5
i
nrrnn nn 77 IT n
Oregon's
Attention
At Focus
Kim Ft Mi 2 2I 22S3S?
Ashland t0-) 4 .000 HO ur
The Oregon A-l prep basketball
flate l crammed with interest
inn games In each ol the districts
tonight, but the Klamath Union
Mpdford Black Tornado
' batUe to Medford draws top bUl
Th Dame will begin at I
o'clock at the Hedrick Junior High
School gym. the usual site of
! utfnrit' home eames, and not
at McLoughlin Junior High
stated in yesterday's story.
. Not only does the game neces
' iarlly break up a Southern Ore
eon Conference tie for first place
shared by KU and Medford but
it will also clear the air as to
the relative power of both clufts.
t. mo rin-les it has been said
that each team has played but
one serious contender lor siaie
' honors, and in each of these cases
they were defeated. The Medford
quint bowed to South Eugene
while Klamath was topped in
overtime by Boseburg. although
they came back the second night
and won convincingly.
The two top scorers in the
league. Medford's Bob Quinney
and Klamath's Wally Palmberg,
are separated by mere seven
points. The Pels, at least statis
tically, have the edge in the
point-producing potential.
KU center Bruce Brickner is
fourth among the leaders with 126
points just ahead of Gary Patzke
who has 124. The two are ex
actly even in rebounds pulled in
to date.
The only other Medford shooter
in the top ten is guard Dick
Ragsdale who is tied with KU's
Freddie Biehn. Each has 82
points.
Pel coach Dean White will call
upon Palmberg. Biehn, Brickner,
Patzke and Ray Taylor (or start
' big assignments while the replace
ment (or in hired Wayne Dennis.
Kent Hunsaker. will undoubtedly
see a lot of action.
Coach Frank Roelandt is ex
eected to start Qulnney, Rags-
dale, Mike Hood, Scott Eaton and
Bruce Bray. Quinney Is the tall
st at M, while the remainder!
el the squad is close to the six
foot mark.
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L. HUlnbotMm (C)
ana erickntr (KP)
Oery Pttlkt (KPI
Larry Jantsen (OPI
SM Oetoer (A)
Sick fteasoala (Mt
rod eiehn (KP)
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10 30 IS
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14 II
Maple Leafs
Falling Short
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Montreal Canadiens, bid.
. ding for their fourth straight
: National Hockey League title,
: have turned back, it least tern
; porarily, the Toronto Maple Leafs'
: bid for share of first place.
: In a position where a defeat
'-would have forced them to share
; 'the top spot with Toronto, the
' Canadiens applied all of their
power for four goals in the second
period Thursday Highland went
on to down the Maple Leafs 6-2.
The victory lengthened their lead
to four points.
The Boston Bruins and the New
York Rangers, with only an out
fide chance of reaching the Stan
ley Cup playoffs, battled to a 44
tie In the only other game,
Sports
Brief s
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BASEBALL
NEW YORK Yogi Berra signed
his 1961 contract with the Yankees
for a slight increase over the
$50,000 he received last year.
CHICAGO -Ernie Banks, the
Cubs' slugging shortstop, signed
his 1961 contract lor an estimated
$55,000.
GOLF
SAN DIEGO - Nick Kerbawy
given leave of absence as general
manager of the Detroit Pistons of
the National Bai.ketball Assocla.
thm because of alleged participa
tion in stockholders fight of De
trait Lions of National Football
League
RACING .
ARCADIA. Calif.-WUlie Shoo
maker rode three winners at
Santa Aaita including Taboo
($i. and Swiss Roll i$s.20) in
the two divisions of the Santa
Monica handicap.
Popl Read I
Power Upfront
LIKES IT TOUGH Pelican Ray Taylor, 6-3 forward,
doesn't mind heavy traffic a bit, to he'll probably find
things to his liking when the KU quintet tangles with the
Black Tornado in Medford tonight. Taylor is currently
number three among the Pelican rebounders.
1960-61 PELICAN STATISTICS
(Conference and Non-Conference To Date)
Player FGA-FG FTAFT PF REB TP AVG.
Palmberg . 117-B1 43-27 . 30 18 149 .521
Brickner 125-49 42-28 39 118 126 .392
Patzke 79-41 74-42 17 118 124 .506
Biehn 75-31 40-20 14 20 82 .413
Taylor 65-22 1 17-11 19 74. 53 .338
Dennis 35-10 2-10 10 28 22 .287
Lapslcy 27-5 14-7 11 11 , 17 .185
Hunsaker 9-3 6-4 6 6 10 .333
Allen 6-3 04 1' 2 6 .500
Ash 5-2 2-2. 8 7 6 .400
Scott 2-1 0-0 ' 0 1 2 .500
Brisbon ., , 0-0 00 0 0 0 .000
Stippich 1-1 0-0 3 12 1.000
Dearing 10 0-0 - 1 0 0 ' .000
Totals KUHS 547-221 240-151 159 404 399 .419
OPP. 438-144 186-133 172 226 435 .326
' Score by Quartera:
OPP. 105 137 105 84 4 435 -
KUHS 152 142 147 156 2 - 629
Track "Who's Who"
Set For Big Meet
PORTLAND Indoor track and
field returns to Portland Satur
day night, and it comes back al
ter an absence of more than two
decades with an entry list which
reads like the "Who's Who" of
the sport.
The Memorial Coliseum, already
successful site for basketball,
hockey and numerous other at
tractions, forms a beautiful back
drop for the great collection of
Celts Keep
NBA Margin
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Philadelphia Warriors arc
maintaining a hot pace In the
Eastern Division ol the National
Basketball Association, but have
not been able to cut the Boston
Celtics' two-game lead.
The Warriors won their sixth
game in their last eight starts
with a 111-102 victory over the St,
Louis Hawks Thursday night. But
in the first gamo of the double'
header at Philadelphia, the Celtics
made it scven-out-ot-eight with a
124-118 overtime conquest of the
Syracuse Nats.'
In the only other game, the
Detroit Pistons returned to their
old home a Fort Wayne, Ind
and downed the Cincinnati Royals
124-112.
With Bob Petlit getting only 15
points, the Warriors led all the
way against the Hawks and at
times had leads of 19 points. Wilt
Chamberlain paced the winners
with 37 points.
Bob Cousy's 33 points and 23 by
Tom Heinsolin powered the Celtics
to their victory over the Nats.
Detroit, with 18 straight victo
ries over Cincinnati at Detroit,
grabbed the lead at the start of
the fourth period and pulled away.
Bailey Howell scored 33 points for
the Pistons, lopping Oscar Robert
son's 31 for Cincinnati.
THREE FROM CANADA
NEW HAVEN, Conn. AP -Yale's
hockey team includes three
players irom Canada. They are
Ken MacLean and Tim Sargeant
of Toronto and Stephen Ripley
Irom Calgary.
Klamath Animal Supply
Everything For The
Stockman Pet Owner
Vaccines, medicines, equipment . , . Hot
Shot and Syringe repair.
Oawn t A.M. mi i:a r.M. t"e na. Ilk. Aeresa tram Ike tawer
Tkeater.
world, Olympic and collegiate
stars who have been Invited here
by Bill Bowcrman, meet director,
There will be 16 Olympians in
action, including gold medal win
ners Otis Davis, Don Bragg and
New Zealand's great Murray Hal
berg. There are world record hold'
crs like Parry O'Brien in the shot,
Davis, Halberg, Bragg and sprint'
crs Harry Jerome and Roscoe
Cook.
The college stars are paced by
Oregon's Dyrol Burleson, OSC's
Darrell Horn, Southern Califor
nia's Rex Cawley and Dallas
Long, and then there are the
AAU greats led by Jim Beatty,
Ron Morris and Lazlo Tabori.
- It's truly a field worthy of
the rebirth of indoor track and
field in Portland.
The track the runners will use
i the meet Is also unique, in
that it is tho first designed and
built in the west in modern times
and it is the first to be construct
ed in Oregon of a typically Ore
gon product"-plywood.
It was designed by Bowcrman,
detailed by architect Jack Staf
ford, and carried out by Oregon
industry which mane it possible,
at half the cost of other indoor
tracks in the country.
3-HeaderSet
In Chiloquin ,
Chiloquin basketball fans get
three for the price of one to
night at the high school gym
when three members of the Klam
ath Falls Cily League and two
clubs from Warm Springs tangle
in action staled to start at 7
p.m.
Admission prices are 75 cents
for adults, 50 cents for students
and 25 cents for youngsters un
der 12.
The Sprague River Pipcllners
and the Fleet's Sporting Goods
five tangle in the opener. Im
mediately following, the T-Bird
number two unit will mix with
the Warm Springs Mustangs and
the Warm Springs Cougars will
(ace the Chiloquin Thundcrbirds
in the finale.
M4y 13m
WAYNI SCOn,
PAGE 19
Pelican Musclemen
Slate Two Matches
The Klamath Union wrestling
team is seriously considered one
of the chief threats among Ore-
gon prep squads eyeing the state
AFL Owners
Blast NBC
Coverage
HOUSTON, Tex. (UPD-Expan-
sion and the possibility of Los An
geles being shifted to San Diego
will be the main topics ol discus
sion today at the mid-winter
meeting of the American Football
League.
The infant league, which just
completed its first season of play,
leveled a broadside at the Nation
al Broadcasting Company's cov
erage of the Senior Bowl Thurs
day. AFL owners protested what was
called "flagrant violations of nor
mal reporting procedures."
NBC President Kobert Kinter
was telephoned by AFL owners
that "literally hundreds of per
sons have commented to us about
the unbelievable disregard of fair
play in mentioning the names of
National Football League teams
which had signed various players
and constantly refraining from
linking the names of our players
with our teams."
In Thursday's meeting Ameri
can Football League Commission
er Joe Foss made public that the
new league's television ratings
doubled by the end of its first
season.
He said the Ncilsen point rat'
ings showed there were twice as
many viewers the last game Dec,
18, than there were at the begin
ning ol the season.
Expansion will probably be an
other year away lor the league,
but Foss said three outside inter
ests were seeking franchises.
He did not name them, but he
said one group' had already de
posited $25,000 with the league in
a show of good laith,
Foss said the league meeting
probably will not adjourn until
Saturday. He said the possibility
of shifting the league office from
Dallas to New York still has to
be discussed.
Lucky Lanes
v MAJOR CLASSIC LIAOUI
W L
Ltwtl Chevron 521 23'
Sixth St. Oxyrjert Salt 4I' 27'i
Superlor Trov 47,i 2l!t
Sporiiman Hottl 45 31
Lucky Lanes 44 32
Maurv'i Foreltjn Cars Wt 33'-s
Southtrn Oregon Music. 36V
Klamath Tractor 31 31
Vallltr'i Cafe 33'. 42',
Ptlican Motors 25 51
Klngjley Voodoos 24 52
Bar a boo Eltctric Id 60
Jan. 11 results: Superior Troy 4. Bars-
boo Electric; Maury's Foreign Cars X
Lewis Chevron u sportsman Hotel 3.
Sixth St. Oxygen 1; so. Ore. Music 3,
Valuers Cafe If Lucky lanes J. Kiam
ath Tractor 1; Pelican Motors 0, King
aley Voodoos 4.
High team series, superior Troy 1(3 :
high Ind. game. John Ooltnshtk 234;
high ind. series, tun stemier j.
CRIAM PUP llAOUt
W
L
34
Three sieogti 33
Mad Matters 3
Tha Coolers 26
Town Clowns 34
Tha Peeps 22
Bowlers Tnree 20
Bowl Waavllt JO
No Names 14
Jan. II results: Mad Hatters J.
Bowl
Waavllt 1; Tha Goofen 3. Bowleri Thraa
1 1 Thraa Stooges 3, No Names li Town
Crowns 2, Tha Peeps 2.
High team oame, Bowlers Three M5;
high learn series. The Goolers 1303: high
inn. game, Bonnie Bramweil (sub) 17;
high Ind. series, Bonnie Bramweil 4M.
GYMNASTIC BIRDS
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP) - The
Bird brothers, senior Albert and
sophomore John of Jersey City,
N.J., are members of the Syra
cuse University gym team. Both
are S-foot-6 and weigh 140 pounds.
Al Bird is 23. John 20.
pete all-around.
Both com -
z
USED STEEL & PIPE
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2S21 So.cth Phone TU 4-3481
Sports Editor
Friday, January 13,
1961
championship title and past per
formances seem to bear out this
thinking. ,
However, tonight on Pelican
Court they face the Medford
Black Tornado in a Southern Ore
gon Conference dual match which
begins at 8 o'clock following Jay
vee matches starting at 6:30 on
Pelican Court.
And the Medford squad, direct
ed by fiery coach Bob Keith, is
seemingly not the least impressed
with the Pelican stature. They
may have a point because they
also have drawn numerous raves
as to their ability, , ,
KU coach DeLance Duncan,
while never overly optimistic con
cerning his team's chances, is
quietly conlident his group can
come through with the "big one."
He has noted vast improvement
among his wrestlers and much of
it is credited to the fact that
the younger matmen are always
pushing the older, more expe
rienced for spots on -the varsity
roster.
Duncan will call upon Jim Long,
Gary Head, Milo Crumrine, Gary
Leavitt, Ross Griggs, Eric Peter
son, Bob Mitchell, Dave Gon
zales, Les Husted, Art Mills, Joe
Cox and Gary Hancock to handle
the assignments this evening.
Tomorrow afternoon coach
Lloyd Manown and his freshmen
will travel to Grants Pass where
they will clash with the North
Junior High squad beginning at
1 p.m. '
i ,.
Unitas, Moore
Handed West
Starting Slots
LOS ANGELES (UPD-Coach
Vince Lombardi today named
quarterback Johnny Unitas and
right halfback Lennie Moore of
the Baltimore Colts among his
starters for the West All-Star Pro
Bowl team against the East Sun
day at the Coliseum.
Lombardi, in naming his prob
able offensive lineup, held in re
serve his two aces from the Green
Bay Packers, quarterback Bart
Starr and right halfback Paul
Hornung, the National Football
League's all-time scoring leader.
Lombardi was apparently set on
the strategy of letting teammates
Unitas and his favorite passing
target, Moore, work together, at
least for a while.
Named with-Unitas and Moore
in the backfield were Jon Arnett
of the Los Angeles Rams at left
half and Jim Taylor of the Pack
ers at fullback.
Coach Buck Shaw of the East
squad 1 named his Philadelphia
Eagle quarterback Norm Van
Brocklin as a starter in a back
field with John Crow of the St,
Louis Cardinals and Tommy Mc
Donald of the Eagles at halfbacks
and Jim Brown of the Cleveland
Browns at fullback.
Eagle Four
Ski Entry
WEED (Special) A four-man
squad of Siskiyou College skiers,
in company with coach Olle
Youngberg is at the Sugar Bowl
on Donner Summit to participate
in a big two-day seven-school
meet. The meet will continue
through Saturday and Sunday.
The Eagle team is made up of
Dick Ridgeway, Dunsmuir, Bob
Johnson, Weed, Ted Swan and
Bob Cioogln;, both of Mount Shas
ta. The group will compete in
both the , slalom and downhill
events.
The schools to be represented
in the event are Sierra Junior
College. Chico State College, the
University of Nevada, Stanford,
'Shasta. California and the Sis
kiyou College.
College Basketball
EAST
Penn State 7! Gettysburg 58
Connecticut 79, New Hampshire
77
Bates 75, Tufts 71
MIT 77, Lowell Tech 48
SOUTH
West Virginia 105, George Wash.
87
Furman 70, Clcmson 61 .
Virginia Tech 78, VMI 63
MIDWEST
Cincinnati 80, Wichita 57
Notre Dame 76, St. Francis
(PA) 54
Tulsa 81, Drake 69
SOUTHWEST
Houston 60, Bradley 59
- St. Louis 60. North Texas 40
FAR WEST
Utah 111, New Mexico 66
Montana 61, Denver 44
National Basketball Association
Thursday Results
Boston 124, Syracuse 118 lot)
Philadelphia 111, St. Louis 102
Detroit 124, Cincinnati 112
USC-Husky
Tilt Star
Attraction
By United Press International
Cage action is scattered along
the Coast tonight with the fea
ture attraction the USC-Washing-ton
game at Los Angeles. .
Troy is the new Coast king
after two stunning wins over Call
fornia in the Bears' lair.
The enigmatic Huskies have all
the ingredients for a chanv
pion, but have managed only four
wins in their first nine games.
They split with the rugged UCLA
Bruins last weekend in Seattle so
they are st'll in the thick of the
Big Five scramble and can stay
there with a split or sweep in
their two games against the Tro
jans this weekend.
UCLA hosts Arizona to round out
an attractive Los Angeles Sports
Arena twin bill tonight and tomor
row the Brums meet California's
befuddled Bears. !
Latest Big Five statistics show
Troy's smooth center John Rudo-
metkin leading the scoring parade
with 39 points in two games.
Washington's Charlie Hanson,
another classy center, is the most
accurate shooter with 7 hits in 9
casts. Rudonietkin is also impres
sive in this department with 16-for-28.
Washington's Clint Names is the
top free throw shooter and Cali
fornia's muscular Bill McClintock
is top rebounder.
Stanford is at Oregon tonight
for the first of a pair. Oregon
Stale faces. Washington State and
Long Beach State is at' Fresno
State in a CCAA battle.
San Francisco State opens de
fense of its Far West Conference
crown when it travels to Chico
State. The Gators showed they
would be tough to handle this year
by bopping University of Pacific
of the West Coast Athletic Con
ference earlier this week.
Nevada is at Humboldt State
and Santa Clara is in Honolulu
for a rematch with Hawaii.
Former USC star Roy Irvin
scored 21 points to lead Mirror
Glaze over Pasadena College, 88'
67. last week.
OWN AN OLDS?
rOUR SATISFACTION
IS OUR NO. 1 JOB!
Vquicki
friendly!
competent i
FAIRLY
PRICED I
OLDS
MOTfCTS YOU ROCKIT... AND YOUR POCKITI
DICK B. MILLER CO.
OLDS
7th & Klometh
Houston Derails Braves;
Unbeaten List Shrinking
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Texas, suh. is big, bold, brash
and to Bradley's basketball
Braves just plain bad!
For the second time in two sea
sons, tne university ot nousion
has derailed one of Bradley's un
beaten streaks. Thursday night, it
was a 60-59 upset that snapped
the Braves' nation-leading major
college winning string at 18. Brad
ley had started the new one,
which carried through the Nation
al Invitation Tournament champi
onship and 12 games this season,
Beavers
Missing
Pauley
CORVALLIS (Special)-An elev
en-man Oregon state traveling
lad instead of the usual 12
climbed board the airplane bound
for Cougarville this morning and
that missing man could make
a difference.
The Beavers tangle with the
Washington State cagcrs on the
Cougar court tonight in the first
of a two-game series.
Left behind with a badly
sprained ankle was sophomore
flash Steve Pauly, the ex-Beaver-
ton star, who has performed so
well for coach Slats Gill in recent
games.
Gill took Bob Jacobson, Jay
Carty, Karl Anderson, Terry Ba
er, Jim Woodland, Steve Flynn
Stan Stafford, Bill Wold. Dave
Hayward, Gary Rossi and Ernie
Johnson on the Washington inva
sion.
The Beavers enter the series on
the long end of a 6-4 record and
despite their weakened condition
are still rated a slight favorite
over the Cougars.
New Cities
Make Bids
HOUSTON (AP)-Three appli
cations for new franchises were
on hand today but two American
Football League owners said they
will oppose expansion of the year
old league for the 1961 season.
Commissioner Joe Foss declined
to identify the applicants or cities
involved as the league began the
second day of its first winter
meeting.
Unanimous approval by the cur.
rent eight clubs is needed for ex
pansion. Two owners told repor
ters they are unalterably opposed
to any additions this year.
Foss declined comment on 1961
possibilities but indicated expan
sion is a detinue possibility for
1962.
FOUR BIG RACES ON TV
NEW YORK (AP) - Sports
Network will televise the four
$100,000 thoroughbred races to be
held during the Florida season.
The first big event will be the
Widcner Handicap to be run Feb,
18 at Hialeah. This will be fol
lowed bv the Flamingo on Feb,
25 at Hialeah, the Gulfstream
Handicap, March 18, and the
Florida Derby at Gulfstream
Park on April 1. The features are
part of the Race of the Week TV
program arranged with three Flor
ida tracks by Richard E. Bailey,
president of the network.
LET US
GIVE YOU
SERVICE
THE WAY
YOU
LIKE IT!
Gutardian
Maintentince
CADILLAC
Ph. 4-4 154
after having 15-game streak
broken by the same big, bold,
brash and bad Houstons on Feb.
22 last year.
It was an Illinois boy-hailinglP'ons made it 2-0 in Skyline Con.
from Wood River about 150 miles
south of Bradley's Peoria campus
-who applied the string-snapper
in the intersectional game at
Houston.
Jim Lemmon, a 6-2 senior, sank
a free throw with 35 seconds left
to close out the victory over the
nation's No. 2 team and one of
five major unbeaten clubs in the
country. The two trips to Houston
have cost the braves a 35-ganie
streak.
Now the perfect record list is
down to Ohio State, Louisville,
DePaul and Vanderbilt, with Ohio
State's top-ranked Buckeyes hold
ing the longest winning streak
16 games. They began it just be
fore their rush to the NCAA
championship last March. "
Bradley blew a 10-point half-
time lead fashioned on sophomore
Tim Robinson's 22-point burst and
went scoreless the last 54 min
utes of the game. Lemmon, who
had 10 points was fouled in the
act of shooting, missed the first
free throw, but sank the second
to break a 59-all tie.
Defense-wizard Gary Phillips.
who has made a career of bot
tling touted scorers and twice
stopped fabulous Oscar Robertson
with less than 15 points, held Rob
inson to two points in the second
half. Bradley's Chet Walker, one
of the top ten scorers, had a rough
night with 13 points half his sea
son average.
The Braves remain the Missouri
Valley Conference leader and fa
vorite since Houston (now 8-5
pulled out of the league this vear.
but other MVC clubs showed there
are other pitfalls ahead.
Reawakening Cincinnati (10-3)
survived a shower of debris from
unhappy1 Wichita fans and crushed
the Wheatshockers 80-57 for a 2-2
league record as soph Tom Thack
er's 20 points led a balanced at
tack. Tulsa held Drake's high.
souring vjus uuyaon without a
point in tho first half while hand
ing the Bulldogs their second los
in 12 games, 81-69. St. Louis (10-
4) was the only favorite to win-
routing North Texas State (1-10
60-40.
Virginia Tech (5-0) and West
Virginia (5-1) remained a half-
game apart in the Southern Con
ference. Tech, winning its seventh
against two losses over-all,
whipped VMI 78-63 as Chris Smith
scored 26 points. Sophomore Rod
Thorn fired 32 points in a 105-87
rout of George Washington that
extended West Virginia's winning
sireaK 10 eight and its over-all
record to 10-2.
Dave King's tip-in with 20 sec.
NW Preppers
Earn Honors
NEW YORK (AP) - Four Pa-I
ciflc Northwest prep stars hold
places on the tenth annual All-
America high school football
squad picked by Scholastic Maga
zine, national high school educa
tion weekly.
They are Scott Miller, Kelso,
Wash., an end; John McLaughlin,
Kirkland, Wash., and Hoyt Ken
ney, Portland, Ore., tackles; and
Stan Tarter, Nampa, Idaho, a center.
JIM BOND'S
GREATEST
mmm
CCC Mammoth bull elk and hear them
OCC ling, bugling, bugling ....
SEE
Fantastic fly and spin-fishing on the
Missouri end Madison Rivers, only a
day's drive away ....
etc
The "trapping"
in the high peaks and crags ....
3700 feet of the finest true adventure
films.
SEE
Mills School Audo
TONIGHT
Doors Open 7:00 P.M.; Show at 8:00 P.M.
Admission: Adults only $1.25; Children only 75e
tax incl.
TICKETS AT
THE DOOR
Sponsored ly
SCRItN, FINI
IIS
onds left gave Connecticut (U
third straight Yankee Conference
victory. 79-77 over New Hamp.
shire, and Utah's defending Cham
ference tussling, 111-66 over New
Mexico as Billy McGill scored 27
points.
All five Notre Dame starters hit
double figures, led by John TuU
ly's 16, in a 76-54 romp over St
Francis 'Pa.), and 26 points h
Tom Conard and 21 bv Jenv
Smith led Furman's 70-61 victory
over Clemson.
Ducks,
Indians
Paired
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON.
Eugene (Special )-Coach Stevo
Belko's Oregon Ducks open a
long stand at McArthur Court Fri
day and Saturday nights against
ine tough Manlord Indians, who
upset California in their last
game.
The Ducks have nine of their
next 10 games at home after
playing seven of the first nine '
away from the Igloo. "We're glad
to be back," coach Belko re
marked, "and I'm sure it isn't
going to hurt us any to play
on our own floor for a while."
Belko declined to name his line
up for the Stanford opener except
to say Glenn Moore would be
center, Charlie Warren at a for
ward and Denny Strickland would
handle either a guard or a for
ward spot.
If Strickland stays in the back
court then Bill Simmons will prob
ably be the other forward. If
Strickland moves up front then
Butch Kimpton, Leon Hayes or
John Mack would provide tho
starting guards.
Mack came along nicely in tho.
Idaho series and is certain to
see a great deal of action even
if he does not open the game.
The same is true of Wally
Knecht, who replaces Moore at
center.
Stanford, often on the short side
in the past few years, has both
good height and shooting this sea
son. John Hendry (6-3) and John
Windsor (6-8). have done an, ex
cellent job at' .forward and Coach
Howie Dallmar has Rich Hosley
(6-7) and Bob Whelan (6-9) at
center. The Indian guards hava
been bolstered considerably by
twin sophomores, Doug and Don
Clemetson, and still have Bub
Bowling on hand.
The Indians have a victory over
Utah as well as California in
their rugged schedule and come
into the Oregon series even up
while the Ducks are 5-4.
Tht
DANMOORE
HOTEL
1217 S.W. Morrison St.
Portland, Oregon
All Transient Guests. All those
who come return. Rates net
tee high, net low. Free fa
rofa, TV's and Radio's. Repu
tation for cleanliness. Children
under eeven, no eharja.
bug-
of gagey mountain goat
Klemath Jayceet
MOJtCTION IQUIPMtNT
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