.Eug
ernes Opener From- enatoF9; 30
ene
J
Willamette Bearcats iNorthivest Conference Champs
Cleveland Drubbed
by Detroit 11-4
Tales
Champions, of the 1955 Northwest Conference baseball pennant
raceare' these Wilamette Bearcats. From left to right in front
row are Gary Shngarts, Harvey Neffendorf, Jerry McCallister,
Dave Gray, Ed Lipscomb, Alva Brown and Terry . Ziegelman.
Willamette
Six Records
Mull
Captures
Singles Title
WALLA WALLA Willamette's
. defending champion golf team re
gained the Northwest Conference
'title Friday with a team score of
645 for 36 holes at the Walla Walla
Country Club. .
Pacific was second with 667, fol-,
lowed by Linfield with 681, Whit-i
man 692, and Lewis and Clark 720.
College of Idaho did not enter.
Medalist honors were taken by
Bill Sundstrom. Willamette, with
157, one less than his team male.
Ward Sligh.
Mall Takes Title
The all-conference golf team,
based on scores in the tourney,
dound Sundstrom leading the list
with his 157, followed by Slight
with 158, Tom Loree .of Willam
ette with 159 and Bob Morton of
Linfield with 159.
WALLA WALLA UFl Bud Mull
of Willamette and the Linfield duo
of Fred Minnife and Andre Iseli
wrapped up Northwest Conference)
Tennis championships- Friday - in
matches on the Whitman College
courts.;
Mull upset defending champion
Dick Hahn of the College of Idaho
in the singles final. 6-2, 8-6. Minifee
and Iseli topped Jim Peterson and
Bob Ellerby of Portland's Lewis
and Clark in the feature- doubles
match. '
Results:
Mull defeated Don Berg, Pacific,
6-0, 6-4: Al Shulte. Linfield, de
feated Drew Hall, Lewis and Clark,
6-4. 6-2.
.Mull defeated Jim Young, Whit
man, 6-2, 8-6: Dick Hahn. C of I,
defeated Shulte, 10-8. 6-0; Mull de
feated Hahn. 6-2, 8-6.
Doubles Results
- Doubles:
Jim Peterson and Bob Ellerby,
L k C, defeated Charles Carter
and Ron Butler, Willamette, 9-7.
6-4; Minifee and Iseli. defeated
Roger Mielke and Dink Ellingham,
Whitman, 6-3, 8-6.
Peterson and Ellerby defeated
Cays and Jelderks, 6-3. 6-1; Min
ifee and Iseli defeated Zeltner and
Evans, 6-3, 6-2; Minifee and Iseli
defeated Peterson and Ellerby, 6-4,
6-2. v '
Hurts
Oregon Hopes
SEATTLE UP Illness eliminat
ed one of Oregon's top shotputters
Friday night and narrowed the
margin by which the Ducks are
expected to win the Northern Divi
sion track and field meet in the
University of Washington stadium
Saturday afternoon.'
The point-getter who will not be
"able to perform was Jack Moad,
stricken at Eugene with poliomyel
itis. He had been expected to take
second in his event for a needed
3 points. ,
The Ducks had been favored to
win the' meet with approximately
59'i points on the basis of pre
meet form charts, compared to 48
. predicted for Washington, They
benefited slightly by the withdraw
al of BiU Link. WSC 880 star who
suffered a pulled kg muscle, andj
" mi?" J"
uregon a posMuie an u nu
ington's SO.
; A Friday night meeting resulted
In a rfooieinn nnt tn hold mnmin?
: v. .ti
prciuiuiuures ui 7"- ' ' ZI
so iieia events wui sum m x;ou
p. m. and track (the mile race)
at 2 O'clock.
Washington State has been
tabbed , as the likely third place
winner. Idaho fourth and . Oregon
State fifth. The closeness of the
contesting teams in pre-meet fig-;
urirg leaves considerable room
for an all-around upset, however.
The weatherman has promised
It will be sunny with a slight
breeze, contributing to hopes for
new meet records. , , '
One new record is expected in
the 2 mile , event. The current
mark of 9:22.5 set by Denny Meyer
of Washington in 1954 has been
beaten already this year by Ore
gon's Ken Reiser with :20.4
mark
- . V -
Golfers, betters Snare MWC Crowns
Broken as State Track Meet Opens
YMCA 'Olympics' Today
The YMCA "Junior Olympics." a novel track and field
outing for boys of grade and junior high school age, take
place this morning in McCulloch Stadium. The grade school
boys will have at their portion of the meet starting at 9:30
a.m.. and the junior high lads will take over starting at 10:30
If boys haven't already registered for participation at the
YMCA. they may do so this morning at the stadium, before
9:30 o'clock.
Events for the grade schoolers will be 50 and 80-yard
dashes. 220-yard relay for four men. shot put relay for four
men, potato race, baseball throw, high and broad jumps,
wheelbarrow and 3-legged races. No boy may enter more
than three events.
The junior high lads will take part in 50. 100 and 220
yard dashes, hop-step-and-jump, high and broad jumps, base
ball throw. 410-yard relay, shot put relay, pole vault and low
hurdles. Boys are limtied to three events here also.
Seattle Raps Beavers. 11-2;
Briggs Bows to Padres, 5-2
SEATTLE UH Seattle battered
three Portland pitchers for 14 hits
Friday night to win a Pacific
Coast League baseball game, 11-2.
The win gave the tro teams a 2-2
Chiefs Nudge
Spokes, 11-10
WENATCHEE UFl - Wenatchee
pulled six runs out of four hits and
three walks in the ninth inning to
edge Spokane in a weird North
west League baseball game, 11-10,
Friday night
The tilt saw seven pitchers per
form for the two teams, five of
them coming in in the last two
innings.
Wenatchee started the scoring in
the sixth with one run but fell be
hind as Spokane added two each in
the seventh and eighth. The locals
moved ahead with a 4-run splurge
in their half of the eighth only to
have Spokane take over with six
runs in the ninth.
Wenatchee rapped three Spokane
pitchers in . its grand finale and
wound it all up with a slugfest en
thusiastically participated in by all
players from both teams. The fisti
cuffs started after Edo Vanni, Wen
atchee manager, was heard to say
one of his players had been tripped
by a Spokane man at third. Only
bruises resulted.
Spokane's Eddie Murphy got two
doubles during the tilt, one a three
runner in the ninth.
The Lewiston B rones collected
12 hits in bunches to take an 11
4 victory from the Yakima Bears.
Lewiston . 1. 030 012 10411 11 0
Yakima . 010 OOO 030 4 12 2
Franks and McNamara; Babbitt,
Wilkerson (6) and Luby.
Sookane OOO 000 22810 12 2
Wenatchee 000 001 04S 11 11 1T
Trierweiler. Crawford 8). Luedtke . t
(9). Red (9). Flanniran (9) and
Sheets: Marshall, lsringhaus (9) and
Jenney. :
Today's Pitchers
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Kansas City at Chigaco Shantz
(3-3 vi. Donovan (4-1). Cleveland
at - Detroit --Garcia 3-3) vs. Maas
42-1). Boston at Washington night
Brewer t0-) vs. Pascual (1-1). Balti
more at New York Wilson (2-3)
vs. Kucks (1-1)
i NATIONAL LEAGUE
Philadelphia at Brooklyn Mey
er (0-S) vs. Newcombe (5-0). New
York at Pittsburgh Maglie (3-3)
vs. Kline (2-4). St. Louis at Cincin
nati Jones (1-1) vs. Stale? (3-3).
Chicago at 'Milwaukee Hacker
I (2-2) v. Nichota (3-1).
Senator Swat:
(Last night's fame not included:)
ab h 2b 3b hr rbi pet
Robinson 58 23 1 2 4 10 .397
TanseUi 69 26 S 3 4 20 .377
Frailey , 71 . 26 1 2 5 27 .368
Krause 44 1 . 2 . 1 0 : it J64
Traversi 47 16 t t 0 1 .340
Steinagel 74 25 8 1 2 IS .338
AgosU 81 25 2 2 0 10 .309
Shields 27 8 1.1 t 3 .296
iDunn 35 10 t t t 2 .281
Luby 14 4 1 t t 1 .283
Koept 66 16 3 t 1 IS .242
Niro IB t t t t t .000
Pitching:
g ip w 1 so bb er
Walsh t lt'a a t 13 12
King 5 16 1 t 4 16 I
Wortham 3 15i 2 1 3 10 4
Tucker t 18, 1 1 IS 27 13
Whitson 4 23j 1 1 IS 23 21
Dials ... S 413 3 4 2 IT It
Fraacia I 1 1 13 23 11
i IE
in
'
la back row (1-r) are Mishashl Watanabe, Bill Nelson, Wes Hal
colm, Pete Reed, Vic Backlund, Jerry Kangas, Fred Butler, Dan
Feller, Dale Patton, Brad Lacas and Coach John Lewis. (Willamette
U photo).
! Q
split for the four games played
in the current series.
The Rainiers made, a three run
takeoff 'in the first inning. Carmen
Matird ' and Monty' Basgall singled
and Bill Glynn walked. Bob Bal
cepa added another single for two
runs in. A sacrifice and a walk
followed before Joe Ginsberg skied
to left, scoring Glynn.
They doubled the count in the
second, using virtually the same
combination of players. Mauro sin
gled, Basgall walked, Glynn tri
pled, Balcena singled, just like
that.
Portland sliced the lead a bit
with single tallies in the third and
fifth innings. The first came on a
single by Artie Wilson; Carl Powis
was safe on an error and Dick
Whitman forced Powis. Joe Taylor
skied to left to tally Wilson.
Successive singles by Whitman,
Joe Taylor and Ed Mickelson ac
counted for the second. The sin
gles made it 24 successive games
in which Whitman has gained a
hit.
Seattle added two in the fifth
on three singles, a force out. a
wild throw and a wild pitch. The
bum tosses were by Portland's re
liefer. Bob Alexander.
The margin went to 10-2 in the
sixth. Mauro singled in Gene Ver
ble and three! successive walks
added another.! The eleventh run
was put over in the seventh.
In other PCL games, rookie
John Carmichael outpitched John
ny Briggs and San Diego reared
past Sacramento 5-2 for the Pads
seventh straight win. San Fran
cisco beat Los; Angeles 5-3, and
Oakland bowed to Hollywood, 7-2.
Portland 001 010 000 2 S 3
Seattle 330 022 lOx 11 14 1
Lint. Alexander (2). Han (6) and
Robertson; Duren. Oldham (8) and
Ginsberg.
San Diego ;.. 400 001 03O8 12 0
Sacramento 000 010 0012 9 1
Carmichael and Bailey; Briggs,
Brazle (8) and Sheely.
A.i..
V?rl!.i!
020 010 0003 7 3
San Francisco 102 110 OOx 5 11 0
Piktuzis. Pyecha (5). Kuncl and
Fanning; Bearden and Tornay.
Oakland 100 001 0002 0
Hollywood 010 020 31x 7 10 1
Cain. Bamberger 47). Besana (8)
and Neal; Hogue, Garber (6) and
HaH,
Vikings, Saxons Bow
In Golf Tournaments
Eugene clinched the new Wil
lamette Valley Golf League Fri
day at the-Salem Golf Club by
winning one of the two round
robin tourneys held there.
In the first tourney, Eugene
defeated South Salem, 15-0, and
Corvallis, 11-4, and then South
Salem and Corvallis tied with IVi
each in the final round.
In the other tourney, won by
Albany, Cottage Grove defeated
North Salem, 11-4, Albany defeat
ed North Salem, 13-2, and then
Albany defeated Cottage Grove,
14-1-.
Gordon Marlatt of Eugene and
Terry Shannon of Albany were
co-medalists with 73s.
SPRINGFIELD TRIUMPHS
EUGENE un Springfield de
feated Willamette of Eugene 4-3
Friday and will represent district
& in the Oregon high school base
ball playoffs at Albany next week
end.
'vi
! -fl 5-
Finals Slated
For Saturday
CORVALLIS (fl Six records
were established Friday in quali
fying action for the 29th annual
Oregon High School Track and
Field championships here.
Two of the marks were in the
A . division and the others in the
B division for smaller schools.
In A competition. St. Helens'
Duane Marshall, defending cham-
pion, bettered the shotput record "i" ruium anuweu mcy nc
with a toss of 58 feet, 2 V inches.1 5uite ready to be buried by
w. ij t i iKoofirnr PrnAlvn If uoo t Via
. The old mark of 57 feet 8" j inches
was set two years ago by Jack
Moad.
Amble Tops Mark
Albany's Bob Amble broke his
own record of a year by nearly
five feet with a discus throw of
161 feet. 6 Vi inches.
Record setters in the B division
were Don Trautman, Concordia,
the 440-yard dash, 51.9 seconds;
Martin Shark, Eagle Valley, high
jump. 5 leet, 11 Vx inches; nob
Babb, Days Creek, javelin,- 187
feet,. 6 . Inches; Bob Duncan,
Moro. , 180-yard low hurdles, 20.9.
Medford Favorite
Medford, the defending cham
pion, appeared to be the favorite
after Friday s qualifying heats.
Medford qualified 10 men in nine
of the 14 events. .
Roosevelt of Portland qualified
six.
Finals will be run off Saturday.
Salem Voted
A-2 Playoffs
CORVALLIS ( The Oregon
school Activities Assn.'s delegate
assembly Friday named sites for
the three 1936 high school basket
ball tournaments and voted 11-10
to continue high school baseball
championship playoffs in 1936.
All the prep basketball tourneys
will be run off in the spring vaca
tion week March 12-17. Baker will
get the class B tourney, Salem the
A-2 and Eugene will keep the A-l
playoff.
Each of the eight districts in
the A-l tournament will be repre
sented by its two top teams. Pott
land, which has two districts, will
be limited to three teams. 'The
other berth will be granted to the
winner of a special playoff be
tween districts S and 8.
The assembly voted 15-5 to sub
mit an amendment to eliminate
football playoffs but that proposed
association constitution change
cannot be considered until the next
meeting, scheduled for November.
Playoffs will be under way . by
then.
The 15-5 vote was not taken to
indicate, that much sentiment for
eliminating football playoffs, a
spokesman said. The vote merely
was to have the amendment draft
ed for later consideration.
Lons Island Set
For Hoop Return
BROOKLYN 1 Long Island
University, one of the schools
rocked by the 1951 basketball scan
dals, will return to the game in
the fall of 1956, Admiral Richard
L. Conolly (ret).), president, an
nounced Friday.
Speaking at a dinner sponsored
by former LIU athletes, Adm. Con
olly said he would not permit the
team to enter into high pressure
basketball that brought it promi
nence for two decades.
WSC Cougars Topple
Idaho Vandals, 9-5 ' '
MOSCOW, Idaho W Idaho,
struggling through one of the worst
seasons in memory, fell before
Washington State 9-5 Friday for
its 12th straight Northern Division
baseball loss.' .
The Cougars got to Vandal star
ter Aubry Stevens for seven runs
on eight hits in the first two in
nings. Reliefer Tom Vopat allowed
only two runs and his successor,
Roger Ranta, threw no-hit ball for
Idaho in the final three Biniogs.
BrooklynBows
To Phils, 5-3
Yanks Whip Orioles;
Giants Squash Bucs
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Cleveland Indians' Ameri
can League lead was trimmed to a
thin half-game Friday night when
the Tribe took an 11-4 lacing from
the Detroit Tigers and the second
place New York. Yankees whipped
the Baltimore Orioles, 7-5.
The Tigers broke the game wide
open with five runs in the seventh
against the Indians. Until then
things had been fairly dose, al
though neither starter Bob Lem
on of the Tribe and Billy Hoeft of
the Tigers lasted beyond the
fourth.
Lemon hung on until the-third,
gave up four runs and was charged
with the defeat. Al Aber, the third
and cleanup man of the Tiger hurl
ers, was the winner. A crowd of
30,004 was on hand.
Tnrley Wins Game
Bob Turley received credit for
his seventh victory of the cam
paign for the Yanks, but it did not
come the qasy way. He wasn't on
the premises at the end. During
his tenure, he walked nine and
struck out only three. Manager
Casey Stengel decided he had
enough when he passed the first
four batters to face him in the
sixth.
By the time Jim Konstanty got
the side out, the Orioles had edged
to 6-5. But he and Tom Morgan
held them at bay the rest of the
way.
In other American League action
Art Ditmar tossed a smooth two
hitter against the Chicago White
Sox to lead the Kansas City A's to
a 1-0 triumph, while the Washing
ton Senators, behind the hurling
of Bob Porterfield and Johnny
Schmitz, turned back the Boston
Red Sox, 3-1.
Brooklyn Beaten
In the National League, the Phil-
beating Brooklyn, 5-3. It was the'
Brooks fourth loss in a row and ;
cut their lead to 6Vi games be
cause the second place New York 1
Giants squashed Pittsburgh, 6-3.
Cincinnati routed St. Louis, 10-7,
and the Chicago Cubs defeated the
Milwaukee Braves, 4-2.
The Phillies collected enough
runs in the first three innings to
drop the Dodgers, tapping Billy
Loes for two each in the second
and third. Andy Seminick added
an insurance home run in the
ninth, Robin Roberts, who has won
half the Phillies 10 decisions, went
all the way for the winners. The
Phils had lost IS of 16 games be
fore Friday night.
Bill Taylor, another of the Gi
ants' pinch hitters extraordinary,
broke up the ball game when he
swatted a home run with two
mates on to break a tie. The blow
came on the first pitch by Max
Surkont and sent the Buccos down
to their eighth straight loss. The
Giants had to come from behind
to tie it with two in the seventh.
Reliefer Hoy Wijhelm was the
winner.
Cincinnati trounced the Cards
the easy way, collecting six runs
on two hits in the eighth inning.
The big blow of the inning was
a bases-loaded home run by Smok
cy Burgess. The triumph was the
Reds' fourth in a row and snapped
a five-game winning streak of the
Cards,.
Santee A?ain
Fails at Mark
By BOB MYERS
LOS ANGELES Ifl - Talkative
Wes Santee made another assault
on the 4-minute mile Friday night
but the best he could do was 4:03.5
in one of several disappointing
episodes in the 15th annual Colise
um Relays.
A huge crowd of 56,173 turned
out despite weather that turned
from chilly to cold, and witnessed:
A flop in the heralded 880-yard
run, with favored Amie Sowell of
Pittsburgh fouled out of conten
tion, the winner disqualified and
the second place finisher, fresh
man Ron Delaney of Vilianova
crowned the victor in 1:50.5.
Seven false starts In the 100-yard
dash, sending Andy Stanfield of the
New York Pioneer Club and John
Haines of Penn to the sidelines.
Jim Golliday of Northwestern, 29,
won, as expected, in the non-excit
ing time of 9.6.
Collapse of the anticipated re
newal of rivalry for top honors
between Lou Jones, ex-Manhattan
quarter-miler. and Jim Lea of the
Los Angeles Athletic Club, the two
fought it out and both bettered the
world record for 400 meters in the
Pan American Games in March.
Friday night they fought it out
for second place honors as both
were decisively beaten by Kevan
Gosper, the Australian runner now
at Michigan State. The time was
46J.
RAMS TAKE CROTCH
FOREST GROVE tf Central
Catholic won the district 3-A high
school baseball championship Fri
day by shutting out Banks 4-0.
Camellias
Rhndodendrnns
For Specimen or Hedge. .
RII01IFILH ACRES
2497 Hollywood Dr.
Phone 2-2182
Statesman, Salem, Ore., Saturday, May 21; 1955-(Scc 2M
Title Clincher, Today . .
Beavers, Ducks Split
In 1J-P" Dpubleheader
EUGENE W3) Oregon and Oregon State split a baseball
doubleheader Friday prolonging for one more day the Pacific
Coast Conference Northern Division baseball race.'
Oregon, which is shooting for its third straight Northern Divis
NORTHWEST LEAGUE
W L Pet W.L pet.
Wentch 1 5 .762 Yakima 9 10 .474
Eugene S .571 Lewiston S 12 .400
Tri-City 12 10 Mi Spokane 6 17 .261
Salem 11 10 .524
Friday's results: at Eugene 3. Sa
lem o: at Wenatchee 11. Spokane 10;
at Yakima 4, Lewiston 11.
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
W L Pet. - W t. Pet.
Sn Dieg 29 16 .644 Sn Fran 21 23 .477
Seattle 26 20 .563 Oaklnd 20 23 .465
Los Ant; 24 21 33 Sacram 19 25 .432
Portlnd 20 21 .488 Holywd 17 27 .372
Friday's results: at Seattle 11. Port
land 2; at Hollywood Y Oakland 2;
at Sacramento - 2, San Diego S; at
San Francisco S, Los Angeles 3.
AMERICAN LEAGUE.
W L Pet. W L Pet.
Clevland 21 11 .636 Boston 15 20.429
Nw Y'rk 20 11 .645 Washgtn 13 18 .419
Chicago 18 12 .600 Kn City 13 19 .406
Detroit 18 15 .545 Baltmre 20 22 .313
Friday's results: At Chicago 0. Kan-
fas City 1; at Detroit 11. Cleveland
4: at Washington 3. Boston 1; at New
York 7, Baltimore 5
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pet W L Pet.
Brooklyn 23 8 .758 Milwauk 1717.500
Nw Y'rk IS 14 .563 Cincinn 1311.419
Chicago. 19 15 .559 Pitsbgh 1121.344
St. Louis 15 14 .S17 Philadel 10 21.323
Friday's results: At Milwoukee 2,
Chicago 4; at Cincinnati 10. St. Louis
7: at Brooklyn 3. Philadelphia 5; at
PitUburf h 3, New York 6.
Bearcats Get
Bid by NCAA
Willamette's Bearcat baseball
team was given an NCAA bid to
the district 8 West Coast play
off Friday in a telephone mes
sage from the NCAA office at
Los Angeles. The Bearcats will
join in a tourney at Fresno,
Calif., with three other at-large
teams. The tourney winner then
will meet the Pacific Coast Con
ference champs.
Other teams in the Fresno
tourney are San Jose State, Pep-
perdine and Fresno State. They
will play next Friday and Satur
day to determine who "will meet
the PCC champ.
Willamette Coach johnny
Lewis was attending the North
west Conference meeting at
Walla Walla Friday and was not
available to comment on his
team's selection. The Bearcats
won the NWC title with a 12-3
conference record. Their season
record is 14-6.
Emeralds Shine:
Salem () (3) Eugene
AB R H AB R H
Dunn.m 4 0 0 Jackson Jt 1 11
Krause.2 4 0 0 Hesse.l v 4 0 0
RobinsonJ 3 0 0 Gladstne.m 42
Tanselli. 4-0 1 Dapper.c 2 0 0
Frailey.r 3 0 0 HuffmanJ 3 0 0
AgostaJ 3 0 0 Toso.l 3 0 0
Koepf.c 3 0 1 Thompsnj 110
TraversiJ 2 0 0 Romeroj 3 0 1
Wortham.p 10 0 Storti.p -211
Walsh.p 2 0 0
Total 2S 2 Total . 24 1 S
Salem 000 000 000 0 2 3
Eugene ..... 100 010 10 3 5 2
Winning pitcher: Storti (2-0). Losing
pnener: wortnam (2-2).
IP AB H R Er So Bb
Wortham 4'i 13 3 2 0 3 5
Walsh 3i 14 ' 2 1 0 1 2
Stort I 29 1 0 0 8 2
Wild pitches: Walsh; Passed Balls:
Koepf: LOB: Salem 4. Eugene 5. Er
rors: Traversi 2. Hesse. Tanselli,
Huffman. 2BH: Tanselli. Etort. RBI:
Gladstone. Romero Sac:: . Storti.
Double plays: Tanselll-Traversi (2),
Dunn - Tanselli - Traveris: Traversi-Tanselli-Traversi.
Krause-Tanselli-
Traversi; Romero-Toso. Att.: 2.200
est T: 1:53. Umpires: Bogle and
Bergmann.
Tom Brewer, right handed
hurler for the Boston Red Sox,
attends Elon (N.C.) College dur
ing the off-season. He is major-'
ing in accounting.
A
NEVER BEFORE
At Such a
LOW, LOW PRICE
A Complete .
Watch Overhaul
. ' (Guaranteed 1 Year) ;.
Only $5.53v
Weisfield's
305 No. Liberty
Salem,' Oregon '
ion championship, won the open
er 7-1 but dropped the nightcap
15-7.
Oregon could have clinched the
title by winning the second game.
It will take two Oregon State vic
tiries in Saturday's doubleheader
at Corvallis to give OSC the title.
One victory will give Oregon the
championship.
Shaw Leads Batten
George Shaw, who is trying to
make up his mind whether he will
play professional baseball or foot-(fifth. Manager Hugh Luby re
ball, led Oregon at the plate in I placed Wortham with Bill Walsh.
the first game with three hits, in-
eluding a double and two runs
batted in in his four trips. In the
second game he had two for three,
including a double.
Terry Maddox, winning his fifth
Northern Division game against r.o
losses, scattered six Oregon State
hits in the opener.
Jay Dean's sixth inning homer
over the centerfield bank was the
Beavers' only run.
Four Oregon errors and six hits.
including a double by Frank Love-
joy, accounted for. eight Oregon
State runs in the fifth inning of
the second game.
Oregon used five pitchers. The
loss was charged to starter Bill
Blodgett.
Joe Epperle, winning pitcher,
had three hits in four times at
bat, including a double.
Colts Want Show w
Don Kellett, president of the
Baltimore Colts professional foot
ball squad, is here to urge Shaw
to join his team.
Shaw has said he won't an
nounce his decision until after Sat
urday's games, at least
First game:
Oregon State 000 001 000-1 6 0
Oregon 004 102 OOx 7 12 0
Guidotti, Mohler (6) and Love
joy; Maddox and Marlett.
Second game 7 innings:
Oregon State 103 082 115 16 1
Oregon 000 040 3 7 9 4
Epperle and Love joy; Blodgett,
Maddox (5), Lundell (5). Siles. (6).
Olson (7) and Marlett, Bowen (7).
Bout Ends in Draw
NEW YORK (fl - Ramon
Fuentes and Gil Turner fought
head to head for 10 stirring rounds
Friday night to finish in a draw
at Madison Square Garden. Fuen
tes weighed 15374. Turner 154 J.i.
HAKE FRIEIIDS VflTH
WILD BIRDS
AUDUBOII
BIRD CM!
tird-lovort find f
ducotionol fvn ottrochng
wild songbirds with tha ,
Audubon Bird Coll. Simple
to M. Twist it . . . ""d
heor them onswor bockl
Hondmod of kirehwood
and pewtor . . . fl'
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Salem Suffers
First Shutout
Bill Dials to Hurl
Second Game Tonite
By AL LIGHTNER "
Statesman Sports Editor
EUGENE (Special) The
Salem Senators turned in five
double plays in their Northwest
League series opener with Eu
gene here Friday night, yet man
aged to commit three errors
which rendered all the Eugene
runs unearned in a 3-0 setback.
It was the first shutout loss
the Senators have absorbed this
season. It was nobly admin-
istered by righthander George
Storti, a hard-throwing six-footer
owned by the Boston Red Sox
who limited the Senators to two
hits, struckout eight and walked
only two.
The Salem hits were by catch
er Harvey Koepf who singled in
the third and by shortstop Gene
Tanselli who lined a double off
the right field fence with two
out in the fourth.
Salem had two men on base
only once in the ball game, in
the eighth inning, but Storti
stood up to the challenge and
stopped cold what might have
been a run-producing rally.
John Wortham Starts !
John Wortham started for Sa
lem and yielded reluctantly a
run in the first inning which was
set up by an error. .When Eu
gene threatened again in , the
his huge righthander. Walsh
stopped the rally that produced
one run. Then m tne seventh
Storti doubled with two out and
scored when Tanselli errored on
Ron Jackson's ground balL
- Eugene had only five hits, two
of them by Granny Gladstone.
Second game in the series
opens here Saturday night at 8
p. m. and will be followed by a
doubleheader Sunday afternoon.
Bill Dials will seek his fourth
win for the Senators against Eu
gene in the Saturday game.
Over 100 Salem rooters were
on hand to cheer the town Sen
ators, many having come down
o n a chartered bus.
Players Released -
It was also announced Eriday
night by Luby that two players
had been released and another
was to be added to the Salem
roster. Released outright was
veteran catcher Joe Niro, Re
turned to Sacramento was Bob
Tucker, lefty pitcher wbo has
been suffering from wildness.
The Sacs will send him to Chan
nel City (Ventura) of the Califor
nia League.. . .. ... ,
The new player is Dan Holden;.;
who will join the Senators Satur
day. Holden is a veteran who
played for Vancouver of the
WIL last year. Holden, who can
play an position, has been play
ing with Tri-City this year until .
being acquired by Salem.
GRANTS PASS VICTOR -
MEDFORD UH Grants Pass
blanked Klamath Falls 8-0 Friday
to clinch the district 6-A-l high
school baseball championship. i
DON'T LET THIS
HAPPEN TO YOU...
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Brakes Now!
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