PAGE SIX, THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1960 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1966 Packers Corral Colts in Opener MILWAUKEE (P)-The proud (ing a field goal on fourth down, Green Bay Packers' defense hu- Unitas handed off to Jerry Hill miliated the great Johnny Uni- but the fullback was met at the tas and carried the Packers to a line of scrimmage by bullish mid- 24-3 victory over the Baltimore dle linebacker Ray Nitschke and Colts last night in a grudge the Packers took over. match beginning the National The Colts finally cashed in for Football League season. a second period score when Lou 26 yards out. Michaels helped preserve the lead he built by blocking a Chandler field goal from the 14. The Colts took over the ball on the 28 and began moving up- field against the clock. With three minutes left Unitas underthrew a receiver at the' the 100 in :10.1, caught the ball, faked out a would-be tackler and getting punishing blocks from Wil- lie Davis and Tom Brown at the 26, wheeled for the touchdown. With 1:13 left Unitas aimed a sideline pass at Ray Berry, but the rapid Bob Jeter cut inside the veteran receiver to steal the ball and race for another touchdown. Lee Roy Caffey and Bob Jeet- er picked off two Unitas passes in less than two minutes and turned them into touchdowns as the Packers dynamited any doubts about their claim to the 1965 NFL crown. The two sudden scores broke the backs of the Colts' resistance. The Packers' offense, which had slumbered through most of the first half, caught fire and domi- nated play the rest of the game. Packer quarterback Bart Starr combined withPreceiversnBoyd Dowler and Paul Hornung to spark a 79-yard third period drive that ended with Starr bolting over for a touchdown from the eight. Don Chandler, whose field goal had beaten Baltimore 13-10 in last December's dramatic playoff for the Western Conference crown, NFL SCHEDULE Chicago at Detroit Philadelphia at St. Louis Los Angeles at Atlanta Minnesota at San Francisco New York at Pittsburgh Cleveland at Washington Michaels capped a 47-yard Uni-1 tas-led drive with a field goal from Green Bay 48. Caffey, who runs 'MAJOR LEAGUE ACTION: Dodgers Slice Pirate's Lead tf L a1 R h i a t* ti NO BANDS, NO CROWDS: Scrimmage: Football's Grim Necessity A football scrimmage is one of sportingdom's most teasing and tempting affairs. Not real football, it often comes so close that you open your mouth to cheer only to find a yawn come lumbering out. Scrimmages have kick-offs, passes, fumbles; and to make just like the real thing, it even has injuries. But scrimmages don't have bands, scoreboards, programs, or cheerleaders. Not even boy cheer- leaders. To the players, it smacks of the same fraudalent qualities. After days of push-ups, chalk talks, and battling the blocking sleds, it's a chance to throw a pass and see your receiver actually try to score. But adrenalin doesn't flow when you're assigned to tackle your roommate and that give-'em-your-all diving catch only earns a mark in the end coach's notebook. Nope, football scrimmages aren't ball games. But out of long Swear'yscrimmages, mighty football games grow. By The Associated Press The Los Angeles Dodgers trim- ned Pittsburgh's National League lead to one-half game yesterday, nipping Houston 1-0 on pinch hit- ter Al Ferrara's run-scoring sin- gle in the 10th inning while St. Louis upended the Pirates 6-5 with a four-run burst in the ninth. Regan Right Don Drysdale and winner Phil Regan limited Houston to four its as the Dodgers boosted their record in one-run games to 24-5 and moved a full game ahead of h i r d place San Francisco, trounced by Chicago 12-3. Maury Wills opened the 10th with a single, moved around to third on a sacrifice and ground out and broke the scoreless dead- ock when Ferrara, hitting for Regan, came through with a single to left. The victory was Regan's 13th against one loss. Bucks Bow Ed Spiezio's run-producing sin- gle climaxed the Cardinals' win- ning rally, which overcame a 5-2 Pittsburgh lead. Singles by Curt Flood and Orlando Cepeda around Tim McCarver's infield out deliver- ninth. Bill Mazeroski singled and scored on Bob Bailey's triple in the fourth, sending the Pirates ahead 3-2, then hit a two-run homer in the eighth. Perry Sunk Glenn Beckert rapped a double and two singles, extending his hit- ting streak to 20 games, and drove in five runs as the Cubs pounded 20-game winner Gaylord Perry and five Giant receivers for 17 hits. Dick Ellsworth, a 20-game loser, gained his sixth victory while Perry took his sixth loss. Sammy Ellis and reliever Billy McCool combined for a four-hit- ter as the Cincinnati Reds edged Philadelphia 2-1 last night. Art Shamsky clipped loser Jim Bunning for a lead-off homer- his 19th-in the second inning and the Reds added an unearned run in the fourth. Mets as Usual Cline's run-scoring single in the fifth inning capped a two-run Atlanta rally that sent the Braves to a 3-2 victory over the New York Mets last night. Trailing 2-1 going into the kicked another from the 15 as the Packers took a 24-3 lead with onlyF a quarter to play. But the defense, as it had1 through the Packers 1965 season, was the key to the victory - Green Bay's fourth straight over the Colts.g Caffey's 52-yard romp with a n pass stolen from the peerless Colts'. quarterback gave the Packers aF 7-3 lead late in the second per-Z iod. Four plays later Jeter got into the act by grabbing another Uni- tas pass at the Baltimore 46 and racing untouched into the end zone. Unitas was missing from the Colts' lineup last season when the Packers and Colts met in the play- off game. But he seemed completely re- covered from knee surgery as he led the Colts to early game mast- ery over the slight underdog Pack- ers. The Colts, who outgained the Packers by 55, yards in the first half, had driven 54 yards to the Packer 19 early in the opening period. On a third and one situation, Unitas was rushed attempting to pass and barely managed to reach the line of scrimmage. Disdain- ed the first three runs in the fifth, the Braves scored the tying .i Major League Standings -I NATIONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE Pittsburgh Los Angeles San Francisco Philadelphia Atlanta St. Louis Cincinnati Houston New York Chicago W 83 81 81 77 73 73 71 63 60 51 L 60 59 61 67 70 70' 71 82 83 90 Pct. GB .580 G .5791 Y .570 1% .535 611 .510 10 .510 10 .500 11% .434 21 .420 23 .362 31 Baltimore Detroit Minnesota Chicago Cleveland California Kansas City New York Washington Boston W 89 79 79 75 73 71 65 64 64 64 L 53 64 65 70 72 71 80 81 83 84 Pct. GB .627 .552 10Y/x .549 11 .517 15Y .503 17 .500 18 .448 25% .441 26 x .435 27Y2 .432 28 run on singles by Denis Menke and Woody Woodward and an in- field out by pitcher Tony Cloning- er, 13-9. Felipe Alou was then hit by a pitch and Cline scored Woodward with his single off starter Jack Fisher, 9-14. The Mets got just five hits but they scored in the first inning on two wild pitches and again in the - third'on Ken Boyer's run-scoring single. The Braves got their first run on a sacrifice fly by Menke in the second. The Braves have won five games in a row and 10 of their last 11. The Mets have lost seven of their last eight games. Senators Whitewashed The Chicago White Sox edged Washington 1-0 on Bruce How- ard's two-hit pitching and a run- scoring single by Tommie Agee in the sixth inning. California scored seven runs in the fifth inning and trimmed Cleveland 9-2 behind Marcelino Lopez' three-hitter. Home runs by Roger Maris and rookie Steve' Whitaker powered the New York Yankees to a 5-1 victory over the Boston Red Sox last night. Mars hit his 11th homer in the second inning and scored two ,V other runs. He was hit by a pitch in the sixth and eventually scored on a single by Elston Howard, then reached base on a fielder's choice in the eighth before Whit- aker smashed his sixth homer. Left-hander Al Downing blank- ed the Red Sox on five hits through seven innings before giv- ing way to Mel Stottlemyre. Stot- tlemyre was clipped for a run in the eighth on two walks and a pair of force play grounders. Nash's Eleventh Mike Hershberger drove in two runs and Ed Charles drilled A homer, powering Kansas City rookie Jim Nash to his 11th vic- tory last night as the Athletics blanked Detroit 5-0. Nash, who has lost only one game since coming up from the minors two months ago, checked the Tigers on six hits before giv- ing way to reliever Jack Aker in the seventh. Aker allowed two hits the rest of the way in recording his 25th; save of the season. Hershberger started the A's on the way to their fifth victory in the last six games with a run- th at sx g m s wt u -scoring double in the first inning and singled one of three runs across in the seventh. Charles led off the fourth against loser Denny McLain, 18-12, with his ninth homer. Daily Classifieds Pull Like a Magnet Photographs By Russ Loughlin YESTERDAY'S RESULTS St. Louis 6, Pittsburgh 5 Los Angeles 1, Houston 0 (10 inn) Chicago 12,,San Francisco 3 Atlanta 3, New York 2 Cincinnati 2, Philadelphia 1 TODAY'S GAMES Atlanta at New York Cincinnati at Philadelphia St. Louis at Pittsburgh Houston at Los Angeles (2) Chicago at San Francisco (2) YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Minnesota 7, Baltimore 2 Chicago 1, Washington 0 California 9, Cleveland 2 Kansas City 5; Detroit 0 New York 5, Boston 1 TODAY'S GAMES Detroit at Kansas City Baltimore at Minnesota Washington at Chicago California at Cleveland New York at Boston f i University Activities Center Announces its MASS MEETING ;' An opportunity to meet the leaders of UAC i" A chance to hear how UAC works is An occasion to find out what UAC does 7:30 P.M. SUNDAY, Sept. 11 MICHIGAN UNION BALLROOM . "Ii ml AN IMPORTANT MESSAGE FOR SE ORB 74xav.' Iew wiC4t AM DOWNTOWN If you are a member of the class of '67-graduate schools included-you should make an appointment for your senior picture sitting during the current sale ON iA THE DIAG. The photographers begin work September 12 and there's a sitting fee of $2. This is your only opportunity ! ! Please don't delay!! 1* I I