Tuesday, July 11, 1972 Royals Take Ninth-Inning Win By The Associated Press Lou Pinelli walloped a two- out, two-run home in the ninth inning Monday night, giving the Kansas City Royals a come-from-behind 32. Am-ron League goalkeeper Jake McCarthy skidding Baltimore Orleans. It was the fifth consecutive loss for the defending American League champion Orioles. Left-hander Mike Cuelar was working on a four-hitter and hit three home runs in ninth when he surrendered a blood single to Richie Montoya. Piniella followed with his eight homer, putting Kansas City on top. THE ORIOLIES took the race with a two-torn, five inning, Brooks Robinson's single starting the rally. Robinson scored on Dave Johnson's double, who in turn scored an impressive sharp single to right, which Scheinbich bobblebob for an error. Pitcher Bruce Dalt Canton doubled, leading off the Kansas City sixth and tallied on an infield fly for the Amos Oaks' saffron飞 for the ninth. In other American League games, Detroit blazed Texas on both runs in the first three innings, on two run-ons homily by Jim Norrthup and Norm Cash in the fourth. And Rangers 8-3 to take sole possession of first place in baseball's American League game. The Tigers entered the game tied with Baltimore for first. The Orioles lost to Kansas City. DICK MeAULIFE opened the Tiger first with a walk and a kneel, then sacrificed by sacrifice by Northrup, Bill Freeman paid a sacrifice fly off A walk to Aurelio Rodriguez and a double by Ed Brinkman produced a Detroit run in the second. Then Willie Horton, a replacement for Kaline, who had pulled a muscle running out of her right leg, and having with a single and came home on Northrush's fourth home of the year had his 16th win and Cash's 18th win. His 18th fight was the fence in right. Cash hit his second of the game in the eighth inning. Joe Coleman, with ninth-inning relief help from John Hiller, put his record at 11-7. COLEMAN HAVE UP a two-run runner by Don Mincher in the seventh, the 200th of Muncher's second home for the same innering foot home in the same innering Gaylord Perry of Cleveland tossed a four-hitter for his 14th victory of the baseball season as the Indians rode Ron Lolich's first major league home run to a 2-1 victory over the Chicago Perry's 14 victory tied him with Detroit's Mike Molic-Ichin. Ron's connias—as the winningest pitcher in the majors. Baseball Standings American League Bobby Darwin's first grand slam home run of his career and the combined seven-hit pitching W. 41 L. Pot. G.B. Detroit 81 40 L. Pot. Baltimore 40 35 L. Pot. New York 40 35 L. Pot. Cleveland 34 36 42 42 Cleveland 34 36 42 42 Cleveland 34 36 42 42 Oakland 48 27 640 Miami 51 24 916 Minnesota 38 36 154 Kansas City 39 37 513 California 37 42 114 Cleveland 36 36 149 National League East Pittsburgh W. L. Pet. G.A. New York 44 32 35 10 Philadelphia 44 32 35 10 Chicago 41 36 35 10 Montreal 33 42 35 10 Baltimore 33 42 35 10 Monday Scores Cheetahtim Toronto Foxconn Atlanta San Francisco Sacramento 45 31 392 45 31 591 45 31 526 36 42 462 35 48 410 35 48 410 American League Kansas City 3, Baltimore 2 Cleveland 2, Chicago 1 Minnesota 8, Milwaukee 1 Phoenix 5, Detroit 4 National League Los Angeles 61, Philadelphia 49 San Francisco 5, New York 4 Monreal 6, San Diego 3 Fraternities Expect Rush To Fill Pledging Quota It is possible that more men have been pledged, but not all pledging cards have been turned in to the dean of men's office. Legal pledging of rusheshearers for earlier date to compensate for their time on dormitory contract dates for student dates for student dates for pledging will be required. Summer rush for fraternities at the University of Kansas is proceeding reasonably well, but other brooks, advisor to KU, fraternites. Approximately 600 men would almost completely fill the room in a number is arbitrary. According to Brooks, 600 men would put the system in good shape, but the system would not even with a lesser number. The pledging date had been advanced last year when it was found that dorm contracts could More than 180 men have been pieded so far during the summer. The total is higher than the total at this time last year. be signed earlier than in the previous year, or be able to compete with the residence halls during the summer, because of the contracts. According to Mark Gunnelis, an executive with many men who wish to join a fraternity during the summer have always had to be prepared before they decide to join a fraternity making it hard for the houses to pay the cost of breaking their bonds. Formal rush has also been changed because the date has been moved closer to the beginning of school, hopefully to attract a larger number of students. The men will be able to quit their jobs without losing any money by making the job more demanding. Formal rush week will start Friday August 18 and early Sunday August 21 which is the first day of orientation week. So far 50 men have signed up for the rush week. of Jim Perry and Dave LaRoche helped the Minnesota Twins beat the Milwaukee Brewers 8-1. DARWIN'S 46-foot homer, his 10th of the season, followed singles. Danny Thompson and a walk to Harmon Killebrew. In the National League, Ken Sangleton and Mike Jorgensen hit nine innings homers, leading to Expos to a 6-3 National League victory over San Diego in which both teams played wounds up in the hospital. In the first inning, San Diego catcher Fred Kendall, crashed into a guard rail between the backstop and the Padres' 'dugout while trying to run down a foul ball, and suffered a bruised shoulder and a bad cut on his forehead. In the third Leron Lee was hit on the batting helmet with a pitch and was taken to a hospital for X-rays. tumbled slumping New York 4/4 games back of idle Pittsburgh in the National League's East Division. Chris Speier delivered a two-run single in the eighth inning, rallying the San Francisco Giants at home to victory over the New York Mets. Jim Freegest had tagged a two-run homer in the sixth inning and then snapped a $3 tie with an RB that scored 10, giving the Mets the lead. But Gary Gentry surrendered a little pinch single to Jim Liewert and took him McGraw relieved for New York. Then Boby Bonds singled with the Maddux advanced the runners with a sacrifice boot. Spencer Maddux Kansan Sports Comment By JIM GALVIN of the The Eastern Division of the American League has the worst first place team and just about the worst team in major league baseball. Translated, this means that it's anybody's pennant in the East. It's a team that separate the top four teams—Baltimore, Detroit, Houston and Chicago. The loss of Frank Robinson isn't all that's hurting the Orioles. The Orioles are bribeable, and the league's team batting chart, with barely over a 220 mark. Consequently, Baltimore is relying on their great pitchers and the players who nearly invincible in the past. Newcomer Bobby Grich has been a delight to manager Earl Weaver, but the O's must cater for him. Robinson's hitting and leadership Balloting On Stars Continues The Detroit Tigers seem to be the best bet to give the Orioles a run for the title. Detroit has had good pitching from always, but they haven't played Joe Coleman, but like Baltimore, they haven't exactly destroyed anyone with their hitting. The Tigers have been the Eastern Division's most consistent team, and they're highly symplemous with championship teams. if they expect to last much longer. NEW YORK (AP)—Cincinnati second baseman Joe Morgan and Chicago shortstop Dennis Kessler assumed the leads in their game, which Sunday as fan balloting continued National League-All-Star team. The Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees have been fighting for six years in most season is a mediocre mark at best. This season is different, though, and Boston Red Sox are in the midst of 67, while pennant fever is hitting hard in New York, where base-ball fans now have their chance to win. Third baseman Jorre Torre of St. Louis and first baseman Lee May of Cleveland lead in their positions. May leads Willie McCovey of the Giants 381 to 287,757 while Jason Kidd of the Giants 293,477 for runner-up Ron Santo. Morgan closed fast to lead Glenn Beckert of the Cubs 402,446 votes to 398.785. The Red Sox have the second best batting team in the league, and although Carl Yazmus trumped him, the catcher Caternish Fisk is The Sox's pitcheres all have been good in past years, and if they improve this year. Boston better send players to check out Pittsburgh. Kessinger, who had been trailing Bud Harvey since the start of the season, concludes next week, moved past the Mets star with 497,158 votes. Red's catcher Johnny Bench continues to dominate balloting for his position, leading Manny Sanganoan of Pittsburgh 836,084 888,188 Henry Ahnur of the Braves leads balloting for the outfield. New York has had fair pitching and hitting, and their chances, like Boston's, rest on established personnel picking up the slack down the stretch—namely Murcer, Peterson and Stot tremyle. The Cleveland Indians and Milwaukee Brewers are still close enough to be counted as possibilities, but about all I can see either team doing is possibly knocking off one of the con The Brewers haven't found life too harsh in their new division, but when Elie Rodriguez is the top recruit for your team that is hitting, forget it. The Indians have faded from a fast start to fifth place. It's going to take a lot more than Gaylord and put Cleveland into contention. 1. UCLA has won the most collegiate basketball championships, but do you know who ranks second? Sports Stumbers 2. Can you name the hockey player who scored a hat trick (three goals in one game) in the shortest elapsed time? Answers to previous Stumpers 1. Eddie Gaedel was the St. Louis Browns' three-foot pinch- hitter. 2 Len Dawson threw 15 complete passes in a row for a NFL record. University Summer Kansan KU Students View Art Camp Projects Kansas Photo by LINDA SCHILD Bob Draker, Des Moines senior, and Fred Perser, Los Angeles graduate student, look at art camp students in his studio. EUGENE, Ore. (AP)—Jim Rynk, relaxed and smiling, sat with his wife, Ann, at a Eugene restaurant late Sunday night. The former Kansas star had climbed the Empire State of America's middle distance runners. after a long, often painful, comeback, the 25-year-old woman moved from 40 feet to 1,500 feet mile and 1, 500 meters had earned a crack at an Olympic gold medal. Ryun Relaxes After Race Just as he did in the 1986 U.S. and field trials, Ryan had missed a three-man 800-meter team but bounced back to earn the count. "I'm really looking forward to Munich," he said. "I feel I have a better race inside me." works by art camp students is changed each friday. HE'LL undoubtedly have to Kansan Staff Writer Women's Studies Committee Initiates Courses for Fall By TRISHA TEETER Kenyon Staff Writer "WE HAVE fantastic people teaching these courses," Hamer said. "It will be exciting to see what develops from the courses." Women in the contemporary world will deal with women's movements in other countries Efforts of the Committee for a Women's Studies Program to encourage women have produced two new liberal arts and sciences courses to be offered by the University of Vicki Hamer, Lawrence graduate student and member of the program. Hamer also said that five or six additional courses may be scheduled by fall and that others should be available by spring. "We want to first develop the courses and interest in them," she said. "Then we'll be able to get a better structured program. We'll eventually be able to offer a degree in women's studies." THE IMMEDIATE AIMS of women's studies are to make students aware of community awareness of issues involving women, to help them carry the discussion into their own lives and encourage courage students toward accomplishing the potential of a liberated identity, according to the program. KU Catalogs Rare Books By BOB FULKERSON BY BODY CLERK Kansan Staff Writer Twenty-seven years ago the school gave students a collection of books on birds, mammals, and exploration valuation in $200,000 from the late 1980s. Today, according to Carol Chitondon, associate special collections librarian, the Ellis Collection is "wilderness." "Some of the collection is in Chitendon's job is cataloging that portion of the Ellis Collection located in Spencer Library. Watson Library and part is in the KU Museum of Natural History," said Chitendon. She explained that the goal of cataloging the Ellis Collection was to make it more accessible to those who wished to use it. "Because these are such important books," Chiteng said, "they can be written in a bibliographically complex, making them fully accessible is a challenge." "Catalogue of the Ella Collection of Ornithological Books in the University of Kansas Libraries, a private research year, and although it lists only those books whose author's last name is again with A or B, it has 299 head. According to Mengel, Ellis began as an ornithologist and naturalist, which, due to poor funding in the 1980s, his book collecting after about 1983. Then, writes Mengel, "Far more was achieved in a came in at an average rate of Professor Robert M. Mengel, curator of the Museum of Natural History, has compiled the first "Ellis bought the Gould Collection in the 30%," said intendon, "from Henry Bentley and Co., in Great Britain. "Ellis's central idea was birds," said Chiltonen, "and his collection of ornithology books is one of the best in the world." "There were 1,500 original drawings and prints, 3,000 color print and production, and 'and' there were examples of all the different stages of work that were done." The largest single contribution to the ornithological portion of the Baskerville Collection was British ornithology (180) to 181), said Chitendon. 2,000 per year, or roughly 165 each month." Book Is Part of Priceless Collection . Carol Chitendon displays pages from rare book collection . According to Chitendon, researchers come from all over the world to see the Ellis Collection. "In March of 1971, an Australian, Allen McEvey, writing about Gould, spent a month here," she said. "Most of the volumes he bought," she said, "in very good condition with nice, sound leather binding." "He bought an account of Carnaby's articles, pages, sheets, and supposedly notes by Captain Bligh of 'Mutiny on the boat' of the boatyard family. He never did filth." According to Chitendon, Ellis was fooled at least once, however. Chitendon said that Ellis had "a remarkable collecting instinct." According to Chitenden, the Elk Collective includes 13 species of Darwis "origin of the Species" and "original manuscripts of John James Audubon." Research grants for women's studies, programs may be awarded according to Hamer, but the committee has not secured any The committee evolved last winter from the actions of the February Sisters and the Women's Coalition. IN THE BEGINNING, académies, the colleges, had no definite name for the program. Since then, they have become structured, feasible program for the University with the help of the dean of women's office and the secretary. The committee, which consists of Hamer, Loretta Blahna, Dr.rence graduate student, Lindie, Loretta Blahna, sophomore, Juli Highfill, Lawrence junior, Sharon Roeder, Burlington sophomore and Shari Wells, Council Grove sophomore, paper to female faculty and staff. The paper was a statement of the committee's concept of women's studies and a request for reactions to the program. They said women's studies program will fulfill not only the needs ofproviders of women' s studies for women who wished to major in women' s studies, but have a personal perspective and cover women's contributions in all fields of study. The committee did not receive a large number of responses to the feedback, and said that the feedback was considered valuable because it "WE WANTED to stimulate ideas, not make demands or stress our needs." said Hamer. The questionnaires requested that faculty who were interested The committee then sent out questionnaires to women faculty members, with priority for those with a high enough standing in their department that they could submit and submit them, said Hamer. "There is a great need at the University for an equal distribution of women through all the fields of study," she said. in teaching a course or in being a course instructor or in course should contact the committee. Hamer said they received a large number of responses to his work. KU Changes Aid Application Filing Deadline The application filing date for all aid and programs has been changed Feb. 1, 1973, according to Jerry Johnson of the Office of Student Engagement. Prior to the 1973-74 school term, separate applications were needed for KU scholarships, and students will be required college work study and the Health Profession's Scholarship Lan. However, Rogers said, "The application programs will be covered by one application. The deadline for this application will be Feb. 1. 1973." Students will be available around Oct. 1. In addition to completing the application, you must fill out a financial summary and return. this financial summary is due one year a student requesting a renewal in his aid program must complete both the application and the financial summary. The decision to change the application form and the filing date was based on several reasons, according to Rogers. He said that the new benefits benefit both the student and the Office of Student Financial Aid. Rogers said that the processing period for the separate applications was resulting in a tremendous amount of paper work. This change should benefit the student who is looking at KU as a leader. This means that, to this year, a student might have asked for a $1,000 scholarship and received only $500. Then the student informed him of his financial award but would have to wait for another application for a loan. The new application enables the student to check all the programs he is interested in. This course will credit in University because the office could award the $200 scholarship with a $500 loan at the same time. reach back for something extra. An American hasn't won the metric mile in the Olympics since 1908. Rogers said the Office of Rogers Financial Aid hopes to begin by April 15. However, he said that some scholarship committees within various schools do not accept semester grades and semester grades are available. Most of the nearly 600 athletes who assembled in this track conscious city have left. After 10 days of competition, fewer than six dozen spots on the U.S. national team were available in Munich beginning Aug. 31. Ryun, who had a tactical race at the trials in 3 minutes, 41.5 seconds, set the world record of 3.33 in 1967. He finished second the following year at the Mexico Olympic to Kip Keino of Kenya. It will be a mixture of fast-rising young stars and tested veterans on the U.S. team. THERE'S Dwight Stones, the 18-year-old UCLA high jumper, the nation's 0.1 berth in the Sunday. And there are 35-year-old Jay Silvester and 34-year-old Young. Both Olympic veterans The most prominent casualty was Randy Matson, holder of the world record for the shot-put event. He was a graduate and went home with only an alternate's spot on the U.S. team. The first attempt by 5% 4½ inches, has said he will retire. Silvester earned a third trip with a 211-2 first place throw in the discus. Young, bronze medal winner in the Olympic steeplechase four years ago, earned a shot at the 5,000 meters this time as he finished behind Oregon sensation Steve Predfontaine. Young ran a track meet in New York and American record fourth Olympic trip for a distance runner. Prefontaine, saying he now has the confidence "to do whatever anybody else does" said he felt he could go 10 seconds faster than his 13:22 8 clocking Sunday night. The 21-year-old Ooregan star erased his own American record in the 5000 by nearly seven seconds. THE DECATHLON contenders will be Bjennanniste and Jeff Dillon. The top three are 8,120 and 8,076 points rank them first and third in the world. Dave Wottie may be the most talked-about runner in Munich. The Bowling Green star, who wears a white golf hat when he heats up on the course, and Ryan in the 1,800 after beginning a world marathon of 14.3 in the 800. Larry Young, an Olympic veteran, won both the 20- and 30-kilometer walks for a return trip to the Games. Like Matson, a number of big names won't be around. GERRY LINDGREN, plagued by injuries the past two years, failed to qualify in the 5,000 and 10,000 meters. Pat Matzdorf, world record holder in the high jump, failed to advance, and Mark Murro, who was also in the javelin, also was a casualty. Former Olympian Ralph Boston pulled out when he couldn't overcome injuries. Sprinter Mel Pender, 34, called it quits after falling on me in the first half. Beamon, who won the long jump at the 1968 Olympics, retired Bill Bowerman, the University Oregon coach who will direct the men's national team to Munich, said the U.S. team will assemble in Bowlow, Me., on July 20, work for a week or a week, go to Oslo, Norway, to finish up. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Kansas Union Wednesday, July 12 1 a.m. to 8 m.p. Thursday, July 13 1 a.m. to 5 p.m. ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Eat all the Pizza and salad you can handle for just $1.35 MONDAY WEDNESDAY FRIDAY 11:30 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. 1606 W. 23rd 843-3516 804 Iowa 842-1667 ★★★★★ ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★