The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, September 30, 1981-Page 9
MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP
Tigers on lop; rout Orioles, 14-0
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' By CHUCK HARTWIG
Special to the Daily
Detroit unleashed all of its pennant
race fury on Baltimore last night as it
pounded out 12 hits against four Oriole
pitchers enroute to a 14-0 blowout.
The fireworks started in the first
when Detroit scored five times off
Baltimore starter and loser, Scott
McGregor (12-5).-One run scored on a
wild throw to the plate by first baseman
Eddie Murray and Ron Jackson and
ou Whitaker both had two-run singles
7.drive in the other runs.
Tiger manager Sparky Anderson
then decided to give his bullpen some
work. Dave Rozema came in to pitch
the last three innings and allowed only
two hits to wrap up the shutout.
Hitting . stars for Detroit included
Jackson, 3 RBIs, Leach, 3 RBIs, and
Gibson, 3 hits and 2 RBIs, including his
homer. The frenzied Detroit crowd of
31,204 went home happy as the Tigers,
once again managed to keep their pen-
nant hopes very much alive.
Indians 3, Yankees 2
CLEVELAND (AP) - Miguel
Dilone's bases-loaded grounder off the
glove of New York second baseman
Andre Robertson scored two runs to,
break a 1-1 tie in the eighth inning and
give the Cleveland Indians a 3-2 victory
over the Yankees last night.
Cleveland right-hander John Denny,
10-5, scattered nine hits, struck out five
and walked three in pitching his sixth
complete game of the season.
NEW YORK starter Ron Guidry, 11-5,
carried a two-hitter into/the eighth, but
left after yielding a leadoff single to
Dave Rosello and a ground rule double
to rick Manning.
Reliever Ron Davis intentionally
walked pinch-hitter Von Hayes to load
the bases. Dilone's ground ball then
kicked off the glove of Robertson, who
was pulled in for a play at the plate, and
both Rosello and Manning were able to
score to give the Indians a 3-1lead.
Bosox 7, Brewers 2
MILWAUKEE (AP)- Rich Gedman
drove in three runs with a homer and a
grounder, Dave Stapleton lined two
bases-empty homers and Mike Torrez
and Mark Clear combined on a five-
hitter, leading the Boston Red Sox to a
7-2 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers
last night.
The Brewers' defeat dropped them to
second place in the American League
East, one-half game behind the Detroit
Tigers, who beat Baltimore 14-0. The
Red Sox arethird, a game behind the
Tigers.
Jerry Remy walked, took second on a
two-out wild pitch and scored on a
single by Carl Yastrzemski to put the
Red Sox ahead 1-0 in the first.
THE RED SOX chased Jim Slaton, 5-
7, with three runs in the fourth to lead 4-
0. Stapleton lined a 1-1 pitch into the left
field seats for his ninth homer. Tony
Perez followed on the next pitch with a
line drive that skipped past Thad
Bosley to the right field corner for a
triple, and Gedman belted the next pit-
ch into the right field seats for his fifth
homer.
The Red Sox added two runs off Bob
McClure in the sixth. Stapleton singled,
took third on a single by Perez and beat
the throw home on a grounder by Ged-
man that McClure fielded to the right of
the mound. Rick Miller then hit an RBI
single.
Stapleton hit his 10th homer of the
year and second of the night in the
seventh.
Torrez, 9-3, struck out eight and
walked two, giving up the Brewers'
runs in the ninth on Robin Yount's RBI
triple and a run-scoring single by Cecil
Cooper before needing Clear's relief
help.
AL East
r
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Milwaukee .........
Boston. .............
Baltimore.........
Cleveland ........
New York........
Toronto..........
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20
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Today's games
Baltimore at Detroit
Boston at Milwaukee
New York at Cleveland
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1.
Gibson
... blasts 2-run homer
THE TIGERS then showed their
home run power with solo shots by Tom
Brookens in the third inning and John
Wockenfuss in the fifth inning, along
with a two-run blast by Kirk Gibson in
the seventh.
Detroit also scored five times in the
*ixth inning on RBI singles by Jackson
and Brookens, sandwiched around a
three-run, bases-clearing triple by
Rick Leach. ,
Tiger pitching, on the other hand, was
having no trouble at all with the Oriole
hitters. Starter Jack Morris went six
innings and allowed only one hit in
raising his record to 14-6.
week's speciuI
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THE RACE IS heating up in the
American League Eastern Division as
can be seen as the Detroit-Tigers' Alan
Trammell (above) slides under
Baltimore catcher Dan Graham at
home plate during first inning action in
Tiger Stadium last night.
Meanwhile, in a game of little impor-
tance,tempers flare between the Toron-
to Blue Jays and Oakland A's. Blue Jay
shortstop Alfredo Griffin (left) lands a
blow as the A's Mike Heath's batting
helmet goes flying.
AP Photo
Is
in your future'?
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TEILHARD CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION
IN ANN ARBOR-1981
Pierre Telihard de Chardin (1881-1955) was a great evolutionary thinker. His thinking and writing has brought
about a new vision on evolution and on the destiny of human kind. His thoughts and ideas provide a new matrix
for all disciplines and all aspects of human life. In this sense he is important to us all.
The University of Michigan is honoring this great thinker by arranging a series of symposia on the occqsion of his
centennial.
October 1, Thursday 8:00 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre
"TEILHARD: EARTHING THE VISION" - Dr. John Newson
Dr. John Newsom, a secretary of the Teilhard Centre for the Future of Man, in London, and for many years
editor of the Teilhard Review is a physicist intimately acquainted with Teilhard's thought as well as an original
evolutionary thinker.
November 19, Thursday8:00 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre
"THE POLITICS OF COMPASSION: Implications of Teilhard's Thought
for Socio-Political Life Today" - Prof. Robert A. Ludwig
"THE POLITICS OF EVOLUTION EQUALS EPISTEMOLOGY OF BECOMING"
- Prof. Henryk Skolimowski
Prof. Ludwig currently in the Theology Department of Loyola University in Chicago participated earlier this
year in the Boulder Forum on Evolution honoring Teilhard de Chardin.
Prof. Skolimowski is a member of the Humanities Faculty in the College of Engineering and his most recent
publication Eco-Philosophy: Designing New Tactics for Living is an articulation and application of Teilhard's
thought.
December 15, Tuesday 4:15 p.m., Rackham Amphitheatre
"HUMAN PEACEMAKING AND THE EVOLUTIONARY PROCESS" - Prof. Elise Boulding
Prof. Boulding is Chair of the Sociology Department at Dartmouth. Three of her recent books are-The
t - /..J LJ.i4.of ... A m, ,I AVi w.W Tomn hrfh Tim. Women in the Twentieth Centurv World, and Women: