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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 7, 1959)
I 1 MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Wednesday, January 7, 1959 M. Oetken President Of Archers Southern Oregon league of Archers held its fourth and largest shoot of the winter in door season Sunday at Phoe nix Community hall. Hosts were the Black Bear Bowmen of Phoenix-Jacksonville. Sixty-five bow benders registered for the twenty-eight target Flint round. Top in stinctive shooters were: Men Ray Dusenberry, Grants Pass, 472; Women-Jerry William son, Central Point, 257, and Juniors - Don Vallentyne, Grants Pass, 122, for 14 tar gets. The league is composed of eight clubs from the south west part of the state: Savage Archers, Ashland-Talent area; Black Bear Bowmen, Phoenix Jacksonville area; Rogue Archers, Medford-Central Point area; Rogue River Arch ers; Siskiyou Bow Hunters, Grants Pass; South Umpqua Archers, Canyonville - Myrtle Creek area; Pelican Bay Bow man, Crescent City, and Southern Curry Bowmen, Erookings; Shooters of Klamath Arch ers at Klamath Falls were guests at Sunday's shoot. , Benefit Shoot New league officers for 1959 were elected Sunday. They are president, Mac Oetken, Phoenix; vice presi dent, Ernest Pruitt, Grants Pass, and secretary treasurer, Betty Thompson, Crescent City, Calif. Publicity chair man is Gale Staley, Ashland. An extra, special benefit shoot is to be held Sunday, Jan. 11 at the Rogue Rod and Gun clubhouse, one mile south of Grants Pass. Trophys will be given in all classes and divisions. Proceeds are to be donated to a building pur chase fund for the new Na tional Field Archery associa tion headquarters near Red land, Calif. Buildings will house the offices of theNFAA. All persons with a yen to see the bow and arrow in action are invited ' to attend this shoot. Anyone interested in be coming an archer or archers interested in joining an or ganized club may telephone Gale Staley, Ashland, (MU 9-1731). Women's PGA Team Selected Augusta, Ga. (DPD Mickey Wright of San Diego, Calif., and Beverly Hanson of Indio, Calif., and Patty Berg of Chi cago are among the headlin es who have been selected to the 10-member 1958 La dies Professional Golfers as sociation team. Fred Corcoran, the associa tion's tournament director, said he hoped . to schedule matches between his team and professional women golfers of other countries. Others named to the squad are Marlene Bauer Hagge of Delray Beach, Fla.; Louise Suggs of Atlanta, Ga.; Fay Crocker of Montevideo, Uru guay; Betsy Rawls of Spar tanburg, S. C; Wiffi Smith of St. Clair, Mich.; Marilynn Smith of Wichita, Kans.; and Betty Jameson of San- An tonio, Tex. Baseball Real Bush in Cuba Havana, Cuba - (DPD - It was real "bush-league" here Tues day night. Cuban league baseball of ficials admitted all fans wear ing beards free into Gran Stadium as the shout "play ball" was heard in Havana for the first time since the revolution. The stands were filled with bewhiskered rebel guerrilla fans, most of whom hadn't seen a baseball game in two years. They saw Marianao defeat the Cienfuegos, 5-1. 4 WE HAVE EXPANDED -B So We May Serve You Better DALE'S UPHOLSTERY 1920 TABLE ROCK ROAD Across from Big Y Market Phone SP 3-6461 Stop in and let Us Show You How We Can Save You Money TT" .-7-59 TiPBfiADV humiliated) SPORTS CROWN.' Tip Brady really goofed on'Who Cut Down the World's Tallest Tree?" mating the tree only 147 feet tal I ; 53 feet taller than the world's -tallest red wood at Dyersville, CatVf. Th' redwood, The Founders Tree H 36 feet tall. Vfe beard about thVs boot fromns P" Winnipeg to EverefcfcjVfcshuvjton, where recently a 25&bot Douglas Fir was felled. And in Calvforriiain 1853 a Sequoia Gigantea standing 302 feet was felled by the woodsman's axe- Crater 9th Takes Tilt Central Point Crater's size and rebound control en abled it to offset cold shoot ing and inexperience against zone defense and trip Phoe nix in a freshman basketball game on Tuesday. The Comets were in the lead at all intermissions 8 to 5, 12 to 9 and 23 to 18. Both clubs were cold of fensively. Crater averaged just .175 in field goal accur acy and Phoenix .136. LINE-CPS: 33 Crater F 6 Kimball F 3 Jeff Anhorn . C 4 Champ Phoenix Lucas - Lester Baker G 7 Christie Colfax 4 G 4 G. Burns Harris 7 Substitutions For Crater, Beman 4. Debrick. Cooper, D. Burns. Har rison 2. Glass, Nielson; for Phoen ix. Hatching. Beeson, Johnson 4. Pluggers Take Over First Spot In Trapshoot Knothole Pluggers, cap tained by Jack Porter, took the lead during the first week end of the league trap shoot at Medford Gun club. The team was tops in total score, had high score for its top five and tied for attend ance honors. This success gave the Pluggers 19 points. John Deaver's Nut Busters were second with 17 points, Loyd Langston's Meat Balls tallied 12, Ed Kliever's Iron Men 7, Ray Coleman's Nail Drivers 5 and Joe Jorgensen's Cream Puffs none. Thre Tied High . individual gunners were Charles Skeeters of the Pluggers, Sam Samson of the Busters and Coleman each with 49 out of 50. The shoot of teams made up of club members will con tinue for five more Sundays. The Knotholers had a total team count last Sunday of 527 compared to 498 for the Busters, 372 for the Meat Balls, 299 for the Iron Men, 288 for the Drivers and 211 for ihe Puffs. The two top teams each had 12 men pres ent. Top five for the Knothole Pluggers totaled 298 and the Nut Busters 296. There were 52 shooters par ticipating. HONOR JIMMY BROWN Philadelphia - (UPD - Jimmy Brown, the Cleveland Browns sensational fullback who set a National Football league ground - gaining record this season, has been chosen the American Athlete of the Year by the Philadelphia Sports writers association. FIGHTS Detroit (UPD Wilf Greaves, 162, Canada, stopped Otis Woodard, 162. New York 8. M TT T3 - -- Vanderbilt Quint Trips Kentuclcians By MILTON RICHMAN United Press International Unranked Vanderbilt and an unsung but hot-shooting little Hoosier proved to be the undoing of previously un beaten Kentucky. It all happened at Nashville, Tenn., Tuesday night when Vanderbilt handed top-ranked Kentucky its first licking in 12 starts this season, 75 66, for possibily the biggest upset of the basketball cam paign so far. Jim Henry, a New Albany, Ind., native who barely stretches six feet, was the man chiefly responsible for Ken tucky's first loss since last Feb. 24. Henry, whose chief hobby is tropical fish, also collects points and the 29 he came up with Tuesday night were enough to snap a Wildcat winning streak which had ex tended to 16 games over two seasons. Kentucky, last year's NCAA champions, fell behind early, stayed ice cold throughout the first half and never was able to catch up. The inspired Commodores, who had won five games and lost five until Tuesday night, walked off the floor with a 41-27 lead at half time and then came back to run up a 17-point lead in the second half. Held in check by a man-toman defense, the Wildcats rallied late in the second half to cut Vandy's margin to six points, 70-64, with three min utes to go, but the Commo dores never let them get any closer. Hornets Tip Eagle Club Hedrick Junior High ninth grade ' cagers started slowly but got going in the second quarter yesterday to down Eagle Point freshmen 41 to 29. Eagle Point was in front 6 to 5 at the first rest stop but the Hornets of Medford had 25 to 16 control at the half way buzzer., Third quarter count was 33 to 25. Charles Allen tabulated 16 points and Scott Eaton 12 for Hedrick and Steve Geren had eight for the Eagles. LINE-UPS: 41 Hedrick Eagle Point 29 F Thompson Chamberlain 6 F 12 Eaton Meyer C 16 Allen Wilson 7 G 1 Morris - Geren 8 G 4 Vowell J. Dusenberry 4 Substitutions For Hedrick, Irv ing 8. McCullough. Wickersham, Mitchell, Fisher. Byrd; for Eagle Point, L. Dusenberry 2, Goode 2. Smith, Teutsch Now Second in Gold Handicap Ranny Smith and Tom Teutsch made the biggest gain in the holiday handicap golf tourney at : Rogue Valley Country club last week. They took six points from Jack Sanborn and Bob Mor ris to rise from a fourth place tie to second place and have a total now of 13 points. Lead of Clayton Lewis and Frank Allen was narrowed but still is a comfortable 10. Lewis and Allen, who have 23 markers did not play last week. . Paul Meyers and Dick Ho gan broke even with Dr. Dave Boals and Dr. William Miller to retain third position. Hugh Pitts and F. W. Casey won two points from Doug Pickell and Harrv Withrow to move to a fourth place tie with Miller and Boals who took five from "Lloyd Pope and Dick Travis for the second biggest jump of the week. Ken Teeter and Jerry Ol son fell from second to sixth with a three point loss to Ed Nichols and A. C. Broyles. STANDINGS: Lewis - AUen Matches Pts. 6 Plus 23 Smith - Teutsch Meyers - Hogar . Pitts - Casey Boals - Miller Teeter - Olson , Moore - Dunlevy Sears - Mayer j... Nichols - A. Broyles Voegtly - Cowning .. Ksviland - Humph'y Conrad - Anderson Kalibak - Eidswick.. Doughetry - I. Lewis Phillips - Gilbertson Milne - H. E. Nulton Lambert-J. Mitchell Pickell - Withrow L. Clark-P. Mitchell J. Cottingh'm-Alxd'r Schmidt - Lubbers Flink - Sullivan . Odell - Nuich . Fabrick - Weils Robinson - Leonard Pope - Travis . C. Knight - Parsons Marten - Somen Gordon - Lynch Holmes - Baker . Sanborn - Morris Hall - Brown Getchell - VanDuker Rementeria - Barclay 13 9 8 8 7 6 6 6 5 5 4 4 3 3 i 0 4 Minus 1 5 S 5 4 3 6 3 9 4 4 1 7 4 5 4 4 1 1 2 2 3 4 6 .7 7 8 8 9 10 13 14 16 AMATEUR STATUS Vienna - flJPD - Toni Sailer, former Olympic and world skiing champion, will appear at a meeting of the Interna tional Skiing federation at Zurich Sunday when his ama teur status is discussed. Sailer currently is acting in a movie which is being filmed here. The island1 of Trinidad boasts 2,000 miles of modern roads. Full College Hoop Slate on Week End United Press International Somebody forgot to tell Dave Klurman of College of Pacific that basketball is a big man's game. The 5 foot 10 inch guard tanked 29 points Tuesday night to lead the Tigers to an 81-53 victory over Chico State in a non-conference tilt. It was a quiet night on the Pacific Coast basketball front and it will be even quieter tonight and Thursday - but a full schedule is on tap for the week end. In the Pacific Coast con Med St. Mary's Grabs Lone Leadership in St. Marv's of Medford stood alonetoday as unmarred lead er of the Jackson County B Basketball league. The Crusaders turned back Butte Falls High 41 to 36 here last night for their fourth vic tory in the loop. It was the first loss in four league games for the Loggers. , Second half rebounding and shooting of Gary Miksche and Dick Evans and scoring of Bob Evans were instrumental in the win. St. Mary's com pletely dominated the rebound play under the backboards in the second half. Butte Falls, with their tall man, Raymond Abbott out of action because of a turned ankle, neverthe less held its i own under the boards in the first half. Loggers Threaten The Crusaders assumed the lead for.good in the first quar ter. They headed 10 to 6 at the end of that period. Butte Falls never came closer than within three points after that but was a threat throughout the second period to overtake the Medford club. St. Mary's was on top just 19 to 16 at halftime but rolled Ring Chairman Position Goes To Krulewitch New York-(DPD -Ma j. Gen. Melvin L. Krulewitch, a for mer fighting Marine, will have command of the fight game in New York state for the next four years. General Krulewitch, who fought in three wars with the U.S. Marine Corps, was ap pointed chairman of the New York State Athletic commis sion Tuesday night by Gov. Nelson Rockefeller. The new chairman, a New York attorney and major gen eral in the Marine Reserve, succeeds Julius Helfand of Brooklyn, who broke up the powerful Boxing Managers' Guild and tried zealously to clean up the sport during his four-year term. As chairman of New York's three-man commission, 63-year-old Krulewitch holds perhaps the most important job in professional boxing; for New York is the hub of the sport. The commission also controls professional wrestling. Russians Trim Michigan Stars Detroit (DPD The Russian national hockey team met its toughest opposition to date on its American tour Tuesday night with four Soviet power play goals the difference in its 7-3 victory over the Uni versity of Michigan-Michigan State university All-Stars to lead the scoring parade be fore 6,738 fans at the Olym pia. The Russians broke out with four goals in the middle period and when the All Stars narrowed the lead to 5-3 in the final stanza, came back with two more power play markers. l SCORING VICTORY over Ashley Cooper, Australia, Alex Olmedo (above), is big wheel in bringing back coveted Davis Cup from Australia. Olmedo, a Peruvian now at tending University of Southern California, Los Angeles, defeated Australia's top player 6-3, 4-6, 6-4, 8-6, ference Friday, Washington plays at California, Idaho at Stanford, Washington State at UCLA and Oregon State at Southern California. On Saturday, Idaho moves to Cal, Washington to Stanford, and the Cougars and Beavers switch opponents in Los An geles. . . The West Coast Athletic conference opens its seventh season, with University of San Francisco at Santa Clara, St. Mary's at Loyola and COP at Pepperdine. On Saturday, COP meets Loyola, and San Jose State visits USF. tTWBUME B League up 12 points to Butte Falls' four in the third quarter to lead 31 to 20. In the fourth quarter the Medfordites built their edge to 15 points at 37 to 22 and 39 to 24 before Coach Bill McKibbin sent in reserves. Regulars returned, however, when it appeared the comeback efforts of the Loggers might catch the Cru saders. The Medfordites are in no danger of losing their lone leadership this Friday since they are idle. In games that evening Butte Falls will play at Talent and Jacksonville at Prospect. LINE-UPS: 41 St. Mary's t 10 D. Evans . F 14 B. Evans C 15 Miksche . Butte Falls 36 Remsen 8 .. Ferguson Jims 6 G R. Daley Cavin 16 G Hout Ellefsen 6 St. Mary's substitutions Cooper, Frazier. Yates, H. Daley. Presidency Decision Up To Cronin Chicago- (DPD -It apparently was up to Joe Cronin today to decide whether he wants to be president of the Ameri can league. ' Retiring President Will Harridge said Tuesday ;the 52-year-old general manager of the Boston Red Sox is the only candidate invited to ap pear in Chicago Jan. 14 be fore a Screening committee charged with picking Har ridge's successor. "The committee wants to discuss details with Cronin. If the conditions are right as far as Cronin is concerned, he probably will be the man," Harridge added. The six-man screening com mittee meets next Wednesday at Chicago's Palmer House. The six-man group will make its recommendations Jan. 31 at a gathering of American league club owners in New York. Holly Mims Foe Of Bobby Boyd Chicago-(DPD-A "new" Bob by Boyd, seeking a ranking among the middleweights, and Holly Mims of Washing ton, D.C., clash tonight in a televised 10-rounder at the Chicago Stadium. Mims, a 30-year-old cam paigner of 10 years' ring service, was ranked as a slight favorite, although Boyd holds an edge in their two previous fights. The lanky Chicagoan earned a 10-round nod over Mims in 1956 and the pair fought to a 10-round draw almost a year ago. DESIGNER SUGGESTS WIGS London (DPD Designer Ted dy Tining, who designed the lace panties that won head lines for American tennis player "Gorgeous Gussie" Moran, today proposed vari colored wigs as the accessory the woman tennis player should wear in 1959. kk .... X2Te!K!sajsMi ?':&g!P"r Prep Basketball Tuesday Basketball (United Press International) Jefferson 73. Madison 48 Franklin 70 Cleveland 58 Grant 55. Washington 26 Benson 55. Roosevelt 53 Wilson 54. Lincoln 36 South Salem 50, Beaverton 49 Central Catholic 77, Jesuit 51 Dallas 57. West Linn 56 Oswego 51. Tigard 49 McMinnville 68. Forest Grove 45 Sandy 63, Gresham 49 McMinnville 68. Forest Grove 45 North Marion 33, Gervais 29 St. Helens 65, Oregon Citv 52 Corvallis 57. Springfield 47 Sweet Home 51. North Eugene 49 Woodburn 48. Canbv 41 Lebanon 52, OCE Frosh 45 Tillamook 42, Newberg 29 . Clatskanie 48, Knappa 44 Myrtle Creek 66, Cottage Grove 52 Brookings 41, Illinois Valley 38' Rogue River 55, Canyonville 49 Eagle Point 69. Jacksonville 53 Elkton 36, Sutherlin 35 Glide 57. Camas Valley 40 St. Mary's 41. Butte Falls 36 Pleasant Hill 58, Elmira 42 Banks 49, Estacada 34 ,. Dayton 51. Amitv 31 1 ut Lake 40, Mosier 33 Villamina 68, Sherwood 46 Stayton 48, Serra 44 Tillamook Catholic 57, Taft 42 Star of the Sea 49, Vernonia 48 Neahkahnie 58, Warrenton 43 Eagle Point Victor Over Jacksonville Jacksonville Eagle Point high took control in the third quarter here last night to de feat the Jacksonville hoopmen in a non-league encounter. Jacksonville was ahead 13 to 12 at the quarter. The Eagles were in front 30 to 29 by halftime then pulled to 52 to 41 in tlie third quarter. It was a rough fracas and Jacksonville was hurt by the loss on fouls of Doyle Bran: som early in the third quar ter and Ken Perreard ' early in the fourth. Jacksonville re serve Tim White also fouled out. Twenty-seven fouls were tooted on the Redskins and 20 on Eagle Point. Bill Turner continued his high scoring for the Eagles with 31 points, getting 22 in the second half -after being held down by Bransom in the first half. Turner had 12 field goals. Perreard picked up 24 points before being retired from the action. He put in 10 of his 11 free tries. , Jacksonville won the jun ior varsity time in overtime. LINE-UPS: 69 Eagle Point Jacksonville 53 F 8 Huffman Bransom 4 F 14 Nease Perreard 24 C 1 B. Hubbard Griffin 7 G 13 Green wod Davis 7 G 31 Turner Hartley 3 Substitutions For Eagle Point, Smith, Hooper, Brryman, Charters; for Jacksonville, White, Cabler 1, P. Hubbard. Long 4. Pilots Whip Falcon Five Portland (DPD The Univer sity of Portland Pilots crush ed Seattle Pacific here Tues day night, 86-43, in a one sided basketball game. - It was the ninth victory in a row for Portland. Jim Armstrong of the Pi lots was high with 18 points and Jim Altenhofen had 14. Orville Anderson who racked up 38 points for the Falcons to spark a 77-66 victory over Lewis and Clark here Monday night, got only 12 Tuesday night. Portland hit 32 field goals in 92 attempts for .348. Seat tle Pacific shot 51 times from the field and made 10 shots, or .196. The Pilots got 85 rebounds versus 47 for the losers. Florida State Grid Job Open Tallahassee, Fla. -(DPD Ter ry Brennan and Otto Graham today were being considered as possible successors to Flor ida State university football coach Tom Nugent. But Tallahassee attorney W. G. Starry, president of the local boosters club, said: "I personally doubt if we could pay enough to get either one." Nugent, who guided Flori da State to one of its best seasons in school history this fall, signed a four-year con tract Tuesday as head coach at the University of Mary land. The Indians called Lake On trio "Skanyadario" meaning "lake beautiful." makes k sense ! MORRIS the mSiTANT CAR JSy VIDE STEVENS AUTO SALES 505 North Central Sport OSCAR FRALEY I Parade aSc vm ry7;, United Press New York-(DPD-College bas ketball is buried today in a morass of clutching, grabbing and stalling which . remains, and will remain, only because of the selfishness of the coaches. " Pro basketball sold itself to the spectators by installing a 24-second time limit on pos session. But the colleges stub bornly refuse to move out of the roundball dark ages and continue to play the same slow-down game. The answer is in the coaches, their fears of defeat and the inevitable retribution of the alumni. This becomes obvious when you talk to a group of them. They know all too well that speed and height would be of tremendous importance in a relentless, crowd- pleasing game where both teams were forced to drive right up to the final basket. In the final analysis, they are fearful that the margins of defeat would often be tre mendous and their jobs might hang in the balance. "Respectable" Defeat Margins So they are all too content to play the slow-down game where the margins of defeat will be "respectable" even though it means a dull, list less, stalling contest in the late stages. Ken Norton of Manhattan, a member of the NCAA Rules committee, once again is stumping for the pro-type pos session limit. He admits that his efforts probably are doom ed for the coaches voted 2 to 1 against the proposition in a questionnaire sent out last year. "This is a dull, sloppy game we are playing" he snorts. "It is a desolate situation. Be cause of the leading team's stalling tactics there is no way of getting back into a game once you fall 10 points be hind." Norton points, as evidence, to a recent Bradley-Dartmouth game in which there wasn't a shot taken during 16 min utes of the second half. He also frets over such instances as a recent game in Philadel phia in which "it took about a half hour to play the last three minutes because of the constant fouling." Provide Weak Arguments The coaches generally pro vide weak and inane argu ments for the opposition. The time possession limit, they contend, would force bad shots ;stereotype play; encour age the lack-lustre zone de fense and, how silly can it get, the clock would be too expensive. Lou Rossini of NYU hits the nail squarely, however, when he says: "If we have a time rule, the teams without height and Yankee School To Be Curtailed New York - (UPD - The New York Yankees' "acceleration school" - a pre-pre -season camp for promising rookies- will be curtailed this spring. The world champion? an nounced Tuesday that most of their young farmhands de veloped so fast ' during the new Florida Instructional league last autumn that they will not be asked to attend the "acceleration school" this year. "The results we achieved in the Florida league were far superior to those in the ac celeration school," said Jerry Coleman, assistant farm di rector. "The kids had con stant instruction and compe tion under the best playing conditions . . . and we had a chance to get a sustained look- at them." Temperatures are extreme ; on the moon, ranging from 215 degrees above zero, Fahr enheit, to 240 degrees below, i Instantly ready to move effortlessly through' heavy traffic, or zip into the tightest parking place, the "instant" Morris gives family transportation with over . . 40-miles-per-gallon economy. VMM Down Ck a PfWJwct of Th Irtticfc Motor corpofitMM. Mafc ft of suck htm cart at: AMI V MC. Auatia. !(- lucki Phono SP 3-3655 speed would be losing by 20 to 40 point spreads." There is the basic reason why the college coaches fight the time limit. There would be too great a difference be tween the haves and the have- nots. They know that, under current rules, the haves are willing to run up a 10-point edge and then stall the rest of the way. In this manner, nobody gets hurt too badly. College Basketball Hurt There is a real hurt, how ever and that's to college bas ketball. Oklahoma State, under Hank Iba, is famous-or in famous, if you will-for its dull, possession type play. It is a formula which is so dull that the Aggies no longer are invited back to play in Madi son Square Garden. The rea son: They put the customers to sleep. College basketball, some contend, has never been a big ger draw than at present. The answer is that it is the only wheel in town. But criticism of it has never been bigger, either. The coaches are going to have to admit it is bigger than they, as individuals, or they're going to kill the gold en goose. NWL Bills Starters By United Press International The Northwest Conference 1959 basketball season opens Thursday night with defend ing co-champions Linfield and Willamette both on the firing line at the start. Linfield meets College of Idaho . at McMinnville and Willamette plays host to Whit man at Salem. The conference has had ties for basketball honors in six of the past 12 years and in both of the last two. College of Idaho has the most impressive pre-confer-ence record with 7-0. Lewis and Clark is 6-4, Linfield 5-5, Willamette 5-5, Pacific 3-6 and Whitman 2-8. Bob Moreno, 6-1 College of Idaho freshman from Chicago, leads scorers in pre-season games with a 22-point aver age. Games Friday night send Pa cific to Lewis and Clark, Col lege of Idaho against Willam ette and Whitman and Lin field. On Saturday Lewis and Clark plays Pacific at Pacific, Whitman is at Linfeld and College of Idaho at Willam ette. BASKETBALL TUESBAY COLLEGE SCORES (United Press InternaUonal) East Connecticut 73, Maine 58 ' Catholic U. 76. Baltimore IT 57 ' Massachusetts 71, American Int. ol Gannon 66. Carnegie Tech 65 Brooklyn Col. 86, St. Fran. (NY) 85 Dartmouth 52, Yale 51 Niagara 70, Syracuse 55 -South Va. Tech. 86. Geo. Washington 81 N. Carolina St. 73, Virginia 68 Richmond 69. Citadel 62 Florida St. 65, Miss. Southern 62 Vanderbilt 75, Kentucky 66 ' Midwest Xavier (Ohio) 85, Miami (Ohio) 79 Butler 62, Notre Dame 60 Washburn 74, Omaha 56 Southwest Southern Methodist 73. Texas 55 Rice 70. Texas A&M 65 Arkansas St. 72, Southern U. 70 West College of the Pacific 81, Chico 53 Portland 86, Seattle Pacific 43 Clark JC 55. Yakjma Valley JC 48 Closed Car Driving Weather Is Here! DON'T RISK DEADLY EXHAUST FUMES! Come In Today For A MUFFLERS AND EXHAUST SYSTEMS $2.50 Voluo NOW o. A Complete Check of Your Exhaust System! Inspect entira system for dangerous carbon monoxide leak. Permanently seal all leaky connections with leakproof muffler and tailpipe sealant. Tighten all muffler and tailpipe Replace worn, broken or rusted Carefully test to assure noiseless Hurry! Limited FHEESTONE STORES 214 So. Riverside Fray May Be Spiced By Grudges By HAL WOOD Los Angeles -(UPD- If Coach Weeb Ewbank knows what's good for him. he won't cet too close to the sidelines when the East tangles with the West in the Pro All-Star football game here on Sunday. Sam Huff, the New YorW Giants line-backer, hasn't for gotten that Ewbank Dunched him on the adams apple dur ing the play-off game between the Baltimore Colts and the Giants in full view of the 70,000 fans and a few million more on television. "What gets me is that I can't figure why Ewbank flew m there to punch me, says the still-burned Huff. "The man I tackled, Ray Berry, didn t think I was playing dirty. Next thing I knew, Ew bank was on top of me, so I punched him back." Adds Dessert The possibility of this re match between the 230-pound Huff and the smallish Ewbank adds a little in the wav of dessert to what promises to be one of the finer free-for- alls in all-star records. The report is that Norman Van Brocklin. one-time Los Angeles Ram quarterback, is unhappy with his successor here, Bill Wade. Van Brock lin now is with the Philadel phia Eagles and the two mav be quarterbacking against each other. Then Gene Big Daddv LiDs- comb is supposed to be mad at the whole Los Angeles team because it traded him -away. It is doubtful that Huff. Lipscomb and Van Brocklin will carry their grudge onto the field and it is very im probable that there will be any fisticuffs. But it should result in a slam-bang game. Pettit Paces Hawk Victory United Press International Bob Pettit's golden touch-' promises to make him the first man to reach the 1,000 point mark in the National Basketball association this season. Pettit raised his league leading total to 979 Tuesday night as he poured in 38 points to lead the St. Louis Hawks to a 112-95 victory over the Minneapolis Lakers in the opener of a Madison Square Garden doubleheader. New York trounced Syracuse, 118-108, in the nightcap. In a Philadelphia twinbill, the red-hot Boston Celtics knocked off Cincinnati, 109 95, and Detroit nipped Phila delphia in the last seconds, 107-105. GOLF EDITOR DIES Atlanta -(UPD- Bert Finck Prather 52, Atlanta Constitu tion golf editor, died Tuesday following a heart attack. Pra ther covered all major south ern golf tournaments' during his 18 years with the newspa per. Buy At Builders Supply Drain Til Bricks, Flues, 727 W. MeAndrswt Ph. SP 2-4107 SPECIAL (o)c connections and clamps. bolts. and leakproof exhaust System. Time Offer! Phone SP 2-7119 6ff QUALITY fri! J BLOCKS n (o) (6)