Wednesdoy, September 20, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine, Wednsda, Setemer 2, 172 TE MCHIGN DILY ageIin TougE By The Associated Press The Detroit Tigers lost both ends of their twinbill to Cleveland last night 3-2 and 6-4. The double loss ended Detroit's five-game winning streak and drop- ped the Tigers into a tie with the Baltimore 0 r i o I e s for second place, a half-game behind the first-place Boston Red Sox. Rain! washed out a scheduled contest between Baltimore and Boston. Dunning collaborated with Ed Farmer in the first game on a! nine-hitter and sugged a bases- empty home run in the fifth in- ning. Dunning's home run, his third of, the season, gave the In- dians. a 2-0 lead and they scored the eventual winning run on Chris Chambliss' RBI single in the same inning. Dunning, with eighth inning re- lief help from Farmer, bested De- troit ace Mickey Lolich, 20-13.- In the nightcap Nettles' 17th homer with one aboard in the Tribe trips Tigers daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: RICHARD STUCK fourth inning gave Cleveland a 2-0 lead. Ray Lamb 5-5, was the second- game winner, with help from Far- mer and Mike Kilkenny. Lamb took over for Bill Butler in the third after Butler walked two batters but prevented the Tigers from scoring. The Indians erupted for four! runs in the seventh inning against! four Detroit pitchers, taking .ad-j vantage of three walks and two singles, one a bases-loaded bunt by Frank Duff y. The Tigers scored three runs in straight East flag. Pittsburgh's the eighth on Willie Horton's 11th next victory, or a loss by the run- home run of the year with two men nerup Chicago Cubs, will give the on base and they added another on Pirates the division title. Al Kaline's ninth-inning single. Robertson slugged his 11th hom- Yanks yaked er of the year with two men on MILW yanKe base in the second inning to give MILWAUKEE - George Scott Moose, 12-8, enough for victory. belted a home run and a run-scor-j twice Cards deal ST. LOUIS - Bob Gibson hurl- ed a five-hitter for his 17th vic- tory of the National League base- ball season last night and Ken Reitz' two-out single delivered St. Louis' winning run in a 2-1 victory over Philadelphia. Ted Simmons doubled with two out in the 10th and then Reitz, a rookie third baseman, delivered the winning hit. * * * Cubbies downed CHICAGO - Bob Bailey tripled Sports of The.Daily C'mon Floyd ing triple while John Briggs con- tributed a homer and Ollie Brawn a two-run single to lead the Mil- waukee Brewers to a 7-2 American League East victory over the New' York Yankees last night. Bill Parsons, 13-12, scattered six hits and singled home a run en! route to his fourth straight vic- tory. The Yanks, who dropped their fourth decision in five starts, scored their runs on Bobby Mur- cer's 29th homer and Ron Blom-{ berg's 12th. Brown's two-run single came off loser Rob Gardner, 7-4, in the first. The Brewers made it 4-0 in the third on Scott's 18th homer and Briggs' 17th. Another run scored in the fifth on singles by Briggs, Rick Auer- bach and Parsons. Joe Lahoud reached first on a force play in the sixth and raced home when Scott lined a triple past right fielder Johnny Callison. Scott scored the final run on Briggs' sacrifice fly. Twins triumpht MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL - Cesar Tovar's two-run homer in the bottom of the ninth inningc lifted the Minnesota Twins to a 5-3 American League baseball vic- tory over the Texas Rangers last night. George Mitterwald singled with one out in the ninth and one out later, Tovar crashed his second home run of the year to win the game. It was his fourth hit of the' night, following a single, double and triple. lets blasted. NEW YORK - Bob Robertsone slammed a three-run homer andE Bob Moose pitched a six-hitter as the Pittsburgh Pirates beat the New York Mets 5-1 last night and clinched a tie for the National< League East baseball pennant. The Pirates reduced their pen- nant - winnig magic number to one- as they zeroed in on their third7 Home troit, 4; City, 1. Away troit, 3. BOSTON (9)--Baltimore, 2; De- Milwaukee, 2; Kansas (6)-Baltimore (3); De- BALTIMORE Home (S)-Cleveland, 2; Bos- ton, 3.. Away (7)-Boston, 3; Milwau- kee, 2 Cleveland, 2. DETROIT Home (8)-New York 2; Mil- waukee, 3; Boston, 3. Away (5)-Cleveland, 1; Bos- ton, 4. NEW YORK Home (5)-Cleveland, 2 waukee, 3. Away (7)-Milwaukee, Cleveland, 4; Detroit, 2. ; Mil- The AL East Dogfight 1; . .0.@ hang 'em up By BOB McGINN FEW moments in sports history can be recalled after a week or two. After several years, forget it. It's all just not very important. Only those events which detonate genuine emotion stick with us. That's the reason I recall so vividly November 22, 1965, the night Floyd Patterson was humiliated by Muhammad Ali in one of the cruelest mismatches of all time. Patterson, at 21 the youngest man ever to win the heavy- weight crown, was battered unmercifully by the champion. Fighting with a painful muscle spasm in his back, Patterson was a pathetic figure between rounds as his trainers virtually carried him to his stool. The eventual winner had been determined after the first round or two. But Ali, angered by his foe's personal pre-fight remarks, had a score to settle. After nearly 12 rounds, with Patterson senseless and fighting by instinct alone, the debacle was halted. That was the scene almost seven years ago. Tonight the same two men fight again. Someone should stop it. Anybody with an ounce of boxing sense realizes that when a man is seven years older, 20 pounds lighter, has a nine inch shorter reach, and is infinitely slower than his opponent, he's in for a beating. And deep down, Floyd Patterson, age 37, weight 195, reach 71 inches, wnows it. In 1965 he said, "I was a champion. I was a good champion, and I know I am nearing the end." Yet a month ago this very intelligent and thoughtful man told an interviewer: "If I was positively sure I'd get this bout next year, I'd wait. I'll be better at 38 or 39 than at 37. I feel better now than I did five years ago. Since I've started my come- back two years ago, I've improved every fight. His self-delusion can be explained easily enough. Patter- son once said, "Even if I lost something I wouldn't accept it. A fighter never admits to age." But the larger question re- mains. Why does he fight on? For most fighters, money is the sole reason they box. Although Patterson is guaranteed $100,000, his motives definitely run deeper. Since the late Sonny Liston scored his first of two first round knockouts over the ex-champ, Patterson has struggled a decade to erase the lingering memory of that night in Chicago. It showed in their second bout. Patterson admittedly had been fearful of Liston. Deeply ashamed, he decided to slug toe-to-toe with his immense foe-and was obliterated. Friends see Patterson as a funny and gracious man. But after defeat he becomes reticent and oblique, somehow making himself believe that his close friends have instinctively turned against him. Thus, the Patterson of the dark glasses and dis- guises emerges. Patterson has always felt that he is indebted to boxing. "Who is to say what I would actually be if it wasn't for fighting," he quietly says. "A truck driver? A bum?" A far better question would be to ask where the decrepit sport of boxing would be if it had not had the decency and professionalism of Patterson for the past 15 years. Even the New York promo men are having a difficult time selling Patterson's chances to the public. What can they say after no betting line has been issued for the bout? The last time that happened may have been for the Ali-Brian London farce a few years ago. Patterson has been played up as a comeback fighter who has won nine straight. True, he did decision the brawling Argentinian, Oscar Bonavena. But the other wins have come at the expense of such nonentities as Pedro Agosto and Roger Russell. In their need to write something about the fight, the Associated Press commissioned former "white" hope Jerry Quarry, Ali's one-time punching bag, to preview the bout. "I'll go with Ali, but Floyd should extend him and really make him work," babbled Quarry. Patterson really deserves much better than to have his career degenerate to this. He has come from an emotionally disturbed childhood to an Olympic gold medal to the heavyweight champion- ship. The fourth stage, that of a washed-up old pug drowning in dreams and memories, is upon him. Patterson has faced both defeat and victory in his time. Now it's time to face up to age. Hopefully, tonight will be his last stand. --oo Reds win CINCINNATI - Cesar Geronimo cracked three hits and scored the winning run on an infield error in the eighth inning as the Cincin- nati Reds whipped the San Fran- cisco Giants 5-4 Tuesday night and close in on the National League West baseball pennant. Thomas r at, San Di1 SAN DIEGO (!P) - Running back Duane Thomas joined the San Di- ego Chargers yesterday and work- ed out with them for the first time since he was traded by Dallas July 31. Thomas, asked whether he had come to play, answered "yes," and also said, "I'm always in shape." The moody -athlete, famed for his running ability - and his silence -visited the Chargers' National Football League training camp on home a run and Tim Foli hit a two-run homer as the Montreal Ex- pos beat the Chicago Cubs and 20- game winner Ferguson Jenkins 7-2 yesterday before 1,362, the small- est baseball crowd at Wrigley Field since April 25, 1967. Bailey tripled in a run and then scored on Ron Hunt's sacrifice fly in the second. The Expos scored another run in the third and then Foli homered off Jenkins, 20- 12, in the fifth. Jenkins, who has given up 32 homers in 36 games this year, left for a pinch hitter in the bottom of the fifth. Astros soar ATLANTA - Doug R a d e r smashed his 21st home run of the year-and Cesar Cedeno had a run- scoring double as the Houston As- tros downed the Atlanta Braves 5-3 in National League Baseball last night. reap pears egpo camp three previous occasions but did not stay. Head Coach Harland Svare suspended him Aug. 29 for not reporting and he was fined $150 daily. That would make the total fine $3,150. To get Thomas, the Chargers gave up receiver Billy Parks and running back Mike Montgomery. Svare acknowledged at the time that the deal was a gamble since the trade was permanent even if Thomas did not report. There has been no public ex- planation of why Thomas refused to report to the Chargers. When a reporter asked him about it yes- terday, he said, "What do you think?" Thomas stayed after the morn- ing practice and ran pass patterns with quarterback John HadI and several other players. Svare was asked whether Thom- as would play against the Denver Broncos Sunday. "I don't know," the coach re- plied. "Tom Landry, Dallas' coach told me he's capable of stepping in any time.' Thomas gained 1,596 yards on 326 carries in his two years with the Cowboys. He also scored 16 touchdowns. Thomas' decision to return to the Chargers may have been influ- enced by long talks he had here with his probation officers and the district judge that placed him on probation last February for a marijuana conviction. District Judge Hollis Garmon said yesterday he had told Thom- as that if he completed one suc- cessful year with the Chargers, the court =would consider reducing the sentence. rf+ 4' TI T - . F., { The best stereo ~ value in town: ~ Intermediate" I AP Photo CLEVELAND'S BUDDY BELL slides safely into second ahead of the throw to Detroit's second sacker Dick McAuliffe. The play occurred in last night's first game of the twinbill, won by the Tribe, 3-2. The loss combined with another setback in the nite cap 6-4, dropped the Tigers into second place in the torrid American League race. I J s J r r 0 -- 92 ADVE\T The new Pioneer SX-525 AM/FM stereo receiver has enough power to satisfy both ! PIONEE R you and the Advents. It produces 17 watts RMS per channel, across the entire musical Individually, each of the components range at less than 1% total. distortion pictured above has created a new standard (RMS is ;the most demanding and least of sound per dollar stereo value. Together, flashy of the various power rating systems.) these components will provide you with The tuner sections will separate weaker more qualitysounandreliabitytanyo .stations on a crowded dial from their could have bought a year ago for over five brawnier neighboring stations and receive cudrhed o ugtyar agsfr ve fve them with an amazing fullness and clarity. hundred dollars. t ah ult f Poera The Smaller Advent Loudspeakers are the To match the quality of the Pioneer and only speakers costing less than $100 each the Advents, we recommend the BSR model which can reproduce the entire musical 510A/X with a Shure M-75 EC magnetic range. Most inexpensive speakers cannot cartridge. The 51OA/X has a heavy platter, produce the lowest octaves of music: the a synchronous motor, a convenient cueing lowest strings of a double bass or electric control and comes with a dustcoverbsand bass guitar, the lowest pipes of a pipe organ. base. The Smaller Advent can. "The Intermediate" comes complete with our exclusive Five Year Protection Plan and Free ' on year Lab Analysis. Come to Hi-Fl Buys and ask us about it. $449.00 HIwFI BUYS 618 S. MAIN (Hill St. at Main) ANN ARBOR-769-4700 or 01 OPEN 10-9 p.m. weekdays sP 10-6 on Saturday BANKAMERCAR FREE PARKING ~ Major League Standings American League East National League East Boston Baltimore Detroit, New York Cleveland Milwaukee Oakland w 76 77 77 75 66 59 L' 64 66 66 68 79 86 Pct. .543 .538 .538 .524 .455 .407 GB 122 19 Pittsburgh Chicago New York St. Louis Montreal Philadelphia w 90 78 73 70 65 52 L 52 65 68 74 77 90 Pet. GIP .634 - .545 121/ .518 1611 .486 21 .458 25 .366 38 West 84 57 .596 Chicago 79 62 .560 5 Minnesota 72 69 .511 12 Kansas City 68 71 .489 15 California 67 74 .475 17 Texas 52 90 .366 32V2 Yesterday's Results Cleveland 3, Detroit 2, 1st Cleveland 6, Detroit 4, 2nd Baltimore at Boston, postponed Milwaukee 7, New York 2 Minnesota 5, Texas 3 Chicago at Oakland, inc. Kansas City at California, inc. Today's games Baltimore (Cuellar 17-0 or Alexander 6-8) at Boston (Tiant 12-5) Detroit (Fryman 7-2) at Cleveland (Tidrow 12-14) New York (Stottlemyre 14-17) at Mil- waukee (Brett 6-il) Texas (Paul 7-7) at Minnesota (J. Perry 12-14) Chicago (wood 24-14) at Oakland (Hloltzman 17-11) Kansas City (Busby 1-0) at California (May 10-10) West Cincinnati 88 55 .615 - !Houston 80 62 .563 7 Los Angeles 76 66 .535 11i/ Atlanta 66 77 .462 22 San Francisco 63 81 .438 25y2 San Diego 53 87 .379 33% Yesterday's Results Montreal 7, Chicago 2 Pittsburgh 5, New York 1 Houston 5, Atlanta 3 Cincinnati 5, San Francisco 4 St. Louis 2, Philadelphia 1, 10 innings Los Angeles at San Diego, inc. T oday's games Pittsburgh (Kison 8-7) at New York (Seaver 17-12) San Francisco (Marichal 5-15) at Cin- cinnati Houston (Reuss 9-12) at Atlanta (Stone 5-10) Philadelphia (Carlton 24-9) at St. Louis (Wise 15-15) Montireal (Torrez 16-10) at Chicago (Pappas 14-7) Los Angeles (Osteen 17-10) at San Diego (Norman 9-9) Are you stil A ey ut reading the way your parents read? In the first grade, when you were taught to read "Run Spot Run," you had to read.it out loud. Word-by-word. Later, in the second grade, you were asked to read silently. But you couldn't do it. You stopped reading out loud, but you continued to say every word to yourself. Chances are, you're doing it right now. This means that you read only as fast as you talk. About 250 to 300 words per minute. (Guiness' Book of World Records lists John F. Kennedy as delivering the fast- est speech on record: 327 words per minute.) The Evelyn Wood Course teaches you to read without mentally saying each word }o yourself. Instead of reading one word at a time, you'll learn to read groups of words. To see how natural this is, look at the- dot over the line in bold type. grass is green You immediately see all three words. Now look at the dot between the next two lines of type. and it grows when it rains With training, you'll learn to use your innate ability to see groups of words. As an Evelyn Wood graduate, you'll be able to read between 1,000 and 3,000 words per minute . . . depending on the difficulty of the material. At 1,000 words per minute, you'll be able to read a text book like Hofstadtler's American Political Tradition and finish each chapter in 11 minutes. At 2,000 words per minute, you'll be .able to read a magazine like Time or News- week and finish each page in 31 seconds. At 3,000 words per minute, yoU'll be able to read the 447 page novel The God- father in 1 hour and 4 minutes. These are documented statistics based on the results of the 450,000 people who have enrolled in the Evelyn Wood course . since its inception in 1959. The course isn't complicated. There are no machines. There are no notes to take. And you don't have to memorize any- thing. 95% of our graduates have improved their reading ability by an average of 4.7 times. On rare occasions, a graduate's read- ing ability isn't improved by at least 3 times. In these instances, the tuition is completely refunded, Take a free Mini-Lesson on Evelyn Wood. Do you want to see how the course works? Then take a free Mini-Lesson.=M The Mini-Lesson is an hour long peek at what the Evelyn Wood course offers. We'll show you how it's possible to accelerate your speed without skipping a single word. You'll have a chance to try your hand at it, and before it's over, you'll actually increase your reading speed. (You'll only increase it a little, but it's a start.) We'll show you how we can extend your memory. And we'll'show you how we make chapter outlining obsolete. Take a Mini-Lesson this week. It's a wild hour. And it's free. CHEECH & CHONG U of M STUDENT UNION 530 S. State St. MON., SEPT. 11 6:30 or 8:30 p.m. TUES.; SEPT. 12 6:30 or 8:30 p.m. WED., SEPT. 13 6:30 or 8:30 p.m. .....-..- a IN I 'I