The Bend Bulletin, Tuesday, May 22, T962
Strikes out 10
Koufax handcuffs
Giants for 8-1 win
ly Jo Sargli
UPI Staff Wrltr
Manager Walt Alston of the Los
Angeles Dodgers keeps insisting
Sandy Koufax could be the best
pitcher In the major leagues, and
the Brooklyn-born strikeout King
couldn't have picked a better
time to make his boss look good.
Koufax, who led the majors
with 269 strikeouts last season.
fanned 10 San Francisco batters
Monday night to run his 12
total to 82 while pitching the
Dodgers to an 8-1 victory over
the Giants. ,
It marked the 33rd time In the
27-y e a r-old left-hander's career
that he had fanned at least 10
batters In a game. Koufax per
mitted the National League-leading
Giants Just five hits in picking
up his fifth victory of the season
against only two losses.
Ends Losing Streak
The victory snapped a three
game Los Angeles losing streak
and kept the Dodgers 14 percent
age points behind the Cardinals,
with whom they are virtually tied
for second place. The Cards beat
the Philadelphia Phillies, 4-1, and
now are 3'4 games behind the
Giants the same margin by
which the Dodgers trail San Fran
Baseball
line scores
Mar League Results
By United Press International
American League
Kansas City 101 302 30010 14 1
Boston 003 100 001 5 12 2
Walker (5-2) and Azcue. Conley,
Earley (6), Fornieles (7), Kolstad
(9) and Tillman. Loser Conley
(4-4). HK Azcue, Walker, Bres
aoud. Minnesota 000 021 110- 5 10 0
Washington 010 001 010 3 8 1
Pascual (6-2) and Battey, Zim
merman (3). Stenhouse, Hobaugh
(7), Kutyna (9) and Schmidt. Los
er Stenhouse (3-1). IUI Kille
brew, Piersall.
Baltlmora 000 204 010 7 13 0
Cleveland 403 000 00310 11 0
Brown, Stock (3), Roberta (4),
Wilhelm (8), Hocft (8) and Trian
dos. Grant, Latman (6), Bell (9)
and Romano. Winner Bell (3-3).
Loser Hoeft (0-3). HR-Dlllard,
Held, Gentile, Brandt 2, Snyder,
Romano.
Detroit 510 100 000 7 12 2
Chicago 020 000 010 3 8 1
Foytack, Nischwitz (8) and
Brown. Wynn, Fisher (1), Zanni
(5), Lown (7), Kemmeror (9) and
Lollar, Roselll (9). Winner Foy
tack (2-1). Loser Wynn (2-3).
HR-Colavito, Fernandez, Apari
tio. (Only games scheduled)
National League
Chicago 301 000 000 4 10 1
Pittsburgh 040 010 12x 8 13 0
Ellsworth, Amlorson (7) and
Tappo, Thacker (8). Francis,
Slurdivant (3 and Leppert Win
ner Sturdlvant (2-2). Loser
Ellsworth (3-5).
Phila 010 000 000 1 t 1
St. Louis 020 002 OOx 4 6 1
Bennett, Green (6), McLlsh (7)
and Dalrymplo. Broglio, Wash
burn (2), Shantz (8) nnd Oliver.
Winner Washburn (3-0). Loser
Bennett (0-1). IUI Sicvers,
White.
New York 020 000 000- 2 7 2
Houston 002 000 Olx 3 9 1
llillman, Mlzell (3) and Taylor.
Golden (2-1) and Smith. Loser
MizcU (1-2).
S;in Fran 000 000 100 1 5 1
Los Aiiceles 000 201 OT.x- 8 11 1
O'DeU. Bolin (7). Larson (7)
and Bailov. Koufax (5-2) nnd
Koseboro. Loser - O'DeU (5-2)
HR T. Davis, Ce)oUa.
Cincinnati at Milwaukee, ppd rain
Conallis top
prep golf feam
PORTLAND (m A yowi
brother of oao time fenflnlne golf
star Carole Jo Knhlor rind the
Individual medal lend after 18
holes of the Oregon Slale high
school golf tournraiicm today.
Tom Kabler of Sutherlin sIkH a
Ti to shoe koMi t Kith the Cor
vallis team. C'orvallis Willi Mark
Gust: 'sofl rIiiO OJR a 75, l-Ory
Fergiisoo a 78. Steoe, Vrtiska a 77
and JUiko llullenheck an 82, had
a 310 for a two-stroke load over
North EuriO-
City recreation schedue
TUESDAY
4:007:00 PM Baseball Clinic for Rook la t Jr. Laagu at Municipal
7:J0 :30 PM Ladies Gym Night at Junior High Gym
7:30 f:30 PM 4-H Leather Tooling at Harmon Hobby Houie
WEDNESDAY
11 Noon 4:00 PM-Golden Ago Mealing at E. Sth A Gl.nwood Drive
4:007:00 PM-Bataball Clinic for Rook la A Jr. League at Municipal
1:00 PM Umpires Matting at Harmon Hobby House Anyone Inter
t etted in umpiring It urgtd to attend O
cisco.
Orlando Cepeda spoiled Keufax'
shutout when he hit his 12th home
run of the season In the seventh
Inning for San Francisco'! only
run. Tommy Davis provided San
dy with all the batting help he
needed with a two-run homer In
the fourth and later hit two
doubles. Billy O'DeU, the first of
three Giants pitchers, was the
loser.
The Houston Colt nipped the
New York Mets, 3-2, and the
Pittsburgh Pirates whipped the
Chicago Cubs, 8-4, In other NL
games. The Cincinnati at Milwau
kee game was postponed because
of rain.
Sat Homer Mark
In the American League, the
red-hot Cleveland Indians hit
three more home runs to set a
major league record of 28 In nine
games while beating the Ball!
more Orioles, 10-7, to take over
the league lead; the Kansas City
Athletics downed the Boston Red
Sox, 10-5: the Minnesota Twins
defeated the Washington Senators,
5-3, and the Detroit Tigers beat
the Chicago White Sox, 7-3. The
Yankees and Los Angeles Angels
were Idle.
Bill White and Curt Flood drove
Minus Mantle,
Yankees not
nearly so tough
Today's Sport Parade
By Oscar Fraley
UPI Staff Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) The New
York Yankees are a solid ball
club from stem to stem but those
close to them insist today that
for all of this they are just an
other team when they lose the
services of Mickey Mantle.
Nobody is pushing the panic
button because the Mick will be
on the sidelines for approximate
ly a month with a torn grain
muscle. They feel they can hold
their own until he's back In serv
ice. But without him there's no hope
of an anticipated runaway and
there's always the uneasiness of
what this latest injury will do to
his effectiveness.
"We'd have the devil of a time
winning the pennant without him"
said one. "It would make a real
scramble of the race and whether
we could win It or not would then
depend primarily on our pitching.
We couldn't count as heavily on
our power."
There are several reasons when
you ask for an explanation as to
why not
Ftar Marls Lass
The first if that the pitchers
don't have the respect for Roger
Maris that they do for Mantle.
This is not to hint that they
don't always pitch carefully to
Maris. But when Mantle is coming
up right behind him, they can't
give Marls anything too good to
hit and yet they can't pitch so
carefully that they walk him and
risk two runs.
"With Mantle out there, as
serted one expert, "they don't
hava to worry too much about
walking Mans.
Mantle also means many Intan
gibles to lha Yankees. He has,
within the last couple of years,
come Into his own as the
real loader of the team. All of
the players like him nnd ha sets
an Inspiring example by compet
ing despite physical handicaps,
frequently playing when ho is
only 75 per cent up to par.
Another factor Is that Yogi
Borra long swung another blazing
hnt which menaced rival pitchers.
Rut they have lost much of their
fear of the ning Yogi and, when
you dorrick Mantle, too, they
breathe a lot easier.
Tho contenders have evolved a
costly system for boating the
Yankees, laming up to a series
wilh the pcromtlnl champioas,
they aswiily mmiipukifml their
rotation to have their best pitch
ers available. Vi the praacss, y
chnmiiv their rotation, taey sun
ply woro dVerrtm retributioa bc
causo in any subsequent serins
their pitching staffs were liaublea'
nnd lost highly iwcoiry effec
tiveness. Everybody wn doing it
and it ttinc hurt In tha procv
With Mantle out, you may not
see this hnppojlng.
Tho Mick has had more than
his share of Injuries and all
ment.s. HOIIy a year passes that
something doesn't happen to hal
ter him.
in two runs each In pacing the
Cardinals to their fifth straight
victory. The Cards scored twice
In the second and sixth innings
off Phillies starter Dennis Ben
nett, who suffered his first major
league defeat Ray Washburn,
who took over in the second when
starter Ernie Broglio suffered a
pulled groin muscle, picked up
his third victory without a loss.
Pinch-hitter Jim Pendleton's
triple and Ramon Mejias' sacri
fice fly In the eighth Inning pro
duced the Colt s winning run. The
victory moved Houston past New
York into eighth place. Jim Gold
en went all the way for the Colts
to register his second victory
both over the Mets. Vinegar Bend
Mlzell, who took over for starter
Dave Hillman In the third, was
the loser.
Four Hits Apleca
Dick Groat and Bill Virdon
each had four hits in Pittsburgh's
13-hIt ' attack. Tom Slurdivant,
who took over for Earl Francis
in the third inning when the Cubs
scored a run to tie the game at
4-all, was the winner. Slurdivant
scattered five hits the rest of the
way to even his record at 2-2.
Dick Ellsworth, who gave up nine
hits and six runs, took his fifth
loss against three victories.
John Romano's three-run ninth
Inning homer with two out was
tha margin of difference in the
Cleveland victory. Don Dulard
and Woody Held homered earlier
in helping the Indians build up a
7-0 lead. That gave Cleveland 28
homers over a nine-game stretch
one more than the old record
set by the New York Giants in
1954. The victory boosted the In
dians Into the AL lead by a half
game over the Yankees. Chuck
Esseglan had three hits in four
at-bats to boost his AL-leading
batting average to .402.
Pascual Stars
The Twins, in third place, also
a half-game out of first place,
beat the Senators on the pitching
and batting of Camilo Pascual.
The Cuban right-hander singled
home what proved to be the win
ning run in the seventh and dupli
cated the feat In the eighth to
help himself to hit sixth victory
against two losses. Rookie Dave
Stenhouse, unbeaten in three pre
vious games, took his first loss.
Home runs by pitcher Jerry
Walker and catcher Joe Azcue
plus the clutch batting of Jerry
Lumpo proved too much for the
Red Sox as the A's gained their
third win in the last four games.
Walker went all the way to post
his fifth victory while Gene Con
ley, the first of four Boston pitch
ers, took his fourth loss. Manny
Jimenez, the AL s second leading
hitter, had a double and single to
boost bis average to .371.
The Tigers battered Early
Wynn, seeking the 29,'ith victory
of his career, for five runs in Uie
first Inning and went on from
there behind Paul Foytack and
Ron Nischwitz to score an easy
victory. Nischwitz came on in the
eighth, when Foytack walked two
batters to fill the bases with two
outs, and got Nellie Fox to end
the threat
Relays meet
won by Bend
Bend seventh and eighth grad
ers took honors in a recent tri
angular relays meet
The seventh graders edged Red
mond 51-40, with Madras a close
third with 39 points.
Bend won the 880-yard race,
finished second In the 440-vard
and 2M0-yard relays and took
threo third places in the 8110-
yard relay, 300-yard hurdles and
medley.
Eighth graders edged Madras
02-51, with Redmond scoring 17
points.
The Bend eighth grade squad
won the 2010-yard relay race and
the 300-yard hurdles relays. Rend
finished second In the 44iiyard re
lay, 880-yard relay and In the
medley.
The Caeoaderj toek three third
places In the 2t'-lo-yard relay.
M-yH rainy and ia the med
ley. H Mi evenAs ware held.
Arroyo plactd
on diabd Hit
NEW YORK (LTD - Luis Ar
royo, ralod baseball's lo.o.ng re
lief pitcher last season, has boon
placed on the disabled list by the
New York Yankees because of a
sore elbow and Tex Clevoneor
h)been recalled from Richmond
of the International League to re
place him.
Drink
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OUT AT SECOND Jackie Baird, Pendleton third baseman, is
forced out at second by Prineville second baseman Mike Barrow
in this action shot from Prinaville-Pendleton playoff game
Saturday, Note loose bag, center of controversy a moment
later when a Pendleton player was ruled safe. Pendleton took
Major league
standings
By United Prats International
American League
W.
Pet.
Cleveland
New York
Minnesota
Los Angeles
Chicago
Baltimore
Detroit
Kansas City
Boston
21
20
22
18
20
18
16
17
13
.618
.60S
.595
.545
.526
.514
.485
.447
.382
Washington
.273 1114
Monday Night's Results
Cleveland 10 Baltimore 7
Kansas City 10 Boston 4
Detroit 7 Chicago 3
Minnesota 5 Washington 3
(Only games scheduled)
Tuesday's Probable Pitchers
Kansas City at Boston Wick-
orsham (3-1) vs. Cisco (3-3).
Los Angeles at New York
(night) Chance (1-3) vs. Ford
(3-31.
Minnesota at Washington
(night) Lee (3-2) vs. McClain
(0-4).
Baltimore at Cleveland (night)
Pappas (4-2) vs. Donovan (7-0).
Wednesday s Games
Kansas City at New York
Minnesota at Boston, night
Cleveland at Chicago, night
Detroit at Baltimore, night
Los Angeles at Washington, night
National League
W.
Pet.
GB
San Francisco
St. Louis
Los Angeles
Cincinnati
28
22
24
19
18
16
15
14
12
12
.700
.629
.615
.559
.529
Pittsburgh
Milwaukee
.432 10',i
.429 1014
.378 12 '4
.375 12
.324 14V4
Philadelphia
Houston
New York
Chicago
Monday Night's Results
Pittsburgh 8 Chicago 4
St. Louis 4 Philadelphia 1
Houston 3 New York 3
Los Angeles 8 San Francisco 1
Cincinnati at Milwaukee, ppd rain
Tuesday's Probable Pitchars
Chicago at Pittsburgh (night)
Cnrdwell (OA) vs. Friend (4-4'
Cincinnati at Milwaukee (night)
O'Toole (3-5) vs. Shaw (4-1 .
Philadelphia at St. Ixiuls (night)
Mclish (4-0) vs. Gibson (4-2.
New York at Houston (night)
Craig (2-4) vs. Farrell (3-3).
San Francisco at Los Angeles
(nlqhU-Snnford (4-3) vs. Drys
dalo (5-3 or Williams (2-1).
Wednaiday'i Gamtt
Chicago at Milwaukee, night
Pittsburgh at St. Louis, night
Cincinnati at Houston, night
Now York at Los Angeles, nlcht
Philadelphia at fan Fran., night
Little League,
ump meets set
An umps clinic for all interest
ed in umpiring baseball games
will he held 8 p.m. daylight time
Wednesday at tho Harmon Hobby
limine, city recreation depart
ment officials announced today.
Also scheduled this week is a
Little league board meeting S
o'clock daylight time Thursday
owning, also at Harmon.
All coaches aro asked to at
tend, since caps and schedules
will at' given out at this lime.
HOISTS
and JACKS
BEND
RENTS
HIGHWAY 97 SOUTH
Juit beyond
Bob't Truck Strvice
EV 2-9906
Prep ramblings .
Weather cold, tratksters hot
By Bill Thompson
Bulletin Staff Writer
It looked like anything but a
day for setting records as Inter
mountain Conference track and
field qualifiers readied for the dis
trict 7 A-l meet at The Dalles
last Saturday afternoon.
The sky was dull and overcast.
The wind, blowing hard from
Spring handicap
pairings set
Bend Golf Club pairings for the
second round of the women's
spring handicap play were an
nounced today. Members should
start play as soon as possible.
They are as follows:
Nine-hole, championship flight:
Mrs. A. E. Wiley and Mrs. Rich
ard Kerr; Mrs. Loyde Blaklcy
and Mrs. Glenn Gregg; Mrs. Lar
ry West and Mrs. W. A. Lackaff;
Mrs. R. P. Robinson and Mrs.
Jack Halbrook.
Nine-hole, first flight: Mrs.
Vcrn Prodchl and Mrs. Ted
Creighton; Mrs. Bradford Pease
and Mrs. A. O. Joslin; Mrs. Dun
can McKay and Mrs. C. L. Necl;
Mrs. Frank Loggan and Mrs. 11.
R. Bostclman.
Eighteen hole, championship
flight: Mrs. C. W. McDowell and
Mrs. Don Baglcy; Mrs. Everett
Olson and Mrs. Vern White; Mrs.
Robert Cutter and Mrs. Chet
Slimkosky; Mrs. Arthur Stipe and
Mrs. C. F. Coryell.
Eighteen-hole, first flight: Mrs.
Gordon Randall and Mrs. Earl
Nelson; Mrs. F. J. Elliott and
Mrs. Don Thompson; Mrs.
Charles Rayeraft and Mrs. W. A.
Grimsley: Mrs. Jim Wood and
Mrs. Walter Bcrgcr.
Alvis leading
PCL hitters
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI' Max
Alvis. Salt Lake City, leads the
hitters and Zack Monroe. San Di
ego, tops the pitchers, according
to averages released today and
including Sunday s games.
Alvis has compiled a .318 bat
ling average to top tho regulars.
He also has the most hits with
46 and Is tied wilh teammate Hal
Jones for tho runs-batted-in lead
with 31.
Ken Wallers of San Diego tops
the sluggers wilh eight homers.
Monroe has won 5. lost 0. and
has an enmed-nin average of 1 62.
He has appeared in 15 games,
pitched 39 innings, walked only 9
nnd struck out 16.
Dirk Egan of Hawaii leads the
strike-out artisls with 46.
anng your
MACHINE & WELDING WORK
to tha best equipped shop in Central Oregonl
Specializing In Industrial
plant and sawmill
maintenance and repair
k Gears and Sprockets
made to order
T; Well-drill tools manufactured
and repaired
BENNETT'S MACHINE SHOP
1114 Roosevelt Ave.
Two blocks wait
both ends of twin bill 12-1 and 11-3 to win best-of-three dis
trict championship series. Bucks will host North Salem, district
8 A-l baseball champ, in single quarter-final game this Friday
at Pendleton.
. .
west to east, was almost bitter
cold. And the track, high above
the city center on the outskirts of
The Dalles, didn't look especially
fast.
But, three hours later, seven
Intermountain Conference records
and six district 7 A-l marks had
been shattered in an exciting
meet
Since the Intermountain Confer
ence was not formulated until
the fall of 1959, IC records are on
ly three years old. But district
7 A-l marks go clear back to 1910
when Peare of La Grande ran
the half mile in 2:02.
Pearo's 51-year-old district
mark was shattered when Bend
sophomore Herb Hickman ran the
880 in 2:00.5. Bend senior John
Cutter also broke this old mark of
2:02 with a clocking of 2:01.6.
The significant thing is that
twice down the backstretch they
had to buck a heavy wind.
Hickman also broke his IC rec
ord of 2:04 set as a freshman in
the district meet at Hermiston
last year.
It was probably the outstanding
feat on a day of outstanding
feats. For on a warm day, a fast
er track and minus that wind
plus some tougher competition
Hickman might have been sever
al seconds under two minutes flat
Pendleton's Chuck Blackley
broke the old IC and district 7
A-l pole vault mark of 11-10 sot
by Harold Still of Bend and Gary
Romine of Redmond last year
when he went 124. But he al
most didn't make it to the state
meet.
Five boys had tied at 11-8, but
Baker's Orin Lay and La
Grande's Jim Haydock had few
er number of misses.
The standards were upped to 12
feet. Nobody made it on their
first two tries.
Lay. Haydock and Hermlston's
Ken Phillips also missed on their
third try and were eliminated.
Bend's Bill Tye, using tha fibre
glass pole that had carried him
to 12 feet in the subdistrict meet
the week previously at the same
track, had one more jump. So did
Blackley. But if they both miss
ed, the spots in the state meet
would go to Lay and Haydock on
the basis of fewer misses at Uie
lower heights.
Blackley went first His fibre
glass pole bent way back as he
easily cleared the 12-Ioot stand
ard for new IC and district 7 A-l
marks.
Then it was Tye's turn. He too
got well over tha 12-foot mark,
but brushed the bar on his way
down.
Blackley, elated by his success,
cleared 12-8 on his first try. He
missed throe tries at 13 feet, then
watched Lay and Haydock battle
it out for the second spot in Uie
siale meet
Phone EV 2-3762
of Skyline Drive In
The other records were set
when Pendleton's Curt Thome ran
the 120-yard high hurdles in a
wind-aided : 14.8, breaking his
wind-aided :14.9 clocking set at
Hermiston last year.
His time also topped the 7 A-l
mark of :15 flat held by three La
Grande runners Fred Goodwin
(1958), Bill West (1951) and O.
Zimmerman (1950). But their
marks will 6tay in the record book
on the basis that Thome's time
was wind aided.
Back in 1935 Baker of La
Grande had run the mile in 4:37.5.
It stood as a record until Hermis
ton's Ralph Bennion churned it in
4:36.4 Saturday. Again consider
ing tho strong wind down the
backstretch, it was quite a per
formance. Bennion and the new: three fin
ishers also broke the IC record of
4:39.8 set by Wayne McBride of
The Dalles last year.
Another record was shattered
when Pendleton's Dave Walker
ran the 440 in :51.5 breaking
the old IC mark of :52.2 set by
Baker's Mike Welter last year and
also toppling tire 22-year-old dis
trict 7 A-l mark of :51.5 fashion
ed by Ray of Nyssa back in 1940.
Pendleton's speedy 80-yard re
lay team, timed in 1:32.5, broke
both the IC mark (Pendleton,
1961. 1:34.6) and the 7 A-l mark
(Nyssa, 1949, 1:34).
That took care of the six 7 A-l
marks broken, but Pendleton's
Bob Thome got his name in Uie
IC record books with a 2l-3'i
broad jump toppling the old IC
record of 20-11 set by Red
mond's Bob Durfee in 1961.
Seven new Intermountain Con
ference records. Six new district
7 A-l marks. It was quite a day.
When
you grow
up in
the West...
you grow
up to
Hermitae!
8 W""" 1
$465
m ituiuu ilium cc..-i:M:it.
Hot Springs golf
king humbled
in Open prelim
NEW YORK (UPI) Al Johns
ton of Montreal can tell you now
why they call golf a "humbling
game."
On Sunday the young Canadian
pro won the Hot Springs Open
and a $2,800 jackpot. On the same
course Monday he flunked his
preliminary test while trying to
qualify for the U.S. Open cham
pionship at Oakmont, Pa., June
14-16.
Johnston was the No. 1 casual
ty among more than 2,000 golfers
who swarmed over the fairways
In 54 cities Monday in the first
of two elimination rounds to de
termine the starling field for the
Open.
A total of 359 passed their first
tests and another 84 will qualify
today for the second series in 13
cities June 4-5. New York area
golfers will shoot for 47 places,
26 will qualify at Chicago, where
rains cancelled the second rounds
Monday, 10 will make it at the
rain-delayed trial in Indianapolis
and there's a playoff for the last
remaining spot at Denver.
Trials In June
Counting nine who qualified at
Oakland, Calif., on Friday, there
will be 452 first-round survivors.
Then in the early June sectional
trials, they'll be joined by 45
other old pros like Sam Snead,
Ben Hogan and Cary Middlecoff
in a scramble for 131 starting po
sitions at Oakmont Nineteen
others, including Gene Littler, Ar
nold Palmer, Gary Player and
Jerry Barber, were exempt from
both qualifying tests.
Bob Shields, a hot-shooting pro
from Quincy, HI., led the nation
Monday with a sizzling 63-66129
at Springfield, 111., for a four-shot
margin over Bob Zimmerman, 21-year-old
Dayton, Ohio, pro, who
had 68-65133 at Cincinnati.
Joe Moore of San Antonio, Tex.,
and Jim Campbell of Hobbs,
N.M., had 135s Moore scoring at
Houston and Campbell in the
tough section at Hot Springs,
Ark., where most of the touring
pros including Johnston tried
to qualify.
Has Two Eagles
Johnston missed by two shots
with a 117 despite posting eagles
on the 18th hole of each round.
Marty Furgol. a tournament vet
eran, had to withdraw because of
a back ailment but otherwise
most of the name players made
the grade.
Safely in at Hot Springs were
a total of 26, including Moon Mul
lins, South Africa's Harold Hen
ning and Bobby Verwey, Austral
la's Bruce Crampton, Bruce Dev
lin and Bill Dunk, Butch Baird .
and George Bayer.
At Indianapolis, where rain
washed out most of the second
rounds, Joe Campbell was low
among the 36-hole finishers with
66-70136.
Mack Main led with 136 at Bur
lington, N.C., where vctenin ama
teur Billy Joe Patton just made
it as the last of eight qualifiers.
Stan Leonard was among the Se
attle qualifiers and Frank Strana
han led at Phoenix.
Labron Harris Sr. and Jr. made
it at Oklahoma City and Robert
T. Jones 111 led the Albany sec
tion. Among those who missed were
Jug McSpaden at Kansas City,
Jimmy McHale at Philadelphia,
former major league pitcher Lou
Kretlow at Oklahoma City, Rex
Baxter and Jerry Steelsmlth at
Hot Springs, and Skip Alexander
at Tampa.
$905
u. i.uw r.ttci, ti nnt