t Page 8/The Battalion/Wednesday, June 8, 1988 &HORT STOp Double Cheeseburger Fries Z Drive Thrus Redmond Terrace 1 6 OZ. Drink 1426 Texas Ave. v ^ / / y y y , Stop Procrastinating-Start Perfecting SMART PARTS Summer Special (Through August 31 9 1988) •Indoor swimming pool • Racquetball • Volleyball • Basketball • Indoor Jogging track • Tennis • Weight Machines • Free weights • Aerobics • Tanning bed • Snack bar • Lounge CLUB Aerofit 823-0971 A basketful of cash is better than a garage full of 'stuff Have a garage or yard sale this week - Call 845-2611 Ueberroth to keep job through negotiations Vol. 87 r NEW YORK (AP) — Baseball Commissioner Peter Ueberroth said Tuesday he was rejecting a second five-year term offered by owners but would extend his contract through the labor negotiations in 1990 if nec essary. Ueberroth, who had said he didn’t think he had enough votes for an other term, was offered the new term last week but turned it down. gotiations for a new collective bar gaining agreement, a new national television contract and expansion plans. term was unanimous, accon Minnesota Twins owner Carl lad. He said he told owners at the meeting in San Francisco that he would remain in office for a tran sition period and said he decided Tuesday that it would last no more than one year beyond the end of his current contract on Dec. 31, 1989. “The owners came back to me and talked about a second term,” Ueber roth said. “I was suprised. I was pleased. I was thankful. But I told them I would not accept.” He said he will not seek political office as has often been rumored. “In this way, my successor will have plans and agreements for the 1990s with which he could live,” Ue berroth said. “I didn’t think it would be fair to the owners and my succes sor to allow the institution to suffer from the situation in which I found it upon taking office in 1984.” According to Ueberroth,Slid were losing money when hem lice. He said Tuesday that 221,! made money or broke evening The Associated Press reported Monday that Ueberroth had agreed to stay on through the 1990 labor negotiatons. Ueberroth, 50, succeeded |j Kuhn and became baseballs j commissioner on Oct. 1, HM came to baseball after organize,] 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles [ ■WASH 1 Dukakis ar Owners were concerned that Ue berroth would leave only months be fore a possible players’ strike. Base ball’s collective bargaining agreement expires the same day as Ueberroth’s contract and baseball’s network television contracts end af ter the 1989 season. “I have no entry point into poli tics,” Ueberroth said. “I’ve passed up opportunities. I’m a little too brash, a little too blunt. But I run things well. I’ll find something to run.” Ueberroth said he would partici pate in the selection of his successor and said he and the new commis sioner both would be involved in ne- “The important thing is that the commissioner has agreed to stay on, Seattle Mariners owner George Ar- gyros said. “You have to recognize that Peter’s done a wonderf ul job as commissioner.” Ueberroth’s support for a new "When I arrived in base,, j, commissioner was in China,ik(K$ to S et retary had quit, the umpires 111 strike and NBC was demandir;|P 111(1 easi million dollars in refundsbe® ^ 11 /' 10 sa .1 Chu.iLM. Cubs (lav plavofl, ■ ! u 11 ’ Ueberroth said. . Duka *! s tion on We Kuhn said Tuesday that heciT I don t erately went to Asia tnensoasi f et hut th take the spotlight awayfroml pk that ar rotli hut that in hindsight “perl an< l he’ll b< was not available enough." chusetts ge ■Dukakis Ueberroth vowed Thursd Pn^identi; he would not allow a chaotir hnal sition and said that Bud Selin n|W matchi of the Milwaukee Brewers,ami : ljr e kd)!’ r Wilpon, co-owner of the Ne* l f e Ap ri| - Mets, were appointed to wrill k hnchin the details of the transition. Dukakis to ing about Martin continues feud with umps Bush has 1 NEW YORK (AP) — Billy Martin versus the um- “Billy will be singled out,” Phillips said Mor: pires. So what else is new? night. “He will be treated differently because ht In this case, it is the umpires who are challenging treated umpires differendy than any other manage Martin, and the New York Yankees’ manager, his vow “Rule 9.02 (a) says that any judgment call bv an. of abstinence having expired, is ready to take them on. pire is final and cannot be argued. If he comes* Martin said his promise to stay in the dugout and not argue, he will be ejected. In the past, umpires have; argue was good for only one game. discretion with all managers. They will not exercise True to his word, Martin did not leave the dugout cretion on Billy’s behalf. . . If Billy persists in arg;. Monday night during the Yankees’ 3-2 loss to the Bos- he’ll be ejected from the game.” ton Red Sox. The funn rcMilu-d from Martin's latest in a kq Martin said things will be different Tuesday night for of run-ins with umpires on the mat both, pick nominee is wh.it they ■liege ma Offic COD' h the second game in the series. “I’ll be out on the field all day,” Martin said. “Every time I want to go out, I will go out on the field and I will argue and do everything a manager is supposed to do. I defy Richie Phillips to stop me.” Phillips, head of the umpires’ union, said Martin is not like any other manager and will not be treated as that the umpires would take act ion on their own one. Martin was suspended for three games and fiE I $1,000 by American League President Bobby Bro for throwing dirt on umpire Dale Scott on May51 Oakland. Phillips and the umpiring crew chiefs said lastFnd the punishment was not strong enough and warn HKJK. C1117 wmi nwi uc 11 CdLCU as lliai U1C UIlipiICS WUUIU UIKC aCllOU Oil Uieil 0WI1 one. ‘Say Hey Kid’ sorry about autograph-for-pay incideni WASHiMrrrnN capi — icy, he said. Weve never:. supplies r On trade n natio About fonvoy t I.S. citie would sta until the Rie carav WASHINGTON (AP) — The owner of a downtown bookstore said Tuesday that charging $10 for a Wil lie Mays autograph during a book signing session was a mistake. Robert Haft, president of Crown Books, said he wasn’t quite sure how the Hall of Fame outfielder came to be collecting money while auto graphing copies of his new book, “Say Hey: The Autobiography of Willie Mays.” “I think what happened is he had signed about 700 books in our store,” said Haft of the incident which took place May 20. “Some people apparently came in with baseballs and gloves and they wanted him to sign. “It’s unclear who said it,” said Haft, “but somebody said he’ll sign for $10, and people started putting down money on the table there.” Mays, when contacted by the As sociated Press, said he was tired of talking about the incident and com plained that reports about it didn’t seem to get the story straight. But in Tuesday’s editions of the New York Post, Mays was quoted as saying, “I didn’t take a dime. Every thing went to the bookstore.” Mays, 57, said he was working for “Fm still trying to vindi cate myself. ” — Baseball Hall of Famer Willie Mays icy, he said. “We’ve never li signing where an author etii money. Had we known, we* not have allowed it.” the publisher, Simon & Schuster, and was there to sign only books. “They tell you when the books run out, you get up and walk out,” Mays told the Post. “But when the books ran out, there were about 50 to 100 people still in line. “Rather than leave the people hanging there, I said, ‘Give the bookstore $10 and I’ll sign whatever you have.’ “I thought I was doing something right. I thought I was helping every body there.” Mays said the store’s president was standing next to him. “All he had to do was tap me on the shoulder and say ‘Willie, we wouldn’t like you to do that.’ ” Haft said Crown’s policy is not to pay authors for promotional appear ances and not to charge for auto graphs. “It’s just totally against our pol- But Haft said he found oui that players do get paid to sign letic paraphernalia in sports f and said he thought that have caused the mix-up. Mays didn’t take any mono him when he left the store, said. “I guess he realized it wasni right thing to do,” said Haft," company owns a chain of 20: count bookstores nationwide. Crown employees gave i hack to as many customers as hie and donated the rest to the! League. Haft said he didn't how much money was collected The incident came to the upset mother of a youngster who attended thel' signing two weeks ago wrotealO to The Washington Post. Intlit| ter, published last Friday, Vaughan said her ll-year-old began crying when Mays asked for money. I LAKE] wad bloc 1 Peace Co wossing Wednesd ■formed Bes carr I The gi wdo Tu< to cross morning supplies though, supplies i des couk I U.S. C were ins llssets C Depart m Hoi regu ■ The r unlieense Br e •nut do in des sucl medicine relieve h B Treasi taking tr violate t fold the post hot all of the Do Parents believe sports essential for daughters WtAn agr and Dow ( repair bill ling C. Ev cilities pla Gen. \ NEW YORK (AP) — Most parents believe sports are as important for their daughters as their sons, accord ing to a national study released Tuesday. Eighty-seven percent of the par ents surveyed said they agreed that “sports are equally important for boys and girls.” “It shows the word ‘tomboy’ no longer exists in the athletic diction ary,” said Dorothy Harris, education director of the Women’s Sports Foundation, which commissioned the study. “Girls who participate in sports are no longer laughed at and ridi culed,” she said. “In fact, it’s popular for girls to play sports. It’s the sexy thing to do.” in sports, the figure dropped to 75 percent in the 15-to-18 group. According to the study, the drop off is primarily due to interest in other activities, lack of time, or inter est in boys. Many black girls cited ad ditional reasons for quitting sports, including transportation problems and inadequate funds to pay for equipment and lessons. Many girls stop participating in sports during their mid-teens, the study shows. agreemen or negotia Work r ■As Among the findings: _ A sectlf — Girls whose parents 8% U g USt; j volved in sports are more li' a ( h em ic; participate themselves. supports — While most parentsbelif u {j rar y to e ter health is the best reason fc 1 ! l> ow, h daughters to play sports, girls' p av f or ,| biggest motivator is “fun. settlemen — Girls participating in sp°| “There ceive more encouragemeni s ara t their mothers than fathers, has alway Deborah Anderson, exeenuj Guy ^ e ]| “The puberty barrier appears to exist,” said Harris, a professor of exercise and sport science at Penn State University. “When girls be come more interested in boys, they tend to become less interested in However, the study indicates that girls tend to drop out of sports as they get older. While 87 percent of those in the 7- to-10 age group said they participate sports. The survey was based on tele phone interviews last November and December with 1,004 parents and 513 of their 7-to-18 year-old daugh ters. It was co-sponsored by the Wil son Sporting Goods Co. rector of the Women’s Sport: happy th: dation, said attitudes abowlBHe sai participation in sports W, dement a change in 1972 when ^■“We dt passed a law guaranteeing jujst so w equal educational opportunit' “jj^ p, ec The Title IX legislation sp al ' preferabl dramatic increase in gin 5 ] Relfon school teams and colleg c dement, arships for female athletes, thought \ The foundation, establi 5 ■‘T hey 1974, is a non-profit, ediir :lt " ter-offers ganization that encourage 5 1 concessio to participate in sports.