Brooklyn's
Saxon Trackmen
3 Events
Captured
By Norval
Er skine Handcuffs
Win District Meet
NOKTHWFST I F AC I S
W I. Pi;. W L Pet
Euiene . I 1 .727 Wenatrn i I AM
aklma I 3 .77 S V.FM . 5 VS
Ia-itiv fi 3 f7 Spnkane 3 I 27
Tri-l'ltv 5 I
Saturdas's reulti. at Salem Lew
itinn ram: at Wenatrhee 4. Tri-Clty
3; at Spokane 7. Yakima I.
pciric coast i.KAcrr
(H)resoni$tatc5ittah Senators
Play Pair
w ;
W L Pet
Los An it n san Dg t 17 4U South Salem Hieh Saxons 11 .
8 Fran 17 is iii Vanrov io :2 ju and field meet here Saturday, and
SatuitlaVj results: it Seattle ! ouatiliod fnr 10 herth in n.t
Vlks Place 2nd Statesman, Salem, Ore.iju May13, '56 (Sec. IV)-21
With Albany Srcl
CORVALLIS - (Special! - The
They'll Go to State Meet
Portland 1: at l.na Angelea
Firncisco 7: .it S.icramento
Diefo 7 at Vancouver 2-8.
wood S-2.
l' san eek's stale meet. Coach Lee Gus-iiuiiy-
tafson's Saxons scored 141 points
on a 10-8-6-4 2-1 basis (or six avail-
americ a v I kacii . able places in each event.
n York is ii S2 Wahifi ll 12 7 Ken Hunt's North Salem Vikings
o.vind i:v .sis Baitimr ii 13 . finished second, with 7 1'5 points'
S'ST Vi r,y $ "1 qualified for seven berths in
Saturday s result: At New York 0, "he State finals. The Vlks a I. SO had
Baltimore 1: at Cleveland J. Knn (he dav's outstandin athlete in '
little Jimmy Norval. who won
NATIONAL LKAil'K '", . " u" ul
w i. Prt w i, p,t relay team that tied with South
viiuauk a 4 !2 Pituh inio .son Salem in the thrilline finale for
a i i-M , -
the meet
City J: at Detroit f Chicago 7;
Washington 12. Boston 9.
St l.uis 13 7 ,M N. York fl 12 42I
Clnrinn 13 .! CMraan 5 11 nm
Brnklyn 11 .550 Phlladel 5 14 2SJ
Saturday's result": At Brooklyn 3.
New York 0: at Pittsburnh . Phtla
delphia 5: at ("hlratn 14. St lamia
10; at Cincinnati 10. Milwaukee
Chiefs Nudge
Braves 4 to 3
Albany was third with 80 Ui :
points, but will have only two;
hopes at the state meet. Bob Gat-!
lin in the mile and Ray Baldwin in
the 8fW. Both were winners Satur
day. Four From Corvallis
Corvallis scored 55 15 points
and has four state meet places,
three of 'em belonging to Big Jim
Stinnette, the Spartans' weight star
and hurdler. Stinnette won the high
VM-'.WTOIKK -Hold to only hurdles and shot put, and was sec
three hits. Wenatohee made up in nd in the discus. The other Cor
fancy base running what it lacked valfis place will be filled by John
at the phte in defeating Tri-City, Hunter, who tied with Fred Sten-4-1.
in a Northwest League base- hauser of Bend" for the high jump
ball same here Saturdav night, j victory here.
It was the Chiefs' sixth straight Bend scored 49 points and will
wn and gave them a 2 0 series sfr,d 440 winner Norm Pease,
edce over the Braves. Stcmhauser, Shelby Blevins in the
Wenakhec's winning run in the shnt put and Pease in the 220 to
eighth w as scored wilhotit a hit. inP state linals.
I.arry Segovia walked and ad- Sweet Home tallied 12 2 5 points
vanced to second on a sacrifice. ad qualified only Bill Ford. sec
He scored while Trif'ity was try- ond paCe winner in Saturday's
ln to execute a aounie piay. sec- javelin event.
ond lo firM
The Braves' John Caruso yield
ed only three safeties, but lost
the decision to John Marshall who
gave up but five hits himself.
In the other NWL game playd
Saturday night, Herman Lewis
helled one over the right field
fence in the eighth inning to give
Yakima an 8 7 win over Spokane
before a chilly 650 fans.
National league
Lebanon scored nine points here
hut failed to qualify a man for the
finals.
Patterson Wins Hurdles
South Salem winners Saturday
were Bruce Patterson in the low
hurdles. Brad Krueger in the dis
cus and the relay quartet of Pat
terson, Jack Scott, Bob Gates and
Bill McDonald. Second-placers who
also qualify for the itate meet
were Patterson la the low barriers,
Jim Rawlins In the 100, Loren
Blaco in the mile, Gates In the 440,
Bob Sterrette in the 880, Dan
Moore in the broad jump and Dave
a,
1
u .'is v,'-J'-. -r-'--
w A ft V Si 1
I i W - TJ'. 11 II I VI al
am . ... mmr -M JT Wk M '.
At Waters
Rain Douses (Hash;
4Se ries Prize Today
By AL LIGHTNF.lt
SUtmmaa Sports tdito
- The- Slm Serutors nd Lw
iston Broncs agaia failed to get
their Northwest League baseball
series under way last night at
Waters Field, as a whopper of a
rain shower at shortly after sev
en o'clock cascaded on the prem
ises. Not even the infield tar
ipulins could save this one, and
it went alongside the Friday
nighter as one that will have to
be made up later in the season.
If it stops raining today, the
tarn should have thiM in
good shape for the 1:31 o'clock
douhleheader. II will take a
lot of the gloomy moisture to
wash out the twin bill, for
Generalissimo Luby plans get
lag it la "if we have to wear
boots."
Today is a big one for the Sen
Philadelphia . 000 0.10 002- 1 0
Ptttunumll 002 004 00- 1.1 I
nnkr DlMatt i It I inrf Raitiinirli'
rnend. Littietieid t!. Kmg ii and i Merchant in the pole vault.
Krvl" ; i Jim Backstrand in the javelin
Nw York "ono'ono ooo o o o and Colin Morse in the vault, along
Brooklyn .. ooi ooo 20- 3 fl Norval. Don Harris, Herb
wnnniniMon. wnssom (ti ana
V,tt F.rcUin And Tamnanella
lav. were nrsi piace winners lor
t I.OIIU
Chiiaen
Ml7flt. McDsnifl i3i. .1
Jarkion tfi) and Sfiuth.
ValentirietU )9l and Chitl
Graves and Dale Drake in the re
' lav. were first Dlace winners for
ml ma io't 14 is o Norlh Sa,em Saturday, along with
nne nip inree victories postea ny tne
Rush and swj(t 'orval. Don Harris in the
Giants With No-Hitter
Ermine Makes It Rough on the Giants IDodgerS
7;.Nal) 3-0
-
Victory
. f V t
$$?t ')
i cs a'1 I I x
1 v - .r,'r''ii,.vA-j44;vJ ;
if kr-z?
I, Ath.- llr ..-rtlW-.tI ..,. -ajfi.W .-JMfc iV4 iJW.
Both Jimmy Norval, left, of North Salem's VikloRs and Bob Gates,
right, or the Sooth Salem Saxon Saturday qualified for the state
track aid Add meet at Oregon State the coming weekend. Norval
won firsts la the 1(W, 22 and broad Jump, and ran aa the relay team
that tied with South Salem for first place. Gates was second la the
district 44 and also ran oa the Saxoa relay quartet.
LC Loses 2nd Tilt . . .
Bearcats Split Pair
In Final NWC Games
tors' season ticket holders, for ,
the ball club's special "World
Series Prize" is to be given away
between games of the double bill.
It is again reminded that
nlv those who have-paid for
their season tickets, as well as
those who are paying for them
a the installment plan, will
he eligible to win the prire.
The club will provide an all
expenses paid trio, for two. to
the 195S World Series, to the
lucky person today.
The season tickets are still
available and will be until draw
ing time today. Persons wantin
them ran secure them at the ball
park ofifre either before or dur- j
in? the first game of the twin I
bill. I
Ufty Jerry fade (l t and j
either lftv Marion Owdell i
1-1) or Righthander A a d y
George U-l) will pitch in the
douhleheader for the Senators.
Manager Wilis l.ayne's Lewis
ton choices will he Buss Agne
(?-0), a leftv, and Don Fornall
10), a righthander.
The Broncs have won five of
their first eight league games
this season, while the Senators
have won five, lost eight. Hie
Salems will be out to do some
thing about that "eight" today,
for the setbacks have reached
eight in a row.
Lewiston leaves town after
today's scheduled pair, and
Don Pries' TrlCilv Braves are
due in Monday night to open
four-game stand.
John Warren, the new outfield
er from Sacramento, checked in
NEW YORK-Bi-eaklya Dodgers pitcher Cart Erskiae grits his teeth as he sends ball plaiewardi U Whiter
taekmaa af the New York Glaats otarial sixth taaiag of Ebbeto Field game Saturday. Erskiae led
Dodgers to 1-4) wla as bo hurled second ao-hitter of his major leagu career. He wanted two and iaaaed
three. He pitched other ao-hiltrr of Ms career against uncage tans jaae i. ism. iir wirepaoioi
tandy Races 3:59.1 Pile
Aussie Leaves
Bailey Runs 4.-Q6.4 Mile .
Oregon's Ducks Snare
3rd Straight ND Meet
EUGENE, Ore. UP The University of Oregon won Its third
mnwciitiv Pacific Coast Conference Northern Division track and
field championship Saturday, with Oregon's Jim Bailey providing the j cracked the four minute barrier
Field Behind
By BOB MYERS
FRESNO. Calif, lit Austral,
ia's matchless John Landy con
tinued his mastery of the mile
Saturday night, winning a special
race at the distance in 1:59 1.
The 26-year-old flying school
master from Melbourne thus
hiehlisht
Bailey, the Australian who cracked the four-minute mile in beat
ing John bandy last wees, louna
The Willamette Bearcats and the Lewis and Clark Pioneers closed ''k(,'v
lit Norval. Don Harris in tne " "" " , r 7. . w n . l , j- Hiv's hill
, hurdles was the only second out ,n,,r Northwest Conference baseball seasons at Mc-Culloch Stadium "'J'
Milwaukee 100 200 .TOO- S 11 2
Cincinnati 711 000 01"- in 1.1 2
Ruhl. Johnson lit. Nichols t2i.
Tr,,lMiri?e i4i. Rohinton i.Si. Jolly
("i and C'ranrtall. Rice (41: La-rrn'-r
Black iti and Burgea-s.
low
place winner for the Viks.
6 Firsts for Viks
North Salem had six firsts in all.
: (Continued on page 22, col, 2)
Deer Hunters
Snap Records
Whilden Runs
9.2 Century
Saturday by splitting a pair of close games. The Pioneers took the
first game 3 to 2 and the Bearcats nabbed the second one 2 to 1.
Xho results left Lewis and Clark
fourth in the final conference
standings with a 7-1 record and
Willamette fifth with a 5-10 mark.
.Neither team could get more
than four hits in eilher fame.
Gary Siickley douhlcd home LC's FAYETTEVILLF., Ark. (A
! first run in the second inning and Bobby Whilden ran 100 yards in
'Ihe Pioneers added the next two 92 to better the world's record
Smashing all previous records, , th(, sixlh Saturday to furnish the only rec-
ping total of 134.0H6 animals during k an) frd mH dominaU,d
the lfl55 seasons, it was announced "'hiiiii: " T.v!lc
. 1 .. name ramp in the seennr! inninp. " texas.
aiiirnav nv me ureson i,ame f
Finstenvald
Regains Lead
ST. LOUIS - Dow Finster
wald, up-and-coming Ohio pro,
jumped back into undisputed pos
session of first place Saturday at
the three-quarter mark in the
2.'i,000 St. Louis open with a 54
hole score of 205, 11 under par.
Finsterwald shot a three-under-par
69 on his third round to put
with earlier sub-par scores of 65
with the Senators Saturday and j and 71.
vitl see some action in to-1 -'usi one sirottc oacx at is
Hill casper Jr., ot muia vista,
Calif.
no opposition and breezed to the
division mile title in 4:06.4 min
utes. Bailey led all the way.
John Midtbo of Washington
State tried to make It tight race,
and clung doggedly to Bailey's
heels for two laps before fading,
Bailey wai 7$ yards in front at
the finish.
Bailey said afterwards he had
held no illusions about running un
der four minutes this week. Asked
if he needed someone to push him,
Bailey said:
"I needed Landy both to push
me and to pull me."
Lap Times Giveu
The Australian, whose winning
tirnA nvpr l.nnrlv In trnpk w
3:38.6, had lap times of CI, M. 63 bai'kstretch
and 59 4 seconds Saturday
The day was cloudy and cool.
twice in eight days as he wound
up a good will visit to the United
States.
Landy finished an estimated 75
to M yards in front of 20-year-old
Ron Delany of Ireland, a run
away that was accomplished with
astonishing ease.
Bailey Beat Laady
A week ago Landy ran second
to his fellow countryman, Jim
Bailey, of the University of Ore
gon, at Los Angeles, with both
breaking under four minutes
Bailey in 3:58.1 and Landy In
3.58.7. Delancy was third that aft
ernoon in 4:05.5.
Landy appeared to blast away
even faster on the final lap Sat
urday night, but official wind
gauges disclosed he was bucking
Fcrrarcse Holds
Yanks to 2 Hits
By ED WOES
AaarUte1 frrw Sports Writer
Brooklyn's Cart Erskine pitched
a no-hit. no-run game with 54)
Job oa the New York Giants at
Ebbets Field Saturday. And at
nearby Yankee Stadium, Balti
more's young Doe Ferrarese al
most duplicated that standard per
formance by beating New York 1
American League leaders 1-e oa
two hits both in the ninth inning. . .
It tti the second no-hitter Tor
the slender, S-year-old Erskine.
He no-hit the C h I c a g e Cubs 4
June 18, 1952, in a near perfect
game. .
A pair of dandy fielding stabs
by third baseman Jackie Robin
son and right fielder Carl Furillo
helped Erskine against the Giants.
Robinson made a diving catch of
WiUie Maya' low liner in the
fourth. An inning later, Furillo
turned his back to the plate and
hauled la Rav Katt'i blow to front
of the right-centerfield score
board. '
Only Two Make Base
Erskine, righthander starting
his ninth season in the majors and
all with Brooklyn, struck out
three. Only two Giants got oa
base, both by walks. In his first
no-hitter, Erskine allowed only
one base-runner, also on a pass.
Oddly enough, the Giants are
the only National League club
with a life-time edge over Ersk're.
He's 1J-14 against New York and
102-59 over-all. This wai his sec
ond 195 victory both are ever
the Giants against two defeats.
With the victory, their , third
straight, the world champs held
on to fourth place, two games out
of first In the NL race, which
tightened as Cincinnati whacked
first place Milwaukee 10-1 and
Chicago walloped St Louis 14-1J.
Pittsburgh edged Philadelphia
again (- for the Phillies' aiath
straight defeat,
Lead Cut U Oa
Ferrarese'i nifty Job en the
Yanks cut their lead to single
game as second place Cleveland
defeated Kansas City 5-J. Chica
go s White Sox slipped past De
troit 7-0.
Ferrarese, t SOyear-eld left,
bander who singled home the lone
run In the seventh off Bolt Turley,
lost his nohitter oa Andy Carey's
chopper ell the plate to epea the
(Continued ea ! . eoL 1)
Beavers Trim
Vandals, 6-1
MOSCOW, Idaho Iff - Lowell
Pearce gave op only five hits Sat
urday as Oregon State strength-
a 5 mile an hour wind up the er eo us noia on tnira place in the
nonnern division of the Pacific
A sell-out West Coast Belays , Coast Conference with a H base-
crowd of more than 15,000 gaht- ball win over Idaho.
Leonard, 40-year-old Can- The track swept by a brisk south- "cd its collective feet as the Aus- The tall right-hander threw I
veteran, who was tied with wcscriv 'wjnH was heavv ai. ' tralian blazed into the final 220 ! shutout until the ninth inning
11 ciiiriiuuus i m pan w mia arru iwv tn p
I ors allowed the Vandals their only
' run.
erwald at the halfway point. lhmRh not mlKdv from rriday', yards, displaying a
1 I . ( L...4 ...iti. Ik liniehinrt Link
carded a one-under 71 but with it rain.
finishing kick.
fell into a third-place tie with Bil
Iv Maxwell of Odessa, Tex., whose
BS also gave him a 54-hole score
of 207.
Whildcr.'s 10a cannot be submit-
1- . . .. f ll,. pnnnn Itnal. I V, n In,,'. Cnnslnr, Vl Q I 'D Wnr-fl C 1 1 f f IT
... .1 .. l- . ... ,-i.- - u.w , . .l . Je Fnuler onpleo home h.ri l.tn-
irg 01 late, we suppose mere are tno.se wno expeti us u ir a is commission, inc i. season mm an -- - - --- - . . , ,A r.rnrj hecause
kit. t rni u,,oh'. thlt. rhou, Vm nn oonrf and snil 'em onto nil fin hioh a fr a Inlal kill scomh for one of them and Gone ' 'n.r a worm recorn necause
the next outgoing bus. Sorry to be disappointing, but we wont no it iof deer is concerned
SWC Opened
To Texas Tech
At tUi D;i., . a V,.vl.Mr.M Wind Ruin fhinrM
.at iiioi uaiirT "vi n ,iui iiil'i 11 - " - em.-, n 1. . ...
Most observers at this point felt " "evrr oangeo oui 11 mis
sure he might have broken his M'n Clark Anderson and re-
nun uiorld'. r-nrrf if 5 ul in l'''' Kent Church.
19.V4 in Finlan. . But the wind was
(Continued on page 22, col. 4)
Nelson scored the other on a wild naa 3 mlle per nour wina, FAYETTEVILLE. Ark,
throw. al hls back- bal " wlU stand ;,s Texas Tech's 29 years of knock-
.... . a rnnffirrnrn rornrrl W t aicft .1 . a il ...h
of blasting at eager, aspiring AwfA a ,otal of mm animals. I" '"e ""' ,wo ' ln; " ' "d "a " n(, ,;,. mark when r, .u n.M
vnttnBsters who are brin" siven h,lr 1 7ji u,oro taken t..rin- th, nmz games, the Pioneers scored r(iuaiien a cont.rince marK wnen Conference came lo a glnnous
What pleasure can anyone pet out Tnr gPnpra dpr.r season pro-
Division record. The old mark was
4 12 2. established hv Phil Lie
: bowiiz of Idaho in 1940 and tied
' by Bill Dcllinger of Oregon last
j year.
j DrUircer Sets Mark
Dellinger. who finished fourth in
Ihe Los Angeles race last week,
did not run the mile Saturday. He
was entered in the two-mile event.
I Dellinner set a Northern Divi
, sion record for the two-mile event
with a time of 9:03.5 minutes. The
previous mark of 9:11.3 was es-
controlled hunts and 252 during the once in the third frame and then ". .L:"". '"".I . fnl nn h "lh ,rv .Sa.u.rte'
and who are guilty of little archery seasons. A total of 230.585 Willamette tallied twice in the hot- "" " me college was inviteo 10 mem-,
nimrods. also a record, partici-, lorn of the last to clinch the win. " . , ,h. mr(t .(h ocrsntp at a rrteeiing nirc oi 1011-
patcd in the general deer seasons ! Willamette got their winning runs T" rfTdn'hce 4T w frrrm'e rf,c,als '
,,. , ... ..... . )n a starmpnI tn( ronlerence
ful. These hunters reported taking, Bpi1h !.,,- nnd Trv 7iel. r il:j " .1 ' , said "by unamious vole wa-, in-
82.136 bucks and 48.955 antlerless tbj ' t ,;t., ' ' ivited to appoint a committee to
their chance to become profession
als
more than losing one-run deci
sions' Besides, why get excited
over a few losses. Surely you re
member the 1953 campaign. I nky
H's whiners got ofl to a lousy
first couple of weeks that year door.
of which 59 per cent were success- j after two were oul
lot third with S2!li
Tom Moore sinfiled
tn hrinff in I nQt finrt ITmnW V. M u-r-n t E , vc t M E-cna
" L h K1?ma'n ,c"umy wa' ,op,s ,n 'nc ruso drove another lone single 10 white
.v ,...v. FU 1 ni 11 -r 0 ooer Droauceu wncre 7,nm-.
Lucas was the winner in the
second game for Willamette. lo roll into the third round lead
ol the hite Sulphur Springs open
smeitf Saturday by shooting 64, six
Seattle Nips
Portland, 2-1
SEATTLE -Portland cot
tablished by Ken Reiser of Ore- two men on base in Ihe ninth inn-
gon last year. ing Saturday nisht but the rally
Dellmger's time Saturday was fizzled and Seattle took a 21 dc-
a little short of his own best time, cision to even their Pacific Coast
sel earlier this season, of 9 03.1. League baseball series at one
Oregon easily won the meet, fnr game each,
the third consecutive time, with i ,hr ci,,., nn '..
Oregon State, which swept ill
4-game series with Idaho, bow
moves on to neighboring Wash
ington State for games Monday
and Tuesday with the division
leading Cougars.
OSC 010 J20 000-1 11 I
Idaho 000 000 001-1 I
Pearce and Lovejoy; Anderson,
Church 19) and Howard, Arnone
(9).
OCR Splits Pair
Wilh Clark Club
VANCOUVER, Wash. - Cl:rk
Junior College traded baseball
GENE TAN'SF.U.I
be heard for blocks. et alter hunters reported taking 11.421 ani
Luhy had a good look at what he mals foinwod jn or(irr hv Grant
had. culled out the weak ones and counlv wjln 10 m Ulyc tollnty
;ecuieu aocquaie repiacemenis. wjln 9945 Deschutes county with First same
the hissables went on to win the 9 736 ;ind Crook counly wiln B.,iwi. " i
lirvt half of the pennant race, clos- ll(,h western Oregon counties in- ctirki,vr
ing wilh a spectacular rush that f((, ,Pne wn,,rr g (,.,.r wrrP nmnm.1-1
hart everyone in even he sur- ti t ,.,.,,1.1., .ih 1 m Tilir. "
rounding counties chirping test mn.,t 'i-mint with s7S and'tkuie-
work wilh a committee of the
mnnthwnKt rnrfprpn1!, fnr the fv .
SPRINGS, nrAQC nnrnoi of u.'nrkin0 nut Hn.
Roly poly Ed Oliver ; lajs undf.r which Tpxns Toch mav
score of 56 1-3 points, Washing San FranciRt0 pounded 17 hits into shutouts with visiting Oregon 0 J
a 7.1 VL'l n nttnr 1 net Aneii c hm , r?P fU P niirniinil hAP Valitfileitj
assured Ihe Generalissimo will )as ffnlny 'wjtr) 3.147 animals re
install
help
a respectable winner here
needed mostly. In short.
make me necessary maneuvers to nnrted.
just as soon as he decides where ril. ...
s don t get excited yet. Let s , . u..." 1.- ..-:...j
Ua el.,n- fornl l lo 1,. k,ll . . k l - ...Uil. 4- f. "'l'l 5. d'ilLJ " J") '-
- ' bl 1 fcv' lu lt,t- ''i .tiiin-. it, 1 1 mar "I fl willlt . ill
you nusht awaken one morn to lind that someone did chew up Int
ent ire organization, and spat it onto a slow boat for China, lor
keeps . . .
Tnnev
SrhK-rf! .1
Mever.r,
Rins I
Wilk'nvr
Strnhem n
-W,ion.l
(.'I W'll
B R H
2 O I Monrr.m
2 0 il 7't Iman.j
.ton Paiinn c
2 0 0 ran,sn..1
0 0 rt-i'fl 1
B R H strokes better than par.
All Ihe world luves a winner, and occasionally one finds a
glaring example of Ihe known laet. When Oregon's Jim Bailey
returned from his viclorv over Landy. over 2.000 jammed the
F.ugene airport fnr a rousing welcome for the surprised kid.
Had he lost evrn br two Inches to (he world record holder. Ihe
welcoming turnout would have been more like instead of 2,(W0.
If Z.im students would turn out fnr an Oregon basketball game.
Athletic Chief Leo Harris would probably faint . . . The same
week Ihe 2,000 batk-slappers whooped and hollered fnr Bailey
at F.ugene, a grand total of 13 turned out lo hear Slnts Gill, who
Is an outstanding speaker, talk lo Ihe Salem Rreakfast ( luh.
No riouht Ihe Joint would have been jammed had Slats led his
OSC'ers lo the (oast litle last March . . .
collent 1953 season, breaking all
pre' ious kill records except the all
time high 1949 hunt. Nimrods re
ported in with a total bag of fi.OBt
of the big wapiti, the second high
, est kill on record. The general elk
season produced 4,578 animals.
I I MrC'll'l'r 1 3
0 0 I, ip rnmb.r 2
0 t Nrlsniv? 2
1 0 Fovler n 2
1 I d-Mnlinlm 1
Picrrtti p 0
Total
I
n n
o I
n n
0 n
n n
1 l
l n
o I
n n
o o
2
SULPHUR
W. Va. id
finished in a whirl of three birdies bl,cornP a nlcmnPr 0f' (hP South
west conference,
"This means that it is the ex
pressed intention of the conference
lo admit Texas Tech to its mem
bership as soon as a satisfactory
arrangement of the details can bc
concluded hy the above mentioned
commillees "
Kntranee of the Lubbock. Tex.,
school into Ihe fabulous conference
jncrea.scl5rjribcrhirLini;ishL
a
ton was second with 44
liime nasninEinn Male witn ,,, ; ii,. k.. t-jji. nrv . ih J
., . i ii "'"iiirin ill IIIC IHIISI UV r.UUIC "wn upiTlls:! , -W, fllll
wi.-KUll .11. lie 1.1 ana Knnk onH in lh fourth hv M.en, Clark took the w.nnl 1J1
Elliott nttshed San Dieiro nasi Sae- Dwain Brandt Ditched a two-
Wcsley Double Winner ramcnto. 7 2, and the Vancouver hitter for OCK in the first game.
Sam Weslev of Oregon Slate was split, Ihe Stats winning an after- The nightcap developed into a
the onlv double winner Me edged noon game, fi-2, and Vancouver pitching duel between Tom Gar-
JacK Morris n Oregon in Ihe too- taking the nishtcan. 9-2
25 5-.fi,
Idaho 14'
Major League
Leaders.
yard dash and squeaked past Mel
(Continued on page 22, col. 4)
I'lirtland (11
:i 4 T,il?u 28
Wood sma'ed f,ir R.nne tn H'
d M.iU'olm popped 2R fur Fmilrr
in lilli
I.f f'tn tM? 0- 3
Wi"amet'e on OOO 0 '
Winning p'trhi-' S'ii!ii'nv I.tivin
pitrher- FowIt F-.ilk Fouler.
while 1.505 were taken during the stppnpn, 7 ':n 4 j 1 4 1
controlled hunts. One lucky how
1 hunter reported taking an elk dur
! ing the archery, seasons to fill out
.the G.oni total.
Dimit Calls Meeting
For Girls' Softball
t'rged to, form a women's soft
.ball league here in Salem if at all
Fnwlrr . B 27 t .1 : IS
Picn-itl i .1 o n n io
Hi 'iv p'trhrr Slirklrv ind Fl'i
, 1 I.rft on h-lr I.f" ' R I . W'lll
i",. f'.rinr' -Sllrk'o- i:ii S-h lartl
i"i t?iire.. V.'ilkmv Rrd Ne',n.
PirtPtM Two-basi1 hits StirHry.
l.lnromb. Runs hn'lrd in- F'wler.
Slirklev Wilkin Sarrifii-e Tonrv
Stnlen hae - T.lnsrnmh flniihie play
Csriiiin tn Nelson in Rerrt
AMERICAN l.r(it'E
ti A R R
Mantle. New York 2.1 S 3
Rnvrt. n.illnnorc 22 4B
(ifiiert Ftoftnn III fit 11
Mivwrlt, I3eli.nl 17 fill 14
l.nllar. C'hlraijn 17 ,Vi S
Sh.iBhter. Kn. Cl!v IS 4:1
Ulsun. W.islllil'iloil 2:1 84 14
KiiPiin. Drti.,11 22 Wl 12
Pin-all. nostnn :0 hS lit
Cmidiiian. Bo.Mnn 19 S4 10
lemon. Wash'etnn 21 75 1.1
Sndri. Wash'a' n 2:t fitt !
Home rtnl Mmllf New York II:
Rrrra New York. 10: flrrnert. Rns-
t,m. R: STftxurll. Dr'.imt. 7. nam-'-.
N-w York 7
n,in ha:trd in Mantle. New York
?Y rW'ri.i. New Ynrk. ?l. Lemon
WVhinzton. Grrnprl. Ponton I'':
fbuei. New nrk 17
KcihhmIv
R;iinirrs
oin
to J
;ain
II Prl
:u -Mia
m vm Other members are Rice, Arkan
" sas. Baylor, Southern Methodist.
20 ii? Texas A It M. Texas Christian
15 .TI
2!l ..'15
.11 .114
2 i .:i.l8
?S Xl.l
2.i ..I'l l
2:1 :i:n
-ska mi
They Obviously Want a Winner in Vancouver
It's rather obvious the sportsies in Vancouver. B. C. want nothing possible, City Softball Director : 'n)' p,,ton
but a winner in Coast League play, for they seem to be taking turns Jim Dimit has called a meeting
at bombing the last place Mounties in their city. Owner Brick Laws . "of all those interested in such a
is getting most of the abuse, and it's a shame. He's one of the project" for May 21, at 7:30
nicest guys in baseball.
NTION.M, .FAil'R
(T ATI R
Second same: BenoNki St. I-mrn IS SO 14
I c ad noo O- l 4 1 Burton. Milwaukee n 4fi 15
Willanelie nnn non 2 - 2 4 4 R"v,-r- R'- I nu", 7" " '
n e..ni. .h n m..ni.. 1 Bailev. Cincinnati IS 4i
Knox I-ails UCLA
I linf. Pittshurlth 21 SO
1 Moon. St. I,oim 20 7S
i Walls. Pittsburgh 20 60
I McMillan, Cincinn. 22 7S
! Robinson. Cincinn 21 78
Bell Cincinnati 2i 72
and Texas.
II was the first change in the
conference's roster since 1925.
Today's action ended a long
fiuht for admittance hy Texas
Tech The first try was in 1927.
and since then Ihe school was
bitterly disappointed 12 times.
But the long wait only built up
enthusiasm, and Ihe word here
was that start of one of Ihe hig-
nnrl fnl,.hral ion. in I lll.luu'll hlC.
" I'1 , I.. ,L- r:..:l I
22 440 fry awHiteu omy inr tniieiai wuiu
20 am that Texas Tech was finally in.
whose relief pitching was j vital
factor in Seattle's Pacific Coast
League pennant effort last year,
is coming bad. to the Itainiers
Gen Mr Dewey Soriano said
Saturday nijilit Kennedy had been
purchased from Cincinnati and
would rejoin the Maimers in the
middle of next week He said Ken
C!l seaitle
II H (1 A n H O A
Saflrll m 4 2 4 n Rlrna.m 4 1 I II
Mmnej.l 4 110 llichell.s 4 (I 2 .1
n':vkl r 4 0 0 0 Smith ,1 2 111
Mkcln 1 3 2 1.1 t Taylor r 4 n ' n
Vnun.2 4 112 Srhiilt.l .10 2 0
lljvrs 1 4 0 1 J Ortrl.i- .1 I I 11
Cldern r 4 0 10 Clvrn.1 1 0 14 1 oc'F.
i.M.M.w 1 , i.ourKr t .1 I Z 1 (
v 1 fl 0 0 t.mrrtt n 2 0 0 2
Frrilrr o fl (I 0 (I J,,ni.-ll u fl II 0
a-Mrimn 11 0 0 11
row of Clark and Ted Owens ol
OCK, but a two-run inning in the
second gave Clark the victory.
First same:
net. ton ntn n-j 7
Clark jc ooo otm 041 1
Rrar.rtt and Adams: Atlee, Ratwh
,4, and Davis
Second same:
nno 000 00 4 S
??k jc m us iM I a
Owens and Adams: Garrnw, Bautrh
1S1 and Oasis
Vt learned long ago, when playing in the old Western Inter
national League, that the Canadian scribes were an odd lot.
We'd have sworn some of 'em thought a pop fly was the husband
Is a ata-legged Insert. And we know they haven't Improved.
They art of Ihe species who think they know it all, and whn be-
14 reporting rnnsiats mostly of giving some poor bloke
(Continued on page 22, col. 1)
o'clock in the School Administra-1 jg ANGELES If -The UCLA ! Thnma. pittshumh, ' Banks. thW
tion Building, 13th and Kerry varsitv wound un il nrinff font-1 " 7: Kulazewski. Cincinnati. 7; Rnb
, , iv ,, ' w"una "P fPr'" lon' ' linson. Cincinnati (I; Jablonakl. Cm-
streets. ! ball practice season Saturday with nnnatt, s; i,on?, Fittshurah, n. Boy
if .nnnoh iTw,r, ooarhoc a 26-S win over an alumni team. s' i-ouu.
.. .r,.,...,.., Run nuttrd m Jablonskt. Clnrtn-
' and players are interested. " Dimit . Ronnlc Kn.ox louch, ;.,!. '" "'-
r down nn a five-yard end run and St. i.ouis. in: T'ioma Pitt-burch,
revealed, "we'll try tn form a nassed 12 vards lo pnd Dirk Wai- ,f' campanula, n-nnkivn. l.v Pe.t
i . . ... Passed U arns 10 ena UICK vtai rincinnatli 5. McMillan. Cincinnati.
i women s league this season. J Ion (or another., u.
ia i jiir
i ,404 Texas Tech at present is a mom
is m 400 be r of the Border conference. The
1.1 IV .1112
a 2t i .so
25 mi than 7.000.
17 2.1 .321
14 .21 .31!) j
school has an enrollment of more
TuUli .11 s?4l.i T,,lal- 4 27 III
a Walked fin In Ell,
I'm '.Unci Hill IIU lillO 1
Seattle I tH 1 illu mix ;
F None. Httt Tas lor Ortrn. M.ir
nur ;h Ml.kr'vir Satlcll 1H
f.-llcena 1111 (li'i-ie 11 Smith S
Hall Pit Riebrtti. 1 ohrke and
(.Imiii I .el I Ourtlanrl 7 Seattle S
IIP llll r.r.lUrl 1 t,,,rrtl -
nod'' was due In he pruned (nun so itaii i t omhardi' i tve-
Cincinna'l's nversi7ed Pltclllll" M' 1 1,1 ' 1 -ti riarrti in .
,,ff ' Fiedler 1 in I. Jan-ci- n m I H Kit
Hall 2-2. Lombard! 1-1 .lac.en n-0.
Although his won Inst record r,",'.rtV -.W ,l ,""hi,J'1'
. . , ,. , Hall 1-1 I t arluci i Nrne.'.icll and
was only R-fi last year. Kennedy Kurd r 2 it A 3.3117
was the team's resciie arDst He-
appeared in 52 games and com- . 1 . 1 1
piled an earned run average of Hill JMilltll .S'lM'tCll
1 91 for !4 innings of work Ken- y l,irll-iiwl VV I'jwI
nedy walked only 18 men all sea- t,,r 1 orll'ml 1 J 1 0!,t
sun. j
Rain Calls Halt
To Mil;cl Racers
Last night's scheduled midget
;ulo racing program at Hollywood
Bowl was rained out. by two big
downpours, one at 4 p m., the other
at seven Stock hard tops are to
race at the howl next Saturday
night, by the Capital Auto Racing
Association of Salem.
Orioles Sell Dvrk
PORTLAND - William W.
MBilD Smith Saturday was named
CORNKI.L CREW VICTOR 1 director of physical education at
WASHINGTON f -Cornell's tnP University of Portland,
veteran crew streaked ahead at Smith, captain of the university
NEW YORK The Baltimore the very finish to beat Vale hy football team in 1950. has been
Orioles Saturday sold outfielder six feet for the eastern sprint row- iPnjhing and coaching at Hiilloll
Jimmy Dyxk to Cincinnati for a ins championship Saturday and j Hj M ,'Tacoma.
reported $2.i,0i0, leaving Ihe On- cl iblish itself as the earlv favor-
oles one more player ol pare be- ite I" renresert the fnttc' States "'' succeeds Michael W. Tichy,
fore next Thursday's deadline, 1 in this year's Olympic Games, j resigned.
RADIANT
GLASS11EAT
Bt Continental
"The Sunshine Heat"
0 No Fire Haurd
0 Mo Noise
0 No Dirt 01 Odor
0 No Maintenance
The onlv full automatic heat
(uarsnleed bv
Good Houorkeepini
lor Kree Mlimate Phont
46263
1540 Faircronnds Rd. Satent