The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, May 06, 1963, Page 3, Image 3

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    The Bend Bulletin, Monday, May 6, 1963
USC, Stanford
Oregon still
track greats
By United Pre International
Trade powers Southern Califor
nia, Stanford and Oregon took
duel meet wins over traditional
rivals Saturday in a day without
many upsets.
tJSC defeated UCLA for the 31st
straight time 9946 as the Trojans
held UCLA's great C. K. Yang to
14 points.
The decathlon ace took wins in
the broad jump and pole vault
and had a second in the javelin
and third in the high hurdles.
Yang won the pole vault at 15
feet 6 and then missed three tries
at a world record.
USC got a double win from Rex
Cawley in the 440 and intermedi
ate hurdles and Bob Pierce and
Brian Pokinghorne both ran :14.t
in the hurdles to edge Yang at
;14 2 in the day's best race.
Stanford's Dave Weill broke
NCAA, stadium, meet and school
records when he tossed the dis
cus 193 feet 2 inches against
California Saturday at Berkeley.
The Cards rolled 92-53 in the
68th Big Meet against California.
Cal's Todd Gaskill hit the best
college triple jump of the season,
49 feet UVt inches.
Cal's Roger Olsen won the high
jump and javelin, but Stanford's
Larry Questad captured both
sprints and Steve Cortright took
both hurdles and a second in the
triple jump.
Oregon downed Oregon State 80
65 as All American football star
Mel Renfro ran the highs in :14.0
and broad jumped 25 feet 6V4
inches.
Keith Forman ran the mile in
4:03.2 to edge the Beavers' Mor
gan Groth (4:03.9) and Ducks
Archie San Roman! Jr. (4:04.7).
Washington State's mile relay
team galloped 3:19.1 in the rain
to give the Cougars a 74-71 win
over the Washington Huskies.
San Jose State dominated an in
formal meet with the Spartan
freshmen and the Santa Clara
Valley Youth Center, but the
Spartan yearlings cracked a na
tional mark when they ran the
4-mile relay in 17:17.4, to break
the former record by about 13
seconds.
San Jose State's Jeff Chase pole
vaulted for distance and went 28
feet 8 inches. Nobody could find
a better mark on the books for
this very unofficial event.
Fresno State dominated the CC
AA meet at Santa Barbara as the
Bulldogs' Sam Workman won the
Tenpin
Alley
Kofft Kats
W L
Coffee Pots 38'i 174
Alley Nots 324 ZM
Channel Kals 31 25
Wild Kats 29',i 26',4
Alley Kats 21'A 34'
Glitter Kats 15 41
Team leaders: Coffee Pots 1371
series.
High scorers: Jackie Backman
450 series and 172 game.
Guys & Gait Leagu
W L
Pin Savers 501i 13'i
Four Stooges 38 26
Pin Splitters . 35 29
Fun Fans - 31 33
Starving Four 30 34
Jets 26 38
Dark Horse 24',i 39'A
Pin Heads 21 43
This week's games: Starving
Four 4, Jets 0; Dark Horse 2, Pin
Heads 2; Pin Splitters 3, Fun
Fans 1; Pin Savers 3, Four
Stooges 1.
Team leaders: Pin Splitters 702
game. Pin Savers 2009 series.
High scorers: (men) Erv
Franek 225 game, Dick Wick 560
series. (Women) Thelma Sher
man 204 game, and 518 series.
This marks the end of league
play-
sprints.
Fresno had 75'i, Long Beach
State 57, Los Angeles State 38,
San Diego State 36V4 and the rest
trailed behind,
Nevada, a coming track power,
won 11 of 16 events to crush all
opposition in the Far West Con
ference meet. Nevada's Alex Dar
nes tossed the discus 164 feet 7
inches.
COC affords
reiay surprise
in 4-way meet
Special to Tha Bulletin
ASHLAND Central Oregon
College's surprising six-man track
team provided the surprise of the
day here Saturday when they
took second places in two relays.
Humberto Rodriguez, Harold
Still, Jim Reeves and Wayne
McBride dashed home in the 440
relay in 46.8 seconds. In the mile
relay, Central Oregon did the
same with Endriguez, Still,
Reeves, and Don Barry.
Don Barry anchored the mile
relay just after he finished tak
ing second in the two-mile run.
He covered the distance in 15:48
minutes. Still tied for fourth in the
pole vault with a mediocre leap
of 11'8".
Vern Willcox competed in the
shot put. Host Southern Oregon
College won the meet going away
with 123V4 points. The University
of Pacific (Stockton, Calif.) took
second with 38. Central Oregon
was fourth with 13V4, and South
western Oregon was last with six.
Next week the Central Oregon
ians get back into their own track
bracket when they dash into a
four-way battle between Oregon
College, Lower Columbia Junior
College of Longview, Wash., and
Southwestern Oregon of Coos
Bay.
Golf league
sfarfs Tues.
Special to Tha Bulletin
REDMOND The merchants'
Twilight golf ieague will begin its
play Tuesday and Wednesday,
May 14 and 15, at Juniper Gulf
Club.
Tee-offs are slated for 5 p.m.
Ten sponsors will field teams
each week, playing two men each
Tuesday and Wednesday through
the middle of July, with the ex
ception of July 4 week.
After the regular tune - wecK
schedule has been played, golfers
and sponsors will join for an eve
ning of recreation at the club. A
Dutch lunch will be served and
trophies awarded to winning
teams.
Grelle breaks
4-mJnute mile,
beats Beafty
SAO PAULO, Brazil (UPI) -Former
Oregon ace Jim Grelle
upset famed Jim Bcatty in the
1,500-meter run in the Pan Amer
ican Games in meet record time
of 3:43.5 Saturday.
Grelle scored the surprise vic
tory by outkicking his rival in the
final 100 yards of their metric
mile duel.
REDS TRADE BROSNAN
CHICAGO (UPI) The Chi
cago White Sox grabbed Cincin
nati Reds relief pitcher Jim
Brosnan off the waiver list Sun
day and sent pitcher Dom Zanni
to the National League club on
a similar waiver.
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emifiUtnRi IVEBEEN SEE? Aamm-REAL
HOW ABOUT MEANING JUST A TOBACCO TASTE
AEWOP TOTRyiT" SMALL SURE EA9IER
MHAGEnVh PINCH IS THAN SMOKING
0 k I j ALL YOU WHEM YOU'RE
I VJ L-V4l 4- NEED. ON THE JOB.
Denver rises out of cellar,
Portland-Okla rained out
By Ron Supintky
UPI Staff Writer
Denver began seeing daylight to
day after escaping the Pacific
Coast League cellar by getting
potent plate power from a pitcher
and rookie triple-A outfielder.
The Bears Sunday swept a
doubleheader 11-3, 3-0 from the
San Diego Fadres, defending
champions of the PCL.
In other games, Salt Lake City
cooled off torrid Tacoma, 12-9,
Dallas-Fort Worth nipped Seattle
1-0 on a ninth-inning home run by
Joe Nosske, and Hawaii edged
Spokane 6-5 only to-have the In
dians come back to beat the Is
landers 6-3 in the nightcap of a
doubleheader.
Rain washed out the Oklahoma
City-Portland doubleheader in Ore
gon and also the second Dallas
Fort Worth game after two in
nings. Six-foot southpaw Dick Kelley of
Denver stifled San Diego in the
clutch by going all the way to pick
up his first PCL win. He personal
ly accounted for three Bear runs
with a triple and single. Chico
Salmon and Phil Roof each added
three safeties to Denver's 14-hit
attack in its first-game rout of
the Padres.
In the second game, Denver out
fielder Ethan Blackaby, who play
ed for Yakima in the Class B
Northwest League last year, lam
med a 375-foot home run over the
right field fence with twi on in
the eighth. The blast came off San
Diego starter Marvin Fodor who
had allowed only three Bear hits
up to then.
The victory moved Denver from
the cellar to fourth place in the
tight Southern Division.
Oddly enough, Dallas-Fort Worth
replaced Denver In last place
even though the Rangers beat
Seattle. Gary Dotter went all the
way for the Texans, allowing
seven hits, and besting Wilbur
Wood who was handed his first
defeat against two victories.
Salt Lake's Bees pounded Ave
Tacoma pitchers for 19 hits, in
cluding Hal Jones' fifth homer of
the season, to break the seven
game winning streak of the red
hot Giants. Despite the loss, Ta
coma owns the best record In the
PCL at 13-7 and is in first place
in the Northern Division.
Spokane's Al Ferrara bashed a
three-run homer in the first in
ning of the second game against
Hawaii to give the Indians a lead
they never relinquished.
In the first game, Hawaii nip
ped Spokane in the top of the
ninth on a sacrifice fly by out
fielder Carlos Bernier, the Island
er's' leading hitter.
Portland U.
loses twice
SEATTLE (UPI) Seattle's
Chieftains defeated the Portland
Pilots 10-6 and 5-3 in a baseball
doubleheader Saturday.
Ma for leagues
By United Pratt International
American League
W L Pet. CB
Kansas City 15 9 .625
New York 11 8 .579 Vk
Boston 11 8 .579 14
Baltimore 13 11 .542 2
Chicago 11 10 .524 2i
Cleveland 9 9 .500 3
Los Angeles 12 14 .462 4
Minnesota 10 13 .435 44
Washington 10 15 .400 54
Detroit 9 14 .391 54
Saturday's Ratultt
Chicago 8 Washington 1
New York 3 Minnesota 2
Baltimore 8 Detroit 4
Cleveland 8 Los Angeles 0
Kansas City 14 Boston 3
Sunday's Ratultt
Minnesota 4 New York 1
Cleveland 4 Los Angeles 3
Boston 3 Kansas City 2
Chicago 8 Washington 0, 1st
Washington 8 Chicago 7, 2nd
Detroit 12 Baltimore 4
National League
W L Pet. CB
Pittsburgh 13 8 .619
St. Louis 16 10 .615
San Francisco 16 10 .615
Chicago 13 11 .522 14
Milwaukee 13 13 .500 24
Los Angeles 12 13 .480 3
Philadelphia 11 12 .478 3
Cincinnati 10 12 .455 34
New York 9 15 .375 54
Houston 8 17 .320 7
Saturday's Ratultt
Pittsburgh 5 Los Angeles 0
San Francisco 17 New York 4
Cincinnati 6 St. Louis 0
Philadelphia 7 Houston 0
Chicago 7 Milwaukee 5
Sunday's Ratultt
San Francisco ( New York 3, 1st
New York 4 San Francisco 2, 2nd
Los Angeles 7 Pittsburgh 3
WERTZ MAY RETIRE
DETROIT (UPI) - The long
basebail career of Vic WerU
may finally be over.
Wertz, 38, who was starting his
17th season in the big leagues,
declined an offer to become a
Detroit Tiger coach Sunday and
was unconditionally released bv
the Tigers.
Coast league
Northern Dvition
W. L Pet. CB
Tacoma 13 7 .650 ....
Seattle 12 7 .632 4
Portland 12 8 .600 1...
Hawaii 9 12 .400 S.
Spokane 9 14 .391 54
Southern Dvition
W. L. Pet. CB
Salt Lake City 9 8 .529 ...
Oklahoma City 11 10 .524 ...
San Diego 11 13 .458 14
Denver 10 13 .435 2. ..
Dallas-F.W. 9 12 .459 2..
Sunday's Ratultt
Denver 11 San Diego 3 (1st game)
Denver 3 San Diego 0 (2nd game
8 innings)
Salt Lake City 12 Tacoma 9
Dallas-Fort Worth 1 Seattle 0 (1st
game)
Dallas-Fort Worth at Seattle (Sid
ppd after 2nd inning rain)
Hawaii 6 Spokane 5 (1st game)
Spokane 6 Hawaii 3 (2nd game,
7 innings)
Oklahoma City at Portland, 2
games, ppd rain.
Cincinnati 5 St. Louis 4, 1st
St. Louis 7 Cin. 4, 2nd, 10 inns.
Philadelphia 6 Houston 5, 1st
Houston 6 Philadelphia 2, 2nd
Chicago 3 Milwaukee 2
Sisters girl
is softballer
McMINNVILLE - Aurice Kil
mer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Stacy Kilmer, Sisters, is a pitcher
on the women's Softball team at
Linfield College. The team is one
01 the activities sponsored by the
Women's Recreation Association
and women's physical education
department for interested Lin
field women.
Marilyn Smith
double winner
SPARTANBURG, S.C. (UPI)
Marilynn Smith won two big golf
tournaments all in a week's time,
but she says she never figures on
coming out on top just doing her
best.
Miss Smith, of Tequesta, Fla.,
had even par 216 Sunday to take
the $1,200 top money in the 54-hole
Peach Blossom Women's Open.
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DIRECT DISTANCE DIALING
y aw
V NJ
0 fUl
DS In!
ERE
Now you have the entire country at your dialing fingertip! You can dial your own station-to-station long
distance calls to over 80,000,000 telephones in the United States and Canada.
It's easy! Just remember these simple steps:
1. First dial "1" this connects you to the
Direct Distance Dialing equipment.
2. Dial the 3-digit area code of the location
you're calling (if your call is going outside
of Oregon ... just skip it if you're
calling another Oregonian!)
3. Dial the complete telephone number.
4. Give the operator the number you are
calling from, if she asks for it.
We have mailed you a folder of information about DDD, and you'll find additional Direct Distance Dial
ing instructions in the front pages of your new Bend Telephone Directory.
Dialing your own station-to-station long distance calls can save you time and it's fun! Isn't there
someone you'd like to call tonight?
BE DIAL-WISE
LOOK IT UP
JOT IT DOWN
DIAL CAREFULLYI
PACIFIC NORTHWEST BELL
DATED
FOR
A PINCH
OF REAL
FRESHNESS
70BACCO TASTE
ii TRY
7