I
JANUARY 5, 1954
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE NINE
mm
Kentucky,
Dukes Win
Pt n rfl ' Vfv. IT r m ft t n r,n
JlPO STATION LEAGUE
W
g Supply .
t 0rehout .
Waterboys .
t Store .-I
Jfovlng -
37 r,
2B'i U
. 2H 4
i H 4
it & Prod .. 20 ' 4
K H Freigmways 17 " 6
Jlalpine o u
4 racmc rruii u
f People". 1
A1B Paint 1
an.nllriated L
r" piping. A 2
lv Itobb of Modoo Bnllding
1 i put together a 609 series
V it to lead the pack in the
I conation Bowling League.
top game was 237, ahead
an Olismou of KFLW with 222.
a Bold or interstate water-
tM second for series with a
J.
t-m bowling. KFLW had a
and 2745 series. Twin
's feanring rolled a 2709 scries
( People's Warehouse a 934
ri -
is ' , f MOOSE MA'S
) goo
IMltWi Variety
fa Cft
Ot'i rood ...... ..
buth Flower
ka'a iicnal Serv 24
j Bcore Lalt
for. 4 Klamath
aa'a S Louie't 1
Ua Swaden 3 Bing's 1
d at Con 3 Schneider'! 1
on Wool 3 Jonesies 1
(old Jl Son toppled Schneider's
liety, t-l, last night to tie that
(m lot4 the top spot in the Moose
I's Bowling League. (Bold Si
a get' the top position in the
indinss on total pins).
n upsetting the erstwhile league-
idersr Bold & Son added up the
lb scores in team play, a 921
me ana 2606 series, so. ore
uUo was next with 878 and 2561
Kuby Phelps of Stone's Signal
rvlca chained up the high game.
302, followed by Viola Kenaston
a URayne Harris, both oi so,
t. Music, with 192s.
Phelps added 174 and 143 for a
t series, ahead of Joyce Ross of
Id 4i Son with a 495 three-game
ire,
llary Ellen Hankins picked up
I 6-7 spilt, Lillian carr tne 2-7-iu
1 Harris the 5-B-iu.
AGE SCORES
, COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Sy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
- (Monday's Results)
FAR WEST
ah 71, Utah State 58
mtana 64, Montana state 62
rominz 61, New Mexico 61
litworth 56, Washington State 50
uthera Oregon 78, Portland Stale
18
czaga 84, Eastern Washington
I'A (overtime)
ciflo U. 64, Oregon Coll. of Ed-
icatlon 51
latent Montana 69, Ricks Coll. 54
ciflo Lutheran 53, Seattle Fa
Slltc 46
, SOUTHWEST
Tdlh-Slmmons 57, Texas West
ira 6
. EAST
iquesns 70, Dayton 52
rdham 87, NYU 60
ivv 67. Princeton 66
lem (W.Va.) 100, Rio Grande 96
lode Island 72, Maine 64
t; . MIDWEST
liana 70, Wisconsin 67
loots 66, Northwestern 65
una 16, Oklahoma 72
lr.hi.ari us. Ohio State 76
lcnlti77, Detroit 75 (overtime)
wa II, Michigan State 63
sbraaka 74, Iowa State 60 .
dorado 66, Missouri 62
l KHinit BOWL TOURNEY
trtn, Texas State 61, Spring Hill
(Ala.) 59 (Semifinal)
lMliatppi Southern 89, Stetson 84
SOUTH
tntucky 77, Xavier (Ohio) 71
kwlanri 72. Richmond 64
unson 75, William It Mary 72
ilk M, South Carolina 69
P ' PRO BASKETBALL
!B THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
, Monday's Results
baton 77, Baltimore 73
ochester 85, Minneapolis 84
In Breeze
By RIP WATSON
NEW YORK (Pi It looks like
pretty clear sailing now for Ken
tucky and Duquesne, two mem
bers of the basketball big three,
but Indiana, third member of the
trio, has a rough road to travel.
Kentucky's Wildcats, rolling
along at the head of the Associated
Press poll, defeated a stubborn
Xavier of Ohio team 77-71 last
night while Duquesne was beating
uayton iu-dz. Indiana, meanwhile,
had its second successive close
shave in Big Ten competition be
fore downing Wisconsin 70-67.
Kentucky, with eight straight
victories in a triumphal return to
the college cage scene after an en
forced year's absence, now has
only De Paul and Vanderbilt to
worry about. De Paul is always
tough in the Chicago Stadium and
Vandy upset Kentucky three years
ago in the southeastern Conference
tournament. But they shouldn't
prove any more troublesome than
Xavier, which outscored Kentucky
in the second half but couldn't
catch up from an early 22-point
dencit.
RETURN GAME
Duquesne, ranked lust behind
Kentucky, is threatened by a re
turn game with Dayton and an
other match with Niagara, a five
point victim of the Dukes in the
Madison Square Garden Festival
Tournament. Lanky 'Dick Rickctts
showed Dayton the same brilliant
shooting he flashed against Niagara
as ne popped in 24 points last
night. The victory was No. 12 for
the unbeaten Dukes.
Indiana, which went down to the
final seconds against Michigan
Saturday night, ran up a 15-point
lead against Wisconsin, then had
to play strict possession ball to
stop a Badger rally. Big Don
Schlundt, playing in the corners
instead of his accustomed pivot
spot, dunked In 29 points for the
Hoosers.
HOME AND HOME
Indiana has two games against
sixth-ranked Minnesota and also
has home and home, dates with
Illinois, a 66-65 winner over North
western last night. The Hoosiers'
Saturday night date in Minneapolis
should tell the story.
conference competition got go
ing with a bang last night. Kansas,
which bowed to Indiana in the
NCAA final last year, began de
fense of the Big Seven title by
squeezing past Oklahoma 76-72
Duke. No. 8 team in the country.
rolled along In the Atlantic Coast
Conference by flattening South
Carolina 89-69; and Wichita won
its Missoui Valley opener with
77-75 overtime victory over
Detroit.
In other Big Seven openers last
night, Nebraska turned back Iowa
State 74-60 by sinking 11 of 13
field goal attempts in the fourth
quarter and Colorado downed Mis
souri 66-62 after nearly blowing a
13-polnt halftime lead.
In other Big Ten games, Iowa
opened with a 73-63 victory over
Michigan State, and Michigan
downed Ohio State 85-76 despite 36
points by the Buckeyes' Paul
Ebert. '
Bill Slattery of Navy stole the
ball and fired in a basket to give
Navy a 67-66 edge over Princeton.
Fodham poured in 33 points In
the final period to overwhelm New
York University 87-60, Maryland
beat Richmond 72-64, Utah edged
Utah State 71-58 and Wyoming
belted New Mexico 81-61 in other
leading games.
Raiders Snip
Losing Skein
ASHLAND Wl Southern Ore
gon College of Education snapped
a four-game losing streak Monday
night, defeating the Portland State
College basketball team 78-58.
Dick Price led the winners with
18 points. Portland States' Don
Porter scored 14.
Southern Oregon held the lead at
the quarters, 23-16, 36-31 and 59-45.
rcorge Quits
rcxas A&M
OLIitGE STATION, Tex. Wl
resignation of Ray George as
lad football coach at Texas A&M
flowing closely the departure 0!
fo sssistants, means an almost
ttirely" new gridiron regime lor
Agfle school.
George, whose team lost its last
e Southwest Conference games,
lit Monday with the announced
tention of entering private busi
es. Ha told reporters he is out
' the coaching business.
Speculation on his successor
xned on these names:
Mike Mlchalske, A&M line coach.
J. V. Bikes, former Texas A&M
otball star who resigned as coach
( Kansas last November after a
M season.
Dick 'Todd, former Aggie and
ntessional football player now an
plstant on the Southern Metho
st stair.
Maryland Coach Jim Tatum.
roiY Coach Red Blaik.
George's resignation is effective
11.
fomen Hold
in Tonight,
Women's Klamath Basin Bas
s' League holds its season
tonight at 7:30 on Oregon
i miie-nigh court with at
lour teams in the field,
fc. Griggs, Oregon Tech and
sponsored team are entries
so in the Jamboree that pro
Jstart of league play Jan.
tills.
Whitworth Nips
Cougars, 56-50
SPOKANE (H Ron Bennink
tallied 23 points for Washington
State College Monday night but the
effort wasn't enough as the Cou
gars fell 56-50 before Whltwortb's
Pirates in a basketball game end
ing WSC's pre-conference tuneup
campaign.
The loss left Washington State
with a season record of six wins,
Including an earlier 53-48 decision
over Whitworth, and five losses.
The Cougars open their North
ern Division schedule with two
games with Washington at Pull
man Friday and Saturday nights.
T
ME AND MY OVERSIZED SHADOW Six-nine Clyde Love
lette ( left ) it understudying six-ten George Mikan. The former
Kansas and Phillips Oilers' star is slated to eventually succeed
the Minneapolis Lakers' Mr. Basketball.
-h a .1 m
f
RED HURD, Ssorlt
Vandals
Picked
Over UO
EUGENE, Ore. Wl It's the
Oregon Ducks vs. the Idaho Van
dal Tuesday night in the inaugural
of the 1954 Northern Division bas
ketball campaign.
Idaho rates as a slight favorite
here as the teams open the strug'
gle for division and Pacific Coast
Conference honors, but the Vandals
will face rougher going later in
the week. :
After games Tuesday night and
Wednesday night, Idaho moves to
Corvallis for meetings Friday and
Saturday with Oregon State, Jo.
10 on Tl Associated Press poll
and the team picked by most ob
servers as the probable successor
to defending champion Washing'
ton.
INJURIES
While both- the Vandals and
Ducks rank next to OSC as title
contenders Idaho drew the favorite
role here on the basis of reports
that two of Oregon's key players
are handicapped by injuries.
Ken Wegner, Oregon's leading
scorer in pre-conference games, in
jured an ankle in practice and may
see only limited action. Forward
Jerry Ross also Is out with an
ankle injury and is expected to
miss the series.
Coach Bill Borcher said he will
start Wegner, a guard, at forward
with Ed Halbert, Max Anderson
at center, snd Barney Holland and
Howard Page at guard. Bob Stout,
Kent Dorwin and Ray Bell will be
available to replace Wegner if his
ankle gives out, Borcher said.
STARTERS
Idaho Coach Chuck Finley
named Harlan Melton and Tom
Flynn to start at forward; Dwight
Morrison at center, ana bod ra
les)! and either C. W. Totten or Bob
Garrison at guard.
Idaho boasts a 6-1 pre-conference
record as the campaign gets under
way. Oregon has won eight and
lost three.
Jack Kramer Would Finance
Development of Net Talent
NCAA Knuckles Down
To Business Today
By FRITZ HOWELL
CINCINNATI I The National
Collegiate Athletic Assn., after a
day of dilly-dallying in Executive
Committee sessions, gets down to
business today at its 48th annual
convention.
The American Football Coaches
Assn. and the NCAA Television
Committee are slated for execu
tive sessions, but no drastic rec
ommendations for changes are ex
pected from either.
LIBERALIZE
The coaches, with 1954 rules top
ping their agenda, are tipped to
string along with the one-platoon
system, with proposals to liber
alize substitutions to some extent.
Some also want to do away with
the four-minute rule at tne end oi
the second and fourth periods
forcing an "all-the-way" game un
der the same set of rules.
In the television sector the only
fight against the current restricted
program appears to be coming
from the Big Ten conference. It
would like to have one of its games,
televised on a regional basis each'
Saturday, and the powerful circuit
may lead the way toward some
loosening of the restricted plan in
vogue in 1953.
SUGGESTIONS
The Television Committee meets
today and tomorrow, and will sub
mit its recommendations to the
NCAA business session Friday. The
Coaches will offer any rule change
suggestions to the NCAA Rules
Committee, which meets Jan. 11
in Sarasota, Fla.
A year ago the Rules Commit
tee ignored a coaches' poll which
favored the two-platoon system by
a 9-1 margin, and installed the
limited substitution plan. Lou Lit
tle of Columbia, chairman of the
coaches committee on rules,
Hoff Eyes
Bout With
Marciano
MILWAUKEE Ifl Philadel
phia s Dan BucceronU a 2-1 favor- lne curl.ent was overw'helm.
:tf nH (larmanv't Hum Tun Hmf .... v . ..
mgiy m invor oi uie single platoon
style of piay,
:te, and Germany's Hein Ten Holf
Tuesday night box a 10-roundcr
which could increase the crowd
hunting a try at Rocky Marciano's
heavyweight title.
The bout, which will jam an ex
pected capacity 7,156 into the Mil
waukee Auditorium, will not oe
televised or broadcast. .
If the rangy, 215-pound Ten Hoff,
former European heavyweight
champ, should upset Bucceronl, an
offer stands ready to bring Mar
ciano to Berlin for a summer title
defense against the 32-year-old
Hamburg veteran.
Joachim Goettert, Berlin promo
ter, Monday wired Ten Hoff's man
agei, Fred Kirsch, he would dan
gle a "sizeable sum" to lure Mar
ciano to a delense in Berlin's Olym
pic Stadium.
The 29-year-old Bucceronl, 190,
who like Ten Hoff has lost only
three pro - bouts, however, hopes
to use the German as a spring
board to a Miami title bout with
Marciano In February or a sum
mer meeting wherever the cash
might grow the greenest. Bucce
ronl currently ranks the No. 4 chal
lenger to Marciano.
TIME OUT
'Six times in ten minutes that
guy sinks a shot that he couldn't
make once In five years!
By ED CORRIGAX
NEW YORK tfl All sorts of
schemes have been advanced for
almost a week on how the United
States can win back the Davis Cup
from Australia, but Jack Kramer,
one of America's greatest stars,
today , came up with a new one.
And It might work.
He wants to give his time and
money to developing new talent.
The lormer amateur ace who only
a few years ago ruled the game
offered to contribute $7,500 and
two months of his time in an effort
to develop young players.
The plan sounds sensible and
should prove practical if the Unit
ed States Lawn Tennis Assn. the
governing body of the amateur
game approves.
Kramer figures he will visit
about 85 cities on his professional
tour the llrst five months of this
year. At each stop he would like
to have the local professional or
school coach bring a group of the
most talented youngsters to him.
He, along with Pancho Segurs,
Psncho Gonzales snd Don Budge,
would look them over and pull out
the best for special attention.
Alter he has looked over all the
lads he wants them all under 18
because they can be developed
more easily he would take the
eight top prospects ' to camp for
an entire summer of coaching. The
more money he can get the better,
he said. But If no one else wants
to contribute he's ready to under
write the entire cost himself to
prove it can be done,
Panrho Gonzales won the 14.000
top prize of the opening "tourna
ment" of Kramer's 1954 profes
sional tour by whipping Pancho
Segura 7-9, 6-4, 6-4 in Madison
Square 'Garden last night.
Frank Seagman won the conso
lation round with a 6-4, 6-2 victory
over ancient Don Budge.
TOM WELLS
... Tech gets him
Owls Get
Ex-KUHS
Matman
Coach Bob Srfiith's star-studded
Oregon Tech wrestling squad was
further strengthened yesterday with
the addition of Tom Wells, Oregon
State transfer and former Klam
ath Union High School matman.
Smith said Wells may move into
the 157-pound spot against the
University of Oregon Saturday,
the Owls' first meet. It's between
him and Fred Stepper, one of
six state prep champions on the
Tech squad.
Other high school champs are
Joe Kimm, competing with Larry
Dryden and Wes Newby for the
123-pound chore: J. C. Thorpe,
with Alvln Christie a candidate
for the 130-pound position; Vic
Schweitz, who is battling Glen
Nofsigcr for the 147-pound assign
ment; and Dean Schmitz and Dean
Johnson, both In the 167 - pound
Sch'mltz may go against the
Ducks in the 177-pound division but
Kent Crawley is giving him a bat
lie. Floyd Pierce seems to have
the heavyweight noa cincnea.
Don Earle and Sherman Grate
are contenders for the 137-pound
position
Hariwig Drubs
Vic Seixas
ADELAIDE, Australia 11 Aus
tralla's unpredictable Rex Hart
wig scored a smashing upset over
veteran Vic Seixas of Philadel
phia Tuesday in the quarterfinals
of the South Australian Tennis
Championships.
Hartwig won the match, 5-7, 6-3,
6-1. 6-2.
Tony Trabert of Cincinnati, prob
able opponent of Australia's la-year-old
wonder Lewis Hoad in the
finals, entered the semifinals with
a 6-3, 6-3, 6-3 straight set conquest
of Aussie lefthander Merwyn Rose.
Heinrich
Inks With
NY Giants
NEW YORK Wl Don Heinrich,
the University of . Washington's
"Arm" during his college playing
days, will make his professional
football debut with the New York
Giants, probably next fall.
The National Football League
club announced Monday it has
signed the Bremerton, Wash.,
quarterback, the. nation's leading
college passer ami an All America
selection in 1950 and 1952, to a
one-year contract.
Heinrich was drafted by the
Giants at the end of the 1952 sea
son. But the Army had a prior
claim. His Army hitch will be up
In August and Heinrich is expected
to be available for the start of the
1954 professional season.
During his Army service, Hein
rich was quarterback of the Fort
Ord, Calif., Warriors. The team
was unbeaten in 12 regular season
games and smothered the Great
Lakes Naval Training Station in a
postseason Salad Bowl encounter.
Baker Pro
Low For
LA. Open
LOS ANGELES (fl A 28-year-
old Baker, Ore., professional, Dick
Lundahl, topped the qualifiers for
the 28th annual Los Angeles open
Golf Tournament, which starts Fri
day at Fox Hills.
There were 72 qualifiers Monday
over eight courses in the Metro
politan Los Angeles area, but
Lundahl, who makes clubs during
the winter at an Escondldo, Calif.
golf factory, fired the low 138. He
had a 73 In the morning round
and then contributed a sensational
six-under-par afternoon round of 65.
Five competitors tied for the
second spot Babe Lazane of Ba
kcrsfleld, Calif., Ralph Evans of
Whittler, Calif., Gene Webb of St.
Louis, Pete Fleming of St. And
rews, 111., and an amateur, Dave
Stanley of Montebello, Calif. They
had 139's.
There were two aces' In Mon
day's play, one by Bobby Plnnell
of Seattle oa the 160-yard second
hole at Inglewood.
KBI Quints
Win Openers
The Klamath Basin Independent
basketball league opened last
night with the Malin Athletics, Dor
ris Lions, Chlloquin Parks, Tule-
lake Inners and Jayhawks scor
ing iniital victories.
The Athletics outshot the Dorrls
Townles, 52-45.
The Dorrls Lions evened the
doubleheader with a 45-33 win over
the Malln Townles.
Chiloquin Parks waxed the Mer
rill VFW, 62-36.
Tulelake Inners shaded the Chllo
quin Townles, 68-53.
The Jayhawks got by Langell
Valley, 61-46.
The Dorrls Townles jumped Into
a 23-18 first-half lead but potted
just 7 in the third while the Ath
letics were throwing in 16 to go
aneaa in-au. wnour welsh scored
21 points for the Townies: Rod
Dietrich was high for the Athletics
with 18.
Barnett led the Dorrls Lions with
15 points, while Unls was leading
the Malin Townles with 11. Dorrls
led all the way.
ien players got in the scoring
act for the Chiloquin Parks with
Matnis high with 15, Oates contrlb
uting 14 to the total.
J. King was the scoreboy for
Tulelake, dumping in 21 points,
while Wayne Hatcher added up 18
in a losing cause for the chiloquin
xowmes.
Hilltop,
Beatty In
Cage Wins
1 Hilltop Cafe evened its season
record to 2-2 and the Beatty Lakers
won their first game of the City
League campaign in a doublehead
er at Altamont last night.
The Hilltops breezed by the Klam
ath Sons, 52-31; Beatty handed
Southern Pacific its fourth straight
loss by a 4432 count.
The Hilltoppers piled up 14-2 and
32-9 leads at the first two quar
ters, then coasted In over the Sons.
Danny Mahoney led the way with
12 points; Bob Walton, Ki Carrier
and Ken Mtlligan chipped in with
8 each. High for the Sons was Jack
Delorme with 9-
Buddy Faithful sparked the Lak
ers with 19 counters as Beatty
forged ahead 34-23 at Intermission
time and were never in trouble.
Games Wednesday night put Met
ier Bros, against the Klamath
Sons in the 7:46 opener and the
league leading National Guards
against Beatty In the afterpiece
T
Scoring:
ATHLETICS (St) ( DORR1H
O'Keeffe 4 r 21 Welsh
Dietrich P WilUamS
Conroy 14 C $ Porterffeld
Anderson 4 G 4 Roblnson
PeiK0?. 6 a. ,G Hammond
Athletic lube Woodley 4, Duncan 2,
Stevenson. Acevedo. Dorris tubs Hos
kins 6, flifo 7, During. Egline 2, Owens.
S cor in fl:
SONS Ctl)
Montgomery 6 -
Barney l
Weiser 7
Delorme 9
E. MiUer 8
. (1,2) iinxTor
4 Lundgren
12 Mahoney
8 Walton
8 Carrier
8 MilliRan
Sons subs Ruff. Beaver Barney. Jen-
Kins. Hilltop subs Milder 7, Brochman,
Kennard, Dossett; Chaves 3, Johnson a.
J. Allen 1
McMillen
McGoufihey B
Bigby 8
Alien
CM) LAKERS
11 P. Weiser
7 Brown
8 Plummer
2 Riddle
10 Faithful
Southern Pacific subs Anderson,
Pounds. L, Plerson. Bowers. Flora 8. Do-
herty 3, W. Plerson, Oldham. Beatty subs
Davis, iv. weiBcr, maae, toppeniem
Jackson.
MALIN SS
Unis 11
Dal ton 0
Fallahee 3
Sarutzky 4
tjmaxay e
l.1 LIONS
10 Brandham
6 Motschenbacher
4 Miller
8 Kenaston
15 Barnett
Malin subs Rodsers 3. HHskArv 1
Dorris Lions subs Ward, Dodson, Cope
land 2, Maltien, C lei and.
PARKS fH3)
Mathls IS
David 7
Jack 2
Souers
DuBols 8
(3d) MERRILL
4 Barry
L. Has kins
4 W. Hasklns
6 Reeves
8 White
Chiloquin Parks subs Leggett S, Blck
era 2, Getnger 3, Wilkie 4. M Ins to 2,
Oates 14. Merrill subs Heaton 3, Vaughn
10, Anderson 2.
TULELAKE (58)
7. King 21
DeFrain 3
F. King 10
Urback 11
Sowles
(53 CFIILOqiTIN
IB W. Hatch r
8 G. Hatcher
11 Crume
B C. Hatcher
7 8. Miller
TulUka suha Brlffhtman 10. Avers 3.
Chiloquin subs Cllne, Harrington, Allen,
Wampler. .
.. jBThawks-Langall Valley hot score
net avaflabls.)
Pacific Edges
OCE by 54-51
MONMOUTH Wl Pacific Uni
versity closed Its pre-season bas
ketball schedule Monday night by
defeating Oregon College of Educa
tion M-51.
Pacific's Clint Agee was high
scorer with 21 points. Frank Orove
and Chuck Pinion shared honors
for the losers with 16 each.
COP Coach Favors
National School
SAN FRANCISCO lifl M.
(Van) Sweet, College of the Pacific
basketball coach, suggests a na
tional basketball school to stand
ardize officiating.
"In every section of the country,
we found a different set of stand
ards," Sweet told sports writers
Monday of his team's December
trip to Illinois, Wisconsin, Kansas,
Oklahoma and Texas.
fe-JMWJj iuil
Wildcats,
Duquesne
One-Two
Br BEN PBLEGAR
NEW YORK M") Duquesne'
towering Dukes crept up on Ken
tucky in this week's Associated
Press basketball poll but the all
winning Wildcats held on to first
place by a narrow margin of 81
points.
Thev led by 150 points a week
ago but Duquesne's sweep through
11 straignt games ana tne Garden
Holiday Festival in New York sent
the Dukes' stock soaring. Du
quesne and Kentucky both won
again last night after the polls
closed. The Wildcats have won 8,
Duquesne 12.
Indiana stayed In third place and
Minnesota in eixth but the rest of
the positions underwent a thor
ough shakeup. mainly as a result
of holiday tournaments.
MOVES UP
Oklahoma A&M, winner of the
All-College Tourney at Oklahoma.
City, moved up from fifth to fourth,
and Western Kentucky, seventh a
week ago, jumped to fifth after
winning the Louisville Invitational.
Western has taken 12 straight this
season.
Holy Cross broke Into the top
10 In seventh place as it ran its
record to 8-0 In winning the Sugar
Bowl Tournament at New Orleans,
The biggest advance, however,
was by Duke, winner of Raleigh's
Dixie Classic. The Blue Devils
were unranked a week ago. This
week they finished eighth in the
voting by 99 sports writers and
broadcasters. Ten points were
awarded for a first-place vote,
vote, nine for second, etc,
DROPS
Oklahoma City moved .up from
11th to ninth and Oregon State,
beaten twice in three games in the
Dixie Classic, dropped from fourth
to loth.
Illinois, North Carolina Stat and
Fordham, 8, 9 and 10 a week ago,
dropped out of the top 10,
The results, with first place
VfHfts in nnrpnttiAspR-
1. Kentucky (38) ... ...805
2. Duquesne (19) 125
.3. Indiana (4) ...553
4. Oklahoma A&M (12) 443
5. Western Kentucky (6) 381
6. Minnesota (3) ..326
7. Holy Cross' (5)... '
8. Duke :. 188
9. Oklahoma City 121
10. Oregon state (1) 106
11. Rice 104
12. Tie between George Washing
ton (9) and Niagara 103
14. Dayton (2) 102
18. Illinois ....-88
18. Tie between Seattle (1) and
Kansas - 79
18. Navy 74
19. Vanderbilt 85
20. N.O. State 59
By THE ASSOCIATED PREba
BASEBALL
RICHMOND, Va. Richmond
qualified for a berth in the Inter
national League ns the City Council
agreed to make municipally-owned
Parker Field available as a home
park.
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. The
New York Yankees and the Cin
cinnati Reds will meet in the 13th
annual Hall of Fame game at
Doubleday Field, Cooperstown,
Monday, Aug. 9.
FOOTBALL
COLLEGE STATION, Tex.
Head iootball Coach Ray George
of Texas AfcM announced he was
resigning, cllectlve Aug. 31.
NEW YORK Don Heinrich,
former passing star at the Univer
sity of Washington, signed a one
year contract with the New York
pro football Giants. ,
TKNNIS
NEW YORK Richard (Pancho)
Gonzales defeated Pancho Segura,
7-9, 6-4, 6-4, to win the first pro
fessional tournament of Jack
Kramer's 1954 tour.
SYDNEY Australian Davis
Cup player Lewis Hoad will be in
ducted Into the Army Jan. 13 for
90 days of fulltime national service
training.
SHUFF STUFF
Bill's Place blanked Schuss Tav
ern, 4-0, last night in one opening
game of the City Shuffleboard
League.
In other games, Wocus whipped
Drumstick and Tat's downed VFW,
T ) both by 3-1 scores.
LAST
Night fl
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BROOKLYN Walter Cartler,
161, New York outpointed Randy
Sandy, 168 , New York, 10.
BOSTON Curley Monroe, 137,
Worcester, Mass., outpointed Fred
die Monforte, 138, Brooklyn, 10.
HOLYOKE, Mass. Joe Mlcell,
145, New York stopped Jesse Keel
er, 141, Qreensburg, Pa., 2.
BILLINGS, Mont. Freddie
Lutherans Trip
Falcons, 53-46
SEATTLE Wl Paclflo Lutheran
College of Tacoma spotted Seattle
Pacific's Falcons an early lead
Monday night, then combined a
second-period scoring splurge with
a tight last-half defensive game for
a 63-46 non-conference basketball
victory over the locals.
i Babe) Herman, Los Angeles
stopped Don Rogers, Spokane,
Wash., 2.
FOR TIRES
SEE JUCKELAND
They don't improve with age.
It hai been aitimottd that pott du account, which art
90 days past due are 90 collectible
120 days past due are 82 collectible
180 days past due are 67 collectible
1 year old 46 collectible
2 years old 27 collectible
3 years old 18 collectible
SEND THOSE "PAST DUES" TODAY TO
CARTER'S COLLECTION AGENCY
P. O. Bex 844 Phone 6121 Klamath Falls, Ore.
So smooth mMJ
it leaves you
breathless .i'
mirnpff
ZM qneaiest name
v -VODKA
(W proof Mi'lf from 1 00 "6 uriin neuirsl tpirits.
Si. Piei it Smirnoff Hi. Inc., Hinford.Conn,
GUN STORE
SLEDS
Flexible Flyer
$795
Yankee Clipper
$550
TOBOGGANS
8 Foot
$2850
THE
GUN
STORE