Friday, September 221, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY vage Nine 'Fi,Spebe,1 17 HEMCIGA AL aeNn Cards boast WRCN Rockin' 650 serving your dorm top defense serving your City WCBN 89.5 fm stereo By BERNARD ARGENBRIGHT I $ It was January 1, 1972, that the Michigan Wolverines, ' on the trail of an undefeated season, ran into the Thunder- chickens. The Stanford defensive unit never let the Michigan offense get untracked all day, doing their part to inflict a 13-12 defeat on the Maize and Blue. The Thunderchickens are gone now, playing pro ball in Minnesota, Houston, San Diego, and other towns. But the I A Stanford defense that remains is still not a unit to be taken ARMYNA VY SURPLUS lightly. Bo Schembechler realizes their potential. Referring to Stanford's debacle against Penn State he said, "Stanford 518 EAST WILLIAM played a great game on defense (against Penn State). They 10-5:30 761-6207 have some great people like Roger Stilwell and Randy Poltl, who played a great game against us in the Rose Bowl." Stilwell, a junior, is already one Stop in and See our rge of the best defensive linemen in the country. Only a junior, Stilwell da l selection of winter coats: features agility and speed, and has a reputation of being impossible to block one on one. He should be quite a challenge for Curtis Tucker. Poltl's "great game" against Michigan consisted of ten unas- NIGHT EDITOR Down Parkas . . $48.50 sisted tackles. A genuine all JOEL GREER America candidate, he holds down strong safety.________ _______ Joining Stilwell on the line inA F ek1fl4 Stanford's pro-style defense are Ferguson, as you may remem- end Pat Donovan and tackles Pete ber, was the man who was drag- A FP k6 2 Hanson and Joe Martin, Hanson is ged into the end zone by Ed Shut- A described as a "smart player," tlesworth that gave Michigan a which is a nice asset for a defen- temporary lead in the Rose Bowl. P Coats $2 . sive tackle to have. Donovan and Ferguson has now forgotten that aM.ll Martin saw considerable action cheap call, and should have a spe- last year in a reserve capacity. cial incentive in Saturday's game.! RegmTseField They may not be the Thunder- Last season, the Stanford defenseg ai n chickens, but they should get the was termed the "mystery defense" job done. as its 'only consistent trait was Stanford lost its entire starting inconsistency. It could be better J linebacking corps to graduation. this time around. Coach Jack Christensen has done ------Wool Air Force Coats (Used) $9.98 a capable job in repairing this unit. Senior Gordon Riegel and sopho- more Geb Church man the outside1 SHOP AT Army Field Coats(Used) $ 7.90 In the middle is a remarkable athlete named Forrie Martin. Mar- FOLL ETTS 4 ypesof Split tin runs the 40 in 4.5 seconds, the Typesin97,ad itrit oyu 100 in 9.7, and hits with joyous abandon. Michigan coaches speakd am A . of him with a touch of envy in f d spp Hood Parkasfrom $24.99 their voices. The secondary is the strength of: Stanford Athletic Deportment Photo ROGER STILLWELL (91), the fulcrum in the 1973 Stanford Cardinal defense, takes off in hot pursuit of Washington's fabled Sonny Six- killer (6) in 1972 action. Although the Cardinal defense figured to be weak in '73, volatile Penn State was pressed to push over 20 points in an opening day victory over Stanford. Perhaps the biggest question going into Saturday's Stanford-Michigan tussle is whether the Indians will be able to stop the potent Michigan attack. CARDINALS CRUMBLE: Pittsburgh clings to, East lead Foster belted two homers eds, giving him three for By The Associated Press e Cub Exwalked, stole second, continued to NEW YORK - Ron Hodges de- xpthird on catcher Bob Stinson's wild livered a 'two-out single in the win- CHICAGO-Rick Monday banged throw and raced home on Randy ning run and give the New York out three hits and scored three Hundley's squeeze bunt. Mets a 4-3 victory over the Pitts- runs yesterday to lead the revived* * burgh Pirates Thursday night. Chicago Cubs to a 5-4 victory over John Miner and Ken Boswell the Montreal Expos. Bry ant rolls started the 13th with walks and Singles by Monday and Don Kes- SAN FRANCISCO - Lefthander Don Hahn popped out attempting singer, who also had three hits, Ron Bryant struggled to his 23rd to bunt. Hodges followed with his and the first of three wild pitches victory, Chris Speier's bases-load- single to left off reliever Dave by Montreal starter Steve Renko, ed triple sparked a six-run, third- 14-11, gave the Cubs a 1-0 lead in inning rally, and the San Fran- The victory boosted the Mets the first inning. cisco Giants outlasted the Cin- into second place in the National Bob Bailey tied the game for cinnati Reds 7-5 yesterday. ust one-half game Montreal in the second when he Bryant, 23-11, was trailing 4-1 League East, s - m hit his 25th home run of the base- when the Giants erupted with six ei Metsent the gamball season to extend his hitting consecutive hits in the third. Suc- etie on the strengtheogaf Duf streak to 13 games. cessivq' singles by Bobby Bonds, Dyer's two-out run-scoring double Chicago regained the lead for ITito Fuentes and Garry Maddox in the ninth. Pinch-hitter Boswell good in the third when Monday started the rally and chased Reds led off the inning with a single and doubled, went to third on a single starter Ross Grimsley. was sacrificed to second. One out by Kessinger and scored when sec- Reliever Dick Baney, 1-1, yielded later, Dyer belted a double off the ond baseman Larry Lintz bobbled a single to Gary Matthews and wall in left field to tie the game Billy Williams' grounder. Speier's triple for a 5-4 Giants at 3-3 The Cubs got what turned out lead. Run-scoring singles by Dave Dave Cash ripped a two-out dou- to be the winning run in the sixth, Kingman and Bryant capped .the ble in the Pittsburgh ninth inning making it 5-1 when Paul Popovich rally. to give the Bucs a brief 3-2 lead Bob Robertson drew a walk to} start the inning, Dal Maxvill sac Major League Standings rificed him to second and, after an intentional q alk to Richie Heb- AERICAN LEAGUE ner, Cash delivered his tie break- NATIONAL LEAGUE ing hit. East East n. Pete Rose's leadoff the Stanford team. They finished hit-batsman, Bryant's er- number one in pass defense in the >ickoff attempt and Tony Pac-8 last season, and they have n-scoring grounder gave a good chance of doing it again. two runs in the first. Poltl, along with veteran sidekick Jim Ferguson provides the nu- cleus. Jim Kaffen and Doc Blan-! , chard round out the secondary. N.* , Bird~(s Cembarirass ih n1 YTROIT-Don Baylor collected four singles, stole three bases, scored two runs and drove in two others while Jim Palmer fired his second consecutive shutout in the Baltimore Orioles' 9-0 victory over the Detroit Tigers last night. Baltimore pelted Tiger pitchers for 15 hits-all singles. The Orioles also pulled off a triple play in the fifth against pinch-hitter Frank Howard. Dick Sharon was on first and Aurelio Rodriguez was on second when Howard hit a grounder to Brooks: Robinson at third. Robinson step- ped on the bag to force Rodriguez, threw to second to force Sharon, and the relay was in time to retire Howard. The Orioles, who stole five bases in the first three innings, jumped to a 3-0 lead in the first with Bay- lor stealing hone for one of the runs. The other run in the inning scored when Baylor stole second and catcher Bill Freehan's throw to second base was wild for an! error. he4Ah s} LpFhr. That's right! A new name for you apartment hunters-and at this time of year it must be a welcome sight. EXPLORER'S BOOKSTORE formerly PENGUIN BOOK CENTER * out of town NEWSPAPERS MAGAZINES * /PAPERBACKS SCI-FI, FANTASY, MYSTERY, & MORE " NEWSPAPER-MAGA- ZINE RESERVATION SERVICE * SCI-FI BOOK CLUB TO BEGIN IN SEPT. '73 611 Church Street Ann Arbor 769-6644 I ' * * Cards slide PHILADELPHIA - Bob Boone and Greg Luzinski hit solo home runs in the sixthtinning last night' - to break a 4-4 tie and give the 'Philadelphia Phillies a 6-5 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals. The P'hillies took a 3-0 lead in the second when Denny Doyle homered after aswalk to Mike Schmidt and a single. by Larry Bowa. They added a run in the fourth when Bowa singled, took second as Mike Rogodzinski walk- ed, went to third on a passed ball and scored on D~oyle's sacrifice fly. St. Louis scored an unearned runj in the second, then used consecu- tive singles by Bake McBride, Ted Simmons and Tim McCarver to score again in the third. After Joe Torre was intentionally walked, Bernie Carbo walked to force in the third St. Louis run. The Cardinals tied it 4-4 in the sixth when McBride was hit with a pitch and scored on Simmons' dou- ble. Carbo hit his eighth home run in the seventh to make it 6-5. Balt i more Boston Detroit New York :Milwaukee Cleveland Oakland Kansas City Minnesota jChicago California Texas w 90 83 80 75 67 90 83 74 14 72 53 L 62 69 72 78 80 86 62 70 77 79 79 99 Pct. GBz :546 7 Pittsburgh .526 10 New York .490 1512 Montreal .474 18 St. Louis .438 23%2 Chicago Philadelphia West 76 s 3 75 73 68 94 89 84 78 7 3 56 L 75 77 77 78 79 85 59 64 68 81 96 Pct. .500 .497 .493 .490 .480 .444 .614 .582 .553 .503 .474 .368 G(B 3 LET US TELL YOU MORE ... First off, we are located mile from the Eastern Michigan University Campus and only a 10 minute drive from your North Campus at U. of M. We have a unique environment to offer those that live at Huron View. We have more than 800 students living here--not only from your Uni- versity but others also. This offers a tremendous academic and social environment for student renters. NOW FOR YOUR APARTMENT ... One, Two and Three Bedrooms with air conditioning, pool, recreational areas, drapes and laundry fa- cilities, and furniture available if you wish. NOW FOR YOUR COST... ONE BEDROOMS (150-160) TWO BEDROOMS (170-200) THREE BEDROOMS (220-260) RENTAL OFFICE OPEN NOON-6 P.M. EXCEPT SUNDAYS PHONE 483-6007 West 1I,'' .592 .542 7V2 .490 151/ .484 161E .477 17/ .349 37 Cincinnati Los Angeles San Francisco Houston Atlanta San Diego 5 9jb' 17 21 it. 27f.', ZEN I and AIKIDO Yesterday's Results Minnesota 4 Oakland 3, 1st ' Oakland at Minnesota 2nd, inc.< California 6, Texas 4, 1st, 11 innings { California at Texas 2nd, inc.1 Baltimore 9. Detroit 0 Kansas City 10, Chicago 3 Other clubs not scheduledt Today's Games Oakland (Holtzman 20-12) at M-in :esota (Corbin 6-5)t California (Hand 5-6) at Texas (Clyde 4-6) Boston (Pattin 13-14) at Detroit (Lolich 15-14) Chicago (Kaat 14-13) at Kansas Cityj (Busby 14-15)< Baltimore (Alexander 10-8) at Mil- waukee (Champion 5-7) Only games scheduled Yesterday's Results Chicago 5, Montreal 4 San Francisco 7, Cincinnati 5 Philadelphia, 6, St. Louis 5 New York 4, Pittsburgh 3 (13 innings) Atlanta at Los Angeles, inc. Other clubs not scheduled S Today's Games Montreal (Rogers 9-3) at Chicago (Hlooton 13-14) Pittsburgh (Blass 3-8) at New York (Seaver 17-10) St. Louis (Wise 13-12) at Philadelphia (Ruthven 6-9) j San Francisco (D'Aquisto 0-0 and Barr 11-15) at San Diego (Greif 9-16 and Jones 5-5), 2 Cincinnati (Billingham 18-9) at .Los Angeles (Osteen 16-10) Only games scheduled a lecture on Zen (Zazen) will be presented by the reknown Zen Master Rev. Soyu Matsuoka to be followed by an aikido demonstration by one of the foremost instructors Sensei Takashi Kushida 7th degree black belt I U0 CLE KARL You Sept. 21, 1973 Friday 7:30 WANTS IM Bldg.-Wrestling Gym State and Hoover Streets r i Miriam and Friends Featuring Folks and other musics dulcimer, piano, voice at i 0 f _ _- T '.., .... t,.. , ......1... ,.. . ...