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October 16, 1975 - Image 7

Resource type:
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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1975-10-16

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ihursday, October,16, 1975

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Hoge Sever

TIANT COMPLETES 2ND GAME

..

Bosox

squeak

by

Reds,

5-4

By The Associated Press triple and the score was tied. Carl Yastrzemski dropped a The hit went for a double and a
CINCINNATI-Dwight Evans The relay skipped by Reds' soft single to right center and, moment later, Concepcion came'
tripled home two runs and third baseman Pete Rose but with two out, Tiant was off dashing home on Geronimo's
scored another in Boston's five- Cincinnati got a break when the and running. He rounded third triple - another fly ball down
run fourth inning explosion that ball hit the fence in front of the and scored Boston's fifth run the left field line that bounced
carried the Red Sox to a S5-4 Red Sox dugout and Evans had of the inning, into the corner as Beniquez
victory over Cincinnati yester- to hold. It was a temporary res- The Reds came back to nick tried to run' it down.
day and tied the World Series pite for the Reds. him for two runs in the bottom Tiant weaved his way out of
at two games each.- Ric ul fl i o w usmte otm Tatwae i a u f
atRtwoambesTch b Rck Burleson followed with of the fourth, converting two a fifth-inning jam with runners
Remairkable Luls Tiant bat- his seventh hit of the series, a pop fly hits that were placed in at second and third when he
tied his way through one jam'I ball that looked like a routine just thehright spots for their got Bench to fly to left field. He
after another to pitch the Red single to left. Evans scored eas- ally. gave up two-out singles in the
the tobest-heof-seven Series ily. But Burleson never stopped With two out, Foster got an sixth and eighth but escaped
Ebest-oseen Se-ruies, - as he rounded first and hustled infield single up the middle and both of those innings intact.
Evans, whose two-run ninth- it into a two-basethit, beating reached second when second Geronimo opened the ninth
Tuesday night, delivered the key eorge ster's row by an b a s e m a n Doyle's throw with a single to right and Ed
blow in a rally that gave Tiant ybounced past base and found a Armbrister batted for reliever
That finished Norman, with space in the fence in front of Rawly Eastwick. In a situation
off the Cininnati bats. Reds' Manager Sparky Ander- the Reds' dugout, advancing identical to the one that caused1
The Reds threatened to kayo son bringing in Pedro Borbon, the runner. an interference argument the
Boston's ace whenthey scored but the Cincinnati reliever Dave Concepcion hit a pop to night before with the same bat-
twonqsice wns theyiscored fared little better than theirrs short left field and three Red ter, Armbrister bunted.
ning. But it was still 2-0 in the starter had. Tiant delivered an Sox - Beniquez, Lynn and Bur- This time, the sacrifice went1
fourth when the Red Sox came unexpected sgle to center. leson -- surrounded the ball. routinely, with Tiant throwingt
to bat against Cincinnati starter Burleson stopped at third on But none managed to catch it. the runner out at first base.
Fred Norman. the play out of respect for Ger-ne agdo thiter e ttfs e I
Carlton Fisk opened the onimo's arm. Unaccustomed as
fourth with a line single to left he is to running the bases, Tiant
and moved to second when took a big turn at first. John-
rookie Lynn singled to right. ny Bench faked a throw but
Rico Petrocelli popped out but couldn t try it because first
then Norman's wild pitch moved baseman Tony Perez had moved
the runners to secondiand third. over into a cutoff position. Tiant By ENID GOLDMAN set and then I just started play-
FEvans tagge - p up the a ac tSpecial To The Daly ing well," said Fertig. "I hadf
eht ien erfield alle andoti On Borbon's next pitch. Juan EAST LANSING - The wo- trouble adjusting to the wind, 1
the imeCesr Geonio gt i On orbn'snextpith, uanmen's tennis team turned in a but then learned to use it to myI
back to the infield, Evans was Beniquez checked his swing -
sliding into third base with his and sent a roller between first gutsy performance on a gusty advantage."
_base and the mound. The ball day as they unstrung arch-rival, Certainly the day was hardlyr
was tapped so lightly that even Michigan State, 5-4 in their final an ideal one for tennis, as swirl-1

f'

With the tying run in scor-
ing position,' Tiant worked
carefully to leadoff man Rose
and walked him. That put the
potential winning run on base
and Boston Manager Darrell
Johnson went to the mound.
But he didn't bring Tiant back
with him.
The pitcher with the fierce
Pu Manchu mustache reached
for something extra and got
Griffey on the long fly ball that
gobbled up most of the room
Lynn had in center field. The
rookie went to the wall for the
one-hand catch and the runners
held.
Morgan popped sky - high to
first base. It must have seemed
forever to Red Sox fans before
the ball settled in Yastrzem-
ski's glove.

U,

5-4

Doily Photo by KEN FINK
CAMPY RUSSELL looks for the basket with Al Eberhard on his shoulder in the Cleveland Cava-
lier's 121-102 loss to the Pistons. Campy returned to Ann Arbor last night and treated his old
fans to 21 points. An All-American junior, Russell left the U-M campus early last year only
to become a reserve forward for Cleveland. He plans to see more action this year.

4-6. Pollick was down 2-S in the
first set and 0-5 in the second
b e f o r e succumbing to Mike
Kruger.
Jan Karzen, in another close
match lost to Diane Selke 4-6,
4-6.

CAMPY RETURNS:

Pi tons to Cavs at Cri sler
By RICH LERNER reached his peak in the third points per game. With another Following Hairston's field
A crowd of 4,256 turned out at quarter. year of experience under his goal, Howard Porter and Eric
Crisler Arena last night, to wel- Russell ripped the cords on belt, Campy is expected to see Money hit three baskets apiece,
come Michael Campanella Rus- six straight attempts in the more action this season. pushing the Piston lead to 65-52.
sell back to Ann Arbor, and period, including a flying tip- "It think I'll be used as a I The Cavaliers could get no clos-
Campy disappointed no one. in with his back to the basket third or fourth forward," Rus- er than a seven point differen-
Playing only two quarters, Rus- of a Jim Brewer miss. sell said. The Cavaliers traded' tial for the duration of the,
sell showed all his old moves "I really didn't expect a lot of starting forward Dwight "Dou- game.
and even a few new ones, scor- people to be here, simply be- ble D" Davis to Seattle during The Pistons outshot Cleveland
ing 21 points. However, the De- cause of the way it was when I the off-season and acquired: 54 per cent to 40 per cent and
troit Pistons topped the Cleve- was here,"aRussell said. guard Butch2Beard. p the battle of the boards,
land Cavaliers, 121-102, in a~ "Basketball is a secondary Trailing 28-12 in the first 49-45.
National Basketball Association thing here. Football comes first quarter, Archie Clark led a Kevin Porter totalled 16 points
exhibition game. andkthen comes basketball or piston rally that brought the to top the Pistons, hitting on
Russell hit on 10 of 16 field track or whatever. game to a tie at 48 points seven of ten shots from the
goal attempts, grabbed six re- The 6-8 forward bypassed his apiece by late in the second floor. Money chipped in four-
bounds, and meted out five as- senior year to play for the Cav- period. After Lindsay Hairston teen points, missing only one of
sists. After warming up with aliers last year and saw action hit a bucket to break the tie, seven field goal attempts. His
eight first period points, the almost exclusively in a reserve Detroit never relinquished five assists tied Russell for high
former Michigan All-America role, averaging just over six the lead.
in the ame.

i
1
1
i
E
E
:

on the speedy artificial surface, match of the season yesterday.
it traveled no more than 30 feet. The victory enabled the Wol-
Perez raced in for the play verine netters to finish their fall
but never came up with the schedule with an unprecented
baseball. Burleson scored on the and unblemished 5-0 record.
play and Tiant, advancing cau- "Michigan State is the best
tiously, stopped at second. team we've faced all year,"
__noted team member Missy
Cochhied 1Pollick.
Coach hired In the tense contest, the net-
The Athletic Department ters had to settle for a split of
announced yesterday the hir- the six singles matches.
ing of Jim Boyce to fill one Barbara Selden, playing first
f the two vacated assistant singles, routed Mary Hicks, 6-2,
coaching spots for basketball. 6-1 in what turned out to be the
Boyce, 38, coached at De- most one-sided win of the day.
troit Northwestern, compiling The other singles' victories
a 62-16 record, before moving were recorded by Jody Strom
to the UniversitycofcDetroit -atthe third position and Me-
as an assistant coach. Mid- linda Fertig playing sixth.
way through last season, he Strom, down 2-5 in the first
moved to Detroit Kettering set,rbattled back to defeat Jea-
as head basketball coach and nie Vogel 7-5, 6-0. "I moved
athletic director. more in the second set," ex-
Sources close to the basket-a . t .".
ball program indicate Dan self I betr win justold my-
Fife, Michigan's 1971 basket- Melinda Ferti with a scath-
ball MVP, will also be hired,
but the Athletic Department ing cross court backhand as her
has yet to verify 'this Infor- primary w e a p o n, conquered
ration. Katy Salvadore, 6-3, 6-2.
______________________ "I was behind 3-0 in the first
GriddePicks
Last week's Gridde champ was William Cherniak of 3125
Bolgos Circle. Get your Gridde Picks in by midnight Friday for
your chance to a U-M umbrella or a $10 gift certificate from

ing air masses caught and car- It was then up to the doubles
ried balls in every direction. teams to resolve the tense 3-3
Some players had a tougher deadlock.
time than others making an ad- Though Strom and Pollick
justment. playing in the second position
"It was practically a tornado were "defeated by Hicks and
out there," exclaimed Theresa Zwer, 7-6, 4-6, 2-6, Selden and
Traber. "I tried to hit harder Karzen at first doubles com-
because I could not use my bined. to edge out Selke and
usual slow spin shot strategy Kruger 3-6, 6-3, 6-2. Then
in the wind." Traber and Fertig at third
Traber lost her match at fifth doubles trounced Kathy Jo
,singles to Pam Zwer, 3-6, 2-6. Bock and Vogel 6-3, 6-3 to se-
Missy Pollick, playing fourth cure the victory for the Wol-
singles lost an uphill battle 4-6, verines.
WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF A
PROFESSOR ACCUSED YOU
OF CHEATING ON AN EXAM ???
If you're an LSA student, you would probably
have a hearing before the
LSA Academic Judiciary
The Judiciarvhandles most cases of olleged cheatinq and
plaaerism in the College, and that probably makes it
the most important committee that students sit on in LSA.
The Judiciorv is composed of 7 students and 7 faculty
members. However, the LSA STUDENT GOVERNMENT is
currently fillincg four vacant student positions..
if you are interested in applvina, you must sign up for an
interview at the LSA Student Government office-Room
4001 Michigan Union.
DEADLINE FOR APPLYING IS MONDAY,
OCT. 20, 1975 at 3:00 p.m.

Blue basketball looks hopefu
as Orr opens fall practice

Hairston, Clark, Bob Lanier,
John Mengelt, George Trapp
and Terry Thomas also scored
n double fi-nres for Detroit.
Russell's 21 took game hon-
ors as five other Cavs broke
into. double figures. Brewer

By KATHY HENNEGHAN athletes." against big players until the
"Run. .. all we did was run," However, this isn't the first season starts - we'll just hope Detroit's Curtis Rowe bruised
said Steve Grote. time that graduation (or early they're ready and can compete his hip in the second period and
And so went the opening day departure for the pros) has hurt when the time comes." will miss the Pistons' exhibition
of. varsity basketball practice Michigan. Based on what 'hey aantteNwYr ncsi
yesterday atbCrisler Arena. "It have seen so far, the veterans INEXPERIENCE is but one against the New York Knicks in
was the hardest practice since are enthusiastic about the new challenge with which the team Detroit tonght.
I've been here," Grote said of: recruits. must deal. "Our schedule is one Austin Carr and Steve Patter-
the session. "I couldn't believe of the toughest in the co intry," son missed the game for Cleve-
it. They knew we were running "WE'VE SHOWN in the past said Orr. "Ours and Indiana's land with a bruised calf and a
hard 'cause they stopped us half that we've lost good players and are probably the toughest."
an hour early." . have overcome it," Grote re- "The pre-season will definite- dd fg s

I

flected. '"We'll have the bench

ly have us ready for the Big

THE PLAYERS have been strength this year. Ten," agreed Grote. "We don't
running conditioning drills with- "It's a young team," he ad- have a lot of pushovers."
out the presence of coaches for mitted. "and at first it's always Another serious problem is the
the pastmonth. Highlights in- hard to ay together, but kuow- new travel squad limit, as Orr
eluded the annual running of jin teknofgsw'egt, would be the first to admit.
the "Michigan Mile" Monday the kind of goys we ie g "Only taking ten players o, the
afternoon, which Lloyd Schinner- road is a very difficult job' he
er won handily for the third con- Returning forward John Rob- said. "After six or seven weeks'
secutive year. sn concurre eth an we should know who we'll want
Conditioning is an essential surndance of talent, that's for to take. Right now, I have no
part of the preparation for the sure.idea who it's going to be."
upcoming season. Coach Johnny "One problem," said Grote, In another new ruling affect-
Orr is bntimistic aboit the cut "is that with the exception of ing the team, the NCAA allows
look. "We have more good rlay-, Johnny Rob, we don't have any a team to play 27 regular sea-,
ers now than we've had at any' established Big Ten players. son games this year. Michigan
one time since I've been hire," Britt is definitely established, has added a game with Eastern
he remarkedI but he's small. The new guys Michigan, to be played at Cris-
The nost established re, orn- won't have a chance to play I ler February 16.
ing players are Grote, Wayman
Britt, and John Robinson. Also '-
back are Joel Thombson, Dave
Baxter, Don Johnston, and Sch- DEADLINE
innerer.
"Joel Thomoson and David or Initiative Petitions
Baxter played very, very well1
over the summer," paid Orr. In the Fall SGC elections.
"Joel has irn-roved tremen.lrwrs-,
lv from a year ago. David has ! TODAY
great confidence: he's a veryT
good player."!
Candidates may file Friday, Oct. 17
NEW FACES to the v. rsity
include transfers Edear rch in the SGC Office
and Tom Bergen. Recruits are
Phil Hubbard. Rickey Green,
Alan Hardy, Tom Staton, and
Bobby Jones.
"The freshmen are verv tal-
ented. there's no question about* SPECIALISTS INC.
that," Orr commented. "It last
denends on how quickly they TAPE
come along."RECORDER
The big o'lestion is vho will :"Exce, the BEST from TRS."
replace graduated starters C.J.j
Kpnec (now with the Los An-
Complete Audio/C.B./VTR Service
geles Lakers) and Joe Johnson.!
them will hirt is trenend(?nslv. Warranty Repair for 104 Brands
They both had great years last S-E
year, and both were expellent Stl:ACAdio-Technica; Empire;

r
I
,
:

The Cavaliers finished their
pre-season with an 0-2 slate los-
ing both games to the Pistons.
Detroit takes a 4-2 record into
tonight's final exhibition. The
Pistons open the regular season
October 24 in 1\ew Orleans and
after a game in Atlanta, debut
at Cobo Arena against the Los
Angeles Lakers, October 29.

C
-a
.2

Marty's Clothing.
1. Northwestern at MICHIGAN
(pick score)
2. Purdue at Illinois
3. MSU at Minnesota
4. Iowa at Indiana
5. Wisconsin at Ohio State
6. Tennessee vs. Alabama
(at Birmingham)
7. Missouri at Colorado
8. Northern Michigan at
Eastern Michigan
9. Albion at Kalamazoo
10. Texas at Arkansas

11. Kentucky at LSU
12. Mississippi at S. Carolina
13. Nebraska at Oklahoma St.
14. Tulane at W. Virginia
15. N. Carolina at N.C. State
16. Auburn at Georgia Techf
17. Navy at Boston College
18. Kansas at Iowa St.
19. Kent State vs. Bowling
Green (at Cleveland)
20. DAILY LIBELS vs. The
Hill Street Gang

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