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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 1, 1961)
AaeJ Aa 0mi He - ' W ' WhM aat busy Hdeaatag" a Oraat Wwis. and when he bowls Lack Ijih and new Holiday This week Grant tossed a aha Malar Claanie leafua aad won Dtdat atop to figure out what the M-amnlkhmcal. but II alal easy figuring aat bis three game average for the series. t.. ... Mmnrtnnfi mines ne . stepped onto the hardwood at the ; Holiday and came through with a (30 to set a new high series mark , in the Classic Trio loop. Must - have gotten a new ball (or Christ- 'i . :. -i mas. Bill Hawlcy twirled a 144 the tame night to grab off high game . honors in the league to date. The : Holiday foursomes saw new highs . posted a J Dee Wickline rolled a '., series of 504 while Johnny Rose '' blasted 857 to top the men's single game mark. . ' In the Holiday League Ted Pin. ner idud a 248 while Fran Ram ; sey collected the high series with 630. I Al Hakenwerth Is showing his : eld. form as evidenced by the ; 200-256-223-172 for four game . total of 851 In the Master' Trio ... Frank Beard was crowding , him all the way with 178-188. j 208-238 for an 810. '.' i Incidentally, dally Instruction courses open to any ana. later- ested are scheduled to begin at .' the Holiday oa Jan. t. The class : es are slated seven days a week, front it a.m. nntil 11:38. II you'd like t eater call TO S-4M8. . Meanwhile, back' at Lucky Lane, Chuck Reynold added his . lame to Um Hoaar Hail wtth a M aeries . . . Jerry Cat Is hack with 72s Billy Haley hit a ttt aad Ralph Claugh aad Chea Ran teraUa each collected 22's. Lela Mathison led the ladies - with S52, followed by Opal Mc- Donald and ber 542, Willi. Solo- mon with a 538, Bonnie Snyder 'and a 530, and Audrey Herrlck : was fifth with a 527. Johnny Webb, the RockbV Bowl- ar. proved that the site of the .ball doesn't make much differ- ante either baseball or bowling 'fcall, ha chucks strikes. He rolled 'M J plua a six pin handicap to ti Win the' City Tournament at basin iauj 1 w M , .'3- 8 : M?7 City Ceirtw Lode wr Auto lorvica AcffM Cwtcrstv SOwUo Tina Notional ewd 'U.I. Nofl Dot M.a.a. 1 . - C S. Toom No. It i IS Kofl Owro' Oftleort -- It r!p LMkm Macfclnartf 10 . aoouitst H.a.a. i. city confer looto It U.S. Nofl Sot a. Nononol Ovoro Oflkon 1l Notional Ouor I, Scnuln1 ' Tim It Kolor Auto Sorvk , OMoraUM vm 4t Acme Concroto I, Toom No. It It Swllt ond Co. 4, CroMr UM Ma- HMi'toom oomo. Aitontat fum ltlti Wth toom oorlot, Imsrotato auma Itat tHtti m. tamo, Marry rty UU hhih M.. sartot, Marry tvay no. : -, auTOMjTiva vimui '. w s: t t? 31- S loot Side llectrle iorsltor Motor Co. Dole's ady Shan Molvorson'a Union Or loon Mattroao . Soil SnoH SpocisllBd Servtoo O. . Millar Co. . tn im 14 J3 jr v IIVi sv 1 ai 4i , Ml 4JV Jim Wlndo eulca aauirioi Carlson Mottresi 4 aalslior Motor It Jim Wind lulck a, IMorstora 4i O. a. Minor t SoeciaiiieS Sorvlca i Olson Motors I, Holvorien'a Union li Mis X Dakfe Body Sno ll Don's (Poll torrtca , Boot SMo BkKtrlc 1. Hlah toom fame, Malvorson'o Union nMI i titan Mom series. Malvorson's Un ion ttai ktfpj Ind. omo. Joret Mowloy tali hjN na. osries. nana wnon on. , MINOR CUISW IBAUB L Unary Inovranc 441 ItVj ' Uiaaan Thrift n AA M r Boraoo Doaoott, ; :) , I i 411 UV, ' norom one news ' amt'a Colo - Merit Service Supply : Summers Lena RldillaM Aomo Concrete . , . i 3r . ai it a 5; 2 SO M 17V 40 Lucca Cat. .'If wnoeler Nursery 1 Rosulrsi Lucca Colo a. Wntern Thrlrt 4; Acme concrete i noier mmpui i . Blna'o Cote 4, Vrtieeler Nunery i Wl- St Herald and News I, Bockos A pa- aett li Landry Insurance 1. merit oerv .W. ' . .h. Bold PMi htgn room series, Landry In-, ok toil blah Ind. aaries. Bill McKvno PS. ALLBY KATI W L at n 41 II 41 M 41 14 it it 15 11 nt saw 13V I4U X li 141 41Vt 71 44 ill 41't Care r.M HMtlna Wrtants Reetty '. Swan UMMMf. , iekpetroo . eiass Mountain Amieana Moctilnaa rMMMt o. Blrk . Chamber Mevln - Lois Cot cwtro I. Olesi. Mountoln li wen Leke am a i . -m . uaaasa 9 1 imawSMmn 1 1 Dunns X CtWHrttjor I. Hto PJm tamo, OeWltl k Blrk Ml i k. s temserteTOwm 4 Btrk ltd, I Ee (nTUrrSIlMreer" Bvanj TO, pijp. I md. aema. pevernr mrwtm, m I M n . a.. .a 111 Il( Pronts Useal Car Jettnny Plylna A ' Attornont Oroe. - auMol ti lev iv UV MV Tower Pum. Jerrys Drhra I : Bs V Mertcel Wakfm Brat. i an sivi .11 at 1 41 ii 41 Charm Center Charrn cerrror . a ma pec. ir rosunsi rnr.u ; T V ll Jerrys 4, Klms Bi BremweMs Cnorm Center Tower Purn. 1. vre. ar li Johnnys V "ran. ll Vaimweoen tvo, Lions IV. m . tm turn am Tawor Pvm. Ml; . . . by WAYMI SCOTT W W ar swlagiaf a scatiergua. Marlea b leaves a aurk a both tha Bowl alleys. 2B - t04OJ for a let at Lucky la himself aa ABC Triplicate patch. adds ar against this particular p ,r .i LAlCKy UJUWB. IUT IIIUBV UIIUCI 19), senior singles championship Thursday. Last year the high boy m the nation had a 656 so Webb's effort puts him right up there in the running. Bob Tucker latched onto the junior title with a 599 while Rick Whetstone picked up th bantam marbles with a 326 two-game se ries. The senior doubles title was won by Gary Shearer and Vaughn Stone with a 1103 total. Junior titles were won in the doubles by Gary Fanning and Livio Valde marin with a 1070 total for city honors while Rex Reed and Mike McFadyen won the Christmas Tournament for national honors with a 1008. la the bantam division Ronnie Campbell and Dennis York rolled a 628 total to easily win. Ronnie had games f 161-131 to go with his 20 pin handicap while Dennis had games of 155-124 to ( wtth his 36 pla handicap. The juniors who won them selves a trip to Portland to bowl in th state tournament at Gate way Lanes on Feb. 17 Included Webb, brother Jim Webb, Rich DePew, Gary Shearer and John Lawsoni This Is a pretty fair team and they should do well in Portland. January will end th Proprie tors Tournament so now is the time to get in and roll for the big money 8500 to the winner in th men's division and 8250 in the women's division. This tour nament only costs one buck plus lines. Tha qualifying round and semifinals are to be bowled right her at Lucky Lanes. Squads will be run both Sunday and Monday starting at 1 p.m. In February two teams of Jun iors and two teams of bantams go to Medford to bowl. In the bantam division it will be the five high boys and five high girls. sirlesi J lame. Pi i, OloVla Mart team Johnnvi Plvlna A lll'i hlfllt Ind. aims. Ruth BKhtold IMj high ino. newron eQ4. CITV LBAOUB Klamalti HSwds. II o Harris Maclilno l't . t"i SImplst-DoVoo 14V V First Not. Sir II II Ourmardi -II 11 N.W. Produce IJ II Anderson's F Ivors It I Dick's RkMlild II 11 Klamam Hdwds. A t is Car-Ado I II Walkor rM. I 11 Pier A. toys) II Results: Ounnards a, Plavd lovd Oi SlmlataVaa I, Caro It Harris rnocnina J, First nat. oaiw it Kiamatn Hdwds. A o, dick's aicniiaid 4t Klamam am Hdwds. a . n.w. produce o. HMn team oomo. Horns Mecnine tmj hloh toam Mr let. Klamath Hdwds. mil man Ind. tamo, Ray Sandbar U7t me. oorws. At posit air. w 41 14 IS 11 a Arlemont Orecory Kiomom Monumeni PoitOMS Martiet Team No. I O'Halra Memorlol Chaaal cp a ww war it a Lucfcv unes jo I uva Merrill Moose .11 U Muserov Piumblns MV in Hartweiw Ttxeco i m Dec. I results: Hsrtwolls Teiioco I, Pai. teoos Market li Merrill Moose 0, Mus. Kevo Plumbln 4t Teem No. I I. Klsmstn onumont li Altamont O roc try 1. CP A w. w. Word li Lucky Lonoa 0. O'Halra Memorial cnapei 4. Hloh Ind. aame, Rooer Wllklnian mi Hlah Ind. series, Mel Roblmon sesi Hih ream ama, Muetrova riumomg tout IMS. Hlah team series. Musirov Plumblm iwr. i Holiday TWILITB LBAOUB . W . I Sateway Ith It. II 4 Satan's Chaulteuri 1? 7 Teem No. - Ir 7 Weaver Brermlnstln 11 II Drive More Motors 11 11 Ore. Wain. Telephone Co. 11 11 Joy Hawk Rocket 10 14 Saiewey So. 4th St. 10 14 Blue Ox 10 14 Pacillc Coooeratlves I 91 Results: Sateway So. 4th It. 1, Sateway itn If. It ore. wain. Telephone a. Blue 0 It Satan's Choulteurs X Drive More Motor 1 1 Pecltlc Coop 0. Teem No. f 4i woover asierminotini . joy howk Rock at 1. Htan teem aame, Miant cnaurreurs Ot hloh team serial. Satan's Chauf feur l14t Men Ind. oomo. Keith Lar-I OMi mon mo. series, nairn Larson WBONBIDAV NIBHT TRIO LBAOUB W L 14 10 14 10 111 7' 11 11 nv in 11 11 10 II I 11 letsn's Choufleur No. 1 Sketeton Wheel Vets Rev's Shell Toom No. I Salon's Chauffeurs Ne I Team No. I ream Ne. Results: talon's Chauffeurs No. 1 0. Roy's Ihell 41 Salan'i Chauffeurs 1. Teem No. 1 It Team No. a I, Vets 1, Team No. I a Skottland Wheel! 4. High team game. Satan's Chauffeurs No. I Sett high team terles. Satan's Chauffeurs No. I 1410; high Ind. game. L. Huebner 104: high Ind. aeries, L. Hueb nor Ml. HOLIDAY MINOR! LBAOUB W L Stelmelter tleclrlc 10 I Cascade Timber II I Southern Pecltlc No. I '14 11 Pino Arts IS 11 lorgo'i Trailer Estates ll it Klamoth Troctor 11 11 Bennington Steal Bide. Co. 10 II Southern Pecllic Car Knockers I M Results: Southern Pacific No. I 1. Bon.! nlngton Steel Bldg. Co. It largo's Trailer Elteles 0, Cascade Timber Co. 4: Klanv ath Tractor 1, IP Car Knockers Si Iteln- High teanf game, Pine Arts H4i high teem serin, Coicede Timber Co. He): ootrer oiectiic t, eine Arts a. high ino. gome. a. Hanson nil high Ind. series. Pen Bridge in. CLAIIIC TBIO LBAOUB Holiday Collee trwe Beroeoo'l TV Service '(HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath ..,MMM.MMMMMMMoa. ' m0mW''0m''m" tffWfm jv it! - ' , r, ' "",'? 1 Z I . I" "''' .1 J ba k v ' xi" ,k v j , - r 9 " " 1 ' 111 " f. CITY TEEN TOURNEY WINNERS Th City Bowling Tournament for boyi and girli under 19 yean of ago was completed Friday at Lucky Lni, tha scores to ba ssnt to th American Junior Bowling Congrats for entry in th national Christmas Tourna ment. In tha picture at th top, John Webb, center, winner of tha ssnlor division, poiet with Bob Tucker, left, junior winner, and Dick Whetitone, bantam victor, at the cloto of th tinglai competition. In th lower picture ar shown Mike McFadyen, Rex Rd, Livio Valdemarin, Gary Shearer, Vaughn Stone and Gary Flamming in th back row, while up front ara Ron Campbell and Dennis York. McFadyen and Read nabbad tha junior Christmas Tournament doublet title, Shearer and Stona nailed th enior doubles crown, and Valdemarin and Fanning earned th 'city doublet champion ship. i Today's Sport Fearless Fraley Devises Plan To Get Rid Of Extra By OSCAR FRALEY MIAMI (UPI) - Fraley's final follies of 1960 the "winners" of the bowl games or what to do with all that spar money left oyer after Christmas. - GATOR BOWL Baylor ever FlarMat This one maybe is In th football history books by the time you read all the ads and get around to this but it will give you a tipoff on what a solid line we re sending. Florida entered the fray a one- half point choice although Baylor wound up as ths nation s 12th ranking team while Florida was no belter than 16th. To further! confuse the issue, Rice beat Flor ida, 10-0, while Baylor bested Rice, U-7. The guys from Gator Land are a band of opportunists but from here It scemi improbable that the lady will knock. So go ahead, make a bum outta, me on the last day of the year, You're only 364 days late. ORANGE BOWL Missouri over Navy: These tired red-rimmed old eyes have been fastened on th preparations for, this one all week' and it seems like a bigger risk than one-button suspenders to give the seven Citadel Dominates Tangerine ORLANDO, Fla. (UPD Citadel, riding the passing arm of senior quarterback Jerry Net ties, won the 15th annual Tanger ine Bowl Friday night with a 274 win over Tennessee Tech. The Citadel completely doml nated play before a record crowd of more i than 13.000. outgainlng iccn i to (i yams on me Lewti Chevron M4e Bel The OoonO U Utile Seaen So. Oregon Muele Team Ne. 11 Team No. 3 ' Vallieri Cala spuo cellar Team No. 7 Reiuiti: Meeo Bsl a. Valuers Csta li So. Oregon Muilt I, Team No. 7 ii The Round Uo 4. Soud Cellar 1: Hon. day Cottte Shoo I. Team No. I Si a.,. two i iv service j, team No. 11 Ij i.l!tle Sweden 1, Lewll Chevron 4. High team eama. Team Ne. S slli hlah loam series, Lewis Chevron Jim h'oh,jnuid of reserves sneaked over Ind. oama. Jim Hann lit, hint. tt "H""" ' ivKntii oneahfu liver series, Jim Hones M. Fall, Or. Suaday, Youthful KF Keglers Parade points by which Mlssou Is fa - vored. The thought here is that the bowl-tattered Tigers, having lost all six such contests in which they have appeared, are about ready to bust loose. There's little to choose on the surface. Missouri, ranked fourth nationally, beat the Air Force, 34-6. Navy, ranked sixth at season's end, whopped the Space Cadets, 35-3. The "show me" boys are miffed at the Middies over a lot of pre. game lip; have the line to shackle Joe Bcllino and the pass defense to make Hal Spooner their dish. ROSE BOWL Minnesota over Washington: !And just to really put two left feet in an extra large mouth, by more than the seven points being quoted. . There were no common oppo nents for top-ranked Minnesota and fifth-ranked Washington so you can't make any odious com' parlsons. Comparative scores make as much sense anyhow as cast Iron waterwings. 'F'lnstance, Minnesota beat Iowa, 27-10; Iowa whomped Pur due, 21-14, and Purdue boffoed Minnesota 23-14. Meaning Minne sota was 17 points better than Iowa, which was seven points Action The.ground and 167 to 30 yards by' j. raiuu puna up a vuiiih ut urc 1 future, he'll be rewriting the Nettles threw a six-yard pass to'westem Hockey League record end Bill Allen on a fake field; books. But it may be years before goal attempt in the first period.l ntry removes the mark The kick for extra point gave The' mad May night by the Vic- Citadel a 7-0 lead. The second period tefi but hM WM btrJ was score- ly underway when halfback Tom' my Edwards ripped off left tac kle and rambled 36 yards for a score. The extra point attempt failed. Later in the same period, Nettles threw a 16-yard pass to end Bill Gilce for the third touch down and tha extra point was good. The Citadel ended the scoring; in tli final period when quarter back Sid Mitchell, heading up a Ifrom th one. PAGE ! Xmas Loot ibetter than Purdue, which was nine points better than Minnesota and what else is new? SUGAR BOWL Mississippi over Vice: Creamed by more than the 10 being quoted by the lads in the back-room. Ole Miss finished third in the final rankings by the UPI Board of Coaches with a lot of support for top honors.. Unpuffed Rice didn't even make the first 20. Against common denominators, Ole Miss beat Tulane, 26-13, and Arkansas, 10-7. Rice stopped TU lane, 10-7, but lost, love-three, to Arkansas. That old river oughta overflow the banks and ruin the! crop good. COTTON BOWL Arkansas over Duke: This Duke team is up and down like a run away yo-yo but Arkansas has the fire power to win by at least the seven points It is favored, Just for the cracked record, Ar kansas finished seventh nationally this year with Duke This, of course, you can file and forget. Because once they start bumping heads it 11 be a dandy. All of which provokes, a big, fat phew" and a New Year's resolution I can keep: No more predictions in 1960. Seattle Ice Star Counts By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ctll. - a-....tJ r" ";7 , : ""ful toria Cougars and Spokane Com' ek. Fielder, 30-year-old veteran playing his ninth WHL season, scored one goal as his Totems tied the Portland Buckaroos 5-5 in overtime In Seattle Friday night. That boosted his point total to 813, highest ever run up by a player in th WHL. In Victoria, where the Cougars defeated the Comets 6-2 with four third-neriod eoals. a whnnnintt brawl broke out with less than two minutes remaining. Before refe ree Lou Farelll got through, a record CO minutes in penalties wer handed out. January 1, 1161 . SSavj'iQQS fyfoiv Bovjh Three Offivo West Clubs To IWm LA Hoop Classit By Vaited Press International The holiday tournaments on the Pacific Coast were over Satur day with Iowa, Oregon State and USF reigning as champions. With th New Year will come the conference races, with the summit of college cagedom the NCAA tournament following close behind. But as 1960 closed, the Hawkeyes, Beaver and Dons temporarily ruled th roost. At Los Angeles, they came to cheer Indiana's Walt Bellamy, but stayed to salute Iowa's Don Nel son. ' The four Big Five teams were able to handle Indiana, Min nesota and Michigan State of the Big Ten, but the never-say-die Hawkeyes mowed down' the three top teams of the AAWU to pick up all the marbles. Iowa doomed UCLA in the fi nals 71-65. Other scores 'included USC 90, Indiana 71 (third); Cali fornia 40, Stanford 36 (fifth), Schloredt's Status Still Undecided LOS ANGELES (AP)-The un certain role of 1959 All-America Bob Schloredt of Washington raised a tall question mark Sat urday over the Huskies' Rosa Bowl struggle with Minnesota. Unless Coach Jim Owens switches at th last minute, th quarterback in Washington's 44-8 conquest of Wisconsin last New Year s Day will be on the bench Monday when the Huskies start against th national champions. But Schloredt, inactive since he broke his collarbone against UCLA two months ago, Is certain to be in action soon thereafter. He's healed but he hasn't hit the conditioning and timing he had in midseason,"1 said Owens. "He'll play at least half th time, though." Westerners who watched Schloredt transform Washington into a team of dash and daring last year are sure the 197-pound (-footer will be in th thick of it. Washington , and Minnesota coaching staffs agree that the starter, Bob Hivner, Is a quar terback of high ability. He dem onstrated it by leading th Husk ies through one tight scrape after another in the late season. Yet, assuming Schloredt if In close to top form, this Is a man with greater game-breaking po tential. The one-eyed star la a hard- socking runner on rollout plays, a good passer with a habit of delivering in the tight spots and one of the better college kickers. Minnesota remained a 6'4-point favorite 48 hours before its first Rose Bowl appearance in history. Sunny skies, with temperatures m the 70s, are forecast for Mon day. Cotton Bowl Foes Praise Rival Clubs DALLAS (AP)-Coachcs Frank Broyles of Arkansas and Bill Mur ray of Duke told each other how good the other's, team was today while preparing to beat its ears oft in the Cotton Bowl Monday Murray said Arkansas was the quickest team he had seen this season and that it "come nearer going at everything 100 per cent." Broyles said Duke had a poW' erful running game and excellent passing and 'that he thought it gave 100 per cent even in its de feats. The argument the two coaches had through the writers about the Arkansas weights, with Mur ray claiming they were incorrect in the Cotton Bowl program and Broyles saying they were sub stantially correct, simmered down some when the two coaches took their first 22 players and arrived at an average. Arkansas, it ap peared, averaged 192 to 195 pounds to the man and Duke 205. Anyway, Brovles said he fig ured Duke would have an advant age if it's a muddy field because of the superior weight. The Weather Bureau savs pro spects Indicate then won't be any rain Monday but it can make no positive forecast. Rain set in early Saturday. SIGN PRO CONTRACTS SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)-The San Francisco Forty-Niners have signed quarterback Bill Kilmer of UCLA and center Ronald Lakes of Wichita, their first and sec ond draft choices, to 1961 con tracts. Dave Budd, now a member of th New York Knickerbockers, scored 1.014 points in three var sity basketball seasons at Wake Forest College. and Minnesota 83, Michigan State 77 (seventh). . ing back. McClintock, a muscular UCLA held a 38 34 half time forward, was the difference and bulge, but Iowa passed t b eihad 14 points. Cal's only tourney Bruins with 12 minutes to go and hung on. Nelson, a 6 foot, 6 inch junior, hit 26 to raise his three game tourney total to 72. Soph Ron Lawson had 18 for the Bru ins who absorbed their second loss the season Indiana's 8 foot, 10 Inch Walt Bellamy hit 27 points, but was again outplayed by his foe as Troy's talented John Rudometkin smashed the tournament one gam record with 35 point. The national fourth ranked Hoosiers thus lost two out of three here and Bellamy, while good, definitely took a back seat to players such as Nelson, Rudo metkin and Cal's Bill McClintock. The Cal-Stanford game was an exhibition of the defensive style basketball favored by Bay Area schools. Cal led 15-13 at the half, 49ers Getting Jump On Rest Of League SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - The San Francisco Forty Niners, get ting the Jump on the rest of the National Football League, had four mora players under contract Saturday. Biggest news came when UCLA tailback Bill Kilmer joined the team Friday. He was th nation's total offense king and led the West against the East Saturday in the Shrine Classic. He was also one of three play' era picked by the Forty Niners during the first round of last week's drafting at Philadelphia. The other two, UCLA's Jim John son and Bowling Green's Bernie Casey, also have signed with the Forty Niners. San Francisco next announced it had signed its second round choice, Ronald Lakes. He is a 6 foot, 4 inch Wichita center. Also signed up Friday by the Prospectors were Bob,McCreary, a 250-pound Wake Forest tackle, LA Chargers Set For Oiler HOUSTON, Tex. (AP)-The Los Angeles Chargers, losers In Hous ton's first American Football League' game,, worked out Satur day with hopes of closing the sea son with upset victory. The Chargers and the Houston Oilers meet in the.AFL's first championship game Sunday be fore an expected 25,000 persons and a national television audience ABC, 2:30 p. m., CST. Houston is a 6Vi point favorite. The Chargers lost to Houston, 38-28, ' in the Oilers' first league home game in September, and won, 24-21, on a muddy field in Los Angeles later, The Chargers, with 104 record, won the league's Western Divi sion. Houston, also 10-4, won the Eastern Division. Sid Gillman, Los Angeles coach, brings th best-balanced team in the AFL into the game. The Chargers weren't tops in any of the league's six-team sta tistical categories, but they never were worse than fourth in any de partment Tha Los Angeles hopes depend on the passing of Jack Kemp, the Rodeo World Hails King DALLAS, Tex. (AP) The pro- Bob A. Robinson of Rockland, lessional rodeo world hailed a new champion in one division Sat urday. And the moment of deci sion neared for contestants for crowns in three other events and the all-around title. Harry Tompkins, one a New York dude wrangler and now from Dublin, Tex., was named king of the bull riders. He won the crown although his bulls pitched him in the first five go rounds. But his nearest competitor. Duan Howard of Minnewaukan, N.D., also had troubles and can not win enough money in the re maining four go-rounds to over- coma Tompkins' lead. Tompkins is the second titlist of the year. Dean Oliver of Boise. Idaho, won th calf roping title before th finals began by amassing so many points during the season that no one can catch started th finals 1,487 points be him in the finals. jhind Robinson five days ago. 'but fell behind St 24 before com- loss was a four-overtime chiller to the Hawkeyes and the Bears still look like the team to beat on the coast. I : The all-tourney team was con spicuous by Bellamy's absence. It was made up of Nelson and 'McClintock at the forwards and John Green of UCLA and Dave Maher of Iowa at guards. Center spot was a tie between Ron Zager of Iowa and Rudometkin. USF has unveiled a fine bunch of sophs who could lead the Dons back into the national cage pic ture some day. USF edged St. Mary's 51-48 in overtime Friday night in the finals of the West Coast Athletic Conference Tour nament. Soph Lloyd Moffettrhit the shot that won for the Dons, while Bob Gaillard led the winners with 21 and Tom Jewell, a 245-pound Ida ho State lineman. They were fifth and seventeenth round choices. Kilmer, a 195-pounder from Azusa, Calif., is believed to be a key man in the Forty Niner plans for next season. Coach Red Hickey has unveiled a unique shotgun spread of fense to augment the standard-T. The Forty Niner offense therefore requires both a T-formation quar terback and a single-wing type of; tailback. Kilmer is perhaps the1 only man in collegiate football last season who filled the bill. Five men on the West team have now been signed by the Forty Niners. Tom Matte, who quarterbacked the East team Saturday, Inked a contract with the Baltimore Colts. He was the Colts' number one draft choice. And from Los An geles came rumors that West end Marlin McKeever has signed with the Los Angeles Rams. Squad AFL's top passer, the running of Paul Lowe, Ben Agajaman's kick ing, and defensive work of Ron Botchan, Emil Karas, Ronnie Loudd, Dick Harris and Jim Sean. But Agajanlan, as a kicker. may be the Chargers' best defen sive weapon against Houston. If Agajanian sails his kickoffs out of the end tone, he can single- handedly stop the threat of the league s top kickoff return spe- cialist. Ken Hall of Houston who has a 31.8 average on 19 kickoff returns. Bill Cannon, another Houston back, returned only eight kickoffs during the season, but he aver aged 33.3 yards on each one. Hall went 103 yards for a touch down against New York, and Can non returned a Boston kickoff 88 yards for a touchdown. Kicking, in fact, could b the big factor in the game. Agajanian, called out of retire ment by Gillman, kicked 13 field goals and 46 extra points for the Chargers this season. George Bianda kicked 15 field goals and 42 extra points. Agajanian scored 85 points by kicking, Bianda 87. Mahn Tnmrlkln nnlv onnneillnH1.! for. the all-around rodeo cham ionship, still was fighting a come-from-behind battle, but his chances of overtaking the Texan appeared slim. He Is 2,520 points behind and can win only 4,864 if he sweeps all the remaining events, which is unlikely. , The steer wrestling crowd set the most blistering pace. Two men chalked up identical 4.2-sec-ond figures to break the previous national finals record of 4.4 sec onds set in 1955 by Harry Charters of Melba, Idaho. Th record-setters wer Harley May of Oakdale, Calif., and Don Huddleston ol Sardis, Okla. I May moved within 996.25 points of Robinson in the fast pace for the steer wrestling crown. May COCtl and was named most valuable player in th week-long compe tition. Tom Meechery starrred for the losers with 13. Soph Gene Shields hit it as Santa Clara scored a 48-42 wis over San Jose State in the bat tle for third. Loyola nailed down fifth with a 71-62 win over Pep perdine and COP downed Ford ham, 56-54, for seventh. Gaillard was joined on the AO Star quintet by Meschery, Kea Stanley of COP and Dons Henry Johnson and Ed Thomas. Elsewhere Friday night It was Los Angeles Stat 82, Bowling Green 78 as Leo Hill hit for 31 points. Other scores were Long Beach State 90. Whittier 68; Po mona 90, Los Angeles Bible in stitute 52; Linfield 70, St. Mar tig's 64; Western Washington 87, Pacific 35; San Diego State 91, San Diego Marines 79; Northern Illinois 77, U.C. Santa Barbara 74. Raider 'I I' " Not Likely ; To Transfer- OAKLAND (UPI) - The Oak land Raiders are not likely to be come the Honolulu Raiders, ac cording to general manager C,het Soda. He emphatically denied Friday that he had aver been con&ct ed by Bill Pacheco of Honolulu about shifting th club. Pacfieco had been quoted as saying h would "give a million dollars" to get an AFL franchise if, h got control of Honolulu Stadium. Tv never been contacted, by this man," Soda said. "But if- he is offering a million dollars, for a franchise, give him my nam and phone number, will you?." Soda recalled that he had one talked to some people "some time back" about the possibility of moving the Raider franchise to the Islands. "But we never gave it serious thought," he added. "We are busy right now trying to get ready for the next two years in Oakland. If we ever get a stadium built on this side of the bay we'll, ba okay right here." Rice, 'Miss'. May Get Wet NEW ORLEANS (AP)-Soohef or later, the weatherman always slips into the bowl picture -and for Monday's Sugar Bowl football game between Mississippi .and Rice, he says it might be wet. The weekend weather outlook for the New Orleans area calls for temneratures around 50 to 60 degrees with occasional rain Sun day and Monday. But damp underfootlng shouldn't bother either Mississip pi, runnerup to Minnesota for th national title, or the Owls Who tied for second place in the South west Conference. Mississippi rules a 10-point fa vorite, but support Is growing for Rice. And with a wet field in prospect, the 80,000 fans in Tulane Stadium and millions more on national television- (NBC) might see a pretty close game. Wet conditions could hamper the passing of Rebel quarterback Jake Gibbs, an All-America. But Gibbs is backed up by some good running backs in halfbacks Bob by Crespino and George Blair and fullback Jim Anderson. And Gitjbe is a pretty good runner himself if conditions dictate he should concentrate on a ground attack. Rice will have the same burden a wet ball probably would hamper" Owl quarterback Billy Cox. But again, Rice has capable runners in halfbacks Bob Wayt and Max Webb and fullback Rol and Jackson. George J. Kolowich Jr. of Den ver is president of th National Industrial Basketball League for the second straight year. RINGING IN BEST WISHES To our mony friends ond loyol potrons, wa wish o vary Hoppy New Year. ART BURNETT "NEWT" WEAVER SHASTA VIEW BARBERS 4241 Shasta Way