Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 30, 1959, Page 13, Image 13

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    Tuesday. .Tune SO.
vav, nnRTEEV
San Francisco Reclaims 2nd Place
KF Legion Lineup ntact
HERALD AND NEWS. Klamath Falls. Ore.
Dodger's
Win Skein
Snapped
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The National League's longest
winning streak o( the season cov
ered seven games in seven days,
lasted 12 innings and was all over
en one pitch.
Jim Davenport and Willie Mays
Jolted reljever Stan Williams' first
two pitches for 13th-inning home
runs Monday night, but Daven
port's was all San Francisco need
ed in i 6-4 decision that ended
Los Angeles' streak and reclaim
ed second place from the Dodgers.
II was Davenport's second homer
of the night.
That was the only game sched
uled in the NL and left the Giants
two percentage points ahead of
the Dodgers. Both are l'-j games
behind -Milwaukee's league-leading
Braves, who return to action at
Cincinnati tonight.
SF 6, Los Angeles 4
Davenport now has homered game at Pittsburgh a week from
twice in one game three times in
the majors each time at the Los
WAYNE SCOn, Sports Editor
AL Contenders Face Crucials
Tigers, NY
Tied For 4th
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The American League pennant
race, so far a scramble of winning
streaks and slumps, gets rolling
tonight on what could be 10 telling
days for the five contenders
Cleveland, Chicago, Baltimore.
Detroit and New York.
In those 10 playing days, sand
wiching the break for the All-Star
Today's Sport Parade
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
, American League
W. U Pet. G.B.
Cleveland at .565
Chicago 39 32 .549 1
Baltimore 38 34 .528 2'
New York at 35 .507 4
Detroit 37 36 .507 4
Washington 32 39 .451 I
Kansas City 31 38 .449 8
Boston 31 39 .443 8'j
Monday Results
Kansas City 10, Detroit
innings
Only game
National League
W. U Pet. G.B
For Medford League Test
The Klamath Kalis American Le I ipr. Blake Griggs '5-P pitching. inh Optra! Point and is then
eion baseball team got a shot in Don Gresdel ai Inst, smiley Her-; oil lo Sweet Home for a two-
the arm Monday night when regu-ircra at second. KMin Kuer ai.ri.iy Un-s.ime sland against the.
lar centcrlielder Rich Dcpew got third. Don Willcy in lett. Hon
ih. dnmr's okav to come batk Yunck in right. Dcpew in center
to work. and Binncy at shortstop.
Sucet Hume nine.
The next home appearance for
he local squad conies at the end
Deptw. who has missed a num
ber of Legion contests because of
a finuer smashed when, by his
Gri.qgs. in addition to his mownrot next week
record, is rolling along at the top, mi
of the KF batting statistics with1
own admission. "I doped off trying a AX He is crowded closely by
Most Lethal Weapon
SinceTrigger Advent
Angeles Coliseum, where he hit
five of his 12 rookie homers last
season. Last night's pair, for a
total of five this year, were his
first against the Dodgers in '59.
The Dodgers who three times
came from behind scored twice in
the first, chasing Jack Sanford in
his first appearance since June 11
because of injury, for a 2-1 lead
utter Davenport's lcadoff homer.
Willie Kirkland's 13th home run
scored two for a 3-2 Giant lead in
the third against starter Roger
Craig, but Gil Hodges' 14th home
run tied it in the Dodgers' third.
Both, scored in the ninth after
Craig retired 16 in a row, the
Giants counted on a single by Or
lando Cepeda and Jackie Brandt's
triple. But the Dodgers came
back on a single by Gilliam and
a double by Charlie Neal that
chased reliever stu Miller, and a
sacrilice fly by pinch-hitter Carl
Furillo off winning reliever Mike
McCormick. The young left-hand-l
er, now 7-7, blanked the Dodgers
on four hits the rest of the way,
getting Don Demeter on an inning
ending fly with the bases loaded
in the 11th.
Williams (3-3) came on after
fouthpaw Sandy Koufax had
struck out five in three perfect
tunings of relief, then was lifted
for pinch-hitter Don Drysdale
who grounded into a doubleplay
in the 12th.
(13 innings)
S. Fran. 102 000 001 000 2 9 2
L. A. 201 000 001 000 0 4 11 1
Sanford, Miller (1), McCormick
(9) and Landrith, . Hegan 19).
Craig, Koufax ll, Williams 03
and Roseboro, Pignatano HI).
Winner McCormick 7-7. Los
er Williams 3-3 ) . HR Daven
port 2, Kirktand, Hodges, Mays.
(Only game scheduled.)
By OSCAR FRA1.EV
NEW YORK (UPD Reflections
on "THE" right hand:
Everybody still wants to know
about lngemar Johansson's right
hand, the only difference being
that since he knocked out Floyd
today, two of the three western Patterson to win the world heavy
wonders' will face each other weight title they believe all the
every day. stories.
Cleveland, first a game over The punch, as seen from this
Chicago, plays four games with 'corner with an over-lngo's-shoul
the White Sox in that span and der view, was readied much like
six against Detroit. The Tigers,
four games behind and tied for
fourth with New Y'ork after a 10
inning, 10-3 loss to Kansas City
the only AL game scheduled
Monday have a half-dozen games
with the White Sox.
That gives either of the three
the Indians, White Sox or Tigers
a chance to break away, but a
stand-off is more likely. And a
stand-off would give Baltimore
and New York a chance to take
charge.
The Orioles, third. 2't games
back, and Y'ankees play each oth
er only three times in the 10-day
period. Baltimore splits a dozen
games between Washington and
Boston, while the Yankees have
10 with the Senators and Red Sox.
A stand-off among the Injuns,
White Sox and Tigers would
make Kansas City the tie-breaker
and the seventh place A's could
snarl things but good.
Mounties,
Indians Win
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
It was "come from behind
right in Pacific Coast League
baseball action Monday night
In the only games played. Spo
kane scored seven big runs in the
eighth to overtake the Salt Lake
City Bees, 7-4, and Vancouver's
Mounties tallied twice in the
eighth to down the San Diego
Padres, 4-3.
Some 10.370 Spokane fans
svatched their Indians break a tie
for fifth place by beating the
Bees. It was the largest crowd
ever to watch a baseball game in
Spokane.
At Vancouver, the Mounties
(Hatched an early 1-0 lead melt
away when the Padres scored
once in the second and twice in
the fifth.
The linescores:
Salt Lake City oil 000 101-4 10 1
Spokane 000 000 07x 7 7 1
Francis. Vmbncht ', Hanlon
(8 and Westerfeld. Nicolosi. Gil-1
loinbardo 7, Merrill 9, Payne
(9) and Barracan.
San Diego 010 020 0003 0
Vancouver 100 010 02x 4 8 0
Smith and Jones; Estrada.
Luhke and Pagliaroni.
KC 10, Detroit 3
They jumped from behind for a
2-2 tie on Kent Hadley's ninth-inning
home run at Detroit Monday
then turned another batch of Ti
gers bobbles into a record-tying,
eight-run 10th. The Tigers now
have lost nine of their last 14
games, and while dropping three
of their last five, 16 of the 30
runs against them have been un
earned.
The A's eight runs tied the AL
record for 10th inning scoring. The
Tillers set the mark against Wash
ington in 1943. and ueveiano
matched it against Philadelphia
to vears later.
An error by losing reliever Bar
nev Schultz (1-21 got the A's
started. Then reliever R. G. Smith
gave up a walk and the tie-break
ins and winning rtms came ir
when Smith threw wild on Dick
Williams' bunt. Hadley. 3-lor-5.
singled Williams home and the
A s went on to send 12 baiters to
the plate.
Bud Daley 8-5 was the winner
with Ned Garver's relief after the
Tigers, blanked for five frames.
added one run in the 10th
Right-hander Jim Bunning start
t for Detroit, but was sidelined
rr five to six days when hit on
the right wrist by Jerry Lumpe's
line drive in the third inning
Robin Hood pulling his bow to full
leverage as he got ready to pink
one of King John's henchmen.
lngo's fist was the head of the
arrow and all you can say in the
final analysis is that it must be
the greatest thing since TNT to
have knocked Patterson flat on his
back.
It was one of the most fearsome.
driving punches these tired, old
red-rimmed eyes ever have seen.
It retrospect the mere fact that
Patterson rose, again and again
like a runaway yoyo, is a testi
monial to his instinctive courage
and gameness. Because the man
was really lathered . . .
TREE TRUNK LEGS
One of the items which legis
lated against Johansson in the
pre-fight speculation was that he
was declared by some to have
"tree trunk" legs which limited
his agility. Those who saw the
pictures of his fight with Eddie
Machen knew, however, that he
could move like a jack rabbit in
laxation was good for him.
lngo only grinned when they
asked "what's wrong with Ameri
can training methods?" Then he
merely replied that everyone
should train as he sees fit, which
is what I do."
Johansson did feel alien and
suspicious as the result of all this
sharp-shooting and was highly re
luctant to discuss his plans and
his training. Thus that right hand
was the best kept secret of the
boxing ages.
Yet lngo did tell the truth when
he said he didn't want to hurt his
sparring partners. If he had
thrown that right in training
they'd have been the most busted
up batch of beak benders in ring
annals.
Because the punch he finally did
put on display was the most
lethal right hand since invention
of the trigger finger.
Milwaukee
San Francisco
Los Angeles ....
I Pittsburgh
I Chicago
St. Louis
Cincinnati
Philadelphia
42
42
43
38
36
' 34
32
26
.583
.560
.558
.507
.500
.472
.4.18
.371
to bunt," picked up a practice
1Bbat Monday nisht and lound that
he hadn't lost his eye during his
layoff.
Said coach Hi Hatfield, "This is
a good time lor men 10 come
back. We've got a tough slate this
week. His hand doesn't really
seem to bother him now but I
14
14
54
6
S
104
IS
Monday Results
San Francisco 6. Los Angeles 4-
13 innings
Only game
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
W L Pel. GB
45 33 .577
41 35 .539 3
40 38 .513 S
37 36 .507 54
38 38 .500 6
37 39 .487 7
34 43
34 44
who
imagine it's a little tender when
he connects with one way out on
the end of the bat
Saks with a .Ml and Willcy
is powdering the ball at
cllp
Dcpew is holding a .3i8 lor his! i
nine games to date while relict
pitcher Gary Bobber has racked , Kiu,'r
up a cool .400 in four games.
Slated to get the nod trom. Med-1 ii,n,.
ford coach John Kovcnz as the I"1"
crew most likely able to knock Acik
II 47 1 30 i
4 S 4 2 I
lfi 4 17 1H lfl
14 W 14 IT a
t, a s
4 7 2 a 3
14 40 10 11 9
Its
OllH'l
unbeaten KK squad oil
perch are catcher Jim Barry, iotah
II 10
.442 104
.436 U
prairie fire
This was proved indisputably by
the fact that, while he floored
Patterson seven times in the third had an U-run celebration in the
round, it was only 2:03 when the I sixth inning to blast Moyina
East Side
Stretches
BR Lead
The top team climbed higher
and the bottom club got stomped
a little deeper in Babe Ruth
League baseball at Conger Field
Monday night. East Side Electric
padded their lead with a 10-5 de
cision over the Crater Lake Ma
chinery Cats while K Amusement
Sacramento
Vancouver
San Diego
Portland
Spokane
Salt Lake City
Phoenix
Seattle
Monday's Results
Vancouver 4. San Diego 3
Spokane 7. Salt Lake City 4
(Only games played)
NORTHWEST LEAG4JE
W L Pet. GB
Salem 42 24 .636 -
Eugene 32 31 .508 8 4
Lewislon . 34 33 .507 84
Wenatchee 33 35 .485 10
Yakima 29 36 .446 124
Tri-City 28 39 .418 144
Monday s Result
Salem 18, Lewiston 1
man Lowell Dean, second sacker
Ray Stewart or Ray Konapasek.'
third baseman Cal Dean, short
stop Ken Durkee and outfielders;
"The boys have been playing ! pitcher Jerry Anderson, first
real good ball. We won four out
of five games in a three day pe
riod, all of them on the road, and
that's quite an accomplishment."
Hatfield smiled.
The return of Dcpew to t h e
lineup coincides with the return
of regular shortstop Sieve Bin-
nev. Binney has been attending
engineering school for the past two
weeks.
With both Binncy and Dcpew
hack, the lineup figured to go
against the talented Medford Le
gion nine at Camp White Wednes
day night finds Dave Saks catch-
r-
.IM
400
.aort
.i
.271 "
1W
Ml
.0.1
.las
.107
.125
.111
.100
OHO
.000
JOO
.111
ire r: ll
E lurrom 7 Hig.r 7. Binnrv 8.
Yum-k 3. Urrcdrl 4. (iiggt 3, Carney
Nakf. .laiknin. Sulwi'll Monre.
W.-l.h Rnhng. Paxton. Willey; 2B
Will. v 4 Vuni-k ;l. Wilkinmn 3. De-ix-w
3. s.,k. 2 Bmnev. Brbhor. Her-r.-;a.
Gri4v .IB hk 4. Urines 3.
W Mr-v 3 n nnv SAT -K,air 1 Siki
Wayne Thompson. Sam Dedincer.'wiiiev. ' tirrn-ra'. Binncy. nrearieii
Bob Quinncy or Kouapasek. '; "BE? U.'.' Wt
Following their Wedncsd.iv UrMdH. Ho ad, WHkirwm. Bcbber. Ki-
maicn wnn wiaiora mo rv rdiisiSrtk( to Pitx1oni Wpbb to Hrr?r. Kt-
tiU' Ciroetl; ucr lo ItiTTrr to Pxion. Wilkinwn to
. . ' Crt'stirl to Sjk, Yunck lo Herrrra to
ir.tfiVI, Kigt't lo Ht-rrera to Urenrtcl
muftis
SCORES
MIXED FOl'BSOMKS
Johansson Heads
Home On Friday
MIAMI. Fla. (API lngemar
Johansson said he will carry the
world heavyweight boxing cham
pionship back to his Swedish
homeland starting Friday, after
few davs of Florida fishing and
golf.
And his title won't grow dusty,
the collegiate looking conqueror
of Floyd Patterson indicated.
"I definitely won't retire after
two more fights. I'm gomg to be
fighting champion." lngo said
Monday as he and his brother.
Ro!f, and their fiancees alighted
from New' York-Miami plant lor
four-day vacation.
(in innrnsst
Kan. City 001 00 OOl 8-10 14 0
Detroit 100 100 000 1- 3 13 2
nalev. Garver U0 and House
Bunning. Morgan 3'. acnuin
U0 R. G. Smith 10. Sisler 10
and Wilson. Winner-Daley (8-5'.
User - Schulti (l-2. HR Had
ley. (Only game scheduled.)
KF's Jackson
Draws Net Bye
SPOKANE APi More than
inn n avers staneo oui .
quest of championships in the 19th
annual Inland t-mpire icu.uo
tournament.
Tn.eeded in the men s singles
as Doyle Perkins of Seattle, who
met Jim Kinkade of Cashmere in
the first round. Jim jaexson
vnmath Falls. Ore., the ro. -
slaughter was halted. Which
means that there still were 57
seconds remaining and If Ruby
Goldstein hadn't intervened, lngo
might have destroyed the champ.
It seemed like the longest round
history, as it was, and you
kept wondering why the bell didn't
ring. The answer was in the
speed of logo's "tree trunk" legs.
They moved him in and out with
the frenzied grace of a berserk
ballet master. The man can really
sprint ...
The cutest question thrown at
lngo during the post-fight press
party was: "What's wrong with
American training methods?"
HARPOONED ABOUT RIGHT
During his training, the Swede
was harpooned from alt sides and
even his own trainer, Whitey Bim
stein, mildly criticized his refusal
to throw his right hand as well
as the ladies' day and home-cook
ing atmosphere in lngo's camp.
lngemar trained at Grossinger's
one of the swankiest Catskill re
sorts, and the hotel received a
lot of unfavorable and unfair men
tion as contributing to his boxing
delinquency, lngo did see several
of the floor shows and he did ta
ckle the rhumba several times
with his fiancee. But there was
no monkey business with his
training regime and no demands
were made on his time. He simply
figured himself that a bit of re-
Salem Solons
Kick Broncs
seeded player, drew a first round
bye.
l Patten. Spokane city cham
pion and No. 3 seed, played Jim
tikins Sr. of Seattle in another
first round contest.
Defending champion Bill nose
of Portland is not entered.
Mrs. Lucille Davidson of Kay
town. Wyo.. is top seeded In the
women's division although Doris
Ponnle of Oswego. Ore., who won
the Seattle city title last week, is
expected to give her a run for the
ball.
In the junior men's, Munn Chin
of Seattle is seeded No. L He met
Richard Hurd of Great Falls.
Mont, ia a first round mate.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Lewiston lost its toe-hold on
second place in the Northwest
League standings Monday when
Salem kicked the Broncs off the
ladder with 21 hits that gave the
Senators an 18-1 victory.
Starting pitcher Thornton Kip
per was blasted from the mound
in the first inning as Salem piled
up its first six runs. He was fol
lowed by four more Bronc hurl-
ers. each equally unsuccessful in
stemming the tide.
The linescore:
Salem 602 510 00418 21 0
Lewiston 000 001 000 1 t 3
Fahnestock and Gaffney: Kip
per. Canner '1', Longwello t
Wads worth I5, Job Hi and Mc-
Samara.
W Fahnestock (7-4).
L Kipper (7-).
HR Gary Rushing, Lewiston,
6th, none on.
Heights 16-0.
Electrician winning pitcher Kent
Hunsaker survived a wildness that
saw him permit 11 walks but al
lowed only two safe hits while
his teammates collaborated on
five errors.
The loss was charged to the
Cat's Jim Lancaster who was re
moved in the first inning after
the Electric nine had counted four
big tallies. Lancaster,, however.
was credited with both the Crater
hits.
Hunsaker spearheaded his own
win with a triple and a pair of
singles in four trips to the plate
Shortstop Teddy Crutchfield add
ed three one base knocks to the
East Side account.
K Amusement chucker, Jim Pu
ter. dealt misery to the Moyina
Heights batters for the first five
innings, holding them hitless and
striking out 12. He gave up the
only three Cinderella bingles in
the bottom of the sixth but was
still credited with a shutout.
A rash of extra base hits and
five walks in the top of the sixth
were the downfall of losing pitch
er Jack Webb. Six hits, including
triples by Lyle Phelps and Ben
Gonzales, a double by ruler ana
singles by Phelps, Roy Denham
and John Faulkner helped to
push 11 runs across the plate
Webb, Dave Friberg and Jim
Douglas collected the only Moy
ina hits.
The linescores:
R H E
Crater Lake 010 031 0- S 2 4
East Side 430 120 X 10 11 S
Lancaster, Yunck 2 . Ross (51
and Shearer: Hunsaker and Pax
ton. R H E
K Amuse. 032 0011 1 11 1
Movina 000 000 0 II
Puter and Currin: Webb and
Holliday.
4 Notlnif
Go Gcttre
Couolry Four
Prlc Wlu
Swmpi
Wooll Bnoacrl,
Ytng Tans
Flipptra
Dd Ball
Maple Mallcra
Pnlka Dota
Four Mora
Last oigM's results:
Notlnis 3. Flippers 1
Sweepa 4. Polka Dota 0
Wooltea 4. Four More 0
Country Four 4. Prlea Wise
Yins Yang 3. Maple Mailers 1
Go Gettera 3. Dead Bella 1
W L
1 4
14
13 7
11 S
ii a
11
10 10
II
a ia
T 13
a H
a 17
Hamilton
AAWU
Executive
nine returns
Sprints for a
across
Friday
niuht
BALLFARE
Hi-
to Yui
irk lo Ore-del.
GretdeU
Wt-bb to Saks to
BABE Rl'TII LEAGIE
Grin Stadium
6:30 Henley vs. Balsisers
8:30 Chiloquin vs. M. i.. Johnson
MEN'S SOFTBALL LbA-:l'E
Conger Field
6 45 Kingslcy Field vs. Nazal cue
Church
8.30 Hal's Sport Shop vs. Market
Basket
SS LITTLE LEAGl'E
5:30 Metier Brothers vs. House of
Discount at Kingslcy
rn.-nk-i.-l.KV Calif. (AP) Tom5 30 Kingsley Field vs. Oregon
(irondi-l
r ITCHING KTATIHTIC
IP H IK KB SP ff t
Sk J 2 0 1 3 10
C.rit 41 li 12 70 5 O
We'm 2 A 2.1 i in 19 3 1
Rrhhrr II 9 4 12 11 1 1
Hrr ra 2 2-3 3 0 2 3 0 1
Orncv 20 14 3 11 13 0 3
COwis 7 1-3 10 & 3 0 0
T.mli ll in; M M lit ! 1
hi ah (trim Mm Country Four MA
Huh tm Mrl Country Tour 3453
Hifh lnd. gam women l LuclU
Arttin IM
Hifh ind. Mr.ei (woman) Clara Beard
Ml
High lnd. game (men! Shelby Bald
win 2-i
High ind. aeries (men i Shelby Bald
win 14
MIXED DOL'BLES
W L
V-B Scott IT 3
H-M HanBcam 1 4
S-D Lagan U
i M-R Wilkinson
D. Spoat-V. Allan "
r-M Sutton
A-8 Baldwin "
C. Duua-H. DllUtrom 1 11
taut ttltrhfa reaulti:
D Sproai-V. Allen 3. Duua-Dlllttrom 1
H-M Han team 3. S-D Lagan i
V-B Scott 4. A-S Baldwin 0
Htgh team game V-B 8rttl 443
Hh loam riM V-B ScOtt 128.1
High Ind gam twomeni Haiel Hen
cam MM
High Ind series twomenl Haiel Hans
rim SM
High Ind. game (mini-Bud Srott 32S
High lnd. sortest (men) Bud Scott 834
McCloud Contest
Suffers Rainout
McCLOUD The McCloud town
baseball team vs. Susanville game
was rained out after the first in
ning at Susanville Friday evening
The local team was leading S-l
when the game was called. Bob
Paolenetti hit a 430 foot homer
over the centerfield fence for a
grand slammer.
The June 28 game with Redding
at McCloud was canceled by Red
ding. Susanville will meet the local
team July 19 and August I here.
The Logger! travel to Susanville
fur a July 10 night game.
MINOR LEAGUE
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
American Attn.
St. Paul S. Charleston 7
Minneapolis 1. Indianapolis 1
Dallas 4, Fort Worth 0
Houston 10, Omaha T
Denver 5-0. Louisville 4-11: first
game 11 Innings
International Leaf
Rochester 4. Miami 1
Buffalo S. Havana
Only games
Hank Aaron of Milwaukee had
baseball's longest hitting streak of
the I9M season. He hit safely in
25 straight games.
Hamilton won't be a policeman hi
his new iob as executive officer
of the Athletic Assn. of Western
Universities.
That was the field where Victor
0. Schmidt ran into trouble as
commissioner of the Pacific Coast
Conference, an organization that
officially passes out of existence
today
Hamilton, 53. resigned Monday
as director of athletics at the Uni
vcrsity of Pittsburgh, a job he
had held since 1949. to become
head of the newly formed AAWU
that numbers four erstwhile PCC
members.
He agreed to a five-year con
tract at a salary believed arounfl
$20,000 a year.
His duties will be to run the
affairs of the association, see that
we have a good officiating pro
gram and generally aid in the pro
motion of intercollegiate ainiei-
ics." explained Greg Englehard.
athletic director at California.
He will not have the investiga
tory powers that Schmidt had. but
would help m settling any differ
ences of opinion between mem
bers. This is probably the main
difference in their jobs."
California. UCLA. Southern Cali
fornia and Washington banded to
gether in the AAWU.
The articles ot tne conierence:
The association has been estab
lished on the principle of institu
tional control for the intercollegi
ate athletic program and with mil
nial trust ai,d confidence that
each member will conduct its ath
letic program according to these
basic principles."
Some of the California schools
objected to Schmidt's role in in
vestigating policeman while he
headed the PCC.
A big question remaining on this
eve of the official formation of
the "Big Four" is whether it will
.nnn hrrnme a "Biz r ive witn
Stanford included.
Hamilton formerly starred lor
Navy and coached tne miasnip
men. He retired from the Navy
m 1949 with the rank of rear ad
miral. He coached football, along
with his director's Job at Pitt in
1951 and 1954.
He is due here Wednesday to
discuss his new position with of
ficials of the member schools. Me
said he would make his headquar
ters in San Francisco.
Dr. Frank Kidncr. chairman of
the AAWU organiiing committee
and professor of economics at
California, said. "We are extreme
ly pleased that we were able to
attract Hamilton, a national fig
ure, who commands universal re
spect among his colleagues in in
tercollcgiate athletics.
DAEICO
LL Nine
Winner
Basernnnors got plenty of exer
cise in Monday nisht's South Sub
urban Little League action as
UAItCO swarmed over House of
Discount. 32-11. and Kingsley Field
etlucd hy Teamsters 911, 12-10.
DARCO. leading 15-6 going into
the bottom of the filth inning, ex
ploded for IB runs to more than
put themselves out of reach. Tha
winners slammed out 27 hits, in
cluding homeruns hy third base
man Knhert Buck and second base
man Charles Barlow and two
doubles by Dorran McBride. Bar-
Food at Capchart
W-D Dons
Staging
Runaway
Nabbing their sixth straight vic
tory and ninth of the. season
against a single loss, the Weyer-
haeuser-Don's team continued to
dominate the Klamath Falls Little
...:.u ,n t ...... .. I) I I
ueague Willi a lt-1 will uvt mmri . ...
Portland on Wright Field Monday! hlnst came with the bases
KF Little , iU. ..:..
KICK Liossen piiLncu uic h.iuij
for Kincsley while the loss was
pinned on Jim Haney. Jim Hill
ol KinRsley slammed out a home-
night. In the other
League contest Park Moyina
moved into a second place tie with
Hal's Sport Shop by toppling the
lading Johns-Manville nine, 6-2, in
the first extra-inning contest ot the
year in the league.
W-D pitchers Steve Youn and
David Johnson held B P to four
singles while Johnson, who hurled
the final three innings without giv
ing up a hit, supplied the hitting
punch by slamming out a pair ol
singles and a triple.
Johnson struck out six and
walked only one while Young
whilled five and gave up a single
base on balls.
For the losers Jim Patzke and
Terry Metier shared the hulling
chores, Patzke striking out eight
and walking four while Metier
whiffed two and yielded no walks
Park-Moyina broke a 2-2 dead
lock in the top half of the sev
enth inning as pitcher David
Crumc won his own hall game
with a bases loaded double. The
P-M stuad scored a total of lour
runs in falcful inning olf J M
hurlcr Steve C.oodt
Good worked only the seventh
inning, giving up tnree wants anu
two hits to absorb the loss while
the first J M chucker, John Pari-
solto, went the first six innings,
striking out six and walking loin
while yielding three safeties.
Crume, the third of three P M
pitchers, hurled the last three in
nings to earn the win, strixinu
out two and walking one while giv
ing up but one lone hit. His game
winning two-base hit was the onl
extra busc blow of the game.
R II F.
Weyer -Don s 240 10.1 10 9 0
Bend-Portland 013 OHO 4 4 5
Young, Johnson i4 and Ham
mersley: Patke. Metier (Si and
Moss. Patzke (5).
R II F.
Park-Moyina Ono 110 4-6 J 1
Johns-Mam llc 20(1 000 02 2 2
Coffman, Barnes 3 . Crumc
'51 and Crume, Barnes (5ij Pan
sotto. Good 17) and Jendzejewski
run in the third, tne oniy extra
base hlnw of the game.
In the South Suburban Minor
Leafiucs. Monday night, Kilowatts
o. 1 defeated Safeway, 9-7. and
Iloliert's Hardware downed Mam-
Ih Loekers. 17-10.
Hon Nealy gained the victory
for the Kilowatts crpw while tnt
loss went lo Fred Zaler.
For Robert's Hardware Tommy
Kerns slammed a bases loaaea
homenin and Ron Steinbock a
two-run four master while Leslie
Hawley pitched the win. The loss
was charged to Richard Card.
R H E
House of Disc. 050 0 1 511 11
DARCO ' 414 7 16 x 32 27 I
B. Ahbey and Sullivan: Pelzell.
Itulherlord (6 and Jones.
Antelope -
Elk-Deer-
Applications
and 1959
Hunting Lawt Now
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