The Bulletin. (Bend, OR) 1963-current, December 20, 1963, Page 8, Image 8

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1AST TIME THEY MET . . -"Klck 'em high, girls" would be a good theme for this bit of
action last weekend when Bend and Klamath Falls met on the local hardboards. Offering
photog Nat Bull a three-legged Lick is the Pels' big Gene Kingsbury, 23. At right is fall
Terry Ash, 40. John Lundgren of Bend is at left. The two play again tonight. Bend won last
time in an upset, 55-50.
A LOOK AT
23 SPORTS
Pokes favored to
hold off Panthers
-TJ by Web Ruble
Bulletin Sports Editor
' What would a weekend of
(ports be without the offering
qf a few comments on the out
come of things?
' It's time to go out on a limb
... .even though it is without
sufficient knowledge on which
to base It. But, with a nose to
the wind, a few calculations
tfcom the old weather vane him
self, Phil Brogan, and a few
mathematical formulas, here it
is:
Redmond's wrestling Panth
ers, determined to dislodge the
defending district champion
Crook County Cowboys from
their crown, will come within
three points (possibly two) of
)icating them at Bend tomorrow
in the Central Oregon tourna
ment. They won't do it, how
ever. : Prineville will reign. Coach
Bill lngling though, isn't that op
'Umistic. Hie Sportslooker is go
ing, rather, with tho overall
picture gained from brief con
versations witli oilier local mat
mentors.
lngling wants no part of this
kind of talk. All lie is hoping
for is "a good showing."
COURT BATTLE AT K-FALLS
Tonight in Klamath Kalis a
rematch between the Bend La
va Bear basketballers and the
Klamath Pelicans has the lead
ing interest in Central Oregon,
and perhaps even in the Inter
mountain Conference.
Bend, upset winner Inst Fri
day night by a 55-50 tally, will
be' hard pressed to do it again
tonight. This time it is in the
Pels' lair, and the taller boys
from down south are expected
to turn the Bruins six feet un
der. Take It from the pump house
coinputors. . .Bend will drop
the f r a c a s by about eight
points, but only after a har-cm-scarem
go around. (Com
ment: quite frankly, It might do
the Bruins a lot of good If Uiey
dropped this one. It's better to
Joso any Dig neao tendency
right now than to wait until the
chips are down In conference
piny.)
Other predictions: Madras
will avenge a defeat from Ks-
I For Christmas
. . , ,
g husband Is a ranch-
tr, logger or sports
man, Ine new
MOUNTAINMAN
JACK makes an ,
Ideal Christmas
present. 42" and
At" heights, I year
unconditional
guarantee.
21.50
for fete At
Mo:ty & Van Dyk
( Prineville
Redmond
Auto Supply
Redmond
tacada last weekend. Coach Bob
Allord's Buffs will find a way
to hold down Estacada's 5-8
phenom Howard Durand long
enough to eke out a win. Basis
for call: home maples for the
Buffs plus the certainty that
the odds will not permit Dur
and's being that "red hot"
again this weekend. Last time
he bombed the hoop to the tune
of 36 points.
If Bend is up against it at
Klamath, the host bisters Out
laws tonight stand an excellent
chance of being annihilated
again on their home floor. Com
ing to town is McKenzie High
of Blue River, an A-2 aggrega
tion that usually has opponents
on the run in its own circles.
KINNEY RECALLED
Leo Davis, prep sports writer
on the Oregonlan, came out
witli a good column Thursday
about ex-Ileim mentor Glen
Kinney. Kinney left Bend after
the 1959-60 season and went for
a sojourn to Bakersfield, Calif.
Now he is back in Oregon,
coaching at Corvallis High
School. Local court fans saw
him in a twin win last weekend
at Prineville.
For those who believe ath
letics (all of them) are better
in California than in mid-Oregon,
heed Iheso words by Kin
ney through Leo Davis.
"For most of Uie students at
East Bakersfield (enrollment 3,
500) basketball was a part-time
hobby. 'Very few kids actually
believed in it enough to play
the year around,' Kinney ob
served. 'Each year I had a boy
voted the most outstanding
player in tho area, but taking
the players as a whole, I'd say
they didn't have the savvy of
these kids in Corvallis. . .they
hadn't seen as much of the
game'."
Oregon State
faces tough
weekend tests
By United Press International
Oregon State's 10th ranked
basketball team faces one of its
toughests tests of the season this
weekend when Indiana's tall,
fast-breaking Hoosiers come to
the Northwest.
The teams will meet tonight
In Corvallis and Saturday night
m Portland s Memorial Colise
um.
Coach Branch McCracken's
Hoosiers have been over the
100-point mark four times this
season, against Notre Dame,
Southern Illinois, Missouri and
Detroit. They scored an 18-point
victory over Detroit, a team
that forced defending NCAA
champion Loyola into overtime
before succumbing.
Indiana has lost twice, to
North Carolina and Kansas
State.
The visitors are paced by
Identical 6-5 twins, Tom and
Dick Van Arsdale, at forwards.
The other starters are Larry
Cooper, 6-7; Steve Redenbaugh
6-2, and John McGlockin, 6-5.
Oregon State coach Slats Gill
plans to counter with seven-foot
Mel Counts at center, 6-3 Scott
Eaton and 6-2 Frank Peters at
forwards, and Jim Jarvis and
Rick Whelan at guards.
The Beavers have a 5-1 re
cord after dividing a series at
California last weekend.
Oregon State will be the only
major Oregon team in action
until Sunday. The University of
Portland takes on Seattle Uni
versltv in Seattle that afternoon.
Oregon is idle until the Far
west Classic in Portland Dec
26.
SIGN FOR FIGHT
PITTSBURGH (UPD-Kenny
Lane of Muskegon, Mich., and
Johnny Bizzarro of Erie, Pa.,
have signed for a 10-round bout
in Erie's Tech Memorial Gym
nasium Jan. 16. Lane is a light
weight and Bizzarro fights in
the junior lightweight division
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luxuriously fift-pack
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BEAM'S
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In Delft Blue Bottle, 90
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The Bulletin, Friday, December 20, 1963
West's best face tough
tilts with top-ranked 5's
By United Press International
They start separating the
men from the boys in West
Coast basketball circles tonight
when the areas strongest
squads take on some of the best
teams from the rest of the na
tion. Unbeaten UCLA, for instance,
meets Baylor tonight and
Creighton Saturday. Creighton,
led by All-America candidate
Paul Silas, also has not tasted
defeat.
Stanford, which looked good
winning three games and then
took time out for exams, faces
improving Sn Jose State to
night and Kansas Monday.
And Oregon State, third Pa
cific Coast power off games so
far, hosts Indiana twice this
weekend.
The West Coast should find
out if it has any of the na
tion's 10 best teams after these
contests are played.
In other action tonight, South
ern California opens a two
game series against Nebraska,
while California is at the Sun
Devil Classic at Tempe, Ariz.,
to face the likes of Oklahoma,
Michigan State and Arizona
State.
Long Beach State swaps foes
with UCLA, taking on the rug
ged Creighton squad tonight.
A wild game at San Jose
Thursday night saw the Univer
sity of San Diego blow a big
lead over favored Santa Clara
and then come back in the fi
nal 30 seconds to pull out a
TRAP SHOOT SUNDAY
Clay pigeons will fall at the
Bend Trap Club Sunday.
An open turkey shoot (indi
vidual competition) com
mences at 10 a.m. All shoot
ers will be paired according
to ability. It will be the sec
ond event of the season.
Jim Lance, local shoot en
thusiast, hat announced that
it it open to the public.
Everyone Is welcome. Shot
guns and ammunition will be
available on the grounds,
RETURN PLAYERS
NEW YORK (UPI) Goalie
Gilles Villemure, center Gordon
Labossiere and left wing Dave
Richardson were returned by
the New York Rangers Thurs
day to their Baltimore farm
club in the American Hockey
League. The players had been
brought up when a rash of in
juries hit Ranger regulars.
66-65 decision.
Russ Vrankovich of the los
ers led scorers with 22 points,
but barely missed a half-court
shot at the final buzzer that al
most turned the tide. San Diego
won the game at the free throw
line, where it hit 26 of 32 shots.
Touring Western teams con
tinued to take their lumps. Utah
crunched Washington State, 102
71, and Assumption College
dumped Los Angeles State, 92
76. Western Washington upset
Idaho, 71-66, and it was Azusa
78 LaVerne 75.
Two holiday tournaments
opened In Southern California.
In the Kris Kringle Klassic
at Anaheim, Nevada Southern
looked like the team to beat
when it downed defending
champion Chapman, 80-67. Si
las Stepp hit 32 for the winners.
Other first round results: Se
attle Pacific 82 Orange State
76, San Francisco State 73 Sac
ramento State 70, Cal Poly of
Pomona 76 Redlands 60.
At the Holiday Tourney at
San Diego, first round results
showed Cal Poly defeating
Whittier, 79-64, and Cal Western
defeating Wayland College of
Texas, 54-49, in the school di
vision. In the service division,
it was Vandenberg Air Force
Base 83 Phibpac 70 and San
Diego Marine Recruit Depot 71
Hamilton Air Force Base 59.
Bear Cubs belt
Baby Cats 49-24
By Mike Stahlberg
Bulletin Staff Writer
Coach Harold Pitcher's Bear
Cubs defeated the Baby Panth
ers in a 49-24 basketball rout
here last night in the opening
game of the season's sophomore
hoop schedule.
The locals kept the Panthers
from sinking a single field goal
in the first period to build up
a 12-2 lead bv the end of the
first period. From then on the
Bruins steadily increased their
lead until they reached tneir a
nal 25 point advantage.
Redmond's Mike Skeen was
top scorer, using a quick jump
shot to good advantage. He
Doured in 13 points. Bend's well
rounded attack found four in
dividuals sharing high - points
honors. Alan Mellott, D u n n 1 e
Hanks. Garv English, and Lar
ry Gray each tallied eight
points in the winning cause.
Bruce May was right behind
the leaders with seven counters.
Redmond (24) Skeen 13,
Hill 4. Johnson 1, Durfee 2, and
Malick 0. Scoring subs: Van
Matre 2, Walters 1, and Davis
1.
Bend (49) May 7, Westfall
3, Mellott 8, Wyatt 5, and Eng
lish 8. Scoring subs: Hanks 8,
Hall 2, and Gray 8.
WHL Standings
By United Press International
. WLTPrsGFGA
Denver 19 9 2 40 126 76
Seattle 14 11 3 31 97 82
Los Angls 14 12 S 31 88 101
Portland 11 16 4 26 90 104
Vancouver 12 16 2 26 95 101
San Fran 12 18 2 26 90 122
Thursday's Results
Los Angeles 3 Denver 2
Friday's Schedule
Seattle at Vancouver
Portland at Denver
TO WISH YOU" .
la very merry Chistmas, and thank you for 11.
ffyour kindness and loyalty is the purpose!
Wat thin, our sincere holidav araetina.fi
From All Of Us At
STROPS AUTOMOTIVE
AUTO PARTS MACHINE SHOP Engine Rebuilding
168 Greenwood Ph. 382-2442
ALL MAKES OF CYCLES
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See our new 80 ec WP w"u . .
Trail Machines! 1405 S. 3rd 382-0881
t Alkswagc'n or AMiaT&t, AT;
Some people think it never
needs service.
It's easy to get thai impression.
How many other makes hove been driven
60,000 miles with the original pistons and cylinders
intact? How many ordinarily get 40,000 miles on
the same tires?
That doesn't mean the Volkswagen never needs
service. It does.
To gel the most out of It, have your VW serv
iced regularly. We call it preventive maintenance.
We'll give you a boot on preventive maintenance
for the first 30,000 miles you drive. And every
30,000 miles after that.
In the book for new VWs, for instance, coupons
stort you off with two free maintenance services.
One at 300 miles. One at 3,000 miles. Alter thor.
the coupons remind you to bring your VW in for
specified services at regular intervals. It's th
best way to keep your VW in top shape.
Service is so important that Volkswagen won't
sell cars where they can't be properly handled.
By factory-trained mechanics, tike ours.
Parts are economical and quickly installed.
There isn't a Volkswagen made that you cont
get parts for easily. Most are interchangeable
from year to year. (You con have a 1963 fender
put onyour '58 model with 10 bolls. It fits perfectlyj
We pride ourselves on this fact: Our service
is as good as the car. Ask anybody.
MID-OREGON MOTORS
1515 So. 3rd (South City Limits)
Ph. 382-1711
Read Bulletin Classifieds
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Did you have cold, drafty rooms and high fuel bills
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substantial fuel savings year after year. Just add
easy-to-pour Zonolite over your old insulation, level
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10 for $1.00 100 for 9.00
25 for $2.50 127 for $11.60
50 for $4.75 254 for $22.75
Miller yard prices. Delivery slightly extra
ALUMINUM STORM DOORS
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8:00 A.M. till
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thru Saturday
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