The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 21, 1954, Page 9, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Seattle Doicned Twice . .
ea vers Capture Pair
From Sacramento Club
The Portland Beavers climbed to within a single game of sev
enth place in the Coast League baseball i&ndings Sunday by
taking a double victory at Sacramento in night clashes, 8-3 and
6-4. The Sacs won the series, however, 4-3.
Navy's Great
Crew Finishes
Ditto Career
By MUBRAY ROSE
SYRACUSE tf Navy's rowing
opponents sighed, "wait until nxt
year" Sunday as the bulk of the
greatest crew in rowing history put
away its oars for the last time.
For the "Super Six" of the in
vincible eight-oar armadas of the
Naval Academy were all through,
iter racking up their third straight
Inter-collegiate Rowing Association
championship and their 29th victory
in an unparalleled streak in
101 years of college rowing history.
A crowd of round 13,000 sat
and marvelled in the bright
sunshine Saturday as the magni
ficent Middies, stroked by rangy
Ed Stevens of Detroit, casually
pulled away for a length and a
half margin over runner-up Cornell
In three mile classic on glassy
Onondaga Lake.
Rusty Callow's superb swingers
were timed in 16:04.4 in a race in
which they led from the 200 yard
marker on.
The time was considerable be
hind the 15:08.1 and 15:29.6 clock
ings of the mighty Annapolis shells
of 1952 and 1953, but the sailors of
Saturday had no tailwind to push
them on. There was only a slight
breeze on the rare, perfect day
for rowing's "World Series."
Syracuse apparently clinched
this regatta as a site for the next
few years at least as each -of the
three races went off without a
hitch. It was the best of all of the
three regattas on Onondaga and
conditions couldn't have been bet
tered. Cornell nosed out Washington
and Wisconsin, the third and fourth
finishers, in a brisk battle for sec
ond. It was a great day all around for
the Bit- Red their biggest in the
regatta since 1930 as the lads j
from Cayuga swept the freshmen ,
two-mile and junior varsity three- ,
contests and the Jim Ten fcycfc ;
Memorial Team Trophy with 19
pouit-
Navy, with a third in the frosh ,
aAonnH in th I &vvM was i
second with 17 points. Washing
ton, last year's team winner, was
third with 14 points. It was the
Erst time the Huskies failed to win
t least one of the three races
since 1942.
"The pendulum has swung to the
East," moaned Coach Al Ulbrick
lon, the dour Dane of Washington.
'This was the greatest crew 1
iver coached," said Callow. "There
ughta be a law against gradua
tion." Cornell's formidable freshman,
winners of their two-mile jaunt
by IV lengths over Washington in
10:18.5, reminded Callow "of my
Navy crew when they first started.
They're the successors to Navy."
The Big Red yearlings were the
people's choice in their event but
Cornell i jayvee victory was a ma-1
Jor upset.
Representatives of RESERVE LIFE INSURANCE
COMPANY will try to call on all residents of
MARION, POLK and YAMHILL counties from
June 21 to July 31 to explain details of our well
known Hospitalization Plan.
We know that many residents of this area
wapt complete details on the protection offered
by Reserve Life. We have made special arrange
ments to give priority during this period to each
family that drops a post card requesting com
plete details.
WRITE
CALL 2-1774 Salem
Or watch for the representative in your area.
P. S. All families now covered by Reserve Life's protection
make a point of asking the representative about the new me
thod of increasing your coverage to meet present day needs.
In other Sunday doublehead-
ers, the San Diego r a are a
dumped the Seattle Rainiers
twice, 5-4 in both games, with
Earl Rapp driving in the winning
tallies in both tussles; Oakland
bounced Los Angeles twice, by
4- 2 and 6-3 scores, and Holly
wood's league leaders defeated
San Francisco on both occasions,
5- 4 and 8-1.
Spider Jorgensen s 11th in-
ning homer won the first game
for the Oaks. '
!
Pertlaa ) 3) Sacrament
o n u a onvjt
Austin j 12 2 1 DllmerJ 3 11
o l
BumklJ 3 0 0 3 CombaJ 3 11
RobbeJ 4 13 0 Jone.l 4 0 3
Judnlch.r 4 10 0 Brovia.r 4 13
KrenichJ S- 3 1 1 Hphry jn 3 0 9
Arft.l 4 0 7 1 Sheelyx 4 1 10
dldrtn.m 4 1 11 0 ScheniJ 3 2 2
j
o !
o !
o ;
GUdd.c
4 0 2 0 Myers. 4
2 0 11 Clcotte.p 1
10 0 1 Gablet.D 0
a-Glav.J 3
Bsae.p 0
b-Attyd 1
Schanz.p 0
Fiedler j
Floret.p
si!
Tatili 38 8 27 7 Totals 33
a Grounded out for Gaoles in am.
b Struck out for Besse In 7th.
Portland - 140 200 001
Sacramento 003 000 0003
AB
ft
EK BB SU
Fiedler 54)
Flores (3Vi)
Cicotte (3i)
Gable li
Besse (2)
Schanz ( 2)
W Medler.
(2). Basinski
22
11
17
7
3
0
S
2
0
1
3 2 1
0
0
0
1
0
4
1
0
0
L Cicotte.
(2). Robbe
R Austin
(2). Jud.
nich Gladstone. DilUncer. ComDs.
Brovia. E Schanz. HBP Schanz by
yiedler. LOB Portland 6. Sacramen
to 6. 2B Gladstone, Schanz. HR
Robbe. Brovia. Judnich. SB Austin.
RBI Krsnich (3). Austin. Robbe (3).
Judnich, Jones. Brovia (2). T 2:17. U
Somen. Walsh and Valenti.
Second game:
Portland ) 4) Saeramente
BHOA BHOA
Austin. 4 114 DUnr.l 3 0 11
BsinikU 4
Roboai 2
EgfertJ 1
Judnich .r 2
0
1
1
1
0
0 Z Schenzj 3
1 0 Jones.l 4
0 0 Brovia.r 2
1 1 Glav'cm 2
4 2
0
KrenichJ 3
1 AttydJn 1
Arft.l
Gldstnjn
Roaat.c
Heard. p
Adanft.p
3 2
1 Myers
0 Combs .3
0 Parte ,c
0 Patrik.p
1 Candl.p
a-Cicott
Daley j
b-Ricy,e
1
2 0
2 1
1 0
Gables. p 0
d-Hum.J 1
Schnz.p 0
Totals 26 7 21 10 Totals 21 21 11
a Doubled for Candini in 5th.
b Grounded out for Glaviano in
5 th.
d Singled for Gable in 6th.
Portland ooo 132 ft
sacramemo .
Herd (44)
Adjms (2i)
Patrick 4)
COO 130
AB
11
17
1
R
H ER BB SO
4 4 4
0 0 0
4 2 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
i-anaim I " J I
Daley ' (0 plus) 1
Gables (1) 4
Schanz (1) 3
0
W Adams. l-Daley.
I Myers,
Schenx (21. HBP Brovia by Adams.
LOB Portladn a. Sacramento 0. 2B
Robbe. Cicotte. Brovia. Eert. 3B
Jones. HR Judnich. Austin. SH
Judnich. RBI Judnich. Heard. Aus
tin (2). Arft. Brovia (3). Jones. DP
Jones ( unassisted : Combs and
Jones.T 1:50. U Walsh. Valenti and
Somen A 3.281.
Tide Table
Tides at Taft, Oregon
(Compiled by U S Coast and
Geodetic Survey, Portland. Ore.)
June Tim Height Time Height
High Waters Low Waters
21
2:47 ajn. 5.9 :51 a m. -0.4
4:38 pjft.
3:47 ajn.
3:20 pjn.
4:57 ajn.
:03 pjn.
Jl ajn.
8:4S pjn.
5.4
53
5 8
4.7
-i
4.2
8.6
10:16 pjn.
10:31 ajn.
11:29 pjn.
11:14 ajn.
2.4
0.1
1.9
0.7
23
24
12:47 ajn.
12:05 pjn.
1.3
13
mm
Reserve Life Insurance Company
2019 Fairgrounds Rood, Salom, Oregon
Oak Knoll Golf
Tourney Due
For Semifinals
Quarterfinals playoffs in the Oak
Knoll Spring Handicap golf tourn
ament were completed, for other
than one match, on Sunday and the
meet is now poised for semifinals
next Sunday.
In yesterday's play Dick Taylor,
winner of the second flight, defeat
ed Bill McArthur, first flight
champ, by a 2-up count. Joe Fitz
patrick, third flight winner and
Roy Wilson (4) are to play their
match on Thursday.
Mel Harper (5) downed Gary
Pugh (6) by a 4-3 score. Art May
(7) defeated Jim Reynolds (8) by
a 1-up count and Larry Ross (9)
eliminated Wilroer Lamb (10) by
a 7-5 count. All winners advance to
the semifinals.
There was also a hole-in-one ac-
complished at Oak Knoll Sunday,
SUfnley Jobe, superintendent of
schools at Burns, who is vacation-
ing in Salem, holed out his tee
shot on the No. 3 hole, a 113-yard-
er. He used a No. 9, iron for the
feat.
branny lies
Coast Record
SACRAMENTO W Granville
Gladstone of the Portland .Beavers
Sunday tid the Pacific Coast
League record for the most chanc
es by an outfielder in a nine-inning
game.
Eleven chances, all put-outs,
came his way in center field in
the first game of a Portland-Sacramento
doubleheader. That equalled
the record which Lou Almadon of
the defunct Missions established in
1934 and Bob Marquis of Portland
tied in 1933.
EAST TOPS WEST
HOUSTON. Texas UP Don Al
bert of Purdue and Frederick
Hovde of Princeton scored 4-under
par 68's in the rain Sunday as
their Eastern team came from be
hind to defeat the West in best
ball matches, preliminary to Mon
day's opening of the 57th National
Collegiate Golf Championship.
More rain was predicted for Mon
day, when a field of 147 players
from 40 colleges and universities
began the first 18-hole round of
qualifying play.
PCL Line Scores:
Seattle ......011 000 0204 0
San Diego - 010 000 2035 12 1
Evans, Kindsfather (7) Byrne (7)
and Orteig: Smith. Kerrigan (I)
Erautt (8) and Pocekay.
Seattle .O10 100 010 1004 8 0
San Diego - 200 000 010 1013 18 3
Widmar and Erautt. Orteig -(8):
Fannin. Kerrigan (8) Tho mason (10)
and Sandlock.
Los Angeles 010 001 000 002 10 1
Oakland .- -200 000 000 02 4 8 3
Spicer and Pramesa: Bamberger,
Ferrarese (9), and Landini. Neal (9).
Los Angeles 100 100 13 11 1
Oakland 020 004 6 8 1
Church, Moiaan ) and Evans:
Gettel. Shallock (7) and Neal.
San Francisco 101 010 100 t 13 3
Hollywood 110 002 0018 9 1
Ponce, Muncrief (9) and Tomay:
Lohrke. Donose (7) and Malone.
San Francisco 010 000 01 3 4
Hollywood 201 500 8 8 1
Chandler. Bradford (5) and Tie
sera: Strobel. Walsh (2). Main (5)
and Dorton.
Senators Win Sunday Pair,
Play Chiefs Again Tonight
(Continued
Rivas, a fine young prospect,
belted one of Del Sarto's casts
over the left-center wall in the
fifth for one of the runs.
. Jimmy Deyo made his playing
debut in this game, drove in a run
with a sacrifice fly and picked up
a single to start off the Salem
eighth. He's still quite a ways
from top playing condition, how
ever. Curve-baller Keith Bowman was
Brigg't opponent in the nightcap
and went behind 3-0 in the second
inning when he hit Perez atop the
head, which almost created a
rumpus inasmuch as Cuban Con
rado is getting mighty tired of
being tattooed by pitched base
balls, gave up a single to Harry
Warner, a sacrifice fly to Bob Kel
logg, a walk to Lou Scrivens. a
run-producing single to Ogden and
then watched helplessly as Briggs
squeezed in the third tally with a
flossy bunt.
Warner's walk, a sacrifice and
Ogden's long double to right net
ted the other Senator run in the
fourth.
For a guy who is forced to catch
every game, and is doing it with
Parent Wins Washington Title
TACOMA un Five times a runner-up
in nearly two decades,
Seattle's Erv Parent finally won
the Washington state amateur golf
championship Sunday with a
whopping 9 and 8 victory over fellow-townsman
Jim Mallory Jr.
Parent fashioned a brilliant one-under-par
70 on the morning 18-hole
round to take a 5-up lead, then
wrapped things up with an even
par performance over the 10 holes
it took to close it out in the after
noon. The titular match, scheduled for
36 holes, was played in a brisk
Oust
ft fl 36
survey shows that TV
This ntosssgo proparod by BUREAU OP ADVERTISING, American Nswspspor Publishers Association, and published
fullor understanding f newspapers by STATESMAN JOURNAL NEWSPAPERS.
from page 8)
a severe finger injury as well as
some bruises on other portions of
his anatomy. Ogden had himself
quite an afternoon.
Briggs chance for a shutout,
something no Senator pitcher has
been able to accomplish this sea
son, went blooey in the final in
ning when Jerry Greed, Don Stan
ford and Jake Helmuth bopped
out successive singles. The Chiefs
tried to make it another big threat
by then loading the bases with two
out, but Briggs got the dangerous
Jenney on a foul fly to Gene Tan
selli in right to end things.
Some sort of record might have
been set by the Salems in the twin
bill, as they produced no less than
11 sacrifices in the games, ix io
the opener. Three were of the fly
out variety . . . Tajiselli turned in
two strictly great plays, one in
the opener while playing third
base, and the other in the night
cap, while playing right field. . .
Nothing official yet heard from
Harv Storey about what he intends
to do, but it is known that Tri-City
is after him to sign a regular
player's contract, and he may do
so . . .
wind under a brilliant sun over j
Tacoma's Fircrest Golf Clubi
course, scene of the five-day state;
amateur tournament.
Mallory's trouble on the greens
was his undoing. The lanky former
University of Washington basket
ball player left himself a string of
putts between six and eight feet
all day long, and missed' all but a
couple.
Monmouth Park holds the world's
record for a daily double betting j
pool of $3fi6,378 set on August 8,
1953. I
SO ODD
For the fourth year in a row the
Cunningham 6c Walsh independent
"Videotown" urvey shows that
television set owners are spending
more time with their newspapers
than ever before!
It it clear that every medium
including TV, the newcomer
limply whets people appetites
for the full story.
In their newspaper they'll find
the whole story about the fight they
saw on TV last night . . . about the
entertainers they watched . . . the
debate they saw.. .or the educational
program that was so interesting.
Goin' After em
(Continued from page 8)
or no difference according to the hundreds of anglers who
swarm the lake waters every week-end. For some time bow ail
reservations for cabins and boats have been taken for the teng
Fourth of July week-end at East and Paulina and it would
appear that there wiU be thousands of anglers visiting that
area over the holiday week-end.
Klamath lake was poor last week with an unusual low catch
report coming from that area. The Williamson river was muddy
as was the Sprague which threw both streams off the good list.
Some fish were taken from Agency lake and the Wood river tut
even those waters were not up to standard . . .
From up Westport, Wash., way the reports are a bit on the
brighter side. Although the usual Grays Harbor drijzle hangs
on the salmon moochers are really finding the going red hot
Part of the week finds a strong westerly blowing however, and
the bar is a mighty rough piece of water. At least one boat
with three anglers found it rough. Cutting across the tip of
the south jetty (a very foolish stunt) proved to be the undo
ing. The three were tossed from their capsizing boat and only
because of the quick action by a charter boat skipper did they
live to tell about it
In face of rocks and rough water the charter boat rescued the
three and later the skipper received a Coast Guard citation for
bravery.
We'll be at Westport this coming week-end and hope to keep
our shirt-tail dry. Look out salmon!!!
Open Season
On Sturgeon
SAN FRANCISCO UTt California
now has a 12-month open season
on Sturgeon, the big fresh water
fish, for the first time since 1917.
In the 1870's the fish were so
abundant that markets became
glutted and lots were thrown back
into the rivers after only the ca
viar and bone marrow were re
moved. In 1917, when the commercial
catch dropped to less than 10,000
pounds, the State Legislature
made laws protecting the sturgeon.
Experts say the fish is a very
slow grower, with females not ma
turing until they are more than 20
years old
Even then they are only
INCREASES
i vilsJ j tl ,
V - ' j" "'Win1 A
I O r v I
No matter what the source of
news may be an angry dictator
across the sea, an earthquake in
Mexico, a tennis match in Austra
lia, a fire downtown, or a TV pro
gram in the living room it's the
newspaper that tells it all.
No wonder people are reading
their newspapers morel No wonder
advertisers are finding newspapers
more productive than ever before!
Chart is based on information
drawn from " Videotown 6" sur
vey by Cunningham & Walsh, New
The StcrteYmcnu Satan, Oregon
'Worst Drivers Are
i
Intelligent Ones'
BOSTON (JP) Signs of brains
being stupid about following
directions.
That is the conclusion of George
W. Flood who for 20 years has
been answering a barrage of trav
eler Questions at an information
j booth in Boston's subway,
j "The worst people to handle
! are the intelligent ones," said
Flood. "They don't pay any at
i tention."
three or four feet long and weigh
from 25 to 30 pounds.
The law now provides a fish
must be at least 40 inches long be
fore the angler can keep it. A 25-
year-old fish might have to be
i thrown backl
it 2
York, N. Y nationally known ad'
oertising agency conducting this sur
oey solely for the benefit of its clients:
YEARLY INCKIAS! OP TIMI SPENT
READING NEWSPAPERS
OVIt I !
ItSO
MO I I
SO 1.31 If SJ
Monday, June 21, 18548
Soviet Bosses
Watch Giant
Show hy AF
MOSCOW Prmler Georgi
Mo!?nkov. party boss Nikita Khru
r !?!' v and other Soviet leaders
vxt?!'?d the Soviet air force stage
a !'nt air show Sunday featuring
637 plrnes of all types.
Fore'sn observers looking for
something new were disappointed.
The Russians showed no new
planes and did not even repeat the
demonstration of their four-jet in
tercontinental bomber which was
flown over Red Square on
May Day.
The aircraft types in the demon
st.cllon ranged from four tiny radio-controlled
gliders to 162 two
jet bombers.
A quarter of a million Russians
were on Tushino Field to watch
the show, staged in observance of
the Soviet Union's annual Air
Force Day.
The show proved once more that
Russians are past masters in bal
let: The planes performed acro
batics at slow and high speeds and
intricate routines almost like a
classic dance in absolute time to
music from a 500-man band draws
j up on front of the reviewing stand
on the porch of the Chkalov Air
i Club.
Premier Malenkov was the dom.
inant figure in that assemblage
Sunday.
In 19S3. tractor accidents killed
45 Minnesota farmers and injured
2,000.
!55S
ten Sb
13 fSSM
12 OVft
I.S2
20OVft
lJI
in tho interests of