Tuesday, October 26,'1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Fuesday, October 26, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine~ ONLY SECOND LOSS MSU blanks clubbers By GARY SWAN Yesterday was a day for hockey all right - on a good pair of skates and with a ther- mal muffler to keep out the chilling 35 degree wind. But it was hardly a day for the "other" kind of hockey, the kind played in bloomers expos- ing legs to the icy air. So one had to wonder what the Michi- gan State athletic department had provided in the way of warmups for its women's field hockey team on the way down from East Lansing yesterday. The Michigan women found that they never could warm up and the only thing that was a traditional blue in the final 4-0 MSU victory was the color of the players' lips. "Yeah, it was cold out there," said Michigan's Lynn Darin. But MSU played well together, particularly in thefirst half." It wasn't the type of day when a player could shrug off a solid crack in the shins with a I stick or ball. The MSU women took charge early, scoring two goals in the first ten minutes' and their final two before the' half ended. Their third score bounded off the pole in the corner of the Michigan net. Most of the decisive first half play never left the sight of Michigan goalie Laura Pieri. The defensive players+ couldn't dig the ball out ofI the goal area often enough for the wings and backs to make much of an attack on the MSU goalie. The winners controlled the ball so well that it seemed, at times, if the women from East Lansing had more people on the field. The defeat left the Michigan record at 4-2-1. The home team took some consolation for the day in a 1-0 victory by the junior varsity over their MSU counterparts. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN WASHINGTON SUMMER INTERN PROGRAM in WASHINGTON, D.C. MASS MEETING WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27 7:30 P.M. NAT. SCI. AUD. Introduction to Kundahm iYoga . AS TAUGHT BY Sward Redra3n3da & Michael Shoemaker BEGINNERS CLASSES EVERY MONDAY WEDNESDAY 0FRIDAY at 5:30 P.M. Rudrananda Ashram E 640 OXFORD ! 995-5483 Daily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN Michigan Field Hockey player Sylvia Aretakis maneuvers against two Michigan State defend- ers to avoid being pinned against the sideline in yesterday's cold weather-plagued match In Ann Arbor. The Spartan defense was tough all through the game and kept most of the play near the Wolverine goal as they blanked Michigan, 4-0. Redskins tr-04i p Car~ds 2010 Rain, fumbles -lague game eP I "We Need an Innovative and Balanced Energy Policy Sensitive to Concerns Over Environmental Quality." CARTER FAVORS strong measures for energy conservation including peak-load pricing for electricity and mandated automobile efficiency standards. CARTER URGES extreme CAUTION in the development of nuclear breeder reactors. CARTER SUPPORTS increased emphasis on coal production and in- creased research on solar, wind, and geothermal energy. CARTER SUPPORTS legal restrictions against ownership by single firms of competing energy sources-such as coal and oil. FORD SUPPORTS fast development of nuclear energy and the placement of nuclear plants in Third World nations.. COTE FOR CARTER-FOR A COHERENT AND SAFE ENERGY POLICY I HOMECOMING '76 OCT. 28-30 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28 PEP RALLY 7:30 p.m. at Sigma Chi, 548 S. State (next to the Union) Bo, the Team, & the Marching Band! FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29 MICHIGAN DAY! Wear something Maize, Blue, or with Michigan on it! WUOM OPEN HOUSE 10.a.m.-7 p.m.-5th floor LSA Bldg. Tours of the studio, meet favorite radio personalities, free cider & donuts DIAG DAZE Check it out! 3-5 p.m. on the Diag JUDY COLLINS In concert 8 p.m. Hill Auditorium. Tickets $4, $5, $6 SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30-Homecoming Day WELCOME HOME! To all alumni and to the best football team in the country! MUDBOWL '76 SAE vs. Phi Delta Theta, 10:30 a.m. in the Mudbowl at the corner of S. University and Washtenaw WUOM OPEN HOUSE 10 a.m.-2 p.m., 5th floor LSA Bldg. UAC'S HOMECOMING PARADE! Parade leaves the Union at 12:00 noon and will pro- ceed to the Stadium, meeting the Marching Band at Revelli Hall. Prize for the best float! Contact Bryan Lee, 663-1029, to enter. HOMECOMING '76 FOOTBALL! MICHIGAN vs. MINNESOTA for the Brown Jug! Kickoff: 1:30 p.m. LET'S GO BLUE!! MASQUERADE DISCO! In the Union Ballroom, 9 p~m.-1 a.m. Cover is 50c, Beer and Wine coolers. Costume and Dance Contests. Win a dinner for two! Music by Professional Disco Service. t By The Associated Press N WASHINGTON-Eddie Brown b returned a punt 71 yards forS a touchdown in the fourth quar-' ter just 93 seconds after Mike Thomas went seven yards for another score last night to give the Washington Redskins a 20- 10 National Football League vic- tory over the St. Louis Cardin-| als in a nationally - televised game played in a steady raina that produced 13 fumbles. Thomas' touchdown run, which gave the Redskins ae 13-10 lead, was set up whent the Cardinals' Terry Metcalfl fumbled on his own 10-yard line and Washington defensivej end Dennis Johnson recovered with 10:38 remaining in the game. Metcalf fumbled for the' fourth time as the Cardinals at- tempted to mount a desperation scoring drive that took them to the Washington two within the last minute of play. Hart found The Top 20 By The Associated Press The top Twenty teams in Thej Associated Press college foot- ball poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, season records, and total points. TEAM POINTS 1. MICHIGAN (53) ......7-0-0 1,184 2. Pittsburgh (6).....7-0-0 1,068 3. U.C.L.A...........6-0-1 944 4. Southern California . 5-1-0 707 5. Maryland..........7-0-0 705 6. Texas Tech (1) .,.....5-0-0 618 7. Georgia..............6-1-0 483 8. Ohio State...........5-1-1 475 9. Nebraska.............5-1-1 368 10. Missouri........5-2-0 293 1:, Notre Dame..........5-1-0 292 12. Florida............. 5-1-0 287 13. Oklahoma............,5-1-1 268 14. Arkansas............ 4-1-0 159 15. Texas ......3-1-1 81 16. Oklahoma State. 4-2-0 33 17. Alabama ,. .. 5-2- 291 18, Mississippi State. 6-1-0 25 19. Colorado .... .....5-2-0 121 20. x-Cincinnati .. 5-1-0 10 x-Lone defeat, a 7-3 loss to South- western Louisiana, was later forfeit- ed to Cincinnati. Metcalf at he one-yard line, bu Mecalf fumbled and Jake Scott recovered. The Redskins' victory kept1 their playoff hopes alive in the National Football Confer- ence East Division with Dal- las, the leader, coming into, the nation's capital Sunday. After a miserable first quar-I ter in which the Redskins were able to gain field goals by Mark Moseley of 34 and 33 yards, the Cardinals put togeth- er their first sustained drive in the second period after a Mose- ley 28-yard attempt was blocked by Clarence Duren. The Cardinals marched .65 yards on eight plays with quarterback Jim Hunt hittingj tight end J. V. Cain for an eight-yard touchdown to put St. Louis into a 7-6 halftime lead. The Cardinals, the highest- scoring team in the NFC going into the game, suffered seven fumbles in the first half, losing six of them, in addition to one1 interception. The Redskins also recovered two St. Louis fum- bles in the second half, break- ing the old NFL record of sev- en set by the Buffalo Bills in 1969. ~ - -~~~ r He's an experienced command law officer ' with integrity. N NNW I NOON ISSUES FORUM OCT. 27 & NOV. 1 ELECTIONS, ETHICS AND APATHY V* "'tESDAY, OCT. 27 REV. RICHARD SINGLETON |VERNMENT POWER AND ITS ABUSES: A Critique from the Orientation of Biblical Prophets" MONDAY, NOV. 1 DR. JOHN REED a Baptist and a U-M Law School Professor ELECTIONS, ETHICS AND RELIGION Moderated by DR. STAN HARBISON Noon issues are held in the Pine Room of the Wesley Foundation attached to the First Methodist Church, State & Huron. Sack lunches are encouraged. Tea, coffee, etc. provided. U-M SUMMER INTERN PROGRAM ,SOBS RETAILING " PUBLIC RELATIONS o FINANCE ADVERTISING " GENERAL BUSINESS MEDIA S MARKETING $140"wk MASS MEETING MONDAY, Nov. 1-8:00 p.m. Rackham Auditorium Open to liberal arts oriented sophomores, juniors and seniors y paid political advertisement fil C' PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT () Hey, John, I hear you're running for office!l o That's right, Bruce, isn't that exciting? (,J .oe-- Yeah! Just think! Broads and excursions, broads and booze, broads and.... Uh...Bruce... Yeah, John? I'm not a Democrat. 7 I 0 0 -- * I WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27 NOSTALGIA NIGHT Dance to the original sounds of the BIG BAND ERA, Tommy Dorsey-Benny Goodman-Freddie Martin Eddie Duchin-Sammy Kaye-Glen Miller' AND MANY OTHERS! Put on Your "Saddle Shoes" and "Bobbie Socks" and Hop on Over to the Blue Frogge! Have a Party with Your Friends!!! Better Yet, Come for One of Our CANDLELIGHT SUPPERS. FREE DANCING LESSONS-8-9 P.M. TONIGHT-TUESDAY-IS LADIES' NIGHT! LADIES ADMITTED FREE 3A ~ ~ . % 1 " ____. f i s Oh...well...you should be more broad minded. r~t-- %0 I I IFI