Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, May 06, 1959, Image 13

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    WEDNESDAY, MAY 6. 1959-
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE 3 B
Today's Sport Parade
Things Vice Versa
Claims Yankee Boss
By OSCAR FRALEY
; NEW YORK (UPIl-There is an
'old story concerning what hap
pened to the men who owned a
Stable of Thnrnuphhi-nHs nnf a
stable of harness horses which
were cleaning up until suddenly
tie 1051 everytnmg. a
"It's lilTIDle." hp evnlninori
"The runners started trotting and
me irouers started running. So 1
went broke."
Ifs that simple, too, with the
J.'ew York Yankees.
"The pitchers suddenly ain't
pncning ana ute mtters ain't hit
ting," opines Manager Casey
Stengel.
But no matter what you hear,
me wrinkled warrior isn t press
Amateurs
Pro Top
Tourney
PORTLAND (AP) The Oregon
Open golf tournament entered its
final day this morning with a pro-
iesaionai and two amateurs tied
for the lead. .
Chuck Siver of the University
of Oregon and Jim Bourne of Se
attle scared first place with pro-
tessional Joe ureer of Yakima
with 3 under par 141 for the ini
tial 36 holes at the Columbia-j
i,dgewater Country Club course.
Of the original field of JOO,
there were 66 survivors. The elim
ination point was 153. Only 12
strokes separated the leaders
from the bottom of the field.
Tied for runnerup first day
honors were four professionals
Boots Porterield, Grants Pass;
Ockie Eliason, Tacoma; and Bob
Duden and Tom Marlowe, both
of Portland. .
The defending champion, Dick
Yost of Portland, is well down the
list, and it appears there will be
a new champion. '
The leaders:
Joe Greer, Yakima, 71-70141
Jim Bourne, Seattle, 69-72141
' , Chuck Silver, U of 0, 72-69141
Bob Duden, Oswego, 72-70142
Ockie Eliason, Tacoma, 72-70
'142
Tom Marlowe, Portland, 69-7$
142
Boots Porterfield, Grants Pass,
69-73142
Bill Eggers, Portland, 71-72143
Don Krieger, Portland, 70-73
143
Eddie Hogan, Portland, 69-74
143
Sam Cavalli, Portland, 69-75
144
Scores of other Oregon com
oetitors included:
Chuck Hunter, U of 0, 71-76147
Harvey Hixon, Eugene, 74-74
148
Tom Shaw, U of 0, 72-77149
Keith Gubrud, U of 0, 72-77149
Wendell Wood, Eugene, 75-75
150
, Walt flint Jr., Salem, 76-75151
Bob Caspar, Cottage Grove, 75-77152
Bob Prall, Salem, 79-78157
George' Weise, Pendleton, 78-81
159
Charles Sparks, Eugene, 78-81
159
Paul Sundin, Salem, 77-87164
Clark Good, Klamath Falls, 83
5168 . Babe Carter, Eugene, 93-85178
MINOR LEAGUE
Minor League Results
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
International League
Buffalo 9, Rochester 5
Miami 8, Richmond 2 '
Havana 5, Columbus 3
Toronto 6, Montreal 2
American Assn.
Fort Worth 7, Houston 1
Denver 8, Indianapolis 7
Louisville 8, St. Paul 2
Other games ppd
Sisters Coach
Joins Tule Staff
TULELAKE Tom Cox, former
fnVd football fend track coach at
Sisters High School, has accepted
a position at Tulelake High School.
E. L. Coyner, principal, announced
today.
Cox served as head track coach
during his three years at Sisters.
He was assistant football coach
his first year, moving up to head
coach the following year.
Cox's football teams have never
finished worse than second In
league competition, and won the
six-man football championship dur
ing nis initial season as head grid
coacn.
He will serve as assistant foot
ball coach in addition to teaching
auues.
ing the panic button and he isn't
in danger of being fired al la Bill
Norman at Detroit. It was Nor
man's sage and sad rebuttal that
"managers are hired to be fired"
but not so with the man who has
led the Yankees to nine pennants
and seven world championships
in 10 years.
SWEETNESS AND LIGHT
Only since the Norman dismis
sal has the current sad plight of
the ankees come into focus. Be
fore that, the Detroit downfall
took precedence but, with that
matter cleaned MP. all eyes are
now trained on the Yankees. Ac
tually, the Yankee plight was
even worse all along. They were
expected to be winners. Detroit
only was given an overall vote of
confidence to make the best run
at the world champions.
The standing of the club in the
strange- atmosphere of the lower
strata of the second division is
evident in old Casey's attitude. He
is all sweetness and light.
This, the Yankees , will confide,
is ever the way when things are
going bad. At such times, Stengel
is most solicitous pf his heroes, in
a kindly manner attempting to re
build their trembling egos. It is
only when they are hot that he
lashes out with the whip. Then he
applies the old backroom philoso
phy of "you've got 'em down, kick
em.
CLUB IS SOLID
Stengel naturally is worried
and, as he does while winning or
losing, spends his nights plotting
and scheming for victory.
There is a great deal of
lip licking and chortling around
the league as result of the poor
Yankee start. There have been all
kinds of analysis, all jubilant, as
to what has happened. The veter
ans have been labeld long over
the hill" and the younger mem
bers "overrated." The league
overall undoubtedly is stronger
but impartial observers still con
tend in the face Of current adver
sity that the Yanks are all alone
in the first division on potential.
Hank Bauer summed it up best
when he said:
"See me in September."
The hunch here is that the rest
of the league at that time will
have to look upwards to make
such a vision possible. .
Case Unworried,
Just Irritated
KANSAS CITY (AP) - Casey
Scngel isn't worried by his New
York Yankees' slump but he
seemed irritated. Tuesday night
netore the game with the Kansas
City Athletics. .?
A television camera crew ap
proached the Yankee bench with
microphone and camera.
"Get away from here," Stengel
said. "You want me to come out
and talk about this ball club and
I ain't going to do it. This is a
good ball club. I make my living
here On this bench not in the
movies.
When the camera crew tried to
put in a dissent, Stengel jumped
up and headed for the clubhouse
calling over his shoulder:
"I'll see you in Europe."
' Bill Skowron led the Yankee hit
ters during the spring exhibitions
with a .466 batting mark. He also
led in triples, doubles, hits and in
scoring runs.
The University of Washington
football team lost seven of its last
eight games in 1958.
Owl Athletes
Schedule Trek
(Continued front Page I B)
marked that the Owls cinder crew
could match Portland State in
quality but not in quantity." The
graying Ore Tech mentor, was re
terring to the fact that the Vikings
are two' and three men deep in
every event. The majority of the
PSU points in meets this year
have come from second and third
place finishes.
Top men for the Vikings this
year, expected to give the Owls
a rough time, are Len Lukens in
both the mile and two-mile events
Gene Hedrick in the 440 and 880.
Ole Adamson in the discus apd
shot put. Ron Lokcn in the pole
vault and Bernie Jones in both
the 100 and 220.
Ore Tech's Dick Hocevar. How
ard Jackson jnd Norm Sawyer
all have turned .in good per,
formances this spring, each break
ing the school record in his respec
tive event. Hocevar holds the
high hurdle mark while Jackson
and Sawyer ' have set new stan
dards in the javelin and 880-yard
dash respectively.
Other Owl tracksters who turned
in promising performances against
Southern Oregon two weeks ago
were speedster Leon Wilson in the
100-yard dash and Dale Perkins in
the discus. Wilson, competing in
the third track meet of his career
won the 100. against SOC in 10.2
seconds. Perkins, improving con
stantly, placed second to the Raid
ers' Pedro Colley in the discus
event to help boost the Owls to
victory.
Other entries for Ore Tech
against ' PSC will be Sawyer in
the half mile, Bill Barrington in
the 440, Roger Moreland. who won
both events against SOC in both
the mile and half mile, A r d e 1
Hamilton in both ' the broad
and high jumps, William Hanson in
the pole vault and Frank Wilson
and Paul Layher in the shot put.
Beaver, Duck
Tilts Scratched
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Baseball games scheduled bv
the University of Oregon and Ore
gon State College were rained out
Tuesday.
The Oregon Ducks, who were
to have played the University of
Portland at Eugene, .leave today
tor i-uuman wnere tney will play
Washington State Friday and Sat
urday.
Oregon State had to cancel its
scheduled Northern Division
game with Washington.
'OLD AMERICANS
STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY J
New Mentor
Likes Detroit
Vim, Vigor
DETROIT (AP) Jimmy Dykes
doesn't know, nor docs he care,
what went on with the Detroit
Tigers before he got to town.
Everything Dykes has seen so
far, albeit only three baseball
games, ' has his approval. His
team beat the Boston Red Sox
Tuesday night 8-3 for its third
straight victory.
It sounded odd Dykes' reply
when he asked what he likes
best about the team he inherited
unexpectedly late last Saturday
afternoon when Bill Norman was
fired.
"I like the spirit, the attitude,"
said the 62-year-old manager.
"The players are grinning, they
act like they want to win and they
didn't let up after beating the
Yankees that doubleheader.
That's important.
If we can win a couple of
the players might get that old
confidence. Then there's no tell
ing where they might go."
It sounded odd, because these
are the Tigers who have been
criticized so roundly over the past
tew seasons for being too carefree,
too easy-going, too nonchalant.
Few have hinted that the spirit,
above all, was anything to boast
about.
"I don't know what went on be
fore," Dykes added. "All I know
is what I see now and I'm waiting
to see other things. And I won't
ask the coaches anything about
what went on before, how the
other guy ran the club, or any
thing. I'm running it now."
HIGHEST IN YEARS
NEW YORK (UPD-The Amer
ican Hockey Leagu.e announced
today the recently completed
Calder Cup playoffs was the most
lucrative money pool in years. A
total of $68,473 will be divided
among the "champion Hershey
Bears, Buffalo Bisons, Cleveland
Barons and Rochester Americans.
m
SCtpRES
COMMERCIAL LEAGUE I
tin! Standing
w l.
Pepsi Cola 00 42 I
Steinieiftr Zlec. 82'i 49' a
Luton Aircraft 77'i 54'i
Ellington Logger! 72 60
yFW. - 70 62
Superior Troy Cine. 65 67
Ricky fliij 701,,
Bower Dlit. en n
Weyerhaeuser ' M'i 744
Malone Chevron M 7R
Griggt Foods an 79 1
Great Northern ' 47 83
Last night's results: I
Griggs Foods 4, Superior Troy 0
Bowers Dit. 3, VFW 1
btelnaeifer Elec. 3. Rlckyi 1
Malone Chev. 2. Litlnn Aircraft
Pepsi Cola 4, Weyerhaeuser 0
Ellington Loggers 3. Great Northern 1
High team tame Pepii Cola 998
High team series Pepsi Cola 2923
High ind. game T. C. Griggs 247
High ind. series Chuck Reynolds 618
COFFEE CUP
Houston's Beauty
Jones Office Supply
Charm Center
Tower Furniture
Team No. 8
Team No. 7
Team No. 2
Specialized Svc.
93 51
92 52
504 534
47 Vi 56 'a
36', 674
Last night's results:
Team No. 2 3. Specialized Svc. 1
Houston's Beauty 3, Charm Center 1
Team No. 7 4. Jonea Office Sutmlv 0
Team No. 6 3, Tower Furntiure 1
High team game Team No. 6 769
High team series Team No. 6 2047
High ind. fame-Gloria Anderson 184
High ind. seriesGloria Anderson 470
BOOSTER LEAGUK
Dick's Chevron
Crater Lake Creamery
Klamath JC's.
Shaffer Electric
Team No. 6
KKJI
Low Cost Food Mkt.
Richfir'd Borons
w
I.
354
S 41
944 454
54 46
91 40
4:i4 564
414 5A4
32 68
Last night's results:
Shaffer Electric 3. Cr. Lake Cmy. 1
Dick's Chevron 4. Klamath JC's. 0
Team No. 6 2, KKJI 2
Rich field Borons 3, Low Cost Mkt. 1
High team game Dick's Chevron 959
High team aeries Dick's Chevron 2795
High Ind. game Mel Hearth, Mike
ooiiuon itlei 202
High ind. series Mike Robinson 570
North Carolina's 1959 football
team will have five lettermen back
battling for the end positions.
MOTORCYCLES
FUN ECONOMICAL THRILLING '
n -$7)(S1(S1
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315, E. Main Ph. TU 4-4672
m m
Sacto Keeps Lead
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Sacramento Solons retained
their spot on top of the Pacific
Coast League standings Tuesday
night, beating the Seattle Rainiers
5-3. .
The Solons now hold a three
game lead over the San Diego
Padres and the Phoenix Giants,
who are tied for second.
The Padres were beaten 5 0 by
the Spokane Indians Tuesday
night, while Phoenix's scheduled
game with the Beavers at Port
land was rained out. In the other
league game, the Vancouver
Mountics whipped the Salt Lake
City Bees 8-5.
The Solons won on the strength
of a three-run sixth inning. Mike
Krsnich, Al Heist and Nippy Jones
were the scorers. The Rainiers
outfit the Solons 12-11 but the
safeties were scattered.
Chris Nicolosi stopped the
Padres on five hits. He struck
out seven batters and walked
none as his m a t e s pounded San
Diego pitching for nine hits. Tony
Roig's first-inning single, scoring
Maury Wills from second, wu the
only run the Indians needed.
Red Graber got three of the five
San Diego hits off Nicolosi while
Freddie' Hatfield and Rudy Regal
ado picked up the others. All were
singles.
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