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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1958)
FRIDAY, JUNE 6, 1958 HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE 3 B Yankees, Sox Split; T A Ml DosTon, a s inumpn (Continued from page 1-B) lief. Early Wynn was the loser. Mickey .Mantle hit his eighth homer, fourth in four-days. (1st game) Chicago 003 000 200 5 9 2 New York 021 133 20x 12 15 0 Wynn, Fischer (51, Qualters (7) and Lollar, Battey (7). Lap sen, Duren (7) and Berra. Winner- Larsen (4-0). Loser - Wynn (5-4). HRs-Mantle, Torgeson. Rool, Mays Pace Giants Over Leader By United Press International SAN FRANCISCO tUPD The hot Ms of Orlando Cepeda and Willie Mays had the San Francisco Giants back in business again even if they have not entirely come out of their' private reces sion. Cepeda collected four singles Wednesday, as did Mays, and drove home the winning run in the 12th inning by hitting a one bagger to right which brought Jim Finigan loping in from second base for a 5-4 triumph over Mil waukee. However, the Braves remained on top of the National League and led Manager Bill Rigney's second place club by 10 percent age points. Tonight Ramon Monzant (4-3) is scheduled to start against Cin cinnati's Harvey Haddix (3-3) as the Redlegs move in for a four game series. TAKES LOSS A crowd of 19,891 watched the Giants snap a two-game losing streak to the Braves at the ex pense of long Gene Conley, the 6 foot, 8 inch former basketball player who suffered his fourth loss and still has to win a game. Mays opened the 12th with a single then tried to come all the way around on Finigan's two bagger to right, Willie was thrown out at the plats. Then Cepeda rapped a Conley pitch out to right field to send Finigan and the crowd home. Knufhnaw .Tim Onns(nhle whn was the fourth Giant pitcher to work and only hurled the 12th In- ning, got his first win of the year, LEFTIES SHELLED The 1 game started as a left handed duel between Johnny An- tonelli and Warren Spahn. Anton, .elli was combed for 11 hits and taken out in the eigntn alter Jonn ny Logan greeted him with a home run and Andy Patko fol- lowed with a single. Ruben Gomez then gave up two more singles, (ha ear.nnrl nne. hu lTaliv Mantilla chasing in Pafko to make the score 4-4, That's the way it stay ed until the 12th. Milwaukee took a 2-0 lead in lh third innincr with .Ino Adrnrk and Wes Covington each stinging Antonelli with run-scoring singles. The Giants tied it in the fourth on a crashing double to right cen ter by Ray Jablonski which chased in Daryl Spencer and Mays, San - Francisco moved ahead, 4-2, in tfie 6th after the first two batters had gone down. Mays sin gled and ,raced to third when Spahn threw wildly trying to pick him off 'base. He scored on Jab lonski's single and "Jabbo" rum bled home -on Hank Sauef's sin gle through the box after being moved along on Cepeda's first hit of the day. ! '. NO CENTER JUMP ' LARAMIE, Wyo. W - Ever ' hear of a. basketball game with the first or second half? It hap- pened at Laramie last season : when Oklahoma City University . played Wyoming. As the game ; was about to begin, Referee Mar ' ty Nash called a technical foul .against the" Oklahomans lor nav ing a uniform number higher than 55.' When the teams reported for the second half, Nash an- nounced a technical foul against ' Wyoming because of remarks . Coacn tv sneiion maae 10 mm in the corridor between the halves. ' Thus, each half started with free throw instead of the center tipoff. Oklahoma City won the i game 89-71. ICE FISHING . ST. PAUL I Minnesota's larg- est annual temporary housing ' nroiect came down overnight .' Roughly 112,000 ice fishing houses -were ordered towed off the state's 10,000 lakes with the wind ' up of the winter fishing season ' Biggest concentration was , 3,027 ' on Mille Lacs Lake. (2nd game) Chicago 200 000 OOM-3 12 1 New York 000 000 0022 6 1 Moore (2-1) and Lollar. Shantz, Maglie (9) and Howard. Loser- Shantz (4-2). Tigers 6, Birds 3 Ray Boone's eighth major league grand-slam homer bagged it in the seventh for the Tigers as Hank Aguirre won his second with a two-hit shutout in 8 1-3 relief innings. Billy O'Dell lost his sev enth. Detroit 001 100 400 6 11 1 Baltimore 300 000 000 3 4 0 Foytack. Aguirre (D and Wil son. O'Dell, Beamon (8) and Trt andos. Winner Aguirre (2-1). Loser 'Dell (5-7). HR Boone. Boston 5, Tribe 3 Gene Stephens slid home with the winning run on Jackie Jen sen s fly ball in a two-run Red Sox eighth that broke a 3-3 tie at Boston. Jensen drove in three runs, hitting his 11th homer with a man on, and Dick Gernert cracked his 10th homer for the Sox. Dick Brown hit a three-run homer for the Injuns. Mike For- nieles won his third in relief. Hoyt Wilhelm lost his second. Cleveland 021 000 0003 7 0 Boston 000 102 02x 5 8 0 Bell, Wilhelm (6) and Brown. Smith, Fornieles (4), Kiely (9) and White. Winner-Fornieles (3-2) Loser-Wilhelm (2-2). HRs-Brown, Gernert, Jensen. . asm Time Out SF 5, Braves 4 The Giants won on Jim Fini gan s double and a single oy rookie Orlando Cepeda (who was 4-for-6) off losing reliever Gene Conley,- now 0-4. Mays had opened the 12th with his fourth single, but was nailed at the plate by Hank Aaron's peg as he tried to "Please, mother nad dad . . . Stop being so concerned that the. ump might call some bad ones on me By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PITCHING Ralph Terry, Athletics Threw a seven-hit, 13-inning shutout that beat the Senators 2-0 in a duel with Camilo Pascual broken up by Woody Held's two-run homer. HITTING Sherm Lollar, White Sox Drove in all of the Sox runs with a homer and single in 3-2 second game victory over Yankees, who took opener 12-5. (Continued from page 1-B) in Los Angeles a presidential elec tion has been the only event to see a larger number of voters than turned out to get in their two - Dits worm on tne Dodgers- Chavez Ravine issue. ... In San Francisco, Evangelist Billy Gra ham played to the smallest aud ience of his career- ... the night that the Giants opened their home series with the Milwaukee Braves It would appear that the "end of the world" has been postponed . . . at least or some baseball fans. Some more of the state's 1958 crop of sky-scraping basketball talent have picked colleges at which they hope to further their cage careers and educations. Of Bill McKenzic, the 6-5 all-stater from Grant In Portland who plans on attending . Washington State, Coach Marv Harshman says, "Mc-Kenzie Is one of the top bas ketball prospects In the Northwest." Of John Stevens, 6 foot, 7 inchcr from Helix High who is headed for the University of Oregon, Steve Belko says, "Stevens Is one of the top basketball prospects" in the Northwest." Sure are a lot of "top prospects' In the good old Northwest. Giants Edge Braves; Cardinals, Reds Win 1 (Continued from page 1-B) skine (3-3). Hodges. HRs-Purkey, Hoak, Bums-Braves Game Cinch Dollar Boom Gibson Gains -r r- l lennisrmais MANCHESTER, England (AP) Althea Gibson of New York and Maria Bueno of Brazil reached the final of the women's singles in the Northern England tennis tournament Friday. Miss Gibson, 30-year-old holder of the title, defeated British Wightman Cupper Ann Shilcock, 6-0, 7-5 in one semifinal. Mi6s Bueno, 18-year-old rising star, stopped Karol Fageros of Miami Beach, Fla., 7-5, 6-3 in the other. - FIGHTERS ARE FIT , PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - Gil Turner and Sugar Hart were pro nounced physically fit Thursday for their 10-round main event bout at Connie Mack next Tuesday night. Yogi Berra of the Yankees has ; averaged 27 home runs a season : during the last eight years. 1 IAST NIGHT -R.. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS LOS ANGELES Alvaro Gu tierrez, 147V4, Mexico, stopped Karl Guder, 148, Germany, 4. STOCKTON. Calif. Ross Pa- dilla, 121 Vt, Stockton, outpointed Joey Augustin, 120'i, Los Angeles, 10. QUITS COMPETITION MADISON, Wis. W An ailing hand has forced Connie Schwoeg- ler, world bowling champion in 1942 -and again in 1948, to quit tournaments. "My bones are too brittle and my fingers blister too Stadium-rmuch," said the 230-pound 6-foot- 3 kegler. LOS ANGELES (UPI) The Dodgers, first in the hearts of their new Los Angeles country men but last in the National League, go up against the world champion Milwaukee Braves in a game assured of being a financial success. Los Angeles sends Don Drys- dale against the fearsome Braves in the hope he can mane h an artistic success before the 60,000 fans expected in Memorial Coli seum. The Vn Nuys, Calif., hur ler, slorts a meager 2-8 record INTEREST IS HIGH Fred Haney. the Los Angeles- born manaecr of the Braves, an nounced Lew Budette (4-3) would take the mound for Milwaukee's first appearance here. Haney managed the Hollywood Stars be fore his present major league sting and the big turnout was ex pected to give mm a Delated ovation for winning the world series last fall. So strong was the interest in Milwaukee's first appearance here that the three-game series may draw almost as many people as the home opening set with San Francisco, which attracted 167,209 fans. The Dodgers, flushed with a win over Cincinnati, had enter tained fleeting thoughts of getting out of the cellar Thursday. A Los Angeles win and a Philadelphia loss would have done it. But the Phillies won and the Dodgers lost to the Redlegs, 8-4. SHORT HOMERS The Redlegs sent their top hur- ler. Bob Purkey, to the mound and he notched his fourth straight win and seventh of the season against one loss, aiding his own cause by smacking the second home run of his career over the short- left field screen. Teammate Don Hoak homered into the same area for the Red- legs, while Gil Hodges of the Dodgers dropped one there in the ninth. The Redlegs mauled four Dodg er pitchers for 13 hits, sending starter Carl Erskine to the show ers in the fourth. But he might have done better for himself and the Dodgers if he had stayed. Manager Walt Alston gave Ers kine the hook with the score tied 3-3 because he had two men on base, one of them as the result of Dick Gray s error. But reliefer Don Bessent served up a triple to Johnny Temple and there went the ball game. Purkey was touched for eight hits but he pitched six scoreless innings after the Dodgers scored three runs in the first two stanzas. score on Finigan's hit to center. Jim Constable pitched only the 12th, but gained his first decision He followed a perfect 3 2-3 in nings by Marv Grissom. who came on in the eighth after the Braves tied it with two off start er Johnny Antonelli and Ruben Gomez. (12 innings) Milw 002 000 020 0004 13 2 SFran O00 202 000 0015 15 2 Spahn, Burdctte (7), Conley (8 and Crandall: Antonelli, Go mez 18), Constable (12) and Schmidt. Winner - Constable (1-). Loser-Conley (0-4). HR-Logan. Cards 4, Bucs 3 The Cards scored two unearned runs in the third and bagged it with two in the fourth as Gene Green hit an RBI - double and scored on Curt Flood's single. Bob friend lost his fourth. WUmer Mizell won his third. Pittsburgh 000 020 0103 9 1 St. Louis 002 200 OOx 4 7 0 Friend (8-4) and Foiles. Mizell (3-5) and H. Smith. HR-Stevens. PhilliesTCubs6 Marry Anderson s three - run double and Stan Lopata's follow- up sixth homer gave the Phils five in a clinching seventh against losing reliever Don Elston (6-3). Ray Semproch (5-4) won it in re lief. Phila 010 001 5007 11 0 Chicago 000 060 0006 10 1 Sanford, Semproch (5), Farrell (7) and Lopata. Hobbie, Mayer (7), Elston (7) and S." Taylor, Today's Spori Parade Stengel Still Going Strong By OSCAR FRALEY United Press International NEW YORK (UPI) - Casey Stengel, old "old perfesser", can count another record today in ad dition to those eight pennants and sit world championships in nine seasons with the New York Yankees. Old Case has outlasted 47 other major league managers during his decade in the house that Ruth built. J his may not stop many presses, but it points up once again tne fact mat being a ma jor league manager is an occupa tion where continued employment is rightfully notorious for being on the short- side. Some skippers it might be noted, have been canned after finishing first. Whether Casey s artful mampu lations of his brawny talent or the accrual of same by the front oftice is responsible for the Van kee successes won't be debated here. But when it comes to man agers, nothing succeeds like suc cess. Old Case, the left-handed den tist from Kansas City, is wrinkled proof of that. To further the point, let it be recognized that the guiding genius of the compet ing Yankee athletes is along with Marty Marion r one of the champion commuters among vari ous dugouts. Marion holds the laurels over the last decade, having been boss man ot the bench with the Cardi nals and, over in the other league, with the White Sox and But Casey did his share of traveling, too, before he became the gifted manager of this era. He managed at Brooklyn from 1934 to 1956 and piloted the erst while Braves of Boston from 1938 through 1943. In those days the genius was called a stiff, when they kept it that polite. A total of 125 managers has come and gone since Stengel ac cepted the reins at Brooklyn in 1934. Stengel was two of mem. The biggest turnover in that peri- Winner - Semproch (5-4). Loser- Orioles. Three jobs is the most Eiston (6-3). HR-Lopata. 'for the last 10 years. od was in the National League, disconsolate directors of the dou ble play bowed in and out. The top dugout redecorator was the St. Louis Browns-Baltimore Ori oles who, since Stengel was a novice at Brooklyn, have had 12 pilots. Casey and Marion weren't the only league hoppers. During the checker playing of the decade in which Stengel has been with the Yankees, jumps also were made by Steve O'Neill and Rogers Horns- , by- ' I mine j I 7 Crown" SUGRIV-OISllllMS COUPm. H.t IllHOIO WHISKY. M WMF. 8554 OUII lOTiU. Sflllll 1 1 yv;r . i rVst.- l. m'. 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