sports Battalion/Page 11 October 25, 1982 Cards ^“as World being n overlooked Series champs is. son) rt combine to season. From st for as low stone Resort )SS-country leginners, io features door tennis, img, shop- by Milton Richman UPI Sports Editor ■^EW YORK — At the very top, let’s gel one thing straight. The St. Louis Cardinals are the world champions and certainly de serve to be. ■ They played by the rules, they won the World Series as prescribed, in seven games, and nobody is trying to take their victory away from them. Nobody could, anyway. ■ But in losing the World Series, the Mil waukee Brewers seemed to capture the fan cy of people and swing them over to their side more than the Cardinals did in win- ning. ■The Set ies has been over almost a week now, but everywhere I go, everybody still talks about the Brewers, not the Cardinals. ■‘What a shame they lost,” and “I was pull ing lor them so hard.” That’s all I keep hearing. I’m hearing it at airline ticket coun ters inure Midwest as well as in the East, in such diverse places as supermarkets and Barbershops and astonishingly enough, even among many of my journalistic col leagues. There’s supposed to be no rooting in the press box but the World Series was one athletic event in which that rule was violated. Maybe it was because the Brewers had never won anything before or because of the way they battled back to beat both the Orioles and the Angels in those final games where they would’ve been all finished had they not. Or maybe it was because Mil waukee symbolizes America’s Heartland to most people more than St. Louis does. I don’t really know what it was, but I do know the Brewers are emerging as the most popular losers in sports since Roberto Ue Vicenzo erased himself as the winner of the Masters championship by not using his pen cil properly. The Brewers lost with style. They went to war with one of their biggest guns spiked when their Cy Young relief ace Rollie Fin gers had to merely stand around and watch but they never offered that as any excuse for losing. They didn’t whine, they didn’t alibi, they didn’t complain, and maybe that’s what made so many people take to them all the more. Last Thursday was a cold and cloudy day in Milwaukee, the kind of day you feel like staying indoors. But, according to police estimates, some 100,000 people lined Wis consin Avenue to show the defeated Brew ers’ players how they felt about them as they came along in a motorcade. Later at Milwaukee’s County Stadium, Pete Vuckovich, who was charged with the seventh game defeat against the Cardinals, got up to speak to the crowd. His choked emotion showed in his voice. “I don’t feel so good today because we lost the game,” he started to say to the crowd, but it never let him finish, answering him back in a rising but loving chorus, “It doesn’t matter ... it doesn’t matter.” Bud Selig, the Brewers’ owner, became so excited when they won the pennant by beat ing the Angels that he bloodied his hand on the roof of his private box. He bled some more, inside where nobody saw, after the defeat by the Cardinals. In light of what he has seen, and how much it has meant for his club even to reach the World Series, he’s feeling a lot better. “It has bound this state and community together like nothing else has in the past three decades,” he said Sunday from his home in Milwaukee. NFL situation bleak )rtation from i 111 1 gws 4day S as talks break oil i ; hotel taxes i >ag; and the out the trip. and Colorado United Press International WASHINGTON — Just in case there was some doubt, the iking NFL players sent league owners a message that there will Ino pro football in 1982 without a collective bargaining agree- ger) Even those union members who don’t always agree with the Hdership either agreed with the union line Sunday or stayed silent following a meeting of about 100 players in Washington. ■ The 34-day strike apparently won’t end before games next weekend are called off, the sixth straight weekend without pro tool ball. ■ “If anyone came here looking for us to blink, I’m sorry,” said linjiggetts of the Chicago Bears, a member of the union negotiat ing committee. ■Vo further meetings have been set to resume negotiations that broke off Saturday when mediator Sam Kagel pulled out. Kagel walked out when both sides refused to budge on the crucial issue of how wages will be distributed. ■Ed ( iarvey, NFLPA executive director, said he will ask chief AIL negotiator Jack Donlan for further talks “as soon as possible.” Vo meeting is expected before midweek since Donlan is scheduled ifmeet today in New York with members of the league’s executive committee. ■Garvey also said the union plans to push for further action by the National Labor Relations Board. NLRB General Counsel Wil liam A. Lubbers said last week he will issue a complaint against the VFL for refusing to bargain in good faith. ■Union attorney Joseph A. Yablonski said the NFLPA will decide soon whether it will seek a rehearing of an appellate court decision allowing the NFL to challenge in state courts the players’ right to play in a series of union-sponsored all-star games or appeal the case to the U.S. Supreme Court. ■ Yablonski also said the union may go back to U.S. District Court in Washington this week seeking to have the standard NFL player contract ruled invalid. The union sought an injunction against the contract, but Judge John Penn said the matter needed further hearing. WATCH THIS SPACE FOR OUR SPECIALS Buffet Special AXL YOU CAN EAT 11 a.m.-2 p.m. SHILOH PLACE SKAGGS CENTER DELIVERY □EKXXnDEKX 693-0035 BRYAN 846-4809 TEXAS AVE. 846-3412 100 N. MAIN NOW OPEN SHILOH PLACE $'549 779-2431 775-6788 •~i* vU vL* vL'* •st' •st' nL' *‘1' str •st' 't* 'T* •T' "T* 'T' -t* *t' *t* 'u* "v* ■’T'* •T'* 'T* 'T* 't* * r T'* *t* •t- 't* "t* *t > r T N 'T' 'T'* •t* *t'* y- >83 Extravaganza lues. Oct. 26 MSC Main Lounge 11:30 a.m. Featuring: • Ski Fashion Show • Ski Equipment Presentation • Ski Film Modeling by MSC Hospitality Ski Fashion & Equip ment provided by Perdue Sports of Houston. Sponsored by MSC Travel & MSC Hospitality e ad 2 DAYS ONLY! Ladies Fall Fashions — Famous Labels 30-60% Off Sizes 3-16 Ramada Inn — Texas Ave. Tues. Oct. 26 12-8:00 Wed. Oct. 27 9-4:00 Don't miss this opportunity! Momentum Sales Inc. <•& -k —k ^k ^k ^k -k —k ^k ^k ^k ^k ^k ^k ^k ^k ^k ^k ^k ^k ^k ^k ^k ^k ^k ^k TX-l NOTICE TO STUDENTS HAVING TAKEN CHEM101/111 AND/OR CHEM 102/112 DURING THE PERIOD Fall 1973 through Summer 1982 In order to clear our files and storage areas, we will be disposing of all old exams and individual grade records for F73 through SS82. If you have any reason for requesting consideration of a grade change for one of our courses taken during this period, you will need to file such request at Room 413 Heldenfels Hall no later than November 24, 1982. No grade changes will be considered after that date, except by the official University appeal mechanism. Rod O’Connor Director of First Year Chemistry Programs Steanuxrat STEAMBOAT’S WILD WEST SNOWBREAK VACATION No other package includes more for less! $185 Charlotte Cunningham or Charlotte Boyd 764-8787 Jan 2-9 i Your Snowbreak package includes: • Deluxe lodging at some of Steamboat's finest lodging facilities ' Steamboat lift ticket with the finest skiing anywhere ’ "Never Ever" lesson program, allowing you to exchange a one day lift ticket for the first time lesson and use of lifts ' All Colorado sales taxes ■ Admission to our exclusive Wild West welcome party with a Wild Western band Admission to another Wilder West party Free beer vouchers for both Wild West parties Special on-mountain beer and cheese party Entry fee to the National Cowboy- Cowgirl Champion ship Downhill Race with western wear as prizes to the top three winners Entry fee to the “Hats Down” Collegiate Slalom Championship with western wear prizes for the top. three winners Services of Travel Associates professional on-site Snowbreak Vacation staff TANK MCNAMARA by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds Salazar shakes Gomez to win NY marathon United Press International NEW YORK — In the last half-mile of Sunday’s 13th New York City Marathon a small dust storm kicked up in the faces of Alberto Salazar and Rodolfo Gomez, who were waging a grueling duel. When the dust cleared, Salazar had shaken off Gomez and pulled away to a four-second triumph in 2 hours, 9 minutes, 29 seconds — his third straight New York victory. For the second time in three years, he had withstood a challenge from Gomez, the veteran Mexican runner. Salazar, the 24-year-old from Eugene, Ore., who now is undefeated in four marathons, played down the significance of the dust, saying: “When you have 600 yards to go in a 26-mile race, you don’t worry about little things like dust.” The Cuban native had begun his charge to the finish 10 meters before the dust kicked up, stum ning Gomez, who was unable to respond. “I was surprised that he increased the tempo so drastically,” Gomez said through an interpreter. “I didn’t expect it. Then we entered the du$t storm and I couldn’t see him. The surprise was the spurt Alberto did.” Salazar knew from the start, along with 14,3d8' other runners, that he wouldn’t have much of a chance at his world record of 2:08:13 which he set last year; the cold headwinds which gusted out of the northeast at up to 23 mph made sure of that.’ Still, the pace was even slower than expected. At the sixth mile, the lead group’s time of 29:42' was 30 seconds behind the record. By the half mark, the time of 1:04:55 had fallen 45 seconds' off the pace. If your anniversary’s next month, order her Anniversary Embrace Ring Since our seven-diamond Anniversary Embrace Ring is custom-engraved with both of your names, it takes four weeks to be sure it’s absolutely perfect. 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