PAGE SEK THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1966 .BASEBALL ROUNDUP: t Dodgers Favored in Series By The Associated Press LOS ANGELES - The strong arms of Sandy Koufax, Don Drys- dale and Claude Losteen make the Los Angeles Dodgers the 8-5 favorites over the hard-hitting Baltimore Orioles in the World Series, opening tomorrow at Dodger Stadium. old left-hander with a 13-5 record, hoe card for the Dodgers, whose to open for the American League champions who have had almost two weeks to prepare for the big test after clinching the AL pen- nant Sept. 22. Dodgers' Manager Walter Alston will go with Drysdale, since Kou- faz nitrU h Ll d iihiai ,rn an#_nlnhin ax p ee the pennant-cilnc ing ? Orioles Manager Hank Bauer finale against the Phillies. named Dave McNally, a 23-year- Pitching is expected to be the r I'l Major League Stan dings NATIONAL LEAGUE Final Standings Los Angeles San Francisco Pittsburgh Philadelphia Atlanta St. Louis Cincinnati Houston New York Chicago 95 93 92 87 85 83 76 72 66 59 67 68 70 75 77 79 84 90 95 103 Pet. GB .586 - .578 1'1; .568 3 .537 8 .525 10 .512 12 .475 18 .444 23 .410 282 .364 36 JUNIOR HALFBACK Ernie Sharpe (17) hits the ground as Tar Heel defensive end Billy Warren (83) applies the final touches to a tackle that pinned Sharpe one yard behind the line of scrimmage. Sharpe only carried the ball once after catching a screen pass from Wolverine quarterback Dick Vidmer. Jim Detwiler, who rushed for a 4.2 yard average, played most of the game in the halfback slot opposite Carl Ward. AMERICAN LEAGUE Final Standings W L Pct. Baltimore 97 63 .606 Minnesota 89 73 .549 Detroit 88 74 .543 Chicago 83 79 .512 Cleveland 81 81 .500 California 80 82 .494 Kansas City 74 86 .463 Washington 71 88 .447 Boston 72 90 .444a New York 70 89 .440 SUNDAY'S RESULTS Baltimore 6-0, Minnesota 2-1 Kansas City 7, Detroit 5 New York 2, Chicago 0 California 2, Cleveland 0 Only games scheduled GB 9 10 15 17 18 23 25Y/ 26 26 SUNDAY'S RESULTSI Philadelphia 4-3, Los Angeles 3-6 San Francisco 7, iPttsburgh 3 (11 inn) St. Louis 2, Chicago 0 Atlanta 4, Cincinnati 2 Houston 6-8, New York 1-2 M' ERRORS COSTLY: 1, -- I s . has a 2.63 earned run aver- age and 52 complete game com- pared to the Orioles' 3.35 ERA and only 23 complete games for the entire season. The top winner for Baltimore was Jim Palmer, 15-10. He is due to face Koufax in the second game on Thursday afternoon. Baltimore has the big bomber of the year in Frank Robinson, the former Cincinnati Reds' star who won the batting triple crown with a .316 average, 49 homers: and 122 runs batted in. The Orioles' also have the big bat of first base- man Boog Powell, third baseman Brooks Robinson and left fielder Curt Blefary. Bauer's bullpen is his big pitch- ing plus, with men like soft-throw- ing Stu Miller, knuckler Eddie Fisher, young Eddie Watt and Moe Drabowsky ready to rush to the rescue. The Dodgers seldom hit homers, especially in thier own spacious stadium, but Jim Lefebyre. Lou Johnson, Willie Davis, Wes Parkeri and Ron Fairly have hit more than 10 each. When Alston needs to dig into! his bullpen he has the veteran left-hander Ron Perranoski for the left-handed hitters and Bob Mil- ler for the long haul in the middle innings. The stopper is Phil Regan, known as The Vulture because of his habit of coming in to pick up a decision that some other pitcher has let get away. The. Dodgers have good speed although Maury Wills, their pre- mier base stealer, has been handi- capped recently by a torn cartilage in his right knee. The clubs will play the first two games in Los Angeles, starting at 4 p.m. EDT. Friday will be an open date for travel and they will resume play in Baltimore Saturday, where the fourth, game will be played Sunday and the fifth, if necessary, Mon- !day. If the issue isn't decided then, they will take another day off for travel and return to Los Angeles for a sixth, and possibly seventh game. St. Louis 4 Dallas 3 Philadelphia 2 Cleveland 2 Washington 2 Pittsburgh 1 New York 0 Atlanta 0 Western+ Green Bay 4 Los Angeles 3 Baltimore 2 Detroit 2 Chicago 1 San Francisco 0 Minnesota 0 0 0 1.000 114 0 0 1.000 127 2 0 .500 81 2 0 .500 114 2 0 .500 78 2 1 .333 88 3 1 .000 65 4 0 .000 48 Conference 0 0 1.000 92 1 0 .750 97 1 0 .667 77 2 0 .500 59 2 0 .333 33 2 1 .000 37 3 1 .000 70 58 39 84 76 98 94 149 117 50 58 61 53 55 90 99 1~ 'Carolina Zoon Michigan went into last week- end's encounter with North Caro- lina ranked eighth in the nation on the strength of an opening two game win streak, one an impres- sive 41-0 victory over Oregon State. . North Carolina, on the otherĀ° hand, had only won one of its first two starts and that victory was a > close one over intrastate rival, North Carolina State, a team that Michigan State had soundly{ beaten a week earlier. The Tar Heel offense had only scored 10 points in its two games and only quarterback Danny Talbott seemed to be a threat. It appeared that the Wolverines were facing an easy challenger, All was not so last Saturday, as the visitors fron Chapel Hill showed football skills that no one thought they possessed. Their backfield aggressively ran up 167.* yard rushing while their study de - fense limited the Wolverines to only 11 completions out of 27 at- tempts. North Carolina coach Jim Hickeymeant it when he said that the Tar Heels had "played their :k"# best game of the year" defeating the unsteady Wolverines, 21-7. The Tar Heels had revenged az 31-24 setback at the hands of the :. Wolverines last year. The only DEFENSIVE SAFETY Rick Volk (49) bright spot for Michigan was the renewed running power of Jim caught by Tar Heel right halfback To Detwiles, who rushed for a 4.2 of quarterback Danny Talbott's 10 comr yard average in six carries. for 21 yards in North Carolina's 21-71 In other baseball news, the De- troit Tigers signed Mayo Smith to a two-year managerial con- tract and the Cleveland Indians announced that Joe Adcock has agree' to manage their club for a kvo-year span. r Pro s R il NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Conference WV L T Pet. Pts. OP go Turn sBlue FRIDAY'S RESULT Los Angeles 34, San Francisco 3 SUNDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 13, Minnesota 13 Cleveland 28, New York 7 Dallas 47, Atlanta 14 Green Bay 23, Detroit 14 Washington 24, Pittsburgh 10 St. Louis 41, Philadelphia 10 NEXT SATURDAY'S GAME Pittsburgh at Cleveland NEXT SUNDAY'S GAMES Atlanta at Washington Baltimore at Chicago taren Pay at San Francisco Los Angeles at Detroit New York at St. Louis Pittsburgh at Dallas Neec t - Swe say mo ire T New Yo Bauffalo Houston Boston Miami San Die Kansas Oakland Denver AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Division W I. T Pet. Pts. OP rk 3 0 1 1.000 111 58 3 2 0 .600 141 127 2 3 0 .400 147 126 1 2 1 .333 72 101 Wes'e-n Division 0 4 0 .000 62144 go 4 0 0 1.000 124 37 City 3 1 0 .667 133 83 1 3 0 .250 83106 1 3 0 .250 64 124 TONIGHT Join the New PI KAPPA ALPHA chapter at the University of Michigan! Come to the Pi Kap Rush Smoker at the _ Student Union in Room 3 R & S at 7:30 P.M. For information, call RON GILBERT (aimnus counselor) 761 -4929 SUNDAY'S RESULTS San Diego 44, Miami 10 Denver 40, Houston 38 Buffalo Z9, Kansas City 14 New York 24, Denver 24 (tie) NEXT SATURDAY'S GAMES Denver at Kansas City Boston at Buffalo San Diego at New York NEXT SUNDAY'S GAME Miami at Oakland GRID SELECTIONS, tries in vain to stop a North Carolina pass that is about to be mm Lampman (28). Lampman was on the receiving end of two npletions that netted 70 yards in the air. Lampman also rushed upset victory over Michigan. John Zline of 526 S. Forest was last week's winner of two free passes to the Michigan Theatre (currently showing "A Fine Mad- ness"). John, a Bus Ad student, foxily discovered that some of his rejected IBM cards resembled grid picks, and of course The Daily staff couldn't tell the difference. Who knows? You could be the lucky one next week. Just slip your grid selections, or any rea-' sonable facsimile (e.g., a link of kielbassa, a day old bagel) into the box at 420 Maynard St. by midnight Friday. Only one entry per person. please. Watcn tomorrow's paper for a scouting report on the perennial battle between Kutztown and East Stroudsburg. 1. MICHIGAN at Michigan State (score) 2. Ohio State at Illinois 3. Minnesota at Indiana 4. Iowa at Purdue 5. Northwestern at Oregon State 6. Nebraska at Wisconsin 7. Hawaii at Air Force 8. Baylor at Arkansas 9. Army at Notre Dame 10. Wake Forest at Auburn 11. Florida at Florida State 12. Tennessee at Georgia Tech 13. Mississippi at Georgia 14. Missouri at Kansas State 15. Navy at Syracuse 16. UCLA at Rice' 17. Princeton at Dartmouth 18. Washington at Southern Cal 19. Utah at Wyoming 20. Kutztown State at East Stroudsburg State KEEP AHEAD OF YOUR HAIR!! " NO WAITING * 7 BARBERS "Headquarters for Collegians" THE DASCOLA BARBERS Near Michigan Theatre KEEP FREEDOM * 0 n ?1r1110 l fi~i}n -# RINGIN~G DICK WESOLOWSKI (40), sophomore halfback for the Tar MICHIGAN QUARTERBACK Dick Vidmer cocks him arm after Heels, clutches the football, as defensive tackle Bill Hardy pre- eyeing an open receiver downfield. Completions were hard to come pares for the tackle. North Carolina coach Jim Hickey said after by for the Wolverines who were only able to complete 11 out of the game that Canadian born "Weslowski played his best game 27 passes against the stubborn Tar Heels. ever" as he rushed for 60 yards in 15 carries. BUY U.S. SAVINGS BONDS JOBS ABROAD GUARANTEED '00 PHOTOGRAPHS by ANDREW SACKS and ROBERT SHEFFIELD Cox Moore v-necks Sromn England - Cox 'Moores distinctive Iambs wool v-necks. 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