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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1959)
X 24 X t C-r 0 6? 6 rVHl - f sp 4$ k Sfe m LLiiiM. -jar mi ! hi hm iwrrnirmmTi rr" -nw wnr OTtwfflr ftiMiflirttflitiiiwjilttt ' ' ' 'm-ttti VIE IN PLAYOFF GAME HERE Members of the St. Mary's high of Medford football squad, pictured here, entertain Sherman of Moro Saturday night at 8 p.m. in Class B state football quarter-final game at the Medford high stadium In the photo are, front row, from left, Roger : Hout, Ron Daley, Fred Lucas, Bob Evans, Andre Knutson; .'Don Macpherson, Alex Mete and Jim Valentine; second : row, left tto right, the Rev. John Ilg, athletic director, Tim Darland, manager, George Lucas, Tom Hersant, Don Rausch, Terry Cooper, Mike Moore, .Tom Tom jack, Mike Duggan, Dick Evans, Jim Dupray, student trainer, and Bill McKibbin, head coach; third row, from left, Jim Cal houn, Mike Austin, Bill Smith, Don Pruitt, Mike Wright, Mike Stinon, Jerry Vakoc, Doug Snider and Calvin Lan fear; back row,- left to right, Marv McGee, Mike Read, Pete Naumes, Dick Russell, Dan Jacobson," Paul Elliott, Pat' Stinson and .Joe Kaiser. . - urn SIPflDOBTS Woods, Water, Wildlife By Hank DeVoss ' . The Oregon division of the - Izaak Walton League of America will hold its annual convention in Eugene on the 27th and 28th of this month together with the annual con ference for Young Outdoor Oregonians. The theme of this year's conference is adapted to the league's conservation program for 1960: "Save Our Shorelines." Many of Ore gon's streams, lakes and some ocean frontage is dosed to public use for lack of access. ' The Young Outdoor Oregon I ians attending the conference will discuss this problem and j will be expected to arrive at Ybe conference with a report ' fr i i this situation as it exists in 4eir local community. CONSERVATIONISTS These young people are sponsored by local chapters ef the IWLA and by inter- ctiH individuals and groups. It is hoped that by wakliwa ' ahw Ave. goniana. the opportunity of getting together and dis i cussing common problems ' that- they in turn will be come spokesmen for con- serration among their own , age group. The Jackson County chapter of the , IWLA has sponsored sever - ml youth each year to the annual conference and has made applications . avail able to high school youth In the - county again this year. The league feels that this is an opportunity of rare importance for local -youth who enjoy our out doors. -HAZARDOUS CANALS Our concern over the deer kill in the Howard Prairie de livery canal is small potatoes tompared to the concern over the human kill in the A canal of the Klamath Irrigation project. In a recent letter, Oregon's Sen. Dick Neuber- ger writes that he has been .trying for some time to get favorable action on fencing the A canal because it has been a death-trap for more than a score of children and adults in recent years. WHICH HIGH COST? Despite the' heavy loss of kuman life in the canal, he writes that there is con siderable resistance to the fencing proposal because ' of the high cost involved. He says there seems to be some feeling that approval of fencing at the Klamath project would establish some kind of a precedent for fencing or covering oth er canals and ditches in the western states which would entail lhe expenditure of 1 many millions of dollars. DOLLARS VS. HUMAN LIFE It seems a little ridiculous that some of us should expect that a lot of money ought to be spent to save some deer when the money isn't avail able to save human life. We like to think of ourselves as a nation of people who think of human life as having great value and yet this situation would seem fc indicate the reverse. It would seem that irrigation water has a much higher value or could it "be that we are hypnotized by our ability to construct con crete monuments to progress and we refuse to accept their negative values. . MORAL RETRIBUTION? . There have . been, some complaints recently con cerning the fact that deer have been eating the newly- planted . shrubbery and tramping holes in the new ly - planted lawn of the ' Green Springs Power plant. This power plant uses the - water - delivered by the Howard t Prairie c a n a L Would it take too much . - stretching of . imagination to wonder whether or not' : the relatives of the deer lost in the canal are exact ing their ownorm of retri bution for the acts commit ted against their kind? At least they are more effec tive than their human coun terparts! THE ANGLER'S LOG The water is. low and clear and we know there are plenty of fish in the river, but where are they? The Rogue seems to have the same doldrums every year so far as some anglers are concerned. The fish are few and far between wheru. expectations, are high, and yet there are those who limit out every time, or so they say. It ' could be ( that some fishermen change their fishing to fit the change in water conditions and they are the ones who can find fish. The guides aren't having any trouble, but then they shouldn't with all the prac tice they 'get. THE HOT KLAMATH ' The Klamath is produc ing some good fishing down river, with stories of an glers having to sit down and rest between fish! There seem to be fish all along it with night crawl ers producing the . best. Early morning .fishing is providing the fly-fisherman with limit catches on wooly worms and no one seems to be going away totally un happy with their luck. ILLINOIS RIVER The Illinois river is produc ing a few silver salmon for the persistent angler. Reports indicate some people still don't know a silver from a chinook and are earning arrest tickets from game enf orement officers. Let's hope for a rain soonso the salmon can get over the falls and make room for those steelhead that are sure to follow. Let's also hope the salmon - snaggers . get caught this year and are fined so heavily, they don't come back. ., - . THE OPTIMIST'S CORNER Things are getting better. i It has been discovered that when " there . is -more than ; 2,800 cubic feet per second going through the flood gates at Savage Rapids dam the velocity is too great for the fish. So now the flood gates are shut to allow the fish use of the southside ladder until the water ve locity is such that they can make it. through the flood gates. Let's hope this knowledge is put to use every year and perhaps the fish will cooperate by be coming more abundant. GOOD LUCK! Havana (CM Outfielder Minnie Minoso, a .302 hitter for the second-place Cleve land Indians last season, suffered a small fracture .of fine left wrist Thursday while playing in the Cuban Winter league. A spokesman for the Marianaos club' said Minoso will be sidelined about two weeks as a result of the in-' jury. The Canadian Army is us ing quick-frozen milk. It is handled in solid blocks and cut up with a saw. Sherman-St. Mary's High Football PROBABLE OFFENSIVE LINEUPS Medford High Stadium Saturday, 8 P.M. ST. MARY'S SHERMAN No. Name Wt. Pos. Wt. Name No. 22 Roger Hout. 140 E 170.... Everett Royse 36 88 Dan Jacobson ...170 E 72 Mike Duggan ..167 T 77 Jim Valentine . 165 T 62 George Lucas 154 G 64 Don Macpherson 185 G 50 Tom Tomjack 170 C 20 Bob Evans 148 QB 36 Alex Mete 145 HB 32 Dick .. Evans .: 163 HB 30 Terry Cooper 165 FB 160 Orville Blaylock-29 210.. Sieve Bellont 32 180 Ron Mobley 38 150 Tom Eakin 11 180 Jim Thomas 37 168 : Tom DeMoss 25 130 ...Jim Duncan 14 140...: John Fields 10 178 Larry Middlelon 26 180 :.,Terry Kaseberg 24 Quotes From the News J : ' By UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL . Rome-White House Press Secretary James Hagerty, on an advance swing of President Eisenhower's foreign tour route, stating that the trip's emphasis will be on informality: "There is not a while lie dinner on any point along the way-thank God." Wisconsin Rapids, Wis -Vice President Richard M. Nixon, calling on, Americans to work harder and longer to meet Russia's ideological challenge: ' "There is no question about the . outcome . . . when men and women have a chance, they choose freedom." Washington-Secretary of State Christian A. Herter, in a statement Issued after he said the United States was not tak ing sides on the technical aspects of the border dispute be tween India and Red China: '". Whatever may be the merits of the dispute, force must not be used to settle it. The Communist Chinese regime has clearly used force and in this respect is wholly wrong." St. Mary's, Sherman Gnash Mere Saturday in IB Run-OT State high school football elimination rivalry is billed at the Medford stadium Saturday with a hassle between a pair of "little bigs." Medford's St. Mary's high Cruusaders are hosts to Sher man Union of Moro with a kick-off time of 8 p.m. Class B school championship of southwestern and central Ore gon and a berth in state play off quarter-finals are the lau rels being sought. St. Mary's, unbeaten in Ore gon competition and 7-1 for the regular season, carries the pennant of District 5 while Sherman flies the flag of Dis trict 6. It will be a scuffle between T formations. But, there are no close comparisons by which to establish which is the fa vored team. Sherman comes here with a 5-3 standing for the season. It was unbeaten in the three con flicts within Class B district but with a 4-2 status in the Cuyuse conference finished back of the leader in its cir cuit. In district scrapes coach Dale Christiansen's Huskies of Moro turned back Echo, Wheeler of Fossil and Wasco of Maupin. They tripped Con don in the Cuyuse but lost to Umatilla and to Heppner. St. Mary's was champion with 5-0 in its district, lashing defending state champ Merrill 46 to 26 in the 5B title game. The Crusaders licked A-2 Illi nois Valley 20 to 0 and lost only to Yreka, Calif., a school of A-l size. Halfback Terry Kaseberg, 180, and quarterback Jim Dun can are big guns in the Husky operation. Duncan also has a halfback twin-brother, John, a reserve. The Crusaders also have their brother combina tion with the running and passing of ' quarterback Bob Evans and the packing and catching halfback Dick Evans. Fortifying the SM attack also are fullback Terry Cooper, speedy halfback Alex Mete and end and half Roger Hout, St. Mary's has relied mainly on its ground attack this fall but in the game with Merrill with five completions, for long gains, on six throws gave evi dence of strong aerial threat. Just how Sherman has func tioned through the season isn't known but in the Wasco fra cas, which was scouted, it de pended on its rushing game. Both Sherman and St. Mary's are big schools in their class. The Moro prep has 184 enrolled and .will be A-2 next year. St. Mary's . has around 151 registered but, as a. paro chial school with limited fa cilities, will not expand its student body until a new building has been provided. Average daily membership of 150 or more makes a school A-2 ,for the following year of competition. ' Victor in the Saturday night tangle will advance' into semi finals next week end against Wallowa or McEwen. Those two teams were to meet this afternoon at Athena. Owens Leader In Corum Poll New York -(DPD Jesse Ow ens, a track star of the 1930's, topped the polling Thursday that selected the best Jiving athlete of, the age to be hon ored at the first Bill Corum Memorial dinner on Jan. 24, I960? He drew 615 points. Heading the list in other sports were: Jack Denipsey, boxing; Ty Cobb, baseball; Bob Cousy, basketball; Don Budge, tennis; Bobby Jones, golf; Red Grange, football; Maurice Richard, hockey; and Eddie Arcaro, racing. MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. Friday, Nov. 13, 1959 11 SULLIVAN VICTOR Portland UP Seventeen-year-old John Massey's string of four straight professional knockouts ended Thursday night- as hard-punching Joe Sullivan of Stockton, Calif., flattened him in 2:32 of the first round. The -youthful Portlander, game as they come, climbed off the canvas twice before going down for the count. Sullivan, 190M, used a vicious right hand smash to put the stopper on Massey, who tipped the scales at 199. YANKS GIVEN RECEPTION Moscow -(UPD- The Soviet Ministry of Culture Thursday gave a reception for U.S. Am bassador Llewellyn Thompson and American film workers who came to the Soviet Un ion for' the premiere "Marty,1 the Tass news agency report ed today. 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