Blto feUNi FOR STATE Jim Leagjeld, right, member of the state Shrine teem, takes a pitch-out from Roseburg's all-,tate quarterback Paul Brothers in practice this week, as the State squad prepares to meet the Metro II next Saturday. Leagjeld is the only athlete from Central Oregon that made the Shrine test. He was a halfback last year for the Bend Lava Bears. t .. .,!-' I 1 'i . . v:-- : 1R . The Bulletin, Saturday, August 10, 1963 A LOOK AT SPORTS J more tracksters make Hall of Fame M By Web Ruble Bulletin Sports Editor By Web Ruble Bulletin Staff Writer Bend High School's Track and Field Hall of Fame received (our new additions this week. Three individuals off the 1963 Lava Bear track team were written in the hall's annals, plus the whole team unit. Coach Hoot Moore's fame hall consists of a photo gallery with appropriate comments about each individual. In order to make the Hall of Fame, a track athlete must be a dedicated trackster. He gets plac ed on the fame roster after com pleting his senior year. There are some stringent requirements. He must have turned out for track all three years he was in high school. He either must have held a district championship or a school record at the time he was competing. Coach Moore said that his 1963 Lava Bear tracksters were the best he has coached. Moore, therefore, thought that the whole Lava Bear team (as a unit) should go up on the board. Bend was undefeated in dual meet competition. This is the third year in a row that Bend has done it. The Lava Bears now boast a 14 consecutive dual meet win record, over the three-year period. Hoot's 1963 Bruins were cham pions of the Oregon - California Relays, the Elks Cinderama, the Hayward Relays (the first time in the school's history), the Bulle tin Metric Invitational, and won the sub district championship. Bend was district runnerups. Bend captured seventh place in the Class A-l state track meet. During the 1963 season, the Lava Bears set 10 school records, 25 meet records, and scored 1003 points. This resulted in Bend's compiling a staggering average of 91.1 points per meet, including 'Jie comparatively meagre 18 points Bend scored in the state meet. Aside from the team, three in dividual tracksters had their names enscribed in glory. Bill Hutton, Bend's hurdle ace for the past two years, was one of them. Hutton holds the school record in the low hurdles. His record time is 19.6. Hutton was undefeaUd during the regular season in both the high and low hurdles. He was the champion in both evenU for the 1953 Bulletin Metric Invitational, as was he in both events for the sub-district and district meets. His time of 14.9 is the third best in the stale for the highs. He also was third in the state in the low hurdles Hawaiian Colts PORTLAND (UPD Vern In ouyt fired a one-hitter as Hilo. Hawaii, defeated Tri-City 6-0 to capture the Northwest Regional Colt baseball championship Friday night The Hawaii team advanced into the Western Division tournament, which opens at Riverside, Calif., Monday. Looking for a car? Check CI as sificauon No. 100 tor best reiulu. ...... . .. .V Si with a time of 19.8. Hutton receiv ed the team's high point man track award, and was honored with the Grahlman-Winter award for being "the outstanding track man." Jim Leagjeld, Bend javelin thrower, is the second addition. He holds the school record in the javelin event with a throw of 191' 4'V. He was the 1961 Hayward Relays champion. Leagjeld was both district and sub - district champion in 1962 and 1963. He was champion this year in the Oregon California Relays and the Bend Elks Cinderama. He holds meet records in the latter two. Leagjeld received the Jaycee outstanding athlete award, and he was co-captain of the 1962 and 1963 teams. Mark Miller, 1963 district 880 champion, is the third member of the honored trio. Besides being district champion in the 880, Miller was a member of two relay teams that took first places in four meets. The Lava Bear two-mile relay team captur ed three of them: the Oregon California Relays, the Bend Elks Cinderama. and the Hayward Re lays. The Bend mile relay team captured top honors In the Ore gon - California Relays. Bend holds the mile and two-mile relay records in the Hayward Relays. Coach Moore's 1963 trio Joins eight other track and field ath letes on the school's glory roster. The others Include: Rex Cham bers, 1962. now playing basketball and running track at the College of Idaho. Harold Still, 1961. nov through school at Central Oregon College with plans to continue at one of the Utah colleges. Jerry Johnston, 1961, now playing foot ball at Idaho State. Curt Jones, 1961, now attending COC. George Hawes, 1959, (the first one) now working for the U.S. Forest Serv ice. Dave Vandevert, I960, now a trackman at Linfield College. Har old Haugen, 1960, playing football and running track at Southern Oregon. Gordon Hogland. 1961, now playing football at College of Idaho. And Dave Fletcher, 1962, now playing football and running track at College of Idaho. Also enscribed In glory is the entire 1961 team which emerg ed district champions, plus the 1962 two-mile relay team con prised of Herb Hickman, John Cutter. Rex Chambers, and Ran dy Slate. Hickman will be a senior this year. Cutter is attending Stan ford. Randy Slate graduated this June, but hasn't disclosed plans. win regionals Hilo was unbeaten and unscored upon in three games in the four team, double-elimination regional tourney, which ran four days. BENNETT'S MACHINE SHOP Weldini & Repairing 1114 Roosevelt Ave Bend Ph. 382-1762 Shriners offer game-travel plan for tilt Local Shriners announced to day a game travel package plan for those Central Oregon football fans who want to at tend the Shriners' all-star prep Metro State football game in Portland, Saturday, August 17. It Includes a game ticket with a round trip bus ticket all In one. These package ducats are en sale at West's Coffee Shop. Game tickets alone will be on sale at Magill Drug Store. All tickets are about 30-yard line seats under the covered part of Multnomah Stadium. They are reserved seats. It is the same deal that was offered last year. The bus leaves Bend on Saturday at 1 p.m., and returns to Bend im mediately following the game. Gametime Is 8:30 p.m., with the pageantry preceeding the annual contest at 7:30. Jim Leageld, a star halfback at Bend High School last year, is on the state team roster. The Bend High School band (80 members In all) will join other musical groups in the pagean try. Fullmer fights Tiger tonight in Nigerian bout By United Press International IBADAN, Nigeria (UPD Bull shouldered, Bible-reading Gene Fullmer, a brawny mink-rancher of West Jordan, Utah, will try to recapture the world middleweight crown from stocky, fast-fisted Dick Tiger of Nigeria tonight in their third title fight. And in case Fullmer, 32, docs defeat the idolized Tiger, the Ni gerian government will have a force of 1,750 soldiers and police ready to protect Gene, if neces sary, from the expected sellout crowd of 45,000 in the new out door Liberty Stadium. However, Tiger is favored at 4-1 to keep his 160-pound crown in their scheduled 15-round fight. And if England's Jack Hart, the referee and only ring official, de cides that 33-year-old Tiger is the winner, no trouble is expected. A sellout gate would approxi mate $280,000. Among the various starting times that have been given out for the fight, the newest and per haps the likeliest was 7 p.m. (2 p.m. EDT). Intermittent rains for nearly a week threatened until Friday aft ernoon another delay of this bout, which already was postponed twice because of a stone-bruise on the ball of Fullmer's left foot. The previous dates were July 13 and July 27. The Nigerian government, us ing this match to boost the coun try's prestige, has guaranteed $182,000 to promoter Jack Solom ons of London. He, in turn, guar anteed Tiger $100,000 and Full mer, $60,000. BEND CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC MODERN FACILITIES FOR GENERAL PRACTICE X-RAY LABORATORY PHYSIOTHERAPY HOURS: :00 . 5:00 CLOSED THURS. AFTERNOON Other hours by Appointment. J21 GREENWOOD AVE. BETWEEN BOND WALL TELEPHONE 382 5422 Final witness in Georgia's Butts denies game By Charles S. Taylor Jr, UPI Staff Writer I ATLANTA (UPI) - Wallace ! Butts was on record today In his $10 million libel suit against the Saturday Evening Post with an emphatic denial that he con spired to rig Ihe 1962 Alabama. Georgia football game. Butts was the final witness be fore the libel suit hearing in the gold-draped federal courtroom here recessed for the weekend. The "round little man" of col lege football testified for three and a half hours in a sometimes I impish, sometimes serious vein. Part of his appearance put him on the courtroom floor to explain tricky football plays with fancy top-rung Yanks in homer hitting By United Press International Yes. Virginia, there is a race the New York Yankees are los ing. It's not the American League pennant race, of course, because that's a Cakewalk for the world champions who are 8Vi games in front with 50 to play. They couldn't lose that one if they let tlie batboy sub for manager Ralph Houk for the rest of the season. But there is a definite possi bility that the Minneosta Twins will wind up wearing a tradition al Yankee trademark: the home run title. The Twins have clubbed 150 homers in 113 games to put them live homers ahead of the Yankees and the way the Minnesota mus clemen hit 'em in bunches they're a good bet to finish the season on top. At their present clip they'll wind up with 210 only 30 short of the major league rec cord set by the 1961 Yankees when Roger Maris and Mickey Mantle combined to hit 115. Reach 150 Mark The Twins reached the 150 mark in homers for the season Friday night when Don Mincher, Zoilo Versalles and Rich Rollins connected in a 5-3 victory over the Boston Red Sox. It was the Twins' eighth win in their last nine games but they're still 9'k games out of first place because the Yankees just go on winning ...winning.. .winning. The Yankees defeated the Los Angeles Angels, 1-0, the Detroit Tigers beat the Chicago White Sox, 3-1, after a 2-1 loss, and Ihe Kansas City Athletics topped the Cleveland Indians, 5-1 In other AL action. In the National League, Cincin nati beat Los Angeles, 8-4, San Francisco shut out Philadelphia, 4-0, New York defeated Chicago, Beat Bend 3-2 Redmond Juniors go to state tourney Special to The Bulletin REDMOND Central Oregon will be represented in the state Junior League tournament this year by Cent -Wise Drug, Red mond's area championship nine. Redmond won the Central Ore gon title and gained the state tour- ney berth last week by beating Bend 3-2. It was Redmond s third triumph this season over the Bend-ites. Redmond will go into the stale playoffs with a 15-7 win-loss rec ord. Besides holding victories ovjr the other Central Oregon clubs, Redmond has cleaved teams from Portland, Creswell, and Burns. Redmond's state title hopes rest on the shoulders of four batters who have pasted the ball at a clip above the .300 mark all season. A game-winning battery of Harold Duncan and catcher Wayne Mar quis will also lend a helping hand. Cent-Wise Drug hopes have been bolstered by the addition of Jerry Dunaway, a winning pitcher from neighboring Prineville. The rules state that a district winner is en- MACK GETS NOD NEWTON, Wales (UPI) -Freddie Mack, formerly of Brooklyn, N. Y., is favored to defeat Joe Erskine of Walkes, Ihe former British and Empire heavyweight champion, tonight In a 10-round bout. Mack, 28, has settled in It aly. I footwork. He also diagrammed, as three coaches before him have done during the trial, football for mations. Butts looked squarely at the jury, made up of 12 businessmen, when he denied that he save Uni versity of Georgia football secrets to Alabama coach Paul (Bear) Bryant prior to the game last September in which Alabama trounced Georgia 35 to 0. The Post, in an article called "The Story of a College Football Fix," said Butts passed vital in formation in an attempt to fix the game's score. Butts acknowledged under ques tioning that he knew and associa I ted with Frank Scobey of Chicago replacing 7-3, Milwaukee whipped St. Louis, 6-3, and Houston and Pittsburgh split 7- wins in a twi-nlght pair that went 15 and 11 innings re spectively. Jim Perry yielded homers to Dick Stuart and Carl Yastrzemski but pitched a four-hitter to win his ninth game for the Twins. The Twins scored the winning run in the sixth inning when Lenny Green tripled home a tally and completed the circuit himself on Chuck Schilling's wild relay. Bouton Wins 15th Bulldog Jim Bouton won his 15th game for the Yankees with five-hitter to top the Angels' Don Lee. The Yankees scored the only run of the game in the second inning on singles by Joe Pepitone and Elston Howard fol lowed by Johnny Blanchard's sac rifice fly. It was Bouton i fourth shutout. Bubba Phillips' tie - breaking single paved the way for the Tig ers' 10-inning second-game tri umph after relief pitcher Eddie Fisher earned his sixth victory lor the White Sox in the opener. Pete Ward doubled and scored the decisive run of the opener on Camilo Carreon'i single in the fourth. Dave McNally, aided by three innings of shutout relief by Dick Hall, won his fourth gamo for the Orioles behind an eight-hit attack that included two hits each by Luis Aparlcio and Jerry Adair. Jim Duckworth, tagged for three runs In five Innings, suf fered his ninth loss for Washing ton. Moe Drabowsky pitched a three-hitter and struck out five as the Athletics handed Jack Krallck his 11th defeat, Bobby Del Greco homered for the Ath letics while Max Alvis connected for the Indians. titled to pick up one additional player from lis district when en tering the state tournament. Redmond's district champion nine has been playing under the coaching of two young mentors: Claron Ferguson and Alan Uye matsu, Ferguson doubled as di rector of Redmond's summer youth recreation program. i taasMSiSaBaSeMiaiaK TRAMWAYS 1068 Bond BEND 382-2151 $10 I but added that he never knew i Scobey made bets. Scobey, identified by the Sen ate rackets committee as a man who at one time placed heavv bets on horse racing and football games with a gambling syndicate in Terre Haute, Ind has made a deposition in the suit but It has not been read and entered into the court testimony. Butts said he was a "good friend" of Scobey and had talked by telephone to him several times prior to the controversial game. He said he made 10 or 11 calls to Scobey in September, 1962, In cluding one call on the day of the football contest The Post said in the alleged fix The Scoreboard Major Leagues American League W. 72 64 63 64 56 54 54 51 50 41 Pet. .643 .566 .558 GB 8tt 9tt New York Chicago Minnesota Baltimore .547 lOtt .483 18 .482 18 .458 21 .455 21 .450 21U .360 32 Cleveland Boston Los Angeles Kansas City Detroit Washington Friday's Results New York 1 Los Angeles 0, night Minnesota 5 Boston 3, night Chicago 2 Detroit 1, 1st, twi-nlght Detroit 3 Chicago 1, 2nd, night Kansas City 5 Cleveland 1 Baltimore 7 Washington 1 National League W. Pet. Los Angeles San Francisco St. Louis 68 64 63 63 59 60 57 58 45 37 .602 .561 .548 .534 .527 .517 Cincinnati Chicago Philadelphia Pittsburgh .500 UVi .500 UV, .388 24V4 Milwaukee Houston New York .325 Sltt Friday's Results New York 7 Chicago 3, night San Fran. 4 Philadelphia 0, night Houston 7 Fitt. 8, 1st, twl, 18 inn Pittsburgh 7 Hou. 6, 2nd. night 11 inns. Cincinnati 8 Los Angeles 4, night Milwaukee 6 St. Louis 3, night Bend fo host all-comers track meet August 23 An "all-comers" track meet for school-age boys and girls will be held In Bend on Friday, August 23, it was announced today by the City Recreation Department. Eugenian wins SALEM (UPI) -Duke Mathews of Eugene fired 68-75142 to win the Northwest Assistant Golf Pro fessionals tournament champion- snip nere t Tiday. Jerry Mowlds of Portland finish- ed in second place with 70-74144. RIDES THREE WINNERS SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. (UPI) Bobby Ussery rode three winners at Saratoga race track Friday. Ho scored on KHda ($9.60) in the second race, Out ing Class ($2.80) in the fourth and Trick Dance ($12.80) In the sixth. FAMILY-STYLE CHINESE DINNERS FOR 3 . . . Your choice of any 3 dishes, enly $3.75. Try Itl SKYLINE DRIVE-IN 1213 South TWrS . . . m-iXIl Opn Noon lo 10 p.m. Closed Monday You can tell this is a thru-bus just by looking at it! by looking at it! I y because it's Ly RESERVATIONS FOR TRAILWAYS TOURS TO NEW AND FLORIDA ARE BEING TAKEN AT THE BEND million libel suit - rigging i article last March that Atlanta insuranceman George Burnett ac cidentally overheard a telephone conversation between Butts and Bryant in which Butts gave Bry ant important secret information about the Georgia team. Butts was athletic director at Georgia at the time of the al leged incident. He resigned from that position last February. Bryant denied in court Thurs day that he had received any In formation from Butts. Bryant also has a libel suit pending against the Post as a result of the article. Butts is due for further cross examination by Post attorneys wnen the trial resumes (at 11 a.m., EDT) Monday. PCL standings Northern Division W. L. Pet. 78 47 .624 GB X3Vi Spokane Tacoma Hawaii Hawaii Portland Seattle 64 .518 .484 .484 .468 17V4 19V4 ,440 23 Southern Division W. L. Pet. GB Dallas-Ft. W. Okla. City San Diego Salt Lake City Denver 65 58 .528 64 58 .525 61 64 .488 58 63 .479 55 68 .447 Friday's Results Dallas-Ft. Worth 8 Okla. City 2 San Diego 3 Tacoma 1' Seattle 3 Tacoma 1 Seattle 13 Denver 1 Spokane 5 Salt Lake 4 (10 inns). Hawaii 4 Portland 3 Northwest Loop W. L. Pet. GB. 27 17 .614 27 18 .600 Vt 23 21 ,523 4 21 22 .488 6A 17 25 .405 9 Salem Yakima Lewiston Wenatchee Trl-City Eugene 17 29 .370 11 Friday's Results Yakima 8 Lewiston 1 Trl-Clty 12 Salem 1 Eugene 3 Wenatchee 2 tonight's Schedule Lewiston at Yakima Salem at Trl-City Bend's multi-event track and field affair fs open to boys and girls in school grades one through nine. The competitors do not have to be from Bend. It is an open meet. Preliminaries will run In the morning with the finals in the aft ernoon. The track and field affair is being jointly sponsored by the Bend Rotary Club and the City Recreation Department. There will be track coachlne clinics this year, but they will be modified," City Recreation Di rector Vince Genna has announc ed. Registration for the meet is now open at the city swim pool and the city recreation office in the City Hall. All entrants must reg ister, Genna said. Enjoy Push-Button Water ing With Underground LAWN SPRINKLER SYS TEM. Molit-O'Matlc the only truly automatic lawn and garden sprinkling system. FREE ESTIMATES CONTACT Eastern Oregon Mills 10 E. Greenwood 382-3511 fers baffle T Van s Vikings in PorWmd go PORTLAND. Ore. fUPD-The San Francisco Forty Niners open their exhibition season against the Minnesota Vikings tonight her at Multnomah Stadium. Five Forty Niner starters are out for a variety of reasons. J. D. Smith, the team's number one runner, and veteran end Clyde Conner are definitely out with Injuries. Guards Bruce Bos ley and Mike Magac are doubtful because of Injuries and coach Red Hickey hopes to get by with out them. Guard Ted Connolly is warring with the team over his contract. Kermit Alexander, the much heralded back, is expected to ba restricted to runbacks since he has only been in camp a week. Hickey will especially bo look ing at such backs as Lloyd Wins ton, Jim Vollenwelder and rookies Mike Lind and Don Lisbon. They have run well In practice and if one could be found to join Smith in the starting backfield, the ver satile Alexander might wind up playing defense. The Forty Niner passing game should be a strong one with quarterback John Brodle having a pair of outstanding young re ceivers In Bernie Casey and Jim Johnson. Leon Donohue and John Thomas will open at guards and if they can move a few Vikings aside and men like Winston and Lind can look as good as they have in practice, then the Forty Niners too. Minnesota will not unveil its flashy rookie quarterback, Ron VanderKelen, but veteran FrBn Tarkenton is around and he can throw with the best of them, VanderKelen, who started for the college all stars against Green Bay, also has only had a week of practice. ,,, The Vikings' best runner. Tom my Mason, is sidelined because of Injuries and the veteran Tom my Wilson will take his place. San Francisco defeated Minne sota three times last year and rates as the slight favorite today. FREE ADULT BOWLING LESSONS Beginning Auguif 7 Bealners I to 1 P.M. Intermediate . . . 1 te S PM. CALL CASCADE BOWL Phone 3I2-I37J For Reservations 744 Bond THE ONLY THRU-BUS SERVICE FROM HERE TO THE EAST AND SOUTHWEST ENGLAND DEP0T1 i