THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY. JULIA 6. 1997 THE MICHIGAN DAILY THTTR~flAV~ JTTTV ~ iaw~ - -- ~ a.sa.fl,, i. Av au 17u[ii.}NL1L3. Qf IZYU$ i Newcombe, Bungert Clash in Wimbledon -Associated Press UTTING TAG ON HELMET is Woody Woodward of Atlanta yesterday in game with Chicago. Cubs' Ted Savage pulled in safe with a double. Tigers ueeze ynis 3-2 Twins Win, Cubs, Cards Lose By The Associated Press Ray Oyler's squeeze bunt in the eighth inning scored Mickey Stan- ley with the winning run last night as Detroit nipped Cleveland 3-2. The victory was the fourth in a row for the Tigers while the In- dians lost their fourth straight. Earlier in the eighth, Stanley tripled to drive in Norm Cash, who reached first on Tony Horton's fielding error, with the tying run. Rocky Colavito's single drove a 1-0 Cleveland lead and Horton added a run in the second on a bases-empty homer, his second. Oyler singled to lead off the fifth for Detroit and scored on a force out after advancing on a walk and a single. Fred Gladding, 3-3, who relieved in the seventh got the win. George Culver, 5-1 took the loss. Dick Reese and Ted Uhlaender slugged home runs and drove in seven runs between them as torrid Minnesota exploded for . a 10-4 victory over the New York Yan- kees. The twins, posting their eighth straight victory, swept a four- game series from the Yankees and pinned the fifth loss in a row on New York. Chico Ruiz socked a pinch dou- ble, stole third and then scored on reliever Nelson Briles' wild pitch in the 10th inning giving the Cincin- nati Reds 2-1 victory over slump- ing St. Louis. The Cardinals retained their one-half game National League lead when Atlanta defeated second place Chicago 4-2, on Hank Aaron's three-run homer in the seventh inning.. Aaron's two-out blast, his 21st of the year, came off reliever Chuck Hartenstein, brought in when Chicago starter Rich Nye yielded a single to Woody Wood- ward and walked Mack Jones. Nye, suffering his fourth loss against seven victories, had given up only four hits when he was lifed, and had not allowed a Brave past second base. He struck out eight and walked five. Hal Lanier's two-out single de- livered Willie McCovey with the winning run in the seventh inning as the San Francisco Giants nip- ped the New York Mets 2-1. McCovey opened the Giants' sev- enth with a single and moved to third on a sacrifice and an in- field out before Lanier singled him across. That was enough to beat Bob Shaw, 2-8. Gaylord Perry, a 20-game win- ner last year, made his first relief appearance of the season and saved Mike McCormick's 10th vic- tory. Don Sutton scattered seven hits as Los Angeles whipped iPttsburgh 5-3 and ended its four-game losing streak. Sutton, 6-9, struck out seven and walked none as the Dodgers staked him to an early 4-0 lead. Ron Fairly singled home Los Angeles' first run in the first after Steve Blass yielded two walks, and Dick Schofield singled in the second to score John Rose- boro. Willie Davis tripled off Blass to start the third and the Dodgers scored twice when reliever Woody Fryman was tagged for a single by LourJohnson and a triple by Roseboro. Rick Wise singled home a run and with ninth inning held from Dick Hall, pitched the Philadel- phia Phillies to a 3-2 victory over Houston. It was the Phillies' fourth straight victory and their 10th triumph in the last 13 games. Frank Howard drove in two runs with his 21st homer and Cap Peterson doubled in two more is the Washington Senators de- feated the Kansas City Athletics 5-3. Howard's 461-foot drive sailed over the left-center field fence in the third inning and scored Ken McMullen, who had singled. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID KNOKE WIMBLEDON, England (/P) - Wilhelm Bungert of West Ger- many and John Newcombe of Aus- tralia qualified for the men's sin- gles final in the 81st Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Championships yes- terday, and Bungert had the chance of making a little bit of history. No German has ever won this hallowed crown of lawn tennis. Even the great Baron Gottfried Von Cramm never landed the title for Germany. Von Cramm made the final three times, in 1935-36-37, and three times he went down. Australians have won the title nine times since the end of the second World War. So it would be no great surprise if Newcombe, seeded No. 3, took it again and made it 10 times for the Aussies with . a victory over unseeded Bungert. Bungert defeated Britain's No. 1 ace, Roger Taylor, 6-4, 6-8, 2-6, 6-4, 6-4 in a tough match where the German's shrewdness paid off in the end. Newcombe knocked out left-hander Nicola Pilic of Yugoslavia 9-7, 4-6,'6-3, 6-4. A sell-out crowd of 18,000 watched both matches in the sort of humidity that can turn the center court into something akin to a Turkish bath. A total crowd of 240,000 has crammed Wimbledon in the past nine days of championship play. The girls go on court in the singles today, and it's a case of three Americans against one Briton. Mrs. Billie Jean King, the de- fending champion from Long Beach, Calif., meets Kathy Har- ter, Seal Beach, Calif., and Mrs. Ann Haydon Joies of Britain plays Rosemary Casals of San Francisco. Mrs. King and Mrs. Jones are the only seeds left in the women's singles in one of the most devas- tating Wimbledonshin the cham- pionship's 90-year history. Seeds fell like autumn leaves in both the men's and women's sin- gles-and today it is up to top- seeded Mrs. King and third-seed- ed Mrs. Jones to restore a little pride in the seeding committee. Newcombe found himself the only ranked player left in the semifinals. That was the first time such a thing had happened since seeding started 40 years ago. Taylor had the partisan home crowd on his side in the match against Bungert, but for the German it was third-time luck. Bungert, now 28 years old, was a losing semifinalist in 1963 and 1964. In the fifth - set, Bungert, who served 18 double faults in the match, pulled his game together in the vital final game of the fifth set and took the match with a service winner and a volley. The Necombe - Pilic match was completely dominated by service with the Aussie's serve the more reliable. Only once in each of the four sets was service broken. Men's Singles-Semifinals Wilhelm Bungert, West Ger- many, defeated Roger Taylor, Britain, 6-4, 6-8, 2-6, 6-4, 6-4. John Newcombe, Australia, defeated Nicola Pilic, Yugo- slavia,, 9-7, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4. Women's Singles-Quarter Finals Mrs. Billie Jean King, Long Beach, Calif., defeated Virgina Wade, England, 7-5, 6-2. Rosemary Casals, San Fran-1 cisco, defeated Judy Tegart, Australia, 7-5, 6-4.I Kathy Harter, Seal Beach,I Calif., defeated Lesley Turner,I Australia, 7-5, 1-6, 6-2. Ann Jones, England, defeated Mrs. Mary Eisel, St. Louis, 6-2,3 4-6, 7-5. 11 Collegiate: ConfereLunees Lash AAU MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (P)-Com- missioners of 11 major collegiate conferences yesterday accused the Amateur Athletic Union of num- erous violations of a truce in a longstanding feud with the Na- tional Collegiate Athletic Asso- ciation. The Sports Arbitration Board, appointed last year by Vice Presi- dent Hubert Humphrey to oversee the truce, was urged to start moving in the direction of settling the feud. The commissioners, whose con- ferences are members of the NC- AA, said there had been "deterior- ation rather than improvement" in the administration of amateur, sports in areas covered by the Humphrey-inspired mortatorium. They sent a letter to that effect to Humphrey and the chairman ofj the arbitration board. A resolution passed by the group charged the AAU with "numerous violations of the mora- torium," including some "caprici- ous" ineligibility rulings. The as- sociation represents more than 200 major colleges and universities.3 The commissioners, winding up a five-day meeting of the Col- legiate Commissioner Association, voted to hold their next meeting, June 21-24 in either Seattle, Wash., or British Columbia. * * Aiston Picks Nine for All-Stars CINCINNATI 41P)-If the need arises, manager Walter Alston ofI the Los Angeles Dodgers, can do some juggling with his National League line-up in the annual ma- jor league All-Star Game at Ana- heim July 11. Alston named nine players yes- terday to go with the starting line-up, selected by a vote of the! players and the pitchers he pre- viously named. The nine are: Catchers Tom Haller of San Francisco and Tim McCarver of St. Louis; infielders Ernie Bariks of Chicago and Tom- my Helms and Tony Perez of Cin- cinnati; and outfielders Willie Mays of San Francisco, Pete Rose of Cincinnati and Rusty Staub and Jimmy Wynn of Houston. In making the selections, Alston passed up some second place choices in the player balloting but in picking the trio of Cincinnati players he will have three who can play several positions. The Redsr had been passed up in selectionsk fOr the starting line-up and thez pitchers. Helms can play second, third or shortstop. Perez can play third or1 first and Rose can play third or second as well as in the outfield. Selection of Mays, fourth in the t balloting for the three startinga outfield positions, means the Giant star will keep at least part of his All-Star team record. He had been picked for the starting line-up ever since 1957 until this year. He has an All-Star Game batting average of .379. Banks is second in seniority with 12 games and a .290 batting aver- age. He finished third in the bal-1 loting by players to starter Or-t lando Cepeda of St. Louis and Felipe Alou of Atlanta. Alou was. bypassed.t Helms a regular second base- man, also finished third in the balloting behind starter Bill Ma- zeroski of Pittsburgh and Julian Javier of St. Louis. Perez was sec- ond in the balloting to Richie Al- len of Philadelphia. McCarver and Haller finished second and third behind Joe Torre of Atlanta for the catcher's job. The four reserve outfielders named by Alston finished in or- der right behind startersdRoberto Aaron of Atlanta and Lou Brock of St. Louis. Helms, Perez, Staub and Wynn will be on the squad for the first time. The full 25-man roster shows St. Louis with four players, Cin- cinnanti, San Francisco, Pitts- burgh, Atlanta and Houston with three each; Chicago and Los An- geles with two each and New York and Philadelphia with one each. ., * 4 * * * 4e 5f1igwn at4 420 Maynard Street Circulation 1-4 p.m., 764-0558 Circulation Complaints 9-11 a.m., 764-0558 Classified 12:30-2:30 p.m., 764-0557 Display 1-3 p.m., 764-0554 Student Publications Office 8 a.m.-5 p.m., 764-0550 Major League Standings -11 NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. St. Louis 46 31 .597 Chicago 46 32 .589 Cincinnati 45 36 .555 Atlanta 41 37 .526 San Francisco 42 38 .525 Pittsburgh 38 37 .507 Philadelphia 39 38 .506 Los Angeles 34 44 .435 New York 29 46 .387 Houston 29 50 .367 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Philadelphia 3, Houston 2 San Francisco 2, New York 1 Los Angeles 5, Pittsburgh 3 Atlanta'4, Chicago 2 Cincinnati 2, St. Louis 1 TODAY'S GAMES. Chicago at Houston (n) Cincinnati at St. Louis (n) Only games scheduled AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. GB GB 3 51/ 5Y2 7 7 12Y2 16 18 Chicago 45 30 .600 Minnesota 43 34 .558 Detroit 42 34 .553 x-Boston 40 35 .533 x-California 40 40 .500 Cleveland 38 40 .487 Baltimore 36 41 .468: New York 34 43 .442 Kansas City 35 45 .437 Washington 34 45 .430: x-Late game not included: YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Detroit 3, Cleveland 2 Washington 5, Kansas City 3 Minnesota 10, New York 4 Chicago 3, Baltimore 2 Boston at California (inc) TODAY'S GAMES Baltimore at Chicago Only game scheduled 3 3% 5 74 10 12 124 13 -T AN K SEALRTS~ Who got the job? * Wr UTWALLS OPTIONAL AT EXTRA *OST. CC OLKSWAGEN OF AMERICA. INC. Pd *4 Ford Cortina HENDERSON FORD SPORTCENTER 514 E. WASH I NGTONPH. 662-3261 EXT. 60 A Vietnam Forum: "YOUTH VIEWS THE WAR" Thursday, July 6-8 P.M. St. Andrews Episcopal Church, 306 N. Division, A.A. Panel Ruth Baumann, Senior, U of M; Exc. 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