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The Philadelphia Inquirer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Page 79

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Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
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79
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1 1 SECTION tlfie'yfiilabelpfiia inquirer SUNDAY OCTOBER 11. 1964 Also in this Boat News Additional Classified Yanks Win in on Mantle HE HD SPORTS 9th N. Y. Gains 2-1 Edge in Series Play I Mickey's 16th clout Breaks Ruth's Mark, Jars Cards' Schultz By JACK HAND NEW YORK. Oct.

10 (AP). Mickey Mantle wiped out Babe Ruth's World Series home run record Saturday when Barney Schultz's knuckler didn't I I m.1 i rrmimmm- OV" SjjMtjrs knuckle and the New York Yankees went one up on the St. Louis Cardinals with a 2-1 victory in the third game. Mantle rammed Schultz first relief pitch in the ninth inning over 400 feet, off the facade of the towering third deck of Yankee Stadium, for his 16th Series homer. Ruth had 15 back in the Golden Era of Sports.

'HORNS' ON MICKEY "I'll just stand here to get a head start," Yogi Berri had said as he moved near the runway to the Yankee clubhouse when Mantle went to bat. Yogi didn't have to wait long. "I had to hit that," said Mantle. "I had the horns." Mickey Scries Facts, Related Articles and Statistics, Pages 8, 9 m. i "i 5 Muni l' PI Telephoto AP Wlrephoto towering drive dents lofty third tier.

Mantle's 16th World Series homer, it bettered Babe Ruth's mark. Mickcv Mantle, rlehthandcd hitter anainst southpaw Curt Simmons in Beaten on first pitch, dejected Barney Schultz and other Cards look like midgets as Mantle's earlier appearances, explodes from portside in ninth Inning at Yankee Stadium. referred to an error that led to the only Cardinal run in the fifth inning and made him a potential goat. "Just think," said a dejected Schultz. "You throw one ball and it's all over." A happy Jim Bouton, winner of his first Series game after a tremendous duel with Curt Simmons, beamed.

"I've got a little hoy going to Curtis Bach Pilot Villanova Wins 4th Straight, Cornell Spoils Perm St. Turns Back TW mif Qzl.n Perm's 1st Visit Army's Late March Keane Right In I iff inn Him aggressive per-1 Br JOHN DELI. ven bigger score it held on of equally be a year old Oct. 26," said the young Yankee righthander. "Hi name is Michael George.

The first thing I'm going to do is change his name to Mickey. "That guy has got to be the greatest ball player that ever lived." Bouton left nine Cardinals stranded while pitching a six-hitter in a fine battle with Simmons, a canny 35-year-old vet Bv IRVING T. MARSH -0 The Inquirer Staff tightly to the Cyril J. Burke formers. This was expected to bo the, Trophy if Alex Bell hadn't been j0hn Kellcher, a end.

nughest one yet but it turned out in a merciful mood in the second scorc(i touchdowns on a six-yard In be just about the easiest one half. pass from Dave Connell and a Of The Inquirer Stajf Special to The Inquirer and N. Y. Herald Tribune Its ITHACA. N.

Oct. 10 WEST POINT. N. Oct. 10.

Penn Mate, beaten ior viuanuva a lunwru, ne cats scored ail weir poinw M-yara pass irom om AiwrejMj.i tn u. i By ALLEN LEWIS Of The Inquirer Staff NEW YORK, Oct. 10. To pinch-hit or not to pinch-hit untied, unpressed foot: a 11 team. in a first half that came within.

Connpl who continued his fine' LiV Cn uiX mnv three games ot tne season ior tne nrsi ume in umb -HePO'nU of tiemg its club r'sZ "ended "itball history, unleashed all its pent-up on 'Army's team Saturday eran, until Mantie lowered the iivi iruuii a o-u 111111 jor a nail, inen piayca main-Krnrpj4 (ho firtt tniirhdnwn on a that is the question that had; boom on Schultz, the bullpen in After marching 62 yards ly with intermixed un.ts in the run I WuaneroacK a i spo- second, in which they threw dl.d most of the jolting Pictures, Page 2 the third period to a baseball observers taking sides hero of the Cards' late pennant jviii uiu.ii, "ii. i.mjiiuvu jeaamg ine Dig itea xo a oo-u the Nittany Lions turned bach after Mickey Mantle won day in the most one-sided Pss KJ'nst4 cir friends Sport Results the Cadets three times inside nis Bia to remain among tne Nation's leading rushers by third game of the World Series RL'TH RECORD BROKEN' out in the 32-game series with Picture, Page A Uj ns1 linn in tho lact Before they went into their villanova's most-met rival. with a ninth-inning! It was a typical Yankee crash uM Saturday gaining fi2 yards, scored on a victory Saturday before minutes ana eagea mem, finish tn a hitterlv fought third Villanova, which now hasn't shell and kept Detroit there 34.yard run 14,000, snow; Michie Stadium. nome run ai lannee siaaium. --0.

'(Tamo ac Tanflo cmacnon Rana at been given even so much as a with them the Wildcats, who nnhnmnre Ifans- 'ho sat through Thil Bender, a i flurries to watch the alight scare in four lop sided vie-have beaten every rival by at runaway. Professional FOOTBALL NFL 2 at Schoellkopf Field. tories, may have piled up an least 20 points, had a number I Continued on Page 2, Column in a DruiSing Datue 01 oppovi me imu wuw numei uy nit home.run record with ing lines before 32.268, largest limping slugger set a record for1 lltMsbIt Ithe fall classic-Babe Ruth 5 A Picture. Paac 12 mnrp imnnrtant it Pavel -laiuie, ins lei Idptu tltouuy Sponaugle, whose injured right shoulder was "90 percent Saturday's Results New York Yankees a 2-l furth" injury had been i i i .1 ithe i 1 1 uA healed." according to coach Pittsburgh 23 Cleveland Louis Car-j 8 nauuea againsi victory over the St dinals and a 2-1 lead in the a rai, s' leu- DUl sw'll-corioc it i-amo nn thP first nitr-h ed to the left side when Cards Standings Eastern Division ine in in ii iu tit 7 cini jiaic nue (withstood that llth-hour on- i .1 i 1 lorn Jiarp, neipea turn ine game into a 100 percent rout. The 200-pound Lancaster, siaugni engineereu uy uie hv relirver Slausni uu-v "'c thrown by Pet Barney manager Johnny Keane brought in Schultz to start the ninth.

native ran 23 yards for Cor- Pts Opp 95 69 nificent Rollie Stichweh to earnj Scnultz Temple's Preschutti, Princeton Belts i Bazis Engineer Rout Dartmouth for Of Favored BU, 44-1337-7 Ivy Victory 1 1.000 its first victory over west not uave naDDenedj Keane had lifted Simmons for S5 ns' Point in four years. It if rariinal Manager! a pinch-hitter in the top of the nell's first touchdown, threw a St. Louis 3 fourth-down screen pass to left halfback Gabe Durishin for the second and directed a pair fcS of third-period scoring drives. 122 94 103 53 47 58 .750 .600 .500 .250 .250 .000 70lost in each of the last three by johnny Keane had not decided ninth after Phil Linz's error on 84 a field Bal- 'to remove his starting pitcher.iTim McCarver's hopper and 141; Although this was an embrog-; 87 lio packed with action, it was Continued on Page 9, Column 1 Continued on Page 9, Column 1 M. VI I A.

urn's mmm STRAIHHT HANOVER, N. Oct. 10 Snnh nnartprhark Bill Abel WashngtB 0 (LTD. Powerful Princeton roll-j i winners 72 yards in 17! Western Division World Series Boxscore Ry CHARLIE FRt'SH Of The Inquirer Stajf BOSTON, Oct. 10.

Figures lie and so do rating charts. Temple is a small college team, according to the NCAA, but the Owls played like the major college team Boston Univer jin the second half, and particularly in the final quarter, that Jthe excitement reached a cres- D'icendo. 3 STICHWEH SHARP ed over Dartmouth 37-7 Satur- plays in the fourth period 'Baltimore 3 day, handing the Indians their sneaking the final yard him- Detroit 2 first Ivy League loss at home in self. But by then, Cornell's Los Angls 2 THIRD GAME ST. LOUIS 142 79 85 99 89 80 67 .750 .667 .667 .300 .500 .500 .250 fourth straight victory over ininnes ta i sity is supposed to oe as mey.

frnojill years Bill 4 lllJll. 1 UV.1VII.11. LUllllUi Cosmo Iacavazzi scored two! Perm the New Yorkers' long- Franco Boston errors into a 17-7 half 94! It was in that quarter atteri 67 State had rolled to its touch-'Flood, rf iu'down following the kickoff that Brock, If 2 2 1 71- Grn Bay touchdowns and Charles Gogolak! est winning streaK tne Chicago time lead and Owl halfback Jerry Preschutti broke loose on il" tl'LU. hnntoH thrro firlH Pnal and four came series was assurea The score mounted so un utormed to a 44-13 rout of the favored Terriers Saturday afternoon at Nickcrson Field. The final statistics gave Boston the best of it on total offen-aive yards but that was the only place the Terriers came out conversions for the Tigers College Picture, Page 3 opened tne secona nan mat; Stichweh put on a display of K.

Boyer, 31 pyrotechnics that fell just short Groat, ss of snatching the victory exactly McCarver, nne minut seven seconds from Shannon, rf Dartmouth scoring drives stalled inside the Princeton 20- Picture, Page 7 the end. ftlaxvill, 20 When it stopped that driveJa-Warwick 13 Penn State took a safety witlvBuchek, 2b 36 seconds to play to make cer-Simmons, FOOTBALL LOCAL Villanova 34 Detroit Temple 44 Boston U. IVY LEAGUE Cornell 33 Penn Harvard 3 Columbia Yale 15 Brown Princeton 37 Dartmouth Standings tain that Army wouldn get o-nKinner expectedly in the second half that Harp seemed almost embarrassed. "I made no effort to roll it up. Really, I didn't" he said.

Apologies were unnecessary. Cornell rolled it up because Penn, unable to match its strong defensive effort of the previous week, played poorly. Even so, Penn forced Cornell to score its last four touchdowns on fourth-down plays and was very much in contention until the last minute of the first half, when the visitors received a double-barrelled jolt. Schultz, B.Av. AB BH RBI 2B 3B HR TB PO A .143 5 0000000100 .154 40000000200 .091 40100001 12 20 .091 40ftft0000130 .273 40101002130 .444 21100001300 .364 30100001100 .286 30101002120 l.ooo ooooonooooo .000 00000000000 (0 0) 20110001200 .500 IftOOOOOOOOO (0 1) 00000000000 32 1 6 1 2 0 0 8 x24 10 0 NEW YORK B.Av.

AB BH RBI 2B 3B HR TB PO A .250 40000000031 2b .357 4 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 4 3 0 .231 40000000400 .417 31211016301 .400 21100001200 .300 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 .182 20000000800 .200 30111002130 (1 0) 3000000010 0 ft another chance. 71 Game honors went to a Penn 7j State junior, Bob Riggle, a 6-I foot-1 195-pound left halfback Totals ifttuihH urn All ttflk OtMttUM 98 and 52-yard touchdown runs in less than three minutes of the second half to make it a nightmare for some 3500 fans. BAZIS SPARKS DEFENSE Co-captain and guard Tom Bazis sparked a Temple defensive charge which threw the Terriers for a total of 63 yards lost rushing, led to three pass interceptions, forced four fumbles and blocked a punt. The Temple offense came to life in the second half and before the fourth quarter was minutes old. Temple coach George Makris had the last of his 38-man traveling squad in Continued on Page 3, Column 3 from Washington, playin yard line and the Indians were held scoreless until four minutes remained in the game.

It was Dartmouth's worst defeat since Bob Blackman became head coach. Iacavazzi opened the Princeton touchdown spree in the first quarter when he grabbed a 10-yard scoring pass from Don McKay. Iacavazzi's other touchdown came on a one-yard plunge later in the game. Gogolak, a converted soccer player who uses the side of his Continued on Page 7, Column 2 2 0 Princeton Yale Harvard 0 0 0 0 ft A Pct.his first game of the year after Ljnz ss t-JJ! a pre season injury, and to R'icnards( L0O0 Army's Stichweh, the magnifi-i jaris 1.000 cent magician. Throw in a'iantie rf 1.000: penn state lineman, guard BoD'iioward, Kane, brother of a former Penn 0jSJate halfback, Billy Kane, and lh Don repitone, in lino 'Pftrtiull The first barrel was delivered; orneu with 26 seconds to go.

Leading 7-0, Cornell was faced with a Brown Dartmouth Penn Columbia you xiave uie mice upciduvca.r nnn Boyer, 3b Continued on Page 6, Column 6 Bouton, wno piayea tne Key notes. It was Riggle who scored the MIDDLE ATLANTIC Lion touchdown on a wide slant Olympic Action Starts Continued on Page 12, Column 3 CONFERENCE UNIVERSITY DIVISION Delaware 28 Lafayette Standings Totals 28 2 5 2 2 ft 1 10 27 9 2 x-None out when winning run scored. a-Walked for Maxvill in 9th. b-Filed out for Simmons in 9th. St.

LOUIS 00001000 01 60 NEW YORK 01000000 12 52 DP Maxvill, Groat and White. LEFT St. Louis 9, New York 5. SACRIFICE Simmons, Shannon. U.

S. Trio Tops Swim Mark Mass. Tramples At Atlantic City Saturday's Twin Double at Atlantic City Race Course involved the following horses, riders, numbers and payoffs: FIFTH: Waia Ours (J. John-on), No. 1 for $15.60.

SIXTH: Thanks Doc (J. Oil-mone), No. 8 for $7.60. EIGHTH: Rimbaud (R. Adams), No.

6 for $10.20. NINTH: Honey's Dream (T. Lee), No. 1 for $9.60. The payoff was $939.60 on each of 134 tickets.

At Liberty Bell Saturday night's Twin Double at Uberty Bell Park Involved the following horses, drivers, numbers and payoffs: SIXTH: Cardinal Tom (D. Cote) No. 8 for $17.60 SEVENTH: Scottish nan-ver (C. Champion) No. 4 for $5.40 EIGHTH: Roy Abbe (A.

Gal-entine) No. 6 for $4.80 NINTH: Lady Eliiabeth (D. Cote) No. 4 for $15.00 The payoff was $1847 on each of 37 tickets. Pet.

1.000 Over 30-0 tralia, and Lance Larson, of the United States. i .000 AMHERST, Oct. 10 (UPI). Massachusetts smashed but all three U. S.

entrants in this first event on the swimming program were under the old Olympic record. Thus Ilman wiped out part of Yankee Conference foe, Connec .000 .000 Gettysburg 3 0 0 Delaware 2 10 Lafayette oil x-TempIe 0 ft ft Lehigh 0 ft ft Bucknell ft 1 0 Hofstra 0 2 1 COLLEGE DTVISION Pitching Summary IP 8 4 9 6 the memory of one of America SO 2 ft 2 ER 1 1 0 BB 3 0 3 JJrY'ticut, 30-0, Saturday for its third Simmons WW i I. Ilman, a 21-year-old student x-Scbultz (L) decision in four starts. biggest dissappointment at Rome, for Devitt's win over Quarterback Jerry Whelchel Bouton (W) Jesse Owens' Column, Page 5 TOKYO, Oct. 11 (Sunday) (UPI).

Competition opened in the Olympic games here Sunday and the United States immediately displayed its vaunted power in water sports as Gary H-man, of San Jose, smashed the Olympic record in the men's 100-meter freestyle swim and Patsy Willard, of Mesa, took the lead in women's springboard diving. Not only did Ilman crack the freestyle mark in the first heat, hurled a TD pass and kicked a x-Faced one man in 9th. BB Simmons 3 (PeDitone. Mantle, Howard), Bouton 3 (Mc- Larson had been hotly disputed by Americans who thought the judges had erred. field goal and three conversions Northern Division (C.

Boyer, maris), isouton Jtn snearhead the Redmen's do- Carver 2. Warwick). SO Simmons 2 Soar (A), urexei 13 incoming It th( rr.rnat. Simmons). UMPIRES-Burkhart (N), Plate; at Foothills College, flashed through the 100-meters in 54.0 seconds, erasing the old Olym Don Schollander, of Lake Oswego, won his freestyle heat in 0:54.3 and Mike Austin, third base; Susquehanna 36 Juniata iii pm'iiVB Tno base: V.

Smith (N). second base: A. Smith (A), 0 Ul UPK Secory (N). left field; McKinley (A), ngnt item, imrmi VF tory boosted Massachusetts' 2-0, pic mark of 0:55.2 set in 1960 at ATTENDANCE 67.101. NET BtltlrlS jiwiw.iv Continued on Page 7, Column Continued on Page 11, Column conference record Rome by John Devitt, of Aus i.

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Pages Available:
3,846,583
Years Available:
1789-2024