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Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York • Page 21

Location:
Binghamton, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
21
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

th.ni.on, N. Y. 21 Vu June 1 lio A i'Liil'HS FOR NICKLAUS AND NOBODY ELSE FALL BALL FOR INDIANS 'St. Louis a Swinging Chorus Checkered -Fteg Jim Weinman, North's new TPS i IWftn J5V 3,7 Dom Palmer, Terry Dill and Chris Blocker are rated as the longest ball hitters but Casper does not think any of those football coach, meets his troops tonight and at this point Jim is only too ready to turn his mind to football. I His Lyons Central baseball team, after making a late-season comeback to reach the Section 5 Class AA baseball finals, took a 17-2 flogging from John Marshall High of Rochester in Red Wing Stadium, Rochester, Saturday.

Tonight, in a supply session at the school cafeteria, the 1965 Indian coach-elect will hold a i get-acquainted session with players, and coaching assistants. Weinman's football coaching record is 26-5-1. Despite the fact that most of the feature races among sportsman stock cars at the area speedways have been close ones, this seems to be the year when each track is to a great extent dominated by one driver. At Five-Mile Point, Jerry Hayes is making no bones about the fact that he is top dog there. The Whitney Point-area driver won the 50-lap inaugural feature on May 15 and has won three of the four main events since then, his lone loss a runner-up effort behind George Chalker three weeks ago.

Last Saturday he started in scratch position but quickly threaded his way through the pack. shots on the long par 4's here while the rest of us will be using woods." TIIEKE ARE ONLY two par-5 holes, the 580-yard eighth and the 60b-yard 17th. "I cant see anyone in the field except Jack getting on in two on those holes," added Casper, who won the Open in 1959. Gary Player, who has been practicing daily with i k-laus, echoes Casper's viewpoint. "It's going to be almost impossible to beat Jack," said Player.

"I played with him last weekend. He hit only three fairways, yet shot 67. He is so powerful, it is frightening." Next to Nicklaus, Arnold By Press Wire Services St. Louis George Washington never slept here but Jack Nicklaus did and that was enough to make him a prohibitive favorite among the majority of golfers who will tee off for the U. S.

Open championship Thursday. Nicklaus not only slept here, he practically lived on the long, rugged 7.191-yard Bellerive course during the last 10 days. Following the same formula which proved so successful in the Masters and sticking strictly to his plan of shooting for the big ones, he took a week off the regular tour to get in earl practice licks here. He spent hours charting every hole in his little brown notebook making notes on the good spots and the bad ones, and was so satisfied with his progress that he took the weekend off to visit his family in Columbus. Ohio.

Today, he will be back as the 8-to-l betting favorite to win his second Open title at the age of 25. "If ever a course was built for Nicklaus, this is it," said former Open champion Billy Casper. "And if we get a couple of days of rain it will put Nicklaus in a class by- himself." Casper pointed out that Nicklaus was the only golfer in the 150-man field "with an even chance to get on the par-5 holes in two." "Besices," Casper added, "he will be using 4-and 5-iron three will hit the greens of those two par-5 holes in two. "This course is just unfair to the average golfer because he just can't hit the ball long enough to stay with Jack," Casper explained. Casper, of course, had enough company for a choral rendition of the St.

Louis Blues. Moaning loud enough to be soloist was Sam Snead. "Oooooh wheeee!" Sam exclaimed after yesterday's practice round. "There shore are a lot of trouble holes here. It's going to be tougher than any other Open course I've played." (Sam has played in 25 of them.) MINOR NOTES Johnson City veteran Stan Lupka missed in his bid for another win at Mid-State on Sunday afternoon but he still has two wins, and second-place and third-place windups for the four races he has finished.

Lupka, winner of the Mid-State point crown last year, still leads the standings with 72 points to 62'2 for Gordie Smith, runner-up last season, 40' for fellow JCer Glen Knapp and Hal Oliver's 39. And at Shangri-La, there's just one big man so far and that is the 40ish veteran from Bath, Dutch Hoag. Dutch was runner-up to Binghamton's Mike Zopp at the Owego race plant last year but has been virtually untouchable this time around finishing 1-2-1-3-1-2-2-1 in eight races. His toughest competition has come from Jerry Cook of Lockport who, after a slow start, has two wins and a pair of seconds. Glen Aubrey, late starting the season because of difficulty finding a promoter, has run only one program but that was taken by defending point champ Wade Gregory who impressed Lorn Tier tlaseball Draftee: anbury OWEGO CARD GAME International League Glen Hobble, former Chicago Cub pitcher, is looking for anottier shot at the major leagues and is building a strong case for himself.

He held Toledo to three hits as the Syracuse Chiefs won, 5-0, to give him his seventh win in 10 decisions, and fourth in a row. A 3-run homer by Tim Harkness paced Atlanta to a 4-3 win over Buffalo. Eastern League Pittsfield's lead dwindled to one game as York, behind home runs from Brennan Asplen and Jim French, defeated the Red Sox, 7-6. Ron Locke went all the way for his fifth win in eight decisions as the Williamsport Mets beat Reading, 6-3. Pacific Coast League Portland and Oklahoma City, the two division leaders, met last night with O-City winning, 9-1, behind Jim Ward's 6-hit pitching.

choices, other than Hanbury, Favorite objects of Sam's scorn were two par-4, 470-yard holes (Nos. 4 and 5). "There's just no way in the world most of 'em can get on in less than three." The biggest gallery for the tuneups followed Arnold Palmer, taking his first tour yesterday. "Did you see his shoes?" someone said as Palmer took some swings on the practice tee. "He's got 139 written on the soles." "I'll take it," Palmer said.

"First two, last two, it doesn't matter. I'll take it without knowing what the leaders have." CASPER IS THE first to admit most tournament golfers are chronic complainers and he makes sure to include himself among them. "As a group, I think we do a tremendous amount of moaning," he said. Why? "Well, I'm not really sure," Billy replied. But when we get to playing poorly, we start moaning.

I do it myself. I moan a lot inside where no one can hear me." VERY DESIRABLE LOT FOR SALE Corner Riverside Drive and West End Ave. 109 ft. front by 465 ft. deep to river CALL RA 2-4941 DAYS OR SW 7-3601 AFTER 6:30 P.

M. -UPI TELEPHOTO. ROUGH STUFF A man besieged with physical troubles, defending National Open champion Ken Venturi strays from a narrow fairway at St. Louis and finds himself in deep rough, but lucky at that not to be in the jungle behind him. Venturi is determined to play the entire tournament despite a circulatory problem which leaves his right hand numb and bloodless until massaged several hours every day.

Owego first-baseman Dave Hanbury is the draft property of the world champion St. Louis Cardinals, it was learned today, the only Southern Tier schoolboy chosen in last week's 826 a baseball draft. All selections are listed in the current issue of the Sporting News. Hanbury's parents were surprised with the news. The only scout with whom they'd talked had represented Minnesota.

However, the Cards can't sign Dave anyway, until after graduation later this month. Then they have exclusive rights until January, at which time his name would go back into the hopper. The G-foot-2, 200-pounder, a lefty throwing and a switch-hitter (.439 this year and named the team's outstanding player) has planned to enter Cortland State next fall. Cardinal general manager Bob Howsan named Hanbury (according to the Sporting News, mislocating his home as Oswego, N. as 13th choice of the Cards' Rock Hill, S.

C. farm. That made 18-y a r-old Dave the 723d over-all choice in the long two day Hotel Commodore session. Still later, however, Howsan was to name two far more famous athletes. One was outfielder Trenton Jackson from Franklin High in Rochester, the University of Illinois and the Tokyo Olympics where football and sprinting have left little time for baseball.

The other was Columbia shortstop Archie Roberts, who has prior commitments with (a) med school, and (b) the Cleveland Browns football team. The Cards' 61 choices included five other first-basemen: one high-schooler, Bob Bender of Goodlettsville, and four collegians: Jim Getta of Arizona State's NCAA champions, a Freeman of Utah, Dale Ford of Washington State and, the club's second choice, Terry Milani of Lewis (111.) College. The nearest high school are two Scranton-area boys, Scranton Central shorstop Frank Borgia whom Cleveland named and Moscow pitcher Ralph Foytack whom Detroit picked to follow in uncle Paul Foytack's footsteps, along with West Genesee (Syracuse) southpaw Tony Cirapella, tapped by Boston. Roberts wasn't the only successful college QB selected. Others included 1964 Kansas' 1964 soph starter Steve Renko (Mets), Pitt star Fred Ma-zurek (Minnesota).

And Paul Dennebaum, who wound up playing nothing but first base at Syracuse, despite rave QB notices at West Scranton High and with the Harvard frosh, was a Dodger choice. The New York Yankees, any of whose signed selections could wind up as Triplets, named 40 players. One made in the Binghamton club's turn on the selection wheel was 17-year-old lefty Ralph Scott, from Newburgh Free Academy where the Yanks signed Bill Short 10 years ago. the crowd with his steady driving and looks as though he'll be tough all year. Hoag has 166 points to his credit.

Runner-up Lee Osborne has 144, Zopp 137, Cook 125 and Wayne Reynolds 122. In the modern division at Shangri-La, Jim Zacharias and Ray Blaishure are tied with 129 each, followed by Endicott's Joe Buchak with 108, Dave Lambert with 98 and Chuck Brady with 86. The 30-lap Spring Championship for moderns will be held this Saturday on the paved Owego track. MEMBERS OF THE SQUARE DEAL Motorcycle Club will leave Binghamton Thursday to make the jaunt to Laconia, N. for the 44th annual New England Motorcycle Tour and Rally.

The schedule calls for novice races on Friday, competition in the 250 c.c. expert and amateur classes on Saturday and the 100-mile National Championship road race on Sunday. HERE AND THERE Bobby Unser and Roger McCluskey, two of the top veteran drivers on the U. S. Auto Club racing circuit, have been added to the field for the second USAC sprint car race of the season Saturday night at the Reading Fairgrounds! Already signed up for the event are young Greg Weld of Kansas City, winner of the April 24 USAC race at Reading, Greg Larson, Don Branson and Al Unser, Bobby's brother.

Branson is the defending champ on the USAC cir When in Canada, Run Like ell Vancouver, B. C. Peter Snell returns to the mile tonight, determined not so much to re Casper reeled off a handful of players who rarely complain about course conditions Player, Palmer, Nicklaus, Jim Ferree and Gene Littler. But he admits even they may be crying the blues before they're through in St. Loo.

gain his world record, but to give Jim Greiie his come-up- II Mill- pance. France's Michel Jazy beat Snell's mile record in Rennes LITTLE LEAGUE Westover Meth. 350 520 x-13 11 5 I Perham and Hammond, Landon (5); a week ago, with a 3:53.6. Later in the week, Snell lost an 880 to Canada's Bill Crothers1 after barely nipping Americans Grelle and Jim Ryun in his last mile outing. New Zealander indicates Other Yankee bids were for Plattsburgh High catcher Jeff Burns, Villanova third-baseman Bob Hall of Brasher Falls (in the Massena area) and Long island outfielder Harry Wright, a classmate this year of former Vestal athlete Tom Silvanic at Cheshire Academy.

It'll be just as well if San Francisco's No. 3 choice, a Santa Clara U. athlete, never winds up as part of the Yankee double-play combination. His name is Richard BINGHAMTON Sherwood and Steika. HR Karns (WM).

Jr. High Pharmacy 000 1001 1 4' Blvd. Meth. 1 400 207 518 15 2 Shadduck Insurance 101 13x 6 4 St. Johns 000 020 0- 2 2 6 King (L), Dodd (2) and Phillips; Vin- D.

Oakley ana ricConegly; Dobransky cent and Szelkowski. and Kanazawich. HR McConegly, B. Oak-Davis 000 1001 2 ley (BAA). Monticello-The 5-5 daily double paid a disappointing $8.70 here last night.

The FRONT or REAR SHOCK ABSORBERS SPECIAL $14for 2 cos i ou imt 4 All Saints 102 101 0- 5 6 4 that Grelle, whom he calls the third best miler in the world, has been needling him about his loss of invincibility. Shea (U, Romano Murray (5) andprim. Metn. 535 101 x15 18 6 Bergen; Chanecka and Tedino (Chanecka) MacDonald (L), Martin (6) and Re- strucK out 12). jvelf; Dean and Adams.

HR Kearney Sheraton Inn 210 82013 13 (AS). Miller Motors 000 0000 1 first winner, Ozark Hanover, paid $3.60, $2.60 and $2.80 and the second, Irish Sweepstakes, paid $3.90, $3 and $2.60. Yankee Luck won the $1,400 feature in 2:06.4 and paid $10.20, $6.30 and $3.80. Roosevelt The Premise won the featured invitational mile pace in 2:02.4 to pay $12. Sharp Rodney and Cheyenne Abbek (2-7) combined for a $193.70 daily cuit.

The most impressive entry list in 18 years of sports car racing at Watkins Glen has necessitated qualifying trials for the Glen Grand Prix scheduled for June 25-27. The 87-lap, 200.1-mile race over the 2.3-mile track is sanctioned by the SCCA and is the fifth of 10 races giving points toward the United States Road Racing Championship for drivers and manufacturers. The starting field will be cut to 30 through trials on Saturday the 26th after a Friday practice session. Among the entries are Jim Hall, Texas oilman who won the Sebring Endurance Run in his automatic transmission-equipped Chaparral, and partner Hap Sharp Mario An-dretti, Italian-born driver and Indianapolis 500 rookie of the year for his third-place finish, will start on the pole in the first race on the new paved Langhorne International Motor Speedway in the 100-mile USAC race Sunday. Second in the starting field is Parnelli Jones who was runner-up to Scotland's Jim Clark in the Indy 500.

Jones won the Milwaukee 100 last week but Andretti's fourth -place finish gave him enough points to take the national leadership over from Jones and Clark. Others in the 22-car field include former national point champ Chuck Stevenson, Gordy Johncock, Billy Foster, Mel Kenyon, Bobby Unser and Ronnie Duman Foley and Pongonis; Mahalek (L), Keane (2), Donovan (16) and Haines. (Foley struck out 13 and was 4-for-3 atj Area Boats Place Alexandria Bay Endwell's double payoff. Buffalo-Big Stirk won featured $1,300 Huff a Redskin To the End 15,000 Mile Guarantee bat). Gallagher's Barn 100 Hall Printing 002 Putano, Dennis MarcelU Dan Marcello L-6) and and $3.10.

The 2-4 daily double of McNeil finished third in 300 015 7 5 020 004 8 5 (4), Pflug (5), Rumppll; Far- Bernie and Singing Pence returned fu0 riasc A Division nf tho 11th Scratch Wall By Press Wire Services $191.40. Vernon Downs Little Misty trotted annual 100-mile Thousand Island I nuic CPI Art Wall netti, Hughes (W-7) and Lee. HR Rum-pell. ENDWELL through the mud for a win in the $1,500 ifntrir Rnat rnmnetitinn nn the Washington Sam Huff, 30- Hirst-division race, paying $19 9.20. In i year-old defensive star who was 01 rOCOno Manor, IOrmerisecond-division pace, Little Cream paid at.

Lawrence niver over Harris Foodline 000 0101 2 Rotary 004 OOx 4 1 chammnn. withdrew $8.20. Daily Double ii traded to the Washington Red- Masters (6-4) of Admiral weeken(J 4 Qass 3(5 was iDir-hlia anrt Uaa(nuu Gale and Benware; Johnson and Ran uyai yo.u o.7; II 1 niiiitiiiiiiiiiiittHiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiir MAC'S MUFFLERS iiMiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiil GEORGE HIGHWAY, ENDWELL PI 8-4619 dall. (Gale struck out 12, Johnson 10) skins after nine years with the from the U. S.

Open Golf Cham-j he STuCy tms Tiy i Henry Luning of New York Giants of the Na- pionship today because of a1 away. Rebel Land Freed, Pure Leisure ows pa but Mor tinnal Frmthall loorrnn Mf0. LT Dicky's Pride returned $2,284.10. 0 -l. 4 i-i lit.

4 Montrose's Rick TEEN BASEBALL ii a Qaratoaa-Torr Fliaht wnn hv a n-k amilll iaUeU LU 111 UlcU Llullw i uwvwwii jjil- UcHJIV 1UJU1J. lie woa IcpiaCVii CV RUTH LEAGUE VAhltnou Dnint nni Ann ft 9 A i i -nil lnnhlA i-i Caior Ina anri I nirll 4 double of Clever Ina and E. H. Greene ioo 722 x-i2 contract with the Redskins. Ile ex-PGA champion, in the 150- age.

$66. field which begins play rur ana wn, Ddoyer ana receive an estimated $30, castie creek 402 ooo o6 io 3 000 a year. i Thursday Docalavich, Eaton (4) and Hinds; Ra-! Huff Wants tO play OUt his kaukas and Aatson. HR-Michaiek (ST). KFL career in one city for the; III AT flf 20? 2 I sake of his children.

He saidj A1U F. Fragomeni and T. Fragomeni; Rob- that he Wants them tO remain Night-shift quota tournament: Ralph inson and Peters (Fragomeni struck out- ui Johnson-Richard Miller plus Peter 16). at the same school Until they Zadvorney-Reese Jones plus-6; Richard Hiiicrest 00 ooo o-6 2'graduate and not be forced to' wnton plus 5. Cperk9Rifker (41 ancfp inker ouoh Shuttle ffOm School tO SChod.

IfEiioEi ienauli: Eieat Ferrari, Ufa Heme, Porsche, Lotus and Lancia NY-P Linescores Exhibition IJaseball Jamestown 000 001 000-1 5 5 Geneva 110 022 llx-8 11 2, (At Atlanta, Ga.) Wood (L), Korince (5) and Solarek; lin (4); Wajor-. Hisson (2) and Klenovic. SOFTBALL JC CHURCH Blvd. Meth. r2 400 COO 04 3 1 Sara Jane Meth.

001 000 1-2 6 1 Holmes and Kneer; Sample (L), Tran-sue (2) and Isham (Transue struck out 11). Chicaao (AL) 000 010 000- 1 6 0 Blue and Vickery. Milwaukee (NL) 302 000 OOx 5 110 John, Pizarro (5), Bollo (8) and Ro- Wellsville 000 010 000-1 2 4 mano. Shatter (5); Keiley, Osinski (6) Auburn 010 010 OOx 2 4 and Torre, Kolh (6). WP-Kelley.

LP-i Jackson (L), Thornton (8) and DeFelice, 5 John. HR-Carty. Beamer (8); Denehy and Goosen. 005 000 0 5 6 J. C.

Presbyterian (79 cars started only 8 finished. Four were Renaults. They came in 1st, 3rd, 4th and 5th.) tlis faig 3 comSort shaving Any one a perfect gift for -n" a Jerri1- 1 1 If! Father's Day or Graduation iffy w0k 1 3 lifer K3k VYnUss Give the Norelco Comfort Shave! The new Renault Dauphine For the cost of a used Detroit gas-eater, you can get this dependable Dauphine that delivers up to 40 miles per gallon, is guaranteed for 1 2,000 miles or 1 year. It's the lowest priced 4-door sedan on the market. Only $1515 P.O.E.' Ana Kenauit got ine s'-f! 9 The new Renault Caravelle Winner of the Prixd'Elegance, this Ghia-designed convertible hasan optional removable hardtop so you can enjoy it summer and winter.

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The new Renault R-8 (sports sedan) The new R-8 1 100, the popular version of the car that won the Corsica Rally, is now available in dea'ers' showrooms. It's not a racer, but a low-Driced, high performance car for everyday diving. Here ae some of the things the experts are saying about it: "Vast seats are better than most cars at any price." "Amazing ride and overall stability." "Got a powerplant that fairly begs for abuse." "It's the fastest 1 1 OOcc sedan we've ever driven." "The best car in its class." No wonder Car and Driver Magazine's Road Test Report said: "The new R-8 should sell like mad in the United States." It does. And for only $1748 P.O.E. The new Renault R-8 (Rally car) This one, the new R-8 Gordini, was the winner in Corsica.

Three others like it swept 3rd, 4th and 5th. If this was just a test of speed, obviously the more expensive Gran Turismo racers would have shellacked us. But this was a torturous 8C7 mile race that went on night and day through fog, snow, village streets and winding mountain roads. It was too much for some of the toughest cars in the world. But not for the rugged Renaults.

Out of the 79 cars that started, only eight finished. And four were Renaults. Renault competes in rallies like this not just to collect trophies, but to prove out the ruggedness. quality and performance that we build into every car we sell. ony-pusn ouiion transmission in a small car.

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