THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1962 THE MIC~HIGAN TUAT.V lft & stew ri a ua uai Vaa l l K1 L['11L1 - _ .'Z PAGE SEVEN Terry Wins Game for Yankees IN COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Arkansas, Purdue Climb Up (Continued from Page i field and Richardson lined a single to left. Al Dark, manager of the Giants, bounced out of the dug- out to confer with Sanford but decided to let him continue. The right-hander then threw one ball to Tresh. The 24-year old son of aformer major league catcher, before the round-tripper. Terry, the man who threw the decisive home run ball to Pitts- burgh's Bill Mazerski in 1960 and the loser of the second game of this series, finally broke his string of four series defeats withran eight-hit effort. Open Date Today is an open date for travel with the sixth game scheduled for Candlestick Park in San Francisco' tomorrow. The seventh game, if necessary, will be played on the same site on Saturday. The Giant manager said he had not considered yanking Sanford 'M' Club' Picks Head The first meeting of the Var- sity "M" Club was held last night and formijer Big Ten tennis cham- pion Ray Senkowski was elected as president. Fritz Crisler spoke to a small but enthusiastic group of varsity lettermen about the past history of the group and what it could do in the future. To get the ball rolling, Carl Lu- tomski, past president of the "M" Club told the members what the club's functions were. Then came the elections with Senkowski elect- ed president; Dick Honig, vice- president; arry Babcock, secre- tary, and John Dumont, treasurer. Then Senkowski took over and it was decided that the nevt meeting would be held on Wednesday, Oc- tober 24, in the "M" Room at Yost Field House.. Crisler Speaks In discussing the club, Michi- gan Athletic Director Fritz Cris- ler made the point that some ele- ments on this campus are trying to get "M" men disqualified from sitting on the Board of Athletics and there is no voice against this at present. Crisler pointed out that a strong "M" club should counteract this as well as the workings of other pres- sure groups. The jobs of social, communica- tions and publicity chairmen were brought up later in the meeting with some suggestion that they should be elective rather than ap- pointive offices as in the past. These motions were tabled, how- ever, until the next meeting when there would be a bigger turnout. In summing up, Senkowski said that they had "taken some major steps" in getting the "M" club going. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m. two days preceding publication. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11 Day Calendar 4:15 p.M.-Dept. of Botany sponsors Lee- ture-Dr. Tyge W. Bocher, "Variation Pattern in Plant Speciesnas Elucidated by Ex- perimental cultivations": Rackham Amphitheatre. 5:00 p.m.-Biomedical Data Processing Program Lecture Series - Prof. John A. Jacquez, "Dig- ital Computers: Applica- tion": School of Public Health Aud. 7:00 and 9:00 p.m.-Cinema Guild-Aud- rey Hepburn, Gregory Peck, and Eddie Albert, "Roman Holiday": Architecture Aud. 7:15 p.m.-Carillon Recital: Sidney F. Giles, assistant Univ. caril- lonneur, will present a caril- lon recital, Burton Memorial Tower. 8:30 p.m.-Professional Theatre Pro- gram - Richard Baldridge's "We, Comrades Three": Ly- dia Mendelssohn Theatre. General Notices 50 Per Cent Off of all texts and other books to be sold by Student Book Ex- change at its one time only Four-Hour- Book-Sale. Thurs., Oct. 11, from 1-5 p.m. in the Fishbowl. Engineering Seniors and Grad Stu- dents: The 1963 College Placement An- nual, official occupational directory of the College Placement Association, is now available free to seniors and grad students at the Engrg. Placement Serv- ice, 128-H W. Engrg. Bldg. Botany Final Make-Up Exam will be given at 7 p.m. in Room 2004 Natural Science Bldg. The Institute of International Educa- tion announces a special program to university grads for the teaching of English in universities of India during 1963-64. The teaching assistantships in- volve approximately 12 hours per week, and require no previous teaching exper- ience or a major in English. Further information and application forms are available at the Fellowship Office, Room 110, Rackham Bldg. Deadline for mak- ing application is Oct. 22. The First Chamber Dance Festival, presented by the Univ. Musical Society, when he went out to talk with him before Tresh hit the homer. "I just wanted to slow him down," he.said. Neither manager would talk about the seventh game that might be played Saturday. Either Billy O'Dell (19-14) or Sanford again would be the likely starter for the Giants and Stafford (14-9) for the Yanks if he doesn't work the sixth game. Sanford almost had a triple play in the first inning when with men on first and second and no- body out Tresh lined back to the box. Sanford hesitated momentar- dressing room later and posed for pictures with his illustrious off- spring, one of the individual stars of the current series. "Where were you sitting?" some- body asked Mike Tresh. "I wasn't sitting-I was jump- ing up and down," the father said. Still it wasn't over. Out of the Giant dugout came Ed Bailey, a dangerous long ball hitter who swings from the left side. Bailey lofted a long fly to right but Roger Maris was there to make the catch for the game-ending out. The sixth game of the series at San Francisco Friday was rated an even game with Yankee right- hander Billy Stafford facing left- hander Billy Pierce of the Giants. Broadway bookmakers made the champion Yankees 31/a to 1 in the man-to-man odds to win the series. Sports Clubs Starting Up Three clubs are starting to function for the coming season under the sponsorship of the Intramural Department.. All persons interested in join- ing the Judo Club should attend practice in the wrestling room of the Sports Building tonight. The club meets every Thursday night from 7:30 to 9:00 p.m. and no previous judo experience is neces- sary to join. Boxing instruction will be given every Monday through Thursday nights from 7 to 9 p.m. in the boxing room of the Sports Build- ing. Let Philbin is giving the les- sons and theynwill continue until spring vacation. Anyone who wishes to form a skin diving club should attend a meeting at the pool of the Sports Building on Oct. 18 at 7:30 p.m. By BILL BULLARD Only six unbeaten and untied teams remain on the Associated Press college football poll as many teams face their fourth game of the season this weekend. The top five-Alabama, Texas, Penn State, Southern California, and Mississippi-all have records , of 3-0. Arkansas, also with a 3-01 record, is No. 8. Louisiana State, (No. 6), Wash-1 ington (No. 7), and Purdue (No.j 9) each have a tie on their rec- ords. Ohio State in tenth place is the only team in the top ten with a defeat. The Buckeyes dropped to tenth from first place after RALPH TERRY ... series winner ily and finally threw to first to double up Richardson. The return throw to Pagan, covering second, was too late to get Kubek. Strikes Them Out Sanford really dominated the' bottom half of the Yankee batting order. He struck out Terry and Skowron three times each and Howard twice. Kubek and Boyer were his other victims. Billy Pierce (16-6), loser of Sun- day's third game, is the pitching choice for the Giants in tomor- row's encounter w i t h either Whitey Ford (17-8) or Bill Staf- ford (14-9) going for the Yankees. Many among the crowd of 63,165 at Yankee Stadium second- guessed Ralph Houk, Yankee man- ager, when he let Terry bat lead- ing off the last of the eight with the score tied at 2-2. But it paid off although Terry soon became Sanford's 10th strikeout victim. Terry wasn't home safely yet, despite Tresh's three-run blast. Willie McCovey opened the ninth with a single. After Felipe Alou struck out, Tom Haller doubled to left center, beyond the reach of Mickey Mantle, and McCovey scored. Jose Pagan, leading hitter of the series and the man who hit a home rune in the fifth inning, came up in a spot where a homer would level the score. Terry made him ground to Kubek at short. Old Mike Tresh, looking fit enough to don the pads of a catcher still, came down to the -Daily-Pete Anderson STILL DRIVING-Dependable Dave Raimey, the top breakaway threat and bread 'n' butter man on this year's Michigan offense, is apparently stopped in last week's Army game. The Wolverine halfback didn't realize it and kept on for a healthy gain in last week's contest. their 9-7 loss to UCLA last Satur- day on the coast. 'Ole Miss' in Front Mississippi has perhaps the easiest schedule of the unbeaten and untied teams. With such stal- warts as Tulane, Vanderbilt, Chat- anooga, and Mississippi State booked for future Saturday's, te Rebels probably will only be nut to a real test against Louisiana State. The first showdown of the sea- son between the present unbeaten and untied teams will come on October 20 between Arkansas and Texas. Both teams rolled over their opponents last Saturday. Texas scored within five minutes of the opening of the game against Tulane and went on to a 35-8 victory. Arkansas, fighting for an unprecedented fourth straight Southwest Conference champion- ship, burst loose with four touch- downs in the second half and stunned Texas Christian, 42-14. USC Meets Toughies While Mississippi may have the easiest schedule, Southern Cali- fornia may have the toughest of the top ten. On successive Satur- days the Trojans will oppose Cali- fornia, Illinois, Washington, Stan- ford, Navy, UCLA, and Notre Dame. Three of these opponents have proved their ability by knock- ing off highly ranked Big Ten teams. Washington tied Purdue 7-7 and defeated Illinois 28-7. Michigan State was upset by Stan- ford 16-13 two weekends go and UCLA knocked Ohio State off the top of the AP poll with a 9-7 de- feat last Saturday. Alabama, the defending national champion, has found a leader in sophomore quarterback Joe Na- math and despite Coach Paul ( Bear") Bryant's pre-season pes- simism the Crimson Tide has knocked over three teams so far After killing Georgia 35-0 and Tulane 44-6, the Tide had relaxed in beating powerless Vanderbilt 17-7 last Saturday. 'Tide May Ebb The last three games of the season will be the toughest of the season for Alabama. Away games at Miami (Fla.) and Georgia Tech followed by the Auburn game at Birmingham will be major road- blocks in the Tide's quest of an- other national championship. Penn State, the best team in the East, must defend its top ranking in the East in its next two games. Army and Syracuse have the po- tential to upset the Nittany Lions who must also defeat Pittsburg in the last game of the season to establish itself as its region's dom- inant team in the East and a r.ational power. LSU's Tigers jumped back into the top ten as its ace halfback Jerry Stovall ran 97 yards past the Georgia Tech defenders for the winning score in a tight de- fensive battle between two of the nation's top teams. Purdue Returns Purdue was pushed around and stopped cold by Washington in its opening game but managed to gain a 7-7 tie. The Boilermakers convincing win over Notre Dame last week put them Lack on the trail toward football respectibility. Arkansas rose in stature by KO- ing dangerous and highly regarded TCU in convincing 42-14 fashion. To make room for them new en- trants Georgia Tech, Miami and Army fell by the wayside. Tech dropped a close 10-7 contest to LSU, Army was beaten by Michi- gan and Miami barely avoided an upset in a 7-6 win over Florida State. / I With I$M-KIT, you can duplicate every weightlifting routine. IT'S ONLY $995 AT H LAROLD S. TRICK 711 N. UNIV. 902 S. STATE BIG TEN NOTES: Spartans Practice in Secrecy TIRED OF LIFTING BARBELLS WITH NO RESULTS? Try ISO-KIT, the exerciser famous Universities and Colleges are now using for weightlifting and football training. ISO-KIT, based on the principle of Isometric Contraction, can multiply your efforts 10 times and give you aston- ishing results. ISO-KIT BUILDS BODIES UP TO 10 TIMES FASTER THAN WEIGHTLIFTING Iii I By The Associated Press EAST LANSING-Both pass de- fense and offense were stressed in the closed Michigan State football workout yesterday. To avoid injuries to key men prior to Saturday's game with Michigan, Coach Duffy Daugherty spared his first two units from any hitting. Tackle Jim Bobbitt, bothered by an ankle sprain, will be used spar- ingly, if at all, Saturday. Quarter- back Dick Proebstle, nursing sore ribs, will see action only as a punter. Sophomore quarterback Charlie Migyanka is scheduled to start but senior Pete Smith, the better pass- er, will spell him in an effort to supplement the strong Spartan ground attack. COLUMBUS - Coach Woody Hayes put his Ohio State football- squad through a 25-minute drill on goal line offense yesterday aimed at insuring there will be no repe- GRI D SEL.ECTIONS As of 3 a.m. this morning, The Daily sports staff had rated a mere 11 of this week's Grid Picks as "definite" tossups; five as "prob- able" tossups; three as tossups; and one sure winner. With such favorable odds, no one can afford not to enter this week's contest. Just wait until Friday to match the Consensus (which leads the staff selectors) and bring or mail your entry to The Michi- gan Daily office, 420 Maynard. You can come to pick up your two free tickets to the Michigan Theatre and a subscribtion to the Football News next week. P.S. The Consensus hasn't picked them as well as our previous winners, however. So don't feel bad. Get out your pencils, dig out last' week's scores, and start picking them on your own. You probably won't win, but you'll feel a lot better knowing you lost on your own picks. THIS WEEK'S GAMES tition of last Saturday's failures. Those, of course, were when UCLAE stopped the Buckeyes at the 1-yd. line on three occasions.1 Other portions of yesterday's, practice for the game at Illinois stressed ball-carrying by the half- backs and kicking plays. Hayes calledthe day's work a "pretty fair practice." He said newly promoted Bob Butts is mak- ing good progress at first-string fullback. EVANSTON - Northwestern' sharpened its passing attack and emphasized passer protection yes-e terday in a football scrimmage. Bob Puette, third team fullback, sprained a knee in the scrimmage and will be sidelined for several days. MINNESOTA - Minnesota Coach Murray Warmath shuffled through his regulars and reserves yesterday, hunting for a place- kicker to replace Mike Reid. Reid's doctors said examinations of an arm injury suffered on prac- tice Tuesday turned out to be a fracture, meaning Reid is out for much of the season. He is a jun- ior from Spring Valley, Wis. It appeared halfback Jim Cairns had the edge on reserve backs, Terry Brown and Len Stream in yesterday's practice. CHAMPAIGN-Illinois' football fortunes dipped again yesterday as sophomore center and linebacker, 240-pound Dick Butkus of Chicago, was hospitalized with a knee in- jury. Butkus was hurt in practice Tuesday, but it was not regarded serious. The knee swelled, how- ever, and further diagnosis show- ed a torn ligament. He will not play against Ohio State in Illinois' homecoming Saturday. MADISON - Wisconsin Coach Milt Bruhn was told yesterday that three of his regulars who have been sidelined with minor ailments or injuries would be in shape to play Saturday. Team physicians said that Rog- er Pillrath, a tackle who had a boil removed from his arm, guard Steve Underwood, who has a gash on his forehead and end Elmars Ezer- ins, who has a bruised shoulder, would be ready for the game against Notre Dame here Satur- day. The Badgers went through a modified scrimmage and worked on a goal line offense yesterday. There were no changes in the line- ups of the first three teams, except to replace the sidelined men. IOWA CITY-The Iowa Hawk- eyes concentrated on passing in another hard football workout yes- terday. The squad scrimmaged on of- fense and defense, with the re- serves using Indiana plays. Iowa opens its Big Ten campaign against the Hoosiers at Blooming- ton Saturday. Bill Perkins, No. 1 fullback, was back and took part in the workout. His replacement, Vic Davis, showed some hard running that drew praise from Coach Jerry Burns. The Hawks expect to have the entire team in good physical shape for the Indiana game wit hthe pos- sible exception of quarterback Matt Syzkowny, who worked in sweat clothes. I WAS REPAIRED AT BEAVER'S WE ALSO REPAIR BIKES AND SELL N EW BI KES FOR $4 $4'95 605hh 605 church NO 5-6607 OPEN MONDAY NIGHTS 8:30 P.M. h f v r l Y. ~ 1. MICHIGAN at MSU (score) 2. Ohio State at Illinois 3 .Iowa at Indiana 4. Northwestern at Minnesota 5. Notre Dame at Wisconsin 6. Penn State at Army 7. Yale at Columbia 8. Holy Cross at Harvard 9. West Virginia at Pittsburgh 10. Boston College at Syracuse 11. Georgia at Clemson 12. Texas A&M at Florida 13. Tennessee at Georgia Tech 14. Maryland at North Carolina 15. Kansas at Iowa State 16. Colorado at Oklahoma State 17. Washington vs. Oregon State at Portland 18. Stanford vs. Washington State at Spokane 19. Miami (Fla) at LSU (n) 20. Oregon at Rice (n) NHL Results Toronto 3, Chicago 1 Our University Shop favors the tweed sport coat This herringbone tweed is typical of our sport coat thinking. It is quietly casual, exactingly tailored, and has patch pockets with flaps. Our tweed jacket collections are sufficiently casual for most leisure activities yet of an essentially conservative nature. The style shown, a fine shetland woolen, is available in a wide size range in grey, brown with black, green with blue or, A 11 A , ' t /11" " " r I 11 11 I i