f Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY sunday, September 9, 191 r- FRESHMEN! If you ordered a copy of the FRESHMAN REGISTER be sure you stop by ahd pick ,it up. Come to the U.A.C. OFFICE-2nd floor of the Mich- igan Union-Mon.-Fri. 10-4:00. (5odep'4 Seek o 316 S. STATE 40,000 titles .a in stock! a '10% DISCOUNT on all new hardcovers' -/ ( d iFU 5 sT s e' J } ?y J t Hank knocks No. Y 709 MASS MEETING for SOPH SHOW'S Wonderful Town Sun., Sept. 9-7:30 Assembly Room Basement of Michigan Union ACT-SING-DANCE WORK ON COSTUMES-PROPS-ETC. By The Associated Press Bobby Tolan delivered a pinch ATLANTA-Hank Aaron hit his single in the Reds' eighth and after 709th career home run last night Pete Rose's fielder's choice ground- and Davey Johnson's 39th homer er retired Tolan, Morgan connected of the season in the ninth inning for the tying homer. lifted the Atlanta Braves to a 3-2 * * * victory over the Cincinnati Reds. Tgers score Johnson,the major leagues BOSTON - D i c k Sharon and Shome run leader, connected as the1 Frank Howard hit home runs and leadoff batter in the bottom of the Joe Co won his 19th gam ninth after Aaron and Dusty Bawer J oea o i 9hgm n j had homered earlier for Atlantae the Detroit Tigers' 6-1 victory over h the Boston Red Sox -yesterday. The Reds had bounced from be- Sharon gave Coleman, 19-5, a 1-0 hind, tying the score in the eighth lead with his first-inning homer inning on Joe Morgan's 21st home ;and after the Tigers scored two run of the season, a two-run shot runs in the fifth on a groundball off Atlanta's Carl Morton. and an error, Howard built the. Aaron's 36th homer of the advaptage to 4-0 with a solo blast baseball season came off a 1-1 in the seventh. pitch from Jack Billingham and ' Coleman, who had suffered left him only five homers away seven consecutive losses, had re- from Babe Ruth's all-time record lief help from John Hiller. 714. The Tiger relief ace came into The teams were locked in a the game during a mild .sixth-in- scoreless pitching duel between ning uprising by the Red Sox Billingham and Morton until the and nailed down the game for seventh. Detroit with his 32nd save. After Aaron unloaded, Baker fol- The Red Sox scored their only lowed with his 18th homer of the run in the seventh on Reggie season for a 2-0 Atlanta lead. Smith's double. The Tigers added a run in the eighth on Ed Brink- man's sacrifice fly and another in the ninth on Ike Brown's base hit. * * * Yankees explode. NEW YORK - Graig Nettles drove in six runs, three of them with his 20th homer of the season yesterday, leading the New York Yankees to a 15-1 romp over thz sixth ended Medish's no-hit bid and drove in the Brewers' run. * * *- Mets falter MONTREAL - K e n Singleton belted a two-run homer in the third inning and rookie Steve Rogers. outdueled Tom Seaver to lead the Montreal Expos to a 3-1 decision over the New York Mets - Come Everyone Welcome Classroom Experience For Credit Innovative Tutorial Experience Credit in Education or Psychology Contact LAURA ROSA PoetC m uiy2204 Michigan Union 763-3548 . i i j , Milwaukee Brewers. last night. Rookie George Medish, 12-8, hald Ron Fairly reached base with the Brewers hitless until the sixth a one-out single off Seaver, 16r9, inning and finished with a three- and Singleton followed by driving hitter for the victory. a 2-2 pitch high off the right-field The Yankees loaded the bases scoreboard for his 22nd homer of with two out in the first inning the year. and got their first run when The Mets came back with an Nettles was hit by a pitch. Jim unearned run in the fourth in- Ray Hart singled home two more ning as Rusty Staub drew a lead- for a 3-0 edge. off walk and second baseman New York added three more in Larry Lintz bobbled a routine the third when Nettles crashed his ground ball by John Milner for homer and then the third baseman an error. singled home two more runs in a Ed Kranepool -forced Milner at four-run fourth. second base before catcher Jerry bred Stanley hit a grand slam Grote looped a single to left to homer for the Yankees in the score Staub. eighth. . Ron Fairly added an insurance Dave May's bloop single in the run in the eighth for Montreal with a solo homer off Seaver. Both Rogers 8l3, and Seaver allowed four hits, but Rogers was particularly effective with his low pitches. Rogers did not "allow a fly / ball to the outfield. 'es UCLA*** a _. i I z i a r- WELCOMES RETURNING U of M STUDENTS. with a SPECIAL SKI SALE EADS UP TO KNEISSL OF50 OFF ROSSIGNOL 2455 S. STATE 1 mile S. of campus HOURS--M.; Th., F.-10-8:30; T., W., Sat.--10-5:30 662-7307 BankAmericard* Mastercharge 0 American Express --I i i i i a I WESTERN WINS Nebraska emasculat I 197 4. Mi hi anensian" ON SALE NOW at Student Pub. Business Office 420 Maynard SIGN UP for SENIOR PICTURES beginning next week. Watch for booths around campus.j From Wire Service Reports LINCOLN - Quarterback Steve Runty, after two seasons in re- serve, drew his first starting assignment yesterday and teamed with sophomore back Tony Davis genson returned a punt 65 yards and Dan Matthews ran 24 yards two plays later in the final quarter yesterday to boost Western Mich- igan to an 18-13 win over Mid- American Conference rival Central terday in the season opener for both teams.. Fullback Jim Upchurch tallied two touchdowns for the Wildcats, who relied almost exclusively on their running game. The tough. Arizona defense did not allow the Rams past midfield until halfway! Orioles roll CLEVELAND-Al Bumbry's hot bat and Jim Palmer's five-hit pitching s p a r k e d the Baltimore Orioles to a 6-1 victory over the Cleveland Indians last night, Bumbry drove in three runs with three singles as the Indians were U U to propel Nebraska to a 40-13 vic-f Michigan. tory over UCLA in the season's Jorgenson came in late in the first matchup of Top Ten football second quarter to engineer West- powers. ern's first touchdown on Jim The 5-foot-11 Runty, filling in White's one-yard plunge and then for injured David Humm, ran for ran in the final minutes to give one touchdown and passed for an- Coach B i I1 Doolittle his 10th other in the nationally televised straight opening win. Jorgenson clash between a Nebraska Corn- shone with 33 yards in six carries, husker crew rated fourth in the including a couple of big gainers AP preseason ratings and a Bruin on option plays. team ranked 10th. Central had pulled ahead in Davis, a 212-pounder, scored two the first quarter when Dennis second-half touchdowns, one a 43- LaFleur recovered a bad snap yard scamper in the fourth quar- on a Western punt attempt for a ter to put the game out of reach. touchdown in the end zone. The Nebraska started out to make Chippewas' second score came It a rout, running up a 14-0 first- on a 27-yard field goal by Mike quarter lead, headlined by a Francko*iak in the second quar- 77-yard punt return for a touch- ter, and Franckowiak added an- down by Randy Borg. other field goal of 37 yards to close the half with Central But a Nebraska fumble in the ahead, 13-8. ./ Fall Term U of M STUDENTS! Buy USED TEXTBOOKS urTO 3 /3 + SAVE UP 33 AT FOLLETS State Street at North U. Check our new book prices, too! through the final quarter. mathematcally elimnated f r o m h h *a a the American League's Eastern Di- vision race. Hurons highPalmer, 19-8, snapped a personal YpSILA DTI - Junior running two-game losing streak As the back Mike Strickland exploded for Orioles captured their 20th victory 128 second half rushing yards to in their last'25 games. set up two Eastern Michigan The Indians took a 1-0 lead in scores for a 17-14 win over Ball the second without the benefit of State yesterday. a hit as Palmer temporarily lost Strickland, held to only 14 yards his control. He walked'John Lo- in the first half, carried three wenstein with one out, then fired times in a 65-yard drive climaxed two wild pitches, enabling Lo- by quarterback Houston Booth's wenstein to reach third. 15-yard keeper play. Walter Williams' sacrifice got Ball State opened scoring with Lowenstein home. a six-yard pass from Rick Scott to The Orioles kayoed loser Milt Jim Micklos. Then Eastern's Ray Wilcox, 7-8, in the fifth on two hits, Vanover kicked a 34-yard field two walks, a hit' batsman and a goal. wild pitch. Scott scored again before the Ray Lamb, who followed'Wilcox' half on a one-yard sneak. to put to the mound, was chased in the the halftime score at 14-3, but the sixth when the Orioles scored twice Hurons cashed in on Strickland's on three hits, a walk and a wild rushing with two touchdowns in pitch. Brooks Robinson homered the third quarter. for Baltimore in the eighth. .. Major League Standings. t t t R -1 "You've got a lot of livin' to do"' waning moments of the first quar- ter, recovered by Jim Bright on Nebraska's 14, put UCLA on the scoreboard. Kermit Johnson ran 12 yards for the tally. Central qu, uarterback Gary Be- TRY SORORITY LIFE I, d' *\ r. asmsir RUSH REGISTRATION is Sept. 10-12 Re gistration places... DORMS FISHBOWL PANHEL OFFICE (Mich. Union Rm. 2306) Broncos buck MOUNT PLEASANT-Paul Jor- THE NUMBER ONE BOOK a OF THE YEAR! NOW-THE SUSPENSE FILM OF THE YEAR! fred innemannt fihl1 w r JACKAL , OPEN 12:45 SHOWS: 1 P.M.-3:35-6:10-8:45 603 E. LIBERTY r ection kMfodern _ oong DIAL 665-6290 vington was caught in the end zone for a safety in the final quarter which added two points to the Broncos' final score. The Bronco defense toughened up in the second half, allowing Central only.three first downs and nine for the game. Central racked up only 135 yards total offense and Western had 230 yards in the de- fensive battle. * * * Arizona assaults FORT COLLINS, Colo.-Arizona's new ball control offense and stingy defense - imported by new head coach Jim Young from Bo Schem- bechler's Michigan juggernauts- dominated Colorado State 31-0 yes- AMERICAN LEAGUE East W L Pct. Baltimore 81 57 .587 Boston 78 64 .549 Detroit 75 68 .524 New York 72 70 .507 Milwaukee 68 73 .482. Cleveland 61 83 .424 West Oakland 82 .59 .583 Kansas City 76 64 .544 Chicago 71 71 .500 Minnesota 68 72 .486 California 64 73 .465 Texas 49 91 .348 Yesterday's Results New York 15, Milwaukee 1 Minnesota 6, Chicago 2 Detroit 6, Boston 1 , California 9, Kansas City 6, 1st. California 4, Kansas City 2, 2nd Baltimore 6, Cleveland 1 Texas 4, Oakland 3 GB 5 8y/ 11 141/2 23 3% 112 13% 16 321/ Nt St. Louis Pittsburgh Montreal New York Chicago Philadelphia W 72 69 69 68 67 63 West L 70 69 72 74 73 79 ational League East PCU~ .507 .500 .489 .479 .479 .444 .603 .585 .571 .300 .419 .364 GB I _. 4 9 2 i4 14 16!? 32Y, i l I+ R ., Cincinnati, 85 57' Los Angeles 83 59 Sanl Francisco 80 64 Houston 72 72' Atlanta .69 .74 San Diego 51 89 Yesterday's Results Chicago 3, St. Louis 1 Houston 9, San Francisco 7 Atlanta 3, Cincinnati 2 Pittsburgh 5, Philadelphia 3 Montreal 3, New York 1 San Diego at Los Angeles, inc. Michigan wrestling coach Rick Bay holds the record for most let- ters garnered at 'an Illinois high school. Bay earned ten letters at Waukegan High School around the turn of the decade (1960), breaking the old ;nark of nine set by Ottoj Graham. r.N...f",t. tN:r{.dr{t 25%rrv / E"....:Et": . " '" W ;iggeM' B SCORES - A this Hond 3 First Prizes: HONDA Super Sports 50 Second Prizes: Columbia 10-speed bikes Guess the number of staples No5610 & 6610 i the jar. Are you interested'in.. . liP 111 11 IEIIEI I ii E LIVE ENTERTAINMENT SUNDAY NITE featuring REVUE A FIVE PIECE ROCK AND ROLL BAND 6-2 341 S. MAIN-ANN ARBOR A moving experience in sound and light EXHIBITION FOOTBALL New York Giants 21, Cleveland 10 New York Jets 16, Philadelphia 13 Oakland 17, Buffalo 7 Cincinnati 13, Green Bay 10 Pittsburgh 19, Atlanta 0 New Orleans 16, Houston 10 COLLEGE FOOTBALL N. Carolina St. 57, East 'Carolina 8 Furman 13, Presbyterian College 6 Michigan Tech 17, Northwood Michigan 7 Grambling 29, Long Beach St. 16 San Francisco St. 31, Nevada, Reno 28 Nebraska 40, UCLA 13 Eastern Michigan 17, Ball St. 14 Western Michigan 18, Central Michigan 13 Maine 14, Vermont 0 Refiance 28, Olivet 13 Temple 49, Xavier 7 Edinboro St. 0, Fairmont 0 TENNIS FINALS AT FOREST HILLS Margaret Court d. Evonne Goolagong 7-6, 5-7, 6-2 Jan Kodes d. Stan Smith 7-5, 7-6, 1-6, 6-1,7-5. DJ work? carpentry?. reporting? a technical engineering? program engineering? nnouncing? copy writing? . --- .. Women's Political Committee Women to amend city charter to include initiative and referendum.1m x Meeting, Mon., Sept:14-$ P.m.U International Center 603 E. MADISON (Across from South Quad) I The jar is approximately 81/4" high and 10"in circumference. It's filled with Swingline Tot staples. (Look for the clue about Tot capacity in the coupon.) The Tot 50" stapler is un- conditionafly guaranteed. It staples, tacks, mends. Only 98o* with 1,000 staples at your stationery, variety or college bookstore. b ukO Desk and Hand staplers are only $1 .98*. And the Super Cub'" sta- pler with no-slip, no-scratch base, only $2.67*. Fill in coupon or send post card. No purchase required. Entries must be postmarked by Nov. 30, 1973 and received by Dec. 8, 1973. Final decision by an independent judging organ- ization. Prizes awarded to en- tries nearest actual count. In case of tie, a drawing deter- mines winners. Offer subject to all federal, state and local laws. Void in Fla. and Wash. and wherever prohibited r or restricted. -Suggested Retail Price. talk shows documentari graphic design? ? interviews? es? art work? sales? local media? production? . play by play? If you want to do any of these things CBN NEEDS YOU!!!b a rr.sp by i COME ON IN OUT OF OF THE COLD Arbor Forest Apartments A short walk to campus, a warm sauna, good people, concerned management. A community. e electronic security 9 individual or joint leases Blues * Broadway * Classical Folk * Jazz * Maranatha New Release * Oldies Potato , .Progressive I 5 *CLUE: (You could fill between 200 ® and 300 Tots with the sta *ples in the jar) SWINGLIN HONDA P.O. Box 169 New York, N.Y, 10016 m , 1 Black Edition o Commentary I I There are staples in Sthe jar. Important: Write your guess outside the envelope, loerlft h.-ancoer I Newse Sports * Public Affairs I. 'TarAKY i r rn v^ n 1'1 M'rY TrtilrhrtA, a Irtrlin Fran rhpffn F III !I