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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 13, 1959)
lO MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford.Or. Sunday. Dee. 13, 195 y fJtt 1 -"! 5 5 GEORGE LUCAS : Mett Valuable Cruuder Awards Given Ar St. Mary's Guard George Lucas, was voted most valuable player of the 1959 state B co-championship St. Mary's high football aggregation. .The honor was announced Thursday evening at an award program attended by some 200 people at St. Mary's gym - .Football letters and gold footballs, the latter emble matic of the state title, were presented to the Crusader athletes. : Sister Gerard Mary, princi pal of the school, presented the district title trophy to team co-captains Lucas and Roger Hout. Presentation of the . state championship tro phy was made by the Rev. Carl ' Mai, pastor of Sacred Heart parish, to Tony Mar shall, student body president. Chico State Beats SOC Chico, Calif. (DPD Chico State College coasted to a 59- 55 victory over Southern Ore gon College of Education on Chico's basketball court Fri day night. '. .The Calif ornians, behind by one point, 27-26, at the half, came on to lead 47-34 mid way in the second period, and easily held the lead to the end. Gordon Carrigan of South ern Oregon was high scorer with 17, followed by Ron Ti bulski of Chico with 15. Three Oregonians missed th oamA aftpr TTpai Cnarh Theodore Schopf, the team manager and a reserve player were hospitalized following a four-car collision near Yreka on the trip to Chico earlier Friday. .-' 4 v 1.0" Santa steps in with AUTO ACCESSORIES squire "500 LUXURIOUS one-piece contour -f'rt CAR MATS 1 beautihr. ummm mm SPEaAL PRICE Reg. $1!.95-$8.9S CHROME LAKES PLUGS! St . Ti"CHA LL- .ttaaw. T V ) . I MUhdo) teiblddL Is Medford ' 801 N. Riverside 9 A.M.-6 ?M. so ' Or e - Ashland 9th Tops Mac Hoop Club Ashland's ninth grade bas ketball club caught McLough lin with a zone defense it was not prepared for Friday and clipped the Medford team 35 to 19. The Lithians "had quarter spreads of 10 to 4, 21 to 10 and 31 to 19. Gale Tepper spurred the Ashland ers with 14 points while Mike Neath amer's seven was best for Mac. Doug Farnsworth re portedly turned in a good ef fort as captain and floor lead er of the Medford Bulldog crew. McLoughlin eigth graders reversed the result" of the ninth grade mix and beat Ash land 32 to 19. The Medfords pulled from a 7-all first quar ter tie to 17 to 10 gap at the half and 25 to 16 at the third period halt. Chuck Kimball had 14 points for McLoughlin and Don Kengla eight with six each by Jeff Trost and Samuelson high for Ashland. McLoughlin seventh also won, 20 to 12. LINEUPS: 35 Ashland MeLonghlfn 19 T . Cotton Van Pelt . F 3 Hudson Farnsworth 4 C 14 G. Tepper Lowery 4 G 7 Hess Neathamer 7 Gr 2 D. Tepper Crocker 2 Substitutions For Ashland. Longer. Polk 2. Watts. Hamilton, Johnson: for McLoughlin. Partsa fus. Couch, Calkins. Ford. Sander, Deffley 2, Bell, Stiger, Henny. .The word "Parliament" was first used in an official docu ment in England in 1242, dis cussing 'formation pf such a body. Prep Basketball FRIDAY GAMES United Press Internationa! Serra 57. Mt. Angel 41 S. Eugene 52. S. Salem 41 Willamina 50. Dayton 32 Neahkahnie 66, Coquille "8 Arlington 38. Culver 31 . Sisters 57, Condon 41 Canby 52. North Marion 44 Klamath Falls 48. Springfield 44 Yoncalla 64. Oakland 44 Crater 53. Willamette 49 Tfewberg 49. Centennial JV 43 West Linn 50, Milwaukie 46 Lake view 60, Klamath Falls JV 53 Madras 63, Prineville 45 Astoria 59. Centralia 44 - North Bend 67. Grants Pass 58 Hermiston 74. Mac Hi 45 Salem Academy 74. Amity 53 Albany 50. Hillsboro 33 . Wishram 65, Trout Lake 43 Vale 59. Payette 45 Parma 47, Nyssa 38 Perrydale 56. Gaston 29 Harrisburg 64, Central Linn 41 TYV North 77, TYV South 71 Junction City 56, Cascade 49 " Myrtle Point 55. Siuslaw 49 ; Waldport 55. Taft 52 Wy'east 53, The Dalles 39 Central 41,. Silverton 36 Hood River 52, Banks 48 Philomath 47, Nestucfa 42 Pasco 52. Pendleton 45 ' - Portland Preps Grants 64. Gresham 48 " Washington 50, Parkrose 46 Central Catholic 76, Madison 38 Reynolds 53, Estacada 37 Franklin 60, David Douglas 57 Roosevelt 71, Battle Ground 57 . Caldwell 54, Baker 43. -La Grande 65. Ontario 46 Joseph 46. Union 40 Shasta (Re-dins. Calif.) SI. Ash land 27 MAUD KAM FOG LIGHTS TRIPLE CHtOMI PLATED Handsome lighto power brood, pen etrating bom for increased arivinf jofaty in fog. Eotf ts install. Complete Selection -To Choose From WHEEL COVERS Large Selection ALL SIZES ft JP ' W J vi S -" V OPEN SUNDAYS It Grants Pass 237 Hiway 99 S. S Week Days J siPdDiKTrs BOWLING CHAMPIONS Don Carter, St. Louis, and Olga Gloor, Chicago, were winners in the grueling third annual World Invitational Match Game .Bowling tournament which concluded Friday at Chicago. . (UP I Telephoto) Don Carter Regains World Kegling Toga Chicago-(UPD-Deliberate Don Carter reigned as "world" bowling champ for the second time in three years Saturday by virtue of the rallying pow er that won him the world's invitational match game bowling championships. . Carter staged a heated fin ish Friday night by rolling 320.32 Peterson points to the 316.27 for Detroit's hard-challenging Bill Golembiewski. - Olga Gloor of Chicago, foi led past Donna Zimmerman of Akron, Ohio, in the final round, with 149.02 Peterson points to the run n.e r u p s 145.41, to take the women's "world" tiUe. Beavers Capture Opening Skirmish on Home Court . . Corvallis-tUPB-Oregon State won its home opening basket ball game here Friday night beating Montana ' university 67-52 in the first of a two game series. ! 'Jay Carty and Jim Wood land led the Beaver attack with 14 points each. . Oregon State led at half time 28-19 and played much Lions Hold Grid Dinner On Tuesday More than 80 football play ers will be honored by the Medford Lions club on Tues day evening.. The occasion will be the club's annual dinner for the state champion Medford and St. Mary's High school play ers." Lettermen of Medford . . , ... ' J nign ana me squaa oi oi. Mary's will be guests for the event at 6:15 p.m. at the Jack son hotel. Main speaker will be Dr. Leonard Mayfield, Medford school district superintendent. He will discuss the athletic program in Russia, its goals and results, and will make a comparison with athletes in the United States. . Lions President Mike Beck will preside at the dinner and will turn the rostrum over to Dr. Elmo Stevenson, president of Southern Oregon college, who will be master of cere monies. The Kev. John Ilg, of Sacred Heart parish, St. Mary's athletic director, will give the invocation. Nick Gier will lead singing of the two schools' songs and Al Huntemann will be piano ac companist. Glenn Linn, Elliott Beckon and Wilson Slater are commit teemen in charge of the din ner. BASKETBALL 8 A TURD AT COLLEGE RESULTS By L'nited Press International Wisconsin 85. Loyola (111.) 67 Duke 72. South Carolina 70 Navy 57. Princeton 47 Illinois 93, Western Kentucky 80 F RID AT COLLEGE RESULTS ' (united Press international) East Duquesne 53. William & Mary 52 Temple 90, Lehigh 62 Army 77, William 58 Pittsburgh 74. Johns (N.Y.) 73 South Citadel 75. George Washington 58 North Carolina 60, Kansas 49 Furman 83, Richmond 68 No. Car. St. 66, Kansas St. 59 Marquette 74. So. Dakota St- 69 Cincinnati 123, St. Joseph's (Pa) 79. West Oregon St. 67, Montana 52 West Mont. 79. Coll. of Idaho '62 Utah 103, Wichita 80 Wyoming U. 75. Pepperdine 68 UCLA 62, Brigham Young 42 Drake 83, Utah SHt'. 73 USC 73. Oklahoma St. 50 Chico St. 59, Sou. Oregon 55 Stockton 71, Reedley 55 Hawaii 56, Lewis and Clark 45 Fresno St. 74, Cal Aggies 58 S. F. Presidio 71. Nevada 66 Portland 60. South .Dakota 45 Santa Barbara St. 84, Arizona 78 Pacific Lutheran 81. Willamette 68. Westmont 74. Occidental 67 Bozeman Invitational Oklahoma City 71. U. L'SF 54 Montana St. 81. Oregon 75 - Southwest Texas A&M 70. Midwestern 43 DiiJard U. L Texas 69. - s Carter set a new record for the three-year history of the tournament by totaling 14,107 pins and received the $5,000 winner's share of the purse for men while Golembiewski and Mrs. Gloor got $2,500 apiece for the men's runner up and women's championship shares. Carter, bouncing back from a second-place finish in the tournament last year, was not himself at the start of the final round this season but shook the poor start and clos ed fast on the leaders Friday and Thursday.. of the second half with re serves. Vince Ignatowicz was high point man for the visitors with 13 points. He was fol lowed in the point column by Dan Sullivan, who scored .12 points. The crowd . of . 3,573 watched theB e a v e r s win only their second game of the season. BOX: Montana Harris Screner Ruegsegger Balko Ignatowicz Sullivan O Billovich Totals Oregon State Carty Johnson Anderson Wold Patterson Woodland Stafford Flynn Critchfield Jacobson Campbell Niles .. fg . o . 2 . 2 . 5 . 6 . 4 . . 0 ..19 fg - 6 .. 0 . 5 .. 4 .. 1 6 O . 2 3 0 .. o o ' ft 1- 2 ' 2- 3 3- 5 1-3 1- 5 4- 8 2- 3 14-?9 ft 2-3 1- t 0-0 2- 3 0- 0 2-3 2-3 1- 2 0-0 0- 0 2- 3 1- 2 Pf tp 2 1 3 0 1 7 4 11 1 13 4 12 1 2 16 52 pf tp 14 1 10 10 2 14 2 Totals . ..27 13-20 21 6J St. Mary's Rallies by Eagle Point Eagle Point St. Mary's of Medford' rallied from a cold start' here Friday night to down Eagle Point high hoop team 46 to 40. The Eagles were in front 15 to 2 after the opening quarter but SM outshot the EP club 18 to 12 in the sec ond panel to cut the gap to seven points at 27 to 20. St. Mary's rolled in 13 points each in the third and fourth cantos while the Eagles got four and nine. The Crusaders caught up at 28-all and were on top 33 to 31 at the third quarter rest. Eren on Boards Medford's parochial team got good shots and made them in the second and third quart er comebacks. Eagle Point turned cold in the second half. The teams ended about even in the backboarding with EP dominating in the first half and SM in the second. Al Yates of the Crusaders was the evening's high point maker with 16 -while Dick Evans put in 11 and Jim Cal hound 10. Jim Nease's nine was high for Eagle Point. The encounter was marked by aggressive play on both sides. St" Mary's won the junior varsity ruckus 37 to 34. LINEUPS: 4S St. Mary's Eagle Point 40 Knutson Nease 9 Hout Jorde 5 D. Evan . Greb 7 4 11 G 5 B. Evans Geren 5 G 10 Calhoun .... Greenwood 5 Substitutions For St. Marv's, Yates 16, Shasky, Cooper. Austin; for Eagle Point, Ayres 4. Wilson 2, Perdue U Berryman 2, Pfiefer. UTAH GRIDDERS WIN ' Honolulu -OJPD- Utah State fumbled the first four times it got the ball Thursday night, then settled down to pound out a methodical 48-6 victory over the University, of Hawaii in the final college football game of the regular reason. NortKTips Crater in Overtimes Central Point-North Grants Pass Junior high ninth edged the Crater Frosh 55 to 53 in double overtime and Central Point won from North in the eighth grade mix 32 to 30 in a single extra Friday in bas ketball action at Grants Pass. North topped Central Point 15 to 13 in the seventh grade tangle. Freshmen teams, were knotted 51-apiece at the end of the regular time in a game which saw both ; clubs shoot and move the ball well. Tally after one overtime .was 53-all. NGPs Reddick fire'd from the key in sudden death for the win. North headed 19 to 11 at the quarter. Count was 22 each at halftime and favored GP 39 to 37 after the third stanza. Louis Alvarez had 22 points for Crater and Bonzon 17 for North. Lindauist of th GP club had 17 rebounds while Willie Jones pulled in 12 for the Comets. Score at the end of the regular time in the eighth grade fray was 30-each. Cen tral Point led 14 to 11 at th half and 27 to 19 after three cantos following a 6 to 4 North bulge at .the close - of the fourth quarter. Sparlin had 12 for GP and Darrell Summerfield eight for . the Pointers. Larry Glawe of Central Point with six was hieh for both seventh grade clubs. LINEUPS: 5S North GP V Crater 53 7 Boue i Jones 3 10 O'Leary Glines 15 5 Lindquist G. Wald 5 14 Reddick Alvarez 22 17 Bonzon P. Peoper 8 DeCourcey 2. Thompson. Phoenix HS Noses Out Billy Five Phoenix - Mike Consbruck swished in three free tosses in the final stages here Friday night as the Phoenix basket ball quintet nosed out Pleas ant Hill high 50 to 49 in a non-league hassle. .. Two of Consbruck's charity casts tied up the fracas at 49 all and the third provided the margin of decision in a" see saw final stanza. . The two teams went into the last quarter tied 38-all af ter a 29 to 21 Phoenix lead at the half. A layin by Dick Wright gave the Billies 40 to 38 ed?e but Consbruck tied it for Phoenix with a jumper. Wright made it 42 to 40 at the gift line but a field goal and free shot by Mike Reese put Phoenix on top 43 to 42. Cons bruck and Gene Tinker traded free shots and a fielder and gifter by Jim Floyd made it 47 to 43 by the Pirates. Tinker hit a layin and Bruce Bradshaw two free markers and a field shot for 49 to 47 wtih Pleasant Hill . ahead. Then Consbruck got his points. Pirates Shoot .450 Wright and Tinker had 16 and 16, respectively, for the Billies while Consbruck put in 15 and Ron Baker 12 for Phoenix. . The Pirates . gunned hot from the field in the first half and cooled in the second, still winding up with .450 average to the .404 of the Billies. The field totals were 18 of 40 to 17 of 42. Pleasant Hill shot 15 of 24 from the foul mark and Phoenix 14 of 22. The Willamette valley visitors had 22 rebounds to 20 for Phoenix in the mix and had a five retrieve edge on the home club in the second half. . Tinker put in seven of the Billy points in the third quarter comeback. That stan za saw the Pleasant Hill club erase their eight-point differ ence and take a 38 to 35 lead. A free shot by Gary Chriss and a juniper Ty Reese brought the period end dead lock.. Phoenix junior varsity tip ped the Grants Pass sopho mores in the prelim 34 to 26. GP led at the quarter 11 to 10 and Phoenix at the half and three-fourth stops 21 to 17 and 29 to 24. Bill Lucas and Dave. Johnson for Phoe nix and McClellan for GP each put in nine points. - LINEUPS: 5R Phoenix Pleasant Hill 49 F 15 Consbruck Broderidt 2 F 5 Sloper Laird 0 C 12 Baker : Black 5 G 9 Floyd wngnx io G 7 Reese .... Elliott 5 - Substitutions For Phoenix, Craig, R. Richey 1. Chriss 1: for Pleasant Hill, Tinker 15, Cheshire, Bradshaw 4, Roberts 2. . Gold Rey Fish Count WEEK ENDING DEC. 12: (No Fish). FULL SEASON: Silver Salmon 227 (includes 7.9 per cent jack salmon) sinee Oct. 17. Winter run steelhead None. Poison Oak? Try a Bottle of ZEMACOl You must be satisfied or , rout money cheerfully refunded. Get ftottla today at WESTERN THRlfl Marshfield Downs Tornadoes 66-58 as Counts Puts in 33 Coos Bay Towering Mel Counts, as anticipated, and Karl Coke, made the big dif ference here Friday, night as the Marshfield high basket ball crew trimmed the Med ford Black Tornado 66 to 58 in the opening engagement of the season for each aggrega tion. Counts collected 15 re bounds and poured in 33 points to pace the Pirates. Coke had 20 points. Actually the Marshfield club won the conflict at the free line. The Bucs put in 28 gift tosses to Medford's eight while the Tornado led in field buckets 25 to 19. Jerry Anderson sparked the visiting delegation with 14 markers and 10 rebounds. Booth Deakins had 11 points and eight board retrieves. Lowell Dean put in 11 tallies and Jerry Shults 10. Bob Buries cleared the backboards eight times for Marshfield. . Collapse on Counts Defense of both crews left quite a bit to be desired but the Tornadoes collapsed two Junior High Tilts Taken By Hornets Hedrick Junior High school basketball clubs made a clean sweep of the action here Fri day against South Grants Pass. The ninth grade won 49 to 34, the eighth 32 to 21 and the seventh 27 to 22. Torrid shooting in the first half by Hedrick was a ninth grade feature. The Hornets in going to a 32 to 21 margin hit 14 of 21 field tries, an average of .667. The two clubs traded just about bucket for bucket in the second quarter and then slowed down over the last half. Hedrick had 14 to 6 open ing chukker advantage and was on top 38 to 27 after three periods. Danny Miles turned in an all-around fine game and paced Hornet scor ing with 19 markers. Shepard of South scored 16 and did a top job on the boards. Don Anderson rebounded and shot well for Hedrick, putting in 12 points. Keisserker and Pippen turned in all round good play for South GP. The local seventh had 6 to 5, 10 to 9 and 19 to 12 quar ter differences. Tim Watrud led Hedrick With eight points and 15 rebounds. Connell had nine points for South. LIVEUPSt 49 Hedrick South GP 34 F 8 Mitchell Shepard 16 F 12 Anderson Keisserker 6 C ' 4 Bandy : Wade G 19 Miles Piopen 10 G Gilbertson White Substitutions For Hedrick, Shaw, Ross 2, Reed, Stockton. Hau pert. Heysell, Fowler 4; for South GP, Ferguson 2. Tests made by ornitholo gists indicate that migrating birds can navigate by the stars. A 1 y mm i mi u m Am if filer For All FORD PASSENGER CARS IfJSTfllLEI Only Includes Checking Complete Exhaust System! CRATER :LAKI Main At Fir O and three men on "6-10 Counts at a time and didn't give him any layups. Counts, never theless, hit well from the field from the inside while Coke was scoring from the outside and on drives. Most of the Medford per sonal infractions came on ef forts to stop Big Mel and Coke. Counts got 16 free chances and put the ball in the hoop on 13. Coke hit eight for 10 from the free stripe. Good field shots were miss- Chiefs Nick Prospect Gang 40-39 Rogue River - Rogue River high cagers rucked Prospect Friday night 40 to 39 on Jeff LeRoy's hooked goal from un der the hcop with 12 seconds left. The scoreboard showed 38 all just before LeRoy's shot but a check of the official scorebook later disclosed that Prospect had been leading by one point, 39 to 38. That was the only time the Cougars were in front in the contest. Rogue River, which applied a pressing game for the last three cantos, had 11 to 5, 21 to 20 and 29 to 27 quarterly leads. . Craig Gardner of Prospect had 11 points to top scoring. Bob Fitch and Lee Williams of the Cougars and Dave Car ter and Steve Simer of RR each contributed nine. Rogue River - also won the junior varsity tiff 33 to 31. LINEUPS: 40 Rogue River Prospect 39 F 6 McCabe C. Gardner 11 F 4 Frantz Fitch 9 C 9 Carter Williams 9 G 1 Laws Hall 4 G 5 Phil Archer ...... Scaife 5 Substitutions For Rogue River, Simer 9, Gail. LeRoy 6; for Pros pect, Yell 1, Rogers. m Drop in I YE OLD FASHIONED HOSPITALITY 1 Food Beverage EE Friendly warmth of th crackling fireplace will greet youl 4 You'll find o gamey atmosphere of Hunters EE Tavern ... "Where the Elite Meet". i Hunters Tavern j 4 Comers . . rilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillHIIIIIllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllin HEAVY GAUGE ed by both contingents. Still Medford had a commendable .352 fiel average firing more and making more than the Pi rates who recorded .333. Marshfield headed at every intermission 14 to 9, 37 to 30 and 49 to 43. The Bucs had only a scant edge in back board retrieving, 36 to 34. BOX: Medford Anderson, f Pf tp 4 14 Deakins, f L. Dean, c Shults. g .. Durkee, g Wuinney Ragsdale Miller C. Dean Olson .. Totals J 1-21 14-S 20 58 ft pf tp l-l 2 5 Totals . -57-1S 33-28 12 66 Viks Trim IV Cougars Myrtle Creek - Myrtle Creek high hoopmen got off to a good first quarter start on Friday , and rolled to a .60 to 40 decision over Illinois Valley. - The Vikings, sparked by Fred Earwood's 29 points, used a tight zone defense to advantage on their small court. Quarter scores were 20 to 8, 31 to 14 and 38 to 26. Chuck Baird had 13 points and Mike Hanby 11 for IV. Illinois Valley salvaged the junior varsity scrap 36 to 35. LINEUPS: 60 Myrtle Creek 111. Tal. 40 4 Trask Baird 13 6 Kinney ..... Johnson 5 C 29 Earwood - B. Tucker G 5 Tiffen Lewis 7 G 8 Watson M. Hanby 11 Substitutions For Myrtle Creek, Bartley 4, Halverson, Shirtcliffe, Clarke 3. Topp 1: for Illinois Val ley. Turner. S. Hanby, Hiu. Ver steeg, C. Tucker. for a Bit of Y . Crater Lake Hiway fg ft 20-6 5-2 15-5 1-1 11-4 3-3 12-4 3-2 9-3 1-0 n n n-n 0-0 0-0 3-2 0-0 1-1 1-0 0-0 0-0 Marshfield fg Weekley, 1 8-2 Buries, f U.....4-1 2-2 Counts, c 26-10 16-13 Burke, g 1-0 0-0 Coke, g 17-6 10-8 Traxler. , 0-0 0-0 Eickworth 1-0 - 2-2 Hughes 0-0 2-2 $cf 90 MOTORS Phone Colts Tromp Rams 45-26; Take Title By United Press International The Baltimore Colts scored three touchdowns in the fourth period to beat the Los Angeles Rams, 45-26, Satur day and clinch their second straight Western conference championship in the National Football league. The victory means the Colts will play the New York Gi ants in Baltimore, Dec. 27, for the league championship. The Colts won last year's playoff, 34-28, in pro football's first sudden-death overtime game. The Rams, fired up by Coach Sid Gillman who an nounced his resignation in the dressing room before the game, carried a 26-24 lead in to the fourth period but quar terback Johnny Unitas' third touchdown pass of the game gave the Colts the lead and they added two more touch downs on a 15-yard run with an interception and a 99-yard run with a missed field goal attempt, Unitas threw two touch down passes to Ray Berry and one to Jerry Richardson to make it 37 consecutive games in which he has thrown at least one scoring pass. The 99 yard run, by Carl Taseff, equalled the N.F.L. record. JEWELERSWIN Andys Jewelers defeated Southern Oregon college jun ior varsity 71 to 49 Thursday in a Southern Oregon Inde pendent Basketball league game. r Builders Supply QUALITY BLOCKS Drain Til Bricks, Flue 727 W. McAndrews Phone SP 3-4575 w SP 2-4107 Your Tori Gets Better Care at Your Ford Dealer! J SP 3-4547 AVI W mm m V s Jit