan) my lull sup­port, 11 1s wllh regret that I have 10 announce tht" closure of the comp,rn; in Sweden, ' s.11d the Fnghsh-languagt' statement

Swedish TelevlS1on. which inter· viewed directors or Borg's company at· ter they emerged from the cloSed meeting, suggeste-d \n tts report lllot there were benlnd-tne-scene!conntcts over con!rol or thtcnmpany

Borg's statement did nol men!H1n his other holdin�. which are regL'-· tered in Monaco and the English Chan· net island or Jersey They apparentl) "ere not directly arrecled by the

The announcement marked the lat­est in a series of setbacks for the for mer W1mbledon champ1on

The directors of the B1orn Borg De· Sign Group were summoned Tuesday to seek ways to keep the company sol· vent Borg's popular line of men's fash­ions and accessories has expanded sa fast that the group has run out of cash

La.51 week, Borg tu med down a res­r Je offer or S4 6 m1ll1on in capital for !ear or lusini control of the company, which he hoped to bu lid into a Swedish IJSh1on house modelled alter Lacoste or France

He also IS involved in a custody fight for hIS 3-year--0\d son, Robin, and has met repeated delays in arranging a marriage with Italian rock singer Loredana Berte, who IS waiting for her divorce

11 Borg IS down in the hflh set, he's not giving up He says the match isn't over yet

"l remain committed to the bus,-

ness," he said in a statement Monday, responding to open cnllc1sm from his business partner, Lars Skarke, !or re­fusing to accept the inieclion of funds

Borg's two-year--0ld business looked like a replay of his phenomenal JO­year tennis career The group, head· quartered in Monte Carlo, has orders for the autumn fashion season or 404.000 garments. compared with 127,000sold last year

Proiected sales were put at S30 mll· hon, up from about S7 m1lllon in 1988, the Dagens Nyheter dally reported Marketing offices were established in the United States. Switzerland, Italy, Hong Kong and Singapore

Borg, who made long hair and headbands fashionable on the tennis court. said he approves each item sold by the group Bold colors, loose fits and macho designs are the trade­marks.

One big selling item is men's under· wear, marketed In a round plastic con, talnerthe stzeora tennts ball ror up to SIOap,ece

Borg, winner of five straight Wim bledon crowns and six French Open lltles, once estimated his total pnze money at about S5 m,thon

By the time he quit professional tennis m 1983, he also banked an esli mated S70 million in endorsements and advertising

He shit plays tennis for big money Last spnng he toured with John Mc En· roe !or a senes of exh1bll1on matches in the Far East, arranged by Biorn Borg Sports Management and designed to promote fash1onwear by BJorn Borg Enterpmes,Ud

St LoulS Cardinal pitcher Joe Magrone has a T-shirt that reads. "Throw stnkes Babe Ruth 1s dead " Relax, Boston Giants try again for new stadium

Roger Reid, Brigham Young University basketball coach. on reports that Michael Smith, No. I draft choice or the Boston Celtlcs. IS a little on the wild side ··When you're at BYU. ,t doesn't take much to look out of the mainstream

People in Sports Owners of Continental Basketball Assoc1at1on teams have ap­

pointed Jerry Schemmel acting comm1s.s1oner until a search com­mittee recommends a permanent replacement for Jay Ramsdett, 25, who was one or the v1ct1ms of the United Airlines Flight 232 crash last week Rookie Ken Griffey, Jr. of the Seattle Manners was placed on the 21-<lay disabled list after breaking a bone in his hand m an accident in a Chicago hotel room Gary Redus, earned off the held on a stretcher Monday night after being beaned by the Dodgers· Tim Crews, was released Tuesday !rom Allegheny General Hospital after X-rays proved negative on the Pittsburgh r,rst baseman John Mayberry, hitting instructor for the Kansas City Royals, was released from 1a1\ after appeanng in court and pleading innocent to misdemeanor battery of his wife The Cincinnati Reds placed left-handed starting pitcher Danny Jackson on the 1 5-day disabled IIS! and reacllvated nghl-handed reliever Rob Dibble Tight end Russ Francis of the New England Patri­ots races an Aug l Justice Court arraignment on charges of carrying a concealed pistol and dnvrng a motorcycle while drunk The Sealtle Seahawks have acquired offensive tackle Daryle Smith from the Dallas Cowboys ,n exchange !or an undisclosed draft choice Freshman ol!ens,ve guard Eric Ipock, one of Arizona State's top football recruits. wilt be inehgible to play thlS season because or an 1nsuf!1ctent entrance exam, a newspaper reported Tuesday Free agent defenseman Larry Robinson and the Los Angeles King.s have reached an agreement in principal on a con­tract, the NHL team said Eugene's Brian Coke and Beau Myrick set a course record at Oakway Golf Course on Monday when they played !03 holes or golf, breaking the record ol 72 holes

B)TheA.ssoclatedPres.s SAN FRANCISCO - The San Fran·

c1scoG1ants w111 trvonce more to win voter approval for a downto\lin gtadi· um rather than move to a suburban site in the South Bay

The Giants, who have the best home record in the maior leagues but "ant to leave chilly windblown ran· dleshck Park after their contract ex· pires in 1994, said they mav hold a news conrerencetodav · ·

O"ner Bob Lune. and other club

officials refused to comment on re­ports that the Giants have deuded In lavor or a Stt5 m,1 1,on 4,.ooo-seat. open air stadium on the wJ.terfront in the China Basm sechon or San Francis·

��a�:Slead of a rival proposal in Santa

Edberg beats Lendl ByTheA odatfdPre

TAlPEl. Taiwan - Sweden's Stefan Edberg beat Ivan Lendt or Czechoslovak1a, the world's top-ranked player, 6·4, 3-6, 6-3 on Tuesday in an exh1b1t1on tennis match on their three­nation Asia tour

�U.S.A.� TOUR HEADQUARTERS& TRAVEL SERVICES

Edberg, 23, ranked third m the world, won the Wimbledon lltle m 1988

Lendt, 29, told a news conference earlier that he would ktep playing pro­less1onal tennis "as long as I enJoy ten­nis and can compete with young play­ers."

Edbtrg and Lendt are to play an­other exh1b ll1on in the Ph1llpp1nes to­day and wind up their tour in Japan With \WO ma!Cheson July 29-30

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or) said to me, ·w e win the ties,'" Stone said "And 1 think ,f San Francis­co could put together a proposal that was comparable to ours, that was the proposal Lune was going to take, be­cause 1t's ea�1er ·•

Lune's expected announcement would clear the way for a November ballot measure in San Francisco. Ag­nos, who supports the downtown plan, has promised to let the voters have the finat say

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Borg, now 33 and six years orr the pro circuit, lost the series to his old nvat, who unseated him at Wimbledon in the 198 1 llnal.

Borg entered the fashion business by signing an endorsement contract 1n 1983 with Eiser, a state-owned textile company that continued to lose money even after Borgjoined the team.

In 1987 the government sold the

group to 1ts managemen� which then sold Borg Eiser Internallonal, includ­ing the Borg trademark and d1stnbu-11on rights, !or virtually the cost or ,ts debts , about SU million

With the company's order books overflowing and the future promising, Borg was cnllclzed for playing out of his league when the financial crisis be­came known last week

But editorial writers rallied to Borg's defense Tuesday. Dagens Nyheter newspaper said he bad bi,­come a v1ct.Jm of the media, partly be­cause he encouraged tbe "scandal wnters" by being loo open about his love and business affairs.

"Perhaps there are sllll some peo­ple who remember the old picture or BJorn Borg as a hero," the paper wrote

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Page 3: Comics/SB fheaters/7B , ngels win again/6B · PDF file, ngels win again/6B fheaters/7B Comics/SB JIM MURRAY J Oregon enters the underworld AMERICA THE Beautiful is turning into the

THE REGISTER-GUARD, Eugene, Oregon, WedneSday, July 26, 1989 Page SB

_C_A __ N __ S_E __ c_o __ co_nt _1o_ue_d_1r_om __ Pa..:.ge_1_e ____________ �--�-

----- --------------------

pro��,e�� �:I��:� says, yes, he:s against the Orioles, he was six tor 13 ol beautiful women.

He says be Just wants to go about his business, but he conducted some ot It last winter driving a cherry-red Jag­uar with "40-40" license plates. That got him Into so much trouble that he swapped It !or less-gaudy transporta­tion - a white Porsche convertible.

"At his age, he's had a lot to han­dle," Alderson said, "but he's not the

MOORE Continued from Page IB

watching him as a competitor and writer.

"The Interesting thing Is that there aren't very many or the old guys

here," be said. "You can go through

the list. Very bluntly, these are not our peers. By and large these are not peo­ple who ran successfully competitively at an early age and continued

"They're people 1 can't speak !or really, but here they are at an advanc­ing age, shll very gOOd And emo!Jonal­ly all or them are ready, eager and hungry to run their best

"The old guys, the old friends, say the adrenalin that I hope to get me through the mile won't be there. They guarantee me ,t won't be there. (For­mer Oregon runner) Arne (Kvalbe1m) says ,rs not tbe way ,t works. We've had an Intense racing career and that's past, and now we don't want 1l any­more. We don't have that desire any­more. II we did, we'd be out there rac­ing. making a bigger deal out or it."

Moore agrees, loo, with another former world record-bolder, Peter Snell. who says ,rs extraordrnary to have someone who wants to train long­er than ltve or six years at a high mter­nat,onal level

"There's an eagerness to get out and tram and !eel exhilarated by 11," Moore said "To want to improve, and to want to get every tenth or a second you can squeeze out ol yourself there is a fixed psychological window when that's appropriate to a person's ath letics, and ,t can come at apparent· ly any age. This window, thlS eager­ness. IS now being experienced m the lull nesh by a lot of people that didn't have a competitive youth So they're the people in the distance races."

And they're the people Moore probably w,11 be writmg about thlS week, although be says lhere·s another

;:s:,:ct to the event that you can'I 1g-

"You have 85-year-old people trying to pole vault. which 1s cruelty com,cat," he said. "It's wonderful and homfy,ng at the same lime. I think that's the cultural set!Jng that's neat here. Where H's been given over to supreme human performance. the es­sence of youth, this \S not the essence of youth It's the same In that It's push­ing at the limits. but they're different, different hmtts, and there's a different sense ol what's going on

"They're inextricably connected with 1t," he said of the sport's senior citizens "When you start out to have a sporting expression !or people of all ages then you have a sporting expres­sion lor people or genuine age. I mean 80, that's age."

For Moore, the creed is never to look back Always look forward, which isn't easy to do for a man who once ran 7f>.second pace !or a marathon, not a two-mile workout

"There's an Inconsistency here be· cause you're supposed to be w,se and accepting and patient and have thlS balance in your Ille that you didn't have in your wild, committed youth." he said "Now it IS a one-sided com We do run with great vigor and enjoy the camaraderie. sun, there's the same basic kicking and screaming against death, against the mev,table decline You want to dig your heels m against that

"So, we can't be passionless. The wisdom we're talking about ,s a wis­dom or balance between reiection or age and reiection or decline We're not looking !or ,mprovemenl anymore We're lookmg to arrest decline. That's

what's hard to get the handle on." And therein may reside the heart

olthese champlonsh1ps

first He can't keep thinking rules are going to be bent for him, because they won't be."

Canseco, who chooses not to launch Into a publ ic mea culpa, could be from now until Christmas detailing his mis· takes - the unexplained absences, string or speeding tickets and unregls·

��ed handgun round on the floor or his

He originally said he'd registered the handgun In Florida and that he didn't know add1llonat California reg,s­tratlon was required. Later it was dis­covered no Florida registration exist­ed, and the case might come to trial yet ,r no plea bargain ,s agreed upon.

There was the speeding ticket In Mlam, and another in Oakland, and the famous spnng-traming red tight In Anzona that netted him three v1ola­llons

"It ,s, ,t ts," Moore said enthuslas· ticalty. "There's nothing more exciting •r.==== than momentum. The stronger you are, the stronger you want to be. Don Kardong uses the image or the nywheel, how heavy It ts and how hard .,,====== 1t IS to get going. The workouts and the long runs at first are awful You're sick and say. 'What's this running stuff?' But you're starting the nywheel You're getting momentum, and once you have the momentum ,t cames 11. It gets easier and easier until soon ,t carries you along with it, and pretty soon you can't stop

"So. the guys I'm going to toe the line with !or the most part are guys

who are being earned along with their emot,onat nywheet at high speed I en­vy them I've been there."

Now II only he can keep it all In perspective - on paper and on the track

Large field expected for Ladies' Classic

An estimated 220 women golfers from throughout Oregon wil! compete m the ninth annual Ladies' Oassic gull tournament at Fiddler's Green gall course on Friday

Among the participants In the 18· hole medal play tourney will be de­rendmg champ,on Frances Burke of lhe Springfield Country Club. Four other former champs will also be 1n the !1eld, which ts one of the largest worn n· tournament 1n the Pac1f1c Nort ·es1 •

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:i, point or pride m their clubhouse

"We're nol a team that relies on one player," Canseco said, "and I nev· er looted myself into thinking we were. We have great depth"

As Oakland ace Dave Stewart said "Home runs get the headlines, but It's pitching and defense that'll win you some games. We have the same pitch· mg we had last year We haven't bad the same amount of runs. Have you noticed a drop-of!? What would it be 11 we didn't hold the other team to 1wo runs so orten?"

disappointed. · Likewise, he s with three homers and five RBI.

won't deny I've made some mistakes. but l think there were times I became a convenient target as well l don't think there's any question about that Again. though, l want that sturr behind me. l want to go out and play ball."

In last weekend's four-game series

''II I were I 00 percent, who knows what I could do?" he said. "It's not going to be back to lull strength this year It's going to take a lull orr�ason or work. The most frustrating thing Is I'm getting 82-mph fastballs down the middle, and there's nothing l can do about them"

While he gives of his time, one thing his interviews don't evolve Into are apologies.

II he's at some kind or crossroads. as some or his employers suggest, he does not admit It. He chooses to let the specifics pass, hoping instead that time and the realization that he's not the first 25-year-old kid to make mistakes w11i erase memories

"lt's been a tough year," he said. "I

Still, he admits It's been a sobenng time. Earlier this month he was sent to Class AA Huntsville, Ala .• for rehabih· talion work. He'd been there before, but In 1985 he was a rnmg young mi­nor-leaguer whose monstrous home runs were already the sturr al legend

"lt brings you back to earth." Can­seco said. "The last lime I was m Huntsville, l was putting together a big year (41 homers in 540 at-bats) This time I go down and l can't get a ball out of the Infield. You get reminded how hard this game IS and that when you're on top of your game you'd bet­ter enjoy it."

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Page 4: Comics/SB fheaters/7B , ngels win again/6B · PDF file, ngels win again/6B fheaters/7B Comics/SB JIM MURRAY J Oregon enters the underworld AMERICA THE Beautiful is turning into the

Chuck Finley and Greg Minion out­dueled Dave Stewart as the Angels ex­tended their winning streak to seven, beating Oakland 4--0 Tuesday night for a two-game lead over the A's in the American League West.

Chill Davis, Jack Howell and Dock Schofield h1! solo home runs as !he Angels defeated Oakland for !he sec­ond day in a row and opened their largest lead of the season. The teams fin1Sh the series th1safternoon

"It's very important for us lo hit home runs, as ,t ,s for most clubs," California Manager Doug Rader said, "especially when you're not blessed with great team speed."

Pitching has been just as important in the Angels' streak The team's 13th shutout of lhe year ,s the most by Call­lornia's stalf since ,t had 13 In 1978

Finley, 12-6, won his fifth consecu­tive deCISIOD He gave Up SIX h1!s in 7r, innings and beat the A!hiellcs for !he !1rst l1mein l1ve careerdecisions.

Greg Minton ended !he Oakland eighth by retmng Terry Steinbach on a bases-loaded grounder Minton pitched lheninlh forh1ssixthsave

"I can't complete every game," said Finley, who leads !he maiors with nine complete games. "When you've got a shutout going with lour outs to go, you want to slay in !here. But you've got to do what's ,n the best interests or the team."

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Stewart, 14-6, railed to become the league's r,rst 15-game winner. He has not won two starts in a row since May 20 and Is 10-3 lifetime against lhe An­gels

The Athletics have scored a total of one run in Stewart's last three losses

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Stewart pitched his fourth com­plele game and gave up 11 hits, three by Howell. On Monday night, Howell ended a l -lor-26 slump with a game­winorng home run in a 5-4 victory

���·-·�· f fl f i T 1 1 three-run homer i n the first inning, help, ng Doyle Alexander and the De­troit Tigers end six-game losing streaks with a 7-2 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers

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Wll�a'I pitched to 2 Datt� I� tt! 7�- �_2

Rv<n PB-Kreuf« T-l;.12 A-2S.297 Mohtor lb Yountcf 0..,- ,1 .,_ io .......... Sumo!f c ........

Red Sox . . . . . . 10 Royals . . . . . . . . 0 BOSTON - Wade Boggs got lour Stranot lb """ "'

Brian Downing opened the second inning with a single and Howell hit his 14th home run with two outs. Davis hit his 13th homer in the fourth tor a 3--0 lead Schoheld hit his fourth home run m the ntnth

"The team's be.en carcymg me a\\ year," Dav\S sa\d "l·htbng .300 th\s year ,s out or the question for me, so rm JUSI trying lo hit mistakes and car­ry my weight the rest of !he year "

extra-base bits in a game for the !lrst time m hiS career, and Mlke Boddick­er extended bis consecuUve score\ess­\nn\ng streak to 24 as the Boston Red Sox trounced tbe Kansas City Royals 10-0

The Athletics put the leadoff batter on base m the first !Jve innings, but failed to score. In the third, Glenn Hubbard doubled and Mike Gallego walked before Finley struck out Ric­key Henderson and retired Carney Lansford and Dave Henderson on ground bails

BOSTON ._, ,.. Romero lb ._, ,. Romine cf Gf'"e,enwtll " ..... . EIOSkv lb Alee dh ........ c,,one c Kuteher rf

ob r h bi 5 2 • 2 0 0 0 0 4 1 1 1 3 1 1 1 4 1 2 1 1 0 0 0 , 1 2 2 5 1 1 0 5 1 2 0 5 1 2 1 4 1 1 2

Totals 40 10 16 10 OOCI OOCI 000- 0

White Sox . . . . . . 7 Mariners . . . . . . . 6 CHICAGO - OZZle Guillen scored

A crowd of 43,529 gave the A's their fourth consecutive sellout, a club record. Today's game alSO has been sold out in advance.

Bodon . • . _ 0.1 210 oox-10 E-�tzer OP-Ka'lsm Otv 1, Boston l. !he go-ahead run in !he eighth inning on a double-play ball as the Cbicago White Sox won tbeir 10th consecutive home game, beahng the Seattle Mar­iners 7-6

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OAKL.AMD allrhbt R� tt , 0 1 0 Lonsf'Of'd lb 1 0 0 0 OHenden,on d • 0 1 0 McGwlre lb J O O O Consecor1 3 0 0 0 Stelnoach C , 0 1 0 OPCl"ket" dh , o 1 0 Hut>t,crd lb 3 0 2 0 Ja\/ler ptl 1 0 0 0 GdeQO U 2 0 0 0 Houey ph �

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Twins . . . . . . . . . 9

Orioles . . . . . . . . 3

MINNEAPOLIS - The Baltimore Onolesiosl lheir season-h1gh s1X!h con­secuhve game as Kirby Puckett homered and drove in lour runs. send­ing Allan Anderson and the Minnesota Tw1ns to a 9-J v1ctory

BALTIMORE ab r l'l bi [>e,yete,au.• cf • 0 2 0 Trct>er ot, 1 0 0 0 PBrodle'f'lf S O O D CR-en H • 1 2 0 Tt"ttlt'ton C • O D OMllhQa1 1tl 4 0 0 0 W{W'ffllngfon � 4 1 2 1 MeM" dt> ) 1 1 1 s,,«tl pt, 1 0 1 0 8PipllN'1 2b , 0 1 0 Or1ukt, rt JO I 1

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lt f 1S I 000 100 100-)

Minnnoto 100 142 0011-f E-BRlpll.t'I\ Worthing1on, Ne..,,.mon. ROOl"iQUtt. OP- Mlnnl'KIIO 1 LOB-Bothmcrt' •• 1WnnHOtQ 9 29-CRlpllen 1 Goettl. D«'¥tr, Buih. MeMn. HR­Pudtett 171 !t- On1J� Bothmore SChm1dt U·IO HOt'V 01,.c,n

P H R ER 18 SO 4 6 S • I 1 2 6 4 4 2 0 1 I O O O 0 1 2 0 0 0 I

-·· AAnOer'ICWI W,10-9 6 1-J 7 J l O • Guflvlt 1 1·) 2 0 0 0 l !.IQott't l 1 0 0 0 0 i, "���,���2:.ibotf•s In the Sth. WP-

Blue Jays . . . . . . 4 Rangers . . . . . . . 0

ARLINGTON. Texas - Nolan Ry-M tru,� out 14 or a Texas-record 1 8 bJtll'rs, bu! Dave Stieb combined with t•o relievers on a lour-h11ter as the luronlo Blue Jays beat the Rangers 4-11

llO r h D, 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 c O I O , 0 1 0 • 0 1 04 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0

Bo,ton Boddlcktr W,f.7 T-2:29 A-14'44

Yankees . . . . . . . 5 Indians . . . . . . . . I

CLEVELAND - Andy Hawkins pitched a live-hitter and the New York Yankees stopped a seven-game losing streak by beating the Cleveland Indi­ans :.-I

ob r h bl S 1 4 1 4 0 0 1 5 1 2 2 3 0 0 0 S 1 3 l S 0 1 0 3 1 0 0 4 0 1 0 4 1 1 0

CU-VELAIC) Brownit lb Ftrmlnss ........... Co-M H P08rien lb ...... Komm1nsk d JacobV lb AHooson c

ob r h bi 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 , o o o 4 1 2 0 ] 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 1 1 ] 0 1 0

Totab )1 1 5 1 ,_..... yorl( 101 100 100-5 Oevetand OOCI 100 000--1

E-AlkJnSOR. OP-New Yon.. I LOB-Ntw Yor1l 11, C�vtland 7 19-Sox. Allanson. HR­�!�o

(17}, Mattlnotv tll). se-saa 3 (JO). s-Mtw Yor11: HowltlnsW,lH o,,......, Swlndell Ll>-3

p H R ER U SO t 5 I O 4 5

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Seattle • • • • 010 121 100-4

i.��Jl-i�f.Jt:���:-POSQUO (9) S-Revnolds., Merri� SF-Br1-Seattle: P H A ER 68 SO Borilheod l 1·3 7 S S l J

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Giants . . . . . . . . . 5 Braves . . . . . . . . 4 ATLANTA - San Francisco par-

layed a denected grounder off !he gJove ol losing Pilcher Derek Liihquist into the go-ahead run, and Mike La·

Motor Oil To go! All Participating Ex_xon.Stations inEugene/Spnngf1eld for July and August only.

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:rn, 1 0/30, 1 0/ 1 0, \TF �

$8. 79* 30, 1 0/30, l 0/10, ATF

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�� i gu ar Pnces in effect for

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'"'PACiFic ?ETROLEUM aO H,.) . 9�N, Eu�4'11•· 683- 1 1 3:l

Expos . . . . . . . . . 2

Phillies . . . . . . . . 0 MONTREAL - Mark Langston's

third shutout gave Montreal a 3:;.17 record since his acquisition May 25, and Tim Raines homered as the surg­ing Expos beat lhe Philadelphia Phil­hes 2--0 PHI.A ab r h bi

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Totols PtlladtlPhkl Montreal . - . - . . 010 000 ooa-1

E-WOllod\. Otovts. LOB-Phllodelphlo 1. Man· tred 9 28-Brooks. Ovkstra.. Foley HA-Rolnes (S). SB-Reoov (•l _ ...

��2-11 P H R ER M SO 6 6 2 1 J 6 2 2 0 0 0 l

Monlreal L°'::� 2. Pe:...s!,� 0r-h.2

A� )0,101.

Dodgers . . . . . . . 6

Astros . . . . . . . . . 0

HOUSTON - Tim Belcher tied teammate Orel Hershiser for !he Na­tional League lead with his fourth shut­out as the Los Angeles Dodgers ended Houston's lour-game winning streak with a 6-0 v1clory over !he Aslros. LOSANGELS ...-, 20 .... Cl Donlffl H Gotu- Cl Milra,, lb Sh.C>Osrf --· Homllton lb Sclosda c Anatnon SS .. .,,.,..

Cllb r h bl 5 1 1 1 5 1 2 0 2 1 2 0 2 1 1 1 S O I O 2 1 0 0 1 0 1 2 4 0 1 1 S 0 1 1 4 1 2 0 2 0 1 0

HOUSTON BHatc:htf'lf

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Loa A� OCNI OOJ �

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""""°" =�].._. T-3'01. A-21.910

P H R ER M SO 9 5 0 0 5 9 sn o 1 1·3 1 1 1-l S .n 1

Padres . . . . . . . . 6

Reds . . . . . . . . . . 2

CINCINNATI - The Reds matched their longest losing streak in th_ree . years at nine games, and San Diego s Ed Whitson tied a career-high with his 14th victory as the Padres beatCincinnatlS-2.

The Reds, losers in 30 of their last 40 games, dropped nine in a row from Apnl 25 to May 5, 1986.

Son Oitva, . .

ab r h bi 3 0 1 0 ) 1 1 0 • 1 1 1 4 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 1 2 2 3 1 1 0 4 1 1 3 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0

CJndmatl , . . . . , . , , . • , , . 020 000 000-1

;;�:�'!..;������� Son 01f90 P H A ER M SO WhltsonW,14-6 7 10 2 2 0 S :C"::i 2 1 0 0 0 0 �n!.ino L7-10 • • t � t � J Sebro . , 2 O O O 1 T-2:0l A-24.221

Cubs . . . . . . . . . . 4

Cardinals . . . . . . . 2

ST. LOUIS - Paul Kilgus had an RBI single and won for !he first time since June 6, breaking a streak of six victories by Sl. Louis counterpart Joe Magrane as the Cubs beal the Cardi­nals 4-2. CHICAGO Wefton d 4 0 1 0

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1 st Year Anniversary

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4 0 0 0 • O O O3 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0

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4 0 0 0 2 1 2 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0

P H R ER U SO 6 4 1 1 I 2 • 1-3 0 0 0 2 0 •

2 �:� 1 � g l ! SIL.ou,s Magrone LIM , 7 6 3 3 3 5 Costello . . . . 2 1 1 1 0 0 A-�;f' pltcneel to l botterln the lth. T-2:41

Pirates . . . . . . . . 4

Mets . . . . . . . . . . 2

NEW YORK - Bobby Bonilla sin-gled to break a 2-2 tie in the eighth inning as the Pittsburgh Pirates, cash­ing In on a walk and an error, cooled off the New York Meis 4-2.

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, , , , .OOO O'JO Oll--4 Mtw YOf1( . . . • , • , • • . • 000 001 000--2 E-Somuel, H.Johnson. BanUlo. OP-Pittsburgh 1, Ntw Vont 1. LOB-Pittsburgh S, New Yortl I 28-GWllson, StrowbefTV. HR-King (I). SB-Som· uei (12), eonma (6). s-OltOO SF-Sauer Pittlburvh P H R EA U SO �� W,H • \.3 � � J � � Kipper 2-J O O O O 0 LcndnJmS,14 1 0 0 0 0 1 New Yor11: Oltdo Agullero l.6-4 .

T-3:00 A-342•9 7 l 2 3

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EARLY BIRD SPECIAL � . -�,.c.1 _ Breakfast 75 e °'\" u> Burrito off Shredded Beef• Chicken • Veggie

Mon.-Fri. 7 a.m.-9:30 a.m. Authentic • Fast • Delicious 1473 £»1 i9111 A- · e.,-o...-

Friendly ,_ ,n.as,w

.. . . . . . . COUPON I · · · · · .. Chinese Dinner I 2 1 This offer good for anb Chinese I

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I Good Sunday through � n w l nn n I Thursday. Not ood on V I V V

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I � sent coupon. RESTAURANT & NIGHT CLUB

.. a1111""11ti. • cou:��'·1·a'a··111·a

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GEL 1 01 • MEN'S/WOMEN'S TRAINING •••••••••••••••• 43°0

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GEL EPIRUS • WOMEN'S HIGH MILEAGE TR ••...••.. 93oo

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AIR PEGASUS • M/W'S BASIC TRAINING ..••••••••••••• 58°0

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WE HAVE A FULL LINE OF NIKE PRODUCTS IN STOCK

RUNNING • TRAINING APPAREL

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