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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 20, 1955)
V MEDFORDi&s.TRIBUKE SIPCDDBTrS Fanfare r DICK JIWETT Mail Tribune Spertt Editor McArthur Court, University of Oregon, Eugene Medford's Black Tornado learned Thursday night- in the Oregon Class A prep tourney second round, what it really means to be a top rated favorite in state tournament. The partisan Med ford rooters, of course, vocifer ously backed their team. But everybody else was cheering for the McLoughlin High Pioneers, spillers of strong North Bend in the opening round, to pull an other big upset. Eugene high's cheer section particularly joined the smaller Mac Hi representa tion and one of the Pioneer lead ers even led a yell in front of the Eugene section. Perhaps, the Axemen backers were hoping for a set-up in tourney finals. It's natural, however, to boost the underdog and blast the favor ite. It's the price good teams have to pay and Medford's hoop men weren't rattled. They took it with poise. Cheers for the Pioneers lost their gusto when it loomed cer tain that they were outclassed. The yells and shrieks didn't reach the fevered pitch of the North Bend-Mac Hi fray. the opening quarter against NB, Jensen hurt his knee and never returned to action. The towering Quaker had opportunity for only three field tries and made just one against the Bulldogs for a game total of two points. TUMBLER. TOO By the lima he is in college, Jensen may make cage fol lowers in this state forget all about the fabulous Swede Hal brook. He's a tumbler and a boxer along with his basket ball ability. OVERCONFIDENT Big reason for the North Bend loss to the Pioneers ap parently was that the Bulldogs had counted the chickens be fore they hatched. They weren't seriously thinking of the game of the moment. They regarded Mac-Hi lightly and were more concerned with what they might do to Med ford in the second round. The oyerconfidence prored fatal and gar the less cocksure but still confident Black Tor nado an easier quarter-final foe. INTERESTING SPECULATION It's interesting to speculate on just what might have happened had North Bend and Medford played Thursday in the cham pionship quarter-finals here. The Black Tornado had nicked the Bulldogs by three points early in the season but North Bend had wins over Marshfield which Have Medford two tough battles in mid-season. In Thursday con solation play the Bulldqgs shot .467 from the field and beat Franklin of Portland 75 to 67 compared to Medford's .407 and 60 to 51 over the Quakers on Wednesday. There was a big difference in the two games. The Quaker's 6-9 sophomore Bjarne Jensen played much more against Medford. He sat out quite a bit of the Med ford fracas because of fouls. In FURTHER SPECULATION North Bend's second upset de feat of the tourney, to Baker on Friday morning by a 69 to 59 count, also caused pre-game spec ulation on the Firday night Med ford - Cleveland scuffle in the championship bracket. Going strictly by comparative tourney scores the Tribe had rated a slight edge over Oregon's No. 1 team. But neither Cleveland nor the Eastern Oregon club were play ing their best ball in their tour ney opener. Baker was at its best in dumping North Bend in the scramble of the Bulldogs, outscrapping the coast team and overcoming a 14 to 23 first quar ter deficit for a 35 to 33 halfway lead. At that, the personal foul sit uation took some of the luster away from the Baker win. North Bend committed 23 infractions to Baker's 11 and the easterners grabbed advantage for 21 out of 36 gift shots while North Bend got only three out of 15. NB had a 28 to 24 margin in field goals. BLOEDEL TOP REBOUNDER Elmen (Red) Bloedel, Mil waukie, took over the stale tourney rebound lead at the halfway point with 48. His 27 en Thursday was second high for en game in tourney his tory, trailing Swede Hal brook's 32 for Central Cath olic in 1952. First day high's in the classic were 24 each by Jim Altenhof en of Central Catholic and Oliver McCord of Baker. Our Cleveland-Baker statistics sheet got stuck in a hind pocket Wednesday and we overlooked McCord in our previous Fanfare. Jerry Kalapus and Everett Kastner led Medford in re bounds after two games with 20 each. MORAN SCORE LEADER Mike Moran of Eugene and Dick Jolley of Cleveland took second day scoring honors with 27 each and Moran took the mid way tourney lead with a 50 total. Rotary Tills with the Best -r r Plowing, Cultivating, Harrowing, Discing, WMding, Farrow- fg, town Mowing, Wood Cutting, log Trooi, Goof ing Fonco Howl. Clearing troth. Sowing Corowood. ulldozing. Snow Flowing, Spray ing. Fainting, Hooting. Aim Wary or Imor jancy Powor. They're real clodbnsters" And these new Simplicity Kotary liuers otter you all the advantages of modern rotary tilling at the price of m single implement! Easy to attach, rigid, raggedly built . . . lot as are yoa a demonstration! 2!i H.P. Mode! FA Tractor Complete With 12" Rotary Tiller Only 3I5 00 lasy Terms Come in end see our display of 2 h.p., 2b h.p. and 5 h.p. tractors and the O complete line of implements for all models. Tractor Prices as Low as $163.50 America's No. 1 Lin of Gordon Tractors and Implements. COME IN, WRITE OR PHONE FOR A FREE DEMONSTRATION Southern Oregon Equipment Co. 3540 No. Pacific Hiway Medford Phono 3-3633 PCL Prize Money Due For Livewire Teams Los Angeles (U.R) Paci fic Coast League President Claire Goodwin backed up his "hustle" campaign with cash today as he announced some $20,000 prize money will be handed out to livewire teams, players and managers during the coming baseball season. The PCL directors approved the plan at a meeting here yesterday. The Pepsi Cola Co. will sponsor the program, which calls for monthly S2500 awards to the club with the most hustle, and $2500 prises at season's end to the player, manager and umpire with the most pep. ICE RING RECOMMENDED Portland (U.R) Commis sioner of Parks Stanley W. Earl yesterday recommended devel opment of a $300,000 ice skating arena here. Don Stamps of Albany had 45 and Bloedel 44. Jerry Kalapus of Medford tied for eighth in the total with 32. Copple had 31. Jolley was a shining light on Thursday despite a bad ankle. AXEMEN SWIPE THUNDER Eugene's .541 and .518 shoot ing averages enabled the Axe men to swipe a lot of No. 1 rated Medford's thunder in the favorite category of the touin ney. Axemen brilliance con trasts to Dallas' pitiful .169 against Milwaukie on Thursday. MORAN FIRES .769 The Axemen's superb Moran had a two-day .769 field goal average for best individual mark in the tourney. Kalapus with 11 made of 17 attempts shot .647 for Medford while Copple had 14 out of 29 and .483. RAABE REPORTING Seen daily on press row at the tourney is Joe Raabe, who moved to Eugene recently after holding the sports editor job of the Medford Hi Times. Joe is now writing for the Eugene school paper. We've missed him since he left Medford for he was good at providing Black Tornado statistics for us. We suggested that Joe spend a week end in Medford after the state tourney and work out the Tornado's season data. He politely declined. EX-TORNADOES SEEN Seen and talked to so far are several ex-Medford high athletes now at University of Oregon, Jack Morris, Terry Maddox, Dave Newland, Norm Chapman. Jack finishing his freshman year after four years in the Air Force, is expected to star in Frosh track this season. He says he hasn't worked out much yet. Maddox is anticipating a Cali fornia jaunt with the baseball team soon. He's being given the finer points of catching after previous prep, semi-pro and cqW lege freshman service as a pitcher and outfielder. Newland, newly crowned coast collegiate wrestling champ in his weight, has turned -his atten tion to track and his pole vault specialty. So far he's just done some running to get his legs in shape. - Chapman is looking forward to spring football practice after the vacation period. Morris has indicated that his brother, Frank, won't be out for track at Oregon this spring. There have been rumors he would. But Jack states that Frank hasn't recovered suffic iently from a polio attack last year. NORTH BEND RAN Some teams in this current tournament have stalled at the end to hold leads and in some ease it's almost proved fatal. North Bend, against Franklin, was a learn which ran all the way. The Bulldogs, against the Quakers, too, lost Dick Wool sienhulme, Dave Hartley and Al Van Leuven but didn't seem severely hampered. OLD ACQUAINTANCES The state tourney is a fine place to meet and renew old ac quaintances. We've seen two old college acquaintances, so far, whom we hadn't seen for years. Ladies... Your New Easter Suit Made to Measure Your Choice jf Dressmaker -jV Many Styles in Tailor-Made SUIT$ j I m m 73 mm 94 and up B i g selection e f fine matorials in both Ladies' and Men's materials. Chris the Tailor 128 E. Main - Phon. 2-8473 Defeats fl $FU Duquesne Kansas City, Mo. U.R) San Francisco's Dons lived up to their No. 1 national ranking Saturday night by administering a decisive defeat to LaSalle's de fending champions for the NCAA basketball championship. The score was 77-63. Six-foot 10 inch Bill Russell, All-American center of the San Francisco club, electrified a sell out crowd of more than 10,000 with an amazing display of all around court skill. He poured in 23 points to feature the 26th con secutive San Francisco victory that brought the first national championship to the West Coast school. Colorado's Big Seven cham pion Buffaloes fought from an eight-point underdog position to beat Iowa 75-54 in the consola tion game. Billed as a "Battle of AU Americans," the game began as that, but LaSalle's Tom Gola ultimately was forced to concede honors to his taller rival. The lean San Francisco Negro coupled his size with unbeliev able jumping ability to thrust an arm above the basket and guide many shots down through the San . Francisco goal. Several of the counters made were credited by a gracious official scorer to teammates of Russell. But it wasn't a one-man San Francisco triumph by any means. K. C. Jones, 6-1 guard with two of the quickest hands in the col legiate sport, not only did a great job in his assignment to guard Gola,. but he rammed in 24 points 18 of them in the final half when San Francisco definitely was in control. Gola managed 16 points but in this crucial test saw a team mate, Charley Singley, gain the individual scoring honors. Sing ley got an even 20. Sunday, March 20, 19SS MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUWE WW New York (U.R) Duques ne's master ball - control artists, with all-American Si Green and Dick Ricketts combining to score all but 14 of their total points, won the National Invitation Bas ketball - Tournament Saturday night by outclassing towering -aSalBe, 77-63; Wins NIT. by 70-58 Dayton, 70-58. A crowd of 18.496 largest of the season at Madison Square Garden watched Green score 33 points and Ricketts 23 in a superb two - man show that earned Duquesne its first NIT championship in eight tries. Despite the brilliance of the two Duquesne stars, however, Maurice (The Magnificent) Stokes of St. Francis (Pa.) was unanimously voted the Most Valuable Player in the tourna ment. Stokes, who scored 124 points in the four-tournament games, was the first player from a semi-final team to win the award since Ernie Calverly of Rhode Island State in 1946. In the opening game, Cincin nati was forced into overtime by Stokes' brilliant shooting before pulling out a 96-91 victory over St. Francis (Pa.) for third place in the tournament. Willy Mays Says Fielding More Fun Than Hitting Ball Phoenix, Ariz. (U.R) Willie Mays, the major league batting champion, insisted today that outfielders should be paid for their fielding and not their hit ting. "You get a man out there in center field who's good with a glove, and can run and throw the ball good, and he's better than a guy who hits good but can't field," the Giants star said. "The way I feel, you don't have to hit so much, just long's you can go get that ball in the out field." Mays, of course, does both well some say better than any one else in the game. But if he had his way, he'd just as soon play the outfield all the time, and let the other guys do the batting. Outfield Is "Real Fun" "Don't get me wrong," he said, "I like to hit, too. But there's nothing like getting out there in the outfield, running after a ball and throwing some body out trying to take that extra base. That's real fun." Last season it was hard to de cide whether Mays was greater with a glove or bat. His defense maneuvers were climaxed with that over-the-shoulder World Series catch off the bat of Cleveland's Vic Wertz. His work with a bat in his hands was told by the statistics: .345 batting average, 41 home runs and 110 RBI's. "I felt real good last year," he explained, "and it helped a lot being with a team like this one. We really went out there to win every game. It's great to be with a club with these kind of guys." He said again he never would play any more baseball in the Caribbean League during the winter months. "Things aren't the same down there for the players," he said. "And when you play baseball all year like that, it gets to be too much like work. This is a game, and a lot of fun, and I don't want to spoil it." "Everybody always talks about my hitting, and whether I'm gonna hit those 60 home runs that Babe Ruth hit, and stuff like that. I try to get any kind of hit I can. If I can get a single that will win a game for us, I'd rather have that than a dozen home runs that don't mean anything. "But I don't like to talk about hitting all the time," he said. "I like to talk about fielding." Copra, valued at $26,351,599 was the third most important im port commodity received through the San Francisco Customs Dis trict in 1953. ,The U. S. Forest Service's first experimental station was estab lished in 1908 in the Coconino National Forest near Flagstaff, Arizona. Ski Conditions Skiing conditions at Crater Lake National park were "poor to fair" Saturday, the ranger's office there reported. The snowpack, which is 90 inches deep compared te 128 last year, is rough and icy. There were light flurries of snow Saturday. Highway 62 to the park is open, and the road to the rim v is open with spots of ice. High temperature Friday was 44, and low Saturday with 11. with a 13 degree temperature at 8 a.m. Saturday.' The warming hut will be BOTH KO'D Portland (U.R) The wres tling bout between Kurt van Poppenheim and Eric Pedersen was called "no decision" Friday night after they collided head on. Both were knocked unconscious. epen Sunday weather permitting. Portland (U.R). Weather conditions will clear in Cas cade mountain ski areas Sun day, the weather bureau said, with winds of 20 to 30 miles per hour at elevations rang ing from 5000 to 7000 feet. Skiing conditions at Mt. Hood were reported good. p 5 IMS i El j n i i 1 : TJ (Hc " "j "STAMP IT!" with a "DECO" RUBBER STAMP I Day Service o Photostats FIRST IN QUALITY FAIREST IN PRICE FASTEST IN SERVICE "A Satisfied Customer Is Our First Consideration" ENGRAVING CO. PHOTOENGRAVING BLUE PRINTING RUBBER STAMPS Rubber and Metal Marking Devices Ink Pads Notary and Corporation Seals. 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