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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1957)
MEDFOfaVSWTEIBUXE iPdDiiTr Oregon Ducks Outplay UCLA's Bruins 21-0 Eugene TP Coach Len Cas anova said today that none of his players suffered serious injuries in Saturday night's game with UCLA in Portland which saw the Ducks surprise even their most avid rooters with a 21-0 victory. Oregon meets San Jose State here this coming Saturday in a tuneup test for a key game on Oct. 19 with Washington State at Pullman. - Jim Shanley and Jack Crab- tree paced the Ducks to their win on a wet field over UCLA but they had plenty of help from a fired-up team which out played the favored Bruins throughout. The crowd was 16,- 332. The victory, was the first ever for Oregon against a Red Sanders-coached UCLA team. Shanley raced 10 yards for one of the Oregon touchdowns and racked up 101 yards rush ing in 20 carries to become the second leading ball carrier in Oregon football history. Crabtree, a senior from Lake wood, Calif., came into his own ' at the key quarterback slot, passing four yards for one touchdown to end Ron Stover and completing seven of his eight aerial attempts. Stover caught seven of Oregon's eight pass completions. Oregon's other touchdown was made by Senior fullback Jack Morris who plunged over from the two after a first period drive which went 70 yards in 15 plays. Morris also kicked three straight conversions. Oregon, using an unbalanced Women's Golf As disdainful of the weather as the postal service, the Ladies Golf association of the Rogue Valley Country club met last Thursday to play on the board of directors trophy, and enjoy the directors luncheon. The luncheon was held on the patio of Mrs. Ray Frisbie's home, where the awards were also pre sented. Winning the trophy in the 18 hole division was Mrs. William Miller with a net 81. Mrs. Doro thy Dowson accepted a silver bowl as 9-hole division winner with a net 49. There were also group win ners for last Thursday's play: A Group, Mrs. Margo Collins, net 83; B Group, Mrs. Marge Lam bert, net 88; C and D Group win ner, Mrs. Marge Knight, net 87; and, 9-hole group winner, Mrs. Billie Kliever, net 54. This Thursday's play will be on a medalion given by the Trans-Mississippi Golf associa tion and will be straight medal play. t Members desiring to be paired in regular play are requested to telephone Mrs. F. L. Flink (SP 3-1536). The lady whose name appears first in the pairings is to call the other two to arrange a starting time. Pairings: Mr. Richard linen. Mrs. William Blackledge. Mrs. W. T. Clark; Mrs. Frank Tamney. Mrs. Dean Lambert, Mrs. L. W. Bates; Mrs. H. E. Nulton; Mrs. John Day. Mrs. Tom CulberUon; Mrs. Belle Schenck, Mrs. Rose Bunch, Mrs. C. B. Collins. Mrs. William E. Ruffner, Mrs. B. L. Nuttin. Mrs. Alton Hart: Mrs. Wil liam Miller, Mrs. Noble Vincent. Mrs. Jack Mitchell: Mrs. Tred Coleman. Mrs. Mahr Reymers. Mrs. William Schei: Mrs. Ken Teeters. Mrs. H. S. Elbert, Mrs. Robert Templeton. Mrs. Edward W. Sickels, Mrs. Ray Frisbie, Mrs. William Stark. Mrs. Paul Walker, Mrs. Ed Milne. Mrs. Warren Lesseg; Mrs. Ed Radzweit, Mrs. Ted Groomes. Mrs. Sam Colton; Mrs. Ed Gordon. Mrs. L. T. Anderson, airs. Bettie Boyle. Mrs. Tom Hamsberger: Mrs. W. A. Samuelson. Mrs. Donald McGeary; Mrs. William Knope, Mrs. Ralph Bar clav, Mrs. Russell Heysell; Mrs. Wayne Safley, Mrs. Jerry Olson. Mrs. L. C. McLaughlin: Mrs. Miles Doran. Mrs. C. H. Barrell. Mrs. J. W. Barnard. Mrs. Frank Benesh. Mrs. W. T. Cowning. Mrs. Reese Alexander; Mrs. Ira Smith, Mrs. Floyd Somers. Mrs. Rav Sorenson; Mrs. Roy Smith, Mrs. R. "B. Thierolf, Mrs. Charles Mclntyre; Mrs. Paul Dix. Mrs. R. J. Rementeria. Mrs. Darold McDonald, Mrs. D. H. Adams: Mrs. Royal Bebb. Mrs. R. R. Parsons; Mrs. L. W. Buonocore, Mrs. John Raapke: Mrs. Jack Kerr. Mrs. W. H. Pyle: Mrs. Edward Kliever, Mrs. Paul Haviland; Mrs. Tom McFadden. Mrs. Dorothv Dowson; Mrs. .Robert DeLorme. MrsfeRobert Wells. Mrs. John Bunker. Mrs. Howard Scroggin: Mrs. Vincent Nicoletti. Mrs. William Deatherage: Mrs. Jerry Laus man, Mrs. Glenn Keys: Mrs. Tom G. Polk, Mrs. John B. Ripley; Mrs. Wayne Mack, Mrs. Keith Bates: Mrs. Galen Sanner. Mrs. S. McQueen; Mrs. Dick Alley, Mrs. David Loury; Mrs. R. S. Wise. Mrs. M. W. McGrew. line, caught the usually strong UCLA defense flatfooted with its mixture of passing and run ning plays. And Coach Len Casanova's tough defense threw back every UCLA scoring threat. The field was wet from rain which fell most of the week and a downpour in the second quarter. The victory was Ore gon's second in PCC play this season against no losses. The biggest Bruin scoring threat came early in the fourth period with sub-tailback Chuck Kendall directing the attack UCLA drove to the Oregon eight but a fourth down pass from Kendall to Craig Chudy was incomplete in the end zone. It was the first time UCLA has been shut out in 22 games. The last previous time the Bruins were blanked was by Maryland, 7-0, in 1955. Shanley, a senior who has 1438 yards rushing, is second only to George Bell, halfback on Oregon's cotton bowl team of 1948, who has 1729 yards. STATISTICS: lO 18 205 95 8-10 VCLA First downs 13 ' 102 106 9-15 1 8-40.5 2 74 Rushing yardage Passing yardage Passes Passes intercepted by 1 Punts 6-35 3 Fumbles Lost 0 Yards penalized 57 SCORE BY PERIODS: Oregon 7 7 7 0 21 UCLA 0 0 0 0 0 Oregon scoring: Touchdowns, Mor ris (2. run): Stover (4. pass from Crab tree); Shanley (10, run). Conversions, Morris 3. Three Clubs Knot In Northwest Grid Conference By UNITED PRESS Willamette, Oregon Tech and Oregon College of Education scored important wins Saturday in counting action in the North west and Oregon Collegiate con ferences. Willamette joined Linfield and College of Idaho in a first place tie in the Northwest Conference by defeating Lewis and Clark 25-14 on second half come back. Lewis and Clark led 14-12 at the half but the Bearcats had too much power. All three leaders have 1-0 records. Linfield stepped out of the conference and defeated South ern Oregon, an OCC favorite, 14-9, on a wet field at Ashland. Southern Oregon was on the Linfield three when the game ended. Oregon College handed de fending OCC champ Eastern Ore gon a 34-13 shellacking at Mon mouth Saturday night, building up a 34-0 lead before the Moun ties could score. Oregon Tech tied OCE with a 1-0 record and the conference lead by stopping Portland State 14-0. Pacific dropped a 26-7 decis ion to the Seattle Ramblers in a non-counting game. Sanction Denied In Welter Bout Boston (ID The Oct. 29 bout scheduled between Tony De Marco of Boston and Virgil Akins of St. Louis Saturday was denied official sanction as a wel terweight title match. The Sharkey Athletic associa tion announced the bout Friday, billing it as a Massachusetts Boxing commission and Nation al Boxing association approved title match. But the NBA and the chair man of the World Boxing Com mittee's championship rating group said the bout would not be recognized as a match to fill the welterweight title vacated by Carmen Basilio when he wrested the middleweight crown from Sugar Ray Robinson last month. NBA President Gillis Jackson said the NBA intended to fill the welterweight crown with the winner of a tourney between the top-four ranked contenders in the nation. Jackson identified these as De Marco. Gil Turner, Isaac Logart and Vince Martinez. RETIREMENT CAN BE FUN when you have the regular income provided by Life Insurance, but you should start planning NOW. Can the Man from Manufacturers today. mmsu mzs$m District Representative: C. "CHUCK" COX 210 Elm St., Medford, Oregon Tel. MWJII,U j I. I,. l ll.l j IM.IM GO AFTER WILDCAT Four Southern Ore gon collegians go after Linfield Quarterback Ron Parrish in the fourth quarter. He made only a short gain. Head down and driving for Linfield udge ied Haiders Ashland Linfield college turned two breaks into touch downs and relied on firm ground defense and the flight of time Saturday night to. outlast South ern Oregon college 14 to 9 in non-conference contention on Fuller field here. Final horn .of contest came in the nick of time to preserve a Wildcat victory. The SOC Red Raiders of the Rogue, held to a net of only 14 yards for the night on the ground, rolled up 126 yards on Lance Locke aerials in the final quarter to tabulate their one. touchdown and come within three yards of another. Just a few more seconds in the hassle and the score might have been 15 to 14 for SOC. Locke tossed passes to Chuck Crandall, Cy Perkins and Ron Maurer for 61 yards in the dying moments and the ball was on the Linfield three at the final buzzer. Slavros Field Goal Southern Oregon scored first in the contest when Quarterback George Stavros thumped a field goal with Halfback Eldon Fran cis holding in the second quar ter. Linfield's first touchdown was in the same period after End Jerry Beier and Guard Howard Morris boomed in to block a Stavros punt. TD play was a five-yard pass, Quarterback Ron Parrish to Halfbapk Bob Flood. Guard Gene Manley kicked the bonus. Bob Flood gave the 'Cats their other TD when he snared a Locke pass and ran 49 yards to the goal after the interception. Manley's conversion kick- again was ' good. The Raiders marched 47 yards in the fourth panel and reached the end zone on a Locke to Cran dall pass . good for 13 yards. Locke's extra point kick was blocked. Although the Raiders were on the short end of the score and made only 14 net yards rushing, they dominated the game in overall yardage and first downs. SOC picked up 168 yards through the ozone to only 11 on pass completions for the Wild cats. Linfield, however, got 23 yards on a pass interference in fraction by the Raiders. Statis tics also showed the Ashland collegians defensively sturdy on the ground. Linfield netted only 64 rushing yards. 37-Yard Pass Initial score by SOC came after the Ashland ' eleven had moved from their own 44-yard line to the Linfield seven on a 37-yard pass play, Locke to Cran dall. Fullback Ron Maurer swept end to the two and hit right tackle to the one, but Locke lost to the five on a keeper. Stavros then booted the ball through the uprights. Linfield's first of three punt blocks (Morris got the other two) gave it the ball on the SOC 26. Fullback Sel Spray went up the middle to the three-yard line. Halfback Dwight Umbarger lost to the six and on third down Parrish got off the TD heave to Flood. Flood's interception followed a punt from the Linfield 11 by Parrish, giving the ball to the Raiders .on the Linfield 47. The pass stolen from the SOC club was a flat one and enabled the 24 57 SP 2-8420 Wildcats Wildcat halfback opportunity to romp away easily to the goal. At the start of the fourth quar ter, Southern Oregon had the ball on the Linfield 43. A Locke pass, that Maurer almost caught, was intercepted by Parrish who was downed on his one. The 'Cats got out to the 10 and Par rish punted to the 38. Maurer re turned the ball to the 32. A Quarterback Larry Yarnell to Halfback Lee McGill pass for 23 yards put the-ball on the Linfield nine but a fumble by Halfback Larry Maurer was re covered by Wildcat Guard Vic Fox to give the ball to the Mc Minnville club on the 12. Raiders Score The 'Cats got out to the 17 and Parrish kicked with SOC taking over on the 47. After one complete heave, Locke passed to Crandall for 17 yards. Another toss misfired the next to Crandall gained 12. McGill reached the Linfield 13 on a five yard right sweep. Locke threw flat into the end zone to Cran dall for the TD. After an exchange of downs. Linfield just hanging on to the ball marched to its 40. SOC Halfback Delmar Brood then ran Parrish's punt back from the SOC 25 to the 36. Locke chucked to Crandall for 17 yards, to Perkins.for 27 and to Maurer for 17 to carry to the three. Linfield offensive moves in the hassle were halted on the SOC 25 and six-yard line. There were Raider drives to the Lin field 20 and 36. STATISTICS SO Lin. Net yards rushing 14 64 Net yards passing 168 11 Total net yards 182 75 Passes 20-9 15-2 Passes had intercepted 3 2 Punting 10-30 10-27.5 First downs .. 8 5 Yards penalized 28 28 Fumbles lost 4 . 3 1 SUNNV BROOK B01RB0.1WHISKET OtD 1 $::: . r S 1 jltl ' VIP-"t4 Mjf& V5 H WINNING THE WEST! P ftgaajf SO, fmtm A&JCTl S'i -Sfel after thefam American artist ' i fSf " ""S W FREDERIC REMINGTON Wt "''?T"ji'TAIMT FROM ifZft 'T KENTU.CKY J MW. "-2 A T"OLV AMERICAN J THE OLD SUNNY BROOK CO, LOUISVILLE, KY, DISTRIBUTED BY NATIONAL the Raiders is Jim McAbee. The other SOC players are Herb Colley (72), Eldon Francis (30) and Modesto Jiminez (77). Linfield won 14 to 9. Jay vee Grid Mix Tonight Medford high school junior varsity gridders begin their season this evening. They will be hosts to Grants Pass at 7 p.m While the Junior Tornado goes into action without a game behind it, the Cavemen have played one or two con tests. They defeated Ashland 18 to 13. Coaches Frank Roelandt and John Kovenz of the Tornado indicated that the crew tonight will be made up entirely of players who did not make the Marshfield varsity trip. They have been working with a jay vee squad of 33 to 40 players for the past couple of weeks. A cross country race be tween the Medford and Grants Pass teams is set for 6:45 p.m. Knoxes 'Decide' Ron Will Play Chicago (IP) Harvey Knox, spokesman for Harvey and Ron nie Knox, has indicated he will allow - Chicago Bear owner George Halas to take his pass tossing stepson back into the fold. The elder Knox said Sunday that the Knoxes held a man-toman talk over the week end and decided .Ronnie would play pro fessional football for the falter ing Western division champions if Halas is. willing to forgive and forget. Halas slapped Ronnie with a suspension Thursday for "wilful violation of rules and regulations of the club." In answer to Harvey's offer, Halas said, "No comment."- Chicago (IP) The Illinois Ohio State football game will be televised on a regional basis next Saturday. It will be the first Beg Ten conference game televised regionally this season. Kentucky Straight Bourbon The great bourbon of the Old West is winning new friends everywhere ! The smoothest of fine Kentucky bourbons has the taste, the mildness, the quality that will win you too! Monday, October 7, 1957 Brown, Colt Teams Lead Pro Division By EARL WRIGHT United Press Sports Writer The Cleveland Browns, who hold most of the patents on foot ball defense, and the Baltimore Colts, who have some pending, grabbed the National league's division leads today with the only perfect records after two weeks of play. The Cleveland and Baltimore defensive units provided the only hints of consistency as the 12-club league rocked under five upsets for the second straight week. The Chicago Bears, defending Western Divis ion champions, loomed as the "bust" of the season as they took their second straight whip ping. Cleveland scored a 23-12 vic tory over the Steelers Saturday night at Pittsburgh and took the undisputed Eastern Division lead when the Washington Red skins surprised the" Cardinals Sunday at Chicago, 37-14. Bears Upset Baltimore upset the Bears Saturday night, 21-10, and be came the sole Western leader when the Detroit Lions scored a 24-14 Sunday victory over the Green Bay Packers. The New York Giants were fa vored over the Eagles by seven Newspaper Picks Four St. Louis (ffl Stan Musial, Ted Williams, Warren Spahn and Billy Pierce today were picked by the Sporting News for this year's outstanding player and pitcher awards in the major leagues. Calling it the "season of old pros,"' the national baseball weekly noted that all four of the players were over 30 years of age and three of them were closer to 40. Wif f Smith Cops Voluntary Golf . San Francisco (IP) Wiffi Smith, 21-year-old St. Clair, Mich., golfer who was born In California and learned the game in Mexico City, today was $831 richer as first place winner in the United Voluntary Services Open tournament at the Pre sidio. Miss Smith took the title with a steady, even-par 74, in the final round of the $5,000 tourna ment Sunday to put her seven strokes in front of Fay "Crocker of Montevideo, Uruguay. Sawdust Telephone 2-2111 MEDFORD FUEL GO. To) The frontiersmen of the West favored partial to Sunny Brook's Kentucky flavor. too, prefer the superior quality and PT. 45 QT- DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CO. BOTH 86 PROOF. MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEN points Saturday night at Phila delphia and were lucky to win 24-20. In the other Sunday clash, the Forty-Niners thrilled 59,637 rooters at San Francisco by rally ing to surprise the Los Angeles Rams, 23-20. Cleveland and Baltimore have 2-0 records while Philadelphia and the Bears have 0-2 marks. All the other teams have 1-1 records. San Francisco OP) The San Francisco Forty Niners edged the highly-favored Los Angeles Rams, 23-20, Sunday in a "spec tacular" that kept professional football fans glued to their seats until the final gun. The Rams slaughtered the Forty Niners, 58-27, in exhibition play less than a month ago, but the two teams came up with their typical contest Sunday complete with tricks, "impos sible" pass catching, and last minute threats. However, it was a costly vic tory for the San Francisco, team. Bob St. Clair, a 265-pound of fensive tackle who had been in destructible in five years of play, suffered a shoulder separation and may be out for the rest of the season. The Rams took a seven point lead in the first quarter without much strain, but in the seeond period, Quarterback Y. A. Tittle dug into his bag of tricks and the Forty Niners went to work. Id) Invites you to these TV GAMES World 'FOOTBALL First Pacific Coast Conference Game SATURDAY, OCT. 12 JSclwciud- 2-5271 To) Whiskey bourbon . . . and were Today's whiskey-wise Americans, mildness of Sunny Brook! KENTUCKY BLENDED WHISKEY CONTAINS 65 Dick Stearns OGA Medal Meet Victor Cornelius (IP) Dick Stearns of Portland, won the seventh an nual medal play championship of the Oregon Golf Association at Forest Hills Country club here Sunday after coming from seven strokes behind to post a six-over-par 222. E. L. (Gene) Bates, of Forest Hills, carded a 223 and tied for second with Portland's Dick Yost and Don Krieger. At 224 were Bob Atkinson Jr., Portland; Ad Huycke, Oswego, and Barry Ott and Jim Hunt of Forest Hills. Defending champ Bob Prall of Salem finished well back with 232. - Salem (IP) Willamette's football team left by plane today to fly to Honolulu for a game Friday with the University of Hawaii Rainbows. The Bearcats will return next Sunday. We Pick Up DEER HIDES Phone SP 2-2877 or SP 2-6435 6th YEAR Ship 3 Sea Scouts Series TBU-KHK CONCRETE C9 248E.MeANDREWS RP. NOTE TO BLEND BUYERS! You get a superior bTen6 vrhtn you set a Kn. fuefcr 6'end. 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