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November 13, 1975 - Image 9

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1975-11-13

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Thursday, November 13, 1975

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Page Nine

Thursday, November 13, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY

I
'

V ekn9

HIS THIRD CY YOUNG

Seaver top

rated

inNL

TTMI

NOON LUNCHEON
HOMEMADE SOUP 50c
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14th
Prof. Dick Mann
Psych Dept.:
"Human Liberation"

From Wire Service Reports to win the award three times..........................consecutive season of 200 or
Chinks in the arm or . NEW YORK - The Baseball Koufax won it four consecutive more strikeouts (the m a j o r
Writers Association of America seasons. .j"league record for total seasons
fiannounced yesterday that New is held by Bob Gibson with
.of talented icers York Met pitcher Tom Seaver IN THE balloting, Seaver re-: nine), had a 22-9 won-lost rec-
has received the 1975 Cy Young ceived 98 points and runner-up ord and a very impressive 2.38
By TOM DURANCEAU Award. Randy Jones of the San Diego po F earned run average. Jones led
Jim Palmer was earlier an- Padres finished with 80. the NL with 2.24. Seaver also
O THE MICHIGAN hockey team has visions of national chai- nounced as the A in e r i c a n Seaver made a remarkable NIGIhT EDITOR: led the National League in
pionships dancing in its head this year. It sounds great to League winner. comeback this past season, after GLAZER strikeouts and won 20 games for
those hard core followers of Wolverine hockey, but what about This was the third time the posting a mediocre 11-11 record ANDY GLAZER the fourth time.
the question marks that lace this squad? Optimism abounds, but Met pitcher has won the coveted in 1974, when he was hampered At a news conference Seaver
let's look at the reality of the situation. award, making him along with with a painful sciatic nerve in Some National League batters said, 'I felt I pitched well
Considering the positive aspects first, senior goalie Robbie Sandy Koufax the only pitchers his hip. also rioted that Seaver had lost enough to win in '71. But they
Moore appears to have returned to his all-America form of two a little velocity off his fastball, gave it to Ferguson Jenkins. If
years ago. Last season he was racked with injuries, but this Seaver, realizing he wasn't get- Jones had won it this year, I
year- he is back to his old "acrobatic saves" self. ting any younger,: developed a wouldn't have felt as badly as
changeup this season to keep I did in '71."
thehitersoff stride. Ths wa
The dimunitive goaltender made some tough saves during h itrs te sin was In 1971 Seaver had a record
the past two weeks against both the United States Olympic the first time in Seavers nine of 20-10 and led the NL with a
team and North Dakota. year career that he had thrown 1.16 ERA, and he also set a
a changeup with any success National League record for the
A second plus for Michigan .is its potent offense. With such during a season. most strikeouts by a righthand-
top gunners as Angie Moretto, Kip Maurer, Kris Manery and SEAVER, WHO set a major ed pitcher (289). He pitched only
Pat Hughes, the Wolverines should not have to worry about put- league record with his eighth 286 innifigs.
ting the puck in the net.
Freshman Dan Cormier .looks very strong playing the wing TEr going thry, Sase
on the first line with Moretto and Hughes. /Y'auuJks yas agon zg un look, Sea er
Inevitably, however, we arrive at the .question marks, the ahead, beyond baseball. He is
biggest of which concerns the quality of the Michgan defense. spending the off-season as a
IIston E.T sportscaster for a local televi-
Whether it has been inexperience, lack of hustle, or just sion stio
having their heads somewhere else during play, the Mich- .B The AssociatedPress "I've enjoyed it," he said.
igan defensemen simply have not performed that well. DETROIT- Eo r.ar d'But there'salot of pressure
Senior Tom Lindskog is an exception. John Drew drilled in 27 points, The other 'night I was still
18 in the third period, as the typing at 11:12 and I was due on
Sophomores Ben Kawa and John McCahill looked particularly Atlanta Hawks fought off the I the air at 11:25 Let me tell
vulnerable standing in front of Moore. None of North Dakota's Detroit Pistons 109-106 last night you,.the perspiration was flow-
four goals Saturday could have been blamed entirely on the .Y for their third straight NBA ing when I got there."
senior goaltender ty -- -

GU I LD HOUSE

802 Monroe

i

PAINTER PANTS
AT
330 S. STATE ST. (Nickels Arcade) 761 -6207'

At one point, for example, Moore came out and stopped a
close in shot, but Kawa failed to clear the two subsequent re-
bounds. The third rebound was finally knocked in, to Moore's
obvious disgust.
The return of junior defenseman Greg Natale could help
remedy this situation. The defense, however, must play smarter
as a whole for the Wolverines to be national contenders.
Careless penalties hurt
Another problem the Wolverines have to work on is careless
penalties. Holding and tripping penalties at key points in the
game must be avoided.
One particularly questionable penalty was taken by defense-
man Rob Palmer in the last minute of the tight game with North
Dakota Saturday night. With the score tied, Palmer was shadow-
Ing the puck carrier on the right side in the Blue defensive zone.
At that point the ND man looked as though he had beaten
Palmer slightly, and Palmer tripped him.
A power play this late in the game is obviously dangerous.
Michigan luckily managed to fight off the power play and win
the game in overtime.
Captain Angle Moretto has the responsibility to lead the
Wolverines during the game. One way he cannot do this is by
getting upset at every referee's call and talking needless
penalties. Against the Olympic team a flare-up occurred.
Moretto skated the length of the ice to become so involved he.
sat out the next ten minutes with a misconduct.
A captain cannot allow himself this type of "privilege" when
he's depended upon to score and pass on the powerful first line
offense.
The final problem the Wolverines must overcome is incon-
sistencies. Against North Dakota the pucksters blew the fighting
Sioux out of the area Friday night, 11-1.
On Saturday night, however, North Dakota came out and
played much better. The Wolverines skated for the majority of'
the game as if they had anvils tied to their skates. They finally
began to move in the last three minutes of the game when they
rallied to tie the game.
Anybody who has ever played sports knows that it is hard
to. get up for every game. However the Michigan hockey team--
if it has those "visions" of greatness-must skate even when it
dgesn't feel like it. That's how you get to Denver in March.

Drew's scoring heroics en-
abled the Hawks to overcome
a five-point deficit early in
the third period and shoot
Atlanta into a lead the Hawks
n e v e r relinquished. At
one stage in the third period,
the Hawks outscored De-
troit19-6.
Drew spent most of the
fourth period on the bench with
five fouls and then, after re-
turning briefly and adding one
Imore point, he fouled 'out.. But

"U Towers

. . . to grandmother's house we go
One of Michigan's top three cross country runners, Bill
Donakowski (right) races alongside of Jack Sinclair during
the Michigan-Michigan State dual meet last month. The
Wolverine harriers hold an overall 49-0 re or thi s easnn

including a Big Ten Championsh

.. ,_...__. ._ w .. ._.. __..
}

II

Jill

SCORES

IM BASKETBALL
Daily Libels 54, Psi Upsilon 36
(89th consecutiverwirn breaks
UCLA's collegiate record)
NBA
Atlanta 109, Detroit 106
Milwaukee 107, Philadelphia 84
Buffalo 93, Houston 80
NHL
Pittsburgh 6, Washington 6
Chicago 4, New York Rangers 4
Philadelphia 3, Buffalo i
Atlanta 2, Kansas City 1
CHARING CROSS
BOOKSHOP
Used, Fine and Scholarly Books
316 S. STATE-994-4041
Open Mon.-Fri. 10-8,
Sat. 10-6
DE CGRADS:
To attend Commence-
ment, you must order a
cap and gown, by Nov.14F
at
university cellar.

VV*' S L S.ACUS , I the Hawks were able towith-
i1. stand a last - minute Pistons
-esurge led by Bob Lanier and
Join The Daily John Mengelt.
TONIGHT at 9:00 and FRIDAY at 10:00
MI KE AU LODRI DGE
Fantastic Dobroist of the Seldom Scene
APPEARING WITH THE
R F DBOYS
AT THE
PRETZUL BELL
71-1470
WHlY WAILK FARTHER!.
LEVI'S BRAND
Available at
Wild's Varsity Shop
FEATURING:

ACU-1
POCKET
BILLIARD
TOURNAMENT
Sat. and Sun.
Nov. 15-16
SIGN UP NOW
UNION BILLIARDS

. t -

Society of
Automotive
Engineers

TUNE-UP -CLINIC,

" Denim Bells " Panatella Work S
* Brush Denims Knit Slaks * Flanne
" Boot Jeans
" Corduroys 0 Pre-Wash Sloks ! Denim
Wild's Varsity Shop
311 S. STATE STREET

Shirts
tel Shirts
n Jackets

TUNE-UP CLINIC CLASS
LEARN TO TUNE YOUR OWN CAR-7:30 P.M
THURSDAY, NOV. 13-AU D. B ANGELL HALL
TUNE-UP CLINIC
LEARN TO TUNE YOUR OWN CAR'-8:00 A.M.-5 :00 P.M.
SATURDAY, NOV. 15-AUTO LAB, N. CAMPUS
*TOOLS SUPPLIED
-A fee of $5.00 will be charged
-$6.00 for air-conditioned cars
CERTAIN FOREIGN CARS WILL BE ALLOWED

=NNW&

6

IGri~dde Picks

-2

'.5

1. MICHIGAN at Illinois
(pick score)
2. Indiana at Wisconsin
3. Iowa at Purdue
4. Northwestern at Mich. State
5. Minnesota at Ohio State
6. California at Air Force
7. Auburn at Georgia
8. Baylor at Texas Tech
9. Maryland at Clemson
10. Colorado at Kansas

11. Kentucky at Florida
12. Yale at Princeton
13. Miss. State at LSU
14. Oklahoma at' Missouri
15. Notre Dame at Pitt.
16. N. Carolina St. at Duke
17. Iowa St. at Nebraska
18. Miami (Ohio) at Kent St.
19, Harvard at Brown
20. DAILY LIBELS vs.
Cleveland Browns

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smelling like a roast.
0Wre__
Weco or lol ecuew tikyo'ewot t

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T

ear after year,semester
after semester, the
CollegeMaster from
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been the most accepted,
most popular plan on
campuses all over America.
Find out why.
Call the Fidelity Union
CollegeMaster
Field Associate
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I Sth Unie lageCqej I
0 DECEMBERGRADUATES! 0
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TO ORDER CAPS AND GOWNS.

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1202S . UNIVER5I TY
555 S. FOREST

I

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11

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