Wednesday, September 24, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Wednesday, September 24, 1 969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven 0 Egos raised, gridders look to next, game By TERRI FOUCIIEY: Nobody new has been hurt. Some of the pre-season injuries arey showing signs of mending. And with the knowledge that they can't be all bad (a 42-14 victory does wonders for the ego), the Michi- gan football team begins prepar- ing to meet the University of NIGHT EDITOR: Washington Huskies Saturday JOE MARKER afternoon. However, there is some glaring evidence pointing to the fact that the form of stepping up the Wolverines aren't all good. It farther. The move enabled is just this evidence that they are to get past his blocker and trying to overturn before their straight for the kicker. case comes before the jury of 11 He added, "I knew I got a opposing players. of it, but I didn't realize One of the weak points which the ball had gone. When became obvious was punt return-- Marty (Huff) had it I just b ing. The team worked harder than the first white shirt I saw. usual on this aspect of the game c in practice yesterday and is ex- This little performancee pected to continue to throughout Keller membership in The V 1.' , rhIdd e Pikinu;s Are you depressed? Disenchanted? Discouraged? Oppressed? Lonely? If you feel this way don't despair. The Michigan Daily you something to live for. Again this week you will get a demonstrate your true talents, not to mention a chance delicious Cottage Inn Pizza. Marxisnis .......t has, given chance to to win a 4 Of course you might fail-fail to gain the admiration of untold thousands who will read your name in The Daily sports pages, fail to achieve that aurora of sexual desirability that inevitably surrounds every Gridde Picks winner, fail to win honor for your family, fail to win the pizza. And if you do fail, your old self-image that you are a stupid, ignorant, slob will only be further reinforced. But is that any reason to chicken out, and not bring your entries to The Daily before mid- night Friday? Of course not! Remember: Nothing ventured, nothing gained. a bit Keller d head a piece where I saw locked " MICHIGAN'S MIKE KELLER (90 dark) blocks Steve Smith's fourth quarter that saw the Wolverines score three touchdowns Saturday. Seconds later linebacker Marty Huff, who scooped up touchdown ramble to make the score 28-7 -Daily-Jerr Weesier (90) runt at the start of a wild to rout the Commodores 42-14 the loose ball, scored on a 31 yard 1. Washington at MICHIGAN (pick score) 2. SMU at Michigan St. 3. Texas Christian at Ohio St. 4. Purdue at Notre Dame 5. California at Indiana I. Northwestern at Southern Cal. 7. Illinois at Missouri 8. UCLA at Wisconsin 9. Ohio U. at Minnesota 10. Washington St. at Iowa 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Florida State at Miami (Fla. Syracuse at Kansas Princeton at Rutgers Auburn at Tennessee Kansas St. at Arizona Texas A&M at Nebraska Vanderbilt at Army Air Force at Wyoming Baylor at Georgia Tech Dickinson at Lebanon Valley THE WILDLY UNPREDICTABLE MARX BROTHERS IN EXCERPTS FROM THEIR GREATEST MOVIES. ALL THEIR FABULOUS "BITS" ON ONE INCREDIBLE ALBUM. FROM THE ORIGINAL MOTION PICTURE SOUND TRACKS TO DECCA RECORDS. THE DELUXE PACKAGE ALSO INCLUDES A FREE 18 X 24 INCH POSTER vailabl ontape. TIME MARX'S ONI earned,- VictorsI the week. Club and two gold helmets. He 7 In the second quarter of last got one of the helmets because Saturday's game, when Vanderbilt the defense scored a touchdown was punting on a fourth and 39 and the other because he blocked situation, the defensive backfield the punt. "il14S111130 1ff11 I):1 G ( CI S OMBE seenmed to get its signals crossed a bit and this resulted in a fumbled punt and Vanderbilt regaining possession. Head coach Bo Schembechler said about the play, "It was a badt play. The whole defense seemed mixed up.'We were trying to block the kick and this may be what eaused the mix-up. The defense finally got straight- ened around on punts in the fourth quarter. Surprisingly, there was another mix-up on the blocked punt that resulted in a touchdown. Schembechler described it, "We weren't trying to block that one. We were looking to return it. But Keller managed to get a hand on it and it ended the way we hoped the other play would." On this one play, defensive end Mike Keller showed that at least the blocking portion of the team's punt return effort hasn't been :'ompletely ignored. As he learned in practice, Keller had been going in all day.. "I'd been close on a few before, but there was a rather had snap on this one. The kicker bobbled it and altered his kicking pattern a little," Keller said. This alteration was in 1.11 .7 .Vl : u . Hopefully, with more practice the punt return portion of prac- tices will become known to the team. The Wolverines also emphasized Mets edge Cards in 11, clinch tie By 'he Associated Pres NEW YORK - The New York w 1 their pass defense in Tuesday's! Mets clinched a tie for the Na- practice preparation for Washing- ton. Several long pass patterns were run as Michigan tried to improve the rather weak point of their of- fensive attack. However, the offense will be strengthened by the return of Bill Taylor, who will fill the slot be- hind Glenn Doughty after recover- ing from a shoulder separation. Schembechler said, "He won't be ready Saturday, but he's coming along well. He's a bit rusty and his timing is bad, but with more prac- tice these problems should solve themselves". IM RESULTS Fraternity Football Kappa Sigma 8, Delta Chi 6 Sigma Phi Epsilon 16, Alpha Sigma Phi 6 Delta 'rau Delta 22, Psi Upsilon Sigma Alpha lu over Delta Upsilon (forfeit) Sigma Nn 6, Zeta Psi 0 Sigma Phi 6. Sigma Alpha Epsilon 0 tional League's Eastern Division championship last night, beating i . ' t the St. Louis Ca'rdinals and Bob s Gibson 3-2 on Bud Harrelson's s run-scoring single in the 11th F inning. o The victory moved the Mets six b games ahead of the Chicago Cubs I Major Leagu( with both teams having six games eft. With one out in the 11th. Ron Swoboda, who made a game-sav-' ng catch in the eighth, singled i o deep short and Jerry Grote lashed a single off the glove of econd baseman Julian Javier. Harrelson then lined a 1-2 pitch over short and Swoboda easilyI beat Curt Flood's throw to the plate. Gibson, 18-13, nursed a 2-1 lead three innings he pitched and was into the eighth but the Mets tied tagged with his 12th loss. the score when Tommie Agee With one out in the first, Staub opened with a single, moved to walked and scored on Bailey's second on Wayne Garrett's bunt, triple. The Expos added three runs and scored on Art Shamsky's in the second on a walk, a run- single to right. scoring single by Gary Suther- Until then, Gibson, in complete land and Staub's 29th homer. control, was working on a four- Fairly blasted his 12th homer in hitter. the third. Both Cardinal runs came with - two out in the fifth. Lou Brock I hu t rit '. A cI1,n 3a and, A 1nil al - I Standings DeaG1 UL a . sigle anu Iuuu 1" 01' lowed with another single. Ken Boswell booted Vada Pin- son's bouncer, allowing Brock to score. and then Joe Torre singled off pitcher Jim McAndrew's leg, bringing Flood home. 'New York Chicago Pittsburg St. Louis Philadelpf Mtont real NATIONAL. E.:st'F :astern ivision 89 67 h 8'?_73. S73 lhia 6° 9' 57 10-1 Western lDivision San Francisco 87 67 Atlanta 88 fi8 Cinceinnati 811 70 Los Angeles 82 N: Hlouston 78 75 Sani Diego .18 106 .6 09 .571 .529 .103 .333 .565 .5- .545 .539 .510 - 12 6 12' 1' 3- 43 3 5'. 3'. Mi IN ta tic t). C K St AMEICAN LEAG i: latern livision W' L6P'ct. (GB ;ll mnore 106 48 .688 - etroit 86 67 .562 19' loton 83 71 .539 23 ,ashingimi 78 75 .510 27' wv York 7S 79 .487 31 t'yi'ladl 62 92 .-103 44 Wester iivision limiiiesota 93 61 .604 - )aklanid 8V 71.536 10': %kli.ori 68 86 .444 41, liiago 61 89 .418 28' ansas Cit ' i 90 .416 29 eatIe 60 93 .392 32' Yesterday"s Results Cleveland 3. Baltimore 1 Boston i8,New ork 3 i"liliesota 6, Kansas ('ite Oakland 4, Chicago 3. 1st C'hicagoat Oakland, 'nd 11in. Seac leat California, inc. Washinigton at Detroit, rain Today's Games t miago at Oakland Seattle at California, nieilit Minnesota at Kansas City Washington at Detroit (). twi-niglt Baltimore at Cleveland. night New York at Boston, night i :', .; ,; , ,:, .; (;ubs clubbed CHICAGO-Home runs by Rusty Staub and Ron Fair'ly and threej runs batted in by Bob Bailey vaulted Montreal to a 7-3 victory over Chicago yesterday. Southpaw Ken Moltzman, a 17- game winner for the Cubs, was battered for five runs in the first AIRPORT LIMOUSINES for information call 971-3700 Tickets are available at Travel Bureaus or the Michigan Union 32 Trips/Day Subscribe to The Michigan Daily SGC APPLICATIONS OPEN MONDAY - THURSDAY SGC offices -- SAB Contemporary Directions 1969-70 Presents The Michigan Contemporary Directions Ensemble FIRST CONCERT, RACKHAM AUD. 8:00 P.M.-Saturday, Sept. 27, 1099 PROGRAM PHIL WINSOR .. . . ......... . . . Coronation ANTON WEBERN ............ Concerto, Op. 24 BOGUSLAW SCHAFFER . . ..... Imagio Musicale B. Kushner, violin soloist S. Hodkinson, conductor GEORGE CRUMB .. Eleven Echoes of Autumn 1965 SIntermission Red Sox put Williams out; Notire Dame in at Michwan *BOSTON Controversial Dick Williams. who led the Boston Red Sox to their Impossible Dream pennant as a rookie manager in 1967 but feuded off and on with players throughout his tenure, was fired yesterday.' The terse announcement by the club said only that Williams would not be back in 1970, and that coacl Eddie Popowski would manage the team for the rest of this season. The team declined comment on a published report in the Boston Record American that Eddie Kasko, manager of its Louisville farm club in the International League, would be the new pilot. 0 SOUTH BEND, Ind.-- A historic football rivalry that lapsed in 1943--Michigan and Notre Dame-will be renewed in a four-game series beginning in 1978, it was announced yesterday. The series calls for Michigan to visit Notre Dame Sept. 23, 1978 and again on Sept. 20, 1980. The Irish will travel to Michigan Sept. 15, 1979, and Sept. 19, 1981. In the last football meeting of the two universities, Notre Dame wore 35-12. The series ended with Michigan holding a 9-2 winning edge. . NEW YORK Two discharged American League umpires filed a multimillion dollar federal court damage suit Tuesday, calling baseball's reserve clause illegal, under the anti-trust law. Yesterday 's RltsI Montreal 7. Chicago Philadelphia 4, Pittsbu rghr. Newv York 3, St. Louis 3 (IIit inn Atlanta 10, Houston 2 C'incinnat i G-5, Los Angele's. :-? Sail lFrancisco at San Diego, in(-. 'Today's Games St. Louis at New York, night Philadelphia at Pittsburgh, night Montreal at 'hicago Los Angeles at Cincinnai Atlanta at Houstn.on, iht San lFranicisco at San lDlego, nighlt CHI OMEGA LAW N DANCE featuring LOV E S ALCHEMY September 27 4-6 P.M. 1525 Washtenaw Join The Daily CIRCULATION [DEPT. Come in any afternoon 420 Maynard MAKE MONEY & rOWN A BUSINESS Send in this coupon if you want to learn how to earn a great deal of money for yourself while operating your own exclusive franchise on campus distributing Audio-Lites. IHA presents BUFFY SAINTE MARIE Saturday, Oct. 4 - 8:30 P.M. HILL AUDITORIUM TICKETS: $2.00- $2.50- $3.00 on sale at SAB Sept. 29 - Oct. 3 Mail Orders and Block Ticket Requests (Sept. 22- Oct. 1) IHA Concert, 1511 Student Activities Bldg. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor GEORGE BALCH WILSON ........Concatenations (World Premiere) PAUL CHI HARA......... ............ Redwood WILLIAM ALBRIGHT ..........,.Beulahland Rag Sponsored by: The Composition Depart- ment of the University of Michigan School of Music r I Rent your Roommate with a Classified Ad BUFFY SAINTE MARIE October 4! i ALQ ULTES SENSATI SOUND- UGH GRADUATE ASSEMBLY MEETING TONIGHT 7 30 P.M., Rackham Bldg. -VISITORS WELCOME-- S40 per month low, i - , ONAL NEW SENSITIVE T UNITS NAME SCHOOL ADDRESS CITY STATE ZIP Columbia Gas Energy Engineering has opportunities for you in . 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It's hard to put fences around the engineering excitement waiting for you at our Columbia laboratories. Natural gas provides about one-fourth of the U.S. fuel energy. It's one of the nation's fastest growing industries and Columbia is a leader. For in- formation on our growth opportunities for you: MAIL TO: American College Distributing corp. P.O. Box 636, De Kalb, 111. 60115) kl. "+ r s . wr+ra r% SCULPTURE EXHIBIT SEPT. 24 - OCT. 9, 1969 THE HOUSE (H I LLEL 1429 HILL ST. WE DO OUR THING 20%OFF On Regular Dry Cleaning FOR STUDENTS ONLY,.. Must show U of M ID card U Ut~ jr frn'.an ri....fk Aa Fl I I I RAnof nn P imnuv with (leer Dnnrnoantetiun r 5.. y I I