Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 10, 1971 Orioles in Sen BALTIMORE (W) - Merv Ret- the Pira teninund, frequently overshad- 3-0 leadi owed by a cast of Baltim o r e But th superstars, cracked a decisive Ellis, wh three-run homer and left-hand- a sore e er Dave McNally settled down only 2- to pitch a three-hitter as the- ager Dan Orioles began defense of their call forr world championship by defeat- Frank ing Pittsburgh 5-3 yesterday. oles star Frank Robinson and Don Bu- second in ford also homered in a dis- pitch irit play of Baltimore power but ers foro Rettenmund's shot, off contro- 13 postse versial Dock Ellis, brought t h e Ellis, a Orioles from behind in t h e ing the/ third ining for a 4-3 lead they any furth never surrendered. but imm McNally, meanwhile, extended challenge the Orioles' season-ending win- when sh ning streak to 15 games cover- led offa ing 11 regular season g am s, After .three playoffs and this World Ellis cot: Series opener by methodically lenge. B mowing down the Pirates' pow- and tha er hitters. mund, th Shaken for three. unearned outfielder runs in the second inning when leading h the usually flawless fielding lar seaso Orioles made two errors, Mc- shadowe Nally was touched for his third Powell,I and final hit in the t h i r d Brooks R inning, then retired 19 men in This I order before Manny Sanguillen Rettenniu reached base on an error in the picked a ninth Inning. the Balti McNally, who is facetiously the leftf called Dave McLucky by his Ellis p Oriole teammates because they ell on a3 have frequently taken him off all for h the hook after a slow start, on in rel needed their help again. after tim of Bu el tes ha in the ae bub o has lbow, innin nny M relief. Robin ted wh nning o the only h mason a 19-gf regula her tro ediate ed aga ortstor with a strikir uldn't uford t brot he 5-fo r who hitter n but d ons a Frank Robins time, fund's 2-1 pi imore field b roceed 3-2 pit im as. ief. M luford's sink Pira s opener ad given Ellis a er in the fifth inning that gave second inning. McNally some additional work- ble-gum chewing ing room. been troubled by But McNally, who threw 53 of was able to last his 117 pitches in the first three igs before Man- innings, didn't need it. He shut urtaugh had to the Pirates off completely while walking only two and striking son got the Ori- out nine. ien he led off the Yet when the Pirates began by tagging a 1-1 chipping away in the second in- left field bleach- ning, with the aid of Oriole er- iis second hit in rors, it appeared that McNally at-bats. might not even be around as ame winner dur- long as Ellis. r season, escaped The trouble began for the uble at that stage four-time 20-game winner when ly found himself he walked Bob Robertson on a in in the third 3-2 pitch to open the second p Mark Belanger inning and wild pitched him to single. second. ig out McNally, Sanguillen then bounced to meet the chal- shortstop MarkBelanger, who singled to right tried to cut down Robertson ight up Retten- heading for third. But his throw )ot-10, 195-pound hit Robertson and rolled into was the club's the Baltimore dugout, enabling during the regu- the Pirate first baseman to race remained over- home with the game's first run. club with Boog McNally then threw out Jose Robinson a n d Pagan as Sanguillen took third. on. But when Jackie Hernandez however, it was bunted in front of the plate, show, and he McNally couldn't get Sanguillen itch to drive over coming home and catcher Ellie bullpen and into Hendricks let the throw get by leachers. him. ed to walk Pow- That enabled Hernandez to ch, and that was reach second and, after Ellis Bob Moose came struck out, Hernandez raced oose was the vic- home with the third run on a first pitch hom- single by Dave Cash.1 tes 5-3 An inning later McNally was in trouble again as Roberto Cle- mente led off with a single and Willie Stargell followed with a walk. But McNally struck out Robertson and Sanguillen . and got Pagan on an easy fly. And that as it turned out was the Pirates' last threat. But it was only the beginning for the Orioles, who chased El- lis to a loud chorus of boos and a handkerchief-waving sendoff as they took a 1-0 lead in the competition for the $15,000 top prize and a second successive world championship. The second game of the best- of-seven series is scheduled for t o d a y but the weatherman predicted an 80 per cent chance of rain for the 2 p.m., EDT, starting time. Baltimore Man- ager Earl Weaver had named right-hander Jim Palmer, 20- 9, to go against right-hander Bob Johnson, 9-10. -Associated Press BALTIMORE PITCHING ACE, Dave McNally, gets the 1971 World Series underway with a pitch to Pittsburgh Pirate second baseman Dave Cash. McNally, who got off to a. shaky start giving up three unearned runs in the second inning, retired nineteen men at one stretch before allowing catcher Manny Sanguillen to reach base in the ninth. Once again, McNally's teammates bailed him out, blast- ing two homers as the Birds came from behind to smash the Pirates, 5-3. HUSKIES THINNED: Sooners r past Longhorns --; I I CONTROVERSY SERIES LES TER MADDOX TALKS ON: BUSING WAGE-PRICE FREEZE t 4 1 3 {J tt 1 t 1 t t By The Associated Press DALLAS - Shrimp - sized Greb Pruitt, a 176-pound meteor, blazed for three touchdowns and over 200 yards rushing yesterday to give the 8th-ranked Oklahoma Sooners a 48-27 victory overy 3rd- ranked Texas in a brutal, sledge- hammer war of wishbone of- fenses. The five - foot - nine Pruitt, a junior from Houston, dashed through and around the Long- horn flanks virtually unmolested as he piled up 219 yards rushing; in 21 sorties. Pruitt pranced to touchdowns on runs of 1, 4 and 20 yards as undefeated Oklahoma used the ground thundering Wishbone-T offense made famous by Texas for an awesome 425 yards on 'the ground. Oklahoma piled up a 31 - 21 halftime lead after Texas took brief leads of 7-0 and 14-7 in the early going. Stanford strikes SEATTLE - Stanford's Indians tomahawked Sonnk Sixkiller, the Cherokee quarterback, and rode a series of Washington mistakes to a 17-6 Pacific-Eight Conference yesterday over the previously un- beaten Huskies. The blitzing Stanford defense dumped Sixkiller for losses to- taling 42 yards in the first half and Benny Barnes picked off three tosses from 1970's nation- al passing champion. The defending Pac-8 champs jumped to a 14-0 lead in the first period. After Larry Butler threw Sixkiller for an 11-yard loss, a poor punt went out of bounds on the Washington 32. Stanford's quarterback, Don Bunce, passed 20 yards to John Winesberry for the first touchdown. State, thwarted most of the first half by a rash of mistakes, scored five touchdowns in a span of 11 minutes, three by fancy-stepping Lydell Mitchell, enroute to a 42- 0 college football victory oyer Army yesterday. The Nittany Lions, 4-0 and ranked ninth, began the on- 10th - ranked Bulldogs shredded the Mississippi defense with hard running sophomores Andy John- son and Jimmy Poulos yesterday to smash the Rebels 38-7 i. a Southeastern Conference football battle. Buffaloes boffo AMES, Iowa- J. B. Dean kicked a 32-yard fourthBquarter field goal and came up with a final-minutes interception yester- day to spark fifth-ranked Colora- do to a 24-14 Big Eight con- ference football victory over Iowa State. I I R EVEN U E-SHARING PRIVATE ENTERPRISE slaught with eight seconds let the first half when John Hufne COLUMBIA, Mo. - Top-ranked hit Scott Skarzynski with a Nebraska's Jeff Kinney broke yard touchdown pass that m loose for two touchdowns yester- the halftime score 7-0. day and the Cornhuskers went on to a 36-0 Big Eight Conference Bulldogs bop football victory over Missouri, ex- JACKSON, Miss - Geor 'tending their unbeaten streak to 24 games.:: It took the Cornhuskers, who r piled up 330 yards total offense in Colle the first half, 21 minutes, 18 sec- onds to find the range, but once SCORES they did there seemed little doubt GRIDDE PICKINGS: about the outcome. MICHIGAN 24, Michigan State 13 Nebraska sandwiched a safety Ohio state 24, Illinois 10 between Kinney's touchdown runs Wisconsin 35, Indiana 29 Of 1 and 3 yards. Purdue 27, Minnesota 13 yar.Northwestern 28, Iowa 3 Kansas 29, Kansas State 13 Tigers tweek Oklahoma 48, Texas 27 AUBURN, Ala. - Pat Sullivan Georgia 38, Mississippi 7 Stanford 17, Washington6 srifled three touchdown passes yes- Penn state 42, Army 0 terday giving fourth-ranked Au- Toledo 24, Bowling Green 7 burn a shaky 27-14 football vic- Harvard 21, Columbia 19 tory over a Southern Mississippi Delaware 48, Lafayettes0 Northern Illinois 37, Marshall 18 team that led 14-7 at halftime. Citadel 25, VMI 24 Terry Beasley, the other half of. Ohio U. 35, Kentucky 6 Auburn's famed Pat and Terry North Carolina State 24, Show, equaled his own record Wake Forest 14 with 11 pass completions which Idaho 40, Idaho state 3 accounted for 100 yards and one DAILY LIBELS 99, touchdown. Anonymous Eunuchs 0 East Military muscled Cornell 19, Princeton 8 Pittsburgh 36, Navy 35 UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.-Penn Yale 17, Brown 10 ge Score t in aagel 14- ade gia's. . J' 1 HILL AUDITORIUM lkS :: Slippery Rock 34, Shippensburg 7 Dartmouth 19, Pennsylvania 3 South Notre Dame 17, Miami 0 Clemson 3, Duke 0 West Virginia 28, William & Mary 23 Tulane 37, North Carolina 29 Tennessee 10, Georgia Tech 6 Syracuse 21, Maryland 13 Florida State 27, Mississippa St 9 Auburn 27, South Mississippi 14 Alabama 42, Vanderbilt 0 Midwest East Michigan 17, West Kentucky 14 ' Colorado 24, Iowa State 14 West Michigan 31, Kent State 0 Arkansas 35, Baylor 7 Texas Tech 28, Texas A&M 7 Far West Air Force 30, South Methodist 0 Arizona State 42, Colo State Univ. 0 Wyoming 14, Arizona 3 NHL Minnesota 4, Detroit 2 Chicago 4, St. Louis 2 Pittsburgh 3, Philadelphia 2 , New York 4, Montreal 4 4 SUNDAY, OCT. 70-2 P.M. $1.25 Tickets on Sale in Fishbowl and Union Lobby Also available at the door I.3 I 4 COMING OCT. 24: DAVID HARRIS U a + Use Daily Classifieds Muggers split against Spartans + U Give The Bear a break. You're the only one who can. Because all Smokey can do is ask you to help prevent forest fires. He can't break your matches. Or douse your campfires. Or snuff out your cigarets. Only you can. So, please, lend Smokey a hand. And maybe while you're at it, lend him your voice too: tell people to give the bear a break. He deserves it. So does America. _t By CHUCK DRUKIS Special to The Daily EAST LANSING - Michigan's Blue ruggers were a day late and a dollar short. A last second at- tempt to pull out a victory died when Michigan's Ron Smith was driven out of bounds inches short of the end zone to preserve the Michigan State 4-3 triumph. Michigan drove within the State five yard line at least six times, but choked on each occa- sion. Playing on a field that was 20 yards too narrow and 20 yards too short, the open field running of M i c h i g a n became impos- sible. State, at an apparent ad- vantage, because of the field di- mensions, was able to stop the Bluebbefore the wings could get the ball. Early in the first half fullback Dick Moon broke through several Spartans but was tackled short of the endzone. When Michigan failed to follow up the play, State moved the ball back down the field, but failed to score after an errant pass. After getting the ball back into Spartan territory, Michigan re- ceived a 15 yard penalty kick, but failed to convert as the ball sliced off Richard Thompson's foot. The Blue again failed to score when Cleland Child picked up his own kick through the mark on the four yard line, but was tack- led on the run. Poor Michigan rucking allowed State to kick the ball away, which State recovered. After several passes and missed tackles by Michigan, State scored a try but failed on the conver- sion. Michigan losththeir offensive momentum for the remainder of the half. However, when State was p e n a 1 i z e d for off- sides, Thompson put the Blue on -Associated Press TED GRIGNON didn't think fast enough on this play as the Western Michigan quarterback is dropped for a five yard loss by Kent State's Jack Lambert. Grignon must have done something right, however, as the Broncos won 31-0. the board with a 35 yard penalty kick. The frustrations of the Blue Ruggers became apparent shortly after the start of the second half. Thompson attempted another 35 yard penalty kick, only to watch it rebound off the crossbar. Numerous Blue drives were whistled back for knock-ons. When Michigan again had a chance to'take the lead on a' 30 yard penalty kick, Thompson's kick never reached the proper height to clear the goal posts. 3 Several Michigantattempts to cross into the Spartan endzone were frustrated by kicks, sending them back into their own terri- tory until Smith's determined run which was stopped just short as time expired. The Michigan Gold, however, fared better than the Blue. The Gold ran up two tries in each half plus one conversion (18) to noth- ing for the Spartans. John Bohl- ke scored the first two tries for the Gold with some artful run- ning. Forwards Chris Penowar and Steve Chapman scored the other two while Chapman also made one out of four conversions. For the student body: FLARES by SLevi Farah $ Wright I The Most Useful Coupon You May Ever Rip Out ... Say It, Sell It, Seek It-Thru Daily Classifieds AD COPY: UNCONTRACTED CLASSIFIED RATES WORDS 1 day 2 days 3 days 4 days 5 days 6 days add. 0-10 1.00 2.00 2.40 3.20 3 90 4.50 .55 11-15 1.15 2.30 2.90 3.90 480 5.60 .75 16-20 1.30 2.60 3.60 4.80 5.90 6.80 .85 21-25 1.55 3.10 4.30 5.70 7.00 8.10 1.05 26-30 1.80 3.60 5.00 6.60 8.10 9.40 1.20 31 -35 2.05 4.10 5.65 7.40 9.05 1u.50 1.35 36-40 2.30 . 4.60 6.30 8.20 10.00 11.60 1.50 41 -45 9 5 5 10 95 9 oflCin 95 ' 1970 1 AS '"W' I I