“managed ‘the x presideat of. the Los Angeles Olympic Coni- piitteg; In the face of Soviet insistence that their with- drawal from the Summer Games id irrevocable, says he hopes ‘to- stem the domino ‘effect of other countries joining the pullout, = “We--owe It to other athletes’ from other countries who want to be - Olympt¢é ‘president fears=domino. effect pullouts PPR TE A ee ko Tee ae ee eed anne ge see ‘others to- join them, Peter Ueberroth said Monday. "We'll use resources and .* we'll use’ energy ‘because we owe it to to, the’ US. athletes,” ~ * Ueberroth, -also saying he has’ net completely given up on the Soviets coming to’ Los Angeles, will try. to get them to ° reverse their decision at Lausanne, Switzerland, on Friday, where the Inter- national Olympic _Com- ‘mittee has’ ‘called. ia “emergency meeting: Soviets have ‘announced ' they* will.- attend meeting, but their officials insist they -won’t change their decision to stay out of the Los Angeles Games. Ueberroth said Olympics officials had discussed the possibility of extending the__ but we will also say that we— Afghanistan .— _ followed Juné. -declaration - the | 2: " déadiine- ~ for: of par- ‘tielpation -in the Games; SAY NICE THINGS the: ‘Soviets, Ueberroth ° -replied: ‘ "We. will say some nice “things and we will say some co-operative things, - were insulted by some ‘of the things {they said), such - : i gap that we “would try to ‘but that decision remained “dru “up to ‘the:IOc. i. ug their athletes.” **.Ueberroth *.. also — ex- pressed concern. about the _\ Asked what he will tell, a list of boycotting countries’ ‘growing. ‘Seven countries — East. Ger- many, Bulgaria, Vietnam, Las, Mongolia, Czechoslovakia and other - the Soviets’ lead in with- drawing from the Games. “They are trying to influence the better part of the globe,” Ueberroth said of the Soviets — a charge that was denied Monday at a‘‘news conference by * Marat Gramov, chairman of the Soviet Union's Olympic committee. * The Games got a boost Seaver shuts out Kansas City Royals — By The’ “assoclated Press Tom Seaver, 39, pitched a five-hitter to lead ” Chicago White’ Sox over Kansas City Royals 20 Monday. night for his first. AL baseball shutout after . 17 years in the NL. It was the 277th victory, svth shutout and 214th complete game of his storied career, which included. three Cy Young Awards with New York Mets. ° Phil Niekro, who spent 25 years with the Braves, pitched eight innings for his sixth: AL. victory in seven decisions as New York _-Yankess beat Pirates: feel great after win By The Associated Press The Pittsburgh Pirates, after three consecutive late-inning losses in Atlanta, got. home runs from Jason Thompson and - Dale Berra to go with a solid eight-inning _ per- formance from ‘Jose DeLeon to edge Houston Astros 3-2 Monday night in Pittsburgh. “Tl tell you, this feels great,” said Pirates manager Chuck Tanner, who had called a 9-8, 10- inning Sunday defeat to the Braves “ag tqugh a loss as I can ever remember.”* "Jose pitched great and it’s nice to see a couple of home runs.” In two other National League games, it was: Montreal Expos 7, San Diego ‘Padres 6, in 10 in-. The "Pirates, normally one-.of' the. most. prolific hitting teams in baseball, had hit a NL‘low 11 homers until’ Monday. No other team in the league had hit fewer than 17. ‘ Thompson, the Pirates’ cleanup hitter who had only. two previous homers, drilled a _ two-run homer fourth following Marvell Baseball Standings __ AMERICAN LEAQUE East Division Wo. Pet. OM. Catrolt 2? 5:44 — Teronto wi 4 8 Baltimore “19 16 663 9s Alllwaukee 15.16 484 11% New York . 14 19. 424 198 Cteveland Boston 14 2% Weat Division Minnesota © = =19 «17 «528 — Californlé 1? 16 314 WwW 17 J 1 1 18 S 1 18 18 0 1 zy. 4 12 22:39. 6 Monday Results Boston 6 Cleveland 1° Baltimore 4 California 1 Catroft. 7: Seattle 5 New York 3 Cakland 1 Chicago 7 Kansas City 0 ANE 14 * Seattle — Kansas Clty . Texas ¥ Tonight's Games. Boston at Cleveland California at Baltimore Seattle at Detrolt , Oakland at New York Texcs af Milwaukee Kenses City at Chicago Toronto at Minnesota . Wednesday Games Teronte at Minneacia California al: Baltimore N 1 Seattle at Detroit N Oakland, at New York N Texas at Milwaukee N Kansas Clty at Chiceio N NATIONAL LEAGUE Eat Division ‘ Wok Pet. OL Naw York 13 a1 — Chicago Philadelphia Mantreal . St. Louls Pittsburgh | west piviticn Lok Angeles 22.18 579 — Cincinnati San Franclaco 23 ‘ab su : Monday @egutts| Plitaburgh 3 Houston 2 . Phitedsipnia 4 Los Angeles 2 Montreal. 7 San Diego é (10 In- nings) _»- Fonighi’s Games Houston at Pittsburgh Chicago at Cincinnatl Atlanta at St. Louls Montreal af San Dingo Philadelphia of Los Angeles New York af San Franctéco “Wednesday Games ' New ‘York at S80 Francieco Houiton. af Pittsburgh N Atlanta: at St. Louls No. Chicago at Cincinnatl N+ Montrent at San’ Diego N Fhijadeiphla at Los Angeles N ares : . in the . Oakland 3-1, Niekro, 45, _ tied Detroit's Jack Morris - Boston “nings; “and: Piiladelphia ” 2 ‘oophillies? 3, Eos Alig | ae the ‘tiinth, ‘bill Te » Mark Bailey | to ground into a game-ending double 12017 ale We ae a a ae for the league lead in victories while lowering chis ERA to 1.04. - .Niekro, a knuckleballer, now has 274 career vie- tories and has allowed only four earned runs in 54 1-3 innings this season. . In the rest of the AL, it was: Baltimore Orioles 4, California , Angels . 1; ‘Red Sox 46, Cleveland Indians 1; and Detroit Tigers 7, Seattle Mariners: 5. White Sox 2 ayes 0 . Seaver, #2, struck out three and: didn’t walk a Wyntid's ‘3 ; double to ve the Pirates and DeLeon a 2-1 lead. Then, after losing pit- cher Bob Knepper tied the game at 2-2 with his fourth . career homer, Berra came through with the game- winning solo shot in the seventh, DeLeon, 2:1, was one of the top rookie pitchers in baseball last season when he flirted with no-hitters three times en route to a 7- Srecord. The start Monday was only his third of the season, and he brought a 7.82 ERA into the game. DeLeon scattered three hits over eight. innings before leaving in favor of reliever Kent Tekulve because of a blister on his pitching hand. The. Astros quickly put runners on first and fhird-with 9 ulve got play. Phillles 3 Dodgers 2 - Rellever Tom Nieden- fuer hit pinch hitter’ Len Matuszék with a pitch with - . thebases loaded, forcing in . the winning. run, and Philadelphia extended its. winning streak to four games by scoring three runs in the ninth inning. Jerry Reuss went into ‘the ninth with a two-hit shutout but ylelded one run on consecutive singles by CASSETTE PLAYER 1a. aut;iN batter,. while Scott Flet- cher singled in one run and scored the. other as Chicago ended. Kansas City's three-game winning streak. Seaver said his shutout was special only in that it gave the defending AL West champions’ a .500 record, 17-17. “It wasn't any more gratifying than any other game,” Seaver said. Seaver had both his losses and two no-decisions before finally winning his first game in the American League in his fifth start. He came into the game Monday with a 4.25 ERA, ™ Ivan —Welenis, . Aguayo and Juan Samuel. That chased Reuss, and Niedenfuer took mound, Garry... Maddox sacrificed the runners ahéad, and Niedenfuer walked Mike Schmidt intentionally. An error by first baseman Franklin Stubbs, who earlier had hit his first major league homer, allowed Aguayo to score, and Niedenfuer hit Matuszek with an 0-2 pitch. Charles Hudson surrendered: four hits in eight innings for the vic- tory. Expos 7 Padres 6 Tim Raines hit a two-run “Luis “ the . whick he towered, to 3.59 but Seaver said he hadnt pitched poorly since h was knocked out in the’ fifth | inning of his first start. Fletcher drove in a run ; with a single in the second : inning, ‘and hé tripled and - scored on a single by Jerry .., Dybzinski in the fifth: Yankees 2 A'si _ Niekro surrendered: four hits in eight innings before -‘ leaving with a twinge in his right shoulder. The | sidered serious enough to jeopardize his next start. ‘He didn’t allow a run until - Rickey "Henderson homer and doubled home the winning run in the top — of the 10th inning .as Montreal extended the Padres’ losing streak to five games. Gary Carter also homered for the Expos, hitting a three-run homer that helped Man- ‘real build a 6-1 lead. But the Padres, with the help of homers. by Alan Wiggins and Terry Ken- nedy, tied it 55 after seven innings. Terry Francona led bff: the Expos Wth with a single and scored all the way from first when Raines's drive to left off = - Dave Dravecky -rolled all the way to the wall. teva Sports § Shorts : | "ICKL executive | ; The Terrace commercial hockey league recently held a meeting and elected a new executive for the 184-85 season, - They are president- Dave Mallett, vice-president-Dave Hamilton, treasurer-Jack Phalen, Secretary-Bonita Chapdelaine, registrar-Ken Gordon, referee-in-chief-John Donald, townament chairman-Doug: Thomson, fund- raising chaitman-Bob Dempster, statistician-Jim Rigler, scorekeeper-Phil Olson. Discussion regarding changing to non-contact hockey: in” next years’ league arose. A decision was made to table ’ the discussion to a general meeting later in ‘the year when a larger representation of players could be present. Auto Reverse Cassette Piayer/AM-FM Stereo Radio ‘AR-4000 ® Auto Reverse: Tape reverses at end for continuous play. , ® Metal. Tape Selector: Sets proper bids andEQ forhigh performance metal tenes. ® Locking Fast Forward and Rewind AM-FM STEREO RADIO. ie Soft Muting: Monitors FM signal strength, reducing output gradually as noise ncreases * Stereo/Mano Selection: Choice of modes for best’ reception. PLUS... | © Full Iilumination: All controls illminated tor easier night operation, @ Loudness control @ Tone control @ Balance control ’ @Line out terminal for separate amplifier COMES. WITH 1 PR, RSAI5 DUALCONE FLUSH _ MOUNTED Te eOrorw, SYSTEM. - and %§,82 per "oe DAC ra rt ES 184 an wt m, 23 down 590" PR ow ¥ TECH tad tess ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING ~HOWE ENTERTAROENT REPAIRS NON, —SAT.—#:00-4.09 pn ERI —9:00—-9:00 am. 4519 Lakelse Ave. Temace, OC. VOG G04 095-816 SERVING TERRACE © NITIMAT © QUEEN CHARLOTTES . homered with: two til in” “ the eighth inning, -. Two of New York's: runs. 4 seored on Omar Moreno’s ° “ seventh-inning ‘triple, and " theother scored in the first ‘on an, error™ baseman Joe | Morgan: ” Orioles 4 Angels 1: Rich ‘Dauer - ‘continued . his hot - hitting’ against’ ' Geoff Zahn, doubling in two runs and scoring another after a single, and Scott McGregor pitched a- « five-hilter for Baltimore, ‘problem was not con- ~~ which has won 14of its last 1? games, The Angels, - meanwhile, have lost six of seven. Dauer has‘a .237 batting: *-average but is hitting .405 ‘Nfetime against Zahn, the . .. Angels lefty. Dauer had “ gone 3-for-26 before his two - hits, Dauer hit hig twos run *- double in the ‘third. inning, and’ the Orloles chased ’ Zahn in the eighth when Dauer singled and scored an a triple by Cal Ripken dr., who scored on a single by Eddie Murray. McGregor, 8-3, allowed a run in the fourth on a single by Reggie Jackson, a walk and a double by Juan Beniquez. Red Sox 6 Indians 1 Bob Ojeda and Bob Stanley teamed on a three- hitter and Jim Rice pounded a two-run homer by: second .. planned demonstrations at in thé first" ‘inning as the -.Red Sox ‘broke a three- -game losing streak. “Ojeda, 4-2, gave up two “hits and one unearned run in the fourth that snapped a string of 19 2-3 scoreless innings, He - struck “out “seven and walked five, and - ‘Stanley pitched threé one- hit innings for his sixth save. ~ The Red Sox chased Indians starler Rick Behenna, 0-3, with two runs in the second that made it 4-0, Behenna was ‘demoted after the game. Tigers 7 Mariners 3 Pinch-hitter Dave ‘Bergman hit an = run-. scoring triple in the eighth that ensbled Detroit to recover from two Seatlle .tuns In the top half of the inning that had forged a 5-5 _ tie, Lou Whitaker singled home Bergman. with’ the insurance run that made a winner of Aurelio Lopez, 3- » ith one out in the Tigers eighth, Rusty Kuntz, who had homered earlier, doubled down the line into Jeft for his third hit off Seattle starter Ed Vande Berg, 2-2. That set the stage for Bergman and Whitaker as the Tigers Improved their record to 27-5, best in the majors. Alan Trammell also homered for the Tigers. GULF SPRING § SAVINGS among Heavy Duty { Shock Absorbers Installed For —- $100 Sizes fo fit most popular Morth Amerioan cars, TOTEM GULF SERVICE N & J Service Centre Ltd. The Herald, Tuesday, May 15, 1984, Page 7 when Yugoslavia, host of chairman of the govern- the recent Winter Olym- ment sports committee. He pies, confirmed its in- jnsisted {he withdrawal tention to participate.’ was not ' politically While Ueberroth said he motivated and it: wasn't will try to change the revenge for the U.S.-led _ Soviets’ minds, it's not boycott of the 1980 Summer likely - judging _ by. Olympics in Moscow. ‘Gramov'’s statements at M the news conference: eanwhile, He said the withdrawal - journalist, who requested decision was final, and anonymity, said sports blamed it on the Reagan officials from the Soviet administralion. Union and its allies met last .week to — discuss FEAR DEFECTIONS : Gramov — reiterated °%eanizing a counter- : Olympics’ and decided iebdnerauaariienv edad Us. instead to divide events among . Communist the Games and about the Countries. possibility of defections his country’s athletes and trainers. He reinstated charges that ‘Western intelligence personnel have drugged Soviets to make them. defect, charges the U.S. state department “call preposterous. ; Under the plan, boxing, pentathlon and fencing competition would be held in Poland. Another official, who also spoke on the condition he not be iden- tified, snid the com- petitions would not be held at the same time as the July 28-Aug. 12 Los “This decision of ours is Angeles Games to avoid lrregocable.” = said — conflict with the Olympic who also holds charter, which specifically Gramov, forbids counter-games. the cabinet-level post of a Slo-pitch results a A The first. two games of the men’s slo-pitch league were played last night at Riverside Park. In the early game Gus’ Rec Center defeated Tilden 12-2. Gus’ opened the game with four straight hits and scored 3- sevenruns in the firat inning to put the game away early. Tilden scored one run in the firat inning and then failed to mount any offense until the sixth inning when they scored their only other run on a walk and a hit. In the late game, Terrace Builders downed Hanky Panky’s 12-4. Terrace Builders chipped away in the game scoring two runs in the first inning on two hits, three runs inthe second on three errors and three runs in the third on four hits, Hanky Panky's scored on a single and a sacrifice fly in the first inning and picked up a couple more later in the game on a combination of errors play. The next games in the schedule are set for tonight at, Riverside Park. Williams. Movers will take on Skeena Hotel and SKB will play Keith Grace Contracting. —ATIT tokelse Ave. Specialists In all brake work licensed mechanic on duty 6 days a week. 635-4515 a Polish. we ee eer