Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 29, 1957, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    EIGHT MEDFORD (OREGON)
Stanford
To Come
BY PETER HAYES
San Francisco 'IP Stan
ford's "lily-white" status in the
bickering Pacific Coast Confer
ence came under scrutiny today
when Al Masters, the Indians
athletic director, faces an As
sembly subcommittee investigat
ing the PCC.
Among others scheduled to
testify before the group headed
by Frank Bonelli D-Huntington
Park are Chancellor Clark Kerr
of California, who is scheduled
to become university president
next year and Rixfor K. Snyder,
DeSVIarco, Akins Clash
Tonight In Title Bout
Boston W) Ten-round Tony
Dellarco, fretting more about
the first round, and Virgil
Akins, lights-out puncher,
turned cautious boxer, collide
tonight in a 15-round welter
weight "title" fight as muddled
as their new styles.
Conditioned to go the distance
by the most strenuous training
Russian Surgeons ;
Tell of Creating
Two-Headed Dogs
New York (W Two Rus
sian surgeons said Monday they
had achieved a feat medically
equivalent to the phenomenon of
the Soviet space satellite circling
the earth.
The doctors showed movies to
group of Columbia University
surgeons and medical students to
bolster their claim that the Rus
sians have created two-headed
dogs and replaced the hearts of
dogs with a new arterial sewing
machine.
Dr. V. V. Kousnov, dean of the
First Moscow Medical School,
and Dr. P. J. Androsev, head of
the Surgical Institute of Moscow,
gave details of what they claimed
to be a revolutionary achieve
ment in a lecture at Columbia's
College of Physicians and Sur
geons. Not Soon For Humans
They said they did not be
lieve animal experiments such as
theirs could be applied to human
beings very soon. But they re
lated the case of a woman whose
nearly-severed hand was reat
tached and restored to normal
through use of a new device for
mending blood vessels.
In the dog experiments, they
said, a head was removed from
one dog and placed on another.
The dog survived seven days
with two heads. And a dog that
received a heart from another
dog lived 32 days, they said.
All this was made possible,
the doctors claimed, by the new
arterial sewing machine.
The doctors, who plan to tour
the country with their "medical
fantasy," said they hoped to ex
change information with Amer
ican medical researchers.
Mayfield fo Discuss
Bond Issue Proposal
Leonard Mayfield, superin
tendent of Medford schools, will
discuss the district's proposed
bond issue at a special meeting
at West Side school at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, according to Ron
ald Weatherford, principal.
Weatherford said the meeting
would be open to anyone inter
ested. Patrons of school district
549C will vote Nov. 5 on a Sl,
786,000 bond issue to finance
construction of a two-year buil
ding program in the district.
URGES SCHOOL AID
New York IW General Mo
tors President Harlow Curtice
has called on the nation's 14,825
largest corporations to help the
nation's 82 medical schools
through their present financial
emergency. Curtice said the
medical schools need S10 million
more a year to enable them to
add teachers, expand enroll
ments and start new courses.
r
aIcHRIST3IAS GIFT FOR HOI
OSSSSw -jvj,,
BY fAMOUS
J DORIC ST M J
DORIC SET
SreanTl Ring . S39.50
rido'a ting . S3S.00
C
YOUR
Specializing in Fine Silver,
130 EAST MAIN
MAIL TRIBUNE
lily White'
Under Fire Today
Stanford faculty advisor on con
ference policy.
The committee is seeking in
formation on whether collegiate
athletic sports in California
should be governed by a state
commission. Bonelli has termed
the PCC "on the way down" and
has proposed that an "all-California"
conference be formed
with the four main schools in
this state acting as a nucleus.
The probe is an offshoot of
last year's conference scandals
which saw UCLA, Southern Cal
ifornia, Washington and Calif-
sting of his career, DeMarco, the
25-year-old Boston boy was a
10 to 7 favorite to win tonight
if he gets past the first round.
His 29-year-old opponent from
St. Louis ranks one-two with De
Marco as the hardest puncher in
the division, but has been work
ing on his left jab and boxing
generally in training sessions
here.
A controversy blew up when
the Massachusetts Boxing Com
mission sanctioned this as a title
fight, ostensibly in accord with
a National Boxing Association
mandate. Chief opposition has
come from New York Commis
sioner Julius Helfand whose
state is the only one not in the
NBA.
Morse, Byrd Lead
Seriate Dissenters
During '57 Session
By Congressional Quarterly
Washington (CQ) Two very
different Democrats Sens. Har
ry Byrd of Virginia and Wayne
Morse of Oregon established
themselves as the Senate's lead
ing dissenters in 1957.
Byrd and Morse took the mi
nority viewpoint on just about
one-third of the roll calls where
bipartisan majorities agreed, ac
cording to Congressional Quar
terly's analysis of Bipartisan
Support.
The analysis was based on 69
Senate and 41 House roll calls
on which a majority of voting
Democrats and Republicans took
the same position.
Byrd bucked bipartisan major
ities 33 per cent of the time;
Morse, 32 per cent. Leading dis
senters among the Republicans
26 per cent of the time were
Senss William E. Jenner (Ind.)
and John J. Williams (Del.).
Fifty-three per cent of the
1957 roll calls were bipartisan
votes, the CQ a'nalysis showed.
Bipartisanship was up slightly
from 1956, when 50 per cent of
the roll calls produced party
agreements, but was well below
the 1955 level of 65 per cent
agreement.
Local Scores
Senator Morse backed bipar
tisan majorities on 55 per cent
of the roll calls, and opposed
them on 32 per cent.
Sen. Richard L. Neuberger
(D) voted with bipartisan major
ities 83 per cent of the time and
against them 17 per cent of the
time.
The average Republican Sena
tor backed bipartisan stands
more frequently than did the
average Democrat. The typical
GOP Senator's Bipartisan Sup
port and Opposition scores were
75 and 11 per cent; the typical
Democratic Senator's 70 and 15
per cent. Absences accounted for
the. remaining votes.
Similarly in the House, bi
partisanship was stronger among
Republicans than among Demo
crats. The average GOP Repre
sentative voted with the biparti
san stand 71 per cent of the time,
and against it 16 per. cent of the
time. The typical Democratic
Representative supported the bi
partisan majority on 69 per cent
of the roll calls and opposed it
on 19 per cent.
Rep. Charles O. Porter (D)
voted with bipartisan majorities
78 per cent of the time and
against them 10 per cent of the
time.
Famous for over 100 years
See our tremendous selection of
Artcan ed wedding rinps for men,
made of specially hardened gold,
and guaranteed for a lifetime.
Come in to-day !
T.i-i. mrir rr Prtec tie!. Fd. Tlx.
Kings an Urged to snow detail.
awrence s
FRIENDLY FAMILY STORE
Diamonds and Watches
EST, 1908
Tuesday. October 29, 1957
State
ornia heavily penalized for in
fractions. The first three teams
remain banned from the Rose
Bowl for various periods as a
phase of the penalties.
Bonelli is from Los Angeles
County, where sentiment runs
strong for the two schools in
that area to break out of the
PCC.
Clean Bill
Stanford emerged "clean"
from the disclosures of 1956 as
did all the Northwestern schools
with the exception of the Hus
kies. Among those invited to testify
Monday was Prof. Emmett B.
Moore, PCC faculty advisor
from Washington State, but he
wrote that he could not attend
because of the flu. Bonelli said
he would see if Dr. Moore could
be subpoenaed but committtee
counsel Francis R. Ruggieri said
that he only probably would at
tend voluntarily.
Monday's all day session,
which is the second part of an
investigation that started in Los
Angeles and may end there
brought out that:
California has no argument
with the $25,000 fine levied
against it by the conference for
illegal loans to a few players;
The Bears may secede from
the conference if the latter does
not go along with a new athletic
code that the university, which
includes UCLA, adopted last
June;
Some Opposition
The Association of In
dependent California- Colleges
and Universities private schools
is opposed to formation of a
state commission to regulate
their sports.
Greg Englehard, California's
athletic director, told the group
he personally was against the
fining system but that the Bears
legally were assessed because
"we were caught with our finger
in the pie."
Engelhard also said the Bears
"will try and sell the conference
a five-point program adopted by
the regents last June and if not
successful, we'll probably end
our participation in the PCC."
Robert E. Burns, president of
College of Pacific, spoke in be
half of the collegiate association
and said that a commission
would "confound and complic
ate" matters in the sports scene.
Among others who appeared
were Coach Pete Elliott of Calif
ornia and Chuck Taylor of Stan
ford. Nautilus Went
Near North Pole
Groton, Conn. (IP) The atomic-powered
submarine Nautilus
traveled within 180 miles of the
North Pole during the five and
one-half days she was sub
merged exploring the waters
under the Arctic ice pack, the
Navy disclosed today.
The Navy said the Nautilus
was out of contact with the
outer world for 74 hours while
nosing her way under the thick
permanent ice of the Polar pack.
The Navy also disclosed that
the conventional-type sumbar
ine, Trigger, accompanied the
Nautilus during part of the
underwater exploration. The
Trigger is the Navy's newest
snorkle-type sub. It was not re
vealed to what extent the Trig
ger took part in the dangerous
assignment, which the Navy de
scribed as taking the submarine
farther north and at a faster
speed than heretofore accomp
lished by any other known ship.
Rear Adm. FrederickB. War
d e r, commander Submarine
Force Atlantic Fleet, said sonar
equipment helped in locating
and avoiding submerged ice for
mations. Also, he said, a major
significance of the Nautilus' trip
was the fact she didn't have to
fight the heavy ice fields nor
mally encountered by surface
ships in Arctic Waters.
Suit Filed Against
Medford Corporation
Burton F. Shults, 64, of 1465
Spring st., Medford, has filed a
complaint in circut court against
Medford corporation asking $22,
000 general damages and $992.75
special damages plus compensa
tion for injuries received last
March while employed by the
corporation.
According to the complaint,
Shults sustained a severe and
permanent injury which disabled
him from performing his duties
for a long time when an adz
struck his left leg March 4, 1957.
He charged that the company
was careless and negligent in re
quiring the plaintiff to perform
hazardous work with a hand
tool at a time when the weather
was stormy in ah unshelted area.
Attorney for the plaintiff is
Stanley C. Jones Jr., of Medford.
Use of carbon black in auto
tires started when one manufac
turer used it to distinguish his
tires from competitors, and later
learned that it served to toughen
the rubber for greater use.
1
I iff rvg$ if s
" '
BOTTLED UP Perm's Fred Duelling is hemmed by Navy tacklers after gaining
seven yards on an end sweep in the first quarter of their game in Philadelphia. Two
of the Navy tacklers are Ned Oldham (27) and Tony Anthony (76).
Fanfare
Ed Bingham, ex-Medford high
and University of Oregon ath
lete, plans to make a career of
military aviation. That is the re
port from Lackland Air Force
Base, San Antonio, Tex., where
the javelin thrower and basket
ball player is undergoing pre
flight training. Sports still hold
an intriguing challenge to Bing
ham, who is a second lieutenant.
He and his sights on qualifying
as one of the spear tossers on the
United States Olympic team.
Bingham is in the 3700th Offi
cers Pre-Flight Training Group.
ECKEL AT BYU
Paul Eckel, ex-Medford high.
Is a regular guard this season
for the Brigham Young uni
versity football team. Eckel, a
business administration stu
dent for BYU, is a sophomore
in eligibility for the Cougars.
Last season was to have been
his first as a varsity player but
he suffered a broken jaw in
practice and laid out of com
petition. FLU AND FORFEITURE
The Southern Oregon confer
ence (knock on wood) has not
been disrupted by the epidemic
of flu and colds going the rounds
although most of the clubs have
had their sieges. Two Rogue
league games have been post
poned because of the inroads of
sickness but the top two clubs
have managed to get in all their
games. In this area District 5B
schools have " been hardest hit
with six postponements or can
cellations. Only schools not forc
ed to call off games are not in
the race. If the cancelled frays
Argentina Wildly .
Greets Armstrong
Buenos Aires (IP) Firemen
turned high-pressure hoses on
a jumpin' and jivin crowd of
5,000 Argentina jazz aficionados
who turned out to welcome
trumpeter Louis (Satchmo) Arm-
strong Monday night.
The perspiring and disheveled
Armstrong said it was the
"roughest welcome I ever got."
The demonstrators swirled in
to Ezeiza International airport,
outside of Buenos Aires, .and
spilled out across the runways
when the famed American Negro
trumpet player and his jazz
combo arrived for a 10-day stay.
The streams of water failed
to dampen the. spirit of the
crowd which had been whipped
into a virtual frenzy by a var
iety of impromptu jazz bands
at the airport.
Armstrong waited inside the
plane for almost half an hour
before braving his fans. With
two federal policemen running
interference, he dashed into the
chating, cheering crowd.
Mrs. Robert Thornton
To Be Oregon Delegate
Salem (IP) Oregon's official
delegate to the sixth national
meeting of Unesco next month
in San Francisco will be Mrs.
Robert Y. Thornton of Salem,
vice chairman of the Oregon Un
esco commission for six years.
Washington OP) The Su
preme Court has rejected an ap
peal by convicted atom spy Mor
ton Sobell.
Bay
At
Builders Supply
QUALITY
BLOCKS
Bricks, Flues,
Drain Tile
727
W. McAndrews
Ph. SP 2-4107
By DICK JEWETT
Mail Tribune Sports Editor
affect the determining of a dis
trict champ, district committee
men are expected to rule that
the team asking to have a game
called off be charged with a for
feit. 'REAL LOSS
The Baker High Bulldogs,
tutored by Stan Smith, ex
Eagle Point High coach, final
ly have suffered a "real" foot
ball loss, 13 to 7, at the hands
of McLoughlin High of Milton
Freewater last Friday. They
won five in a row before the
flu bug forced them to forfeit
to Hermision.
LEGION GRADS IN SERIES
A communication of the Amer
ican Legion points out that 28
graduates of the Legion's junior
baseball program were included
on the playing rosters of the New
York Yankees and Milwaukee
Braves in the 1957 World Series.
WEED WANTS GAME
Weed, Calif., High school. Is
looking for a Nov. 8 football
game, according to a telephone
call from Principal Jerry Ku
bli. Weed is unmarred in seven
games and plays Yreka this
Friday in a contest which de
termines the Siskiyou County
league crown.
National Guard
Holds Conference
Portland OP) About 250
National Guard and Army of
ficers, including 10 generals,
gathered here Monday for the
eighth annual National Guard
Bureau, Army division confer
ence of the 6th Army area,
which includes Oregon, Calif
ornia, Utah, Washington, Idaho,
Montana, Nevada, Arizona, Ha
waii and Alaska.
Maj. Gen. Donald W. McGow
an said the high ranking group
would discuss how to maintain
a strength of 400,000 men "with
out our appropriation."
Mcflnwan. who heads the con-
ference. explained that the
guard has been directed to main
tain a minimum strength of 400,
000 with less money than was
asked of Congress.
WAREHOUSE $yyF- J
CJSGC3 O333ood
get it faster. ..for less...
with a BUTLER steel building
You can get floor space fast, for factory, warehouse
or store, with a Butler steel building! Adaptable
Butler design is easily suited to large or small, sim
ple or complex building layouts. Low-cost erection,
and mass-production savings give you up to 47 per
cent more usable floor space for the same money.
Fire-safe Butler buildings with galvanized or alu
minum covering require little upkeep. You can get
clear-span widths up to 70 feet, in many lengths.
See us belore you build, uur service in
cludes everything from foundation to
insulation. Call or write us todayl
Medford
240 E. McAndrews
Webfoots Cop
Empire Title
Eugene (IP) Coach Bill Bow
erman's Oregon Webfoots won
the Emerald Empire cross coun
try meet Monday over a course
nearly three miles long, scoring
18 points to 45 for second place
Oregon State.
Lewis and Clark was third
with 95 and Portland fourth
with 111.
Jim Grelle of Oregon was the
individual winner with a time
of 14 minutes 21 seconds.
BEARS GO FOR UCLA
Berkeley, Calif. (IP) Center
Frank Donetti, who made a good
showing for the California Bears
against Oregon last week, will
get a chance at the starting spot
Saturday against UCLA, accord
ing to Coach Pete Elliott.
Meier Quadruplets
Get Milk Solution
Elgin, N.D. (IP) The pre
mature Meier quadruplets, now
four days old, were given a di
luted milk solution today and
doctors reported their condi
tion unchanged.
Crowds of visitors continued
to flock to the hospital here to
view the girls. Visitors can see
the quads in their incubators
from behind a glass window of
the hospital nursery.
A glucose feeding Monday was
the first nourishment the quads
received since their birth Fri
day. Physicians said that was
a normal procedure in the case
of premature children.
The quadruplets were born to
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Meier, who
live in a four-room house on a
320-acre farm. The couple also
have boys, aged 3 to 10.
Robert Duncan Named
To House Ways, Means
Salem Rep. Robert Duncan
(D), Medford, has been named
vice chairman of the House
Ways and Means committee dur
ing the special session of the
Oregon Legislature, now in pro
gress here.
Sen. Phil Lowry (R), Medford,
is a member of the Senate Taxa
tion committee, whose member
ship was unchanged from the
regular session.
Blow Pipe
0
Phone SP 3-6294
SPORTS
Cougars Planning
L'Fere' For OSC
Pullman, Wash. (If) Coach
Jim Suthelrand, still beaming
over Washington State's victory
over Southern California, today
made plans for taking on Ore
gon State at Corvallis Saturday.
Fullback Eddie Stevens
sprained an ankle and Don El
lingsen suffered a broken nose
in the Trojan game, but Elling
son was out for practice Mon
day and should see action
against the Beavers.
PLAYERS SENT DOWN
Detroit (IP) Minor League
center Guyle Fielder, picked up
from Seattle, and rookie left
wing Bill McCreary were sent
back to the minors today by the
Detroit Red Wings. Fielder was
returned to Seattle and Mc
Creary was sent to Hershey, Pa.
LOSCUTOFF LOST
Boston (IP) Forward Jim
Loscutoff will be lost to the Bos
ton Cletics for an indefinite per
iod because of an injured knee.
Loscutoff suffered the injury in
a game against New York Satur
day night.
BEDNARIK SCORES TD
Philadelphia (IP) Chuck Be-
narik, the Philadelphia Eagles,
235-pound all-league linebacker
has scored one touchdown dur
ing his seven-year career in the
National Football League. That,
of course, came on a pass inter
ception.
Turks Riot Over
Alleged Cheating
Istanbul, Turkey (IP)
A
crowd of 8,000 persons rioted at
a southeast Turkish city today
in protest against alleged "cheat
ing" by the victorius Democrat
ic Party in Sunday's general
elections.
First reports said a police of
ficer and a boy were killed and
seven other persons severely in
jured in the clashes in which
rioters marched shouting
through the city of Gazianstep.
All available police reinforce
ments were mobilized. They
sought to quell the demonstra
tion by using clubs and tear
gas.
it's the DOBBS
COUNTRY
COMFORT!
Dobbs Country Comfort is at
home wherever men enjoy the
wide open spaces wherever
easy living is the order of the
day. It's styled with a grace
that is a pleasure to behold
sports a very narrow band
that completes its carefree
mm IB
229 East Main
Medford Junior Chamber of Commerce
P. O. Box 251, Medford, Oregon
ENTRY BLANK
Christmas Opening Parade
Please enter.
Opening Parade to be held
'S vember 16th. Meet at Hawthorne Park.
We will be In the.
Our theme will be
You may contact our chairman
J Address
Phone.
Medford Mail Tribune
Washington Run
'Out of Bounds',
TV Film Shows
Portland W -Films of last
Saturday's Washington - Oregon
State football game, won 19-6
by Washington, show that Hus
ky quarterback Bobby Dunn
stepped out of bounds on a 26
yard run to the OSC 9-yard line
in the second period, the Oregon
Journal said today.
Dunn's run set up the touch
down which put Washington
ahead 12-6.
George Pasero, Journal sports
editor, said in his column "Pa
sero Says," that the film "shows
clearly that Dunn stepped on
the left sideline stripe at the 21
yard line and was clearly out of
bounds at the 17."
The film was shot by KGW
TV which ran movies of the
game Sunday. .
WAJDA BOOTS IN FIVE
Boston (IP! Hank Wajda,
one of the top winning jockeys
on the New England circuit this
year, booted home five winners,
four of them in a row, Monday
at Suffolk Downs. Wajda scored
on Richard Jr. $7.60, Hell Ray
sor $8.40 Noted $9.80, Bama
$5.00 and Chac Rosett $6.00.
STANFORD MEETS OREGON
Stanford, Calif. (1?) The
Stanford Indians may be short
a couple of their top men when
they tangle with the powerful
Ducks of Oregon Saturday in
what could be their crucial
game of the year.
WANT T
TO
RENT
A
-N TRUCK'
CAR,
FOR
A
DAY,
OR
MORE
Wilcox Beehive
TRUCK & CAR RENTALS
6th & Grape, Med. SP 3-3261
DOBBS
I HATS
appearance. $12.95
MEN'E
STORE
Phone SP 3-3803
ln the Christmas
at 1:30 p.m. on Saturday, NO
-group
(Youth or Adult)
(Biblical, Christmas or Fantasy)
I