6 B
WEDNESDAY. JUNE S. IWi
MiDr'ORD MAIL 1JUBUNE, MLDtOHD, OHLtiON
Three Medford High Players
On State Baseball All-Star
Thro player from Me)-
ford high'i tt temifinaliii
baseball nint ha bn nanv
d to lh SUt Um tot th
prop all-iir gam with th
Metropolitan Uam el th
Portland arta.
Th thro ara Stuart Young,
plichtn Dan Mil, shortstop
and Dick Dofllay. aacond
baitman. Tha Stat craw alto
include Gary B d d I e k.
Grant Pan outfildr.
John Koran. Mdlord high
mnter, will b hd cotch
for th Stat club. Hi atiiit
ant will ba Bob Kana, South
Eugan high tutor.
South Eugan placed lhr
man and Pandlaton two on
tha Stata craw
8TUAHT YOUNG
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HtlVJ -, v-eC- .,.11
DAN MILES
filJlM;
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Eugene-(UPII-The State base
ball team for the annual prep
all-Mar aerie here June 13-16
will Include four lefthanded
pitchers and two righthand.
er.
Lefty Steve Bunker of
Pendleton will be Joined by
southpaws Stuart Young of
Mcdford, Ross Dappen of
Reynolds and Butch O'Brien
of Prairie City. Righthanders
will be John Conrad of Ban
don and Lorcn Whltaker of
North Salem.
Catchers are R. J. Hudson
of Oregon City and Rob Cook,
Pendleton.
Other squad members In
clude:
Jack Willis, South Eugene,
and Chris K 1 r b y, Forest
Grove, first base; Dick Def
fley. Medford, second base;
Dave Stanley, Albany, third
base; Dan Miles, Mcdford, and
Wavne Smith. South Eugene,
shortstops; Randy Dolven, La
Grande, utility Inflelder.
Outfielders: Gary Feddlck,
Grants Pass; Bob Officer,
South Eugene, and Dennis
Buldridge, McKenzle,
nr in
41
I 1 a)
JOHN KOVENZ
To Coach Slat Stars
DICK DEFFLEY
On Slat All-Star
Palmer Back
After Three
Week Layoff
Pittsburgh - lUPtl - Arnold
Palmer, one of professional
golf's biggest moneymakers,
said today he feels "ust
great" and Is anxious to get
back on the tour after a three
week layoff to rest up and re
shape his game.
Palmer, voted the PGA
player of the year in 1062 af
ter bunking $81,448 In offi
cial earnings, took a break
after he lost his golden touch
last month.
"I'm ready lo go," he said
from his Latrobc, Pti., home
"1 plan lo play in the Thun
dcrblrd next week. I'm flying
out of here on Sunday.
Palmer plans to play a few
tunciip rounds at the West
Chester Country Club in Rye,
N.Y., before the 100,000
Thunderbird gets under way
there June 13.
llow does he feel about his
gome after the layoff? "I think
my game is in pretty good
shape now." he said. "But you
never really know until you
get into competition. And s
tor putting , . . well, thats
something else again. You
have lo wait until you're on
that course."
During his stay in Latrobe
Palmer said he did not touch
a golf club for the first week
"After that I began lo play
periodically," he said. "Last
week I played quite a bit Just
about every day, in fact."
Vancouver, Wash. - (I'M -Pitcher
Jerry Isaacson, a lo
cal high school product who
graduated from Northwest
Naiereiie college, signed a
contract with the Loi Angeles
Angels Tuesday. He will re
port to Tri-City of the North
west league.
Spokane's
Whammy
Hits Denver
United Prss International
Denver Is the latest victim
of Spokane's unique second
game whammy.
The Indians are a so-so zu
28 in the Pacific Coast league
standings, but are 15 for 16
in the second games of all
their PCL series.
The Indians, five games be
hind TBcom In the northern
division chase, got a stiff eai
tie Tuesday night before Dlflk
Nen's single In the bottom of
the ninth brought a 4-3 vie
lory.
Denver Jumped off to
auick lead, but nice relief
work by Joe Moeller and Ken
Rowe and AI Ferrara s two
run homer Jn the fifth helpoil
sot the stage for Nen's game
winning blow.
Ferrara i blast ran his run
batted In total to SI for the
campaign.
The weatherman and a
couple of hot pitchers pretty
well took care of the rest of
the PCL action last night.
Portland was postponed at
Seattle and Salt Lake City at
Tacoma because of wet wear-
ther. Hawaii mashed Okla
homa City 8-1 behind Dick
Sovde and Dallaa-Ft. Worth
thumped San Diego with dai-
zltng Lee Stage doing the
honors.
Sovde allowed six hits, but
still only faced 32 batters
since he did not walk a man.
Damaging Homer
Ex-Los Angeles Dodgers
Jim Golden took the loss al
though Dick Simpson's three
run homer off reliever Butch
Nixon did the heaviest
damage.
At Fort Worth, the Rangers'
Stange allowed but three hits
and fanned 15 Padres in rua
ning his record to 5-9. Loser
Sammy Ellis gave up only
one run before retiring for I
pitch hitter In the eighth.
The win moved the Rang
ers a game and a half ahead
of San Diego In their south'
em division battle. The teams
arc going steady during the
next few weeks with all 11
meetings between the teams
scheduled soon. San Diego
mav have Its problems.
Off the field yesterday
Seattle and Tacoma pulled
off a big trade that sent first
baseman Don Gile to the Gi
ants for outfielder Felix Mai
donado.
Gile, presently hitting
.260, came to Seattle In 1080.
He hit .306. had a shot with
the Boston Red Sox, but then
was shipped down to the
Ralnlers.
Maldonado was hitting
287. Signed by the San Fran
cisco Giants out of Ponce
Puerto Rico, he has played
with St. Cloud of the north'
ern league, Eugene of the
Northwest Itague and El Paso
of the Texas league.
State Now
Has Legal
Betting
Philadelphia - ItlPD - The
horse players of Pennsylvania,
surrounded by states with le
galized betting, can do it at
home with the full blessing of
the law beginning this Friday
Liberty Bell Park, the Com
monwealth's first licensed har
ness racing track with parimu
tuel betting, writes Keystone
State history when it opens a
30-day meet, and the bettors
can hardly wait.
Actually, they have been
waiting for something like 150
years for Just such an occa
sion, the result of a 1050
argesse by the Pennsylvania
Legislature. However, flat
racing still is locked in the
stable.
The featur of Friday night's
nine-race opening card is the
Liberty Bell, naturally, a
$20,000 added three-year-old
pace. The program Is for nine
races, six nights each week.
Othtr Tracks Radld
Liberty Bell, in Phlladel-
phla's Northeast section, be
gins the new sports era with
a three-week lead. The Mead
ows opens at Washington, Pa.,
near Pittsburgh, June 28.
The William Penn Assn
opens Its tall meeting Sept. f
at the Liberty Bell track. And
ground has been broken for
Pocono Downs in the Wilkes
Barre Scranton area, the
state's other licensee of the
four permitted. M. J. Mike
O'Neill, president of Liberty
Bell, said:
"Pennsylvanians have wait
ed 150 years for this. History
shows harness racing was
probajly the first formalized
sport on the North American
continent. There was topflight
harness racing in Philadelphia
more than 100 years ago."
Canadiens
Hockey Club
Trade Four
Br DICK BACON
Montreal - (UPI) - The once
awesome Montreal Canadiens
hockey dynasty is only a hol
low shell today following the
passing of four more Habs
from the scene through trades
and waivers.
The Canadiens, who built
what was once one of the
best hockey machines ever to
grace a National Hockey
league rink, Tuesday traded
away Jacques Plante, a 34-year-old
goaltender consider
ed by many the best netmlnd
er the league has even seen,
and smooth-skating forwards
Donnie Marshall, 31, and Phil
Goyette, 30, to the New York
Rangers.
In exchange, the Canadiens
received another 34-year-old
soalle. Lome (Gump) Wors-
ley, and three nondescript for
wards, Dave Balon, Leon
Rochefort and Len Ronson.
Waived To Bruins
The fourth Canadien to
leave was Tom Johnson, a 33'
year-old defenseman who was
picked up for the $20,000
waiver price by the Boston
Bruins. Johnson, named the
best defenseman In the league
two years ago ad a 14-year
veteran In the NHL, was out
the last half of the 1062-63
season with an eye injury
that still hasn't healed.
The Rangers, who until
few years ago wouldn't get
"the right time" from Mont
real, now have five men in
their lineup who were mem
bers of the Canadiens' great
Cup teams. In addition to the
latest trio, the blueshirts also
have defenscmen Doug Har
vey and Al (Junior) Langlois.
The latest deal left the
Canadiens with only four
members from their cham
pionship heydey of the late
1950s Bernle (Boom) Goef-
frlon, Jean Bellveau, Henri
Richard and Claude Provost.
MroF0fUs$,TRreui
sipODinnrs
Only 9 Yanks Left
In British Amateur
Kirsch Chosen
Coach of Year
Eugene - lUPli - Don Kirsch,
University of Oregon base
ball coach, has been named
"Coach of the Year" by
NCAA District 8, it was an
nounced today.
W. P. Ferhring, baseball
chairman of the District 8,
said all district 8 coaches
chose Kirsch in a district
wide vote.
Kirsch, who guided the Falls N.J.
By
HENRY W. THORNBERRY
St. Andrews, Scotland-fl!P&-
U.S. Walker Cup stars Down
ing Gray and Charley Smith
were among five more Ameri
cans eliminated in the second
round of the British Amateur
golf championship today, leav
ing only nine American sur
vivors. Dr. Ron Luceti of South San
Francisco. Calif., and Faule
Dye Jr. of Indianapolis were
the only Yanks who won their
second-round matches on to
day's morning schedule. They
joined seven Americans who
reached the third round Tues
day,
All nine U.S. survivors
were scheduled to play third
round matches this afternoon.
The elimination of Gray
and Smith left only three
members of the U.S. Walker
Cup team in the running for
the British Amateur crown.
They were Richard Davies
of Pebble Beach, Calif., the
defending champion; Dike
Sikes of Springdale, Ark., and
Dr. Ed Updegraff of Tucson,
Ariz.
Gray, who comes from Pen-
sacola, Fla., was eliminated
on the 20th hole by Morrison
Zulll of Scotland; Smith, from
Gastonia, N.C., was trounced
by Mike Lee of England, 6
and 5.
Besides Gray and Smith,
the Americans who lost in the
morning second round today
were: William Castleman Jr.
of White Sulphur Springs, W.
Va.; John Penrose Jr. of Mi
ami, Fla., and Capt. Richard
Twiss of The Dalles, Ore.
Mike Bonallack of England,
the leading British favorite
for the title, advanced to the
third round with a 4 and 3
victory over Gregory Young
of Ireland.
Nine Yanks failed to sur
vive their opening tests Mon
day and 16 were chased to the
sidelines Tuesday, including
U.S. champion Labron Harris
of Stillwater, Okla., and fel
low Walker Cupper Billy Joe
Patton of Morganton, N.C.,
and Bob Gardner of Essex
Ducks to second place In the
Northern division, had a 25-7
record for the season.
FIGHTER OF MONTH
New York - (UPI) - The Ring
magazine today named light
heavyweight champion Willie
Pastrano "fighter of the
month" because of his title-
gaining victory over veteran
Harold Johnson last Satur
day In "the upset of the year."
Baltimore -IW- Paul Hoff
man, who played with the old
Baltimore Bullets, has been
named general manager of the
Baltimore Zephyrs of the Na
tional Basketball Association.
Hoffman, a former Purdue
star, served as director of
Maryland's Physical Fitness
Commission for the past year.
l.isrsroitrs:
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Twin Eliminated
In British Tourney
St. Andrews, Scotland - (UN)
- Capt. Richard Twiss of The
Dalles, Ore., was eliminated
in the second round of the
British Amateur Golf cham
pionship today. Twiss was
beaten on the 20th hole of
his match with Alan Hall,
Scotland.
DROPS IN RATINGS
Providence, R. I. - (UM -
The World Boxing association
(WBA) today automatically
dropped Harold Johnson of
Philadelphia to third among
contenders because of his loss
of the world light heavy
weight championship to Wil
lie Pastrano last Saturday.
According to WBA rules he
was placed below top-ranked
Mauro Mina of Peru and second-rated
Eddie Cotton of Seattle.
Seven of the U.S. survivors
were scheduled to play sec
ond round matches today. The
lucky ones will Join the seven
other Yank contenders in
third round play this after
noon. .
Five U.S. Walker Cuppers
avoided elimination during
the first two hectic days of
firing over St. Andrews' par
73 old course. They were de
fending champion Dick Da
vies of Pebble Beach, Calif.,
Charlie Smith of Gastonia,
N.C., Dick Sikes of Spring
dale, Ark., Dr. Edgar Upde
graff of Tucson, Ariz., and
Downing Gray of Pensacola,
Fla.
The elimination of Harris
and Patton were the principal
shockers during Tuesday's ac
tion. Harris fell behind early in
his second round match with
England's Lionel Smith and
never caught up as he bowed,
2 and 1. Patton is carried
to the 18th green by Jim Pirie,
a 25-year-old dairy farmer
from Scotland. Pirie won the
opening round match when
Patton three-putted, the last
time from four feet.
Gardner became the third
U.S. Walker Cupper to bite
the dust when he dropped a
2 and 1 decision to Scotland's
Dick Smith.
Davies advanced into the
third round with a 4 and 3
victor; over England's Peter
Davidson, Updegraff needed
an extra hole before downing
Richard Gardner-Hill of Eng
land, and Sikes won his sec
ond rounder against Scot
land's Gordon Cosh, 3 and 2.
Smith posted a 4 and 2 open
ing victory over Scotland's
Marshall Douglas.
Southeastern Conference
Split By Racial Difference
Mule Deer
Compact
Suggested
Sacramento -fUPD- A mem
ber of the Oregon Legislature
Tuesday told California law
makers that the only way to
save the interstate mule deer
was for the two states to enter
into a deer compact.
"The herd is in very bad
condition," said Rep. Edward
W. Elder, R-Eugene, a mem
ber of the Oregon House Fish
and Game Committee. "With
just a little bit more hunt
ing pressure it could even be
wiped out."
Elder spoke to the Assem
bly fish and game committee.
The committee chairman,
Assemblywoman Pauline Da
vis, D-Portola, noted she had
a resolution pending that
would provide a study of a
possible tri-state deer compact
among California, Oregon and
Nevada.
Elder said the "problem of
this depleted deer herd should
be studied in depth." He said
it was poor practice for one
state to adopt one set of reg
ulations while the other state
had still different rules for the
same herd.
By DAVID MOFFIT
Atlanta - (WD - The South
eastern Conference, long rec
ognized as one of the power
ful athletic groups In the
nation, is beset with prob
lems these days that could
tear it apart.
While it is too early for a
definite conclusion, it appears
the biggest of these wedges
may be the introduction cf
Negro athletes into this Deep
South conference which has
held the color line since its
formation three decades ago.
It is no longer a question
of if - but when. The Univer
sity of Kentucky has an
nounced that it will start
awarding athletic scholar
ships to Negroes this coming
school year. This means that
Kentucky probably will have
Negroes on its varsity foot
ball team in the fall of 1964
- and that's when the part
ing of the ways may begin.
The conference appears
split right down the middle
on the racial issue. Florida,
Georgia, Georgia Tech, Ten
nessee and Vanderbilt, all of
wh'ch have Negro students,
have Indicated they are will
ing to play racially mixed
teams on a home-and-home
basis.
But in the three deepest of
the Deep South states - Ala
bama, Mississippi and Louisi
ana - the other half of the
Dixie dozen doesn't appear as
ready to accept Kentucky's
Studs Play Grants Pass
At White City Tonight
Ctntril Point - Ctntral
Point Cheney Studs, sporting
a 4-1 season record, make
their "homo" dbut this Tu
ning in th Southern division
Bowling
BLUE MONDAY
Northweat Heatlnf Oils won
firat place In th roll-off. Blue
Monday Bowling league. M&M
Chain Saw took aecond place. Win
ning team members were Isabel
McMIUin, Diana Herzog, Shirley
Raney and Julie Netz. Second
place team members were Lee
Goddard. Mary Ellen Plankenhorn.
Dora Peyton and Vernieta Atter
bury. Trophies for the year were pre
sented at a luncheon at Kim's
Those receiving them were: High
average. Lee Goddard; high
scratch series. Honey Hobbs: high
game scratch, Helen Nikodym;
high series with handicco, Diana
Herzog; high game with handicap,
Bea Mathews; moat improved,
Shirley Raney.
MONDAY NIGHT SCRATCH
Team Four (0-8! 0, Claude Hat
field 333; Team rive (6-l 4, Dave
Bergstrom 542.
Team Six 13-91 1, Clyde Owen
478; Bateman's Cafe (3-91 3, Fred
Morris 488.
Team Twelve (0-81 0, Walt Daigle
810; Echo (8-01 4. Len Thrun 563.
Night All 14-4) 0, Al Coultee 948;
Team Eleven (8-0) 4, Mel Peterson
347.
Selby Glass (4-4) 0. Bill Hall 561;
So. Ore. Surgical (7-1) 4, Gary
Mlksche and Bruue BrOmly 54B.
Eight Balls (1-7) 1. Ernie Ross
453; Team Eight (4-4) 3, Clyde
Ricssland 449.
Walt Daigle 315-215. Steve Udell
212, Paul Smith 208; Echo 2062.
PETTI POINTS
Team Two, 56.44: Team Five.
54.07: Team One 54.00; Team Four,
54.00: Team Three, 53.18: Team
Six, 51.39.
Eleanor Holbrook 220, Enid Ed
wards 206, Gwen Slavens 194; Hol
brook 694.
for Ara 4 of American Le
gion Junior baseball.
Th Studs host Grants
Pass Mock Ford at 7:30 p.m.
at Memorial field, Whit
City.
This will b th second
ruckus btwn the two this
season. Central Point won a
4 to 0 vardici ovr th Fords
in a non-lgu skirmish last
week.
Th squads of th two clubs
ar largely mad up of Cra
ter and Grants Pass players
from th high school base
ball season jusi past. How
ever, Central Point's Crater
delegation is supplemented by
Neal Ellis from Butt Falls
and Bob Cotlis from Eagle
Point.
Grants Pass comes to White
City after beating Ashland in
a league appearance last Sun
day. This will be th second
league fray for each team.
Cantral Point dropped a May
2$ fray lo th Falcons at
Klamath Falls.
Ashland is iehduld
against th ' Klamath Falls
Hawks at Klamath Falls this
evening.
Spokane - tUPD - The Spo
kane Comets of the Western
Hockey league were sold
Tuesday night to the Toronto
Maple Leafs of the National
Hockey league, who will
move the franchise to Den
ver. The sale ends five years
of professional hockey in this
smallest city of the WHL.
plans.
The six questionabl
schools, Alabama, Aubur
Mississippi, Mississippi Stat
Louisiana State and Tulan
have declined to come o
flatly one way or the othe
They all have taken a wa:
and-see stand.
The big question for mo
of these appears to invoh
playing against racially mi
ed teams at home. Most ;
ready have played again
teams with Negroes in gam
away from home.
JACK
NICKLAUS
nr
1
Golf's Boy Wonder
At 23 years of age, he':
1963's top golf monej
winner and aiming for t
second U.S. Open cham
pionship next week-witl
a close knit family as hi
cheering section.
Jack Ryan writes one of his fas
cinating profiles on this excitini
new personality in the
JUNE 9TH Issue of
Family
with your copy ot the
Medford
Mail Tribune
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The boys and girls in Medford and the Rogue River Valley are out
of school now to enjoy a summer of fun. PLEASE help them to
keep enjoying it! Youngsters will still be going to school play
grounds and playing at home . . . they are apt to dash into the
street anytime . . . into the path of YOUR car. The Medford Traffic
Safety Council urges YOU to make SAFE DRIVING a very person
al responsibility. Have your car thoroughly checked for safety . . .
be doubly careful to observe traffic signs and regulations ....
watch out for children everywhere - and give them the right of
way!
Published in cooperation
with the Medford
Safety Council by The
Mail Tribune