1'AGE SIX x SUNDAY. OCTOBER 1.. 1~R7 THE MICHIGAN DAIlY T ers Suffer Split; Boston Bombs JzIinn., 6-4 Late Inning Rally Beats DETROIT-Jim Fregosi's two- run single in the eighth inning climaxed a six-run explosion that carried the California Angels past Detroit 8-6 in the second game of a doubleheader yesterday and backed the Tigers Into a dark corner in the frantic American League pennant race. Detroit won the first game 5-0 on Mickey Lolich's three-hitter, but California's stunning come- back victory in the nightcap drop- ped the Tigers one-half game be- hind both Minnesota and Boston going into the final day of the regular season. Must Sweep The Tigers now must sweep Sunday's doubleheader against the giant-killing Angels to gain a tie for the flag with either the Twins or Red Sox. In the first game, Detroit jump- ed on left-hander George Brunet in the first inning for two runs. McAuliffe drew a walk and Hor- tan followed with a homer high into the second deck in left field, his 18th of the year. Don Wert led off the second Twins Slide; Red Sox Tie For Lead BOSTON - Carl Yastrzemski drove in four runs with his 44th homer and an infield single as the Boston Red Sox whipped the Min- nesota Twins 6-4 yesterday and stayed alive in the hectic Amer- ican League pennant race. The drama-packed victory be- fore Vice President Hubert Hum- phery, Massachusetts Sen. Edward Kennedy and a flock of other dig- nitaries in a packed crowd of 32,909, left the Red Sox and Twins all even with 91-70 records for a dramatic showdown today. Just Insurance At the time Yastrzemski hit the homer - a seventh-inning blow that put him one ahead of Min- nesota's Harmon Killebrew in the home run race-it appeared the three runs were just insurance. But the homer turned out to be the winning hit when Killebrew socked his 44th homer in the ninth inning, cutting the Red Sox' lead to two runs and tying Yastrzemski once again for the homer lead. Yaz, who singled and struck out in his first two times at bat, put the Red Sox ahead with a run- scoring infield hit in the fifth, but the Twins came back to tie the count 2-2 in the top of the sixth. Scott Homers IXIa jot' League S1auIiit~'s AMERICAN LEAGUVE Boston 91 70 .565 Minnesota 91 70 .565 Detroit 90 70 .563 Chicago 89 72 .553 California 83 76 .522 Balt imore. 75 85 .469 Washington 75 85 .469 Cleveland 75 86 .466 YEsTERDAY'S RESI'LTS ISetei 5-6 Caiorni 0- Washington 4, Chicago 0 Baltimore 5, Cleveland 2 New York 5, Kansas City 4 TODAY'S GAMES Washington at Chicago California at Detroit (2) Baltimore at Cleveland Kansas City at New York Miinnesota at Boston ('Ii 1., 2 15'.~ 15' 16 20 28'~ NATIONAL LEAG UEfc. x-St. LOUiS 100 60 .625 - Sani Francisco 90 71 .559 l0'. Chicago 87 73 .544 13 Cincinnati 86 75 .534 14' Philadelphia 82 79 .509 l8'. Pittsbmrgh 80 71 .497 20'. Atlanta 77 84 .478 23'. y-Los Angeles 72 88 .450 28 yNe York 60 l1l .37 40 x-Clinched pennant. y--Late game not included. Chicago 9, Cnnati 4COE houston 4, Pittsburgh 3 San Francisco 3-1, Philadelphia 2-0 St. Louis 3. Atlanta I New York at Los Angeles (mne) TODAY'S GAMES St. Louis at Atlanta Chicago at Cincinnati New York at Los Angeles houston at Pittsburgh Philadelphia at San Francisco Boilermakers Upset Ara'sIrish 28-2 -Daily--Andy Sacks DETROIT MANAGER MAYO SMITH and catcher Bill Freehan confer with reliever Fred Lasher in the second game of the doubleheader played yesterday with the California Angels. The conference was for naught, however, as the Tigers lost the second gam 8-6. with a double and Eddie Mathews fourth when Tracewski tripled and singled him home. Mickey Stan- McAuliffe singled. ley singled and Lolich sacrificed The Tigers were breezing along before Dick Tracewski sent Ma- with a 6-2 lead in the nightcap thews across with a sacrifice fly. when Fregosi touched off the The Tigers added a run in the eighth inning burst. Pierced or Pierced-Look Assortment of Shapes. Styles. and Finishes from Five Dollars Engoraved Free LI 16 NICKELS ARCADE Ron Kline became the third Minnesota pitcher in the bottom ~ of the sixth and received a rough Se lin's ahig sh THlE BOSTON RED SOX stand a dozen rows into the center field Yastrzemski after he lit the gaii bleachers for his 19th homer. day's game with the Minnesota T Then came the three-run out- homer of the season. burst in the seventh. ~- ~~ ~ ~ - - - -- --- With one out, Mike Andrews BIG TEN ACTION-: beat out an infield bounder down - the third base line for his second a hterrs Adair grounded bac ctto 4 dropped Kline's throw on an at- tempnted, frcer fer n. e rrr -Associated Press up and reach out to greet Carl ie-winning home run in yester- wins. It was Yastrzemski's 44th tops OSU 0 Southpaw Jim Merritt was sum- moned frbm the bullpen to face Yastrzemski. Yaz ran the count to 3-1 and then unloaded a drive intoL the Minnesota bullpen in right CO center, enabling him to pass Ted ArizI - § -. % § § T § § § LambwoolSweters Co ur MtedShirs § ~ I § Now hanc ome lambsool sweatrs come thterwnCor- MateShistbothmad inEnglnd n oiginl, denicalcolurs Lamwoolbr. Sweaters are ldo r all abteld hrs Now handsoe lambswool weater m wit th. ow$Clur 50 wolfbrc.Seaerure maeoal lambswool anrdgn ..re6 fullyurfashioned.ts § Williams as the greatest left- handed home run hitter in Red Sox history. CHICAGO - Successive sixth inning homers by Fred Valentine a n d Cap Peterson supported Frank Bertaina's five-hit pitching as the Washington Senators blanked Chicago 4-0 yesterday, ex- tending the White Sox' shutout srin to three gamues. Frank Howard beat out an in- field hit in the sixth inning and, pithento thpe right field stand, snapping a scoreless tie. Peterson followed with another homer into the left field seats., The Senators, who eliminated Chicago from t h e American League pennant race Friday night with a 1-0 victory over the Sox padded their lead in the seventh on a walk, a ground out and Ken McMullen's single., perio ed b~ upse yeste ball A Up il littke were after Th the Dav from foun toucl Ar UMBUJS, Ohio UP - Aroused Hw eysL e ona spotted Ohio State a first IOWA CITY, Iowa (IP) - It )d touchdown and then storm- took Oregon State less than 10 ack to register a stunning 14-7 minutes to build a 21-0 led Sat- t victory over the Buckeyes urday, and the Beavers went on ~rday an intersectional foot- to whip Iowa 39-18 in an inter- clash.sectional football game. clash.The Beavers, winners of three crowd of 77,468 sat bundled in a row this year and nine n chilly Ohio Stadium and had straight since last season, pul- to cheer about as the Bucks verized Iowa's inept defenders unable to generate an attack with a three-pronged attack by their lone touchdown. quarterback Steve Preece, full- ~e score came with 4:59 left in back Bill Enyart and wingback Dpening period when halfback iBill Main. eBrungard, taking a pitchout With those three consistently quaterback Gerry Ehrsam, making good yardage, Oregon d Ehrsam for a seven-yard State rammed in touchdowns hidown strike. three of the first four times it 'izoa sorme 82yard inhad the ball. By halftime, it was .' izona wstor 82iua± vvyrd n- -Associated Press PURDUES JIM BEIRNE gathers in a pass from quarterback Mike Phipps that is good for 40 yards in the first quarter of the Boiler- maker's clash with Notre Dame yesterday. The No. 1 ranked Irish lost, 28-21. Bob Ojson (36) and Bob Kuechenberg ('75) are covering Beirne. LAFAYETTE, Ind. (/P-Pur- clown burst, through the middle due's alert football team inter- - as the Sun Devils handed the cepted four passes by Notre Dame Badgers their first defeat in a quarterback Terry Hanratty and home football opener since 1948. smashed the nationally top-rank- Roseborough passed 22 yards ed Irish 28-21 yesterday. to J. D. Hill for the Sun Devils' The teams took turns scoring first touchdown, scored the sec- touchdowns - and the lead ond on a one-yard plunge, passed changed hands six times-but 12 yards to John Helton for a Purdue got the last one on a 31- third. yard pass from sophomore Mike Tom Schinke put winless Wis- Phipps to Bob Baltzell. consin on the scoreboard for the The biggest crowd ever to see first time in two games with, a a game at Purdue's Ross-Ade Sta- 39-yard field goal in the second dium, 62,316, almost tore up the period. The Badgers scored again stadium as the Boilermakers main- when Mel Walker romped 48 tained a tradition of being bad yards after intercepting a Rose- medicine for Notre Dame. borough pass. They have licked the Irish four tines in their last sixs meetings. - 4 Unbeaten Since '65 The Iryish were lastatdefeated in Burly Perry Williams, Purdue fullback, bulled his way 10 yards for a first period touchdown but the kick failed. Hanratty, who completed 29 of 63 passes, pulled Notre Dame even with a orte yard sneak and Joe Azzaro's conversion MIInnesota Edged LINCOLN, Neb. (/P) - Nebraska sophomore halfback Joe Orduna cracked open a rugged defensive football battle with a bulling 25- yard touchdown run in the third qu rer yestr da h kand the seventh decision over Minnesota. It was the 20th consecutive U monds going the final yard for the equalizer at 3:40 of the second period. Quarterback Bruce Lee contributed a key 23-yard pass to Roger Brautigan to the Buckeye one. UN ION-LEAGUE "FO R EVE RYT H ING TH E RE IS A SEASON AND A TIME FOR EVERY PU RPOSE U N DER H EAVEN . .. A TIME TO LAUGH . .. A TiME TO BE GAY. . .." Homecoming '67 October 20-2 1 Meanwhile, the West Coast outfit kept the Hawkeyes and their vaunted quarterback, Ed Podolak, bottled up most of the day. All interested persons are wel- come to see the Michigan Rug- boronto in acdoubleheader today at Wnes aField Tegames are TV R ENTA LS $10 PER MONTH FREE service and delivery NEJACTV RENTALS 662-5671 Phpps hit end Ji Beirnes wth at made it 14-7. ioss in two starts. A 94-yard drive highlighted by rookie quarterback Frank Pat- rick's~ passs set un the gtame win- gav th hsh 7- lad.iiomie field win or± N ras IX, ani Williams crieds anot erd. o an all-time record Memorial Sta- Notreiame tclrs nover theadoal dium crowd of 65,361 sat in as lnote from treeyrs outr ter ga Nebraska ran its season record scoreless second quarter and t2-.Iwa Minsa'frt Bleier Too ning touchdown after each team Halfback Bob Bleier, plunged for had shackled the other's offenses a third quarter touchdown and and the only solid threat had Azarro tied it up 14-14 going into been long field goal tries. hPhipps passed 11 yards to LeroyIliiR ce Keyes on the third play of the IlMR~e last quarter and Bob Baltzell kick- ;CHAMPAIGN, Ill. UIP--Quarter- eNotre Dame marched 75 yards |obne touchdon and passed for for a tying touchdown, getting janother, and sophomore Dave the score on Hanratty's 27-yard Jackson rocketed 78 yards to turn pitch to Paul Snow, and Azzaro 'the game into a rout as Illinois kicked again, opened its home football season Purdue's Jim Kirkpatrick ran yesterday with .a 34-6 smashing the kickoff back 30 yards to his Jof Pittsburgh. 36 and the Boilermakers charged The Illini drove 46 yards in 11 64 yards in five plays for the win- plays in the first quarter with ning touchdown. Rich Johnson's 15-yard dart and * * *Naponic's 11-yard toss to Phil Houston keying it. Naponic drill- Badgers Smashed ed the final yard. MADISON, Wis. (/P)- Ed Rose- A 19-yard pass from Naponic to borough passed for three touch- Craig Timko and runs by John- downs and scored one himself son and Jackson launched the while Max Anderson shredded Illini on a 71-yard thrust in 11 Wisconsin's plodding line for 220 plays early inarthesthird period, yards as Arizona State pummeled Naponic's 6-yadsotoJh the Badgers 42-16 yesterday. Wright was the payoff. Anderson got off the day's Illinois scored three quick ones longest run - a 75-yard touch-J in the fourth quarter. I I I r~ EARLY FALL DRYCLEANING VALUES TOP or CAR Mon.-Tues.-Wed. Oct 2-3-4 eQCh I ROSH HASHONO SERVICES Rackham Lec ture Hall Auditorium Jackets-$1 .19 Ski or Windbreaker Furs and suedes excluded-zip out linings EXTRA; fur collars