The print. (Oregon City, Oregon) 1977-1989, May 14, 1980, Page 6, Image 6

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    Sports shorts
Intramurals
The champion of the three-man intramural basketball
league has been decided as the Barber Squad defeated
Hoodye in the playoff game.
After Barber and Hoodye in third place was Vaught,
followed by Honas and the Maggots.
Intramural softball will begin this Thursday at noon. Loren
Swivel, intramural coordinator, said that the games will be
held rain or shine.
The Ball Team has the first bye of the season while the
Draft T’s play the Green M and M’s and Cindi’s Team will
take on The Banchiez.
Baseball
Pumping iron
That was what it was all about last Wednesday, May 7th at the CCC
gymnasium as about 54 contestants entered the bench press contest sponsored by
community services. Lifters competed in seven weight classes in high school division
and an open division. Evergreen High School from Washington dominated the high
school division as they had entrants place first in 3 weight classes while taking two
seconds and a third. The top lift of the night came in the open division when Roger
Patterson pressed 405 pounds. Staff photo by Sue Hanneman.
The season has come to a close for the CCC baseball
team who finished the season 19 and 19 overall and 10 and
16 in league play.
The final league games of the season came at Mt. Hood
Community College where the Cougar nine lost both games
of a double header. In thé first game the CCC glovemen fell,
8-0, before dropping the night cap, 13-4.
The following contest and the last of the season for the
Cougs came against Eastern Oregon State College’s J.V.
team. The Cougs won the first game, 12-1, which was
highlighted by a Steve Mills grand slam home run. Dave
Case went three for three with four RBI’s.
In the second game, Coach Gene Peterson allowed all of
his pitchers to play various postions and lost the game by
one run, 2-1.
Track teams finish admirably at regionals
By Brian Rood
Of The Print
For both the men’s and
women’s track teams, Mt.
Hood Community College was
the site of competition last
weekend, when both teams
took to the track in the Region
18 track and field meet.
Although neither team
threatened to run away with
the region title, both squads
finished admirably with the
women taking a fourth place
finish out of 13 schools, and
the men ending the day fifth
out of 12 schools entered.
Lane Community took the
team and will be one of the
higher hopes for the women in-
the national meet this week in
San Angelo, Texas.
women’s crown while the
College of Southern Idaho
grabbed the men’s title.
Sue
Hanneman
again
gained
top
performance
honors for the women. She
finished the 400 meters in 58
Hanneman, along with Jodi
Moore, Dani Varner and Lisa
flat for second place, and also
finished second in the 200-
meter dash with a time of 26.1.
For her efforts, Hanneman was
named to the regional all-star
CCC STUDENTS
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Pierce, glided tc
place finish in the 400-meter
relay, crossing the finish line in
a quick 51.5. Nancy Reynolds,
who will also be in San Angelo
this week at the National Junior
College Track and Field Meet,
came away with two third-
place finishes in the 3,000 and
5,000 meters. Reynolds’ time
in the 3,000 was 10:11.7
which, combined, with her
5,000-meter time of 18:07.62,
earned her a spot on the
regional all-star squad.
Along with the members of
the 400-meter relay team who
will instead compete in the mile
relay at nationals, Joy Cz-
mowski will make the trip to
San Angelo to compete in the
snot and discus. She has met
the national qualifying mark at
least twice during the year.
Joining the women for the
trip to San Angelo from the
men’s team will be Bret Brouse
who qualified in the 100-meter
dash, as did John Martin.
Brouse finished second in the
100 at the regional meet and
Martin had met the qualifying
time earlier in the year. Martin
placed second inthe 200
meter, but will not compete in
that event at the nationals
because his time was not fast
enough.
Bob Ryan will get his first real
chance to show what he can do
when he competes in the
decathalon. Ryan has had no
actual meet this year where he
competed directly against top
athletes of his sport, but he did
qualify in an invitational at
CCC. Coach Buck Monroe
looks for Ryan to finish
somewhere between tenth and
fourteenth in San Angelo.
The steeple chase, another
interesting and grueling event,
will be entered by CCC’s Jim
Colgan. Colgan will also be
making the’ trip south. He
finished second in the regionals
with a time of 9:17.8 and has
met the national qualifying time
twice.
Coach Monroe had alsl
hoped to enter his 400-meteq
relay team of Ryan, Brousa,
John Martin and Dan Martirl
but the team lost by .3 second!i
and failed to qualify by either
winning the regionals or
meeting a qualifying time of
41.8.
Both
women’s
Coacl
Marilyn Linsenmeyer and
men’s Coach Buck Monroe are
aware that placing at the
national meet is extremely dif-j
ficult. But both would agreg
that
the
experience is
unequaled. Linsenmeyer said]
Sue Hanneman probably has’
the best shot of her girls to
place, but also mention®
Nancy Reynolds in the 3,000
and 5,000 meters.
Monroe, on the other hand,
said that Jim Colgan has a
chance to get to the finals in the
steeple chase, and Ryan could
come home with a respectable
showing in the decathalon. I
Dick
Smelser
For
County Commisioner
Position No 3
Clackamas community College