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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 25, 1958)
SIX MEDFORD (OREGON) Kansas Favored to Clinch NCAA' By TIM MORIARTY" United Press Sports Writer . Kansas State and San Fran cisco are favored to clinch au tomatic bids to the NCAA Basketball tournament to night while Bowling Green will attempt to snag a berth in the National Invitation tournament. "The top-ranked. Wildcats can wrap up the Big Eight conference championship by defeating Oklahoma on State's home court, and the third-ranked Dons can clinch the West Coast conference crown by downing St. Mary's. Both titles carry automatic invitations to the NCAA tour nament. - Although Bowling Green has a mediocre 13-8 won and lost record, the Falcons re cently were included on a list of NIT candidates and prob ably will earn a trip to New York if they get by Loyola (111.) tonight. Kansas Upset Kansas State received sup port from an unexpected source Monday night when . MEDFORD J&TRIBUNE siPODmnrs Grant Generals Leading Rates; Talent, Phoenix Place in Other Voting : Portland (W Grant high of Portland, with a per fect 19-0 high school basket ball record, today topped Ore gon's high school basketball teams in the weekly Journal coaches' poll. Beavers Said Best on Coast By (JSC Coach Z Los Angeles (IP) Ore gon State's second-place Bea vers have the best team in the Pacific Coast conference in the opinion of Coach For rest Twogood of the Univer sity of Southern California. Twogood, whose Trojans lost to Stanford and Oregon State last week end, told southern California basket ball writers Monday the Bea vers have "a tremendous ball club with due respect to Cal ifornia," the PCC leader. The SC coach was joined in praise of Oregon State by Coach Johnny Wooden of TTPT A V "We were beaten by a big ger and better team a team that is much better than when we played them earlier in the year," Wooden said. "Oregon State's Lee Har- man is a tremendous ball player. He has a great change of pace is a good driver and makes the club go EX-G BIDDER HURT Davenport, Iowa (W Jo seph Bush, a former Notre Dame football player, was un dergoing treatment today for injuries suffered when he was pinned under a heavy piece of road equipment; after he lost control of it. ALL-STAR GAME SET Raleigh. N.C. IP Jack Paar of Kansas State, Vern Hatton of Kentucky and Jack Quiggle of Michigan State head a list of 19 college bas ketball players who will take part in a N orth-South All Star Game here March 28. BASKETBALL COLLEGE RESULTS By United Press 4 East Pittsburgh 109. Geneva 74 Maine 65. Massachusetts 59 Iona 90. Brideeport 73 Marshall 92. Toledo 69 Buffalo U. 80. Buffalo Tchrs. 72 Drexel Tech 97. Delaware 77 Boston U. 63. Boston College 60 Schanton 83. Muhlenberg 74 South S. Western Tenn. 80, Chatta nooga 74. Clemson 88. Wake Forest 76 Presbyterian 65, Belmont Abbey 63 Alabama 70. Tennessee 37 Auburn 64, Kentucky 63 Tampa 79, Florida St. 56 Mississippi St. 74. Tulane 62 Murray St. 66. Tennessee Tech 55 Vanderbilt 69. Georgia 66 Ga. Tech 62. Florida 61 Mississippi 85. Louisiana St. 78 Western Ky. 100, Evansville 80 Midwest Purdue 72. Michigan State 70 Indiana 95, Michigan 88 Iowa State 48. Kansas 42 Minnesota 71. Wisconsin 63 Iowa 86. Northwestern 78 Bradlev 72. Tulsa 54 Wheaton 100. Beuloit 77 Wichita 82. Houston 65 Wash. (Mo.) U. 77. Regis 68 Creighton 68. Drake 63 Omaha 73. Rockhurst 61 Southwest Oklahoma City 104. Beinedict 84 McMurry 88, Texas Lutheran 82 Okla. St. 63. N. Tex. St. 52 Rice 61. Arkansas 59 E. Tex. St. 92. Sul Ross St. 78 Los A. St. 67, Ariz. (Tempei St. 62 Los Angeles State 67, Arizona State (Tempei 62 College of Idaho 93. Linfield 86 Montana State 63, Pacific Luth eran 59 Pasadena 81. Westmont 67 Willamette 85. Whitman 75 Oregon Frosh 88, Grays Harbor JC 61 MAIL TRIBUNE State, Iowa State surprised Kansas, 48-42, in a Big Eight confer ence game. It was the fourth conference defeat for the Jayhawks and virtually ruin ed their chances of gaining an NCAA berth. They lost to North Carolina in last year's championship final. In two other upsets, Auburn remained in the running for a share of the Southeastern conference title by knocking off Kentucky, 64-63, while Purdue tied Michigan State for the Big Ten conference lead by downing the Spar tans, 72-70. Kentucky already has won an NCAA berth but Auburn, which is ineligible for post season day. can tie the Wild cats for the SEC title if the Tigers beat Alabama Satur day and Kentucky loses to Tennessee. The Big Ten race also is headed toward a photo fin ish. Purdue and Michigan State have 8-4 records and each closes out . the regular campaign against Iowa and Indiana, who have matching Grant was followed by Kla math Falls, North Salem, As toria, and South Eugene in that order. Dallas, with a 13-7 mark, was the top-ranked team in class A-2, followed by St. Francis of Eugene and Oak- ridge. Molalla was fourth, Phoenix fifth and Vale sixth. Mytrle Point and Coquille also received votes. Sisters topped the class B poll, followed by Enterprise, Stanfield, Talent, Harrisburg, Lorrane and McKenzie. Also getting votes were Star of the Sea, Pilot Rock, Merrill and Jefferson. The A-l rankings: Team Points 1. Grant 79 2. Klamath Falls 70 3. North Salem 67 4. Astoria 54 5. South Eugene 42 6. Springfield 37 7. Pendleton 30 8. Roosevelt 21 9. Tie: North Bend 8 9. Marshfield 8 Others: Bend 6, Roseburg 5, Mac-Hi 5; McMinnville 4; Jefferson of Portland 2, Her miston and Franklin 1. NAIA Playoffs Reset in March At Milwaukee Portland W Dates of lhe District 2 NAIA basket ball tournament have been changed from March 3-4 to March 4-5 at Milwaukie high school. The first round will send Southern Oregon against Lewis and Clark and Port land State against Univer sity of Portland. The win ners meet the next night for a berth in the Kansas City NAIA tournament March 10-15. Air Force Quits Vanport Claim Washington (m The Air Force disclosed Monday that it has relinquished all claims to a portion of the Vanport tract ' in Portland which local authorities have wanted for an industrial site. The Air Force had planned to use the tract as an ammun ition storage area but Maj. Gen. Joe Kelly, congression al liaison director, notified Rep. Edith Green (D-Ore.), that "the Air Force has no further requirement for the Vanport property. According ly, action is being taken to advise the General Services Administration of this decis ion." The general offered no explanation of the Air Force move. IMPROMPTU CENSORSHIP - Paris OPI Marlene Diet rich's noted legs have been censored in Paris subways. City Hall officials reported receiving complaints that the posters advertising her latest movie showed too little skirt and too much leg. Today the legs had been covered with pasted-on paper. About 115,000 Americans attempting to do their own carpentry work and home re pairing suffer some kind of disabling accidents each year. Tuesday, February 25, 1958 Sao Francisco 7-4 marks. Purdue, using its five start ers all the way, nipped eighth ranked Michigan State on a basket by Willie Merriweath er in the final 10 seconds. In diana wiped out a 19-point deficit in scoring a comeback 95-88 triumph over Michigan while Iowa defeated North western, 86-78. Bradley remained in the running for the Missouri Val ley conference title by tram pling Tulsa, 72-54, despite a Oregon Comes Close To Cal Upend, 60-61 Eugene W A jump shot from 20 feet out by sen ior center Don Mcintosh with 15 seconds to go scraped Cal ifornia by upset-hungry Ore gon, 61-60 in a Pacific Coast conference basketball thrill er here Monday night. The win gives California an 11-2 PCC mark to 9-3 for Ore gon State. The Ducks had a 60-59 lead with 30 seconds remaining when forward Charlie Frank lin hit two gift shots after being fouled by the Bears Bob Dalton. The game was tied seven times and saw five changes of lead, two of them in the final minutes. Oregon outshot the Bears from the floor with a .463 against a .411, but Cal dunk ed 15 free .throws in 24 tries, 10 of them in the second half. -California took an early lead in the first half but Ore gon, paced by guards Chuck Rask and Bud Kuykendall, led most of the way and held a 32-31 halftime advantage. With 10 minutes left in the game Jhe Webfoots led 51- 4S. ine?uers Diazea to tie it up at 56-all with 3:44 re maining and Dalton- hit for a 58-58- tie two minutes later, Oliver Collects First Win Since Greenbriar Open Houston, Tex. I1PI Ed fPorkv) Oliver, whose 5-un- der-par 67 Monday gave him the too monev in the $30,000 Houston Invitational golf tournament, moves to fort Arthur, Tex., today to parti cipate in a $3,000, 3b-hoie pro-amateur. Oliver, the 5-10, 224-pouna, rjro from Canton, Mass., col lected $4,300 for his 72-hole total of 281. He finished a stroke ahead of Jay Hebert of Sanford. Fla.. and Roberto De Vicenzo of Mexico City. Jimmy Demaret, the Hous tonian playing out of Kia mesha' Lake, N.Y., who led the tournament by two strokes going into the final round, finished with a 2-over-par 74 for a total of 283, to tie with Marty Furgol of Lamont, 111., and Dave Ragan of Orlando, Fla., behind Hebert and De Vicenzo. Oliver, who has not won a tournament in his last two years on the circuit, coupled six birdies with a bogey and 11 pars to come from five strokes behind Demaret and take the tourney crown. It was the pudgy pro's first tournament win since he took the Greenbriar Open at White Sulphur Springs, W.Va., in 1956. He plays out of Hes- peria, California. GOLF PLAY LISTED Pinehurst. N.C. (W Leslie Hoss of Tulsa, Okla., and ran Tirubaker of Cleveland will defend their Seniors Tr.r.-Rali eolf championship starting Friday at the Pine hurst County Club. The nnai round is scheduled for March 5. Warriors Play Knickerbockers By UNITED PRESS The Philadelphia Warriors are set to deal the -death blow to the New York Knicker bockers' National Basketball Association play-off hopes. Three games in front of New York after a 110-95 vic tory over the Minneapofis Lakers Monday night, the Warriors meet the Knicks in their next two games. They play them at New York to night and at Syracuse Wed nesday night. A crowd of 3,800 watched the first NBA game ever played in Bethlehem, Pa., as the Warriors ran up a 50-42 halftime lead to hand the Lakers their 48th loss in 65 games. St. Louis plays Detroit in the other game on tonight's Garden program. Bras 34-point effort by the losers' Roger Wendel, while Califor nia strengthened its hold on first place in the Pacific Coast conference by edging Oregon, 61-60. Pittsburgh and Oklahoma State, a pair of NCAA tour nament nominees, posted easy victories. Don Hennon poured in 41 points in sparking Pitt to a record-busting 109-74 triumph over Geneva and Ok lahoma State turned back North Texas State, 63-52. Mcintosh took game hon ors with 21 points and Frank lin was high for Oregon with 16. Rask and Kuykendall had 13 and 12 points respective ly. California 61 Dalton. f Sterling, f G F P T .3 4-6 5 10 .2 1-2 4 5 .7 7-9 1 21 .2 1-1 2 5 4 1-4 3 9 .4 1-2 0 9 . 0 0-0 1 0 . 0 0-0 0 0 . 1 0-0 0 2 Hi 15-24 16 61 G F P F 3 2-6 4 8 5 2-3 4 16 3 3-4 5 9 5 3-4 2 13 .6 0-0 1 12 . 1 0-1 1 2 2S" 10-18 17 60 Buch. g Totals Oregon 60 Robertson, f Totals TTalftime score: ornia 31. Kansas St. Holds Lead In UP Poll New York (IP) The United Press major college basket ball ratings first-place votes and won-lost records through Feb. 22 in parentheses: 1. Kansas St. 24 (18-1) ....328 2. W. Virginia 5 (22-1) ..276 3. Cincinnati 3 (20-2) 270 4. San Fran. 2 (21-1) . 267 5. Temple (20-2) 191 6. Duke (16-5) 105 7. Kansas (16-4) 91 8. Michigan St. (15-4) .... 84 9. No. Carolina St. (16-5) 60 10. Notre Dame 1 (19-4) .... 50 Second 10 ground 11, North Carolina, 40; 12, Okla homa State, 36; 13, Dayton, 32; 14, Bradley, 29; 15 tie, Kentucky and Maryland, 6 each; 17, California, 11; 18, Seattle, 9; 19, St. Bonaven- ture, 5; 20, Purdue, 4. Others St. Louis, Oregon State and Michigan, 2 each; Auburn, Indiana and Wy oming, 1 each. Bowling n eeir nnwl.lKR LEAGUE W. L. Oak Knoll Golf Course 23 5 Morse Motors 17 11 Henry's Broiler 16 12 Lamport's Sporting Goods 15 13 Trail Creek Lumber 14 14 Hight Real Estate 14 14 Hillver Oil Co 11 17 Sam's Sporting Goods 11 17 Sewing Machine Center 10 18 E. H. Mann Co 9 19 Sam's Sporting Goods 4 (Cliff Proctor 563) z,tyz; sewing ma chine Center 0 (Harold ElHj 541) 2,520. Morse Motors 3 (Lee Bex 564) 2,755; E. H. Mann Co. 1 (Andy Anderson 623) 2.644. Oak Knoll Gold Course 3 (Marsh o.mihv 5R5 2.661: Henrv's Broil er 1 (Pat Patterson 563) 2,570. Hight Keal estate 4 irrann Airn 5R7) 2.665: Hillyer Oil Co. 0 (Norm Hillyer 527) 2.421. Lamport s sporting liooas z oam . . t-.,1. SQOi Trail PrDoir vail uyn-iz j " -; . w.-.. Lumber Co. 2 (Don Harmon 555) 2,632. W. L. Livelv Five 20 8 Miss-Fitts 19 9 p.ER.'s IS 12 Alley-Gators 16 12 Gvdos 15 13 Cementers 14 14 Adairs 13 15 Medics 12 16 Go-Boys 10 18 Wallflowers 5 23 Results: Miss-Fitts 4 (Gardner 530) 2.454; Wallflowers 0 (Neal 433) 2.008. t z i.. rr; o n.Vnra m a i o ua. V CI .V (lit iit.ui. www " . Cementers 1 (Snedden 499) 2.144. Gvpos 2 (Offord 486) 2.292. V TJrt.rc n IMnrn 549 1 2 3fi5: Medics 2 (Stevenson 469 V 2.440. Adairs 1 (uurreii oop i.io:; ai-ley-Gators 3 (Phipps 472) 2.255. FIGHTS BY UNITED PRESS xTn,,, vnrlr .Timmv Archer. tioi' Vew Vnrlr. stnnnpd Datmv Russo', 151, Brooklyn (7). . Buffalo. N.Y.: Neal Rivers. 160'i. Niagara Falls, N.Y, knocked out Chebzo Hernandez, 15934, Mexico (2). New Orleans: Ernie Smith. 159. Newport,. Pa., outpointed Tony Du pas, 156. New Orleans (10). BRILL METAL WORKS Commercial Industrial Residential Sheet Metal Work Stainless, Galvanized and Copper Fabrication 2287 West Main PHONE SP 2-4440 Top Teams" Shuffled in Golf Tussle William Blackledge and Bob Little rose a notch to sec ond place during the 'past week in the holiday handicap golf tourney at Rogue Valley Country club, while Russ Heysell and Ed Gordon mov ed up to third and Dr. Wil liam Miller and Dr. . Dave Boals climbed from seventh to fourth. Dick Travis and Lloyd Pope did not play but held on to front position with their 32 points. Frank Allen and Ed Hall dropped from second to fifth. Blackledge and Little cop ped their match with Clark Mears and Bob Voegtly 2 up to bring their total to 28 points. Heysell and Gordon won 4 up from Hall and Al len. Boals and Miller dropped Ken Teeter and Everett Mc Graw 6 up. Gain First Win Dutch Meyer and Murray Gardiner, after having lost ll matches, won on their 12th try. They defeated Dr. Frank Wilson and Dave Koblik. Jack Daugherty and Jim Dunley took their fifth straight verdict last week, handing Hall and Allen one of their two losses by 3 up. Dunlevy and Daugherty have moved from 32nd to 14th in the standings. The tourney runs through March 9. Qualifying play for the spring handicap ends on March 2. TEAM POSITION: Matches Points Travis-L. Pope 12 28 W. Blackledge-B. Little 13 28 R. Heysell-E. Gordon 11 27 W. Miller-D. Boals 14 21 F Allen-Ed Hall 15 20 C. Lewis-J. Sheldon 10 15 B. Catey-Stan Stark .... 13 J5 J. Worthington-J. Wells 15 ; 14 D. Hogan-R. Gandee .... 9 ' 12 L. Flink-H. Sullivan .. 12 " 9 E. McGraw-K. Eeeter .... 10 ' 6 V. Swanson-W. Chase 11 6 J. Nnich-J. Vargo 12 5 J. Dunlevy-J. Dougherty 12 5 B. Morris-J. Sanborn .... 9 4 K. Knapp-Bob Brown 9 '' 3 J. Curley-C. Mickelson 7 1 R. Parsoris-C. Nnight 12 ... 0 D. Provost-J. Busch .... 4 . 0 Archer Downs Danny Russo in Monday Fight New York (IP) - Steel helmets may be apropos for fans the next time welter weight Jimmy Archer, ex stevedore, has a TV fight at St. Nicholas Arena, March 17 St. Patrick's Day in view of the melee among the spectators that garnished his victory at St. Nick's Monday night. Sandy-haired Archer , of New York s Hell s Kitchen area stopped dark-haired Danny Russo of Brooklyn at 2:51 of the seventh round in their bloody brawl before 1, 553; and immediately a wild free-for-all broke out among rival admirers of lhe boxers, It was five minutes before uniformed and special police could stop the thudding fists, slamming chairs and scurry ing feet. Then promoter Ted- dy Brenner announced, "No harm done. Nobody sent to the hospital and nobody ar rested. The fans just had a good time." ,- Russo, weighing 151 pounds to Archer's 149 V4, suffered such bloody cuts on both his brows that referee Petey Seal zo stopped the bout in the seventh. Archer, favored at 9 5, had won a split decision over 20-year-old Danny in a previous bout at St. Nick's Jan. 27. Hawaiian Sugar Strike Continues Honolulu (IP) Thirteen thousand sugar workers be gan the fourth week of a strike today against Hawaii's 26 plantations, with neither side showing signs of being ready to get down to serious negotiations. The union promised man agement an early reply to a proposal which would put some workers back on their jobs to keep the cane alive in the fields. However, in formed sources indicated the answer would be no. The International Long shoremen's and Warehouse men's union, representing the strikers, is demanding a 25- cent hourly wage increase on top the present $11.52 aver age daily pay. The industry has offered to raise wages an average of 6 cents an hour. Rogue League Sub-District 6A2 BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT FEB. 27-28 and. MARCH 1st Games at 6:30-8:009:30 each night at Southern Oregon College Gym Ashland, Oregon Brookings Eagle Point Phoenix Illinois Valley Henley Glendale Rogue River Coliseum Relays Assemble World's Tod Nile Runners Los Angeles HP) The greatest field of distance run ners ever assembled for a single vent was in the making today as every mile runner in the world in active compe- tion who has broken four minutes was invited to com pete in the "Miracle Mile" of the Coliseum relays. Stealing a march on rival meets, Coliseum Relays' Chairman Willis O. Hunter announced that 15 of the 18 men who have broken the distance barrier by running Joe Brown Will Fight Echevarria New York (IP) Two inter esting lightweight fights fea ture this week's boxing sched ule. Lightweight champion Joe Brown meets Cuban Orlando Echevarria in a non-title 10 rounder Wednesday at Ha vana. Although Brown is a 4-1 favorite over lhe champ of Cuba, the bout is significant because it's the first sports event ever televised to the United States from overseas. It will open Havana's new Sports Palace, center of a new $12,000,000 Cuban sports project. The other lightweight fight brings together unbeaten Car los Ortiz of New York and Tommy Tibbs of Boston Fri day night at Madison Square Garden for a TV 10-rounder. Ortiz, who won 24 of his 25 fights and has one no-decision, is favored at 8-5. Tibbs, champion of New England, beat Willie Pep on Jan. 14, and won eight, lost two and drew one in 1957. The week's boxing sched ule includes: Tuesday London Willie Pas- trano vs. Brian London: Miami Beach Larry Boardman vs. Lulu Perez; Houston, lex. .Paul J or gen sen vs. Gil Cadilli; McKeesport, Pa. Gene Tippett vs. Tommy Wil liams: Richmond, Cal. Vic Cardot vs. Marvin Marcus; Hartford, Conn. Red Top Davis vs. Seve Ward: Chicago Jerry . Ortell vs. Jimmy McCoy. Wednesday Havana, Cuba Joe Brown vs. Orlando Echevarria (non-title) TV. Thursday Los Angeles Auburn Copeland vs. Felix Cervantes: Re vere. Mass. Joe Devlin vs. Faulie Griffin; New York (Sunnyside Gar den) Rocky Milone vs. Bernie Raines. Friday New York (Garden) Carlos Ortiz vs. Tommy Tibbs TV, Saturday Brooklyn (Parkway Juan Veneias vs. Harvey Charles: Boston Rory Calhoun vs. Randy Sandy; Hollywood, Calif. Lauro Salas vs. Pete Kuwala; Milan, Italy Duiuo lxi vs. Wallace (Bud) Smith. Church Junior League to Hold Semi-Final Play St. Mark's Episcopal will play First Baptist at 6 p.m. next Saturday and YMCA will meet St. Peter-Zion Lu theran at 7 p.m. at the Y in semi-finals of the junior high division play-offs in the church basketball league. In games last Saturday First Baptist topped Mt. Pitt Nazarene 29 to 16, St. Mark's romped 43 to 25 over Presby terian and the Lutheran club whipped the Methodists 30 to 21. The Y had a bye. A men's division contest saw the Methodists nip the Presbyterians 25 to 24. Gor don Williams had 17 points for the winners and Dave Er ion 13 for the losers. The Baptists were unde feated in six games of regular junior high league play while St. Mark's was runner-up with five wins and one loss. John de Place headed the Baptist win with 13 points. Chuck Shaw had 15 and Jim Randle 14 for St. Mark's. Mack put in 14 for the Lu therans. FIVE MAN RACE New York (IP) Istvan Roz- savolgyi of Hungary will run against four other milers Sat urday night in a special race during the IC4A indoor track and field championships at Madison Square Garden. PELLIGRINI DUE BACK Philadelphia IP Bob Pel- ligrini, an offensive guard for the Philadelphia Eagles in 1956, will return next fall, the pro football, club an nounced today. Pelligrini has been in the ArmyV the mile under four minutes have been sent bids to com pete in the event May 16. And for the first time in the 18-year history of the Coliseum Relays, the running events are being staged on grass, a surface the foreign runners are accustomed to. This was brought about be cause the Los Angeles Dodg ers share use of Memorial Coliseum and are planting sod on the running track to cover the outfield. Of the 18 under-four-minute" milers on the record books, only John Landy, Rog er Banister and Chris Chata way no longer are 'competing and were omitted from the list. England and Australia, which have dominated mile running, topped the ' list of those invited with three men each. England's Derek Ibbotson, who has the fastest time on record of 3:57.2 which is awaiting approval as a new world's record, headed the list of those invited. The other stars sent bids were Dan Waern, Sweden; Jim Bailey, Australia; Don Bowden, U.S.; Herb Elliott, Australia; Ron Delaney, Ire land; Merv Lincoln, Austral ia; Roger Moens, Belgium; Laszlo Tabori and Istan Ros zavolgyi, Hungary; Stanlislav Jungwirth,' Czechoslovakia; Lubrication . . . for the next 30 days we will give oil change! . Don't get just a 415 S. Riverside Ave. TOP ACTS i acts vczr XT BEST tf f Tr)C COMEDY I Jrm$) 1 GOOD StssV?l1 MUSIC JJ UCj I Show Starts 7:30 p.m. Wed. II u 8:15 p.m - Thursday, y If JB Friday and Saturday J II Feb. 26-27-28, March 1 MEDFORD SENIOR HIGH MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE Olavi Vpurisalo, Finland; Gunnar Tttelson, Denmark; Kenneth Wood and Brian Hewson, England. Pilots Top Gonzaqa U Spokane OPI Portland forward Ray (Great) Scott, dropped in 17 points to lead the Pilots to a 72-62 basket ball win and a two game sweep over Gonzaga Univer sity Monday night. Scott, Portland's latest whiz, hit six field goals and five free shots but didn't com pare with the 31 points he canned Sunday when the Pilots won. 70-56. Scott did not make a point for the first 17 minutes but then hit four consecutive in two mintes. The defensive work of Gon zaga forward Mike Gordon was credited with holding the ace down. The Zags Jean Lefebvre. 7-foot 3-inch import from Paris, wasn't un to his usual scoring par of the past four games and hit only 11 points. OSC PLAYER OUT Corvallis IIP) Ted Miller, guard on Oregon State's basketball team, was sent to the campus infirmary with a respiratory infec tion Monday and will be lost to the team t indefi- FREE a regular lubrication with every (Any make or model passenger car.) grease job get a thorough lubrication nowl ill MILLER CO.. THE NAME STICKS Boston (IP) Superior Judge Felix Forte presided at the million-dollar Brinks rob bery trial a couple of years ago. Recently a toastmaster, introducing him as a dinner speaker in a mid-western city, said he had the honor to pre sent "Judge Brinks." Syracuse, N. Y. (IP) A very thorough or just plain greedy burglar took $2,400 from the safe in Frank Ellis restaurant and then grabbed $7 in keepsake bills that Ellis had framed on a wall behind the bar. THE. BULL SHOT The vodka drink with beef in it. Qmirnaff the greatest name in VODKA 80 and 100 Proof. Dist. from grain. St. Pierrt Smirnoff Fls.(Div.ofHeublein)Hartford,Conn. Phone SP 2-6209 Is