Word: bauers
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Shirley Englehorn: the $40,000 Haig & Haig Scotch Mixed Foursome golf tournament, at Sebring, Fla. Taking turns hitting the ball, Sam and Shirley, who won one tournament and $19,582 on the ladies' tour this year, shot a final round 65 to beat Dow Finsterwald and Marlene Bauer Hagge by one stroke. Shirley's contributions to the partnership included a 25-ft. putt for one eagle and a 50-yd. wedge shot into the cup for another...
...Baltimore Orioles' Brooks Robinson, 27: the American League's Most Valuable Player Award for 1964, breaking a four-year Yankee monopoly. Third Baseman Robinson hit 28 home runs, led the league in RBIs (118), and produced the hits that kept Hank Bauer's Birds within reach of the pennant until the last of the season. - Notre Dame: a crushing 28-0 victory over Iowa to remain unbeaten, untied and unchallenged as the nation's No. 1 college team. Michigan defeated Ohio State 10-0, winning its first Big Ten Championship in 14 years and a trip...
...Baltimore's Hank Bauer, 42: the Associated Press poll for American League Manager of the Year. Bauer's Birds were figured as also-rans by the experts, but their granite-chunk skipper (TiME cover, Sept. 1 1) kept them in first place for most of the season before they finally fluttered back to third-thus earning himself 53 out of the 83 ballots cast by sportswriters...
...over the St. Louis Cardinals. With six more to play, two of them with the Reds and three with the Cards, Philadelphia Manager Gene Mauch was running short of fingernails. "They say we're tense," he growled. "They'll bite those words." Baltimore's Bauer, of course, was considerably more relaxed. "What do you do now?" somebody asked after the Orioles committed two errors, booted a game 10-3. "Get drunk," said Bauer candidly...
Every kid who has ever puffed out his cheeks blowing up a sausage-shaped toy balloon has marveled that anything as immaterial as air can make the thin rubber so rigid and strong. This week the Bauer & Black division of Boston's Kendall Co. is putting on the general market an inflatable splint based on the same simple principle, but made of heavy, transparent plastic...