Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 11, 1963, Image 14

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    6 B
CHEERING WINNER Spectator! applaud Park and Recreation department at Haw
as Michele Waldron wlna the obstacle course thorne park last week. About 260 Medford
race for 10 and 11-year-olds during the an- youngsters participated In the event, accord
nual play day sponsored by the Medford ing to Robert L. Haworth, director.
White Sox Defeat
Tigers; Twins Top
Red Sox In AL Play
United Press International
Ray Herbert's six-hit pitch
ing and a pair of two-run
spurts off Detroit hurlers BUI
Faul and Allen Koch Satur
day. carried the Chicago White
Sox to a 5-1 victory over the
Tigers.
Herbert, boosting his rec
ord to 11-6, missed his sev
enth shutout of the season
when rookie Pet Ward's er
ror at third base allowed the
Tigers to score an unearned
run after two outs in the sixth
Inning.
Herbert walked only on
batter and permitted only on
eDtroit runner beyond second
base. He was aided by tour
White Sox double plays.
Ron Hansen doubled home
Dave Nicholson for a Chicago
run in the second inning and
the White Sox put Herbert in
front to stay with two runs
in the fifth when Ward sin.
sled home Camiio Carreon
and Jim Landis.
Koch, taking over in the
sixth, filled the bases on a
pair of walks and Carreon's
single, and then walked Jim
Landis to force in a run. Nel
lie Fox' single scored Herbert
with the inning's second run.
Certificates of Competency
Needed by Hunters Under 17
Portland Young hunters,
17 years or under, are remind
ed by the game commission
that If they Intend to hunt this
fall they must have in their
possession a certificate of com
petency in the sate handling
of firearms. This is a provi
sion of the law passed by the
Oregon legislature which be
came effective January 1,
1962.
The law further states that
any youngster 17 or under
who desires to obtain a cer
tificate of competency shall
first satisfactorily complete a
course in the sate handling of
firearms.
The commission urges all
youngsters who intend to hunt
this fall and who do not have
FAIR FINALE: Entertainment . Prizes
ADM: ftZu AUGIKT 1 4-1 8 IKKWURG
COSTS IE SS THAN OWNING!
SOUTHERN OREGON LEASE CO.
Set Jha Ciliana si Crete Lake Meren IMf.
6TH A Hit MEDFORD Ph. 773-7591
SUNDAY AUGUST 11, 1113
y '-v3S. v0 ; f 5 I
In the only other afternoon
game In the American league
Dick Stuart of the Boston Red
Sox hit two homers to take
over the league lead, but this
did not deter the Minnesota
Twins from scoring a 5-3 vic
tory. Stuart hit a pair of bases-
empty homers off Minnesota's
Lee Stange to increase his to
tal to 27, one more than the
Twins' Harmon Killebrew.
Jimml Hall and Zollo Ver-
salles hit Minnesota homers.
The Twins scored four
runs off Boston's Earl Wilson
during the first three innings.
Stange was credited with the
victory although Bill Dalley
was summoned in the seventh
and recorded his 12th "save"
of the year.
In night games, New York
was at Los Angeles, Baltimore
at Washington, and Kansas
City at Cleveland.
Boston 000 S01 000 3 1 0
MlnMOta 113 000 Olx 5 8 0
Wilson. Lamb (3). Rariatz (71
anil Tillman: Stanae. Dallev 17)
and Battoy, Zimmerman (8), WP
SUnfc (5-3). LP Wilton
(S-t3). HRS Hall (18th, 8tuard 2,
(18th and 27th), VersaUw (8th).
Detroit ooo ooi 0001 e o
Chicago 010 023 OOx 8 9 1
Foul. Koch (6). Anderaon ftl and
Roarke: Herbert (11-8) and Car
reon. LP Faul (8-8).
certificate of competency to
enroll In a hunter safety class
immediately. Instructors are
available in cities, towns and
rural areas and many will be
holding classes , to qualify
youngsters for the certificate.
If youngsters are in doubt
about the location of classes
In their local area, they are
requested to contact the near
est game license agent. He has
been provided with a list ot
qualified Instructors.
The statutes also provide
that no youngster under the
age of 12 shall be issued a big
game tag, and no person un
der the age of 14 shall be per
mitted to hunt on lands other
than his own or legal guar
dian, unless accompanied by
an adult.
WIN
YOUR WEIGHT
IN NICKELS
or other valuable merchandise
Sunday Evariiitg - Auq. 18-9:00 pm
DOUGLAS
if
XT'
STANDINGS
By United Praia International
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W. L. Pet. OB
New York 72 40 .B43
Chicago 65 49 .870 8
Minnesota .84 SO JI61 0
Baltimore . 64 93 .847 10,i
Cleveland S6 60 .483 18
Bolton 99 89 .478 lflii
Loi Anielea 94 64 .498 31
Kaniaa City ..S1 61 .498 21
uetrott JIO 62 .446 22
Washington 41 73 .360 33
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L. Pet. GB
Loa Angelee 68 48 .602
San Franclaco ....63 80 .969 4
St. Loula 64 62 .8.12 8 '4
Cincinnati 63 89 .934 7!
Chicago 60 93 .931 8
PhlladelDhta ..-. 60 87 .813 10
Pittsburgh 87 87 MO lift
Milwaukee 98 99 .498 12
Houiton 49 71 .388 3414
New York 37 78 .322 32
(Reaulta of Saturday nlaht
gamee not Included.)
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
(Aa of Friday)
Northern Division
L.
47
60
63
66
70
Pet.
GB
Spokane ,
Tacoma -Hawaii
..
Portland
SeatUe .
78
64
... 99
98
.... 88
.624
J16 13 '4
.484 17 '4
.488 1914
.440 23
Southern Division
(As ol Friday)
W.
Dallas-Ft. Worth 69
Okla. City 64
San Diego 61
Salt Lake City 88
Denver . 89
L.
88
98
64
63
68
Pet.
.828
.928
.488
.479
.447
NORTHWEST LEAGUE
W. I..
Salem - 27 17
Pt,
GB
.614
.600 (4
.923 4
.488 514
.409 9
J 70 II
Vaklme 27 18
Le Wilton 33 21
Wenatchee 21 33
Trl-citv 17 25
Eugene 17 29
MATHEWS VICTOR
Salem -(UPD- Duke Mathews
of Eugene fired 67-79-142 to
win the Northwest assistant
golf professionals tournament
championship here Friday.
Jerry Mowids of Portland fin
ished in second place with
70-74-144.
HILO CHAMPION
Portland (UPD Vern In-
ouye fired a one-hitter as
Hilo, Hawaii, defeated Tri
City 6-0 to capture the North
west Regional Colt baseball
championship Friday night.
The Hawaii team advanced
Into the Western Division
tournament, which opens at
Riverside, Calif., Monday.
Miles Seeks
Of Youth Baseball Here
Claude (Shorty) Miles,
Jackson baseball commission
chairman and staunch sup
porter of American Legion
Junior baseball, has reported
that he would like to meet
with interested groups to pre
sent facts and figures on what
can be done In youth base
ball with the fine facility at
the fairgrounds the county is
constructing.
Said Miles:
"There is no question that,
with a little cooperation from
service clubs, we could have
a wide ball program and turn
$4,000 to $10,000 a year to
some project (such as a pet
segment of the Bear Creek
plan, the blind, or whatever
worthwhile project you
might name.)"
Miles reported further that
youth baseball is seeing a
tremendous rise In popularity.
He said that police and wel
fare workers are finding that
it keeps boys busy and, un
questionably. Is one ot the
greatest Juvenile delinquency
deterrents. "Klamath Falls
now has 22 ball parks," stat
ed Miles, "and, to quote our
own attorney general, 'they
are doing the best Job in the
i state In crime prevention.' "
Draws More Than 30.000
The baseball commissioner
also pointed to Roseburg
where the American Legion
baseball program has drawn
more than 30,000 total attend
ance this season and may go
over 80,000.
Miles mentioned the Le
gion playoffs for' tht state
championship which have
been Just completed. P 1 sV-
Tiger TKO's Fullmer After
Seven Rounds, Keeps Title
Ibadan, Nigeria - (UPD - Mid
dleweight champion Dick Ti
ger of Nigeria gave American
Gene Fullmer such a terrific
beating and blood bath Satur
day night in their third title
fight that Gene couldn't see
at the end of the seventh
round and "retired" from the
bout.
Fulimer's defeat will go In
to the record books as a sev
enth - round technical knock
out, referee Jack Hart of Eng
land said.
Although 32-year-old Full
mer of West Jordan, Utah, suf
fered the worst whipping of
his career, he declared in the
dressing room:
"I don't know whether I'm
going to quit fighting. It's too
soon to decide. I just don't
know."
A Mess
Gene's face was a gory mess
at the end of the seventh from
cuts above and below both
eyes. But it was a deep gash
on the right brow and the
river of blood that flowed
down into the right eye that
caused Fullmer to signal the
referee and disclose that he
couldn't see out of the right
eye.
Fullmer was included with
the idolized Tiger in the fren
zied cheers of more than 35,
000, sweltering in the outdoor
Liberty Stadium, when Ref
eree Hart signalled that Tiger
was the victor.
The American, who had lost
the title to stocky 33-year-old
Tiger in their first fight and
had held Tiger to a draw in
their second, didn t have a
chance last night, it was ap
parent almost from the open
ing bell.
Tiger lived up to his name
end up to the expectations of
his admirers as he tore into
Gene In every round. And the
big difference last night was
that Dick wouldn't let Full
mer evade his tanklike at
tack, which trapped the Amer
ican again and again on the
ropes and had him bewilder-
Butts Emphatically
Denies Conspiracy ,
To Rig Grid Tussle
By CHARLES S,
TAYLOR JR
Atlanta -(UPD-Wallace Butts
was on record Satur
day In his $10 million libel
suit against the Saturday Eve
ning Post with an emphatic
denial that he conspired to
rig the 1962 Alabama-Georgia
football game.
Butts was the final witness
before the libel suit hearing
in the gold-draped federal
courtroom here recessed for
the week end.
The "round little man" of
college football testified for
three and a half hours in a
sometimes impish, sometimes
serious vein.
Part of his appearance put
him on the courtroom floor to
explain tricky football plays
with fancy footwork. He also
diagrammed, as three coaches
before him have done during
the trial, football formations.
Butts looked squarely at
the jury, made up of 12 busi
nessmen, when he denied that
Promotion
offs for the regional diadem
will be held at Roseburg be
ginning Aug. 15. Champions of
Oregon, Washington, Idaho,
Montana, Alaska and Wyo
ming will participate. Win
ner will go to Keene, N. H.
for the national title compe
tition which will be national
ly televised.
The Medford man said that
Roseburg and Klamath Falls
have had teams in these play
offs In the last few years and
have performed very well.
In both cases their losses were
to the team that won the na
tional. Medford has never been a
force in this setup, said Miles,
mainly because of lack of
facilities. Medford, Klamath
Falls, Bend and Roseburg
seem to be the choice sites
in the eyes of regional gov
enors of Legion baseball for
state and regional playoffs
for the reasons ot climate and
fewer counter attractions, he
pointed out.
Said Miles in conclusion of
the Legion ball program, "It's
big. It s worthwhile.
CRATER LAKE MOTORS
D. E. GILMORE SPECIAL
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'61 CHEV
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MEJDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE.
ed and half groggy in the
opening session.
Fullmer weighed exactly
160 pounds, but he had to
remove his red boxing trunks
at the weigh - in to do it.
Dick scaled 159.
Tiger, who stretched his un
beaten string to 10 straight
bouts, including a draw,
praised Gene by saying: "This
fight was tougher than our
first at San Francisco, but
not as tough as our second
at Las Vegas. At Vegas I
couldn't catch him. Tonight I
did."
Fullmer, halted for only
Cepeda's Bat Aids
In Giant Victory
Over Phillies, 7-6
United Press International
First Baseman Orlando Ce
peda continued his batting
rampage against the Phillies
Saturday and the San Fran
cisco Giants held off a last
ditch Philadelphia rally for a
7-6 victory.
Cepeda picked up three hits
to give him a season mark of
22 safeties in SO appearances
against the Phils and a .440
average. His hits plus three
each by Harvey Kuenn and
Felipe Alou paced a 17-hit
San Francisco onslaught on
five Philly hurlers.
Giant starter Billy O'Dell
twisted his ankle while bat
ting in the second inning and
Bob Bolin who relieved him,
he gave University of Georgia
football secrets to Alabama
coach Paul Bear Bryant prior
to the game last September
In which Alabama trounced
Georgia 35 to 0.
The Post, in an article call
ed "The Story of a College
Football Fix," said Butts pass
ed vital information In an at
tempt to fix the game's score.
Butts acknowledged under
questioning that he knew and
associated with Frank Scobey
of Chicago but added that he
never knew Scobey made
bets.
Scobey, identified by the
Senate rackets committee as
a man who at one time placed
heavy bets on horse racing
and football games w 1 1 h a
gambling syndicate in Terre
Haute, Ind., has made a de
position in the suit but it has
not been read and entered in
to the court testimony.
Butts said he was a "good
friend" of Scobey and had
talked by telephone to him
several times prior to the con
troversial game. He said he
made 10 or 11 calls to Scobey
In September, 1962, including
one call on the day of the
football contest.
The Post said in the alleged
fix article last March that At
lanta lnsuranceman Geo rge
Burnett a c c I d entally over
heard a telephone conversa
tion between Butts and Bry
ant in which Butts gave Bry
ant important secret informa
tion about the Georgia team.
Butts was athletic director
at Georgia at the time of the
alleged incident. He resigned
from that position last Febru
ary.
Bryant denied In court
Thursday that he had recei
ved any information from
Butts. Bryant also has a libel
suit pending against the Post
as a result ot the article.
Butts Is due for further
cross examination by Post at
torneys when, the trial re
sumes Monday.
Gold Ray Fish Count
Rolrt Ry fish count Sl SPTS
PF.R10I) ENDING AIMS. 10:
Chinook Salmon 29 includes
36 2 per cent Jark salmon).
Summer run steelhead 34.
ri't.L UKASON:
Chinook nalmon 40, SOS Mn
eludes 17 per cent Jack salmon)
since April 9
Summer run steelhead 811
since May 13.
MEDFORD. OREGON
the second time in his career
of 62 fights, seemed half-groggy
and perspiring too much
from the heat in the second
round. And the excited crowd
began to sense that he was
on the way "out."
In the third round, small
cuts began to show under
both of Gene's eyes. But Tiger
shifted his attack to the body
and almost folded him with
smashes to ribs and stomach.
Gene suffered a terrific bat
tering in the fourth, almost
without return, until it seem
ed that the bell may have
saved him on his feet.
fanned nine before he tired
in the seventh. Relievers Jack
Fisher and Billy Hoeft en
countered difficulty in quelly
ing the hosts the rest of the
way.
A two-run, pinch homer by
Roy Sievers in the bottom
of the ninth almost pulled the
game out of the fire but Hoeft
retired the last two batters
on long flies.
Cepeda tripled home two
runs in the first. The Giants
added two in the fourth to
drive starter Dennis Bennett
from the found and got single
runs in the sixth, seventh and
ninth.
The Phillies got their first
hit in the fifth inning when
Clay Dalrymple singled in an
unearned run. Bolin allowed
another in the sixth on John
ny Callison's double and Wes
Covington's single and Tony
Gonzalez tripled in two in
the eighth.
Stan Musial's ninth inning
pinch single drove across the
winning run as the St. Louis
Cardinals snapped a three
game losihg streak by beating
the Milwaukee Braves, 6-5.
Hank Aaron's eighth inning
triple following Frank Boi
ling's double tied the score
and set the stage for Musial's
heroics.
In the only other day game,
the Chicago Cubs broke a
scoreless tie with four runs
in the ninth to beat the New
York Mets, 4-0. Ellis Burton's
two-run homer and a single
by Ken Hubbs accounted for
the Chicago scoring as Larry
Jackson gained his 13th vic
tory against 10 defeats. Galen
Cisco (7-11), who pitched two
hit ball until the ninth, was
the loser.
In night action, Los An
geles was at Cincinnati and
Houston was at Pittsburgh.
San Fran ... 200 201 1017 17 1
Philadelphia 000 oil 0226 9 1
o ueu, tsonn t. risner in,
Hoeft 48) and Bailey; Bennett.
Klippstein (4t, Duren (6). .Locke
I7. Green fBk and Dalrymple. WP
Bolin (7-4). LP Bennett (4-2).
HH sievers (lam).
Chicago 000 000 004-
6 0
New York ... 000 000 000 0 7 1
L. Jackson 113-lui and Bertell;
Cisco, Bearnarth (9 and Cole
man. LP Cisco (7-11). HR Bur
ton (8(h).
St. LouL. 100 010 022 8 14 2
Milwaukee ... 201 000 oil 5 10 1
Burdette. Taylor Ifi), Jones (91
and McCarver; Lemaster, Shaw (9).
Piche (9) and Crandall, Torre (9),
Oliver (91. WP Taylor (7-4).
LP Lemaster 18-8). HR Mc
Carver (4th).
CENTRALIA VICTOR
Portland - (UPD Centralia,
Wash., defeated Portland 5-1
and Coquitlam, B.C., edged
East Maui of Hawaii 3-2 to
gain the finals of the Little
League Western Divis i o n a 1
baseball playoffs Friday night.
MONTGOMERY SIGNS
Portland - (I'm - Jefferson
High school of Portland foot
ball and baseball star Leo
Montgomery signed a contract
with the Milwaukee Braves
Friday. Montgomery, who
graduated from Jefferson this
spring, will report to a farm
team of the National league
professional baseball club
next year.
PHONE 779-1730 ANYTIME.
SETS NEW RECORD - Rodney Peterson, record for 11
who finished the sixth grade at Griffin in yesterday's
Creek elementary school last fall, clears track meet at
crossbar at 8 feet, 8 Inches to set a new
Four Marks Broken
In All-Comer Track
Four records fell and one
was tied Saturday in the
morning competition of the
City of Medford park and rec
reation department all - com
ers track meet at the senior
high school.
Dan Berryman, Eagle
Point, was responsible for
two marks in the boys' 10
and under class. His records
were 13 feet 11 inches in the
broad jump and 11.0 in the
low hurdles. Berryman also
won the shot put and ISO and
330-yard run heats.
Rodney Peterson, Griffin
Creek, vaulted 8 feet 8 inches
for a new standard in the 11-12-year-old
boys' division. He
also took his 150 and 330
heats and the shot put.
Debbie Berryman, Eagle
Point, set a record of 28 feet
in the 11-12 girls' shot put.
She won her 150 and 75-yard
race heats.
Vault Mark Tied
Gene Thomas, Phoenix,
tied his own 13-14 mark of
9-4 in the pole vault. Steve
Wilkins also vaulted 9-4 but
Thomas won the event on
least misses.
In the 13-14 boys events
Neil Shaw won a 220 heat,
the discus and the javelin
and Dave Culbertson the high
jump, broad jump and a low
hurdle heat. Culbertson tied
in a 75 heat with Jack Stoop
who won a 330 heat.
Double winners among 11
12 boys were Dave Pruitt in
330 and 75 heats and Jeff
Werner in the high jump and
low hurdles. In the 8 and
under class Brad Camden,
Rogue River,- took 100 and
75 heats.
For 10 and under girls Ei
leen Pruitt won 150 and 75
heats and Melanie Monroe a
75 heat and the broad jump.
BOYS RESULTS:
(8 and under)
150 (1st heat) Steve Knutson,
29 6; (2nd heat) Brad Camden, 23 9.
(3rd heatl John Berryman, 24.8;
(4lh heat) Ken Brain. 25.2.
75 (1st heat) Kelly Tippets,
12.9: (2nd heat) Bill Schlreman.
162: (3rd heatl Camden, 11.5; (4th
heat) Brain. 12.1; (Sth heat) Ber
ryman. 12.0.
Broad jump Stan Kramer;
Randv Griffith: Terry Piche; K.
Brain; Joe Brain; Donald McLean.
9-11.
(10 and tinder)
Pole vault Bob Palm; Bob
Griffith, 6-10.
880 Brian Smith: Rick Tip
pets: Camden; Steve Tippets. 2.58.
150 (1st heat) B. Griffith,
202; (2nd heat) Dan Berryman,
21.1.
Shot put D. Berryman: Palm;
Jim Hutchlns: Ted Pappas; Karl
Oakes; John Pappas. 24-53.
Hieh jump Oakes: tie second
J. Pappas and Smith: Palm; Hut
chins; tie sixth, Piche. Ricky Doo
dv. T. Pappas, John O'Conner. 38
feet.
330 (1st heat) Pat Werner.
59 B; (2nd heatl B. Griffith. 52 8;
(3rd heat) D. Berryman. 52.8.
75 list heat) B. Griffith, 10.0:
(2nd heat) Palm, 10.6.
Broad Jump D. Berryman:
Palm; Oakes; T. Pappas: B. Grif
fith: Elliott Braaten. 13-11 (new
record ) .
Low httrdtes (1st heat) R.
Tippets. 14.2: (2nd heatl D. Berry
man, 11.0. (new record.)
(11-13 years)
Pole vault Rodney Peterson:
Larry Thomas: Bob McLean: Jim
Acord. 8 8 inew record !
880 I.arry Thomas; Lynn
Thomas. 2-50.9.
150 list heat Steve Patterson,
20 4: (2nd heatl Peterson. 213.
Shot put Peterson; Larry
Thomas: Lynn Thomas: Kevin
Bethel; Mct-ean; Patterson. 2fi 8.
330 (1st heat. Dave Pruitt.
47 9; (2nd heatl Peterson 49 4.
Hiph jump Jeff Werner; tie
2nd. Peterson, Jeirv Sessions, Pat
terson: Kuschel. 4-2.
75 (1st heatl Pruitt, 10.0; (2nd
heatl Peterson. 10.4.
Low hurdles (1st heatl J. Wer-
Announcing
VALLEY
BOWLING SUPPLY
MOVING TO
1132 Court St.
AUG. 12, 1963
Bowling Bags Shoot Accessories
Custom Fining nd Drilling on tho Promises
ner, 11.8; (2nd heat) Lynn Thomas,
13.0.
Broad jump Sessions; Rod Pe
terson: McLean: Bethel; Acord;
Eddy Brain. 13-7.
(13-14 years)
Pole vault Gene Thomas;
Steve Wilkins; Tom Mallams; Mar
ty Browne. 9-4. (Thomas tied own
record. Wilkins also wen 9-4 but
Thomas first on least misses.)
880 Mallams, 2.32.9.
220 (1st heat) Jack Stoop.
28.6; (2nd heat) Neil Shaw, 28.9.
High jump Dave Culbertson;
Browne: Shaw; Bob Morris; Lane
Forncrook. 4-6.
Low hurdlea (1st heat) Cul
bertson, 17.3; (2nd heat) D. Ber
ryman. 18.8.
Broad Jump Culbertson; Mor
ris; Shaw; Browne; Forncrook. 16-2.
Discus Shaw; Don Molloy;
Browne; Culberton. 103 feet.
440 Forncrook: Tom Nave;
Larry Hochstatter. 1:04.7.
Javelin Shaw: Molloy; Cul
bertson; Nave; Forncrook; Browne.
97.6.
Shot put Molloy; Shaw: Cul
bertson: Nave; Greg Jones; Forn
crook. 38-11!j.
73 (1st heat) Nave 9.7: (2nd
heat) tie first, Culbertson and
Stoop 8.2.
High hurdles Hochstatter;
Morris. 12.0. v
GIRLS' RESULTS:
(18 and under)
150 (lat heat) Nancy Kuschel,
28.3; (2nd heat) Eileen Pruitt. 22.9.
Broad jump Melanie Monroe;
J. Kuschel; Crlstl Monroe: Laurie
Renner; Judy Kuschel. 8-6.
Shot put Mary Stoop; tie 2nd,
C. and M. Monroe. 10-9.
75 (1st heat) M. Monroe: (2nd
heaM Pruitt. 11.3.
High jump C. Monroe: tie
2nd, N. and J. Kuschel; M. Monroe.
2-8.
(11-12 years)
150 Debbie Berryman: Mar
va Slavens: Barbara Doody; Mar
sha Skudlark. 20.8.
Broad jump Slavens: Berry
man: Saga Sandberg; Skudlark;
Doody. 11-4.
Shot put Berryman: Sandberg:
Doody: Skudlark. 2B feet, (new
record.)
78 Berryman; Slavens; Doody;
Skudlark. 10.7.
Klamath Falls
Team Advances
Kellogg, Idaho (UPD - Kla
math Falls pitcher Bob Moore
was hot Friday night, giving
up only two hits and downing
Aberdeen, Wash., 3-2 in the
Babe Ruth regional tourna
ment here.
Moore gave up his first run
in the 4th inning when he
walked Bob Henry. Then
John Augustine hit a ground
rules double for Aberdeen and
a wild pitch by Moore sent
Henry home.
Klamath Falls scored Us
first run on consecutive dou
bles by Bob Williams and
Greg Brosterhous. The other
two runs came on Aberdeen's
two errors.
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65,000 discerning Americans now drive behind the famous
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renowned cars too? Prices start at $3800. Call on us for
a demonstration ride.
(X) ROBERT C. HARTIK
arc... Your Friendly Dealer Since 1933
711 S.E. 6TH ST. 476-441 1
GRANTS PASS
. --wiMw-.-(f''s myif
and 12 year-old participants
City of Medford all-comers
Medford High school,
California!.
Tops Mark
2nd Time
Chicago fUPD California
teen - ager Don Schollandef
broke the official world's rec
ord in the 200 meter freestyle
Saturday in the national AAU
outdoor swimming champion
ships for the second time in
two weeks.
A world relay record - in
which Schollander turned in
an even greater performance
-also fell during the second
day of competition at the
Rodgeland Common pool in
Oak Park.
Schollander, 17, from the
Santa Clara Swim club won
his second consecutive AAU
200 meter freestyle title with
a time of 1:59.0. He qualified
for the national AAU meet
July 28 in the Los Angeles
Invitational with a time of
1:58.8.
Both times are better than
the 2:00.3 world record set
by Bob Windle of Australia
last April and the 2:00.4
American and meet record
shared by Schollander and
several others.
COACH NAMED
Monmouth-dJPB-Boyd Long,
former varsity football play
er at the University of New"
Mexico, has been named head
track coach and football lire
coach at Oregon College of
Education. He also will be
junior varsity baseball
coach.
I
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