Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, May 21, 1958, Page 11, Image 11

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    Yanks Whip Sox; l- Cards Don Foyrth
TIME OUT
Cardinals Trade
Al Dark To Cubs
Red Sox,
A's Grab
Triumphs
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
One can t help but recall the
fiighly optimistic words of Chicago
White Sox Manager Al Lopez of
two months ago.
"We're going to win the pen-
rant," he said then, "because the
Yankees are not going to beat us
nine of 11 in our park as they did
last year. A majority of those de
feats came in the late innings aft
er we had taken the lead.
"We had that in mind when we
traded some of our power for
more pitcning. I feel the only club
we have to beat to take it all is
the Yankees and I'm sure we have
the pitching to do it."
The White Sox met the Yankees
for the first time this season Mon
day night in Chicago. It was the
same old story. The Yankees won.
5-1. They hit three home runs, by
Mickey Mantle. Hank Bauer and
Marv Throneberry. Chicago got
only five hits off Johnny Kucks.
avoiding a shutout in the nintl
inning. The defeat shoved the So
deeper into the American Leagui
basement, 104 games behind thi
runaway Yankees.
Kansas City retained seconi
place, 6'i games off the pace
vanquishing Washington 7-3. Bos
ton swept past Cleveland inti
fourth place, thrashing the lndi
ans 6-1. In the only daylight game,
third place Baltimore evened their
record at 13-13, defeating Detroit
6-4.
In the National League, the San
Francisco Giants opened up i
length and a half lead over Mil
waukee. defeating Cincinnati 4-2
while Los Angeles scored three
times in the 11th to beat the
Braves 6-3. St. Louis, making it;
11 in their last 13 games, moved
into fourth place with a 5-0 tri
umph over Philadelphia. Pitts
burgh snapped a five-game losing
streak, drubbing the Chicago Cubs
12-3.
pew
Wednesday, May 21, 1958 KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
SEC. B PAGE 1
Coast Conference Meet
Ends With Friendly Mote
PORTLAND, Ore. UD With
an air of amiable togetherness,
the Pacific Coast Conference
wound up its annual spring meet
ing Tuesday afternoon two day
early, leaving unsettled the im
portant question of what schools
might be eligible for the 1960 Rose
3owI game;
Friendship keynoted the meet
ng, which was to have lasted
hrough Thursday. Nothing was
irought up which might have
narred the pleasant program.
The faculty athletic represent-
itives they run the show who
vould have voted 5-4 last year
in whether to vote standing or
fitting were bosom , companions
The athletic directors were
cloaked in a brotherly soberness.
The football coaches wore half-
size smiles; the basketball coaches
as they contemplated the slim
ming down of the conference due
in 1959. That's when California,
UCLA and Southern California
have said they will pack their
athletic bags and depart.
It was learned but not reported
officially by the conference that
the coaches had gone to the fac
ulty men with statements of soli
darity. These said, in effect, that
no coach was mad at any other
coach and hoped to perpetuate the
feeling. ,
Because of the air of heavy
U.S. Leads World's
Track, Field Marks
Yanks 5, ChiSoxl
The Yankees rapped Dick Dono
van and Bill Fischer for 10 hits
to register their seventh straight
victory, their 11th in the last 12
games and their 20th in 25 games
this season.
New York 010 110 011 5 10 0
Chicago 000 000 001 1 5 0
Kucks (2-1) and Berra; Dono
van, Fischer (9) and Lollar. Loser
Donovan (2-4). HRs Mantle
(4thl, Bauer (2nd), Throneberry
(1st). - -- -
(Continued on Page 3-B)
NEW YORK (UP) A flurry of
the. seven world track and field
marks recorded in the past 12
days has failed to disturb fhe
United States' leadership in the
sport, a United Press survey re
vealed today.
A total of 27 world cinder path
records are presently held by
American athletes, while Russia,
the nearest contender, carries 17.
Despite the fact these two coun
tries were involved in six of the
seven new records, the U.S. will
still lead. 27-18, when and if the
new records are officially accepted.
Vastly Kuznetsov of Russia can
raise his country's trailing total
if his new decathlon record is ac
cepted. Russia's, new "world's
greatest athlete" scored 8,013
points in a meet at Krasnodar
Sunday, according to Soviet re
ports. This eclipsed the record
Rafer Johnson set at Kingbury,
Calif., in 1956.
SJ Wins On
Owings' Single
By UNITED PRESS
Bakersfield moved into second
place in the California League
standings Tuesday night with an
8-3 victory over Fresno while
front-running Visalia downed Reno
by the same score.
Fresno's loss dropped the Giants
Into a third-place tie with Stock
ton, three games off the pace.
while the Bears remained two-and-one-half
games behind the
Redlegs.
San Jose shaded Modesto, 1-0.
and Stockton buried Salinas, 14-4,
In other games.
At San Jose, Jim Gleason threw
a three-hitter and struck out eight
for the Pirates win over Modesto.
Catcher Fritz Messncr doubled af
ter two were out in the Pirates
half of the seventh and scored
the game's only run on a single
by Ron Owings. Loser Hugh
Hendry allowed only five hits.
The game was played in the fast
time of 1:38.
The Linescorei:
Fresno 000 101 0103 11 4
Bakersfield 232 010 OOx 8 11 5
Cregan, Blair (3) and Wilson;
Steplitus, Hogg (6) and Huber.
Salinas 103 000 0004 14 1
Stockton 105 220 40X-14 13 0
Weeks, Morley (3) and Grolla;
Spearmand and Zander.
Modesto 000 000 0000 3 3
San Jose 000 000 lOx 1 5 3
Hendry and Muffick; Gleason
and Messner.
Bill Mihalo of the United
States, however, can offset this
gain if his mark of one hour, 26
minutes, 1.0 seconds in the 20.000
meter walk becomes official. This
topped the record of 1:27:38.6 set
earlier by Grigory Panichkin of
Russia.
Other records set:
Herb Elliott of Australia waits
official word on his 3:57.8 mile
at Los Angeles, May 16. This beat
countryman John Landy's accept
ed mark by two-tenths of a second.
Russia broke Sweden's 10.000
meter walk record when Panich
kin was clocked in 42:18.3.
Elias Gilbert of Winston-Salem.
N.C. Teachers broke a U.S.-held
mark by running the 220 yard
hurdles in 22.1 seconds.
A two-mile relay tearn from the
University of California broke an
American-held standard by cov
ering the distance in 7:20.9.
harmony the conference spokes
man. Prof. Emmett Moore of
Washington State, was asked if
old wounds might be forgotten and
forgiven before the 1959 deadline
and he replied:
I don t believe you can assume
that."
When the three southern schools
break away they will leave the
Rose Bowl game and its quarter-
million-doilar payoff to the six sur
vivors. The conference holds ;
contract with the Tournament of
Roses to provide the western rep
resentatives in the Bowl for 1959
and 1960.
Before they called it quits until
the regular winter meeting Dec.
7-11 in Pasadena, the faculty men
adopted a resolution praising Vic
tor O. Schmidt. He has been con
ference commissioner for 15 years
and is quitting in July.
The conference altered the
rules slightly on spring football
practice and changed the method
ot cutting up television income.
Formerly limited to 20 days 'of
practice in a 30-day period, the
football coaches now may spread
(Continued on Page 3-B)
Birds Tip
Phillies;
SF Victor
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
After almost being left at the
starting gate, the St. Louis Car
dinals have finally pulled up into
fourth place in the National
League race.
ft look 11 victories in their last
13 games to do it. Lindv McDan
iel made sure of it by hurling a
seven-hitter against Philadelphia
as the Cardinals triumped 5-0. It
was tne s.tO.000 bonus right-hand
er's first shutout of the year and
ins lirst since he blanked the
same team by, the same score on
May 16, 1957.
The Cardinals' sizzling pace is
being matched, practially victory
for victory, by the San Francisco
Giants. The West Coast sensations
also made it 11 victories in their
last 13 outings Monday night with
a 4-2 decision in Cincinnati. Young
Mike McCormick, the $60,000 bo
nus left-hander, posted his fourth
ictory without a defeat with a
five-hitter.
The Giants' triumph, coupled
with Los Angeles' 6-3 success in
Milwaukee in 11 innings, boosted
them into first place by 24 per
centage points over the Braves
Pittsburgh blasted out of a five-
game losing streak with a 12-3
walloping of Chicago.
'You going to waste all this moon
light, Crumlelgh. It's bright as
day on the court!"
BOOSTERS HOST AWARDS
Tonight at 7:30 In the new
Klamath Union High School
.cafeteria a special spring
sports award ceremony will be
sponsored by the Pelican Boost
er Club.
Emccelng the affair will be
club president Harry Molatore
while Ku athletic director Jim
Johnson will make the presenta
tions which will include letters
and trophies to winners from
baseball, tennis and track. Re
freshments will be served.
strikeouts, 50 walks and a 3.38
earned run average.
"He has great equipment, a
fine fast ball and a good curve,"
Hutchinson said. "On top of that,
he is just starting to come along
now. The way he throws, he's
bound to help our pitching staff.
"Defensively, Schofield is doing
fine," Hutchinson said. "He's got
to learn to handle the bat a little
better bu I think he will."
Schofield, a S40.000 former bo
nus player, is batting only .232
but also feels he can improve
that figure considerably.
"I'm tickled to death over the
opportunity the Cardinals are giv
ing me now," he declared after
the news of Dark's trade. "I
Cards 5, Phils 0
The Cards' surge can be attrib
uted to their sudden ferocity
against southpaws, who used to1
give them a great deal of con
cern. They have faced seven start
ing left-handers during their
streak, and have beaten six, kayo
ing the seventh.
curt summons, their latest vic-
(Conllnucd on Page 3-B)
Oregon Blasts
Washington '9
SEATTLE lifi The University
of Oregon blasted Washington
,9-2 in a Northern Division base
ball game here Tuesday as Don
Lane held the Huskies to seven
scattered hits.
PHILADELPHIA (UP) - Fred
Hutchinson said today the Cardi
nals "hated like the devil" to part
with Alvin Dark, but the veteran
35-year-old infielder was delight
ed with the deal because it will
give him a chance to play regu
larly again with the Lubs.
"The shock wasn't nearly as
great as when I was traded from
the Giants two years ago," said
Dark, who was dealt to the Cubs
Tuesday for right-handed pitcher
Jim Brosnan.
'I had a feeling for several
days that I'd be traded and now
that the deal has been made 1
feel great about it, because I
know I'll he able to play regularly
for the Cubs
So determined was Dark to play know they won t be sorry.
for the Cubs, he flew to Pitts
burgh to join them immediately
alter the trade was announced.
Manager Bob Scheffing of the
Cubs inserted him in the start
ing lineup at third base in Tues
day night's game against the Pi
rates. Dark, who brought a .297 aver
age to Chicago, had been reduced
to a bench warmer with the
Cards. Young Dick Scholield took
over his old shortstop job and
Ken Boyer was solidly entrenched
again at third.
"We needed pitching," Hutchin
son said "and with Schofield go
ing all right, we figured we
could give up Dark. We could
use Brosnan and the Cubs could
use Dark. That's all there was
to it."
The 28-ycar-oid Brosnan, a six
foot, four-inch 215-poundcr, is one
of the hardest throwers in the
National League.
So far this year, he has won
three games and lost four. Last
year, he had a 5-5 record with 73
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