Sunday, September 7, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven THE ICHIAN DILY age eve Mets gain on By The Asociated Press NEW YORK - Jerry Grote sparked a two-run third inning with a leadoff homer and Don Cardwell and Tug McGraw com- bined for a six-hitter, leading the New York Mets to a 3-0 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies Sat- urday. The victory coupled with Chi- cago's loss to Pittsburgh moved the Mets to within 3'2 games of the first-place Cubs in the Na- tional League East. The other Mets runs came in the third on infield hits by Bud Harrelson and Cardwell. a sac- crifice by Tommie Agee and' Wayne Garrett's sacrifice fly and in the seventh when Harrelson doubled and scored in McGraw's single. Cardwell, 6-9 yielded four hits in the six innings he worked, and McGraw, who took over at the top of the seventh, gave up two the rest of the way. Philadelphia threatened in the fifth. Ron Stone led off with a single and, after two force-outs, loser Jerry Johnson singled and Terry Harman walked to load the bases. Johnny Briggs then lined out to second baseman Ken Bos- well, who made a diving catch. Pirates pound Cubs CHICAGO-The charging Pitts- burgh Pirates broke loose with a six-run rally in the third inning and lashed out a season high of 19 hits for a 13-4 victory Saturday which sent to the Chicago Cubs tumbling to their third straight defeat. The outcome saw the Cubs' lead in the National League East shrink to 3 ? games over the New York Mets who downed Philadelphia 3-0 while the third place Pirates pulled within 8' games of first place. Pittsburgh sent 11 men to bat in the big third and collected eight hits with six different play- ers driving in a run each. The ral- ly kayoed Ferguson Jenkins who sought to become a 20-game win- ner but took this 12th defeat in- stead. Bob Veale, 11-11, recorded his seventh straight victory and be- came especially tough aftei the Pirates had snapped a 3-3 tie with their third inning rally. The Pirates bounced back scor- ing three runs in the seconad with Gene Alley driving in two of the runs with a single which ir etched his hitting streak to 19 str'iht games. A walk and singles b; Don Young and Jenkins tied it is ;he bottom of the second before the Pirates broke it wide open in the third as Al Oliver and Sanguilen got things going with conse:utive doubles. Oliver also cracked a two-run homer in the fifth while Carl ,f ay-' for collected four hits and Alley and Matty Alou drove in ih)ee runs each. Tigers edge Orioles DETROIT - Tom Tresh hit a one-out homer in the 11th inning Saturday, lifting the Detroit Tig- ers to a 5-4 victory over the Baltimore Orioles. Tresh connected off Eddie Watt, 4-2, for his 13th homer. The Tigers scored four runs in the first inning - three on Wil- lie Horton's 26th homer - and survived several Baltimore threats until the eight when the Orioles tied it on Dave Johnson'shdouble. Starter Mickey Lolich w a s daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: ELLIOTT BERRY shaky through the early innings, particularly in the third when Paul Blair and Boog Powell hom- ered. Blair hit his 26th and Pow- ell his 37th. The- Orioles scored another run in the first when Blair walk- ed and scored on Powell's double off the right center field barrier.j Detroit tok the lead in the first when rookie Cesar Gutierez beat out a single and scored on Norm Cash's single. Jim Northrup, who singled ahead of Cash, also scor- ed on Horton's homer. Red Sox take Senators BOSTON - Cal Yastrzemski" and rookie Syd O'Brien each lined three hits, including homers, and drove in three runs apiece Satur- day in powering the Boston Red Sox to a 9-5 victory over th Washington Senators, Yastrzemski hit his 35th homer in the first, singled in the second and doubled home a run for his 100th RBI in the third. Cubs O'Brien hit a two-run homer, his eighth, in the second, singled in the third and tripled in the fifth. He scored after each hit. Del Unser led off the Wash- ington seventh with an infield hit and Lee Maye followed with his ninth homer. Ed Stroud had a three-run shot in the eighth. Reds steal one CINCINNATI - Gary Nolan fired a four-hitter and Woody Woodward stole home, helping the Cincinnati Reds beat Atlanta 2-1 last night. Bobby Tolan walked, stole see- ond and scored on Tony Perez' single in the first, giving Nolan a quick lead. Then, in the second, Woodward singled and two outs late' r'aced to third on Tolan's single. Tolan broke for second and stole the base as Woodward slid across the plate on the front end of the double steal, giving Nolan a 2-0 lead. Nolan retired 16 of the first 17 men he faced before Felipe Alou spoiled his bid for a no-hitter with a line single to left in the sixth. Orlando Cepeda opened the sev- enth with a single and got as far as third before Nolan threw out pinch-hitter Rico Carty. The Braves nicked Nolan for a run in the ninth when Cepeda and Clete Boyer singled and Felix fMillan hit a sacrifice fly. Tiis sIasI A's OAKLAND-Cesar Tovar blast- ed a two-run homer in the 18th inning yesterday, giving the Min- nesota Twins an 8-6 marathon victory over the Oakland Athletics. The victory gave Minnesota a 71 game lead over the A's in the American League's West Division. Tovar, who beat the A's Thurs- day night with a 10th-inning grand slam, connected after Jnim Holt opened the 18th with a single and was forced at second by Ted Uhlaender. It was Tovar's ninth homer of the year. Tony Oliva's second home run of the game and 21st. of the sea- son had given the Twins a 6-5 lead in the top of the 16th but the A's battled right back to tie it again with Bert Campaneris mold- ing the run. Campaneris opened the inning with a single, stole second and third and scored on Dick Green's sacrifice fly, tying the game again. The A's had tied the score with a four-run burst in the fifth in- ning-three of the runs scoring on Reggie Jackson's 46th homer. A double error by shortstop Rich Renick got the A's rally going and all the runs were un- earned. Oliva had socked a three-run homer earlier as the Twins rushed into a 4-0 lead. Twins' Manager Billy Martin was ejected from the game in the fifth inning for arguing on a half- swing strike to Rich Reese and Coach Art Fowler also got the thumb in the 14th for arguing on a call at first base. NEVER BUY flashbulbs again. Buy this fabulous electronic flash unit and start saving! Get better pictures, too. -Associated Press CHARLIE SANDERS (88) of the Detroit Lions is upended after hauling in a pass in the Lions 23-21 victory over the Philadelphia Eagles. The Lions, who blew a 20-0 lead, managed to hang on with the kicking ability of Errol Mann. Lions Eagles; Cowboys wp Jets N ;4 x t . y d By The Associated Press E RALEIGH, N.C. --- A spectacular' 95-yard touchdown run by Lem Barney and the steady field goal kicking of Errol Mann led the De- troit Lions to a 23-21 victory over the Philadelphia Eagles in a Na- tional Football League exhibition game last night. A 32-vard field goal by Mann, his third of the night, gave the! Lions their winning margin in the last 39 seconds of the game after the Eagles had overcome a 20-point deficit and surged into the lead. The Eagles' second half come- back was sparked by the passing of veteran quarterback Norman Snead. Snead passed for 42 yards and 23 yards on drives which led to two Philadelphia touchdowns and then connected with Hawkins en a 56-yard pass-run combination for the Eagles' final marker. Barney's touchdown run canre on a pass interception. He pickedI off a bullet-like aerial by Phila- delphia rookie quarterback Billy Guy Anderson to stop a steady drive by the Eagles toward the De- troit goal in the second quarter. DALLAS, Tex. Rookie Roger Staubach electrified a sluggish Dallas offense with a dazzling 17-yard touchdown run last night and directed the Cowboys to a 25- 9 inter-league professional foot- ball victory over the Joe Namath- less world champion New York Jets. Broadway Joe who failed to suit up because of a leg injury got a lusty round of boos from the sellout crowd of 74,701. He was taunted by the Dallas crowd xwith cries of "We want Joe" as the Codboys built up a big second half lead. Staubach, a 1963 Heisnan award winner from Navy, entered the game deep in the second period after starting quarterback Craig Morton dislocated the index lower of his right hand. Dallas trailed 9-3 at the time on field goals of 33. 15, and 15 yards by Jim Turner. Staubach whipped the Cowbo'ys 76 yards in 10 plays. With lour second remaining from the Jt 17. 'he set sail for the goal. He huck off two New York tacklers at the 10 and swan-dived into dIe end zone in the arms of Jet cor'nei'back Cornell Gordon for the touchSown to give Dallas a 10-9 halItime lad. The Cowboys never trailed Itter that. I- . WASHINGTON Bill Nelsen arched a tie-breaking toueh'iown pass to Gary Collins as Cleveland cliped Washington 20-10 last m:i it to pin Coach Vince Lombardi ,.ith the worst pre-season record of his legendary career. Nelsen broke a 10-10 half'ime deadlock with a 15-yard flip to Collins on the fifth play of the second half, Don Cockroft nailed down the victory with his zec- ond field goal in the fading see- osds of the game. ULTIMA 300 " Get 450 flashes per set of batteries " Kodachrome-X Guide number is 48 " Small and compact - 1' x 2 x 3' " Guaranteed one full year, both parts and labor * Tried and proven (we've sold hundreds at $17.95) Now available for less money than our most popular flashgun and two packages of bulbs . :d. yU .. ;h Sa'i'ay nil tI , 1 MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS Subscribe to The Michigan Daily .AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Division W L Prt. G13 nmlimore 91 45 .676 - Detroit 80 58 .580 13% Boston 7- 62 .544 1814 Washington 71 68 .511 23 New York 69 68 .504 24 Cleveland 55 84 .396 39 We'stern DIivision Minnesota 84 53 .613 - oakland 76 60 .559 7% 'talitornia 58 76 .433 2414 xKansas City 55 81 .40-1 281: xChicago 53 81 .396 291.. xSeattle 51 84 .378 32 x-Late games not included Yesterday's Results Detroit 3, Baltimore 4, 11 innings New York I, Cleveland 0 Roston 9, Washington 5 Chicago at California (inc.) Kansas City at Seattle (inc.) Minnesota 8, Oakland 6, 18 innings NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Division Chicago New 'ork Pittsburgh St. Louis Philadelphia Montreal W'esternH San Francisro Cincinnati xLos Angeles Atlanta Houston xSan Diego W L 84 55 79 57 73 61 73 64 55 81 42 96 Division 77 60 74 60 i4 61 75 64 71 65 42 95 Pct. .604 .581 .545 .533 .404 .304 .552 .548 .540 .522 .307 011 -B 3"' sa 10 27 41. 3 5 35 x-Late game not included Yesterday's Results Montreal 3, St. Louis 2 New York 3, Philadelphia o Pittsburgh 13, Chicago 4 Cincinnati 2, Atlanta 1 Los Angeles at San Diego (inc.) San Francisco 7, Houston 6 U of M Lacrosse MASS MEETING 7:30 MONDAY, SEPT. 8 Business Administration Building 1 st floor Printed Copies While You Wait Also Photo-Copy Service REASONABLE PRICES Wedding Invitations and Christmas Cards INSTA-PRINT I've got my interview set between computer lab and econ hurry up bus I'll be late for class wonder if Alcoa's doing anything about traffic jams I read somewhere they're solving rapid transit problems and helping explore the seas and outer space and working with packaging and automotive applications So when I go in I'll tell it like it is-for me and they'll tell it like it is-- for them Straight questions-straight answers and they won't care if the bus is a little late Get together with Alcoa: OCTOBER 9, 10, 1969 An Equal Opportunity Employer A Plans for Progress Company 221 S. Main Phone: 761-6636 . .. A , ,, _ a Change for the better with Alcoa OALCDA HO, ECO I G '69 lASS MEETING TUESDAY CrDTIAADCD 1A4