Tuesday, September Z T, 1976 I Ht Ml(.HJUAN DAILY Pevev a !'tt ina Tuesay, eptmber21,1976I M MIUil(AN LAI1 rage rvEne r OUTI OAF BOUNDS by Rich Lerner Bo's all smiles... ...andl rightfully so B0 SCHEMBECHLER'S avacado and seafood salad tasted es- pecially good at his luncheon with the local media, yester- day. After all, anything would have tasted good after the Wol- verines' demolition of Stanford Saturday. What more could a fellow want? The offense rolled up 546 yards and 51 points, while the defense, a cause for concern the week before, shut out the nation's best passing team. And he can't even complain about the pollsters, not giving his Wolver-" ines their proper recognition. Nor did Dwight Hicks' hand surgery dampen Bo's mood. No matter what the subject, Schembechler could only think of nice things. Bo shrugged off Michigan's non-existent passing attack against the Cardinals. "When we go for 531 on the ground we don't need a passing attack. They (Stanford) were throw- ing the ball so much the fans were getting their money's worth. So why should I?" Schembechler said. "But we'll take to the air lanes this week," Schembechler joked. While Schembechler preferred to allow Stanford to do all the passing Saturday, no one can complain that the Wolverine offense is boring, notnwhen four different players rip off gains of over 45 yards in one game. With the offensive line opening Grand Canyon-like holes and the speed of the Wolverine backfield, every play has the potential of going all the way. Fullbacks on most teams just don't run 85 yards untouched, up the middle. The Wolverine backfield just may be the fastest in cil- legiate history, Rob Lytle, Harlan Huckleby, and Russell Davis all run track in the off-season. Big playsa re fine, It . . "I like being a big play team, but I don't like to depend on them," said Schembechler. "I don't think you can count on that kind of a ballgame consistently. We're not going to break those kind of plays against Navy." IDLE PHILLIES GAIN Mets outslug Pirates, 5-4 11 7'f GRIDlE PICKS I I'-. uI By The Associated P'ess NEW YORK - Rookie Lee Mazzilli slammed a two-run homer with two out in the ninth inning yesterday liftihg the New York Mets to a 5-4 victory over Pittsburgh, stalling he Pirates' pennant drive. The loss, Pittsburgh's third in the four-game series against the Mets, dropped the Pirates 4h games behind Philadelphia in the National League East. The Phils were idle. The Pirates had erased an early 3-0 deficit to take a 4-3 lead in the eight inning on: WillieaStargell's 19th homer of the season. Pinch hitter John Milner sin- gled off Pirates reliever Kent Tekulve, 5-2, and Mazzilli, who was brought up earlier this month, followed with his second home run of the season over the fence in right center. The Mets took a 3-0 lead in the third inning, bunching five singles off Pirates starter John Candelaria. Bud Harrelson led off the in- I ,e,, ! bit Rick Jones, 5-3, picked up the ning with a single to right. Hit- victory in relief of Reggie Cleve- and-run singles by Mazzilli and DETROIT-Cecil Cooper drove land. Seven different Red Sox Felix Millan produced the Mets' in four runs with a homer and a players drove in runs as Boston first run. Joe Torre, hitting an single and Jim Rice blasted two completed a four-game sweep inside pitch, looped an opposite- solo homers last night to lead of Detroit. field single to right, scoring, the Boston Red Sox to a 12-6 * Mazzilli, then Dave Kingman rout of the struggling Detroit Yankees topped hit a check-swing single to cen- Tigers. ter, making it 3-0. Boston pounded out 13 hits MILWAUKEE -- Rookie Dan The Pirates got their first and collected nine walks as Thomas' fourth-inning homer run off Lolich in the fifth in- the Red Sox won their sixth and Don Money's two-run single ning. With two out, Frank consecutive ame their lon helped the Milwaukee Brewers Taveras lofted a fly ball to est winning streak of the sea- score a 4-2 victory over the deep left center which Mets son. The loss was the sixth New York Yankees last night. left fielder Pepe Mangual straight for Detroit. The defeat left the Yankees dropped after a long run, , "magic" number for clinching Taveras getting credit for a Cooper's homer followed a teAeia egeEs triple. Rennie Stennett fol walk to Carlton Fisk in the sec- the American League East lowed with a run-scoring ?ond inning and Dwight Evans tip Baltimore did not play and double to center. added a solo homer. til .*, r by1 ! Eur an w T ' Last week's winner of a one-item pizza from Pizza Bob's was Dave Hochman, who correctly predicted 18 of the 20 games. To have a chance at that pizza (plus one item) your Gridde must be in by Friday midnight. 1) Navy at MICHIGAN (Pick score) 2) Orio State at Missouri 3) USC at Purdue 4) Western Michigan at Min- nesota 5) Baylor at Illinois 6) Michigan State at N.C. State 7) Notre Dame at Northwest- ern 8) Indiana at Washington 9) Iowa at Penn State 10) Washington State at Wisconsin 11) California at Arizona St. 12) The Citadel at Furman 13) South Carolina at Georgia 14) Tennessee at Auburn 15) Miami, Fla. at Colorado 16) San Jose St. at Stanford 17) Texas A&M at Houston 18) Virginia at Duke 19) Princeton at Rutgers 20) LAILY LIBELS vs. Busi- ness Staff Burnouts The Pirates with two runs Richie Hebner single, and one hitter Bob Ro him home. T with a single t pinch runner making it 3-3. tied the score Boston sent 11 men to the in the seventh. plate in the fourth to collect led off with a'seven runs off three Tiger1 out later, pinch pitchers, with Cooper collecting transi s ew YorKDtU 112 games, going into a four-game series between the teams which begins Tuesday. Thomas' third homer since he bertson doubled1 averas followed o right, scoring Miguel Dilone, a two-run single among the four was called up from Pittsfield of hits. Rice belted his first homer the Eastern League September in this inning, then added his 1 broke a 2-2 tie. The blast came second blast of the night and off loser Ken Holtzman, 13-10. 23rd of the season in the ninth. The Brewers scored an insur- _ ance run in the eighth after I- j . r - - - 1- - 7 - - - - - Stabler passes burn Chiefs as Oakland triumphs, 24-21 eadoff singles by Lezcano and Scott. Two successive passed balls by Yankee catcher Thur- man Munson scored Lezcano. Mixed Bowling Leagues Now Forming SIGN UP NOW UNION LANES OPEN: 11 a.m. Mon.-Sat.; 1 p.m. Sunday See us for pinball-18 machines A N IGIAU d AAFLM CC-CUD I I TON IGHT!-"In Aud. A Angell Hall KANSAS CITY (Y) - Oak-' land quarterback Ken Stabler, using the forward pass like a surgical instrument, carved through the Kansas City de- fense for 224 yards and three touchdowns last night as the Raiders held off the Chiefs 24- i1 21. Stabler, before leaving the However, come Saturday, you can bet Michigan will break a game in the fourth quarter with few more long plays. Huckleby, Lytle, Rich Leach, Jim Smith a strained right knee, complet- and Davis can't be collared for 60 minutes. ed 22 of 28 passes. Navy coach George Welsh has called the Michigan back- The Chiefs, 0-2, completely field the best college backfield he has ever seen. As an as- outclassed by the unbeaten sistant to Joe Paterno in 1971; Welsh coached the offensive Raiders in the first half, sacistat htohJoe claternorinc197, rWescoaedlthellcharged back in the second. backfield which Included Franco Harris, Lydell Mitchell and I They got a pair of touchdowns John Hufnagel- on a one-yard run by Mac- In fact, this year's Wolverine backfield may be rated as one Arthur Lane in the third per- of the best college backfields of all-time -- up there with the iod and by quarterback Mike Four Horsemen of Notre Dame, Glen Davis and Doc Blanchard Livingston in the fourth. of Army, SMU's Doak Walker and Kyle Rote combination, and Then they cut the final mar- the Syracuse backfield of the mid-60s with Larry Csonka and gin to a field goal - a 37-yard- Floyd Little. er by Oakland's Fred Steinfort Lytle and Smith will probably ea" H-\merica honors this in the second quarter - when Livingston passed 25 yards to year and by 1978 Huckleby, Leach, a, . is (sophomores all) Billy Masters with 2:53 to play. should etch their names into the All-Amcrican annals. The Raiders totally domi- Michigan averages an amazing 7.7 yards per carry after nated the first half, amassing the first two games. Lytle has the lowest average of the five, a 16 first downs and 288 total paltry 5.1 yards per crack. yards while the Chiefs managed the half, Stabler used 12 plays to pilot the Raiders from their 14-yard line to the Chiefs' 20, where the drive stalled and Steinfort booted a 37-yard field goal. Coming out smoking in the second half, Kansas City moved from its 46 to the Raider two- yard line on seven straight rushes. Two smashes into the middle by Lane made it 17-7. But the Raiders stormed right back, behind Stabler's passing. Siani snared Stabler's third touchdown strike, a 14- yarder that gave the Raiders a 24-7 lead, Livingston then directed the Chiefs 87 yards on 12 plays to move within 10 points at 24-14. On their next possession, the Raiders fumbled on their own 25-yard line and the Chiefs had a chance to get within three. Livingston, scrambled to his right and connected with Billy Masters in the end zone with 2:53 on the clock., Kansas City, in a desperation move, tried an on-sides kick- but Oakland successfully field- ed it and ran out the clock. GROUP TRAINING WORKSHOP Expand counselinq skills- Work on personal issues- Ongoing & Weekend CALL LIFEWORK COUNSELING 995-0088 leave message for Richard Kempter-Leader. JEAN COCTEAU'S LES ENFANTS TERRIBLE 1949 I I I Beset by a case of the dropsy against Wisconsin (three fum- bles), Lytle recovered nicely against Stanford gaining 101 yards in 19 carries and two touchdowns. "Lytle was sensational," said Schembechler. "He was our best player on offense. On every play he did something. He either knocked somebody over or carried the ball or made a fake. He blocks the corner and he blocks inside." Smith great natural at lete 'Smith also drew Schembechler's praise. "He's a great rmner, a great receiver, he returns punts and kicks. When you talk about important football players, there's one," Schembechler effused. "Tie could play tailback, fullback, split end, tight, end, defensive back, or outside linebacker. He can play anywhere. He'd be a hell of an option quarterback, he's just a natural athlete. "He's the only plaver I've ever told that he would come inX and start for me as a freshman. I told Leach he'd have a chance to start as a freshman but Smith is the only one I promised." Huckleby, ouickly becoming a household word, has amassed 288 yards in only 35 carries. And because of his blazing outside soeed defenses have had to pay him extra attention, opening things for his r1un-ina-mates. Lench's n-qIde ramnins ineomiwtent. however the Flint flash has nouichld the ji'hiran nation attack. raverring 9.6 yards on keenars. wvi. a 6-3, 220-noind 9.9 sprinter (he also hiyh i'mos G9) has inst begun to show his votential. Bo was in such a wood mood yesterday that even the up- coming onnorent didn't seem to worry him. S hembechler Prais- ed Na-v's middle guard, but other than that he didn't tout the Mi.shinmen. Michigan shonld have no tronhle in winning the first election year match-im of the nresidential candidate's alma maters (Car- ter attended Navy) since 1912, when Princetone (Woodrow Wilson, Harvard (Teddy Roosevelt), and Yale (William Howard Taft) met each other on the gridiron. only two first downs and 37 yards over-all. With time running out in Got the Gutts? Any persons interestedin forming a 5-man Guts Fris- bee league, with a possibili- ty of approaching the I-M de- partment for sanction, should call or see Rick Olshansky, 4033 Alice Lloyd Hall, 764-5911. Special Rates This Weekend BOWUNG at 510e per gz e 1-6 p.m. Now thru Sat. Michigan Union SUN PHOTO 1 ay Color Print Service POESN A 20% discount on Kodak processin EASY DRIVING AND PARKING 3180 Packard 1 blk. E. of Platt 913-0110 Hours: 830-9:00 M & F 8:30-5:30, T, W, T, S MODIFY YOUR UNDESIRABLE BEHAVIORS IF YOU WANT TO: 1) LOSE WEIGHT 2) STOP CIGARETTE SMOKING 3) INCREASE STUDY SKILLS 4) STOP BITING FINGER NAILS 5) EXERCISE MORE FREQUENTLY 6) MEET MORE PEOPLE 7) COMPLETE YOUR DISSERTATION 8) CHANGE OTHER MINOR MALADAPTIVE BEHAVIORS Students in Psvcholoav 414 (Advanced Laboratory in Behavior Modification} in Cooperation with the Insti- tute of Behavior Change, will work with You in chana- ina Your undesirable behaviors. For Registration Information CALL: 994-3332 2200 FULLER RD.-Suite 209 S 7:00 P.M. ONLY This lyrical treatment of Jean Cocteau's perverse tribute to rebellious adolescence has rarely been seen in America. One of the most electrifying confrontations of normality in all cinema. A special event. "One of the most exciting films of our time."-Pauline Kael. French with subtitles. LUIS BUNUEL'S 1969 THE MILKY WAY (La Voae Lactee) AUD. A-9 P.M. only Two beggars on a pilgrimage witness encounters and adven- ture whichtseem to take placetanywhere-in Bethlehem or Spain, in the first century or the seventeenth. The episodes are presented with a total absence of logical or temporal order, as in dreams. The surrealist structure skillfully executed by the master Bunuel makes THlE MILKY WAY a delightful, sacrilegious comedy not to be missed. French with subtitles. TONIGHT 1N MLB 3 7 & 9 KING OF HEARTS (Phillipe de Broca, 1967) Our most popllar film. A Scottish soldier during W.W. II is sent to a French town, evacuated except for an asylum. Meanwhile, the fleeing Germans have left a time bomb. The asylum inmates escape, taking up various costumes and roles. A very funny comedy and a powerful anti-war film-the sanity of insanity and vice-versa. Alan Bates, Benevieve Bujold. "Delightfully subtle satire-penetrating comedy encased in a most beautiful film."-Judith Crist. t A { i{ I mom I, i 3 I k r We take this space to pay tri- buite to our (a) fearless, (b) hairless leader as he enters into the 'golden ae' of life. Ile is known far and wide for his in- valhable service to this denart- mont - e'h as hi s traitilt-n- ing un of the blletin hoard constantlv. Ymi're a petty ty- rant. but we love you. JSCORS' - - BASEBPALL New York 5, Pittsburgh 4 Boston 12, Detroit 6 Milwaukee 4, New York 2 Bill Stieg 21. ANNOUNCING OUR GRAND OPENING FAIR CINIC UNI-SEX SALON 323 E. WILLIAM j A Salon of Distinction and Full Family Service Mondav and Friday 9-9 Tues-Thurs. and Sat. 9-S Op^.n Eveninns by Aooointment 665-0395 CONSULT US FOR YOUR HAIR CARE NEEDS THE RUDOLF STEINER INSTITUTE OF THE GREAT LAKES AREA announces TWO LECTURES by ELIZABETH LEBRET MUSIC TEACHER AT WALDORF SCHOOLS AND SCHOOLS FOR EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN "RUDOLF STEINER'S IMPULSES TOWARDS THE RENEWAL OF MUSIC" Saturday, Sept. 25, 1976, at 8 p.m. "WHAT CAN MUSIC EDUCATION DO FOR OUR PRE-SCHOOLERS?" Sunday, Sept. 26, 1 976, at 2 p.m. RUDOLF STEINER HOUSE 1923 GEDDES AVENUE, ANN ARBOR OPEN TO THE PUBLIC ADMISSION FREE I16 LI £ I Thur., Sept. 23 4-6 p.m. Pendleon Lounge I Lecture-Discussion 2nd fl. Mich. Union There IS a difference!: -*MCAT -"LSAT -"DAT e GMAT .CPAT eVAT .GRE *.OCAT "SATI "DEIFICATION OF THE SELF" Peter Marin's critical reflections on the new religious and humanistic movements. " . His insightful feature article in Harper's (October, 1975, "The New Narcissism" caught our eye, Then we discovered he was the resident moralist and critic of the Association for Humanistic Psychology and had some im- . NATIONAL MED. & DENT. BOARDS . ECFMG ."FLEX Flexible Programs and Hours . , ; r Aft JAW I I liU 11'1L Itl I f9