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The High Point Enterprise from High Point, North Carolina • Page 11

Location:
High Point, North Carolina
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

-At Davicfson- Relays Set Today DAVIDSON iccwU High Relays belag this iltenMM at DariitM Celtefe win track (earns Inm three states and SMtt Canttaa Virginia. 014 stand-bys tfce North State Conference will be hand inctodiag i I i 26 NAIA champ. Catawba. Three other NSC schools are Atlantic Christian, Lenoir Rayne, and the "host" team High Point. Davidson College, acting as tito "home" team, is another North Carolina school expected to be a strong contender for top honors.

The Old Diaililsit sending down one of Us finer small college cinder nuds. Eoaaoko College has for yean dominated track and Held competition la its neck of the woods and Is considered the team to beat at the High Poiat Relays. And from Carolina, Presbyterian College Is expected to give more northerly located neighbors a ran for their money, although, Presbyterian did not enter the Relays last year. High Poiat College it fielding a smr.ll group of cindermen who reorganized on their own after the track sqnnd disbanded at midseason. Headlag the list Is Mickey Den, a HPC veteraa juler who tied for the W-yard North Stale Conference record at 2:18 with Rohy Deese of Catawba.

Deaa will ma the last lap of the sprint medley relay today after the other members of the team have carried the stick the prescribed distance. Other mem- brs of the Panther relay team are Jack Wagner, Bill and Ralph Clements. Houston will also eater the broad Jump, and along with Fraak Johnson will throw the discus. Yesterday's Boxes American Orioles 2, Yanks 1 NEW YORK BALTIMORE ab hi ab bl Rich'son 2b 4 0 0 0 Breeding 2b 4 1 2 0 McD'g'ld 3b 4 0 2 0 Woodling If 2 0 1 1 Mantle cf 3010 aPil'cik rf 0000 Berra If 4000 Brandt cf 4020 Maris rf 4010 Dropo Ib 3000 Skowron Ib 4 0 0 0 Tasby r-lf 2001 Howard 4010 Robinson 3b 4 0 0 0 Kubek SK 4120 Ginsberg 3 1 1 0 Sbort 3021 Hansen ss 3 0.0 Browns 2000 34 Totals 27 2 6 2 for in 7th. 000010000-1 Baltimore 001 100 OOx-2 PO-A-New York 24-12, Baltimore 27-12.

DP-Hansen and Dropo; Kubek, Kichardson and Skowron; Dropo, Hansen and Dropo; Skowron and York 7, Baltimore 7. zS-McDougald. 3B-Kubek. Maris. SB- Richardson.

HRERBBS Brown (W, 1-0) 9 9 1 1 1 2 Short 1-1) 8 62 Stewart, Hurley, 2:34. Soar. National Braves 5, Phils 3 PHILADELPHIA MILWAUKEE ab bl ab Curry rf 3110 Bruton cf 4100 Coker 0000 Sch'd'nst 2b 4 0 1 1 Dark 3b 4110 bCotlier 2b 1000 Callison cf 3110 Mathews 3b 3 0 0 0 SHhilley 1000 Aaron rf 3020 Bouchee Ib 2000 Torre Ib 4000 cLepcio 2b 2000 Maye If 4110 Her'ra 2-lb 2001 Logan ss .4120 Anderson If 2 0 0 0 Crandall 3X22 dSmith If 1000 Bubl 0000 Dalrymple 2 0 1 0 aSpangler 0000 ePost rf lOOOPizarrop 3021 Koppe ss 2000 Spahn 0000 Owens 2000 Short 0000 fDelGreco 1000 Robison 0000 Totals 28 3 4 2 Totals S3 11 4 for Buhl in 2nd; for Schoendienst in 6th; out for Bouchee in 7th; out for And erson in 7th: out for Dalrymple in 8th; out for Ehorfc In 8th out for Callison in 9th. Indians 5, K. C.

4 CLEVELAND ab bi KANSAS C1TT ab bl Tuttle cf 4010 Power Ib Lumpe 2b 4011 Temple 2b Herzog rf 3110 Kuenn rf 4 1 1 0 Siebern Ib 4110 Francona If 3 1 0 Cerv If 3000 Bond cf Williams 3b 4 0 2 0 Hardy cf CWU 4112 Nixon Hamlin 2 111 Held ss aSnyder 1 0 0 0 Phillips 3b Larsen 3000 Perry Kucks 0000 bThr'n'b'y 1000 Totals 33 4 4 Totals out for Hamlin in 2011 4000 4000 0000 4120 3234 3110 2000 29 59 5 9lh; E-None. PO-A Kansas City 24-11, Cleveland 27-11. DP-Larsen, HamUn and Siebern; Held, Temple and Power; Tittle and Lumpe. LOB-Kansas City 6, Cleve- 2B-Chiti, Phillips. HR-Hcld 2.

SB- Pnwer Perry. Power, erry. a ER BB 5521 0000 4443 x-Larsen (L, 0-2) Kucks 2 1 Perry (W, 1-1) 9 8 x-Faced 2 batters in 7th. U-Range. Rice, Smith 2:28.

Paparella. T- 3, Tigers I DETROIT CHICAGO ab bl ab bi Yost 3b 4000 Smith rf 4000 Boiling 3110 Fox 2b ChMsley 3000 Minoso If KaHne cf 3010 Sievers Ib Colavito rf 3000 Lollar 4011 300 000 .010 103 PhiUdelphii Milwaukee Curry 2. phia 24-7. Milwaukee 27-7. and Torre; Crandall, Logan and Schoendiest 1.

Milwaukee 9. Brulon. Crandall. IP ERBBSO Owens (L, 1-2) Short Robinson Buhl ..1 ..2 x-Pizarro (W, 1-1) 6 Spahn 1 1 batter in 9th. li, Burkhart, Vargo, Conlan.

12,480. Cord's 16, Cubs 6 CHICAGO ST. tOCIS ah bl ab bl T. T'lor 2b 5 2 2 0 Cunn'h'm rf 5 3 2 1 Ashburn cf 4 1 0 0 Gram'as 2b 6 1 1 0 Altman Ib 4000 white cf-lb 5 4 3 Banks ss 5236 Bover 3b Thomas If 5010 Musial Ib 3110 Moryn rf 5010 flood cf 1111 S. T'lor 4000 spencer ss 4 3 3 4 Zimmer 3b 3 0 0 0 aenpr If 3220 B.

J'nson 0 0 0 0 smith 5122 dAverill 0000 Millcr 2 1 1 Drab'sky 0 0 0 0 Barnes 2000 Goctz 0000 Morehcad 0 0 0 0 Srhroll 1010 aWill 1 0 0 fl Ceccarclli 0 0 0 bNoren 0000 cDrake 3b 1100 Totali 3S 6 8 Total! 411C 13 on error for Schroll in 5th; Reliable Defeated By 4-2 GREENSBORO Moody Tile exploded for three runs in the first inning here last night and went on to cop its first Piedmont Softball victory with a 4-2 decision over tellable Manufacturing of i Point. The big first frame was fea- ured by a two-run single by Pete Taylor. Rudy Ramirez of Reliable started, but was tagged hard and relieved by Ray Francis in that opening stanza. Lee Shirer was the starter for Moody Tile and had little trouble until the seventh inning, when Reliable made a big bid to jerk the game out of the fire. During a two-run outburst, Shirer was der- ricked in favor of Dewey Long, who finished up.

Reliable DM MM It Moody Tile 001 0 Ramirez, Francis (1) and Knox; Shirer. Long anil Craven. Major Loop Leaders By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 9. St. Louis 9.

Boyer. Spencer. Berberet 3 0 1 1 Goodman 3b 4 0 3 0 cBunning 0000 aEsp'ito 3b 0 0 0 0 Bilko Ib 3000 Landis cf 4000 wh (c Cash Ib 1010 Apancio ss 3 0 0 0, F'nandez ss 3 0 0 0 Wynn 1000 bHarris 1000 Lown 2000 Lary 2000 TotaU 29 1 4 1 Totals 33 3 8 3 a-Ran for Goodman in 8th; b-Popped up for Fernandez in 9th; for Berberet ia 9th. Detroit we 100 noo-1 American League Batting (based on 25 or more a Kansas City, Allison, Washington, .439. Runs Woodling, Baltimore Hantle, New York, and Gardner, Washington, 11.

Runs batted Baltimore, and Allison. Washington, 14 Kansas City, 19; Allison, Washington, 18. Doubles Buddin, Boston, Lolar, Chicago, and Allison, Wash- ngton, 6. Triples Hansen. Baltimore, i in 7th- d-Hit by pitch for Chicago, an 'York, 2.

2 Home Cleveland, Minoso, Chicago, Colavito, Detroit, Skowron, New York, and Lemon and Battey, Washington, 3. Stolen Cleveland, Freese, Chicago, Bond, Cleveland, and Kaline, Detroit, 2. Boston. Mor gan, Detroit, Herbert, Kansas and Coates, -New York, 2-0. Cleveland, 23; WHITE STARS Black Demons Edge Bison In 3-2 Tilt White was a big man for the R.J.

Reynolds Black Demons here yesterday. White limited the visiting High Point Black Bison to a mere three hits and batted in the winning run in leading his team to a 3-2 decision in a Central 4-A Conference contest. High Point'js David Kemp got behind in the second inning when Reynolds pushed across a pair of tallies. Steve Heckard Southern Dumped In Softball BURLINGTON-Barnhardt Salad of Burlington parlayed a home run and a three hit pitching performance into an important Piedmont Softball League win here last night. G.

W. Burgess went all the way or the Burlington team and picked up a 3-0 victory over the defending state champions. South- rn Motors, of High Point. singled, Britt Smith lashed out a booming triple and Tony Dunn singled for the scoring punch. A single run In the fourth frame proved to be the winning tally for the Demons.

Smith, leadoff batter, walked, stole second and scored on a sizzling single by White. High Point's runs came in the sixth innings, but both runs were unearned. Reynolds committed three errors, while the Bison had a brace of miscues. Both Kemp and White went the full distance on the mound. Hith Foinl MM Bcrncldi 030 100 7 Kemp and Proctor; and Gnsklns (RJR).

Air Force Leads In Ring Tourney CAMP LEJEUNE. N.C. Air Force held the lead The home run, which gave- Bur- Thursday night at the conclusion gess the margin he needed, camej of elimination bouts in the eighth ff the bat of Doug Stewart in he fourth inning. The winners icked up an insurance tally in tie snxth inning to round out the coring. Burgess had everything his own way as he outhurled Southern's ce hurler, Donnie Hunt.

Hunt al- owed only five hits in also going he distance. Southern Mottri Johnson, cr Nelson Ib Cranford. 2b 3 Payne. It 1 Hunt, Allen, 3b 3 Hicks cs Brewer, 2 Stoker, rt 3 AB RBI 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 24 0 3 0 Burlington AB II RBI Bolden 1 0 0 0 Allen 3 0 0 0 Watklns 3 1 1 0 Coper 2 0 0 0 Stuart 3222 Chrlsco 0 1 I Harvey 3 0 0 0 Mcouira 0 Buness 1 Totals Southern Motors Bnrllnrton 21 3 5 OOO 000 000 201 IP ER BB SO 5 3 1 1 7300 1 4 Bnrllnirtnn 1. DP 2 0 Johnson 4 0 1 d' 3112 Spencer, Altman.

Wnite. 54-10. St. Louis 27-6. LOB Miller (W, 2-0) 2-3 Barnes 21-3 Morehead (L.0-2) 1 1-3 22-3 B.

J'npon 1 x-Drab'sky 0 Gnpiz 1 x-Faced 5 batters ER BB SO 333 320 in 3 3 0 0 5 5 8th. E-Bolling, Yost. FO-A-petroit Barnes fAveriln by nrabow- Jcvcl Chicago 27-7. DP-Fox, Aparicio and ky (Cunnineham wP-Morehead. Balk- PaSCUal, Washington, 21.

7. Chicaqo 7. I Morehead. Dascoli, Secory, Lollar. Crawford.

IP ERBB SO 8 8 2 1 1 32-3 1 5 2 Lown (W, 1-0) 0 0 1 1 McKinley. Stevens, Hono- Chick. FOX USED FROM PAGE EIGHT to pivot around second base. In fact, I used his glove. At the time I had only a first baseman's mitt.

SINCE THOSE early days I've had a lot more help around second base. When I went back to Philadelphia under Mr. Mack, Jimmie Dykes, now Detroit manager, anfl Eddie Joost, an ex-manager and a former shortstop, worked with me. After one year and parts of two others I wasn't such a good hitter with Philadelphia (.255 in 1949), and was traded lo the Chicago White Sox for catcher Joe Tipton. WITH THE White Sox, Paul Richard helped me most, beginning with his first year in 1951.

He had Jimmy Adair coaching and in the spring brought to camp Joe Gordon who was managing Sacramento, then a Chicago farm club. Gordon helped me as much as anybody in baseball. Before Gordon took hold of me I was hitting second base with the wrong foot and I was throwing off balance. Now I try to get to the bag and straddle the bag before the ball arrives. Previously I was trying to take all the throws on the run.

Consequently I was throwing badly to first base. L. A. Giants 2 SAN FRANCISCO LOS ANGELES ab bi ab bi Blas'ame 2b 5 0 fl 0 Gilliam 3b 4211 Am'(it'no3b4 000 Neal 2b 4100 Mays cf 3110 Moon r-lf 3100 McCovey Ib 4 1 2 1 Snider ef-r 2111 National League Batting (based on 25 or more at San Francisco, White, St. Louis, .408.

San Francisco, 13; Groat and Skinner, Pittsburgh, Alcu rf 4021 Hod e.s Ib 300 0 White an(J Rodccrs If 3000 Roseboro Brcssoud ss 4 0 0 0 Larker If 3110 Schmidt 4030 Demeter cf 1 0 0 0 1000 Wills ss 4220 Mnranda 0 0 0 0 Podres 2110 aPasan 5000 Shipley 0000 bnavcnp't 1000 Totals 34 2 8 2 20 10 7 6 out for Maranda in 7th; Klicrt out (or Shipley in 9th. San Francisco 000 200 2 Los Anjfrtes Jones. Francisco 24-10. Los Angeles 27-11. Neal and Hodses; Amal- fitann, Blasinaame and McCovey; Rods- and Blasincamc.

I.OB—San Francisco 8, Los Anceles 4. McCovey. Covcy. Podres. 100 OHO Bressoud, McCovey.

IP 2-2) 5 M.irnnda 1 Shipley 2 Podres (W, 2-1) 9 ER BB SO TOMORROW: Double Play. Making the Yale Lary of Detroit led the National Football League in punting last season with an average of 47.1 yardi per kick. Sudol, Smith, Bossess. story- High Stokesdale Noses Out Allen Jay STOKESDALE In a book finish, Stokesdale School pushed across a pair of runs in the final inning here yesterday to best Allen Jay's Jaybirds 2-0 in a Guil-Rand Conference tilt. After battling for six and one- half frames without any scoring, the home team found the range to ice the contest.

Crawford, Allen Jay hurler, allowed only three hits to the winners, but they got plenty of mile- ngc out of the base knocks. Allen Jay collected six hits off the slants of Bill Childress, but could not push across a single tally. 12. Runs batted San Francisco, 18; Banks, Chicago, 17. San Francisco, 25; Clcmente, Pittsburgh, 21.

San Francisco, Bailey, Cincinnati, Skinner, Pittsburgh, and Kirkland, San Francisco, 5. Triples T. Taylor, Chicago, Roseboro, Los Angeles, Coker, Philadelphia, Stuart, Pittsburgh, and White, St. Louis, 2. Home runs Boyer, St.

Louis, Banks, Chicago, McMillan, Cincinnati, and McCovey, San Francisco, 5. Stolen San Frani cisco, Pinson, Cincinnati, and Kirkland, San Francisco, 4. Pitching Friend and Law, Pittsburgh, 3-0. Los Angeles, 33; Friend, Pittsburgh, 32. Cmwtord Crow; ChlMtMf 104 Tucker.

Hunt Burjfss Motors 2. 1-8-4-3 Motors 3: Bur. 3. 1. HRr-Stuart Burlinitton 1.

Minor Loop Scores By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pacific Coast League Seattle 7-4, San Diego 1-7 Tacoma 7-0, Portland 4-1 Sacramento 2, Vancouver 1 Salt Lake City 6, Spokane 0 Rochester 5, Columbus 4 (10 in nings) Toronto 3, Miami 1 Havana 3, Montreal 2 Buffalo 11, Richmond 5 American Assn. Minneapolis 5, Dallas Fort Worth 3 Charleston 2, St. Paul 0 Other games postponed SOUTH ATLANTIC LEAGUE Charlotte 3, Charleston 2 Jacksonville 10, Asheville 7 Savannah 14, Knoxville 9 Macon 9, Columbia 3 CAROLINA LEAGUE Winston-Salem 5, Greensboro 4 Raleigh 10, Wilson 2 Burlington 1, Durham 0 College Results By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS BASEBALL Georgia Southern 10, South Carolina 9 North Carolina Freshmen 3, Duke Freshmen 2 Wake Forest 4. East Carolina 3 The Citadel 9, Virginia Military Lenoir Rhyne 10, Western Caro- ina 2 North Carolina 9, Duke 5 Atlantic Christian 5, William and Mary (Norfolk Division) 14 TENNIS South Carolina 7, Erskine 2 East Tennessee 8, Wofford 1 N.C. State 6, Clemson 3 Wake Forest 6, Pfeiffer 0 North Carolina 5, Duke 4 GOLF East Carolina Atlantic Christian 3'i Fair Grove Bounces Back, Tops Pilot 13-7 Fair Grove's Tigers took Pilot's Sunday punch on the chin in the first inning here yesterday, but came up off the canvas swinging.

When the smoke had cleared from the Pilot field, the Tigers were on the long end of a 13-7 Central Carolina Conference score. The Red Raiders came in swinging a mean' bunch of warclubs and collected six runs in the opening frame. However, Fair Grove found the range in the second frame for five tallies of ill own. Pilot garnered a tingle run in UM second, but Utw well sudden- ly went dry after that. On the other hand, Fair Grove had just.

begun its scoring merry-go-round. The Tigers grabbed three runs in each of the fifth and sixth frames and capped the scoring with two in the seventh. Poe and Kanoy of Pilot had homeruns for the losers to pace their hitting. In addition to the 11-hit attack of Fair Grove, Pilot aided the enemy cause no end with 10 miscues afield. Orm HMt 1.

Little, Smith (1) 7 Kinntdj; annual inter-service boxing championships. The Air Force will send eight contenders into the finals tonight. Ledford's Panthers Top North THOMASVILLE -Bedford High School's Panthers don't believe in looking a gift horse in the mouth. North Davidson proved very charitable here yesterday as ford racked up a 5-2 Central Conference victory. The losers booted five chances to Rive every opportunity in the book.

Rill Saintsing gave up only six! hits to the winners, but couldn't absorb the fielding weakness of his teammates. MOTSINGER allowed North Davidson only four base knocks and got perfect fielding help from his Panther teammates. Roger Hedgecock. Ledford catcher, was the caly man in either team lo get more than one hit. Hedfiecock collected a pair of bingles in three trips to the plate.

Ledford jumped off to a big lead with a three-run outburst in, the initial frame, and came back with single runs in the third and fifth stanzas. North Davidson pushed across both of its runs in the fourth inning. Hlfk hint iMwprlM, SMwfcy, 1NO DECISIONS DeNUCCI Tiger Downs Another Hopeful BOSTON pro Ralph (Tiger) Jones sat on a low chair in his dressing room discussing his unanimous decision over young Joe DeNucci. "He's a pood boy," Jones said between bites at an orange, "but he's got a lot to learn." Jones, wlio made his 43rd (ion-, television appearance in sixth and ninth. Jones just 10-round bout with the hopeful kept boring in." Middleweight from Newton, Mass said he was never in any trouble the first couple The tough old Tiger spent evening calmly stalking his op- no doubt how it would turn out.

"Oh. I Rot a little cute in the middle rounds, when I thought 1 was 'way ahead on points. I ought to know better. I've lost a lot of fights like thinking I was too far ahead." Jones was ahcrd all the way Friday night. One judge and the referee gave it to him by identical ponent, picking his shots and landing them.

DeNucci tried the combinations that worked so well when he was in the prelims, and Jones brushed them off or let them whistle past. In the middle rounds, Jones jchanged his style and played cat and mouse. At times, he dropped his hands and stuck his head out. daring Joey to take a shot. When he did, the Tiger was waiting for him with a punishing left hook.

The other judge Nhrlh Davidson Lt dl-rd Snlnutinir and HftiRccoclc. ooo 4 am oio Parker; Motsinucr had it 98-92. It was a match of age and experience against youth and hope. 1 Jones. 32.

has boon a pro for if); wmeo i SCOIIICC The Marines had winners in five preliminary bouts; the Army five, the Navy two. In the ninth Jones appeared to tiro. DeNucci made a frenzied, last gasp hid for a knockout in the 10th, saw it turned aside, and (he last minute lie has fought the bc.st and; sc icd mcre 'y tr in 8 lo last calls himself "the old DeNucci is 20, was malting his first television appearance. "He just couldn't make Jones fight his fight," DeNucci's manager Rip Valcnti said. "He couldn't Saratoga race track, the oldest operating track in the States, will bs 100 years United old in take charge, except for a while in 11963.

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FHONI 3411.

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About The High Point Enterprise Archive

Pages Available:
148,309
Years Available:
1906-1977