Wednday, ue21 971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY' Pa e een Wednesday, June 23, 1971 THE MICHiGAN DAILY Page Eleven HE'LL PLAY 'EM ALL: League Leaders r AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE Trevno set for next tourney g ab r h ct. Oliva Min 60 238 44 91 .382 Morcer NY 15 234 38 81 .346 ROJas KOC 62 233 34 74 .311 Kaline Det 56 180 36 57 .317 Buford Bal 50 193 51 61 .316 F. Rob., Bal. * 51 181 34 56 .309 Reichardt Chi 51 191 20 59 ,349 S. Rob. B~al 63 242 33 71 .301 F. Howard Was 61 233 22 71 .305 Otis KC 60 240 40 73 .304 HOME RUNS Oliva, Minnesota, 16; R. Jackson, Oakland, 15; Cash, Detroit, 15; W. Horton, Detroit, 13; Melton, Chi- cago, 12; R. Smith, Boston, 12; Murcer, New York, 12, RUNS BATTED IN Killebrew, Minnesota, 52; White, New York, 44; Petrocelli, Boston, 43; Oliva, Minnrsota, 43; F. Rob- inson, Baltimore, 42. PITCHING 7 Decisions Cuellar, Baltimore, 11-1, .917; Blue, Oakland, 15-2, .882; Drago, Kansas Ci5ty, 2-2, .778; DalCanton, Kansas Cily, 7-2, .770; Painer, Baltimore, 9-3, .750. g ab r h Pct. Torre StL 70 271 42 99 .365 W. .Davis LA 56722 45 97 .363 Pepione Chi S0 113 23 64 .350 Beckert Chi 65 259 40 87 .336 Garr Atl 70 291 49 97 .333 Brock StL 67 273 53 91 .333 Straub MtIl 04 221 41 74 .325 Jr Alau BHn 52 117 14 60 .320 Cash Pgh 61 248 46 79 .319 M. Aaou StL 66 268 28 85 .317 HOME RUNS Stargrll, Pittsburgh, 25; H. Aaron, Atlanta, 20; Benh, Cincinnati, 17; L. May, Cincinnati, 17; B o n d s, San Francisco, 16. RUNS BATTED IN Stargell, Pittsburgh, 67; H. Aaron, Atlanta, 56; Totre, St. Louis, S0; Santo, Chicago, 50; 5 tird with 42. PITCHING 7 Decisions 'tullett, Cincinnati, 8-2, .800; J. .ohnson, San Francisco, 8-2, .800; Ellis, Pittsburgh, 11-3, .786; Dierker, Houston, 10-3, .769; Carlton, St. Louis, 10-3, .769. . SRI 2 K " KWIk 'N SHIRTS KLEEN h 34c 740 PACKARD cleyning with complete laundry order and dry cleaning facilities KWIK 'N' KLEEN has a cool idea coming up. Watch for the grand announcement! DRY CLEANING Mon.-Fri.: 7:30 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. Saturday: 7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY Mon.-Sun.: 7:30 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. Washers only 35 and 25 cents, Dryers only 5c CLEVELAND tP) - Newly- crowned United States Op e n golf champion Lee Trevino doesn't plan on heeding Jac k Nicklaus' advice to slow down - at least not for a while. "I'll play 'em all, whether -they're for $60,000 or $250,040. It doesn't matter to me. If they've got a golf tournament going, I'll be there. If they're putting up the money, I'll play on a gravel road," Trevino said yesterday before a practice round at the Beechmont Coun- try Club. Trevino, although again in possession of the golf world's most prized title, doesn't plan on taking any time off for sev- eral weeks. Most winners of the U.S. Open title take a few weeks off after their triumph to come back to earth. Not Trevino. He beat Nicklaus, probably the most feared competitor in the game today, in the 18- hole playoff at Ardmore, Pa. Monday afternoon, yesterday morning put in an appearance at a department store in Cleve- land, then got back to work on the golf course yesterday af- ternoon. He's competing in the $150,- 000 Cleveland Open this week, next week will be in Montreal for the Canadian Open, then whips off to Southport, Eng- land for the British Open, then back immediately for the Wes- tern Open in Chicago. He doesn't plan a week off until sometime in August. He's played 20 tournaments out of a maximum of 24 - and missed a couple because of the illness of his mother and with- drew from two others for the same reason. In those 20 he has been in the top ten finishers 12 times, hasn't missed a cut, won three, lost in a playoff and missed first place in four others by a total "Lee is different. He hasnt of five strokes. played that much. Right now He's the leading money win- he's like a kid a few years out of ner with $165,110 and top in the college, 26 or 27 - it's go, go, Vardon Trophy standings as go. the man with the best stroke "But in a couple of years he'll average on the tour, have to learn to pace himself The stocky, swarthy guy who or he'll burn himself out." stalked out of poverty and ob- Trevino, however, has no im- scurity when he won the 1968 mediate plans in that direction. Open, capped it all when he "I'm the U.S. champion," he joined that exclusive club of said. "I think people want to players who have taken two na- watch me play. I'm going to tional open titles. play in as many tournaments as Trevino, whose quick wit, non- I possibly can. I'm dedicated to stop chatter and earthy hu- golf and want.to do something mor have made him a favority for the game - put back in it with this country's golfing mil- some of the things it has given lions, said the victory at Ard- me. more meant more to him than "The sponsors seem to want his first Open title. me to play. They think I help "Mr. Walter Hagen said it," them at the gate. That's fine. Trevino explained.. "He sa i d, I'll play. 'anybody can win one open. "I play every day anyhow. But it takes a great player to Even if I'm taking some time win two.'" off, I'm out there beating balls "Trevino has been playing every day. the tour, what, five years," "Besides, it's good for me to Nicklaus said. "He's the s am e play. I play better when I age I am--31. But I've been play all the time. My game is playing tournament golf since kind of mechanical, and I play L was 13 - almost 20 years. better if I don't take time off. I've been playing on the tour If I take time off, my g a me since I was A. gets rusty." A AU president attacks amateurism in Olympics MIAMI BEACH (P) -- Mod, happens to be a cornerback for revolutionary AAU President the Philadelphia Eagles," he Jack Kelly is advocating an said, "then I think he should "open" Olympic Games match- be in the starting blocks at the ing the world's premier ath- Olympics." letes . . . pro and amateur. Bending a mite, the slick- "When eight 100-meter sprint- haired Philadelphian-a four-time ers line up for the Olympic fi- Olympic rower-said that "at the nals," he said, "there'.i no rea- least, an athlete who is a pro- son it shouldn't be the fastest fessional in one sport should still eight humans . . . regardless of be able to compete as an ama- their daily jobs." teur in another." Kelly, handsome older brother Such a ruling would clear the of Monaco's Princess Grace, road for sprinters such as Bob was elected Amateur Athletic Hayes to run in the Olympics Union chief last year and is will- even though he has been hand- ing to take shots at his own or- somely paid to play football for ganization as well as other mem- the Dallas Cowboys. bers of the sports establishment. "Avery Brundage," he said, Kelly said that an "open" turning to the aging head of the Olympics would "help to elimi- International Olympic Commit- nate cheating and under-the- tee, "may be the world's only table dealings, much the way simon pure amateur. His com- an open format has done for mittee is made up of self-per- tennis." petuating old men." Many of the amateur sports Kelly agrees with many Unit- regulations, he said, "were es- ed States athletic leaders that tablished in Queen Victoria's Yank chances in the Olympics time when athletes were gener- suffer since the nation generally ally considered to be a low class adheres to amateurism while so- of people. My father once denied cialist nations subsidize pro- a chance to sail in the Henley grams. Regatta because he carried the union card of a bricklayer." Among the antiquated ama- teur rules, he said, is one that Join Iforbids a man coaching swim- ming to perform as an athlete in the Olympics. "On the other hand, a life c~J- / PS gulard can enter the Olympics... but he must not have served as a (668-6872) [life guard within 90 days of the Olympics." -- - ON WASTENAW AVE ', s . 1 /2 mluoneast of ,;*! mssArborand US-23. ~ DIAL 434-1182 WED-SAT-SUN at 1:30-4 p.m.-6:30-9 p m. ~- . . - Thurs-Fri ot 6:30 & 9 p.m. First Time At Popular Prices t'nnyrs n e p s~r ,ron . 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