Wednesday April 16, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine THIHGNDAL aeNn Michigan By TOM CAMERON 1 The Michigan baseball team managed to split a double-head- er yesterday in their home op-F ener against Bowling Green. The Wolverines were blanked in the first game, 4-0, and took ten innings to win the second, 5-4._ Coach Moby Benedict started two freshman pitchers in front of a fairly large home crowd. "You have to start these guys if you want them to get var- sity experience," Benedict ex- plained. "This is why we have these games . .to get the freshman in." BENEDICT TRIED to rest his four top pitchers for this weekend of Big Ten games. Bill1 Stennett went the distance in the first game despite a shaky start and Craig McGinnis! pitched 42%3 innings before vet- eran Larry Soronson took over. The first score in that sec- ond game didn't come until the fourth inning when Bowling Green touched McGinnis for a single run. The Falcon's center- fielder Kip Young singled to start the inning and was prompt- ly sacrificed to second by Larry Owen. Young was then doubled home by left fielder Dick Selgo. Michigan answered that run with two of their own in the bottom of the same inning. PeteI Ross, who had three hits in the second game, started the inn-1 ing with an infield single. Third baseman Jeff James forced him at second and Jacob Hasle- rig followed with a walk, put-' ting men on first and second. Greg Lane scored James on a line shot to center field and' moved Haslerig to third, who came in two pitches later on a wild pitch to give Michigan a 2-1 edge. THAT EDGE lasted until the next inning. With two outs, a walk and a single off McGinnis brought Benedict to the mound and Soronson out of the bull pen. The reliever gave up an- other walk and single which scored two, runs and Bowling Green took a 3-2 lead. But the Falcons gave up that lead in the sixth inning with two errors. Again, Ross started the inning off with a single. James placed a bunt on the first base- line that was fielded by the pitcher who hurled it into left field. Ross ended up on third and James halted at second to give Michigan two scoring threats with no outs. But Haslerig and Lane fol- lowed with two infield out which brought Ted Mahan in to pinch hit for Jim Berra. Mahan sp lit grounded the ball to shortstop ' Mark Telinda who threw the 1 ball past the first baseman to I bring both Ross and James home. IF THE WOLVERINES had! held in the seventh, the fans would have been out of the cold air a little sooner. But the first batter of the inning doubled and moved to third on a single. Soronson threw a wild pitch to let him score and the game was tied, 4-4. "That is a problem," Bene- dict emphasized. "When a pitch-! er crosses the white line, he has got to be mentally ready. I guess he (Soronson) wasn't' set yet." After the wild toss, Soronson! settled down and retired the next three on strikeouts. I Michigan won the game in the tenth. Mark Grenkowski singled to start the inning and moved to second on Dick Walterhouse'sI sacrifice. Ross then delivered his game-winning RBI.' Bowling Green pitcher Romiej Schweiter stopped Michigan on! a one hitter in the first game. A single by Mike Parker on the fifth inning and four scattered walks accounted for all Wolver- ine baserunners; only one of which made it to second. STENNETT LET Bowling Green off to a big first inning as the first three batters singled and the fourth doubled to pro- twi n bill duce three runs. The freshman pitcher then settled down, strik- ing out the next two batters and getting the final out on a fly to! right. He then kept the Falcons in check, scattering five hits over the rest of the game. Bowling Green did come up' with one run in the third,' though, when Walterhouse's er-I ror allowed Mike Wood to get on base and Berra's error es- corted him home.I Michigan must now prepare themselves for a weekend of Big Ten games as they enter- tain Iowa on Friday and Minne- sota on Saturday. Iowa and Minnesota were co-champs last, Orr lands Staton- Flowers to choose By AL HRAPSKY Tom Staton, a 6-3 guard and two-time all-stater from Ferndale, signed a national letter of intent to enroll at Michi- gan, yesterday. Staton, who averaged 22 points, 15 rebounds, and five assists a game, while playing all three positions last year, was described by Michigan coach Johnny Orr as "a tre- mendous prospect and the finest guard in the state. "He has an excellent chance to play as a freshman," Orr said. "The competition at guard will be just super next year with (Steve) Grote, (David) Baxter, (transfer Edgar) Burch and Staton." So far Orr and staff have signed two of the three Michi- gan high school prospects they have tried to recruit-Staton, and Alan Hardy from Detroit Northwestern. Today at 1:30 p.m., Bruce Flowers, the other in-state recruit, will announce his choice at a press conference at Berkley High.r When asked about the probable outcome of Flowers' press: conference, Orr reluctantly commented, "I'd be surprisedr if he did come here." SMORGASBORD Wednesdays 6-9 p.m. AND Saturdays 6-9 p.m. 1. cold viclysoisse 2. coq au vini 3. potatoes anna 4. shrimp newburgh 5. boeuf burguingnone 6. rice 7. swedIsh meat balls 8. vermicelli 9. breaded veal cutlet 10. fresh garden green 11. tarragon peas 12. eggplant parmesan 13. beef oriental 14. veal hearts 15. chicken giblets 16. cheese casserole 17. sliced beef 18. fried chicken 19. barbecued ribs 20. fried cod fish 21. black olives 22. greek olives 23, green olives 24. dill pickles 25 celery 26 carrots 27. green onions 28. crab apples 29. red peppers 30. radishes 31. corn salad 32. sliced cucumbers with sour cream 33. sliced tomatoes with fresh dill 34. red bean salad 35. greek bean salad 36. Italian green peppers 37. greek stuffed eggplants 38. sliced beets 39. garlic sauce 40. herring 41. portuguese sardines 42. anchovies 43. cod fish caviar mousse 44. cod fish red caviar 45 liver pate 46. sliced Jambon 47 sliced salami 48. sliced cold turkey 49. chicken salad 50.russian fish salad 51. tuna fish salad 52. cottage cheese 53. sliced mushroom in dill sauce 54. eggrols 55. hot mustard sauce 56. stuffed eggs bonnefemme 57. coe slaw 58. cold salmon 59. fresh tuna in soyn sauce 60. butter 6. home made bread 62. sliced tongue 63. horse radish sauce 64. chicken wings japanese 65. fried squid 66. smokedspork chops 67. potato salad 68. russian salad 69. macaroni salad 70. Jelled fruit salad 71. tossed green salad 72. chef's dressing 73. french dressing 74. 1000 island dressing 75. russian dressing 76. tartar sauce 77. hot sauce 78. bacon crumbs 79 croutons 80. parmesan cheese 81. sliced onions 82 eggplant salad 83. hocktail sausage 84. hors d'oeuvres 85. stuffed grapeleaves 86. greek feta cheese 87. swiss cheese 88. cheddar cheese 89. bread pudding 90. rice pudding 91. creme caramel 92. baked apples 93. house cake 94. peaches 95. mandarin organges 96. organe sliced candies 97. bananas 98. grapes 99. apples 10. watermelon balls I / u~aiyat Hand-Crafted Leather Goods CUSTOM ORDERS SCall 665-5575 POUCHES C TRAVEL OPEN BAGS MON.-FRI. " BELTS 12-7 eHATS SAT. 0 WALLETS 12-5 0 SADDLERY & HARNESSES 611 S. FOREST ANN ARBOR Just Off S. University I 4 A I i 'I oI A rbys Beef Piles If On! I Ar'by' s COUPON SPECIALS Offer Good at Arby's of: ANN ARBOR YPSILANTI WASHTENAW AVE. 1 MI. WASHTENAW AVE. ACROSS WEST OF ARBORLAND FROM K MART NEAR GOLFSIQE _ I PRESENT THIS COUPON SAVE 48c Photo by Gordon Tucker MICHIGAN'S BILL Stennet lets a pitch fly against a Bowling Green batter in yesterday's ac- tion. Although Stennet gave up only five hits he was tagged with a 4-0 loss. The Wolverines came back in. the second game though with a 5-4 win. ABA CHAMPS-OUSTE- AB A C H AMPS OUST E D ARBY'S I REGULAR ROAST BEEF SANDWICHES for LIMIT 6 REGULAR ARBY'S (THIS COUPON CANNOT BE USED WITH ANY OTHER COUPON) GOOD THRU APRIL 27th Spir its bump Nets PRESENT THIS COUPON SAVE 60c ' By The Associated Press UNIONDALE, N.Y. - Freddie Lewis' 20-foot jump shot with three seconds remaining, car- ried the underdog Spirits of St. Louis to a 108-107 victory over the defending champion NewI York Nets last night in the American Basketball Associa- tion playoffs. Qt4 T .iic' fntirthr nncarttivy IDailv NIGHT EDITOR: JOHN CHAVEZ sr. 1.ous rourtn consecuive e victory, after an opening gamer loss in the best-of-seven series, 1 moved the Spirits into the East-' S C O R E S j ern Division finals against the Kentucky Colanels. ABA PLAYOFFS THE DIMINUTIVE LEWIS, St. Louis 108, New York 107 who finished with 29 points, St. Louis wins series 4-1 scored St. Louis' last 10. His NHL PLAYOFFS three point field goal with 1:51 Pittsburgh 3, New York Islanders 1 remaining brought the Spirits Pittsburgh leads series 2-0 within two points at 103-101. Buffalo 3, Chicago 1'Twnyoesc dsltr Buffalo leads series 2-0 Twenty-one s e c o n d s later, Philadelphia 3, Toronto 0 Lewis' three point play put the Philadelphia leads series 2-0 Spirits ahead for the first time Vancouver 2, Montreal 1 in the game 104-103. After four series tied at 1-1 consecutive points by the Nets," WHA PLAYOFFS Lewis sank two free throws to+ cut New York's lead to 107-106., Then, after the usually reli- able Julius Erving, who was named the ABA's player of the year yesterday, lost the ball on a backcourt violation, setting up Lewis' winning field goal. "THE GAME and the seasonI ended in tremendous disappoint- ment," said Kevin Loughery, the glum New York coach. "We should have won, ' said Dave DeBusschere, in his tirstI season as the Net's generalj manager. "This was a real crusher." The Nets, who led by 14 pmts at the half, were paced by Er-: ving with 34 points. John Will- iamson came off the bench to score 22 points and Larry Kenon added 17. SUPER AR BY'S for LIMIT 6 SUPER ARBY'S PER COUPON (THIS COUPON CANNOT BE USED WITH ANY OTHER COUPON) GOOD THRU APRIL 27th I m PRESENT THIS COUPON SAVE 58c M i k e B a r r contributed 20' points for St. Louis, while Mar- vin Barnes, who had averaged 34 points in the first four games, added 17. ', Houston 7, Cleveland 2 Houston leads series 3-I. New England 5, Minnesota 2 Series tied at 2-2 BASEBALL \ AMERICAN LEAGUE Boston 5, New York 3 California 7, Minnesota 3 Texas 6, Chicago 5, 13 innings Milwaukee 7, Baltimore 1 Kansas City 4, Oakland 3 NATIONAL LEAGUE Atlanta 6, Houston 1 New York at Philadelphia, ppd., rain Chicago at Pittsburgh, ppd., rain Los Angeles 3, Cincinnati 1 __. 102 S. First, Ann Arbor 663-2401 BEEF 'n CHEDDAR $ 60 for LIMIT 6 BEEF 'N CHEDDAR PER COUPON (THIS COUPON CANNOT BE USED WITH ANY OTHER COUPON) GOOD THRU APRIL 27th AT THE SIGN OF THE WESTERN HAT Excellent Summer Jobs JEWEL COMPANY, Detroit, Mich. Work an established route in Detroit or be a customer representative. Other openings in Flint, Saginaw, Grand Rapids and Toledo. Ex- cellent salary plus commissions. Will interview at Summer Plocement-3200 S.A.B. Thurs., Fri., April 17 18. Register by Phone or in per- son. 763-4117. Further details available. rA UNIVERSITE de PARIS-SORBONNE-COURS de CIVILISATION FRANCAISE SORBONNE SUMMER SESSION for FOREIGN TEACHERS and STUDENTS __ I AP Photo FREDDIE LEWIS of the ABA's St. Louis Spirits, drives against the New York Net's Billy Paultz (right) and Brian Taylor (14) in the playoffs last night. Lewis' heroics in the end gave the Spirits the victory, 108-107. VICTOR SJOSTROM'S 1924 HE WHO GETS SLAPPED (AT 7) Lon Chane Sr. plays a brilliant scientist who, cheated of his discoveries, becomes a circus .. ......i...... - -. . .. I11rA. CL.- . . 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