TEW MEDrORD (OREGOX) MAIL TRIBUNE
Thursday. Jl7 I"5
Championship Rivalry Opens in PITA
Grand Pacific at Bedford Gun Club
Three visiting entres broke
SO straight targets at 16-yards
and George Morin, Spokane,
Wash., shared top scores in
doubles and handicap events"yes
terday as some 50 shooters from
five states and a Canadian prov
ince participated in practice
rounds for the Grand Pacific
tournament of the Pacific Inter
national Trapshooting associa
tion at Medford Gun club.
The battle for PITA cham
pionships began today and con
tinues through Sunday in the
biggest trapshoot of importance
in the history of the Medford
club.
Breaking 50 straight birds
yesterday were W. W. Hileman,
Cottage Grove; Walter Fisher,
Wedderburn. and R. E. Lewis.
Fresno, Calif. In handicap prac
tice Morin and Lew Wells, Sac
ramento, Cal., were top gunners
with 48 out of 50 birds each.
Morin and three others shattered
47 pigeons each in doubles. The
three were M. W. Ray, John
Day; Lewis Fisher, Eureka, Cal.,
and John Simpson, Portland.
Class Titles Today
Seven shooters busted 49 in
the 16-yard event and in the
handicap seven had 47s. There
was one 46 and two 45s in the
doubles.
Shotgunners were competing
in the 16-yard class champion
ships today with AA, A, B, C
and D crowns to be decided. It
was estimated this morning that
about 125 entries would fire dur
ing the day.
About 150 gunners are antici
pated Friday for the first half of
the singles slated for morning
and for the doubles program in
the afternoon. Second half of
the singles and the preliminary
handicap will be shot Saturday
with the field likely to reach
173. More than 200 shooters are
expected to be on hand Sunday
when the Grand Pacific handi
cap is scheduled.
Twenty championships are
being determined by the tour
nament. The singles (16 yards)
will settle eight of them. Grand
singles championship, father and
son and husband and wife lau
rels will be decided by Friday
and Saturday's full 200 birds.
Ladies', junior, sub-junior, over
70 years and 65-70 titles will be
figured from Saturday's 100.
Annual Meeting
Also on the program for the
PITA session here is the annual
meeting at 8 p.m. on Friday at
the Medford hotel. New officers
will be chosen and the site of
next year's tournament may be
set.
Registered portion of the tour
ney consists of 700 targets. A
total of S12.070 in trophies and
money prizes is offered.
Oregon, California, Washing
ton, Nevada. .British Columbia
Game Group
Slates 2nd
Hunt Hearing
Portland Second public hear
ing on the 1955 Oregon hunting
regulations will be held at 10
a.m. on Friday, July 22. The
hearing will be held at the Game
Commission's office' at 1634
southwest Alder street.
Any changes in the tentative
regulations proposed by the
commission following its July 8
meeting will be discussed and
the final rules adopted at this
hearing.
All persons desiring to be
heard should submit their rec
ommendations or suggestions to
the commission in writing
either prior to or at the time of
the meeting.
The synopsis of the regula
tions will be available for dis
tribution about the first of Sep
tember at Game Commission of-
nces and license agencies
throughout the state.
Copies of the final regula
lions will be sent to newspapers
and radio stations of the state,
Special information sheets will
be published regarding the ante
lope and other early seasons.
NY Giants Open
Football Camp
Salem CU.R) The New York
Football Giants open their-1955
training camp today when 24
players, 19 of whom are rookies,
report to Head Coach Jim Lee
Howell and his staff.
Howell and his aides, Vmce
Lombardi, backfield coach; Ed
Kolman, line coach; Ken Kava
naugh, end coach, and Tom
Landry, player -defensive back-
field coach, arrived yesterday.
They will look over the rookies
for several days before the bulk
of thfe 57-man squad reports July
25 to begin preparing for the
national football . league - cam
paign. '
Quarterbacks Charley Coner-
ly. Bob Clatterbuck and Don
Heinrich: Center Ray Weitecha.
and Kyle Rote, halfback and
captain, from last year's team
will report . with the first-year
professionals.
and Utah were represented at
yesterday's warm-up
Sixteen-yard shooters with 49s
were Martin Clogston, Medford;
Morin, Bill Ragon, Garfield,
Wash.; Karl Swain, Vernal,
Utah; H. O. Hilficker, Eureka;
Run-Off Set
In Retriever
Competition
Rogue Valley Retriever club
likelv will conduct a run-off
picnic trial on Sunday, August
14, to resolve deadlocks and
close races for club champion
ship trophies.
Kip, labrador male owned and
handled by Kenneth Denman,
and Belle, lab. female, owned
and handled by Earl Wescott,
appeared to be knotted for first
in the open all-age stake after
the fifth local picnic trial last
Sunday. Kip was victor in the
Sunday event at Hoover lakes
and Belle was second.
Great interest was displayed
by handlers in the fifth picnic
affair since the race has been
so close in puppy, derby and
open stakes. Belle appears to
have definitely wrapped up
qualifying stake laurels.
Dead Heat
Two labradors, Chief, owned
by Sid Menasco, and Lucinda,
owned by Otto Spores, loom in
dead heat competition for the
puppy trophy. Cindy, a lab.,
owned and handled by Lee
Skaggs, and Joe, a golden, own
ed and handled by Mrs. Paul
Skinner, are close on the heels
of Chief and Lucinda.
In last Sunday's up event,
Chief was first, Cindy second
and Joe third. Carl Newell
handled Chief.
Rip,-a lab owned and handled
by Gene Hunt, looks to have
slight lead over Meg, lab owned
and handled by William M. Mc
Allister, in the derby rivalry.
However, Chief won the Sunday
derby. Rocky, lab. owned and
handled by Lee Skaggs. was
second, Meg third and Sam, lab
owned by Jack Henry. Klamath
Falte, and handled by Tom Rick
ard, fourth.
Flash, owned and handled by
Weldon Kline, and Pete, owned
by Menasco and handled by
Newell, appear tied for third
behind Belle and Kip in the
open all-age contention.
Rogue Cops Stake
Qualifying stake activity in
the last outing was taken by
Rogue, a lab owned and handled
by Dr. Rambo. Second was
Buck, golden, owned and hand
led by Paul Skinner. Susy, lab,
owner Claude Miles and handled
by Newell, was third.
Kline and Denman were trial
chairmen for the day. McAllist
er and Hunt were puppy stake
judges. Smoky Middlekauf and
Skinner judged the derby and
Rickard and Hunt the qualify
ing test. Skaggs and Charles
Miller were judges for the open.
Rogue Valley club will par
ticipate with Shasta Cascade
club of Klamath Falls and the
Eugene club on Saturday and
Sunday, July 23 and 24, in an
annual trial at Diamond lake.
A camp-out is planned at the
south end of the lake on Satur
day night. The trial will begin at
noon on Saturday. Eugene is
host and each club will furnish
one judge for each stake and
trophies for one stake.
Culys Contend
In Oqden Scrap
Gale Culy, Medford, rolled
a 40-game score of 7427 in the
Maxie Kosof Endurance Bowl
ing tournament now in progress
at Ogden. Utah.
Mrs. Culy had two 10-game
totals of 1572 and 1650.
Culy rolled his stint in 13
hours with 11 other men. Walt
Coleman, DeWiston, Mont., was
high for the group with 7983.
High scores up to last Monday
were Ludquist, Salem, Ore.,
8,218, and a Texas man, 8,134.
Of the 12 starting in Culy's
group a number developed
thumb trouble and one man
was unable to finish for that
reason.
Leading women's scores were
1951, 1905 and 1863.
. The . two . Medford people
were sponsored by - Ross Lum
ber Sales and Ross Lumber com
pany. . . -. -
LEES ADVANCES
Portland (U.R) Defending
champ Bill Lees wound up in
the quarter-finals of the 38th an
nual Portland City golf cham
pionships today after beating
Eastmoreland's Elmer Hanegan
yesterday. Also in the running
today were Ken Dougherty of
Columbia-Edgewater, "Bob Mc
Revnolds of Riverside, Vince
Legler. Tab Boyer and Ben
Hughes and Amel Pascuzzi of
Eastmoreland and Dusty Woods
of McMinnville. Lees, trying for
his third city crown, was pitted
against Boyer in today's 18-hole
quarterfinals.
Dr. Everett Hunt. Eureka, and
George Bronson, Grants Pass.
With 47s in handicap were
Weldon Kline and Clogston,
Medford: Ken Skoglund, Spo
kane; Hilficker; Ray; Hileman;
Lewis Fisher, and Simpson.
SIPCDDRirS
RV Golfers
Eye 2-Ball,
Team Tiffs
Participants are still being
sought for a mixed two-ball golf
tussle Friday and a men's team
match Sunday at Rogue Valley
Country club.
Men and women of the club
will vie at 5 p.m. Friday in a
four-ball eightsome. Drawing
for partners will be at tee-off
time and each team will have
three golf clubs. Entries can be
called to the pro shop.
RVCC men will face a Klam
ath Falls team here on Sunday
morning. The local divoters may
sign up at the pro shop or phone
in their entries.
A junior match play tourney
is now in progress. In the boys
division Tom Hamlin has de
feated Pet Rasmussen and Bob
Emmens has won from Steve
Summins by default in the sec
ond round, according to avail
able scores.
Hamlin Victor
In theopening round Hamlin
turned back Mark Temple 5 and
3, Rasmussen beat Jim Emmens
1 up over 19 holes, Bob Emmens
downed Mike Monroe 3 and 2,
Cummins had a bye, Jim Town
tipped Stan Dowson 2 up, Gary
Harrington had a bye. Tony
Monroe bounced George Schuler
3 and 1 and Bruce Rinehart had
a bye.
Rickie Gilchrist beat Rich
Knight 3 and 2 in second round
matches played in the pee wee
group while Chris Rasmussen
won by default from Lee Wim-
berly. In the only first round
hassles Gilchrist got by Nick
Rasmussen 1 up and Wimberly
edged Larry Berg by the same
count.
Mary Samuelson tipped Susan
Baker 1 up on the 11th hole in
the girls' third round. In the
second round Pam Stacey beat
Sherry Lambert 5 and 4, Judy
Lambert trimmed Dianne Gil
christ 4 up, Miss Baker won
from Sue Knight 4 up and Miss
Samuelson defeated Susan Schu
ler 5 and 4. In the only first
round fray Miss Stacey won
from Judy Christensen 7 up.
Snead Takes
Lead in PGA
Qualifying .
By LEO H. PETERSEN
United Press Sports Editor
Northville, Mich. (U.R)
Sammy Snead, happy with a
new putter that "works like
magic," held a one stroke lead
today as the field teed off for
the second and final qualifying
round of play in the PGA golf
championship.
Using the putter for the first
time in championship play,
Snead who has lost a lot of big
ones because of trouble on the
greens, needed only 29 putts as
ne toured the 6,701-yard Mead
owbrook Country Club course in
a five-under-par 66. He had seven
one-putt greens.
Snead, one of the co-favorites
for the title along with defending
champion Chick Harbert and
Cary Middlecoff, had a hot back
nine with four birdies, dropping
putts of seven feet on the 10th,
nine on the 11th, 18 on the 14th
and 12 on the 18th. He also
dropped one of two feet for a
birdie on the seventh.
Needed 12-Footer
He had to can that 12-footer on
the 18th to take over the lead for
Skee Riegel of Ithan, Pa., and
Jack Burke and Doug Ford, both
from Kiamesha Lake, N.Y., had
come in with four-under-par 67s.
Trailing them by a stroke
were Errie Ball of Oak Park, 111.,
and Don Fairfield of Casey, 111.'
Both Riegel and Ford are com
peting in their first PGA, . for
this is the first year they have
been eligible for it. Riegel had
an unusual round nine birdies,
and two double bogeys and one
bogey.
In all, 17 pros in the field of
134 broke Meadowbrook's 35
36 71 par, and there were 61
golfers with scores of 73 or bet
ter, indicating that the low
qualifying score might be as low
as 146. The low 63 and Harbert
qualify for match play beginning
Friday.
The proton, a unit in the nu
cleus of all atoms, is about 1,800
times larger than an electron.
1
Swain had a 46 in the doubles
while Ragon and John Bateman,
Moses Lake, Wash., had 45s. In
the 44 bracket were Hileman,
Murray Laidlaw, Vancouver,
B.C., and George Blum, Tillamook.
Bisplinghoff
Western Am
Golf Leader
Rockford. 111. (U.R) A 20'
year-old Florida linksman led
the field into the final round of
medal play in the 53rd Western
Amateur golf tournament today.
Don Bisplinghoff of Orlando,
Fla., boasted a comfortable four
stroke lead with a-71-68-67 206
seven under par for the sun
baked Rockford Country club
course.
Low seven scorers at the end
of today's round will join with
defending champion Bruce Cudd
of Portland, Ore., in match play
starting Friday.
Bisplinghoff, North - South
Amateur titlist birdied two holes
on Wednesday's front nine and
eagled the par five 460-yard
10th. He parred the other 15 for
his four under 67. Trailing Bis
plinghoff at 210 were Robert
Brue, the 20-year-old ex-caddy
from Milwaukee, and Eddie Mer-
rins, of Meridan, Miss.
Pressure Mounts
The pressure mounted for
those coveted seven spots with
three tied at 211 and five others,
three of them Walker Cup stars,
knotted at 213.
The 211 threesome included
Jim Blair III, Jefferson City,
Mo.; Rex Baxter, Amarillo,
Tex., the opening day co-leader,
and Alex Welsh, the golfing
Rockford attorney, who led at
the halfway point.
Knotted at par 213 for the
54 holes were Walker Cuppers
Jim Jackson of Glendale, Mo.;
Dale Morey of Indianapolis, Ind.,
and Don Cherry, the golfing
crooner from Wichita Falls, Tex.
Also at 213 were Hillman Rob
bins of Memphis, Tenn., and Har
old Brink of Grand Rapids, Mich.
Cudd had 216, 10 strokes off
the pace although he automati
cally qualifies for match play.
Tied with him was Pat Schwab
of Dayton, Ohio.
Rogue River
Fishing Good
Portland (U.R) The weekly
fishing report of the Oregon
State Game Commission:
Southwest: Fair salmon Win
chester Bar, mostly "chinook.
Trout slow perch excellent
Tenmile Lake. Good evening fly
fishing Loon Lake. '
uooa iisnmg Kogue river
above Robertson bridge, and be
tween Gold Hill and Rogue Riv
er. Good catches upper Rogue
and Union Creek last week end
Fish Lake in Jackson County
producing well. Willow Creek
reservoir mostly fair with some
excellent catches. Trout slow
North and South Umpquas, fair
summer steelhead North Ump
qua. North Umpqua clearing,
South Umpqua muddy. Good
numbers . of shad taken main
Umpqua.
Fame Hall Honor
For Bob Grayson
Portland (U.R) Bobby Gray
son of Portland, former all-
American fullback at Stanford,
is due to be named to the Na
tional Football Hall of Fame
the Oregonian said today.
Grayson led Stanford into the
Rose Bowl three times in the
1930s and earlier played at Jef
ferson high here.
SEMI-FINALS SET
Everett (U.R) Ann Quasi
Everett, met Mrs. Robert Ihlan-
feldt, Seattle, and Ruth Jessen,
Seattle, teed off against Jo Anne
Gunderson, Seattle, in a pair of
semi-final matches in the Wash
ington women's golf tournament
here today.
You'll Always Find
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IN EVERY LOAD OF
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FAST. PROMPT DELIVERY
McAndraws Roa Phona 2-5271
LEGION NINE IN PLAY-OFF SERIES Central Point-Med-ford
American Legion junior baseball club, above, completes
state quarterfinal play-offs with one or two games today at
Roseburg. The local aggregation, sponsored by Myers-Holland
Legion post, Central Point and by businessmen, won the dis
trict championship with a 10-2 record. It has lost only to
Klamath Falls and to Roseburg. Left to right, front row, are
Roseburg Legion Tips
CP-Medford in Series
Starter Here, 7 to 4
Three runs in the fifth extra
inning yesterday gave the Rose
burg American Legion junior
haseball nine a 7 to 4 verdict
over Central Point-Medford in
the first fracas of a two out of
three play-off in state quarter
final eliminations.
Fred Hargis led off the 12th
inning of what had been sched
uled as a seven inning mix oy
socking a triple for the Umpqua
post team. Bill Oerdmg scored
Hargis with a single. Then Bill
Rudzik blasted a home run into
th tennis courts back of left
field to climax the surge.
Yesterday's contest was on the
Medford high diamond. The
clubs moved to Roseburg today
for the one or two games nec
essary to complete the series.
Action was to start at 5:30 p.m.
In addition to the 12th, Rose
burg threatened in two other of
the last four innings but tne
CP-Meds, southern Oregon dis
trict chammons. managed to
weather those storms.
Opportunity Fizzles
Central Point-Medford failed
to get a hit off visiting pitchers,
Dick Smith and Bill Oerdmg, in
the concluding six innings but
they did have one big scoring
opportunity in the 11th inning
which fizzled. Dick McLaughlin
walked to start that batting
turn. Francis got on board the
bases on an error and Laval
Meunier's sacrifice moved the
two base runners to second and
third.
At that point, CP-Med put on
the squeeze. Fred Herrmann
bunted and Pitcher Oerding's
throw home caught McLaughlin
In the excitement, Herrmann
had moved but little distance
down the line toward first base,
He. was easily thrown out to re
tire the side.
After the big Roseburg 12th
CP-Med batted three up and
three down to end the scuffle.
Each team eot a run-in the
third inning. Roseburg used an
error, a sacrifice by Smith and
a single by Gene Polley for its
marker and a double play ended
further damage. A walk, a field
er's option a stolen base by i,ar
ry Perkins and Ed Reinking's
hit did the trick for ClMVieuiora.
The locals took a 4 to 1 ad
vantage in the fourth inning with
a three-run splurge. Paul Eckel,
Meunier and Perkins collected
hits in the frame. McLaughlin
sacrificed. There were two walks
and a fielder's option.
Roseburg came back for two.
in the fifth. The Douglas county ;
club made use of two walks, a ,
fielder's choice, a flyout and i
hits by Hargis and Oerding. The j
visitors tied up the affair in the
sixth on a hit by Jerry Droscher,
two errors and a single by Allen
Lindbloom.
The Umpqua Legion post nine
put men on third in the ninth
canto and in the 11th Shortstop
Gordon Owsley's throw to the
plate on a ground ball prevent
ed a Roseburg run.
Duane Sides started as pitcher
for Medford. He yielded eight
hits over 10 innings, walked
five and fanned five batters. By j
Legion rules he had to be re- j
lieved after 10 innings and Herr-;
mann went to the hill. But it
wasn't Freddie's day. tie gave
up four hits in two innings, hard
hit and three of them hurting.
Herrman struck out one and
walked one.
Smith of Roseburg whiffed
nine batters and walked five.
He eave up all of Medford's
hits. Oerding, replacing Smith
for the same reason Sides gave
way to Herrman, walked one
and whiffed none.
If Central Point-Medford wins
both games today, it will play
in state semi-final eliminations
Saturday night and Sunday at
Albany.
MNESCORE:
Roseburg -....001 021 000 003 7 11 1
CP-Medford 001 300 000 000 4 8 5
Smith. Oerding (1) and Rudzik;
Sides, Herrman (10) and Meunier.
Medford Cubs
Defeat Ashland
CUB STANDINGS:
W.
2
2
. 0
Pet.
Grants Pas
Medford
1.000
.667
Ashland
.000
Medford kept its lone hold on
second place in Southern Oregon
Junior League Cub baseball yes
terday with a 20 to 6 decision
over Ashland, pushing the Lith-
ians deeper into the cellar.
The Medfordites amassed
hits in the encounter.
21
SHORT SCORE
R H E
Medford . 20 21 3
Ashland 6 6 7
Allen and Pond; Stemple, Mc-
Kinnis (6), Woodell (6) and P.
Simpson.
BOWLING
Medford Bowling lanes re
opens today with the completion
of alley refinishing work.
Summer leagues are to bowl
at the regularly scheduled times.
There are reportedly openings
in fall leagues for both men and
women.
ODESSA FRANCHISE IN
Odessa, Tex. (U.R) Poor
home attendance has caused the
owners of the Odessa Baseball
club of the Longhorn league to
drop the club out of the circuit.
The club's general manager said
the franchise will be turned over
to the league. Meanwhile, the
league's president, W. J. Green,
expressed optimism that "some
thing probably can be worked
out" so that the club can finish
out the season.
GET IN PRACTICE
For New Fall Season Starting Soon
Medford Bowling Lanes
Opoon
With Newly Refinished Alleys
If you wish to join a Fall League, come in. We have
openings for both men and women. Free instructions
for beginners.
Modtford losing Lai:
821 NO. RIVERSIDE
Jim Putney, Eldon Francis, Laval Meunier, Ed Reinking,
Ron Pruitt, Larry Perkins and Gordon Owsley. Standing in
back row, from left to right are Manager Alva Perkins, Coach
Cliff McLean, Dennis King, Dick McLaughlin. Duane Sides,
Henry Putney, Fred Herrmann and Paul Eckel.
(Brainerd photo).
Cheney Studs Crush
Mt. Shasta Nine 23-5
Medford's rejuvenated Cheney
Studs found the offerings of Mt.
Shasta, Calif., Eagle chuckers
to their liking here last night.
With Derald and Dick Wooton
and Jack Cooney heading the
slugging and with Medford Hurl
er Jim Kelly holding the Eagles
to five wallops, the Studs
swamped the Shastans ?3 to 5
in a non-league semi-pro base
ball scuffle at the fairgrounds.
Derald Wooton smashed a ter
rific homer off the left field
fence and got two singles. Dick
Wooton slammed two triples and
a single and Cooney cracked
three two-baggers in an 18-hit
barrage. Bob Selsor also tripled
and Ed McCullough, Terry Mad
dox and Ron Maurer contributed
twin-basers as 10 Medford raps
went for extra sacks.
It was Medford's seventh win
in eight games against California
teams. One game was tied. The
Studs nipped Mt. Shasta 4 to 3
a month ago. .
Seventh Only Scoreless
Medford tallied in every bat
ting turn but the seventh last
night, pushing over five runs in
the first inning, four in the sec
ond, three in the third, two in
the fourth, one in the fifth, three
in the sixth, and five in the
eighth.
The Studs got six hits in the
big first frame and three safeties
in the second. Bob Stockton re
tired from the mound after being
tagged for two hits in the second
panel and Rickie Palfini threw
the rest of the way, giving 10
hits.
Two hits, an error, a fielder's
option, a base on balls, a wild
pitch and a sneak home made up
the third inning scoring. One hit,
one walk, -an error and a field
er's miscue figured in the fourth
Derald Wooton's tremendous
clout in the fifth panel matched
a sock by Paul Eckel in a Legion
fracas last Sunday and was the
first hit over the fence for the
Studs in their , home park this
season.
Shastans Tally
Three hits an error and a stol
en base got the markers in the
sixth. There were two hits, two
misplays, two wild pitches and
two bases on balls during the
eighth Medford batting turn.
Mt. Shasta combined an error
a walk and Palfini's single for a
third inning score. In the eighth
the Eagles collected four runs.
The tiring Kelly yielded a triple
to Ron Brooks and singles to
3
vmTmni6wam :iivi nan
Enjoy America's No. 1 sport with the whole family.
Everyone, regardless of age or physical condition
can learn this popular sport.
Gene English and Ronald Gas
pari. An error and a walk helped
out.
Kay Kelley was on the hill for
the ninth inning for Medford and
the side was retired in order.
Jim Kelly whiffed eight batters
walked only two. Kay had one
strikeout.
The Studs next action is here
against Grants Pass on Sunday.
On Wednesday and Thursday
next week Medford is host to the
potent Coos Bay-North Bend
Lumberjacks.
LINESCORE:
Mt. Shasta .001 000 040 5 5 8
Medford 543 213 05x 23 18 3
Stockton. Palfini (2) and Brooks;
Jim Kelly. Kay Kelley and Dick
Wooton.
San Diego Star
Joins Redlegs
Philadelphia (U.R) Milton
Smith, Pacific Coast League's
second leading hitter with a .338
batting mark, joins the Cincin
nati Redlegs tonight. Smith, a
Negro, played third base for San
Diego and is expected to be in
the Redlegs' starting lineup to
night when they play the Phila
delphia Phillies.
Dead line Sunday Classified Is at
noon Saturday: 10 a.m. Monday for
Monday; other dy 5:30 previous day.
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The glass dries as clear as crys
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All Summer leagues will bowl
at their regular scheduled
time.
PHONE 2-2682