Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, September 30, 1963, Image 13

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    2 B
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1983
MEDKOHD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDKOKD, OREGON
t
i0M
Oregon State Whips
Colorado Buffs 41 -6
RAIDER STOPPED - Steve Grimes (3.1), Other SOC Red Raiders shown are Roger
Southern Oregon college, is stopped by an un- umpe iboj, Jim im-daier ui "u uai
identified George Fox tackier in Saturday (75). Other CF players are Robert Craven
night football game at Ashland. Carol Hibbs
(4i) of the Quakers comes up to mane sure.
Southern Oregon
Tops George Fox
(81) and Wendell Barnett (11). SOC won 47-7.
ASHLAND Southern Ore
gon college's Red Raiders of
the Rogue opened their home
season against a collegiate foe
Saturday night by rolling to an
easy triumph of 47 to 7 over
the Quakers of George Fox.
The Raiders quickly showed
their power to the Quakers. They
scored in the first period and
continued their pace through
the game.
Coach Al Akins of SOC de
ployed his whole squad in the
contest, giving all hands a
chance to gain experience. Raid
er quarterbacks helped keep the
score on a gentleman's basis by
calling a rushing game and let
ting the backs test their abilities
at running.
Score, however, did not pre
sent a true picture of the fired
up George Fox team which is
going into bigger time under
the leadership of Coach Earl
Craven. The Quakers completed
55 per cent of their passes and
had a net of 234 scrimmage
yards. GF quarterback John
Newkirk varied his calls and
gave Raider defense some
tough assignments.
Caruthers Scores
Mike Caruthers scored the
lone touchdown for the Quakers
and was the game's top gainer
with 93 yards.
SOC, which led 14 to 0, 27 to
0 and 34 to 0 al the intermis
sions, went into high gear after
receiving the opening kickott.
A couple of running plays called
by quarterback Bill Bailey set
up Mike Hood for a 24-yard rush
through the center which scored.
Doug Olson kicked the extra
point.
Next the Raiders took over
the ball on their own 24-yard
line. They moved to the 14-yard
line in 12 plays and Steve
Grimes packed into the end zone
from there. Olson again toed
the bonus.
A fumble recovery gave the
Raiders third scoring oppor
tunity. With Jeff Rude now
at the quarterback helm, SOC
moved to the goal. Rude went
the last three yards on a keeper.
Olson ran the conversion.
George Fox (ailed to gain a
first down after the kickoff and
the Raiders took over on their
48-yard line after the punt. Rude
then fired a pass to Spike Gor
don for 52 yards and a touch
down which made it 27 to 0.
The Quarkers controlled the
ball into the fore part of the
third quarter but were not able
to get into scoring range. After
a GF punt, the SOC had the
ball on its 25. At that point
Bailey handed off to Dave Nord
who broke away on a 75-yard
scoring run. Olson's kick made
it 34 to 0.
Midway in the fourth quarter
freshman back Mike Watkins
shot through the secondary for
24 yards and a score and Olson
kicked for 41 to 0. Dick Rciling
intercepted a pass to set up
the final marker for the Raiders.
Rude passed to Dick Jorgensen
for lour yards and the counter.
George Fox came back in
eight plays and Caruthers went
the final eight yards with 1:58
left to play. Newkirk kicked the
extra.
soc
First downs 17
Yards rushing 320
Yards passing l.'ll
Net Scrimmage yards 431
Passes tried, coin ..U-fl
Pasbcs Intercepted hy 1
Fumbles lost 2
Penalties and yards ,...8-nn
Punic and average ...,l-2fl
or
in
177
.',7
rsi
m-iii
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3-1.1
7-29.6
(.infield
Downs OCE
By United Press International
Linfield was primed today to
go after its third straight North
west Conference football cham
pionship and fifth in eight years.
The powerful Wildcats rolled
over Oregon College of Educa
tion 52-7 at McMinnville Satur
day night for their second
straight nonconference victory.
Linfield opens its conference
schedule against College of Ida
ho at Caldwell next week end.
Lewis and Clark, rated as a
threat to the Wildcats' title as
pirations, edged Chico State 16
14 at Chico, Calif., on a 28-yard
field goal by Ken Byers.
Improved Portland State scor
ed in every period to defeat
Pacific 27-7 at Forest Grove.
Weber of Utah crushed Ore
gon Tech 29-7 at Klamath Falls
and Southern Oregon rambled
past George Fox 47-7 at Ashland.
Whitman shut out Eastern
Oregon 2?0 at Walla Walla,
Wash., and Nevada topped Wil
lamette 29-6 at Reno.
FootballScores
V F
FIRE HURTS
i
Forest fires destroy the food nd
home! of vnunilcsi animals, l ire
hum up millions of dolUi each sear
in natural resources. 11 coms sour
country more than a hundred million
dollars, a year lust to tight forest tires
high price to pay forcarclevsness!
Yes nine out of every len loresi mes
re caused hy man. That sad knowl
edge iishil hurts most of all.
Do your pari to help. Follow
Smokey'i ABC's.
Always break, matches in two.
Be sure you drown all tires out
Crush all smokes dead in an ash tra .
Please
Bardahl
National
Champion
STATELINE, Nev. (UPI) -No
matter who's driving, Miss
Bardahl, the "Green Dragon"
of the unlimited hydroplane cir
cuit, just keeps winning.
"I've got a great combina
tion," said owner Ole Bardahl
as he counted his winner's share
of the $25,000 Tahoe Regatta.
It was the third victory of the
year for the U-40, and by re
peating last year's triumph at
this wind swept, mile - high
course straddling the Nevada-
California border, It became the
national point champion for
1963.
Bardahl had high praise for
Don Wilson who took over the
driving chores a month ago
when regular pilot Ron Musson
broke five ribs in a race at
Madison, Wis. Musson had won
the Guntsevillc, Ala., and Gold
Cup races.
Wilson, of Palm Beach, Ha.,
didn't have much trouble win
ning the loot put up by casino
operator Wililam llarrah.
He won his first race, heat
1-B, with an average speed of
106.508 miles nor hour and was
far ahead in hent 2-B when offi
cials stopped it because of
strong winds.
At this point both the Bardahl
and Gale of Detroit, which had
won heat 1-A, had 400 points.
Rut Miss Bardahl was judged
the overall winner because its
average speed was faster than
the Gale's 103.607.
Gale pilot Bill Contrail's fin
ish gave him the national driv
er's point championship.
Prep Football
l.lTtKllAY ; VMt S
ny i nuea rrr-ss Internatlttnsl
Crant M Jrflrrsnn a
Marshall 12 WalttnKton A
Benson U Wilson 1:1
Willamette u Thurston 7
North Cstholle an Seattle 7
Concordia 117 Veinonla
Klnilra IB St Francis lit
Illinois Valley 25 St. Marv s (1
Powers 20 Marshlleld .IV 1.1
Hegis 44 coinm v
SATURDAY t'OI.LEOB GAMK.S
l.lntleld S2 OCE 7
Lewis and Clark IS Chlcn State
14
Portland State 27 Paclllc 7
Nevada 2!) Willamette li
Whitman 27 Eastern Oregon 0
Weber 2! Oregon Tech 7
Sacramento Si. 20 S. Clara 14
Ccn. Wash. 21) Puget Sound 7
Montana St. 2!) Fresno St. 7
Idaho HI Utah I)
Whttworlh 41 W. Wash. St. n
San Fran. St 20 L. Beach SI. 16
San Jose St. lti Kansas St. 0
llumholt St. .10 Hawaii 13
N. Dakota I!) Montana 1.1
By GORDON RICE
PORTLAND (UPI) Oregon
State's Beavers surprisingly
find themselves the only major
unbeaten football team on the
Pacific Coast today, after a 41
6 mauling of Colorado in Mult
nomah Stadium Saturday night.
With only two weeks gone
the prc-season "powers," South
ern California, Washington and
Oregon, all have lost at least
once. The Beavers, however,
possess two victories and a
nine-game winning streak going
into last year, the longest string
of consecutive victories in the
school's history.
"A good win, but a little
sloppy," Beaver coach Tommy
Prothro called the Saturday
slaughter.
Quarterback Gordon Queen
demolished the Golden Buf
faloes with four touchdown
passes, three of them on passes
of 14, 25 and 33 yards to end
Vcrn Burke. He completed 9 of
19 throws for 139 yards.
The other Oregon State touch
downs came on a six-yard
Queen-to-Len Frkctich pass, a
10-yard run by halfback Dick
Jones and a one-yard pass from
sub quarterback Warren Wood
worth to end Thurman Bell.
22-0 Al Half
The Beavers led 15-0 after
the first quarter, 22-0 at half
time, and 28-0 at the end of
three quarters. Colorado didn't
score until it fell behind 35-0
and then marched 75 yards in 6
plays. Quarterback Frank
Cesarek passed seven yards to
Mickey Wright
Wins Tourney
LA jolla, cant. (UPI) on
the course where she learned
to play and in a tournament
named after her, Mickey Wright
has become the winningest lady
professional golfer of all time.
Miss Wright, now of Dallas,
Tex., shot a dazzling 70 in the
final round of the $9,000 Mickey
Wright Invitational Sunday to
break Louise Suggs' record of
50 career victories in Profes
sional Golf Association tour
neys.
'It was one of the finest
rounds I have ever played,"
Miss Wright said.
Marvelous Mickey took the
top purse of $1,300 for her 222
total here. Five strokes behind
and tied for second place were
Belsy Rawls, Spartanburg, S.C.,
and Jackie Pung, Daly City,
Calif., who received $910 each.
Marlcne Hagge, Delray Beach,
Fla., had a 228 for the third spot
and $700.
back Bill Harris for the touch
down. Prothro's joy was tempered
by the fact that some of his
players got tired quickly. He
didn't know if it was because of
the one-day attack of flu that
flattened about 30 of his men at
mid-week, or whether it was
lack of conditioning.
"If we hadn't built a quick
lead and been able to substitute
freely it would have hurt us,"
he said.
"Vern Burke really helped
us," Prothro added. The na
tion's top pass catcher last year
has caught only five passes in
two games this season, but
four have been for touchdowns.
"Passing and Oregon State's
speed killed us," agreed Colo
rado coach Eddie Crowder.
S-PCDH&TS
San Diego Chargers
Put Halt To Laughs
Fros Take
Hudson Cup
Golf Play
ASTORIA -(UPI)- The pro
fessionals captured seven of 10
singles matches Sunday to de
feat the amateurs 10-5 in the
15th annual Hudson Cup golf!
matches.
The win left the pros with a
12-2-1 record in the Pacific
Northwest series.
The professionals grabbed a
3-2 lead in scotch fouresome
play Saturday in opening action
of the two-day competition.
Les Moe of Yakima, Wash.,
and Tom Evcrham of Spokane
posted the pros' most impres
sive victories in the scheduled
36-hole singles matches. j
Moe trounced Dick Price of
Longvicw, Wash., 9 and 8 and
Everham walloped Don Krieger
of Portland 8 and 7.
The winners' other triumphs
were by Boots Porterfield of
Grants Pass over Tom Storey
of Seattle 6 and 4, Bob Mc
Kendrick of Lake Oswego over
Bob Ihlanfeldt of Seattle 6 and
5, Tom Marlowe of Portland
over Ken Storey of Seattle 5
and 4, Chuck Congdon o'. Ta
coma over Dick Yost of Port
land 4 and 3 and Al Feldman
of Olympia, Wash., over Bruce
Cudd of Portland 1 up.
Turning in the amateurs' vic
tories were Bruce Richards of
Seattle, Bill Wakeham of Van
couver, B.C., and Bob Prall of
Salem.
Richards defeated Harvey
Hixson of Cottage Grove 5 and
4, Wakeham won over Glenn
Spivcy of Portland 3 and 2 and
Prall edged Eddie Joseph of
Lake Chelan, Wash., 1 up.
CARTER, ARCHER MEET I
NEW YORK (UPI) - Slugger I
Rubin (Hurricnn) Carter of Pat
terson, N. J., and clever Joey
Archer of New York have been
matched for a non - television
middleweight contenders' fight
at Madison Square Garden, Oct.
25. The 10-rounder will not be
televised because the ABC net
work has pre-empted fight time
that night for a documentary:
"What Happened to Royalty?"
Mi;
- Hl
DEER CUTTING
Wrapping & Skinning
Separate Coolers for Deer
LOCKERS AVAILABLE
Harper's Lockers
773-1715
772-6381
By United Press International
There were a few snickers
about a month ago when Sid
Gillman said his San Diego
Chargers were the best team in
the American Football league,
but who's laughing now?
The Chargers rode Tobin
Rote's three touchdown passes
to a 24-10 victory over the de
fending champion Kansas City
Chiefs Sunday to win their
showdown battle and wind up
the only AFL team with a per
fect 3-0 record.
In Sunday's only other game,
the Denver Broncos scored their
first victory of the season by
upsetting the Boston Patriots,
14-10. On Saturday night, the
New York Jets edged the Oak
land Raiders 10-7, and the Hous
ton Oilers defeated the Buf
falo Bills, 31-20.
Rote's first two touchdown
passes, of 19 and 35 yards were
caught by Dave Kocourek. Keith
Lincoln caught a 15-yard scor
ing toss in the second period
and San Diego led 17-3 at half
time. The Chargers' defense
held the Chiefs to only 27 rush
ing yards and 137 by passing,
intercepting three of Len Daw
son's passes and recovering
one fumble before a crowd of
22,654 at San Diego.
John McCormick, a National
Football League castoff, rallied
the Broncos from a 10-0 half
time deficit and knocked Bos
ton out of first place in the
Eastern Division.
McCormick, who took over
when rookie quarterback Mick
ey Slaughter was unable to
move the club, threw a 72-yard
pass to Lionel Taylor for the
winning TD in the final period
before 18,636 fans at Denver.
Chicago Records
Third Triumph of
League Campaign
Lowery Listed
Top Prospect
CORVALLIS (UPI) - Two
former Roseburg High school
football stars quarterback
Paul Brothers and tackle Doug
John headed the list of fresh
man athletes who enrolled at
Oregon State today.
Other top freshman foot ball
prospects included Jack Lowery
of Medford, Gary Ncal of Mon
mouth and Greg Hartman of
Independence. (Neal and Hart
man played for Central.)
Two highly regarded Califor
nia junior college basketball
players also enrolled. They were
6-5 Terry Dreisewerd of Mt. San
Antonio JV and 6-2 John Cham
bers of Antelope Valley JC.
Freshman basketballers in
cluded 6-10'2 Mike Erlingheuser
from San Gabriel, Calif., and
Gary Allen of South Salem.
Passing Attack
Goes for Ducks
STANFORD. Calif. (UPI) -Oregon
football Coach Len Casa
nova described it this way:
"They tried to stop our running
a lot and that made our passing
attack go."
Quarterback Bob Berry pass
ed for two touchdowns and ran
for another to spark the Ducks
to a 36-7 victory over Stanford
before 31,000 persons here Sat
urday afternoon.
"Berry had a real fine day,"
Casanova said.
Oregon, which dropped a 17-7
decision to Penn State in its
season's opener, rolled up a 21-7
halftime lead on Berry's touch
down passes of 14 yards to end
Paul Burleson and 8 yards to
halfback Mel Renfro and a 1
yard scoring plunge by the
junior signal caller.
"At first, Stanford's defense
stalled our running game,"
Casanova added. "But, at the
same time, it left itself vulner
able to passes."
Oregon's defense proved a
big factor by recovering six
fumbles and intercepting two
passes.
"But I think our play was
pretty sloppy in the line at
times," Casanova said.
By NORMAN MILLER
UPI Sports writer
The ghosts of George Halas'
old "Monsters of the Midway"
hover over the National Foot
ball league.
And the real, live modern-day
Chicago Bears are frightening
the daylights out. of a lot of
people around the NFL, too.
The Bears, rated only far-out
chance of winning this year's
Western division championship,
clobbered the Detroit Lions,
37-21, Sunday for their third
consecutive victory.
They now have beaten their
two toughest rivals, Green Bay
and Detroit, as well as Minneso
ta all on the road. Not since
1948 had the Bears won their
first three games.
And their devastating striking
power and rugged defense has
begun to revive memories of the
famed "Monsters" who won
NFL playoff championships for
"Papa Bear" Halas in 1940, '41
and '43.
Browns Are Unbeaten
The Cleveland Browns emerg
ed the only other NFL team with
a spotless record when they de
feated the Los Angeles Rams,
20-6. The Browns have a date
with the once-tied Pittsburgh
Steelers next Saturday night.
Pittsburgh handed the St.
Louis Cardinals their first de
feat, rallying in the last seven
minutes to win, 23-10. The cham
pion Green Bay Packers and
the Washington Redskins also
had to come from behind in the
last half to win. Green Bay beat
the Baltimore Colts, 31-20, and
Washington defeated the Dallas
Cowboys, 21-17.
In the other games, the New
York Giants bounced back from
last week's defeat to trounce
the Philadelphia Eagles, 37-14,
and the Minnesota Vikings set a
club scorino: record hv hoaHnn
the San Francisco Forty-Niners
for the second time in three
weeks, 45-14.
Bill Wade, who prefers to wear
down opponents with short pass
ing gainers rather than the long
bomb, threw three touchdown
passes and bucked a yard for
another in the Bears' win before
a crowd of 55,400 at Detroit. The
Bears broke open the game
with a 28-point second period
and their defense held the Lions
to a net of 40 rushing yards.
Earl Morrall, who took over
for Milt Plum, passed for De
troit's three touchdowns, two to
Gail Cogdill.
Jimmy Brown of Cleveland
was held to "only" 95 yards by
the Rams, but he scored the
Browns' first touchdown on a
17-yard scamper. Frank Ryan
then took over and passed 14
yards to Rich Kreitling and 39
yards to Ray Renfro for Cleve
land's only TD's. Danny Vil
lanueva's field goals of 13 and
45 yards accounted for Los
Angeles' scoring.
Norm Snead, roused by boos
from the home fans during the
first half, engineered two second-half
touchdown drives that
sent the Cowboys down to their
third straight defeat. Dick
James and Jim Cunningham
capped each drive with a one
yard plunge. Jim Steffen ran
78 yards with an intercepted
pass for Washington's first TD
Fran Tarkenton connected on
three touchdown passes, two of
them flying 57 and 67 yards to
Ray Poage, in Minnesota's vic
tory over the Forty-Niners. The
Vikings scored 28 points in the
second period. Abe Woodson
carried a kickoff 95 yards for a
San Francisco touchdown.
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1309 COURT ST. . . . MEDFORD
FIGHTS
Igg only YOU can
PREVENT FOREST FIRES!
Publithsd as a puhllc ssfvlca
h) eooparalicin nh Tha Advertising
Council and lha Nswspspar
Advf rl,nn nil,vs Asioriatlwl.
SUNDAY niHT
RUESSEUIKIM, Germ anv
(UPI) Conny Rudhof, 134V
West Germany, outpointed Gior
dano Campari, i:i4'i, Italy (15).
Won vacant European light
weight title.
WON itiuAWKHiHT TITLE
RUESSKLHEIM, Germany
(UPI) Dark-haired Conny
Rudhof of West Germany, 29,
won the vacant European light
weight title Sunday night by
outx)inting Giordano Campari of
naiy. Kudnot weignoa n-t's
pounds; Compari, 134' .
I
m
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