SIR. THE, MICHIGAN DAILY SIX TINE MICHIGAN DAILY : -ra+ At I vv; vuli LY X79 1 7V Fr lays, Pagan Collect Three Hits STOP RAIMEY; STOP 'M': Four 'M' Passers Fail To Do Share OSU Dean Asks Nicklaus Withdraw (Continued from Page 1) season ended Sunday. They work- ed out Wednesday in Candlestick to familiarize themselves with the tricky wind currents. However, the wind didn't arrive in full force during the game because it was started at noon (PDT). and managed to keep the ball from going over the barrier for a homer but couldn't hold it. It bounced away for a two-run double. Giants Not Dead If the Yanks had any ideas that the Giants would. roll over and play dead after that first Ford's Blouse and Pantaloons shock of their power, they had were ruffled by the breeze as he another guess coming. came down the stretch for a The Giants scrambled back strong finish. It was his seventh with a run in the second on complete Series game and his 18th Mays' first single, another single Series appearance in all. by Jim Davenport and a beauti- Roger Maris, the 61-homer hero fully-placed drag bunt by Pagan of 1961 but a .256 batter this sea- that got Mays home from third. son, gave the Giants a quick taste Ford knew he was in for of Yankee power with a long blast trouble when the Giants lit into to the right field fence in the him again in the third. With one first. Bobby Richardson and Tom out, Chuck Hiller looped a double Tresh had singled before Maris' to left center and Felipe Alou laced the ball to the fence. Felipe singled to right, moving Hiller to Alou jumped high into the air E third. Up came Mays and he de- livered another single into center that scored Hiller and tied the score at 2-2. O'Dell Overworked Ford and O'Dell, the latter over- worked in the Giants' bitter pen- nant fight, struggled along until the seventh wth Ford blunting Giants threats in the fourth, fifth and sixth. Boyer led off the Yankee sev- enth by riding a 2-2 pitch over the wire fence in left about 365 feet away. It was the first World Series homer for Boyer in 10 games. Maris started the. Yanks off again in the eighth when he singled with one out. O'Dell pinked Elston Howard with a pitch and manager Alvin Dark came out to converse with his tiring lefty. After a short consultation, Dark decided to -stay with O'Dell be- cause the Yanks had a left-hand- ed batter coming up next in Dale Long, wh6 had replaced the ach- ing Bill Skowron. Long crossed up Dark by singling into right field, scoring Maris. Don Larsen, the Yanks' perfect game pitcher of the 1956 Series, came in to face his old metes under Series conditions for the first time. Boyer lifted a fly to short left on which shortstop Pag- an collided with Harvey Kuenn. Pagan Fallk Pagan held the ball but was knocked off balance. His throw to the plate, trying to get the slow- moving Howard, came in on a bounce and catcher Ed Bailey couldn't handle it. Howard scored on the sacrifice fly. It appeared Howard might have been out if Bailey held Pagan's throw but there was no- error scored on the play. By BOB ZWINCK Nebraska proved a point last Saturday: stop right halfback Dave Raimey and Michigan's ground attack is prone to falter. And when four quarterbacks cannot connect on passes to gain much-needed yardage-well, it's bound to be a rough day against any opponent. Raimey lugged the pigskin 17 times, twice as often as any other runner, and picked up 59 yards. This total represents over a third of Michigan's ground game. Yet he was injured in the.second half and did not return to action. Sophomore quarterback B o b Timberlake, inserted in the lineup to try and shore up a sagging of- inept, except on different plays. Early in the week Coach Bump Elliott complained that when a. '. man was open, the pass was bad; :officials. and when the pass was on target, Nicklaus, who needs three quar- the ball was dropped. Ron Kocan ters of study to qualify for a caught two tosses for 26 yards. bachelor's degree in the College Jack Strobel also caught two, good of Commerce, was upset at the for 24 yards. ruling handed down by Dean J. R. GRI D.SE LECTION S At Midnight tonight The Michigan Daily's grid picks contest ends. If your entries aren't in by then, you'll have to wait until next week to play when the list of 20 games will be even tougher-Michigan- Michigan State, for example. Bring or mail your entries to The Michi- gan Daily, 420 Maynard St., and don't forget to include the score of the Michigan-Army game. This week's guest selector is Don Lund, who recently accepted a position with the Detroit Tigers as director of minor league personnel and scouting. This fall he provides the color for radio station WPAG on Michigan broadcasts. The prizes for the winner are two free passes to the Michigan Theatre, now showing Peter Sellers' "I Like Money," and a subscrip- tion to The Football News, a weekly gridiron paper. THIS WEEK'S GAMES COLUMBUS (AP)-National Open' Champion Jack Nicklaus, who quit the pro golf tour to resume his studies at Ohio State, has with- drawn at the request of university ONLY'7 DAYS LEFT! TO ENROLL FOR* STUDENT HEALTH INSURANCE BENEFITS INCREASED! PREMIUM REDUCED! 12 Months $20 In Force 24 Hours a Day 365 Days a Year Anywhere in the World for additional information contact STUDENT GOVERNMENT COUNC Student Activities Buildin en ~~IY e g Still hugry for more runs with fense, ran seven times for 36 yards. Ford always a question mark in The passing attack (excuse the the late innings, the Yanks picked expression) was headed by each up a sixth run in the ninth. member of the highly-touted Manager Ralph Houk of the quartet of signal callers. Starter Lanks named Ralph Terry, a 26- Dave Glinka completed three of year-old right-hander with a 23- eight, Bob Chandler connected on 12 record in regular season, to one of five, Timberlake on two of pitch -today's second game here. four, and Evashevski on one of Jack Sanford (24-7) will pitch three. for the Giants. Pass receivers were equally 'ID § -§ § Style 1050 $1695 BY MER " Like a pair of slippers you can wear outside, theseI French Shriner moccasins are crafted with painstaking care - even to hand sewing! Come in and see them. IL VAN. BOVEN SHOES 17 Nichels Arcade NO 5-7240 i .! 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Consensus Picks in Caps Army at MICHIGAN Illinois at NORTHWESTERN Indiana at WISCONSIN Southern California at IOWA No. Carolina at MICH. STATE Navy at MINNESOTA PURDUE at Notre Dame OHIO STATE at UCLA Columbia at PRINCETON HOLY CROSS at Colgate. (Consensus-31-9-.775) 11. Louisiana St. at GA. TECH 12. Georgia at SOUTH CAROLINA 13. DUKE at Florida 14. AUBURN at Kentucky 15. Iowa State at NEBRASKA 16. Arkansas at TEX. CHRISTIAN 17. PENN STATE at Rice 18. Oregon State at STANFORD 19. UTAH at Wyoming 20. PITTSBURGH at California DAVE ANDREWS (Associate Sports Editor, 29-11-.725)-Mich., NW, Wis, Iowa, MSU, Minn., Pur., OSU, Prince., HC, LSU, S. Car., Duke, Ky., Neb., Ark., Rice, Ore. St., Utah, Pitt. PETE DiLORENZI (29-11-.725)-Army, NW, Wis., Iowa, MSU, Minn., Pur., OSU, Col., HC, LSU, Ga., Duke, Ky., Neb., Ark., Penn St., Stan., Wyo., Pitt. STAN KUKLA (29-11-.725)-Mich., NW., Wis., Iowa, MSU, Minn., Pur., OSU, Prince., Colg., Ga. Tech, S. Car., Duke, Aub., Neb., TCU, Penn St., Stan., Wyo., Pitt. JIM BERGER (28-12--.700)---Army, NW, Wis., Iowa, MSU, Minn., ND, OSU, Prince., HC, Ga. Tech, S. Car.; Duke, Aub., Neb., TCU, Penn St., Stan., Utah, Wyo. DAVE GOOD (28-12-.700)-Mich., NW, Wis., Iowa, MSU, Minn., Pur., OSU, Prince., HC, Ga. Tech, S. Car., Fia., Aub., Neb., TCU, Penn St., Stan., Utah, Pitt. BOB ZWINCK (28-12-.700)-Army, NW, Wis., USC, MSU, Minn., ND, OSU, Prince., HC, LSU, Ga., Duke, Ky., Ia. St., TCU, Penn St., Stan., Wyo., Pitt. DON LUND, Detroit Tiger Director of Minor League Operations (Guest Selec- tor, 28-12-.700)-Mich., NW, Wis., Iowa, MSU, Minn., Pur., OSU, Col., HC, Ga. Tech, Ga., Fla., Aub., Neb., Ark., Penn St., Stan., Utah, Pitt. MIKE BLOCK (27-13-.675)-Mich., .NW, Wis;, Iowa, MSU, Minn., Pur., OSU, Prince., HC, Ga. Tech, Ga., Fla., Aub., Neb., Ark., Penn St., Stan., Utah, Pitt. JAN WINKELMAN (Associate Sports Editor, 27-13-.675)-Mich., NW, Wis., Iowa, MSU, Minn.,. Pur., OSU, Col., Ga. Tech, S. Car., Duke, Aub., Neb., TCU, Rice, Stan., Utah, Pitt. JERRY KALISHI (26-14-.650)-Mich., NW, Wis., $owa, MSU, Minn., Pur., 08U, Prince., HC, LSU, Ga., Duke, Ky., Ia. St., Ark., Penn St., Ore. St., Utah, Pitt. JOHN SCOCHIN (26-14-.650)-Mich., NW, Wis., Iowa, MSU, Minn., ND, OSU, Prince., HC, Ga. Tech, S. Car., Duke, Aub., Neb., TCU, Rice, Stan., Utah, Pitt. TOM WEBBER (Sports Editor, 25-15-.625)-Mich., NW, Wis., Iowa, MSU, Minn., Pur., OSU, Prince., HC, Ga. Tech, Ga., Duke, Ky., Ia. St., TCU, Penn St., Ore. St., Utah, Pitt. McCoy less than two weeks after the start of the fall quarter. "I don't like it," Nicklaus said. "I don't like to be told I can't go to school. I've missed classes to play golf every quarter I've been at Ohio State and I feel I could meet my commitments and still do the required work." Included in the commitments he mentioned are a two-week golf tour of Australia and another week for the filming of a television golf show. Thus Nicklaus would miss about three weeks of the normal 12-week study period. Dean McCoy said he had con- ferred with Nicklaus' Instructors before making his decision. "Their judgment was that he could not miss that much class time and still complete the requirements satisfactorily," Dean McCoy said, adding: "He can withdraw in good standing and come back whenever he has time." Nicklaus, who presently stands in third place for the year among golf's leading money winner, said he has not had time to make any plans for the immediate future. "I suppose it hurts most," Nick- laus added, "because I came off perhaps the best streak of golf I've ever played to return to school." Grid Powers Exchanging Informnation UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (P)- Penn State, Syracuse, Pittsburgh and West Virginia are exchanging information on scholastic stan- dards and admission requirements in a continuing effort to achieve a high level of integrity in ath- letics a Penn State spokesman said yesterday. The schools have not advanced to the realm of sharing informa- tion on recruiting techniques, the spokesman said, but hope to in- clude this phase in a long range plan of cooperation. The four schools some time ago agreed to eliminate redshirting of athletes, thus saving a year of eligibility for later on. A Pitts- burgh spokesman said the ex- change of information is done at a president's level and goes no further. Athletic directors and coaches do not see the informa- tion. He said the practice has been in effect for about 18 months. The exchange is "primarily a guarantee of academic integrity of the institutions concerned. Sox' Aparicio Fed Up; Asks To Be Traded By The Associated Press MARACAIBO - Luis Aparicio, American League All-Star short- stop with the Chicago White Sox, has announced formally that he would like to be playing ball with another club when the 1963 sea- son opens up. Aparicio, who claims that dur- ing the season he was offered two contracts for next season by the White Sox-both with salary cuts -says that he would like to leave the White Sox "since the White Sox will need 40 years to win the American League pennant again." He added that he would rather remain at home in Maracaibo than take one of the proposed salary cuts. Aparicio has been the American League's All-Star shortstop for five years. The only year since 1958 when he has not held the post was when Ron Hansen of the Baltimore Orioles beat him out in 1960. Two years ago, he led the Ameri- can League in stolen bases with 56. Tj x I ,I 4 'I A NEW Qualfy PAPERBACK N series NEW WORLD BOOKS Wv A distinctive series of basic Marxist writings and stimulating interpretations by contemporary authors in history, philosophy, economics, psy- chology, world affairs, art, and literature. WHAT IS PHILOSOPHY? 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