Paae 8-Tuesday, September 22, 1981--The Michigan Daily Pennant races heat up p §figers out front in AL East . . . BALTIMORE (AP) - Milt Wilcox, winless in 10 previous lifetime decisions against Baltimore, hurled a six-hitter and pitched the Detroit Tigers to a 5-1 victory over the Orioles last night. It was the third consecutive triumph for the Tigers, after five straight losses to open their current road trip, and kept them one-half game ahead ofBoston in the tight American League East race. WILCOX, 11-8, stranded seven baserunners, five in scoring positibn, before Jim Dwyer cracked a solo homer with two ut in the sixth. The Orioles loaded the bases with one out in the fifth. But Wilcox, who has lost nine regular-season games and a 1970 World Series decision to Baltimore, got Eddie Murray to ground into a double play. John Wockenfuss drove in two Detroit runs. His RBI single in the fourth went through the spot vacated by second baseman Rich Dauer on a run-and-hit play, and his sacrifice fly in the sixth carne after Steve Kemp stole third base as the Orioles tried for a pickoff play on Ron Jackson at first. KIRK GIBSON, who had three hits, beat out a drag bunt to ignite the two-, run rally in the sixth. He scored on singles by Kemp and Jackson. In the eighth, Detroit got its last two runs on an RBI single by pinch-hitter Champ Summers and a sacrifice fly by pinch- hitter Al Cowens. Scott McGregor, 11-4, entered the game with an 11-2 lifetime record against the Tigers. He has a 7-2 record at home this season, with both losses in- flicted by Detroit. Red Sox 9, Brewers 3 BOSTON (AP) - Dave Stapleton drove in four runs with a homer and a single and the Boston Red Sox rode a five-run third inning to a 9-3 decision over the Milwaukee Brewers last night for their seventh victory in the last eight games. Right-hander Dennis Eckersley, 9-6, settled down after allowing two runs in the third, althoughlhe was tagged for another tally in the eighth. STAPLETON, JIM RICE, Jerry Remy, Carl Yastrzemski, Carney Lan- sford, Tony Perez and Rick Miller each{ had two hits in Boston's 14-hit attack against three Milwaukee pitchers. The Brewers, falling out of a tie with Boston for second place in the' American League East, scored two runs in the third on a walk, a double by Jim Gantner and a single by Robin Yount. However, the Red Sox, 24-16 since the baseball strike ended, rebounded quickly against Milwaukee starter Moose Haas, 9-7. WITH ONE OUT, Remy singled and took second on an infield out. Rice doubled, scoring Remy and, after Yastrzemski walked, Lansford lined an RBI single to right. Stapleton followed with.a line shot into the left field screen- for his eighth homer. Boston added two runs in the fourth, one in the fifth and one in the sixth en route to its 10th victory in the last 13 games and 12th in the last 16. Murray tops in AL NEW YORK (AP)- Baltimore's Ed- die Murray became just the second player to earn successive American League player of the week awards when the Orioles first baseman was voted the distinction yesterday following a .500 week. The award was conceived in 1975 and only Oakland's Tony Armas previously had been voted the award in con- secutive weeks when he was named the first two weeks of the 1981 season. Murray, who hit .423 to capture the honor last week, had 10 hits in 20 at bats this past week with two home runs, a triple and a double. He knocked in nine runs, had a .950 slugging percentage and a 1545 on-base mark. Murray is hit- ting .343 in the second season. Indians 5, Yankees 0 NEW YORK (AP)- Rick Waits pit- ched a six-hitter as the Cleveland In- dians extended the New York Yankees' losing streak to three games with a 5-0 AP Photo BALTIMORE ORIOLES SECOND baseman Rich Dauer i§ upended at second base by Steve Kemp of the Detroit Tigers. Dauer nevertheless managed to relay the ball to first to complete a double play on Ron Jackson. 0 victory yesterday night. Waits, 7-9, whose last shutout came on Sept. 25, 1980, also here against the Yankees, broke a personal two-game losing streak as Cleveland won for only the second time in nine games. THE LOSS WAS the Yankees' fifth in their last six games. New York starter Rudy May, 6-11, helped the Indians with his own wild- ness in both the fifth and the seventh in- nings. In the fifth, after May walked Rick Manning-who stole three bases in the game and has 14 successful steals in a row-May could not field Dave Rosello's bouncer and the Indians had runners on first and second. Mike Fischlin, a former Yankee farmhand, then doubled to left for two runs. In the seventh, May fielded Man- ning's grounder and threw wildly past first. After Rosello struck out, Manning stole second and scored as he stole third and May's 0-2 pitch to Fischlin got past Rick Cerone for a wild pitch, allowing Manning to come home. Manning doubled home Toby Harrah in the ninth and Von Hayes' pinch-hit sacrifice .fly knocked in the final Cleveland tally. SCORES American League Detroit 5, Baltimore 1 Boston 9, Milwaukee 3 Cleveland 5, New York 0 Texas 4, Seattle 1 National League St. Louis 2, Chicago 0 ...Cards on top in NL East CHICAGO (AP) - Joaquin Andujar and Bruce Sutter combined on a three- hitter and Darrell Porter and Keith Hernandez knocked in the game's only runs with sacrifice flies, leading the St. Louis Cardinals to a 2-0 victory over the Chicago Cubs yesterday as the Car- dinals snapped a three-game losing streak. Andujar, (7-4), struck out three and walked one bt was forced from the game when he strained his right ham- string muscle with batting in the iiinth inning. Sutter came in to pitch a pefect final inning and picked up his 23rd save. The Cubs have gone the last 23 innings without scoring a run and have managed just a total of six hits in their last two games. THE GAME was scoreless until the sixth when Garry Templeton smashed a line drive to right-center field and stretched it to a triple as the ball rolled to the wall. AfterGeorge Henrick was inten- tionally walked, losing pitcher Ken Kravec, (1-5), gave up a sacrifice fly to Porter, scoring Templeton. In the seventh, Willie Hernandez came on in relief of Kravec and walked Tito Landrum to lead off the inning. Landrum took second on an error by shortstop Ivan DeJesus and Templeton, singled, sending Landrum to third. He scored on Hernandez's sacrifice fly. The Cubs' only hits came in the second when catcher Jody Davis lined a single to center, the fourth when DeJesus skimmed a grounder to third and in the seventh when Leon Durham lined a single to right. Brooks tops inNL NEW YORK (AP)- Rookie third baseman Hubie Brooks of the New York Mets was named National League Player of the Week yesterday. Brooks went 12-for-24 for the week ending Sunday, drilling a double, triple and home run. He scored four runs, drove in six runs and stretched his hit- ting streak to eight games. The streak has raised Brooks' average for the season to .311. Other Player of the Week nominees were Garry Templeton of St. Louis, who batted .452 with three doubles and five C hiAifl £rhtirnnt iin xrin 1 A WVW +p WV rA %4 WI Student Newspaper at The University of Michigan r-----. ----- WRITE YOUR AD HERE! - m-- rn-- -- n-- - I------------CLIP AND MAIL TODAY!-----------ij USE THIS HANDY CHART TO QUICKLY ARRIVE AT AD COST Words- Days 1 2 3 4 5 add. 0-14 1.85 3.70 5.55 6.75 7.95 1.00 Please indicate 15-21 2.75 5.55 8.30 10.10 11.90 1.60 wherethisadad 22-28 3.70 7.40 11.10 13.50 15.90 2.20 forrent 29-35 4.60 9.25 13.90 16.90 19.90 2.80 forsale hepwanted 36-42 5.55 11.10 16.65 20.25 23.85 3.40 roommates personal 43-49 6.45 12.95 19.40 23.60 27.80 4.00 etc. Each group of characters counts as one word. Hyphenated words over five characters count as two words. (this includes telephone numbers). Seven words equal one line. Advertisement may be removed from publication. For ads which required prepayment, there will be no refunds. All other ads will be billed according to the original number of days ordered. SMail with Check to: Classifieds, The Michigan Daily , runs scored; Dusty Baker of Los Angesles, who batted .435; Atlanta's Claudell Washington, who hit .423 with five RBI, and Larry McWillians of, Atlanta, who pitched a two-hit shutout. BigTen, ACC i s hot-out I -CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP)- Basketball players from the Big Ten and Atlantic Coast conferences will r square off next spring in an all-star game sponsored by a University of Iowa booster group, it was announced yesterday. The game, to be called the "Big Ten- ACC Shootout," will be played March 31 at the Five Seasons Center in Cedar Rapids, and will feature NBC television announcers Billy Packer and Al McGuire as the coaches. PACKER WILL coach the ACC team and McGuire, who coached an NCAA championship team at Marquette, will ° lead the Big Ten squad. Ten seniors from each league will be chosen for the game, which is the first of three set up by the booster group, called Hawkeye Rebounders. Player~s cald H w e e R b ud r , amfrom the winning team will be paid $1,000 and the losers will receive $500. - Packer, McGuire and members ,of. Hawkeye Rebounders will choose the players for the all-star teams. Tickets,: priced at $10 and $8, will go on sale in: January. THE FIVE SEASONS Center seats 7,200 for basketball. Bob Brooks, a member of Hawkeye Rebounders, said a second all-star game between the two leagues will be played in 1983 in Greensboro, N.C. The third game will be in Cedar Rapids in 1984. "We'd try to extend it after that if it was successful," Brooks said. "We'd also look at other possibilities, such as having the Big Ten team play the Pac Ten or another league. We'll keep that option open."~ TUESDAY LUNCH-DISCUSSION SEPTEMBER 22-12 Noon "MIDDLE EAST, PEOPLES IN CONFLICT, AND CHURCHES IN THE USA" Speaker: DR. HENRY BUCHER Dr. Bucher is pastor of Bryn Mawr Presbyterian Church, Cottage Grove, Wisconsin, and founder and Consultant of Global learning Opportunities in Basic Education. He has lived in China, the P ilippines, Israel, Lebanon, Gabon, Ghana and France. He received his PHD in Comparative World History from the University of Wisconsin. af the INTERNATIONAL CENTER 603 E. Madison Street Lunch $1.00 For additional information, please call 662-5529 CO-SPONSORED BY THE ECUMENICAL CAMPUS CENTER The Collaborative An Alternative Art Experience Change your evening routine. Obbb- I i .