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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 6, 1959)
8 MAIL TRIBUNE, McdferJ, Or. , ej tj.w iocs CONTRACT DEFINITE Medford-Grants Pass High School PROBABLE OFFENSIVE LINE-UPS Miami, Fia. -aw- "My con- Medford High Stadium tract with the two principles! is definite," New York promo ter Anthony J. Velella said to day in announcing plans to stage the return heavyweight . championship bout between . Ingemar Johansson and Floyd Patterson in Miami's Orange Bowl next Feb. 26. .Bowl next Feb. 26. "I intend sending each fighter an 84- tday notice before the bout." Velella added, so they can "be ready in event arrangements ' are ironed out here." Friday, 8 p.m. GRANTS PASS by "Chuck" Batten WMM "Sura I told you to stay MAT AND CLEAN . . . but let's not OVERDO it!" We don't feel that we can over-emphasize the importance of our careful service. 99 Chevron Station We Give S&H Stamps Phone SP 3-6673 '-lit North Rivrsid "' Chevron Supreme Gasoline Wgt. Pol. 180 LE 200 RE 208 LT 190 . RT 170 LG 17S RG 195 C 160 QB 168 LH 166 RH 170 FB Wgt. 173 174 235 230 190 235 190 178 144 184 182 Nam Larry Jannen Jim Purkett . Jere Patterson Sieve Bennett Jerry Coleman Bill Cole Gary Woolsey Rex Benner Oscar Nealy Glen Davis Harvey Graham No. 50 30 55 53 65 69 ' 60 40 33 39 44 ! MEDFORD . No. Name 80 Jerry Anderson 84 Lowell Dean 70 Gordon Palhman 60 Dennis Jensen 64 Keith Berg . 65 J'n Frohnmayer 51 Pat McLaughlin 14 Dick Ragsdale 25 Skip Bennett 35- Mike Hood 41 Dan Sieg . MEDFORD ROSTER: 7 Jerry Winningham E 175: 8 Dave Serry E 155; 10 Ray Konopasek Q 150; 11 Jim Stever Q 136; 12 Craig La u ranee Q 156; 13 Mike Monroe Q 155; 14 Dick Ragsdale Q 160; 15 Bill Heyerman Q 124: 16 Dick Byrd Q 140; 17 Mike McCullough H 150: 18 Brent Mitchell T 175; 19 Eric Koellner Q 152; 20 Reinhart KosUin T 172; 22 Don Cranston FB 178; 23 Phil Humphreys H 170: 24 Jim Schmidt H 146; 25 Skip Bennett H 168: 28 Jim Barry H 156; 27 Charlie McCormack H 130; 28 Steve Smith H 142: 30 Calvin Dean Q 152; 31 Ken Durkee H 156; 32 Bob Walker Q 150: 33 Len Griggs H 160: 34 Kent Blew H 165; 35 Mike Hood H 166; 36 Monte Jones T 130; 38 Mike Miller T 165; 40 Al Fun ston F 177; 41 Dan Sieg F 170: 42 Bill Charley F 164; 43 Stan Smith Q 160; 44 George Clearwater F 177: 45 John Hamlin E 148: 49 Paul Garren H 155; 50 Warren Parke C 175: 51 Don Tichenor C 170; 52 Pat McLaughlin C 195; 53 John James T 175; 54 Scott Eaton E 145; 55 Bob Rix C J65: 56 Chuck McNair F 152: 57 Paul Bauer C 170; 58 Renny Vowell G 132; 60 Dennis Jensen T 190: 61 Bill Hobbs G 164; 62 George Lindemann G 181; 63 Larry Brown G 150; 64 Keith Berg G 170; 65 Stan Hobbs T 210: 66 John Frohnmayer G 175; 67 Terry Earl G 155; 68 Tim White H 150: 70 Gordon Pathman 208 71 Chuck Holt C 180; 72 Bert Lindemann T 170; 73 Terry O'Sullivan T 185; 74 Lynn Knight T 200: 75 Dick Connolly G 180; 76 Phil Baird E 180; John Pierce G 165; 80 Jerry Anderson E 180; 81 Booth Deakins E 178; 82 Jerry Winetrout E 160; 83 Bob Quinney E ' 170: 84 Lowell Dean E 200; 85 Ed McGinty G 155; 86 Chuck Shaw C 190: 87 Reggie Breeze G 178; 88 Bruce Brav E 170; Ron Gandee H 165: Wayne Cowan T 180: Dave Elmgren-G 158; John Alansky C 155; David Elgin G 156; Richard Knights T 155: Dave Lowry G 150: Bob Claussen E 145: Terry O'Conners T 165: Ron'Snopl C 150; Bill Owens G 130; Kevin Davis G 168; John Sullivan G 155; Art Ruhl H 140. GRATS PASS. ROSTER: . ' 15 Bob Walstrom G 140; 18 Bill Bramblett G 133: 17 Eddie Hull R 163: 18 Richard Katzenbach E 150: 19 Max Hull H 153; 21 Dan Mclntire Q 146; 22 Bob Pfaendler C 165: 24 Gary Stevens G 150; 28 Eddie Moulder H 145: 30 Jim Purkett E 174; 33 Oscar Nealy H 144; 34 Tom Hathaway 'H 145: 35 Doug Robertson T 169; 36 Doug James E 140; 38 Gary McLain E 150; 39 Glen Davis H 184; 40 Rex Benner Q 178; 41 Ole Newman E 156; 42 Ted Fuhrmeister G 180; 43 Fred Higginbotham H 122: 44 Harvey Graham F 182; 46 Dave Wilson H 170; 48 Ken Marshall E 156; 49 Dennis Rose C 170: 50 Larry Janssen E 173; 51 Walt Harvey E 172; 53 Steve Bennett X 230; 54 Phil Krouse H 150: 55 Jerry Patterson T 235; 56 Ken Bastian C 206; 57 Bob Steward G 200; 58 Richard Hodgin T 173; 59 Brian Howard G 152; 60 Gary Woolsey C 190; 61 Bob Loper T 185- 62 Curtis Coffield G 166 .63 Ron Hoatson T 205; 64 Jim'Miller G 170- 65 Jerry Coleman G 190: 66 Jim Hamilton; E 158; 67 Bob Boyce T 175; 69 Bill Cole G 235. 72 John Morris T 185. NOW - OPEN Tha SHOPPING CENTER BARBER SHOP In Tht Medford Shopping Center East Jackson St. 5 f sV " -N' .,VS 5 ' ' v$ ZSV' &4t vtl ft iPoul Kan ' Claud The most modern shop in Southern Oregon the ONLY Barber Shop -in the world with the Vacu-Flo System. ' - -. . " ' .. Lots of ' FREE PARKING FOOTBALL MENU High School Friday, 7:45 P. M. Medford vs. Grants Pass College Saturday, 1:15 P.M. Oregon vs. California Professional Sunday, 11:00 A.M. N.Y. Giants vs. Cadjnals. 1:25 P.M. Rams vs. 49'ers Mail Tribune Sports Station mm SPORTS Wide Open Golf Play UMC Help United Medford Crusade will benefit Saturday from all-day golf competition at Rogue Valley Country club. The 18-hole rivalry will be or gross and net prises. It is emphasized that tha tournay is open to all golf ers. - men and woman, whether they are members of tha club or not. This "wide open" play for tha on day is a departure from the police 'of RVCC. Entry feet will be $2 for members and $3 for non- ' members. More than 100 prises are planned with closeit to the pin and long drive awards to be given in addition to those for gross and net scores. : 'If players do not have established handicaps "the Galloway system will be ap plied to their scores. A hoi ' - in - on tourna ment, separate from the other competition, will be another event of the day. Yanks Now Favored in Ryder Golf Palm Desert, Calif. - (tlPB -Capt. San Snead reached into the strategy bank and came up with some brilliant pair ings that made the United States the favorite to win the Scotch foursome matches in the opening round . of the Ryder Cup competition today. Both Snead and Capt. Dai Rees of the invading squad were confident of victory -and both seemed pleased with the pairings. When play got underway at 9 a.m. today, the pairings were: Bob Rosbur and Mike Souchak, U.S., vs. B. J. Hunt and Eric Brown, Great Bri tain. Julius Boros and Dow Fin sterwald; U.S., vs. Ken Bous field and Rees, Great Britain. Snead, Dr. Cary Middlecoff, U.S., and Harry Weetman and Dave Thomas, Britain. Doug Ford and Art Wall, U.S., vs.- Peter Alliss and Christy O'Connor, Great Bri tain. "I'm hoping to wjn all four matches," said Snead, "but the only way I would be dis appointed would be to lose three or more of them." Snead thinks that his strong est team is made up of Wall and Ford. , '-: Tornado; Cavemen in 6 A-i Toga EDecider Mere Tonight; Comets IHIost To Grizzlies . Class A-l football comes to its 1959 conclusion tonight on southern Oregon fields and there'll be a big showdown on the Medford stadium turf. Medford's Black Tornado is host to the burly Grants Pass Cavemen with kick-off at 8 p.m. For the fifth consecutive year the Tornado meets the Cavemen in the finale of the regular slate. Each year the Southern Oregon conference toga and District 6 A-l issues have been determined in the fray. At Central Point this eve ning' will be the other con ference ender with Crater host tao Ashland. Neither is in the title running but the winner can wind up in third position or share second in the circuit. Play-Offs Aim A berth in Oregon quarter finals is the big objective in the. Grants Pass - Medford game. Victory or tie will give the blitz Tornado the SO man tle and the play-off place again. A Grants Pass triumph would mean a third straight co-championship but the Cave men thereby would advance into contention for the Ore gon big school crown. Med- rMm n ijy 'ftPM0X AT TORNADO FLANK - A fine blocker and pass catcher and a demon defensive player is Jerry Anderson, above, end and lineback for the Medford high football team which meets Grants Pass here tonight. A senior, Anderson has qaught 11 passes this fall for 187 yards., ; Crater-Ashland High Football PROBABLE OFFENSIVE LINE-UPS Central Point Field : : - ; CRATER No. Nam Wgt. Pos. Wgt. 48 Harold Twedeir 174 E 158 46 Tom Whit 170 E 150 -51 Glen Col .183 T 170 47 Bryson LaCasse 185 T 175 22 Larry Ryerion 174 G 160 43 ' John Anhorn 170 G 200 19 Rick Burns 176 C 160 17 Gary Johnson .153 QB 150 13 Jim Eldred ' 155 LH 152 15 - L. Higinbotham 170 RH 160 20 Don Gillaspey 163 FB 160 Friday, 8 p.m. ASHLAND . Nam Vrn Spirs Jerry Houck . Phil -Tucker Bob Hardy Chuck Rush LeRoy Hannon George Moses ' Dav Jackson 1 Steve Gray Bob Voris ' Ror Scholar No, 64 63 76 75 82 85 51 ' 16 22 24 32 6 A-2 Grid Title Game at Phoenix Phoenix - Dreams of Phoe nix and Sutherlin High schools of attaining greater heights in 1959 football carry on or end here this evening. i The two , contingents scrap for the District 6 A-2 cham pionship on the local grass. Starting time-is 8 p.m. Winner will go on into Oregon prep quarter-finals. Loser will pack away its gear until another year. Phoenix's Pirates enter the play-off mix tonight as champs of the Rogue league . and Sutherlin was the winner in the Umpqua Valley loop The two teams were unmarred in their respective northern .and southern divisions of the district. -Single Wings . Tonight's hassle will be one of single wing offenses. Both have good team speed to go with . it. Phoenix has shown The Bulldogs will field the lighter team but in their tilts to date have built up a good defensive reputation despite a lack of size. " Phoenix has some fine fast backs in Mike Consbruck, Fred Lumley and Leon Small Sutherlin toters include Jim Trimmer, Laddie Crippen and Ken Stilwell. Winner of this game will play next week against . the champion of District 5, "the Emerald league. Leading that circuit going into the last week before the quarter-finals is Junction City high. breakaway ability this fall. HOCKEY United Press International Boston 8, Detroif 3 Montreal 8, New York 2 AMERICAN LEAGUE Buffalo S.Quebec 3 ford .enters this tussle 3-0 in the league while GP is 2-1 in' conference games. The Black Tornado seeks its sixth consecutive trip into Oregon grid run-offs: Grants Pass is trying for its first berth since 1953, the year of its last victory over Medford. In 1954, 1955 and 1956 the Tornado gained lone posses sionvof the Southern Oregon trophy. Ties, of 20 to 20 in 1957 and 0 to 0 in 1958 xnade the teams co-champs and Med ford went into the quarter-finals on the basis of net gains in yardage. District 6 representative will - collide next week end with the team from District 5. It will be either Marshf ield (5-0 in its league) or North' Bend (4-1). Those teams also vie tonight. The quarter-final will be on the coast club's field. . Grants Pass Heavier No. 1-ranked Medford, un blemished in eight games, will rely on the quick charge of its line, a fine crew of speedy, hard-running backs and tested passing in its bid to ge by the Cavemen and record a ninth straight win. Grants Pass (4-4 and not rated) will combine both power and speed and is expected to put much use to its aerial game.: , For Medford Dick Ragsdale is the main general and passer but others can throw the ball. The Tornado has Ray Kono pasek to share the quarter backing duties and Skip Ben nett, Dan Sieg, Mike Hood, Ken Durkee and Leon Griggs are among the packers of the ball. Rex Benner will direct the GP attack and is the prin cipal throwing arm while Os car Nealy, Harvey Graham and Ron Hoatson are among the running threats. Medford on the basis of its better record is the favorite in the game. But, the Cavemen have been preparing for this night all season long and are aroused for upset action. And, the beefy Cavemen will out weigh the Black Tornado in the backfield and particularly in the center of the line. Records Listed In previous league games Medford has subdued Crater 54 to 6, Klamath Falls 44 to 7 and Ashland 56 to 0. Grants Pass humbled Klamath 31 to 0 and Crater 26 to 13 while falling to Ashland 7 to 0. Oth er tussles saw Medford drub Beaverton 33 to 0, Marshfield 39 to 21, Orland, Calif.,51 to 13, South Salem 39 to 6 and Eureka, Calif., 53 to 0. Grants Pass trimmed Corvallis 33 to 6 and Roseburg 38 to 14 and lost to North Bend 28 to 6, Marshfield 47 to 6 and Del Norte of Crescent City, Calif., 41 to 7. Fans who turn out at Cen tral Point to see the Grizzlies and hometown Comets play should witness a bang-up scuffle. A previous skirmish gives that indication. Ash land won a non-leaguer earlier this fall from Crater 7 to 0. It was a mix of seemingly even ly matched teams. It is Cra ter's homecoming , and . the Comets (3-4) , want a victory for a break-even season. Ash land (5-3) with another ver dict would end up with its best win-loss standing in many years. The teams are each 1-2 in the conference. New York (DPD Attorney John G. Clock of Long Beach, Calif., a former president of the California Golf association and a member of the U.S. Golf association's ' executive committee for nine years, to day was nominted for Presi dent of the USGA. W ': ECONOMY '. ::. Jl - SAFETY . .SpBB '(Q) , comfort pjy I Test driv the VOLVO then decicW ' I I .Swedens wonder cor . is now Amer L3 I ica's number one import favorite. . ILMI ll LOW DOWN PAYMENT This amazing ve hicle is economic al, safe and com fortable. See for yourself. " Quality is the word for VOLVO. America's leading car testers call this automobile "my particular favorite". Tom McCahill picks this as his. first choice Test drive a VOLVO at Jay Allen Co. now. . V v . ... RAMP REPAIRED Portland - Oregon anglers concerned over the probable loss of the Owyhee boat ramp damaged by a land slippage last month which left the con Crete slab hanging out in mid air, can look forward to again using this popular launching site. Full repairs have been made and the ramp is now ready for boat launching pur poses, the game commission has reported.. De John Slight Pick in Bout Syracuse, N-Y. -0JTD- Un ranked Mike De John was a slight favorite to defeat Char lie Powell in their scheduled 10-round heavyweight bout at the War Memorial tonight.. The bout will be nationally televised and broadcast . by NBC starting at 7 p.m. (P.S.T.) Portland - Anglers estab lished a Jiew all-time high in the number of salmon, taker in and around the mouth oi the Columbia river during the 1959 salmon' season it was learned today. Data collected by the Oregon game commis sion and the Washington de partment of fisheries show that some 75,000 anglers took a total of 73,900 salmon dur ing the period of June through Sept. 26. '. : I 5f9 J "nOPSACK" is THE weave in spurt coats without question the most successful fabric, of the season, if you like the newest you'll like hopsackl 29 't -V "CAREFREE" SLACKS automatic wash and wear . . . 30 rayon, 70 acrlan. repeated by popular demand in flannels and bound to be bigger than ever in new y "HOPSACKING" 7 2 -15.00 The Finest in Complete Parts & Service JAY ALLEN COMPANY SP 3-4393 DAILY'S U-CRIV1 Medford Airport ON YOUR DIAL 1078 Court Street Fiat-Volvo