THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUE th gtLEAD IN NL PLAYOFF: the gme's the thlin ! n~ r Defeat Braves, 3-2 Fred Katz, Associate Sports Editor 11 L V U G / t7 --, I (Continued from Page 1) AHMAD JAMAL Saturday, Oct. 3 Tickets at, BOB MARSHALL'S- DISC SHOP open evenings 4 Baseball a la 1959 W AS THERE EVER a season, without rhyme or reason, like that of '59, When laughs abounded, with mystics confounded and thrills that tingled the spine? 'Twas an unusual season when magnates tried squeezin' in things that had never been done; But of greater amazement than R. Macy's basement were the two major victories they won: First came another All Star (big bother!) to much of the nation's chagrin; It was for naught as both leagues just got one loss and one lonely win.. Then last, but not least, "'Stead of famine, we feast!" cried the players of mediocrity, "For its been declared one more league has been snared in which to display our inability." The Tigers were blue when they won only two of their earliest seventeen games; Then J. Dykes appeared, a man to be feared, and the Tabbies went on without shame. One moment of silence for 14th inning violence that ruined the best game:ever pitched, 'Cause Harvey the Kitten, (by bad luck was he smitten) and his sterling no-hitter was ditched. And how about. Case whose Yanks did 'bout face and finished in third, not.in first; As many have said and I'll give them their head, "We wish they had finished much worst!"+ You know what C. Stengel (who hates the word Bengal) once said at the start of the year-. "If my boys take not it all, blame me for the stall,"-he's eating those words and we cheer. You may credit Bill Veeck with the Sox' pennant trek if you don't follow the game very much; But for our money Lopez is the honey who sweetens the Sox' every touch. However the Veeck made a pretty good wreck of the staleness that permeated the League, And with 1,000 canned eels and Aparicio's steals, Comiskey's crowds were "beeg, real beeg." Gordon (that's Joe), and Lane, a bad show, were certainly a quarrel- some twosome; But right after the day when the Indians gave way, they suddenly became buddies bosom. Dying to get back but on the wrong track was Leo "the Lippy" 'Durocher; He thought that he had a- job in the bag but his hopes just were not kosher. A player disarmin' was Washington's Harmon who smote the ball far and true; What we can't figure is his pulling the trigger with a last name like Killebrew! But no Joe Hardy was he, and despite his great spree, the Senators finished dead last; Yet they shall return, with losses to burn, Killer and the rest of his cast. An amazing sight to see in flight'was two baseballs side by side, But this actually occurred, against the Red Birds, when the Cubs were in their usual stride. The best laid plans of Giant fans went very much astray; They built a new park, and not as a lark, for they expected the Series their way. But the Dodgers and Braves, riding the waves, and playing like two teams that click, Are fighting it out, in manner stout, and it will stay vacant in Candlestick. The season's not ended, the climax suspended, and the Series is still in the fire; But who shall forget the thrills, laughs and sweat; of these we will never tire. Warren Giles of the league to con- fer with the opposing managers. After a long discussion they or- dered the cover off and the warm- ups started. The game got under way 47 minutes late. Only 18,297 braved the threat of rain and ignored the unusual com- forts of home baseball television in the Milwaukee area. The crowd was about 32,000 below the stand- ing room turnout that set a new County Stadium record Sunday when the Braves clinched a tie. Among the onlookers was Al Lopez, manager of the Chicago White Sox, the American League champions, who will meet the win- ner. If the Dodgers win two straight the series will start Thurs- day at Chicago's Comiskey Park. If it goes three games the opener will be Friday. The Dodgers got to Willey for a run in the first when Neal singled off Bobby Avila's glove behind sec- ond base, took second on Wally Moon's infield out and scored on Larker's single to right. Milwaukee forced manager Wal- ter Alston to give starter McDevitt a fast hook in the second. The lit- tle lefty got one man out and then walked Johnny Logan on four pitches. Successive singles by Del Crandall and Bill Bruton drove home Logan with the tying run. After McDevitt threw two balls to Willey, Alston came from the dugout, scratching his head and touching his cap. He waved to the bullpen for young Sherry. Sherry ran the count on Willey to 3-2 before the Milwaukee pitch- er hit a ground ball to shortstop Maury Wills, who Juggled it *for an error, loading the bases. Wills came 14p with Avila's sharp grounder in time to force Willey at second but Crandall scored on the play. The run, of course, was charged to McDevitt who had put Crandall on base.' Cubs Name Grimrm Pilot CHICAGO (MP-"I'm as happy as- a kid," said 61-year-old Charlie Grimm yesterday- as he succeeded Bob Scheffing as manager of the Chicago Cubs. The resignation of Schefflng after three years as, skipper and appointment of Grimm was an- nounced by club president Phil Wrigley; The Cubs shared fifth place yin the National League this season for the second straight year. NFL STANDINGS' Los Angeles tied the score at- 2-2 in the third. With one out, Neal collected his second straight single. Moon forced Neal, but Larker's second single, off Avila's glove, moved Moon to second. Gil Hodges' single past Ed Mathews drove in Moon. Sherry gave up two singles in the fourth but struck out Avila to end the threat. He walked Joe Adcock and allowed a single by pinch-hit- ter Lee Maye in the fifth but made Logan ground out to end the in- ning. He retired nine in a row un- til Lo'gan broke through for a two- out single in the eighth. In the ninth, e, fine catch by center fielder Don Depeter, Snid- er's sub, saved the day. Demet~er went backto the barrier, almost hidden in the fog, to drag down Bruton's 390-foot leadoff drive. The Dodgers completely bottled up the power hitters of the Braves. Mathews was hitless in four trips, striking out once. Hank Aaron walked twice, grounded out and struck out. The best Crandall could manage was two singles. The Dodgers, Los Angeles vari- ety, did better than the old Brook- lyn brand ever did in the first game of a playoff. The Brooks lost in two straight to St. Louis in 1946 and dropped the first to the New York Giants in 1951 before finally being knocked out in the third game by Bobby Thomson's "mir- acle" homer. Now they go home to a tumul-, tuous greeting at the big Coliseum with its 250-foot left field fence where the final game or games will be played today and tomorrow. And they did it without their best hitter, Duke Snider, who was on the bench with a damaged knee. He was available only for pinch hitting duty if needed. BOX SCORE LOS ANGELES AB R H RBI Gilliam, 3b 4 0 0 0 Neal, 2b 52 3 0 Moon,If 401 0 Larker, rf 4 0 3 1 c-Lulls 0 0 0 0 Fairly, rf 0 0 0 0 Hodges, 1b 3 0 1 1 Demneter, of 4 0 1 0- Rosebro, c 4 1 1 1 Wils, ss 400 0 McDevitt, p 1 0 0 0 L. Sherry, p 2 0 0 0 TOTALS 35 3 10 3 MILWAUKEE' AB R H RBI Avia,2b 500 1 Mathews, 3b 4 0 0 0 Aaron, rf 2 0 0 0 Adcock, lb 3 0 0 0 Pafko,If 200 0 A-Maye, If 2 0 1 0 Logan, ss 3 1 1 0 Crandall, e 4 1 2 0 Bruton, cf 4 0 1 1 Willey, p 2 0 1 0 B-Slaughter 1 0 0 0 McMahon, p 0 0 0 0 D-Torre 1 0 0 0 TOTALS 33 2 6 I: A-Singled for Pafko in 5th. B-Grounded out for Willey in 6th. C--Ran for Larker in 7th. D--Flied out for McMahon in 9th. LOS ANGELES 101 001 000-3 MILWAUKEE 020 000, 000-2 E--Wills. DP-Giliamn, Neal and Hodges; Mathews, Avila and Ad cock2. LOB-Los Angeles 8 ,M11- waukee 8. HR--Roseboro. I H R ER McDevitt 113% 2 2 2 L. Sherry (w, 7-2) 7% 4 O0.0 'Willey (L, 5-) 6 8 3 3 McMahon 3 2 0 0 BB-McDevitt 2, L. Sherry 2, WiI- ley 2, McMahon 1. SO-McDevitt 2 L. Sherry 4, Willey 3, McMahon 2. U . .. . * ootbaldance Union Ballroom Saturday Night 9-12 $1.50 per couple Earl Pearson Orchestra GRID SELECTIONS An upset-filled S a t u r d a y bor. Be sure and pick the score marked the first week of Grid of the Michigan-MSU game and Picks as Karl Zollner, '60E, include your name, address, and emerged the winner by virtue of telephone number. picking 15 of the 20 games cor- 1. MSU at MICHIGAN (Score) rectly. 2. Army at Illinois Zollner will receive two free 3. Indiana at Minnesota passes to the Michigan Theatre, 4. Northwestern at Iowa currently showing "The Devil's 5. Notre Dame at Purdue Disciple." 6. Marquette at Wisconsin He ,won utover a host of prog- 7. Colorado at Oklahoma nosticators and was the only con-8.son.atK ss testant to pick 15 right. There 8.oegon U.tateKaneask were many tied withg149..OreonState atNebraska The top Daily .sports staff,pick- 10. Clemson.at Gorgia Tech er was Tom Witecki who man- 11. Rice at Duke aged to come out with 16 right 12. Georgia at South Carolina choices. 13. N. Carolina St. at N. Carolina This week's winner will again 14. TCU at Arkansas get two passes to the Michigan, 15. Navy at SMU and to enter simply come to The 16. California at Texas Daily and fill out a blank, or clip 17. UCLA at Pitt this article, icrcle the winners, 18. Washington State at Oregon and mail to Grid Picks, The Mich- 19. Dartmouth at Penn igan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Ar- 20. Maryland at Syracuse w zl-. / Get a FRESH Point of View of Better Hair Styling SIX BAR BE RS U 71 &orth Unveri S715 North University I i I ;. .. _ M y jf A : : .r"'""'r'1 n j.J.« New York Pittsburg Chicago ( Cleveland Philadelp) Washingt Baltimore San Fran Green B:, Chicago E Detroit Los Angel Eastern Division W L k 10 "h 1 0 Cards 1 0 * 01I hia 0I on 0 1 Western Division e 10 cisco 1 0 Bears 0 1 0 1 des 0 1 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pct. 1.000 1.000 1.000 .000 .000 .000 1.000 1.000 1.000 .000-~ .000 .000 ,. /SMORGASBORD EVERY WEDNESDAY -r5-9 P.M. Our Regular Menu Also Featured HOWARD JOHNSON'S 2452 East Stadium -- Ann Arbor, Michigan - .: . _ - --- ^,.-..r..._. COLLEGIATE HAIRSTYLING To Please You!! 11 Barbers 0 Air-Conditioned * Good Service SHE DASCOLA BARBERS near Michigan Theatre Craft Fired By Athletics KANSAS CITY (JP)-Harry Crat was fired yesterday as field man- ager of the Kansas.City Athletics. Parke Carroll, the Athletics gen- eral manager, said Craft's contract would not be renewed. Saturday Night's Results New York 23, Los Angeles 21 Pittsburgh 17, Cleveland 7 Sunday's Results Chicago Cards 49, Washington 21 Baltimore 21, Detroit 9 Green Bay 9, Chicago Bears 6 San -Francisco 24, Philadelphia 21 QUEEN. First chance you get, really treat her royally. Celebrate your date with Budweisero 0 MN W 0 A N 1H w Q N v .................... Battle, Team, Battle I Agatha is still dancing . . . and at last she's found a goal. Footballs It's high time, Agatha feels, to breach the solid wall of Michigan male cheer- leaders. Bump and the boys need her ... would find her graceful interpretations of 4th and 5 spiritually and morally inspiring. As you might expect, Agatha has already designed her costume . . . is quite prepared to blossom forth as Michigan's secret weapon on an hour's notice. Basic to Agatha's costume concept is a shaggy leotard in shimmering gold. Thoughtful girl that she is, Agatha anticipates non-aesthetic grass stains; plans, after each game, to 0 TURN TO TROJAN 4 Like all sensible Michigan girls, Agatha knows that Trojan specializes in renewing fine fabrics. Each garment receives the exact care. required to restore its original freshness and flair. That we promise. - 'What with football games, rushing, and all those parties;.in the offing, right now is the time to look to the state of your wardrobe. And it's good to know that you can rely absolutely on Trojan dry cleaning and laundering. Get the Trojan habit. Then .., compare the looks of your clothes with those of your friends who haven't discovered Trojan. There'll be a difference .. . and it'll be in your favor. 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