The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 142, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 18, 1961 Page: 12 of 43
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THl ORANGE LCAOtl
SUNPAV. JUNE 1 , Iftt
í-'V's*
Here
Bf fm aRVELLJ
O'Dell Eases Pains
For
BY THE BOOTSTRAPS
It Was No Joke to Courtney, Circuit
Writers May Be Right About Mantle lThem l-Game
Orangeites who remember Clint Courtney u a ahip-¡ SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -7 Wgl- l
yard worker here in the war yean and later as a catcher 9°?,J JÉ* JlÍSÍhTCSS?.
with the Beaumont Exporters probably have forgotten
that Clinl was highly superstitious. *•
There have been many tales told about Clint's davs
Now
in the Texas League.
comes one from the majors.; . ... , yv.
It canse'out recently when recor(J th¡. appear* to be the tBa-
the Baltimore Orioles were ton for him to do «
a plane /or Boston.l^Aad eta* they lay
boarding
/
i |yi
'•i
f 1 #
Sporting
hat had
the
_ . that had wSnm ^! ^
W*t the Uktott of t, chartered ^IÍ Wirha woa
péane at New York. ! 2£L tl2E! -ufc
*Ven the player finally went,1.
aboard after a wart of two ¡2?
Jackie Brandt remarked. Wliat -^®1 Mtuai yrtrtyj
taSi' t* pUne achedukd to
Iff
-JH. .
Brandt u only joking. but
Courtney wa* in no mood .for
humor, He. left the pisa and
mad ' the trip to Boston by bui.
While we're on the subject of
baseball, perhaps something
shortage of starting pitcher
going all the way Saturday fc
1-3 victory over the Chicago Ctt®*¡ ^
that kept^the Giant* ooe game j
of National . Laagtte*leaifin|gj>-¿g g
Jack; Curtis
f.Ve runs in ,2-3
a two-
Starters Sam Jones. Jack Satf- j|
ford aAd Billy Loes are having
their trouble , ao manager AJ
Dark sent out O'DeB — more of-
ten a relief man — for hi* third
«tart thi season. ,
O Dell (W) struck out saw
and walked one.
off O'Deil
2. He if taking more authentic
cvU at the ball lefthaadod.
3. He has discarded hi* theories
about bunting, especially with two.
strike*.
4. He' talfcs lass ta opoona*
catcher when he cOro-s to bat
and concentrates more on the]
As Coleman
Hits Homers
ha« averaged 33 home run* a sea- PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Gor-
M-ek' hits a few early ones and «* • That is far below Ruth-. *w|doa Coleman hit his llth and DA
send that he hit
should be thm*n in about Mickey;pitcher. . . _ . ..
Mantle catching Babe Ruth. It" } 1 He has the
Mantle catching
a topic nearly everyone brings up:
Wis time of year'
the circuit writers quick!,• —
our this *rnings ,tha* Mantle is,*- year
comise They could he
1MI 'f he 1* ever coins to take.be his
■MBMR —■I'
«* sa i w ssis
m in* <Mir« a i 1 1
sans «mm a tin
• *• d l*t«
*r * rim !b 4 12 1
I «1U * *Wv r* 4 1 2 4
« Mil OO.OWaT 4 * I *
* «a 1 a *Mn c 111
as. «a * a e.'9M • nil
* ltd
tits
seee
• a e
rw s*(«i
— fl
I NIMI
SSI *11-
1*1 MS 4**— •
Ore".
. ta Ftanclv
«uo«f *«och. A*n-
J-O DKi. se
m
Old.
h* mus of the year Saturday
the Cincinnati Reds moiatfad
mr
is y«' wi- Man'le vs only %n ,ne ^¡ncinnan neos muumni
right In snd now realizes that .thw could.p gix-run seventh inning to easily
' J j* ever going to take ibe "his year." ¡defeat the Philadelphia PhUttes
Houk Won't Take Any Credit The Phillies came back with
Mantle, more
modest- than su
only one goal.
"That's to stay healthy and play ¡drove ta
game
Ectt
came
three runs in the bottom
TV that they are better than ever. ^venth. two of them oa
he by Elmi
Over one stretch thn spring
runs and per
Elmer Valo. He
pinch hitter -for
«ho had
in
of the
doable
came to as
Jack
Baht-
— *tM vi.rfc^L, tñ'sonalhr accounted h>r tour out of schun, *ho had relieved km-r
EST' of Ths ^stid ^w!^^W^obv««riy RoW. Roberta in the fifth.
rramc tc* or in«. .^ve him a b*g lift T]he Reds did their scortn* hi
That he is the team .leader Is On ooe occasion of the streak the seventh on single* by Vad*
—a esoeciallv since hi the TV screen showed him return p-nson. Gus Bell and Coleman, a
SnAorilstart In his first II ¡to the bench after a homer and force play and Bob Schmidt t
aamea he hit saVea homers. Roth, j receive all load of back-slapping ¡ two-nm homer.
bi bs top year, went M games from his teammate*. His round Coleman got a solo homer
to gst that many. He hit only four-.p^er face brcfce is* a the second, snd^ homered ana
In April ~ Ipia. sonsetmng yon mdn t see on j„ the fourth, this time with •
Of course. Mantle ha* fallen off the big giy"i faco in_15tS. man on base. Both were off' Rob-
exMStderabiy from that April face,
but not so much that talk of his
catching Ruth ha* atomdL •
Another thing Mantle's favor
H the ltt - game schedule, eight
more this year due to expansion
Ralph Houk refuses to take any
crodit tor Mantle' fiare determ
Before every game Mamie goes
through a ritual that would make
a trained norae feel proud. He's
an espeif in tfte aw of wrapping;
surgical banda go around his right
knee, the on* that gave out while
chasing a bail in the 1991 World
Sertea as a rookie. It has bothered
histkm at the piate. Asked sboutihim intermrttemly e-
SS.'tss rss. s;. rsiiJiar zrz srsf?.-
r-«.* , htm do Ihlni* .J )
erts. who suffered hi# eighth loss.'
He has woa one. ICaaaés'OQr
The winner was Bob Purkey.■ fhscagn •
now S-1. He gave up 10 hits
CINCINNATI
•arfefet
Km M S T I a
•lotam* a 4tl t
€♦ Silt
H J I J I
111
caiaman I* S 1 4 4 C Sum*
r< mm 4i to
41 It
s t* s
10th .verse of a sea*
Mantle1
aa said snything sbesitjtha .
Micka/ mental feeUags. but you fans sing each year, they ve got!
can Ull )«st by watching him on'a good argument i WI |
TsMH «I IS II IS T«*sl*
SWC Is Poor But Honest
Conferaace t e a, m called bi^ime hasfcatball. Now.
aot always win. but thay'r*
During Urn first
.- dal there came a humiliating note
for the SWC. Aa Eastern team
••said it trim So ahsva the points.
but it* opponent—SMU—was such
- aa inapt team it couldn't for the
' life of it hold the score down.
It made the folk* In Taxaa feel
rw. But in the light of en-
event* they ahould have
delighted. E'
r admire those who may
¿but honest '
•• Anvwav. It meant the Southwest
Conference probably would never
gi-t mutedvup in a mess that is
10 yaars
But the
a m* a m a 4 . 4MS . — —
mciw • hi •fvn
Isn't
Boston Whips
Senators 6-5
lm Pi
pinch
Bostor
ngsin
Ra Musis aren't
pnrable to those of odier secUaas.
but they am nt least honest and
they have aot overemphasized the
game.
"It s when a sport has become
rf overpowering intereat that gam-
bler get in their licka." write*
Harold Ratliff of The Aasocisted
Preaa. 'They fut the game* ao
they can make ftnaacial coups
Basketball is of intereat in the
Southwest Coaftreaca aad has
been giwwiag' mara sa aach year
but h still isat a game to cause
evsryoas to loso kis sense of
tülñnce.
It Isn't Csir -—fig fbr the fixers
BOSTN (AP) - Jl
crashed a two-run
Saturdsy boosting
PagliaronT
ch homer
■■ iton to its
third straight victory, a 05 ver-
dict over washington.
Pagliaroni, inserted a* * hitter
capped a tour-run sixth inning
that brought the Red Sox from
behind aTj deficit and put than
ahead to stay.
WASNINOTON BOSTON
aSrBSI «'US
o Con «II, 3 111* Sttilllln* la 471*
HMtoo rl 111! <MM*I d im
' Woo# rg (ID) Ys*tr Ul If 4 * 1 1
eKnuSh 0 « i Wirt* tk 4 0 *
Umo 1* 4 S i S J*nt«n rf | M<
i*a¡i ti í í 11 MoOon str 4 i T *
C-rfc t 4 *4-1 Mitón t ' 4 # # S
4 1 0 Sudd-n n ".VI 1 t
•.i-i*el "ev «t 4 0 I S CI*to p IOS
MfCloto p 3 1*0 oeoo' 'O* '
1S0S NICMU p
Kvt.no 0 e Q 0 0
,T* I* MS 11S Tstsu
o—Homfrs*
C-tomUiS M« a
Mf!. c—Ron for. WooSllnS In
wíAinfmi SS* SIS
IMM 1S «14
IS-CoOitr e<5 A—Wothta*.
34M ao on 17 14 OP-LSng. Ma-
Nw>r# Ofd laofl. Sthtlllnf.' BuMm ana
. \00 -Wotn.íjl-m I. Se-,Ion 4.
-Yo.lf om*l.l. Croon O Conno|it Got*-
Moitona. HR-Wooailng. Tarty, ea*-
1W 1
Oo'rymo!. e^« , >0-
a—cmkümsm ni i, i. a
Of—Slaiinaomo an* - Kan
di' nak^M &
cinnv** W'
Loa-cj
ichmMT
S—Blarnssma.' SF—CaONa*
ie n n en nasa
eurkar tw, s)i * s s s * *
asaort* tu i*i ..su t 4 s a
)M 4*41
t i a a
U—Joctemki. Vorge Pprr-nn, Cr
tora. SarlKk. T-J J*T A-5 WS.
m e« aaso
** sai
1*1 I
u-Oo
e*a4ou*a*. T—
Pet. G.B
■ Desama
h Cl«wfa,s5l
■rrask
K ,44S
M , 443
V ,3*3
Pet. G.B.
\'
5
" WS J
Ojuuuh
Game in Front
eNiLAoevawA^^
Dol&ror* el 11 I 1
Taylor 3a 4«S*
CaHltort rf 311 c
I t II V . nL.
4 s i s Loa Aamrí ks
*
Southern Cal Coasts
With NCAA-
HfffO ©
If
m 4 ? t
<•4999 fit
• '!'!!! s*- <J"w
Sa^Ktiun p I I S 1 W !,
OVO'9 ' t I ™
Ithnvm « 5 9 * ChtíT^m
b^altor* ^ * S S
ta , a-
PHILADELPHfK fAPt — D,r^t
Burleson ran a 4 00 5 .le. c-jat
yxi j j Budd came out aa tow m hm
'517 c showdow n duel with Hertry lé
Shantz Gets
Call, Beats
Cards by 9-3
PITCHERS —«
USOaATED PRESS
League
«Port 10-3) at De-
«lamr
because the sport is coaducted on
snne and raasosmble grounds. The
athletes are_treated as amateurs
stars' from other areas,
where basketball1 la ao' big there
<* mad bidding for their services,
•re hot sought. In the first place,
the Southwest couldn't pny the
price.
Thev don't have a summer bas-
circuit The game is
played within its seanoa and the
1 boys arc aot courted with
Inducements
• Southwest Gtnfereace has
its recruiting well in bnnd. T„e
ie Is so closety-hnit that few
can get by with anything, any-
way. Thus, a bad etcample isn't
set for the athlete to begia with.
A valid argument is that college
athlete* may turn bad when they
are recruited, illegally. Tliey fig-
ure they have aright to be crooked
wni|t utile hil>
The conference
M
4 IP H a SB SB SO
McClain <U, 4$) . 1 *451
íyfyo 1 s s * *
OK* IW. mi 7 j 5 4
y e-HIC*0!^ u Honocnto. fl
Ki«nar>oa Hwrtoy. T
Carson Sparking
West Texas Golf
_ SAN ANGELO (AP) - Heizle
Csrson of San Angelo had a 1
r 73 Saturday to lead the
. I round of the men's
Texaa Golf Tournament.
Fifteen qualified for the cham-
ptoaship flight when 89 posted
score over the rniihswept San
SftBgelo. Country Club course.-
Hie qualifying scores will count
a the first roimd and 3S holes
will be played tomorrow to' wind
*'Bp the toutnnmenf?
Rain prevented this tournament
for two straight days,
a cut ia the piay
if the _ HRPpn
people, are
watching the stautM* closely.
iiii|They are the first to admit that
0 ' 0 ' there could be a scandal because
„ 1 i 4'everybody is not untouchable in
C kT'I. *• - o-""y S^P- BuL.w,2,be hf
0 dootimior «or Mrcioin'cause SWC officials «Bdn t do
everything possible to prevent it.
Alreadv the basketball coaches
are bringing in members of the
FBI to tell the bqiys about the ptt-
falls and legal angles.
Next winter the coaches all plan
to have FBI men come in and
lecture to the squads: If by that
time the federal law governing
* bribes is enacted their aopearance
f will be even more forcefuL
Ratliff alao stated that -a good;
aray to prevent a scandal is strike
at the source. The fixer usuatlv
tries to ingratiate himself with
an athlete before making his pit ph.
The Southwest Conference looks
with suspicion. apon what it calls
lavish entertainment If some ath-
lete is entertained on a grandiose
scale there; is an investigation,
even if it'* by an alumnuy of the
school- sirhere the athlete i* already
competing.
The gambling fixer is going to
have a difficult time getting to an
athlete in the Southwest Confer-
ence. In the first place, SWC
schools pass ap athletes who
might be susceptible to the oily
words of the fixers
A boy like that won*! be north
much to the team even if he does
not take the bribes aad get liis
School mined up in a sancdel.
Its fuSt good comadm sense not
to have potential crooks on your
■ <B a r h e r
2-0 «t Cleveland (Bell
ajwf Pir* Wj
*aaa*ngr m iMathias 0-0 and
Uaaoom J-i «r Bumside It) at
-ft rn-e : San1 D-lock 4-2)
«Cueto M and Pas-
cuaf ** .aa-OiTAgo (Herbert 4-0
■ mélia nat
naíTwb^Siníx^Jf ^ 'l K n*
Ef a^L vP>ttotetra<> ^ O** 4 a«« 4-1)
flOt IIKKnPr ttlftlQjl 96iÉÚMhI |#afua
Saturday and heat the St. '—
Cardinals 9-3 on a
rnme in the 100-yard teah
> Southern Califocni* eoasats
the team chitnp«oasn;p 1
NCAA Track and "Fieui
pionships Saturdav.-
' A crowd of about RMO
five meet records brnfcxa am
University of PenaayjvamMi
baed Franklin Field. The
ometer on the field stated
the 100-degree
the meet and
the tape in the mile, a
107 degrees.
So including, the Sméle,
¡only- final on Fr day's
■six meet records went by
ixiarcü.
Burleson, a si. m Oregua
ior, was next-to-last
lT^ litis sp^¡ng. In the 100, but
Mfeed about * strjde ahead-Sat
the 230. Budd heat out his
Tiaie. Paul Drayton by about
7-5) and ¡m,ie mark. Then he
«Hook 02 and Ma-
1 Philadelphia (Fer-
t-3) ,
3-3) at Los
Mi
iCudwrll 5-3) st San
(Manchal 34)
iJactaoa 3a and Sim-
as PtftSbargh (Gibbons j Jerome. Oregon's top
m r- t«g Q-7> | the IPO but also woe
fat . I
ing up and- just as the 0
ed for the final lap^ he
into", the lead.
After that, there
ing Burleson, who
set an American
3;'57.0. The clocking a
meet record of 4:03 5
"If I ..had kaoum how
waa goin#.°' he sad. ""I
have given the fobs a Osar laiia;
uto mile; I wasa't eat ha break
the record."
His final quarter ssas a «aé,
54.7. His first quarter waa CU
Bill Dodaoa of Ksmptr was sac-
ond, about IS yards back an a
4:02.9.
Villanova's Budd aa( aa%r kadi".
S. Bald's time in the) three yards. Jerome didn't quail
09 4. fy for the finals in this one.
sad Jerome both have The other four meet record
worid 100-yard record of breakers were Dallas Long of
Southern California in the ihot,
John Lawlor qt Abilene Christian
in the 3,000-meter steeplechase,
John Thorn ?s of Boston Univer-
sity in the high jump and Luther
Hayes of Southern California in
the hop, itfp and; jump.
Burleson, Long. Thomas snd
Hayes all were defending cham-
pions. The only winner from 1960
who was around again and didn't
!win was J.D. Martin in the pole
viirtt. He wound up in a five-way
tie for fourth with a 15-footer.
George Davies of Oklahoma
State, wbo bettered every record
in the book a month ago when
he cleared 15-10%: Dick Gear of
San Jose State and Jim Brewer
of Southern California shared the
top spot, each clearing 15-4.
Southern Cal wound up wit 65
point*. Oregon was second with
47. and Viilahova third with 40.
Atigels Put
Whitewash
On A's 3-0
Orioles Knock Indians
From AL's Top Rung 41
nine-hitter.
In picking up his fourth
of the year against one loss, the
pint-size Pirates' bullpen artist.
struck out threw and walked onlv
one. He also drove ia
with a pair of hi$s.
Shantz scattered aix hits
eight Innings - but weakened
the ninth when the Cards scored
two of their three runs. "Owy got,
the other in the second on kft
Boyer's tripla and Stan Mosul's
double.
The Pirate * key blow
Dick Stuart' three-run
file four-rub second
sr. LOUIS n
okrkM oa '
Warwick rl $ • 1 V'rpon «f j
Croma 4SSS Groo at Sl'tH .
SS2 4M StawTi " JUS OUE ELAM> (AP) - Wynn out for a piadi Mttcr is
rzzz J?ii mm ^ w
Mtco."r c J*'* M2eT>c i* *1* ^ 8 ^ fin* five Innings whpn Roa gpmj art* a
ZXHJ m ia. S ti!SS?W ^ ^ Orioles bunched!sizigle. got to timti aa a
mromoH p o s -* sna*i mu «gftt Ote*'I# four runs ia the throw by Hawkins
°t£2Í ísV S TOMO «a*W iábfw frames and knocked Robinson's single.
a~ftma* out «*r Mcoanna w m. ,«• Owc^aad -Indiaas from the Singles by
ZJlSl !? 5 ?'Aap.-ncaa League's top rutf? 4-1. Throneberry and Gas
CwLiii". sfcmnor, wm*o ao , ■ << M| was nicked for off reliever Bobbv-
-si. ^owt ?«-n. eitt eysa g-ix o^- ,mixe stngie by Brooks Rob- duced an eightlMavag
^TC^Toa^ LoS^? fSZZZ ■«—. Sixth Russ Snyder *
• ;*-Sur4*«4 ,v i*i. G'-o* sr>,«. WW . and Jackie Brafldt s
Jow>:.t-._w*._ a. a *r. "te-jnaSs kraudht 'Mk home.
SNort. IS HSaCsJ^SBawa. JIWH.V.
¡e, Mac aas T^at ja ? a.M lead Jo winner
!3SL.!ir ' *N S % ftiP' IM). Pappas went
MrOornw .1 " \ • Í * ■ ^ "" : ~ ■
Sfwnrt (W. «I « • t 1 I 1
School Gives Up
KANSAS CITY (AP) - Ted
BswsfieJd. *ith help from reliev-
er An Faaler, throttled the Kan-
sas AthMics Saturday, giving up
-i: \ « jit h-t* as the l-os An^o'f-s
Anaeis whitewashed the A's 3-0.
TV >*tory broke nine-game
game Las Angeles losing streak.
Bawsfield didn't sllow a runner
third base until the
nn ng when Deron John-
.led off with a double and
la third on Jerry Lumpe's
"Bow¿.field g*ve way to
fan Dcaokue who threw only two
iiaBs before he was replaced by
Fo\. Ser struck out Leo
got Dick Howser on a foul
and caught, Reno Bertoja
aag St a third strike. He was
a sharp in the ninth, strik-
es* Joe PignaUno and pinch-
y*orm Siebern. and getting
on a fly bell.
(3-2) Was the winning
The loss was charged to
Bob Shaw (3-5).
KANSAS ciry
«ara* ok r DM
J I 1 a Howjor ip 4 0 0 «
ef * • 1 Sort olo K> 4 S 0 0
* 1 S.I ! ^'♦®n4 « j 5 0 0 off
- 4 r I Bauor cf 4 1 0 0,r —_
^ ^ • ««yon i ? s o e Andy Carey clooted . a two-run
Chisox Rap
Twins 5-1
For 8 of 9
CHICAGO (AP)—Juan Pizarro
picked up hia second consecutive
victorv Saturda,- but he requited
seventh-inning help from Warren
Hacker while 'beating the Minne-
sota Twins 5-1.
The White Sox. winning their
eighth gama ia their last nine,
jumped on Jim Katt for two-run
clusters in file first and fifth in-
nings snd added a single run in
the seventh on successive doubles
reliever Chuck Stobbs.
DETROIT (AP) — The Detroit
Tigers, powered by Al KaHne. wal-
loped the New York Yankees 12-
10 Saturday night in a free
hirting-battle.
The Tigers moved a game in
front in the three-way American
League"race as Yankee home run
power fell short in a ninth inning
'"cieveUnd lost 4-1 to Baltimore
Saturday afternoon and drppptd
a game behind Detroit with the
Yankees two games back.
The sharp-hitting Tigers gavs
starter Don Mcssi an 8-0 Jead in
three innings as a crowd of 51,509
howled with glee. But the left-
hander had to be rescued by Raul
Foytack after the Yankees bomb-
ed him for five runs in the fourth.
Kntine hit' a towering home run
into the left field seats in the
sixth to highlight a four-hit night
in which he drove in five runs.
Chico Fernandez hit a Detroit
home run in the third,
Roger Maris belted hts 23rd
home run to lead off the five-run
Yankee fifth. The Yankees scored
five more times with two out in
the ninth as Clete Boyer. Mickev
Mantle and Elston Howard socked
home runs. Mantle's three-run
blsst was his 20th- . ,
The Tigers used three pitchers
before they could get the Yankee*
out in the ninth. Paul Foytack
weakened and was knocked out,
Terry Fox finaUy came in snd got
the Yanks out but the victory
went to Foytack. . ,
The Tigers climbed on Bud
Daley, making his first start for
the Ysnkees after s trade this
week with Kansas City, for seven
runs in the "first two innings.
Kaline doubled home two runs
in the sjoond to knockout Dairy
and bring in Roland Sheldon, sec- -
ood of four New York pitchers.
With two trips in three st hats.
Norm Cash took over the batting
lead from Cleveland's Jim Pter-
sall with a .365 average.
NSW YORK
okrk M
S I t J
5 1 í I
S I J 1
3 2 13
5 2 3 1
lb S ? 2 1
Boytr- lb
Kubck *
Marls rt
Manilo cf
Howard c
Sfcawrwi ,
Corr M 4-1-1-1
Rídl'sort ,4 0 0 0
Eu*e fin
«ÍFp JSSS
bTortocoa
DSTROIT
Wood 2b
Brulon cf
Kallno rf
Colavlto If
coin ib
'S
abrhki
5 3 3 0
4 3 2 S
5 3 4 5
4 2 11
3 * Í 3
3 0 9 1.
F nondR 3 i i i
lie*
ClovMaor o 0 0 0 0
cBloacn'd
Vlrflll 3b
Moui a
Fcytoe* a
ffithor p
Fm p
i 1 0
I 0 0 0
1101
.0 « 0 #
0 0 0 0
10 0 0
40101110 Tota* S4 It 14 11
a—Fllod out tor Shoidoo In 4th: t>—
Popped out tor Turloy In Mlu c—Fl'od
out tor Ciovongor in Wi. 3
Now York .... Jtm *** P-f?
Ottrolt 411 101 Olx—12
E—Boyar, wood. PO A—Now York 24-14
Ottrolt 2/-S. OP-r-Howord and Kubek;
Ctovongor, Kubok ond Rkhord on; Boytr.
Richardton'and Skowron. LOS—Mow York
5. Ootroit 4. 2B—Ctrv, Marls. KaDnt.
JS—Colavlto. MR—Marls, Savor,
Wood.
Kbllnt.
Manilo Howard
Foytock. SF—Brown.
IP N R SR BB SO
Dolov (L, - 1 1-S ♦ "
ShoWon 11-S 7
TWta*. - t 1
CItiiowBir 1 _ 4
Mossl • , 31-S 7
Foytock. (W, 4-4)
Foytock. (
«-Fioehor
Fox
i 'r
14-
1 mon In 91h.
HBP—By Ciovongor (Colavlto).
Torloy. U—Sorry, Llmatota,
Slowart. T—2:50. A—51.50 .
WF-
Umori,
4 S I 1 bsiobcrn
4*00 Proscott It
4 0 1 * Jotuuon rf
4 11* Lumoo
HBP—By Skontr ILMRsl.
.or. U-B«Wm. OarwvH>.
Injuns Ink Negro
To Big Contract
CLEVELAND (AP>—The
land Indians said Satur
have signed 10-ycar-oid
Agee of Whistler; Ala., for
the club referred to
the higm->t bonu
■Negro youth by any major
baseball Club.
The. Indiaas would not say wfejt
the bonus was. but the C^
Plain-Dealer estimated it at
$60.000. noting if was
the club had paid for
player other than pitchers
ml i *n i
Outfielder Lennv Oreen of
Minnesota Twins batted 3S -n |7
sanies against Kansas Ot) last
season. <
unior Football
banned
schools
voting
within
nions
Team Physicians and
initiated ip Austin
dl ii e medical authorities
tf permapeat -injuries to
i t of junior high school
from contact sports.
T «wrs -one «inner* of the Preak-
pa lannr wred * ainners of }10).
the Birds.
The Indians, going
feat for the fourth &nae
last *ix games, gat &y* fete
Pappas and scored
run without
of the
Jim Piersall walked. Tto
cona beat ant a mlW
*000 Stow
B *0 0
Stow p
aPoaada
3 0 10
3 0 10
2 0 10
0 0
_ 00 00
*•1*1 Totals 904*
o«* tor Stow in Mb; b—
r Sullivan m art*
W! 010 10*— 3
car ese ooo «os- o
PO-A — Los Anflflo 27-1,
C*f 17-10. OP—Hamlin and Bil-
Sullivan. LOB—
*. Kantot City 5. ?B—John-
Yos .
IP H R BR BS SO
í I 4 * 0 "3 0
-0 0 0 0 0 0
.2 0 0 0 0 4
fL- >5 0 0 3 3 3 2
' 1 0 0 0 0 1
U—Soor McKmioy. Oiylak.
ammv T—2 bs. A—0.034.
2 0 0 0 double in the fifth that Jose Val-
filling
walked
run.
BALTIMOaC
aarbW
B.R b s n 3b 5 1 2
Saydor If
Brandt cf
GonHlo lb
Thr n bV rt 4 0 I B
E. rl THI
Triando c
S 1 1 * P-orw / i
5 13? Fricad*
5 0** PtMw-^'a
Adotr 2b
SSfSr'
Hunez Wilis
..... OwrMoyer
tf lOOO
%"aa«* YORK (AP) - Dulk)
-* •*eaManae. a native of Puerto RTco
' irvTHg in New York made his
iitiSp debut on national television
• lila* saOcesBftd One Saturday ni^it
1 eaaa'^ irmate« a split 10-round "de
tot ca>*m over Demy Moyer. of Port
M> «*s* to— aia i Ind. Ore.
ra2 5M W" •MN^bTaCk«S wtíriwd lag, Moyer 160.
y «or t vwbanv m on. a-Fwoa adt ' It was a lively scrap at Madi-
Square Garden with Nun
finish in the last three
rounds gaining him the decision.
Referee Al Berl and Judge Bill
~ Each gave It to Nunez, five
to four with one even.
Joe Agnello called 't a
Sdi in nmads and 5-5 in
Hie Associated Press also gave
m Kuaet >4-1.
divielso lost momeaMnly in the
sun in. short left field. Cary dou-
bled across the run against
Stobbs. -
MINNS SOTA CHICAOO
•brbw abrkbi
Tuttlo Cf set* Ap r«cia s S 1 2 0
Marr.jy 2b 5 0 10 Lono ^ cf 5 2 3 0
K.I b 1- 4 0 7 0 MMna If 112 0
L«nen If 4 * * 0 Wiai lb 4 0 0 1
Alllwn rf 2 0 10 Srnak r# 1 1 t 1
BoWty c 4 1 1 * Carav 3b 4 o j 3
RollMt 3b 1010 F«tb 10*0
bSf^u - tb 1 0 0 0 Espoolto 2b 1 0 0 0
NoMtV too It 1 0 1,1 Corroon c 1*00
cttoragon 10 10 Lanar c 0 0 0 0
dRomai 0 0*0 Ptarr* a 3 0 0 0
Kdot p 2 0 0 0 Hackor p 10 0 0
o Horry 10 0 0
StoMn p 0 0 0 *
•Ctton I * 0 *
Totals Mltl Totolo 11 111 1
a—Slruc* out tor Root In Ttti; b-Fllod
out tor Rti« r — — -
Voldivlofsa in
In 0tho—FM
rlcio.
PO a-
Chicago 11. IB Mai lb . Cortv
Smith, KIHobrtw. SB—Stovof*. SF—Smith.
j
Stobbt ... .2 it i- f i
Pliorra tW, 241 . * M 0 t 1 7 1
Macktr 213 3 ' * * * 1
HBP—By Root tFaa 2. Mlnoso)
Corrigan, Orwmmonr ~
T-J:4t, A—0.022.
California Rowers
Annex Crown Again
SYRACUSE. N Y. (AP) - Cali-
fornia outbattled Cornell Saturday
and won the intercollegiate row-
ing title for the secoad straight
year." . ■*>
NIT was third and Washin^-on
fourth. Penn edged tavored Navy
for the fifth spot.
- ' «MMiMaaMM
Ray Simmons is in hi*¿Mth sea-
son as coach of the Syracuse" Uai
vartity lacrosse '
ODESSA (AP)-—Sandra Palm<r
of Fort Worth successfully de-
fended her Women's West Texas
Golf title Saturday as sho de-
feated Charlotte Scnulz of Wichita
Falls 4 and 3. -
The finals was A rematch of
last year's at Lubbock where the
North Texas State golfer defeated
the Wichita Falls nnkster. 1-up.
This time she had a little easier
time in winning although she was
six-over when sha took Miss
Schulz out.
Mi as Palmer never trailed after
winning the first hole. The Wichita
Falls golfer managed to get even
on four but that was the only
hole she could win.
The Fort Worth golfer got s de-
fault into the finals while Miss
Schulz, winner of the 1057 tourney,
ousted Mrs; A.L, Zaepfel of Fort
Worth 4 and 2."
Bonallack Beats
Walker in Tennis
TURNBERRY. Scotland (AP>—
•Michael Bonallack. 2# - year - old
Englishman, slaughtered 40-year-
old Jimmy Walker of Scotland 0
and 4 Saturday and captured the
British Amateur Golf Champion-
ship in a final decided in driving
rain and howling winds.
Bonallack, a British Walker
Cupper, went to hitich 5 up over
the gray-haired Scot. He never
was headed throughout the 30-hole
final.
Walker had his moments ef
glory Friday in knocking out de-
fending champion Joe Carr and
afiky Vnerican airman Ralph
Morrow of Oklahoma
Those two nerve-t i n g 11 n g
matches took most, of the steam
out of Walker's play.
Bonallack is only the second
Englishman to win the title, firstr
played for in 18S5. since the end
of World War II. ^
' ^
Italians Cain Edge
Germanv (AP) —
famed Davis Cup pair of
Nicola Pietrangeli and Orlando
Sirola defeated Wilhelm Bungert
and Christian Kuhnke 2-6, 7-5, 3-d.
0-1 Saturday and gained a 2-1 edge
over West Germany In their'Eu* .
ropean Zone quarter-finals tennis
- — - — * I — —- , *
competition. I
Italy was, the European Zopa .
champion last year and went on'
to defeat the United States In the
iaterzon* finab ia Australia.
' ' ''
ÉÉÉM'
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 142, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 18, 1961, newspaper, June 18, 1961; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth143064/m1/12/: accessed May 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.