P"d.tuIrdoy, 11 July Z9 111.' THE MlC rl(lA UAtILY _'g P!__r_.,., Sdturday, July 29; 1972 THE ICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Morton paces Cowboys R_ ,. .to 20-7 win over Stars CHICAGO () -- Veteran quarterback Craig Morton replaced s h a k e n Roger Staubach in the second quarter last night and hurl- ed two touchdown passes to ' steer the world cham- pion Dallas Cowboys to a 20-7 victory over the Col- lege All-Stars. Mike Clark booted a 31-yard field goal late in the first quar- - ter to give the Cowboys a 3-0 Y lead. Clark's field goal with 5:43 left in the period followed an interception by Mel Renfro of a Jerry Tagge pass at the All- Star 30-yard line. The All-Star defense led by linemen Sherman White from California and John Mendenhall of Grambling and backs Tommy Cassanova of LSU and Tom Darden of Michigan show :d sur- prisingly well. Darden intercepted a Rogr ARTERBACK Roger Staubach of the Dallas bAP Photo Staubach pass on his own 19 and Cowboys sets to eturned it 30 yards. leash a pass as he gets protection from Duane Thomas (33) d Cliff Harris (43) who thwart All-Star Sherman White (70) THE DALLAS defense led by the first quarter of last night's charity affair. linemen Bob Lilly, Larry Cole JRRY SQUEEZES ORIOLES: Brewers beltT iges By The Associated Press Detroit had scored in the first Boston hitless for 53 innings ILWAUKEE--Tommie Reyn- when Rodriguez was hit by a and pitched the New York , pinch-hitting for a pinch- pitch, Jim Northrup walked and Yankees to a six-hit 3-1 victory er with one out in the bot- Bill Freehan singled. But Mil- over Boston yesterday and a of the ninth inning, stroked waukee tied it in the second on split of a twi-night American c-breaking single to left that Ollie Brown's double and Mike League doubleheader. d the Milwaukee Brewers to Ferraro's s i n g 1 e, then went The Red Sox took the opener -2 victory over the Detroit ahead in the sixth. Johnny 6-5 with a four-run rally in the rs last night. Briggs walked, scampered to ninth inning capped by Bob he victory s n a p p e d the third when Tiger starter Joe Montgomery's first home run of wers' five-game losing spin Coleman uncorked a wild pitch the baseball season with two e the Tigers, droppihg only and Freehan, his catcher, slip- men aboard off ace reliever r third game in the last 12, ped while chasing it down, then Sparky Lyle. ained 2/2 games ahead of Briggs scored on Brown's single.k and Jethro Pugh was equally effective in keeping the All-Stars neutralized. Craig Morton tossed an 18- yard touchdown pass to Ron Sellers with less than five min- utes remaining in the first half to give the Cowboys a 10-0 half- time lead. The pass to Sellers, acquired last week from the New Eng- land Patriots, climaxed a 66- yard drive which took 11 plays. Two plays earlier, Morton had replaced Roger Staubach who was slightly injured on a six- yard scamper for a first down. The All-Stars continued to have trouble moving the ball, as the Cowboys front four put constant pressure on Tagge and permitted the Stars running game only limited room. On the last play of the half, Chester Marcol of Hillsdale at- tempted a 68-yard field goal after Darden made a fair catch on his own 32. But the ball reached only to the Cowboy six- yard line. Dallas made the score 17-0 at 6:13 of the third quarter when Morton hit Bob Hayes with a 24- yard touchdown pass. The score came five plays after Lilly recovered a Tagge fumble on the All-Star 41. The Stars came back with their best drive of the game, moving from their own 20 to the Dallas 30, mostly on the strength of short passes by Tagge. BUT WITH third down and two on the 30, Bobby Moore of Oregon lost 12 yards when he fumbled out of bounds on an option play. Then Marcol's 49- yard field goal attempt was blocked by Pat Toomay. The Cowboys came right back with a drive of their own. The key play was a 26-yard pass from Morton to Sellers that put the ball on the All-Star 34. On the first play of the fourth quarter, Toni Fritsch kicked a 33-yard field goal to make the score 20-0. Heisman Trophy winner Pat Sullivan of Auburn entered the game for the first time after Fritsch's field goal, and moved the Stars 80 yards in 16 plays for their only touchdown. QI un. am in PE M olds hitt tom a. tie lifte a 3 Tige T Bret whil thei remg second-place,- Baltimore in the American League East. Dave May singled and took second on a sacrifice, then Joe Lahoud was given an intentional walk. Brock Davis then batted - for winner Jim Lonborg and Fred Scherman replaced Chuck Seelbach, 7-5, for Detroit. Reynolds was sent up to bat for Davis and lined his hit that gave Lonborg his ninth victory in 14 decisions, The Tigers tied it in the eighth inning when Aurelio Rod- riguez hit his sixth home run of the baseball season, a two- out shot that barely cleared the foul pole. Chess correction We extend our apologies to all you chess freaks for yester- day's booboo in the printing of th e Fischer - Spassky play-by- play. Fischer-white -Spassky-Black 1. P-QB4 P-QB4 2. Kt-Qn3 Kt-0i13 3. Kt-i13 Kt-B3 4. P-KKt3 P-KKI3 5. .i-Kt2 B-Kt2 6. (-0 0-() 7. P-Q4 PxP 8. KtxP KtxKt 9. QxKt P-Q3 10. B-K 1-K3 11. 0-14 Q-i 12. ((i-ill QRl-Ktl 131. i'-ioti KRc-QBI 14. Q-Q2 i'-QRi3 i5. 13-K3 P-QKI4 16. il-iR7 PP 17. IxR6 RxB 10. l'sI lBsP 39. KRQI1 Qt-Q2 20. Kt-Q5 QxQ 21. KtxPch K-1l 22. RxQ KxKt 23. RxB R-Ktch 24. B-131 Kt-i14 25. K-K2 I'-QR4 26. P-K4 B-R8 27. P-B4 P-B3 28. R-K2 K-K3 20. R K2-Q12 43-Kt7 30, 13-Cl P-R4 31. R B2-Q2 B-R6 32. P-m5ch PxP 33. PxPch K-K4 34. R 134-Q4 KxP 35. R-Q5ch K-K3 31. RxQPc K-K2 31. 11-136 resign Elapsed time: Fischer 94 minutes, Spassky 135 minutes. Birds bumped BALTIMORE - Gaylord Perry scattered six hits and triggered a three-run 10th inning rally with a tie - breaking s u i c i d e squeeze bunt to record his 17th victory of the baseball season last night as the Cleveland In- dians defeated the Baltimore Orioles 4-1. Perry, who has lost eight, tied Detroit's Mickey Lolich as the winningest pitcher in the majors, striking out six and walking two as he outdueled Dave McNally, 10-8. A single by Chris Chambliss and Ray Fosses double started' the Indians' uprising. Del Unser was given an intentional walk to load the bases before Perry dumped his bunt in front of the plate with Chambliss steaming home from third. John Brohamer then tried the same thing but missed the ball and Fosse was an easy out at the plate. Brohamer then swung away and laced a two-run sinale to right. Iosox split NEW YORK-Steve Kline held Pirates pepper PITTSBURGH - W i 11 i e Stargell belted his 21st home run of the season, a solo shot off Tom Seaver, and a run- scoring,-single and Dock Ellis tossed a seven-hitter to pace the Pittsburgh Pirates to a 3-1 victory over the New York Mets last night. The victory gave the Pirates a 6%-game lead over the sec- ond-place Mets in the National League East - widest margin of the season for the defending World Champions. " REFORM EDUCATION demtocrat state i'epresentative Paid Political Advertisement Professional League Standings American League National League EastEast W L PtonB W1I.Pet. Oil Detralt 53 30 .512 - Pittsbulrgh 51 34 .626 - Baltimore 50 40 .556 2P/ NewYork 50 40 .556 6'/2 Boston 46 43 .517 - 5t.Louis 46 44 .511 10% New York 44 44 .500 712 Chicago 47 46 .505 11 Cleveland 30 56 .427 14 Montreal 41 48 .461 15 Milwaukee 36 54 .400 I Philadelphia 33 51 .3t3 24 Werst West Cineinnati 5t 34 .622 - Oakland 57 35 .620 - Houstonsi 43 .543 7 Chicago 51 .42 .548 6) Los Angeles 49 42 .538 7V2 Minnesota 45 43 .511 10 Atlanta 43 49 .467 14 Kansas City 45 47 .489 12 San Francisco 41 53 .436 17 California 41 52 '.441 16 as2an Diego 34 57 .374 22% Texas 37 54 .407 19) Yesterday's Results Yesterday's Results Philadelphia 2, Chicago 0 Milwaukee 3, Detroit2 - Pittsburgh 3, New York 1 Chicago 5, Kansas City 0 Montreal 3, St. Louis 1 Boston 6, New York 5, 1st Atlanta 4, San Francisco 3, 1st New York 3, iloston a, 2nd San Francisco at Atlanta 2nd, post- Cleveland 4, Baltimore 1, 10 innings poned Texas at California, inc. San Diego 3, Cincinnati 1 Minnesota at Oakland, ine. Los Angeles 6, Houston 5 Today's Gamrs Today's Games Montreal (Torrz, 11-5) at New York Detroit (Timmerman, 7-8) at Mil- (gentry, 5-6), night waukee (Colburn, 2-2) San Francisco (Reberger, 1-0) at At- Kansas City (Dal Canton, 5-4) at lanta (Kelley, 5-6), night Chicago (Lemonds, 1-3) Sa nDiego (Caldwell, 3-4) at Cin- Boston (Curtis, 6-3) at New York cinnati (Nolan, 13-2) (Kekich, 9-9) Los Angeles (Sutton, 2-5) at Houston Cleveland (Dunning, 0-0) at Balti- (Reuss, 6-8), night more (Palmer, 13-4) Pittsburgh (Blass, 1-4) and Walker, Texas (Hand, 7-6) at California 3-5) at Philadelphia (Brandon, 5-2 (May, 3-8 or Messersmith, 2-4), night and Fryman 3-10), 2, twinight Minnesota (Cobin, 6-3) at Oakland St. Louis (wise, 10-10) at Chicago (Hunter, 12-4) (Hands, 7-7) Conspiracy presents-a midwest premiere LUMINOUS PROCUiRESS starring THE FABULOUS COCKETTES with-monkeys, vegetable people, mimes, whores, musciemen, male nuns, sufi holy men, automatons, transvestites, vision- ories, fairy godmothers, keupie dolls, art models, wonders upon wonders. AN ALTOGETHER EXTRAORDINARY PHANTASMAGORIA" --San Francisco Film Festival TONIGHT-7:30 & 9:30 $1.25 contribution AT THE Modern Language Building DIAL HELD 8-61OVER! Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times: "Fritz is a for cry from Disney. It is an intelligent social satire." INTRODUCING Fritz is a ball for the open mind" Judith Christ