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The Capital Times du lieu suivant : Madison, Wisconsin • 17

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The Capital Timesi
Lieu:
Madison, Wisconsin
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Page:
17
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Caravello, Simonson Share City Tourney Lead By BONNIE RYAN (04 VM (( TMW iMrtl IMI Only the middle-aged have all their five ene in the keep ins of their win. That'i a quote from the fa-moua pre-World War II novel, Antlxiny Adverse. A pair of nnddle-agers, a total of II years worth, put all their five senses together to emerge the leaders of the 35th city men's golf tournament after the first round of play Thursday at the Oduna Hills Golf Course. Steve a a 1 1 55, and Harry Simonson, 57, both many times city titlebolders, used their senses over a seemingly easy Odana course, but proving demanding to others, to take the opening 18 hole leadership each with 72s. (M ina was in excellent hape in beautiful condition observed veteran Joe Bauer, with fast, holding grrens.

Hut (lie fairways were baked hard from the lack rain necessitating a change of shut More one gt-U to the green. The five enes of Simonson and Cara-Velio adjusted to that situation. Both admitted to three errors which hindered their break.ng par. I made three mistakes on liHI-12, said Caravello. Otherwise I played g.d I made three error you can't make, was Simonson observation, But Moore was enthused over his 73.

the first time he has played (Mans that year. I wss hitting the ball good from tee to green," Pat also has a family feud to Kttle. li wife, Kay, finished fifth in last week's city women's tmimry tnd he ha a bet to better that. Bob Walter, who work lr the Male tn local affairs and de-vdojmient, only last year renewed his golfing after an eleven year break, was one of those seemingly frustrated by the Odana course, but now realizes its demands. He thought he could have bettered his score except for missing three greens.

Wain was once state high sclhiol champion in Kansas. Those straining themselves into the 74 field included John Acid, state left handed from Nakoma, Bill Sorenson. representing public links; (('toitiniK-d on gml Paget A newcomer to Madison gulling tourney, Bob Waller, mud himself known Thursday as he fired a 73, Just on stroke behind leader Harry Simonson and Slrvc Caravrllo. (Staff jibutim by Robb Jolmv tn i Claying th Odana lllllt golf court (or lb flrtl time (hit )nr didn't bother Cut Moore Thurtdny be came through with i 73 to thiire third place in the city tourney. I'at will be playing on hit borne court at Maple Itlulf today.

This is one over par, but. ac-'cording to veteran observers, excellent golf from a pair who can readily adjust to changing conditions. Right behind this twosome of golf excellence are Pat Moore and Rob Waller, with 73s and nine others who struggled in with 7 4s with dreams all day of smashing an elusive par 71. The 75 player tourney contingent moves on to an even more demanding Maple Bluff course this afternoon, home field for both Simonson, who has been playing there since his caddy days, and Moore who doesn't often achieve a 73 on that i Fred Milveretedt kx V- Cool and ralm veteran Harry SimonMin studied the angle hU putt might lake on the 17th green Thursday but this was nd a good hole for him as he wound up with a bogey five. But the consistent former city champion finished with a 72 to lie for the lead In the city tourney with Steve Caravrllo, (Staff photos by Robb Johnson) Voir battinit For Milwaukee Harry lluiiebrinkr ct Homers For Brewers 6-5 Win r.

Fairway Phil had thr wrong nl name In thi situation Thursday in the city meet. Toung Phil laihr, who work in the pro shop at the I.laikhnwk C. had problem getting out of samltrap and still rum in with a 76. lour stroke oil the lead. Padres 2 IJurlers Beal Mels in hllli Colburn Is Game Victor AWIIEIM, Calif.

Man-ager Del Crandall says he isn't much worried about the Milwaukee Brewers' pitching staff.) That could be a result of his having to worry instead about the batter who dont arrange their hits to guarantee run-scoring support for the moundsmen i The Brewer wood found thc mark Thursday night, however. I pitched 10 brilliant in (iimgs, allowing only one hit be--Steve Avlin. San Diego 's tore turning the Met over to and Milwaukee gof past the Cal- P.1 1 I dentist, must have(reliever Gary Ross, who permit-ifornia Angels 6-5 for a 2-1 edge P'Vtn or ''B't-i a just one more hit in four in the Brewers' three-game An-(lose of Thursday ji i s. Finally, the Padres aheim series. Jnifiht.

And when the Padres (i- pushed across a run on a bns- nally got around to operating on es-loaded walk in the Hth in- Arlin's baseball patients, it was ning for a 1-0 victory. Johnny Briggs smacked anything but painless. Arlm. who holds a degree in THE CAPITAL TIMES dentistry front Ohio State University, matched zeroes with Hip Mots Jerry Koosman for 10 innings before Ross and New reliever Tug McGrow took 'over. Ry then, the Mots were mesmerized and they never did SCORES: WIBA 238-2601 pair of home runs to assure the victory.

Briggs homered off reliever Don Rose to tie the game in the fifth inning, then homered jin the seventh inning to break the tic. I A double by Dave May, fol-l lowed by Tom Reynolds single, gave the Brewers a run in the opening inning. I California responded with two-run single by Bob Oliver.) Then the Brewers took a 4-2 lead in the second inning on Ellie Rodriguez' walk. P.ob Hcises single, Rick Auerbachs double and s'ngles by Ron Theobald and May. But the Angels rebounded agnm.

getting three runs in the (Continued on 2nd Snorts Pane) The greatest knowledge that can be gained (rum going to college is learning how to look up correct answers In reference books. The technique comes in especially handy (or news reporters and lawyers, neither of which know half as much off the tops of their pointed heads as they would lead you to believe. I shall forever be grateful to a professor who opened his first lecture of the semester with the following droll advice: This it a dictionary read it, he said. This is an encyclopedia look at the pictures. Enlightened by this pearl of wisdom, I finally broke down the other day and trotted on over to the public library to find out for certain who in the hell Harry llanebrink was and whatever became of him.

The ploy ran against the grain of my code of ethics as a baseball trivia fancier (any true pursuer of the pastime shuns the record book as he would a copy of the Ladies Home Journal), but since I had received small satisfaction from my cronies as to the straight scoop, there was little alternative. Of the few oracles of useless information I had consulted beforehand, only Jim Imhoff seemed positive of Hanebrink's clouded history. He was, Imm insisted, the back-up third baseman to Eddie Mathews on Milwaukee Braves teams of the early 1950s. Imm also inferred that llanebrink had later been traded to Detroit. I had him as a Braves outfielder who was eventually dealt off to the further oblivion of thp Philadelphia Phillies.

Now, for maybe the first lime anywhere. The Capital Times is proud to present to the public at large the last word in the short lived saga of Harry Alovsius llanebrink, major league baseball player, According to the All-Time Rosters of Major League Clubs" and the "Official Encyclopedia of Baseball, llanebrink first poked his nose out of a major league dugout in 1953 at Milwaukee County Stadium. He played 51 games as a second and third baseman and batted .238. Chalk up half a point for Imm. Mysteriously, llanebrink disappeared from the books until 1957, when he showed up again in Milwaukee as a third baseman.

He hit .286 in six games. I suspect, during his absence, he was toting a cardboard suitcase and riding a bus somewhere in the American Association. Back again in 1958, Harry started out as a third sacker but was later converted to the outfield a position that he seemed at odds with, judging from his .188 average in 63 games. Apparently the Braves as well were less than enthralled with his progress, for when the season ended they did indeed pack him oft to the Phillies. He stuck it out in the City of Brotherly Love and the Worst Fans in Baseball for one year, ripping the horsehide at a pace of .258 in 57 games, before finally dropping out of sight.

llanebrink aside (perhaps forever), the trivia freaks crawled out of the woodwork last week in response to two more of my incorrect guesses. One of my mistakes had Richard Dale Long hitting home runs in eight consecutive games for the Chicago Cubs in 1957. It was actually 1956, and he was still with the Pittsburgh Pirates at the time. The other error pounced upon by Elliott Maraniss like a third baseman charging a sacrifice bunt had to do with the Washington pitcher who served up Babe Ruths 60th home run in 1927. It wasnt Eppa Rixey, Urban Shocker or Tom Scott.

It was Tom Zachary. Elliott didn't say whether or not he was an eyewitness to that one. Which brings us to the final bit of nonsense of the day a package of Topps baseball cards that I purchased at a PDQ store on the Fourth of July to see what the bubblegum barons have been up to since the days of The Collectors. I got 10 cards, part of Series Three, according to the legend on the wrapper. The names were all familiar, some of them vaguely, but they werent exactly what you might dig out of a treasure chest of Whos Who in the Great American Game: Brant Alyea, Dave Concepcion, Dick Dietz, Don Hahn, Rich Hand, Wes Parker, Bill Parsons, Mickey Rivers, Rick Wise, and the entire roster of the Houston Astros sans identification.

The Astros picture has been reduced to such a size that the players look like ants. Wise is presented in something called, Boyhood Photos of the Stars, and is depicted as a rather glum-looking 10-year-old in an Optimists uniform. It says on the back of his card that he once struck out all 18 batters he faced in a Little League game in Oregon. The solitary piece of bubblegum included in the package, true to the traditional Topps formula, is hard, brittle, and stale to the taste. Someone surmised that it probably has been sitting in a warehouse since 1950.

Wisconsin held on for fourth. Behind llcrold is Riek Hitchcock, Kansas State seventh. Six qualified for Sundays finals with the top three going to the Munich Olympics. (AP Wirephoto) Tarry Harrison (center) of Club West at Santa Barbara, stays in contention before going on to win this 5,000 meter heat in the Olympic Trials at Eugene, Thursday night. Leonard Hilton (20) Houston T.C.

was second and Glenn Herold (366) of FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1972 In other National League games Thursday night, Sail Francisco topped Philadelphia 6-4 in 10 innings, Los Angeles walloped Montreal 11-3, Atlanta edged Chicago 4-3 and Pittsburgh beat Houston 7-3 in 17 innings. Cincinnati and St. Louis were not scheduled. Despite the outstanding pitch-ling of Arlin and Ross, the Mets were still tied in the Hth be-cause the Padres had been unable to cash in on any earlier scoring opportunities. When they loaded the bases with none lout on two singles and a fielders choice at the start of the Coleman in Tenth Win, Halts Skid Mrs.

King is Fischer LosesDraw Champ at Wimbledon OpenPlay Tuesday By BRUCE LOWITT (AiioclatcO Pret Sports Writer) MILWAUKEE CALIFORNIA Iceland can't see Bobby apologizing. Thbaw 25 Vn Aiomar 2b 5hibo lost the drawj The leter began: DearV till Billie Jean King of Long Beach, Thursday night, giving Boris Boris: Please accept my sincer- I(b i won her fourth women's Spassky the first move, and the.est apology for my disrespectful 0LBr0wn 4 i singles titles at Wimbledon ten-'w 1 championship chess behavior to Berber If you can't win 20 games with this club, you dont deserve J00 foerc was no to win, said Detroits Joe Cole- Uua eY couldnt score. But man, who then predicted he'll, amost idn t. do just that with a little help' got Nate Colbert on from his friends. orce P'ay at the plate and Coleman, the Tigers ace lon 7sruc ou Clarence Gas-j'right-hander who won 20 games on errY Morales waited nis championships today with a match will finally start next' At another news conference, if -orbors' 20,0 6-3, 6-3 victory over defending Tuesday.

one of Fischers lawyers said Colborn champion Evonne Goolagong of) Unless the American come to say he had nothing Australia. ilenger or the Soviet champion to say. Total 36 6 10 6 Total 35 11 5 With the second set tied 3-3, 'pleads illness and gets another Mrs. King went ahead when 'postponement. Milwaukee 1 3 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 Sec- California 2 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 O-3, dp -Milwaukee California i.

lob a vear sen reached the haJfwavi0U walk to force home the Milwaukee 6, Caltforn.a 7. 2B-D May, a CcU ikuiway Auerbach, Pinson. HR-Bnggs 2 mi (point toward that magic num-run aan 080 needed. I IP ER BB SO as you say in English, No com- Lockwood 22-37554 0 1- AA-mi 6 1-3 4 0 0 0 Colborn (W.2-0) toward that magic num- 21 her Thursday night with a The Mets almost ment. Wnght 4 1 The Rev.

William Lombardy bXu3) 0000 Continued on 2nd Sports Page 'I wp Lockwood. 2:32. a 5,421. Miss GooJagong had service problems. Then the new champion kept her service with a cross-court backhand to go aheadi 5-3 and then won the set and match by breaking Miss Goolagong with another sizzling cross-court backhand.

The confusion of the past week was summarized by the old woman selling cigarets who asked in the beginning: Fischer come? Near the end it was: Spassky go? Im very pessimistic, Dr. Max Euwe said at 10 a.m. At six-0 hit six-strikeout performance, a got it back 7-0 shutout over Kansas City (n the bottom of the Hth when that halted Detroits four game, Bud Harrelson walked, moved skid. (up on a wild pitch and a sacri- In other American League Bee and then, with two out, games, Baltimore nosed out the tried to score on a short passed Chicago White Sox 2-1, the New baH- But catcher Pat Corralcs York Yankees beat Oakland 6-2, Milwaukee clipped California 6- recovered in time and threw to Ross, covering the plate, to Mrs. King moved ahead 5-3 in the first set when the Australian "J0 a of some weak a TAf 7 thepresent girl was guilty catch Harrelson.

The Giants beat the Phillies in 5 and, in a twi-night double-header, Cleveland swept Texas 4-3 and 6-5 in 12 innings Boston the IMh inning when Tito and Minnesota were not sched- Fuentes unloaded a two-run tri-uled. pie. The winning rally started with a two-out walk to Dave The Tigers battered five Roy-K ingman and after Domaso als pitchers for 13 hits en route Blanco singled, Fuentes deliv- ered his big hit. San Francisco to the triumph that kept them within two games of the front- which has volleying. The American won the set with some crisp volleys.

Mrs. King hadi gained the final by defeating Casals of San Francisco while Miss Goolagong had advanced by eliminating C3iris Everet of Fort Lauderdale, Fla. It was the 28-year-old Mrs. Kingss seventh Wimbledon final. She won previous titles in 1966, 1967 and 1968 and also played for the championship in 1963, 1969 and 1970.

The 1971 championship was the first for the 20-year-old Miss Goolagong. The match on the famed cen-(Continued, on 2nd Sports Pnje) of the International Chess Federation sighed: Theres hope. That was Tuesday. It could have been any day in the garbled prelude to what chess lovers say is the match of the century Spassky of the U.S.S.R. vs.

Fischer of the U.S.A. Spassky arrived early to wait for Bobby. Saying I came to play, he philosophically accept the first post when Fischer didnt show. Later he demanded an apology or he would not play. Fred Cramer, who advanced a slender claim to represent Fischer and called a lot of news conferences, forecast like a man who ought to know: I running Orioles in the East six of its last seven games, vision.

tied it in the eighth inning when Aurelio Rodriguez, with two Garry Maddox singled, moved singles and a double, and Tony to third on two grounders and Olympic Pick Yanks Win HANOVER, N.H. Timo-. hy i 1 of Deerfield, I was named Thursday toi preliminary line-up for the ight-oared shell U-S. team in ihe Olympics in Munich in KWANGJU, Korea w-The U.S. basketball team Venture for Victory whipped the Medium Industry Bank 81-72 Thursday to wind up its goodwill series in South Korea with a record of five victories and two losses.

scored on Mike Ryans wild pickoff throw. Don Money and Deron Johnson homered for the Phillies. Dusty Bakers two-run homer keyed a four-run Atlanta rally (Continued on 2nd Sports Page) Taylor, with two singles and a triple, led the assault while Bill Freehan drove in three runs with a single and a double. The Orioles won three of three from the White Sox in their 1 Continued on 2nd Sports Page Bobby Fischer, left of the U.S., and Boris Spassky, right of the U.S.S.R., meet for the chess draw Thursday in Reykjavik, Iceland, as president of the Icelandic Chess Federation, Gudmundur Thorarinsson, center, looks on. (AP Wirephoto) A.

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