THE MI1WCHIGAN flAlYI WVT"A'%r ItIA4 . - - .aver ' -- - e s a .a -a ID 1I Y, OCTOBER 4, 1963 PUT YOUR BRAND ON Style 435 by R LVCH7fiIANtro9m French Shriner puts its masterful styling § touch on rich, rugged Briarhide. The result § is a shoe that we're sure you're going to , hke. Come in and see it! BLACK OR DARK BROWN 2795 VAN BOVEN SHOES 17 Nickels Arcade NO 5-7240 Dodgers Win Second Straight, 4-1 VANDY GONE: Powerful Badgers Pose Title Threat NEW YORK UP)--The Los An- geles Dodgers captured their sec- ond straight victory over the New York Yankees in the 1963 World Series yesterday, winning the sec- ond game 4-1. Johnny Podres, the pitching hero of the Dodgers' 1955 Series triumph over, the Yankees, limit- ed the defending world champions to six hits before giving way to Ron Perranoski after Hector Lo- pez' double with one out in the ninth inning. Elston Howard greeted the re- lief ace with a run-scoring single, but Perranoski got the final two batters without further trouble and the National Leaguers had a 2-0 lead. Two Runs The Dodgers hopped on young southpaw Al Downing for two runs in the first inning when Maury Wills singled and stole sec- ond, Jim Gilliam singled and Wil- lie Davis rapped a drive to right which went for a two-run double when Roger Manis fell down try- ing to get the ball. Ex-Yankee Bill Skowron con- tinued to harrass his former team, clouting a homer in the fourth, and the Dodgers added their other run in the eighth against reliever Ralph Terry on Willie Davis'second double and Tommy Davis' second' triple. The Davis boys - Willie and Tommy-and Moose Skowron ac- counted for all the Dodger runs with a homer, two triples and two doubles in the 10-hit attack. Po- dres, the 31-year-old left-hander who had beaten the Yanks twice eight years ago in the Dodgers' only Series, victory over the Bombers, had a shutout when he was replaced by Perranoski, the ace of the bullpen, with Hector Lopez on second and one out in the ninth. Lopez, who had slammed his second straight ground-rule dou- By TOM ROWLAND Wisconsin gets an open date this Saturday after slipping past Notre Dame, 14-9, last weekend, and the Badgers will be using the spare time to prepare for the up- coming Big Ten onslaught of Wis- consin's 1962 conference crown. The Badgers won eight while only dropping one last season (that to Ohio State, 14-7) on the strength of superpilot Ron Van- der Kelen and then came out on the short end of the 42-37 Rose Bowl appearance spectacular with Southern Cal. Milt Bruhn's men were second ranked in the nation as well as placing first in points scored per game. Coming back from that team this fall are 26 letter winners - without VanderKelen and All- American end Pat Richter. So Bruhn's big task this fall is to find that big man to run the ball club plus someone'to fill into Richter's size 12 shoes. Harold Brandt, a 193-pound junior who was ousted from the starting quar- terback slot last fall when Van- derKelen arrived, has got the first- string call right now. QB's Score Brandt scored two touchdowns in the. 41-0. opening smash of, Western Michigan, has completed 17 of 33 passes this fall for 52 per cent. In the background, though, is senior Arnie Quaerna, who mov- ed the Badgers 99 yards in three plays in the closing minutes of the Western Michigan game, and a coach can't fight results like that: three plays, 99 yards, one touch- down. Next problem: filling in the end spots. Here Bruhn has one letter- man, Ron Leafblad, and has mov- ed Bobbie Johnson, 6'5", 200- pound senior, onto the other wing. It's Johnson's first year of varsity experience aftbr JV play., Leaf- blad is smaller, 6'2" at 191 pounds, but he put in 238 minutes of play last fall. The middle of the line is the least of the problems around the Madison camp this year. Both starting tackles of the 1962 cham- pionship team are still around, with solid depth at both sides. Roger Pillath, 6'4", anchors the left side tain Andy Wojdula, takes the other side. missed most of thel sions this fall and 245 pounds, and co-cap- 6' and 209, WoJdula has practice ses- sat out the -Associated Press HITS FENCE-Roger Maris, New York Yankees right fielder, crashes into the fence in right field while playing a fly ball off the bat of Los'Angeles' left fielder Tommy Davis. The action took place as the Dodgers downed the Yankees, 4-3, in the second game of the World Series yesterday. Davis was credited with a triple. Maris, injured on the play, was taken out of the game. WMU ; game because of a chest contusion, and Roger Jacobazzi (6'3", 235) has filled in. Guard Depth 'Both of Wisconsin's regular guards missed the Rose Bowl last year because of injuries, and re- serves Mike Cross and Ron Paar gained some valuable experience. This fall all four are back. Gross *and one of last year's starters, Jon Hohman, hold first-string spots now. The Badgers are three-deep at center, with co-captain Ken Bow- man, a two-year veteran, getting the starting post. The Badger for- ward wall gets a 217-pound rating. With all that beef up front it would be a shame if there were nothing to run behind it. But the Badgers have it up front where it counts and in the back where it counts more. Lou Holland, half- back speedster, led the Big Ten in scoring and punt returns last year. Leading ground gainer of 1962 Ralph Kurek takes command at fullback. Weighing in at only 200 pounds, Kurek picked up 341 yards last fall while losing not a single yard. He scored six touchdowns, including the winning margin over Minnesota. It's an impressive line-up, with depth and defense too, and it puts Wisconsin as a top contender for a repeat performance. They'll be getting a good testing: Northwest- ern, Ohio State, and Purdue all grace the Badger schedule. r WANTED ! 1000 HEADS -ml ble, scored on a single by Elston Howard, first man to face. Perra- noski, so Podres lost his shutout. The leading citizen of Witherbee, N.Y., was given a tremendous ovation by the crowd of 66,455 when Manager Walter Alston took him out. Force Play After Howard's hit, Joe Pepi- tone hit into a_ force play and Perranoski ended things by strik- ing out Clete Boyer. The canny Podres, mixing a big curve with his deadly change- up and good fast ball, had the Yankees popping up or beating the ball into the ground most of the way. When they did get good wood on the ball, the speedy Davis boys caught up with them. Roger Maris contributed to the downfall of/ young Al Downing, Podres' starting foe, when he stumbled and fell in the first in- ning, letting Willie Davis' drive to right fall for a two-run double. Willie also contributed a second double and scored the Dodgers' final run when Tommy Davis drove his second triple of the day, a tremendous blast to the fence at the 45'-foot mark in left cen- ter, in the eighth. The second chapter of the re- venge of 'Skowron on his old mates, who traded him away last winter, included a home run sliced into the lower seats in right near the foul pole, with nobody on in the fourth. It was the eighth Series homer for Moose, the pre- vious seven as a Yankee. With a 2-0 Series edge over the American League champs who had been 7-5 series favorites, the Dodgers flew home to Los An- geles, co'nfident of closing out this best-of-7 set in their home park at Chavez Ravine. Today is an open date for travel and they will resume tomorrow in Los Angeles with Don Drysdale, 19-17, due to face the Yanks' Jim Bouton, 21-7. Only one Yankee team ever has lost four straight. That was the 1922 club, and it did manage to stave off disaster for a time with one tie. Dodger speed, the subject of much pre-aeries conversation, be- came evident in the first inning when Maury Wills, thO base stealing champ, singled through the box and promptly skipped to second. Downing had Wills picked off first but speedy Maury kept right on going and arrived safely with a terrific slide that beat Joe Pepitone's relay to Bobby Rich- ardson. Jim Gilliam dropped a single into right field and Wills scooted to third. Then came the big break in the game. Willie Davis slashed a liner to right that seemed certain to be finally slid down' on his side, as he went after the ball, slipped and finally slid down on his side, as the ball sailed past for a double, scoring both Wills and Gilliam. That was the way it stood until Moose sliced one of Downing's outside pitches into the lower, seats in right near the foul pole. Foul line umpire John Rice was right on the job, signalling fair ball as Skowron circled the bases to the accompaniment of those familiar "'Moose, Moose" calls that soundlike boos. Maris had to leave the game in the third inning when he ran into th railing along the right field stands, chasing a crazily bounc- ing ball off the edge of the out- field grass that went for a triple by Tommy Davis. The clubhouse reported that Maris had a bruised left arm but the injury was re- garded as minor and he is ex- pected to play tomorrow. LSU-Georgia Tech SEC Clash Heads Collegiate Grid Action 1 r By MIKE MEYERS Since third-ranked Oklahoma knocked off USC to take over the lead in rational polls, much of the attention of the country is going to be spotlighted on the October 12 meeting between the Sooners and presently third- ranked Texas. Meanwhile, however, this week- end will not be without its own share of exciting NCAA action. Before its meeting with Okla- homa, Texas has to play Okla- homa State, a team that is'under- going a major rebuilding program under new head coach Phil Cutch- in. Darrell Royal's Longhorns, on the other hand, are undefeated and almost unanimous choice to take their fourth Southwest Con- ference title in five years. The staggering USC Trojans, knocked down to eighth after last week's defeat, may not have things any easier against Michigan State. Raving just slaughtered North Carolina, 31-0, the Spartans should be at top strength for this one. Because of the World Series action tomorrow afternoon, the game has been moved up to to- night. In the Southeast, Louisiana State will try to bounce back from its upset at the hands of Rice last week against seventh-ranked Georgia Tech. Tech's triple threat back Billy Lothridge was voted the back of the week for his per- formance in the Yellow Jackets' 27-0 romp over Clemson. The LSU-Tech rivalry usually stacks up as a defensive battle and could go either way. Ohio State, demonstrating half- backs instead of the almost tra- ditional steamrolling fullback, takes on Indiana. The Hoosiers almost upset Northwestern last week and their meeting with the Buckeyes might be of no small consequence in the 1963 Big Ten campaign. Tom Myers, Northwestern's All- America quarterback, will test his arm against Illinois.' In other Big Ten action, Army invades Minnesota. Gopher head coach Murray Warmath was at one time an Army aide. Purdue plays host to Notre Dame in La- fayete. The ever-tough Irish al- most upset Wisconsin last week. After being tied by Washington State on the West Coast, Iowa again tries its luck in the Pacific Northwest by taking on Washing- ton. The Huskies were predicted for a possible Big Six tie with Southern California, but they lost their first two games to Air Force and Pittsburgh. The Panthers, besides their vic- tory over Washington, also defeat- ed UCLA, and they are going to try to make a sweep of the Coast against California. Pittsburgh is one of the major independents to be ranked nationally; they are ninth. Another Eastern power, Penn State, is matched against the Rice Owls who upset LSU last Saturday night. The top attraction in the At- lantic Coast Conference is, the game between Duke and Mary- land. The Blue Devils are strong and fast with backs Mike Curtis and Jay' Wilkinson. Maryland's quarterback, Dick Shiner, is al- ways a potential threat for the long bomb. The contest will be televised nationally. Clemson tries to rebound from tough losses to Oklahoma and Georgia Tech aaginst ACC rival North Carolina State. State is playing with a starting backfield who have been together since their freshman year. Another conference game matches North Carolina. at Wake Forest. The Tarheels are probably happy to get back to their home state after taking a 31-0 beating by Michigan State. Alabama, the number two team in the country, should have an easy time with Vanderbilt. The Crimson Tide are trying for a Southeast Conference champion- ship with quarterback Joe Namath directing the attack: LOU HOLLAND . Badger speedster No J Ferguson Gets StartingSpot PITTSBURGH (M)-It looks like Bob Ferguson will be the start- ing fullback for the Pittsburgh Steelers in the Saturday night contest with the Cleveland Browns which will decide the leader in the Eastern Division of the Na- tional Football League. Ferguson, a former All-Ameri- can back for Ohio State, Is en- tering his second year in the NFL after a somewhat disappointing rookie season.' 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