page 12 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, July 9, 1985 Fisk's grand slam downs Tigers, 9-4 DETROIT (UPI) - Carlton Fisk hit Rudy Law beat out a bunt single and two home runs last night - the second stopped at second when Bryan Little a grand slam that finished off a six- scooted a single through the right run sixth - to pace the Chicago White side. Sox to a 9-4 triumph over the Detroit Tigers. HAROLD BAINES looped an RBI Dan Petry, 10-7, was cruising along single to left to tie the score, 3-3, and with a two-hit 3-2 lead until the sixth. Greg Walker laced a single to right to put Chicago in front, 4-3. Aurelio Lopez then relieved Petry. Walker was safe at second and Oscar Gamble safe at first when third baseman Tom Brookens elected to make a futile try for an out at second on Gamble's grounder. Fisk followed by drilling an 0-1 pitch into the seats in left for his 21st home run and 242nd as a catcher, tying him with Roy Campanella for third behind Johnny Bench and Yogi Berra for most home runs by a catcher. Fisk's 250th career home run came with two out and nobody on in the second. Larry Herndon stroked his seventh home run for Detroit with the bases empty in the second and the Tigers added two runs in the third - one on a wild pitch by Nelson and the second or Herndon Kirk Gibson's double. ..homer not enough 4 4 I Associated Press Down and out Minnesota first baseman Kent Hrbek is down but still able to throw out Baltimore's Larry Sheets. The Twins and Orioles were tied 4-4 in the ninth before a rain delay halted play. SPORTS OF THE DAILY: Rookies wait or ucks 4 GET CAUGHT IN THE FALL CRUNCH? NO WAY! We have GREAT EFFICIENCY 1 & 2 BEDROOM APART- MENTS to lease for the Fall Season, close to CAMPUS, with all the amenities: A/C, disposals, free parking. Room to breathe! -' Tiffany-Colony-Madison Apts. 736 PACKARD No. 100 665-2194 CHICAGO (UPI) - Agents for first- round NFL Draft picks agreed yesterday to wait out team owners un- til they raise salary levels for un- signed players. Thirty representatives for the 25 unsigned first-round picks and other unsigned free agents decided at a meeting they will not sign with any clubs until they end their plan to roll back salary levels to pre-USFL num- bers. "WE formulated a unified policy that we would not accept the rollback salary levels that the NFL management and teams have been proposing in negotiations so far this year," said Frank Murtha, an agent for Richard Johnson of the University of Wisconsin, a first-round pick of the Houston Oilers. "The only time an employee is "We are prepared, and our clients asked to take a pay cut is when are prepared, to respond when they business is failing, when it's are locked out (of training camps). necessary to save jobs or save the Our clients will do whatever they can company." to prepare themselves for the up- One of the big topics of conversation coming season. They will participate at the meeting, Murtha said, was the in team activities until management contract Bernie Kosar signed last throws them out." week with the Cleveland Browns for Murtha who alsorepresents $6millionoverfiveyears. several veteran players, said the group also discussed various legal op- tions to what they consider anti-trust violations. "WE KNEW going in that the NFL is a very healthy financial entity," he said. "It is an extemely healthy, big business. If you look at the NFL's gross revenues they would rank 380th on the Fortune 500 list. m BLUE FRONT Packard at State MARSHALL'S PACKAGE S. State at Liberty $ 79 8 pack- $15 plus depos'it 11 liter bottles plus Good Thru 7/23/85 d p dletpep l dt LIQUOR 9 6 pack- eposit 12 OZ. cans idlil M "WE FEEL they have set the market value this year with the signing of Bernie Kosar," he said. "We intend to discuss Mr. Kosar's contract with the other clubs." "We didn't discuss specific num- bers. We discussed what types of numbers will be reasonable for management to be able to pay. We as a group agree that under existing NFL revenue, the NFL cannot pay 25 or 30 percent annual increases (as they did in 1984)." Talks still stalled NEW YORK (UPI) - Major-league players and owners yesterday haggled over the financial condition of individual clubs in an effort to reach a collective bargaining agreement. The negotiation session, the 29th over the last nine months, lasted 2 %2 hours and left both sides in dispute over the data the owners have put for- th in hopes of convincing the players of the woes they claim plague baseball. Donald Fehr, acting executive director of the Major League Baseball Players Association, said figures were examined for 12 American League clubs. He has asked the owners to review the clubs finances E submitted for 1984. "We've asked them to tell us 'How much are you trying to save,' " Fehr said. "They still haven't told us and we'd like them to tell us quickly," inn