illar & Bill Hi Wednesday, October 29,1986/The Battalion/Page 11 riesell appears ready o resign as Terp coach earns onors 5 accolade: COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) — jaryland basketball coach Lefty iesell has agreed to resign his po sition and become an assistant ath- |ic director at the school, a source se to contract settlement negotia- jns said Tuesday. Driesell, who had once vowed to finish out the remaining nine years of his contract, has scheduled a news conference for 8 a.m. CST today, Yh hours before school Chancellor John B. Slaughter will conduct one of his own. Hlhe separate news conferences to announce Driesell’s reported new job came about after he and Slaugh ter couldn’t agree on a mutual meet ing The Associated Press learned that Driesell, after being told on Tuesday that the chancellor wanted to meet with the media at 10 a.m. today, scheduled his own for one hour ear lier. Because of the logistics involved, Slaughter later agreed to start his news conference at 9:30 to accom modate the movement of people and television equipment between the two sites on the Maryland campus. Attorneys for Driesell and the university had been negotiating for weeks on a settlement of the remain ing years of the contract, and it was reported earlier Tuesday that an agreement had been struck. “We are in sync on suitable terms for an agreement,” James J. Mingle, an assistant attorney general hand ling negotiations for the university, said. “It is just a matter of final re view by the clients.” Driesell, Maryland’s coach for 17 years, has been under attack since basketball star Len Bias died of co caine intoxication on June 19 and subsequent revelations that other players were involved in drugs or had academic difficulties. The settlement came just four days before the Terrapins begin practice for the 1986-87 season. The delayed opening of practice, 17 days later than the starting date allowed by the NCAA, is in keeping with Slaughter’s decision to set the sea son-opening game back one month. Padres name Bowa manager g from a lie to a Ik was a big lift fortki te said. were amici: try to get a receiver is ngnt *, :1 said. ’’Somelto* It nee and doesn't get i; rle pulls out of that.i hi know, I thinkhe'ifi ■SAN DIEGO (AP) — Larry Bowa, the former All-Star shortstop whose team won a minor-league title in his first managing job, was named man ager of the San Diego Padres Tues- da\ replacing Steve Boros. ■feoros was fired as manager but ■l work in an unspecified job in the lid. I was .Padres organization, General Man- back. Once hetlirt. |agei Jack McKeon announced Tues- tlie ball. When I a.I da) Boros formerly was director of elt the guycomin(iit|niiiior-league instruction for the d mv outside sh Padres. 1 l had seen a ta Chib president Ballard Smith said ,s do it when then; Tuesday the change “was something I tried it anditW waquite obviously had been thinking about for quite a while because the : season didn’t go well.” it Still NBC says Game 7 most-watched ran baseball game Boros took over as manager of the team three days into spring training when Dick Williams resigned and guided the Padres to a 74-88 record and a fourth-place finish in the Na tional League West. “Looking at 1986, I think we’re all responsible for the poor showing of our ballclub,” McKeon said. “That includes me, the manager, the staff and the players. We want it to be known that we do not want Steve to shoulder all the blame for that situa tion.” Bowa, the Padres 11th manager in the organization’s 18 years, led the Padres’ Class AAA farm club in Las Vegas to an 80-62 record and the 1986 Pacific Coast League title. A shortstop who played 16 years in the major leagues, Bowa collected 2,191 hits for a .260 lifetime batting average before retiring after the 1985 season. He passed on a $250,000 contract offer to play as a utility infielder for the New York Mets this season to be gin his managerial career. “I certainly feel that Larry has a chance to be an outstanding major league manager,” McKeon said. Boros, 50, who was in Tahiti and unavailable for comment, had served as manager of the Oakland A’s in 1983 and a portion of 1984. s.iid Shemrdd: Hkrahel WaHtoiK: is the Cowbovsjrt: ar. ■ are so diversified n ev on one thing.'L rrard has a flair!?: r. He took a past:, ngton’s Darrell Gk me for a touchdonu Dallas' 31-7 ticior, on Sept. 29, Sherai! to a wobbling pass J or the hall anatme; el scoring catch. / college coach al»js: aggressive going:/, ml said. "It helps la lence." :e squoc saguei nsas-Little Rod it j 2.2 points ineighitrsi :s. wasn’t an easvej Sund said, the r of player persona J v and Dennis an b : | s high. ItwaspreW-J tyton’s defenw ■d him. He'sgomfti lop into a point pi ,( j lopment is whatlk| is all about." | NEW YORK (AP) — Game 7 of thelWorld Series between the Boston Red Sox and the New York Mets was the most-viewed baseball game ever, eclipsing the final game of the 1980 World Series between Philadelphia and Kansas City, NBC said Tuesday. | (The 1986 fall classic went up against “Monday Night Football” on AB( and NBC said the World Series handed the weekly TV football game its lowest rating ever: an 8.8 with .i 14 share. ; The matchup presented a di- lemm;i for New York sports viewers, with the football Giants outplaying the! Washington Redskins, 27-20, while the Mets were defeating the Red Sox, 8-5. In Washington, however, the au- .diepce forsook the baseball I championship for the Redskins. NBC research estimated the Game 7 of the series Monday night was seen in 34 million homes, while thelsixth and deciding game of the 1980 series was seen in an estimated 32 inillion homes. Game 7 received a national rating of 88.9 and a 55 share, compared with a 40 rating and a 60 share for the|1980 game. Mets celebrate win in ticker-tape shower NEW YORK (AP) The world champion Mets basked in sunshine, confetti and adulation Tuesday as an estimated 2.2 mil lion New Yorkers hailed their heroes in a thunderous, chaotic ticker-tape parade. “The team is in a euphoric state,” said Mets co-owner Fred Wilpon, also expressing the mood of the city. “We are absolutely thrilled.” Fans knocked over police bar ricades and flooded the streets of lower Manhattan in a riot of joy as open limousines carrying team members threaded their way slowly up Broadway. People dangled from trees, perched on ledges and cheered from rooftops and windows along the one mile route to City Hall. “What the Mets have done is to take New York, the international capital, and turn it into a small town today,” said Mayor Edward Koch, who rode in the lead car of the parade with Gov. Mario M. Cuomo and Mets Manager Davey Johnson. Their car was preceded by two Sanitation Department snow plows that scooped up ankle-deep debris so the parade could pro ceed. On a gloriously sunny, crisp fall day, the skies rained tons and tons of paper. “The whole last three days have been unbelievable,” said Mets third baseman Ray Knight, the most valuable player of the World Series in which the Mets beat the Boston Red Sox by win ning Game 7 Monday night. “I’ve got goosebumps.” “This means everything,” said second baseman Wally Backman. “This is what life is all about in New York City.” About two dozen people were treated for minor injuries, most of them caused by “pushing and shoving and excitement,” Emer gency Medical Service spokeswo man Donna Osso said. The Police Department de ployed 2,500 officers, many of them on horseback. Police re ported only one arrest. PREGNANT? Child Placement Center offers free counseling to help you cope with your unplanned preg- • nancy. Call 696-5577 V. weekl TiitteJ 1 3r Foffl ; The toughest job you’ll ever love *-"v■** m We admit it. It takes a dif ferent kind of person to be a Peace Corps volunteer. We won’t mislead you with glowing pictures of exotic lands. The hours as a volunteer are long. The pay is modest. And the frustrations sometimes seem overwhelming. But the satisfaction and rewards are im mense. You’ll be immersed in a new culture, become fluent in a new language, and learn far more about the third world — and yourself — than you ever expected. You’ll also discover that prog ress brought about by Peace Corps volunteers is visible and measurable: Such as health clinics established in the Philippines; Fresh-water fish ponds constructed in Kenya; roads and schools and irrigation systems built in Upper Volta; tens of thou sands of people given essential skills in farming, nutrition, the skilled trades, business, forestry, and other specialties throughout the develop ing world. Being a volunteer isn’t for everyone, and it isn’t easy, but to the people of the developing nations who have never before had basic'" health care or enough to eat, the Peace Corps brings a message of hope and change. We invite you to look into the volunteer opportunities beginning in the next 3-12 months in Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Pa cific. Our representatives will be pleased to provide you with details. PEACE CORPS INFORMATION TABLE Wed., Oct. 29; 8:30am-5:00pm Thurs., Oct. 30; 8:30am-5:00pm 1 st Floor Memorial Student Center FILM SEMINAR Wed., Oct. 29 6:30pm-8:30pm Rudder Tower, Room 510 1985-86 Yearbooks are available to be picked up at the Annex English am to 4:30 pm, 8:30 Mon day through Friday. ★★★★★★★ Attention Freshmen and Sophomores: Freshmen and Sophomores can be photographed until October 31. The Battalion SPREADING THE NEWS Since 1878