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October 15, 1970 - Image 8

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Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1970-10-15

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Thursday, October 15, 1970

Page Eight.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

PageEigt TE MCHIAN AIL

.

1

i

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May,
BALTIMORE ()-Lee May put'
the spark in Cincinnati's Big Red
Machine with a three-run homer
in the eighth inning that carried
the Reds back from the brink of
defeat to a 6-5 victory over Balti-
more in the fourth game of the
World Series yesterday.
Only one game from elimination
in the best-of-seven series after
Baltimore won the, first three
games, and trailing 5-3, the Reds
knocked out starting pitcher Jim
Palmer with a walk and Johnny
Bench's single. Then May greeted
reliever Eddie Watt with a blast
into the left field bleachers that
also ended Baltimore's 17-game
winning streak.
THE VICTORY, first for the
Reds in the four games played so
far in the best-of-seven series,
kept them in contention for the
big $15,000-a-man prize money
and ended the Orioles' bid to com-
plete a four-game series sweep
for the second time in five years.
The 6-foot-3, 205-pound May,
who follows heralded Tony Perez
and Johnny Bench in the Reds'
bating order and home run totals,
put Cincinnati ahead with drama-
tic suddenness when he tagged the
first pitch to him by reliever Ed
Watt into the left field bleachers
for a ,homer.
BIllboard
Michigan ticket manager
Don Weir urges all Michigan-
Michigan State ticket-holders
to arrive at the Stadium early
to avoid back-ups and delays
at the section entrances.

Machiml
Until then, despite several 'shaky
innings by starter Jim Palmer, the
Orioles seemed to be in command
as Brooks Robinson continued to
play a hero's role, adding four
hits to his accumulation while
Baltimore built a 5-3 lead.
The 33-year-old third baseman
delighted a sellout crowd of 53,007
with a homer and two Angles
while the Orioles headed for what
appeared to be their 18th straight
victory in an amazing season-
ending streak.
Robinson collected a n o t h e r
single after May had done his
damage, but even Brooks' magic
wasn't enough as the Reds battled
back despite several frustrating
starts that seemed to doom them
to elimination.
PALMER, who won the series
opener, had cruised into the eighth
with a five-hitter, although he
had difficulty with his control
and had been tagged for a fifth
inning homer by Pete Rose. But,
as in two other innings in which
the Reds scored, the 25-year-old
right-hander got into trouble, by
walking the leadoff hitter.
This time it was Perez. Balti-
more Manager Earl Weaver im-
mediately sent coach George Bam
berger out, to talk to Palmer. it
didn't help. Bench lined 'a single
down the left field line.
And so Palmer left, and Watt
came on. May, who hit 34 homers
during the regular season, lashed
into Watt's 'first pitch and sent
it sailing as a groan went through
the stunned partisan crowd.
May's homer, his second of the
series, gave him four runs batted
in for the day and brought his

totals to 6-for-14 with eigh
in the four games.
That shot not only put t
ahead, it seemed to con
change the momentum.'
Helms managed to scratch
gle off the glove of the b
fielding, Brooks 'Robinso
Perez, the Reds' third b
showed he could match th
a play of his own.
WHEN THE ORIOLESc
hn.t in the eighth, Boog
slammea a hot smash t
which Perez gloved back-
throwing to first where th
May put the tag on the
Baltimore first basemanf
collided heavily.
It still was far fromc
Clay Carroll, who came
relief when the Orioles
their last run in the sixt
into the ninth protectir
slim one-run lead.
He got Dave Johnson to
and pinch hitter Terry<
to bounce out. The Orioles

off

Orioles
at RBI's one more chance when pinch hit-
ter Merv Rettenmund reached
he Reds first on a wide throw to first by
mpletely Perez.
Tommy
i a sin- THEN CARROLL, who had re-
rilliant- tired 10 of the 11 hitters he had
n and faced, ended it by striking out
iaseman Don Buford, and the Reds were
iat with back in the series, hoping to con-
tinue their comeback in today's
fifth game.
came to The task facing the Reds is
Powell monumental, seen as it has to be
to third against the backdrop of history.
handed, and the fact that Manager Sparky
at man Anderson is short of pitching.
hulking He will go with either one of
as they three-left handers Jim Merritt or
relievers Wayne Granger or Milt
over as Wilcox today.
on in No team ever has come back
scored to win the series after being down
h, went 0-3; and the Orioles have 24-game
ng the winner Mike Cuellar ready to start
the fifth game.
foul out But the Reds showed in this one
Crowley they could: come from behind
got still against the odds.

*1v

1*

-Associated Press
LEE MAY wins yesterday's World Series game with a three run
homer. May's blast came in the eighth inning off Oriole reliever
Eddie Watt, giving the Reds' their first win of the Series, 6-5.

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tI

FOOTBALL P HILOSOPHER

le well knocks athletic stereotype,

lOctoberSpecials! Al Items Reduced for 31 Days

By JOHN PAPANEK
Not too many years ago, a col-
lege football player was a crew-
cut neanderthal who ate, slept, and
thought football day in and day
out. Today, the crew cuts are al-
most non-existent, players eat and
think different things, and where
they sleep is their own business.
Don't misunderstand. Football
today is more complex than it ever
has been, and requires much more
study and practice than it used
to. But in these changing tines,
even football players (yes, the
jocks of yesteryear) are evolving
into all-around human beings.
PETE NEWELL is one man who
11as evolved. Newell plays defenslive
tackle on Michigan's fourth-rank-
ed defense in the country. Pete
Newell is a philosophy major. Pete
Newell is a member of the Board
for control of Intercollegiate Ath-
letics. Pete Newell is, aht yes, a
social butterfly.
The big senior from Park
Ridge, Illinois finds time for all
these" things because he is an
individual and not just ahunk of
meat. "An athlete must be him-
self," Newell says. "What I do
should reflect my own feelings and

what I feel is important. L e t' s
face it, if I wanted to just play,
football and get good grades I
could do it. But there is a social
life involved, which is just as
important as academics, that I
would have to cut out."
Newell figures that if football
were looked at as a job, it would
add up to 0 to 45 hours a week,
which in the real world would
leave enough time for dinner, a
newspaper, and eight hoursof
sleep.
BUT COLLEGE football is not
played in the real world, and after
practice, players become students
with the same classroom respon-
sibilities that the rest of 'us have.
Consider Newell's day: All his
classes are between 8 a.m. and 1
p.m. From 2:00 to 3:00 every day
is a meeting where the players and
coaches talk over problems and
watch films.
From 3:00 to 4:00 he dresses
and gets taped for pratice. From
4:00 to 6:00 is practice. Then from
7:00 to 8:00 the players eat din-
ner at South Quad. Now tell me
you could go home after that and
do six hours of work. "It's really,
tough," reveals Newell.

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When it comes to the game of
football itself, Newell is very ana-
lytical. He does not identify with
players like Alex Karras or Dick'
Butkus who crave the blood of
relatively pint-sized quarter-
backs.
"I and most of the guys on our
team never feel that way. I'm
playing against guys my size and
ability. Ijust want to excelbat
what I do, not specifically beat
anybody. I want to prove that I
know more about the game and
have worked harder than the other
guy. To me football is not a brutal
game it's a tough game. It's a
team effort. If everyone d o e s
their job, then we win. We're not
the kind of team that looks for
cheap shots."
NEWELL HOLDS a rare distinc-
tion of also being a part of the
administration of the athletic de-
partment. He is a student mem-
ber of the Board for Control of In-
tercollegiate Athletics. The board
was set up by the Regents and it,
has direct control over Michigan's
voting policies at NCAA and Big
Ten meetings. The board approv-
es the athletic budget, salaries,
and most other matters handled
by Athletic Director Don C a n-
ham.
In his capacity as a board mem-
ber, Newell finds it difficult to
defend accusations leveled at the
;athletic department for spending
huge sums of money which could
find better uses, such as to finance
underpriviledged students or to.
help fortify the academic quality
of the university.
"But," he adds, "College ath-
letics has a real value, in that it
helps great numbers of u n d e r-
priviledged students who, if it
were not for athletics, would never
have had a chance to go to col-
lege. In my own case, if I hadn't
gotten a football scholarship. I'd
now be in some state teacher's col-
lege in Illinois.
Newel also denies athlete ex-
ploitation by the Michigan' ath-
letic department. Since athletic
scholarships are given for o n e
year periods only, it would seem
that a player who became dis-
abled permanently would lose his
grant as he would at most col-
leges around the country. Such is
not the case at Michigan. "When
I was recruited by Michigan,"

recalls Newell, "Bump Elliot prom-
ised me that my scholarship would,*
be renewed every year as long as
I didn't flunk out."
BUMP ELLIOTT, former Mich-
igan coach was a great man in
the eyes pf Pete Newell. When, a
new man named Schembechler
came along to replace him, Ne-
well was down. "I resented' Bo
for trying to replace Bump," he
reflects; "but now I'd give Bo
my right arm, left arm, or any-
thing else. He treats us as equals,
but democracy has no place on
the football field.
"There must be one man at they
.helm. So strict disciplinary rules
don't bother me. When I see how
much Bo sacrifices for us, I feel
I can't sacrifice enough for him.
Everything he tells us is for our
own good." Then, he added, "And
anyway, you don't wit to cross
Bo.' ", # ,.
The/ amount of freedom that an
athlete should have off the field
is a question being pondered now
all around the country' "If I
wanted to J'oin SDS," says, Newell,
"I don't think it ,would be so bad.
But when people read about it,
they think it's a reflection on the#
athletic department, the team and
the school. I might feel I'm hurt-
ing the department, which is
something I wouldn't want to do.
They've done a lot for me and I
think I owe them an awful lot
too."
Unlike many athletes, and like
any self-respecting philosophy
majors, Newell has his own phil-
osophy on politics and things in
general: "I share great involve-
ment with all those who want
change, but I'm down about the
way college kids are moving. I
have great concern for things tdW
get better. Demonstrations c a n
serve a purpose, but I'm afraid
people who aren't there get dis-
torted versions through the press."
As for Pete Newell's future, pro
football is a possibility, but lie is
not counting on , it. "If I get1
drafted, I'll go to camp and give
it my all," he says, "If not, then
I'll work this summer, then work
my way around Europe for a year.
Then I'd like to come back and go
to Law School."

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