Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, August 16, 1975 1 EGYPTIAN TOUR SUCCESSFUL Wolverine cagers return By RICH LERNER "It's great to be home" was the pre- vailing attitude among the members of the Michigan basketball team, last night, as they arrived tired, and sou- venir-laden from their 15-day goodwill tour of Egypt. The squad arrived at Metro Airport at close to 10:00 p.m. after more than 22 hours of travel. The Wolverines swept seven games from the Egyption National team, win- ning the last game, Thursday night 93-73. "We saw the pyramids and the sphinx, we went to the Citadel and to the Cairo museum, we swam in the Mediterranean. The Egyptian people were just great to us. We had a bus at our disposal all the time. They went all out to entertain us," Coach Johnny Orr explained. "We saw one good belly dancer and one really rot- ten one." Pirate sN By The Associated Press doubles PHILADELPHIA-Greg Luzin- Tolan ski hit a two-run homer in the fourth, first inning, his 30th of the sea- ven wi son, and Mike Schmidt added Fred his 26th an inning later to power the int the Philadelphia Phillies to a single 4-3 triumph over the San Diego Winfiel Padres last night. Fuentes The triumph brought the sec- ond-place Phillies within 1% B games of the staggering Pitts- BUCS burgh Pirates in the National CINC League's East Division. two-run LUZINSKI connected off Joe Norma McIntosh, 8-11, after a walk to keyeda Larry Bowa. Schmidt made it powere 3-0 in the second. an 8-3 Starting pitcher Dick Ruthven Pittsbu knocked in the fourth run in the The fourth inning after a Garry fourth Maddox double. their la San Diego used back-to-back NORI "Everything went alright until we got on Northwest in New York. "Half our bags didn't come. "All the players are glad they went," said Orr, "but I doubt if any want to go back," he added. "I'm glad I went," forward Joel Thompson concurred, "but you couldn't pay me to go back. It makes you really appreciate what you have." "Hey man, it was alright," said Way- man Britt. "It was a good experience, but it was a long boring trip. "No food worth eating, people tired looking, it sure makes you appreciate the United States," Britt said. "We had to stay in places you thought you'd never have to stay in," the 6.2 senior went on, "but from their viewpoint the places were real nice." "They treated us great," said Don .Johnston, "but by our standards it would not be so good. "We were ready for a plush hotel, but we were right in the middle of downtown Cairo. It was kind of scary at first, but the people were unbelievably friendly," Johnston continued. "Most everyone over there liked the U.S." "I'll tell you in a few weeks what I learned," said Len Lillard. All but the last two games were played on dirt courts, that "made Northwestern look like a palace" in guard Steve Grote's words. "The trip helped the team," said Grote. "That's the first time we lived together and that aspect helped the most. "Plus a lot of the players gained confidence, like Joel (Thompson), al- though it's easier playing against the Egyptian team than it is in our prac- tices." "ItItaught usdhow to play in the worst condtions," said Britt, "and it brought us closer together." "It didn't help as much as it could have, with the weird surfaces like dirt and the different rules," Johnston said. The food and water bothered the Maize and Blue to a degree. "Most everybody got kind of sick," said Johnston. "But I was the only one to miss a game, because of it." Thompson led the team in both scor- ing and rebounding, tallying 106 points, and guard Dave Baxter topped the team in assists and finished second in scoring. Grote and Britt were the third and fourth leading scorers, respectively. "Joel Thompson is ready to play big-time college basketball," Orr en- thused. "Tom Bergen (6-10 transfer from Utah) sprained his ankle, but showed us real potential offensively." The team played three games in Cairo before travelling to Mahalla and Tanta for one-game stints, and closing with two games in Alexandria on the Medi- terranean. Crowds ranged between 100 and 1500 according to Coach Orr. The scores of the games were 79-53, 84-76, 102-71, 87-55, 77-70, 101-73, and 93-73. wvoon by Mike Ivie and Bob to score once in the then knocked out Ruth- th two runs in the fifth. Kendall walked to open ning and scored on a by Tito Fuentes. Dave td doubled to bring in s. dumped. INNATI-Johnny Bench's homer and pitcher Fred n's bases-loaded single a six-run first inning that ;d the Cincinnati Reds to romp over the reeling rgh Pirates last night. loss was the Pirates' in a row and ninth in ast 10 games. MAN, 8-3, won his sixth puts F straight game, holding the Pi- rates to seven hits and raising his career record at Riverfront Stadium to 23-6. After Pittsburgh took a 1-0 lead in the top of the first on Rennie Stennett's single and Manny Sanguillen's double, the Reds jumped on Jim Rooker, 8-9. Pete Rose led off with a sin- gle and, one out later, Joe Mor- gan doubled him home. Bench followed with his 23rd homer of the season, then Tony Perez doubled and George Foster and Bob Flynn walked to load the bases. Battle of Soxes CHICAGO-Cecil Cooper slug- ged a triple and his 11th homer ghillies 1'/2 out to help the Boston Red Sox record a 3-2 victory over the Chicago White Sox last night. The Red Sox took a 1-0 lead in the second inning when Cooper tripled and scored on a sacrifice fly by Rico Petrocelli. The White Sox tied it in the bottom of the third on a triple by Pat Kelly and a single by Jorge Orta, but Cooper snapped the tie with his solo homer in. the fourth inning. BOSTON added a run in the sixth when Fred Lynn walked, took second on an infield out and scored the winning run on a single by Rick Miller. The White Sox came back in the bottom of the sixth on a walk to Orta and a run-scoring d o u b le by Ken Henderson against Tiant, who picked up his 15th victory with a seven- hitter. Jesse Jefferson 3-7, also al- lowed seven hits. Damn Yankees KANSAS CITY - Chris Chaim- bliss' two-run double capped a three-run eighth inning that to a 5-4 victory over the Kansas vaulted the New York Yankees City Royals last night. BOBBY BONDS' single off Dennis Leonard, 8-6, started the decisive burst. Bonds then took Frank Tanana pitched a four-hitter as the California Angels dealth the Detroit Tig- ers an 8-0 shutout last night. The loss was the 19th straight for the Tigers and placed them within one loss of the American League losing re- cord. second and Sandy Alomar reached first safely when short- stop Freddie Patek bobbled his grounder. After Roy White popped out, Doug Bird replaced Leonard and Thurman Munson greeted him with a single that loaded t he bases. Craig Nettles' sacrifice fly scored Bonds before Chamn- bliss doubled to right-center field. SPORTS OF THE DAILY McParlan eyes state title BATTLE CREEK (UPI) - Former Michigan Amateur Champion Rod Sumpter and host pro Glenn Stuart moved into a one stroke lead yes- terday after the second round of the $12,000 Michigan Open Golf Championship at Bedford Valley Country Club. Sumpter, a 28 year pro at Grand Blanc Golf Course, shot the day's best round - a four under par 68, while Stuart carded a 71 to give each a 36 hole score of 140. They held a one stroke lead over former Michigan golf captain Tom McParlan going into the third round of the 72 hole tournament. The 36 hole out was made at 152 with 78 golf- ers surviving. First place money in the tourna- ment is $1,500. The final round is slated for Sunday. NCAA pushes 'the limts' CHICAGO (P) -The NCAA's special economics convention adjourned yesterday after setting lim- its on coaching staffs, reducing travel squads in football and basketball and significantly cut- ting off-campus contacts colleges may make in their recruiting efforts. The convention adjourned after dealing with about 50 of the 73 pieces of legislation presented to it in an effort to reverse a situation in which more than 80 per cent of, the colleges now show a deficit in their athletic budgets. Not acted upon were three controversial share-the-wealth proposals that would have divided up receipts from bowl games, TV and the NCAA basketball tournament. Delegations voted Thursday to terminate the $15 per month expense money that scholarship grants have traditionally included, meaning no scholarship athlete will now be able to receive any money legally. Yesterday, coaching staffs were slashed. Divi- sion I members-the 234 largest colleges-agreed to get by with a head coach, eight assistants and two part-time assistants in football and a head coach, two assistants and one part-time assistant in basketball. There had been no limits previously. The delegates also set limits on traveling squads in most sports. Football teams will be limited to taking 48 players for road games and basketball teams slashed to 10. There had been no previous limts. The convention also said. no college may Visit any recruit off its campus more than three times, and time periods were set for when those visits may take place. And no high school athlete may accept more than six expense-paid visits to a college. There had been no previous limits. Garrison gives goodbyes DALLAS ()-Rugged veteran Walt Garrison, the No. 3 all-time rusher for the Dallas Cowboys, retired from professional football yesterday be- cause of an injury suffered in June as he pursued his off-season career as a rodeo cowboy. Garrison, 31, told Dallas Coach Tom Landry Thursday night that he felt it was time to quit. A strong consideration was the torn ligaments in his left knee which Garrison suffered in Bozeman, Mont.,. while bulldogging a steer. "The thing we'll miss most is that Garrison was part of the great tradition of the Cowboys of the last 10 years," said Landry. "A great football player. He did more with limited size, speed and quickness than anybody I've ever seen." :;.;'ar" New York 62 57 .517 9n Milwaukee 55 64 .462 16Y. Cleveland 52 64 .452 58 Detroit 46 74 .387 26 west Oakland 72 47 .605 - Kansas city 65 53 .556 6,. Tesas 6o en.n9214 Chicago 58 61 .492 04 Minnesota 55 66 .4518 Calitornia 55 67 .446 18'/ Yesterday's Games Texas 10-1, Baltimore 6-13 New York 5, Kansas City 4 Bsoston 3, Chicago 2 Minnesota 9, Cleveland 4 Callfornia 5, Detroit 0 Milwaukee at Oakland, inc. Today's Games Boston (Moret 8-2) at Chicago (wood 12-15), 2:15 p.m. Cleveland (Raich 6-7) at Minne- sota (nutler 1-3), 2:15 p.m. Milwaukee (Slaton 001-12) at Oak- land (Holtzma 14-10), 4,30 p.m. Texas (Perry 12-15) at Baltimore (Grimsley 8-11), 7:30 p.m. New York (Medich 11-12) at Kan- sam 61117 (Buaby 15-9), 8:30 p.m. Deroit (Rare 6-7) at calsornia (Hockenberry 0-2), 10:30 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE East w L Pet. G1 Pittsburgh 67 53 .558 - Philadelphia 65 54 .546 1 St. Louis 64 56 .533 3 New York 61 58 .513 5 Chicago 56 66 .459 12 Montreal 49 01 .419 16' west Cincinnati 10 39 .672 - Los Angeles 64 56 .533 16 San Francisco 61 60 .504 20 San Diegn 04 65 .454 26 Atlanta 54 68 .443 22 Honston 46 78 .371 36n Yesterday's Games San Francisco 6-4, New York 2-9 St. Louis 4-2, Atlanta 1-1 Cncinnatil , Pittsburgh 3 Montreal 5, Los Angeles 4 Philadelphia 4, San Diego 3 Houston 4, Chicago 1 Today's Games Chicago (R. Reuschel E-13) At Houston (Roberts 7-13), 2:15 p.m. Son Francisco (Falcone 8-1) ot New York (Swan 0-0), 2:15 p.m. Pittsburgh (Candelaria 6,2) at Cincinnati( )llingham 13-5), 7 p-m. 56. Louis (Curtis 8-9) at Atlanta (Morton 15-12), 7:35 p.m. San Diego (Jones 15-7) at PhIla- delphla (Christenson 6-4), 7:35 p.M. at Montreal (Carrtthers1i1 .805 p.m.