Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, December 20, 1960, Page 13, Image 13

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    , NAMPA (Special)-Owt renter
-Sammy Smith came through with
a dazzling assortment of shots
worth 35 poind to inspire the Ore
gon Tech basketball team to a
77-7J victory over the Northwest
Nazarene Crusaders here Monday
night in spite of a "boot-the-ball"
second half.
Smith, 6-6, who only recently be
came eligible to play with the
Owls, hit 14 field goals, some
County '5s'
Preparing
To Close Up
County B League basketball'
comes to a pre-holiday close to
night with games planned in!
three gyms but there is little
danger of any shift in loop stand-1
Jngs. .
The only league "counter" of
the slate finds the league leading
Chiloquin Panthers invading Bly
for a match with the under
manned Bobcats, and the Pan
thers necessarily are rated the
Hide favorite,
In the other action planned the
Mustangs play host to the A-2
Henley Hornets on the Malin court
while the Merrill Huskies get an
other crack at the Klamath Un
ion Jayvee and freshman quints,
lliis time on the Huskies' home
maplewood.
' The Sacred Heart Trojans close
'tip for the holidays after tangling
with the KU Wildcats Thursday
sight on Pelican Court. :
Following a rest over the holi
days, most of the B leaguers set-
.tie down to the serious part of
. the 1961 schedule, playing their
'league counters.
The Henley cagers, who have
displayed a powerful potential in
early season games, return to the
. wars on Friday, Jan. 6, when
they travel to Rogue River for
their opening in their own, the
Rogue River League.
Chiloquin draws the KU Wild-i
cats on Jan. 3 while Bly plays
host to Malin on the same night.
Young Giant
ERA Winner
CINCINNATI (AP)-The Giants
a combination of the New York
and San Francisco varieties i
teem bent on making the Nation
al League individual earned run
, pitching championship their per
gonal property. , L ,
Official league pitching aver
ages released today showed Mike'
McCormick, young Giant south
paw, led the loop's hurlers in 1960
by allowing an average of 2.70
earned runs a nine-inning game
in 23 innings of work. He had a
record of 15 victories and 13 de
. feats.
It was the third straight year
the title had gone to a San Fran
Cisco Giant hurler and it was the
fifth time in the last nine years
a Giant had finished on top.
Sam Jones was tops in 1959 with
a 2.82 average and Stu Miller won
in 1958 with a 2.47 mark. When
the Giants were in New York
Johnny Antonelll won the title in
1954 and Hoyt Wilhelm did it in
1952.
RECORD EVERY TIME
GREEN BAY, Wis., (UPI) -
Every time safetvman Emlen
Tunnell of the Green Bay Pack
ers steps on the field for the
Packers he sets a National Foot
ball League record for consecu
tive games played. He started the
I960 season with a record of 138
in a row.
Newest Redskin Boss Sets
Timetable For
WASHINGTON (AP) Bill Mc
Peak, at 34 the youngest head
coach in the National Football
League, has given himself a -year
' to prod the drooping Washington
'. Redskins out of their losing rut.
And he may be the kind of whip
cracker who can do it although
no other Redskin coach in the
past decade or more has been
able to make the once proud team
a winner.
To nobody's surprise, owner
George Preston Marshall an
nounced Monday that McPeak
t. veteran of 12 years in the NFL
was replacing Mike Nixon as
I field boss of the 'Skins.
; Nixon was fired Sunday after
Washington ended its most dismal
5 season in 24 years winning only
- one game while losing nine and
tying two. In Nixon's two years
as head coach the 'Skins won a
grand total of four games.
McPeak. former' all-pro end
with the Pittsburgh Steelers, was
Nixon's top assistant before Mar
' ihall tapped him to undertake the
job of rebuilding the cUib into
a championship contender.
Marshall said McPeak was get
ting a one-year contract, at Mc
Peak's request. Salary figures
were not disclosed.
McPeak confirmed he had asked
for a short term contract, saying,
"I feel that 1 can prove myself
an a year."
ttsr$
hooks, some layups off a drive,1
and some jumpers from the high
post.
Near the close of the first half,
which ended 42-27 for the win
ners, Smith snagged the ball and
was heard to yell "This one's
for Sammy" as he whirled and
canned long jump-shot.
In the second period, however,
the Owls had their troubles. The
Crusaders, led by forward Ray
' WAYNE SCOTT,
Rates Rugged Foe
MAIN-EVENTER Chiloquin Boys Club battler, Ozzie
Gallagher, above, meets Keith Capps of the Burnt Elks
Club in one-half of the double main event planned on
the Owl Hoot Amateur boxing program in the KF Audi
torium Thursday night at 8 o'clock.' Proceeds from the
affair are earmarked for the OTI athletic fund,
Battle-Royal Slated
On Fight Program
What Is planned for internals
sion entertainment on the big Owl
Hoot amateur boxing show Thurs
day night? '
More fights
a battle royal
to be exact.
Matchmaker Lou Jones figures
that a ring full of pint-sized scrap-
Baylor's 39
Kills Pistons
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - The
Detroit Pistons will try again to
night to find out how to handle
Elgin Baylor and the Los Angeles
Lakers.
For the fourth consecutive time
this year the Pistons failed to
come up with the answer Monday
night, going down to 107-103 de
feat and sinking to last place in
the National Basketball Associa
tion Western Division while the
Lakers moved into second place.
The two teams are only a game
apart, however, in that race.
Baylor scored 39 points as he
led the Lakers in a fourth-quar
ter rally.
The teams will meet here again
tonight.
Improvement
The mild-mannered Nixon has
been criticized by some as too
nice a guy.
Marshall said that may be Nix
on's greatest weakness.
Questioned by reporters, Mc
Peak indicated he will demand
an all-out effort from his players.
"I won't say I will be tougher i
than Mike," he said, "but I will
say that I will insist on full con
centration.
Just Arrived
Gift Ideas:
Croquet M
Toboggans
Shuffll Boerdi
Ico Skatti
Shoo Rollor Skalos
Sltdt -Rolooding
Tools
Waror Skit
Smoke Houmi
Sroor Horni
Gun looks
JOE'S
Sporting Goods -
418 Main
fiw
Burwick and center Gene Oberg.
who notched 22 and 20 points re
spectively, played steady ball
while the Owl defenses crumbled.
They narrowed the gap to within
one point, 73-72, with less than
two minutes left in the game.
At this point Smith came
up ;wilh a three-pointer, drawing1
a foul as he went in for a cripple,
that moved the Owls away again.
In the late minutes of the game.
Sport Editor
pers with one glove each and a
blindfold will be plenty to keep
the fans amused while the ring
officials are taking a breather
during the big 10-bout card:
The show, the proceeds of I
which are destined for the Ore
gon" Tech athletic fund, will be
held in the Klamath Auditorium,
beginning at 8 o'clock.
According to those in the know
concerning Oregon amateur box
ing the Owl Hoot program could
well be the highlight of the ring
season.
The major portion of the card
will match the best of local area
fighters against members of the
Burns Elks Club squad. The
Burns group, coached and han
dled by Ray Thornberg, is rated
near the top of all the Oregon
clubs. In past seasons they have
competed favorably in nearly ev-j
ery phase of AAU competition.
Tickets to the fights are now
available at the usual downtown
outlets but may also be obtained.
either ringside seats or general
admission, at the door of the audi
torium on fight night.
The selection of officials to pre
side over the card was announced
Monday by Jones.
The referees will include Sgts.
Thompson and Baker from King
sley Field while the timekeeping
chores will be handled by Bill
Wampler and Aubrey Starkey.
Judges are Roland Clark, Hal Sli
ger and Del Summers. The ring
announcer will be Wayne Scott.
' . ' " ' '
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77 - 72
as the pace quickened, both clubs
suffered from a rash of fouling
that culminated in the benching
of three Crusaders and Owl Hew
letl Nash.
OTI coach Wally Palniberg was
forced to keep big Bob Petersen
and Gene Branson on the side
lines through much of the final
ten minutes of the game since
each had collected four fouls. In
the final dash, however, both came
Sentimenfs
Over Deer
An Obsfaele
DUNSMU1R (UPI) The great
est obstacle in successful deer
management in Northern Califor
nia is the public sentiment built
up after the antlerless deer hunt
in Siskiyou Countv in 1956, Gordon
Ashcraft of Yreka, game manager
of Region No. 1 for the California
Department of Fish and Game,
said todav.
Ashcraft claimed that particu
lar deer hunt was a mistake be
cause game laws at that time
were inadequate to control t h e,
number of deer killed in a certain
area or to control hunter concen
tration.
Legislation passed since that
time provides for unit manage
ment on a deer herd basis and
allows controlled hunting.
Ashcraft maintains the only way
to insure "specimen bucks for;
the sportsman is to manage deer
herds in such a way as to allow
for the proper proportion of bucks
to mature on the various deer
ranges.
"If doe hunting isn't a sport, it
is a duty, Ashcraft said.
To substantiate this statement.
he pointed out that in spot deer
counts this past week in North
em California, only a very small
proportion of the deer observed
were bucks.
In a limited check of the Mt.
Dome area near Dorris, on Fri
day, more than 100 deer were
counted, but onlv four were bucks.
Ashcraft defended the depart
ment's efforts to control deer
herds.
"We didn't create over-grazed
areas, he said, we inherited
them."
He said that harassment from
Weed and Dunsmuir rod and gun
clubs has hampered the establish
ment of firm deer management
policies in the area. He said
I Yreka, Mount Shasta, McCloud
and Scott Valley sportsmen looked
favorably on past policies of the
departmentbut added these men
were less vocal than others,
Deer hunting did suffer in Siski
you County in 1957 and 1958 after
the antlerless shoot of 1956, Fish
and Game statistics show. But re
covery was evident in 1969 and
1960. The average buck kill in the
Mt. Dome herd in the past five
years has been 840 bucks.
"It woud be safe to issue at
least 840 antlerless permits annual
ly for hunting on the Mt. Dome
Range," Ashcraft said.
Chamberlain
Holds Margin
NEW YORK (AP)-Wilt Cham
berlain has slipped a bit in game-
average, but The Stilt of the
Philadelphia Warriors still leads
Elgin Baylor of Los Angeles in the
National Basketball Association
scoring race.
Chamberlain out-scored Baylor
132-105 in four games last week
and official statistics today
showed he has a 36.9 average and
a 51-point lead in total points.
Baylor has a 34.1 average on 1
056 points for 31 games, one more
than Chamberlain, who has
scored 1,107.
A week ago, Chamberlain had
a 37.5 average and Baylor 35.2.
Oscar Robertson of Cincinnati
is third in scoring with 929.
Win
back In to help clean up.
Despite the Owls' big edge in
the opening frame, the game total
showed the two clubs almost even
up at the final gun. The winnin,
oiuerence lor me leenmen was
two extra field goals and a foul
shot. Each team collected 24 fouls
over the distance.
The OTI five hit 27 field goals
lo 25 for the losers and were
successful on 23 of 32 tries from
the foul line while the Crusaders
got 22 of 36 attempts.
Field goal shooting percentages
registered in the early .400's for
both teams.
Guard Leon Wilson, one of the
most consistent Owl scorers.
notched a total of 20 points off
six driving layups resulting from
hsi ball-stealing ability and 8 for
12 at the charity stripe.
Petersen, who again exercised
control of the boards, counted nine
points for his night's work.
The Owls and the Crusaders will
tangle again tonight on the Nampn
court in a game that marks the
end of pre-holiday competition
The Techmen will disband follow
ing the game, not to reform un
til the practice histle blows prior
to their opening w ith the Portland
State Vikings in Klamath Falls
on Jan. 6-7. The series will open
Oregon Collegiate Conference ac
tion.
Scoring Summary
Tach im F0 FT-FTA FF TF
Cumlford
Patarsan
Smith
1
14
I
4 33
Nash '
L. Wllim
Branson
Draca
5 J
I 20
11
3-3
4
1
I
c. Wllion
0
J7
Total
14 77
N.w. Naiarsita (71)
Burwick
Haygood
FO FT-FTA FF TF
5 29
2
Obarg
1 !
Austin
Savaga
Halstad , ,
Moora
Wlllcutt
Total!
Scora by hatvat:
Oragon Tach '
N.W. Natarano
I -I
3-4
3-3
0-0
M
tl-M
S
I
5 3
24 72
42 35-77
27 45-73
EOC Dumps
Alaska 91-85
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -
Eastern Oregon College outlasted
the University of Alaska here
Monday night, 91-85, in a loosely
played basketball game. It was the
second victory in three games for
the Mountaineers on their Alaska
swing. The two teams meet in the
fourth and final encounter of their
series here again Tuesday night.
With three of their starters con
necting for more than 20 points,
Eastern Oregon built up a 17-
point lead early in the second half
and held on for the triumph even
though they lost three men on per
sonals. '
Leading 39-35 at halftime, the
Mountaineers pushed this to 141
points, 49-35, in two and a half
minutes as they put on a half-court
zone press. Then with Tom Neel
and Pascual Arritola showing the
way they grabbed a 63-46 advan
tage with 13:10 left. ,
From that point on, the Alas
kans, turning to a full-court press,
whittled away until with 4:14 re
maining, they trailed only 73-77.
But two quick baskets by Arritola
and single field goals by Larry
Applegate and Dick Turley pulled
the Mountaineers out of danger.
They built up a 13-point lead, 90-77,
but the clock ran out on the Polar
Bears before they could mount
another serious threat.
Open
liouse...
Opexx
FLEISCH MANNS
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fltlSCHMMN'S PKftMfO ILtHOtO WHISKY
W ORtlll NEUTMf SPIRITS FUISCHMKNN
Monday's College Basketball
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
East
Rutgers 74, Colby 63
St. Bonaventure 86, Western On
tario 49
South
Duke 61, Georgia Tech 48
The Citadel 82, Georgia 72
Florida St 65. Clemson 64
Loyola fNew Orleans) 83, Mis
sissippi St. 60
Centenary 80, Tulane 76
Midwest
Ohio Stale 90, Loyola (Chi.) 65
Illinois 79, Washington St. 58
Cincinnati 75, Nebraska 60
Detroit 80, Gonzaga 75
California 62, Northwestern 40
Iowa 105, Arizona 64
Wichita 94, Michigan 76
North Carolina 72, Creighlon 64
Bradley 97, Idaho 68
Oklahoma 56, Colorado State U.
50
St. Louis 52. San Jose St. 26
Drake 75, Wyoming 54
Montana St. 64, North Dakota 54
Xavier (Ohio) 95, St. Mary's
(Texas) 79
Toledo 71, San Francisco St. 56
Southwest
Vanderbilt 80, Texas Tech 78
' Southern Methodist 63, Minne
sota 60
Texas Christian 78, Oklahoma
City 74 , .
Arizona State U. 101, Kent St
(Ohio) 72
Tulsa 73, Baylor 66
Hardin-Simmons 71, N. Texas
St. 63
Far West
San Francisco 67. Hawaii 38
Memphis St. 86, Seattle 81
Fresno St. 73, Colo. St. Coll. 68
City League
Sees Action
A forfeit halted one Monday
night's City . League basketball
game and the thrilling overtime
battle featured the other.
Clarence Bussman canned
come-from-behind free toss at the
gun to bring Dick Reedcr's up to
a 47-47 tie with Tulclake, and
from here the clothing store five
went to a 55-49 victory.
Hal s Sport Shop, reportedly dis
pleased with the officiating in
their game with Malin, walked off
the court midway in the second
half on the short end of a 56-41
count. .
In the only action planned be
tween now and the first of the
year the Chiloquin Thunderbirds
draw the featured role.
The T-Birds, also a member of
the City League, will host the Ma
lin quint in the second game of
a twinbill planned in the Chilo
quin High gym Wednesday night.
Friday night they again appear on
their home floor when they clash
with the Alturas Devils.
Both games will be preceded
by preliminaries. The Wednesday
opener will feature the Chiloquin
Pirates versus Dick Reederi
while on Friday night Sprague
Kiver and Hal s will tangle.
The scoring summary:
Ok noadar't (SSI Bussman 12,
Barnes 4. Boolitt 7, Matt 4, AAcLtan 4.
Andarson 2, Floetka 10, Shortgan 2, John
son i.
Talalaka 4t)-Mcra i, Haiklna 22. Oa
Frano a, Land 3, Torgalano 5, Smith 7,
ONLY ONE
NEW YORK (UPD-Goalie Jack
McCartan of the New York Rang
ers is the only American-born
player . in the National Hockey
League.
. (0 PROOF 65 GRAIN NEUTRAl SPIRITS flflSCHMUKH'S WDM 80 PROOf 1IST1UM fm
S 01) W PROOF DISTILLED FROM IMERICIN GRAIN . THE FUISCHMMN DISTIUUO CORP., IYjC.
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath
East's 'Name' Players
Keep Clubs Out
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jerry Lucas, Chet Walker, Tom
Stith, Art Heyman, Dave De
Busschere and Doug Moe with
out 'em six of the nation's top It
teams might just be a bunch of
guys.
Instead, these individuals have
given Ohio Male, Bradley, !t.
Bonaventure, Duke, Detroit and
North Carolina a stronger hold in
the latest Associated Press rank
ing of top teams with victories
Monday night.
The current poll features 11
teams, with a tie for the No. 10
spot between North Carolina and
North Carolina State.
Lucas scored 19 points, nine in
clinching spurt, for top-ranked
Ohio State as the Buckeyes (5-0)
beat Loyola of Chicago, 90-65,
Walker's 29 helped Bradley batter
down stubborn Idaho 97-68 while
Stith also scored 29 in St. Bona
venture's easy 86-49 victory over
Western Ontario. Bradley and the
Bonnies are ranked 2-3 and both
have 7-0 records.
Heyman got 23 points in seventh-
ranked Duke's 61-48 victory over
Georgia Tech and DeBusschere
scored 27 as his Detroit Titans
(No. 8) defeated Gonzaga 80-75.
Moe's 26 helped North Carolina
get the job done against Creighton
72-64.
Ohio State still got balanced
scoring from the rest of its de-
AP VOTING
The leaders with won-lost rec
ords and first place votes in par
entheses with points on a 10-9-8
etc. basis (records through games
of Saturday, Dec. 17) are
1. Ohio State (36) (4-0)
2. Bradley (6-0)
3. St. Bonaventure (6-0)
4. Indiana (4-D)
5. Louisville (8-0)
6. St. John's (4-0)
7. Duke (5-0)
8. Detroit (4-1)
9. Auburn (5-0)
10. North Carolina (3-2)
(Tie) N. C. State (5-1)
, Others receiving votes Included
Kansas Stale 35, Providence 24,
UCLA 18, Colorado 17, St. Louis
15, Vanderbilt 14, Utah 13, Wake
Forest 11, Kansas and Drake 10
each, Memphis State 7, Kentucky
Purdue 4. Duquesne 3, Utah
State 2, Marquette, Virginia Tech,
Illinois, Iowa and Scton Hall, 1
each.
Floyd-lnqo
Bout Rumored
NEWARK, N.J. (UPI)-A box
ing writer for the Newark, N.J.,
Star-L e d g e r reported Tuesday
that the next Floyd Patterson
Ingemar Johanson bout will be
held March 13 in Miami's Orange
Bowl.
Anthony Marenghl said in Tues
day's edition of the paper he had
learned of the site and date from
sources close to Patterson. The
official information on the tight
for the world's heavyweight
championship will be released by
Feature Sports this week, he said.
Marenghi said Patterson Insist
ed on a winter fight instead of a
proposed June date.
Falls, Oregon
Tuesday, December 20, I960
fending NCAA champions as
Lucas sat out the last 11 minutes
with four fouls. However his
crucial nine-point spree came
when the Bucks iced the game on
a 13-5 splurge during a 55-point
second half. California (5-0) de
feated Northwestern 62-40 in the
first game of the Chicago Stadium
IOC Prexy
Asking Ban
On Champs
CHICAGO (AP)-Banning Olym
pic champions from future games
has been suggested by President
Avery Brundage of the Interna
tional Olympic Committee as an
aid to competition.
Brundage said Monday that
such a restriction might open the
games to more people and lessen
the chances of athletes "making
career out of sports.
The proposal, along with others
aimed at protecting the amateur
status of the games. and reducing
their size, Brundage said, will
be discussed at "an extremely im
portant" meeting of the commit
tee in Athens next June.
"We have been talking about
doing something about amateur
ism for a long time, but this time
we will act," said Brundage, long
time champion of simon-pure ath
letics. He did not disclose the oth
er proposals.
The 1964 games will be held In
Tokyo, with the Winter Olympics
that year in Innsbruck, Austria.
Of last summer's elaborate
games in Rome, Brundage com
mented: "There was so much
commotion after the games that
we have sent a letter to all na
tional committees warning against
subsidized training camps and
such like as a means of building
national prestige. That would be
entirely contrary to the Olympic
spirit. i
"The games are too. big and
too expensive,"! continued Brun-
e. There has been too much
commercialization, and we are
against that, too." "
American Olympic officials, de
clining to be identified, said they
do not believe Olympic cham
pions will be barred as Brundage
has suggested.
However, they said they feel
such a rule would help, the unit
ed States more than any otherl
country because this country at
ways has a large crop of new
talent, while other countries rely
on veterans for two and even
three flings at the Olympics, held
every four years.
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PAGE II
In front
twinbill. Loyola's loss was its first
in six games.
Bradley won Its- 13th in a row
over two seasons, and 40tb straight
at home, after snaking off Idaho'f
pesky zone defense in the second
half. Walker sat out the last five
minutes after a scuffle with Ida
ho's Ray Carolan. St. Bonaven
ture s victory on its home court
at the Olean Armory court was
its 95th in a row there.
Cincinnati, Bradley's chief com-
pelitor for Missouri Valley Con
ference honors, got 23 points from
Bob Wiescnhahn and 21 from Paul
Hogue in beating Nebraska 75-60,
Bob Nordmann scored 15 points
but a tenacious man-to-man de
fense did even more in St. Louis'
52-26 victory over San Jose State.
Ray Swain s field goal in the
last few seconds was the clincher
in Florida State's 65-64 victory
over Clemson while Jan Louder
milk's two fouls in the final three
minutes put Southern Methodist
ahead to stay in a 68-60 decision of
Minnesota.
Don Nelson scored 34 points a
Iowa set a team scoring record in
a 105-64 pasting of Arizona. Draka
won its sixth straight, 75-54 over
Wyoming and Vanderbilt did like
wise, 80-78 over Texas Tech. Wich
ita went on a 12-point spree in the
first half and wound up with a
94-76 victory over Michigan. Sub
Charkey Madzro provided th
play-making spark and Gary Dan
iels canned 30 points in The Cita
del's 82-72 victory over Georgia.
In other games, Oklahoma won
over Colorado State University 56
50 Xavier (Ohio) beat St. Mary's
(lex.) aa-7, Illinois conquerea
Washington State 79-58, Tulsa
knocked off Baylor 73-66, and
Memphis State defeated Seattle
86-81.
UPI VOTING
NEW YORK (UPI) - Tha
United Press International college
basketball ratings (with first-
place votes and won-lost records
through Dec. 17 in parentheses):
Team . Points
1. Ohio State (34) (4-0) 349
2. Bradley (.6-0) 291
3. Indiana (4-1) 208
4. St. John's (4-0) 181
5. St. Bonaventure (1) (5-0) 166
6. Detroit (4-1) 122
7. North Carolina (3-2) 78
8. UCLA (5-1) . 72
9. Louisville (8-0) SS
10. Kansas (3-2) 5S
11, Kansas State, 50; 12, Duke,
38; 13, St. Louis, 32; 14, CalifoiV
nia, 30; 15, (Jolorado, Z7; 16, Au
burn, 26 ;17, Providence, 25; 18,
North Carolina State. 16; 19, Wake
Forest, 12; 20 (tie), Vanderbilt
and Utah State, 11 each.
Chances are your set
of sterling is noe
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those missinj; place
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lolid giving.
SM 111.71
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Town ft Cmntry