Ashland Trims Black
56-43 To Split Cage
SOUTHFRV OREGOV
CONFERENCE STANDINGS
W It
Klamath Fall 13 1
Grants Pasi 8 9
Medford 5 7
Ashland 5 9
Crater 3 9
Pet.
.928
.500
.417
J57
.250
Ashland high'i dipsy-do
Grizzlies utilized streaks of
torrid field bucketing, ad
vantage of more trips to the
foul heave stripe, tenacious
defense and steadier all
around performance at Ash
land Saturday night to re
ject Medford ambitions for a
series sweep in the bid for
second place in Southern Ore
gon conference basketball.
The Lithia city quint quiet
ed a threatening Tornado
storm in the early fourth quar
ter, weathered a pressing Med
ford defense and packaged the
scoring efforts of Jack Tobias
son, Bill Maurer, Scott Peter
son and Albert Hartwell to
drop the Pear city aggrega
tion by the comfortable mar
gin of 56 to 43.
By splitting the two-game
week end engagement, the
Ashlanders made it three vic
tories in four tangles this sea
son with the Black Tornado.
Both clubs are still in the run
ning for the District 6 A-l
spot and a trip to the state
tournament to Eugene. But
the objective looms more
difficult for the Grizzlies who
have just two more hassles in
the circuit. They are still a
full game back of currently
third running Medford, which
has four conference encount
ers yet on its slate.
Medford Versus GP
Medford with its 42 to 40
Friday verdict and Ashland
by the Saturday win each
gained a notch on Grants
Pass, the present second
place holder. Klamath Falls
rapped the Cavemen 70 to 61
Friday and 79 to 58 Saturday
to capture the conference
diadem.
The Tornado carries its
challenge directly against
Grants Pass on the coming
week end while Ashland has
a bye. Klamath will complete
its regular season by skirmish
ing Crater at Central Point.
' Saturday's game at Ash
land began in reverse order
to the one Friday at Medford.
The Black Tornado took the
opening lead. Ashland was
never more than four points
down, however, and the
Grizzlies tied up the ruckus
at 4, 6, 11, 12 and 14-all. With
3' minutes 19 seconds left to
play in the first half, Bob
Johnson made it 15 to 14 with
a free shot. The Ashlanders
stayed in front the rest of the
evening, stretching to 21 to
14 before Medford tallied
again. Halftime count was
23 to 16.
Lead Hacked To 39-37
After the Lithians had out
pointed the Tornado 15 to 6
in the second quarter, the
third session was contested on
imrt oven terms. Medford
cut the Ashland gap to three
points at 26 to 23 and 29 to
26 Nevertheless, the Grizzlies
nosed their guests it
the period for 37 to 29 edge
at rest-time.
Tr Hamlin BOt two field
goals for Medford in the first
45 seconds of ine lasi
t i, Trhiann hooked a shot
for Ashland but Jerry Ander
son and John ironnmayei
v, nt in a Dair of gifters.
cavil y - ,
That cut the Ashland spread
to a mere 39 to 37. ive min
utes 19 seconds remained in
the game. '
That was all of the Medford
scoring for 31 i minutes. In
the meantime Hartwell and
Peterson, plunked field goals,
Tobiasson a " field shot and
three free throws and Maurer
two gift tosses. That took the
Ashland lead to 50 to 37 and
put the Grizzlies out of reach
Delany Won't
Run Mile This
Saturday Night
New York (IP The indoor
mile brigade will get two
races rather than the usual
one Saturday night at Madi
son Square Garden and Ron
Delany will be there. Yet you
can bet the rent money that
he won't win either mile.
That may sound like heresy
since Delany, a Villanova
senior from Ireland, has won
24 straight races indoors, in
cluding 21 miles. Last Satur
day night, he won the nation
al AAU indoor mile for the
third straight year in four
minutes, 3.7 seconds, only
one-tenth of a second off the
world indoor ,'fecord.
Actually, Delany won't win
a mile this week because he
won't run in any. Villanova,
hoping to keep its IC4A team
title, will have Ron try to re
peat his 1957 IC4A double
victory in the 1000 and two
mile runs.
He won each comfortably
last year with one hour be
tween races. He is favored to
do it again, even though he
will have only 35 minutes of
rest this time.
MedfordTribune
St. Mary's, Butte Falls
Cop B League Concluders
JACKSON COUNTY
B LEAGUE STANDINGS
W L
Pet.
1.000
.563
.500
.400
.063
Talent 15
Butte Falls 9
St. Mary's 8
Jacksonville 6
Prospect 1
0
7
8
9
IS
Talent's Jackson County B
league champion Bulldogs at
tempt to wind up their regu
lar season unbeaten by prep
opposition when they vie
at Jacksonville on Tuesday
night.
It will be the final game of
1958 in the B basketball cir
cuit. Three other aggregations
concluded league play Satur
day night. Butte Falls was
second in the final standings
after a 49 to 34 verdict over
Prospect. St. Mary's downed
Jacksonville 54 to 48 to as
sure third place.
Butte Falls had 19 to 7, 24
to 18 and 35 to 25 quarterly
leads over the Cougars. Jim
Irwin got 19 markers and
Mike Conley 18 for the Log
gers. Prospect was without
the services of Dave Gardner
who suffered and ankle sprain
in the Jacksonville game on
Friday.
SM Starts Track
The Redskins headed St.
for the final 1 minute and 49
seconds.
Maurer Has 19
Maurer was the scoring
leader with 19 points for the
Grizzlies and Hartwell had 15
for Ashland. Larry Brown's
11 was high for Medford. He
had seven of Medford's first
11 points. Tobiasson was the
top individual in rebound re
trieves with 11 and Hamlin
had six.
Ashland outscored the Tor
nado from both the field and
the free throw mark. The
Grizzlies had 17 to 15 edge in
the two-point goals and piled
up the biggest share of their
lead on free shots, making 22
of 33 tries while Medford put
in 13 of 19. Ten Ashland gift
ers were in the last quarter.
Taking 35 shots from the
field, Ashland naa a gooa
warm .485 average. Medford
had .395 on 38 casts.
Rebounding came out even
team-wise with 22 each, ac
cording to Tornado statistics.
Coach Earl Iba of , the
Grizzlies called on his five
starters to go the whole route
while Mentor Frank Roelandt
of the Tornado sent 11 players
into the action. Sophomores
Jerry Anderson, Jerry Shults
and John Frohnmayer saw
considerable service and an
other sophoViore, Calvin
Dean, saw his1 first varsity
duty. Lowell Dean, twin of
Cal, top varsity scorer and also
a soph, was sidelined for the
week end with a foot infec
tion. Klamath Falls broke an 18
all deadlock in the second
quarter and led the Cavemen
37 to 25 at halftime Saturday.
Margin' after three cantos was
67 to 42. Glen Moore had 28
points and Bob Peterson 20
for the Pels.
Medford junior varsity
fared about the same as the
varsity although the game was
closer at the finish. Ashland
won 43 to 39. The Grizzly JV
went into the last quarter on
top by 36 to 28. The Junior
Tornado cut it 37 to 34 and
39 to 36 but Ashland pushed
back to a six. point bulge at
42 to 36.
Clarence Smith had 11
points for Ashland and Tony
Monroe 12 for Medford. Half
time score was 21-each.
BOX:
Medford
Hamlin, f -Brown,
f
Anderson, e
Peek, g
Peery, g
Shults
FG
.. 4
. 4
. 2
0
. 1
2
FT
0
3
2
0
3
1
2
0
2
0
0
PF TP
8
11
fi
0
5
5
4
Plankenhorn
Harvey
Frohnmayer
Rasmussen
C. Dean
1
0
0
1
0
0
2
2
0
Totals
15 13
21 43
PF TP
Ashland
Johnson, f
Maurer. f
Tobiasson, c
Hartwell, g
Peterson, g
FG
0
6
3
5
3
FT
2
7
4
5
4
3 2
19
10
15
10
Totals 17 22 14 5
Referees Warren and Zarosm
ski. VARSITY LINE-UPS:
58 Grants Pass K. Falls 79
F 9 Sparlin a Peterson 20
F 12 Smith Niles 6
C 12 Putnam Moore 28
G 5 Haves Robinson 12
G 8 Liridquist Ankeny 10
Substitutions: For Grants Pass
Proctor 7. Rembert 5; for Klamath
Falls--Delap 3.
Preliminary: Grants Pass JV 59,
Klamath Falls JV 61 (OT).
JAYVEE LINE-UPS:
43 Ashland Medford 39
F 6 R. Allen . Deakins 2
F 8 Bjork Olson 4
C 11 Smith Koch 3
G 10 Gray C. Dean 5
G 6 Dickerson G. Allen
Substitutions For Ashland. Al
ley, Forrest 2; for Medford. Durkee
6, Ice, Miller 3, Monroe 12, Frohn
mayer 4.
Tornado
Series
Mary's 9 to 7 at the quarter
but the Crusaders were on
top 27 to 20 by halftime and
48 to 33 by the third quarter
stop. Gary , Miksche had 17
counters for SM and Ken Per
reard 16 for Jacksonville.
In jayvee games St. Mary's
beat Jacksonville 42 to 32
with Ron Daley getting 14
points and Butte Falls drop
ped Prospect 34 to 21.
Coach Bill McKibbin of St.
Mary's planned to start track
workouts today.
LINE-UPS:
54 St. Mary's Jacksonville 48
F 8 King Smith 6
F 17 Miksche Perrcard 16
C 14 Flakus .. Dowell 9
G 4 Evans Branson 7
G 2 Kerr Davis 5
Substitutions For St. Mary's,
Mansfield 2, Colver 7. Hayes, Hout;
for Jacksonville, McKeen 3, Whit
ney 2, Hanley.
49 Butte Falls Prospect 34
F 18 Conley Wheeler 4
F 4 Smith Chapman 4
C Abbott Grieve 9
G 6 Cavin C. Gardner 8
G 19 Irwin Scaife 7
Substitutions For Butte Falls,
Rambo, Baker. Ferguson; for Pros
pect, Jantzer 2.
Gonzales Thinks
Of Retirement
Dallas, Tex. (IP) Pancho
Gonzales, who says he's think
ing of retiring, attempts to
whittle a little off Lew Hoard's
wide lead today in their 100
match cross-country, tennis
series.
Gonzales, defending champ
ion of pro tennis, said Sun
day night after losing 6-4, 7-5
to Hoad in Fort Worth that he
may retire after this series,
but emphasized he hasn't yet
made up his mind.
The 'win gave the Austra
lian a 16-8 lead in the series.
He broke through Gonzales,
service in the ninth game of
the first set and in the 11th
game of the second.
HOCKEY
NATIONAL LEAGUE
. By United Press
The Montreal Canadiens,
who missed two chances to do
it themselves over the week
end, may "back into" the Na
tional Hockey league champ
ionship before they suit up
for their next game.
The Canadiens, who rallied
to gain a 3-3 tie with the De
troit Red Wings Sunday
night, now can clinch if the
second-place New York Rang
ers fail to beat the Chicago
Black 'Hawks Wednesday
night. The Canadiens play
next against Toronto on
Thursday.
The Rangers overcame an
early two-goal defict to de
feat the Maple Leafs, 4-2, and
the Boston Bruins downed the
Black Hawks, 2-0, in the
other games Sunday night.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
The Hershey Bears and the
Cleveland Barons teams
moving in opposite directions
are deadlocked for first
place in the American Hockey
league after a busy weekend
of action.
The red-hot Barons moved
into a tie for the top' spot
by beating the Rochester
Americans, 4-1, Sunday night,
while Providence was trounc
ing the Bears, 7-3.
In the other game Sunday
night, a four-goal outburst in
the final period carried
Springfield to a 6-3 triumph
over the Buffalo Bisons.
PACKER OFFICIAL DIES
Green Bay, Wis. ftP) Rus
sell Bogda, president of the
Green Bay Packers pro foot
ballteam from 1953 to 1957
died Saturday night of lung
cancer. He was 47.
HFC has made loans
promptly for 80 years
Borrow confidently
from HFC
OUSEHOLD FINANCE
128 E. Main St., 2nd Floor
PHONE: SPring 3-5301
Gap in NW
Race Upped
By Linfield
By UNITED PRESS
Linfield .meets up-and--com-ing
College of Idaho and Wil
lamette tries to get back on
the winning track against
Whitman tonight in key
Northwest conference basket
ball games.
Linfield moved into a game
and one-half lead over Wil
lamette in the hot title chase
Saturday night by walloping
Whitman 88-68 at Walla Walla
while Willamette absorbed its
second straight defeat at the
hands of College of Idaho, 78
59. Bill Machamer poured in
38 points and Jackie Riley
added 23 for Linfield as it
bounced back from a Friday
night defeat to take a 9-3 con
ference record to 8-5 for the
Bearcats.
L and C Third
Lewis and Clark stayed in
third place with a close 66-65
win over Pacific. The Pioneers
are 7-6 while College of Idaho
is 7-7. Whitman is 6-8 ' and
Pacific is last with 3-11.
Oregon Tech, which sewed
up the Oregon Collegiate con
ference crown Friday night,
wound up the loop season
with a 92-51 win over Oregon
College. The win gave OTI
'a final 14-2 mark to 12-4 for
Southern Oregon which de
feated .Northwest Nazarene
for the second night in a row,
57-45.
Eastern Oregon downed
Portland State for the second
night in a row, 66-64, but still
wound up in fourth place,
with 6-10, a game behind the
Vikings. OCE finished with
1-15 and won only one of 21
games during the season.
Camilo Pascual
Eyes 10 Wins
For Senators
By FRED DOWN
United Press Sports Writer
Camilo Pascual, perhaps the
first man ever paid by the
Washington Senators for not
pitching, believes such gen
erosity should be repaid.
And so, the little 24-year-old
Cuban right-hander an
nounced Sunday at Orlando,
Fla., that he'll win 15 games
this year. That's almost twice
as many as Camilo ever has
won in a single season but
both he and Senators Presi
dent Calvin Griffith believe
he'll do it.
"Pascual has worn himself
out pitching in winter ball
the last two years," explained
Griffith. "This year we paid
him a handsome bonus not to
pitch and we're confident it
will pay off."
Gels Mad N
"I should win 15 games if
I can control my temper," ex
plained Camilo in broken
English. "In past, I breeze
along okay for four or five
innings but get mad when
they hit me a little bit. Then
they hit me a lot."
Pascual, a 5-10, 175-pound-er,
had 4.09 earned run aver
age in 1957, but throws low
fast stuff that rival managers
believe would make him a big
winner with a contender.
Grelle Finishes
Third in Mile
New York (IP) Jim Grelle
of Oregon finished third with
a good time of 4:06.8 Saturday
night in the indoor mile at
the National AAU champion
ships behind Ron Delaney and
Hungary's Instvan Rozsavol
gyi. Delaney's winning time
was 4:03.7, one tenth of a sec
ond off the world indoor
record.
Grelle also finished third
behind the same pair at the
Baxter mile the week before.
It was only his second indoor
mile race.
CAPPS VICTOR
Seattle (IP) Everett Capps
of Burns, Ore., won the light
weight title in the Northwest
Golden Gloves tournament
Saturday night with a victory
over Ed Richey of Portland.
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.
Fritz Thoelcke Nabs
Rifle Meet Honors
Fritz Thoelcke, Klamath
Falls, with 779 came out win
ner of the Southern Oregon
Sectional tournament which
is part of a rifle champion
ship held by the National
Rifle and Pistol club at Ash
land was one of twenty-five
held on this date.
Scores from all competitors
will be rushed to Washington
to determine the national
champion, team champions
and class winners.
A new Oregon record for
riflemen was set by Mrs. Vio
let Griffin, Macdoel, Cali
fornia. She fired 51 perfect
shots in the prone position
before dropping a center shot.
The previous record .was
Prep Scores
SATURDAY BASKETBALL
By . United Press
South Eugene 63, Marshfield 57
North Bend 48, Springfield 44
Klamath Falls 79. tS-ants Pass 58
Ashland 56, Medford 43
Astoria 64, Hillsboro 39
Ontario 41, Vale 40
The Dalles 69, Pendleton 62
Mac Hi 78, Hermiston 62
Baker 56, La Grande 50
Prineville 61. Lakeview 55
Sisters 48, Sherman 37
Joseph 53. Union 41
Nehalem 63, Warrenton 49
Lead Held
By Demaret
Houston, Tex. (IP) Colorr
ful Jimmy Demaret, who has
been playing pro golf for .30
of his 47 years, carried a two
stroke lead, today into the
final round of the $30,000
Houston Invitational golf
tournament.
The Houstonian, who plays
out of Kiamesha Lake, N.Y.,
fired a 3-under-par 69 Sunday
for a 290 score to lead the
field of 64 pros and five
amateurs who started the
final round today.
Two strokes away from
Demaret were Marty Furgol
of Lemont, 111., and Robert
De Vicenzo of Mexico City at
211, while steady Dow Finst
erwald of Tequesta, Fla., cur
rent golf dom's most consistant
money-winner, was tied at 212
with Jay Hebert of Sanford,
Fla. - .
Seven others were bunched
at the 214 mark Dave Ra
gan, Orlando, Fla.; Milon
Marusic, Webster Graves,
Mo.; Ed Porky Oliver, Caton,
Mass.; Bob Goalby, Darien,
Conn.; Frank Stranahan, To
ledo, Ohio; Gene Littler,
Singing Hills, Calif., and
Stan Leonard of Vancouver,
B. C.
NAIA Grappling
Won By Vikings
Portland (IP) Portland
State won four individual
crowns and took first place
Saturday in the District 2
NAIA wrestling meet with 76
points, Oregon College of Ed
ucation was second with 69,
Lewis and Clark 61, Pacific
40 and Southern Oregon 12.
lit BRUUiv
'i ..-t
KJJCCKT STluu;
'-O A TRULY
.C M IS
.. ......
I 'i s. -u UHISM"
! v-3ff" STRAIGHT FROM v
KENTUCKY
A TRULV AMERICAN WMISKEVf
"THE OLD SUNNY BROOK CO., LOUISVILLE, KY., DISTRIBUTED BY NATIONAL
thirty-nine, held by Bill Jones
of Roseburg.
. Team championship went to
the Medford Rifle club master
shooters, of Clinton Charley,
Harry Heidenreich, Lewis
Conger and Frank Rush. They
won out' over eight other
teams with 1532.
Runner up to Thoelcke's
total of 779 out of 800 pos
sible was Archie Haskins of
Ashland with 775, placing
him in the top spot in the
master class. Other class lead
ers were: expert, Ted Tellin,
Klamath Falls 768; sharp
shooters, Peter Serefin, Rose
burg, 730; marksmen, Mrs.
Mildred Comfort, Roseburg,
730, and unclassified, Larry
Klahn. Klamath Falls, 714.
TOURNAMENT RESULTS:
Match 1 (20 shots prone)
Winner, Violet Griffin 200-51X,
Master 1st D. J. Bolton, Medford,
200-18X, 2nd Bob Lucas, Dorris.
Calif., 200-17X. Expert, 1st Tellin,
200-19x, 2nd Paul Dodge. Yreka,
Calif., 200-18x. Sharpshooter 1st
Charles Menges, Dorris, 200-15X,
2nd Francis Flowers, Midland. 200
llx. Marksmen 1st Phil Brazil,
Yreka, 198. 2nd Leonard Johnson,
Ashland, Unc. 1st Klahn 196.
Match 2 (20 shots sitting)
Winner, Heidenreich 200-15x,
Master 1st Thoelcke 200-10x, 2nd
Victor Hansen, Yreka. 199. Expert
1st Tellin 199, 2nd George Braut
lacht, Hornbrook, Calif.. 199. Sharp
shooters 1st Serafin 195. 2nd Law
rence Willie. Eugene 192. Marks
man 1st Leonard Johnson, Ashland
193, 2nd M. Comfort 193. Unc.
Klahn 198.
Match 3 (20 shots kneeling)
Winner, Haskins 198. Master 1st
John Parisotto, Klamath Falls 197,
2nd C. Charley 196. Expert 1st
Marty Perreard, JacKsonville 193.
2nd Tellin 192. Sharpshooters 1st
Willie 182, 2nd Serafin 181 Marks
man 1st M. Comfort 180, 2nd
Johnson 165. Unc. Jack Schauble,
Shady Cove 183.
Match 4 (20 shots standing)
Winner. Conger 184. Master 1st
Thoelcke 184. 2nd Heidenreich 181.
Experts 1st Robert Purkhiser 180,
Klamath Falls, 2nd Stan Solus,
Yreka .177.' Sharpshooters 1st Sera
fin 175, 2nd Francis Flowers 165.
Marksman 1st Johnson 169, 2nd
M. Comfort 161. Unc. 1st Joe
Waltz, Shady Cove 163.
Match 5 (Grand Aggregate)
Winner. Thoelcke 779. Master 1st
Haskins 775. 2nd Parisotto 771-. Ex
pert 1st Tellin 768, 2nd Brautlach
766. Sharpshooters 1st Serafin 748,
2nd Flowers 731. Marksmen 1st M.
Comfort, 2nd Johnson 723. Unc.
1st Klahn 714.
Celts Cinch
Titular Tie
By UNITED PRESS
The Boston Celtics clinched
at least a tie for their second
straight Eastern division
crown in the National Basket
ball association and ap
propriately. Bob Cousey was
the chap who did the clinch
ing. Cousey whipped in four
straight baskets in the closing
minutes Sunday to give the
Celtics a 99-97 victory over
the Philadelphia Warriors at
Province, R.I. Cousey, ham
pered by an injured leg much
of the season, put on one of
his old-time shows with a
game-high of 30 points.
The second-place Syracuse
Nationals stayed technically
alive in the race by beating
St. Louis, 101-92. In the only
other league game, the Cin
cinnati Royals beat Minne
apolis, 111-93, to snap a six
game losing streak.
Kentucky Straight Bourbon "Whiskey
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! -
The
horses and
In
AMERICAN WHISKEY
Monday, February 24, 1958
Kentucky Hoopmen Close
To Southeastern Crown
By UNITED PRESS
Kentucky can clinch the
Southeastern conference
championship Monday night
for the second straight time
and the 13th in the past 15
seasons.
Coach Adolph Rupp's Wild
cats, already assured an
NCAA basketball tournament
berth since Auburn is in
eligible for tournament play,
plays Auburn at Birmingham,
Ala. Two games ahead with
just two to play, Kentucky
even can lose this one and
still clinch by beating Tennes
see Saturday.
Boston college (15-2) was
selected as the ninth team for
the 24-team NCAA tourna
ment today as a "member at
large", after a 73-68 win over
old rival Holy Cross.
Lightweight Can Challenge
. The Golden Eagles were
picked for the major-college
NCAA competition although
classed by that organization
as a small college this season.
A spokesman explained,
"There is no rule that a light
weight can't challenge'for the
heavyweight title."
Previously named to the
NCA, either as a conference
NIT Selections
Possible Today
New York (IP) Selection
of additional teams for the
National Invitation Basket
ball tournament at Madison
Square Garden, March 13-22,
was considered likely today.
Six teams already have been
named Dayton, St. Bonaven
ture, Niagara, St. Peter's,
Fordham, and St. John's.
When the 12-team field is
complete, four teams will be
seeded and draw first-round
byes.
Lubrication
. . . for the next 30 days
we will give FREE a regular lubrication with every
oil change! (Any make or model passenger car.)
Don't get just a grease job get a thorough lubrication now!
EDAMEll miller CO:
415 S. Riverside Ave.
To)
plainsmen of the Old West insisted on the finest and fastest
the smoothest, best-tasting
today's America, Sunny Brook is still riding high in popularity. .
$i45 o90
V5 QT. PT.
DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CO. BOTH 85 PROOF. KENTUCKY BLENDED WHISKEY CONTAINS 65 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL. TRIBUNE SEVEN
winner or an "at large" team
were Oklahoma" State, Con
necticut, Idaho State, Notre
Dame, Pittsburgh, Manhattan
and Temple.
The regular season ends
this week in the Missouri Val
ley and Atlantic Coast con
ferences, and titles could also
be decided in six others the
Ivy, Big Eight, Southwest,
Pacific Coast, West Coast and
Border conferences.
The champions in each can
go right into an NCAA berth
except in the Atlantic coast
where the top eight teams
compete in a post-season tour
ney for the NCAA spot.
Individual Scorers Cloie
In the battle for the nation
al scoring championship, El
gin Baylor and Oscar Robert
son are now only three one
hundredths of a point apart.
Baylor, six-six Seattle star,
scored 32 points Saturday
night during a 71-68 overtime
loss to Idaho State. But his
average dropped to 33.76
points per game and Robert
son, six-five Cincinnati ace,
gained ground by scoring 36
points in an 86-71 win over
Tulsa. Robertson's average is
33.73.
Wilt (The Stilt) Chamber
lain of Kansas, held to 18
points in a 43-41 loss to Ne
braska, now seems out of the
running with a 30.67 average.
Do his buying at Barker's
and get Green Stamps
Kentucky bourbon-like Sunny
OSC Keeps
Nat Laurels
Portland (IP) Oregon
State kept its state men'i
swimming championship over
the week end by amassing
128 points in the meet, fot
lowed by Aero club of Port?
land's 78. The OSC Rooks had
61 points. -
pick Rotto, OSC sopho
more swimming in the unafc
tached division, entered com
petition for the first tima
since being sidelined with a
heart condition two years ago
and smashed the state record
in the 100-yard breast stroke.
Rotto covered the distance in
the Multnomah club pool in
1:08.7. The old mark was
1:08.8 set by Dave Gaytori,
Vancouver, B.C., in 1956.
ALL MAKES OF
Garden Tractors
And y
Lawn Mowers
SERVICED!
Repairing Sharpening
PICKUP & DELIVERY Service
BIG Y SUPPLY
1948 Pacific Hiway North
Phone SP 3-31 60
Phone SP 2-6209
Brook!
NOTE TO '
BLEND
BUYERS:
You get i supetjor blent
when yvu get a K.n
tuckp blend. Ask tor
Sunny Brook fCMludty
Blended Wlutkty I
4'