PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, 15 AFRM 1965 PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, 15 APRIL 1965 Orioles Walk over White Sox, TORONTO OUT: -0 Montreal To Face 4 By The Associated Press BALTIMORE - Milt Pappas, who missed the opening day as- signment because of a sore elbow, pitched a six-hitter in Baltimore's second game as the Orioles whip- ped the Chicago White Sox 6-0 yesterday. Pappas hurt his right elbow on April 1 in Florida and was out until testing his arm for three innings in an exhibition last Sat- urday. The 25-year-old right-hander didn't allow more than one White Sox base runner in any inning to date and he was aided by three infield double plays. All came im- mediately after Chicago base hits in the second, fifth, seventh and ninth innings. Pappas also doubled opening the Oriole third and scored the first Baltimore run off Joe Horlen. He moved to third on a scratch hit by rookie Paul Blair and scored as Luis Aparicio grounded into a double play. Blair also singled home a run in the seventh after the slow-mov- ing John Orsino singled and stole the third base in his major league career. Orsino scored Baltimore's sec- and run in the fifth inning. His drive to right center got past Floyd Robinson for a triple, and Jerry Adair singled him home. ITorm Siebern drove in two Oriole runs, with a sacrifice fly in the sixth and a double in the eighth. The Orioles finished the game with tliree rookies in the line-up, after rigl't fielder Sam Bowens and second baseman Jerry Ada-r were removed because of injuries. Bowens hurt a muscle in his right thigh when he stumbled on ~#2 D%,A & ./. MAD RAS PARKA the first base b:g in the fourta doubled and scored on Matty inning. His replacement, rookie Alou's two-out single. Ray Culp Curt Bl1fary, doubled home a run came on to retire the side. off Chicago rookie Bob Locker in Gaylord Perry held the Phillies the two-run Crole _Rhth. in check until the eighth when Adair, who inmju:ed his left John Callison singled and Wes shoulder in Tuesday's game, was Covington lined a home run over replaced by Dave Johnson. the right field wall to cut the Pappas struck out four and margin to 3-2. didn't walk a man. The Giants, however, added two * runs off Culp in the seventh on Phill.es-Giants a walk to Mays, Willie McCovey's single and a single by Jim Hart PHILADELPHIA - Willie Mays' Jesus Alou singled home McCovey two-run homer helped kayo Jim before Ed Roebuck came on to get (Perfect Game) Bunning yester- Perry with the bases loaded. day and led the San Francisco * Giants to a 5-2 victory over Phila- delphia before 31,923-the largest C s-Car ina s home opening crowd here in five CHICAGO - Two homers by years. Ron Santo and one by George Mays' second home run in two Altman helped the Chicago Cubs nights started the Giants toward to a second straight victory over their first victory of the season the champion St. Louis Cardinals after two defeats at Pittsburgh. yesterday, 7-3. He hammered a Bunning pitch in Roberto Pena, a prize rookie so the third inning over the roof in far, broke the ice in what started left field scoring Matty Alou, who out a duel of lefties Ray Sadecki had singled. of the Cards and Dick Ellsworth The Giants knocked out Bun- of the Cubs. Pena drove in his ning, a 19-game winner last year, fifth run of three-game series, in the fourth when Jose Pagan singling across Dick Bertell from The U of M SKY DIVING CLUB is now jumping Saturdays and Sundays. Beginners and spectators welcome to visit Richmond Field in Gregory, Mich., 20 miles NW of AA--for information Call NO 3-7874 second in the third for a 1-0 Cub lead. Santo got his first homer this' year, leading off against Sadecki in the fourth, and his second in the eighth. The Cards made it 2-1 on Lou Brock's homer in the sixth, but Altman slammed another lead-off homer in the seventh off reliever Ron Taylor. Taylor also yielded back-to-back doubles to Ernie Banks and Doug Clemens and walked a man, leav- ing the game with the bases load- ed without retiring a man. Glenn Beckert's single off the third Card pitcher, Tracy Stal- lard, scored Banks and Clemens. The Cardinals nicked Ellsworth for two more runs in the ninth,l but the southpaw went all thei way. He allowed 10 hits, four to Ken Boyer. ** * Pirates-Dodgers PITTSBURGH - Claude Osteen pitched a two-hitter and Ron Fairly hit a two-run homer as the Los Angeles Dodgers defeated Pittsburgh 3-1 last night. Until Bob Bailey homered with two out in the ninth inning, Os- teen had allowed only Jim Pag- liaroni's double off center fielder Dick Smith's glove in the fifth inning. Osteen, making his first ap- pearance since the Dodgers ac- quired him from Washington last winter in the Frank Howard trade retired 13 straight batters between the two hits. Bailey's homer, his second of the season, sailed over the left field fence. The 25-year-old left-hander had not allowed a hit for four. 1-31 innings before Pagliaroni drove a long fly to deep center field. Smith ran back after it and got his glove on the ball, but the ball fell for a double. The Pirate catcher got no fur- ther as Osteen struck out pitcher Joe Gibbon and retired Manny Mota on a grounder. Osteen walked two batters and struck out eight Fairly smashed his homer into the upper deck of the right field stands in the fifth after Jim Le- febyre had doubled. The Dodgers got another run in the eighth when speedster Maury Wills singled, moved to second on a sacrifice, stole third and scored on Smith's bunt. Wills stole three bases in the game. All the runs came off Gibbon, who pitched a six-hitter. Senators-Red Sox WASHINGTON - Don Blasin- game's triple over Lennie Green's head in center field topped off a three-run outburst against Dick Radatz in the seventh inning yes- terday and gave the Washington Senators a 6-4 victory over the Boston Red Sox. The starting pitchers, Earl Wil- son of the Red Sox and Buster Narum of the Senators each hit home runs, but they were the only ones of the game after a seven- homer assault by the clubs in Monday's opener. Willie Kirkland opened the Sen- ators' seventh with a double to left center off Radatz, who re- lieved a tiring Wilson after five innings. Pinch hitter Jim King scored Kirkland with the tying run. Joe Cunningham batted for Narum and walked, and Ken Hamlin, running for King, and Cunningham scored when Blasin- game tripled over Green, who was playing in. Wilson hit his home run over the fence in right center after Bob Tillman walked in the third inning. The Red Sox made it 3-0 in the fourth on Lee Thomas' double and Felix Mantilla's single. After Wilson retired the first 10 batters in order, the Senators scored two in the fourth on. a walk to Ken McMullen, Bob Chance's double and Frank How- ard's, first hit in a Washington uniform, a single. Detroit or Chicago By The Associated Press Sunday night if the Red Wings Now that Toronto's recent advance, and in Montreal on Sat- monopoly on the Stanley Cup has urday night if the Black Hawks been broken, the National Hockey win. League's coveted trophy will move The Canadiens and Leafs set a to a new home, couple of records for quick scor- Still in the running for the ing as Montreal took the series prize are the Montreal Canadiens, four games to two. Toronto raced who had the cup in their Forum to a 3-1 lead in the opening min- for one five-year stretch, 1956- utes with all four goals coming 60: the Detroit Red Wings, who within a record 99 seconds and haven't won it since back-to-back the last three in a record 38 triumphs in 1954-55; and the Chi- seconds. cago Black Hawks, who've taken The play of Montreal goalie the trophy only once in the last Gump Worsley sharpened as the 26 years, in 1961. game went on and the Canadiens Montreal gained the playoff took advantage of Toronto penal- finals Tuesday night when Claude ties. Jacques Laperriere scored in Provost's lashing backhand goal the second period and Bobby in overtime provided a 4-3 victory Rousseau tied it in the third, both at Toronto over the Maple Leafs, goals coming with a Leaf in the who had won the cup the last penalty box. three years. Then Provost's low drive at The Black Hawks won at home 16:33 of the overtime period got over the Red Wings 4-0, squaring by Johnny Bower, Toronto goal- their best-of-seven semifinals at keeper. Henri Richard set up the three games each. Neither club winner by capturing a loose puck has managed to win on enemy behind the Toronto goal and pass- ice, meaning the Wings are in if ing out. that form prevails. They settle The Hawks made it decisive matters tonight at Detroit, with against Detroit with three goals the winner to face the Canadiens in the final period by Phil Espo- in the best-of-seven series for the sito, Stan Mikita and Red Hay. 72-year-old Stanley Cup. Ken Wharram netted the first The finals open in Detroit on Chicago goal in the second period. Tau Delta Phi Victorious In I-M Volleyball Finals A ':A ;: x' 1 e e ,f .~ r.: \ Lightweight styling " I!'with drawstring hood for versatile all season comfort The perfect all-purpose parka, goes everwhere. Tailored of hand woven, hand dyed India Madras ... full zip- -per, elasticized cuffs, drawstring hood. Don't be without one. IoWE, BERMUDAS: Don't miss our selection of bold new madras Bermuda Shorts in assot plaids for the most casual comfort yet. $6.95 4 Tau Delta Phi won the fraternity volley ball championship Tuesday night by defeating Zeta Beta Tau, four games to three. The best-of-seven match went down to the wire with Tau Delt taking the final game, 15-12. The Tau Delts won the first game very easily. Then ZBT came back to take the second match without too much trouble. The third onetwent down to the wire with a tie at 14-all. Tau Delt then scored two straight points, taking a 2-1 lead, 16-14. ZBT put on a spurt winning the next two games and taking a com- manding lead of 12-3 placing the ZBT's within three points of the title. At that point, the Tau Delts put on a spurt, scoring nine straight points to tie the score at 12 apiece. They then went on to win that game 15-13, and became cham- pions with the 15-12 win in the seventh game. In reaching the finals Tau Delta Phi overcame Delta Upsilon, Lamb- da, and Delta Tau Delta in suc- cession. For their victory they will receive a plaque as a trophy and a major sports championship award. On the plaque is their record in the 1965 volley ball cam- paign. ZBT beat Sigma Alpha Mu in the semifinals to earn a place in the finals against Tau Delta Phi. rl Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. Detroit 2 0 1.000 x-Cleveland 1 0 1.000 Minnesota 1 0 1.000 Baltimore 1 1 .500 Boston 1 1 .500 Chicago 1 1 .500 Washington 1 1 .500 x-Los Angeles 0 1 .000 x-New York 0 1 .000 x-Kansas City 0 2 .000 x-Night game. YESTERD)AY'S RESULTS Baltimore 6, Chicago 0 Washington 6, Boston 4 Detroit at Minnesota (ppd) Cleveland at Kansas City (inc) Nek York at Los Angeles (inc) TODAY'S GAMES Detroit at Minnesota Washington at Chicago Cleveland at Kansas City (n) New York at Los Angeles (n) Onlygames scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. GB E - r 1 S1% 1 1 1!z 2% Chicago Los Angeles Pittsburgh Philadelphia Cincinnati Houston Milwaukee San Francisco New York St. Louis 2 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 1.000 1.000 .667 .500 .500 .500 .500 .333 .000 .000 GB 1- 1 1 1 1 r 2 2 Upset-Minded P hilly Bids for Finals Berth YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Houston 7, New York 6 (11 inn) Chicago 7, St. Louis 3 San Francisco 5, Philadelphia 2 Los Angeles 3, Pittsburgh 1 Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Houston at New York Chicago at Milwaukee San Francisco at Philadelphia (n) Los Angeles at Pittsburgh (n) Cincinnati at St. Louis (n) p. Fillet -o- Fish..... .24c g oTriple Thick Shakes .. 22c 1308 SO. UNIVERSITY Delicious Hamburgers 15c 2000 W. Stadium Blvd. FILECCIA BROS. BOSTON (/P)-The entire sea- son will be wrapped up in one game when the defending cham- pion Boston Celtics meet the up- set-minded Philadelphia 76ers in the seventh and final game of the National Basketball Associa- tion Eastern Division playoffs to- night at Boston Garden. The winner will gain a berth in the championship playoffs against the Los Angeles Lakers who won the Western Division title, beat- ing Baltimore four games to two. Boston has been installed as an eight-point favorite to win on its home court, having beaten the H6ers 10 times at Boston, includ- ing three playoff games. The odds-makers have called the shot each time, picking the home team Expert Shoe .repairing Quick Service available on request 1117 SOUTH UNIVERSITY "5 RENT AN ECON-O-CAJI GOING-HOME SPECIALS Let Us Help You Plan Your Transportation Low Rates to N.Y.; Chicago, Dallas, etc. * Round Trip or One-Way Rates Rent A Car For House Transportation to Airports and Save Low Weekly Rates Between Semesters Get A Group and Share The Savings Call 663-2033 for reservations-students 19 yrs. in the other six games. Coach Dolph Schayes says his Philadelphia team will pull the upset because he's expecting a big effort from Wilt Chamberlain. "I'm confident Wilt 'will come up with the big effort,' 'he said. "Wilt can do anything he wants to do. He has a chance to make up six years of frustration at the hands of the Celtics . "And a lot of the guys on our team - men like Larry Costello, Johnny Kerr, Hal Greer and Al Bianchi, plus myself = had our moments of frustration at the hands of the Celtics while we were in Syracuse." Boston forward Tom Sanders believes the whole series depends on him and his efforts at stop- ping cornerman Chet Walker. Walker has been the key to the 76er victories so far ,averaging 25 points a game in the three vic- tories at Philadelphia but only 13 points in the three losses at Bos- ton. "Walker is killing me," said Sanders, who rates as one of the best defensive cornermen in the NBA due to his performances against such stars as Bob Pettit, Elgin Baylor and Jerry Lucas. "I've got to do something about it. And I guess I have Just one more try," Sanders said. Walker scored six baskets in the first period of Tuesday's game at Philadelphia. "I was responsi- ble for him early," Satch said, "and he got five of those baskets on me." 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