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Observation Post By AL VOGL Pinch-hitting for vacationing Stan Pakula .» ^ 'In ' and 'Out * V There is a cycle of fashion in sports just ns obvious as the wandering hemline of dresses , the horsepower competition of car manufacturers , or the piesent boom for science in the educational system. The sport itself has litt le to do with it. Its the kind ot peop le who follow the sport, that decides whether its correct anil fashionable , and they ' re usually responsible for its downfall . Not ori ginal, but an interesting idea , and I thought of this a few weeks ago while diiving back from the sports car races at Bridgehampton. It ' s onl y beep since th e end of the war that we ' ve seen the mass influx of foreign cars , and amateur sports car racing on a wide scale in the U. S. is even a more recent development. There was a large crowd at the raceway. They sat in the grandstand or gathered in clumps around the tight corners , and patiently watched the ears blast, by. It was a very hot day and , even without a wind, there was a fine screen of dust in tlu» air . But the humble enthusiasts didn 't complain. They were wheie they were supposed to he, and if they closed their eyes to dream , it was not of sugar plums or long: cold drinks , but !¦¦ •¦ '« -^\\ how they could best describe the smashing ex- A j y OR \ perience to the gang at the agency Monday morning. There were the girls , usuall y well-groomed , trim and taut and eager , with no loose or unnecessary parts , looking like the fast cars or a racing sailboat. The Bermuda shorts, the fouiaid or p laid blous- es , the grey sneakers and such were part of the uniform of Belong- ing. Their faces were healthy and scrubbed , flushed with the be- g inning of a tan that will be quite complete by August. They p layed with their boys as is the custo m of the country in the pro-matron stage. They were nice and horrible at the same time . The boys , who make little money but dress exceedingly well , were going to be successful. You could tell that . They were ni<ce American boys who were going to marry nice American girls and raise nice American children . They have given popularit y to sports cars and racing, but I still have to report, with regrets , sports cars and racing are no longer fashionable because they ' ve become too fashionable . The breath of the avant garde of the middle class is too hot on the tail of tlie hot little curs to keep the sport \hip \ or \ with it\ or ''in. \ I'd like to define my terms , but, the prospects are dim. It was Esquire Magazine , I think , which fi rs t published the difference be- tween \in \ and \ out\ things. They didn 't explain , mind you „ just showed the difference . In simple terms it attempted to draw lines between the discerning, intelligent if not Intellectual , quietly tnjsteful \in \ person , and the \ squares \ — not the decent burghers who think it ' s all a lot of nonsense , but the ambitious , pretentious, low-serious types . who try so hard not to to he thought dolts that they kilp with appreciation. Many in the crowd s\t Bvidgehsvmplon lean to thej latte r category or \ outs. \ They ' re not \ with it\ or \ against it\ but exist in a phantom world in between where, life is b y proxy. But to make the difference a bit clearer , let' s consider thj e fash- ion of sports according to the Esquire formula . From where I sit --- on a chair with wheels since this is a very shift y subject — baseball is \ out. \ However , because baseball is so far \ mut , \ it might be coming \in. \ Sports cars and racing are at the other ex- treme -- so far \in \ they ' re \ out. \ This might also hapjue n with another spoil getting popular , parachute j ump ing. A few \in \ sports are lacrosse , nolo (if you own y«)ur own ponies), speed skating, speleology, parcliesi , hammer throwing , horse racing (not the trotters ), wafer polo, motorcycle hill-climbs , ' falconry, billiards , badminton , and not going over the highway speed . limits . Now for a few \ out\ sports. Skiing is \ out , \ so is Imsketbnll , skin-diving (recent development), bowling, dog racing, hunting with a bow , canasta (so far \ out, \ it might creep \in , \) wnue r skiing, professional wrestling, Monopol y, and bull lighting (\ out\ as spec- tator; \in \ if you ' re the bull). In fencing, the foil is \ out\ and the sabre is \in . \ However if you don 't use rubber ti ps on the foils , it' s \in. \ Tennis is both \in \ and \ out , \ depending upon determination and color of shorts. Hiking the Appalachian trail from Maine to Ceorgin is \ out\ if you mention it at. pai ties. This uni que rating system can also be applied more specifically. The Kentucky Derb y is \ out. \ the Belmont Stakes is \in. \ The Yankees are neither \in \ or \ out \ — they ' re above it. all. Boxer Brian London falls into the same category, but he ' s beneath it all. Ice hockey and the New York Rangers are \in \ because I like both , and that' s good enough for me . I apologize to Esquire Magazine (so far \in \ it' s \ out\). If you cure to write me a letter (could be \in \ or \ out\ depending on what you say) and comment on the situation , I'd be glad to hear from you (\ out \ ). 3 B'haven Students Hel p Cortland Nine CORTLAND — Much of the success of Cortland State ' s base- ball team , which sported a 12-2 record , can probably ho attribut- ed to the seven Long Islanders on the squad. Three members of the team came from Hrookhaven town. Patchogue ' s Fred Crinpen , who shared the catcher ' s chore , hit. a lusty ., '104. Dennis Hutchinson of East Setauket was the regular left fielder , hitting .. 'UK , and I 1 rank Sayers of Lake Ronkon- koma held an important reserve spot on the Cortland team. BRIDGE NOTES At the South Bay Bridge club of Bab ylon , first p lace N-S went to Jack Horton of West Isli p and Sol Walters of Bay Shore with Mrs. Nita Saxe of Islip and Ray MacLoan of Heli port second. Mrs. Madeleine Maurer and Stanley Davies of Bav Shore led in the E-W followed by Mrs. Sylvia Weiner anil Mrs. Lee Croon , both of Bay Shore. Wk FOR POP' jr f jfod^ft^ WE ARE CELEBRATING x BMP ^ ^^L PATCH0GU E ' S MARINE-R-AMA r ^^^^^ T ^ / ^ SELL-A-RAMA OFFERING A ^ ^^^ m COMPLETE OUTFIT |^^^^ READY-T0-G0 mmr& \ *** y goat 15 ft\ L y man or 15 f »- MFC Fiberg las [ M / J / Equi pped With— Steering, Remote Controls \m/ // Anchor , Deck and Stern Hardware / £ Wgmu mmr - ^ Anti-Fouling Bottom (AJ Amk ^ ^ - \ F owere d with— 3 5 HP Evinrude Bi g Twin Y 1%- > $1225 ^ y Wj m^AwS1 Sma11 D ° Wn Payment 2 Years Balance Wm * m} \TOAD\ CONKLIN KIISJFI ^ PATCHOGUE GRover 5-2365 ¦^^^^ ¦H& FOLLOW YELLOW ARROWS ON RIVER AVENUE Rookies Drop 4 in Row Lose 2 to W. Babylon After winning their first, four games of the season , the Patchogue Rookies dropped their fourth straight, b y bowing to West Babylon AA 7-11 and 1 0-:i here Sunday at the Patcboguo High school diamond. What started out as a ' successful sea-sun has developed into a .struggle to keen their heads over the .a0<) mark , as the Rookies are now '1-1. The f.rst game saw the Rookies stage a comeback to tie the score at (i-li , only to lose it in the seventh . In the afterpiece , the visitors came up with seven runs in the sixth inning to win out. The Rookies trai' ed li-2 going to the. hvst id the sixth inning i.f the opener. After Rocky Tedeseo bounced out , John Drew was safe on an error b y shortstop Ron Adsit. Nick Carulli followed with a triple to right , to score Drew. After -Charlie Peterson fanned for the second out, Don Renter walk- ed and pinch bitter Bobby Budd folk .wed with a base hit to score Carulli. A wild pilch by pitcher Charlie Laager put the runners in scoring position which they did on n sireg le b y Les Lawrence. This hit tit*I the score at #»-* ». Hank Jones , Patchogue ' s fourth h .urler , could nol turn back the Visitors. Teek Ketcham singled Imt was forced at second by Laiigen. Adsit strolled and after \George Schumacher f.ied out , Jim Brennan ripped one up the middle to score Langen with the winning run. Patchogu e hurlers allowed 15 on balls , 10 alone off the slants of Paul Roscott , who lasted until the fourth inning. Five passes , an error , a balk plus a double by Joe PetriUo scored four runs in the opening frame. The visitors added one more in the fourth and another in the sixth. Tedeseo walked to start the fourth and scampered to third on a double by Drew. Tedeseo scored on an infield out and Drew scored on Peterson ' s sing le to make it 5-2. The afterpiece saw the Rookies hold the lead throughout the sixth when the West Babylon nine scor- ed seven big runs to snatch victory away from the local nine. Frank DiCorcia started the ball rolling with a walk. The next p lay was the turning point, as Adsit dropped a bunt near the. pitcher ' s mound. But all hands were safe as Budd let the ball ooze through his legs . Roth moved up as Joe Dei.ucca sacrificed to set the stage for hurler Dick Poueel to win his own game. That Dick did as he rapped Rudd' s first toss up the middle for the ball game. The victors added five more for good measure . Two errors and three more hits including a two-run homer b y Pole Ze/.iina did the damage. Carulli tripled with one out in the second inniing and scored as Zezima threw wild to the plate in an attempt to head him off after fielding Peterson ' s bouncer. A single b y Budd , a bunt by Lawrence and u single by Warren llalver- son made it 2-1 in the third. After West Bab ylon tied the score in the top half of the fifth the Rookies went, ahead by one again in its half. Budd _ singled took second on a wild pilch and tallied on a two bagger by Phil Rogers. Sunday is an open date for the Rookies but they are in action the Continued on page , '! , this section Isli p Rec. Dept Will Give Swim Course ISLI P— The Isli p Town Rec- reation department will sponsor n .senior Red Cross Life Saving course at Benjamin ' s Memorial beach , Bay Shore. Interested per- sons can obtain applications at the recreation department here be- tween the hours of i) a. in. and 5 p. m. The course will be offered from June 22 through Jul y X. Other similar courses are p lan- ned for Sayville beach and the town beach at Lake Ronkonkoma. For further information on the course contact the recreation de- partment , JUni per 1-2000 , Kxt. 44. If your subscription expires with this issue of The Advance , we invito yon to renew promptly. Spectator Race Is Latest R'head Raceway Rage R1VKRHFAD — Willi out a doubt , the first innovation in stock- car auto racing in years — the spectator race — has caught on like wildfire 1 at Riverhead Race- way. The stock-car auto racing show was rained out at Riverhead Sat- urday night for the second straight week , but this week , if the weatherman forgets the li quid diet , the biggest show of the sea- son will be presented. Promoter Kd Hawkins began bis spectator races , one for men , Axv.u A NDKHSON . . . invading Rivcrhvud one for women , at his opening show this season. The names of 10 men and 10 women were se- lected from slips filled out b y the fans as they entered the park. Later in the show , the fans don- ned helmets and found out what it ' s like lo gun a late-model jalopy around the high-banked , quarter- mile Riverhead track. Some of the spectator-drivers displayed amaz- ing savvy behind the wheel and the gals especiall y proved they can take rare of themselves on a race track. Two more of these spectator races will lie held Saturday night , along with a. full-stocfc car show that, looms as the bi ggest of the season. Indications point to tlie long-awaited return to action of Johnny Zeke , who has been wait- ing— impa t iently—for his new car to be finished. Another chaiilfeur waiting for his car is Don (iillesp ie and the Riverhead regulars are prepared for an invasion of new pilots like Axel Anderson , dene (iamache , Harry llehenstreit , Wes Harris , Al Hansen and others. .Manhatta n ' s Bobby Williams , with three wins in three tries , figures, as the man lo heat. Action is scheduled to begin at K., '!0 p. m. Saturday. Workshop in Hunter Training Problems Set Sat. in Babylon BABYLON — Open to a ll in- terested adults , the first Hunter Training program workshop in the state will lie held here Satur- day in the cafeteria of Bab ylon Senior High school. Sponsored by the Conservation Education committee of the Suf- folk County Fish and Came asso- ciation , and moderated b y District Supervisor William Bentley , the purpose of the workshop will he to encourage and assist the ex- pansion of hunter training courses throug hout Long Island and to serve as a refresher course for present instructors. Beginning at 0:l!0 a. m., and concluding at '1 :. '!(> p. m., the workshop will he divided into two segments. The morning session will consist of a presentation of the many problems posed by pub- lic hunting. A panel of experts representing the V. S. Fish and Wildlife service , state conservation department , state farm bureau , and the local polite department will discuss the situati on as it affects their agencies. A general question and answer period will follow and at noon there will be a recess for lunch. The afternoon session will at- tempt to present an answer to the problem discussed in the morn- ing session. A representative of the National Rille association will explain the background of present courses. Neither rain , sleet , ice nor heat prevents delivery to your home ur your office of vour Patchouiie Advance . Only Sfi.00 a year. Write or telephone the Circulation Man- ager nnd start your paper today -nriover B-1000 . —Adv . L. Ronk Cards Take 2 Games In SCBL Action Fresh from his no-hitter last we^k against Central Isli p, Jim Buttonow pitched a two-hitter as the Lake Ronkonkoma Cardinals swamped the Smithtown Yankees Sunday, l(i-0. In the other game of the double header, the Cards continued hot , winning fi-4. In the Suffolk County Baseball league standings , tlie Lake Ron- konkoma nine holds a 4-2 record , with the Yankees sporting a dis- mal 1-7 tally thus far in the sea- son. The first game of the twin-bill saw the Cards put together 10 hits and 10 Yankee errors for a three inning sp lurge. Guy Mas- t rion ' s double was the only extra ba»e hit for the Cards. Neville Hugelmeyer was the hero of the second game as he pitched a five-hitter and hit a double in the fifth inning to drive in two runs and provide a neat victory margin. FIRST CAME I.. Ronkonkoma (fill-Smithtown (41 AH R Hi AB R H MnKtririn . ll) 'i \ <> 'AKostn . lf , 't 1 1 R.A.n. v . lf . 'I 1 1 '/.i-rillo . s.s 2 0 0 U. M'irur . Hli :! 1 1' '' ' Arc.Ti . nii . '! 0 1 M..tirii>if .r 2 1 ll: r>wyiT .2t. 3 (I 0 D . U,'<s,. .21i 1 1 l ' -l . Arci-ri .rf 3 1 1 K. SnVH.-s . sa :i II 1 Wick* .lb 2 1 l Tlii.mns .rl Ii 1 T D.irnzio . lf 2 0 0 Strniili .c 2 1 0 1 Wake . c :) 0 1 H' meyiT .p :i II 11 Zim 'haim .n 2 10 Hopkinx .p 0 0 0 Arl.'.iri . ll I 0 a-McOurk 10 0 Totals 22 fi t>| Tot ills 25 4 5 j i- hiiU. ..! for Hopkins in seventh. Smithtown 010 030 0-.| !\ , 2 Lnki- Itonk./nkoma 000 l' .O x—-6 r> .1 SECOND GAME Lake [.Smithtown (1) Ronkonkoma tlOP AB R H AB R WDnnk8.iw .2ti 1 0 0 Mn.sfriom . il. 4 :l 2'LntirolIUf .10 0 H.K.npy.c 4 2 l' Arceri . Sb 3 0 1 Mohrinn. rf 3 2 2 ! Wicks .lb 3 0 0 R. M'inu.Uu -I 2 S'Zerrillo.e 3 0 0 Rcese.2b 3 1 2! J. Arceri . rf 2 0 0 Snyers . SK A 0 ll M»curk.s.s2b , 3 0 1 Thi/mns . if 2 2 0 1 Rniley.cf 2 0 0 H' meyiT . If 1 1 0 ! Hopkins .p 3 0 0 Whitc . rf 2 1 \I Fisher , rf 1 0 0| Iluttonow .p r» 2 lj TolnlH 3-1 Ifi lol Totals 23 0 2 Score by inniiiKH : Smithtown .. 000 0(10 0-0 2 10 Lake Ronkonkoma 015 007 x—1C. 10 1 South Shore Still Tops Biz Loop But Loses to Masons By JAMES BARBAXELL Second round p lay opened last week in the Patchogue Businessmen ' s Soft- ball League. Hi ghlight of the week saw South Shore C & D lose its first game of the season but still retain its hold on firs t p lace , half game ahecid of A & P Masons . On .June 10. defend.ng champ . -\ it I' broke South Shore ' s five game winning streak b y topp ing the Dredgers S-li. The win moved the .Masons into a first-place tie with the losers. However on Friday, the forces of Bill Rooney look the lead once again by coming from behind to nip Four Seasons Sports Center 14-13 at the Shorefront park. In other league action . Carl & Bob' s defeated Sy belie Carpets 7-4 and Grover Lumber edged Four Sea- sons in a 14-12 slugfest. Friday ' s contest between the Dredgers and Four Sensor. ; saw the two teams blast, out 22 hits including four doubles , three triples and a home run. Plus this there were 17 bases on balls and 12 trrors by the two clubs. The j?ame was almost postponed because of a heavy fog that rolled in from the bay. Visibility was so poor in the top of the third inning with Four Seasons ahead 4-2 . that play was halted for an. proximately 15 minutes. Though the mist did not clear, visihilitv improved , the game went on and South Shore came back to win out. Winning p itcher was Julie Pos- senti , who came on at the start of the third frame. The. Snortsmen greeted him with another four- run outburst to take a six-run lead. After blowing that , the charges of Frank Hollmann came back to score five more to take a short-lived 13-10 in the sixth. Meanwhile , South Shore pecked away in big lumps against Four Seasons s tarter Ray Curiale. After the Sportsmen tallied four in the third to go ahead 8-2 . the Dredgers scored one in the third four in the fourth and three more in the fifth to forge ahead 10-S. Mike Stephani was the new Sportsmen hurler in the fifth in- ning. Bill Cockerill opened with a walk and advanced to third on a pair of wild nhches. Duke Pigi- lio also strolled to bring on Chick .Augustine who belted the first serve into right center to score Cockerill. When the ball bounced past Hollmann , Digih' o and Angns- *ine aho scored tn g ive South Shore its first lead of the ni<rht. But Four Seasons bounced riirht. back to score five ni\i'« in the sixth to lead bv three. Vic D'gi'io walked and advanced on Tony Schaefer ' s bunt simrle. A throw- ing error by the pitcher on Schae- fer ' s bunt moved the runner-; into storing position which they did on a single b y dim Morn's . Curiale was hit bv a pitch to set the stasre for skinner IIoll- nv.inn ' s second triple of the night which scored run - three and four. Hollmann scored the final run on a single to left field by S\< 'p- hani. Stephani could not ho 'd this lead as South Shore fought back to score four more in its half to tak\ the game. - Chnr 'io Ru-so led off with n base hit and Cockerill walked. Bi\ Rnonev ' s sine-le scored Russo and sent CocVer'll to third. An infield out. nut Cockerill across lo put the Drcdocrs onl y one in arrears . .Augustine took care of the situation bv belt 'tig one up the ritrht contorfield alley for a home run for f'P winivng run . It was his second of the year . Four S\asons bad the tvi\g run on third base with one out in the seventh inninc . .A fter . Ion OK...-, fanned , Schaefor l.l. -istei l a trinle to left center and held as Morris drew a pass. Pos«enti then bore down indoe- ing Curiale to pop out for the second out and s t ruck out Holl- mann to end the fracas. Schaefer was baftine- star with a triple nnd two slurries to raise lis bnttim r average to a whopping . • \S. '' ,. Hollmann chipped in with a pair of tnpl cs t 0 drive ; n two runs for the fifth place Snorts- men. For South Shore . Amm^tino had a homer and a sitm-lo to drive hi three runs . Possordi. Rus- -o am ' Hal Thomas al=o had two hits to aid the Dredger cause . A & P' s triumph over Ihe Dredgers saw the Masons put to- gether siv hi' s and giirjit l, , .,o.w on balls. Start : ng hurler Pn^e'iii was verv wild as he walked s ' x and hit a ba tter allowing three runs before givinc wav to Roy Kr'oger in the second frime. But it was Krieper who took the loss as he entered the fray with the score tied at o-3 It was his first of the year after two Wl ' os . The Masons tallied two in the third and wrapped it up with a Continued on page 3 , this section Bellport 9' Has Fin e Chance To Take Crown Next Year By Augie Bono BELLPORT — After four successive championshi p seasons , the Bell pot t Clippers had their attempt for a fifth straight league ban- ner foiled this year. The Clippe:s ended their regular season p lay m a first place tie with Kings Park for the B-l honors. In the p lay-off game , Kings Park was victorious 1-0 behind the two hit p itching ot John Evans. For most of the season , the Clippers were fight.ng an up hill battle as th.y won their lirst three league games but then drop- ped the next three to giv . e them a .500 nia.k mid-way through the ..eason. The second half of the campaign saw Bellport rebound niaiiry through the p itching efforts of Tom Carroll and the slugging of John Fuoco. These two seniors enjoyed their finest season as Clip- pers. Fuoco was the team ' s leading RBI man and a steady fielder at first base. Carroll on the other hand was Ernie Robinson ' s \iron man \ on the pitcher ' s mound. He started every league game for the Clippers and went the distance in everv one but three getting cre- dit for \ all of Heliport ' s B-l tri- umph' s except one. In several games, Carroll aided his own cause by swinging a potent bat. Other seniors who will be lost to the Clippers next year are Tony Scesny. Bernie Hoyt, and Gay Vig- nato. \ Vignato took care of the catching chores for Bellport and repiesented a long ball threat ev- ery time he approached the p late wi ' th most of his hits going for extra bases. Scesny and Hoyt com- prised two thirds of the Clipper outfield; each one possessing a fine throwing arm and plenty of speed. Along with their defensive skills , Scesny and Hoyt were used by Robinson as major offensive weapons. Batting in the number one and two positions in the. bat- ting order respectively, Scesny and Hoyt did a line job getting on base often and they used their speed to great advantage on the base paths. Although Coach Robinson will be losing over half of his team thiough graduation , he is fortu- nate in that ho will have several returning veterans to count on for next year ' s campaign. Leading the parade of returnees will he Bob Hoffmann who led the Clippers in hitting percentage-wise. He also proved his defensive worth by plugging up the shortstop hole. Returning with Hoffmann next year will be fellow jun ior and keystone partner Larry Musso. At third hase, Al Kinsclla will he returning for duty. The young sophomore proved his worth at the hot corner both offensively and defensivel y. Fred Cherry made up the final third of the Clipper outfield. Cher- ry came on strong in the hitting department the final half of the season to contribute to the Bellport surge. Jimmy Carroll also saw action in the outfield and can be expected to fill the gap left there by graduation. Pete Irving was the versatile man of the squad , seeing action in both the infield and out- field. John Cook came up from the junior varsity in the middle of the season to give the Clippers bullpen insurance- . Cook proved his worth by p itching fine ball when called to relieve on several occasions. Much of next year ' s pitching p lans for the Clippers wi 1 ! revolve around the promising sophomore. With nil this fine talent at his disposal , Ernie Robinson has a fine chance of seeing the dinners re- gain the league championshi p they lost this year. R konkoma Bucs Tally First Wins ; Take Giants for 2 RONKONKOMA—Dirk Bonsig- nore pitched both ends of a dou- ble-header here Sunday and paced the Ronkonkoma Pirates to 8-3 and 4-3 victories over the Central Is- lip Giants. The games marked the first crash of the Pirates into the win columns this season. In the first game , Bonsignore struck out 14 men. His teammates iced the game in the third inning with six runs. Six walks , Hick Loy ' s two-bagger , and an error were responsible for the runs. John Thelen homered for the Pi- rates in the fourth inning. It was tighter in the second contest , however , and Ronkonkoma had to stiugg le from behind. They scored the tying run in the sixth and the winning tally in the sev- enth inning. In the sixth inning scoring, Frank Mergl singled, stole second , and trotted across the plate on Thelen ' s single. The winning run came in when Al Hanak walked and stole second. Ed Hanak was then walked , and both runners advanced on a wild pitch. Tiger Hanak sing led to drive in the winning run. FIRST CAME Central Islip <:l ) | Ronkonkoma (8) All R Hi All R II Eilcn . sa ;i 1 I . E. Hnnnk ,]f ;l 1 1 Silvn.2b 2 1 2 I.. Hmiiik . iih 4 0 1) ZoIi.2b 2 0 11 ; Suli . Uu 0 u 0 Kzzuv 'tb 11 0 1 MtntL.s ;i U 1 Anderson.If J 0 I) Th. . ' kii ,lb 2 2 1 Durk.cf 2 II ll Luy.c ;l 1 1 Mnururk.il ) 2 ll r llon.sii- 'noi-.' .p 2 1 1 Kaymuii.L ' 2 u H <lu.sUifaoii .cf 1 1 0 Stil.lniori' . if 2 1 I) C.inlon.i-f 1 u (I Jlilio .ll :! U II liolf.rf 1 0 (I le-iiy.iatio .of 1 ll 0 T. Han:ik ,2b 1 1 0 Tot ula 2t :< s! Totals 22 S a Score by innini!.s : Ct-nli-ii ! Islpi OHO 120 0— . '! Runkunkuniii — — llllii 200 s — S SECOND GAME Central lalip (.11 1 Konkonkoma <1) All R II! AB It Jl An.l.'iaon . lf 4 0 1 K. Ilannk . lf 1 U 1 KillinKH .rf :l 1 1 T. Hun.ik .2b :l 1 1 Kik.Mi .as :i ll II Mi . Ttd. sa 2 1 1 Pi-.lro . 'f :t II O Tcl.'li . lb 11 0 1 lOzz. o .p. :!!, :i II 0 Loy.c 11 0 0 MiiKurk .lb :l 11 0 llon. siBniiri' .p :i II 1 Ki.vmon.e :i il 1 -Suli :lb 2 (I (1 Julm.Hb .n :l I IL Hunnk. :il> 1 0 Ii Silver. 2b :l (I 2 <;usl!.fs..n. .'f M I 2 Cunlon.rf 2 1 1 A. Hunak.rf 1 (I 0 Totals 28 X 5 ' Totals 2:1 1 S Score by inniiiKa : Central Islip 000 120 0—3 lionkonkoma — 002 001 1—4 Bernard Dodd Wins B'hampton Bike Race BRTnr.EHAMPTON — The Grand P>'i\- b ; \\\le r:\rp Sii»<h.i' around the difficult and windy course here was von by Bernard Dodd of Onjnov . Mn=s ., a member of the tOafi Olvmni\ team , who cycled the 02'4 miles in thme ho\rs . 10 minutes and 20 seconds There wore fi4 stnrtevs and I'fi finished the grind. Dodd canm in far abend of the 1957 National fnnior champion , Tntnps Donovan of Ridcewood. Third nlace was won b\ Boh Fisher of New York city. The rice wns snonsomd In- die T ong Island Wheelmen ' s as- sociation. LITTLE LEAGUE SUNRISE LITTLE LEAGUE By defeating the visiting team 8 to -1 , behind the excellent pitch- ing of Pete Foster , the Bayport Shands slowed Holbrook' s pennant march and snapped their winning streak at five. Bayport enjoyed a 7-run second inning, sending Mox- son to the showers. Kollenbaum took over on the mound and man- aged to stem the tide somewhat , holding Bayport to one more run. However , his teammates were un- able to overcome the Bayport lead. Whelan laced out a three- bagger for Bayport , scoring two runs. Filosa poled a double for Holbrook. Bohemia nosed out Oakdale , 5 to 1 , in seven innings . Maguire hit a homer for Bohemia with one on. Dan Landowski tripled for Bohemia to drive in two runs. Bo- hemia ' s Arthur Morgan pitched a one-hitter for six innings. Holbrook defeated Oakdale , 9 to o, \ by way of Schumchyk' s three- run homer which broke a fi-G tie. Silosa also hit a homer for Hol- brook. Rusciano was the winning pitcher , holding Oakdale to four hits. Howell , the loser , allowed hut six hits , but extra-base blows were his undoing. The Bayport Bohemia game , with Bayport leading 12 to 10 , was called because of darkness he- fore the completion of the fourth inning, a no-contest game that will be played over today. Bay- port and Bohemia also were scheduled to play a rained-out game Tuesday. The Bayport A minors downed Holbrook , 8 to fi , behind the p itch- ing of Eustace , who had himself quite a day, striking out 7 , get- ting a single and a double , and spearing a line drive for an un- assisted out with the tying and winning runs on third and second. Tin- Oakdale A minors won over Bohemia, 11 to 9 , game call- ed in sixth inning on account of darkness. By winning from Holbrook 13 to 5 , the Bayport B Minors re- mained the only undefeated team in the league, with a firm hold on first p lace. Holbrook scored five runs in the first. Then George Mc- Lachlan relieved Walsh on the mmmd and pitched a shutout ball the rest of the game , while his teammates piled up a comfortable lead. Johnson hit a two-run double for Bayport. Major League Standing W L Holbrook fi 1 Bayport 4 2 Bohemia 3 3 Oakdale 0 7 Ni'YAC LITTLE LEAGUE R H E Island Coal & Lumber 10 12 1 T & S Lumber 4 G 3 Winning pitcher—Ronnie Leno- witz; Losing p itcher—Alan Katz. Hi ghlights : Home runs by Ken Bchme and Ronnie Lenowitz of Island Coal . R H E Main Auto Parts 9 11 1 Clearview & Fiala 0 4 3 Winning p itcher—Ski p Wil- liams; losing p itcher , Hill Brown. Highlights: Home runs by Bob Miseho. John Rustman and John Maloney . R H E Allco Cement 9 10 2 Autorama 7 10 2 Winning p ' U'h'T—John Connors; losinir pitcher—Mike Guerrasio. Highlights: Home runs by Kyle Buxton ^ of Autorama and Bob Stu- • ey of Allco . Bill McEwen of Auto- rama. 2 for 3. R H E Main Auto Parts 13 12 1 Is-l. 'ind Coal ,v Lumber 4 0 2 Winning pitcher—Billy Mischo; losing pitcher—Jim Schrieber. Highlights : Home runs by Skip Wiiliams and John Rustman of Main Auto. R H E T & S Lumber 13 12 1 Allco Cement 8 8 3 Winning pitcher—Mike Carda- inone; losing pitcher—Bob Wana- maker. Highlights: Wayne Borella and Butch Okun , 2 for 3 for T & S. R H E Main Auto Parts 7 4 0 Autorama 12 1 Winning p itcher—Bob Mischo and losing p itcher—Ky le Buxton. Highlights: Main Auto won its eighth in a row; Bob Mischo hit a homer and John McCarthy went 2 for 3 for Main Auto. BELLPORT LITTLE LEAGUE Major League R H E C. B. Van Alen S 9 1 Bellport Laundry 11 8 1 Batteries: Mike Derby and George Pongonis; Tom Gordon and Tom Iarrocei , Smith (5). Minor League R H E Suffolk Paper 11 8 1 Trotta Bros. 5 8 2 Batteries : Jim Sidey and John Hanson; Vern Crit/. and Martv Dranal (21; Larry Angrisani (4) and W. Cheruhin. Major League R II E Bellport Bank 11 9 0 Bellport Laundry 2 . 3 0 COSTELLO'S FISHING STATION LEAKY - R. - BOATS No More \Fishermen ' s Widows \ Enjoy Our Picnic Grounds and Bar-B-Q Pit Springville Road , Hampton Bavs Tel. HAmplon Bays 2-0R19 NPYAC Babe Ruth Season Opens Sun. At Tremont School The North Patchogu e Youth A. C. will open its Babe Ruth sea- son at 2 p. m. Sunday at the Tre- mont Avenue school field. Four teams will make up the league and they will p lay a 12- game schedule. Bchme Bakery will be managed by Julie Sackstein , Brookhaven PBA will be managed by Harold Rooney, Barrio Bros, will be man- aged by Bob Rustman and Repub- lican Club District 41 will Vie man- aged b y Mario Genua and Tom McRae. Charlie Mischo , chief umpire , still needs men to umpire in this league. Men interested are invited to call ATlantic 9-0298 or come to the field any night. Joseph Hauser , vice president in charge of the league , said all Sunday games will start at 2 p. m. and the week day ni g ht games will start at 6:15 p. m. 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