Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 19, 1954, Page 9, Image 9

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HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
CAGE SCORES
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
By TUK ASSOCIATED PRESS
Monday'! Results
FAR WEST
Wyoming 56, New Mexico S3
Colorado Springs 69, Montana
State 67
Whitman 66, Pacific S3
Southern Oregon 63, Oregon Tecb
66
Idaho 82, Lewis &
KAST
(Pa.)
I I iamttARY 19. 1954
I liy-r-Sr5 ' .- .. . - ...Li-i..i,.L.LLJaLa. I II ...1 J..
, u (--VJi f4j M:-x '
ruewT Basketball guides are the most demonstra- hieyes. Washington's Tippy Dye (right center) lends a
- if aches Dr. Phog Allen (left) o Kansas tells off a hand. Colorado's nail-chewing Bebe Lee looks up at what
I eeKansas State's Dobbie Lambert (left center) hides must be a disappointing score.
attorn IPlais Coroefeadk
PAGE NINE
99, Baldwin-
rinter
grees To
oRace
. t.ric STEVENSON
G BEACH, Calif. W-Sprlnt-ElFatton,
who set existing
"... fieures he'll give
Liu a good run for their
nest ma.
lie loneW.6cd former Uni-
f Southern uamuruia. oi-ai.
i,. it be known His living
tatlmie to come liom nu
Ltmintiiiir. He'll train when
L an snndwich It In.
m.comnmeu wc uwuu..v.w
Irom Melbourne yesterday
has agreed 10 rate ngnm-si.
, Herb McKenley and
- Aussie pros in what, is
' u the world professional
acing championships. He de-
to say now mum mow n. ,
e the races are Feb. 12 and
.11 have to cet in shape In
L Weighing 152, or just four
I, re than when in college.
Inks he can do Itr-but doesn't
anything lute nis u.j-scuunu
in the 100-yard dash or 20.2
tit 220-yard and 200-meter
, He explains:
college I could run 9.6 or
,t with five or six weeks'
tar after a complete layoif
ve been rather active me
lew years with general con
ing, golt, nanuDau ana sucn
. I think I'll be in good run-
iftane but frankly I have no
ol how last 1 u DC aoie to
IT AGAIN
lermed acceptance of the of-
a jpur-of-the-moment type of
" KtnotlaUons started and
k last summer with disagree-
oa lime and money, then
id again a few weeks ago.
lore that, he says, "I thought
mm days were over."
re's Just one possible hitch,
ill needs approval cf a nine
leave from his job as track
and counsellor at Long
City College. Action on his
si is expected shortly. He
lively plans to leave Feb.. 0.
eaamamamaBaaamaBBjinM:ip iimanw
i
Pity The Ball Clubs
With 'Holdout1 Woes
WHAT'S MY LINE? Ez-
zard Charles is back as a
contender for the heavy
weight championship. This
is how the Cincinnati
Clouter looks sparring be
hind a new type rubber
ized mask and badly in
need of a shave.
Jojans Lose
St. Mary's
Sacred Heart Trolans lost
31 decision in Medford Sun-
o the St. Mary's five.
Snider, however, was high for
Brae when the Trojan pumped
points.
Mary's also won the junior
17 preliminary over the AcaU-
Shuff Stuff
pstlck, Schuss and Bill's
won shulfleboard matches
7 league Dlav last ninht.
rastlck blanked Jonesies. 4-0:
f did the same to TIny's
p's Place beat Mecca, 3-1.
ars Land
ost Honors
f ANGELES tfl This Is al
ia! much for Omrcn Good-
f'etary of the Pacific Coast
W Baseball Writers Assn. -u
tough enough for rtenree
pounce that the writers had
Hollywood's Bobby Bra-
manager of the year for
xouaic "ns of the same
the most valuable player.
f1 Monday came the an.
f'mcnt that Geome O'Don.
"flit handed rjitpher who wnn
N lost 12, had been selected
fkie of the year.
P'- S What. mA u 4H..i
t'le. For his job as secretary
' writers' association is sec-
e s the publicity man for
r "geies Angels, arch ri-
- nouywood.
fen UCLA lining it. i..
t. . ..o 1UUV
ra in 1919 the enrollment
women nnri no M,n
OAT BUILDERS
FIBER GLASS
MATERIALS
Cloth Retin
NOW IN STOCK
he GUN STORE
Boy Admits
Post-Game
Stabbing
' DETROIT Ml A 16-year-old
boy has admitted the ice pick
stabbing and serious wounding of
a high school basketball player
which has led to a ban on all
major night-time athletics in De
troit's public prep schools.
The ban, without precedent here,
was ordered by School Supt. Ar
thur Dondlneau Monday after a
huddle with school principals.
In the background was a long
period of youngster hoodlumism at
prep after - dark games. Public
concern has long been evident.
BAN
The ban Includes both football
and basketball. All games now
must be played In the day time.
The stabbing victim, Ross De
boskev. 17. MacKenzie High School
star, remained in serious condition
at receiving hospital. One lung was
punctured. He was stabbed in the
back. '
Police said the boy who admitted
the stabbing told of it this way:
"Somebody else had his (DeBos
key's) head and everybody else
was beating him, so I stuck him."
ARRESTS
Police have arrested U youths,
six of them juveniles.
According to police, the boy who
admitted the stabbing said "word"
had been going around Central
High School the day before the
game that there would be a fight.
Central played MacKenzie
More than 200 boys went to the
game from Central expressly to
get into a fight, the boy was
quoted as saying.
Whitman Stops
Pacific University
walla walla Ifll Whitman
defeated Pacific University 66-5a
In a slow-moving Northwest Con
ference basketball game here
Monday night.
Don Parker of the Missionaries
and Pacific's Danny French
shared scoring honors.
tributing 17 points.
By JACK HAND
(For Gayle Talbot)
NEW YORK ln It looks like a
long, lough winter for the ball
clubs with holdouts sprouting in
the collar. Loud wails are drifting
back from the outlnnds as 'feller"
contracts find their way Into mail
boxes along the R.F.D. routes.
Some of the owners may have
a tough time explaining to the
hired hands how much money they
lost and how far attendance
drooped. The athletes, are quite
hep to the fact that television con
tracts olten run into six ugums m
the balance book. It's no secret
that a few clubs figure on the
TV dough to meet the player pay
roll.
So far the players are asking
only for the World Series and All
Star TV cash. Some of these days
the boys may start gunning for a
cut of the dally TV take, just as
the boxers demanded and got
$4,000 each Friday night from the
1BC.
PAINFUL
The painful aspects of pennant
winning always come to light
about this time of year. When a
club wins, the playei-3 naturally
want more money. When they lose
they don't want to take a cut.
Many a beautiful friendship be
tween player and club has cracked
uo on these rocky shoals. .
How would you like to have
George Weiss' Job of signing the
Yankees? Five straight pennants,
five straight world Series the
greatest. Add to that the compli
cation of the stadium sale last
month.. The ballplayers read all
about It in the pnpei-3, how Dei
Webb and Dan Topping sold for
6V2 million dollars something thfy
bought for $2,800,000 a few years
back and still own the ball club.
SPRING
' Last year most of the Yankee
regulars didn t sign until spring
training time. Whltey Ford, Eddie
Lopat, Vlo Raschi, Allie Reynolds,
Billy Martin, Joe uouins, jonimy
Mize. Phil Rizzuto. Hank Bauer,
Mickey Mcntle and Gene Woodllng
waited until thev not to St. Peters.
burg. Only Gil McDougald, Yogi
Berra and Johnny Sain, of the
"big names," signed early.
Ford already has said he wants
more. Yogi is angling for $40,000
salary and McDougald wants a
raise. Don't think Lopat, Rizzuto
and some of the others are going
to be easy to rope.
USED TO THAT
But the Yankees are used to this
sort of thing. How about the
others?
When the Phillies can ask Rob
In Roberts the best pitcher in
baseball to take a cut, where does
that leave men like Sal . Magne,
Larry Janscn and Ferris Fain?
Some of tne more stuoDorn cases
may last until the next six-inch
snowfall but we'd like to put broth
er Gayle Talbot way out on the
limb with one prediction they'll
all be signed by opening day.
St. Francis
Wallace
St. Michael's 70, Middlebury 63
Massachusetts 57, Williams 59
SOUTH .
Maryland 70. Virginia 56
Tulane 63, Tennessee 61
Mississippi 78, Vanderbilt 74
Xavier (Ohio! 79, Eastern Ken
lucky 63
Florida A&M 68, Morehouse (Ga)
411
West Virginia State 75, Virginia
stale 12
MIDWEST
Indiana 94, Ohio State 72
Wisconsin 57, Michigan State 53
Iowa 79, Illinois 70
Kansas 76, Iowa State 61
Nebraska 80, Missouri 72
Bradley 86, Houston 71
Detroit 83, Drake 65
John Carroll 04, Seton Hall 86
Iowa Teachers 73, North Dakota
State 65
SOUTHWEST
Rice 80, Arkansas 55
Texas Christian 73, Baylor 60
Tulsa 61, Murray State (Ky) 51
t Overtime)
West Texas State 67, New Mexico
A&M eo
PRO BASKETBALL
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Monday's Results
Minneapolis 91, Milwaukee 72
Cougars,
Idaho Mix
. j vj
COURTING WARMTH
Angela Buxton introduces
something new during the
Junior Lawn Tennis Club
o Great Britain's Tourna
ment in London. The come
ly miss wears white slacks
and green buckskin jacket
lined with iamb's wool.
Athletics Win Fifth
In KBI Cage League
standings . lUons; Jim Conroy was held to IS
1.000 1 but led the. Athletics in their fifth
Victory ; j . mug sua uw x am
threw in 25 and 21 lor tne Dig part
of Tulelake's 98 noints: M. Revls
rounded out the high scorers with
I for the Jayhawks.
The Matin and Dorris teams mix
Thursday night at Dorris, the Town
ies against the Townles and the
Athletics against the Lions; the
Chlloquin Townies face Merrill and
Ohfloquin Parks meet me
. 4
, 3
Mulln Athletics
Dorris Townles ..
Tulclake Inner
Uingell Valley
Hnrri Liom
Chlloquin Townie
Jayhawkt
Chlloquin Parks -
Merrill VfW 0 S .000
Bceres ruin
TVirria Towiilin 6.1 CMloauin Park 41
Dorris Lions 63 Chlloquin Parks 48
Maltn Athletics 51 Lamell Valley 43
Tulclake In tiers 98 Merrill 41
Jayhawks 00 Malin Townles 45
There was little shuffling in the
Klamath Basin Independent League
basketball standings last night.
The Malin Athletics stayed on top
with their fifth straight win against
no setbacks, while the Dorris Town
ies and Tulelake Inners stayed a
squeak behind at 4-1, both winning
last night.-
Tulelake ran up SB points to
trounce Merrill, 8841.
The Athletics whipped Langell
Valley 51-42.
The Dorris Lions hurdled tne
Chiloauin Parks. 63-46.
The Dorris Townies dumped tne
Chlloquin Townies, 65-48.
The Jaynawks oreesea oy ine
Malin Townies, 6045.
Wilbur Welch potted 20 points for
the Dorrl? Townies: Elmer uran
ium did the same for the Dorris
the
Tulelake Inners at Tulelake In
the other doubleheader.
Scoring:
JAYHAWKS (60)
Dow 12
Foster 4
Hevia IB ' ' i
Johnston 14
Layton 9
lin tubs Heiskary. Donaldson.
TULELAKE (U8)
J. King 35
Brifhiman 0
DeFrain 31
Klne 6
Ay res is
is.i.i.tr. anhB Kirhv D. Urback 0.
Sowlea 10. Merrill subs Vaughn 3.
VALLEY (43)
Seater 13
l. tiorsiey a
Grohs 14
Homey
fa run
College Of Idaho
Trounces L&C
CALDWELL, Idaho R. C.
Owens Doured in 20 points and
collected 32 rebounds Monday
night as College of Idaho rolled
to a 82-74 basketball victory over
Lewis and Clark,
The 32 rebounds boosted Owens'
total for the year to 369, tops lor
the nation.
MOSCOW, Idaho UK The Idaho
Vandals and Washington State
Cougars meet here Tuesday night
m a basbetball game expected to
make a three-way race of tiie
scramble for Northern Division
honors.
A win by the Vandals would
boost them within half a game of
Oregon's Ducks and the Oregon
State Beavers, currently tied .on
top of the standings, and set the
stage for a weekend battle of title
contenders a meeting here with
the tall Beavers.
The Vandals, whose 2-2 confer
ence records includes a win and ft
loss in earlier series with the two
leaders, are expected to have lit
tle difficulty with the Cougars.
The Staters, under Coach Jack
Priel, have won one of four con
ference starts and have a 7-8 over
all record. .
Coach Chuck Finley will send a
team, of veterans led by Dwight
Morrison against the underman
ned Cougars, whose mainstay is
high scoring forward Ron Ben-nink.
Tuesday night's game is the only
one on tap in the league until
the weekend when the Beavers
play Idaho here and Washington
meets Oregon at Eugene.
Assistant For
Kircher Inks
PULLMAN, Wash. Wl , Golden
Romney, Washington State college
athletic director, announced Mon
day night the WSC Athletic Coun
cil has named Michael J. Scarry
as an assistant to head football
nonr.h Al Kircher.
The appointment is suDject iu
approval by the WSC Board of
T?.ncrfntR
Rnnrrv. head lootoatl coacu at
Loras College in Dubuque, la., in
1952, was a backfleld coach at
Santa Clara in 1950. Before that
he coached at Western Reserve
oft.!. Kpverni -vears of professional
football with the old Cleveland
Rams and the Los Angeles Rams,
Bing's Tourney Gives
$50,000 to Charity
MONTEREY. Calif. Iffl Bing
Crosby said Tuesday his 13th an
nual pro - Amateur Golf Tourna
ment, won Sunday by E.J. (Dutch)
Harrison, netted $50,000 for char-
itv.
The figure exceeded last year's
hlirh of S42.00O and brought to
$220,377 the total raised for char
ity in the eight yeafs the tourney
Haa hpen staeed here.
rrnstav said he was willing to
nriri u ivn to the nurse to make
next year's a $15,000 event if the
Professional Golf Assn. will give
him August or September doles.
The tourney usually is drenched
here in January.
'Wrong Way'
Keglers Lead
CHICAGO W A pair of wrong
way bowlers, Tess Joans of uieve
land and Lou Camni of Dumont,
N. J.. Daced the 224 bowlers in
the National All-Star Bowling
Tournament Tuesday as the keg
lers made ready for their last day
of qualifying trials.
CamnL who once shared tlie na
tional doubles crown, moved into
the men's lead with a 3,696 total
for 18 games, tour more than Ban
Johnson of Tacoma, Wash., and
12 ahead of veteran Pete carter
of Detroit who is third..
Campl, a 48-year-old contractor,
violates one of the cardinal prln
r.loles of bowling aa on tne ap
proach, he finishes on his right
tnnt rather than the left foot as
do Uie rest of the conventional
men stylists.
Mrs. Johns, a' 34-year-old house
wife, onlv throws the experts for t
loss as she throws the bowling
ball with her left hand rather than
her right. If she manages to win
the' Qualifying trials, she will be
the first leit-nanaer in msiory w
do so.
i ii tr.iiu ,h Rtnllh 1. Schnei
der, . Pepple 2. Robert 3. Bobs. T. Jfep
ple 1. Sohn. M.lln ub Kenyan 3, Dun
can 4, Stevenson 1.
The leading hitter in the Texas
League for 1953 was Joe Frazier
who batted .332 witn umanoma
City. He will get a trial In spring
training Witn tne Bt. Louis usroin-als.
(15) MAU.V TOWNS
P .14 Dalton
F . ! UnU
C . 12 SaruUlU
G 3 Falllhee
G 4 Lindiay
Ramsey, Jones a. m
(41MEBBILL
B Beeves
3 Heaton
14 Hasklns
It Barry
3 Anderson
(51) ATHLETICS
3 .Azevedo
'12 Woodley
16 Conroy
. a Peterson
11 Anderson
LIONS (63)
Branham 20 r
MotscnenDacnsr r
Miller 16
Harnett 17 G
Kenaston 1
MS) PABK8
. 0 David
3 Oatea
3 Gelnscr
13 Mathis
11 IJUBOIB
i.,ns .,,h rjodson. Ward 2, niait-
un 1, Copeland 2. Parks subs Wllklel ,
Lefget 2, Mlnato 3, Bickers.
DORRIS TOWNS (Ml )
welch 20 . ; :?;",:"
Rllo 4 T 4 G. Hatcher
Forterfleld It C
Robinson 6 G
ti'iuB v ., i,i. li. Williams.
"uL..d rw.n 4. Chiloauin
Townles' subs Wamplcr, AUen 2, Har
rinston, Crume 7, Cline.
s Mlnato
13 C. Hatcher
miner
. So smooth
it leaves you
breathless
HOTELS
OSBURN HOLLAND
EUGENE, ORE. MEDFOED
, . Thoroughly Modern
Mis. J. E. Barley Joe Barley Jr.
Proprietors
mirnoff
tHe artaiest mwc
O :..A1ttrtttk
vuvnrt
0proof.M.efioml00lBinnMtBliplrits
each con-
Regardless of shop -W eon
supply SAP b IT auiw
GLASS to fit any eat. Mod
rn .ouiomtnt: axperitnctd
gloilert ond rtolly fins sto
ck of tht btst. available
glass plus o eemprohtnsivt
stock ot potwrns, ui.vr
prompt satisfactory sorviet,
KIMBALL'S
GLASS SHOP
flflrrt St ! '
Ml Warn "rl
BsarParmlamTiaa
& , , . i teg ,
rwj i 4
I .
. . rvp
' I i.
' f:;,.: 'S
It used to take this much equipment to
do the same job as the small unit the man
in the photo at the left is holding.
New, smaller voice boosters take about
a twentieth as much space, mean real sav
ings in these days of high building costs.
Such savings are helping us furnish good
service, more service, low-cost service to
you. ..and to all the West.
Making things smaller helps keep telephone rates
down. As your voice travels over telephone circuits.it gradual!;
gets weaker and must be amplified -or "boosted" at intervals.
It used to take some rather bulky electronic equipment to do this.
' But, today, a man can easily hold in his two hands more of these
voice-boosters than were once contained in each of the tall panels
pictured above. The smaller units are now in use in many places in
the West as part of a plan we call "miniaturization." This is a pro
gram in which telephone people work to develop equipment that
takes less space, does a better job and costs less to install. Such
research has meant a lot in helping us fight today's high prices
and keep your telephone rates low.
Pacific Telephone
works to make
your telephone a
bigger value
every day