Tuesday, September 24, 1'974' Page Seven THE MICHIGAN DAILY r usaSpebr2,17 H iHGNDIYPg ee .........: . 4. Today in Sports I L: P Sic transit . I ill " " . L oria Ben galis I By CLARKE COGSDILL and JOHN KAHLER DEVASTATION, DESPAIR and woe haunt Tiger Stadium, like the cobwebs in the rusting girders and the undernourished bats sweeping down from the third deck after their share of Hygrade's Ball Pa-k Franks. Jim Campbell has done what Lee Harvey Oswald, Jack Ruby, Sirhan Sirhan and James Earl Ray failed to do before him: assassinate the Bengals. Some optimists, the same people who began saving for Detroit World Series tickets a year ago, seem to think the local eroes will manage a miraculous turnaround sometime during e offseason. And you can see their point: if the Houston tros are willing to give Cesar Cedeno in exchange for Dave manczyk, and the Baltimore Orioles agree to send over Palmer, Cuellar, Grimsley, and Brooks Robinson in return for Aurelio Rodriguez, Detroit may have a shot next year. However, back in the world of reality, it will be dis- covered over the winter that the Tigers have few, if any players that any sane general manager would give up talent for. The names of Mickey Stanley and Ed Brinkman have been mentioned as trade bait, which shows the gullibility of the Detroit sports media. People -who pick up 33 year old outfielders, such as Stanley would be, do so for their bats, not their' gloves. As for Brink- man, not even Bungling Bing Devine of the Cardinals would give up ability for a .210 hitting shortstop with power, no matter ow good the man may ;be defensively.: The rest of the roster is composed of people the Tigers dare not trade (John Hiller), do not'care to trade(Ron LaFlore) or people that not even the Mets would accept in trade (Jim Ray). In fact, there is only one player on the whole roster that can seriously be considered as a candidate to be shipped else- where: Aurelio Rodriguez. Rodriguez arrived in the McLain deal. He was only 22 at the time, had slugged 19 homeruns the previous year (most of them with California), driven in 83, stole 15 bases, and played spectacularly in the field., Only the glove has held up-and that's why Aurelo is worth something in trade. A team which has everything 'else can afford a slick-fielding thirdbaseman who hits .220 consis- ently, strikes out too much, loafs on the bases, and loses more what little power he started with each year. Even with these liabiilties, Rodrigeuz would have been worth at least five games to Cincinnati this year-and look where that would have put them! But most depressing has been the Tigers' absolute inability to get anything out of the young talent in their system. Maybe the players have all .the skills. You can't really tell when a guy like Mary Lane spends six years on the farm, and comes up .a glaring hitch in his swing, and an absolute incapacity to understand what's going on whenever he's on base. As a class, the Tiger rookies don't know the strike zone, iaven't the faintest idea of how to get the jump on a pitcher, and seem impervious to the niceties of how to retire a batter. Trepichers, in particular, have a distressing habit of shining in Montgomery and fizzling at higher levels. Witness Lerrin LaGrow. One can boo Bill Freehan, laugh at Luke Walker, and hurl obscenities at Ralph Houk, the Miracle Major. But the fault for this sorry excuse for a baseball team belongs to Tiger owner John Fetzer and general' manager Jim Camp- bell. The Tigers have been incredibly good to the pocketbooks of Fetzer, consistently leading the American League in attendance. With the Tigers generating a profit, there was little incentive to upgrade the team. A financially secure Fetzer had no over- whelming urge to press Jim Campbell into making trades. And Campbell did nothing on his own. Now, they're beginning to pay the price for keeping their team in contention several years after it should' have been 'broken up. Inept baseball on the field and turnstiles gathering dust, are a fitting reward to such incompetance. Let it continue. If the Tiger fans continue to show good judgment by staying away, Campbell will be forced either to radically overhaul his entire organization, or seek employment elsewhere. Let's hope he's still on good terms with Bob Scheffing. Bigr] By ANDY GLAZERf On the whole, UCLA, Nebras- ka, Stanford, North Dakota, Colorado, Oregon State and Syr-I acuse would have preferred to be in Philadelphia last Saturday. But then again, anywhere wouldI have been better than a Big Ten city.. The Big Ten was veryi definitely the wrong place to be, as two major upsets and some solid all-around football restored much of the prestige1 the Big Ten had lost in recent years.- The most spectacular of the weekend's games was the con- test between Nebraska and Wis- consin. It had shaped up as an interesting battle even before the game: Wisconsin's Badgers had won their first road game in four years the week before (28-14 over Purdue), while Ne- braska had methodically pul- verized Oregon 61-7. The Cornhuskers carried the No. 4 spot in the polls into the game, and were prohibitive fa- vorites. But someone forgot to tell that to Wisconsin quarter- back Gregg Bohlig, who passed for 242 yards; the last 77 of these' came in one burst when Jeff Mack grabbed his long pass at the Nebraska 35 and outraced his defenders the rest of the way. The play, which came with 3Y2 minutes to go, brought to a head the delirium that had hit the Wisconsintbench two plays earlier when the Badgers held Nebraska to a field goal after the Cornhuskers had started with a first down at the two- yard line. Wisconsin Coach John Jar- dine called the game "the finest defensive effort we've ever had here." Small wonder. 'Meanwhile, out in Palo Alto another Big Ten team was mak- ing headlines. Illinois let Stan- ford score first, then shut them out the rest of the way in an impressive 41-7 rout. The Illini, who normally live or die by their defense, got four interceptions from Mike Gow, who led the nation in that cate- gory last year. One of those he returned 33 yards for what proved to be the winning touch- down. The game wasn't icel, though, until linebacker Tom Hicks re- covered two fumbles and made two important, tackles on a goal line stand to help the Illini pro- tect their 14-7 lead. After that, senior quarterback Jeff Hollen- bach directed two long touch- down drives to ice the game. Hollenbach had replaced starter Jim Kopatz, who suffered a: pinched nerve in his second offensive series. When ex-Michigan defensive line coach Frank Maloney brought his revamped crew ofI Syracuse Orangemen into East Lansing, he probably didn't ex- pect to be manhandled quite so1 badly by the team that Michigan1 beat 31-0 last year. But this time his players were wearing Orange, not Maize and Blue, and it made a' bit of a dif- ference. The Spartans shut out the Orange 19-0. Syracuse just never got un- tracked against a fine Spartan defensive effort, trailing in the eni first down department by the embarrassing margin of 23-4. The State scores came on a 30 yard TD pass from Charlie Bag- gett to Mike Jones and two fourth quarter runs by Rich Bass. Ohio State took the field down in Columbus against Oregon State and about the biggest up- set here was Woody's Buckeyes giving up 10 points to one of the lowlier Pac-8 teams. But the I l1exes Bucks had no problems scoring themselves in their 51-10 win. The Griffin brothers (yes, there's another one. Freshman Ray scored twice on runs of nine and 12 yards to go with big brother Archie's score) were so busy with the football that Len Willis figured if he didn't score when he got his hands on it, he wasn't going to get an- other chance. So he returned a kick-off 97 yards to add insult grid 'to injury. Archie, who has never been called anything less than amaz- ing, needed only a quarter and a half to get 134 yards. Oregon State Coach Dee Andros dis- covered during the game that "to beat Ohio State you have to stop Cornelius Greene and Archie Griffin." Now all he has to do is figure out a way. Minnesota also triumphed, 42- 30 over North Dakota, and the Golden Gophers seem to have found an offense. Quarterback Tom Dungy, who put 19 points on the board against Ohio State the week before, threw four touchdown passes (three of them to halfback Rick Upchurch) in the wide open battle. The Purdue Boilermakers can take comfort in the knowledge that everyone has a Miami of Ohio. The famed "Cradle of Coaches" school did it to the Boilermakers again this year, tying them at 7-7. Purdue Coach Alex Agase, who wasn't exactly thrilled when his boys lost to Miami last year, seems to be softening his hopes: "We had a chance to win it, but we didn't," said Agase, "I guess we're making a little progress."~ Indiana gave a reasonable ac- count of itself in losing to 18th ranked Arizona 35-20. The Hoos- iers actually led the Wildcats 14-7 before Bruce Hill passed for two touchdowps and an Arizona victory. Soviets tie Canadians VANCOUVER (A) - Alexan- der Maltsev and Alexander Gu- sev scored goals late in the third period Monday night and rallied the Russian national team to a 5-5 tie with Team Canada in the fourth game of their exhibition hockey series. The Soviet comeback wiped out the 5-2 lead the Canadians had built behind Bobby Hull's three-goal first-period and left the teams tied at one victory and two ties each entering the Russian phase of the series. Even lowly Northwestern mnan aged some sort of pride in their 49-3 lambasting at the hands of Notre Dame. The Fighting Irish managed only a 14-3 lead at halftime before running it up -to 'poll respectibility.' Not to be outdone, the Iowa Hawkeyes surpised everybody, including themselves, by pound- ing 12th-ranked UCLA, 21 to 10. It was the first victory ini thir- teen attempts for the doormats of the Big Ten. The fact that it came against the ,so-called mighty Bruins makes every- thing a bit sweeter. It was indeed a fine week- end for the Big Ten. Overall the Big Ten teams were 7-2-1 against outsiders. Not bad, con- sidering the vaunted Big Eight's only 8-7, and the Pac-8 has stumbled to 5-10-1 against its outside competition. The glory days of old may not be quite back yet . . . but it looks like the Big Two and Little Eight will soon become the Big Ten again. muscles :l.,W. !"}Y.".J'::i""J!":":}!"!{'!l.""". !:S.f. t"} . M1 I"l "1 ""V,.'VJ .. . "' Y Ji":1"}::4i' 't i . : .:: . v .:: ; MICHIGAN Ohio State Michigan State Wisconsin Illinois Purdue Iowa Indiana Minnesota Northwestern 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0> 0 L 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 Big Ten Stand ings Saturday's Games Navy at MICHIGAN So. Methodist at Ohio St. Purdue at Notre Dame Penn St. at Iowa Texas Christian at Minnesota Wisconsin at Colorado Indiana at Kentucky Michigan St. at UCLA Northwesternat Nebraska Washington St. at Illinois 'Sports of The, Daily Reserves bomb ND Michigan's varsity reserve football team opened their season on a happy note Sunday with a 31-12 win over the Notre Dame reserves. A crowd of 2,000 watched the game in South Bend. The Wolverines scored in every quarter, and never re- linquished the lead. The stubborn Michigan defense forced the Fighting Irish into mistakes. Dennis Brown's squad capitalized on the bad luck of the Irish with four fumble recoveries (out of ten made by Notre Dame), two pass in- terceptions, and a blocked punt. Notre Dame went to the air 43 times and completed 22 passes, but had trouble converting their gains to points on the scoreboard until the second half. The Irish had 371 yards in total offense to Michigan's 277. Shaun Szenderski blocked a Notre Dame punt in the first quarter to set up a score. Rex Mackall took the ball into the end zone on an eight yard run, with Steve Knickerbocker kick- ing the extra poin.t It was the Baby Blue's aerial attack that really shone. Quarterback John Ceddia threw two touchdown passes, a - 20 yarder in the second period, and a 50 yard bomb to Dennis Richardson in the, third quatrer. Michigan gained a total of 149 yards in the air. Notre Dame's first score came on an eight yard run by Cicco in the third quarter. The Irish also scored on a 30 yard pass from Forystek to Parseghian (head coach Ara's son). Both the extra point attempt and a two-point conversion failed. Wolverine { kicker Steve Knickerbocker was four for four on extra point attempts for the day, and also made a 26 yard field goal in the second quarter. Michigan's final score came on a 44 yard pass from Roger Bettis to Dave Harding. -KATHY HENNEGHAN Y Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN WOLVERINE DEFENSIVE END Larry Banks leaps high to deflect a pass thrown by Colorado quarterback Dave. Wil- liams during last Saturday's game. Thanks to the efforts of players-such as Banks, the mighty Michigan defense shut out the Buffaloes of Colorado, yielding just 181 yards in total offense to Colorado. -- -- --T-- - TOPPLE BRUINS Ha wkeyes By STEVE KIRSCHNER Well, it was an eventful week- end in college football, especial- ly if you're a Big Ten fan. Eventful, to say the least- Odds- makers are wondering what happened and maybe thinking that looking for a new line of work isn't such a bad idea after all. There were eight, yes eight, major upsets on Saturday, three of which were engineered by Big Ten teams. One of these is particularly interesting. IOWA - remember them? They played here a short time ago and were humbled by the Wolverines, 24-7, in a game in which Denny Franklin didn't even dress. The only thing that changed when it was over was that Iowa had lost twelve in a row. They still hadn't won a Daily Sportsr NIGHT EDITOR: JEFF SCHILLER game since 1972. And then there was UCLA, the Bruins, powerhouses in most everything these days and rank- ed twelfth nationally in football. Well, the Hawkeyes of Iowa broke their twelve game losing streak last Saturday and they did it in style. They' toppled the Bruins 21-10. QUARTERBACK Rob Fick, clicked ' on scoring passes of 38 EXTRA INNING BATTLE BuCS down Cardinals By The Associated Press ST. LOUIS - Richie Heb singled home a run in the inning, giving the Pittsburgh rates a 1-0 victory over the Louis Cardinals last night. The victory moved the Pirk within one-half game of Cardinals in their torrid ba for the National League E pennant. Paul Popovich singled Lynn McGlothen, 16-11, to 1 off the Pirate 10th. Pinch-, ner Miguel Dilone was sa ficed to second base by Rer Stennett and scored on Hebn base hit to right. Winner Jim Rooker, 14 scattered eight hits throughr innings and worked out o mild jam in the eighth inn Lou Brock, on first base vi forceout grounder, stole sec for his 115th steal of the sea but was thrown out trying Mador Leo AMERICAN LEAGUE East W LPct, New York 84 70 .545 Baltimore 83 71 .539 Boston 78 74 .513 Cleveland 74 80 .486 Milwaukee . 74 81 .477 DETROIT 71 82 .464 Western Division Oakland 86 68 .558 Texas 81 72 .529 Minnesota 80 74 .519 Chicago 75 78 .490 Kansas City 75 79 .487 California 61 93 .3961 I steal third. Ted Sizemore then and single after two were out in iner followed with a single, but the the sixth inning, but could not 10th Cardinals could produce no score. Pi-, more offense. Dave Parker was straded at St. Reliever Dave Giusti saved third in the Pittsburgh seventh the game for Rooker inthe 10th. following a two-base Cardinal ates After Stennett and Willie Star- error. the gell singled in the opening in- * * * attle ning, McGlothen retired 12 Pi- T split East rates in a row. Light-hitting ribe, Brewers spit Frank Taveras snapped the CLEVELAND -- T wo-run off shell with a scratch hit after homers by Charlie Spikes and ead two were out in the fifth inning. Leron Lee led the Cleveland run- Meanwhile, Rooker surender- Indians to a 7-4 decision over tcri- ed only Ken Reitz' leadoff sin- the Milwaukee Brewers for a nnie gle until Sizemore beat out a split of their twi-night double- er's bunt which rolled dead next to header yesterday. the third base foul line in the The Brewers scored four runs -11, fourth. in the ninth inning, two on Tim nine Reggie Smith followed with a Johnson's tie - breaking double, f a single to left field, but Pitts- and beat the Indians 6-2 in the ing. burgh shortstop Taveras con- first game. a a verted Ted Simmons' ground The Indians took a 2-0 lead in ond ball into a 'double play. the secoid game on Spikes' tson St. Louis then put Smith and homer, which followed Frank to Simmons on base with a walk Duffy's single. The Brewers ":.<:,;:<:>><:. .:... : cored three runs in the second inning; with Pedro Garcia 's RBI gue Standiinassingle capping the rally. The Indians tied the score in NATIONAL LEAGUE the fourth on Dave Duncan's East run-scoring single, then Lee pro- G Wt. Louis8; L Pct. GB vided the game-winning hit' with 1I Pittsburgh 81 72 .529 1/2 his homer in the sixth. 5 Philadelphia 75 78 .490 6Y After Johnson's double off the 10 Montreal 72 80 .474 9 left field fence broke a 2-2 tie in 101/. New York 69, 83 .454'12 the ninth inning of the first 121/2 Chicago 64 88' .421 17"g West game, Jack Lind and Don - Los Angeles 96 57 .627 - Money followed with run-scor- 42 Cincinnati 92 62 .597 42 ing doubles for the Brewers. 6 Atlanta 84 70 .545 12%- 102 Houston 78 75 .510 18 11 San Francisco 71 84 .458 26 25 San Diego 56 99 .361 41 ' - m -V ;hine and 30 yards within 52 seconds of the second period and UCLA never recovered. Dave Jackson caught the 38 yarder, giving Iowa a second period lead and after Andre Jackson scooped up a Bob Ferrell fumble two plays later, Fick connected with Mark Fetter for the second touch- down. The Bruins closed to 14-10 with 14:58 to play. Iowa, however, played tough defense and Fetter iced it with another touchdown with 1:28 to go in the game. "Our kids played the com- plete football game," coach Bob Commings commented. "We didn't do anything different than we did in. Ann Arbor, we just did it a lot better. Of course," he added, "Michigan had a lot to do with that. It's about the biggest thing to happen around here in a long time." Meanwhile, across the way in Bruin country, the loss may be one of the biggest things to hap- pen since the "Walton Gang" was dethroned back in March. "We just got our fannies whipped," quipped an obviously upset Dick Vermeil, coach of the Uclans. "We had too many turnovers on good drives caus- ing the defense to get progres- sively tired and vulnerable." ALL IN ALL, six" fumbles, three of which Iowa recovered, were the kiss of death for UCLA. By the way, rumor has it that an aging Greek from Las Vegas is looking for work and his name isn't Kojak. Ladies' and Children's Hairstyling a Specialty- Appointments Available Dascola Barber Shops Arborlond-971-9975 Moole Villae-761-2733 E. Liberty-668-9329 E. University-66240354 104 -:-:-- ' OPEN 24HUR {~ ATTENDANT ALWAYS S-. 4 ONDUTY MR. STADIUM COIN LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING - :r : s: ;r><1958 S. INDUSTRIAL, South of E. Stadium Blvd. - ---"#h 4 668.7928 What can you get for r these days? - A box of KLEENEX with this COUPON at ;' 1112 South University 313/663-5533 FRED KREYE, Pharmacist Highest Quality Always LIMIT: 4 BOX PER CUSTOMER Offer Good Tues., Sept. 24 thru Sat. Sept. 28 WASHERS & DRYERS NO WAITING! Gridde Piceks. MARCUS PUREIFOY, guardian of truth and holiness, stared singlemindedly at the pavement. Starbeam stalctites hung from the zodiac like visions of halvah lumbago: Disestablishmen- tarianism was afoot. He was sure he had seen it somewhere. "Unattractive Jewish male, with unspeakable crushw on John Boccabella, desires ravishing female , of any 'species. Ob ect: guess. Contact "Chick" at 1001 South State Street. Void where perimtted by law." It. was Lucifer, he knew, with garland ecclestones of ginger- bread traiilng ferbishly in his wake. It was time to fill out the Gridde Pickings, get them to the Daily by midnight Friday, and try for, a free Pizza Bob's pizza. l Ken Jeffrey, of 721 South week and won the pizza. 1. Navy at MICHIGAN (pick score) 2. Washington St. at Illinois -3. Indiana at Kentucky . 4. Penn St. at Iowa 5. MSU at UCLA 6. TCU at Minnesota 7. Northwestern at Nebraska 8. SMU at Ohio St. 9. Purdue at Notre Dame 10. Wisconsin at Colorado 11. Mississippi at Arizona St. 12. Grambling vs. Morgan St. (game in Washington, D.C.) 13. Edinboro St. at Slippery Rock m . U I Forest, got 12 games right last if 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Miami (F) at Tampa Texas at Texas Tech W. Virginia at Tulane Tennessee at Auburn N. Carolina at Maryland S. Carolina at Georgia DAILY LIBELS at Detroit Lions (in Hamtramck)! SEXUALITY & PERSONAL GROWTH' A small group experience intended to increase personal and inter-personal growth with regard to sexual ident- itX, sexual preference, and sexual relationships. Explor- ation and sharing about attitudes and behavior will be encouraged. Semi-structured group experiences, and a one-day intensive workshop using sexually explicit audio-visuals will be part of the program. The groups will have great flexibility in the course they finally take. Two groups of 9 weekly sessions each will begin with a PRELIMINARY MEETING for both groups on WEDNES- DAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 25, AT 8 P.M. in the Office of Ethics and Religion (third floor, Michigan Union). Thereafter one group will meet on Tuesday evenings, El GROU PGUITAR LESSONS SConsecutive Weeks, Materials Included, ONLY $12.00 A /" i / I1 11 iI