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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 16, 1960)
Q G .":::! C7: . - .. r c , ... z V7' a. 1. & ca m tw. ' '.'-WWW 1" .' it. -MV .V s.' " . , - v i, V 1 . r ..... ' . . jL-' BEATS THROW Cleveland player, Tito Francona is shown sliding into home plate to score the Indian's third run in the first the first inning of Saturday's game with the Chicago White Sox. Cleveland built up an early lead and went on to win 10-9. - -. ,a.--- vfc . i' -4 'l''fT Former Cleveland hurler, Herb Score suf fered the loss. White Sox catcher Dick Brown is waiting to catch the throw (right) from second baseman Nellie Fox. (UPI Telephoto) Portland Man To Lead Climb This Summer Portland, Ore. -(l'PD- A for mer Portland man will lead an American expedition this summer against the second! highest mountain in the world, it was learned here Saturday. Plans were announced for an expedition to be headed by U. S. Army Major William D. Hackett, who is now stationed as a special training officer in Fort Monroe, Va., to tackle the 28,250 foot Mt. Godwin Austin. The peak, generally known as K-2. is only 778 feet lower than Mt. Everest. It is located in the Kashmir part of the Karakorams. Dick Phillips Sets Pace For Tacomans By ORVILLE BOY1NGTOM United Press International Tacoma's fast-rising Giants are only half a game out of first place in the Pacific Coast league today and Dick Phil lips is the guy responsible. Phillips, an infielder, came on as a pinch hitter in both ends of a twin bill Sunday with Salt Lake and sparked a double win which lopped a full game off Sacramento's lead over Tacoma. Phillips banged a solo home run in the eighth Inning to give Tacoma AUTOMOTIVE Based on K ... . 1 TREMENDOUS TUESDAY SPECIAL Oil Change & Grease Job SJ99 On S n 2j vi 1 Oil 20 or 3n t.,-:.L. WHEEL PACK, 2 whees 99e SPECIAL WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY ONLY. COMPLETE WHEEL ALIGNMENT Sr 88 5 WHEEL BALANCING "NIT ii An wheel TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY BRAKE ADJUSTMENT 99c 1 I . ""i "',1 HAVE YOUR AUTO REPAIRED WHILE YOU SHOP . . . OUR SERVICEMEN ARE EXPERTS. "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back" 0 SEARS . sp a-ti nw PARKINS orm MONDAYS 1 FRIDAYS TILL P.M. Pin Lanes Baseballers Win Again Medford Bowling ! n n baseball nine nipped Fort Jones 5 to 4 in the California city yesterday for ila second victory in pre-loop practice play. Two rum in the ninth in ning gave the Keglers their tying and winning markers. The scores came on a walk and tingles by Larry Perkins, Dave Neet and Earle Tiche nor. Medford got the first runs in the mix with two in the third. Fort Jones went ahead with three in the fifth and one in the sixth. Kay Vaughn homered for Medford in the eighth canto. Perkins tripled and singled for the Bowlers and Ken Vannice and Dick Durante also had two hits apiece. On the hill for Medford, Vannice allowed three hits and a walk and fanned three in six innings and Jim Eggers yielded two hits and whiffed three. The Bowling lanes playa Dunsmuir, Calif., at White City next Sunday. !l i SPORTS w. w GP Schools Victors in Track Tiff Grants Pass schools won both classes in a seventh and eighth grade track meet here Saturday. North Junior high took the eight grade division with 61 points. Hedrick of Medford had 42 and South GP 39. South took the seventh grade action with 50 7 10 to 20 9'10 by North and 20 2 5 by Hedrick. MNESCOKES: Medford 002 000 0155 11 4 Fort Jones . 000 031 0004 9 1 Vannice. Egfters (7) and Vaughn; Evans and Huward. N'CP: James. Wv- Rob- Kel-Hoh. a 5-4 win in the second game after he had hit a game-tying triple and scored the winning run in the Giants, 3-2, victory in the openr. Sacrament lost valuable ground by splitting a pair of games with San Diego. The league leaders won the open er, 8-1, behind Winston Brown's three-hit pitching but dropped the second contest, 8-3, as the Padres' Bud Pod bielan dealt a six-hitter. In other games Sunday Spokane exchanged places in the standing with Seattle by dropping the Rainiers, 3-1, and 12-4, and Vancouver de feated Portland, 8-3. Spokane is now in third place, a game and a half off the pace, while Seattle slipped to fourth, three games out. Portland's loss left the Beavers in fifth position, one percentage point behind Seattle. Phillips' first clutch per formance came as the Giants trailed, 2-1, in the seventh inning of the first game. He connected for his long triple which chased home the lying run and then scored whan player - coach Sal Carormion banged a plnch-hit double. Phillips' pinch - hit solo homer in the eighth inning -the first extra frame - of the second game broke a 4-4 tie. I The Giants have won eight of their last nine starts. Al Heist and J. W. Porter used their booming bats to take the pressure off Brown in Sacramento's first game win. . Heist hit a three-run homer in the second inning and doubled in two more runs in the fifth. Porter hit homers in the fifth and eighth inn ings to raise his output to eight for the season. San Diego poured it on for five runs in the sixth inning of the nightcap to help Podbie lan pick up his win. Spokane scored seven runs in the fourth inning to go ahead for keeps in the second game after Mel Nelson had turned in a six-hit pitching job in the first game. The big rally was made up of six sin gles, two doubles and a pair of walks. The Indians shelled five Seattle hurlers for 13 hit in the high-scoring nightcap. In the first game Nelson need ed help from Ed Palmquist who retired the side in the ninth inning without yielding a hit after Nelson had loaded the bases. It was Nelson's fourth win against one loss. Vancouver scored five run in the fourth inning and three in the seventh to turn back Portland. Veteran George Bamberger spaced 11 hits to get the win. Vancouver's five-run outburst in the fourth Inning overcame i 2-0 Beaver lead and put the Mountiea ahead for good. Stenlund Hurls Spear 260 Feet Br HAL WOOD Fresno. Calif. - 'LTD - The glory road that leads to Rome for track and field artists moves to Los Angeles on Fri day for the big Coliseum Re lays. And some of the boys who turned in disappointing results in the West Coast Relays here on Saturday night will have to improve to keep in conten tion for the big Summer Olympic Games. But the future looked bright for others, including: -Doug Smith, the skinny Occidental sprinter who edged the powerful Ray Norton in the 100-yard dash in 9.4 sec onds. It was the first defeat in 30 starts for Norton since last summer. -Dave Edstrom, Oregon, who won the high hurdles in 13.9, but says he would have done "much better" if he hadn't locked arms with Chuck Cobb, ex-Stanford run ner, while going over one hurdle. Gary Stenlund, Oregon State, who got off the second best javelin toss in United States this year with a meas urement of 280 feet, 4H inches. Stenlund, only 20 years old, topped his best throw of last year by more than 12 feet and figures to make the U.S. team - if he continues to improve. Edstrom, a decathlon ex pert, is pleased with his de velopment in the high hurdles. "If I can get my time down around 13.5 or 13.6 I may give up the decathlon and try to make the team as a hurdler," he said after his easy victory. ' I love the decathlon, how ever." Darrel Horn of OSC won the broad jump in 25 feet 5H inches and Jim Grelle, ex-Ore gon ace, took the mile in 4:09.9; Amos Marsh of OSC had a 9:5.5 in the 100 yard dash but finished fifth; Norm Hoffman of OSC finished third to Grelle in the mile with 4:15.8. Results (Elihin Grade) Pole vault Van Koten Sparlin. NOP; Kellv. SGI". SCP 11 ft Shot put Peterson. NOP mar, NOP; Graftstrom. SGP; ertson. H. 4S-1. Javelin Van Koten, N'GP lay. SGP: MrCormack. NGP; ertson. H. 131-3. , High hurdles Hawkins. SGP Cory, SGP; Hopper, NGP. Bamlad. NGP. :10 5. 73 Henry. H: Van Koten. NGP Guise, SGP; Verstrate. H 08 4 330 Henrv. H: Wvmer NGP Sanders. SGP: Cornett. NGP 4(18 Discus Robertson. II: Mt-Cor-maek. NGP; Cole, NGP; Grafsmim SGP. 87-S. Broad jump Tie first. V.rMr;tte and Knieht, II: Packard. NGP; la- ueu. lo-B'7. Hieh iumn Wvnier NGP- tip second. Head. NGP. and Sandvrs and Hawkins. SGP. 5.2. Low hurdle Hnulti., sr:p. Cory. SGP; Isabel!. NGP; Murray' H. :15.8. 130 Verstrnte H Panbirri NGP; Culse. SGP; Swariifarccr. ll! ;17. 600 Co e. NGP niatt It- UW..I. S; Lens. H. 1 38 2. Relay Hedrick iSu-nr!7f;ip..r Verstrate. Murray. Henry i; North Grants Pass. :49 3. lulnse Ravac i Wins Colonial Fort Worth, Tex. - tlTr - Ju lius Boros flew home to see his lwt)-wi'ek-thi son for the first tinii' lav S:. 000 richer and packing a distinct par tiality for sti'.ithweslci n golf cmirx1 after winning the Co lonial National invitation title with par golf Sunday. The 40-year-old New Eng lander, who now lives in Fort Laudt'rriale. Fla., and plays out of Mid Pines. N.C., sank, a 20-foot sirichill pressure putt (or a birdie on the 17th green to win a wild final round scramble. Boros' final round 38-34-70 along with earlier rounds of 70-71-69 for 280 enabled him to nose in ahead of Kel Nagle and Gene Littler who finished at 281. and the fast-closing Ted Kroll, who wound up at 282. Morris Kicks Winning Point Eugene -mr two lormer University of Oregon linemen picked up loose footballs and ran them back for touchdowns to give the Alumni a 13-12 vic tory over the 1960 Duck var sity here Saturday. Greg Alteuhofen grabbed a blocked punt and rambled 30 yards to give the Alumni Wain of Norman Van Brocklin ila narrow victory. The score came with 2 minutes re maining in the game. The alumni scored its other touchdown when husky Bob Peterson picked up a fumble and ran 40 yards for the score in the third quarter. Jack Morris, a defensive back with the Los Angeles NFL Rams, kicked what proved to be the winning conversion. I MAIL TRIIUNI. MetlfarJ, Or. Ma.dav. May U. 140 A ' Coach Len Casanova s . . Ducks opened the scoring i j second six-pointer came In the the first quarter on Bin third quarter whe,- 'v.Hhtri Brown's thrw-yard burst into ! Bruce Snyder took a pitehout a Van Brocklin atrial. Their from Oregon quarterback the end jnp.. It wni et up hy I Dave Grosz and scored from Bill Swain s interception of ;i yards out. Russians eat three times more ice cream person than Americans do. PIONEERS CHAMPS Portland - (UPD - Lewis and Clark's Pioneers won their second straight North west conference track champion ship here Saturday. The Pio neers swept both the high and low hurdles events. They scored 109V4 points In win ning. Willamette finished sec ond with 62 points, Whitman and Linfield tied for third with 49 each, College of Idaho was fifth with 8'j and Pacific finished last with 7. (Seventh Rrade) Pole vault Johnson SGP- llmvn NGP; tie third, Howerton. NGP. and Gendfry. SGP. il-i). ttroad lump Pope. SGP: Hurk- ner. SGP; Ocheltree. NGP; Lciiure H. 15-5 'j. HiBh lUntD Five U-nv lie nmnno Smith and Ueare, H. Hmverl.ui ami Crews. NGP. and Snckeli. SGP. J-;t. High hurdles Howe. NGP: Wa- trud. H; Smith. H; Sackett, SGP. 10.2. 73 Roberts SOP: Howe NGP Buckner, SGP; Ocheltree, NGP. :un.. 330 Pone. SGP: Riirkner SGP! Pryor. H; Farrniul. NGI. :44 3. Shot out Roberta. SGP: Prvor. H: Clark. NGP; Bcare. 11. 411-10'.. 150 Roberts. SGP: Pone. SGP; Ocheltree. NGP; Leinire, 11. ;17 3. rlelav south t. rants p.iss ipone. Bucker, Godfrey, Roberts i; Hed rick. springtime or any time put on your smiling face One Stop Shopping Makes Seme Whin You Buy Insurance! CONVENIENT - ECONOMICAL SAFEST let us plan your insurance program t fit All yeur insurance needs For Car . . , For Home . . . For Life For Business! Professional Insurance Service nsurance 4IHawtlMi. rfc.Wt-7ll WIOK,OMM "INSURANCE IS SECURITY" willi Ih NEW m Affz nlorelcb iMj wlth Rotary Bl"1 ASK YOUR DEALER TO SHOW YOU NORELCO'S FAMOUS ROTARY BLADES! 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