Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, July 27, 19771 Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, July 27, 19771 I SIXTH STRAIGHT WIN FOR CHISOX White Sox rip. Tigers, 8-3 By The Associated Press CHICAGO A" -Richie 7,isk drove in five runs with a triple and a home run and Chet Lem- on added a two run homer last night to lead the Chicago White Sox to an 8-3 victory over the Detroit Tigers. CHRIS KNAPP, 9-4, checked the Tigers on five hits through 7 1-3 innings, one of them Rusty Staub's two run homer in the first, to post the win. He struck out eight and walked two be- fore giving way to Dave Ham- ilton with the bases loaded and one out in the eighth. Staub's homer staked loser Dave Roberts, 4-10, to a 2-0 lead in the first, but the Western Division leading White Sox same back with a run in their half of the first, and took a 4-2 lead on Zisk's 20th homer of the season with two men on in the third. Lemon's fourth inning homer, his 11th of the year, hiked the Sox' lead to 6-2. Zisk's triple added two more in the seventh after Ralph Garr had singled and Jorge Orta drew a walk. THE TIGERS loaded the bases with one out in the eighth against Knapp, as Tim Corco- ran and Ron LeFlore singled and Tito Fuentes walked. Ham- ilton came on to put down the rally, but not before walking in a run. The win was the White Sox' sixth in a row, and increased their lead in the American League West to five games over idle Kansas City. Brewers nipped BOSTON - Right - hander Don Aase struck out 11 batters in his major league debut last night, and the Boston Red Sox nipped the Milwaukee Brewers 4-3. AASE, 22, called up from Pawtucket of the International League Tuesday morning to holster Boston's pitching corps, survived one weak inning, the fifth, as the Red Sox' snapped a three game losing streak. Milwaukee tied the score 3-3 in the fifth, but the Red Sox came back to pull out the victo- ry with a run in the seventh. Milwaukee starter Larry Soren- sen, 2-4, struck out George Scott to open the seventh, giv- ing him 11 consecutive outs. BcrutButch Hobson singledto center, took second on Denny Doyle's single to left, and scor- ed on Rick Miller's single to left-center. THE RED SOX JUMPED on Sorensen for three runs in the third inning, a rally capped by Jim Rice's 26th homer, giving him the American League lead in home runs. lha t4 / /ei*t by KATHY HENNEGHAN.'O'. Pistol Pete goes Hollywood... ... movie isn't convincing 1 HAD A CHANCE to see "One on One", a movie about a college basketball player, at a screening hosted by the Pistons organization Monday night.. Warner Brothers is billing the movie as a "love story" involv- ing a "young man who is faced with the awesome realities of the college sports system. It is contemporary, energetic and contro- versial." All of which makes me wonder whether anyone at Warner Bros. actually saw the film in question. The movie is entertaining, but it hardly deals with "awe- some reality" of any kind. In fact, it's corny-don't say I didn't warn you. "One on One" sets out to blow the lid off of big time college athletics but quickly dissolves into a fairy tale- the division between the "good guys" and the "bad guys" is that absolute. Robby Benson, who wrote the script in collaboration with his father, stars as Henry Steele. Off the court, Steele is a wide- eyed freshman. -On the court, he is a sort of "Pistol Pete gone Hollywood". We have already seen how he is signed by Western University coach Moreland Smith (G. D. Spradlin). Steele has had other offers, but Smith's promise of a car closes the deal. Yet when the prize recruit arrives on campus, Smith hasn't the slightest idea who he is. That hardly seems likely. If a kid is really that good, chances are that the coach who finally signs him is practically a member of the family. The athletic department sets Steele up with an easy job and free tickets which he sells to obliging alums at up to $300 a crack. He is also assigned the tutor who eventually becomes his room- mate, Janet Hays (played by Annette O'Toole). Hays initially regards Henry as just another "animal" but his innocence eventually wins her over. The boy-girl story is the most successful aspect of the movie, and of course it appeals to a wider range of people. Just don't expect too much from the bas- ketball sequences. Henry's freshman year has its ups and downs, to be sure. He feels lost on the huge Los Angeles campus and clings to his high school letter jacket like a security blanket. He even car- ries his basketball to class with him (another Andre McCarter?). It's little wonder he has trouble adjusting - if Mark Lozier had behaved the same way he would have been laughed out of Weft Quad. Coach Smith predicts stardom for Steele, who appears at least a head shorter and fifty pounds lighter than any of his teammates. Steele becomes a starter, but Smith soon decides he is a hot dog and not only benches him. but tries to run him out of the university. A sort of Bobby-Knight-gone-beserk, Smith even brings a thug to practice for the express purpose of beating Steele bloody while his teammates watch. The incident successfully destroys all re- maining credibility. Nobody, but nobody is THAT nasty. Steele toughs it out and eventually resolves his conflict with the coach, but it takes him until the last game of the season to do it. The Big Game is almost over, Steele is on the bench and West- ern is behind. One guard fouls out. Another is carried off on a stretcher. Smith, like it or not, is forced to call on Steele for the final four minutes . . . well, you can guess what happens. The credits roll while Seals and Croft sing that "love conquers all", Fairy tale stuff. backed by the hitting of Frank Taveras, Omar Moreno and Ed Ott giving the Pittsburgh Pir- ates a 3-2 victory over the Houston Astros last night. CANDELARIA, 11-3, was hit in the left forearm by a line drive off the bat of Wilbur How- ard in the eighth inning and was taken to a hospital for X rays. Cubs win .. . ... extend lead to 1 V See page 11] The tall left bander was not in trouble until the eighth when an error and his second walk of the game put two aboard with one out. Then came the shot off Howard's bat to load the bases. Rich Gossage camne on..to finish the inning, but not before Rnos Cabell hit a sacrifice fly to score Roger Metzger. Phils flop LOJS ANGELES-Glenn Burke broke a 1-1 tie with a run-scor- ing double in the seventh inning last night, leading the Los An- geles Dodgers to a 5-1 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies in the first game of a twi-night doubleheader. run in the fourth inning off loser Steve Carlton, 13-6, gave tos Angeles a 1-0 lead, but the Phil- lies tied the game in the seventh when Richie Hebner doubled and Ted Sizemore singled him home. The Dodgers started their win, ning rally when Dusty Baker walked and took second on a balk. Lee Lacy grounded to shortstop Terry Harmon, but Baker was able to beat lar- mon's throw to third. Burke then doubled over the head of center fielder Garry Maddox to score Baker. Jays blasted TORONTO - Kurt Bevacgua knocked in three runs with a home run and singled to back the four-hit pitching of Bert Bly- leven and lead the Texas Ran- gers to a 14-0 rout of the Toron- to-Blue Jays last night. THE RANGERS got 17 hits off five Toronto pitchers to hand thne Blue Jays t h e i r sixth straight loss andt16th out of their last 20. Willie Horton, Claudell Wash- ington, and Bert Campanerix knocked in two runs apiece for the Rangers. HORTON, the designated hit- ter, hit three doubles, two of them scoring runs. He was thrown out at third when he tried to stretch one of his dou- bles into a triple. Washington knocked in his runs on a sacri- fice fly and a single. Campaner- is tripled home both his RBI. Bucs win PITTSBURGH - John Can- delaria's four hit pitching was STEVE GARVEY'S 23rd home _.. - ^r r. - BOSTON RED SOX second baseman Denny Doyle slides safely into home last night in Fenway Park. Milwaukee catcher Larry Haney blocked the plate but dropped the throw allowing Doyle to scre. Boston defeated the Brewers 4-3. In late action St. Louis beat Atlanta 4-2, the New York Yankees defeated Baltimore in ten innings, 5-4.