9 £ S 4_f 4 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, July 9, 1970 Tiger 3-2w By The Associated Press Pinch-hitter Gates B r o w n boomed a long sacrifice fly in the bottom of the ninth to cli- max a weird rally and give the Detroit Tigers a 3-2 victory over Boston last night. With one man out and the* game tied, 2-2, Norm Cash and Don Wert drew walks. With Jim Price batting, Red Sox reliever Vincente Romo unloaded a wild pitch, allowing Cash to take third. The Tigers then pulled Price in favor of Dalton Jones, who was given an intentional pass. Tiger manager May Smith then inserted Elliott Maddox to run for Cash, and Brown, bat- ting for Ken Szotkewiecz, came through with a long fly and. Maddox scooted home with the winning tally. The Red Sox had tied the game in the top of the ninth, getting a single tally on Rico Petrocelli's double and Billy Conigliaro's single. Boston drew first blood in the fourth, as Carl Yastrzemski sin- gled, stole second and raced home on Tony Conigliaro's single. The Tigers overcame this def- icit in the late innings, as Willie ral in for , C14 Sfrl~igan :4.3 rn -Associated Press Curses - foiled again Ex-heavyweight champ Muhammed Clay (or is it Cassius Ali?) helps a little girl onto a plane as he leaves Charleston, S.C. The champ was scheduled to fight an exhibition for charity, but Clay told the promotors he would prefer they cancel the fight rather than pay too much for a site. The matches were to be staged in a Charleston arena, but City Council denied the permit. RAIN HALTS PLAY Horton hit his 16th homer of the season to tie the game in the seventh, and Szotkewiecz belted his third in the eighth. Mickey Lolich, 7-10, snapped a personal five-game losing streak that saw him go without a win in June by, pitching a complete game. In other American League games, Don Buford's bases-load- ed single capped a three-run ninth-inning rally that gave Baltimore a 9-8 victory over the Yankees in a wild and wooly affair. Buddy Bradford belted a grand slam homer in the eighth inning to give Cleveland a 6-5 comeback triumph over the Senators, and Chicago's Bobby Knoop raced home on an error by pitcher Al Downing to start a two-run rally that lifted. the sagging White Sox to a 2-1 vic- tory over the Brewers. In National League action, San Francisco must h a v e thought they were at a carnival instead of a baseball game in Atlanta. Giant batters got on a merry-go-around in the fifth inning, and merrily circled the bases until eleven runs had crossed the plate en route to 13-0 slaughter. Recently recalled Jim Ray Hart tied a major league record by driving home six runs in the fifth with a three-run homer and a bases-loaded triple. McLain fined for zealous fungo hitting DETROIT (P) - Detroit's Denny McLain is up to his old tricks again, but on a much smaller scale. The Tiger man- agement confirmed yesterday that McLain has b e e n fined $2.50 for each ball he hit into the left-field stands during warm-up for outfielders July 2. Tiger General Manager Jim Campbell said, "It's notsa fine, we're just asking Denny to pay for t he balls he deliberately knocked into the stands." Mc- Lain has been assessed small amounts in the past for the same stunt. When asked about the inci- dent, McLain said, "No com- ment. What am I supposed to be, Peck's bad boy or some- thing?" nith In °other NL games, the per- sistent New York Mets gained a game on second place Pitts- 6urgh, as they rode a three-run homer by Ken Singleton to a 7-5 win over St. Louis. The Pirates dropped a 2-0 decision to Philadelphia on Deron John- son's two-run homer in the ninth. Montreal salvagedl some pride by coming back to beat Chicago 5-4 In the nightcap after the Cubs had won the opener, 5-1. Maury Will stroked a two-run double to cap a five-run ninth that gave Los Angeles a 6-5 victory over Houston, and Cin- cinnati lost to San Diego, 3-1. All-'Star pitre selected By The Associated Press Managers Earl Weaver of Baltimore and Gil Hodges of New York announced their pitching staffs f o r Tuesday's All-Star game in Cincinnati yes- terday. The American League hurlers are headed by three members of Weaver's own Orioles - lefties Mike Cuellar, co-winner of the Cy Young award in 1969, Dave McNally, and righthander Jim Palmer. Hodges named only one Met, Tom Seaver. The National Lea- gue st a ff is headed by two members of Cincinnati's reju- venated mound corps - Jim Merritt, who leads the majors with 14 victories, a n d rookie phenom Wayne Simpson, who has amassed an incredible 13-1 record. Weaver also named Yankees Fritz Peterson and Mel Stottle- myre, Angel no-hit artist Clyde Wright, Oakland ace Jim Hunt- er, Minnesota's Jim Perry, and Cleveland's fire-balling S a m McDowell. Hodges named two reliefers to his squad, the Phillies Joe Hoerner and Atlanta's ageless knuckleballer, Hoyt Wilhelm. Also named to t he NL staff were St. Louis workhorse Bob Gibson, who is hitting .400, the Dodgers' Claude Osteen, and Gaylord Perry of San Francisco. F L I G SKS Vol. LXXX, No. 41 -s Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, July 9, 1970 Ten Cent TUITIO HIKE THIS St. 0 I A ndre ws ripped by red-hot ST ANDREWS, Scotland () - A dozen of the world's great- est golfers savaged the Old Course of St. Andrews in the first round of the 1970 British Open championship yesterday, but only a lightning rain storm stopped defending titlist Tony Jacklin from making golf his- tory. In balmy weather, the early starters butchered the par-72 course, including a record- breaking 65 by Neil Coles of England, a 66 by England's Tommy Horton, and others close behind. Late in the day, Jacklin, hold- er of b o t h British and U.S. crowns, shattered the front nine with an incredible 29 shots, seven under par. As he birdied the 10th to go eight under par, a thunderstorm came in off St. Andrews Bay. After the 13th hole, Jacklin was still eight under and head- ed for a score that would be ar- gued about for generations but play had to be abandoned. With about 22 stars still on the course, The Royal and An- cient Golf Club decided for the first time in its history to com- plete the rounds Thursda decision to mark the bal. ed Jacklin, Lee Trevino others f r o m starting scratch. At the end of the first play in the $100,000 title ney, the situation was th Coles, at 65, was cle front. Horton was breathing his neck at 66. On 67 were four unex] challengers, youngsters. Charles Richardson of En Harold Hennings of Sou rica, Maurice Bembridge o land and Florentino Mol Argentina. On 68 were five-timeI Open Champion PeterI son of Australia, Arnold er, Jack Nicklaus and Sanders from the U.S.c and Brian Huggett, the Cupper from Wales. At three under par 69 G a y Brewer, of Dallas U.S. amateur champion Melnyk of Brunswick, Ga British amateur king M Bonallack. F o u r shot 70's, in Ohians Tom Weiskopfo go ifers y. The lumbus and Georg Bellino. Ls sav- Youngstown. a n d Nine were tied at 71, one un- from der par, and another 14 among the field of 134 were on even t day's par 72 for the 6,951-yard Old tour- Course thatehas resisted domi- is: nation for centuries. rly in The weather was responsible down for the incredible scoring until the storm. :pected Jacklin said after the thun- J o h n derstorm had stopped play: ngland, "That was the best nine I've th Af- ever played. Remember that 29, of Eng- I know I'll remember it. ina of "Play has been stopped with my ball under a bush. I'll have British to consider that business before Thom- I decide how to play. Palm- "It's an interesting thought Doug to go to bed with tonight." circuit, Ryder 9 were Tex., Steve a., and viichael3 eluding of Co- k. Presider day no n recommer meet a we "We are and recon what we]h statement television There 1h an increa dition to April. As hinted at and fee i tentatively based upo receive in posed by t; "The le fact, $2.2' budget. W situation,' try very crease. Fleming earlier sta telegram f House hi sub-com ; new tuitici Rep. G troit), a cf in the Up "Caution tuition oi 2J enroll Universit3 pense. " Your$ lion highi quate for ties and q fiscal situ to pay mo prove pr credit hot The pro is one in: cation bil It require tuition lev and face if any tul after that -Associated Press Indians meet with President Indians control of programs WASHINGTON- (R) - Deploring the educational institutions their children plight of American Indians, President attend. Nixon told Congress yesterday, "The Nixon also proposed a significant in- time has come to break decisively with crease in federal aid to economic develop- the past" and welcome Indians to assume ment-industrial, commercial and re- creational-affecting Indian lands which greater control of federal programs that the nation as a whole holds in trustee- affect them. ship. that public monies will be more effec- tively expended if the people who are most affected by these programs are re- sponsible for operating them." Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, speak- ing as chairman of the National Coun- cil on Indian Opportunity, described Nixon's proposals to newsmen as far- reaching and a "distinct departure" from pgst policies. 5LW#"m''":..:. E'..-:-s....".::mm..mmm ... . . I Major League Standings . - .... Si? AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE Baltimore Detroit New York Boston Cleveland Washington xMinnesotla xraifornia xOakland xKansas City Milwaukee Chicago East W L 52 30 44 36 44 37 41 39 37 44 37 47 west 51 26 48 33 45 37 30 50 30 54 29 55 Pct. .636 .550 .544 .513 .456 .446 .662 .593 .549 .375 .354 .343 GB 7 7% 10 14 16 New York Pittsburgh Chicago St. Louis Philadelphia Montreal East w 46 46 41 39 35 34 West L 36 39 41 43 47 50 Pet. .561 .542 .500 .476 .426 .405 GB 1Y 5 7 11 13 18 19 25% 2714 If Congress agrees, and legislation will be needed in some cases, more than $400 million a year in federal spending will be thrown open to control by Indians rather than by government bureaucrats. In a special message, Nixon said: "The first Americans -the Indians -are the most deprived and most isolated minority group in our nation. On virtually every scale of measure-employment, income, education, health-the condition of the Indian people ranks at the bottom." In the wake of Nixon's message, the question remained whether the chief executive would turn next to messages on the plight of other minorities, notably the blacks. The President said it is time "for a new era in which the Indian future is deter- mined by Indian acts and Indian deci- sions. He asked Congress for legislation that would permit Indians to assume direct administration and control of most fed- eral programs affecting their local com- munities -- power that would be removed from federal employes such as those staf- fing the Bureau of Indian Affairs in the Interior Department. Nixon specifically sought authorization to permit Indian communities to set up ' their own school boards and operate the "We have concluded," he said, "that the Indians will get better programs and 5 8 22? 24i 25 x--late game not inc. Yesterday's Results Detroit 3, Boston 2 Baltimore 9, New York 8 Cleveland 6, Washington 5 Chicago 2, Milwaukee 1 Kansas City at California, inc. Minnesota at Oakland, inc. Today's Games Boston at Detroit Minnesota at California Washington at Cleveland New York at Baltimore Cincinnati 59 23 .71 Los Angeles 50 32 .611 Atlanta 41 40 .50 San Francisco 39 42 .48 Houston 34 50 .40 San Diego 33 53 .38 Yesterday's Results Chicago 5, Montreal 1, 1st Montreal 5, Chicago 4, 2nd Philadelphia 2, Pittsburgh 0 New York 7, St. Louis 5 Los Angeles 6, Houston 5 San Diego 3, Cixcinnati 1 San Francisco 13, Atlanta 0 Today's Games Montreal at New York Pittsburgh at St. Louis San Francisco at Atlanta San Diego at Cincinnati Los Angeles at Houston 12 1 03 82 R, Wl P. SE -Ass c4JL rs Cardinal Jae Torre scores against Mets