THERMICHIGAN DAILY "TV __ rxAA. *., Vk IV~ )odgers Win herry Stops Sox gaDrm 'hree Dodgers Homer World Series, Whip White Sox, 9-3 WORLD SERIES HIGHLIGHTS: Stengel a Reporter; But Still News (Continued from Page 1) Maury Wills, almost at the identi- cal spot where Larker hit safely. Johnny Podres, the Dodgers' starting hurler, then lashed a double to center which Jim Landis misjudged, Wills scoring on the play. Donovan Relieves Wynn was yanked by manager Al Lopez, who knew that his No. 1 workhorse was through for the day. Dick Donovan, hero of Tues- day's skin-close 1-0 victory that made this sixth game possible, was brought in. But his sliders were no my tery this time as they were in Los Angeles' Coliseum. Donovan walked SJunior Gilliam. Charley Neal doubled home both Podres and Gilliam. Then left fielder Moon neatly cleared the bases with a 375-foot wallop into the 10th row of the right-centerfield stands. Donovan was out before he could retire a man. Turk Lown and a White Sox procession of three other relievers followed to game's conclusion. They yielded only one more run, but the dam- age had been done. Unlikely Hero When the Series first started there was considerable specula- tion whether Wynn, Donovan, Bob Shaw, Podres, Don Drysdale, or Roger Craig would be the Series' outstanding hurler. The name of Larry Sherry was little known, let alone being mentioned with the above. Yet Sherry, a lanky 24-year-old righthander, was the Dodgers' hero yesterday as he had been in three previous games. In the four games in which he saw action, Sherry won two and was credited with Author of "I Wa Loves FOOTBALL: ITS Next Saturday at the football g choice student's seat behind t thought to Alaric Sigafoos? Alaric Sigafoos (1868-1934)1 near Thud, Kansas. His mothe were bean-gleaners, and Alaric he moved to Oregon And foun stump-thumper. Then he wen tended the furnace in a granary to Texas where he tidied up Arizona where he strung dried tucky where he fed horses at a to Long Island where he dresse to Alaska where he drove a de sledder). Then to Minnesota w slicer). Then to Nevada where] house (dice-pricer). ,Then to Mi lenses together (Zeiss-splicer). Finally he went to Omaha w beating pig hides until they we Here he found happiness at last saving the other two. And he pitched only 12% innings. Podres had smooth sailing in the first 3Y3 frames he pitched. He had been touched only by Jim Landis' bloop single in the first which rolled .15 feet to the left of home plate and stopped. Podres Loses Control Going after his second Series win, Podres suddenly fell apart. He beaned Landis, who was pro- tected by his plastic helmet. A walk to Sherm Lollar set the stage for Ted Kluszewski's record- smashing home run, his third of the playoff. A mighty poke, it bounced out of the first row in the upper rightfield stands. The giant first baseman thus established a new Series record of 10 runs batted in, breaking the old mark held jointly by Bob Meusell and Billy Martin, both, with the Yankees. After walking Al Smith, man- ager Walt Alston sent Podres to the locker room and motioned for Sherry, who wasn't even good enough to make the team at the beginning of the year. Sherry's skill at first left some- thing to be desired. Bubba Phillips greeted him with a single. He got pinch-hitter Billy Goodman on strikes, but then walked Earl Tor- geson, batting for Lown. With the bases loaded, Sherry immediately became the money pitcher he had been in other Series efforts. Luis Aparicio pop- ped up, ending the last serious White Sox challenge. Another rookie, Chuck Essegian, finished out the day's and the Series scoring in the ninth inning with a homer off Ray Moore's first pitch. DUKE SNIDER . . .World Series hero Dodger By FRED KATZ Associate Sports Editor Special to The Daily CHICAGO - Seldom does an event find so many persons out of character as does a World Series. Maybe its because celebrities there are a dime a dozen and for once they aren't in the center ring. They are the spectators (usually self-paying, commissioner's or- ders) not the stars. For example, did you ever ex- pect to see Casey Dillon Stengel, manager of the New York Yankees during a regular season, at the business end of penand paper? In a way, he is luckier than most scribes who have covered previous World Series, for he's never had to decipher his own quotes into. something comprehensible. But despite his new role as cor- respondent for a national maga- zine, he still found himself one of Onslaught a-Ran for Larker in 4th. b-Struck out for McAnany in 4th. c-Walked for Lown in 4th. d-Grounded out for Staley in 7th. e-Homered for Snider in 9th. f-Flied out for Moore in 9th. LOS ANGELES (N) 002 600 001-9 CHICAGO (A) 000 300 000-3 E-Aparicio. DP-Podres, Neal and Hodges. LOB-Los Angeles (N) 7, Chicago (A) 7. 2b-Podres, Neal, Fox, Kluszewski. HR-Snider, Moon, Kluszewski, Es- seglan. S-Roseboro. IP H R ER Wynn (L) 3fj 5 5 5 x-Donovan 0 2 3 3 Lown ~1 0 0 Pierce 1 2 0 0 Moore 1 1 1 1 Podres 3i13 2 3 3 Sherry (W) 5% 4 0 0 Staley 3 2 0 0 x-Faced 3 batters in 4th. BB-Wynn 3 (Snider, Larker, Moon), Donovan 1 (Gillian), Podres 3 (Smith 2, Lollar), Sherry 1 (Tor- geson). SO-Wynn 2 (Giliam, Neal), Pierce 1 (Moon), Moore 1 (Demeter). Podres 1 (Wynn), Sher- ry 1 (Goodman). HBP-by Podres (Landis). U-Dascoli (N) plate, Hurley (A) first base, Secory (N) second base, Summers (A) third base, Rice (A) left field, Dixon (N) right field. T-2:33. A--47,653. the most fussed about persons Last year, it went to the Yankees' present. Bob Turley. A reporter waved a big hello to* * * Stengel before yesterday'shgame The Los Angeles coaching staff and hollered, "Case, I read your was depleted by one after yester- last piece in Life. And let me tell day's fourth inning. Charlie Dres- you - if you ever give up base- sen was ejected by first base um- ball (long pause)-brother, you're pire Ed Hurley. in trouble!" The sequence of events leading Stengel, playing the rare role of up to Dressens' involuntary with- straight man to the hilt, coun- drawal went like this:. Dressen tered with, "You don't hear me was jawing at plate umpire Frank saying anything." Dascoli. -Hurley told Dressen to A hulk of a figure in dark brown shut up. Dressen, never accused business suit, wide-brimmed hat of being a "yes-man," reiterated and towering over a corner of the the greeting. Hurley's last words, plush bar in one of the White Sox "Get out!" Dressen went. suites looked far removed from * * baseball. He looked lost, not at Chicago musicians can be con- all the jolly character Detroit sidered sympathetic if not the Tiger fans knew Bill Norman to most melodious around. When it, be as manager during his brief was apparent that the Sox' fate tenure. had been sealed one of four stroll- And if Norman was out of char- ing bands rendered a heartfelt ar- acter, how about Paul "Dizzy" rangement of "Am I Blue." Trout who was passing out sou- * * * venir ball-point pens to members This was the first World Series of the press? Trout, former Tiger in which no complete games were pitching whiz, now is a member recorded. In fact, no team had' of the White Sox organization, ever won a Series without a com- with principle duties as a scout. plete game. Even Nat "King" Cole, the * * * soothing singer, was. an almost- The White Sox had the per- anonymous spectator, even though centages stacked way against he hardly strived to be incognito, them when they fell behind three Wearing an alpine-type hats con- games to one after last Monday's servative checkered jacket, and defeat. Only two teams in history with an ebony-and-silver cigar- had ever come back from such a ette holder clenched at the corner deficit to win the Series in seven of his mouth, Cole still was hound- games. The 1945 Pirates did it in ed by a. few autograph seekers. beating Washington, while just Adequate proof that pure base- last season the Yankees accom- ball, even at Series time, reigns plished the feat against the supreme. Braves. * * * * * * Larry Sherry, by virtue of his Contributing to the richest' two victories over the White Sox, World Series ever was a total paid was named winner of a sports car a t t e n d a n c e figure of 420,784,i that Sport Magazine presents an- eclipsing the mark set by even a nually to the Series' outstanding seven-game series. player.. Total receipts were $2,626,973.44, All four previous winners of the with the players dividing a pot of award have also been pitchers. $892,365.04. rU the game's the thing! Fred Katz, Associate Sports Editor - Bleacherite CHICAGO-All Comiskey Park's a stage and all the men and women in it merely players. And most of them not of the baseball variety, either. There were the clebrities for whom it is de rigeur to show up around World Series time in minks and Cadallics. Maybe its their appearance (presumably infrequent, during the mundane 154-game season), that gives the post-season classic the glamour that few other sporting spectacles can claim. There were more than 600 newsmen providing coverage for every corner of the world by lurking in every corner of the park, to snare that "exclusive" story. But the only group whose presence makes you certain that you're still at a ball game and not at a Hollywood sneak preview or the coronation of a king is the bleacherite. For the bleacherite is the celebrity with mink removed and with '49 Ford, not '59 Cadillac. He might have the ten bucks for a box, seat, but most of his breed wouldn't budge from the section located 415 feet away from home plate at its shortest distance. But question his_ devotion to, or knowledge of baseball, and brother-you're in for a real pier-five hassle! BUT IF HE SPENDS the previous night in line (as many did Wednesday evening) it becomes a vigil worthwhile when the ticket windows open at 8:20 a.m. and $2.05 are replaced with one admit- tance. in 20 minutes close to a thousand pasteboards were snapped up yesterday, and at the rate of only one to a customer. And if one believes that, the four hours remaining before game time in which the bleacherite is forced to stay in his seat (or lose it) is 240 wasted minutes, he most certainly has never spent even a minute in the outer reaches of the baseball world. A battle-weary woman concessioner shouts in approved hard-sell manner, "Get your White-Sot pennant, victory pins." Wanna wait another forty years?" You'll all be dead! Get 'em now! The parade of the vendors begins, not exactly in step to the roving four-man band that is "serenading" the early arrivals. Quzz- ling of brewed liquid refreshments and gorging of red-hots begins at 9:30. This is a going concern until the final out is made at 4:32. And a hawker reveals the secret behind his intense devotion to the White Sox: "Hope they win today; I want to work tomorrow." Horns blow, firecrackers explode and punches are swung. A woman bedecked with Sox charms and pins, red beanie and foot-high feather, obviously the queen of the bleacherites, dances in the aisle as the band strikes up "Chicago." Is there any other way to see a series? LOS ANGELES (N) AB Gilliam, 3b 4 Neal, 2b 5 Moon, If 4 Snider, cf-rf 3 e-Essegian 1 Fairly, rf 0 Hodges, lb 5 Larker, rf I a-Demeter, ef 3 Roseboro, c 4 Wills, ss 4 Podres, p 2 Sherry, p 2 ITOTALS 38 CHICAGO (A) AB3 Aparicio, ss 5 Fox, 2b 4 Landis, ef 3 Lollar, c 3 Kluszewski, lb 4 Smith, if 2 Phillips, 3b-rf 4 McAnany, rfI b-Goodman, 3b 3 Wynn, p ~ I Donovan, p 0 Lown, p 0 c-Torgeson 0 Staley, p 0 d-Romano 1 Pierce, p 0 Moore, p 0 f-Cash 1 TOTALS 32 RBI 0 2 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 9 RBI 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0' 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 s ----------- s a Teen-age Dwarf', "The Many of Dobie Gillis", etc.) 0 m CAUSE AND CURE ame while you are sitting in your he end zone, won't you give a started life humbly on a farmi r and father, both named Ralph, became a bean-gleaner too. Later d work with a logging firm as a nt to North Dakota where he (wheat-heater). Then he drifted oil fields (pipe-wiper). Then to fruit (fig-rigger). Then to Ken- breeding farm (oat-toter). Then ed poultry (duck-plucker).,Then livery van for a bakery (bread- here he cut up frozen lakes (ice- he computed odds in a gambling lwaukee where he pasted camera where he got a job in a tannery re soft and supple (hog-flogger.) t. A column of incidntafWlflgenc. by /ocketlbrand "BITE THE HAND" Edmund Burke first noted that some men will bite "the hand that fed them". But Mark Twain, in 'Pudd'nhead Wilson", refined the observation and made it biting; "if you pick up a starving dog and make him prosper- ous, he will not bite you. This is the principal difference between a dog and a man." a IN6 I i 4 A~Pc lky , Yivc ..b.b" l~z gy~ r~. Why, you ask, did he find happiness at last? Light a firmr and fragrant Marlboro, taste those better makin's, enjoy that filter that filters like no other filter filters, possess your souls in sweet content, cross your little fat legs, and read on. Next door to Alaric's hog-floggery was an almond grove owned by a girl named Chimera Emrick. Chimera was pink and white and marvelously hinged, and Alaric was instantly in love. Each day he came to the almond groye to woo Chimera, but she, alas, stayed cool. Then one day Alaric got a brilliant idea. It was the day be- fore the annual Omaha Almond Festival. On this day, as every- one knows, all the almond growers in Omaha enter floats in the big parade. These floats always consist of large cardboard al- monds hanging from large cardboard almond trees. Alaric's inspiration was to stitch pieces of pigskin together and inflate them until they looked like big, plump almonds. "These sure beat skinny old cardboard almonds," said Alaric to himself. "Tomorrow they will surely take first prize for Chimera and she will be mine !" Early the next morning Alaric carried his lovely inflated pig- skin almonds over to Chimera, but she, alas, had run off during the night with Walter T. Severidge, her broker. Alaric flew into such a rage that he started kicking his pigskin almonds all over the place. And who should be walking by that very instant but Abner Doubleday! "PRAISE THE LORD AND ETC." Perhaps the most popular remark to come out of World War ii is this exhortation made at Pearl Harbor by Lt. Comm. Howell M. Forgy, a Navy chaplain: "Praise the Lord and pass the ammunition." "IGNORANCE IS BLISS" It was Thomas Gray who coined this comforting generalization in behalf of all "D" students. See his "On a Distant Prospect of Eton College": "...where ignorance is bliss, 'Tis folly to be wise." , ; .# An announcement of importance to dockeuj SKANTS' striped brief "Merely sensational"- that'sthe judgment of college men who have seen the new Jockey Striped SKANTS. Jockey stylists have taken their own original 100% stretch nylon bikini-style brief (already a national favorite)...added candy stripes...and produced a garment you'll really enjoy wearing. SKANTS is cut high on the sides with a low waistband and comes in a choice of red, black, green, rust or blue« stripes. Look for SKANTS- in stripes, or solids-in the Jockey department at your eampus store. fashionf ' by the' _-se of7 Lockheed Missiles and Space Division is engaged in one of the broadest spectrums of scientific exploration in the country. The Division has complete capability in more than 40 areas of tech- nology - from concept to operation. Diversity of the work areas is typified by the programs in such fields as: magnetohydrodynamics; space medicine; ocea- nography; sonics; propulsion and exotic fuels; metallurgy; advanced systems research; manned space vehicles; reconnais- sance; optics and infrared; electromagnetic wave propagation and radiation; electronics; physics; chemistry; mathematics; computer design; aero and thermo dynamics; test; design and operations research and analysis. PROJECTS- Current major projects include the Navy POLARIS Fleet Ballistic Missile; the DISCOVERER program; MIDAS and SAMOS; Air Force Q-5 and X-7 and the Army KINGFISHER. PROJECT MIDAS is an early warning infra- red system against ballistic missile attacks, based on the use of satellites. PROJECT SAMOS is designed for the development of an advanced satellite reconnaissance system. DISCOVERER, MIDAS and SAMOS are programs of the Advanced Research Projects Agency under the direction of the Air Force Ballistic Missile Division with Lockheed as systems manager. ENGINEERING AND PHYSICAL SCIENCE MAJORS LOCATIONS -You have a selection of two of the choicest living areas in the country at Lockheed. Headquarters for the Division are at Sunnyvale, California, on the San Francisco Peninsula. Research and development facilities are located in the Stanford Industrial Park in Palo Alto and at Van Nuys, in the San Fernando Valley of Los Angeles. Testing is conducted at Santa Cruz and Vandenberg AFB, California;' Cape Can- averal, Florida; and Alamogordo, New Mexico. Together, the Division's facilities occupy more than two million, six hundred thousand square feet of laboratory, engi- neering, manufacturing and office space and provide the latest in technical- equipment, including one of the most modern computing centers in the world. OPPORTUNITIES FOR ADVANCED EDUCATION- For those who desire to continue their education and secure advanced degrees Lockheed maintains two programs. The Graduate Study Program permits selected engineers and sci- entists to obtain advanced degrees at the company's expense while working part time at Lockheed. The Tuition Reimbursement Plan remits fifty per cent of the tuition for approved evening courses for salaried employees who are working full time.