The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, July 13, 1963, Page 5, Image 5

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    NIclclaus loses touch
tir
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BACKHAND Bend
education instructor Tom Winbigler gives a few pointers to
thres of the 36 young boys and girls registered in the city's
summer tennis program. Leslie Winbigler, left, Vickie Johnson
and Mark Hughes go through drills on the proper method of
Bombers 4, Angels 3
Berra's homer ups
Yanks lead to five
By Fred Down
UPI Staff Writer
Yogi Berra is doing it from
memory but what a memory!
He's 38 years old and on his last
legs as an active player but he's
still the pride of the modern New
York Yankees when the team is
in need. Like when $172,000 worth
of sluggers like Mickey Mantle
and Roger Maris are out of the
lineup.
Berra stepped in Friday night
to show the young Yankee lions
how the old pros do it when he
exploded a three-run homer off
Ken BcBride that produced a 4-3
victory over the Los Angeles An
gels and boosted their American
League lead to 5" games.
It was Yogi's fifth homer of the
season and the 355th of his career
and it enabled Ralph Terry to
square his record at 9-9. It also
sent the Angels down to their 10th
straight loss and suggested to
manager Bill Rigney that jumping
off the nearest bridge might be
preferable to pitching to Yogi
with runners aboard and a game
Two
more years
Reds sign Hutch to
! CINCINNATI, Ohio (UPI) -Hatchet-faced
Fred Hutchinson,
armed with his second two-year
contract to manage the Cincinna
ti Reds, hoped today for a repeat
of the 1961 season -when he and
the Reds brought home the Na
tional League pennant.
'Hutchinson, 43, signed a two-
Storey, Moe in
PNGA finals
SPOKANE. Wash. (UPI) An
eastern and a western Washington
golfer teed off today for the men's
championship of Uie Pacific
Northwest Golf Association tour
nament being played here.
They were Mahlon Moe, Spo
kane, and Ken Storey. Seattle.
Friday Moe ba.ttled with Bob
Ihlanfeldt, Seattle, in the semi
finals, beating him seven and six.
Ken Storey outplayed his son
Tom, defeating him three and
two.
For the Storeys it was the sec
ond time they faced each other
in the semifinal contest. In 1961
at the Overtake Golf course at
Believue, father Ken won over
son -Tom one np. He lost in the
finals. '
In the women's competition at
the Manito Golf and Country Club,
Bob Ihlanfeldt's wife, Edean. had
better day than he did. She de
feated Sue Jennett, Oswego, Ore.,
four and three.
Facing Mrs. Ihlanfeldt will be
Karen Ford. Seattle. Miss Ford
gained her finals berth by defeat
ing Patty Lesser Harbottle, one
time women's amateur titleholder.
Tacoma, in a down to the wire
match. Miss Ford was one up for
the 36 boles.
For FAST RESULTS
Advertise in The Bulletin
Classified
Senior High School physical
to be won.
Berra's homer came in the sixth
inning with two out and Bobby
Richardson and Tom Tresh
aboard. Until then the young
Yankees had been mesmerized by
McBride, who had beaten them
six straight times and held them
to two singles in this game.
The Angels rallied for two runs
in the last of the ninth but relief
pitcher Hal Rcniff hung on to pre
serve the Yankees' third straight
win and their 11th In their last
14 times. '
The Beston Red Sox edged the
Minnesota Twins, 3-2, in 12 In
nings. The Detroit Tigers shaded
the Chicago White Sox, 7-6, also
in 12 innings, and the Baltimore
Orioles topped the Washington
Senators, 4-3, in other AL action.
Cleveland at Kansas City was
rained out.
In the National League, Los An
geles defeated New York, 6-0,
Philadelphia topped San Francis
co, 7-5, Pittsburgh nipped Hous
ton, 2-1, Chicago beat Cincinnati,
Will
year contract on Aug. 23, 1961,
and his Reds responded with the
pennant, the first baseball cham
pionship in Cincinnati in two dec
ades. Maybe General Manager Wil
liam O. DeWitt remembered that
Friday when he called a news
Archer, Salim
fight fonight
NEW YORK UPI Rangy,
brown-haired Joey Archer of New
York continues his campaign for
an eventual shot at the middle
weight crown tonight in a nation
ally televised fight with Farid Sa
lim of Argentina.
Archer, 25, seeks his sixth
straight victory in their 10-round-er
at Madison Square Garden.
Ranked sixth among 160-pound
contenders, Irish Joey hopes that
an impressive victory over the
26-year-old Argentine medical stu
dent may boost him into consid'
eration as a challenger.
Joey is favored at 2-1 over slen
der, black-haired rand ol balta
Argentina.
Each has 35 victories but Salim
is unranked because many of his
ODDonents were comparatively un
knowns. Also Salim sullerea tnree
defeats and was held to one draw
in his 39 bouts. Archer had only
one loss in his 36 fights.
Neither ever was stopped. Sa
lim scored 14 knockouts; Archer,
only seven.
EMERSON, OSUNA CLASH
EDGB ASTON. England (LTD !
Roy Emerson of Australia and
Southern Cal's Rafael Osuna of
Mexico clash today in the final
round of men's singles in the
Midland Counties Lawn Tennis I
championships. Emerson defeated !
Mike Sanester of Britain and j
Osuna eliminated Manuel Santana i
..L ,1m final
executing a backhand return in a recent session in the play
yard at St. Francis School. Persons interested in registering for
the program may do so Mondays, Wednesdays or Fridays
between 9 and 1 1 :30 a.m. at the junior high school tennis
courts.
4-1, and St. Louis won over Mil
waukee, 5-3.
"Monster" Dick Radatz shut
out the Twins for the final four
innings and won his 10th game of
the season when Carl Yastrzemski
homered off Ray Moore in the
Red Sox' 12th. Rich Rollins and
Harmon Killebrew homered for
the Twins. The win moved the
Red Sox past the White Sox into
second place.
The Tigers scored their 12-in-ning
decision over the White Sox
when Rocky Colavito doubled and
scored on a single by Bill Free
han. Terry Fox, who shut out the
White Sox on two hits lor tne
last four innings, received credit
for his fourth win while Jim Bros
nan suffored his fifth loss. Ron
Hansen, Pete Ward and Jim Lan
dis homered for the White Sox.
Johnny Orsino's two-run ninth
inning homer gave the Orioles
their eighth straight win over the
Senators and relief pitcher Wes
Stock his seventh victory of the
season without a loss. Don Lock
homered for the Senators.
history repeat?
new pact
conference to announce that Hut
chinson had signed another two
year pact for the 1964 and 1965
seasons.
DeWitt said Hutchinson was
signed to set aside all doubts that
the fiery manager would return
as field boss next year..
'We made the announcement at
this time when so many other
managers are being fired or find
ing themselves in disfavor with
the fans and front office," De-
Witt told the hastily called gath
ering of newsmen.
The news conference was called
just before the Reds took the field
against the Chicago Cubs Friday
night and came as a surprise to
most observers, since Hutcmn-
son's job was not regarded as be
ing in danger.
Hutchinson said he was "real
happy" over the contract although
he admitted he received no raise
in pay. "I'm making enough,"
said.
Hutchinson became manager of
the Reds July 8, 1959, succeed
ing Mayo Smith, who was fired.
Although Hutch was not original
ly hired by DeWitt, the two men
have hit it off since DeWitt took
over front office operations be
fore the 1961 season. -
Hutchinson took over a seventh
place club in 1959 and finished in
a tie for fifth place that season
In 1961. the Reds were tagged for
another second division finish but
they surprised everybody in win
ning the pennant.
Last season, the Reds did al
most as well, winding up in third
place with a 98-64 record, com
pared to a 93-61 mark in the pen
nant-winning 1961 campaign.
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Candy Spots
must win
in American
CHICAGO (UPI)-Candy Spots,
beaten only three times In his
11-race career, gets a chance for
revenge against one of his con
querors in the $100,000 added
American Derby today, and he
needs a win to remain in conten
tion for three-year-old honors.
Candy Spots, owned by Rex C.
Ellsworth of California, has lost
only in the Kentucky Derby, to
Chatcaugay and Never Bend, in
the Belmont, to Chateaugay, and
in the Chicagoan, to Elmendorf
Farm's B. Major, in his two years
of competition.
Today he will run against B.
Major and four other challengers
in the mile and one quarter stake
tor three-year-olds, carrying top
weight of 126 pounds with jockey
Willie Shoemaker, his rider in
every start so far, aboard.
B. Major, winner by a neck in
the mile and an eighth Chicago
an when he carried 117 pounds,
will tote 123 pounds for this out
ing with jockey Ray Broussard
up.
Other challengers were William
Miller's Crowdus and Fred W.
Hooper's Sky Gem, both with 114
pounds, and Theodore D. Buhl's
Lemon Twist and River Divide
Farm's Cosmic Tip, each with 117
pounds.
Pennel named
NEW YORK (UPD-John Pen
nel of Northeast Louisiana State
Thursday was named by the Na-
lonal Amateur Athletic Union to
replace injured Brian Sternberg
as a pole vaulter on the U.S.
track and field team that will
compete in Europe later this
month.
Pennel has cleared lo feet 3
inches, a height surpassed this
year only by Sternberg, the 16-8
University of Washington vaulter
who is partially paralyzed as the
result of a trampoline accident
last week.
The role of substitute for Stern
berg was offered first to Ron
Morris, who finished third in the
National AAU championships.
Morris is now in Finland and de
clined, the AAU said.
Pennel now is competing In
England. He will join the U.S.
team there and go on to Moscow
for the meet against Russia July
20-21.
GRAND OPENING!
BILL'S STANDARD STATION
NEXT TO THE A&W DRIVE IN
PRINEVILLE
11
OPEN e A.M.
TILL MIDNIGHT
Rodgers,
LATHAM ST. A N N E S, Eng
land (liPl) Lefthander Bob
Charles of New Zealand and cocky
Phil Rodgers of La Jolla, Calif.,
a Mutt and Jeff twosome, teed off
today in a 36-hole playoff for the
British Open golf championship.
Both happily accepted the posi
tion with neither making excuses
for putts that didn't drop or
1 drives that went astray on the
final wind Friday which lied
them for the lead at 277 each.
They teed off this morning at 9
a.m. (4 a.m. EDT) in a 36-hole
playoff with sudden death there
after in the event thev still are
tied.
Rodgers, a chunky 5-8 ex-Marine
with sandy hair and a wise
cracking manner said "I'm not
The Bulletin, Saturday,
k JUL s ' -v "s -1
aWA-tA-totAvA w Avv.i.,-vJ .ittiMaafca -AAjga.-s y--'jata , f iff fifth Stii ri
The Scoreboard
Major leagues
By United Press International
National League
W L Pet. CB
Los Angeles 53 33 .616
San Francisco 49 39 .537 S
St. Louis 48 39 .552 5'4
Chicago 47 39 .547 6
Cincinnati 47 42 .528 7'4
Milwaukee 44 42 .512 9
Pittsburgh 43 43 .500 10
Philadelphia 42 45 .483 HVi
Houston 34 56 .378 21
New York 29 58 .333 2414
American League
W L Pet. GB
New York 52 31 .627
Boston 47 37 .560 514
Chicago 48 39 .552 6
Baltimore 49 40 .551 6
Cleveland 45 40 .529 8
Minnesota 45 41 .523 8',4
Los Angeles 41 48 .461 14
Kansas City 36 47 .434 16
Detroit 36 48 .429 IGVi
Washington 30 58 .341 24'A
Major leaders
By United Press International
National League
Player & Club G. AB P.. H. Pet.
T.Davis, LA 73 268 30 88 .328
Santo, Chi 86 342 42 109 .319
White, StL 87 358 64 114 .318
Groat, St.L 87 353 51 112 .317
Clcmente, Pitt 77 294 46 92 .313
Wills, LA 65 264 43, 82 .311
H.Aaron, Mil 85 333 63 103 .309
Ramos 8-5 favorite to dump
King and retain world title
MEXICO CITY (UPI) -World
featherweight champion Ultiminio
(Sugar) Ramos puts his title on
the line for the first time tonight
against Rafiu King of Nigeria in a
scheduled 15-round bout for which
the champion is a strong favorite.
The odds have fluctuated from
2 to 1 to 8 to 5 that Ramos, who
gained a split decision over King
in Paris last year, wul polish ott
the Nigerian in less than the 15
scheduled rounds. Ramos, himself.
is predicting he will win inside of
eight rounds.
Ramos won the title on March
11, 1963 when he stopped Dnvey
Moore on a TKO in the 10th.
Moore died shortly thereafter. It
was Ramos' 25th knockout and it
marked the second time that an
opponent had lost his life in a
Ex-Beaver Bates
ST. LOUIS UPI The St.
Louis football Cardinals Thursday
announced the signing of three
linebackers, Dale Meinert, Bill
Koman and Ted Bates. All three
were reported In excellent shape
after 1962 injuries.
The 2&-year-old Meinert, in his
sixth year with the Cardinals, suf
fered knee injury and missed nine
games last season.
The 28-year-old Koman, In his
eighth National Football League
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Charles
conipluining. (Jack) Nicklaus had
his chance and blew it, so we are
both lucky to be here I guess."
Charles, a contrasting 6-feet-2,
agreed he, too. was happy and
had no regrets.
"There were several occasions
on which I thought I'd lost out,"
he said.
Gained Two Srraktt
Rodgers gained two shots on
Charles in their head-to-head duel
in the second of Friday's two
rounds to gain the tie. He shot a
one-under-par 34-35-69 to Charles'
35-36-71.
Nicklaus, the Masters champion
from Columbus, Ohio, was the
leader with nine holes left to
play but blew himself right out
of the running when he bogeyed
July 13, 1963
Boyer, StL 84 328 39 100 .305
Pinson, Cin 89 356 50 108 .303
Williams, Chi 86 330 50 100 .303
American League
Ystrzmski, Bos 80 311 53 104 .334
Wagner, LA 84 315
46 103 .327
Malzone, Bos 84 330 38 106 .321
Kaline, Dot 81 311 53 99 .318
Rollins, Minn 73 263 38 83 .316
Davalillo, Cle 52 214 32 65 .304
Pearson, LA 82 317 44 95 .300
Robinson, Chi 84 310 44 93 .300
Maris, NY 61 227 36 66 .291
Home Runs
National League McCovey, Gi
ants 26; A. Aaron, Braves 25;
Cepeda, Giants 17; Mays, Giants,
and Banks, Cubs both 16.
American League Allison,
Twins 22; Wagner, Angels 20; Ma
ris, Yanks 19; Stuart, Red Sox 19;
Killebrew, Twins 18.
Runs Batted In
National League H. Aaron,
Braves 66; White, Cards 62: San
to, Cubs 62; McCovey, Giants 58;
Boyer, Cards 55.
American League Wagner, An
gels 59; Allison, Twins 59; Kaline,
Tigers 57; Stuart, Red Sox 55;
Malzone, Red Sox 54.
Pitching
National League Koufax, Dodg
ers 15-3; Maloney, Reds 14-3;
Perranoski, Dodgers 9-2; McBean
Pirates 8-2; Marichal, Giants 14-4.
American League Radatz, Red
Sox 10-1; Ford, Yanks 14-3; Bou-
ton, Yanks 11-4; Plzarro, White
Sox 11-4; Barber, Orioles 12-5.
fight with the adopted son of
Mexico.
On Nov. 8, 1958, before Ramos
had formally become a pro, Jose
Blanco died in Havana, Cuba,
after an eighth-round knockout by
Sugar. Ramos is Cuban-born but
fights out of Mexico these days.
Altogether, Ramos has won 35
fights and lost only one when he
was disqualified in a bout against
Mexico's Rafael Camacho on Dec.
13, 1961.
King's record is hardly less im
pressive. He has won 23 fights by
knockouts and 11 by decisions.
Rafiu has had two draws and lost
four bouts all by decision. When
he lost to Ramos In Paris they
were fighting for Uie right to
meet Moore for the titlo.
inks Card pact
season, his fifth with the Cardi
nals, underwent knee surgery.
Bates, former Oregon State
tackle, was the Cardinals fifth
draft choice in 1959. He too suf
fered a hairline fracture In the
Big Red's second game last sea
son, but returned to action later.
The AAU said no replacement
would be named for hammer-
throw champion Hal Connolly who
withdrew Wednesday because of a
chronic back injury.
tie in British open
the last two holes. Even pars
would have given him the title
outright. As it was, he finished
third with a 72-hole total of 278.
The last title playoff was in
1958 when Australia's Peter Thom
son defeated Dave Thomas of
Wales.
Rodjjers wound up with 67-68-73-69277
and Charles finished at
68-72-66-71-277. That's three un
der par for the Royal Lytham
St. Annes 6.757-yard layout.
Won Houston Classic
Charles' only big win has been
in the Houston Classic this year.
There is more at stake today than
the $4,200 first prize and the
British title. The winner today
will automatically qualify for the
World Series of Golf at Akron,
Temperature near
Bay area
dominate
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UPI) -Bobby
Lunn and Steve Opper
man, two San Francisco area
youngsters with the poise of vet
erans, battle today for their first
taste of fame in the finals of the
National Public Links golf tour
nament. They meet over the 36-hole
route on Uie sun-baked Hag
gin Oaks Golf Course, with the
temperature expected to be near
Uie 100 mark again.
They vanquished stubborn foes
Friday in the broiling sun with
birdie-sprinkled filial holes to end
the matches.
"I was hoping that Bobby would
win his match," said Opperman
after he had disposed of 49-year-old
Dante (Dan) Viclni of Otta
wa, 111., 4 and 3. "It should be a
good mutch."
"But I'm glad to get past that
Vicini. What a competitor he is."
Weird plays
haunt Giants
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) The
San Francisco Giants, who have
had some weirdies in the past few
days, had another one Friday.
They made four assists without
a putout against the Philadelphia
Phillies.
It happened during a four-run
first inning by the p'hils.
Tony Taylor opened with a
single and went to third on a
single by Johnny Callison. Short
stop Jose Pagan cut off the
throw from right fielder Harvey
Kucnn and trapped Callison be
tween first and second.
A rundown started. Paean
threw to Orlando Cepeda. who
tossed to Chuck Hllle.-, who re
turned the throw to Cepeda. But
then Callison and Hitler collided
and an obstruction error was
charged against Hillcr, with Cal
lison permitted to take second.
Since Uie throws during the run
down were faultless, the players
making them received credit for
assists regardless of the fact that
Callison was not put out.
SADDER BUT WISER
NEW YORK (UPD-Joe Beck
er, first base coach of the Los
Angeles Dodgers, was a little sad
der but wiser today as the result
of a S75 fine and a three-day sus
pension levied by National League
President Warren Giles Friday
night. The reason for the action
was that Becker brushed against
umpire Lee Wcycr In an argu
ment Thursday night.
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Ohio In September with much
bigger monetary rewards.
Nicklaus, as Masters champ,
and Julius Boras, the U.S. Open
champ already have qualified.
The World Series field will be
rounded out by the British Open
winner and the PGA champ. The
PGA championship will be decid
ed at Dallas, Tex., next week.
Kel Nagle of Australia, tha
19C0 British Open champion, fin
ished fourth with 283 and Thom
son, a four-time winner of this
event, was fifth at 285.
Defending champion Arnold
Palmer, never under par on any
round, finished at 294, far back
in the pack of 47 qualifiers for
the last 36 holes.
100
swingers
publinks
Lunn, son of a San Francisco
policeman, had even more trouble
disposing of Jerry Yuke, a Chi
nese youth playing his home
course. The final score on this
one was 3 and 1.
But it was Vicini who was a
hero in defeat. Every old-timer in
the gallery was rooting for him
as time and again he fought
back after being two or three
down. Opperman, a 21-year-old
golf course shop assistant, was
out-driving him from 30 to 70
yards on nearly every hole.
Vicini didn't have that kind of
game. But he had a fighting
heart.
Lunn, 18 and just out of high
school, played an up-and-down
match with Yuke.
The six-footer was one-up at the
end of the morning round. Yuke
evened it on the 19th hole and
then they took turns winning holes
until the 31st.
The winner of the match today
automatically gets an invitation
to play in tne National Amateur
this fall.
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