I A L I at % 0 Page Eight T f 1 f- l f f /- f f t THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, Ct0 eC l Page Eight [HE MICH1~5AN UAlLY l-riday, October '1, I '9 f'* rIOT JAZZ FLIP JACKSON QUARTET T THURSDAY-FRI DAY-SATURDAY 9:30 P.M.-1 :30 A.M. -NO COVER- HURON HOTEL & LOUNGE 124 Pearl-Ypsilanti Phone 483-1771 Liberty at Division 769-8030 FREE DELIVERY !!!!!........w.............--w--.-. I , I ONE COUPON PER PIZZA / MR. PIZZA w / 5 Ic I~ I T NickelBe r i Is Back. r ~with ilunch at Village Bel Monday-Friday 11 :b a.m.-3:O0 p.M. Subscribe to The Daily , PLAYOFFS TOMORROW By LEBA HERTZc A team that surged from last place to first and a team that led its division all year vie for the National League pennantt this year.I The Pittsburgh Pirates underl manager Danny Murtaugh host1 the Los Angeles Dodgers undert manager Walter Alston tomor- row in the first game of thel best out of five series. THE DODGERS, who took first place last April 14 andc never relinquished it, won their first division title in eight years. Finishing four games ahead ofi the Cincinnati Reds with a 102- 60 record (besgt in the majors). buLg/tt I (Mike) Marshall and that was all we needed." WYNN, WHO the Dodgers acquired in a trade with Hous-! ton for pitcher Claude Osteen F Dodge rs -U-1- - - - :UVt UC n111 LIM 1 1 Z1, Los Angeles is one of the more well rounded teams in the ma- --- - --jor leagues this year. ZZ9 YAK ." Outfielder Bill Buckner said, "We've got to be the favorites H+ENTI RE BO KSHOPS now. We're a good team right now and we'll be even better 336 MAYNARD next year. The way I see us now, we're set to be on rop for This is the sort of book that makes lthe next five years." CENTICORE the m os t interesting Second baseman Dave Lopes badds, "I knew all along we were H bookshop around . Ecapable of winning this division. THE COMPLETE ENGRAVINGS OF Winning this first one is a lot DIDEROT'S ENCYCLOPEDIA' more difficult. . . . We had a 1 greatlast season but didn't win. Facsimile edition-the first in nearly 200 years-of the Then we made those two super Sgreat "Encyclopedie ou Dictionnaire Raisonne des Sciences, .trdsfr(i)Wn ad ' des Arts et des Metiers" of Diderot, d'Alembert and others trades for (Jim) Wynn and Y',l Originally published between 1751 and 1772, they contain - over 3,000 individual copperplate engravings portraying the trades, crafts, industries, machinery, tools, manufactur- EstateAuction ing processes and technical knowledge of the 18th century, a stunninq history in pictures of the beginnings of ourS technical knowledge, and one of the greatest achievements i SATURDAY MORNING, of the rational spirit of man. Nearly 300 categories of ' OCT. 5 human knowledge, from agriculture and architecture to at 10:00 a.m. p copperworina, diamond cuttina, mineralogv, printing, up- : upholstering, watchmaking, wood engraving, etc.-each in a Located 3 miles west of Hell, series showing everv step in a process. Included are overall Michian on Hiahway D-32 I . views, scenes of workers at their tasks, cutaway drawings, to Graves Road and 1/4 mile j floor plans, etc., beautifully engraved with the finest 18th north. ' century craftsmanship. Bound in six double volumes, in 'r An interesting sale of antique calf-skin with raised bands, simulating the binding of the 'Y articles including round oak original Encyclopedie. Meticulously printed and bound in itable, oak icebox, milk safe, Laussane. Limited edition-200 sets, each one numbered.+ other antique furniture, clocks, This is the sort of price that makes piano w/bench, some wicker T stfpurniture, pot belly heating CENTICORE the best place to shop . . . stove, and many more old and 4M ite tino items. t j i i r j i has been one of the reasons the1 Dodgers won their division. In his first season as a Dodger, the 'Toy Cannon' had 32 homet runs (third in the National League) and 105 runs batted inl (fourth in the NL).r Mike Marshall, who was ac- quired from Montreal for veter- an Willie Davis, has been at phenomenon this year, appear- ing in 105 ballgames, a majorI league record. The Dodgers are not, l'ow-t ever, a two man team. Accord-i ing to pitcher Don Sutton, "No one man won it for us and no one man lost it for us." LOS ANGELES can claim good hitters in first baseman Steve Carvey, outfilder Buck- ner, and third baseman Ron1 Cey, among others.t Garvey had the best year of' his career, collecting 200 hits,1 21 home runs, 111 RBI's and a batting average of .312. Buckner led all Dodger regu- lars in hitting with a .314 bat- ting average. Cey setga club record for runs batted in for a third base- man with 97. Shortstop Bill Russell, who batted .271, and right fielder Willie Crawford, who hit .295, should also add to LA hiting in the playoffs. THE CATCHING duties are shared by Steve Yeager, a fine defensive catcher, and Je F'er- gnson, who had 16 home runs as saw spot duty in right field. The Dodger pitching staff, should be able to handle the Pirate hitters. Messersmith is the ace of the staff with a 20-6. He is the only 20 game winner, in the National League.l When Tommy John, 13-6, was1 sidelined with an injury Jujy 17,1 Sutton, who was 6-7 at the time,, picked up his pace and finished with a 19-9 record. DOUG RAU, who replaced' Osteen on the staff, won 13 games. Al Downing and firmer1 Michigan pitcher Geoff .Zahn round off the Dodgers' starters. The Pittsburgh Pirates were in last place with a 37-49 record, the worst in baseball, on July 14. The Bucs made a comenack by winning 51 of their last 76 games to capture the division; title by one and a half games in the NL East. The Pirates won 8 out of 12 games from the Dodgers in the regular season this year. Murtaugh said of the Pirates, "I think we have some pretty good players. . . I would have to say this club is not going to get the recognition it deserves. We were so far back and they had to play great baseball." OUTFIELDER Al Oliver bat- ted .321 (second in the NL), and had 198 hits, 38 doubles and 12 triples making him one of the prime candidates for MVP this year. Richie Zisk was one rf the leading batters this year with an average .313, while Willie Stargell continues to give Pitts- burgh awesome power. Manny Sanguillan is possibly the fastest catcher in the major leagues. He hit about .280 this year. THE PIRATES traded Dave Cash to Philadelphia and Milt May to boost their pitching staff, obtaining Ken Brett and Jerry Reuss for the duo. Although Dock Ellis will not pitch in the playoffs due to an injury, he won eight games in a row after a 3-8 start. Brett, Reuss and Jim Rooker should provide fine pitching for the Pirates in the playoffs. The bullpen, with righthander Dave Giusti and lefthander Ra- mon Hernandez should be able to aid the Pirate starters if they get in trouble. 1i Gridde Picks mo -om J 1. MICHIGAN at Stanford (pick score) 2. California at Illinois 3. West Virginia at Indiana 4. Iowa at USC. 5. Notre Dame at Michigan 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. State Minnesota at Nebraska Oregon at Northwestern Ohio State at Washington St. Purdue at Duke 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 4I n eresn gtem. SAnyMediumnor Larger Pizza 'The six volume set WAS $675.00PKE * PEARLE KIRTLAND ESTATE Offer Good Friday & Saturday CENTICORE'S price $395.00 William J. Stanton and V Stephen E. Stanton, October4 & 5 Auctioneers October 4&T5 This is CENTICOREPh (517) 726-0181 ABRNOLUTE CLEARANCE 43/00 BO K ALE C4 Complete, final, on all merchandise-Hardbacks, paperbacks, prints and 1975 Calendars Discounted books are further discounted! Over 1/2 acre of Books MUST go! For Example,' n, 405 CENTENNIAL James A. icerr. A moior novel about the size of Hawaii, JOY OF SEX. ed. Alex Comfort. This is not a pseudonymn. Comfort w ' with a fictional count. characters and true psychological history. Patiently, writing scholarly, psycholoical books in the 1940s, until one evening, winding through time and mind. Michener gradually brings into focus a while sipping a B&B and readina the Kama Sutra, hs wife's copy of JOY huge collage of the American early West to 1973. Epic. Published this OF COOKING unexplainedly fell from a shelf into his lap. Both books month at $10.95. SALE $8.76 were disbound in the fall and the pages hopelessly intermersed. Comfort, seeing the appropriateness of it all, felicitiously repaginated in hs own WORKING by Studs Terkel. Studs i-s a live wire, and only a down to earth intimate way. Now appropriately in softbound at $4.95. SALE $3.96 1 man could get thistoether. Like enerations of American writers, Terkel MCA is trying to find e nd kat workin people of felds, omort. ovemakin carpenter to hooker to former. He lets people talk about what they do and SEX." The seguel emphasizes relationships, people, etc. with such chapter how they feel about it. A scurce hook on America. PubI. at $10.00. headings as Language of ihe Body, Special Needs, and Couples and Others. SALE $8.00 Both books are destined to become an important part of our thinking and t feeling since they are to be at least partly the basis of future sexual AMERICA by Alister Cooke. The book that came -from his remarkable counseling. Just published ct $12.95. SPECIAL SALE- documentary film, AMERICA is a look through the lens of history to find out how we got where we :.re. A very visual book with lush illustrations, ~~ ?t it caphures much of the ailemma and wonder of- America, with a fine sauce of nostalgia. PubI. at $15.00 SALE $12.00 & DISCOUNT BOOKS ARE FURT HER REDUCED 20% S4nn- 1 ~1i n Snte'Siv~p* ~n~ 9 nm -9 n Mn -~ct' 1-~Sijcln ZOU 2Cl easy listening sounds live entertainment every Sunday 5-8 p.m. serving: deep dish sicilian pizza NO COVER 310 4, . a ' , Geography and Planning: THE SOCIAL SCIENTIST'S ROLE IN SHAPING THE FUTURE MINI COURSE 414, Div. 495, 1 Cr Hr (See also symposium announcement) ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING at noon, Friday, October 4, Rm. 4050 LSA Bldg. SIX LECTURES to be held in Room 200 Lane Hall . Monday, Tuesday and Thursday, October 7, 8, and 10: 4-6 P.M.-TORSTEN HAGERSTRAND: "The Conception of Man in Postindustrial Society" 8-10 P.M.-AKIN MABOGUNJE: "Rural Development Processes: A Theoretical Wilderness" ENROLL AT GEOGRAPHY DEPARTMENT, 4028 LSA BUILDING For further information please contact Prof. Gunnar Olsson, Department of Geography, Tel. 764-0339, or 761-3195. GEOGRAPHY SYMPOSIUM III Georgraphy and Social Action: CHANGING GOALS IN A TRADITIONAL DISCIPLINE The public is invited to attend the following lectures to be held of he Rackham Amphitheatre. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9 10-12-DAVID HARVEY, Prof. of Geography and Environmental Engineering, Johns Hopkins University: "Urbanization and Capital" Commentator: Bernard Marchand. University of Toronto 9 r9 ,_mTADTF UNAGERTRANDfrnf of HmanGe oroohv.U niversitv of Lund,