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Vidette-Messenger of Porter County from Valparaiso, Indiana • 6

Location:
Valparaiso, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Another' 71 For troke eaci. Gary Player, Only Sox Work Willie Hits, Par Breaker, Second Ted Nears .300 As Bosox Tighten Grip and the Chicago White Sox' ended a 5-5 tie at 14 innings because of 4 Baltimore curfew. In the National League, the first place Milwaukee Braves retained a lVi game edge by beating St. Louis 2-0 in a game held to six innings by rain. Second place San Francisco ended its losing string at five with a 6-1 vic-(oi over Philadelphia.

Los Angeles defeated Pittsburgh 5-4. Cincinnati and the Chicago Cubs were idled by rain. In defeating the Yankees, the Tigers won their third in four shots under new manager Bill Norman. It was Bobby Shantz' third consecutive defeat. Billy Hoeft won it for a 5-5 rec- the younger generation of touring golfers, had 152.

Tied for fourth place at 144 were Julius Boros, 1952 Open champion and one of the first-day leaders and two Oklahqmans, former Amateur champion Charii Coe and Labron Harris, 5year-old Oklahoma State University coach. Sam Doesn't Walt Snead still had an outside chance to qualify after he shot tm 80 Friday for a 155 total. But paid off his caddy and locker room boy and didn't wait to find out. Departing with him were such players as Gene Saracen, twic winner of the Open, 1954 champion Ed Furgol, 1955 champion Jack Fleck and the current amateur champion, Hillman Robbing. i Sr L-r rri i.

i I Fred Hutchinson Buclty Hllc By HUGH FULLERTON JR. TULSA, Okla. AP) Tommy Bolt today set out to hold his lead in the National Open golf championship against two unexpected rivals while the men whose names were bandied about a few days fcgo as likely winners looked on from the sidelines. 39-year-old Bolt Friday bad a double bogey six that marred his second straight round of 71. As 55 survivors of the field which numbered 2,150 original entries and 162 starters plunged into today's final 36-hoIe marathon, the players u' beat lined up this way: Bolt at 142; Gary Player, the South African who is the tournament's only par-breaker so far, at 143 and wealthy 35 year-old Frank Stranahan at 144.

Snead Mining Missing for the first time in this stage in 18 National Opens was Srm Snead, who never has succeeded in winning this title. Cary Middlecoff, iwo-time champion who shared the favorite's role, barely escaped elimination with 154. Four-time winner Ben Hogan, suffering from an injured left hand, made a brief bid for the lead but wound up six strokes be hind at 148. Dick Mayer, the defending champion, wss farther back at 150 and Ken Verturi, brilliant leader Marlene 1st, Louise 2nd MARBLEHEAD, Mass. (API- Weather and stamina were vital factors today as Marlene Hagge and Louise Suggs stood 1-2 going into a double round at the $12,000 Round Robin Women's Invitation Golf Tournament.

Mrs. Hagge maintained her ad vantage with a plus 31-point score followed by Miss Suggs who gained 30 Friday for a plus 26 and second place. "I play well in the rain," Mar- lene said after informed scattered showers were forecast for the grueling 36-hoIe test today at Te- cesco Country Club's par 7S course. In addition, Marlene has the ad vantage of outh over the veteran Miss Suggs and third-place Patty Berg (plus 13 points). The tournament, which winds up in a fifth round Sunday, involves 16 pros grouped in foursomes which change from round to round.

A plus point is awarded for each stroke under the three opponents and minus points for strokes over them. Fishing Report First District (19 Northwestern Counties) Fishing at standstill throughout entire district as result of torrential rains. All rivers, streams and ponds high and muddy. Conditions in lakes of district equally bad. Wabash river continues to rise.

Outlook for weekend bad. B1U Norma JackTlgha TIOIRTOWN TURNOVER In an effort to field a winning team, the Detroit Tiger have dona a bit of reshuffling- of the field manager over the last four years. In fact, with the appointment of Bill Norman, from the Charleston club, to replace Jack Tlghe as manager, the Bengals have had their fourth new bench boss since 1964, the most changes of any olub in the majors. Fred Hutchinson wound up a three-year term in 1954, wtth Bucky Harris taking over In 1965-56. Tlghe came on In 1957 and he's out now.

(UPI Telephoto) Ohio U. Sprinter Sets 220 Mark In Prelims Four Hours For 5-5 Tie BLATIMORE (AP)-The circus moves into Memorial Stadium when the Baltimore Orioles take to the road next week, but base ball fans got a sneak three-ring preview here Friday night. The Orioles and the Chicago White Sox battled four hours and two minutes to a 5-5 tie called because of curfew. It was a 14-inning bizarre match for no decision, but it couid hardly be called no contest. Most of the 15,418 fans stayed until the end of the game which started approximately on Friday the 13th.

Starters Billy Pierce for Chicago and Jack Harshman for Baltimore each allowed only one hit for the first six innings. Harthman Lifted Harshman who had allowed only two singles in eight innings, gave up three more to start the ninth. He was lifted, but three Oriole relief pitchers couldn't stop the Sox who punched seven singles to go ahead 3-4. In addition to the pitching changes, three pinch hitters and a pair of pinch runners were used during the wild half inning. When Baltimore came to bat, Chicago Manager Al Lopez inserted four players in the field for the time and shiited the positions of three others.

Pitcher Bill Fischer retired the first two Oriole batters, but Baltimore skipper Paul Richards sent up Jim Marshall to bat for the hemer-hitting Busby, and Marshall responded with a homer to tk the score at 5-5. Each team made only cne hit the rest of the game. East Preps Beat West EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) The East will 4iave a chance to square the "world series" of prep basketball tonight, but it will take a double header victory over the West to do it. The West, 2-1 victor in the previous series at Hutchinson, won fairly easily 76-66 Friday rJght.

They will play one game tonight if the West wins, two if the East wins and forces a rubber game. Roger Str''ckland, 6-feet-3, Jacksonville, Fla.l outscored 6-11 Bill (The Hill) McGill of Los Angeles 21 to 20, but the West had better balance and got double-digit scoring from all its starters. The West never trailed. The East caught up at 23-all In the second quarter, but the Westerners ran off 12 points to make it 35-23 at halftime and never were threatened again. The Wigwam Wisemen of America, a group of Oklahoma City oilmen, arc sponsoring the series between all-star teams of 1958 high school graduates.

'Mystic' Carter Beats Germany's Willi Besmanoff NEW YOPK (AP) Harold Carter, the mystic, deep thinker, lover of poetry and philosopher (he says) is ready to start mingling with the top heavyweights. Carter dropped Nietzche and Keats to spar with Besmanoff (Villi), a heavy muscled German, Friday night at Madison Square Garden. He sot away with a unanimous decision over Willi although he tired In the late rounds. "Did you have any poetic thoughts?" a man asked in the dressing room. "I ran over a ftv lines," he answered.

Sitting on a rubbing i.ible, he spoke4. "If you can keep your head, while all around you men are losing theirs' Gene Tunney wasn't around so the boxing writers couldn't check Harold for accuracy. It seemed every one had forgotten to bring their copy of Kipling to the fights. Norton, who bad the best 100 yard SF Pitcher Goes Route SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Mana-gei Bill Rigney is back on cloud nine. Willie Mays hits once again a San Francisco Giant pitcher doesn't need help from the bullpen.

"Everytime I see Mays walk in the door I know I've got a chance," Rijney said after his Giants broke a five- game losing streak Friday night ly tromping Philadelphia 6-1. Willie walked in the door Friday night mr.t and Rigney had thoughts of benching him. The Giant star got only one singled in 23 times at bat. But the told the boss he wanted to play. "I knew then that everything was okay," Rigney said.

eMays played, and Johnny An-tonelli pitched a neat five-hitter before a crowd of 18,068 fans. It was the first time a Giant pitcher had gone the full distance since June 1 when Antonelli beat St. Louis 7-2. It wasn't only Willie's sharp sin-file in the third that brought a smile to his manager. He was nearly estatic about a perfect strike Mays threw from center-field which cut off the tying run in the seventh.

Wally Post tingled and Rip Re-pulski on second tried for home. Mays threw and catcher Bob Schmidt tagged out Repulskl on a close play. Antonelli, who picked up his sixth victory against four defeats, said he was pitching mostly fast balls. He struck out five and no Phillie reached first base until the fourth when Chico Fernandez walked. Morey Rally Beats Roy er INDIANAPOLIS (AP) Dale Morey of Indianapolis, who won his first Indianapolis District golf championship when Ron Royer of Crawfordsville was in kinder-garten, came from four strokes buck on the last nine to beat Roy er by three Friday.

The 38-year-old veteran made up the deficit In six holes and then finished birdie-birdie-b i i to uiatcb his sixth District title from the 20-year-old Indiana university star. Morey had 280 for 72 holes, and Royer had 283. Royer had led after the first round at Meridian Hills Country Club, Morey took the lead on the second round at Speedway and Royer moved back in front by a droke on the third round at They returned to Meridian Hills, and the youngster went but in 33 to Morey's 36 and took a four-stroke advantage. Then Royer's game fell apart and he took 40 on the back nine to Morey's 33. Defending champion Tom Matey ana Pete Dye tied for' third at 286.

Don Essig, National Public Links champion, was fifth at 287. Miss Lindsay Gains Finals SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) -A former champion and an 18-year-old Iowa girl were matched today in the 36-hole finals of the Trans-Mississippi Women's Golf Tournament. They were Marjorie Lindsay of Decatur, 111., runner-up in 1949 and champion in 1950, and Andrea Cohn of Waterloo, Iowa. This is Miss Lindsay's ninth tournament and Miss Culm's first.

Miss Lindsay defeated Sherry Vneeler, Glasgow, 1 up in the semifinals Friday, gaining her winning advantage when Miss Wheeler overshot the 17th green. Miss Cohn had an easier contest in beating Mrs. J. Harry Henderson, Alexandria, 4 and 3. While the Waterloo girl played steady par golf most of the way, Mrs.

Henderson flubbed several approach shots that brought her downfall. FIGHT RESULT NEW YORK Harold Ortrr, 191 4, l.lmlrn. N. outpointed Willi HrsmanofT. lM, (iprmany (10).

oro, but needed relief help. He retired the first six he faced, then gave up Mickey Mantle's 12th homer for a 1-1 tie in the fourth. Ray Narleski won his eighth with 'a four hitter for the Indians, Chuck Stobts lost his fifth. The White Sox, blanked on two l-'ts for eight innings, chased Jack Harshman wirh seven singles and fjve runs for 5-4 lead in the ninth. Then Jim Marshall, pinch- hitting for Jim Busby (whose 3- run homer junked Billy Pierce's one-hit shutout in the seventh), lined the tying home run off Bill Fischer with two out in the ninth.

Major League Leaders By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS AMERICAN LEAGUE Batting (based on 100 or more at bats) Nfeman, Baltimore, Kuenn, Detroit, Vernon, Cleveland, .339. Runs Cerv, Kansas City, 40; Minoso, Cleveland, 38; F. Boiling, Detroit and Mantle, New York, 3. Runs batted in Cerv, Kansas 47; Jensen, Boston, 45; Gernert, Boston, 39. Hits Fox, Chicago, 70; Malzone, Boston, 65; Minoso, Cleveland, and Bridges, Washington, 61.

Doubles Kuenn, Detroit, 16; Malzone, Boston, Avila, Cleveland and Power, Kansas City, 13. Triples Martyn, Kansas City and Lemon, Washington, Tut- tle, Kansas City, 4., Home runs Cerv, Kansas City, 16; Jensen, Boston, 15; Triandos, Baltimore, 13. Stolen bases Aparicio, Chicago, 15; Harrell, Cleveland, Mino-30, Cleveland, 7. Pitching (hased on 5 or more decisions) Larsen, New York, 5-0, 1.000; Turley, New York, 10-1, Hyde, Washington, 4-1, .800. Strikeouts Harshman, Baltimore, 68; Turley, New York, 65; Pierce, Chicago, 62.

1 NATIONAL LEAGUE Batting (based on 100 or more at bats) Maya, San Francisco and Musial, St. Louis, Green, St. Louis, .343. Runs Mays, San Francisco, 51; Banks, Chicago, 50; Cepeda, San Francisco, 43. Runs batted in Thomas, Pittsburgh, 59; Banks, Chicago, 52; Mays, San Francisco, 42.

Hits Mays, San Francisco, 89; Cepeda, San Francisco, 74; Banks, Chicago, 73. Doubles Hoak, Cincinnati, 17; Moryn, Chicago, Aaron, Milwaukee and Mays, San Francisco, 14. Triples Mays, San Francisco, Ashburn, Philadelphia, Banks, Chicago, Neal, Los Ange les and St. Louis, 6. Home runs Thomas, Pitts burgh, 19; Banks, Chicago, 18; Walls, Chicago, 15.

Stolen bases Ashburn, Phila delphia and Mays, San Francisco, 10; T. Taylor, Chicago and Skinner, Pittsburgh, 8. Pitching (based on 5 or more decisions) Purkey, Cincinnati, 8 1, McMahon. Milwaukee, Vl. Mi; Spahn, Milwaukee, 8-2, .800.

Strikeouts Jones, St. Louis, 71; Antonelli, San Francisco, 59; I rotl, Chicago, 56. CHESS TOURNEY EVANSVILLE. Annual Trl-State Open Chess tournament will be held at the Evansville YMCA June, 21. Entry inquiries should be addressed to Evans ville Chess club, 724 Bryan road, Evansville.

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jackie Jensen and Dick Gernert have been slugging the home runs, and Frank Malzone has been battling with the bat, but look who's finally started to hit for the bustling Boston Red Sox a guy named Ted Williams. The Big'GUj who last year won the batting crown at an unlikely 39 with an equally unlikely .388 average, has been having it tough so far. But Friday niht he cracked a pair of singles, drove in two runs -and scored one wnue reaching" his percentage nigh .395 of- the season as the Red Sox tightened their grip on second place with a 9-3 victory over Kansas City. That left Boston eight games behind the American League leading New York Yankees, who were beaten 4-2 by the Detroit Tigers. Cleveland defeated fourth place Washington 10-1, and Baltimore High School Ball League Goes Monday Director Bill Eiler said the High School Baseball league in the city parks program will be gin Monday when the Cubs face the Phillies.

All games start at 6:15 at the fairgrounds. Pirate face the Redlegs Wednesday, Rot tort CUBS Capt. Chuck Kriston, Skip Collins, Cecil White, Jerry Britton, Larry Thompson, Bill Cordell, Joe Foncannon, Augie Ralston, Ed Berndt, Darrell Reynolds, Peter Hawjesky, Ed Swan-son. John Stoner, Martin O'Neill, Deve Bieber, Jack Slavey. PHILLIES Capt.

Warren Rayder, Jim Dommer, John Bowman, Pat Murphy. Ted Sutton, Bob GahL John Flynn, Tom Parsons, Jon Gramhofer, Herb Pietsch, Rick Fabing, Dean Fol-lis, Dick Wehner, Jack White, Charles Frogge, Dick Koeppen. REDLEGS. Capt. Butch Jones, Bucky Grey, Mike Cam-polattara, Jerry Prentiss, Roger Steele, Dennis Parry, John Wor-stell, Dennis Magid, Bob Harding, Jim Donley, Jerry West, Bud Heimberg, Don Brown, Malcolm Duncan, Tom Prentiss, Gerry Hamacher.

PIRATES. Capt. Dale Gott, Jim Loayza, Bob Daly, Dick Eb- ersold, Chuck Freeman, Clarence Doelling, Bob Graham, Chuck Bill Harbeck, Bob Smith, Fred Ingram, Tom Lam-' bertCXarry Xlemz, Larry Cole, Barry Meyerowitz and George ShulL, Two Players Get Golf Scribe Cards Tulsa, Okia. (AP) Gary Play- ei of South Africa and Bruce Crampton of Australa, leading contenders for the U.S. Open golf title, got their press cards today.

They were accredited as first foreign members of the Golf Writers Assn. of America. They are associate members. Player writes for the Johannesburg Star, Crampton the Sydney Morning telegraph. Stat Farm Auto Insurance Rate 'HAVE HOT GONE UP! Right here in our city, careful driver have saved as high as 40 tm their automobile insurance with State Farm compared to rates of most other companies.

Now, when others art raising their rates, State Farm holds its rates down your chance to save "vrn more! ate bultt on the Idaa the careful driver ckarvaa break. That's why wt aim to Irwure only cartful driven, not the rocklaaa ftw who kp ratal high. It world. Car for car and itafe for itata, Stare Farm policyholders enjoy tubitantlal laving Vr attar yaar. How about you? Tired of pay.

Inaj tky-hlgh rataiT Chance are you can qualify foe State farm "Careful Driver" Insurance I eut of 10 driver tart, To find cut If you can teva money, tall the Stat Farm agent lifted below today! 9 TATE FARM MUTUAL rZZJjT WOULDf LAPQMT AUTO iNtuRANd Company R. Gregory 116 Uneelnwey 0 Ph. 14Q01, Nlht 1-1414 VU's Orton Named ICC's Top Player GREENCASTLE Top Individual baseball honors in the Indiana Collegiate conference have beo voted to Coach Paul Wolf of Indiana State and Catcher Tom Orton of Valparaiso. In balloting by the league's head coaches, Wolf won the 1968 coach-of-the-year award by a widei margin, and Orton was a top-heavy choice as the outstanding player. Wolf guided the Sycamores to their first undisputed ICC championship during the recent campaign, winning nine and losing only one in conference play.

State Posted 1J-I A 1929 alumnus of the Terr Haute school, he also was at the) helm last year when State shared the crown with Evansville. Against all competition this season the Sycamores posted a 13-1 record. Orton is the first sophomore to win outstanding player honors since 1935, when Bud George turned the trick and began a three-year Evansville monopoly which continued through Clyde Cox's two terms. In 12 loop contests Orton hit .471 and posted an '853 slugging average, with exactly one-half of his hits going for extra bsies. He was equally dependable behind the plate, handling 111 chances without sn error.

Doubling as a member of Valpo's varsity basketball team, he was named Detroit's outstanding prep athlete in 1950. NCAA WORLD SERIBS (At Omaha) Pint Round Ulaaouit Michigan 1. Waatarm MALDIN FARM IQUIFMINT Authorised Forsl Treetor Dealer Genuine Parts, Quality Service) Phone Valpo 472S7 Highway 49 at Maiden F. L. BURRUS Ozzie'i Citi Srk ait Llneolnway Ph.

t-2411 J. N. Cities Srvi 1307 H. Celumot--Pho Maxwell's CitUs Snvicm Kouta, IM. Hi-Way 6 Citiea Sefvlca U.

S. 4, Haeart Whltey Oevsn, Prof. SERVICE time with 9.4, jast one tenth off the world rocord, and Ed Colly- more of Villanova, the IC4A champion. Ireland's Olympic 1500 meter champion Ron Delany and California's sub four minute miler Don Bowden top a bulky field in the mile. TV 440 levels out as a personal dual between.

Ohio State's Glenn Davis and Eddie Southern from Texas. MAY FASTEST BERKLEY, Calif. (AP) Willie May of Indiana had the fastest time among high hurdles quali fiers In the NCAA track and field meet today, having won his heat in 14 seconds. May won his preliminary heat in the low hurdles in 24 seconds but finished second in his semi final heat, three-tenths of a sec ond behind Fran Washington of Winston Salem Teachers, who was timed in 23.1. Tom Campbell of Indiana qualified for thq high hurdles finals with a 14.4 run, good for third in his heat.

Harold Caffey of Indiana "won his heat in the 440-yard dash in 47.5 seconds. Mike Morindo of Notre Dame qualified for the finals in the javelin throw with a sixth-best toss of 222 feet 54 inches. Indiana's O'ympic champion broadjumper, Greg Bell of Terre Haute, was hampered by a leg injury and failed to qualify with a leap of 23 feet 6 inches missing the finals by less than two inches. Taff Resigns As Paoti High Coach PAOLI, Ind. W-Andy Taff, 34, former Hanover College basketball star, resigned as Paoli High School coach Friday to take a job coaching basketball and baseball at High School.

He succeeds Harlan Clark, who goes to Salem. Tuff's 14-4 record in 156-57 was the best of his six years at Paoli, arid his 1955 team won the Bedford sectional. when you change io I I 5D Koolmotor BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) Two great races, the mile and the 440 yard dash, highlight today's finals in the 37th annual NCAA Track and Field Meet with Southern California's Trojans still the favorites. Friday's preliminaries at the University of California's Edwards Field saw many of the collegiate stars eased up and running just fasr enough to qualify for the But Les Carney, Ohio University sprinter, went all out to set a meet record for 220 yards around a curve.

Carney sped the furlong in 20.8 seconds to eclipse the 20.9 set in 1955 by Northerwestern's Jim Gol-liday. The Ohio runner beat such stars as San Jose State's Ray By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pet. G.B.

New York Boston Kansas City Washington Baltimore Cleveland Detroit 35 16 .686 29 26 .527 8 26 26 .500 9V4 26 28 .481 lOVt 24 27 .471 11 26 30 .464 114 24 29 .433 12 Chicago 22 30 .423 134 Saturday Games Cleveland at Washington Chicago at Baltimore Detroit at New York Kansas City at Boston Friday Remits Chicago 5, Baltimore 5 '14 innings tie, called curfew) Cleveland 10, Washington 1 Detroit 4, New York 2 Boston 9, Kansas City 3 Sunday Games Cleveland at Washington (2) Chicago at Baltimore (2) Detroit at New York (2 Kansas City at Boston 2 Monday Games No games scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE W. L. Pet G.B Milwaukee 30 21 .588 San 31 25 Vk Cincinnati 24 23 .511 4 Pittsburgh 27 27 .500 4 '4 St. Louis 25 26 5 Chicago 27 29 .482. 54 Philadelphia 23 29 .442 74 Los Angeles 23 30 .434 8 Saturday Games Milwaukee a' St.

Louis Cincinnati at Chicago Philadelphia at San Francisco Pittsburgh nt Los Angeles N) Friday Retulls Milwaukee 2, St. Louis 0 'fi innings, rain) Los Angeles 5, Pittsburgh 4 Fiancisco 6, Philadelphia 1 Cincinnati at Chicago, rain Sunday Garnet Milwaukee at St. Louis Cincinnati at Chicago 2 PitUhurgh ai Los Anteles Philadelphia at San Francisco Monday Garnet St." Louis at Cincinnati (N AMERICAN ASSOCIATION ttKllatiRjW'Mn 3. Minneapolis 2. onions ft, 3.

Wlrhltn 9, St. Paul a. Dmivcr 0. Charleston 0 (J Inning tie. rain.) MIDWEST LEAGUE Paris II, nintoii Keokufc 4-0.

Dt.r 1-1. Michigan. City 5, Dwbuu 4. 1. IncrtasexJ pasoUfM) mlUca 2.

Increased trig in power 3. DcrcscJ oil consvmptfon 4. Ds-crease-d stnglrw knozk i. Dtcreaied engine wear Cttles Service 9D Koolmotor actually doe tto work of several grades of motor oil to give you maximum protection for starting, warm-up, nd emlstog IM three dally driving ranges. STOP IN THIS WUKI Hcinold Oil Co.

SUPPLIER Buy From Any of Tht Stations: "ill Blastick'i Cities Srvice Wait Lineolnway Ph. 9-2701 Art'i Cities Service Acroaa from Hotal Lembke Phone 2-1231 Jack's Cities Servict LaCroiia, Ind. Fred Steve's Cities Service Interaction Highways 30 A CrowrPolnt, Ind. CITIES A SUCI Of f8t OPEN SCINf Here's a yiew of th dufieg 10th hole and gTpen at Southern Hills Country club, Tula, the National Open sit. Three pros way up on the ll.it ot favorites to win are (top to bottom) Bam Boad, Frank Stranahan and BUJv MajtwaU, (UPI Ttpot NO PATTYCAKI tTUff That gesturing; (fenUeman of the Tnke, Cwwy StWig-cl, squares off in a hand spread with Umpire Frank Umont In Detroit, arguing about a close play at Drat.

The umpire won, InttmatiomU).

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About Vidette-Messenger of Porter County Archive

Pages Available:
334,757
Years Available:
1927-1995