Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 07, 1961, Page 9, Image 9

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    o
Buckeyes, Bonnies Crack Century Mark In Victories
illFRAI.t) AND NEWS, Klamath Falls Oregon
Tuesday, February 7,
PAGE !
. By Lotted Press International t victory the Buckeyes hold over the Walt Bellamy, Lucas' Olympic i about five minutes remaining iumph over Richmond. The vic-lon 23 of 24 foil attempts, with
Ohio Slate and St. Bonaventure .'unstate 'ew York-en this .!. ... ij .k ui. ...iik' Rut two baskets bv Stith toonled torv was the 16lh for the Titers. Dick Hall colleclinc 8 for 8 on
. - iccuiuuaic, uic nuwicia n 1111 - --- - - . . -
Al. - . . !,--!. I I . . 1. . II ' ..L.I .1 ...I U I I I...-I1' ,ir:l.: .....9. Mint enralfl
IIK UHJ iwu cuntime DasKeiDau son. . . buzmo the m&e lne OOpe 01 Tenuis. WIKJ UdYfl Hl Ulliy LU I1CM V II -, 1113. Wrt lu a o-t-pvim
TVHVPrhnilfiAC mav hava In IllilWa Tlia Akinine tcitinr. tn ,1,.UI J
next month's NCAA tournamenlithe relentless Bonnies in the na-
to decide which is the best in the tional rankings, turned In their
nation. 22nd consecutive victory, longest
Both teams prepared for a pos- winning streak m basketball cir
ible tourney showdown by going cles to date.
over the century mark Monday! Lucas Score J4
enlh straight Big Ten victim for
the unbeaten Bucks.
St. Bonaventure. which
In other top games, Purdue
forced four of Michigan's five
starters out on fouls in gaining
a 96-79 Big Ten win; Illinois
Loses Third Straight !" f Dalon' V?'1? Kl,lk
paced the winners with 20 points.
Four-ranked Bradley reeled to Kansas moved back into a first
never, its third straight defeat, a set- nace tic with idle Kansas State
seems to lose at home, won its back that virtually knocked the jn the Big Eight Conference by slaved off a late Wisconsin rally
17th game in 18 outings this sea- Braves out of championship con- defeating Colorado. 88-65. Wayne. to upend the Badgers, 77-73; West
son over a Tennessee Ail squad, tention, as Drake gained an nb-ib Hightower scored 23
night, the No. 1 Buckeyes ripping Indiana felt the brunt of an that stepped out of its class onceiverdict. bus ouyaon neipea snapjKansas while teammate Billlseason with a 100-77 romp over
Indiana, 100-65, and the second-Ohio Stale attack that was re-t00 0"en- ! Bradley's home court winning Bridges tallied 21 and nabbed 19 Marshall; Iowa Slate tripped Ok-
ranked Bonnies cainine a lru-RTivense for the last lo snfforprl Sonhimnre Fred Crawford tal. string of 48 in a row witn nis rebounds. lahoma Stale. 80-6,1; Florida
decision over Tennessee A&I, the by the Buckeyes a year ago. And lied 38 points and Tom Stith col- 33 P'nls- Chet Walker had 30 for
country's small college basketball the triumph was reaped in a con- lected 33 as the Bonnies whiskedjthe Braves.
leader. certed team effort as Jerrv Lucas to an 18-4 lead and stretched the Memphis State, first team se
The measure of difference be-iscored 34 points, Larry Siegfried
Tollrge Ilaskethall
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
EAST
St. Bonaventure 104, Tennessee
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Misplaced Corvallis, which waf
Klamath Falls, 14-1 for thejdropped out of the top 10 despite
season ana undoteatea in i n e a victory over North Salem.
End Irish Streak State stepped past The Citadel,
nucnigan aiaie snappen a io-tkWi; Louisiana oime ut-at .nn-
tre Dame home winning itreak'sissippi. 75-69; Vanderbilt edged
tween Ohio State and St. Bona- netted 27 and John Havlicek'
venture so far is the two-point' poured in 22.
margin to 54-39 at halftime. The lected for the National Invitation that had extended over three sea-;Alabama, i3-70; Tennessee tietcai
closest the losers came was a Tournament, prepped for the post, sons with an 89-74 victory at cd Florida. 83-68, and Temple
seven-point deficit at 88-81 with season classic with a 104-73 tri-iSouth Bend, Ind. The Spartans hit. walloped Muhlcnhurg, 102-61
FRACTURED EMOTIONS
COACHES
AGE MC&T EXPRSS&VE
OF FlGrUZZES.
u" ,u""i4nJ ' oitiic 01 ;snilhm nrpnnn Cnnfprence. con- rnir.,l r--.u-i: .l. .1
Temple ,02, Muhlenberg 6. ,,, io cholce of sports MetroH,ta; L a g . leader.
St. Josephs .Pal 60. LaSalle 54 llm and hroadcasters as thejbarged into .he select 10 betn?
SOI Til state s top high school basketball voted No. 8 after a 65-33 win over
Mississippi aiaie j, luiane team.
Vanderbilt 73, Alabama 70 j After Its 78-5.1 victory over
LSU 75, Mississippi 69 Crater of Central Point, Klamath.
Memphis State 104, Richmond;won the first-place votes of 11 of
73 . the 14 casting ballots in the
Tennessee 83, Florida 68 weekly Associated Press poll.
Davidson 88, VM1 79 Roseburg, which split a pair of
Florida Slate 81. Citadel 77 early season contests with Klam
Western Kentucky 100, Marshall alh Falls, remains the No. 2 team
77
No Cinches Seen
In B Cage Action
None of the teams scheduled sarily as easy as it sounds, de-
for County B League basketball spite the fact the Bobcats have
action tonight can lay claim to never cracked the win column,
a "cinch" assignment but the Last Friday night, when they
Merrill Huskies can see a good bowed 56-45 to Malin, thev were
possibility they might end up never out of contention until the
WAYNE SCOn, Sports Editor
alone in the number two spot for
change.
The Huskies play host to the
0-13 Bly Bobcats in one of three
league encounters on tap. In
Klamath Falls the Sacred Heart;
Trojans meet the league-leading'
Chiloquin Panthers on the SHA
floor, while the Bonanza Antlers
must face the Mustangs at Ma-j
lin.
The unbeaten Panthers are In
final minute of play.
Coach Gene Christiansen, brand
new at the Bobcat helm, has no
ticed definite improvement on the
that ha ham nnlv ihraa
games in which to break thel Considering their present fourth
string and keep from drawing aiPlace Pslllon ,ln the 8n 9 I
complete blank for the leaguelpSla!e Conference basketball
route. His club fimres Merrill landings there is no hope for a
Owls, Red Raiders
Tangle In Crucial
CIM PDIWPICPn IITDTI If-allA . 11 mnnlli a um." Vail'fllt
United States, which invenledrsaid, "and were surprised to learn V I A I A P I :as- 4'
basketball, has already lost inter-! we only play from December toil I IU jfWl I
a good place to start.
The Malin cagers also
figure
no danger of losing their holdjto have their hands full. They1
on the top spot regardless of a have a pair of victories over the
loss to the upset-minded Trojans
but the Huskies (7-2) could climb
a notch with a win over the Bob
eats, provided, of course, the
Mustangs get dumped.
But first they have to beat the
Bly five, and that is not neces
Cincinnati
Pro Grid Club
In Prospect
Bonanzans to their, credit, one a
41-33 win the first game of the
season, and the other a very nar
row 50-49 at Bonanza recently.
The long memoricd Antlers now
stand 4-4 for league play, and
have posed a serious threat to
each team they have met since
the early season.
The Sacred Heart squad mem
bers, always dangerous, especial
ly on their home floor, are tied
with Bonanza for fourth place on
the ladder and have shown flash
es of potential that lead coach
Marv DelPlanche to believe they
might , fool the high-flying Pan
thers. The Chiloquin quint Is more ac
customed to the larger floor so
Eyes Squad
CINCINNATI (AP) - Bob Rnp
pnport, young New Yorker who
says he aims to. put a pro football
team in Cincinnati, says also he
has the money backing and goodthev n)n jn(0 troub,e
prospects for a franchise "within
six weeks."
Officials of the year-old Ameri-
ean Football League Monday said A ft ft A I NTflTT
he has a good chance to get the J
franchise, but perhaps not until
summer.
One league source said Rappa
port might get the franchise in
any one of three cities.
Rappaport said Monday he
wants to field a team for the 1962
season, and call it the Cincinnati
Dukes.
He said he came to a reason
able understanding over hire of i
Croslcy Field, home of the base
ball Cincinnati Reds, for games.
Rappaport said he picked Cin
cinnati because it was one
title this year at Southern Oregon
College.
. But the next best thing, the
chance to ruin what champion
ship hopes the Oregon Tech
Owls might be entertaining, is
at hand. Tonight the Red Raid
ers host the Techmen in what is
easily the most crucial game the
Owls have played all season.
The scrap scheduled to begin
at 8 o'clock in the SOC gym to
night is the third meeting of the
two clubs, and in both the pre
vious tries the Raiders have fall
en short. Two weeks ago the
Owls invaded the Raider den and
emerged with a come-from-behind
victory . . . and one thing the
US Olympic Coach
Warns Of Russians
MIDWEST
Ohio State 100, Indiana 65
Purdue 96, Michigan 79
Iowa Stale 80. Oklahoma St. 63
Kansas 88, Colorado 65
Xavier (Ohio! 99, Detroit 96 (ot)
Illinois 77, Wisconsin 73
Oklahoma 69, Nebraska 58
Wabash 74, Butler 61
Drake 86, Bradley 76
Michigan State 89, Notre Dame
4
SOUTHWEST
Prairie View 90, Arkansas A&M
75
West Texas State 78, Oklahoma
City 75
FAR WEST
Washington Stale 83. Seattle 76
Conzaga 81, Regis 76
I)yo!a of Los Angeles 65, Sanla
Clara 60
Clackamas,
Bend, still leading the lnter
mountain League after victoriej
over La Grande and Baker, held
(o ninlh place.
And South Salem, tied with Cor
vallis for the Valley League lead,
took over No. 10. It displaced
Bcaverton, which is right behind
Central Catholic, in the Metro-
Team
1. Klamath Falls 14-1
District Two
Wilco
League leader Scappoose, and the
rualatin-Yamhill Valley League
pace - settuig Tillamook, ate topi
among the also-rans.
The poll, with 10 points for a
first-place vote, 9 for second, etc.
(non-lost records in parentheses)
after solidifying ils position on top
f .1 -I w li:J,.rl.M, T nnmin
lit li e MluiiK .iiiuwciici ii ucoui; .. ,
i.k ..i,nH uii-mrip, nJPobtan League.
-f .,. . Jkl-.,arlim' tx.-a.fl Hill,
68-66 win over formidable South
Eugene, which slipped a notch to
No. 6.
Grant, the stale's only undo-,
fealed class A-l team, was idle
on the weekend but still was a
solid choice for third place.
Medford, defending state cham
pion and second behind Klamath1
Tails in the Southern Oregoni
loop, racked Up easy weekend vic
tories over Crater and Ahland
and again is ranked No. 4.
Wilson, second behind Grant In
the Portland League race, was
advanced from No. 8 to fifth
after two more triumphs.
Marshficld, which grabbed sec
ond place in the Midwestern
League with victories over North
Eugene and North Bend, moved
up one spot to seventh place. It
Point
137
2. Roseburg 13-2 127
3. Grant 14-0 107
4. Medford 13 3 89
5. Wilson 141 61
8. South Eugene tO-S 51
7. Marshficld 11-4 41
8. Central Catholic 12-2 31
9. Bend 13-3 31
10. South Salem 10-S 21
Others; Corvallis 19, Beavertos
17, Scappoose 14, Tillamook 11,
La Grande 5, Madras 2, NorUt
Bend 1.
Owls were splitting with the co
holders of second place, the Port'
land State Vikings in Portland,
the Raiders lost a pair to front
running Eastern Oregon but in
the second loss they showed a fire
they've lacked most of the sea
son.
Coach Ted Schopf will call upon
Jerry Shults, John Payne, Don
Vannice, Dave Hughes and dead
eye Gordy Carrigan who finally
came through with a scoring effort
reminiscent of seasons past
against EOC.
Coach Wally Palmberg, with a
terse, "We've got to win them
all from here out," named Bob
Petersen, Sammy Smith, Norm
Johns, Leon Wilson and Hewlett
Nash for starting assignments to
night. He plans to save Gene
national leadership in the game,
and the 1964 Olympics could be
"very rough" on our cage pres
tige, Olympic coach Pete Newell
said today.
The power looming on the bas
ketball horizon is the same one
we see everywhere else the
USSR.
The Russians obviously arc
gearing themselves right now fori
the 1964 Olympics," Newell said.
"They are dedicated to bringing
their caliber up to and beyond
ours. They want to beat us at the
only American game in the Olym
pics."
Rusft Improvement Seen
Newell, who coached the U.S
team to an 81-57 semi-final vic
tory over Russia last year, said
the Russians will certainly be
Raiders do not bear gracefully is Branson as much as practical
a loss to Oregon Tech, especially since the big forward is still hurt
on their own home floor. ing in the knee he Injured during
Over the weekend, while the! the Christmas holiday.
m nKnu I
..Iclllll. j
,J?:'k '"fit, flll Plan Posted
domination in the Olympics is the
fact that "the game here is drift
ing away from the international
game," according to Newell.
"The international rules are far
'enough from ours now, and by
1964 the rest of the world may be
playing completely different from
the way we play.
U.S. Leadership Sags
He said this was because the
U.S. "hasn't ever taken the inter-
Bowdry, Johnson
Meet In Title Tiff
PORTLAND (AP) Arrange,
mcnts were announced Monday
for the District 2 Nalional Asso
ciation of Intercollegiate Athletics
basketball title playoff next
month.
District officials said the two
top teams in the Northwest Con
ference and the Oregon Collegiate
Conference will qualify for the
first round March 4.
The No. 1 team of each con-
have allowed other countries to
take the lead which we, as the
veterans of the game, should
hold."
Newell said Europeans "don't
belter next time. And, he said, get much chance lo see the game
the U.S. can l he sure ot naving as we play n. wnai mey oo see.
SF Second-Sacker
Takes Salary Cut
LOS ANGELES (UPD-Manag-1
er Bill Rigney of the Los Angeles
Angels and his coaching staff to
day worked out a semblance of
order at the new American
SAN FRANCISCO (UPD-Sam
Francisco Giant second baseman
Don Blasingame will have a
better year in 1961 than in 1960,
according to manager Al Dark.
Blasingame Monday came to
terms
field when he was obtained from
St. Louis in the winter of 1959
The Giants gave away Daryl
an outstanding crop of players
like Oscar Robertson, Jerry
Lucas, Darral Imhoff, Jerry West
and Bob Boozer.
The U.S. will have to pick ils
"best team if it wants to win
the 1964 basketball Olympics, he
said. "The selection system in the
past has sometimes come up with
an unbalanced team because we
were more apt to take the players
by name." He said the Russians
sent to Rome a group of players
who were chosen as a team.
"The Russians play basketball
Slate Heads
national leadership we should. We(el.ent.e play the No. 2 team
of the other conference with
cames to be on the home floor!
aF tkA Nn 1 taumc with thicl
exception: If Portland Slate wins
the OCC title, the game will be
played on the court of the No,
Northwest Conference finisher.
That is because Portland State
has no home court.
First round losers will meet In
the consolation game before the
championship contest March 7,
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) ;
The end of the rainbow loomed
tonight for Harold Johnson,
The 32-ycar-old Philadelphlan
meets Jesse Bowdry of St. Louis
in a scheduled 15-round bout at;
Miami Beach Convention Hall,
with the National Boxing Associa
tion version of the. world light
heavyweight championship the
prize.
Johnson is rated a M favorite
over his 23-year-old opponent, ao
anything but a successful quest
for the title he has been chasing
Wilt The Stilt
Still The Top
NEW YORK (AP) Week to
'week the National Basketball
Association's scoring story reads
he said, "is the Russian game.'
"If we sponsored basketball
trips like we sponsor track tours,
we would give people in other
countries an opportunity lo ob
serve our style. If we sent teams
around we could explain our game
and show them our way."
Newell, now athletic director at
the University of California, made
his comments in an interview fol-
ImiMin in a u-nrninn iactiaH hv
Olympic track slar Bob Mathias! ,willia Mk
at Ik. N-Wlhorn fi.lifr.rni;. Bunk. mulnS toatn wu" "K
ball Writers luncheon Monday. m P8 trainin8,lcased today.
Malhias said Russia might beat al "elJd"u' r,- Chamberlain's closest compcti-
Uie U.S. in basketball at the 1964 Williams is putting on a tiy east- or in lne scoring race still is El
games unless "we can keep up,ing exhibition at a sports show in.pin Baylor of Los Angeles, whn
Seattle. has scored 1,931 points for a 35.1
'I know the Red Sox will put In average.
which will be played In the Port-:
land Coliseum.
Williams To Aid
SEATTLE (AP) Bat master
the same: Wilt Chamhorlain.
Philadelphia's Stilt continues to
lead the scoring parade with 2,108
points and a 37.6 point average.
Ho also is Um most accurate
shooter from the field, with a
.491 percentage, and is No. 1 In
rebounds, with a 27.7 average,
according to league statistics re
fer years would rate as a distinct
upset.
Promoter Chris Dundee said hi
expects a crowd of 6,000 and i
gale of $60,000 for the show, which
will not be broadcast or televised,
Bowdry used two fights as a
springboard to the match for the
crown taken from Archie Moore
by the NBA for failure to defend
it within a stipulated time.
The St. Louis youth knocked
out Freddie Blados and then won
a decision over Willie Pastrano,
Middleweight Henry Hanks had
kayoed him twice running befot
those two bouts.
It will be Johnson's second
crack at the crown. He wai
knocked out in the 14th round by
Moore in 1954 in the fifth of thcil
meetings, but the only one involv
ing the championship. -:
Tale Of The Tape
MIAMI BEACH (UPI) - "Tate
of the tape" In the Harold Johnson-Jesse
Bowdry fight for the
NBA world light heavyweighi
championship:
g m" "livieai ill inc iui i ami
5lLldV RlVet work out a system to send a team
W I M J wi tnat is chosen beCause i, the
BOISE (AP) The governors team ana not one lorniea-nenra notmnR nm rimhi i-ejionfi
nt iH-'lv, whinDtnn and firernn wilh the idea of keeping every-lfrom the front office about the
Spencer and Leon Wagner for the,hav(, fnr' j . committee to find'hody happy." ISox' farm system."
Blazer.
a good club here," he said.
Baylor picked up 38 additional
points Monday night as the Lakers
whipped the Cincinnati Royals 110-
101 In the only game scheduled.
Johnson Bowdry
32 Age 23
175 Weight 175
5-10 Height - M0
41 Chest normal 37'i
43 Chest expanded 40
74 Reach 72
14 Biceps 1514
12' i Forearm 12
32 Waist 32
22 Thigh 2.1
15'i Calf IS
12 Vi Fist 13
out what to do about "serious de-,
But he collansed hoth in the nlotlin" nt fich in tha rnlumhia
telephone call from fjM an(j nt tn(, nia(. . thf,;., aj :,. irikinrio
League clubs tryout camp and his home in Glendale, Mo t0Giants skidried , firth piace Govs Robert s ,je of I(iaho
settled down to the job of sifting vice president Charles Chubjl95!) collected 178 hits in 136 Albert Roscllini of Washington and
prospects for talent. jFeeney in San Francisco. He re-me st.orcd w rus waked 67 Mark Halfje() o( 0regon sc( up he
A throng of 272 embryo base- portedly took a cut from around ljmes hit .M9i participated in lOfijcovernors' Columbia River Fish-
ball players lumea out lor tne si.auu 10 io.uw aner a aismai douh e d avs and hand ed 818 ri, Manani.mni rnmmiii.
of the Pen'n day f 'be tryouts Mon- 1960 campaign.
few big league cities
pro football franchise.
He said Pele Pihos. now an as
sistant coach at Tulane. had
agreed to coach the new team.
J.. L. tl... 11 Hlnn., Ik..lt DU.-:nnr.,a k.J
. UdV ill lne veitidllS UUMilidl mciiijr luuugn. uiiaii!ciii nn.i
witnoui a,, , . ... . . . ! ,j - ; M
oaseoan neia in nesi Loscfiiienitu a iiiidiu-n inning m-
Angeles.
total chances.
Boom Boom
Pads Margin
UPI Voting
Playing in the Identical number members
Monday with themselves as the
The Angels had anticipated 75,
or 100 at the most, and it took
the efforts of the entire manager
ial staff, scouts, farm directors ed
dim uimci iia.Miiy itiiui'i'i aura Dasneioan ratings wnn ursi-piace Rookje manager
to devise some order so that votes and won - lost records' , a:j
Rienev could eel down to the inn ,k,.,k rk a ; n.nik.. in01 seem womea-
of iudeine the nrosnects. i .".!.. "" ?
' ,,k... .1 ""m r""""!record." Dark said
Boom) Geoffrion;or tour good prospec's it will be:
National Hockcv worth while," Rigncy grinned !
of games, 136, in 1960, Blasin
game collected , only 123 hits,
scored 72 limes, walked on 49
occasions, hit only .235. oarlici- program to restore "fisheries re
NEW YORK lUPD The Unlt-ipaied i but 66 double plays and sources" and present their pro
tress international col lege; hand ed 661 tota chances. Isram as soon as possible.
They told newsmen they will
direct fisheries agencies in their
states to develop a coordinated
Montreal's
Al Dark did
of his fine career
MONTREAL (AP)
Bemie 'Boom
returned to
League action with a flourish last. 1 oon t know il there are anv
week and added to his lead in the diamonds in the rough in the
race for the scoring title. icrowd. But we hope to lind oul
The Canadiens' right winer-r. before the week is over."
who won the point scoring crown
m 1954-55 when his teammate and
rival Rocket Richard had to
out a three game suspension, had
missed six tames because of
knee injury. He came hack
score three goals and an assist
in three games for a total of 66
,d,Van Brocklin,
a '
Bel lino Cited,
62
They did not place reponsibility
for fish depletion and said they
did not discuss the effect of dams
already built on the river system.
They said they took no position
on competing plans to build two
power dams on the Snake River.
Applications to build those dams
before the federal Power
Commission. One is for a dam at
ihe Npz Perce site, below the
"It was just a had year. I've1 o lne Saimon River. The
had them. We've all had them." nlh.P unid k .t the Mountain
above the Salmon.
jrecorn. Dark said, I feel we
39 can safely discount Blasingame's
31 1 1960 performance. I know he is
23 a much belter player than the
173 lOfin fiiriirps indicate and I'm
IW! u- ...;ll L: : are
-muie lie win ivam nis previous
lM'ypar's form.
130
64
62
Sheep site
PHILADELPHIA (AP'- Qunr
Geoffrion's closest competitor, "roam iorm an HrocKiin.
1. Ohio Stale 34 16-0
2. St. Bonaventure 1 16-1
3. Duke 16-1
4. Bradley 14 .1
5. North Carolina 14-3
8. Southern California 15-3
7. Kansas Slate 14-3
8. Iowa 12 3
I. 'tie'. Cincinnati 16-1
9. itie. Louisville 17-3
Second 10 teams: 11. Kansas, Cougars Triumph
ITI.A 11 St .Inhn
,j t-,au PULLMAN, Wash. (APi-Wash-
16. West Virginia. 14; 17 Wichita mgion .vaie downed .Seattle in
11: 18. Mississippi State, 9; 19 versity'i basketball
Scores
team 81-76
1 Monday night the easy way. The
Frank Mahovlich of Toronto, col- guided the Philadelphia Eagles to
lectea only inree points ior a ta- the National Football Learue 1 1 e . , ".. . . : er.
irti., (M ,hm irM a rnini'ix , . . . ... u.,v, ... v .. ...... j .,,..,,
Western Hockey league
By THE A.SSOTIATKH PRESS
(Monday Result)
,' u.l. -..i.i:- ...u. itiei. St. Louis and Oreeon.
V.HU " -
eactl- Cougars led from buzwr to but-1 Victoria 4. Winnipeg 1
uiners: vannerom, a; wane
point
-l I tJ .., 1 1'. A Af Kit
, ",w.'u: ;rJ ,A11-America halfback,
Biiats in lllil. fI.Mj .iilimir-.i n.-,,
were hon- st j0,ph' (Pa.).
the big Toronto player managed Dr -,onai,y n "X "
only one goal for a total of 41, 'pl Football Club.
Van Brocklin. now coach of the'
each; DePaul and Detroit, 2 each;! In mf marre,i by 51 foul
PU Loses St or
Pilots Win Easy Minnesota Vikings received the FOREST GROVE (APi The'
VANCOUVER. Wash. AP Bert Bell Memorial Award as the Pacific University basketball team
After piling up a 22 5 lead, the ouwmt professional foolball,1" lll"ut " of iu toP
University of Portland starting rf jvHcorer. tne rest oHhi. wason.
basketball team let the reserves , ' .1 Guard Gains Nickelbrry was
take over, at the P.lots Tew to Memorial Award asjrt inelisible Monday be
a 82-tt win over St. Martin i hmnt'' outstanding collc,fe2 flUS, nf .ades. He had Qd
Monday night. i football player of last year. i 171 points 16 game,
Dave Mills and Eddie Miles led J
the jjeri with 26 and 24 respect- j
ively. i
Dwight Damon paced WSU with J
21.
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Do you prefer a compact car of I full -size carf No
matter. We build them both. Compact Dodge Lancer,
priced right down the lint with Comet, Corvair and
Falcon, Full-size Dodge Dart, priced model for
model with Ford and Chevrolet. Compact and stand
ard, both Dodges have leatures their major com-
STANDARD OR COMPACT
YOU GETA GREAT DEAL WITH
I IIMITIO TIMI ONLY! J
TrantmiiiiM Ooorheul Special
All Maktt ft Modtla j
I mil Pickup and Dtliurr
! 3001 Or.aon Ave. Ph. 4 417 i
DODGE
JOE FISHER
petition does not offer. A unitized, rust-proofed
body, A superb ride: Torsion-Aire. And i new
device called an alternator. It makes the battery
last far longer than usual, because it charges even
at idle. Compact or standard, see your Dodge
Dealer, He's got the wheels with tne Dodge on top.
677 So. 7th St.
CKIa4!ft Ft"' Ore.