six THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1967 SIX WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 9,1967 ['igers Split Pair; pubs, Mets Win ,1 MUSKET Ensemble to DETROIT - Dick McAuliffe raced home on J. C. Martin's passed ball with two men out in the 10th inning, giving Detroit a 2-1 victory over the Chicago White Sox in the first game of a doubleheader. Dennis McLain, who ran his record to 14-12 with his four-hit performance, led off the 10th with an infield hit off relief pit- cher Hoyt Wilhelm, 6-2. He ad- vanced on a sacrifice and Mc- Auliffe walked. Al Kaline then singled, but left- fielder Ken Barry, who entered the game before McAuliffe came to bat, threw out McLain at the plate, the other runners going to second and third. McAuliffe then scored when Martin let the first pitch to Wil- lie Horton get by him. In the second game, Chicago's Don Buford crossed home plate from second with the winning run in the 10th inning on a bobbled ball by Dick McAuliffe. Tom Mc- Craw followed Bufford on a Rocky Colavite's single to make the final score 6-4. Dick Wickersham (4-3) of the Tigers absorbed the loss. Don Mc- Mahan of Chicago recorded his 2nd victory against two losses. The Tigers lost a chance to win the game in the bottom of the ninth with the game tied and bases loaded after two outs. Third baseman Don Wert went to a full count before grounding to Chicago third baseman Ken Boyer for the last out of the inning. Cubs Take Pirates CHICAGO-The Chicago Cubs, bouyed by home runs from Ron Santo and Randy Hundley, scored their first victory in nine starts yesterday, whipping the Pittsburgh Pirates 8-4. The Cubs, who had lost seven before struggling to a 3-3 tie in 14 innings Monday, spotted the Pirates two first inning runs, but bounced back in their half of the inning with Ernie Banks driving in two with a double. Hundley's homer, leading off the second, put the Cubs ahead to stay. Chicago added another before the inning was over on Adolfo Phillips' double, Joe Niekro's sacri- fice and a sacrifice fly by Don Kessinger. The Cubs picked up one in the fourth on some wild play by the Pirates. Phillips singled and was sacrificed to second by Niekro. Pi- rate catcher Manuel Sanguillen threw past third and Phillips romped home. Santo's homer, his 24th of the season, followed a single by Glen Beckert in the fifth and the Cubs got their last run in the sixth on a double by Hundley, a single by Kessinger and a throwing er- ror by Gene Alley. The victory was No. 60 for the Cubs, one more than they won all last season. A's Take First KANSAS CITY - Ken Harrel- son and Danny Cater drove in two runs apiece and Jack Aker .snuf- fed out a ninth inning rally as Kansas City defeated slumping Boston 5-3 in the first game of a twi-night doubleheader. It was the fourth straight loss for the Red Sox, who snapped a 19-inning scoreless string when Rico Petrocelil slammed a n eighth-inning home run. Tony Conigliaro's two - run homer in the ninth helped knock out starter Jim "Catfish" Hunter but Aker came on to get the final out with a man on. Hunter drove in one run with a double and then started Kansas City's three-run rally in the sixth with a single. He held the Red Sox scoreless on three hits until the eighth. Harrelson drove in single runs in the first and sixth and Cater knocked in two runs in the sixth. In the second game Norm Sieb- ern's single and an error on the hit by Jim Gosger gave the Red Sox three runs in the ninth inning and a 7-5 victory. The Red Sox battled from be- hind in the nightcap after spot- ting Kansas City a 4-0 lead. Bos- ton notched a run in the fifth and then tied it with three in the sev- enth with Carl Yastrzemski's single driving in one and Tony Conigliaro's double chasing two more across: Indians 5, Birds 3 BALTIMORE-Boog Powell's er- ror allowed the tie-breaking run to score and Chuck Hinton's sac- rifice fly produced another as Cleveland rallied for two runs in the ninth inning and a 5-3 victory over Baltimore. After Larry Brown and pinch hitter Jim King opened the In- dians' ninth with singles, Powell bobbled Vic Davalillo's roller, al- lowing Brown to score. Hinton's fly ball brought home another. * * 4 L.A. Stops Cards ST. LOUIS - The Los Angeles Dodgers built a three-run fifth inning on doubles by Lou John- son and Ron Hunt and went on to stop the first-place St. Louis Cardinals 6-2. Johnson raced home on win- ning pitcher Don Sutton's sacri- fice bunt. Then Hunt stroked a long two-run double to left off loser Dick Hughes. Johnson doubled to left leading off the fifth. Ron Fairly moved him to third with a fly ball and Johnny Roseboro was intention- ally walked. Mets 3, Braves 2 NEW YORK - Bob Johnson, who singled as a pinch hitter in a two-run ninth inning rally, led off the 11th with a homer, lifting the New York Mets to a 3-2 vic- tory over Atlanta. Johnson's homer came off Jay Ritchie, 2-3 and ended the Braves' winning streak at four games. Ron Taylor, 3-3, got the victory. The Mets, held to just one hit by Denny Lemaster through seven innings, tied the game in the ninth against Cecil Upshaw, who had stopped them with the bases loaded in the eighth. With one out in the ninth, John- son singled and scored on Ed Kranepool's pinch double. Ron Swoboda flied out, but Ed Charles singled home Kranepool. Atlanta scored in the third when Denis Menke doubled home Felipe Alou. The Braves got an unearned run in the sixth. Clete Boyer walked with two out and went to third on Rico Carty's double. When Swob- oda's throw from the outfield hit Carty at second, base. * Phillies in 10th PHILADELPHIA - Johnny Callison's two-out single in the 10th inning drove in Johnny Briggs and the Philadelphia Phil- lies edged San Francisco 5-4. Briggs opened the 10th with an infield hit and moved to second on a sacrifice. After Rich Allen was purposely walked, the run- ners advanced on an infield out and then Callison singled off Frank Linzy. It was the Phillies' eighth straight victory and the second straight loss for the Giants fol- lowing a sx-game winning streak. Twins Triumph ST. PAUL - MINNEAPOLIS - Rich Rollins smashed a two-out home run in the eighth inning, lifting the Minnesota Twins to a 3-2 victory over the Washington Senators. Rollins' fifth home run of the season soared 375 feet into the left field seats and beat Dave Baldwin, who relieved Frank Ber- taina in the seventh and struck out four of the first five bat- ters he faced. Bertainadhad singled home Washington's two runs in the fifth after Hank Allen singled and Dick Nen doubled. The hit wiped out a first inning Minnesota run produced by Harmon Killebrew's single. Reds Dump Astros CINCINNATI - Milt Pappas hurled a two-hitter as the Cin- cinnati Reds shut out Houston 5-0. Pappas, who picked up his 11th victory of the year, struck ont nine and retired 16 consecutive batters at one point in the game. The Astros' only hits were a one-out single by Jimmy Wynn in the first and Julio Gotay's bloop single in the ninth. Only one other man reached base. Lee May, who slammed two dou- bles and keyed a three-run up- rising in the fifth inning, supplied all the power the Reds needed. Tony Perez socked a solo hom- er and a run-scoring single. 0 Tour Orient On Aug. 22, the Michigan Union Show (Ko-Eds Too) will leave Ann Arbor on the first leg of a 50.000 mile tour of the Far East. The tour, completely sponsored by the Defense Dept., will take the 15-man ensemble to such faraway places as Guam, Japan and Korea, where it will perform for American troops stationed in those locations. MUSKET Director Jack Rouse says that the show, entitled "Entertainment, U.S.A.." draws from many sources for its material. Although the MUSKET group stages Broadway musicals for its Ann Arbor audiences, "very little" show material will be used on the tour, according to Rouse. Instead, "all sources" are being relied upon: pop music, rock and roll, bossa nova and folk music are all included in the better than 40 numbers the group has learned for the tour. Rouse says that last winter he submitted films and recordings of past MUSKET presentations to the Defense Dept., and that the MUSKET group is one of only "eight or ten" groups in the country to be chosen for troop entertainment. And polished entertainment it will be. The 13 people chosen. to go on the trip have been rehearsing for better than 40 hours per week since July 20. Choosing the people for the tour wasn't an easy job, Rouse says. He had to pick only 13 people from the 48 who were in the MUSKET productions last year. "Of course there was some disappointment," he says, "but we had to choose the most versatile and most mature people in the company." Since the troupe will be gone until November, all the members had to drop out of school for the fall trimester. This presented no real problem for the girls, but the guys in the cast went to summer school so they could retain their student draft deferments while they're on the tour. t * * * 199 N fl' Story and Photography by Thomas R. Copi . _ . I I Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. Chicago 60 46 .568 Boston 59 50 .542 Minnesota 58 49 .542 nwt.--5R 50MR e NATIONAL LEAGUE GB 2 2% 2 3. St. Louis Chicago San Francisco Atlanta w 67 60 59 L 43 52 52 Pct. .611 .536 .532 .528 GB 8 81 9 56 50 i