o
TElf MECTOTO fOOTOOW) MAIL TRIBTJIfE
PLENTY OF CHEERS greeted this Univer
sity of California at Los Angeles float in the
annual Pasadena Tournament of Roses pa
Tornado Defeats Ashland 79-48
Klamath Falls Subdues Cavemen
Ashland Leads
In First Quarto
Torrid shooting from the field
and control of the backboards
over most of the evening and
its usual hard-running, driving
game carried theQMedford high
Black Tornado to a 79 to 48
triumph over the Ashland Griz
zlies on Friday night at Ashland
in the Southern Oregon Confer
ence maplecourt opener for
both schools.
While the Tornado was roar
ing, Klamath Falls came though
in another SO circuit 1956 in
augural at Grants Pass, subdu
ing the Cavemen 68 to 57.
Medford's potent crew char
acteristically got off to a slow
itarfIt was cold in its shooting
during the first quarter and
Ashland controlled the play in
the early moments. But the
Pear City Mntingent pushed
into command by the end of
the period and in the second
session swung into a whirling
hot stride to take a wide lead
that the Grizzlies could not con
sistently threaten.
33 Point Advantage
Quarterly bulges, all with
Medford in front, were 12 to 9,
32 to 17 and 52 to 33. A spread
of 79 to 46, a 33-point advantage
was the widest of the night.
Dick McLaughlin and Bob
Tisdel with seven and six field
buckets, respectively, and with
16 points apiece, provided most
of the fire power and big Neil
Plumley was the rebound tow
er of strength with 16 plucks
in the Tornado assault. All Med
ford starters put in four field
goals or more as 32 shots swish
ed through the net for a .500
average in a 64-try barrage. In
clearing the boards the Torna
do outdid Ashland 55 to 28,
virtually 2 to 1 control.
Missing a number of good
shots and harried by the spirit
ed but eventually outbattled
Lithians, the Black Tornado
found the twine for only five
field goals in 18 attempts in
the first quarter and it took
nine for 12 shooting in the sec
ond panel to bring the average
up to 50 per cent which . was
maintained in the second half.
Trailed Just Once
The Medfordites trailed only
once in the fracas. But the
bounce of the ball, an Ashland
Ashlanders
Nip Bulldogs
Ashland high school's fresh
men tipped the McLoughlin
junior high ninth grade hoop-
men here Friday afternoon 32
to 31 in a closely contested
skirmish.
McLoughlin had an 18 to 13
halftime advantage at the half
but Ashland caught up 25-all
at the close of the third quarter
and outscored the Bulldogs
to 6 in the wind-up chukker.
Seventh Grade Wins
Bill Turner . of the Bulldogs
was high point eager with 12.
Bob Plankenhorn of the Med
ford club and Bud Taylor of
Ashland each had 10.
' Seventh graders of McLough
lin also saw action Friday and
tripped Oak Grove grade club
27 to 19. The Bulldog Pups had
quarterly spreads of 5 to 0, 13
to 6 and 19 to 12. Dick Rags
dale of McLoughlin as top
shooter of the tussle with 13.
LINE-UPS:
Ashland 9th 32
oodell
Rosenbalm
McKinnis
Taylor 10
31 McL 9 th
-10 Plankenhorn
Peterson
4 Hamilton
Lyons
Patzke 6
1 Koch
Substitutions For Ashland. Sturfill
5, Bjork 5. Mickle 6. Tepper: for Mc
Loughlin. Barr 3. Grier. Sellars. F.
Fuhston 1. Turner 12. Friesen. Pond,
Clark, Keich.
McL 7th 27
A. Funston t
Hammack 2 f
Hood 2 c
Quinney 8 S
19 Oak Grove
2 McKnight
4 Turpin
Wooldridge
Plankenhorn
1 Gilman
Substitutions tor MCL-ougmin,
Minnitk, Hoots. Hox. Lingren 2, Ro
mineHior Oak Grove. Mack 2, Brown
6. Saltmarsh 2, Thomson 2. Champion,
Bohls.
edge in fighting for it and Griz
zly ability to be in the right
place at the right time delayed
the Tornado bid to get ahead
and stay.
Ashland took opening lead in
the game on a goal by Baker but
Medford went ahead 5 to 2 on
field and free shots by Dick
Copple and a driver bucket by
Tisdel. Stuart Baker dunked a
singleton and Phil Sword duec
ed from the gift line for a 5-all
deadlock. Copple's pusher made
it 7 to 5 to Medford but a longie
by Lance Locke tied the game
again. McLaughlin hit it close
for 9 to 7 with 6Vi minutes
played,' and Medford kept the
lead after that.
The Grizzlies were game and
restrained the Tornado at var
ious stages of the tussle but the :
Medford quint was able by
streaks snd bursts to build up
its margin. And those surges
came by six, eight and 10
points while the Tornado was
blanking the Ashlanders.
Medford had a gap of 24 to
13 in the second quarter. Ash
land cut it to nine points at 26
to 17 but a pair of goals, long
and short, by McLaughlin and
a corner cast by Lloyd Cearley
brought the 32 to 17 midway
count. In the third quarter the
Medford "advantage alternated
at 13 and 15 markers until Tis
del and Copple connected in
succession and McLaughlin
scored twice in close for a 21
point 46 to 25 spread.
That edge slipped to 19 points
but Tisdel and Cearley scored
from that field and McLaughlin
got a pair from the free line
for a 25-tally, 60 to 35, Medford
command. A full quint of Ash
land reserves at this point hust
led to cut the gap to 60 to 41.
After that big try ended, Med
ford fought up to 66 to 44. A
complete group of Tornado non-
Y, Prospect
Contend in
MIBL Hassle
A Monday night battle be
tween the top two aggregations
of the circuit is a feature this
week as Medford Independent
Basketball Leaguers barge full
scale in to the second half of
their reuglar race.
Eight games are on tap for
the week with three on Monday,
The big one tomorrow match
es, Prospect, unbeaten loop lead
er, and Medford YMCA, m sec
ond place with a lone loss at
the hands of Prospect on the
Prospect high court.
Two other games Monday will
be at McLaughlin 'junior high
here. Company A of the Na
tional Guard takes on Moose
lodge at 7 p.m. Phoenix Mer
chants and Butte Falls are 8:30
p.m. rivals.
A pair of contests are set
for Tuesday at the junior high,
YMCA opposes Moose in the
early one and Headquarters
Company of the National Guard
and Phoenix go at it in the
second.
Prospect plays Company A
and Hawkinson's meet Moose on
Wednesday at the junior high
while Headquarter travels to
Butte Falls.
Bobby Brocato Wins
San Pasqual Handicap
Arcadia, Calif. (U.P.)
Smoofh-striding Bobby JBrocato
showed his heels by some four
lengths Saturday to a small field
of handicap performers as he
captured the $27,800 San Pas-
quel handicap at Santa Anita.
After forcing the early pace
of History Book for the first
half mile, Bobby Brocato took
the lead going into the turn and
quickly opened up lengths of
ground between him and the
other six in the mile and a six
teenth race. Nagpuni got up for
second and Prince Hill was
third.
Sunday, January 8, 1956
rade. Institutions of Pacific Coast Conference
were listed in flowers. Parade was witnessed
by 1,000,000. (International)
starters was running away from
Ashland at the finish.
Copple, playing with his back
taped because of muscle ail
ments, was second high in Med
ford backboard work with seven
plucks. Tisdel had six. The two
and Cearley led the Tornado in
ballhawking. Baker and Gene
Parent each had nine retrieves
for Ashland and Parent headed
his team in scoring with 11. He
was the .only Grizzly to get
more than two field ' goals.
KF Leads Whole Way
Ashland bettered Medford in
one department making 18 out
of 27 free shot tries to the Tor
nado's 15 out of 38.
At Grants Pass the KF Peli
cans went in front at the start
and kept there. Klamath led 16
to 11 at the quarter and after
going to 20 to 11 never had its
margin trimmed to less than six
points. Margins were as wide
as 13 to 16. points. Halftime
score was 35 to 27. The Pels
worked to 49 to 33 in the third
panel but the score at the end
of the stanza represented just
an eight point difference, 55 to
47. Edge was just 55 to 49 short
ly after the fourth quarter be
gan. Klamath had the rebounding
edge, but not a lopsided one,
37 to 29. Earl Tichenor, 6-5,
recovered 17 for the Pels and
Glenn Moore, 6-6, got nine.
Medford plays at Klamath
Falls next Friday , and Satur
day. BOX:
Medford
Copple, f
McLaughlin, f
Plumley, c
Cearley, g
FG FT PF TP
4 1
Tisdel. g .;
Perkins
Foust
Stearns
Reinking
Riley
Clemens
Slessler .
Totals .
, 32 15 16 79
Ashland
Parent, f
Baker, f ......
Johnson, g
Sword, c ....
Locke, g
Tobiasson
FG FT PF TP
4 3 2 11
5
1
1
1
o
3 -3
1
1
,1
1
Alley ...
t. Fitch
M. Fitch
Cluff
Green
Eberhart
Woods
Totals 15 18 20 48
Mangrum Leads
LA Golf Tourney
Los Angeles (U.R) Undis-
mayed by a 63 fired earlier in
the day by red-hot Tommy Bolt,
veteran Lloyd Mangrum of Los
Angeles carved out his second
straight 66 Saturday to take the
lead at the half-way mark in
the $30,000 Los Angeles Open
golf tournament with a 132
score.
Starting late in the day and
not half way through his round
when he heard that Bolt had
shot a record-shattering 63 to
go with an earlier 71, Mangrum
put together nines of 33-33 for
his mark.
Ten Under Par
That brought his record for
36 holes to . 10 under on the
Rancho course which has a par
of 71 and which veteran pro
fessionals claim is one of the
toughest municipal layouts they
have had the pleasure of play
ing in recent years.
It started to appear that this
would develop into . a two-man
feud.
Mangrum led the field by six
strokes.' Bolt was in front by
four.
Despite Mangrum's .spectacu
larly steady golf Bolt stole the
show today.
Alternately cursing, smiling,
throwing his clubs or dancing a
jig, the terrible-tempered Texan,
now playing out of Chattanooga,
Tenn., shot eight birdies during
the round and had no bogies.
.ne iidu. a u yesceraay ana a oo
hole total of 134.
He was out in three-under-par
33 (with a two-stroke out-of-
bounds penalty, mind you), back
in an even 30 on a course that
has a par of 36-3771.
Marciano's
Quits NY Fight Guild
Helfand Starts
Boxing Cleanup
New York 0J.P.) Al Weill,
who looks after heavyweight
champion Rocky Marciano, led
what was expected to be a gen
eral exodus out of the Fight
Managers Guild Saturday, sub
mitting his resignation and stat
ing he would support the cam
paign to clean up boxing in New
York State.
Weil's decision, which he re
vealed in a telegram from Los
Angeles to the headquarters of
the Guild here, was the latest
development in a swift series,
all tending to bring total victory
to Julius Helfand, the State Ath
letic Commissioner, who was in
structed to clean up boxing or
run it out of New York.
"I decided to go along with
Helfand and the New York State
Athletic Commission and I just
sent the wire to the Guild that
I was resigning effective im
mediately," Weill said in Los An
MEDFORIMfeWTRIBUNE
OSC QUINT DRONES 59-40
OVER WASHINGTON STATERS
Pullman, Wash. U.R)
Oregon State droned its way to
a 59-40 victory over Washing
ton State Friday night in the
Pacific Coast conference bask
etball opener for both teams.
Oregon State stumbled to an
early lead and was never head
ed, but only because WSC was
even colder than the slightly
cool Beavers.
Last year's Northern "division
champs led 25-12 at the end of
the first half in which the
Cougars scored just two field
goals one with nine minutes
gone and one with a minute and
a half to play.
WSC hit only 7.4 per cent
South Wins Pro
Senior Bowl Game
Mobile, Ala. (U.R) Full-
bavk Joe Childress of Auburn
cracked the North's goalline de
fenses in the first and final
periods Saturday to climax two
marches and give the South a
12-2 triumph in the seventh an
nual Senior Bowl game.
A capacity crowd of 35,000
fans at Ladd Memorial stadium
saw Childress, a hard-running
195-pounder w h o - carried Au
burn to the Gator Bowl, buck
two yards to cap a 56-yard scor
ing drive in the first period. He
also smashed two yards for the
second touchdown in the clos
ing minutes of the game.
In between Childress two
scores, it was a stubborn South
defense that earned the honors.
The South's line, led by Tackles
Don Goss of Southern Methodist
and Auburn's M. L. Brackett and
All-America Guard Bolinger of
Oklahoma, time after time stop
ped the powerful North running
attack, often deep in Southern
territory.
The players, all seniors,
turned professional by playing
in the game. Each member of
the winning team received $500
and each one of the losers $400.
About 30 scouts from profession
al teams in the United States
and Canada watched the con
test. OLYMPIC GOALIE Don
Rigazio, 20, the top player
on the 1955 All-World Hock
ey Team, has been picked as
goalie of the 1956 U. S
Olympic Hockey Team. The
squad will compete at the
Cortina D'Ampezzo, Italy
Jan. 26-Feb. 5.
HASKINS
Saw Shop
MACHINE SHARPENING
Chain, Circle and Hand Saws
Lawn Mowers and Tools
1736 No. Riverside
Phone 2-8236 -
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Manager
geles. "I have no other com
ment." Chick Wergeles, who is asso
ciated with Weill in various
managerial fight ventures, also
announced here that he was quit
ting the-Guild.
The Guild, a group of fight
managers who have sought to
get larger percentages and other
concessions for their boxers,
was denounced by Helfand as
"monopolistic, dictatorial, and
crime ridden" and he issued an
edict, banning it in New York
State effective ton Jan. 16. Spe
cifically, he ordered the Guild
dissolved because it was against
the best interests of boxing, and
the Guild members in turn, vot
ed 66-0 to battle Helfand's edict.
However, the Guild was dealt
a haymaker blow by promoter
Jim Norris of the International
Boxing Club, who announced
"100 per cent , suppprt of Hel
fand" and declared also that he
would do everything in his pow
er to keep major weekly boxing
shows operating ' in New York
for national TV and radio au
diances. from the floor during the first
period while Oregon State was
hitting 30 per cent. Big Cen
ter Dave Gambee scored nearly
half of Oregon State's points
with 23 while forward Larry
Beck led the Cougars with 12,
eight of them on free throws.
Oregon State controlled the
backboards in the slow moving
game and had' a slight height
advantage. The two teams meet
here again tonight.
BOX SCORE:
Oregon State fg ft pf tp
Paulus, f 3 2-2 3 8
Wilson, f 3 1-2 2 7
Allord, f 1 0-2 0 2
Fredericks, f 1 0-0 0 2
Gambee, c 8 7-15 2 23
Moss, c 1 0-0 1 2
Nanson, g 10-13 2
Haynes. g 4 3-6 1 11
Crimins, g 0 2-2 4 2
22 15-30 17 59
Washington State
fg ft pf tp
Beck, f 2
Steele, f 2
8-11
1-3
0-0
0- 1
1- 2
2- 2
4-5
0-2
0-0
0-0
King, f 0
Nelson, f 1
Galbraith, c 2
Olson, c 1
Perry, g 2
Rask, g 2
Foisy, g 0
Lorcj, g 0
12 16-26 20 40
High School Scores
By United Press
Eugene 56, Benson 48
Astoria 58, Roosevelt 43
Molalla 60. Lincoln 47
Franklin 60, Central Catholic 58
Gresham 68. Grant 58
David Douglas 55, Canby 53
Parkrose 57, Washington 49
Milwaukie 70, Cleveland 45
St. Helens 66, Hood River 40
Corvallis 51, Sweet Home 34
Warrenton 36, Nestucca 34
Vale 41, Weiser (Ida.) 30
Mac Hi 52, Grant Union 38
Toledo 64, Philomath 45
Payette (Ida.) 56. Nyssa 34
Amity 57, Chamawa 42
Silverton 47. Woodburn 44
Siletz 37, Taft 35
Sandy 46, Lake Oswego 42
Albany 46, Lebanon 28
Stayton 42, North Marion 32
Scappoose 67, Rainier 38
South Salem 53, Bend 44
Wy'East 50, Vernonia 46
Huntington 69, Richland 30
Scio 59. Gates 25
Sisters 55. Moro 46
Gervais 70. Mt. Angel 57
Culver 62. Maupin 56
Cascade 51, Serra 48
Seaside 48, Neahkahnie 45
Banks 63. Yamhill 47
Knappa 66, Nehalem 51
Willamina 46, Sheridan 36
Mosier 56, St. Mary's (The Dalles) 36
Redmond 62. Springfield 47
Tillamook 51. Central (Monmouth)
38
Marshfield 66, Dallas 59
Brownsville 49. Halsey 34
Condon 64. Rufus 45
Tillamook Catholic 34, Jewell 33
Myrtle Point 50, Glendale 47
Coquille 64, Bandon 39
Klamath Falls 68, Grants Pass 57
Lakeview 73, Burns 72
Jefferson 48. Mill City 44
Cascade Locks 61, Dufur 58
St. Joseph's (Pendleton) 70. St.
Patricks (Walla Walla) 56
Crater 61, Illinois Valley 43
Talent 72, Butte Falls 50
Willamette 62, Junction City 56
TYV Jamboree
Tigard 13. Newberg 7
Oregon City 17, Forest Grove 12
Beaverton 26. West Linn 18
McMinnville 24. Hillsboro 17
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CUTTING THROUGH MARYLAND LINE.
Oklahoma's Bob Burris makes 12-yard gain
after Maryland's Ron Athey barely misses
Lloyd Hoffine Headed -Red Raider
Scorers in Pre-Conference Play
Ashland Lloyd Hoffine paced
the Southern Oregon college
basketball scorers through their
eight pre-conference contests, ac
cording to tabulations prepared
by Len Weber, Red Raider sta
tistician. Hoffine led the club in field
goals with 127, total points with
145 and in average per game
with 18.1. He also was top man
in free shot average with an
.820 record.
Close on Hoffine's heals in
total scoring was Bill Hollings-
SOUTHERN OREGON COLLEGE STATISTICS
G FG FGA Pet. FT
Hoffine. Lloyd 8
Hollingsworth, Bill 8
Titus, Hal 8
Bates. Dale 8
52
48
20
17
10
9
8
9
2
2
2
127
96
43
43
26
34
24
21
5
3
4
Crandall, Chuck 15
Tenney, Ted 4
Biddington, Punk 5
Munsell. Guy 6
DePuy, Gene 3
Carlile. Jim 1
Lowrance. Don 3
Team Totals 8 179 426
Opponents' Totals 8 183 472
REBOUNDS:
Off Def Tot APG
Hoffine 36 39 75 9.3
Bates 33 40 73 9.1.
Hollingsworth 33 37 70 8.8
Titus 22 28 50 6.2
Munsell 20 17 37 6.1
Crandall 8 13 . 21 4.2
Biddington 5 11 16 3.2
Tenney 4 10 14 3.5
DePuy 2 3 5 1.7
BOUT SCHEDULED
Buffalo, N. Y. (U.R) Mid
dleweight contender Joey Gi
ambra and Al Andrews have
been matched for a 10-round,
nationally televised bout at Nor
walk, Va.,. on Jan. 25. The bout
will be Giambra's first since his
recent discharge, from the
Army.
Basketball
FRIDAY COLLEGE SCORES:
East
Pennsylvania 69 Dartmouth 66
Princeton 85 Brown 58
Temple 90 Scranton 60
Villanova 54 West Virginia 53
South
Southern St. 86 Arkansas 82
Davidson 65 Citadel 59
Southwest
New Mex. A&M 68 Arizona 35
Tempe 74 Texas Western 72
West
Loyola (Calif.) 77 Fresno St. 69
San Francisco 62 Pepperdine 51
Washington 57 Stanford 42
Oregon St. 59 Washington St.40
UCLA 92 Idaho 73
California 52 Southern Calif. 51
Idaho St. 68 Montana St. 54
Wvoming 66 Denver 51
College of Olaho 55 Willamette 50
Pacific JV 58 Lewis & Clark JV 50
Linfield 77 Whitman 72
Eastern Oregon 86 So. Oregon 76
Pacific 63 Lewis and Clark 58 (over
time) ,
Portland State 87 Oregon Tech 67
Ore. Dental 78 Ore. Medical- 72 (two
overtimes)
Seattle Pacific 92 Oregon Coll. 65
George Fox 75 Concordia 63
Central Ore. 73 Willamette Frosh 68
Drexel Tech 75. Delaware 52
Boston Univ. 64. Army 48
Colgate 86. N.Y.U. 69
Pennsylvania 63. Brown 54
Princeton 90, Dartmouth 82
Vanderbilt 84, Tennessee 57 ,
Ohio Univ. 80. Kent State 72
Cincinnati 74. Duquesne 52
Michigan State 65. Iowa 64
William and Mary 79, " Washington
and Lee 70
Kansas 77, Oklahoma 65
Duke 68, North Carolina State 58
Michigan 81, Minnesota 79
(overtime)
Virginia 71. Virginia Tech 66
Drake 80, Loyola (111.) 74
Kentcky 104. Georgia Tech 51
Seton Hall 68. Boston College 53
Holy Cross 59, Fordham 53
Columbia 73, Cornell 67
Purdue 68. Northwestern 54
Louisville 86. Toledo 71
Bucknell 65, Carnegie Tech 60
L.S.U. 96, Georgia 77
C.C.N.Y. 92, Rutgers 80
Detroit 80, Tulsa 72
Kansas State 68, Iowa State 64
Penn State 54, Leihgh 39
Miami (O.) 74, Bowling Green 65
St
worth with 141. Hollingsworth
also was second in per game
average with 17.6. He shot from
the field at an even .500 clip
for the best mark among those
who played most and he was
first in number of free shots
made with 61.
In rebound retrieving Hoffine
was also leader with 75. Dale
Bates plucked 73 and Hollings
worth 70.
The Raiders outscored foes
530 to 511 or 66.2 points to 63.8
per game.
FTA
50
61
43
39
18
16
9
9
4
Pet.
.820
.737
.488
.692
.722
.750
.666
.444
.750
.000
PF
20
24
34
21
8
9
8
17
3
1
1
TP
145
141
61
61
33
30
22
22
7
4
4
APG
18.1
.410
.500
.465
.395
.384
.264
.333
.428
.400
.666
.500
17.6
7.6
7.6
6.6
7.5
4.4
3.6
2.3
4
1.3
.420
.390
172
145
250
238
.688
.609
147
156
530
511
66.2
63.8
Team Totals 163 198 361
GAMES PLAYED:
SOC 93, Linfield 62
SOC 33. Linfield 42
SOC 68, Whittier 66
SOC 67, Yellow Cab 55
SOC 69, Humboldt 57
SOC 60. Humboldt 64
SOC 68, Lewis and Clark 67
SOC 72, Lewis and Clark 98
A LONG STORY
Evansville, Ind. (U.R)
book, withdrawn from the libra
ry 10 years ago, was returned
with two $5 bills tucked into the
flap pocket. The book was Tol
stoy's "Ivan the Fool." ' .
The man who made sports history
is still making it!
s c o
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tackle. Powerful Sooners came from behind
to beat Terrapins 20-6 in annual Orange
Bowl classic at Miami, Fla. (International)
Badger's, 'Cats
Win in NW Loop
By UNITED PRESS
Pacific had to come fr8m be
hind with just 11 seconds to play
Friday night to tie Lewis Tind
Clark and then pull away to win,
63-58, in an overtime in the
Northwest Conference basket
ball opener for both schools.
In other conference openers,
Linfield measured Whitman 77-
72 and College of Idaho defeat
ed Williamette, 55-50.
The potent combination of
Bill Machamer, Dan Porter and
Dave Sanford helped Linfield to
its victory. Machamer scored 24
points, Porter 23 and Sanford 18.
Willamette closed the gap on
defending champion College of
Idaho, 50-48, with little more
than a minute remaining in the
game. But the Coyotes turned on
the steam and pulled away. R.
C. Owens scored 22 points to lead
the Coyotes- Jerry McCallister
and Pete Reed each scored 12
for Willamette. ..
45
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