Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 12, 1959, Image 13

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    Hood, Swanson, Ryerson
Pace Track Tiff Classes
Mike Hood, Vern Swanson
and Dennis Ryerson were
four-event winners Saturday
morning in junior activities
of the all-comers track meet
at Medford High school sta
dium and Hood tied for first
in another event.
Both hurdles events in the
15-16 .years of age division
were taken by Hood, Med
ford. He also was first in the
broad and high jumps and
tied with Wayne Cowan,
Medford, in the shot put.
Cowan gained blue ribbons
in the javelin and discus and
Dan Lumley, Phoenix, was
vistor in v both 15-16 age
dashes.
Swanson, Central ' Point,
won in the 13-14 division in
the 220 and 440-yard races
and both hurdle events. Pat
Pepper, Central Point, was
Giants Keep
League Lead
Win 5-3
Cincinnati-Eddie Bressoud,
hitting at a .500 clip since
taking over the shortstop job,
clouted a pair of doubles and
a homer and Johnny Antonel-
li notched his 13th victory
Saturday to help the San
Francisco Giants maintain
the National league lead with
a 5-3 victory over the Cincin
nati Reds.
The second of Bressoud's
two doubles came during a
two-run Giant fourth inning
which started the Reds, still
winless under new Manager
Freddie Hutchinson, on the
road to their sixth straight
defeat.
The Giants added two more
runs off starter Jim Brosnan
in the seventh when they
bunched three hits, one of
them Bressoud's second hom
er of the year.
Antonelll, a shutout winner
in his last two outings, blank
ed the Reds until the bottom
of the seventh when they
bunched three of their nine
hits for one run. Two more
Red runs, one unearned,
crossed the plate in the
eighth.
Tom Acker, Brosnan's suc
cessor, yielded the Giants'
final run in the ninth.
The Giant victory ran their
current skein to four straight,
their longest this season. The
victory put them two and a
half games ahead of the Mil
waukee Braves and a game in
front of the Los Angeles Dod
gers. The Giants tangle with the
Braves this afternoon. The de
fending champs just dropped
two straight to the Dodgers.
Jack Sanford, 7-7, Is sched
uled to pitch for the Giants
while Warren Spahn, 10-9,
will probably get the call from
Milwaukee Manager Fred H
ney.
Bill Rigney's crew will
move i to Philadelphia after
their two game set with the
Braves and then will go to
Pittsburgh before returning
home to tackle the red-hot
Dodgers.
Upsets Scored
In Net Tourney
Baastad, Sweden - (uTD - Ra-
manathan . Krishnan of India
upset Alex Olmedo, United
States Davis Cup star and
newly - crowned Wimbledon
champion, Saturday for the
second time in three meetings
during the past 23 days.
Krishna ngained the men's
singles final at Baastad's In
ternational Tennis Tourna
ment by whipping Olmedo,
6-3, 3-6, 6-3, 6-1.
Krisnan, 22, a sturdily-built
lad from Madras, will meet
Luis Ayala of Chile in Sun
day's final. Ayala led Jan
Erik Lundquist in the other
semi-final, 6-1, 4-1, when the
young Swede was forced to
quit because of illness.
Joan Johnson of Wyandotte,
Mich., qualified to meet Bev
erly Baker Fleitz of Lo&g
Beach, Calif., in Sunday's
women's final by defeatmg
Ulla Hultkrantz of Sweden in
45 minutes, 7-5, 6-4. Mrs.
; Fleitz reached the final Fri
day. j Miss Johnson and Jeri Shep-
ard of Los Angeles won the
women's doubles title by de
feating Sweden's Solveig Gus-
:tavsson and Gudrun Rosing in
70 minutes, 6-2, 3-6, 6-2.
V2t 3 fl
23-year-old Peruvian who at
tends the University of South
ern uamornia, piayea eacn
other for. the first time June
19 in the semi-finals of the
London Grass Court tourna
ment. Krishnan won, 8-6, 6-1,
and upset Astralia s top-rank
ed player, Neale Fraser, in
straight sets the following day
to win the title.
BRAVES SIGN PLAYERS
Milwaukee, Wis. -fflPD- The
Milwaukee Braves have sign
ed shortstop Richard Clark of
Philadelphia and pitcher Je
rome Burgess of Brantford,
Ont., to 1960 minor league
contracts. They will be as
signed to Cedar Rapids, Iowa,
of the Class B Three-I league.
a triple winner in the class,
taking the discus, javelin and
shot. Double wins were chalk
ed up by Frank Van Pelt,
Medford, jn the 75 and jave
lin and Scott Eaton, Howard,
in the high and broad jumps.
Girls Unopposed .
Ryerson claimed the 11-12
age blue strips in the 75, 220
and 440 runs and the shot
put.
Three Howard girls Karen
Schroeder, 13-14 class, Sally
Eaton, 11-12," and Susan, Tun
gate, 9-10, had no opposition
in their respective divisions
and got all the ribbons, Misses
Eaton and Schroeder in five
events each and Miss Tungate
in four.
About 40 were entered in
the junior events. The meet
was sponsored by the Ore
gon AAU Olympic Develop
ment program and the city
of Medford. Meets are also
set for July 18 and 25.
Remit
(Ac 9-10, Girls)
75 Susan Tung-ate, Howard.
:lr.3. (record). ,
220 Susan Tungate, Howard.
AO A.
High jump Susan Tuncata, How
ard. 3-2. (record).
Broad jump Susan Tungate,
Howard. 10-7. (record).
(Age 11-12, Girls).
75 Sally Eaton, Howard. :11.1.
220 Sally Eaton, Howard. :34.3.
70 low hurdles Sally Eaton,
Howard. :13.2.
High jump Sally Eaton, Howard.
3-4.
Broad jump Sally Eaton. How
ard. 11-11.
(Ar 13-14, Girls)
75 Karen Schroeder, Howard.
:10.4.
220 Karen Schroeder, Howard.
33.
70 low hurdles Karen Schroeder
Howard. :123.
High jump Karen Schroeder,
Howard. 4-1.
Broad jump Karen Schroeder,
Howard. 13-2.
(Age 9-10, Boys)
75 Jack Hurt, Howard; John
Baker, Medford. :10.7.
440 Jack Hurt, Howard. 1:13.9.
(record).
70 low hurdles Gary Vaughn,
Medford. :15.1.
Broad jump Jack Hurt, Howard;
John Baker, Medford; Gary Vaughn
Medford. 11-1. (record).
Shot John Baker, Medford. 13-2.
(Age 11-12, Boys)
75 Dennis Ryerson, Central
Point; Lloyd Zacharias, Howard;
Dal Beare, Howard- Gordy Brad
ford, Howard: DarreU Kiger, Gold
Hill. :09.5.
220 Dennis Ryerson. Central
Point; Dale Beare, Howard, Lloyd
Zacharias, Howard; Jack Mullen,
Medford; DarreU Kiger. Gold Hill.
8.5.
440 Dennis Ryerson, Central
Point; Dal Beare, Howard, Danny
Mainwaring, Central Point; Jack
Mullen, Medford; Ray Baker, Med-
zora. :t3.z. (recora).
70 low hurdles Dale Beare,
Howard; Jack Mullen, Medford,
Gordy Bradford, Howard; Ray
Baker, Medford. :12.1. (record).
Pole vault Gordy Bradford.
Howard; Jack Mullen, Medford.
6-9. (record).
HI eh jumD Dick Fosbury. Med
ford; Lloyd Zacharias, Howard,
Dennis Ryerson. Central Point:
Dale Beare, Howard; Gordy Brad
ford, Howard. 4-6. (record).
Broad jump Lloyd Zacharias.
Howard; Dennis Ryerson, Central
Point: Dick Fosbury, Medford, Dale
ueare, Howard; JJarreu luger, uoia
Hill. 14-6.
Shot Dennis Ryerson, Central
Point; Dale Beare, Howard; Dick
Fosbury, Medford; Jack Mullen,
Medford; Ray Baker, Medford.
28-8.
(Ag 13-14, Boys)
75 Frank Van Pelt, Medford;
Vern Swanson. Central Point: Sher
man Kiger, Gold Hill; Bruce Walt
ers, Gold Hill; Alan Bray, Central
Point. :08.4. (record).
220 Vern Swanson, Central
Point; Sherman Kiger, Gold Hill;
Bruce Walters, Gold Hill; Alan
Bray, Central Point; Danny Main
waring, Central Point. 26.6.
440 Vern Swanson, Central
Point; Scott Eaton, Howard; Ron
Calkins, Medford; Bruce Walters,
Gold Hill. :57.6. (record).
880 Hiram Martin, Medford;
Danny Mainwaring, Central Point;
Alan Bray, Central Point. 229.6.
120 low hurdles Vern Swanson,
Central Point; Scott Eaton, How
ard; Alan Bray, Central Point.
a5.5.
70 high hurdles Vern Swanson,
Central Point; Alan Bray, Central
Point. -.103.
Pole vault Frank Van Pelt, Med
ford; Scott Eaton, Howard; Alan
Bray, Central Point and Ken Brad
ford, Howard, tied for third.. 8-10.
(New record).
High jump Scott Eaton, How
ard; Ron Calkins, Medford and
Vern Swanson, Central Point, tied
for second; Bruce Walters, Gold
Hill. 5 ft.
Broad jump Scott Eaton, How
ard; Vern Swanson. Central Point;
Ron Calkins, Medford; Sherman
Kiger, Gold Hill. 17-4.
Discus Pat Pepper, Central
Point; John Harris, Central Point;'
Frank Van Pelt, Medford. 97-7 Va.
Javelin Pat Pepper, Central
Point; John Harris, Central Point;
Frank Van Pelt, Medford; Ron
Calkins, Medford. 127-6.
Shot Pat Pepper, Central Point;
John Harris,. Central Point; Frank
Van Pelt, Medford. 42-6.
(Age 15-16, Boys)
75 Dan Lumley, Phoenix; Nick
Lingren, Medford; Bob Criswell,
Medford. $8.
220 Dan Lumley, Phoenix; Fred
Keith. Medford; Jerry Lewis, Cen
tral Point. 25.5.
440 Fred Keith, Medford; Jerry
Lewis, Central Point. :58.6.
880 Hiram Martin, Medford; Bob
Criswell, Medford. 2:29.6.
120 low hurdles Mike Hood,
Medford; Fred Keith. Medford.
.14.6.
70 yard high hurdles . Mike
Hood. Medford; Jerry Lewis, Cen
tral Point. :09 3.
Pole vault Nick Lingren, Med
ford; Bob CriswelL Medford. 10
ft. (record).
High jump Mike Hood. Medford;
Dan Lumley. Phoenix; Nick Lin
gren. Medford; Bob Criswell. Med
ford, and Fred Keith, Medford
tied for fourth. 5-5.
Broad juimp Mike Hood,
Medford; Don Lumley, Phoenix;
Nick Lingren, Medford; Fred Keith,
Medford; Bob Criswell, Medford.
20-4. - -
Discus Wayne Cowan, Medford;
Mike Hood, Medford; Pat Pepper,
Central Point; Les Baker, Medford.
129- 9. (record).
Javelin ;Wayne Cowan, Medford;
Pat Pepper, Central Point; Dan
Lumley. Phoenix; Mike Hood, Med
ford; Jerry Lewis, Central Point.
130- 9 'j.
Shot Mike Hood, Medford and
Wayne Cowan, Medford, tied for
first; Pat Pepper, Central Point;
Dan Lumley, Phoenix; Jerry Lewis,
Central Point. 46 ft.
GOP LEADER DIES
Newport, R. I. (UPD - Henry
P. Fletcher, 86, former chair
man of the Republican Na
tional committee, died here
Friday. He served as a diplo
mat under six presidents be
fore taking an active role in
the affairs of the GOP. He
was chairman of the Republi
can National committee from
1934 to 1936.
MEDFCW)UtTRIBUHl
Drag Race Timing
Starts at 10 a. m.
I Drag racing action begins
this morning at 10 a.m. on me
Camp White drag strip oper
ated by Southern Oregon Tim
ing association.
Many contenders are ex
pected to be timing in their
vehicles early to avoid the
expected hot temperatures of
the mid-day.
A new class has been added
to the competition this week.
Superstock cars with automa
tic transmissions will have a
class all their own and will
not have to compete with cars
sporting manual -shift trans
missions. These superstockers,
representing the fastest pro
duction vehicles coming out
of Detroit, will be subject to
the same rigid safety inspec
tion performed on all ve
hicles entered in competition
at the races.
All drivers are again re-
Records Set
In Swim,
Dive Meet
Los Altos, Calif.-(UPD - The
American record in the 200
meter breast stroke was scut
tled twice Saturday and anoth
er record was sunk in the 100
meter back stroke during tor
rid trial runs at the National
AAU men's outdoor swimming
and diving championships.
Ron Clark of the Detroit
AC, who never had competed
in the outdoor 200 - meter-
breast stroke before on a na
tional scale, qualified with a
time of 2:44.7. This shaved
3.1 seconds off the American
standard held by defending
champions Norbert Rumpel of
the New York AC.
Rumpel, a native of Ger
many, had bettered his own
mark a few minutes earlier
when he qualified in 2:45.8.
Frank McKinney, of the In
dianapolis AC, defending
champion in the1 100 and 200
meter back shroke, cracked
the American record for the
century when he paddled
home in 1:03.8. His time broke
the American mark of 1:04.3
made by Hawaii's Yoshi Oya
kawa two years ago.
The American record for
the 200-meter individual med
ley relay, an event instituted
last year, was broken four
time during the qualifying
trials.
Lance Larson of the Los
Angeles A.C. did the fastest
job with a time of 2:25.4.
Frank Brunell of the Indian
apolis A.C, who set the stand
ard of 2:29.1 lasa year, also
shattered it Saturday with a
trial run of 2:27.8.
The Detroit A. C. led the
qualifiers for the 800-meter
free style relay with a time
of 8:50.7.
Rule Synopses
Now Available
For Huntsmen
Portland - Big game hunt
ers are advised that the hunt
ing regulations in synopsis
form for the 1959 big game
season are now available at
all license agencies, in' addi
tion to big game tags and ap
plication forms for the various
unit and controlled hunts.
Seasons, bag limits, and other
rules for taking antelope,
deer, and elk are contained
in the regulations synopsis.
- On one side of the folder
will be found listed all of the
general and special big game
seasons, gun and tagging regu
lations, and other information
pertinent to the hunts. A big
game management unit map is
contained on the reverse side
in addition to complete de
scriptions of all management
unit boundaries.
Jones Rescues
SF in Relief
Cincinnati - (UPD - Manager
Bill Rigney may have solved
the one big problem that has
made many experts count the
San Francisco Giants out as
the National league flag
choice.
The experts say you have
to have top flight relief pitch
ing, which they claim the first
place Giants don't have.
But Sad Sam Jones, who
has been superb since that
much publicized one hitter in
Los Angeles, may be just
what the sages say is essen
tial. He came on in relief Fri
day night in the eighth in
ning and chucked three score
less frames while getting
credit for San Francisco's 8-6
win over Cincinnati in 11 in
nings. It was the second night in
a row Jones has come in to
grab the win, nudging his
season record to 12-8. .
minded of the safety rule stat
ing that all entries except
stock cars and small sport cars
(under 2700 cubic centimeters
displacement) will be requir
ed to have a 360 degree safety
shield completely surrounding
their bell housings. This
shield must be constructed of
steel at least one-fourth inch
thick and anchored to the
frame of the car. Any con
testant not passing this test
will not be allowed to com
pete on the strip, association
officials stated.
Trophies To Winners
Trophies will be presented
to all class winners, for top
time of the day, and for the
little and top eliminator
awards.
A $100 bond rests on the
strip record of 144.46 miles
per hour. Should this mark
not fall today the amount will
be increased to $125 for the
July 26 meet. Interest among
local dragster drivers indi
cates they will be all out to
better the mark set by Jay
Cheatham (deceased) at last
falls Northwest Gas Cham
pionships. Medford cycle driver Jack
White still has a $25 bond
posted on his "B" cycle class
record of 100.55 miles per
hour. Each meet the cycle
drivers in this class keep gun
ning their bikes toward this
mark but as yet none have
been successful.
Contestants are expected
from many points of Oregon
and California with a strong
group of challengers arriving
from the Crescent City-Arcata
region of coastal California.
Each meet this group from
the redwood region goes home
with several of the trophies.
Spectators are welcome at
the local strip and there is
bleacher seating available and
the concessions will be oper
ated by the Medford Lions
club.
The SOTA drag strip is lo
cated seven miles north of
Medford in West Camp White
off the Crater Lake highway.
Signs will be posted from the
"Y" in north Medford.
'
Intermediate
League Leader
Has Challenge
SOUTHERN OREGON
JUNIOR BASEBALL
Intermediates
W. L. Pet.
Central Point 2 0 1.000
Medford Giants 1 1 .500
Medford Yankees 1 1 .500
Ashland 0 2 .000
Pee Wees
W. L. Pet.
Asland Cubs 4 1 .800
Medford Wildcats 4 1 .800
Medford Tigers 3 2 .600
Central Point Ind. 3 2 .600
Eagle Point 2 4 . .333
Ashland Bears 1 4 .200
Central Point Braves 1 4 .200
Cub League
W. ' L. Pet.
Central Point 2 0 " 1.000
niinoiss Valley 2 0 1.000
Medford '. 1 - 1 .500
Ashland 1 1 .500
Grants Pass Bears 0 2 .000
Grants Pass Cubs O 2 .000
Ashland challenges top rung
Central Point and the two
Medford teams clash on Mon
day in intermediate division
games of the Southern Oregon
Junior Baseball league.
In pee wee games on Tues
day the Ashland Bears and
Central Point Braves go after
the leaders.
Ashland is host to the un
blemished Central Point inter
mediates. The Medford rivals
in the Monday mix are the
Giants and the Yankees.
Tuesday's pee wee bouts
have the Bears meeting the
Ashland Cubs and the Braves
playing at the Medford Wild
cats. Medford Tigers will vie
at Central Point Indians in a
battle of third place teams.
Thursday games will be Ash
land Cubs at Central Point
Indians, Central Point Braves
at Ashland Bears and Eagle
Point at Medford Wildcats.
Wednesday will see another
round of cub loop scrapes
with Medford at Central
Point, Grants Pass Cubs at
Illinois Valley and Ashland at
Grants Pass Bears. Central
Point heads this circuit giving
that community two loop
leads in southern Oregon jun
ior activity.
ATTENDANCE UP
Portland-Assistant General
Manager, Bill Sayles, of the
Portland Baseball club has
announced that attendance so
far this year to Beaver base
ball games at Multnomah Sta
dium has reached the 100,000
mark. This is paid attendance
and covers the 31 openings
since May 1. This figure .is
13,340 above the same num
ber of dates during the 1958
season and breaks down to an
average 3,226 per opening.
SECOND OFFENDER
Bennington, Va. - (UPD - Se
lectmen ruled that a dog
which had bitten a nine-year-old
boy must be banished from
here or else destroyed. In
1956 the same dog was order
ed to be chained at all times.
ECiHlebrew .-Hits 30th IHIomer
Leads Senators to Victory
By Unjted Press International
Red-hot Harmon Killebrew,
biggest thing to hit Washing
ton sirice Coxey's army,
smashed his 30th home run
and moved one game ahead
of Babe Ruth's record time-table
Saturday in leading the
Washington Senators to a 9-3
victory over the Baltimore
Orioles.
Killebrew drove In four
runs while helping Bill Fisch
er record his seventh victory
of the year.
When Ruth hit his record
60 homers in 1927, he didn't
connect for his 30th homer
until the Yankees' 83rd game.
This was Killebrew's 82nd
game and the slugging Sena
Group Named To Aid Planning
Of 3rd Major Baseball League ,
By ED SAINSBURY
United Press International '
Chicago -(DPD-Major league
baseball has moved to help
supporters of a third major
league get their dream off
the ground.
A seven-man committee
composed of Commissioner
Ford Frick, President Warren
Giles of the National league,
President Joe Cronin of the
American league, and club
owners Tom Yawkey, Boston,
Arnold Johnson, Kansas City,
Bob Carpenter, Philadelphia,
and Lou Perini, Milwaukee,
was named to meet with third
league partisans and aid their
future planning.
Special League
Frick named the committee
ubs, Cards, Dodgers, Giants
II Triumph in League Games
By United Press International
Eddie Bressoud rapped out
a pair of doubles and a home
run ; to help the San Fran
cisco Giants maintain their
one-game lead in the National
league Saturday - with a 5-3
umphreys
Mobs Four
1st Places
. Ashland Phil Humphreys,
Medford, was the big winner
here Friday night in the Ash
land" city recreation depart
ment's track and field meet
at Southern Oregon college
oval.
He won four events in the
high school class. Neil Plum
ley, Medford, and Charles
Swingle, Phoenix, in the open
class, and John Burns, Med
ford (ex-Crater high), and Ron
Baker, Phoenix, in the prep
division each were double
winners.
Larry Rogers, Ashland, took
three junior wins.
Humphreys nabbed the
broad jump with 19-2, the 100
yard dash with :10.6, the 220
with :25.2 and the 120-yard
low hurdles with :15.7.
In the open events Plumley,
Oregon State collegian, threw
the discus 109 feet 7 inches
and put the shot 46 feet.
Swingle, Southern Oregon
college, won the 100 and 220
sprints in : 10.9 and :25.9 and
John Jones, Lewis and Clark
college and ex-Medford high,
won the javelin with 172 feet.
Burns took the prep high
jump at 5-6 and the javelin at
178. Baker heaved the discus
112 and the shot 43. David
Colwell, Ashland, copped the
pole vault at 10 feet.
Among the juniors Rogers
won the broad jump at 12-5,
the low hurdles in :20.1 and
the 150 dash in :21.7. Wayne
Calvary, Ashland, took the 75
in :10.1.
There were 22 participants.
Next meet at the college track
will be on Friday night, July
24.
Portland Loses
Leading Batter
. Seattle - (UPD - Leading hit
ter for the Portland Beavers,
fleet centerfielder Russ Sny
der,. Friday was recalled by
the Kansas City Athletics.
Snyder joined' the Beavers
shortly after they opened the
season and has led the club in
hitting practically all the time
since then. After Thursday
night's game with the ain
iers, Snyder was hitting .338,
second top hitter in the Pa
cific Coast league. He had
rapped 77 hits in 228 times
at bat.
Buy
At
Builders Supply
QUALITY
BLOCKS
Drain Tile
Bricks, Flues
727
W. McAndrew
Phone SF 3-4575 or SP 2-4107
tor third baseman has a
chance to increase his margin
next week inasmuch as the
Babe did not hit his 31st hom
er until his 94th game.
Also Hits Homer
Jim Lemon of the Senators
also hit a home run, his 31st,
and teammate Bob Allison cel
ebrated his 25th birthday by
collecting three of Washing
ton's 15 hits. Fischer limited
the Orioles to seven. Hector
(Skinny) Brown was the loser.
Barry Latman limited Kan
sas City to four hits while
pitching second-place Chicago
to an 8-3 victory. Latman col
lected three of the White Sox'
12 hits and scored twice him
self. Nellie Fox drove in three
at a special meeting held , by
the major leagues to consider
aid to the minor leagues and
also to vote for a second time
on authorizing inter -league
trades without waivers dur
ing the three-week period,
Nov. 21 to Dec. 15, this year.
Both .the American and Na
tional league held to their
previous positions favoring
free interleague trading this
winter and they reaffirmed
their previous vote to make
such deals possible. 1
Frick, though he had been
on record against the plan;
said that both league presi
dents also opposed the rule
and that he did not regard the
vote to retain the rule as a
personal matter with him. .
victory over the Cincinnati
Reds.
Southpaw Johnny Anto
nelli posted his 13th victory
with a nine-hit effort . that
sent the Reds down to their
sixth straight loss.
The second of Bressoud's
doubles came during a two
run fourth inning that put
the Giants in front to stay.
San Francisco added two
more runs off loser Jim Bros
nan in the seventh when
Bressoud hit his homer.
Home runs by Don Deme
ter and Charlie Neal led the
Los Angeles Dodgers to a 7-5
victory over the Milwaukee
Braves. The victory kept the
second-place Dodgers a game
behind first place and the
loss dropped the third-place
Braves 2V games off the
pace.
The Dodgers wiped out a
3-0 deficit with a five-run
burst that chased loser Carl
ton Willey in the fourth. Neal
and Demeter both homered
during that frame. In addi
tion to his homer, Neal had
a double and two singles to
pace a 12-hit attack. Don
Drysdale, who relieved starter
Sandy Koufax in the fourth,
gairied his 10th victory.
Marciano May
Manage Branch
Goetborg, Sweden-(DPD-Roc-ky
Marciano, former world
heavyweight champion, might
become manager of the plan
ned' American subsidiary of
Ingemar Johansson's Corre
spondence school - newest of
several prosperous enterprises
operated by the new heavy
weight champion.
The disclosure was made
Saturday by Bertil Ohlsson, a
bearded Goteborg journalist,
with whom Johansson oper
ates "Goteborg's Sports
school, Ingemar Johansson
and Company." Ingemar's sec
ond associate in this enter
prise is his personal physi
cian, Dr. Goesta Karlsson.
Ohlsson also confirmed re
ports from the United States
that he-acting on behalf of
Johansson-has been in contact
with Joe Cahill, sports pub
licity director at the U. S.
Military academy, regarding
a "possible cooperation, aft
er Ingo's sporti school has
crossed the Atlantic.
"But we have only talked
about the matter and no for
mal deal exists," Ohlsson said.
1
HERTZ
TRUCK RENTAL
Available
at
HOPKINS RICHFIELD
SERVICE
McAndrew at Court
Phone SP 3-9068
3
a-
of Chicago's runs with a sin
gle and a double. The victory
was Latman's third against
two defeats. Ned Garver suf
fered his ninth loss against
six victories.
Don Buddin's grand - slam
homer off Bob Turley in. the
10th inning enabled the Bos
ton Red Sox to beat the New
York Yankees for the third
straight time, 8-4.
Buddin's game- winning
blow came shortly after um
pire Bill Summers had ejected
catcher Yogi Berra and re
liever Ryne Duren for pro
testing a decision. Earlier in
the game, first baseman Bill
Skowron was forced to leave
when he aggravated a back
injury and Hector Lopez bow
ed out after being hit by a
pitch.
Murray Wall was the win
ner in relief and Jim Bronstad
the loser. Tony Kubek's ninth
homer sent the game into ex
tra innings.
Cleveland met Detroit in a
night game.
American League
Kansas City 102 000 000 3 4 0
Chicago. Oil 041 Olx 8 12 0
Garver, Sturdivant (5), Tisitouris
(7), Dickson (8) -and House; Latman
(3-2) and Lollar. LP Graver (6-9):
(10 Innings)
New York .. 300 000 001 0 4 9 1
Boston 010 000 030 4 8 9 0
Maas, Greba (6), Duren (8), Bron
stand (10), Turley (19) and Berra,
Howard (10); Casale, Kiely (7),
WaU (8) and White, Daley (8). WP
Wall (2-4). LP Bronstad (0-3).
HRS Kubek (4th). Buddin (6th).
Baltimore 010 100 0105 7 2
Washington .... 200 214 OOx 9 15 2
Brown, Johnson (6) and Triandos;
Fischer (7-3) and Courntey. LP
Brown (5-5). HRS Killebrew
(30th), Lemon (21st).
Detroit at Cleveland, night.
Hank, Aaron hit his 23rd
homer for Milwaukee.
Ernie Bands drove in three
runs with a homer and a
triple as the Chicago Cubs
snapped a five-game losing
streak with a 5-1 victory over
the Pittsburgh Pirates. The
defeat ended a five-game
winning streak for the Pi
rates, who collected nine hits
off winner Dave Hillman.
Banks opened the fourth
inning with his 24th homer
off loser Ronnie Kline and
drove in two more runs in
the fifth when he tripled with
two ipen on. The loss evened
Kline's record at 7-7. Hillman
is 4-7.
The St. Louis Cardinals
nipped the Philadelphia Phil
lies, 4-3, behind the combined
seven-hit pitching of rookie
Marshall Bridges and newly
acquired Dean Stone. Stone,
brought up from Omaha
Thursday, relieved Bridges in
the sixth after Gene Freese
hit his 11th homer and Sparky
Anderson singled.
Stone struck out five and
gave up two hits the rest of
the way to save Bridges' third
straight victory. The loser was
Don Cardwell,-who gave up
10 walks and was the victim
of a two-run rally in the sixth
which decided the game.
LIXESCORES:
National League
Los Angeles 000 510 1007 12 1
Milwaukee .... 012 100 100 5 9 1
Koufax, Drysdale (4) and oRse
boro; Willey. Pizarro (4), Rush (7)
and Crandall. WP Drysdale (10-6).
LP Willey (4-3). HRS Neal (11th),
Demeter (17th), Aaron (23rd).
San Francisco 000 200 201 S 13 2
Cincinnati 000 000 1203 9 0
Antonelll (13-4) and Landrith;
Brosnan, Acker (8), Lawrence (9)
and Dotterer. LP Brosnan. HR
Bressoud (2nd).
St. Louis 100 012 000 t 7 1
Philadelphia .. 002 001 000 3 7 1
Bridges, Stone (6) and H. Smith;
Cardwell, Robinson (16), Phillips
(7) and Sawatski. WP Bridges (3
0). LP Cardwell (2-6). HR Freese
(11th).
MURDERS
CRABGRASS!
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easy to apply with spreader.
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330 North Fir
Canadian
Wins Match
Portland - (CPD - Canada's
Ron Willey kept a morning
round lead of 2-up orer
Dick Stearns to take a Pa
cific Northwest Golf associ
ation championship here
Saturday afternoon.
In the women's division,
young Shirley Englehorn.
of Caldwell, Idaho, copped
a victory over Elaine Por
ritt of Eugene, 6 and 7.
Willey's win came on the
18th hole in then after nooa
round.
Willey carded a 35-38-73
' in the morning round to
take the lead. Stearns had a
39-36-75. Miss Englehorn
fired a 42-38-80 in the
morning round and Miss
Porritt, a 38-45-83.
Arizona Girl
Golf Titlist
Highland Park, Ill.-UrT)-Jo
Anne Gunderson, an Arizona
state coed who belts the ball
like the late Babe Zaharias,
Saturday combined booming
drives and deadly chip shots
to win the Women's Western
Amateur championship with a
6 and 4 victory over veteran
Marjorie Lindsay of Decatur,
111. ,
The 20-year-old strawberry
blonde of Seattle, Wash.,
swept to a four hole lead at
the halfway mark of the 36
hole title match, went five-up
on the 28th green and ended
the match when she dropped
a 57-foot chip shot from the
apron of the 32nd hole for a
birdie three.
Jo Anne consistently clout
ed the ball from 225 to 260
yards off the tee, outdriving
her 34-year-old opponent from
30 to 70 yards. She scored an
eagle three and two birdies en
route to her commanding half
way margin and then added
two more birds on the final
14 holes.
14 Nations
Enter Event
Harrisburg, Pa. (UPD The
field for the world modern
pentathlon championship, to
be held in the Harrisburg-
Hershey area Sept. 25-30, is
shaping up with 14 nations
entered so far.
Maj. Jack Burnheim, secre
tary of the U. S. Olympic
Modern Pentathlon commit
tee, listed the nations accept
ing bids to the five-sport com
petition to date as follows:
West Germany, United
States, Argentina, Austria,
Brazil, Denmark, Finland,
Great Britain, Hungary, Italy,
Russia, Sweden, Switzerland
and Tunisia.
Russia is the defending
champion in the event consist
ing of cross-country riding,
fencing, shooting, swimming
and cross - country running.
The sport is modeled on the
tests a military courier might
face while passing through
hostile country.
Vaults To
Victory
Phil Paquin, university
of Oregon pole vaulter,
cleared 12' 6" to take first
place in that event at the
Medford All-Comers track
and field meet yesterday
evening.
The Grants Pass athlete,
who has a lunge of 14 7" to
his credit this year, had
been sidelined with a leg
injury since lasi April. This
was his first competitive
jumping since his injury.
COVERS
5,000 SQ. FT.
$675
Phone SP 3-4503
MAIL TRIBUNE. Medford, Or. 19
Sunday, July 12, 19S9
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