roge Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, August. 5, 1971 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, August 5, ~97l L olc es BIG TEN COMMISSIONER: I-j1l0chstrikes out1 l-A g !,At " as Tigers DETROIT - Mickey Lolich Cubs, struck out 14 and scattered sev- en hits, leading the Detroit Tig- CHIC ers to a 2-1 triumph over the double Washington Senators last night. backed Lolich, 17-8, was locked in a pas an pitching duel with Dick Bosman, to a 3 9-12, who only allowed four hits, Diego I when Al Kaline knocked in the The winning run with a third-inn- tary w ing home run. game Kaline, who started at first darkne base for the first time this sea- resume son, also tripled to pace the Ti- with th ger offense. they hu Willie Horton singled home Pepit the first run after Kaline's tri- the sect ple in the third, Kaline homer- larly s ed into the lower deck in left doubled field, his 10th of the year. 1-7, an Cleo Ja Major League Redss h" NEW Standings double to avert AMERICAN LEAGUE forman East Gentry W L Pt. GB Reds to Baltimore 66 39 .629 --- Mets y Boston 62 46 .74 5 eSy Detroit 58 50 .537 91/ Genti New York 55 56 .495 14 strongl Washington 44 63 .411 23 strikeou West WaadsoW Oakland 68 39 .636 -- eighth Kansas City 53 52 .505 14 eih, California 53 58 .477 17 sacrific Chicago 50 58 .477 17 ose us Minnesota 49 50 .4819 tathi Milwaukee 46 61 .430 2 that hi Yesterday's Results center Baltimore 5, Boston 4 (first) 10 innings Boston at Baltimore(slecond game) o postponed, rain BALI New York 7, Cleyeland 3 mound's tDetrot 2, Washington 1 Chicago at California, Inc. fourth Kansas City 2, Minnesota 1 (first) home E Minnesota at Kansas City (second as the game (Inc.) IYy Milwaukee at Oakland, inc. victory Today's Games Sx in Detroit at Boston, night duled Cleveland at Washington, night last nig Baltimore at New York, night Minnesota at Kansas City, night Thes Milwaukee at Oakland, night out aft Chicago at California, night -- NATIONAL LEAGUE East0 W 1LPet GB Pittsburgh 68 42 .618 --- V St. Louis 60 50 .545 8 Chicago 59 50 .541 8% New York 55 53 .59 1 Philadelphia 49 62 .436 20 Montreal 44 66 .400 24 West San Francisco 67 46 .593-- B Los Angeles 59 52 .532 7 Atanta 58 56 .509 9y udt Houston 5 54 .09 O9% Ho"sn : !E a audit Cincinnati 52 62 .456 15: San Diego 40 73 .354 27 Sat. Yesterday's Results St Montreal 4, Pittsburgh 3, 11 innings, Atlanta 5, Philadelphia 3 ann Cincinnati1, New York 0 Houston 2, Los Angeles 0 -- Chicago 6, San Diego 4, 1st game Chicago 3, San Diego 0, second St. Louis 7, San Francisco 2 Today's Games San Diego at Chicago New York at Atlanta, night Pittsburgh at Montreal, nightt/ Los Angeles at Houston, night San Francisco at St. Louis, night boo es t 'b01, 'it° tritrnx click AGO - Joe Pepitone's and run-scoring single the pitching of Milt pap- d led the Chicago Cubs -0 victory over the San Padres yesterday. Cubs also recorded a vic- hen they completed a suspended because of ss May 16. The game was d in the seventh inning he Cubs leading 6-3 and tng on for a 6-4 triumph. one got things going in ond inning of the regu- cheduled game when he off loser Fred Norman, d scored on a single by mes, squeak YORK -- Pete Rose's scored Woody Woodward come an 11-strikeout per- ce by New York's Gary and led the Cincinnati a 1-0 triumh over the esterday. ry, 9-9, had been pitching y towards a career high it total when he walked !ard leading off the After Gary Nolan had ed Woodward to second, nloaded with a line drive t off the fence in right field. es comeback 17IMORE - Merv Betten- 10th inning single - his hit of the game-chased Baltimore's winning run Orioles rallied for a 5-4 over the Boston Red the first game of a sche- twi-night doubleheader ht. second game was rained er 11/2 innings. David Hemmings 'anessa Redgrave Sarah Miles ANTON ION I'S LOW-UP orium a-angell hall Aug. 7 only-7 & 9:30 arbor film cooperative iph Mark Belanger was hit by a pitch to open the 10th and was sacrificed to second by winning pitcher Pete Richart. After Don Buford was intentionally walk- ed, the runners pulled a double steal. Then Rettenmund singled to center for the victory. Yankees sweep CLEVELAND - Roy White slammed a two-run homer and Danny Cater drove in three runs without a hit as the New York Yankees defeated the Cle- veland Indians 7-3 last night to sweep their three-game series. White staked Stan Bahnsen, 10-8, to a 2-0 lead in the first with a two-run homer. Cater boosted the margin, driving in a run with a groundout after Ray Lamb, 5-10, walked Bobby Murcer and White in the fourth. Graig Nettles slammed his 20th homer to trim the lead to 3-1 in the bottom of the inn- ing but the Yankees pounced on reliever Alan Foster for two more in the sixth on just one hit. Dodgyers downed HOUSTON - Rookie Ken Forsch silenced Los Angeles on four hits last night, outdueling veteran Al Downing as the Houston Astros blanked the Dodgers 2-0. Forsch, 6-5, had lost four straight games and hadn't won since beating Cincinnati 6-1 on July 4th. Against the Dodgers, the tall right-hander walked three and struck out nine. Forsch and Downing, 13-7, battled on even terms until the sixth when the Astros scored EARLY SHOW TONIGHT! "RIALY COMICI YOU SHOULD CERTAINLY SEE ITI"-a.Y.Ti.. '1 .0L91V~i$ ARTISTS at 8:30 TA E TE' E pt 7:00 p.m. AUD. A-ANGELL SUMMER FILM FESTIVAL Orson Welles Duke to get ostfon i CHICAGO ( P) - Wayne Duke, commissioner of the Big Eight, will be named Big Ten Confer- ence commissioner, succeeding the late Bill Reed, the Associated Press learned yesterday. Official announcement of the appointment is expected today. Selection of a successor to Reed, who died May 20, report- edly centered on Duke and Jack Fuzak, 56, Michigan State faculty representative. Duke, 42, former administra- tive assistant with the NCAA be- fore joining the Big Eight, was highly recommended by Big Ten athletic directors. Reportedly they endorsed him 9-1 in a straw vote. Big Ten Presidents deter- mined the selection at a hush- hush meeting in Chicago Mon- day. The Big Eight, under Duke's commissionship since 1962, has grown into one of the nation's top football powers. Nebraska won the 1970 national championship. At Big Eight headquarters in Kansas City, Mickey Holmes, Duke's assistant, said the com- missioner was vacationing in the mountains of Colorado and could not be reached. Holmes said the news was a surprise to him because after several conversations with Duke on the matter "I've grown rath- er optimistic he wouldn't ac- cept." the Big Ten post. A conference spokesman said no machinery had been set up to name a successor if Duke gets the Big Ten post. Duke was graduated from the State University of Iowa at Iowa City in 1950. He was sports information director at the Uni- versity of Northern Iowa at Ce- dar Falls and the University of Colorado before joining the NCAA executive staff when it was organized in Kansas City in 1952. While with the NCAA, Duke was involved in nearly every phase of association activity, including an assignment with .NBC - TV Sports in New York in 1957 as NCAA - NBC television public relations - liaison officer. Duke is a member of the NCAA executive, legislative, football television and football advancement committees and an NCAA representative of the gov- erning council of the U.S. Track and Field Federation. 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