12, 1970 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, May I 12r,-19-- Q i In Memoriam THEMICHIGAN DAILY SPORTS STAFF feels a great sense of loss and extends its deepest regrets to the family and friends of Bob Gillon, who met an untimely death in a car accident on Saturday. Bob, who was a former president of the lacrosse club and immediate past president of the Sports Club Asso- ciation, played a vital role in promoting increased Uni- versity service to the recreational needs of students through work with the Office of Student Organizations Policy Board and also on the Advisory Committee for Recreation, Intramurals and Club Sports. Perhaps the foremost of Bob's contributions was his leadership in the 1968 "lie-ins," which impeded the pro- gress of bulldozers on Wines Field, and prevented the paving of Wines Field. This action not only saved Wines Field, but guaranteed the rugby and lacrosse clubs play- ing space and preserved a field needed desperately by intramural teams. Other contributions which Bob made to student rec- reational needs came from his work with the OSO Policy Board. In addition to working on a funding program which helped to guarantee equipment for club sport. teams, lob played an important role in involving the Women's Athletic Association on the OSO Board and brought them from near extinction to representative membership in the Sports Club Association. Bob's humanitarianism and involvement with so- cial as well as recreational issues served as an inspira- tion to many people, and the university community owes him a great debt. BULLPEN FAILS AGAIN w Ciso. By The Associated Press DETROIT - Syd O'Brien andk Ed Herrmann each drove in three runs against Detroit's faltering pitching staff and the Chicago White Sox crushed the Tiger 9-5 last night. Chicago chased Tiger starter; Joe Niekro with a four-run out- burst in the third inning, includ- ing a two-run homer by Herr- rmann, who also singled in a runj in the fifth. Detroit pitchers have given upl 49 runs in the last seven games. The Tigers scored three runs in the third, Dalton Jones, Al Kaline and Willie Horton driving them home. In the sixth, they got suc- Netters fall to ruggekd bel t Tigers cessive homers from Jim North- rup and Bill Freehan. Luis Aparicio also homered for Chicago, daily{ Seaver stopped NEW YORK - Southpaw Dan McGinn, making only his second NIGHT EDITOR: major league start, stopped NewNG EIR: York on three hits and ended TomLEE KIRK Seaver's string of 16 consecutive regular season victories, as Mon- treal beat the Mets 3-0 last night. leavisng him only fiveothy of 300 The left-hander, 2-1, allowed for his career. two first-inning hits to Bud Har- Aaron and Rico Carty, who ex relson and Ron Swoboda but didn't tended his hitting streak through yield another until the eighth 29 games, each singled in runs in when Tommie Agee singled. Mc- the seventh inning for a 6-4 lead Ginn struck out five and walkedt before Johnny Callision tied it four. with his fifth homer, a two-run Seaver losing for the first time shot, in the bottom of the inning, this season after winning six in a * * * row, had captured his last 10 de- Pirates plunder cisions in 1969.PItTs G LeT PITTSBURGH - Deft-hander Cubs clubbed __________ _______ _A. L EE K IR K __ _ _ _ _ _ Y } All-Star balloting.. .. .a commercial cop-out While Detroit fans and sportswriters are up in arms about Al Kaline's failure to make the All-Star ballot, consider poor Rico Carty. The Atlanta outfielder is off to a spectacular start. Since being blanked on opening day, the slugging Brave has hit safely in 29 straight games and is batting over .400, yet he is not on the All-Star ballot either. The reason that Kaline and Carty were not on the ballot is simple enough. The ballots were made up before the season opened. Among the more noteworthy players on the ballot are Ken Harrelson, out for the year with a broken leg, Don Mincher of Oakland, currently tearing up the league with a .220 average, and Cleon Jones of the Mets, who is currently thundering the horsehide to a .182 tune. Meanwhile, such names as Spencer, Hopkins, Gra- brokewitz will not appear on the ballot and their possessors will probably not get invited to Cincinnati. Even the Red's rookie phenom Wayne Simpson and his 1.35 ERA will not make it unless the Cincy fans start stuffing those boxes. Fans had made the All-Star selections up until 1957 or so, when a horde of Cincinnati partisans engaged in one of the great ballot-box stuffing campaigns in history. Loyal Red root- ers managed to get seven of their home-town favorites starting berths, and it was quickly decided that the voting would be done by the players. The idea behind the return to public voting for the All-. Stars is to return player selection to the fans, but instead, Base- ball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn and his cohorts have given it to Gillette. And the "once in the morning does it" people de- cided that costs would be prohibitive if the printing of the bal- lots was rushed through before the game, and so they had them printed up well in advance. It was nice of Gillette to sponsor the All-Star voting, and it is too bad that they expected a favor from baseball for services rendered. It would have been just as easy to give the fans interested in voting a ballot with a listing of all the players, although it may have been more cumber- some. But after all, if a job's worth doing, it's worth doing right. To say that this little money-saving 'ruse was bastardizing the voting would be an understatement. The premature ballot is unfair to both players and fans, and it is hard to find any justification for baseball placing the interests of Gillette above the best interests of baseball. I for one am not so sure that giving the vote back to the fans was such a hot idea. I can't believe that it will drum up any more interest (or disinterest) in baseball. No one is more capable of judging a baseball player's ability than another base- ball player, but this is not my main reason for opposing a na- tional ballot. My mind sees this horrid vision of nine Mets tak- ing the diamond in Cincinnati in July. -Associated Press Jump for joy Boston's fantastic Bobby Orr soars in ecstacy after scoring the winning goal in Sunday's Bruin sudden death triumph. Orr was yesterday named recipient of the Conn Smythe award as the Most Valuable Player in the playoffs, giving him an unprecedented sweep of hockey awards. He had ear- lier been named season MVP, scoring champion, and outstanding defenseman. WOLVERINE WRAPUP: 111'teams excel over weekend '5 4 CHICAGO-Hank Aaron opened the 10th inning with his fifth jhme run inmsixggames. propelling Because of unrest on the South- the Atlanta Braves past the Chi- ern Illinois University campus, the cago Cubs 7-6 yesterday for their Salukis tennis team played its 12th victory in 13 games. match with Michigan at ten Aaron, the first man to face o'clock this morning and then rookie reliever Archie Reynolds, started early on the long trip back belted his 14th blast of the sea- to Carbondale Illinois. Perhaps son into the vacant center field catching the Wolverines a little groggy, the Salukis managed to Y~i t'. :. ::t1":4 1 t ,.." leave with a 5-4 victory under their belts. M ajor LeagL Even with the singles points ~ Even, AMERICAN LEAGUE split 3-3, Michigan still had an East excellent chance of winning as w 1 Pet. G"B doubles competition got under Baltimore 21 8 .724 - way. The match was not decidedDetroit 15 13 .536 51 xBoston 14 13 .519 6 in fact, until the number three xNew York 16 15 .516 6 doubles match was completed. Un- Washington 13 16 .448 8 fortunately, Michigan's usually Cleveland 10 1 .385 9. strong combination of Dan Me- West Mineso 18i 9 .667 - Laughlin and Bruce De Boer seem- xCalifornia 18 10 .643 ed to lose their poise and went Oakland 14 16 .467 51 down by a score of 6-3, 8-6, to Chicago 12 17 .414 7 Southern Illinois' Briscoe and anakeey 10 184.33 3 89 Snook. x--late game not included The other scores were as fol- Yesterday's Results lows: Jon Hainline (M) defeated Chicago 9, Detroit 5 Bill Lloyd 6-2, 2-0, default; Maiky to na altiwaukee, Inc. Dominguez (SI) defeated Joel Ross 2-6, 6-2, 6-4; Bruce De Boer (M)Today's Games defeated Chris Greendale 7-5, 6-4; Chicago at Detroit, night Graham Snook (SI) defeated Ra- Washington at Oakland, night mon Almonte 4-6, 6-3, 6-4; Dan Baltimore at Minnesota, night McLaughlin (M) defeated Ray New York at Milwaukee, night Briscoe 6-0, 6-3; Jorge Ramirez Boston at California, nightI (SI) defeated Tim Ott 1-6, 6-1, or 6-3; Lloyd-Ramirez (SI) defeat- ed Ott-Ross 6-3, 6-3; Hainline- D al' ( I Almonte (M) defeated Greedale- Dominguez 6-3, 8-6. Chicago Pittsburgh New York St. Louis Philadelphia Montreal Cincinnati Atlanta Los Angeles xSan Francisco Houston, xSan Diego W L 15 12 14 16 14 16 12 14 13 17 9 19 West 23 9 t18 12 17 12 15 16 14 17 14 1$ Pet. .556 .466 .466 .461 .433 .321 .719 .600 .586 .484 .452 .438 GB 214 21 3 6'.> Bob Veale pitched a three-hitter and Bill Mazeroski delivered a tie- breaking double as the Pittsburgh Pirates defeated the Cincinnati Reds 4-1 last night. Veale, 2-3, retired 19 batters In succession after Pete Rose led off the third inning with a single. Bob Tolan drew a walk with one out in the ninth, but Veale fanned Tony Perez and Johnny Bench to end it. ue Standings NATIONALsLEAGUE The Michigan baseball teamY gan 67 points out of a possible took out a few frustrations on, 81 in their nine Big Ten meets Toledo Saturday afternoon, sweep- and put them well ahead of the ing a doubleheader from the Rock- pack prior to the conference ets, 5-2 and 3-0. championships this weekend at Highlighting the play of the Minneapolis. Wolverines were fine perform- * * * ances by two young pitchers. The Michigan golf team racked' Freshman Mickey Elwood scat- up a fourth place finish in the tered six hits in the opener while Spartan invitational this pastj fellow frosh Ed Bryson gave up weekend in East Lansing with a but three hits in the nightcap to 775 total, two strokes behind third rack up his first varsity victory. place Miami (O). Freshman a 1 s o contributed Michigan State waltzed to the heavily to the Wolverine offense as title on their home course for the Lee Roberts contributed three hits, third time in five years with a 754, including a triple, and Tom Ket- and the Sparten 'B' team took ad- tinger and Bob Makoski had two vantage of the familiar surround- hits each. ings to finish second. The Wolverines will play West- The Wolverines were paced by en Michigan this afternoon in a single contest beginning at 3:30 at Fisher Stadium.- Keith Mohan and Randy Erskine, who totalled 152 over the two rounds. John Roska finished with 156 while Gary Balliet had a 161 total and Pete Clarke came in at 168. The linksmen move onto Cnam- paign this weekend for the Big Ten Championships. *I * * The Michigan AFC (soccer club) trounced the Bavarian club of Toledo 3-1 to maintain their lead in the Toledo' League with a per- fect 4-0 record. The Bavarian goal was only the second scored against Michigan this season. The Michi- gan team will be action almost every Sunday this summer in To- ledo League competition. 4 4 7 x-late game not included Yesterday's Results St. Louis 3, Philadelphia 0 Atlanta 7, Chicago 6 Montreal 3, New York 0 Pittsburgh 3, Cincinnati 1 San Francisco at San Diego, Inc. Today's Games Atlanta at Chicago Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, night Philadelphia at St. Louis, night Montreal at New York San Francisco at San Diego, night Houston at Los Angeles, night r, 1ds Get Results i Ira Russell achieved his am- bition and cracked the 25-foot barrier ir the long jump to high- light an easy 108-45 victory for the Michigan :thinclads over an outclassed Purdue squad. Russell soared 25-6%,_, breaking the old Ferry Field dual meet rec- ord by well over two feet. High-jumper John Mann also set a new field dual meet record by clearing 6-10. The old record was 6-6 set by Wolverine Al Am-I merman back in 1963. Mann would like nothing better than to jump higher than 6-10 this season, but although he has cleared that height several times, he has never topped it. This weekend, thetthinclads will be competing in the Big Ten, Championship in Bloomington. The Michigan tennis squad Ii- anlly got a chance to relax and enjoy their game as they trounced Purdue 9-0 Saturday afternoon after three tough dual meets ear- lier in the week. Coach Brian Eisner was pleased after the match, noting "we just relaxedagainst Purdue. We played some of our best tennis of the spring. The Purdue victory gave Michi- - I JACOBS, ON'S OPEN MONDAY NIGHTS 'TIL 9:00-TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5:30 / .~ ~ ~ 4' ~ ~ Jacobson S LIBERTY AND MAYNARD STREETS 4f TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION As Iaught By MAHARISHI MAHESHr YOGI A" Llr>~en~I 2.brp~ I li The "Transfer Kit," at top, contains clarifying lotion, facial soap, cleansing cream and moisturizing lotion... selected from the total Clinique collection for sensitive skin. Mt' a beauty gift for you ... the Clinique kit of allergy-tested, fragrance-free preparations is yours with a Clinique purchase of $5, or more now thru May 16th. A. Clarifying lotion, 6 oz. $6. B. Hair Spray, 12 oz. $5. C. Wrinkle stick, $6. D. Soap, $7.50 E. Moisturizing lotion, 2 oz., $7.50 F. Cleansing cream, 31/4 oz., $5 COSMETICS-STREET FLOOR r F N. 2.riw 0 . f ti t11