Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 19, 1955, Image 8

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    MEDFORD (OREGON)
Rack Up Tuesday Victories
JACKSON COUNTY
B LEAGUE STANDINGS
W.
I Pet
0 . 1.000
1 .667
1 .667
2 .333
2 .333
3 .000
Rogue River
Talent
St. Mary'
Jacksonville
Butte Falls
Prospect
3
2
2
1
1
. 0
Rogue River high's Chieftains,
to whom county, district and
state B championships are an
old story, appeared back in title
stride today.
The Chiefs, who in 1952 won
their second 'state B champion
ship in three years, moved up
Into Class A competition in 1953.
' Then last season they were back
in the B race only to lose out
in the Jackson county campaign
to Talent's Bulldogs.
Last night Rogue River, play
ing on its home court, downed
Talent 64 to 58 to take over un
disputed first place in the
county B league. .
In other tangles within the
the circuit last night St. Mary's
defeated Jacksonville 51 to 38
and Butte Falls rolled over Pros
pect 74 to 42. The Crusaders
pulled into a tie with Talent for
second place while Butte Falls
East Wins
Pro Contest
. New York U.R3 Bob Cousy
had the West players so fright
ened they forgot all about Bill
Sharman and that's why the
East won the fifth annual Na
tional Basketball Association
All-Star game. "
At least that's the explanation
offered by Sharman, the Boston
Celtics bullet who was voted
the "outstanding player" in
Tuesday night's 100-91 triumph
at Madison Square Garden.
Sharman, former Southern
California court star and an out
fielder in the Brooklyn Dodgers
farm system, was only second
highest scorer for the East with
15 points but he fired 10 of
them in the final period to spark
a drive that turned a one-point
deficit into a comfortable tri
umph. .
Cousy High Scorer
"The West boys .were concen
trating on Cousy, and that's why
I was able to shake loose in the
fourth period," explained Shar
man, and he added simply, "Bob
is the greatest."
Cousy, Sharman's more famed
Celtic teammate, was the out
standing player of last year's
All-Star game and was " the
East's high scorer " last night
with 20 points. 'Mindful of his
game-winning play, a year ago,
the West scrambled - madly to
stop him in the final frame
while Sharman was killing them
with a brilliant assortment of
one-hand shots.
Sacred Heart,
Headquarters Cop
Ml BL Conflict
A pair of Medf ord Independ
ent Basketball League game
will be contested tonight ' at
the junior high court. The
Campus Five will tussle Eagle
Point at 7 o'clock and the two
National Guard units here.
Headquarters ; Company and
Company A, are rivals at 8:30 '
o'clock.
The clubs which have been
at the bottom of the heap
jumped up to score, triumphs in
the Medf ord Independent Bas
ketball League last night. Sacred
Heart church whacked YMCA
69 to 49 and Headquarters Com
pany of the National Guard
laced Burelson's of Central Point
51 to 28.
It was the second league win
for each of the victors. YMCA
held on to fourth place in the
standings despite the) loss. 1:
Sacred Heart had quarterly
advantages of 15 to 9, 37 to 21
and 45 to 30. Stan Read with
24 points and Tom Weiskamp
with 21 paced -.the way for
Sacred Heart. Don Mintz piled
up 17 and Tom Rodgers 16 for
the Y. ' -":-,w: ;.c
Bruce Bateman with 19 was
the big gun for the' Guardsmen
and D. Burns got 12 for Burel
son's. Headquarters was on top
; at the end of every period 9 to 2,
21 to 14 and 38 to 28.
LINE-UPS: -Sacred
Heart 69
Murray 8 f
Harden . t
Weiskamp 21 ; - c
1 49 TMCA
11 Leaf
17 Mint
Smith
IS Rodgers
Read 24 g
Driscoll 10 g
S Johnson
Substitutions For Sacred -Heart.
Fendergast 6. for YMCA, Swisber.
Headquarters 51
-Bu. Bateman 4
: K. Bateman 7
McCandless 1
Drew 7
28 Burelson's
- 2 Wisely
; -- i. 2 Connor
3 Burns
7 Simmons
12 D. Burns
Br. Bateman 19
Substitutions For Headquarters.
Mills 8. Perkins 5; for Burelson's,
Hall 2. Campbell. . s
Roy Hewitt Top Scorer
In Weekly Pistol Shoot
" Roy Hewitt led the Medford
Rifle and Pistol club pistol shoot
ers ; last night with- 266 out of
possible 300. Max Terzenback
was second " with " 265, ; Loren
Croucher 250, Jim Bolton . 247
and Don Payne 242. It was first
trip of Payne into ', five high.
New shooter was Arnold Medi
cus who recently moved to Med
MAIL TRIBUNE
Lone B League
M99ers
rose to a fourth place tie with
Jacksonville and Prospect stay
ed alone in the cellar. ...
Si. Mary's Underdog
' The Chiefs now will be favor
ed to upend St. Mary's in a loop
engagement in Medf ord on Fri
day and continue at the front
of - the pack. Talent is expected
to roll back into the win column
at Prospect .Thursday and Jack
sonville may face a bitter strug
gle at Butte Falls on Friday.
Rogue River led Talent 14 to
12 at the quarter last night, slip
ped behind 25 to 28 by half time
then went on top to stay midway
in the third quarter. The Chiefs
had a 47 to 42 vantage at the
end of the third period but the
edge slipped to three points
halfway through the , closing
stanza. -
Jim McAbee . and , George
Zickefoose gave Talent consid
erable strength on the back
boards .and the Bulldog cause
was hurt when McAbee fouled
out in the third quarter and
Zickefoose went out early in
the fourth. Ted Stanfield and
Bill Weaver pretty much gave
Rogue River control after that
Johnson Has 24
There was some wild shoot
ing in the tense fourth quarter.
Gary Johnson of Rogue River
was top scorer in the fracas. J.
Lloyd Wood of Talent picked up
20.
Mt. Mary's had a 15-point 32
to 17 spread shortly after the
second half opened but the third
quarter didn't go so well for the
Crusaders and their margin was
hacked to 10 points, 39 to 29, at
the end of that period. Jackson
ville on two free shots by Sam
Bishop cut the gap to 39 to 31.
Then a long howitzer by Dick
Paup, two shots from the side
by Tim Dugan and a goal by
Laval Meunier on a steal bulg
ed out the SM lead again. Meun
ier added a free shot and an
other field goal and St. Mary's
advantage was 19 points, 50 to 31
its widest of the night.
The lead switched three times
and the score was deadlocked
once in the first quarter which
ended 15 to 9 in Crusader favor.
Jacksonville's Redskins cut the
edge to 16 to 13 in the second
period but by the half St. Mary's
had a lead of 39 to 17. In the
third quarter Jacksonville out
scored the Crusaders 12 to 9. St.
Mary's got only one field goal
in that stanza.
Abbott Gets 27
Dugan with 16 and Meunier
with 11 for St.' Mary's were high
point men. Sam Bishop was high
for the Redskins, matching the
nine picked up by the Crusad
ers' Tony Miksche. -
: Butte Falls was on top at ev
ery intermission, in thumping the
Cougars.' First quarter ended 16
to 7. Each club got 18 poinfe in
the second canto which ended
34 to 25. The Loggers steadily
moved ahead in the last half,
Third quarter score. was 52 to
35. -. -
Three men hit in double fig
ures for Butte Falls. Lee Abbott
poured in 27 counters and Bill
Irwin 23. Pat Conley got 13.
Dale Ray Smith of the Loggers
and Ron , Couser of Prospect
each put in nine. Sid Peterson
of Prospect put in 15
In junior varsity prelims St.
Mary's tripped Jacksonville 35
to 26, - Prospect nudged Butte
Falls 23 to 20 and Talent beat
Rogue River 59 to 38.
Rogue Blver
Johnson 24 - -
-58 JackxonviUe
.16 Zickefoose
5 M. Wallace
9 McAbee
5 Thoreson
Weaver .v
Daily 5
Stanfield 17
Stinchcomb 4
20 Wood
Substitutions For Some Hiv e r.
Moore. Phillips 2. Towse 1: for Tal
ent. Hon Weinhold 1. Bartol 2. P.
combs. Teeters. Hoffman. -
St. Mary's 91
Walsh 6
Bobbett 3
Miksche 9
Meunier 11
3S Jacksonville
: T Sanford
f
f
e
9 Bishop
8 Gemaehlich
S
.8 Mclntyre
Dugan 18
ST
4 uaiy
Substitutions For St.. Mary's. Paun
8, nassier. iJberta.- oariand. Murphy
for Jacksonville. Wilson 2. Guches 2.
i. Jttueners, il. Jttueners. pawiowski.
Butte Falls 74
Irwin 23
D. R. Smith 9
Conley 13 '
Abbott 27
42 Prospect
f
.f
e 1
g
15 Peterson
8 Walls
2 Oswald
9 Courser
D. L. Smith
g
Ring
Substitutions For Butte Falls. Dan
iels 2. Henshaw; for Prospect. Ik Bean,
a. Bean B. Artmure.
Now
Contains
Whether you feed light or heavy cattle . .
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Wednesday, January 19. 195S
Willie Mays
'Greatest
Leo Claims
By MILTON RICHMAN
United Press Sports Writer
Leo Durocher declared flatly
today that Willie Mays is "the
greatest ball player I've ever
seen," ana that memoes rem- an
from Babe Ruth to Stan Musial.
"If I had 'to choose between
Willie and Musial," Durocher
said at press conference in New
York, "I'd take Mays. And no
body admires Musial any more
than I do.
"Willie would be great at any
positions you . put him. Third
base, first base or . shortstop.
Why, a lot of times before
games, he gets out there at short
and I hit grounders at him until
get blisters on my hands. He
handles the hottest ones I hit at
him as if they were nothing. .
" 'Is this where you used to
play?' he needles me. 'Why it's
just like an old man's home.' "
Could Be 'Greatest' r -
Durocher said that if Mays
hits .325 for : the next four or
five years he could be the
"greatest ball player we've ever
had."
"To be a great ballplayer, you
need five things," he said. "You
need to be able to hit, you need
to have power, you need to be
able to run," field and throw.
Willie can do 'em all.
"He's as good a hitter as Mu
sial and he has much power. And
he can out-field, out-run and out
throw Musial. . ;
"Maybe Willie doesn't have
the greatest I.Q. in the world,
but all I know is that he's never
made a mistake for me."
Apart fronv the subject of
Mays, Durocher predicted that
Milwaukee might cause ' "the
biggesttrouble" in 1955 and that
the Cardinals and Redless
should be tremendously .: im
proved." . - . ; -: -y-.
Cards Have Good Prospects- ;
. ine uarainais nave some
fine young ball players coming
up, like Eill Virdon, Ken Boyer
ana w uiner jyiizeii, wno is get
ting out of the Army. They
could make St. Louis ; awfully
rough. Brooklyn? They, always
give us a helluva battle."
On other baseball fronts, pit
cher . Tom , Morgan became the
19th Yankee player to sign his
contract for 1955. ; He posted a
11-5 record last year and was
given a slight raise.
Nelson King, 6-foot-6-inch
righthander, who compiled a 16
5 record with New Orleans of
the . Southern X association, be
came the first Pittsburgh player
to return his signed contract.
Pitcher Bill (Bud) Black, fresh
out of -the Army was the 12th
Tiger player to sign for 1955. He
came to Detroit in a trade with
the St Louis Browns two years
ago.-. ' :':-;'--;;..v,v"
Veteran catcher Walker Coop
er, 40, became the 11th Chicago
Cub to sign. Cooper appeared
in 48 games for the Cubs last
season after coming from Pitts
burgh on waivers and hit .301.
Coast Leagues
Plan Spring Loop
El Centro, Calif. U.R) Four
Jfacific Coast League baseball
clubs today planned to turn
apiing training into a paying
proposition by establishing a
four-team league and a regular
scnedule of games. .
Disclosure of the plan, unique
in organized baseball, was made
yesterday at a conference at
tended by representatives of the
four clubs, the Oakland Oaks,
ban Francisco Seals, Sacramento
Solons and Seattle Rainiers.
under the plan,! the ; teams
will play nine games in Palm
Springs, 10 here, 10 in nearby
Calexico and 11 games in Yuma,
Ariz. League standings and sta
tistics will be kept and the games
may be broadcast.
-. TJie four clubs, all of which
tram m this area, set up an
executive - committee with
member from each city to handle
promotion and other details of
the league.. A contest will be
held to pick a name for the
training league.
. .
Mil ma.
CASTING OFF with left handed hook shot, Dick Welsh of USC
.scores as UCLA's Mark Costello (foreground) and Don Bragg
(background) move too late to stop him. Welsh makes 25 points
but Bruins win thriller 70-67 at Los Angeles. . (International)
Medfordjtribune
U lift W, Ka i t
BEAUTIFUL BUT RUGGED In the qualification trials at
Cypress Point the backdrops are beautiful but the course '
is rugged. Here Jay Bedsworth blasts out of sand trap on
the 17th hole as BiU Collins, George Bayer and Bill Higgins
Geft to right) watch. They are goifing in the Bing Crosby j
L Invitational Tournament at Febble ceacn, Lam.
Swede Halbrook Suspended
From Oregon State Squad
Corvallis, Ore. (U.R) After
an H hour-and-a-half , conference
yesterday afternoon, r Oregon
State College basketball coach
Slats Gill announced the suspen
sion of his high-scoring ' center
Wade Swede' Halbrook. -
The suspension came in the
face of a tough basketball clash
expected this week end with the
University of Oregon Webfoots
in Eugene in a two-game series
that will go a long way in de
termining the Northern Division
winner.
"Halbrook has not done those
things an Oregon State basket
ball player is expected to do,"
GiV'- brif announcement said.
. Gill added he expected Hal-
brcuK to snape up and promise
to do. better before he would be
.whether you have good
A FEEDLOT FAVORITE
for 25 YEARS
LBESTEE0
0 ;
reinstated on the team.
The 7-foot, 3-inch giant, who
Won All-Coast honors as a sopho
more, had to sit out the pre-con-
f erence slate because oi scholas
tic difficulties and only returned
to the fold Jan. 6. '
There were hints Halbrook's
"poor attitude'? and non-attendance
at classes were major rea
sons for the suspension. There
was no way of knowing if he
would be back in the lineup by
Friday night to face Oregon.
Halbrook scored 35 points
against Washington last week
end ' and, has 60 tallies in the
four conference games he has
played this year.
Phil Shadoin. worked out in
Halbrook's center spot yester
day. -
or poor roughage
VMAOI KIHT
I rilCID IIOMT f
KOVIO IWHTf
j IIUCIO-IUXID U
T " " ' ""-V--".. '
GricI CKarge
Denial Made
At Mai
CoUege Park, Md. (U.R)
Coach - Jim Tatum's denial - of
"foot ball over-emphasis' at
Maryland was : supportr . at
least in part today by 'ae com
missioner of the Atlantic Coast
Conference.
"No school, no conference
member, nor the NCAA has ever
asked me about Maryland's ath
letic policies," said ACC Com
missioner James .Weaver in the
wake of charges levelled by the
Middle States Association of
Colleges and Secondary Schools.
The report was made to the
Maryland General Assembly.':,
-NCAA officials declined com
ment but the outspoken Ta turn
declared the charges were "un
founded, uninformed and out
dated." He then proceeded to
"take "apart" the charges as fol
lows: " . ;
"Maryland has violated no
NCAA or Atlantic Coast Confer
ence rules and if the association
had ever read the rules.- the
charges would never have been
made. ' - ' r,r -.
"In addition," Tatum continu
ed, "between, the time Maryland
was investigated by the associa
tion and its report issued, our
athletic department already had
satisfactorily explained its pro-.
gram, policies and activities to
me Association and our own
board of regents.
- mucn oi tne criticism was
based on misunderstanding and
madequate information," Tatum
said. "It is unfortunate that this
outdated report has created mis
leading headlines all' over the
country. . s -; J. -
Tatum also pointed out that
Maryland is the only ACC team
which also belongs to the Middle
States Association. ;
"That's the main reason 'the
charges are so unfounded and
uninformed," he said. "It would
seem that . the association is
somewhat unacquainted with
conference rules." :
Free Throws
Aid Cougars
Pullman,1 Wash. KlhPJ Wash
ington State's . flashy forward
Ron Benhink drove : a usually
stall minded University of Idaho
basketball team to desperation
last night by dribbling literally
for minutes at a .'. time, then
calmly leading the Cougars to a
53-39 victory on free throws.
The win boosted Washington
State from the cellar to third
place in the' Northern division
and dropped the Vandals to the
cellar. ";
At" one point in the second
half Bennink dribbled for two
and a half minutes; Two Idaho
players fouled out trying to get
the ball away from him while
Bennink scored sevea of the 10
free ""throws Washington State
chalked up : in a nine-minute
stretch. -
Bennink collected 24 points,
10 df them free shots, for the
night
BASKETBALL-
TUESDAY COLLEGE SCORES -,
By UNITED PRESS
East
.Vale 83.' Dartmouth 79
? Holy Croas 84. American Intl. 73 '
WiUiama 77, Maoachuaetta 57
SonUi
- South Carolina SO. Clemaon 87
G. Washington 75. Maryland 53
: Loyola (iLa.) 76, Miss. Southern-58
N. Carolina 84. N. Carolina St 80
William & Mary 88. VMI 68 - :
Florida A&M 85, Tuskexee 53 -Southwest
Baylor 89. Texas A&M 77 .
Riee 73. Texas Christian 63
West -- - -
Montana St. 96, Colorado Col.- 55
Washington State 53. Idaho 39 , -San
Jose 63. Fresno 60
Southern Oregon 74, Oregon Tech 54
Central Washington 80, Seattle Pa
cific 62
FIGHTS
Miami Beach. Tla.: Bobby Dykes,
162, Miami, Fla., outpointed Andy
Mayfield. 163. Miami, Fla. (10).
Salt Lake city, utan: nex uiyne,
209. Salt Lake City, Utah, knocked out
Kirby Seals 190, ucm Angeies toi.
in
rJm
cf a tstter deal
for toman at
thawhcdidtii
315 East 5th
rvland
n . n n n
YELLOW CAB FACES 'STRONG
FIRMCO FIVE ON
Fans who like their basketball
flavored with lots of scoring like
ly' will see that kind of a game
Thursday: night when a coupje
of the top independent aggrega
tions of - southern - Oregon - col
lide here. - .
The skirmish brings together
iFirmco, of Myrtle Creek, and
Yellow Cab, one oi the unae
feated leaders in the ' Medford
league. Game time is 8:15 p Jn. at
the St. Mary's school gym:
M. Carolina
Upsets NCU
By Running
r By JOHN GRIFFIN
.United Press Sports Writer
Basketball's new wave of up
sets rolled on today, smashing
efforts by North Carolina State
and Texas Christian to take un
disputed league leads. :;;'
North Carolina State, titan-of
the Atlantic Coast : conference
and ranked No. 5 among the
nation's court powers,' had been
expected ; to - snow under - rival
University of North Carolina. In
stead . State : had its . " knuckles
cracked,: 84-80. ..:;....
It was only the second , time
that North Carolina, had beaten
State, since Coach . Everett Case
came .out of Indiana"- nine years
ago to guide State's cage teams.
The last r time North , Carolina
won was almost two years ago
Jan. 24, 1953.
.: Texas : Christian grabbed the
Southwest conference lead by
upsetting " Southern Methodist
last Saturday, but got some, of
its own medicine Tuesday night
in a 73-63 loss to Rice. The de
feat shoved TCU back into a
first-place tie with SMU,- each j
with a 3-1 conference rocord.
Switch Confuse Stale f
A crowd of 10,500 at Rat
eigh, . N. C, saw Coach Frank
McGuire of North Carolina con
fuse mighty State by a sudden
switch in tactics. Instead of the
"slow, down" strategy McGuire
had always used against State,
as in a 47-44 loss to, State earlier
this season, North Carolina start
ed racing with the first; whistle
and roared' to a 38-18 lead in
the first 16 minutes of play.
State spent the. rest of the night
slowly . closing the gap and fi
nally running out of timei
: Lennie Rosenbluth, sophomore
from.Brooklyn sank five straight
baskets ' to pace the early . Tart
heel : assault: and was .the Vic
tors' high 'scorer with 22 points.
However, Ronnie - Bhavlik of
State look game honors with 32
ooints. -The - victory left North
Carolina with a .7-1 league rec
ord and : dropped State into
fourth ' place " behind Maryland
and Duke. '
' Rice beat Texas Christian by
stopping the Horned : Frog's
brilliant sopohomore center Dick
O'Neal, the Southwest Confer
ence's leading scorer who fouled
out after scoring only 13 points,
Yale Upstls Dartmouth ;
Meanwhile, Rice center Terry
Tellieman : was Dlavine one ef
the best games of bis career and
winning scoring honors with 26
points. Joe Durrenburger added
18 points for TCU and did fine
rebound work. ' - v - '
Another major upset last night
saw. Yale defeat Dartmouth, 83
79, in overtime. It was the third
Ivy league loss in five starts
for Dartmouth and put a damp
er on the title "hopes that . had
been aroused by the Indians' vic
tory in the New England college
tournament last month. It Nwas
only the second win in 14 games
for Yale. ; yJyrr.y;
George Washirgton, defend
ing Southern conference champ
ion ranked No. 18 nationally,
scored what could be called a
mild upset by beating Maryland,
ranked No. 11, nationally, 75-53
in a local rivalry.
. ,
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THURSDAY
Last week Yellow Cab lost an
85 to 81 decision to Flrmco at
Myrtle Creek. After that the
Douglas county club was tagged
"the basketball power of south
ern Oregon." -Firmco added to
the claim with two more wins
List week to. bring its record to
10 straight victories. Its success
so .far this week hasn't been
learned nere.
The Cabbies feel despite the
previous loss that they have the
wherewithal to dispute the Myr
tle Creek claim. And this time -they
will have the advantage of
their "home" floor. X ,
Svidence Given
Evidence of a high scoring en
counter . and i possibly another
close game arises . xrbm last
week' score. Four men on each
team scored in double figures. Ed
Hummel of Yellow Cab was high
with 28. . Bill Werner got 19,
Chuck Stacy 16 and Johnny Fos
ter 10 for the Medford team. For
Firmco, Bob Stout, ex-Oregon,
put in 22, Wally Richardson, ex- -Pacific
got 18, Bob Stuempges,
ex-Santa Clara, counted up 16
and Ron Gillispie was second
high to Hummel with 24.
The Cabbies had the lead on
Firmco in the final quarter last
week put could not hold it Firm
co tied up the game at 77-all then
pushed away. Yellow Cab's full
court press didn't pay off and
four ' technicals were called on
the'Medford team. . -
There will be no regular city,
league games tonight, enabling
all fans interested to take in the
non-loop attraction.
Ray Robinson
Fiqhts
Chicago (U.R) Sugar Ray
Robison' meets : the ' second
hurdle on his "comeback' cam
paign to regain the middleweight
championship tonight, : and the
former titleholder was a solid
7 to 2 favorite to i whip tril
horse Ralph (Tiger) Jones, v
"He's a rough, tough boy,"
Robinson said, "and he punches
all the time." -
But to - Robinson : the bout,
slated on the television network
from the Chicago stadium, will
be another means to determine
when he'll be ready to make an
attempt to whip the 160 pound
champion, Carl (Bobo) Olson. -Only
Way - -. . -r-; :1 v
"That's the only way I'm go
ing to be able to tell when I'll
be - ready -fori Olson," he . said.
"How I do in niy, fights. I can't
say that it'll take so many fights
to be ready and that I want him
after another one or two fights.
"I don't want him until I'm
ready and the 'only way Til
know' is how: I feel fighting. In
conditioning," I'm ready right
now."
. Robinson made his first ring
appearance in 31 : months two
weeks ago in Detroit when he
scored a sixth round knockout
over Joe Rindone, the second
time his fight with that battler
came out in the same fashion. '
Red Raiders
Trounce OTI
Ashland U.R) -Southern Ore
gon disposed of Oregon Tech 74
54 here last night in an Oregon.
Collegiate Conference basket
ball game. '" : .
V A: pair of Bobs, Johnson and
Smith, led the SOCE scoring
with 26 and 19 points respective
ly, while Johnny James hit 22
for OTI.
Gropplers at Klamath
For Encounters Today
Medf ord high's wrestling team
was in Klamath Falls this after
noon for its fourth match of th
season. The Black Tornado con
tingent included 35 boys, 32 of
them wrestlers.; Medford has
won twice from Illinois Valley
and once from Grants Pass. .
CIO
,
n
ford from Torrance, Calif.