Thursday, October 3, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Thursday, October 3, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY EDGE CUBS IN 10TH: Bucs pirate Eastern crown ny w dr in vi Ia LE sh S d t o PITTSBURGH (A) - Man- Thursday, only if the Bucs scored when pinch-hitter Dave y Sanguillen's infield single had lost last night. Parker grounded to second for ith one out in the 10th inning The Pirates scored twice in the second out. ove in the winning run, giv- the ninth inning, the 'second Cubs' starter Rick Reuschel g the Pittsburgh Pirates a 5-4 run coming when Cubs' catcher then struck pinch-hitter Bob ctory over the Chicago Cubs Steve Swisher turned a game- Robertson out for the third st night and the National ending strikeout into a run- out, but Swisher let the ball eague East Division champion- scoring passed ball, to tie the get by him and Sanguillen lip. Cubs 4-4.I raced home with the tying The victory eliminated the Chicago took a 4-2 lead into run. t. Louis Cardinals from the the bottom of the ninth but Division race. Pittsburgh walks to Richie Zisk and Man- The Pirates started the 10th wound up 1 games ahead of ny Sanguillen and a sacrifice against Cub reliever Ken Fran - he Cards, who were rained bunt by Ed Kirkpatrick put the ing when Al Oliver tripled into out at Montreal. That game tying run in scoring position. the left field corner with one would have been played Pinch runner Miguel Dilone F,*,r. , GIANT BENEFIT GARAGE SALE Ann Ar'bor Amateur Hockey Ass'n Saturday, Oct. 5-9 a.m.-4 p.m. 1302-06 So. Forest St. ® SPORTS EQUIPMENT 0 HOUSEHOLD GOODS " GAMES AND TOYS MENTAL HEALTH RESEARCH INSTITUTE Dept. of Psychiatrv-University of Michigan THURSDAY SEMINAR OCTOBER 3, 1974 C. A. A. J. GREEBE Instituut Voor Perceptie Onderzoek, The Netherlands, "Recent Perceptual Research in The Netherlands." TEA 3:13 P.M., RM. 2059 MHRI SEMINAR 3:45 P.M., RM. 1057 ' i Majfor League Standings out. w Sitlargeiiland pincn hitter Gene Clines were walked intentionally and Oscar Zamora replaced Frailing. Final Standings American League East x-Baltimore New York Boston Cleveland Milwaukee Detroit w 91 89 84 77 76 72 Nest L 71 73 78 85 86 90 Pct. .562 .549 .519 .475 .469 .444 GB 2 7 14 15 19 x-Pittsbui St. Louis Philadelpi Montreal New York Chicago Final Standings National League East W L rgh 88 74 86 75 hia 80 82 79 82 k 71 91 66 96 West hr a r ~ ntr~ m. _ ^ iarevD i Pet. GB .543 - .534 1 4 .494 8 .491 8% .438 17 .407 22 SGC z' ; :f'xd~ } : .. i . . .: x-Oakland 90 Texas 84 Minnesota 8? Chicago 80 Kansas City 77 Californias t 7 x-won division title 71 84 80 94 AP Photo THE JUBILANT PITTSBURGH PIRATES rejoiced following their pennant-clinching victory over the Chicago Cubs last night. The Pirate s won 5-4 on Manny Sanguillen's bases-loaded infield single in the bottom of the 10th inning. The Bucs will host the Los Angeles Dodgers Saturday in the opening game of their playoff series. Yesterday's Game Baltimore 5, Detroit 4 Texas 2, Minnesota 1 Chicago 5, Kansas City 4,1 Cleveland 8, Boston 6 New York 2, Milwaukee 1 Oakland 2, California 0, in 5 inn. .559 - x-Los Angeles 102 60 .630 - 6.525 514 Cincinnati 98 64 .605 4 0.506 8!4 Atlanta 88 74 .543 14 .500 9, Houston 81 81 .500 21 .475 13% San Francisco 72 90 .444 30 4 .416 23 San Diego 60 102 .370 42 x-Yvon division title es Yesterday's Games San Diego 9, San Francisco 5 Pittsburgh 5, Chicago 4, 10 inn. 12 inn. Atlanta 13, Cincinnati 0 Philadelphia 3, New York 2, 10 inn. Los Angeles 5, Houston 4, 10 inn. ic. after St. Louis at Montreal, cancelled, rain I The following offices are open for the Student Government Council elec- tions for Winter, 1974. Applications for office may be picked up at the SGC office, 3909 Michigan Union. FILING DEADLINE is 4 p.m. sharp, October 4th. Filing deadline for party names is also Friday at 4 p.m. RIVALS SINCE 1902: Blue,, By RAY O'HARA This Saturday in Palo Alto the gridiron squads of Michigan and Stanford will collide for only the eighth time in the history of the two schools. Although they have not met often, their clashes have not been lacking in either excite- ment or import. From time to time they have battled over Rose Bowl glory, national rank- ings and regional snobbery us- ing everything from high school; cheerleaders to future U.S.. senators as ammunition. STANFORD and Michigan first crossed each other's paths in the 1902 Rose Bowl in a' game that was shortened eight minutes by darkness. The lost time was missed by nobody, however, as the Maize and Blue swarmed over the Stanford men, in a 49-0 rout that supposedly I pointed up the supremacy of "Eastern Football." Despite the deluge of scoring the Wolverine eleven did not have an altogether easy time with their West Coast adver- saries. The much smaller Stan- Stanford meet I r.."r- FURTHER frustration greeted The phenomenon of television an improved Stanford squad in brought the 1952 game to Ann 1949. Western Football was Arbor from Palo Alto but Blue slowly gaining a better reputa- partisans would have been hap- tion helped by a combined 98-0 pier if left in the dark. performance by the Indians in One Stanford touchdown was two previous contests against set up when Olympic decathlon NIGHT EDITOR. eastern opposition. They still champion Bob Mathias (later to FRED UPTON weren't good enough to derail become a Senator) fumbled the the Michigan express however. ball for the Indians on Michi- ..................... After a see-saw first half in gan's 23. The ball bounced out rosters and a map of Ann Arbor which the Wolverines gained a of bounds on the 19 for a cru- to distract the fans. 7-0 lead the Stanford defense cial Stanford first down. collapsed in the third quarter, Despite fumbling on the Stan- The game was over quickly I yielding two touchdowns quickly ford three the Maize and Blue as Michigan struck for four en route to a 27-7 defeat. had managed a 7-7 tie by the touchdowns in the first eight Stanford became the first fourth quarter only to lose when minutes, including two long; West Coast team evertto defeat they were called for interfer- bombs and a reverse by future 1951. ence in the endzone, setting up coach 'Bump' Elliott. The re- Michigan with a victory in19ah. the Indians' 14-7 triumph. action of the Michigan crowd In miserable, drizzly weather aton the Michigas an I the Indians dominated the Wol- to the blitz was totally unna- verines after spotting them a THE 1972 Rose Bowl was sup- tural by today's bloodthirsty brief 6-0 lead in the first half. posed to be a mismatch between standards; they cheered for The only cheering for the undefeated Michigan and a Stanford to make a game of it Michigan crew amid the sparse loose, unconventional, group of and thunderous approval greet- home crowd was generated by talented Stanford players. ed their two scores in the 49-13 over 2,000 high school cheer- Michigan's vaunted running rout. leaders, imported especially for game was unable to move at The Wolverines were reward- the occasion by the athletic de- crucial times, however, because I ed with the top ranking in the partment. Even the "pom-pom the entire Stanford defense was next poll but succumbed to persons" went home with damp ; keyed against it, ignoring the powerful Army in their follow- spirits after Michigan's 23-13 pass. Michigan's inability to ing game and fell to seventh. defeat. throw made them look all the igain worse when compared with Stanford quarterback Don Bunce's 290 yards on 24 com- pletions. The Wolverines grabbed a 12- 10 lead on a safety in the clos- ing minutes but were overcome by Rod Garcia's 31-yard field goal on the game's final play. The erstwhile Indians, now the Cardinals, had their winning streak broken decisively in 1973. Michigan capitalized on three ill-timed Stanford turnovers to take a 21-0 first quarter lead. The Wolverines took ample re- venge for the Rose Bowl de- bacle as they crushed Stanford, 47-10. The only thing that can be said for certain about this year's game is that the loser will re- member it the next time they meet. OFFICES SGC President SGC Executive Vice-President RESIDENTIAL CONSTITUENCY Dorm Fraternities Sororities Co-ops University Married Housing Independent (apartments) DIVISIONAL CONSTITUENCY Graduate Rackham Undergraduate Professional, Grad ( Non-Rackham) OTHER OFFICES Board for Publications, Underg rad SCHOOL AND COLLEGE CONSTITUENCY LSA Engineering Education Medical Law Business Ad. Art Arch. and Urban Planning Dental School Music Social Work Natural Resources Nursing Library Science Public Health Pharmacy '. ford players held Michigan scoreless for the game's first SIIUT OFF BY SAINTS: 24 minutes including a heroic: goal line stand on their own ' one yard line. The spirit of their fiture clashes was thus initi- ated. Sometime later, 1947 to be exact, the Wolverine squad had a legitimate claim on the na- tion's number one ranking. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan's meatgrinding teams had rolled up an incredible total of 24 consecutive victories by the time the arrived in Ann Arbor. THE AFFAIR was marked by a revolt against high program prices by the students. Claiming that the athletic department's fifty cent offering was packed with "irrelevant facts and pic-. tures of too-familiar buildings," the students sold their own ten cent program with only the ' Stags lose exh By BILL STIEG The scoring began when sev-! The Michigan Stags, Detroit's eral first period penalties left representative in the World the Stags o u t m a n n e d long Hockey Association, were given enough for Ron Busniak to flip their first test last night at a nice pass from behind the net Yost Ice Arena against the Min- to Bob Boyd, who beat Mich- nesota Fighting Saints. The igan's goalie Gerry Desjardins Stags failed, 2-0. from point-blank range. A pair of first period power'EIGHT MINUTES later, at play goals was the difference 14:57, a goal-mouth scramole in the sometimes slow, some- left an open net for Danny times sloppy, but almost always O'Shea, who, along with Larry boring prsetasnnm t y Johnston and Desjardins, had ibton one of the few. names familiar to the crowd. Perhaps realizing that their lackluster performance w a s making the crowd fidgety, the players obligingly livened things up with three fights, the first two involving the Saints' Gordie Gallant. The last, and most vio- lent, fight surprisingly came with less than two minutes left in the apparently already de- cided game. I EflIfi The crowd was announced as 1205, but that number must have included the bats residing in Yost's rafters. A I A /AIAAAlI1 AAe" IAA AIfI /IA AY Grl*dde PI*eks 1. MICHIGAN at Stanford (pick score) 2. California at Illinois 3. West Virginia at Indiana 4. Iowa at USC. 5. Notre Dame at Michigan State 6. Minnesota at Nebraska 7. Oregon at Northwestern 8. Ohio State at Washington St. 9. Purdue at Duke 10. Missouri at Wisconsin 11. Alabama at Mississippi 12. LSU at Florida 13. Va. Military vs. Virginia Tech. (at Richmond) 14. Pittsburgh at N. Carolina 15. Georgia at Clemson 16. Richmond at Furman 17. Western Michigan at Kent State 18. Navy at Boston College 19. Pennsylvania at Brown 20. DAILY LIBELS vs. Edit Staff Flunkies t Phi Beta Kappa Auspices, Alpha Chapter A MEDIEVALIST LOOKS AT SPACE IN MODERN ART PROFESSOR ILENE H. FORSYTH Deportment of the History of Art PLACE: Rackham Amphitheatre (4th floor) TIME: Thursday, Oct. 3-4:10 p.m. OPEN TO GENERAL PUBLIC *E The Nickel Beer is Back! ( ord/ /4oork //1 I ORIGINAL GRAPHICS BY WORLD FAMED ARTISTS OF THE 19TH & 20TH CENTURIES Bonnard Broaue Calder Kandi-nsky Maillol M iro These prints are all original, some sgned and some unsigned. Most of them sell for $10 to $20-some for as much as $100. Come look over our stock of hundreds of these You have practically everything it takes to be a postcard, if you have a Kodak pocke Inn4n.,-n*:^ r - -r ..r rn . - rr - r ^ -z,+ r.;: I _____.___.._. :. r