TWO HERALD AND NEWS Friday. Feb. 2. 1945 Two Top Cage Tussles On KUHS Maple Tonight Pelicans Clash With Ashland Quint; Marines Collide With Music Makers By PAUL HAINES 1 tlto City of Roses and is prob- A double-header is sla.ed for If ' , Tho Music is ; trv for he ir inkers bopped Shannon's the !e wy,of the other nteht . to , Uk. ""disputed tonight on tho KUHS maple wlicn the Pelicans second coherence win posscssio ot first place in the season against Ashland at 7 JO v? ' . .. ,cau aild boasts and the Leathernecks from he "'J Vatterson Marine Barrack collide ' Morrie strcmich. Roy Jackson, Fees Music Makers of Poit and ' o'Connell in a clash immediately follow- a"d bY vlnt h the inn iho initinl tussle Coach Israel will send the ri,h Marhle r5ok has been Leathernecks on the hardwood H,nSn0 .ho K - all week h ' the opening tip-off with Burk drilling the K-men ail. ttccic n 10rward berths. now uerched oi, lhc 4cond ind Job" Cox and Joe Doniitro-"fp?- sn,?ihr, n Ivich at the backeourt positions. coiucrcnce ladder with three Friday night will be an cc wins against three losses for an : ning of fin e basketball for average of .500 per cent. The Klamath cage fans and tickets Grizzlies have bounced the Pel-1 are now on sale from marine icans once and Grants Pass I personnel or at the box office twice, while they have been i before the games. Price of ad plastcred once by the K-mcn I mission is 40 cents for students and twice by the raging Black i or military ana su cenus 10 cnu- Tornado of Medford. Cook will probably start either Palmer and Pope at for wards. Thorne at center, ana Track Bookies Move Into Collegiate Field LAWRENCE, Kit.. Feb. i W) Two protesting horseracing pub. Ushers todiy had what Phog Al ien iiid wit proof of hit stete- ment that BooKmeaers " Chi- closed horte parks are morine odd. on .U imporUnt fl.m.w into the intercollesiete betting! In a telram o Neau Dunn Held" land Heden M"I""' " ,,0i.. -i .i .v- rk.,iiliiind Record Alien, univefMiy ui x ,. wi ...v.-------- - , basketball coach and nt Lexington. Kf.. Allen furnl.hed foe of organised gamblina on1 a North Dearborn street addrau i r-Mtana where he laid the bookmaker operated. Dunn and Kirkpatrick had challenged Allen to prove hit statement concerning racing bookmakers and protetted that It was neither "legitimate or de: Mm i vou ta attempt shifting and Had Kirkpatrick. editors the blame for crookedness in !? .k- Th,Mhhred Record oi your own game . onto a sport which is entirely Innocent ol tne wrongdoing you attribute to it. celleae sports, named a cagoan at one "nationally known bookmaker who has operated racing forms and now is operat ing basketball torm charts with Tough Tony Ross Tangles With "Grey Mask" Tonight Three red-hot rasslinc bouts collides w ith the masked men-, are on deck tonight at Gladiat-1 ace and hu savage head oitl-v. or's eullv for Klamath bicep lony is nw; a t.r... ... fans. The headline event will see customer, however, Tough Tony Ross crunch cran-llh boy to wca ther the' iums with Mr. Stoneface in six i and tunic the hooded hoodlum. 10 minute rounds or two out oi. . While the ve. ed v.rmm re three floDS ! on Ms dreaoed head konks. Ross fancies himself as one of! Tony s pet hold is a oa-orcaK-the more rugged musclers on thc ; er w hich he has used to good 1 ad circuit and will get a fine chance : vantage in several tussles here to test his durability when he; ociorc. ibij By PAUL HAINES ian adults. 1 On Saturday night the marines ' will again swap buckets with j Fee's, this time at thc post gym nasium. Additional Dusses wm leave thc court house starting Rules Changes In Cage Sport Will Be Tested ACTION CALLED FOR With thc arrest and subse quent indictment on conspiracy charges of two Now York gamb lers, tne DasKct- ball situation blew wide open1 with a bung that startled the en t i re sports world. And vet, this Norccn and White at guards, or The Pelicans are due to mcor(iiir invited lo aend the themselves a ball game and will , c Saturdav at the Barracks really turn on the heat in an d ecd not-be escorted by a effort to dump their second-, m.rin. and mav also drive out Dlace opponents. The damp at mosphere that pervades the bot tom of the conference well is definitely unpleasant to the K-, men and they hope to lift them-; selves to a position on the third tier where better conditions pre-. vail. I The second game between , Coach Les Israel's boys from ! the Barracks and the rhythm ! kids from Portland will be one : of the top cage contests of the j year in Klamath Falls. Fee's is currently leading the j American league hop race in j in private cars if desired. Work Shoes : Logger Boots OREGON WOOLEN STORE Main and 8th Turnabout! SKIATOK. Okla.. Feb. 2 (P) Whenever Skiatok high school has a basketball game, the darndest things happen. An Owasso player dribbled the length of the court, plop ped a qoal in Skiatook's bas ket. Skiatook won by two points. The next week a Sperry player tried to do the same thing, but Skiatook didn't profit this time. He missed hit shot. Then came Collinsville. A Skiatook slayer fouled, and Collinsville lad confusedly stepped up and took his free throw for him." Made it, too. - Mvv VS Ymwr. LHere's your chance to cut - j Mileage Costsl" jj EXTRA-MILEAGE RECAPPIMO wodysar Extra-Mileage Hecapping spreads your lira dollar over many more miles, cuts mileage costs, may mean the difference between a working or an idle truck. Our specialists give smooth, alipplna, snin. ning tirea, deep, longer-lasting traction treads for safe, straight-line slops and starts over thousands of extra miles. No certificate needed. Bring In your worn truck ilret today for fast, low-cost dopend ! able recapping o keep your trucks rolling. 0RADI A CAMAIACKI 7.00x20 32x8 11.80 8.25-20 18.65 9.00-20 22.50 V mvici 8th ! Klamath STORII Phone 8141 i aswi'ssj torso twister in the northwest to throw the hooded heel ai.d will resort to every trick both in and out of the book to gain his end. i in the semi-windup tussle. ; rtoDuiar r"cie rcicasiro, inc v rca i n, ! assassin, will slug it out with 0"r , i burly "Blood and Guts'1 David-!Z " ,oi! time. XEW YORK. Peb. 2 (jPi son. Pete is also after a scrap . WitTi the gov Next Wedncsdav's Columbia-j with the "Grey Mask" and willjornmcn, crack Fordham basketball game will be going all out to dispose of his down on lorse be played under rules changes j rival in a hurry. , 11oing it was ob- suggested by riowara noDson. isiooa ana uuis nas pruveu Oregon university coach on j himself to be a hard man to leave, and by Julian Rice, New : handle and will have a great York bridge expert and cage 1 deal to say about thc situation, fan. He, also, has challenged thc Under Hobson's sucecstions a ! 'Mask'' and Promoter Mack Lil- field goal scored outside an arc ! lard may give thc nod to thc 21 feet away from the DasKct winner oi mis iracas provining will count three points, those in-', Tony doesn't dump the vicious side the arc the customary two. muscleman tonight. The foul zone also would be in- i A newcomer here, Georcs i HAINES creased in width from six to 12 j Dusctte, will make his grappling feet, thc three-second rule ap plying to tne enure area. Rice proposes to have a free throw made from the usual 15 foot mark count one point but would give the player an option of trying for a two-pointer from 21, feet out. On a two-goal foul no more than three points may be scored. debut at the Klamath Punch plaza in the opening bout when he tangles with Canadian Tar- zan Potvm. This fracas rounds out a .top notch card and Wally Moss will once again be the third man in the ring with the first fray slated to get underway at 8:30 P. m. Webfoots Face Important Cage Series With Huskies By The Associated Press Fortune may not . smile to night she may laugh right out loud. The hoop teams of the Uni versities of Washington and Oregon both will be courting the fickle old hussy, and if either loses not only this eve ning's brush but thc battle to morrow as well, you will find it off in a dark corner of the Pacific Coast conference north ern division shedding worn out basketballs for tears, Oregdn State, at the same time, will be scrambling desper ately to stay in the pennant picture, meeting the Univer sity of Idaho's winless but will ing Vandals. The situation as Washington and Oregon square off at Se attle is this: Washington can climb to with in a half-game of the lead with a double triumph. One Oregon victory would insure its con tinued hold on top spot and two wins would give it a top heavy edge for the rest of thc cam paign. By winning twice at Idaho while Oregon was losing two in Seattle. Oregon State could bounce into a first place tie. ' . , Idaho s scrappy young club, an almost-hero outfit in several of its games, might check the OSC Beavers if Coach Babe Brown has brewed some strat egy potion to check big Red Rocha, the Beaver center. Wash ington State stopped him Tues day and won easily; failed to hold him Wednesday and lost, although in a double-overtime thriller. Oregon's chore at Seattle is much tougher than it was when the Webfoots trounced thc Huskies twice at Eugene. Wash ington will have its navy train ees for these tilts, includina its scoring aces, Don McMillan and Bill Vandenburch. Washington has not lost a home tilt in con ference play, First-place Oregon has won seven, lost two; Oregon State's record is five opd four, Wash ington with four and four and Washington State with five and five are tied in third place and Idaho trails with six defeats. EASTERN WINS, 58-19 CHENEY, Feb. 2 (P) East ern Washington college defeated the McCaw hospital basketball team of Walla Walla last night, 58 to 19, with Pcrrault looping 21 points to pace the attack. Thc halftimc count was 28 to 6. WORK SHIRTS Tans and Blues Sites 14! lo 17 OREGON WOOLEN STORE 800 Main When in Medford Stay at HOTEL HOLLAND Thoroughly Modern Joe and Anne Earley Proprietors Domesticated! MARIETTA, Ga., Feb. 2 W) Maybe it's the shotgun short age that makes them so tame. Anyway, W. E. Carithers re ports: He parked his car and left a door open. Thirty minutes later he returned to get his coat. Inside the car was a pair of quail eating cracker crumbs dropped on the floor. viniK ! Mill inr boys who like to pick it up the j eay way would rcsori 10 uincr means and sources to feather their nests. The National Collegiate Ath letic association has apparently taken the ostrich stand that if no dangor can be seen, then there is simply no dangor. Wide awake college ofticials. of which Phog Allen, basketball coach of the University ol Kan sas, is the best example, repeat edly warned the NCAA that a blowup was sure to come. But with a complete disregard for these warnings and a blindness fortunately not characteristic ol athletic organisations as a whole, the NCAA let It ride. Now the blowup has conic as predicted. It is true thnt these two tinhorns will be punished and probably imprisoned, but for every two men of this Ilk there are 2000 more. This Incident Is only the start and will pick up momentum like a snowball roll ing downhill if it Is not checked for once and for all. Law enforcement agencies may helo to a great extent, but the actual blame for the situa tion lies with the college heads and the NCAA who have failed to take proper precautions In ad vance oi this catastrophe. Incidents such as this endan ger tho future of tho entire sports world whether it be football, hockey, baseball, golf, or boxing. What sports needs' ond needs badly, is a group of men to deal with thc various problems that are bound to arise with foresight and Intelligence. Baseball had Its "Black Sox" scandal and Commissioner Kene saw Mountain Landis, csar ol or ganized baseball, was born. With his nomination to the post oi grand commissioner, the dia mond game was run with nary a breath of scandal for 20 years. . Why is it not feasible to ap point one man to head each par ticular type of sport? A man who is familiar with thc groundwork and thc whys and wherefores of that particular kind of athletic game. Such men would be difficult to find now, it is true, but alter tha duration of the war, why not give it a whirl? The one thing most needed by sports as a whole is competent men to head ath letic programs of all kinds, both in Washington, D. C, and else If it's a "frozen" article vou need, advertise for a used one In the classified. Goffers Rip Par Asunder On Corpus Chrisfi Course Aid Asked In Halting Gambling NCAA Issues Invitation To Sports Writers to Help Check Widespread Betting By SKIPPEn PATRICK , NEVV OH LEANS, r'eb. 3 ('H president Wilbur C. Smith of the National Collegmle Athletic association is.iut'il an Invitation todnv to the mitlonul .-quirts writers to nssIM tho NCAA In cheeking gambling on college uthletiu events. The plea followed by only four duys the breaking of the Brooklyn c o 1 1 e g o buskotbiill "scandal" In which five Brook- j lyn players admitted accepting money to "fix" n scheduled game with Akron college. It was also the first official lie-, tion of Dr, Smith, Tulane nth lotic director, who was mimed head of the NCAA last month. "I am sure that this assist ance Is In a large sense already being extended," Dr. Smith said, "as 1 know that the press Is Just as hopeful as uiu we uf thc colleges thnt this evil menace may soon bo stamped out. Few newspapers hnvo ever nuuled gamblers odds on collego spurts, but 1 wish lo make this pleu to those that do that this practice be discontinued in tho Interest of spurts. "No one appreciates more than I that tho public feels that its guardianship of sports, and particularly amateur athletics, Is to a large extent in the hands of the nation's sports writers. From an institutional trustee ship, of course, we of thc Na tional Collegiate Athletic asso. elation are charged with a def inite responsibility but the aver age fan who loves sports looks to the press lo safeguard his interests." Dr. Smith said that ho had prepared a letter tu be sent soon to all members of tho Na tional Collegiate association, for mally acquainting them with tha gambling resolution adopted at tho association's national meeting In Columbus, Ohio, last month. "Thc most effective step that we can take for thc moment, is to discontinue furnishing spec ial Information for use In form sheets and other publications i designed 'primarily for the in terest of those wagering on con tests," he said. "Coaches may cooperate by giving Information regarding pre-gnme injuries and such through regular news chan nels only." Delivery Five, Trotters Take V. L Tussles The Victory league got off to a flying start lost night on the! KUHS hardwood with two tills being played, one in each league. In the opening tussle Jerry's Delivery delivered hy rapping Sacred Heart academy; 25 to 19,: and thc Herald and News Trot-: t?rs romped all over a Red Shield five, O0-28. Mac Eplcy, deadcyc backeourt man for the Trotters, looped In n total of 20 points in the final clash to take high scoring honors for the evening and came within one marker of tvlng the record of 27 tallies registered by Wnrren Prltchard last year, i Ballantyne of Jerry's Deliv ery and Paul McChesncy of tho academy collected 10 markers each in the Initial fray. In the following fracas thc Trotters re ceived a bit of aid from Holmes, Red Shield pivot man, when ho flipped in one of the best shots of the game for tho opposition, I Fuller rang up eight ringers to pace the Red Shield attack, while Eplcy was running wild to take lop scoring honors for tho t rollers. TODAY PROGRAM I I Hh Newest k.S His Best f: ROY (0$ ROGERS ti teh, !H.?..rMJL.y I George "Gahby" HAYES . Dalitf Alio Loon Errol Comedy n 11 wwminu JUIN, ITS DIFFERENT! I ft 'STWSri Ghosr Hounf. Mon V ...-van ... r i I&Z5 -Th0''' No Now,'S fM V Mon Mount, I 'i ' . WTOfc.. eaaeVeN. CORPUS CHRISTI, Feb. 2 (P) The city down on the Gulf of Mexico sees the start of its first annual $3,000 open golf tournament today with a field of 102, in which the ama teurs outnumber the pros by only a dozen, hammering at an often-cracked par 70. Regulation figures took a brisk going-over yesterday in a pro-amateur played in mist, fog and high wind in which Claude Harmon of Grosse Point, Mich., turned in a 32-3264 card and a score of other players ripped par asunder. But despite all those awesome rounds, Byron Nelson, playing the course for thc first time and ' r . ., irr . Texas,, registering Just a stroke 'tinder par, was in his accustomed role of favorite. Thc golfers looked at It like this. The Toledo, O., pro has been thc man to bent in each "tournament of the winter swing this year; he hasn't finished low er than a tic for second in any meet, won one tournament and was edged out ot first money by a single stroke last wackend In tho Texas Open at San Antonio. Frank Strazza of Greenwich, Conn., had a 05 in yesterday's pro-amateur and seven others registered 66, among them Sam Byrd of Detroit, who took thc Texas Open title. Johnny Rcvolla of Evanston, III., fashioned a 66 to go with a 67 by Ed Furgol, Detroit ama teur, In winning the pro-amntour with a best ball of 60, each car rying away a $70.00 war bond. es MP BLENDED WHISKEY SS r-ROOr THE LANSDOWlfE DISTILLERY SI'.i GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS HAVRE DE GRACE, MARYLAND JUST COASTING ALONG FORT LEWIS. Foh ri Just coasting along, keeping his ! average intact, Pvt. Gail Bishop i nippca Z-J points in wc bucket last night as his Fort Lewis War riors downed thc Sand Point naval air station quintet, 40-28. STARTS SATURDAY MIDNITE "KISMET" Dooii fiun i lot MiotajTiM liu Iti4 N MI feuaaaair Hiti Open 6i45 Wk. Days; Open 1230 Sat. Sun. Con. Culw TIN COATS TIN PANTS OREGON WOOLEN STORE 800 Main DANCE LAND SIS Klamath Ave, DANCE Music By PAPPY GORDON'S OREGON HILt, BILLIES SATURDAY NITE Auspices V.F.W. im ut ri tr . MM 1 ii n ii s' l inPINE i j i h . i i.i im J V m. i -v nr til I TRUCKS FOR RENT You Drive Move Yoursell 8ave ! Long and Short Trips STILES' BEACON SERVICE Phone 8304 1201 East Main ' " . nT enaeaaVbaf U EUV y Bill Bobby C Elliott Blake Open6i4J ' End" TonUM "Mr. Winkle 0 mr" to W"' and . "Murder On W Wat", s.,. an- Continuous Daily Open 1:00 P. M. Frl. . Sat. Double Bill A LAFF RIOT! Apt