Saturday, August 3, 1974 TH IHGAN DAILY Page Eleve Saturday, August 3, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven i 1 1 1 7 1 1 i 1 FeudingA By The Assoiated Press weeks earlier - without rea- OAKLAND-- Reggie Jackson lizing Dark was listening - called the shot for the Oakland that "this guy couldn't manage A's this season in spring train- a meat market." ing. Dark says, "We're still "We've got that turmoil going making mistakes. But we're again. We're going to win an- scoring enough runs now to other pennant," the American make up for them." League's Most Valuable Player Jackson leads the team in of 1973 chortled amid the grum- batting and home runs but is bling over cut-rate World Series behind teammates Bando and rings A's Owner Charles 0. Fin- Joe Rudi on the league's RBI ley sent to Arizona. leaders list. The three men in And it appears now that the heart of the batting order this baseball team of constant had a total of 194 runs batted in turmoil and tremendous tal- through July. ent is on its way to a fourth Jim "Catfish" Hunter, Vida straight division title and a Blue and Ken Holtzman could shot at a third straight World repeat as 20-game winners, and Series appearance. After a the bullpen corps led by Rollie traditionally slow start, the Fingers still ranks as the best A's posted a 20-8 record in in the major leagues. July to open an 8 -game lead "You win pennants with over the Western Division good bullpens, because most pack- games are won in the sev- "We played bail in July like enth, eighth, and ninth inn- we usually do in September," ings," says Dark, who went said second baseman D i c k to his bullpen so often this Green. "Early in the season, spring that his starters were we made more mistakes than predicting t h a t complete we had over the past two games would become extinct years." in Oakland. New Manager Alvin Dark "Their edge over us is their ended two months of seeming bullpen," says Texas Manager tolerance with a biting, player- Billy Martin, speaking for the by-player critique at a club- Western Division teams trying house meeting early in July. to stay within reach of the A's. The strong words from the Unfortunately for boss Fin- Bible - quoting manager won ley, the lack of a close race him some respect from most could hurt the team at the gate, players, including team captain where things aren't so bright. Sal Brando who remarked a few The A's drew more than 120,000 DEJA VU s lead AL for seven dates on their last home stand, but their season attendance stands at 534,000 and the most optimistic projec- tions are for a somewhat em- barrassing season total of about 800,000. The A's topped the one mil- lion attendance mark-barely -last season for the first time since they came to Oakland. After Finley fired third base coach Irv Noren and bullpen coach Vern Hoscheit at Dark's request in midseason, pitching ace Hunter remarked, "Noth- ing surprises me on this team. If they told me half the team had been traded to Mexico, I'd believe it." Finley, his own general man- ager, hired track star Herb Washington as a pinch running specialist this spring. The play- ers groused that Washington, who hadn't played baseball in six years, was taking away a real ballplayer's job, but no one was dumbfounded by the Fin- leyism. Washington has appeared in 6t2 "Teenage RATED-X alrt 1. "Illusions of ALady" RATED-X 31 N. Washington Ypsilanti OPtt'lNOON-482-3304 more than half the A's games, without ever holding a glove or bat, and has been the victim of some embarrassing pickoffs. But he has made some club- house friends and has even con- tributed to some victories with stolen bases. Jackson was a virtual one- man show for the A's early in the season, got snowed under by reporters and said, "A lot of the other guys didn't like it." The team's bench, which in- cludes potential future stars, makes it a threat to create a baseball dynasty. Claudell Washington a 19- year-old outfielder, was pro- moted to the A's a month ago and is hitting near .300, mostly as the designated hitter. He batted .372, with 11 homers, 55 Sparkie Williams, a small Aus- tralian parrot (budgerigar) that died in 1962 in Bear C r o s s, England, had a vocabulary of 531 words including "budgeti- gar" and "chatterbox." West RBIs and 34 stolen bases in half a Southern League Class AA season. "He'll be the Richie Allen of the league by the time he's 25," predicts Chicago White Sox Manager Chuck Tanner. Another Reason to SHOOT POOL or get a H AIR CUT Bowling Closed for Repairs MICHIGAN UNION Billiards & Stylists THE SUMMER REPERTORY THEATRE presents FIVE ABREAST GOING ABROAD: A Celebration of the Women We Are An Original Theatre Piece Created & Assembled by a Women's Workshop for Both Women and Men TWO CONSECUTIVE WEEKENDS AUG. 1, 2, 3 & AUG. 8, 9, 10 (Matinee 2 P.M.) $1.25 8:00 P.M. DONATION EAST QUAD AUD. FOR RESERVATIONS, INFORMATION, GROUP RATES CALL 763-1 172 DAILY 5-7 P.M. -ANN ARBOR'S ALTERNATIVE THEATRE- VICTOR FLEMING'S 1937 Captains Courageous Adapted from the Rudyard Kipling novel, this film is the story of a young scamp who becomes a man during an enforced three month fishing cruise. The film takes on a documentary guality, augmented by poetic photographers and the human portraits of the fishermen with their heroism and resignation. The cast is impeccable and the camera work lends a pregnancy to the film. Freddie Bartholomew, Spencer Tracy, Lionel Barrymore, Melvyn Douqlos. Next Weekend: BATTLE OF ALGIERS and ONE DAY IN THE LIFE OF IVAN DENISOVICH Next time you see someone polluting, point it out. It's a spewing smokestack. It's litter in the streets. It's a river where fish Rn't live. You know what pollution is. But not everyone does. So the next time you see pollution, don't close your eyes to it. Write a letter. Make a call. Point it out to someone who can do something about it. People start pollution. People can stop it, ' Keep America Beautiful 4 ~t ' 09PorkAvenue NewYork NewYork 10016 APucsAadThsnN sswpeSIaN p*e Cwsein