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The Jackson Sun from Jackson, Tennessee • 18

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The Jackson Suni
Location:
Jackson, Tennessee
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18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2-B The Jackson Sun, Jackson, Tennessee, Friday, January 7, 1 977 eech omecominq Game Bluff Faces Last By DAN MORRIS Sun Sports Staff BEECH BLUFF They've been playing basketball at Beech Bluff High School for more than half a century. The round ball first bounced here sometime around 1922. But it all ends next month, a fact that saddens most Beech Bluff residents and brings back memories of bygone days. A recent court ruling aimed at desegregation has forced the closing of Beech Bluff High by June 1. Its students will be assigned to either North Side or South Side high schools, and a history-laden prep basketball program will end.

Like most schools of the day Beech Bluff got its start in a one-room building back in 1885. Facilities gradually improved, including the addition of a basketball court two goals erected outside on the playground. Rafe Blankenship played on one of the first Beech Pipkin. Possibly the school's top female athlete was Barbara (Bain) Hill, who graced the courts in 1960. All of these facts and more will be recognized Saturday night (weather permitting) when Beech Bluff High stages its final homecoming.

Former coaches, players and cheerleaders will be honored at the ceremonies which begin after the 7 p.m. girls' game with Tennessee Academy. "We've put a lot of work into this," said Mrs. Tom Britt, who is organizing the halftime activities. She said pictures of former coaches and players were being collected to help highlight the homecoming theme "The Way We Were." "It's kind of sad to think about it (the school's closing)," said Beech Bluff High Principal Jimmy Morris.

"But the school spirit now is the best it's been since I've been here (four years). We're just happy we'll be here the rest of this 3rear, and we're going to make it a good Bluff basketball teams and later became the school's first "official" basketball coach in 1933. Mr. Blankenship, now a mail carrier in the community, coached until 1942. His most memorable achievment as a coach came in 1935 when Beech Bluff's girls won the Madison County championship.

"There were ten schools in the county then," recalled Blankenship, "and we were the only school that still didn't have a gym. We had to play all of our games on the road, so when we won the county tournament it was kind of special." Blankenship, who quit coaching in the spring of 1941, said Beech Bluff finally got its gym in 1942. It was built with very little money and plenty of volunteer labor. Beech Bluff's most heralded team was Coach Hugh Harvey's 1957 crew that mounted an undefeated record in regular season play. Members of that team included Donald Jeter, Bill, Ray and Larry Alexander and Sonny one." Naturally, all homecomings are made even merrier when the home teams are victorious.

Beech Bluff Coach Calvin Bailey says his players are ready. "They're really up for it," said Bailey. "At the first of this year they were down because they thought it (the school) was going to close in December. But now that they know they're going to finish the year here, they've got something to play for. "They want to win the last homecoming games.

It's a big event with a lot of people coming back for homecoming. There's been a lot of work on it, so it's really something special for everyone. It's. an important night and the players want to do something special for all the people who will be here." It is morale that wins the victory," said former U.S. Army General George C.

Marshall. If that's true, then Beech Bluffs final homecoming will be the merriest ever. Battle In Lines Could Be Key 3 I Super Bowl Will Be Territorial Fight 3 "Then I'll keep talkin' to him but up real close." He said he has been intimidated only once in his nine-year career, in his rookie season against the New York Jets. "Don Maynard caught eight or nine passes off me in that game," Atkinson recalled. "That is the ultimate intimidation." Does Atkinson think Rashad can be psyched? "If he can be, I've never noticed it.

Remember that Monday night game a couple of years ago when he was with Buffalo? He caught two touchdowns off me. No, I guess he can't be too Rashad doesn't sound like the type to give ground just because the other guy's talking up a storm. "Atkinson is a good friend of mine," says the Vikings' pass catcher. "I know him off the field. He plays a rough style.

But let's face it. Football is rough. You can't let it get to you. I look forward to a nice, rough, tough Sammy White, the. Vikings other star wide, receiver, looks forward to "a pretty good day if I'm able to go one-on-one with anybody.

I'm not worried about any of their guys giving me a cheap shot. We can't worry about these things." Safety Jack Tatum, like Atkinson the wearer of a "Hatchet Man' label in the Oakland secondary," will be covering White at least part of the time. He already displays respect for the Vikings' sensational rookie. "He sure doesn't play like a rookie," Tatum said. "He seems to be able to catch just about anything that's thrown at him." something.

I can remember hearing guys shouting things like, 'You better not turn your back on me or you're gonna get or 'Here I come, Fortunately for Branch, he has roomed for the past several years with Atkinson, the master of intimidation, and has learned the art of the counterattack. "The best thing you can do, except maybe for ignoring the guy altogether, is to give it back to him, to try to get inside his head and mess him up," Branch says. "For example, if a guy's been giving it to me about how he's gonna get to me, I might yell back, 'Don't you blink, man, or I'm by you. I'm in the end zone. I'm Atkinson is nothing like the cutthroat, the intense, angry man he is pictured as being.

He may seem to have that killer instinct on the field "let's just say I'm very aggressive" but off it he is extraordinarily easy-going. He has an infectious laugh and a perpetual twinkle in eyes sitting behind violet-colored glasses. "I'm a very compassionate fellow." And what is it that Atkinson says to the enemy receivers which has them quaking in their sneakers and sneaking looks behind them as they charge onto his turf "Oh, I ask them about the best discos in town," he laughs. He says he can look into a man's eyes at the start of the game, sometimes even before the start, and get an indication whether intimidation will work. "If I think it will, I start talkin to him right away," Atkinson says.

And if it doesn't seem to be working? LOS ANGELES AP) Super Bowl XI will be as much a territorial battle in the secondary as it is in the face-to-face pit of the scrimmage line. "When I'm out there, I feel that the field is mine," says Minnesota wide receiver Ahmad Rashad. "My job is a positive one, to catch a football. The other guy's is a negative one, to keep me from catching it," says Oakland wide receiver Cliff Branch. "When someone catches a pass in my area, it is an embarrassment to me.

And I do not like to be embarrassed," says Minnesota cornerback Nate Wright. "If I can make the man I'm covering think about me for just an instant and break his concentration, half the battle is won," says Oakland safety George Atkinson. It is, to understate the matter, going to be one heck of a battle out there on Sunday in the fly patterns, the crossing routes, the zone seams of Super Bowl XI. When the quarterbacks Fran Tarkenton of the Vikings and Ken Stabler" of the Raiders stop their "hut-hut" chatter at the line and the ball is snapped, the rampant in those far-away regions where receivers and defenders try to outguess, outpsyche and outrun each other begins. "Oh, yeah, there's an awful lot of talk goin' on out there," says Branch, an All-Pro wide receiver rated as Oakland's big-play man.

"The defensive backs are trying to intimidate you, to get inside your head. "If they can do that, they can make you louse up your route or break stride or miss a step or look his way or scoreboard sports briefs basketball 36- 3874 38 36 74 37- 3774 36-3874 36 3874 33974 37 37 74 37 3774 35 3974 39-36 75 37 38 75 35-4075 Forrest Fezler Gory Koch Johnny Miller Ed Sneed Butch Baird Tommy Horton Tom Watson Bruce Cromoton Gene Counter Tom Evans Grier Jones Mike McCullough Memphis St. 82 Oklahoma City 72 MEMPHIS STATE (82) Bradley 12 0-0 24, Brown 4 0-0 8. Washington 3 0-0 6. Reed 10 4-5 24.

Wright 6 0-0 12, Kilzer 1 0-0 2, Meachom 1 0-2 2. Hancock 0 0-0 0, Isbell 2 0-0 4. Totals 39 4-7 82. OKLAHOMA CITY (72) Gracev 2-3 20, Gwaltner 1 0-0 2. Krause 1 5-6 7, Hill 3-4 13, Tucker 7 0-0 14, Montgomery 5 4-4 14, Sykora 0 2-2 2.

Totals 28 16-19 72. Halftime-Memphis St. 46-OCU 43. Total fouls-Memphis St. 16, OCU 10.

NBA Standings EASTERN CONFERENCE -3 "Sl MILWAUKEE (lit) Bridgeman 7 2-2 16, Restant 2 0-0 4. Na-ter 7 0-0 14, Buckner 6 0-0 12. Winters 6 2-2 14, Dondrtdoe 13 11 27, E. Smith 3 0-1 6, Bra aw 4 1-1 9. Carter 2 0-0 4.

English 1 1-1 3. Lloyd 4 0-0 8, Meyers 1 0-0 2. Totals 56 7-8 119. Buffalo 22 21 22 111 Milwaukee 25 24 3 11 Fouled out Nater. Total fouls Buffalo IS, Milwaukee 24.

A 10,275. Cleveland 129 Golden State 100 GOLDEN STATE C1M) Barry 2 0-0 4, Wilkes 9 4 5 22. G.Johnson 0 0-0 0. Williams 2-1-2 5, P. Smith 6 6-8 18.

Davis 1 4-8 6, Dudley 3 2-2 8. Parish 2 0-0 4, C.Johnson 11 0-0 22, Parker 2 7-7 11. Totals 38 24-32 100. CLEVELAND (12) Russell 7 4-5 18, Brewer 6 1-2 13. hones 4 2-4 10, Carr 11 6-6 28.

Cleamons 6 2-2 14, B. Smith 7 4-4 18. Snyder 5 0-0 10, Thurmond 3 4-7 10, Lambert 2 0-0 4, Garrett 10-0 2, Williams 1 0-0 2. Totals 53 23-30 129. Golden Stale 22 22 2 Jt 1M Cleveland 2 34 42 24 Fouled out None.

Total fouls Golden State 22, Cleveland 23. A 11,033. bowling REBEL LEAGUE Results Tom's Hair Core 4. MFA Insurance 0 Shetton Construction 4. Bank ot Huntingdon 0 Maico Lanes 3.

Keilv Foods 1 Herman Mulier 3, Miller Hi Life 1 High Single Game (Men) James Sovooe. 238 High Series (Men) Red Nesbitt. 646 Atlantic Division Pet. GB Philadelphia 20 14 .588 N. Y.

Knicks 18 17 .514 Boston 17 18 .486 3'A Buffalo 15 27 .357 7 N. Y. Nets 12 24 .333 9 Central Division Cleveland 22 14 .611 Houston 20 13 .606 'i Son Antonio 20 .541 2Vi New Orleans 19 17 .528 3 Washington 17 17 .500 4 Atlanta 13 27 .325 11 WESTERN CONFERENCE Midwest Division Denver 24 12 .667 Detroit 21 15 .583 3 Indiana 19 20 .487 6' Kansas City 17 20 .459 7'i Chicago 12 21 .364 lO'j Milwoukee 11 27 .289 14 Pacific DLJsion Portland 25 1 3 .658 Los Angeles 22 14 .611 2 Golden State 19 16 .543 Softie 20 19 .513 Phoenix 14 19 .424 8'2 brandings Minnesota's Fran Tarkenton issues warning. Regalado's Key Is New And Old PHOENIX (AP) The new clubs didn't work so well. But the old putter did and more than offset the problems caused by a new driver and a new.

stronger set of irons as Victor Regalado took a one-stroke lead after the first round of the $200,000 Phoenix Open, the kickoff tournament on the pro golf tour. "It's going to take some time to get used to the new clubs," the 28-year-old bachelor from Tijuana, Mexico said Thursday after he'd one-putted 10-times on his way to a five-under-par 66 that staked him to the lead for only the third time in his four-year tour career. "I hit it all over the place, just everywhere. But my putter saved me." It did indeed. He took the lead with a 45-foot birdie putt on the 17th hole at the 6,726 yard Phoenix Country Club course.

He dropped two others of about 25 feet, one of them for par. He one-putted six of the first seven greens. And he made an eight-footer to save bogey on the 15th, after hitting it into the bleachers. Just one stroke back at 67 were U.S. Open champion Jerry Pate, his close friend George Burns and Danny Edwards, who said he's been taking lessons from his brother David, a member of the NCAA champion Oklahoma State team.

Larry Nelson had a 68 while Tom Weiskopf and PGA national champ Dave Stockton were in a large group at 69. The scores were unusually high on this desert layout that often yields some of the lowest numbers on the tour. Unusual desert conditions cold weather and pools of casual water left by some rare rains were the chief problems. Johnny Miller was one of the casualties. The pre-tour-ney favorite, winner of five of the last six PGA events in Arizona, twice a 61-shooter on this course, blew to an unhappy 74.

"The first round usually is the key to my tournament." Miller said. "All the iron shots were kind of mushy from the rain. But that's nobody's fault. I just played bad. And my putting was awful." He must improve today if he is to survive the cut for the final two rounds.

Sunday's final round is scheduled for an early finish to allow national television coverage (CBS-TV) to be completed before the start of the Super Bowl football game. Miller's putting was so erratic that it sent him to the practice green for a long session. "You know I've got to be putting bad if you see me out here practicing," he said. Regalado's work on the greens was little short of sensational. "I haven't played for a couple of months," he said.

"I played pretty bad at the end of the year (despite winning more than $53,000 for 1976) golf Team won Lost Miller Hi Life 5 3 Herman Mulier 5 3 Shelton Construction 5 3 Tom's Hair Care 4 4 Maico Lanes 4 4 Kelly Foods 4 4 Bonk of Huntingdon 3 5 MFA Insurance 2 6 Darryl Fuller JBC Fight Night Saturday One of the largest and possibly finest boxing cards is scheduled for Saturday night in the Jackson Recreation Department's "Fight Night" at the Jackson Boxing Club on East Deadrick. Covington's Wayne Cole will face Darryl Fuller of Jackson in the night's main event. Old Hickory's Bill Hall and Bill Osborne of North Side are also expected to be on the card. Boxers from Osceola, and Camden will also highlight the night's action. Bell time is 7:30 with 18-20 bouts scheduled.

Cage Menu Tonight's Games Adamsville at West Alamo at Bells Tenn. Academy at OHA Rutherford at Kenton Atwood at Trezevant Bolivar at McNairy Central Trenton at Milan Yorkville at Medina Dyer at Spring Hill Gadsden at Maury City Clarksburg at McKenzie Covington at Oyersburg Bradford at Dyer Co. Brighton at Friendship Dresden at Dover North Side at CCHS Obion Central at Munford Humboldt at JC-AA Brownsville at Ripley Byhalia, Miss. at Fayette-Ware Henry Co. at Westview South Side at Beech Bluff Gleason at Bruceton Lexington at Savannah Palmersiville at Huntington College Itawamba at JSCC (Women) Union at Dixie Tournament Lane at Ft.

Valley St. Southeast La. at UTM Saturday's Games Prep Scoffs Hill at Medina Huntingdon at Riverside Greenfield at Bradford JC-M at McNairy Central Old Hickory at Halls Auburndale at Alamo Humboldt at Gibson TA at Beech Bluff Bartletf at Favette-Wure South Fulton at Dyer Co. Savannah at North Side Union City at Dresden College Nicholls St. at UTM Bethel at Lambuth Union at Dixie Tourney Lane at Savannah St.

College Scores EAST Adelphi 95. St. Joseph's, Maine 63 Alderson-Broaddus 92, La Roche. Pa. 90 Ashland 59, Franklin Marshall 50 Baltimore 88, Bolt.

Lovola 71 Baruch 80, LivincT ton Col 70 Connecticut 52, St. Peter's 50 Delaware 96, Vermont 75 Dominican, N.Y. 77, N. J. Tech 67 Siena 87, Buffalo 76 Chester 64, Millersville 61 Widener 74, Ursinus 44 Thursday's Gomes Cleveland 129, Golden State 100 Indiana 103, Atlanta 95 Mitwd'ikee 119, Buffalo 111 Friday's Games Los Angeles at New York Nets Cleveland at Philadelphia Phoenix at Washington Milwaukee at Detroit New York Knicks at Chicago Denver at Houston New Orleans at Portland San Antonio at Seattle Saturday's Games Boston at Buffalo Phoenix at New York Knicks Washington at Cleveland New York Nets at Indiana Houston at Kansas City Philadelphia at Milwaukee Chicago at Denver New Orleans at Golden State Sunday's Games Los Angeles at Detroit San Antonio at Portland New Orleans at Seattle THURSDAY NIGHT MIXED LEAGUE Results Hiqh Balls 2.

Grosshoopers 2 White Lightning 4. Singapore Slings 0 Hurricanes 3. Tom Collins 1 Screwdrivers 3, Carbinis 1 High Single Game (Men) Carl Wvatt. 194 Hiqh Single Game (Women) Audrey Whitaker. 211 Hiqh Series (Men) Dan Patterson.

SSO High Series (Women) Audrey Whitaker, 558 Standings Team Won Lost Hurricanes 7 I Screwdrivers 6 2 High Balls 5 3 Grasshoppers 5 3 White Lightning 5 3 Tom Collins 2 6 Carbinis 1 7 Singapore Slings 1 7 DOWNTOWN CIVIC LEAGUE Results Post Office 4, Moore Studio 0 Mectronics, Inc. 3, Dudley's Exxon 1 Hoys Mfg. 3. Volunteer IHC I Winter Garden 3. Dairy Queen I High Single Gome (Men) Joe Harris.

246 High Series (Men) Pud Oliver. 578 Standings Team Won Lost Dudley's Exxon 40 19 Mectronics, Inc. 36 24 Havs Mfg. 3S 25 Volunteer IHC 33 27 Dairy Queen 26 34 Winter Garden 26 34 Post Office 26 34 Moore Studio 17' i 42' Indiana 103 Atlanta 95 INDIANA (103) Hillman 1 3-4 5, Jones 6 7-8 19, Robisch 2 3-6 7, Buse 1 0-0 2, Knight 15 11-11 41, Roundfield 3 8-12 14, Bennett 2 3-4 7, Anderson 2 0-0 4, Green 2 0-0 4, Lewis 0 0-0 0. Totals 34 35-45 1 03.

ATLANTA (5) Brown 3 5-7 11, Meriweather 4 3-5 11, Denton 2 3-4 7, Henderson 6 1-1 13, Hudson 15 0-0 30, Charles 1 0-1 2, Borker 3 5-9 II, Hill 1 0-0 2, Sojourner 2 0-0 4, Will-oughbv 2 0-0 4. Totals 39 17-27 95. Indiana 21 30 24 102 Atlanta 22 14 34 Fouled Out Meriweather, fouls Indiana 29, Atlanta 33. TechnicalAtlanta Coach Brown, Hudson. Phoenix Open PHOENIX (AP) First-round scores Thursday in the 4200,000 Phoenix Open Golf Tournament on the par 36-35 71 Phoenix Country Club course: Vic Regalado 33-3366 Danny Edwards 34-3367 Jerry Pate 35-3267 George Burns 33-3467 Larry Nelson 34-3468 Dave Stockton 35-3469 Keith Fergus 33-3669 Mike Morlev 33-3669 Tom Weiskopf 35-3469 Lon Hinkle 34-3569 Cesar Sanudo 35-3469 Homero Bloncos 35-34 69 Gory McCord 34-3549 Woodv Blackburn 35-3469 George Johnson 35-3570 Bob Lunn 37-3370 Bobby Wodkins 36-3470 Joy Hoas 35-3570 Bob Gilder 35-3570 Fuzzy Zoeller 34-3670 Orville Moody 37-3370 Hubert Green 35-3570 Gibbv Gilbert 35-3570 Mark Pfeil 33-3770 Dave Hill 38-3371 Garv Groh 35-3671 Rod Funseth 35-3671 Paul Purtzer 35-3671 John Gentile 34-3771 George Archer 36-3571 Mike Hill 37-3471 Hale Irwin 34-3771 Bruce Lietzke 35-3671 George Cadle 35-367) Mac McLendon 36-3571 Joe Porter 35-3671 Bill Brosk 35-3772 Chi Chi Rodriguez 39-3372 Tony Jacklin 37-3572 Lyn Loft 36-3672 Bill Colfee 35-3772 Morris Hatalsky 37-3572 Ed Dougherty 37-3572 Rik Massengale 37-3S 72 Bob Wynn 38-3472 Don January 35-3772 Bill Johnston 36-3672 Andy Bean 35-3772 Peter Oosterhuis 38-3472 Jack Fleck 35-3772 Bud Allin 36-3672 Allen Miller 35-3772 Miller Barber 35-3772 Bill Garrett 363672 Tommy Aaron 35-3772 Steve Taylor 35-3772 Ron Cerrudo 35-3873 Bobbv Mitchell 35-38 73 Rod Curl 38-3573 George Knudson 37-3673 Frank Mize 37-3673 Bill Kratzert 37-3673 Gil Morgan 36-3773 Tom Purtzer 35-38 73 Jim Colbert 36-3773 Phil Rodgers 38-3573 Phil Ferranti 37-3673 Babe Hiskey 36-3773 Gene Littler 37-3673.

Don Poolev 36-3773 Fred Marti 38-3674" David Glenz 37-3774 Mark Hayes 38-3674 Lonny Wodkins 36-3874 Tom Jenkins 37-3774 John Schroeder 36-3874 Andy North 37-3774 Mike Reid 38-3674 John Jackson 37-3774 Mike Reasor 38-3674 Football Game Scheduled HUMBOLDT A tackle football game between independent teams from North Side and Old Hickory will play the Humboldt Daily Park Bombers today at 2:30. AAcCovey May Return SAN FRANCISCO AP) Willie McCovey may be playing with the San Francisco Giants when the 1977 baseball season opens. McCovey reached contract agreement with San Francisco on Thursday but whether he plays again is conditioned upon his ability to make the team in spring training. After 13 years with the Giants, McCovey was traded to the San Diego Padres in October 1973 for pitcher Mike Caldwell. He was a pinch hitter with the Oakland A's part of last season but played out his option.

The big slugger has a major league career total of 465 home runs. His annual salary reportedly peaked at $125,000. Tito Fuentes, another former Giant traded to San Diego, also has expessed an interest in returning to San Francisco. Fuentes, with an annual pay of about $75,000, went unclaimed in the draft. He said he was offered the same salary after batting .263 for San Diego last season, but he said he "will not lower myself to play for the same money." Both McCovey and Fuentes live in the San Francisco Bay area.

Arizona Arizona Accept PAC-8 TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) Arizona State University and the University of Arizona announced their formal acceptance Thursday of membership in the Pacific-Eight Conference effective July 1, 1978. The action came on the heels of a telegram from the other six Western Athletic Conference schools saying they expected the two Arizona universities to fulfill their football scheduling commitments for the next five years. $-1 en's RShlMii SOUTH Beck lev 78, Salem 76 Berry Col 71, Tennessee Temple 69 Bluefield 93, Radford 78 Coastal Carolina 106, Morris 70 Coppin St 96, Shaw 62 Furmon 88, Jacksonville, Fla. 74 Georgetown, Ky.

89, Union. Ky. 88, OT Kentucky St 73, Carson Newman 62 King Col 84, Virginia Col 59 Lenoir Rhyne 86, Barber-Scotia 79 Lipscomb Col 87, Belmont Col 80 Memphis St 82, Oklahoma City 72 Mercer 82, Culver-Stockton 57 NE Louisiana 101, Texas-Arlington 60 Newberry 86; Erskine 66 Oglethorpe 63, Shorter 61, OT Old Dominion 83, Ga. Southern 82, OT Potomac St 91, Cecil CC, Md. 60 Mississippi 93, Lamar 90 SW Louisiana 81, Louisiana Tech 72 Stetson 74, Marshall 63 New Orleans 76, Samford 57 Georgia 97, Loras 90 MIDWEST Bethany Naz.

83 Evangel Ma 63 Cent Methodist 95, Mid-America Naz. 68 Dakota-Wes 81, Dakota St. 67 DePauw 88, St. Edwards, Tex. 65 Eureka 81, Principle 55 Friends 84, Tabor 65 Illinois 89, Ohio St 72 Illinois Wesl 91, Park 63 Indiana St 74, Centenary 71 Jamestown, N.

D. 94, Bismarck JC 74 Mt. Marty 79, Concordia-Neb. 74 Michigan 102, Northwestern 65 Michigan St 84, Wisconsin 61 Minot St 76, Mayville St 67 Muskingum 83, Ohio Weslevan 70 Northern, S.D. 64, Black Hills St.

59 Ohio Dom. 58, Mt. Vernon Naz. 57 Purdue 80, Indiana 63 -St. Joseph's, Ind.

81, Wis-Platte. file 77 Tri-State 108, Hillsdale. Mich. 82 Valley City 81, Dickinson St 77 Wayne, Neb. 91, Cbodron St 81 Wilmington, Ohio 78, luffton 73 San Francisco 95 Portland 73 SAN FRANCISCO Redmond 7 0-0 14, Hardy 7 0 2 14, Cor-twright 5-5 15, Bovnes 9 2-2 20, Cox 5 2-3 12, Williams 0 2-3 2, Thompson 5 0-3 10, Randall 1 2-3 4, Gllberg 0 2-4 2, Hamilton 1 0-0 2.

Totals 40 15-25 95. PORTLAND (73) Downey 1 0-1 2, Williams 2 0-0 4, Heller 7 2-2 16, Cook 7 0-1 14, Krueger 1 2-2 4, Dixon 0 0-1 0, Kintz 0 0-0 0, Dudley 0 0-0 0, Logan 7 7-9 21, Lee 1 0-0 2, McCullough 5 0-0 10. Totals 31 11-16 73. Halftime San Francisco 46, Portlond 38. Fouled out Cook.

Total louls Portland 23, San Francisco 21. A 3,680. It's that time again, guys! Marberry's ANNUAL WINTER CLEARANCE SALE up to Come in today and check the selection Milwaukee 119 Buffalo 111 BUFFALO (111) Dantlev 10 3-4 23, Gianelli 3 0-0 6, Shumate 4 4-5 12, DiGregorio 1 0-0 2, R. Smith 10 2-2 22, Averitt 3 2-2 8, Abdul-Aziz 4 2-2 10, Foster 2 0-2 4, Williams 1 4-5 6, Adams 7 2 3 16, Gerard 1 0-0 2. Totals 46 19-25 111.

4 Madison South Shopping Plaza Open 'til 8 Fri. Night Gary Wintz 36-38-74.

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