Page Twelve Wednesday, August 15 ,1973 THE SUMMER DAILY PaeTeleTEUMR AL w ~, How about that, sports fans? Gooney Bird manager Don "Baby Boog" Powell " powders a decisive fourth-inning round trip- per to lead his charges to victory in the IM Slow-Pitch Champion- ship held yesterday. For details, see page 11. Daily Photo by TERRY McCARTHY THE MAGNIFICENT 700 Jr. OImpics start today By CHUCK BLOOM North, South, East and West. They come from all over the country. Over 700 y o u n g, aspiring athletes, from the ages of 10 to 17 converge on the little sleepy college town of Ann Arbor in the heart of the Huron River Valley.- All of them in search of victory in the seventh annual AAU Junior Olympics which begins to- day. For most of the participants it will be the first taste of na- tional competition in the oft-ne- glected area known as age group competition. Age groups are exactly what they imply; competition within a ...gertain a g e bracket. Unfor- tunately age group competition ends for a youngster once he or she has compared in a National championship event, the Junior Olympics excluded. Most of the attention in the country is given to older, more established athletes who are veterans of national meets. Yet few realize that they all came up the same way, through the age group program. And without the age group program, they would not be the big names that they are today. Names like Spitz, Schollander, Rudolph. COMPETITION WILL be held at three sites: Fuller Pool, Fer- ry Field, and Crisler Arena. Here is a schedule of all events and times: WEDNESDAY 0 JUDO - Crisler Arena - 9 am-NOON. * DIVING - Fuller Pool - 4 p.m. * SWIMMING - Fuller Pool- 6 p.m. - FINALS * . TRACK - Ferry Field - 4-7 p.m. * GYMNASTICS-C r i s I e r Arena - 1-6 p.m. THURSDAY * TRAMPOLINE - Crisler Arena -9 a.m.-NOON. *DIVING, SWIMMING, T R A C K, GYMNASTICS - same as above * CLOSING CEREMONIES- Crisler or Bursley Hall - 8 p.m. Ann Arbor will be heavily rep- S miff resented in the swimming com- petition to be held at Fuller Pool, on Fuller Road on the way to North Campus. A strong Ann Arbor Swim Club contingent, un- der the tutelage of coach Johanna High, stands a good chance of taking some top honors. Danny Stephenson leads the men's di- vision swimming three gureling freestyle events while Jenny Ogle tackles both butterfly events for the women. Several aspiring divers will be- gin competition at four today. GYMNASTICS co - ordinator Carew, Cards, By The Associated Press BLOOMINGTON, Minn.-Ameri- can- League batting leader Rod Carew smacked five hits and Dave Goltz emerged from the Minnesota bullpen last night to deal Detroit a 12-1 defeat. The loss checked the Tigers' winning streak at four games and ended a losing skid by the Twins at seven. Carew lifted his batting aver- age to .360 with five hits in six trips and reached 1,000 hits for his ,career. The Twins ripped Joe Coleman, 18-10, for 11 singles and seven runs, hamrniering him for three runs in the first inning and then finishing him off with a four- run sixth. Cards stop losing ST. LOUIS-Seventh-inning dou- bles by Bernie Carbo and Joe Torre snapped a 5-5 tie and sparked the St. Louis Cardinals to a 9-5 victory over the Houston Astros last night. The Cardinals, who had drop- ped eight straight games in ty- ing their longest losing streak Newt Loken says the action over at Crisler Arena will be out- standing with 14 of the country's finest gymnasts competing. But the highlight seems to be the track and field competition at Ferry Field. There will be some real fleet youngsters com- peting in the two-day action. Among them will be Alvin Cren- shaw, from Dallas, Texas, who is a double state champion in the 440 and 880. Crenshaw is con- sidered the cream of a very good crop this year. To challenge the T e x a s Tornado will be Balti- more's Clifford Wiley who runs a fast 100, 9.6 to be exact, and Illinois 880 champ Charlie White. AND IF YOU like to see your- self on television, you'll get your chances as CBS Sports Spectacu- lar is taping the proceedings for an Aug. 19 telecast. Tickets are $1 per event or a fin for the whole ball of wax. The best thing for these ath- letes would be a large turnout from the community to lend sup- port to some fine young warriors. Who knows maybe an Olympic champion is among them? Goltz bomb Tigers; Cincy both since 1957, erupted for five runs in the sixth and followed with a four-run burst an inning later. Reds are marching PITTSBURGH - Andy Kosco's ninth inning single scored pinch runner Cesar Geronimo with the tie-breaking run -last night, help- ing the surging Cincinnati Reds to a 5-4 victory over Pittsburgh. Johnny Bench opened the ninth with a double and went to third on Willie Stargell's single. Gero- nimo ran for Bench and scored on Kosco's hit. Pete Rose'; two- out single added another run. Royals in first KANSAS CITY - Fran Healy drove in three runs to lead Kan- sas City to an 8-5 baseball victory over Cleveland last night as the Royals retained their half-game lead in the American League West Division. George Hendrick, Cleveland's victors slugging centerfielder, suffered a broken bone above his right wrist when he was struck by a pitch from Steve Busby in the second inning. Hendrick, who has belted 21 home runs this season, will wear a cast on his arm for about three weeks. Chisox still stink MILWAUKEE - Milwaukee's George Scott blasted a one-out, ninth inning homer to lift the Milwaukee Brewers to a 5-4 de- cision over the Chicago White Sox last night. Scott's homer, his 17th of the baseball season off reliever Cy Acosta, 7-3, broke a 4-4 tie which the White Sox had forged in their half of the ninth on Pat Kelly's single off reliever Eduardo Rod- riguez, 5-3. But Rodriguez then stiffened and preserved the .tie by pitching out of a bases-loaded, none-out jam. Major League 1 'Stc dinsg AMERICAN LEAGUE East W I. Pct. GR Detroit . 66 53 .554 - Baltimore 64 5 21 New Tech 06b 56 .541 1'? 'oton 62 5 5 .505 3' Milwaukee 58 59 .496 7 Cleveland 47 72 .395 19 west Kansas City 69 51 .575,- Oakland 60 515.571 x. Minnesota 57 60 ..487 1011 Chicago 58 62 .483 11 California 53 63 .457 14 Texas 42 75 .359 25' Yrsterday's IRslts New York 7, California 2 Oakland 1, Boston 0 Kansas City 8, leveland 5 Milwaukee 5, Chicago 4 B~atimore 12,Tesas 10 Minnesota 12, Detroit 1 Today's Games Baltimore (McNally 10-13) at Texas (Bibhy 6-6) Cleveland (Timmerman 6-3) at Kansas City (Fitzmorris 4-0) Detroit (Lolich 12-11) at Minneso- ts (Decker 7-5) Chicago (Wood 20-17) at Milwaukee (Bell 9-8) California (Barber 1-2) at New York (Stottlemnyre 12-10) Oakland (Blse 02-7) at Boston (Cur- tis 1-9) NATIONAL LEAGUE East EatW L Pct. GB St. Louis 62 58 .517 - Pittsburgh 57 59 .491 3 Montreal 5700.407 3'>. Chicago 56 62.475 5 Philadelphia 54 63 .462 6 New York 52 64 .448 8 Los Angeles 74 45 .622 - Cincinnati 73 48 .603 2 San Francisco 64 52 .552 8' Houston 63 59 .516 12' Atlanta 57 65. 467 18' San Diego 42 76 .356 31' Yesterday's Results Atlanta 6, Chicago 2 Cincinnati 5, Pittsburgh4 50x. Louis 9, Houtston 5 New York at Saa Diego, inc. Montreal at Los Angeles, inc. Philadelphia at San Francisco, inc. Today's Oames Cincinnati (Billingh"m 15-) at Pittsburgh (Ellis 11-10) Atlanta (Harrison 7-4) at Chicago (teuschel 12-10) Houston (Reuss 12-8) at St. Louis (Wise 13-7) Montreal (McAnally 7-6) at Los An- geles (Sutton 14-7) New York (Seaver 15-6) at San Die- go (Arlin 7-10) Philadelphia (Twitchell 11-4) at San Francisco (Marichal 9-8) Summer Daily Sports