TElf MEDfORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Sunos?, May 13 1938
Bedford High Takes 4th Consecutive fl-t District Ghampionshii
KF Pelicans
Head Tennis
Qualifying
Chuck Finch and Roger
Cooley were the only Medford
high tennis players to advance
past opening matches Friday in
the district tournament at Klam
ath Falls.
They beat Paul Clark and
Lynn Mannan, Grants Pass, in
doubles 6-4, 6-3 but dropped
their next match 3-6, 1-6 to Jim
Hines and Jim Reynolds, Klam
ath Falls.
Jim Norland and Dov: Finney,
Klamath Falls, defeated Med
ford's other doubles taem 6-4,
6-3.
In singles starters Wayne
Pounds, Klamath, downed John
Thompson, Medford, 6-0, 6-0 and
Dean Mason, Ashland, tripped
Don Gordon, 6-4, 6-4.
Jim Gordon played lefthanded
because of an injury to his right
hand.
Klamath Falls qualified five
men for the state tourney, John
Bousquet in singles and Julius
Reynolds and Jim Hines and Jim
Norland and Don Finney in dou
bles. Dave Woods of Ashland
got the other singles berth from
the district.
Bousquet, 14-year-old fresh
man, is believed to be the
youngest player who has won
the district diadem.
PILOTS VICTORS
Vancouver, Wash. (U.R)
University of Portland downed
Portland State, UVz-iVi, .in a
golf match here Friday. .
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Bailey, Dellinger Lead UO
To Conference Track Lead
Eugene OJ.R) The Uni
versity of Oregon, led by its two
crack distance runners Jim Bail
ey and Bill Dellinger, piled up
56 1-3 points here Saturday to
dominate the Pacific Coast con
ference Northern division track
and field meet.
Bailey, the man who has run
the mile faster, than anyone else
in the United States, won his
favorite event in 4:06.4 today,
considerably slower than the
3:58.6 he posted last week n
defeating his fellow Australian.
John Landy, the world record
holder. But is was fast enough
to leave the field behind and
set a new meet record. The old
mark of 4:12.2 was set by Phil
Liebowitz of Idaho in 1940 and
tied by Oregon's Bill Dellinger
last vear.
De'llinger, the 1954 NCAA
mile champ, set the only other
meet record of the day in the
two-mile event. The husky
MEDFOfbvSSTRIBUNS
SIPdDJMTS
TORNADO, CAVEMEN VIE
TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY;
GRIZZLIES ELIMINATED
SOUTHERN OREGON
CONFERENCE STANDINGS
W.
Grants Pass 7
Medford 5
Ashland 6
Klamath Falls 2
Pet.
.700
.625
.500
.200
Its only Grants Pass and Med
ford in the case for the Southern
Oregon Conference and District
6 A-l baseball championships
now.
Ashland high was eliminated
yesterday when it split a double-
1 header with Klamath Falls. The
Grizzlies won the opener 6 to 2
but were shaded in the finale
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Springfield, Ore., runner was
clocked in 9:03.5, considerably
under the old record of 9:11.3,
set by Ken Reiser of Oregon last
year.
Oregon picked up other first
place finishes to go with the
record breaking performances of
Bailey and Dellinger. The Ducks
took top honors in the 440, the
javelin, the broad jump, the 220
yard low hurdles and then fin
ished up the meet with a victory
in the mile relay.
Runnerup Washington, fin
ishing further back this year
then it has in the last two meets
when barely edged out by Ore
gon, posted 44 points. The Husk
ies picked up first place points
in the pole vault, discus and the
120 yard high hurdles.
Washington State finished a
distant third with 25 5-6 with
Oregon State following at 24 1-3
and Idaho trailing the field at
the final tabulations with 14V4.
4 to 3. Klamath Falls previously
had bowed out of contention. -Medford
and Grants Pass
prepsters failed to get in either
of there scuffles slated for last
week. The conflicts are now
billed for Grants Pass on Tues
day and Medford on Wednesday.
Wet grounds spoiled plans to
play here on Friday. Grants
Pass had a mix billed with Rose
burg yesterday and Medford has
a jayvee tiff at Ashland on Mon
day. Medford Slates KF
Coach Mel Ingram might have
brought his GP Cavemen to play
at the fairgrounds here Friday.
But there was no assurance that
the diamond would be adequate
ly dried out. There was also the
matter of further rain.
Medford has also a loop dou
bleheader date next Saturday
at Klamath Falls. Grants Pass
completes its league season with
its Medford encounters.
The Black Tornado needs to
take both conflicts from GP to
gain the loop lead. If it can
accomplish that a split with
Klamath would give Medford
the championship. Grants Pass
can grab the title by sweeping
its Medford games. A split in
the Tuesday - Wednesday action
will assure the Cavemen of at
least a knot for the crown.
Ashland has finished league
play.
Verdict Goes
To Bahama
Syracuse, N.Y. (U.R) Yama
Bahama said he expects to drop
from middleweight to welter
weight in his next bout "because
the pounds slow me down," al
though he was speedy enough to
cop his 22nd straight victory
i over a less-expenenced Hardy
i (Bazook) Smallwood.
Yama, who won a unanimous
I decision over Smallwood in a
) national televised fight Friday
i night, won't be seeking his next
I match, however, until a cut that
required stitches heals under his
right eye. ,
Best Blow
Smallwood'g best blow In the
. slow fight opened the cut in the
I third round, but Bahama's han
; dlers stopped the blood and it
' did not trouble the 23-year-old
! winner.
j Referee Barney Felix called It
j seven rounds for Bahama, two
j for Smallwood and one even
while Judge Paul Cummings
gave the nod to Bahama, 5-4-1,
and Judge Richard Fazio called
it six for the winner and four
for Smallwood. The United Press
card agreed with Felix.
Baseball
FRIDAY'S RESULTS
Pacific Coast League
Hollywood 5. Vancouver 4
Portland 5. Seattle 4
Sacramento S. San Diego S
Los Angeles 6. San Francisco I
National League
Brooklyn 8, New York 4 (night)
Pittsburgh 6. Philadelphia 5 (night)
Milwaukee 9, Cincinnati 8 (10 night)
(Only games scheduled)
American League
New York 3. Baltimore 2 (night)
Chicago 9. Detroit 7 (night)
Washington 4. Boston 3 (nigth)
Cleveland 4. Kansas City 1 (night)
Northwest League
Wenatchee 7. Tri-City 1
Spokane 3. Yakima 2
Lewiston at Salem pp rain.
SUNDAY'S GAMES
National League
New York at Brooklyn
Philadelphia at Pittsburgh (2)
Milwaukee at Cinn'ati (2)
St. Louis at Chicago (2)
American League
Chicago at Detroit
Kansas City at Cleveland (2)
Baltimore at New York
Boston at Washington
Medford Gains 12 Berths
In State A-l Contention;
Wally Larson
Medford High school's whirl-
winding track and field aggrega
tion chalked up its fourth conse
cutive track and field district
championship and gained 12
berths for state A-l contention
Saturday in a meet highlighted
by the record equaling hurdling
of Wally Larson. !'
The Black Tornado of the
Rogue Valley rolled up 158-112
counters in a District 6 A-l bat
tle fought out in chilling cold on
the Klamath Union High school
field.
Grants Pass finished second
with 133-112 and collected sev
en state meet spots. Klamath was
third with 78-56 and five berths
and Ashland scored 57 and got
four state meet places.
Larson of Medford ran the
high hurdles in :14.6 to equal the
mark set by Jack Morris of the
Tornado in 1950 and glided over
the low barriers in :19.5 to tie
the 1951 performance of Frank
Morris, another Medfordite.
Close, Russell Win
Plumley won the shot for the
Tornado. His distance was 52
feet 5 inches. Picking up other
first places for Medford were
Jerry . Close with 21-6 in the
broad jump; Mike Russell with
:51.1 in the quarter-mile; Bilbee
Lane with 2:01.8 in the half
mile and the team of Larson,
Pete Kershaw, Russell and Mike
Hawkins in the relay with a time
of 1:32.1.
Getting seconds for Medford
and also getting state meet posts
were Dave Johnson in the high
jump, Eldon Francis in the jav
elin, Mike Hawkins in the 100
yard dash, Lew Breazeale in the
pole vault and Les Lingscheit in
the 880-yard run. The total was
seven firsts and five seconds for
the Medfordites.
Colley Takes Discus
Pedro Colley of Klamath was
first in the discus with 142-734,
followed by South's 128- for
Ashland. Larry Slessler of Med
ford was third. Colley also qual
ified in the shot put with 48-10
for second place.
Gene Parent of Ashland won
the high jump at 5-10 beating
out Johnson's 5-9. Larry McFar
land of Grants Pass heaved the
javelin 190 feet 5 inches to de
feat the state champion Francis.
The Medfordite retained his
chance to defend the title with a
throw of 181-2l.
Hawkins ran a :09.9 prelim
for Medford in the 100 but was
beaten by Stewart Baker's :10
flat for Ashland in the finals.
Hawkins had :10.1. Baker also
won the 220 in :22.4. Dave Pep
ple of Klamath took second with
:22.7 and Hawkins finished third.
Terry Boatman won the mile
for Grants Pass in 4:42 and was
followed by his teammate, Mike
Barrett. Phil Paquin took anoth
er GP first with 12 feet in ,the
pole vault and Breazeale quali
fied for state with 11-8.
Second places nabbed by the
GP Cavemen included . Chuck
Weller with 21-4 in the broad
jump, Bert Klett with :14.9 in
the high hurdles and Bob Mary
ott with :20.5 in the low hurdles.
Tom Farrell of Klamath Falls
was second in the 440-yarder
with a :51.7 time and the Klam
ath relay crew of Pepple, Butch
Kimption, Donn Taucher and
Farrell was second in 1:33.
Plumley" reportedly had to
Rental Equipment
Air Compressors Water Pumps
Cement Finishing Machines
Electric and Gas Cement Vibrators
Roller Water Wagon
WITH OPERATOR
2 Graders Shovel 4 Cranes
Back Hoe Drag Lines
3 Tractors with Bulldozer, Ripper or
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2 Turnapulls
Gunnite Machine with Mobile
'600 Cu. Ft. Compressor
Ties Record
puts better than the district
mark following his event. The
distances were not available
from Klamath Falls last night.
Larson High Man
Larson was high point man
with 22V4, Baker scored 21,
Colley 18 and Pepple 16.
Plumley in warm-up and after
the shot event beat by several
inches the district mark of 54-7
set by Jack Moad of Medford in
1953.
Sickness which had bothered
him all week hampered Med
ford'i Wilcey Winchell in the
half-mile. He finished seventh.
Bob Tisdel of the Tornado hurt
his ankle in the broad jump,
hobbling him for participation
in the high jump.
Russell in the quarter was box
ed by Farrell and Jim Cattanach
of Grants Pass. That accounted
for a time slower than Russell's
best this year. Once loose . the
sophomore ran a great race.
Plans Told
For Lifts On
Mt. Shasta
Mount Shasta, Calif. Mt.
Shasta Ski Bowl, Inc., has taken
the wraps off the biggest moun
tain development plan in the
United States.
A two section lift, spanning
more than miles of Mt.
Shasta's extinct volcanic cone,
will carry passengers from a
base station at 7,600 feet to a
lookout at 11,050. Height of Mt.
Shasta is 14,162.
Sen. Randolph Collier, presi
dent of the Ski Bowl organiza
tion, said that the plan has been
prepared by Heron Engineering,
Denver, Colo.
The upper lift will be the first
in the nation to employ four
passenger gondola cars. Capacity
of the upper tramway is set
for 250 passengers per hour,
Lower lift will be a regular dou
ble chair installation. It will han
dle 600 passengers per hour and
will run from the 7,600 to 9,800
feet elevations. The lower facili
ty will be 7,775 feet long and
will serve a ski bowl two miles
long.
Vice President Elmer Ken
nedy said that the Ski Bowl
organization has assurances that
the entire development, includ-
ing cost of a lodge, warming
hut and upper vista house facilv
ties can be completed for less
than $1,000,000.
The development plan was
launched when the Forest High
way. Programming body ear
marked $880,000 for paving
Everitt Memorial highway, from
Mount Shasta to the Ski Bowl
at Panther Meadows. Work on
the 15-mile route is expected to
begin in June.
Mt. Shasta Chairlift Develop
ment committee initiated the lift
project. The Ski Bowl corpora
tion has been formed out of con
tributors to the development.
Actual development will start
after the U.S. forest service is
sues a prospectus next month
and approves the best qualified
bidder. The project will be on
forest service land and under
its control. Time table calls for
completion of the tower lift in
1958 and the upper lift in 1959.
TOM-MIX
CONCRETE C9
CRATER HIGH TRIUMPHS
IN DISTRICT A-2 MEET
Ashland The Crater high
school Comets, with only a pair
of seniors on their team, col
lected top scoring honors in the
District 6 A-2 track meet here
yesterday and earned seven
berths in the state prep meet
next Friday and Saturday at
Corvallis.
The Comets, who rise into
the A-l ranks next fall, ran up
87 points in their final appear
ance within the A-2 area. Suth
erlin came next with 54V4 and
Myrtle Point was third with 50.
Douglas took fourth with 48 and
Eagle Point, a rising threat in
track circles, had a 42 tabula
tion and Bandon recorded 36.
Phoenix scored 31, Myrtle Creek
29V2, Illinois Valley 29, Coquille
18, Henley 5 and Gler.dale two.
Crater's first place winners
were Jack Lilly with one 134
feet 5 inches in the discus,
George Juveland with :10.6 in
the 100-yard dash, Bob Mason
with 21-1 Vt in the broad jump
and Dick Davis and Craig Coch
ran who tied at 5-9 in the high
jump. Juveland was second in
the 220 and Don Goyette runner
up in the pole vault.
Double Winners
Brant Strickland in the hurd
les and his Douglas high mate,
Don Thompson, in the mile and
half-mile were the only double
winners of the conflict. Strick
land had times of :15.7 and :21.2
in the highs and lows. Thomp
son ran the mile in'4:47 and the
half in 2:06.6. The two got the
only places for their school in
the state meet.
Sutherlin also picked up four
meet' spots. Stillwell won the
440-yarder in :54.5 and the team
of Stillwell, Carl Bay, Chriss
and Seal took the relay. Bay
was second in both the high and
low hurdles.
Myrtle Point and Bandon each
got three berths. Stan Sharp
was first for Bandon in :23.6 in
the 220 and was second in the
100. Dale Moore won the vault
at 11-7V4 for the Tigers. MP's
Bobcats got seconds by Mike
Russell in the Discus. Jess Ad'
ams in the 440 and Springer in
the half-mile. j
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George Plumlee won the shot
put at 46-5i for Illinois Val
ley and got another state spot
with second in the javelin.
The spear event was taken
by Wayne Christian of Eagle
Point with a dandy 172-5V4.
For other state meet trips
Phoenix was second in the relay.
Ed Sanders, Coquille, in the
shot, and Naas, Myrtle Creek
in the mile.
A-2 Results:
Hieh Hurdles Strickland. Douglas:
Bay, Sutherlin; Bartley. Myrtle Creek:
Brewer, I. V.; Holmgren. Glendale;
Jackson. Eagle Point; Time :15.7.
"shot-nut Plumley. I. v.: Sanders.
Coquille: Russell, M. U.; Sherwood.
Coq.; Christian, EP; Morse, Crater:
Distance 46 ft. S'i in.
Discus Lilly. Crater: Russell. MP:
Smith, D; Christian. EP: Plumley, IV:
Hughlett. Bandon: Distance: 134 ft. 5
in.
100 yd. Dash Juveland, Crater:
Sharp, Bandon; Beck, MP: Stillwell,
Suth; McClure. EP; Brood. Phoenix;
Time :10.6.
Hieh Jums: Davis. Crater: Cochran.
Crater: Bartley, MC; Friend. E.P.;
Kincheloe. MP: Schricker. Suth:
Height: 5 ft. 9 in.
Pole vault Moore. Bandon: Goy
ette. Crater: third nlace tie. Friend.
E.P.: Alcorn. IV; Bennett, MC; Height:
11 tt. 7 u in.
Mile Thomoson. Douglas: Naas. M-
C; Deem. MP: Eldon. Crater: Bowles,
Crater; Estremado. Crater; Time 4:47.
440 stillwell. Suth: Adams. MP.:
Swingle. Phoenix; Thorton, Henley;
Fish. Coquille; Hubbard, Crater;
Time " :54.5.
Prep Golf Team
Gets 831 Score
Medford High's golf team had
an 831 score Friday in the up
state Golf tourney at Albany
and Corvallis but its exact plac
ing in the tourney was not
known last night. '
Marshfield had an 815 to take
the meet and South Salem was
next with 819.
Other scores had not been
compiled for the two days when
the Tornado linksmen headed
for home.
The Tornado five had ;411
total at Albany on Friday and
a 420 at Corvallis yesterday.
Phil Mongrain headed Med
ford with 77-82159. Other
cards were Tom Hamlin 80-82
162, Dick Copple , 79-82161
Gary Harrington 88-83 171 and
Joe Materie 36-92 188.
' Ja,rel!"r-Chrlstin- Er:tPun2f"' ?
Suth: Sellers. Suth; Distance: 172 ft.
5a in.
Low Hurdles btnckland. Douglas:
Bay, Suth; Brood, Phoenix: Springer,
M.P.; Gossett, Crater; Byers, Crater;
Time "21.2.
220 Sham. Eandon: Juveland.
Crater: Chriss. Suth: Greagor. Co
quille; Witte. Phoenix; Arnett, Henleyi
Time 23.6.
Broad Jumn Mason. Crater: Daw.
E.P.; Bardwell, M.C.; Pettegrew, EP.;
Newton. Douglas; Jesperson, Bandon;
Distance: 21 ft. l'.'t in.
880 Thompson. Douglas; Springer.
MP: Spradling, Crater; Straus, Crater;
McDonald. EP: Time 2-06.6.
Relav Sutherlin (Stillwell. Bar.
Chriss, Seal): Phoenfx. (Brood. Swingle.
Witte, Maddeni; Bandon. Myrtle Point.
Eagle Point. Crater. Time 1:39.1.
Oregon State
Trims Idaho
Moscow, Ida. (U.R) Dan
Lovejoy, Oregon State catcher,
drove in two runs in the ninth
inning here Friday with a double
that gave the Beavers a 7-5
Northern Division victory over
Idaho.
Lovejoy was the leading hitter
for the Beavers with three hit
in four trips. He drove in three
runs. Newt Westerman, Idaho
shortstop, had three hits in three
appearances.
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