100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

October 22, 1976 - Image 9

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1976-10-22

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Friday, October 22, 1976_

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Pacie Nine

Friday, October 22, 1 97b THE MICHIGAN DAILY

P4! hc 1\R

Reds first,
(Continued from Page 1) Morgan led off the fourth in-
Nettles opened with a single to ning with a walk. After Tony
right field and was safe at sec- Perez flied out, Morgan stole
ond when Concepcion dropped second base without a throw
PJerez' throw on an attempted from Munson. Dan Driessen
force play when 'Oscar Gamble fouled out, but Foster drilled
grounded to first. a single to left, scoring Mor-

NL
walks to Perez and Dr
In tie midst of the
walk, Martin was thro
of the game, becomi
first manager to g(
thumb in a World Serie
Earl Weaver of Baltimo
ejected from the fourth
of the 1969 Series agai
New York Mets.
With men on first ahd

repeater
issen. and no one out, Martin flashed stole
second the bunt sign to !Willie Ran- the
wn out dolph. But the rookie missed gain
ng the the ball and Bench picked Net- Wor
et the tles off second base.M
s since Then Randolph took a third mi\ddl
re was strike and, on two pitches, theMan
h game Yankees had gone from two on
nst the and none out to one on and two Tw
out. ripped
second Stanley then flied out; ending game,
the inning, -knock
In the fifth, the Yankees got Yank
in the a run back. Mickey Rivers Series
cutor's opened with a single and one record
ned a out later, he stole second. the
st De- It was the first successful 1924.

since

'22

r)JIp

t

:i

McEnaney, who struggled
through a sad 2-6 regular
season but saved Game Three
of the Series, came out of
the bullpen to face Chambliss.

gan with the tying run.
That brought up Bench, who
had six hits in 11 at-bats in the
first three games of the Series
and drove in five runs in Game
Four. The Reds' husky catcher
walloped a 1-1 pitch down the

n base against Bench and
Reds in 27 post-season
es dating back to the 1972
Id Series against Oakland.
.nson then singled up the
e, scoring Rivers and
ng it 3-2.
o innings later, Munson
d his fourth hit of the
a two-out single that
ed out Nolan. It gave the
ee catcher six straight
hits to tie a 52-year-old
A set by Goose Goslin of
Washington Senators in

A week ago, the Yankees left field line and stood at home
first baseman was the toast of plate, watching the drive.
the city when his ninth inning
home run won the pennant for It banged up against the
the Yankees. With a chance to Screenalongside the foul pole
be a hero again, Chambliss for his fourth career World
stepped in toface the left-hand- Series home run and a 3-1 Reds
en. ,lead.
er. lea '
But McEnaney won the duel Bench became the 24th man
with the first pitch as Cham- in World Series history to hit{
bliss tapped a checked-swing two home runs in a single1
roller to Morgan, ending the in- game, the last being Perez one
nins year ago.

,
.
s
k
:,

I
1

Barnes arrested
DETROIT - Aides
Wayne County proses
office say they obtai
felony warrant agains
troit Pistons basketbal
er Marvin Barnes for4
ing a concealed ha
through a security chec
Oct. 9 at Detroit Merop
Airport.
Barnes, suspended W
day by the Pistons fo
ing to report for pn
two days in a row, r+
edly had a .38-caliber r
er in his hand lugga
he prepared to bfird a
for St. Louis.

Daily
NIGHT EDITORS
BOB MILLER
KATHY HENNEGHAN
NEWENU
M i"at e
V-BEL

On ANY 10-Speed in Stock
OFFER EXPIRES HALLOWEEN
A LLSPVK-R-T BCYCL ES
CENTURION-PUCH--AUITRO DAIMLER-VISCOUNT

a

Il play-
carry-
indgun
kpoint
politan
ednes-
r fail-
ractice
report-
evolv-
ge as
plane

ning.

Sixers buy.
the Doctor

After squeezing out of thatI
jam, McEnaney got some
ninth-inning insurance, courtesy
of Bench. Losing Yankee start-
er Ed Figueroa opened the
ninth by issuing consecutive1

PHBy The Assciated Press
BThAsoidPesPLADELPHIA -* Julius Health an Healing E e
Erving, otherwise known asH and Energy
the fabulous Dr. J. officially FRIDAY EVENINGS at CANTERBURY
joined the Philadelphia 76ers
of the National Basketball As- ANDREW FOSTER
sociation last night, completing
a $6 million deal with the New, DR EAMS AND
York Nets. HEALING. ENERGY"
Erving, the gifted 6-7 for-HE
ward with dazzling moves, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22
makes a strong NBA title con- t
tender of the 76ers. He'll team
with George McGinnis to give 8 p.m. herb tea, 8:30 discussion
Philadelphia what may be the
strongest front line in pro bas-
ketballhistory. CANTERBURY HOUSE
The two shared the Most Valo- 218 N. DIVISION STREETI
able Player award in the ABA corner of Catherine and Division
in 1975, before McGinnis jump-
ed from the Indiana Pacers to
the NBA.-
Net coach Kevin Loughery
had the highest praise for the Presenting the Third Lecture in the
man he lost, the- man who con- I
tributed 29 points per game in DISTINGUISHED FACULTY SERIES
his five-year professional ca-
reer. N o. II L ^mm III lI rara.i

The University of Michigan School of Music
and the Alumni Association
PRESENT
WITH THE
Univ. of Wis o sx Cse College Singers
FRIDAY, Oct. 22, 8 P.M., POWER CENTER, $2.50
TICKETS are available at the Alumni Association office in
the Michigan Union, at the Information Office of the
School of Musc and at the door. For further information
} call (313) 764-0384
-1
'KIP
* Y
, I K
50c Discount on Admission
with Student I.D.
COMING OCT. 26-30
DENISON STARS
HOURS:Fri.&Sat. 8 p.m-2 am
WEEKLY HOURS: 9 p.m.-2 a.m
~J 516 E. Liberty 994-5350

( -
S University near Washtenaw
769-1744

2715 PLYMOUTH RD. MALL

r

663-2233

POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT
RE-ELECT
U of M Regent
*9 Voted to place.rstudent representative on the
University Board of Regents.
* Inititated disclosures of public employee's salaries.
o Has worked hard to make all meetings public.
s Works daily with the State Legislature for increased
University funding-lower tuition.
0 Has seventeen years professional educational
experience.
0 Only active Democrat appointed by the Governor to the
Michigan Higher Educational Assistance Authority
-provides financial help to, college students
DEMOCRAT
paid for by the Students for Dunn
.. t ..::; --,'.-'.. ......'. :'-.-----

"There's no replacement
for Julius Erving," Loughery
said. "Even if we got three
or four players to replace
him, they couldn't help us."{
Andthe empathized with his
team: "If they are down, you'
can't blame them.
The contract Erving received
'reportedly makes him the high-
est paid player in pro basket-
ball, topping the estimated
$500,000 Los Angeles pays to,
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.

ur.KUUIJeII v. rneming
"The University and Its Role
in the World Community"
FRIDAY, OCT. 22-8 P.M..
Ecumenical Campus Center
921 CHURCH
Refreshments and discussion will follow the presentation
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CALL 662-5529

I
i
S

UNITED STATES READING LAB
OFFERS SPEED READING COURSE
AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN

All
Of

Kinds
Peple

United States Reading Lab will
offer a 4 weelk course in speed
reading, to a limited number of
qualified people at U-M:
This recently rleveloped method
of instruction is the most innovative
and effective oroaram available in
the United States.
Not on'y does th's famous course
reduce your time in the classroofn to
just one c'as rer week for 4 short
weeks but it also includes an ad-
vanced1 speed reading course on
-cassette tape so that you can con-
tinue to im-rove for the rest of your
life. In iust 4 weeks the average
student should be reading 4-5 times
faster. In a few months some stu-
dents are r e a d i n g 20-30 times
faster attaining s p e e d s that ap-
proach 6000 words ner minute. In
rare instances s p e e d s of up to
1 3 000 wprn have heen documented.
Our averae Graduate student
should read 7-10 times faster upon
comoletion of the c o u r s e with
marked imorovement in comprehen-
sion and concentration.
For those who would like addi-
tional information, a series of free,
one hour, orientation lectures have
been scheduled. At these free lec-
tures the course wi'l be -explained
in comolete detail, including class-
room oroced i res, in-truction meth-
ods, clots schedule and a special 1
time onlv introdJctorv tuition that
is less than cne half the cost of
similar cour'es. You m u st attend
any of the free meetinas for infor-
motion ahout U-M classes.
Thece nrientoti-ns are open 1o

4 short weeks you can read 7 to 10
times f-as t er, concentrate better
and comprehend more.
If you are a student who would
like to make A's instead of B's or
C's or if you are a business person
who wants to stay abreast of
today's everchanging accelerating
world then this course is an abso-
lute necersity.
These free soecial one-hour lec-
tures will be held at the following
times and places.
U-M MEETINGS
Wednesday, October 20
,6:30 and 8:30
Thursday, October 21
6:30 and 8:30
Friday, October 22
7:30
TWO FINAL MEETINGS
Sunday, October 24
2:30 and 7:30
Monday, October 25
6:30 and 8:30
THESE MEETINGS WILL
BE HELD AT
ANN ARBOR INN
100 SOUTH FOURTH AVE.
If you are a businessman, stu-
dent, housewife or executive this
course, which took 5 years of in-
tensive recearch to develop, is a
must. You can read 7-10 times
faster, comorehend more, concen-

Make

News

The news isn't always black and white.
In reporting, it's important to have an
understanding of minority points of view
and such representation on our staff helps
to promote this understanding with the
readers.
If you're at all interested, give us a call
-or better yet, stop by one afternoon.
lItst #+1 ,rt*c4 .1 4t

E

I

._.~

I

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan