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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1960)
Doubleheader Tonight Ems Win in Tenth On Robinson's Homer NORTHWEST W L Pot. GB Yakima 37 21 .638 Eugene 32 22 .593 3 Trl-Cllles 32 25 il 414 Lewiston 30 25 . 545 S'.i wenatctiee 21 37 .345 16 Salem ... . 16 38 .286 19 MONDAY'S RESULT Eugene S, Lewiston 2 (10 Innings) Only game. One of the smallest crowds of the season missed seeing the end of one of the better ball games of the same period on a cold Monday night at Bethel Park as Jerry Robinson lined a three run homer out of the park in the bottom of the tenth to give Eu gene's Emeralds, whose Richie Slomkowski tossed a three-hitter, a 5-2 Northwest League triumph over Lewiston. Not more than 100 persons, some of them no doubt too numb to move, were in the stands when Robinson belted his fifth homer over the left-field wall. Tells of NCAA Meet Bowerman Speaker At Oregon Club "This was the greatest assem bly of college athletes that I've ever seen," Oregon track coach Bill Bowerman told Oregon Club members at the Eugene Hotel Monday. He was speaking of the week end's NCAA track and field cham pion.ships at Berkeley in which the University of Oregon finished tied for fourth place. Bowerman added that he was very proud of the way his Wcbfoots performed in the meet. Of the nine Oregon athletes entered in the NCAA, five earned points for the Ducks. They includ ed Dyrol Burleson, first, and George Larsen, sixth, in the 1,500 meters, Dave Edstrom third in the high hurdles, Jerry Stubble- field fourth in the discus, and Jerry close sixth in the broad jump. Bowerman said that only two events, the high hurdles and the ' pole vault, were not up to past standards but that poor organi zation was partly responsible for the poor marks in the pole vault where none of the four 15-foot vaulters hit that mark in the NCAA. Bowerman said it took two and one-half hours for tho bar in the pole vault to be raised from 13-6 to HO, which tired the athletes. The webfoot coach said he thought tho beat race was in the 800-meter run won by George Kerr, the Jamaican from Illinois, in 1:46.4. Jerry Siebert of Cali fornia was second in 1:46.9 and Ernie Cunliffe of Stanford was third in 1:47.6. Burleson, Bowerman noted, ran easily in winning the 1,500 meters in NCAA record time of 3:44.2 Burleson's plan was if the pack was too crowded at the half, "to get out of there," which ho did. Bowerman said Edstrom's third place finish in the high hurdles at 14.0 "solved one of my prob- Emerald Marks Ratling ab r h Sparks . 81 14 20 Maldonado 202 46 72 Tartabull 206 51 68 Krause 60 12 22 Scralmaglla 205 36 64 llnhlnson .. 1R.1 42 54 Arruda 18 I 5 Sommera .. 95 7 25 pet rlil 2b 3b hr 338 16 2 2 .356 34 .330 22 .319 8 .312 15 .295 3R .278 1 .263 Ko 180 30 47 .261 35 MCillllcuddy 06 21 .219 13 Calder ... 28 2 6 .214 3 Simmons .. 21 3 4 .190 II Rrhurr 17 2 3 .176 0 Ilreiuel ... Ill 10 19 .171 15 Johnston ... 7 1 I Brai-ev 8 0 1 Gtlimn 22 1 2 Lane .... II 0 1 Slomkowski 12 0 0 143 0 .125 0 .091 0 .091 2 .000 0 Pltehlng Ip Gibson 50.4 Arruda 53 S'kowskl 38 Braeey 32 Lane 22 Schurr 604 Calder 62ij Johnston 24 Simmons 58 w I r h so bb era 24 49 36 29 3.40 27 41 36 42 3.4.1 20 26 37 33 3.55 14 30 31 16 3 56 10 9 21 36 3 68 39 60 39 30 4 90 47 76 43 40 5 34 16 2.1 26 23 5.63 48 60 28 47 6.21 Qm CRYSTAL- -OIL C0 BROADWAY AND HILYARD, EUGENE The crowd earlier was listed at 575 for the opener of a six-game series in four nights. Monday's fray, which moved the Emeralds within three games of the idle Yakima at the top of the heap was a rain makeup. So will be the first game of Tuesday night's doubleheader, which will start at 6:30. The two clubs will tangle in two more Wednesday, then close with one Thursday before the Emeralds open a vital four-game hassle here with Yakima. Slomkowski, who fanned six and walked six as he improved his record to 3-2. was one of the happiest to see Robinson end it. Loser was little Ted Ncal, who replaced Jim Johnson after the Lewiston starter had limited the Emeralds to only four blows in nine innings. Ncal fanned Jack Scramaglia at lems." Had Edstrom run the event in 13.6 or 13.7, Bowerman said, Edstrom might have had to keep his attention on hurdling. But now Edstrom will concen trate soley on his bid for an Olympic berth in the decathlon As for next week's national AAU meet in Bakersfield, Bower man said Bob Newland will ac company the Oregon Emerald Athletic Assn. group. Newland will make a report to the Oregon Club next Monday noon at the Eugene Hotel. Entries will include Jim Grelle in the 1,500 meters, Otis Davis in the 400 meters, Bill Dellinger in the 5,000 meters, Jerry Tarr, whose home is in Bakersfield, in the high hurdles, and Ted Abram and Jose Luna. "None of the collegiate group will be going down," Bowerman added. While Bowerman's trackmen were winning fourth place in the meet, Bowerman, himself, had trouble Friday getting inside the gate. Having given away three participants passes, the Webfoot coach had to pay his way in. Kansas City Tops Boston AMERICAN W L Pet. GB New York 33 22 .600 A x-llaltlmore 37 25 .597 . Cleveland 30 25 .545 3',i Detroit 29 27 .518 S Chicago 30 29 .508 314 Washington 25 30 .435 814 Kansas City 24 35 .407 11 1,4 Boston 21 36 .368 1.H4 x Games behind figured from Bal timore record. MONDAY'S RESULT Kansaa City 9, Boston 6 Only gamo scheduled KANSAS CITY UR Kansas City, fighting to keep out of the American League cellar, rallied lor three runs In the seventh inning to beat off Boston in the opener ot a four-game scries Monday night, 9-6. Harry Chili's homer with Norm Sicbern on base was the big blow of the tie-breaking rally. Siebern had singled to score Hank Bauer whose double had sent Boston starter Tom Borland to the showers. R E Boston 100 102 101 6 12 1 Kansas City .. 010 013 3lx 9 12 norland, Htuman (7) sttidevant (8) & Nixon; Sadowskl (71; Hall, Johnson 161, Klrly (7) Kulvna 7 & Chill. HR: Kansaa City Chltl. Carey. W Kutyna 12-2). L Borland 10-2). Schedule Change LOWELL A single North Dis trict 4 Junior Legion baseball game sending Cottage Grove to Lowell Tuesday night has been changed to two games, the first beginning at 7:30. A twin bill was scheduled to replace a later game at Cottage Grove. ARMSTRONG 2 for I TIRE SALE BUY ONE TIRE . . . Plus tax on two tires and recappable exch. AT THE MANUFACTURERS REGULAR SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICE .... AND YOU GET ALL SIZES! Buy Now and Save Armstrong's Premium Miracle Tubelesi Whitewall the start of the Eugene tenth but walked Jose Tartabull, who promptly carried the winning run into scoring position by steal ing second. Felix Maldonado was issued a free pass in hopes of set ting up a force or double play but added an unneeded run when Robinson connected. Each team failed to hit in the first three innings, then tallied an unearned pair in the fourth Lewiston's Sal Fcrrara singled one across after a walk and an infield hit, then scored on Jerry Cifford's flyout to center. Maldonado opened the bottom of the fourth with a single for the first blow off Johnson (6-5) and moved to second when Rob inson walked. Johnson sneaked a called third strike past Joe Sparks and retired Chuck Koss on a groundout but walked Mel Krause. That put the burden on Denny S 0 m m e r s, who came through with a single that chased Maldonado and Robinson across That's the way it stayed until the tenth as Slomkowski stayed out of serious trouble except in the eighth, when Tom McDonald tripled with one away but soon was caught in a run-down. John son, who fanned four and walked six, yielded a double to hustling Tartabull in the fifth and a single to Krause in the sixth. LEWISTON H-B Tabacchl, 2 0-4 McNamara, c 0-5 Pyles, If 0-4 McDonald, rf 24 Fcrrara, 1 1-2 Gilford, cf 0-3 R-BI 0- 0 00 1- 0 1-0 0-1 0-1 00 00 00 0-0 O A F. 1-3 0 5-1 20 1- 0 15-0 2- 0 2-5 0-3 0-2 0-0 George, as 0-2 Olsen, 3 0-3 Johnson, p 0-3 Neal, p 00 Totals 3-30 2-2 '28-14 0 'One out when winning run scored. EUGENE H-B ... 0-4 ... 1-3 1-4 R-BI O-A E Scramaglia, 2 .. Tartabull, cf .. 0-0 1-2 0 1-0 2-0 0 4-0 0 0-0 0 0- 3 0 1- 5 0 15-0 0 aldonado, rx . 2-0 2-3 04 0-0 0-0 0-2 0-0 Robinson If ... .. 1-3 Sparks, 3 0-4 Koss, as 0-4 Krause, 1 1-2 Sommers, c M Slomkowski, p 0-3 7-2 0 0-5 0 Totals. 5-31 5-5 30-17 0 Lewiston 000 200 000 02 Eugene 000 200 000 35 Pitcher In ab r h er so bb w 1 Johnson .. 9 29 2424800 Ncal . V4 2 3 1 3 1 2 0 1 Sl'akl (3-21 10 30 2 3 2 6 8 1 0 HR Robinson: 3B McDonald: 2B Tartabull; SH Gilford, Johnson,Slom- kowskl: SB Ferrara 2, mcuonam, Tar tabull, Robinson; HBP Tabacchl by Slomkowski: LOB Lewiston 7. Eugene 7; WP Slomkowski; Umpires Haller and Brooks; Time 2:38; Attendance 575. Rematch Scheduled As Mat Main Event Indian Billy White Wolf and Wild Bill Savage will renew their mat rivalry at the Cow Palace in Saturday night's main event. The two battled to a no-decision out come last Saturday night. Supporting matches will fea ture Shag Thomas against Luigi Macera in the 30-minute opener at 8:30 p.m. and Kurt VonPoppen heim against Ramon Torres in the semifinal match. Softball II E John Warren .. 003 04 9 8 1 1 9 Mavnard Pharmacy 000 00 0 Richmond & Meata; Crook & Klver. Mc- RUE BI.M 101 01 3 2 10 Wleklund's 510 6x 12 10 0 Dunn t Vaughn; Sherrer, Williams (51 & Larson. l.DS 211 400 1" " " Hlck'a 200 201 X 6 5 i Butler & Peterson; Kosllng & Dow llhower PCL Standings PCL W L Pet. GB Taeoma 36 28 .581 .. Spokane 38 28 .378 .. Sacramento 38 28 .376 .. Seattle 32 31 .308 4'4 Salt Lake City 29 32 .475 i Vancouver 29 .14 .460 7V4 San Olfgo 28 40 .412 11 Portland 2S 38 .410 lOtt MONDAY'S RESULT Vancouver 6, San Diego 2 Salt Lake City 5. Spokane 2 San Francisco (NL) 8, Tacoma 7 Only games scheduled. J Braves Climb Ahead of SF NATIONAL W L Pet. GB Pittsburgh 37 21 .638 . Milwaukee 31 23 .374 4 San Francisco 34 26 467 4 St. Louis 29 30 .492 8' j Cincinnati 29 31 .483 9 l.o Ar.seles 27 32 .458 mi Chicago 23 31 .426 12 Philadelphia 21 37 .362 18 MONDAY'S RESULT Milwaukee 4, Los Angeles 1 Only game scheduled MILWAUKEE 1 The Mil waukee Braves climbed into sec ond place in the National League pennant race by downing the Los Angeles Dodgers 4-1 Monday night on a pair of homers by Hank Aaron and the brilliant re lief pitching of Joey Jay. The victory moved the Braves past idle San Francisco and to within four games of the pace setting Pittsburgh Pirates, who also had a day of rest. Aaron, the 1959 major league batting king with a hefty .355 av erage, entered the game with a mere .279, but snapped out of a prolonged slump in a personal duel with Los Angeles right hander Don Drysdale. Hammerin' Hank blasted his 14th homer leading off the sec ond, walked on four pitches when Drysdale brushed him back three times in the third, and then crashed another solo shot into the bleachers in left center on the first pitch of the sixth. R H E Los Angeles 001 000 000 1 4 0 Milwaukee . 020 001 10X 4 9 0 Drysdale. Palmqulat (7). Craig 18) & N. Sherry; Buhl, Jay (3) 4 Cran- .'JLrrtlr ""'ICannon was free to play for the Match Play Ooens in OGA X VANCOUVER, Wash. I Match play began here Tuesday in the Oregon Golf Assn. tourney. after qualifiers finished Monday, led by the near-record play of Dick Price of Longview, Wash. Price deftly stroked rounds of 31 and 34 for a 7-under-par 65 Monday that was one stroke over the Royal Oaks Country Club course's tournament record. Price's total for the two days of qualifying play, with rounds of 18 holes each day, was 138. First-day leader Dick Stearns of Portland was edged out by a single stroke. He carded a 2-un-dcr-par 70 Monday to go with his 3-under-par 69 Sunday. Eugene s Shirley Siegmund led women s qualifiers at Oswego Lake Country Club with a 35-41 76. Other men's scores included Daryl Winn, Eugene, 78-77155. Scores among those who skipped medal play and shot only an 18- hole qualifying round included Lcighton Tuttlc, Eugene, 39-39 78; Van Valin, Corvallis, 40-41 81; Bruce Fischer, Eugene, 39-4382; and Howard Hanson, Eugene, 40-4282. Ticket Sales Open For Decathlon The sale of reserved seats be gan Tuesday for the National AAU decathlon championships at Hayward Field July 8 and 9, where one of the finest fields in the history of the event is ex pected to be on hand. Emerald Empire A A officials said Tuesday there would be two types of reserved seats with one priced at $4 to cover both the Fri day and Saturday competition while seats for cither single ses sion will be available at $2.25 each. All mail orders should be addressed to the EEAA at Mc Arthur Court, University of Ore gon, Eugene. In addition to McArthur Court, tickets will be on sale locally at Mattox Pipe shop, Jay's for Young Men, and Warren Hard' ware while Laxton's will handle the Springfield sales. "The taste is to a 'tee'" SAYS MR. SMOOTH TO MR. SILK s Kessler drinks as smooth as silk Vjl with taste that It scores on flavor mwMiOai I ..rt1"fu,.V,tt,,.n, ljUiM SMOOTH AS SILK mm m mius itssut coamiciUJt6,ici mtwo Flounder, Fishing in Bays Along Coast By PETE CORNACCHIA Of the Register-Guard k If you want some family-type angling that will provide both pleasure and tasty food, get gome light tackle together and go after flounder or large red-fin perch in the bay at Florence, Reeds- port or Coos Bay. Either fish is easy to catch on the incoming tide and it's strange that so few people seek them in these three areas. Interest in the flounder and the1 perch, which moves CAMP into ine oays wun wri a T the tide, has been IViLA 1 much higher in the bays north of Florence. While some of the bays along the north coast may be more popular be cause they're sheltered more than those in the central and southern sections, nearly all of Oregon's Cannon Suit Lost by Rams LOS ANGELES Un The count was 1-0 in favor of the American Football League Tuesday in the new league's player war with the old National League. And All-America halfback Billy Houston uners or me mi,, in stead of the Los Angeles Rams of the NFL. Federal Judge William J. Lind berg Monday denied the Rams' injunction suit to keep Cannon from playing for the Oilers. The court blasted NFL Com missioner Pete Rozelle for con ducting the Cannon negotiations in a "shruod of secrecy" when Rozelle was the Rams' general manager last November. The Rams contended Cannon signed three contracts for the 1960-61-62 seasons. The judge faulted the 1961-62 contracts mainly because neither was signed by then Acting Com missioner Austin Gunsel, a re quirement he said is stipulated in the NFL constitution. He dis missed the 1960 contract, because ho said it was part of an incom plete contractual package. Judge Lindberg, in his 40-min- ute, 27-page decision, described Cannon as unusually naive for a college senior and anything but astute in business dealings. The nidge held as irrelevant the fact that Cannon signed both the Ram and Adams' contracts prior to the Jan. 1 Sugar Bowl game, when his college amateur standing in football ended. Greer Wins PGA Title WALLA WALLA, Wash. Wl Joe Greer of Yakima, Wash., suc cessfully defended his Northwest Professional Golfers Assn. cham pionship Monday, defeating Port land's Glenn Splvey and Taco ma's Al Feldman in a playoff. The three tied at 138 in regu lation play. Greer, Harvey Hixson and Bill Eggers of Portland and Ed Buck lin of Moses Lake, Wash., will go to the national PGA meet in Au gust. Jim Russell ol Walla Walla and Boots Portcrfield of Grants Pass, Ore., tied for fourth at 139, but declined the PGA trip. Hixson and Eggers finished at 140 and Bucklin at 142. Other scores included: 146 Wendell Wood, Eugene; Larry Lamberger, Portland; Ed die Hogan, Portland. 157 Howard Bonar, Portland; Alex Kinsfather, Eugene. NCAA Finals Minnesota 2, USC 1 (10 Innings). msitT.ii wooum tun win. smits. Time Return Urged by Duck Perch Offer Unusual inlets are calm enough for small boats most of the summer. Andy almost every tidal bay or river along the coast has a popu lation of flounders averaging one to three pounds. Greatest concen trations are usually found along channel edges and on sandy or muddy bottom, where there is an abundance of food. Often you can drift along until you hook fish, then drop the anchor. Another method of finding flounders is to anchor and at tract them with a chum pot, which is an illegal method for game fish. The chum pot can be a small wire basket, loosely woven sack, or a can pierced with small holes. The pot, filled with ground fish or meat, is lowered to the bottom, where it attracts fish in a hurry. Or you can lure them by stir ring up the bottom, uncovering tiny morsels of food, with a rake tied to rope. Throw the rake far from the boat as you can and let it sink to the bottom. If the rake remains attached to the rope, drag it back in and remove all old tires or bed springs. If some thing hits the rake on troll, you Baseball School Slated Thursday At Bethel Park Tryout sessions, under the di rection of San Francisco Giants scouts Hank Sauer and Eddie Montague, will continue Wednes day morning from 10 until noon at Bethel Bark. The rookie ses sions opened Tuesday. Thursday, Monte Montgomery and Gordon Perlich will sponsor a baseball school at Bethel from 1 to 4 p.m. The kids will receive instruction from Montague and Emerald manager Dick Klaus and his players. Also on the staff will be Hugh Luby, general manager of the Ems, Don Kirsch of the Univer sity of Oregon and John McNam ara, Lewiston manager. Base run ning, throwing, sliding, hitting and other aspects of the game will be covered by instruction. The school is open for all school age boys. Each will re ceive a diploma at the end of the day, plus a free pass to Thursday night's Emerald-Lewis- ton game. Springfield Legion Scores 5-4 Victory The Springfield Junior Legion baseball team scored a run in the seventh inning to defeat the Cascade Ranger legion nine, 5-4, in a non-league game at Spring field Tuesday. A hit by Doug Jones brought in the winning run from third base in the final frame. Don Herman hit a two-run triple for Spring field in the first inning. Morrison accounted for all of the Rangers' runs, two of them with a two-run triple in the first. Cascade 210 100 04 S 2 Springfield . 310 000 15 Miller. Dunn (5). Bastlan (61 It An- derson; Wllloughby & Jones. ( PM rl-T :lfUtf ! lolackelurykil THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL! Remove front wheels to in- ipect lining and drumi 2i Repack front'wheel beating 3, Check grease seals 4. Adjutt brake ihoei to contact 5, Add brake fluid and toad mufflers tailpipes shock absorbers FREE! N STALL ATI OM GOODYEAR SERVICE 7th & Cha melton Eugene Hunters better have lots of backing on that rope. For just flounders, though, any light rod with casting or spinning reel will do fine. While your terminal rigging need be nothing more than a fairly small hook and adequate lead weight, the conventional rig along the Atlan tic coast is a flounder spreader, a two-hook setup. This is a piece of stiff wire from 12 to 18 inches long. At each end of the wire is a loop onto which a long-shanked No. 4 hook is fastened with a foot or more of leader. In the center of the wire is a clip, where you fasten your line and sinker. This enables you to fish with two hooks, well separated on the bot tom. In Oregon, drifting bait with just enough lead to bump bottom seems to be the conventional method. Cast across the current and let the tide move the bait along. At the end of the drift, let the bait rest for a few min utes. Flounder usually will take the bait when it stops moving. You get the message in a series of rapid tugs. Red-fin perch will grab bait whether it's moving or not and they strike harder than the flounder. The weird but tasty flounders aren't choosy about their food. They'll take worms of all types or small chunks of clams, mus sels, herring, shrimp, or other meat. But they have small mouths, so keep the bait small. The flounder, regarded as one of the tastiest fish in the ocean, is delicious when filleted and fried in cracker meal or deep fat. The fillets usually are small, so fry them no longer than nccessa-1 ry to turn them a golden brown. , k When game management di- j rectors from eight western states gathered Sunday at Salt Lake City they strongly urged the Fish and Wildlife Service to return "the daily starting time for duck hunting to half an hour before sunrise. Last year, as many duck hunt ers recall unhappily, the federal agency took away a very vital 30 minutes by trimming the starting time to actual sunrise. Sentiment at Sunday's meeting of the Pacific Flyway Council, which drew fish and game chiefs from Oregon, Washington, Cali fornia, Alaska, Idaho, Nevada, Utah and Arizona, was in accord with the many disgruntled hunt-i ers who felt that the cutback was unnecessary. Leading the attack against the Fish and Wildlife Service was John Biggs, director of the Wash ington Game Department. He said western game officials "have not felt that the curtailment was justified." The FWS officials at the meeting were told by Bigs, "We say to you that one year of that regulation was enough. We don't want it any more." Noting that the curtailed shoot ing time stirred up more criti cism than any other regulation, Idaho game director Ross Leon ard said Idaho's duck kill was down about 18 per cent last year. He attributed most of the reduc tion to the sunrise opening. proper teat Regisftr-Guard, Eugene, Oregon 2B Tuesday, June 21. 1960 Stop in today: Warren's Chevron Service 18th & Chambers S& H Green Stamps Per ONLY " " Mo. On Approved Credit ff A IX'C Radiator sVM J Service DI 40253 162 East 6th (ADVERTISEMENT) Where Success Comes From Failure comes from tension, "which 9 times out of 10 is based on memory of past fail ures". . . So this author de scribes in July Reader's Digest a stratagem for focusing on success which works in sports, in business, or in the art of baking a cake. Read how , . , it may help you! Page Zlfi. Make Your Move to OLDS! 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