Texas A&M The Battalion Sports June 9, 1982 Page 13 durable it helped etic bleu irst place, ndustriesj i ings Mil' “St Pointj aking tlit irts andst inufactutt! nd mab icluding Shirts), nr Heusen, .ire g C il blend Lakers perform title Magic; top ixers 114-104 ! a yGretlifi y [ured as a; r 179,8(1 ds of den icluding i aeriod - er 1980, ittheincidt ■matitis, icosmetic, igher,” tit any > Y of ad« bly are tentionofi are solved selves bv f a produr :riaf-and-er aarticularl] e irritation g or itcli lion. : ingredie n affected I as bent d benzyl It we ' tas been us lore than n out of in 1979 ERA, fl o ill sheet* ; the bun JJgf in the Cap ledical iers vowed until the il thejunt ic. United Press International INGLEWOOD, Calif. — Once again, the Los Angeles Lakers re sampling the NBA vintage champagne. And once again the Philadelphia 76ers are left with dreams f what might have been. The Lakers clinched the NBA championship with a slim 14-104 victory over the 76ers Tuesday night. Now they have a arade through downtown streets to look forward to. All the 76ers have is a somber return to the City of Brotherly Love and weeks of chastisement on radio talk shows. The Lakers captured their second NBA crown in three icasons with the victory, winning the series, 4-2, and tying an NBA playoff record with a 12-2 record after sweeping Phoenix nd San Antonio in the Western Conference. For the 76ers — who were seeking to become the first team in NBA history to rebound from a 3-1 deficit in the title series — it was another bitter end to a championship series. They’ve lost in :he finals three times in the last six years. For 76ers’ superstar Julius Erving — who led his team with 30 oints — this one may be the hardest to swallow. “I’m more disappointed this time than any other year,” Erving said. “As to why, I don’t know. It just hurts more than other year. It’s very painful.” And while the 76ers were dreaming of what might have been, 50 feet away the Lakers were letting loose with champagne. Coming off last year’s shocking loss to the Houston Rockets in the first round of the playoffs, the Lakers said the champion ship was much sweeter. “The guys made up their minds that no matter what the cost, were going to get our title back,” said Laker guard Magic Johnson, who was named the 1980 series Most Valuable Player and grabbed the honor again this year. Los Angeles center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar agreed last year weighed heavily on the Lakers’ minds, and also said Sunday’s embarrassing 135-102 loss to Philadelphia provided another incentive. “We remembered Sunday, we remembered it real well,” he said as his 20-month-old son, Amir, sat on his shoulder in the crowded locker room. “It’s hard to put this championship into words. Last year we were at the bottom and now we’ve come all the way back to the top.” In the somber Philadelphia locker room, Maurice Cheeks said that the better team had won. “I can’t say I’ve ever seen a better team,” Cheeks said. Cardinals squeeze out 5-4 victory United Press International Whitey Herzog put the squeeze on the Montreal Expos Tuesday night. The St. Louis Cardinals, under Herzog’s instructions, employed the old-fashioned squeeze bunt on two occasions and were successful both times in defeating the Expos, 5-4, in 12 innings. The Cardinals tied the score, 2- 2, in the seventh when pinch- hitter Mike Ramsey squeezed home Tom Herr from third. And they scored what proved to be the winning run in the 12th inning on another suicide squeeze play when Ken Oberk- fell brought home Willie McGee. McGee had tripled in the go-ahead run that broke a 3- 3 tie. “We played good and we ex ecuted good,” Herzog said. “We bunted three guys over and scored twice on the squeeze play.” Herzog’s only regret was that he didn’t use the squeeze play in the fourth inning when the Car dinals left the bases loaded after scoring one run. “I wish I would have had the squeeze in the fourth inning, maybe we wouldn’t have had to play so long,” he said. The usually reliable Woody Fryman lost in relief for Mon treal and dropped his record to 2-2. A1 Oliver drove in two of the Expos’ runs with singles in the first and 12th innings. Elsewhere in the National League, Philadelphia downed Chicago, 5-2, Pittsburgh whip ped New York, 6-2, San Diego beat Cincinnati, 4-1, and Atlanta edged Los Angeles, 4-3. PHILLIES 5, CUBS 2 — At Philadelphia, Marty Bystrom scattered five hits in eight in nings to help the Phillies hand the Cubs their ninth straight loss. PIRATES 6, METS 2 — In New York, Don Robinson cele brated his 25th birthday with a two-run, fourth-inning double and 7V$ innings of three-hit pitching in pacing the Pirates. PADRES 4, REDS 1 — John Montefusco and Luis DeLeon combined on a three-hitter and Terry Kennedy drove in two runs to spark the Padres, in San Diego. BRAVES 4, DODGERS 3 — At Los Angeles, Dale Murphy scored twice and singled home the tie-breaking run in the seventh inning to lead the Braves. In the American League, Bos ton Red Sox manager Ralph Houk, quite clearly, has found a system for winning—all he does his loosen his right arm and point to the bullpen. Mark Clear handles the rest. The Red Sox, coming from behind to win a game for the 19th time this season, used a Carney Lansford single with none out in the 10th inning Tuesday night to give Boston a 4-3 victory over the New York Yankees. The triumph was the fourth in a row for the Red Sox, with the decision going to Clear, 5-1, who now has four wins and seven saves in his last 11 appear ances. George Frazier fell to 1-1 as the Yankees lost for the sixth time in seven games. “We have been doing this all year, battling back, battling back, battling back,” said Clear, who helped the Red Sox main tain a share of first place in the American League East with De troit. “We played an excellent game and got good perform ances from everybody.” Jim Rice led off the 10th with a walk and moved to third when Carl Yastrzemski ripped a single through the middle. Two pitch es later, Lansford drilled the game-winner as the Red Sox boosted their extrainning re cord this season to 5-0. In other AL games, it was' California 11, Toronto 4; De troit 8, Cleveland 3; Baltimore 4/ Milwaukee 2; Kansas City 9, Minnesota 4; Seattle 2, Texas 1, in 14 innings; and Chicago 5, Oakland 4. ORIOLES 4, BREWERS 2 — In Milwaukee, Gary Roenicke and Cal Ripken Jr. hit home' runs and Scott McGregor pitch- 1 ed a six-hitter to post the wih> over Milwaukee. MARINERS 2, RANGERS T — At Arlington, Todd Cruz doubled home A1 Cowens from second base with two out in the 14th inning to lead Seattle. - ’ 0ioom € i Serving Luncheon Buffet Sunday through Friday 11:00 a.m. to 1:30 $4.50 plus tax ^ Top Floor of Tower Dining Room J ^ Sandwich & Soup Mon. through Fri. $2.19 plus drink and tax a i-Open to the Public 4. J “Quality First” FfiTH€R S DRV GIFT SRl€ Many Items ON€ HALF OFF! featuring clocks, and a variety of prints 9:00 a.m. to 5 p.m. June 7 through June 11 in the Main Hall of the MSC Sponsored by the MSC Arts Committee Whoever Said "Perm" Means "Frizz"? Let us set the record straight about curl. We can achieve the look you'd love with a Redken perm. Our professional analysis shows which Redken® perm to use. 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