Saturday, July 131 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven Saturday, July 1371974 THE MICHiGAN DAILY Page Eleven Sports of The Daily Player leads Open ___ LENO E Tiger Horton shelved DETROIT - Detroit Tiger outfielder Willie Horton will enter a hospital here today for treatment on a knee injury that has handicapped him for nearly two months. Horton, 30, who ruptured cartilage in his knee when he col- lided with the grandstand wall at Tiger Stadium in May, will be placed on the disabled list for a minimum of 15 days, team Gen- eral Manager Jim Campbell said.- Doctors said Horton's knee -would be placed in a cast for about a week. Further tests will then be made to deter- mine whether he will need surgery, they said. Since May, Horton has been able to start only 10 of 27 Tiger games. He will be replaced on the Tiger roster by outfielder Jim Nettles, 26, bought from Evansville of the American Association. Nettles will join the Tigers in Kansas City for this weekend's series, Campbell said. The brother of New York Yankee third baseman Graig Nettles, he bit .285 with 47 runs, 11 homers and 47 RBIs in 75 games with Evansville. F. Robby hanging on NEW YORK - California's Frank Robinson has a slight edge on three other outfielders for the No. 3 spot in the starting line- up for the American League in the July 23 All-Star Game, but the ballots are still being counted. Robinson, with 764,893 votes, trails Reggie Jackson and Bob- by Murcer, but with the results of voting by baseball fans across the country still incomplete, Detroit's Al Kaline, Oakland's Joe Rudi and Texas' Jeff Burroughs can't be counted out. Kaline has 757,448 votes, Rudi 726,603 and Burroughs 696,426, the commissioner's office announced yesterday. Jackson, the A's slugging outfielder, ran away with over- all honors in the AL balloting with 2,085,192 votes, the first player to surpass the two-million mark. New York's Murcer is second In the outfield race with 833,783. So far 4,223,484 ballots have been counted in the voting which ended Sunday. Final results for the annual rivalry, which will be held this year at Pittsburgh's Three Rivers' Stadium, will be announced Monday, Kuhn said. Boston's Carlton Fisk, hobbled by a knee injury, leads the catchers with 972,816 votes, followed by New York's Thur- man Munson with 666,451, Other leaders in the voting, which has not been dominated by any one team, are Dick Allen of Chicago, first base, 937,511; Rod Carew of Minnesota, second base, 1,608,892; Brooks Robinson of Baltimore, third base, 940,006, and Bert Campaneris of the A's, shortstop, 1,375,010. Wilkes a Warrior OAKLAND - The Golden State Warriors announced yester- day the signing of All-America UCLA forward Keith Wilkes to a multi-year contract with the National Basketball Association team. General Manager Dick Vertlieb refused to discuss the con- tract's financial terms. "It's a good offer, and I am happy about it," Wilkes said at a news conference. Wilkes, 21, is a native of nearby Berkeley and played three years with UCLA. He was overshadowed on the Bruins, who won two NCAA titles, by center Bill Walton, drafted and signed by the NBA's Portland Trail Blazers. "I'm kind of looking forward to playing against Walton in the NBA," Wilkes said. One scab LIBERTY, Mo . - Wilbur RENTALS Young was the only regular who checked into the Kansas STEREOS TVs City Chiefs training camp on the AIR CONDITIONERS William Jewell College campus by yesterday evening's dead- quaorenteed repoir line, according to a team service done right spokesman. in our shop Young, a starting defensive end last season, walked with Hi Fi Studio the picketing veterans outside the campus during the after- 215 S. ASHLEY noon, but entered the camp 668-7942 769-0342 when the deadline arrived. THE SUMMER REPERTORY THEATRE presents JEAN GENET'S -TO-IE MAWSI,0 July 11, 12, 13 at 8:00 p.m. East Quad Auditorium $1.25 DONATION-LIMITED SEATING -ANN ARBOR'S ALTERNATIVE THEATRE- as Nicklaus charges LYTHAM ST. ANNE'S, Eng- land (') - Gary Player's sear- ing sub-par pace cooled yester- day, and the dour little South African looked over his should- er to see the advancing shadow of Jack Nicklaus with one round to play in the British Open Golf Championship. "Sure, I'm uncomfortable, I'm very nervous," he said after seeing his five-stroke lead chop- ped to three by England's Peter Olosterhuis and - the awesome Nicklaus coming from nine back to within four of the top. Jack is free-wheeling and I'm choking. Any man who says he doesn't choke is a liar. Saturday will be one hell of a day." After brilliant sub-par rounds of 69 and 68, Player's blades proved they were subject to hu- man frailty and he had to be satisfied with a 75 for a 54-hole score of 212. His chagrin at this falldown was heightened when he left a bll in a bunker at the 162-vard ninth hole and wound up with a doasble bogey five. "In 10 years of tournament golf I don't remember blading the ball as I did then," he said. "I hit it like a duffer." Player is rated the finest sand player in the world. While the part-time Johannes- burg rancher was encountering his problems, the 6-foot4 Oos- terhuis was shooting a fine 73 to put him in second place at 215 and Nicklaus was charging out of the pack with a one-under par 70 for 216. "I thought I was going to have my Saturday round on Friday," the golden-haired Nicklaus, winner of a record 14 major championships, said. "I had it made up and then I gave it back." Sailing toward a possible 66 or 67, big Jack encountered a thick growth of willow scrub on the 15th hole, pitched the ball in a bunker and failed to get out on his first try, winding up with a double bogey six. He lost ano- ther shot at the 16th, chipping poorly, but salvaged a birdie on the 17th to break par for the, first time. "I am fortunate to be this close," Nicklaus said. "Certain- ly, anything is on from here." Nicklaus is renowned here for last-day rallies, having shot rounds of 66 and 6S on the final days the last two years. Hubert Green of Birming- ham, Ala., second leading mon- ey winner on the U.S. Tour, shot a 72 for 217 and. moved into fourth place just behind Nicklaus and ahead of defend- ing chomnion Tom Weiskopf of Columbus, Ohio, and Bobby Cole of South Africa, tied at 218. Weiskopf had an erratic put- ting round with 36 putts and wvent over par on his jinx bole -the 445-vard 14th - for the third straight day in shooting a 74. Young Cole, a copper-hair- ed copy of Player, caught up with his more illvstrous coun- tryman midway of the round but faded to a 75. Major League Leaders AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE Player Club G ABR H Pet. Player ('ub G AB R Pet. Carew Min 3 332 50 128 .336 Garr Atl 87 365 30 133 .364 Maddox NY e5 194 37 64 .330 Gross Mtn 2 2 283 42 95 .336 Hargrove Tex 6 204 27 67 .328 f-Smith StL 75 262 39027 .332 Ystrzmski na 83 227 52 94 .322 D.Cash, Phi 5350 312I2.320 R.Jackson Oak 75 257 47 84 .327 Schmidt Phi 55 282 51 90 .319 Randle Tex 59 262 32 15 .324 Geronimo Cin 74 201 32 64 .312 Orta Chi 66 229 37 74 .323 Zisk Pgh 76 260 40 54 .316 Stanton Cal 56 298 26 67 .322 Grubb SD 86256 33 90 .313 lLRobinson Hal 51 295 23 95 .322 BucknerLA 70 303 39 94 .310 Braun Min 73 255 50 51 .313 Garvey LA 87 358 53 111 .310 Home Runs Home Runs 0. Alien, Chicago, 22; Mayberry, Cedeno, ouston, 19; wynn, Los Kansas City, 17; Hendrick, Cleve- Angerls, 19: Schmidt, Philadelphia, laad, 16; It. Jackson, Oakland, 16; 18; Bench, Cincinnati, 16; T. Perez, w. Morton, Detroit, 15; Briggs, Mil- Cincinnati, I5; Garvey, Los Angeles, waukee, 15. 15. Runs Hatted Sn Runs B~atted Sn Burroughs, Texas, 70; 0. Allen, Cedeno, Houston, 70; Garvey, Los Chicago, 69; Rudi, Oakland, 59; Angeles, 65; Schmidt, Philadelphia, Briggs, Milwaukee, SS; R. Jackson, 62; Cey, Los Angeles, 61; wynn, Los Oakland, 53. Angeles, 61. Pitching (7 Decisions) Pitching (7 Decisions) G. Perry, Cleveland, 15-2, .892; John, Los Angeles, 13-2, .167; Sprague, Milwaukee, 6-1, .857; Fin- Messsrsmth, Los Angeles, 9-2, .81; gers, Oakland, 7-2, .778; EdRdgez, Griffin, Houston, 10-3, .769; Me- Milwaukee, 6-2, .750; Corbin, Minne- Glothen, St. Louis, 12-4, .750; Cap- sota, 5-2, .714; Hamilton, Oakland, ra, Atlanta, 9-3, .750; Mough, Los 5-2, .714; Cuellar, Baltimore, 11-5, Angeles, 6-2, .750; hardy, san Diego, .689; Ftzmorris, Kansas City, 6-3. 6-2, .750. 'r rF YF' i c tit t2p ON M 4th Annual Ann Arbor E0strI '/A L ON MINI S'REfl July 17-20-10 a.m.-10 p.m. 40 in 40 40 40 40 0 r x r t ; t E4 40 f 11V AeA 40 i in o -' LIVE IN AN INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY DURING THE SUMMER TERM FAMILY APARTMENT AVAILABLE * SPACES IN 2-4 PERSON APARTMENTS -modern oportments -community prooroms, sports events, films, dinners -reosonable rotes CALL THE ECUMENICAL CAMPUS CENTER 9211 CHURCH8 ST., 662-5529 MAIN ST REET AS IT WAS AROUND 1900 FEATURING: 2 50 ARTISANS Including; Special demonstrations of arts and crafts techniques; Raku and Stoneware Pottery; Watercolor; Sculpture; Drawings; Painting; Leathercraft; Jewelry, Photog- raphy; Weaving; Wood carving; AND MORE! * ENTERTAINMENT & Including; Mountain Music, by Sherry and John, Wed. 6 and 7 p.m.; Jazz entertain- ment, by Ron Brooks of the Del Rio, 8-10 p.m. every night; The Extension: Special Extension Circus for children, 3-3:30 Sat.; Gemini, Wed. 4 p.m. Th-Fri. 6 p.m.; Rachel, Folk singer, Wed. 5 p.m., Th. 7 p.m., Fri. 2 p.m., Sat. to be announced; David Bernstein, sneak previews of the medieval festival; Your Heritage House Puppeteers, 3 p.m. Wed.-Fri.; Michael the Mime, Wed.-Th. 1 p.m.; Percy Danforth, Rhythm and bones, to be announced; Ann Arbor Squares, square dancing, participatory; AND MOREl GOURMET REFRESHMENTS * 41 40 -1 494 I k. 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