Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, October 4, 1969 Page Eglight1111m TH MCHG. AIY-aura- -tbe 4 -6 SUBJECTS NEEDED FOR EXPERIMENT: Must be native speakers of English with no history of a hearing disorder or speech impediment.. Subjects needed for four hours at $1.50; hour. Please call DAVID P I SON I, 764-2594 from 10 A.M.-12 Midnight or CRLLB, 764- 0510, 9-5. at THE HOUSE this week 1429 HILL STREET ~ FRIDAY, OCT. 3: HILLEL SABBATH SERVICES with Beth Israel Congregation 8:30 P.M. wins test By The Associated Press in the opene BALTIMORE-Outfielder Frank EDT, and Ma Robinson said yesterday the Balti- against them more Orioles "shouldn't have to "Sometimes prove again" that they're the best teams change conservative," team in the American League. we're going t "We've already proved that over run. That cou 162 games," Robinson said on the mental mista Orioles in playoffs The Mets, once the darlings of futility, overtook the Cubs, who r Saturday, 1 p.m., Mets, Braves ready rtin promised to "run quite a bit." s in a crucial game, e and become more ' Martin said, "butd D play our game and ald lead to errors or kes. eve of the league's inaugural play- Weaver seemed more concerned off to decide the World Series about the Twins' hitting and pow- participant. "Now, we have to do it er, rather than their base running. again in a five-game series." "Minnesota has an explosive "We're impressed by Baltimore's team," he said. "If you get three, 109 wins," said manager Billy four or five runs ahead, you try Martin of the Minnesota Twins, i to get more before Killebrew hits' e rthe ball out." the Orioles' playoff opponents.ry" Martin said Cuellar's screwball enables him to get righthanded Martin, manager Earl Weaver batters out easier than left-hand- of the Orioles, and Harmon Kille- ers, but at the same time he an- brew, Rod Carew and Jim Perry nounced that right-handed swing- of the Twins participated in a ers Bob Allison and George Mit- news conference between workouts terwald would be in the startling by the teams in Memorial Sta- line-up. dium, "They're both swinging hot bats Perry, 20-6, will start for Min- right now," Martin explained. "I nesota against Mike Cuellar, 23-11, like hot bats." Major League Standings ATLANTA - The pressure that held a nine game late season edge, goes with long winning streaks to win the East by eight. Atlanta was lifted from the New York won the West by three games Mets and Atlanta Braves Thurs- over San Francisco, but the tor- day, but there still will be plenty rid race saw five teams in the to go around when the teams open title picture as late as three weeks their best-of-five series for the ago. National League championship The Mets late-season streak was here today. led by their outstanding pitching The Mets, winners of the East corps while the Brave streak vas Division, lost their nine-game win- highlighted by good pitching and ning string in a 5-3 defeat at the the red-hot bat of Rico Carty, hands of the Chicago Cubs while who had a .387 average as At- Cincinnati ended the Braves' 10- lanta won 17 of its last 20 games game streak 8-3 as the regular in September. Tony Gonzalez hit season ended Thursday. .489 in the Braves' final 10 game Atlanta, listed as an 11-10 favor- winning streak. ite over the Mets, clinched the West Division crown Tuesday by Hank Aaron, who played on two trimming the Reds 3-2. New York Braves' pennant winners in Mil- wrapped up its division last week wauke, swatted five of his 44 home by bankng S. Luis -0.runs against the Mets and 'atted by blanking St. Louis 6-0. .325. Aaron led the Braves in hit- The Mets, who arrived here .2.ArnldteBae nht Thursday night, hold an 8-4 edge ting with a .300 mark. Carty hit over Atlanta this year..343 but didn't have enough at The opening game - it startsbats to qualify for hitting honors. at 4 p.m. EDT - will match the The Mets' top hitters against aces of the two teams - 25-game Atlana were Tommie Agee with a winner Tom Seaver of the Mets .364 and Cleon Jones .344. Jones and 23-game winner Phil Niekro of .finished third in the National the Braves. League batting race at .340. -Associated Press METS' MANAGER GIL HODGES (center) helps New York's ace righthander Tom Seaver. (left) and lefthander Jerry Koosman (right) raise the rawhide sphere high in the air. Seaver will start for the Mets against Atlanta today while Koosman will start Sunday's game. SUNDAY,OCT.5: 2:00-4:00 P.M.: ISRAELI FOLK DANCING 4:00-5:00P.M ERECEPTION FOR SCULPTURESS BARBARA BRODSKY All Are Invited to View Her Work 7:30 P.M.: SOVIET JEWRY SIMHAT TORAH CELEBRATION. Israeli and Hasidic Songs and Dances. Cider and Donuts MONDAY, OCT. 6: BROWN BAG LUNCH 12:00 Noon: MUG Conference Room 1 "The Self-Hating Jew" TUESDAY, OCT. 7: JEWISH PEACE FELLOWSHIP 8:30 P.M. WEDNESDAY, OCT. 8: GRAD COFFEE HOUR 7:30 - 9:30 p.m. 8:00.m Balt im ore Detroit Briton Washingtc New Yor Cleveland Minesota Oakland Californi Kansas C Chicago Seattle AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L P 109 53 . 90 72 . 87 75 . 6k 8 0 8 1 . 62 99 . West IDivision a 97 65,. 88 74 . a 71 91. lity 69 93 . 68 94 . 64 98 . Pct. 673 556 .537 531 497 385 599 543 438 426 420 395 GB 19 22 23 281 46i' 9 26 28 29 33 New Fork Chicago Pit tsburgh St. Louis Philadeipt Montreal rAtlanta San Franc Cincinnat Los Ange Houston San Dieg NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L P 100 62. 92 70 hi 88 74 87 75 hia 63 99 52 110 West Division 93 69 Cisco 90 72 . 1 89 73 les 85 77 81 81 0 52 110 PEct. .617 .568 .543 .537 .389 .321 .574 .556 .549 .525 .500 .321 NATIONAL GRID SCENE: GB 8 12 13 37 48 3 4 8 12 41 Florida State Seminoles go on warpath as Arkansas tackles vanquished TCU By SANDI GENIS xa writers, poets, artists, photographers generation accepting material for information, call 769-7358 or 665-4636 420 Maynard The Seminoles are on the war- path again and this afternoon they'll battle the enemy in Gains- ville, Florida, as they tackle thej twelfth-ranked Gators of the Uni- versity of Florida in one of col- lege football's most vicious rival- ries. Displaying a plucky offense powered by superb quarterback Bill Cappleman to complement their rugged defense, Florida tate upset highly regarded Miami 16-14 a week ago. Meanwhile,the Gators, who sur- prised the football world with their stunning 59-34 win over Houston two weeks ago behind the sensa-, tional passing of sophomore John Reaves, continued to roll as they BUFF1Y SAINTE MAR IE October 4! drubbed a tough Mississippi State team 47-35.I IN THE BATTLE for south- western supremacy third-ranked Arkansas takes on a troublesome Texas Christian squad in an all important conference clash. In their 62-0 humiliation at the hands of Ohio State a week ago, the Horned Frogs' offense which scored 35 points against PurdueI in its first g a m e, sputtered as flashy quarterback Steve J u d y failed to complete 16 of 25 passes. In shutting out their opponents for the second straight week, with a 55-0 romp over Tulsa, the Raz- orbacks exhibited awesome defen- sive power that, combined with Bill Montgomery's offensive wiz- ardry, should give Arkansas an easy conference victory. Meanwhile, t h e rival Texas Longhorns play host to a rough Navy team that scored 22 points against Penn State's mighty de- fense two weeks ago. It is ques- tionable, however, whether t h e Middies' strong ground game will be able to make much of a dent in a Longhorn defense that has yield- ed only one touchdown this sea- son. For their part, the fourth-rank- ed Longhorns' triple-option of- fense, highlighted by t h e fear- some ground-gaining power of Ted Koy, Steve Worster, and Jim Bertelsen, should give the Middies' line a few worries. The fifth-ranked Trojans of U.S.C. will have a war of their own this afternoon as they invade Cor- vallis, Oregon to m e e t Oregon State's Beavers. The Trojans come off a 48-6 romp over North- western, paced by t h e brilliant passing of Jimmy Jones and rush- ing of tailback Clarence Davis. SECOND-RANKED Penn State goes after their fourteenth con- secutive win this afternoon when, they tangle with a powerful Kan-I sas State team. Even without the' services of star halfback Charlie Pittman, the Nittany Lions rout- ed a scrappy Colorado squad 27-3. In defeating the Buffaloes the! Lions exhibited a ferocious de, fense that kept Bob Anderson, the nation's top rushing quarterback the past two years, penned up for the entire game. The potent run- ning attack displayed by the sur- prising Wildcats in their 42-27 find the going awfully rough against the Lions' brilliant line, and Penn State should coast to their third victory. UNDER THE LIGHTS of Bir- mingham tonight two of the S.E.C.'s big powers, Alabama and Mississippi will clash. The fifteenth-ranked Crimson Tide looked impressive as t h e y rushed over Southern Mississippi a week ago 64-14. Behind the per- tect passing of quarterback Scott Hunter the Tide scored the first eight times it handled the ball. Meanwhile, the twentieth-rank- ed Rebels dropped a heartbreaker to Kentucky 10-9. Rebel quarter- back Archie Manning, an o u t- standing runner and passer, pro- vides the real offensive threat for Mississippi and could give the Al- abama defense a little trouble. At Cambridge two of the East's better teams go at it when the Crimson of Harvard meet the Ter- riers of Boston University in an inter-city rivalry. T h e Crimson, top contenders for the Ivy League crown, lay a ten game winning streak on the line following last week's 13-0 win p. . "PORTNOY'S COMPLAINT- ETHOS OR VOSS IS DOSS" -EROS, id Bob Rockaway :=== ==saess:s: Featuring: Prof.A Marvin Felheim an victory over Arizona last week will [over a strong Holy Cross team. Saturday, Oct. 4-4 P.M. 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