Page Six y THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, October 16, 1971 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, October 16, 1971 For the student body: Genuine Authentic n Navy PEA'.COATS $25 Sizes 34to 50 CHECKMATE State Street at Liberty Birds at the brink of World Series crash Wi dea ts ai n Boilermakers' BALTIMORE MP-The Baltimore Orioles will trot out today for the sixth game of the World Series against the Pittsburgh Pirates prodded by a reminder of a past disaster-a poetic reminder framed in this little ditty: "Remember the Mets- It took a year Now we can do itj In two days here." The four lines were chalked on the blackboard in the Orioles' dressing room yesterday by the clubhouse attendant, Clay Reid. And they underscore the Orioles' challenge as simply as possible. Their three defeats in Pittsburgh sent the Orioles into game No. 6 trailing 3-2 in the best of seven series that determines the best team in baseball for 1971. On the eve of the crucial sixth game, Manager Earl Weaver de- clined to name his starting lineup but did reaffirm that right-hander Jim Palmer, who won the second game, would be his starting, pitcher against Pirate right-hander Bob Moose. Now the Orioles stand one de- feat away from having the Pirates lock up their first championship since 1960 while destroying the myth of Baltimore invincibility. "Two games is nothing," Weaver said. "I'd rather be down 2-3 than 0-2. They just went to work and did the things they did all year. Now we'll have to do the things we did all year." Things are going exceptionally well for the Pirates, who are with- in one victory of a feat never before accomplished in the 49-year history since the Series was changed from nine games to the best of seven games. Only four teams in that period have been able to come back and win the Series after losing the first! two games. No team has ever been able to do it by running off four consecutive victories. Despite all the pre-game words, "it will all boil down to who's the best pitcher Saturday," Weaver insisted yesterday. On paper, that's Palmer. Palmer posted a 20-9 record dur- ing the regular season and won the second game, allowing seven hits and three runs in eight in- nings. Moose, 11-7, during the regu- lar season, pitched in relief in the first two games, allowing eight hits and six runs in 42/3 innings. However, what's been on paper hasn't meant much in this Series. By CHUCK BLOOMa There are only three unbeaten teams left in the Big Ten and one of them will be seriously challeng- ed today. Along with Michigan and Ohio State, the Boilermakers of Purdue have compiled a 2-0 re- cord. But Purdue must travel to Ev- anston to meet Northwestern, still determined to win their first Big Ten title since 1'936. Since every game on the Wildcat schedule is a "must" game, the Boilermakers will be in for a battle. Quarterback Maurie Daigneau is establishing himself as the con- ference's premiere passer. Last week, he passed for 256 yards in a 28-3 victory over Iowa. Along with this potent arm, Northwest- ern boasts a fine ground game led by Al Robinson and Randy Anderson. The versatility of the Wildcat offense has resulted in three straight victories over Syracuse, Wisconsin, and Iowa. Coach Alex Agase considers his defensive secondary, headed by Eric Hutchinson and Jim Ander- son, to be "the best in the coun- try". It would have been the key fac- Subscribe1 The Michigan to Daily WANTED: European movie film shot by students. Interested in buying 16 mm. unscreened original color film. Price negotiable-based on review of film. Send information only-no film-including subject matter, amount of footage available and description of film to: AUDIO VISUAL ARTS 1933 Vernier Road Grosse Pointe Woods, Michigan 48236 -Associated Press EVERYONE seems to be running from giant Wilt Chamberlain. Wilt snared one of his numerous rebounds last night against De- troit as the Pistons move on the defense. Don't let the scoreboard deceive you; Detroit lost 132-103. tor in a passing duel between Daigneau and Purdue's Gary Dan-' ielson; all that is now forgotten. Danielson, a product of Dear- born Divine Child, suffered a shoulder separation last week and will be lost to Purdue for two to three weeks. Danielson had em- erged this season as a talented field general and field leader. Last week against Minnesota, he was 17 yards short of the Big Ten single-game passing record and 31 yards shy of the confer- ence single-game total offer se mark. Had he not sustained the injury, Danielson would have broken both records. The quarterbacking duties now fall to sophomore Steve Burke who has had only limited action. If Burke does not move the offense, sophomore Bob Bobrowski will try his luck. The offense should be able to move itself. Purdue has the fourth leading rusher in the Big Ten in one 'Otis Armstrong. The Boiler- makers also have a fine pairof receivers in Darryl Stingley and Rick Sayers. The Purdue defense has been stingy against the rush but the pass defense leaves a lot to be de- sired. Daigneau should have a field day as Purdue has allowed on the average of 230 yards in the air. Pity poor Woody Hayes! Any- one with a heart must feel sorry for Woody. The Buckeyes have lost the services of ninehstarters. Notable are fullback John Bled- soe. and tackle Shad Williams and linebacker Kevin Fletcher on the defense. Alas, there is good news. Quarterback Don Lamka will return today after a week's absence. Though the injuries have hit hard, Ohio State's schedule is soft. Today's opponent, Indiana, has been erractic to say the least. The Buckeye offense is led by Lamka, halfbacks Rick Galbos and Morris Bradshaw. Despite all the injuries the Buckeyes display fine depth with numerous sopho- mores and non-lettermen getting lots of playing time. Indiana also has an injury jinx. to cool. Steam The Hoosiers keep losing wide re- ceivers; the latest being Charlie Byrnes. Byrnes caught eight pass- es for 113 yards against Wiscon- sin Saturday. Byrnes was coming out of the library last Sunday night when he stepped in a hole and sprained his ankle. Byrnes joins fellow re- ceivers Terry Woodburn, Steve Porter, and Glen Scolnick, all of whom are on the sidelines. Gone are the days of Harry Gonso and Jade Butcher. Coach John Pont has watched his team go from riches to rags. The of- fense has faltered until last week when quarterback Ted'McNulty, making his first start of the sea- son, revived a sagging aerial at- tack. His connections with rookie receiver . Alan Dick reminded Bloomington fans of the old Gon- so-Butcher combination. The Indiana defense was su- perb inrthe first four games but fell apart last week against Wis- consin. Michigan State has played well in its last two games even though both wound up as losses. Spartan coach Duffy Daugherty has found a quarterback; a good one in Frank Kolch. Kolch stands 6-5, 220, and runs the newly - found Spartan option extremely well. Kolch has a superlative receiver in tight end Billy Joe Dupree. The major disappointment in Michigan State's running attack has been speedster Eric Allen. Al- len has failed to gain needed yardage and is one of the major factors for the sputtering Spartan running game, ranked ninth in the conference. The Spartan defense ranks among the best in the Big Ten. Ron Curl, an All-American can- didate, and Brad Van Pelt, a three-letter man, head up a stub- born pack. Wisconsin, State's opponents, have the conference's top runner, Rufus "Roadrunner" Ferguson. He has rushed for 537 yards while teammate Al Hannah leads all re- ceivers with 25 catches. The Bad- gers quarterback is Neil Graff and he will test the vaunted Spartan defense. BING SURGERY OK: Lakers mutilate Pistons 1 presents VACATION FLIGHTS Air- t craft Seats Carrier No. Routing Depart Return Price DC-9 94 Air Can 001 Win/Nassau/Win 11/24 11/28 $189 DC-9 94 Air Can 003 Win/Nassau/Win 11/28 1/4 $179 C990 149 Mod Air 105 D/Acapulco/D 1/3 1/10 $199 DC-8 250 Univer 005 Det/Nassau/Det 3 4 3/11 $179 DC-8 195 KLM 207 Det/Munich/Det 12 27 1/9 $299 Price includes round trip jet airfare PLUS hotel accommodations. (Airfare only also available.) $25 deposit will hold your seat for Thanksgiving, Christmas, or Spring vacation in Mexico, Nassau, or Austrian Alps. For further info, please contact UAC Travel, 2nd Floor, Student Union, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., 763-2147. OPEN ONLY TO U-M FACULTY, STAFF, STUDENTS & IMMEDIATE FAMILY. ALUMNI ELIGIBLE FOR CERTAIN FLIGHTS; PLEASE CALL By The Associated Press DETROIT - The Los Angeles Lakers made their new coach Bill Sharman's debut a winner as the well-balanced Lakers surged to a 132-103 National Basketball Asso- ciation victory over the Detroit Pistons last night. Los Angeles had seven players in double figures paced by Wilt Chamberlain's 26, followed by Jerry West with 19 and Jim Mac- Millian with 25. The Lakers, now 1-0, edged the Pistons 26-20 in the first quarter and then pulled away to a 16-point lead at the half 63-47. Of MacMil- lian's total, 15 came in the second half. Bob Lanier topped the Pistons with 25, but only managed one point in the second half. Meanwhile at Ann Arbor, doctors at University of Michigan Hospital said that surgery yesterday to re- pair a detached retina in National Basketball Association All - Star Dave Bing's right eye apparently ~was a success. But Dr. Morton S. Cox Jr. said it will be two or three days before it is known whether the repair will hold and perhaps several months until it can be determined whether Bing suffered permanent vision damage. The standout Detroit Pistons' guard suffered the injury in an Oct. 5 exhibition game, but the condition was not diagnosed until Thursday. Bullets bulled CHICAGO - Bob Love scored nine straight points early in the first quarter to spark the Chicago Bulls to a 106-82 rout of the Balti- more Bullets, their first triumph o fthe National Basketball Asso- ciation season last night. Love, who finished as the game's high scrorer with 31 points, was helped by teammates Jerry Sloan and Bobby Weiss who collected 19 points each. Chicago's defense held Balti- more's Earl Monroe to 10 points as the Bullets dropped their NBA opener. Cams clipped CLEVELAND - The B u f f a l o Braves overcame an 18-point first quarter deficit to defeat the Cleve- land Cavaliers, 111-109, in over- time in a National Basketball As- sociation contest yesterday and give Braves coach John McCarthy a victory in his coaching debut. Guard Walt Hazzard, acquired from the Atlanta Braves during the off-season, sparked the Brave attack, scoring 35 points, 27 of them 'in the second half. falo lost its season opener to Seattle by 33 points. Rookie Charlie Davis, who scored all eight Cavaliers points in the overtime session, put Cleveland on top 107-105 with two minutes left on his third field goal, but Haz- zard hit a 12-footer 15 seconds later and then Bill Hosket put in a missed free throw by Hazzard to give the Braves a 109-107 lead they never lost. Cleveland missed a chance to tie the score when John Johnson missed a shot as time ran out. Hazzard hit 15 of 24 from the field while 6-foot-11 rookie Elmore Smith corralled 18 rebounds for the Braves. Johnson had 22, Bingo Smith 21, and Davis 19 for Cleve- land. * * * Celtics clawed BOSTON-Jeff Mullins scored 28 points in leading the Golden State Warriors to a 97-75 victory over the Boston Celtics last night in a National Basketball Association season opener. Golden State took a 43-37 half- time lead, then hiked the margin to 56-37 as the Celtics went 0-13 from the floor and were scoreless in the second half until 7:25 of the third period. The Warriors nailed down the de- cision by out-scoring Boston 16-6 for an 82-56 lead in the first seven minutes of the fourth quarter. Jim Barnett scored 18 points and Cazzie Russell contributed 15 for Sucre to The Michigan Daily Lipon to coach Tiger farm club, Bills sign for large stadium By The Associated Press DETROIT-The Detroit Tigers announced yesterday that former Cleveland Indians manager Johnny Lipon has been hired to manage their Toledo, Ohio, farm club. Lipon succeeds Mike Roarke as manager of the Toledo Mud Hens of the International League. Lipon, 48, is a native of Detroit and has played major league ball with the Tigers, Boston Red Sox, St. Louis Browns and Cincinnati Reds. His playing career ran from 1947 to 1954. S * * * ! BUFFALO-The Buffalo Bills of the National Football League signed a 25-year lease yesterday for a planned 80,000 seat football stadium to be built by Erie County. Bills owner Ralph C. Wilson Jr. said the stadium will be "one that the taxpayers can afford and one that the people will be proud of. I wouldn't be surprised if many communities, in the future, will copy it." * * * " COLOGNE, Germany-Bob Lutz and Jeff Borowiak of Los Angeles scored upset victories yesterday in quarter-final singles play of the World Professional Tennis Tournament. Lutz, who scored an upset triumph Thursday by defeating Aus- tralian Roy Emerson, ousted top-seeded Rod Laver of Australia 6-4, 7-6. Borowiak beat Spain's Adnres Gimeno 7-6, 7-6: Borowiak gained the quarter finals Thursday by defeating Australian Fred Stolle. McCarthy took over the Braves the Warriors. The Celtics were top- reins Wednesday, replacing' Dolph ped by Jo Jo White, who netted 22 Schayes who was fired after Buf- points. i rid Michigan Union Dining Room Buffet Lunch Mon.-Fri. I I. OPEN FOOTBALL WEEKENDS Dinner on Fridays Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner on Saturdays CREATIVE SHABBAT SERVICE Every Friday-6 P.M. at Hillel TOM & HARRY'S WATERBED FANS! WITH STUDENT Supe GagantanI.D.. A KING QUEEN (100 DOUBLE SINGLE I - Kti SCORE S NBA Los Angeles 132, Detroit 103 Chicago 106, Baltimore 82 Buffalo 111, Cleveland 109, OT Seattle at Portland, inc. Golden State 97, Boston 75 Only games scheduled ABA New York 115, Pittsburgh 107 Virginia 118, Carolina 114 Utah 116, Dallas 106 Indiana 115, Denver 104 Only games scheduled FACTORY CLOSEOUT WOLVERINE HATS 1750 full color plastic vacuum formed Wolverine hats $1.50 retailer, only $.20 ea. (min. 250). If check is with order, we pay shipping. Hats formed as brown and black wolverines wearing blue sweater with yel- low "M" on it. "Wolverine" in blue on yellow visor. (Sample $1.00, postpaid.) Bagley Spe- cialty Advertising, Executive Plaza, Lakeland, Fla. 33803. t4leW, CTRIiCAi- MPPGAzI/E !NAE ...h1JN It.J OrIl A V