Page Eight Tigers I By The Associated Press DETROIT - J i m Northrup made up for two errors at first base with a 400-foot double to centerfield in the seventh in- ning to score Mickey Stanley e and snap a tie as the Detroit Tigers defeated the Washington Senators 11-7 last night. Reds rout Mets NEW YORK-Johnny Bench drove in three runs with a single and a double and Lee May snap- ped a tie with a lead-off homer in the ninth inning as the Cin- cinnati Reds defeated the New York Mets 4-2 last night. May's 28th homer of the year opened the ninth inning and gave the Reds the lead against loser Jon Matlack, 0-3. Royals drop KANSAS CITY - Gene Tenace drilled a home run in the sev- enth inning to give the Oakland A's a 2-1 victory over Kansas City last night and extend the Royals' chain of defeats to seven. Tenace's blow, his fourth, broke a 1-1 deadlock and in- creased Oakland's American League West lead to 13% games over the second-place Royals. Bosox rally BALTIMORE - Reggie Smith and Carl Yastrzemski walloped consecutive seventh inning home Major League Standings AMERICANsLEAGUE Feast W IL Ptt(GB Baltimore 65 39 .625 - Bston 62 45 .580 4', Deteit 5 49 .538 9 New York 53 56 .487 l5tz Washington 43 62 .408 .22 Cleveland 43 s65 .397 23 West Oakland 67 39 .632 - Kansas City 52 51 .504 13% California 5 57 .413 161 Chago 50 57 .467 17 Minnesota 4 57 .457 17/% Milwaukee 45 50 .49 2111 kesterday's Resuls Boston 7, Baltimore 4' New York 7, Cleveland 0 Detroit 11, Washington 7 Oakland , Kansas City I Chicago 7, Minnesota 5 Milwaukee at California, inc. Today's Games Milwaukee at Caliornia Oakland at Kansas City Minnesota at Chicago Washington at Detroit New York at Cleveland Boston at Baltimoree NATIONAL LEAGUE East W L Pt. GD Pittsburgh 61 41 .620 - St. Louis 59 49 .548 8 Chicago 56 50 .528 10 New York 54 51 .521 1t., Philadelphia 47 61 .436 20 Montreal 43 65 .398 24 West San Francsco 61 43 .609 - Los Angeles 57 51 .58 9 Atlanta 57 55 .509 11 ouston 55 53 .516 1 Cincinnati 50 61 .449 17' San Diego 39 71 .352 28 Yesterday's Results Hoston 2, Chiago 1 Philadelphia 4, Atlanta 0 Cincinnati 4, New York 2 St. Louis 3, San Diego Los Angeles at San Franciso, inc. Today's Games Cincinnati at New York Atlanta at Philadelphia San Diego at St. Louis Chicago at Houston Los Angeles at san Francisco Pittsburgh at Montreal BILLIARDS TABLE TENNIS BOWLING FOOSBALL UNION TV Stereo Rentals $ $10.00 per month 3 * NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY, PICK UP AND ERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, August 3, 1971 trample runs as the Boston Red Sox ral- lied to defeat Baltimore 7-4 last night and pull within 41/% games of the first-place Orioles. Smith's 23rd homer, a two-run blast off the right field foul pole, followed a leadoff single by Doug Griffin and put the Red Sox ahead 5-4. Yastrzemski then hit No. 14 and chased reliever Tom Dukes, 1-5. Indians trounced CLEVELAND - Fritz Peter- son fired a four-hitter and Gene Michael capped a four-run fourth inning with a two-run homer, carrying the New York Yankees to a 7-0 triumph over the Cleve- land Indians last night. Petersonbnever allowed more than one baserunner in any in- ning enroute to his 10th victory in 17 decisions. Michael's blast gave the Yan- kee southpaw a 5-0 cushion and all the runs he needed. Houston nudges HOUSTON - Big Don Wilson fired a two-hitter for his ninth victory last night as the Hous- ton Astros nudged Ferguson Jen- kins and the Chicago Cubs 2-1. Wilson allowed a single by Paul Popovich in the second and lost his shutout on Jim Hick- man's one-out homer in the fourth. Phillies blank PHILADELPHIA - Consecu- tive home runs by Deron John- son and Roger Freed keyed a three-run fourth inning that car- ried the Philadelphia Phillies to a 4-0 victory last night over the Atlanta Braves. With one out in the fourth, Johnson slammed his 26th home run of the season' and Fred fol- lowed with his fourth. Warriors set for move to Oakland From Wire Service Reports The San Francisco Warriors announced yesterday that they are changing their home and their name next season. Instead of being called the San Francisco Warriors they will be called the Golden State Warriors and will play their home games in Oakland rather than San Francisco. The Warriors will hold their home games in the Oakland Coliseum which seats about 14,000 for basketball. They will share it with the NHL Caifor- nia's Golden Seals. There had been speculation during last season that the San Francisco team might move to San Diego or split their home season between the San Fran- cisco and San Diego sites. Senators, 11-7 PAN AM GAMES U.S. gains medal lead CALI, Columbia (A) - Roxanne Pierce, a pert and pretty teen- ager from Kensington, Md., led a U.S. 1-2-3 sweep in women's overall gymnastics yesterday. The three individual medals, plus a gold for the team prize, pushed the United States past Cuba in their intense medal ri- valry. They had started the third day of competition with a total of 21 each. Rick Wanamaker, a 6-foot-8 Jets cut Beuts Former Wolverine grid standout Jim Betts was cut by the New York Jets yesterday. Betts was the Jets No. 10 draft pick in the winter draft meeting. string-bean from Des Moines, Iowa, forged into first place after seven events of the Pan Ameri- can Games' demanding decath- lon but it was a bleak day for the Yankee oarsmen in Lake Calima. Argentine's "Golden Crew," a patchwork of the nation's gold medal winners in smaller boats, upset the favored University of Washington shell in the featured eight - oar race and handed the United States its first rowing shutout in the Games. The U.S. setback was nearly as humiliating as its 73-69 loss to Cuba in men's basketball Sun- day. Wanamaker, 23-year- old for- mer basketball star at Drake University, showed surprising strength in the high jump, hur- dles and discus to forge ahead of Cuba's .Jesus Mirabal in the decathlon. With three events - the pole vault, javelin and 1500 meters- remaining, Wanamaker had a total of 5,627 points, compared with 5,565 for the slim Cuban in second place and 5,450 for Rusty Bodge of Los Angeles. In baseball, Paul Patterson, a 6-foot-6 right - hander from Canton, N.Y. and Ithaca College, shut out the Canadians for eight innings on one hit, but finally yielded three hits and a single run in-the ninth. Alon Torregano of Southwest Louisiana State contributed a double and two sin- gles to the U.S. attack. In track competition U.S. com- petitors won their heats in the 200 meter trials-Marshall Dill, 18-year-old Detroit schoolboy, in 20.9 and Willie Deckard of Los Angeles in 20.8. Al Feurbach, a 6-1 250-pound muscle man from Los Angeles, led a 1-2 U.S. placing in the shot put by heaving the 16- pound iron ball 64 feet, 10 inches, while Karl Salb of Law- rence, Kan., got second place. Long Hair Should Be Cut As Often As Short Hair NOW 4 SHOPS * EAST UNIV. AT SO. UNIV. * ARBORLAND " MAPLE VILLAGE * LIBERTY OFF STATE See The Dascola Barbers DIAL 8-6416 TONIGHT AT 7:15 - 9 P.M. YOU MUST BE 18 OR OLDER PROOF OP AGE REQUIRED ALL SEATS $2.50 THE UNPUBLISHABLENOVEL 7S NOWAMERICA'S MOST CONTROVERSIAL FILMI e£the 4 VOLKSWAGEN OWNERS " WAGON WERKE SUMMER TUNE-UP SALE. -COUPON- WITH THIS COUPON A COMPLETE TUNE-UP INCLUDING PLUGS AND POINTS, VALUE ADJUSTMENT only 12.95 SAME DAY SERVICE AVAILABLE a AND WARRANTEED WORK 1245 Rosewood, Ann Arbor-Phone: 662-2576 GOOD FOREVER B *. = r rUr w wr =r == r r rr r w === =r=r r =r.r=r r w =rr . r ... r =rr r r ==w r wr r r WI r t N STEREO SION DAILY ADS BRING RESULTS The School of Music and Department of Art present ROSSINI'S OPERA The Barber of SevilleGISH (IIN ENGL ISHI) AUGUST 13, 14, 16 and 17-8 P.M. MENDELSSOHN THEATRE $1.50 & $3.00 Conductor Josef Blatt Stage Director: Ralph Herbert TICKET INFORMATION: 764-6118 - MAIL ORDERS: School of Music Opera, Mendelssohn Theatre, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 Please enclose self-addressed, stamped envelope 4 w5 i That's right, folks. If you bought 1,000 books at the Cellar's sale, you could save $400 or more, because we are discounting 2A0OFF ALL NEW OK EXCEPT HARD COVER TEXTBOOKS WED., JULY 28-SAT., AUG. 7 university cellar michigan union basement I]