The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, May 25, 1963, Page 5, Image 5

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    cauKKnammmsrannniEsa
'Orlando the unwanted' blitzes Sandy Koufax
By United Press International
. Let Alvin Dark sprinkle a little
salt on all those criticisms of
Orlando Cepeda and they won't
taste half bad.
In fact, they may taste almost
as sweet as the San Francisco
Giants' Friday night 7-1 victory
over the Los Angeles Dodgers
that enabled Dark's team to take
a two-game lead in the National
League race.
And, in case Dark needs some
pepper to go with the salty words,
let him mark down in that little
Records tumble
at state A-l,
A-2 track meets
CORVALLIS (UPI) Flashy
Leon Lincoln of Jefferson shatter
ed the 220-yard dash record and
two other marks were broken as
the Oregon high school class A-l
and A-2 track meets got under
way Friday.
The meeta ended today with
final events. Preliminaries were
held on the opening day.
Lincoln, a senior, won his heat
In the 220 in the A-l competition
in 21.6 seconds. The record was
set by Reg Brady of Washington
in 1933 and tied by Butch Lumby
of Grant last year.
Ironically, the 1933 Washington
'team is holding its 30th reunion
here this weekend.
Lincoln also won his heat in the
100-yard dash in 9.9 and anchored
Uie Jefferson 880-yard relay team
Bend qualifies
only two men
Bend qualified only two men.
Bill Hutton, hurdler, and Clyde
Smith, diseue thrower, for the
finals of the state meet. In the
preliminaries Friday, Smith
tossed the discus 155 feet 3 Inch
es for a new record by a Bend
athlete but not first in the
Friday qualifications. Hutton
placed in the hurdles, with a
mark of 15.1 for the highs and
a l.i for the lows. Hutton's 19.6
for the lows was also a new
Bend record.
to a 1:29.3 clocking, the best in
the preliminaries.
r.rnnt. Pass, the ore-meet fa
vorite, qualified men in seven fi-
. : 1 i.
nal events, jeiiersoii, ngmcu
be runner-up prior to the meet,
gained spots in six events.
Th twn other records were
smashed in A-2 competition.
nn Faircloth and Mike Rosa,
both of Reedsport, accounted for
them. Faircloth won his heat in
the 880-yard run in 1:57.0 ana
I? went 22-4'A in the broad
tamo.
The old marks were 2:00 by
Randy Taylor of St. Francis of
Eugene in 1961 and 22-2'A by John
Laduke of Siusiaw in iaou.
nun final A-2 events were held.
Ron Salmon of Myrtle Creek won
the high jump at 6-0 and Don
GoorUen of Sutherlin captured
the pole vault at 12-1HI.
Lead is taken
by Prineville
Prineville golfers, with 1451
strokes, lead after the first round
of Central Oregon Golf Associa
tion four-way team matches held
Sunday at Prineville.
Trailing are Madras, 1545; Red
mond, 1560, and Bend, 1572.
In individual scoring. Vern
White, Bend, and Bill Close and
Fred Hudspeth, Prineville, are
tied with 67s. Mac Reynolds,
Prineville, Is low net scorer with
60. Tied with 66s are Del Wil
liams, Prineville. and Garth Bow
man, Madras.
Accredited with longest drive is
Close. Mel Lambert, Prineville,
dropped his ball closest to the
pin.
The Bend 25-member team has
copped the tourney trophy the
past two years, and needs only
to win this year to keep it. Next
month's matches will be held in
Redmond.
Picnic planned
for youngsters
Special to The Bulletin
PRfNEVILLE A full day of
water-skiins and picnicking has
been planned by the young people
of St. Andrews Episcopal church
(on May 29, when there is to be
no school for Crook county pupils.
The youth group and their
friends will meet at the cove, at
Ochoco reservoir, at 2 p.m., with
water sports through the after
noon. After a picnic supper, sing
ing and a ghost story contest are
plrmed for the twilight hours, un
til 10 p.m.
Your Local
ELECTROLUX
Dealer
PHIL PHILBROOK
M2-1252 1304 E. 3rd
black book in which he judges
his players that "Orlando the un
wanted" merely put the blitz to
no-hit ace Sandy Koufax and pro
vided the big blow that snapped
the Dodgers' eight-game winning
streak.
Friday night Cepeda hit a shot
into right center field for a three
run double that put Koufax on the
ropes tnd was the bie blow of
the Giants' first-innine five-run
rally. Felipe Alou followed wiUi j
a two-run homer and then Juan
Marichal did the rest with n
tS( t " N; t 1 t ( t
TALKIN' IT OVER Bend High School baseballers Mike Clark, left, and Jerry Vetle, right,
were caught doing some falking between games in a recent series at new Brum Field. Both
are on this summer's Bend Legion team. Bend Legion faces Sweet Home in three games
here this weekend. . ,
) 'wi mix
tt ' T w 1 i
The Bulletin, Saturday, May 25, 1963
Rangers roosting at top
of PCL Southern Division
By Ron Supinskl . Seemingly out of nowhere the
UPI Staff Writer Rangers came to roost today atop
Thev make 'em bis in Texas the Southern Division after win-
ihc. r.alla.-P'nrt Worth Rane-1
f Pacifin roast Leamie
are no exception.
Kokanee best
in May, June
Fishing for kokanee will be best
only May through June. They are
not taken on sport tackle until
their third or fourth year of life.
They are taken with worms, sin
gle eggs, white grubs or trolled
spinners and worms and small
lures. A surface fish, the Koka
nee goes deep late in the summer.
It is the cousin of the sea-run
sockeye.
Because they are "tender
mouthed," fishermen sometimes
have trouble landing them. The
hooks often tear loose from their
mouths. Known as "blueback" at
Odell Lake, the fish are now uni
versally being called kokanee.
They range from as small as
eight Inches at Wallowa Lake in
northeastern Oregon, to 18 at
Odell.
An aid to the fishermen and
Uie vacationer alike is the Oregon
SUie Park convenience. Parks of
fer 44 overnight camps.
Inaugurated by Samuel H.
Boardman, the parks today num
ber 190. They cover 65.201 acres.
Knme rioveloDment has been made
on 180 of them and 44 offer full
overnight facilities. Over 12 mil
lion attended Oregon's parks last
year, including i of a million
pamners.
Orecon state parks are usually
close to the main highways. These
narks have remained under the
jurisdiction of the Highway De
partment, an administrative pro
cedure that has worked "econom
ically." Use The Bulletin's Classification
80 to find the home of your
dreams.
Enjoy Push-Button Water
ing With Underground
LAWN SPRINKLER SYS
TEM. MoistC Matie the
only truly automatic lawn
and garden sprinkling sys
tem. FREE ESTIMATES
CONTACT
Eastern Oregon Mills
10 E. Greenwood 332-3511
SOme sa1f( AlvintutOHB
sparkling four-hitter that gave the ' at San Francisco.
Gianta their first victory of the The St. Louis Cardinals wal
year over the Dodgers. loped the New York Mets, 10-4,
Koufax, who pitched a no-hitter the Pittsburgh Pirates whipped
against the Giants the last time
he faced them, suffered his sec
ond loss against six wins. It was
Marichal's sixth victory of tlie
campaign and gave him a 7-5
lifetime mark against the arch
rival Dodgers. He lost his bid for
a shutout in the sixth inning as
pinch-hitter Don Zimmer homered
but he struck out 10 and walked
only one before a crowd of 40.676
i vrw u w , jr
II it n vj i,,
?tJ" "Hi- v I
"g " 17 game
The Texans
became the fourth
team to hold first place in the
tight Southern Division since the
beginning of the season.
Hawaii knocked ban Diego out
of first place Friday with a 7-2
win while the Rangers tallied two
runs in the ninth to beat Denver,
6-4.
In other contests, Ken McMuI-
len drove in four runs to give
Spokane an 84 comeback victory
over Portland, Tacoma scored six
unearned runs in one inning to
top Seattle lOfl, and Oklahoma
City s Jim Golden fired a six-nit-
ter to tame Salt Lake City 4-1.
On May 8, Dallas-Fort Worth
was in last place in its division
with a miserable 9-14 record. Sev
enteen days later the Texans
were in the king's room with a
22-18 mark. Only Vi games sep
arate the Rangers from last place
Salt Lake City.
How come the rapid rise? Main
ly because Ranger Manager Jack
McKeon shows little patience with
his pitchers. Once one of them
falters, in comes another.
Other reasons are the timely
hitting of outfielder Joe Nossek
and Infielders Ray Jablonski and
Cesar Tovar. Jablonski, a veteran
of the National League, leads the
club in homers with nine. Nossek
is batting around .320 and Pepito
Tovar, a Venezuelan, is matcn
ing Nossck's average.
Tovar's line single to center
scored the winning run for the
Rangers in the ninth inning Fri
day. The Texans capitalized on
three Denver errors in the ninth
to score two runs. The loss
snapped Denver's five-game win
streak. Rliefer Don Williams (5-2)
was the winner.
Eli Grba went the route for Ha
waii to even his record at 1-1.
He allowed only six hits while the
Islanders got II off San Diego
pitchers John Flavin (2-5) and
Dave Sisler.
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the Milwaukee Braves, 7-2, the
Philadelphia Phillies downed the
Cincinnati Reds, 5-1, and the
Houston Colts topped the Chicago
Cubs, 6-5, in other NL games.
In the American League, the
Baltimore Orioles . defeated the
Cleveland Indians, 7-4, the Min
nesota Twins topped the Chicago
White Sox, 8-6, the New York
Yankees beat the Washington Sen
Bucks sfop
North Salem
By United Press International
Strong pitching performances
carried Madison. Medford and
Pendleton into Uie semifinals of
Uie state class A-l baseball play
offs Friday.
Medford's Stuart Young stopped
South Eugene on one hit as the
Tornado collected a 4-1 decision
at Eugene.
Madison got a two-hit Job from
hurler Rick Wise and battered
Reynolds 22-0 at Troutdale. Wise
fanned 11 men and drove in five
runs himself with three hits.
Pendleton's Steve Bunker
stopped North Salem 4-2 on two
hits at Salem. Bunker strucK out
10 Vikings and walked six. A pair
of Pendleton errors opened the
door for North's two runs.
Semifinal games next week will
match Madison against Hillsboro
and Medford against Pendleton,
Woodburn edged Vale 2-1 in a
class A-2 quarterfinal game at
Woodburn Friday and moved into
the semifinals next week against
McKenzie. Yamhill Carlton will
play Band on In Uie other semi
final.
Portland State
beats Linfield
SALEM ( UPI Veteran Gordon
Riese pitched a four-hitter as
Portland State defeated Linfield
8-1 in the first game of the best-
of-three District 2 NA1A baseball
playoffs Friday.
The Vikings and Wildcats con
cluded their series today.
Portland State, champion of Uie
Oregon Collegiate Conference,
beat Northwest Conference title
winner Linfield in two straight
contests last year and went on to
finish second in the national play
offs. Riese, running his record for
the season to 8-1, struck out nine
and walked three.
Jim Leahy drove In three runs
with two hits including a double
and Gary Linn batted in two runs
with a single.
CLINIC ADDS COACHES
MONTICELLO, N.Y. (UPI)
Football coaches Frank Howard.
Clemson: Buff Donelll. Columbia;
Jerry Claiborne. Virginia Tech,
and Vic Fusia, Massachusetts,
have Wned Uie staff of the an
nual coaching clinic to be held at
Kutscher i Country Club, June
24-28.
ators, 5-3, the Boston Red Sox
beat the Detroit Tigers, 5-2, and
the Kansas City Athletics scored a
3-1 victory over the Los Angeles
Angels.
Stan Musial hit his seventh
homer of the season and Gene
Oliver drove in three runs with
three hits for the Cardinals, who
dealt Roger Craig his seventh loss
against two wins. Bob Gibson al
lowed four hits in eight innings,
including one hit in four tries by
Jimmy Piersall, who made his
NL debut for the Mets in center
field.
Long awaited
race between
Snellr Beatty due
MODESTO, Calif. (UPI)- Mo
desto was jammed today as fans
from all over northern California
flocked to Uie junior college sta
dium to see what could be the
greatest mile race in history.
The race, featuring Peter Snell
of New Zealand and Jim Beatty
of United States, will be run at
7:45 p.m. (PDT) and will be tele
vised nationally (ABC).
But the stadium, which seats
less than 9,000, is expected to be
crammed with the curious who al
so will watch the 22nd edition of
the California relays.
Not since Cornelius Warmerdam
set the world record of 15 feet,
8 inches in the pole vault at
the opening California relays has
there been such a chance for a
big show as this mile event.
Snell holds Uie world mark at
3:54.4. Beatty has been clocked In
3:56.3: Jim Grelle in 3:56.7; Bob
by Seaman at 3:58 and Cary
Weisiger at 3:59.2. There is talk
among the athletic fraternity that,
if the pacing Is fast, this mile
may be run in as low as 3:52
or 3:53.
John Fennel of Southwest Louisi
ana, who holds the world mark
in the pole vault at 16 feet, 6
inches, tangles with John Stern
berg of Washington, who has
cleared 16 feet, 5 Inches. They
could push the record up near the
17-foot mark If the weather condi
tions are right.
The 60-foot mark In the shotput,
only a few years ago considered
a big barrier, will be broken
nearly every time the boys heave
the iron ball this time. Competing
are Gary Gubner, Parry O'Brien,
Dave Davis, Dave Steen and John
McGratb all members of the 60-
foot club.
PSC places 4 on
all-star feam
PORTLAND (UPI) Champion
Portland State placed four men
on the 12-man Oregon Collegiate
Conference all-star baseball team
announced today.
The Vikings were led by junior
pitcher Gordon Riese, who has
been named to the team twice
previously. Other PSC selections
were catcher Bob Slamsos, second
baseman Bob Jones and third
baseman Terry Yamuchi.
Southern Oregon, which finished
third, placed utility Infielder Bill
Bailey and outfielders Damien
Rossetto and Dave Hughes. Second-place
Eastern Oregon was
represented by pitcher Dennis
Bagnall and shortstop Ray Strong.
Emeralds lose
12th straight
By United Press International
The Eugene Emeralds went
down to their 12th straight defeat
Friday night, 7-1 to Salem, and
set a Northwest League record
for consecutive losses.
Tri-C'ity held the old record of
11 in a row, which was set during
the 1961 season.
lowest
fastest
rates
service
Ducks keep
their ND
hopes alive
EUGENE (UPI)- Oregon kept
its Northern Division baseball
title hopes alive by coming from
behind to edge Oregon State" 2-1
in 12 innings in Uie second game
of a doubleheader Friday,
Orogon State won the first game
3-0.
The decisions left the defending
champion Beavers with a 10-3
record and the Ducks with a 9-4
mark. They ended their regular
seasons and the division title race
with a doubleheader at Corvallis
today.
Oregon won the second game
when winning pitcher Wally Palm
berg squeezed home Eric Hardin
from third base in the 12th inning.
Hardin doubled and was sent to
third on a single by Ken Jensen.
Palmberg pitched six innings of
hitless relief.
The Ducks sent the nightcap in
to extra innings on consecutive,
two-out singles by Fred Pettengill,
Cal Dean and Ed Vetter In the
seventh inning.
In the first contest, Cecil Ira
pitched a three hitter and Al
Lehrcr slammed a two-run homer
for Oregon State.
Linescores:
OSU 200 000 1-3-4-1
Oregon 000 000 0-0-3-1
Ira and Hayward: Snow and
Jensen.
OSU
010 000 000 000-1-44
000 000 100 0012-9-2
Oregon
Ira, Stevens (7) and Hayward;
Agcr, Palmberg (7) and Jensen.
Benton seeking
10th victory
NEW YORK (UPI) - George
Benton of Philadelphia, second
ranking middleweight contender,
seeks his 10th straight victory
tonight in a nationally televised
fight with sixth-rated Rubin (Hur
ricane) Carter of Patterson, N.J.,
at Madison Square Garden.
For this 10-round battle of
knockout specialists, Benton is
favored at 8-5 because of his
combined ruggedness, skill and
punch.
World champion Dick T I g e r ol
Nigeria will be an Interested
spectator at the ringside as he
scouts the two hardest hitting
contenders In his 160-pound divi
sion. .
Whether 80 year old Benton
wins or loses, he will have
achieved at least one objective:
His first main event at the Gar
den in his 14th year as a profes
sional. Twenty-six-year-old Carter, with
the shaven head and pirate's
mustache, has had only 18 pro
fessional bouts; but four of them
were Garden main events.
Because of his explosive hook
ing attack. Carter probably would
have been favored over Ben
ton tonight, had he not been
stopped by Jose Gonzalez (6) be
cause of a badly cut right brow
in his latest fight. March 30.
That was the Hurricane s first
kayo loss and his third . de
feat. Eleven of his 15 win were
by knockouts. His most spectacu
lar victory was a first-round
knockout over Cuban Florentlno
Fernandez last Oct. 27.
Benton seeks his 48th victory
and 28th knockout in 56 fights. He
has never stopped. And he hasn't
been beaten since Nov. 2, 1960,
when he lost a controversial de
cision to John McCormack at
Glasgow, Scotland.
BARBECUE PLANNED
Special to The Bulletin
PORTLAND Oregon's Beef
Council, along with the Western
States Meat Packers Association,
Portland, will host a steak barbe
cue feed for Uie varsity and alum
football players, coaches and
sports writers following Uie grid
test today between Oregon State
I University and Its Alumni.
Compare
" TTXk
III ((T
20-lbs. 30-lbs. 1 40-lbs. 50-lbs. 60-lbs. 70-lbs.
PACIFIC TRAILWAYS 1.05 1.20 U5 M.50 M.65 1.80
PARCEL POST 1.13 1.53 1.93 2.33 2.73 3.13
TRUCK RATE5 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00
RAILWAY EXPRESS 3.12 3.58 4.01 4.46 4.89 5.34
AIR EXPRESS 3.50 3.50 4.00 4.50 5.00 5.50
PACIFIC TRAILWAYS
Major leagues
By United Press International
American League
W. L. Pet. CB
Baltimore
New York
Chicago
Boston
Kansas City
26
.634
.618
.600
.556
.553
.471
.462
.442
I Cleveland
Minnesota
Los Angeles
Detroit
Washington
.368 lOli
.326 13
Friday's Results
Boston 5 Detroit 2, night
Minnesota 8 Chicago 6, night
K. City 3 L. Angeles 1, night
New York 5 Washington 3, night
National League
W. L. Pet. GB
San Francisco 27 15 .643
Los Angeles 25 17 .595 2
St. Louis 23 20 .535 4H
Pittsburgh 20 19 .513 5Vi
Cincinnati 19 19 .500 6
Chicago 20 21 .488 6'4
Milwaukee 19 23 .452 8
Philadelphia 18 22 .450 8
Houston 19 24 .442 8Vi
New York 16 26 .381 lUi
Friday's Results
Houston 6 Chicago 5
Phila. S Cincinnati 1, night
St. Louis 10 New York 4, night
S. Francisco 7 L. Angeles 1, night
Pittsburgh 7 Milwaukee 2, night
Little League
action slated
Little League baseball action
gets underway Monday afternoon
between 5:30 and 7 p.m. as Uie
Elks meet Lelco at Marshall,
VFW takes on Shoop & Schulze
at Juniper Field, and Dairy
Queen and Moose squads collide
at Harmon Field.
Men's Softball acUon starts
Monday evening at 7 p.m. on the
Bend High School Softball field.
Gory Haugen
awarded letter
Special to The Bulletin
TACOMA Gary Haugen of
Bend was among 37 athletes at
Pacific Lutheran University who
were awarded spring sports let
ters, according to Mark Solzman,
athletic director.
Haugen's was a baseball letter.
VALENZUELA RIDES TRIPLE
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UPI)
Jockey Ismael Valenzuela Ignored
news of a five-day suspension
Friday by booting home a triple
at Hollywood Park. Valenzuela
begins the layoff next Tuesday.
We Don
Sell A
Policy:
COMPLETE INSURANCE
PROGRAMS ARRANGED
When you buy Insurance policies at rendom, rather than
getting peckage protection . . . you are paying toe much
for toe llttlel Most policies chosen in that way will have
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lection. We plan your insurence so you get full protection
at the lowest costl
LUMBERHS
INSURANCE AGENCY
1924 Bond St.
CUT
shipping costs
with
TRAILWAYS
PACKAGE EXPRESS
These Rates Between Central Oregon and Portland!
Reminder issued
on deer fawns '
Special to The Bulletin
SALEM All outdoor users
are reminded by the game com
mission that it is illegal to pick
up fawn deer or any other young
animal or bird found in the wild.
WiUi camping, fishing and oth
er outdoor uses now getting in
full swing for the summer, ouU
doorsmen will be coming across
many of these young creatures In
their travels through Uie fields
and forests of the state. c
Oregon law states that It shall
be illegal for anyone to hold in
captivity any bird or animal of
the state without a permit from
Uie game commission. According
to the commission, no permits are
issued for keeping fawn deer as
pets. Anyone who picks up a fawn
and holds it in captivity is sub
ject to prosecuting under Uie law.
AND BRING ALONG
THE WHOLE FAMILY
Young and old will enjoy
this sport in our clean,
bright, pleasant atmosphere,
with plenty of modern lanes
and i convenient snack bar. -
NOW
Before 7 P.M.
7 Days A Week
35c
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After 7 P.M 4
CASCADE
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Phone 362-1392 For
Reservations 744 Bond
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Ph. 382-2421
1068 Bond
382-2151