Lacrosse club' formng The Michigan Lacrosse Club will hold its fall organizational meeting tonight, at 7 p.m. in Room 2230 CCRB. All in- terested athletes are invited to attend this meeting, and club leaders stress that no experience in lacrosse is necessary. The club will play a fall exhibition schedule, with a regular schedule in the spring. This year, the club will be trying to defend its Big Ten champion- ship, and continue on last year's un- defeated record. The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, September 10, 1980--Page 11 - i$:': t ?~:'t:t ;: i;. ' r:_________ _ :k d ti: ::__ .._ .....i:_ _z1_ :%..r ii_ M.21. ti~«....;.;. .:.. ,.. *:. .. ...z3zzi~ Quality .. : . : t22 .24 Results ,nsr ring cuides, .nts plies. Female gridder Becky Humphrey (61) awaits the snap in last week's opening junior varsity football game. Humphrey, 15, won a court order last year to play football on the St. Louis, Mich. High School team. The second team "line person," said that her opponents from Bullock Creek didn't hit her very hard. St. Louis lost to Bullock Creek, 27-6. Join The Daily Sports Staff! Equipmenl For Professional I Rapidograph technical pe Koh - I - Noor templates, scales, lette and fine drawing instrume' cGregor three-hitter lifts 0's over Tigers University of Michigan Tae Kwon Do Club Demonstration Wed., Sept. 10, 1980 8:00 pm, Martial Arts Room CCRB We are offering 10% off our already low prices on art and engineering supp MORE THAN A BOOKSTORE By BRUCE NEARY Special to The Daily DETROIT-Scott McGregor's three- it pitching and Doug DeCinces' fifth inning solo homer carried the Baltimore Orioles to a 2-0 victory over Detroit at Tiger Stadium last night. McGregor walked Jim Lentine to start the first and then retired the next 15 batters before Dave Stegman spoiled his no hit bid with a grounder to the box to lead off the fifth. One out later, Len- tine cracked a single to right, but that was all the Tigers could muster until the ninth inning. With two down in the ninth, John Wockenfuss singled and Lance Parrish put the fans on their feet when he sent left fielder John Lowenstein to the fen- ce, but Lowenstein caught the long ball, ending the Tiger hopes. Tiger starter Dan Schatzeder went the distance and took the loss, dropping him to 9-11 on the year. The Bengal southpaw started off estrong by striking out the side in the fir- SDespite several early threats, the Orioles could not,produce until the fifth, when Doug DeCinces led off by knocking a shot off the facing of the up- per deck. Then with one out in the seventh, DeCinces lined a double down the lef- tfield line. Rick Dempsey then singled, moving DeCinces to third. DeCinces then scored on a sacrifice fly by Lee May. Schatzeder found himself in trouble again in the eighth when Ken Singleton singled and went to second on a wild pitch. Tiger manager Sparky Ander- son's decision to intentionally walk Ed- die Murray paid off when Benny Ayala tapped weakly into a double play. A's 6, Rangers 3 OAKLAND, Calif. (AP)-Mitchell page pounded a pair-of homers and Matt Keough won his 15th game of the season to pace the Oakland A's to a 6-3 victory over the Texas Rangers yester- day. Keough, who was 2-17 a year ago, now stands at 15-12. He beat the Rangers for the first time after losing seven straight to them. However, he left in the eighth with a sore back, and Jeff Jones, the A's second reliever, earned his fifth save. The A's scored four runs in the fourth, one on a throwing error by starter Ed Figueroa, 3-10, one on Page's 13th homer, and two on Dave McKay's bases-loaded double. Page hit his second homer with a man on in the, seventh, raising the edge to 6-0. Al Oliver hit his 17th homer in the eighth for the first Texas run and Keough left after walking the next bat- ter. Reliever Bob Lacey walked pinch hitter Billy Sample and Jim Sundberg chased Lacey, hitting a two-run double to right to account for the final score. Mickey Rivers extended his hitting streak to 24 games for the Rangers with two hits. Oliver has hit in 21 in a row. Reds 7, Braves 1 ATLANTA (AP)-Ken Griffey broke a tie with a three-run homer in the sixth inning and right-hander Mario Soto scattered seven hits as the Cincinnati Reds defeated the Atlanta Braves 7-1 last night. Soto, 9-5, struck out 15, high for a Cin- cinnati pitcher this season and high for Soto's career, as the Reds beat the Braves for the 13th time in 14 games this season. The score was tied 1-1 when Ron Oester led off the Cincinnati sixth with a single against Atlanta starter Tommy Boggs, 9-9. After Soto sacrificed Oester to secoaid and Dave Collins drew the game's first walk, Griffey sent a drive over the center field fence for his 10th homer. Johnny Bench boosted the Reds' lead when he led off the seventh with his 23rd home run. Collins had opened the game for Cin- cinnati with a double and later scored on Dave Concepcion's grounder to give the Reds a 1-0 lead. The Braves tied the score in the fourth when Gary Mat- thews doubled and scored on Chris Chambliss' single. 549 E University at the corner of East U. and South U 662 - 3201 SCORES American League Baltimore 2, Detroit 0 Oakland 6, Texas 3 Toronto 6, New York 4 Boston 4, Cleveland 3 Seattle 4, Chicago i National League Cincinnati 7, Atlanta 1 Now comes Miller time. "Tow ILlboo "