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

Star-Gazette from Elmira, New York • 41

Publication:
Star-Gazettei
Location:
Elmira, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
41
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Minnesota Not Yet 'In9 Football Tips STAR-GAZETTE flmlro, N.Y. Wednesday, Stpt. 22, 196S 41 I Red Snutk rjj In the Dust TvX if Birds Stymie Twins in 10th Paul Blair sacrificed, pinch-hit MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL (AP) Luis Aparicio's single in the eighth, tying the score at 4-4. Singles by Earl Battey and ter Norm Siebern walked, and Aparicio untied the score with Frank' Quilici, Andy Kosco's and a bases-loaded walk gave Baltimore two lOth-inning runs and a 6-4 victory over Min gives Minnesota its first pennant.

The Twins and Orioles conclude their two-game series here today. The Orioles, who had led 3-0 earlier, launched their win-l sacrifice fly and a double by Zoilo Versalles produced the Blockers Real Heroes Of Winning Football (One of a series) By WILLIAM D. MURRAY Duke Football Coach NEW YORK (AP) The boys who get the football headlines usually are the passers, receivers and runners. A winning football team's REAL heroes, however, are the blockers. To be an outstanding blocker you must master the shoulder block.

Follow this outline to master these techniques: DO DON'T STANCE his single. After Russ Snyder walked, loading the bases, Mel Nelson replaced Boswell and walked Boog Powell, forcing in another runs. nesota Tuesday, preventing the Twins from clinching a tie for the American League pennant. Minnesota's pennant-winning Tony Olivia played after sitting ning rally in the 10th against Dave Boswell with a leadoff sin out most of the past week with a number remains at three any1 gle by Dick Brown. Jerry Adair run.

Stu Miller was the winning pitcher. slight knee injury. He had three combination ol Twin victories forced Brown at second on an attempted sacrifice, but then! and Oriole losses totaling three The Twins rallied for two runs hits in four trips, boosting his league-leading average to .320. BALTIMORE MINNESOTA lb bi ah bl Santo? Slugging Sinks Phils Avariclo ts 6 111 V'salles ss 6 0 2 1 1 Snyder rf 1110 Hall cf 0 0 0 Powell lb 4 0 2 3 0liva rf 4 13 01 (1) Look up at opponent Look at ground, iob'son 3b 5 0 0 0 Nossek cf 0 0 0 CHICAGO (AP) -Ron Santo score at 5-5. (2) Keep back straight.

(3) Distribute weight evenly on both feet. (4) Keep about 15 inches between feet. Bend your back in any direction. Put one foot well behind tha other. Keep feet too close together or too wide apart.

Ernie Banks accounted for the drove in six runs, five of them other Cub run with his 26th Blefer 5 0 10 Mincher lb 4 0 11 Bowens If 0 0 0 0 Kil'br'w 3b 4 0 0 0. Lau 3 12 0 Battey 4 2 2 0 ph 1 0 0 0 Uhl'der If 5 0 10 Brown 10 10 Quilici 2b 3 01 Oi Adair 2b 5 13 0 Tovar pr 0 10 0 B'air cf 4 112 Kendall 2b 0 0 0 01 Pappas 3 0 0 0 Rollins ph 10 0 0 Siebern ph 0 10 0 Pascual 10 0 0 Allison ph 0 0 0 1 V'ld'pino ph 10 0 0 Kosco ph 0 0 0 11 on two homers, as the Chicago Cubs defeated the Philadelphia homer in the first inning. The Phillies scored their first Phillies 7-5 Tuesday. run in an unusual rundown play Ron Santo CHARGE (1) Drive your knee down as Charge Santo's 30th homer in the first after the Cubs had two runners inning was good for three runs. Reeie If 1 0 0 0' 40 ill Totals St 4 10 4 100 210 000 2-4 000 100 120 04: Tofili Baltimore Minnesota trapped at third base.

The umpires ruled that Cub catcher Kris Krug had tagged the wrong His single in the third sent another across and in the eighth Mincher, Versalles, HR-Blair (5). SB-Adair 1. Tovar. you begin the charge. (2) Look up at opponent.

(3) Keep back straight. (4) Keep feet apart, take short driving steps and keep feet moving Look at ground. Bend your back in any direction. "Push" your opponent with long slow steps. runner.

Cub Coach Lou Klein Snyder, Pappas, Blair, Mincher SF Kosco. IP ER BB SO he came through with his 31st homer with one mate aboard after the Phils had tied the played the game under protes! because of the decision. PHILADELPHIA CHICAGO ahrhbi Ibrh bl fast. (5) Apply pressure with your Let forearm hang loose, forearm Taylor 2b pappas 71-3 4 Hall 1-3 1 0 S.Miller 11-3 1 0 Bunker 1 0 Pascual 4 4 3 Merritt 3 1 Pleis 2-3 1 0 Klippstein 11-3 1 Bowell 12-3 3 2 Nek son 1-3 0 8 5 0 2 0 Lend'm cf 4 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 Beckert 2b 4 2 3 0 1 2 0 Williams rf 3 2 10 3 0 12 Santo 3b 4 2 3 6 3 110 Banki lb 4 121 FOLLOW THROUGH pressure on oppo- Stop footwork after contact (1) Keep nent. 2 Card Pitchers Blank Astros, 3-0 Repeat all steps in charge 2 0 0 0 Krug 4 0 0 0 3 1 1 OAltman If 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Clemens If 0 0 0 0 4 1 2 OKes'nger ss 3 0 0 0 3 0 10 Ellsw'rth 1 0 0 1 0 1 OAb'nathy 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 100 1 0 100 1000 Callison rf Allen 3b Stuart lb Johnson If Gonzalez If Phillips cf Brigs cf Wine ss Corrales H'rnst'n oh G.J'ks'n oiash ph Sorrell ph Covin't'n ph Dal'mole Totals Philadelphia Chicago Keuka Group Sets Election ST.

LOUIS (AP) Ray Sad- 10 0 0 37 11 3 Louis Cardinals to a 3-0 victory Totals 31 020 010 1105 over Houston. ecki and Hal Wotxteshick combined for a five-hit shutout Lake i elected, several directors will PENN YAN Keuka Orange's Allen Healthy Again SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) -Ted Allen, a 220-pound fullback, was taken off the injured list Tuesday and will don his football uniform for Syracuse University's home encounter Saturday with the Hurricanes of Mi- 02x-7 401 Woodeshick came on with one HR-Santo Beckert. Taylor, Allen, Chapter, Izaak Walton League, Tuesday night'pitching the St. (30.31), Banks (26).

SF-Stuart. out in the ninth inning after Sa-decki had walked two men. The will hold its annual "paid-up- II ER BB SO HOUSTON ST. LOUIS be named at the session. Present officers are president, Elmer Frederickson; vice president, Warren Giles; and secretary-treasurer.

Mrs. Hazel Pen- lb bl dues" dinner and election of officers at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at reliever walked Walt Bond, loading the bases, but Norman Llllis ib fi bl 4 110 4 110 4 0 10 Tolan rf OOOFIood cf IP G.Jackson 1 4 Bu'dette 3 3 Baldshun 1 1 Wagner 2 Jenkins 1-1 1 1 Ellsw'rth 61-3 Ab'nathy 4-4 2W 1 4 4 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 1 4 4 3 1 1 0 the Guyanoga Clubhouse. 4 0 10 Miller than hit into a game-end In addition to officers to be I rod 3 0 11 4 0 11 ing double play. 3iami.

MILWAUKEE For a few unsettling moments Sunday, the championship dream of Herman Franks and his San Francisco Giants lay writhing in the dust of County Stadium here. Willie Mays, the indispensable man, was down. For all that his troubled playmates could tell just then, he might be out for the season and possibly for the century. With two out and the Giants leading the Braves, 2-1, in the sixth inning, Willie walked and raced to third on Willie McCovey's single. When a pitch by Tony Cloninger got away from Jesse Gonder, the catcher, Mays set sail for home.

Gonder retrieved the ball and flipped to Cloninger who had come in to cover the plate. With a sort of rolling slide, Willie crashed into the pitcher and as Ed Sudol flung up an arm to signal the third out, the best baseball placer in the world lay sprawled on his side, limbs moving feebly. Out of the dugout with almost comical haste popped Franks. His round face reflected what 12,084 witnesses in the stands realized fully that if Willie was seriously hurt, San Francisco's chances of surviving the last 14 games in first place were mangled beyond recognition. FENCED ROUND by supplicants in gray flannel, Leo Hughes, the Giants' trainer, crouched at Willie's head.

The crowd was silent. After a moment there was applause as the stricken warrior was helped to his knees. He rested there briefly, then got slowly to his feet. Another moment and he reached for the glove somebody offered and trudged out to center field. He had no plays while the Braves were tying the score in the bottom of the sixth, but in the eighth he had a small part in an exquisite bit of buffoonery which the Giants will remember fondly, if they win the pennant, as the most delicious episode of the season.

To get the chronology in line, it should be mentioned that the Giants had grabbed a 2-0 on Mays' 49th home run of the year In the first inning and Jim Ray Hart's 23rd in the second. Leading off the fourth, Joe Torre made it 2-1 with a smasher to the top of the bleachers, and in the sixth doubles by Hank Aaron and Torre squared the match and removed Bob Shaw, San Francisco's starting pitche'r. Then came the joyous eighth and a scene of compelling charm, though Bobby Bragan, the Braves resident authority on these works of art, would not have enjoyed it. At the suggesion of Bob Engel, the umpire at second base, Bobby departed before the best part. BY AN AGREEABLE coincidence, it was a single by Jesse Gonder, a fugitive from the Mets, that led to Bragan's departure.

Jesse's hit led off the home seventh and Sandy Alomar ran for him. With Tony Cloninger trying unsuccessfully to bunt, Alomar dashed for second and was thrown out on a close play. When Bragan got through explaining to Engel how close it was, the Milwaukee manager was off the premises. Consequently, he didn't see Hal Lanier open the eighth with a single. He wasn't there when Jim Davenport laid down a bunt that crept with ravishing deliberation out on the first base line.

Joe Torre, the Braves' first baseman, crouched over the rolling ball, scrutinizing it like a zoologist discovering a new genus of cockroach. So did Billy Williams, the umpire on fire base. Lanier ran, Davenport ran, and the ball rolled on. When at long last it came to a halt not more than six inches under the Torre and Williams' noses, it appeared from the press box to be resting on the white line. However, Torre snatched it up, jubilantly crying foul.

the umpire ruled instantly, pointing tpward the alkaline side of the chalk mark. Davenport had long since reached first base safely and Lanier, having rounded second, wis watching the pantomime with delighted interest. He saw Torre fling the ball to the ground in sudden rage, and he took off for third. NOW CAME A scene lifted bodily out of a tag team rassling match in Ridgewood Grove. Torre took his belly and hit Williams' belly with it.

Williams lifted the imperious thumb and Torre's working day was officially ended. Joe still had things to say, though, and he was still saying them when Lanier scampered home with the winning run. Torre never saw him. When at length Torre joined his manager in the team's boudoir, Dick Schofield forced Davenport, Jesus Alou beat out a single deep short and Mays walked to fill the bases. A long fly by Willie McCovey sent Schofield home for a 4-2 lead.

Bill Henry shut out the Braves in the eighth and Juan Marichal put them down in order in the ninth. So the Giants won two of their three games here and wen on to Cincinnati to face such further crises as may arise. If they win the pennant by one game, it'll be the first championship ever decided by a runner traveling 270 feet to score from first on a 40-foot bunt. 3 0 10 Brock If 4 0 0 0 Gagliano 3b 3 0 10 Kernek lb 3 0 0 0 Buchek si 3 0 3 0 McC'ver OOOOMaxvill 2b 0 0 0 0 Sadeckl 3 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 10 0 3 0 11 Jackson ss Wyrm cf Harrison 1b Aspro'te 3b Staub rf Bate man Gaines pr Bond ph Miller If Zechery Brand Adlesh Total Houston St. Loull 24 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 I Totals 32 3 73 jn.

000 000 0000 110 000 lxJ JB Kernek, Sadeckl, Baleman, Brock. SB-Tolan, Wynn. IP RIP. BB SO zscnary L.0-1 1 1 Loomos 2 110 1 sadeckl 1 1-3 5 0 0 4 9 Woodeshick 0 0 0 1 0 TO GiVC UP DeGolyer Duo Low Net Champ On Rybak Day Peggy DeGolyer and Don WE HATf L' Johnson copped the low neet event in the Mike Rybak Day Tournament at the Mark Twain Golf Course. They teamed for a score of 62.

I Low gross winners in the tournament, held in honor of the Mark Twain pro. were Mary Lou Leach and Lou Caparulo with 80. Rybak and Jeanne Whitney had second low net score of 64, Dick Mosteller and Barb Green were third with 67. Runners-up in the low gross event were Be atrice Avery and Art Caparulo with 81, Doug Mosteller and Cle Kakretz with 85. Art Caparulo and Mary Lou Leach won prizes for the long est drives on the first hole.

Mary K. Owen won a prize for coming closest to the pin with her tee shot on No. 15, a par-three hole. Thirty-six players participated in' the tourney, which was followed by dinner at Moretti's. Covington Wants Out RACING NtW YORK Priceless Gem, S3.40 made it trirea i row with in eight' length victory hi the Miss Merriment Purse at Aqueduct.

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. Isadandy, S4, opened big eirly lead ind hung on to win the tatur I Atlantic City by one- half length. PAWTUCK6T, R.I. Royal landing, Sio.60, scored by 3vi lengths over the fa vored Hellenic Ace in the Warren Purse at Narreoansett. CHICAGO Battle Star, S13.20, won the Gallant Wan Purse at Hawthront by from New York, lost two matches Tuesday in the Capa-blanca Chess Tournament.

The one-time boy wonder of American chess was beaten in the of two adjourned matches. He dropped a 17th rounder to Russia's Ewfin Geller in 56 moves and was downed in 46 moves of an 18th round match by Russian Ratmir Jolmov Jack Nicklaus, whose $145,539 this year makes him the all-time champion of professional golf, is more than $36,000 ahead of Tony Lema, who is second with $108,869. a nose over Stay Ud. EXCEPT TO YOU! SAN MATEO, Calif. Every Breeze, 180, beat Balva Beaum by wie-haif length in the Crystal Springs Purs it Bay Meadows.

EMERSON WINS LOS ANGELES Too seeded Roy Em erson of Australia won his second round mrrh frnm nu A.1 1.1 tne pacific soutnwest Championships. fi NICHOLS OFFERS Associated Press Wes Covington, claiming that "I'm not going anywhere with the Phillies," said he has asked the Philadelphia organization to release him so that he can make a deal with another club In an interview with the Milwaukee Sentinel, Covington said that "clubs in the firs division certainly have asked for me." The Washington Senators will continue their working agreement with the Geneva Senators of the Class A NY-P League for a fourth season. Wayne Terwilliger will manage the team for a third season. Willis Reed, the New York Knickerbockers' Rookie of the Year in the NBA last season, had his fractured nose reset Tuesday. The 6-10 star's nose was broen in a scrimmage.

He'll have to wear a mask but will resume practice Thursday Hunters will get a chance to bag turkeys in three uostate counties next month. The Consrervation Department said a special session on wild turkey Oct. 4-8 in parts of Delaware, Otsego and Schoharie Counties will be held Loren Babe, who guided Columbus to the Southern League baseball title, was named Manager of the Year in the Class AA circuit. Jimmie Williams, 36, who boxed as a heavyweight under the name of Kid Riviera, has been convicted of gambling and sentenced to six months in jail Bobby Fischer, the U. S.

champ You'll want to join our winner's circle when you hear the special end-of-model-year-deals we're making. We'd like to protest the end of the best year Dodge has ever had and go on selling '65's forever. but time marches on! We've got to hand out a good many winning deals before the new models arrive. That's where you come in. In to see why more than 500,000 car buyers picked Dodge as a winner during the '65 model year.

In to see why Dodge and the Dodge Boys together make a winning combination" smart car buyers just can't protest. Now is the time to really cash in. See the Dodge Boys. Find out how. GREAT REWARDS HI RETAILING 1 IMMEDIATE POSITIONS AVAILABLE for assistant managers with variety or chain depart ment store experience preferred.

Good Salary Hospitalization Extended Medical Coverage Paid Vacations Opportunity for Advancement Openings in Elmira, Corning and Utica, N. Y. AffiLH MTI Done 251-253 BALDWIN N.Y. APPLY DISCOUNT CITY i turn inin ri i i i i.

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 Star-Gazette
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Star-Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
1,387,429
Years Available:
0-2024