Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 13, 1958, Image 6

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    SIX MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Monday, January 13, 1958
South Eugene Axemen Quintet
Sweeps Series With Tornado
South Eugene high's hard
running Purple Axemen, fast
breaking, passing sharply and
surely and defending ten
aciously, blazed their reputed
maplecourt power here Satur
day night by slicing a scrappy
Medford Black Tornado 67
to 45 in a non-conference
ruckus.
The Choppers from the Wil
lamette valley had their of
fensive and defensive weapons
even more sharply honed than
on Friday when they subdued
the Tornado hoopmen 52 to
42. Scoring punch by big all
stater Charlie Warren, John
Polhemus and Tom Jones, the
strong under-t h e-backboards
play of Warren and the slick
ball handling and hawking of
Rick Cerkoney, Polhemus,
Jones and Niel Goldschmidt
were the elements of victory
Medford, despite the wider
deficit, appeared a generally
smoother operating club than
on Friday. The Tornadoes led
in the early moments and
matched stride with the Axe
men in the opening quarter
but South Eugene pulled
steadily away over the next
two periods.
Frohnmayer Gets Eight
First panel score was 13 to
12 in Eugene favor. Medford
tabulated only eight counters
in the second quarter, all by
sophomore reserve forward
.Tnhn Frohnmaver. who was
Troy Batters Oregon
In Coast Loop Fray
By GENE BRYANT
United Press Sports Writer
With the powerful Univer
city of San Francisco Dons
staging another runaway in
the West Coast Athletic con
ference basketball race, bas
ketball fans focused their at
tention today on what looks
to be a wide open scramble
in the PCC title chase.
Oregon State, lOth-ranked
nationally, is leading the pack
with a 2-0 record and still
rates the nod as the squad
most likely to succeed. But
California. UCLA and bouin
ern California figure to give
the Beavers a run-for-the-money.
And Idaho and Oregon, al
though both are two-time los
ers already, can give anybody
trouble on a given night.
Over In the WCAC, how-
Willamette
Keeps Lead
By UNITED PRESS
Willamette university re
mained undefeated after post
ing its third Northwest Con
ference victory with a 76-59
decision over Whitman Sat
urday and loomed as the No.
1 contender for the conference
baseketball crown. The Bear
cats devoured the Whits Fri
day, 83-59. Lewis and Clark
whipped Pacific, 72-67, Sat
urday for second place in the
'conference. In the other Sat
urday game, third place Lin
field handed College of Idaho
its third loss of the season,
57-53.
Church League
Action Starts
Ashland Baptist and Phoe
nix Nazarene won opening
games Saturday night in the
YMCA Men's Church Basket
ball league.
The Baptists crushed Med
ford Methodist 47 to 20 while
the Nazarene team downed
Sacred Heart Catholic 52 to
48. A game between First
Nazarene and Medford Bap
tist was postponed. The Pres
byterians drew a bye because
St. Peter Lutheran has with
drawn from the loop.
Four teams of the Junior
High league are not organized
so the other four had prac
tices on Saturday. YMCA
edged Medford Baptist 31 to
28 and St. Peter Zion Luth
eran lashed Methodist 72 to 6.
Bill Rupp had 28 and Mack
21 for Lutheran. .
a
LINE-VPS:
47 Ash. Baptist Methodist 20
T 4 Lemley Robertson 4
T Swink Williams H
C'20 Lowrance Moore
G Allev Raymond
G 7 Livingston Doran 2
Substitutions For Baptist, Sim
monds 6. Dickerson 2. Main 2; for
Methodist. Schlachter. Kuschel,
Hale. Eicher.
$2 Ph. Nazarene Sac. Heart 46
r 13 Searcy Miksche
T 7 Furrv Babbett 3
C 2 Barrett Hasler
G 8 Banral S. Read 8
G 8 Zickefoose Meunier 18
Substitutions For Nazarene. Mc
Cartv. Wood 14. Witt: for Sacred
Heart. Vorreck 5. Brown 2. R.
Read 2. Messer 3. Pendergast 2,
Murray. Wridmay.
ever, there was little doubt as
to the outcome of that race.
Coach Phil Woolpert's Hill-
toppers are off and running
with a 3-0 mark and it looks
like it may be another un
defeated conference season
for the 4th-ranked Dons.
A full round of games were
played in the PCC Saturday
night as the California clubs
took three out of four from
the visiting Northwest schools.
UCLA dumped Idaho, 64-56,
while Southern California bat
tered Oregon, 73-52, in a
double-header at Los Angeles'
Pan-Pacific Auditorium. Fur
ther north. California took a
47-32 victory over Washing
ton State at Berkeley and
Washington entered the con
ference win column with a
60-54 decision over Stanford
at Palo Alto.
In a . single game played
Sunday, Elgin Baylor poured
through 48 points to lead Se
attle to a 97-75 route over
Portland at Vancouver, Wash.
Baylor connected on 19 field
goals as the Chieftains took
their second straight from the
Pilots.
San Jose State buried Pep-
perdine, 92-61, and Santa
Clara rallied in the second
half to down Loyola, 58-52,
in the only WCAC contests
played Saturday.
The Trojans hit a blazing
52 per cent of their shots from
the floor for their win over
Oregon while the Bruins ef
fectively slowed down ace
Idaho Guard Gary Simmons
for their victory over the Van
dals. California's Bears hit only
27 per cent of their field goal
attempts but still outshot the
Cougars for their easy win at
Berkeley. Washington saved
the day for the Northwest
squads as center Doug Smart
scored 19 points to lead the
Huskies to their win over
Stanford.
Other major games played
Saturday saw San Diego State
upset Arizona, 83-76, Gon
zaga trounce Whitworth, 80
63, and Idaho State dump Col
orado College, 88-52.
Only two contests are sched
uled on the coast tonight.
Eastern Washington will host
Gonzaga while Santa Clara
will visit Chico State.
BOX:
use
Pugh. f
White, f .
Werhas, 1
Live
FG
3
7
0
0
5
1
Hampton, f
Hanna, c
r rjcr. c x
Clements, c 0
Gonzales, g 7
Mount, g 2
n
nuiiii, g ..
Bloom, g
Kemp, g
O
.. 0
- 1
FT
5- 7
5- 8
O- 0
0- 0
2- 2
2- 2
0- 0
0- 0
0- 3
0- 1
2- 2
0- 0
3- 4
PF TP
2 11
Totals
27 19-29 20
Oregon FG
Franklin, f 3
Herron, f , 1
Padovan, t 2
Robertson, f 1
Duffy, c 5
Tuchardt, c 2
Rask, g 2
Kuykendall, g 0
Davis, e 1
Ronquillo. g 0
Hastings, g 0
Anderson, g 1
Totals 18
Halftime score:
gon 25.
FT
5- 8
3- 4
0- 2
0- 1
2- 3
0- 0
5- 5
0- 0
0- 0
0- 0
1- 3
0- 0
PF TP
3 11
16-26 18 52
USC 36, Ore-
Enjoy the great bourbon flj
V,... l!!w0ld WeS iPjr
. cmniuv RRflOK CO LOUISVILLE. KY., DISTRIBUTED BY NATIONAL
EiffilK stra!ght bourbon WH1SKEY-86 PR00F
elevated from the jayvees last
week. The Axemen, in the
meantime, put in 21 and at
halftime were in front 34 to
20. Tornado players collected
another eight in the third pe
riod while South ran up 15
for 49 to 28 command. Widest
Eugene lead in the fracas was
22 points.
Warren, who was given a
rugged time again on the
floor and who was the object
of some unsportsmanlike vocal
treatment from fans, was high
point man again with 26
tallies on 11 field goals and
four free shoots. He was also
top scrambler under the
boards with 19 rebounds. The
all-stater picked up his goals
on a variety of shots. He
tallied from rebounds and tip
ins and from recoveries under
the hoop and from hooks and
jumps and received fine as
sistance from his mates.
Polheumus was second high
scorer of the evening with 13
points. Tom Hamlin of Med
ford and Jones each had five
field goals and a free shot for
11 markers.
Jerry Anderson was the
main Medford rebounder with
nine snares and Hamlin had
seven.
SE Tops Rebounding
South Eugene headed the
full game rebounding by six,
39 to 33. The Tornado had a
better field goaling mark with
.391 on 18 for 46. But the Axe
men made up for it volume
and their average was close.
They had 25 for 65 tries for
.385.
Medford took a 3-0 lead at
the start on Hamlin's jumper
and Dean's free toss. Warren
picked up a point for Eugene
but Anderson made it 4 to 1.
Jones dumped in a rebounder
for the visitors and Dean hit
from the corner for Medford.
A Warren jumper brought the
count to 6 to 5 favoring Med
ford.
Bilbee Lane netted a closey
on Hamlin's feed but Polhe
mus hit a long one-hander and
side jumper for Eugene's
first lead at 9 to 8. Anderson
put Medford back on top with
a long jumper but Warren
sank a mid-range bucket for
11 to 10 and the Axemen were
ahead for keeps.
The Axemen for the second
night utilized their quickness
and slick-handness to break
up the Tornado offense and
get their own attack going.
Medford junior varsity over
powered Eagle Point jayvee
52 to 18 in the prelim, tally
ing 26 markers to nine by the
Eagles in each half.
Funston on
Shrine Grid
Contingent
Portland HP Members of
the 27-man State and Metro
politan teams that will clash
in the annual Shriners hos
pital all-star football game
next August in Multnomah
stadium were selected Satur
day at the Multnomah Athle
tic club here in a day-long
session.
State holds a slight edge
in the weight department.
South Salem, finalist in 1957
state championship play, was
the only school to place three
players on the State team.
Four Metro member teams,
state champion Jefferson,
Grant, Beaverton and Mil
waukie, each landed a trio
on the Metropolitan squad.
The squads:
STATE:
Ends: Gary Smith, Vale; Claude
Layton, North Salem: Mike Spar
lin. Grants Pass; Dick Manilla,
Springfield.
Tackles: Bob Belleisle, South
Salem: Jim Bullard, Marshfield;
John Willmer, Eugene; Gerald Mc
Intire, Prineville; Ben Gehlen, Wil
lamina. Guards: Dennis Pieters. South
Salem; Bill Woodcock, Baker; Pat
Clock, Newberg, and Doug Aus
tin. Dallas.
Centers: Jim Funston, Medford;
Merlyn Wright, Seaside.
Fullbacks: Marion Elair, Willam
ette. Eugene; Frank Hawley, Vale;
Hardy Spurgeon, Marshfield.
Quarterbacks: Keith Burres,
South Salem: Jim Smith, Grants
Pass; and John Wilson, Albany.
Halfbacks: Rick Herman, Spring
field: Steve Picard. Seaside: Ricky
Lamb, North Marion; Val Barnes,
North Salem: Marvin Tyler, Lake
view, and Stan Bye, Milton-Free-water.
West Thumps East
26-7 In Pro Bowl
Los Angeles (IP Big, good
natured George Wilson was
one up on his former boss
Buddy Parker today after
his West team scored an al
most ridiculously easy 26 to 7
victory over the .East in the
eighth annual Pro-Bowl game
Sunday.
The West's win before a
Pro-Bowl record crowd of 66,
634 came less than 48 hours
after Wilson and Parker
sounded hearts and flowers to
end a six-month feud which
began when Parker quit as
Detroit head coach in a huff,
and Wilson, his assistant, was
named to replace him.
Passes Intercepted
Four times the always alert
West defensive secondary
anchored by three great De
troit defensive stars, Joe
Schmidt, Yale Lary and Jack
Christiansen, plus Green
Bay's Bobby Jack Dillon
picked off East passes.
Three times the West con
verted the interceptions to
touchdowns.
The other West scores were
two field goals one for nine
yards and one for twenty
three by unerring Bert
Rechichar of Baltimore.
Pittsburgh's Earl Morrall,
the goat on three intercep
tions, passed 39-yards to
Cleveland's Ray Renfro for
the East's only score, which
gave the outplayed Eastern
ers a short-lived lead early in
the second period.
Medford
JTribune
sinddbts
BOX:
South Eugene FG
Jones, f 5
Goldschmidt, f .. 1
Warren, c 11
Cerkoney, g 3
Polheums, g 4
Willener 0
Coleman 0
Campbell 1
Senn 0
Allen 0
FT
1
1
4
2
3
0
3
0
1
0
PF TP
0 11
Totals ...
Medford
25
17 10 67
FG FT PF TP
Anderson, f
Hamlin, f
Dean, c
Lane, g
Peek, g
Brown
Rasmussen
Peery
Frohnmayer
Plankenhorn .
Harvey
Deakins
Bowling
5
2
.. 4
... 1
0
... 0
... 1
0
... 3
. 0
1
.. 0
. 1
1
1
2
0
0
0
3
0"
2
0
0
0
0
Totals 18 9 16 45
Referees Swanson and Warren.
JUNIOR VARSITY GAME:
52 MedTord Eagle Point 18
F 8 Olson Cox 2
F 4 Shults . Hubbard 1
C 8 C. Dean Cooper 6
G 3 Monroe Neasa 2
G 2 Allen Gerbing
Substitutions For Medford, Ice
3. Miller 2. Konopasek 2, Durkee
7, Koch 3, Moore, G. Lindemann
6, Kliever, B. Lindemann, Knight
2, Freisen, Shoemaker 2, Manley
1: for Eagle Point, Greenwood 2,
Hugg 4, Jorde, Evers, Berryman,
Peile 1, Anderson-.
Pointers Play
McLoughliners
Central Point Central
Point seventh and eighth
grade basketball teams will
play McLoughlin of Medford
clubs here Wednesday.
Seventh grade mix is set
for 6:30 p.m. and the eighth
graders meet at 7:30 p.m.
Last Friday Central Point
seventh won 26 to 19 from
Grants Pass while the Point
er eighth fell 36 to 31 to its
Climate city rival.
METRO:
Ends: Jim Sandsness, Grant;
Richard Kipp. Beaverton; Dick
Ramsey, Gresham: Jim Luening,
Roosevelt; Dick Howells, Jeffer
son. Tackles: Randy Hawke, Benson;
Gary Lehan, Washington; Sherm
Cochran.- Roosevelt; Rick Alper,
Cleveland.
Guards; Jim Dooney. Central
Catholic; Ted Brewster, Milwau
kie; Jodi Weatherall, Jefferson and
Robert Mautz, Grant.
Center: Doug White. Jefferson:
Wallv Wolf. Milwaukie. and Boh
Payne. David Douglas.
Halfbacks: Mick Sinnerud, Bea
verton: John Damis, Grant; Paul
Goddard, Lincoln; Dave Woodford,
Gresham; Larry Miller, Washing
ton, and Jim Warren, Benson.
Fullbacks: Steve Beguin, Bea
verton; Al Adamson, Estacada and
George Held. Woodrow Wilson.
Quarterbacks: Gary Albright,
Milwaukie, and Jerry Jones, Cleveland.
BASKETBALL
COLLEGE RESULTS
By United Press
East
Boston U. 57, Army 58
Dartmouth 82, Columbia 80
Rhode Island 55, Northwestern
54
W. Virginia 93, G. Washington
66
LaSalle 111, Villanova 105
Massachusetts 65, N. Hampshire
49
Niagara 93, Colgate 76
Georgetown (DC) 89,. American
78
Dayton 47, Canisius 43
St. Bonaventure 75, Iona 54
South
Georgia Tech 78, Miss. St. 81
Citadel 85, Furman 69
Florida 90, Auburn 66
Morehead St. 79, Tenn. Tech 69
Midwest
S. Dakota 62, N. Dakota 30
Iowa St. 62, Missouri 55
Southwest
S.W. Okla. St. 64, E. Cent. Okla.
50
Cent. Okla. St. 59. S. X. Okla.
St. 46
Wiley 84, Arkansas St. 75
Arkansas St. 50, Miss. Southern
46
West
Oklahoma 51. Colorado 41
Idaho St. 88, Colorado Col. 52
Loyola (111.), 71, Air Force Aca.
50
Utah 81, Utah St. 57
USC 73. Oregon 52
Lewis & Clark 63. Pacific U. 55
San Diego St. 83, Arizona 76
San Fran, state 67, Nevada 52
Seattle 77. Portland 47
Puget Sound 65, British Col. 57
Los Angeles State 71, Cal Poly
66
Fresno State 73, Long Beach S.
60
Redlands 69. Occidental 61
Willamette 76, Whitman 59
Linfield 57. College of Idaho 53
Santa Barbara 57, Westmont 51
S. Diego Marines 76. Ariz. St.
75
Sacramento St. 56, Humboldt St.
52
Pacific Luth. 81, West. Wash. 54
Seattle 97. Portland 75 (Sunday)
Klamath, Grants Pass
Win League Frays
SOUTHERN OREGON
CONFERENCE STANDINGS
W L Pet.
Klamath Falls 4 0 1.000
Crater 2 2 .500
Grants Pass , 1 1 .500
Ashland 1 3 .250
Medford 0 2 .000
Centella Fights
Ryff Tonight
New York IP Kid Cen
tella, Nicaraguan lightweight,
makes his New York debut
tonight in a TV 10-rounder
with frisky Frankie Ryff at
St. Nicholas arena.
Ryff of New York is favor
ed at 12-5 because of his
speed and skill, despite Cen
ella's reputation as a knock
out specialist. Centella has a
five-straight losing streak.
Centella, 26, from the city
of Managua, has been fight
ing in the United States near
ly seven years mostly
around New Orleans and Los
Angeles,
Jackson B
Tilts Billed
Talent places its Jackson
County B league unbeaten
status on the line at Jack
sonville Tuesday evening
while Medford will be the
scene of another B game with
St. Mary's host to second
place Butte Falls.
A tussle in the Rogue
league tomorrow will have
Glendale at Eagle Point.
Prospect of the B circuit has
non-loop activity at Rogue
River, a member of the A-2
Rogue league.
On the home front St.
Mary's hopes are bolstered by
the return of Terry Cooper,
who has been on the sidelines
because of torn ankle ligaments.
WALTONIANS MEET
Jackson County chapter of
the Izaak Walton league meets
at 8 p.m. today at the Jack
son hotel. State Sen. Phil
Lowry will be speaker. All
persons interested are invited.
Klamath Falls barely nosed
a shorter but persistent Ash
land high basketball quintet
to maintain its undefeated
lead in the Southern Oregon
conference Saturday night
while Grants Pass was edging
Crater to gain a percentage
tie with the Comets in the
loop standings.
The Pelicans of Klamath
were forced into overtime to
nose out Ashland 55 to 54
while Grants Pass outlasted
Crater 38 to 35.
Klamath is unbeaten in
four games. Crater's 2-2 rec
ord and the GP Cavemen's 1-1
standing gives the two clubs
each .500 in the average col
umn. The Pels beat Ashland
46 to 34. Grants Pass lost to
the Comets 42 to 40 on Friday
and earned a series split with
the other week end hassle,
Score at the end of the
regular playing time at Ash
land Saturday was 49 to 49
Don DeLap put in two field
goals and Smiley Herrera
free shot in the overtime for
the Pelican nod. After De Lap
made his second field goal on
a swipe, Jim Daniels of Ash
land knotted the game with a
steal but he fouled Herrera,
bumping into him as he came
back down court. Herrera,
with seconds remaining, made
his first shot but missed the
bonus.
Move Well In Third
The Grizzlies, who have
lapsed in the third quarter in
previous games, moved well
jn that period against the
Pelicans. That enabled them
to rise from a 24 to 18 midway
deficit to a 37 to 34 lead at the
third intermission. Ashland
boosted its edge to 42 to 38 in
the fourth quarter but Klam
ath caught up at 45-all and
knotted play at 47-each. The
Grizzlies went back on top 49
to 47 but Bob Niles' bucket
with seconds left in regular
playing time sent the ruckus
into the extra session.
Klamath headed 14 to 3 at
the first quarter halt and was
in the lead 22 to 8 during the
second panel.
Klamath's 6-8 Glenn Moore
fouled out in the fourth canto
but was high scorer with 20
points.
For the second night Ash
land outshot Klamath from
the field with 23 goals to the
Pels' 21 but KF had a 13 to
eight margin in free heaves.
Free Goals Pad
Grants Pass was on top of
Crater only 36 to 35 with a
minute and some seconds to
play but Kerman Bennett of
the Comets fouled Charles
Rembert who made both his
shots with some seven seconds
to play. Wayne Allen and
Randy Campbell each fired
Crater shots before the final
buzzer but they were in-and-
outers.
No more than seven points
separated the clubs. Grants
Pass took a 12 to 5 margin in
the second quarter. Period
counts all favored GP 7 to 4,
17 to 15 and 28 to 25. Crater
had a lead of 21 to 20 in the
third panel on a long set shot
by Allen and 30 to 29 in the
fourth when Allen made two
free tosses.
Allen was high point man
for the game with 19 points.
He made eight of Crater's 11
second quarter points on four
of his field buckets. Dick
Hayes put in 12 markers and
Jim 'Smith 11 for GP.
Grants Pass won the junior
varsity mix 42 to 28 with hot
ter shooting.
BOX:
Klamath Falls FG
Niles. f 6
B. Peterson, I 5
Moore, c 7
Robinson, g 1
Herrera, g
DeLap
0
2
FT
1
0
6
3
2
1
PF TP
3 13
Totals
.21
13 It
55
"THE AMAZING VOLKSWAGEN"
TOPS ALL CARS IN RESALE VALUE
MORSE
MOTORS
West 6th and Ivy Srs.
Phone SP 2-7155
Ashland
Lombard, f .
Maurer, f ...
Tobiasson, o
Hartwell, K .
S. Peterson, g
FG
.. 0
.. 5
1
.. 3
7
Watrus 0
Johnson 2
Daniels 5
Totals 23
FT
0
4
1
0
1
0
0
2
PF TP
2 0
14
3
6
15
0
4
12
18 54
Referees Flink and Ballantyne.
Crater FG
Allen f 8
Turner, f 0
Campbell, c 3
Bennett, g 0
Teeter, g 1
Kime 0
White 0
FT
3
3
2
2
0
0
1
PF TP
3 19
Totals 12 11 17
Grants Pass FG
Smith, f 5
Lindquist, f 0
Putnam, c 0
Hayes, c 5
Sparlin. g 4
Rembert 1
Thomas 0
Totals 15
FT
1
0
0
2
0
3
2
PF TP
1
1
5
2
4
2
0
15
JUNIOR VARSITY GAME:
42 Grants Pass Crater 28
F 11 Purkett Cooper
F 11 Benner Davis 1
C 4 Burton Mack 13
G 7 Chandler B. Brown 6
G Sabin Eldred 6
Substitutions For Grants Pass,
Erickson, Fox 11, Nealy 1. Hunni
cutt. Hutahas; for Crater, Woods 2,
Smith, Michaels.
Portland Club
Obtains Fanning
Portland (IP) The Port
land Beavers traded catcher
Most Fish
Regulations
Stay Same
Portland (IP) New tenta
tive fishing regulations pub
lished by the state game com'
mission here leave most Ore
gon fishing season dates un
changed from last year . ex
cept on the coast where a late
May 24 trout opener was pro
posed. The Commission also sug
gested a 22-inch length limit
for ocean-caught salmon and
a new policy of stream man
agement for the Wilson river.
In all other fishing zones,
trout season would open April
16 and close Oct. 31. High
lakes season in the Cascades
would run from May 24 to
Oct. 5. The May 24 date for
the coast would apply only to
coastal streams. Coast lakes
would open April 26.
Bag limits would remain
the same as in 1957 except
in zones 7, 8 and 9 north
east and southeast portions of
the state. In those areas, the
"not more than 5 trout over
12 inches" rule would be
dropped in favor of a straight
10 fish over 6 inches bag
limit.
The Commission decided to
invoke the 22-inch length lim
it on ocastal salmon from
Tillamook head north during
the period July 1 to October
31. It said the ocean off the
mouth of the Columbia is a
feeding area for immature sil
ver and Chinook salmon. Pu
get Island bridge was desig
nated as the downstream
boundary for the special sum
mer jack salmon bag limit on
the Columbia.
Fishing would be permitted
in the old Diamond lake outlet
closure area after July 15.
Final angling regulations
for 1958 will be set after the
Game Commission holds a
hearing Jan. 24 on the tenta
tive rules.
Bowling
KIWANIS JUNIOR LEAGUE
standings: w
Black Boys 30'i
Myans 27
Rambling Rebels 19
Fire Balls 19
Odd Balls . 18
King Pins .'. 17'fc
Gutter Gang 17
Splits ...... 16 ','2
Pin Busters 16
Alley Gang 14
L
8',
12
20
20
21
2H
22
22 1 J
23
25
Results:
Pin Busters 0 (Wilson 250) 1334
Black Boys 3 (Jones 336 1 1423.
Splits 0 (Barry 255 1358; Fire
Bans 3 (Osborn 278) 1390.
Odd Balls 0 (Bailev 243) 1312;
Myans 3 (James 239) 1380.
Gutter Gang 2 (Huffman 251)
1350; Rambling Rebels 1 (Quinney
King Pins 2 (Bortis 264) 1370;
Alley uang l (Myers Z84) 1337.
Larry Jones 205 high game.
INDUSTRIAL LEAGUE
Standings: w L
Rail Roguei 25 3
City Hall 19 9
Kims , 16 12
Red Blanket Lbr Co. 15 13
Richfield Oil Co 15 13
Graham Electric 12 16
Linnineer's Read v Mix 12 IB
Jorgensen's Dairy ll'i 16 1
onoooys n 17
Domestic Laundry 11 17
National Cash Register 11 17
Standard Oil Co 8i 18 15
Results:
Rail Rogues 4 (Kidd 456) 279.1
Elvin TaDDe to the Chicaeo ; snoboys 0 (cough 490) 2577.
rs,V, nf tho TMatir,al l.0!..?.rah Elec- 4 (Graham 478)
"- i ztn j; lums 0 (MCMeel 500) 2610
in exchange for Jim Fan- Red Blanket 3 (Murray 527)
in Athor r.Mor Tovn'2425: Cash Reg. l(Pyle528) 2389.
iin.b, - Kicntieid 4 (Kjeer 540) 2797;
General Manager Tommy , Domestic o (Ratty 484) 2672.
Heath revealed Sunday. Ist-'o'aittiSSS 4S7?'262oSl4!
Tappe played for Los An- city Hail 3 (Compagnoni 577)
geles in the 1957 Pacific 241r.serlsen's 1 McWhort
Coast league season and came '
to Portland two months . w L
from the parent Chicago club. 1 Larry s Rich Maid 47 21
I Oak Grove Furniture 39 29
LLOYD SKI WINNER S I? ?
Sun Valley, Idaho (IP) A j First National Bank 35 33
California skier, Kenny Lloyd i fffijTZZZZZ 3? 3?
31 37
Jack's Drive Up 26 42
Harry & David 24 44
of Mammoth Lake, has won : Forest Patrol
the Sun Valley Open ski
meet. Lloyd combined a first
place in Saturday's downhill
race and a second spot in Sun
day's slalom to give him the
Class A men's combined title.
TITLE BOUT PLANNED
London (IPl Jack Solo
mons said Sunday night that
he i nlannino tn nrnmnt a
f . j 'Results
uue ligni Deiween wona iigni Gypoi 4 (Chase 507) 2172; Wall
heavyweight champion Archie nower 0 (Erickson 463) 2064.
ELKS LEAGUE
Standings:
Gypos
Miss-FitU
Cementers
Team Ten
Lively Five
Medics
GO-Boys
P-E-R s
Team Nine
Wallflowers ....
W
4
3
3
3
2
2
ZZ 1
1
0
Moore and Trinidad's Yolande
Pompey at Kingston, Jamaica.
Solomons said he hoped to
stage the bout between March
1 and March 15.
Miss-Fitts 3 (Graham 542) 2579:
Go-Boys 1 (Morgan 539) 2390. I
Cementers 3 (Snedden 517) 2191; 1
PERs 1 (Barry 530) 2254.
Team Ten ,3 '(Veal 514) 2141;
Team Nine 1 (Ouelette 527) 2138. !
Lively Five 2 (DeVore 555) 2139
Medics 2 (DeLorme 431) 1963.
HFC has made loans
promptly for 80 years
Borrow confidently
from HFC
Since Grandfather's day
HFC has been making
prompt loans, in pri
vacy, to people who need
money for all kinds of
good reasons. At House
hold you can borrow up
to $1500, get one-day
service and take up to
24 months to repay at
the terms you choose.
OUSEHOLD FINANCE
128 E. Main St., 2nd Floor
PHONE: SPring 3-5301
Bill Casper Victor
In Bing Crosby Golf
Pebble Beach, Calif
The man to beat on the 1958
golf trail is obvious to the
touring golfers these days; fat
Bill Casper, the roly-poly pro
with the golden touch in his
putting fingers.
The ex-San Diego sailor,
now playing out of Apple Val
ley, Calif., today headed for
the $17,500 Tijuana Open,
starting Friday, holding these
titles:
1 The Bing Crosby Na
tional Pro-Amateur singles
crown worth $4,000.
2 The leading money-win
ner of the short 1958 season,
$7,700.
Second place in the Cros
by Pro - Amateur division
worth $1,500.
With such a start the other
pros on the tour are eyeing
suspiciously the good-natured
lad from the South.
Casper won $27,000 in of
ficial winnings last year; col
lected another $12,500 in a
special TV competition,
where he won six consecutive
matches; plus a certain
amount for endorsements, etc.
This one he did the hard
way. He was trailing front
running Bobby Rosburg by
five strokes at the end of the
first 36 holes played- at Cy
press Point and Monterey
Country club. The next 36
were to be played on one of
the world's toughest courses:
Pebble Beach, where it is
rough to make up ground.
But in the third round Billy
shot a very fine three-under-par
69 to pull into a tie with
Rosburg, who took 74. The
two were paired in the final
round and Casper easily
proved the master.
Raiders Stay Undefeated
In Collegiate Conference
OCC STANDINGS
OTI
SOC
OCE ......
PSC .
EOC
w
4
4
0
0
0
L
0
0
2
2
4
Pet. ern Dreonn Tt was TmfV
looo fourth loss of the season.
.000
.000
.000
Ashland Southern Ore
gon college will battle for
undisputed lead in Oregon
Collegiate conference bas
ketball on Wednesday night.
The Raiders will be hosts
lo Oregon Tech which is
also unbeaten in the circuit.
On Friday and Saturday
SOC entertains Portland
State.
By UNITED PRESS
The Red Raiders of South
ern Oregon college and Ore
gon Technical institute shared
the top spot in the Oregon
Collegiate basketball confer
ence today after protecting
their no loss records Satur
day. Both have won four loop
games.
SOC drubbed Oregon Col
lege of Education at Mon
mouth 69-40, and OTI scored
and 84-56 victory over East-
Prep Scores
SATURDAY BASKEitSALL
By United Fresc
Madras 49, Lakeview 35
Klamath Falls 55, Ashland 54
(OT)
Vale 60, Meridan (Idaho) 40
Ontario 60, Nyssa 37
Nehalem 61, Concordia 45
Mosier 40, Trout Lake (Wash.)
29
North Salem 57. Springfield 52
Pendleton 57. Baker 37
Bend 39, Redmond 33
Prineville 55, Burns 36
Corbett 42. Arlington 39
McKenzie 53. Mohawk 22
South Eugene 67, Medford 45
Sisters 57, Moro 42
Valley JC 76, Bakersfield 59
Junction City 45, Cottage Grove
43 v
La Grande 54, Mac-Hi 48
Star of the Sea 53, Siletz 47
Grants Pass 38, Crater 35
Cascade Locks 65, Dufur 42
Marshfield 63. Reedsport 62
Astoria 5B, Seaside 42
Corbett 42, Arlington 39
Central Union 55. Stayton 49
OCE and Portland State,
who was idle over the week
end, both have 0-2 marks.
OCE was within striking
distance at halftime when
SOC led 30 to 18. But the
Raiders pulled away in the
last half with Bill Hollings
worth tabulating 18 points.
He had nine for the night.
All but Dave Love among
Southern Oregon's 10 players
tallied two points.
The Raiders had a .308 field
goal average on 29 of 61 to
the Wolves 15 of 89 for .246.
SOC had 58 to 30 command
on the backboards.
SOC FG
D'Olivo 5
Hollingsworth 11
Oliva 4
Crandell 1
Foust 1
Love 0
Kenney 1
McAbee 2
Mauer 1
Sutherland 3
FT
0- 0
5- 8
0- 4
0- 2
2- 2
0- 0
0- 0
1- 3
1- 3
2- 3
PF TP
10
27
8
2
4
3
2
5
3
'8
Totals
OCE
Adams
Goodman .
Milton
Williams
Buss
Getzel
Brown
Bovle
Sherk
Pellatz
Hoy
Young ...
..29
FG
4
. 2
1
.. 1
. 0
1
. 0
0
0
0
... 3
3
11-23 13 69
PF TP
3 8
FT
1- 1
1- 1
0- 0
1- 1
0- 0
1- 1
0- 0
0- 1
0- 0
1- 2
4- 5
1- 2
5
3
3
0
3
0
0
0
1
10
7
Totals 15 10-14 16 48
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Line Up Shop
3724 So. Pacific Hwy.
NOW
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Wheel Balancing
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