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DOVUNG
rl: VTENS'lAL LEAGl'E
fcUHduick:
Alley Busters
Pot Holders
Sparebowlers
Stragglers ,
Three Mrs
Lucky Strikes
49
51
52
54
56
561.
57
60
00',
56
54
52
51 1
Merry J no .
Three Slippers 51
Slow Pokes 48
Jokers 47 1
' Alley Busters 3 IN. Chase 447)
llt8.
Pot Holders 1 IB. Moore 3711
1035; Three Mrs. 3 (M. Shaw 3S4J
1126.
Sparebowlers 3 (G. Trulv 439i
1316; Three Slippers I iL. Hittert
(iicfc 4531 1237.
Lucky Strikes 3 IM. Thomas 465)
128B; Jokers 1 IT. Uricn 4U0) 1254.
Merry Trio 3 (E. Merit 385i 1128;
Slow Pokes 1 (B. St. Clair 46I 1116.
High game Bev. St. Clair 101.
Bl.l'E MONDAY LEAGUE
Standings: w.
Pin Pickers 38
Mits & Misses .... . 32
Eight Balls 29
Clowns 2i
Bowling Bags .... 25
Pin Thinners
Pin Skippers .. 17';
Butterflies 17
34 4
35
Results:
Pin Pickers 4 (Doris Price 394)
1931; Pin Thinners 0 tEUen Lamb
3821 1014.
Hits V Misses 3 (Galle Luke 378)
1960; Eight Balis 1 tMaxine Thom
as 3961 1950.
Butterflies 3 (Grace Hunter 353)
2023; Pin Skippers 1 (LaVonne
Braatcn 332) 1905.
Clowns 2 (Pat Shelton 3881 1981;
Bowling Bags 2 (Lauva Faytinger
365) 1084.
High game Sally Williams 162.
Ems Nudge
Braves for
Win No. 11
By ROY WEBSTER
United Press International
Who's gonna stop the Eu
gene Emeralds?
That's what five Northwest
league teams are asking to
day after Eugene topped the
Tri-City Braves, 10-9, for its
11th win in 12 starts.
The loss dropped the Braves
Into fifth place as Salem beat
Wenatchee, 2-1, for its fourth
season win. In other action,
Yakima poured on the coal
with eight runs in the seventh
frame and defeated Lewiston,
10-7.
Krupsky Scores
Gary Krupsky scored the
winning Emerald run in the
top of the ninth. Krupsky got
aboard on a walk, went to
third when Dick Mitchell
doubled and came home on
the only Tri-City error of the
game. Jerry Robinson had a
solo homer fur Eugene in Hie
fifth, and Bob Nelson tagged
his seventh homer of the sea
son for Tri-City in the eighth.
Ron Wilkins followed suit for
the Braves with a solo homer
in the same frame.
Salem jumped into fourth
place with its 2-1 victory over
Wenatchee. The Senators
started this weeks' action tied
with the Chiefs in the cellar.
A two-run triple by Benny
Gonzales gave the Oregon
team its third-inning win. The
blow scored Terry Martin and
Monzo Wilson. An error in
the top of the third allowed
Wenatchee's run after Al
Owen had doubled.
Peterson Tops
Hitting in ND
Moscow, Idaho -UIPD- Larry
Peterson of Oregon State con
tinued to lead regular North
ern Division baseball hitters
through last week end with a
.469 average.
Peterson had 15 hits in 32
times at the plate for the third
place Beavers. He was credit
ed with six runs and four
RBI's. ,
Other top hitters in the
division were Marv March
banks of Washington State
with .406, seven runs and 12
RBI's; Jim Hollister of Ore
gon with .360, seven runs and
six RBI's; Larry Hattemer of
Idaho with .357, three runs
and five RBI's, and Arley
Kangas of WSU with .344, 14
runs and 10 RBI s.
Oregon State's Bill Oerding
led the pitching department
with a 2-0 mark.
Linfield Holds
2-Game Spread
United Press International
Linfield held on to a two-
game lead in the Northwest
conference baseball race to
day after a series of split
doubleheaders in Tuesday's
action.
Linfield blanked College of
Idaho 2-0 in the first game
behind the four-hit pitching
of Tom Younker.. But the
Coyotes came beck to take
the second game 8-4.
Willamete split a double
header with Pacific, winning
7-6 but losing 8-6.
This left Linfield 9-2 and
Willamete 6-S. The two teams
have a twin bill scheduled
next Monday, at McMinnville.
In another doubleheader
Tuesday, Whitman edged
Lewis and Clark 3-1 only to
fall victim to the Pioneers
18-1 in a wild second game
which saw Lewis and Clark
get 12 runs in the first inning.
EASILY IDENTIFIED
Greensboro, N.C.-0.TD'- Po
lice had little trouble spotting
the hitchhiker described by
an excited motorist Tuesday.
They drove out and picked up
Donald R. Maness, 25, who
still was wearing the prison
uniform and handcuffs he had
on when he escaped.
SO Raiders Outlast
Oregon Tech, Stay
In League Running
Klamath Falls buuuiern
Oregon college called on ace
ehucker John Younger to put
out the fire and preserve a
10-8 baseball victory over Ore
gon Tech in Klamath Falls
yesterday.
Younger came on in the
seventh inning to save the
game for Don Vannice and to
gether they iced the Raiders
hold on second place in the
Oregon Collegiate conference.
For OTI, it was the 12th
consecutive conference loss in
a disastrous season that failed
to see the Owls win a single
game.
Kerm McLemore was the
big hitter for the Raiders as he
banged out four hits and
knocked in four runs. McLe
more got two RBIs in the
three run first inning prior to
adding a second pair in the
all-important third inning.
Now that the Raiders have
cinched second spot, they
could move into the champion
ship over Oregon college in
the event the league leading
Wolves fall to Portland State
tomorrow in Portland.
Raiders 8-2
An OCE loss would leave
the Wolves with a 9-3 record
and a .750 percentage mark
SOC, on the other hand, has
finished with an 8-2, having
two games with Eastern Ore
gon being rained out. Raider
percentage is .800.
Although the regular season
is over for the Raiders, they
will participate in the District
2 NAIA tourney in Portland
May 20 and 21 against two
teams from the Northwest con
ference and one other from
the OCC.
Eldon Francis led off the
three run first inning for the
Detroiters
Opponents
In Masters
Toledo, Ohio-mPD-Billy Go-
liembewskl, 1959 masters
runnerup, and his Detroit
teammate, Thurman Gibson
met today in the feature
match of the 10th annual
American Bowling Congress
master tournament.
Billy G, as Goliembewski is
known in the bowling world,
and Gibson, have won five
straight matches in winners
bracket competition.
Billy G's five victories
this year's masters, gives him
a 14-4 record in three years
of being a finalist in this tour
nament. Gibson has been a finalist
five -times in the 10-year his
tory of the masters and up un
til this year had a poor, 6-10
record, which he has pulled
to 11-10 with his five succes
sive triumphs.
There are four other bowl
ers with a chance for the title
but they, are in the losers
bracket and face the almost
impossible task of having to
win five straight matches to
day to emerge the champion.
These four are Steve Nagy
of St. Louis, Tom Hennessy
of St. Louis, Clyde Hobbs of
Cleveland and Al Sak of Mil
waukee. SENTENCE NAZI
Munich, Germany-fflPD-Wal-
ter Schultz, former Bavarian
health director, was sentenced
to four years in prison Tues
day for assisting in Hitler's
program to promote the "mas
ter race by employing eutha
nasia. Schultz, 66, was found
guilty by the court of pro
nouncing 120 crippled chil
dren unfit and 250 mental
patients incurable. The chil
dren and the mental patients
were all put to death.
EXTEND LOAN PROGRAM
Washington OIPD - The Sen
ate Veterans subcommittee
Tuesday approved a bill to
extend the G.I.' home loan
program until Jan. 31, 1965.
SPRING
SELL-A-BRATION SALE
FRIDAY - SATURDAY - SUNDAY
Many Factory Demonstrations
See Thursday's Mail Tribunt ,
BRUCE CAUED
LUMBER COMPANY
Raiders with walk. Jess
Munyon was safe on a sacri
fice bunt and when a pick off
went into center field both
runners moved up.
Phil Sword was intentional
ly walked to load the bases
but McLemore came through
with his first hit to drive
home two runs. . The third
scored on the same play when
the leftfieder bobbled the ball
and allowed Sword to score
from first.
Frances Doubles
Pitcher Vannice walked in
the second and stole second.
The ball again sailed into cen
ter field and Vannice was
lodged on third. Francis fol
lowed with a double to score
the one run.
Sword started the merry-go-
round in the six-run third
with a fence shattering triple.
Bob Jones walked and stole
second to be followed by Mc
Lemore s two run single. Mc
Lemore was safe at second
when the ball was thrown
home.
Jack Brown singled McLe
more home and later went to
third on the habit forming
center field pick off play. Van-
nice tripled but Brown had
been out trying to steal home.
Jim Dietz followed with a
single to score Vannice. Dietz
then stole second and scored
when the Owl shortstop over
threw first base with Francis
going to second.
Another single scored the
final run when Munyon
rapped the ball into left field
to score Francis.
OTI retaliated with three
runs of its own in the first
when two errors and a walk
loaded the bases. Virgil Win
ters singled to left to score
two runs but an outfield error
scored the third runner from
first base. '
Bases Jammed
A walk to Roland Swanson
and a single by Ardell Hamil
ton put runners at first and
third. Hamilton tried stealing
second and on the throw
Swanson scored from third.
In the last ditch stand in the
seventh a walk and single
coupled with a wild pilch put
runners at second and third.
Swanson walked to load the
bases before Hamilton was hit
by a pitched ball to score a
run. Frank Sprinkle singled
home another run and bases
remained jammed. Lee Sim
mons was safe on an infield
error but in the mixup two
runners scored to make the
count 10-8.
The Raiders settled down
though with mostly reserves
playing the final three in
nings. Only Chuck Nevi and
Sword played the whole game.
Vannice in winning struck
out five and walked four
while Younger struck out four
and did not issue a pass.
Nevi and Sword were the
only Raiders to get more than
one base hit as each got two.
Only one of the starting nine
failed to hit.
BOX:
SOC ab
Diet ss 4
Kopacz 2
Francis cf 3
Cook 1
Munyon If .................. 3
Funderburg 1
Sword c 2
Jones rf 3
Rossetto 1
McLemore 3b . .. 5
Garner 0
Brown, lb 4
Johnson ... 1
Nevi 2b 5
Vannice p . 3
Younger 1
. Totals
OTI
OlivBS SS
Johnson 2b ...
Swanson rf .
Hamilton cf .
Winters If
Sprinkle lb .
Simmons 3b .
Wilson c
Branson p ...
McKlbbon
ab
. 4
. 4
. 2
. 4
. S
. 4
. 4
. 2
. 0
. 3
Totals
32
7
E Kopacz, Francis. Munyon,
Brown, OUvai. Winters, Simmons,
WHson 2, Branson; 2b Francis; 3b
Sword, Vannice;sb Dietz, Jones,
Vannice, Swanson. Hnmllton; DP
McLemore, Nevi, and Brown, Dietz,
Brown, and McLemore: LOB SOC
9. OTI 6.
SOC 31fl 000 000 10
OTI 300 010 400 8
IPMHiT
U2TvDeof Plane
m m
Said incapabieof
Evasive Tactics
FRANK H. BARTHOLOMEW
President
United Press International
New York - ll'PD - The U - 2
type of aircraft alledged to
have been shot down in the
USSR is completely unarmed
and with no capability for
evasive tactics or electronic
jamming, a Strategic Air
Command officer said today.
Col. C. T. Van Fleet, deputy
director of public information
for the SAC at Offutt AFB
in Nebraska, said in a tele
phone interview that the ship
is a sub-sonic (of a speed less
than that of sound in the air)
airplane and "not very fast."
"We participate in the flight
of such aircraft in a project
called Crowflight," Van Fleet
said.
"Co-participant is the Na
tional Air and Space Admin-
Padres Nip
Indians 3-2
United Press International
San Diego and Spokane had
the Pacific Coast league all to
themselves Tuesday night and
they played a dandy before
the Padres finally won out,
3-2.
The other three games, Salt
Lake - Seattle. Tacoma-Vancouver,
and Sacramento-Portland,
were postponed because
of rain.
The San Diego win moved
the Pads into a three-way tie
with Portland and Tacoma
for third place in the stand
ings, while the loss dropped
second-running Spokane two
full games behind Sacramen
to. San Diego won it in the
eighth, when Cam Carreon
doubled, moved to third on a
grounder and scored on Har
ry Simpson's sacrifice fly.
Kent McBride went the six
hit route for the Padres and
notched his second win in five
decisions. Bob Gialombardo
took the loss, his first against
one win.
Venezuela has an area larg
er than Texas and Oklahoma
combined.
njoy
the true
Kentucky
'ESEBj
I
always smoother because
it's slow-distilled
KENTUCKY STRAIGHT
BOURBON WHISKY 86 PROOF
EARLY TIMES DISTILLERY CO.,
LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY
istration, although our ob
jectives are completely differ
ent. No Military Plane
"We seek to conduct infra
red radiation studies at high
altitudes. NASA is conduct
ing upper air analyses.
"The airplane itself is not
in any sense an armed or com
bat aircraft, and is without
defensive capability."
Asked if It were probable
that an airplane flying at an
altitude of five miles could be
struck by a ground-to-air mis
sile, Van Fleet answeted in
the affirmative.
Dispatches thus far have
not stated flatly whether Pre
mier Khrushchev, who is as
serted to have given the order
to bring the American plane
down with rocket fire, used i
a ground-to-air or air-to-air
missile; if the latter, it would j
have been fired from a pur
suit airplane and probably ;
from below the U-2. I
Could Pilot Survive
"Could a pilot survive a di
rect hit with a rocket of any i
sorte?" Van Fleet was linked.
"Yes, survival is possitile, i
providing his canopy did not I
jam, after sustaining a hit
from any sort of rocket other ,
than one armed with a nucleur
warhead," Van Fleet said.
"Would not a man suddenly .
ejected from an aircraft at !
over five miles altitude imme- j
diately freeze to death?" i
"N o t necessarily." Vn
Fleet said. "Men have surviv-1
ed temperatures of 104 de-j
grees below zero.
"The pilot could survive If
he went into a free fall with
out his chute open.
"Most chutes carry an at-;
mospheric device which Willi
automatically open the chute
at about 15,000 feet if the pilot
is unconscious.
"Record fall survived was
by Captain Joseph W. Kittin
eer last November 16. He bail
ed out at 76.400 feet, and was
falling at 450 miles per hour
when his chute was opened by
barometric pressure at about
12,000 feet. He sustained life
durina his free foil by an
oxygen bottle and a partially
inflated suit."
old-style
Bourbon
Globe Trotters Planning
Rule-Change Experiments
Chicago - H'PP - The Harlem
Globe Trotters will experi-
Flavin Signed
Cincinnati, Ohio-dTC-Hand
some John Flavin, a 190
pound California high school
southpaw who was sought by
every club in the majors, will
play for the Cincinnati Reds
under a big bonus contract.
The Cincinnati organization
did not reveal the terms un
der which he was signed Tues
day, but called the contract
"one of the largest bonuses
ever paid" by the club.
The Reds said the 18-year-old
all-around player, who
just graduated from El Cer
rito, Calif., High school, was
assigned to Columbia of the
South Atlantic league.
pi!f H it n i 6CTOlf' .lr.5-
Pll'T 1
m -JL , TUBBUM8
I k roosaPsB Al-
Ad Goodyew Tlret ire Tumpta-Promtf
. . . designed and manufactured fe
make recapping practice!
3-T
All-Weather
VHITEWALLS
V 416.70x15
I I iTube-Typa
Si I A.
pt'Js tai and nctppaUe lire
Pay Only 1.23 tfeefty
3-T ALL-WEATHER
Specially PritteJ TurnplkevProveMl
pint tax and reeappeMe Ik
Pay Only
,Q2X2sG
FREE PARKING O
MEDFORD
Service, Dime
nient with rules changes, in
cluding a 'hree point score on
special long shots, which
might be used by the new
American Basketball league,
owner-coach Abe Sapcrftein
fiu tuoay.
Sape'u'ein, who will own
the San Francisco franchise
in the new league, which be
said would start in the 1961-62
season, outlined rules changes
he had discussed with oilier
owners as possibilities for the
league.
Among them will be to
score three points on shots
taken from outside a line to
be drawn 21 feet out court
from the basket,
Oilier experiments to be
made by the Globe Trotters
will be to play 40 minute
Karnes, to widen the lane un
m i f i a Til ci i n um"- - ss
l" MM K H Mil 9 M
7.10x15
Tube-Type
7.60x15
Tube-Type
JQ9S
.70 x IS
llackwaH
f f 96
Tvba-Typ
7.10 x 13
eiockwo
Tub.Typ
7.M x 15
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Tube-Type
SI9S
9S
IM Weekly
(HOE (32 :
Avails at A Jfccll, Ocba ci Cfcii
Esycz (bdycar't Ebrnl
der the haket to 18 feet, the
Olympic standard, instead of
the usual 12, to establish a
three foot wide area behind
the basket to allow maneuver
ing, to delay play from three
to five seconds after each
basket, to eliminate the bonus
rule, and to allow hand guard
ing with contact of players
driving for the basket.
Saperstein said that two
additional cities, Portland.
Ore. and Pittsburgh. Pa., had
been granted franchises and
would start the schedule in
1961-62 along with the origin
al members, San Francisco,
Los Angeles, Kansas City,
Washington. DC, Cleveland
and Chicago.
Saperstein said that Cleve
land, Washington, Kansas City
and San Francisco wanted to
start the league this fall, but
that the other four members
did not have arenas available
for play and that it was de
cided to defer the start until
all eight teams could begin.
Our rolt
tVvars! Hurry!
vSS- on,y
....3 OLD TIR6
DOWN PAYW'l
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3-T SAFETY AH-Wealder
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Bejy Now Om Tfm At
JIGED iltSl 3D
S&H GREEN
MAIL TRIBUNE, Mtdfotd". Or.
Wednesday, May 11, I960
SLIP UP
Jackson, Miss. - CPt - Gov.
Ross Barnett aiM other digni
taries participated last week
in ceremonies to mark the
signing of an annual motor
vehicle inspection bill, A
clctk uiacuvereu Tuestiay thai
the governor forgot to sign
the bill.
GLQGSTQN'S
Metal
Weather Stripping
and Screens
litimatcj Gladly
Phone SP 3-1014 Evenings
V Z7
- ueV BE TH
"
f I I SIM
lBi 1A M
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Inline
Low At $t.M3 Wklf
fJZV 3 3 ICC 'IiCE
STAMPS
in
Phone SP 3-62G6
o 123 S. Divcrsit
tt
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