Wednesday, SOpte.mber 12, 1973 I HE MICHIGAN UAIL.Y Wednesday, September 12, 1973 I HE MICHI(5AN L)AILY .... ......... Cards Reds toppled roll past by E Dodgers By The Associated Press Tony Perez popped out, Johnny ST. LOUIS - Steve Renko and Bench was walked intentionally. Mike Marshall combined on a six- Armbrister batted for Cesar1 hitter and Montreal rallied for four Geronimo and doubled to center d atly runs in the seventh inning that for the game-winning runs. Joe carried the Expos to a 4-1 victory Ferguson then mishandled Denis s over St. Louis last night. Menke's fly to right, allowing an- eother Cincinnati run to score. behind the first-place Cardinals in'Tom Paciorek's two-out single in the National League's East Divi- the seventh inning pulled the NIGHT EDITOR: sion standings, began their rally Dodgers into a 3-3 tie. THERESA SWEDO with Mike Jorgensen's singley Ross Grimsley, seeking his against Alan Foster, 12-8. first victory over the Dodgers in grounder for an error, then Billy seven starts, had retired 14 of 16 Williams scored Hooton with a Jim Lyttle followed with an at- batters before Manny Mota dou- sacrifice fly. tempted sacrifice that Foster let bled with two out in the seventh. roll to the right of the mound for Paciorek blooped a single into' a single, and Bob Bailey's single centerfield that dropped at the Phillies fly forged a 1-1 tie. h feet of on-rushing Cesar Gero- PHILADELPHIA-The Philadel- Bob Stinson walked, loading the: nimo. phia Phillies slammed four home bases for Renko, 13-10,wose The Dodgers took a 1-0 lead in runs, two by Greg Luzinski, and ground 'out scored the tie-breaker. the second on a run-scoring dou- rallied to beat the New York Mets The Expos added two more when ble by pitcher Don Sutton, his 6-4 last night. second baseman Ted Sizemore first extra-base hit of the year. The Phillies picked up their threw wildly on Larry Lintz' two- Paciorek's home run in the third first run In the third on Luzin- out grounder. made it 2-0. -- - St. Louis scored its run in Then Ken Griffey blasted a.a ' the sixth on singles by Lou three-run homer in the fourth to 1 Brock and Ted Simmons sand give the Reds a 3-2 lead. wiched around Sizemore's sacri- * * * fice. After Renko retired the first two Bucs baffleded ) batters in the eighth, he walked CHICAGO - Burt Hooton baffled "f f' ' I Bernie Carbo and was 3-1 on Ken Pittsburgh with a four-hitter and Reitz when Marshall came in. Randy Hundley hit a fifth-inning By JOHN 'Marshall completed the walk Whome_ run yesterday to carry the Reitz, but fanned Jose Cruz to end Chicago Cubs to a 2-0 victory over "My major concern is depth., the inning. The relief ace went on the Pirates. was Coach Bo Schembechler'st i to record his 29th save of the base-j Hundley's 10th homer of the with the season opener at Iowa o ball, season. baseball season was a shot off Some welcome news was rec * ** Steve Blass which curved around has not produced much of it late CINCINNATI - Ed Armbrister the left field foul pole. Blass, 3-8, Mike Hoban, who had been hobby drove home two runs with a pop- was making his first appearance yesterday and, according to Schen fly double in Cincinnati's three-run since Aug. 1. . Their apparent recovery will hel eighth inning, pacing the Reds to The Cubs also picked up their offensive line, which has been the a 6-3 decision over the Los Angeles other run in the fifth without a o Another piece of news was th Dodgers last night. hit. Hooton and Rick Monday Antepicofewwath Dan Dries sen opened the Reds' walked, Don Kessinger was safe received their NCAA eligibility, a eighth with a double and after when Maxvill f u m b 1 e d his may make the travel roster. Al--. na . ; 4 1 ainnh ddi ski's first homer of the game and his 26th of the season. They made it 4-2 in the fifth on an RBI single by Luzinski. Then, in the seventh, Billy Gra- barkewitz put the Phillies in front with a leadoff homer. Two outs later, Luzinski slammed his 27th, the fourth time this year he has his two homers in a game. Jim Lonberg earned his 13th victory against 12 defeats while Jerry Koosman, 12-15, took the loss. i Tigers nibble MILWAUKEE - Mickey Stanley slugged a two-run homer with two out in the 10th inning, lifting the Detroit Tigers to a 4-2 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers last night. Stanley then provided the game- winner with a blast into the left field bleachers, his 16th homer of the baseball season. - recv----- i i a Saturday :N KAMLER We lost a lot of fine players." This an worry after practice yesterday, only four days away. eived from the offensive line, which ly. Starting linemen Jim Coode andj led by injuries, returned to practice' mbechler, were going at full speed. p to clear up the situation on the big trouble spot this fall. at, for the first time since freshmen s many as three freshman gridders ismc Llit PuriU(UUVof T d aJtir i f B I d AP Photo RON SANTO sends a Steve Blass pitch skyward in yesterday's important showdown between the Cubs and the Pirates. With the bases loaded, Santo, who is not known for his clutch performances, flied out to end the inning. Although Blass pitched creditably, for a change, in this outing, the Pirates could not touch Cubbie right hander Burt Hooton and the Bucs fell to the North Siders, 2-0. The National League East race continues onward. Stay tuned to the Daily for all the details. B~ucks open with Soph COLUMBUS, Ohio - Ohio State football coach Woody Hayes reiterated yesterday that sophomore quarterback Cornelius Greene will start the season opener in place of senior signal caller Greg Hare, who has a leg injury. Hare, however, will dress for the game and is expected to see some action. CAMPUS THEATRE # 1214 S. University 0 Dial 668-6416 JOSEPH E.LEVINE ACADEMY MKEeNs a AWARD ENDSIKEICHOLS"WINNER T H ULRS. rCE TURMAN DIRET EMIKE NICHOLS DOUBLE JosephE.Levine presents a FEATURE EMike Nichol SFilm Carnal nowledgeGRADUATE STARTS F R IDAY ROSS HUNTER'S Musical Production of Music byBURT BACHARACH - Lyrcs by HALDAVID SLWRR hAIER I"~ROSS HUNTER, Wi CHiARIES JARROTT Q - -x A D ULT S O N " emy~r best Film ever made. A! Goldstein LAST CHANCE TO 0T EVER { -EE*.* 4i A; " ee" 4 &7 d Semi F illsdale survives . . 0 ..-0will others?9 Almost certain to be includea is spat eno im z mt of Dueislana, Illinois, who is backing up Keith Johnson at that position. Right veterans. guard Greg Boik and quick tackle Iowa returns a veteran unit that Jim Hall have been battling for some people have picked for as positions all fall and could easily I high as third in the Big Ten. No- make the trip. body in the Wolverine camp is' The defense is rapidly molding taking them lightly. into shape. Craig Mutch is still out --- at linebacker, but is expected back soon. The defensive halfbacks are anybody's guess and nobody's worry. Whether Barry Dotzauer and Dave Elliot, Tom Drake and Roy Burks, or any combination there of are the starters, the posi- tions will be manned by seasoned , a art.E OADU LTS /PLAYBOY ave Itlay for oIepleasureof 1 tine foetw" * 31 1S. Judith Crist, NEW YORK MAGAZINE Dan Borus ---- T+E HILLSDALE College catalogue describes the four years at the private school as "an adventure in learning and maturity." a Located 60 or so miles southwest of Ann Arbor, Hillsdale is a school with a difference. Founded by Free-Will Baptists imbued with "the rugged individualism" philosophy, the college holds strongly to those beliefs today. i Government, school officials will tell you, has no business in education and the school will not accept any federal, state or local money. This policy, in these times of shriveling dollars and two-metal quarters, can point to the demise of a small school. But Hillsdale has a concept of education and that will stay intact, even if genuine alligator waistbands have to be taken in a notch or three. Part of that "four year adventure" is centered at the fieldhouse under the watchful eye of Athletic Director Frank "Muddy" Waters. When Waters is not raising money and doing all those things high powered athletic directors do when they are being high powered, he coaches a football team and at a 131-43-S clip at that. There are no Orange Bowl bids, no Top Twenty's to worry about, no national television, 120 grants in Hillsdale. But there is a tradition, a kind of down home tradition. Although only Chester Marcol has cracked his way to the pros, the Hillsdale Chargers remain an integral part of the pageantry that is college football. The bits of inflation hit Hillsdale and it has hit Hillsdale hard. "We had to change the cut of beef we usually put on the training table," Waters explained. "There was a hell of a lot of hamburger going around. "Luckily schools started within three days of our open- ing camp and the boys could eat with the rest of the stu- dents. If camp had last any longer, I don't know how we would have made it." Food, of course, is not the only item which is skyrocketing in- price, now that Phase Whatever has proven uneffective. Transportation, equipment, repairs, and even footballs are cost- ing schools more these days. The question before Waters is whether or not the Hills- dall football program can survive. "Of course, it can," Waters retorts. "The school has a commitment to the type of education intrinsic in football. Unlike up there (Michigan, where the Athletic Department will see splashes of red ink on its annual budget report for the first time, we've been in debt ever since I can remember. We've always had to depend upon donations and endowments. "We do a couple Booster things with our alumni group, the Touchdowners. You know, like raffling a football. Our alumni support us pretty well." Waters' selling point is his program, a program, he argues, which is educational and disciplining. It is a program on which he can, in the parlance of youth, rap on for a long, long time. And unlike marry high powered mentors and men who want to be higli powered mentors, you kind of get the feeling that mybe Waters means it. "There's a lot of discipline in this game. I know that word is looked down upon by some. But I don't force people. I say if you're gonna win you have to make sacrifices. "The reason," speculates Waters, "and I've thought about this some, that I've been lucky enough to win all these games is that I love this game. And love the players who play it. "What I ask them is to sacrifice for the team, for the common goal. I'll bet that during the season 90 per cent of them stay away from liquor, away from that sort of stuff. And these are rough-tough kids. "These aren't things I force on them, these are things they accept. I don't have a hair rule or a dress code, either." THIS YEAR'S disciplined Chargers took the field last weekend Mayor League Stinding1. A Baltimore Boston Detroit New York Milwaukee Cleveland MERICAN LEAGUE East IZIZ t' lY OHA2300 3: i SINTN YSi ru~_ CINEM w 83 79 77 72 70 64 L 59 66 69 73 74 84 Pet. .585 .545 .527 .497 .486 .432 .580 .545 .500 .486 .464 .352 GB 51/ 8 12z 14 22 5 13 16 2 32' 2 - -----, Oakland Kansas City Chicago Minnesota California Texas West 831 60 78 65 72 72 69 73 65 75 50 92 I 'I Yesterday's Results Baltimore 8, Boston 3 Cleveland 7, New York 3 Detroit 4, Milwaukee 2, 10 innings NATIONAL LEAGUE East w L St. Louis 72 72 Pittsburgh 70 71 Montreal 70 73 Chicago 69 74 New York 69 75 Philadelphia 65 79 West Cincinnati 88 57 Los Angeles 84 61 San Francisco 80 62 Houston 73 73 Atlanta 70 76 SantDiego 53 90 Yesterday's Results Chicago 2, Pittsburgh 0 Philadelphia 6, New York 4 Cincinnati 6, Los Angeles 3 Montreal 4, St. Louis 1 Pet. .500 .496 .490 .483 .479 .451 .607 .579 .563 .500 .479 .371 GB 1% 1 r'z 1 3 7 4 61Az 18f 34 I UAC-DAYSTAR Stephen stills and manassas f riday sept.28 crisler arena IN.O Attention all students and faculty: Communiy Bank has a free checking account for you. all the details. Go ahead. Tear our heart out. We 1. Our Drive-in offices are open 9 love students and faculty and we 'til 9 Monday thru Saturday (or have more great services to prove it. you can do it by mail). We think it's tough enough to study 2. We pay 7%/% on $1,000 (4-year) and teach without learning banking, time certificates. too. 3. Anyone with a $300 savings That's why we've made it all so account gets our free checking, too. easy. You can bank with us most 4 And many N anyol'time and we'll give you more un-banker anyunb nk r; e time r P -I - - no.5 A% -