
Poland’s Communist Party appealed to citizens to ignore the banned Solidarity union’s call to boycott fall elections, but union founder Lech Walesa said he would not cast a ballot. Leaders of 300,000 students and Roman Catholic bishops have also threatened to boycott the October 13 election for 460 Parliament seats. Union leaders are urging voters to stay away to protest the exclusion of candidates from independent organizations.
Northern Ireland authorities foiled an apparent terrorist plan to attack the police station in the border town of Newry when they found mortar-launching tubes in a van parked nearby. The planned attack was cut short about five months after nine people died in a rocket attack on the station. In a related development, the Sunday Times of London reported that prominent militant leader Gerry Adams has been named chief of staff of the outlawed Irish Republican Army. Adams, an elected member of Parliament from Belfast, is president of Sinn Fein, the legal political wing of the IRA.
An express train packed with vacationers collided head-on in flames with a local train in the south of France today, killing 35 people and injuring 120 in the country’s deadliest train wreck in more than a decade. Twenty-nine of the injured were hospitalized in serious condition while the others were treated on the site of the crash in the Perigord region for slight injuries, police said. The train wreck, the second fatal crash in France in less than a month and the worst in 13 years, marred the first day of the traditional August vacation and grand exodus from Paris. Rescue workers extricated some 45 people trapped in the tangled wreckage and firefighters put out the blaze four hours after the 4 PM collision at the hamlet of Flaujac near Figeac. The victims were traveling on an extra train added to take passengers to the sunny south.
Turkey is dissatisfied with the level of American military aid and is preparing a request to revise a military and economic cooperation agreement with the United States, according to senior officials and military officers directly involved. Under the five-year agreement, the United States operates extensively from several military, intelligence-gathering and communications bases, and it stations 6,000 to 7,000 troops in Turkey. The agreement will expire in December, and the officials say Turkey intends to insist on fundamental changes. The Turkish grievance is longstanding and twofold. Ankara says it believes that the Reagan Administration fails each year to request the amount needed for a costly modernization program for Turkey’s armed forces and that Congress, under pressure from Greece, cuts the annual appropriation even further.
The Soviet Foreign Ministry has protested to Liberia over the expulsion of its staff from the West African country and retaliated by ordering Liberian diplomats out of Moscow, the official Soviet news agency Tass said. It was Moscow’s first word on the dispute, which started when the Liberian government broke relations with the Kremlin on July 18, accusing Soviet diplomats of gross interference in its internal affairs. The Soviets were given 72 hours to leave after students were reportedly caught passing defense secrets to them.
The 12th World Youth Festival ended in Moscow’s Lenin Stadium with closing ceremonies attended by more than 100,000 people. About 20,000 delegates from 157 countries, including about 300 from the United States, participated in a week of seminars, cultural exchanges and sporting events. The festival organizing committee released a “message to the youth and students of the world… to do all they can to halt the forces of militarism and aggression and to pool their efforts to prevent a nuclear catastrophe….”
Gunmen kidnapped the operations manager of ABC News in Beirut today as he was on his way to the airport to go to the United States for a medical checkup. An ABC spokesman said four men with rifles seized the executive, Shakib Hmeidan, a 50-year-old Lebanese, as he was riding to the airport in a chauffeur-driven car. The spokesman said the men ordered Mr. Hmeidan out of his car and into their sedan at gunpoint, took the keys and told his driver not to follow.
China’s “open door” policy has run into economic and political troubles. Deng Xiaoping and other top leaders are pulling back on some of their most cherished projects that they had hoped would attract Western technology and investment. The Peking leadership has had to placate a coalition of powerful figures, mostly elderly conservatives. The hope has been that Western technology and investment, as well as economic changes modeled on the “market” system of the capitalist world, would pull China from its backwardness and make it a world power by the middle of the 21st century. Lately, much of the momentum that Mr. Deng, 80 years old, had built up by the end of last year seems to have been lost. As Western diplomats see it, the pragmatic faction that controls the Communist Party has had to trim its sails to placate a coalition of powerful figures, mostly elderly conservatives, who are uneasy with a course requiring a drastic break with China’s proud, inward-looking, past.
Japan’s atomic bombing survivors are still being treated in special hospitals in Hiroshima and Nagasaki. There 367,000 men and women officially certified as survivors of the bomb and eligible for treatment. Their long-term health consequences of exposure to radiation are still not fully understood by medical researchers.
Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos said today he would decide by early next month whether to hold an early presidential election. In an interview on American public television that was broadcast here on Government television, he said the timing would depend on how opposition moves affected negotiations with foreign banks and creditors on rescheduling the Philippines’ debt, and on how opposition politicians and journalists treated attempts to impeach him. He denied accusations that his family and close associates had amassed fortunes abroad — the basis of opposition threats to impeach him.
The Greenpeace vessel Alliance, with a crew of seven, headed for an atomic test site at Mururoa Atoll in French Polynesia today to join a flotilla protesting French nuclear testing. About 200 people gave the ship a sendoff when it left a wharf a few yards from the wreckage of the Rainbow Warrior, the flagship of Greenpeace, an environmentalists’ group.
Mexican police officers using tear gas and riot sticks dispersed a large crowd that gathered Friday night in Monterrey, the capital of Nuevo Leon, to protest what they said was the fraudulent election of a governing party candidate for Governor. At least 39 people, among them several police officers, were reportedly injured in the disturbance, and hundreds of demonstrators suffered eye and skin irritations from tear gas. The demonstration was called by the conservative National Action Party to protest what it said was the fraudulent defeat of its candidate, Fernando Canales Clariond, in elections July 7.
At least 67 rebels, 11 soldiers and three civilians were reported killed in three days of fighting between Nicaraguan troops and U.S.backed rebels, known as contras, after a guerrilla attack on the town of Trinidad, 75 miles north of Managua. Military and civilian sources said about 1,000 rebels from the Honduras-based Nicaraguan Democratic Force retreated after a four-hour battle in Trinidad. Witnesses said the attack wrecked buildings and damaged seven vehicles. Fighting continued in the mountainous areas to the south near Esteli.
Seven members of the House Select Committee on Narcotics Abuse and Control arrived in the Colombian resort city of Cartagena in an effort to enlist Colombian aid in the U. S. campaign against the cocaine and marijuana traffic. The group, headed by Rep. Charles B. Rangel (D-New York), arrived two days after a Colombian newspaper reported that four army officers, who were later dismissed, received payoffs from drug dealers during a raid on a cocaine factory last year. The congressmen plan an aerial inspection of marijuana fields.
In a sudden move, Chile’s President Augusto Pinochet has replaced the head of the paramilitary police force in an effort to contain a scandal over police involvement in the killings of three Communists. General Rodolfo Stange, 59 years old, the deputy police chief, was appointed commander of the police force and was sworn in as a member of Chile’s ruling junta Friday night. He replaced General Cesar Mendoza, 66, a loyal companion of General Pinochet’s for almost 12 years since the coup that brought the military to power. The change came as riot policemen battled hundreds of angry demonstrators with water cannons and tear gas for more than 10 hours, The Associated Press reported. It quoted the Government as saying that at least 13 people were hurt and 79 demonstrators arrested. General Mendoza quit his job Friday after a judge ruled that 14 policemen were implicated in the killings of the three Communists. The bodies of the three — Manuel Guerrero, a teachers’ union leader; Jose Manuel Parada, a human rights worker, and Santiago Nattino, an artist — were found in a ditch in late March.
Distribution of emergency food aid and other relief supplies has significantly improved in the northern Ethiopian provinces of Eritrea and Tigre, according to United Nations officials. The report comes amid criticism that the authorities in Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital, have been blocking aid shipments to the two provinces, which are largely controlled by forces fighting for independence from the Ethiopian Government. Relief agencies representing the two provinces immediately challenged the findings, saying that the Ethiopian Government was making only a token effort to distribute emergency supplies in the area and that most supplies reached the area from the Sudan.
Former Sudanese Presidential Affairs Minister Baha Eddin Idris pleaded not guilty to nine charges of political and economic corruption, including embezzlement, mismanagement and bribery. Idris, 53, is the first senior associate of former President Jaafar Numeiri to go on trial since Numeiri was ousted by a military coup in April.
Soldiers are on guard everywhere in Kampala, Uganda’s capital, which is uneasy but calm a week after the military coup that toppled President Milton Obote. Many Ugandans greeted Mr. Obote’s fall, his second since 1971, with enthusiasm, charging gross human rights violations and rampant tribalism.
South Africa’s controls on funerals for victims of civil unrest, imposed under its emergency decree, were challenged by about 1,500 blacks at a funeral for 11 people said to have died in clashes in black townships. The mourners ignored rules forbidding political speeches at funerals and chanted slogans praising the outlawed African National Congress. But the regulations appeared to have reduced the turnout.
Wind shear may have caused the crash of a Delta Air Lines jetliner in a thunderstorm near Dallas Friday night, Federal investigators said. They said wind shear, an abrupt change in the speed or direction of airflow near the ground, was far more likely than lightning to have caused the crash in which 131 people died. Preliminary examination of the flight recorders aboard the Delta Air Lines jumbo jet that crashed here Friday registered no alarm among the crew that anything was wrong and no warning from ground controllers of hazardous wind shifts, according to Federal investigators. Moreover, ground-control tapes showed no sign that computerized sensors had been tripped by wind shifts while the jet was trying to land in a thunderstorm at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport. The flight data recorder and voice recorders simply came to a “sudden stop associated with impact on the ground,” said the head of the investigation, G. H. Patrick Bursley, a member of the National Transportation Safety Board who spoke at a news conference here. “There is nothing in the cockpit voice recorder preliminary readout we have made that suggests any concern,” Mr. Bursley said. “There is no suggestion of anything unusual.”
President Reagan makes a Radio Address to the Nation on the nation’s economy.
President Reagan spends the day at the pool at Camp David.
The head of the Environmental Protection Agency said he will slow the cleanup of toxic chemical dumps because he is not sure Congress can meet a September 30 deadline for extending the Superfund program. “During the next several weeks, I will begin to implement a slowdown of the cleanup program,” EPA Administrator Lee M. Thomas said in a letter to Rep. John D. Dingell (D-Michigan), chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee. Congress left last week for a monthlong recess, leaving bills to renew the Superfund still awaiting floor action. The program’s taxing authority expires September 30.
Agriculture Secretary John R. Block said in St. Louis that he would recommend a veto on any attempt to extend current farm laws and stressed the importance of Congress passing new legislation by October 1. Block said the best farm bill will not necessarily be the one spending the most money, and he chided Congress for increasing federal funds for farm bills before it recessed for the August break. Block predicted this spring’s death knell for farmers will not be repeated, but he estimated about 5% of current farmers will be forced to go out of business.
Space shuttle Challenger’s mission was extended a day by space agency officials because its $72 million payload of telescopes and other observation instruments was working so well. The shuttle is now scheduled to land at Edwards Air Force Base in California on Tuesday at 3:46 PM Eastern daylight time. “O.K., Challenger is ready to talk about a 15-day mission,” joked Colonel C. Gordon Fullerton of the Air Force, the shuttle’s 48-year-old commander, as the seven astronauts aboard pressed ahead with their science experiments in the spacecraft orbiting 190 miles above the earth. Mission Control in Houston replied that an added week was too much, but said, “With your concurrence, we’d like to extend you a day.” “Let me think that over,” said Colonel Fullerton, who paused a second before adding, “We’ll go for it.”
Soggy mattresses and soaked carpets were piled on front lawns today and street crews cleared piles of hailstones as the cleanup began after by one of the deadliest storms in the city’s history. Twelve people died and 70 suffered minor injuries, the authorities said. The hail and flooding damaged countless homes and businesses, shredded trees and shrubs, tore down power lines and turned low-lying areas into lakes. The authorities put damage in the million of dollars. The storm dropped 6.06 inches of rain on Cheyenne between 6:20 PM and 9:45 PM Thursday, about half the precipitation the city usually gets in a year. The hailstones fell at the same time and remained today in piles up to five feet high. Federal Emergency Managment Agency officials were scheduled to tour the city to assess the damage and determine whether a Federal disaster declaration was warranted, said a Wyoming Civil Defense spokesman, Norm French. Such a declaration would make the area eligible for Federal financial aid.
A 15-year-old boy from Shepherdstown, West Virginia, must resign from the Boy Scouts because he does not believe in God, said Carl Hunter, director of the Stonewall Jackson Area Council, citing a decision by the Boy Scout national council. Paul Trout, a junior who attends boarding school in Charlottesville, Virginia, and belongs to a Scout group there, was denied a Life Scout promotion several months ago because he said he did not believe in God. The decision to expel him was reached last week.
Impeachment of Alaska’s Governor was rejected by a report of the State Senate Rules Committee. The Governor, Bill Sheffield, had been questioned over his role in the awarding of a $9 million lease at a state office building. The five-member State Senate Rules Committee said in a report: “While it is the personal opinion of a majority of the Rules Committee that an impeachable offense may well have occurred, it is also the belief of the committee that the necessary degree of unanimity within the Senate to pass an impeachment motion does not exist.” The report, which was sent to the full Senate today, said fewer than 14 senators, the two-thirds majority needed to impeach, “believe the evidence heard thus far rises to the level of ‘clear and convincing evidence’ for purposes of proving an impeachable offense.” Governor Sheffield, a 57-year-old Democrat, called the report “a highly partisan document.” The Rules Committee has four Republicans and one Democrat.
A federal appeals court in Atlanta affirmed a jury’s decision that Nobel Prize-winning physicist William Shockley was libeled by an Atlanta newspaper. But a three-judge panel of the U.S. 11th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the $1 verdict against Cox Enterprises Inc., which owns the Atlanta Journal and Atlanta Constitution. Shockley contended that an article written by former Constitution reporter Roger Witherspoon, which discussed Shockley’s theory that blacks as a group are inferior to whites, libeled him. He sued Cox Enterprises and Witherspoon for $1.25 million. Shockley had appealed to the 11th Circuit because he was unhappy with the $1 award.
New York City Coroner Eliott M. Gross said that he was innocent of medical misconduct charges and accused the state Health Department of joining “a lynch mob” seeking to force his resignation. Gross took a 60-day paid leave from his $90,000-a-year job when the department charged him with 11 instances of professional misconduct or negligence in nine cases, some involving persons who died in police custody. The charges are to be considered by a review board. If it upholds the charges, Gross could be warned, fined or censured, or have his medical license suspended or revoked.
Amish farmers have a constitutional right not to put bright orange warning signs on their plain black buggies because their conservative religion prohibits such displays, a judge ruled Friday. “The First Amendment compels toleration of sincerely held beliefs of minority religious groups,” Judge Ben Dickinson of Barren District Court wrote in dismissing a traffic ticket issued to an Amish man for not carrying a sign on his horse-drawn carriage marking it as a slow-moving vehicle. The defendant, Herman Zook, 27 years old, said his community should be exempted from the Kentucky law requiring the signs because its religion forbids display of bright colors and symbols of government authority.
Marilyn Jean Buck, who admitted walking away from a federal prison where she was serving a sentence on a weapons charge, was convicted in Charleston, West Virginia, of escape and sentenced to five years in prison and fined $5,000. Buck was serving a 10-year sentence when she was granted a furlough from prison in 1977 to visit her lawyer in New York. She never returned to the prison and was recaptured in New York last year. The self-proclaimed member of the Black Liberation Army still faces a New York indictment alleging that while she was at large, she took part in four murders, four armored car robberies and two kidnappings.
The land of moonshine is now producing wine, too. “The white likker” is still a staple in the South, but a new breed of farmer is planting vines from Florida to Virginia, from Mississippi to the Carolinas.
An Indian investment bank in Maine that now has the largest pool of private capital in the state has become an important factor in its economy. Tribal Assets Management, the bank’s formal name, was established to help oversee the $81.5 million settlement the Government gave the Penobscot and Passamaquoddy Indians in 1980 in compensation for land taken from them.
“Nihilator” set harness pacing mile (1:49.6) in East Rutherford, New Jersey.
Major League Baseball:
Baseball’s labor teams met yesterday after a two-day hiatus, but they ignored the package of proposals presented by Commissioner Peter Ueberroth. They also failed to make even a bit of progress, bringing them a day closer to Tuesday’s strike deadline with no settlement in sight. Representatives of the players and the owners will meet again at noon today, which could turn out to be the next-to-last day on which games are played. “No new ideas were suggested on the major issues by either side,” Donald Fehr, the union leader, said after the unproductive two-hour session. “We reviewed where we are on the issues that divide us. From time to time you have to review where you are.”
Chris Brown hits a 3rd-inning grand slam to propel the Giants to a 7–5 win over the host Braves. The game was tied at 1–1 going into the third, when two walks sandwiched around a single by Manny Trillo loaded the bases. Jeff Leonard’s grounder made it 2–1, and a walk to Dan Driessen reloaded the bases for Brown, who hit his 11th homer for a 6–1 lead off Rick Mahler (15–9). Mike Krukow (7–8) picked up the victory, allowing eight hits in five innings.
The Chicago Cubs wrested the lead from the Mets in the eighth inning today by scoring two runs on a suicide-squeeze bunt by a pinch-hitter for a pinch-hitter. But the Mets tied them with two down in the ninth with two hits off Lee Smith, the Cubs’ best relief pitcher. And the Mets finally won by 5–4 in the 10th on a two-out home run by Howard Johnson, who had been given the day off three hours earlier. Still, nobody played a more theatrical role in a theatrical performance than Keith Hernandez. In the eighth inning, he fielded the squeeze bunt on the run, and fired the ball to first base. But the bag had been left unguarded by Wally Backman, the second baseman, and two runs scored. Then, with two down in the ninth, the same two Mets played the atonement scene to raves: Backman singled, Hernandez doubled into the right-field corner, and a game that had been lost was suddenly resurrected. And, when Johnson cleared the center-field fence an inning later, it was won.
Derrel Thomas delivered a two-out two-run double while pinch-hitting in the 10th inning tonight, sparking the Philadelphia Phillies to a 6–4 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals in a game delayed twice by rain. With one out, Glenn Wilson and Ozzie Virgil singled off Jeff Lahti to put runners at first and second. After Rick Schu flied out, Thomas doubled to left-center, scoring both. Don Carman allowed the Cardinals to tie the score in the ninth, but hung on to win, with relief help from Larry Andersen.
The Dodgers blanked the Reds, 2–0. Bob Welch pitched a two-hitter to outduel Mario Soto, and Mike Scioscia and Pedro Guerrero hit home runs for Los Angeles. Welch (7–1), surrendered a single to Dave Concepcion in the fifth inning, a double by Eddie Milner in the sixth and three walks while recording his sixth consecutive victory. Soto (10–12) allowed only four hits in defeat — the two homers, a double by Mike Marshall and a single by Steve Sax. He walked only one. Scioscia lined a fastball into the right field seats to lead off the third inning. Guerrero’s two-out homer in the ninth was his 26th of the season. Pete Rose, who has hit Welch better than any other pitcher in his career, was 20 for 41 with a .488 average against him going into the game. Rose, who stayed 25 hits away from breaking Ty Cobb’s all-time record by going hitless in four at-bats.
Hubie Brooks and Mike Fitzgerald each drove in two runs as Montreal won, 6–5, to hand Pittsburgh its 10th loss in 11 games. The Expos led, 5–1, after three innings against the starter Larry McWilliams (5–8). After a Brooks RBI in the first, Fitzgerald singled home a run and Bryn Smith scored another on an infield out in the second. Brooks homered in the third and Tim Wallach and Jim Wohlford chased McWilliams with consecutive doubles. The Pirates made it 5–2 in the third when pitcher Jim Winn doubled and scored on two groundouts. Fitzgerald’s sacrifice fly in the fifth provided the winning run.
Mark Bailey ripped a two-run single in the bottom of the ninth inning to rally Houston to a 4–3 victory over the visiting Padres. With Houston trailing by 3–1, Jose Cruz and Jerry Mumphrey opened the ninth with singles to knock out the starter Eric Show. Glenn Davis greeted Craig Lefferts (6–5) with a double off the wall in left center to make it 3–2. Dickie Thon ran for Davis and Kevin Bass was walked intentionally to load the bases. Bailey then singled to right center to score two runs and give the reliever Charlie Kerfield (1–1) his first major-league victory. The last 16 Padres were retired in order with Nolan Ryan getting 10 and Jeff Calhoun and Kerfield the final six.
Doug DeCinces socked a two-run homer off Bert Blyleven with one out in the bottom of the ninth inning tonight to give the California Angels a 5–4 victory over the Minnnestoa Twins. Rod Carew had a hit in the fourth inning for the Angels, raising his career hit total to 2,999. The 39-year-old first baseman can become the 16th major league player to record 3,000 hits on Sunday against the Twins. After Juan Beniquez flied to right to lead off the ninth, Brian Downing doubled to right-center, only the fourth hit off the newly acquired Blyleven (9–12), and DeCinces followed with his 13th homer of the year, over the left field fence.
The New York Yankees flexed their collective muscle in the first inning, scoring four times, and coasted to an 8–4 decision at the Stadium. It did them little good. The Toronto Blue Jays won again, their 13th victory in 14 games, to retain their comfortable edge of nine and a half games in the American League East. The Yankees made it relatively smooth for Ed Whitson (7–7) by getting successive home runs from Dan Pasqua and Ron Hassey in the first and another from Don Mattingly in the third. Mattingly, who is now hitting .314, has three homers and five runs batted in over the last two games. He improved his league-leading RBI total to 85.
Gary Allenson’s two-run, two-out double highlighted a three-run sixth inning that carried Toronto to a 4–1 win over the Texas Rangers. It was Toronto’s 10th consecutive victory at home, a team record. With the Blue Jays, winners of 13 of their last 14 games, holding a 1–0 lead in the sixth, Cecil Fielder reached on a fielder’s choice and Garth Iorg followed with a single off Chris Welsh (2–3). Allenson then drilled the team’s fourth double of the game, driving in two runs and giving Toronto a 3–0 lead. Allenson scored on Tony Fernandez’s double to left-center field. Dennis Lamp (7–0) was the winner, giving up three hits in three and two-thirds innings. The Toronto starter, Jimmy Key, left after two and a third innings with a blister on his finger.
The Red Sox edged the Royals, 5–4. Bill Buckner belted a three-run homer and Roger Clemens returned from the disabled list to post his first victory in over two months for Boston. The loss was the Royals’ second in their last 11 games. Clemens (7–4) allowed three hits and one run over six innings to record his first victory since May 27. He has been out since July 8 with a sore right shoulder. Steve Crawford pitched three innings for his fourth save, despite allowing two runs in the ninth on Steve Balboni’s RBI triple and Darryl Motley’s sacrifice fly.
Lance Parrish hit two home runs and Kirk Gibson and Darrell Evans hit one apiece to lead the Tigers to a 9–3 rout of the Brewers. Parrish, who missed 13 games last month because of a sore back, slammed a two-run shot in the third inning to give the Tigers a 4–3 lead and connected for his 15th in the fifth to increase the margin to 6–3. Dan Petry (12–10) gave up three runs in the first innning but blanked Milwaukee the rest of the way. He finished with an eight-hitter.
The Mariners downed the A’s, 6–2. Gorman Thomas hit his 24th homer and Mike Moore pitched a seven-hitter for Seattle. Moore (10–6) won his sixth game in eight decisions since coming off the disabled list June 21. He struck out three and walked one. Thomas’s homer followed a walk to Phil Bradley off the Oakland reliver Steve Mura in the seventh and made the score 6–1. The Mariners took a 1–0 lead in the first off the A’s starter Bill Krueger (8–10). Domingo Ramos opened with a double and scored on a single by Bradley. Seattle went up 4–0 in the fourth. Thomas led off with a single, Alvin Davis walked and the runners pulled off a double steal. Ivan Calderon singled in Thomas and consecutive walks to Harold Reynolds, Ramos and Bradley force in two more runs.
The Indians clobbered the Orioles, 10–4. Julio Franco drove in five runs to highlight a 16-hit Cleveland attack and the newly acquired Curt Wardle picked up a victory in his first major league start. Brett Butler went 4-for-4 while Franco and Otis Nixon each had three hits to back Wardle (2–3), who made his first appearance since the Indians obtained him on Thursday as part of a package from the Minnesota Twins for the pitcher Bert Blyleven. Wardle’s start came after two relief appearances in 1984 and 35 this season with the Twins. The left-hander allowed two runs on four hits, struck out five and walked five in seven innings before Tom Waddell finished. Wardle did not allow a hit after Floyd Rayford’s two-run homer with one out in the fourth inning. Mike Young hit a two-run homer, his 13th.
San Francisco Giants 7, Atlanta Braves 5
Minnesota Twins 4, California Angels 5
New York Mets 5, Chicago Cubs 4
Los Angeles Dodgers 2, Cincinnati Reds 0
Baltimore Orioles 4, Cleveland Indians 10
Milwaukee Brewers 3, Detroit Tigers 9
San Diego Padres 3, Houston Astros 4
Boston Red Sox 5, Kansas City Royals 4
Chicago White Sox 4, New York Yankees 8
Seattle Mariners 6, Oakland Athletics 2
Montreal Expos 6, Pittsburgh Pirates 5
Philadelphia Phillies 6, St. Louis Cardinals 4
Texas Rangers 1, Toronto Blue Jays 4
Born:
Georgina Haig, Australian actress (“Fringe”, “Snowpiercer”), in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.