~ ~ W! IL IVU'.... II.Fl L.'FQq. IvvaI . I Page Eignt E hC Mit,-hIU/AN L)/AtL.r z UI IUay, VCTO.IerLJ !#Ii i oI~. GULLETT INJURED IN 5-1 VICTORY Graduate Research Assistantships In Civil Engineering The Department of Civil Engineering at Princetor University invites applications for graudate study and research in the areas of Structures and Mechanics, Transportation, and Water Resources leading to M.S.E. and Ph.D. degrees. Annual re- search stipends start at $4,240 plus tuition and are offered to all admitted students requesting sup- port. For details and applications write: Professor Peter Lee Director of Graduate Studies Department of Civil Engineering Princeton University Princeton, N.J. 08540 Cincy draws By The Associated Press Yankees starter Doyle Alex- ander, tagging a 3-1 pitch into CINCINNATI - Joe Morgan the lower stands in right field.J ripped a first-inning home run, Lou Piniella, New York's des- touching off an extra-base blitz ignated hitter, opened the sec- that carried Cincinnati's Big and inning with a double to Red Machine to a 5-1 victory1 right field. He moved to third over the New York-Yankees as pennant hero Chris Chamb- yesterday in the opening game liss grounded out, then scored{ of the 1976 World Series, on a long fly ball to center field Cincinnati left-hander Don Gul- by Graig Nettles. lett, the winning pitcher in the In the third inning, the Riv- Reds' triumph will be lost for erfront Stadium crowd of 54,826 the remainder of the series with got its chance to yell as Cin- ah disloctedmandonthsrigwthcinnati took the lead for good.. a dislocated tendon in his right With one out, Dave Cpncep- ankle. cion, the ninth hitter in the Morgan set the tone for the Reds' lineup, senta shot up the alley in left-center field and Reds when he unloaded on turned it into a triple. A nmntlar C nrrinI firstd In the bottom half of the sixth, the Reds widened their lead to 3-1. Rose opened withsa walk onj a 3-2 pitch and was forced at second by Griffey, whose speed beat the relay tj first. GriffeyE stole second and scooted home' on Tony Perez' singleto left, his third hit of the game. In the seventh, Gullett hit Chambliss with a pitch leading: off the inning. But Nettles rap- ped into another double play.: That helped Gullett survive thel inning, despite consecutive' walks to Maddox and Ran- dolph. Otto Velez batted for Stanley and struck out on a 1-2 pitch. bdood ond single and dashed home when Johnny Bench ripped a triple off the right-field wall. That finished Alexander, with Sparky Lyle relieving. But Lyle bounced his second pitch past Munson, allowing Bench to score easily for a S-1 lead. Gullett retired Rivers, the first batter he faced in the eighth, but hurt his ankle on the last pitch to the Yankees centerfielder. When White fol- lowed with a single to left, the Reds' pitcher grimaced in pain. Reds' Manager Sparky An- derson came to the mound for his starter, who left to a stand- ing ovation from the crowd. Borbon was the reliever and mowed down the last five Yank- ees' hitters, nailing down the victory. ONE GOOD REASON IN THE U-M CAMPUS AREA WHY THE CRITICAL-BRIDGE IMPROVEM ENT PROGRAM IS BEING PROPOSED.' LOOK FOR PROPOSITION NOV. 2 A moment later, concepcion trotted home as Pete Rose sent a sacrifice fly to Yank- ees centerfielder Mickey Riv- ers. In the bottom of the seventh, the Reds put the game away. Foster opened with his sec- ' PUT ON YOUR DOORSTEP! - i AP Photo JOE MORGAN, Cincinnati star second-baseman, deposits this Doyle Alexander pitch into the right field seats in the first inning of yesterday's ballgame. Morgan's homer was one of 10 Cincy hits that helped the Reds to a 5-1 win over the Yankees. r I Deciding on a Law Career? If you live on campus, why wait until the afternoon to find out what's happening when THE DAILY can be on your doorstep in time for breakfast-? Read THE DAILY and keep up on world, local and campus news, and sports. 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