Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, July 16, 1971 Dodgers, Osteen dump BravesTC RENTALS BylTheAsocated Press ATLATAs iate Davis, Major League Standings AUSSi g Hi Fi Studio Richie Allen and Jim Lefebvre grabs 121 W. Washington belted fourth inning home runs AMERICANsLEAGUE NATIONALsLEAGUE NO 8-7942 in support of Claude Osteen's Eit Pet t Eas eae G Wi itra h o nee L Pct. GB W L Pet. CGB six hiter as the Los Angeles Baltimore 55 32 .632 - Pittsburgh 57 31 .648 - -- Dodgers blanked Atlanta 6-0 Boston 50 37 .575 5 New York 47 40 .540 9t1'0 W estern O e last night Detroit 41 39 .547 7! Chicago 48 41 .539 9/ New York 41 48 .461 15 St. Louis 47 42 .528 10%xe The uprising came off right Cleveland 38 52 .422 181'. Philadelphia 39 51 433 19 CHICAGO I) - Australian hander Ron Reed, 9-7, who had Washington 35 52 .402 20 Montreal 455 .382 23%, Bruce Crampton fashioned a retired 10 of the first 11 Dodgers Oakland We 31 .644 - San Francisco 55 36 .604 - five-under-par 66 yesterday and before Davis ripped his fourth Kansas City 44 41 518 11 Los Angeles 50 41 .549 5 grabbed the first round lead in homer over the center field Minnesota 41 47 .466 15 Hous 43 45 489 10 the $150,0 Western Open Golf fence. California 42 50 .457 t61 _ Atlanta 44 49 .47 te$10,03Wser1Oe2Gl Chicago 38 48. 42t Cincinnati 42 51 .452 14 Tournament while Lee Trevino Allen followed with his 13th Milwaukee 38 48 .442 I7 ." San Diego 33 57 .367 21 warned, "I'm not out of it yet. homer into the center field seats Yesterday's Results St. Louis 7, Montreal 3, 1st Trevino, unprecedented win- before Willie Crawford beat out Kansas City 1, Cleveland 0 New York 9, Houston nr of the U.S.. Canadian and Cisicag, 7,Philadelphi Baliet cpslead Wolverine golf captain Gary Balliet scored a 37-34-71 to turn in the first sub-par round in the U.S. Public Links Golf Tourna- ment in Phoenix yesterday. Balliet's 71 gave him an even par 144 and the early second round lead. an infield roller and scored when Lefebvre smashed his ninth homer over the right field fence. Sudden Sarn stopped KANSAS CITY-Lou Piniella's run-scoring single with two out in the sixth inning brought the Kansas City Royals a 1-0 vic- tory over the Cleveland In- dians last night and spoiled sore-shouldered Sam McDowell's brilliant two-hitter. McDowell, who had retired 11 in succession, walked pitcher Dick Drago with none out in the sixth. Fred Patek sacrificed Drago to second and Paul Schaal lined out. Cookie Rojas then walked before Piniella lash- ed his game-winning single to center. Reds ruin Giants CINCINNATI - Tony Perez slammed his 15th home run of the season, a two-out blast in the bottom of the ninth off San Francisco reliever Jerry John- son, giving the Reds a 2-1 vic- tory over th~e Giants. The Giants, who had been blanked on three hits through seven innings by Don Gullett, tied the score 1-1 in the eighth on rookie Ed Goodson's double and pinch hitter Alan Galla- gher's single. Cubs club Phillies CHICAGO - Joe Pepitone slammed a leadoff homer and Don Kessinger and Glenn Bec- kert tripled during a six-run fourth inning which enabled the Chicago Cubs to overcome a 6-1 deficit and record a 7-6 victory over Philadelphia yesterday. Washington 8, Chicago 3 Boston 3, Minnesota 0, 13 inn. Milwaukee 1, New York 0 Detroit at Oakland, Inc. Baltimore at California, inc. Today's Games Detroit at Oakland Baltimore at California Cleveland at Kansas City Chicago at Washington Milwaukee at New York Minnesota at Boston Chicago 7, Philadelphia 6 Los Angeles 6, Atlanta 0 Cincinnati 2, San Francisco 1 San Diego at Pittsburgh, Inc. Montreal at St. Louis, 2nd, inc. Today's Games San Diego at Pittsburgh Philadelphia at Chicago Montreal at St. Louis Los Angeles at Atlanta New York at Houston San Francisco at Cincinnati SPORTS ROUND-UP Plunkett inks By The Associated Press AMHERST The New Eng- land Patriots announced last night they have signed quarter- back Jim Plunkett, the Heisman Trophy winner from Stanford who was the National Football League's No. 1 draft choice this year. Davis (:uppers tabbed CHARLOTTE, N.C. - Cliff Richey, star of the 1970 Chal- lenge Round, heads the six-man U.S. Davis Cup squad named yesterday to defend the interna- tional tennis trophy here Oct. 8-10. Other members of the squad are Stan Smith, Clark Greabner, Tom Gorman, Eric Van Dillen. and Frank Froehling III. Chinese ping-pong OTTAWA-The Table Tennis Association of China has accept- ed an invitation to tour Canada at a time to be fixed later, it was announced yesterday. Roy Gannon, executive direc- with Patriots for of the Canadian Table Ten- nis Association, said he had re- ceived the information from the Chinese embassy here and the association has begun actively preparing for the tour. Ryun i-etgiris TOPEKA-The Topeka State Journal reported yesterday that Jim Ryun had cut short his European tour and was heading back to the United States. Ryun has been ailing with hay fever, and had some disappoint- ing performances in Europe. British Open championships in a four-week period, . was eight strokes back at 74. "Actually, 74 was about as bad as I could have scored," tt2 ti- year-old Mexican-AmerirCn said. "I don't think I'n3 out of it yet. I shoot a four or five-finder par tomorrow and I'm right bac in the ball game." Crampton, an As.: ie vete-an of 15 years on the Aincrican tour, held a sing l-strol' lcad over Tommy Aaron, hs fiired a respectable 67 in tse gy tricky winds- which set over the 6,749-yard par 71 i2mpia Fields Country Club couis Lanky Dale Dilass was alone in third with co. A group of five, head-d by pug-nosed former M :t r s champ Gay Brewer wire at 69, just two strokes off the pAce going into the second roand in the chase for the $30,000 f.ast prize. Billy Casper, the 1970 player of the year but a non- tdi 3-i r this season, could inanage anly a 73 and was well batk in the field. H ICHAE[ COON[Y a one-man folk festival 1411 Hill STREET 16n1gLS " 1% the ann arbor film cooperative presents CHRISTOPHER JONES, SHELLEY WINTERS, DIANE VARSI with Richard Pryor as Stanley X and Ed Begley as Senator Albright in WILD IN THE STREETS in color from American International. Music by Les Baxter EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION-Road Runner Cartoon - SATURDAY, JULY 17 ONLY - auditorium a 7:00 & 9:00 p.m. angell hail still only 75c Jr TONIGHT-ONE NITE ONLY! AUD. A ANGELL HALL shows at 7:00, 9:00, & 1 1:00 P.m. 7 , -2-7 Y." Sophistication in Design As Well as Performance if you expect a great deal from a turntable, .then the PE-2038 miy be what you're looking for. Vertical tracking angle adjust- ment control for the best sound reproduction and lowest distor- tion; cueing device, viscous dam tedtar the gentlest dte- scent;ran exclusive styi rp- tection system are just a few of the features in the impec- cable PE-2038. $115.00 ANN ARBOR-EAST LANSING 618 S. Main 769-4700 Comprehensive Repair Service Available "If you did not see Midnight Cowboy because of its rating, its now rated R!" Thus reads the copy the producers wanted us to run for Midnight Cowboy. Frankly, though, if you didn't see Mid- night Cowboy because it was rated X, then that's your problem, but you probably shouldn't see it now. Why? Because we have the original, un- cut version, not the schlocked-up "acceptable/ respectable" version they started peddling when it won the Academy Award for Best Picture in 1969. Do the eleven extra minutes make that much difference in the movie? Yes. You'll be seeing it the way director John Schlesinger put it "in the can" the day he finished editing it. The way he wanted, not the way some distributor decided would be necessary to satisfy the guardians of public morals who won't see it anyway. One last extra-in our search through Holly- wood's basements for a print acceptable to us (i.e., the original, we found one in 35 mm. The picture will be sharper, clearer, brighter than the normal Aud. A fare, but the real improvement will be the sound-and considering John Barry's award-winning score, that's goad news. TONIGHT ONLY AT 7:00, 9:00, 11:00 Tickets-for all three shows on sale at 5:30 p.m. sharp! AUD. A ANGELL HALL