Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 31, 1956, Page 9, Image 9

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    SPAY, JANUARY 81, 1956
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE NINE
IS
JS.I
bid Medal Certain .....
Albright faim Wide bad
i By TED SMITS
IrfRTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy Of)
jTeniey Aiongm, America's
t champion, fight back the
tal a sore leg to gain a strong
tiin the women's figure skating
petition Tuesday while Rus-
h irunaway in the Winter Olym-
i carries came to a temporary
He willowy, 20-year-old college
l jrom Newton Center, Mass.,
tig Intricate designs flawless
fdded to her edge over 16
ittold teammate Carol Heiss of
jt Park, N.Y., after the com
pry figure phase of the event.
fiJlursday the ladles swing into
i jiree sxaung maneuvers, in
mi contestants conceive their
-tjroutines, and Americans have
jqual in this type of skating.
tjjUnited States appears certain
I gold medal, with Miss Al
jjit the favorite,
ifhave to admit my foot hurts,"
fcy said after accumulating
7 points compared with
I.OTor Miss Helss. she gashed
ignt leg in pce-oiympic prac-
F Men's
ourney
nderway
and B Paint and Medo-Land
4mery moved into lead posi-
oi uie annual Men s City
fling Tournament Monday night
lucky Lanes as the season's
ding meet opened the first ac-
-m of the week-lone session.
ina&i play will continue tonight
nit Wednesday evening at Lucky
us, ana tne aouDies ana singles
dl start Thursday and continue
ro)gri Sunday.
the Class A division's first
, A and B Paint rolled a 2755
iab first spot, while Kalpine
moved into the second place
ion with a 2752. KFLW's 2703
iwrBed the radiomen the third
hut of the ladder going into the
lind round tonight.
Urao-Lana s 2812 was nigh lor
Class B teams, and Under-
hood's rolled into the second best
lion with their 2776. The third
f in me b division was gar
p1)d by Macdoel Tavern after
ling up 2748 pins,
(lino Rosterolla, who has been
ling the local alleys afire with
splendid kegling during the
season, jumped into an early
lor tne Class A all-events
pionshlp as he rolled a 561.
A-E leader in Class B with
is Wayne Misco. John Wal-
talhed a 534 in Class C to
that division's race for all
ots honors. ,
ist night's high game was
d by Rosterolla when he col-.
d ft 225. Other high games on
tournament's opening night
fe posted by Walt Schweigert,
12; Wayne misco, a 209; HerD
shbarger, 203; and Joe Wach-
an even 200.
arting time for tonight's ac-
will find the first shift open
i barrage against the pins at
and a second shift getting
underway at 9 o'clock. The same
tines will prevail in Wednesday
is schedule.
therbergTo
ir UW Woes
EATTLE im Cowboy Johnny
Owrberg, ousted last week as Unl
vejfsity of Washington football
eaich, will outline his troubles
Tuesday night to Seattle radio and
television fans.
Station KING-TV said Cherberg
hft agreed to appear on a pro
(iim starting at 6:45 p.m. to de
tail the differences with the unl
tslty administration that led to
hla firing by athletic director Har-
Iw Cassill.
V the university athletic depart
ment was offered similar time but
th offer was not accepted, the
tftion reported.
9"he Drosrrnm wits nrrancred for
filter Cherberg had requested and
received permission to address a
Spokane sportswriters' dinner
Tuesday night. He withdrew the
fUfftuest after the Seattle program
EVs arranged.
iphcrberg, onetime Washington
football star who became head
FCOrich three years ago, was fired
6M Cassill last Fridav at the end
a controversy that started with
"players' revolt" In November.
Ffahis
MONDAY'S FIGHTS
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
jNEW YORK Ocne Poirier,
151. Niacnra Falls. N.Y.. outnoint-
fed Carmine Fiore, 150li, Brook
lyn. 10.
; (BOSTON Julio Mcderos, 193,
Ciiba, outpointed Claude Chapman,
MB'i. Cambridge, Mass., 10.
PROVIDENCE. R.I. CUrlv
Monroe, 135. Worcester, Mass.,
S outpointed Gene Butler, 133,
tfcston, 12.
jNNEW ORLEANS Al Pelle
ffiini, 155, New Orleans, outpoint
?ed Jim Hegerle, 158, St. Paul,
Minn., 10.
y '
ilowa Ghosts, Chics
o Play In Chiloquin
Chlloquln basketball fans will be
for a night of laughs this Sat
urday as two local teams face the
lunous Iowa Colored Ghosts and
JRnrlem Chics, a girls basketball
lib that is taking the country by
'Mprm.
H rhf Klamath Reservation Junior
Chamber of Commerce draws the
d to meet the Chics In the first
me at 7 o'clock, and the Chiio
flin Firemen tangle with the
Miosis in the featured game.
This Is the first appearance In
W" Basin for Uie Chics, who en-
Jttse in court games with such
fall! JSSZSJLl
fc.-'-. -a i..... .nd!
k.. ,i..v. han .n reived. I
tice. Tlie itrongest competitors,
Ingrld Wendl of Austria and
Yvonne Sudgen of England, were
well back.
SPECIAL SLALOM
The day's three championships
went to Toni Sailer, a handsome
21-year-old Austrian who added the
men's special slalom to his giant
slalom title; Slgge Ericsson, Swed
en's speed-skating king who stop
ped the Russian route at mile-high
Misurinia, by winning the 10.000
meter race in Olympic record
time, and Sverre Stenersen. a rug
ged Norseman who captured first
in the two-ply Nordic Combined.
America made a favorable show
ing in the special slalom but fell
completely out of the running in
the other two competitions, wnlch
require remarkable staying pow
ers. Sailer nipped down the icy Ca
nalone course a 666-foot Incline
with a 272-foot vertical drop and
92 strategic gates In 1:27.3 and
1:47.4 for a total time of 3:14.7.
Brooks Dodge of Gorham. N.H..
made America's best showing. He
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Monday's Results
FAR WEST
Arizona 77, Arizona State (Flag
staff) 74
New Mexico Western 70, Pasadena
67
Montana State 89, Western State
(Colo.) 79
New Mexico A&M 57, Santa Bar
bara (Calif.) 48
Sul Ross 45, New Mexico High
lands 24
Carroll (Mont.) 87, Rocky Moun
tain (Mont. )85, (overtime)
Eastern Washington 80, College of
Puget Sound 72
St. Martin's 82, Taylor (Ind.) 69
Pacific Lutheran 96, Whitworth 63
EAST
Holy Cross' 88, Georgetown 68
Seton Hall 86, Creighton 73
St. Bonaventure 76, Scranton 55
USF Holds Top Spots
In AP, UP Cage Polls
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The San Francisco Dons, who
remained undefeated throdgh last
Saturday s battle of the. Deep
Freeze against California and set
new record for college basket
ball winning streaks, eem to be
lust aa thoroughly installed at the
top of the basketball rankings.
Gordie Howe
Leads Hockey
Point Makers
MONTREAL (UP) Gordie Howe
of Detroit today led all National
Hockey League scorers for the
second straight week with 57
points.
Howe scored his 299th goal of his
career early last week against the
New York Rangers and added
three assists. Montreal's Jean Be
llveau fell two points off the lead
although he bagged three goals.
Maurice Richard was seven
points behind Howe.
New York's Andy Bathgate
dropped to fourth place with 48
points after being deadlocked with
Richard for the past two weeks.
Tod Sloan of Toronto moved into a
fifth place tie with Montreal's Bert
Olmstead, each with 47 points.
Sloan and Belleveau were the top
goal producers, each with 29.
Olmstead picked up a pair of as
sists to Increase his league leading
total to 38.
Goalie Jacques Plante of the Ca
nadiens fanned seven times last
week, but stll had the best goals
against average with a mark of
1.82. Detroit's Glenn Hal was the
only other netmlnder under the 2.00
level with a 1.98 average.
Lou Fontlnato. the Rangers' col
orful defenseman, led the parade
to the penalty box with a total of
penalized team with 773 minutes
142 minutes. Toronto was the most
penalized team with 773 minutes
off ice.
Winter Games
Winners Listed
CORTINA D'AMPEZZO. Italy W'
The list of champions after 10,
completed events of the seventh
Winter Olympic Games:
TWO MAN BOBSLEDS
Italy (Lamberto Dallas Costa,
G. Contl), four heats, total time
5:30.14.
SKIING
Women's giant slalom Ossie
Reichcrt. Germany. 1:56.5.
Women's special slalom Renee
Colliard, Switzerland, two runs,
1:62.3.
Women's 10-kllometer (6 miles,
376 yards) cross country
LjubovJ Kozyreva, Russia, 38:11.
Men's 30-kilometer cross coun
try (18 miles, 1,128 yards) Veik
ko Vakullnen. Finland. 1:44.06.
Men s 15-kilometer (9 miles, 560
yards) cross country Hallgelr
Brenden, Norway, 49:39.
Men's giant slalom Toni
Sailer, Austria. 3:00.1.
SPEEDSKATING
500 meters (546 yards, 2 feet)
Eugeniy Grishln, Russia. 40.2 sec
onds (Olympic and world record).
1,500 meters (120 yards less than
mile) Eugeniy Grishln, bus-
sia and Yuriy Mikhailov. Russia, i vation officials be waa getting rea
tie, each 3:08.6 (Olympic and world dy to call them to haul the carcass
Tooo'met.r, ,3 miles, 188 vardoj
Boris Schilkov. Russia, 7:87.7
Russia, 7:87.7'
(Olympic itcoii ) . i
had runs of 1:27.6 and 1:54.2 tor
3:21.8 which placed him among the
leaders. .
Accidents, which were frequent,
put out two U.S. contenders, Ralph
Miller of Hanover, N.H., and Wal
lace (Bud) Werner of Steamboat
Springs, Colo., both of whom took
tumbles.
STORE OWNER
Ericsson, 26-year-old sporting
goods store owner, sped the 6 mile.
376 yard distance at Misurinia In
16 minutes, 35.9 seconds, clipping
9.9 seconds off the Olympic mark
of 16:45.8 set by Norway's HJal
mar Andersen in 1952 at Oslo,
In the races against time on ice
that was slowed early in the morn
ing by a freezing fog.. 'Norway's
Knut Johannesen did 16:36.9 and
Oleg Gontcharenko of Russia did
16:43.2, also to break the Olympic
mark. Andersen saw the last of his
three Olympic speed skating
crowns go by the boards, finish
ing sixth.
Pat McNamara, 29-year-old Min
neapolis landscape had the mis
fortune of an early start when the
SOUTH
Kentucky 84, Georgia Tech 62
Georgia 93, Florida 73
Louisiana State 87, Tulane 66
Mississippi State 100, Mississippi
69
West Virginia 103, VMI 68
George Washington 92, VPI 70
Memphis State 97, Arkansas State
67
Clemson 86, The Citadel 70
MIDWEST
Illinois 95, Minnesota 84
Purdue 78. Northwe-'ern 68
Indiana 81, Notre Dame 76
Kansas State 71, Oklahoma 63
Wichita 99, Detroit 79
Toledo 96, St. Francis (Pa.) 93
Rio Grande 117, West Virginia
State 86
t SOUTHWEST
Texas 96, West Texas State 79
Oklahoma City 76, Texas A&M 58
Houston 87, Sam Houston 59
After winning their 40th straight
game and their 14tli this season--by
the unusual score of 33-24, the
Dons scored 1,357 points In the As
sociated Press poll of sports writ
ers and broadcasters -to tighten
their hold on the No. 1 ranking.
. Sari Francisco received 90 first-
place votes out of 148 ballots and
34 for second place. Fewer than a
dozen unbelievers dared put tne
Dons lower than fourth. Points
were scored on the usual basis of
10 for first, 9 for second, etc.
Dayton's Flyers, who suffered
their' first defeat after winning 14
straight, held onto second place
ahead of upsurging Vanderbllt.
While Daytpn was losing to
Louisville, 66-64 in overtime, Van
derbilt's Commodores turned in a
decisive 81-73 decision over Ken
tucky, and St. Louis University
beat Cincinnati by an impressive
104-86 score.
As a result of these three games,
Vanderbllt leaped from seventh
place to third in the rankings.
Louisville vaulted from ninth to
fifth and Kentucky dropped from
third to eighth.
Although running their winning
streak to 13 for the season, un
beaten Temple pushed down one
place to seventh, just behind Big
Ten leader Illinois, which also lost
ground.
North Carolina 'State, fourth;
North Carolina, ninth; and Duke,
tenth, completed the top 10.
The leaders, with first-place
votes in parentheses:
1. San Francisco (90) 1,357
?.. Dayton (3)
3. Vanderbllt (13)
4. N. C. State (4)
5. Louisville (10)
6. Illinois (2)
7. Temple (2)
8. Kentucky
9. North Carolina (4)
10. Duke (1!
The Second 10:
11. St. Louis (3) 164
12. Alabama (2) 142
13. St. Francis (Brooklyn) ...141
14. Holv Cross (4) 122
15. Oklahoma City 14) 115
16. Memphis State 106
17. .Southern Methodist 73
18. Marshall (W. Va.) 70
19. Iowa 57
20. UCLA 46
NEW YORK (UP) The United
Prpci mUeo hnclrMhnl! raHntrs
(Firsl.place votes and won-lost
records through Jan. 28 in paren
theses): Team Points
1. San Francisco (32) (14-0) 33a
2. Dayton (1) (14-1) 238
3. Illinois (II (11-1) ' 22",
4. N. Carolina St. (14-2) 210
5. " Vanderbllt (14-1) 154
6. Louisville (1) (16-1) 148
7. Temple (13-0) , 127
8. North Carolina (13-2) 106
9. Kentucky (10-3) 78
10. SMU (14-2) 71
Second 10 teams: 11, Duke, 38;
12, Iowa, 31: 13. UCLA, 25; 14, St.
Louis, 24; 15, Holy Cross, 23; 16,
Utah. 20; 17. Alabama, 11; 18, St.
Francis (N.Y.). 10; 19, Brlgham
Young, 9: 20 (tie), Cincinnati and
Canisius. 6 each.
POOR SPORTS
ESCANABA, Mich. Of) Arthur
Emblem. 60, of Green Bay, Wis.,
I killed a buck deer with his car
three days before hunting season
' opened. He told Michigan conser-
ed hunter, came along, dumped the
carcass into their car trunk, and
sped away,
ice was slow. He finished 27th in
17:45.6.
SPEED SKATING
Russia had won the 500, 1500
and 5.000 meter speed skating
championships two in world rec
ord time and had piled up an In
posing total of 85 points going into
Tuesday s activities. Tne united
States was far back in the unoffi
cial team scoring with 6!i points.
Stenersen gave Norway its sec
ond gold medal in the Nordic com.
bined by winning the 15-kllometer
(9 miles: 560 yards cross country
ski race in 56 minutes and 18
seconds. He finished eight full min
utes ahead of Russia's Yry Mo
schkln, who had won the Jumping
half of the double-barreled test,
America's entries were Ted Far-
well, a 25-year-old helicopter pilot
from Montague City, Mass.: Mar
vin Crawford, 23-year-old Denver
soldier; Lynn Levy of New Or
leans, and Charles Tremblay of
Keene, N.H. All finished far out
of the running. Farwell had the
best of the U.S. times with 1 hour,
1 minute and 2 seconds for 22nd
place.
Eugene
Captures
Vote Lead
By TUE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Eugene, the defending state
champion, displaced Jefferson of
Portland as Oregon's No. 1 basket
ball team in this week's Associated
Press poll of sportswriters and
broadcasters.
Eugene moved up from its No. 2
position the hard way. The Axe
men had to score 12 points in the
last two minutes to keep from
being upset by Roseburg Friday
night. They won that game 60-46
and went on to beat Cottage Grove
easily the following night for their
12th victory against two defeats.
Jefferson lost the top spot be
cause of a 60-59 overtime loss to
Franklin. Jeff dropped to No. 2
while Franklin came up from No.
4 last week to No. 3 this week.
Marshfleld, a team whose core
is members of Its state champion
ship football squad, moved from
No. 5 into fourth place with wins
over Medford No. 3 last week
and Grants Pass.
Medford, a state tournament fi
nalist last year, dropped to No. 6
after defeat by North Bend as
well as by Marshfleld. Beore run
ning into Marshfleld, Medford had
a (9-game winning streak. Now
Marshfleld has won nine' straight.
South Salem defeated Milwaukie
and North Salem and sq moved
up to No. 5 in the estimation of the
sportswriters and broadcasters.
Milton-Freewater climbed from
.No. 8 to No. 7 with victories over
The Dalles and Hermiston. Mil
waukie dropped down into the No.
8 spot vacated by Milton-Freewater
which had shared it with Beav
erton. Pendleton moved into the top
group at No. 9 and Bend came
up to share 10th place with Beav
erton. Lincoln, which as 10th last
week. Joined the group getting
points but not enough to stay In
the top 10.
Eugene gets its big test over
the weekend when It swings Into
the formidable Coos Bay country.
Waiting for the Axemen are
Marshfleld Friday and also strong
North Bend Saturday,
The Portland league leaders,
Jefferson, Franklin and Lincoln,
were expected to sustain their vic
tory strings. But South Salem
faces strong opposition when it
goes to Corvallis Friday and to
Bend' Saturday. .
Milton-Freewater will try to get
revenge Friday from Dayton,
Wash., which has given It one of
its only two defeats.
South Salem has two tough as
signments a game with Corvallis
Friday and another at Bend Sat
urday. The positions in the poll with
won-loss records:
Points
1. Eugene (12-2) 154
2. Jefferson (11-2) 139
3. Franklin (11-2) t 137
4. Marshfleld (10-2) 1 123
5. South Salem 12-3 1 94
6. Medford (12-4) B5
7. Milton-Freewater (12-2) 54
8. Milwaukie (8-4) 26
9. Pendleton (9-3) 22
10. Bend (10-51 20
11. Bcaverton 19-2) 20
Others: Lincoln 18, Molalla 9.
Cottage Grove, 6, St. Francis of
Eugene 5, Albany 4. Grant and
Klamath Falls 2, North Bend 2,
North Salem and Roseburg 1.
YMCA
Church Leaque
Stewart Lennox turned back
Church of the Brethren 28-18 in
the only Senior Division game
played in last night's YMCA
Church League basketball action.
In the two Unlimited Division
games, Mt. Lakl walloped Subur
ban Christian 40-27 and the Ys
Men whipped First Baptist 37-30.
Coffman tallied 10 to lead the
Stewart Lennox win, while Heggle
led the Ys Men with 15 polnta.
McOown of First Baptist hit for
10 points In a losing cause. Lee
and Kaylor paced the Mt. Lakl
entry with 12 and 10 points apiece.
9n 8hh$
SPORTS IN BRIEF
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
TENNIS
BRISBANE. Australia Aussie
Lewis Hoad won Australia's sin-'
gles championship for the first
time by defeating two-time tltlist !
Ken Rosewall, 6-4, 3-8, 8-4, 7-5. j
RACING
MIAMI, Fla. Hilarious
118 80) blazed 6 furlongs In 1:10
1-5 to capture the 110.000 6unshtne
State purse by a neck at Hialeah.
Pels To Meet Shasta;
PS Invades Ore Tech
Coach Don Peterson's Klamath
Union High School Pelicans g a t
another "one-night weekend" this
week, but for the basketballlng
Owls of Oregon Technical Institute
and coach Wally'Palmberg, the
Friday-Saturday schedule looms as
the biggest home series to unfold
before local fans tills year.
Wlille the Pelicans are prepar
ing to meet the invading Shasta
High Wolves of Redding in a one
night stand Saturday evening, the
Owls must polish their attack for a
pair of weekend outings against the
league leading Portland State Col
lege Vikings.
This past week, OTI split a pair
with Oregon College of Education
at Monmouth, and now head
Into four straight weeks of home
floor action with only one road
trip remaining on their schedule,
that a Journey to Ashland for a
game with Southern Oregon, three
weeks from tonight. And to open
this elongated home stand by the
Owls, the Mile High Campus cage
forces must tangle with the power
ful PSC Vikings of Sharkey Nel
son. Portland State's two games over
the weekend found them showing
off their scoring department with
double wins over Eastern Oregon,
KF To Host
Zany Antics
Of Roadkings
Unveiling, perhaps his greatest
basketball team in the past 24 sea
sons, the Harlem Roadkings, Bobby
Grund's mirth-provoking I a n y
basketcers tangle with City
League all-star quintet at the OTI
gymnasium this Thursday night at
8 o'clock.
Winning games are a habit with
the Harlem Roadkings and last
season they hung up a record of
149 wins with but seven losses, and
in that span ran up 58 straight
victories before a loss. But turning
the game into a circus of laughs,
magic tricks with the ball' and
uncanny shooting is the trademark
of the Roadkings.
And speaking of comedy, the
hilarious Bud Collins, veteran of
the Roadkings, will again display
his court Jesters that keep the fans
in an uproar throughout the game.
Collins' crazy antics along with his
superb basket shooting marks
him as one of (he outstanding pro
fessional players In the country
Jtoday. '
The Roadkings have also come
up with a new, sensational "drib
bler" In Sonny Mitchell of Louis
ville, Kentucky. Mitchell can make
the ball do everything but talk
and think as he goes through his
dribbling stunts. Besides his drib
bling chores, Mitchell was the high
point getter for the Roadkings last
season.
The "rookie" of the year for the
Roadkings was Paul Brllt,. 6' 6"
center from Louisville, Kentucky,
Just out of high school, a fine re
bounder and picked up the clever
routine of clowning with the Road
kings his first season. Britt is
marked to become a great star.
Orund will surround Collins again
with Moses Stephens' defensive
ability and two other talented ball
players to give them another out
standing club.
If you have never seen a basket-
boil come alive then I suggest
you attend the Harlem Roadkings'
mirth-provoking show with their
brilliant ball handling and skilled
basket shooting.
Olympic Games
At A Glance
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Monday'! Results
1500 meter (metric mile) speed
skating Eugeniy Grishin, Rus
sia, and Yuriy Mikhallav, Russia
(tie), 2 minutes, 8.2 seconds (world
and Olympic record).
15 kilometer (9 miles, 660 yards)
cross country ski Hallgelr Bren
den, Norway. 49 minutes, 39 sec
onds. Women's special slalom Re
nee Colliard, Switzerland, 1 min
ute, 52.3 seconds.
Bring Your Car to
Home Base for
SERVICE!
Cunningham & Rickey
DODGE
SPECIAL!
Automotic tronimiaiion adjust
mtnt lor all Dodgt family auto
mobiles, only . .
$goo
Cunningham &
Rickey Motors
Dodgt-Plymouth and Dodgt
"Job-Rated" trucks
7th and Commercial Ph. 1104
.CLAYTON HANMON
SPORTS EDITOR
and both nights the score sur
passed the centry mark, Friday
night Portland State won a 112-65,
and the second game closed with
the Vlks holding 103-85 margin.
The double loss knocked the Moun-
lles of EOCE from the top spot
in the conference standings and
moved the PSC club into the va
cated spot.
Nelson's crew of talented hoop-
sters are out to make a successful
defense of their 1954-55 Oregon Col
legiate Conference chamolonshlp,
and with the power they displayed
In their last games, the Job seems
10 De a certainty.
Earlier In the year. Portland
State throttled the Owls on two
occasions In the opening weekend
oi nrsi rouna conference action.
PSC won 93-67 and 87-67 on their
home floor In Portland. Since that
time, Tech has split with SOO,
lost two to EOC and split with
Oregon College. Portland State
whipped OCE once, split with the
Red Raiders of 8outhern Oregon
and toppled the Mountles of East
ern Oregon twice.
The local high school followers
have another lean basketball week
ahead of them, with only Sat-
urday night action showing on the
pelican court docket. Shasta and
Klamath will engage In their third
meeting of the season, a rematch
of the Christmas - week series
played in Redding. In this pair of
tilts, the Pels came off the victor
on both occasions.
Coach Harlen Carter of Redding
has been having a rough go of it
this year, with one of the
"greenest" teams ever produced
by Shasta Union. Early In the
season Redding lost seven of eight
games, but in the last few weeks
has been showing signs of Im
provement, i .
Carter's hoopsters would like
nothing better than to knock the
Pelicans off on their own maple,
but the odds are stacked against
them, should Peterson's Pels re
cover from last Saturday night's
loss to Bend.
Glenn Moore, talented 6-6 center
of the. Whitebirds is expected to
be on hand for this Saturday's
play after sitting out the Bend
contest because of a badly sprained
right wrist. The smooth-working
sophomore fell and Injured h i s
wrist last Wednesday and was
forced to wear a splint for protec
tion. Should Moore's wrist fall to
respond, then the chances of the
Wolves pulling an away from
home win would be increased.
T. Jackson,
Baker Clash
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tommy (Hurricane) Jackson re
turns from a three-month layoff
to take on high-ranked Bob Baker
Friday night at Madison Square
Garden in an important heavy
weight test.
Although the Hurricane huffed
and puffed to no effect In losing
to Jimmy Slade Oct. 28 explaining
"I couldn't get my arms and legs
working right," he currently is
rated No. 3 among Rocky Mar-
clano's challeners with a 25-4-1
record. .
Baker ranks even higher, No. 1
under the National Boxing Assn.,
and No. 2, behind Archie Moore,
jn the Ring ratings. He lost plenty
of prestige in a dull winning effort
against Nino Valdcs at Cleveland
Dec. 9 although he plodded to his
13th straight victory.
MacArthur Returns;
Chamberlain Departs
MONMOUTH, Ore. W Bill
MacArthur will resume his duties
as head football and track coach
at Oregon College of Education
here next year.
John Chamberlain, who coached
OCE to a tie for the Oregon Col
lege Conference football title last
season, resigned Monday. Cham
berlain had been an assistant at
OCE seven years before taking
over the head football Job from
MacArthur, when MacArthur took
a year s leave to complete grad
uate studies at Oregon State Col
lege. Chamberlain said he was giving
up football coaching for business
and teaching responsibilities.
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Klamath
Upset U of 0 Frosh
Richard Berg scored a 9-3 de
cision in the final bout of the
match last night at Pelican Court
to give the Klamath Union High
School Pelicans a 22-20 wrestling
triumph over the powerful Uni
versity of Oregon Frosh. The win
was the sixth this yean against
three losses.
The last minute victory avenged
an earlier season loss, 28-12, that
the Frosh had been able to hang
on the Pelicans In a bout held at
Eugeno.
Going Into the final bout of the
Monday evening match, the Pels
were trailing the Frosh 20-19, and
the load rested on the shouldors of
Berg, a 1955 state high school
wrestling champion. Going against
Jim Fortmlller of the Frosh, Berg
outpointed his more experienced
foe to hand his team the triumph,
and a big win it was for the Pell
cans. In posting their upset victory
over the Frosh, the Pels won six
bouts on decisions and drew In two
others. The U of O Frosh won two
tiffs on falls, drew In two more
and captured another pair on
points, .v.
Illinois
Increases
Cage Lead
Bv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Four major independents, hope
ful of luring nertns in college oas
ketball'a postseason tournaments,
and Illinois, aiming for the same
goa by way of a conference title,
were able to add favorable clip
pings to the scrapbooks with ease
todav.
The Illinl scampered farther out
front In the Big Ten race which
leads to the NCAA tourney by
whipping Minnesota 95-84 last
night. It was the 11th straight sue.
cess for once-beaten Illinois, now
5-0 In the Big Ten and sixth ranked
in today s Associated press pon.
Among the Independents, Holy
Cross walloped Georgetown 88-68
with Tom Helnsohn setting two
Crusader free throw records; Okla
homa City handled Texas ASiM
with equal ease 76-56; Memphis
State ran away from Amansas
State 97-67, and Seton Hall cleared
the bench beating Creighton 8B-1J.
Holy Cross, No. 4 in the poll and
14-2 for the season, was an NIT
entry last year along with Seton
Hall, unranked and 14-2. Oklahoma
City, No. 15 and 14-4, and Memphis
Stale, No. 16 and 14-2, both were
NCAA at-large selections in 1955.
In other conference games last
night, Kentucky, ranked eighth,
cot back on the beam in the South
eastern bv whinninor Georgia Tech
84-e2- Kansas State took the Big
Seven lead with a 71-63 decision
over Oklahoma; West Virginia bol
stered its Southern lead by pasting
Virginia Military 103-68 while run-nor-up
George Washington clipped
Virginia Tech 92-70; and Wichita
defeated Detroit 99-79 In a battle of
Missouri Valley also-rans.
Ton-ranked San Francisco, Idle
last night, figures to odd San Jose
State to its record 4u-game winning
streak tonight.
Tlllnnls nnt.hit from the field.
sank 31 of 37 free throw attempts
to stand off a second-half Gopher
rally fired by Jed Dommeyer'a 31
points. He finished with 27.
Helnsohn scored 28 for Holy
Cross, which had ' no trouble
against Georgetown s 2-3 "lone.
Helnsohn hit 18 free throws for one
team mark and sank his first eight
tries from the foul line to run his
string to 23, breaking the previous
high of 19 held by Bob Cousy.
ssOres
IMOOSB MA'S LEAGUE f
Evin'i CJrocery : .
Blng'i Cil. "
Schntlder't ?"
Women o( th Mon 41
Southern Oreion MUilc J
StinurhHn Flower 2i
Klamatli riower
llydc i Jewelry "
Lt nluhl'e reiulli:
Klamath Flower 4 Blnn'l ..
Southern Oregon 4 Women ol the Mooia
l'j Uu.'l !u,Blrv 1
Evan'a Orocery a Suburban Flower
High loam game Southern Oregon Mu
Hlgh ''uam aerlea Southern Oregon
High Individual game LaRayne Harrla
Kin
Jljeh Individual
rla 5tt0
aerlea LaRayne Har-
NICTS CENTURY GOAL
BUFFALO, N.Y. Ifl Chuck
Blnlr, right wing for the Builalo
Bisons, scored the 100th goal of
his American Hockey League ca-
ireer against the Springfield team.
& Rickey Mtrs
Ph. 8104
Grapplcrs
James Olmstead of the Frosh
handed the ftsltors a 3-0 lead fol
lowing the first bout, with a 7-3
decision over Pete Barnhlsel of
Klamath. Pelican Gary Price
evened the team count at 3-all
with a 4-2 victory over Tom How
ser, but an ex-Klamath .Union
grappler put the Eugene collegians
in front on another decision as
Ron "Rooster" Conner, state cham
pion from KUHS, outpointed Gary
Roberts 5-0.
. Bill Stelner of the Pelicans
brought the teams back together
at 6-6 with a 7-3 win over Tim
Berg in a 145-pound battle, Then
James Beaton of the Frosh, a 1955
state champion from Lebanon,
pinned Dan Hitchcock in 1:30 of
Uie third round to push the U of O
club ahead by a 11-6 margin.
In a heavyweight match, Pedro
Colley of Klamath outpointed Lar
ry Newton 3-0 to close the gap,
but the Frosh registered their sec
ond pin of the match when Dave
Fish flattened Bill Badorek in 15
seconds of the third round, and
tho U of O freshmen held a 16-9
margin with five bouts remaining
on the card.
Roy Ropp of Klamath and Har
old Erland grappled to a 6-6 draw,
and Darryl Peterson of the Pels
nudged the Frosh's Leroy Todd In
the second heavyweight bout 4-3 to
make the scoreboard reading stand
18-14 in favor of the visitors. C. B.
Simons out-faught Bill Shields in a
175-pound clash for a 7-3 decision
that shot the Pelicans to within
one point of their foes, 18-17.
Dave Leellng, a runnerup for the
Pels in last year's state tourna
ment, and Larry Fraser of the
Frosh battled to a hard-earned 1-1
draw In the next to last bout, and
the stage was set for Berg's victory-saving
win over Fortmlller.
Coach Bill Hammer of the Frosh
said after the match that "it was
a great win for Dutch's (Simons)
boys, they out-hustled my kids all
the way."
, The next outing for the Pelicans
will be this Friday afternoon as
the Klamath mat team travels to
Grants Pass for a return match
with the Cavemen. Last week
Coach Dutch Simon a' club
trounced the -Cavemen 45-4.
Tonight's
Ballfare
CITV LEAGUE
at Allamont Jr. High
6:30 Joslens vs. Nat'l Guard
"Reds"
8:00 YMCA vs. Klamath Fall! ,
Creamery
VICTORY LEAGUE '
at Mills School
6:30 DeMolay Blues vs. Heaton's
8:00 Herman's vs. Gun Store
COUNTY B LEAGUE
(non-league games)
7:00 Henlev at Sacred Heart
f7:0O Bly at Bonanza
7: on Maim at Mrrm
7:00 KU Frosh-Wilricats at Chllo
quln JOE'S
14.95 Insulated, sixe 12
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2.9S Mem & Womens
nsulated
Socs
1"
15 04
21.95 3-seot
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trric These tkil are O 00
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Pacific Standard
reloodintj
Tool
NT
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10.95 size 14 & 1414
100
Wool Shirts
Wool "Ike tvoe" :
Jackets
4
200
9.95, Star draq trollinq
Reel 5"
85c Larqe size Pop's
Eggs 3?c
SEE
ALASKA
The
Wonderland
Toniqht & Wed.
Mills School
Auditorium
7:30 P.M.
Adults 1.10
Students 55c
tax inc.
JOE HAS THE
TICKETS
JOE'S
Soorfinn Goods
418 Main
Ph.
8878