PAGE EIGHT TILE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11,1965 PAGE EIGHT TIlE MICHIGAN DAiLY THURSDAY. OCTOBER 14, 1965 TwiSn MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL (R) Jim (Mudcat) Grant, pitching with only two days rest, squared Wi1n, HONORARY PROVES CHALLENGE: Tie Up eries Club Gives Athletes SE1E TiHE (AME UP CLOSET, 4. first the men pitch 392 left field on base. feet and deep stands with into ble play, but Tony Oliva kept the Alston ordered Reed to give Qui- two water boiling with a single to left. lici a free ticket to first, setting Battey's Bat the stage for Grant. i nfys tca B F LS- _t the World Series for the Minne- A record crowd of 49,578 rose in Earl Battey led off the second The powerful pitcher, who was sota Twins yesterday by hurling a thunderous ovation to Grant, the with a triple to left center, and one of the Twins' best-hitting a six-hitter and belting a three- 21-game winner, as he trotted Don Mincher walked, but Osteen pitchers in the regular season play run homer in a 5-1 sixth-game home. Grant was the first pitch- escaped with a whole hide. with a .155 average, slammed the victory over. the Los Angeles er to hit a homer in the Series Again in the third, Osteen was first pitch. into the wildly cheer- Dodgers. since Lew Burdette did it for in trouble when he walked Ver- ing fans in the left field pavilion. Grant's triumph, the Twins' Milwaukee, Oct. 2, 1958. It was salles on a 3-2 pitch, but the next It was Grant's very first homer third in three games at Metro- the first by an American League three went quickly. of the year, and he wouldn't sell pitcher since old Jim Bagby for k Third Pitch of it fr$10,000-the amount he can Cleveland in 1920. 'Dick Tracewski, playing second i o 1 0-h muth a Fairly Stars for the injured Lefebvre, messed r ,: Fa ly ars . up Battey's leadoff grounder in 1%%%% Grant, beaten Sunday in the 'PBte' edf rudii forath gmewen hendas knke the fourth. Allison, who had struck fourth game when he was knockedout earlier and had only one hit out in the sixth inning, came back in 10 trips, ripped into Osteen's strong as though he had a month's third pitch and drove it into the rest. He had a no-hitter goig lower pavilion in left for the two- until Ron Fairly opened the fifth run homer that really won the Switha single to center. ball game. Fairly's seventh-inning home bl ae Osteen had been getting behind run ruined Grant's bid for a the hitters, and his pitches were . shutout, but the big fellow never high instead of in his usual low- faltered.brehkingtgrofns.l After Lou Johnson singled for g g the sixth hit with two gone in Commander Grant was in command all the the ninth, Grant retired the Dodg- way. The Dodgers never got a e y i e r r chance to use the speed that prac- out to Frank Quilici. The entire tically ran the Twins out of the '°{<.f Twins' bench came out to greet park in Los Angeles. Only once, the 30-year-old right-hander as in the sixth when Tracewski and he walked off the hill. Maury Wills singled, did they have Osteen Beaten two on base at the same time.. Osteen, who never before had The second guessers will have BOB ALLISON lost to the Twins in his days with a field day with Walter Alston, Washington and the Dodgers, fin- Dodger manager, for his move in JIM KAAT politan Stadium after losing three ally dropped his first decision to walking the weak-hitting rookie straight in Los Angeles threw the the Minnesota sluggers after beat- Quilici in the sixth to pitch to make if the Twins follow through Series into a decisive seventh ing them six times. Grant. and win the seventh game. game today. So far, it, has been The crafty lefty had shut out the Strong Play Kaat Tomorrow a home park series. Twins in Los Angeles in the third Parker had made a superb play Twins' Manager Sam Mele nam- Grant, Allison Homer game last Saturday 4-0. to throw out leadoff man Battey ed left-hander Jim Kaat to start Bob Allison's two-run homer off The Twins started out making in the sixth, but Allison walked. the seventh game, but Walter Al- Claude Osteen in the fourth gave life miserable for Osteen in the Reed, who had just replaced Os- ston of the Dodgers refused to the muscular Grant the margin very first inning when Zoilo Ver- teen at the start of the inning, pick a pitcher, saying he would not he needed. Then he came up in salles led off with a single. He curled a third strike past Don decide until today between right- the sixth and blasted Howie Reed's was erased on Joe Nossek's dou- Mincher. hander Don Drysdale and left- --__ ---hander Sandy Koufax. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: RICK STERN By MARTY LIEBERMAN Sigma Delta Psi, the national honorary athletic fraternity, may not be the most widely heralded fraternal organization on campus, but it is without a doubt the hard- est to pledge. Last year seven physical education majors and varsity athletes competed for membership to the club, but none were able to meet the require- ments. Tests Applicants must pass the fol- lowing 15 tests: 1. 100-yd. dash 11 3 5 sec. 2. 120-yd. low hurdles 16 sec. 3. Running high jump about 5 ft. 4. Running broad jump 17 ft. 5. 16 lb. shot put 30 ft. 6. 20-ft, rope climp 12 see. 7. Baseball throw 250 ft. or Javelin throw 130 ft. 8. Football punt 120 ft. 9. 100-yd. swim 1 min. 45 sec. 10. 1 mile run 6 min. the 1920's. He acted as national president during the early fifties, and looks back on four decades of close contact with Sigma Delta. "None of the tests are really dif- ficult, but all together they make a rough exam. The toughest events are usually rope climbing and the hand stand, but this differs for each athlete." Before the expansion of the Uni- versity I-M program to include 36 sports, Sigma Delta Psi was a popular intramural activity. So- cial fraternities and dormitories would compete to qualify the most members. In recent years, how- ever, interest has waned and few athletes even compete. 90 Chapters Ninety colleges and universities across the nation have Sigma Del- ta Psi chapters, and an award is presented annually to the school which produces the most mem- bership. Records are reviewed at the national office at the Uni- versity of Minnesota by national director, Pat Mueller, the head ofj the Minnesota I-M program. Do you think you can qualify for Sigma Delt? Give it a try. Go down to the I-M building. Look around in the lobby and you'll see the list of members. Keep on walking and you'll find Earl Ris- key's office. Ask for an applica- tion. Good luck. 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