P, age Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, October 23, 1974 Page Eight THE M~~~~~~~IIADALWeedaOtbr2,17 Sports of The Daily Yankees trade Murcer The New York Yankees announced yesterday the trade of outfielder Bobby Murcer to the San Francisco Giants for out- fielder Bobby Bonds. Bonds is one of the premier base-stealers in baseball. He has stolen 263 bases in 325 attempts. Murcer hit 140 career homers for the Yankees, 17th on the club's all-time list. In another baseball trade yesterday the New York Mets acquired outfielder Gene Clines from the Pittsburgh Pirates in exchange for reserve catcher Duffy Dyer. * * * Ci pa possible starter- Larry Cipa, the man who was not considered good enough to start at quarterback for a Rose Bowl team, may very well be calling the signals for the New Orleans Saints this Sunday. Cipa, a backup at Michigan throughout his career, started the season as the third string quarterback for the supposedly professional Saints. But with starter Archie Manning in coach John North's doghouse, and backup Bobby Scott injured, Cipa is in a position to start. Hadl dealt to Pack LOS ANGELES - John Hadl, All-Pro quarterback of the Los Angeles Rams, was traded Tuesday to the Green Bay Packers for five National Football League draft choices, including first-round choices in 1975 and 1976. * * * Football at Cal-Berkeley: cs roses By BILL STIEG The school, known as Cali- average crowd of less 'an a school that supports its team For the first time since the fornia on the scoreboards but 29,000 for their first three home more. days of campus unrest in the Berkeley in the classrooms of games, in a stadium that holds The defense, which gives up late sixties, the University of America, has one of the finest 77,000. ibo-?t 14 points a game, is led California at Berkeley is mak- academic reputations in the "California had a great foot- by ruidle guard Paul VaalDer- ing headlines. country. ball tradition," claims Thed r, Mehden. This fall, however, the news "It's tough being a student "but with the problems it had a California's only defeat came from the Bay Area is about here," says assistant c o a c h few years ago, and the radi al in the first game of the season Cal's football team, now 5-1 Roger Theder, "and it's a lot movement, things changed. Be- when it lost to Florida, '1-17, in overall, 2-0 in the Pacific Eight, tougher to be a student-athlete." I ing a football player back th n Gainesville. F 1 o r i d a is now and tied with Southern Cal for ..................................*...*.................... . ..:... !. f. ..,,...., first place in that conference. But not even two big upsets "California had a great football tradition ... but with the prob- this week and next over UCLA, and USC will get the Bears-1 lems it had a few years ago, and the radical movement, t h i n g s into the Rose Bowl this year- changed. Being a football play er back then didn't mean any- California is on NCAA proba- n -Roger Theder Along with Oklahoma, South-....... .::.."...:.::.."...... .:. ::.:...... . . er M ethodist, Southwest Loui- -.................,.......*........."..... . .....,.....*...'.....'..........j... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . siana and Long Beach State, BESIDES SUFFERING the didn't mean anything. ranked twelfth in the nation. California is banned from post- same penalty as the aforemen- "But now, little by little, the Since then, the Bears have man- season play and live television tioned schools, it's hard to find attitude is changing," he con- aged to beat San Jose State, coverage of its games. any similarities between Berke- tinued. "Fraternities and soro- Army, Illinois, Oregon, and FOUR YEARS ago, the Bears ley and the others on probation. rities are coming back, and the Oregon State. The only "easy" had Isaac Curtis playing for Unlike Oklahoma, where college students support the team very win was their 40-10 conquest of them, a receiver now with the football is the number-one en- well. A very high percentage Oregon. CincinnatirBengals.The NCAA tertainment in town, students of the student body buys tickets. THIS SATURDAY 65,000 fans discovered that Curtis's grade at Cal-Berkeley have countless "Winning has taken care of are expected to fill Memorial dintvere has below the' distractions, including nearby that."I Stadium in Berkeley to find out oint averae was below the "beaches, mountains, and San CALIFORNIA hasn't had a if the Bears are for real, as on prbtiond forthre ye. Francisco, just 25 miles away," winning record the last two they take on UCLA. The "rub- Further inquiries were made, according to one on-campus ob- years. Its best season n recent ber band" defense willhave to a diinlirglrte server, memory was '68, when they stretch itself to the limit to stop tacked on addtharearteu- Thsefabeat Michigan and finished 7-3- the Bruins' 395-yards per game tacked on another year of pun- These factors, plus the em- 1. That yearthe Golden Bears offense. ishment. phasis on school work, have .Ta er~h odnBasofne Theprobation ends this Feb- hurt California at the turnstiles, climbed as high as eighth in ##Emse#E sammumm "' ruary. The Bears have attracted an the polls. PACIFIC EIGHT Yeste.rda_ CLal was ranked Read and Use Daily Classifieds MOVING 72fbo ff ALL ME SALES L RE Vii ... 316 SOUTH STATE STREET 9 a m -9 p m. Mon -Sc Smiling Bob gets three Iowa football Coach Bob Commings yesterday was given a new three-year contract, effective Jan. 1. Commings, a former Massillon, Ohio, high school coach who had actively campaigned for the Iowa job last winter, had originally signed a one-yearbcontract at $25,000. "I'm very happy the board and president have recognized the outstanding job performed by Coach Commings and his staff," said Hawkeye Athletic Director Bump Elliott. -_"This action is an excellent endorsement of our football pro- gram, which is being built on a solid foundation," he said. .-C Posters Cards Posters Cards Posters Books Posters Books Posters Books tCHANDISE LOGOS BOOKSTORE 1205 S. University-761-7177 Open 9 a.m. to 10:30 p.m. t.; 1 a.m.-6 p.m. Sun. Psychology t Gridde Pck Maybe the Daily Libels are just too powerful for their own good. Rather than go against Coach Fielding H. Feldman's awe- some squad this Saturday, the Hoboken franchise has decided to suspend the rest of its season. A team spokesman stated that the players were free to negotiate with the World Football League or anyone else that could use them. To fill the void for this weekend Coach Feldman has arranged for his team to play the Datum Technics. Not much is known about the Technics, 0-0-6 on the season, but Feldman isn't taking any chances. His seventh-ranked Libels have been working out all week with calculators and slide rules. Minnesota at MICHIGAN (pick Illinois at Iowa score) Wisconsin at Indiana I Ohio State at Northwestern Purdue at Michigan State - - * . fl n .1. % Z S~uy, l UZFIC twentieth by the Associated Press. The key to this year's success is a high powered of- fense, and what Bear fans like to call a "rubber band" defense -one that bends but seldom breaks. Two 9.6 sprinters are the leading rushers for head conch Mike White, a former Stanford assistant. Chuck Muncie, MVP for the Bears last year, is aver- acing 5.3 yards a carry, while Howard.Strickland is gai g 4.8 yards per rush. THE BEARS' quarterbavk is Steve Bartkowski, who is pres- ently leading the Pac-8 in pass- ing. Among his impressive sta- tistics are 85 completions in 154 attempts, and only two in- terceptions. Bartkowski s h a r e d playing time last year with Vince Fer-j ragamo. Ferragamo left for Ne- braska, supposedly in search of STANDINGS Conference games All games 5-1-0 California Sonthern C UCLA Stanford Washington Wash. St. Oregon Oregon St. 2-0-0 al 2-0-0 1-0-1 1-0-1 1-1-0 0-2-0 0-2-0 0-2-0 4-1-0 3-1-2 1-3-2 3-3-0 1-5-0 1-5-0 0-6-0 If the 65,000 do show up, it will be the largest crowd to see a regular season game there, with the exception of the tra- ditional showdowns with arch- rival Stanford. The renewed interest in Cal- Berkeley football is for real, according to coach Theder. "The other day I overheard two long-hair types discussing football," he relates, "and one of them said, 'Yeah, but now they're winning -maybe we oughta' go!' " Concentrates. Dimensions of Religious Experience LECTURE AND DISCUSSION SERIES WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23, 3-5 p.m., Angell Hall Aud. A Occult Metaphysics in the Western Tradition by Professor GARY KESSLER Philosopher of Relioion, California State College at Bakersfield NEXT WEEK, Oct. 30, 3-5 p.m., Angell Hall Aud. A A WITCHES VIEW OF WITCHCRAFT-PAST & PRESENT, by Gundella, a descendant of the Green Witches of Scotland and an active member of the Ann Arbor Coven. INTERESTED IN PSYCHOLOGY JUNIOR HONORS PROGRAM? Applications may bepicked up from: DR. PEPSDORF 3439 MASON HALL Must be returned by October 31+ UCLA at Cal (Berkeley) ' Colorado at Missouri Iowa State at Kansas N.C. State at Maryland Texas A&M at Baylor Georgia at Kentucky Duke at Florida Tulane at Georgia Tech Memphis St. at N. Texas St. Delaware at Temple Yale at Cornell Long Beach St. at San Diego St. Miami (Fla.) at Notre Dame Oklahoma State at Nebraska DAILY LIBELS at Datum Tech The Top Twenty CAREER OPPORTUNITIES FOR WOMEN IN RETAILING By The Associated Press 1. Ohio State 50 6-0-0 1,196 1., 2. Oklahoma 8 5-0-0 1,08 2. 3. Michigan 1 6-0-0 923 - 4. Alabama 1 6-0-0 887 3.. 5. Auburn 1 6-0-0 699 4.. 6. S. California 4-1-0 628 5. 7. Notre Dame 5-1-0 529 Tie Daily Libels 6-0 141 8. Texas A&M 5-1-0 507 7. 9. Nebraska 4-2-0 355 10. Penn State 5-1-0 311 8.1 11. Texas Tech 4-1-1 188 9.l 12. Florida 5-1-0 194 13. Texas 4-2-0 182 10. 14. Arizona State 4-1-0 125 11. 15. Maryland 4-2-0 94 12. 16. Arizona 5-1-0 88 17. N. Caro. State 6-1-0 55: 13.. 18. Tulane 5-0-0 46 14. '. Miami, O. 5-0-1 35 15.' 0. California 5-1-0 28 16. Others receiving votes, listed al. phabetically: Baylor, Illinois, Kan- 17.. sas, Miami (Fla.), Mississippi State, 18.' North Carolina, Oklahoma State. Pitt, Purdue, San Diego State, Temple, UCLA, Wisconsin, Datum Technics. By United Press International Ohio St. 35 6-0 350 Michigan 6-0 296 Alabama 6-0 286 Auburn 6-0 236 Tie Southern Cal. 4-1 164 Tie Notre Dame 5-1 164 Texas A&M 5-1 141 Tie Daily Libels 0 Penn State 5-1 89 Nebrasxa 4-2 76 Texas 4-2 32 Florida 5-1 29 Maryland 4-2 10 Miami (Fla) 4-1 9" Arizona 5-1 8 Texas Tech 4-1-1 7 Miami (Ohio) 5-0-1 6 Arizona State 4-1 5 Tie Tulane 5-0 3 Tie Oklahoma St. 3-2 3 Tie Mississippi St. 5-3 Tie San Diego State 4-1 3 Tie Datum Technics 0-0-6 3 I I sponsored by CAREER AUGELL HALL-AUD. B WITCHCRAFT & THE OCCULT REVIVAL TODAY, by Dr. Marcello Truzzi, Chairman, the Department of Sociology, EMU, specialist in occult organi- zation and the sociology of the Bizarre. The first in a series of informal lunch hour discussions with employers. Meet with representatives from J.C. Penney, Montgomery Ward & Co., & Rikes. ALL WOMEN welcome freshperson-seniors, grad students, faculty & staff. Feel free to bring your lunch. Wednesday, Oct. 23-12 Noon Held in Conference Rms. 4 & 5, Michigan league Ii - -------------------------------- - - d I Planning t Placement 764-7460 e TIXI FOR U OF M STUDENTS WITH I.D. CARDS P fo 'I, $1 F071 PEOPLE Conversation and Entertainment at The Hillel Coffee House Saturday, October 26 Refreshment &Entertainment provided HILLEL Discount on top two rices r 1429 Hill St. 663-3336 Winer of 5 tony awards I ARAVEL MICH. UNION 763-2 A ONFLIGHf DOMESTIC FLIGHTS SPECIAL FARES SAVE 20% THANKSGIVING-Deadline Oct. 28 NEW YORK CHRISTMAS-Deadline Nov. 19 NEW YORK LOS ANGELES SAN FRANCISCO Broadway's biggest hit musical comedy! ONLY AREA PERFORMANCES TOLEDO MASONIC AUDITORIUM 4645 Heatherdowns Boulevard Sign our classic peacoat aboard for upcoming winter excursions. A ruggedly good-looking mate with epaulets, slash pockets and a deeply notched collar. Nav wool and other fibers for 36 to 44 sizes, s70. In our Contemporary Shop. i i i