Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 22, 1961, Image 10

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    MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON
10 A
SUNDAY. JANUARY 22. 1961
BALLET ON COURT This scene nenr the
end of the Klamath Falls-Crater high basket
ball game Friday night has the appearance
of a maplecourt ballet and Crater's Loyal
Higinbotham attempts to control ball and
other players have puzzled or worried ex
pression on their faces. Guarding the Comet
player are Pelicans Fred Biehn (23) and
St. Mary's
Victor Over
Butte Falls
JACKSON COUNTY
B l.KAOUE STANDINGS
Prospect
St. Mary's 2
Butle Fall! 0
Pel.
.1.000
.007
.000
St. Mary's fortified Its sec
ond place hold in the Jackson
County B league Friday night
with a 53 to 42 verdict over
the Butte Falls high basket
ball team at Butte Falls.
The outcome set the stage
for a mix between St. Mary's
and Prospect here Tuesday
night. Prospect leads St.
Mary's one game In the stand
ings. Butle Falls, snowing muie
tmsllB than it has for several
nmn had a 12 to 11 first
quarter lead but SM was on
top 21 to 18 at the half and 37
to 29 after three periods.
St. Mary's belter height
gave It backboard control.
Andre Knutson of the Med
( ird Crusaders ran up 19
points. Neal Ellis- sank 14 for
the Loggers. "
Butle Falls lost Danny
Romsen on fouls in the third
quarter. :, , :
Jnwpfi victory also went to
St. Mary's 38 to 22. Mike Stln
son of the Crusaders was high
totnlor with 16 and Ira Ramoo
had nine for BF.
lineups:
' 93 St. Mary'i Butte Fall! 42
P 0 Evans Reinsert 10
F in Knulson Baker
C 4 Elliott Bn"L'S;v A
a Kaiser N. Ellis 14
Q a Calhoun Eliefson 2
Substitution! For St. Mary i,
Naumcs 2, Burlch, M. Stlnson 2,
Shnskv 71 Mete 2, Lewis. Alwood.
liertnk: tor Butte Falls, A. Ellis 4,
Straiten 2.
Dodger Batting Star
Signs 1961 Contract
Los Angeles - IUP1I - Norm
Larker, batting star of the Los
Angeles Dodgers last season,
and outfielders. Willie Davis
and Tommy Davis have been
signed for the coming season,
Vice President and General
. Manager E. J. (Buzzi) Bavasi
announced Saturday,
Larker, who fought It out
with Dick Groat of the world s
champion Pittsburgh Pirates
to the final day for the Na
tional league batting crown,
was believed to have received
an increase of around $7,000
this year, boosting his salary
to an estimated $25,000,
FILM
mm im-. n ..,ir ra .n
INSTALLED
FREE IN
FIFTEEN
MINUTES
(P5
Pels Avoid Upset.
Nit) Crater 62-58
SOUTIIHRN OREGON
CONFERENCE STANDINGS
W.
Klamath Falls 5
Med ford 5
Grants Pass 3
Crater 1
Ashland 0 '
Pet.
1,000
,n:i:i
.000
.1(17
.000
Central Point-Crater high's
diligent Comets, unheralded
outside : their own circuit,
proved no respeclors of high
ratings here Friday night and
made themselves known.
Klamath Union's No. 1
ranked Pelicans claimed their
fifth successive Southern Ore
gon conference basketball de
cision but not before the
Comets came within an ace
of pulling off what would
have been the upset shocker
of the season on Oregon prep
maplecourls,
The Pelicans survived 62 to
58 In a scramble right down
-to the final buzzer which saw
the lead switch hands 13 times
and the count tied on seven
occasions. Klamath had to
come from behind twice In
the final quarter to preserve
its District 6 A-l unbeaten
status as Bryson LaCasse,
Loyal Higinbotham and Den
nis Edwards spurred , the
Comets in their most fiery ef
fort of the 1900-1961 cam
paign. With Wally Palmberg get
ting nine of the counters, the
Pels out-tallied Crater 15 to 9
in the concluding chapter to
retain lone hold on the con
ference lead.
Higinbotham Scores 30
Higinbotham, Crater's free
toss sharpshooter, plunked 14
of 17 from the stripe and net
ted eight baskets from the
field to head all scorers' with
30 points. Klamath's 6-7 Bruce
Brickner, hurting the hustling
Comets with little jumps from
the side, put in 24 markers.
Gary - Patzke cleared the
boards for KF 15 times and
Brickner 13, Edwards had 12
retrieves for Crater and the
Pels had a scant rebounding
edge of 43 to 42. With the
backboarding even and Crater
getting a 22 to 14 margin In
free points, it was Klamath's
better field shooting In the
second half which made the
final difference, The Pels hit
.422 from the field to Crater's
.300 in the second half. Over
the first two periods the
mu t. v t Ri i ims.
Clwvrolit Mucwy
Di Soto Milropoliln
Oodgt Nun
did Oldimobilo
Ford rKkltd
Frilff Plymouth
Henry J PoniiK
Hudson FMmMtr
Klitfr StudfOUH
lineal Wiliyi
'Add 11 for Buck,
Ctdilltc ChryilM
8:00 A.M. -9:00 P.M. Monday & Friday
8:00 A,M.-o:00 P.M. Olnor Days
CLOSED SUNDAY'S
12th and So. Central
SPrlng 3-6450
Wayne Dennis. At left of the picture are
Gary Patzke of the Pels, Bryson LaCasse
(34) of Crater and Wally Palmberg (seen
above Patzke) of KF. Higinbotham has the
ball, not the referee's head. Klamath, No. 1
ranked Oregon team, won 62-58, barely
escaping upset.
Comets outshot the KF club
.350 to .300.
Fourth quarter play opened
with Crater in front 49 to 47.
Palmberg canned a free heave
for Klamath but Higinbotham
countered with a long jump
for 51 to 48. Buckets by
Patzke and Brickner put the
Pels In front 52 to 51 but
Higinbotham dribbed the full
length of the court for a layin
for a Crater lead of 53 to 52.
On Top To Slay
With five minutes, 9 seconds
left Palmberg tabulated on a
fake and drive for KF 54 to 53
and the Pelicans stayed on
top from there. A Brickner
free toss and two gifters by
Palmberg ran the score to 57
to 53.
For better than ZVi minutes
the game was scoreless. Then,
LaCasse took a feed from
Mike Glines and was fouled
by Wayne Dennis. The 6-4
Comet made both his field
goal and free shot cutting the
cap to 57-56. After two free
heaves by Palmberg and a
long jump by Higinbotham it
was a bare 59 to 58.
Palmberg followed with a
layin for 61 to 58. With 13
seconds left, Higinbotham
purposely fouled Fred Biehn
in a Crater move to unfreeze
the ball. The stellar Comet
guard was banished from the
game. A technical infraction
was called and Biehn put In
the final point of the tussle.
The Comets overcame Ihe
widest spread of the night to
take their third quarter mar
gin. Klamath led 47 to 42
with 1:50 remaining in the
panel. Jim Allen contributed
two free tosses, LaCasse a re
bound bucket and Edwards a
lip in shot. Then Higinbotham
put in a gifler.
LaCasse Has 13
Crater was on lop 14 to 12
at the quarter and Klamath
led 31 to 28 nt the half.
LaCasse in his tremendous
and finest effort of the slate
for Critter had 13 points and
eight rebounds. He played
through the second half with
four fouls charged against
him. Crater's smaller men aid
ed the rebound work. Higin
botham, who turned in steady
ball handling and strong de
fense, had seven retrieves.
Glines picked off seven re
bounds and Louis Alvarez
five. Higinbotham earned
jump balls with Klamath men
on a number of occasions.
Patzke, Brickner and Palm
berg each had . four fouls
against them with six minutes
left to play.
Klamath pulled away in the
last quarter to win Ihe junior
varsity tilt 55 to 42. The Pels
had 18 to 10, 28 to 23 and 39
to 38 quarter edges. Bill Ash
had 18 points and Sherm Al
len 17 for KF and Ron Beman
11 for Crater.
liox:
k. Falii ra
Pnlzke. t .... n-a
f'T
2-1
0-0
1(1-
7-0
2-1
0-0
0-0
Iter, PKTP
15 4 7
8 2 12
1.1 4 24
4 4 111
2 3 I
0 2 2
1 10
Taylor. I .11 -li
Hreckner, c 17-11
I'nlmbers, R 17-,t
menu, g . .. a-u
l.npsley 3-1
Dennis 1-0
Totals ... 6J-3I 21-14 4 211 t
Crnler r'l r'T llrb PK TP
Edwards, I .. 4-.1 2-1 12 3 7
White, f .... 7-1 1-0 3 1 2
l.nCasso. c .. -S 4-3 8 4 13
Clllncs. b .... 1-0 l-l 8 1 I
lllltlnhthm.il 10-8 17-14 7 0 30
Alvam 2-0 1-0 S 4 0
Anhorn 1-0 0-0 0 0 0
Allen 0-1 4-3 I 0 .1
Beman 0-0 0-0 0 0 0
Toinu 45 lit la-rt 4? i.i m
lleterecs Wendl and Ktselstyn.
J.WVKK LINKUPS:
0.1 Klmnitlh t'alli Crnler 41
F 3 lVarlns Neman 1 1
F 8 HunMkrr Wald 2
C IB Ash , , hrninom 0
G 3 Stlpplch Pepper I)
11 17 Allen Toinlintnn 8
Substitution For Klnnmth,
notogny 2, .lackland. Kelly, Wal
ters. Kaler 2, Sootl 4: for Craler.
Knrriencr, Jnnes3, . Mason, Riven
burg, Cooper.
Vern Law
Signs Pact
With Boost
By FRED DOWN
United Press International
The world champion Pitts
burgh Pirates continued to
line un their kev stars without
fanfare or trouble today when
20-eame winner Vern Law re
turned his signed contract in
the mail.
Winner of the Cy Young
Award as the major league
pitcher of the year, Law re
ceived a big boost estimated
to put him in the $30,000-a-year
class. Terms of the con
tract were not revealed but
Law's quick acceptance indi
cated he had received a sub
stantial increase.
Two Series Victories
The 6-foot, 3-inch, 195
pound, right-hander compiled
a 20-9 record during the Na
tional league season and re
ceived credit for two victories
over the New York Yankees
in the World Series. He also
started the seventh game of
the Series but retired after
five Innings partly because of
an ankle injury suffered In a
clubhouse accident the day the
Pirates clinched their first
flag in 33 years.
Law is the sixth member of
the world champions to agree
to terms for 1961.
Law was the biggest "name"
to agree to terms Thursday
but the Cleveland Indians and
Chicago Cubs also were active
in the pen and ink league.
Indians Sign Held
The Indians announced the
signing of shortstop Woodie
Held, catchers John Romano
and Valmy Thomas and pitch
er Mike Lee and the Cubs an
nounced the signing of seven
players bringing their satis
fied list to 32.
Held led the Indians with
21 homers in 1960 and Ro
mano added 16 to a generally
weak-hitling attack. Held bat
ted .258 while Romano hit
.272 in 108 games. Thomas
was drafted from Rochester in
November while Lee, a hard
throwing right-hander, ap
peared in only seven games
and pitched nine innings in
1960.
The players signed by the
Cubs were Lou Johnson, Ben
Johnson, Sam Drake, Nelson
Mathews, Walt Bales, Moe
Morhardt and Ken Hubbs. Lou
Johnson, Drake and Mathews
played briefly for the Cubs
last season. .
Lakeview Bops Henley,
Phoenix Nicks EP Quint
In Rogue League Frays
ROGUE LEAGUE STANDINGS:
VI.
Pet.
.800
.800
.S00
.500
.2.10
.000
Henley 4
Lnkevicw 4
Phoenix 2
Illinois Valley 2
EnRle Point 1
RoRue River 0
Henley and Lakeview High
schools were tied for first spot
and Phoenix and Illinois Val
ley for third in Rogue league
basketball after Friday night
games.
Lakeview ended Henley's
unbeaten status 65 to 52. Phoe
nix slipped by Eagle Point 35
to 34 and Illinois Valley de
feated Rogue River 38 to 32.
Henley led In Its fracas 15
to 7 after a quarter but Gary
Peters sparked a second quar
ter surge for the Honkers with
15 points and Lakeview was
in front at the half 33 to 29.
Third chukker count favored
Lakeview 47 to 42. Peters had
22 points for the game and
Gary Reynolds aided the
Honkers with 19. Ray Brown
had 18 and Kent Gooding 15
for the Hornets.
At Phoenix Mike Consbruck
put in two free tosses with 48
seconds to play to break a 33
all deadlock. With 20 seconds
left Dick Wilson of Eagle
Point put In the first shot of
a one and one chance and
missed the second. Phoenix
got the rebound but lost the
ball in the front court. Ron
Weidmon missed a 20-foot
jumper for EP and the Pirates
nabbed the ball and hung on
or the last eight seconds.
Game Knotted
Phoenix had a slender 27 to
23 margin after three quar
ters. Consbruck's set shot
made it 29 to 23. Tom Perdue
of EP traded two free heaves
with Gerald Sloper's layin for
the Pirates. Perdue and Wil
son added single gift tallies
and Consbruck got a pair for
Phoenix for 33 to 27. Jumpers
by Steve Geren and Mike
Palm and two free casts by
Palm knotted the game at 33
with a minute to play.
The Pirates were ahead
through most of the first pe
riod and had 14 to 9 lead at
Ihe pause. In the second quar
ter, however Phoenix made
only two points on a Jumper
by Othar Richey. Eagle Point
picked up nine markers for
an 18 to 18 midway margin.
Consbruck on one jump shot
and Hichey on a pair of them
put the Pirates back on top
22 to 16 and the Eagles didn't
catch up until the 33-all stand
ing. Sloprr had 12 points and
Eagle Point's Hon Grcb 11.
Consbruck had 10.
Phoenix put in 35 per cent
of its shots from the field and
MED)WT!iIBUHl
Portland
Beat Red
Portland Portland State
college trimmed a frigid
Southern Oregon college bas
ketball team Friday night,
49-28, to take possession of the
front-runner position in the
Oregon Collegiate conference.
Triumph gave the Vikings
a 2-1 standing in the loop and
made the SOC Red Raiders
4-2.
The Raiders managed only
two field buckets in 21 shots
in the first half for an aver
age of .095.
Portland had a 12 to 0
jump before SO got its first
point on a free throw by Gor
don Carrigan when the scrap
was 9'2 minutes along. First
Raider field goal was record
ed with almost 17 minutes
played in the half and PSC
headed 21 to 1 before John
Payne scored the layup on a
fast break. Dave Gardner got
the other FG with 65 seconds
to vie in the half.
Midway score favored Port
land 23 to 5.
Southern Oregon out-averaged
PSC from the field .370
to .300 in the second half but
had too much of a deficit to
make up. PSC had a .339
mark to SOC's .250.
The Raiders misfired on
some good opportunities but
the Vikin's did play fine de
fense and forced the Ashland
team's shots a bit.
Earl Tichenor put in six of
his eight points for the Raid-
Sportsmen Convene
Central Point-Ralph Wiese,
Rogue River National forest
recreation officer, will show
colored slides of mountain
scenery and mountain climb
ing at the meeting of Central
Point Sportsmen's club on
Monday, Jan. 23.
The meeting will be at 8
p.m. at the clubhouse.
Tentative fishing . regula
tions for 1961 will be dis
cussed. The session is open to all
interested sportsmen and re
freshments will be served.
Eagle Point 21 per cent.
Illinois Valley and Rogue
River had a slow contest with
both clubs missing shots. IV
defense was exceptional and
was credited with the differ
ence. Rogue River missed a
good number of free line op
portunities. After a first quar
ter tie of 6-all the Cougars of
Cave Junction had rest stop
gaps of 18 to 12 and 27 to 19.
Craig Burton put in 13 points
and Don Johnson 12 for IV
and Jeff LeRoy's nine was
high for the Chieftains.
Eagle Point won its junior
varsity game from Phoenix 32
to 31 with 10 to 7, 21 to 17
and 27 to 23 advantages at the
intermissions. John Morrison
scored 12 points for Phoenix
and Denny Chamberlain and
John Linder each had nine for
the Eagles.
Illinois Valley posted a 36
to 34 overtime jayvee win
with Roger Martin getting
nine points.
Glide cancelled a date it had
with Phoenix lasl night.
LINEUPS:
35 Phoenix Eagle Point 34
F 12 Sloper Pomeroy 3
F 8 O Richey Palm 0
C 3 D. Johnson Grcb 11
G 1 Jacobs Perdue 5
G 10 Consbruck Geren 2
Substitutions For Phoenix. Sey
mour 1. Colfax: for EnRle Point.
Wilson 5. Wcldman 2. West. .
38
F 13
F 4
C 12
G 2
G 8
III. Valley Rogue River 32
Burton Kite 2
J. Johnson Laws 8
D. Johnson Stiner 8
Halrd Archer 1
Kennedv LeRov 0
Substitutions For Illinois Valley.
Hill 1, Tucker: tor RoRue River,
Frantz 4.
IT'S ALWAYS
GOOD!
Readymix
CONCRETE
by
Lininger's
PHONE
Staters
Raiders
ers in the eight minutes of
the second half and helped
as the Ashlanders whittled
their deficit to 25 to 12. In
the last eight minutes of the
game, PSC warmed up and
expanded to 49 to 21. SOC
scored the last seven points
of the tilt.
Bill Turner had 16 points
and 11 rebounds for the Vik
ings, getting four baskets on
tipins.
BOX:
SOC FU
Hughes .; 2-1
Vannice 7-0
Payne 2-1
Carrigan .... 8-2
Shults 7-2
Eickworth .. 1-0
Gardner 9-3
Hennen 2-0
Tichenor .... 8-3
Louk 2-0
FT
3-1
0-0
0-0
lrl
0-0
0-0
0- 0
2- 0
3- 2
1- 0
Her, I'FTP
3 3 3
Totals ...48-12 10-4 36 13 28
PSC FG FT
Bertell 4-2 3-1
Bridges 10-4 3-2
Turner 13-6 6-4
Chase 6-0 3-2
Lahtl 7-3 0-0
Morton 5-3 0-0
Saltmarsh .. 4-1 0-0
Miller 0-0 2-0
Powell 1-0 2-2
Williams .... 0-0 0-0
2 5
2 10
Totals ... 56-10 19-11 51 9 49
Hyde and Janes.
Webfoots'
Victory Led
By Warren
Eugene -UIP1I- Charlie War
ren has had some good and
bad nights this season. Friday
night was a good one.
The 6-foot-4 junior forward
hit 26 points to lead Oregon's
Ducks to a 60-53 victory over
Washington State in college
basketball action before a
crowd of 3,457.
Warren, scoring on long
push shots and tip-ins, con
nected on 11 of 24 shots from
the field, added four free
throws and paced the Ducks'
rebounding with 10 recov
eries. It offset an equally-brilliant
performance by Washington
State's Terry Ball. Ball, a 6-2
junior, tallied 25 points on 10
field goals and five free
throws.
Oregon took the lead early
and stayed there. The Ducks
overcame a 4-0 Washington
State advantage at 5-4 and led
at halftime, 28-26. The game
was still close at 51-49 with
seven minutes left to play
when Oregon broke it open
running the score to 58-53 and
stalling out the last two min
utes. Outrebounded by 42-38, the
Ducks outshot their Washing
ton rivals from the field. They
hit 24 of 55 for a .436 percent
age to Washington State's .379
on 22 of 58.
Each team used only seven
men.
liox:
wsu
Sells
Damon
Dlrom
Ball
August
McKenzie
Colacino
Totals
FG FT TP
. 1 1-4 3
.2 1-2 3
3 0-0 6
.10 5-5 25
.3 0-0 6
3 2-4 8
0 0-0 0
M IM5 53
Oregon lG
Warren H
Simmons 1
Moore 4
Macl J
Hayes 5
Knecht 1
Klmpton 1
FT
4-7
2-2
2- 2
0- 0
1- 4
0-0
3- 4
Totals 12-19
Touchdown Awards
Columbus - OIPII - Olympic
decathlon winner Rafer John
son collected two awards dur
ing the 6th annual awards din
ner of the Touchdown Club of
Columbus last night when 40
coaches, athletes, teams and
officials were honored.
Johnson, a gold medal win
ner in Rome last year, was
given the Bob Gutowski
Award by the Touchdown
Club as "the track star of the
year.
While here, Johnson aiso
received the Sullivan trophy
for being "the outstanding
amateur athlete of the year."
SP 3-7555
Burleson Winner of 1,500 Mejer Run
Auckland, New Zealand-ttlPD
- Dyrol Burleson, the only
American who has bettered
four minutes for the mile
twice, outlasted New Zealand
Olympic hero Murray Halberg
oy one foot Saturday to win
the 1,500 meter run at Eden
park in 3:47.4.
Halberg, the Olympic 5,000
meter champion who recently
set a world indoor record for
two miles while running In
the United States, was also
timed in 3:47.4 as both run
ners reached the tape almost
side-by-side.
The red-haired Halberg set
the pace in the "metric mile"
until the final lap when
Burleson, who had been run
ning fourth, sprinted into the
lead. Willie Baillie of Auck
land then passed both Halberg
and Burleson to take the lead,
but Burleson charged back in
front with Halberg on his
shoulder.
Grand Jury Not
Cramping Style
Of Goose Tatum
Dallas, Tex. - (UPD - Reece
(Goose) Tatum, the madcap
magician of basketball, said
Saturday a grand jury indict
ment isn't going to cause him
to "lose any sleep" or cramp
his style on the court.
"I said on the court . . . not
in the courts," Goose said with
a grin.
Then he spread his arms to
the full wing-span of eight
feet, 12'2 inches, let them
drop to his sides and got seri
ous for a moment.
"Actually, I don't know
know much about it," he said.
"I've got a lawyer handling
it for me. I'll just do what he
says,"
A federal grand jury in
Kansas City, Mo., indicted
Tatum Friday on two charges
of income tax invasion. One
alleged his gross income for
1956 was $52,896, and the
other alleged he earned $40,
924 in 1957.
Tatum said he learned about
indictments when he got to
Dallas Friday with his Harlem
Stars for a performance at
the Southern Methodist Coli
seum against the New York
Rens.
And the Goose, who long
ago earned the title "clown
prince of basketball," enter
tained the crowd like he
didn't have a care in the
world.
Highest of Mexico's extinct
volcanoes, Mount Orizaba,
reaches 18,690 feet.
The population of Moscow
has increased to 5 million
from 1 million since the start
of the century.
DON'T LET WINTER1 KtOOUR FORdN
BE SURE YOU'LL ApPly-IT'S JANUARY!
j j 's EC0N0TP0WER
" rHiWT'T Il 1 NEW 4000 MllE '
at7T I 'IT.' ' TV " Tr-TiJ CT ROTUNDA
Complete Electrical Check:
Here's What We
Clean and reset
distributor points
Clean and re-gap
spark plugs
Sol Ignition timing
Test voltage regulator
action
COME IN
Crater
W. MAIN AT FIR
Halberg drove hard on the
outside as the two front-runners
matched strides down the
home stretch but the Ameri-
Generals
Maintain
Clean Slate
United Press International
Grant of Portland and La
Grande, rated third and sev
enth in the Oregon Journal
Coaches Poll, maintained their
perfect records in Oregon
prep A-l basketball action Fri
day night.
Grant took its 10th straight
game with a 62-55 victory
over Madison in Portland In
terscholastic league play while
La Grande posted its 14th vic
tory without a loss by edging
Prineville 39-37 in Inter
mountain league action.
Top - rated Klamath Falls
narrowly escaped falling from
its high ranking as the Peli
cans edged unranked Crater
62-58. The win kept Klamath
Falls one game ahead of de
fending state champion Med
ford in Southern Conference
play. Medford, rated number
two in the poll, kept on Klam
ath Falls' heels with an easy
83-43 win over Ashland.
Roseburg, Wilson of Port
land, South Eugene, David
Douglas, Beaverton and Bend,
the remaining members of the
top 10, all posted victories.
Roseburg defeated North
Bend 76-51, fourth-ranked
Wilson downed Lincoln 56-43,
South Eugene, number six in
the poll, edged Springfield
31-28; David Douglas, ranked
number eight, dumped Gresh
am 80-53; Beaverton, num
ber nine, defeated Centennial
54-46, and Bend raced past
Pendleton 71-55.
Utah Invited
To LA Classic
Los Angeles -(UPD- Utah has
been invited to appear in the
third annual Los Angeles Bas
ketball Classic next Dec. 23
30, Athletic Director Jess Hill
of the University of Southern
California announced Satur
day. In addition to the Ules of
the Skyline conference the
schools invited by co-hosting
University of Southern Cali
fornia and UCLA are Army,
Ohio Slate, Purdue, West Vir
ginia and Washington.
The first two classics at
tracted nearly 90,000 fans to
the Los Angeles sports arena
where the tournament is play
ed. The 1959 championship
game drew 13,024 fans while
the 1960 title game attracted
14,589 persons.
Do:
Test generator output
and condition
Test battery cell condi
tion. Add water
Clean and tighten bat
tery cables
OR CALL
Lake
a a.
can was In front by one foot
at the tope. Baillie was third
in 3:49.6.
Burleson, University of Ore
gon star, finished sixth in tho
1,500 meters in last summer's
Olympic games in 3:40.9.
Peter Snell, New Zealand's
Olympic 800-meter champion,
broke his own national record
for 880 yards on a grass course
by winning that event in
1:49.0.
George Kerr of the West
Indies took second in 1:49.2,
equalling Snell's old record.
Gary Philpott of Auckland
was third in 1:52 and Roger
Moens of Belgium fourth in
1:54.4. Snell finished one yard
in front of Kerr.
OSC Schedules
Colorado State
Corvallis - (UPD - Colorado
Slate university has been
added to the Oregon State
college football schedule
for 1962, Beaver Athletia
Director R. S. Keene an
nounced Saturday.
Colorado State, filling an
open date created when
Denver University announc
ed this month that it was
giving up the grid sport
will meet Oregon State Nov.
17, 1962, here. ' .
Last week the Beavers
scheduled a 1962 game with
Brigham Young to fill an
other open date caused by
Denver giving up football.
IRRIGATION
PUMPS
to 60 H.P.
29
50
From
up
V3 H.P. Shallow
Well $QQ00
Vi H.P. DEEP WELL
With 42 Gallon Tank '
and
Air
Charger
15450
Complete
Siskiyou Hardware
Ph. SP 2-2939 22S W. Main
MEDFORD. OREGON
We Give S&H Green bt.mpi
ALL FOR ONLY
(Parti Extra, If Needed)
$095
THIS MONTH
ONLY
3-447
OIL FILTER
Ai low At O
Motors
M-jaja jii ni
o