15, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY A A' ' £7 t j5 MNE r Koufax Hurls Shutout As Dodgers Take one defeat, bis third since team moved to Los Angeles. The Dodgers probably will s up about $9800 each and Series the Twins will take home a healthy consolation prize of about $6500 slice from the players' pool of $885,- the 612. By The Associated Press 4 MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL - Sandy Koufax, the golden arm of the Los Angeles Dodgers, won the World Series yesterday when he fired a 2-0, three-hit shutout at the Minnesota Twins in the seventh game before a record 50,- 596 fans at Metropolitan Stadium. Coming back with only two days rest after his 7-0 victory Monday at Los. Angeles, Koufax finally terminated the streak of home park domination in this Series. Sandy ended the game with a strikeout flourish, mowing down his ninth and 10th victim for the last two outs. Kogfax, who had won and lost in previous duels with Jim Kaat, the Twins' left-handed ace, yield- ed a single to Zoilo Versalles in the third, a double to rookie Frank Quilici in the fifth, and a single to Harmon Killebrew in the ninth. Johnson Homers Lou Johnson, a 'much traveled athlete who has made the scene at Ponca. City, Olean, Lancaster and way points before the Dodg- ers brought him up in May, hit the home run that doomed Xaat. The 31-year-old outfielder from Lexington, Ky., hit the foul pole screen in left' leading off the fourth inning.; Ron Fairly's 11th hit of the Series, a double to the right field wall, and Wes Parker's' bouncing single: over Don Mincher's head to right field, scoring Fairly, fin- fished off Kaat in the fourth be- fore abUan was out. Brilliant Play Koufax escaped from his most serious jam: in the fifth on a brilliant play by Jim Gilliam. Quil- lei's doube A0o the' 'left center screen and''a walk to pinch hit- ter Rich 1ollins on a '3-2 .pitch that drew protests from Koufax gave the Twins their best shot of the sunny afternoon. Versalles rapped a hot drive down the third'baseline that Gil- liam gloved 'behind the' bag and was able to scramble to third base in time to foce Quilici. The big home.town crowd, which had cheered Kouf ax when he came to bat in the top of the ninth, whooped it up for the Twins in the last inning as Killebrew sin- gled tq left with one out. No Rally But Earl B ,ttey struck out on three blazers and Bob Atlia n went dtWn swinging for the finth time in the Series. The Dodgers converged around .the mount, slapping Koufax on the back and Manager Walter Alston, who had chosen Sandy over a rested Don Drysdale for this final game, rushed out to pump the left hand that won him an- other World Championship. "I didn't have the curve ball at all," said Sandy in the dressing room. "I couldn't get it over. I went with the fast ball." In Control Drysdale was warming up in the bullpen through the early innings, especially when Sandy walked Tony Oliva and Killebrew in the first after retiring the first two batters. But big Don never was needed. Nor was anyone else. Koufax remained in control all the way, striking out six in the first three innings and then bid- ing his time for a blazing finish. He retired 12 men in a row at one time, until Killebrew singled in the ninth. The Twins got only two men as far as second, and no one reached third. NL Dominance It was the third .straight Na- tional 'League Series success and their eighth in the last 12 years although the American still holds a 37-25 edge. Alston, the senior citizen among National League.'-managers, at 53 with 12 years of service behind him, won his fourth Series to only --Associated Press DODGER LEFTFIELDER LOU JOHNSON lashes out with a mighty cut and sends the ball into the left-field seats for a home run to give the Dodgers a 1-0 lead in the fourth inning of yester- day's final World Series game. The Dodgers rode Sandy Koufax's three-hit, 2-0 victory to a Series triumph over the Minnesota Twins. SSubjects neded for sychological research Must be able to spend 3 hours in one weekday evening sitting and 1 hour at a later time to be arranged. $5.00 UPON COMPLETION of 4 hours-choice of evenings SIGN-UP SHEET IN LOBBY OF SOCIAL WORK ANNEX (former Corner House), corner of Washington and Thayer The ultimate in oxford. Long staple cotton. Hefty with a luxurious hand. Great character from the inimitable flare of its button- down collar to its superb fit. 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