Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 08, 1961, Page 9, Image 9

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    Everyone Wanis Inio
M Willi t " ft l III' 11 llltlf
PERFECT TIMING Three players, Bob Petersen (34), Bill Turner, left background,
and Sammy Smith (the extra hands), are caught suspended in mid-air, but the ball
doesn't cooperate in this battle for the all-important rebound. Other players planninq
a grab are Frank Chase 1 13), Ron Cumiford (50), and Don Bridges, right foreground.
The action was snapped by H&N photog Don Kettler in the Friday night tussle between
OTI and PSC.
Although almost anything can happen . . . and many
times dees. And I realize that
plished in the next couple of
if this could be the real "big"
ath Union High School coaches and their respective
squads.
While now k not exactly the proper time to go around trying
en championship crowns . . . head sizes sometimes being flexible
. . . Dean White and DcLance Duncan could be forgiven if they oc
casionally gave the situation a thought.
This is written early Saturday
and things could possibly
have changed over night . . . but
say they didn't, and they both
get past ever-present Medford . . .
the odds are greatly in their fa
vor. Does this put (he kiss of death
on them . . . this, and the other
highly favorable publicity they're
getting around the state? I don't
think so.
At one time I used to be a
little afraid to tell a young ath
lete I thought he was a potential
champion. I no longer worry
about it . . . since someone (could !
have been even White or Duncan)
told me, "Listen, if a kid can't
read compliments to himself
without having his head grow all
out of proportion he isn't cham
pionship material In the first
place and something else would
come along to drop him by the
wayside." Makes sense, doesn't
it?
The truly great athlete . . .
once he sees big things ahead
. . . never rests on the "big"
things he may have done in the
past, but gets in and digs, digs
harder than he ever did before.
So ... I expect to see many
"holes" in the maplewood and
the mats at Klamath Union.
Odds and Ends . . .
Something I never expected to
see . . . Owl guard Leon Wilson
"blanked," absolutely blanked, in
(he score column. It happened
Friday night against Portland
State. A little out of proportion
with a comment Wilson was i
heard to make last week.
KU wrestlers had themselves a
fine crowd Friday afternoon for
the match with Redmond. Sure,
, . . some of them were "captive'
. . . they couldn't leave until
the close of (he last period of the
day
but the encouraging
thing was, that
when the bell
rang ... a large number of them
rVed . . . and enjoyed the show.
There s something catching in
the enthusiasm the Pel wrestling
team engenders for their buddy
on the mat.
The Owl wrestlers, who won't
start their 1961' campaign until
January 18, were represented at; Veterans Singles in the recent
the KU Friday matches . . .iAshland Indoor Tennis tourna-
Wcndcll Winlerbottom and Tom
Cilman officiated. . . . Winterbot-
Ion has charge of the 177 class!
for the Techman while Gilman is crown, 6-2. 6-3. Brooks disposed
167-poundcr. . . . Both look lo.of Jack Yeider, also of Eureka,
be in pretty fair shape. Coachl6-2, 6-2, for his trophy.
there is a let to be accom
months . but it looks as
year for at least two Klam
George Miller has had his squad
training diligently (hard, that is).
Seemed good to see Bob Niles
at a basketball game, even
though he's wearing a "boot"
and riding a crutch. He showed
up at the OTI-PSC game Friday
and then had the Saturday Pelican-Cavemen
scrap dedicated to
DeLANCE DUNCAN
. , . "the big year"
him on his appearance there.
Chiloquin Panther Paul Harris
tfied to overlook his bum knee and
play some basketball for the first
time this season ... but it didn't
work. The knee, hurt in football,
went out on him again and he may
not be back the rest of the sea-
son. This could hurt the Panthers
B title hopes ... if they let it.
At any rate he'll be missed.
Back to wrestlers again . , ,
KU could have claimed a forfei-
ture over Redmond Friday, since
nearly all the Panther entrants
i came in "heavy." . . . Duncan
decided it wouldn't do his squad
much good to win that way how-
BomjUlWiinn mi !
ever ... so he went ahead and.lKy.) State 64
beat Redmond, and badly, in spite
of the extra weight. He figured his ;
kids couldn't learn not wrestling.
Earl Brooks won the Junior
ment and Jimmy Jackson got up
to whack Ellis Williamson
(Eureka' for the Men Singles!
The Aci
KF Legion
Meeting Set
A special meeting of the
American Junior Legion base
ball officials will be held to
night at the office of Red Law
son, the association secretary.
All present officers and in
terested parties are urged to at
tend. Lawson will tender his resig
nation as secretary of the
group because of ill health. It
is expected that the nomina
tion of a replacement for Him
will be included on (he busi
ness agenda of the meeting.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
National Basketball Association
New York 102, Syracuse 117
College Basketball
Delaw
are State 91. Howard 1
Slippery
n at oictu; is
California (Pa) State 64
Columbia 65, Pcnn 54
West Virginia 105, Furman 90
Vanderbilt 68. Tennessee 66
Brown 73, Harvard 53
Cincinnati 83, North Texas Slate
34
Ohio State 91, Illinois 65
William & Mary 63, Richmnod
60
Colorado 61, Iowa State 60
Kansas 58, Oklahoma 55
Ohio U. 62. Bowling Green 61
Catholic U. 77, Randolph-Macon
69
New Hampshire 80, Bates 65
Wisconsin 74, Michigan State 71
St. Bonaventure 89, Duquesne 78
Purdue 79, Northwestern 64
Canisius 78. Selon Hall 74
Villanova 74, Muhlenberg 53
Massachusetts 70, Colby 69
Buckncll 75. Delaware 69
Massachusetts 70, Colby 69
Kansas State 69, Oklahoma St
58
Nebraska 62, Missouri 48
Florida 79, Tulane 75
Mississippi St. 56, Auburn 48
Princeton 64, Cornell 57
The Citadel 70, VMI 69
Yale 68, Dartmouth 62
Virginia St. 70. Blucficld St. 63
Coast finarrf Ar-arl fin MIT V) 1
Georgia 79, Tulane 68 lot)
Arkansas 76, Southern Mctho
dist 74
Bradley 76, Tulsa 66
Louisville 84, Marquette 63
Clcmson 74, Davidson 63
George Washington 83, George
town (D.C.) 75
Holy Cross 103, Connecticut 85
Augustana (S.D.) 71, South Da
kota 64
South Dakota State 60, North
Dakota 54
Alabama 80, Mississippi 54
St. Francis Pa.) 68, Morehead
I
Mississippi
Memphis Stale 72
Southern 55
Oklahoma City 63. Centenary 60
North Carolina 73, Notre Dame
71
Wichita 70. St. Louis 61
De Paul 75, Dayton 64
Southern Calif. 65. California 57
L'lah 85, Utah State 70
Brigham Young 74. Montana 66 by NBA Champion Gene Fullmer
Pcnn State 72, Carnegie Tech 67ilast June, showed little effects of
Army 66, Fordham 61
UCLA 62, Washington M
M
KUHS Five
Takes Two
From GP
By FLOYD WYNNE
Herald-News Managing Editor
A withering fourth quarter basket
barrage broke a tight game wide;
open Saturday night on Pelican
Court and gave the Pelicans a 69
to 52 victory over a pressing Rang
of Cavemen from Giants Pass.
The victory was the third con
secutive conference triumph fori
Coach Dean White's charges who
belted Ashland Friday night 63
to 23 on the Grizzlie's court.
For three quarters the Saturday
night clash was a "nip-and-tucker"
with the Pels holding the lead
but the Cavemen threatening.
KU held a seven point 50-43
edge to open the final quarter and
ran 14 points before the visitors
could counter a point. W a 1 1 y
Palmberg and Fred Biehn paced
the 14 point barrage that sank the
Cavemen hopes for an upset tri
umph. Grants Pass held the lead for
only the first minute of the game.
Larry Janssen sunk a push shot
with the game five seconds old to
give Coach Gordon Prelim's team
a short-lived lead. Biehn coun
tered a gift toss on a foul shot
and Bob Lewellyn added another
point for Grants Pass on a free
throw.
Palmberg High
Wally Palmberg who was the
game's lop scoter with 27 points
scored from outside with 1:05
gone in the first quarter to tie
the game at 3-all.
He came back 25 seconds later
with another two-pointer and that
put the Pels in front, a lead they
never gave up although Grants
Pass closed to a single point a
number of times in the first three
quarters.
Palmberg again provided the ol
fensive spark for the Pels as he
scored 10 of their first 17 points
and poured ir 10 field goals and
seven of 10 free throws for his
27 point total.
Klamath held quarter leads of
17-14, 38-35 and 50-43.
The big scoring splurge of the
night came in that fourth quar
ter for the Pels. Biehn opened the
scoring with the quarter 10 seconds
old and Palmberg followed 30 sec
onds later. Biehn added another1
two counter, then sunk three free
tosses on two separate fouls. This
made the score 59-43. .
Palmberg dumped in a charity
toss, Gary Patzke, the game s
second high scorer at 16 points,
counted two free throws, Palm
berg a gift loss and Bob Lapslcy
a free throw to make it 64 to 43.
With three minutes remaining in
lhe fourth Quarter. Jim Davis
dropped in a two-pointer for the ""Review nonKers ana me nen
Cavcmen's first counters of the, Icy Hornets may have had a
quarter. 'onf r'c'c Dul "lcy ma('e ,ne most
Brickner On Bench
The Pels played without the
throughout much of the thirdiRogue River 56-42 after having
f a t n a u atf Hntfa Hriclf not' I
. .,. v.. ji,-j Uic
quarter when he picked up his
fourth foul and spent the bigger
share of the frame on the bench.
He re-entered the game in the
final quarter and didn't fmil out.;stopping the Rogue River five Fri
Meantime, Grants Pass lost both
Dave Haunlz and Clyde Murray,
both 6-4 ball players, on the per
sonal foul route.
Klamath shot a warm .380, con -
verting 23 out of 60 field goal at- Lakcview 56, Rogue River 42
tempts, while Grants Pass was Lakeview grabbed an early slim
right behind with a .320 on 16 forcad of 15-12 over the Chiefs Sat
51 shooting. jurday and rolled on to command
The Pels dominated the rebounds at halftime 30-21. However, the
despite the tall Cavemen, snaring
54 while the visitors got 29.
The KU Jayvees also chalked
up a pair of victories over the
1 I J : . i-i
weuKcnu, flumping nsiuanu s uay-
vees 56 to 46 Friday night andjout by Rogue River's Jim France
turning a big second half into a
57 to 45 win over the Grants
Pass Jayvees Saturday night.
Grants Pass (S3
FO FT-FTA PF TP
Davis
Janssen
Hauntz
Murray
Lewellyn
Staley
Blacksmith
Hamilton
Atkins
AAillemann
Totals
Klamath Falls 4t)
5
3- 4
S-7
o-o
4- a
4-4
0-0
1- 3
0-0
04
i II
S 3
4 4
1 13
0 4
3 3
1 0
0
14
30-30
35 33
FO FT-FTA PF TP
Pauke
0-0 3
111 3
3-3 4
Brickner
Palmberg
Bienn
Dennis
Lapstev
Totals
score by Quarters
Klamath Falls
Grants Pass
7-10
3
is
2
0- 0
1- 4
3 3
i i
14 4
17 31
14 31
13 l-4
I 9-52
(Continued On 3-C)
Basilio Flashes Old Form In
NEW YORK (AP) Carmen
Basilio overcame a sluggish start
and won an unanimous 10-round The referee and Judge Lee Birn-'
decision over Gaspar Ortega at'baum voted six rounds for Basilio1
I Madison Square Garden Saturday
night with a two-fisted attack
reminiscent of the form that once
earned him the welterweight and
middleweight boxing titles.
The 33-year-old battler from
Canastola, N.Y., in a comcbsck'silio's 139'j. Carmen came in four
altempt after his knockout defeat pounds over his contracted weight
I his long layoff as he closed with
la rush. His younger and lighter
Bfflp
glPOETg
WAYNE SCOTT. Sports Editor
PAGE 1-C
Idaho Tops Oregon;
Moore Held to Four
score w as 43-all alter the Techmcn
MOSCOW, Idaho (AP) - Utiliz- James got 22 points in the sec-na( blown a 43-37 lead that ex
ing a sterling defense and charg- on(j half. listed wilh onlv 1:28 left in the
trig their guards with most of the
ZZ?::-.ZTZ?Z . 1 nlV
cc :u:i:... t J u .
gon's Ducks here Saturday night
The victory was a form of a re
venge for a 68-66 last-sccond-de-feat
suffered at the hands of the
Ducks (Friday night.
The Vandals, who began their
defensive push mid-way through
the first half, after trailing as
much as 10 points through the
early going, came to life with
zest in the second half and rolled
ud a safe marcin toward victory!
with some 6 or 7 minutes remain
ing.
Co-captain Dale James, w ho
thought he might have lost a start-!
ing berth to the fast improving
Rich Porter, showed Saturday
night he still is dangerous and
tallied 25 points for game honors.
Charlie Warren hit for 18 points,
the only double figure performer
for Oregon.
Fouls Cost Beavers
Game With Pilots
CORVALLIS (AP)-The Univer-,
sity of Portland cashed in on Ore
gon Stale fouls for a 47-44 vic
tory in a fiercely played basket
ball game here Saturday night.
Oregon State trailed until late in
the contest when it forged ahead,
39-36, on two free throws by Jay
Carty and another by Steve Pauly.
But Portland fought back to a
44-39 lead on two field goals byeach, paced a well-balanced of-
Roland Carpenter and two more
by 6-10 Bill Garner and Mike Do-
herly.
Oregon State made a final bid
when field goals by Jim Wood -
land and 6-10 Karl Anderson cu,t:(rce-Ihrow.s to 10 for OSC. That
the margin to two points. Bufjoffscl a 17-13 OSC field goal edge.
Honkers, Hornets
Have Hot Weekend
EAGLE POINT I Special )-The
",tu "'! ",":
League action over the weekend.
' ho I aL-AVinui ninnffw niimriPrl
topped Eagle Point Friday night,
while the Hornets just reversed
the procedure, whipping Eagle
Point 44-36 Saturday night after
day night
The two learns now stand tied at
the top of the Rogue loop with a
pair of wins each against no loss-
!Cs
chiefs came fighting back to
close the gap to 41-34 at the end
of the third period.
Doug Maxwell paced the Honk
ers with 14 pointers but was nosed
w ho bucketed 16. Honker Troy Mc
Coy picked up lop honors in the
rebound department with 14.
The big factor in the Lakeview
win was their shooting percentage.
The Honkers hit 22 out of the 39
shots they attempted. They also1
out scored the Chicis from the
charily lane, making It 11 for 10
o to 14 of 29 for the Rogue five.
Trir, cr-nrinf Klimmarv-
Lakeview (51) G. Peters 4, Cossey A.
McCoy II, Conn 4. Maxwell 14, Barry 1,
L. Peters e, Tooke 3, and Reynolds 5.
Rooue River (411 Kite I, France 14,
,,:simer l, LeRoy , ana Arcner 4.
Henley 44, Eagle Point 36
The Hornets look the first quar-
tcr lean ny a narrow margin oi single season money - earning
17-11 and kept up their scoring marks in I960 by collecting $75,
pace to hold the same margin at!2(2 in official PGA events.
foe from Mexico was hanging onlnounce the duration of the sus-
at the final bell.
and four for Ortega, w ho spotted
his opponent 10 pounds. The other
judge, Joe Eppy, had it 5-4-1, the
same as the AP card, in favor of
Basilio.
Ortega weighed 149'i to Ba-
of 155 and was suspended by the
New York State Athletic Commis
sion for this infraction.
oThe -commission said it will an -
t
SIP
o
Sunday, January I, 1961
Running him company was
8"d Chuck White with
17. Porter, who had scored 20 last
night, started Saturday but got but
3 and saw only limited action.
Virtually the same was true for
Oregon's high scoring Glenn
Moore, 6foot-7 center, who went
wild last night with 32 points and
had to settle for only 4, a field
goal in each half tonight. ;
Idaho held
a 23-22 edge at the
nalf Dut na(l ,railed through most
of the first. With three minutes
remaining until the half, Oregon
led 22-16. Then White and James,
established the pattern which
tinued into the second half as
they scored seven consecutive
points in the three minutes and
sent the Vandals to the rest period
with the one point edgel !
The Victory gives Idaho a 3-10
record and sent Oregon back to
Eugene with a 5-4 season mark
Portland bagged three more free
throws and limited the home team
to a single point in the final sec
onds. Portland used only six players
in gaining its first victory over
Oregon Stale since November.
1956. Doherly, with 11 points, and
Garner and Carpenter, wilh 10
tensive.
Jim Woodland of Oregon Stale
led all scorers with 13 points.
Oregon Stale fouled 20 times
ito 10 for Pcrtland, which had 21
25-17 at the halfway mark. How -
ever, the Eagles were not ready
iu huh, aim vaure uaiiniiK uduKl2:M cft and Petersen sunK one
to close that margin to 32-28 at
the end of the third period of play
before the roof fell in.
Kent Gooding, Henley's 6'6"
center, came through for the vic
tors to collect high scoring honors
with 12 and also take the lead in
the rebound department.
The Hornet juniors also went
home on a victorious note as
they whipped the Rogue River jay
vccs 56-30 Friday night and took
the Eagle Point junior varsity 37
35. The scoring summary:
Eagle Point 134) Pomeroy 4. Wilson
S, Palm 7, Greb 9, Perduo 3, Geren 4,
wesr.
Henley (44) Chanman I. Allbrllton I.
Gooding 13, Kendall 4, Brown 10, Tc
chinl, Herringshaw.
(Continued On 3-C)
SOC Takes 2
ASHLAND (AP)-Soulhcrn Ore
son made it two in a row over
Eastern Oregon by winning Sat
urday night's Oregon Collegiate
Cnnfprpnrli haslcelhall oanw hnri
SOC won 78-59 Friday night.
Bruins Avenge Defeat
SEATTLE (AP) - The Uclan
Bruins avenged Friday night's up
set defeat, by breaking in front
and dominating the play to post
a 62-58 basketball victory Satur
day night over Washington's Husk-
Golfer Arnold Palnrcr broke all
pension at its next mccling, Fri-
day, Jan. 14.
The suspension is effective Sun-
day.
There were no knockdowns al
though several times the 25-ycar-old
Ortega was staggered by solid
right hands
Ortega, lough as nails, ought
back furiously each lime he was
hurt and, on several occasions,
hurt his older foe with furious
counlcr-pounching.
Ortega, who has never been
.knocked out In 81 fights, showed
Owls Post
OCC Win
In Thriller
By WAYNE SCOTT
Hrrald and News Sports Editor
The Oregon Tech Owls cracked '
the Oregon Collegiate Conference
win column Saturday night when
they edged the cagy Portland
State Vikings 46-45 in a thrill
packed five minute overtime.
At the end of regular play the
game.
The victory evened the two-
game weekend series one each
the Vikings having grabbed f
42-39 w in Friday night on the Mile
High court.
Sammy "Cool Cat" Smith proved
he was just that when he climbed
high on the backboard with a
two-pointer that wrapped up the
Saturday triumph for the Owls!
w un icss man is seconds icu ui me
overtime period, smun scooped
in a rebound alter guard Hewlett
Nash had missed a juniper,
which, in turn resulted from a
Con-:"1'sscd free lhlow by Smith
Sammy Produces
Smith hauled in 23 rebounds
and counted 17 points to become
(he second high producer for the
night
Although the Owls had momen
tary leads at 4-2 and 1210 during
the first half they were actually
in arrears the biggest portion of
the ballgume.
They managed to break the
light defensive thrown up by the I
Portlanders with 7:20 left of regu
lar playing lime when Smith
dumped a rebound to make the
count 35-34. He came right back
with a jumper and a set shot,
both from outside to add four I
more points, and guard Charlie
Wilson drilled one that made the
count 41-36. Smith drew a foul
with 3:00 left and sunk both shots
to make it 43-36 but at this point
the Owls began to falter. 1
Viking Bill Turner, the game's
high-pointer with 19 tallies, camcj
up with a pair of jumpers, and
Eldon Lalili intercepted an uwi
nass for an easy layup that made
the score 43-41 with 25 seconds
left to go.
One Bin Shot
Ctrach Sharkey Nelson called a
time out and sent In Gary Mor
ton, who cast off with one shot,
but it was a big one.' It lied
everything up with three seconds
left.
Turner led off with a jumper
from the key just seconds into
lhe overtime and the Viks settled
inlo some real ball-control. Don
f Bridecs fouled Bob Petersen with
to make the count 45-44.
The Owls got the ball with just
55 seconds left and Smith drew
the foul that led to winning buck
et.
The Owls earned a 64-44 rebound
advantage as Petersen followed
up Smith's fat total with 13. Tur-j
ner was high for the losers with
nine. '
Owl coach. Wally Palmberg, en
thused over lhe way his squad
came through when it counted,
said, "You can see we still have
a lot of work to do. We just
weren't ready for this scries only
three days practice after a long
layoff ... but I think we've got
the stuff."
The box score:
Scoring Summary
FO FT-FTA PF TP
0 o-o oo
11-3 S3
1 3-4 4 19
3 3-3 IS
3 0-3 3 4
3 0-1 2 4
0 04 10
10- 0 0 3
11- 1 S3
1 0-O 13
It 7-11 13 41
FO FT-FTA PF TP
0 00 0 0
1 7-11 4 9
4 513 4 17
1 3-3 0 I
3 0-1 3 4
10-1 14
14 14-39 11 44
h4lvos:
31 34-45
II 3144
PSC (41)
Chase
Berlell
Turner
Bridget
Lehti
Powell
Wllllaml
Morton
Miller
Saltmarsh
Totals
OTI (44)
riimlford
Petersen
Smith
Nash
L. Wilson
C. Wilson
Totals
Score bv
PSC
OTI
(Continued On 3-C)
Bearcats Even Series
SALEM (AP)-Willamelte dc
feated College of Idaho 69-57 here
Saturday night and evened a
Northwest Ccnference basketball
scries.
Decision
no visible damage, but Basilio
left the ring with a slight cut
alongside his right eye.
The hard-earned triumph for
Basilio was his 531 h in 77 fights.
Ortega, who came in which a rec
ord of 58 victories, 20 defeats and
two draws, now has lost three in
a row.
A crowd ol 8.000, who paid $17,
000, acclaimed Basilio's victory
which presumably will keep the
craggy-laced veteran In the ring.
He had previously expressed
thoughts of retiring If he lost this
bout.
lara
Pelican Wrestlers
Swamp Bend, 50-5
BEND (Special) The rugged
KUHS wrestlers continued to mow
down everybody in sight Saturday
afternoon as they swamped the
Bend Lava Bears 50-5 for the
fifth straight win of the season.
Friday DcLance Duncans grap
plcrs crushed the Redmond Pan
thers 39-8.
En route to the lopsided decision
over Bend, the powerful Pelicans
won all but one match. Seven of
their 12 wins came on pins and
Fastest Human
Gets Track Ban
FRANKFURT. Germany (AP)
German gold medal sprinter
Armin
Hary, considered the
world's
fastest human, v
banned from track for a year Sat
urday on several charges includ
ing padding of expense accounts.
Hary, a West German who won
the 100-meter dash at the Rome
Olympics and world record co
holdcr at 10 seconds flat, was
banned by the legal committee of
the Athletic
League of Hessen
Province.
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MOTORS
11th to 12th en Klamath?
"Trucks are
Jim Long, the lightest Pelican at
98 pounds, took the Bears' Dan
Jarvis to the canvas in a near
record 29 seconds.
The Pelican Jayvccs also rolled
to an impressive decision 30-10..
All matches ended in pins with
Pelicans on the short end of two
of them.
Varsity results:
IS Long (Kl pinned Jarvis IB) :39.
106 Head IK) pinned Nelson IB) :4a.
lis M. Crumrlne (K) pinned Feser (Bl
4:.
l3J-Ouncan IK) dec. Ward IB) 5-0.
130 Griggs IK) dec. Boole IB) 4-S.
134 D. Crumrlne IK) dinned Anoell
161 1:57
Ml Mitchell IK) pinned Houohton IB)
3:51.
HI Gomales IK) dec. Choate IB) 4-0.
157-Wllhart IK) dec. Ward IB) 3-2.
144 Ewlng IK) pinned Barclay IB) 1:31
1)4 Mills IK) dec. Pedersen IB) 5-1.
191 Cox (K) won by default over Iver
son (B).
Hvy Hancock (K) pinned by Hoagland
IBI 9:50.
Flnald score: KF 30. Bend S.
JV results:
104 Davenport (B) pinned England (K)
3:01.
115 McClung (K) pinned Marcouller
IB) 1:41.
U3 Leavilt (K) pinned Jacobson.
IB) :53.
130 McSwaln (K) pinned Boole (B)
1:15.
134 Peterson (Kl pinned WMIt IB) :53.
144 Swisegood K) pinned P. Marcou
ller (Bl :3I.
157 Fitzsimmons (K) pinned Smith
(B) 3:34.
144 Dexter (B) pinned Hulled (K)
3:33.
Final score: KF JV 30, Bend JV 10.
(Continued on Page 2 C)
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