Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 11, 1960)
OUT OF ROUGH Eric Monti, Los Angeles, chips out of rough onto fifth green during second round Saturday in the Los Angeles NCAA Nixes Two Platoon Football; Defeats Effort Against Foreign Athletes .New York -IUPD- Tne na tion's college football coaches were thrown for a heavy loss in their all-out campaign to bring back the two-platoon ystem. Any hope that two-platoon football might return this year has been practically eliminat ed by the National Collegiate Athletic association, which voted to retain the present substitution rule. The NCAA's action, which virtually amounts to a man date, certainly will influence the football rules committee at its three-day sessions in Miami Beach, Fla., beginning BOWLING NIGHT HAWKS LEAGUE Standings: W. L. Barco Supply Co. 16 8 Hamilton Manage. Corp- 15 9 Mitchell Truck Lines 13 '4 10'i BAR ., 12 Va lHa Guy Hays Real Estate 11 13 Mechanics Laundry 10 14 Team Five 9 13 Triangle Food Market . 9 15 Results: Barco 3 (Bob Bigger 5191 1396; Hr.vs 1 (Doug Batten 458) 1329. Mitchell Bros. 4 (Pink O'Connor 328) 1424: Triangle Mkt. 0 (Bob Foster 445) 1174. Team Five 0 (Ralph Pardon 445) 1225; Mechanics L'ndry 4 (Eldred Jack 487). BAR 1 (Marvin Miner 4641 1314: Hamilton Mgmt. 3 (David Baylor 107) 1383. High game Pink CVConnor 234. RAINBOW LEAGUE Standings: W. L. Steve Wilson Lumber 18 8 Don Stathos Ins 17 7 Steve Wilson Lbr. One 17 7 Star Body Shop 14 10 State Forest Patrol 13 'i 10 Va Hoot Owl Logging Co. .13 11 Harrv and David ll'i 12'i Carolina Pac. Plywood 12 'i Piggly Wiggly 82 Id I: C. L. Machinery One 7 17 C. L. Machinery Two 7 17 Knishts ol Columbus 8 18 Results: Wilson Two 4 (Warren Poling 492) 2729: Wilson One 0 (Lee Rich ardson 4fi0) 2622. C. L. Mach Two 3 (Don Stoner 477) 2629: Piggly Wiggly 1 (Frank McKeen 454) 2594. Star Body 4 (Pink 0"Connor 539) 2879: C. L. Mach. One 0 (Maury TutUe 494 ) 2748. Forest Patrol 3 (Buz Moran 506) 2728: Harry and David 1 (Jay Puffinburger 508 ) 2717. Carolina Pacific 4 fBob Mc Clearen 534) 2777; Knights 0 (Ernie Flakus 471) 2468. Stathos Ins. 3 (Floyd Palmer 516) 2774; Hoot Owl Logging (Earl Lenz 490) 2618. PACIFIC LEAGUE First Half Standings: W. L. Western Hot Coffee . .. 49 23 Oregon Veneer Co 47 25 Prospect Shopping Cent. 39 la 32 'a HiWav Tavern 39 33 Beneficial Standard Life 36i 35i Harrv & David 36 36 Lininger Ready Mix 3-Hk 37 i Active Club 34 38 Weisfield's Jewelers 28 43 Team One 16 52 Results: Lininger 3 (Sanford 475) 2699; Prospect 1 (Sanderson 498) 2640. Hot Coffee 3 (Fowler 570) 2882; Hiwav 1 (Miller 5071 2617. Active 3 (Paul 526 1 2878; H&D 1 (Doty 473) 2769. Oregon 2 (B. Doty 470) 2629; BSl. 2 (Bonis 490 2664. Weisfield's 3 (Harper 508 2840; Team One 1 (Richey 434) 2678. BARTLETT BELLES Standings: W. L. 10 2 10 2 9 3 8 4 8 4 8 4 7 " 5 7 5 6 6 6 6 4 8 2 10 2 10 2 10 2 10 First National Bank Alexander Music , Lininger's Pepsi Cola Bottling Co United Grocers Baker Moulding Chrystal Meats Eagles One Universal Pump Sales Eagles Two Trowbridge & Flynn Stauffer Reducing Plan Roethlefs SheU Double Dee Lumber Co. Results: Lininger- 1 (Tracy 411) 1946; Eagles Two 3 (Coulter 412) 1981. Baker Moulding 3 (M. Baker 492 ) 2080; Alexander Music 1 (Dver 410 1902. Eagles One 2 (Forbes 436 2058; D.D. Lumber 2 (Jacks 440) 2097. United Grocers 3 (Boardman 401) 2083; Stauffer 1 (Cornelius 4791 2057. Universal 3 (Goff 492) 2145; Sy' Place 1 (Turtle 456) 2100. F.N3. 3 (Ellis 454) 1963: Roeth ler's 1 (Marcum 478) 1931. Corner Club 3 (Davis 463) 2293; Trowbridge 1 (Dickinson 493) 2267. Chrystal 3 (Hukill 425 ) 2008; Pepsi Cola 1 (Young 419) 1900. Split conversions Coffin 7-9-10 Tracy; 7-9, 5-10: I. Goff 5-8-10; Seiler 2-7-10; Thomp on 7-8-10. - , n (Si B Htog& today, and the general be lief is that the current substi tution code will keep for at least another year. The nation's coaches voted overwhelmingly last week to urge the rules committee to bring back platoon football which the NCAA banned in 1953. cut jncaa officials, by a majority of 2 to 1, voted against unlimited substitu tions again Friday and the strong Eastern College Ath letic conference strongly sup ported the recommendation Gotham Bowl Approved NCAA delegates concluded their 54th annual convention Friday but before they did, they took the following ac tion: -Gave their stamp of ap proval to a new "Gotham Bowl" football game to be played in New York's Yankee Stadium next Dec. 10 or 17. -Defeated a move to limit the age of foreign athletes from competing for American universities because restric tions would brand the U.S. as discriminatory "all over the world." -Ruled that U.S. team events against the University of Alaska, as in the cases of the University of Hawaii and Puerto Rico, shall not be con sidered as contests in comput ing maximum playing sched ules. COACH OF YEAR New York -ffiPD- Vince Lom bardi, guiding force behind the best Green Bay Packer record in 15 years, has been named National Football league "Coach of the Year" for 1959 in the annual United Press International poll. BASKETBALL SATURDAY COLLEGE GAMES United Press International St. Bonaventure 83. Niagara 75 Davton 73. Canisius 63 Manhattan 90, Georgetown (D.C.) : 82 Yale 67. Pennsylvania 57 St. Francis 102. Carnegie Tech 68 Temple 82. Lafayette 70 Syracuse 85. Pittsburgh 77 Hunter 62, CCNY 61 Rhode Island 83, Vermont 75 Cornell 81. Harvard 57 Seton Hall 89. St. Joseph's 88 LaSalle 68, Duquesne 65 Colgate 78, Rutgers 74 Brown 79, Princeton 61 Holv Cross 52, Connecticut 49 Dartmouth 84, Columbia 78 New York U. 69. Navy 61 Villanova 74. Muhlenberg 46 Army 74. Fordham 59 The Citadel 74, VMI 53 Tulane 61. Tennessee 56 Duke 47. North Carolina St. 34 No. Carolina 62. Wake Forest 59 Kentucky 77, Louisiana St. 45 Georgia Tech 82, Miss. St. 60 Furman 64, Davidson 59 Georgia 70, Alabama 58 Auburn 73. Florida 69 Vanderbilt 66. Mississippi 58 William & Mary 90, Richmond 76 South Carolina 74, Virginia 70 Evansville 71. Butler 50 Bradley 71, Wichita 70 Kansas 60, Nebraska 47 Marquette 61. Louisville 57 Purdue 99. Wisconsin 69 Iowa 73, Northwestern 59 Michigan St. 89. Michigan 58 Ohio St. 96, Indiana 95 Kansas St. 65, Missouri 60 Notre Dame 75. Detroit 63 Illinois 90, Minnesota 82 Arkansas 90. Baylor 83 Iowa St. 49. Oklahoma St. 48 SMU 49. Texas Tech. 44 Texas 52. Rice 50 Texas A&M 64. Texas Chris. 52 Brigham Young 63. Montana 58 Denver 74. Wyoming 62 Idaho 56. Montana St. 45 Oregon 68. Washington St. 64 Utah St. 73, Utah 61 Pepperdine 59, San Fran. U. 55 .- California 52. Stanford 43 Southern Cal 69. Washington 68 Sacramento St. 60. Cal Aggies 31 GrinneU 64. Pomona 35 Coe 61. Whittier 56 Seattle 98. Portland 70 Nevada 72. Humboldt St. 47 Redlands 74. Occidental 65 San Diego St. 67.- Long Beach St. 61 Santa Clara 51. Loyola 46 Cal Poly 64, Westmont 55 La Verne 68. Cal Western 57 Arizona St. 84. Texas West 63 Portland St. 39. Oregon Tech 34 uniieia si. college of Idaho 51 EOC 65, SOC 54 OCE 68. George Fox 56 Willamette 84, Whitman 70 Hawaii 85, Lewis and dark 62 Open golf tournament. He finished the round with a 171. This made him a 137 total, low for the two days. (UPI Telephoto) Eric Monti Paces LA Los Angeles - (UPD - Home town favorite Eric Monti, giv en a day of grace by the ele ments, carried a slim one stroke lead into the rain-delayed third round of the $37, 500 Los Angeles Open today. The postponement Sunday gave Monti a chance to nurse a persistent cold as well as his narrow advantage over second-p lace Dow Finster wald, of Tequesta, Fla. Mon ti's 71 Saturday provided him with a 36-hole score of 137, while Finsterwald gained ground with a 68. With his 70 Friday, it gave him a halfway score of 138. The final round of the 72- hole tourney will be played Tuesday, weather permitting. GRAVES FLORIDA COACH Gainesville, Fla. (UPD -Florida's often criticized conservative-style football will be scrapped for a crowd pleasing multiple ofiense un der new head coach Ray Graves. Graves, himself one of the country's leading ex perts on defense, promised an exciting, offense-minded team as he signed a five-year con tract Saturday as Florida head coach and athletic director. Graves succeeds Bob Woodruff. Oregon Triumphs 68-64 Over Washington State Pullman - (UPD - Oregon's Ducks, embarked on one of their best seasons in many years, added another win here Saturday night. This time it was over Washington State, 68-64. The Ducks now have a 12-2 mark and must be rated as serious contenders for a West Coast NCAA berth. They meet Portland this week in a home-and-home series. The Saturday night win gave the Ducks a complete sweep in their Palouse in vasion as they defeated Idaho 58-54 Friday night at Moscow. Cougars Rally Washington State, which trailed most of the game, ral lied strongly in the closing minutes and brought the score to 64-62 with 12 seconds re maining. Oregon's Chuck Rask con trolled a jump-ball in the Cou gar circle and the Ducks stall ed out the remaining time. Bill Simmons picked up a foul as the final gun sounded and made good on two free throws. Charlie Warren, sophomore forward, .led Oregon scorers with 22 points, hitting seven field goals and eight for 15 from the free-throw line. Another sophomore Glenn The Weather Is lever Too Rough To Pour Tru-Hix Concrete! It's Heated to Produce Summer Driitered SP 1-5271 Cincinnati Has Tough Cage tests Br JOE SARGIS United Presi International Cincinnati's top - ranked Bearcats, winners of 12 straight, could come a cropper right in their own conference this week when they take on a pair of tough nuts in fourth ranked Bradley and ninth ranked St. Louis. And it won't exactly be easy sledding for some other ranked powers such as Cali fornia, West Virginia, Ohio State and Texas A&M as play for the most part settles down to conference skirmishing. The Bearcats rolled to vic tory No. 12 Saturday and con ference victory No. 3 by whip ping the University of Tulsa, 83-50, even though All-American Oscar Robertson scored only 24 points. Bradley, in the meantime, had all it could do to beat Wichita, 71-70, at Wichita, while St. Louis breezed over North Texas State, 76-65 on its home court. Cal Whips Stanford Second - ranked California, which meets Washington State on Friday and Big Five rival Washington on Satur day, had little trouble beating Stanford, 52-43, for its 12th victory in 13 starts, but third- ranked West Virginia, which meets William and Mary to night, Virginia Wednesday and unbeaten Villanova Satur day, struggled to a 75-73 vic tory over Penn State. West Virginia also has been beaten only once in 13 games. Fifth-ranked Ohio State, a 96-95 winner over Big Ten rival Indiana at Columbus, Ohio, plays Delaware at home tonight and then tangles with Northwestern on Saturday. The Buckeyes are 9-2 and their win over Indiana virtu ally knocked the Hoosiers out of the Big Ten race. Utah Upset Seventeenth-ranked Utah State upset sixth-ranked Utah, 73-61, and swings back into action against Skyline rivals Colorado State U. and Wyom ing this week, while Utah meets conference rivals New Mexico and Denver. Eighth-ranked Georgia Tech ran its record to 10-1 by scut tling Mississippi State, 82-60, Saturday, but goes right back to work tonight against South eastern conference rival Miss issippi and then takes on Georgia Wednesday and Van derbilt on Saturday. Texas A&M, ranked 10th, had little trouble beating Texas Christian, 64-52. Moore, got 12 for the Ducks. Sophomore Dwight Damon topped Washington State with 17, and Frank Reed had 15. BOX: Oregon Kimpton . Rask Strickland Robertson Herron . FG . 1 4 4 1 FT 0-0 0- 3 1- 2 2- 2 3- 6 2-2 2-3 8-15 PF TP 2 8 9 . 4 9 ' 1 12 22 .. 3 Simmons 0 Moore .... 5 Warren 7 Tetals WSU August Wilson ... ..25 18-33 21 68 FG 1 1 2 2 FT 1-2 0- 0 . 1- 1 3-5 5-6 5-U . 3-5 0-0 r 0-0 PF TP O 2 2 4 4 5 3 O 2 3 2 5 7 17 15 11 2 2 64 Ball Ranniger Damon 6 Reed 5 Maras .. 4 McHenzie 1 Wicht 1 Totals .23 18-30 22 Halftime score: 24. Oregon 29, WSU HOCKEY SUNDAY GAME! National League New York 4. Detroit T Chicago 3, Montreal 0 Boston 4, Toronto 0 American League Buffalo 5. Hershey 4 Providence 4. Springfield 2 Rochester 7. Quebec 2 POPULATION TOTAL Population of Libya IS slightly more than one million. Pouring Conditions All Winter! COrXRETEC? O 248 E. McANDREWS RD. Pepperdine Holds First In West Coast Circuit United Prei International Pepperdine, the weak sister in the West Coast conference a few seasons ago, held down first place today and coach Bob Feerick of Santa Clara is the last person to be sur prised. . ' - "Sure, we figured this would be a good year for them," said Feerick, whose favored Santa Clara Broncos took a 59-48 belting from the Waves Friday night in Los Angeles. Pepperdine won both of its games last week end to post a WAC mark of 2-0. After downing Feerick's Broncs on Friday, the Waves controlled the boards while outscoring USF, 59-55 on Saturday. ' Santa Clara bounced back to take Loyola, 51-46, on the same night but the Dons re turned to their hillside home in worse shape than when they Tiremen To Play Andy's; Clubs Merged in SOIBL Play in the Southern Ore gon Independent basketball league resumes this evening with a game at McLoughlin gym here. , Hawkinson Tire Tread will meet Andy's Jewelers at 8 pan. The Hawkinson team, made up largely of coaches and ex - Southern Oregon collegians, is undefeated leader of the league while Andy's is in third place with just one loss in three games. There's a bit of a prestige side issue at stake, for a group of Andy's players last year wore Hawkinson togs and beat the gang now play ing under the Tire banner in the AAU eliminations. Consolidation of the Big Y and Grants Pass basketball teams was approved by direc tors of the Southern Oregon Independent Basketball league at a meeting here yes terday. Big Y had been forced to drop from the league because of a lack of player interest and Grants Pass had to quit because of lack of a sponsor. Big Y agreed to sponsor a combination of players from both teams which will be known as the Big Y team and will play the schedule previ ously drawn for the Medford Big Y. All games scheduled for Grants Pass will be erased from the beginning of the season. This action takes one win away from Hawkinson Tire of Medford but they still lead the league with three wins and no losses. Grants Pass had previously forfeited Champ Dinner On February 10 1 Portland - Oregon' biggest sports gathering, the annual Bill Hayward "Banquet of Champions,'? will be held the night of Wednesday, Feb. 10, it was announced by Doug LaMear, president of the Ore gon Snorts Writers and Broad casters association. Site will be University of Portland's new university commons. Tickets will be available next week, according to Hal Childs, general chairman. Highlight of the big evening will be the presentation of awards. Last year the Hay ward trophy for the "Athlete of the Year" in Oregon sports went to Ted Bates, Oregon State's AU-American football tackle. Tom DeSylvia, Jeffer son high football coach, wai recipient of the "Man of the Year" award. Again fans will have an op portunity of making nomina tions for the awards. Names may be submitted to any member of the candidate screening committee which is made up of Carl Cluff and Hal Laman of the Oregon Journal; Don McLeod, the Oregonian; Don Fair, Capital Journal, Salem; Al Lightner, Oregon Statesman, Salem, and Dick Strite, Eugene Register-Guard. i - left. The loss to Pepperdine followed a 58-44 drubbing by the Lions on Friday and ran USF's season mark to a pair of wins against 12 losses. California and Southern California swept their week end games to go into a tie for first place in the Big Five. The Bears defeated UCLA, 59-47, on Friday and followed with a 52-43 win at Stanford. Tandy Gillis hit on seven straight field goals to spark the Bears after Stanford had taken a one point lead at half time. s Southern California clip ped Washington by a point for the second straight night, 69 68, when Jim Hanna bagged a set shot with one second to play. Bill Hanson of Wash ington had put his team in the lead five seconds before. The Huskies now have lost three in a row by one point. to the Tiremen. Glendale, the only team to have played Grants Pass to date, loses its win over the Climate City five and now has no wins and three losses. Big Y will come back into the league with no wins and three losses. Games which had been passed up since Big Y dropped out have been rescheduled. They will play at Glendale Jan. 17 at 1:30 p.m., at Butte Falls Jan. 30 at 8 p.m. and at Andy's Jewelers Feb. 17 at 8 p.m. 4TH 11 s. GUARANTEE Fiji ttftfica gaoronl.e for !h sptc- if.4 lim; protot4 o monflo and. Adiiijtmenll boM on pi bofora tredn whon rofwfMd IP? Somebody Took Advantage Of Birds' Tameness-Why? It is a small pond, not over two acres in extent, located a few yards from a paved road. In spite of the thousands of cars that rush along the high way, not one in a hundred even knows of the presence of the tiny lake. But there were wild things that knew, and several vari eties of water birds regularly visited it. Some lived there and raised their families. Among these residents were a half dozen coots. These hen like aquatic birds waded in the shallows and swam over the lake's surface, happy in their complete isolation. To these birds the lake was home, and the most impor tant spot in the world. They had been unmolested so long that they became care less of their own safety. The occasional visitor who pene trated the brush-screen be tween the highway and the lake was able to approach within a few feet of the coots before they carelessly swam away to the far side of the lake. Watched Them A friend of mine derived considerable satisfaction and pleasure in visiting .this iso lated spot to watch the coot families splash happily among ANNUAL TIRE AND BATTERY Youir J75 Trade-in quality UUt i TUHIBS tLACKWAllS TUKUSS WHITiWAUf I TUH-TTM HACWtlS I TtllE-TYPI WHITtWALlS list pric Mckl Slit iric ' list irin Mthj Sal pric Utt pric Mcbl Sal prin Uil rica Mdd Sol prica HytaaM bafor trada-ia witlitrada-ia kaiaratraaa-ii wMtrada-ia kafaratraaa-ii wita traoa-ia with fraaa h rithtraaVia plas axcisa tax plat axcita tax plaiaxdwtax plat axtha tax plat axrita tax plai axdta tax plat axiita tax plaixritata 6.70-1 S 29.85 2 0.6 A 36,55 2376 26.40 18.56 : 32.35 21.66 7.I0-1S 3275 22.66 " 40.10 25.96 29.30 20.66 35.90 23.66 7.6Q-15 35.85 25.36 43.90 28.46 32.00 22.66 39.20 25.66 8.008.20-15 39.95 29.66 48.95 32.95 36.95 26.36 45.25 29.6 W "if--HI- -tf- '-TSX- RUGGED DUPONT NYLON CORD 8.S0-14 35.85 2T36 43.90 28.46 GIVES YOUR TIRE ADDED IMPACT ""9.00-14 1 39.95 I 29.66 I 4895 " 32.95 " PROTECTION. ..GREATER BIOWOUT MOTECTION CLIP THESE BONUS COUPONS total sals price when you buy two tires. No cash down... your old. tires are your down Wards convenient terms! FREE TIRE MOUNTING! iUUUMUaaMUMUUMUMMMUMMUUUMMaMMUUUMMIiUaUMMMMUMauMMUMaa IVUallilvuaiiiikUllllMMIIHallllllllauMllUMIIUaUMMiluuiluuaMiiuiiiiiiiiu mwwn www wvtirwffrrrr wn ft? nfTrfTfffrtmnf ? ww www wr ?nf?ff ?? (0)88 24 Month Guarantee - 6-v.rt Type1,2L 30 Month : Guarantee 6-volt Type 1,21 uu NO CASH DOWN-YOUR C2; Small Worlds Around Us By Lynn M. Watkins the lilypads and the cattails. He had watched them, during the summer, build their reed nests and later became friend ly with the coot babies as they floundered awkwardly in try ing to balance themselves on a lily leaf.. As the summer waned, the young coots became almost as large as their parents, and dove and swam with meas ured precision; they were ful ly grown and on their own. They, too, were accustomed to my friends visitations, and paid no attention to him as he sat on the bank and watch ed. They readily chased a bug, or walked confidently in front of him not over a yard away. Then, the other day, my friend drove out to the lake. He walked down to the very edge of the pond, his eyes ex amining every inch of the lake's area. He Found Them One by one he located a half dozen rumpled blobs, floating sluggishly, or wedged in the nearby reeds the bodies of dead coots. He floundered around the entire circumference of the pond. Every little ways he found empty shotgun shells, and here and there another OPEN TIL Ddl froVe 5s on premium GUARANTEED FULL 2-YEARS! total sale price when you buy three tires. TRADE-IN ON YOUR BATTERY 24 Month Guarantee 12-vorr Type24S INSTALLATION SUPER : 24 Month with trade FREE Guarantee 12-volt Type 24S with trade TRADE-IN BATTERY IS YOUR MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. Monday, Jan. 11, 1960 Morse Proposes Library for Blind Washington (LTD Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.) accept ed the first opportunity in the new session for introduction of bills by proposing estab lishment of a federal music library for the blind. Morse's bill, among the first in the 1960 Senate hop per, called for an extensive library of braille musical scores for use by blind mu sicians. The scores would be loaned to those among the estimated 355.000 legally blind persons in the United States who re quest them. Morse said eight existing regional libraries of Braille scores supply only limited and inadequate cat alogs. dead bird; the slaughter had been complete. My friend is confused and bewildered, and he asks, "Is this sportsmanship? Is this the reward that creatures re ceive that have confidence and trust in human beings? Are such things necessary, and if so, what purpose or satisfaction can anyone derive by destroying a harmless creature? Does man's inhu-' manity to man extend in all directions, and to everything under his control?" I'm sorry, my friend, but to all those questions I can not find an answer. (Released by The Register and Tribune Syndicate. 1960) TONIGHT woirtfo total sale price when you buy a set of 4 tires. payment Pay on with trade r 0 with trade DOWN PAYMENT in