Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, March 08, 1963, Image 11

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    SECTION B
MEDFORDSgTRIBUNB
PAGES 1 to 12
sjpoDiHnrs
MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1963
Butte Falls, Prospect
Eliminated in 5B Meet
Klamath Falls - bonanza
and Merrill High schools
spoiled the bids yesterday o
Butte Falls and Prospect of
Jackson county in the District
5B basketball tournament.
Bonanza beat Butte Falls
45 to 32 and Merrill nipped
Prospect 42 to 41.
Paisley beat Gilchrist 55 to
46 and Chiloquin won from
Prep Basketball
THURSDAY PLAYOFF GAMES
United Press International
District 2-A-2
Nestucca 52. Yamhill-Carlton 39
Philomath 48, Dayton 44
Dlitrlct A B
Camas Valley 47, Elkton 6
Powers 33, Oakland 33 (o.t.t
Canvonville Bible 43, Days Creek
37.
Yoncalla 36, Canyonville 26
District 5-B
Bonanxa 47, Butte Falls 32
Merrill 42, Prospect 41
Paisley 55, Gilchrist 46
Chiloquin 56, Malin 32
District 6-B
Condon 51. Dufur 41
Maupin 57, Arlington 45
Cascade Locks 38, Sisters 40
Wheeler 59, Culver 6il
Malin 56 to 32 to advance to
semifinals tonight along witif
Merrill and Bonanza. Chilo
quin faces Paisley and Mer
rill takes on Bonanza this eve
ning. Bonanza took a 20 to 17
halfway lead on Butte Falls
after an 11-all first quarter
knot and the Antlers led ako
30 to 26 at the half. Earnic
Nichols scored 12 for Bon
anza and Neal Ellis 11 for the
Loggers. Fouls hurt Butte
Falls.
Prospect had 11 to quar
ter gap but the Huskies head
ed 21 to 17 at halftime and
32 to 29 after three cantos.
Ken Smith scored 15 for the
Huskies and Dick Bean 11
and Andy Maurer 10 for Prospect.
LINEUPS:
Butte Falls 32 Ramho 2. B.
Copeland 8, Ellis U. Lytle, Stral
ton 4. Sizemore 2. Bowen 2, Ed
mondson 3. Mitchell. Sutton.
Bonanza 45 Newland 8. S i m
mons 4. Stcber 6. Nichols 12. Dear
borne 7. Burnett 5. Tofell 3, T.
Scatcr Pfeiffer, J. Seater.
Prospect 4i Anaresen 6. Hunt
6, Maurer 10. D. Bean 11. Wilson
8, Scott. Hemphill.
Merrill 42 Kurtz 6. Smith 15.
-6-ofinors 6. Hill 9. Moore 6Barnes.
Hazzard
Selected on
Look Team
New York - UCLA's Walt
Hazzard was the lone Pacific
Coast player named to Look
Magazine's All America team,
picked by the U. S. Basketball
Writers association, it was an
nounced yesterday.
The basketball writers'
selections will appear in the
issue of Look out next Tues
day, March 12.
Other members of the ten
man All America were: Tom
Thacker , and Ron Bonham,
Cincinnati; Art H e y m a n,;
Duke; Jerry Harkness, Loyola
of Chicago; Bill Green, Colo
rado State; Cotton Nash,
Kentucky; Ken Charlton,
Colorado; Rod Thorn, West
Virginia, and Barry Kramer,
New York University.
H e y.m a n, Thacker and
Harkness were unanimous
choiccs,of the USBWA's selec
tion committee; Heyman and
Nash were the two repeaters
from last year's All America.
Cincinnati, with Thacker and
Bonham, became the fourth
team ever to place two play
ers on tlie basketball writers'
squad.
The basketball writers vot
ed National Collegiate Ath
letic Association District o
All-Star honors to Oregon
Stale's Mel Counts, Seattle's
Eddie Miles, Southern Cal's
Gordon Martin and Stanford's
.Tom Dose.
! Q M ''MailU.J IIMII1I1 jj
iMElMM
i dt
From selected reserves,
Gooderhara & Worts, Ltd., a famous
old distillery name, produces
G&W PRIVATE STOCK
"The Bourbon of the Year."
TASTE IT and COMPARE IT.
ISO
4s Qt.
eaMl dim mttmmtm m
$o8s
A Pin
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$ fei
my
STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY, 86 PROOF, GOODERHAM 4 WORTS LTD., PEORIA, ILL
DEFENDING DISTRICT MANTLE-While the Eagle Point
High school Eagles, above, are runncrsup in Rogue League
basketball, they are the title defenders this week end in the
District 6 A-2 tournament at Southern Oregon college in
Ashland. The Eagles meet Myrtle Creek, the other 1962
finalist, in a 7:30 p.m. game this evening. Finals are on
Saturday night. From left, kneeling, are George Lindcr,
manager; Ron Brown, trainer; Ed Hanscom, scorekeeper,
and Dale Bates, head coach. Players, standing, left to right,
are Bob Corlis, Frank Charley, Wilber Boatwright, Duanc
Whaley, Charles Pomcroy, Richard Shot, Lonnie Mcsloh,
Bill Hocfft, Bill Ayres, Richard Anderson, Jack Straus and
John Linder.
Red Raiders
Start Slate
In Baseball
Ashland-Saturday will see
the opening of the 1963 base
ball season for Southern Ore
gon college. The Raiders
travel to Weed, Calif., to meet
the College of the Siskiy s
in a doubleheader starting at
noon.
Coach Ted Schopf feels that
his men are in good shape
despite the loss of their first
siring catcher by injury in
Wednesday's intra squad
game. Chuck Hmcy broke his
ankle leaving the Raiders at
an almost total loss behind
the plate as the No. 2 man
is suffering from a bad arm.
Eighteen players will travel
south. Of these 18 men the
probable starters include
pitcher, Dom Johnson; catch
er, Dave Hughes; first base,
Don Jaquctie; second base,
Bill Franks; third base, Joe
Fundcrburg; short stop, Terry
Gardner and out fielders Da-
mien Rossetto, Paul Blinka,
and Mike McKibbcn.
11 Players Back
The Southern Oregon team
has 11 players returning from
the 1962 squad with three of
these being pitchers. This
week end's starting pitcher
Johnson, was a member of
the squad last year and had
a 3-2 record.
The Raiders had a tough
schedule in practice games
last season and Ihe season
looked brighter as they went
into conference play and went
8-4 for second place in the
Oregon Collegiate conference.
Jess Munyon, a senior last
year, has been selected to as
sist Coach Schopf this year.
Munyon was the No. 2 man
of the diamond last season
with a .307 average and 10
runs balled in.
Eagle Point. Myrtle Creek
Vie; Henley Plays Douglas
In District 6 A-2 Scraps
UO Ducks
Face OSU
In Series
Eugene - OJPII - NCAA playoff-bound
Oregon State takes
on Oregon here tonight in
the first game of a two-contest
series to end the teams'
regular seasons.
The Beavers, who meet Se
attle in a playoff game next i
Monday night, and the Ducks j
tangle again Saturday night j
at Corvallis. j
Oregon State and Oregon
split an earlier two-game se- j
ries this season, the Beavers i
winning 67-57 and the Ducks
coming out ahead 54-50. j
Oregon State, which h a s i
rolled up a 17-7 record, prob-1
ably will start Mel Counts at
center, Jim Krause and Sieve
Pauly at forwards and Terry
Baker and Frank Peters at
guards,
Oregon, which has an 11-13
mark, figures to open with
Jim Johnson and Steve Jones
at- forwards, Glenn Moore at
center and Elliott Gleason and
and John Mack at guards.
Basketball
THURSDAY COLLEGE RESULT!
United Press Inter nation!
Connecticut 02, Syracuse 74
NYU 56. St. Jnhn's 47
Fordham 66, Manhattan 61
Providence 80, Brown 57
Fremo 70. Riverside 78
Stop-O-Matic Brake Lining In
stilled on all 4 Wheels WHILE
YOU WAIT! Easy terms. Brake
Specialist for 23 years.
Phone 779-1966
NATIONAL
BRAKE CENTER
1216 North Court
Henley's Hornets bear their
No. 1 Oregon A-2 high school
basketball rating into combat
and the Eagle Point Eagles
put their 1962 title on the
line tonight as the two Rogue
league schools go against
Umpqua Valley league foes in
the first round of the District
6 A-2 tournament at Southern
Oregon college in Ashland.
Eagle Point lakes on
Myrtle Creek at 7:30 p.m. and
Henley tussles Douglas at
8:45 p.m. Tonight's winners
meet at 8:45 p.m. on Saturday
for the title after a 7:30 p.m.
fray between this evening's
losers.
Prize for the champion is
spot in the Oregon A-2
tournament which opens
March 18 at Coos Bay.
The four schools which are
participating in the District
event are the same ones
which took part last year.
Henley and Myrtle Creek
come as the 1963 champs of
their respective circuits.
Eagle Point and Douglas were
runners up.
Havo To Provo
"We're on the spot," said
Coach Jerry Johnson to Hen-
Icy which was. last district
champ in 1961. "We still have
to prove our No. 1 rating."
The Hornets go to Ashland
after a couple of weeks of rest
from action and Johnson
feels the layoff has helped.
Henley carries a 20-game un
defeated record into the
tourney.
Heading Ihe Buzzers Is
Kent Gooding, 6-7 senior, who
was an all-slater as a sopho
more. Others in the fairly
stable starting lineup are
Earl Allbritlon, Mike Bcy
mer, Steve Roiling and LeVoy
Young. Charley Thompson is
close to being a first stringer
and Tom Sanders and Elton
Schiro both are showing well.
Henley will encounter a
less experienced club in
Douglas (12-8). Only Trojan
lettermen are Bruce Ledger
wood, a senior, and Bob Reed,
a junior, and sophomores and
juniors have dominated the
r :
L LpS&aJj iMwi? .toff vUipn
GREYHOUND M A
'I VAN LINES, INC. f 1 VSS '
:I0T i in .H ''If Krtoiiittk ' .
Stanford
Can Cinch
Cage Toga
Uni'sd Press International
Howie Dallmar, who led
Ihe Stanford Indians to a na
tional basketball title in 1942,
can get the Indians started on
the same road again tonight.
Dallmar was a player 21
years ago, and a great one.
Now he coaches the Tribe,
which can clinch its first con
ference title since that long
ago pre-war season by dump
ing UCLA in a Big Six battle
at Los Angeles.
Even if the Cards should
lose tonight, their chances of
annexing the crown seem
pretty solid.
Stanford (7-3) Is at USC
Saturday, while UCLA (5-5)
entertains California.
Should the Cards blow
both games and the Bruins
lake two, league director Tom
Hamilton Thursday decreed
that a playoff will be held
on Tuesday at Santa Monica
City college gym. The two
teams would reign as co-
champs but would be battling
to determine who will repre
sent the league In the NCAA
regional tourney at Provo,
Utah.
It's the last week end In
the regular season and some
teams going nowhere will be
out to end their year on a
high nole.
California, a spoiler a 1 1
year long, is at USC tonight
and at UCLA Saturday.
Rooks Defeat
UO Frosh 61-58
Corvallis -IUPB- Dave Fox
scored 23 points to lead the
Oregon State Rooks to a 61
SP. haskethall win over the
Oregon Frosh Thursday night.
The Rooks, beating Oregon
for the second time in three
games this season, wore .h(Bd
35-29 at halftime. Jim Barnett
and Bill Jennings each scored
IB points for the Frosh.
club. There is no one to match !
Gooding's height. Reed
(6-1 Vi) is tallest regular. Ray
Shepherd and Dan Withers ,
are sophomore starters.
Archie Walker, a senior,
rounds out the likely lineup.
Ron Stobbe, a junior, is a lop
reserve. There has been bal
anced scoring among four
players.
Eagles Enthusiastic
Coach Rod Feigner is
pleased with the way things
have gone for his club this
season. At Ashland he consid
ers his club an underdog
against the Rogue schools but
he said that his squad has
been looking forward "to the
possibility of pleasing these
people down thero. We're cer
tainly not going down just
for the ride."
Mentor Dale Bates has re
ported his Eagle Pointers (17
6) "enthusiastic and fired up
about the opportunity to play
Myrtle Creek again." The
Eagles beat the Vikings 47 to
ii earlier this season and
nipped them in overtime 44
to 43 in last year's district
final.
Bales said he felt that the
club has accomplished much
although the Eagles did not
workout on Monday and
Tuesday's drill was light
There has been emphasis on
fundamentals along with
much shooting.
Boatwright Ready
Wilbur Boatwright, regular
who sprained an ankle
against Illinois Valley last
Saturday, will be ready for
limited duly, Bales indicated.
He may slnrl along with all
stater Charles Pomcroy, Rich
ard Short, Bill Hocfft or Du
ane Whaley. Otherwise, John
Linder or Frank Charley
could get the nod.
Myrtle Creek has done sur
prisingly well, considering in
experience, according to
Coach Hank Talus. Ed Cad
man, one of three who may
draw a Blurting guard assign
ment, is the only lettermen.
The other guards are Tony
Quinn and Rick Abrahamson.
Other starters may be Lee
Bochlkc, Bob Fuller and Ron
Salmon.
While the Vikings, with
llinif lllllp mm nlavinff II
tough, have had a successful
season to date, Talus feels
thai so far as the district
tourney Is concerned, "We're
a little out of our class."
NEW CARD GUIDE
New York -(UPli- "Hoyle's
simplified guide to the popu
lar card games," containing
rules, terms, hints, points and
reminders, will be published
by Doublcday on March 15.
A TEXAS LEGEND !
"My husband and I itarted In thi warehouse business in 1952 with
ni Dodge truck, I'm still working that Dodge, and it's become I
legend. I've made more money with it than with any other truck I've
owned. In over 87,000 miles, it's needed new plugs and points, a
water pump, and heater hose. Fact is, it's still running on four of
the sit original tires. How's that for dependability? That truck's going
to retire with me. I wouldn't dart sell it or trade it when it's per
forming so fine!" Mts. Thelma p. Sleveis, Greyhound Van tines, Dallas, Tetas
Quite a few things have happened to Dodge trucks since Mrs. Stevens
bought her first. Among them Is a new policy of running Improvements
that has made Dodge trucks more than 50 ways better In the past year
alone. Another is a new series of conventional and cab forward medium
tonnage diesel models, specifically built for substantial savings In city
service. But one thing that hasn't changed Is price. Dodge, America's
only Job-Rated truck, it priced lower than most of tha competition,
right in line with the rest. Your nearby Dodge dealer has the proof.
DODGE DIVISION
& Chrysler QQDGE BUILDS TOUGH TRUCKS
PARSONS MOTOR CO., 315 East 5th, Medford
FREE BOWLING
LADIES INSTRUCTION GLASSES
4 LESSONS -Tues. thru Fri.
Starts at 1 P.M.
Ends at 2:30 P.M.
REGISTER NOW!
Instructor Wanda Booth
leading So. Or. Bowler
TOMORROW
NIGHT!
ALASKAN SAFARI
' NEVER BEFORE SHOWN - In Colorl
by JIM and BARBARA CLARK
Alaskan Guidos in Person
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HOUR and 4S MINUTES ot action picked
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Hunters take Caribou end Moose that go in the
, record book,, plus a Grinly. Record White Sheep also
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Afcen by float plane; see a pack of
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Fly up the
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Fishing, Big Game Hunting, Bird Hunting,
Wildlite end Wilderness.
More wildlife than ever shown bofore.
Don't Miss This Exciting New Show
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HOOVER SCHOOL
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SATURDAY-MARCH 9-8 PM
Adults 1.25 -Students 75c
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Medford Mail Tribune