TURDAY.IAWnZ) PACK TWELVE HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON TIMEOUT Gayle Talbot fc-1 i. ii NOW they start jumplnr U a round here I" Sports From Page 1 1 CAGE SCORES COLLEGE BASKETBALL By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS . FAB WEST Oregon State 52, Oregon 41 -Washington State 11, Idaho 61 Montana State 97, Colorado Col lege ...: Colorado State 65, Colorado Mines ; S3 . . . Gonzaga 80, College of Idaho 70 Srlgham Young 89, Washington 79 (Overtime.) UCLA 86, college of Pacllio BS California 70, Utah 59 San Francisco 62, St. Mary's 08 Nevada 76, Cal Aggies 57 Portland State 82, Oregon Tech 66 . Oregon Education 76, Eastern Oregon 61 Eastern Washington 70, Western Washington 65 ' Whltworth 52, British Columbia 49 Central Washington 70, Paclllc Lutheran 64 Reed 69. Oregon Medical 84 Oregon Dental 81, . Concordia . (Portland) 70 SOUTHWEST . Texas Western 83, Arlsona State V4f (Tempe) 68 .-. Arlsona State (Flagstaff) 81, Ad ams Stat (Colo.) 78 EAST ' ' Holy Cross 93, Niagara 88 (Over time) ' ' i , Rhode Island 103, Boston College 101 (overtime) Army 78, Hdrtwlck 64 " - SOUTH " ' Auburn 83, Florida 78 ' i Clemson 78, The Citadel 55. Richmond 99, Virginia Tech 78 Furman 85, Newberry 67 v Western Kentucky 87, Regis 72 . MIDWEST '---Wichita 89, Drake 74 Butler 78, . Northwestern 60 Coe. 65, Orlnnell 61 HIGH SCHOOL '' By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ' Mllwaukie 78, Tillamook S3 Oorvallls 70, Bweet Home 34 Marahfleld 79, Salem 64 - .-, Oregon City 74, Newberg 69 -Willamette (Eugene) 70, . Cottage Drove 63 Junction City 86, Oakrldge 87 Pleasant HiU 80, Elmlra- 63 Bt. Francis (Eugene) 66, Drain 49 , Rainier 52, Scappoose 46 ' Warrenton 62, Vernonla 83 Tlgard 85, Forest Orove 64 (over- time)--' ' Oresham 82, Astoria 44 ' t Cascade Locks 70, The Dalles JVs , 43 :...( . Mill City 70, St. Paul 53 . Sherwood 80, Banks 38 " MoMlnnvllle 60, West Linn 52 Lexington 60, Boardman 28 HM-rlabunr 70. fillets 62 ' " Halsey 60, Brownsville 48 Star of the Sea (Astoria) 88 halem 82 Lake Oswego 64, Columbia Frep ; (Portland) 44 North Powder 48, Harper 43 Cascade 56, Philomath 41 Toledo 51, Taft 48 Albany 44, Lebanon 6 Hlllsboro 54, Beaverton 50 The Dalles 60, Wy-East 49 Olatskanle 72, Beaslde 49 Klamath FaUs 61, Roseburg 48 North Marlon 58, Sheridan 53 Mapleton 65, MoKenzle 62 Redmond 83, Madras 48 . ' Rogue River 79, Prospect 81 Mt. Vernon 54, Dayville 44 Burns 63, Grant Union 43 Nestucca 63, Waldport 45 Neahkohnle 45, Knappa 42 Culver 61, St. Mary's (The Dalles) 80 Heppner 47, Fossil 45 V.. Molalla 60, Sandy 33 .'.,., Wlllamina 49, Amity 36 . Maupin 47, Moro 38 Pendleton 50, Milton-Freewater 49 Hood River 49, Concordia (Port land) 38 . Sacred Heart (Salem) 82, Central Union 61 (2 overtimes) Butherltn 62, Reedsport 44 Oanyonvllle 36, Days Creek 31 Riddle 81, Camas Valley 33 Oakland 63, Yoncalla 48 . Elkton 81, Glide 40 Medford 58, Southern Oregon JVs 61 " - -Anatone (Wash.) 72, Lostln 40 Baker 54, La orande 50 (overtime) North Bend 56, Bandon 52 ' Rogue River 79, Prospect 61 Myrtle Point 62, Coquille 48 Portland League ... Roosevelt 65, Lincoln 64 Jefferson 55, Cleveland .62 Benson 19, Franklin 64 Grant 84. Washington 54 Ne- Swiss In Sled CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy Ml Frits Felerabend, veteran Swiss bobsledder, took an almost unbeatable lead Saturday In the world four-nun championshlpti by winning the first two heats down Cortln's hasardous icy elide. In his two blistering runs down the twisting mile long chute, Fel erabend far outraced IS sleds from sis other nations. Twice 'he smashed the course record which he himself hid let In trial run Thursday, Cougars Upset Vandals Br THE ASSOCIATE!! PRFna Idaho, which had hopes of sneak ing in the back door to the Pa cific Coast Conference Northern Division basketball title while Ore gon ana Oregon State were knock. Ing each other off, Saturday watched those hopes slowly fade OW.J, ... j The Vandals, who had their most crucial series oi trie season over, stepped into Washington State Fri day night In what was supposed uj ob a preauier ana look a 71-61 licking. Oregon State, meanwhile, slipped uiw a urst piace ue wiin Oregon oy trimming me Ducks at Cor vallis, 62-41. Washington stepped outside the conference and Into an overtime defeat at the hands of Brlgham loung s uougars. ss-7S. OFF PACE Idaho's loss gave the Vandals a 4-4 record, far off the pace set by Oregon and Oregon State at 6-2. Wso now has a 2-4 record for fourth place and Washington brings up the rear with 1-S. Idaho, with Its two Oregon State series and one Oregon series his tory, went into the WSO nma with a very good chance of getting top spot wiin Oregon and Ore gon mate scrapping . In . lour games. But Washington- State unveiled a new scoring threat in Bill Rehd- er as uie vandals concentrated on Ron Bennink. Render netted 19 points before he went out on per- buuui iouis in uie iinai period cenmnic goi It. LEAD Washington state grabbed off' an 18-16 lead at the end of the first quarter but trailed at the half, 38-33, after a Idaho rally during the second period. The Cougars took the lead mid way through the third qaarter and held on to It the rest of the way. WSO hit on 24 of 60 field goal attempts for a .480 percentage. Idaho averaged .349 on 22 of 63. Oregon State's sky - high guy, Swede Halbrook, pumped 22 points through the hoop in leading the Beavers to victory over Oregon. Max Anderson topped' Oregon scor ers with 1 counters, tne only Oregon player to go Into two fig-. ures, The Beavers - broke a 10-10 tie early In the second quarter with seven straight points and were never headed again. They held a 27-17 advantage at the intermis sion and enjoyed a 40-25 bulge at the three-quarter mark. Washington's' Huskies- appeared to be on the way to victory in the final minutes of their game with" BYU, but Dave Lewis and Mao Madsen.of the Cougars found the range and erased a 68 - 64 deflolt- to send the contest into overtime' at 70-all. LONG SHOT 1 ' : Lewis connected on a long set shot with about two minutes left to go. Washington' Dean Parsons matched It with a field goal for the Huskies. Lewis- found the range again and Madsen whipped one through to tie the game up at 70-all with 15 seconds to go. Dean Larson of BYU, trying to beat the gun,- stole a- Washington pass and dropped in a long shot as the game ended, but he was called for traveling and the game went into overtime, . ': The Cougars went wild In the five-minute overtime, scoring 19 points to Washington's nine. Par sons topped scoring with 18 points. Oregon and Oregon State move to Eugene for the second game of their series Saturday night while Idaho and Washington State draw byes. Washington again meets BYU at Seattle'. : tinsD OREGON Ross, t .. Halberg, f '' Anderson, e Weimer. a " ' Holland, g Hawes. a . Page, g , .' , , Ben, c Totals OREGON STATE Dean, f - , Whlteman, i naiorooK, c Fundlngsland, g , Jarboe, g Vlastellca, f Robins, g Toole, g Halllgan, f Romanoff, f Paulus, f Crlmins, g Totals Oregon Oregon State o r p t 14 2 6 3 S 4 12 3 6 - s 8 0 0 1 0 0 4 0 . U 17 41 . G F P T 3 2 4 8 1 1 1 3 4 23 0 0 2 2 1 6 1 2 3 10 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 18 16 17 81 1 10 8 1641 8 19 13 1252 8 0 0 0 2 2 1 1 0 4 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Free throws missed: Oregon u,ii..rn .1 Inriannn S. Holland. Oregon . State Dean, whlteman 3, Halbrook 4, Funaingsieua t. -boe, Toole 6, ; . Adelphi Drops Grid Sport ; NEW YORK in The Increasing difficulties and lessening rewards of fielding a small college football team were emphasised today as Adelphi College of Garden City, N. Y.," became the third school In less than a month to drop the sport from Its Intercollegiate ath letto -program. . "i - ' Qulnoy, 111., on Jan. 25 and Case Institute of Cleveland, O. were the other colleges which have suspend ed football since the first of the year. ,- Adelphi, which had a 3-3 record hi collegiate competition last year, threw In the sponge yesterday fol lowing a meeting of Its board of trustee.". "Lack of Interest on the part of the student body," was the reason given for the suspen sion. ,'..-. v u . me lfi) By THE ASSOCIATED PBESS FOOTBALL MINNEAPOLIS Murray War- math of . Mississippi .State was namea neaa lootDall coach at Min nesota. GOLF PALM SPRINGS, Calif. E. J. (Dutch) Harrison scored a. 4-un- der-par 68 for a tie with Bo Wln lnger at the midway point in the 316,000 Thunderbird Invitational Tournament, , DUNEDIN, Fla. Gene Sara- sen stretched his lead In the PGA Senior Tournament to three strokes after 38 holes with an even par 72. MIAMI, Fla. Marlene Stew art, British . Women's Amateur cnamplon, defeated Bobble Daw- son of Piedmont Calif., and Mary Ann Downey of Baltimore to gain a semuinal berth in the Helen Lee Doherty tournament. - Johnson Dull In Victory By JACK HAND NEW YORK liWimmy Blade and 1,464 fans at - St. Nicholas Arena don't think Harold Johnson Is quite ready for Archie Moore. The TV audience hasn't been heard irom yet. t "He fought like he was scared." said Slade last night, after losing a split decision to the No. l licht heavyweight contender -in 10 rounds. "He fought less this time tnan before., SQUEAK Johnson beat Slade easily in the same arena Jan. 16, 1953. He bare ly squeaked home this time on the official card. , Judge Harold . Barnes gave it to Slade 6-4-1. Judge Joe Edtjv voted 7-3 and Referee Al Berl 6-4-1. both' for Johnson. The AP card had Johnson on top 6-4. "i was slow," said Johnson. "Maybe. It was the extra weight. I fight best at 175 pounds (John son weighed 178 K. heaviest of his career and Slade 182). He's a hard fellow to look good against. But I figure 1 won." . DISTURBED Tommy Loughery, his manager, was disturbed about the boos his fighter drew- while Referee Berl pleaded with both men to fight banter. - "He. gave him (Slade) a boxing exhibition," said. Loughery. "They (fans) want mm to step in mere and get hit." Slade was outspoken in his views because he thought he deserved the decision. But he fought only in spurts until the final rounds. Johnson's next fight will be with Billy Gilliam. Feb. 23 at Troy, Ohio. Philadelphia promoter Herman Taylor hopes to match Johnson, the home town boy, against Moore out doors next June Wininger, Harrison In Knot D1T.W BDDTMflfl flalif M. Young Bo Wininger and an ailing Hi,, J, ' Kuuwnj . xiirrisvu jcu vuc way Into the third round of . tho u nnA Thimrlarhlnl TnulfatlnnCLl Golf Tournament Saturday but the going promisea to oe rouga sor iae two final rounds. orack players, Including Ben Ho gan, as the field of 36 selected professionals went into the final laps of the 72-hole event which winds up Sunday. TIED ...xiBi.nn A9vnr-AlH veteran from' Ardniore, Okla., had rounds of 63-68. Wininger, 31, from Okla- lku. rlt ka,4 Al.7n .anil thev were tied 'at 131 at the halfway mark. Harrison had personal troubles two unseparated vertebrae which have been rubbing against each other since he was a kid in his native Arkansas. ' " The Arkansas, traveler, nouesi article on the winter trail to date with top money of 2,000 at the at the San Diego Open, aaia ne might not be able to tee off Sat urday money or no money. ACHING BAC1. 'It Isn't worm it, narriaoo ni h. lnihrf Vrtriftv with a blls- inaia wa hirrilActhe final four holes with exceptionally long putts, acning oapa ana u..nnAA aftAr hu ft rat round Tiuu,ge - 61 11 strokes under par for the. Thunderblrd's par se-ae ra, o.ai yard course -had but two poor holes or he would have been away and winning. He was tour under par on the first five holes of the round. Collins Inks With Yankees wnt VADT Ifll JM Collins. New York Yankee first baseman, Saturday signed his contract. Collins la one -of 18 men who have played first under Casey o. .i in hi. f tvA nAnnaiifewin- UWUJ.I - - nlng years. He has managed to play, at least pan ui hw umv, with each of Stengel's champions. nAiin. 9i hAttArf .9ftfl last sea son In 137 games, hitting 17 home runs and driving in m nw. WORLD'S STRONGEST MAN That's the claim of The Great Atlas who faces David Jons in Wednesday night's wrestling main event at the 'Armory. - The strong New Yorker packed the house here a couple of years ago and has since been an Eastern television star. ' - . -. . - - '' Atlas, Jons Headline Wednesday Mat Slate Morris Shaniro. known to 'mil lions of wrestling fans as The Great Atlas, pits his tremendous strength Wednesday night "at the Armory against clever David Jons, I iAiii.iiiin..i;te-'-V'J t LONDON'S pride and joy,.. David Jons, gets Wednes day ' night's , assignment . against The Great Atlas in : the wrestling main event at the Armory. British llghthcavywelght champion. The Great Atlas, who last ap- iPeared here almost three years ago, has whipped such renowned wrestlers as Jim Londos, Gorgeous George, Prlmo Camera, Danny , . FRIDAY'S FIGHTS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW YORK (St. Nicholas are na) Harold Johnson, 178 W, Phil adelphia, outpointed Jimmy Slade, 182, New York, 10. WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. Larry Mujlca, 140, New York, and Nicola Funari, ijta, Rome, It aly, drew, 10. PHILADELPHIA Jimmy car- llnl,'148tt, Philadelphia, out point ed Johnny Cook, 148 Va. Philadel phia, 8. : . J TNH T0HIT r OREGON vs ;. OREGON STATE ; 8:00 p.m. 5000 WATTS mm McShane, Gene Stanley and Argen tine Rocco. , He's a strutting muscleman who backs his egotism with unbeliev able feats of '.trength. Jons is no pushover. The good looking Britisher piled up a long lino of mat wins here late last year and knows every gimmick in uie trade. Atlas and Jons are down for a one-hour bout or the" best of three falls.- . finnnnrttno. hnilfo'hrinir baclr TMD pillar Georges Dusette aginast Jack (Cueball) Rush, the Boston Bad man; and Danno McDonald against Bronco Lublich, both of whom lo cal grappling customers will re member. . . s The Dusette-Rush and McDon-ald-Lubllch bouts are timed for 30 minutes, also , on a . two-of-three basis. . ..... - It's an outstanding card, the first since early December here. Atlas, the. Peacock of Wrestling, Is ex pected to fill the Armory. Reserved tickets are on sale at Castleberry Drugs. ; ; Rock Restless, Ve Denies Bucceroni By GAYLE TALBOT NEW YORK IB Al Weill denies resolutely that he has agreed to pit his champion. Rocky Marciano, against Dan Bucceroni in an Indoor bout here in March, but a talk with the orld's richest manager indicates he is feeling the pressure. Jim Norrls, the world's richest promoter, wants very much to put it on. He and Weill are having a long talk on the subject every lew days, pernaps even raoie va uie point, Marciano Is restless ana wants to fight somebody, the soon er the better. He doesn't relish loafing until next June. ' I guess It's natural," weiu slgbed. "His business Is fighting, and so he wants to fight. But I haven't agreed to anything yet, no matter what you hear." Vexed by income tax problems, Weill has been looking into the possibility of having Marciano in corporated. It seems that It he could have done so. Rocky would be able to fight more often without surrendering quite such a hefty percentage of his earnings to the government. ' "I found out that nothing like that could be done," Al said in a discouraged tone. . The ways of the National Foot ball League sometimes, are beyond the understanding of one who looks at the pro loop with a sort of de tached Interest. Any time you think it might be fixing to do something that figures to help the league as a whole, that's where you're going to get left. ' The best college passer in tne land, by all accounts, was 'Bob Garrett of Stanford. The tresspass er in the professional league for some years, as any fool knows, has been Otto Graham of the Cleveland Browns. So the boys get together for their annual draft of new crew cuts, and who gets Gar rett? Why Cleveland, of course. Several other teams In the mon ey circuit Baltimore being a prime example are dying for need of n good passer. A winning club at Baltimore and a better bal anced Eastern Division would mean thousands of dollars to every team in the league. But Garrett goes to Cleveland which needs him at the moment like It J """" Erie,, I u wok lnventivs .-' It about. Before th. - Ihe real business of magnates play a Um, ,i eled after Russian "bonus pick." Tne? name Is drawn from " , fine, sree choice of J star its heart may 4-3 They are runnin. . ber out West todi, Santa Anita Maturltj tuutung S160.400 al,ij ses which run the tt, This is,of course, onlt sort of race these dy real good three-year his owner up to 84O00OC even gets to the Keotu providing he doesnt Me iB unween tne coats it does serve to noim lution of the sport will Sarazen Senior Lt DUNEDIN, Fl. ui of the Senior PGA's id bers and one 63-yeuJ champion shot lt out a the final round or the il nament lor tne PDA plonshlp. You have to be at leal old to qualify as a ti of the top 10 men lit J were In the youngest a t4 years. , - . The exception was Hams of Louisville, h under par Friday with 36-hole total of 143 gtvd lor lourih place wlUi Vecchie of Greensbuigj Gene Sarazen of Oi Pa. held a three sts equaling par 73 Pridtjl ing a total of 139 lei rounds. . Mortie Dutra of Lof and Al Watrous of I Mich., tied with 143. If.:;.'-,--jj-,.w. 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If you can save $3.75 a week nmlarlv through tin five years you will have $l,025.9f ! In 9 yean and 8 months H z,i37.3U ... m 19 years and 8 months, $5463.72! ai - - l . ,i tr i -y tfl nJ www mni yvar nouroe, jou can l auwi w , j thing aside for yoorseif. So join the Payroll Savings Ptei'l mn. raoay. oirengtnen your own reture ana mat y" -1 enving your money through U. S. Sevngs Bonos. Tim V. . SomtiumiiI ttm net my for IMa mttwtwmt. Tta Tnfmy Bamlm" strolic donation. IA, AdvctUu Ctxutcd w q Garrison Equipment Company Klamath let and Storaq Company The California Oregon Power Company First Federal Savings & Loan Amoc. Baliiger Motor Company Klamath Basin Pine Mills Company -Modoc Lumber Company . ' ( Metier Brother! Home Lumber at Supply Company Hitchcock I Mother Klamath Falls Branch U.S. National Bank Herald t Newt Weverhaeuser Timber Company Ellingion Lumber Company Ca:-Ad-Co Company Fluhrar's Holium Bakery J. W. Kami, Oregon Ltd, .