9 n
IHLK.SUAV, IH lllltLII 3, l'lci.I
MUJfOKU .MAIL fRlbt.Nt,, MhUHJHD, OHLUO.N
n v r w i
la s uoagers instead or ranKees w
Had the Man Who Was Too Much
m s
I ' I
; 7' rr .Jnii!?! ""fjr
j
i ; linn,'"- . - f
few,' : - Sri'f L-
THREE-RUN HOMER This diagrammed gen- World Scries yesterday in Yankee Stadium at
eral view traces the flight of the three-run New York. Bill Skowron and Dick Tracewski
homer hit into the right field stands by Johnny precede Roseboro around the bases. The Dodg-
Roseboro of the Los Angeles Dodgers in the ers won 5-2. ( UPI )
second inning of the first game of the baseball
Sport
Parade
NEW YORK (UPI) Fralcy's
follies and the week end football
"winners" along wilh some J
reflections from the W o r 1 d
Series. j
Game of Ihc Week
Navy over Michigan This '
one sho",ld give a real line on !
how Navy stacks up among Ihc
big fellows and from Ihis corn
er it looks as if Roger Staubach
will make the winning differ
ence. The East
Pcnn Stale over Rice The
Series opener marked Maury
Wills' 31st birthday.
Pitt over California Person
ally he wasn't too hapy.
Syracuse over Holy Cross
None for five.
Princeton over Columbia But
wait'll he reaches first.
Also: Yale over Brown, Dart
mouth over Pcnn, Cornell over
Lehigh, Delaware over Gettys
burg, Buffalo over Villanova,
Colgate over Boston U.. Rutgers
over Harvard, Buekncll over
Massachusetts and Temple over
Connecticut.
Midwest
Army over Minnesota The
blucplate special.
Northwestern over Illinois
Hot dogs sold like hoi cakes.
Noire Dame over Purdue
Koufax worried 'cm all the way.
Ohio Slale over Indiana
Wciners taste heller Mian fin
gernails. Also: Boston College over Do-
troit, Kansas Stale over Colora
do, Nebraska over Iowa Stale,
Missouri over Idaho, Cincinnati
over Xavier, Ohio U. over Kent
State and Bowling Green o v e r
Dayton.
The West
Washington over Idaho Clete
tl.KS INlllMIIIAl.
Overhead Door il.v.ti l). C.cotK'1
Taul SO:!. Whitney Olds t!-li 4.
All Pollard Ml.
Lively Kive ti;l-7i I, Boh Sutton
.Mill. CJypus l7-Kii 3, Llod Huston
trj
Kofiap (Kl-7i 3, Maiv l.cmciuv
.11(4; NiuuiHS Equip. t.ri-l."it 1. if
Tavlor 4li4
Spoilers Mll-Hi 1. Am llaumatt
57!l; Golioys iU-!li (1, Ken lliown
Hi
Fluhlers i Ill-Ill I. Everett Clench
Sltl; Sea Dons t HI-1 Mi .1 H.urv
Jewell SI3
Tillers ill-Ill 4. Don Weill .1311
Allllutors 14-11,1 (I. Al l.cMian!
Marv Leinclux 'Jiil
niniiliam Norm
Hi.
-Inn i'iiii
Ncalluiiiicr KMPDii: i. i:ta n
Stones TV Scivtce llj-li I.
Jovce KnuiB 4711. Fills Si.ilood i4
Lii II. Lauiu Uoes 41111
Albers Feed K Funn UMi 2.
Marie Tcimulil 4711 Wc.-.tcin Thnlt
Uruu iH-Kl 2. Esther niton) 417
(Ink fliove Service n llo-
bella 'I'lavls. Cascade Spoils M.t
rlna ill-Mil 4. Hcttv Noniin .11"
Nil-Wav Cleaners ,'1-7, I Mcl
ba .lenleil 4t,l. tllson Mai' Sales
7-!ll 3. Helen Dev llio
Hell 'I'.n lor Insoi.iuie ill'.-7'.i
4. I'ckHV MelsPd .'i-'O Inltcd
Meat iii'.PI'i u. Sliitlcv Noilh
4ti7
lleltv Noruin 201, .l"c- IMd
rock 1114 Peno Mclsted 1113 Hen
Taylor Insulancc 1430
MA.IOIU i"M: st n ri ii
So Oirculi Itopliv ,1.,. I' I
Wanda lloolh .MM. t'l.i-.lc Sludlo
18-Hi II Hcssie Scott 177
L.irrv's Line l'i il-.'" 11 f.cor
Cla Eans 4111. Dodson P,,um , 1
J2i 11, Elaim llroun .Ma
Brace Bull llll-li, 3 I'd Snulli
11113, Kims 1 10-ui 1 Del lliii.. i-
len 4117
(lleeon 'cnce
1 ,
K7n '." '
wicms iii-i'M 1 r.ui, ,
Itosv Ann 1
ton .1
Mi
'
I'at Dwver 22.1 W,
Jll. Mai lene Pe hm 2
gon Trophy 1H!1H
zi I'll wi i r. At. i i;
Mmlern 'I'lle Co i 10 2 II Sov.-n
sleekrv loo. Hoik's Avniiiiis l j
T,i I Kiln tone. 17:t
Watnscnlt i IJioks iH-i ,1 l.ulm
Snulli Medfirr! A : l".il.,n, c
(7-.1i 1, Ann Skceleis 4ao
lloKlle ItoaKlmn Kennels 7.", ,1
Lee Avellne 411 Al Aosucint
2-I0i I. Mererhlll (lesson, Mi U'l
Laiults Studio o-i,. :l 111 Hit
Ben If 4SI1: Medlord llood.i i...
B'i 1. flrnce lliintr, 4''T
Alice Fields 2li;i Klla Lone t'i2
Susan Meeker llm. Wain. colt i
1814
Sll hi X I I 11,1 1:
Sirs' Airihi
Trorell mid Mvrn
Tenor Sueno 1.1-11,
I .1 Kthel
Waeler 171
, Juice Hr.i-
vis 427
S I
Lnk Pautrlln (11-, 11 .Vila fia-
neU 4711: l.a Sriiolas l.l-l.ll 1
Jennie William. ;i7h
Blooper. ll..i 3. Ilonnle flreen
J f
By
OSCAR FRALEY
United Prcu
International
J
Boyor ain't no weak hitter.
Oregon Slate over Baylor He j
had a rare distinction. j
USC over Michigan State Got '
a hit off Koufax.
Stanford over UCLA And
was the only Yankee who didn't
strike out
Also: Washington State over
Arizona, Brigham Young over
Montana State, Utah State over
Slate over Colorado State.
The Snulli
San .lose Slate and Arizona
Stale Richardson fanned three
times.
Oregon over West Virginia
Tennessee over Mississippi
Kubek, Tresh and Mantle all
fanned twice.
Georgia over South Carolina
Maris, Howard and Pepitonc
each once.
Georgia Tech over LSU And
lliree pinch hitlers all took a
whiff.
Also: Alabama over Vander
hilt, Auburn over Kentucky,
man over W&M, Florida over
Richmond, Miami over Tulane,
Duke over Maryhnd, North
Carolina over Wake Forest,
Clemson over North Carolina
Slale, VIM over Virginia and
VMI over Davidson.
The Southwest
lexas over iKIalloma Male- j
I in: winim-i .- up nil- umw-
makers.
SMU over Air Force They
dropped Ihc Series lo pick 'cm.
Arkansas over TCU Down
ing is 7-5 over I'odres.
Mississipi over Houston I
still like the Dodgers in six.
Also: Texas Agios over Tex
as Tech, Memphis State over
Tulsa, Wesl Texas Slale over
North Texas State and Utah
over New Mexico.
Wetbacks (ll-.M a, Dolv HiikIics
31111. Sleepy ClIIIKOS (3-13) 2, Hul
da Somiuer 3IIII
Duv. Itll Ian , Ill-Ill '2. Helen Nlko
M in 437. Aiiukos 7-1); 2. Eunice
Mc.M.inaina 4J7
Nlla (losncll -14, Louise Swlll
cl Iff 17H. Helen Nlkiidvm Hill.
1)1, .fern I ,H.
STiiiiuii: leaiiii;
Weeks and (111 ilHi 3. Ted
Thompson 3311. Insili.ince Marl
lll-lli I. llov Snivel' 474
Walkers Tcsaco . 13.71 3. R
t'llsler 312. Di'lah 'I'lluher i-12i
I John Trulv 313
llnciic 'allc' Vcnduii; iI3-7i 4.
I'cd tiiiiunics 333. I'miiaiie tlrcli
! aids ,7-13i II, Ben Harm M7
Mall Tribune 112. Ill 4. Forrcsl
i l.lddell 33li, Sliiunnnds t'onsl i HI.
I 10' II, Bud Simmonds 33.'i.
Dental Lab Il2-Hi 3. Martn
i Slavrns 1113, Larry's Lineup ill-l2i
j I, Belle Thornton -p2
j Aineliean Veneer illi-llll 4. floc
rr t'omctl 330, llKon-L.uwer Llir.
i ul-7, II Danohl Hal 1111 472
Marvin Slacens 2211 Ccn
214. lioiuic V.illev Veiidini;
m',''
2111 1
Cross Country
Run Slated at
Canyonvillc
CANVUNVILLE-Kagle Point
ami Uogiie Hiver highs will ho
among schools participating Sal-
in 11, i, mi .1. in ine 1 uni uni -; 1 1-1- lavoriles among the held line. a(.v, Hmldv Homar, Tom Hen- countered that Lane's manager. ;
Ial1011.1l ( riiss t tiiintry nieel of of lot golfers al toilay's start of : it,n Overman, a halfback nessev, Hill Hunetla and Harrv I Pete Petroskev. never agreed
(.anynnvillo HiWe academy Ihc Sl.lHHi Whitemarsh Open, ml l , a a accident during Smith. The roll-offs for prize j to his terms. The terms were
A varsity race of about L'.'i the world's richest prnlessional (u, preseason practice period, .money begins Friday wilh the $10,000. but Parnassus said Pe
nnies and a tumor varsity run coif tournev Plaver hail one ,,, ,. ,,ic r,. Hi., fn-i limn finois" si.-o.-d for iin,l:iv nfioc. : ieosL-.v wnntori nvoenses n.iiri
iii'P'oMiii.iiciy 1, nines win
'',' h'1'1
.minus; .siiiuui.s cnilMUll ailllli;
wiiii ine itogiie league teams
and CUA are McKenie. Plulo-
math, Pleasant Hill and Itose-
burg Cue or two other schools
may nun Ihe field bv race time
Stanford Has
Fullback Cattle
STANFOHIl. Calif il'PD
.sharp battle (or fullback iiiV
oped at Slantonl today whei ISt
Indian roster went over (tiU
strength.
Coach John lialston had two
fullbacks on both H' drst and ,
... oui
T,iv lsnlLli unm nn t f..-
1),., V,,. ' '
!i(a)l ami Glenn ytei,ers M
k'..o UfiWVnon u.,ro l,i lhfl u. i
j
C
J
j
X
Mick Takes
His Hat Off
To Koufax
My .MILTON RKTIMAN
I NEW YORK (UPI) -Mickev
Mantle, always quick to give
credit where it's due, took his
hat off to Sandy Koufax today
as one of the finest pitchers he
has ever faced
"Everything I read about him
was true," Mantel marveled.
"And everything they told us
about him also was true. Whatta
pitcher! Still I don't feel loo bad
at what 1 did against him.
"He only fanned me twice.
Carl Erskine once got me four
limes."
Mantle not only ranks as a
prime judge of good pitchers but
also knows a long-ball hitter
when he sees one because some
of Ihe tape-measure blows he's
belted never have been dupli
cated in all baseball history.
The Dodger slugger he singled
out for special comment was
hulking, six-foot-seven Frank
Howard, who started Wednes
day's decisive four-run uprising
wilh an eye-popping liiO-fool
double otf Ihe center field wall
at Yankee Stadium.
Hard Hit Rail
"That was one of (he hardest
balls ever hit over my head,"
Mantle declared. "It wasn't ex
actly a high fly, either. That ball
was really traveling."
Koufax, ol course, was the
nmRm. )1;lyo. mosl nf tne Yan.
kces akpd ahll( nnrJ h(, (,.(
everyone's respect from Ralph
llouk right on down lo Ihe hat
boy. "You gotta give him credit,"
llouk said. "He's an extraordin
ary pitcher and he would have
to be to strike out 15 of our hit
ters like he did."
Then, as an afterthought, Ihe
Yankee in a n a g e r addetl,
"chances are we'll see him
again."
llouk didn't say it apprehen
sively; neither did he say it
happily.
"It's only one game," he said,
trying to rationalize. "We've
lost before and we've won a few,
too."
Tresh Wasn't Awed
t(ne of the few Yankee players
who wasn't completely overawed
by Koufax' record-breaking per
formance was sophomore Tom
lresli, who spoiled Sandy s shut
out wilh a two-run homer in the
eighth inning.
"I don't think he's going to
strike out 15 the next lime he
pitches against us," Tresh said.
"You gotta see any pitcher at
least once before you really
know anything about him."
Not that Tresh was crowing
about his homer or trying in any
way lo lake some of Ihe luster
tiff Koufax' performance
"Don t get me wrong
ho
said, "lies
a terrific nitcher
and he mav even beat us again
hut I simplv think we'll do bet- ready for the l.akeyiew game ; Woavervillp Calif and lost to m:lU'h ,'i','i champion Lar
ler the next lime out against ' ami is doubtful for the I Imenix , - os ..rtiz and Kenny Lane in
h,m." fracas on the following week """'-s 'in" K"-"p KIUI' l.os Angeles is off. according to
PI.AVI'.H SI'.TS ItKCOltl)
PHILADELPHIA il'l'l) South Freshman Eric Jensen is lick-: p,.s an(i ,. iwwiCI.s started World Hoxing Association Pres
Africa's Gary Player shot a eted for quarterback duties this (irinR ,ofav in tht, S;i;! .J00 SH). ! (cnt K(i Lassman announced
recurtl nine-under par h:i in a Friday wilh either Jim Itever- kane 0pon' uowlmg tournament ! Wednesday at Miami Beach the
tourney tune-up to join Jack . man or Anthony Mete at the h,,,.,, Among the noted pro 1 contract would be signed "mo- i
Nicklaus ami Arnold Palmer as halfback snot vacated bv Valen- h,. i..c ,.nt.,,-oH uo,-.. i.t, ' ... a n 1 a e ; 1 v " Uni Parnassus 1
eagle, nine untiles ami two no-
S''s i s'lli"g 11 new competi-
hm itnu si- icciiiii on v Clllies-
nay at ine v nitemarsli alley
Country club in a pro-amateur
tournament The previous roc-
onl on the O.miT vard, par T'J
ctiiirsr wis hil. svt in 1'Mti by
Joe Kirkwood, ,Jr
Yu Are Invited To See the
C.i, WORLD SERIES
? i 'Roomful of Color'
By Mnfltlnvox-UniwufcWW ky ny Olh.r Color TV
PURUCKER'S no ce
By FRED DOWN ,
NEW YORK (UPI) It was j
like taking candy from a baby j
as it has been so often in the .
World Series, only this time it;
was the New York Yankees who1
were reduced to utter helpless-'
ness. I
Because this time it was the
National league champion Los
Angeles Dodgers who had the
' superman" in their corner.
Back through the golden years
of the Yankees World Series
. history they've had the Babe
Kuth, the Lou Gehrig, the Joe
DiMaggio, the Allie Reynolds
and the Mickey Mantle who've
First Game Makes
Series Odds Even
NEW YORK (UPh Fact ana
figures on the lllfiS World Scries:
Today' name Second, at Yan
kee Stadium
First name score Dodgers 5,
Yankees 2
Series standing Dodgers lead
1 game to 0.
Series winner First team to
win four games.
Remaining g a ni e s Second at
Yankee stadium Thurs., Oct. 3;
third, fourth, and fifth (if neces
sary! at Dodger Stadium, Los An
geles, Sat., Oct. S, Sun., Oct. fi.
Won., Oet. 7; sixth and seventh
(if necessary at Yankee Stadium.
Wed, Oct. !l and Thurs., Oct. HJ.
Second game pitchers Dodgers:
Johnny Port res M-12t; Yankees:
Al Downing I13-5i.
Second, game nrids Yankees fa
vored. 7-.V
Series odds Even money
First game attendance 6!). 000.
First game financial figures
llecrtpfs S4!)n.2!).ll; p I a y e r s'
xhar e 73,5:JB 87; c I u bs and
leagues' share $41.(172.03.
NEW YORK (UPI) - In the
wake of Wednesday's stunning
5-2 triumph of the Los Angeles
Dodgers over the New York
Yankees in the first game of the
World Series, oddsmakers re
duced the series to even money.
They established the Yankees
as 7-5 favorites to win the sec
ond game, however.
The Dodgers carried a "we
told you so" altitude into to
day's second game while the
Yankees despite a healthy
respect for the fircballing Kou
fax were confident they would j of Bob Feller has a' pitcher so
draw even today and go on to I manhandled the slugging Yan
win their 21st world champion-1 kees as did Koufax en route to
ship in 211 tries. : his 15 strikeouts.
Although today s odds favor-
ed the Yankees, many experts
were inclined to believe that it
is the Dodgers who now have a
key advantage the advantage
of sending a classic clutch pitch
er like Johnny Podres against a
22-ycar-oltl lefthander who will
be appearing in series compe
tition for the first time.
Johnny entered today's game
wilh a 3-1 mark in scries compe
tition, including his never-to-be-forgotten
2-0 victory over the
Yankees that gave the Dodgers
Ihe 11)55 series and the only
championsmp they ever won
while in Brooklyn. Podres also
beat the Yankees, 8-3, in that
St. Mary's Engages
Lakeview on Friday
St. Marv's High school's foot-i
ball game at Lakeview in the
!:ririSgh. T 1
n'at is fhe' report of St.
Marv's Coach Bill McKibbin.
,
IS.ICKOII will lie at n p.m. .11
Ihe rodeo grounds. The tussle
had been set for Saturday night
and was changed to better ac-
commodate the delegation from
Medlord parocnial school
Knee injuries continue to r'ook an( l!os(, , suar(1Si pan 1 ; TpxM am 1 12-0.
plague the SM Crusaders. Latest . .. .. .,... fl- "'ei Wiitenhern ii-o-i. 47
1 mi 1 t t .1 iMi.sm.iiKa, center, Jensen, n f. car 1 12-n 4?
victim is halfback Don Valen-, ' ' ! s d 111-n pmshursh state
tine who was hurt in the third , quarterback; Tim Sakrairia ami ; lKi;"5,",2, 'omaha. :u: 1:1. Ten
quarter of the game last Satur- j Mete or Jim lievcrman, half-. ft '
dav with Illinois Valley. McKib-j backs, and .left Uandolph, full-! 121. 24; in. central Micinsan ,n,
bin said that Valentine may be ; back. and S;WmlXW.
lost for the season j s M . u, , 21 ,l, tlinnhold, State in. 20
The coiu'h reported that John .,. . : . . n.,, Blt,IPr' iH
lintzor. rccular qimrter b a c k.
'h hurt a knee in practice last
week, definitely win not he
end.
Jensen at ((mirter
v
Tuesdnv. An ankle laceration
alH pulled thigh muscle sitle
hnoi him
Guard John Lucas, who play
ed last week despite a back
whiplash injury, has neon ink
ing therapy all week and is
doubtful for the Friday fray.
McKibbin said ho may put Hay
proved just too much (or the
opposition to handle.
But Wednesday it was the
Dodgers who had the man who
was just too much. He's Sandy
Koufax, of course, and he man-
handled the lordly Yankees in
a way that left American lea-
i guers gaping.
I Other great pitchers have
; beaten the Yankees but nowhere
I in World Series memory is there
I an instance of a pitcher who so
; completely overpowered them.
Koufax Took Command
A 25-game winner with 306 ,
strikeouts in 311 innings and a I
hackdrop of two no hitters and!
series and had them popping
the ball into the air throughout
most of both games he pitched,
He was 14-12 this season.
Impressive Credentials
A 22-vear-old medium - sized
left - hander, Yankee pitcher Al
Downing has more impressive
season credentials than Podres.
Brought up to the Yankees from
their Richmond farm club in
the International league on June
2, Downing won 13 games and
lost only five. He had four shut
outs and struck out 171 batters
in 175 innings. Before the Yan
kees saw Koufax Wednesday it
was fashionable in their club
house to say that Downing was
as fast as Sandy.
But and tight now it is the
big "but" of the series Down
ing is a rookie in all but the
purest technical sense and was
appearing in his first series
game. Not since Frank Shea in
1!M7 have the Yankees called
upon so inexperienced a pitcher
to carry such a heavy load.
At the moment Koufax looms
as the mighty man of this series
the mighty man of many a
World Series to come, in fact.
Mamlamlled the Yankees
Now since the greatest days
j There couldn t have been a
second guess in the Yan k e e
clubhouse, and there wasn't.
"You can sum up the entire
game in one word: Koufax,"
said manager Ralph H o u k.
"He was great all Ihe way.
There's nothing you can do
when a man pitches a game
like that against you."
"His greatest game'.'" smiled
marfager Walt Alston of the
rwloorc "llnu; onn vnil loll uilh
Koufax. He pilches so many
good ones. But Ihis one was a
good one because we won."
Neither manager planned any
changes in his second-game line
up
Richler at an end and shift Den- FloridQ School
I nis Rose t0 an interior line posi- " . . .
i11- Luca. migh, p,ay wi,., Ratings Leader
Row spelling him and Steve pnSuS"
Cook, who has a banged uplfooibaii ratines with ursi-piace
i votes and won-lost records in
Kllee.
i A jbl(, wouW have
1. ... . ' , , ,
" "ociis, cutis,
j Mike Hutchinson and R a n d y
i Pnrliss tnclflns' nmnnn Liwae
i ....... ........ p..j...J
: . . . ,,, c V'.,iio,. 1 .,l-.
ri , .' d Trinilv of
PIN TOl'HXKY STAHTS
SPOKANE 1 fPIl-l ocal kee -
noon.
Automatic Transmissions
EXCLUSIVELY
Minor or Mjjor Rcpjiri
Fatrery Umti in Stock
100 Financing
Mitford Transminiaji Ribujlders
3540 N. Pic. lit Hv
PSom 779.1B11
j two games in which he struck
lout 18 batters during his career,
Koufax took command of the
Yankees like a big league pitch -
er would take command of a
high school team.
He struck out the first five
j batters to face him and nine of
j the first 12. After four innings
the Yankees had hit only one
' fair ball. He blazed his fast ball
; past them. He confused them
, with his deep - breaking fast
I curve. And he made them look
I ridiculous with nis change-up
thrown with the same motion as
the high, hard one.
This was supposed to be a
match-up of star pitchers Kou-, L li i
ifax vs. Whitey Ford, who start-:" 15 UWR ViarK
o( the came with a 10-5 World, NEW YORK (UPI) Sanriv
! Series record.
i Pranlf HnwiirrTs 457-fnnt riou-
! ble, singles by Bill Skowron and
Dick Tracewski and J o n n n y
Roseboro's three run homer
.u r a tr- r., .,r,c in
eave the Dodgers four runs in
the second inning and that was
u it was obvious the Yankees
j coui(j not overcome such a hand-
! icap against Koufax and the
; brilliant lefthander just kept
mowine 'em down
Koufax had two tough innings
because he lost the pinpoint
i control of his curve ball - in
the fifth and sixm. ine lan
NEW YORK (UPI I Box score
of ihe first game of the l!tlij
World Series
I. os Aneeles
Ml II II HI"
Wills, ss
flilliiim. 3b
W Davis, rf
T. Davis. If
F. Howard, rf
Fairly, rf
Skowron, lb
Tracewski. 2b
Roseboro, c
Koufax. p
Totals
New York
Kuhek. ss .
Richardson. 2b
Tresh. If . .
Mantle, rf
Maris, rf
E. Howard, c
Pepltone. lh ..
Rover. 3b -.
Ford, p
a-Lopez
Williams, p
b-Linz
Hamilton, p
c-Brisht
All It II Kill
Totals
a-Struck out for Ford in nth;
b-Struck out for Williams in 8th;
c-Struck out for Hamilton in !)th.
los Aneeles 1)41 nun onn 3
New York nno rain 02112
PO-A Los Aneeles 27-3. New
Vorl. '7-m I. OR Los Aneeles
New York 7 2b F Howard, MR
Rosehnro. Tresh. SB T. Davis.
S W. Davis.
IP
rr I1I1 sn
2 2 15
K mi fax
Fnrri
S
Willinms . 3
I
n
n
n
Haniiltnn 1 n n n (i i
U Panarrlla ( AL). plntp; Gnr
mnn ' NLl lb; Napp (AL). 2b;
Crawfurn (NL) 3b; Rice (AT-),
rictit firld fnul line; Vcnznn (NLl,
left lirld fnul line T '2 :0f. A
(i!(. 1)0(1,
put together three singles wilh
I two out in the fifth but Sandy
fanned pinch hitter Hector Lo
pez to end that threat and they
got two straight walks in the
sixth with one out only to have
Sanely retire Mickey Mantle and
Roger Maris on infield pops.
Tom Tresh hit a two-run hom
er in the eighth but by then
Koufax was throwing fast balls
for strikes and he quickly closed
out the game.
After the seventh, the crowd
i parenlheses:
Florida am 7 n-n
.,' Delaware 2 ii-m
Points
1112
121
114
:,. N,.,n(.rn 111 3 ia-n
1 "os!-. "1 li-'i'l
' B. Montnim St.
MATCH OFF !
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A
pro p o s e ri lightweight title ,
peeved matchmaker George
Parnassus. Lane said in Michi-
! enn that the bout was set and
also.
COMPLETE
OVERHAUL
labor At
Lew Ai
53750
Fill Efticicnt Scrvict
Ntii to Bilco'i Tivcrn
of 69.000 was cheering for Sandy
I to break Carl Erskine's mark
of 14 strikeouts in one game,
j set against the Yankees in 1953.
Koufax finally accomplished
the feat for a new mark of 15
; when be buzzed a fast ball past
j pinch hitter Harry Bright for
the final out of the game.
Bright stood there gaping
typical of a Yankee team that
had run up against a man who
; was just too much
' ITm-.IJ--1 F.L
aixine reeib
'Qnnrlv im p.i
Janu Wafl DCui
I Koufax is capable of breaking
hlS OWn World SnriPS ctritnmit
his own World Series strikeout
record the next time he (aces '
the Yankees.
mat was the opinion voiced
hu Ps,-! 17 --i, ; u i
Dy Larl hrskine. the former
Record holder, when he wander-
ed into the Los Angeles Dodg
ers' locker room Wednesday to
congratulate Koufax for his 15-;
strikeout performance in the
"Sanriv mav hrk th3l rra,-H
again before the series is over,"
said Erskine, who 10 years ago '
. 10 me aay naa set me old series
mars Dy tanning H Yankees as
a member of the Dodgers.
"I'm delighted that Sandv has
kept it in the Dodger family, and
I think he's the man who de -
serves to have it," added Er -
;j smile, nts just aoout i n e ""e -'nine. M VY ItKSOIK TOl'H
greatest strikeout pitcher of j Lind has been out with in- DENVER UP I ( Heavy
1 1 lne1"l al,'' !f ne?" ! juries since before Ihe season weight champion Sonny Li.sti.n
3 1 Asked if he was surprised : opener. His return leaves the : headed for Philadelphia loriav
Jwhen Koufax erased his mark, ; squad still one man short of the ' to discuss possible resumption
.i.iiisKine replica:
"I'm sure no one ever predict- New coach Jack Christiansen ' plaining that he broke off lin
ed that Carl Erskine would ever , reported that "both Boh Waters series of personal appearances
break a series strikeout record, ! and Lamar Mcllan have been in England because ol latigiie
n out iney certainly am lor tnis
n j fellow."
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Find out before you enl.st'
You know Marines serve
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iff
M?VO 1 ft
. l-vT n M,
, . .
has to get a hand from catcher
Ihe n Yankees he struck nul
, . .P. .1
nana uj uie viciorv wnn nis uirce un nume run. urn
MEDF0RDt,-l22f.TRIBUTiB
lH lH IS ffl
l-nftv Ninr-1-c Arf
7
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) The
San Francisco Forty Ninors'
squad was at 3B players today i
' following the activation of 220 -
!puntl running back Mike Lincl
National football league limit,
; passing well in practices,
Starting quarterback John Bro
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Los Angeles Dodgers' pitcher Sanriv KoufaN. lefl,
Johnny Roseboro as he "counts"
to set a new World Series record
, ' .,.,.
ICPl M
vnfo mrf
v
die is out for a minimum of six
weeks with a reinjured arm. so
it's up to Mcllan md Waters In
move the team,
of his Eurooean lour after e-
and embarrassment a b o u I
- : America's racial conflict.
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