THE MICHIGAN DAILY +ord Hurls 10-0 Victory COLLEGE ROUNDUP: Syracuse Rolls On (Continued from Page 1) achieved what Richardson did. And that goes for the slam as well as the RBI's. Little Bobby is the seventh player -- sixth Yankee - ever to hit a bases-loaded home run in the World Series. But none of the others did it in vast Yankee Stadium. Only Three Homers In six seasons in the majors, the 5-foot-8 second baseman has hit only three home runs. He's a "smart" hitter, the kind of 'little guy' Manager Casey Stengel likes -- laying town bunts, moving the runners. ftet is, when he came up against reliever Clem Labine with the bases loaded yesterday, he was supposed to lay down a bunt. But he fouled it off. He fouled off two more pitches, then laid a 3-2 pitch in the left field stands, "I knew I hit it good," said the smiling, soft-spoken South Caro- linian, "but when I rounded first base, I thought the left fielder had caught it. "I don't think I've ever hit even a three-run homer before, except maybe at Denver, where it's a mile high." Sky High Things went sky high with this one. And after striking out against Fred Green in the third inning, Richardson, the No. 7 man in Stengel's batting order, lined al two-run single off Red Witt in the fourth. That gave him his sixth RBI. The best anyone had been able to do in one series game before was five, and it wasn't just any- one, it was Yankees Tony Lazzeri and Lou Gehrig in the 1936 series against the New York Giants, Ted Kluszewski of the Chicago White Sox against Los Angeles last October, and Mantle in Thurs- day's game. No National Leaguer has ever done it. Mantle had two singles, the home run (his second off Green) and a ground rule double in his first four trips to the plate. "They just bombed us," said Murtaugh, who was 43 years old today.° "A birthday present like this doesn't make you feel any young- er. Shutout, Too! PITTSBURGH (N) AB R H Rbi PO A 8 F today's terrific dollar value! Virdon ef Groat as Clemente ri Stuart lb Cimou If Smith Hoak 3b Mazeroski 2b Mizell p Labine Ip Green p Witt p a-Baker Cheney p b-Schofield Gibbon p Totals NEW YORK (A) Cerv if Marls rf Berra rf Mantle ef Skowron lb McDougald 3b Howard c Richardson 2b Kubek ss Ford Totals By The Associated Press WORCESTER, Mass.-Syracuse was shocked by upstart Holy Cross which outplayed the nation's No. 1 football team for 41, minutes, rallied behind its mighty defense and fullback Art Baker for a 15-6 victory yesterday. The Orangemen felt their pres- tige and a 13-game winning streak tottering until tackle Tom Gilburg boomed a conversion kick to de- cide the contest with one second left in the third quarter. Sopho- more halfback John Mackey had dragged the Crusaders' quarter- back-leader Bill Joern the final yard into the end zone for the touchdown. The Orangemen's defense, first in the country, held on their 4- yard line to stem a fourth period Crusader surge from the Holy Cross 20. Eleven seconds before the final gun the previously awesome Syra- cuse attack, which had sputtered and fizzled before the hard-rush- ing Crusader forwards, clicked on a 25-yard scoring pass, from Dick Easterly to Ernie Davis, making the final tally misleading. ** * WASHINGTON ST. 21, CALIF. 21 BERKELEY-Washington State parlayed Keith Lincoln's running and Mel Melin's throwing into a come-from-behind 21-21 tie with California in the last 1'2 minutes of their football game yesterday, with Lincoln's two-point con- version climaxing the contest. BAYLOR 28, ARKANSAS 14 FAYETTEVILaLE, Ark. -- Bay- lor's Bears ran and passed the Ar- kansas Razorbacks ragged yester- day for a 28-14 Southwest Confer- ence football victory which broke an eight-gamie winning streak for Arkansas. NO. CAROLINA 12, N. DAME 7 CHAPEL HILL-Twice-beaten North Carolina struck for two sec- ond period touchdowns and with- stood a desperate second half rally yesterday to defeat Notre Dame, 12-7, in an intersectional football battle on a rain-soaked field, the first victory for the Tar Heels in the 11-game series. Notre Dame, harrassed by pass interceptions, drove past the North Carolina 20-yard line five tihes before finally scoring late in the final period. MISSOURI 34, AIR FORCE 9 DENVER - Halfback Don Smith's 90-yard touchdown trip on a punt return capped a 20 point second quarter for Missouri as the unbeaten Tigers sent Air Force reeling to its first defeat, 34-8, yesterday. PENN STATE 27, ARMY 16 WESTPOINT-Halfback Jim Kerr scored three touchdowns yes- terday for a comeback Penn State team which spoiled Army's un- beaten record and homecoming celebration, 27-16, as rival Navy rolled on against SMU. WASHINGTON 29, STANFORD 10 STANFORD-Washington All- America Quarterback Bob Schlor- edt passed for one touchdown and ran for another yesterday as the resurging Huskies battered fum- bling Stanford, 29-10, in their na- tionally televised Big Five battle, recovering from last week's upset 15-14 loss to Navy. Pro Standings NFL WESTERN DIVISION W L T Pet. Baltimore 2 0 0 1.000 Chicago 1 1 0 .500 Green Day 1 1 0 .500 San Francisco 1 1 0 .000 Detroit 0 1 0 .000 Dallas 0 2 0 .000 Los Angeles 0 2 0 .000 EASTERN DIVISION Cleveland 2 'E0E0 1.000 New York 2 0 0 1.000 Pittsburgh 1 1 0 .500 Philadelphia 1 1 0 .500 St. Louis 1 1 0 .500 Washington 0 1 0 .000 TODAY'S GAMES Baltimore at Green Bay Dallas at Washington Los Angeles at Chicago New York at Pittsburgh St. Louis at Philadelphia San Francisco at Detroit NHL W L T Pts. GF GA New York 2 0 0 4 7 3 Chicago 1 0 1 3 5 3 Montreal 1 0 1 3 6 1 Boston 0 1 1 1 3 S Detroit 0 1 1 1 3 5 Toronto 0 2 0 0 2 10 LAST NIGHT'S GAMES New York 5, Toronto 2 Boston 1, Montreal 1 Only games scheduled 31 0 4 0 24 9 AB 5 3 1 5 S 4 4 5 3 4 R H RbIIPO A 1 2 0 3 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 4 2 2 2 1 11 3 2 1 0 0 3 12 4 3 0 1 0 2 1 1 1 0 3 4 39 10 16 10 27 15 W m"nan-styled ADLER SC* now inwomen'ssie Get wewel pairs now at Ih* This famous *Shrink-Controlled (and sase guaranteed) Choice of Champions, long tine favorite sports-casual of the college man, is today in high demand with his sis- te, his cousins and his aunts. Fluffy lamb's wool (90%) and sturdy nylon reinforced throughout (10%) in preferred 10-inch Ungth with nicely shaped ankle. Sires full *ad half, 9 on up. Olympic White. a-Grounded out for Wtt in 6th. b-Lined out for Cheney in 8th. Pittsburgh (N) New York (A) 000 000 000- 0 600 400 00x-10 E--Kubek. DP--Ford, Richardson and Skowron. LOB--Pittsburgh (N) 5, New York (A) 9. 2B-Virdon, Mantle. HR- Richardson, Mantle. Ford (W) MJzel (L) Labine Green SWitt Cheney T-t41t IP H 9 4 :l 3 i& 4 1 5 i', ;3 Z 1 A-70,001. R ER BB SO 4 4 1 0 x 2 0 0 4 4 0 3 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 3 ' UM, M. M , S DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN r T. r Collin SoUp STATE and LIBERTY LOOK TO KESSEL'S FOR FASHION (Continued from Page 4) open October 19 with actress-author IT-' ka Chase, to be followed by Burgess Meredith, Marcel Marceau, Agnes De- Mille, Herb Shriner and Basil Rath- bone. Students are offered a special rate in the second balcony of 13.00 for the complete course. There is also a 50 per cent saving by buying season tickets in the reserved sections, main floor and first balcony. Tickets for indi-' vidual performances will go on sale October 17. EventsM onday Radiation Laboratory Lecture Series: "Anisotropic Magneto Plasmas" is the title of the lecture to be given by Dr. Lewis Gold of the Radiation Laboratory on Mon., Oct. 10 at 4:00 p.m. in E. Engineering, 2084. Mon., Oct. 10, 4:00 p.m., Rm. 1300 Chemistry Bldg. Dr. v. i. Spitsyn, Di-a rector, Institute of Physical Chemistry,I Academy of Sciences of the U.S.S.R. will' speak on "New Data on the Influence of External Radiation on Heterogeneous Chemical Processes." Engineering Mechanics Seminar. Mon. Oct. 10 at 4:00 p.m. in Rb. 305 West Engineering Bldg. Prof. C. S. Yih will speak on "Cambridge As I Coffee will be served In Engineering at 3:30 p.m. k k- r # Know it." 201 West Automatic Programming and Nu- merical Analysis Seminar. "Eigenvalues of Trl-Diagonal Matrices" will be dis- cussed by R. C. F. Bartels on Mon., Oct. 10 at 4 p.m. in 318 W. Engineering. Events Tuesday Faculty Recital: Oliver Edel, Prof. of violinncello and Chamber Music and Cellist of the Stanley Quartet, will pre- sent with commentary "The Six Suites for violoncello (Unaccompanied)" by J. S. Bach. The first of the series of three concerts will be performed on Tues. Oct. 11, at 4:15 p.m. in Aud. A, Angell Hall, the program to include Suite LI n CG major and Suite 11, in D minor. The second and third programs are scheduled for 8:30 p.m. in Angell Hall, the second on Thurs., Nov. 10, and the third on Dec. 6. Open to the general public. Doctoral Examination for Charles Wesley Jackson, Jr., Psychology; thesis: "An Exploratory Study of the Role of Suggestion in Research on Sensory De- privation," Tues., Oct. 11, 7615 Haven Hall, at 10:00 a.m. Chairman, E. L. Kelly. AN ORIGINAL BY Doctoral Examination for Bruce Bug- bee, History; thesis: "The Early Ameri- can Law of Intellectual Property: The Historical Foundations of the United States Patent and Copyright Systems," Tues.. Oct. 11, 3609 Haven Hall, at 9:00 a.m. Chairman, W. R. Leslie. Placement N Aotices City of St. Paul, Minnesota-Civil Service-Dental Hygienist for public school work. Applications for exam mustbe filed not later than November 7. Open to non-residents, Please call the Bureau of Appoint- ments,,Rm. 4021, Admin. Bldg., Ext. 3371 for further information. INTERVIEWS OCT. 13 Prudential Insurance Co. of America -Mr. W. H. Klingbell of Detroit will interview men & woman with degrees in liberal arts,.BusAdmin, Law or Edu- cation for Insurance Sales positions in Detroit. Interested seniors please call the Bureau of Appointments, Ext. 3371. OCT. 14 Tennessee Valley Authority; Knox- ville, Tenn. Mr. Howard Hill will inter- view M. and PhD candidates (Feb. & June 1961) in Economics and Public Administration for positions in Knox- ville and Chattanooga. U.S. citizens or students who have applied for Immi- gration status, please contact the Bu- reau of Appointments, Ext. 3371 to be scheduled for interviews. '"' ; .. ,g - ...,. . .. .. }} N y ; -: : h ,,, w, ' ,- y f F ''! //( J Organization Notices I 0~Y are C . eoA NT Ew PANT!IE -"leg can't fel USE OF THIS COLUMN for announce- ments is available to officially recog- nized and registered organizations only. HELP WANTED Organizations planning to be active for the fall semester should register by SECRETARIAL help wanted. Qualifle OCTOBER 10, 1960. Forms available, secretary needed in modern, new, we 3011 Student Activities Building. equipped office. Call NO 5-6103 Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student NO 2-2761. Hl Club, Orientation at 5:30 p.m,, Supper at 6 p.m., Business meeting. Initiation SALES PERSON in work part-time i for new members, Oct. 9, 1511 Washte- wallpaper department of local pair naw. store. Interior decorating experienc * "** not necessary, but preferred. Ma Newman Club, Communion Break- qualifications to Anderson Paint C fast, Speaker: Prof. Albert Wheeler, 300 E. Washington, Ann Arbor. H Oct. 9, 10:30 a.m., 331 Thompson, S * * * 'BIKES and SCOOTERS Riding Club, Open riding, Oct. 11, 6:50 p.m., WAB, for ride to Stable. Call 1958 LAMBRETTA 150 LD. Mint cond Lee Sonne, NO 2-3122 for information. tion. Must see to appreciate it. Ca * * * NO 5-8459. Student Zionist Organization, Oct. 10, 8 p.m., 1429 Hill St. Speaker: Areyh LAMBRETTA MOTOR SCOOTER. 150-1 Simon, National Director, "Zionism Excellent condition, $155. Call N and the American Jew." All welcome. 2-7395 after 6 p.m. 2 Th A COLUMN OF ORLON KNIT... with outsize turtle neckline dipping to a point in back. Purple, 1 : a ,- . = f, : : . e .+ r , - , ' . Wonderfully firming nylon, rayon and rubber net pan- tie ... it's GUARANTEED MACHINE WASHABLE! Satin elastic front panel of acetate, cotton and rubber. White, Medium length; Petite, Small, Medium & Large. S95 Available also in girdle style. White. Medium length; P, S, M & L. black. Sizes 5-15 . . . . . . $22.95 If your wardrobe needs a bit of amplification in a few vital spots, you'll find a visit to our Campus SPECIAL TRENCHCOATS ... $10.00 II If 11 E