Sunday, September 8, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Sunday, September 8, 1968 THE MICHiGAN DAILY ~Twins slice Tiger lead to 'CANINES INVADE: eig ht Soph Morehead impressive Rookie's two homers do trick, Twin fielding preserves win By ED HERSTEIN Special to the Daily DETROIT - The Detroit Tigers' "magic number" re- mained at 12 last night as the Minnesota Twins came up with a magic number of their own to beat the Tigers 2-1. The Twins performed their sorcery with No. 28, right- fielder, Greig Nettles, whose two home runs ruined a fine performance by pitcher Pat Dobson (5-6). The Tigers time and again seemed to have caught on to starter Jim Perry's bag of tricks only to have a Minnesota fielder pull a little white ball out of his glove. Two nice fielding plays prevented the Tigers from knock- ing Perry out in the first. Dick McAuliffe walked, after swing- ing at a couple of bad pitches. Mickey Stanley followed with Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE a single to right and Jim Northrup lined the first pitch up the middle. But Frank Quilici speared it at his shoe laces and tossed to Rich Rollins at third. McAuliffe, who had almost crossed the plate, was easily doubled off. DENNY McLAIN Detroit Baltimore x~oston Cleveland New York Oakland Minnesota xCalifornia Chicago Washington x-Late game W Y Pet., 90 53 .629 82 61 .573 76 66 .535 76 70 .521 72 70 .507 73 71 .507 68 75 .476 62 81 .434 61 83 .424 56 86 .394 not included. GB 8 13 j 152 17f 171 22 28 291 33' a YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 16-10, Washington 2-0 Minnesota 2, Detroit 1 Oakland 2, Cleveland 0 Baltimore 4, Chicago 0 Boston at California, inc. TODAY'S GAMES Cleveland at Oakland Boston at California Minnesota at Detroit Chicago at Baltimore Washington at New York TOMORROW'S GAMES Boston at Oakland, (n) Detroit at California, (n) Cleveland at Minnesota, (n) Baltimore at Washington, (n) Mr Only games scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE r W L Pct. St. Louis 89 55 .618 - San Francisco 78 65 .545 Cincinnati 13 67 .521 Chicago 74 71 .510 Atlanta 72 71 .503 Pittsburgh 69 73 .486 Philadelphia 67 75 .472 Houston 65 78 .4552 New York 65 80 .448 Los Angeles 63 80 .441 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS San Francisco 5, St. Louis 1 Houston 6, Atlanta 3, 10 innings Philadelphia 4, Chicago 2 Cincinnati 4, Los Angeles 2 New York 4, Pittsburgh 3 TODAY'S GAMES Houston at Atlanta Philadelphia at Chicago Los Angeles at Cincinnati Sanl Francisco at St. Louis New York at Pittsburgh TOMORROW'S GAMES San Francisco at Atlanta, (n) Los Angeles at St. Louis, (n) Philadelphia at Pittsburgh, (n) Houston at Cincinnati, (2) Only games scheduled Horton beat out a dribbler to short but Caser Tover got Perry v. out of trouble when he grabbed' '12 Norm Cash's knee-high liner toI center while running at top speedI v and reaching across his body. Y The Tigers threatened again in the third when McAuliffe and Stanley singled. With two gone, Perry spent seven minutes striking out on a 3-2 pitch. Don Wert got Detroit on the scoreboard on the first pitch of the fifth with a long fly which dropped into the lower deck in left. With two outs, Stanley drilled his third single of the night, Northrup singles and Horton walked on four pitches. After Minnesota manager Cal Ermer had a word with Perry, Cash lofted a shallow fly to left for the final out. The Twins got even in the sixth % on Nettles' first home run, only the third hit off Dobson. % With one out in the seventh, McAuliffe swatted a deep liner which Nettles misjudged, bouncing off his gldve for a two-base error. , yBut he was caught in a rundown when Stanley grounded to Perry with Stanley going to second. After Northrup was inten- tionally walked, Horton sent Net- tles to the fence for the final out. Nettles' homer in the top of the ninth put the Twins ahead to stay. But it took a nice catch of Gates Brown's pinch liner to short to keep the lid on the Bengals. Al Worthington, who came on in the ninth, completed the witch- craft and picked up the win for { the Twins. GB 10/ 14 151 161 19 21 231 24Y 251 Rug gers take easy 1 first win; soccer begins The Michigan Rugby Club trav- eled to Windsor yesterday and came home with their first victory of the season. Though this was the first game scheduled and there have been relatively few practice workouts, the ruggers surged to a 14-0 mar- gin over the Borderers. Fullback Tom Fagan accounted for the first eight points with a penalty kick, a try, and a con- version. Another try by Gordy Jones ended the first half scoring. Bob Siegel, who played in place of injured Mike Johnson, added the final three points on a penal- ty kick. Meanwhile back in Ann Arbor, the new members of the club had their first taste of actual game play in a trial game. * '* ,' Anticipating a highly successful season, Michigan's soccer club will swing its collective feet into action at Toledo Sept. 21. "This is the best squad I've ever played on in terms of person- nel and depth," said co-captain Les Feldman, beginning his third season. "We're shaping up well in most areas, and I predict we'll win at least five or six, if not all, of our games," he added. Last year's squad compiled a 3-1 lo , while the 1966 team won four of five matches. Junior Tom Smith serves as team manager, and co-captain Wiley Livingston completes the triumvirate which -acts as an un- official coaching body. Because ,soccer at Michigan is a club sport, the university provides no coach or transportation, as it does for varsity NCAA sports. The pitchmen will play other varsity NCAAteams, however. Center forward Jerry Vagelatos will lead the offensive attack. Hervan Drobney will also play up front. Feldman, Smith, and Liv- ingston will man the halfback slots, while fullback Ted Coen spearheads the defense. "The only problem position, where we're not set yet, is goalie," Feldman stated. The booters will play three home games: Sept. 28 versus Cleveland State; Sept. 29 against Waterloo; and Oct. 12 opposing Toledo. Besides the opener at To-j ledo, the club will play three other away matches: Oct. 19 at North- ern Illinois; Nov. 2 at Central Iowa; and Nov. 16 at Kentucky. Anyone interested in playing on the team should contact Feldman at 761-5681 or Smith at 764-1778. Cocky McLain talks success (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following story is from a personal interview with Detroit Tiger pitcher Dennis McLain during a promotional ap- pearance in Ann Arbor yesterday.) By BILL LEVIS Associate Sports Editor Denny McLain doesn't seem overwhelmed by his success this this year. He expected it all the time. The 24-year-old Tiger pitcher, who won his 28th game of the sea- son Friday night, seems' bored by all the reports asking him con- sistently, "Why have you been winning so often this year?" Denny McLain knew he could do it from the beginning. That's why he got so upset when the Chicago White Sox left him un- protected in the first year draft in 1963. He showed his vindictiveness by beating the White Sox with a home run, 4-3, in his first major league appearance with the Tig- ers. His vendetta against the Sox has since cooled down but not his pitching ability. He was candid enough to ad- mit, "There really isn't too much I could do to avoid a year like this. Every time I look around, the batters are hitting right at some- one. And my own teammates have been amazing. Whenever I need two runs, I get two, and when I need six, I get six." It appears so simple but with a little coaxing, McLain does con- cede there are other reasons for his fantastic success this year. "I'm pitching more away from Tiger Stadium for one," he chuck- The Detroit Lions lost to the New York Jets, 9-6. Quarterback Joe Namath's passing set up the two New York scores. daily sports. NIGHT EDITOR: DIANA ROMANCHUK of head coach Bump Elliott's plan to simulate "game conditions" as early as possible for his players. The, dogs were funny, and the girls who chased them were cute, but otherwise the Blue first team beat the Gold second team 41-3. The scrimmage seemed quite frustrating for several players, notably quarterback Dennis Brown and split end Bill Harris, and in- By FRED LaBOUR Two dogs ran across the during Michigan's second football scrimmage of the yesterday afternoon in the dium, and no one seemst certain that they were not field full year,I Sta- quite part vigorating for others, like quar- terback Don Morehead. Brown was definitely off for the afternoon: missing receivers, ex- ecuting poorly, and screwing up his timing. Elliott explained after the game that Brown "was hit on the head sometime in the game and that definitely hurt his performance." Elliott added that Morehead per- formed in an "excellent" fashion. Harris found it difficult to hang onto the ball on both long and short passes, and he incurred the noticeable wrath of the coaches. The Blue offensive got off to a very slow start in the scrimmage. managing to score only once in the first half. That touchdown came on a short blast by halfback Ron Johnson into the endzone, the first of three Johnson tallies. Tim Killian, who appears to be emerging as the team's number one kicker, booted the extra point. The offense bogged down again and again in the first half be- eause of an inability to remain consistent and to pull off the big play when it was needed. One optimistic note was struck in the first half when sophomore Tim Killian kicked a 37-yard field goal for the Gold team. The third quarter featured more of the first half and the addi- tional spice of another Johnson score and a missed extra point by Killian. A pass interference call on Mark Werner gave the Blues the ball on the Gold 17 but they failed to capitalize. Another drive peter- ed out on the Gold three. Things heated up a little more in the fourth quarter as Morehead seemed to spark the club. Johnson drove over from the one: More- head ran in standing up from the six; Morehead passed complete to John Gabler from the four; and Jim Betts took a pass in from the eight. The scoring was coipleted at that point. After the game the squad par- ticipated in 50-yard dashes which Elliott called "conditioning." "I was pleased with a lot of things," he said thereafter. "We did a better job in the stadium this week and improved a lot of things." Opening day is 13 days away. * " * Monday's IM Softball sched- ute-all games on South Ferry Fields- 4:30, Field No. 1: Higher Ejucation vs. Phi Epsilon Pi; Field No. 2: Phi Delta Theta vs. Alpha Kappa Psi; Field No. 3: Lambda Chi Alpha vs. Res- idential College: Field No. 4: Wenley vs. Smallpox Epidemic. 5:45, Field No. 1: BioEngin- eers vs. Intruders; Field No. 2: Guaiacs vs. Evans Scholar "A"; Field No. 3: Kappa Sigma vs. Reeves: Field No. 4: Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Sigma Nu. Purdue 22_ Mie.16ioan 21 King rallies way into finals; semis match Graebner, Ashe led. Tiger Stadium has never been known as a pitcher's paradise and C EDCAMPUS MOTORS McLain has suffered his five de- COIes MOTORS feats In Detroit. andService At 24, Denny McLain is finally its Hairsty ng growing up as a pitcher. He's be- Galore! SPECIAL CLOSE OUT ginning to use his head as well as '68 Americans $1858 his arm. -TRY US- But you can't discount that No appointment needed 68 Javelins $2595 arm. 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"I'm using lotsof ; tional 10% CASH SAVINGS on all your beauty, heat treatments and x-ray ther- sundry and health needs. r apy to keep me going, he said. , He admitted, "I'm looking for This cash savings is in addition to our EVERY DAY , 30 now," but added, "You can't LOW PRICES. Use this valuable coupon and save ; win 30 before 29." McLain is tak- money ing these last few starts one at ary time. - _-__ - ' - "Where Price and Quality Meet M 1TE R;I MISER R EGENCY DRUGS FAMILY RESTAURANT 123 EAST LIBERTY (Corner 4th) " HAMBURGERS ThEAUE CiES SCEY ISLANDS Ann Arbor, Michigan " JUMBOYS C SMILING E STORE HOURS: Monday thru Saturday 8:30 A.M.-6:00 P.M. SPEEDY SERVICE CosdSuda1 CARRY-OUT SPECIALISTSE Closed$unday NO WAITING - PLENTY S of PARKING (This ofer expires Spt.30, 1968) INSIDE SEATING OR i EAT IN YOUR CAR I OPEN II AM DAILY mm...... .... m..w .m .........mm m=mm=m mm=m=mm mm m 662-0022 ~~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY' 3325 WASHTENAW RD. Ph n 76 - 2 BLKS. W.of ARBORLAND 1"ne 764 -0558 FOREST HILLS, N.Y. (AP) - Ebullient Billie Jean King huffed and puffed her way into the last' round of the women's singles and trigger-tempered Clark Graebner assured an American men's final- ist with victories that rocked the old concrete stands yesterday in the U.S. Open Tennis Champion- ships. Billie Jean, already holder of the Wimbledon open and rated the world's no. 1 woman player, rallied for a 3-6, 6-4, 6-2 semifinal victory of the injury-plagued Maria Buenos of Brazil. The 24-year-old Long Beach, Calif., housewife goes into t h e women's final today against Vir- ginia Wade: Clark Graebner of New York joined his U.S. Davis Cup mate, Athur Ashe, in the semifinal of the men's division by beating John Newcombe of Australia, a rookie pro who won both the U.S. and Wimbledon titles a year ago, in a postponed match. Graebener, the tall, bespecta- cled son of a Cleveland dentist, took the court and in 19 minutes of slashing tennis completed a 5-7, 11-9, 6-1, 6-4 quarter-final triumph over Australia's fourth- seeded John Newcombe. The victory placed him in the semifinal bracket opposite his Davis Cup teammate, Arthur Ashe, the new U.S. amateur champion, whom he will play today. "You Can Read a Book in 2/ Hours Says i . P.McCarthy, WJRRadio Personality Welfare mothers, officials meet again this afternoon (Continued from page one) them what needs, what they'll The county, board chairman get.'" added last night, "Pretty s o o n Those meeting in executive ses- some hard-line conservative like sion yesterday included Harrison, we have in the county will come Wasson, Hulcher, Larcom, Burton and tell them (the welfare recip- and social services, official Carl ients) that, 'them what has, tells Scheffler. 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Other graduates include members of the White House staff under the late President Kennedy a n d members of Congress. Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics w i I I increase your reading efficiency three times with equal or better comprehension or guarantees to refund full tuition costs. 11 As Wash, Rinse and Wax! WAAII -twf .t JN~ 5 Minutes - 25c LIBERTYR CAR WASH PENro OPEN 24 HOURS a guide to: Apartments Bars Restaurants with maps and hints on life in Ann Arbor $1.00 MONDAY AFTERNOON - 4:00 P.M. Sept. 9-postponed from Sept. 4 ADDED TO AGENDA: Report on Welfare Rights actions-Support of Univer- sity employees against U. administration-workers may strike this week for basic union rights. PRESENTATIONS & WORKSHOP DISCUSSIONS AT FIRST MEETING OF VOICE - SDS UM-Ann Arbor Chapter, Students for a Democratic Society ASSEMBLY HALL, MICHIGAN UNION Short introductions, break into issue/action workshops to be continued next week 1 318 W. Liberty St. C o c r . *. Free Demonstrations Howard Johnson's, U.S. 23 & Washtenaw 4, 6, & 8 P.M. Classes Start Sept. 10 Some Class SelectionsMill Available For Further Information Call Today Collect 353-5111 ,ajs0 1 41 Organization of Voice; Previous Years Action; Seminars, Visitina Snekers '68 Party Election & Independent Party Movement (New Politics Pence and Freedom Party sneaker) I I e