PAGE EIGHT WEEK OCT. 9 - 14 WE'LL BE READY ... WILL YOU? First Choice Of The Engageables They like the smart styling and the perfect center diamond, . . . a brilliant gem of fine color and modern cut. The name, Keepsake, in your ring assures lifetime satis faction. Select yours at your Keepsake Jeweler's store. He's in the yellow pages under "Jewelers." REGISTERtD 9 9TD S. DIAMOND RINGS ~„„-,. HOWTO PLAN YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDDING Please send new 20-page booklet, "How To Plan Your Engage ment and Wedding" and new 12-page full color folder, both for only 25c. Also, send speciat - offer of beautiful 44-page Bride'S Book. Ire, Name Address 1 I City I 1 I 1 State Zip 1 KEEPSAKE DIAMOND RINGS, BOX 90, SYRACUSE, N. Y. 113202 i I ................ . . C~~:~1~~-~~~t~~ HAS AN ENGINEERING CHALLENGE WAITING FOR YOU Expansion and development programs of The Cleve land Twist Drill Co., offer immediate placement for Engineering graduates in ME, lE, and Metallurgy. The Cleveland Twist Drill Co. is a medium sized, multi-plant internationally known leader in the Manu facture of metal cutting tools, having foreign as well as domestic manufacturing operations. Openings at the headquarters plant in Cleveland in clude the following positions: PRODUCT DESIGN ENGINEER Individual and group project responsibility in design, application and development of metal cutting and thread ing tools. Customer engineering as required by the de velopment of new tooling programs by industry-1 Some travel. MANUFACTURING ENGINEER 1 Determination of new or improved manufacturing pro cesses, economic justification of machinery, writing ma chine tool specifications, debugging and cycling of (equip went. I MACHINE DESIGN ENGINEER ' Creative assignments in design of special metal cutting and forming machines, includes writing specificatons, making preliminary layouts, supervising designs and draftsmen and follow-up debugging. METALLURGICAL ENGINEER Product and process development, product performance and evaluation, applied research in tool materials and other laboratory and engineering projects concerned pri marily with high speed steel, tungsten carbide and re lated alloys. ! These are challenging positions offering immediate responsibility and advancement opportunity to B.S. and M.S. graduatest Principal fringe benefits include profit sharing, re location assistance, retirement progam and full re imbursement of education tuitions. Make an appointment today to meet our repre sentatives when they visit Penn State on October 12. THE CLEVELAND TWIST Jonzz.. co. P.O. Box 6656 • Clew*.land,Ohio 44101 A Plans for Progress Company 1 Sox Win Evens Series BOSTON (AP) Jim Lon- ting...for 20 minutes in a special walked - and Dalton Jones sin borg flirted with a perfect drill after Wednesday's game in gled, Yastrze.nski slammed a game and wound u with a one- which he went hitless. It paid pitch by left-handed Joe Hoern hitter and Carl Yastrzemski off with two homers and a sin- er into the center field bleach- 1 sl amm e'd two elearifying gle and four runs batted in. ers: It was a tape measure job, homers yesterday to even the The man who carried the Red landing among the frantic Red World Series with a 5-0 Boston Sox on his back to the pennant Sox fans about 430 feet from the victory over St. Louis in the and everybody's choice for plate. rain-splattered second game. Most Valuable Player honors, The drama piled up as Lon- A tense crowd, of 35,188 slammed a 360-foot homer into borg whirled through the Cardi thrilled to Longerg's brilliant the sixth row of the right field nal batting order, once, twice pitching that awoke memories stands in the fourth. The blow and into the third time before of Don Larsen's perfect game broke up a scoreless battle be- he finally walked Flood on a for the New York. Yankees in tween Lonborg and Di c k low, outside - ditch on 3-2. the 1956 series. - Hughes. Time after Lime the Red Sox Not a man reached base and With Lonborg pitching the infield had given him a helping 19 Cardinals had been retired best game of his career, in hand. Jerry Adair at second in order until Curt Flood finally which his last start and 22nd base made a marveolus play on walked on a 3-2 it :h wit'l one victory had been Sunday's a ball hit by Lou Brock in the ou. iii the seventh, clinching in over Minnesota, fourth with a back-handed stop that first run was all he needed. and perfect throw. The no-hitter still was alive into the eighth when a light Seventh Inning Homer Rico Petrocelli fumb 1 e d shower and sudden dark clouds Coming up in the seventh in- Flood's shot for an instant in forced the lights to be turned ning after Jose Tartabull the same folrth inning and on. By this time, the game had . been locked up by Yastrzem- , ski's second homer, a three-run 430-foot blast hit° the bleachers ards Got Nothing for a 5.0 lead. % Blister Bothers Lonborg Lonborg, ever aare of the t Off L On b org no-hit possibilities, was sibilities, was work ing with a blister ,9n his right thumb, botherin his breaking ball and curve A rousing cheer arose when Tim McCarver grounded out to second base. The noise`mount ed when Rico Petocelli, a de mon in the field all day, tossed out Mike Shannon The air went out of the no-hit b o Q,m when Julian -Javier slashed a double into the left field corner. But Lonborg never missed a stride. He blew down pinch hitter Bob Tolan to com plete the eighth and knocked off the Redbirds, one-two-three in the ninth. This handsome, 24-year-old, razor-cut Sta..ford grad thus matched the three previous one hitters thrown in Series com petition. Ed Reulbach had one for the Chicago Cubs in 1906, and Claude Passeau for the Cubs•in 1945. But Floyd Bevens, of the Yanks had lost his one hitter in 1947 when Cookie Lav agetto doubled off the right field wall fo_ a 3-2 Brooklyn victory with two put in the ninth. Yastrzemski skipped batting practice and took a 45-minute nap in the- clubhouse after hit- Tonight at • NICKELODEON NITES The Halfback of Notre Dame The Submarine Pirate Yes, Yes Nanette The Terribly Strange Bed plus Chapters 1,2, 3 of THE LAST FRONTIER 7:00 and 9:30 in the HUB Assembly Room Tickets 25c Free popcorn A .HUB Arts Committee Presentation . , 1968 LA ..viE NOTICE TO ALL , --- LOCAL HIPPIES -- is - THE HEDGE SHOP is in State College only to help you bend your mind. The level of profit is only HIGH enough to keep me eat ing. I have no desire to take a quick thousand out of your pockets. I want only to help you Wednesday - Friday - October 4 . 4 . in any way possible. , I appeal , to you to keep State College and 9:30 - 4:00 EACH DAY Ground Floor HUB • its people, beautiful by supporting ... . . , • $l5 Per Copy, Payable Then . THE HEDDE SHOP 128 S. Barnard St. Each Senior will get one Free, but anyone third floor else who wants one must order it NOW. please call first . ... 237.1826 WOULD YOU BELIEVE? On September 22, 1967, 1,432 people jammed into the MAC Office 203-C HUB JOIN THE CROWD! COMMITTEE MEMBERSHIP CHAIRMANSHIPS Open in: Open for: Educational Affairs Ed. Affairs Food & Housing Pub. Relations Penn Statesman Food & Housing Penn Statesman ,Special Events Applications at NUB Desk For more Information call: Bone Cavalluel 865.9613 THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY . PARK, PENNSYLVANIA Yaz Slams Two Homers BOSTON (A') Most of the St. Louis Cardinals play ers felt Boston's Jim Lonborg was throwing the pitches to the right spot but their bats,just weren't connecting. "He was throwing theni fight in there," Manager Red Schoendienst said after Lonborg and the Red Sox beat St. Louis 5-0 in yesterday's second game of the World Series. There' was more talk in the Cardinal dressing room about Carl Yastrzemski, the American League's leading hitter who went without a hit Wednesday but cracked two homers yesterday. '".l got the pitch almost where I wanted it," Hughes said in discussing the first Yastrzemski homer, a blast into the rightfield corner. "It was a fast ball." Body Moves • "His (Yastrzemski's) body moves toward their dugout on the first base side," Hughes said. "His style is similar to (St. Louis catcher) Tim McCarver's. Joe Hoerner, normally the Cardinals' most effective lefthanded reliever, gave up the second Yastrzemski homer, a three-run blast, just after he replaced Ron Willis on the mound. "I threw a fast ball up high," Hoerner said. "I got two strikes on him high and inside, but I didn't quite get the one he hit where, I wanted . . . And boy, did he hit it." Julian Javier, the brilliant-fielding St. Louis second baseman, spoiled Lonborg's bid for a no-hitter with a sharp double to the leftfield corner in the eighth inning. "I hit a good pitch," Javier said. "He threw me some good pitches all day." He added that he felt the ball was in there when it left the bat. then gunned him down. It was . Petrocelli, lie dandy little shortstop, who did it again 'in , the sixth on Dal Maxvill's hop per behind second base and' it was Rico to the rescue again for a fine play on Orlando Cepeda's smash behind second for a force Ilay on Flood to ' end the seventh. Extra Police Order: -I Extra police had been or dered to the dugout area to avoid any repetition of the wild mob scene that followed Lon borg's Sunday effort. There was no trouble this time al- though a knot of fans appealed around the 22-game winner ; when he bowed out of the dugout for a moment. Yaz and Lonborg simply took matters into their own hands • this day. The Sox added. an other run off Hughes in the sixth when he was driven to cover on two walks and lan error by Shannon -on Jei.ry Adair's smash off his chest. Don Willis replaced Hughes and was pitching when Petro celli drove In George Scott with, a long sacrifice fly to Floo&ci in deep center. The run, of course, was charged to Hughes, the 18-6 performer in regular season. Willis Wild Streak In the seventh Willis ran into a wild streak. Jose Tartabull walked and Jones singled past Shannon to left. With the rain coming down quite hard, Red Schoendienst went to his bull pen and brought in a southpaw pitcher, Joe -ioernor, to face the left-handed batting Yaz. It didn't work as Yas went to 2-2 and then drove the ball deep into the center field bleachers, driving in Tartabull and Jones ahead of him. First word from the club house was that Lonborg had a little blister on his right thumb that developed in the seventh 'inning. Dick Williams, the man ager, said the blister bothered his breaking ball and curve but never reached the point where he was thinking of taking him out. "Pressure?," said Williams' in answer to a question. "No, this was'fun. You should have been here the last half of the season to see what pressure • ~ Bell Scheduled Williams said he will pitch Gary Bell Saturday in St. Louis against the Cards' Nelson Briles after Friday's off day for travel. "It Will be Jose Santiago, Wednesday's loser in the Sun day. game," said Williams. "And then Lonborg will wrap it up Monday." Correction! It' was incorrectly reported in yesterday's Collegian that Jordan 2 defeated Juniper House in intramural football Tuesday night. Juniper won the game by a 3 : 0 score. Varsity Rifle Team Sets Dates for Tryouts Varsity Rifle Team tryouts will be held Saturday and Sunday 6:30-9:30 and Mon day and Tuesday 1-5 at the Rec Hall Rifle Range. Try outs are' open to all fourth term students in good stand ing. ,kolb's korner They Call The Great By RON KOLB Assistant Sports Editor Within the past few weeks, almost every newspaper in the country received a flashy blue and gold press brochure in its sports mailbox. A UCLA pompon girl is leading a cheer at the top of the pamphlet, while Bruin defensive halfback Mark Gustafson is snaring a pass - in- terception at the bottom. In the center is the stop-action photograph of number 16, pausing be hind the line in search of a receiver. Above his golden helmet is his title: "The most exciting foot- ball player in the U.S.A." Turn the page, and you can read 10 selected quotes about "how the experts see him." Joe Paterno, Penn State head football coach, said "He is the best quer. terback I have s ee n in several years. I would compare him to Roger _ • Staubach. , He is a great BEBAN i ' passer and his speed to this outside gives UCLA an added threw." . a A sports writer in Pasadena covered just about every C, aspect of t the game when .he 'said, "He does everything. • He fakes. He plows ahead on keepers. He rolls out. He passes accurately. He is a rounded quarterback with good poise and judgment." . Without going on to find out who this mystery phenomenon is, you'd almost swear Johnny Unitas or Bart Starr were running for President, and their public relations agents were giving them, adsi - anced billings. Not so. Then open the brochure to the inside, and in:bold letters at the top is "The Great One." Jackie Gleason? Of course not, it's Gary Joseph Beban, UCLA's passer, run ner, genius and magician. If it• were up to his coach, Tommy Prothro; Beban could go out on the field alone against any opponent, spot the other team two touch- downs and still win by three. The 6-0, 1911 pound quarterback started as the Bruins' field general two years ago iagainst Michigan S tat e, • which is quite a way to break in. Though UCLA lost, 13-3, the young sophomore ran 26 times for 103 yards and completed eight of 15 passes for, another 69 yards. Right there, Prothro knew he had something. Beban's second game was against Penn State at Beaver Stadium before a sellout Band Day crowd (sound familiar?). The backfield 'wizard - did everything but park cars, though walkie talkie equipment in his electronic helmet provided some weird directions in the two-way radios of the parking attendents outside the stadium. Despite the national attention created by the inci dent, Beban still showed his natural poise by running 21 times for ,97 yards and two touchdowns, and com pleting seven of 14 passes for' another 76 yards. It was enough to hold off a late State rally land to win, 24-22. His junior year, in spite of a late season injury, was just as great. His team only lbst one game, and among the victories was a 49-11 annihilation. of Penn State. Behan carried 11 times for 48 1 , yards arid two TD's and hit on eight of, 13-. passes for 1132 yards. This year looks to be just one of those seasons again. For instance, in the Bruins' fir 4 game against Tennessee, Prothro found his club down by:two points with a little over four minutes to play. th4 t i coach pulled his star over to" the sidelines during a time out and said, "Gary, I need just one big play." Beban went back into the game. look the ball around right end, cut sharply to the riddle and outsprinted his nearest defender to the endzone for a 27-yard score. UCLA won. 20-16, as The Great Ono rushed for 72 yards and passed for 107, scoring two TD's. The Pitt game two week 4 ago vas another typical exhibition of the senior's gridiron skills as he guided his club to a 40-8 romp, Lash week Beban scored two more as the BruinS viciously downed Washington State, 51-23. Thy .old is a hider ie 21-year-. __Ty major average. On the field, he's a terror, and he's far from average. Like the time against Southern California when he hit on two scoring bombs, !one for 04 and the other for 52 yards. One Moment UCL A trailed with four min utes left, 16-6. The next Moment they had won, 20-16. The West Coast school doesn't advertise - about its favorite son just to get rid of !some paper and ink. The Heisman Trophy balloting comes up at the end of the year. Then the scribes pick All-Americans, and All-Star representatives, and pro draft prospects. The way things have gone over the past 23 games in which he has played, Beban better, start dusting off !his trophy case and start cleaning out his wallet. Penn State fans going to' tomorrow's game better start dusting off their binocular lenses and, start cleaning up their descriptive adjectives. They might need them. .... • . FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1967 Him One or with a solid "13" Allan, Nelson top IM Golfers Don Allan, Theta Delta Chi, won the 1967 Intramural Fraternity p Golf-Medal Tour nament with a score of 150 for 36 holes. Paul Nelson, Acacia, was runner-up with 151. • • Tau Kappa Epsilon's Jim Jenson, the defending cham pion, finished in a tie for fourth place with a 158. The top ten men were: Allan, Theta Delta Chi -150 Nelson, Acacia-151 Merrill, Theta Delta Chi -157 Jensen, Tau Kappa Epsi -lon-158 4. 1 Noble, Phi Gamma Delta —l5B 8. Zaner, Alpha Chi Rho -160 7.1 Rattigan, Phi Sigma Kap pa-161 7. Caliguri, Phi Gamma Delta 1 1 -161 9.! Hargraves, Triangle-165 10. Lehman, .Triangle-166 10. Klinetob, Sigma Alpha !Epsilon-166 Three Golfers Tie First Round In Tournament I ST. ANDREWS, Scotland (ir) Billy Casper, Doug Sanders and Gardner Dickin stip shared the first round lead in the rich Alcan Golfer of the Year tournament yes terday with 22-year old Bri an Barnes of England. All registered. four-u nd e r-par 68s. IThe tournament, being played for' the first time; car ries a first prize of $55,000 the largest in pro golf. Elev- BUnited States pros, Seven Britons and Bob Charled of New Zealand qualified. HUB COMMITTEES CAMPUS PACTS ARE COMING OCTOBER 11th & 12th Ground Floor HUB
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers