l SPORTS OF THE DAILY oll named player of the week CHICAGO-Defensive back Mike, olly of Michigan has been named Big 'en Defensive Player of the Week by he Associated Press for leading the ourth-ranked Wolverines to . their and shutout of the season in a 52-0 ictoryover Duke. JOLLY, A 6-3, 178-pound, junior from elvindale, Mich., intercepted two sses, one of which led directly to a core, brok up a pass, had two tackles nd returned three punts for 19 yards. Jolly was among those singled out by o Schembechler for~outstanding play when the Michigan coach feared the Wolverines might let down following an emotional victory over Notre Dame. linksters swing All fired up under head cbfth Tom imon, the Michigan men's golf team -aptured a first place finish in the layboy Invitational held this veekend in Wisconsin. The Wolverines four man, 36-hdle total was 595, seven strokes better than second place finisher MSU. Michigan's Rod Pafford was the medalist of the 12 team field, firing rounds of 74-71 for a 145 total. BRUCE PATTERSON and Steve Maddalema achieved Mid-All- American honors by virture of their 149 and 151 totals, respectively. Simon, who also coaches the women's golf team, was named head coach last week. He replaced former head coach Bill Newcombe; who was forced to resign earlier in the year. Speaking of the women's team, they also competed this weekend, finishing ninth in a 17 team field in the Purdue Invitational in Indiana. The Ohio State women were the winners, competing in their first tournament of the fall season. Freshperson Linda Drillock paced the women linksters for the third, straight tournament, posting scores of 83-85 for a 168 total. -DAILY SPORTS Mentor maimed CINCINNATI-Bill "Tiger" Johnson, who failed to win after inheriting a playoff contender built by Paul Brown, was fired as head coach of the Cincin- nati Bengals yesterday after an 0-5 season start and was succeeded by former Rice University Coach Homer Rice. Rice came to the National Football League team this year as quarterback coach from Rice University, where he was head coach and athletic director. . "Bill met with us this morning and we mutually agreed that something had to be done," Paul Brown, ยข general manager, said in a prepared statement Monday. "HE IS A FINE, proud man and he put the welfare of the club first and agreed that a chaige could help our situation. "Homer Rice fits into the picture with fine coaching and administrative background and is well-known in Cin- cinnati. "He is taking over immediately and his first meeting with the players will be at 1 p.m. Wednesday. "There will be no disruption in the working staff. All the other coaches will continue in their usual duties and will be directed by Homer," the Brown statement said. "WE WILL REVIEW our picture at the end of the season but I have a lot of ponfidence ih Homer," the statement concluded. The announcement came a day after the Bengals dropped a 28-12 decision to the previously winless San Francisco 49ers.. The Bengals have lost six straight games over two seasons. Johnson was named coach when Brown retired in 1975. His record was 10-4 in 1976 and 8-6 last season. Rice coached at the University of Cincinnati in 1967 and 1968. He then went to North Carolina where he was also named athletic director. -AP The Michigan Doily-Tuesday, October 3, 1978-Page 9 PIi.EJEVJF This Week in Sports BASEBALL With Boston out of the way, baseball is left with the same four teams that contested last year's divisional playoffs slugging it out for 1978 honors. Kansas City and the Yankees begin their best three out of five divisonal playoff tonight at Royals Stadium. Meanwhile, Philadelphia and Los Angeles take another day off before beginning their series tomorrow. The NL playoffs, which begin in Philly, do not have a travel day on Thursday as the Royals and Yanks do. If you haven't guessed by now, this is to insure that prime time has a game every night this week. Once the playoffs have been decided the World Series will begin at the home of the National League team. - COLLEGE FOOTBALL Michigan hosts the Wildcats of Arizona in the last full week of inter- sectional Big Ten games. The conference didn't fare so well last weekend, with only Ohio State, Illinois and Wisconsin joining the Wolverines on the winning side of the ledger. In 20 games against non-league opponents, the Big Ten is dead even with ten wins against ten losses. This week Illinois is. at Missouri, Notre Dame at Michigan State, Min- nesota hosts Oregon State, Iowa entertains Utah, Northwestern at home against Arizona State, Wake Forest invades Purdue and Woody Hayes welcomes Southern Methodist. Other games of interest'(of varying kinds) include: Washington at Alabama N.C. State at Maryland Baylor at Houston Kentucky at Penn State Iowa State at Nebraska Stanford at UCLA Oklahoma at Texas DAILY LIBELS at Conclave College PRO FOOTBALL Best match of the week... Houston at Oakland. Worst matchup .. . Washington at Detroit. Traditional matchup of the week ... (tie) Chicago at Green Bay and San Francisco at Los Angeles. Animal matchup. . . Colts at Cardinals. IM SOFTBALL The playoffs have gotten underway, with the highlight game of the week Thursday afternoon when the DAILY LIBELS defend their Class B Cham- pionship against the Midshipmen.Game time is 5 p.m. at Fuller Field No. 5. tickets are still on sale but are going fast. Be there. Schwartz Illustrated By CUB SCHWARTZ 1 : _ / . , ,t IA F j i f i. R t. t I: Y _' -1' sK .u-.Y., SPORTS., Fishing around ahead for ex-Tiger Houk Bo's predictable?... ...It's Greek to me It was raining, Michigan was pounding Duke into the ground (swamp) 31-0 and most everyone around was bored. A school teacher, elementary no doubt, cane up with a brilliant suggestion to pass the time. "Let's play a game;"she shouted from three rows back. "OK," a wet and wasted alumnus yelled back, "but what kind of game?" "We could try and guess the final score," an enthusiastic freshperson suggested. No one took him seriously. Then a professor-like individual suggested we try and figure out the line- up on the field. With all the substitutions Bo was making there was a consen- sus that such a game would be near impossible. Finally an umbrella-protected lady suggested we try and predict what play Bo would call on each down. I thought it wasa good idea and looked forward to some tough competition. But as soon as my enthusiasm surged, it declined at the remarks of a drunken frat man next to me. "That won't work, you jerks," he stated. "Bo is so predictable, why wat-, ching paint dry would involve more suspense. Give up on the contests and watch the game." I sat dripping wet, watching Smith off tackle, Dickey on the option, Leonni up the middle. It wasn't predictable-at least as not as predictable as drying paint. So here, my Greek philosopher, is a test of Bo's predictability. Th questions are those asked him at the Monday afternoon luncheon. Following ,are three possible answers, only one of which is correct. You have 30 seconds to think about each question. Good luck. QUESTION 1. Why did you kick-off to Duke to start the second half? a)- I bet Virgil at halftimethat he couldn't hit the scoreboard in the Nor- th endzone on the fly with a kick-off. I wanted to collect on the bet early s6 I could send Leach out for hot dogs while the press was still around to see it. (That kid can do anything.) b) It was raining when we went into the lockerroom and with the con- ditions what they were I would rather kick-off. The only way we were going to lose was by our own mistakes so I thought we should kick. When we came out of the lockerroom I saw that the rain had stopped and I figured I made the wrong decision. Then again, when they said I tried to run up the score I said 'what the hell, we gave them the ball in the second half.' c) Leach, Huck, Davis and Clayton were playing euchere in thei lockerroom and they weren't quite finished so I sent the defense out. QUESTION 2. What did you think of Dickey's play? a) Super. If Joe Falls hadn't started all of thisLeach for Heisman talk I would probably start B.J. I can hear it now-the fans.in the south endzone yell B and those in the north endzone yell J. b) Well, I'm not up on my theatre. Is Dickey the guy who wrote Camelot? Or was it One in a Million? c) When you judge a reserve player you have to look at the situation when he comes in. We were ahead 31-0 and he knew he couldn't blowit. He wasp pretty loose. Overall he played pretty good. He made some bad judgments .. but then Rick madqea bad judgment. QUESTION 3. Did you see that water girl Duke had? a) No b) I'm not sure, what number was she wearing? c) Yeah, I saw her. As a matter of fact I turned to Dr. Jerry O'Con- nor who was standing next to me and said, 'That's the reason we're going RELEASE YC to whip these guys.' FEELINGS ON' QUESTION 4. How good is Arizona? New Monogramed Ur a) Terrible. It should be worse than Duke. *The newest,,most dire b) I don't know and I don't care. spirits! We are all looking ahead to * Approximately 7" acrc Michigan State. Faue ag ce c) They are not a team you can Features a large screw take lightly. They are a very for- case some dough-head midable opponent. They still make a right away) few mistakes which has kept them * Use as a urinal screen, from blowing their opponents out. I necklace pendant! (Ca sincerely believe Arizona is going to where you're going to be a tough opponent for us. * Emotional satisfaction ANSWERS: 1-b; 2-c, 3-c, 4-c. - Return this coupon with2 CORE YOURSELF: (straight scale) person in YO 4 right-Predictable" 3right or less-Terrible Pieae send me Intu By The Associated Press DETROIT-Ralph Houk, now that he has officially retired from 40 years in the game, says he "wouldn't even con- sider another baseball job-unless 15 years from now I'm stone broke." He and the reporters jamming his Tiger Stadium clubhouse office laughed as Houk, who closed out his 16-year major league managerial career Sun- day, fired volleys of parting witticisms and anecdotes. DID HE, PERHAPS, hope for one last chance to argue with the umpires, throw his cap to the turf and kick the dirt? "I wouldn't have done it because they would have thought I was doing it to put on a show," he said. Then, breaking in- to a grin, he added, "I wouldn't do that to those nice guys." Asked if he might write a book about his experiences, Houk, occasionally puffing on his ever-present cigar, said: "I never will because the only thing that would sell would be something'like Bouton's book ... "THE ONLY BOOKS that sell are ones where you have something cheap in it and I wouldn't do that-although I could put a lot in it." Jim Bouton, former New York Yankee pitcher under Houk, wrote "Ball Four," a best seller which in- cluded inside stories about baseball and his teammates. "Everybody thinks I'm retiring," Houk said. "I'm just retiring from baseball. I've got a new job, maybe tougher than ever: catching fish. And you know my job will be tough-if you've ever seen me play golf." Houk, 59, said his biggest ambition when his baseball career began in 1939 was, "to make the Joplin ball club or the Topeka ball club" of the Yankees' farm system. "I THOUGHT that would be the high point of my career," he said. Later, he said, "I had more visions of )UR INNERMOST THE OPPOSITION! inal Screen In School Colors! ct way to let out your school oss through the monogram (in doesn't get the message wall hanging or even as a [tion: It is wise to decide put it before using) guaranteed! 2 bucks Right away! Be the first UR can to have one. ) urinal screens a $2.00 each being a football player ahead of being a baseball player. I was better at foot- ball. I had a lot of scholarship offers." Houk was general manager of the Yankees from 1964 until May, 1966. "THAT'S THE WORST job in baseball," he said. "It's a job I got no kick out of. I never worked so hard in my life .... I'm not a desk man. I never knew how to do all that paper work. My file system was terrible, but my secretary did a good job." However, "I think it made a better manager out of me . . . I don't think people realize the problems you have in the front office." Houk said he'll probably feel funny about his retirement about the time he'd normally prepare for the winter league meetings, then again when he'd normally get ready for spring training. sc 1 l/n c Q} and now, 4 i i i'\I a worc ~about I 0l ur WINTER BOOK RUSH 1 OCT. 2-16 979 1. Applications Taken from Oct. 2 through Oct.16,1979, for Winter Book Rush. I. The Cellar Will take applications at later times than indicated in (1); however, subsequent applications will be placed in hiring order by Date of Application, and they will receive priority after those taken in (1). 111. Former Rush Employees in good standing Need Not Reapply for WINTER RUSH and will. receive top priority over all other applicants., IV. All applicants hired for WINTER RUSH will be notified by phone or mail later in Nov. or Dec. Rush employees hired to work in December should expect to work through and beyond reg- istration. HOWEVER, all rush jobs are, unfortunately; only temporary. Starting pay is $3.11 per hour. V. Permanent positions which may open up after Rush will be filled by employees who worked WINTER RUSH. Post-Rush hiring is done departmentally, on the basis of the empolyee's Rush performance and their availability for the unified hours. VI. After APRIL 30, 1979, all unused applications will be thrown away. Therefore, applicants must reapply for each future rush that they wish to work. ABSOLUTELY NO APPLICATIONS WILL BE UPDATED OR KEPT ON FILE FOR FUTURE RUSHES. UNFORTUNATELY, WE HAVE ABSOLUTELY NO JOBS AVAILABLE CURRENTLY. *-ld_ ___- y'.fir, ..u O . c- - - - - - - - -- Specify F' Ohio State [A Michigan Yah, Yah, I've Sent The Money With My Order. I I