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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 30, 1955)
G o o 0 o Q O QO 1 0 0 O O O 0 ) O 0 0 0 0 0 ft o w o o 0 $0 0 o 0 EIGCT MZE9QSI(Qgk9flli Cleveland Top 55-52 FranWI fewas turft aul SHil iheJ: and Franklig higU schoMi at Uiff Bortland Inter.i?tas!c League I bounced S carters Orezcn Can I ference opBisiltol at Grants Rass &st iishi to fi-esx evi in their twij-?ay dcuWe ?slvre in vas,ion of tffff.Sasus tie9 va'iey. QClev.snd'j i?!ps?dtfnjJiS In- dians toifpvs&S hitsxi Of the dope asters ijy up-iriiino MtiSasA SS to 52 after fcsvir. lasf a. 63 to 52 eScfe to Xli'snia J?as fcefeoa, Wednesslay. JfrsnKia, however, was tru la forts Xiii'a ft SI tS 4 triumph yir the CrzaUi ?sss( Cavemen. "fjig ijtfetprs with elongated Bjafla Jeni&n.adClhe favored role despite 3 $3 4o 5;P GOlosso Medford US Wednesday. The Indians og the fesn metropolis spilled Mgdiarfi Black Tornado hoopjters ls2 sUr! playing tljg'm and utshee&iiSg 1 them well into t Iftird gggr ter and by jumping 3sk ?n froSt and hanging on af fee? teiing over take i the final gifia. Frank lin foid the gieenougTSt 4Vio ctart l-iiS. ftticttpH intn rnm- mandin the (Seg,nd period afte Quaker's 6-pot9-inch jarne Jensen didnH become -effective unuijnai secogp suiiiia. Springer Shines ,- The terrific rebounding of Hug Springer, e shooting of Dave Roark and Springer, tough defense which gave Med foro? few good shots and Med- lord inability to connect when it did eet fDDortunitieswere factors which enabled Cleve land to grab a substantia early lead over the Tornado. q Cleveland headed the Medford quint 17 to 11 at the quarter and was on top 34 to 14 at half time after several 12-point sec- ond . cant'dO margins The Tribe pushed to 40 to 26 in the third panel and then to 45 to 31 before the Tornado, finally warmed to the task, blew up a gale w&ich almost turned seeming defeat into victory. Medford's big rally was spur-J, iLe7l,Slral13 Xisaei ana jjiciv iviv-jjougmm "' by the ballhwking of Tisdel, T.lnvd Cearlev and Larry TfeS- kins. The Tornado cufe dioife to 4k)to019 by ab c;sa 5i fee & third stanza Sad ?a -fee tourSi poured in Si SHteS wisis holding cievels SO SBToo &$ nn Qm for the sessni iisas lA Uis ball gam, 52 t SI, Vlif& 8 Jsi more ths three ElUlUteS ?el ts play. Tornado Si&ILt Tisdel corei eisii soiais ia the 21-poiat twsuarset sage, Mcfcaugbisa asvea kjU Jaha Foust, Pe?IK CessSxf sita two. Twa issa siafs 2- Laughl .ifter3? ffa steals . Medford ISl ft iisSI Ssr getting ahe8?9 S R 80 shot if it wa t fSJBSiSrS &3 S6 again.-But thj baSIwiwl V of bounds. Cle-lanJ g's take advantaea arjji 6a rlose to Rod Simoasen hnt made it 53 to 52 w!l& 1:40 W n it was the Tribe tfix 9 control the ball and ii addeS its score with a pair of fresg by Tom Ballen on fouls Gag? 0 Rilev. The Tornado got the sS.SSti two or three shots in thejlfflal; moments but couldn't dugK r. ; Tisdel with five field &9sls and eight sho led all sSsrS: with 18 points. Roarkopacfp Cleveland it h q!4 alS to; s the first half. Final team statis Ucs were close. Cleveland nad one more field egoal and one more free shot than Medford and the Tornado was zuilty of orgy one more foul thaSri the Indians, r-woianrl with 33 free tries made0 19 and Medford with 32 made 18. CoppLa Doesn't Play 0 MeSford was without - the services of Dick Copple who sat out the game because of a lame back.l And his absence did hurt. Tn the Franklin-GP game the ball came Jensen's way very lit tle on rebounds or for shotsn the first quarter and he got oifly two points in that portion. After that tne tail yuui.ua .u.... ness picked up and Anade the difference." Jensenhad 24 points for the night. With 14 points in the second quarter he helped theGQuakers to a 31 to 21 halftimeJead. Franklin more than doffbled Grants Pass scor ing in the second .quarter aner GP had held an 11 g 1CP first panel eugc. ( The Portlanders widened tt C5 to 30 over GP in h third: chukker a6d led 47 to 34 at Us: intermission ReseVv int5 the tussle midway &s ?Sta"h aiuart- andGthen was, fStor; n Grants Pass clofeng gS and both clubs had a sirgbes of r'ulars back in at tnesimsa. Tom ltBernetJasOh?g1i S39rei s . for GraatPass-with 1, $Eft3ur c3 of Franklin f ollo, j wifi 17." OO BOXES: - Cleveland O 3 Dnl on f 1 v a, cu Watson, f ...gsasisi ? Q ? S 3 S a 8 3 0 Roark. g ...i.-. Voll. g. Vern J sties ...t.iu,... Coblems 1 v 3 Simonsen arnm jn Totals is a Medford Fcust McLaughlin, Plumley. c Tisdel, g f8 ss?vs S 2S Z 'IS i fctXft YfeI8Tf es Tornado Downs Cav tta1 21 15 22 57 e,nts j.as7 Sernet ra JFT EF TP 5 S:r--f t?.iv. . WalkM- ........... Mnllh Marks Writer 33Jor 6 5 ,.1S 2 3 6 O ,5 2, 0 0 "0 0! 4 4 4 12 Franklin FG FT PF TP -J .......... 1 ;0 , 0 2 Spargur, t 1 3 2 17 ...... 0 2 1 2 Xuhn. f 2 0 3 4 ....... . 0 0 10 Jensen, c 8 8 0 4 24 2 5 2 9 Luhrs. g 3 2 3 8 0 0 3 0 Hutton, g ., 0 14 1 . 0 0 10 Holcomb ........ & 10 2 2 W Srhnahpl 11 0 0 0 ?falt 15 19 25 49 Jarboe 0 l 4 1 U 0 MEDFORDM'MBUJfB -v s O O O ' O n East-West Gridders -wait ShnneG Hassle Sag, Franciico (U.R) A WSrmup drill for the East team and a skull session for the West squad Pound uptrinhig today for theQ31ne East-West foot ball classic. The game will be played to morrow iflPSan Fraacisco's Ke- a'frzar Stadium. w Coach Woody Hayes of the East, "Steadfastly refused to tell his starting lineup. "It tigs your mitt, and besides I'd bg) nurting some kids' feel- ings," he said a?0he ran the squad through a half-hour w&rm up drill in sweat suits. There seemed0 to be little doubt, however, that his No. 1 attacking teanVj would have Gar et Reichow of Iowa at quarter back, Hopaloag Cassady of Ohio State at left half. Len Moore U)fpfiin Stajte at right half and uon ocnaeier or. iNoxre uame ai fullback. o . O Schaef er Has, Cold ebWf was in Sari La Clar fnfersary Yesterday with a eclrL feut h ihsistedhe'd be FOJi thg Sringline tomorrow. The. eslwr starters fos the Satff, Jufijtog frm workouts, ftouid be these: Eadsr, Jiai Katcavagej, payton, and "Wal yrye, North Carolina; tables, Dicfc Mu?ley, Purdue, and Sraflcis Maejiinsky Ohio Stsfe; guards, Ray emek?, No tre Jiams and Calvip. Jones, laws; crater, Ken cVargo, Ohio I.StSte. TA Sest puJled a "sneak" drill yesterday "morning. After S vs aovr seseien, the players eJsoUd Jgnes gngi 'yafgfj' esi co- AS Sianiad. ert Cog&ri Jess Hill g&?Q out his starting sstgn- Sleau yesterday 3fter what, he called R 'aiol satisfying" wrke BUS dBiiRg wfllch gll ptoses gf ihe impTng god gassyi- attack WSfffe pgliseds Q West Lineups Igftg Bagkfield wfs, cgftippled 6? suthgave - Jim Cdritrattp Oof Basketball OS o HRsia.YjcoLLEGe (ScoeEf Sugar BowL-, Ht Round JOi!re Dame-86, Alabama 80 Utah 89, Marquette 84 -s J 0 Orange. BowL Ssatf-Final o O D Wast Virginia 50. Columbia 60 Miami (Fin.) 8$JTulane 7o consolation " Hale 71. NYU 70 Kt) Santa Clara 61, FloridaiSt. 59 Dixie Classic, 1st Round Wake Torest-87. Minnesota 83 Q Nortg) Carolina St. 59. Oregon Stats Si Duke 71, Wyoming 54 North Carolina 86, VillancQa 63 Tilg Seven Se mi-Final Iowa St. 55. Colorado 52 Kansas 73, Missouri 56 Consolation ' O ' Kansas St. 86, Okla. 64 W NebraskaJO. Cornell069 Richmond Invitational Semi-Final -s j. Richmond 72. William W Maty 60 Cincinnati-82, Seton Hall 81 Consolation Army 99. Rhode Island 74 CSV Mid-Winter, -ist Round (uchigan St. 95, Maryland 7o r?peo. Wash. 69, St. Francis (Fa.) 58 - Southwest Tourney Semi-Final O T r; on TO f ) (' SMU 70. Sou. Calif. 64 Consolation O C Texas Christian 67, Texas ?S Baylor 67, Arkansas &i " Kentuckv Invitational l Murray St. 74, Wejttrs Si. If Consolation Ohio U. 97. Mof&ieii St. Sf y Bowling gren 3, kcizana. 7S. O Queen tiV. IS'. RSSad &&er 'OhSi? 8. Nivaara S3 &i. oi. 7. QeottseXD'n tD.C.J 32 C&ftieius 91, Ln'sywte' 70 leSh g5. v?5icnsie l?a.i 55 ?vUp$. BSiahom City 58 Oss.elafeas . iue! Si. 14. ?enrLirvnui VP Qitl. S. Sessile 52 .'Aateru-. lxt Ro-a vi'iSV,.oe? ie isy Cri. of Pacific 64 Wjeyst 8-i. Viaiv ,0 gattir Bawi Steng, 4-05. Cjvrolllia fP. O CSolation lisigna i- S. Genrgts 3S 0 l.ssiaa Ir.viWtlSasl c 5. TeXW St. dS. tcviaar.a TeJ 62 dnlciaV S3, Wqirung'-on Si, 55 aiSr.!cr , Jsr.v-9 SS Ss.tuJ.-y iS'-. St. I-suis 80 VisiosrSjiil 84. Ke ileis AC Si-.ino-r-i S5. Drli" 2 Uai ami I iims. . i! rriiar. Decemier 35, 1833! Quint amen .. 4 0 2 8 10 1' .2 0 0 2 0 Cearlev, g Perkins Riley Beinking .... 0 totals 17 18 1 32 Reerees Clarence Mellbye and Lee Flink. . Southern California, a fine ball handler, at quarters; o Preston: Carpenter, Arkansas, left half; Herb Nakken, Utah, right half; anff) Henry Moor& Arkansas, fullbak. The starQng line will have Henry Greminger of Baylor and Menan Sehriewer of Texas at ends; LorT Stiner, Oregon, and Forrest Gregg?, Southern Metho dist, tackles; John Jankans, Ari zona; State (Tenape) and Orlan do cFerrante, Southern Califor nia, guards; and Joe Long, Stan ford, at center. Punts Could Halt Tech By JACK GATES ' ; New Orleans ftJ.PJ Pitts burgh Coach Johnny Michel osen, quick to admit the over all speed advantage possessed by Georgia Tech, said today he hppedthe booming kicks of Bill Schmitt would put a damper on Tech's explosive backs in the Sugar Bowl football classic here Monday.0 " "From what I've heard and seen Tech won a lot of games this season on punt returns, but we hope to eliminate 0it,"Micli elosen said. The Panthers buckle down to a rugged two and one-half hour scrimmage Thursday, a surpris ing move so close to game time. There were no injuries although the Panthers hit hard in the line. The flu scare aDDears sone. Quarterback-Pete Neft. oae of the victims, looked good Is the afternooa sessioa. oTheTech team of Bobby Dodd arrived today anf scheduled a worKout for 4oB.m. jn the sta dJum.cioUgw thg Pftt session.' .. " w Vince Martinez Stops Mueller ) o Milwaukee, Wis. (U.R) welterweight Vince Martinez, wn Over Peter Mueller with a, classic sfecond round said "I want- 'RacirtA rsext. And if hs busy I'll take n Robinson. MaStinez back -npdalprie jabbed (ShrouSh the first ound "u inuaiui mc aecoiia in xne fight(bere Thursday night. There was no indication the end was trearQintil Martinez scored with three corobirations in a rowlate irrthe second round. The fiil punch was a short right to MuelleV's headP Mueller, who at 155 pounds outweighed Martinez by four pounds, Qiit the (Snvas rolled on his side and was motionless Uong after the count "ended. NM NAMES CLAUSEN h Albuquerque, N M. -(U.R) Lwuaj liailicu ailldll SUiUUl fnl. 1 T ptoach of The Year" Dick Clau sen of Coe College. Iowa, to head up university fgol&all i)ere next year. 0 0 0 ! 21 I - - if-M- XJiX If 3" Tulsans Win Alt-College Tournament Br JOHH GRIFFIN TTniitd Press Spoits Writer Tulsa grabbed the spotlight In basketball's holiday tournament circus- today, bidding foV na tional" honors by capturing the championship in the All-College Tournament the same title that catapulted San v Francisco to recognition a year ago. The Golden Hurricane's 65-58 conquest of Oklahoma City in the only major final round of a tourney Thursday night over shadowed brilliant performances by such power teama si North Carolina, Utah, West Virginia, and Stanford. i 5 Victory in this tourney,3 the nation's oldest, gave Tulsa an impressive -10-1 record and-a siring of six wins. North Carolina, ranked fourth nationally, stole the show in the opening round of the Dixie Clas sic, at Raleigh, N.C., by drub bing Villsnova, 86-63. In to night's semi-finals, the Tarheels will face Duke, which whipped Wyoming, 71-54. Tarheel Rivals Win By contrast, North Carolina .State, the Tarheels' arch-rival ranked No. 3 nationally, had to struggle in the same show cf or a 59-54 win over Oregon State. State -will meet Wake Forest, which upset Minnesota, 87-83, in overtime. Utah, No. 8 nationally, blew a 13-point halftime lead but showed class in downing Mar quette, 89-84, in the opening round of the Sugar "Bowl Tour nament at New' Orleans. In the Sugar finals, Utah0 willi face Notre Dame which upset Ala bama, 8e-80. West Virginia, title favorite in the Orange Bowl Tournament at Miami, gained the finals with a 70-00 win over Colombia. The Mountaineers thus qualified for a final-round game with Miami, Fla., which downed Tulane, 86-75. Stanford wasn't in any tourna ment, but the Indians scored Thursday night's biggest upset as they beat Iowa, the nation $ No. 5 team, 34-62, at Stanford. It was the third loss in six games for Iowa, the second straight on its. West :Coast visitP o ; Orovars Top G Crater 56-44 Central Point Cottage Grove ramped away after a close first quarter to deefet the Crater high b&ketball team 60 to 44 bere last night. The Comets of Crater kept pace with the Lions through the first Stanta tut0cooled off after that. They gbtoonly thre points in the second period end Cot tage Grove headed t the hlf( 23 to 13. Tbird quarter core was 47 w 38. . Good bU handling and pass tang, a "fie fast break and better height "which gave, the Lions a lot of tip-in shojs were instru mental in the Cottagg Grove vic tory. Subtracting tip-ins, how ever, the Comets had a slight edge in ibackboard retrieving. Cottage Grove moves to Ash land tonight, to meet the Griz zlies. Q O LINE-UPS: Cottage Grove 6 Burelson 8 f Hayes 11 f Nichols 12 c Rice 8 g Aneell 4 g Substitutions For 0 44 Crater 12 Herrmann 12 Shama Davis 6 Douthit 10 Goyette Cottage Grove, Wood worth 2. Picknell 2. Peters 2, Thies 2. CasUe 5: for Crater. Letter, Green 3, Tidwell, Allen, Harsh 1, Juveland. MH Jayvees Trim Crater e Medford .junior varsity bas keteers whopped Crater's jay vees 58 to 25 at CentralPoint last night in the prelim to the Cottage Grove - Crater varsity game. , s The Junior Tornado was in front at all intermissions, 12 to ,6, 23 to 11 and 47 to 15. Mike Russell had 18 points for Medford. .Jav Mullen- and Ron Perry each 10 and Richard Puhl eight. Greed topped Crater with five. SKIWANIS A.A.JU. o o JLX3 SiSfWEt State a-wijlfSo Jft$iJGi&f Gb&innigA, atemiiftfl QUthexn Oregon Coffoge Gyrrj INorth Carolina State's Flury Stops OSC Beavers Raleigh, N. Q-. (U.R) Oregon State's young.and green. Beavers put on a second half rally that almost nipped high-ranked North Carolina State yesterday but the Wolfpack came out on top in a first-round Dixie Classic game, 59-54 before more than 12,000 S. regon State trailed 34-21 at half-time but kept pecking away Red Raider Rally Nicks Pioneer Five By UHITED PRESS Southern Oregon and Port land State came through with hairline ' victories in Oregon small ccollege basketball play lest night while Portland uni v e r s 1 1 y walloped Willamette 77-42 to avenge an earlier one poin.t defeat. Linfield dropped its second game at Tacoma in two night to Pacific Lutheran, this time by an 83-64 score. , o Bill Hollingsworth - was the Southern Oregon hero as the Red Raiders nipped Lewis and Clark 68-67 at PoPtland.' Hol lingsworth, who scored 24 points, hit tweb field goals in the last 21 seconds. Lloyd Hoffine had 28 points for SOCE, which now has won 6 and lost 2. Portland State usedtwo free throws by Jim Perkin in an overtime period to edge Pacific 63-52 at Forest Grove, Perkin led the scoring with 20 points. Jimmy winters, as usual, was the sparkplug for Portland U as the Pilots crushed Willamette. Winters cames through witl? 20 points and Gene, Kutsch hit 17. Don Porter hit 24 points, for Linfield in a losing cause at Ta eoma. o Southern Oregon was behind by seven points with 52 seconds to go against the Pioneers. Hof fine and Dale Bats got geld goals. Bates stole the ball and passed . to Hollingsworth who plunked in another two pointer. Lewis s,ni Clark heaved the ball the length of the courtand SOC took it out of bound?. The Raiders held it until five seconds were left. Then ' H,Q,llingswrth dribbled in asd Jaid up th win ning goal- Southern Oregon had trailed all the way until those final sec onds. The Pioneers' halfway lead was 2 to 2tf. LINE-UPS: SOC 68 Hoffln 15 g 7 L and C 16 Ward Z Adrian 11 Nichols 12 Boutin Mollinssvoitb 23 i Titu 1 c Bt.t 8 g CrndIl 5 I Subatitutians For SOC 11 Brady Lowrance 8. Munsail; far L and C. Ness , B. aiemgls 3. R- tempie 4. High School Scores By United Press Cleveland 55, Medford, 52 Franklin 57, Grants .Pas?5)49 Central Catholic 58, The Dalles 56 (overtime) Roosevelt 4, Gresham 47 Parkrose Sf Washington 45 Pendleton 65, West Valley 61 Hillsboro 68, Nortlr Bend 66 (over time) Cottage Grove 58, Crater 46 Newport 53, Casrade Union 39 QGrant Union 53, Bend 49 i Willamina 37, Oakridge 33 Mt. Angel 53, Sandy 43 Richland 101, Hermiston 65 Stanfield 50. Pilot Rock 44 Prospect Gagers Win at Halsey Prospect Prosper high's Cougars broke even in basket ball games during the holiday week. They lost to Chiloquin there last night 65 to 50 after a 54 to 49 triumph Tuesday at Halsey. Chiloquin led the Cougars by 37 to 23 at halftime. Dick Sie mens"sparked the Panthejrs with 22 rjbints while Don Vannice got 19 for Prospect. At Halsey the southern Ofe gon team led 31 to 14 at the half but Halsey pushed ahead 37 to 35 in the third quarter. Jim Dan iels was big gun for Prospect with 24 counters. Fight Results Los Angeles (U.P.) Jack Johnson. 209, Los Angeles, stopoed Ezzard Charles, 196. Cincinnati (6). SPONSORED FIG 1S- o o o fl Qtai Gb&mm& a "gw&i Drive o Des, 40 - 8 P.M. half af the lead in the second with its ball centre type of game. With two minutes to play it was, 55-54 North Carolina State, but a last mintjte flurry by Ron .Shaviifc, ys-foot-ight Wolfpack center sewed, up thej victory. Oregon State met Minnesota in a consolation game today. . - Ken Nanson, ypung, Oregon State guard, hit f9 pogits and Dave, Garftbee, sophomore cen ter, scored 17. Shavlik had 19 for N'C. State. O ijarry i-auius ano-jwayne iviossf) fixilPd n.fl nf th L. w nT T 1-, l. . . n, gon State. (S) ine Beavers had a percentage of .289 to the winners. shooting .279 for u FT PF TP 6-2 2 8 N.S, State" Molodet g Magliog Shavlik c Seitz c Dinardo f .. Hafer f Pond f FG . 1 . . 6 . 5 . 1, . 5 2-0 9-1 2-0 2-0 0-0 0-0 3 19 2 4 1 12 1 2 1 0 D' 1 0 Totals 19 Oregon-State 54 FG Paulus f 2 Gambee i 8 Moss c 0 Haynes c 1 Nanson g 7 Wilson g 4 CriminS g 0 CD o Totals iz 21-3 FT 2-1 1- 2 . 0-3 0-0 5-1 2- 1 0-0 11 59 PF TP 5 6 1 17 5 0 1 2 0 19 2 10 0 0 10-8 14 54 Dons, Bruins In Holiday Cage Finale cBjp NORMAN MILLER New York, U.r-San-Fran-cisco and UCLA, two Califor nia basketball teams that trav elled 3,000 miles to set up their only meeting of the season clash tonight at Madison Square Gar den for the Holiday Festival title. c cSan Francisco, ranked first in the nation and rolling on a 35 game winning streak, is an eight point, choice to defeat the team thatTianded it its last defeat. Coach1 Phil Woolpert's Dons have equalled the fourth long est winning streak in major col lege nigtory since dropping a 47-49 dgcisiqn to Coach John Wogdej' Bruins at Los Angeles, Dec. 9, 1954. W'oolpert will throw Bilt Rus sell, six-foot, 10-inch All-Amer ica center, star guard K . C Jones and a strong group of re serves against UCLA in a bid to climax a seven-game cross-coun try, tour with a second tourna ment title. The (Dons, last seaJ sorts NCAA champions won the DePaul Invitation Tournament at Chicago Dec. 17. - O Use Tribun&Want Ads PENME' 0 o c '''hs 0QSmO5 GET LIGHTWEIGHT WARMTH 1&t JKH SiiMfIT f f NNEY FOREMOST BOOTS! G o o o O O 5SWa-JiJp5V Mmob insoles atrcte4&Twm&tmtfm$v&iQ teles O i I- c 9 ; 0 m4 !wejs flat tread ioiWf SStam jCKfflb ejund enHr - femeu&a&y !gfet...fd1fV kastherined... s. aai&s fay arjo beJ?er wear '. o Smarts Broadcasts Taiavion KBES will bring 1ai East-West Shrine football SVBe io southern Oregon view ers at 1:45 p.m. Saturday aft r presentingQthe Blue-Gray' ffaeie at 11:15 a.rn. On Mon day IgBES will carry ihe Cojt ton BowKgame at 10:45 a.m. j)and the Tiose Bowl game at 1:45 p.m. On Satyufday radio station KYJC will air the Auburn VanderbiltOGator Bowl game at 11 aQi. Siaiidh KWIN will carry the Ashland-Cottage Grove high school basketball game at 3 o'clock tonight andQhe Blue- T J Gray football mix at 11:15 . q. . a-m- Saturday. At 3:50 p.m, p Saturday ifjwill air a broad cast ot tne-iast-wesl grid irav. Practice Trap Shoot on Sunday JVieaiord Ciun club will hold 16-yard trapshooting and ,410- guage skeet practice this Sun day. It will be an informal pro gram. On Sunday, January 28, a 410- guage skeet tourney will be held for a trophy and merchandise prizes. It had been postponed from an earlier date because of frtr fonr ontrioc- LAUSE VS. SAVAGE New York '(U.R) Eduardo (KO) Lausse. Arsentine middle weight, will try to strech his winning streak to 32 straight when he faces Mllo Savage of Salt Lake Ci, Utah, in the 10 round main event at Madison Square Garden, Jan. 6. UCLA Eases, MSC Tightens In Rose Bowl By ALEX KAHN Pasadena, Calif. (U.R) Coach Henry (Red) Sanders eased up .on UCLA in practice today but "Duffv Daugherty tightened up on his Michigan State players as the, two Rosejj Bowl rivals adopted opposing training strat egy. The Pacific Coast' Conference champions were scheduled to work twohours Thursday but after an hour and a half.. San ders called off the drill and an nounced, "From now on we re. labeling uii. Over at the East Los Angeles Stadium where the J5partans are training, Daughertjr cracked the whip over his men for two full hours and promised them more of the same today as he pointed our, We've got to the point where the players have to tight en up." . ( Sanders actually ended his hard work on Monday and-to ALL WEATHER, INSULATION o ' Oklahoman Picked bv 7 Oveil, terps Minneapolis, Minn. (U.R) Oklahoma, thenation's top- . ranked 1955 college football team, is a seven-point favorite to open 19Sfi in successful style -t'Jowte'Pjffe Maryland in their Jan. JrQjmge Bowl clash at. Miami, Fla.- The latest odds suppKecL by Athletic PubMcations, inc., which computes oint sp jlads on bigtime college football I land -basketball games, indicategjthat a major post-season games will be hardfought. Michigan State, which was a seven-point -choice several weeks ago for its Rose Bowl game with UCLA, now is only as six-point favorite. In the other big Jan. 2 tilts, Georgia Tech is favored , over Pittsburgh by six for the Sugar Bowl game at New Or leans and Texas Christian is a seven-point pick against Missis sippi Oin the Cotton Bowl at Dallas. In Saturday's games, Auburn is favored over Vanderbilt by . six in the Gator Bowl at Jack sonville, Fla.; the South over the North by six for the Blue-Gray Pgame at Montgomery, Ala., and the East over the West by six for the Shrine All-Star clash at San Francisco. Caral Gables, Fla. (U.R) Wil lie Hartack rode four winners . Thursday at Jg-opical Park to boost his 1955 victory total to 416, tops in the country. Preparations make sure the Bruins were notx stale, he gave them Tuesday off. The UCLA coach feels too many games ae left on the practice field, and with his short bench he can't ke the chance. Daughtfery said his strategy was to consider this like a nor mal practice week except that the gamewaPbn Monday instead of Saturday. Under that line of reasoning the workout he plan nedS&ay was the kind he nor mally would hold orfcWednesday for a Saturday game. .And he said, "that Wis for lots of hard work for two full hours." Mulligan State will determine todayf elid Bob Jewett will be abli, to play in the Rose Bowl game. Jewett injured, an ankle away from the practice" field and he has not been able to run withJiis usual effectiveness. Al though not a starter, Jewett is consKlered the team's top offen sive nd. uj - FOR COLD WEATHER NEEDS 9 - Vino-Foam from top to bottom Insulate summer and winter! j i Snch shoes 175 ' Widths D-EE o 575 j4 fcCjnch boots0 ; 0 5 en J ...B. A ..Ti S 8 e 9 3 o 0 O G o o o o o o o - o