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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 15, 1961)
Vlfhitebird Eagers Mold Top Spot In Conference" ' ' On Pqqe3-B JiTBARKS 'II BITES V ' I. WAVMI 4POTT - mm A phont conversation with Willy Palmborg in La Grand Saturday morning aftar ha had lost a 72-48 evar timar with Eastarn Oregon and haard tha nawt that tha Klamath Union Palicant had handlad Madford 58-56 in lik situation ravaaled tha fact that Wally it not entire- ly satisfied with tha affort h is gatting from hit ball club. - Can't say I blame him . . . taking them one at a time , . . and reviewing each one's true potential . , you might have to ad mit he has a problem. 'Wally has the answer . . . says he, "II my club had the won the bail gam tor a team heart to 'come back' or 'get up like the Pelicans do . . . we'd be.'in good shape." The Owls have come back . . . and they have also failed to "come back." I see what Wally means . . . and I think the lack of individual elfdrt on the parts ol some of bis players is the answer . . . The Owls, Irom where I sit, have the potential to handle al most anything in the Oregon Col-j legiate Conference ... but they had better hurry. They w ill have no better chance to prove .1 than this coming Tues day when they tangle with the Southern Oregon Red Raiders at OTI. Viiiis one 1 won't miss ... ' Klamalh Falls and its baseball players rate pretty high with tliej Philadelpnia rhillies' organization. At a meeting January 6-7 in San Luis Obispo, California Phil lie scout boss Jim Gallagher gave the gathering of western Phillie scouts the go-ahead on the 1961 piajers' clinic and tryout cam paign . . . and he placed spe cial emphasis on the fact that Klamath Falls was probably the lit hi site to be considered on the schedule. Glenn Elliott and Eddie Bock- man, who appeared here last year lor the Phillie tryouts, were; tickled to boost the KF area be cause ol the tremendous turnout that attended the clinic last sea son .. . and Gallagher remem bered, too. There wili be another one held but and I still don't at the same time it's possible. This is not picking on refe rees, either. I know lots of them . . . and they all put their pants Oregon Gains Split; WSU Edges Beavers PULLMAN (AP) - Washington State hit at a near 50 per cent clip from tho field Saturday night to even a weekend series against Oregon State with a 7241 victory. The Beavers won Friday night ran m how ib"b. Charlie Sells and Nick August led the Cougars. August getting 18 points, the 6-foot-7 Sells 19. EUGENE, Ore. (AP)-Oregon, sparked by the shooting and back board play of Bill Simmons and Charlie Warren, beat Stanford, 61 58. Saturday night and gained a split in a two-game weekend col lege basketball series. The contest was almost a com plete reversal of Friday night's 67 60 Stanford victory. Saturday night it was Oregon on one leg at a time . . . and, away the Cougar lead that started they can have good nights andjearly but never managed to close The Beavers kept c h i p p i n g which won it at the free-throw line, scoring 19 one-pointers to 12 they can have bad ones. But all the gap. OSC inched to 34-31 just before half time but a Cougar s p u r t gon, too. for Stanford, which had a 23-21 field goal edge. A 57-31 edge in re bounds was a big factor lor Ore- HI HATFIELD . . . honor nomine in all, they're doing their work (and believe tnce me, its a thankless job that someone has to do I to the best of their ability. Many times, referees ... as do ' sportswriters,' sportscasters, etc. . . . have ('favorites" in any given game . . . they just about have to or they wouldn't bother spread it to 38-31 The Beavers got back in the show with five minutes left and trailing 55-5!, when Terry Baker Simmons, the game's high scor er with 18 points, and Warren, who made 16, got rolling after Stanford had jumped into a 6-1 A Soft Two Points set up Bob Jacobsen's lay-in with!lead and drove Oregonto a 19-10 a nne.hanneti nass lur The Cougar went into outside weave and just about sewed it up when Baker fouled out with 2:52 left. Bill WoM topped the Beavers' scoring with 15. Dukt Worms Up , DURHAM, N.C. (AP) - Duke's nationally ranked Blue Devils warmed up to their task in the second half Saturday night after a slow start and raced to a 70 62 victory over Maryland. A crowd of 6.000 watched the eighth-ranked Blue Devils erase a five-point half time deficit. The game was deadlocked sev- eral times until two jump shot baskets by Simmons and Wally Knecht's free throw gave Oregon a 31-28 halflime advantage. Oregon expanded its advantage to from 7 to 9 points early in the second half. But near the end Stanford, led by Bud Bowling and John Hendry, surged back to nar row the margin to two points. In the last two minutes Oregon froze the ball and the scoring was limited to free throws. Hendry, who did not start. topped Stanford scorers with 16. Oregon's season record now is 6-5. Stanford is 5-7. this season, after school is outt officiate in the first place be probablv. onlv this season attend ance will be limited to strictly those playcis invited. According to Bockman and El liott, the West Coast scouts, this cause of a complete disinterest in the game. Since they are fa miliar with the game and appre ciate talent, or the lack of, some times they watch one player, us Is definitely better because theyjual'y the good one, more ; than ran net a much closer look at others ... so I can see how the individual whin there are lesser numbers. Also it guaran tees the boys attending that they will benefit from closer supervi sion and training. ' Elliott, who was in town Tues day, told u that one of baseball's top names would be on hand to they could be accused of "hom ering" . . . but I'd bet my shirt they never do it deliberately, Odds and Ends ... Sacred Heart Trojan Elmo Le Beau, a pretty cool sophomore, hasn't been living up to all that SUPPOSE HE'S SERIOUS? When you see this look in Pelican reserve guard Sherm Allen's eye it's relatively safe to assume he means it, Allen cut loose with a one hender from the top of the key to give the Pelicans a 58-56 victory over Medford there Friday night, Allen's fateful shot came with just two seconds left in an over time period, Hornets Take First Place As Lakeview Loses To V The Henley Hornets took undis-iran away with the game in the puted possession of first place in third quarter with a tremendous the Rogue Valley A2 League Sat- 19-point outburst. Coach Jerry urday night by waltzing past a Johnson said it was "another lethargic Phoenix five 54-38. team effort." While the Hornets were run-i Ray Brown, a high scoring ning their league record to 4-0 guaro, was it nis usual role as and their season record to 9-1, Uh Hornets' top point producer;! the Lakeview Honkers ran afoul, he had M counters. Lanky Kent of a fired-up Illinois Valley five gPOET WAYNE SCOTT. Sports Editor Sunday, January 15, 1961 PAGE 1-B Pelican Matmen Now 7-0 OTI Owls absorbed their second istrnight defeat here Saturday night at the hands of the hot shooting Eastern Oregon College Wolves, as they were waxed 73-64. The Wolves, throwing bombs at the basket from all angles, hit on 25 of 47 field goal attempts DeLance Duncan's Klamath Un-I'm' a Per cent average to the ion wrestlers continued to crush 0ws" pathetic 22 per cent on 17 everything in sight Saturday buckets in 76 attempts. LA GRANDE (Special) The Wolves went out ahead to stav in me second naif during some incredibly cold shooting -by the Owls. Although they were outre bounded 47-40. the Wolves made the most of their opportunities while the lid was on the basket for the visitors. Smith was dynamite under the boards until he fouled out and when they ran over the Prine- ville Grizzlies to the tune of 33-9. Using a combination of skill and power, the Pelican mat corps "We piayed ourselves a ter rible ball game." coach Palmberg paced the boardmen by captur ing 17 rebounds. Bob Petersen turned in his usual workmanlike job and, while his shootinc was won all but one match to pdstiwllle story. There are liable to said after the game. "We justjoff, he pulled in 11 off the boards. -couldn't hit and that was the1 The Owls swine back inin rvm. their seventh consecutive victory of the season. Friday, the KUHS wrestlers took some air out of the Medford Black Tornado bv be some lineup changes when wel play Southern Oregon Tuesday. Jumping jack guard Leon Wil- ference action Tuesday night by hosting the SOC Red Raiders in -the first game of that intense rivalry for 1961. Palmberg is hop- a score of 36-10. Medford hadiWiln 18 counters, but hit only five son topped the Owls pointm.-.kers ing his charges decide to Dlav ...:,u ,o L...1 L:i I r:.'i.i i . .. f J been figured as the Pelicans' toughest Southern Oregon Confer ence opposition. Gary Head, a rugged 106-pound- er, turned in the lone pin for KUHS against Prineville but eight of his mates won decisions to result in the lopsided final score. Art Mills drew Klamath's most difficult assignment when he of 26 field goal attempts. He had a perfect oight-for-eight from the foul line. Cenlcr Sammy "Cool Cat" Smith had 14 points for sec ond honors. The limber Owl fouled out with six minutes left in the game and OTI lost control of the boards at that point. Larry Applcgate. who scored 50 faced the Grizzlies' clever Chuck i scored 27 points Saturday and was ably assisted by Tom Neal, who . pumped in 17 points from outside to cause further trouble for the invaders. The lead see-sawed back and forth in the first half but the and dropped a 55-47 ball game, Henley 54, Phoenif 11 The Hornets started slowly! ' against the visiting Pirates but Pender Keeps Share Of 160 Pound Crown Holiday in a 178-pound match. The exciting match ended in a draw. Bob Mitchell, with a 10-2 deci sion, Gary Lcavitt with 7-0 and Jim Long and Milo Crumrine with 4-0 decisions, were also impres sive for the Pelicans. The Jayvees were equally tough in subduing the Grizzly juniors 34-17. Gary Nctzcr and Rick Cur rin pinned their opponents. Vanity aesulls 'I Long (Kl (Ik. Borden IP). 4-0. IIM Head (Kl pinned Edgerly (), 0:37. Crumrine (Kl dec. Jones (P), 4-0. 1!3 Leavltl (Kl dec. Hutchinson (P), 7-0. 130 Griggs K) dec. Ouanl PI. 4-3. lie Pelerson K and Bllyau IP), drew i-i. 141 Mitchell (K) dec. Sharp (PI, 10-1. 141 Goniales (K) dec. Chase IP), 1-0. isr Wlshard (Kl dec. Grubb IP). l-O. He Gray (P) pinned Ewlng (Kl, 1:41. We Mills IK) end Holiday IP), drew 3-J. Hvywt Hancock IK) dec. Slrouaham. M. Final score: Klamath Union 33, Prine ville ?. Junior Varsity Results Ollnger Arrltole Hunt Neal Turlay Woll Total! points in the two-game scries, i Petersen Nesn Smith L. Wilson C. Wilson Mugger ud Brown -Johnson relets - work with the players attending coach Marv Delplanche has ex- but for Phillie reasons he pecieo ... not until Friday was unable to tell us who the man might be . . . I have a sneaking suspicion that big Paul Waner, one of the all Jime greats, might show . . . it's possible. . night. Said Marv, "This lad has tremendous scoring potential . . he should get into the dou- Ible figures each game . . . " : So . . . Eimo comes ud with a 112 the other night . .. suddosc jjl if. Jf "c KUL "ie message, a gooo Doy Th-rp art innw advantages to 1 10 wa'eh . . . Speaking of SHA tieing the conch of a football teaml- "'ere are a couple of nerv- ihat uin ninp iimrs . . . no ous seniors on the squad defeats, no losses, after all. Iand now about 'his Keith Mur- Rex Hunsaker, the genial grid boss at Oregon Tech is now rea lizing some of the rewards that should naturally come with an accomplishment of this kind. Rex has not only been nominat ed for the "Man of the Year" award at the annual Bill Hay ward banquet to be held in Port land soon ... but he is also a strong candidate for the head football coaching job at Brigham Young University. Within a week or so we should have a concrete answer from;Contini''ng BYU . . . Oregon Tech's football field will scorn a Iitt:e strange without Hun saker around . . . one kind of gets used to his winning ray . . . lie shoots the eyes out ol that basket. The Southern Oregon Red Raid ers and the Oregon Tech Owls are paired in the first of their Honkers Beat Malin, 53-40 MALIN (Special)-Hank Smith's Tulelake Honkers showed their first win over the Malin Mus tangs was no fluke as they rolled to a convincing 53-40 here Satur day night. The Honkers, paced by two snapshooting guards, Joe Rogers and Tom Alcorn, moved out to a 14-9 lead in the first quarter and were never behind. Rogers and Alcorn killed a Malin zone by bombing the basket with long shots. Rogers hit for 32 and Al corn had 18 points. A trio of Mustangs, Larry Rick, Nick Johnson and Dick Clark Referee Connolly said ''Dow near was cut badly and bleeding too much. I had to stop it." The doctor, lie said, had told him to stop it if Dowies started to bleed badly in the round. Doctor' Francis Wixlcd had BOSTON (AP - Classy Paul Pender of Brookline, Mass., Sat- Gooding, - a rapidly improving 'urday night retained his share of sophomore, had nine markers and, the world middleweight cliam was a demon on- the boards Mike Consbruck led the Pirates with 11 points. In the JV encounter, the Henley juniors posted their eighth win in a row by dumping the Phoenix JV's 44-33 The babv Hornets were led by Steve Rciling, who scored 18 points, and Charlie Thompson, who snared 21 re bounds. . The scoring summary: PlteenH (111 Slooer a. Rlchev 1 u. more 5. Morrison 2. c Johnson a. Davis. ,-onsorucK ii. nerris 7, colfex 5. Tomp. kins. Henley (14) Chepman 4, Tacchlnl e, Allbrllton 7. Wolfe 3, Gooding , Ken dall t, Herrlngshaw 2. C. Blotsky 2. Brown 13. Barrel!, L. Blofsky. IV 5 Hookers 47 ILLINOIS VALLEY (Special) - Lakeview suffered its second loss'Klamath Union frosh wrcstlin8mandatory eight-count ball before then. The scoring summary: SATURDAY OAMf ' Scoring Summary JOC 03) Fga-Fg Pl-Fla PI Re Tp Holmes .i o-o 4 0 7 Applegau 13 10-13 ' 2 2 23 . . 2-0 5-1 4 S 1 0-3 4-1 S I 7 10-4 4-1 S 4 It !- 3-1 5 11 17 0- 4 04 SOS 1- 1 0-0 III C IS Ji ll 40 11 Fga-Fg Ft-Fte PI Re T 110 10-11 2 15-13 1-2 4-2 2 3 4 ' 15-4 4-2 5 n 14 20-5 - i 4 IS 10-1 94 4 1 S 04 04 1 0 0 1-0 2-1 111 4-2 24 3 5 4 24-17 4S-M II 47 M (Cohllnufd cm -C . Sugar Ray Denies Paternity Charge pionship by stopping game Terry Downes, the American-trained Briton, in the seventh round of a 15-rounder at the Boston Arena. The 30-year-old champion had floored the 24-year-old challenger in the first round and had opened two nasty cuts on Terry's face in 4U r....iu M,.r. wrc luuitu luuim, .. , ,. . . . . Downes. although he foughti- , 3 strongly, bled profusely from the fdurth round on. lively scrap at 57 seconds of the seventh round. Downes was gashed over his;dr.r"s75 left eye and on the bridge of the w-Reinmiiier iki dec. congioton P) nose. NEW YORK (AP) - Former boxing champion Sugar Ray Rob inson denies he is the father of a child born to a singer and danc er, although he admits there was a romance between them. At the paliinily trial Friday in Special Sessions Court, , Robinson answered "No, I am not, when asked if he was the father of the baby born Feb. 9. 1953, to Bar- hum Trpuinna 31 " rimiii in puinn aion iM, , . t -jj, , . loo McKinnev (Kl dec. McKemie (pi. nooinson, lormcr miaaieweigni IIS Velkos (Kl dec. Puckelt IP), 44. 123 Gllmort IK) dec. Flowers IP), SO, 130 Henson IP) dec. Herrero (Kl, 16-10. 13o Wilson (K) and J, Puckelt (P). Referee Bill Connolly halted the KU Grapplers the Englishman after the fifth and sixth rounds. Pender, making the second de fense of his New York-Massa- chusclts-Europe recognized cham pionship, set Die crowd of aboul fi.500 into an uproar when he to t4t-MedlorS IP) plnnM Slllwell (K). 157-Meyhew (Kl and Flynn (PI, drew 2-7. 14S-Nelier (K) pinned Merwln (P), ,1:00. 171 Currln (K) pinned Cerwln (P), 2:53. 191 Hemel IK) pinned Vice (PI. 2:70. 191-Cok IK) dec. Klrkpelrlck IP), 270.1 Final score: Klamath Union 34, Prlno- vlllo 17. (Continued on Page 1-B) Jkl kllL f2. D floored Downes with a right IVD iVOf Til M7llhe jaw in the first round. Torn irncn al fi'iA an1 circuit.- GRANTS PASS (Spccial)-Thc nead whjle ,)e was gjvcn ,he annual four game series ... and had nine coun'e"- Rlck als9 8aln- if this isn't enough to move the most jaded of fans . . , I'll check in my typewriter. ered in 18 rebounds. The scoring summary: Tulelake (51) Long 4, Rogers 22, Rudeslll 5. Alcorn II, Oehlrlch 4, Ma- harry, Sura. Roberts. ...It- . tl Slrlr 4 Got hold Of a July 22, 1947 issue'eark . Brown 2, Prescott 0, Stastny I. of the Hsr.-iM nA m-t ,! ,., Sleyskal 4, O. Johnson. an item headed "OVS Sign-Up OVS? Th was Oregon Voca- I tional School and there were 35 . students enrolled in the four classes offered, two body-fender, but! auto mechanics and a class for t cooks ... but interested parties. Chosen field can t be passed by. rom two to 12 callers" per Personally ... for Rex's sake dy. ere inquiring as to the I hope he gets the job . . . but start of new classes. I won t be mad if he sticks: A far cry from today's Oregon around. What will be . . . will Tech and its present enrollment! but that s the way it start- Saturday night, both of them com ing at the hands of the Illinois Valley Cougars. The tall Cougars took this one 55-47. Coach. Ted McKee's Honkers. coming off an easy 49-30 Friday night win over Phoenix, just couldn't get started. Junior Chuck Cossey, playing his best game of the year, led all scorers with 15 points but they weren't enough. Illinois Valley's well balanced attack saw four players in double figures. The scoring summary: ' Illinois Valley (55) Burton 12. T. Johnson 13, 0. Johnson II. Belrd 3. Tuck. er 4. Kennedy 10. Hill. Lokovlew (47) G. Peters . Cossey Mccoy 7, Mexwell 2, L. Peters e. Reynolds, McKoy 4. squad, led by Grant Humphrey who scored his fifth straight pin in five matches and, Mike Hitch ing who won nis tourm consccu- esson tive matcn, rolled over tne worm Grants Pass freshmen 27-19 here Saturday afternoon. Rod Solan. 88 pounds, took his Both weighed 160, Although tne American gave the British champion a boxinq for most of the fight, Downes gave the champion a ter rific scare in the fifth round. The husky Briton stunned Pen der with a rieht and a left to liin man to tne mat in a: is minuics jaw ant lncn drove nim to tnc is, Cook 7, cd. Wonder if they had a football team that year? be. Whoops! I've heard a coach growl at, or about, the officiat ing at basketball games . . . and chew towels etc. . . . and cuss "homers" somewhat vehe mently . . . even at the state tournament, but it rarely is car-lsented at the annual Bill Hay rird past that stage. iward banquet in Portland soon. Roseburg athletic director Jim, Hi Hatfield is the one. Aiken, however, appealed his case to a higher court . . . what ly is. is just plain mad. He. Trout Season Dates Posted PORTLAND (AP) The dates for Oregon's 1961 general trout season were tentatively decided on Saturday by the stale Game Commission: April 22 through Oct. 31. The dales would apply to all parts of the state except Zones 1, 0 anu sue cwiiuihsmuh iu;. , i j , . it had decided to tentatively set;'1? took ""vantage of a brat in.vi is, tifi n on u nian (Continued Oa 3-B) Shasta Takes Simple Win WEED I Special -Shasta Col- the season in Zone l and the high lalrAc a( ttu, rncf-arlu Mnnntain Klamalh Falls has a second1,,..-, Mav throueh Oct. 31. nominee for the "Man of thei ne regulations were decided Year award which will be Die- tii,,., . krino k.r. uuuu iui ii'n iiiev a nmi ma, "-'v Ftiday. Final regulations will be set after another hearing in Port land .Tnn 27 In case you're concentrating on! Thm-P wnnld ho an exceotion for anomer spon rigni now. Hauieid is the guy who directed the Klam- for a 5-poinlcr to get the clash underway The remainder of the Klamath matmen followed and scored four decisions and three pins between them, while the Cavers made three decisions and two pins. In the junior varsity matcn, the Klamath juniors took the Caver cubs by a score of 34-26. Gary Wlshard, Jay Paxton, Chuck Sweetland, Larry Tice, and How- 54 for Pender, ard Coulson picked up pins for ; Klamath grapplers. Coulson made q I j f the fastest pin of the day as he I OtS I OD Mn:tA kl. mn l thtt mat with: ' jiaiicu 111a man iu ,,.v ...... :25 seconds gone in the first round. The scoring summary: Verslty Resulls M Road Sloan IK) pinned Bellinger IGP), 5:13. ropes with a flurry of punches But Pender snapped out of it and proceeded to give Terry a boxing lesson. Pender was leading on the scorecard of all three officials for the completed six rounds. Referee Connolly and Judge Harry Sund berg each had him ahead 59-55 under the 10-point "must" sys tem. Judge Steve Salek had it 59- e lags, 63-47 COEUR D'ALENE Iduho (AP) Black Wind Tops Crater MEDFORD (Special) Med ford made up for their heart breaking Friday defeat at the hands of Klamoth Falls here Sat urday night when they waxed the visiting Central Point Comets 82-61 with a tremendous second half scoring spree. Medford jumped off to a 21-14 first quarter lead, but had to beat down the Comets who came with in a point with only 3:30 left in the first half tn gain a 37-28 half- time lead. After the close first half, the Tornado came on to dominate the remainder of the game. Bob Quinncy poured in a total uf 31 points and had seven re bounds to lake top honors for the evening. In other Southern Oregon Con ference Saturday action, the Grants Pass Cavemen mobbed the Ashland crew 75-46 in Grants Pass, in a game in which all of the GP bench saw action and all but one scored. Ashland's Sid DcBocr lead the scoring honors with 17. Raiders Run Past Wolves ASHLAND (Special) -' The Southern ' Oregon . Red Raiders warmed up for their Tuesday clash with OTI here Saturday night by running over the OCE Wolves 63-54. The win gave them the undispuled first place in the Oregon Collegiate Standings with four straight wins. The Raiders hit a scorching 54 per cent from the field, .70 per cent of which came in the sec ond niiarlnr when thev had to fidht off a determined OCR rally Dave Spencer of the OCE squad paced the Wolves with 18, to gath er in high scoring honors tor the evening. He was followed by SOC s little guard Dave Gardner, who ' pumped in 7 for 11 field goals he attempted for a 16-point total. -.'.'' The scoring summary: SOC (41) Huohes 7. vannlct 10. Payne 10. Gardner 14. Shuns 7. Elck worth 4, Tlchenor I, Honnon 1. Hlnk, Jtn- sen. oca (54) Hanoi 3. spencer is. volt 2. Renkln e. Land 12. Nyo, Bennett 1. Cole, Woll f. and welterweight king, testified that in May 1952, lie was at Pompton Lakes, N. J., training for a bout with Joey Maxim. ' Robinson said he did not return -to New York until shortly before ' the June U5 fight. Mrs. Trevigne claims her son, . Paul, was conceived during a ' tryst with Robinson on May 10 in a New ork hotel. . , George Gainford, Robinson's former manager, and Charles L.' . Austin, who served as financial secretary at the Pompton Lakes camp, boih testified that Robin- son never lelt the camp. Furthermore,-they said, he was under strict orders against sexual rela- : tions before a bout. Robinson said he had met Mrs. : Trevigne in Boston in 19511 he ; invited her to Chicago to see him fight, and on the train, returnirc East they had relations for the first time. ;: Robinson and. Mrs.' Trovigne. both Negroes, wore married at -the time. Mrs. Trevigne has tes- tilled their romance, took place -during a ' separation from ' her husband. Robinson also told of traveling ' to Oklahoma City in 1951 with :. Mrs. -Trevigne. Then he went to : Europe, Robinson said, and did : not see her until the summer of ; 1952. . Robinson, ,14, admitted giving ; Mrs. Trevigne money in 195S and . 1959. He denied this constituted - support for the child or constitut- -ed recognition of parentage. j Robinson's wife, Edna Mae. sued last month for a separation. The three judges hearing the paternity suit scheduled a deci-. sion for Feb. 16. ' . Bradley Topi 100 DENTON, Tex: (AP) - Chet Walker hit 40 points and grabbed U. I il . I: n ,1 I defense to rack UD an easv 62-471 w-v.nell (GP) pinned John stliwelli"" "" rumanu . .1. u. ?P ' ay 62 47,iK). 5 . . pulled away from Gonzaga to take over the heme team College of the Siskiyou? here Saturday night. The COS Eagles battled nip-and-tuck with the" Knights until the end of the first half when they couldn't seem to do anything finUt ,nj Bl,A- Iks VM:nt.l ,(K). 3-0. ,,B. a. u.c , 141 Cole (GP1 104 Rich McSweln (Kl dec. Smith (GP 3- 2. 115 Grant Humphrey (K) pinned Head (GP), 3:13. 123-Rlch Beth (K) dec. Williams (GP), 0-4. 130-Tom Diver (K) dec. Johnson (GP). 4- 0. 134 Cornell (GP) dec. Tom provancne -With Frank Bosone hitting from 23 rebounds to pace Bradley to a 110-72 basketball victory over North Texas Stale Saturday night. the closing dates in the high Cas-!-umP t0.a 40-24 halftime margin. cade lakes If preliminary plans are folloved, East and Paulina lakes u-nuld he closed Oct. B. and took them on to the Little.Thrrev Un un.ilr! tw. rlnailiw on World Scries in Hastings, Neb.,!trjbutarv streams on several uf 85 lhe blow which dealt the Ea- I 'me, I'll never forget in and hekhe Cascade lakes in September ,8les tneir .loss I beat some p-etty touch customers and October to nrolect snawnini! fe scoring I end evidently others, feels that ath Falls American Legion team the Indians got "homered" at Eu- lo the West Coast Championship: gene recently, and he made his feelings known, via the Associat ed Press. I can't argue with him wasn't there ... but I'm sure en route. He did a great job! trout that his contention las outlined in j with some great ball players . . .1 A 15-dav reduction in the fall I :. .1 f-ll l-- . . I tV rriaays nor.M nas some men ui man uiai ioiiows mm 'rial-salmon season was ordered lor catro 10. Hewkins 2. Joroon j, Zaiunar . . . and some basis in fact. He field retired at the end of theithe Tmpqua River, the new sen- M Lrv. suggests some ways in which the past season) has really got his son to run from Aug. 2 through situation might be corrected . . .iwork cut out for him. Can hardly Oct. 31. The bag limit would some good . . . some bad. Atiblame Hi for retiring when he'allow five jack salmon from 12 i did . . . think a moment . . . to 20 inches tn he taken during how often does a guy get the the season. There also was a Shasta's speedy guards. Mike Anthony and Larry B e a k 0 n, turned in brilliant performances rH ikM :Hl.t ..J ....... & KM:uii2l. "". "u 1"'"" Hvvwt-Cherlson (GP) dec. Ino IK), 10-5. pinned Terry Chris- a 63-47 verdict from the Bulldogs here Saturday night. Gonzaga went cold al the end of both halves and Bosone's foul shooting marie the margin during the last Bulldog slump, Frank Burgess, the nation's leading scorer, got 24 points, con necting in two spurts. He also led dec. Larry Peacore IK I. 54. 141 Oean IGP) Hansen IK), 1:01. c, ,11.. uiklM fir I niftMri Miwir (gpi. 3:55. iGonzaga in rebounds with 12. Bur- 160-boo canon IKI oec. r. or, hi. . j nlJn.. n .. a--- ..... The 6-8 center's performance kept the Braves in front in the Missouri Valley Conference chase with a 5-0 record. Wichita 90, Drake 70 Cincinnati 92, Tulsa 75 '. Marquette 89, Creighton 64 Villanova 82. West Virginia 77 Tulane 72, Kentucky 70 -Miss. Slat 74, Vandcrbilt 66 Utah 95, Denver 82 Oregon 61, Stanford 58 Colorado State U. 81, Utah St. 44 Wyoming 79, Brigham Young 71 Air Force 65, Montana State Coll. 51 Idaho Stale 64, Colorado Mines 50 Canisius 103, Syracuse 78 , , UCLA 54, California 48 Colorado 66, Nebraska 51 S. Calif. 83, Washington 72 . St. Johns. Romps ; NEW YORK (AP) Fifth- ranked St. Johns of New York scored its loth basketball victory in 12 games with a 67-51 conquest of St. Francis of New York Sat urday night. The Redmen took a 34-24 halt- time lead and then opened up 23-point margin with 3Vi minute remaining: All America Tony Jackson paced the winners with ' 19 points. : - CaUttiol Novigofion , : OTTAWA (AP)-Migratingaock-eye salmon may navigate by the stars. A report' to Canada's Fish eries Research Board from its station at Nanaimo, B. C, said the fish follow definite ways in. clear weather but travel m ran-' dom directions under artificial covering or overcast skies. :. The scoring summary: Shasta Collete (all Llpta 10. Hat. storm 7, Pralt 5. Johnson 5, Dicks 1. Anthony 17, Beekon 11, White 4, Booer. COS 147) smith II. Beckhem I. Bel- any rate I firmly feci that the Oregon Schools Activities Associ ation would do well to give his points some consideration. We'd all like to. but most of us the Rogue River: A reduction Ire always said I didn't knowjwill never quite gel that muchjfrom five to four in the posses Stith Hits 46 NIAGARA FALLS. N. Y. APMand Clark here Saturday night, Total tcorina: Grants Pan 19. Bob Ew-j Klamalh V, Nortlv Linfield Still First McMlNNVILLE (AP)-Linfield strengthened its hold on first place in the Northwest Conference wilh a ccme-from-hehind 80-78 basketball victory over Lewis a 7-2 lead but Art Eascrly was sharp on free throws to put Port land ahead and give the Pilots a 28-18 halflime margin. Bill Bruton, Dcloril's new cen lcr fielder, batted above his .276 career average In his last four seasons with Milwaukee. Tom Stith cut Niagara to bits Saturday night with a 46-point chance to quit while he's ahead?ichange in the salmon season on ! performance as third-ranked St. Bonaventure ran its basketball season recoid to 13-1 with an 88- f any case where the officials "ahead." Ision limit. s victory. Linfield won Friday night, 71- 67. Nine men finished the high-scoring game in double figures with burly Gene Carlson of Linfield tops al 17 points. GRAVEL Pit run et Crvihtd for your elriviway Gto. R. Stacy Co. hon. TU 4 351 RANGE READY BULL SALE THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, U3 PX Klamath County Fairgrounds 32 Horned Hrford, 18 Polltd Hertford, Ab rdatn Angus, 1 Shorthorn. Sifrod for quality. Good brttding condition. Sponsored ly KLAMATH CATTLEMAN'S ASSOCIATION tY 111 . KianMifc falls. Ore. MetM TU MtM " " leaf Stew will be served at nee at- Ma Klemetft Ce I