Page Eight THE MICHIGAN-DAM' Wperne'dArn Octor r17. 1973 Page Eight THE MICH1GAN~ DAILY _________________ I- -....~- .---.--~--.. T T a.. t.l l tGJL7tid +1 t.A4 t lJt./T:1 1. / J I Farrell's men stress basics 0 l 1' 0 1 By ROGER ROSSITER Despite a myriad of problemsk surrounding the completion of the, Y o s t Coliseum transformation, Michigan hockey practice marches' on. Coach Dan Farrell has been stressing skating and agility, drills' thus far in the early going," the' kind of things," as Farrell put it, - "I wouldn't have 'them doing if they had been with me a couple years.'' Goaltending, one area that Far- rell hoped to be a strong point, became cloud-filled over the weekend. First freshman "Butch" Wagner suffered a shoulder separation that will sideline him indefinitely, and then fellow frosh netminder Bill Dewey decided to quit the team. Thus, after last year's backup Roy Bolles was cut from the squad, the Wolverines were reduced to only two healthy goalies, Robbie Moore and a third freshman Ron Thfun. "Depthwise, we really look weak in goal right now," summarized Farrell. Originally, Farrell had hoped to go with a two goalie system, not - - - - - - - n eariy going improved over what I saw of them last year. "Angie Moretto has lost weight whichdhas made him much quick-3 er and stronger, and Randy Neal S looks to be headed for a repeat of the great freshman year he had two seasons ago. Paul Paris and NIGHT EDITOR: Frank Werner have also looked THERESA SWEDO good." Just how far the young Wolver- ines have come will be known Fri- alternating every night necessarily, day when Bowling Green comes to but to the extent where both would town for a three hour scrimmage play a fairly equal number, of from 3-6 p.m. games. Whether that will now be "We'll be running our first line possible relies on Thrun's develop- people against theirs," Farrell ex- merit which, Farrell hinted, should plained. "We should both have a be fast. pretty good idea of what we've got The rest of the squad is coming after that." on strong, particularly the defense. Aside from Wagner, the only' "We've got eight defensemen and other injury of note belongs tol ten forwards that have deffhitely Gordie Cullen, a sophompre de- made the team," Farrell noted. fenseman. Cullen sustained a "What I have to decide now is minor foot injury over the week- which defensemen will start and end which should not sideline him which will be given a shot at for- for more than a few days. ward. This coming Sunday the Wol- "I'm not ruling out the possibility verines will stage an intra-squad of switching some of the defense- scrimmage at the Westland Arena men who do not start to the for- in Westland at 7 p.m. For those ward lines if I believe, they are fans interested in attending, the better than the forwards I have Westland Arena is on the corner now." of Cherry Hill and Newburgh Roads Farrell named seven freshmen just a short drive out Plymouth whom he considers, from whathe Road. has seen, to have already made- the team. The seven consisted ofj defensemen Rob Palmer, Dave SMORGASBORD Shand and Greg Natale, along 510 J PVU with forwards Doug Lindskog, Kris Manery, Gary Morrison, and WEDNESDAYS 6-9 p.m. Pat Hughes. T AKIOo First organizational meeting of Aikido Association of University of Michigan THURSDAY at 7:30 Michigan League Conference Rm. 5 Call HARVEY BARA for further info 663-1013 LED ZEPPELIN Killer, full color, 24" x 36" poster of the Zeppelin made f r o m their recent Detroit appearance SPECIAL LIMITED EDITION Send $2.00 with address to: PEOPLES POSTERS, L1 P.O. Box 212 Mason, Mich. 48854 ATTENTION! STUDENTS WITH WELL-TO-DO PARENTS By "well-to-do parents" we mean parents who invest in real estate and have approximately $165,000 in cash to invest in a fully occupied Ann Arbor student apartment. Our office has such a property to sell. The deal makes sense to any investor but makes greater sense to an investor who has a student son or daughter who could live in one of the attractive rental units thereby saving the expense of outside management.. Lost year the owners paid live-in and professional apart- ment managers approximately $6,800. Why not keep this in the family? AP Photo NEW YORK MET Wayne Garrett blasts the second pitch off Oakland's Jim "Catfish" Hunted in the first inning last night, at Shea Stadium in New York to 'give the home team an early lead. The Mets managed one more run before Hunter could retire the side in the second extra inning game of the series. The fourth game is scheduled tonight in New York. CAMPY STARS A's nip Me ts in, ove run. Millan then third on Staub's on Hunter's wild By The Associated Press NEW YORK-Bert Campaneris delivered a two-out -single in the 11th inning last night, scoring Ted Kubiak and giving the Oakland. A's a 3-2 victory over the New York Mets in the third game of the 1973 World Series. The victory gave the A's a 2-1 lead in the best-of-seven Series, with Game 4 scheduled for 8:30 pm., EDT, today in New York. Wayne Garrett hit a home run leading off the New York first and Tom Seaver struck out five batters as the New York Mets built a 2-0 lead dver the Oakland A's after three innings of the third World Series game last night. Garrett hit Jim "Catfish'' Hunt- er's second pitch into the right field seats for his second homer of the Series. The Mets also got their run in the first when Felix off with a home second singled, went to1 Millan single and scored singled, went to third on Rusty pitch. Staub's single and scored on a wild The A's scored in the sixth when pitch. Sal Bando doubled with one out Seaver, who gave up a double *and came home on Gene Tenace's to Joe Rudi in the first and a double. single to Bert Campaneris. in the Seaver struck out five straight third, recorded his five strikeouts men, including the side in the sec- consecutivelyin the first and sec- ond inning, before Dick Green ond innings. grounded out leading off the third. Dick Green grounded out leading The strikeout string was just one off the Oakland third, snapping short of the World Series record. Seaver's strikeout streak one short Seaver also struck out the side of the World Series record. Seaver scattered five hits and _ ? f struck out 10 A's after six innings +. . The Mets gave Seaver a 2-0 lead in the .first inning as they 'bid to take a 2-1 lead in games in the best-of-seven Series Garrett led I in the fifth inning and fanned A's slugger Reggie J a c k s o n three times. Rudi's single scored Campaneris, who had singled and then stole second. The A's got their first run in the sixth when Bando doubled with one out and came home on Te- nace's double. New York's Seaver scattered seveh hits and struck out 12 before giving way to reliever Ray Sadecki at the start of the ninth inning. Morrison, from nearby Ecorse, was termed "a gem" by Farrell. "He's the kind of guy we really! didn't expect much from, but he cime out and proved he can play hockey for us." With all the talk about the fresh- men, one might be led to believe that the incumbant skaters have not been overly impressive, but such is not the case. "Don't get me wrong," Farrell was quick to add, 'our upperclassmen look much Knicks blast Buffalo; winless Wings singed By The Associated Press The teams each had scored two NEW YORK-Dave DeBusschere goals in the second period, with! celebrated his. 33rd birthday last Alex Delvecchio and Henry Bou- night by scoring 28 points and cha scoring 33 seconds apart for grabbing 14 rebounds, sparking the Red Wings and St. Louis get-i the New York Knicks to a 117-91 ting goals from Ab Lemarco andI N'ational Basketball .Association Steve Durbano, also 33 seconds victory over the Buffalo Braves, apart. It was the Knicks' 11th triumph It was Detroit's fourth consecu- in 11 meetings with the Braves at tive loss, matching the club's Madison Square Garden. worst start ever. The Wings now DeBusschere, playing his final are the only team in the league season with the Knicks before without a point. taking over as general manager * * * of the New York Nets of the' Islanders catch Kings American Basketball Association, also did a strong defensive job on UNIONDALE, N.Y.-Lorne Hen- Buffalo's Jim McMillian in the ning rapped in a rebound with just second half. over eight minutes remaining, pro-! McMillian, game-high s c o r e r viding the New York " Islanders wifh 29 points, collected 23 in the with a 4-4 tie against the Los An- first half against Bill Bradley and geles Kings in a National Hockey Phil Jackson. But DeBusschere, a League game last night. member of the All-League defen- Henning's second goal of the sive team each of the past five season came at 11:46 of the third seasons,mchecked him with six period and erased a 4-3 Los An- points in the second half. I geles lead fashioned on Bob Nev- Meanwhile, the Knicks, who led in's goal at the four-minute mark 28-22 after one period and 57-51 of the final period. at halftime, pulled ahead 82-71 at the end of three quarters with the. Irs " 3 ,I Ij c t i i If interested, call BOB ROSMAN- CARL ROSMAN & CO. REALTORS Tower, Suite 717 26555 Evergreen Rd. Southfield, Mich. 48076 PHONE: 1-353-2100 $3.95 1. cold vichysoisse 2. coq an vin 3. potatoes anna 4. shrimp newburgh 5. boeuf burguignone 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 sardiies 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. eggrolls 55. hot mustard sauce 56. stuffed eggs bonnefemme 57. cole siaw 58. cold salmon 59. fresh tuna in soyu sauce 60. butter 61. home made bread 62. sliced tongue 63. horse radish sauce 64. chicken wings Japanese 65. fried squid 66. smoked pork chops 67. potato salad 68. russian salad 69. macaroni salad 70. jellied 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. cocktail sausage 84. hors d'oeuvres 85. stuffed grapeleaves 86. greek feta cheese 87. swiss cheese 88. ceddar cheese 89. bread pudding 90. rice pudding 91. creme caramel 92. baked apples 93. house cake 94. peaches ! 95. mandarin oranges 96. orange sliced candies 97. bananas Travelers 3035 Washtenaw across from lee Oldsmobile .E AP Photo SAL BANDO BOBBLES Felix Millan's grounder at the hot corner in last night's World Series tussle. Millan got a single when the ball caromed off Bando's chest. Although Millan scored in the first inning, he was stranded after this fourth inning safety. : .. ... .. ..: ..::i e::.. ... ... .. ... .. - - " -m help of 10 points by DeBusschere, then broke open the game in the fourth period.eThe husky, veteran. forward connected on 12 of his 151 floor shots in the game.1 The Knicks' Dean Meminger hit each of his five field goal attempts in the first period and contributed' 12 points in the final period blitz, winding up with 27 points. DETROIT-Lou Angotti deflected defenseman Bob Flager's 70-foot shot past Detroit goaltender Roy; Edwards with five minutes remain-. ing in the game last night and { gave the St. Louis Blues a 3-21 National Hockey League victory, over the Red Wings.7 Angotti's goal, at 14:55, seemed to catch Edwards completely by surprise as it trickled into the' righthand corner of the net. I IGridde rickinigs WANDERING THROUGH the dark, dank, dreary, dusty stacks graduate library I came upon an aged man. "I have traveled these dark, dank, dreary, dusty halls for moons. Could you show me the way out?" of the many Biliboa rd A H a r v a r d University representative will be on campus 24 October 1973 to discuss the Harvard MBA program. Students interested in discussing a career in administration should contact the Place- ment Office to arrange a time. Tonight and Tomorrow Night The RCKETS $.00 Tyler Palmer, former member of the U.S. Olympic Team at Sapporo,. appears at Schneider's Sport Shop in Briarwood Mall this Thursday. He will demon- strate ski technique and discuss ski problems beginning at 7:00 p.m. The' demonstration is free. i I As I showed him the way out he explained that he had been on his way to deliver his Gridde Pickings to 420 Maynard and got kidnapped and was thrown mercilessly into the library with no hope of escape. The tattered paper he held in his hand read, "Daily Libels 44, Rutgers 0." Yes, sports fans, the old man, Methusala, correctly predicted the first football score in history. (Rutgers played Princeton the following week. (The Libels game went unreported, until now, because the Daily _ I had not yet started publication.)) I Pizza pizz a. And thereupon regained his i 2. NBA Standings East Division W .TPt GFCA was promptly awarded a Mr. youth. Wisconsin at MICHIGAN (pick score) Ohio State at Indiana Illinois at Michigan State Minnesota at Iowa Northwestern at Purdue Colorado at Oklahoma Tennessee vs. Alabama at Birmingham Houston at Miami, Fla. Texas at Arkansas l- HOMECOMING I RINGDAY official- U. of M. Ring LARGE SELECTION MICHIGAN UNION LOBBY II Friday and Saturday LOCOMOBLE and WALRUS b1.50 Boston New Yo Buffalo Philade Houston Atlanta Clevela Capital EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division W L Pet. 2 0 1.000 ork 1 1 .500 1 2 .333 lphia . 0 2 .000 Central Division n 3 1 . 750 c 2 2 .500 nd 0 2 .000 0 3 .000 GB 1 1% 2 1 21 9",- Boston N.Y. Rangers Toronto Montreal Vancouver Buffalo N.Y. Islanders Detroit 3 0 2 0 2 1 2 0 1 2 1 2 0 2 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 6 5 4 4 2. 2 1 0' 18 10 13 '4 13 9z 9 5; 10 11 9 13, 3 10 7 18 Wed.-Fri., Oct. 17-19 Hours 11-5 8. 9. -5 C, Y SMOItIN:r r West Division .4 10. Stanford at Washington 11. Texas Tech at Arizona 12. Southern Methodist at Rice HOMECOMING RING DAY SPECIAL FREE SIGNATURE IN GOLD ROCK & ROLL Philadelphia California :3 0 0 6 4a 13 5 2 3 I 1 I ,*ll . : ) 7, 4 xv , I