A Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, June 17, 1971 Bengals squeeze past Chisox A By The Associated Press DETROIT - Ed Brinkman de- livered the tying run with a sac- rifice fly and Aurelio Rodriguez chased in the winner with a bases-loaded squeeze bunt in the eighth inning, lifting the Detroit Tigers to a 6-5 victory over the Chicago White Sox. The White Sox had broken a 4-4 tie with a run in their half of the eighth prior to the Tigers' rally. A Walk and two infield hits filled the bases for Detroit be- fore pinch-runner Cesar Gutier- rez came in on Brinkman's sac- rifice fly. Gates Brown, who had beaten out a hit and moved to third on a walk, then came home on Rod- riguez' squeeze. Carlos May's sacrifice fly scored Bill Melton in Chicago's eighth to give the White Sox a short-lived 5-4 lead. Detroit jumped in front 3-0 in the first inning on a single by Rodriguez, a double by Tony Taylor and Al Kaline's two-run homer, his fifth of the season. Mets murder Dodgers NEW YORK - Mike Jorgen- sen walloped two home runs and Duffy Dyer and Ed Kranepool chipped in with two hits each as the New York Mets defeated Los Angeles 7-2 yesterday, ending the Dodgers' winning streak at five. Dyer scored two runs and drove home another and rookie Charlie Williams got credit for the victory, working the first six innings. Jerry Koosman and Tug McGraw finished up. The Dodgers nicked Williams for a first inning run on a walk and two infield hits but Jorgen- sen tie4 it for New York with a tremendous homer that hit the scoreboard some 400 feet away in the bottom of the first against Dodger starter Bill Singer. Jorgensen also closed out the New York scoring with an eighth inning homer. Reds ruin Cards ST. LOtUIS - Lee May drove in the only run with a single in the first inning as the Cincin- nati Reds edged the St. Louis Cardinals 1-0 yesterday behind Don Gullett's four-hit pitching. May, facing Cardinal right- hander Al Santorini, singled over the head of shortstop Dal Maxvill after Pete Rose led off the game with an infield hit and moved to second on Hal McRae's grounder. Following the run, Gullett and Santorini engaged in a tight mound duel, with each working out of jams. The victory lifted Gullett's record to 7-2. * Braves bump Cubs CHICAGO - H a n k Aaron doubled across two runs and singled home a third and Atlanta exploited pitcher Ken Holtz- man's error for five unearned runs in the fifth for a 6-5 victory over the Chicago Cubs yester- day. Aaron hit a key two-run dou- ble in the big Brave fifth in which Holtzman, unbeaten in three previous starts including a June 3 no-hitter at Cincinnati, opened the gates by fumbling Bob Didier's sacrifice bunt try following singles by Zoilo Ver- salles and Mike Lum. With the bases loaded and none out, Atlanta starter Jim Nash, 5-4, flied out. Then Felix Millan's fly, instead of ending the inning, scored Versalles from third. After Sonny Jackson singled across Lun, Aaron slashed a two-run double and Orlando Cepeda doubled across Aaron before Bill Bonham replaced Holtzman and struck out Earl Williams to end the inning. Birds bomb Brewers BALTIMORE - Paul Blair and Brooks Robinson cracked two-run homers, helping Dave McNally gain his 10th victory as the Baltimore Orioles downed the Milwaukee Brewers 8-3 last night. Blair connected in the opening' inning following a single by Don Buford. Robinson's blow in the sixth came after he was decked by an inside pitch from loser Marty Pattin, 6-7. The homer scorednFrank Robinson, who had been hit by a pitch. McNally, 10-4, doubled home a run later in the sixth, aiding his own cause as he went the dis- tance for the first time in eight starts. USC ekes out win over Tulsa diamondmen OMAHA, Neb. (R) - Pitcher Mark So g g e 's ninth-inning single drove in an unearned run and gave defending champion Southern California a 3-2 vic- tory over Tulsa here yesterday in the College World Series. I The victory pushed the top- ranked Trojans into tonight's final a g a in s t third-ranked Southern Illinois, 43-8. Sogge (14-1) singled with one out to drive in Jeff Port, who reached second base on short- stop Phil Honeycutt's error- Tulsa's 18th of the tournament. Sogge scattered eight hits and For the truth about Howard Porter and all those nasty numors about his signings, see Page 7. pitched out of a bases-loaded, one-out jam in the eighth in- ning with a remarkable pick- off move that started a double play. Tulsa, 35-12, which came to the eight-team, double-elimina- tion tournament ranked fourth, thus lost to Southern California on two straight nights to bow out of the tournament. USC won Tuesday night 8-4. Playersearry-guns; Phillips fears trouble ANAHEIM (A) - The California Angels' troubles seemed to be mounting yesterday with a report that the club is so torn by dis- sension that some players are carrying guns or knives to protect themselves. Manager Lefty Phillips was reported considering resigning. It happened a day the club foundit would have to keep its No. 1 problem, outfielder Alex Johnson. Johnson brought up the subject of guns Monday when he ac- cused utility infielder Chico Ruiz of threatening him with one fol- lowing Sunday's game. Ruiz, formerly a close friend of the Ameri- can League's 1970 batting champion but now an admitted foe, denied it. Los Angeles Times columnist John Hall wrote yesterday that Ruiz and two other players have been seen carrying guns and that "several others are known to have hidden knives." He added that ill will exists between a number of players and feeling against outfielder Tony Conigliaro is as strong as against Johnson, whom the club tried unsuccessfully to trade before the midnight deadline. General Manager Dick Walsh, who was flying to Chicago for a league meeting, and Phillips weren't available for comment on Hall's account. Hall quoted Phillips as saying: "I'm afraid there's going to be real violence in the clubhouse. I'm afraid somebody is going to hit somebody else over the head with a stool . . . or worse." Hall said many resentments are borne by the players-not just their well-publicized feelings against Johnson. Many players, he said, feel outfielder Tony Conigliaro, obtained from Boston last winter, is a malingerer and that before his latest trip to the hospital the players laid his uniform out on the stretcher alongside crutches and splattered it with catsup. The situation is so distressing to Phillips, Hall said, that he is considering resigning. I TMT HURRY! RATED 4TH WEEK! OPEN 1 :15 P.M. SHOWS AT 1 :30-4 P.M.-6:30 All Good Things Must Come To an End POSITIVELY ENDS WEDNESDAY! AROBER RoUCToN -ANDROEA STRAIN r o win"Wrru DIAL 662-6264 * At State & Liberty * STARTS THURSDAY! AJACKROLLNS-CHARLESHJOFFE l7 { , -_ COLOR by DeLuxeUnted An is ,ยข I r..x:>; ATLANTA BRAVE Felix Millan (17) slides wide of second base as Cubs secondbaseman Glenn Beckert throws to first in an attempt to catch Sonny Jackson for the double-play yesterday afternoon. The Braves outlasted the Cubs for a 6-5 victory. Major League Standings ' AMERICAN LEAGUE East W L Pet. Baltimore 37 21 .630 Detroit 35 27 .565 Bosto 33 27 .550 New York 79 33 .408 Cleveland 28 32 .467 Washington 21 37 .362 West Oakland 40 21 .656 . Kansas City 32 25 .561 Minnesota 31 32 .492 California 29 34 .460 Chicago . 22 35 .386 Milwaukee 22 35 .386 Yesterday's Results New York 3, Kansas City 2 Detroit 6, Chicago 5 Minnesota 3, Cleveland 2 Baltimore 8, Milwaukee 3 Boston at California, Inc. Washington at Oakland, inc. Today's Games Detroit at Cleveland New York at Baltimore California at Kansas City' Chicago at Minnesota GB 4 10 10 16 6 10 12 16 16 NATIONAL LEAGUE East W L Pet. GBl Pit'sburgh 40 74 .625 - New York 34 25 .576 3f St. Louis 36 29 .554 41, Chicago 31 32 .497 8Y2) Montreal 25 32 .439 111/ Philadelphia 25 36 .410 U3 West San Francisco 41 25 .621 - Los Angeles 35 29 .547 5 Houston 31 33 .484 9 Atlanta 30 36 .455 11 Cincinnati 27 36 .429 121t San Diego 23 41 .359 17 Yesterday's Results Pittsburgh 6, Houston 4 Atlanta 6, Chicago 5 Cincinnati 1, St. Louis 0 New York 7, Los Angeles 2 Montreal 2, San Diego 0 Philadelphia 6, San Francisco 3 Today's Games St. Louis at Chicago Atlanta at Cincinnati The Latest Wr I from the world of business is Sony's executive Model 80 cassette recorder. Designed for office or conference roon, the Model 80 helps you work more efficiently and effectively, with such features as built-in con- denser mike and exclusive Sonymatic recording control to ensure perfect recordings automatically. It's so simple! Just push a button and you're in business. When you reach the end of the cassette, an alarm audibly signals you. 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