-bUNDAY, CTOBER 7, 1956 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN ~UNDAY, ~CTOBER 7,. 1956 TUE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN - mom".0--ft - - - I This morning on STATE STREET *.:. by stere heilpern i Yankees Top Brooklyn On Slaughter's Homer .:. The Big One'-Lost These are the ones that are tough to write about. Michigan lost yesterday. It was the big game-with the squad from Eastt Lansing. The home team was magnificent, but it left the field second' best.1 Michigan should .still rumble on to a fine season, but this indelible score will remain throughout: visitors 9, Michigan 0. The visitors wore green and white jerseys. B Michigan threw the book at the Spartans, but the Spartans had] all the answers. Duffy Daugherty's boys, outplayed in the first half, refused to let their goal line be touched. The second half came .. . the Wolverines made a couple of mistakes ... and that was all that State needed.t Daugherty was all smiles in the dressing room. "I wanted to' win that one more than the Rose Bowl," he admitted. "That was thej big one." Daugherty, happily munching on an apple, spoke freely after the game was over. This was it. He had just been named the] proud possessor of a successful season.- The MSU coach was quick to ex- tol the merits of the team he had just conquered. "They (Michigan) are better than they were last year. We beat a truly fine Michi- gan squad. They should go a long1 way." Daugherty sounded very= sincere. "The game was hard fought, } } but it was clean," continued the winning coach. "You could tell itt was a clean game because of thet comparatively few penalties." Thei statistics bear him out. In fact, only one 15-yd. penalty was called, against State for a personal foul.- Daugherty singled out tackle Pat Burke for his inspired play. Burkei didn't start becau se of a leg injury, but made his presence known as soon as he entered the game. ': Another beaming face belonged to Biggie Munn, MSU's athletic boss. "It was easy to name the MSU'S DAUGHERTY turning points," he mused, "the first was on that intercepted pass. . .:the big one'Then came the fumble." Munn, along with some other observers, thought that Michigan's limited substituting in the first half paved the way for Michigan State. "We substituted much more freely in that half," he said, "and were fresher after, the intermission." Oosterbaan, holding court across the hall, was his suual calm self. He praised his players, especially center Mike Rotunno and back Terry Barr. Rotunno, the converted end, was a standout at his new spot yesterday. He played the entire 60 minutes. Barr played a fine game, even though he played the second half with a head bruise. 'No Alibis for Bennie ...' rphe gray-haired Michigan coach didn't alibi. He never does. "They're a real good team," he admitted. "You have to give them credit. They're real alert. Notice our short jump passes? Pretty successful. We practiced them all week. But the other guys finally intercepted one, and that started It. That's alertness." Sophomore fullback John Herrnstein was feeling as bad as a player can feel. It was his intercepted pass that was converted into a field goal and it was his fumble that was turned into a touchdown, but there will be better days for Herrnstein. He showed an awful lot of promise. He was a terror in the first half, and might have continued ripping up yardage in the second half had he not been slowed up by an injury. The big question, of course, is Ron Kramer's Injury. The huge end lived up to his all-America reputation until he was stopped by an agonizing injury to his left hand-the same one he injured last week against UCLA. The x-rays will tell the story. So that was it. It was one of those Saturdays. Your team loses to its biggest rival. The weather must have been created by Charles Addams. It's a long walk back. But there will be some happier Satur- days this year, unless I miss my guess. NEW YORK (M--Enos Slaugh- ter, the ever-hustling 40-year-old "country boy," helped Whitey Ford boost the New York Yankees back into the World Series yesterday with a three-run homer in the sixth inning for a 5-3 victory over Brooklyn after two staggering de- feats. The former St. Louis Cardinal, who was reacquired from Kansas City on waivers Aug. 25, slammed a Roger Craig pitch into the lower right-field seats with Hank Bauer and Yogi Berra on base and two out in the sixth. Slaughter's homer was his seventh series hit, boosting his average to a shiny .583. React to Crowd The Yankees, who played in a dreamy daze for two days in Brooklyn, reacted violently to the bumper crowd of 73,977 on their return to Yankee Stadium. An eye-catching relay from Hank Bauer to Billy Martin to Andy Carey cut down Carl Furillo trying to stretch a double into a triple, snuffing out the Dodgers' last threat to Ford in the ninth. Ford, who lasted only three in- nings in the opener defeat by old Sal Maglie, curled his curve past the Dodgers for a eight-hitter, his fourth series triumph. The chunky little lefthander walked only two and struck out seven, fanning the feared Duke Snider three times. Slaughter Applies Clincher It was Ford who finally stopped Brooklyn's sluggers but it was Slaughter who really finished off the Dodgers. Hero of the 1946 Series when he dashed three bases on a routine single into right cen- ter to give the Cards the champ- ionship over the Boston Red Sox, YANKS' SLAUGHTER . . .the big hit Slaughter continued his terrific Series. Ford and Craig were locked, 1-1, rafter theytraded runs in the sec- ond, until the Dodgers finally opened up a one-run lead in the sixth on Pee Wee Reese's triple past Mickey Mantle and Snider's deep sacrifice fly to Mantle. The huge crowd was the largest to see a Series game in New York since Oct. 5, 1947. Bauer Starts Rally Bauer, hitless in two previous trips, looped a single int6 short left field. Joe Collins, instead of bunting with the tying run on first and nobody out, swung at the first pitch and flied to Snider. Then Mantle, whose only hit was a drag-bunt single in the first, popped high to Gil Hodges. Berra kept it alive with a single to right-center. Then Slaughter, the leading Yankee series hitter, strode to the plate. Swinging on the 3-1 pitch, w_ I. FEINER GLASS & PAINT CO. 216 W. William Street Telephone NO 8-8014 We Have All Kinds of Glass-Mirrors and Furniture Tops. We Have the Nationally Advertised Paints. You Can Park Right in Front of Our Store. WE HAVE BEEN SERVING THE COMMUNITY FOR 67 YEARS p I- m - NORTH AMERICAN HAS BUILT MORE AIRPLANES THAN ANY OTHER COMPANY IN THE WORLD 60 Electric Razors 0 oOFF NO TRADE IN Remington - Sunbeam - Ronson Schick- Norelco WIKEL DRUG CO. At Engineering Arch 1101 South University Saturday 9 A.M.-1 P.M., 5 P.M.-1 0 P.M. 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