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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1954)
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1954 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PACK SEVEN TIME OUT fo)o) LLLL WW "All right! Let'a spread out those wickela!" CAGE SCORES COLLEGE BASKETBALL By THE ASSOCIATED JPBESS ' FAR WEST UCLA 82, California 54 'Oregon State 70, Washington 47 Santa Clara 53, Honolulu Univer ses 49 cific 59 Southern California 57. Stanford 63 uiuince, iuuit;uB 94, wmtnian 83 Oregon Tech 76, Portland State 58 Fuget Sound 68, Western Wash ; ington 59 i. Faclflo Lutheran 79, Eastern Wash-'.- ington 61 ' : Idaho 68. Oreaon 54 : Wyoming 63, Brlgham Young 47 . Montana state sts, eastern Mon- . tana 62 Utah State 70, Montana 66 Colorado A&M 66, Utah 62 Pacific 68. Willamette 60 ..'Lewis and, Clark 91, Llnfield 77 Eastern Oregon 69, Southern Ore- : gon 68 Nevada 70, Portland 53 8t. Mary's (Calif.) 85 Humboldt 6t ate 67 t. central wasnington eo, sruisn ; Columbia 57 EAST - Holy Cross 68, Fordham 54 Bucknell 84, Susquehanna 61 Dartmouth 68, Brown 64 Tufts 62, Boston College 60 Connecticut 107, New Hampshire 68 Brandels 78, Vermont 76 ' SOUTH . George Washington 108, Washing ton and Lee 63 South Carolina 79, The Citadel 69 MIDWEST Bradley 97. Marauette 90 North Dakota 67, South Dakota 52 North Dakota State 87, Augustana 6outh Dakota State 17, Northern S. D. 61 SOUTHWEST Hardin Simmons 85, Arizona State Tempe 78 Arizona 61, West Texas 62 Texas Tech 77, Texas Western 57 ' New Mexico 72, Eastern New Mei! CO 50 . By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS HIGH SCHOOL Mllwaukie 63, Tillamook 41 , ' Corvallis 61, Sweet Home 23 Redmond 48. Burns 42 Lake Oswego 56, Hood River 44 Baker 58, Hermiston 54 Frlneville 69, Stayton 61 North Marlon 71, Amity 52 Portland State Frosh 63, Parkrose 65 Eugene 90, Cottage Orovi 62 St. Helens 61, Seaside 62 Oresham 37, Astoria 35 Marshiteld 75, Albany 69 (over- ' time) Pendleton 81, Milton-Freewater 68 La Grande 78, The Dalles 49 .Rocue River 68. Butte Falls 38 Myrtle Point 75, Illinois Valley 50 Grants Pass 60, Ashland 55 Newport 39, Lebanon 37 Scio 48, Sublimity 44 (overtime) Silverton 47, Molalla 44 Sandy 67, Canby 41 HUlsboro 64, Newberg 47 Beaverton 63, West Linn 60 Willamette (Eugene) 63, Oakridgo 69 Alsea 63, Waldport 38 Yamhill 43, Sheridan 31 Eslacada 53, Woodburn 37 Jefferson 65, St. Paul 43 Perrydale 61, Gaston 42 Creswell 71. Elmira 55 Wy-East 60, Concordia (Portland) - 41 Sherwood 40, Dayton 38 Vernonia 57, Scappoose 52 MrMinnvllle 53 Titrard 47 Central Union 63, Cascade 48 Dallas 54, Mt. Angel 45 St. Francis (Eugene) 61, Pleasant - Hill 69 Springfield 76, Junction City 49 Oregon City 68, Forest Grove 53 : lone 74, Boardman 61 , Condon 66, Arlington 52 - Neahkahnle 45, Warrenton 44 Harrlsburg 57, Monroe 42 Brownsville 53, Shcdd 51 Nestucca 60, Star of the Sea (As--. toria) 36 Joseph 80, Powder Valley 48 6t. Mary's (The Dalles) 61, Mosicr 4A Coburg 49, McKenzie 48 Colton 58, Verboort 31 WiUamina SO. Banks 47 Knapoa 61, Tillamook Catholic 58 ' (overtime) John Day 48, Mt. Vernon 40 Portland League Roosevelt 73, Washington 4 Cleveland 61. Grant 46 ,- Benson 60, Jefferson 49 i Lincoln 72, Franklin 69 Mountaineers Rap Raiders ASHLAND ifi Eastern Oregon. behind for three quarters, surged ahead in the final period to defeat Southern Oregon 69-6 in Friday nienis non-conierence basketball game. EOCE's Gary Burton tied the score at 61-all with a basket late in the final quarter. Then center Boh Adrian pushed one through to put Eastern Oregon ahead to stay. Ted Schadewltz was high for the dinners with 20 points one less than Ken Kimura scored for South ern Oregon. Sandy Amoros, rookie outfielder, getting a trial with the Dodgers, led the International League in fine departments last year bat ting, runs scored, hits, doubles and total bases. Kentucky Aims For Number 18 By RIP WATSON " NEW YORK I Five of the nation's highest - ranking college basketball teams swing into action tonight with winning streaks total ing 55 games, and they'll be mighty surprised if the streaks don't add up to 60 when all the scores are in. Kentucky, the nation's No. 1 team In the Associated Press poll for weeks, takes a 17-0 mark against Mississippi on the Wildcats home court, where they haven't lost in more than a decade. Oklahoma A&M also goes to work with 17 straight, dating back to a December loss to Minnesota, and the Aggies figure to make it 18 against Oklahoma. A & M, ranked fourth in the country, whipped the Sooners 65-48 earlier in the season. La Salle, No. 7 team, also hasn't lost since December and their winning streak should reach an even dozen tonight against Temple, a team the Explorers whipped 77-53 a few weeks ago. SELLOUT Indiana is another team which hasn't lost this year meaning 1954, and the third-ranked Hooslers will have a sellout crowd on hand in the Nortnwesterh Held house as they go for their tenth straight. Leading the Big Ten with an 8-0 mark, tne Hooslers win do listen ing for the score from Minneapolis. where Iowa (7-1) will face Minne sota (8-2). Western Kentucky, No. 5 .team, Is the other top ranker in action. The Hllltoppers boasted the long est winning streak in the country, 21 aames. until being unset by Eastern Kentucky last week, iney came back to start a new one against Morehead Monday night and Murray State, a 57-43 victim earlier, should double the streak. Two other members of the top 10 stretched modest win skeins last night. Holy Cross, No. 9, won its sixth in a row since a loss to sixth-ranked Notre Dame as they turned back Fordham 68-54. Oeorge Washington, No. 10, clinched first place in the Southern Conference race by walloping Washington it Lee 108-63 for their filth consecu tive victory. IDLE Duquesne, second ranked; Seat tle, eighth, and Notre Dame are idle this week-end. Bradley's Dick Estergard set a new school record by scoring 33 points in his school's 97-90 victory over Marquette. Dartmouth moved up to a tie for fifth place in the Eastern League by cuffing last place Brown 68-64. Oregon State, led by towering Swede Halbrook, who made 20 points, took over first place in the Pacific Coast Conference s north- ern division by whaling Washing ton 70-47 while Idaho was trimming Oregon 68-54. In the southern divi sion, UCLA moved to within one game of California by trouncing the leaders 82-54. They play again tonight. Colorado A at M widened its Skyline Conference lead by nipping Utah 66-62 as second place Brig ham Young bowed to Wyoming 63-47. TV Fans Scream Split Decision Goes To Giamba in Waltz By JACK HAND NEW YORK 11 Joey Giambra lost face, Italo Scortlchinl lost faco and TV fans lost their temper. That was the net result of last night's 10-round cross country race at Madison Square Garden where Giambra won an unpopular split decision over Scortlchinl. One TV viewer even called the AP office in New York from Los Angeles to protest about the WAITED ENOUGH Chuck Mather, tired of waiting for head coaching job at Ohio State, accepted Kansas of fer. NO SWIMMING ALLOWED CHATTANOOGA, Term. A A swimming meet here had to be called off because of too much water. The Chattanooga and Nashville YMCA's were scheduled for a dual meet, but the Naahvllle team couldn't travel because of flooded highways. v !t if 1 -.3 i.i. ,-,11 I V. 't L-v'- I .Lj Sports Quotes Of The Week: By OAYLE TALBOT NEW YORK I Our nomination for quote of the week goes to the forthright statement by Gerald Staley, the St. LoUla Cardinals pitching star, that Solly Hemus, Card shortstop, "can't move up to big league standards," and that Ray Jablonskt, another teammate. doesn't have much range at third." - We'll bet the left aide of that good old Cardinal infield is a real stonewall when Gerald toes the rubber next summer. Second award goes to Adoloh Rupp, the eminent Kentucky bas ketball mentor, who told an Inter ested audience that his current team Is the "finest ever assembled in the United States." Adolph is no piker, especially since he also was coach of an other Kentucky team a few years back which contained Alex Groza, Ralph Beard and Wahwah Jones. Would he liko to bet, with no point spread? The third, or consolation, prize belongs to Ben Hogan, who told "Golf Graphic" that "From every observation I have ever made -of putting there is no reason why the average golfer cannot putt rea sonably well, since putting is mere ly rolling the ball over the green by striking it a gentle but firm blow." Great litUe kidder, that Ben. It's always dangerous to suggest a baseball player might be a seri ous holdout, tor the chances are good he will have signed before the item can get in prin . But the lac; remains that Auie Reynolds has fired his contract back to the Yankees for the second time and gives every evidence that he isn't fooling. ' If the world champions are try ing to get the game's highest paid pitcher to take a cut because of his nominal 13-8 record last year, tills could become interesting, for two reasons. The first Is Reynolds Is sufficient ly well fixed from throwing base balls and owning oil wells that be is in position, if sufficiently irked, to tell the Yanks to go fly their pennant. The second reason is that many baseball men are far from sure Casey Stengel can make it six straight without the Chief, even II he la crowding 40. Reynolds has been the "policeman" of the Yank stair, the pitcher opposing clubs least, liked to see walk out there, either as a starter or a stopper. With him gone, every club would Invade the stadium with much more confidence. Herman Hickman probably will think a long time before he again cams aspersions on tne noble sci ence of rasslln', as he did in a recent magazine article. Pinkie George, the well known Iowa pro moter, let the Tennessee trouba dour have it thusly in an inter view with Al Ney of the-Waterloo courier: "Hickman didn't lie. He's writ. Ing about some 20 years ago, about 1933, and that was the era that brought ill repute to wrestling with bums like him and other fakers. Aa a result we're still trying to out live the scandal they created in that era." That, we submit, should hold 1 Herman. "lousy" decision. Most of the 1,011 who paid $7,481 to watch in person bombarded the offiolals with their boos. Judge Frank Forbes votod for Giambra 7-3 and Referee Ruby uoiastein also gave Olambra the edge 6-3-1. Judge Artie Aidala saw it for Scortlchinl 5-4-1. The AP card agreed with Aidala. Eight of 13 ringside boxing writers sided with scortlchinl. Olambra, a 4 to 1 favorite, even disappointed Ms manager, Tex Sul livan, although Tex thought he won all the way. "He didn't look like the real Olambra until the late rounds," said Sullivan. The fighter had a strange ex planation. He said he had gone "right hand crazy" in his most recent fights so had decided to concentrate on developing the left. Enortlfchini confused Giambra, the no. t ranking middleweight, by backing away and circling, first one way and then the other. From this corner, Scortlchinl seemed to outfox Joey, throwing him off stride, . Noren Signs With Yankees NEW YORK Ifl Irv Noren. who fills in for the ailing Mickey Mantle in centerfield, has signed his 1954 baseball contract with the New York Yankees. The Yankees announced the sign ing Saturday without divulging the salary figure. This leaves 22 mem ber of the world champion team still unsigned. TRAINING TREK BT, LOUIS m The Cardinals, who annually do their spring train ing in St. Petersburg, Fla. will take a cross-coin;! ry trek this year. The Redblrds will play their first five exhibition games in Florida, then hop to California where they will meet the Chicago Cubs in two contests at Los Angeles, and one at Fresno. Both squsds will play a game at Mesa, Art. Following this series, the Cards return to St. Petersburg to resume their Florida schedule. Beavers Win;UO Trounced By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Oregon State Beavers, pre season favorites to con the Pacific Coast Conference Northern Divi sion basketball crown, stood atop the standings Saturday. Tne Beavers, with Lanky Swede Halbrook's 20 points, paving the way, humbled Washington, 70-47, Friday night to run their confer ence record to 8-3. - The University of Oregon Ducks. who were tied with the Beavers for the top spot prior to Friday night, tangled with Idaho and came out losers, 68-54. . 1-4 RECORD The loss gave the Ducks a 7-4 record and entrenched Idaho's Vandals In their third place spot at 5-6. Washington holds down fourth at 3-6 and Washington State, Idle this weekend, is tne tauena club with a 3-7 mark. Oregon slumped to a meager .237 per .cent in shooting as the Vandals got off to a. fast start and handcuffed the Ducks in the scoring department effectively. IUaho grabbed off a 16-8 advan tage at the end of the first quarter and weathered a second period Oregon rally to hold a 32-24 bulge at tne intermission. ...... s 19 POINTS . Tommy Flynn, the Idaho sharp shooter, took individual scoring honors with 19 points. Max Ander son was top man for the Ducks with 15. The Washington Huskies made a good fight of It with OSO during the first half of the game at Cor vallis. but the Beavers scored 19 points in the third period while holding Washington to eight to take long lead tney never relin quished again. , The score was knotted five times during the first half and the score at the intermission was 32-28 Ore gon State. , COLD The Huskies couldn t beg. Borrow or steal enough baskets in the final half to make a game of It as Hal brook, Ron Robins and Ron Fund ingsland found the range and con nected time and time again from the field to rim the count to 51-36 at the end of the wira. Dean Parsons was high man for the Huskies with 17. The same duos play again Sat urday night. The box: WASHINGTON G F P T Coshow, t 4 0 4 8 2 4 3 8 6 5 1 17 Voegtlln, f Parsons, c Johnson, g Perkins, g Bryan, f Tripp, g Patnoe, g 1 0 1 2 1 4 1 it S 0 4 Ek, f Morris, g Olsen, f Halle, g Totals 17 13 19 47 OREGON' STATE Whlteman, f Dean, f Halbrook,' c Halllgan, g Jarboe, g Robins, g Romanoff, f Fundingsland, g Vlastellca, c G F T t 5 1 3 11 7 3 12 3 20 0 0 2 0 0 15 1 1 1 4 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 2 Toole, g Paulus, f Crimlns, g Totals Washington 25 20 13 70 12 16 8 1147 15 17 19 1970 Oregon State Free throws missed: Washington Coshow 2, Voegtlln 3, Parsons 2, Brvan, Oregon State Whlteman, Dean, Halbrook 6. Robins. Vlas tellca, Toole, Crimlns 3, Fundings land 2. Dannv Schell, rookie getting trial with the Phillies this spring, led the Eastern League in 1953 in batting (.333), hits (185) and to tal bases (285). DEADLY MISS Velma Liming, 16, average! 41.3 points a game for Easton, Kans., High's girl basket ball team. Solas. Rentals WMIIL CHAIR! CURRINS for drugs rli mi Meia Pk. 11471 In Merrill b. V- i I X V . : ' 1 f ' i . W i ' I ; t ' ' I f " "; i I - ' ,i r.? 1 ' - ',-. ' ' 1 I ' " ' yjv v i i v ? SNAKE HOPKINS . with Ghosts Telegram Has Dee In Dutch TUSCALOOSA,' Ala. I.n Both basketball coach Johnny Dee and athletic director Pete Cawthon of Alabama have expressed regret for publicity given a telegram' by Dm- criticizing Kentucky's Adolph itupp. Both communicated Friday night with athletic director Bernie Bhivcly of Kentucky, and said Shively was satisfied with their explanation of the aifair. Dee said he was "very much up set" because a Cincinnati Post sports writer gave publicity to what he called a "personal tele gram." Dee was quoted as saying he was thinking of quitting the game aitogetner oecause ne nad to as sociate with Rupp, coach of Ken tucky's basketball powerhouse. MUM Rupp declined comment. -The story touched off the loud est uproar in the career of the bright young Southeastern Confer ence coach. Dee is a former No tre Dame star who so far this year has guided the Crimson quin tet to a record of 12 victories and five defeats. Dee submitted his resignation to university authorities last fall, but never nas Deen acted upon. He said Friday the resignation is still in tnetr hands. - "I am very much upset that (Jim) Miner made a story out of a personal telegram," Dee said. "I explained It to Mr. Shlvelv and ne was very nice aoout it. MISUNDERSTOOD Cawthon said he ' telenhoned Shively that be "regretted that this incident came up." He said lie aiun't know the complete message In the telegram, but believed Dee was misunderstood. 'We've always had good rela- tlonshlps with Kentucky and per sonally I've always gotten along fine with Coach Rupp," Cawthon said. "I've always considered nupp a good friend of mine." . Dee criticized Rudd last Satur. dav for reportedly saying that playing Georgia's weak quintet was "as ridiculous as kissing your sistpr." Rupp declared he was misquoted. Alabama and Kentuckv meet here March 1. Trojans. Bruins Win By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The racehorse UCLA Brums and delense - minded USC Trojans their championship hopes re-kind iea oy a tailoring California team, could throw the PCC Southern Di vision basketball race Into a three way tie for the top spot Saturday night. The Bruins, who handed Stan ford two crushing defeats last weekend, kept up their red-hot pace Friday night by walloping the division leading California Bears 82-54, in UCLA's cracker box gymnasium. USC, who like the Bruins now are 4-3, in conference play, trim med the cellar-dwelling Stanford Indians, 67-53, at Palo Alto. California now holds a 6-2 one game margin over Us two Los Angelea rivals, Olympic springboard and plat form diving champion Pat Mccor mick is the only woman ever to hold all five AAU titles in one year. 1; -fir iijtrnj-Klai- MiYOiiMinjiMrr Bring in your lUtnt Aim . . . up to 400 feet on a tinil ml. We udd Ml Howell SOUNDbTR I PE absolute y fre . . . helo vou record your own ounrilrtck with our FUmoaonnd 202. 4 4N0 CMf, no obligation toyou. ' your 16mm silent film today! uru. win- uuti : unnm in offtr npxm March St, 1954 LEO'S 1 camera aitop S36 Main Ph. 2-3331 Sunday CYNTHIA MOORE . stars for Chics Ghosts, Chics Visit Merrill The famous Iowa Colored Ghosts (the Harlem Tops) and the Har lem Chics stop-on their cage tour in Merrui Sunday nignt lor a doubleheader with Merrill- town teams. The Negro gals will face the Mer rill VFW team of the Klamath Ba sin independent League in the 7 o'clock opener; the Ghosts and last year's Merrill team in the KBI league square off in the second game. . The Ghosts, while not as famous as their counterparts, the Harlem Globetrotters, are a talented band of dribble and pass-happy shotmak- ers, wno can turn on the steam or tickle the fancy of the most staid tan. They are managed by Rio Col lins, one of the finest shots in the game today. Rookie In Golf Lead ST. PETERSBURG. Fla, The country's top women pros had ws loon up to an ia-year-oid ama teur from San Diego starting the second .round of the 54-hole St. Petersburg women's Open,; Golf Tournament Saturday. Blonde Mlokey Wright sprayed birdies all over the back nine for a slx-under-par 31 Friday to go wivn a par 37 on the front nine. Her total of ti was a stroke better than Babe Zaharies-of Tampa and Beverly Hanson- of Indio, Calif. . The Babe cane back stronger than she started, turning in 38-113 69. She missed a 20-foot putt by about an Inch on the 18th hole that would have given her 68 also. Miss Hanson had a steady 35-35 69. Betty Dodd of Tampa and Kathy McKlnnon Cornelius of Dayton, Ohio, tied at 71 over the 6.118 yard Sunset Country Club courae. Miss Dodd had the best front nine score of the day, 33, but her putt ing was bad on the home nine. Right behind came Louise Suggs of Atlanta with 72. Other leaders in the $3,500 event were Betty Jameson of Ban An tonio. Tex., and Betsy Rawls of Spartanburg, B.C., with 73s, and Fay Crocker of Montevideo, Uru guay, 74. STILL AT IT LONDON (P) BUI Wilson celeb rated his 70th birthday by trying out a few new wrestling holds on nis pais at a London sporu club. "And I hope to still be wrest ling when I'm 80," he said. "I owe a lot to the sport." wiison was crippled with arth- rltls 20 years ago and could not bend his knees. His doctors ordered him to take up wrestling. Wilson aid and soon was completely cured. OVERHAUL YOUR CAR MOTOR NOW . PAY LATER! OUR SPECIAL complete overhaul WE WILL: Initell '"" Grind v.l" ci- . tmtmK, onnlll beeiiaii wi - Cite ell "! a T-i.. mater ' Chevroier puhj- ASHLEY CHEVROLET 410 So. th Panthers Win to Tie " Down 2nd in Tourney STANDINGS I. M Minn . e o l.ooo Chiioquln 3 1 .833 Blr i .- 3 3 .500 fiacrcd Htart ..3 3 .300 GllchHlt ..1..... 1 4 .200 MrrM 4 .soo Boiwiu 1 5 .W7 ! Lut Nlthl Chlloquln M Sacred Htart S3 Bonanza 31 Merrill 47 Henley S3 GUehrlat 37 (non-league). Chlloquln tied down second seed ing in the upcoming Klamath Coun ty prep basketball tournament last night as expected but downtrodden Bonanza, a team that couldn't find a win in 16 starts this season, sup piled the , unexpected when the Antlers upset the Merrill Huskies, 61-47. V ' Chiloquln's win over the Sacred Heart Trojans was by . a 68-52 count. ' - Henley waxed Gilchrist, 52-37, in Haddix Inks With Cardinals NEW YORK I The St. . Louis Cardinals' advance spring training -camp is open today andithelr 1954 salary worries are pretty much of a cioseo question. - At about the time a squad of 75 rookies began limbering up at De lano, ria., -star second- baseman Red Schoendlenst and Ray Jablon- sll, rookie third baseman of 1953, reached for Dens to slim new con tracts' in the Cardinal offices in St. Louis. Harvey Haddix, the Red- Diras top Hurler last year with a 20-7 won-lost mark and 3.06 earned run average, had agreed to terms earner in tne day. NOT IN The Milwaukee Braves, mean while, admitted shortstop Johnny Logan and second baseman Jack Dlttmer were something less than happy about their proffered con tracts. General Manager John Quinn pointed out the pair can't ne classed as holdouts unless and until they fall to report March 1. Schoendlenst. Jablonskt and Had dix were by tar the biggest names 111 tne comparatively small group of major leaguers to come to terms with the clubs yesterday. Schoendlenst, the National League's second leading hitter in 1953 with an average of .342, said ne was "well satisfied" with a sal ary Increase which reportedly brought his pay close to the 150,000 bracket. He received about $36,000 last season. s 21 HOMERS Jablonskt hit 21 home runs in his first season, two more than Johnny Mite hit as a rookie, and batted in 112 runs. Haddix was believed- to have doubled his $7,000 salary of last year. Brooklyn signed rookie third baseman Don Hoak and sub out fielders Dick William and Bill An- tonello, while the Philadelphia Phil lies received tne signed contract of Johnny Lindell, knuckleballer obtained from Pittsburgh last sea son. Dick Young, lnflelder who hit .236 with Charleston of the Sally League last year also signed with the Phillies, and rookie pitcher Bob Purkey okayed Pittsburgh contract. Sports In Brief By 'THE ASSOCIATED PRESS GOLF ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. Mick ey Wright, an amateur from San Diego, Calif., led the way with a ( under par 68 in the first round of the St. Petersburg Women's Open. BASEBALL' " ST. LOUIS, Mo. second base man Red Schoendlenst and pitch er Harvey Haddix of the St. Louis Cardinals signed their 1964 contracts. BY POPULAR DEMAND! Wt?UKUbll. riitoa . Dlttilbutor '' " . ' ...... ...-nrtrJItiortltV a non-league ime. , f Bonanza's Cinderella win over the Huskies eliminated an- expected three-way' tie. in the league bat made sure of two more knots after ionium's closer at Merrill between the Huskies and GUchrtst Oriazliea. Regardless of how tonight's came goes, the loser -will be tied with Bonanza and a coin-flip; will be necessary to decide the sixth and seventh spots in the - tournament starting Thursday at Henley. TIE FOR THIRD Bly and Sacred Heart finished tied for third with 3-3 records and will havo to draw for the third and raurtn positions. Opening rounds in the tltle-de- oidlng tournament will put the Number - 8 team (Paisley, auto matic Lake County entry) against Number 4 (either Bly or Sacred Heart), in the first game; Number 8 (either Bonanza or the Mer-rlll-Gllchrlst loser) against Number 2 (Chlloquln) in the second game: Number 7 (Bonanza .or- the GU-christ-Merrill loser) against Num ber 3 (Bly or Sacred Heart) end Number 5 (the Merrlll-GIIchrfst winner). against Number 1 (Malliv). 'Johnny O'Nell rolled in 26 points -tor Merrill last night but Cornelius Janssen and Joe Hoefler coliectaM . 20 and 19 for the Antlers in the up- . After, a slow -start. Merrill helrl a .7-4 first-quarter lead,, .then Bo nanza started to rock and toll to the tune of hometown cheers and led 22-20 at the half. It was tied at 34 heading into the fourth frame, when Merrill went ahead en a field goal and the Antlers bounced back with two of . their own to take a lead they kept at 38-36. Chlloquln led Sacred Heart all the way, although it was Just 13-10 at the end of one period and the Trojani closed the margin to five points In a third-quarter splurge led by Roger Seibert, Bill Snider ana uean Micnaeiis. BEACH ' Snider and Seibert ended with 13 points each. Michaelis with in. . but the Panthers, defending cham pions in the county, had Jo Jo George with 17, Ted Siemens with 16, while Vernon Joe and Dick Sle. mens chipped in with 12 and 10. ' Henley also was on the fat side of the score throughout against Gil christ, 20-15 at the half. . In junior varsity preliminary games. Bonanza whipped Merrill, 36-29; Henley shaded Gilchrist, 35-33; ' and , Chilcouin bounced Baored Heart. O'Nell 2S T so Juaw chleeht 4 T 4 Hanklna MeCulloeh 1 C , ; 4 Mitchell UJohneona G IDym a-JSi'"1 ' ' "J . . MHoafler Merrill tube Barry . Leper 3, Pal. meteer, Hodsaa. Oeraahtr, ShetrUI T. Meniu tuba Burnett X, Thomas t, con. Bingham 1. . RKART (I) Snider 13 A. Raflnato - Slebert 13 Mlchaalla ID M CBItOQDTM IT Gaarf ' 16 T. SJemenj. r 10 P. aiemana U V. Jo.' D. Reslnato S l. JO Sacred Heart aubi Wkktlna X Chll oquln euba Barney 3, Souen a. HiNLtr (it) "i " (iT nrtCBBuT Kaylor T ; F ' . T WUltr.ham R. Wrlfht 11 T IL Iraoit Zaroelnakl 10 C a BUM Roberta 3 O a Trawr .Parker a G 4 Jordan xieniey . nearer a. u, ooarcy t. Hill e, T. Wrirht S. Gilchrist euba Patteraon. T. Larian 9, Uoeey, Aanta 1. Cory, Boland. Konno Cracks, Swim Record COLUMBUS, Ohio Wl Ford Konno, Ohio State swimming star, bettered the world record in the 220-yard freestyle Friday as Ohio State defeated Indiana 65-28. Kon no's time was 3:04.8, breaking the record of 2:05.5 set by John Mar. shall of Yale In 1950. Konno, a Hawaiian, also broke the NCAA record in the 440-yard free style, swimming It In 4:30, two-tenths of a second taster than the mark also held by Marshall. Dick Cleveland of Ohio State tied his own world record of :49.2 in the 100-yard .free style. $7(5)95 Pay Only $7.18 Per Month ! FIX YOUR CAR NOW AND FIX US LATER! Phono 4119