,, PAGE SU THE .lf ICH16AN DAIL'V ;SATUJKDAY, MAY 28, 1966 PAGE SI~ TIlL M113lih(.AN DAILY ~AiU16JJAI~, MAX ZS, 19~6 0 MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Cleveland Edges Minnesota in Ninth Inning Michigan State Captures Big Ten AllSports Title After two years of sitting firmly MSU, the only school to partici- atop the Big Ten standings in the pate in all 13 of the sports in unofficial all-sports race, Mich- which there is conference compe- igan was unceremoniously unseat- tition, pulled in four firsts, five ed this year by bitter rival Mich- seconds, two thirds, a fourth and igan State and relegated to the a tie for fourth to win the title. runner-up s Rnt-" ,1-_.,.4U_ ._- By The Associated Press CLEVELAND-Rocky Colavito's ninth-inning single brought Max Alvis home with the winning run last night as the Cleveland In- dians edged Minnesota 5-4. Alvis opened the ninth with a single and moved to second when relief pitcher Bob Allen sacrific- ed. Then Colavita tagged Johnny Klippstein's pitch for a single to center, scoring Alvis. It was the fourth straight vic- tory for the Indians and their sixth in the last seven games. The Twins tied the game 4-4 in the eighth with singles by Don Mincher and Zoilo Versalles fol- lowing a walk to Bernie Allen, producing one run and the other scoring on a double play. Cleveland jumped to an early 3-0 lead behind John O'Donoghue. Fred Witfield drove in two of the runs with a single and double, and Leon Wagner's home run account- ed for the other. * * t Tigers Lose Again DETROIT-Willie Smith drove in two runs and scored another as the California Angels edged Detroit 3-2 last night. Marcelino Lopez stopped the Ti- gers on three hits, one of them Norm Cash's home run, until the ninth. But with one out in the ninth he walked Bill Freehan, and Ray Oyler beat out an infield single. After Jerry Lumpe popped up, Jake Wood singled for a run. Bob Lee then relieved Lopez and struck out Don Wert on three pitches for the game-ending out. *- * * Birds Down A's KANSAS CITY-Rookie catch- er Andy Etchebarren drove in two runs and scored another as Baltimore defeated Kansas City 4-2 last night. Etchebarren singled Sam Bow- ens home in the seventh, breaking a 2-2 tie and the Orioles added another run in the eighth on a bases-loaded passed ball. Wally Bunker gained his fourth victory with the help of Stu Mil- ler, who pitched out of a bases- loaded jam in the seventh. In the seventh, Bowens walked, stole second and went to third on a wild pitch. Adair grounded out with Bowens holding third. Etch- ebarren then singled sharply to left, scoring Bowens. Bunker gave up two singles with two out in the seventh and was replaced by Miller. Pinch hitter Waye Causey walked but Ken Harrelson grounded out. * * * Yankees Smash Sox NEW YORK - Mel Stottlemyre allowed only three singles and re- tired 19 in a row at one stretch in pitching the New York Yankees to a 4-1 victory over the Chicago White Sox last night. Stottlemyre, bringing his record to 5-3, was touched for a ground single by Don Buford in the first inning. He didn't allow another hit until Floyd Robinson singled to left field with twonout inthe seventh inning. Stottlemyre struck out eight and walked two. Chicago scored its only run with two out in the ninth when Tom McCraw walked and Roy White dropped Floyd Robinson's fly ball for a two-base error, scoring Mc- Craw. * * Nats Edge Bosox WASHINGTON - Run-scoring singles by Bob Saverine and Don Lock in the ninth inning boosted Washington past Boston 5-4 last night. The two-run rally wiped out a 4-3 lead the Red Sox had taken on George Scott's two-run homer in the eighth inning. Willie Kirkland started the Sen- ators' ninth with a single. He took second on Tony Conigliaro's wild throw and was sacrificed to third. Then he scored the tying run as Saverine singled to center field. Ken Sanders then walked Jim King, and Lock followed with an- other single to center for the win- ning run. Yeale Blanks Astros HOUSTON-Willie Stargell and Bill Mazeroski each drove in two runs, leading Pittsburgh to a 6-0 victory over Houston last night. Bob Veale allowed the Astros only two hits through seven in nings but needed relief front Pete Mikkelsen in the eighth after Houston loaded the bases on a walk and two singles. Mikkelsen struck out Lee Maye and got Jim Wynn on a fly ball, preserving Veale's sixth victory against two defeats. Reds Nip Cards ST. LOUIS-Three home runs, two of them by Vada Pinson, help- ed Cincinnati build an early lead and the Reds hung on for a 6-5 victory over St. Louis last night. The first three Cincinnati hits off Cardinal starter Art Mahaffey were homers with Pinson connect- ing in the first, Tommy Helms in the third and Pinson again in the fourth. The Reds chased Mahaffey with two singles and an error filling the bases after Pinson's second homer. John Edwards' sacrifice fly delivered one run and Jim Maloney's single brought another in. That gave Maloney a 5-0 lead, but the Cardinals fought back : t r s The all-sports title is not offi- cially recognized by the Big Ten and is usually only. computed at Michigan and State; the two schools which customarily wind up one-two in the standings. The standings are compiled on a "quality points" system. Quality points are computed by dividing the number of sports in which a ,. , . i SPORTS SHORTS: against the hard-throing right- school participates in Big Ten hander and finally knocked him competition it the total number Michigan won three conference championships and placed below fourth only once-a seventh-place tie in football. The other Michigan finishes were firsts in basketball, gym nastics and tennis; seconds in swimming, wrestling and golf; thirds in hockey and baseball with a third place tie in outdoor track; and a fourth in indoor , track. Michigan does not compete in cross country or fencing. The Wolverines had won the all-sports championship the two previous years, last year setting a record for quality point total with 9.23-better than a second-place average. In the '64-'65 season Michigan had- five .firsts, four seconds and two thirds to overwhelm the rest of the conference. * Lions Reinstate Cogdill After 77-Day Suspension a Major League Standings li By The Associated Press DETROIT - The Detroit Lions announced yesterday that they had reinstated veteran end Gail Cogdill after 77-day suspension and had fined him $1,000. Cogdill was suspended Feb. 8 for an indefinite period after cri- ticizing the National Football League club at a public meeting in Flint. He issued a public apology two days later. Contract Battle and a Ram he will remain "for many years to come." That would seem to settle the issue, except- Oakland General Manager Scot- tString cotnsha e sign- ed the 6-foot-4 NFL veteran at 12:05 a.m. Monday in an Oakland motel, with the contract to go into effect for the 1967 AFL season. "We were contacted through a third party and Gabriel came to Oakland Sunday night. I had a long conversation with him and he signed a contract with us early Monday morning," Stirling said. "I feel we have a legal and bind- out in the seventh with a three- run rally. Two of the runs came home on a double by Curt Flood, who drove in four runs in the game. Braves Top Cubs CHICAGO-Three homers, in- cluding Hank Aaron's 16th of the season, hoisted the Atlanta Braves to a 5-3 victory over the Chicago Cubs yesterday. Aaron's homer came in the fifth inning during which Joe Torre belted a two-run homer for a 5-1 Brave lead. Cub starter Ernie Broglio also was clouted for a homer by Mack Jones in the third. Atlanta's Wade Blasingame took his third verdict against three losses although he was lifted after six innings. Chicago's Billy Williams slam- med a solo homer in the fourth. Ron Santo hitmanother in the eighth. AMERICAN Cleveland Baltimore Detroit California Minnesota New York Washington Chicago Boston Kansas City LEAGUE W L Pet. 26 10 .722 22 15 .595 21 16 .568 20 18 .526 17 18 .486 17 20 .459 17 21 .447 16 20 .444 15 23 .395 13 23 .361 GB 41.. 5 - 7 8 9 Y 10 10 12 13 NATIONAL LEAGUE WI L Pct. San Francisco 27 15 .643 Los Angeles 24 17 .585 Houston 23 18 .561 Pittsburgh 21 17 .553 Cincinnati 19 17 .528 Philadelphia 19 18 .514 Atlanta 20 23 .465 St. Louis 16 21 .432 New York 13 19 .409 Chicago 10 27 .270 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Atlanta 5, Chicago 3 Pittsburgh 6, Houston 0 Cincinnati 6, St. Louis 5 Los Angeles 4, New York 0 Phliadelphia 9, San Francisco 2 TODAY'S GAMES Atlanta at Chicago Cincinnati at St. Louis (n) Pittsburgh at Houston (2, d-n) j New York at Los Angeles (n) S Philadelphia at San Francisco GB 23 4 5 5l 7 x 8% 9 141: 0 0 0 Mich St. 10 Minn, 7Y/ Wisconsin 3Y4 Ohio St. 9, Illinois 6 Iowa I N'west. 5 Indiana 2 Purdue 7N2 e C, 0 9 7 4 10 3 9 10, 5 4 3 7 11/ 1Y_ 8 7 6 10, 9 9 10 6 3 8 7 4 of points it piles up in these sports on the basis of ten for a first, nine for a second, etc., down to one for a tenth place finish. The Spartans won the crown this year with a quality point total of 8.88 to Michigan's 8.27. In other words, State averaged al- most a second place finish in all events. BIG TEN ALL-SPORTS STANDINGS (Fall, Winter, Spring, 1965-66) ' Re 0 c1 . . Cfl 9 10 a 0 ; 10 a 3 1 7 6 9 2 4 5 3 1 va 8 9 4 6 7 2 3 5 10 1 10 9 8 7 6 1 3 4 5 2 7 10 9 8 7 19--1 9 7f 4 4 6 6 10 2 3 5 4 7 3 9 2 1 5 5 6 3 8 2 1 1 tC C a a a1 n, 61/ 11412 9* 91 10 66 2 60l 1 59yf 3 481/z 5 501 4 21 ' 0 s 0 8.88 8.27 6.83 6.04 5.05 5.04 4.96 4.85 4.59 2.33 4 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Cleveland 5, Minnesota 4 New York 4, Chicago 1 Baltimore 4, Kansas City 2 Washington 5, Boston 4 Calltornia 3, Detroit 2 TODAY'S GAMES California at Detroit (n) Baltimore at Kansas City (n) Chicago at New York (n) Minnesota at Cleveland Boston At Washington LOS ANGELES - The involved ing agreement for his services to case of quarterback Roman Gab- begin in 1967. riel may be settled in court. "His agreement with us pro- The Los Angeles Rams of the vides that he would not sign with National Football League say the Los Angeles Rams or any Gabriel belongs to them - this other football team beyond the year, 1967 and 1968. 1966 season. The Oakland Raiders of the "If he has signed, then our American Football League say agreement has been violated and Gabriel belongs to them for at our next course of action will be least three years, starting in 1967. determined a f t e r consultation Friday, Gabriel stood by his or- with counsel. We feel that we have iginal statement that he is a Rain a very, very good case." SFfecit Aea) 26 Among all the trunk air lines... only -; +k _ .. t, 4 . . .. ;: ... .. xi. y. ,. ., _ _ .,. offers a reserved 4 V seat Vice President Gene Fowler, manager of the new Campus Office, invites you to walk through our unique air door. Youth Fare... 130ff! ... to your new National Bank Campus Office at William Thompson Streets. and Come on in.. . We're waiting to serve you. Our air doors, the first in Washte- naw County, are always open weekdays from 9:30 to 3, Fridays 'til 6, both summer and winter! The new Campus Office is a full-service bank, with safe deposit, checking, loan and trust services, mortgage loans, drive-in banking, and a parking lot with its entrance off of Thompson Street, as well as a new Statement-Savings plan. Vice President Gene Fowler and Assistant Cashier Elizabeth Bock are ready to help you solve any banking problems. If you are already a National Bank customer, this is your branch when shopping or visiting in the campus area. You can deposit or withdraw money from your checking or savings account, open new accounts or carry on any other banking transaction here. It doesn't matter where you opened your account, the Campus Office is ready to serve you. So come in and see the new Campus Office. We built it just foi you! Betty Bock, assistant manager, helps solve a customer's banking problem. Say Good-bye to Stand by...get a seat for sure! A Make firm reservations by phone in advance... no more uncertainty! A Pay just a bit more and be sure: off regular Day Jetourist fare. A Good from noon Monday to noon Friday, plus Sat. pm, Sun. am. A Just get a $3 I.D. card from Delta or other U. S. scheduled airline. Typical Delta Youth Fares from Detroit: I i "ll