Thursday, August 23, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Eleven Thursda, Auaust 2.1D I i Major League Leaders AMERICAN LEAGU -NATIONAL LEAGUE Player Club G AB R H Pct. Player Club G AB R H Pet. Carew Min 117 455 75 161 .354 Rose Cin 126 528 91 182 .345 W. Horton Det 84 311 36 102 .328 Watson Htn 128 475 84 151 .318 Mutter NY 127 491 67 157 .320 Unser Phi 105 330 49 103 .312 D. May 121 493 77 157 .311 T. Pete. Cin 119 443 55 138 .312 Munson NY 118 408 67 127 .311 Maddox SF 109 437 57 136 .311 Otis KC 122 483 81 147 .304 Cedeno Htn 106 396 66 123 .311 M. Alon NY 116 470 59 143 .304 Matthews SF 113 399 54 123 .308 Scott Ml 118 451 74 137 .304 Cardenal Chi 116 423 66 130 .307 T. Davis Bal 105 422 42 128 .303 Hunt Mon 109 392 61 120 .306 Cepeda Bun 114 445 46 133 .299 Bonds SF 122 482 104 146 .303 HOME RUNS HIOME RUNS RackoOaanStargell, Pittsburgh, 35; Evans, At- toR. ;kMn ,yber ryKan s Fisk, Ros- lanta, 34; DaJohnson, Atlanta, 33; Otis, Kansas City, 24;RF.eRobinson,Bands, San Francisco, 33; H. Aaron, At- California, 23. lanta, 31. RUNS BATTED IN RUNS HATTED IN R. Jackson, Oakland, 102; Mayberry, Stargell, Pittsburgh, 91;Bench, Cin- Kansas City, 93; Mutcete, New Yotk, 82; cinnatl, 91; Evaos, Atlanta, 88; Sin- Otis, Kansan City, 00; Scott, Milwaukee, gleton, Montreal, 86; T Perez, Cincin- 77. nail,03. nTtES PITCIIING (11 DECISIONS) PItC IN (11 DECISIONS ,eaver, New York, 15-6, .714; Brett, Runtet, Oakland, 19-3, .833; McDanieI, Philadelphia, 12-5, .706; Twitchell, New York, 11-3, .786; Palmer, Balti- Philadelphia, 12-5, .706; Bryant, San more, 17-6, .739; Colbern, Milwaukee, Francisco, 19-8, .704; Osteen, Los An- 16-1, .667; Blue, Oakland, 14-7, .667; geles, 14-6, .700; P. Niekro, Atlanta, Hiller, Detroit, 8-4, .667; Splitorff, Kan- 13-6, .684 Billingham, Cincinnati, 16-8, sas City, 15-8, .652; 2 Tied with .636. .667; Cleveland, St. Louis, 12-6, .667. RUNS RUNS R. Jackson, Oak., 92; Otis, KC, 81; D. Bonds, S. F., 104; Evans, AtI, 94; °Mor- My, Mil, 77; White, N. Y., 77; Carew, gan, Cin, 91; Brock, St. L 84; Watson, Min, 75; Nor0th, Oak., 75. Htn, 04. U.S. cagers sink Cuba "in riot-marred battle MOSCOW P) -- 'I saw a Cuban grab the timer's gun and heard it go off. I was really scared." So said towering Tommy Bur- leson of North Carolina State after the fist-swinging, bottle- throwing brawl that marked the last seconds of the United States' 98-76 basketball victory over Cuba yesterday. "I thought anything could hap- pen," he added. Burleson, 7-4, Olympic s t a r, and Cuban Juan Domeco had fal- len to the floor after dashing for a loose ball with 12 minutes left to play. As the two collided and fell, the whole Cuban bench - led by head coach Ernesto Diaz - emp- tied and the team came charging across the court. Diaz chased American Coach Ed Badger as Franklin Standart and Domeco picked up chairs and started swinging them. A startled Amer- ican team quickly backed out. "They wouldn't fight - they just tried to hit any American they could from the blind side," Burleson said. Standart knocked down Duane Woltzen, an assistant U.S. team manager, with his chair, and then another Cuban kicked Wolt- zen in the groin. He needed med- ical treatment before getting back on his feet. Diaz caught up with Badger, from Wilbur Wright College, and kicked him in the stomach. The Pappas, Popovich spar Cubs; Big S.ee There's Gaylord six-hits isox, - By The Associated Press The Reds' Fred Norman, 10-12, unearned run charged N th in g CHICAGO-Milt Pappas posted was hurt by five unearned runs him in the sixth on his his first victory -since June 28 as in seven innings, with shortstop rant pickoff throw, tw £S c u w u the Chicago Cubs rallied for five Darrel Chaney's miscue on a and a force play. runs in the fourth inning to de- Rico Carty bases-loaded bounder Pappas, loser of five feat Cincinnati 6-5 yesterday. setting up four tainted runs in finally upped his record a b o tit t Paul Popovich provided the the fourth. despite being relieved big blow in the rally with his Norman, who left for a pinch- seventh after yielding 11 first home run of the season, hitter in the seventh, yielded The Reds took an early driving home two runs, only three hits but had another in the fourth on singles the-in-ce.-JMorgan and Tony Pei the pri1e.-Bobby Tolan's double. Johnny Bench hit h homer of the year to lea irect from S. University Cincinnati eighth. Drtfm UiIWI xn - against own er- o walks straight, d to 6-10 in the A hits. 2-0 lead by Joe rez and is 22nd d off the BIG BURG'ER and the Deiltones Playing music by the Beach Boys, The Coasters, and much, much, more. - LIVE at The PRETZEL BELL Tuesday, Aug. 21-Saturday, Aug.25 120 E. LIBERTY-761-1472 CLEVELAND-Gaylord Perry scattered six hits and finally got the run he needed to win when Buddy Bell scored on a wild throw to give Cleveland a 12- inning, 1-0 victory over the Chi- cago White Sox, Bell was walked by Cy Acosta, 7-5, and then came around to score when, with one out, Bill Meltdn fielded Walt Williams' bunt and threw it into the dirt, allowing Bell to cross the plate with the winning run. Perry, now 14-16, got stronger as the game progressed, allow- ing no hits over the last four innings. American bore two footprints on his white shirt. The court in the Red Army gym became a circus. Police swarmed in from adjoining sta- diums with dozens of Games of- ficials, and they began chasing the Cubans around. Wally Walker, University of Virginia, fell on broken glass and suffered a cut on his right hand requiring three stitches. A bot- tle had been thrown from the Cuban bench. The victory sent the U.S. team into the semifinals against Brazil, 61-51 winner o v e r Czechoslovakia. Then the next step is tomor- row's final, where the opponent is almost certain to be the So- viet Union, boasting several play- ers who ruined America's 36- year Olympic basketball reign at Munich. The Russiansegaineda semifinal berth Wednesday by beating Bulgaria 87-57. The American women's team, sith no confidence, gained the final with a 59-55, incident free triumph over Cuba, setting up a Friday showdown with the Russians, who beat the Ameri- cans 92-53 in the first round. "We are a more experienced and poised team now," said head coach Jill Upton from Mississip- pi State. "We may not win, but the Russians will know they've been in a fight." Meanwhile, the Russians won three of the six events at the Central Lenin Swimming Pool- beating Cathy Carr, America's world record-holder and double Olympic gold medalist, in t h e women's 100-meter breaststroke -and added three gold medals in tennis. This boosted the Russian over- all total to 54 gold medals, 26 silver and 25 bronze. The Unit- ed States added three golds and three silvers in swimming and had a medal count of eight golds, seven silvers and 13 bronze. The day's biggest surprise was the defeat of the 18 year-old Miss Carr of the University of New Mexico in the women's 100- meter breaststroke, NFL Standings NFL Exhibitions Today's Game Dallas at Houston, 9 p.m. TomorroW's Games Cincinnati at Detroit, 8 p.m. Los Angeles at Miami, 8 p.m. Saturday's Games Oakland at Minnesota at Berkeley Atlanta at Cleveland at Knoxville Baltimore at Washington New York Jets at St. Louis New England at New Orleans Philadelphia at San Diego Sunday's Games Pittsburgh at New York Giants Chicato at Buttalo (Gteen Bay at Kansa City Saturday and Sunday nam, am e am ., M.MILLER 'rOm War 8 os A Krry Services ompny Modern Languages Aud. $ 7:15 9:30 p$1 .25 friends of newsreel PO The last day of publication for M"% THE Summer Daily is FRIDAY, 24AUGUST 1973 e tc t Bailj resumes publication on FRIDAY, 7SEPTEMBER1973 Display and classified advertising deadlines will be: Noon, Thursday, Sept. E for classified and 3 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 5 fo display. 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