Friday, September 12, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Friday, September 1 2, 1 969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven I. CUBS LOSE EI(;TH STRAiGHT: AmazingCMets By The A-,sociated Press NEW YORK--The first-place New York Mets increased their National League East Division lead yesterday, beating' the Montreal Expos 4-0 behind Gary Gentry's six-hitter. The victory was the seventh straight for the Mets and stretched their bulge to 2 games over the Chicago Cubs who lost a 4-3 decision to Philadelphia. Gentry, who evened his record at 11-11, kpt the Expoj hits well scattered and never was in serious trouble. Hot-hit-j ting Ken Boswell again led New York's offense. Boswell, who add to lead Major League Standings 0I 76ers Jackson jumps; NHL to expand in 1970 By The Associated Press NEW YORK - Luke Jackson, star center of the Philadelphia 76ers, and four top referees of the National Basketball Association switched to the rival American Basketball Association yesterday as the pro basketball war continued to escalate. Jackson, a member of the 1964 Olympic team and a graduate, of Pan American University in Texas, became the third NBA star in recent weeks to jump to the ABA. However, Jackson will play out his option with Philadelphia this season and join the Cougars next year. The referees shifting to the ABA are Norm Drucker, 47, of East Meadow, N.Y., Earl Strom, 41, of Pottstown, Pa.; Joe Gushue, 36, of Philadelphia, and John Vanak, 36, of Lansford, Pa. Drucker, the senior NBA referee among the group, spent 15 years in the NBA. while Strom put in 12 years, Gushue eight and Vanak seven. Baltimore Detroit Boston Washingti New York Cleveland Minnesot Oakland Califtornia Kansas C Chicago Seattle I AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division %V L P 99 45A 82 61 76 65 on 71 70 k 70 72 57 87 West Division a 86 56. 17764 a 61 79 itv 59 83 56 84 55 86 .688 .573 .539 .514 .493 .396 .606 .536 .436 .415 .400 .390 GB 16 21r. 25 28 42 -? 24 27 29 30k, NATI Ea New York Chicago Pittsburgh St. Louis Philadelphia Montreal Wq Cincinnati Atlanta San Francisco Los Angeles Houston San Diego ONAL LEAGUE ast Division "' L 85 57 84 60 76 64 77 66 57 84 44 100 had five hits in Wednesday's doubleheader sweep that put the Mets in first place for the first time ever, drilled two more yesterday. Boswell singled in the third when the Mets scored their first run and doubled another run home in the fifth. Tommie Agee also had two hits for the Mets and Cleon Jones scored twice. Agee singled leading off the third and marked time while Wayne Garrett popped up. Then he stole second and was awarded third when Gary Sutherland in- terfered with him. M o in e a t later, Agee scored on a passed ball by catcher John Bateman. Two innings later, Jones sin- Bled, moved to second as Art Shamsky walked and scored on Boswell's double. Jones walked and scored all the way from first on Shamsky's two-out single to center in the sixth. Jones was removed Irom the game in the next iniing because of a slight muscle strain in the left. side of the lower back. Rod Gaspar singled home the game's final run in the eighth. PHILADELPHIA - Eighth-in- ning doubles by Tony Taylor and Johnny Briggs brought Philadel- phia from behind and Richie Al- len put the Phillies in front with daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: PhIL HERTZ a two-run homer that sent the plummeting Chicago Cubs to a 4-3 setback last night. It extended the Cubs' longest losing streak of the season to eight games and dropped them. two games behind the New York Mets in the National League East ---three games in the loss column, Ernie Banks of Chicago had snapped a 1-1 tie in the top of the eighth with his 22nd home run of the season but tha Phillies quickly bounced back in their half. Reds first CINCINNATI -- Pete R o s e drove in three runs with a double and a bunt single as the Cincin- nati Reds fought off lowly San Diego 6-4 last night and moved back into first place in the Na- tional League West. They lead Atlanta by one per- Vest Division 77 63 79 65 > 78 65 76 65 75 66 45 98 Pct. .599 .583 .543 .538 .404 .306 .550 .549 .545 .539 .532 .315 GB 8 27' > 42 - , 2 y. 33',' CLASSICAL POPULAR. FOLK agreeable music at an agreeable price Yesterday's Results Baltimore 4, Boston 2 CleSveland 5, Detroit 2 Washington 7, New York 3 Kansas City 3, California 0 Chicago 4, Minnesota 0 Oakland 6. Seattle 3 Today's Games Detroit at Washington, night California at Seattle, 2, twi-night Kansas City at Minnesota, night Oakland at Chicago, night Cleveland at Baltimore, night Boston at New York, 2, twi-night Yesterday's Results Philadelphia 4, Chicago 3 New York 4, Montreal 0 Pittsburgh 3, St. Louis 2 Los Angeles 1, Houston 0 C'incinnati 6, San Diego 4 Atlanta 5, San Francisco 3 Today's Gaines Montreal at Philadelphia, night New York at Pittsburgh, 2, twi-night Chicago at St. Louis, night Houston at Atlanta, night San Diego at Los Angeles, night Cincinnati at San Francisco, night centage point and by one-half game. The Reds broke four runs in the San Diego starter San Francisco loaded and two out in the eighth inning, leading the Atlanta Braves in front with past San Francisco 5-3 last night third against despite two homers by the Giants'' Tommie Sisk, Willie McCovey. " NEW YORK - The National Hockey League will expand from 12 to 14 teams starting with the 1970-71 season, it was announced yesterday. The announcement was made at simultaneous press conferences in New York and Montreal. Clarence Campbell, the NHL president, said the league had re- ceived informal applications for franchises from Vancouver, Balti- more, Buffalo, Atlanta, Cleveland, Kansas City and Washington. The cost of each new franchise will be $6 million. When -the circuit expanded from six to 12 teams three years ago, the cost was $2 million each. 0 KANSAS CITY - Ewing Kauffman, owner of the Kansas City Royals baseball team. yesterday announced plans for opening in Florida next summer a baseball academy to be built at the cost of $1 million. Kauffman plans to spend $500,000 more on the operation of the academy in the first year and sign approximately 50 players, mostly 17 and 18 years old, for the program. * MINNEAPOLIS -- The Minnesota Vikings announced yesterday final agreement to play their Oct. 5 National Football League game against the Green Bay Packers at Memorial Stadium on the Univer- sity of Minnesota campus here. The Vikings asked the university for use of the stadium after the Minnesota Twins of the American League said the 47,644-seat Metropolitan Stadium would not be available if the Twins got into the playoffs. * MONTREAL - Flanker Roy Jefferson, one of the National Football League's top receivers last season, was suspended indefinitely and fined yesterday by the Pittsburgh Steelers for violating training curfew. Jefferson, a fifth-year man from Utah, was ordered to re- turn to Pittsburgh before the start of the Steelers' final exhibition game against the New York Giants in Montreal. 717 North University Ann Arbor, Michigan MUSIC 51-10 1-11. Gary Nolan singled, Ted Savage walked and a single by, Bobby Tolan scored Nolan. Roser then unloaded a two-run double. Rose was nailed at the plate, trying to score on Johnny Bench's! single but Lee May doubled Bench across after Jack Baldschun re- lieved Sisk.1 G;ins scalped ATLANTA -- Mike Lum, a pinch hitter, slapped a tie-break-, ing two-run single with the bases, Phipps to carry Purdue hopes Rico Carty opened the eighth with a single off Frank Linzy and Oscar Brown ran for him. Orlando Cepeda also singled and, with one out, both runners moved up on Tony Gonzalez' infield out. Sonny Jackson was purposely passed but Lum batted for winning pitcher Ron Reed, 16-9, and sin- gled to center. )odgers nip Astros HOUSTON - L e f t-h a n d e r Claude Osteen protected a one- run lead from the first inning last night and tamed Houston on four hits as the Los Angeles Dod- gers squeaked by the Astros 1-0. It was Osteen's fifth consecutive triumph over Houston this season and gave the Dodgers undisputed possession of fourth place in the hectic National League West. Maury Wills opened the game with a double and continued to third when Jesus Alou fumbled the ball. Manny Mota then doubled Wills across before Don Wilson, 16-11, checked the Dodgers on three hits the rest of the way. Osteen, 19-12, worked out of serious threats in the fourth and Ninth, striking out Jim Wynn each timne. By JOE FOUCHEY Even without All-American Le- roy Keyes and fullback Perry Williams, Purdue's word for foot- ball is "win". Coach Jack Mollenkopf explains this philosophy. "Although o u r losses were tremendous, we still have some good football players". Former Michigan coach T o n y Mason added, "We're not an ex- ceptionally talented team, not like last year. But we're getting bet- ter'. If a few guys come through it could be a great year'. The confidence expressed by lhe coaches is not unfounded. PURDUE Lafayette, Indiana Coach: Jack Mollenkopf Coach's Record: 76-37-9 1968 ConferencerRecord: 5-2-0, tied for 3rd 196r Record: 8-2-0 Lettermen Lost: 27 Lettermen Returning: 29 All Big-Ten quarterback Mike Phipps is returning, ready to set more records. Phipps was hampered last year by a mid-season ankle sprain. Now, completely recovered, he is ready to start with the new of- fense. The straight drop-back pass will be injected into the series of pass plays. Phipps has all the confidence and poise necessary to handle his inexperienced receivers. Ashley Bell 6-4, 218). a sophomore, will turn. Tim Foley, All-Academic All-American, is the team leader, in mass interceptions. Two of the three Purdue line- backers are one year veterans. Veno Paraskevas 16-0, 210), and Bob Brumby (6-0, 210), both are wvise to the opposing teams' plays and set ups. However, Mollenkopf has one problem with his defense. If any injuries ware to occur, to any of his starting defensive eleven, it could be a disaster. Trying to hold his whole team together during the course of a Big-Ten season will be nearly im- possible. Injuries to one or two key players could kill Purdue's title hopes. Phipps and his receivers will be the key to scoring and winning. Tim Foley and the defense will hold their own against anyone. So if Purdue stays healthy, and their offense gels as is predicted, thay will undoubtedly be a first divi- sion team, possibly' even Rose Bowl material. SOPHOMORES I f you missed Soph Show '69 Mass Meeting It's not too late! Contact: UAC office 2nd floor Union ART PRINT LOAN A r Liven up your room-rent a print from Art Print Loan for a semester or year. 3511, 3516 Tuesday 3-5 Wednesday 3-5, 7-9 Thursday 7-9 Friday 3-5 SAB EREV ROSH HASHANAH, FRIDAY EVE., SEPTEMBER 12 CONSERVATIVE SERVICES: 7:30 P.M. RACKHAM LECTURE HALL AUD. CREATIVE REFORM SERVICES: 7:30 P.M. RACKHAM AMPHITHEATRE ORTHODOX SERVICES: 6:30 P.M. HILLEL LOUNGE SEPTEMBER 13 CONSERVATIVE SERVICES: 9:00 A.M. RACKHAM LECTURE HALL AUD. CREATIVE REFORM SERVICES: 10:15 A.M. RACKHAM AMPHITHEATRE ORTHODOX SERVICES: 8:30 A.M. HILLEL LOUNGE SEPTEMBER 14 CONSERVATIVE SERVICES: 9:00 A.M. RACKHAM LECTURE HALL AUD. ORTHODOX SERVICES: 8:30 A.M. HILLEL LOUNGE VE WISH ALL OUR FRIENDS A NEW YEAR OF HEALTH, HAPPINESS AND PEACE. THE HOUSE (HILLEL ) play flanker. Letterman Greg Fen- ner will be at tight-end. He is the only receiver who has caught a pass in a varsity game. Even though p~assing is Pur'- due's main weapon, their back- field, with three runners return- ing. will keep opposing defenses on the alert. The backfield will, however, be shaky in the first few games, since John Bullock, Stan Brown and Randy Cooper have on y six games experience between them. Although there are a few kinks in the offense, the qtality of the defense can never be doubted. Mollenkopf has added a 4-3 front alignment to his already strong defensive unit. The defen- sive line has an average weight of 265 pounds, while in the second- ary. six veteran performers re- KWIK 'N KLEEN' 662-4241 740 Packard 662-4251 WELCOME BACK STUDENTS! 100o Of f On All Dry Cleaning (with Student I D SH IR TS 33c on Hangers or Packaged SHRS3c withDry Cleaning Order HOURS Coin Operated Laundry Open Mon. thru Fri.7:30 a.m. to8p.m. Saturday 7 :30 a.m. to 6 p.m. WHAT IS THE -an all-campus orchestra! -sponsored by MUSKET and G&S! -performing 3 hit shows! DON'T MISS THE MASS MEETING SEPT. 15, 8 P.M.,-ROOM 3A-UNION UNIVERSITY THEATRE ORCHESTRA presents SPIDER JOHN KOERNER and 9~A nn