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The Missoulian du lieu suivant : Missoula, Montana • 9

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The Missouliani
Lieu:
Missoula, Montana
Date de parution:
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9
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The Missoulian, Tuesday, Juncfi, 1972-9 Oakand Wm ill 10 i The i 1 I 1 Odom Oufduels Perry OUTDOOR PICTURE If i By Dale A. Burk if CLEVELAND (AP) Bert Campaneris slammed a two-out home run in the 10th inning Monday night to power Oakland to its fourth straight victory as the A's beat the Cleveland Indians 3-2. Campaneris' third homer of the season off Cleveland starter Gaylord Perry, 9-4, saddled the Indians with their 10th loss in 12 games and extended Oakland's lead over Chicago in the American League West to four games. The A's jumped to a 2-0 lead in the third inning as pitcher John "Blue Moon" Odom sin gled and, two outs later, Reggie Jackson clubbed his Uth home run of the year-tops in the American League over the center field fence. Odom checked the Indians on just three hits until the seventh inning, when Alex Johnson led off with a double down the left field line and scored on Graig Nettles' single to center.

They tied it in the eighth on Eddie Leon's homer, his third. Odom, 3-1, was relieved by Darold Knowles, who got the final out of the game by getting pinch-hitter Roy Foster on a pop-up. OAKLAND CLEVELAND ahrhbl abrhbl Csmpnrls ss 4 I 2 1 McCraw cl 4 0 10 Rudi II 10 10 lirnhamr 21) 4 0 I 0 KJ nekton rf 4 I 2 2 A Johnson II 4 110 Hando 3b 4 0 0 0 Fosse 4 0 0 0 Kpstt'in lb 10 10 Chmbliss lb 4 0 1 0 tlegan lb 2 0 0 0 Nettles 3b 3 0 2 1 Mangual cl 4 0 10 Bell r( 3 0 0 0 Duncan 4 0 0 0 Unser ph 10 0 0 LRrown 2b 4 0 0 0 Leon 4 111 Odom 4 110 GPerry 2 0 0 0 Knowles 0 0 0 0 Lowcnutn ph 0 0 0 0 Foster ph 10 0 0 Total 36 3 I 3 Total 34 2 7 2 Oakland 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 1-3 Cleveland .000000 110 0 E-GPerry. DP-Oakland 3, Cleveland 1. LOB-Oakland 5.

Cleveland 4 2B-Rudi. AJohnson. (11), Leon (31, Campaneris Hi. S-Camp-aneris. IP RERBBSO Odom IW.3-1I 9 2-3 7 2 2 2 2 Knowles 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 GPerry IL.9-4I .10 8 3 3 0 II Darwin Leads Twins' Win I 1 BALTIMORE (AP) Bob Darwin, who singled to launch a two-run Minnesota rally in the fourth inning, doubled home the tie-breaking run in the sixth as the Twins edged the slumping Baltimore Orioles 3-2 Monday night.

The winning hit scored Harmon Killebrew, who had reached second when Dave Johnson fielded his leadoff in field hit and threw wildly past first base. It snapped the Twins' losing streak at four games. Minnesota's other runs off loser Dave McNally, 5-5, came on singles by Darwin and Steven Brye and a two-run double by Eric Soderholm. The Orioles, who have lost four in a row and six of their last seven games. MINNESOTA BALTIMORE ab bl ab bi Tovar rl 0 0 0 Bulord If 3 0 0 0 Thompsn ss 4 0 2 0 Watt 0 0 0 0 Carew 2b 6 0 10 Scott 0 0 0 0 Killebrew lb 3 1 1 0 Oates 4 0 2 1 Monzon pr 0 0 0 0 Rettenmd cl 4 0 0 0 Roof 0 0 0 0 JPowell lb 3 0 0 0 Darwin cf 3 12 1 Shopay If 0 0 0 0 Brye If 4 12 0 Baylor rf 4 0 10 Spderhlm 3b 3 0 1 2 BHobinsn 3b 3 1 1 1 RWoodsn 3 5 0 0 Crowley If 10 0 0 Manuel ph 10 10 McNally 2 0 0 0 Kaat pr 0 0 0 0 Hendrcks ph 1 0 0 0 Granger 0 0 0 0 Grich ss 10 0 0 Total 34 3 10 3 Total 30 2 5 2 Minnesota 000 tOl 0003 Baltimore 001010000-2 E-DJohnson.

DP-Baltimore 1. LOB-Minnesota Baltimore 7. 2B-Oates, Soderholm, Darwin. HR B.Robinson (II. SB Belanger, Rettenmund, Baylor 1 Mage Leads Seattle Open D.

Johnson, Darwin ii will ii ii TW 1 IP 8 RERBBSO 5 2 2 4 6 Woodson 4-3 Granger McNally (L.5-51 Watt Scott 1 0 .7 9 1 1-3 0 0 1 1 2 2 4 0 2 1 0 0 0 CHESS CHAMP? Bobby Fischer, American chess master who will meet Boris Spassky of Russia for the world chess championship in Iceland in July, hits a serve while competing in the second annual Dewar's Sports Celebrity tennis tournament in Rancho La Costa, Monday. His partner was Gail Goodrich of the NBA champion Los Angeles Lakers. (AP Wirephoto). SEATTLE (AP) Gary Mage, striving for his first professional championship, continued to lead the $37,500 Seattle Open bowling tournament Monday as the keglers moved into the final eight-game set. The 26-year-old southpaw from Vancouver, lost only one of the day's opening eight games, while spilling pins for a 237-pin average through 34 games.

Mage led second-place Earl Anthony of Tacoma by 236 pins with his total of 8,503, while Johnny Geunther of Seattle continued to hold third place with 8,186. Rounding out the top five in the 24-man field were Marty Piraing of Syracuse, N.Y., and Jim Wantland of York, Pa. The winner gets $4,000. Holes-in-One MILES CITY (AP) The Miles City Town and Country Club had four holes-in-one this year after going 18 months without any. Budget Troubles Keep Isaksson Home Sammy Snead Eliminated From U.S.

Open Tourney BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) Isaksson is staying home," was the terse statement Monday by Dave Maggard, meet director for Saturday's Kennedy Games here. What wasn't said was that Isaksson, the Swede who shares the world pole vault record, is being kept home. He allegedly exceeded allowed expenses while competing in other U.S. track meets earlier this year, the Associated Press learned.

Maggard was asked in an interview whether the world record holder's amateur status is in jeopardy. "I don't know. I've had no indication about that," said the meet director, who also is University of California athletic director. Maggard had hoped to stage a rematch between Isaksson and Bob Seagren of Monterey Park, who both went 18 feet, 4V4 inches two weeks ago Wake Forest golfer Eddie Pearce of Temple Terrace, was the only amateur to qualify. Kemper Win Moves Sanders to Sixth CHARLOTTE, N.C.

(AP) -Sam Snead, the 60-year-old golfing legend from the hills of West Virginia will not play in the U.S. Open championship this year. Snead failed to qualify Monday for the only major tournament he has not won, ballooning to a 78 in his second tour of the Charlotte Country Club's par-71 layout. He missed the qualifying total of 145 by two strokes, despite a fine 69 in the morning round. Doug Sanders continued the hot streak he started by winning the Kemper Open Sunday.

Sanders, led the field of 57 pros and five amateurs with a 68-67 135. There were few other surprises among the 30 golfers who qualified for the Open at Pebble Beach, June 15-18. Non-qualifiers included Lionel Hebert, Bruce Fleisher, Herb Hooper, and Phil Rodgers who shot 72 in the morning, then quit in disgust on the 14th hole after a string of bogies in the afternoon round. Snead called his second round "the worst I've ever played." He carded five bogies and a birdie en route to an outgoing 40. He settled down for the first seven holes of the back nine, and needed only to par in to make the cut.

Instead, he bogeyed the 17th, and then double-bogeyed the par four, 423-yard 18th. Hubert Green at 136, Don Bies and Rod Funseth at 138, and Lou Graham at 140 were the other top qualifiers. Others making the field included Ker-mit Zarley, Dave Marr, Bob Murphy, Bob Lunn, Mason Rudolph. Dave Hill, Charles Sifford, Jim Jamieson, Bruce Devlin and Gibby Gilbert. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The following golfers were exempted from qualifying rounds for the U.S.

Open Golf Championship, to be played June 15-18 at Pebble Beach, Open champions since 1967: Tony Jacklin, Orville Moody, Jack Nicklaus, Lee Trevino. PGA champions of the last five years, not otherwise exempt: Julius Boros, Raymond Floyd, Don January, Dave Stockton. In 1971 Open, 15 lowest scorers plus ties, not otherwise exempt: George Archer, Gay Brewer, Bob Charles, Jim Colbert, Bobby Cole. Jerry Heard, Larry Hinston, Jerry McGee, John Miller, Bobby Nichols, Chi Chi Rodriguez, Bob Rosburg, Jim Simons, Lanny Wad-kins, Bert Yancey. Fifteen leaders on PGA tour under USGA point system for calendar year 1971.

not otherwise exempt: Miller Barber. Frank Beard, Billy Casper, Charles Coody, Bruce Devlin, Hale irwin, Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, Tom Shaw, J. Snead, Tom Weiskopf. Five leaders on PGA tour under USGA point system from January 1 until close of Open entries on May 3, not otherwise exempt: Bobby Mitchell. to set the new world mark in a meet at El Paso, Tex.

Isaksson, who went home immediately after the El Paso meet, also was planning to compete in Los Angeles this Friday night in the Vons Classic meet. Al Franken, promoter of the Vons Classic, said Friidrott Larsson, head of Sweden's amateur sports organization, informed the U.S. Amateur Athletic Union by mail this week that Isaksson would not be able to compete overseas "at this time." Franken said, "He wants to come, too. It's really too bad." air tare ot about $1,000 and expenses connected with competing would be no problem, Franken said. "We'd take care of all that." Seagren's main competitition in the Kennedy Games should come from NCAA champion Dave Roberts of Rice, who has gone 17-6, and Sweden's Hans Lagerquist, 17-7.

In another of Saturday's field events, 70-foot shot putters Randy Matson, Al Feuerbach and George Woods will face each other. Woods joined the 70-foot class Sunday. Scoreboard Slowpitch Mountain Sales 22, General Pants 2 Mobile Homes 10, Davis Farm Sup ply 8 Twite Construction 25, Chuck's Bar 6 Little League Ml. Sentinel Minor Edelweiss 12, Bob Wards 9 Mt. Jumbo Minor Carnation 10.

Bonner-K'ast Missoula 9 4 Commenting on the News Watch out for all the talk about the good reclamation of strip mined land. While important, reclamation of the devastated landscape is but one of the problems of strip mining and perhaps the lesser problem at that. The real environmental damage of coal strip mining involves three basic effects of ripping the bowels of the earth apart and scrambling them about the landscape in jumbled piles of bare and topsy-turvy rock I- water, air and the land itself. It just could be that all the talk these days about reclamation of mined lands is only to draw attention away from the other two, and much more serious, effects of stripping the coal. The fact is that the long-term effect "of the coal mining process may have more severe Impacts on our air and water than on the surface values esthetically and in terms of reestablishing a life-supporting system atop the mined surface.

There can be no doubt that the Impact on water will be staggering, both In terms of what disturbing the vast areas will do to water tables and in terms of the amount of water it will take to process the coal once it is mined. Secondly, the air pollution problems associated with coal processing plants are staggering and might be sufficient reason simply to leave the coal alone. Most of the talk you hear comes from those who will reap the economic wealth from tearing apart the landscape in southeastern Montana. They have a point, and a good one, but it isn't or shouldn't be the only thing taken into consideration in determining what should be done in determining whether or not strip mining should be allowed at all. There are costs, both environmentally and socially, that must be evaluated before massive mining gets under way.

We should determine more than whether or not the surface lands can be restored to window-dressing quality. The crucial question of what happens to the water table and how serious will air pollution be must be answered first and then a decision must be made in the overall public interest as to whether or not this can be permitted. It just could be that we will find that it would be in the long-range public interest to leave that coal alone. The fact is that right now we know little about long-term impacts, and yet the coal miners are proceeding as though their value is the only one that should be considered. Montana Outdoors Magazine A proposal has been made to merge the official magazine of the Montana Fish and Game Department, "Montana Outdoors," with a commercial publication called "Montana West." It is a suggestion that should be approached with utmost caution.

First and foremost, under no circumstances should the Fish and Game Department's official publication be done away with as an independent voice for the state's wildlife resources. Nor should it be tied to a commercial venture. There are precious few channels through which the resource-oriented issues affecting our fish and wildlife resources can be examined in print and the complex and technical manner with which they can be covered in a publication independent of any commercial enterprise. "Montana Outdoors which has been published in its present format more than two years but which goes back a couple of decades as a department publication has largely fulfilled that need. And yet "Montana West" publisher Rick Graetz of Helena made a good point at the recent Fish and Game Commission meeting where he made the proposal to merge the two magazines.

"I see no need for the state to compete with private enterprise," Greatz said in noting that the editorial contents of the two magazines overlaps in readership interest. This is the crucial point. Why indeed has the contents of the Fish and Game Department's magazine swung to the general interest nature to the point where it is competing with an established and independent commercial venture? Commission Shifts Emphasis The answer is that under the present Fish and Game Commission the pressure from the Commission has been to shift the department's approach from a quality resource-oriented publication to one that rocks no boats and discusses few issues and provides no continuity to the professional for a voice regarding the fish and wildlife resources he is charged with managing. Up to the time former Fish and Game Director Frank Dunkle resigned this pressure was offset and the department publication fulfilled its role as a quality publication in which the issues of the day involving the fish and wildlife resources were explored in an informative manner. Then, when Dunkle left, the commission forced upon the department its desire to have a soft-line publication and the result has left the professional field and invaded the general interest line of article that has been the forte of Graetz' publication.

The consequence is that the commission has brought about a situation where they've encroached upon an editorial domain they should never have entered. The obvious solution is that each magazine should publish material in line with the purpose they are (or originally were) intended to serve. To be sure there would be some overlapping of editorial content, but not to the extent that has developed. A merger or joint publication such as Graetz has suggested has good and bad points, but insofar as the Fish and Game publication is concerned the decision must be made on the basis of what is good for the state's fish and wildlife resources and nothing else. It isn't likely that the merger will come about because the commission earlier denied a similar request under which the Fish and Game Department would have provided an insert to the publication of the Montana Wildlife Federation.

Still, the present Fish and Game Commission has consistently shown itself to be not only inconsistent but incomprehendable and Montana sportsmen and conservationists must make their assessment and recommendations on the proposal in line with the ultimate effect it will have on our outdoor resources. NEW YORK (AP) Doug Sanders' victory in last weekend's Kemper Open golf tournament boosted him to eighth place on the season money-winnings list, the PGA Tournament Players Division announced Monday. Sanders, who won only in all of 1971, earned $35,000 for winning at Charlotte, N.C, raising his season's total to $74,232. That purse moved Sanders from 26th place to eighth on the list. Jack Nicklaus, who skipped the Kemper Open, continues to head the list with $156,051.

Lee Trevino, who finished second by one stroke to Sanders at Charlotte, earned $19,950 and jumped from fourth to second on the list with $118,397. Jerry Heard is third with $110,011, George Archer fourth with $106,963 and Tom Weiskopf fifth with $97,179. Completing the top ten are Bobby Mitchell, Bruce Crampton, Sanders, Bob Murphy, $72,482, and Dave Hill, $71,977. Sanders and Hill were the only newcomers to the top ten this week, replacing Grier Jones and Bob Rosburg. Wide Open Field in Belmont lack tough competition since No Le Hace, Key To The Mint and Smiling Jack are among those expected to go to the post.

And there could be an outsider like Pass Catcher, who paid a winning mutuel of $71 last year before a record New York crowd 82,964, most of which turned out to root for Canonero II in his bid for the Triple Crown and watched him finish fourth. Trainer Lucien Laurin likely will try to win the Belmont with a two-pronged attack in which Upper Case will join Riva Ridge. Upper Case, the winner of the By ED SCHUYLER JR. Associated Press Sports Writer NEW YORK (AP) The 104th running of the Belmont Stakes Saturday will have Kentucky Derby winner Riva Ridge. But it won't have Pre-akness winner Bee Bee Bee or the kind of man-in-the-street excitement created by a Cano-nero II.

But it promises the excitement of a wide-open race, with a field of 10 3-year-olds in prospect. Although trainer Del Carroll has said Bee Bee Bee will not try the testing IV2 miles of the Belmont, Riva Ridge should not MAJOR LEAGUE ii'' Belmont picture by winning last Wednesday's Jersey Derby, the race in which Pass Catcher finished second before his Belmont victory last year. The Belmont, like the Preakness but unlike the Derby, accepts supplementary nominations. To supplement for the Belmont, an owner must pay $2,500 to enter and another to start. Ruthless, a filly won the first Belmont on June 19, 1867 and her owner, Francis Morris, collected a purse of $1,850, The biggest Belmont first prize was the $117,700 earned by Amberoid in 1966 and Stage Door Johnny in 1968.

The fastest Belmont was the 2:26 3-5 by Gallant Man in 1957; the biggest victory margin was 25 lengths by Count Fleet in 1943 and the smallest margin was a nose by Granville over Mr. Bones in 1936 and by Jaipur over Admiral's Voyage in 1962; the biggest field was 14 in 1879 when Calvin won and the smallest. Florida Derby and Wood Memorial but a disappointing seventh in his last start, the Jersey Derby, did not run in the Kentucky Derby or the Pre-akness. Key To The Mint already has scored a triple of sorts. Paul Mellon's colt won the Derby Trial four days before the Derby, a Preakness Prep a week before the Preakness and last Wednesday's Withers Stakes, the final major prep for the Belmont.

He did not run in the Kentucky Derby and finished third in the Preakness. Key To The Mint will be trainer Elliott Burch's fourth Belmont starter, and he won with the other three Sword Dancer in 1959, Quadrangle in 1964 and Arts and Letters in 1969. No Le Hace, the runner-up in the Kentucky Derby and Preakness, finished sixth in the one-mile Withers but trainer Homer Pardue said he was not concerned. Smiling Jack ran into the American League East Pet. .585 .500 .500 .436 .429 24 21 20 17 18 15 17 21 20 22 24 23 3' 6 6 ''i Vh National League East Pet.

GB New York 31 13 705 Pittsburgh 27 16 ,628 3'z Chicago 24 18 .571 6 Montreal 19 24 442 ll'i St. Louis 17 28 378 144 Philadelphia 16 28 364 15 West Los Angeles 28 18 609 Cincinnati 27 18 600 4 Houston 26 19 .578 1 1 Atlanta 20 23 465 6'j San Diego 16 29 356 U'2 San Francisco 17 34 333 134 Grizzlies Sign Mrk LaTrielle Detroit Baltimore Cleveland Boston New York Milwaukee Oakland Minnesota Chicago California Texas Kansas City 13 West 29 24 25 .690 .600 .595 .455 .409 .405 20 17 24 26 25 17 Results Baltimore 2 Minnesota 3, Results Pittsburgh at San Diego, postponed Other clubs not scheduled Oakland 3. Cleveland 2, 10 innings Other clubs not scheduled 48.3 quarter-mile in the Big Sky finals in Boise, he would have taken second to Montana's Brown. LaTrielle is the first prep athlete to sign with Montana in track, and Lewis, who guided the Grizzlies to their first track title ever this spring, said he is recruiting other top Montana thinclads. I Brown, Lyngstad Look to Olympic Tryouts Stiles, Cook Possible Olympians 4 1 1 a record-setting sprinter Mark LaTrielle has accepted a track scholarship to the University of Montana, Grizzly Coach Harley Lewis announced Monday.

LaTrielle set the state and AA 440-yard record two weeks ago at the state finals at Dornblaser Stadium. He also won the 220-yard dash which iced the second straight AA track championship for the Knights. LaTrielle's best quarter-mile effort was 48.3 in the prep finals bettered the old state record of 49.1 set by Grizzly freshman Ric Brown and Billing Senior's Hal Anderson in 1971. His best 220 time is 21.7 and LaTrielle has a 9.8 wind-aided 100-yard dash time to his credit. LaTrielle also quarterbacked the Hellgate football team last fall that challenged for the state championship.

Concerning LaTrielle's intention to attend the Missoula school, Lewis said, "We are extremely pleased to have Mark join our program. He is a tremendous athlete and will be a fine asset to our team." Lewis said had LaTrielle run i I I I andards, they will go to the Olympic Games in Munich, Germany, later this summer. Lewis said Stiles, who has a best throw of 255-10, needs a throw of 262-5 to meet International Olympic Committee standards while Cook must run 8:38 in the event. Cook ran a lifetime best last week in the NCAA finals in Eugene of 8:46.9. Lyngstad of Columbia Falls has thrown the javelin 265 feet and has a recorded best throw of 261-8 while competing for the U.S.

Army. Lyngstad is expected to compete in the AAU finals in Seattle next week as will Stiles and Cook. Brown, who tried out for the 1964 Olympics in the will attempt to make the U.S. marathon team. Brown will have to run the 26 miles.

351 yards in two hours and 30 minutes to meet IOC standards. Brown currently lives in Billings. Lewis said he has no information on Brown's marathon University of Montana Track Coach Harley Lewis said Monday that Grizzly thinclads George Cook and Craig Stiles have shots at making the U.S. Olympic team in July. Two former Grizzly thinclads also will be attempting to represent America in the upcoming Olympics.

Doug Brown who won the 1965 NCAA three and six-mile championships and Mike Lyngstad who set the UM javelin record prior to the Stiles era. are Olympic hopefuls. Lewis, who just returned from the NCAA finals in Eugene with Cook, Stiles and Doug Darko said Cook, ranked in the top 16 steeplechasers in America, and Stiles, seventh among U.S. collegiate javelin throwers, will probably be invited to the Olympic tryouts in Eugene in July. The UM track coach said the nation's top 24 in each event are invited to compete in the trials and assuming the top three make Olympic qualifying st.

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