TEN MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Friday. December 13. 1957
Rams Will Try To Aid
Forty Hiner Cause in
Sunday Grid Fray
San Francisco Y o u n g
John Brodie will start at quarter
back for the San Francisco Forty
Niners Sunday against the Green
Bay Packers in a game that
might well mean the NFL West
ern division championship.
Brodie, the former Stanford
star has only seen about seven
minutes of action with the Forty
Niners this season, but he has
completed six of nine passes
for 88 yards and two touchdowns
and engineered the team for a
total of 157 yards. 0
Los Angeles API The Los
Angeles Rams, with little else to
win but prestige in defeating
Baltimore, hope to repay a long
standing debt Sunday by defeat
ing the Colts.
The Rams to a man feel they
owe their upstate rival San Fran
cisco a National Football league
victory over the Colts who go
into the final week end of the
regular season in a three-way tie
for the loop's Western division
leadership with the Forty Niners
and the Detroit Lions.
And Los Angeles, which has a
penchant for winning on the
home ground, are a three-point
choice to down the Colts.
49eri Need Ram Win
A Ram win, coupled with
San Francisco victory over Green
Bay and a Detroit losi to the
Chicago Bears would give the
Forty Niners outright possession
of the Western division title and
the right to meet Eastern titlist
Cleveland. The Forty Niners are
a 14-point choice over Green Bay
and the Bears a thin 1-point fa
vorite over Detroit.
Thus, the Ram victory is all
important and parallels the clos
ing Sunday of the 1951 season
when a Forty Niner victory over
Detroit broke a tie and gave Los
Angeles undisputed Western Di
vision honors.
The Rams have waited a long
time to repay the Forty Niners
a team that they have enjoyed
lashing to the whipping post
more than anv other in the arch
intrastate rivalry.
Gang Up
But when it comes to helping
one another's cause, the clubs
mentally link arms and gang up
on the "outsider." And the Rams
are determined that Baltimore
will not win the title, but come
next season and the two Cali
fornia clubs will butt heads as
viciously as ever.
As the league winds up its reg
ular season of big week ends,
there is another Saturday con
test. At Philadelphia, the Eagles
meet the Chicago Cardinals. On
Sunday at Washington, the Red
skins will play the Pittsburgh
Steelers and in New York, the
Eastern Champion Cleveland
Browns will face the New York
Giants.
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PLAYS AT COOS BAY Tom
Hamlin, above, is expected to
be in the starting line-up tonight
when the Medford high basket
ball team opens its season against
Marshfield at Coos Bay. The
Black Tornado also will play at
North Bend on Saturday night.
Hamlin, a senior, was a regular
last season, starting on some oc
casions. He's the most exper
ienced man on the Tornado
squad. Other possible starters
for Medford in the week end
jaunt are Bilbee Lane, senior,
Don Peek, junior, and Lowell
Dean and Jerry Anderson, sopho
mores.
Fight Card
At Talent
Talent Talent Boxing club
and Medford Police ' Athletic
league will be matched in a 16
bout, 52-round card here Satur
day night.
Curtain-raiser will be at 8
p.m. Proceeds go to the Talent
Youth center. It will be the first
card of the season for the two
clubs.
Gary Loper, Talent, and Bob
Brown, PAL, are matched in the
middleweight main and Dave
Parker, Talent, and Bob Little,
PAL, in the 125-pound semi
main. Larry Lewis, PAL, and
Floyd Brown, Southern Oregon
college, go to it in a lightweight
affair.
Larry Lewis, Bob Little, Bo
Brown and Larry Little are to
be . participants in a Portland
PAL Christmas boxing show to
night.
Cavemen Victors
In Mat Matches
Grants Pass Grants Pass high
thumped Crater 35 to 14 in a
Tuesday wrestling match. The
Cavemen won 10 of the 13 count
ing bouts. Jayvee action also was
won by Grants Pass 66 to 16.
Grants Pass varsity meets Ash
land next Tuesday while Crater
is at Medford.
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Cal Regents
Consider PCC
Withdrawal
Los Angeles (IP) The Univer
sity of California Regents met in
open session today to consider
withdrawal of California and
UCLA from the 42-year-old Pa
cific Coast conference.
The open meeting followed a
closed session Thursday at which
the regents accepted resolutions
from faculty and students
groups from both calling for a
bolt from the conference.
Academic senates and student
councils at Berkeley and the
Westwood campus and alumni
groups have urged withdrawal
of both schools.
Calls to jump the conference
on July 1, 1959, came after a re
cent PCC meeting in San Fran
cisco at which a five-point state
ment of policy was almost totally
rejected.
In or Out Program
The policy statement was
adopted by the regents last June.
At the time the administrations
of Cal and ULCA were ordered
to accomplish the program "in
or out of the conference."
If the regents stick by that
order it appears that they have
no choice but to sever connec
tions with the conference which
imposed probation and other
penalties on UCLA, Washington,
the University of Southern Calif
ornia and California for illegal
aid to athletes.
However, it was felt that
UCLA probably would stay in
the conference until July 1, 1959,
when the Bruins would have
served their sentence and been
returned to good standing in the
conference.
Across town at SC, the same
pressure for withdrawal was
building up in statements by
faculty members, students and
alumni. The Trojans go off pro
bation next July 1, giving them
a chance to get out after having
"taken their medicine."
BASKETBALL
THURSDAY COLLEGE GAMES
By United Press
East
Louisville 89, Iona 65
Princeton 72. TJpsala 56
Colgate 83, Florida Southern 63
St. John's Washington & Lee 73
Dartmouth 84, Houston 64
South
N. Carolina 91, Furman 74
Richmond 70, Texas A&M 50
VMI 82. Roanoke 77
Alabama State 93. Alabama A&M 62
Loyola (La.) 92, Tampa 53
Midwest
Bowling Green 78. Canisius 63
Eastern (HI.) 87, Quincy 80
Southwest
Oklahoma 66. SMTJ 58
Texas Western 63, McMurry 52
West
Iowa St. 54. Brigham Young 45
Utah 71. Los Angeles St. 59
Oregon St. 63. Seattle 55
Southern California 79, Loyola
(Calif.) 60
Gonzaga 76, Whitworth 49
Shoot Open
To Public
Members of the Medford Gun
club have pointed out that pub
lic participation is welcome Sun
day in the pre-Christmas turkey
shoot at the club grounds west
of Crater Lake highway Four
Corners.
Turkeys, hams and bacon will
be prizes. Shooting in classes
is planned and events are sched
uled for non-shooters.
Traps open at 9 a.m.
Lunch will be available at the
grounds.
Pasadena People
Choose Sides on
Dodger Issue
Pasadena, Calif. : (IP) The
community of Pasadena was
choosing up sides today on
whether the Dodger baseball
team should be permitted to play
in the Rose Bowl until they can
build a stadium.
Most groups, including the
Tournament of Roses committee
that sponsors the annual New
Year's Day football classic, wel
comed the idea of having the
Dodgers as guests in 1958 and
possibly 1959.
But property owners have or
ganized, fearing that traffic prob
lems and other factors would
outweigh benefits to the com
munity. The Linda Vista associa
tion, representing an estimated
700 property owners in the fash
ionable residential area west of
the Bowl, plans to submit a let
ter to the Pasadena board that
will decide next Tuesday wheth
er to offer facilities to the Dodg
ers. Thursday, the Dodgers receiv
ed the support of the Los An
geles county board of supervis
ors In their plan for a temporary
move. The supervisors voted, 3-1
to approve the request made per
sonally Wednesday by Dodger
President Walter O'Malley.
Swedish Boxer Faces McBride
Gothenberg, Sweden (IPI
Whether heavyweight Ingemar
Johansson will invade the Unit
ed States may be determined to
night in his 10-round fight here
with Archie McBride, his first
American opponent.
Unbeaten Johansson of Swe
den, champion of Europe, has
won all of his 18 professional
bouts, 10 by knockouts. But Mc-.
Bride of Trenton, N.J., is regard
ed as the most dangerous op
ponent he ever faced.
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Saturday End
Of Preference
Ticket Buying
Eugene (IP) Preference ticket
buying for the Rose Bowl game
will end Saturday, Oregon offic
ials said today. All persons de
siring tickets were urged to mail
their orders immediately.
Athletic Director Leo Harris
said the general public classifi
cation is still open. He said "we
are still confident we can offer
tickets to any person iA the state
of Oregon who desires them."
Tickets are priced at $5.50.
Orders should be sent to the
athletic department at the Uni
versity. No over the counter sales
will be made.
Beavers Select
Opponent Team
Corvallis (IP) Four players
from UCLA and two each from
Oregon and Washington State j
were named today on Oregon j
State's all-opponent football
team.
UCLA players on the team in
cluded end Dick Wallen, tackle
Bill Leeka, center Dave Peter
son and back Barry Billington.
Halfback Jim Shanley and guard
Harry Mondale were chosen
fron. Rose Bowl-bound Oregon
and end Don Sllingsen and quar
terback Bob Newman were
picked from WSC.
Others on the team included
tackle Troy Barbee, Stanford;
guard Jerry Kramer, Idaho, and
back Jim Jones, Washington.
GALENTO TO WRESTLE
Newark, N.J.flP) Willie Gil
zenberg, manager of two-ton
Tony Galento, one-time heavy
weight challenger, is negotiating
with Promoter Emile Czaja for
Galento to make a tour of South
east Asia wresting rings. Czaja
has offered a guarantee of
$10,000.
JEWISH AIDE DIES
New York (IP) Abraham
Horowitz, 57, executive vice
president of the Federated Coun
cil of Israel Institutions, died at
his Brooklyn home Monday of
cancer of the lungs. Horowitz
helped found the council in 1940
to centralize appeals to the Unit
ed States and Canada for inde
pendent religious, educational
and welfare institutions in Israel.
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