o o o o o wpnsing mm m By Web Ruble Bulletin Staff Writer It seemed impossible but they did it. . . Those Lava Bears, who never heard of Klamath Falls' fame, dramatically turned the tables on the dopesters last night when they picked up their third consecutive basketball win BIG BEAR HUG Bend High School caiaba-man par excellence Jack Ward geU a mobbing from two members of the Growlers, an all-male (rather noisy) rooting section. Mike Shepherd, right, is Growler leader. Fan at left is unidentified. (Photo by Mike Stahlberg). 3rd quarter deluge Outlaws take bad 64-30 basketball shellacking SpecUl to The Bulletin SISTERS Steve Shehan poured in 15 points here last night for the Sisters High School Outlaws, but his efforts went to no avail, as visiting Condon turned on the fast break and the points in the second half to annihilate the locals 64-30. "It was one of those games that should have ended tit the half," Sisters Coach Roy Runco Boxing: refs to count after bell SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - "Saved by the bell!" one of boxing s ageless cries seemed destined to start getting the full count today from the California State Athletic Commission. The group proposed Friday that the referee continue his count over a fighter even if the round had come to an end. And the gong only would ring when the count was finished or the boxer had made t up from the canvas. Tills was one of 13 rules changes which the commission recommended to increase safety measures in California s profes sional bouts. The entire list comes up for a public hearing at another commission meeting next month. Then it is sched uled to become law 30 days after that. In another Important propos al, gloves would bo raised in weight by two pounds in nil divisions, pudding would be in creased on the lower strand of the ring ropes and time out would be called until a boxer recovered his lost mouthpiece. Harry W. Falk, Jr., chairman of the commission said that the roles were drawn up and for warded to C!ov. Kdmund (5. Brown and the state legislature after the governing body re quested such a study, Brown also has had a personal fact finder, Sol Silverman, checking Into boxing safety. Falk said Friday that the commission had not seen any of Silverman's written recommendations. ' "Put I cannot visualize any thing now adopted by the com mission which would not have been advocated by attorney Silverman," commissioner Dan 0. Kilroy said. The latter is a physician and former chairman of the commission. If the rules are adopted. Sloves used from the flyweight trough the welterweight ranks would be increased from six to eight ounces while Uie increase would be from eight to 10 in all higher weight classes. Proposals to give the lower rope extra padding followed the death in Los Angeles last March 25 of Davey Moore, who succumbed after losing h 1 s world featherweight title to Sugar Ramos. Moore sustained brain dam age when he was knocked over backward and his lover neck hit the bottom strand in a rare accident. I o by bombing the red-clad Peli cans right off the floor. Paced by seniors Jack Ward, 16 points, and Mike Clark, 14, the Bend High School maple court men emerged from a 23 23 halftime deadlock to turn un der a much taiiur, highly favor ed crew from down south, 55-50. "It was our good shooting and said today. "We sure took it on the chin in that third quarter," he added. Runco was pointing out how the Condon crew out-scored his locals in that decisive third stanza, 25-5. Condon, leading only 19-16 at the half, had tried to net results from its full court press and fast break all through the first half. Suddenly, in the third quarter, it began working. And once the Condon hoop squad started roll ing, there was no stopping it. When the dust cleared at the end of the third frame the count was 44-21, and Sisters was out of the ball game. Three basketeers hit in the double figures for Condon. Stenchficld and Bamett tallied 12, Smith poured in 10. Tonight finds the Outlaws playing host again, but this time the opponent is Wheeler County. Wheeler nipped Culver in the final minutes in a league go last night. Box score: . Condon (64) (30) Sisters T. Bailey 2 6 Rowe Smith 10 4 Jacobson Beck 4 5 Burdick Ashonfeltcr 6 0 Hammack Myers 4 15 Shehan Subs: Condon J. Bailey 2, Auignon 2, Parrish 6, Stench ficld 12, Bamett 12, and John son 4. AIRS AFL CHAMPIONSHIP NEW YORK (UPI) - The American Football League championship game on Sun day, Jan. 5, will be televised by the American Broadcasting Co. from either San Diego or Oakland, Calif., starting at 4:15 p.m. EST. Neither dlvison race has been clinched. San Diego and Oak land are the only contenders re maining for the Western title, the conference which will host the game. v CASCADE BOWL FEATURES 10 ft I We Custom Drilling Service: Also See Our Large Selection of Bags, Shoes. a I CASCADE BOWL I g. 744 Bond Ph. 382-1392 our defense that did it," Bend Coach Chuck Hudson comment ed after the game. "But, boy, we've sure got a lot of work to do," he added. Visiting Klamath Falls, complete-with tall, husky bohunks of the 6-4 variety, for most of the game just didn't seem to Puget Sound belts Pioneers By United Press International Puget Sound walloped highly regarded Lewis and Clark 81-55 and Pacific Lutheran defeated Linfield ' ' 92-80 in basketball games at Tacoma, Wash., Fri day night. The Oregon teams switch op ponents tonight. Bob Sprague and Bob Abelsett each scored 17 points for Puget Sound, which led 40-25 at half time. Jim Boutin collected 26 for Lewis and Clark. Pacific Lutheran, with seven foot Hans Albertsson getting 27 points, was ahead 48-41 at half time and held a 75-50 lead mid way in the last half. John Lee had 21 for Linfield. In other small college games, Leon Johnson scored 19 points to lead Pacific to a 94-52 vic tory over Oregon Tech at Kla math Falls. George Wachter tallied 28 as E a s t e r n Oregon won over Whitman 76-64 at La Grande, and Northwest Naza- rene upended Southern Oregon 89-83 at Leview despite a 34 point outburst by Jerry Shults. Kirk McNeil hit a 10-foot jump shot with 27 seconds left in overtime to give Willamette a 68-66 win over Humboldt State at Salem. The same teams play again tonight. Ducks to host Wyoming '5' EUGENE (UPI) Oregon's basketball Ducks, winless in three starts this season, play the Wyoming Cowboys at Mc Arthur Court tonight. Wyoming defeated Washington 74-61 in Seattle Friday night. Oregon Coach Steve Helko said lie probably will open with Steve Jones and Jim Johnson, each 6-5, and 6-4 Larry Cooley as his front line with either Jones or Johnson at center. His guards will be Steve Bamett and Elliott Gleason. I I I New Brunswick BOWLING BALLS Feature One Day airs have the gumption to stay with the more plert Bruins. To some it looked ias if the larger Pels were tryiig to "coast through." Screen Giants Actually, much of it can be attributed to Bend's skillful ap plication of "screening off" the big mn. It worked to good advantage.; Klamath Falls did not have its shooting eye, eith er. The red - bedecked Pels, though shot down in the third and early burth quarters, kept a cool head throughout the con test until the waning seconds. But there it blew. . .and the game with tt. A last second dive for the ball and too much lip service to the officials put Bend in the dri ver's seat alter the Lava Bears almost handed the Pels the game by throwing the ball away. Bend, who broke away from the Pels in the third quarter, found themselves hamstrung in the last minute by a full court press, and couldn't crack it. Four straight turn overs netted the visitors eight tallies. Two field goals by Steve Baker and one apiece by Lanny Guyer and Larry Binney closed the gap on the leading Bruins to 52-50. Bend, in the mean A....f iltHi, The Bulletin, Saturday, December 14, 1963 Wheeler nips Bulldogs in casaba league go, 51-48 Special to The Bulletin FOSSIL Foul shots spelled the difference here last night when the Culver High School Bulldogs fell victim to the Wheeler County casaba squad NBA Standings By United Preu International Eastern Division W. L, Pet. .909 .613 Boston Cincinnati Philadelphia New York 20 2 19 12 11 14 .440 8 22 .267 Western Division W L. Pet. .630 .586 Los Angeles 17 10 St. Louis 17 12 San Francisco 12 13 .480 Baltimore 8 16 .333 Detroit 6 17 .261 Friday's Results Boston 111 Philadelphia 84 Balti. 116 San Fran. 114 (OT) (Only games scheduled) Saturday's Games Cincinnati at Boston Philadelphia at New York Detroit at St. Louis Baltimore at Los Angeles WHL Standings By United Press International WLTPtsGFGA 16 8 2 34 106 68 Denver Seattle Los Angls Portland San Fran Vancouver 14 10 13 10 10 14 11 16 9 15 31 94 77 29 80 85 24 83 96 24 84 110 20 82 83 Friday's Results Vancouver 4 Los Angeles 1 Seattle 7 Portland 4 Saturday's Schedule Vancouver at San Francisco Los Angeles at Denver We've 9ttcU$iHU THINGS While this insurance agency doesn't employ a pneumatio pick to get the necessary information bo that we can do a gnod job in recommending and putting together a good insurance program, wo do think that it is important that we dig into things. This means that we must know the h.tiards which surround you, your family and your busi ness. Vie must know something about your obligations, your contracts, your dependents. You can talk to a good insurance agent with as much freedom as you can your doctor or your lawyer or your minister. OUR ADVICE COSTS YOU NOTHING LUJIABERMENS INSURANCE AGENCY 1024 Bond St. 1 upenoi time, had managed to can only three points. Six seconds re mained when Bend held that meager two point lead. Pels Scramble It was at this moment, after the Pels had picked up three straight loose balls, that Lan ny Guyer tried to gobble up a fourth one. It proved disastrous. He fouled Bend's Mike Clark who was having trouble getting the ball down court. Clark then stepped to the gift toss line on a one-and-one, and canned them both. At this point the Pel players and the coach began a violent protest against officials Jack Lutz and Kay Garrison. It resulted in a technical foul. Doug Williams, Bend captain, then stepped to the foul line for two shots. He made one and missed one. When the dust cleared and Bend took control of the ball out of bounds, the locals were safely in front 55-50. Seconds later the buzzer sounded, pandemonium split eardrums and delirious Bend fans poured onto the floor and mobbed the victors. Thus the Pels were vanquished. Pell Led Early Klamath Falls led most of the first half, though only by a in a Deschutes League opener, 51-48. If Culver expects to take Con don tonight at home, the Bull dogs will have to keep trom fouling at crucial moments. It spelled defeat last night. A nip-and-tuck contest all the way, Wheeler County overtook the lead the last time with about two or three minutes le maining. Several gift tosses put the home town crew out in front. They never relinquished it from that point on. Don Steinbeck led the scoring parade, pouring in 17 tallies, but Dan Ostander of Wheeler County was right behind him with a 15-point effort. Two oth er Bulldogs hit in the double figures. Rick Urback dumped in 10 as did Stan Earnest. Cox, a high scoring Wheeler substitute, soared to the fore where his teammates didn't and wound up with 12 counters. It was one of those games where the lead was changing hands constantly. Wheeler had the advantage of playing on its home court. Tonight it's Culver's turn to play at home. Facing Culver on the hardboards is Condon, a lop-sided victor over Sisters last night. The greatest lead in last night's contest was held brief ly by Wheeler, six points, in the third frame. Box score: Wheeler Co. (51) Ostander 15 Reed 1 Wham 8 Lovell 5 Marks 5 (48) Culver 10 Urback 5 Wollam 17 Steinbeck 4 Vails 10 Earnest Scoring subs: Wheeler Da hill 2, Cox 12. and Nickalson 3. Culver Porkomy 2. 382-2421 Penrains, 55-5 couple of points. The lead had changed hands three times right at the beginning. Klamath Falls was on top at the quart er 12-8. Bend overtook the visi tors momentarily in the second quarter on a gift toss by Wil liams, but the Pels blitzed to the fore again. Jack Ward sank two foul shots just before the Intermission buzzer to knot the count at 23-all. Klamath tried to get a shot away, but couldn't. The two squads retired at a deadlock. Noticeably the largsst contri buting factor in the Bruin vic tory was the Lava Bears' tre mendous execution of defense in the third quarter. Ward, play ing extremely alert, stole the ball from the visitors four con secutive times. Ward bombed the hoop for 10 of Bend's 15 points in that crucial stanza. At one point, he had all of them. The Pels fell to a 9-point deficit before rallying to close it to 38 34 at the quarter mark. Fourth Quarter Bend's sharpness on defense carried over to about midway In the fourth frame. When Bend took time out with 3:22 remain ing in the contest, the Bruins were out in front 5042. Then the rains came, and the Bears Pel JV's top Bend's Lava Bear junior var sity basektball squad took it on the chin last night by way of a 57-48 trouncing at the hands of the visiting Klamath Falls JV's in the hoop season's first action for the locals. Bend fell behind early in the contest and the Pels poured it on hard and fast to build up a 30-17 halftime margin. The Bear Cubs were able to close the gap to an eight point difference in the third quarter but could do little more than keep pace with the visitors after that. UHJ "TTT V MEMO TO GRANDPARENTS P I) had to scramble to stay alive. I Klamath Falls had the upper j hand in the rebound department but still didn t dominate the boards. George Woodworm, himself an 11 point contributor, often snaked down rebounds from his huskier adversaries, and other Bruins picked up the "stray" bounders. Klamath, who used its great height to advantage at home last weekend when it dumped Roseburg twice, saw only one of the giants hitting in the dou ble figures last night. It was 6-6 ; Gene Kingsbury who dumped in ! 11. Terry Ash, another tall one, ! contributed eight. Doug Wil-I Hams batted in nine points for the Lava Bears. Bears Must Work Bend's undefeated Bears, now ; victors three times over, has an j improvement task before them. Last night may have seen the' locals with the jitters. Bend, it ! seemed, tried its best to give the Pels the ball game several times. Erratic passing, especially of the cross-court nature, resulted in countless turnovers. Bend hit a splurge of this disease in the first quarter and then periodi cally throughout the contest. It wasn't the Pels' defense that Bend juniors Bend's Rod Pitcher led all scoring by gunning in 27 points for the Bruins, 21 of those in the second half, while L. Coon led the visitor's attack with a meld of 12 points. Scoring: Klamath Falls (57) Robbins 9, Bauer 7, Coleman 8, Coon 12, Lummans 11, Eccles 3, Sandmeyer 5 and Lyman 2. Bend (48) M. McGinnis 2, Mellott 0, Arnett 2, Pitcher 27, English 2, Cannon 8, Horn 2, Fraser 1, N. McGinnis 2, and May 2. PLAN TO SPEND THIS CHRISTMAS in the warm and lively company of your children and grandchildren! Christmas means so much more when the family's all together. And Trail ways can help unite you with direct thru-bus con nections to most any point in the nation. Round trip fares are remarkably low ... and traveling comfort is downright luxurious. Trailways luxury liners pamper your every wish, with six-way-ad justable reclining seats, big pan oramic windows, air condition ing, even rest rooms aboard! See your Trailways agent now for tickets and reservations and go see the kids this Christmas! TRAILWAYS CAN HELP YOU COMPLETE THE FAMILY CiRCLE THIS CHRISTMAS PACIFIC TRAILWAYS 1068 BOND in BEND 6 31-1151 .,r.,Ml.; ;.;,..iafegwiBJ was causing it, either. To quote Coach Hudson, "just sloppy passing. . .we had our shaky moments." Eend, also, fell apart offen sively in those final moments. Passes went wMd and dribbles were bobbled. But, the Bruins had the point bulge. And when the pressure was really on. . , plunk! In the ball went. Rematch Friday ' Klamath Falls will have its chance at vengence next Friday night, when the Pels play host "We've got some work to do be fore then," Coach Hudson offer ed todav. K. Falls 12 11 11 16-50 Bend 8 15 15 17-55 Long box: Bend (55) fga fg fta ft tp Williams .. 11 1 9 7 9 Lundgren 9 2 10 4 Woodworth 6 3 7 5 11 Smith 6 0 2 1 1 Ward 15 6 5 4 16 Clark 11 5 5 4 14 Klamath (50) Guyer 9 3 3 1 7 Kingsbury 11 5 5 1 11 Ratzke 10 111 Jendrzjewski ..8 3 4 1 7 Ash 13 4 0 0 8 Binney 6 2 10 4 Baker 4 3 10 6 Moore 4 2 2 2 6 GEORGIA COACH RESIGNS ATHENS, Ga. (UPI)-Bobby Proctor, Georgia defensive backfield coach and captain of 1954 Arkansas football team, has submitted his resignation ef fective Jan. 31. "Proctor came to Georgia with former head coach Johnny Griffith who was replaced last week by Vince Dooley. BENNETT'S MACHINE SHOP Welding & Repelring Completely Equipped 1114 Roosevelt Ave. Bend Ph. 382-3762 (O.) O