F'R. DAY, OCTOBER 26,1956 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAMrtF a.V' FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26,1956 THE MICHIGAN DAilY -n 4*xLA~ ~v arw N Marion Quits as GRID SELECTIONS Today is your last chance to enter this week's Grid Picks contestI All entries must be received at the Daily no later than noon today. Entry blanks have been provided for your convenience at the main desk on the second floor of the Student Publications Building. the winner of this week's contest will receive two free tickets to either "She Creature" and "It Conquered the World" to be shown at the State theater or "Bigger Than Life," to be featured at the Michi- gan. Be sure to include the score of the Michigan-Minnesota game as this will be the deciding factor in case of multiple ties. This week's guest forecaster Is Dave Silver, Business Manager of the Michigan Daily. SELECTIONS (Consensus selections appear in capitals) CONSENSUS (58-22-.725) White Sox Manager Lopez Under Consideration As Heir To Chicago Position CHICAGO (P()-Marty Marion yesterday quit as manager of the Chicago White Sox, apparently under pressure, and it was strongly suspected his successor will be for- mer Cleveland Indian pilot, Al Lo- pez. In resigning with still a year to go in a two-year contract, Marion said: "They (White Sox officials) were not happy with my work." Lopez was quoted from his Tam- pa, Fla.,- home that he had not been approached by the White Sox, but emphasized he still would like a job in baseball. Vice President Chuck Comiskey of the Sox said, "You might say Lopez would be on our list of prospective candidates." He said a new manager probably would not be selected for about a week. Marion's decision came as a surprise. The former star short- stop of the St. Louis Cardinals di- rected the Sox to a second straight third-place finish in the American League this year. He had succeeded Paul Rich- ards when Richards left for the Baltimore Orioles after the 1954 season. The Sox said they would "ful- fill their obligation to Marion un- der terms of his 1957 contract." It was believed Marion was paid between $30,000 and $35,000 annu- ally. AL LOPEZ MARTY MARION in?... out! 1. Minnesota at MICHIGAN 11. No. Carolina St. at DUKE 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. California at WASHINGTON Colgate'at YALE Iowa at PURDUE KENTUCKY at Georgia Maryland at TENNESSEE Miami (Fla.) at TCU MICHIGAN ST. at Illinois NAVY at Pennsylvania NORTHWESTERN at Indiana 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. OKLAHOMA at Notre Dame Oregon at PITTSBURGH Oregon St. at UCLA S. CALIFORNIA at Stanford Texas at RICE Texas A&M at BAYLOR Tulane at GEORGIA TECH Wake Forest at N. CAROLINA Wisconsin at OHIO STATE Baseball writers Choose DAVE GREY (60-20-.750)--Michigan, Wash., Yale, Iowa, Ky., Tenn., TCU, MSU, Navy, Duke, Okla., Pitt., Ore. St., Stanford, Rice, Texas A&M, Ga. Tech., No. Carolina, OSU. STEVE HEILPERN (60-20-.750)- Michigan, Wash., Yale, Pur- due, Ga., Tenn., TCU, MSU, Navy, Ind., Duke, Okla., Pitt., UCLA, Stan- ford, Rice, Baylor, Ga. Tech, No. Carolina, OSU. * * * DICK CRAMER (57-23-.713) -Michigan, Calif., Yale, Purdue, Ky., Tenn., TCU, MSU, Navy, NU, Duke, Okla., Pitt., UCLA, USC, Rice, Texas A&M, Ga. Tech, No. Carolina, OSU. hANK ROSENBAUM (57-23-.713) -Michigan, Wash., Yale, Pur- due, Ky., Tenn., TCU, MSU, Navy, NU, Duke, Okla., Pitt., Ore. St., USC, Rice, Baylor, Ga. Tech, Wake Forest, OSU. JIM BA4D (56-24)-.700)-Michigan, Calif., Yale, Purdue, Ky., Tenn.; TCU, MSU, Navy, Duke, Okla., Pitt., UCLA, Stanford, Tex., Baylor, Ga. Tech, Wake Forest, OSU. s * s BRUCE BENNETT (55-25-.688)-Michigan, Wash., Yale, Pur- due, Ky., Tenn., TCU, MSU, Navy, NU, Duke, Okla., Pitt., UCLA, USC, Rice, Baylor, Ga. Tech, No. Carolina, OSU. ' JOHN HILLYER (55-25-.688)--Michigan, Wash., Colgate, Pur- due, Ky., Tenn., TCU, MSU, Navy, NU, Duke, Okla., Pitt., Ore. St., USC, Rice, Texas A&M, Ga. Tech, Wake Forest, OSU. AL WINKELSTEIN (55-25-.688)-Michigan, Wash., Yale, Pur- due, Ky., Tenn., TCU, MSU, Navy, NU, Duke, Okla., Pitt., UCLA, USC, Rice, Texas A&M, Ga. Tech, No. Carolina, OSU. GUEST STAFF (54-26-.675)-DAVE SILVER, Daily Business Manager-Michigan, Calif., Iowa, Ga., Tenn., TCU, MSU, Navy, Ind., Duke, Okla., Pitt., UCLA, Stanford, Rice, Baylor, Ga. Tech, No. Caro- lina, OSU. Sten gel as NEW YORK (A')-Charles Dillon (Casey) Stengel, who guided his New York Yankees to a runaway in the 1956 pennant race, yester- day was named American League Manager of the Year in a land- slide victory. The cagey "Perfesser" drew 164 of the 207 ballots cast by members of the Baseball Writers Association of America. in the annual Associ- ated Press poll. The honor climaxed an out- standing season for the 65-year- old Stengel, who also regained the world championship from the Brooklyn Dodgers after losing the title in 1955. Five Time Winner The. grizzeled manipulator of lineups 'and exponent of double talk has received the Manager-of- the-Year accolade five times, in the last eight seasons, having won the award last in 1953. He also was chosen in 1949, 1950, and 1952. Five other managers received recognition. Paul Richards of Baltimore was runnerup with 14 votes. He did an excellent job in steering the patch- work Orioles to a sixth-place finish after the experts had tabbed them for last. Marty Marion collected 13 votes for piloting the Chicago White Sox to third place. Trailing the Yanks by only two games going into July, the White Sox faltered at that point to end up 12 games off the pace. 'o AL Pilot Bucky Harris and Al Lopez, for- mer Detroit and Cleveland man- agers, and Mike Higgins, Red Sox skipper and last year's winner also drew scattered votes. So: Carolina Fumble Helps Clemson Win COLUMBIA, S.C. (R)-Clemson quarterback Charlie Bussey re- covered a South Carolina fumble behind his own goal line with less than three minutes to play yester- day to save a 7-0 Atlantic Coast Conference football victory for Clemson before 34,000 fans. South Carolina fullback Don Johnson, who had been the hero of a Gamecock drive from its own 22 to the Clemson three, fumbled away South Carolina's chances for a tie. Clemson earned its victory with a battering ram attack on the South Carolina line, never once taking to the air. Bussey scored the lone touch- down, sneaking over from inside the one-yard line. 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