!JUKiWUI!ll)lt:!j;j C.JC:iD C. v. CZZOC
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Mill TRIBUNE, McJforrf, Or.
Dairy Maids Divide
With Salem Team
Memorial Stadium, VVhite
City - Rogue Valley Dairy
Maids, whamming over five
runs in the second innmn,
tripped the Salem Shamrocks
6 to 2 here Sunday lo ijain a
series split on the opening
week end of 19G0 play in the
Northwest Women's Major
Softball league.
Salem, 1959 state champ,
won the Saturday scuffle 5 to
0.
The big Sunday inning for
the Maids was on .six hits, by
Jean Main. Shirley Hanson,
Janet Pfaff, Jan Batemnn,
Doris Hickson and Helen Wul
gamott, and two errors. Rogue
Valley also scored in the
third inning on singles by
Hanson and Bateman, a sacri
fice by Pfaff and groundnut
by Phyllis Perry.
Thru-Hilttr
Salem tallied once in the
second frame on a walk and
Pitcher Now Has Worry
About Encore With Cubs
By GENE BLUDEAU , There were no close bud
Chicago - iDl'li- Ex-Philadel- dies to hoist him atop their
nhia nitrher Don Cardwell. ! shoulders and there were no
who hurled a no-hiler
in his
debut with the Chicago Cubs
Sunday, worried today about
what to do for an encore.
All I wanted was to get
out there and win so the Cubs
could be impressed with their
trade for me," Cardwell said.
"I wanted them lo be proud.
But what do I do now?"
Cardwell, 26, a 6-4 right
hander who came to the Cubs
last week in their near-desperate
search for a front line
pitcher, faced only 28 baiters
Sunday to heal the St. Louis
Cardinals, 4-0, In one hour, 46
minutes.
It was the first no-hitter
pitched against the Cardinals
since Horace Ellcr of the Cin
cinnati Reds turned the Iriek
on May 11, 1918 -41 years ago.
Only a first inning walk to
Alex Grammes-on a 3-2 pitch
-marred a perfect game for
Cardwell.
Fait Balls
Cardwell said he threw
mostly fast balls and change
ups with a few curves.
The Cardinals could lilt on
ly seven balls past the Infield.
Cardwell struck out seven and
there were only four occasions
when there appeared even a
chance the Cardinals might
hit safely.
Cardwell, his record now 2
2, last had pitched nine days
earlier when, as a Phillie, he
held Los Angeles hitlcss un
til the sixth.
The atmosphere in the lock
er room was reserved. No-hitter
or not, Cardwell was "a
new boy In town."
HEED
Hyatt Cr N.D.
BEARINGS?
CALL SP 2-5227
FAM 'TNSS
126 North Front
have you eyes that dream
of the"ood old davs?"
c9
1 mwam tfJetituc&i
45 0'. J4 I0; Pint J2 70 blond j
Kenlucky hniey. A Blend. 84 fro;,. 72l',"o Grain N.ut.il
Ipinll. Schtnley Disl. lot , f.ankfotl, Ky,
A Monday, May Tl, WO
, a double by Marge Hurley.
Three Maid miscues gave the
Shamrocks a run in the fourth
panel.
Ellen Callaghan pitched
! three-hit ball for the Maids,
i walking three. Hurley gave
I up 10 hits but no bases on
balls Hanson and Bateman
had two hits each for RV and
On Saturday Sa 1 e in got
three of its runs in Hie third
stanza on a walk, fielders
option and hit by Delnris Han
II u r 1 e v and Jiickie
I ('luirchck. Hansen and Vivian
Reaves each had two hits for
the Capital city team.
l.li:S OKKS:
(Saturday)
Sale m 00 1 I - s 7 2
RrifMif! VhIIpv Tin DOO 00 3
Hurley and MantyU, Barron and
Mom.
(Sunday) .
Salem . mo 'n 02 2
Rdiiuc Vallov UM 000 x 6 10 A
I Hurley and M;inlyl, CBllanhan
'nd Main.
ex-roommates lo pour cold
drinks over his head in tri
umph. In the midst of baseball's'
i greatest moment of triumph
I for a pitcher a no-hit game-
Don Cardwell stood almost
alone.
The Cubs shook Cardwell's
hand and patted his back.
Manager Lou Boudrcau jok
ingly said Cardwell's pitching
was "all right" but how was
his hitting?
SO Raiders
Walkaway
In Net Tilt
Klumath Falls - Bruce Mer
rill and John Root made it a
walk-away as Southern Ore
gon college won the Oregon
Collegiate conference tennis
championships here In a two
day event Friday and Satur
day.
SOC scored IS points, Port
land State five, and Oregon
college two as the Raiders
won the title for the fifth time
in six yars.
Merrill copped (he singles
crown by defeating leammnte
Ron Singler 7-5 and 6-2.
Singler was ranked as the
fourth man on the Raider
squad but he won Hie chance
to play Merrill when he up
sel Root, the Raider second
man, in sets of 6-0 and 6-3.
Merrill and Root won the
doubles crown from Mutt
Gcfre and Jerry Richmond of
Portland State in straight sets
of 6-4 and 8-6.
Actually the Raiders won
the team championship the
first day when they piled up
enough points and placed
enough men in the finals and
semi-finals to win the crown.
Vancouver, Wash. - UIPD -Don
Kreiger of Portland won
the fourth annual Royal Oaks
Invitational golf tournament
Sunday with a record-smash
ing 207 for the 54-hole total.
t -
The eyes
of a
dreamer
The lips
of a
judge
HWlsaelH
This, is the whiskey of
"the good old days,"
Made with matchless
Kentucky know-how
and skill, it's
1 7? 1 "7
: -. J -" ' jL".fi J
THROWS NO-HIT VERDICT Don Card-., baseball game. Del Rice, left. Walt Moryn,
THROWS NO-HIT VERDICT Don Card- second from left, and Jerry Kendall, right,
well, newly acquired by the Chicago Cubs, made some exceptional plays in backing up
is-surrounded by teammates who helped Cardwell. Ernie Banks hit a two-run homer
him with his no-hit shutout Sunday against for the Cubs. - (UP1 Telephoto)
the St. Louis Cardinals in a National league
Cardwell No-Hitter
On Unusual Sunday
By FRED DOWN
United Press International
It was a day to remember -a
day on which form look a
holiday.
That's just about the only
way to sum up Sunday's major
league ve its that included
the season's first no-hitter, it s
biggest free-for-all. the possi
bility that the Indians used
player belonging to the Sen- j
alms and Ihe speclai le of the i
Baltimore Orioles sharing the
American league.
In fact. San Francisco fans
are just about the only ones
who would call it a normal
day: The Giant pitching slaff
turned in another shutout.
Here's a rundown on do
ing's that provided 228.168
Sunday baseball fans with one
of Ihe dizziest days in years:
-Don Cardwell, 21-year-old
right - bander acquired from
the Phillies on Friday pitched
the first no-hitter against the
Cardinals in 41 years for a
4-0 victory in his debut with
the Cubs.
-The Phillies and Reds
staged a free-for-all at Cincin
nati which 8-foot, 8-inch, 230-
pound Gene Conley featured
by socking 5-foot, 11-inch, 165
pound Billy Martin above the
left eye.
-The Indians tried to use
Pele Whisenant as a pinch
! hitter after they had announc
ed he had been traded to the
Senators.
-The Orioles swept a double-header
from the Red Sox,
2-1 and 7-4, to tie the White
Sox for first place.
Misses Perfect Gam
Cardwell, a native of Win
ston-Salem, N.C., who had a
17-26 record in three big
league seasons, missed a per
fect game because he walked
the second batter to face hint
in the first inning of the Cubs'
nightcap with the Cardinals.
The 6-4, 210-pound right band
er retired the next 26 batters
in order, striking out seven
and allowing only seven balls
lo be hit to the outfield.
The Cardinals, who hadn't
suffered a nine-inning no-hitler
since May II, l!ll. hnd
won the first game, 6-1, on the
strength of Larry Jackson's
four-hitter and two homers by
Ken Bover.
The free-for-all between the
Reds and Phillies broke out tn
the eighth inning of their
opener after Cincinnati pitch
er Raul Sanchez hit three
players with pitched balls in
the same frame. Philadelphia
Manager Gene Mauch charged
the mound and players spilled
nut of both dugouts. Umpire
Hill .lackowski
Ican-d both
benches of players not in the
game when it was all over.
Johnny Callison, Tony
Curry, Cal Neeman and Frank
llerrera homered to lead the
Phillies to a 14 3 victory in
that one but Gus Hell drove
in three runs with a homer
and two doubles as the Reds
won the nightcap, 5-1
Ui Traded Player
T h e unusual protest do
vclopod
the second Chi-
cage - Cleveland game when
Joe Gordon sent up Whisen
ant as a pinch-hitter in the
seventh inning. The Indians
fif HAWKINSOrTj H
I ls going to havi a I Ri
rf BIRTHDAY! Ill
I W.tch Your Daily Papor I f J
t4 i
SL y A ,o ' ,
, had already announced Wills-
' . . , , !
ll'llillll h I been traded to the;
I c n,i iiM.i,n (J... Hlnn.
it ti , , , ,' .
ai'r ai u'(ii' ii".' c pi "ii'M
on the grounds that Cleveland
had used a player who was
not on its team.
Karly Wynn had pitched a
five-hitter for his first win of
the season as the White Sox
won the first game, 4-0. but
the Indians took the disputed
nightcap. 6-3, on Harvey
Kuenn's three-run lOth-inning
homer. In Boston, a spokes
man for league president Joe
Cronin said Cronin would
take the protest under con
sideration late Monday or
early Tuesday.
The Orioles ran their win
ning streak to four games and
gained a share of the AL lead
when rookie Steve Barber
pitched a three-hitler in their
opener and veteran H a 1
Brown and rookie Chuck Es
trada combined in a nine-hitter
in the second game. Brown
and rookies Jim Gentile and
Ron Hansen knocked in two
runs each to produce a six-run
first inning that routed Bos
ton's Frank Sullivan in the
nightcap.
Johnny Antonelli pitched
San Francisco's fourth shut
out in five games, 2-0, over
the Dodgers and the Braves
beat the Pirates, 6-4. after a
4-2 loss In other National
league games. The Yankees
crushed the Senators, 11-2,
and the Athletics whipped the
Tigers, 5-0 and 5-4, in other
AL games.
I, INK SCORES:
N'HLloiial Leacur
Los A nil .'leu 0(10 000 0000 ft 1
San Fran. . 000 000 02x 2 7 1
Podres. L. Sherry fl and Pinna-
lano. Anlftncllt 2-0 and Schmidt
Loser Podrri 2-3.
(Ui Cunr)
hiladrlphia .110 122 041 14 IS 0
Cincinnati . 010 000 011 3 8 0
Con ley l-l and Neeman. Mcl.iah
CMeen 3, Prosnan . Sanchez 8.
Hook fl and Bailey. Mouse 6. Loser
ftipu.i.i a-3. mi callison. Curry.
Gonzalez, Neonian. llerrera.
tut Game)
Si. Louis . 000 023 001 12 2
Chit-ago ... (MX) 000 010 1 4 0
Jackson 2-3 and Smith. Droll.
Anderson fi. ElMon fi. Ceccarelli 7
and Taylor- Loser Droit 0-4. HR
Boyer 2.
Clnd Came)
St. Louis 000 000 0000 0 1)
Chicago 000 012 lOx 4 7 0
McDaniel 1-2 and Smith Card
well 2-2 and Rice. HR Banks.
(1M Catnr)
Piusburgh
400 000 200 fl l fl
I Milwaukee 00 1 00O 111 4 7 1
Haddix. Face 7. Green B. Um
bricht 8 and (.urges. Spahn. Rush
0 and Crandall Winner Haddix
2-1. Loser Spahn 2-1. HR Skin
ner. Stuart, Crandall 2. Hoak.
Aaron.
C'nd Game)
Philadelphia 000 000 100 1 7 0
Cincinnati 010 101 20x 3 7 0
Robinson. Farrell 7 and Dalrym
pie. Neweombe. Henry 7 and Dot-
ei Robinson 0-3 HR Robinson.
Bell.
?nri Game)
Pittsburgh . 100 000 100 2 11 1
MilwHiikee 300 001 OOx 4 10 2
Daniels. Giel 8 and Smith Pizar
ro, MrMabon 7 and Lhu. Winner
Piano 2-1. Lo-Mcr Daniels l-l.
IIH Aa ion.
merlran l.eaue
I;
w ork .111 101 00211 11 1
H-bington 000 000 101 2 2
Ditmar 2-0 and Howard Cleven-
ger. lee I. kralick 6, Fischer 8
and Battev Loer Clevenger 1-2
I HH Mrnn.n,DM U.t.-.,
i,t.mon
i(1
Baltimore . , 100 000 1002 A J
thxn.n 000 000 tOO I 3 0
Barber 2-1 and Courtnev Casale.
norland 8. Sturdivanl 8. Fornieles
and H Sullivan. Loser Casale
l HR Breeding.
"
1
Highlight
in Majors
",ll,lrl - "99 n'n ' '
Boston 000 200 0024 9 0
Brown, Estrada ai.n Courtney,
F Stillivaii RorlanH I Millntan R
I Foriueles 7 and Gile. II. Sullivan
7. Winner Brown 3-0. Loser F
suiuvan i-i.
ist Gamei
Chicago
000 100 1204 0 0
000 000 0000 S 1
Cleveland
Wynn I
and Lollar. Perrv.
Clrant 8 and Nixon.
Loser Perry
1-2.
C'nd Game, Ml Innings)
Chicago .. 000 000 300 03 2 1
Cleveland .. 000 100 101 3 10 1
Donovan. Bauinann 7. Staley 7
and Brown. Lollar 0. Stigman, Bell
Ii. Klippstein H and Romano. Nixon
fl Winner Klippstein 1-0. Loser
Staley 3-1. IIR Kuenn.
(1st Game)
Kansas City 010 000 202
Detroit 000 000 000-
-s a o
B. Daley 2-2 and Chitl. Mossl.
Semproch 9 and Wilson. Loser
Mossl 1-3. HR Cerv 2.
(2nd Game, 10 Innings)
Knn. City .. 020 100 010 15 11 1
Detroit . 101 000 011 04 10 2
Hall. Kutyna 7. Herbert 8. Trow
bridge 9 and Cbitl. Burnslde. Mor
gan 8. Fnylark in and Berberel.
Winner Trowbridge l-l. Loser
Foylack J-2. HR Chili, Chnaley,
Cerv.
Giants Open
Road Trip
Cincinnati, Ohio - lUPP-The
San Francisco Giants, forsak
ing their "pitcher's paradise'
for a 13-game road trip, tangle
with the Cincinnati Reds to
night in the opener of a two
game series.
Sam Jones (4-2) was sched
uled to start for San Fran
cisco against the Reds Bob
Purkey (2-1).
Johnny Antonelli
nltnhnrl
pilCliea
his first complete game of the
eason Sunday and registered
a 2-0 shutout over the Los
Angeles Dodgers to keep the
Giants on top of the National
league.
Orlando Cepeda won it for
lefty John by smashing a sky
scraping triple off Johnny
Podres into the teeth of a 25
milc per hour wind to drive
two base runners across in the'
eighth inning.
Bears Score 31
Bur Only Split
United Prei International
lis a prctiy Rood trick but
Yakima scored 31 runs in its
Northwest league doublehead
er with Eugene Sunday and
still had to settle for a split.
The Bears routed the Em
eralds. 17-2. in the first game
but Eugene scored a single
run in the ninth inning of the
nightcap to win 15-14.
irillllll!ll:3! lllllllllil
TRU-MIX
CONCRETE
helps you do
the job
FASTER
'EASIER
'BETTER
U
Dtlivtr! jp j.jjri
u
STANDINGS
AMERICAN LEAGI Z
10
10
Baltimore
New York .
Cleveland .
Bton
Deifoit
Washington .
Kanta City .
12
13
571
.36 ."i
.300
A2H
3ll
.375
IS
Sunday'! Results
Baltimore 2. Bontnn 1 (1st
Baltimore 7, Ronton 4 rind
KMnraa City S, Detroit 0
Kamaa City ,' Detroit 4 '2nd. to
inniin.i
Chicaao 4. Cleveland 0 ibti
cm, ind a. Chicago 3 Und. lo
innmgt)
Yorl
kjll.
Wahhington 2
NATIONAL LtACt t
H . I
San Franruco .. 1
PitthburKh 18 I
Milwaukee . 12 I
Cincinnati U 1
lw Angeles 12 1
Chicago . A I
Pel.
.704
643
545
514
421
.331
J85
J79
St. Louis 10
Philadelphia II
18
Sunday's llesults
Philadelphia 14. Cincinnati 3 list)
Cincinnati 5. Philadelphia 1 2nd
Pittsburgh 6. Milwaukee 4 1 1st!
Milwaukee 4. Pittsburgh 2 (2ndl
St. Louis 6. Chicago 1 list,
Chicago 4. St. Louis 0 2ndi
San Francisco 2. Los Angeles 0
r.iiMi. iuam i.t.ttilt:
W. I.. Pet. OB '
Sacramento 17 12 .586
Tacoma 15 1 1
Spokane 18 14
Seattle 15 16
Portland 14 15
San Diego 15 18
Salt Lake 12 15
Vancouver 9 14
.333
.483
.482
.454
.444
.391
Sunday's Results
Vancouver 8. Portland 3
Sacramento 8, San Diego 1
San Diego 6. Sacramento 3
Tacoma 3, Salt Lake 2
Tacoma 5. Salt Lake 4 18 inningsi
Spokane 3. Seattle I
Spokane 12. Seattle 4
NOR.THWF.ST LFAOl'F
V. I..
Pel.
74
.fillH
r.50
,30
.315
.203
Eocene
13 4
Lewislon 1 4 7
Yakima 13 7
Tri-City 7 13
Salem
Wenatchec
I
simuay s kcsuiis
Yakima 17-14. Eugene 2-15
Wenalchee 2-0. Isalein u-H
League Leaders
Bv I'nitrd Prrss Intrrnatioiial
NATIONAL I.EAC.L'K
I'lriver .k l liib G AH R H Pet.
Burcess. Pah. .. 1H 38 10 22 .379
.Mays. S.F 27 101 22 38 .?7ft
Clnintc. Pull 28 US 21 43 .374
Currv. Pha 20 3!) 8 21 .336
Aaron. Milw 22 88 13 30 .341
AMERICAN LEAGUK
Plaver tV Club G AB R H
Maris, X.Y 18 68 14 23
Hansen. Bait. .. 24 80 10 2!)
Pet.
.368
.363
.3tll
,360
33S
RunnHs. Rns 19 72 10 26
Alison. Wa-h. .. 23 86 17 31
Berra. N.V. .. 13 33 U 19
Run? Batfrrt In
National Lean.! McCovfy. Gi
ants 27; Clemenle, Piratji 27; Mazer
oski. Pirates 23: Banks, Cubs 24;
Aaron. Braves 22.
Ameriran League Skowron,
Yanks 23; Howard. Yanks 21; Gen
tile, Orioles 21: Minoso, White Sox
20; Lemon. Senators If); Maris,
Yanks 19; Smith. White Sox 10.
Home Runs
National League McCovey. Gi
ants 8; Boyer. Cards 8; Aaron.
Braves 8; Banks. Cubs 7: Crandall,
Braves 7: Thomas. Cubs 6
American League Lemon. Sena
tors 8: Held. Indians 7; Lerv. Ath
letics 6: Skowron. Yanks. Siebern.
Athletics. Minoso. White Sox, Bat
tey, Senators, all 5.
Pitrhlnr
National League McCormick
Giants 3-0: Antonelli, Giants, Far
rell. Phillies, Miller, Cards. Ells
worth Cuhs. all 2-0.
Amerlran League Hall Athletics
1 3-0; Brown, orioles d-u: uoaics,
, n. nf(mar Yank Porto-
enrrero. Orioles. Kralick. Senators,
Morsan, Tigers, Fornieles, Red Sox,
all 2-0.
Easy Triumph
For Bally Ache
Baltimore-UPD-Bally Ache's
new owners may begin col
lecting dividends this Satur
day when the three-year-old
colt, who finished second in
the Kentucky Derby, com
petes in the S150.000 added
Preakness.
He will be racing for the
first time for the Turfland
Corp.. headed by Joseph A.
Arnold, a Lexington, Ky.. at
torney, who purchased Bally
Ache Saturday for a near
record $1,250,000 from Leon
ard Fnichtman of Toledo,
Ohio.
In his last race for Fnicht
man, Bally Ache scored an
easy four - length victory in
Saturday's Preakness Prep at
Pimlico.
11V IVHUjT
COtXRETEC?!
241 I. McANDRCWS RD.
sc Un!
I Victory Led
By Marlatt
Klamath Falls - Southern,
i Oregon college copped the
Oregon Couegiaie cunierence
golf championship from Port-
! land State by a score of 612
; 614 in a two d.iy tournament
held at the Reaincs Golf and
' Country club.
J
j Bob Smith of Portland
State took advantage of a one I and conference mark in the
stroke edge Friday to edge 220-yard dash with a clock
j Gordy Marlatt of SOC for the, ing of :22.1. He turned the
medalist honors 145-146. cenl"ry run in :09.8, new SOC
Eastern Oregon college be event. Baker was also a
i was fourth with a 688. ; member of the second place
i In winning. Bob Mever had relj?y lfa'"' . .
;a 74-80 for SOC, Phil Mon-. Poland f Jte copped the
grain had a 76-78 and Phil tcam championship with 7
Austin had an 81-77. i Pints' Southern Oregon was
I Smith, Marlatt, and Dick Second with 29, Oregon col
Cook of Oregon college allilc8e had 21 '2, Eastern Ore
qualify for the NAIA district! on col,cSe 20 and Oregon
2 tournament tn he held in
Salem next week end.
Tuneup Bouts
Billed Tonight
Baltimore. Md. - WP - Don
Jordan and Suaar nay Robin
son will box at Memorial sta
dium tonight ir. postponed
tuneup bouts.
Jordan, world welterweight
champion from Los Angeles,
149 pounds, meets Candy Mc
Fa r I a n d of Philadelphia,
148' a. in a non-title 10-round-er
designed to sharpen Don
for his crown defense against
Benny (Kid) Paret of Cuba at
Las Vegas, Nev., May 27.
Middleweight challen g e r
Robinson, 161, engages Pedro
Gonzales, of Rankin, Pa., 170.
in a prep 10-rounder, arrang
ed to groom New Yorker Ray
for his return shot at Paul
Pender's crown New York and
Massachusetts version at Bos
ton June 10.
The tuneup double-header
was originally scheduled for
last Saturday night but rain
caused a shift to Monday
Cliff McLean
Hall of Famer
Portland-Five former small
college athletic greats have
been named as charter mem
bers of the District 2 NAIA
Hall of Fame and were in
ducted into that select group
Saturday at an awards ban
quet at Portland State col
lege. - Included in the group of
players were Walt Erickson.
Willamette university: Murel
Nehl, the University of Port
land; Stan Russell, Pacific
university; Clifford McLean.
Southern Oregon college; and
Claude (Skccts) O'Connell,
Oregon College of Education.
c, - , , , , ,
Erickson, Nehl and Russell
were noted for their football
! .f . . ,
heroics. McLean was a stand-
out basketball player and
0-r., 11 1, j . , ,
Council excelled at both
hasknthall and h.jcnkull
a , '
n 11 10 01 cuai-iics, nenry Le
ver of.Linfield college. Roy
S. "Spec" Kecnc of Willam
ette, and E. Robert "Bob"
Quinn of Eastern Oregon col
lege were also inducted into
the Hall of Fame.
(Clifford (C h i e f) McLean,
named to the District NAIA
Hall of Fame is a teacher and
coach at Medford's Roosevelt
Elementary school. He resides
at 117 Almond St., Ashland.)
The Audubon Society was 6:09, while the Oregon Row
founded in 1886. ; ers' time was 6:28.
exxezxxxx
Make CENTURY Your
Sports Headquarters
OPEN
FRIDAY
NIGHTS
OUR STOCK OF
EQUIPMENT WILL
EVEN THE MOST
OF FISHERMEN.
We Do Business With The Nicest
FISHING CONTEST
Dn't for t Mltf
your crch in tfit lift
CINTURY FISHING
CONTIST. Iytiful Tr.
pkit for jll ivinti. $
fhtni in t)iir wintlaw.
ICJ
y
I Mf&Ky) Wt Givt II
j THRIFTY STAMPS Pn lth Dy Till 9 Friday U
8th and Riverside
Stu Baker
Shines for
SOC Crew
Klamath Falls Stuart
i Baker, Southern Oregon, set
two new records in being
awarded the outstanding
trackman trophy in the Ore
gon Collegiate con i e r e n e c
track championships
held
I here Saturday.
J
Baker ran to a new school
i lecn 1J
Spear Record
Don Korth took a third top
spot for SOC with a new col
lege and meet record when he
threw the javelin 206 feet 7
inches.
Lcn Dobry won the discus
for the fourth Raider first
place medal when he threw
the plate 137-3. He got a sec
ond in the shot put.
Jay Hill of PSC and Doug
Cutsforth of OCE were the
onlv other double winners of
the' afternoon. Hill won the
liflO yard run and the mile
and Cutsforth the high and
low hurdles.
Bill Stewart of SOC gained
a fourth in the discus, Ora
Bannister had a fourth in the
440, Ken Coflman was fourth
in the half mile, and the
Raider relay team of Baker.
Don Story, Chuck Swingle,
and Bannister finished second
to PSC by about two feet.
PSC's win in the relay
chopped a full second off the
OCC record set last year by
SOC. PSC with the team of
Byron Arthur, Lance New
man, Gene Hedrick, and Jon
Abraham was clocked in
3:31.7.
RKSt'l.TS:
Rhnlpiit T.e Clark fPSO: Oobr
'SOCi; Clark iEOCi; Robinson
(EOO. 46-10.
Javelin Don Korth (SOCi:
Kramer IPSO: McKinney lEOCl;
Miller (PSO. 200-7.
Pole vault Colin Morse (OCEI;
Carpenter IPSO: Peterson IPSO;
Miller lEOCl. 12-a.
Discus Len Dobry fSOO: Robin
son lEOCl; Johns tOTIl; Bill Stew
art iSOO. 137-3.
Mile Jav Hilt tPSO: Newman
(PSO; Sumpter IPSO; Dawiano
(OCEI. 4:32.3.
440 Stan Miller IPSO: Hedrick
IPSO; Kromer iOCEi; Bannister
(SOO. :31.7.
100 Stuart Baker tSOO: Ten
nerson iOTIi; Abraham (PSO: Wil
son tOTIl. :09.8.
Hlfih jump Tom Lee (PSO:
Yoast (PSO; Miller lEOCl; Mar
shall (OCEI. 6-0.
Hljth hurdles Doug Cutsforth
(OCEi; Exley (EOO: Newman
(PSO: Clark (EOO. :I3.3.
880 Jay Hill (PSO: Sawyer
MOTh: Schroeder (PSO; Coffman
IISOO. 1MB.B.
' zo Muarl BBKcr isui-i: Wll-
! son iOTIi: Abraham IPSO; Kromer
I iocei. 22.1.
Broad jump Roy Cox (PSCt:
Miller 1PSC1; Clark 1EOC1; Sposito
ipso. 21-', .,,,.
Low hurdles Doug Cutsforth
oCEl; Clark .EOC, Newman
IPSO: Yoast IPSO. :23.2.
Two-mile Tim Small
IPSO:
Brown
Lukcns IPSO; Cook IPSO;
OTIi. 10:14.6.
Relay PSC (Arthur. Newman.
Hedrick. Abrahaml SOC. OCE;
OTI; EOC. 3:31.7.
UBC FASTER
Vancouver, B.C.-(UPI) - The
University of British Colum
bia defeated Oregon Stale col
lege by four lengths Saturday
in an eight-oared rowing com
petition on Vancouver's Coal
harbor. The U.B.C. crew cov
ered the 2.000-litre distance in
SOUTHERN OREGON'S
MOST COMPLETE STOCK OF
SKIN DIVING EQUIPMENT
U.S. DIVERS
V0IT
HEALTHWAYS
SP0RTSWAYS
WHITE STAG
FISHING
PLEASE
ARDENT
FISHING
hacrt
BOWLING
sundltiE:
LkK'k Strikes .
R..llerettes .
Jokers
Thrrc Hits & A -Ml!
Huh Balls
Four Y s
Krazv Kats
Kotlee Kiatih
Split it Mra
Try Hards
It. L-
1.1 a lit
J7 -JJ
ill -'5
-ti la
30 30
2"'j ll'i
2,1 3T
:i si)
IT1.- 42')
RrKo"ce Klat.'h 4 'L RiMcrspirh
529. I77H, n 'Heretics 0 'V. Eu
banks 4391 15114.
High Balls 0 iD Ncasc 4IIO, lo93;
Jokers 4 iD. L.'K,,v .nil, 171.
Try Hards 1 'B Kdwardi, 44.l
ISI13; Krazy Kals 3 'J. Krous 4u.il
13Four Y's I iE Sanderson 50fli
17113: Three tills ii A Miss 3 iF.
Loros 4U0i 1823
Luekv Strikes 3 ID Harris .i.i4 1
1904 Splits & Mrs. 1 'M. jonnson
I425i'l732. ,
High game U'TIs Mains t-o-hta
Hmerspach 19li. Evelyn Sander
son 197.
RV League
Given NBC
Franchise
Wichita, Kans.-CTIi-Tlie Na
tional Baseball congress said
today it has franchised the
Rogue Valley league consist
ing of Oregon teams in ils
19H0 National association.
Harry Chipman of Medford
is president of the league.
The loop is one of a net
work of non-pro leagues with
1 players of unlimited are go
ing rrancliisecl throughout
Oregon in connection with
qualifying teams into the an
nual state lournament at
Drain starting Aug. 12.
Ducks Defeat
Idaho Vandals
Moscow. Idaho - ilT'ii - The
Oregon Ducks took a tighter
hold on third place in the
Northern ('vision baseball
race and shoved Idaho further
into the cellar with a 4-2 vic
tory over the Vandals Satur
day. A costly error and a timely
single accounted for three
runs in (he second inning for
Oregon and they proved to be
the winning tallies. Ron Walp
put Ihe Ducks in front when
he scored on Idaho first base
man Ron Zwittcr's error and
then Walt Baranski drove
home Dave Moore and Leon
Haves with a one-base blow.
The win gave Oregon a 6-4
conference record while Idaho
is 3-11.
-FREE-
Hive your exhaust sys
tem checked now tor
satcty.
NO OBLIGATION
2 minutes vill lave you
Time and Money!
1 1 30 No. Riverside Ave.
People in Town
TIPS
10 Minute installation i,
most cars and pickups, jj:
FREE Pickup & i
GUARANTEED
SP 3-4818 j
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(7) O