Bartow Studs' Hurler
For Camp White Tilt
Jerry Bartow is the prooabie
pitcher for the Medford Cheney
Studi Saturdav night when they
battle Camp White at 7 30 P m.
st the Veterans Arrr,ini.stration
domiciliary Ricker field.
The ex-Washington Sta'e col
legian joined the Studs this
week. He is not stranger to
Cheney players who have play
ed against him in the now sus
pended Southern Oregon league, j
Bartow was in a Coos Bay-North i
Bend uniform last season and.
ranked as the No. 2 hurler in the
SO circuit behind Meriford's j
Dcrald Wooton. In 1955 Bartow
was with the Drain Elack Sox.
Bartow was a Northern divi
ion all-star for the champion
ship WSC Cougars in 1956. He
Is the stepson of Carl Mays,
Portland, ex-major league hurl
er. During the past year Bartow
has been working for his mast
er's degree. He hs studied to be
a teacher and coach.
Mound foe for the new Studs'
tosser will be picked from
among three VAD man, accord
ing to Keith Johnson, Camp
White manager. The three are
Ned Landers, ex-Medford high
and Southern Oregon college;
Fred Herrman. ex-Crater high,
and Don Sanford, ex-Jacksonville.
Seeks To Repeat
Camp White will be looking
for a repeat verdict over the
Studs. The VAD topped the
Cheney Lumber company club
10 to 2 In non-leaguer on Me
morial day. Since that time,
however, the Studs' record has
been somewhat more impres
sive. Medford has tripped Glen-
Collegians
Threaten in
Trans Miss.
Dallas. Tex. W W a 1 k e r
Cupper Rex Baxter Jr. headed
a batch of college youngsters
who made up exactly half of the
field as the 54th annual Trans
Mississippi golf tournament hit
the third round today.
Actually, with Baxter as the
bellwether, the University of
Houston's NCAA defending
championship team seemed to
be using this storied tournament
as a warm-up for the National
Collegiate championship next
reek, at Colorado Springs, Colo.
Four other members of the
Houston team were in the field
of 16 whicch set out over the
troublesome 6,706-yard Brook
Hollow Golf course today in
aetrch of quarter-final berths.
In addition to the 21-year-old
Baxter, from Amarillo, Tex.,
tha Gulf Coast university also
hid Jim Hiskey of Pocatello,
Idaho, in the top half of the
draw and Bob Pratt of Seattle,
Wash., Jacky Cupit of Greggton.
Tex., and Frank Wharton of
Dallas still in contention.
It fell Hiskey's lot to try and
cut down defending champion
Charlie Coe of Oklahoma City
today as the tall, thin Okla
homan continued his search for
a fifth Trans-Miss title. Coe has
been named non-playing captain
of the Walker Cup team which
meets the British squad late this
summer at Minneapolis.
Hme
kit-, iryuvr-
4 ".Ti 1
s.
rithaJOHN DEERE
No.8 FORAGE HARVESTER
Quito a staiement, isn't it, saying youTI male mora money
with a John Deere No. 8 Forage Harvester and save time and
lbor to boot!
And that's just what you'll do, for the No. 8 has every fea
ture you want and need to speed up work, make it easier,
produce better feed at lower cost. The No. 8 gives you such
things as three interchangeable harvesting units mower
bar, windrow pickup (shown above) and row-crop unit . . .
six-kmfe "open-face" flywheel cutter . . . uniform-speed feed
rolls . . . higher quality construction and a long list of other
feature"?.
We've never seen another forage harvester that can hold
a candle to the No. 8. Come in and see for yourself.
HUBBARD-WRAY CO., Inc.
Medford
dale 18 to 1 while Camp White
won from the Loggers 11 to 3
The Studs trimmed Grants Pass
17 to 10 while the Whiters tip-!
ped the Merchants 3 to 1 then
lost to them 16 to 6. !
There will be at least a couple
of new faces in the Camp White ,
line up with Dennis Conner, ex-1
Medford high, the likely short
stop and Dave Campbell, from !
Cave Junction, possibly playing
third base. It'll be either Camp
bell or Kimura at third. Other
probable starters are Dick Woot
on. first base: Richie Price,
second, and Dick Nix, Charles
Rettman and Bob Serak or Bob
Smih in the outfield.
Medford line-up may be Frank
Roelandt, catcher; Jack Cooney.
first base; Larry Perkins, second
base; Frank Rector, third base:
Ron Owings. shortstop, and Ed
Reinking, John Kovenz and
Jerry Droscher, outfielders.
Glendale is contending Satur
day night in league play at Cave
Junction. RVL games on Sunday
are Cave Junction at Butte Falls
and Talent at Glendale.
Five Judges
Selected for
Ski Tourney
Names of four judges who
will serve with Dr. Fred Landis.
Chico, Calif., at the first annual
Oregon State Water Ski cham
pionships have been announced
by officials of Crater Lions club,
sponsor of the meet.
The combined American Wa
ter Ski association competition
and novice tournament will be
held on Saturday and Sunday,
June 29 and 30, at Gardener
lake east of Medford.
Landis, west coast regional
vice-president of the AWSA,
will be chief judge. Others judg
ing will be Dr. Lewis B. West,
Seattle; Lon Skinner, Medford;
Sam Paragary, Bakersfield,
Calif., and Floyd H. Vance, Sac
ramento, Calif. Skinner is tour
ney co-chairman along with Dr.
Norm Capsey.
Some 30 experienced skiers
from Pacific coast towns have
made commitments to enter the
AWSA portion of the meet. The
list of novices from this area is
mounting.
Novices Listed
Among the novices are Mar
vin Woods, Ashland. Dr. Capsey,
Chuck Herman, Duke Anderson,
Roger Fields and Chuck De
Lorme, Medford, in the men's
class; Myers Jones, Medford, in
the veteran's class: Art Gard
ener, Eagle Point, in the boys'
division and Mrs. Phyllis Skin
ner and Carol Tarns, Medford,
in women's competition.
Woods, Capsey and Gardener
are said to be doing well in the
Slalom and Gardener is good on
the jump.
Meet events include tricks as
well as the jump and slalam.
Entry blanks and tournament
information are available at Big
Y Feed and Seed, Johnston
Stores. Rogue Sportsman, Med
ford Marine and Owen Boat
works.
Skiers may practice at the
lake after 5 p.m. today, on Sat
urday afternoon and all day on
Sunday. They are asked to bring
their own skis.
ana ""
i :. i
- Grants Pass
TMU'ST X. A 1 J 1 w - J -i -i
1M
MeDFORDxJvTRIBUFE
SPORTS ILLUSTRATED
USES FRED CHEZ PHOTO
ON COVER FOR JUNE 24
Fred E. Chei. ex-Medford
High school athlete and a
graduate of Stanford univer
sity, is the photographer who
snapped the color picture
which appears on the cover
of the June 24 issue of Sports
Illustrated.
The picture shows Bob Gu
towslci. Occidental college,
clearing the bar for a new
world pole vault record.
Fred, who gained his master
of arts degree at Stanford last
January and who will teach
at a San Jose High school
starting this fall, has a na
tional reputation for hit pho
tos, a number of which have
been used for covers on na
tional magazines. His name
has been in "Who's Who in
Color Photography." In 1953
Chez was named the best col
lege sports photographer in
the United Slates.
ARMY OFFER
Chez's "Steps and Shadows"
Challenge Right To Be
Hardtop Auto
A special match race between
Wayne Lemley in A-57 and
Crock Hunter in 15-X will be an
added feature this Saturday eve
ning in hardtop auto races at the
Valley View speedway.
The even probably will go for
10 laps and is planned for after
the regular main event.
Current point leader at Valley
View and the 1956 track champ
will be matched in the race. Lem
lev is in front of drivers this
Willie Mays
Gets Many
Star Votes
New York (IP Willie
Mays, who batted .500 as a part
time performer in three previous
All-Star games, apparently will
be voted into the National
league's starting lineup for the
first time this year;
The New York Giants' bril
liant center fielder is one of five
National Leaguers who have
opened up huge leads in the
voting for the starters in the an
nual midsummer classic at St.
Louis, July 9.
The latest figures released by
Commissioner Ford Frick's of
fice today reveal that Mays has
received 27,032 votes for center
field compared to Brooklyn
Dodger center-fielder Duke Sni
der's second-place total of 10,
276. First baseman Stan Musial of
the St. Louis Cardinals has at
tracted 32,766 votes for a 28,-000-lead
over Gil Hodges of the
Dodgers, while left-fielder Frank
Robinson of the Redlegs, right
fielder Hank Aaron of the Mil
waukee Braves and catcher Ed
! Bailey of the Redlegs also have
leads of about 20,000 for their
positions.
Schoendientt Ahead
Red Schoendienst of the
Braves leads Johnny Temple of
the Redlegs in the second-base
balloting; Roy McMillan of the
Redlegs leads Al Dark of the
Cardinals for the shortstop
berth, and Ed Mathews of the
Braves tops Don Hoak of the
Redlegs in the voting for third
base.
The fan poll closes on June
27.
Slugger Ted Williams of the
Boston Red Sox continues as
the top vote-getter in the Ameri
can league with 39.481 for left
field. Mickey Mantle, the New
York Yankees' triple crown win
ner, is the second top-vote get
ter with 37,715 and second-baseman
Nelson Fox of the Chicago
White Sox ranks third with 34,
652. All have tremendous leads
over their closest rivals.
Third base is furnishing the
closest competition with Reno
Bertoia of the Detroit Tigers
showing the way with 14.124
votes. Gil McDougald of the
Yankees is second with 11,750
and George Kell of the Balti
more Orioles is third with 11,
097. First baseman Vic Wertz,
short-stop Harvey Kuenn, right
fielder Al Kaline and catcher
Yogi Berra are the other leaders.
Dick Smith
Signing Told
Glide. Ore. if Dick Smith.
S4.000 richer despite a broken
ankle, prepared today for a base
ball career which he hopes will
eventually land him a place on
the Brooklyn Dodgers.
Smith returned here from Los
Angeles where he signed a con
tract "with the Dodgers at a
S4,000 bonus price. Although he
S starred in high school as a pitch
er he was signed as an outfield
er. He suffered the broken ankle
while sliding at the tryout camp.
Smith has been a star athlete
al Glide High schooL
won the only honorable men
tion in an International
I n tercollegiate Photography
contest. He has taken many
pictures in Mexico and look
numerous others in the Army
in Europe which brought him
the offer of an instructorship
in the Army photography
school. Seventy-five of his
pictures were on display at
the Stanford museum early
this year.
Chez, the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Fred L. Chez, 812 Palm
st., was married last Tuesday
to the former Jonita Stiff, a
graduate of Northwestern uni
versity and student at Stan
ford from Muskogee, Okla.
His brother. Joe was best
man. Joe, an ex-Medford ath
lete and ex-Stanford baseball
star, is with Prudential Life
Insurance company at Sacra
mento, Calif., is married and
has two daughters.
Feature
year with a 139 total. Hunter, the
defending champ, is in present
second place 39 points behind.
Lemley reportedly issued the
challenge with Hunter eagerly
accepting.
Both drivers have a good fol
lowing at the Valley View oval
and tiie challenge chase is ex
pected to be a considerable at
traction. The match developed
out of last week's main event in
which Huiter spun out and lost
the lead. Contention arose that
Lemley's car had had something
to do with the spin. Lemley
went on to win the race.
Saturday's program will in
clude A and B trophy dashes,
four heat races, a main and semi
main and the challenge run.
Time trials are slated for 7 p.m.
with the first race at 8 p.m.
A meeting of the Rogue Valley
racing association is scheduled
this evening at the track to dis
cuss matters of race operation.
It will be at 8 p.m.
450 Athletes
Gather For
National AAU
Dayton, Ohio IP1 Some 450
of the nation's top track and
field athletes will toe the line
tonight in the 67th National
AAU championships.
The most impressive display
of talent in the history of the
event, has the cast including 11
Olympic champions and all but
three winners of last week's
NCAA championships plus doz
en of more foreign stars.
Meet officials expect Ameri
can and world records to fall in
wholesale lots if the weather
stays good.
Featured at the Dayton High
school stadium track will be 21
events, with competition begin
ning at 7:30 tonight in eight of
them, while the rest will be run
off Saturday.
Olympic Champs
Olympic champions on deck
are Charley Jenkins, Villanova,
400-meter dash; Tom Courtney,
Army, 800-meter run; Parry
O'Brien, Los Angeles AC, shot
put; Al Oerter, Kansas, discus
throw; Harold Connolly, Boston
AA, hammer throw; Lee Cal
houn, North Carolina college,
high hurdles: Charley Dumas,
LAAC. high jump; Glenn Davis,
Ohio State. 400-meter hurdles;
Rev. Bob Richards, LAAC, pole
vault; Greg Bell, broad jump;
and Milt Campbell, decathlon
champ who will compete in the
120-yard high hurdles.
Bob Rosburg
Paces Open
Flint, Mich. U Pudgy Bob
Rosburg has come a long way
from the time he had to make the
decision whether to turn his tal
ents to baseball or golf. Although
he chose golf, he hasn't forgotten
his baseball swing.
Rosburg took his unorthodox
swing and a hot putter into the
second round of the S37.000 Flint
Open today. The 31-year-old San
Franciscan carded a 6-under-par
33-3265 Thursday to take a 2
stroke lead in the tourney.
Four Tied
Arnold Palmer. No. 2 money
winner on the circuit, was tied
with Johnnv Pott and Canadians
Al Balding and Stan Leonard for
second with 67s.
It was like old home week for
Rosburg and Palmer who have
marked up some of their greatest
successes in Michigan.
Rosburg last year won the
Motor City Open at Detroit and
Palmer grabbed the 1954 Ama
teur title. Palmer birdied three
of his last four holes Thursday.
The weasel is the most blood
thirsty killer of ail North Am
1 erican animals.
Cornell Has
Favored Role
In Regatta
Syracuse, N. Y. W Cornell's
unbeaten varsity crew will enter
Saturday's 55th Intercollegiate
Rowing association regatta the
strongest favorite in the six
years the event has been rowed
on Lake Onondaga.
Coach Stork Sanford's veteran
Huskies, stroked by Phil Gra
vink, have never been beaten in
this blue ribbon crew classic.
They won the freshman title
three years ago, ran away with
the varsity three-mile race the
past two years and this year 11
other coaches ray they can't be
beaten unless their shell sinks.
UCLA Seeks
Break From
Conference
By SCOTT BAILLIE
United Pres Sports Writer
Berkeley. Calif. W UCLA
today sought to break out of
the strict Pacific Coast confer
ence and Cyril Nigg, Bruin
alumni president, said he. was
"strongly hopeful" his school
will get the green light.
"We're strongly hopeful that
the board of regents will vote
to let us move out of the con
ference," Nigg said on the eve
of the meeting. "However, I
can't say what will happen. We
expect President Robert Gordon
Sproul to make some kind of
proposal but we don't know
what it is."
The Bruins and the University
of California, although worlds
apart in football policies, belong
to the same statewide institu
tion which is governed by one
board of regents.
Trouble Started
Threats of a bolt date back to
last summer when the confer
ence gridiron scandals broke and
UCLA was among four member
schools penalized for infractions
In the Bruins' case, it included
being barred from the Rose
Bowl until July of 1959.
The latest drive for UCLA to
clear out started last month
after the PCC refused to allow
penalized seniors to play half
their games this autumn as was
the case with last fall's four
year men. The Bruins also bare
ly escaped being expelled from
the conference, staying in by a
vote of 5-4. Nigg proposed the
secession which will be studied
today.
In the meantime, California
also is reported to want out, not
because of strict athletic code
but because the austere Bears
feel it is not rigid enough.
Lack of Action
Chancellor Clark Kerr of the
mother campus recently said
that Cal might leave the PCC
since the conference had not
taken any "constructive" action
toward clearing up the reasons
for past difficulties.
Kerr favors greater responsi
bility on the institutions, which
would have to furnish athletes
job records upon request, among
other things.
Nigg's resolution was sched
uled to be discussed by the re
gents' Education Policy Commit
tee Thursday before it was sub
mitted to the full board today.
The session was cloaked in
secrecy and Sproul unavailable
for comment.
Last Ditch
Effort For
Jim Norris
New York OP) Defense at
torneys were making a last-ditch
fight today to prevent Jim Nor
ris and partner Arthur Wirtz
from being forced out of Madi
son Square Garden.
In the final session of the boxing-monopoly
hearing, they were
trying to change the mind of
Federal Judge Sylvester Ryan,
who apparently believes the
remedy to the monopoly is to
make Norris and Wirtz dispose
of their stock in the Garden
Corp.
Kenneth C. Royall, former sec
retary of war and now head of
the defense lawyers, claims such
a divestiture would be a "cruel,
retroactive punishment" for bus
inessmen who thought their con
duct of boxing strictly legal until
Ryan found them guilty of mo
nopoly in March. The monopoly
verdict applied only to their con
duct of title fights.
Must Be Divorce
At Friday's session the judge
indicated he vould force Norris
and Wirtz, controlling stock
holders, to dispose of their Gar
den holdings "because I person
ally feel there must be a divorce
ment of Norris, Wirtz and Madi
son Square Garden."
Norris is president of the Gar
den Corp.; Wirtz. a director. The
Garden Corp. owns the Interna
'. tional Boxing Club ot New YorK.
morris and v lriz aiso coniroi me
' Chicago Stadium and its IBC of
Illinois.
USED WARDEN'S NAME
Marquette, Mich. (U"
Someone registered at a Flint,
Mich., hotel under the name of
Raymond Buckhoe, warden of
Marquette Prison, and ran up a
S104 bill without paying. Buck
hoe wondered if the imperson
stor was one of nis former prisoners.
Friday, June 21, 1957
Tom Hamlin, Pam Stacey Lose
In OGA Junior Champ Matches
Portland 'TP" Biff Lovett of ,
Portland met Jerry Mowlds of
Vancouver, Wash., today for the
Oregon Junior Golf champion
ship. Lovett advanced to the finals
Thursday by defeating Mike
CL Motors, M and
Victories in JC Softball League
Jackson County Softball
socialion's two games last night
had a couple of similarities.
Each was a no-hit, no-run en
counter and each ended 12 to 0.
Ron Weatherford hurled the
verdict for Crater Lake Motors
over Courtesy Chevrolet and
Chuck Halcom tossed the de
cision for M and W Chains Saw
over the popular Rogue Valley
Dairy Maids.
Crater Lake stretched its un
manned lead in the circuit with
its third victory. It was the first
setback for Courtesy which has
played two games. M and W also
in its second loop fray, recorded
its first win.
The CLM-Courtesy tangle was
over in 4$ innings since the
Ford club had the required lead
of seven runs or more after the
Chev's fifth batting turn. Dairy
Maids made the Chain Saw club
go the full route. M and W led
only 5 to 0 after six innings,
then powered for seven runs in
the seventh.
Schell Hits Homers
Lou Schell had two home runs
and a single against the girls.
Jim House homered once and
two-baggered twice and Mel
Amaro got a roundtripper,
double and single.
63 SPEEDS
Salem, N.H. IP Four
teen-year-old Bob Blodgetl's
homemade automobile has 63
speeds 56 forward and 7 in re
verse. Bob paid $10 for the parts
at a used car Jot and devoted
eight months to assembling them
into a strange contraption that i
will go 50 m.p.h. on the high
way and also serves as a tractor
around his father's farm.
FULLY GUARANTEED
IBM fU L
AIR MATTRESS
DON'T MISS THE 4TH
MM Jobber Wetter
JOIN THE
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUIH-NINB
Sweet of Caldwell. Ida , 6 and 4.
Mowlds had it tougher against
Medford's Tom Hamlin, winning
1-up as he hit the flag with a
nine-iron shot at the 18th hole.
David Munro of Portland took
a 3 and 2 decision from Doug
W Gain No-Hit
Francis Guidry, Dale Thomp
son and Don Wendt each collect
ed two hits for Crater Lake.
Weatherford struck out 11 bat
ters, walked one and hit one.
Only two Courtesy men got on
base in the five turns to bat.
Halcom had 14 strikeouts. He
hit two of the Maids with pitches
and issued four bases on balls,
three walks going to Shirley
Hansen. There were two M and
W miscues and a fielder's choice
as nine Dairy Maids got on base.
The girls had the bases loaded
with two out in the final inning.
Rogue Valley drew much ap
plause from the crowd for its
efforts against the men and for
a number of fine fielding plays.
I.INF.SCORES:
Courtesy Chev. nno no 0 0 2
CL Motors ... 2S2 3x 12 in 0
Collins and Minms; Weatherford
and Hale.
Dairv Maids .. 000 000 0 0 0 4
M and W ..Oil 201 7 12 12 2
Hickson and Maine; Halcom 4nd
Garner.
HARDTOP RACES
SPECIAL EVENT!
Saturday, June 22
WAYNE LEMLEY No. A-57 Challenges
CROCK HUNTER No. 15-X to a
10-LAP RACE
RACES
VALLEY VIEW SPEEDWAY
t .
LF.G&wlrich
V3f
USUAL
4'5
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A natural for camping,
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Strong vimy platH
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OF JULY FIREWORKS SHOW
SAFE DRIVER LEAGUE
Ragin of Oswego to advance to
the Boys' final against Lynn
Ylurri of Oktario. Yttrrri won
from Daryl Winn of Eugene,
2 and 1.
The finals went 36 holes.
June Robinson of Tillamook
I and Jnv Pnhenslein met in the
18-hole Girls' division final. Miss
Robinson downed Pam Stacey
of Medford 6 and 4. while Miss
Rubenstein won over Marcia
Lessing of Portland 7 and 5.
Larry Berg, Medford. wai
playing today in the pee wee
second flight finals of the Ore
gon Golf association junior tour
nament in Portland. Stan Dow
son, Medford, was eliminated in
the sixth flight semi-finali of th
boys' division yesterday.
Red Fir Slabwood
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