MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON
Crater's Comets Defeat Medford In SO Hoop Fray
MONDAY. JANUARY 14, 1963
SOUTHERN OREGON
CONFERENCE STANDINGS
W. L.
Grantt Pass .. a 1
Crater .. J
Klamath Falls ,
Medford
Ashland .
. 2
- 1
..... 0
Pet
.750
.6T
.PH7
J3J
.000
Central Point - Crater High
school's pcrserverant Comets
roared back into orbit In their
quest for Southern Oregon
conference basketball laurels
here on Saturday night by
battling to a victory over the
foe they like the most to
beat.
The Firebar overcame the
Medford Black Tornado 68 to
63 in a fast-pace, stirring al
most down-to-the-wire scram'
ble that rounded out a ring-a
rosy in the rugged District 6
A-l chase.
. Crater, after a see-saw strug
gle, took the lead for keeps
at the start of the final quar
ter. The Central Pointers saw
five-point gaps slip to one as
the Tornadoes fought back.
But the Comets padded their
margin again at the finish. .
" The field goal firing of Mike
Glines, the free tossing of
Howard Tomlinson, the re
bound work of Tomlinson and
Paul Bransom and solid but
less spectacular performances
pf Pat Pepper, Lon Alvarez,
.Willie Jones and Darryl Sum
.fnerfield went into the mak
ing of the triumph before' an
estimated jammed-in standing
.Jroom only crowd of 1,600
'.fans. - ' ' . ' .
jGifteri Figure ''. ;. -. '
'.C. Glines put in 18 points on
nine field goals and Tomlin
son 19 with 15 out of 20 from
"ihe foul stripe. Tomlinson
-cleared the boards 16 times
. and Bransom 10 for Coach
jjtloyd Hoffine's team. Jack
'forde with 16 points and Dan
v Wiles and Jim Hill each with
J 2 were the top scoremakers
ior the Medfords. Hill pulled
42 and Forde eight rebounds
Jor mentor Frank Roelandt's
'Whirlwinds.
Tomlinson's gifters figured
. Strongly in the verdict. For
Comet success at the free
'heave line made the scoring
."difference. Medford tossed in
3 field goals to Crater's 22.
' &t Jhe foul mark the Central
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Pointers made good on 24
tosses and Medford on 17.
Victory was another first
for Crater In Its annals of the
maplecourt. Comet cagers
beat the Medfords last season
But, this was the first time
on the Central Point court.
Crater, K.F. Knotted
The Saturday outcome knot
ted Crater with Klamath
Falls in second place In the
conference. Grants Pass took
the lene leadership the same
night by beating Ashland 67
to 39. Medford is fourth In the
standings of the SOC. Crater
goes up against Klamath Falls
on Friday while Medford is
host to Ashland.
Ring-around-the-rosy In the
circuit was accomplished in
this fashion: Grants Pass beat
Crater and Medford, Klamath
Falls beat Grants Pass, Med
ford beat Klamath Falls and
Crater beat Medford. This se
quence has aroused keen in
terest in the Crater-Klamath
game. .
Lead chanjed hands 10
times Saturday and the score
was tied on seven occasions in
a fracas that saw Crater on
top at the quarter 20 to 16,
Medford at the half 35 to 35
and Crater 51 to 49 at the
three-quarter pause. 1
It was a game which ran the
gamut of the elements which
create fan appeal with spark
ling play on the part of per
formers on two good teams
and with controversial decisi
ons by referees Harold Doug
las and Don Sutphln which
brought roars from supporters
of both sides.
Three Point Play
A pair of free shots by
Miles tied the game at 51-all
at the start of the fourth quar
ter. Tomlinson put the Comets
on top for good on a three
point play. He was fouled on
a pivot and drive-in shot and
made the free ittempt for 54
to 51. Alvarez flipped in a
goal after a drive across the
key for 56 to 51.
Forde hit a jump from the
corner but Bransom hit slick
ly from under the hoop on a
short pass by Alvarez from
out-of-bounds. Score was 58
to 53. Salyers scored on a fast
break but Tomlinson made it
60 to 55 with two tosses from
the free line. Dick Deffley,
for Medford, hit a close range
jump and Forde duplicated.
Count was 60 to 59 with 3:46
to go.
Glines hit on a driver for
Crater but Miles did the same
for Medford for 62 to 61 with
2:58 on the clock. Tomlinson
added another brace of free
heaves with 1:41 left and
Summerfield two more with
38 remaining seconds. Then
Glines scored on a fast break
with 15 to go. That made It
68 to 61. -Three
Fouled Out
Medford's Mike Neathamer
fired the last goal with five
seconds left. .
Loss of Hill on his fifth foul
in the last seconds of the third
quarter was a blow to Med
ford. But, Crater lost Alvarez
with 4:53 to go and Bransom
with three minutes yet to play
in the closing chukker.
Miles was sidelined : for
Medford when his head hit
the floor and was sat on. At
this time 1:41 was left on
the scoreboard clock. Cuts
above the eye and by the nose
required six stitches. The mis
hap also loosened two of
Miles' teeth.
Score was tied twice in the
TIPOFF This is the second half tipoff for the Crater
Medford high basketball game at Central Point. Seconds
later Mike Neathamer (15-black), scored to give Medford
37 to 34 margin. Crater battled back, went ahead for
keeps in the fourth quarter and won the Southern Oregon
conference game 68 63. Medford's Jack Forde and Crater's
Paul Bransom are jumping on the tipoff. Crater players
(white) include Pat Pepper (24), Lou Alvarez (10) behind
jumpers, Mike Glines, behind referee Don Sutphin, and
Howard Tomlinson. Medfordites are Dan Miles (25), Mike
Barnes, beyond Pepper, and Jim Hill, back of Stuphin.
Anders photo), ' , '
first quarter and there were
four lead switches in the pan
el. The lead changed hands
three times each in the sec
ond and third quarters. Third
quarter saw four deadlocked
scores.
Medford headed by three
points several times but never
by a wider difference. The last
was at 46 to 43. A shot by
Pepper from the corner cut
this to 46 to 45. Deffley hit
a free toss. Then Summer
field's lone field bucket tied
the game at 47-all. Deffley put
in two free shots for the last
Medford time ahead. Pepper's
long jump shot tied the game
at 49 apiece. Two Tomlinson
charity heaves made it 51 to
49.
Three Hill Buckets
It was Hill's scoring that
took Medford into the lead
in the second quarter. Med-
Grants Pass Victor
Over Ashland Bruins
Ashland Grants Pass high
broke an early second quarter
deadlock and went on to crush
a cold Ashland Grizzly basket
ball team here Friday 67 to
39.
The decision projected the
Cavemen into lone leadership
of the Southern Oregon con
ference and held the Bruins
In the cellar spot. GP is 3-1 in
the loop and Ashland 0-3.
Ashland was right in the
thick of the fight after nine
minutes of the game. The
score was tied 14 to 14 at that
time. The Grizzlies had come
up to tie the, count after the
first quarter favored Grants
Pass 14 to 9. But Ashland
could get only one more point
in the remaining seven min
utes of the half.
Grants Pass was. ahead 29
to 15 at the midway halt and
47 to 27 after three stanzas
had been played.
Lour Average
Ashland put In only four
of 21 first half field goal at
tempts and just nine of 46 for
the game for a .196 shooting
average. Grants Pass shot
.386 on 21 of 54.
The Cavemen had 47 to 27
control of the backboards and
benefited from Bruin viola
tions.
Al Hutchins scored 12
points for GP and Jim Pippin
and Tom Sparlin each 10.
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'REE PARKINS
Howard Johnson had 10 for
Ashland. . ' i
Grants Pass won the junior
varsity tiff 46 to 32 with Steve
Newman scoring 13 points and
Jerry McCormack 12. For
Ashland Bill Jury had 12 tal
lies and Frank Sullivant 10.
Sophomore victory also
went to GP 65 to 53 with
Larry Forsgren firing in 16
markers and Duane Rice IS.
Jim Conklin had 21 for the
Grizzlies.
BOX:
Grants Pali FO
Pippin 8-3
Bauer 4-1
Hutchlna 10-5
Reddlck ..... 6-2
Sparlin 8-4
Keisecker 3-1 '
Shepard .. .... 7-1
Llndqulst 3-2
Van Koten .. 2-1
Scott 2-0
McCormack 0-0
Mahaley .......... 0-0
Maynard . 1-1
Ireland - 0-0
Total! 54-21
Aihland .
Cotton
D. Tepper ,
Lamb
Pierce
Hess
FO
. 6-1
, 7-2
, 4-1
. 3-1
, 8-1
Llndley 3-0
Trost 1-0
Samuelson .... 0-0
G. Tepper ...... 4-u
Polk 0-0
Morrla 1-0
Johnson 0-3
Watta -
Totals .
.48-9
FO PF TP
7-4 a 10
1- 1 S 3
2- 2 2 12
2-2 3 8
2-2 2 10
2-2 2 4
S-4 '26
4-4 3 8
2-2 0 4
4-1 0 1
1-0 O 0
0- 0 0 0
1- 11 3
1- 0 0 0
36-25 23 67
FT PF TP
2- 0 0 2
4-2 5 6
12-6 4 8
4- 2 3 4
5- 4 2 8
2-2 1 2
1- 0 10
0-0 0 0
0-0 3 0
0-0 10
2- 1 3 1
4-4 1 10
0-0 0 0
36-21 23 39
Cincinnati
Cagers Like
Attorney
By DICK JOYCE
UPI Sports Writer
Cincinnati's top ranked
Bearcats are getting like tele
vision's Perry Mason you
wonder if they're ever going
to lose.
Almost one year ago this
week the Bearcats suffered
their last defeat, 70-68, In
overtime to tough Missouri
Valley conference foe Bradley
at Peoria, 111. Since then Cln
cinnatl has reeled off 31 con
secutive victories.
Coach Ed Jucker's Bearcats,
who are shooting for an un
precedented third straight
NCAA basketball title and
sixth consecutive MVC cham
pionship, scored victory No.
13 of the season Saturday
night by beating stubborn
Tulsa, 67-57, at Tulsa, Okla.
Ron Bonham, the Bearcats'
jump-shooting junior, tallied
30 points, 20 in the second
half, as Cincinnati pulled
away from a 32-32 tie. Cin
cinnati led only, 44-41, when
Bonham scored seven straight
field goals to thwart the Hur
ricane threat and earn the
Bearcats their third MV victory.
Cincinnati, second-ranked
Loyola of Chicago (15-0), sev
enth-ranked Georgia Tech (1 1.
0) and unranked Niagara (7-0)
thus remain the nation s only
unbeaten major teams. Loyola
was idle last weekend while
Georgia Tech edged Missis
sippi, 73-71, in overtime at
Oxford, Miss., and Niagara
belted St. Bonaventure, 80
63 at Niagara Falls, N.Y.
ford was down 23 to 28 with
4:45 left in the period. The
Tornado jumping jack hemp
ed a rebound bucket, a 12-foot
jump shot and a goal off a
Miles' feed.
Statistical charts of the riv
al aggregations differed. The
Comets', however, gave them
a .386 field gunning mark on
22 of 57. Medford's charts In
dicated 23 Tornado goals on
58 tries for .397. Buti Tornado
shooting was far below that
full game mark for the sec
ond half. The Medford's over
the last two quarters hit 10 for
35, a .286 average.
Crater defenders grabbed a
good share of the rebounds in
the closing portion of the fray
to spoil Medford second
chances. Tomlinson did most
of the snaring after Bransom
was retired, the positioning of
Jones and Summerfield under
the hoops helping him to a
clear way to the ball.
For Crater beating is just
about the ultimate in its ath-
letic rivalry but not quite.
Coach Hoffine relished the
victory for his Comets but ex
pressed more exultation that
the Fireballs had firmed up
their status in the chase for
the conference banner after a
bad Friday night at Grants
Pass.
Medford Coach Roelandt
looked toward the task of
finding so.ne boys who can
get the ball through the hoop
more often.
BOX:
Medford FO
MltcheU 2-0
Neathamer ....12-3
Forde 18-6
Barnea . .. 16-2
Miles ..,. 8-5
Deff ey 5-1
Hill 6-3
Salyers 1-1
Houston 6-4)
FT Ho. PF TP
1-0
1-0
7-4
4- 3
3-2
6-8
5- 2
0-0
0-0
0
2 8
3 16
4 7
0 12
1 8
5 12
2 3
1 0
Totals 58-23 29-17 16 21 63
Henley, Lakeview
Eagle Point Victors
In Rogue Scrambles
ROGUE LEAGUE STANDINGS:
w.
Henley 4
Essie Point ...... 3
Lakeview 3
St. Mary's 2
Illinois Vallev 1
Phoenix 1
Rogue River 0
Sacred Heart 0
Prt.
1.000
.7.10
.750
.667
.333
.250
.000
. .000
Henley high fortified Its
leadership and Eagle Point
and Lakeview bulwarked
their shareholds on second
place on Saturday night In
Rogue league basketball.
The Hornets of Henley
trimmed Phoenix 71 to 54.
Eagle Point thumped Rogue
River 69 to 45 and Lakeview
subdued Illinois Valley 34 to
50.
Lakeview came from nine
points back in the last two
minutes to subdue the IV
Cougars. Henley with Kent
Gooding, getting 29 points
over . the full route, spurted
away from Phoenix in the
final quarter.
Crater
Pepper
Tomlinson .
Bransom
Alvarez ..
Glines
Jones
Summerfield
Totals
FO
..10-4
..12-2
... 7-3
... 7-3
..20-9
0- 0
1- 1
FT Rb. PF TP
2-0 2 2 8
20-15 16 3 19
4-1 10 5 7
4-4 4 5 10
0-0 0 4 18
0-0 0 3 0
4-4 12 8
..57-22 34-24 31 24 68
iSurjhtrndJ5oulas
Medford;
rWBUNB
siPCDmnrs
MH Jayvee,
Soph Fives
Nab Tiffs
Central Point - Medford
junior varsity and sophomore
aggregation were the victors
here Saturday night in the
tussles engaged prior to South
ern Oregon conference varsity
action.
The Junior Tornado won 63
to 47 over the Crater jayvees.
In the sophomore hassle Med
ford prevailed 38 to 22.
Medford had a strong sec
ond half to take the jayvee
clash. Quarter counts favored
the Tornadoes 15 to 10, 26 to
23 and 47 to 38. Ross Burd,
Crater, was the top point pro
ducer with 23. Bill Enyart col
lected 18 for Medford and Ron
Edmonds 16.
The Tornado had sopho
more period margins of 14 to
5, 19 to 13 and 27 to 20. Jim
Cox had 11 points and Mike
Blckler 10 for Medford and
Don Patterson nine for the
Central Point school.
JV LINEUPS:
Medford 63 Envart 18. Kensla
o, inini o, Alien o, Lamonai 10,
siocKman. wimDenv a. wvan 2.
Mullen, Wherely, Davis 2, Hlnman
1, xurpln, Anders 1, Olson, Brown,
Crater 47 Rverson. Twedell 2
Swanson 2. Burd 23. Peoner LI. M.
Turner 4, Stroh 3, B. Turner,
oiawe, Annorn . wnu.
Red Raiders Rally
To Whip 0CE Quint
Ashland - Southern Oregon
college's basketball squad
made a great second half
comeback to humble the
Wolves of Oregon College of
Education 80-75 here Satur
day night.
The victory gave Southern
Oregon a 3 win 1 loss record
in Oregon Collegiate confer
ence play.' The Raiders only
drop was to OCE Friday
night.
In the first period the
Wolves took the tip and lit
tle Darrell Brandt drove all
the way to gain the opening
basket. The Raiders tied the
game up with two free throws,
but Oregon college came
back at the local boys with
three quick counters to take
the lead which It held through
out the half.
With less than four minutes
remaining in the period, SOC
trailed 27-18. At this stage
of the game the Raiders be
gan to open up. Larry Hink
took a pass in the corner,
went by one defender and hit
with a smooth jumper from
the side. Ed Hill and Dave
Hughes tallied three free
counters to help the Raider
cause. Then Loyd Cole shot
two from the free throw mark
to carry the visitors to a 29
point total. SOC came through
with four more points before
the half closed. Coming up
from a 12 point deficit, the
Raiders trailed at the half
27-29.
As the second period be
gan, a strong, fired-up home
town team came on the hard
wood. The Raiders took the
opening tip and worked Bill
Franks open for Jumper in
the corner. OCE brought the
ball down fast but under the
enthusiastic defense of t h e
Raiders lost it. Once again
Franks lost his defender and
scored. This gave the lead to
Southern Oregon who stretch
ed it to 40-33 after 4H min
utes of play.
The scrapping Raiders wid
ened their margin to 55-37 by
the half way point of the pe
riod. With their barrage the
Raiders finished the game
with a mighty .490 field goal
average and a .756 at the free
throw line. Under SOC's tre
mendous defense the Wolves
hit only .303 of their field
goals and were low at the
penalty line with .548 aver
age. Aided tremendously by
Dave Hughes 11, the Raiders
outrebounded OCE 38-31.
.Hughes was also the num
ber one scorer of 'the game
with 28 points. Toby Wolf
was high for Oregon College
with 20.
FO FT PF TP
18-9
6-3
3- 0
11-4
2-1
5-4
4- 2
1-1
SOC
Hushes
Hlnk
Flanary
Shulta ....
Hill
Franks ...
Klaer ...
Beazlzo ..
Lewellvn
Johnson ,
Totals ....
. 4-2
0-0
11-10
4-3
1-1
' 3-2
4-3
1- 0
10-7
2- 1
1-1
0-0
.51-26 37-21 26 SO
OCE
Brandt
Marr
Rankin
Wolf
Cole
Morton
FO
13- 5
. 6-3
. 8-2
14- 7
. 3-0
8-1
Curry 8-2
Price 3-1
Hanson 2-0
Read ..... 1-0
10-6
3-1
3-1
' 8-6
3-3
0- 0
1- 0
2- 0
0-0
t-0
pr TP
2 16
Totals 66-20 31-17 25 37
AFL TO TIGHTEN
San Diego, Calif. flfPD
The investigation of the Na
tional Football League in the
past few weeks is one of the
reasons the American Foot
ball league will tighten its
security regulations before
next season. AFL Commission
er Joe Foss announced the
move Saturday at the con
clusion of the league meetings.
Richard Shart and Charles
Pomeroy combined to give
Eagle Point rebounding and
scoring domination over
Rogue River. Short tied his
school mark of 26 rebounds
and put in 25 'points. Pom
eroy had 24 retrieves and 23
counters.
Press Busts Stall
Illinois Valley had 12 to
, 32 to 28 and 42 to 32 quar
ter margins at Lakeview and
led the Honkers until the very
last, The Cougars went into
stall to hold their margin
but Lakeview applied a press
to break it and take the fra
cas. The Honkers caught IV
at 50 all.
Larry Samples had 19
points and Danny Leahy 16
for Lakeview and Charles
Versteeg 17 for the Cougars.
Henley held the lead on
Phoenix throughout the sec
ond half after a seesaw scuf
fle for the upperhand over
the first two quarters. Lead
ership switched six times in
the first panel and ten times
in the second. The Hornets
built seven point gaps in the
third quarter but the Pirates
twice narrowed their deficit
down to two. Quarter scores
were 15 to 14, 30 to 29 and
48 to 44 for Henley.
The Hornets broke away
from a 54 to 50 count to out-
score Phoenix 17 to 4 over
the last 5'i minutes of the
game. Mike ' Bey mer had 16
points and Earl Allbrltton 14
for Henley and Jon Granby
19, John Barker 12 and Rick
Bolz 11 for the Pirates.
Eagle Point, firing .373
from the field on 28 of 75, out
rebounded the Chieftains 77
to 22. The Eagles also played
good defense and ran well.
They had leads of 20 to 9 at
the half and 37 to 23 at the
quarter.
Tom Davidson scored 18
markers for Rogue River.
In junior varsity clashes
Eagle Point won 55 to 51 and
Henley 46 to 33. Henley had
8 to 5, 21 to 12 and 30 to 21
quarter leads and Lewis put
n 13 points. Steve Denham
was high for Phoenix with 12
SOPH LINEUPS:
Medford 38 Flanders 1, Blck.
ler 10, Hasaman 6, Kupp 4, cox 11
Newland 2, Fosbury, Watrud, Bren
nan, Pollard 2. .
Crater 22 Gall, Marshall 8,
Harper 7, Patterson 9, Mtlkowakl,
Hope, Ketley, Tate, Ceaaro, Leea,
Gary Player
SD Champ
Br HAL WOOD
San Diego, Calif. - OJPD - If
coincidence counts, Gary
Player, the amiable South Af
rican, is in for a big year.
"I came here to win, said
Player after he had completed
his first round in the $25,000
San Diego Open.
Sunday, Gary knocked In
an 18-foot pressure putt from
off the edge of the green on
the 72nd and last hole to win
the tournament by one stroke
from lean Tony Lema.
Lema, the hot man on the
tour these days, now has won
four tournaments and finished
second In three out of the last
12 he has played.
"I didn't realize anyone was
so close until I got to the 18th
green," said Player. "Then I
found out I had to sink that
putt to win. I knew I had bet
ter win now because I haven't
been so good in playoffs. In
fact, I've been in eight play
offs and lost every one."
Player finished the round
with a one-under-par 70, and a
270 for the 72 holes 12 under
par for the distance.
LINEUPS:
Eaile Point 69 Pomeroy
Whaley a. Short 25, under 6.
wrleht 10, Ayres 1, Straus, Mesloh
ornss, unaney i.
ftoiue River 45 Davidson 18,
rorHss, Charley 1,
oiu River 45
LeRoy 7. O'Brien 6, Cooper, Salter
6, Powell, Schefstrom 1, Palmer-
ton, e enucost a, rrantz a.
Illinois Vallev AO Vrtff 17.
ft. Martin 7, Thornhllf 8, Gellert
iu, jncnaugni d, isaunif araner e.
Lakeview 54 Williams 2. fltuw.
ard 6, Leahy 16, Warren 7, Sample!
l, raw i
Phoenix 54 Johnson ff. Barker
13, Granby 19, Bole 11, Conabruck
2, Hawkins 3, Hill 1, Wallace, Den
ham. Henley 71 Allbrltton 14. Raw
mer 16, Goodlnr 29, Renins S.
Youna 8. Thompson 2. Sanders.
Schlro. I
- B 3
Viking Mat
Crew Nips
SOC 14-13
Ashland Portland Stats
college's Pacific coast cham
pion wrestling contenders
edged by Southern Oregon's
Red Raiders 14-13 Saturday
night In Portland. ,
Portland State had already
trounced Oregon State uni
versity 15-9 Friday night. This
was the first time Oregon
State had been beaten by a
Pacific coast school in five
years. The last time PSC and
SOC met was two years ago
when the Vikings trounced
the Raiders 36-0.
Portland won the match
with four wins and one draw.
The only pin of the match wa
gained by Southern Oregon's)
ex-marine heavyweight, Jim
Grush. Grush pinned Don
Kemp. In the 123-pound class
Doug Smith, SOC gained a
lopsided 6-1 decesion on Grant
Henjojl. Smith and Grush are)
still undefeated for the Raid
ers. 123 Doujr Smith. SOC, dec.
Grant Henjojl 6-1.
130 Ron Calhoun, PSC, dea.
Gerr Holmes 14-3.
137-JoJin Pettyjohn, PSC, dee.
Trenton Douslas. 13-0.
147 John DePlace, SOC, dee.
John Stopa 6-2.
.. yr-"-' Brown, PSC, dee. Jerri"
Hull 6-2.
167 Jim Rlderhour, PSC, deo.
George Moses 9-2.
...1."Trcl,n Moses. SOC, drew wttb
Mike Simmons 2-3.
Heavy weljht Jim Grush, SOC,
pinned Don Kemp 2nd.
West 21-14
Winner in
AFL Tussle
Br HAY MEANS
San Diego. Calif. (UH)
Rookie of the year fullback
Curtis McClinton and 14-year
veteran quarterback Frank
Trlpucka were the big offen
sive, guns as the West All-
Stars edged the East, 21-14,
Sunday in the second annual
American Football league All-
Star game. .
McClinton, named the
game's outstanding offensive
player, ripped the East line
for 94 yards, Including a 64-
yard touchdown dash In the
first half. He gained only 10
yards In the second half, suf
fering a minor injury early
in the third quarter. ...
Trlpucka came oft the
bench at the start of the
fourth quarter with the score
tied, 14-14, replacing Lert
Dawson who was . bruised
from, spending most of the
afternoon on his back. The
veteran signal caller guided
the West on a 92-yard touch
down march, featuring three
passes to Denver Bronco team
mate Lionel Taylor, to win
the game. The first was for
6 yards, the second for 49
yards and the third for 8
yards and the score.
ALIGIIMElIT stiff steering ;
77
ALL CARS '
NO UPS
OUR EXPERTS DO ALL THIS
correct caster correct eimbtr correct toe-In
sdlutt steering full safety ehck
GENERAL TIM SERVICE Medford
1112 Court ' Pkmt 771-I2SS
LEASING SERVICE
Complete . . . Personalized
Chevrolet Chevy 2t Corvairs
Chevrolet Trucks
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DIAL 772-6113
4.
mm
BOWL
JJll
LADIES INSTRUCTION CLASSES
4 LESSONS-TUESDAY THRU FRIDAY
Starts at 1 P.M. -End. 2:30 P.M.
REGISTER NOW
Instructor Wanda looth, leading So. Ore. lowler
Frcs Coffee
FREE BABY
SITTING SERVICE
R03IY ANN
BOWLING LANES
2373 South Pacific Hwy.
Phone 772-7171