Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 29, 1954, Page 8, Image 8

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    TAOE EIGHT
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
FRIDAY JANlUov. I
ProspDt
CHILOQUIN,
MALIN MIX
IN FEATURE
Malln goes to Chiloquin to
night in the top game on the
Klamath County League prep
basketball schedule.
The Mustangs and Panthers
are currently tied for the
league lead with 3-0 records.
In other games, Sacred Heart
hosts Bly, Gilchrist travels to
Bonanza and Henley is at Mer
rill in the only non-league
game. Henley is A-2 on an in
dependent schedule.
Junior varsity preliminary
games tip off at 7:30 on ail
fronts.
3 From
N'west
Thurs4.y-dra'
Performed in the LSI
Howard McCant, - L
Berry, both of wlshiSff
teams that TappC j
round choice of the 3
York Glanu-toVy
1 'm04 s cs
FORWARDS DON MILLS (left) and Ed Barron Dav attention as Cnar-h Paul MnPall nut.
lines plans for the Roseburg series that opens on Pelican Court tonight. The set is
king's-X for the Pelicans.
Photo, by Don Kettler
Pelicans pen Series
Tht Pelicans open a two-game
series against Roseburg tonight
here, one of two king's-X sets be
fore the Klamath quint swings back
into .Southern Oregon Conference
motion in an attempt to catch the
Grants Pass Cavemen.
The Klamath Junior varsity
warms Pelican Court tonight. 6:30,
in a preliminary skirmish with the
National Guards. City League lead
ers, and open Saturday night's pro
gram against - Henley, Klamath
County's only A-2 school playing
this , season on an independent
schedule.
The Roseburg Chiefs will start
tonight with forwards Gary Crabb
and Kub Beamer, back after t
knee operation; center - Jim Gil-
bert and guards Don Carter and
Bon Kelley.- ,
IN-AND-OUT
In 1 games, the Indians have
broken even in an in-and-out
season that saw them win and lose
with Myrtle Creek and knock over
North Bend.
Roseburg and Klamath have-met
one common opponent. Grants
Pass, the team that knoed the
Pels out of the Southern Oregon
conference lead with two victories
over the Pels last weekend (64-60
and 47-44) whipped Roseburg, SO'
43. -
Frank Selvy Nears
Cage Scoring Mark
,'. By BEN FHLEGAR,
' NEW YORK Ml Fabulous Prank
- Belvy from Furman University fig
ures to break basketball's all-time
individual scoring tor a three-year
major college career record some'
time within the next 10 days.
' If he can keep up his most recent
pace he will do it before the week
u over.
Selvy is a scoring marvel, the
likes of which never before has
been seen on a basketball court.
After two seasons of play with the
Greenville, S. C school, he has
scored 1,803 points. He needs Just
86 more to pass Kansas' Clyde
Byrne Stops
Joe Kahiii
PORTLAND Wl Jlmmv Bvrno
of Portland knocked out Joe Kahut
of Woodburn, Ore,, in the ninth
round of the 10-rounder headlining
a boxing card here Thursday
night..
Byrne, at 216, outweighed the
Veteran Kahut by as pounds,
v In preliminaries:
Oals Davis, 166, Eugene, Ore.,
no Gene Meeker, ltstt, Eslacada,
Ore., drew, 4: Frank Scott. 105,
Eugene, stopped Tommy Demon
188, Snndpolnt, Idaho, 4; Chuck
Maxson, 100, Portland, stopped
Stew Rose 185, Madras, Ore. 2;
Gene Brlxen. 185, Snndpolnt, Ida
ho stopped Monte Clark, 185, Cor-
vauu ore. 3.
So smooth
e- i ......
u leaves yuw, fl OnJi
breathless vs&J
mirnpff
: vuvnn
ii)f.Mtdftomt00(liil"5'"l!PW''
t.twnSniiK Hi Int. Hirtford.Cenn. ,
- i l,l fl f ii
Lovellette's record Bnd he has 15
regular-season games to play.
48 POINTS
Last night against Presbyterian,
he scored 48 points, the eighth time
in 12 games this season that he's
hit 40 or more and the luth time
lie's been above 45. His average
for the dozen contests Is 39.5. ex
actly 10 points above the single-
He has played twice since he
paused for midterm exams. The
first game after his rest he scored
45 points. Tonight he goes against
Newberry and tomorrow against
Clemson. Those 86 points may
come in the two games, if tney
don't he's got two mors games
coming up next week against
Manhattan College in Madison
Square Garden Thursday and
against La Salle in Philadelphia
Saturday, v
HELPED
Selvy'a show last night helped
Furman overpower Presbyterian
108-70 and bring their season's
mark up to 6-6.
In the Rocky Mountain area,
Colorado ASiM took over first place
In the Skyline Conference by whip
ping Montana 67-64 while Wyoming
Was suiiering its nrat league loss,
62-46 against Utah State.
In the only other major games
last night Penn State outlasted
Pittsburgh 01-85 in tnree over
times, St. Francis surprised St,
John's 67-48 in an all-Brooklyn bat
tle, and Crelghton defeated the
University of Scranton 87-68.
Jesse Arnelle scored 31 points for
Penn State before fouling out In
the third overtime.
alfe it'fam mt'"''
I A 1
8:00 P.M.
K.H.U.S.
,. ' vs.
ROSEBURG
KFJI
Pnaohilrrr'a tttirh. hxwj
with 116 points In the 14 .games,
one ahead of Carter, albert Is
down at 107, Crabb 80 and Beamer
22 i in the three times he's gone
to the post since his knee injury.
7-5 FOR PELS ; v
' The Pels, second to the Cave
men in league action and with an
Overall 7.fi rannrrl .Mi.al 4 T5 rtJ
-v Auu.u, tw new
ding next weekend for a series
Mmot.h ,i,U .U. HI,..,. n,t...
w...Hn... mux W,D DUUM VTU1VC9,
then return to play for keeps in
a Feb. 12-13 series in Medford.
. ClnanH Caul Mnlfalt tt......,
nounced his starting line-up and
it b uKuiy it won v oe Known un
til gametlme as the Klamath men
tor continues to try to find a win
ning combination.
Tn 12 Mm., flanmi- r.r- J
- tj - - nil 11 UUU
league), guard Larry Vamell
leads the Pels -with 110 points,
fourth In the conference; Don Mills
has 76; Dave D'OUvo 65 in Just
eight games; Ouy Munsell 62 and
, McCall could start with Mills
fltlri Mlinonll at 11.. ,
D'OUvo at center, Yarnell and Be-
vans ai tn guard positions,!
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
FOOTBALL
PHILADELPHIA. vn,m r,T....
land Browns, Eastern Conference
CbamDa of thai Kntlnnnl VnntH.,u
League, selected Stanford's Bobby
urn-ret as uie-ir oonus pick in the
annual NFL draft of college play
ers. A total of 3fi0- nlnver wn
drafted.
; GOLF
MIAMI, Fla. Mary Lena Faulk,
Thomasville, Ga., defeated Polly
Riley 4 and 3 and Marlene Stewart,
Fronthlll, Ontario beat Helen Mac
Dougall of Saskatchewan, 5 and 4,
In first round matches in the Helen
Lee Doherty Amateur Tournament.
PALM SPRINGS. Calif. Bo
Wlninger of Oklahoma City took
the first round lead in the $15,000
Thunderblrd Invitational Tourna
ment with an 11 under par 61.
DUNEDIN, Fla. Gene Sara-
zen of Germantown, N.Y., shot a
6-under-par 67 for first place in the
annual Senior PGA Tournament.
HnAWT.V.V folif -RnK RAM.
burg, 27-year-old Chicago pro, shot
a seven under par 63 to take a first
round lead in. the 72-hole Brawley
open,
; RACING
mninTA ' nalif. . Resistance
($8.40) won' Santa Anita's feature,
going a mile and one-eighth in
1:52 4-5 on tne tun.
nmalUi.' Wanw.rrilm ftpt Uie
world's record for the pole vault
on May 20, 1043 when he vaulted
15 feet 8'i inches at Chicago.
JNIW10H.l.
wHh ravtn 9or ond iwvfrof
Smt h nmvtt . AH-rM4
frwm tor fsnlry fltkif, Hf. bMh, .
H CAHi, Wa$fpff Mfn)M twi
cniFIIJMNw'. A
THE GUN STORE
714 Main PSon. 3863
Pros Rqp
Single
Platoons
PHILADELPHIA (IPl Most
National Football League couches
said that thanks to college foot
ball's one , platoon system they
felt as It they were selecting pigs
in a.jwke at the annual pro player
draft. - , r
A poll of coaches and officials
of various NFL teams brought
the general opinion that the qual
ity of 1053 collegiate players was
below par. The lack of specializa
tion cut the list of good pro pros
pects, they said. ;
DIG ' . '
Coaches Buck Shaw of San Fran
cisco and 31m Trimble,, of Phila
delphia, set the general pace when
they told how they had to dig up
1952 college rosters to find out
which players played defense and
which played offense during two
platoon days. . :
"If we didn't," said Shaw, "we'd
miss out on some good defensive
boys who sat out most of last
season . because he couldn't play
on offense. The same goes on re
verse." The 12 NFL teams drafted 360
players at Thursday's 14 hour
draft session. Each club picked
30 players.
PICK
The Cleveland Browns, Eastern
Division champions, got things
started by walking off with the an
nual "bonus'' pick.
Coach Paul Brown immediately
grabbed the nation's top passer,
Stanford's Bobby Garrett to add
to his quarterbacking staff of Ot
to Graham and George Ratter
man. One general manager com
mented that it was the first thing
Cleveland had won without (Lou)
Groza,
Davis Heavy
Champion In
Gloves Meet
TAOOMA Wl Army and Air
Force fighters shared top honors
with young battlers from Seattle,
Portland and Vancouver, B. ft,
Thursday night in finals of the
sixth annual Tacoma Golden
Gloves boxing tournament.
Ted Davis of McChord Air Force
Base outpointed Franklin Haynes
of Ft. Lewis to capture the heavy
weight crown. . .
Welterweight and light heavy
weight titles were retained by last
year's champions Joe Bethea of
McChord and William Parker of
Ft. Lewis, respectively. Bethea
outpointed Norm Jorgensen o f
Vancouver, B.C., and Parker
earned the nod over Don Walrond
of Paine Air Force Base.
Jorgensen was defending light
welterweight champion but had to
move up a weight division this
year.
Other championship round re
sults: Flyweight Nick Lopes, Ft.
Seattle. 1
Bantamweight Al Martin, Se
attle, outpointed Gerald Mathes,
Bremerton Navy.
Lightweight Wlllard Nelson,
Portland, outpointed Ruggles Lar
son, Tacoma.
Featherweight Earl Vance,
Vancouver, B.C., outpointed Bud
dy Pearson, Vancouver, B.C.
Light welterweight Phillip
Moyer, Portland, outpointed Don
Roos, Seattle.
Light middleweight Arnold
Kllnkenberg, Seattle, outpointed
Wilbur Young, Yakima. .
Middleweight Abraham Lin
near, Ft. Lewis, outpointed John
Heard, Ft. Lewis. V '
. .
In 1878-79 John L. Sullivan fought
..j j-fMtul fiim AnnonenLi and
received a total sum -of $320 for
his efforts.
auto Insurance feature :
replaces regular, j!
State Farm medical t
payments coverage.
'PROTECTS:' il
of year iimny M tm
nmn lira ;
I Kcidtnli-drivmf,
iwtiunf!
I gnat Im Injurod it Of ly
roeroHl J
Iit't ntlmivt? Aaothtr toot ?
SUIt firmhul.' .
Get tti facts from your
t State Farm Mutual l
I lnUoday - I
William Goen
DM. Mentor I
; 1131 Mselw Ph. " I
.,
i - ' ' 1 Ti -v -a,,, .., ;,ji,mt,j.,tiMi.a
CAPABLE RESERVES for the .Oregon Tech Owls hold a pre-game huddle as the Hilltoppers
prepare to face the Portland Vikings tonight and tomorrow night on Portland's Lincoln
High School floor. Left to right are Bob Robison, Ed Schallhorn and'Charles Garcia.
. ', Photo by Don Kettler
Orefech in Portland
For Series With Viks
PlayatLosAuge,;
mlsnn h, mil, ....
u, will .rV tn -J
"is Lions.
Berry said he hopes to
coaching after Si.
pros.
Other Notthwesterners
umes came ud 1b iiJ
were: n
Dave Mnnn rw n. I
, wbou tual
uuw wun me Ft. Ord AtnJ
uy unicago cardinals' n
I Black. Washinninn
Angeles; Dean Chambers
uibiuu lacme, By chiciti
Emery Barnes, Oregon
Green- Bav nii.n. w.
Washington tackle, by IJ
ies;. juui cenwenk.
state tackle, by Detroit;.
Hartman. Oregon m.t. ,1J
Detroit: Joe Fulwyler. ai
State center, by PittsbnJ
liam Albrecht, Washlngtol
bv Chicaoro: M1 n.r(M-J
center, by Detroit; ftrrjl
en, wasnington state
Green Bay.
OCC STANDINGS
Eastern Oregon
Oregon Tech
Oregon College ,
oruana biate
Friday-Saturday Schedule
usun icen i-ortiano state
Eaalern Oregon at Oregon College.
Pel.
.730
.500
.000
.000
It's "stop Porter" weekend In
Portland for Oregon Tech and if
the plan is successful, the Owls
can climb into a challenging posi
tion in the Oregon Collegiate Con
ference. Porter, given name Don, is Port
land state's radar kid with exactly
300 points in 13 games for a neat
23-plus average.
The Owls' and Vikings clash on
the Lincoln High gym floor tonight
and Saturday night in OCC
counters. On the same nights, Ore
gon College will be host o East
ern .Oregon at' Monmouth
Regardless of the OCE-ECC out
come, Oregon Tech can't come
borne with a league lead if they
grand slam the Vikings, but a
sweep would put them within
shouting distance of the top posi
tion. FAVORITE
Eastern Oregon, OCC favorite,
leads the league with a 3-1 record.
OCE is at 2-2, Oregon Tech at 3-3.
Talbot Likes Third
Chapter of Title Go
By GAYLE TALBOT
NEW YORK W-If you liked the
latest number between Archie
Moore and Joey Maxim down in
Miami, don't feel too bad about it
or hide the fact from your neigh-
Dors, we thought it was a whale
of a fight too.
Because of this Independence of
soirlt. we are beine looked at
strangely. But we still think it was
a humdinger and would be happy
to watch Joey and Archie fight a
fourth time.
We realize full well this is a silly
attitude to take, that it practically
amounts to professional suicide,
anyway, ostracism in better
boxing circles. This was expected
to be a terrible turkey, and we
note that most of our experting
friends who were at the ringside
gave it the back of their hands.
About the best they had to say
was that the two fighters should be
kept apart from here on.
But we still have a fixation, or
something, about Archie and Joey.
We even liked tne way mey went
Bevo Hits
47.4 Per
NEW YORK Wl When Bevo
Francis scores less than 47 points,
he's having a bad night and the
Rio Grande (Ohio) hot shot has
been having very few of them this
season, , .. .
Latest small college basketball
figures released by the NCAA
Service Bureau show the elongated
center has tossed In 159 points in
the 16 games he's played for a
healthy average of 47.4 points per
tut.
Francis addea 136 points In three
games last week to his already
sizable total.
His closest competitors are Car
son Lovett of Franklin and Marsh
all with a 32.3 per game average
and Bob Hopkins of Orambling
who has scored 591 points in 22
games.
at it out in Ogden, Utah, last
summer. Later we became partly
convinced that this must have been
due to the lovely mountain scenery
mat the TV cameras kept picking
up on that occasion. We were pre
pared, therefore, to watch them
very critically this time, there
being no mountains around Miami.
And what happens but these two
175-pound workmen get in there
and again tried to beat each other
to death for 15 rounds. Two skilled
fighters who know and practice
every move in the book, who can
take It and hand it out, gave a
sustained exhibition of whatever
art there Is in the ring game, com
plete with knockdowns. At least,
that was the way it looked from
here. .
MATCHED
We cannot see where the fact
that Moore, the champion, is 37
years of age and probably past his
best enters into the matter. Nor
the undisputed fact that Maxim is
not one of the sport's hardest
hitters. The important thing Is that
they are evenly matched, or near
ly so, and that they are willing
and able to fight from bell to bell.
Anyway, that's our kind of fight,
vastly to - be preferred over the
sort of thing that is being seen
all too frequently since television's
tilings. Maybe this is what the
sponsors and the matchmakers
think they must provide If they
are to keep tne sets turned on until
the ' next commercial. If so, they
migm oe underestimating their
audience.
SLfl5SSRVICC
When that glass Occident
happonoiust call 737S and
our completely quipped
glailng organization will
tnop info action and replace
tha glat quickly and prep,
rly. W carry a eomprehtn.
iv glass stock,
KIMBALL'S
GLASS SHOP
Cltorr ( Partial In Rear
111 Were MUM 7171
On the Monmouth Court, the
Wolves are expected to split with
tne EOC Mountaineers
Despite the fancy scoring of Por
ter, ex - MoMinnvllle -Higher.
Portlifnd State (0-3) is expected
to lose two to" the Owls, who
found their stride in two wins over
Oregon College last 'week.
If the script is followed (two
wins for OTI and a split at Mon
mouth) the-. Mountaineers would
hold a percentage lead (4-2. .667)
to Tech's 5-3, .625, but neither
team would hold an edge in the
won-and-lost column.
Oregon Tech has a one-two punch
witn wmcn to answer tne vikings'
Porter. Don Sutphln and Jerry
Wyatt are waging a battle for the
scoring lead with Sutphin holding
a slim 201-194 edge after 14
games. .
12CAGERS
Tech Coach Skeet O'Connell In
dicated before he left yesterday
with 12 cagers he would start with
Wyatt and Don Hubble at the for
ward positions. Keith Thompson at
center, Sutphin and either Gary
Dorn or Alan Cunningham at the
guard posts.
Dorn has the inside track but
his recently - injured ankle didn't
hold up well enough in the OCE
series to warrant more than a
quarter or two of action.
P-State Coach Sharkey Nelson,
who took over tha cage reins from
Arba Ager this season, will likely
send Ron Brown, Jim Perkin, John
Fought and Richard Green in to
work with center Porter on the
starting lineup. ....
LYNCH IS PIRATE HOPE
PITTSBURGH Wl The Pirates
are looking to a young rookie to
nelp them out of their hitting dol
drums. Up from Norfolk in the
piedmont League will be 23-year-old
outfielder Gerry Lynch. At Nor
folk in 1953 he led the league in
Datung with .333, runs-batted- in
133), hits (180). total bases (320)
doubles (33) and triples (22).
ARE THE TIRES
OK YOUR CAR BALD?
If so, buy a new set of tires.
The life you save may be your
own.
Carter's Collection Agency
P. O. BOX 844
411 Main Phone 6121
NEW YORK m The
ball adage that the dob
the . close games usuaUT
pennant aion't noid no
American League in 1953. lj
gees, wno won their filth
pennant, played only .500 i
decided by one run. Thev
of these tight contests aaa
8.
s i
be:
19
ettef1
l ORGON'$ OWfl
J AND ONLY BKfl
IUTZ WCINHAIO CO, rWlA
A Bargain today is
anything you can buy
at yesterday's Prices!
Our hourly flat rotil
mechanical work if 1
lowest in town.
We use your cor monj
facturers specified eic
cd time for .every jod,
gardless of the maki
your car,
USE OUR EASY
BUDGET PLAN
DICK B. MILLER CO.
7th and Klamath OLDS FISK TlBrc. . rinii i if . . rfc
OLDS FISK TIRIS - CADILLAC
41