Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Daily Press from Newport News, Virginia • Page 29

Publication:
Daily Pressi
Location:
Newport News, Virginia
Issue Date:
Page:
29
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Daily PressTimes-Herald, Buffalo overcomes From staff reports BUFFALO, N.Y. Moises AIou drove in the eventual winning run with a sacrifice fly in the eighth inning Sunday as the Buffalo Bisons defeated the Tidewater Tides 2-1 in a Triple-A Alliance game. The Bisons spoiled an eight-inning outing by Tides pitcher Julio Valera (44) for their second triumph against Tidewater in three games. Reliever Mark Ross (4-4) took the victory, hold mm Finder helps: Kinston pound Pilots ing the Tides hitless in two innings. Tidewater took a 1-0 lead in the first inning.

With two outs, Keith Hughes reached first on an error by second baseman Ke-vin Burdick. Kelvin Torve singled to right-center field to move Hughes to third, and Darren Reed hit an RBI single to center. 1 The Bisons tied the game in the bottom of the first as Steve Home tonight Pijots play Durham at 7 p.m. with two RBIs for the Southern Division-leading Indians (31-15). Kinston took a 1-0 lead in the first, and Ramon Bautista's two-run single made it 3-0 in the fifth.

In the fifth, Tepper led. off with a single and reached third when Jeff Darwin's attempted If mm mm mm ft piiii America loses inf Team; Cup From AP reports DUESSELDORF, West Germany Yugoslavia, making its first appearance in the ATP World Team Cup, upset the United States 2-1 in the championship Sunday, i Goran Prpic started Yugoslavia on its way to victory by beat-, ing Brad Gilbert 64, 64, then Goran Ivanisevic clinched the triumph, rallying to upset Jim Courier 3-6, 7-5, 6-1. With Yugoslavia assured of winning the $320,000 first prize, the United States took the mean- ingless doubles, as Ken Flach and Robert Seguso defeated Prpic and Slobodan Zivojinovic "I have been playing my best tennis these past two weeks and I was very confident," Prpic said after upsetting Gilbert "Last week, Prpic won his first 'ATP i tour event, beating Ivanisevic at Umag, Yugoslavia. Courier, unbeaten in previous rounds at Duesseldorf, seemed in control after winning the first set and taking a 4-2 lead in the second. But Ivanisevic battled After winning the second set, the Yugoslav broke Courier's serve in the second game of the third set and eased to his first victory against the American in four meetings.

i i "When I was down 24 in the second; set, I thought it was i over," Ivanisevic said. "I've lost, against him three times already, and I thought I was going to lose again. But I tried to concentrate more on my serve and tried to pull my game together." Paulus wins In Geneva I GENEVA Barbara Paulus of Austria rallied to beat third-seeded Canadian Helen Kelesi 2-6, 7-5, 7-6 (7-3) in the final of the Geneva European Open tournament. The victory enabled Paulus, the No. 2 seed, to continue her PRUNED TOPPED REMOVED landscaping: Full Service Includes Design, Installation and Warranty LAWN CARE MAINTENANCE PROGRAMS: Fertilizer, Insect Weed Control, feeding BUSHWACKERS TWO 595-8755 826-1131 874-0075 .8 Helen Kelesi bemoans loss to Barbara Paulus in European Open.

AP her sharp backhand, rallied to. win the set Kelesi again appeared to be in command in the third set, taking a 5-1 lead, but Paulus recovered to take the match. Argentinian wins title STRASBOURG, France Argentina's Mercedes Paz defeated Ann Grossman of the United States 6-2, 6-3 in a match of unseeded players and won the Strasbourg Open tournament. Our factory-trained air conditioning specialists will perform an 8-point check that will make sure your air conditioning system keeps you cool in the coming -months. We will: I.

French Open highlights men's unpredictability Adjust drive belts Inspect hoses A Clamps Check coolant level Test system pressure Addfreon Check for leaks Clean condenser Test performance C5 4 Carter scored on Wes Chamber! Iain's double-play grounder tpj short 4 In the bottom of the Chamberlain triggered the rally, with a one-out single to lefC Tommy Shields singled pinch" runner Jeff Cook to third, where Alou brought him home with the, sacrifice fly. Tidewater; "on a road trig through American Associatioa I cities, begins a three-game se ries at Nashville tonight. jr 5 tyg pickoff throw "went awryr Rouglas Odor then walked and! stole second, setting up Bautis ta's hit. Tepper doubled in a. run in.

the sixth for a 4-0 edge before the Pilots scored their only run. Ruben Santana singled and reached second when cente't' fielder Nolan Lane mishandled" the ball. Santana reached third on Ron Pezzoni's infield hit and1 scored on Dan Barbara's fielder's choice. See boxscore, C2. 1 K0WCXLY Partt txtra if required.

OFFER 1 EXPIRES JUNEO. 1990 It I CALL FOR APPOINTMENT lit 11 III ii eubfecl to Ueckeut or cfienge. Enjoy basic 31 channel cable service on every TV set In your house for only $19.50 month Offer ends 62990. Limit one special rate per customer. Cutfpnur Santo Ctntar r-w 8 30am-6pm.

fiEinU Branch oaiir i pin Employer Monday. May 28. 1990 From staff reports KINSTON, N.C. Four! Kinston pitchers, including Tabb High School product Chris Pind- i er, combined for a six-hitter Sun- day as the Indians beat the Pen-! insula Pilots 5-1 in a Carolina League game to complete a four-1 -game sweep. Pinder, who blanked the Pilots (11-33) for four innings, left the game after being struck in the left ankle by Kelvin Thomas' line drive opening the fifth.

Mark Tepper went 3-for4 Smoltz Continued from CI was going to do it, it would be him." The last" Atlanta pitcher to toss a no-hitter was Phil Niekro on Aug. 5, 1973, against San Diego, There has never been a nine-; inning no-hitter at Veterans Stadium. Montreal's Pascual Perez pitched a five-inning no-hitter at Philadelphia on Sept. 24, 1988. Nobody came close to a hit for the Phillies until the ninth.

"Obviously, the guy had great, stuff," Dykstra said. "Give the guy credit, he had a good fastball all day. I hit a good fastball so he got beat with his best pitch." Smoltz (34) struck out eight and walked three, including Von Hayes twice. American Jay Berger, 9, is the seed with the toughest first-round opponent. He plays Argentina's Alberto Mancini, a clay-court master who reached the French quarters last year and is ranked 23rd in the world.

The privilege of playing the first match on Center Court goes to Graf, who faces Pascale Par-adis of France. Women's tennis, enjoying one of its most exciting periods, has a perfect script waiting to be carried out. Graf, the top seed, is seeking to recapture the title she lost last year to Arantxa Sanchez-Vicario. With Martina Navratilova preparing for Wimbledon, Seles is seeded No. 2.

If the seedings hold, she would play Sanchez-Vicario in the semis. But the Spaniard may first have to get past 14-year-old Jennifer Capriati, who has reached two tournament finals in just three months as a pro. SLO, 4:28.66. Nancy Lomg, Cal Poly 4:28.69. 100-meter hurdles 1, Doris Williams, Cal Poly Pomona, 13.47.

Tal Alodefa, Alabama A8.M, 13.77. Melleasenah Williams. Hampton, 13.91. 400-meter dash 1, Judith Lawrence. Nor-folk 54.04.

Josetta Royal, Norfolk 54.20. Charmine Welsh, Alabama $4.42. 100-meter dash 1, Volonde Straughn, Abilene Christian, 11.77. Cynthia Royster, Norfolk 11.86. Carolyn Nwaiel, Alabama 11.88.

800-meter run 1, Teena Colebrook, Cal Poly SLO, 2:02.48. Kim Fordhom, South Da-koto 2:06.24. Gloria Morgan, Alabama 2:07.12. 400-meter hurdles 1, Kassaundra Hester, N.E. Missouri 59.84.

Rhonda Colvin, Cal State Hayward, 59.97. Gladys Milton, St. Augustine's, 1 :00.16. 200-meter dash 1, Yolonde Straughn, Abilene Christian, 23.40. Cvnthla Royster, Norfolk 23.83.

Judith Lawrence. Norfolk 23.97. run 1, Callle Calhoun, Air Force Academy, 16:31.61. Donna Thlbert, Edinboro, 16:45.84. Jamie Park, Cal Poly SLO, 16:57.28.

relay 1, Norfolk St. (Bertha Knox, Judith Lowrence, Cynthia Royster, Josetta Royal), 3:40.93. Abilene Chrlstion, 3:42.70. South Dakota. 3:42.71.

It's not just a car, it's your frhkdorri. ieSSBB 1 hk plll Allfl rF-V AMrKJM 838-5450 PARIS (AP) Will the real men please step orward? When the French Open begins today, the women's battle lines will already be clearly defined can Steffi Graf hold off Monica Seles? But the men can't seem to produce a strong favorite, making it one of the most unpredictable French Opens in years. "There are about 10 very good clay-court players right now," said top seed Stefan Edberg, who lost in the 1989 final to Michael Chang. "It's very open' Edberg, a serve-and-volleyer who excels on fast surfaces, has not been impressive on clay this year. In the World Team Cup in Dusseldorf on Saturday, the Swede lost 6-3, to unheralded Goran Prpic of Yugoslavia.

Boris Becker, the second 4 I chevrole rGeo 1073 W. MERCURY BLVD. Jeep Eagle HAMPTON. "Everbody's been beating ev-erbody," Gomez said. "Anybody could win this year." The big question is the Chang, who won the title last year and became the youngest male winner of a Gand Slam tournament.

Last December, he suffered a hip injury and has won just two of seven matches all year. "I think winning the French Open last year was premature he said after losing in the first round of the Italian Open. "It's one of those things you wonder if it really happened or if it wasn't a bedtime story." Chang, seeded 11th, opens play on court No. 1 today against Brazil's Cassio Motta, ranked 128th in the world. Agassi will be the top men's seed in action today, facing Canada's Martin Wostenholme on Court 2.

Sanchez plays Swedish qualifier Niclas Kulti. II track results Collum, Kenneth Brokenburr), 3:04.44. N.Y. Institute of Technology, 3:04.50. Hampton, VVOMEN Team scores Cal Poly SLO, 116; Norfolk 72; Abilene Christian, 62; Alabama A6VM, 56; Cal State Northrldge, 4414; St.

Augustine's, 44; Seattle Pacific, 33; South Dakota. 26; Air Force Academy, 20; N.E. Missouri 1916; Cal State Hayward, 17; South Dakota 16; Edinboro, 16; Hampton, 16; U.S. Military Academy, 14; Cal Poly Pomona. 13; San Francisco 13; East Texas 11; Cal State Sacramento, 10; Ashland.

10; S.E. Missouri 10; North Dakota tVi; St. Cloud, East Stroudsburg, Shlppensbura, N.V. Institute of Technology, Saginaw Valley. tVi; North Dakota, Angelo Pittsburg Cal St.

Bakersfleld, S. Connecticut Cal State Stanislaus. Virginia Humboldt Sonoma Central Missouri Cal St. Los Angeles, Cal-Davls. 2.

Javelin 1, Michelle Devrles, Seattle Pacific, 163-2. Melissa White, Cal Poly SLO. 158-3. Gina Taylor. Seottle Pocific, 150-1.

Shot put 1. Leether Greene, Ashland. 49-2. Esther Ikaml, Alabama 48-10. Denlse Taylor.

Norfolk 47-9. Triple lump 1, Elexa Wills, U.S. Military Academy, 44-11. Lollta Pile, Cal State Northridae, 41-10. Irish Holems, St.

Augustine's, 41-OVS. 400-meter relay 1, Norfolk St. (Cynthia Royster, Bertha Knox, Charlene Robb, Judith Lawrence), 45.2. St. Augustine's, 45.6.

Hampton, 45.91. run 1, Teena Colebrook, Cal Paly SLO, Melanle Hiatt, Cal Poly charmed life on Geneva's clay courts, where she won in 1988 and defeated Chris Evert last year in reaching the semifinals. This was the first tournament for Paulus, 19, since taking a break for high school exams after! the Australian Open in January. Though ranked 16th in the world, she will miss this week's French Open because of school commitments. Kelesi won the first set and raced to a 3-0 lead in the second set.

But Paulus, often relying on seed, is another case in point. The -three-time Wimbledon champion with the booming serve lost in Dusseldorf to Spain's Jordi Arrese. "I think he'll go far at Roland Garros, but I don't see him Edberg said of Becker. "He'll have a lot of trouble when he runs into the real clay-court specialists." Those include third-seeded Andre Agassi, No. 4 Andres Gomez of Ecuador, No.

6 Emilio Sanchez of Spain, No. 7 Thomas Muster of Austria and No. 8 Andrei Chesnokov of the Soviet 'Union. But none of them has been able to dominate the clay-court circuit this spring. Muster looked strong in winning Italian Open, the main warmup before the French, but he has been bothered by an arm injury that could hamper his topspin groundstrokes.

i NCAA Division 3:4836. 3, Jay Shaeffer, Northern Colorado, 3:4989. 111-meter hurdles 1, Charles Johnson, St. Augustine's, 13.68. 2, Brett Fortune, Hampton, 14.00.

Sam Saffo. Morehouse. 14.11. 401-meter dash 1, Johnnie Barnes. Hampton, 45.41.

2, Howard Burnett, N.V. Institute of Technology, 45.60. 3, William Reed, Morehouse. 45.95. 106-meter dash 1, Kevin Hendrlx, Cal Stats Northridae, 10.50.

Kenneth Broken-burr, St. Augustine's, 10.52. Robert Love, Cal State-Los Angeles. 10.59. 100-meter run 1, Erick McBrldae.

Cal State Northrldg. 1:49.34. All Mahomed, St. Augustine's, 1:49.77. Ted Govette, Call-tornlo-Davls.

1:50.21. 460-meter hurdles 1, Fltzroy Morrison, St. Autustlne's, 49.90. Johnnie Jones, Hampton, 50.45. Melvln Johnson, St.

Augustine's, 50.75. 100-meter dash 1, Terrence Warren, Hampton, 20.67. Kenneth Brokenburr, St. Augustine's, 20.70. Kevin Hendrlx.

Cal State Northrldge, 20.87. run 1, Uriel Rivera, Edln-boro, 14:35.63. Jimmy Hearld, S.E. Missouri 14:38.85. Randy Lowe, 14:43.10.

1 relay 1, St. Augustine's (Fiti-rsy Morrison, Trevor Williams, Donovan Hew Location ENGINE EXCHANGE 15 Newsome Place 722-4452 Factory Replacement Engines Installed '1399 4 cylinder V-6 I-Small block V-8 Most applications 12 Mo. 12,000 Mile Warranty Complete Machine Shop MEN I 40frmfw relay SI. Augustine'! (Trevor Team scorn St. Augustine's.

Ill; Cal Slate WillUms, Kenneth Brokenburr, Tarrell 40; Hampton, 56; Cal Poly SLO, penttr, Charles Johnson), 40.04. 2, Abilene S3; Cal State-Los Angeles, 49; Abilene Chris- Christian, 40.2). 3, Morehouse, 40.24. tian, 37; Ferris 33; Morehouse, 32; N.Y. l.sw-meter run 1, Scott Hem pel, Cal Poly Institute of Technology, 30; Angelo 30; 'cn vi7Ai i.

Lull Nuiwt. past. If II TODAY Giants is Cubs 2PM -1 hietssrebs BLLTXmB ATHLETICS' And catch all the action on and off the field on "Baseball Tonight" at 7PM. Cable -Channel lit ESPN enty avttfiMa through euttunzeO ctwlnbulors Pregremmms pr7niuiioerr ruuii RlcftDicuiiion CALL TODAY mJ THM TOTAL ii inn iy llLlMlljl lll. Jill JUIIIJ.IIIIIII.IIII.I.IIII.I 5.B.

Missouri rt, cainooro, vai-uuvis, -27; Indiana 24; North Dakota 20; N.E. Missouri 19; N.W. Missouri 17; Humboldt 13; C.W. Post, 12; Son Francisco 10; Cal State Bakersfleld, South Dakota Shlppensbura, North Dakota, Michigan Tech, Lock Haven University, Indianapolis, Pittsburg Northern Colorado, Virginia Augustona, Cal State Chico, Ashland, Lowell, Kutz-town, Lincoln, Slippery Rock, Mornlngside, Central Sonoma Mankato 7Vt; Mlllersvllle, Philadelphia Textile, East Texas Minnesota-Du-luth, Central Missouri So. Connecticut Wis Lewis, Cal State Stanislaus, Saginaw Volley, 1.

Triple lump 1, James Browne, Abilene Chrlstion, 54-1. Xavier Donaldson, St. Augustine's. 52-1. 1 Ben Holback, Cal Poly SLO.

50-414. Javelin Jeff Neral, Indiana, 227-11. Todd Schember, Ferris State. 216-2. Craig Johnson, Cal State-Los Angeles, 216-0.

Pole vault 1. Kevin Rankin, Cal Poly SLO, 17-8'j. 2, Brian Fisher, Cal St. Los Angeles, 17. 3.

Todd Arnett, Cal Poly SLO. 17. High lump 1, Dorrin Moore, St. Augustine's, 7-1. 2, Kenneth Brown, Morehouse, 7-0V.

3, David Bedford, Abilene Christian. 7-0Vi. Discus 1, Paul Chochron, Ferris 161-7. 2, Ken Onuaeuluchi, N.W. Missouri 175-11.

Rich Havward. N.E. Missouri 171-4. HOME REPAIRS No job loo big or small Free Estimates Call R.N. Wood 073-0321 Liu CAU2M-4S00 for convenient home delivery Dailn toss The Times-Herald THREE RIVERS SPOtmNCTWORK II I TTTTTT TW GLASS CO.

INC. MOBILE AUTO GLASS SERVICE TO THE ENTIRE PFNINSULA We Offer: 20 vrs. experience quick on-site response quality workmanship K. LOCATED IN OYSTER POINT PARK A mmm 8:30 am-6 pm feJ Sat. 9 am-1 pm UL i tauai upportunity 9 30 90.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Daily Press
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Daily Press Archive

Pages Available:
2,151,294
Years Available:
1898-2024