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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 3, 1956)
EIOMT BEDFORD (OREGON) Etose Bowl Victory Causes Hot Debate Pasadena, Calif. (U.R) The Rose Bowl game today again j was embroiled in an aftermath of charges and counter charges following Michigan State's hard-to-believe 17-14 victory Monday over UCLA scored in the last seven seconds of the game. There is no doubt about who won the game. That's already entered into the official books, with a sophomore end named Dave Kaiser the.hero off his 41 yard field goal just before the final gun. But there were some differ ences of opinion on these cases: 1. Did the official signal an "intentional grounding of a pass" by Ronnie Knox of UCLA, and thus indicate that Michigan State would have received two points, because the penalty would have put the ball in the UCLA end zone? & Was there any reason for the ofiicials slapping a 15-yard penalty on UCLA, with less than a jbinute to go, for "coaching from the sidelines?" This was the penalty that put the Bruins back on their own one-yard line and ultimately led to the Michi gan State victory. Coaches Back Official! According to the coaches, the officials were right all the time. The conference rules don't allow them to criticize an offic ial. "We were penalized 1J yards for coaching from the sidelines," said Coach Red Sanders of UCLA. "I understand that it was one of our assistant coaches who kept yelling at Knox to pass. I believe the officials were right." Sad Maryland Coach Names Oklahoma Team Best Ever Miami (U.R) Coach Jim Tatum sadly admitted today his battered Marylanders ust could not find enough breathing space, "even with an oxygen tank on the sidelines," to thwart the crackling second half offensive that gave Oklahoma a 2 0-6 4 Orange Bowl victory. The convincing victory firmly established Oklahoma as, the un d i s pxl e d national football chstfipion, for this game match ed the only two perfect-record major-college teams in the country. Oklahoma had been ranked No. 1 nationally at the end of the regular season. Tatum, often called the na tion's top defensive genius, con ceded he'd been soundly troun ced at his own game by wily Bud Wilkinson of Oklahoma. Sooners "Finest Team" 'II want to say that in all my 20 years of coaching and five years of playing, Oklahoma was the finest foolball team I've ever seen on a football field,' Tatum told players and coaches from both teams at a dinner Monday night following the big same which drew a record of 76,561 fans. "The great delusion before this game was that Oklahoma had only an offensive and we had a fine defensive team. Ok lahoma has a fine defensive football team, . . . and defense is the payoff in football. "In the first half we got the feeling that we might win. But at halftime I said to my players that Coach Wilkinson was tell ing his boys, "you haven't let them have it. You'll have to go out there and play to win." "They came back and called Xavier Named Tournament 46th Basketball Champion By JOHN GRIFFIN .United Press Sports Writer The rapidly-closing holiday season in college basketball to day crowned rangy Xavier of Ohio as its 46th tournament champion, but the emphasis on the courts now has changed to conference competition i t h high-rated Illinois showing the way. ' Unbeaten Xavier, from Cin cinnati, stamped itself as a com ing power by winning the Queen City Invitational at Buf falo, N. Y., with a lopsided 92 67 decision over Georgia Tech. Forty-five other teams won tourney titles of varying size during the holiday weeks, led by such powers as national cham pion, San Francisco in the Holi day Festival at New York, North Carolina State, in the Dixie Clas sic, Tulsa in the All-College, Notre Dame in the Sugar, SMU in the Southwest Conference, Iowa State in the Big Seven, and West Virginia in the Orange Bowl. Xavier Breezes Home Xavier, with a 7-,0 mark, ap peared a worthy foe for any of these as it crushed Georgia Tech, the team that upset Kentucky twice last season. The Ohioans rolled up a 53-35 halftime margin and breezed home. This was the only tourney ac tion Monday night, and there's only one more big holiday carni- MAIL TRIBUNE On the intentional grounding of a pass, there still rages a dispute. If the penalty had been called, as the official signalled, then Michigan State would have been awarded the two points and there would have been no need for Kaieer's heroic stunt. In any event, some of the most exciting football ever seen in a post season game w'as crowd ed into, the last ofew-minutes of this herve-shatterer. Bruin Tie Count Michigan State was leading 14-7 midway in the last quarter and appeared to have the game salted away. Then Knox came into the battle and promptly tossed a 47-yard pass to end Jim Decker on the Spartan sev en. The Bruins scored 'from there and knotted the count at 14-14. . But all that did was set the stage for the fireworks. UCLA had to kickoff and the Spartans immediately started a drive to ward the Bruin goal. It was halt ed on the 20 and UCLA took over. But the penalty came and set the club back on the one From there Knox finally had to get off. a kick out to the 40. Michigan State then started a drive which eot down to the 19 with seven seconds remain ing. The Spartans were penaliz- Fed back to the 24 for taking out time when the stage was set for Kaiser. He booted the ball from the 31 through the up rights, 10-yards back of the play ing field a 41-yard kick tnat will go down in football His tory. the plays so fast our boys didn't get breathing space, even with an oxygen tank on the sidelines" Tatum said. Modest Bui Moved Wilkinson, modest as ever but obviously moved deeply by his team's great victory, thank ed his players for "the greatest heart, the greatest spirit and the greatest second half I've ever seen." "The second half is the bests we've played this season ... all we had to do, with Maryland ahead, was goof a couple of times and that would have been Maryland's ball game," said Wil kinson. It was halfback Tommy Mc Donald and No. 2 quarterback Jay O'Neal who sparked the sizzling second-half comeback for the Sooners and gave the national champions their 30th consecutive win in the fifth bowl game under Wilkinson. Maryland's lithe Ed Vereb, playing with a "nervous and empty stomach" that kept him up much of the night before, and Maryland's rugged defend ers headed by All-America cen ter Bob Pellegrini dominated the first two quarters. BOUT SCHEDULED New York (U.R) Carlos Ortiz, Puerto Rican lightweight, will meet Ray Portilla of New York -in the 10-round feature bout at St. Nicholas Arena Jan. 9. IN TRACK MEET New York (U.R) Wes Santee, Lou Jones, Tom Courtney and Horace Ashenfelter head the entry list for the Metropolitan AAU track and field champion ships Saturday night. val the Senior Bowl at Mobile starting Wednesday. Illinois, ranked fifth nation ally, paced the four Big Ten opening games by coming from behind to beat . Michigan State, 73-65. The Illini trailed until 12 minutes were gone in the second half, caught up -51-i51, and then j went ahead to stay on a jump shot by Bill Ridley. Big Ten Winners Ohio State ran its overall rec ord to 8-1 by downing -Michigan. 79-66. Indiana pushed its record to 7-1 with a 94-81 decision over Northwestern. And Purdue led by a wide margin nearly all the way in beating Wisconsin, 78-66. In other leading games: De troit downed Bradley,' 106-91; Murray State, winner of the Kentucky Invitational, scored its sixth straight win, 93-73, over Arizona .as Howie 'Crittenden tallied 24 points for a new record for Kentucky college "player of 1,746 in his career; Washing ton, Mo., drubbed roadweary Utah St 82-61: Canisius rout ed St. Bonaventure, 77-47, and Niagara ripped Lafayette, 89-69,. in Queen City consolations; and Pittsburgh downed Yale, 95-74. Three of tonight's highlights see North Carolina, No. 4 na tionally, try to bounce back from its rout by North Carolina State against Louisiana St.; Stanford, No. 20, host St. Mary's (Calif.); and West Virginia host Washing ton and Lee. -- "n Tuesday, January 3, 1S5S Mississippi Upsets TCU, In Bowl Game Dallas, Tex. IU.R) A quar terback who was there and one who wasn't there were the key figures in Mississipi's 14-13 up set Cotton Bowl victory "over Texas Christian. The man who was there was Ole Miss' part Cherokee Indian signal caller, Herman Sidney (Eagle) Day, whose fourth-down gamble near midf ield iand clutch running paved the way for the victory and earned him the "Most Valuable Back" award. The man who wasn't there was Charles (Chuck) Curtis, who had guided TCU to a 9-1 season while favoring a year-old knee injury only to go crashing out of the bowl game on the opening kickoff with two fractured ribs. No one will ever know wheth er Curtis could have been any more successful than his emer gency fill-in, Richard Finney, at snapping a bowl - game losing sxreaK lor tcu that has now grown to five straight. Coach Missed Curtis But, TCU Coach Abe Martin described Curtis' loss as like "losing your right arm" or like "losing .a good agate in a marble game. There was no Question that Curtis' exit gave Mississippi the chance to load its defensive line without too much risk of under staffing its pass defenses. ' Be cause Ole Miss knew as well as TCU that Finney, who hadn't worked a single play with the first team all season, wasn't apt to hurt anyone with his passes. He threw only three and had two of them intercepted one that killed the already dwin dling hopes of a TCU comeback in the waning moments follow ing Day's gambling coup that turned defeat into victory. Day Tries- Pass Ole - Miss was trailing 13-7 when Day took his . successful long shot gamble with a fourth down pass on the TCU 45. It clicked for 14 yards to fullback Paige Cothren and set the stage for Day to dart 25 more yards to the five after apparently being trapped trying to pass. From there, substitute half back Ralph Lott skirted end for the tying points and Cothren col lected his eighth point of the day with the winning " Conver sion. He had plunged three yards for Ole Miss' first score and converted in the second quarter. All-America Jimmy Swink of TCU lived up to his reputation with touchdowns from three and 39 yards out in the first two pe riods and a 42-yard punt return that went for naught when the packed Ole Miss line stifled the TCU running game. He picked up 107 yards rushing. BULL MONTANA Faces NW Champion Bull Montana Bills GP Debut Grants Pass The main wres tling event at the fairgrounds arena Wednesday night will mark the debut of Bull Montana who is rated the roughest guy to come out of the East in years He is called the Toledo Terror in Ohio. Montana will meet the Pacific NW heavy champ, John Paul Henning. Montana is a big, hairy brute who has heavy eyebrows' and long hair. He is fast ior a big man. These two men have not met before. The Irishman from Australia, Jack O'Reilly, will return also on this card to meet Thor Ha gen. O'Reily has been campaign- nine in the East around North Carolina. . HOST TO TEAM New York (U.R) New York will fete the major contingent of the U. S. Winter Olympic team at a luncheon Jan. 16 with the athletes planning to leave for Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy, by plane immediately after the city plays host to them. MfdfordJTbibuni .... i r"l 1 II IN Dons Rated Top Team With 36 Win Streak New York -cisco, having - (U.R) San Fran- completed a tri umphant coast-to-coast tour, 'led the United Press basketball rat ings for the fifth, straight week today with hopes of expanding its 38-game winning streak to a major-college record. Although the top four teams remained the same as the pre vious week, the busy tourna ment activity shook up the rankings below No. 4 ' and brought Iowa State, Southern Methodist and George Washing ton among the leaders. Dayton Second Dayton anoV North Carolina State, which like San Francisco are undefeated thus far, follow ed the Dons in the weekly rat ings of the United Press Board of Coaches. North Carolina, beaten by N. C. State in the Dixie Classic Tournament final, clung to fourth place. San Francisco, the defending national champion which has been on top of the ratings every week this season, was chosen No. 1 by 30 of the 35 leading coaches who rank the teams weekly for the United Press. With four second-place votes and one for third, Coach Phil Woolpert's men' had a total of 344 out of a possible 350 points This was slightly less than last week when the Dons were the first choice of 33 coaches and received an all-time "high of 348 points. Pepperdine Next Up Having convinced fans of their prowess in Chicago, Wichita, New Orleans and New' York's Madison Square Garden where they won the Holiday Festival last week end, the Dons are back home where they will re sume their assault on the con secutive winning record Friday night against Pepperdine. After that, it will be Santa Clara and Fresno State, follow ed by a two-week layoff for mid-year examinations,, and if Six-Man Ski Team Chosen For Olympics Spout Springs, Ore: (U.R)- A final six-man U.S. Olympic ski team, composed of two cross country specialists and four com bined skiers, was chosen here late yesterday. Mack Miller of McCall, Idaho, and Larry Damon of Burlington, Vt., were chosen as the cross country men. The four combined men were Marvin Crawford of Steamboat Springs, Colo., - Ted Farwell of Montague City Mass., Lynn Levy of New Orleans, La., and Charles Tremblay of Kenne, N.H. Cedric Sherrer of Lyndonville, Vt., was selected as an alternate for the cross country specialists and Alf Vinceiette of Highland Falls, N.Y., an alternate for the combined skiers. Ski team coaches decided not to include Sven Johansson, An chorage, Alaska, who along with Miller led all cross country fin ishers, because of his inability to get a clearance on his American citizenship. He was due for his citizenshit) Dec. 13 but because of a 30-day waiting period it has not been granted. Johansson asked for a waiver of the waiting period but that, too, has not yet been grant ed. : Coaches said, however, there was still a chance Johansson, in Ancnorage awaiting word on his citizenship, will be with the team as a seventh member, if he gets ms clearance on time. Berrios Beats Pat Ma rcune New York U.R) Feather weight Miguel Berrios of Puerto Rico, reputedly a powder-puff puncheF, floored and stopped Pat Marcune in the eighth round Monday night at St. -Nicholas arena and earned another TV fight on Feb. 6. His opponent will be Bobby Courchesne, of Holyoke, Mass., who won a majority decision over 23 - year - old Berrios at St. Nick's on Nov. 14. Monday night Berrios, favor ed at 12-5 because of his speed and stamina, achieved the sec ond kayo in his career of 18 pro fessional fights by staggering Marcune of Coney Island, N.Y., in the eighth round with three left hooks to the head and floor ing him with a right. Marcune, 26, lurched to his feet at the count of eight. But he was so groggy that Referee Ray Miller stopped the fight at 1:52 of the eighth and awarded Berrios victory on a TKO. Each weighed 130 pounds. Use Tribune Want Ads For Action, still undefeated San Jrancisco can set a new mark of 40 by defeating California. The Gold en Bears are coached by Pete Newell, who guided San Fran cisco to national prominence seven seasons, ago. Iowa State made the biggest jump oi tne week, moviuj uy all the way from a tie for 33rd place to occupy the No. 7 rating after winning the Big beven Tournament. This week's group of leaders became a "top 11" when SMU and George Washington moved up to a tie for 10th place after winning tournaments. They were tied for 19th last week. SMU won the Southwest Con ference Tourney and George Washington the Mid -Winter Tournament at College Park, Md. Kentucky Back Again Illinois and Kentuck also advanced among the nation's top teams. The Illini moved up three places to No. 5, while Kentucky, out of the top 10 last week for the first time since the United Press ratings were initiated in 1950, moved back to sixth place from 12th.' Utah and. Holy Cross were ranked eighth and ninth, respectively, each falling two places. The top three teams received extremely heavy support, Day ton receiving 295 points 49 less than San Francisco and N. C, State 282. There was a big drop off to the next team, North Carolina attracting 151 points Illinois had 102, Kentucky, 68, Iowa State 66, Utah 51, -Holy Cross 50 and George Washing ton and SMU 49 each. Dayton received three of the first-place votes that did not go to San Francisco, with N. . C. State and llth-ranked Louis ville getting one each. Afte Louisville came Rice, with Indi ana and UCLA tied for 14th. Iowa, Tulsa, Duke, Temple, Stanford and Ohio State round ed out the second ' 10 group. Rose Bowl Win Like OSC Loss in 1952 Portland (U.R) Yesterday's 17-14 Rose Bowl victory by Michigan State over UCLA re minded Oregon State football fans of a similar Michigan State victory in 1952. With seven seconds to go yes terday Dave Kaiser kicked s field goal to give MSU its Rose Bowl win. In 1952 with' eight seconds to go, Eugene Lakenta kicked a field goal in Multno mah Stadium to eive MSU i 17-14 win over Oregon State. (Football COLLEGE" BOWL RESULTS By United Press Michigan St. 17 UCLA 14 (Rose) Oklahoma 20 Maryland 6 (Orange) Ga. Tech 7 Pittsburgh 0 (Sugar) Mississippi 14 TCU 13 (Cotton) Wyoming 21 Texas Tech 14 (Sunl Prairie City 59 Fisk 7 (Prairie View) juniaia fa.) 6 mo. valley (Mo.) 6, (Tangerine, night). Saturday's Results: East 29 West 6 (Shrine All-Star) Vanderbilt 25 Auburn 13 (Gator) South 20 North 19 (Blue-Gravl Border All-Stars 13Skyline A. S. 10 (salad). College Basketball By UNITED PRESS East Queen City Tournament Championship Xavier, Ohio 92, Ga. Tech 67 Consolation Canisius 77 St. Bonaventure 47 Niagara 89 Lafayette 69 Pittsburgh 95 Yale 74 South Memphis St. 112 N'western (La) 78 Mid. Tenn. St. 80 E. Tenn. St. 57 William & Mary 93 Tennessee 83 Murray State 93 Arizona 73 Belmont College 90 Bethel 80 Midwest Illinois 73 Michigan State 65 Indiana 94 Northwestern 81" Ohio State 79 Michigan 66 Purdue 78 Wisconsin 66 Detroit 106-Bradley 91 Wash. (Mo.) 82 Utah State 61 U. of Paris 69 Lake Forest (111.) 64 West Seattle Pacific 91 Eastern Ore. 82 Pacific 64 Ore. Col. of Education 53 Fight Results By UNITED PRESS New York. St. Nicholas Arena Mieuel Berrios. 130. Puerto Rico stopped Pat Marcune, 130. New York (8). Miami Beach. Fla. Jimmy Beecham 155. Philadelphia, stopped Luther Rawlings. 151. Chicago (9). . You'll Always Find 9 Reliability Uniformity Full Strength IN EVERY LOAD OF TRU-MIX CONCRETE Tru-Mix Concrete Co. FAST,, PROMPT DELIVERY Mc Andrews Road' Phone 2-5271 French Leads Pacific To 64-53 Victory Forest Grove U.R) Danny French hit 23 points, including 13 out of 13 from the free throw line, as Pacific downed Oregon College of Education 84-53 in a non-conference basketball game here last night. The two teams .were tied at 22-all at the end of the first half. OCE outshot Pacific from the field, .328 to .222 but Pacific hit on 34 out of 43 free throw at tempts to 7 out of 18 for the Wolves. Bowling ROGUE ROLLERS Rogue Rollers Bowling league started their second half last week with Brooks Electric get ting the only clean sweep, tak ing four -from Darrell Miller comDanv. Ralph's Restaurant took all other high honors. Ma bel Clark had games of 211 and 212 and high series of 602. RalDh's had top team series of 2262 and high game seneg 798 Team W L 0 1 1 1 1 , 3 3 3 3 4 Brooks Electric 4 Ralph's Restaurant S a and a Auction J First National Bank S Rogue Sportsman 3 Women of tne Moose X H and M Shell Service 1 Clave Construction 1 Chris Drugs 1 Darrell Miller Company 0 Brooks Elec. 4 4 D. Miller Co. 0 368 N Roberts -353 466 M Tremblay 344 332 A Zenor 427 36(5 p Carmony 333 451 O Wyatt 351 . Handicap 78 1983 1886 Clave Const. 1 433 D Hickson 401 417 M McNeel 385 393. F Clave 369 417 A Hoffman 401 602 J Tresham 370 Handicap 198 2262 2124 P Braack E Sessions M Durham J Barnum G Hayse Ralph's 3 V Knox F Doty Absentee K Smith M Clark H-M Shell 1 B-B Auction 3 E Baker E Lenz A Bohannan 406 J McCready 412 400 451 391 V Findley 425 C Dubs 352 A Monroe R Eberius 372 H Culy (sub) 506 Handicap 93 D Christians'n 497 497 2160 Chris Drugs 1 E Doty 300 T Tolles 476 G Russel ' 361 L Kufner(sub) 402 B Forn'y (sub) 437 F. N. Bank 3 H Read . M Epps V Schmidt M Tedrick C Selleck" Handicap 355 406 279 362 396 218 1976 2016 Rogue Sptsman 3 W. O. T. M. R Wadlow S Coulter D. Finley M Fordyc E Olsen Handicap G Ludwie 491 340 349 308 373 338 336 319 235 357 117 E Johnson D Webster A Frost D Paul CITY TOURNAMENT With the end of the first night, of team bowling in the Medf ord City Bowling tournament, the lead is held by the Top Notch Cafe, with 2933. High man for the Cafe team and high for the evening was Gene Piazza with a 604 series, topped by a 224 game. Second in the standing: is the Hammers Sporting Goods of Grants Pass, with a 2824 series. High "games by an individual went to W. Hawley with a 227 and high team game so far in the tournament goes to Top Notch with a 933. Top Notch Cafe 2933 Hammers Sporting Goods 2824 tiignt neat .Estate : 281 Valley Music Co 281 Pfaff Sewing Center 2809 Medford Furniture Co. 2767 Wonder Bur (Grants Pass) 2755 E. H. Mann Co 2726 Walker Real Estate . 2697 Henry's Drive In .... 2649 Mogan Lumber .Co. 2629 Sam's Sporting Goods 1.257$ Wonder Bur McFarland Singer Paterson Endicott Frink Handicap Top Notch Shaw Piazza Forney Harmon Jantzer Handicap 473 498 506 554 490 234 2755 547 604 535 553 484 210 2933 Pfaff Sewing C. Hawley 566 St. Hilaire 537 Webster 522 Klatt 513 Frye 521 Handicap 150 Henry's Drive In Barr 465 Learning 498 C Proctor 503 Blunt 525 Sacchi 481 Handicap 177 2809 2649 Medford Furn. Vessey 515 Kurth 531 Van Dyke 504 Hillyer 59 Rector 529 Handicap 129 Walker R. Estate Brock 506 Knox 544 Spain 536 Wise 508 Sullivan 495, Handicap 108 2767 2697 Sam's S. Goods 496, 506 439 443 Mogan Lbr. Co. Morgan 511 Chapman 461 Dyer 455 Clark 513 Burroughs 512 Handicap 177 Lubbers Gardner White Straus Schroeder Handicap 547 153 2574 2629 Estate 525 501 508 533 501 Hammers S Goods. Pruess 539 Hammer 492 Dawson 546 Sprinkle 571 Preston 523 Handicap 147 Hight R. Green DeVore Beck Wilson Knapp Handicap 243 2824 2811 Valley Music Schneider Dick Parker E Lenz Speer Driscoll Handicap E. H. Mann Co. Spaunhorst 492 Goode 468 Stevens 503 6chulz 554 Anderson 556 Handicap . 153 529 527 476 597 517 165 2811 2726 K interference Results In 0 - Tech Victory New Orleans flJ.R) Georgia Tech's Bobby Dodd, his fourth Sugar Bowl victory firmly in hand, today praised the magnifi cent Pittsburgh Panthers whose crunching offensive power and desperate touchdown bids Mon day in their 7-0 losing cause brought cheers from even the most ardent Tech fan. . Twice Pitt bore down on the Tech goal line with relentless fe rocity, only to be frustrated by combination of the clock and the Engineers' throttlehold on a few feet of vital yardage. Pass Interference Georgia Tech pounced on a pass interference ruling to score the lone touchdown midway in the first period and then with stood the Pitt offensive. The pass interference ruling created minor rhubarb. The interference was called on Pitt fullback Bobby Gier, the first Negro ever to play in a Sugar Bowl football game. Tech quarterback Wade Mitchell toss ed a pass to end Don Ellis from the 33 where Pitt had fumbled Ellis, on the goal line, dropped the ball when he and Grier came into contact. The officials gave Tech the ball on the one-yard line and Mitchell - scored two plays later, adding the conver- si n. Grier claimed after the game that "I was in front of him and couldn't have pushed him, but he shoved me a little and it caused me to fall down." Knocked Off Balance Ellis, however claimed that Grier "definitely shoved me and it knocked me off balance and prevented me from catching the pass." Neither Pitt Coach Johnny Mi- chelson nor Pitt Athletic Di-. rector Tom Hamilton seemed in clined to pursue the argument. Both took the attitude that the "game is over" and' Grier him self added that the Tech players "are all fine sportsmen." BEATS BROTHER 9 New York (U.R) Hashim Khan 41, of Pakistan defeated his 29-year-old brother, Azam Khan, 18-16, 12-15, 16-18, 15-14, 15-9, Monday in the final round of the third annual U. S. Open Squash Racquets championships. The brothers have met 11 times in competition and Hashim has won every match. Dead line Sunday Classified Is at noon Saturday: 10 ajn Monday for Monday: other days 5:30 previous day The man who made sports history . is still making it! LISTEN 0 TOM MR.MQ-M TEXACO For top reporting in the world of sports, listen to Tom Harmon, former All-American and now one of America's great sports authorities. Every weekday he brings you complete scores, game reviews, interviews and back ground stories of the people who are making sports history today. ' MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 5:30 PM. Brought to you by YOUR TEXACO DEALER J . - ... the best friend your car has ever hadL SPC Posts Win Over EOC, 91-82 Seattle i(U.R) Seattle Pacific -and Eastern Oregon battled on even terms through most of the first half here last night but SPC spurted in the second half to post a 91-82 basketball vie-' tory over the Oregonians. j A tip-in field goal bv Orville" Anderson, a transfer playing his' first game with the Fair-fin' gave SPC a 23-2 lead. The Fal con then stayed out in front: and at halftime held a 46-39 lead. ' In the second half. SPC twW held 26-point leads at 76-50 and" 78-52 but Eastern Oregon began to catch up when Falcon Coach Ken Foreman removed three of: his starters. However, with fivei minutes to play, Foreman put; ma in at siring uacK in and SPC' held on for the victory. Memphis Man Solves J . i TV Game Problem Memphis, Tenn. (U.R) Evan; Fellman solved the problem that: often perplexes television foot-.' ball fans when more than one! good game is on at tha same' time. ; -j Fellman stacked up three television sets, one on top of the other, to watch the Orangey Cotton and Sugar bowl football games. He used a radio for the1 sound and tuned in the game that at the time seemed most exciting. Use Tribune Want Ads Just Call 2-6141 WRESTLING CARD GRANTS PASS ARENA, WED NIGHT, JAN. 4, 1956 Main Event-Best 23 falls or o 1 hour limit Bull Montana, 220 The Toledo Terror vs. John Paul Henning, 215 Florida Montana is rated as the toughest guy to ever come out of the east. Semi Final Best 23 falls or 1 hour limit. Jack O'Reilly, 205 Australia vs. Thor Hagen, 208 Minnesota TO KYJC DIAL 1230 CBS RADIO mi tup ; (