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September 21, 1972 - Image 9

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Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1972-09-21

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a
Thursday, September 21,'l 972

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Nine

Thrdy epebr2, 92TEMIHGNDIL aeNn

Surprising I
By ROGER ROSSITER
If there are any long time Michi-d
gan football fans in the stands of j
the Los Angeles Coliseum Satur- i7
day night, they can hardly be
blamed if they are struck with a
little nostalgia when the name of sot
UCLA's starting quarterback is an-
nounced. You see, UCLA's quar- NIGHT EDITOR:
terback, Mark Harmon, is the son BOB McGINN
of Michigan's legendary number
98, Tom Harmon. breakaway play when we've need-
Bruin coach Pepper Rodgers ed it." He also expressed pleasure
has made the big move to the with the ground game which he
wishbone, and Harmon, a junior called "very strong," but was
college transfer, came out of noI quick to add that this week's scrap
where to take the helm. with Michigan will be a true test
THE BRUINS OPENED the sea- of how strong it really is.
son with what may well be the up- Halfbacks James McAlister and
set of the 1972 season, a stunning Kermit Johnson are the hub of
20-17 cliffhanger over the top the ground attack. McAlister (6-1,
rated Nebraska Cornhuskers. Last 195) has carried 34 times for 174
Saturday the Bruins followed up yards, in the Bruins two victories,
with a 38-28 road victory over Pitts- while Johnson, (6-1, 185) has toted
burgh that was not as close as the the pigskin 29 times for 195 yards,
score indicates. with 80 of those yards coming on
The key to the Bruins' success one play.
to date has been their powerful Gary Campbell, (6-1, 210), rounds
ground attack and their ability to out the backfield from his fullback
take advantage of other ,people's post. Campbell spends a lot of
mistakes. time blocking for McAlister and
Rodgers admitted that "we have Johnson and has also racked up
been very fortunate in getting the 54 yards in 15 carries.
-- qhR rin ha hd d blnh1

ruins

slow

power

Tigers tame

Tribe 4=1;

200). This duo could be called on
often to help plug the gaps should
the defensive line run into diffi-
culty.
Jimmy Allen, whose name does
not even appear on the UCLA pre-
season roster), burst into the start-
ing lineup against Nebraska and
has since intercepted three passes
on his way to becoming the defen-
sive leader.
Returning. starter Allan Ellis
holds down the left halfback slot,
opposite Allen, while James Bright
does the job at safety.

S

t
i
f
4
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3
;,
r
s
k
f
P

RODGERS HINTED that he may
try to go with more of a balance
between running and passing this
week in realization that relying on
just a rushing attack against Mich-
igan would most likely be fatal.
'Michigan will probably come
out throwing," Rodgers said. "I
know Bo is saving something for
us, and whatever it is we'll have
to be ready."
Rodgers coyly admitted that his
team was sky high after upsetting
Nebraska, commenting, "Would-
n't anyone be up after beating a
team like Nebraska?"
UCLA has been an extremely
opportunistic ballclub in, its first
two games, using costly Nebraska
turnovers and some timely inter-
ceptions against Pittsburgh to gain
victory.
viRodgers was fearful that such
generosity might not be forth-
coming this week commenting,
"Coaxing a well coached, highly
disciplined team like Michigan in-
to making mistakes can be a try-
ing occupation."

Bosox I
By The Associated Press ;
CLEVELAND - Woody Fryman
hurled a six-hitter last night and
drove in two runs with a ninth inn-
ing single as the Detroit Tigers
tripped Cleveland 4-1 in American
League baseball.
The Tigers, locked in a four-
way struggle for the East Division
title, were tied 1-1 after eight inn-
ings with the Indians.
Gates Brown opened the Detroit
ninth with a single and moved up
on a sacrifice before Duke Sims,
like Fryman a National League
retread, drilled a tie-breaking
double.
Two intentional walks loaded the
bases with two out and Fryman,
8-2 since coming to the Tigers in
early August, singled for two more
runs.
The Tigers scored in the first
inning on a walk, a stolen base
by Jim Northrup and Brown's
single to left.
The Indians tied it in the sixth
when, with two out, Chris Cham-
bliss singled and went all the way
to third as the ball bounced away
from right fielder Sims. Roy Fos-
ter walked and Craig Nettles sing-
led.
Birds plucked
BOSTON - Luis Tiant pitched a
four-hitter for his sixth shutout of
the season and the Boston Red Sox
beat the Baltimore Orioles 4-0 to
sweep a baseball doubleheader last
night and increase their lead in the
American League East pennant
race.
The Red-Sox exploded for seven
runs ini the fourth inning of the
first game to beaththe Orioles and
Jim Palmer, 9-1.
The victories increased Boston's'
lead to one game over Detroit, 2 /
games over Baltimore and 3 /
games over the New York Yan-
kees.
Tiant, a veteran right-hander
with service with three major
league teams, has a 13-5 record for
the season and has won nine of his
last 10 games. Six ofhis last seven
victories have been shutouts.
The Red Sox got their first hit

and scored their first run off Mike'
Cuellar, (17-11), in the fifth inning.
Doug Griffin singled; moved to
second on an infield out and scor-
ed on Tommy Harper's single.
Boston added two more in the
seventh on Dwight Evans' triple,
a walk to Harper and Luis Apa-
ricio's single, which scored Evans
and moved Harper to third. Harp-
er scored on a wild pitch from Cu-
ellar.
Boston starter Marty Pattin won
his career-high 15th victory in the
first game. He has been 13-3 since;
June 12. He gave up five hits while
striking out six and walking four.
Mets manhandle
NEW YORK - Tom Seaver,
showing no signs of a recent in-
jury, pitched a five-hitter as the
New York Mets delayed the Pitts-
burgh Pirates' pennant-clinching
celebration with a 4-1 victory last
night.
The Pirates, needing only one
victory or a loss by the second-
place Chicago Cubs to clinch their
third straight National League
East title, scored a first inning run
off the New York ace but were
unable to get untracked there-
after.

yop

Birds twi~ce'

Seaver, 18-12, hasn't completed
his last five starts, three due to
a hip injury. He struck out 1S
Pirates with an assortment of
hard sliders and fast balls.
Braves bounce
ATLANTA - Felix Milan rapped
a bases-loaded triple and a two-
run single and Dusty Baker crack-
ed a three-run homer as the Atlan-
ta Braves exploded for 13 runs in
the second inning and belted the
Houston Astros 13-6 in National
League baseball last night.
The Braves sent 19 batters to the
plate against four Astro pitchers
and equalled their club record for
runs in an inning set in 1910 against
the Brooklyn Dodgers.
Atlanta 'had 12 hits in the in-
ning, breaking the team mark of
11 set against St. Louis in 1900.
Baker started the rally off Tom
Griffin, 5-4, with a double, and
scored on Sonny Jackson's single.
Expos sliced
CHICAGO - Glenn Beckert's
bases - loaded, two - run single
and solo homers by Billy Williams
and Ron Santo gave Milt Pappas
a 200th career pitching victory
yesterday as the Chicago Cubs de-
feated the Montreal Expos 6-2.

Cardenal to
Gene Mauch:
Bleep-bleep'
CHICAGO (R) - Manager Gene
Mauch led virtually his entire Mon-
treal Expo squad to 'the Chicago
Cub clubhouse door atfer yester-
day's game, apparently to con-
front Chicago outfielder Jose Car-
denal owed an alleged obscene
name calling incident.
Cardenal, who later accused
Montreal pitchers of throwing at
him over the past few- seasons,
was charged with shouting an ob-
scene name at Mauch during the
Cubs' 6-2 victory when the Cub
player was decked by Expo pitch-
er Mike Torrez.
Backed by at least 15 of his
players,. Mauch summoned Cub
Manager Whitey Lockman to the
clubhouse door and reportedly told
Lockman: "Cardenal called me a
bleep-bleep and nobody's going to
walk away from me after he calls
me that. The next time, I won't
wait until the end of the game if
that happens again."
Cardenal denied he said any-
thing to anybody on the Montreal
team, especially after close pitch-
es by Montreal's Torrez in the
third and fifth innings. In the fifth,
Cardenal slammed a single, stole
second and went to third on Tor-
rez' pickoff throwing error and
scored on an infield out.
"He's full of bleep," said Torres
when told Cardenal accused him
of throwing at him.

th Be ruinsn ave naa reasona e
success through the airways when
they have opted for that form of
attack. Harmon has connected on
7 of 15 attempts for 118 yards and
two touchdowns to complement his
108 yards rushing on 29 carries.
HARMON'S FAVORITE target
is split end Brad Lyman,6who has
caught four aerials for 65 yards
and one score. Tight end Jack
Lassner (6-3, 220) is also a cap-
able receiver of known ability.
Spearheading the offensive line
will be three returning double let-
termen, left guard Russ Leal (6-2,
228), right tackle Bruce Walton
(6-5, 265) and center Randy arch-
ler (5-11, 220). r
Junior college transfer Ed Kezir-
ian (6-4, 235), will man the left
tackle slot and junior Steve Klos-
terman (6-2, 225) should get the
call at right guard.
The success of UCLA's defensive
line against Michigan's big, strong
offensive line could easily be the
deciding factor in Saturday night's
game.
Rodgers remorsed that "Michi-
gan has the type of physically ov-
erpowing line that could give us
trouble."
RIGHT-DEFENSIVE guard Ger-
ald Peeke (6-2, 235) is the biggest
member of the six man Bruin de-
fensive front. Letterman Rick
Buska (6-2, 215) ' handles the left
guard spot with sophomores Rich
Gunther (6-4, 212 and Art Fry
(6-2, 210) manning the left and
right tackles, respectively.
The defensive ends, Cal Peter-
son (6-4, 200) and Fred McNeill
(6-3, 198), are both tall and quick
with their specialty being cutting
off the sweeps.
The linebacking chores will be
handled by Steve Hookano (6-1,
218) and Herschel Ramsey (5-11,

Daily Photo by ITKKY McAKIHY
DEFENSIVE KINGPINS DON COLEMAN (39) AND TOM KEE (37)
combine to halt an unlucky Northwestern ballcarrier in last Satur-
day's 7-0 triumph. Both gentlemen will -have to be their rest
against UCLA and their vaunted Wishbone-T

7TH ROUND KO

f; PSYCHOLOGY
UNDERGRAD ASSOCIATION
announces
GENERAL MEETING FOR ALL PSYCH MAJORS
AND PROSPECTIVE PSYCH MAJORS
TODAY, Thurs., Sept. 21
....t 7:30 P.M. .
.:. SGC of ices-
3rd Floor Michigan Union
AT THIS MEETING:
1. Setting up academic advising program.
2. Participation in curriculum decisions.
3. Election of officers.

All*humbles atterso~n
NEW YORK (A)-Muhammad Ali tinned to land with his piston-like accuracy and did not let many
attered Floyd Patterson's face jab and caught Patterson with openings pass in the sixth and sev-
to a swollen, bloody mask and short jolting rights any time he enth rounds, although he did oc-
opped hjm after seven rounds of felt like throwing one. casionally back off from Patterson.

b
in
st

a scheduled 12-round fight last About midway through the round,
night at Madison Square Garden. blood started gushing from a gash'
The end came when Dr. Harry around Patterson's tightly-closed
Kleiman signalled referee Arthur eye and it was obvious the end{
Mercante to stop it with Patterson was near.
sittinn his titly-clod bleod flow-

The victory, before a crowd
of 17,378 including heavyweight
champion Joe Frazier, which
paid a gate of $512,361, was Ali's
39th and his eighth in a row

bILlg VI 15n U1anl 1001
ing from his tightly-closed left eye.
It counts as a seventh-round knock-
out.
This battle of former heavy-
weight champions had little ac-
tion in the first five rounds as
Ali circled and jabbed. The 37-
year-old Patterson held his ownI
by getting in with left hooks and
sortie body shots, although he
never hurt Ali, who seemed to
tower over him.I
Then, in the sixth round, Ali,
who had a nine-inch reach advant-
age and outweighed Patterson 218-
188 , turned the fight into a mis-
match. Ali sent Patterson reeling
into the ropes with a smashing
right hand shortly after the bell
opening the seventh round, then
hurt him with a left and right to
,the head.

It was the second time Ali against only one loss-4hat being
had defeated Patterson, who at to Frazier on March 8, 1971.
21 was the youngest man to win Actually, the crowd's biggest
the heavyweight title and is the chance to roar until the last two
only man to win it twice. Ali, rounds came before the fight start-
then champion, stopped Patter- ed, when Frazier was introduced
.son in 12 rounds Nov. 22, 1965 in the ring. Ali threw his arms up,
at Las Vegas, Nev. then put on a show for the fans
Patterson fought much of that and a nationwide closed circuit
fight with a slipped disc in .his television audience by making as
back and Ali later said on tele- if he were trying to get to Frazier
vision that he had carried Pat- while his handlers held back.
terson, a claim Floyd has disputed. Frazier stood in the center of the
But this time Ali showed no ring and laughed at Ali, while Pat-
signs of carrying his opponent as ; terson stood passively in his
he picked his shots with deadly corner.
ISIR

AND$KFA
SKI SEASON PREMIERE SALE
SPECIAL HOURS: Sat. 9-5:30; Sun. 12:00-5:30
Head 240, All Sizes
Were $115.00
Now $79.00
A Head 360, All Sizes 720-208-213
llizesWere $155.00
Now $109.00 Were $175.00
00_ _NOW
Kneissi White Stars
$8900 $790
1 95-200 -205
Were $215.00$7
Now $124.50
M, THURS., FRI: BANK AMER ICARD 2455 S. STATE
10:30 - 8:00 MASTER CHARGE 1 mile South of Campus
TUES., WED., SAT:
10:30 - 5:30 AMERICAN EXPRESS PHONE 662-7307

Major League Standings

t
R
t

American League
East,

National League
East

Boston
Detroit
Baltimore.
New York
Cleveland
Milwaukee
Oakland
Chicago
Minnesota
Kansas City
California
Texas

w
78
78
77
75
66
59
84
80
73
69
67
52

L
64
66
68
68
80
86
58
62
69
71
75
91

Pet. GB
.549 -
.542 1
.531 2'%
.524 3%
.452 14
.407 20Y2
.592-
.563 4
.514 11
.493 14
.472 17
.364 32y~

West

Pittsburgh
Chicago
New York
St. Louis
Montreal
Philadelphia
Cincinnati
Houston
Los Angeles
Atlanta
San Francisco
San Diego

w
90
79
74

L
53
65
68

70 75 .483 21 at the two-minute mark but. Ali
53 90 .371 37 came back to wobble Patterson
with a series of about 10 shots to
the head-every one of them solid.
89 55 .618 _ Patterson's eye was closed when
80 63 .559 81.2 the bell rang.

But Patterson got away and Ali
let up. Then Ali shook Patterson
again with a left and right to the
Pet. G head and again with a flurry of
.629 -
.549 112 punches to the head. Patterson shot
.521 152 home a solid right to Ali's head

west

GUILD HOUSE
802 MONROE
FRIDAY, SEPT. 22
NOON LUNCHEON 35c
Ser:'eY JERR LU N DY
Black public relations consultant
"Will Further Racism Divide Us?"
(Series: "Threats to Our Common Life")
FRI. EVENING 6 p.m.-ITALIAN DINNER
with Antipasto Table-$1.15
For Reservations: 662-5189 or 663-2362

1 i

II

I

76
67
63
54

67
77
82
87

.531 12%
.465 22
.434 26%/
.383 33Y,

Yesterday's Results
Boston 9, Baltimore 1, 1st
Boston 4, Baltimore 0, 2nd
Detroit 4, Cleveland 1
New York at Milwaukee, postponed rain
Minnesota 3, Texas 1
Chicago at Oakland, inc.
Kansas City at California, inc.
Today's Games
Detroit (Coleman 17-13) at Boston
(Garman 0-0)
Kansas City (Nelson 9-5) at Califor-
nia (May 10-10)
Only games scheduled

Yesterday's Results
Chicago 6, Montreal 2
New York 4, Pittsburgh 1
Atlanta 13, Houston 6
Cincinnati 8, San Francisco 6
Philadelphia 2, St. Louis 1
Los Angeles at San Diego, inc.
Today's Games
Pittsburgh (Blass 17-7) at New York
(Gentry 7-9)
Philadelphia (Twitchell 4-8) at St.
Louis (Bibby 1-0)
Only games scheduled.

In the seventh round, it was all
Ali again, although Patterson got
in with a hard left hook and a good
right on two occasions. Ali con-

I

I

I

I

10 Speed Imported Bicycle FREE
with purchase of new Toyota or "quality checked" used car

SA$4S STOREP
.-.--

- DOMESTICS -
'70 CHEVROLET
One-half ton, pickup, V-8, 3-
speed, radio, 612 ft. fleetside
box.
$2195
'70 MAVERICK
6-cylinder, automatic, radio,
new tires.
was $1595 NOW $1495
- FOREIGN and SPORTS -
'72 MERCEDES BENZ
250c 4-door sedan, automatic,
AM-FM radio, 12,000 miles,
beautiful dark green finish,

'66 PORSCHE 911 Coupe
New engine, and transmission,
priced for quick sale.
'64 Porsche 356C Coupe
Sharp finish, runs good, very
clean for a '64,
was $2295 NOW $2095
1971 SAAB 99E
4 Dr. Auto. 10,000 Miles, Just
Like New.
$2895
1963 MER. BENDZ 190D
Mint Cond.
$1495
TOYOTAS, 100% warranty
'70 CORONA

11

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.. . .. . . . .. . . .. .: : . . .. . . . .. . . . . . . . ..: . . .. . . .. . . .. . . . : .' :..: . :. .: .: : . .: . . . .:: " ... . . . .. . . . .. : : : Y? ii : ' : :. :.. :l ;: . . : : : . :. " i' i.Li }L $

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