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September 07, 1975 - Image 9

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1975-09-07

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Sunday, September 7, 1975

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Png+e Nine

Sundy, eptmber7, I 95 TH MIHIGN DALY ageNin

CONNORS, ORANTES IN MEN'S FINAL

Michigan Union Billiards

Frt

beats

Goolagong

for

title

Free Instruction
Pocket Billiards
IHURS., SEPT. 18
3 p.m. &7pm.

Free Exhibition
Pocket Billiards
JIM REMPE
WED., SEPT. 24
BALLROOM, 4 p.m. & 8 p.m.

By The Associated Press the man to challenge Connors
FOREST HILLS, N.Y.-"You - ...for the title here. The Argen-
do it, and I do it, too." Jimmy " :Utine, from Mar Del Plata,I
Connors said it was a silent scored service break in the first
message he passed on to Chris ! game, held to take the first set
Evert with his eyes and a ges-" 6-4, and ran out the second setj
ture before taking the center ;7 jU rF isin 25 minutes.
court Saturday in the U.S. Open
Tennis Championships. NIGHT EDITOR: Then he lept to a 2-0 lead in
Chris responded with a confi- JOHN CHAVEZ the third and spectators began
dent smile and a wave of the packing up their belonging to
hand. Then both went out and go home.
fulfilled the mission. 45-minute marathon 4-6, 1-6, 6-2, Then Vilas who had won
7-5, 6-4. six straight games, himself
So, the 20-yar-old Miss Hardy segments of the original became the victim of a six-
Evert of Fort Lauderdale, I l m - iInon_.gme sweep by frantes tak-
~WL d.I~w - tuu, 3.,u -0 gam swe by Orae tak-

Union Billiards open 1 1 a.m. Mon.-Sat.; 1 p.m. Sun.
Shattering,
'Sale *

Fla., is the new queen of the
world of tennis and she willj
be in the stands Sunday cheer-
ing the man she hopes willt
prove to be king.
It's the sequel to Wimbledon's
sweetheart story of 1974, which'
left romanticists in a state of
suspension.
The perfectly poised Miss Ev-
ert, unflappable under throat-
clogging pressure, came from a
set down for a 5-7, 6-4, 6-2 vic-
tory over talented Evonne Gool-
agong of. Australia to win the
American championship that
has evaded her for five years.-

*-: Connors, the feisty court
brawler from Belleville, Ill.,
looked down the barrel of one
. ... of tennis' newest whiz kids
and scored a 7-5, 7-5, 6-5 semi-
final triumph over 19-year-old
Bjorn Borg of Sweden.
This sent him into Sunday's
title match against Manuel Or-
antes, a 26-year-old journeyman
AP Photo pro from Barcelona, Spain who
THE "LOVEBIRD DOUBLE" in double exposure as both triumph at the U.S. Open Satur- rolled off a minor miracle in
day. Chris Evert took the Women's championship over Evonne Goolagong, while Jimmy beating Guillermo Vilas of Ar-
Conners advanced to the Men's final by defeating Bjorn Borg. gentina in a bizarre three-hour,
--,

se out crowa -- a oui , -
stayed until after 10 p.m., EDT,
to watch one of the greatest
comebacks in the sport's his-
tory. Twice left for dead, Or-
antes picked himself out of the
coffin, fought off five match
points and thrilled the crowd
with a spectacular finish.
Chris collected $25,000 for1
her victory. A check of simi-
lar size is awaiting the men's
champion.
Most of the sellout crowd of
15,720 jammed into West Side's;
famous horseshoe wouldn't have
given a plugged nickel for Chris'
chances when Miss Gollagong,
playing superbly, won the first
set and went into the second,
putting Miss Evert on the de-;
fensive with her slashing of-!
fensive tactics.
But Chris - unshaken, a ver-
itable automaton chasing down!
every ball and whittling away at
Evonne's drive with patience
and consistency - stormed back
to win the second set and then,
after a shaky start in the third,
sweep the third with five games
in a row.
The bizarre finale between
the two hard-hitting Latin
left-handers climaxed a day
that began under threatening
skies, was punctuated by
thunder and lightning and end-
ed under the lights at close
to 10:30 p.m., EDT.
It started out as a routine
victory for the second-seeded.
Vilas who beat John Newcombe
and Ilie Nastase on grass last
year to win the Grand Pri
Masters and who was picked asI

lilll avY4 F VJ' i~lil\., ."
ing the third set and prolong-
ing the match.
Vilas tookscontrol againhin
the fourth set, as if hie had
merely been the victim of a
short siesta. He won five games
in a row and was standing on
the verge of victory. Again
Orantes came back--one game,
two games, three games, final-
ly seven.
The match was tied at two
sets apiece.
By this time, Vilas was al-
most glassy eyed. He didn't
know what had hit him.
Orantes, now feeling victory
at his fingertips, achieved a
service break in the third
game and moved ahead 4-2.
But Vilas came back to tie it
at 4-4.
Orantes, however, was not to
be denied. He broke Vilas in
the ninth game with the loss of
only one point, lifting a lob
over the Argentine's head for
the clinching point, then won
his two service at love, serving
an ace on the third points. He
forced Vilas to hit into the net
for the final point and the crowd
poured out ontohthe courtand
flocked around the hero from
Barcelona.
COPYING
SERVICE
Dissertation Quality
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THE
COPY MILL
211 S. STATE
(near Gino's)
662-3969

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ULRICH'S
549 E. UNIVERSITY AVE.

orex 60

ewis

out for season

By AL HRAPSKY mage before the season opener THERE WERE, however, a i
Kirk Lewis, a senior guard,'with Wisconsin yesterday and few bright spots for the Wolver-
suffered a broken arm in the was lost for the season. ines who have been plagued byt
Wolverines' final major scrim- Listed in satisfactory condi- injuries and inclement weather I
tion at the University Hospital, this fall.
.............. Lewis will undergo surgery this Leach, splitting time with El- t
afternoon after breaking his zinga, engineered a touchdown f
Ma jor League arm in two places in the sec- drive whichawas capped by t
ond period of the Blue-White freshman Harlan Huckleby'sC
Standinos scrimmage. one yard plunge and also threws
a 32 yard scoring strike to wing-
NATIONAL LEAGUE THE INJURY o c c u r r e d back Jim Smith. Leach was 6
East scarcely 24 hours after the pre- for 13 through the airways for:
season all-Big Ten guard was 106 yards.
Pitsburgw L Pet. GB elected co-captain by his team- Elzinga led the second scor-,
St.Louis79 60 568 -%1mates along with Wolfman Don ing drive for the White squad
Philadelphia 74 67 .526 6 Dufek. and junior Rob Lytle dove over
New York 73 67 .523 6% Hfead coach Bo Schembechler from the one yard line in the
Chicago 66 76 .464 14reScn eid
Montreal 61 78 .449 18 said, "Losing Lewis is a tre- second period.
mendous blow and we are en-
west taring game week behind where LYTLE, WHO was switched
Cincinnati 94 47 .6e7 -- we should be," after his first to fullback this fall, played'
Los Angeles 75 67 .529 19% team handed the Blue team a withbtheflu which sidelined
San Francisco 70 71 .496 24 28-0 loss middle guard Tim Davis. Start-
San Diego 64 78 .450 30% ing tailback Gordon Bell had
Atlanta 62 80 .436 32% Junior quarterback John Ced- a slight muscle pull and didn't
Houston 54 89 .377 41 dia, Who backs up Mark Elzinga play so Schembechler alter-
Yesterday's Games and freshman Ricky Leach sep- nated Lytle at fullback and tail-
Pitth.,vh 19Mnnt,.~1arated his right shoulder early back.
Pittsburgh 12. Montreal..5.,-hs_.. . . .

tions."
"But this scrimmage was a
typical scrimmage and it's very
hard to evaluate."
Huckleby led the scoring withI
two touchdowns; his second a
four yard run in the third quar-
ber. Sophomore fullbackScott
orbin collected 40 yards on
seven carries for game honors.

An Amazing Documentary
illegally filmed in post-coup
Chile by a team of
East Germans.
[ 4iI1CHILE:
I WAS, I AM,
I WILL BE.
(in English)
Preceded by movie short.
"PABLO NERUDA, POET"
AUD "A" ANGELL HALL
WED., SEPT. 10-7:00 & 9:00
DONATION $1
Sponsored by the Group on Latin American Issues

University Reformed Church
HURON at FLETCHER
SUN DAYS
SEMINARS-9:30 a.m.
Culture and Christianity-Prof. K. L. Pike
Philosophy and Christianity-Prof. Geo. 1. Mavrodes
WORSHIP-10:30 a.m.
SUPPERS--6:00 p.m.
Ministers-Calvin S. Malefvt. Alan W. Rice
WHY WALK FARTHER !
LEVI'S BRAND

IS SOMEONE TRYING. TO GET
MORE FREE LEGAL SERVICES
FOR STUDENTS?
. YES! . . . Student Government Council is! The SGC
Legal Advocate Program is being reorganized to provide
additional 'legal services for students.

Chicago 7, Philadelphia 6
Atlanta 3, Los Angeles 2
St. Louis 6, New York 3
San Diego 2, Houston 1
Cincinnati 3, San Francisco 2
Today's Gam~es
Chicago (Burris 12-10) at Phila-
delphia (Twitchell 5-9), 1:35 p.m.
St. Louis (McGlothen 13-11) at
New York (Matlack 16-9). 2:05 p.m.
Los Angeles (Messersmith 15-14)
at Atlanta (Morton 16-15), 2:15 p.m.
San Francisco (Falcone 11-9) at
Cincinnati (Guliett 12-3), 2:15 p.m.
Pittsburgh (Blair 8-14), 2:15 p.m.
San Diego (Spinlner 5-12) at Hous-
ton (Roberts 7-14), 3:05 p.m.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East

in the game and may also be,
lost for the season. Defensive
tackle Jeff Perlinger sprained
an ankle in warmups and his
status for next week's opener:
is uncertain.

A distraught Schembechler
said, "Injuries have played a
big part in early fall practice
and has held us back along
with the bad weather condi-

ARE YOU COLOR BLIND?
If so, we need your participation in
paid vision experiments.
CALLj
764-0574
or come to
VISION LAB
Rm. 5080-KRESGE II

Available at
Wild's Varsity Shop
FEATURING:
* Denim Bells 0 Panatella 0 Work
* Brush Denims Knit Slaks 0 Flann
*Pre-Wash Slaks an
* Corduroys 0 Boot Jeans . Denim
Wild's Varsity Shop
311 S. STATE STREET

Shirts
el Shirts
Jackets

SGC

Trying to make UM a better
place for students to live.

3rd floor, Michigan Union-M-F 9-5-763-3241

4.

mwmmm-wNmwAw

I

f

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

w
83
77
74
65
61
54

L
56
63
71
70
80
85
56
61
73
74
71
77

Pct. GB
.597 -
.550 6'.'z
.496 14
.481 16
.433 23
.388 29

I

West
83
76
69
67
66
64

.597
.558
.486
.476
.481
.454

5
16
17
20

Needed-Male Dancers
AUDITIONS for University Dancers and School
of Music production of Carmina Burana in
Power Center, November 14, 15, 16.
Auditions Tuesday, Sept. 9 at 1:00 p.m.
R8rhor(vGm [Danc Studio. of M

t

Yesterday's Games
Kansas City 4, California 3
Baltimore 7, New York 6
Boston 20, Milwaukee 6
Cleveland 4, Detroit 2
Oakland 2, Texas 1
Chicago 5, Minnesota 2
Today's Gammes
Detroit (Coleman 9-16 and La-
Grow 7-13) at Cleveland (Bibby 5-
14 and Peterson 11-7) 2, 1 p.m.
New York (hunter 19-13) at
Baltimore (Palmer 20-9), 2 p.m.
Boston (Cleveland 10-9 and Pole
2-4) at Milwaukee (Cdlborn 10-9 and
Slaton 11-17), 2, 2 p.m.
Minnesota (Hughes 13-12) at Chi-
cago (Kaat 19-11), 2:15 p.m.
Kansas City (Fitzmorris 14-10)
at California (Hassler 3-12), 4 p.m.
Texas (Hargan 8-9 and wright 4-
5) at Oakland (Rosman 8-5 and
Todd 5-3 or Bahnsen 9-12) 2, 4:30
p.m.
COMING
to the Union

,i
I NFORMATION--764-6273!
MARTIAL ART OF SELF DEFENSE
DEMONSTRATION BY
TAKASH I KUSH IDA, 7th dan
Sponsored by Akido Association of the
University of Michiqan
TUESDAY, SEPT. 9-4:30
IM Bldg.-Wrestling Room
CALL DAVE DANKOVIC FOR
FURTHER INFO: 769-1218
Aikido is a Japanese art of self-defense that is based on
non-resistance rather than strenqth. An attack is never
stopped: it is met and quided in a way that causes the
attacker to be thrown by the force of his own attack.
In addition to throws, Aikido glso employs a number of
wrist techniaues. Although these techniques are extremely
painful and can drive an aaaressor to the "rourd immedi-
ately. they are not designed to break bones or cause in-
iurv. For this reason. Aikido can be said to be a 'kind' form
of self--defense.
'T-Lo wnrrl.. .ik -, "methodiks.c or wav/(do,) frnr the

14 Reasons
to wash and dry clean your
clothing at MR. STADIUM
1. 104 washers & dryers (no waiting)
2. 36 top load washers
3. 24 double load washers
4. 12 triple load washers (Only 50c on our
Tuesday & Friday special)
5. 32 30 lb. clothes dryers
6. 3 dollar bill changers
7. 4 dry cleaning machines (Use our drop-off
service-we do it for you)
8. Air cooled for your comfort
9. Plenty of parking (over 50 spaces)
10. Lots of hot (Miracle Soft) water
11. 2 free clothes steamers (removes wrinkles)
12. Open 24 hours every day
13. Attendant always on duty
14. We guarantee our services.
WHAT MORE CAN WE SAY?
MR. STADIUM
Coin Laundry &
Dr y Cleaning

WHERE CAN I REGISTER
TO VOTE?
. . . At Student Government Council, 3rd floor, Michigan
Union . . . the only permanent voter registration sight on
campus ... M-F 9-5.

SGC

Trying to make UM a better
place for students to live.

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