PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY TU9S6AYJD QBER'10.1967 PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY TPF~IflAV flC flRVfl~ in. i~A7 i{d JWf.7Jdrii.s, j XFVa XVU i All 1V, 1OV I AMERICAN OPINION FORUM OF ANN ARBOR presents REVEREND FRANCIS E. FENTON Catholic Priest, Lecturer, Member, Council of the John Birch Society SPEAKING ON COMMUNISM AND AMERICAN SURVIVAL 12 OCTOBER 1967 Ann Arbor High School 8:00 P.M. TICKETS: $2.00 .there is no career that can match business in diversity of intellectual interest . .. A vigorous, free society calls for the highest type of business leadership ..." THE STANFORD UNIVERSITY GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS invites you to meet its Admissions Representative, Mr. Fred Putney on October 17, 1967 to discuss the Stanford M.B.A. and Ph.D. Programs in Busi- ness Administration. Appointments to meet with Mr. Putney may be made through the Director of Placement. The M.B.A. Program is a two-year general management course particularly designed for students who have majored in liberal arts, humanities, science, and engineering. The purpose of the Doctoral Program is to train scholars for the stimulating challenge open to business educators, researchers, and innovators. I! T «Vll 0111IIJ ST. LOUIS (/P-Gentleman Jim Lonborg rescued the staggering Boston Red Sox with his second straight victory over the St. Louis Cardinals yesterday, 3-1 and sent the World Series back to Boston for at least at sixth game tomor- row. Lonborg shut out the Cards until Roger Maris homered with two out in the ninth. The handsome 24-year-old right- hander, who blanked the National League champions with one hit Thursday, cut the Cards' edge in games to 3-2 with a three-hitter in the fifth game before a dazed crowd of 54,575 fans at Busch Stadium. org Stops St. Louis Cold, 3=1 It was an unearned run off 22- year-old Steve Carlton, the Cards' lefty starter, as Harrelson's hit followed a single by Joe Foy and an error by Mike Shannon on Mike Andrews' sacrifice bunt. Ninth Inning Uprisings A Red Sox two-run rally in the ninth seemed to be only frosting on Lonborg's cake at the time but it meant the ball game after Maris hit his sixth Series homer in the last of the ninth. Ron Willis, the third Card pitch- er, loaded the bases in the ninth, with a walk to George Scott, a double by Reggie Smith and an intentional pass to Rico Petrocelli. After Willis threw one ball to Elston Howard, Jack Lamabe came on to face the veteran catcher. Howard singled to right, scoring Scott, and Smith also came home when Maris' throw to the plate was high. Both runs were charged to Willis. The Cards were lucky to get out of the inning on a double play in- volving a complicated rundown play at the plate. Lonborg, who admitted he had the sniffles, simply was superb all through the cool sunny afternoon. He said he felt he was home free BOSTON (A) AB R H BP4O A Foy 3b 5111024 Andrews 2b 3 0 1 0 1 2 Yastrzemski if 3 0 1 0 2 0 Harrelson rf 3 0 1 1 1 0 Tartabull rf 0 0 0 0 0 0 Scottlb 3 1 0 0 14 0 R. Smith cf 4 1 1 0 1 0 Petrocelli ss 3 0 0 0 1 2 Howard c 4 0 1 1 5 0 Lonborg p 4 0 0 0 0 2 Totals 32 3 6 2 27 8 E - Shannon, Petrocelli, Maris. DP-Javier, Maxvill and Cepeda; McCarver, Javier, McCarver. ZB3- Yastrzerski, R. Smith. HR-Mars. S-Andrews. LOB-Boston (A) 7, St. Louis (N) 3. BB-Carlton 2 (Yastrzemski, Har- relson, Willis 2 (Scott, Petrocelli). SO-Lonborg 4 (Cepeda, Brock, Shannon, Tolan). Carlton 5 (Foy, Scott, Lonborg 2, Yastrzemski.) Washburn 2 (ePtrocelli, Foy). La- nmabe 2( Lonborg, Foy). WP - Carlton. Time-2:20. A-54,575. U- Runge (A) plate, Pryor (N) first base, Stevens (A) second base, Bar- lick (N) third base, Umont (A) left field, Donatelli (N) right field. Brock If Flood of Maris rf Cepeda lb McCarver Shannon Javier 2b Maxvill ss b-Ricketts Willis p Lamabe p Carlton p a-Tolan Washburn e-Gagliano Bressouds Totals ST. LOUIS (N) AB R 4 0 40a 4 1 4 0 e 30a 3b 3 0 3 0 >0a 1 0 0 0 .0 0 r~1 0 10a p 0 0 l1 0 31 1 H 0 0 a 0 "a 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 BI 0 0 0 0.2 1 3 0 5 0 9 0 1 0 4 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 271 A 0 0 0 0 3- 3 4 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 13 a-Struck out for Carlton in 6th. b-Grounded out for Maxvill in 8th. c-Popped out for Washburn in 8th. Longorg but 8-12 against other Boston pitchers, said he was just trying to hit the all. Except for a first inning drive, he never got the ball out of the infield. Orlando Cepeda, the big St. Louis first sacker, continued to have problems at the plate. He went hitless four times, giving him only two hits - both doubles - in 19 trips to the plate. "Every time I hit the ball it's right at somebody," Cepeda said. "What can I do?" Hughes vs. Wasiewskl(?) St. Louis skipper Red Schoen- dienst said he would pitch Dick Hughes, the 29-year-old rookie right-hander, in Wednesday's sixth game in Boston. Hughes lost to Lonborg in the second game at Boston last Thursday. Red Sox manager Dick Williams said he would stick with rookie right-hander Gary Waslewski as the Boston starter. Waslewski started only eight games with the Red Sox, compiling a 2-2 record, as he divided his time between Boston and Toronto of'the Inter- In have the Record Performance 18 innings, the Cardinals managed only four hits off 22-game winner, who also Lonborg w Carlton L Washburn Willis Lamabe BOSTON (A) ST. LOUIS (N) IP H R ER 9 3 1 1 6310 0 1 2 1 1 1 0 0 001 000 002-3 000 000 001-1 I clinched the pennant for the Sox on the final day of the ular season. Red reg- Lonboro Wins 2nd It was the lowest hit total by a pitcher in two consecutive Series games. Ken Harrelson, the fellow who was fired by Kansas City's Charley Finley, only to sign with Boston for $75,000, drove in the first run of the game with a single in the third inning. Thomrpson's Pizza 50c, OFF Large, One-Item Pizza One Per Coupon Good Tues., Oct. 10-Thurs., Oct. 12, 1967 This coupon not good with other promotionals 761=0001 after the Red Sox got the two runs dienst in the clubhouse, after in the top of the ninth. getting one run off him in 18 in- The Boston ace, who retired the nings. first 19 men he faced in beating Mike Shannon, who was charged Dick Hughes in the second game with an error on a sacrifice in at Boston. blew down 12 in a row the third inning, said the bunt from the fourth until the eighth "just went past my glove." Both until Julian Javier got a life on Steve Carlton, the starting Red- Rico Petrocelli's error. bird pitcher, and Shannon went Dal Maxvill got the first hit off for the bunt on the third base Lonborg, an infield single to Mike side of the infield. "I thought Andrews with one out in the third. it was my ball," Shannon said. Maris singled to right with one out As for Lonborg, Shannon said, in the fourth. That was all until "I think I could see the ball to- Maris drove the ball over the right day ... but he still kept us boxed field wall, just to the left of the in. I'd much rather hit off him 330-foot mark. here Busch Stadium than in Bos- Asked the key to the Series so! ton." far. William said: Schoendienst said that he took "Well, Lou Brock has been on Carlton out for a pinch hitter base in three games and the Car- in the sixth inning although the dinals have won three. He hasn't young left-hander allowed the got on base in two and we've won Red Sox only three hits and one both." . "I hope we don't see this guy SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: (Lonborg) again," said Schoen- MARK HALPERT - -----.----- ---,--.--- I Lou Brock, who is 0-8 against . national League. GRID SELECTIONS This man makes more money in one night than you will in a life- time. And he doesn't even work for it. In fact, he smiles for a living. You should hate this man. He makes more money in one night than you will in a lifetime. And he doesn't even work for it. In fact, he smiles for a living. You should hate this man. As a matter of fact, this fellow makes more money in one night tian you will in a lifetime, probably. The funny thing is he doesn't even work for a living. He smiles for it. He should hate you. You make more money than he does in one night's living. And you don't even smile for it. You probably even work for it. He spends a lifetime trying to smile for you. And it makes more hate than a lifetime. Money doesn't even enter the picture. In one night he should hate you. After all, he has more life in one money than you make all night. And you probably do it for a smile. So enter this week's grid picks. Don't think about, just do it. You may even win, like last week's lucky Mike Thoryn. And whatever you do, smile .. 4 run. "We had to get some runs," the St. Louis manager explained. "We're gonna beat them there, we still got the hammer and we're still in front." ---- t _ _ 4 [11 I BRIDGE AND UNION-LEAGUE DANCE LESSONS BEGINNING BRIDGE $6.00 for the 12 hours of lessons ROOM 3G-UN ION POPULAR DANCE (e.q. the Pearl) $4.00 ROOM 32-S-UNION f k .. . 2. 3.' 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9' 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 1. Michigan State at MICHIGAN (score) I Iowa at Indiana Minnesota at Illinois Northwestern at Rice Pittsburgh at Wisconsin Purdue at Ohio State Clemson at Auburn Toledo at Bowling Green Brigham Young at Oregon St. Missouri at Colorado Massachusetts at Connecticut South Carolina at Florida St. Georgia Tech at Tennessee Kansas St. at Iowa St. Syracuse at Navy Southern California at Notre Dame dea. s I EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT FORMAL REGISTRATION: Oct. 3-Nov. 14 7-9 P.M. .I FISHBOWL ,_ 17. Oklahoma at Texas 18. Duke at Virginia 19. North Carolina at Air Force 20. Lock Haven at Shippensburg St. - - --- i I1 z, will a job with LTV Aerospace make you more exciting, sought after, healthy, wealthy and wise? #I Why shouldn't you enjoy the good things of life when you're out to conquer the universe? Sound far fetched? It's not. Q Your first job with LTV Aerospace sets you on a path that can lead you almost anywhere you want to go. Q LTV Aerospace Corporation makes products, of course. Q The A-7 - F-8 - Gama Goat -MACV - Lance -Sea Lance -Scout -prime subcontract struc- turals for the 747 and the SST. That's a few. Design, development and production require systems engi- neering with enormously diversified capabilities. El At LTV Aerospace those capabilities are being ex- amined in terms of the total environmental picture sea, land, air, space and outer space - in ocean sciences - high mobility ground vehicles - mis- sile systems -military and commercial aircraft, V/STOL - launch vehicles-- extra vehicular activity research and development. 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