rb. " A' Navrati ova anks r PBy The Associated Press Ties6 BOSTON--Reggie Jackson belted a DEROIT three-run homer and New York trpeThih 'capitalized on seven Boston errors for sren ignr seven unearned runs last night, sightnd can carrying the Yankees to a 13-2 rout of togt ovnd th the Red Sox and pulling the winners Throer in within two games of first place in the Thinn American League's*East Division. do Jon Woe Rookie right-ha nder Jim Bea t- Trambll tie--sent to the minors after being Trme pounded by the Red Sox June 21-pit- ched a six-hitter and got ninth-inning relief from Rich Gossage. The triuimph was the Yankees' 14th in 16 games, while the Rled Sox suffered .. their seventh defeat in nine games. Beattie, 4-7, recalled July 14, struck out eight and walked one. He gave up two unearned runs in the ninth when Carlton Fisk singled after catcher Mike Heath dropped Fisk's foul pop-up, t which would have- ended the game. Jack Brohamer followed with an RBI 'single. The Yankees followed up their 21-hit, r -15-3 victory Thursday night with a 17-hit assault which featured Jackson's 21sat homer and Lou Piniella's fifth. Piniella also had a double and a triple, and Mickey Rivers had three singles. A.L. Standings EAST W L GB *N",, Yok............ 9 6 2- Milwaukee ............ 81 60 V% " Baltimore ............ 7 62 1/ Cleveland ............ .... 60 79 25% Toronto .. ... 56 7 31% Kansas City ..................... 76 61 - CaByfornia ............... .... 75 65 2% T Texas ......................-..... 68 69 8 t r Oakland ......u....... ..... 64 76 13%n l t a Minnesota Yankees.... 62 79 16 Chicago ......................... 59 81 18% Seattle ......................... 52 85 24 Last g ht's results Detroit 6, Cleveland 3 NewYork L3, Boston 2 ATLANTA' Milwaukee 3, Minnesota 0 here as the Baltimore 5, Toronto4 a double pla within 3 ga SPORTS OF THE DAILY: ther evethdefatin in gaes KP returns PORTLAND (UPI)-The Detroit other-dur Pistons' love-hate relationship with together. Kevin Porter revolved to love again "My me Friday with the reacquisition of the game of ba flashy, penetrating point guard from was not th the New Jersey Nets in exchange for hearing hir scoring guard Eric Money the kind of p Coach Dick Vitale said he was getting "In high -rid of Money to resolve a conflict in tense guy, philosophy between the two. very intens . seguy" Pc IT WAS SIMILAR to the conflict in- se guy, I w volving Porter, Money and Herb Brown, who coached the Pistons until he was fired early last season. VITALE "I want to play a 'running game of have coma basketball," Vitale said. "And to do Porter bec that, you need a point guard, someone "an honest who can get the ball to the other fellas. "I talked No one can do that better than Kevin former Pis Porter." to believe a Porter, who played one full season wants to wi and parts of two others with Detroit af- "He wa ter being traded from Washington for uniform. H the just-retired Dave Bing in 1975, petitor he w averaged 15 points and more than 10 lminute of assists to lead the league with New Jer- wrong with sey last season. - MONEY, AT 23, five years younger than Porter, averaged 18.8 points per game with the Pistons last season. Money ahd Porter were unable to getH :along with Brown-or each ~iABIGAIL'S presents: RI Shriver upsets Martina; gains U.S. Open finals The Michigan Daily-Saturday, September 9, 1978-Page 11' NEW YORK (AP)-Pam Shriver, a 6-foot 16-year-old with the grace and shotmaking. finesse of someone far more ex- perienced, bowled over top-seeded Martina Navratilova in the semifinals of the U.S. Open tennis championships yester- day, 7-6, 7-6., The Lutherville, Md., youngster thus becomes the youngest woman ever to play in the final of the U.S. cham- pionships. On Sunday, she'll play the winner of the other semifinal Friday afternoon between defending champion Chris Evert and fourth-seeded Wendy Turnbull of Australia. UNTIL THURSDAY, when the 16th-seeded Shriver gained the semis with an easy victory over Australian Lesley Hunt, Evert had been the youngest semi-finalist ever. She was 16 and about 9 months old when she attained the semis in 1971. Shriver is 16 and two months. Aided by two rain delays that seemed to frustrate the older Navratilova, the big teen-ager played steadily and aggressively throughout the match. WITH THE OPENING set tied at 5-5, Navratilova, ap- pearing irritated, won the next game at love. Shriver struggled in the 12th game but won it to set up a tiebreaker. Navratilova double-faulted to give Shriver 5-4 in the tiebreaker and angrily batted a ball into the stands. She got the point back when Shriver double-faulted on the next point. But Navratilova made two backhand error to give Shriver the tiebreaker 7-5. Each player held serve at 5-5 in the second set to force a tiebreaker. Navratilova won the first point, breaking serve, but Shriver ran off the next five before Navratilova held for the first time. Navratilova got one more point with a break for 3-6. But Navratilova, trying for a passing shot, overhit and the Wimbledon winner, who has never won the U.S. Open, was once again denied. Shriver RACES TIGHTEN UI? ip R4 $, Indians 3 T-Lou Whitaker's two-run lighted Detroit's four-run ng against David Clyde last arried the Tigers to a 6-3 vic- e Cleveland Indians. g began with a one-out walk ckenfuss. Aurelio Rodriguez hen rookie shortstop Alan singled home the first ed Sox, 13-2 4;~VW NDI~ -NI Detroit run. Ron LeFlore followed with an RBI single, then Whitaker hit his triple to knock out Clyde, 6-10. Jim Slaton, 15-10, gave up runs in the second, third and sixth and got ninth- inning help from John Hiller. Ted Cox had an RBI single for Cleveland in the second. Bernie Carbo doubled home a run in the third, and the Indians' last run scored in the sixth on a single by Rick Manning after Jim Norris tripled. A double by catcher Dance Parrish and a single by Wockenfuss in the fifth gave the Tigers a fifth run. Detroit ad- ded a run in the eighth. * * * Phillies 2-1, Cards 1-0 PHILADELPHIA - Bake McBride's two-out, run-scoring single in the ninth inning gave the Philadelphia Phillies a 2-1 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals and a sweep of yesterday's tw-night double-header. The Phillies won the first game 1-0 as Dick Ruthven pitched a three-hitter and Bob Boone hit a sacrifice fly. Mike Schmidt opened Philadelphia's ninth inning of the second game with a single. Jerry Martin sent Schmidt to second with a single and two outs later, McBride laced his winning single to center. Reliever Ron Reed, who pitched the ninth after starter Jim Kaat went eight innings, earned his second victory in four decisions while rookie Dan O'Brien, making his first major league start, suffered the loss. N.L. Standings 112 S. ASHLEY RETAIL-WHOLESALE FOREIGN CAR PARTS 10% DISCOUNT FOR ALL STUDENTS WITH VALID MICHIGAN I.D. 665-0207 EAST Philadelphia .................... Pittsburgh................... Chicago .................... Montreal ........................ St. Louis................... New York.................... WEST Los Angeles ..................... San Francisco ................. Cincinnati ....................... San Diego ....................... Houston ......................... Atlanta .......................... W 77 74 70 67 61 56 84 81 76 73 65 61 L 63 65 71 75 81 85 57 60 63 69 74 80 GB 2 / 7 / 11 17 211/ 3 7% 111 18% 24 AP Photo S DARRYL CHANEY gets the best of San Francisco's Jim Dwyer Braves' shortstop managed to get his throw off in time to complete ay in last night's game. The Giants won the game 8-5, however, to pull mes of Los Angeles. The Dodgers were beaten 5-0 by Houston. Last night's results Philadelphia 1, St. Louis 0 San Francisco 8, Atlanta 5 Houston-, Los Angeles 0 Chicago 4, Montreal 2 San Diego 3, Cincinnati 2 SEPTEMBER SPECIAL VW, Volvo Owners OIL CHANGE SPECIAL 4 quarts national brand oil and oil filter all for $5.00 VW SHOCK SPECIAL All Bugs and Type Il, except Super Beetle 4 Heavy-Duty Shocks $29.95 WHILE THEY LAST HOURS: M-F: 8-8, Sat: 8-6, Sun: 10-4 ELECTRONICS Kent-Moore Instrument Division located in Ann Arbor, Mich- igan is looking for conscientious students for the following part-time positions ELECTRONIC ASSEMBLERS Familiar with PC board stuffing, soldering and chssis assembly. FLOOR SUPERVISORS Experienced in all phases of light electronic assembly and PC boards to be leader of electronic assemblers. QUALITY INSPECTORS Experienced individuals in PC board and chassis inspection. ELECTRONIC TEST TECHNICIAN Graduate of trade school and/or two years experience in testing of PC board and electronic assemblies. DESIGN DRAFTSMEN Experienced in PC board design and electronic packaging. We offer competitive wages. 4 interested call Steve Mazade at 1-539-5330 or send resume to: Kent-Moore Instruments 251 Jackson Plaza Ann Arbor, Michigan 48103 EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER ANNOUNCING ANN ARBORTS ONLY MEXICAN NIG H TCLUBR -Authentic Full Service Mexican Restaurant -Live Mariachi Music Seranade During Dinner -Disco Dancing After 9 pm -Free Disco Dancing Lessons Taught By Professional Instructors Every Wednesday Night -Open from 4:30 pm Tuesday through Sunday -Tuesday: Ladies Night -Live Jazz Every Sunday Night 611 CHURCH ST., NEAR SOUTH UNIVERSITY 995-5955 I1" 1" I~ FOR NEW STUDENTS PREMED INFORMATION MEETING Tuesday, Sept. 12th or Wednesday, Sept. 13th 4:00-5:00 pm Auditorium B, Angell Hall PRE-LAW INFORMATION ; Dennis says goodbye ing their brief tenure ntal attitude toward the sketball under Herb Brown here," Porter said. "After m (Vitale) talk on TV, he's person I want to play for. school I played for a very in- in college my coach was a e guy and I am a very inten- orter said. "He sounds like ant to play for." SAID he does not expect to munication problems with cause Porter will give him effort." d with Ray Scott, another tons' coach, and he said not ll the stories about Kevin. he n." ants to wear a Pistons' He's such an intense com- wants to be on the floor every the game. There's nothing that." Red Wingretires DETROIT (UPI)-Dennis Hull, the slick-skating forward with one of the most fearsome slapshots in hockey, an- nounced Friday he was retiring from the game. Hull, 34, joined the Detroit Red Wings last year after 13 National Hockey League seasons with the Chicago Black Hawks. RED WINGS General Manager Ted Lindsay convinced Hull last December to skip retirement for one more season. 'But the Pointe Anne, Ontario, native said he now wants to return to college and coach minor league hockey in the St. Catherine, Ontario, area, where he and his family own a farm. "I have the greatest amount of respect for Ted, and the whole organization," Hull said. "THEY WERE just super to me last year." The brother and former teammate of Bobby Hull finished his career with 303 goals and 351 assists in 959 NHL games. Hull saw regular duty at left wing during the second half of last season with Detroit. But his performances did not match his earlier exploits with Chicago, where he had four 30-goal seasons. He managed just five goals with the young Detroit team that made the playoffs by finishing second behind Montreal in the NHL's Norris Division. UofM Tee Kwon Do Club DEMONSTRA1iON Wed. Sept. 13 -7 PM CCRB Martial Arts Room ALL WELCOME for info call: Joe: 665-8543 Joann: 663-5913 FOR RUNNERS & JOGGERS I I DI PPI DES NORTH (across from the Federal Bldg.) I ESon E. 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