THE MICHIGAN DAILY 51 THE MICHIGAN DAILY S MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP Baltimore's Barber Quiets Yankee Bats All-Stars Lose To Chica; As Pass Defense Collaps By The Associated Press NEW YORK-Steve Barber, with a late inning assist by Harvey Haddix, won his third straight over New York as the Baltimore Orioles blanked the Yankees 2-0 last night and recaptured the American League lead. Haddix relieved Barber with two on and two out in the seventh, ended the threat by striking out pinch hitter Phil Linz and check- ed the Yankees the rest of the way. Barber had pitched four- hit and three-hit victories in his last two appearances against the Yanks. PHILADELPHIA-Frank Thom- as, an original New York Met who was traded to the Philadelphia Phillies before the game, socked a double and single and batted in two runs in his debut with the Phils yesterday in a 9-4 victory over the Mets. Sent to the Phillies on waivers for three minor league players, Thomas also started a double play in the seventh after the Phils had rallied for four runs in the sixth to break open a 4-4 game. Major League Standings CHICAGO-Ray Herbert blank-{ ed the Boston Red Sox hits and drove in both game's runs yesterday in the Chicago White Sox three-game losing streak 2-0 victory. on five of the helping snap a with a AMERICANl LEAGUE W L Pct. Baltimore 67 42 .604 New York 64 41 .6101 Chicago 66 43 .6061 x-Los Angeles 58 54 .518 V Detroit 55 57 .491 U y-Minnesota 53 56 .486 1 Boston 52 59 .468 1 y-Cleveland 50 59 .458 1 Kansas City 42 67 .385 24 x-Washington 42 71 .372 2 x-Played night game. y--Second game incomplete. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 2, Boston 0 Cleveland 10, Minnesota 4 Baltimore 2, New York 0 Detroit 5, Kansas City 2 Washington at Los Angeles (an) TODAY'S GAMES Minnesota at Cleveland Baltimore at New York Boston at Chicago Kansas City at Detroit Washington at Los Angeles (n) NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct.4 Philadelphia 63 43 .595 San Francisco 62 47 .569 Cincinnati 61 49 .554 Pittsburgh 57 50 .532 St. Louis 57 51 .528 Milwaukee 55 53 .509! Los Angeles 54 53 .503! Chicago 52 55 .4861 Houston 47 65 .416 New York 34 76 .3093 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 7-4, Pittsburgh 3-3 Philadelphia 9, New York 4 St. Louis 4, Houston 0 Los Angeles 5, Milwaukee 1 Cincinnati 5, San Francisco 3 TODAY'S GAMES New York at Philadelphia Chicago at Pittsburgh Los Angeles at Milwaukee Houston at St. Louis (n) San Francisco at Cincinnati (n) GB 1 1 1 Y 131/2 14 16 17 25 GB 2 4 7 9 9% I 31 A veteran right-hander, who lost a month this season while on the disabled list, collected his fifth victory against three losses. Ed Connolly suffered the loss, his eighth against two victories and1 his fourth to Chicago. * * *t CINCINNATI - Jim Maloneyf struck out 12 men in six innings3 and drove in a run before his1 arm stiffened up last night, andI the Cincinnati Reds went on to a 5-3 victory over the San Francisco Giants. Maloney looked like a threat to the strikeout record, when he whiffed 12 of the 24 batters who faced him in six innings, but he had to leave at that point. Thej record is 18 for a nine-inning{ game and Maloney has struck out 16 in his career. Young Billy McCool pitched the last three innings and held the Giants to two runs, including Jim1 Hart's ninth inning homer. * * * DETROIT-George Thomas andE Bill Freehan hit back-to-backt homers in the eighth inning and Phil Regan scattered eight hits asl the Detroit Tigers beat Kansas City last night 5-2 for their fourth straight victory. Manny Jimenez got four of the hits off Regan. It was the first victory for Re- gan since July 3 and only his fifth of the season.He was a 15- game winner for the Tigers last season. Gates Brown hit a third homer for the Tigers that accounted for the first run of the game in the, second inning. Detroit got two more runs in the third on four singles. Phils Trade For Thomas PHILADELPHIA ()-The Phil- adelphia Phillies aquired veteran power hitter Frank Thomas from the New York Mets yesterday for three minor leaguers in a deal the Phils' brass views as "pen- nant insurance." The Phils gave up Wayne Gra- ham, a .305 hitting outfielder- third baseman with Arkansas in the Pacific Coast League, and two other players to be delivered by Aug. 12 and Oct. 31. General Manager John Quinn is no stranger to this game of so-called pennant insurance deals. The boss of the National League- leading Phillies acquired Red Schoendienst for Milwaukee in 1957 from the New York Giants. and the slick infielder sparked the Braves to the pennant. Need Righthander Now he finds his Phillies in vital need of right-handed power to thwart southpaw pitching that has been beating the predomi- nantly left-handed hitting Phils in recent weeks. So, he reached out and grabbed Thomas, a right- handed slugger who has hit 275 career home runs. There have been other notable cases of mid- or late-season ac- quisitions that have meant pen- nant. The New York Yankees are past masters of this maneuver. They did it in 1949 when they got Johnny Mize from the Giants, and in 1951 when they acquired pitcher Johnny Sain from the Boston Braves. Kroll Second Man In addition to the 27-year-old Graham, who has hit 11 home runs and batted in 56 runs for Arkansas, the Mets apparently will get pitcher Gary Kroll, a right-hander the Phillies have placed on waivers to make room for Thomas. Kroll appears to be the player marked for Aug. 12 delivery. The Phillies long have coveted Thomas, whom Manager Gene Mauch is expected to use as an outfielder-first baseman against left-handed pitching. Chi Chi Maintains Golf Lead CHICAGO (P)-Jaunty Chi Chi. Rodriguez, shaking off a three- week tournament slump, shot a 69 in the Western Golf Course yesterday to capture the 36-hole lead by one stroke over Arnold Palmer. The 120-pound Puerto Rican coupled 35-34 against Tam O'Shanter's frayed 36-35-71 par and pulled up to the halfway mark in the $50,000-plus meet at 133- nine under regulation. Billy Casper, who shared the first round lead with Chi Chi at 64, skidded to 35-36-71 for 135. Disrespect Typifying the discrespect for Tam's par was Casper's comment: "It was among the worst rounds I've ever played. I missed seven greens and dropped only two good putts-a 10-footer for par on the eighth and a 20-footer for a birdie on 17." Casper said after the first few holes he didn't know if he could continue. "I was real sick from something I must have eaten," he said. "But my wife kept giving me salt tab- lets and soft drinks and I kept going." Difference R o d r i g u e z three-putted two greens and failed to get home in regulation on three others, "and that's the difference between my second and first rounds." Most attention went to the stampede of defending champion Palmer, who banged out a 32-34- 66 for 134. There wasn't a bogey on his card as he fashioned five birdies and the rest pars. His biggest disappointment came on the 305-yard fifth. "I drove the green, and was 40 feet from the cup," he said. "Then I three-putted, missing a three- footer my last try." Other seige guns moving into range were Don Massengale, 27- year-old pro from Jacksboro, Tex.; Pete Fleming of Hot Springs, Ark., and the steady veteran, Jay Hebert. Scores Eagle Massengale fired a 65 for a 136. An eight-foot putt gave him an eagle 3 on the 484-yard second. then he birdied the next three with putts of 8, 25 and 6 feet for one of the most noteworthy streaks of the tournament. Fleming shot a 69 and Hebert had a 68 and are grouped at 137. National Open champion Ken Venturi posted a 71 for 139. Also bracketed at 139 was Brit- ish Open champion Tony Lema with 34-35-69. Richert Tie For Jaycee Golf Crowvn ST. PAUL (P) --- Two golfers deadlocked for the lead in the 19th annual international Jaycee championships at M e n d a k o t a Country Club after 54 holes yes- terday. Jim Day of Laurel, Miss., and John Richart of Ann Arbor, Mich., had even par 216 totals. Eighteen holes today end the meet. Day scored the low round of the tourney as he toured the 6,265- yard, par-72 course in 68. Richart tacked a 73 on to his 143 two-day total. In third place one stroke back were Jerry Heard of Vasalia, Calif., and Stan Hultz of Craw- fordsville, Ind. Both had even- par 72s yesterday. Wade Tosses Two Scoring Pass Tallies Once in Easy 28-17 Victo By The Associated Press CHICAGO - Bill Wade threw two touchdown passes through the College All-Stars' porous air de- fense last night and scored once in a 28-17 victory for the Chicago Bears. After the Collegians had excited the big crowd of 64,000 at Soldier Field by taking a 10-7 lead at the half, the defending champions of the National Football League togk charge of the second half. Charlie Taylor, a speedy runner and option passer from Arizona State, and George Mira, the fine quarterback from Miami, Fla. thrilled the fans with their ex- citing play in this annual game sponsored by the Chicago Tribune Charities, Inc. Wade Busy Wade hit bigMike Ditka with a 13-yard TD pass in the second period, sneaked over from, the one and connected with Gary Barnes for a 20-yard scoring play in the third. Rudy Bukich took over late in the game and tossed a 20-yard touchdown pass in the fourth per- iod. Dick Van Raaphorst of Ohio State, who joins the Cleveland Browns after the game, put the All-Stars on the scoreboard first with a 14-yard field goal in the second period. After Wade's pitch to Ditka had given the Bears the lead tempor- arily, the Collegians came up with the most spectacular play of the night to go in front. Warfield Drops Pass Mira has, a long pass dropped by Paul Warfield of Ohio State before he got a second chance when Billy Martin fumbled Joe Don Looney's punt and Taylor recovered on the Bears' 18. Mira fumbled the ball momen- tarily as he dropped back but re- covered quickly and pitched out to Taylor, a future Washington. Reskin. The fleet former Ari- zona State ace sped to his right Girls. Vie For Olympic S1 Winslow Wins Pentathl end and fired to Georgia ' Ted Davis in the end zone. The All-Stars saw their disappear through errors and bles in the third quarter bi back in the scoring column i final seconds when Mira cor ed with Taylor on a 5-yard at 14:34. Spotty Ball The Bears played spotty 1 might have been expectedJ pro team in its first exhit game with a long season a They lost the ball on a fu once and they had two p intercepted. Both came afte: kich replaced Wade. Wade completed 15 of 2 217 yards and two touchd while Mira, who was a dou participant because of a sti muscle in his right arm pit, pleted eight of 18 for 70 and the one score. The crowd was with Mira once bobbed around among a of Bear defenders and still aged to make nine yards he seemed sure to be throws a heavy loss. Great Catch In addition to throwing pass and catching one, 'T snard a 29-yard toss from Beathard of Southern Cali: in the second period, a specta one-handed catch. He also r ered two fumbles, one by Bears and one by a teammate The Bears pierced the pass defense 287 yards but outgained by the collegians c ground 142 to 84 in net yar Taylor made 36 of those All rushing yards in seven carries Dave Wilcox of Oregon, Ti Crutcher of Texas Chri George Seals of Missouri anc Eller of Minnesota showed t vantage on defense for the But the Stars simply gav the ball too often on fumble interceptions. Basketball Coach Quits CHICAGO (P)-The Baltimore Bullets of the National Basketball Association announced yesterday the resignation of Coach Bob Leonard after rejecting his re- quest for a three-year contract. The announcement was made at the office of Dave Trager, Chicago owner of the Bullets, with Leonard in attendance. Leonard said "I'm at that stage where I want more security than pro coaching offers and want to get a college or high school coach- ing job." Trager said Leonard "completely surpised" him last week when he said Leonard informed him that unless he was given a three-year contract, Leonard would return to college to get his master's degree. WELCOME STUDENTS! Hours: Monday thru Saturday 8:30 to 5:30 P.M. The Dascola Barbers Near Michigan Theatre NEW YORK (M)-Pat Winslow, a big strong blonde from San Mateo, Calif., won four of five events and captured the penta- thlon title yesterday in the U.S. women's Olympic track and field trials. She totaled 4,544 points. The 5-foot-11 housewife just surpassed the Olympic qualifying standard of 4,500 points for the event, added to the Olympic pro- gram this year. She was well off the pending American record of 4,644 points she set in winning her fourth straight national title last year. She won the high jump, broad jump, shot put and 200-meter dash and finished fourth in the 50-meter hurdles. Two of her winning perform- ances, however, were disappoint- ments. She went only 5-foot-1 in the high jump Thursday, two inches under her best perform.- ance, and was only 18-41/2 in the broad jump, some eight inches off her best. She won the 200 in 24.8 seconds, picking up 950 points, her best in a single event, and took the shot at 43-1%/. Sally Griffith, a petite blonde from San Jose, Calif., took. second in the over-all standings with 4,225. She was the winner of Thursday's hurdles. Denise Paschal of San Francisco was third with 4,120, the only other in the field of seven to break 4,000 points. Only Mrs. Winslow will make the trip to Tokyo, since none of the others reached the pre-deter- mined qualfying standard of 4,500 points. The pentathlon was the only final event on the program, with the rest of it devoted to qualifi- cations for today's finals. Upsets were at ahminimum there were only a handful of1 usual performances. Among the latter were 1 meter semifinal victories by 'I nessee State teammates Edith ] Guire and Wyomia Tyus, eact 11.3. That was only one-tenth a second off the recognized we record, but both girls were favc by a trailing wind of about miles per hour, well over allowable limit. Janell Smith of Fredonia, K ran an American record of in the semifinals of the 400 met The 18-year-old blonde clip one-tenth of, a second off pending mark of 54.7 set in n a t i o n a 1 championships month. Cherrie Sherrard of San Fr cisco was timed in an excel 10.9 in the 80-meter hurdle se finals, just one-tenth off pending American record. RaNae Bair of San Diego led javelin qualifiers with 169-6 her only throw, surpassing listed American record but sl of her own pending m i of 173-4%. S r, . y OUTS in the ICOLD? She'll love M ou in . V ri_: l I h ' I'1T I music ". z F I "iii. ' I ALL v:. VALUABLE COUPON LOY'S RESTAURANTS Opens New Location 814STATE STREET Pizza Loy-Dairy Joy) OPEN .cni-e enrc en cn D C ACr -17 DON'T BE! I1 Follow all compus goings-on, local and national events in The MICHIGAN DAILY. Delivered 6 mornings