Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 13, 1956, Image 11

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    Black Tornado Heads
For Hayward Relays
Medford high school track
men headed to Eugene today to
defend their Kayward relay
championship.
A 35-man squad has been
named to carry the Black Tor
nado standard. The crew left
Medford at noon today and was
to work out on the Hayward
field oval and turf about 4:30
p.m.
The Tornado will seek the
metropolitan division champion
ship for the fourth time. It has
won the last three consecutive
years. Medford also will be after
its 14th crown in 17 tries. Ten
Tornado titles came in Class A
contention before the metro di
vision was formed.
Medford will defend against
18 other schools. A total of 83
schools are entered in the meet's
four divisions. And some 1,300
Athletes are to participate.
, C Vie Today
B and C aggregations ' vied to
day and A and metro gangs
meet on Saturday starting at
10:30 a.m. There are no defend-
titlists in three of the divi
sions. Mt. Shasta, Calif., C win
ner last year, is not entered.
Neither is Central Union, last
year's victor in Class B. Marsh-
field. 1955 chamo in A. has
moved up into metro.
Grants Pass and Klamath
Falls are among metro teams.
Crater and Ashland are in Class
A, Eagle Point and Illinois Val
ley in Class B and St. Mary's of
Medford, Phoenix and Rogue
River in Class C.
Coach Bob Newland of Med
ford reported his squad in good
shape physically for its Eugene
trip.
ENTRIES:
Class C Glndale. LoweU. Gates,
Triangle Lake. Sutherlin. St. Marys
of Medford. Gervais. Waldport. Phoe
nix. Culver, Creswell. Camas Valley,
McKenzie. Crow. Banks. Oakland,
Dram, Coburg, Monroe, Yelnv Wash.,
Pleasant Hill. Rogue River, Culver,
fit Fnnrpi Manletnn.
Metropolitan Grants Pass, North
Salem. South Salem. Eugene, Beaver
ton. Washington, Franklin, Fort Van
couver. Wash.. Medford. Cleveland.
Albany. Roosevelt, Lincoln, Roseburg.
Jefferson. Brant. Benson. Klamath
Jails, and Marshfield.
Class A Sweet Home. North Bend,
Ashland. Cottage Grove. Lebanon,
Corvallis. Shelton, Wash., and Hudson
Bay of Vancouver, Wash., Lake Oswe-
fo. Bend, Scappoose, Crater and
rineville.
Class B Bandon. Canby, Cascade
Union, Dallas. Douglas, Eagle Point,
Elmira. Henley. LJiinois Valley, Junc
tion City, Madras. Myrtle Point, New
port, Oakridge. Pleasant Hill, Red
mond. Sherwood, Stayton. Taft. Tole
do. Washougal, Wash.. Willamette,
Wood burn and North Marion.
MEDFORD ROSTER:
440 Mike Hawkins, Bob Gould,
Ken Tucker. Wally Larson; Mike
Smith, alternate.
880 Gould. Pete Kershaw, Don
Gray. Mike Russell: Tucker alternate.
- 2-Mlle Les Lingscheit. Bilbee Lane.
Bill Richey. Wilcey Winchell; Bill
Henderson alternate.
Mile Kershaw. Loren Christean,
Winchell, Russell; Don Gray alternate.
Distance medley Jay Walker three
quarter. John Bellack quarter. Bob
Xastgate half. Bruce Thompson mile.
Shuttle hurdles Larson, Hawkins,
Dennis Miller; Mike Stearns, alter
nate. Broad jump Bob Tisdel. Hawkins.
Wayne Ciose; John Jones alternate.
High jump Tisdel. Larson, Bob
Tarns; Dave Bergman alternate.
Shot put Neil Plumley. Jim Fun
ton, Larry Anderson; Frank Albert
alternate.
Javelin El don Francis; Gary Lewis
alternate.
Discus Anderson; Larry Slessler
alternate.
Pole vault Lew Breazeale.
Managers Jim Hill and Ralph Todd.
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TORNADO RELAY RUNNER
Wilcey Winchell, above, will run
Japs in two events for Medford
on Saturday in the Hayward re
lays at Eugene. He is slated to
gallop the anchor half-mile of
the two-mile event and to run
the third lap of the mile relay.
(Landis-Shangle photo)
Phoenix High
Takes Dual
Track Meet
Phoenix Phoenix high track
and field men defeated Jackson
ville 94 to 45 yesterday in a dual
meet, taking firsts in all but two
of the 14 events.
Ron Muir won the mile and
half-mile for Jacksonville in
times of 5:14 and 2:15.5 respec
tively. The Pirates of Phoenix had
several double winners. Jim
James took the 70-yard high
hurdles in :11 and the high jump
at 5 feet 4 inches. Lewellyn
Witte won the 440-yard run in
:57.6, the 220 in :24.5 and tied
with Delmar Brood in the 100 in
:10.9. Brood nabbed the 100
yard low hurdles in :12.5.
Bill Madden won the shot put
for the Pirates with 43-4 and
the broad jump with 17-7. Jim
Korth was tops in the discus
with 104-10 and in the javelin
with 162-10. Carson took the
pole vault for Phoenix at 9-6
and the Pirates copped the 440
relay in :48.6.
Walcotr Called
In Boxing Probe
Chicago U.R) Jersey Joe
Walcott will be asked to tell all
he knows about corruption in
boxing before a Cook County
grand jury on Monday.
The f o r m er heavyweight
champion of the world was sub
poenaed Thursday to testify
about charges he made on radio
and television broadcasts.
Walcott, who took the world
title away from Ezzard Charles
in 1951 and lost it to Rocky Mar
ciano in 1952, said on a TV pro
gram that boxing needed strong
men to "clean it up."
Friday April IS, 1958
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE ELEVEN
Minnesota Vote Delays Bowl Okeh
MedfordJ&Tribune
JIM NAU CHOSEN HOOP
COACH AT CRATER HIGH
Central Point James Nau,
1953 graduate of Oregon State
college has been selected as
head basketball coach at Crater
high school
here.
He will have
a full teaching
load in the
social science
depart ment
and will assist
in football.
Nau is 26
years old, 6
feet 5 inches
tall and weighs 210 pounds. He
was a high school star at Santa
Ana, Calif., and came to Oregon
State in 1948. He was an out
standing player for the Rooks
and lettered the next three
years on the varsity squad where
he was regarded by Coach Slats
Gill as one of his top players.
Nau served two years in the
Air Force. During part of this
fa r-t i
V If
Jim Nau
time he was base athletics of
ficer ai Dow Air Force Base,
Bangor, Me., and coached and
played on the base basketball
team. At the present time he
is attending Oregon State com
pleting his work for his master's
degree. He has also been coach
ing the basketball team at Cen
tral Oregon junior college at
Bend.
Nau is married and has two
children.
In taking over the basketball
helm for the 1956-57 season, Nau
will succeed Leonard Warren,
football and basketball coach
here for a number of years, War
ren will handle only football as
head tutor next school year.
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By ED SAINSBURY
Chicago U.R) Minnesota's
vote against renewal of the Big
Ten Rose Bowl contract with
the Pacific Coast conference
prevented automatic extension
of the' agreement by the Western
conference.
Until the Minnesota faculty
voted to throw the matter back
to the conference again, no
school had voted against the ex
tension. Extension of the bowl pact,
for an indefinite period, was ap
proved by the conference's fac
ulty representatives and athletic
directors at Michigan State on
March 2.
But because the bowl agree
ment requires a waiver of legis
lation against post-season games
each renewal must be approved
by the faculties of the individ
ual members.
Should the faculty of one
school object, the legislation re
turns tovthe conference for fur
ther discussion and can become
effective when approved by a
majority vote.
Two Opponents '
In the conference meeting last
month Minnesota and North
western were the only oppon
ents against extension of the
pact, Northwestern's faculiy,
while it opposed the bowl agree
ment, decided that another vote
against the pact now would be
meaningless because a majority
of the conference will favor re
newal at the next meeting, May
25, 26 at Minneapolis.
Hence had Minnesota not vot
ed against renewal, it was un
likely there would have been a
negative vote by any member
to reopen the discussion.
Michigan State, Illinois, Wis
consin, Iowa, and Purdue have
voted for renewal while North
western did not report its oppo
sition to the extension. Thus
only Michigan, Indiana and
Ohio State remain to vote on
the agreement and none of these
schools, in three previous votes
on the bowl, ever have voted
against it.
Never Unanimoui
The Rose Bowl agreement
never has won unanimous ap
proval in the Big Ten. Minne
sota has voted against the con
tract on every ballot and North
western, initially for the bowl
agreement, has opposed the last
two renewals.
Others schools which have op
posed the pact on at least one
occasion were Illinois and Wis
consin. Illinois, though It ap
proved the extension this time,
suggested a possible return to
the clause prohibiting a team
from competing more than once
in three years. Currently a team
may compete every second year.
Prof. Henry Rottshaefer of the
Minnesota faculty said the sen
ate rejected the proposal "over
whelmingly" in a quick vote.
The present bowl pact with
the PCC is the third and has one
more year to run.
Record Busting
Golf Predicted
Beaumont, Tex. (U.R) The
54-hole 55,000 Babe Zaharias
Open got underway today amid
speculation that some of the lady
pros might v again sear the par
37-36-73 Beaumont Country club
course with record-shattering
rounds.
Louise Suggs started the par
breaking patterns when she won
the title two years ago with a
224. Then, along came Betty
Jameson last year to post a
sizzling 65 on opening day to
pace herself to a winning 210.
That compared with a 217 win
ning score posted in the in-
TO PLAY ALUMS
College Park, Md. (U.R)
Maryland's 1956 football team,
under new Coach Tommy Mont,
will climax its spring drills
Thursday by playing an alumni
team bulwarked by such pro
stars as Ed Modzelewski, Stan
Jones, Ron Waller and Ray
Krouse.
RECEIVES CITATION
New York (U.R) James
(Sunny Jim) Fitzsimmons, 81-year-old
dean of thoroughbred
trainers, was presented a cita
tion by the Sportsmanship Broth-
augural tournament by the tour
ney's honoree, Mrs. Babe Did
rikson Zaharias.
Mrs. Zaharias will not be able
to be here this year since re
currence of a cancer attack has
her hospitalized at Galveston.
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