league leaders win, 13-4 error-plagued (9) senators lose ... 11/geneva... · error-plagued (9)...

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League leaders win, 13-4 1' i The Geneva Times Friday, August 6, 1971 If Error-plagued (9) Senators lose to Yankees * : * By CHARLESHAYES For the second game in a row, the Geneva Senators came up with a bundle of errors and dropped a ball game. The night before last the Senators lost a 4-3 game to the Newark Co-Pilots in the second contest of a twin bill, no thanks to seven miscues. Last night the Senators came up with an unbelievable nine errors, which ledtoa 13-4 downfall at the hands of the NY-P league leading Oneonta Yankees. The Senators, who have dropped to fifth place in the league standings, one game behind the Co-Pilots who beat Batavia last night,' committed six or their errors in the first five innings, finishing with three in the eighth inning when the Yanks sent 12 men to the plate and scored six runstowrap it all up. Tonight the Senators will host the Yanks again at Shuron Park and they no doubt hope their error commiting days are over. Stan Thomas (4-3) will start on the mound for Geneva in the 7:30 p.m. game. The Yankees, who rapped 14 hits in the three-hour and five-minute game, plated two runs in the second when Tom O'Connor singled and with one out, came home on a home run blasted over the leftfield fence by Andy Bottin. The Senators came up with two errors after that, but starting pitcher Mike Miller managedtoleave two men stranded by posting a strikeout and getting another batter to ground out. The visitors picked up two more runs in the fourth on three Geneva errors, a fielder's choice and a run-scoring single up the middle by pitcher Rob Arnold. Tottin had started off the fourth for the Yanks when he reached first and went to second on an error by third baseman, Greg Pryor. Val Falcone then reached on an error by Dave Bingham 6-5 victory over Batavia Co-Pi/ofs take 4th spot behind Martz' homers BATAVIA - The Newark Co-Pilots, winners of nine of their last 11 games in the NY-P League will be out to reach the .500 mark for the first time this season tonight when they host the Batavia Trojans at Colburn Park. Last night, the Co-Pilots squeezed into fourth place in the loop standings by holding off Batavia and posting a 6-5 victory. The win, alsong with Geneva's 134 losstoNiagara Falls, put the Newark nine in fourth place, one game in front of the Senators. Joe Lawson of Seneca Falls, who has for the most part, been pitching well enough to win, but has a 1-4 mound record, will hurl for the Co-Pilots in tonight's Family Nite game. The entire family will be admitted to the game for $1.50. The biggest problem for Batavia last night was that Newark had a fellow by the name of Gary Martz. The big first baseman blasted two home runs (his eighth and ninth of the year)tohelp lead the soaring Co-Pilots on. He clouted a 3-2 pitch for a solo homer in the second and came right back in the third, blasting a two-out solo on the first pitch in the third. Martz wasn't the only Co-Pilottorap the ball out of the park. Jerry (Pogo) Devins, stepped to the plate after Martz in the second and belted the first pitch to Gary Martz come his way for his third round-tripper of the season in a Newark uniform. Those three homers gave Newark a 3- 0 lead, which it held on to until Batavia plated a run in the fifth on a run producing single by Jim Newhook, cutting itto3-1. The Co-Pilots however, upped their countto5-1 by pushing across two runs in the sixth on a two-base error com- mitted by Batavia third baseman Phil Mankowski and a run-scoring double rapped by Rosey Rosario. The host club plated a run in the seventh when relief pitcher Kevin Kobel, who came in for starter Tom Hausman with two on, walked two of three batterstoforce in a run. Newark added its final tally in the eighth when with two out, Charlie Moore doubled and came home on a single by Charlie Williams. The Trojans plated three runs in the ninth, off Kobel, on four hits, a sacrifice fly, two walks, an error and a wild pitch before Manager Al Widmar brought in Williams Castro, who fanned pinch- hitter Al Locascio for the final out. EXTRA INNINGS—Martz must have had his home run hitting shoes on last night, because before he walked in the sixth he poked a 380-foot foul ball over the right field fence . . . .Duane Espy, who had hit safely in 14 straight games for Newark, was held hitless last night.. . Tomorrow night, the Co-Pilots will travel to Jamestown for a two game, two day series with the Falcons before returning home Sundaytobegin a two day home stand against Williamsport.. . .Sunday will be Marbletown Firemen Nite at Colburn while Wednesday when Oneonta comes in for a three-day stay, it will be Newark Courier Gazette Nite. Next Friday will be Sodus Rotary Nite. Other promotions listed are: Aug. 15. (Old Timers game); Aug. 20, (Marion Nite); Aug. 21 (Spanish-American Nite); Aug. 27 (American Legion Nite); Aug. 31 (Bob Feller Nite). The box score: Newark (6) Batavia (5) > ab r h bl ab r h bi Espy,2 5 0 0 0 Nehhook.cf 5 0 1 1 Melias^r 5 0 1 0 Cash,lf 4 0 1 0 Bianco,3 5 0 0 0 Flanders,r 3 1 0 0 Martz.lb 3 3 2 2 Mappin,c 4 0 1 0 Devins,If 3 1 1 1 Cates,lb 2 1 1 2 Moore,c 4 2 2 0 Mankowski,3b 4 0 1 1 Wllliams,cf 4 0 1 1 Eschen,2 4 1 2 0 Rosaries 3 0 1 1 Gromek.s 5 0 3 0 Hausman,p 3 0 0 0 Horn,p 0 0 0 0 Kobel,p 1 0 0 0 AAcllvaine,p 2 0 1 0 Castro,p 0 0 0 0 Veryzer,ph 0 0 0 0 lqnasiak,pr 0 1 0 0 Knowaton,p 0 0 0 0 Abbott,ph 1 0 0 0 Lukovicp 0 0 0 0 Lantz.pr 0 10 0 Locasio,ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 36 6 8 5 Totals 35 5 11 4 Score by Innings Newark 021 002 010—4- 8-1 Batavia ooo 010 103—5-11-3 E Gromeck, Mankowski, Newhook, Mejias. DP Newark 1, Batavia. LOB Newark6, Batavia 13. 2B — Mcllvaine, Cates, Rosario, Moore. HR — Martz 2, Devins. SB Moore, Devins. SF — Mankowski. PITCHING Hausman, (W) Kobel Castro Horn (L) Mcllvaine Knowaton Lukowic ip 6 2 2 4 1 1 h r er bb so 1-372243 1-3 1-3 2-3 1-3 4 1 2 3 i HBP — By Horn (Devins); By Hausman (Cates). WP Castro. PB Mattln. U — Spinelli-Heyer. T — 3:04. A — 2222. Pan American Games U.S. swimmers By HUBERT MIZELL CALI, Colombia (AP) — Swimming flashes Frank Heckl and Susie Atwood begin splashing toward a possible 12 gold medals today after USA track aces rode away from the Pan American Games on a golden tide. Americans bagged 20 of 24 men's track golds and an Uth-hour grandstand rumble appeared to spur a thaw in here- to-fore frigid U.S.-Cuba relations. Several Cuban athletes erupted Thursday night when Maoist leaflets saying "Cuba Si, Russia No" were circulated at half-filled Pascual Guerrero Stadium. A photographer from the Bogota sports daily, El Espectador, suffered cuts and bruises in the ruckus. A • spokesman for the paper said Cuban sprinter Pablo Montes hit the newsman and that two cameras were smashed. Fans, seeing the red-and-blue uniforms of Cuba amid the scuffle, began hissing athletes from Castro's island as they accepted medals for feats of strength, spring and speed. In an unprecedented gesture, record- breaking Cuban javelin thrower Tomasa Nunez ascended the 1-2-3 platform to accept her gold medal and warmly clutched the hands of runnerup Americans Sherry Calvert of Torrance, Calif., and Roberta Brown of Escondido, Calif. The crowd cheered as the three powerful ladies held hands during the playing of Cuba's national anthem in honor of Miss Nunez' throw of 177-3. While the USA track and field team packed its 20 men's gold medals and five captured by Uncle Sam's girls, the swimmers began today what is expected to be another harvest of first-place awards for the USA. *— "Our coaches keep telling us we're the best," said the 6-foot-5 Heckle, a 20- year-old Southern California senior from Cerritos, Calif. "We've got to go out and prove it." Heckl will shoot for gold medals in four individual events—the 100 and 200- meter freestyles, 100-meter butterfly and 200-meter individual medley—plus to add to golden tide three more in relays. " Miss Atwood, 18-year-old world backstroke record holder from Long Beach, Calif., will go for five golds in two more backstroke events, the 200 and 400 individual medleys and one relay test. Now that track and field has ended a six-day role as Pan Am headliner, the swimmers will take over for the stretch run in the "Western Hemisphere Major league leaders By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS , AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING 300 at bats Oliva, Minn .370; Murcer, N.Y., .336. RUNS Buford, Bait, 77; Murcer, N.Y., 73. RUNS BATTED IN — Killebrew, Minn., 73; Bando, Oak., 71. HITS — Tovar, Minn., 136; Murcer, N.Y., 131. DOUBLES - B.Conigliaro, Bost., 23; R.Smith, Bost., 23. TRIPLES- Carew, Minn., 7; F.Alou, N.Y., 6. HOME RUNS - Melton, Chic, 25; Cash, Det., 23; R.Smith, Bost., 23. STOLEN BASES - Patek, K.C., 36; Otis, K.C., 35. PITCHING 12 Decisions - C.Dobson, Oak., 11-1, .917, 3.08; Blue, Oak., 19-4, .826, 1.63. STRIKEOUTS - Blue, Oak., 223; Lolich, Det., 219. NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING 300 at bats - Torre, St. L., 360; Beckert, Chic, .347. RUNS - Brock, StL., 87; Bonds, jS. 81. RUNS BATTED IN - StargeU, Pitt., 101; Torre, St.L., 88. HITS Torre, St.L., 155; Garr, Atl., 148. DOUBLES — Cedeno, Houst., 28; W.Davis, L.A., 25. TRIPLES Metzger, Houst., 9; W.Davis, L.A., 9. HOME RUNS - Stargell, Pitt., 39; H.Aaron, Atl., 31. STOLEN BASES - Brock, St.L., 37; Morgan, Houst., 21. PITCHING 12 Decisions - Ellis, Pitt., 15-5, .750, 2.74; J.Johnson, S.F., 124, .750,2.61; McMahon, S.F., 9-3, .750,3.43. STRIKEOUTS Jenkins, Chic, 185; Seaver, N.Y., 177. 2 Japanese golf entries TOKYO (AP) - Japan's committee of the International Golf Association said today it will send Takaaki Kono and Haruo Yasuda to the 19th World Cup Golf Championships Nov. 11-14 at the Palm Beach Garden PGA National Golf Club in Florida. Half way there Mexico's Manuel Mendhrfl makes It ever the fence but Us mount Canaleto balks at the effort. dJvil was unhurt la the equestrian event at the Pan American Games hi Colombia. (UPI). Olympics." USA trackmen might have swept every told medal except for a world record performance by Cuban triple jump artist Pablo Perez and the blazing feet of Jamaica's Don Quarrie. Quarrie, a Southern Cal student, won three golds in the 100 and 200-meter sprints and as anchor on Jamaica's championship 400-meter team. He matched Tommie Smith's world mark of 19.8 in the 200. Perez hopped, stepped and jumped an astonishing 57 feet, 1 inch to beat—by a scant quarter inch — the world triple jump mark of Russia's Viktor Saneyev set in the 1988 Olympics at Mexico City. USA speedsters grabbed the other three relays on the closing program including the 400-yard effort that was anchored by Iris Davis, the 100-meter sprint queen from Pompano Beach, Fla. Both the American girls and boys grabbed 1,600-meter relays. Rod Milburn equalled the 13.4 Pan Am record in the 110-meter hurdles and steeplechaser Mike Manley of Eugene, Ore., bagged a gold with an 8:42.2 performance in the 3,000-meter hurdles grind. Perhaps the bleakest moment for the host Colombians came in the 26-mile marathon when their hero—Boston marathon king Alvaro Mejia—finished a dismal fourth to USA double gold medal winner Frank Shorter of Boulder, Colo. "I would have been 30 seconds faster," Shorter said of his 2:22:44 clocking, "But I've been ill and I had to stop to go to the bathroom." Shorter also took the 10,000 meters earlier in the track program. Cute brunette Debbie Van Kiekebelt of Canada snared a bit of the closing night glory for the northland, wrapping up the five-event pantathlon championship. SLCC swimmers score over Goulds The Seneca Lake Country Club swimmers, defeated the Goulds Pump Recreation swimmers, 195-150, yesterday. Triple winners for Seneca Lake were Becky Anania and Bobby Beaudry while double winners were Roberta Anania, Tom Karrol, Dave Gilbert and Joe Kats, for SLCC and Kim Eno for Goulds. Winning single events for SLCC were Kathy Dochak, Steve DeMatties, Kathy DeJohn, Debbie Vogt, Barb and Edan lisi, Bev Barnard, Sandra Katz and John Bero. Winning single events for Goulds were Jean Bradshaw, Kathy Rekmeyer, John Scialdone, Joe Scialdone, Jim Scialdone.Sandy Scialdone and Vicky Carlson. Seneca Lake won both the boys' and girls' 250-yard freestyles. On the girls team were Kathy Dochak, Roberta and Becky Anania, Mary Barnard and Kathy DeJohn. On the boys team were Tom DeSio, Bob Beaudry, Stave DeMatties, Tom Karrol and Dave Gilbert. The Seneca Lake Country Club swimmeia win meet the Weedsport Youth Commission, Tuesday at 4:30 at the club. at short, and Bottin scored. Gene Moser then reached on a fielder's choice as Falcone was forced at second. Moser stole second and Bingham muffed the throw from catcher Rich Revta, before Arnold singled, scoring Moser from second. The Yanks made it 6-0 by plating two more tallies in the fifth on a run- producing single by Phil Still and a throwing error before Dave Spence relieved Miller with one out and retired the side after giving up a walk. The Senators pushed across two runs in the bottom of the frame on a walk to Charlie Waymire and three straight singles, rapped by Pryor, Mike Cubbage and Buddy Caldwell. NY-P league NY-P LEAGUE STANDINGS W L Pet. GB Oneonta 26 13 .667 Niagara FaUs 25 15 .625 14 Auburn 24 15 .615 2 Newark 19 20 .487 7 GENEVA 18 21 .462 8 Williamsport 18 22 .450 114 Batavia 15 26 .366 12 Jamestown 14 27 .341 134 Results last night Oneonta 13, GENEVA 4. . Newark 6, Batavia 5. Niagara Falls 8, Jamestown 3. (Only games scheduled) Games tonight Oneonta at GENEVA, 7:30 p.m. Batavia at Newark, 7:30 p.m. Auburn at Williamsport (2) Niagara Falls at Jamestown Games Saturday GENEVA at Williamsport, 7:30 p.m. Newark at Jamestown, 7:30 p.m. Oneonta at Auburn. Batavia at Niagara Falls.. Geneva slo-pitch Playoffs Sampson Glass downed Luongo's last night, 8-6, and moved into the cham- pionship series of the Geneva Slo-Pitch league playoffs. In another playoff game, Zornow's evened its best of three game series with Harman's, by posting a 5-3 victory over the Sport Shop nine. Frank Pane, Bob Toner, Steve Fit- zgerald, Mike McDermott, Chris Crisanti and E. J. Michaels, all rapped two hits apiece for Sampson Glass. Steve Reid, Dave Nalle, and Dave Perry had two bits each for Luongo's. Ken Kyser and Jerry Thomas paced Zornow's with two hits apiece while Danny Hicks, Arnie Bailey and Jim Meyer rapped two hits apiece for Harman's. Hicks blasted a homer. The linescores: Luongo's 201 300 0 — 6-13-4 Sampson Glass 100 223 x 8-15-2 Urbano and Irland. Major and Stewart. Cubbage plated Waymire while Caldwell scored Pryor. On Caldwell's hit, Cubbage also came storming home but he was called out at the plate by umpire Jim Griffith. Cubbage argued the call. So did- Manager Frank Gable and Tommy Thompson, who arrived in Geneva yesterday to begin a couple of weeks stay with the club, but to no avail. After the Yanks scored those six runs in the eighth they added another in the ninth when Bill Stearns reached on a fielder's choice, went to second on a single by Phil Honeoycutt, to third on a fly out, and scored on a balk by Bob Spinner, the fourth Geneva hurler. Geneva pushed across two runs with no outs in the bottom of the ninth on two walks, an error, a run-scoring single by Pryor and a sacrifice fly by Cubbage before Arnold retired the next three batters. EXTRA INNINGS - After tonight's game, the Senators will spend tomorrow and Sunday in Williamsport, returning home Monday to face Niagara Falls...Gable reports that Dave Danials, a shortstop, and Dave Moharter, a lefthand pitcher, will join the club in Williamsport. Both are corning up from Anderson...The same two umpires, Griffith and Dave Pallone, have worked the last four Geneva games and Gable, as well as fans, haven't seemed too pleased with some of the calls...Spinner, normally an outfielder, pitched for the first time last night. "We didn't have any pitchers to put in there," said Gable, adding, "we've used quite a few in the last few days." Actually, the Senators have used nine different pit- chers in the last four games, not in- cluding Spinner. __The box score; Oneonta ri3) Geneva (4) ab r h bl ab r h bi Adams, 2 6 1 2 1 Waymire, cf 2 1 1 0 Stearns, c 4 2 1 0 Pryor, 3 5 0 4 1 Hon'cutt, s 5 2 3 1 Cubbage, 2 4 0 1 2 O'Conner, lb 2 2 1 0 Caldwell, lb r 5 0 1 1 Still, 3 5 0 2 2 Spinner, r-p 5 0 0 0 Bottin, r 4 2 1 2 Revta, c 3 0 1 0 Falcone, If 4 1 0 0 Hayes, If 4 0 1 0 Moser, cf 4 2 2 0 Bingham, s 3 1 0 0 Arnold, p 5 1 2 2 Miller, p M 0 0 0 Spence, p 1 0 0 0 Boyce, ph 0 0 0 0 Sydnor, p 1 0 0 0 Cease, 3 110 0 Thomas, pr 0 1 0 0 Totals 41 13 14 8 Totals 35 4 9 4 Score by innings Oneonta 020 220 061 13 14 1 Geneva ooo 020 002 — 4 9 9 E — Pnyor 3, Cubbage, Bingham 3, Hayes, Caldwell, O'Conner. DP — Oneonta 1, Geneva 1. LOB Geneva 10, Oneonta 11. 2B — Honeycutt, Hayes. HR — Bottin. SB —Moser. SF — O'Conner, Cubbage. PITCHING ip h r er bb so Arnold (W, 3-3) 9 9 4 3 5 9 Miller (L, 1-1) 4 1-3 6 6 3 2 2 Spence 1 2 - 3 0 0 0 1 0 Sydnor l 4 6 3 3 1 Spinner 2 4 1 1 2 3 HBP — by Arnold (Revta). WP Miller, Sydnor, Spinner. Balk — Spinner. T — 3:05. A — 312. Harman's HI 000 0 — 3-10-2 Zornow's 120 000 2-5-8-2 Bailey and Griffee. Thomas and Hicks. 1968 Buick Skylark Custom, 2 dr. hardtop 1968 Chevelle Malibu 2 dr. hardtop I'M Dodge Charger 2 dr. hardtop 1969 Chevy Malibu 2 dr. hardtop Many more from which M899 '1899 '1599 '1999 to choose. Dochak Motors Inc. Rts. 5*20 Canandaigua Rd. Geneva Dial 789-2200 :N EVENINGS - , OSWEGO SUPERMODIFIED RACING FEATURING: 5 The Battle 5 of the J Champions * * * Every Sat. Nite 7:45 P.M. •** ROUTE 104 E OSWEGO, NY WE WONT SELL YOU VOLVO'S NEW FUEL INJECTED SEDAN PIECE BY PIECE. When you buy a Volvo 142E from us, your only factory-installed option is automatic transmission* (Otherwise, you Ret a 4-speed stick shift with electrically operated overdrive.) You have to take the electronic fuel injected engine. Radial tires. Big 4-wheel power disc brakes. Leather covered bucket seats. TheyYe all included in the standard price of the 142E and wont come out. All of which makes it easier to shop for a high performance sedan. Unlike other dealers, once we've sold you the car we don't start to sell you the necessities that go with it. LeBRUN & SON S17 Waterloo-Geneva Rd. Waterloo, N. Y. Ml : v n 1 v Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

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Page 1: League leaders win, 13-4 Error-plagued (9) Senators lose ... 11/Geneva... · Error-plagued (9) Senators lose to Yankees * : * By CHARLESHAYES For the second game in a row, the Geneva

League leaders win, 13-4 1' i The Geneva Times Friday, August 6, 1971 I f

Error-plagued (9) Senators lose to Yankees *

: *

By CHARLESHAYES For the second game in a row, the

Geneva Senators came up with a bundle of errors and dropped a ball game.

The night before last the Senators lost a 4-3 game to the Newark Co-Pilots in the second contest of a twin bill, no thanks to seven miscues. Last night the Senators came up with an unbelievable nine errors, which led to a 13-4 downfall at the hands of the NY-P league leading

Oneonta Yankees. The Senators, who have dropped to

fifth place in the league standings, one game behind the Co-Pilots who beat Batavia last night,' committed six or their errors in the first five innings, finishing with three in the eighth inning when the Yanks sent 12 men to the plate and scored six runs to wrap it all up.

Tonight the Senators will host the Yanks again at Shuron Park and they no doubt hope their error commiting days

are over. Stan Thomas (4-3) will start on the

mound for Geneva in the 7:30 p.m. game.

The Yankees, who rapped 14 hits in the three-hour and five-minute game, plated two runs in the second when Tom O'Connor singled and with one out, came home on a home run blasted over the leftfield fence by Andy Bottin. The Senators came up with two errors after that, but starting pitcher Mike Miller

managed to leave two men stranded by posting a strikeout and getting another batter to ground out.

The visitors picked up two more runs in the fourth on three Geneva errors, a fielder's choice and a run-scoring single up the middle by pitcher Rob Arnold.

Tottin had started off the fourth for the Yanks when he reached first and went to second on an error by third baseman, Greg Pryor. Val Falcone then reached on an error by Dave Bingham

6-5 victory over Batavia —

Co-Pi/ofs take 4th spot behind Martz' homers BATAVIA - The Newark Co-Pilots,

winners of nine of their last 11 games in the NY-P League will be out to reach the .500 mark for the first time this season tonight when they host the Batavia Trojans at Colburn Park.

Last night, the Co-Pilots squeezed into fourth place in the loop standings by holding off Batavia and posting a 6-5 victory.

The win, alsong with Geneva's 134 loss to Niagara Falls, put the Newark nine in fourth place, one game in front of the Senators.

Joe Lawson of Seneca Falls, who has for the most part, been pitching well enough to win, but has a 1-4 mound record, will hurl for the Co-Pilots in tonight's Family Nite game. The entire family will be admitted to the game for $1.50.

The biggest problem for Batavia last night was that Newark had a fellow by the name of Gary Martz. The big first baseman blasted two home runs (his eighth and ninth of the year) to help lead the soaring Co-Pilots on. He clouted a 3-2 pitch for a solo homer in the second and came right back in the third, blasting a two-out solo on the first pitch in the third.

Martz wasn't the only Co-Pilot to rap the ball out of the park. Jerry (Pogo) Devins, stepped to the plate after Martz in the second and belted the first pitch to

Gary Martz

come his way for his third round-tripper of the season in a Newark uniform.

Those three homers gave Newark a 3-0 lead, which it held on to until Batavia plated a run in the fifth on a run producing single by Jim Newhook, cutting it to 3-1.

The Co-Pilots however, upped their count to 5-1 by pushing across two runs in the sixth on a two-base error com­

mitted by Batavia third baseman Phil Mankowski and a run-scoring double rapped by Rosey Rosario.

The host club plated a run in the seventh when relief pitcher Kevin Kobel, who came in for starter Tom Hausman with two on, walked two of three batters to force in a run.

Newark added its final tally in the eighth when with two out, Charlie Moore doubled and came home on a single by Charlie Williams.

The Trojans plated three runs in the ninth, off Kobel, on four hits, a sacrifice fly, two walks, an error and a wild pitch before Manager Al Widmar brought in Williams Castro, who fanned pinch-hitter Al Locascio for the final out.

EXTRA INNINGS—Martz must have had his home run hitting shoes on last night, because before he walked in the sixth he poked a 380-foot foul ball over the right field fence . . . .Duane Espy, who had hit safely in 14 straight games for Newark, was held hitless last night.. . Tomorrow night, the Co-Pilots will travel to Jamestown for a two game, two day series with the Falcons before returning home Sunday to begin a two day home stand against Williamsport.. . .Sunday will be Marbletown Firemen Nite at Colburn while Wednesday when Oneonta comes in for a three-day stay, it will be Newark Courier Gazette Nite. Next Friday will be Sodus Rotary Nite. Other promotions listed are: Aug. 15.

(Old Timers game); Aug. 20, (Marion Nite); Aug. 21 (Spanish-American Nite); Aug. 27 (American Legion Nite); Aug. 31 (Bob Feller Nite).

The box score: Newark (6) Batavia (5)

> ab r h bl ab r h bi Espy,2 5 0 0 0 Nehhook.cf 5 0 1 1 Melias^r 5 0 1 0 Cash,lf 4 0 1 0 Bianco,3 5 0 0 0 Flanders,r 3 10 0 Martz.lb 3 3 2 2 Mappin,c 4 0 1 0 Devins,If 3 1 1 1 Cates,lb 2 1 1 2 Moore,c 4 2 2 0 Mankowski,3b 4 0 1 1 Wllliams,cf 4 0 1 1 Eschen,2 4 1 2 0 Rosaries 3 0 1 1 Gromek.s 5 0 3 0 Hausman,p 3 0 0 0 Horn,p 0 0 0 0 Kobel,p 1 0 0 0 AAcllvaine,p 2 0 1 0 Castro,p 0 0 0 0 Veryzer,ph 0 0 0 0

lqnasiak,pr 0 1 0 0 Knowaton,p 0 0 0 0 Abbott,ph 1 0 0 0 Lukovicp 0 0 0 0 Lantz.pr 0 10 0 Locasio,ph 1 0 0 0

Totals 36 6 8 5 Totals 35 5 11 4

Score by Innings Newark 021 002 010—4- 8-1 Batavia ooo 010 103—5-11-3 E — Gromeck, Mankowski, Newhook,

Mejias. DP — Newark 1, Batavia. LOB — Newark6, Batavia 13. 2B — Mcllvaine, Cates, Rosario, Moore. HR — Martz 2, Devins. SB — Moore, Devins. SF — Mankowski.

PITCHING

Hausman, (W) Kobel Castro Horn (L) Mcllvaine Knowaton Lukowic

ip 6 2

2 4 1 1

h r er bb so 1 - 3 7 2 2 4 3 1-3 1-3 2-3 1-3

4 1 2 3 Q» i

HBP — By Horn (Devins); By Hausman (Cates). WP — Castro. PB — Mattln. U — Spinelli-Heyer. T — 3:04. A — 2222.

Pan American Games —

U.S. swimmers By HUBERT MIZELL

CALI, Colombia (AP) — Swimming flashes Frank Heckl and Susie Atwood begin splashing toward a possible 12 gold medals today after USA track aces rode away from the Pan American Games on a golden tide.

Americans bagged 20 of 24 men's track golds and an Uth-hour grandstand rumble appeared to spur a thaw in here­to-fore frigid U.S.-Cuba relations.

Several Cuban athletes erupted Thursday night when Maoist leaflets saying "Cuba Si, Russia No" were circulated at half-filled Pascual Guerrero Stadium.

A photographer from the Bogota sports daily, El Espectador, suffered cuts and bruises in the ruckus. A

• spokesman for the paper said Cuban sprinter Pablo Montes hit the newsman and that two cameras were smashed.

Fans, seeing the red-and-blue uniforms of Cuba amid the scuffle, began hissing athletes from Castro's island as they accepted medals for feats of strength, spring and speed.

In an unprecedented gesture, record-breaking Cuban javelin thrower Tomasa Nunez ascended the 1-2-3 platform to accept her gold medal and warmly clutched the hands of runnerup Americans Sherry Calvert of Torrance, Calif., and Roberta Brown of Escondido, Calif.

The crowd cheered as the three powerful ladies held hands during the playing of Cuba's national anthem in honor of Miss Nunez' throw of 177-3.

While the USA track and field team packed its 20 men's gold medals and five captured by Uncle Sam's girls, the swimmers began today what is expected

to be another harvest of first-place awards for the USA. *— "Our coaches keep telling us we're the

best," said the 6-foot-5 Heckle, a 20-year-old Southern California senior from Cerritos, Calif. "We've got to go out and prove it."

Heckl will shoot for gold medals in four individual events—the 100 and 200-meter freestyles, 100-meter butterfly and 200-meter individual medley—plus

to add to golden tide three more in relays.

" Miss Atwood, 18-year-old world backstroke record holder from Long Beach, Calif., will go for five golds in two more backstroke events, the 200 and 400 individual medleys and one relay test.

Now that track and field has ended a six-day role as Pan Am headliner, the swimmers will take over for the stretch run in the "Western Hemisphere

Major league leaders By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

, AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING 300 at bats — Oliva, Minn

.370; Murcer, N.Y., .336. RUNS — Buford, Bait, 77; Murcer,

N.Y., 73. RUNS BATTED IN — Killebrew,

Minn., 73; Bando, Oak., 71. HITS — Tovar, Minn., 136; Murcer,

N.Y., 131. DOUBLES - B.Conigliaro, Bost., 23;

R.Smith, Bost., 23. TRIPLES- Carew, Minn., 7; F.Alou,

N.Y., 6. HOME RUNS - Melton, Chic, 25;

Cash, Det., 23; R.Smith, Bost., 23. STOLEN BASES - Patek, K.C., 36;

Otis, K.C., 35. PITCHING 12 Decisions - C.Dobson,

Oak., 11-1, .917, 3.08; Blue, Oak., 19-4, .826, 1.63.

STRIKEOUTS - Blue, Oak., 223; Lolich, Det., 219.

NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING 300 at bats - Torre, St. L.,

360; Beckert, Chic, .347. RUNS - Brock, StL., 87; Bonds, jS.

81. RUNS BATTED IN - StargeU, Pitt.,

101; Torre, St.L., 88. HITS — Torre, St.L., 155; Garr, Atl.,

148. DOUBLES — Cedeno, Houst., 28;

W.Davis, L.A., 25. TRIPLES — Metzger, Houst., 9;

W.Davis, L.A., 9. HOME RUNS - Stargell, Pitt., 39;

H.Aaron, Atl., 31. STOLEN BASES - Brock, St.L., 37;

Morgan, Houst., 21. PITCHING 12 Decisions - Ellis, Pitt.,

15-5, .750, 2.74; J.Johnson, S.F., 124, .750,2.61; McMahon, S.F., 9-3, .750,3.43.

STRIKEOUTS — Jenkins, Chic, 185; Seaver, N.Y., 177.

2 Japanese golf entries TOKYO (AP) - Japan's committee of

the International Golf Association said today it will send Takaaki Kono and Haruo Yasuda to the 19th World Cup Golf Championships Nov. 11-14 at the Palm Beach Garden PGA National Golf Club in Florida.

Half way there Mexico's Manuel Mendhrfl makes It ever the fence but Us mount Canaleto balks at the effort. dJvil was unhurt la the equestrian event at the Pan American Games hi Colombia. (UPI).

Olympics." USA trackmen might have swept

every told medal except for a world record performance by Cuban triple jump artist Pablo Perez and the blazing feet of Jamaica's Don Quarrie.

Quarrie, a Southern Cal student, won three golds in the 100 and 200-meter sprints and as anchor on Jamaica's championship 400-meter team. He matched Tommie Smith's world mark of 19.8 in the 200.

Perez hopped, stepped and jumped an astonishing 57 feet, 1 inch to beat—by a scant quarter inch — the world triple jump mark of Russia's Viktor Saneyev set in the 1988 Olympics at Mexico City.

USA speedsters grabbed the other three relays on the closing program including the 400-yard effort that was anchored by Iris Davis, the 100-meter sprint queen from Pompano Beach, Fla.

Both the American girls and boys grabbed 1,600-meter relays.

Rod Milburn equalled the 13.4 Pan Am record in the 110-meter hurdles and steeplechaser Mike Manley of Eugene, Ore., bagged a gold with an 8:42.2 performance in the 3,000-meter hurdles grind.

Perhaps the bleakest moment for the host Colombians came in the 26-mile marathon when their hero—Boston marathon king Alvaro Mejia—finished a dismal fourth to USA double gold medal winner Frank Shorter of Boulder, Colo.

"I would have been 30 seconds faster," Shorter said of his 2:22:44 clocking, "But I've been ill and I had to stop to go to the bathroom."

Shorter also took the 10,000 meters earlier in the track program.

Cute brunette Debbie Van Kiekebelt of Canada snared a bit of the closing night glory for the northland, wrapping up the five-event pantathlon championship.

SLCC swimmers score over Goulds The Seneca Lake Country Club

swimmers, defeated the Goulds Pump Recreation swimmers, 195-150, yesterday.

Triple winners for Seneca Lake were Becky Anania and Bobby Beaudry while double winners were Roberta Anania, Tom Karrol, Dave Gilbert and Joe Kats, for SLCC and Kim Eno for Goulds.

Winning single events for SLCC were Kathy Dochak, Steve DeMatties, Kathy DeJohn, Debbie Vogt, Barb and Edan lisi, Bev Barnard, Sandra Katz and John Bero. Winning single events for Goulds were Jean Bradshaw, Kathy Rekmeyer, John Scialdone, Joe Scialdone, Jim Scialdone.Sandy Scialdone and Vicky Carlson.

Seneca Lake won both the boys' and girls' 250-yard freestyles. On the girls team were Kathy Dochak, Roberta and Becky Anania, Mary Barnard and Kathy DeJohn.

On the boys team were Tom DeSio, Bob Beaudry, Stave DeMatties, Tom Karrol and Dave Gilbert.

The Seneca Lake Country Club swimmeia win meet the Weedsport Youth Commission, Tuesday at 4:30 at the club.

at short, and Bottin scored. Gene Moser then reached on a fielder's choice as Falcone was forced at second. Moser stole second and Bingham muffed the throw from catcher Rich Revta, before Arnold singled, scoring Moser from second.

The Yanks made it 6-0 by plating two more tallies in the fifth on a run-producing single by Phil Still and a throwing error before Dave Spence relieved Miller with one out and retired the side after giving up a walk.

The Senators pushed across two runs in the bottom of the frame on a walk to Charlie Waymire and three straight singles, rapped by Pryor, Mike Cubbage and Buddy Caldwell.

NY-P league NY-P LEAGUE

STANDINGS W L Pet. GB

Oneonta 26 13 .667 — Niagara FaUs 25 15 .625 14 Auburn 24 15 .615 2 Newark 19 20 .487 7 GENEVA 18 21 .462 8 Williamsport 18 22 .450 114 Batavia 15 26 .366 12 Jamestown 14 27 .341 134

Results last night Oneonta 13, GENEVA 4. . Newark 6, Batavia 5. Niagara Falls 8, Jamestown 3. (Only games scheduled)

Games tonight Oneonta at GENEVA, 7:30 p.m. Batavia at Newark, 7:30 p.m. Auburn at Williamsport (2) Niagara Falls at Jamestown

Games Saturday GENEVA at Williamsport, 7:30 p.m. Newark at Jamestown, 7:30 p.m.

Oneonta at Auburn. Batavia at Niagara Falls..

Geneva slo-pitch

Playoffs Sampson Glass downed Luongo's last

night, 8-6, and moved into the cham­pionship series of the Geneva Slo-Pitch league playoffs.

In another playoff game, Zornow's evened its best of three game series with Harman's, by posting a 5-3 victory over the Sport Shop nine.

Frank Pane, Bob Toner, Steve Fit­zgerald, Mike McDermott, Chris Crisanti and E. J. Michaels, all rapped two hits apiece for Sampson Glass. Steve Reid, Dave Nalle, and Dave Perry had two bits each for Luongo's.

Ken Kyser and Jerry Thomas paced Zornow's with two hits apiece while Danny Hicks, Arnie Bailey and Jim Meyer rapped two hits apiece for Harman's. Hicks blasted a homer.

The linescores: Luongo's 201 300 0 — 6-13-4 Sampson Glass 100 223 x — 8-15-2 Urbano and Irland. Major and

Stewart.

Cubbage plated Waymire while Caldwell scored Pryor. On Caldwell's hit, Cubbage also came storming home but he was called out at the plate by umpire Jim Griffith. Cubbage argued the call. So did- Manager Frank Gable and Tommy Thompson, who arrived in Geneva yesterday to begin a couple of weeks stay with the club, but to no avail.

After the Yanks scored those six runs in the eighth they added another in the ninth when Bill Stearns reached on a fielder's choice, went to second on a single by Phil Honeoycutt, to third on a fly out, and scored on a balk by Bob Spinner, the fourth Geneva hurler.

Geneva pushed across two runs with no outs in the bottom of the ninth on two walks, an error, a run-scoring single by Pryor and a sacrifice fly by Cubbage before Arnold retired the next three batters.

EXTRA INNINGS - After tonight's game, the Senators will spend tomorrow and Sunday in Williamsport, returning home Monday to face Niagara Falls...Gable reports that Dave Danials, a shortstop, and Dave Moharter, a lefthand pitcher, will join the club in Williamsport. Both are corning up from Anderson...The same two umpires, Griffith and Dave Pallone, have worked the last four Geneva games and Gable, as well as fans, haven't seemed too pleased with some of the calls...Spinner, normally an outfielder, pitched for the first time last night. "We didn't have any pitchers to put in there," said Gable, adding, "we've used quite a few in the last few days." Actually, the Senators have used nine different pit­chers in the last four games, not in­cluding Spinner. __The box score;

Oneonta ri3) Geneva (4) ab r h bl ab r h bi

Adams, 2 6 1 2 1 Waymire, cf 2 1 1 0 Stearns, c 4 2 1 0 Pryor, 3 5 0 4 1 Hon'cutt, s 5 2 3 1 Cubbage, 2 4 0 1 2 O'Conner, lb 2 2 1 0 Caldwell, lb r 5 0 1 1 Still, 3 5 0 2 2 Spinner, r-p 5 0 0 0 Bottin, r 4 2 1 2 Revta, c 3 0 1 0 Falcone, If 4 1 0 0 Hayes, If 4 0 1 0 Moser, cf 4 2 2 0 Bingham, s 3 1 0 0 Arnold, p 5 1 2 2 Miller, p M 0 0 0

Spence, p 1 0 0 0 Boyce, ph 0 0 0 0 Sydnor, p 1 0 0 0 Cease, 3 1 1 0 0 Thomas, pr 0 1 0 0

Totals 41 13 14 8 Totals 35 4 9 4 Score by innings

Oneonta 020 220 061 — 13 14 1 Geneva ooo 020 002 — 4 9 9

E — Pnyor 3, Cubbage, Bingham 3, Hayes, Caldwell, O'Conner. DP — Oneonta 1, Geneva 1. LOB — Geneva 10, Oneonta 11. 2B — Honeycutt, Hayes. HR — Bottin. SB —Moser. SF — O'Conner, Cubbage.

PITCHING ip h r er bb so

Arnold (W, 3-3) 9 9 4 3 5 9 Miller (L, 1-1) 4 1-3 6 6 3 2 2 Spence 1 2 - 3 0 0 0 1 0 Sydnor l 4 6 3 3 1 Spinner 2 4 1 1 2 3

HBP — by Arnold (Revta). WP — Miller, Sydnor, Spinner. Balk — Spinner. T — 3:05. A — 312.

Harman's HI 000 0 — 3-10-2 Zornow's 120 000 2 - 5 - 8 - 2 Bailey and Griffee. Thomas and

Hicks.

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