Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, March 24, 1950, Image 9

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    Three Local Players
) Injured In Accident
Three local baseball players
who nave Deen wormng out
down in California to get in
shape for the coming pro season
had a bit of tough luck their first
few days down south but now
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Med ford Rifle
Team In Lead
Of Cal.-Ore.
CAI.-OHH RIFLE LEAGl'E
STANDINGS (End of Match 7)
Teams u
Med ford Team No. 1 7 o
Grants Pass J i
Klamath Team No. 1 6 1
Medford Team No. 2 5 J
Abhland 5 y
Yreka. Cal "" 4 3
Coos Bay Team No. 1 3 4
Coos Bay Team No. 3 2 J
Klamath Team No. 2 S s
Scott Valley 1 g
Butte Vallev 1 g
Langell Valley 0 7
Medford team No. 1 continued
to lead the California-Oregon
Rifle league standings today aft
er posting a 1,542 to 1,460 vic
tory over Coos Bay team No. 2
last week. Medford's No. 2 team
ranks fourth with Ashland.
Grants Pass team defeated
Medford's No. 2 sextet of rifle
men 1,502 to 1,472.
Last week victories were also
posted by Klamath Falls team
No. 1 over Yreka 1,486 to 1,477,
Ashland over Scott Valley 1.498
to 1,474. Coos Bay Team No. 1
over Butte Valley 1,489 to 1,437
and also Klamath No. 2 over
Langell Valley 1,459 to 1,450.
Members shooting for Med
ford's No. 1 were D. J. Bolton,
Lewis Conger, Harry Heidernich.
John F. Rush, Marion Smith and
Max Terzenbach. On the local
No. 2 textet were Allen Gebhard,
Eileen Hunting, William Hunt
ing, Ed Pathmann, Clyde Rich
mond and Charles Taylor.
Corvallis Golf
Ace Still Leads
Pebble Beach, Cal., Mar. 24
!U.R Grace De Moss of Corvallis.
Ore., scored her second golfing
victory within a week yesterday
by firing a three-day total of 225
in the 54-hole women's cham
pionship over the Monterey Pe
ninsula Country club course.
Last weekend, the Oregon
State star successfully defended
her Pebble Beach championship
for women in another tourna
ment of the California women's
circuit.
Miss De Moss shot a gross 76
in the final round yesterday,
which added to 73 and 76 cards
in previous rounds, gave her a
three stroke advantage over
Edean Anderson, Montana State
champion from Helena. Miss
Anderson's 74 was yesterday's
best 18 holes.
are back on the playing field.
Reports here said that John
"Tex" Chandler. Marvin Cart
wright and Floyd Shotwell w
in an auto accident in which all
were shaken up but not seriously
hurt. Chandler was confined to
a hospital over night but was re
leased after observation.
The greatest ocean depth, near
the island of Mindanao, in the
Pacific, is 35,400 feet.
OSCAR FRALIY
V&v" 3 United Press
SSi 5P0,,, W,',,,
Sport
Parade
Oscar Fralcy
Aintree, Eng., Mar. 24 (U.R)
Fearless Fraley cantered around
the Grand National race course
at Aintree to
day and, as the
tumbling Capt.
Archibald
Becher said in
1839:
"How un
pleasant water
can be without
brandy."
Captain
Becher gave
his name to the
most famous
jump of the 30
which are scat
tered over the four and a half
mile course when lie abruptly
left his mount in an unscheduled
parting the year the race was
inaugurated.
Even so, ho did it the easy
way. Old Fearless ran them
without benafit of horse. Af
ter all, 25 out of 30 horses
weren't able to negotiate those
hedgethorn jumps in two races
yesterday and my insurance
doesn't cover parting your
hair with a hoof.
Forty-nine steeds with as many
maniacs aboard will take off
from the starting line tomorrow
in the quarter-mile dash to the
first jump. It's going to look
like the first at Balaclava and
it's an even 12 to 1 against any
one nag going the distance.
That starting straightaway
looks like roughly the distance
from New York to Chicago when
you stand there at the post.
Then there are two rail fences
before they alleviate the monot
ony with a rail ditch and fence.
Next is another pair of rail
fences before you come to Cap
tain Becher's personal Waterloo.
Becher's brook is an innocent
looking obstacle, until you take
off over its 4 foot 10 inch bar
rier. On the other side it drops
down over a 5 foot 6 inch brook
like an elevator in the Empire
State building. Everybody who
clears this hazard safely should
expect to live to a ripe old age.
Farther on they pile into
Valentine's brook. From there
it's a breeze to the home
stretch, marred only by five
more rail fences, and then the
guys who stage this master
piece of mayhem really get
rough.
Along in front of the stands
there's a six foot open ditch with
a five foot two inch fence at the
far side. If you make that one,
there's another water jump com
ing up, a 15 foot patch of aqua
with a fence to set it off.
That's Aintree and the Grand
National, bub.
And if you've managed to sit
your horse that long, he's still
on his legs, somebody hasn't fal
len in front of you, the cinch
hasn't busted or you aren't in
the hospital, well, there's only
one thing left.
You do it all over again for
it's twice around for the money.
N.C.rdC.C.
NCAA Finals
New .York, Mar. 24 (U.R)
North Carolina State, sliding as
easily as a southern drawl, and
City College of New York, puff
ing like an overloaded subway,
moved into the eastern NCAA
basketball finals today and will
meet tomorrow night for the
right to play the western playoff
winner for the national cham
pionship. North Carolina State, led by
its driving forward.', Sam Ran-
zino end Dick Dickey, had little
trouble beating Holy Cross, 87
to 74 last night before a crowd
of 18.000 at Madison Square
Garden.
CCNY, winner of the national
invitation tournament and aim
ing for an unprecedented sweep
of college basketball's two major
championships, barely beat Ohio
State, 56 to 55, in the opening
game of the eastern playoffs.
Portland Bevos Show
Power A Bat And Win
Riverside. Cal., Mar. 24 (U.R)
Joe Brovia, Frank Whitman and
Johnny Lucadello formed their
own "murderers' row" today at
the Portland Beaver training
camp.
Despite a 10 to 5 drubbing by
Los Angeles yesterday, Brovia
pounded out three doubles, Whit
man got a triple and a double
and Lucadello connected with
a double and two singles.
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Men Golfers i
First Round
C. W. Leonard, seeded No. 2
in the men's spring golf handi
cap at Rogue Valley Country
club, won the first match in the
opening round of the champion
ship flight this week by bounc
ing Ben Trowbridge 6 and 5.
In the second flight John Mof
fat edged Earl Leever 2 and 1.
Other first round tiffs are slated
for completion by Sunday night.
Additional activity at the coun
try club this week-end will be
junior classes at 9:30 a.m. Satur
day if weather permits.
Manager George Harrington
and Ike Staples of the club are
scheduled to attend an Oregon
Golf association session in Eu
gene tomorrow. Plans will be
initiated for the state tourney at
Eugene in July.
Rogue Valley Pro Hugh Stark
weather said this morning that
Ken Tyson, assistant pro here
for a short time, had returned
to Seattle. Dom Provost Jr.,
Rogue Valley member and Uni
versity of Oregon links ace now
on spring vacation, played here
yesterday. He will be in south
ern Oregon through Sunday.
Bradley Vies
UCLA Tonite
Kansas City, Mo.. Mar. 24
(U.R) The first hurdle standing
between Bradley University's
Braves and a second crack at
national basketball supremacy
shaped up today as their tough
est one.
The first-round draw pitted
Coach Forrdy Anderson's top
flight Peoria, 111., quintet agairust
U.C.L.A., the only club rated
much of a chance to keep the
Braves from sweeping through
the western NCAA playoffs
opening tonight in municipal
auditorium.
A pair of oft-beaten outsiders
Baylor and Brigham Young
meet in the other western semi
final clash.
Bradlev was a 5Wpoint fav
orite to beat U.C.L.A.. the Pa
cific Coast conference champion,
while Brigham Young, the Sky
line Six titlist, rated a six-point
edge over Southwest conference
co-champion Baylor.
Instructors
Best'V Ball
Teachers team defeated the
Businessmen in the final round
of the YMCA-sponsored Volley
ball league last night to win the
title for the first year of the loop.
Earlier In the evening the Teach
ers had taken the measure of the
Lumbermen in a prelim round.
The instructors downed the
Lumbermen team 15 to 13 and
15 to 7 but had a bit more diffi
culty In taking over the Business
men, it took the teachers four
games to win this final round
with scores of 15 to 13, 15 to 9,
10 to 15 and 15 to 6.
Members of the Teachers team
were Lee Ragsdale, manager;
Frank Roclanrit, Fred Spiegel
berg, Bob Newland, Les Robert
son, Ken Hulburt and Alex Mc
Donald. On the Businessmen's team
were Bill Leever, Norton Smith,
Dave Koblik, Bill Blackledge,
Bob Rector (manager), Morrie
Leonard, Don Whalin and Joe
Lester.
Junior Colleqe
Cage Tournament
Hutchinson, Knn., Mar.
(U.R) Teams from Utah, Califor
nia, Mississippi and Kansas re
mained in the running today for
the National Junior College Bas
ketball championship.
The Weber Wildcats of Ogden,
Utah, gained the tournnmenl
semi-finals last night by defeat
ing Amarlllo, Tex., 72-87, and a
short time later City College of
Los Angeles qualified to meet
Ogden in the semi-finals tonight
by defeating Bremerton, Wash.,
74-51.
The other semi-final tonight
will send Garden City, Kan.,
against the Northeast Mississippi
Tigers of Boonville, Miss. These
two teams gained the semi-finals
with triumphs Wednesday night.
Winners tonight will collide
tomorrow night for the 1950
tournament championship,
Christian churches of all de
nominations in new Japan to
taled 2,803, according to com
pilations completed in 1949.
Friday, March 24, 19S0
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE MINE
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Sports for
the Week
FRIDAY
Mixed Bowling league, 7:30
p.m. Talent high at Ashland
(non-conference baseball), aft
ernoon. SATURDAY
School gymns open for rec
reation, 10 a.m. to noon and
1 to 3 p.m. Medford high vs.
Grants Pass "short distance"
track meet, Medford high Held
2 p.m. Youth Bowling league,
1 p.m.
San Diego, Cal., Mar. 24 (U.R)
San Diego goes after its second
straight win over Cleveland to
night at Lane field.
San Francisco, Mar. 24 (U.R)
Capt. John G. Crommelin was
formally detached from duty to
day and ordered home.
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COOKSEY RETURNS
E. M. "Bud" Cooksey, service
manager for Cooksey Motor Co.,
Inc., returned this week from
South Bend, Ind., where he at
tended a two-week course in me
chanical engineering. Courses in
the latest method of automotive
repairing and trouble detecting
were the main subjects. Stude
baker's new automatic transmis
sion was also studied. Cooksey
made the trip by air.
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