Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, March 2-9, 19,69 Page SIx THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, March 29, 1969 Tigers bombed for fourth straight By The Associated Press LAKELAND, Fla - The Mont- real Expos, scoring seven runs inI the eighth inning, handed the world-champion D e t r o i t Tigers their fourth straight exhibition: loss and their 10th setback in the last 12 games 8-0 yesterday. Left-hander John Hiller was the victim of Montreal's seven-run outburst. Montreal had nursed a 1-0 lead, but seven hits, one walk and an error gave the Expos their biggest inning of the spring. Win-i ning pitcher Bill Stoneman hurled the first five innings and relievers Skip Guinn and Carroll Sembera teamed with Stoneman for the two-hit shutout. S* * ORLANDO, Fla - Relief pitch- er Joe Brzenda hit a home run ov- er the left field fence in the ninth inning a n d gave the Minnesota Twins a 6-5 exhibition baseball victory over the Los Angeles Dod- gers yesterday. The Twins, overcoming a 5-run Dodger lead, scored all their runs on homers. Cesar Tovar smashed a three- run blast in the fifth inning and Rod Carew followed with a solo shot, both of f Alan Foster. Graig Nettles' home run, off losing pitcher Jim Brewer, tied the game in the eighth inning. Bill Sudakis drove home R o n Fairly, who had tripled, and then scored on a wild pitch as the Dod- gers took a 2-0 lead in the second.! Tom Haller hit a solo homer in the fourth inning off Ron Keller and Willie Davis connected for a two-run shot off Keller in t h e fifth to make it 5-0. * * * SCOTSDALE, Ariz. - Ron San- to~ a nd Don Kessinger slammed three hits each in a 15-blow at- tack which gave the Chicago Cubs a 9-4 triumph over the San Fran- cisco Giants yesterday. Pitcher Fergy Jenkins notched his third victory in four spring starts as the Cubs captured their fifth decision in six games. Giant starter Gaylord Perry, rocked for three runs in the first and five in the fifth, suffered his first setback after four straight victories. The game's hitting star was the Giant's Ken Henderson who bang- ed three straight doubles and sin- gled in four trips. FORT MYERS, Fla.-The Kan- sas City Royals scored two runs in) the sixth inning and contributed the first inning and made them a double to a fiverun seventh as stand up for a 2-1 decision over , the Atlanta Braves defeated the the Pittsburgh Pirates in an exhi- Washington Senators 9-4 in exhi- bition baseball game yesterday. bition baseball Friday. A walk to Pat Kelly, singles by The Braves clobbered four pitch- Jerry Adair and Joe Foy and ers for 14 hits, three of them by Chuck Harrison's force o u t ac- Felix Millan. Del Unser batted in counted for the Royals' runs three of the Senators' runs with against Bob Veale, the Bucs' vet- a triple and a sacrifice fly. eran left-hander. Tom House halted a Washing- Wally Bunker was the winner, ton threat in the sixth inning and limiting Pittsburgh to f i v e hits gave up only an infield single in and one run in six innings. Dick 3 2% innings of relief to pick up Drago, also a right-hander, fin- the victory. ished up, allowing one hit. Pittsburgh scored in the fifth on ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. - Bob a walk and singles by Manny San- Gibson intended to go several in- guillen and Matty Alou. nings as the starting pitcher for * * * nii *a" i n f iv +3v t .}',gr;. i~v:ar.w :" ,:4e;: .,s:.; ';;'"^;_:"":?:_:; :?;:fi :: ' $?t4,.a:} :i;+ ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.-Dou- bles by John Edwards and Jesus Alou and a triple by Leon Mc- Fadden keyed a three-run sev- enth-inning rally that carried the Houston Astros to a 5-4 exhibition baseball victory over the New York Mets yesterday. Dennis Menke started the rally with a single off Met southpaw Bob Hendley, took third ,on Ed- wards' doubleyand scored on a wild pitch, tying the game 3-3. McFadden tripled Edwards home and scored on Alou's double. Joe Morgan's single, Curt Ble- fary's triple and a wild pitch by Nolan Ryan, t h e Mets' starter, gave Houston two runs in t h e third. Ed Kranepool stroked two sin- gles and a homer, driving in two runs, to spark the Mets, attack against fireballer Don Wilson, who pitched 6 2/3 innings for Houston. Danny Coombs and Dooley Womack finished up with hitless relief. . * * * POMPANO BEACH, Fla.-Dar- rell Evans hit a two-run homer in a 6t. Louis carinai arm team yesterday, but the Red Bird ace began to tire after four innings and called it a day after six in- nings. "I wasn't throwing well for four innings but the arm then started to f e e 1 sore and tight," Gibson said. Gibson pitched for the Cardinals Cedar Rapids farm club as t h e varsity didn't have a game Friday. He gave up two' runs, allowed three hits including two 'triples, walked two men, hit one, a n d struck out five. Another member for the Card- inals starting crew, Ray Wash- b u r n, pitched for the Modesta farm team and lasted his allotted seven innings. Washburn also allowed two runs but both were unearned. He yield- ed only four hits, struck out eight, walked one, and hit one batter. The only other varsity men be- sides Gibson a n d Washburn to play Friday were catchers Joe Torre and Tim McCarver. Torre drove in one of the runs off Gib- son with a single. PHI KAPPA ALPHA Graduate Professional Fraternity OPEN BUSH MEETING SATURDAY AFTERNOON MARCH 29 - 1010 EAST ANN - Breaks of the game 14-year-old Dave Sprignoli of Harrisburg poses with the root of his troubles, a basketball. Last month while leaping for a rebound in a junior high school game, he was accidently bumped and fell to the floor fracturing a bone in each arm. Three weeks later, at a local playground, he decided to shoot some baskets with both arms in casts. While leaping for a shot, he came down landing one foot in a hole in the ground breaking a bone in his left foot. Ir EUROPE '69 CHARTER FLIGHT When you're sick go to a doctor (not a park time quack) When you fly to Europe, use a Civil Aeronautics Board approved and regularly scheduled carrier. 4 FLY SABENA Lv. MAY 9.............NY to London, Ly. AUG. 17............Brussels to NY Assured flight-Jimited space UAC offices, 2nd floor Union By The Associated Press NEW YORK - Lew Alcindor, possibly the most sought after col- lege basketball player in history, has decided to sign with the Mil- waukee Bucks of the National Basketball Association, he disclos- ed last night in an interview on a New York radio station. "I had to weigh two decisions, the American Basketball As- sociation and the NBA, and the NBA seemed most solid and sound," Alcindor told sports an- nouncer Chip Cipola last Tuesday in a taped interview made public last night. Alcindor, the 7-foot-12 three- time All-American from UCLA, did not reveal the terms of the contract, which was rumored to be a multi-year pact approaching $1 million. "My decision was based mainly on the fact that it wasthe b e s t situation for me financially," he said. 1 "It would have been a lot easier tablished~ ABA or the NBA. He playing in New Yorl, all things also is expected .to make a winner being the same. But as it w a s of any team he joins. -, things were not the same." In Milwaukee, General Manager The Bucks, who finished last -inj the Eastern Division of the NBA, won top draft rights to Alcindor in a flip of a coin with Phoenix, the last place team in the West- ern division. The Bucks were com- peting for the giant center with the New York Nets, who were giv- en the No. 1 draft rights in the ABA. Alcindor is a native of New York. Possibly the greatest bidding war in the history of sports had been expected between the two pro bas- ketball teams for the services of Alcindor; but his announcement apparently put a quick end to it. Alcindor completed his college career only last Saturday by lead- ing UCLA to an unprecedented third consecutive National C o 1 - legiate Athletic Association cham- pionship.I Cipola said Alcindor, on advice from his lawyers, told each team to make their best offer and the! Bucks made the better financial offer. He said the Nets then said they thought they could come up with more money if given time to get back to the rest of the ABA teams, but Alcindorssaid his de- cision would be made on the first offers by each team. The ABA had been basing a great deal of its future on the hope that it could sign Alcindor,, certain to be a tremendous draw- ing card in either the newly-es- John Erickson of the Bucks denied that Alcindor had signed with the one-year-old team. In fact, the NBA draft officially will not be held until April 7. Erickson, however, refused com- ment when asked whether Alcin- dor had agreed to sign with the club. "If we are the team to sign him, we will announce it," Erickson said. "I wish this rumor were true. I would hope he would sign with Milwaukee, but he has not." Big Lew comes to terms with Milwaukee Agoinst Te Wall By ELLIOTT BERRY CALMLY GLANCING through "Scorecard" in this week's Sports Illustrated I finally came to the most enjoyable section of that column, "They Said It" - those refreshing few paragraphs in which usually intense athletes sit back and laugh at their sport and them- selves. What I was about to read however, was not in the least bit hum- erous, especially if you've been a fanatic National Hockey League fan for the last twelve of your 19 years on this earth. But there it was right where all those funny tidbits are supposed to be: "Gordie Howe would not even make my fifth forward line - if I had one. He would have been all right for my team at 30, but not at 40." - Anatli Tara- sov, coach of the Soviet national hockey team. Gordie Howe, undoubtedly the finest hockey player ever to lace up a pair of skates, a man who at the age of 41 is just completing the most productive season of his unbelieveable career, and he's "not good enough to make my (the Russians') fifth line." My reaction was predictable enough as I began to refer to the Russian coach with some of the most useful adjectives associated with (although not officially'part of) the English language. Then my mental attack became focused on the Soviet Union as a whole. Maybe Richard Nixon is right about those damned loud- mouthed Commies who have plenty of words for everything but noth- ing to back them up. Finally my anger was vented in a tone of re- venge, "I'd just love to get them on the same ice with Gordie," I seethed. "Not only would he do things with a stick and puck which they never dreamed possible but he would give them a lesson in legal physical punishment which they would never forget." Indeed Howe cquid do both. AS MY RAGE spibsided however it became apparent to me that what Tarasov was saying was not aimed at Howe nor did it really have anything to do with him. In the true tradition of Soviet "We will bury you" propaganda the Russian coach was using shock technique to make hepdlines out of page three news. After years of claiming that the Soviet National team is fast approaching NHL calibre and getting very little response, Tarasov decided to sensationalize his claim in order to grab the at- tention of every person with an interest in hockey in North America. Fully aware that an attack on Howe, the epitome of hockey ex- cellence would be bound to meet with a bitter response, Tarasov was hoping that his degredation of Howe would goad the NHL Board of Governors into .consenting to a head to head meeting between the So- viet Nationals and an NHL team. Dressing up a perfectly valid claim (in this case that the Soviet National team is almost of NHL calibre) with wild sensationalism is as Russian as Leninism. As fine a developer of hockey talent as Tarasov is, he knows per- fectly well that Howe today at age 41 is still one of the pest all around performers in the game. But he also knows that his attack of Howe might get him his shot at the NHL, which is becoming more in order every season. After you sort out the sensationalism, what Tarasov was really stating is a cold hard fact which is indeed hard to digest for Ca- nadians and Americans alike - playing international rules the Rus- sian Nationals could give at least six NHL teams a real battle. THE SOVIET NATIONALS have dominated international hockey competition for the past six years and the fact that they finally lost to Czechoslovakia yesterday is not a sign that they are weakening but only that the Czechs too are making great strides on the Ice. The Soviets' hockey prowess is not surprising. They are profes- sionals in the true sense of the word. They work together, get daily time off for practice seven months out of the year, and vacation to- gether. They are also the 18 finest players in the entire nation. They should well be good and they are. Contrary to popular belief Canadians are not innately better hockey players than anybody else, they just start younger and work harder at it than anybody else. With the Russians making a concen- trated effort to match them over the past decade, they have been making steady gains in their hockey program and they now seem to be just a few years away from NHL calibre. THE SCORES OF their wins in international competition are im- pressive, such as their 17-2 swamping of the US team. But the compe- tition isn't much. What is really impressive about the Soviets is their passing and their skating. Passing and skatng are the two ingre- dients which have made the Montreal Canadiens the finest team in the NHL - while the Russians are clearly not in a class with the Montrealers, neither are five of the NHL's Western Division. That how- ever hasn't stopped the west from taking many games from the east's top teams. The Soviets can skate and pass as well as all of the expansion teams with the exception of St. Louis. They don't check as well and therein lies the difference. But checking is not the international game and a series played by international rules would be most interesting. Tarasov was obviously encouraged by the sccess of the expansion teams against the established guard of the NHL, for manyplayers on the rosters of the expansion clubs are not far removed from the teams against which the Soviets enjoyed such great success on their last few tours of Canada. THE RUSSIANS, however are not the only ones anxious for a meeting between the NHL and the Russians. Alan Eagleson, a lawyer who represents most of the NHL players, said they are prepared to play an exhibition series against European teams next September with or without the permission of the NHL Board of Governors: He said he hopes to include the Russians on such a tour. If an NHL European tour attracts the likes of Bobby Hull, Jean Beliveau, Phil Esposito, Frank Mahovolich, Bobby Orr, and most of all Howe, Tarasov will probably wish he had never mentioned the name of Gordie Howe. The Russians are good and could embarass a touring group of average NHLers. But as of now, Canada's best are superior to the. USSR's best. This will change in our lifetime as the Russians mature a bit more. But as for today, Tarasov should remember, "Thou shalt not take the name of Howe in vain." 9 I Drake's ohs. takes honor; Czechs trip Soviet icers 0 NEW YORK - Maury John of Drake was named Coach of the Year yesterday by the U.S. Basketball Writers Association and Lew Alcindor of UCLA was picked as Player of the Year. John's team, unranked until late in the season, finished with a 25-5 record. Drake beat Louisville in a playoff for the Missouri Valley Conference title, was edged by champion UCLA in the semifinals of the national championship tournament and took third place in a rout of North Carolina. * STOCKHOLM - A determined Czechoslovakian team upset the Soviet Union 4-3 and virtually ended Russia's six-year reign as world amateur hockey champions last night. The triumph gave the Czechs 16 points and moved them into undisputed possession of first-place in the six-team tournament. Russia has 14 points. Each has one game remaining, Czechoslovakia against Sweden and the Soviets against Canada, both on Sunday. The hard-fought Czechi-Russia match was the only game played yesterday. * SAN FRANCISCO - The American Basketball Association filed an anti-trust suit yesterday accusing the National ,Basketball Association of monopolizing the sport by using economic power to eliminate competition. Frederick T. Ferth, attorney for the ABA who filed the suit in U.S. District Court, said the suit will seek to recover "millions and millions of dollars" in damages from the NBA. No specific damage claim was made in the action. -ART PRINT LOAN PRINTS MUST BE RETURNED I I Abe Saperstein's Famous E i UEU Io& 17 ;N I 71 STUDY IN CUERNAVACA Learn to speak SPANISH * Intensive courses, with drills, supervised labs, and theory taught by experienced, Mexican teachers. " $135 per month. Study in the INSTITUTE FOR CONTEMPORARY LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES. e Examine themes such as "Protest and its Creative Expression In Latin America" and "The Role of Education in Social Change" in 10 to 30 new courses each month. " Access to excellent library. a $30 per credit. 4 I I 0 of Z