Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 21, 1952, Page 9, Image 9

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    MONDAY, JANUAKY 21, 11)52
HERALD AND NKWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE N1NK
PeDs IFaee UplhuDI CDoinnib
Cavemen
Place 6
All-Stars
TIME OUT!
v.' jit
COWBOY CARLSON
. . in biilllo royal
Carlson
Inks For
Battle
Cowboy Ciirlxou, iiopuhir Mon
tana hrunc-liualr-i, liu. br-i-ii ncld
dl In WrriiiPMlnv niKlil " v.irnlliiifi
liiillls loynl liiir-im hi Ilia nininry,
Buck Dnvldn nnnmiiiced yi-stcr-ilny.
Carbon wtiH n favorite mid par
tlrulnrlv the lutllr' buy In n nr.
rim ol nuttclirs here trvcrnl months
BIO.
llr's n bilKht lultlltl'iii In the
liruwl thnt ulno bruiKK In llir two
I'lirkH brothi m, lim b and Illlly,
Yoik CrrUiiinn. Kuri Von Poppers
hflin unci Ihn lilnnril attraction of
nil. thn U4u-rmunl ttwcdIMi Aiikd.
WAV IIK KKVKN
Tlierea mill u cliunre there'll be
neveii III I bo ni-ramblr.
Trie RrtcuMro bu.i promised to
1H Diividon know todny If bin rye
l: nufllr IPlllly lii-lilicl to no.
Von Poppriilirlin'ri kouhch In Inst
Urrk's mutch bndly brul.srri PcU-'a
r.vc.
'Hie buttle royal will open the
dl ov. .
Ihn first two three If there'll
reven entered tn be pinned lire
thrmiuh lor the cvenlUK.
rii:.MI-VINI)l I'
'Die lies i two come buck In ft
iS-mlmilr urml-wlwlun.
'Hie hist two led on their feet
will return lor n one-hour nmln
event.
IJnvKb.on Mild he li losnlim 'J!0
lulfi th. pot tis ii boiuin lor the
biill'e royal winner, the iniiln
event vicior.
Itrj.erved tlrkel tire on tinte Ht
Cii .tleoerry'i Piukv
Huskies
Capture
ND Lead
Nortlirrn Division Itaskriball
W L Pel
Washington
ldnhn
Oregon
' Washlnnlnn Hlnli
cjreuon stutr
5 1 .833
4 2 Ml
t 2 .600
3 4 !33
1 & . 1C1
hatunlay a Krsiilts:
Wn.ihliiKlon M Oreitnn 3H
Idaho 74 Oregon HUlle 60
Wnshlnnlon nnd Idaho, the North
mi Ulvl.slcn'H nmln routcndcis In
the Pacific Const Conference bask
etball race, are bark In the saddle,
and - JudKhbt from week-end per
formances liriliiK toward a title
collision.
Hie Washington Huskies, defend
inir division mid conlercnt-c clmni
),lon. bounced Into lirst place over
the week-end Willi 74-3(1 and 64-89
victories over Orciton, the former
leader. Idaho moved Into second
place, n Kame behind the Huskies.
Iiv drfentini; OreRon Stale's Beav
ers 6.VR4 and 74-3H.
The Ileuvera remain In the Pa
louse country for panics Monday
and Tuesday with WiishlnKton Slate
necdlnit ft swrep to climb out of
the cellar.
Washlnitton State also will be
host to Washington Friday nnd Sat
urday. Washlnitton complolclv out
clashed Orrnn In the (rallies at
Seattle last Friday and Hatttrdayi
Enoh nlitht thev bottled up Bob
Peterson, the Ducks' rebound spe
cialist. Peterson not only three
points Saturday nliiht.
Thn Huskies, meanwhile, were
lilltlnir the net from all nntilrs.
Frank Clulsnrjs, who connected on
II strnlitht free throws, led the
winners with 17 points.
Idaho, the only (cam to whin
Washington this year, was equally
fhtirp from the Hon- In Saturday's
name but wns aided by OrcRon
Sinln mb'.cues. Thn Viindnls got 32
of their points from 3ft personals
counted n(!iilnst the Beavers. Idaho
Center Hartley Ki lmer led the scor
Iiir with 13 points.
rei Matmen
Beat Roseburg
With bolh teams uslnx second
Pliiniiei's lor Ihn most part, the,
Klamnlh Fails Pelicans beat Rose
burg, 27-35, In the second shift of
a w'rcHlllnir meet Saturday niorn
Inft on Pelican Court,
Thn Vol first tciini won Friday
nl'rht, 311-12.
Seoiinif fulls for Hie Pelicans
were Wllev Hlmnnrls. Carl Stewart.
and Joy Denrlnx. Sam Wilbur, Don
Blehn, I.oule Taueher and Roland
Elehn won by decision.
The Pels host thn stronir Ornffnn
St:iln P.ook saund Wednesday nlnht.
SINUS INFECTIONS
DR. E. M. MARSHA
. ftaoreairullr TriUi
' Krlulr Melhoa
I'M No. Ilh rlln
l.hlrnprirlle rhrsleltn
wis Wood
Klamath
Divides
With GP
IIIHT. 4 TANUINI.i
P' I.
.7.KI
.WW
.230
Minlfui4 ..
Klmimlli Vails .
Grants Pats .....
Ashland ...........
1
'Hie Pellcnm kepi llve their
chunc.es of a Lll.-.l. 4 bnftketball ti
tle H.iUirdKy nlitht with revenue
win over the pesky Cavemen
of (JrnnLi I'a'.n bin now (ace an
uphill buttle the rem of the way.
hiiturdiiy'n win gave the Kllim
nth Fall five an even break In
timtrirt play with a 2-a record.
Hut Medford, meanwhile, was
Krand-nlammlng Ashland with two
wlnn over the weekend to current
ly lend the Big- Four race.
Now the Pels awing buck to non
lrui:i:e action when they ho:t the
iKokcburK Iwllicrin In a Frlday-HRt-urclny
cnKe date here, while Med-
I lord and Oruuta Pans scrap In dis
trict pluy.
'lilt ASK I.ICAD
The Pcliranj Siitiiidny nliilil
ern.-cd n 14-12 first-quarter deficit
on Ralph Carroll's tlp-ln and Jack
Ilorton's field noil and the Pell
cuna stayed ahead the rest of the
way.
In fact, the be.a the Cavemen
could do In the second frame wan
a Held goal by Bruce Itobrrlson
while the Pelicans were building
their Intermission count tn 21.
'Hie Pels really setiled down aft
er the rest period. Jerry Johnson
broke hi for a lay-up. Ray Bell
hit on a set shot and Johnson
scored attain on a fast break to
Hive Klamath Falls a plushly 27-10
lead earlv In the third,
txosi; COUNT
the Cavemen weren't through.
They closed It to 30-31 late In the
third bin Johnson and Carroll
found the ranire again to give the
Pels a 35-31 lead going Into the
Ui'it quarter.
The Pels put on the freeze with
two minutes left to tuck away the
victory.
Bell found his itrlde again aft
er a recenl scoring slump for 15
iiouiis. nign pomi honors. Carrol
scored m. Dick James and
Rob-
ertson counted 10 and for the
cavemen.
Jnx rrue:
hi VMA II1 I AI.I.S
llrll, I ,
(uliixire, f . .
Cm-roll, e
Vo,ie. g . ... . .. .
J, hum, g ,i."r
ttcrrvM:
Morion
lUrroji ., ..... .
ToUli .. .
liHAMI rASS
Medgepelh. t .
MarlMtur, t . ... .
Dean, e
J(ne,, g .
llohrrUi'ii, g
Ite'enea:
K'.liwelniurt. t
1 . 1 1
Norrlrk
lleee ......
Pepoer .
While .
Yoelcn
fa it rr rr
.5 .1 3 1
2 1 4
10 0 3
is is a
lairrru
I t a .i
Toll
n
10 N
llalft.me
Klemelh
rein
Citenlt IMie 10. OfflclsU. S-aneoa and
ri.nk.
Jayvees Lose
To Cavemen
Rt HAROLD MeKAV
Klamaths JVs Mere dealt their
fifth defeat by the Orants Pass
JVs, 43 to 39, In Grants Pass Sat
urday night.
Klamath got off to a bad start
making only one point In the first
quarter while the Orants Pass
Caveklds made 13 points, seven of
them by Jerry Yosten.
The JVs came fighting back In
the second quarter to narrow the
Grants Pass' lead to 22 to 19 at
the half.
The Baby Pels outscored the
Caveklds In the last three quarters
38 to 31 but the damage done In
me nr.it quarter could not quite
be repaired.
Don Mills. KU sub, was high
man with 18 points.
Box irore:
KI.AMATII (JO)
Detroit 4
Omimherty 0
Hummera S
Owing t
tall 1
Klamnlh aiiha
MJ) CHANTS rASS
F S Mark!
y B Hansen
C a Sutphtns
(', Mole
12 Yotlon
Mills. D. IS. Mills. C.
4, fredrlckaon 3.
Grants pasi subs--
lom 4, Barker
D.vmor-k 3, Regan,
Welglt, Lucai, Bertram!,
ltamllti
on.
Frosh Lose,
Fremont Wins
Rr HAROLD McKAY
Grants Pass freshman team de
feated the KU frosh, 41 to 37, on
the winners' court Saturday after
noon. Joe Vainer, Grants Pans for
ward, had 12 points for high points
Honors.
The KU frosh led, 21 to 19, at
Ihe half then proceeded to lose
ground to the Caveklds of Grants
Pais.
The Klamath Junior High (Fre
mont) beat the Grants Pass Jun
ior High, 27 to 25, in the prelimin
ary to the frosh game.
Burnt Tt Moth HoIm
' Worn Placet Rwon
SALLY'S REWEAVIHG
f tiHIe Parties
Reefeieerie' r
TMIsa'a
faaaawaje;aaMrises VTy"M"'''T ' ' F"!k .
SWIFTY Ollic Malson, University of San Francisco's great
Olympic Games candidate in the 100, 200 and 400 meters.
;'' ii : RED HUW. SPORTS EDITOP
',' RED
cage scores 1
College Basketball
(Saturday)
PAR WKST
WashlUKlon 64 Oregon 39
California 64 UCLA 61
.Southern California 75 Stanford 61
Brlgham Young 68 Colorado A&M
47
Idaho 74 Orcfton Slate 50
Ulnh 57 Utah Slate 45
Wyoming 71 Montana 61
Denver 73 New Mexico 68
EAST
St. John's Bkn 64 St. Francis Bi;n
36
Fordham 74 Army 70
St. Bonaveuluie 77 Cincinnati 68
Cornell 67 Princeton 61
Holy Cross 79 Tufts 47
Villnnova 88 North Carolina Stale
71
Pcnn 73 Dartmouth 55
MOUTH
Kentucky 65 Tennessee 56
Tnlnuc 82 Georgia 49
Mississippi 76 Auburn 58
, ! Florida tt vancleroill 'iu
a I William and Mary 86 Richmond 70
" South Carolina 71 VP! 60
jl MIDWKST
a Iowa 76 Minnesota 59
o : Wisconsin 14 Northwestern 63
: I Indiana 83 Purdue 77
I. iRrndlev 63 DclIOlt 59
Michigan 50 Michigan Stale J6
Kansas Slate 76 Iowa State 58
Missouri 44 Colorado 41
SOUTHWEST
Rice 48 Arkansas 40 ,
ORKGON TRKP BASKETBALL
SATIKUAY
Salem Academy 60 Sacred Heart
i Salem! 66
Klamath Falls 48 Grants Pass 40
Marshftcld 53 Coqulllc 53
North Bend 69 Myrtlo Point 39
Culver 80 Maupln 39
Salem 45 Eugene 4 J
Newport 53 Lebanon 40
Lakevlew 44 Madras 43
Milwaukle 61 Lake Oswego 26
La Grande 45 Milton Frecw
Central Catholic (Portland) 34 As
toria 23
Echo 60 St. Patricks (Walla Walla,
Wash.) 45
Medford 50 Ashland 41
Eagle Point 44 Phoenix 30
Rogue River 37 Oakland 34
Myrtle Creek 56 Crater 48
St. Francis (Eugmic) 36 Mt. Angel
30 t Sunday game)
HOCKEY
(Sunday)
By The Associated Press
Pacific Coast Hockey
(New Westminster 3 Seattle 2
Tacoma 9 Seattle 2
New Westminster 6 Vancouver
Edmonton 4 Calgary 4
(No games scheduled Monday)
I
101 mwuillt. OK lOl lO
""""'HOT"
EH' c.
aim
mum
KLflmflTH prllS onesor.
II
1
1
k
1C
HURO, SPORTS tDITOl
2 Oregon Boys Named
On Prep All
NEW YORK CTI Four Pacific
Northwest boys, two from Wash
ington and two from Oregon, were
among the 66 players from 33
states and the District of Columbia
named Saturday on the lirsi All
America high school football team.
The so. unci was selected by
Scholastic Magazines, the national
school weeklies.
I(F Leads
Midland
Gun Loop
The Midland Empire Rifle
League schedule was cut by snow
in Its opening blast but the Klam
ath Falls Club got off to a healthy
start toward keeping the Matt Fin
nlgan and Gun Store trophies It
won last year, emblematic of the
league's rifle title.
Bad weather sliced two of the
five-game slate.
In matches fired, the Klamath
Falls Rifle and Pistol Club outshot
Moose Lodge (1855-17961 and Amer
ican Legion (1849-16871
ifiu-icao i u. im-j M,nu
Weather conditions post'-poned
ihr. rhiior,,iin.rr,rri. r,H i non
Vallcy-Malin shoots.
nnx scores:
MOOSE IIIU41
Washburn .".BO
Carland :utf
Cross :rr4
Turner 3(4
Thoclke 3iit
KI.AMATII IISV'.I
Oooelt
Frellas
Athey
Purvlance
3T0
Thoelka
Cross a.17
Turner Ml
Tallow .106
KLAMATH lllln
Opoelt .179
Frellas .172
Athey ."39
lurvianca :fi8
Tallow 360
ili'Stl LEGION
Otterbeln
-VIS
Hartley
Tellln
Royse
Walker
.148
Fires Ace,
Quits Game
BAGUIO. P. I. If) Francisco
Jalon gave up golf after 30 years
of lighting par. me oa-year old
Jalon scored a hole-ln-onc on the
167-yard No. 2 at Camp John Hay
course. He said that was perfec
tion, and gave away his clubs.
LIFE INSURANCE
. OPPORTUNITY
With Good Earning
; - Possibilities as
! DISTRICT MANAGER
' Applicant must have
background of substan
tial sales production or
' sales supervision.
Man selected will be
given Home Office Train
ing. Call or Write
Gordon D. Orput,
General Agent
NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY
Phone BE-1196
214 Corbetf Bldg., Portland
fullback last season, is an
- America
The 66 are equally divided among
backs and linemen. They were
chosen on the basis of all-around
ability by the six hiRh school week
lies wnich reach 1.100,000 students
and teachers throughout the
country.
Texas leads the states with six
selectees.
Herman L. Masln. sports direc
tor for Scholastic Magazines, said:
"The backficld selections are
classified under four headings:
quarterbacks are T-formotlon men
only; tailbacks played In the single
wing and are triple-threats of the
first order;halfbacks include wing
backs and fullbacks are just what
the title Implies."
The Northwestcrners
honorpd
honored
were:
Tackles - Clifford Brumbeloe,
Grants Pass, Ore., and Earl Mon -
lux. Everett, Wash. -
Center Charles Stone. Walla
Walla, Wash.
Tailback Richard Pavlat,
Astoria, Ore.
Owlbabes
Win 8th
The Oregon Tech Junior varsity
jhave won eight games this season
The inte.M was a 62-53 win over
Ubc Chtloquin Townles, co-leader in
', league, in a preliminary to the
i Oregon Tech-Eastern Oregon var -
sity game on the OTI court sal-
lUrdav nignt.
, ,GI0X The Owlbabes . "shared the
Rowe .n!4 'wealth" on points and Chiloquin's
iianiev sw ;Vavue Hatcher slipped In for high-
waider .137 I poihl honors with 14. Dick Souers
u""m SI and Remo Minato, both ex-Owls.
. n moose i each had 11. All three were high
Washbura 39iei. tna Llovd Lewis' top pcrfor-
Carland 3SS : .,, r in fn- Iha nrslm-h fni'.
vces. But Rex Hunsaker's Jayvees
edged 11 players 4 Into the score
column.
Box score:
Cilll.OOtiN Oil OKI JAYVEES
W. Hatcher 14 r S Martin
Brallon ? 4 Henslee
Mlnalo It C S Humohrey
Miller 9 O 10 Lewis
C. Hatcher SC. 9 Patsrson
Chlloquln subs Uelnger. Souers 11.
Javvee subs Thompson 6. Brown 8.
Printz 3. Terllsner 1, Grossman, Per
kins, Jeter 6. Vlck 1.
'THIS IS ATRWK COMPARTMENT
THAT IS ATRIMKCOMMRTHENT.' '
Si us for all automotive serv
ice , , wi guarantee satisfaction!
teflon
4th 8 Klamath Ph! 8146
eiroes
OTI Hits
Return
Highway
Ot.C STANDINGS
W
Vanport
Orcucm College
Oregon Terh ,
Eatlcrn Oregon
..... 3
3
..... 3
0
.750
.500
.000
The Oregon Tech Owls are fly
ing the comeback trail after a
two-game cage sweep over East
ern Oregon and they've still cot
blue chips in the Oregon Collegiate
Conference pot.
Saturday niiiht's 74-53 victory on
the Hilltop Court gave the Owls a
2-2 record In league play.
ihe Oregon College Wolves man -
aged to split the Vanport series
with a win Saturday night. That
gave the Wolves the league tie j
with a 3-1 mark. I
However, the Owls face an open
weekend and the two-week layoff
could prove costly. They swing into
action again Feb. 1 and 2 against
Eastern Oregon again in La
Grande.
VIKING RUN
Two games with Oregon College
follow on the OTI court, then two
home - and - home series four
straight games with the highly
ratea Vikings.
The Mountaineers played on
even terms with the Owls Saturday
night until early In the second
quarter when Oretech started to
pull away to register a 34-21 .halt
lime lead.
The lead changed hands five
times until Jerry Wyatt canned a
field goal in the second quarter to
give the Owls a 21-20 lead. East
ern Oregon never caught up from
uiai point.
It was team play that paid off
as in Friday night's 77-4o win.
Tom Schubert fouled out again
midway In the third period but
added 12 points to the Owls'
total. Homer Duncan was high with
14, Guards Marv Hammack and
Len Genetin chipped In with 13
each. The other regular. Jack
Pinkley, finished with nine.
GREEN HIGH
But all took a back seat to
Eastern Oregon's Burl Green, who
spent a good part of the evening
on the foul line. His five field goals
and seven free throws gave him
17 points.
The Mountaineers led 16-15 at
the one-quarter mark when Cen
ter Lowell Kolbaba dumped a free
throw Just before the gun.
After Wyatt gave the Owls a 21
20 lead in the second quarter, Dun
can and Schubert sparked a rally
that gave Oretech a comfortable
13-polnt halftime advantage.
The Owls bulged it to 59-34 at
X , "l quarters, men
coacn Art Kirkland cleared tne
me eno. oi mree quarters.
L ZL1? n .tne
.fp'; 6 " ln
'rame-
Box score:
EASTERN OREGON
5a!ing. I . . .
Ball, t '. ;
Kolbaba. c . :
Green, g
Cerry. g . ........
Reserves:
McAlisler ... .
Fox
Houg ..
Holznagel
FG FT PF TP
0
-. 2
...2
Total ....
ORF.GON TECH
Duncan, I
Schubert, t . . .
Pinkley. c ..
Hammack. g
Gesettn. g
. 13 23 24 S3
rG FT PF TP
1 Rtiervei:
Wyatt
Foreman ....
Koch
FUninfam
Paterson . ....
Erown
Holzfuxs
Lewis
Humphrey
Totals 27 20 34 74
Halftime score: Oregon Tech 34 East
ern Ore Ron 21. Free throw's missed:
Eastern Oregon 17 iMc A lister 1. Kol
Jiba 3. Green 6. Bait 3. Fox 2. Gerry 2:
Ore f on Tech 6 (Duncan 3, Genetin X
Foreman It: Officials: Jone and Bon
ne .
Bly Idle
Bly's Bobcats were" Idle Satur
day night when Paisley decided
not to venture through the snow
lor the scheduled non-league game.
SAVE 25 oh LABOR COSTS
; ON ALL AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR WORK
Tuesday - Wednesday - Thursday .
Complete Overhauls , Tune-iips Body Work
Lubrication ' :Wasfi and Polish Brakes
FINANCE YOUR WORK IF DESIRED!
5, $7 DOWN on MAJOR REPAIRS
Dnrlfsa
522 So.
"I wish Just once you guys would
leave that up to the automatic
foul Indicator!"
5 Major
Quintets
Unbeaten
I
By The Associated Press
The whirlwind college basketball
I races slow down to a snail's pace
I 'his week an annual situation
! caused oy mid-year exams but
even so there are some games on
tap that could decide the eventual
conference- winners.
The unbeatens at the traditional
halfway point In the campaign are
Kansas (13-0), Iowa 12-0i. Illinois
ill-Oi, Duquesne (11-0) and St. Bon-
aventure UO-Oi.
Iowa goes right at It Mondav
night against Indiana, a team that
has come alone fast in recent
weeks.
Illinois does not have a league
game this week. Kansas, the No. I
team in the country In the Associ
ated Press poll, faces a real rugged
assignment against Kansas Slate
Saturday night, and the result
might determine the winner of the
Big Seven.
Duquesne has the week off and
St. Bonaventure goes against
Youngstown Saturday night.
The No. 3 team in the nation,
Kentucky, should have no trouble
in its only game this week, Monday
night's tet to against Georgia Tech.
In the Southern Conference, too,
the undisputed leader. North Caro
lina State, can't get rid of the run
ner up west Virginia.
In the Missouri Valley there s a
showdown slated for Saturday, and
of course It Involves defending
champion Oklahoma A&M and St.
Louis, the fifth ranked team in the
country.
Penn and Cornell are running
one-two in the Ivy League, whle
in the Southwest Conference, Tex
as Christian with an overall record
of 14-1, is riding along at the head
of the class with a 4-0 mark.
Any of three teams might grab
off the Skyline title. Brlgham
Youne Is the leader with 3-0. but
Utah (5-1) and Wyoming (4-1) are
in the running. Washington Is the
undisputed king of the Pacific
Coast Northern Division with 5-1
while California, which beat UCLA
twice over the week-end took over
tn the south with -2.
Druggists Win
In Overtime
Paylefs Drugs beat Mobil Gas
of Medford, 64-61, Saturday night
on Pelican Court In a March of
Dimes game but the Druggists
had to go overtime to do it.
Bob Erlandson scored with a
half minute left to send the game
into overtime at 57-all. '
Erlandson and Rex Young shared
scoring honors for Payless with 12
. i each. But Don Harris, Mobil cen
s iter, scored 20 for the losers.
4 .-
Chiloquin
Beats Malin
Chiloquin, gradually gaining
recognition as the dark horse team
of the Klamath County high school
league, repeated its Friday night
league victory over Malin with a
45-32 win Saturday night in a
king's-X outing.
Malin held a 12-10 first-quarter
lead on its own floor. But the
Panthers roared ahead 24-J4 at the
half and kept their lead. -
Dale Fenters. Malin, was high
with 13. Gene Gentry and Wayne
DuBois divided scoring honors for
Chiloquin with 10 each.-
Box score:
rillLOOtJlN (IJ) IN) MAl.tM
Parker ' r W. Rick
David 3 P 1 Tenters
Gentry 10 C 4 Stevenson
Vaden ( O 3 Paris
DuBois 10 G 1 Travis
Chtloquia subs Hescoek. Geonte 8.
Nicholson 2. Llgget 1, Anderson. Malin
suds Kajnus 2, waciten, aicnuniic,
Rlrk. Mauney.
Rear Ehd ' Paint
When You Want The
See
DUGAN
and
MEST
'. PlwsstAuth . Dniia'm "Jab-Ralcrl"
6th
PORTLAND Irl Players from
Grants. Pass and Grant of Port
land, finalists in the state football
playoffs last fall, dominate all-Star
teams which will play the annual
Shrine football game hero Aug. 23,
Selections were announced here
Saturday.
An Upstate team will meet a
Portland squad In the annual gam
proceeds from which go to th
Shrine Fund for crippled Children,
All the playera are to be graduated
this year.
Mel Ingram of Grants Pas will
be head coach of . the Upstate
team. Assisting him will be Bob
George of Mllton-Freewater and
Ray Scgale of Astoria.
Frank O'Nell of Roosevelt high
will coach the Portland team as
sisted by Ted Ogduhl of Grant
and Billy Gray of Washington.
Each side has won twice In the
past four years.
The Upstate squad includes:
Ends Jim Boulton, Rogua
River: Hank Hudspeth, Eugene,
and Dean Benson, Bend.
Tackles Jon Cockuurn; Milton
Freewater: Ron Van Meter. The
Dalles; John Harbour, Orants
Pass: Cliff Brumbeloe, Grants
Pass.
Guards Ron Swisher, Grants
Pass: Kermlt Stein, La Grande; Ho
ward Cockburn. Mllton-Freewater
Joe Corder, Grants Pass.
Centers Doug Simmons, As
toria: Dean Peterson, Marshfleld.
Quarterbacks Jerry crimtns.
Mllton-Freewater; Jerry Custafson
Astoria: Dennis Connors, Medford.
Halfbacks Ron Knlgnt, orants
Pass: Dick Pavlat. Astoria: Bay
Darnes Vale; Dick James, Grants
Pass: Al Leopold, Hllisboro.
Alternate linemen include Fioya
Pierce, Klamath Falls.
OCEIn
Tie With
Vanport
By The Associated Press -Oregon
College of Education, en
the strength of a. 73-62 victory over
Vanport Saturday, moved back Into
a tie with Vanport' for Oregon Col
legiate Conference leadership. :
Vanport bad defeated OCB 85-51
Friday.
In Saturday's game OCE tralle.4
34-35 at halftime. But they cam
from behind to win in the second
half paced by Chuck Pinion who
scored 22 points during the game.
Norm Hubert and Paul poecscn
shared scoring honors for Vanport
with 14 points each.
Bears In :
SD Lead !
LOS ANGELES IT! Southern
Division Pacific . Coast' Conference
basketball teams take' time out for
mid-term exams this week, and
the amazing California Bears will
have until Feb. 15, at least, to en
joy their position atop the stand
ings. Conference hostilities reiume
then, with the teams opening the
second half of their campaign, for
tified with a menu of intersections!
contests starting Jan.-30. '
uaniornia took tne lead over the
weekend by twice upsetlng . UCLA.
61-59 and 34-51. behind alert work
off the backboards and heads up
fiay uy sue seiHjua sinrig.
uai now has won 4 and lost 1 in
league competition.
UCLA dropped into a second
place tie with the peppery Tro
jans of Southern California, who
Knocgea oil staniora twice. w-8
and 75-64. ...
Crume Scores
26 in Victory, ,
Bonama led all the way on Mer
rill's hardwood to dump the Husk
ies, 54-40, in a Klamath County
non-league game Saturday night.
Irwin Crume, Antler forward,
scored almost half of the winners'
points with a 26-point performance.
Merrill held Bonanza -to a H-S
first quarter lead but after that
the Antlers started pulling away
in earnest, posting a : 31-19 half
time bulge. . . .
Box score: "
BONANZA Ol) 0l Mn.t.
Crume 26 ' F 12 Honeyeutt
Hubble 3 F .9 Wlahan
Chandler 2 C 3 Harttnt
Haley 3- G i Handrtekson
Wilson 4 G ' Bsrrr
Bonanza subs Hood 12, Dye 2. Bar
ney, Lugo. Lawyer. Merrill suba
O'Nell 6, Winters, Reeves
Best
Trucks
Ph. 8101