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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1962)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON WEDNESDAY. JUNE 20. 1962 Mat Fans Expecf Goering-Lindsey Affair To Be Wild Wrestling fans are looking forward to a real donnybrook at Medford armory tomorrow night when Fritz Von Goer ing, big tough former German paratrooper, meets Luther Lindsey, flashy colored ace, in the main event, set for an hour or two out of three falls. Von Goering drew the hat red of local customers earlier this spring in three battles with Rocky Columbo, one of which sent Columbo to a local hospital. Von Goering prefers to attempt to annihilate his opponents with any means handy and has made several appeals to the National Wres tling Alliance for more liberal rules. Lindsey likes his grappling along scientific lines but is a terror when aroused, and no body can arouse him quicker than the German. Midget matmen, always a favorite locally, will hold the spotlight in the feature scrap for 30 minutes or the best of three falls. Little Beaver, considered to be the best of the little fel lows, teams with Tiny Tim to face Sky Low Low and Cow boy Cassidy. A couple of newcomers will be seen in the opener, due on the mat at 8:30 p.m. Al Pago Pago of Samoa, who does a sword dance before his matches, will go against Herb Freeman, a chiropractic col lege student in Portland. They're billed for 45 minutes or two out of three falls. Children under 13 years of age will be admitted free of charge if accompanied by their parents. Ringside re served tickets are on sale at Lamport's Sporting Goods store in Medford. big load... little cost... THE NEW DATS UN V ton pickup Touch and rugged th DATSUN Vi Ton is built to power the bi toad in and out of tight traffic Of over the roughest road. Precision engineered for long rife, the DATSUN 12 ton holds up to 2,400 lbs. (with overload springs)... gives you 28 5 square feet of load room... more than any other pickup its size. Town or country, rough or asy, the big DATSUK 60 n.p. ngine delivers up to 33 miles per gallon. All American type par's and threads are stocked atDATSUN't largo western factory depot for tier, more economical mainta nance. for pickup, power, etentmr... Ml the 'S2 DATSUN. Pvt . It 10 work tedajf. .1 ,..n?L 4 H t. 1 1 '1675 Delivered in Medford STEVENS AUTO SALES 505 North Central Phone 773-3655 NCAA Golf Toga Taken By Houston Durham, N.C.-d'PD-Some 64 collegiate golfers were to be gin match play on the Duke university golf course today for the individual NCAA championship. Pre-t o u r n a ment favorite Houston wrap ped up the team title Monday. The 64 golfers are the sur vivors of a 220-man field aft er two days and 38 holes of qualifying play which ended late Tuesday evening. Houston's title winning team was paced by low quali fier Kermit Zarley, who fired 68-72-140, three strokes better than his nearest rivals. Charles Layton of Georgia, Dick Dion of Duke and All- American John Lotz of San Jose State tied for second among the low qualifiers with two-day totals of 143. Sparked by Zarley, the Houston club regained the team crown with a 588 score, 10 strokes under second place Oklahoma State whirh had a 598. Prior to last year's cap ture of team honors by Pur due, the Houston team had taken the championship five consecutive years. This year, defending cham pion Purdue slipped to sixth place with a 611. sports Hfg Robinson Medalist In National Albuquerque, N. M. 01PD June Robinson of Oregon State shot a near-record five-under-par 71 on the University of New Mexico course Tues day to win medal honors in the National Women's Collegi ate Golf tournament. "It was the best putting I've done," the 21-year-old June graduate said. The blonde Or egon public links champion from Albany went out in 34 and toured the back nine in 37. The women's course record, 70, is held by Joann Gunder son of Arizona State. Sue Meerdink of Arizona State shot a 75 for medalist runnerup honors and school mate Carol Sorenson s 76 was third best qualifying round. Their combined score of 151 gave Arizona State the team championship. Judy Hoetmer of Seattle university, the defending champion, did not have to qualify for match play, which begins today. TEAMS SWAP Seattle - 0IPD - Rac Slider, lefthanded - hitting shortstop was acquired by Seattle of the Pacific Coast league Tuesday from Portland in a straight player swap for utility infield- er Jim Hughes, Dick Bee, gen eral manager of the Rainiers, announced. Slider currently is hitting .243. He will join Seat tle tonight for its game against Salt Lake City at Salt Lake Slider hit an even .300 for Hawaii of the PCL last season Bears Near Tie in NW; Eugene Trips Wenatchee United Press Internaitonal It was a tough fight but the Yakima Bears Tuesday night struggled to a virtual first place tie with Wenatchee in the Northwest league. Yakima topped Lewiston 6-2 and 7-5 while Eugene was blanking Wenatchee 5-0. Tri City nipped Salem 3-2 in the other game. Yakima had little trouble with Lewiston in the opener. Ethan Blackaby hit a solo homer in the first and Sonny Kopacz drove in two with a single in the second to give winner Roger Roy all the runs he needed. The nightcap, however, was a different story. Lewiston led 5-3 when the Bears came up for the final time and only a four-run rally saved them. Walt Hriniak won it with a two-run homer after the Bears had pushed across two runs to tie it. Hriniak also drove in two runs with a first-inning single. Frank Linzy had Wenatchee eating out of his hand blank ing the Chiefs on but five hits. Joe McLaughlin doubled home two Eugene runs in the fourth and Dick Dietz had a solo homer in the seventh. Tri-City scored two runs in the sixth on a single by Irv Knowles. Larry Staab, Salem hurler, had fanned three men in the frame but a passed ball on a third strike put a man on and started the rally. SOUTHERN AMATEUR Ormond Beach. Fla. - ttJPD - Sixty-four of the South's top amateur golfers went after Billy Joe Patton's vacated Southern Amateur crown to day in the first six match play rounds. Patton, from Morgan ton. N.C., was not on hand to defend the title he won last year in the annual tourna ment. L 52Sit "i!-fei, Is Nikita Khrushchev another Josef Stalin cold, brutal, unyielding? Family Weekly ex amines the manv facets of the Khrushchev personalitv. Don't miss this informative article about Khrushchev-, he "coom? bull politician, the "woman fancier." "monster, the "jolly grandpa." 9ww 2-Wt JW TVceJcly jili Your Copy ol Uio o MFDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE Small Worlds Around Us By LYNN M. WATKINS (Register and Tribune Syndicate 19621 Ak Any Hog - He'd Go Hog Wild' if He Could It really doesn't take long for a hog actually to go "hog wild." Even a domestic hog who has enjoyed the luxury of a comfortable pig sty, regular meals and a wet place to wal low will, if given the chance. cast aside the shackles of domestication and go native. All the swine, of whatever breed, originated from ances tors which ran wild in Europe and Asia a very long time ago. In many areas, there as else where, there are still wild hogs, first cousins to the lazy, fat porkers which are eating their heads off on fattening foods and all headed toward single unenviable destina tion. Any of them, given the chance and a convenient hole in a fence, would escape to the forest or any wild land, and after one or two confused days, would become a truly wild hog. Plenty of Fruit There is plenty of fruit in a forest if one's appetite is not squeamish, and a wild hog knows or soon learns where supplies are adequate. It is a carefree time of delightful leisure for the newly freed, or the one who has "turned tail" on civilization. In many areas of this and many other countries, the wild boar is hunted as a game ani mal. It is a creature worthy of the chase, and a terrible ad versary if angered and corner ed. Of course, a wild hog may not, technically, be a wild boar. The female is wild, too, but she isn't a boar. She's the boar's wife. But the hunter seeking wild boars will gladly take either father boar or mama hog. Usually, even the wild hog is protected by game laws. All in all, the wild hog's life is relatively free from care. It's easy to understand why any pig would go "hog wild" over such pleasant prospects. The hog is immune to pois onous snakes, for it is pretty difficult for the largest reptile to inject poison through heavy layers of fat and Into a deep- seated bloodstream. The gen uine wild hog seems to derive a certain measure of satisfac tion from catching and eating a fat rattlesnake. Considering the conditions Florida's Gold Coast Clubs Said Now 'Clip Joints' Washington -0JPD- The chief of Miami's Crime Commission told Senate investigators to day that strip joints had re placed houses of prostitution on Florida's Gold Coast. He said they get away with abuses police would never have tolerated in the old days. Daniel T. Sullivan, oper-. ating director of the nonof ficial Crime Commission, said the modern day strip - tease house has degenerated into a "clip joint." "Frequently in such places," Sullivan told the Sen ate rackets investigating com mittee, "the cheating of cus tomers, padding of bills, rob bery of patrons, substitution of drinks, and the vicious ex ploitation of patrons who be came senselessly intoxicated under a relentless system of solicitation, is the rule rather than the exception." Controlled by- Hoodlums Sullivan testified as - the committee moved toward a conclusion of its investigation into the connection between the American Guild of Var- enjoyed by the wild hog, such as easy living, freedom to come and go, absence of ten sion or worry about what hap pens to adult hogs by way of the butcher, it becomes pretty meaningful to say that the pigs which run free are really going "hog wild" for joy. Why shouldn't they go "whole hog?" iety Artists and hoodlum-controlled night clubs. Sullivan charged that con ditions at the "clip joints" could not exist without the knowledge of the police. He said agents of AGVA visited night clubs in Miami and talked with members who are entertainers. He said the union apparently did nothing to alter conditions "so blatant that only blind men could fail to see" how entertainers are used. He said the establishments we're controlled by racketeers but operated with an air of legitimacy partly because they employed girls who were members of AGVA. "There has been nothing done to my knowledge by the union," Sullivan said, "to withdraw Its members from these clubs or to take any action within the union power to correct these flagrant abuses." Sullivan said Miami area strip-tease houses had become 1 centers of vice and prostitu tion rackets. This new aspect of vice is more vicious, by far, than the old time houses of prostitution, he said. B 5 lie demonstration. Called the SRN2, the craft has four jet turbine engines and is capabla of carrying about 75 passen gers. Tuesday it carried 30. At the moment it can only oper ate in calm weather. NEW AIRCRAFT Isle of Wight, England-OlrD-A hovercraft which rides on a cushion of air one foot above the water reached 70 miles an hour Tuesday in its first pub- 30th W Yamaha 55 cc. Motorcycles ELECTRIC & KICKSTARTER 3 SPEED GEAR BOX HAND CLUTCH RUBBER SUSPENSION FRONT AND REAR LIGHTS LIGHTWEIGHT FREE RIDING INSTRUCTIONS Demonstration Rides Available TRAIL & ROAD GEARING SKID PLATE HAND & FOOT BRAKES LUGGAGE RACK HORN & MIRROR STURDY FRAME Phone 535-1242 ALL INCLUDED AT $297 ROGUE VALLEY CYCLE CO. ' Mil South ef Talent on Old Pacific Hwy. Esles May Face Reindictment El Paso, Tex. -fflPD- The fed oral grand jury that indicted Billie Sol Estes and three of his associates met today to decide whether it should re turn new indictments against the west Texas agriculture king. Subpoenas to appear before the grand jury haVe been sent to individuals and business firms. The jury was empanel ed by Federal Judge R. E. Thomason. Asst. Dist. Atty. Fred Mor ton of El Paso said it was pos sible that the grand jury may be asked to reindict Estes on the counts read !n the first in dictment to "tighten the lan guage. Estes and his three associ ates, Coleman McSpadden, Harold Orr and Rual Alexan der, were indicted last April by the grand jury alleging 57 overt acts of fraud. The government charged that Estes, McSpadden, Orr and Alexander conspired to transport an altered, forged or falsely-made chattel mort gage from Hudspeth county in west Texas to Los Angeles. Calif., last Oct. 15. The indictment against Es tes charged that he conspired to commit fraud through an anhydrous ' ammonia fertiliz- tank scheme. Suspected false bank accounts, fictitious names and possible forgeries may come under scrutiny by the grand jury this time, it was learned. Estes was arrested March 28 at Pecos and jailed in $500,000 bond, believed to be the largest in Texas history. 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