Friday, September 1,1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine 4 Friday, September 11, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine ALL WIN .4. " ,"v;<:,:;,.n r r'?::;:.:r";}:"::"v{4::"""'r". :'.. -:...."l?{. .;- FROM THE Major League Standings . ; > > DRIVER'S SEAT :::%:.: By Phil Hertz NL East contenders stand pat AMERICAN LEAGUE East NATIONAL LEAGUE The making of 0 0 " ... a precedent IT HAS been traditional since the advent of the Daily's Gridde Pickings contest to invite some nationally known figure to enumerate his choices for each week's games. In the past such notable figures as Johnny Cash, Senator Henry (Scoop) Jack- son, Elroy (Crazylegs) Hirsch, and a reserve fullback for Ohio + State have served as selectors for the contest. In keeping with this great tradition of guest selectors, it was decided to try to contact our beloved President, Richard Mil- hous Nixon. If I were unable to contact the President, I would then attempt to reach Herbert Klein, Nixon's Director of Communicatiors. This was not as farfetched an idea as it might appear; since earlier this summer we had written to the former Vice-President twice and received answers from Mr Klein each time. THE FIRST LETTER invited Nixon, who had previously ex- pressed interest in becoming a sportswriter, to join the Daily Sports staff as a trainee. Klein refused this offer by noting that the President's "current contract with the American people has some time to go." The sports staff took full cognizance of this problem and offered the onetime unsuccessful Republican candidate for governor of California the same position beginning in January 1973. At the same time an offer was broached to allow Mr. Nixon to participate in the staff's football pool, KLEIN'S RESPONSE this time ignored the job offer, and sidestepped the opportunity to pick the games. It was decided, however, not to' take this response as final, and Tuesday morning, list of games in hand (They appear elsewhere on these pages), I called the formerWall Street lawyer, or at least I tried to. After I asked the operator to place a person-to-person phone call to Herbert Klein. The operator then asked me to hold and I proceeded to do just that for about ten minutes, undoubt- edly enough time to allow the Federal Bureau of Investigation to put a tap on the call. Eventually I was connected with the White House switchboard, which quickly connected me with one of Mr. Klein's secretaries, who put me on hold for another five minutes, and then asked me to'explain the reason for my call. Now this was a slight problem - have you ever tried to tell some secretary that you would like to have the President make some football predictions? Well believe me, it's not easy. In any case, the secretary connected me with one of Klein's assistants. After I explained the purpose of my call, he killed our last hopes of securing Nixon as a guest selector, saying, "The President would be too busy to do something like that." I then tried to secute Mr. Klein as a selector, since he had zealous in answering our letters to the President. Klein's assistant said this might be possible, and indicated that Klein would call me back if it were possible. THREE HOURS LATER, after failing to'receive the return call, I tried to call Klein again, but I met with failure once again. The President's reluctance to reveal his football predictions is not extremely difficult to understand. Last season you may recall Mr..Nixon became the center of the controversy when he predicted Texas would topple Arkansas, and then named Texas the national champion. The actions aroused the ire of Arkansas and Penn State partisans, and prompted irate letters from poli- ticians in Arkansas and Pennsylvania. Those troubles resulted 4 from his interest in one game; imagine his problems if he had to announce his prognostications*on twenty games a week. Nixon would have to worry about alienating the supporters of at least twenty teams unless he elected to predict a number of ties - a move which might just confirm the opinion that the President is by nature indecisive. But the President need not worry, the Daily Sports staff * will always keep a position open for him. By The Associated Press NEW YORK - Cleon Jones ripped a run-scoring triple in the 14th inning, giving the New York Mets a 3-2 triumph over the Phila- delphia Phillies yesterday, re- maining in a tie for first place in the torrid National League East with the New York Mets. Jones drove his hit off the" right-center field wall, scoring Tommie Agee who had opened the inning with a single. Reliever Joe Hoerner, 9-4, then got Wayne Gar- rett on a fly ball before Jones de- livered. Ron Herbel, 9-5, with one in- ning of scoreless relief, picked up his second victory as a Met since being obtained from Sanj Diego. Danny Frisella had hurled five scoreless innings for the Mets- ninth through 13th--allowing one hit while Dick Selma held New York to one hit and no runs in four innings, leaving after the 12th, giving up one hit and strik- ing out six. ,S Cards blanked Baltimore New York Boston Detroit Cleveland Washington daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: JERRY CLARKE W 92 81 75 74 68 66 WI4est L 51 62 68 69 76 76 Pct. .643 .566 .524 .517 .472 .465 GB 11 17 18 24% 251> New York Pittsburgh Chicago St. Louis Philadelphia Montreal Cincinnati Los Angeles San Francisco Atlanta Houston San Diego W 76 76 75 68 66 61 West 92 77 75 71 68 55 L. 67 67 68 76 78 81 53 64 68 74 75 89 (t j t -Associated Press Clay fights again Cassius Clay and Jerry Quarry ink a contract for their pionship fight which will take place in Atlanta on Oct. 26 also known as Mumammed Ali, and the former world cha will be returning to the ring after a three year absence Gridde P'kiiigs Pct. .531 .531 .524 .472" .458 .430 .634 .546 .524 .490 .476 .382 GB 1 10%i 14 13 16 23 36Y/2 PITTSBURGH - Luke Walker tossed a two-hitter and Willie chym- Stargell slammed his 28th home 6. Clay, run as the Pittsburgh Pirates re- impion, tained a share of first place in the .in National League East with a 2-0 victory over the St. Louis Cardi- nals yesterday. Walker, 12-6, struck out nine I The world is full of losers. West Quad is a loser. Hubert Humph- rey is a loser. Woody Hayes is a loser. Orval Faubus, six-time governor of the state of Arkansas and one-time mayor of Dogpatch, U.S.A., was, alas, defeated this week in his bid to return to the governor's mansion from which he gained great glory. All is not lost, however. If his pickings, listed below, turn out to be better than your pickings (And who knows? Maybe Alabama will beat USC), he will win himself a steaming hot Cottage Inn Pizza, delivered direct to his door by the United States Post Office. Don't be a loser! Beat Orval Faubus to the pizza! Make him and walked one in snapping the Pirates out of a three-game los- ing string. Stargell drilled a bases-empty homer over the right center field wall of f Nelson Briles, 5-6, in the second inning. The Pirates added an insurance run in the fourth on Al Oliver's leadoff double, Stargell's ground out and a sacrifice fly by Bob Robertson. Walker limited the Cardinals to singles by Dal Maxvill in the third inning and Jim B e a u- champ in the fifth. Cubs romp CHICAGO - Ernie Banks" three-run homer, after two sacri- fice bunt tries in the fourth, broke a 2-2 tie and led the Chi- cago Cubs to a 9-3 victory over the Montreal Expos to keep the Cubs in the thick of the torrid National League East race yester- day. . The 39-year-old Banks also singled across a fourth run in the seventh and received a standing ovation when he left for a pinch- runner in that inning. Chicago's Milt Pappas, who re- quested the start after only two days' rest, got his 12th 'victory against seven defeats, leaving for a pinchhitter in the sixth with the Cubs ahead 7-3. Pappas yielded four hits, i n-i eluding Rusty Staub's solo homer in the sixth, and gave up a -pair of unearned runs in the fourth.' Glenn Doughty, Wolverine tailback who missed this year's Rose Bowl game due to a knee injury, will be ready to play in this week's intrasquad scrim- mage The Detroit Pershing pro- duct, who re-injuied that same knee earlier this month, will be at top strength for the sea- son opener. -i TV R ENTA LS $10.50 per month NO DEPOSIT EE DE RY ADSRVICE CALL;: N AC TV RENTALS 662-5671 Steak and Eggs for $1.20 AT CAMPUS GRILL RESTAURANTf 808 S. State St. Minnesota 86 56 .606 - Oakland 78 65 .545 California 76 66 .535 1C Kansas City 56 86 .394 3 Milwaukee 53 89 .373 3 Chicago 51 92 .357 35 Results Boston 14, Detroit 0 Baltimore 2, New York 1 Cleveland 13, Washington 4 Minnesota 6, Oakland 1, 1st Minnesota 7, Oakland 2, 2nd Kansas City 2, Milwaukee 0, lstd Kansas City 10, Milwaukee 2, 2nd Other clubs not scheduled. TODAY'S GAMES Milwaukee at California Oakland at Kansas City Chicago at Minnesota New York at Cleveland Boston at Baltimore Washington at Detroit Results Chicago 9, Montreal 3 New York 3, Philadelphia 2, 14 inn. Pittsburgh 2, St. Louis 0 San Diego 3, Atlanta 2 Cincinnati at Los Angeles San Francisco 11, Houston 0 TODAY'S GAMES Philadelphia at Montreal St. Louis at New York Atlanta at Houston Cincinnati at San Diego Los Angeles at San Francisco Only games scheduled r I get EXCELLENT SENIOR BOWLING, 4Cc Leagues Forming AM-Noon Sign Up Now! O.- NLE.S'W UNION LA NES 10 43 9512 1I C . ;:. I PICTURES $2.50, It a loser twice in one week! 1. Stanford at ARKANSAS 2. USC at ALABAMA 3. Holy Cross at ARMY 4. California at OREGON 5. Colgate at NAVY 6. COLORADO STATE at New Mexico State 7. Duke at FLORIDA, 8. South Carolina at GEORGIA TECH 9. Washington State at KANSAS 10. Kentucky at NORTH CARO- LINA 11. Utah State at KANSAS STATE 12. Oklahoma State at MISSIS- SIPPI STATE 13. Villanova at MARYLAND 14. Wake Forest at NEBRASKA 15. Oklahoma at SOUTHERN METHODIST 16. UCLA at Oregon State 17. NORTH CAROLINA STATE at Richmond 18. Pacific at TEXAS AT EL PASO 11 19. Virginia at VIRGINIA TECH 20. OSHKOSH at Weber State ELECTIONS '70 PROF. JACK WALKER, Instructor Course in contemporary political issues which will include work in the 1970 election campaigns, lec- tures by University and non-university authorities. and discussion groups. Sales are Sept. 8-14 at DIAsaes oot I* 420 Maynard I[ f L__. ___________________ T-Th. 3-4 Nat. Sci. Aud. Plus Discussion Sections Poli. Sci. 300 Div. No. 450 4 credit hrs. no prerequisites _ .. _ _ _ DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 Day Calendar Institute of 'Continuing Legal Educa- tion: New Federal Rules on Civil Pro- cedure of Discovery - Registration. Rackham Lobby, 9 a.m. Slavic Film Series: The Ballet of Romeo and Juliet with Galina Ulanova and the Bolshoi Ballet: Multipurpose Rm, Unergrad. Lib., 7 and 9:15 p.m. Philosophy Dept. Acolytes Mtg.: S. Stojanovic, Belgrade, "Changing Mor- ality of Socialist Revolutions," E. Con- ference Rm,, Rackham, 8 p.m. Prelude '70: Multi-media preview of 'the- Univ. Musical Society coming sea- son: Hill Aud., 8:30 p.m. Pkieq n.oi Service Jewish Welfare Board Personnel Serv- ices job supplement, directory of social serv. type jobs nationwide. 4 Jobs in Rehabititation Service, place- ent listings for groups working with handicapped. Current Openings in S.E. Mich. Area, others nationwide, come in and browse: Hawthorne Center, Northville, Child care workers, male only for resident trettment center. Full time or part time if taking 6 hrs. and have more than 56 hrs. Any, area of study. 4 St. Regis Paper Co., Detroit, Plant Controller, BBA/MBA plus 4-6 years experience,. Detroit Civil Service: Nutritionist, X- ray technicians, med. tech., inhalation therapists, isotope tech. UM BARBERS 8:30-5:15 P.M. MON.-SAT. 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