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September 10, 1972 - Image 9

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Michigan Daily, 1972-09-10

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THE MICHIGAN DAiLY Page Nine'~'

Sunday, September 10, 1972

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Nine"'

.-

VOLS BURN TECH:

Indians

trip

BoSox;

Orioles sweep a

pair

:
.
.,

By The Associated Press ]
CLEVELAND - Graig Nettles

last night's twi - night double-
header.

drilled a home run with one out in The Orioles won the opener 2-11
the 10th inning yesterday that: on Terry Crowley's two-out homer!
gave the Cleveland Indians a 2-1 in the ninth after tying the score'
victory over the surging Boston in the eighth on a pinch single by
Red Sox and enabled Gaylord Per- Tommy Davis.
ry to win his 20th game. Alexander, 6-8, allowed a first-
The defeat ended a four-game inning single by Ron Theobald
winning streak for the first-place and then retired 13 consecutive
Red Sox. batters until Ellie Rodriguez
Nettles, 15th home run of the I reached on an error in the fifth.
season off reliever Gary Peters, ' Syd O'Brien beat out an infield
who took over in the ninth inning hit in the eighth.
of the nationally televised game Baylor hit a two-run homer in
after starter Lynn McGlothen left the opening inning off Ken Brett,
for a pinch hitter. 6-11, following the first of four
Perry, who has lost 15 times and hits by Davis in the nightcap.
failed in his last three starts to Johnson connected with a solo!
win No. 20, held the Red Sox to shot in the fourth.
four hits and struck out 10 in win- Davis singled and scored on a
ning for the first time since Aug. double by Bobby Grich in the sixth
22. and singled again as the Orioles
scored four unearned runs in the
Birds fly seventh - two on a double by
BALTIMORE - Don Baylor and Brooks Robinson following a two-
Dave Johnson rapped home runs out error by O'Brien.
to back Doyle Alexander's two-hit In the opener, Ollie Brown's
pitching as the Baltimore Orioles , second - inning homer off Balti-
downed Milwaukee 8-0 in the sec-1t more starter Dave McNally stood
ond game to complete a sweep of I until Johnson opened the eighth
V .V VO.V.V , V.VV. %tflft....V. . V..tst.V .C.. .VW
Major League Standings

with the Orioles' second hit off
Jim Lonborg, 12-10, and scored on
the pinch safety by Davis.
Lonborg retired the first two
batters in the ninth before Crow-
ley slammed a 3-1 delivery into
the right-field bleachers for his
10th homer.
Sparky sparks
DETROIT - Rob Gardner and
Sparky Lyle combined to pitch
a six-hitter and Bernie Allen, Fe-
lipe Alou and Bobby Murcer each
drove in a run as the New York
Yankees beat the Detroit Tigers
3-1 last night and tightened the
race in the American League East.
The setback cost the Tigers a
chance to move back into first
place. They remained one - half
game behind Boston and a simi-
lar distance in front of Baltimore.
The Yankees, who ended a three-
game losing streak, are two
games from the top.
Gardner, 7-2, was relieved by
Lyle after Bill Freehan singled
with two out in the eighth. The re-
lief ace fanned Frank Howard
and went on to pick up his 32nd
save, two short of the American
League record.
Allen, a last minute replace-
ment for third baseman Celerino
Sanchez, who developed a severe
headache, opened the third inn-
ing with a home run off loser Joe
Coleman, 15-13.

Buffs.
By The Associated Press
BOULDER Sophomore line-
backer Ed Shoen returned a third-
period interception 48 yards for a
touchdown and Fred Lima bootedj
two long-distance field goals yes-
terday as nationally ranked Colo-
rado held off a stubborn California*
team 20-10 in the college football
openerfor both squads.
The Colorado defense, guilty of
sloppy tackling throughout the.
game, came up with a big play
when it had to, including Shoen's
runback that gave the Buffaloes
a 17-3 lead.
Lima, a -barefooted soccer-style
kicker who is a native of Chile,
kicked a 46-yard field goal just
before the half and came back late:
in the fourth period with a 55- I
yarder, which set a school record
for distance and tied the Big Eight
mark.'
*I * *
Ducks dropped'
COLUMBIA, Mo. - Senior Greg,
Hill booted a 31-yard field goal with
six seconds remaining, lifting Mis-
souri's Tigers to a 24-22 victory
over Oregon yesterday in the col-
lege football opener for both
schools.
Hill's field goal climaxed a des-!
peration drive from Oregon's 41-
yard line in the game's final 37
seconds.

Tigers

daily
sports
NIGHT EDITOR:
FRANK LONGO
BULLETIN
LOS ANGELES (YP) - Efren
Herrera kicked a 29-yard field
goal with 22 seconds to play as
unranked UCLA stunned the top-
ranked Nebraska Cornhuskers
20-17 last night before 67,702
fans in Memorial Coliseum.

out with less than four minutes
remaining, converted the Kansas
mishap into a touchdown and two
point conversion and edged the
Jayhawks 18-17 in an intersectional
college football season opener yes-
terday.
The late-game turnabout nulli-
fied a record-smashing perform-
ance by David Jaynes, Kansas'
junior quarterback. Jaynes passed
for two touchdowns and broke
Kansas school and individual rec-
ords by completing 24 of 45 passes
for 380 yards.

win

placement from slightly to the lft
of the uprights.
The victory snapped an eight-
game losing streak for Missouri,
whose Cherry matched Oregon's
Dan Fouts' touchdown pass per-
formance with a pair of his own.
Vols vault
ATLANTA-Reserve tailback Bill
Rudder scored one touchdown and
passed for another in a 71-second
span of the third period yesterday
as 15th-ranked Tennessee, cashing

COLLEGE FOOTBALL SCORES
Colorado 20, California 10
Wyoming 30, Idaho State 14
Eastern Mich. 26, Wisc. Oshkosh ,14
Grambling 6, Morgan State 0
Ohio U. 26, Central Mich. 21
Kansas State 21, Tulsa 13
Florida State 19, Pittsburgh 7
Syracuse 17, Temple 10
North Carolina,,28, Richmond 18
Tennessee 34, Georgia Tech 3
Kansas State 21, Tulsa 3
Missouri 24, Oregon 22
Northern Mich, 24, Wisc., Whitewater
14
Washington state 18, Kansas 17
Western Mich. 28, Long Beach
State 20
Glenville State 35, Northwood
institute 24
Washington 13, Pacific 6
Auburn 14, Mississippi St. 3
Maryland 24, No. Carolina St. 24
Washington St. 18, Kansas 17
PRO EXHIBITIONS
Atlanta 44, Cincinnati 14
Chicago 33, St. Louis 14
Green Boy 20, Kansas City 0
Washington 10, Pittsburgh 10

American League

* National League
East

a Boston
Deiroit
Baltimore
New York
Cleveland
Milwaukee

East
W
71
7s
72
71
62
54
West

L
60
62
63
64
71
81

Pet.
.542
.537
.533
.526
.466
.440

GB Pittsburgh
I/ Chicago
1 New York
2 St. Louis
10 Montreal
19 Philadelphia

W
78
74
68
64
61
49
West

L
47
61
64
71
72
85

Pct.
.647
.548
.515
.474
.459
.366

GB
171/2
17%/
23
25
3712

AP Photo
CALIFORNIA'S STEVE BARTKOWSKI (10) barely gets off a pass
in yesterday's 20-10 loss to Colorado. It was the season opener for
both teams. Bartkowski completed 24 of 49 pass attempts for 261
yards.

Stymied twice deep in the Ducks' in on turnovers, crushed Georgia
territory earlier in the fourth per- Tech 34-3 in a nationally televised
iod, Missouri broke through in the college football opener.
final drive as John Cherry, their
new quarterback, hit Jack Bas-
table on a pass carrying to the ,jas jolted
Oregon 20.
Don Johnson then cracked six LAWRENCE, Kan. - Washington
yards to the 14, setting up Hill's State pounced on a fumbled pitch-

Oakland 78 55 .586 -
Chicago 76 58 .567 2'A
Minnesota 67 65 .508 10x/
Kansas City 65 67 .492 12?
California 62 72 .463 16x/2
Texas 51 83 .381 27/
Yesterday's Results
Cleveland 2, Boston 1, 10 ihnings
Baltimore 2, Milwaukee 1. 1st
Maltimore 8, Milwaukee 0, ;2nd
Minnesota 3, Kansas City 2, 13 innings
Texas 3, Oakland 2
New York 3, Detroit 1
Chicago 3, California 2
Today's Games
New York (Stottlemyre 13-16) at De-
troit (Scherman 6-2)
Oakland (Holtzman 15-11) at Texas
(Hand 10-11)
Boston (Pattin 14-12 and Curtis 9-6)
at Cleveland (Dunning 4-2 and Lopez
0-0)
Minnesota (Woodson 12-13) at Kan-
sas City (Splittorff 11-10)
Milwaukee (Brett 6-10) at Balti-
more (Palmer 18-9)
California (May 8-10) at Chicago
(Wood 24-12)

I
I
:I

Cincinnati 82 52 .612 -
Houston 75 59 .560 7i
Los Angeles 72 62 .537 10
Houston 75 59 .560 7!Kn
Atlanta 63 72 .457 19/
San Francisco 59 76 .437 23%!
r iso !!!idMrs. Kin~
San Diego 50 82 .379 31 Ms etra' eut
Yesterday's Results g
New York 3, St. Louis 1
San Francisco 2, Cincinnati 1 FOREST HILLS WP) - Billie
Chicago 7, Philadelphia 4 Jean King won her second consec-
Los Angeles 4, Houston utive women's title at the U. S.
Other clubs not scheduled Open Tennis Championships yes-
Today's Games terday by blitzing Kerry Melville
Chicago (Reuschel 6-7) at Philadel- of Australia 6-3, 7-5.
phia (Reynold s2-12 4) at New York Mrs. King, the top seed from
Seaver (16-11) Long Beach, Calif., completely,
Pittsburgh (Kison 8-5) at Montreal outplayed the 25-year-old Aus-{
(Torrez 15-9) tr gil ded No 9 he
Cincinnati (Grimsley 12-7 and Mc-:alian girl, seed .9, as she
Glothin 7-6) at San Francisco (Reber- captured her third U. S. title in
ger 3-3 and Marichal 5-15), 2 blustery wind and occasional
Atlanta (Reed 11-13 and Niekro 12- rain.
11) at San Diego (Corkins 5-8 and Ar- The match was held up by a
lin 8-18), 2
Houston (Griffin 4-3) at Los An- shower for eight minutes in the?
geles (Sutton 15-9) first set and all of the secondI

E, NASTASE ADVANCE

captures tennis title

was played in a whipping wind
that tugged and tossed the pleated
white skirt of Mrs. King's tennis
dress.
EwIrlier, Miami's Arthur Ashe
and ilie Nastase, a hawk-faced,
long - haired Romanian, advanced
to the men's final Sunday with
relatively easy semi-final tri-
umphs.
Ashe swept past 12th-seeded
Cliff Richey of Sarasota, Fla., 6-1,
6-4, 7-6, while Nastase turned back
longshot Tom Gorman of Seattle
4-6, 7-6, 6-2, 6-1..
Arthur Ashe, who won this title
as an amateur in 1968, puffed out
a big sigh of relief when he took
the match point on a volley.
Ashe, 6-foot-1 and only 150
pounds, romned to an easy vic-
tory in the first set and got the
break he needed in the ninthgame
of the second set, whipping one of
his backhand trademarks to the
baseline on game point.

bled on the scuffed, scarred and
worn grass in the ivy-covered old
stadium and lay motionless for a
moment.
The reigning Wimbledon queen
got slowly to her feet and limp-
ed slightly on her rightaankle as
she returned to the baseline to re-
sume her service. She didn't ap-
pear to be troubled afterwards,
however.
Miss Melville, who lists among
her accomplishments a former
Tasmanian Open title, reached the
title round by way of a semifinal
upset of 17-year-old Chris Evert of
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., the No. 3
seed.
Butshe was over m a t che d
against the veteran Mrs. King
xwho, at one time or another in a!
lengthy career, has taken the na-
tional championships of nine coun-
tries.

AND
TEE ANDKI
PACKAGE PRICES
2 AT
GREAT SAVINGS
KN E ISSL
OLINI
HOURS RSINL2455 5. STATE
M,.W,Th, F: ROSSIGNOL mile South of Campus
10-9 P.m.
T, Sat.: 10-5:30 K-2 Phone 662-7307

Ruggers trounce Boilermakers;
backfield paces offensive attack

By ANDREW WHITEHALL Championship last spring while
The Michigan Rugby Football Michigan had seven new faces in
Club started its fall season with a the lineup.
convincing 12-6 victory over Pur- At times, tempers flared, but
due at Palmer Field yesterday. Referee Bill Schnure quickly warn-
The Blue ruggers scrambled to a ed both teams and kept the game
two-try advantage in the first half quite clean.
on the fleet footed running of John Despite the fact that the Blue's
Bohlke and Ron Smith. Bohlke Deptwh atta theie'
darted down the near sideline af- preseason strength was their
tertakng wel eecued assscrum, the backs played excep-
ter taking a well executed passtionally well. Scrum half Todd
from Smith. The conversion failed. Peterson played a major part of
Smith closed out the first half the game with a gashed finger but
scoring with a zig-zag effort down managed to get the ball out to
the opposite sideline, the backs with accurate consis-
Michigan increased their lead to tency. Cleland Child, having moved
three trys on the quick reflexes to standoff from his usual scrum'
of Vern Plato as he recovered a half position, had numerous break-'
lohse ball in Purdue's goalea aways up the middle, but could
in the early portion of the second never manage to score because of
haR poor support from the forwards.
nila malrrr finallyr m f

in the set scrum," said scrum cap- He built a 3-1 lead in the third
tain Quint Lawson, we were strong set before the determined Richey
enough in the loose rucks; but the rerled off 12 consecutive points,
real decisive factor in the game swept three games at love and
was the backs who showed again! forced the set to the tie-breaker.
how superior they are to most The 28-year-old Mrs. King,
clubs. It was in fact a backs whose face registered every emo-
game."tion in the quick march to the title,
had relatively little trouble.
Purdue avoided a shutout for the But she sent a gasp through the
day when their "B" team defeated crowd of 14,683 in the eighth game
Michigan's Gold ruggers 106. of the second set when she stum-
The Boilermakers struck early
for a 6-0 lead before Michigan's ...
Hank Lukaski gracefully swooped
down on a loose ball on the Pur-
due five yard line and glided into l
the endzone for an unassisted try.
The successful conversion tied the There will be an important
halftime score at six apiece. meeting for all undergraduate
h e pn interectA i f inrr varsity

Huron Valley
National Bank Announces

Faulty tackling by the Gold al-

n onrma ers tnany camn t
life near the close of the game on
the fine kicking of their fullback
who converted one of three drop
kicks with the other two narrowlyt
missing. Purdue also split the up-
rights on a penalty kick after the
Blue were detected to be off side.
Except for brief flourishes of
brilliance, both sides played rather
shoddily. The passing was sloppy,
the tackling, was ragged, and some
of the basic skills remained in the
book.
Both sides, however, had an ex-
cuse. Purdue had lost ten of their
regular starting fifteen which pre-'
vented Michigan from a Big Ten

lowed Purdue to take the lead half-
Ross Viekers, playing with a
severly strained neck muscle-- way through the second half, a;
from the Windsor tournament- margin Michigan could never catch
drew excited murmurs from the despite playing inside the Purdue
crowd after blocking and recover- 'fifty the duration of the game.
ing a Purdue kick and sprinting

17e1 Her e in p aytg gasiy
tennis this year on Monday, Sep-
tember 11 at 4 p.m. in the large
classroom in the basement of the
athletic building. All interested
should attend and bring their
class schedules and phone num-
bers.

inside the Purdue 25-yard line,
only to have his pass knocked-on.
"We've got a lot of potential,"
said club president Chuck Drukis
after the game, "but we're going to
have to put it all together. We
made too many mistakes and we
weren't aggressive enough."
"Although we were overpowered

FALL TERM BOWLING
LEAGUES FORMING
SIGN UP NOW-UNION LANES
--OPEN-
11 a.m. thru 12 midnite Mon. thru Thurs.
11 a.m. thru 1 a.m. Fri. and, Sat.
1 p.m. thru 12 midnite Sundays

WED.-SAT SEPT 6-9
SUN., SEPT 10
MON.-TUES., SEPT 11-12
A LIiI N
A NT WALKER
-- __ _

THE GREAT FRISBEE GIVEAWAY

MARK'S Coffee House
FEATURING ANN ARBOR'S GREATEST JUKE BOX
HOMEMADE Soups, Salads, Sandwiches,
Teas, Juices, ESPRESSO, Bagels,
OMELETS & Greazy (HeH-HeH) BURGERS
-4. Altcr-T-c .1 rf TLA r, + ,4 - T A 'C 11,1--n f /n t --n r)n -, \,r\, I

Open a checking or savings account at our cam-
pus branch (777 N. University, next to Hill Audi-
torium) and we'll give you a frisbee. Absolutely free.
Not just any old run-of-the campus frisbee, mind you,
but a brand new WHAM-O Professional Frisbee.
To get yours, just open your account any day
between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. and on Saturday 9 a.m.-
12 p.m. from Tuesday, September 5 through Tues-
day, September 12. We'll have extra staff to provide
you with the fastest, most courteous new account
service on campus. Frisbees will be given away as long
as the generous supply lasts.

leNatiol
-U7f -8

lee
1
ial

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