By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Washington'! Huskies are the
toast of the football world for the
second consecutive year today
after winning the Rose Bowl game
with a sparkling display of all
around excellence against national
champion Minnesota.
The Huskies, who last year
swamped Big Ten champion Wis
consin 44-8 and astounded just
about everyone outside the state
of Washington, jipped past the
Gophers Monday 17-7 to become
the second team ever to succeed
itself as Rose Bowl champion.
Not to be outdone in heroics was
a solid 21-14 victory by Missouri!
over Navy, which included hold
ing All-America back Joe Bellino
to only four yards rushing. Duke
answered critics of its selection
as a Cotton Bowl participant by
upsetting Arkansas 7-6 while Mis
sissippi struck fast and had
enough defensively to hold off
pesky Rice and win the Sugar
Bowl 14-6 as nearly 400,000
watched the four games in person
and millions more saw them on
television.
The Huskies used the same cast
of characters who appeared in
the Wisconsin debacle last Jan. 1.
Quarterback Bob Schlorcdt, back
for the first tune since breaking
a collarbonei last Oct. IS, half
backs Don McKeta and George
Fleming and fullback Ray Jack
son led the Washington attack.
Center Roy McKasson and tackles
Kurt Gegner and Barry Bullard
stood their ground against a
heavier Minnesota line.
Schlorcdt, the first player ever
to be chosen most valuable player
twice in a row in Rose Bowl his
tory, passed three yards to Brent
Wooten for one score and got an
other on a quarterback sneak,
setting up the latter with a 31-yard
'run.
The 1959 All-America ran five
times for 68 yards, completed two
of four passes for 16 and a touch
down and had a 41.2 punting
average.
"My highest hopes (for a good
performance l were nothing com
pared with the job Schlorcdt did
out there today," Coach Jim
Owens said afterward.
McKeta's two key defensive
plays against Gopher quarterback
Sandy Stephens deep in Washing
ton territory also were key fac
tors. He threw him for a 13-yard
loss on a third-down play at the
Huskies' and then on the next
play intercepted his pass on the
goal line.
Fleming kicked a record (school
and Rose Bowl) 44-yard field goal
and gave the Minnesota defense
fits with his outside running as
Washington piled up a 17-0 half
time load before 97,314.
Tigers Hold Bellino
Missouri, while holding Bellino
on the ground, saw him make a
spectacular grab of a 27-yard
touchdown pass by Hal Spooner.
tamer the Tigers had to snap
back from a 98-yard run by end
Greg Mather with an intercepted
lateral. I
They countered it w ith a 90-yard
TD run by Norm Beal with an
intercepted pass w hen Navy again
threatened. A subsequent extra
point by Bill Tobin put Missouri
ahead for good.
Navy Coach Wayne Hardin said
afterward that Beal's touchdown
run turned the tide. "They'd never
have caught us if we had gone in
and scored," he said.
Dan Dcvine, Missouri coach,
was sure "we could stop Bcllino
and we were not concerned about
his running. We were more wor
ried about his pass-catching. That
TD catch was. the greatest I've
ever seen."
Donnie Smith and Ron Taylor
scored the other Missouri touch
downs in a game played before
71.217, including President-elect
John F. Kennedy.
Ole Miss Victor
Jake Gibbs, Mississippi's All
America quarterback, scored both
Mississippi touchdowns the first
before the game was five minutes
old.
"If we hadn't let 'cm get that
first one so easy it might have
been a different story," Rice
coach Jess Necly admitted later.
Navy All-America
Stopped In Tracks
MIAMI (AP) ' Twenty-onebarrier against running plays that
years of frustration, during whichNavy wound up with a net of mi
it sent six teams on fruitless ex-nus eight yards rushing. Its great
cursions to football bowl games, All-America back, Joe Bellino,
were at an end for Missouri to-had a net of only four yards in
day. , eight carries, although he provid-
The Big Eight champions rolleded one of the major thrills with
back a spirited Navy team 21-14 his end zone catch of a 27-yard
in the 27th annual Orange Bowl Hal Spooner pass( for the second
classic Monday as President-electMiddie touchdown.
John F. Kennedy, an ex-Navy PT Mel West was the workhorse of
boat commander in World War H.the surging Missouri ground
looked on with the 71,217 othergame. He rolled up a net of 108
spectators. yards in 21 carries as the Tigers
It was a victory of crushing, stampeded for a net total of 296
sledgehammer offensive poweryards and 1? first downs. Seven
and an alert and rock-ribbed de-of Navy's nine first downs were
fense. on passes, on which they gained
So impregnable was the Tigerl76 yards.
Blue Devils Atone
For Early Losses
DALLAS (AP) Lonesome endl
Tee Moorman, the toe of Art!
Broning and some little things
turned into breaks vindicated
Duke's angry Blue Devils with a
7-6 victory over Arkansas in the
Cotton Bowl.
The dogged Blue Devils, driving
to atone for defeats in their last
two games of the regular season,
waited until the clock had nearly
run its course Monday before they
rolled 73 yards' for the touchdown
that gave them the triumph in
their first appearance in the Cot
ton Bowl.
For a month the lonesome end
of Duke, a big fellow who lined
up IS yards away from his mates
on every down, had been the ma
jor topic. Coach Frank Broyles
bad told how he feared this man-
His team stiffened and held Ole
Miss until the last period, but
couldn't dent the Rebel defenses,
except for Butch Blume's scoring
plunge in the third period. Twice
the Owls were thwarted by inter
ceptions, and won the battle of
statistics before a crowd of
82,351.
Duke Loughs Lost
Duke's lonesome end, Tee Moor
man, was lonesome in the Cotton
Bowl end zone and quarterback
Don Altman hit him with a nine-
yard scoring toss in the final
minutes as 74,000 looked on in
Dallas.
"I was expecting to throw to
the halfback but Tee Moorman
was wide open I couldn't believe
it," Altman said afterward,
"f was supposed to go straight
down but when (Arkansas half.
hack) Lance Alworth moved with
the play, I cut back into the
open," Moorman said.
Alworth's 49-yard punt return
got Arkansas' only score. The Alt-
man-Moorman scoring combo.
plus the extra point by Art
Browning gave the Blue Devils
the last laugh on those who said
defeats in i the last two regular
season games made them a poor
choice against the Southwest Con
ference champions.
$jraltianttJtefo$
WAYNE SCOTT. Sports Editor
Tuesday, January 3, 1961
PAGE 9
euver and how tough it would be
to stop it.
Broyles was a- soothsayer it
was the lonesome end, Moorman,
who kept that desperate drive go
ing and it was Moorman, a lonely
man in the end zone, who caught
Don Altman's nine-yard pass for
the touchdown that broke Arkan
sas' heart.
Browning, the big guard, plant
ed the ball between the. goal posts
for the point that won the game.
It was more than Mickey Cissell
the Arkansas place-kicking ace
could do after the Arkansas touch
down.. .But Cissell had to contend
with chunky Dave Unser, the
surging Duke wingman. Unser
smashed through to block the ex
tra point effort and thwart Arkan
sas in its third try for victory in
the Cotton Bowl.-
Big Ten Champs Beaten In First Half
By JIM KLOBUCHAR 1 j
Associated Press Sports Writer
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -
Washington's Huskies, a team of
surprises, speed and Schlorcdt,
hit Minnesota's national cham
pions where they weren't looking.
With a 17-7 victory in the Rose"
Bowl Monday, Washington
emerged, as the most successful
Western Rose Bowler of the post
war era, a team unawed by Big
Ten reputations.
The Huskies did it with the
same clutch-playing stars of their
victory last year over Wisconsin
Bob Schloredt, Don McKeta,
George Fleming, et al plus
some wrinkles the Gophers didn't
expect.
The Big Ten co-champions
weren't looking for Schloredt
the mended 1959 All-America
playing his first game since mid
season to cross them up and
speed 31 yards on a simple quar
terback sneak.
BOB SCHLOREDT
, . . repeats game honor
Husky Quarterback
Credits Strategics
PASADENA, Calif. (UPI) - A
little matter of strategy, used on
the first three Washington often
sive plays oi tne game, was
being credited today with the
Huskies 17-7 victory over Minne-
Colusa Duck, Goose Hunt Nice
As Windup For California Trip
By BILL JENKINS
Guest Columnist
Wound up the Christmas holi
days in California with a two
day duck and goose safari in the
Colusa area.
Loyal as I am to the home
grounds I've got to admit that we
don't have and haven't had for a
long lime the kind of hunting
you ge down there. It has been
many a long year since I've seen
flights like we had in Colusa on
the 28th and 29th of December.
And the natives tell me that
both days were below par.
The whole thing started with a
letter from Ted Dunlap, the So
noma steelhead king. He allowed
as how as long as I was coming
down I might as well get in a
little hunting. He had, it turned
out, arranged a hunt with a friend
of his in Sacramento, Jim Harrison.
So we drove from Sonoma to
Sacramento, picked up Jim and
then beat our way through a ris
ing wind to the little town of
Colusa. Arrived there late at night
In find the town overflowing with
hunters and fishermen. The fish
ermen were there for the steel-
head run in the Sacramento. Ev
erything was full but we managed
ouartcrs in what the fraternity
affectionately referred to as pneu
monia row of the old Riverside
Hotel.
A thunderous knocking on me
fortable setup it has been my
privilege to shoot from for a long
time. Warm, dry and out of the
wind.
Our timing was good and we
hadn't been in the blinds over
two or three minutes when shoot
ing time arrived and with it a
big speck. The guns roared and
down he came. From there on it
was just one long string of birds
after another. Shooting was pretty
much restricted to greenheads
and bull sprigs. The sort of day
when you can sit there and pick
your duck.
The wind was blowing hard al
though it was warm and clear.
The birds were flying at extreme
range in most cases but. there
were plenty of them. Almost all
good ducks. Lots of snow geese.
A scattering of honkers, several
good flights of specks. And swans
by the million. Literally. They
are so thick in that area, were
at least while we were shooting,
fields are selectively flooded he
lands when he spots an intruder
and promptly tosses him out.
Thus he gets really controlled
hunting and protects the rights of
his own hunters.
Quite a guy. this Morley. He
has all kinds of equipment, includ
ing a Weasel, and goes all out
for his clients. If there is hunt
ing in the area you'll get it . under
his expert tutelage and the fine
faculties provided. He s a better-
than-average caller, a crack shot
and a true sportsman all the way
through. Not to mention being a
diplomat of no mean talents. I
They didn't expect to be dam-!
aged up the middle, the strong
hold of their defensive line, to see
Washington pitch out and swing
to the outside so often, or to sec
a part time double wing offense.
Above all, they didn't think
they could be shaken up so badly
in the line as they were for the
game-deciding first half. Once re
covered, they played with their
customary force and fury. Ulti
mately they won most of the sta
tistics, except the big one.
"We just got the daylights beat
en out of us in the, first half,"
said a Gopher coaching aid. "We
came back like the good football
(cam we are in the second half,
but it was too late."
Washington rolled up a 17-0
first half lead.
There were two football games
in the sun-drenched bowl. The
crowd of 97.314 roared to the
speed and diversity of a Washing
ton attack that rolled up a 17-0
first half lead and a defense that
louteharged and outgrappled big
ger Minnesota linemen.
And it roared in admiration for
a Minnesota second half rally that
had the Huskies hanging on for
a while, although never in serious
jeopardy.
"This was our best defensive
game, saitl a beaming Coach
Jim Owens of Washington. "And
McKeta made two of the biggest
defensive plays.
The first came with some six
minutes of the game remaining
when with Gopher quarterback
Sandy Stephens rolling out to the
side, McKeta crashed in to nail
him for a 13-yard loss to the
Husky 19. On the hext play, with
Stephens passing on a fake field
goal, McKeta stepped in to steal
the ball on the goal line. With a
17-7 lead, it put the Huskies out
of danger,
"We were damaged early by
our failure to field a couple of
punts near our goal line," Coach
Murray Warmalh said. "Thoy also
hurt us with those pitchout swing
plays. I think Washington had an
excellent team. I didn't think we
were flat. We simply were put on
the defensive early by letting
those ptmts roll, and couldn't re
cover in time. I thought we were
the stronger team ih the second
half.
"We weren't ready at the start,"
brooded 260-pound tackle Frank
Brixius. "Wo came out on our
heels."
Washington's speed and Schlo
redt ' generalship were the chief
instruments of the Husky first
half offensive. A 17-yard Fleming
punt return put the Huskies in
Hsilion for Fleming's 44-yard
first period field goal, longest in
the school's history and in the
Bowl.
The strikes of Ray Jackson and
Charlie Mitchell got Washington
moving again later in the first
period, and Schlorcdt shot a 4-
yard touchdown pass to Brent
Wooten on fourth down early in
the second period.
It was Schloredt, again, en
route to his second year as Rose
Bowl most valuable, sweepina 31
yards on a quarterback sneak to
set up another touchdown, scored
by Schloredt from the one.
Held to two first downs in the
first half, Minnesota grabbed the
initiative in the third period and
held it but marshaled only one
touchdown, a slick 18-yard run by
mil Munsey alter a pitchout from
Stephens.
The Gophers marched 70 yards '
in the fourth period but were frus
trated, for the first time this year
once they got inside the 20.
,. It was a bitter loss for Minneso
ta, Uie team that had captivated
the nation's football fans by
charging from Inst place in the
Big Ten to top national ranking.
Where does this leave the Go-
phers" conqueror? "Well, when
you win a fight," smiled Owens,
"you win the title."
Ohio State Keeps
Top Spot On Polls
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS I Bradley stayed in second place,
Ohio State, the defending na- but lost 15 points in the process.
tional champion, staved at the too The Braves have a 10-0 mark and
sola In the Rose Bowl,
Quarterback Bob Schloredt
voted the "outstanding player of
the game" for the second yearj
in a row, gave the credit to the
Husky coaches and the execution
by starting quarterback Bob Hiv
ner.
'The first three plays we called
set the pattern of the game for
us," said Schloredt. "Our coach
ing staff said if we ran a few
plays up the middle, we would
bring in their defense. Sure
enough, it worked.
"We pulled them in, then we
ran wide the rest of the time.
It was Schloredt, himself, who
did a lot of the ball-packing
around the ends or off-tackle
Once he rambled 31 yards to set
up a touchdown, which he later
scored from about six inches out,
Another time he passed for
touchdown from the three.
All told, the one-eyed signal
caller carried the ball five times
for 68 yards. And he completed
two out of five pass attempts for
16 yards.
'Coach Murray Warmath of Min
of the weekly Associated Press
basketball rating today. What's
more the Buckeyes scored the
maximum number of points for
the third straight week.
Of the 36 votes cast by sports
writers and sportscasters across
the country who vote in the poll
every one had Ohio Stale at the
top. That gave the Buckeyes 360
points.
The Ohio Slate sweep was hard
ly unexpected. Jerry Lucas and
Co. won the Holiday Festival in
New York last week and In the
process dumped St. John's and St.
Bonaventure, both of which had
been undefeated. That made Ohio
State's record 9-0.
tninn you nave o De o n o i a nesola loolt lhe de(eal in good
uuwn uiai kiiiu ui a punt.
Despite some very chancy shoot
ing on my part we liaa tinea
out by mid-morning. With heavy
UPI VOTING
NEW YORK (UPD-The Unit
ed Press International college
basketball ratings (with first-
place votes and won-lost records
in parentheses):
Team Points
1. Ohio Stale (34) (9-0) 349
2. Bradley (1) (10-0) 264
3. St. Bonaventure (9-1) 243
4. St. John's (8-1) 168
5. North Carolina (7-2) 164
6. Louisville (11-0) 124
7. Kansas Stale (9-2) ' 103
8. UCLA (7-2) 891
9. Iowa (8-1 1
10. Duke (9-1)
11, Detroit, 52; 12, St. Louis, 48;
13, Indiana, 45; 14 (tie), Vandor-
collected 304 points on the usual
system of 10 points for first
for second and so on down the
line.
St. Bonaventure, which gave a
good account of itself in dropping
an 84-82 decision to Ohio State in
the Holiday Festival final, re
mained in third place with '264
votes.
Past the big three, though, there
was a wholesale shakeup. Three
members of the top 10 a week
ago Indiana, St. Louis and North
Carolina State dropped out. In
diana took the most emphatic
nosedive spiralling all the way
down from fourth. .
North Carolina, which ,won the
Dixie Classic by knocking Duke
from the undefeated list, made
the biggest jump, right up to sixth
place,
duck straps over our shoulders we
walked out to the cars, a mailer
of about an hour. It was fun. In
that country you follow the levees
with good shooting ground on both
that they post a problem. Tend ( sides of you. The air was still
to drive other birds out of the: full of ducks. In the tree-choked
fields. Lots of sandhill cranes,
too, creaking their way over,
their jerky wingbeat pulling them
through the sky, their necks cran
ing from side to side as they sur
veyed the fields below them.
The area we were hunting lies
between Butte Creek and the Sac
ramento. The fields at this lime
were all flooded due to the big
grace.
"We were out-hustled in the
first half and just didn't score
enough in the second half," said
Warmath. "And lhat Don McKeta
of theirs gave us a bad lime. I
thought one time we ha,d him out
of there with an injury. But he
came back to ruin us."
McKeta was a bearcat on de-
had
and
bilt, Utah and West Virginia, 12
11; 18, Kansas,
20 (tic), Mem-.
AP VOTING
The leaders with first place
votes in parentheses:
1. Ohio State (36 ) 360
2. Bradley 304
3. St. Bonavenlure 264
4. Louisville 225
5. St. -John's (N.Y.) 165
6. North Carolina 158
7. Iowa HO
8. Duke " 76
9. UCLA 65
SI ; 10. Auburn SI
Others receiving votes Included:
SI. Louis, IndianaKansas State
Drake, USC, Wichita, Detroit,
each; 17, Wichita,
10; 19, Auburn,
phis Slate, Providence, North Car
olina Slate, Southern California
and Iowa State, 7 each,
avenues the wood ducks werelense- Alter wasnington
,u:i, :,., fiii ih vio non scored iU first touchdown
fields. Pintails and mallards shot l" marching down the field for
overhead against the sky. The:" second. the Husky halfback
wind blew hard enough that you look things into his own hands.
had to lean into it to walk. It 1 wa5 ",u uu"" u" u,e
ingion live, goal to go. incicia
sliced through the Gopher line,
nailed quarterback Sandy
river going over its banks. In
door iarred us out of sleep at ordinary circumstances tne wno.lOsnoot wjth
4:30 the next morning and weiarea would be selectively flooded guvs
dragged on hunting clothes andjlo control tne nun ing ana a reci. As gJ j gct thjs hin(? a
itumbled down to me couee snopjUie uuua w umnu uj. uvi.,
fnr hrpaltfast. Picked ud there byigent use of water. We shot over
genial Bob Morley who operates rice fields, over beans, tomatoes
the hunting rights on tne a.zuu- ano corn, jneie w uwc ui c-
eryining.
The area is one of the better
was a grand ducK day. ,
Best of all, maybe, we had left
t: J ,UAH. t tUn
season was over. It was a grand
a bunch of grand
when Stephens tried to throw a
pass on the fourth down, McKeta
Vanderbilt, Kansas, Memphis
Stale, Ulah, West Virginia, Ken-
lucky, Scion Hall, Virginia Tech,
California, North Carolina State,
Duquesne, San Francisco, De
Paul.
Conquering Football Hero,
Rose Queen Celebrate Win
Chiloquin, Wildcat
Tussle Scheduled
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - The
conquering football hero and the
beauty queen dined and danced
Monday night almost like it hap
pens in storybooks.
Only thing is, quarterback Bob
Schloredt had that dale with Rose
Queen Carole Washburn lined up
long before he led his Washington
teammates to a 17-7 victory over
acre
erty
Butte Creek Farms prop-
A short drive out of town and managed private shooting clubs.
we were at the jump-oii spot.
Transferred from a car to Bob's
jeep and were hauled to within
a few hundred yards of
Bob Morley does a bang-up job of
it and, unlike some operators we
have run across, has the wel-
t h e fare of the shooter at heart. His
blinds. From there it was a case. area is not ovcrcrowaeo wun
nf stumhline in the dark through shooters and the blinds are put
Very mucn
sorted out in my mind I'll have
more to say on the subject, I
picked Morley's brains pretty well
while we were mere ana got a a much hcr team than the
much clearer picture of this pri-;Wisconsin club his Washington
intercepted it on the goal line andjMjnnesota in lne Rose Bowl
ran it back to the nine. Miss Washburn made that plain
That took the starch out of thejhersclf earlier in the day. After
Minnesota attacx.
riding in the Tournament of Roses
parade, the 18-year-old Pasadena
City College coed confided to
newsmen that she had a date with
Schloredt In the evening regard
less of the outcome of the game,
She also disclosed that against
the morning chill of the parade
she wore something underneath
her flimsy royal gown Schlo
redt's football warmup pants.
Schloredt and Miss Washburn
met during preholiday excursions,
Coach Jim Owens of the victors I
credited the Gophers with being I rflQgr
Lane Trades Jobs
CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPI) -
Frank Lane, vice president and
vate shooting ground situation', ' jp,.,, t. w Vear.
than I have had heretofore. I'll ..t-i.: . , u. ,u.
have more to say on that subject ast' 'when I we lZr naSer of ClevC,and
a little later on. Lin saij nupn "I thmieht the 'ndians baseball club, resigned lo
go on his contract with the Indians.
a flooded rice Held
the same sort of wading we get
up here although not so sticky.
The blinds, two of them side
by side and rented for the season
ky Harrison, were sections of con
crete culvert pipe sunk to within
about six inches of the surface.
Inside was a fruit crate to sit
To say the least it was a revela-i; Minnesota players were stronger
tion to a hardened old Klamalh individually than those from Wis
hunter. I didn't know there wasconsin."
up for shooting, not convenience!1"31 Kl 01 numu'K "-u ' I uoim me turning point
nic nrpa Ann an. ".,;. v,, ,ut mc kciii iojiic riku nn.
or appearance.
other some distance away are
unique in that they are under air
patrol. Morley flies his own plane,
a Stinson, over the clubs and
sports hunters by using his glass
es. He can, he says, tell poach
ers just by their actions. Under
fortable. Just think, shooting in
the early morning without freez
ing to death.
Will wonders never cease?
Seattle club scored its 17th point
n. It was about the most com-lnormal circumstances when the during 1960.
in the first half
"We knew Minnesota would
come back strong in the second
half and that we would have to
Michigan State played bcforeuild up a solid lead,' said
499.703 football fans in nine gamesiOwens. "And that's Just the way
lit worked out."
day to accept a similar job with
the Kansas City Athletics.
Lane was in Chicago today to
sign a contract wun uiarics Fin
ley, an insurance broker who re
cently bought control of the Kan-:
sas City team.
Lane, known for his endless
trading of players, was credited
with reviving interest In baseball
here.
Lane had two more years lo
Richards Nabs
Medalist Honors
LOS ANGELES (AP) Ama
teur Ted Richards shaved three
strokes off par and took medalist
honors with a 67 In the qualifying
round Monday for the $50,000 Los
Angeles Open golf tournament.
Richards had nines of 33-34 and
wound up with a one-stroke mar
gin over a trio of other players.
OSCAR ROBERTSON
. . , free throws help
Robertson
Counts 42
For Royals
By United Press International
Wilt Chamberlain, Elgin Baylor
and Oscar Robertson combined to
score a 144 points Monday night
in their furious race for the Na
tional Basketball Association scor
ing championship.
Chamberlain broke his own sin
gle-game record for the Conven
tion Hall in Philadelphia when he
scored 56 points in leading the
Warriors to a 131-115 victory over
lhe New York Knickerbockers.
In the opening game of that
doublehcadcr, Baylor tallied 46
points, although ho was on the
bench with five personal fouls
when the Los Angeles Lakers
staged the rally lhat beal the De
troit Pistons, 123-113.
Free Throws Win
And Robertson topped off a 42
point performance by sinking
pair of free throws with 28 sec
onds left to play, giving the Cln
cinnati Royals a 126-125 triumph
over the Syracuse Nationals at
Ulica, N.Y.
At Philadelphia, the Warriors
wasted away a 23-point lead and
allowed the Knlcks to pull even
al 85-85 before Chamberlain and
Andy Johnson sparked a last-pe
riod spurt that sent New York
down to its fourth straight defeat.
By winning the Warriors pulled
to within one game of the idle
first-place Boston Celtics.
Lakers Catch Fire
Detroit led Los Angeles, 86-82,
when Bavlor picked up his fifth
personal foul and was removed
from the uamc. But in his ab
sence, Frank Selvy, Ray Felix,
Tom Hawkins and Rod Hundley
carried Los Angeles lo a 111-97
lead. By the lime Baylor returned
the game was broken open.
Syracuse battled back from 13-
point leads twice against Uncin
nati, moving ahead, 115-110, with
5:27 left to play, Robertson then
scored five straight points lo tie
lhe game. After four more dead
locks, Hal Greer put Syracuse
ahead with 40 seconds left, only
lo have "The Big O" (ink his
winning free throwi.
Prep basketball gets under way
on lhe local front again tonight
but only four schools are involved
and of the pairings only one will
go into the record books as a
league counter.
At Bly the winlcss Bobcats arc
probably in for moro of the same
as they play host to the rapidly
improving Malm Mustangs in a
a "B" counter. Bob Graham's
Malin quint is fresh from an up
set victory over the Henley Hor
nets before (lie holiday.-They
claim a 4-won, 2-lost record. The
game will be preceded by a pre
llminary .featuring the Jayvee
squads from each school.
The high-powered Chiloquin Pan
thers get a chance to shake any
holiday cobwebs that might bo
hanging on before going back into
County B League action when
they tangle with the Klamath Un
ion Sophomore Wildcats tonight
at 8 o clock on Pelican Court,
L As a prelim to the Panther var
sity action, the Chiloquin Jayvces
will match talents with the fa
vored KU frosh quint. The opener
is scheduled for 6:30 p.m.,
The Panther-Wildcat scrap gels
the nod as the feature of the
evening since the Chiloquin crew
may have big Paul Harris back
in the lineup and his presence
could make up for some of the
height advantage owned by the
wuocals.
Harris, who was Injured during
me tootball season, has been nurs
ing an ailing knee throughout the
early stages of the season. His
ability off the backboard, coupled
with the shot-making of county
high scorer Butch Crume, should
give the Wildcats all they want to
handle.
The KU quint has been taking
Its lumps, losing all four of its
starts to date. In their most re
cent attempts they dropped a pair
to the Lakeview Honkers.
Papooses Nab
Tourney Title
WARM SPRINGS (Speclal)-The
Toppenlsh Papooses whacked the
Warm Springs Magpies 103-77 Sat
urday night to win the All-Indian
Tournament basketball champion
ship held here Dec. 28, 29 and 30.
Behind the host Warm Sprines
club finished the Portland Red
Hawks in third, Colville, Wash...
in fourth while the Chiloquin
Thundcrbirds collected fifth.
In their opener the T-Birds
dumped the Warm Springs Cou
gars 76-73 and then bowed 125-77
to the Papooses and 57-37 to the
Colville five.
Jack Barney, was named to the
list of Tournament All-Stars.
Scores
National Basketball Associatioa.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Monday Results
Philadelphia 131, New York 111
Los Angeles 123, Detroit 113
Cincinnati 126, Syracuse 125
Tuesday Games .
Detroit vs. Philadelphia at New
York
Syracuse at New York
mm
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