Girl’s minor softball Is In full swing and so Is No-See- ums batter Cindy Cison. ‘Strike!’ says umpire Dale Anweiler as Bobby’s Angels catcher Tammy Clarabut picks up. the ball. The teams are competitors in the girls’ mosquite division of the local softball league. ‘NBA playofts _ Larry” Bird scores career high | Larry Bird scored a career playoff high 937° points as Boston Celtics ‘defeated New York Knicks 116-102 Wetinesday night and took a 2-0 lead in their Sport Shorts NEW YORK (AP) Jack Morris, whose no- hitter was the highlight of ‘Detrolt Tigers’ brilliant ‘start, and teammate Alan Trammell, who hit .403 in April, have been named the American League's pitcher and player of the month, respectively. eyet See TOs if cS "Meanwhil ile, . . Peo ie Tony Gwynn of Padres, who leads the National League in batting average, hits and on-base percentage, has been named that league's player of the month and Rick Honeycutt of Laos Anges Dodgers, who was 4- 0 wth a 1:38 earned-run average, was the top pither. Also nominated for. the pitcher's award were Dave Stieb of Toronto Blue Jays | and Mike Caldwell of Milwaukee Brewers. Others cited for player-: of-the-month honors were Toronto’s Damaso Garcia and Willie Upshaw, Cal - Ripken of Baltimore Orioles, Ron Kittle of Chicago, Dave Kingman of Oakland A’s and rookde Alvin Davis. of Seattle Mariners. MILWAUKEE (AP} — Third baseman Paul Molitor of Milwaukee Brewers was placed on the i-day disabled —_—ist Wednesday, the American League baseball team announced. Molitor has been troubled by an elbow in- jury since spring training. His roster position was taken by outfielder Bobby Clark, who had been on the disabled list with a pulled hamstring March 27. EDINBURGH (Reuter) — Aberdeen captured the Scottish soccer cham- pionship for the second time in four years Wed- nesday night when they beat Hearts 1-0. The victory went a ‘long way toward burying the - disappointment of Aber: deen’s surprise" ‘defeat - in the European Cup-Winners,” Cup by Porto of Portugal — last week. Hearts produced one of its best performances of the season, but Aberdeen stole the points with a Gist- minute effort from fullback Stewart McKimmie. The win put Aberdeen beyond the reach of nearest challenger Celtic and former champions Dundee United. 1 tat. KINGSTON (Reuter) — West Indies completed a 1¢-wicket triumph over Australia in the fifth and final cricket test Wed- nesday to take the series 3- 0. After dismissing the . visitors “th 160 in tele ray hit’ it eee ‘sddutre! "runs ‘just before ag Australia, 135 for seven overnight, kept the West Indies in the field for only 68 minutes. PARIS (AP) — Juan Antonio Samaranch of Spaln, president of the International Olympic Committee, said Wed- nesday the Soviet Olympic Committee and the organizing committee for the Loa Angeles Summer Olympics had removed “all the clouds” that hung over the Games. - In a speech’ to the International Association of Sports Journalists, Samaranch said he based his optimism on a recent meeting of the two com- mittees, called te consider Soviet complaints about the . los Angeles arrangements. But he did not elaborate, nor did he answer any questions. The Soviet ‘Union still has not formally an- nounced its participation in the Los Angeles Games, _ Saying only it will take part, ‘Gf Olympic rules are observed.” The deadline for announcing _par- ticipation is June 2. Transactions BASEBALL American League Milwaukes Grewers place third bavemen Paul Molitor on i aay disabled ~ . National League cn St, Leyla Cardinats sign pitcher Andy" aan i fe aéaign Alm to Arkansas of {he Texas League. roormaLe: cr Tarenio Argonnute sign datensive backs Cart Bratley, Gil Jackson Boneveri Rose, USsFL . Antone Wrangiers trade two draft picks to Sen Antanto Gun- silngers for the rights to defensive back Don Rogers, condivinos 6 his signing. SOCCER NASL Chicago Sting sign forward Seniato. MISL Phoenix Pride hires Splro Papathsnasskls as coatt. National Basketball Association playoff, while Phoenix Suns evened their series against Utah Jazz with a 162-97 triumph behind Walter Davis’s 28 points. A key*to the Boston victory was holding Knicks forward Bernard King to 13 points. King averaged 42.6 in New York's five- game series with Detroit Pistons, but has been held to 39 total in the first {wo games against the Celtles. Bird scored 21. Boston’s firat 43 points in the opening 13:50 of the game, The Celtics led 43-31 at that point. . Phoenix got 17 points from forward Maurice Lueas and 16 from forward Larry Nance as they outshot Utah 15-4 to take a 15-point lead late in the third quarter. The Jazz shot just 27 per cent in the third quarter and went . scoreless for more than four minutes as the Suns of . built a 75-60 lead. Adrian Dantley scored 26 points and Darrell Griffith 22 for Utah. ; In games Tuesday night, Milwaukee Bucks topped — New Jersey Nets 90-94, tying their Eastern Con- ‘ ference semifinal series t- 1, and Los Angeles Lakers downed Dallas Mavericks 117-101 to take a 2-0 lead in their Western Conference semifinal series, Milwaukee is at New Jersey in the Ione game tonight. PGA seniors tour an e one er ea CARLSBAD, Calif. (AP) — From a ‘scrambling, scratching start, a fight for existence, the Professional Golfers’ Association seniors tour is developing an embarrassment of riches. © A “We've got 26 tour: naments this year and we're looking at about 30 next, year,”’ veteran Don January said before teeing off today inthe first round of the Seniors Tournament of Champions, a new entry for the over-50 set that is being played concurrently and in connection with the Tournament of Cham- pions, which brings together winners of regular PGA tour titles” from the last 12 months, New Masters champion Ben Crenshaw and Lanny. Hea Wadkins, winner of this title the last two years, head a record field of 36. chasing $400,000 in prize money ‘in the premier event. January and nine others are competing in the first Seniors Tournament of Champions, with a purse of $100,000, “At the start, when we were just getting un- derway, we were taking anything and everything - could” get, ** “said January, a prime mover and principal beneficiary of the seniors tour which has come into being only in * the last few years, January has won ‘nine senior titles in the Jast 2% seasons and leads the seniors in money winnings this year. “I'm surprised it’s taken Nedomansky sues TORONTO (CP) Hockey agent Bill Watters, who negotiated a contract between Czechoslovakian forward Vaclav Nedomansky and. general manager Ted Lindsay of Detroit Red Wings, says the dealings may have been over Lindsay’s head. Watters, who at the time ‘was vice-president of Sports: Management Lid., a company owned by lawyer Alan Eagleson, “pid the Ontario Supreme Court on Wednesdayy that he and Lindsay agreed to a 16-year contract for Nedornansky in July 1979, but Wings’ management _Tefused to. sign it seven months later. Nedomansky, who retired from hockey last year, is suing Eagleson and his company for more than $1 million, claiming négligence and breach of contract. Watters said he . and Lindsay agreed to a - contract which precluded a “buy qut” clause, so that If the Red Wings wanted to cancel Nedomansky’s contract they would have to pay him Its full value — $250,000 a year. Watters said the deal got around. the buy-out provision because Lindsay had agreed to pay: Nedomansky a major- league salary even if he was sent to the minors. When asked by Nedomansky’s laywer, Morton Greenglass, whether he thought Lind- say understood the im- plications, Watters said: “I had insisted from Day One that the minor league contract be for the same money as the major league. one. It could be Mr. Lind- say didn’t understand what that meant. I might have been talking . about something over Lindsay’s head, but since he was general . manager I assumed he knew,” Details of the deal in- cluded a five-year playing package at a salary of $250,000 a year, plus an option year, a five-year package as a scout starting at a salary of $60,000 and increasing to $100,000 in the final year and a five- year consulting. job, starting at $50,000 and increasing to $90,000 in its final season. Watters . said Nedomansky turned down & three-year, $1-million deal with New York Rangers in 1970 to sign with Detroit. “The security and longetivity of the Detroit offer was the deciding factor,” he said. The Red Witgs picked up a $130,000 «debt “on Nedomansky’s contract with Birmingham Bulls of the | World Hockey Association and had also agreed to a $100,000 signing bonus, Watters said. The case continues Monday. mbarrassment.of, riches off as wall ‘as it has, "he said. “Now, we're getting too-‘many., . “We're gonna have to start shuckin’ and cullin’. It’s just too many. “This one, though, we want. This.is a good ad- dition. This is something we ought to have.” PALMER, OF COURSE He is joined by Arnold Palmer, Miller Barber, Billy Casper, Bob Goalby, Dan Sikes, Bill Collins, Rod Funseth, Doug San- ders and Orville Moady in the seniors bracket. Tom Watson, a five-time and current British Open champion, U.S, Open title- holder Larry Nelson and PGA king Hal Sutton join Crenshaw and Wadkins as the leading contenders in the regular tour event. In addition to Crenshaw and Watson, the other multiple winners in the last 12 months are Jim Colbert, Cal. Peete, Mark McCumber, Gary Koch and Fred Couples, the TPC champion’ and leading money winner who is making his first ap- pearance in this tour- nament, Other rookies are e Larry Mize, Nick Price of South Africa, Pat Lindsey, Mark Lye, Rex Caldwell, Ronnie Black, David Edwards, Bob Eastwood, Nick Faldo of England and Corey Pavin. Also on hand are David Graham of Australia, Hale Irwin, Seve Ballesteros of Spain, Morris Hatalsky, Danny Edwards, John Cook, Wayne Levi, Curtis Strange, Fuzzy Zoeller, Payne Stewart, John Mahaffey, Tom Purtzer, Jack Renner, Bruce Lietzke, Tom Kite and Andy Bean. LOUISVILLE, Ky, (AP) — When Landaluce, the 1982 two-year-old. filly champion of the United States, died of a rare disease, trainer Wayne Lukas thought he'd never have another one like her. ‘{ was thinking Derby all the way with her,” Lukas recalled Wed- nesday, “ht Was devastating.” Landaluce, unbeaten in five starts, died in November 1992. The California-based Lukas will be bucking tradition Saturday when he sends the filly entry of Althea and Life's Magic as part of an expected field of 20 — the rest males — i the $250,000-added Derby: at Churchill Downs. ‘Only 22 fillies have run in the 109 previous Derbies and only two have won — Regret as the favorite in 1915 and Genuine Risk in 1980. The last filly to go in the Derby was Cupecoy’s Joy, the 10th-place finisher in 1982, Other __ three-year-olds expected to bé entered today for the race are Fali Time, Swale, Special, At The Threshold, Bear Hunt, Secret Prince, Gate Dancer, Silent King, Coax Me Chad, Pine Circle, Rexson's Hope, Bedouin, Biloxi Indian, Raja's Shark, So Vague, Vanlandingham, Fight Over and Majestic Shore. SENTIMENTAL BET Lukas said his entry could go off as the. sen- timental favorite because “every housewife in America who’s betting will put $2 on her.” . Swale, the six-time stakes winner, Including the Florida Derby, and Taylor's Special, the Louisiana Derby and Blue Grass winner, figure to be the other leading con- tenders in the 1%-mile classic. Althea is the stronger half of Lukas’s entry, having beaten colts three out of four times. The daughter of Alydar is the biggest money winner in the field. with earnings of $1.2 million. ‘Owned = by David Aykroyd, Helen Alexander and Helen Groves, Althea has won eight of 13 career starts — the last a seven- length triumph in the April 21 Arkansas Derby. “Don't consider her as a filly,” said Lukas. “Just consider her as a race horse.” Life’s Magic, owned by Gene Klein, owner of the National —- Foatball League's San Diego Chargers, and M.E. Hatley, is winless in three starts this year. The daughter of Cox's Ridge posted two wins and four seconds in seven starts as a two-year-old. The fillies carry -12% pounds in the Derby, five less than the colts. ; GRAND TRUNK estan Bored of the same ‘old’ tunch? Taylor's — The Herald, Thursday, May 3, 1984, Page's Wayne Lucas bucks derby tradition — Chris McCarron has the mount on Althea, who likes to stay close to the pace, while Don Brumfield will ‘ride Life’s Magic, whose style behind. The Derby also will have only its fourth woman trainer and its second female jockey. Dianne Carpenter trains and owns Biloxi Indian, runnerup !ast Saturday in the Derby Trial. Patti Cooksey, the first woman rider since Diane Crump in ‘1970, bas the mount on So Vague. Woody Stephens, 70, ‘the Hall of Fame trainer, hopes to be out of his hospital bed to saddle Swale, owned by Claiborne: Farm, Stephens is being treated for pneumonia, but visited is coming from -the track briefly Tuesday to announce Devil’s Bag would skip the Derby because of his less than Woody Stephens impressive triumph in the, Derby Trial and would point for the May 19 Preakness, the second leg of thoroughbred racing's Triple Crown. Stephens -also said the Preakness was rot in’ Swale's plans, regardless. of his finish inthe Derby. Laffit Pineay has the Derby mount. In his most recent start,’ Swale finished second by eight lengths to He Is a Great Deal in the Lexington Stakes, but Stephens blamed the selback on the sloppy Keeneland track, Eddie Delahoussaye, who has the mount on Gate Dancer, third-place - finisher in the Arkanaas. Derby, will attempt to become the first jockey to win three consecutive Derbies, He won aboard Gato Del Sol in 1982 and Sunny’s Halo last year. ere re bere! busy man | LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Trainer Woody Stephens will try teday to win his sixth Kentucky Oaks with Miss Oceana — the day before he tries to win his second Kentucky Derby with Swale. Miss Oceana, owned by Newstead Farm, will meet five other three-year-old fillies. in. the 11-mile, $150,000-added Oaks. Her main rival appears to be My Darling One, although she will be facing two fillies who have beaten her — Lucky Lucky Lucky and Enumerating. Miss Oceana, ridden by] Eddie Maple, won five of: six starts last year when? ' she challenged for the twa-~ year-old filly cham-s pionship, won by Althea.? The loss came in thes seven-furlong Matron on: Sept. 24 at New York's : Belmont Park where she : finished second by three- ; quarters of a length to: Lucky Lucky Lucky. She: then beat Lucky Lucky = Lucky in the one-mile } PARTICIPALTION Ptetiewebanss ya, Building. and Exam. . NORTHWEST COMMUNITY COLLEGE Industrial First Aid Course Tues., Wed., & Thurs. evenings beginning May 15, 1984 each class 7- 10p.m. Room 215 Administration Fee: $175.00, Including Text, Syllabus = 72 OE PARE MASEL IST ERLE ELLOS TPE ORES A LUNCHEON TREAT at the Try oneofour Daily Lunch Specials (including soup & dessert) Monday thru Friday Hom - .homestyle cooking at reasonable prices... Grand Trunk Restaurant for under 4702 Lakelse Avenue Licensed Premises Deptt pees eben ewe ne er Sree Yad frien e SOROS UL Le) Cer ae ee CEO ea *6.00 dom Ei aaa | § eT ETE TT CEE alse a a2 ry eae! its ers LF AAA FES