Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 05, 1961, Page 9, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    gCRALD AND NEWS, Mimatfi Falli, Or.
- 1
Thundaj, January 8, 1961
PAGE -A
BmiSk - Ortega Ssrap May Hud lr
Nobody Gets A Rest
m , 1
: !
the bottom - man in the fore-
i PELICAN MAT MELEE Coach OeLance Duncan,
; around of the picture, it hurrying I
' heavy weekend ichedule. The Pelt
. , auernoon men Travel to Bend on Saturday, tier Duncan demomtratei an eicaoe
j to Milo Crumrine, at 115 pounds, one of the topnotch wrestlers in the state. Crum
; ,rine pinned hi$ la it adversary in record i48 tecondi.
around of the picture, it hurrying hit charges through the final preparations for a
host the powerful Redmond Panthers here Friday
:.i...J... u n.,... J i .i.. M... ...ii
m
To
Wrestlers See
Erase Memory
Chance
Of Tie
Carmen May Retire
After Saturday Go
NEW YORK (AP) - Carmen
Basilio'i thrill-packed ring career
may end on Saturday night.
That's when the craggy-faced,
former welterweight and middle
weight champion meets welter
weight contender Gaspar Ortega
of Mexico in a 10 round television
fight at Madison Square Garden.
"Saturday night will determine
whether I go on further," said
the veteran of 12 years of pro box
ing. : .
Carmen, S3, didn't say flatly he
will quit if he loses. But it's ob-
trinne thai- ika . I tl IWl nnri ,,n
purses won't be dangled in front ! ?,lowe(! and ho," !"Kel-,can kceP
of him if he blows the verdict to .iwrowu.s inmcna, in commnmions.
Ortega is a tall, aggressive fight
er with a steel chin. The Mexican,
25, never has been stopped in 80
pro fights, most of them lively
affairs. Gaspar keeps after an op
ponent and makes him fight al
most a full three minutes every
round.
Basilio shotted definite signs of
wear and tear in his last two ti
tle fights with NBA middleweight
champion Gene Fullmer. Fullmer
slopped the ex-Marine in 14
rounds on Aug. 28, 1959, and in
12 rounds last June 29.
Carmen's reflex action has
POETg
WAYNE SCOTT. Sport Editor
Oregon Tech Foe
Sugar Ray To Sign
For Fullmer Fight
NEW YORK (L'PD-Sugar RayiFcb. 25th fight, it will be put on
Robinson expects to sign today in one of the other most inter
for his fourth middleweight title'ested cities: Los Angeles, Miami
fight with Gene Fullmer, now Beach. Chicago and Salt Lake
that they have been matched for City, Utah.
tenth-ranking welterweight conten
der.
I Last spring In the state prep
wrestling tournament in Corvallis
' the " Klamath Union Pelican
wrestling squad and the Red
mond Panthers tied for fourth'
' place and the northern team felt'
that they had the edge since they
had won three of five previous
meetings with the KU club.
' Friday afternoon on Pelican
Court, however, there seems a
good chance that the KU squad
can change all that, although it
may not necessarily be easy. The
Pels and the Panthers tangle at
; 2:30.
, While the varsity grapplers are
settling their differences, simul
taneous action on two more mats
will pair the Redmond Jayvee
team and the KU JV's, 'and Mc
laughlin Junior High School and
the KUHS freshman teams.
Despite the fact that the Pelican
' team has won.-.30 matches, lost
only six and. drew in two while
' compiling huge point totals in
. their first three bouts of the sea
eon, coach DeLance Duncan has
seen to it that there is no laxity
nor letdown in preparations for "pins" while allowing their earlier
the weekend action. Saturday the foe only two. Gary Head and
Pelicans travel to Bend for a con- Gary Hancock have three apiece
test with the Bend Lava Bears
on both the varsity and Jayvee
levels. The f r o s h squad, under
the direction of coach Lloyd Ma-
nown, will go to Ashland lor a
match with the Grizzly Cubs Saturday.
According to coach DeLance
Duncan, the Redmond squad,
while possibly not quite as strong
as in the past, will be one of the
three toughest opponents the
Pels will face all season.
The Panthers have always been
proud of their "takedown" abil
ity and have proven their superi
ority in that department, how
ever, the Pels are accorded the
edge in "mat" wrestling.
Redmond recently lost to Leb
anon, one of the strongest squads
In the stale, in a dual meet, and
they took second in the David
Douglas Tournament prior to the
holiday. ' : s
On the credit side of the ledg
er the Pelicans have scored 16
Louisville Cagers
Win 12th Straight
while Jim Lone, Milo Crumrine,
Dale Crumrine, Bob Mitchell and
Art Mills each have chalked up a
pair.
The varsity lineup, by weights,
for the weekend includes: Jim
Long 98; Gary Head 106; Milo
Crumrine 115; Sherd Duncan or
Gary Leavitt at 123; Ross Griggs
at 130; Dale Crumrine at 136;
Bob Mitchel' 141; Dave Gonzales
148; Larry Wishart 157; Dick
Ewing 168; Art Mills 178; Joe
Cox at 191 and heavyweight Gary
Hancock. I
The Jayvee squad lists Merle
Sine, Loren Ambers, Dawson
South, ' Mike Collins, Dave Vet-
kos, Jim McClung, Tom Miles,
Larry Gibbs, Dan Herrera, Ron
Head, Vern Nelzer, Dean Met-
calf, Henry Swisegood, Bruce
Campbell and Duane Fitzsinv
mons.
The Jayvee squad is one of the
strongest in years at KU. They
have also won three matches,
scoring 136 points to only 12 for
their collective foe.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Louisville's superstitious Cardi
nals remain members of the
Shaky Six major college basket
hall's remarkably small list of un-
Kpatpns tndav after the kind of front.
o enmphark that may mean Fred Wake
Sawyer's socks will go unwashed
all year.
The Cardinals fashioned a whirl
wind finish to win their 12th in
a row, 70-69 over Eastern Ken
tucky Wednesday night.
Sawyer, who claims he won't
change his socks or wash 'em
while the Cards are winning, con
tributed only three points to the
victory that kept fourth-ranked
Louisville in the winning class
along with Ohio State, Bradley,
Auburn, Vanderbilt and Doraui.
aged to keep the socks untouched.
Louisville survived on a heavy
college basketball night that saw
activity both in the bigtime con
ferences and on the independent
Forest, sinking 65 peri
cent of its second half shots, won
its fourth straight Atlantic Coast
Conference game, 81-59 over Clem
son as Willy Packer hit for 23
points and Len Chappell lor 18
Joe Maikee's 16 points and 11
bounds led Davidson to a 54-45
Southern Conference decision over
William and Mary, and Texas
with Mexico Olympian Al Alman-
za scoring 17, rallied to open de
fense of its Southwest loop crown
with a 68-58 whipping of Arkansas,
Defending champion Princeton
But hig'h-scoring John Turner, Ru-erushed Columbia 76-66 in its Ivy
benstein and a bit of luck man-jopener. Winless Dartmouth beat
Penn 65-60 'and Yale downed
Brown 75-67 in other Ivy games.
Away from the conferences
Bruce Applegatc's driving layup
in the last second of a second
overtime gave Miami of Florida
(8-2) a 102-100 decision over Mi
ami of Ohio, and Jimmy Huggard
Ruff Hits 34
For T-Birds
Chuck Ruft blistered the net for
84 points but five of his opponents
cored in the double figures and
Merrill defeated the Chiloquinjhad 28 points and Hubie White 27
Thunderbirds 86-73 in a City;in Villanova's thumping if highly Qt
League basketball game piayeaTcgaraea ueirou, oi-ot.
Monday night. , : ' Gary Roggcnburk hit for 26
In the other scheduled league points as Dayton (7-2) beat Ca
game the Chiloquin :Pirates wonjnisius for the ninth straight time
a defensive 46-39 scrap from the 86-63, and Don Kojis scored 25
College Basketball
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
EAST
Yale 75, Brown 67
Cornell 65, Penn 60
Dartmouth 68, Harvard 61
Princeton 76, Columbia 66
Pitt 75, Carnegie Tech 66
Villanova 81, Detroit 69
Boston College 85, Boston Univ
58
Hofstra 90, Manhattan 66
St. Joseph's (Pa) 72, Seton Hall
71 (ot)
Niagara 72, Belmont Abbey 48
Siena 64, Buffalo 57
Connecticut 95, Rutgers 74
Duquesne 87, Geneva (Pa) 57
Rhode Island 108, Brandeis 67
Lafayette 64, Lehigh 53
Muhlenberg 72, Mt. St. Mary's
66
Bucknell 104. Colgate 82
SOUTH
Houston, NY
Player-Plan
Under Study
NEW YORK (AP)-The Nation
al League, following the "sane and
orderly" route to expansion pre
scribed by Commissioner Ford
Frick, has set up a committee to
study means of securing players
for Houston and New York, the
clubs to be added in 1962.
At the same time, major league
club owners will decide, in a mail
vote, whether to allow the new-
comers to enter into working
agreements with minor league
clubs this season to develop
players.
The five-man committee com
posed of general managers is to
make a report to the National
League at its mid-summer meet
ing. The results of the mail vote,
which would give Houston and
New York a chance to sign free
agents and call them up from the
minors at the end of this season,
should be known within two weeks
or so.
That's a relatively leisurely
pace compared to the American
League's hurried and harried ex
pansion program, which burst
upon the scene in October and
which calls for a 10-team opera
tion when the 1961 season opens
in April.
The two new American League
clubs Los Angeles and Washing
ton drew their players from a
cash-for-castoffs pool at $75,000
each and in a special, and limited,
minor league draft.
The pool arrangement, In which
the established clubs wound up
with untried youngsters, fringe
players and hangers-on, is some
thing the National League would
like to avoid.
We'll provide major league
players for our new clubs," said
the National League president
Warren Giles, "but how they will
be set aside, or how much of a
cash value will be placed on them
still has to be worked out.
"We don't have to hurry into
it as the American League did
We have until October to decide.
The committee that will study
the problem of player procure
ment is comprised of John Quinn,
Philadelphia; Bing Devine, St.
Louis, Joe Brown, Pittsburgh;
John McHale, Milwaukee, and
Buzzie Basavi, Los Angeles.
The Chittcnango (N.Y.) clouter
used to beat down his foes with
slashing left-rights to the body.
Despite this obvious slowdown,
Basilio has been made a 7-5 choice
over Ortega.
Basilio has agreed to make 155
pounds. He will just about hit on
the head, he said today. Ortega
will weigh about 150.
Senior Bowl
Gridders Set
MOBILE, Ala. (AP)-North and
South squads faced their final ex
tended workouts today in prepara
tion for Saturday's Senior Bowl
football game.
North Coach Jim Lee Howell
and South Coach Weeb Ewbank
apparently had sorted through
their 25-man squads and were just
about ready to assign starting
posts on offense and defense.
Both gave considerable atten
tion to their defensive lineups
Wednesday. Ewbank, the Balti
more Colt coach, came up w ith a
four-man forward wall of ends
Taz Anderson of Georgia Tech
and John Brewer of Mississippi
and tackles Billy Shaw of Georgia
Tech and Mike Zeno of VPI, aver
aging 230 pounds.
'. V"! I
Feb. 25, probably at Las Vegas,
Nev.
Fullmer, recognized as world
champion by the National Boxing
Co-promoter Rothschild, who
completed the match by coming
to terms with ex-champion Robin
son Wednesday, arranged today's
Association, will sign later in the "fining ceremony for Sugar Kay.
week at his home in West Jor
dan, Utah. He, loo, has agreed
lo terms.
Whether Las Vegas stages the1
nationally televised Saturday-
I i I J. .:J.J
Friday in Ihe Nevada gambling, (gAQ hp I RfiCC
Santa Anita
Horses Fail
metropolis at a meeting among
promoters, representatives of the
fighters and a delegation of Las
Vegas hotel men.
Co-promoters Norman Roths
child of Syracuse, N.Y., and Jack
Doyle and Mel Grcb of Las Vegas
want assurances from the hotel
men thai they will cooperate
wholeheartedly in the sale of tick
ets if the fight is slated for the
8,600-seat Las Vegas Convention
Hall.
No financial guarantee is being
asked from the city. But Ihe pro
moters and fighters want city-
wide cooperation in shooting for
a $200,000 gate.
Should the hotel men fail to!
snow proper entnusiasm lor uie $20 apiece
bets."
Department legal experts said to
day that Cuban baseball stars
His linebackers also averaged , have not been forbidden to come
out at 230, including middle man;t0 the United States despite cur
POTENT PORTLAND STATER Don Powell, a 5-9 junior
guard on coach Sharkey Nelson's Portland Stat basket
ball team, will attempt, as usual, to give the Oregon Tech
Owl defensemen something to keep them busy tomorrow
night when the two Oregon Collegiate Conference
Schools initiate league action at 8 o'clock in the Milo
High gym. The second of the two-game series will be
played Saturday night at the same time.
Cuban Ball Stars OlCd
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Stale'by dictatorial flat.
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -One
of Coach Murray Watmath's last
stops before flying home Thurs
day with his Minnesota football
team was the Santa Anita race
track.
He didn't have the horses
there, either
"The entertainment was terri
fic," Warmath said, "but it was
just like against Washington.".-
Tlie coach might have done
better if he'd let his players coach
him for a change. Some of them
went to the track with him, and
at least a few of them won.
"I saw one group of about six
splitting up $125," Warmath said.
"Of course that was only about
We just made small
E. J. Holub of Texas Tech, and
Tom Goode of Mississippi State
and Bo Strange of Louisiana
Stale.
These seven gave the Rebels a
distinct weight advantage over the
Yankees, who will average 221 for
the four forwards and 219 for the
linebackers.
Howell's men up forward will be
Fred Maulino of Syracuse, Roland
McDole of Nebraska, Harold Bea-
ty of Oklahoma Stale, and Joe
Dean of Ohio University. Those
tabbed for linebacking duty were
Fred Hagman of Kansas, Carl
Kammerer of College of Pacific,
and John Murray of Toledo University.
The game will be televised na
tionally by NBC. Kickoff is sched
uled at 2:30 p.m., CST, with about
40.000 fans expected
Castro regime.
At the same time they pointed
out that Castro could prevent1
such stars as Minnie Mmoso, Ca
miio Pascnal, Pedro Ramos and
Mike .Fornieles from playing here
The United Slates has taken no1
action so far that would interfere
with Cuban citizens comine to
I this country. Officials pointed out.
the United States and the Fidel no ,,' umI 11,8 umted slates
is Discouraging Americans from
going to Cuba and Castro could
retaliate with more strinitent
! ALL-STAR ADDITIONS
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Often
sive end Bobby Walslon of the
Philadelphia Eagles and lineback
er Dan Currie of the Green Bay
Packers were added today to the
East and West squads which
meet in the All-Star pro bowl
game on Jan. 15. The two men
were the "bonus choices" of
coaches Buck Shaw and Vince
Lombardi and brought each
squad to 35 men.
measures.
About 20 major leaguers would
be effected if Castro were to deny
Cuban ball players the right to,
ptay ball m the United States this
year. . .
Rink Crash
Hurts Howe
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Detroit's Gordie Howe was hurt,
Toronto's Frank Mahovlich scored
his 34th goal and a couple of less
er lights had big nights around
the goalmouth in National Hockey
League play Wednesday night.
Howe, one of hockey's all-time
greats, suffered a concussion and
a gash over his right eye that re
quired 10 stitches when he col
lided with Toronto's Eddie Shack
in a game between the Red Wings
and Maple Leafs at Toronto.
Howe was taken to Toronto Gcn
eral Hospital where X-rays
showed no fracture. He will miss
a return game between the two
teams in Detroit tonight and hos
pital authorities said they would
like to keep him for two or three
days for further observation.
Toronto won the came 6-4 to
move within four points of the
league-leading Montreal Cans
diens.
Asked how his players feel, now
that they've had some time to
digest their 17-7 loss to Washing
ton in the Rose Bowl, Warmath
said: '
They feel a lot like I do. We
can't change the scoreboard now.
We might as well forget about
that part of it.
'But otherwise it s been a fins
trip. Everything about it has been
wonderful."
Warmath, who was regularly
hanged in effigy during Minneso
ta's fulile 1959 season, had little
to say about his most recent hang
ingin Duluth after Monday's
Rose Bowl game. .-
"That was in a different place
(not Minneapolis)," he said, "and
I don't know anything about it."
Then he just let the conversation
hang. .-,
Warmath had something more
definite to say earlier, when told
that, several of his players had
said they . weren't as high for
Washington as they had been 'for
Iowa during the regular season.
That's for sure," he said. "We
weren't even close."
Cougars,
Gonzaga
To Clash
points and grabbed 24 rebounds
in Marquette's 83-71 victory over
Chicago Loyola.
Sprague River entrant.
Ruff hit 15 field goals and four
from the foul line in acquiring
his total. Teammates Jackie Bar
ney and Bob David added 14 and!
1.1 respectively to the T-Bird ac-.
Gary Curry led the winner with! Deaths Drop
19 poinls off eight field goals ana CHICAGO (AP) - The high1
three free tosses. Bob lucKcr wimiJcnoo f00tball death toll dropped
18. Perry Lancy witn 12, 10m to sevcn in 10its owest ievcl
Tucker with 16
Prep Grid
69
Miami (Fla) 102, Miami (Ohio)
100 (2 ot)
Alabama 74, Virginia Tech 56
Tennessee 70, Florida State 68
Wake Forest 81, Clemson 59
Georgia 87, Mercer 74
MIDWEST
Dayton 86, Canisius 63
Notre Dame 72. Butler 56
Marquette 83, Chicago Loyola 71
Purdue 91, Creighton 72
Toledo 62. Kent Slate 57
SOUTHWEST
Rice 70, Baylor 59
Texas 68, Arkansas 58
FAR WEST
Arizona 79, Regis 61
By United Press International
'Tis the calm before the storm
on the Pacific Coast cafie front
Louisville 70, Eastern Kentucky, tonight with only one major con
test scheduled.
Washington Stale invades Gon
zaga, home of the top U.S. scorer
Frank Burgess.
Friday, the first big round of
conference activity pits Cal-USC
and UCLA-Washington in Big Five
action. Two West Coast Athletic
Conference games are also on
tap as well as Far West Confer
ence and CCAA games. Oregon
faces Idaho in the top independ
ent clash.
Wednesday night was also a
light one with Arizona's 79-61 win
over Regis highlighting the eve
ning. Wes Flynn tallied 20 while
the Wildcats' high-scoring Jake
Ckaisgir meshed 14.
Oregon Prep Basketball
Portland l.raciif
and Bob Reed ,01c vl-u-- ,urh record-keen- Benson 51. Franklin 41
with 13, rounded out the bulk otljng was staricc by ihe National Grant 57, Lincoln 44
the Merrill attack. Merril led 53-1 Federation of State High SchooljVadison 47, Washington 40
86 at 'the half. (Athletic Associations. pVilson 54, Marshall 49
Don Dexler was high man in j officials of the group made the Cleveland 47, Roosevelt 43
the second contest witn 17 points fatajty repori Wednesday during
for the losers. Sprague River was t)ieir annua convention. The sev
Up 27-26 at the midway mark. cn deaths were among 720,000
The scoring summaries:. 'participants, an average of .97
I, B.m.v t4. Ev.n, 4. s. Br"iy i. for every 100.000 compared to an
Mrnii (Mi-TucKr ii. Lnv u. t -vcrao for the ast 15 voars of
tucur !. Curry 1. Red U, Csrulon r
, 7rolmn J. , . i 1.39.
Heat nroslrauon caused one
lrau itr )-rlf 17. Hurudo
I. en,m I. Wwdl Brdy 1,
Clulaquln Plrl (l R.dinhsur 9,
tuinn U. Dull"! 11, Nwrg t, W.
NdwMrl 1L S"iitn J. ad a.
death. The others were injured in
tackling, being tackled and blocking.
WORKING SHARE
Brookings Plywood Corp.
Brookings, Oregon
S3. 00 per hr., IV, O.T., pd.
int., 2-weekt pd. vacation, pan
lion fund, steady employment.
S1 1,000 coin or $15,500,
S3, 500 down, $135 par mo.,
5 int.
Ph. Tuleloke 667-2771
aftar 6:00 p.m.
HEY KIDS ...
ICE SKATE
TRADE NIGHT
. . . TONIGHT!
7 P.M. - 9 P.M.
Skates too imall ... or big?
Bring tham to Had tonight!
Wa'll opproii your old tkatai
. . and halp yau trade!
HAL'S
SPORT SHOP
532 Mom TU 4 5569
(1 SALES h
INTERNATIONAL: Pick-ups, Panels,
TravelAlls, Travelettes, Metro Deliv
eries, Cattle, Farm, Logging and,
Highway Trucks!
ll PARTS J
TIMKEN -- ROSS -- EATON
SPICER -- WESTINGHOUSE
DELCO-REMY -- AUTO-LITE
INTERNATIONAL-CUMMINS
BROWN-LIPE
(J SERVICE h
INTERNATIONAL-CUMMINS
GMC DIESEL-FRUEHAUF
Complete Truck Rebuilding
Frames straightened or lengthened
Brown-Lipes Installed
JUCKELAND
MOTORS, Inc.
TRUCKS ARC OUR BUSINESS
11 id t 12th en Klamath Ave.
Ch. S-tStl
Go After The Big Ones
LURES
IN STOCK
OKIE DRIFTER
SPIN-N-GLO
GUPPIES
CHERRY BOBBERS
Fluorescent YARN
FLATFISH
and MORE
Spin-Drift Rods
All On Sale! Look
At These Examples!
Reg. 45.00 No. 5PBOR
Sila-Flex
Reg. 16.50 No. 7869
South Bend
Reg. 24.95 No. 1274
Shakespeare
Reg. 19.95 No. 6309
Conlon
325o
1395
2095
1695
Let's Go Sluing!
Men's White Stag Stretch
Ski Pants 19" -25". 39
95
Women's Stretch
Ski Pants 19" -25" -39
Non Stretch 10.95
Children's Stretch
16.95 to 19.95
Non-Stretch 8.95 to 11.95
95
White Stag
Ski Jackets 10"
Men's and Women's Imported
Sweaters 12", 13"
u i ij.i.i ci.!. mso ni so
nan neiai jm n 7t
Gresvig and other Skis 24".. 29"
GUNSTOIS
714 Main