Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, June 12, 1975 Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, June 12, 1975 Horton By The Associated Press DETROIT - Detroit's Willie Horton was ejected from the game following a fourth-inning brawl in which both benches cleared, then California broke loose for five runs in the fifth inning and beat the Tigers 14-7 last night in the wild first game of a doubleheader. The start of the game was de- layed 34 minutes by rain, there was a 30-minute rain delay in the third inning, then the ten- sion-filled scuffle delayed the game another 20 mnutes. The melee began when Angels pitcher Frank Tanana nearly hit designated hitter Horton. After t h brishback, I finger mena started walk then ran toI benches and and before down, Horto about a half- a couple of h who were t him. No sol landed. California1 disturbance f pushed acros, fourth off N three singles bases. highlights a t fourth - inning Bruce Bochte, who singled in catc Horton pointed his a run in the fourth, greeted re- up f zingly at Tanana, liever Dave Lemanczyk with a lier ing towards him, two-run double in the fifth to maj swards him. Both conclude the Angels' five-run Mic bullpens emptied outburst against Lolich, 7-4. the things calmed Mickey Rivers, Tommy Harper N' n had taken on and Dave Chalk drove in the in t dozen Angels and other runs in the inning. inft is own teammates The Angels later exploded of rying to restrain for six runs in the eighth in- free lid punches were ning, four on Lee Stanton's In grand slam homer. the' led 2-1 when the Detroit's first run came in gels broke out, having the first off Tanana, 4-4, on a s the runs in the single by Dan Meyer following our Mickey Lolich on Gary Sutherland's triple. Stan- er. and two stolen ley doubled in a run in the sixth, may then in the seventh Tiger rookie - twilighter her John Wockenfuss, called the Bengals held on to split the from the minor leagues ear- rain-delayed, fight-delayed, twi- in the day, hit his first light night from last evening. or league home run. Gene In two other late develop- hael added an RBI single in ments, the San Diego Padres inning. defeated the Montreal Expos ate Colbert blasted a homtr d d t E :he Detroit eighth, his fourth - he baseball season, in the And after 12 innings Boston -swinging game. and Chicago were tied 7-7. last night's second game, College W Series Tigers were leading the An- World 4-3 after six innings, and Arizona State, 60-12, vs. Okla- deadline could wait no long- homa, 52-9, 5 p.m. So, by now you'll know (or Texas, 54-6, vs. South Caro- be you'll have to check) if lina, 50-4, 8 p.m. Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE East East W L Pet. GS W L Pet. GB Pittsburgh 29 23 .558 - on 28 22 .560 - New York 27 23 .540 1 York 30 25 .545 Chicago 29 26 .527 1}4 aukee 25 28 .472 4Y2 Philadelphia 29 26 .527 14 more 23 30 .454 6 St. Louis 26 26 .500 3 eland 23 31 .426 7 Montreal 18 29 .383 8% west West land 34 22 .607 Cincinnati 35 24 .593 - as C 22 .6 - Los Angeles 34 25 .576 1 sCity 33 25 .569 2 San Francisco 29 27 .518 4! s 28 28 .500 5 San Diego 27 29 .482 61f. ornia 29 29 .500 6 Atlanta 25 32 .439 9 nesota 26 26 .500 6 Houston 22 40 .355 140. ago 23 31 .426 10 Yesterday's Results wednesday's Games San Francisco 8, Philadelphia 3 fornia 14, Detroit 7, 1st Chicago at Atlanta, ppd. rain fornia at Detroit 2nd, ine. Cincinnati 3, St. Louis I York 5, Minnesota 1louston 5, Pittsburgh 1 sas City 7, Cleveland 1 Montreal at San Diego, inc. land 5, Milwaukee 3 New York at Los Angeles, inc. Today's Games more 9, Texas 8 Montreal (Rogers 4-40) at Sm on 7, Chicago 4, after 5 Diego (Freisleben 2-1) Philadelphia (Carlton 5-5) at Sai Today's Games F erancisco (Halicki 2-1) fornia at Detroit, 8:05 p.m. Chicago (Reuschel 4-6) at Atltao (Morton 6-6), twinight 5sota at New Yok S. Louis (McGlothen 6-4) at Ci,- eland at Kansas City, night einnati (Nolan 6-3), night and at Milwaukee, night Pittsburgh (Ellis 2-3) at llotesto', (Roberts 3-7), night tn at Chicago, night New York (Matlack 7-4) at I:< imore at Texas, night Angeles (Sutton 10-4), night College Baseball World Series outh Carolina 6, Arizona St. 3 MAHA, Neb. (P) - Greg unbeaten among the four re- tley drove in three runs and maining teams in the double 1 Bass scattered eight hits elimination tournament. South Carolina gained a 6-3 Arizona State battles Okla- sph over Arizona State last homa, in a survival game to- it. night followed by a meeting be- he victory left the fourth- tween Texas and South Caro- d Gamecocks as the only lina. I just can't bear to look ! CALIFORNIA ANGEL catcher, Ellie Rodriguez seems to be anticipating a knockout blow from Tiger Willie Horton in a brawl at Detroit last night. Horton, brushed back by a pitch in the first inning, was hit on the fist in the fourth, starting the dugout emptying brawl. California scored five runs in the next inning. Remembering Pre SPORTS OF THE DAILY (Continued from Page11) for him: "I want him to im- prove 10 per cent over each of the next ten years." When Pre- fontaine died he was still im- proving, yet he was destined to always remain on the thresh- hold of greatness. He never held any world records, and he never won the gold medal. Had he lived, he certainly would have done both. On the night after Prefon- taine died I was laying awake listening to a talk show on alco- holism. Then, when the news came on, they said that by Oregon state laws Pre was drunk when he died. The per- centage of alcohol in his blood was .16. I got up and had a drink. After meets that we won we used to go down to little Italy. People said that they would sell beer to kindergarteners. I would buy because I had long sideburns and a rather inaus- picious mustache that I thought made me look like Steve Pre- fontaine. The man would ask me whether I was 18 or 21, and 1 said I was 21 because I was 16. The beer was cold and wet on my hot dry throat, and I felt on top of the world after two or three. When I knew I was going to win a race I would wave to the stands to tell them I was going to kick. Then I would say, goodbye to the runner next to me. By the time I hit the tape my arms were waving and I was smiles all over. Nothing in my life has made me feel so happy. All of this made me a lot of enemies, and after I got killed in the district meet I decided I wasn't quite good enough for stints like that. On the day that Steve Prefon- taine died, that part of me that emulated him died too. Though I had long since given up run- ning, I had still dreamed about it. But not anymore. Because it seemed to me that Pre, the greatest of all, had just been running in circles like the rest of us. Unless in that last lonely mo- ment, after running so many thousands of miles alone, as his body was once again taken from the control of his audacious, punishing spirit, he had looked and to the right in desperation for a place where the king is but as the beggar. And found it. Women sport adopt athlettic By The Associated Press NEW YORK-A group of prominent women sports personalities have adopted a 10-point "Bill of Rights" demanding "our equal share in a more equitable sports world." The resolution calls for a restructuring of ruling sports bodies, such as the International Olympic Committee, the International Lawn Tennis Federation and the various athletic fed- erations which rule world sports. It demands equal representation for women on such bodies, as well as on boards which pick Hall of Fame honorees in various sports. The resolution goes further to ask that the print media-give proper recognition to wo- men and that the TV media judge the com- petence of women "rather than hiring on the basis of good looks." Gladys Heldman of Houston, founder of World Tennis Magazine, and mother of pro tennis player Julie Heldman, was one of the women instrumental in drawing up the paper. Heldman and 10 other women were brought together as sports consultants for the U.S. Center on the International Women's Year and the State Department. Making a point-a sharp one DEARBORN-A glass of wine has replaced the cigar as an incentive for individual excel- personalites. Bill of Rights lence on Coach Dick Perry's fencing team. Most women don't like cigars, anyway. Perry's University of Michigan-Dearborn fencing squad is the first in the state to in- corporate men and women on the varsity, rather than have separate squads as is the case at many schools, Perry said. It may be one of the first in the country. Perry coached the University of Detroit to the National Collegiate Athletic Association fencing championship in 1972. After reaching that goal, he resigned his job in a dispute over what he considered second-class treatment ot the sport by U-D. No race for Triple Crown winners NEW YORK - There will be no Race of Champions among the winners . of the three Triple Crown events, a spokesman for Belmont Park said yesterday. The New York track had been interested in matching Kentucky Derby winner Foolish Pleas- ure, Preakness champion Master Derby, and Avatar, winner of the Belmont Stakes, in a 11- mile, $300,000 race. But a Belmont spokesman said that Arthur Seeligson, owner of Avatar, had decided that his colt was not ready for that kind of test at this time.