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Star-Gazette from Elmira, New York • 14

Publication:
Star-Gazettei
Location:
Elmira, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

i wi. mi I Topay Nicklaus Begins 3rd Step in Slam Quest "But I hope he doesn't. I'd MUIRFIELD, Scotland (AP) the 32-year-old Golden Bear a Taiwan's Mr. Lu Sheds Chapeau Muirfield this week, Mister Lu was bare-headed and passed al MUIRFIELD, Scotland (AP) Mister Lu, master golfer from the Far East, announced Tuesday that he's changed his image from the hat-doffing mystery man who electrified the last British Open championship. "This year, no hat," said Taiwan's Lu Liang Huan.

He earned the nickname "Mister Lu" at England's Royal Birkdale course in 1971 when he came from nowhere, finished I second to Lee Trevino and earned the affection of golf fans with his unfailing courtesy. The little straw hat Lu sported at Birkdale became his trademark. Every time he hit a good shot, he raised it to the applauding crowds. most unnoucea among ine tans craning tor a glimpse ot sucn as Trevino and favorite Jack Nicklaus. "I not careabout that," said the smiling Formosan.

"Last year I used my hat to return friendliness of Birkdale gallery because at that time I not speak English well. Now I am better." Mister Lu shot a two under par 69 in one of his pratice rounds over Muirfield's windswept course and said afterwards: "If it rains, I get another hat. But I think I play better with ets of balls. "I hit the ball real well last week, but I don't think I'm as hungry to win as I was last year. It's awfully hard to defend, to really get up for it two years in a row." Arnold Palmer, now 42 and looking for his first" victory of the season, ranks as a 20-1 shot but is an enormously popular figure with the galleries.

"Jack has the best chance at the slam of any man in history who has been in position to win it," said Palmer, the last man to make a run at it. Palmer won the Masters and U.S. Open in 1960. He lost by a single shot in the British. "When you get in that position, anything can happen," he recalled.

"The fourth round was rained out for the first time in something like 50 years. When we got it in, Kel Nagle made an eagle on the 17th hole to beat me by a stroke. "It could happen to Jack. Rain, wind, a penalty like to win one myself." The flamboyant Trevino, who capped his incredible rags-to-riches success story last year with a sweep of the American, Canadian and British Opens, took a different tact. "Jack's a freak," he said.

"He's a legend in his own time. He's the greatest player ever to hold a club in his hand. "When he makes up his mind to win something, he's halfway there. When he wants to win, he's awful hard to handle." Trevino has won only once this year, but has a pair of place finishes and is second only to Nicklaus on the money-winning list with almost $130,000. "I think I'm getting it all together," he said.

"I've been awfully hard on my game. My wife wanted me to baby-sit one day last week in Canada and I had to practice. So I took the kids to the course, got me a switch and said 'sit and hit a couple of buck- "Take a good look, the spectator said in a rich Scots burr, draping an arm over the shoulders of his young son. "There's one of the 20 most famous men in the world." He pointed a gnarled and knobby walking stick at the formidable figure of Jack Nicklaus, who stood with eyes narrowed against the gale-force winds whipping off the Firth of Forth during a practice round for the 101st British Open Golf Tournament. Nicklaus, already holder of the Masters and U.S.

Open Championships, ruled as an overwhelming favorite to make this ancient crown the third step on the road to golfing immortality. He's gunning for Grand Slam, an unprecedented one-year blitz of the Masters, U.S. Open, British Open and American PGA National Championship, scheduled Aug. 3-6 at Birmingham, Mich. Britain's legal bookies made 9-4 favorite, one of the lowest prices ever quoted in golf, to capture his third British Open title in the 72-hole event that begins today on the 6,892 yards of Scottish moors that, make up the par 36-35-71 Muirfield links.

His drive toward the Slam has excited the imagination of fans and duffers around the world and even has the golf-crazy Scots-usually fiercely loyal to their own pulling for "Jack to bring it off. But he doesn't like to talk about it. "I'm playing the championships one at a time. That's enough to think about," Nicklaus said when asked about the Slam, repeating himself with almost reflex action, pulling of the same phrase time after time. "I said before the season started that the four championships were being played on courses I like.

That's all." There's no secret of his love affair with Muirfield, which he out one." But in practice for' the British Open championship at time change and has had a chance to work on the course and on his game. I don't think "we did the right thing, Arnie, Lee and by not preparing properly. "Maybe it would be good for the game if Jack won them all. He's already created enormous interest in golf with his first two victories and if he won them all it would just be challengers defending champion Lee Trevino and South African Gary Player-agree that the blond and powerful Nicklaus is the man to beat. "Jack has an enormous advantage," said the doughty little Player, a physical fitness fan, who, with Nicklaus, is one of only four men ever to win all four major titles in a lifetime.

"Coming over a week early, he's become adjusted to the He hasn't competed since taking the U.S. Open in the wind and cold at Pebble Beach, Calif. He took a vacation with his family in the Bahamas, then came to Scotland a week to begin work with the smaller British ball and hone his awesome talents on Muirfield's narrow fairways, pit bunkers, punishing winds and fearful rough. The men listed as his major has called "probably the best in Britain." He first visited it in 1959 as an amateur with the U.S. Walker Cup team, then won his first British Open on the same layout in 1966.

He's never lost here and looked mildly surprised when a man asked him to pick player other than Nicklaus as the most likely to win. "I hadn't even thought about it," Nicklaus said. Spassky jijJDlrixer's Seat nnosinn find the first Russian had the first move. 1 v7 Yefim Geller, the Russian Star-Gazette who seconds Spassky, watched TV I Xhe final moves on closed cir- television in the corridor, ci REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) Bobby Fischer made his opening assault on the Soviet Chess fortress Tuesday night, but world champion Boris Spassky repelled it and left the American with a tough fight for a draw when their first game was adjourned. i ping a cup of coffee.

PORT I What do you think, Grand- ster Geller?" he was asked. ELMIRA, N.Y. JULY 12, 1972 PAGE 31 "I am not thinking, I am drinking coffee," Geller re 1 lose." BTtTO pawwfor Fischer; a king, three TTiTTn nnij tliiillnp for Spassky. Yugo- slav grandmaster, corn- if J'- -JT i 1 it Kf The first game of history's richest world chess title match was called after 40 moves and 3 hours and 34 minutes of play. It will resume today at 1 p.

m. EDT, or 5 p. m. Reykjavik time. When play was called off for the night, there was little left on the board: a king and five doubtful mented: "It is plied.

Fischer has played Spassky five times in the past. The three times he played the black pieces he lost. Playing white he was able to salvage two draws, but has never triumphed over the Soviet. aJ U.S. grandmaster Robert Byrne said: "Fischer is going to have trouble making a draw.

I don't see how Spassky can black can save a draw." Fischer is playing the black pieces and Spassky the white, which means the Pioneers Drop Decision WATERBURY. Conn. -West Haven's Jim Golden limited the Elmira Pioneers to three hits, two by Doby Johnson and the other by Vic Ambrose, and beat the Pioneers, 2-0, Tuesday night. Jim Kern who pitched the first eight innings, giving up six hits including Tony Solaita's eighth homer, took the loss. He's now" 3-7.

The Pioneers have two new players. Ron Ellis, a second baseman from Reno in the California League, and hurler Mark Grossman have joined the team. Grossman, the Cleveland Indians' number two pick in the June draft, is a University of Maryland who started the season at Portland. He makes his first start tonight in a Pioneer uniform. Ambrose, chosen as a utility outfielder, and pitchers Dan Hatchell and Eric Raich are Elmira's representatives in Thursday night's Eastern League all-star game at Three Rivers.

West Have 000 00 1 010-2 7 0 Elmira. 000 000 000-0 3 1 Golden and Deidel; Kern, Hatchell (9) and Johnson. wmm itvvcv. Reds Blank Bucs, 5-0 CINCINNATI (AP) Jack Billingham tossed a seven-hitter and Cincinnati shut out Pittsburgh 5-0 Tuesday night in. a clash of the National.

League's West and East Division leaders. PITTIIUROH CINCINNATI brh bl bl Cllneuf 40 0 0 3 2 10 4 0 2 0 3 0 0 0 Rom if Morgan Tolanct Bench TPereilb Menke3b 4 111 4 2 4 3 4010 Alltyis Oavallllotf Stargel! lb AOMvercf Sangulllnc 4 0 0 0 4 0 10 4 0 10 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 Gtronlmorf 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 Helm er 3b ON THE NEW JOB Paul Owens (center), Phils' general manager who took over as field manager, gets some tips from coaches. Ray Rippelmeyer (left) and Billy DeMars as the Phils play Los Angeles. AP Wirephoto Mairoiklft 4 0 2 0 ConctDcnu 3 0 0 0 Billlnghmp 3 0 10 Tigers Nip 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 10 0 0 0 0 Moose Zlskph Johnson Stennettph Garberp Texas, 6-5 Carlton's 5-Hitter Throttles LA. 4-1 Total 31 0 7 0 Total 31 5 I 5 Pittsburgh 010 010 0 0 00 Cincinnati 212 Oil Ilk 5 Sangulllen, Davallllo, Menke.

DP Cincinnati 3. LOB Pittsburgh Cincinnati 5. 2 Bench, Stargell, Mazerotkl. HR-Bench (22). SB Morgan.

Moon. SF-Menke. IP ER BBSO Moose (L.5-5) 4 a 4 4 1 4 Johnson 2 1 0 0 0 1 Garber 2 1 1 1 1 0 BMIInghm (W.5-9) .9 7 0 0 2 5 HBP-ty Billingham (Hebner). WP nVse.T-l:5. Birds Win On Walk e.

In 10 th BALTIMORE (AP) Tom Shopay walked with the bases loaded in the last of the 10th PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Don Money unleashed a three-run double in the second inning Tuesday night and Steve Carlton hurled a five-hitter to give the Philadelphia Phillies a 4-1 National League baseball victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers scoring all three runners. Carlton raised his won-loss total to 12-6 with his eighth straight victory and struck out seven to run his major league-leading total to 182. The veteran southpaw missed a shutout when the Dodgers scored an unearned run in the eighth. Money's hit capped a fourrun second inning as the Phillies took advantage of Don Sutton's wildness to tag him with his fifth loss in 15 decisions. Sutton permitted only four hits before leaving for a pinch-hitter in the seventh but three came in the second around a pair of walks.

Willie Montanez walked to open the inning and stole second. He scored the game's first run on Denny Doyle's single to right. Giants' Bryant Tosses 2-Hitter at Mets, 6-1 NEW YORK (AP) San Milner suffered a neck injury The Giants wrapped it up Francisco scored four runs on in the collision and was carried with a three-run seventh, the a pair of pop flies by Chris off the field on a stretcher. He last two runs scoring when Speier and rode Ron Bryant's was sent to Roosevelt Hospital Speier lofted a pop fly to right two-hit pitching to a 6-1 for precautionary X-rays and Duffy Dyer allowed the National League baseball which proved negative. ball to fall for an error, victory over the New York The Mets nicked Bryant for a Dyer, ordinarily a catcher, Mets Tuesday night.

run in the fifth but with the was moved to the outfield when Willie McCovey's towering bases loaded and one out, Har- Milner was hurt. The Mets second inning homer gave the relson flied to Ken Henderson have three other outfielders, Giants a quick lead. Then, in left field and Wayne Garrett Cleon Jones, Rusty Staub and the third, Speier was credited was out trying to score after TommieAgeeallonthe injured with a two-run double when the catch. list. New York shortstop Bud Har- relson collided with left fielder rjry Jobber and dropped hi, JUgQX 111111 IAN FRANCISCO NEW YORK abrhbi abrhbi Bonds rf 5 1 1 1 Maylcf 3000 I I 9 Maddoxc! 4 2 2 0 Harreltonu 4 0 0 0 1r)lOT1C Speier 30 12 Milner If 0 0 0 0 I I I I I I -f I I -fH McCoveylb 3 1 1 1 Grotac 300 0 ill VtAVtllUO) M.

Goodsonlb 1 0 0 0 Fraooillb 400 0 Klngmanlb 4 0 0 0 Dyerc 3 0 0 0 Raderc 30 0 0 Sudakiiib 30 oo CLEVELAND CAP The thatnnint FuentMjb 4 0 0 0 TMartlmrf 4 1 1 0 VLJ1'V UBl POmt. Handermif 4oio woarrettft 4011 Chicago White Sox struck for Carlos May walked and eryantp 12 Koorn.np 2000 three hitis in the seventh inning Reichardt blasted a home run sadeckip oooo 0n a two-run homer by Rick to tie the game at 3-3. Then Total 33 4 Total si 12 1 Reichardt and a solo shot by Spiezio unleashed another wal- NYerk 1 i 1 1 Ed Spiezio to whip the Cleve- lop off Tidrow for the game- DhTioXi land Indians Tuesday night, winning run. run barrage Ray Fosse's two-run homer W.oarretl. HR-McCpveyW.

turned around the game g.yen sill' against Qeveland starter Dick fa the second inning. sadecki i loooi Tidrow who had allowed only Tidrow. who struck out seven WM- two hits and struck out 10 until of the ftalXKS 1 aOI gave up Dick Allen's 18th cir- rillfifer LSlkPS lhart" cuitblastoftheyeartocutthe A VJliai Qeveland lead to 2-1 fa the Tuetday'l Raiulti Lakeland Ann Tartaglia fourth. FIRST RACI Flirting Prlncm 35.M, Doll Drive D. Rosier rmcAOO CLRVRLAND 13.40, 4.M; Clanll Kinder 5 20, 3.10; 7 i7ians Choice Rowan abrhbi BMMT'i-io 449 2 rVWIIamirt 40 10 Belief 40 10 SECOND RACI: Pea Cole 4.10, 4.40, 9 Rube Rowan injjrawilb 4 0 0 0 Brohamrlb 1 0 1 0 5.I0; Patch Roval 11.20, 5.40; Steve'i Song 10 Lovely Landing RinC0n tyy Omblmn 4000 DAU.Y DOUBLl: y.PJ'J.'L'Jl', FIFTH RACE PURSE.

MM 0 0 Arplno 7.40, 3.40; Bottla Blonde l.ea.Tlma Bottom Button Rincon soeilolb 1 1 1 1 Fostec 4 112 1:4415 wrT u-wtnia I 1 0 0 0 Laonaa 4 0 0 0 IXACTA: palOMJ.ia 3 Florida Trip Rincon Alvaradou lOOOTIdrowD 1000 7 iTm.Iv i Ihrfe(L'rk McKeever 0 0 0 0 V'i'TSli olet Uc Bahnianp 1 0 0 0 McCrawph 00 00 iAI'ffJinL'imithJMiaa JerCh'l V. Smith Lyttitph 1 0 0 0 RFoeterph 1000. FIFTH RACI: Prince' Smith 2.10, 2.40, 7 OnlySunny Vail jouaoeB 0 0 0 0 HennloenB 00 00 2.20; Atlantic Formal 2.KH 2.20; 2.20; Foamy'sHoM White SiT. lOOOAPh 1000 Tharoi Queen 2.40. Time 1:14 3-5.

Mystic Joy M.Tnhu.' rW' MOteapn ei.Tu'JlcnKuiaO 120 10 Kent Total 33 414 Total IS 111 SIXTH RACI: Bankruptcy jeo, rirmm aaa ill ill 4 1.40; Little Slugger MO, 4.10; HaityTlmaa S.XThrace- 0 1 0 1 Mlle-t. fiJaTtH atAeai. Do Ely 21 Vrhv P. r-vvi vmu DP Cleveland 1. LOB-Chlcago 1, 7 mT v.h bib Beni S' I 3hP T.r..nS Cleveland I.

Foeae 2. HR- 7.20, SM Kawean Big Ben 3.40, t.mli 2 Gohaha Tartaglia 1 Allan (111 Reichardt 141. Windy Mem 4.00. Time 1:00 4-5. 3 Bull Terry Wise Slfi SBaa.

M' 4 Caxton Kino McKeever spwl u'' sMTp EIOHTH RACI: Bound to Dance 4 0, 5 Plundering Bell Whltemen 'b-urmm 1 a 1 3.40, 2D; Flamlr.9 ra 3,20, 2.00; MarkToWin Whltemen S2iwjii'''l 1 1 0 0 0 1 Namnoc 5.20. Tlma 7 Roving Red Parker iw1 i a 0 I 1 NINTH RACI: Silver Fir 4.0, 10, I One Fool Lull 4 41 10 sorw44i0s.540fFou,',, sEVEnthrace nmnm 1 Kit WEDNESDAY ENTRIES TaS ExDOS Trim 7 "Knocker WhiterJIen 2 Welcome Wager 'Colasacco 7 Split Week Tartaglia JcSS'r MONTREAL (AP)-Clyde Nsei Heaiy i Koaia Mashore's 12m-inning double i JUS RotiK HuiSt scored the winning run, lifting is wSfl PHuie, SSnnSnu. the Montreal Expos to a vie- tory over the San Diego Padres 'SECOND RACE 500 7 Doc Foil M.Harri 3 UP S'i FUR SAldodean Hickmott Tuesday night. 1 Charlie Sugar Rofto Evas Centavo I -nr'ace pursM Pistons Sign 4 YoungWill Reynolds 1BUP 0NM'V 5 PullyBone Fitzgerald 1 Tough Tony D. Rosier I JimBoGrizilie Whitemen 2RedHead Kent IeWC01TierS l.

iua 1 fiemkf rharm RoffO DETROIT (AP) Mickey Stanley snapped a 5-5 tie with a homer off Paul Lindblad in the sixth inning, powering the American League East-leading Detroit Tigers to a 6-5 baseball victory over the Texas Rangers Tuesday night. The Rangers had jumped on Tiger starter Tom Tim-merman for three runs in the opening inning and got one off Fred Scherman in the second. But Detroit continually nibbled away at Texas pitching. The Tigers scored lone runs off Pete Broberg in the first, third and fourth innings, plus two in the second before Stanley's homer off reliever Lindblad, now 3-4. Dave Nelson led off the Texas first with a homer, Toby Harrah singled and then Don Mincher was safe on a third baseman Aurelio Rodriguez error.

After a single by Dick Billings, Hal King drove in a run on a fielder's choice and Larry Biittner singled in another. PHILADELPHIA bl Bowa 2 10 0 Monty3b 40 13 Huttonlt 3 0 0 0 DJohntonlb 3 0 0 0 WRobninlf 10 0 0 Montanaicf 3 10 0 Gambia 3 0 0 0 Batamanc 3 0 10 Doyle 2b 2 111 Carlton 3 110 LOS ANOILII abr bl Lacy 4 13 0 WDavllcf 4 0 0 0 Motalf 4 0 10 FRoblnmrf 3 0 0 0 WParkerlb 4 0 0 0 Cannlizroc 4 0 0 0 Grbkwltt3b 4 0 10 WlllSil 3 0 0 0 Valentin! ph 10 0 0 Sutton 2 0 0 0 Dletzph 10 0 0 Mikkelsnp 0 0 0 0 Prentice Ends Hrief Retirement MINNEAPOLIS -ST. PAUL AP Dean Prentice, the National Hockey League's seventh leading active goal scorer, ended his brief retirement Tuesday and signed a one-year contract with the Minnesota North Stars. Prentice, 39, has announced his retirement after 20 years in the NHL after the 1971-72 Carlton singled and Larry Bowa walked to load the bases for Money, who lined his two-bagger into the left field corner LL STAR GAME TROY Phil Deery fanned 13 batters Tuesday and pitched the Northern Tier Little League All-Stars to a 7-3 win over the Troy All-Stars. Total 34 1 5 0 Total 27 4 4 4 Loi Angelll OOlOtOtIO 1 Phtleailphla 040 00 00 4 D.Johnaon, Hutton.

LOB Lo Angeles 7, Philadelphia 4. 3 Money. SB-Money, AAontenei. Ooyle. IP ER BB SO Sutton (L.10-5) 4 4 4 3 5 Mlkkelien 2 0 0 0 0 3 Carlton 3 10 11 HBP-ey Sutton (Bowa).

WP Carlton. J10. boar inning to force in the winning run and give Baltimore a 2-1 triumph over the Kansas City Royals Tuesday night-Reliever Ken Wright, the Royals' second pitcher of the inning, gave up the walk to Shopay after the Orioles had. loaded the bases with no outs on a double by Brooks Robinson and walks to Bobby Grich and Boog Powell. The triumph snapped a five-game losing skid for the Orioles.

The Royals took a 1-0 lead in the first inning on singles by Amos Otis, Richie Scheinblum and Lou Piniella. Kansas City then went hitless until the sixth when Fred Patek opened with a triple. But Baltimore starter Jim Palmer put down the threat by getting the next three outs without allowing a ball hit out of the infield. The Orioles tied the game 1-1 in their half of the sixth Palmer's bases-loaded single. KANSAS CITY BALTIMOM abrhbi abrhbi Patekli 5 0 10 Butordlt 4 0 2 0 Otlicf 5 110 Blalrcf 0 0 0 Schnblumrf 4 0 16 Crowley rf 0 0 0 0 Plnlellalf 4 0 11 Baylorrt 5 0 10 Meyberrylb 4 0 10 BRoblnmSb 5 0 10 Klrkpatrkc 3 0 10 Beiengerpr 0 10 0 KnoopTb 3 0 10 Grlchtl 4 110 Kaougr ph 1 0 0 0 Powell lb 3 0 10 Rolat 2b 0 0 0 0 DJohnton 2b 3 0 0 0 Floyd 3b 3 0 0 0 Shopay Ph 0 0 0 1 Hovleyph 1 0 0 0 Oataac 10 0 0 Taylors) 0 0 0 0 Palmerp 10 11 Dregop 4 0 0 0' AMERICAN NATIONAL L.

34 35 36 Pet. .547 .533 .493 486 GB 1 4 4'i 37 Pet. .640 .579 .533 .532 .434 .346 GB a IS' 7 22'1 .433 Pittsburgh New York St. Louis Chicago Montreal Philadelphia East w. 41 '0 35 35 79 West 49 43 38 3 36 44 .397 II East w.

41 44 40 41 33 West 45 45 41 36 35 29 Detroit Baltimore Boston New York Cleveland Milwaukee Oakland Cnicaqo Minnesota Kansas City California Texas Standlngi do 633 .558 .514 .593 .577 .536 Brewers Topple Twins, 5-1 MINNEAPOL1S-ST. PAUL (AP) Joe Lahoud's ninth inning two-run homer lifted the Milwaukee Brewers to a 5-4 comeback victory over the Minnesota Twins in American League baseball Tuesday night. MILWAUKEE MINNIIOTA aorhbl abrhbi BOevUrf 3 0 11 Toverrf 2 0 0 0 Liniyp 1 0 0 0 JNetllHrf 3 0 0 0 HeiKTb 4 0 0 0 Thomptnit 4 0 0 0 Scon lb 4 0 0 0 Carew Jb 4 0 10 Brlosilf 4 13 0 Klllebrewlb 2 10 0 DMeycf 4 0 0 0 Manuel If 3 110 CiarkJb 4 2 10 Bryeit 1 0 0 0 ERodrgeic 2 0 0 0 Oerwmcf 4 13 1 Lenoudrf 12 12 Sooemlmlb 4 113 4 0 2 2 MWerwIoC 4 0 10 Lockwooop 0 0 0 0 RWoooinp 2 0 0 0 Colbornp 2 0 0 0 Granger 10 10 TReynldiph 1 0 0 0 Reeeeph 10 10 Fetakec 1 0 0 0 Total 3SS7 Total 35 4 4 Milwaukee i Minneeete 4 III III 4 E-Sooernolm, Clark, Manuel, Brlgflf. DP-MHwuM 1, Mlnneeota 1. LOB Milwaukee 5, Mln-rietote I.

2B-Mnul, Auerbech, Grn-per. HP-Soderholm (f lenouo (5). .513 1 5 34 36 37 44 Include Cincinnati Houston Los Angeles Atlanta San Francisco San Diego 10 43 .462 .463 13 .439 IS' Tuetday't 33 not 13' 17 .422 .372 41 49 gemet Standlngi do not Include Tuesday'! Tuetaiv't Result! Brgmelerp 04 0 0 wight garnet. Tuetday't Rttultt San Frenclaco 4, New York 1 Cincinnati 5, Pltttborgh 0 Philadelphia 4, Lot Angelei 1 Houston e-5, Chicago 51 Montreal 6, Sari Diego 5, Atlanta at St. Louit, ittt Monday'! Results Los Angeles 6-1, Philadelphia 4 9 Montreal 6, San Diego 1 San F.

ancisco 5, New York 4 Only games scheduled Today'! Oimn San Diego (Caldwell 1-4 or Corklni 0 J) at Montreal (atonemen 15), 1:05 p.m. San Franclico (McDowell l-e) at New York (Metleck 1-5), 2:05 p.m. Lot Angelet (John 7-4) at Philadelphia (Seima ID 7:35 p.m. Houtton (Roberti 7-4) it Chicago (Reuichel 3 1), 2:30 p.m. Atlanta (Schuaior 1-1) at St.

Lou It (Oib-ton 15), p.m. Pittsburgh (Walker 141 at Cine nnetl (Simpson 41), 1:05 p.m. Milwaukee 5, Minnesota 4 Baltimore 2, Kantat City 1, 10 Inning! Chicago 4, Cleveland 1 Detroit 4, Texat 5 Boiton at Oakland, lit New York at California, late Monday's Results Minnesota I. Milwaukee 1 Kansas City 3, Baltimore 2 Cleveland 3, Chicago 1 Detroit Texas 3 Boston 4, Oakland 2 California 4, Ht York 3 today's Games Boiton (Curtis 5 3) at Oakland (Blut J-S), 9 p.m. New York (Stottlemyrt HO) it Cilltor-nla (Allen 3 5), II p.m.

Milwaukee (Brett 51) Mlnnnote (blyieven 110), 1:30 p.m. Texas (gogolewikl 17) at Detroit (Slay-. back 11), p.m. Oilcego (Wood 11 1) Pt Cleveland (Kilkenny 3 1), 7:30 m. Kansas City (Nelson 2.) at Baltimore (Dooson 101), 7:10 p.m.

mil Total 33 2 7 2 Total tiMta whan wlnnlno run acored. 1 Tag Plate Murphy 4 Dan's War Tuttja DETROIT (AP) The Le- 9 Style Mark Hickmott 5 Noble Centaur nuier 10 Brians Doubtt Vedilago Gretchen's Cup M.Harris tTOXt -PlStOnS announced TueS- ISTS'" siSI day the signing of two draft Brawny Lad Kent THE SELECTIONS SOCiatinn mnfrnrto 2 SargeBrodie K. Smith iciodhopper Little Hawk, Welcomt "On COniTaCU. 3 Navy League SniH! wser' Bruce Anderson, a 6-foot-8 -mS bET" smr' seventhundcAoiafromAri-. 0 Hn'h0' ''m a.andJesseMangham,a(.

Henano Hulet rjon Drive, Rulbel, Lovely Landing. '6 ninth-TOUnd Dick from Mich- ig Huiet FOURTH RACE(4) PUR5ES1.50.- S. yarMac Scffi J-SPlit Week, Barb! D.rl, Banqu Urry GrtaeS, 6-1 from 2 Count Alone t-Donnsshua, Koala, Commodore. Michigan TeCI), Was Signed 3 KimTheClown V.Smith eour Affair, Red Head, Be Beyond. acpnt 4 General Anthony Rofto Bllt Bet-Donnashua In ttii Slh.

aiicettgem. Kernel City 1 I I II I 1 1 1 -1 Baltimore 100 Oil 1-1 Scheinblum. Otl, Floyd. DP ante! City 2. LOB Kanaai City 7, Baltimore 14.

IB-Baylor, Robinson. 3B Pa tek. SB J. Powell. roimer.

Tnon-pion. Leckwwd 1 ER BB SO 13 10 ER BB SO 2 17 1 CAitom Burameier .0 0 wriant .10 111 4 .121 1 PUmr (W.12-4) Limy e. Woocton Granger 2.27..

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