MONDAY, JUNE 23. 1958
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE NTNE
fllaglie Tops diraves
Yanks Bomb Detroit, TS-0
A's Top
Boston;
Nats Bow
New York
Kansas City
Detroit
Boston
Cleveland
Chicago
Baltimore
Washington
Giants,
Dodgers
Nab Nods
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Sal Maglie wasn't kidding when
he said, 1 II show em.
The 41-year-old right-hander
was peeved when the New York
Yankees shunted him to St. Louis
June 14 to make room for a 39-year-old
man Virgil Trucks. .
Freddie Hutchinson, bars new
boss with the Cardinals, gave The
Barber a starting chance yester
day against Milwaukee and was
rewarded with a Z-l victory.
Maglie showed signs of weari
ness in the sixth and seventh so
Hutch sent up Irv Nore'n to bat
for him in the eighth inning. Larry
Jackson, a workhorse both on re
lief and starting, retired the last
nix Braves in a row.
The defeat cut the Braves' Na
tional League lead to Wi games
as San Francisco beat the Phillies
S-4 in 14 innigs on a homer by
Willie Kirkland. The Giants also
led their second game 1-0 when
it was suspended in the sixth by
the Sunday curfew. It will be com
pleted later.
Cincinnati. St. Louis and Pitts
burgh are bunched in third place
IVi games behind tne Braves.
Cincinnati split with Chicago,
winning the tirst on oils Ben s
grand-slam homer 6-2. The Cubs
staged a three-run rally in the
ninth to take the second game 8-6
Steve Bilko and Johnny Klipp-
stin. two recently acquired Los
Aneeles Dodgers, helped the cel
lar team win a double-header
from Pittsburgh 4-1 and 3-2. Klipp-
stin's relief work saved the first
game, in which two singles by
Dick Gray played a prominent
nart. Bilko's 10th-inning pinch sin
gle scored Joe Pignatano from
second base for the second decision.
In the American League, the
New York Yankees beat Detroit
15-0 after losing seven straight to
the Tigers. Don Larsen cooled off
Detroit with two singles for his
third shutout. Kansas City edged
Boston 2-1 on a game-saving catch
by Hector Lopez, who then sin
gled to drive in the winning run.
Cleveland took two from Wash
ington 4-3 and 1-0. Baltimore
pulled out of the cellar on Billy
O'Dell's six-hit job against Chi
cago 2-0.
Cards 2, Braves 1,
Maelie held the Braves to five
hits in seven innings in a duel
with 22-year-old Joey Jay. Two
walks by Jay and Ken Boyer's
double produced the Cardinal runs
in the third.
St. Louis 002 000 OOOt 2 6 0
Milwaukee 010 000 000 1 5 0
Maglie, Jackson (8) and Smith.
Jav. Trowbridge (7) and Crandall.
Winner Maglie (1-0). Loser Jay
; (1-1).
Giants 5, Phillies 4
Willie Mays rejoined the Giants
but it was Kirkland, just recalled
Saturday from Phoenix, who hit
the bis blow. Kirkland's homer
broke up a tight relief battle be
tween Johnny Antonelli and Ray
Semproch.
(1st game. 14 innings)
S.F. 000 200 110 000 01 5 8 2
Phil. 000 020 020 000 00 4 12 3
Monzant, Worthington (5), Gris
som (7), Antonelli (9) and
Schmidt. Morehead, Farrell (7),
Hearn (9), Semproch (11) and
Sawatski, Lopata (1). Winner
Antonelli (7-5). Loser Semproch
(8-5). HRs Anderson, Schmidt,
Ashburn, Kirkland.
(2nd, 5Mi inns., sus., curfew)
San Francisco 100 000 1 6 1
Philadelphia 000 OOx 0 2 2
Gomez and Thomas. Roberts
and Lopata.
Bums 4-3, Byes 1-2
The Dodeers showed tight de
fensive play while the- Pirates
made two costly errors in the first
game, in which Bob Friend was
chased for the first time in his ca
reer for areuing umpire Vic Del
more's calline oa balls and
trikes.
(lit tame)
Los Angeles 016 109 26 4 2
Pittsbureh 000 00 1W 1 S 2
Kipp, Klippstein s and Pipi
ttno. Friend, PorterfieH (5).
Blackburn (6), Fce (I) and
Foiles, Kravitz (I). Winrw-ipp
(8-3. Loser Friend (9-7).
(2nd game, 10 innings)
Los Aneeles 000 000 020 1 I 10 3
Pittsburgh 001 001 001 0 2 5 0
Williams. Koufax d ini Rott
boro, Pignatano (D. Raydoa.
Pnrterfield (9). Smith (10) ori
Hall. Foiles 10. Winwr-Sonftn
(4-3). Lexer Portarfifld !-.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pet. GB
39 21
31 30
30 31
31 33
31 34
29 32
28 32
28 34
.650
.508 SVt
.492 m
.484 10
.477 10V4
.475 lO'i
.467 11
.452 12
Sunday's Results
Nw York 15, Detroit 0
Baltimore 2, Chicago 0
Kansas City 2, Boston 1
Cleveland 4-1, Washington 3-0
Saturday's Results
Detroit 1, New York 0
Chicago 1, Baltimore 0
Kansas City 8, Boston 5
Washington 11, Cleveland 7
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pet.
Milwaukee
X-San Francisco
Cincinnati
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
Chicago
X-Philadelphia
Los Angeles
33 25
34 29
29 28
30 29
32 31
31 34
27 32
27 35
.569
.540
.509
.508
.508
.477
.458
.435
New Anti-Trust Bill
Slated For Congress
Klamath tubs Increase MC
Lead; Mount Shasta Loses
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
LEAGl'E
W
X Does not include suspended
second game of San Francisco
Philadelphia doubleheader to be
completed at later date.
Sunday's Results
St. Louis 2, Milwaukee 1
Cincinnati 6-6, Chicago 2-8
Los Angeles 4-3, Pittsburgh 1-2
San Francisco 5, Philadelphi:
4 (14 innings-second game sus
pended by Sunday curfew
sixth with San Francisco leading
1-0)
Saturday's Results
St. Louis 2, Milwaukee 1
Pittsburgh 11, Los Angeles 7 ,
Cincinnati 9. Chicago 3
San Francisco at Philadelphia
postponed rain.
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
W L Pet. GB
Vancouver 43 27 .614
Phoenix 44 28 .611
San Diego 41 28 .594 1
Salt Lake City 37 31 .544 5
Portland 28 36 .433 12
Seattle 29 42 .408 14
Spokane 28 .42 .400 15
Sacramento 25 41 .379 16
Sunday's Results
Salt Lake 4-2, Seattle 3-8
Phoenix 3-4, Sacramento 1-0
San Diego 4-3. Spokane 0-0
Portland 6-5, Vancouver 3-5
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Just when the Detroit pitching
staff was to be knighted for out
standing service to the American
League race, the Yankees woke
up-
New York had scored only one
run in 37 innings against baffling
Tiger pitching and lost seven
straight to Detroit. Then the
Yanks cut loose yesterday with a
16-hit blast in a 15-0 rout.
Don 'Larsen had a two.-hitter for
his third shutout and sixth vic
tory. After Billy Martin singled In
the second. Larsen retired lb ti
ger batters in succession before
Gail Harris singled in the seventh.
The second-place Kansas City
Athletics topped Boston again 2-1
with the help of a game-saving
catch by Hector Lopez on a drive
by Jackie Jensen. Jack Urban
cutpitched Tom Brewer in a tight
tattle.
Cleveland broke out of a four-
game losing streak by taking a
pair from Washington 4-3 and 1-0.
Minnie Minoso hit a home run in
each game, deciding the second
in favor of Jim Grant over Hal
Griggs.
Sal Maglie, 41. returned to tne
old familar National League sur
roundings and pitched St. Louis
to a 2-1 edge over Milwaukee. San
Francisco beat Philadelphia 54 in
14 innings on Willie Kirkland's
home run.
Los Angeles took a double-header
from Pittsburgh 4-1 and 3-2.
Gus Bell's grand-slam homer gave
Cincinnati a 6-2 opening victory
over Chicago but the Cubs staged
three-run rally in the ninth to
take the second 8-6.
WASHINGTON (UPD-Rep. Al-I
bert W. Cretella (R-Conn.) pre-1
pared to introduce in the House
today a sports anti-trust bill that
would curb major league baseball
broadcasts and telecasts in minor
league territory and outlaw the
major league farm system eiiec
tive in 1960.
Cretella, a member of the House
Judiciary Committee which re
cently approved another sports
bill which will come up for House
debate Tuesday, said he offered
his bill as a compromise between
the committee-approved measure
and a substitute introduced last
week by four committee colleagues.
Yankees 15, Tigers 0
The Yanks knocked out BiUy
Hoeft in the first inning when they
scored six and went on another
six-run binge in the eighth against
Herb Moford and Vito Valehtinet
ti. Gil McDougald had two doubles
and a pair of singles. Tony Kubek
three singles and Elston Howard
two-run homer and a doume.
Ne.v York 600 000 06315 16 0
Detroit 000 000 000 0 2 4
Larsen (6-1) and Berra. Hoeft,
Morgan (1). Moford (1), Valen-
tinetti. (8), Fischer (9) and He
gan. Wilson (9). Loser Hoeft
(6-6). HR Howard.
NORTHWEST LEAGUE
W L Pet. GB
Lewiston 38 21 .644
Yakima 33 28 .541
Wenatchee 33 29 .532 6V4
Tri-City 26 31 .456 11
Eugene , 24 32 .429 12'A
Salem 23 36 .390 15
Sunday's Results
Tri-City 8-5, Yakima 4-9
Eugene 12-7, Wenatchee 4-5
Lewiston 6-2, Salem 1-6
Saturday's Results
Wenatchee 10, Eugene 8
Salem 7, Lewiston 6
Yakima 6, Tri-City 5
After Bell's homar
opener, lor fcicinn;i.
on tM
the Cubs
came bacR on a u-nu mwi.
roughing up rel pitch Hl
Jeficoat in th ninth.
(1st gam
rw i ako ool 8 1
Cincinnati 015 OOx ! 0
Ellsworth. Hobbie (3i. Hillman
)', ,ston (7) ar tinman. Nux
al1. Jefft; (9i and Burgess
Wiiftr Nuxhall (3-3). Loser
Ellsworth 0-D. HR Bell.
1 2nd MmEl
Chicago 010 013 003 8 13 1
. Cirinatl 300 (6) 021 7 1
Drabowskv. Elston 191 and S
Tavlor. Newcombe, Acker (8),
Jeffcoat (9), Purkey 19) and Bai
ley. Winner -Drabowjky (5-7
Loser -Jeffei (3-4). HI -8
Kroll Sweeps
Golf Triumph
FLINT. Mich. (AP) It has
heen two years since Ted Kroll
reaped the biggest payoff in the
history of golf but the compact
little veteran from Sarasota, Fla.,
is back knocking on the victory
door again.
He carried a two-strone lead
into today's final round of the $52,
000 Flint Ooen.
Tommy Bolt, the fellow the 39-
year-old Kroll unseated in yester
day's third round, said he was
glad to be out of the lead for the
first time in six competitive
rounds. "Let him find out how it
feels up there ia that No. 1 spet,
said Bolt.
Consistency paid off for Kroll
whoM $72,M-p!u earnings two
years aje stand as trie higtwet
morwy total for "Ifer is a
sinsle year.
Kroll has misd hittiixj cWy
four rtms in pefulatiaw sinct the
72-hole affair ben at the War
wick Hills Golf and Country Club
in naarby Grand Blanc. Ht has
been over pir on just twt out of
ii holes.
"I'm hitting tht bill better then
I kae in two yesrs," he said.
"I'd lik t hit this wrl the rt
l me lift aaM I'd b happ."
trail ttmi tike WU from ft.
it 3-iinir-pr m the-
U: 9. chtmpiw rwd
ie his MV'M tr.
hrwi -now low wee u, i
strnftf bettvr that Bolt
F'.:k Roches!-, ich.
fired a 69 vesterday.
Trailing r:k and Bolt by
stroi wet JlCjs Bort) Mid
Pines, N. C, Bjid Bill Cap Jr.,
App' Valley. Calif, fcb Rosburg,
Palo Alto, iit., wag even wnn
at 6.
A's 2, Red Sox 1
At Kansas City, Lopez dashed
into rieht center to snare Jensen's
drive in the eighth with Pete Run
nels on third base and tne score
tied. Lopez's single scored the
winning run in the last of the
eighth, after Preston Ward and
Bob Cerv singled.
Boston ooo 100 000 i v u
Kansas City 100 000 Olx 2 9 1
Brewer (3-6) and White, Ber-
beret (2). Urban (6-4) and Smith.
HRs Maris, Runnels.
Tribe 4-1, Nats 3-0
Cleveland came up with three
runs in the fifth inning to win the
opener for Ray Narleskl, his ninth
nlthnuffh Don Mossi finished up
Vic Power and Woody Held drove
in the three runs. Minoso's 11th
home of the year in the sixth in
ning ruined Griggs four-hit job in
the second game.
(1st game)
Washington 110 000 100 3 8 0
Cleveland 000 001 OOx 14 1
Stobbs, Byerly (5), Clevenger
(6), Hyde (8) and Courtney. Nar-
leski. Mossi (8) and Brown. Win
ner Narleskl (9-5). Loser
Stobbs (2-6). HRs Minoso, J.
Lemon.
(2nd game)
Washington 000 000 000 0 6 0
Cleveland 000 001 OOx 1 4 1
Griggs (3-4) and Courtney.
Grant (6-4) and Nixon. HR
Minoso.
Red Athlete
Has Troubles
MOSCOW (AP) The Soviet Un
ion's big soccer scandal was out
in the open again today with one
of the Soviet Union's top stars In
lail on charges of rape.
Komsomol Pravda, which never
tires of lecturing the errant sons
of high officials and other exam
ples of flaming Soviet youth, re
ported that three pampered play
ers had been dropped from the
Soviet all-star soccer team for
rowdiness, drinking and general
debauchery.
The. Communist youth news
paper also attacked top sports of
ficials and highly placed patrons
for allowing the Idolized stars to
run wild.
The major offender, according
to Komsomol Pravda. was Ed
ward Streltsov. 20-year-old all-star
forward who was booted to trie
minor leagues in February after
the paper dug up similar scandals
of high living.
Streltsov promised to retorm
and was brought back to the big
time. But the paper said he "com
mitted a grave crime and will
soon face court as a hooligan and
a rapist.
Right wing Boris Tatushin and
left back Mikhail Ogonkov also
were named in the article
Streltsov's companions in drunk
en crime and debauchery. Kon-
stantin Andrianov was referred to
as the former deputy chairman of
the Committee on Physical Cul
ture and Sports making clear he
had been fired as a result of the
scandal.
The three players were kicked
off the team before It went to
Stockholm for the international
matches, the World Series of soc
cer. The Soviet team was elimina
ted in the quarter-finals last
Thursday.
Komsomol Pravda said Strelt
sov turned up at club meetings
drunk, got into fights with the po
lice, broke into a shop on one oc
casion and smashed the furniture
but he was forgiven time and
again because he was a star.
The article said the orgy tnat
brought the trio's downfall took
place at a country house lent them
by one of Streltsov's fans who runs
a state vegetable store.
Cretella's bill would apply the
anti-trust laws to professional
baseball, basketball, football and
hockey. But it would exempt from
any anti-trust action the reserve
clause, player contracts, territori
al rights, expansion and forma
tion of leagues, advancement of
players through drafting and as
ignment of player contracts.
It would however, correct what
Cretella called "the worst type of
sports monopoly. He said it
would protect baseballs minor
leagues "from total destruction by
Hacking the two major threats
to the existence of the minor
leagues indiscriminate telecast
ing and broadcasting of major
league games into minor league
territory and the farm system.
Accordingly, Cretella said,
for the sake of minor league sur
vival, I am proposing that:
'1 No major league game tele
cast or broadcast be permitted
into a minor league area when a
minor league team is playing in
that city, unless that minor
league team specifically consents
to such a broadcast or telecast.
"2 No major league team may,
after Jan. 1, I960, own a minor
league team directly or indirectly,
Cretella j bill also would pro
vide that:
A player who stgns a con
tract when he is less than 21
years old, would have a choice of
continuing to play tor . the team
with which he signed or becoming
a free agent on reaching the age
of 21.
A player who has served in
the majors for at least three
years cannot be transferred to the
minor leagues without his consent
after he is once placed on the
waiver list and is claimed by a
major league club.
A player who has served in
the minor leagues for five years
cannot be transferred without his
consent to another team in the
same or lower classification.
Klamath Falls 5
Mount Shasta 4
Yreka 4
Weed 3
Dunsmuir 2
Scott Valley 0
Sunday's Results
Klamath 15, Dunsmuir 1
Yreka 15, Scott Valley 12
Weed 7, Mount Shasta 2
Pet. GR
.833
.571
.667
.500
.333
.000
Klamath Falls increased its
Northern California League lead
to a game and a half Sunday aft
ernoon by bombing Dunsmuir into
submission 15-1 while Weed upset
second place Mount Shasta 7-2 in
two of the three Sunday afternoon
games olaved.
in the other game, yreica moved
into second place and dropped
Mount Shasta to third by outscor-
ing Scott Valley 15-12 in a three
hour slugfest that was highlighted
by four home runs.
Manager Irv Whilt s Klamath
Kubs blasted Dunsmuir with 17
base hits including a pair of home
runs. Dave D Ohvo pitched tne
Kub victory, scattering eight Duns
muir hits throughout the lineup
and was never In serious trouble
over the nine inning jaunt.
Klamath broke open the game
with a pair of two-run innings in
the first two trames as the home
runs paid off in pairs. In the first
inning, 1-ran Miller singled then
came home wilh two away on
Floyd Linderman's fourth home run
of the season. In the second. Jerry
Burke drew a base on balls and
scored ahead of Scott Hartley's
home run. Bob Kelly and D'Olivo
rapped out singles, but Dunsmuir
managed to retire the next three
Klamath batters without further
damage.
Burke s single and Kelly s dou
ble in the third accounted for two
more Kub scores setting the next
scoring stage in the fifth inning
when 10 men came to bat for the
winners.
With one out. Hartley walked,
Kellv singled and D'Olivo walked
to load the bases. Miller was safe
on an error with one run scoring
and Donn Taucher was safe on a
fielder's choice that nipped Miller
at second, but Kelly raced home
with another tally. Dorm Martin
rapped a double to left field to
score two more runs and he later
came home on a single by George
Hanson.
Klamath Legion '91
Beats Central Point
Klamath completed their rout
with three scores in the seventh
and one more in the ninth.
D'Olivo set down 18 of 20 bat
ters he faced in the first six in
nings before Dunsmuir could reach
him for a score in the last of the
seventh. Bob Busce doubled with
one out and scored on Elbert Slo
cumn's bases with one out, but a
force play at home and a fly ball to
right ended the uprising.
D'Olivo struck out seven and
didn't give ud a walk in posting
his second Northern Cal victory
'against one setback
Home runs sparked the mara
thon between Yreka and Scott Val
ley in a game played at Fort
Jones. Willie Jones and Wayne
Paulson homered for the winners
wilh Jones getting his on the first
pilch of the game. For Scott Val
ley, Bob Martin homered twice,
once with the bases loaded, the
other with two runners on. It was
Martin's second and third homers
in two games and his second grand
slam blow in as many times.
Yreka had to come from behind
to notch (he win as winless Scott
Valley led 12-11 going into the
ninth. A four-run outburst paved
the way lo the Yreka win.
At Weed, the Sons rapped two
Mount Shasta Ditchers for 16 base
hits while Gene Hilliard scattered
nine hits to the Seals.
Boxscore:
SOUTHERN OREGON
LEAGUE
W L Pet. GB
3 0 1.000
2 1 .667 1
2 2 .500 Hi
1 2 .333 2
0 3 .000 3
Grants Pass
Klamath Falls
Central Point
Mcdlord
Lakcview
Briefs
Sunday's Results
Klamath 4-5. Central Point 2-10
(first game counts in league
play)
Grants Pass 2-2, Mcdford 0-6 (first
game counts in league play)
Klamath Falls' American Legion
Junior Baseball team moved into
second place of the Southern Ore
gon League standings here Sunday
by beating Central Point 4-2 in
the first game of a doubleheader,
the counting game.'
In other Sunday action, branis
Pass kept its league record clean
with a 2-0 blanking of Medford in
the first of two games. Central
Point came back to trounce Klam
ath 10-5 in the nightcap at Gem
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
GOLF
ruirii, mini. iw imu". ,. , .. ,.
Sarasota, Fla., shot a 69 to take alaa a"a "u"
over the lead in the $52,000 Flint u'.""'s "7
Hun tith a Kd.hnln crnrp nF 911 . 04
ERIE, Pa. Patty Berg, St.
Andrews, 111., won her second
Alturas In
League Lead
KLAMATH BASIN
LEAGUE
W L Pet. GB
Alturas 2 0 1.000 -
Merrill 2 1 .667 Vi
Chiloquin Townies 2 1 .667 Vi
Lakeview 2 1 .667
Beatty 1 2 .333 1V4
Chiloquin Cubs 1 3 .250 2
Malin 0 2 .000 2
Sunday's Results
Merrill 10, Malin 9
Chiloquin Townies 7, Lakeview 0
Chiloquin Cubs 11, Beatty 8
Orioles 2, ChiSox 0
Baltimore climbed out of the
cellar when Billy O'Dell turned in
a six-hit shutout H ;ntcago z-o,
his eiehth victory.
Baltimore 002 H z 7 l
Chicajo MS H Ml
0'D11 (1-7) and Triaaaw. "ii-
i. Stater ( avd HitWy, LA
II). Lour Wilson (6-6).
Bar) Cuturvt
NEW YORK (UP1) George
Sheppard. preside of the New
York Boxing Managers' Associa
tion, is suffering from a heart ail
ment and has been ordered to give
uo all activity for at least five
weeks. Sheppard manages welter
weight Peter Schmij aQd C9e'8
ERIE, Pt. UFI) Pracisi
nuttini Patty Hri rmimdmi hr
asviRth Vonea't Vwttm Golf
Aaw. cltmsixhit Vimltf wit
a rir-ihire pvtttr that tamed
tt grma at ts tMt Cm
try Club cour.
Mit bt, . r.,
ho came into th tourna; m
toding champion, faM 'm
gallery by droppir put' 4f
30 feet. She postal firl
rova 01 o, auer taiuir le-n-u
for a total 293. four ,s tttYi second-place
Bi?rly Hanson. Indio,
Calif. Miss Hanson scoitj 72-.
75-74297.
The dv)ing champ
paired with Mickey Wright, Chik'a
Vista, Calif., who hed secor
place for most of the tournanajnt.
Miss Wright, wilting under Pat
ty's rSnetitlon. olunged to a
fourth-place tie with Mary LenfjChiloquin Cubs
The Chiloquin Townies and Chil
oquin Cubs both went on the ram
page Sunday afternoon in posting
Klamath Basin Independent
League baseball triumphs on their
home field and gave Alturas s en
try sole possession of first place
with a 2-0 record.
The Townies whipped Lakeview
7-0 behind the two-hit pitching of
Chuck Ruff. Vic Sisson tripled in
the first inning and Dick Siemens
homered in the third for Chiloquin.
Siemens. Champ Hatcher and Bob
by Jackson each had twe hits fer
the winning Townies,
Itcattv tod the Cube gting late
th last of the eighth but Chile-
is cm u with two runs to
t tlw score at 8- Then Jerry
CoJIim walked ad slot scod,
third twt horns for the winning
rw. Tto Cuhs scored two mere in
twmc runs in the ninth. It was
the first vin for the Cubs.
Xsmll and Malm west into the
last half of tin ninth before the
M attM. Mtlin lid 1-8 ith
tvo oats la th lift frame whe
Hmtli laartad the kssts and
scortl t dtcMinf rux m sinfjas
ta im a ery in-
It
LtMvia 0 a I
Ctiloquia Tm 7 I
Hoy7 and ; wjm
Vin 9 t 3
Merrill 10 9
Anderson. MatlOs '4), Azevedo
'91 and Azevedo, Johrtjln (91.
nnicutt, Wade (81 and Johnson,
Laney (81.
R H E
Beatty H
ll I I
straight Women's - Western Open
title with a 72-hole total of 293.
HUTCHINSON, Kan. Jack
Nicklaus, Columbus, Ohio, won
the Trans-Mississippi Amateur
with a 9 and 8 victory over Rich
ard Norville, Oklahoma City, in
the final.
TRACK
BAKERSFIF.LD. Calif. Aus
tralia's Herb Elliott won the AAU
Mile title in 3:57.9, but it may
go into the record books as a
world equalling 3:68 mark since
the IAAF doesn't recognize tenths
of a second at the distance.
TENNIS
ANNAPOLIS, Md. Alex
Olmedo. Southern California, de
feated Stanford's Jack Douglas
6-3. 3-6. 6-4. 6-1 for the NCAA title.
LONDON Bernice Carr, South
Africa, defeated Margaret Varner.
Boston school teacher, 6-4, 5-7, -t
in the finals of the Queen's Club
Tournament.
FOREST HILLS. N.Y. Un
beaten Pancho Gonzales defeated
Ken Rosewall 19-17, 5-7, 6-4 in the
Pro Tournament of Champions for
a 4-0 record.
ROWING
SYRACUSE, N.Y. Cornell
won varsity, junior varsity and
freshman races in the Intercol
legiate Rowing Assn. Regatta.
AUTO KACINU
LE MANS, France Phil Hill,
Los Angeles, and Olivier Gende-
bien of Belgium drove a Ferrari
to victory in the Le Mans 24
hour sports car race. One French
driver was killed.
BRESCIA, Italy Luigi lara-
mazzo and Giuseppe Gerini won
Italy's famed Mille Migila 1,000
mile auto race, which took two
lives.
RACING
NEW YORK A Glitter ($8.60)
defeated Spar Maid by a half-
lenelh in the S71.450 Coaching
Club American Oaks at Belmont
Park.
INGLEWOOD, Calif. - Eddie
Schmidt ($18) edgod Haw Now in
the 54.70 Inglewoed Handicap at
Hollywood Park
CHICAGO 9ha Pac (J.W
scored a surprise victory ia the
M2.f.rit Grassland HsHicai it
WishiiutM Pirk.
STAXTC), IM. ttarpsruirg
(Ml ufe Vm mwomre of six other
distance rusrs n the JO,OS0
acted Diarmnri Mie sLanriicap at
Delaware Pi.
Klamath evened their league
standings with Crater at 1-1 after
the ..Cheney Studs won Saturday
night's game 2-0 at Central Point.
Two runs in the lirst inning fol
lowed by one-run bursts in the
fourth and sixth frames gave
Klamath the nod over the Cheney
learn. Central Point scored two
limwcw9
tiwMi tin
it l
Marrill 7S-W 11 1
Gun 3 2-5 3 5
Carltton, Hill ' and Ha'lms;
Robatc Hi. tfrr i 1 :tl.
com, Sprinr.
Horn run : t:i
Vrrill.
iitn
tc
Fluhrty s 52 (I -32 14
Tulelake ' 0401 7 4
Herrera, Buckholtz 2i and
Pvnes; Roberts. Oehlrick (2 and
Much.
Home run Danny Herrera, '.uh
rer's (bases load!).
Pep Shooting
For Title Mix
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Willie Pep, the old pro from
Hartford. Conn., will try to
strengthen his claims for another
shot at the leatherweight title ne
hold so long when he boxes Pat
McCoy of Ireland today at New
Bedford. Mass.
Wily Willie has won 28 of his
lest 29 and hopes to boost him
self into a title match with Hogan
(Kid) Basscy, the current 126
pound ruler in mid-September at
Boston.
Will Greaves, the Canadian
whom the late Jake Mint was
trying lo build into an attraction,
returns to New York as the Cana
dian middleweight champion to
night to box Otis Woodnrd of New
York at St. Nicholas Arena.
He won the Canadian crown by
knocking out Cobey McCluskey in
April.
Woodard, a well - conditioned
nlodder. outnointed Eddie An
drews in April and stopped him
the fifth round oi a May re
match.
Du Mont will telecast lo some
sections.
High-rated middleweight Rory
Calhoun of White Plains, N. Y.,
visits the home town of Bohb
Hnvd for a Wednesday TV re
match at Chicago Stadium. Cal
houn slopped Boyd in two rounds
la t November and thinks he can
do it again, despite 1958 defeats
by Spider Webb and Joey Giar
dcllo.
Matchmaker Jack Barrett re
turns to the old days of three 10-
rounders Friday at Madison
Square Garden with the featured
TV match a lightweight pairing
of Carlos Orti and Johnny Busso
two New Yorkers.
In the other tens, Tony DeLola
of Brooklyn faces Frank Ippolito
nl New York and Danny Russo
of Brooklyn lakes on Charley Cum
nines of Philadelphia. All lour are
welters.
times in the ton of the seventh
inning before Keith Farrell could
nut down the last-ditch rally.
In the first inning. Smiley Her
rera was hit by a pitched ball to
onen the game. A triple to ngnt-
center by Bill Worlein pushed Her
rera home. Worlein scored on the
next nlav when Rich Moore
dropped a double into right field,
In the fourth, Steve Binney
walked, advanced on an error and
scored when Ken Womer was
safe on a second fielding miscue,
The sixth inning run came after
Binney again walked with one
out and came home after another
base on balls to Blake Griggs and
Keith Farrell s single.
Central Point loaded the bases
on an error and two walks oy
Klamath starter Dean Dunson. A
single chased Dunson and scored
one run leaving the bases loaded.
Farrell came on and was greeted
by a single by Danny Johnson
scoring ono more run. Then Far
rell struckout two batters in a
row and forced the third hitter
to fly out to rightficlder Bob Yunck
ending the threat and the game.
The Crater High team scored
five runs with two outs in the first
inning and never trailed in the sec
ond game, which was ragged on
the parts of both clubs. Crater
scored once more in the second
lliree times in the third then
added their final tally in the fourth
frame.
Klamalh scoring in the second
game came in the lirst two in
nings twice In the first ana three
times in the second.
Two hits each by Bob John
son. Terry Korbol, Pete Slempie,
Harley Dickerson and Dannie John
son highlighted the Central Point
win. Klamath had only five hits,
two going to Worlein, one a dou
ble and the other a triple.
Linescorcs:
R II E
Crater 000 000 22 4 4
Klamalh Falls 200 101 x 4 3 2
McKinnic and Tucker; Dunson
Farrell (7) and Moore.
RUE
Crater 513 10-10 1.1 2
Klamath Ka Is 230 00 5 5 1
B. Johnson, Slemple 2) and
Tucker: J. Wcbh, Ferrell (1), Bin
ney (2), Herrera (21 and Salva
dor!, Moore (2).
KLAMATH
Mlllpr
II ronaka. rr
Taucher, It
Frlcdcl
Martin. a
l.tnrirrman, cr
llnjile, cf
Harmon, In
nurkc. 21)
Hartley, 3b
Kelly, c
D'Oltvo. D
Total!
miNSMUIR
ltanelton. 3B
HlanfY. If
Miizite, c
Bueae, lb
Slocoumn. rf
Summers, 3b-p
mttione, aa
Moulton. a
Huthcrford, 3b
DoKlna, cf
Cnrr, p
Sowlea. p-3b
Antlorion. aa-3b
Totala
AB-II R-BI O A E
4-1 1-0 2-0
D-D
2-0
0-0
2- 2
3- 3
1-0
5-2
0-0
5-1
5-2
J-0
5-2
0-0
2-1
2-0
2-3
1-2
1-0
19-11
1-0
0-0
0-0
2-2
0- 0
1- 0
11-1
2- 3
0-3
9-0
O-l
21-9
AB-II R BI O-A P.
3-0 0-0 3-1 1
a-i n-o 0-0 0
3-1 O
12-0 O
2-u o
2-0 O
4-0 0.0
4-1 1-0
4-2 D-l
4-1 0-0
2- 2 0-0
0- 0 0-0
1- 0 0-0
3- 1 0-0
0- 0 0-0
1- 0 0-0
2- 1 0-0
S3-K l-l
a-ran for Malone In 5th.
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-1
3-3
M-7
lamalh 222 050 .101 13 .
unamutr 000 000 100 1
Summary: 2b Taucher. Kelly. Bueae.
HR Llndermon, Hartley. SB Mazzlo.
Sac Miller. Taucher. HBP Ltnder-
and Burke by summers, bu oy
D'Oltvo 7. Carr 0. Sowlea 1. Sum
mers 2. BB off D'Olivo 0. Carr 0,
Sowlea 2. summers 3. Mils on u un-
vo o, carr 3. sowies 4. auinmem w. ,
Runs off D'Olivo 1. Carr 4, Sowles
2. Summers 8. Innings pitched D'Oli
vo II, uarr i, aowica i -o, duin,,,.
1-3. DP u Oltvo. Burke, nanson;
BueKe lunaastatedi: Anderaon, Buese.
Loll nn uase mamam ra.ia u,
nunsmutr 6. Umpires Cloyd and
.mini. ,
Yreka 120 034 10415 ll s
Scott Valley 110 301 60012 13 5
Brown, Ewing 17) and sword;
Martin, Fisher (4), Roberts (9)
and Vinall.
R H E
Mount Shasta 2 9 3
Weed 7 16 1
Lawary, Feminis (4) and Ren-
sen; Hilliard and Brown.
Faulk. Thomasville. Ga.,
tw strokes behind Loui:
C9 fc5i. Ga.
at 3-1,1 Denggiro. Jimenez 5 and Cald-
Suggi, well, Coulder ($ . W
'GibblQ.
FIGHTS
v THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
IIOI.LYWOOIa Calif. - Charlie
'Tombstone' Smith. 146'i, Dp
troil. knocked out Armando Mu
ni. Ifi4'2. .luare. Mexico, 3.
BROOKLYN. N. Y. Jose
Tones. 164. Puerto Ilico, knocked
out Joey Sohalo, 166, Yonkcrs,
N Y . 4
DETROIT Joe Hemphill, lflfl'l,
Chicago, outpointed Osee Groom,
i4. Detroit, 6.
SUNNY
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The BoslnS Rfi x 0,1 won an
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'They &t finis fls) feond In 1949.
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