Thursday, October 7, 19 71) .I HL M{CI-1IC3RN UAILY Page Nine Thursday1 October 7, 1971 IHL MlLMl(~AN LJAILY Page Nin& Pirates sink Giant s; take flag PITTSBURGH (') - Richie Heb- ner and Al Oliver slammed three- rup homers while Bruce Kison and Dave Giusti turned in top relief performances as the Pittsburgh Pirates beat San Francisco 9-5 yes- terday and won the National League pennant. The victory gave the Pirates the best-of-5 series, 3-1, their first NL title since 1960 and sent them into the World Series against the Bal- timore Orioles. Oliver's three-run homer cli- maxed a four-run sixth that snap- ped a 5-5 tie and came off Jerry Johnson who relieved starter Gay- lord Perry during the inning. Heb- ner's three-run homer came in the second and gave Pittsburgh a 5-51 tie. Roberto Clemente also drove in three runs with a pair of singles, the second hit snapping a 5-5 tie in the sixth. Kison took over for Pittsburgh starter Steve Blass at the start of the third. He held the Giants to a single until the seventh when, with two out, a single, wild pitch and walk brought in Giusti. Giusti got out of the jam by striking out Dick Dietz and did not allow a hit the rest of the way as he posted his third save in the four-game series that left the Giants bridesmaids once again. The score was tied 5-5 when thej Pirates came to bat in the sixth, the tie having existed since the second inning when Hebner's three- run homer got Pittsburgh even af- ter the Giants had moved ahead on home runs by Chris Speier and Willie McCovey. daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: ELLIOT LEGOW With their wives keeping up a I constant clinking of cowbells be- Cash immediately opened the hind home plate, the Pirates got Cas immedite opned he started whnscn aea aePirates' first with a single. Heb- dwhen second basemanDavener followed with a double and Cash singled with one out. Cash then Clemente drove in both with moved to s e c o n d as Hebner a single. But Perry pitched out of ;further trouble. -Associatea rress PITTSBURGH PIRATE Al Oliver makes his displeasure known after being ruled out at second base on a force play in Pitts- burgh's pennant-clinching victory yesterday. The Pirates con- tended that Giant second-baseman Tito Fuentes (holding ball) had pulled his foot from the bag. NEW COMMISSIONER: Big Eight picks Nei KANSAS CITY (A) - Charles j M. Neinas, Assistant executive di- rector of the National Collegiate Athletic Association, was named* commissioner of the Big Eight Conference yesterday. He suc- ceeds Wayne Duke, who resigned early in August to become com- missioner of the Big Ten Con- ference. Neinas is 39. He was named by conference faculty representa- tives, the league's governing body. He has been located in Kan- sas City with the NCAA head- quarters since 1961. Neinas was one of two per- sons recommended to the facul- ty representatives by a screen- ing committee appointed soon after Duke resigned to succeed the late Bill Reed in the Big Griulde Pickings 4 I I Peter and Martha walked hand in hand down the primrose path, their eyes glazed with spent desire. Occasionally Peter would glance over at his lovely Martha, roll his baby blues and whisper a sweet nothing. The two lovers paused in their walk to eavesdrop on the garden affair of Bobby and Sissy Squirrel. The squirrels rolled over and over on a pile of nuts, till finally Sissy screeched and kicked Bobby in the nuts. Peter and Martha went on, charmed by the beautiful little scene. "Martha," he said sweetly, "how are fall and a Japanese acro- batic act alike?" Martha, her pert eyes sparkling, shook her golden curls. "Because, my dear, in both cases there is usually a little Nip in the air," chuckled John, and they laughed. Back in the city its Gridde Picks time again. To win the scrump- tious Cottage Inn pizza bring your choices in by Ffi ' midnight. And we apologize, its Columbia, not Colgate, at Harvard. Ten. The other was Jack McClel- land, 51, commissioner of the new Conference of Midwestern Uni- versities and a former Drake Uni- versity basketball coach and ath- letic director. Neinas is a gradu- ate of the University of Wis- consin where he was a sports broadcaster prior to joining the NCAA staff under Walter Byers, executive director. Dukealsoheld a position in the NCAA headquarters when he was hired as Big Eight commis- sioner in 1963. AtWisconsin, Neinas had been sports director of WKOW radio- TV in Madison and director of both news and sports for WEAQ radio in Eau Claire, Wis. Neinas said he was "flattered and honored" over the appoint- ment, which is effective Nov. 1. "The decade of the seventies has been termed by some as a time of crisis for intercollegiate athletics," he said at a news conference. "I think it not only will survive but will prosper." The announcement of Neinas' selection was made by Prof. Charles H. Oldfather Jr., faculty representative from the Univer- sity of Kansas and chairman of the conference. Brady mening.ig Ken Brady, 6-10 center on Michigan's basketball team underwent a successful knee operation yesterday. There was no ligament or cartilage damage and bone chips were removed from the knee. Brady, who averaged over 12 points last season as a sophomore pivotman will be out of action through the non- conference schedule, but should be able to rejoin the cagers in time for the Big Ten sea- son in January. grounded out and then the reliable Clemente stroked an 0-1 pitch to center off San Francisco starter Gaylord Perry that put Pittsburgh ahead 6-5. At that point, Giants' Manager Charlie Fox lifted Perry and re- placed him with Johnson, the first of two strategic moves that back- fired against the Giants-for he was to be the victim of Oliver's wrapup homer. Johnson's second pitch to Star- gell got by catcher Dick Dietz for a passed ball that enabled Cle-, mente to race to second. With the count 1-1 on Stargell, Fox ordered the slugging outfielder intentional- ly walked although he was hitless in 14 previous trips. That brought up Oliver, who crossed up the strategy by crash- ing a 2-1 pitch into the right field stands while cowbells clinked and shredded paper rained down from a deliriously happy crowd of 35,487 in Three Rivers Stadium. The timelyhitting began when the Giants came to bat in the first inning against Blass, who had lost the playoff opener to Parry. Sin- gles by Tito Fuentes and McCovey following an error by Cash got the first run across. 2 DAYS B.B. KING HOWLI N WOLF FRI.-HILL AUD.-9 P.M. $2.50-$3.50-$4.50 The Giants came back in the second to tie it quickly when Speier hit a 1-2 pitch over the left field wall for his homer. One out later, Henderson singled and Fuen- tes got credit for a single when Stargell and Oliver let his fly ball drop between them. After Mays flied out, McCovey ripped the first pitch to him into the right field seats for his second homer of the playoffs and a 5-2 lead. It was short lived, however, as Hebner, the hero of Tuesday's game, smacked an 0-2 pitch over the right field fence following sin- gles by Manny Sanguillen and pinch hitter Bill Mazeroski. That tied the score and it was to stay that way until the big sixth inning, although a disputed play in the third inning probably cost the Pirates a run. With one out in the inning, Oliver reached first when Perry's third strike was a wild pitch that got by Dietz. Bob Robertson then shot a grounder to third and Jim Hart fired to Tito Fuentes at second to get the force on Oliver. The throw appeared to pull Fuentes off the base, but umpire David Davidson signalled out. Murtaugh argued briefly, but to no avail. Catcher Manny Sanguil- len then walked and Jack Her- nandez beat out a hit toward third. But, with the bases loaded, Mur- taugh let Kison hit for himself, and the pitcher grounded out to first. The Pirates had to wait until the sixth to break through against Perry, who gave up 10 hits i1i the 5% innings he worked. SYou Can't Lose 0 O with an v 0 IVORY o CHESS SET v o For the student body: FLARES by & Levi '# Farah A Wright A Lee A Male CHECKMATE 1, I -Associated Press THE PITTSBURGH PIRATES and their fans rush to congratulate relief pitcher Dave Guistij sec- onds after winning the National League pennant on a 9-5 decision over the San Francisco Giants in Pittsburgh yesterday. The Pirates took the best-of-five series from the Giants, 3-1. COLLEGE REPUBLICANS ALL MEMBERS-INTERESTED VOTER REGISTRATION DISCUSSED Meeting Tonight Mich. U. Assembly Room TEACH A COURSE! FREE U stillneeds teachers Deadline for course descriptions extended until Oct. 11 Bring your course descriptions to Free U office, 2nd floor Union or call 763-2130 afternoons, 662-9616 evenings and weekends. 11 State Street at Liberty N EWSPAPERS Friend of the CONSUMERS i1 Aj] F Neinas is a native of Marsh- Tickets: Mich. Union t '- 1. MICHIGAN at Michigan State 14. Marshall at Northern Illinois field, Wis., and is the third com- Salvation Records 330 Maynard (pick score) 15. Citadel at VMI missioner of the 65-year-old ath- 330 Maynard, 1103 S. Univ. 2. Illinois at Ohio State 16. Ohio U. at Kentucky letic association. He and his wife, __ _0oooooJ 3. Indiana at Wisconsin 17. Wake Forest at North Caryl, have two. sons. They live 4. Minnesota at Purdue Carolina State at Lake Quivira in Kansas City, 5. Northwestern at Iowa 1U.BrighaKameinu' maat UtahStatelKan. 6. Kansas State at Kansas (Neinas'imhamjYounr responsibility 7. Oklahoma at Texas 19. Idaho State at Idaho with the NCAA has been his su- 8. Georgia at Mississippi 20. DAILY LIBELS vs. pervision of the NCAA cham- 9. Stanford at Washington Anonymous Eunuchs pionships program 10. Army at Penn State 11. Toledo at Bowling Green-- 12. Columbia at Harvard 13. Delaware at Lafayette Freshmen and Sophomores in LS&A may make appointments for MICHIGAN UNION Billiards $1 /hr. Advance 0 5||810 Table Tennis 50c beginning Monday, Oct. 11 10 a.m.-noon Mon -Sat at 1213 Angell Hall 1 p.m.-6 p m Sunday ANNOUNCING THE 3rd ANNUAL TEE & SKI $24 and (BIGGER THAN EVER) $30 SKI SHOW Saturday, October 9, 10 AM.-6 P.M. & Sunday, October 10, 12 Noon-6 P.M. PRESENTING FOR YOUR ENTERTAINMENT & EDIFICATION: Representatives from SKI MOVIES (all new) FROM: " Full Leather Lined Major Ski Manufacturers AUSTRIA: "CHAMPION SKIERS CLASS" * Genuine Vibram Sole "WHITE ARLBERG"G ncluding ...ulCsioe noe CANADA: "FLIGHT IN WHITE" * Full Cushioned Insole HEAD SKI CO. COOK BINDINGS "SKI B.C." ROSSGNO MAKER INDNGS"SKI NO. 324" * Taupe Suede or Brown Gluv ROSSIGNOL MARKER BINDINGS "~ O 2' KNEISSEL SALOMON BINDINGS COLORADO: "SKI VAIL" * Oil Tanned Leather Upper "ASPENGLOW" RAICHLE DYNASTAR OTHER SKI MOVIES BY: LeTRAPPEUR OLIN SKI CO. K-2 ROSSIGNOL DYNASTAR I I Are you still readinkg the way your parents read? In the first grade, when you were taught to read "iFun Spot Run," you had to read it out loud. Word-by-word. Later, in the second grade, you were asked to read silently. But you couldn't do it. You stopped reading out loud, but you continued to say every word to yourself. Chances are, you're doing it right now. This means that you read only as fast as you talk. About 250 to 300 words per minute. (Guiness' Book of World Records lists John F. Kennedy as delivering the fast. est speech on record: 327 words per minute.) The Evelyn Wood Course teaches you to read without mentally saying each word to yourself. Instead of reading one word at a time, you'll learn to read groups of words. To see how natural this is, look at the dot over the line in bold type. grass is green You immediately see all three words. Now look at the dot between the next two ' lines of type. and it grows when it rains1 With training, you'll learn to use your innate ability to see groups of words. As an Evelyn Wood graduate, you'll be< able to read between 1,000 and 3,000 ,words per minute . . . depending on the I difficulty of the material. - At 1,000 words per minute, you'll be i able to read a text book like Hofstadtler's American Political Tradition and finish 1 each chapter in 11 minutes, At 2,000 words per minute, you'll be .able to read a magazine like Time or News-r Increansenour readin sneedu o to 50' at week and finish each page in 31 seconds. At 3,000 words per minute, you'll be able to read the 447 page novel The God- father in 1 hour and 4 minutes. These are documented statistics based on the results of the 450,000 people who have enrolled in the Evelyn Wood course since its inception in 1959. The course isn't complicated. There are no machines. There are no notes to take. And you don't have to memorize any- thing. 95% of our graduates have improved their reading ability by an average of 4.7 times. On rare occasions, a graduate's read. ing ability isn't improved by at least 3 times. In these instances, the tuition is completely refunded. Take a free Mini-Lesson r on Evelyn Wood. Do you want to see how the course works? Then take a free Mini-Lesson.M The Mini.Lesson is an hour long peek at what the Evelyn Wood course offers. We'll show you how it's possible to accelerate your speed without skipping a single word. You'll have a chance to try your hand at it, and before it's over, you'll actually increase your reading speed. (You'll only increase it a little, but it's a start.) We'll show you how we can extend your memory. And we'll show you how we make chapter outlining obsolete. Take a Mini-Lesson this week. It's a wild.hour. And it's free. FREE SPEED READING LESSON at 6:30 i