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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 9, 1954)
1 ItiiHDAV, JANUARY 9, 1954 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE THIRTEEN B I I 5 0' WAR The carriers caught Guy Munsell in an obvious l last night as he yanks at Jerry Knapp's arm to cause the Idford forward to lose the ball. Don Mills, Pelican forward, shown just behind Knapp and uave u uiivo looks on in the background. Klamath Falls won, 44-33, in the first of a two game series that winds up tonight on Pelican Court, 8:15. . (See story Page 12) Photo by Don Kettler mlh, Merit ?! 00 o r u w d Heart W L Pet. , 2 0 1.00D m 1 0 1.000 . 1 0 1.000 , 1 1 .900 . 1 1- .300 .. 0 2 .000 0 2 .000 no f'.ilrhrist 32 Ul 36 Sacred Heart .15 buin 68 Bonanza 26 iloquin, the defending Klam County Class B bsaketball hnion. Malin and Merrill won Liiics that counted last night Henlev eded Bly, 43-36, in ir's-X tussle. iloquin pounded the hapless nza Antlers, 68-26; Malln ped Gilchrist, 59-32; and Mer ited Sacred Heart, 36-35. ' le Chiloquin win was the see- in a row for the defending nplon Panthers and came the way. kiln's outing was its first in Josh Lose Medford Klamath Freshmen team ped a decision to the Medford Simen last night, 41-34. tic McLouehlin led the scoring lie Medford crew with 23 points. Kimpton nabbed scoring lor hath with 12 points. By BEN PHLEGAR !W YORK uB Indiana's dan- Invasion Into Minnesota pfhts a tremendous basketball tonight as nine of the na top 10 teams see action on sram which Includes more 100 major games. ' NCAA champions from pingtoii, now ranked third be- Kentucky and Duquesne, suf Iheir only Bie Ten loss last pn at MinneaDolis. The fin- No, 6 in thft pnnntrt, FpaI Sent of repeating the triumph, crowd of more than 18,000 is :tl, the largest ever to see me In a college-owned arena, lahoma City, No. 9, Is idle and uie oiners in the top 10 1 have things cnnnirfprnhlv than Indiana and Minnesota. league play; the Mustangs are rated the best bet to knock over Chiloquin for the title this season although Rod Lyon Is lost through Ineligibility for scholastic reasons. Bly is still batting 1.000 Inas much as the Henley game was king's-X and the Bobcats won last week. Malin led 17-10 over the Grizzlies at the quarter mark and bloated it to 32-21 and 48-27 at the half and three-quarter posts. Glen steysknl poured In 22 points for, the winners'. Sacred Heart evened the count a couple of times In the fourth Garrett Pitches Stars to Win HONOLULU Ifl Stanford's Bobby Garrett passed 'the College All Stars to an 18-14 victory over the Hawaii All Stars Friday night before 20,000 spectators In balmy Hawaiian weather. Garrett's pitching, plus yoeman work from UCLA's Paul Camer on, puncned over three touchdowns in the first half. Buu the Hawaiians although aided by six profession als couldn't catch up. Garrett completed 15 of 25 pass es. Including two for touchdowns. Eight throws went to his Stanford teammate, end Sam Morley. mm quarter against Merrill but the Huskies had the final punch left to one-point the Trojans. Bill Snider poured in almost half of Sacred Heart's points with 16; John O'Neill was high for Merrill with 12. Henley rallied for Its win over Bly as the Bobcats stayed ahead 11-9 and 24-22 at the first two stops primarily on foul-line shoot ing. The Hornets out-scored Bly from the field, 19-11. Ray Searcy scored the deciding basket for Hen ley. Sherman Seastrong potted 19 for Bly, 11 on free throws. Ch Iloquin' s Ted Siemens led the Panther attack with 18 points with Ivan Joe contributing 15 and Jack Barney 13. In junior varisity preliminaries, Malin whipped Gilchrist, 28-22; Merrill edged Sacred Heart, 34-32; Henley got over Bly, 46-22; and Henley TVA no TODBISS Landy Smashes Another Record MELBOURNE (ffl John Landy, Australia's track star, switched from, the mile to the two-mile Sat urday and set a new Australia rec ord of 8:40.6, breaking the pre vious Aussie mark for the distance by three seconds. His time compares to the world record of 8:40.4 set in Aug. 1952, by Gaston Reiff of Belgium. afional Cage Action Heavy Kentucky entertains Georgia Tech at Lexington where It has won 116 consecutive games. DUKES PLAY Duquesne meets little St. Fran cis of Pennsylvania. Oklahoma A&M, No. 4, entertains Houston In a Missouri Valley contest. Western Kentucky, No. 6, travels to Murray State, always a tough foe for the HUltoppers. Seventh ranking Holy Cross plays host to St. Anselm's; Duke, No. 8, is at home to North Carolina State in the Atlantic Coast Conference hearillner and Oregon State, No. 10, meets Idaho for the second straight night. The Beavers were upset last night 70-65 despite a 32 point spree by 7 foot-3 Swede Hal brook. The American Broadcasting Co. CAA Rejects Broad ode for Eligibility jCINNATl m The college "C administrators, finding selves increasinxlv oecunlerf me task of policing their own , i iiuay turned down a pro 'or a nationwide eUgibillty lor athletes. they inUTIPHtntnl., fnnrf ki " J uitu r" saddled with unnther juo, nanded over by tiie II coarhes. eady heavilv hrrfj in. Problems as teleui.inn fil iate receint. .n .,. I,v. fnd enforcing their own codes Z T .: ' we NCAA members H would be too much to ' "innie a nationwide rule 11R the plitriKII,.. Met t,.w...jr ui IIIUIVIUU- p'DMEVT S had been proposed through to the NCAA con- h.ch would have applied we-year ellg.blity rule and le-jear residem-a t... fcAAS1cn'Ls t0 811 competition in Vk "' " nOW PPll05 m.ni. r "'H meeia ana menu where separate Several objections were raised, but when the delegates saw how much work by national committees would be involved, the amendment was sunk on the convention floor. Hardly had this been done when the American Football Coaches Assn., which has agreed to work in harmony with the NCAA in en forcing rules of conduct, came up with an eight-point program lor improving coaching ethics. DEPLORING The coaches, deploring occasion al extra-rough play suggested con ference committees be given the power to banish lrom football squad? anv player whose conduct Is detrimental to the best interests of the game. They further sug gested using game movies to de termine when such abuses take place. For their own part, the coache3 formally .viewed as unethical pick ing weekly game winners, organ ized sideline coaching, faking in juries, scouting opponents' prac tice sessions, falsifying players' weights and exchanging game mov- is televising nationally an after noon game from New York be tween Fordham and Army. AMAZING Last night brought amazing scor ing performances, both by hidtvid' uals and teams. Baltimore Univer sity, the highest scoring team lr the country, beat Lynchburg, Va, College 142-98, probably the most combined points ever scored In a regulation 40 minute college game, Seven Baltimore players contrib uted 10 or more points but the high scorer. Bob Hall, eot only 20. The one-man shows were by Frank Selvy of Furman with 48 points. Bob Schafer of Vlllanova with 46 and Bob Pettit of Louisiana State with 43. DEADLOCKED Wyoming and Colorado A&M re mained deadlocked lor tne Skyline Conference lead with 2-0 records. The Cowboys broke a 36-36 half. time tie and rolled over Utah State 85-54. The Aggies won their 10th game in 11 starts 73-50 against Montana. -Brigham Young opened conference play with an easy 81-58 decision over Denver and New Mexico, which had lost two, upset Utah 63-tSO. In the Border Conference Texas Tech whipped Arizona 78-62 and West Texas edged New Mexico A&M 64-48. Seattle overpowered Gonzaga (ft 61 and in the Pacific Coast Con ference Stanford nipped Southern California 61-59, Washington State beat Washington's sophomore-lad en team 56-48 and California sur prised UCLA 62-53. Chiloquin romped 50-23. over Bonanza, Panter In TKO Loss To Joey By JACK HAND NEW YORK lAV-Joey Glardello never looked belter not even in Supreme Court. Giardeilo 23-year-old Philadel phia middleweight, ranked No. 3 challenger to champion Bobo Olson showed surprising punching power in stopping Garth Panter, rugged Salt Lake City boxer, in 1:16 of the fifth round last night at Madi son Square Garden. It was the first time In Panter's 67-bout career he had failed to last the route. He claimed he never had been knocked down. Although Garth was hammered half through the ropes and driven around the ring by Joey's right hand barrage, he aidn't go down. Releree Al Berl made it a techni cal kayo when he wisely called it halt. SURPRISED Kven Giardeilo was surprised at the TKO, his lust in the Garden and 14th hi 62 bouts. "i never liken to hurt any body," he said in his dressing .oom. "I couid have knocked ou. Ernie Durando, Walter Cartier or da! DiMartino but I didn't. I had Gil Tumor ready to go in the last three rounds. I 'guess I w.is chicken-hearted. But no more. Every fight means too much." Giardeilo, of course, Is the only lighter who holds a Supreme Court decision over Bob Christenberry, New York State Athletic Commit sion chairman. That happened a year ago when the court reversed Christenberry's reversed decision to give him the nod over Billy Grnham. WANTS OLSON Naturally, Joey wants Olson next. But he won't get him. Bobo has a tentative date with welter champion Kid Gavilan at Chicago, in April. Matchmaker Billy Brown of the Garden has Giardeilo pen cilled in for a Feb. 5 date with Joey Giambra. of Buffalo, N. Y. They have fought twice, each win ning one. "" ' By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS GENERAL TAMPA, Fla. Jockey Patsy Greco was barred from Florida tracks for the remainder of the racing senson by the state com mission for tailing to protect one of his horses against being doped at Tropical Park. CiOLF LOS ANGELES Bill Nary scored a four under par 67 to lead In the first round of the $20,000 Los Angeles Open tournament. TENNIS ' TAMPA, Fla. Defending cham pion Gardnar Mulloy defeated Cal houn Dickson 6-0, 4-6, 6-1, In the quarter finals of the Dixie tournament. Jack Hewins Ed Gayda Out-funnies Famed Globetrotters Ni ght Ml Sparine: MALIN 139) (32) GILCHRIST Rick 11 F 8 Willinfiham Steyakal 22 F 1L Larson uuva iu- u . o muss Miller 3 G 3 Jordan Travis 2 G 5 Traw Maim uos uoKKen s. najnui l, jonn- Bon 4. Gilchrist subs Hosey, Toomey, Warren, T. Larson. MERRILL (86) (S5 S. HEART O'Neil 12 T 16 Snider L. Johnson 2 F ' 5 A. Reginato McCulloush 8 C 7 Seibert Walters 3 G 1 Mlcharlis G. Johnson 4 G 3D. Reginato Merrill subs Srhlecht 7. Sacred Heart auba ThiU 3, Wlckline. (48) HENLEY Kaylor 4 Seaberrv 5 Hill R Roberts 5 T. Wright Twumsch 1. J. subs ZaroMnski 4, Searcy 5. R. Wright 7, D. Searcy . Parker 3, BONANZA (2fl) (08) CHILOQUIN Cunningham 1 F 1J Barney Thomas F 8 George Sankins 1 ' C 18 T. Siemens Hoefler 5 G BLY 4fi Cavan 7 T Harter S F Seastrong 19 C Hadley 2 G Nixon 12 . G Bly subs Miner, Tecumsen. ncniey Dye 3 15 I. ...h-RnhrrU 2. Koertje 4. Bamett 6. Robertson 4. Chiloquin subs Prowell 2, Weddle, D. Siemens 3, Souers 3, Sisson. , NCAA Votes For Video Grid Control CINCINNATI ffl The National Collegiate Athletic Assn. conven tion voted overwhelmingly in fa vor of a 1954 program for con trolled football television Friday. The action was taken alter me Rev. Edmund P. Joyce of Notre Dame described the resolution for the action "a blank check to the television committee." Father Joyce, executive vice- president of Notre Dame, offered an amendment which would re quire the television committee to present each year at the NCAA convention a detailed plan for the following football season. The proposed amenoment was rejected by a voice vote and the convention adopted the original res olution by a record majority of 172 to 9. The committee's resolution, first made public at a round table meeting Thursday, does not bind the 1954 committee to any definite program but makes several strong recommendations, based on the experiences of the past year. The plan in effect last year lim ited the colleges to a game-of-the- week program on national tele vision networks In whlcn no one team could appear more than once a season. The American football, etc., 4th graf TA12 The first Cotton Bowl football classic, was played Jan. 1, 1937. T.C.U., led by Sammy Baugh, de feated Marquette 16-6. According to the Bowling Mag azine Yearbook, there were 481 bowlers who averaged 200 or bet ter during the 1952-53 season. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW YORK ( Madison Square Garden) Joey Giardeilo, 160, Phil. adelphla, stopped Garth Panter, 161, salt Lake City, 5, WEST PALM BEACH. Fla. Billy Lauderdale, 146, Miami, out pointed Larry Mujica, 140, New York, 10. PHILADELPHIA Jimmy Soo, 136, Philadelphia, outpointed Aar on Tart, 135, Philadelphia, 7. Bowling Record Sought SEATTLE Ifl Bowlers of the Pacific Northwest are rallviug be hind a "Beat Los Angeler" slogan to mnke this year's American Bowling Congress tournament the lnrgest ever held on the West Coast. Set for Seattle, the top trundling program In tne world win run from March 13 tnrougn May iu. ' Los Angeles was the host city when the ABC tourney first came to. the far west in 1947. The tour nament that year drew 3.356 teams. There should be little trouble going over this mark If everyone gets into the spirit of the drive," said Bob Nelson of Seattle, an ABC vice president. "The number of bowling teams in the states of Oregon and Washington alone nave doubled since 1947." DRIVE A final drive for entries the deadline is Feb. 2 is being spear headed by Frank K. Baker, ABC secretary. He met Saturday witn Seattle bowlers and will confer next Saturday with trundlers In Portland and the following Monday will be In Tacoma. This will be the only chance any Northwest bowlers ever will have to enter the ABC tourney, which usually Is In the midwest or less was a top attraction for Division for teams of soo average or less was a top attractionnfor the lower average bowlers. ' PRIZES : "Special squad prizes are paid In the Booster Division," he said. "Twenty teams out of every 32 on a squad share In the distribu tion, with the highest scoring team getting first place award of $100, "Every man has a chance to compete for top honors," Baker added. "In the 50 tourneys of the past many unknowns have come through. Ten bowlers, in fact, have won ABO titles in their very first year of competition." By JACK HEWINS Associated press Sports Writer SEATTLE Wi If the sun came out and you wanted to take a golf lesson one of these January days you might have to call out a posse to find a professional. Seems like all the pros in the Northwest have taken off for the warmer and drier, a goodly batch of them heading for Del Monte, Calif., to Join Mr. Harry Llllls Crosby for his annual tournament known as the Blng Crosby InvitA tlonal. Among 'em are Ken Tucker of Everett, Chuck Congdon of Taco ma, Joe Greer of Yakima. Ray Honsberger of Seattle and Bud Holmeister of Hayden Lake, Ida ho. Johnny Hoetmer and Bill Zong ker of Seattle are vacationing in Phoenix and Curley Hueston of Spokane is dittoing somewhere in California. The Harlem Clowns were billed to provide the comedy when they Oliver Wants Bevo's Scoring Record Back Bill Nary Leads In L. A. Open LOS ANGELES 11 Husky Bill Nnry, parlaying 300 yard drives and a lucky putter Into a four-un- der par 67, leads the $20,000 Los Angeles open going into tne sec ond round today, but he knows from sad experience Just how tough It is to win the top money, For Nary, who lives in Tucson, Ariz., has been playing the profes- sional trail more than 15 years and still hasn t had his hands on a first place check. He tied for top honors at the end of regulation play at both Houston and Baton Rouge, La., last year, but lost out In playoffs. CLOSE Hard on the heels of the 8 foot 2!i Nary are such proven first money winners as Lew Worsham, Oakmont, Fa., the leading green- back collector on the pro circuit last year; Jim Ferrier, San Fran cisco and Ed (Porky) Oliver of Palm Springs, Calif. Eight other players came in tin der par for the first 18 in the tour. nament, being played for the first time at the Fox Hills Country Club, a par 71 layout measuring 6,972 yards. HEADS LIST Heading the list at 70 is Tommy Bolt of Maplewood, N. J., who copped the honors here two years ago. Others are Charles Slfford, Negro star from Philadelphia; Jack Harden, El Paso, Tex.; vet eran Paul Runyan of Pasadena; Fred Wampler, Indianapolis; Joe Brown, Des Moines, Iowa; John Serafln, Fox Hills, Fa., and Jack Burke Jr.. Kiamesha Lake, N. Y. Low amateur honors for the first day went to young Bruce Cudd of Portland, Ore., and Don Keith, South Pasadena youngster and University of Southern California student, both with 71's. played a bunch of ex-college all stars in Spokane, but Ed Gayda of the stars fetched the biggest laugh when ills trunks split. . . Bill Steedman feels sorry lor tne New York police commissioner who was named czar of harness racing, saying they just demoted the guy to harness bull. . . Jean Biggerstalf of Tacoma is said to be the only woman driver competing against men In auto races. . .With women crowding more and more into man s prov inces, at least one group ot boys Is Insuring itself against marry ing gals who can't cook. A West Seattle High School teacher re ports she has 24 boys In her cook ing classes, "Including three all city football players and many other athletes.". . . Dave McMillan, who coached Idaho to hoop titles in the early twenties, now Is assistant to john ny Kundla of the pro Minneapolis LaVers. When McMillan coached at Minnesota his assistant was Johnny Kundla. . .And when Jack Nichols was sold by Milwaukee to Boston s Celtics It put ntm back with Red Auerbach for the third time. Jack played for Red at Washington and with the old mid west Tri-City pros. . .We're almost sure that skinny Vic Buccola, first baseman with the Tri-City (north west type) Braves, isn't the same Vic Buccola who was named a3 a guard on the all-California col lege football team. . . If anybody ever asks you to name the oldest sport In the world the answer is ice skating. Scandinavi ans skated 2.000 years ago on skates made of bone. . . Under the 16-game schedule arrangement a Northern Division basketball , team never has gone through a ' season without a defeat. . .Wen atchee Junior College continues to attract topnotch skiers, with Peder Pytte of Kongsberg, Norway, Jumper and cross-country ace, the newest addition to the team. . . Jock McKlnnon, pro at Capilano Golf Club In Vancouver, B.C., once during a tournament hit a ball into a woman's handbag. . . While he was with the Chicago Cubs Clarence Maddern, later of the Seattle Rainlers, saw a flock of mallards flying In low, picked up a ball and brought down a quacker. . , During a Coast League game in Portland Brooks Holder fouled off a ball and hit a woman spectator in the face. Next day a teammate, Marine Pleretti, was playing golf ano one oi ms pokes hit the same woman's husband in the face. RIO GRANDE, Ohio WI Newt Oliver said .Saturday he will ask the NCAA to return the basketball scoring records it took away from Clarence (Bevo) Francis, the na tion's leading scorer. Oliver, basketball coacR at Rio Grande College, said "Bevo's re cent showings against major op position should be proof enough for the NCAA to return to him the honors he won last year." Bevo scored 1,954 points In 39 games last year as a freshman, Crafty Admiral, winner of the 1952 and 1953 runnings of the $50,000 Gulfstream Park Handicap, is the only horse ever to repeat a stakes victory at this seaside track. but the NCAA ruled out the rec ords because of inadequate oppo sition. This year's schedule Included on ly one game against a two-year college, Erie Tech of Buffalo, N.Y. Rio Grande walloped Erie 120-59, and Bevo got 64 points. In 10 other games, Bevo has av eraged 44.7 points. Rio Grande has won six of those and meets high scoring Morris Harvey Saturday night at Charleston, W. Va. Oliver singled out Bevo's scor ing performances against five teams he called "major." Francis got 39 against Vlllanova, 48 against Miami, 34 against North Carolina State, 32 In a game with Wake Forest and 48 against Butler a total of 201 points, an average of more than 40 points per game. I In three of his four years in the National Football League, Doak Walker of the Detroit Lions has scored more than 90 points. He tallied 128 in 1950, 97 in 1951 and 93 In 1953. Gus Bell, outfielder for the Cin cinnati Redlegs, hit 15 home runs at his home park and 16 on the road in J953. The New York Giants hit 176 homers in 1953 to extend their record of having hit 100 or more home runs per season to 22. Frank Leahy, Notre Dame's foot ball coach, has had six undefeated seasons at that school 1941, '46, 47, '48, '49 and '53. Marquette Eyes George Terlep MILWAUEE HI George Ter lep, a former professional football player Is top choice to become head coach at Marquette University, sue ceeding Lisle (Liz) Blackbourn who left Thursday to join the pro coach BTg ranks. Blackbourn resigned his Mar quette post for a threevyear con tract with the Green Bay Packers at reportedly nearly twice his cur rent salary and ?erlep, his back field coach at Marquette, was ex pected to move up. Horatio Luro, trainer at Hialeah race track, uses an electric oat- crusher to prepare food for bis horses. Georges Carpentler of France was the first boxer ever to win all the championships of his country, from bantamweight to heavyweight. UUIUIS mo BBveu jrcniB as .uu- klnson's teams have won 60, lost 7 and tied 3. Four members of the American Hockey League staff of linesmen were former star players in that loop. Announcing A NEW DEALER PARKER P0NTI AC CO. KEEP FAITH IN '54 Do unto your creditor ot you would novo thot ho do unto you. 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