Thursday, June 15, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Tigers edge Twis; Reds down Phillies By The Associated Press ST. PAUL - MINNEAPOLIS - Mickey Lolich, fighting off a virus and Harmon Killebrew's two-run homer, picked up his 10th victory when the Detroit Tigers squeezed in a seventh inning run to down the Minnesota Twins 3-2 last night. The Tigers won Lolich's five- hitter when Eddie Brinkman raced home from third base on a suicide squeeze hunt by Au- relio Rodriguez with one out. Brinkman started the wtnning rally with a, leadoff single, moved to second on Lolich's sacrifice and to third on Dick McAuliffe's single. Magic Number: 106 With. Slick Mick turning the trick last night the Tigers slic- ed into that old magical num- ber for the first time in a few days. Pretty soon it'll shrink to only two digits and from then on it should be just a waltz home. Killebrew's 442- foot smash, following a fourth-inning leadoff single by Rod, Carew, was his seventh of the season and 522nd of his career. It moved him past Ted Williams into te No. 6 spot among all-time home run hitters and 12 behind No. 5 Jimmy Fox. Lolich, who struck out nine to regain the American League strikeout lead with 94 for the season, has been bothered by a flu virus the lastfew days. Gates Brown drove in two Detroit runs, with a sacrifice fly in the first after a triple by Rodriguez and a single in the fifth after a .059-hitter Lolish blooped a hit to right and later lumbered in from second. Phils benched CINCINNATI - Johnny Bench drove in both Cincinnati runs with a homer and sacrifice fly as the sizzling Reds edged Phila- delphia 2-1 last night for their seventh consecutive victory and 26th 4 their last 32 games. Cincinnati took a 1-0 lead in the first inning when Joe Morgan drew his 41st walk of the sea- son, took third on Bobby Tolan's single and came home on Bench's short fly ball to center. Bench's long homer made it 2- inthef ourth.nItwashis17th homer and 47th run batted in, both tops in the majors. The Phils closed the gap to 2-1 in the seventh when Willie Montanez led off with a double and scored on a single by Tom- my Hutton. Jack Billingham, 4-6, retired the first 13 Phillies before Hut- ton singled. He needed help from Clay Carroll after Willie Mon- tanez singled with two out in the ninth for the fifth Philadelphia hit. Barry Lersch, 1-3, was the loser. .: : : a. , . . . , . a a i. -. Sudden wins PITTSBURGH - Sam Mc- Dowell, pitching in his home- town for the first time in his career, stymied Pittsburgh on five singles as the San Francisco Giants beat the Pirates 3-1 last night. McDowell, a Pittsburgh native who spent his major league ca- reer in the American League be- force coming to San Francisco in a trade this year, surrendered the sole Pirate run in the fourth on a hit, an error and a run- scoring single by Manny San- guillen. The Giants had earlier staked McDowell, 74, to a pair of third inning runs off loser Dock Ellis, 5-3. Cubs power CHICAGO-Ron Santo clubbed a three-run homner in the sixth inning yesterday, climaxing a six-run explosion that carried the Chicago Cubs to a 12-9 victory over the San Diego Padres. Billy Williams and Jose Car- denal also homered for Chicago as the Cubs battered six San Diego pitchersfor 16 hits, send- ing the Padres down to their 6th defeat in 13 games. A single by Don essinger off losing reliever Ed Acosta, 1-3, started the sixth-inning outburst. Mike Caldwell replaced Acosta and gave up a single to Williams and a run-scoring double to Jim Hickman that broke a 6-6 tie. After a walk to Carmen Fan- .,zone that loaded the bases, Rick Monday lashed a two-run double, then Mike Corkins took the mound and surrendered Santo's homer, his seventh of the season. A walk, Williams' ninth homer and Cardenal's seventh gave the Cubs three runs in the first inning. New Fork rips NEW YORK-Solo home runs by Johnny Callison and Bobby Murcer and the four-hit pitching of Mike Kekich and Sparky Lyle carried the New York Yankees to a 3-0 victory over Chicago last night, ending the White Sox' six-game winning streak. Callison cracked his second home run of the season in the first inning off Tom Bradley, ending a string of two consecu- tive shutouts for the Yankees, and Murcer connected in the .. fifth. Bradley, 7-3, struck out nine in five innings before leav- ing for a pinch hitter. ATLANTA-Dufy Dyer crash- ed a three-run homer and Cleon .a Jones drove in two runsas the ix New York Mets whipped the ' a Atlanta Hraves 8-3 last night . and climbed back into first place in the National League East. Coupled with Pittsburgh's 3-1 loss to San Francisco, the tri- unmph pushed the Mets one-half game ahead of the Pirates. The victory, only New York's fourth in its last 12 games, came despite the 651st career home run for Atlanta's Hank Aaron, -Assoeiated Press a blow that moved him into a HARD THROWING Sam McDowell winds up one of his blazing tie with Eddie Collins for fifth fastballs. Making his hometown debut in Pittsburgh yesterday, place on the all-time hit list at McDowell pitched one of his best games as a San Francisco Giant 3,311. and raised his record to 7-4. CONGRESSIONAL ROADBLOCK: Kennedy WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W.Va. (R)-Commissioner Walter Kennedy of the National Basket- ball Association said yesterday that a proposed merger with the American Basketball Association "would be impossible to com- plete before next season." But, he added, it could happen before the next draft of college players, which takes place an- nually after each pro season. "I think it will be possible to get the merger passed through Congress despite opposition from the players' association," he said. The merger bill, which has been stymied in a Senate sub- committee since last September and been bitterly opposed by subcommittee chairman S e n. Sam J. Ervin Jr. (D-N.C.), also has met strong disapproval from the NBA Players Association, sees no merger soon headed by Oscar Robertson of the Milwaukee Bucks. 'There has been no question that through their opposition the players' association has caused a delay," said Kennedy on the eve of the NBA Board of Gov- ernors meetings in this plush resort area. "But I believe that both congressional bodies will approve the bill without the play- ers' approval." Merger will be one of the ma- of the reasons they are fighting the proposed merger. Other items on the agenda in- clude possible action against the players who participated in the unsanctioned a ll-s t a r game against the ABA at Uiondale, N.Y. on May 25; discussion on the possible sale or transfer, of the Boston Celtics; approval of sale announced Tuesday night of the Chicago Bulls; scheduling; and rule changes. jor top the goo day m governo from t headed Baltimo "Ther abouti lack of nedy." be discs The the com gotiatin ciation possible Lion clo concern Nate player in tics of discussion when vernors begin their two- [JQC Imt e t neeting yesterday. The rs will hear a report a ie the merger committee, w f by Abe Pollin of the re Bullets. OMAHA, Neb. OP) - Daryl Arenstein's 10th inning single e certainly will be talk Wednesday night swept South- merger, its progress or ern California by Texas 4-3 and it," emphasized Ken- kept alive the Trojan's bid for But I don't think there'll an unprecedented third straight NCAA World Series baseball ussion of the ABA. tle. commissioner also said Top-ranked Arizona State, 63- smittee that has been ne- 4, the only unbeaten left in the g with the players' asso- double elimination tournament, will make a report on met sixth-rated Temple, 33-14, modifications of the op- in the night's other game, ause--a cause of major Southern California is seek- to the players and one ing its eighth NCtitle. Flyweight Nate To win, the Trojans would have to come back through the Archibald is the lightest loser's bracket for the second the NBA (158 pounds). straight year. Trinity widens margin in NCA4A tennis play ATHENS, Ga. {A')-Ninth- Paul Gerken of Trinity I sity beat Miami's second- Eddie Dibbs yesterday t three other Trinity player quarterfinals of the 88th NCAA Tennis Champions Gerken outpointed Dib straight sets, 6-2 and 6- viding Trinity with half Professional League Standing American League East N. W L Pct. GB Detroit 28 22 .560 - Blaltimore 7 22 .551 f NwI or Ceelan22 24 .478 4 Pittsbu Boston 21 25 .457 5 Chicago New York 21 29 .420 7 St. Louis Milwaukee 16 32 .333 11 M inteal West Philadelpia Oakland 33 16 .673 - Chicago 31 19 .620 21 Cincinnati Minnesota 27 21 .563 51/2, Los Angeles California 24 27 .471 10 Houston Kansas ;City 21 28 .440 iii!.Atlanta Texas 23 38 .434 13 San Diego Yesterday's Results San Francisco Boston 11, Kansas City 3 Yes New rke 3,C cago 0 Chicago 12, Sa Dletroit 3,Minnesota 2 San Francisco Texas 7, Milwaukee 1C ncis2, Baltimore at Oakland, inc. tinsiunat 2, Cleveland at Califo aa, in . Los Angeles a Today's Games ,~slg Chicago (Bahnsen, 8-6) at New York T (Peterson, 4-7) night San Diego (Gr Kansas City (Murphy, 2-2) at Boston (Hands, 5-2: (Siebert, 6-2) San Francisco Cleveland (Colbert, 0-4) at California tided) at Pit (Wright, 6-?)'night and Moose, Only games scheduled Only games sc ational League East W L r 28 22 23 30 31 38 30 33 West 34 19 32 22 31 23 35 27 15 35 0 19 39 sterday's Results an Diego 9 8, Atlanta 3 Philadelphia 1 montreal 4 t St. Louis, postpo oday's Games reif, 3-9) at Chicag (Stone, 3-6and u ttsburgh (Briles, 3 4-2) twi-night heduled seeded eight players left in singles. sniver- Top - seeded D i c k Stockton, -seeded fourth-seeded Brian Gottfried and :o lead seventh -seeded B o b McKinley rs into were the other Trinity players annual to make the round of eight. Gott- hips, fried was extended to three sets, bs in the first time a Trinity player 2,fprh- has gone past two sets during of the the week of matches. Favored Trinity took the team lead with 26 points, followed by S Stanford with 22. Defending chamipon UCLA had 20, South- ern California 17, North Caro- lina, 15, Houston 15, Southern Pct. GB Methodist 14, Georgia 11, Miami 64 11, Southern Illinois 10 and .648 'l2 .568 4% Arizona 10. .434 11 Stockton meets Jeff Austin of 413 2 377 UCLA in today's quarterfinals. Roscoe Tanner of Stanford op- 642 poses McKinley, Charlie Owens .593 2/ of Stanford faces Gottfried and .574 3% Alex Mayer of Stanford will play .481 8f Gerken. .340 16 .328 17 Tanner beat Georgia's Danny Birchmore 6-3, 6-4. The Bulldogs also lost out in the doubles when Northern Illinois players Tom and Tim Gullikson beat Birch- ned more and Bob Tannis in three sets 7-5, 6-7 and 6-2. o Stockton dropped his Southern Cal foe 6-3, 6-4; McKinley beat nde- Fred McNair of North Carolina 6-4, 6-4; and Gottfired beat Bob Kreiss of UCLA 4-6, 6-1, 6-2. Thel lead the Russ Pf Gerry sity set en shuti Punting Leader HAIRSTYLING last Purdue footballer to AS YOU LIKE IT! Big Ten in punting was NEW TRENDS FOR 1972 shler. TRIMS-SHAGS ® -and RAZOR CUTS Puckstopper Dascola Barbers Powers of Denver Univer- 2 SHOPS a WCHA record with sev- 0611 E. University outs in 1967-68. 0 615 E. Liberty ENDS SHOWS AT TONIGHT1,3,5,7,9 Staring TRISH VAN EVERE - MONTE MARKHAM JANET LEIGH and MEtVYN DOUGLAS * -FRIDAY * 3with BURT REYNOLDS and RAQUEL WELCH