PAGE FOUR rr 14 i.? M'1 t'l Y1 T r-4 X 1sT wh x t r wr PAGE FOUR FE'Inft Emt'U* u. ltwl d1 aDAILY FRIDAY, JUNE 30,1981 Mays Paces Giants to Sweep over Phillies SIX WEEK JUNKET: cM' Divers To Tour Far East PHILADELPHIA (A) - Willie Mays belted three homers, a triple, double and single, batted in seven runs and scored four to lead the San Francisco Giants to an 8-7, 4-1 doubleheader sweep of the Philadelphia Phillies. The twin victories moved the Giants into second place, .002 percentage points over Los Angeles. Mays hit all three of his homers in the first game, the last one comng in the 10th inning off loser Frank Sullivan (3-8), the third Phillies' pitcher, which brought the Giants the opening victory. The first game was a makeup of last night's 15-inning game which ended in a 7-7 tie. Juan Marichal was the winner in two innings of relief. He is now 6-4. Mays went six for eight in the two games to hike his average from .318 to .331. Billy Loes, routed as a relief pitcher by the Phillies in the opening game, came back as a starter in the, after piece and hurled a masterful five-hitter for this fifth win of the campaign. * * * Tigers 5, White Sox 2 DETROIT (P) - The American League-leading Detroit Tigers ex- tended their margin to two full games by downing the Chicago White Sox 5-2 while the second place New York Yankees, were idle. Righthander Frank Lary out-. lasted the veteran Cal McLish in a pitchers duel which .was as hot as the 93 degree temperature at1 Tiger Stadium for seven innings. In that seventh, rookie short- stop Dick McAuliffe ran his hit- ting streak to nine games by blast- ing a two-run triple to the flag- pole at the 440-foot mark in dead center, scoring Jake Wood and Mike Roake who had opened the inning with successive singles. Those two singles removed Mc- Lish from the scene and Turk Lown came on in relief. He struck out Lary for the first out before McAuliffe's big wallop. * * . Pirates 4, Dodgers 2 PITTSBURGH W) - Earl Fran- cis pitched a fine three-hitter for the Pittsburgh Pirates over eight innings, and his teammates chip- ped in with four-run rally in the eighth that gave Pittsburgh a 4-2 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers. Francis struck out 10 Dodgers in picking up his first victory against two defeats. His first in- ning wildness when he gave up three walks and a bases-loaded single to Tom Davis led to the only Dodger runs. Francis was lifted for a pinchhitter in the midst of the Pirates eighth inning rally, and Elroy Face came on in the ninth to preserve the victory. The Dodgers' starting pitcher, with a four-hitter and nine strike- Sandy Koufax, was sailing along outs until the eighth. He got the first two Pirates on strikeouts. But singles by Bill Vir- don and Johnny Logan and a double by Roberto Clemente tied up the game and sent Koufax to the showers. Larry Sherry came on in relief and issued a single to Dick Stuart and a triple to Don Hoak that sewed up the game for Pittsburgh. Senators 3, Indians 1 CLEVELAND (R) - Home runs by Bill Klaus and Marty Keough paced the Washington Senators to a 3-1 victory over the Cleveland Indians in the finale of a four- game series. Washington won the series, 3-1. The winner was right-hander John Gabler, who went 71 in- nings in picking up his third vic- tory in five decisons. Dave Sisler finished the pitching chores for the Senators. Gabler gave up four hits, struck out one and walked three. The only run against him was unearned. Starter Wynn Hawkins worked seven innings in losing his seventh game against five victories. He gave up all the Senators' runs on nine hits. Bobby Locke hurled the last two innings for the In- dians. Cubs 15, Reds 8 CHICAGO (P)--The lowly Chi- cago Cubs wrapped up their "home run" series with first-place Cin- cinnati, slamming four homers in a 15-8 rout of the Reds. In taking three straight from the Reds after losing the series opener Tuesday, the Cubs out- homered Cincinnati. 14 to 6. The Reds got three homers yesterday. League - leading hitter George Altman launched the Cubs' 17-hit attack with a two-run homer in the first inning. Altman also sin- gled in four official trips to raise his season batting mark to .352. Other Cub homers included a two-run smash by Billy Williams in the third, and back-to-back homers by pitcher Don Cardwell and Al Heist in a six-run fourth. The Redleg homers, all off Card- the seventh, included Frank Rob- well, who yielded to Don Elston in inson's leadoff blow in the third, a solo clout by Leo Cardenas in the sixth and Gordy Coleman's two- run poke in the seventh. A Orioles 6, A's 2 Kansas City (k') - Baltimore bombed Lew Krausse, Kansas City's bonus rookie, for six runs and the Orioles went on to defeat the Athletics 6-2. Dick Hall and Jim Gentile star- red for Baltimore. Hall, the ex- Athletics righthander, pitched a classy two-hitter and won his fourth game. He has lost three. Gentile drove in two runs and took over the league RBI lead with 67, one more than Detroit's Cash. Krausse, the 18-year-old $125,000 bonus rookie who made his major league debut a three-hit shutout over Los Angeles, didn't have it last night. He left the game in the sixth after giving up eight hits and walking five. It was Krausse's sec- ond defeat. The Boston Red Sox beat him last week although he gave up only three hits. Michigan divers Ron Jaco and Bob Webster have been selected to participate in an AAU-sponsor- ed tour of the Far East, it was announced yesterday. Webster, who came home from the Olympic games in Rome last summer with a gold medal, and Jaco, who placed sixth in the Olympic trials, although'he didn't make the trip to Rome, will join a group of 8-12 girl swimmers for a" synchronizing act. The group will tour the far east, performing mostly for the U.S. Armed Forces. However, some pub- lic appearances will be made, ac- cording to Dick Kimball, Wolver- ine diving coach who made the trip two years ago. There will be no coaches mak- ing the trip, but one chaperone, probably a woman, will accompany the group. The group will be flown over- seas by the Air Force, and will perform for various Army, Navy, and Air Force installations in Ja- pan, the Philippines, and other Western Pacific countries. Webster was chosen for the tour because of his past reputation as a fine diver, while Jaco, while also a great diver, was chosen as one from the same locale as Webster. 4 '4 4 Wright, Prentice Tie , ,I Major League Standings AMERICAN1 Detroit New York Cleveland Baltimore Boston Chicago Washington ,Kansas City Minnesota Los Angeles LEAGUE W L ,Pct. 47 26 .644 44 27 .620 42 33 .560 40 34 .541 38 35 .521 38 36 .514 33 41 .446 29 42 .408 28 45 .384 27 47 .365; GB 2 6 7Y2 9 912 14; 17 19 201z ONLY FOUR MEN LEFT: Crawford in Upset Wimbledon Victory WIMBLEDON, England OP) - American Chris Crawford knocked out third-seeded Nicola Pietran- geli of Italy yesterday in the big- gest upset of the Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Championships and won a place in the last 16 of the men's singles. Crawford, 21-year-old student from Piedmont, Calif., and Charles (Chuck) McKinley of St. Louis, were the only American survivors from the, 17 who started out in the men's singles on Monday. Six Yanks fell yesterday. McKinley, a 20-year-old ball of fire and power, breezed into the fourth round with a 6-3, 4-6, 6-0, 6-2 victory over Poland's Vladi- mir Gasiorek. McKinley, seeded eighth, was expected to do just that. But Crawford, ranked only 10th in the United States, was given no chance of getting past Pietran- geli, hero of Italy's Davis Cup vic- tory over the United States last December. Crawford had other ideas. He fought for every point, gave the Italian Davis Cup star no rest and finally pulled off his biggest tri- umph 2-6, 6-3, 6-4, 6-4. "Now maybe people will stop writing me off as a has-been and a Davis Cup dummy," said the delighted and excited Crawford as he danced off court to the cheers of 14,000 sun-baked fans. Little Mimi Arnold, a pint- sized lass from Redwood City, Calif., shared part of Crawford's glory on this sun-splashed day by downing a seed in the wom- en's singles. She defeated Lesley Turner, the fourth seed from Australia, 7-5, 6-4 with net-rushing tactics that unsettled the forehand driving tactics of her opponent. A boiling sun with temperatures in the 80's shone down on the crowd of 22,000 - men in shirt sleeves with handkerchiefs knot- ted over their foreheads, ladies in their coolest dresses. More than 100 were treated for heat exhaus- tion. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Detroit 5,. Chicago 2 Baltimore 6, Kansas City 2 Boston 9, Minnesota 5 Washington 3, Clevleand 1 Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Detroit at Baltimore (n) Washignton at New York (n) Cleveland at Boston (n) Chicagotat Los Angeles (n) Minnesota at Kansas City (n) NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. GB Cincinnati 44 28 .611 - San Francisco 41 30 .577 2%/ Los Angeles 42 31 .575 2/ Pittsburgh 35 31 .530 6 Milwaukee 33 32 .508 71/ St. Louis 30 38 .441 12 Chicago 28 41 .406 14/ Philadelphia 22 44 .333 19 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS San FranciSco 8-4, Philadelphia 7-1 Chicago 15, Cincinnati 8 Pittsburgh 4, Los Angeles 2 Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Cincinnati at Milwaukee (n) Los Angeles at Philadelphia (n) San Francisco at Pittsburgh (n) St. Louis at Chicago SPRINGFIELD, N.J. (IP)-Mick- ey Wright, the big hitter and big' money winner of women's golf, and JoAnn Prentice, who never has won a tournament as a pro, shared the first round lead yes- terday in the Women's National Open Golf Championship. They shot 72's over the big rough Bal- tursrol Lower Course. Mickey, who belts the ball a country mile, posted her round of 37-35 in somewhat sensational fashion-early in the day. It looked good enough to stand up as the wind rose and made the 6,372- yard, par 36-36-72 course play longer and tougher than ever. Then JoAnn came along with a matching round. Two strokes behind were Betsy Offer P.E. For Students And Famiies Free classes in golf, tennis,j swimming, modern dance and fig- ure control are being offered stu- dents and adult family members this summer by The University of Michigan's Department of Physical Education for Women. Instructor Shirley O'Neil said the classes are scheduled at 3:30 p.m. and 7 p.m. weekdays at the Women's Athletic Building and Swimming Pool. No equipment is necessary for students and family members in- terested in elementary and inter- mediate golf, tennis and swim- ming, or for the other classes in modern dance and posture, figure and carriage. Rawls, the defending champion and only four-time winner of the Women's Open title, and a pair of star amateurs, Mrs. Marlene Stewart Streit of Fonthill, Ont., and Mrs. Helen Sigel Wilson of Philadelphia. At 75 were pro Ruthie Jessen of Seattle and ama- teur Anne Richardson of Colum- bus, Ohio. Not many of the 30 pros and even fewer amateurs in the field of 82 managed to break 80 on the rugged Baltusrol course, with its deceptively rolling greens and deep traps full of soft sand. Only the girls who could reach the greens in regulation figures stood a chance of making pars and scores soared as high as the 101 posted by Mrs. Gordon S. Park of Glen Ridge, N.J. Mickey, who has won three tournaments this year and trails Louise Suggs by about $200 in money winnings, had three birdies' and three bogeys on her card. She reached the green on the 460- yard, par 5, seventh hole with a two iron and got her bird. She put a six iron two feet from the pin on the 405-yard tenth and she holed a 15-foot putt for a two on the 16th. JoAnn, who tied Mickey and Mary Lena Faulk in the Eastern Open twogweeks ago but lost the playoff, finished with a birdie four on the 500-yard 18th to gain her tie. She birdied the short fourth with a 10-foot putt and had bogeys on the third and fifth. All the rest were pars. After today's second round of the 72-hole tournament, the field will be cut to the 40 low scorers7 and ties for the final 36 holes ont Saturday. At the end of the first round scores of 83 were good< enough to tie for 40th. College Basketball Scandal Spreads as Detroit's North, Morgan Named in Probe f NEW YORK (I)-The college basketball scandal continued to spread yesterday when District At- torney Frank Hogan announced the indictment of a New York lawyer as another alleged fixer and injected the names of the Universities of Detroit and Ore- gon into the probe. Charles Tucker, a 25-year-old New York lawyer, was indicted on three counts of bribery and one of conspiracy involving players from Connecticut, Detroit, Colum- bia and New York University. The indictment also described an al- leged attempt to reach Oregon players that never was fulfilled. Tucker later was released on $1,- 000 bail. The far-reaching investigation in New York and North Carolina that first broke March 17 with the indictment of Aaron Wagman, a convicted football fixer, now has involved 39 players in 22 colleges. It will continue. The grand jury which has been hearing the evi- dence, was extended yesterday un- til Dec. 29. Two former students at the Los Angeles City Junior College-Lou Barshak, 21, and Michael Siegel, 21, both of New York-and Dave Budin, former Brooklyn College captain, were named as co-con- spirators with Tucker but not as co-defendants. As in previous cases in New York, the players who testified 15, 1960. Hogan said the Colum- before the grand jury were grant- bia player turned it down because ed immunity. The players named he already had been "lined up" yesterday were Charles North, 22, by Joe Green, a New Yorker in- and John Morgan, 21, both of De- dicted previously for bribery and troit, and James Granata, 21, of attempted bribery. New York, a sub on the Oregon Hogan also charged Tucker team a year ago. gave Ray Paprocky, NYU player, Hogan said Tucker also was in- $1,000 to shave points in a game volved in an alleged bribe of Peter with Connecticut, March 8, 1960 Kelly, University of Connecticut in the semifinals of the NCAA captain. He said an offer of $1,000 tournament. Hogan said NYU was to Kelly to shave points in a Feb. to win by less than 10 but won by 18 game with Holy Cross at Storrs, 19 points, 78-59 "because Connect- Conn., was called off at the last icut played so badly." Hogan said minute when things got "too hot" the fixer let Paprocky keep the and bookmakers took the game $1,000 "charging it off to good "off the boards" (refused bets). will." Another bribery count against Kelly of Orlando, Fla., Portnoy Tucker involved an alleged offer of Brooklyn and Paprocky of New of $1,000 a game to Fred Port- York all had been .mentioned pre- noy, Columbia sophomore, Sept. viously in the scandal. WORDS FOR THE WORLD '41 OFF WE GO--That's what Bob Webster, left, and Ron Jaco are saying as they prepare for a six-week tour of the Far East with a group of synchronized swimmers, all girls. Jaco will probably do a comedy diving routine on the tour. it I 4 tV 25-foot Trap Shot Gives Campbell Early Flint Lead The Gift of God to this enlightened age is the knowledge of the oneness of mankind and the fundamental one- ness of religion. -Baha'i Writings Student meetings every Friday at 8:00 P.M. at 418 Lawrence. Everyone is welcome. For transportation call NO 8-9085 or NO 3-2904. Books are available at the U of M libraries. BAHAI TEMPLE Wilmette, Ill. Ai AIR CONDITIONED BOWLIN 1 :00 P.M.-1 1 :00 P.M. daily except Sun. at the MICHIGAN UNION l I l i t f FLINT (A') - Joe Campbell, a cigar-smoking towhead, sank a 25-foot shot from a sand trap on the 18th hole yesterday and seized a one-stroke, first-round lead in the $53,000 Flint Open. Campbell had a four-under par 35-33-68 and led Stan Sikes, a rookie on the pro tour, by the margin ~of his spectacular shot from the sand. The 25-year-old Campbell, a compactly-built ex-Purdue basket- ball player out of Chattanooga, Tenn., came down the 18th tied with Sikes, who'd taken the lead with a 69-a half-hour before. Campbell's second shot was long enough, but bounded down into a trap at the right of the green. His sand blast bounced once and rolled into the cup on the par- 4 No. 18 hole. Campbell and Sikes rocketed past more experienced pros Lionel Herbert, Jerry Magee and defend- ing champion Mike Souchak. This trio fired 70's as the'large 159-man field had trouble crashing the par barrier on the 7,280-yard Warwick Hills course in suburban Grand Blanc. Par pn this, the longest course of the pro tour, is 36-36--72. Campbell was as scorching as the 89-degree weather that had most of the pros complaining. "That wasn't the only one I chipped into the cup," grinned Campbell. "I chipped one in on t~he fourth, too." Campbell had five birdies and just one bogey in his bid for his first major professional title. His greatest fame came when he won a4 $50,000 for a hole-in-one at Palm Springs, Calif., last year. Only 17 players managed to break par as many of the top pros ballooned into the high 70s. Gene Littler, crowned National Open champion two weeks ago, had a one-over-par 73. 'Mighty Mite' Wins Net Title CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (P) - Peaches Bartkowicz, the mighty mite from Hamtramck, Mich., de- feated Mississippi's Becky West, 6-4, 6-2, yesterday for the 13-un- der championship in the Southern Girls Tennis Tournament. Peaches, National 11- and 13- under champion, dashed the hopes of Becky, a Jackson lass, to be- come the only three-title winner in this year's Southern. Peaches, who is 12, also is in the finals of the 15-year singles division, while Becky teams up again this afternoon with Kay Walls of New Orleans for a crack at the division doubles crown. ,: Where to Dine p°' II ._ L U AI A 2a 1 ., dj ...: CHUCK WAGON LUNCHES and DINNERS FINE SALADS and SANDWICHES Specializing in Roost Beef Serving Wines and Beers from all over the world QUICK LUNCH SERVICE recommended by Duncan Hines and Gourmet CATERING SERVICE AVAILABLE OPEN 7 DAYS 2045 Packard Hours 1 1 A.M.-9 P.M. NO 2-1661 I Planning a party? We accommodate groups of ten to thirty,-with food and appointments to the most exacting taste. There's a wide choice of menus, efficient service, and personal assistance on all details. May we give you complete information? _ Vke Corner floue S. Thayer at Washington in Ann Arbor A block west of Rackham BIdg.-NO 6-6056 I 41 I JUNE 26 to AUG 18 For children between the ages of 11 and 18.. Pareints-give your children the priceless gift of typing skill dur- ing vacation morning hours this summer. It's lots of fun! The ability to type will: Help get better grades in High School and College. Win positions on the staff of school publications. Be useful in earning mon- ey and winning advance- r + h' S. fij iii; . ,f ' . .t A w A .,: *s .: i p ' .',. ,s . :, . :. . . - w: a' I i LARRY DAVIS, Proprietor 9 VV I 1 '.4 q New Shipments of USED TEXTBOOKS arriving daily! 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