sports
Short handed men
sprint to victory
By Tracy Sumner
Of The Print
With five Nationals-bound
team members out of action for
last Saturday’s three-way meet
in Albany, the men’s track
team still cruised to another first
place finish ahead of Linn-
Benton CC and Central
Oregon CC.
Clackamas finished with
104 points to Linn-Benton’s 78
and Central Oregon’s 19.
Mike Hortsch, who Coach
Buck Monroe pointed to as one
of the team’s best performers of
the meet, set a school record in
the shot put with a heave of
53-6 x /2. Hortsch’s put also won
him first place in the meet and
a spot in the Nationals.
“Mike did a great job,”
Staff photo by Duane Hiersche
Monroe said. Every one of his
[AKING CAREFUL AIM, Pete Proper, one of the contestants during last Thursday’s pool
throws was over 50 feet. Hort
tournament while Proper’s opponent, Gary Karkland (background) watches.
sch also placed second in the
discus with a throw of
123-11V2.
Another key performer,
according to assistant coach
Kelly Sullivan, was the steadily
improving Marcell Douglass.
Douglass long-jumped
20-83/4 to earn a first place
finish in the meet. He also set a
personal record with a javelin
throw of 182-1 which placed
ed to rip a Blue Mountain 3-3 tie with Treasure Valley
him second in the meet to
fy Tracy Sumner
tandem of Sunden and Eppen- here last Thursday. Imper and
teammate Roger Barnhurst
If The Print
bach 8-2 in a “pro set” to start Dosier combined for the team’s
who threw the spear 209 feet.
doubles victory.
Douglass also placed se
The women’s tennis team
Yesterday’s match with cond in both the high and 400
doubles play. Imper and Dosier
ad an impressive open to
also won easily 6-1, 6-2 over Portland State University was meter intermediate hurdles
ague play last Friday as they
Brown and Horn to account for postponed due to rain. The with times of 16.0 and 56.4,
)lled to an easy 5-1 win over
the final team score.
women play Chemeketa here respectively. Mark Barlow of
lue Mountain CC in
this Friday at 3 p.m.
Clackamas took first in the in-
In exhibition action,
endleton.
Clackamas’ Margaret Bierma
Blue Mountain’s Carla and Sharon Bergstrom lost to
Jrown scored her team’s lone
Tammy Williams and Melissa
vin as she beat Mary Imper of Brewer 1-6, 4-6.
Clackamas 7-5, 3-6, 6-1. The
Dougs’ Lori Dosier finished
“The players played well,”
ingles competition with a hard coach Gladys Michael com
ought 6-7, 6-4, 6-3 victory mented. “We had a good team
>ver Chris Horn.
effort. I thought all three
wilkens and Dillman team- doubles teams played well.”
Wilkens, Dillman lead women’s
tennis team to easy triumph;
Chemeketa meet scheduled
termediate hurdles with a time
of 54.9.
The 400 meter relay team
of Larry Psick, Les Taylor,
John Martin, and Jeff Johnson
turned a time of 42.1 to take
first in the meet. Johnson also
teamed with John Anderson,
Dan West, and Manuel West to
take an easy first in the 1600
meter relay.
Anderson and Manuel
West finished 1-2 in the 400
with times of 49.6 and 50.4
respectively. Taylor, Psick, and
Dan West placed 1-2-3 in the
100. Taylor’s time of 10.7 is a
league best thus far in the
season. Johnson and Taylor
also placed first and second,
respectively in the 200.
Scott Anderson’s long
jump of 43-21/2 was over a foot
short of last week’s perfor
mance, but was still good
enough for first place honors in
this meet.
Roney Macey ran the
5,000 in 15:05.6 to place first
followed by teammates Kevin
MacDermott and Marco Gu-
tienez who were clocked at
15:10.2 and 15:26.1.
Alan Wymore took 2:04
to run the 800, good enough
for second in the meet. Mark
Frickey’s 6-4 high jump also
earned him a runner-up spot.
“Over-all, it was a good
job,” Monroe said of the team’s
performance. “I think we’re
ready for the Mt. Hood relays.”
The Cougars have little choice
but to be ready. The team
travels to Gresham for the
relays this Saturday.
Surviving 1984
Michelle Wilkens started
things off in singles action by
Shipping Blue Mountain’s
Shelley Sundin 6-0, 6-1. Bon-
nie Dillman of Clackamas also
won handily over Monica Ep-
¡penbach 6-0, 6-1.
Michael was also very
pleased with the play of
Wilkens and Dillman. “I have a
feeling they’re going to be
outstanding in this league,” she
said.
Wilkens won 6-2, 6-2 and -
Dillman handled her opponent
6-1,6-1 to help the women to a
Classifieds
George Orwell’s “1984” remains the most controversial
prophecy of our century even today. Yet, the time of
Orwell’s nightmare is only two years away. How will
America-and more important-mankind, survive until the
year 2000? Will the world find itself in the throws of a
Third World War? Will Israel survive the agressions of
the P.L.O? Will the post-Vietnam recession turn into a
depression? These will be the questions we will try to
answer in the Spring issue of RHAPSODY. But we need
your prophecies as well. Send your literature, poetry, art
and photography to Trailer B before the May 5 deadline.
For more information, call 657-8400, ext. 309.
ROOMMATE WANTED:
Nice 3 bedroom home,
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after 5 p.m. 656-1108.
Roommate wanted—Home:
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busline, 653-2610 after 5:00. ,
Wednesday, April 14, 1982
FOR SALE
Two sets of twin-sized mat
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Rhapsody
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