Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, September 11, 1971 . -- - _. BAROQUE ENSEMBLE j AUDITIONS VIOLIN & VIOLA Contact Lyn Lawless, 668-7620 For the student body: FLARES by Levi Lardinal s, 0ioles feAVAV"Lh et' their ntests I By The Associated Press CHICAGO - National League batting leader Joe Torre's first hit of the game drove in Matty Alou, breaking a 12th-inning deadlock and powering the St. Louis Car- dinals to an 8-7 triumph over the Chicago Cubs yesterday. Torre's run - producing single scored Alou from second. Ted Sim- mons sealed the victory by doub- ling Torre home. The Cubs had pulled into a 6-6 tie in the eighth inning after the Cardinals took a 6-4 lead in their half. The Cubs, who had earlier come off a three-run deficit to take a 4-3 lead, tied it in the bottom of the eighth after Billy Williams walked, Jim Hickman singled and Ron Santo moved them up with a sacrifice. Joe Peptitone's grounder got Williams home and pinch runner Cleo James scored when Alou fum- bled Frank Fernandez' grounder. The Cardinals had moved ahead in their half as Simmons doubled in a run and Jose Cruz singled in the other. St. Louis pounced on Ferguson Jenkins for three runs in the first inning with Torre, Simmons and Cruz each driving in a run. Fernandez hit a solo homer, his first hit since joining the Cubs 11 days ago, with two outs in the second. Carmen Fanzone, another newcomer, singled home two runs in the fifth to tie the score. TRon.« C'..«L.., .,. flA nomer,__ x with a triple, then coming in on Merv Rettenmund's single. The third run counted on a throwing error by Tim Cullen. Washington tallied an unearn- ed run in the second on an error and a three-base hit by Toby Harrah. After Robinson's homer, Be- langer poked his second triple in the fifth and tallied on a sacrifice fly by Boog Powell. Run-scoring singles by Merv Rettenmund and Dave Johnson drove in Baltimore's final two tallies in the eighth. * * * Mets win NEW YORK - Injury-plagued left-hander Jerry Koosman lim- ited Philadelphia to eight hits and struck out 11 over 8 1-3 inn- ings, then got ninth-inning relief help from Danny Frisella as the New York Mets defeated the Phils 4-3 last night. The Mets reached Phils start- er Rick Wise, 14-13, for three runs in the second inning on two hits, two errors, two walks and a wild pitch. They scored their fourth run in the fifth on singles by Cleon Jones, Ed Kranepool and Ken Singleton. The Phils scored their first run in the sixth on a sacrifice fly by Don Money, then added another on Deron Johnson's 31st home run of the season, in the eighth inning. Koosman's 11 strikeouts were a season high for the big left-hand- Conigliaro's two-run drive, his er, who has been hampered by in- 11th.. came in the three-run second juries this season. The victory inning. The Red Sox also scored raised his record to 6-9. once in the .fifth and twice in the The Phils knocked Koosman sixth. out in the ninth on singles by Lolich, attempting to break his Larry Hisale and Roger Freed, tie with Vida Blue for the Ameri- Frisella came in from the bull- can League lead in victories, lost pen and retired Ron Stone for for the 11th time. the second out, but McCarver The only hits off Peters, 14-10, singled in a run. Frisella then re- were Mickey Stanley's single to tired Oscar Gamble on a fly ball left in the third inning, Aurelio ' ,, I, Farah Wright Lee to left field to earn the save. ** * Tigers tamed DETROIT-Gary Peters tossed a three-hitter last night as the Boston Red Sox defeated the De- troit Tigers 6-1, ruining Mickey Lolich's bid for his 24th victory. Rico Petrocelli, Billy Conigliaro and Duane Josephson homered as the Red Sox got nine hits off Lolich, seven of them for extra bases. Petrocelli's 23rd homer andt BULLETIN LOS A N G E L E S-Alabama quarterback Terry Davis and his battery of running backs built up a 17-0 lead last night in the first half and made it stand up through a scoreless second half in upsetting fav- ored Southern California to avenge an embarrassing loss one year ago. ismss smehns#ss~ssaa Rodriguez' hit to deep short in the sixth and Ike Brown's home run with two out in the ninth. * *T Astros blast CINCINNATI - Jack Billingham fired a two-hitter and Cesar Ce- deno knocked in the only run need- ed with a first-inning double last night as the Houston Astros edged the Cincinnati Reds 1-0. Billingham, 8-14, checked the Reds until Pete Rose lined a clean single to center with two outs in the third inning. Johnny Bench collected their only other hit in the fourth. The big Houston right-hander struck out six as he boosted his record to 8-14. Roger Metzger opened the game for the Astros with a single to right off Jim McGlothlin, 7-12, and, after Joe Morgan popped up, Cesar Geronirno forced Metzger at second before Cedeno doubled off the left center field wall for the decisive run. Male [CHECKMATE State, Street at Liberty The U of M Gilbert and Sullivan Society MIKADO Mass Meeting Dancers, Sii gers. Tech. Sunday, Sept. 21th Michigan Union Ballroom 8:00 -Associated Press Ted Simmons (23) of the St. Louis Cardinals gets tagged out on a close play at home plate by Chicago Cub catcher Frank Fer- nandez in the eighth inning of yesterday's game at Chicago. Simmons had tried to score from second on a single by Jose Cruz but a perfect relay from the outfield by second sacker Paul Popovich cut him down. The run was important as it took the Redbirds 12 innings to win, 8-7. From the Management and Staff at Thcno's Lcimplighter 421 E. Liberty St. Now at the Lamplighter we have real Italian / and Sicilian Pizza. Also our new hours, 10 a.m.-2 a.m. 7 days a week give our friends more time to enjoy the some fine food and friendly service that our friends enjoy over and over again. CALL 665-7003 for fast carry out service "AT THE LAMPLIGHTER GOOD FOOD AND PEOPLE-PLEASING IS OUR AIM" I Ron Santo's 20th homer, off starter Steve Carlton's first pitch W in the sixth, put the Cubs. ahead 4-3 but the Cardinals came right back to tie it in the seventh on singles by Cruz and Bob Burda 1 T 3 O and a pinch-hit sacrifice fly by Ted Kubiak. Jenkins then struck out Lou NEW YORK ()-The Cincinnati Brock and Ted Sizemore. That Royals, who stumbled on to Nate gave him five for the game and Williams two years ago, made the 1,433 for his career, surpassing Utah State product the No. 1 the club record of 1,432 set by choice yesterday in the National Charley Root. Basketball Association's first hard- * * * ship draft while Atlanta went for Orioles fly 7-foot-2 Tom Payne of Kentucky. BALTIMORE - Mike Cuellar Less than four hours later, the joined teammates Dave McNally Hawks announced Ed Payne's and Jim Palmer at the 18-victory signing, cutting off any possibility level with a three-hitter and of a bidding battle with the Ameri- Frank Robinson belted his 498th can Basketball Association for his career home run, leading the Bal- services. timore Orioles to a 7-1 victory Williams, Payne, Cyril Baptiste over the Washington Senators last of Creighton and Phil Chenier of night. California-all picked in the first Cuellar boosted his record to round of the NBA's draft-were 18-8 and Baltimore's season series among 11 players named by the advantage over Washington to 13- ABA yesterday as eligible for their 3" hardship draft next Tuesday. Robinson now stands two away Baptiste was selected by the from being the 11th player in ma- jor league history to blast 500 newly-named Golden State War- home runs. He connected for his riors and Chenier was tapped by 23rd of the season in the third Baltimore. The other player se- inning. lected was Joe Hammond, an The Orioles jumped out to a Eastern League product without three-run lead against Dick Bos- college experience, taken by Los man, 11-14, in the first inning, Angeles in the fourth round. Mark Belanger scoring Paul Blair I Ed Owens of Weber State, the Read What's Happening in America in a CDb VOICE Special Student Rate $5/yr. CALL 662-1970 or write VOICE c o Stan Werbin, 1319 Cambridge, Ann Arbor - ILLIAMS TOP PICK ducts hardship draft only other player eligible for the NBA draft, was not selected. Williams was selected by the Royals after the first three clubs in the drafting order-Cleveland, Buffalo and Portland-all passed. The Royals, who said they con- sidered Payne, went for the 6-foot- 5 Williams because they felt he could be of more immediate, help. Williams, who averaged 19.6 points in two years at Utah State, likely will be tried at forward by the Royals, although he also could play the back court. "We were fortunate," said Cin- cinnati General Manager Joe Axelson, "that we stumbled on him as a sophomore when I went out to scout Sam Lacey. He did everything that night but sell tickets. Then our scouts stumbled into him two other times scouting other players. "By that time we had a file on him-and rated him better than anybody we could get out of the regular draft next year." In order to select Williams, the ular draft of college seniors, just as did every other club making a selection. The Royals passed on Payne be- cause they felt we "couldn't afford the luxury of waiting for him- he's two years away.'' The Hawks apparently felt they could afford that luxury, waiting for Payne to develop with 6-foot-11 veteran Walt Bellamy on hand to play center. Seattle and Houston, next in line after Atlanta passed. Then the Warriors took the 6-foot-9 Baptiste and the Bullets took the 6-foot-4 Chenier. Hammond was the only other pick, NBA Com- missioner Walter Kennedy going through 20 rounds before termi- nating the draft without Owens having been selected. In explaining Cleveland's deci- sion to pass, Coach Bill Fitch said he preferred to wait for the regu- lar 1972 draft. "I don't like the odds of six players in this draft against 600 in next year's college draft." Besides those drafted by thed NBA on the first round, they in- clude Edward "Mickey" Davis, Duquesne; Edward Leftwich, North Carolina State; Michael Meade, Hartford; Curtis Pritchett, St. Augustine; Allen Raphael, North- western; Anthony Reade, Merce CC, N.J., and Jobey Wright,$ Indiana. Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division Royals had to surrender their responding choice in the 1972 cor- reg- L INTERESTED IN CHANGE? Join THE PROJECT COMMUNITY (formerly U-M Tutorial Project) THOMAS A. MOOREHEAD, Director MASSMEETING Wednesday, September 15 2nd floor Union Ballroom-7:00 P.M. For more information contact The Project Community THOMAS A. MOOREHEAD, Director 2210 Student Activities Bldg.-Phone 763-3548 PROGRAMS '71-'72 Name one tgthat hasn't gone up since1950. Try. Try hard. The only thing we can think of is what we make. The Swingline "Tot 50" Stapler. 980 in 1950. 98 in 1971. And it still comes with 1000 free staples and a handy carrying pouch. It staples, tacks and mends. It's unconditionally guaranteed. It's one of the world's smallest staplers. And it's the world's biggest seller. Could be that's why it hasn't gone up in price in 21 years. If you're interested in something a little bigger, our Cub Desk Stapler and Cub Hand Stapler are only $1.98. Both Tot and Cub Staplers are available at Stationery, Variety and College Bookstores. The Swingline "Tot 50" 98# in 1950. 98# in 1971. If you can name something else that hasn't gone up in price since 1950, let us know. We'll send you a free Tot Stapler with 1000 staples and a vinyl pou-ch. Enclose 250 to cover postage and handling. Baltimore Detroit Boston New York Washington Cleveland Oakland Kansas City Chicago California Minnesota Milwaukee Won Lost 88 51 79 64 77 64 71 72 58 85 55 87 West Division 90 52 77 66 67 76 67 76 65 75 61 81 Pct. .634 .552 .525 .497 .404 .387 .634 .539 .468 .469 .464 .430 GB 1 19 19 32 34% 13% 231/ 23Y2 24 29 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Baltimore 7 Washington 1 Kansas City 6 Chicago 1 Boston 6 Detroit 1 Minnesota at Oakland, inc. Milwaukee at California, inc. Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES New York at Cleveland Washington at Baltimore, night Chicago at Kansas City, night Boston at Detroit Minnesota attOakland Milwaukee at California Ann Arbor Innovative Education Project Ann Arbor Day Care Project Black Liberation School Matrix (Resource Center) Mental Health Halfway House Project Community Courses Solstis Free School Washtenaw Community College Project Willis Community Action Project Willow Run Counseling Project NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division Won Lost Pct. GB HUMAN RIGHTS- RADICAL INDEPENDENT PARTY STATEWIDE MEETING 2 P.M. SUNDAY Oakland Community College (ORCHARD RIDGE) Meet at 1 p.m. outside SAB to attend; noon for women's caucus Pittsburgh 87 58 .600 - St. Louis 81 63 .599 52 Chicago 73 70 .510 13 New Yor~k 73 69 .515 12% Montreal 62 79 .440 23 Philadelphia 59 85 .409 271!1 West Division San Francisco 82 61 .573 - Los Angeles 78 66 .542 4% Atlanta 72 72 .500 102 Houston 70 74 .487 13 Cinncinati 71 75 .486 13 San Diego 54 90 .375 2812 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS St. Louis 8, Chicago 7, 12 innings Houston 1, Cincinnati 0 New York 4, Philadelphia 3 Montreal 3, Pittsburgh 2, 11 innings Los Angeles at San Diego, inc. San Francisco at Atlanta, rain TODAY'S GAMES St. Louis at Chicago San Francisco at Atlanta, night Houston at Cincinnati, night Philadelphia at New York, night Pittsburgh at Montreal 9 Only games scheduled Yesterday's Results EXHIBITION FOOTBALL Green Bay 20, Buffalo 14 ISt. Louis 27. Cleveland 13