EIOHT MZDfORD (ORECOIC) MAIL TRIBUNE
Grants Pass Nicks Crater;
KF Crushes Ashland Cagers
SOUTHERN OREGON
LEAGUE STANDINGS
W.
Klamath Fall 10
Grant Pass . 5
Met! ford 4
Ashland 4
Crater 3
I Pet.
1 .909
4 .556
8 .400
7 354
8 .273
Z Central Point The Grants
Pass High Cavemen, with
; tight defense and good work
on the backboards, rallied in
Z th fourth quarter to over-
come the Crater Comets 43 to
-41 her- Friday night in a
Southern Oregon conference
- basketball ruckus.
: Behind . by six points early
" In the final canto, the Cave-
- men went on top for keeps
when a bucket by Paul Lind
; quist made the score 40 to 39
: with 4 minutes 10 seconds
Z contested in the stanz.
', With the nod Grants Pass
fortified its hold on second
I place in the standings, boost
r ing its edge to 1 V games over
third place Medford, which
. had no games this week end.
' Loop leader Klamath Falls
kept its four game bulge over
' Grants Pass by crushing Ash-
land 72 to 42 in another Fri
; day hassle. The Grizzlies of
; Ashland fell to fourth position
: In the standings.
: AUn Hat 17
' Crater managed only 11
points in the second half
against GP. All of these were
put in by Wayne Allen who
. was high man for the night
with 17.
Going into the final panel,
the Comets were ahead 36 to
32 and this was upped to 38 to
32 when Allen sank a driver
on feed by Bill White. Jim
Smith plunked in a bucket
from - under the net for GP
but Allen got a free shot for
39 to 34. Then Smith, Pete
Proctor, Lindquist and Dick
Hayes recorded field goals in
that order to give GP 42 to 39
command with 2:50 left to
play.
With 2:40 to go Allen col
lected a fielder for Crater.
Neither club was able to swish
a field shot after that and a
free marker by Lindquist with
30 seconds to play concluded
the scoring.
Moor Scores 1.000th
The quints were deadlocked
at 12-all after one quarter and
Crater led 30 to 24 at the half.
At Klamath . Falls Glen
Moore picked up his 1,000th
point in a three-year varsity
career for the Pelicans. He
reached the total on his 14
Tornado J V
Nabs Pair
Medford high junior var
sity basketball team bounced
the Rogue River high varsity
66 to 40 Friday night and the
Tornado JV reserve beat the
Rogue River JV 49 to 31.
Jerry Shults rolled up 30
points for Medford in the
main game. The Tornado
headed 28 to 18 at the half.
LINE-UPS:
66 Med. JV
T 1 Oeakins .
T 30 Shulta
C 8 Dean
G 7 "Olson
G 7 Allen
RR Varsity 40
White 2
. . J. Bigham
:. Kirkley
... B. Bigham
.. Johnson
6
5
7
2
Substitution!
For Medford, Mil-
ler 2
Moore. Durkee. Monroe. Ice
2. Manley 1: for Rogue River,
Carter 10, Stewart 1. McCabe,
Archer 4, Goosey 3.
49 Med. Reserve
T 4 Moore
f 11 MaTiley
C 5 Shoemaker
G 3 Cantrall
G 6 KonoDasek ...
R. JV 31
... Lawi 13
Gail 2
Irwin 6
Combs 4
Van Darns 2
Substitutions For Medford. Jen
sen 3. B. Lindeman 2. Kliever 6,
G. Lindeman 5, Ice 4; for Rogue
River. Johnson. Ailiston, Ross 2,
Archer. White 2.
CUT - SAVE - CUT -
SAVE! SAVE! SAVE!
February
SERVICE
SPECIAL!
Good the Entire Month
of February!
The presentation of This Ad during the month
of Feb. entitle you to the following services
on your automobile:
Complete Lubrication Job
Pack & Check Front Wheel Bearings
Check Brake Linings and Adjust Brakes
Check Muffler and Tail Pipe
9 Check Universal Joint
We Will Perform
This Work in Our
Shop for the Low
Price of Only
Parsons Motors
Dodge Plymouth Headquarters
315 E. 5th ' Phone SP 3-3687
Next to1 Greyhound
HOOPMEN TANGLE This
curred in the Friday night Southern Oregon conference
basketball game between Crater and Grants Pass at Central
Point. An unidentified Crater player has his hands on the
ball in the air and grasping for it is Pete Proctor (9) of
Grants Pass. In the air with arm high is another GP Cave
man Jerry Putnam. Other players shown are Fred Thomas
(13) and Jim Smith (14) of Grants Pass and Wayne Allen
(24) of Crater. Allen scored all Comet points in second half
of fray which Grants Pass won 43 to 41.
marker of the fracas 2Vi
minutes into the final quarter.
Bob Feterson of the .Pels was
high for the mix and Bob
Niles had 13. Albert Hartwell
and Scott Peterson were tops
for Ashland with 12 and 11,
respectively.
Quarter scores for KF were
17 to 9, 36 to 22 and 51 to 32.
Grants Pass won its junior
varsity combat 54 to 47
VARSITY BOXES:
Grants Pass F
PF TP
4 8
0 3
2 6
"2 9
2 7
0 4
1 2
0 4
1 0
12 43
PF TP
0 17
2 8
1 2
4 8
3 6
1 0
0 0
11 41
Jones.
PF TP
2 1
1 8
2 9
5 12
3 11
0 1
2 2
2 0
17 42
PF TP
0 13
0 16
4 14
3 10
1 2
0 3
0 6
1 0
2 4
0 2
0 2
11 72
Smith. 1
Lindquist, I
1
Putnam, c
Hayes, g
Sparlin, g
Thomas
2
3
2
- 2
1
2
0
n
Benner
Proctor
Williams
Totals
Crater FG
Allen, f 8
White, f i 3
Campbell, c 1
Higinbotham, g 2
Bennett, g 1
Teeter 0
Kime 0
Totals 15
Ashland
Johnson, f
. 0
. 3
. 4
. 4
. 5
. 0
.. 1
- 0
17
Maurer. f
Tobiasson, c
Hartwell, g
S. Peterson, g ...
Lombard
Daniels
Murray
Totals
Klamath Falls
Niles. f
B. Peterson, f
Moore, c
Robinson, g
Herrera. g
Don DeLap
4
5
5
5
0
1
AnKeny
3
0
1
1
1
Hall
Drace
Binney
Lewis
i
Totals
SAVE - CUT - SAVE
3
Sunday, February 16, 1958
qgy
lively skirmish for the ball oc
UNE
BASKETBALL
SATURDAY COLLEGE RESULTS
By United Press
North Carolina State 69, Mary
land 64 (three overtimes)
Pittsburgh 85, Navy 83
Michigan St. 69, Illinois 56
Peen Military 83, Drexel Tech 74
FuUerton 81. Chaffey 75
Cincinnati 71. Oklahoma St. 59
Loyola (111.) 57. Kentucky 56
Syracuse 79, Colgate 62
Temple 62, George . Washington
55
Akron 74, Mt. Union 54
Shaw 64, Fayetteville St. 56
Duquesne 66, Detroit 55
Ball St. 83, St. Joseph's (Ind.) 76
William & Mary 86, Washington
& Lee 84
Duke 71, Wake Forest 59
Carnegie Tech 61, Bucknell 50
Western Reserve 70, Wayne St.
U. 60
Ohio St. 85, Michigan 76
Harvard 71, Brown 68
Newberry 84. Presbyterian 66
Connecticut 102, Rhode Island 57
Miami (Fla.) 92. Stetson 85
Kansas 90, Iowa St. 61
Princeton 66, Cornell 63
Boston U. 56. Bates 49
Springfield 60. Tufts 50
Pennsylvania 90, Columbia 77
Vermont 92. Massachusetts . 79
Baldwin Wallace 86. Morris Har
vey 85
Louisiana Southern 87, Texas
College 63
Tennessee St. 84, Central (O.) St.
47
Kent St. 78. Western Michigan 71
Richmond 92. Furman 87
Muhlenberg 96, St. Joseph's (Pa.)
84
Niagara 88, Fordham 81 (over
time St. Norbet's 77. Illinois Tech 67
Indiana Central 71, Franklin 62
Purdue 81. Wisconsin 76
Hamilton 68. Rochester 60
FRIDAY COLLEGE GAMES
By United Press
(East)
Marshal 101 Bowling Green 87
(South)
Virginia 74. Clemson 59
Morehead St. 75, Western Ky. 60
(Southwest)
Ariz. (Tempe) St. 101. W. Tex St.
71
(West)
Stanford 57. South. Calif. 44
Whitman 66, Pacific 64
Gonzaga 114, Seattle Pacific 66
College of Pacific 66, Santa
Clara 52
San Francisco 69, Pepperdine 59
UCLA 64, Washington State 44
San Francisco State 62, Cal Ag
gies 40
San Jose State 58, St. Mary's 47
Whittier 80, Occidental 56
Lewis and Clark 74, College of
Idaho 64
Nevada 54. Humboldt State 35
Fresno State 95. Santa Barbara 79
San Diego State 76. Loyola 53
Puget Sound 84, Whitworth 75
Long Beach State 87. Cal. Poly 73
Pomona-Claremont 70, Cal Tech
42
Portland State 40, Southern Ore
gon 39
Willamette 83, Linfield 77
Eastern Oregon 79, Oregon Col
lege 70
SETS RECORD
Daytona Beach, Fla
A Jaguar 3.4, driven by Ed
Crawford of Chicago, set a
new U.S. record for European
sedans over 1,500 cc in the
Florida International safety
and performance trials Fri
day. The car was clocked in
122.699 miles per hour for
the south run and 104.530 for
the north run on the "flying
mile" for an average speed
of 112.888.
BRILL
METAL WORKS
Commercial Industrial
Residential Sheet Metal Work
Stainless, Galvanized
and Copper Fabrication
2287 West Main
PHONE SP 2-4440
Prep Scores
FRIDAY BASKETBALL '
By United Pres
Scappoose 71, Wy'East 64
Prineville 45. Redmond 43
Springfield 32. Cottage Grove 32
Gresham 61, Hillsboro 50
Corbett 55, Portland Christian 51
Forest Grove 44, West Linn 39
Hudson's Bay 57, Kelso 46
Ft. Vancouver 53, Longview 42
Tillamook 68, McMinnville 55
Lake Oswego 52, Newberg 34
Tigard 66, St. Helens 64
Hood River 75. Reynolds 49
Central Catholic 52, Parkrose 29
Astoria 62, David Douglas 52
Beaverton 63. Milwaukie 44
Benson 69. Lincoln 42
Jefferson 68. Madison 55
Wilson 56, Cleveland 36
Grant 74, Franklin 53
Roosevelt 56, Washington 54
Vernonia 68. Rainier 62
Madras 41. Burns 35 ,
Sherwood 46. Banks 44
Cascade 57, North Marion 43
Jefferson 50, Colton 39
Dallas 93, Estacada 32
Coquille 64, Myrtle Point 60
McKenzie 59. Lorane 37
Sisters 60, Maupin 41
Corvallis 69. Salem 57
Sandy 83, Central 72
Myrtle Creek 58. Oakland 40
South Eugene 49, Roseburg 30
Klamath Falls 72. Ashland 42
Star of the Sea 72. Jewell 39
North Salem 65. Albany 48
La Grande 70, The Dalles 62
Toledo 57. Mapleton 48
Grants Pass 43, Crater 41
Eagle Point 64, Illinois Valley 51
Phoenix 54. Glendale 34
Nehalem 52, Knappa 51
Hermiston 48, Baker 47
Culver 47, Sherman 42
Marshfield 50, North Bend 46
Reedsport 75, Gold Beach 57
Powers 74. Ophir 26
Westfir 50, Mohawk 41
Coburg 52. Lowell 44
Crow 61, Triangle Lake 44
Oakridge 67. Creswell 44
Drain 54, Elmira 36
Pleasant Hill 54, Willamette of
Eugene 45
St. Mary's 62, Prospect 42
Talent 34. Butte Falls 33
Yamhill 74. Amity 46
Nestucca 64, Seaside 61
Alsea 58, Shedd 40
Woodburn 46, Mt. Angel
(overtime)
Sweet Home 44, Lebanon 41
Cascade Locks 54. Mosier
43
50
(overtime)
Brookings 73, Pacific 27
Corvallis 69. South Salem 57
Concordia 60, Gaston 42
Neahkahnie 56, Clatskanie 45
Newport 55. Waldport 42
Pendleton 56. Mac-Hi 42
Philomath 47, Sheridan 31
St. Boniface 44, Santiam 38
St. Francis 57, Junctnn City 46
Registered
Trapshoot
At Gun Club
Medford Gun club has a
merchandise shoot today and
then has its first registered
event of the season on Satur
day and Sunday, Feb. 22 and
23.
Today's event, starting at
noon, is a 50-bird handicap
competition. There will be
other shooting also and prac
tice will be possible ' after
9:30 a.m. .
The shoot next week end,
registered by Pacific Interna
tional Trapshooting associa
tion, is the eighth annual
Early Spring tourney. Pro
gram each day will have 100
targets at 16 yards, 100 han
dicap birds and 25 pairs of
doubles. That makes a 500
target program. . -
Trophies in the early spring
tussle will go to class winners
and runner s-up in the 16-yard
gunning, to winners and run-ners-up
in the handicaps and
to winners in the doubles.
Hedrick Fives
Down Ashland
Hedrick Junior high eighth
grade hoopmen won over
Ashland by the comfortable
score of 38 to 18 Friday but
the Hornet seventh had to
play overtimes to emerge with
a 20 to 18 victory.
The Medford club had 10
to 4, 17 to 6 and. 24 to 10
quarter spreads in the eighth
grade game. Callahan of Ash
land was high scorer with 12
tallies and David Irving had
eight for Hedrick.
Seventh graders were knot
ted 18-all at the end of regu
lation time. First overtime
failed to produce a score and
Gibb Mitchell got a basket
for the Hornets in the second
extra.
Ashland headed 4 to 2 at
the quarter and halftime
standing was 10 each. Hed
rick was on top 18 to 16 after
three chukkers. Gale. Tepper
had 11 points for Ashland and
John Gilbertson eight for the
Hornets.
Romney, W. Va., changed
hands 56 times during the
Civil War.
XP'IP
SAQPIXCMPA GCY NCI
GSYQV
QULQ'G
J L I W L S
Knockdown
Gives Gale
Bout Edge
New York (IP) The Inter
national Boxing club hopes to
stage a return bout because of
the dispute over welterweight
Gale Kerwin's "Chinese"
knockdown and his split-decision
victory over previously
unbeatend Stefan Redl.
Canadian Kerwih, now liv
ing at Valley Stream, N.Y.,
was awarded the split verdict
Friday night after his 10
round TV fight with German
Redl, now residing at Pas
saic, N.J., before 3,500 at
Madison Square Garden.
Kerwin, weighing 14234
pounds to Rerl's 1451., snap
ped Stefan's victory string at
17 straight; but he received an
assist from refree Larry Napp,
who credited Kerwin with a
knockdown in the sixth round.
Without that knockdown
ruling, which influenced all
three ring officials in award
ing the sixth session to Ker
win, Redl might have won the
fight.
Brushed Canvas
The debatable knockdown
resulted when Kerwin landed
a right to Redl's head and
sent him spinning sideways
so that Redl brushed the can
vas with his gloves. Napp,
an American League umpire
during the baseball season,
said, "I had to call it a knock
down because the rule book
states specifically that a box
er is down if any part of his
body other than his feet
touches the ring floor." Many
less-technical referees would
have called the brushing a
"slip."
Stocky Redl took the mand
atory eight-count on his feet
while the fans booed lustily
at the ruling that gave Ker
win a cheaper knockdown
even -than any of the cheap
Chinese" home runs Napp
may have seen on the diamond.
Schulz Highest
In Rifle Meet
David C. Schultz posted the
highest score of 15 shooters
Friday in the smallbore rifle
shoot of Veterans of Foreign
Wars Rifle and Pistol club of
Medford at the armory.
He had a 328 mark.
Other counts included were
Richard Wright 323; William
Ganong 323, Clay Wheeler
307, William O. Burnette 296,
M. D. Childers 290, Ralph Mc
Kinsey 281 and Eugene Thig
pin 266.
Two new members were ac
cepted at the shoot.
Next of the three remain
ing shoots of the season will
be on Feb. 28.
HOCKEY
By United Press
Coach Phil Watson of the
New York Rangers apparently
made a wise move when he
decided to use his two best
snipers, Andy Bathgate and
Camille Henry, on the same
line.
Bathgate scored twice and
set up a goal by Henry Friday
night as the Rangers downed
the Chicago Black Hawks, 3-1,
in the only league action.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
By United Press
The Cleveland Barons, trav
eling under a full head of
steam, will be feeding on last
place "meat" over the week
end as they attempt to close
in on first place in the Ameri
can Hockey League.
The Barons', who defeated
Providence, 7-2, Friday night,
have now won three in a row
and five of their last six, and
are only five points behind
front-running Hershey. To
night, the Barons will host
the cellar-dwelling Buffalo
Bisons, with the teams mov
ing to Buffalo on Sunday.
.Other action tonight will
see Rochester at Providence
and Hershey at Springfield.
QPDDSAW RCDDLI
H P A Q G L
VCOI GPHIPQ
A .
Shot by Frederick
Nudges Red Raiders
Portland John Frederick
tossed a desperation shot from
the corner Friday night just as
the gun .went off and gave
Portland State college a
startling 40-39 upset win over
the Red Raiders of Southern
Oregon college in the Oregon
Collegiate conference. Fred
erick had made only two
points before that.
The loss, third in the con
ference for SOC, severely
threatened its title ambitions.
Southern Oregon winds up its
loop campaign next Wednes
day against Oregon Tech
which has dropped only one
of its circuit clashes. OTT has
three loop encounters remain
ing. Ashland's Red Raiders had
trouble finding the range on
the unfamiliar Lincoln high
court.
Bulwark of Viking scoring
was John Winters who scored
11 points from his guard po
sition. The Raiders had a 23-16
lead at halftime. Dave D'Olivo
had 11 points for the Ashland
quintet.
39 io 38 Lead
PSC went in front 26 to 23
in the second half. SOC tied
the game at 33 and 35 apiece
in the closing minutes and
went into the lead at 39 to 38
Talent Bulldogs . Squeak
By; St. Mary's Triumphs
JACKSON - COUNTY
B LEAGUE STANDINGS
W. L.
Talent 14 0
Butte Falls 8 6
St. Mary's ... 6 7
Pet.
1.000
.571
.429
.385
.071
Jacksonville 5 8
Prospect
1 13
Talent high outlasted Butte
Falls 34 to 33 Friday night
to narrowly avert a loss in
the Jackson County B Basket
ball league and keep its sea
son record unmarred.
St. Mary's pounded Pros
pect 62 to 42 in other league
competition.
Butte Falls almost caught
the Bulldogs of Talent after
trailing 16 to 29 at the end of
the third quarter. The Loggers
cut their deficit to one point
with 15 to 20 seconds left to
lapy and Talent successfully
hung onto the ball until time
ran out.
Ball control play kept the
Loggers close to the Bulldogs
during the first half but Tal
ent began to Dull away in
the third period and midway
in the period Butte Falls
began to move the ball with
the aim of more shots but
good ones. The Loggers man
aged only two points in the
third session but then began
to roll.
Miksche Shoots 22
A 14 to 11 margin in goals
from the field was compiled
by BF but Talent outscored
the mountain club 12 to five
from the free stripe. Butte
Falls was whistled for 16
fouls and Talent six.
Jim Irwin ran up 17 points
for the Loggers and Ron Wel-
Taylor Girls Fire
Best Rifle Scores
Members of Medford Junior
Rifle club are sharpening
their aims in preparation for
a sectional match at Roseburg
on March 29 and 30.
In last week's club shoot
ing Margaret and Phyllis Tay
lor were top scorers with 358
and 341, respectively. Jim
Fawcett had 339. Ken Cox
won the box of ammunition
for his 22 per cent improve
ment over his previous aver
age. Gil and George Harrison
have transferred' to the Med
ford club from the Phoenix
organization.
The first American gover
nor of New Mexico, Charles
Bent, was killed and scalped
by Taos Indians during the
brief anti-American uprising
in 1847.
EL S I !
on Jim McAbee's jumper with
a minute to go.
The Raiders shot .333 from
the field on 15 for 45 while
the Vikings got 17 for 47 or
.362. SOC put in nine of 18
free tries and Portland State
six for eight. PSC had re
bound advantage 38 to 28.
In the only other OCC con
test, Eastern Oregon gave
Oregon College of Education
its 12th straight defeat with a
79-70 win at Monmouth. At
one point in the first half the
Wolves were ahead 32-23 but
the Mounties moved ahead to
gain a 35-34 halftime edge.
Tom Neel of EOC hit 30
points and Larry Howard had
23. Wayne Young had 16
points for the Wolves.
BOX:
SOC
D'Olivo
FT PF TP
3 2 11
3 2 11
2 0 6
0 1 10
0 0 ' 0
10 1
0 0 0
i 39
FT PF TP
0 0 6
0 4 4
0 0 0
0 3 0
5 1 11
0 5 10
0 0 0
0 14
115
t 15 40
. 4
. 4
. 2
- 5
. 0
. 0
. 0
15
Ohva
Hollingsworth
McAbee
Maurer
Crandall
Sutherland
Totals
PSC
DeFant
Frederick
3
2
0
0
3
5
0
2
2
17
Weber
Scrivens ...
Winters
Riley
Jenkins
Ferguson .
Roy
Totals
burn of Talent and Mike Con-
ley each had 12.
St. Mary's glided away
from Prospect after a 9-all
first quarter tie. At halftime
it was 28 to 19 for the Cru
saders and after three stanzas
it was 41 to 25. Gary Miksche
had a hot second period with
12 points and was high for
the evening with 22. Dave
Gardner put in 20 for the
Cougars.
The Crusaders of Medford
applied a sagging man-to-may
defense with effectiveness in
the ruckus
Butte Falls junior varsity
won its prelim 42 to 29 with
Jerry Ferguson of BF and
Eddies Seaver of Talent each
collecting 12. Roger Hout also
picked up 12 for St. Mary's
jayvee in a 43 to 20 win over
Prospect. Dick Evans of SM
and Clifton Chapman of Pros
pect each put in 12.
Jerry Kerr of St. Mary's
varsity missed action Friday
because of an ankle sprain in
Thursday drill. Whether he'll
see duty here Tuesday night
against Butte .Falls is doubt
full. Talent will vie at Jackson
ville on Tuesday.
LINE-UPS:
2 St. Mary't Prospect
F 8 King Wheeler
F 22 Miksche Davidson
C 12 Flakus D. Gardner
G 5 B. Evans C. Gardner
G 2 Mansfield Scaife
Substitutions For St. Marv's
Colver 2, D. Evans. Michael 2,
Hout 5, Hayes 4; for Prospect,
Jantzer, Chapman.
34 Talent
Walls
6 Gingerich
7 Combs
12 Welburn
Butte Falls
Conley
Irwin
.. Abbott
Shepard 2
... Cavin 2
9 Baer
Substitutions For Butte Falls,
Smith. Ellis.
ran
Stop in today! See the revolutionary 4-cylinder,
V-Block Johnson Super Sea-Horse V-50
Meet the "V that goes to sea the
world's first V-engine outboard. It's
"sound conditioned" for super silence.
Ideal block temperature is thermostat
ically controlled. Carburetion is out
boarding's first twin-barrel down draft.
oram -part
6th & Bartlett
Stanford Spills Trojans
57-44 In Coast Circuit
By GENE BRYANT
United Press Sports Writer
Southern California found
itself the, latest upset victim
of the Stanford Indians.
The erratic Stanford hoop
five put the whammy on the
Trojan horse Friday -night
and dealt the Southern Cali-
Aussies Run
Fast Mile
Perth, Australia (IP) Aus
tralians Herb Elliott and Mer
vyn Lincoln both smashed
the four-minute mile here
Saturday, finishing a one-
mile race in the identical
time of three minutes 59.6
seconds.
Judges declared Elliott, a
home-town boy, winner by a
hair's breadth over his rival
from Victoria.
ROUNDTABLE WINS RACE
Arcadia, Calif. (IP) Round
Table uncorked a burst of
speed in the final half mile
Saturday to capture the $50,
000 added San Antonio Handi
cap at Santa Anita by some
three lengths and tied the
world's record for a mile and
an eighth. The winning time
by Travis M. Kerr's Round
Table was 1:46 45. It tied the
world's mark held jointly by
four horses.
mm
BIGGER, BETTER ' J jl
I THAN EVER! I
HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM
FEB. 26-27-28, MARCH 1
Benefit Kiwanis Dental Clinic t
COMEDY! MUSIC!
GET YOUR TICKETS NOW
From Any Member of Medford Kiwanis Club
With a king-size 70.7 cubic inch dis
placement, it laughs at loads. Starting
is 12-volt electric, with a key switch
that works like a car ignition. See this
new Johnson V-bomb today one of
eleven great Sea-Horses for '58!
MEDFORD
fornians a severe blow to
their Pacific Coast conference
title hopes. Frequently tough
on their home court, the In
dians handed the Trojans a
loss they could ill afford
when they dropped the visi
tors, 57-44, at their Palo Alto
crackerbox.
UCLA Takes Lead
UCLA moved into first
place in the PCC standings
Friday when the Bruins eas
ily downed a poor-shooting
Washington State squad,-64-44,
at Pullman. The visitors
rolled to a 26-17 halftime mar
gin and coasted the rest of
the way. The Bruins finish
ed with a poor .296 mark
gars were even worse with
a .206 percentage. Roland Un
derbill led the winners with
17 points while John Maras
had 16 for the losers.
Stanford had to battle most
of the way for its victory
over USC but made it a rout
in the last few minutes when
the Trojans fell apart. The
score was 39-all with eight
minutes 'remaining when Sop
homore Gerry Theusen found
the range and put the Indians
out in front for good. Theu
sen led the Tribe with 17
points while Jim White paced
the losers with 11. Stanford
held a 28-23 halftime lead.
Going into Saturday con
tests, UCLA led the confer
ence with a 7-2 record, fol
lowed by California 6-2, Ore
gon State 7-3 and USC 6-4.
MARINE
DIVISION
Phone SP 2-6235
CUT - SAVE - CUT - SAVE - CUT - SAVE
Main & Central