yPage Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, June 12, 1973 Horton powers Tigers past Twins By The Associated Press DETROIT - Willie Horton blasted his 12th homer and dou- bled in another run, helping aouthpaw Mike Kilkenny to his first victory of the year as the Detroit Tigers beat the Minne- sota Twins 4-1 last night for their fourth consecutive win. Kilkenny scattered six hits in bringing his record to 1-2 and completing his first game in three starts. Horton homered off loser Bert Blyleven, 6-8, to lead off the second inning after the Twins had picked up a run in their half on a walk to Brant Alyea and consecutive s i n g l e s by George Mitterwald and Danny Thompson. Detroit took a 3-1 lead in the third after Al Kaline, walked with two out. Kaline scored on Dalton Jones' double, Jones took third on a throwing error by left fielder Alyea and Horton dou- bled hi mhome. For more baseball tidbits, see Page 11 Dick McAuliffe gave the Ti- gers an insurance run with a homer in the fifth. triumhp.- Dodgers dump Expos MONTREAL - Richie Allen drove in four runs with two homers and a sacrifice fly and Al Downing pitched a five hit- ter, leading the Los Angeles Dodgers to a 12-1 romp over the Montreal Expos last night. Allen and Wes Parker touched off an eight-run explosion in the second inning with succes- sive homers off Jim Britton and each drove in another run be- fore the uprising was over. Allen slammed his second homer of the game and eighth of the season for two more runs in the seventh and the Dodgers added another pair in the eighth. Downing breezed to his sixth victory in nine decisions, blank- ing the Expos on two singles un- til the ninth, when Rusty Staub's sixth homer ruined the shutout bid. Orioles dump Chisox BALTIMORE-Home runs by' Boog Powell, Ellie Hendricks and Don Buford accounted for seven Baltimore runs as the streaking Orioles whipped the Chicago White Sox 8-5 last night for their ninth consecutive vic- tory. Dave McNally, 9-4, went six innings as the Orioles won their 1th game in 12 outings. Buford singled and scored on Grambling leeks grid tilt in Pontiac PONTIAC, Mich. ()-Gram- bling College, noted for sending flocks of players to the National Football League, has offered the Pontiac Stadium Authority a 10-year contract to play a na- tionally televised game each year in the city's proposed stadium. William Clay Ford, owner of the NFL Detroit Lions, has al- ready committed his team to 'v play at Pontiac if the city is able to build a stadium by 1974. Negotiations are underway with an auto firm to sponsor the Grambling TV games. The Louisiana college of 3,600 stu- dents played a 10 game schedule last season in major metropol- m tan areas throughout the coun- try, drawing between 20,000 to 60,000 each game. Grambling has agreed to play Eastern Michigan University in the proposed Pontiac Stadium in 1974. There was also a pro- posal that if the stadium is covered a major bowl would be held there feating the' nation's top Negro college football team as host. Bench leads balloting for NL All-Star team Look Ma, I can fly! Action in yesterday's first rocnd of the NCAA College Baseball Championships featured Mississippi State's leaping second base- man, Dale Holland, making a daring and successful attempt to double-up Tulsa's sliding Joe Fleming in the first inning of their game. Earlier, Harvard dumped Brigham Young, 4-1. NEW YORK (') - Johnny Bench, Cincinnati's super catch- er, and venerable sluggers Hank Aaron of Atlanta and Willie Mays of San Francisco are the early pace-setters in voting for the National League All-Star team. Bench, the NL's most valuable player last season, received 69,- 506 of the 110,000 votes cast by fans to lead all players in the first week's balloting, according to figures released yesterday by Commissioner Bowie Kuhn. Aaron, 37, and the 40-year- old Mays also received more than 60,000 votes each to set Stars' Daniels collapses at court hearing SALT LAKE CITY (P)-Utah Stars' owner Bill Daniels was hospitalized yesterday after col- lapsing during a recess in a court hearing on a contract dis- pute with Coach Bill Sharman. Witnesses said Daniels, who had been on the stand all day, was about to return to the court- r o o m for cross - examination when he became ill. A Stars' spokesman said Dan- iels, reported in good condition, had taken an antibiotic for an allergy and that his illness ap- parently was caused by some- thing he ate for lunch. A wit- ness said he started sneezing violently and had to lie down. Daniels, infthe morning ses- sion, had testified that two key clauses in Sharman's contract -an option to buy 5 per cent of the team and a pension plan- have not been put into effect. But, Daniels said, he had been trying to iron out the problems before Sharman announced he wanted to quit to become coach of the Los Angeles Lakers. Daniels, a Denver cable TV executive, filed a $5 million suit last week and obtained a tem- porary restraining order pre- venting Sharman from coach- ing any team except the Stars. the pace in outfield voting. Pittsburgh's Willie Stargell, who leads the league in home runs and runs batted in, is the third outfielder. The other early leaders are first baseman Willie McCovey of San Francisco, second base- man Glenn Beckert of the Chi- cago Cubs, shortstop Bud Har- relson of the New York Mets and third baseman Joe Torre of St. Louis. Ralph Garr, the A t l a n t a speedster whose name does not appear on the All-Star ballot, received 14,251 write-in votes to rank No. 8 among outfielders. Aaron picked up 65,206 votes, Mays got 60,040 and Stargell 25,193. Lou Brock of St. Louis, Pete Rose of Cincinnati, Rober- to Clemente of Pittsburgh and Billy Williams of Chicago also are ahead of Garr. The closest race is at short- stop, where Harrelson has a 1,688-vote edge over the Cubs' Don Kessinger. The Leaders First base - Wile McCovey, Son Francisco, 37,680; OrlandoCepeda Atlanta, 27,331; Lee May, Cincinnati, 11,384; Donn Clendenon, New York. 8,676; Wes Parker. Los Angeles. 8.523; Sob Robertson, Pittsburghs, 6,424. Second base-Glenn Beckert, Chi- cago, 26,653; Juian Javier, St. Louis, 19,173; Felix Millan, Atlanta, 15,- 1604; Tommy Helms, Cincinnati, 52,- 027; Ken Boswel New York, 11,770; Dave Cash, Pittsburgh, 8,615. Third base--Joe Torre, St. Louis, 30,514; Ron Santo, Chicago, 25,439; Tony Perez, Cincinnati, 23,216; Clete Boyer, Atlanta, 8,973; Bi Grabar- kewitz, Los Angeles, 6796; Richie Hebner, Pittsburgh, 5,745. Shortstop - Bud Harrelson, New York, 29,014; Don Kessinger, Chi- cago, 37,920; Haury Wills, Lo An- geles, 21,547; Dal Maxvili, St. Louis, 6,854; Denis Menke, Houston, 6,361; Gene Alley, Pittsburgh, 5,761 Outfeld - Hnk Aaron, Atlanta, 65,206; Willie Mays, San Francisco, 60,040; Willie Stargell, Pittsburgh, 25,193; Lou Brock, St. Louis, 24,032; Fete Rose, Cincinnati 17,508; Ba- beeto Ciemente, Pittsburgh, 10,405; Billy Williams, Chicago, 15,976; Ralph Garr, 14,251; willie Davis, Los Angeles, 11,903. Catcher-Johnny Bench, Cincin- nati, 69,506; Jerry Grote, New York, 8.102; Manny Sangulilen, Pittsburgh, 7,086; Dick Dietz, San Francisco, 0,420; Tim McCarver, Philadelphia, 5,010; Randy Mund7ey, Chicago, 3,897. I Frank Robinson's sacrifice fly in the opening inning and ;hen hit a three-run homer to cap a five-run inning off reliever Steve Kealey in the sixth to make it 8-1. Hendricks connected with one aboard earlier in the inning. Padres nip Phillies PHILADELPHIA - Ed Spiezio stroked a sacrifice fly in the second inning and Clarence Gas- ton drilled a run-scoring single in the third as the San Diego Padres, held to two hits by Phil- adelphia's Barry Lersch, nipped the Phillies 2-1 last night. A streak of wildness in the second cost Lersch one run. He walked Nate Colbert and Ollie Brown with none out before Ivan Murrell tapped into a force at second as Colbert took third and Spiezio delivered his sacri- fice fly to center. In the third, second baseman Terry Harmon booted Roberts' grounder for an e r r o r, Enzo Hernandez sacrificed and Rob- erts scored on Gaston's two-out single. Royals blast Bosox KANSAS CITY -Cookie Ro- jas drilled a three-run double in a four-run first inning, leading the streaking Kansas City Royals to a 6-3 victory over the Boston Red Sox last night. Rojas' bases - clearing triple was the only hit of the Royals' big inning. Jerry May's sacrifice fly scored Rojas with the final run against veteran Luis Tiant, who was making his first start for Red Sox after being recalled from the minors. Ed Kirkpatrick's homer off left-hander Ken Brett in the sixth gave Kansas City a 6-3 edge. Giants nip Nets NEW YORK - Hal Lanier raced home with the winning run from second base on a wild pitch by Tug McGraw in the 10th inning, lifting the strug- gling San Francisco Giants to a 3-2 victory over the New York Mets Jast- night. Lanier, who greeted the Mets' new reliever with a leadoff dou- ble, roared home after McGraw sailed a pitch over the plate with Willie Mays at bat and catcher Jerry Grote was unable to find the ball. FIRST FEMALE DRIVE Women's Lib hits Le Mans raceway LE MANS, France (P) - The favored Porsche will meet a strong challenge from Ferrari in the Le Mans 24-hour race today, but the big talk around the circuit is about a pretty woman driver, Marie Claude Beaumont. Miss Beaumont, 29, French fe- male rally champion, will be the first woman in 20 years to quali- Major League Standings fy for the speed and endurance classic. "I am not carrying the flag for the feminine sex," she told an interviewer. "I'm driving, sex doesn't count; skill does." At the wheel of a seven-liter Chevrolet Corvette, Miss Beau- mont and veteran French rally champion Henri Greder have little chance of winning. They burned out one engine in the first day of trials and their qualifying time put them far back on the grid for the In- dianapolis-type running start at 11 a.m. this morning. Favored among the 49 expect- ed starters are the s e v e n Porsche 917's, threatened by nine Ferrari 512m models. The Porsches generally made the fastest trial times, being faster on the straightaway. But the crowd of perhaps 300,000 will be watching Miss Beaumont. She knows it, and it frightens her. "A spin out in a rally goes un- noticed," said the petite doe- eyed honey blonde, "but the slightest mistake here will make big waves. I don't know why. It scares me." Daughter of a rally driving auto dealer from Gap in the Alps, Miss Beaumont dropped her real family name, Charmas- son, when she stopped rallying the make of cars her father sells. She has the looks of a fashion model, is a skier, an ice skater and a licensed water ski instructor. "I know a lot of girls who can drive as well as some of those men out there on the track," she said. "Girls should have their place here." W" AMERICAN LEAGUE East W L Pet. Baltimore 35 19 .648 Boston 32 24 .571 Detroit 32 25 .561 Cleveland 27 28 .491 New York 25 31 .446 Washington 19 35 .352 West Oakland 38 19 .667 Kansas City 29 23 .558 California 27 31 .466 Minnesota 27 31 .466 Chicago 20 32 .385 Milwaukee 20 33 .377 Yesterday's Results Kansas City 6, Boston 3 Baltimore 8, Chicago 5 Detroit 4, Minnesota 1 Cleveland 2, Miwaukee 1 New York at Oakland, inc. Washington at California, inc. Today's Games Milwaukee at Cleveland Chicago at Baltimore Boston at Kansas City Minnesota at Detroit New York at Oakland Washington at California GB 4 4% 11 16 11 11% 15Y2 16 NATIONAL LEAGUE East W L Pct. GB Pittsburgh 36 23 .610 - New York 32 22 .593 1 St. Louis 35 25 .583 1'/ Chicago 28 30 .483 71 Montreal 24 28 .462 8 Philadelphia 22 34 .393 1214 West san Francisco 39 22 .639 - Los Angeles 31 28 .525 7 Houston 29 30 .492 9 Atlanta 28 33 .459 11 Cincinnati 24 34 .414 13A San Diego 20 39 .339 18 Yesterday's Results. Pittsburgh 11, St. Louis 4 Houston 5, Atlanta 4 Cincinnati 4, Chicago 3 Los Angeles 12, Montreal 1 san Diego 2, Philadelphia 1 San Francisco 3, New York 2, 10 inn. Today's Games Cincinnati at Chicago San Diego at Philadelphia San Francisco at New York Los Angeles at Montreal Atlanta at Houston Pittsburgh at St. Louis Team Batting AMERiCAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE ab r h hr rbi pet, ab r h hr rbi pet. Minnesota 1913 240 498 41 222 .260 St. Louis 2030 276 565 37 265 .278 Baltimore 1792 255 462 45 238 .258 Pittsburgh 2019 261 545 55 239 .270 Boston 1822 249 405 56 234 .255 Los Angeles 1947 229 518 30 221 .26 Detroit 1894 234 480 57 212 .253 New York i844 208 415 33 109 .263 Oakland 1966 264 495 63 244 .252 Chicago 1919 217 492 48 209 .256 Chicago 1715 178 431 33 166 .251 Atlanta 2069 236 524 60 218 .253 Kansas City 1718 205 431 32 196 .251 San Franco 2054 255 515 56 239 .251 New York 1850 212 462 31 198 .250 Montreal 1678 179 410 27 159 .244 Cleveland 1818 195 427 34 180 .235 Houston 1966 193 473 20 174 .241 Washington 188 165 413 25 152 .227 San Diego 1929 197 463 43 188 .240 California 1922 191 428 40 179 .223 Cincinnati 1897 178 449 43 164 .237 Milwaukee 1671 160 360 33 153 .215 Philadelphia 832 164 416 40 154 .227