Srx THE MICHIGAN DAILY .rTT7RnA3.L AJTARVZ~Z. U, 109. SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY QATTT1~TbAv f~f1'I'dT~VW~ 0 1n~n OtIXUJMJJAZo VV'X"VDEIS b, lutiZ. A EVENS SERIES: MeCovey's Homerun Helps CADETS TOUGH: Wolverines Host Unbeaten Cadets -- ----- - (Continued from Page 1) 41st home run ball thrown this vear Terry has side out the Los Angeles Dodgers CandJe4tica k hadscoed eve ties.Candlestick P a r k observers had scored seven times. claimied McCovey had hit a long The first hit off Sanford was a lamed Mc vehd hit a pure fluke. Tom Tresh bunted a hoetha r.ee sm 50 pop fly back to the mound with feet earlier in the year, but this one out in the fourth. Sanford was long enough to put the ball went back in a try for the ball, was lon euh interfering with Jose Pagan's at- game beyond reach. tempt to catch it. Tresh promptly The 43,910 fans roared with ex- stole second, the only Yank to pectation or more runs when Tom reach that station until Mickey Haller singled and shortstop Tony Mantle doubled with two out in Kubek dropped Jim Davenport's the ninth. double play grounder following the Terry Tires homer. Terry also had matched Sanford With men on first and second with a fine pitching job until Mc- and nobody out, Dark ordered Covey hit that towering home run Pagan to sacrifice, moving both drive in the seventh. It was the runners, with the pitcher next to Ernie DavisAWinning Fight Against Leukemia Sanford missed the pitch on a suicide squeeze attempt and Hall- er was trapped between third and home and run down. The failure of Haller to move toward the plate in that rundown prevented Daven- port from taking third base. Con- sequently, when Sanford singled to right, Davenport was thrown out, trying to score from second, on a perfect peg by Roger Maris. Best of Deal Sanford, 33, isan ex-Philadel- phia Phillies right-hander who was traded to the Giants Dec. 3, 1958, for pitcher Ruben Gomez and catcher Valmy Thomas. It turned out to be a great deal for the Giants. Manager Ralph Houk of the Yanks was high in his praise of Sanford. He.said the scouting re- ports showed Sanford was strong and the reports were right. "Both men pitched great ball," said Houk. "Sanford won and you have to give him all the credit but Terry pitched great ball, too." Despite their 2-0 defeat today, the New York Yankees were made 7-5 favorites to win the third game and 9-5 choices to win the World Series over the Giants. Broadway bookmakers last night established the Yankees the 7-5 favorites (man-to-man odds) for Sunday's game at New York. f By TOM WEBBER Sports Editor 4, If ever the second game of a season was a crucial one, it is for the Michigan Wolverines as they host Army today. Starting with the 1:30 kickoff, the Wolverines will be trying to turn the complexion of this season onto a more successful note. They weren't supposed to win many games this season and one of those went by the boards last Saturday. A loss to Army would make a dis- mal season almost before it has begun. Army, meanwhile, under new Coach Paul Dietzel, is shooting to uphold the national ranking it gained with successive victories over Wake Forest and Syracuse. New Lineup Wolverine Coach Bump Elliott has drastically changed his lineup for the Cadets. Right end Bill Laskey, tackle Tom Keating, guard Dave Kurtz, left half Jack Stro- bel and fullback Wayne Sparkman have all moved into the starting lineup. They replace Jim Ward, injured John Houtman, John Mar- cum, Harvey Chapman, and Bill Dodd. Halfback Dave Raimey is ready to play despite the presence of a heavily taped shoulder, and soph- omore fullback Mel Anthony may finally see some action. Anthony was first string fullback in the spring and early fall before sprain- ing an ankle. Dietzel brings to the midwest the three unit system which brought him national fame at Lou- isiana State. His Regular, Go, and' Chinese Bandit units will be rec- ognizable by the coloring of the socks, patcheson the jerseys and by the way the Cadet corps shouts as each team goes in. Army had only two units last year, but Dietzel spread out his forces in fall practice( he chooses the personnel for the teams at that time and they stay that way all season) added the socks and stir- red up the Cadets behind the teams and now all three play like seasoned units. Elliott says he will try to use three units hmiself, but will not try purposely to match units with Dietzel. Dietzel himself warns that this is unwise. "Some coaches fig- ure the Bandits are our third team and try to get their best units against them, but it doesn't work because before long the Bandits are better on defense than the Regulars." A Little Influence Dietzel also admits to "having something to do with" the red coolie hats the Cadets wear when the Chinese Bandits are on the field, but adds that the rest of the paraphernalia is the Cadets' own idea. "They have flags for each team and different cheers prepar- ed," he said. "I started it but they've taken it out of my hands. They've really gotten behind the club." Any inexperience Army has is overshadowed by enthusiasm. The Go team, which contains seven sophomores, scored four of six touchdowns against Wake Forest and all nine points against Syra- cuse. The Black Knights' offen- sive leader, John Seymour, plays left half for the Go team while Cammy Lewis, who has been burn- ing up the airways of late, is the quarterback. Besides the national ranking, Ar- my has another incentive, and that is to avenge last year's 38-8 defeat at the hands of the Wolverines. "A lot of those guys are back who played in that slaughter," Dietzel said. Despite all the momentumArmy has, plus the ranking, those who are supposed to know have placed Michigan anywhere from a six to eight point favorite. "It was only three when we left New York," Dietzel said. "It seems to go up a little the further west we go." CLEVELAND (P)-Ernie Davis of the Cleveland Browns, the na- tion's top collegiate football play- er of 1961, has leukemia. But it is in a "perfect state of remis- sion," the club said yesterday, and he is physically able to start workouts with the team. Davis has been undergoing treatment and traditional forms of medication since Aug. 1, when the deadly disease ifrst was diag- nosed. His condition had been de- scribed publicly as a blood dis- order. "Ernie Davis has had a form of leukemia," said Dr. Austin S. Weisberger, professor of medicine at Western Reserve University and an outstanding authority on blood disorders. The medical specialist, who has been in charge of treat- ment for the former All-America halfback from Syracuse, added in a statement:, Can Play Pro Ball "He has responded extremely well to therapy and medication. At the present time his blood find- ings are entirely normal. As long as he remains in this perfect state of remission, I see no reason why he cannot play professional foot- ball." Tebbets Moves To Clevelnd SAN FRANCISCO (P) - Birdie Tebbets resigned today as 'man- ager of the Milwaukee Braves and became 1963 field boss of the Cleveland Indians. Tebbetts, 50, replaces Mel Mc- Gaha, who was fired by the In- dians last Sunday, the final day of the season, U of .D Falls; Miami Wins By The Associated Press In college football action last night Detroit continued its win- less streak by dropping its third straight in losing to the New Mex- ico State Aggies, 21-14. Behind quarterback G e o r g e Mira, unbeaten and heavily favor- ed Miami squeeked by Florida State 7-6 to remain unblemished. New Mexico State scored three touchdowns in the last quarter while Titan quarterback Jerry Gross passed for 265 yds. in a los- ing cause.' Davis will start a conditioning program Monday under the super- vision of Dr. Victor Ippolito, team physician of the National Foot- ball League club. "The most im- portant thing is to get his legs in shape," said Dr. Ippolito. "As his wind and muscle tone returns, he can work into regular practice with the team ... Ernie is a mar- velous boy and has always taken excellent care of himself." Doctors said the complete re- mission was brought a b o u t through use,of traditional medica- tion. No experimental drugs were used on the 22-year-old athlete. Rare Recovery . "This has happened before in other cases," said Arthur B. Mo- Mahovlich Sold CHICAGO (W)-The Chicago Black Hawks tonight purchased Frank Mahovlich of the Toron- to Maple Leafs for the sum of $1,000,000. Jim Norris, chairman of the Chicago Black Hawks club made the announcement at a hockey gathering in Toronto. can't -call it a miracle. It is re- markable, though. He has a per- fectly normal blood count at this time. There are no traces of the illness." It is characteristic of leukemia -cancer of the blood-that the afflicted person may feel normal, physically. Intermittent remis- sions occur and are not unique, but no cure for leukemia is known. Remission means the disease is temporarily arrested. Will Davis be sidelined again? "We just don't know," said Mo- dell. "We'll have to watch him carefully, of course. This is a disease that is not fully defined. Doctors are still learning much about it all the time." Kept from Davis "I knew something seriously was wrong," said Davis, the first Negro ever to win the Heisman Trophy, "It was a relief to him that it was clearly defined," said Modell. "All he wants to do now is play football for the Browns and help the team. The diagnosis was first made in Evanston, Ill., after Davis was hos- pitalized while working out with the College All-Stars for the game in Chicago with the champion Green Bay Packers. The finding of leukemia was confirmed by five institutions and more than a dozen doctors. DAVE GLINKA ... now or never COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Teams Face Showdown (. By CHARLIE TOWLE Three teams ranked in the top ten by the major wire services will put their high positions on the line today. Penn State, Georgia Tech and Mississippi, ranked fourth, fifth and seventh respectively, all face tough opponents. Penn State at Rice is the pre- mier inter-sectional game of the week. Rice, a sophomore dominat- ed team, knocked LSU from among the nationally ranked teams last week as they played the Tigers from Baton Rouge to a 6-6 stand- off. Coming to Life Led by quarterback Walt Mc- Reynolds, a last minute stand-in who completed 13 of 23 passes for 179 yards last week, the Owls seem to be jelling fast. Meanwhile, Penn State had trouble in getting past the Air Force Academy last Saturday scor- ing thirteen points in the last half to defeat the Falcons 20-6. Georgia Tech meets Louisiana State in a nationally televised game from Atlanta. The Tigers will be fighting to regain their fifth national ranking after get- ting knocked off by Rice last week. Beefy Line Tech's strength lies in its line which averages 222 lbs. from end to end. Led by guards Rufus Guthrie and Dave Watson the Engineers have held their oppon- ents to an average of 79 yards rushing per game. Mississippi will encounter Hous- ton at Jackson, Miss., today in a game in which the interest isn't purely on the players. Houston has been the surprise team of the football season. The Cougars upset perennially strong Baylor and Texas A&M in their first two outings. Coached by Bill Yeoman, one of Duffy Daugherty's multitudinous offspring, Houston stands head and shoulders above their fellow Texas independents. Quick Start Mississippi, with 23 returning lettermen led by All-American tackle Jim Dunaway, had no trouble in getting past their first two opponents Memphis State and Kentucky. Around the country in other games of interest many teams will be kicking off in their first con- ference conflicts. Columbia meets Princeton Uni- versity in a traditional Ivy League clash for both teams. Both squads had victories last week, Columbia over Brown 22-20 and Princeton over Rutgers 15-7. Georgia at South Carolina, Iowa Dr. Margaret Mead writes of SEX RMIORALITY in October REDBOOk on sale now State at. Nebraska, and Arkansas at TCU are some of the other in- itial conference meets around the nation. Highly ranked Alabama and Texas seem to be in for coin- paritively restful games. Alabama meets inept Vanderbilt and Texas will encounter all-losing Tulane today. Alabama mauled Tulane last week 44-6, and Texas is eager- ly looking forward to doing the same. Attention, all witty, urbane college students: or would you like to try for ENTER LUCKY STRIKES' ZANY NEW !CrazyQuestloi oitest ( a s e d o n th e h i to u s b k h e e s to n M /' 50 CASH AWARDS A MONTH. ENTER NOW. HERE'S HOW: First, think of an answer. Any answer. Then come up with a nutty, surprising question for it, and you've done a "Crazy Question." It's the easy new way for students to make loot. Study the examples below, then do your own. 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