THE MICHIGAN DAILY* WEDNE TAY, OCTOBER 11, 1967 TH MIHGNDIYWDEDAOTBR1t16 ''gee Soxil HEATED GRANDSTAND By The Associated Press BOSTON - Gary Waslewski, an obscure commuter between , - . Fenway Park and the Toronto farm club, is the Boston Red Sox's hope to square the World Series in today's sixth game as the 10 Race Nigpitching foe of St. Louis' Dick Hughes. Dine . our Trailing 3-2 in games, Manager Dick Williams of the desperate J SRed Sox has to gamble on a HRpitcher with a 2-2 record against a 16-6 Cardinal regular in hopes of extending the Series to seven games and a third chance for Jim Lonborg. 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 iesort A victory for the favored Car- dinals would close out the series and give St. Louis its eighth world title without the need of a third effort by Bob Gibson. "We have to win both games," said Williams, "All the players know it. We faced the same situ- ation in the last two days of the season when we had to face Min- nesota's best pitchers. We never had beaten Dean Chance all year and our ace Lonborg never had beaten the Twins. "We think we'll win this ball game and then we'll have our ace come back against Gibson, anoth- er fellow we never have beaten." Winning Line-up Williams decided to stick with the same line-up that won the fifth game in St. Louis. That meant Joe Foy will remain at third base, Mike Andrews at sec- ond base and Ken,.Harrelsop in right field. Dalton Jones, the leading hitter at .353, will remain on the bench. The, Cardinals' manager, Red Schoendienst, also plans to use the same batting order that has started previous games. "We won the pennant on the road 52-28," said Red. "So we'll win the World Series on the road." Hughes, beaten 5-0 by Lon- borg's one-hitter in the second game, is a candidate for rookie' of the year honors in the Nation- al League. After nine years in the SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: to Uni Cardinal chain gang the right- hander finally made the big show at the age of 29. "I feel better about this start than the first," Hughes said. "I have had a lot of rest since Thurs- day and I have a better idea about the hitters. Last time I had my fast ball but I didn't have my good curve and slider." Asked Asked how he would pitch to Carl Yastremski the second time around, the bespectacled Arkan- san unloaded a chew of tobacco and said, "I'll just give him my best pitch. Like I said before, the home run he hit was half a mis- take. He made it a whole mistake. The ball was where I wanted it tried Hurler NC State Seeks To Bury 'Clemson in ACC Race but it didn't have enough stuff." Yastremski hit one homer off Hughes and the second off Joe Hoerner, the left-handed relief man. If Waslewski wobbles, Williamsr will be sure to clean the bench for pitchers. However, he said he would not go to Lonborg on relief in any circumstances. If it should rain, Williams indicated he would stay with Waslewski. f-Gary Bell, Lee Stange, Dave Morehead, Jose Santiago, Johnz Wyatt and all the others will be standing by on a ready basis. After five games the pitchers clearly are dominating the Series. St. Louis is hitting .210 and Bos- ton .206. HUG H By DIANA ROMANCHUK Two weexs ago, Houston upset Michigan State'37 to 7. Last Saturday, North Carolina, State upset Houston, ranked sec- ond in the nation, 16 to 6. That upset victory propelled North Carolina State -into the na- tional rankings, and it hiay spur the Wolfpack on to capture the Atlantic Coast Conference title. Its present 4-0 record reverses' the situation of the past two years where the Wolfpack was plagued by poor starts. Though they im-' proved in the latter half of those seasons, they were forced to fin- ish second to Clemson both years. This may be the year to reverse the final results, too. Clemson, the preseason favorite to repeat as ACC champion, has dropped its last two games: first to Georgia 24-17, and last Satur- day to Georgia Tech 10-0, with Alabama still to be faced. However, last season it lost all three of its non-conference games (Southern Cal, Alabama, and Georgia Tech) and still wenton to become the ACC champion. The only conference game the Tigers lost last year Was to North Caro- lina State, 23-14, in North Caro- lina State's newly finished Carter Stadium. This year's North Carolina State-Clemson clash takes place November 18 on Cleinson home !leads the defensive unit aided by All-ACC guard Harry Olszewski and ends Burt Saursavage and Lory Branton. Altogether, the Tigers can show not only talent but depth at every position both offensively and de- fensively. North Carolina State, on the other hand, was expected to field an outstanding defense, with an offensive line weakened by grad- uation. Ali - American Tackle Dennis Byrd along with end Pete Sokalsky PEPTO-BISMOL: Upsets Plague Grid Powers FRED LaBOUR 1-1 By HARRY ENGLEHART In the sporting year of 1967 the word upset has become an over- worked and rather vague way of saying that any team can beat any other team on a given day. It all began last spring when the Chicago Black Hawks were blasted out of the Stanley Cup playoffs (as usual). Then Jack Nicklaus missed the cut in the Masters Tournament at Augusta and Gay Brewer, a 20-1 shot, won the coveted green jacket. When baseball season began, most of the oddsmakers had Pitts- burgh picked as the winner of a tight NationalaLeague race and Baltimoie should have run away with the Junior Circuit crown. But St. Louis ran away with the NL title, accumulating a won-lost percentage of .620 and Boston won a hectic AL battle. Autumn has arrived now and the only thing that seems to be going as predicted is the World Series, and even there Las Vegas would not give odds. Here, There, Everywhere Football's '67 season has turned out to be the most unpredictable in quite a while, much to the con- sternation of local bookies. Up- sets have been more frequent than babies and the season is on- ly three weeks old. Take the Big Ten for example., Pre-season polls had Michigan State ranked in the Nation's Top Ten. The unranked, unheralded Houston Cougars were to be their first opponents. About the only thing that Houston could really boast of was Warren McVea and who ever dreamed that all his press releases were true. The Cougars flew into East Lansing, stayed for a couple of days and, before leaving, had suc- ceeded in ravaging the Spartans.j They scored 37 points by blasting holes in the MSU defensive line and, for versatility's sake, they held the potent Spartan offense to one morale-boosting touch- down. Duffy Daugherty called McVea one of the best halfbacks in the country and then ran off to lick his wounds. A couple of hundred miles to the west on that same afternoon, the Northwestern Wildcats were busy biting the wind out of the sails of the Miami Hurricanes, who were ranked second on most pre-season polls. In the South, Bear Bryant's Johnson Voted Back of Week The Associated Press yesterday picked Michigan's Ron Johnson as the Back of the Week for his outstanding running against, Na- vy last weekend. His rushing efforts also boosted him to seventh place for rushing in the nation with a total of 405 yards in three games. The 6-1, 190 pound junior piled up a total of 270 yards from scrimmage in 26 carries, including touchdown runs of 62 and 72 yards. Another 37 yard dash set up a third Wolverine score. He caught three passes for 19 yards, thus accounting for all but. 97 of Michigan's 386 yard total offense. Johnson's total broke the Mi- chigan single game record set 24 years ago by Bill Daley and sur- passed the best efforts of such greats of yesteryear as Tom Har- mon, Willie Heston, and present coach Bump Elliott. Crimson Tide had red faces to match their red uniforms as Flor- ida St. managed to score as many points in one game against Ala- bama's defense as the Tide had given up all last season. It was only good enough to gain a tie for Florida State 37-37, but it-was as cherished as a victory. If the biggest upset of the year was to be picked at this early, stage of the season, the-frontrun- ner would certainly be Purdue's victory over the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame. Notre Dame, nearly everyone's pick for National Champions, had their proverbial Irish shaken by the likes of Purdue's Mike Phipps to Jim Beirne passing combina- tion. Pooh-Pooh By virtue of their win, the Boil- ermakers. have been made the favorites to capture the Big Ten title this year. But with Michigan State and Ohio State on their Big Ten schedule, the path to the crown will be littered with green and red obstacles, all itching to be on the right end of the upset plague. Other notable upsets have in- cluded Texas Tech's whomping of Texas; N. Carolina St. preserving their perfect record this past weekend by nipping Houston; and Duke jolting Army's Lambert Trophy hopes by beating the Ca- dets. Navy has been involved in three upsets. The Middies upset Penn State and Michigan and were up- set by Rice in between. There are still seven weeks of football remaining and the upset fever is just catching on. It ap- pears as though the tean that can find the preventive will be the National Champions. A. q JAY CALABRESE ground, and may decide the con- ference champion. ,Clemson Coach Frank Howard, beginning his 22nd season as head coach, lost only 2 offensive first stringers, and 4 defensive starters through graduation. Outstanding among the 46 returnees are quar-- terback Jimmy Addison, fullback Buddy Gore, and All-American Tackle Wayne Mass. Addison, who set Clemson pass- ing records last season, has his two favorite receivers, flankerback Phil Rodgers (6-2, 175)and tight end Edgar McGee (6-4, 213) back In the line-up this year. Gore, ACC rushing champion last year, sparks the running game with help from tailback Jacky Johnson. Mass, a 6-4 and 245-pounder, DENNIS BYRD (6-1, 215) bolster the defense and safety Art McMahon and middle linebacker Chuck Amato head a seasoned secondary. Among the six remaining teams in the conference, South Carolina and Duke present the only real challenge for Clemson and NC State. Paul Dietzel, South Carolina coach, has said, "I wouldn't trade our backfield for any in the con- ference or possibly elsewhere in the nation.".With fullback Warren Muir rated eighth in the nation in rushing previous to Saturday's 21- 0 loss to Georgia, and Mike Fair, one of the leading passers in the nation, he may be right. Michigan has already-had a look at the Duke Blue Devils, including defensive tackles Bob Lashy and Robin Bodkin. Highly rated fullback Jay Cala- brese, however, abdicated in favor of tailback Frank Ryan here in Ann Arbor and ran only 10 times. Bringing up the tail end of the conference are Virginia, North Carolina, Maryland, and Wake Forest. The Cavaliers from Virginia are 2-1, a 26-7 defeat at the hands of Army opening the season followed by 35-2 victory over Buffalo and a 14-12 edging of Wake Forest. Though tailback Frank Quayle has not quite lived up to expectations, -teammate Gene Arnette is tenth in the nation in scoring. 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