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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (March 20, 1959)
N TODAY, M ARCH 20 IQM HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON Pelicans, Pirates, Quakers Or Bucs Will Be A-1 Champ . ELGKNK (API - Take vour .pick - cither Klimath Falls. Marshfield. Pendleton or Frank lin of Portland will be Oregon's "new A-1 prep basketball cham pion . And of the four, defcndmc rhampion Klamath Falls was the: meet Saturday for mosi impressne inursday night honors. in aultins into tonight's semi- The Marshheld - North Salem final round here. contest was the only game in the The fast, rangy Pelicans easily A-1 tourney in which 6-9 players disposed of Sandy, the darling of; ever had opposed each other. ino tournairont. 64-43. Like his team. Marshfield s gi- Salem. and Beaverton with North! Af'er the game, coach Brute Bend ! Hotfine said of Klamath Falls fn two other consolation round games today. Jelferson of Port land meets St Helens and Med ford is matched with McMinnviUe. The winners of those games will fifth place Aone ot tne other victors in Thursdays championship round was able to win by more than six points In a battle between teams wr.h -! performers. Marshfield eased past North Salem 39-M . Franklin, the second place team -In the Portland league, nipped fceighboring Beaverton SO-45. j And Pendleton, an Eastern Ore gon entry, edged North Rend 53- 4f with a late flurry of points. J The losers of those four games -jneet here late today for the right ant junior, Mel Counts, came ou on top. Counts flipped in 15 points, and got 13 rebounds in the' slow, de liberate game. North Salem's 6-9 star. Grant Harter. was held to 8 rebounds and A points. North Salem stayed within reach through the first half, but Marshfield drew away in the third period. And by early in the fourth quarter. Marshfield had a 35-23 bulge, its biggest of the game. Six quick points by Bill Maurer helped close the gap to 3,-33. but to meet Saturday lor the tourna-! Marshlield's Lawrence Kickworth 'vent's fourth position. ; pulled his team out of reach with Sandy is matched with North ' another field goal. (f RES - fcrHr 1 in LAD V BI G LEA (HE iCoca Cola 56 43 1 W I Baldwin Hirhftrld M 44 E R Palmer SS 41 Walker Bror S5 45 fir it Federal Ml 41 Medn Land V V Vee Smith SS 4S Northwen Produce 40 SI Market Basket M' tSVk Lwrk'i Fnnd M KC To.vchet 51 47 Car-Ad-Co 4 M Lucca Lounge VI 50 Sharps Grain 4S 54 Howardi Cleanert 50 50 Simplot Devoe 45 5.5 Drive More Molori 40 51 Sear 42 H Shultz Tire 40 54 KC Paint 41 59 The Ranch 40 54 All Drive Inn 43 50 Last night's retults: TP Packing 35 65 Simplnt Devoe I, Sharp Grain I Ut night i retultt: Ala 2. Lucca 2 T R. Palmer 4. Drive Mora t Market Basket , Howards 1 TP Packing 3. Rhulti 1 The Ranch 3. Jeie Smith 1 KC 3. First Federal 1 High team game- TP Packing 103 High team series E. R Palmer 2778 High Ind. game Elora Bhalev 222 High ind series Jean Rodgen 5H3 CUT Baldwins Richfield 4. Medo Land Car-Ad-Co I. Lucca Cafe 3 KC Paint 3, Coca Cola 1 Walker Bros 3. Sean 1 Larrk Foods 1, Northwest Produce 3 High team game Lucca Cafe 9H0 High team series--Lurca Cafe 2011 High ind game Pete Bray 21S High ind series- Pete Bray 579 FOIRKOME LEAGIE Exhibition Scores EXHIBITION BASEBALL By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Thursday Results Boston 2. Chicago N 1 San Francisco 9. Cleveland 6 Milwaukee vs. New York at Miami IN), canceled, rain Los Angeles vs. Baltimore at Sarasota, canceled rain Pittsburgh vs. Kansas City at West Palm Beach, canceled, rain Washington vs. Chicago 'A) at Tampa, canceled, rain Kriday Schedule Cincinnati vs. Philadelphia at Dunedin or Clearwater St. Louis vs. Baltimore at St. ' Petersburg Milwaukee vs. New York at Miami 2 'day & night! Pittsburgh vs. Detroit at Fort Myers San Francisco vs. Chicago (N) at Mesa Cleveland vs. Boston at Scotts dale Kansas City vs. Washington at Orlando Cincinnati vs. Los Angeles at Havana V' Los Angeles vs. Chicago A it Tampa W L Witts Market 3ft Macs Market , 44 , Curleys Clippers 54 50 Four Mugs 53 51 Haps Photo 52 52 McCloud Cleaners 51 53 Maxines Twisters 4Ta S7'i Snoball 34 70 Last night's results: Witts Market 2. McCloud Cleaners 2 Macs Market 4. Snoball n Four Mugs 3. Maxines Tw uteri 1 Haps Photo 4. Curleys Clippers 0 High team game Haps Photos (WO High team series -Hap Photos 2427 High ind. game men John Hool: m 224 High ind. series imem Jnhn Rohtn 40 High ind game -women Helen Ander son 181 High ind aeries iwomen Lola Fergu son 466 CIVS AND GALS LEAGUE GIANTS SIGN SCOTT ' NEW YORK 1 UPI The New York Giants have signed George Scott. Miami of Ohio halfback, to a 1959 contract. Scott, a good "rurmer and pass receiver, was the Giants I9th draft choice. W L Spelzinit ft2'a 2) M Gravel Gerties 76'i 27'a LaPortas 35 Mike and Tonys 46 SH Johns and Helens 40' a A3i Windsors' Drug 38 OT Shasta Laundrv 34 70 Bank of Mt. Shasta 29'i 74li Marshfield' opponent tonight "We'll have to be at our best to beat them." Klamath Falls had one of the best records in the state. 19-3. when it entered the tourney, and was third in the final Associated Press poll. Marshfield had but a 13-9 sea son record, and uas fifth-ranked. Its Thursday victory was a big upset, for North Salem had the No. 2 poll position. The other semi-finalists tonight also are top-seeded teams. Pendleton was seventh-ranked, and Franklin the No. R team. After Franklin's Thursday tri umph, the coach of the losing Rcaverton team, Teddy Wilson, said: "I think they'll go all the way. They've got size and good shoot ing and that's a tough combina tion to beat." Franklin used S-7 Jerry Berg strom to ood advantage The talen'ed senior scored 16 points, and three of them came in the late crucial minutes. That was after Beaverton's Steve P;tiily got a pair of quick baskets that chopped the Frank lin lead to 47-43. Pauly, one of the tourney's best scorers, topped the game with 22 points. Pendleton. Franklins opponent tonight, hart to scramhle even more for its quarter-final tri umph. The Bucks were ahead until late in the game. And then, with three minutes to go. Tom Younkers tied it at 49-49 with a field goal for North Bend. Dave Nelson, however, sank the tie-breaking field goal, Bill Cook added another and then Pendle ton stoutly held North Bend score less the final two minutes. Pendleton will be the shortest player in the semi-tmal round. for the Bucks have no player more than 6-3. But North Bend was chilly at the Fox paid Pendleton this trihute: 'Our ball handling was not as sharp as it could have been And you can t make those kind of mis takes against a clgb as good as Pendleton. Pendleton shot at a 338 clip, hitting 22 of 65. North Bend got more field goals. 23 of 54 for a sizzling .426 percentage. But North Bend was chilly at teh free throw line, getting only 3 of And it was at the foul line that Pendleton won. The Bucks sank 9 of 16 attempts. The end of the line came for four tourney teams Thursday, as they suffered their second de feats. Thus knocked out of the 16 team field were Bend. Baker. Stappoose and Astoria the No. I team in the AP poll. Scoring summ-aries: Player FG FT-FTA PF TP Lbk- Js,aai ' -1sW aiBH smmL i-jMBslLsB HkarfHl 41 Haw " - -ffiV J'V-aaWJk LmI MAD SCRAMBLE Pelicani Bob Petersen (34) and Don DiLap (241 tcrap for a loose ball with Sandy's Howard Bjork, canter on floor in Thursday's afternoon contest which the Pels won, 64-43. to advance thamselves to th semifinals where they clash with Marsh field tonight at 7:30. Closing in on the pile-up are Pelican Bob Lewis, and Mick Byrd and Ed Hoffman of Sandy. Time Out "Okay, I'll see him! Dam these alumni m ho think just because they (innate inonry for the new gym, (heir sons can be on the team!" Pacific Champions In NCAA Tourney LOIISV1LLK. Ky. AP - The home court advantage is expected to do more for Louisville than Os car Robertson for Cincinnati. Jer ry West for West Virginia, or a bear-hug defense for California in the NCAA basketball showdown opening at massive freedom hall tonight . lxwisville (lf10) meets West Virginia '28-4' in the semifinal opener at 8 30 p.m followed by Cincinnati (94) vs. California '23-4' at 10:30. The winners play for college basketball's tastiest plumb Satur day at 10 p.m-, following a con solation game between tonight s Today's Sport Parade Grandpa Longden Running Time Race By OSCAR r RAI.EY nd ng have gone into tho record NEW YORK ITI - The gal-lbotiks since the wizened lit tit man loping grarmpappy is running a photo finish with father time today. Johnny Longden. nt 49 the win- ningest jockey of them all, says s going to hang up his tack me July. It's startling news in the turf worid from the man whi aid he would ride as long as he ould do justice to his mounts. The inference, of course, is that the rigors ot riding finally hae become too tough. LONG TOO COMING One thing sine, it mas a long time coming. Thirty two years of Lat night results: Spelzlnu 4, Gravel Gerties 0 Mike and Tnn ,l. Johns and Helens 1 Windsors 2, Bank of Mt Shasta I LaPortas 4. Laundry 0 Huh team pM imen D. Spelxini 210 High team senea 'men D Spelzinl 60S Hiah team fame 'mwnen-- Phvl Cain 47S HiRh team aerie women Phvl Cain 471 High team game--Spelttni 1042 High team series Spelzims 283a Lt. Pepper Rodgei s. coach of the Air Force Academy's offensive backs, formerly quarterbacked Georgia Tech. Steve Pauly Bea Mel Counts .Ma- 20 G. Scott 'Asf IS J. Andrrson 'Med 13 E. Hoffman iSani 14 Berkgstrom .Fn 18 Bill Mauer 'NR 11 T. Vnunker MB) 11 L Philhpa (MoM1 12 Bill Adama -St Hi 11 P. Connolly (Bend. 11 14-22 5-11 11-21 1.1 1R 9-IS 4- 7 11-14 5- 9 0-1 1 7-0 7-9 43 Jean Saubert Snares Gal's Salome Title YAKIMA. Wash. AP A hoy 'ho losl a ski and won a title and . girl who lost a ski and didn't, 'personified joy and despair Thurs day as the National Junior Ski 'run at White Pass in the sun lit 'Cascade Mountains. ! Younssters from all sections of the Tinted States and Canada toncentrated on the downhill runs .Friday. There are 74 entrants in the hnvs downhill and 3d in the fclrls division The hoys slalom is set for Sat urday and the hoys jumping event ill be Sunday. Competitors are 18 or younger. - Mike Gallagher of Rutland. Vt , 'lost a runner a few yards from !he finish of the boy cross coun try race and fimsHed on a ski arid a boot lo take first place Thursday. He was timed at 3.1:42 for the long haul through tall jimher and rumpled terrain. .lean Sauhert of Lakeviow. Ore . 'on the girls national slaloro title. regaining a crown she took three years ago. The attending crm Dion. Sharon Pecjak ol Aspen -Colo., was disqualified for missing gate She entered a protest The protest was disallowed. Her total time was 125.4 seconds, which would have given her third place. The tragedy of the lost ski befell Augusta Russell of Woodstock. Vt. Her time for the first trip through the gates was 59.2. better ing Miss Saubert s clocking of it) 4. Rut on the second run Miss Russell lost the ski not once hut twice and missed a gate to be disqualified. Miss Russell finished the second run hut it took her three minutes Miss Saubert's total time wa- 120 seconds. .Judy Waterman of Aspen was second in two minutes .1 4 seconds and Shern Gerhaz Aspen, third in 2:05.. The loss of a ski was 1 fairly common hazard. In the cross country Jim Page of Lake Placid. N. Y., parted company with one runner and limped nearly a mile without it. Then he managed to borrow a spare and finished on two skis, but next to last in a lirld of 41 starters. An equal number of girls com peted in (he slalom. Among them was Canadian champion Eliiabeth Greene of Rosland. B. C, who finished sixth. Open '58 Season Chemult Gunners CHEMULT The Chemult Rod and Gun Club officially opened the trap season with the first of the Journal Telegraph Shoots on Sunday. March IS. Previous years the Chemult mm and women have shot with the Rend and Redmond clubs, hut voted at their annual meeting to shoot as a unit this year representing just their own group. Scores phoned in were R. E. Jessup 25. Verne I. Brader 25. and Bill Rogers 23 . Roth Jessup and Brader were presented tie clasps from Grant Damon who had promised the unique shotgun tie clasps to each of 25. shooter who shot a straight 25 dur ing the season, for the first score ESKIMOS SIGN TWO KDMONTON '1'PI -The Ed monton Eskimos of the Canadian Football League have signed hall- back Cliff Jackson and guard James Forbes, both of North Car olina College. T. Anthony 11-5 Favorite Over Sonny By MURRAY ROSE NEW YORK iAP' It's goodby to the heavyweights and hello again to the light heavyweights for picture punching Tony An thony. The tall, lean New Yorker takes on Sonny Ray of Chicago in a re turn battle of light heavyweight ontenrlcrs tonight at Madison Square Garden. Anthony, the No. 1 man is an 11-5 favorite to make it two straight over the fifth ranking challenger, in the television NBC i ten rounder. In their first meeting Nov. 14 the B-l Anthony swept the last three rounds to grab a unanimous decision. Tony was a 4-1 faontc that night in scoring his seventh consecutive triumph and ending Ray's victory streak at nine. nthony s wir streak was broken along witfi his heavyweight hopes in his next outing. Reuben Vargas.-a rough, tough. 189-nound California heavyweight, clawed out a decision over the 17-pound-er at the Garden, Jan. M. It proved that Anthony can't give away loo much weight to an opponent who will come after him Tony looked woeful whenever he was pressed strongly and that was for most of the fight. Anthony's record now is 37-Vl including 28 knockouts. Raw 23, muscular, and ML Is one of the most improved battlers in the cruiser-weight division. Aft er his loss to Anthony, he reacted well and easily defeated Ritque Maravilla in Chicago Jan 14 HOCKEY Scores NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE Rv THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Toronto fi, Mont real S Friday Schedule No games Saturday Schedule Kninn at Montreal Chicago at Toronto New York at Detroit 'afternoon TV) Carolinian Holds Two-Stroke If ad COLUMBUA. Ga. UP1 South Carolinian Betsy Rawls held a two-stroke lead in the $6,000 Royal Crown Women's Open today after shooting the only sub-par golf in the opening round. The 5-6. 132-pound veteran golfer shot a two-under women's par 72 Thursday. That was good enough to put her three strokes in front of Patty Berg. Minneapolis, Minn . and Wiffi Smith, St. Claire. Mich REJECTS l .S. OFFERS PERTH. Australia LPI'-Aus tralian swimming champion Dawn Eraser has refused offers to coach in the United States. The 21 year-old Aussie record-breaker aid she will not consider coach ing until after the i960 Olympics losers. Capacity crowds of about 18..S00 will attend each session Despite the general feeling among the coaching fraternity that the home court assist will he minimized by tournament pres sure, the odds-makers hae made the homestanding Cardinals the lavontc. This although Louisville has the poorest record of the semilmalists, has no one to match All-Americas Robertson and West, and has a defense that's hit-and-miss com pared lo California's "make-'em-for -everything" style. The Cardinals also are the only at-large entry lined up against three solid conference champions in a tournament regularly domi nated by league teams. No at large entry has won since CCNY in 1950. On a point basis. Louisville is quoted at W over West Virginia and Cincinnati 5 over California All lour teams were in top shape after final workouts with only Cincinnati due to play short- handed. Mike Mendenhall. regu lar backcourt nan. U ineligible for the NCAA competition as four-year player, This didn't stop George Smith's Bearcats Irom spilling lop-ranked Kansas State 8.V75 in the Midwest regional final at Lawrence. Kan., last weekend. Cincinnati, champi on of the Missouri ValleV Confer ence, scored its other Lawrence victory over TCU 77-73. Louisville, which lost seven of its first 12 games, created the big gest stir when, after' bouncing Eastern Kentucky in the first round, it blasted "defending cham pion Kentucky 76-61 and powerful Michigan State 88-81 to win the Mideast regional. West Virginia, winless in four previous NCAA tournaments, also has won Ihree straight from Dartmouth 82-68. St. Joseph's Pa 95-92, and Boston V. 86-82. The latter win nailed the Eastern re gional title for the Southern Con- lerente perennials coached by Freddie Schaus. California, riding a 14-game winning streak, bagged its third straight Pacific Coast Conference title before whipping L'lah 7159 and St, Marys 66-46 m the Par West regional at San Francisco Scotty 's BARKS 'N' BITES (Continued from Page 1-B JelOrfion Pemocralii In 1h lerond round. lnlreling, n battle between all Rtater Gordon Srott ami Terrv Baker. Easily the mnut eye eloudinc sighl at the tournry thu far was the reaction of Raker' heim-pole forward. Steve Van Orker. a he dashed for the dressing room with tear streaming Irom his eyes af ter missing two free throws alter the gun had Sounded on St. Hel ens' I9-4K overtime win oer the Kulldnes in the serond game of the second round. Van Oeker. who was fouled nt the gun. stepped to the foul line with an opportunity to give his team another tie and possibly victory If he hit. He missed . and so. the tears. Said his coach Inter, Garv Hammond. "Steve has hern our 'clutch' player all xeason What happened to htm could have happened Ut anybody though. He tried." with the squeaky voice rode the firs' of the 5.250 winners he had earlier this year. That's a Ions time in a field where youthful muscles, vigor and reflexes are rt '.mi ned as the most necessary adjuncts to success. How long is it really? You can only appreciate the length of that span when you consider that when Longden rode his first winner a young man named Bobby Jones was three years short of his folf ing grand slam. Jack Dempsey was the heavyweight champion of the world, the Ruth Snydar-Judd Gray case was in the headlines, Calvin Coo!:rige was president and a New York attorney named Kranklm D Roosevelt was being mentioned as a candidate for gov ernor in New York. MR. MONEYBAGS Even then Longden had been trying a year to win a race after being ad iM that he didn't hava the stuff of which winning jock- were made. But the young . born in England and reared Canada, refused to be side tracked. His first job had been riding a donkey which drew ore wagons from the Calgary mines .ind Johnny was determined t stay above ground. He can look with gilt-edged scorn today on those who con tended thai he always rode as if still perched on a mine mule. For Johnny, known in the trade as ' "Mom's bags," has a mansion complete with swimming pool in Arcadia. Calif , a ranch in Cali fornia and another in Nevada and lucrative oil and other holdings. The eomment hy Eugene Regis- ter-GuArd photographer Phil Wol- cntt: "This would he absolutely great If they didn't hae these hallgamen In between." The occa sion? Phil had lust rnmpleted snapping phntos nf the "Trojanes," halftime performers from Wilson High in Portland, In another of their spectacular production num bers. The Trojanes were Just one group of many, including the Pel- lean rally squad, who put on eye catching demonstrations In the In termission. And It all comes with the price of a ticket to the annual state A-1 basketball tournament In Eugene. Fights By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Liverpool. England Randy Snndy, UH, Brooklyn, N.Y.. de feated Dick Tiger, 161, England. 10. Odessa. Tex Joe Giambra. 158. Dallas, knocked out Andy Anderson. 155. Indianapolu, 1:50 second round. New York .lose Torrfe. 11, Puerto Rico, knocked out Leroy Oliphant. 167, New York, ! II third round. When Privileged won the Pim lico Futurity and was disqualified in 116, his jockey. Eddie Arcaro was suspended for six months for rough riding. rhHLLMAJl Enqlond's Economy Family Cor I DICK B. MILLER CO. I HAM SHOOT SUNDAY - MARCH 22 NOON TILL DARK SPRA6UE RIVER GRAVEL PIT Sponsored by Sproaue River Volunteer Fire Dept. IRON SIGHfS SCOPES SHOT GUNS Refreshments will be icrved Wolverine turqundy colored ihell honehide. 9" hiqh. Moe toe The utmoit in com fort Firm qrip composi tion tole. Light ond com fortable. S1Q95 I 7 Put them on a revolving charqe DREWS Manstore 733 Main and Town t Country Stora Four Roses A (XirViTirmr:. Ml I!' Kentucky Straight Bourbon trr-Bo ---leal 1 ' 'wi i mil ml" That old-time flavor is here! Vf4S O90 FOUR KOSIS DISTILLERS COMPANY, N.Y.C. KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY I PROOF AGED 6 YEARS Portland Bevos Open With Vans RRAWLKY. Calif. MP) - The Portland Beavers of the Pacifi' Coast LfttflM will open thei spring baseball exhibition reason Friday against the Vancouver Mount ies at Yuma, Ariz. The Beavers still are without a regular second baseman, so out fielder first baseman Bob Di Pietro will play second. I he Kansas City Athletics nf the American League are sending Milt Graff, a second baseman, to Portland, but he is not expected to jom the team until sometime next wrrk. With Buffalo in the International League last season. Graff batted about .260 BUY Genuine LlVff BOYS' 3.33 YOUTH'S 3.55 MEN'S 3.75 LADIES' 3.75 and Get Green Stamps DON'S Don Anderson Genu FeveH 337 Mam TU 4-6520 pedwin. JL young ideas in shots SKon lo- 7llt5Ma SEE EVERYTHING ffcftCKlL THAT'S NEW FOR JV Q&l . J 417 Main Everyone Welcome! - - - i -- I