100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

September 10, 1974 - Image 9

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1974-09-10

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Tuesday, September 10, 1974

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Nine

Yankees

By The Associated Press
BOSTON - Chris Chambliss
and Elliott Maddox each drove
in two runs last night, helping
the New York Yankees beat the
Boston Red Sox 6-3 to take over
sole possession of the American
League East lead.
THE YANKEES snapped an
11-game Fenway Park losing
streak and took a one-game
lead over the Red Sox in the
torrid division race.
George "Doc" Medich, 18-12,
was the winning pitcher with
eighth-inning relief help from
Sparky Lyle. Medich gave up
two runs in the inning, one on
a homer by Carl Yastrzemski,
before Lyle came to the rescue.
The Yankees raked starter
Rogelio Moret, 7-9, and Reggie
Cleveland for 13 hits and capi-
talized on three Boston errors
for two unearned runs.
THE VICTORY w a s New
York's first in Boston since
July 31, 1973, and only its sec-
ond in 22 appearances since the
1972 season.
O's win
MILWAUKEE - Bobby Grich

IDaily
Sports
NIGHT EDITOR:
BRIAN DEMING
singled with two out in the 11th
inning and eventually scored the
winning run on a wild pitch by
Tom Murphy, giving the Orioles
a 6-5 victory over the Milwau-
kee Brewers last night.
Mike Cuellar, pitching with
only two days rest, extended
his string of scoreless innings
to 25 until Ken Berry doubled
in a run in the Brewer sev-
enth. He had won his previous
two starts by 1-0 scores.

topp
Chicago Cubs to a 9-4 victory
o v e r Pittsburgh yesterday,
snapping the Pirates' six-game
winning streak.
The loss was only the third in
the last 17 games for the Na-
tional League East leaders and
was charged against 21-year-old
Larry Demery, 6-5, who had
won his previous six decisions.
THE TRIUMPH was the ninth
for the last-place Cubs against
the Pirates in 14 meetings this
year and went to starter Steve
Stone, 7-5, who needed help in
the seventh.
Chicago broke the tie with
three runs in the third. With
one out, Don Kessinger singled
and Cardenal walked. MoralesI
followed with his two-run dou-'
ble, and Steve Swisher singled
home the third run.
* * *

le

Bosox

came in the eighth for the finall
runs of the game for the
Dodgers, leaders in the National;
League West.
Zahn, a 27-year-old former
Michigan player who pitched
his first complete game in the
major leagues, struck out two
and walked four in raising his
record to 3-4.
The Cincinnati Reds, mean-+
while, kept pace with the'
Dodgers by whipping the Padres
8-3.
* * *
Cards dumped
ST. LOUIS - Jim Lonborg
pitched a two-hitter and JerryI
Martin and Mike Anderson sin-
gled home runs last night to;
lead the Philadelphia Phillies
to a 2-0 victory over the St.

Louis Cardinals, whose record
seeking Lou Brock did not steal
a base.
The loss kept the Cardinals
2 games behind the Pitts-
burgh Pirates in the National
League East race.
BROCK WAS thwarted in his
bid for a record-tying 104th
stolen base when he was thrown
out on an attempted steal of
second base in the sixth inning.
Lonborg, 15-11, yielded only
a third-inning single by Mike
Tyson and an eighth-inning sin-
gle by Bake McBride. John
Curtis, 8-13, was the loser.
Philadelphia scored its win-
ning run in the second inning
when Greg Luzinski walked,
advanced, on a passed ball and
scored on Martin's one-out sin-
gle to left-center.

AP Photo
YANKEE third baseman Graig Nettles slides safely into home plate while Red Sox catcher
Bob Montgomery attempts to pick up the dropped ball. Nettles appropriately salutes the
umpire's decision in the win which placed the Yanks alone atop the American League East-
ern Division standings.

EARL WILLIAMS' first- Dodgers dance
ning sacrifice fly scored Paul Ag
Blair with the first Baltimore ATLANTA - Hot-hitting Steve
Brun Garvey c r a c k e d a two-run
The Orioles made it 2-0 in the homer and Ron Cey belted a
fourth when a run scored on a three-run shot to back the four-
double play. Blair hit a homer hit pitching of rookie Geoff
f or Baltimore in the fifth and' Zahn and lead the Los Angeles
Baylor hit one in the sixth.an Dodgers to an 8-1 victory over
Brooks Robinson's double de- the Atlanta Braves last night.
livered an eigh nin g un f Garvey, extending his hitting
the Orioles, string to eight games, drilled'
th Oile.his 20th homer of the season in
the Dodgers' three-run third in-
Bucs downed ning off Atlanta starter Buzz
CHICAGO - Home runs by Capra, 13-8, giving Los Angeles
Jose C a r d e n al and Andre a 4-0 edge.
Thornton plus a two-run double
by Jerry Morales powered the CEY'S THREE-RUN b 1 a s tI

lish

I

drub

Engineers

Texas Instruments
INCORPORATED
CA LCU LA TOR~hS,
IN STOCK
TI-1500 . . $ 59.95 SR-10 .... $ 69.95
TI-2500 . $ 44.95 SR-11 .... $ 79.95
TI-2550 .. $ 69.95 SR-20 .... $139.95
TI-2510 .. $ 39.95 TI-3500 $ 79.95
TI-4000 .. $119.95
WE ACCEPT
BANKAMERICARD COWEACCEPT
COMPANY P.O'S
ULRICH'S Bookstore 549 East Univ. Ave.

ATLANTA (P) - Notre Dame, opening kickoff 32 yards.
embarrassed when its defense Rudy Allen hit on all three of1
was shredded for an early his passes for 31 yards, includ-'
touchdown, rallied behind Tom ing an eight-yard touchdown
Clements' passing and running toss to Jimmy Robinson with
plus a brilliant goal-line stand 8:14 left in the opening period.;
and smothered Georgia Tech Notre Dame drew even with
31-7 last night. less than five minutes remain-
The victory by the defend- ing in the session after Drew
ing national college football Mahalic recovered a fumble by
champions, before a non-sell- David Sims at the Yellow
out crowd of 45,228, plusea Jacket 14.
national television audience, It took Notre Dame only
spoiled the coaching debut of four plays to score, withj
ex-Georgia Tech quarterback Wayne Bullock hurdling the
Pepper Rodgers at his alma right side for the final yard.
mater. Dave Reeve kicked the point
Notre Dame, No. 1 at the for a 7-7 deadlock with 4:39
close of the 1973 campaign but remaining.7
ranked third in The Associated ;
Press' preseason poll for 1974,
took advantage of a costlyr
Georgia Tech f u m ble and
caught up before the first
period was over.S
The Irish took the lead when
freshman Dave Reeve kicked
a 22-yard field goal on the sec- I
and play of the second quarter
following an 80-yard march. IJ ba
Georgia Tech surprised the BOSTON-The New York Ya
Irish by methodically march- acquisition of Alex Johnson from
ing 68 yards to score after The controversial Johnson w
Randy Rhino returned the runs and 41 runs batted in for t
:::::::: almost exclusively as a designa
major league team.

The Irish threatened late in session, stopping the Jackets --
the quarter when Tom Clements three times inside the one after
and Art Best combined on a Danny Myers had raced 43T
35-yard run to midfield. Cle- yards to the Irish three.
ments got most of the yardage Notre Dame pushed its lead
before lateralling to Best. to 17-7 at halftime with an 80-
Moments later, Clements fired yard drive in the closing
a 21-yard pass to Pete Dem- minutes.t
merle at the Tech six and the Clements picked apart the
quarter ended with Notre Dame! Tech defense by completing six
on the five, passes for 81 yards in the drive. GREENSBORO, N. C. W)-
The touchdown came on a David Thompson sank five con-
After an incomplete pass, sevencutive free throws the clos
Reeve kicked a 22-yard field seve-yard pass from Clements seuiefe$hrw$ntecs
to Demmerle with 55 secondsI ing minutes Monday night to
goal eight seconds into the remaining. Reeve kicked thei lead the United States to a 67-
second period to give the Irish extra point. 66 international basketball vic-
a 10-7 lead. Notre Dame dominated the tory over the Soviet Union.
Notre Dame staged a goal- third quarter, but could not Thompson's free throws en-
line stand on Tech's next pos- manage a score until the final I abled the Americans to stave
minute. off a closing rally by the deter-
The Irish marched 50 yards mined Soviets and their pow-
to the Tech 21 with the second erful center Alexander Belov.
'half kickoff, as Bullock ran for' It was the fourth victory in
24 yards and Clements hit Dem- five games for the American
The D ail merle with a key 17-yard pass. collegiates during the Russians'
The drive s t a 11 e d, however, current tour of the United
when Clements overthrew Dem- States.
merle on a fourth down pass. It appeared, however, that
Clements connected with Rob- the Sovietswere going to pull
in Weber for 28 yards to the out a victory. Down by as
inkees announced yesterday the Tech 34 midway through the many as seven points midway
the Texas Rangers on waivers. quarter, but again the drive through the second half, the
as batting .291 with four home fizzled. Russians came back behind the
he Rangers. He had been used Notre Dame's only score in inside shooting of Belov, a 6-
ted hitter for Texas, his sixth the quarter came on a 22-yard foot-6, 23-year-old center from
drive after Jim Stock recovered Leningrad who played on the
a fumble by Sims. Bullock 1972 Olympic championship
scored on a one-yard plunge team.
with 32 s e c o n d s 'remaining. Belov's inside play befuddled
Reeve's kick sent the Irish into a series of American defenders
ety Rick Penney, sidelined with the final quarter with a 24-7 during the Soviets' stretch
miss Saturday's season-opener lead. drive. To prove his versatility,
ifnntbnll CnnhB bI Cnmnr

i hits foul,
eat Soviets,
he also rebounded and brought
the ball up court against the
American press.
Belov's layup put the Soviets
ahead 65-63 with two minutes
left. Thompson replied with two
free throws and then Belov lost
his temper.
He snatched a rebound from
North Carolina State's Phil
Spence and was about to shoot
an easy layup when a foul was
called on teammate Yuri Pav-
lov, stopping play. In frustra-
tion, Belov threw the ball to-
ward the ceiling, drawing a
technical foul.
Thompson, an All-American
from N. C. State, canned the
two free throws.

Ann Arbor, Mich.

662-3201

N.

. ............ .,. v.. ., ., ....... momij

I

A n Alternative

One Semester in

England

INNER SPACE:
The Last Frontier

Applications are now being accepted
from undergraduates and graduates in-
terested in semester of study in Educa-
tion at the UNIVERSITY OF SHEF-
FIELD or the UNIVERSITY OF KEELE,
Winter term, January '75 to June'75.
Applicants must also a p p l y for the
teacher certification program.
APPLICATION DEADLINE: SERT. 19, 1974
Applications are available in Room 4117, School
of Education, can be sent upon request, tele.
764-5496.

Moior League
Stand~ne.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East
W L Pct. GB
New York 75 65 .536 -
Boston 74 66 .529 1
Baltimore 74 66 .529 1
Ceead6,70.9 1Milwaukee 67 75 ,472 9
Detroit 65 76 .461 10%,
West
Oakland 81 61 .570 -
Texas 75 68 .524 614
Kansas City 70 70 .500 10
Minnesota 70 71 .496 10%
Chicago 70 72 .493 11
California 56 86 .394 25
Yesterday's Results
Cleveland 7, Detroit 1
New York 6, Boston 3
Minnesota 3, Chicago 1
Caifornia 4, Texas 1, first game
Oakland 3, Kansas City 0, first
game
Baltimore 6, Milwaukee 5, 11 inn.
Today's Games
Detroit (Lolich 16-17) at Cleve-
land (Peterson 8-li), 7:30.
New York (Dobson 15-14) at Bos-
ton (Tiant 20-11), 7:30.
Chicago (Kucek 1-1) at Minnesota
-(Albury 6-8), 8:30.
Baltimore (McNally 14-10) at Mil-
waukee (Champion 10-3). 8:30.
Kansas City (Briles 4-5) at Cali-
fornia (Tanana 10-17), 11 p.m.
Only games scheduled
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East

* *
Hawke ye hurt
IOWA CITY, Iowa-Free safe
a sprained knee, will probably
at Michigan, University of Iowa
said yesterday.
Sophomore Jim Caldwell, ar
last year, will replace Penney.
* *

Experience Arica
Wed., Sept.
8 P.M.

11

oo a010l ;acn 10 wmmings ,
part-time starter at cornerback
'4

Trevino triumps p
AKRON, Ohio-Lee Trevino defeated South African Gary
Player in a sudden death playoff yesterday to win the World
Series of Golf. The victory was worth $50,000 to the PGA cham-
pion.
Trevino has now won the U.S. Open twice, the British Open
twice, the PGA, the World Series and the World Cup. Only the
Masters green jacket is missing from his collection of trophies.
JOIN The University of Michigan
Meetings every Thursday-
311 West Engineering
7:45 p.m.
Rides leave Rive Gauche (corner E. University
and Hill) every Saturday 8-9 a.m. for club lo-
cation Bose Line Lake.
WASHERS & DRYERS
NO WAITING!
OPEN 24 HOURS
ATTENDANT ALWAYS
ON DUTY
MR. STADIUM

k.e.i. martial arts studio
teaches Okinawan Shorinyu Karate as:
-a philosophic discipline
-a means of self-defense
-a sport
217 e. washington
994-3620

r-- 04

Michigan Union
FREE

aar--
OIL

sigma chapter

presents

.U

0

t_ w - - -_ ._ . _ _ -- _ __ _ _ _ _

i
I

Pittsburgh
St. Louis
Philadelphia
New York
Montreal
Chicago

76
74
70
65
61
57
West

L
64
67
71
73
77
81

Pct.
.543
.525
.496
.471
.442
.413

GH
2' 5
6%
14
18

GROUP GUITAR LESSONS
6 Consecutive Weeks,
Materials Included,
ONLY $12.00
We also teach
flute, banjo, recorder,
bass, sax, drums, piano,
oboe, and clarinet.
FOR ENROLLMENT, CALL 769-4980:
ANN ARBOR MUSIC MART
336 SOUTH STATE
Open 10:00 a.m.-7:0 p.m. Mon.-Fri.; Sat. 'til 6:00
_ _ - _ _ - - - - - - - - - -

E
I
I
i
I

cornedian
IN
CONCERT

'I

:. r

Los Angeles 88 52 .529 -
Cincinnati 85 56 .603 3y'
Atlanta 78 64 .549 11
Houston 71 69 .507 17
San Francisco 65 76 .461 23%2
San Diego 51 91 .359 38
Monday's Games
Chicago 9, Pittsburgh 4
Los Angeles 8, Atlanta 1
Cincinnati 8, San Diego 3
New York 7, Montreal 1
Philadelphia 2, St. Loui , 0
San Francisco 8, Houston 6
Today's Games
Pittsburgh (Kison 7-7 or Ellis 12-9)
at Chicago (Reuschel 13-10), 2:30.
Los Angeles (Sutton 14-9) at At-
lanta (Morton 14-9). 6 p.m.
San Diego (Palmer 2-5 or Mc-
Intosh 0-i) at Cincinnati (Gullett
15-10), 8:05.
Montreal (McAnally 6-13) at New
York (McGraw 6-7), 8:05.
Philadelphia (Ruthven 8-11) at
St. Louis (Foster 7-9), 8:30.
San Francisco (Caldwell 13-3) at
Houston (Roberts 9-11), 8:35.
i Ir mADI ETE RF l I

also
featuring

IABE14tLI

,eel
IL

Sat. September 14
Hill Auditori m 8 p.m.
Tickets *4, 5,&$

I

-
'
h :
".

COIN LAUNDRY &
DRY CLEANING
1958 S. INDUSTRIAL
South of E. Stadium Blvd.
668_7928

°.

0

transcendental meditation
as taught by
MAHARISHI
e MAHESH YOGI
"'Provides deen rest -

-1

THE
COPY
MILL

J

on sale at
Michigan Union

Hudson's
Grinnell's
Bop Shop.
& Trotter House

,
ml' *'

!'t

1
..

TWO COPY MACHINES

I

Imo ' '"j "ice ' _ . ' '' " 1 " .. r

''7J''

C', :-"- Ia . ;.

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan