Wednesday, September 19, 1973 Page Nine THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1 I Contrasting bands renew old rivalry By FRANK, LONGO ford band members came running The Michigan troupe enjoys a Michigan's 1973 home football op- through the lines, tossed a foot- tremendous reputation in the ener with Stanford is now only ball around, threw stones at the marching band field and Cavender three days away. The Wolverines Michigan bandsmen, and generally points to his band's selection to have a score to settle with the tried to disrupt the profession. perform at Super Bowl VII last team that nipped them 13-12 in the The Michigan band members January as proof. 1972 Rose Bowl. didn't break formation and totally The Wolverines' band has Another large Michigan organi- ignored the incident, drawing high been, and always will be, en- zation, also clad in blue, opens its praise from Cavender. Bt the fundeared to the hearts of the faith- 1973 home season Saturday in (for Stanford, at any rate) had ful alums. Stanford's band will Michigan Stadium. And though just begun. undoubtedly be appreciated more they may deny it, the Michigan About 1:30 that morning, while by the students in this liberal Marching Band has a score to set- most Michigan bandsmen slept, college community. tle with the musical counterpart the Stanford musicians assem- which gave them trouble at the bled quietly outside Hedrick Hall, Saturday's game should not be 1972 Rose Bowl, too. complete with instruments, and billed as a battle of the bands, The 235 member marching proceeded with an ear-shattering however. Instead, the 50,000 fans band, largest yet in Michigan's rendition of "Yellow River" and attending this Saturday's football .history, once again steps to the other assorted tunes. It was to- clash should consider themselvesI commands of co-ordinator of tally appropriate when the mu- fortunate to witness a pair of half- bands George R. Cavender. Of sical prowlers ended their sere- time shows given by two groups all the stories circulating about nade with the Mickey Mouse so varied that almost everyone's the incidents between the two song, knowing full well that marching and musical entertain- bands during New Year's Week Michigan's band had a Disney- ment tastes should be satisfied. two years ago, at least the fol- land trip on the morrow's sched- lowing are true. ule. The second day the Michigan Stanford's ensemble, well known band spent in California, it was for its non-marching and out-of-the- forced to hold rehearsals indoors ordinary half-time themes, also because of the weather. Desperate- had gained notoriety for distract- ly needing some marching prac- ing from the other band's halftime! tice after the . month-long layoff show with various sideline antics. following the Ohio St. game Cav- For example, during the Rose ender made arrangements with of- Bowl halftime in 1972, Stanford al- ficials at UCLA for use of the most got Michigan off to a false The new Student Governrr Bruins' ballroom. An abbreviated start by blowing whistles along the tives of the various constit field could be laidrout and at least sideline. Picking up a note at the ture was put into effect b part of the show rehearsed. end of one tune and holding it aft- But as the band marched in for- er the band had stopped playing All-campus election. In e mation from its quarters at He- was yet another favorite attention- the new reform Council pl drick Hall to the Union, the Stan- grabber furnished by the Cardinal musicians. Well, the first of an expected Th1ewSCwilb ATTENTION LS&A STUDENTS: Are you fair-minded, conscientious, and interested in being involved? Then s i g n up now to interview for appointment to the LS&A STUDENT JUDICIARY, Sign the list at room 3M, Michigan Union, or call Chuck Redman, 761-1597, by Satur- day, Sept. 22. I' I i s. MPUS ELECTION nent Council will contain the directly elected representa- tuencies of students on campus. The new Council struc- y on overwhelming vote of the student body in the Spring a record turnout election, 92% of the voters voted for an. elected on October 9, 10, and 11. All of the seats Daily Photo by ROLFE TESSEM THE MARCHING MEN and, of course, women of Michigan, prepare to journey into a battle against the Stanford ensemble, their 1972 Rose Bowl tormentors. PIRATES, EXPOS BOW N.L. East pennant race closes By The Associated Press tory over the M PITTSBURGH - Don Hahn sin- - terday. gled in two runs to break a 4-4 tie (131EVYThe victory as the New York Mets rallied for place Cardinals a 6-5 victory over the Pittsburgh hind the front - Pirates yesterday.-the National Le Hahn's one-out single up the the runnerup middle capped a fiverun Met up- back. rising in the ninth inning. NIGHT EDITOR: The Cardinals The- defeat, Pittsburgh's fourth JIM ECKER on Joe Torre's in 12 games since Danny Mur- first. taugh replaced the fired Bill Vir- Ted Sizemore don, cut the Pirates' first-place down the left-field line for two with an infield; e d g e in baseball's National more. and moved up League east to one game over * * * Ted Simmons the Montreal Expos, who dropped blasted his f an earlier 7-4 decision to St. C'rd -s hufle June 13. Louis. MONTREAL - Luis Melendez Melendez the The Mets remained in fourth,1belted his second homer of the runs for the Ca 2% games back. St. Louis is two season - a three-run shot off Ba- and scored onP games' out, in third place. for Moore in the third inning- fice fly in the In the ninth, pinch hitter Jim !and doubled twice and came around and came arou Beauchamp singled and Wayne to score two more St. Louis runs, ver's single in Garrett doubled, and both runners ledding the Cardinals to a 7-4 vic- The Expos ra scoring on Felix Millan's triple. After Rusty Staub walked, reliever CONtUI STA DOR BOUND? Ramon Hernandez was replaced by _ Dave Giusti, who gave up the ty- ing run on pinch hitter Ron Hod- ges' single and then filled the bases'l t to s W ineo pitch. Montreal Expos yes- moved the third- to two games be- running Pirates in ague East and kept Expos one game opened the scoring RBI single in the e led off the third single for St. Louis on a base hit by before Melendez irst homer since n scored two more rdinals. He doubled Mike Tyson's sacri- sixth and doubled nd on Tim McCar- the eighth. llied for three runs akers in the third inning on run-scoring singles by Ken Singleton, Mike , Jorgensen and Bob Bailey. Single- ton's RBI was his 98th, eclipsing the old Montreal club record of! 97 set by Rusty Staub in 1971. slew of Stanford band members ar- rived yesterday for Saturday's game. They came to Ann Arbor, according to their student business manager, "by car, bicycle, mule train, hijacked subway, and _any other means available." Whether their halftime show will be con- structed with the same foresight remains to be seen. The bands' styles could hardly be more opposite. Michigan s is strictly military, and ex-Marine Cavender continually spurs his b.,cmr n "Pick un those feet on the newly constituted Council are up for election this Fall. Each stu- dent is allowed to vote in each of the three constituencies, residential, divisional, and school and college. The seats up for election are as fol- lows: f O lne anusmICI LUrk p LJ L,,. Astros blanflked - Lock that knee at the top!" Pre- CINCINNATI-Andy Kosco's run- cision marching and playing are scoring, pop fly single with two out the Michigan trademarks. in the eighth inning drove in the Stanford's band members, much game's only run and Don Gullett more colorful and less disciplined, pitched a four-hitter for his ninth scatter from one formation to the straight victory, giving the Cincin- next, decorate their instruments, nati Reds a 1-0 victory over the and present shows on controversial Houston Astros yesterday. topics. Major League Standings RESIDENTIAL CONSTITUENCY Dorms (3 seats) Fraternities (1 seat) Sororities (1 seat) ICC Co-ops (1 seat) Univ. Married Housing (H seat) Independent Housing (apartments) (6 seats) DIVISIONAL CONSTITUENCY Rackham (grad) (2 seats) Undergraduate (6 seats) Professional (Non-Rackham grad) (2 seats) SCHOOL and COLLEGE CONSTITUENCY LSA (4 seats) Engineering (1 seat) Education (1 seat) Law (1 seat) Medical (1 seat) Business (1 seat) Nursing (1 seat) Arch. & Design (1 seat) Music (1 seat) Social Work (1 seat) Dentistry (1 seat) Natural Resources (1 seat) Library Science (1 seat) Inter-College degree programs (1 seat) Pharmacy (1 seat) You can run for office in any district of which AM ERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE East East Baltimore Boston Detroit New York Milwaukee Cleveland w 89 82 79 " ) 71 67 L 61 69 71 77 85 Pct, GB .594 - .543 7f2 Pittsburgh .527 10 Montreal A494 15 St. Louis .470 18 New York .440 23 Chicago Philadelphia Giusti then went to 3-2 on Hahn LOS ANGELES A) -Wilt Chain- as I can say," admitted the 7'1"' before the Met pinch hitter stroked berlain, holdout center of the Los veteran of 14 National Basketball his game-winner. Angeles Lakers, affirmed yester- Association seasons. The Pirates scored all four of day his talks with the ABA's San The San Francisco Examiner re- their runs in the fourth. Bob Diego Conquistadors. He refused, ported yesterday that Chamberlain, Moose's walk, Dave Cash's infield however, to confirm or deny his 37, w o u 1 d sign a $600,000-a-year single and a walk to Al Oliver rumored jump to the rival league. contract with San Diego. loaded the bases before Richie Zisk I "I'm negotiating with the Con- The Big Dipper, appearing at a singled home a pair of runs. Man- quistadors as possibly being a Hollywood Boulevard bookstore to ny Sanguillen then lined a double player and coach, but that's as far autograph copies of his new book "Wilt," claimed he did not know' where the newspaper report origi- Gridde Pickngs ated. Chamberlain's contract with the ILakers has expired, but it con- WITH A DEEP sense of personal regret and loss, the Daily Sports tains an option clause binding him Staff announces the pasing of its esteemed contributing editor, C. to the Los Angeles club for another Andrew Bloom, known to his friends, simply, as "TOR." season. Pete Newell, Laker gen- No more shall we hear the pitter-patter of his tiny double-dribbles eral manager, said, "We expect around the- office. No longer shall we see that massive right arm, a Wilt to play this year and if he symphony of grace and violence, pulverize the wastebasket while I plays anywhere, he'll play here." stuffing a helpless coffee cup therein. Gone forever are the biting col- , Chamberlain, when asked to umns, the withering morning-after sarcasisms, the never-ending argu- comment on the Lakers' trade ments with Dan; yes, gone are all those things we have grown to Monday that sent forward Jim McMillian to the Buffalo Bravesj love and cherish through the passing years. for 7-foot center Elmore Smith, SERVICES WILL be private. The family requests that memorial responded "in what way?" Does he think the tradewa donations be sent to Mr. Pizza pizza, who furnishes the compensation made to give managementda lever for the winning entry in our weekly Gridde Pickings contest. TOR against him in contract negotia- wanted very much to be around after midnight Friday night to judge jtions? all the eligible entries. How unfortunate that cruel fate prevented him "I would think they would try from living out his dreams! to use it as a lever, yes," said TOR's body was donated to the University Medical Center, and has Wilt. West Oakland 89 61 "594 - Kansas City 82 69 .547 7V2 Minnesota 73 76 .487 15% Chicago 73 78 .487 16 California 69 78 .470 18V Texas 53 96 .350 35% Yesterday's Games Oakland 5, California 4 Cleveland 6, Milwaukee 5 Boston 4, New York 2 Baltimore 6, Detroit 2 Kansas City 4, Minnesota 3 Texas 7, Chicago 2 Today's Games Milwaukee at Cleveland California at Texas (2) Oakland at Minnesota (2) New York at Boston (n) Baltimore at Detroit (n) Chicago at Kansas City (n) CHICAGO (UPI) - To deter- mine a batter's slugging percen- tage divide his total at-bats into total bases. CHICAGO (UPI) - Luis Apa- ricio joined the White Sox in 1956 and promptly won nine straight base stealing titles with seven at Chicago and two more in Bal- timore. Aparicio, at 39, is still an active American League shortstop. ruisa.uci uia w 75 75 75 74 71 66 93 87 83 77 73 55 L 73 75 76 77 79 85 58 64 66 76 84 95 Pct. .504 .500 .497 .490 .473 .437 GB? 1i 1 2V2 5 10/ ~n West Cincinnati Los Angeles San Francisco Houston Atlanta San Diego .616 - .576 6 .561 9 .504 17 .477 21 .368 37Y ment) seats, the undergraduate seats, and the LSA seats. The filing deadline for all other seats is Monday, October 1, 1973. Any person who desires to run or has any questions should come to the SGC office in room 3X Michigan Union or call 763-3241. you are a constituent. Filing forms are avail- able in the SGC office on the third floor of the Michigan Union, room 3X. The filing deadline is Monday, September 24, 1973 at noon for the dorm seats, the Independent Housing (apart- Am since been trade dto the Winnipeg Blue Bombers for an undisclosedI high future draft choice. 1. Stanford at MICHIGAN (pick score) 2. Michigan State at Syracuse 3. Iowa at UCLA 4. Miami (Ohio) at Purdue 5. Illinois at California 6. Indiana at Arizona 7. Northwestern at Notre Dame 8. Colorado at Wisconsin 9. North Dakota at Minnesota 10. Southern Ca} at Georgia Tech 11. Texas at Miami (Fla.) 12. Alabama at Kentucky 13. Washington State at Arizona State 14. North Carolina State at Nebraska 15. Grambling vs. Morgan State (game in New York City) 16. Tulsa at Kansas State 17. Eastern Michigan at Indiana State 18. Texas A & M at Louisiana State 19. Montclair State at East Stroudsburg 20. DAILY LIBELS at Vassar Walker signs HOUSTON (JP) - The Houston Rockets of the National Basket- ball Association announced yes- terday that guard Jimmy Walk- er has signed a multi-year con- tract, ending a week-long hold- out. The Rockets announced ear- lier that rookie guards Lee Col- burn from South Dakota State and Eric McWilliams from Long Beach State have been waived. A BROWSING DELIGHT ! BE SURE TO VISIT THE Paperback Book Department (Thousands of Titles) on the Mezzanine at Fol Iett's State St. at North University Ann Arbor Yesterday's Games St. Louis 7, Montreal 4 Cincinnati 1, Houston 0 San Diego 9, Atlanta 4 New York 6, Pittsburgh 5 Chicago 3, Philadelphia 2 Today's Games San Francisco at Los Angeles, Inc. Montreal at Chicago, (2) St. Louis at Philadelphia (n) Pittsburgh at New York (n) Atlanta at Los Angeles (n) Cincinnati at San Francisco (n) Tge 5-Uinute. Whole-Earth. Studyperi'on': Computerized Dream: An Individually Tailored Research Source List. Writing a paper? Thesis? Cut out time wasted digging in indexes to find where to begin. We have on computer the authors and titles of 350,000 articles published in 548 history, poli sci and sociology journals since 1834. Send for free details, or call us free with an order. By mail, $4 for 25 citations; by phone, $6 plus C.O.D. postage. To order, call Nexus Corp. at: 800-854-3379 Call Toll Free. 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