EIGHT MEDrORD (OREGOW) MAIL TRIBUNE
GDendaOe, EPP (Brookings
Victors in GA-2 Tourney;
Semi-Finals This Evening
Ashland Four teams
;whieh made it a tight finish
in the Rogue league enter
:emi-finals this evening in the
;District 6 A-2 southern divis
"ion basketball tournament at
2 the Southern Oregon college
gym in Ashland.
; Glendale will take on Rogue
; league champion Phoenix
:high at 7:45 p.m. and Eagle
Point faces Brookings at 8
"pjn. Rogue River and Henley
;have a consolation conflict
:at 6:30 p.m. Illinois Valley
-has a bye in the consolation
bracket.
y In tussles last night Glen
dale downed Rogue River 36
Ho 28, Eagle Point clipped
.Henley 53 to 42 and Brook
rings dropped Illinois Valley
37 to 36.
Tournament finals will be
bn Saturday. Championship
garne is at 9 p.m. with con
solation game at 6:30 p.m.
rand third place play-off at
.17:45 p.m. Division champ will
1MB
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play Douglas high next week
end for the full district ban
ner. EP Show Best
Eagle Point and the Hornets
of Klamath county put on the
best show of the night. The
Eagles came from behind and
took command with a 13-point
surge in the fourth quarter.
Glendale, tense and missing
a lot of shots, nevertheless
piled up a substantial lead on
Rogue River. But the Pirates
of Douglas county had to
withstand a Chieftain come
back in the closing period
Brookings ran up a wide bulge
over the first three stanzas
and then coasted home.
The Eagle - Henley hassle
was tied seven times and the
lead also switched on that
many occasions. EP went into
the final canto on top 34 to 31
and Bill Hubbard made it 35
to 31 as the stanza began,
Then the Hornets went on top
36 to 35 on two gifters by
1
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Friday, February 23, 1958
Burell Gober and a field
bucket and free shot by Lee
Kaylor. Paced by Bill Turn
er's 10 markers. Eagle Point
roared back with its 13 points
before Henley could find the
hoop again and took control
48 to 36.
Henley, which outscrapped
the Eagles in the first half
and had the edge under the
boards, took an 11 to 8 first
quarter lead after EP had
jumped in front 5 to 0 at the
start. At halftone the count
was 21-each. The Hornets
went ahead in the third ses
sion 25 to 21 but Eagle Point
fought right back and the
fray see-sawed through the
chukker.
Turner Has 24
Turner, the Eagle scoring
artist, had 24 points for the
night and Ron Veach of the
EP club had 10. Jim Herring
shaw with 11 and Gober with
10 topped Henley.
Glendale pulled ahead of
Rogue River 11 to S in the
first quarter 11 to 5 'and led
24 to 9 at the half. Coach
Bob Stolz had his Glendale
reserves in action for 5V4
minutes of the third quarter
and the Pirates picked up
only two points in the period
to lead 26 to 14 at the in
termission. Regulars for Glendale had
a hard time getting back into
stride and the Chiefs -threat
ened in the final minutes, cut
ting the gap down to six
points on a couple of oc
casions. Tom Munyon had 12 points
and Troy Reynolds 10 for
Glendale and Joe Kirkley-10
for Rogue River in the ragged
action. Inability to hit the
hoop hurt the Chiefs who
made only two of 15 free
shots while Glendale put in
six for 11.
Lead Up io 38-19
Brookings jumped off to a
7 to 0 lead on Illinois Valley
but the Cougars caught up,
knotting the score at 7-all and
8-all. Jerry Fox tallied on a
fast break shot and the Bruins
headed 10 to 8 at the quarter.
Brookings stayed on top
through the rest of the eve
ning. At the half it was 21
to 15 and after three sessions
the score stood 34 to 19.
The Bruins increased to 38
to 19. IV then closed the gap
to 38 to 28. Brookings re
serves managed to choke off
the challenge although the
Cougars got as close as 42 to
34.
Fox had 13 points for
Brookings and Marv Bullock
( l )
Phone SP 3-5383
MEDFORmTRIBUNE
GO FOR REBOUND Eagle
hoopmen battle for the ball after a missed shot on their Dis
trict 6 A-2 southern division
night. Eagle Point players are Wayne Christian (12) and Bill
Hubbard (13). In the air for the Hornets are Gary Curry and
Alvin Born. Preparing to leap is Lee Kaylor. Eagle Point
won 53 to 42 and plays Brookings tonight in semi-finals of
the playoffs at Southern Oregon college in Ashland.
nine while eight each by Doug
Lewis and Mike Hanby were
tops for IV.
BOXES:
Glendale
R. Munyon, f
T. Munyon, i
Worley, c
Hale, g ...
Reynolds, g
Smart
Allen
Humphreys
Mullarkey
Mehl
TO FT PF TP
1
0
S
0
2
4
2
0
0
0
0
0
2
1
1
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Stanley
Young .
- 1 .
IS
Totals
S 11 36
Rogue River
Carter, f
White. I
FG FT PF TP
1
0
- 5
Kirkley. e
J. Biggman. t 3
Johnson, g O
MccaDe u
Irwin 1
B. Bigman 0
Archer 3
Goosey 0
Totals
Ragle Point
Turner, f
Hubbard, f
Christian, c
Veach, g
Nelson, g
Smith
Gerbing
Knudsen
13
2 10 28
FG FT PF TP
9 6 2 24
1
2
2
4
0
0
0
0
0
3
6
10
4
0
0
0
2
4
Cooper
Greb ..
Totals
19 15 11 S3
Henley FG FT PF TP
J. Herringshaw, f.. 5 1 1 11
Curry, f 3 2 1 8
Kaylor. c 112 3
Born, g 0 13 1
Swisher, g 0 0 0 0
Chapman . 2 1 3 5
Gober 4 2 2 10
Larson 10 12
Ferguson 1 0-32
Tacchini '. 0 0 0 0
Kammerer 0 0 0 0
Jackson 0 0 0 0
D. Herringshaw 0
Totals
IT 8 IS 42
Brookings
R. Bullock, f
Workinger, f
M. Bullock, e
Fox. g
Mid wood, g .
Westeren
FG FT PF TP
- 2 3 2 7
2
3
3
Anderson
Hansen
Turpin
Totals
Illinois Valley
Whitely, g
Lewis, g
Ollis, c
Dickey, g
Hanby. g
Rauber
Tucker
Slanaker
Love
Buckhaultz
Hovater
15 .17 20 47
FG FT PF TP
2 0 3 4
4
3
2
4
0
0
3
0
0
0
Totals
16 16 25 36
YANKS WIN
Helsinki (IB A U.S. Air
Force team station at Ram
stein, Germany, defeated the
Finnish national team, 80-67,
in an international basketball
game here Thursday night.
James Fields and George
Lynn scored 32 and 21 points,
respectively, for the winners.
nil
Lubrication
. for the next 30 days
we will give
oil change!
Don't get just a
415 S. Riverside Ave.
Point and Henley High school
tourney game at Ashland last
Ed Bailey
Likened To
Rare Gem
By STEVE GERSTEL
Knoxville, Tenn. (IP)
Cincinnati's Ed Bailey is like
a rare diamond easy to covet
but hard to get.
Several teams, notably the
Los Angeles Dodgers and the
San Francisco Giants, have
expressed interest in the 26-year-old
receiver to no avail.
The price is high and it
should be because Bailey is
possibly the best catcher in
the National league.
Picking up the paper and
reading that the Giants are
offering Johnny Antonelli as
trade bait or the Dodgers are
dangling Don Newcombe in
front of red officials, doesn't
bother Bailey. "I've been in
baseball too long," the Straw
berry Plains, Tenn., ace says,
"to believe I've been traded
until I'm notified.
"One year, someone from
the newspaper called up and
told me I'd been traded. The
story originated in Houston
and it got mixed up some
where along the line. I wasn't
traded."
Plans No Change
Despite an off-season last
year which saw his batting
average slip from .300 to .261,
with an accompanying de
crease in home runs and runs
batted in, Bailey plans no rad
ical change in spring training.
"I've been doing a lot of
thinking about it this win
ter, 'he said. "It's just a lot
of bad habits you pick up that
hurt." .
Bailey called his slump last
summer "a good one and I
never pulled out of it. It was
just a bad year."
The strapping catcher sees
a four-team race this season
with the Dodgers, Milwaukee,
the Redlegs and the Cards all
in contention.
Ullman Announces
Reelection Plans
Washington (IP) Rep. Al
Ullman (D - Ore.) announced
today he will be a candidate
for reelection from Oregon's
second district.
Ullman, from Baker, was
elected to the post in 1956.
He defeated incumbent Re
publican Sam Coon.
FREE a regular lubrication with every
(Any make or model passenger car.)
grease job get a thorough lubrication nowl
Five Team
Shoot Set
At Gun Club
Plans for a five-team tour
nament opening Sunday,
March t 2. and running five
Sundays, have been an
nounced by Medford Gun
club.
Teams are sponsored by
Medford business concerns
and drawing by team captains
determines team membership.
Names of each and every club
member are being drawn,
making teams of 12 to 15
shooters.
Teams and captains are
Skinner Buick-Cadillac, Andy
Anderson; Rogue Valley Land
company, Bob Mclntyre; Cole
man Hardware store, Ray
Coleman; Louis Biden Log
ging company, Louis Biden,
and Sam Jennings Tire com
pany, Sam Jennings.
50 Targets Per Week
In the tourney each man
will fire at 50 targets at. 16
yards each Sunday. The five
high scorers per team each
week end will be used in de
ciding the tourney winner.
Members of the winning
team will receive trophies. A
dinner-dance party will be
held at the conclusion of the
meet.
Teams will be posted on
the bulletin board at the club
this Sunday.
Tarheels,
Duke Clash
For Crown
By UNITED PRESS
Never mind the tournament
berths this one is just for
glory tonight when Duke and
North Carolina battle it out
for " the regular season title
in the Atlantic Coast confer
ence. The clash between the two
local rivals on North, Caro
lina's court at Chapel Hill is
the windup game for each.
and each goes into it witn
a regular-season record of 10
wins and three defeats in
league competition.
A berth in the jnuaa tour
nament is not at stake- that
will be settled March '6-8
when the league's top eight
teams play off in the league
tournament.
But plenty of old-fashioned
school glory will be settled
bv this rubber meeting of the
two rivals. They split two
meetings this season North
Carolina winning the urst,
76-62. during the Dixie Clas
sic tourney and Duke taking
a regular season game, $1-75.
Duke is ranked sixth nation
ally, North Carolina 11th.
Tennessee Tech, which has
clinched an NCAA tourna
ment berth as champion of
the Ohio Valley Conference.
disclosed Thursday night it
may pass up that tourney in
favor of New York's National
Invitation tournament. Three
Tech players are freshmen
who would be ineligible to
compete in the NCAA play. ,
"We're working on the
NIT," said coach John Old
ham, and school officials said
something could develop
today.
If Tech bows out of the
NCAA carnival, the berth
probably would go to runner-
up Morehead of KentucKy.
Victim of Yacht
Capture Set Sail
Balboa. C. Z. (IPI Mr. and
Mrs. William R- Hervey Jr.,
of Balboa, Calif., whose lux
ury yacht was taKen over Dy
a gang of escaped convicts
last week, sailed toward San
Diego today aboard their ves
sel, Valinda.
Thp Hervevs. their friend,
Richard J. Di Maio, of Santa
Ana, Calif., and three crew
men underwent a' harrowing
pvnerience when 21 convicts
from a penal colony in the
Galapogas Islands comman
deered the Valinda and forced
the mat gun point to ferry
them to the Ecuadorian mainland.
Phone SP 2-6209
Giant- Pitchers
Have Batters
Fa nrting Breeze
Phoenix, Ariz. (IP) The
pitchers got down to business
at the San Francisco Giants'
training camp here Thursday
and the batters who had
been rattling the fences all
week found themselves
swinging at air.
Marv Grissom, the Red
Bluff, Calif., veteran who'll
be 40 next month, set the ex
ample for the young hurlers.
He was bending tosses in for
10 minutes that even had
Willie Mays kicking up dirt.
Manager Bill Rigney said
there was little doubt that the
aging reliefer would make
plenty of late inning appear
ances during the regular sea
son. However, Rigney didn't
give the pitchers all the
credit. He pointed out that
stiff and sore muscles always
bring a letdown in the first
week of drills.
"But the bounce will be
back by the end of the week,"
the manager said.
BEAVERS SELL BAICH
Portland (IP) The Port
land Beavers Thursday sold
catcher Danny Baich to Sm
Antonio of the Texas League,
leaving the PCL baseball club
with two receivers, Jim Fan
ning and Milt Martin.
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Palmer Has
Baton Rouge, La. (IP)
First round leader Arnold
Palmer teed off today in the
$15,000 Baton Rouge Open
determined to avoid the 1957
pitfall which saw him take the
lead only to finish out of the
money.
The 28-year-old Latrobe,
Pa., pro shot the hottest game
Thursday with a five under
par 67 to wind up on top in
the field of 152 pros, includ
ing a handful of amateurs, in
the PGA winter tourney.
Second round play opened
today on the damp country
club course with a weather
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Links Lead
man's promise of possible
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5 FIGURES FOR EASTER
Buffalo, N.Y. m Luke
Easter, former major league
star who has enjoyed two fine
seasons with Buffalo of the
International league, was
tempted today with a 1958
contract calling for a salary
of "five figures." Bisons gen
eral manager Don Labbhizzo
didn't reveal the amount, but
said he had offered F.aster a
salary of "five figures as a
tribute for two great seasons
here."
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