Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, September 8, 1974 By ROGER ROSSITER Tailback won't be a problem for the 1974 Michigan Wolver- ines, at least if yesterday's scrimmage is any indication. Gordon Bell, Bo Schembechler's number one tail man, found paydirt twice in the regular's 26-10 victory over the reserves in Michigan Stadium, and his team backups Rob Lytle and fresh- man Joe Holland each turned in strong performances. Holland also scored on a 13-yard scamp- er. What the scrimmage really proved is open to debate. Schembechler didn't seem all that enthused with the day's events. "I didn't see anything shapE particularly impressive," he said in summarizing the scrim- mage. "They're definitely not fresh, and that may have a lot to do with it." Competition remains open for a number of starting spots, notably fullback, defensive right tackle, the defensive ends, middle guard, and wide side halfback. Middle guard Tim Davis and fullback Chuck Heater have yet to return to practice, and wheth- er or not they . heal quickly enough will determine if each starts. Soph Jerry Vogele and froshj Scott Corbin appear the heirs apparent at fullback, while Rick Koschalk has been handling the middle guard duties. Dan Jilek, Larry Banks and Larry Johnson are all vying for the defensive end positions. Come Saturday one will be rid- ing the bench. With defensive tackle Bill Ho- ban now ruled out for the open- er the right tackle spot belongs to eitheryGregtMorton or John Hennessey. Both have looked good. Defensive back Tom Drake, of whom Schembechler once said, "He's the best at the1 position I've ever coached," injured his left shoulder in yesterday's scrimmage. Drake had been the odds on choice at wide side halfback, but now converted tailback Harry Banks may get the job. Sophomore .im Smith will get the starting call at split "end ahead of last year's starter Keith Johnson. Schembechler said that decision was made "primarily because I intend to use Johnson at a number of positions, including as a backup to Chapman at wingback." Bo always likes to ready per- sonnel two-deep at every po- sition, but he admits right now he's not all that sure who some of the backups will be. "We're still looking for re- serves at tight end, fullback and at linebacker," he said. Schembechler did decide that left guard would be his shuttle position for bringing in plays. Jim Armour and Kirk+ Lewis will be the men saddled I i 1 up Daily Sports NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN KAHLER s 2 with that responsibility. Th Wolverines elected their captains for the 1974 season, and to no one's surprise they are the ' temsoffensive and defensive sparkplugs, Dennis;r Frnki and Dave Brown. Both are threed ya stresand all-America . hopefuls. Freshman John Anderson gain- ,1 ed official recognition as Michi - gan's regular punter with Kurt,. .....:...:,....:. .x -: . .t::'<. amedesignated as his re,?Y serve. :t::::: }" The Wolverines will go into regular game week workouts r starting with a sweatsuit run- XX...i si:ii:?K: ::.. ::::::." ning workout Monday, two4dys,.{. of heavy hitting..Tuesday and Wednesday, and then progres- -S. sively lighter action on Thurs- ''.iY::'::>':ii- day and Friday. The Iowa Hawk- r eyes come to town Saturday, and agrees that they will pose no threat to the Wolverines' bid for Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN their fourth consecutive Big Ten BUCKEYE QUARTERBACK Cornelius Greene w ill get nowher e on this play, since Dave Brown (6) and Walt Williamson (91) championship. are closing in on him. Two season of stellar play at safety has netted Brown a co-captainship on' this year's Wolverine team. [IoranblstsunID dgr Captains Franklin and Brown Yanks manage split on Gura whitewash From Wire Service Reports NEW YORK - Graig Nettles slammed a home run in the second inning and preserved Larry Gura's five-hit shutout with a brilliant fielding play in the fifth as the New York Yankees edged the Detroit Ti- gers 1-0 to split yesterday's doubleheader and hold onto first place in the American League East. The Tigers took the opener 8-3 behind the five-hit pitching of Luke Walker and John Hiller. The split left the first-place Yankees one game in front of Baltimore and Boston. Leon Roberts, former Mich- igan player, drove in the tie- breaking run in the opener with his first major league hit and Aurelio Rodriguez and Gary Sutherland added two- run singles as the Tigers scored five times in the fourth inning for a 6-1 lead. Nettles, who hit a two-run homer in the first game, wal- loped his 17th home run of the season with two out in the sec- ond inning of the nightcap off Woodie Fryman, 5-8. It was only his sixth homer since he tied a major league record of hitting 11 in the month of April. In his second at bat, Net- tles was on first base with another safety, or so it seem- ed. Michigan graduate Bill Freehan employed his edca- tion when he discovered Net- ties had been using an illegal bat. Nottl s nsimmnedintelv sig- naled out. The Tigers then rais- ed the auestion of whether or not the home run should count. It turned out to be the game winning run, so the League office should announce its de- cision very soon. Marvin Lane doubled with one ot in the Detroit fifth for the on1v extra-base hit off Gira, 2-0. Third baseman Nettles then made a diving stab of Ed Brink- rpan's smash and threw him cut and f i e I d e d Ron LeFlore's trirkv honner deen behind the bag and retired the sneedy cen- ter fielder. The second-came tr iN m n h was the Yankees' 18th in their last 23 Fames. In the onener, loser Rudy Mov. 6-3, held the Tigers to one hit and an unearned run o ,r the first three innings while striking ot five, but had his nersonal five-game w1n"inu streak snanned when the Tigers erupted' i the fourth on four singles and three walks. Al K'iine drew a leadoff walk a"d Bill Freehan singled. After tPesaie Sanders flied out, Rob- erts slapped a single up the middle for the go-ahead run. ' A walk to Marvin Lane loaded the bases and Rodriguez slam- med a single to left for a 4-1 lead. May walked Brinkman to reload the bases and was re- placed by Mike Wallace. After LeFlore fanned, Sutherland sin- gled tocenter for the other two runs. Freehan hit his 12th home run in the seventh for Derroit's final run. Luke Walker, 5-3, making his seventh start of the season and first since Aug. 5, allowed five hits before giving way to John Hiller with two on and two out in the sixth. Hiller, who has won 16 games, re- tired pinch hitter Walt Wil- liams on a grounder and went on to earn his 11th save. By The Associated Press a one-out walk to Pete Rose CINCINNATI - Joe Morgan's and then served Morgan's home two-run homer in the eighth run, his 20th of the baseball inning spoiled Mike Marshall's season. record-tying 92nd relief appear- ance and gave the Cincinnati THE DODGERS took a 5-0 Reds a 7-5 victory over the Los lead after two innings, scoring Angeles Dodgers yesterday. four times in the second. Bill THE REDS' victory cut the Buckner's two-run homer routed Dodgers' lead in the National Cincinnati starter Clay Kirby,1 League West to 2 games. who was victimized by two hits, Marshall, 13-11, tying his own two walks and two wild pitches.I relief appearance record set The Reds charged back on last year with the Montreal Ex- D a v e Concepcion's three - run' pos, came into the game in the homer in the third and nar- psxth can ino thege in sther rowed it to 5-4 in the fifth on sixth inning in relief of starter Bench's 28th homer, a solo shot. Andy Messersmith and pitched out of trouble. But in the eighth, he gave up CINCINNATI drove Messer- smith from the mound after Bench's homer, tying it at 5-5 on Concepcion's run-scoring sin- 1b '1'1 gle after a walk to Dan Driessen ' and single by Cesar Geronimo., i Cards edge bases, Ron Hunt hit a shot that fourth when Ted Sizemore drew forced Simmons at the plate. a leadoff walk and scored two ST. LOUIS - Lou Brock's But then Brock laced a hard outs later on Simmons' double. bases-loaded single in the ninth grounder up the middle, beyond inning brough thome Ken Reitz the outstretched glove of Mets ST. L O U I S. threatened to with the winning run, giving the shortstop Bud Harrelson. move ahead in the sixth on a St. Louis Cardinals a 2-1 victory New York took a 1-0 lead single by Sizemore and two over the New York Mets. when John Milner doubled to walks, but Jon Matlack, 12-11, right-center with one out is the fanned McBride to end the WITH THE score tied 1-1, second inning, continued to;inning. Ted Simmons led off the ninth third, on Reggie Smith's error Brock walked in the opening with a walk. Bake McBride, at- and came home on Wayne Gar- inning but was picked off first tempting to sacrifice, hit into a rett's single up the middle, base by Matlack and did not forceout, but Reitz looped a But the Cardinals, after wast- add to his season stolen base single to right, McBride taking ing a two-out triple by winningItotal of 101. He remained there third. After Dan Godby was in- pitcher Bob Gibson, 9-12, in the short of Maury Wills' record tentionally walked to load the third, tied the game in the of 104. Smoking Orioles to i ti ,j The Women's Intercolle- giate volleyball team will be holding a practice at Bar- bour Gym today from 2-5. Anyone interested in joining the team is welcome to stop 'by. TRANSCEN DENTAL MEDITATION Red Sox halt losing streak Clay Carroll, 11-4, who re- lieved starter Clay Kirby, was the w inning pitcher with ninth- inning relief help from Fred Norman. I fl By The Associated Press CLEVELAND - The amazing Baltimore Orioles ran their shut- out string to 54 innings-an American League record-in a 3-2 decision over the Cleveland Indians Saturday. Ross Grimsley, 17-12, who started the Orioles' current 10- game winning streak on Aug. 29, pitched shutout ball until the ninth inning when the Indians finally scored on Charley Spikes' two-run homer. Bob Reynolds relieved Grimsley 'after the hom'er and nailed down the vic- tory. The Orioles, who had five previous shutouts to break an AL record, snapped the score- less inning streak of 47 set by the 1947 Indians when Grims- ley blanked Cleveland over the first two innings. The major league record of scoreless innings is 56, held by the Pittsburgh Pirates of 1903. The Orioles took a 1-0 lead off loser Gaylord Perry, 18-10, in the third inning when Enos Ca- bell walked, moved to second on a fielder's choice bouncer, third on a bunt single and scored on Paul Blair"s sacrifice fly. Tommy Davis made it 2-0 in the fourth when he scored on run and gave the Boston Red Sox a 4-3 victory over the Mil- waukee Brewers Saturday. The victory snapped an eight- game losing streak for Boston. With two out in the 10th, Pet- rocelli singled off Milwaukee relief ace Tom Murphy, 7-6, and Tim McCarver lined a shot to right field that bounced into the seats for a ground rule double. After Dick McAuliffe was intentionally walked, load- ing the bases, Guerrero blooped his game-winning single to right. Boston starter Bill Lee was almost constantly in trouble, but managed to escape from each threat except for the third inning. With one out, Ken Berry dou- bled to right. George Scott flied out, but Johnny Briggs beat out a high chopper to third for a single. Gorman Thomas, who had three hits, doubled low off the left field wall, scoring Berry and Briggs. Bob Mitchell then lined a single to left, bringing home Thomas. The Red Sox, shut out in four of five previous starts, had scored only three runs in SO in- nings before breaking out with a pair of tallies in the fourth. Juan Beniquez led off with a Morgan hit his homer while SCO RES injured. He had sprained his left ankle while running the -- bases in the second inning and Miami, Ohio 39, Eastern Michigan 0 eventually had to leave the Northwestern 14, Maine 7 game in the ninth. Syracuse 23, Oregon State 15 The Dodgers started their scoring in the first when Lopes No. Carolina St. 33, Wake Forest 15 led off with a double, moved to Richmond 14, Villanova 13 third on an infield out and Tampa 28, Chattanooga 0 scored on a sacrifice fly by! Jimmy Wynn, his 100th RBI of Kent state 21, Central Michigan 14 the season. Western Michigan 33, Texas, Arling- ton 6 | AS TAUGHT BY MAHARSHI MAHESH YOGI * Practical aspect of the science of creative intelli- gence. " Provides deep rest and relaxation as preparation for dynamic activity. " Life expand in fulfillment " Introductory Lecture: single and Dw ed. Carl Ya Evans at se Cooper ground to right, scori rocelli then t slump with a to left. vight Evans walk- RON CEY opened the second Morgan State 10, Jackson State & strzemski forced with a double, went to third on' cond, but Cecil a wild pitch and scored on Concordia, St.P. 14, Augustana, S.D. 7 led a sharp single Lopes' sacrifice fly. Bill Rus- North Dakota 3, Nebraska, Omaha 0 ng Beniquez. Pet- sell, who had walked, scored broke an 0-for-21 from third on Kirby's second'Olivet 20, Defance 7 run-scoring single wild pitch. Buckner's homer Tennessee Tech 17, South Dakota 13 made it $-0. Tennessee 17, UCLA 17 F1I Chadron State 22, So. Dakota State 8 TUESDAY, SEPT. 10--8 P.M. HENDERSON ROOM-3rd Floor MICHIGAN LEAGUE for further information contact 761-8255 MALONEY WINS DEBUJ I Volunteers tie shortstop Frank Duffy's Mark Belanger walked seventh, stole second and on Rich Coggins' single, the Orioles a 3-0 edge. * * * error. in the scored giving Skid stops BOSTON - Mario Guerrero's bases-loaded single with two out in the 10th inningbrought home Rico Petrocelli with the winning From Wire Service Reports KNOXVILLE, Tenn. - UCLA and Tennessee battled to a 17- 17 deadlock yesterday in an in- tersectional football game fea- turing spectacular running and passing by the Bruins' John Sciarra and the Vols' Condredge Holloway. UCLA's Brett Wright missed a 40-yard field goal with 14 sec- onds remaining that would have given the Bruins a victory in a nationally televised game. UCLA spotted Tennessee a 10-point first quarter lead, stormed back to tie the count in the third and forged ahead 17-10 on a 13-yard scoring pass from Sciarra to end Norm Anderson with 6:29 left in the fourth period. Tennessee came back to tie the game at 17-all on a 12-yard rollout by Holloway with 3:11 to play, capping an 80-yard drive in seven plays. H o I o w a y electriifed the crowd of 57,560 by unloading a 74-yard touchdown bomb to fleet Stanley Morgan on the second play of the error-filled contest. Later in the first period, Ten- nessee boosted its lead to 10 points on a 47-yard field goal by barefooted Ricky Townsend. But Sciarra began finding his receivers late in the second period and drove UCLA from its 20 to the Tennessee 3 from where White booted a 20-yard field goal. Orangemen win SYRACUSE, N.Y.--Capitaliz- ing on several Oregon State University errors, a hard-driv- ing Syracuse University made the debut of head coach Frank Maloney a success yesterday by scoring 16 points in the final quarter to defeat the Beavers 23-15. Maloney took over as head coach of Syracuse this season after the Orangemen had played for 25 years under Ben Sch- wartzwalder, who retired after a dismal 2-9 season last year. Maloney formerly assisted Bo Schembechler at Michigan. The Orangemen turned the game around in the final quarter by intercepting two passes by Beaver quarterback Alvin White and turning them into touchdowns. Linebacker UCLA! Ray Preston picked off the first one and six plays later tailback Tim Kinsey scored from the one to give the Orangemen a 17-7 lead. A second pass by White was deflected by Syracuse's John Rafferty to safety Tim Moresco, who ran the ball in from the 17 for the third Syracuse touch- down. Oregon State started the scor- ing at 7:45 of the second quar- ter after Syracuse safety Bob Mitch fumbled a fair catch on the Orangemen's 14-yard line. Four plays later, OSU scored when fullback Dick Maurer ran off tackle from three yards out. Concordia, Neb. 14, Culver-Stockton 14 Northern Iowa 31, Kans. State, Pitt. 22 Stout State 9, Hamline Univ. 7 Wis. LaCrosse 45, Northland Col. 0 Wis. Platteville 9, Kentucky St. 7 Wis. Stevens Pt. 30, Morningside 0 Wis. Whitewater 14, North Michigan 0 Fullerton State 10, Northern Arizona 7 UM stylists Open 8:30-5:15 p.m. Mon.-Sat. UM UNION WITH COUPON One double load of Laundry in our WASCO JR. Washing Machine. WASHERS and DRYERS NO WAITING! ALL NEW EQUIPMENT F I I Maior League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East NATIONAL LEAGUE East New York Boston Baltimore Cleveland Milwaukee Detroit Oakland Texas Kansas City Chicago Minnesota California w 74 73 73 67 67 64 West' 80 74 69 69 68 54 L 64 65 65 70 73 75 60 67 68 70 70 85 Pet. .536 .529 .529 .489 .479 .460 .571 .525 .504 '.496 .493 .388 GB 1 1 6% 7 10/ 9/ 10%/ 11 26% Pittsburgh St. Louis Philadelphia New York Montreal Chicago Los Angeles Cincinnati Atlanta Houston San Francisco San Diego w 75 74 68 63 61 56 West 86 84 77 70 64 51 L 63 65 71 73 75 80 52 55 63 68 75 89 Pct. GB .543 - .532 1 / .489 71/ .463 11 .449 13 .412 18 .623 - .604 2/ .550 10 .507 16 .460 221/ .364 36 WEIGHT CONTROL GROUP PROGRAM " AN INNOVATIVE APPROACH TO PERMANENT WEIGHT LOSS. " BASED ON BEHAVIOR MODIFICATION TECHNOLOGY * NOW HAVING STRIKING SUCCESS ACROSS THE COUNTRY. The WEIGHT CONTROL GROUP PROGRAM is a ten- week sequence of group and individual meetings di- rected by professional behavior scientists. The goal of COIN-OP DRY CLEANING 4 lb. Mini-loads 8 lb. Regular loads ' OPEN 24 HOURS *e ALWAYS ATTENDED a :: ~. Stadium Coin.Laundry & Dry Cleaning ; 1958 S. INDUSTRIAL HWY. E South of E. Stadium Blvd. ' ..668-7928 a A* lr r no Udw r r r rr r r r r r r I n ii m i.m mwm m-mm- m -m-mm m1 Yesterday's Games Yesterday's Results Baltimore 3, Cleveland 2 San Diego 8, Houston 4 Detroit 8-0, New York 3-1 Chicago 3. Philadelnhia 0 II