ediford,
IHloop Quints Mix
fin Loop Tonight
Lone leadership in the
young 1960 basketball cam
paign of the Southern Oregon
conference will be determined
at Hedrick Junior high maple-
court here this evening.
The fracas matches Crater
and Medford Senior high
teams at 8:15 p. m. A tangle
between junior varsities at
6:30 p.m. will serve at the
curtain lifter.
Varsity contention will
match a pair of clubs which
have shown qualities of ag
gressiveness and hustle. Each
wor its opening league game
last Saturday.
In wins and losses for all
games played this season, Cra
ter has a record of 6-1 com
pared to Medford's 4-3. The
Black Tornado of Medford,
however, is the favorite for
tonight. It appears to have
more offensive punch. Cra
ter's Comets with the poten
tial for their best District 6
A-l hoop season, so far, will
be shooting for upset. And,
the Tornado is mindful of past
challenges by underdog Com
et cagers.
Winner of tonight's tussle
here will have a 2-0 record in
the Southern Oregon circuit
Hold Light Drills
Coach Frank Roelandt is
expected to call on a starting
combine for Medford of Jerry
Anderson, Bob Quinney, Lo
well Dean, Ken Durkee and
Dick Ragsdale. They were in
the opening lineup Saturday
when the Tornado whipped
i defending champion Klamath
Falls.
' For Crater Coach Lloyd
Hoffine may pick Earl Coop-
" er, Dave Sharp, Chuck Turn
Church Cage
Loop Starts
Medford YMCA Church
Basketball league play open
ed last night with three games
in the High School circuit.
. In the opening games the
: Presbyterians trounced the
' First Methodists by 42 to 38,
' St. Marks took the First
! Christian 33 to 31, and the
First Baptists edged out the
Sacred Heart church team 39
to 31.
There are three church
basketball leagues this season.
The Junior High loop is to be
contested on Thursday nights
at Roosevelt school and the
Men's league is set for Thurs
day evenings at McLoughlin
Junior High school. Both
loops are to open this Thurs
day. In the Men's games First
Christian will meet First Bap
tist at 7 p.m., Sacred Heart
will play the Methodists at 8
p.m., and Presbyterian No. 1
will meet Presbyterian No. 2
at 9 p.m. Nazarene has a bye.
More Entries Needed
Additional entries are still
sought in the Junior High
league and that slate is not
yet drawn up. Four teams
' are entered so far, Presbyter
ian, Nazarene, Methodist and
Christian.
' There are nine teams in the
' High School loop, First Meth
odist, St. Luke's Methodist,
First Baptist, First Christian,
First Presbyterian, St. Mark's
Episcopal, Sacred Heart Cath
olic, First Nazarene and Zion
Lutheran.
Mike Head was high point
man of the game for the Pres
byterians with 14 points and
Jack Joyce scored 10 points
to lead "the First Methodists.
Doug Kliever was high point
er for St. Marks with 12 and
George Lindemann top man
for the First Christians with
11 points. Don MacPherson
was leading scorer for Sacred
Heart with 18 points and
Dean Goddard top scorer for
the First Baptists with 15
points.
BASKETBALL
l' tilted Press lnternationl
South
Wake Forest 77. Clerrtson 62
Maryland 103. Yale 80
Louisiana St. 81. Georgia 77
Mississippi St. 85. Alabama 56
Tulane 1. Florida 55
Mississippi 64. Auburn 56
Midwest
Detroit 94. Creighton 78
Iowa 71. Wisconsin 64
Northwestern 61. Indiana 57
Kansas St. 57. Nebraska 53
Iowa St. 47. Nebraska 53
Ohio State 97. Illinois 73
Utah 78, Montana 62
Southwest
Houston 68. Tulsa 62
Oklahoma St. 51. Missouri 42
West
UCLA 55. Washington 54
California 60. Southern Cal 45
Stanford 43, Oregon State 38
Lovola 54. Cal at Santa Barbara
49 -Pac
Lutheran 66. San Fernando
St. 55
Oregon 62. Washington State 48
KLINE SIGNS FOR '60
St. Louis (UPD Pitcher Ron
Kline, who posted an il-13
record for the Pittsburgh Pir
ates last season, signed his
1960 contract' Monday with
the St. Louis Cardinals. Kline
went to the Cardinals in a
trade for outfielder Gino Ci
moli and pitcher Tom Cheney.
Crater
er and Loyal Higinbotham
with the fifth man to be chos
en from among Tom White,
Bill Anhorn and Denny Ed
wards. The Comets won Sat
urday from Grants Pass.
Both Crater and Medford
had light drills yesterday in
preparation for the scrap
which will be one of three in
the league this week for Med
for and one of two for the
Comets. The Tornado will
play at Ashland on Friday
and entertain Grants Pass
here on Saturday. Crater has
a Friday tilt with Klamath
Falls on Friday.
Ashland opens conference
rivalry tonight at Grants
Pass and goes to Klamath
Falls on Saturday.
Red Raiders
Will Go to
La Grande
Ashland - Southern Oregon
college hits the trail to La
Grande and a two-game series
with Eastern Oregon college
to open the 1960 Oregon Col
legiate conference action Fri
day and Saturday nights.
The Red Raiders of SOC
sport two starters in center
Glen Peterson and forward
John Payne who stretch the
height tape to 6-5 which gives
the Raiders some much needed
height that has been missing
in the past few years. SOC's
second forward will be either
Tom Bernet or Don Vannice
who are 6-even.
Raider Coach Ted Schopf,
who still has a cast on his
ankle from the auto wreck
last month, figures his team
will be in the running for the
OCC crown and that most
trouble should come from
Portland State. Narrowly
missing the trip to Kansas
City for the NAIA finals last
year, the Raiders feel if they
make the district tournament
they will be in strong conten
tion for the finals.
Carrigan Averages 15.1
All-conference guard Dordy
Carrigan continues as leading
point getter for the Raiders
through eight pre-conference
games. Captain Carrigan has
averaged 15.1 points per game.
Payne is the only other
starter scoring over 10 points
per game. He has a 10.5 mark
and a similar rebound record.
Dick Puhl or Dick Lillebo
will appear at the other guard
with Carrigan when the Raid
ers open Friday. Puhl is aver
aging 4.5 points and Lillebo
in limited action is averaging
3.0.
Schopf feels the biggest
surprise of the year is the im
provement of center-forward
Dick (Hughie) Smith. Smith
at 6-3 has been playing with
the second unit and pulling
over six rebounds a game off
the boards in addition to scor
ing 5.5 points per game in
limited duty.
Scoring by the -Raiders is
Carrigan with 121, Payne with
84, Peterson with 47, Smith
44, Puhl 36, Vannice 35, Ber
net 15, Lillebo 12, Dave Gard
ner 9, and Brad Flanary 8.
Welterweight
Fights Slated
New York -flIPD- Two wel
terweight fights, both on TV,
feature this week's light box
ing schedule.
Rudell Stitch, Louisville,
Ky., ranked fourth among
147-pounders, is favored at
2-1 to spoil the TV debut of
Philadelphia's Carl Hubbard
at Louisville Wednesday
night. Hubbard is unrated.
Their 10-rounder will be tele
vised nationally by ABC.
At Madison Square Garden
Friday night, Stan Harrington
of Honolulu makes his east
ern debut in a 10-rounder
with Mexican Gasper Ortega
Neither is ranked among the
welterweight contenders, al
though Ortega formerly was
high up.
Ortega is favored at 8-5
over Harrington for their na
tionally televised and broad
cast bout (NBC).
The week's boxing schedule
also includes:
Tuesday Los Angeles
Olympic - Johnny Handen vs.
Bobby Sand.
Thursday Los Angeles
Olympic - Danny Valdez vs
Billy Thomas.
ECAC NAMES TEAM
-New York -fUPD- Russ Gor
don of Temple, Bob Milkvy of
Pennsylvania, Doug Critch
field of Massachusetts and
Tom Stith of St. Bonaventure
were named today to the first
of the weekly all-East teams of
the Easteren College Athletic
conference.
NAME UNITAS TOPS -
Philadelphia (DPD Quarter
back Johnny Unitas of the
Baltimore Colts has been nam
ed America's No. 1 athlete by
the-Philadelphia Sportswriters
association. Unitas will be
honored at the writers' 56th
annual dinner Jan. 25.
Medfcriv&Tribumi
"Tiff JQJgP?' i'?Wi
1 4. "
UP. UP AND IN! Denny Strickland, University of Oregon
guard (No. 30), left the floor to lay the ball in during last
night's game at Eugene between the Ducks and Washington
State university. WSU's Terry Ball (No. 15) looks on help
lessly. U of O captain Chuck Rask (No. 23) watches from
the background. Oregon won 62-48. (UPI Telephoto)
Oregon Overcomes
WSU At
Eugene -(UPD Oregon scored
44 second half points Monday
to overcome a Washington
State halftime lead and win
its 10th game of the season,
62-48.
Four Ducks scored in double
figures as Oregon again play
ed without its 6-7 center
Glenn Moore, out with an in
jured ankle.
Oregon trailed 22-18 at half
time but finally caught up
with seven minutes gone in
the second half and went
ahead for good on Stu Robert-
Medford Ranks 3rd
In Prep Caqe Foil
Portland -flJPB- Marshfield's
Golden Pirates, with seven
straight victories under their
belts, were rated the number
one high school basketball
team in Oregon today.
Marshfield picked up all
eight first-place votes in the
inaugural United Press Inter
national prep board of coaches
poll.
Neighboring rival North
Bend, also with a 7-0 mark,
was ranked second just ahead
of Medford and Klamath
Falls. Defending state cham
pion Franklin was fifth.
One coach from each of the
eight A-l districts is included
on the board. They will pick
the top teams each week until
the state tournament in
March. Voting will not neces
sarily be limited to A-l
schools.
Coaches Listed
The coaches include Glen
Kinney, Bend; Mel Krause,
North Eugene; Jerry Mosby,
Astoria; Don Peterson, Frank
lin; Eldor Baisch, McMinn
ville; Frank Roelandt, Med
ford; Herb Booth, Parkrose,
and Dick Ballantyne, South
Salem.
Points are awarded on a
10 - 9 - 8 - 7 - 6 - 5-4-3-2-1 basis.
Marshfield, led by 6-9 Mel
Counts, had 80, while North
Bend had 54, Medford 50,
Klamath Falls 49 and Frank
lin 42.
The second five included
Hermiston, Jefferson, Lincoln,
La Grande and Cleveland.
29 Football
Deaths Noted
New York (UPD Twenty-
nine football fatalities were
recorded last season for the
highest total since 1947.
Dr. Floyd R- Eastwood of
Los Angeles State College,
who has been investigating
football deaths since 1931, re
ported to the National Col
legiate Athletic association to
day that football was directly
responsible for 18 fatalities
and indirectly charged with
II others." The all-time record
ed was 49 in 1931. There
were 30 in 1947. "
Nine of those in 1959 were
in sandlot football, three in
semi-pro"," '13 ' in " high 'schools
and four in college.
"Four deaths indirectly due
to football resulted from heat
exhaustion," Eastwood re
ported.
Half. 6
son's free throw at 28-27.
The Ducks kept adding to
this lead and with three min
utes to play had a 60-43 edge.
Washington State suffered
the loss of Charlie Sells with
8:42 left to play in the second
half. Sells sprained his ankle
after going up for a shot.
Chuck Rask paced the
Ducks with 14 points followed
by Robertson with 12, Dale
Herron 11 and Charlie War
ren 10.
Sells was high for Washing
ton State with 11.
The rankings with won-loss rec
ord in parentheses:
Team Points
1. Marshfield (7-0) 80
2. North Bend (7-0) 54
3. Medford (4-3) 50
4. K. Falls (6-1) 49
5. Franklin (4-0) 42
6. Hermiston (7-0) 38
7. Jefferson (4-0) 33
8. Lincoln (4-0) 17
9. Tie La Grande (6-0) 13
Cleveland (3-1) 13
Others: David Douglas 10; Rose
burg and St. Helens 7; Astoria and
Central Catholic 5; Sandy and
Grant 4: Crater, Springfield and
South Salem 3; and South Eugene 2.
BOWLING
CLASSIC LEAGUE
Standings: W.
Edith & Henry's Drive-in 24
Hight Real Estate 20 "i
Oak Knoll Golf Course .. 18',i
Sewing Machine Center .. 17
Morse Motors 17
Trail Creek Lumber Co... 16
Lamport's Sporting Goods 16
Oak Street Tank & Steel.. 16
E. H. Mann Co 14 V2
Sam's Sporting Goods 12l,i
Hillyer Oil Co n
South. Ore. Construe. .. 9
L.
8
11 Vt
13 'i
15
15
16
16
16
17 'i
19 ',t
21
23
Results:
E. H. Mann Co. 3 (Forrest Lid
dell 582) 2694; HUlver Oil Co. 1
(Norm Hillyer 581) 2688.
Sewing , Machine Center 3 (Ray
Wise 580) 2678; Southern Oregon
Construction 1 (Ken Bowser 554)
2668.
Hight Real Estate (H. A.
Green 595) 2759; Lamport's Sport
ing Goods 'i (Vem Allen 575) 2581.
Morse Motors 3 (Garv Couch 555)
2590; Oak St. Tank & Steel 1 (Gene
Morris 518) 1702.
Sam's Sporting Goods 3 (Wilton
White 557) 2641; Trail Creek Lum
ber 1 (HaiTv Goode 577) 2634.
Oak Knoll Golf Course 3 (Bill
Luman 571) 2781; Edith & Henry's
Drive-In 1 (Bill Howell 582) 2759.
MAJOR LEAGUE
Standings: (End of First Half)
Team w.
Team No. Five 51
Pin Ups 38
Keglers 37 Va
Bowlerettes 35
L.
21
34
34 Vi
37
Channel Cats 30 'i 31'
Gutter Balls . 24 48
Results: v
Bowlerettes 1 (I. Schroeder 516)
1478; Team No. Five 3 (C. Lowd
511) 1486.
Pin Ups 1 (E. Baker 512) 1519;
Keglers 3 (S. Daigle 565) 1534.
Channel Cats 2 (W. Winkler 484)
1439; Gutter Balls 2 (A. Bohannon
5011 1438.
High series S. Daigle 565.
Winkler 200.
High series S. Daigle 5656.
Split conversions Anna Dale
Bohannon 5-8-10. -
ROXY ANN MAJOR LEAGUE
Standings:
W.
L.
7
8
8
8
8
9
10
11
12
12
12
15
Asko Supply
Western Oil
Allison Const. .
Kachina Room
Donna Timber
Rotary Club
Medford Tire
Desert Service
Mail Tribune
K-Dove .
Country Club
Cal. Ore. Ranches .
13
12
12
12
12
11
10
9
8
8
8
5
Results:
Asko Supply 4, Desert Service 0.
Rotary Club 3, Cal. Ore. Ranches
Western Oil 3. Medford Tire 1.
Allison Construction 3, Mail Trib---
une 1.
Donna Timber 3, Kachina Room
1.
K.-Dove 2. Country Club 2.
High game Clarence Wilson 225.
High series Don Turner 571.
City Pin
Tourney
Scheduled
January 16 is the deadline
for filing entries for the an
nual Medford Bowling asso
ciation tournament.
The men's city champion
ship contention will be staged
on four week ends. Team
bowling will be on Jan. 30 and
31 and Feb. 6 and 7 at Med
ford lanes. Doubles and sin
gles will be rolled on Feb. 13
and 14 and Feb. 20 and 21 at
Roxy Ann lanes.
With the competition on
Saturday evenings and all day
Sunday, the tourney will not
interfere with league play on
other days of the week.
Entries may be turned in to
Jerry Burroughs, association
president, or Paul Dimick,
secretary-treasurer, or may be
left for them at either one of
the lanes.
Top Rookie
Named for NFL
New York-(UPD-Boyd Dow
ler, young star for the most
successful Green Bay Packer
team in 15 years, today was
named the National Football
league's top rookie of 1959 in
the annual United Press In
ternational poll.
Dowler, former University
of Colorado quarterback who
played offensive end for the
Packers, won by one vote in
balloting by 31 sportswriters
who covered the 1959 cam
paign in the 11 league cities.
Only two votes separated
the top three players in the
poll.
Dowler received seven. Nick
Pietrosante, Detroit Lion full
back from Notre Dame, was
second with six. Billy Stacy,
Chicago Cardinal safetyman
and kick runback specialist
from Mississippi State, was
third with five.
Tommy Davis, San Fran
cisco Forty-Niner place-kicker;
John Lovetere, Los An
geles Ram defensive tackle;
J. D. Smith, . Philadelphia
Eagle offensive tackle, and
Richie Petitbon, Chicago
Bear defensive back, each re
ceived two votes.
Olympic Shot Put Champion Aiming
At Unprecedented Third
Los Angeles -(UPD- Parry
O'Brien, 27, two-time Olym
pic games shot put champion,
today was embarked on a
campaign he hopes will lead
to an unprecedented third
gold medal in his event at
Rome this Summer.
The Sullivan Award win
ner for 1959 as the nation's
top amateur athlete disclosed
his plans and preparations
Monday at a meeting of the
Southern California Track
McGrew Top
For Medford
Eddie McGrew outshot 29
other shooters to win the
Medford Rifle and Pistol club
annual junior rifleman cham
pionship match at the club
range Monday.
Dropping only 4 points in
the 20 shot prone match, Ed
die compiled a score of 196
of a possible 200. He captured
the silver trophy presented by
Syracuse Rated
Top Grid Team
New York - (UPD - Syracuse,
which capped the only perfect-record
season achieved
by a major college in 1959
with a 23-14 Cotton Bowl vic
tory over Texas, was named
the No. 1 football team of the
country today by a committee
representing the Football
Writers Association of Amer
ica. - s
The five - man committee
gave Syracuse three first
place votes and two for sec
ond for a total of 13 points.
Mississippi, Sugar Bowl con
queror of Louisiana State,
ranked second with 11 points
followed by Washington with
four points and Texas and
Georgia with one each.
Syracuse will be presented
with the sixth annual Grant
land Rice award by Look
magazine. The award was
won by UCLA in 1954, by Ok
lahoma in 1955 and 1956,
Ohio State in. 1957 and'Iowa
in 1958.
Huskies Given
Loud Welcome
Seattle -(UPD-A presidential
candidate would give his eye
teeth or his upper plate for
the kind of support given
the returning University of
Washingotn football team
here Monday night.
It was Rose Bowl hysteria
all over again in a tumultuous
celebration which made New
Year's Eve quiet by com
parison. -.
Cheers from more than
5,000 fans cut through the
34-degree mist at the Seattle
Tacoma Airport to greet the
Huskies who conquered Wis
consin, 44-8, in the Rose
Bowl Friday.
Sears and Silo State
Triumph in Cage Contests
United Press International
It took California's Golden
Bears only 48 hours to wipe
out the memory of one of
their saddest basketball de
feats. The second - ranked Bears
did a slow burn when South
ern California snapped their
25-game victory streak last
Saturday night but they start
ed a new string by trampling
the Trojans, 60-45, Monday
night on the same Los An
geles court.
Darrall Imhoff, the hero of
California's victory over West
Virginia in last year's NCAA
championship game, missed
most of the second half be
cause of an injury and wound
up with only four points.
However, he still managed to
grab 12 rebounds as the defensive-minded
Bears limited
Southern Cal's starting five to
13 points.
Bill McClintock picked up
the scoring slack for Imhoff
as he totaled 16 points, four
more than : teammate Tandy
Gillis. Chris Appel, who play
ed a key role in Saturday's
upset, led USC with 17.
Sophs Run Wild
Three slick sophomores ran
wild in the Big Ten Confer
ence. Jerry Lucas scored 30
points as fifth-ranked Ohio
State opened its title bid with
a run-away 97-73 victory over
Illinois; a 27-point barrage by
newcomer Bill Cacciatore car
ried Northwestern to a 61-57
upset over Indiana, and Iowa
turned back Wisconsin, 71-66,
behind Don Nelson's record
breaking free throw shooting.
Lucas and Larry Siegfried
totaled 37 points between
them in the first half as Ohio
State hustled to a 51-36 ad
vantage. When the Illini fell
farther behind in the second
half, Coach Harry Combes
cleared his bench in disgust.
Siegfried wound up with 26
points while Govoner Vaughn
led Illinois with 16.
Cacciatore, a 5-11 guard
who was promoted to a start
ing berth only last week, scor
and Field Writers Association,
O'Brien said his first com
petition of the year would be
In the first Los Angeles Invi
tational Indoor Track and
Field Meet Jan. 22 at the new
Sports Arena.
Sees Long Career
O'Brien said he hoped to be
able to compete in weight
events until he is 40 if he can
continue training and also his
job as a bank executive.
Currently O'Brien said he
Shooter
Juniors
the Medford Rifle and Pistol
club and the annufil junior
rifleman championship medal
presented by the National Ri
fle association. Les Little with
194, Jim Shaw with 192, Ed
McGinty with 190 and Larry
Poling with 188 followed in
that order and will receive
bronze trophies.
Kathie Heidenreich, 180;
Andre Bessonette, 179; Ron
Caulkins, 179; Rodney White,
179; and Gregg Schmidt with
177 completed the first 10
shooters.
Next Friday at 7:30 p.m.
the first of a series of Friday
night classes in pistol shoot
ing will be held at the club
range. Instructor is Lt. Col.
Frank D. Graham USA (ret.)
formerly team coach of the
U.S. Army pistol team. All in
terested in participating are
invited to attend.
Sunday, Jan. 10, the club
will hold its monthly pistol
match with firing scheduled
to start at 1:30 p.m. The fol
low Sunday, Jan. 17, the
monthly rifle match will be
held with firing starting at 1
p.m. All shooters are invited
to attend these matches.
TRACK STARS ACCEPT
New York -(UPD- Sweden's
Don Waern, a sub-four-minute
miler, and Stig Petterson, who
has cleared six feet, 11
inches in the high jump, have
accepted invitations for meets
in the United States this win
ter, it was announced by the
national AAU.
Los Angeles -(UPD- Defensive
halfbacks - Charlie Britt of
Georgia and Don Ellersick of
Washington State have signed
with the Los Angeles Rams of
the National Football league.
Bay
At
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ed nine straight points mid
way in the second half to give
Northwestern a 50 - 44 lead
The Wildcats hung on gamely
the rest of the way to hand
Indiana its second straight up
set defeat.
Breaks Field House Record
Nelson canned only four
field goals but he broke the
Wisconsin Field House single
game records for free throw
attempts (20) and successful
free throws (14) as Iowa re
bounded from its week end
upset by Minnesota. Marty
Gharrity, another soph, led
Wisconsin with 17 points, in
cluding 14 in the second half.
Sixth-ranked Utah rallied in
the second half to down Mon
tana, 78-62, Kansas State op
ened defense of its Big Eight
Cincinnati
Get Top
New York - (UPD - Oscar
Robertson and his Cincinnati
Bearcat basketball mates to
day topped United Press In
ternational's major college
ratings with 346 points, the
second highest total ever re
corded in the voting.
The only higher total re
corded during the 10-year his
tory of the ratings was the 348
count collected by the Bill
Russell - sparked San Fran
cisco Dons on Dec. 27, 1955.
The maximum possible
score is 350. Each of the 35
leading coaches who rate the
major schools for UPI selects
10 teams in the order he ranks
them nationally. The points
are awarded on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1
basis for votes from
first through 10th place.
Win Holiday Festival
Cincinnati, with Robertson
setting single game (50) and
tournament (122) scoring rec
ords, won the Holiday Festi
val last week in New York
Gold Medal
was working out three days a
week for an hour or two
weight lifting and three days
putting the shot.
O'Brien said he intended
competing, in three indoor-
meets, the invitational here
Jan. 22, the Los Angeles
Times meet next month and
the National AAU meet in
March.
Herschel Smith, director of
the invitational meet, said
plans for the first such meet
to be staged in Los Angeles
were progressing well, thanks
to an assist from Milwaukee.
While the newly built Sports
Arena eventually intends to
have its own indoor track, it
could not get it ready for this
season. But Smith was able to
borrow the board track used
by Milwaukee annually and it
will be the surface for both
his meet and the Times next
month.
Indians
ip OSC
By 43-38
Corvallis (UPD Stanford's
defense minded Indians
throttled Oregon State 43-38
here Monday.
The loss was only the sec
ond for Slats Gill's Beavers.
Gill was hospitalized with the
flu and Paul Valenti handled
the Beavers.
Stanford led all the way in
the first half and fell behind
only once in the second half
30-29 with five m i nju t e s
played.
The game was tied four
more times from then on until
Jim Windsor hit two fast bas
kets to push the Indians in
front 39-35.
Oregon State managed to
cut the margin to one point
twice more before the final
buzzer.
John Arrillaga paced the In
dian attack with 16 points. He
was the only Stanford player
in double figures. Jay Carty
had 14 to pace Oregon State.
3
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conference championship with
an easy 69-37 victory over
Colorado, and llth-ranked
Wake Forest downed Clem
son, 77-62, for its fourth
straight Atlantic Coast Con
ference triumph.
Al Bunge set a school rec
ord of 43 points in sparking
Maryland to a 103-80 triumph
over touring Yale; Duke roll
ed to a 72-36 victory over
Bucknell; Jeff Cohen's 22
points helped William & Mary
down Davidson, 72-64; David
Fedor total 28 points and 28
rebounds as Florida State rip
ped South Carolina, 93-75;
Houston out-lasted Tulsa, 68
62, as Gary Phillips tallied
24 points, and a last-minute
field goal by Kent Miller
earned UCLA a 55-54 squeak
er over Washington.
Bearcats
Rating
. and downed Dayton Saturday
night to boost its season rec
ord to 10-0. This record earn
ed the Bearcats 32 first-place
votes, two second-place votes
and one third-place vote. The
coaches based-their ballots on
games played through Satur
day night.
California, which defeated
West Virginia in the Los An
geles Classic last week before
being upset Saturday night by
Southern California, replaced
the Mountaineers in second
place. West Virginia slipped
to third. Bradley, beaten only
by Cincinnati, advanced from
seventh to fourth. Ohio State.
beaten last week by Ken
tucky, slipped from fourth to
fifth.
Utah was sixth. Southern
California, tied for 18th last
week, advanced to seventh.
Georgia Tech, 17th last week,
moved to eighth. St. Louis
dropped from sixth to ninth.
Texas A & M, winner of the
Southwest Conference tourna
ment, advanced from 12th to
10th to become the third new
comer in the top 10.
Southern California, Geor
gia Tech and Texas A & M re
placed Indiana, Illinois and
New York University in the
select group.
Wake Forest headed the
second 10 group. It was fol
lowed in order by North Caro
lina, Indiana, Villanova, Iowa,
Iowa State, Utah State, South
ern Methodist, St. Joseph's,
Pa., Kentucky and Illinois.
Kentucky and Illinois tied for
20th.
Shoemaker
To Ride
Arcadia, Calif.-(UPD - C. W.
Smith's Hillsdale, the star of
western racing last season,
had a new rider today for his
1960 campaigns with the na
tional riding champion, Wil
lie Shoemaker, agreeing to
handle him all year.
Shoemaker replaced Tom
my Barrow who won . iu
stakes with Hillsdale last sea
son and brought the horse
within nodding distance of
"horse of the year" honors.
The Detroit industrialist
telephoned his decision to
switch from Barrow to Shoe
maker at Santa Anita Mon
day at Hillsdale drew top
weight of 130 pounds for his
winter debut Saturday in the
$50,000 San Carlos Handicap.
IT NOW!
THE NEW 1960
MIIJMMEIH1
Super Snipe
Hemispherical Combustion Engine
Power Steering and Brakes
Automatic
All-Leather Interior
Also ... at Waifs Lithia Motors
. . . See the all-new
I960 SUNBEAM
and the Brilliant 1960 Hillman
OYIKIflA S13(D)TOS
On the Plaza Ashland
9
Tuesday, Jan. S, 1960
Red -Blue
Trapshoot
On Sunday
Annual Red and Blue team
shoot of Medford Gun club
will be held on Sunday, Jan.
10.
Dr. Arthur Anderson will
captain the Reds and Jack
Porter will head the Blues.
All paid up members will
be eligible to participate on
one of the teams and the cap
tains will pick their teams
from among members present.
Losing team will have the
"privilege" of serving dinner
at the annual membership
meeting on Wednesday, Jan.
13. The 7 p.m. banquet at the
gun club will be preceded by
a social hour. Dinner will be
free to paid up members.
Three directors will be
chosen at the meeting which
follows the dinner. Terms of
John Deaver Eugene Hunt
and Everett Gibson expire.
Holdover directors are E. W.
Pease, Martin Clogston, Don
Petersen, Loyd L a n g s t o n,
Charles Skeeters and Bert
Peck. A movie of "Champion
ship Flyer Shooting at Monte
Carlo" will be shown.
Big Y Team
Drops Gut
Big Y Markets team has
dropped out of the Southern
Oregon Independent basket
ball league, it was announced
today by Bill Weddle, man
ager. Weddle said lack of play
er interest was the reason.
The team, scheduled to play
at Butte Falls last night, for
feited the game when an in
sufficient number of players
were available for trip.
Other teams making up the
league are Southern Oregon
college junior varsity, Haw
kinson Tire, Andy's Jewelers,
Medford ' National Guard,
Butte Falls, Grants Pass and
Glendale.
A game originally schedul
ed for McLoughlin Junior
high gym tonight between
SOC JV and the National
Guard has been switched to
the Southern Oregon college
gym Ashland, according to
Harry Chipman, league presi
dent. How to Gef
from your Airline
ticket to
EUROPE
For full details, call or visit
George Lewis
ROGUE
TRAVEL
SERVICE
We Reserve and Sell Airline
and Steamship Tickers
PHONE SP 2-6779
111 E. 8th
4 - door Sedan
Transmission
ALPINE
SPORT
ROADSTER
MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or.
I