WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17, x.962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVE1~ Yankees Win 20th Series, WELL-BALANCED: Purdue Hopes To Rebound from Loss 4> " Giants Don't Score; Won Last in 1922 (Continued from Page 1) Ralph Houk, the Yankee man- ager, came out to talk to his pitcher with McCovey, a 6-4, 200- pound left-handed slugger, next at bat. McCovey had hit a towering home run off Terry in the second game. McCovey swung from his heels and delivered a long foul that the wind helped swerve into the right field stands. Terry, pitching care- fully, threw once more. The ball rocketed back at Richardson, al- most toppling the little second baseman, but he held on and the ball game was over. Half-Dozen A foot-or maybe six inches- either way-and they would have been dancing in the street at Mar- ket and Power last night. The lone run of this well- pitched final game was scored in the fifth with Bill Skowron comn- ing home while the Giant infield completed a double play on Tony Kubek's smash to short. Goose-egger Sanford had been throwing goose-eggs, too, although his con- trol was off and he was struggling. In the third the Yanks had men on first and second with two out but Sanford escaped when Tom Tresh grounded out. Detroit To Bid For Olympics CHICAGO ()-Detroit, unsuc- cessful in three previous attempts to host the Olympics, was select- ed yesterday to bid for the 1968 Summer Games against mounting international competition. Detroit and Lake Placid, N.Y., desiring the 1968 Winter Games, were certified by the U.S. Olympic Cpmmittee Board of Directors to bid for the 1968 games at the In- ternational Olympic Committee meeting at Nairobi, Kenya, Oct. 13, 1963. Although the United States has not been host to the Summer dames since 1932, when Los An- geles was the site, U.S. Olympic officials felt the itnernational bloc will be difficult to overcome. Lake Placid's chances for the Winter Games appeared dim becuase the 1960 games were held in Squaw Valley, Calif.- Detroit won over Los Angeles, San Francisco, Philadelphia and Portland, Ore. The only bid against Lake Placid came from Salt Lake City. K. L. (Tug) Wilson, president of the U.S. Olympic Committee, said Detroit was chosen by the Board of Directors "after a very lengthy, wearing discussion." Wilson lav- ished praise on the other presen- tations although it was indicated that the final vote was between Detroit and Los Angeles. Skowron opened the fifth with a ground single to left, the second Yankee hit. Clete Boyer promptly followed with a single to left cen- ter, movin gthe Moose to third. Fatal Sanford then made his fatal er- ror, walking Terry on four straight pitches. That loaded the bases with nobody out. If he had retired Ter- ry, the subsequent double play by Kubek would have eased him out of the inning instead of yield- ing the fatal run. The Yanks finally got rid of v We Need Help Today at 5:00 p.m., a meeting for sports trainees and any oth- ers wishing to join The Michi- gan Daily sports staff will be held on the second floor of the Student Publications Building, located at 420 Maynard Street (next to the SAB). Come one and all. Sanford in the eighth when a bad throw by Jose Pagan on Richard- son's grounder, a single by Tom Tresh off Pagan's knee, and a right field single by Mickle Man- tle loaded the bases with nobody out. Brilliant Alvin Dark, Giant manager, sent for O'Dell, a lefty, and he turned in a brilliant relief job. O'Dell made Roger Mans force Richard- son at the plate and then got out of the inning on Elston Howard's double play grounder to Jim Dav- enport. O'Dell needed only five pitches, all strikes, to escape. The stiff wind, between 25 and 35 miles an hour, blew all after- noon while the Giants lofted fly balls into the gale. Of the 27 Giant outs, 19 were on fly balls, includ- ing five fouls, and four struck out. There were only four ground ball outs. The victory meant a difference of about $4,000 to each Yankee and Giant. Although official cuts are not announced until later by? the office of Commissioner Ford Frick, on the basis of 30 shares for each, a Yankee would take home about $12,000 and a Giant about $8,000. There was $362,578.32 to be divided among the winners and $241,718.88 among the losers, a dif- ference of $120,859.44. 20th, This was the Yanks' 20th World Series triumph in 27 classics and the Giants' 10th defeat in 15 se- ries. Not since 1922 have the Giants beaten the Yanks, who hold a 5-2 edge in their private rivalry that used to be a "subway series" but now means a coast-to-coast jet run. Proving once more that baseball is a game of inches, a sensational running catch by Tresh on Mays' curling wind-blown drive to left saved the ball game in the sev- enth. The next hitter, McCovey, then lashed a long triple to deep- est center. Tresh said he caught the ball in the web of his glove. After Tresh made contact with that ball he disappeared from view of the press box in the foul cor- nner in left. Umpire Ken Burkhart, working the foul line, gave the "out" sign. By STAN KUKLA Turn about is fair play - but don't tell that to the Purdue Boilmakers. Heading for a national rating, the Bolermakers were dropped by lowly Miami University of Miami, Ohio. In early week predictions the Miami team was rated as a power in its own right-but cer- tainly no match for powerful Pur- due, challengers of Ohio State for number one in the nation. Purdue was downed 10-7 by an inspired Miami squad, which now deserves Purdue's Big Ten title of Spoilermakers. Not Really But the Purdue team is a Big Ten team, so it can't be that bad. This Saturday it will try to prove it is better than last week's show- ing. Their opponents? The Wolver- ines, who were shut out by Mich- igan State 28-0, arethe lucky ones to draw the straw. After being trounched by their upstate rivals, the Michigan Wol- verines find themselves in the throes of depression. It appears that the Old Gold and Black from Lafayette will have little trouble in dealing with the Maize and Blue. Remember? Most of the Purdue team re- member last year when the Wol- verines eked out a 16-14 win. Only three men were lost from last year's backfield and the Boil- ermakers are making the most of their experienced backfield. They fought a highly-rated Washington squad to a 7-7 tie and then down- ed Notre Dame 24-6 before last weekend. Fullback Tom Yakubowski is backed up by seniors Roy Walker and Bob Plaskon. At quarerback is Ron DiGravio, who is spelled by Ron Meyer. Added to last year's sextet of halfbacks, Charlie King has proved to be a fast-moving sophomore capable of keeping up with the likes of Dave Raimey Terry Marcoline, another nev pass-catching ability. Lost but Found Up front, Mollenkopf mainguard of last year's somewhere he has found ments on a par with the lost the line but replace- original. halfback, has impressed head coach Jack Mollenkopf with his Raimey to run his off-tackle play. Michigan coach Don Dufek, who scouted Purdue in the Miami game, rates the Boilermakers as a solid team with a strong and aggressive defense. He says that it isn't easy to pick out one or two star players because the team plays as a team, not a group of 12 individuals. Variety On offense the Purdue squad has a vavriety of styles to throw at the Wolverines. Last: year they used the spread, or shotgun, for- The line would have to be rated as heavier than Michigan's but with almost the same amount of speed. On defense, Nathaniel Jack- son is thrown in to plug up those big holes and his 253-lb. frame doesn't leave much space for mation against Michigan and have used it several times this year ;n an effort to upset the timing of their opponents. The mainptay of the Purdue of- fense, however, is the Wing-T featuring end sweeps, fullback power plays, and many passes. (The Wolveri ies have proved weak in pass defens- in past weeks.) Forest Farmer and Harold Wells' are part of the reason why Purdue has such a potent passing attack and why it is favored Saturday, even after its defeat last week. _____________________ ~II 1963 GRADUATE ENGINEERS The Inland Steel Company, East Chicago, Indiana, invites you to in- vestigate our many career opportunities. Our representatives will be on your campus on Wednesday, October 24th. Contact Mr. John G. Young for an appointment. - INLAND STEEL COMPANY East Chicago, Indiana An Equal Opportunity Employer -AP wirephoto LEAP FOR JOY-New York Yankee baseball players jump for joy as they come off the field of San Francisco's Candlestick Park yesterday after beating the Giants, 1-0, to become the 1962 World Series Champions. Bill Skowron, left, and catcher Elston Howard (32), rush to winning pitcher Ralph Terry. In background are Tony Kubek and Bobby Richardson, right background. Lakers, Knilcks Win As NBA P'lay Start's F, i NEW YORK (M)-The New York Knickerbockers edged the Chicago Zephyrs 121-119 and the Los An- geles Lakers, with Elgin Baylor and Jerry West combining for 65 points, whipped Detroit 122-106 last night in a doubleheader at NCAA AA U Question Still Stalemgated CHICAGO (A)-The squabble be- tween the NCAA-supported Fed- eration movement and the AAU remained at a stalemate last night after a two-hour discussion on the question of certification of track and field athletes for Olympic competition. Meeting before the U.S. Olympic Committee Board of Directors, the AAU reaffirmed its stand that it would not certify any athlete for international competition who competed in a Federation or "open" meet. The Federation supporters said they were going ahead with. their plans .anyway. The result was that K. L. (Tug) Wilson, president of the U.S. Olym- pic Committee, was instructed to appoint a study committee-a semi-arbitration board - which would meet within the next two weeks to try to work out a solu- tion. Board members were not im- mediately named. Madison Square Garden that open- ed the National Basketball Asso- ciation season. A crowd of 8,247 watched the Knicks, led by Richie Guerin, build a big lead, then hold off a desperate Chicago rally in the nightcap. The Knicks held an 18-point lead, 78-60, early in the second half but led by only one point, 120- 119, with 37 seconds remaining. The Zephyrs took possession of the ball with 19 seconds remaining but the Knicks' Willie Naulls grabbed the rebound when the Zephyrs' Woody Sauldsberry miss- ed a jump shot from the corner 11 seconds from the end. Guerin scored a free throw after the final horn for the last point. Baylor scored 35 points and West 30 as the defending Western Division champions took an early lead, and then ran away from the Pistons in the final period of the opener. Detroit's Ray Scott was the game's high scorer with 37 points, shooting 13 for 22 from the field, but the Pistons couldn't overcome the one-two Laker punch of Bay- lor and West. Detroit rallied within five points, 71-66, as the Lakers could score only one field goal in the first six minutes of the second half, but West then scored seven of a nine- point Laker splurge to break it open again. The Pistons' rally in the fourth quarter was foiled by Baylor, who scored 19 of his points in this period. NBA Scores EASTERN DIVISION W L New York 1 0 Boston 0 0 Cincinnati 0 0 Syracuse 0 0 WESTERN DIVISION Los Angeles 1 0 San Francisco 0 0 St. Louis 0 0 Chicago 0 1 Detroit 0 1 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Los Angeles 122, Detroit 106 , New York 121, Chicago 119 TODAY'S SCHEDULE (No games scheduled) Pct. 1.000 .000 .000 .000 1.000 .000 .000 .000 .000 Coeds:' "Let us style a FLATTERING HAIR-DO to your individual needs." -no appointments needed - The Dascola Barbers near Michigan Theatre a GRID SELECTIONSI Last week we took the wraps off our secret, surefire system for picking the grid selections and revealed it to the world. The effect was immediate. No one attempted to follow it for more than three games in a row. The Daily staff even deserted it. So naturally some- one won the tickets to the Michigan Theater and the subscription to Football News. This week, however, we have decided to become even trickier. So the selections are even more difficult. They should take you several hours to figure out, and will also completely confuse you. But fill out your entry and mail it or deliver it in person to The Daily, 420 Maynard before Friday midnight, Oct. 19, even if you have to pick them quickly. It will also probably increase your score if you just circle the team which is first in alphabetical order (which is the real Daily system, and is guaranteed, if everyone follows it, to allow everyone to win the prizes and will give the sports staff a big headache.) THIS WEEK'S GAMES 'U WEEJ UNS* by FOR MEN 1.1 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. MICHIGAN at Purdue (score) Northwestern at Ohio State Michigan State at Notre Dame Illinois at Minnesota Iowa at Wisconsin Indiana at Washington State Navy at Boston College Harvard at Columbia 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. UCLA at Pittsburgh Georgia Tech at Auburn Duke at Clemson Florida State at Georgia Mississippi State at Houston So. Carolina at No. Carolina Oklahoma at Kansas Arkansas at Texas New Mexico at Utah Washington at Stanford 9. Holy Cross at Dartmouth 10. Syracuse at Penn State SAVE $3," on Dacron and Wool Wash 'n' Wear Permanently pressed Ivy style slacks All from our Regular stock. Regularly $10" . ..NOW $788 RICHMAN BROTHERS SUITS from $3995 f _ :. S