THE MICHIGAN DAILY Jay Handcuffs Yank Sluggers Chacon, Coleman Star for Reds with Dav di Quality is the key to success at Western Electric Admittedly, our standards are high at Western Electric. But engineering graduates who can meet them, and who decide to join us, will be- gin their careers at one of the best times in the history of the company; For plentiful oppor- tunities await them in both engineering and management. As we enter a new era of communications, Western Electric engineers are carrying for- ward assignments that affect the whole art of telephony from electronic devices to high-speed sound transmission. And, in the management category alone, several thousand supervisory jobs will be available to W.E. people within the next 10 years. Many of these new man- agers will come from the class of '62. Now's the time for you to start thinking seriously about the general work area that interests you at Western Electric the manufac- turing and supply unit of the Bell Telephone System. Then when our representative comes to your campus, you'll be prepared to discuss career directions that will help make the inter- view profitable. After a man joins Western Electric, he will find many programs that will aid him in explor- ing the exciting course of his career - while advancing just as fast as his abilities- allow. And he'll be secure in the knowledge that he is growing with a company dedicated to help- ing America set the pace in improving commu- nications for a rapidly growing world. Challenging opportunities exist now at Western Electric for electrical, mechanical, industrial, and chemi- cal engineers, as well as physical science, liberal. arts, and business majors. All qualified applicants will re- ceive careful consideration for employment without 'regard to race, creed, color or national origin. For more information about Western Electric,1write College Rela- tions, Western Electric Company, Room 16106, 222 Broadway, New York 38, New York. And be sure to arrange for a Western Electric interview when our college representatives visit your campus. A N P Y MANUfACTURING AND SUPPLY UNIT 4f THE BELL SYSTEM (Continued from Page 1) fits" showed fielding dash andk speed after yesterday's shutout1 defeat. But the big man was Jay, a hulking 6-5, 225-pounder who won 21 games for the Reds after Mil- waukee traded him last winter. Time after time the big fellow went to 3-2 on a hitter only to dig down deep and come up with that something extra he needed. Jay's victory was particularly satisfying to Cincinnati fans who had been haunted by the possibil- ity of another 4-game sweep such as the Yanks had inflicted upon Bill McKechnie's Reds in 1939. In fact, this was the first series game the Reds ever have won from the Yanks. Short on Hits Bobby Richardson's single lead- ing off the first, Berra's homer in the fourth and his single in the sixth plus Tony Kubek's sin- gle in the eighth were the only hits off Jay. He walked six and struck gut six. The turning point in this game, played before a crowd of 63,038, came in the fifth inning with two out and Terry rolling along in a 2-2 tie with Jay. Chacon dumped. a fly ball into short left center that fell in front of Maris for a single. Eddie Kasko followed with a single right up the middle over second base, moving Chacon to third. Terry was pitching carefully to Vada Pinson, one of the most Bombers See Red CINCINNATI (N) AB R H RBI Chacon 2b 4 1 1 0 Kasko ss 5 0 1 0 Pinson cf 5 0 1 0 Robinson if 4 2 0 0 Coleman lb 5 1 2 2 Post rf 4 2 2 0 Freese3b 2000 Edwards c 4 0 2 2 Jayp 4 0 0 0 Totals 37 6 9 4 NEW YORK (A) AB R H RBI Richardson 2i 4 0 1 0 Kubek ss 4' 0 1 -0 Marsf3 1 0 0 BerralIf 4 12 2 Blanchard rf 4 0 0 0 Howardc 3 0 0 0 Skowron lb 3 0 0 0 Boyer 3b12 00 0 Terryp2 0 0 0 a-Lopez 0 0 0 0 Arroyop .0 00 0 b-Gardner 1 0 0 0 Totals 30 2 4 2 a-Walked for Terry in 7th. b-Lined out for Arroyo in 9th. Cincinnati (N) 000 211 020-6 New York (A) 000 200 000-2 E-Boyer Arroyo, Berra. DP-Cha- con, Kasko and Coleman 2. LOB- Cincinnati 8, New York 7. 2R-Post; Edwards, Pinson. HR-Coleman, Be- ra. IP.H R ER Jay.(W) 9 4 2 2 Terry (L) 7 6 4 2 Arroyo 2 3 2 1 B-Jay 6 (Skowron, Marts, How-j ard, Boyer 2, Lopez), Terry 2 (Cha- con, Freese), Arroyo 2' (Robinson, Freese). SO-Jay 6 (Kubek 2, Mars 2, Skowron 2), Terry 7 (Kasko 2, Freese, Post, Jay, Pinson, Coleman), Arroyo 1 (Jay). PB-Howard. U- Conlan (N) plate, Umont (A) first base, Donatelli (N) second base, Runge (A) third base, Crawford (N) left field, Stewart (A) right field. T-2:43. A--63,083. feared Red batters. He threw a ball, then a strike. Terry's third pitch was inside to the left-handed Pinson and bounced about 10 feet away from Howard for a passed ball. Watched Kasko Howard appeared confused as he quickly recovered the ball. He looked toward second because Kasko had made a move in that direction. Too late he saw the streaking Chacon. Pitcher Terry was not at home plate and the scoring station was unguarded. The Yankee catcher hurried to- ward the plate and dived toward Chacon. Too late, signalled plate umpire Jocko Conlan who was I right on top of the play. I Chacon's run put the Reds out front 3-2 and they never yielded that advantage. Instead they kept adding to it as the Yanks' touted defense crumpled. There were two out again in the sixth when the Reds struck at Terry once more. Wally Post doubled to the left-field corner and Houk ordered Terry to walk Freese. Although most managers prefer to have their right-hand- ed pitchers face right-handed _ hitters, the Yank strategy was t pass the rightie and try for the lefty, Edwards, who had done nothing in two previous attempts Good Strategy? For a few moments it appeare( the strategic move would work a STerrycurled two strikes past the 23-year-old Edwards, who was it BIG TEN HIIGHLIGHT.' 1r the minors until June 26. Then the rookie smashed a ground single to A New W ea on? right field, scoring Post. The eighth was a nightmare for the Yanks. Maybe Arroyo, who FOOTBALL PLAYERS are a select lot, but not near so select as one usually relieves Ford, felt out of particular breed of football player, the placekicking specialist. place coming to the rescue of Ter- With the return of the foot to football this guy has become even ry. more so in demand. It used to be that a coach could draft almost Anyhow, he walked Frank Rob- anyone to kick the ball between the posts on Saturday afternoons. man topped the ball in front of The short kick for the extra point was his only duty. Field goals the plate, Arroyo threw it wildly were as dead as the old gray mare. past Bill Skowron into right field. Some of the old one point experts even became rather pro- It was scored as a hit and Rob- ficient at the art, but the only time they were heard from was inson counted from first on the when his team managed a 14-13 victory on the strength of his error. Coleman, in turn, was nail- accurate big toe. 1ed at third on a fine peg from Johnny Blanchard to Boyer. In modern football, however, the situation has changed. NCAA J LnghrdnniBrulemakers saw to that a few years ago. The foot in football was Long I g becoming extinct, that is for anything other than routine assign- Little Looie wasn't out of the ments, so they decided to put it back. Nothing quite so drastic as to lef t t d Ba in to move the posts back to the goal line (the college game had to be dif- bright sun and rolled through his ferent from the pro's), but they did manage to. widen the uprights. legs for a three-base error. Freese Then they threw in the "wild card".rule and the plot was complete. again was walked intentionally. Now, they reasoned, with the better target and the relaxed Once again Edwards upset the substitution we'll see a little more kicking. They were right! strategy, this time against a southpaw pitcher. He looped a Not only have the wider posts prompted more field goal attempts, broken bat double over third base, but they have- also intensified the search among football recruiters scoring Post. for a boy who can kick. Not just any football player makes a good s "He is going to be a real good field goal kicker, you know, or didn't you? one," Manager Fred Hutchinson said of Edwards. "He's a little over MustPop I - D anxious at the plate." e Hutchinson said, Bob Purkey MICHIGAN'S KICKING COACH, Jack Fouts, puts it this way. e (16-12), a 32-year-old right-hand- "The kid's got to have good snap in his leg. Good pop we cal it. er, who has come up with a good The fellow must also be able to discipline himself to practice. It's knuckler, would 'pitch the third sort of a mental thing. Not everyone has the patience to go out day d game at Cincinnati tomorrow. fe a n ok ,s Bill Stafford (14-9) a 23-year after day and work.",- e old right-hander, will pitch for This year the Wolverines have got one of those kids. His name? n the Yanks in the third game. Doug Bickle, a slender 6'3" sophomore from Traverse City. And he could make the difference between a winning and a losing season. Those extra three points now and then might just turn a couple of one point losses into two point victories.h Key Injures Hit Illi Badgers in Top Shape Principal manufacturing locations at Chicago, Ill.; Kearny, N. !.; Baltimore, Md.; Indianapolis, Ind.; Allentown and Laureidale, Pa.= Winston-Salem, N. C.; Buffalo, N. Y.; North Andover, Mass.; Omaha, Neb.; Kansas City, Mo.; Columbus, Ohio; Oklahoma City, Okla. Engineering Research Center, Princeton, N. J. Teletype Corporation, Skokie, Ill., and Little Rock, Ark. Also Western Electric distri- bution centers in 33 cities and Installation headquarters In 16 cities. General headquarters; 195. Broadway, New York 7, N. Y. By The Associated Press EAST LANSING-Some of the sophomores who sparkled on of- fense are being given defensive jobs this week as Michigan State prepares for its football meeting with Stanford tomorrow. Coach Duffy Daugherty found out he had some great ball carriers in such sophs as Sherman Lewis (48 yards) and Dewey Lincoln (39 yards) against Wisconsin. Now he wants them to be two- way ball players. LAFAYETTE-Purdue's Boiler- makers virtually completed their preparations for Saturday's home opener with Notre Dame yester- day, with a full-scale drill. In an extended non-contact workout, Coach Jack Mollenkopf attempted to put the final polish on both offense and defense. He indicated he would start the same lineup that opened against Wash- ington two weeks ago. CHAMPAIGN - Quarterback Mike Taliaferro and fullback Mike Summers were ruled out yes- SICHIGANENSIA p) SPECIAL OFFER... For 2,wHeaded PUoIleetors Genuine imported hand-carved cherrywood pipe... that really smokesi terday of Illinois' Big Ten foot- ball game with Northwestern be- cause of injuries. Tackle Bob Scharbert, may re- cover enough froma shoulder ail- ment to play part time. Because of these injuries, plus promotions of former reserves,. Coach Pete Elliott will have 13 players in his patoons for Sat- urday's game who either are new starters or are playing in differ- ent positions than they did a week ago. -EVANSTON - Sophomore end Tim Zieinke of Sandusky, Ohio, listed as a potential Northwest- ern starter, will be unable to make the trip to Champaign for the Il- linois game, Coach Ara Parseghian said yesterday. Ziemke's injured knee has been slow in responding to treatment. Jim Benda, a sophomore end from Cleveland, replaced Ziemke on the traveling squad. MADISON-The University of Wisconsin football team hustled through a short tapering-off drill in sweat clothes yesterday to wind up preparations for its game against Indiana Saturday.. Bruhn will start three sopho- more backs behind quarterback Ron Miller-Jim Nettles at left half, Jim Purnell at fullback, and Bill Smith at right half. The Badgers are in nearly top shape physically. Co-captain and left guard Don Schade is still hob- bled somewhat by a sprained ankle but is expected to play Saturday. MINNEAPOLIS-Coach Murray Warmath sent his University of Minnesota football team through an unexpected controlled scrim- mage yesterday, venting his dis- pleasure at the mental and physi- cal condition of the team. Thursday is usually a light day for the first and second Gopher units, but yesterday it was differ- ent. Warmath kept everyone on the field for two hours, the of- fense running against a live de- fense and the defense going against a three-fourths speed of- fense in separate drills. Warmath said the squad has not been showing its potential so far and may not be in top condi- tion for the Oregon game Satur- day. Jack Mulvena, who hasn't prac- ticed since his injury last week, is expected to be ready to go Satur- day. Free Delivery Free Delivery -ON THE DIAG 'Free Delivery Auburn found the secret last z ' fall behind the magic toe of Ed Dyas. No less than four times did a Dyas field goal - make the difference for the powerful Tigers. It could be the same way ' for Michigan this fall against its killer schedule. Last Sat- urday against surprisingly in- potent UCLA, Bickle's first collegiate three-pointer didn't make much difference. The Wolverines would have won rf.:anyway. Against a stronger team it might have. "Rather than punt this year we'll be going for three whenever we get close," said Fouts. "Doug has kicked as many as three out of five from the ,50-yd. line in practice with the wind at his back. He DOUG BICKLE could just as well do it in a ... hot foot game." A sixty yarder is a little too much to ask from the exciting sophomore, but if hecan do it consistently from the 30 the Wolverines will have added a dangerous new weapon. The pros always say that three points are better than none. The collegiates rarely have anyone who can do the jobs Maybe this fall Michigan has found the man. This unique two-headed pipe is a real conversation piece... a must for your collection! Hand-carved in the Italian Alps and finished in gay colors. Stands alone on its own tiny legs. Ideal for your desk, mantel, or bookshelf ...mighty good smoking, tool This is a wonderful value! Send for your two-headed pipe today! 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