Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, October 17, 1971 .BIR D . =S IN IN TI"--T- 3-:^ 0.0.'** ** E *- R**-" p' ..f. ::i. ':;' ;i::':4:":i-isi '::t i:ii "?:":";'; }yj$;:: ;;:j;:j i:}::};:;i ;<:lii:":::v ;ti. i...,. ''} +:?{^: ::": ti: : >isiir'ii:":"iii:: i:4i:'v< {ii: :QiSii::":; :.:":ti_:":L :":i $::":":}}ry.::{ .y:<':i+t' ::::.... ":: r: s::: i "::.:: :::::::: "::. ::::::... 'i:cf:YY '<'%iii'iiiSi2S:" ?... :::t ::"::o-::: r......? r:;: .;" :..:::........... ::. .: i' ii5ii3 3ii'i': ....... ,.,.:, ::,.. _.... ................,.,.,,,,,................:6S:,.: $ : z;8 ..:s:: ::.: r's: s:r.: Sift Oriole rally BALTIMORE () - The Balti- Frank Robinson drew a walk off a wid more Orioles, bouncing back from reliever Bob Miller with one out the : the brink of eliminating defeat- in the 1th- made ed the Pittsburgh Pirates 3-2 yes- Merv Rettenmund then bounced ed an terday on Brooks R~binson's sac- a single up the middle, F r a n k Mi rifice fly In the 10th ining and Robinson racing around to third with sent the 1971 world series into a on the play, bat ri decisive seventh game. Brooks Robinson, who had col- loftin Robinson, a hero of s er i es ilected seven previous hits in this when past, ended thie tension-filled Series, then stepped to the plate and7 game with a soft fly to center as a crowd of' 44,174 yelled with home field that brought a sliding Frank anticipation for the likeable third Th Robinson across the plate with baseman who so often has pro- line f the tie-breaking run. vided the game-winner for t h e Sang The end to the dramatic game, slid i in. which the Orioles trailed 2-0 Brooks fouled the first pitch to ler fl before battling back, came after him back of the plate, then tookIOriol( 1,:. ties de pitch for a ball. He missed next pitch for a strike that the count 1-2 and then foul- nother back.' iler's right arm came around the fifth pitch and Brooks' eached out to meet it, -the ball ng softly to center fi eld e Vic Davalillo made the grab then reared back and fired e. e ball, however, was up the or Pittsburgh catcher Manny ;illen and Frank Robinson in as plate umpire Bill Kib- ashed the safe sign and the es-oriented crowd w e nat wild. t.. Like all of us, hs Changabit.Theresult: up The victory -squared the series at three games apiece - e a c h team having won all its games at home - and left Sunday's sev- enth game as the decider. Through six innings it looked as if the Pirates had it - t h e game, the Series and a special gtche in World Series history. After battling back from an 0-2 deficit to take three games at Pittsburgh, they-were on the verge of becoming the first team in base- ball history to annex the w o r 1 d championship with four straight comeback victories. Despite a run-producing single by Bob Robertson in the second inning and Roberto Clemente's homer in the third it wasn't enough for the Pirates, as t h e slumbering Baltimore bats began to shake off the effect of a three- game slump. Scoreless for 22 straight innings and limited to two hits through five Innings by Pittsburgh starter Bob Moose, the Oriles struck for their first run in the sixth inning on Don Buford's homer and then tied it in the seventh. With one out in the seventh, Mark Belanger singled to get the Orioles started against reliever Bob Johnson. Baltimore starter Jim Palmer then wascalled out on strikes but Belanger moved into scoring posi- tion bystealing second. When Johnson went 'to 3-1 on Buford, Pittsburgh Manager Dan- ny Murt'augh called for his bull- pen ace, Dave Giusti. Giusti f in- ished the. walk to Buford, t h e n found himself the victim of a looping singleby Dave Johnson that tied it. Now the tension began to build, the Pirates needing a run for their first championship since 1960 and Special Paper Back BOOK SALE. olletts MEZZANINE Paper Back Book Dept. THIS WEEK ONLY Selected items from McGraw Hill John Wiley Capicorn Prentice Hall Spectrum Paper Backs only 50% off WHILE THEY LAST FOLLETT'S )eries the Orioles needing a run to re- main alive in their bid for a se- cond stright world championship. The Orioles made the f i r s t serious bid in the bottom of the ninth when, with one out, Bela- nger walked on a 3-2 pitch. One out- later, Don Buford doubled in- to the right field corner, but Bal- timore third base coach Billy Hun- ter held Buford up at third in respect for Clemente's rifle arm. Clemente fired a one-bounce strike to the plate and would have had Belanger easily had he tried to score. Johnson then grounded to Pitts- burgh shortstop Jackie Hernandez, who bobbled the ball but recoup- ed just in time to get the streak- ing Johnson at first base by a step. The world champion Orioles will go with Mike Cuellar, t h e third game loser, against Steve Blass, the winner of the t h i r d game for the Pirates, in tomor- row's contest. -Associated Press BALTIMORE ORIOLES slugger Frank Robinson slides safely across home plate, scoring the winning run for the Birds in the bottom of the tenth inning of yesterday's World Series contest. The throw from center fielder Vic Davalillo was short to catcher Manny Sanguillen, allowing the Birds to even the series. The seventh game will be played this afternoon. ARKANSAS DOWNS TEXAS Undefeated Sooners halt Colorado s Teir new album on Capitol By The Associated Press NORMAN, Okla. - Lightning Greg Pruitt flashed by Colorado on touchdown scampers of 66 and 12 yards and quarterback Jack Mildren hurled two long scoring bombs as 'second-ranked Oklaho- ma's thunderbolt Wishbone-T of- fense blitzed Colorado 45-17 in a collision of two Big Eight grid powers yesterday. Pruitt, a converted split end who has emerged as one of college foot- ball's premier running backs, rushed for more than 150 yards as the Sooners ran up a 24-0 half- time lead. Mildren, who had kept Oklaho- ma's passing attack a secret un- til this game, hit John Harrison on a 54-yard scoring play in the first half, then .combined with halfback Joe Wylie on a 68 - yard touch- down in the second half which broke the Buffalo's back. Colorado made a contest out of it briefly in the third quarter as sophomore quarterback Ken John- son hurled a 64-yard touchdown pass to Willie Nichols and tailback Charlie Davis hit paydirt on a 16-yard run. However, the Buff defense could- n't halt OU's rampaging attack which rolled up more than 600 yards in total offense. It was the second straight week that Oklahoma had knocked over one of the nation's top-ranked teams, and the victory set the For the student body: Genuine Authentic ' Navy PEA COATS with No. 1-ranked Nebraska on Thanksgiving Day for the Big Eight title and possibly the na- tional championship. The Sooners crushed Texas 48-27 last week. * * * Razorbacks romp LITTLE ROCK - Quarterback Joe Ferguson, a deadly marksman with nerves of rawhide, led Ar- kansas with two touchdowns in less than three minutes at the close of the first half yesterday to dump 10th-ranked Texas 31-7 and snap the Longhorns' 21-game Southwest Conference victory string. Ferguson, a 6-foot-2, 15-pound junior from Shreveport, La., pass- ed for two touchdowns aid ran for another as Arkansas built up a 21-7 halftime lead before heavy rains cut down on the offense in the second half. Ferguson whipped Arkansas - now 3-0 and the undisputed leader in the Southwest Conference - on a 94-yard drive which he climaxed with a 10-yard gallop behind a crushing block by Mike Saint to give Arkansas a 14-7 lead it never relinquished. Defending SWC champion Texas had to punt after three downs. It took the determined Razorbacks, who had not beaten Texas since 1966, only 37 seconds to go 56 yards. The payoff came on a 37- yard touchdown bullet from Fergu- son to wide receiver Mike Rep- pond, who didn't have a Texas player within 15 yards of him. Huskers rampage LINCOLN - Nebraska's top- ranked and undefeated football juggernauts, aided by a stonewall defense, rolled over Kansas 55-0 yesterday in a Big Eight clash be- fore 68,331, the largest crowd in Memorial Stadium history. So grudging was Nebraska's "blackshirts" defensive unit that the Jayhawks owned minus total offense yardage at the intermission and did not gain a first down un- each period, the most spectacular coming on a 66-yard third quarter run from scrimmage by Jeff Kin- ney. The victory ran Nebraska's string to 25 games without a loss and dropped Kansas to 3-3 for the year. *, * * Tide rolls BIRMINGHAM - Alabama's proud defense, led by Robin Park- house and a ballhawking secon- dary, held Tennessee off yesterday for a 32-15 Southeastern Confer- ence football victory. It was fourth-ranked Alabama's sixth straight conquest of the sea- son and the first over Tennesseg since 1966. The defeat left Tennes- see with a 3-2 mark with Auburn holding the other decision over the Vols. Both teams began raggedly and there were four turnovers in the stage for a mammoth showdown' while, tallied two touchdowns in a first eight minutes, including a fumble recovery by Parkhouse on the Vol 22 that launched Alabama on its first score. Three plays lat- er Terry Davis passed 20 yards to David Bailey for the touchdown. Irish rip SOUTH BEND - A smothering Notre Dame defense more than made up for a sputtering offense as the seventh-ranked Irish gain- ed their second consecutive shutout with a 16-0 victory over North Car- olina yesterday. A sellout crowd of 59,075 basked under blue skies in mid-70 degree temperatures as the huge Irish defenders limited the Tar Heels to 92 yards rushing and 57 passing. Bob Thomas, a sophomore place- kicker, gave Notre Dame 311 the offense it needed as he tied the snigle game Irish school eccrd for field goals with boots of 27, 28 and 24 yards in the first half. 4i- Brown, harriers gain fourth place finish, By SANDI GENIS Special to The Daily EAST LANSING - In what is beginning to become a habit, freshman standout Keith Brown paced a determined effort by the Wolverine harriers with an out- standing individual performance yesterday morning at The Michi- gan State Invitation Cross Coun- try meet. Posting the finest time of his collegiate career over a six-mile course, Brown emerged from the fog that engulfed Forst Akers Golf Course to cross the finish line fourth among 45 competitors from Western, Eastern, Central and Michigan State Universities, as well as from Michigan, with a time of 30:58. The fine freshman, who de- clared that the weather did not bother him at all since he felt he ran better under inclement condi- tions, passed the two-mile mark in about twentieth place and had{ pulled up to the seventh spot after four miles. Turning on the speed, within the last mile and a half he man- aged to slip past two Eastern Michigan stars, Jim Bilsborrow and Terry Furst, and nearly caught the two MSU runners, Ken Popejoy and Rob Cool, who fin- State Street at North Univ. _____ I $25 til the third quarter. The Cornhusker offense, mean- I :, y-- : . __ _ _ . . . _ ... ._ ______ _ ____ _ __ _ _ _ _ __ ished just ahead of him, to cop the fourth slot. Coach Dixon Farmer was more than satisfied with Brown's per- formance. "Keith is one of the best freshmen in the Midwest," Farmer declared, citing his first place finish among the freshmen in last weekends Notre Dame In- vitational. "If he keeps improv- ing he could become the first Wol- verine NCAA cross country All- America in many years." While Brown was spectacular, the team as a whole managed to duplicate his fourth place finish for a somewhat less than out- standing showing. Nevertheless, Farmer was pretty much satisfied with their morning's work, espe- cially with the performance of his two sophomore stalwarts Mike Pierce and Rich Schott. Pierce finished second among the Michigan harriers, in eigh- teenth place in the meet, with a time of 32:17, a "milestone" for him in Farmer's estimation. Schott was the third Wolverine to finish, posting a 32:22 run for the twentieth spot. Displaying surprising power, a tough Spartan team nipped the favored Western Michigan squad, 36-46. The Spartans placed six men in the top twenty, led by Ken Popejoy and Rob Cool who fin- ished second and third, respec- tively, with a seven-eight finish by Dave Deiters and Randy Kil- patrick. Sparking the WMU team, Gary Harris copped the individual hon- ors, establishing a new course re- cord of 30:26.3 while easily outdis- tancing his competition. The Wolverines were barely nosed out of the third place slot by the Eastern Michigan team which garnered 76 points to the Wolverines 88. Central Michigan finished last with 102 points. TAKE A TASTE OF IS (AEL... Tues., Oct. 26 at Power Center 7:30- ISRAEL NOW Israeli representatives will be present to provide information on programs in, ISRAEL: Hebrew- Study, Kibbutz, University, Jobs, Travel, Archeology, and. more. ADMISSION FREE TO "ISRAEL NOW" WORKSHOPS 8:30 - SHALQM '72 MC'd by Mike-Burstein - Israeli motion picture and stage star. FEATURING:. Yaffa Yarkoni: popular singer called the "national voice. of Israel." Shuli Nation: whose dramatic assent began when she introduced "Jerusalem of Gold" in 1967. PLUS: "The Armenian" - Yeminite folk singers. "The Lions of Judah" - a contemporary rock group from Tel Aviv, with the SHALOM '72 Dance Ensemble. BE GLAD YOU' RE YOUNG. G-ET TH.E -NEW STUDEN.T FARE A .1 4w I I The most Meaningful Semester you'll ever spend... could be the one on World Campus Afloat Sailing Feb. 1972 to Africa and the Orient Through a transfer format, more than 5,000 students from 450 campuses have participated for a semester in this unique program in inter- national education. WCA will broaden your horizons, literally and figuratively . . . and give you a better chance to make it-meaningfully-in this changing world. A U~ ~U. UW ~ I ' I