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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 14, 1961)
O 'Pin-Twins' Pace Techmen To Mat Win Over Chicoans CH1C0 'Special! The Oregonjpins and notched three more by John Weaver opened the ion Tech "pin-twins," John Weaver idecisions. Jtest when he nailed Tony An- and Dave Kubesh, were joined They were topped in only two geles in -2: 04.0 of the second round by Tomas Gilman who added a bouts. Loren Weaver, 137 pounds, 'in the 123 - pound class. Kubesh third (all victory in leading the was pinned by Chico's Don Davis followed his example with a con- Owl wrestlers to a 24 8 w in over Chico State College here Saturday night. The match was the final dual meet lor tne oil matmen prior to their entrance in the Oregon Collegiate Conference tournament to be held at Southern Oregon College in Ashland this coming weekend. In compiling their points the Owls won the three matches bv 'Hardtack' Craig Joins LA Dodgers LOS ANGELES HUM I - Pitcher Hoger Craig, 10's hardluck play er, will be throwing for the Lost Angeles Dodgers again this sea-i son. He and three rookies joined thej Los Angeles fold Monday by send ! ing their signed contracts to Gen- q I fffti AN eral Manager E. J. Bavasi. jll3IUWUMWII Craig had ended the 1959 sea-!, ' con in brilliant form as a key: I QAI I flGS man in the Dodgers' pennant j w At the beginning of last season (U Ot 111011 Craig expected lo pick up where. he had left off, but on May 2 he; Klamalh Union Pelican hopes was bowled over covering the plate in a game with Cincinnati and suffered a broken collarbone. That disabled the pitcher until June 20 and he didn't earn a start ing assignment until July 4. Then he had a six-game winning! streak through Sept. 5. Craig later said that had it not been for the collision at the plate with' Vada Pinson he might haveiPrineville where the Pelicans had his finest season. learned their 12th straight victory He did well enoueh. however. a8ainsl n0 deeats for lhe overa11 for the lankv hurler linished the year with an 8-3 record and a $.26 earned run average which got him a raise estimated at about $1,000 and boosted his salary to I such a manner that he w as un ahout $18 500 for this season iable to continue and was forced Pitchers Thad Tillotson and Rick:10 ,u"c'1 ""'T ,lu "u"u" - Warren and infielder Bobby Aspro monte were the rookies whose con tract signings were announced. Maple Leaf Star Leading MONTREAL (AP)-Frank Ma.jpionshjps t0 be held in Corvallis novlich of the Toronto Maple!on March 4. Leafs has finally made it to the Watcning MiIls. stca(ly improve. top in the National Hockey League D.,- individual scoring race. Mahovlich displaced Montreal's Bernie (Boom Boomi Geoffrion as leader last week with a seven- point production in three games after having been within range ot, Another blow to the Pelicans the top for several months. was re.cjvetj on Pelican Court . Official NHL statistics released Saturday afternoon when young today show Mahovlich has a Verne Netzer. wrestling on the league-leading 43 goals and 26,Jayvee squad against Ashland, assists for a total of 69 points injturned up with a broken wrist 6fi games. and will also be forced to for-i Geoffrion. who missed six of go the sport for the rest of the Montreal's 54 games with a knee season. injury now has 68 points on 32; The injuries are the first of tallies and 36 assists. jany consequence reported in the Dickie Moore of Montreal held Pelican wrestling program thus onto third place with 63 points, season. Wits 'Spear' Lippy Friar 'Roastmasters' Fete Durocher On Return To Ball who has 2.067 points and a 35.0 BEVERLY HILLS. Calif. lUPI) dy Hackett. Dean Martin, and Joelmanaging the Dodgers because avcrage-by a commanding 260-, FOREST GROVE. Ore. (API --Show business gave Leo Duro- Garagiola. his brushes with baseball and le-'ppint margin, and also U barrelingpacific University is looking for thcr back to baseball Monday1 The active participants in base- gal authorities. toward rebound and field goala new football coach and athletic! night but if the famed lippy man- ball who turned out to honor Du- But he pointed out tlwl it was records. He has 1.681 director to succeed Paul Slagg. ager of the onetime Brooklyn rocher in addition to Haney and Durocher's suggestion which W rebounds and is hitting from t h e1 Stagg announced Monday that Dodgers and New York Giants had any ego it was lorn Horn nim by the greatest wits of the enter- tainment world. T-l i ll.,lm ,.lar dinner of the Friars Club, the fra- tcrnal and philanthropic oigani.a-t.ngeles tion of the theater. And Durocher was the guest o( honor. Jell cnanaier parapnraseo un- a parooy on men me Brumel, who cleared a fabulouis As such he was the subject for coin's Gettysburg Address by de- Louis." 7 44 inches in the high jump thrce hours of biting humor be- claring "We are honoring one! Among the barbs in the dilty)ast mon(h saja lofay he's ready fore a strictly slag audience of plucked from the dead so this ballwas ".Your language was exciting (0 resume nj, battle with John 1500 persons in the inleinationaliclub may live. But we cannot but Pepper Martin did your fight-, Thomas t0 decide the greatest ballroom of the Beverly Hilton Ho-consecrate the hallowed grounding." (jumper in history. tel. at third base if Leo Durocher is Pitcher Don Drysdale of the The 18-year-old Brumel. along Everybody Gets Rapped cuing to occupy it. ;Dodgers said he was sure Duro-Kth ,w0 other 5 fllhletes Although Durocher was the chief, The ribald nature of the stag cher would be a help to the play- broad jumper igor Ter-Ovancsyan target of the cutting wiltici-ms. alfair led Haney to quip, "it s eay ers because in two visits with him and dlsUnce runncr EvReny Mo-' the greatest comedians in show 'to see from the language that Durocher had taught him ' now to molkov arrjved Monday night business had enough to spare to fhower some on Walter F. O'Mal-i lev. president of the Dodgers, the club Durocher rejoins as a coach And their barbs also found targets tn Fred Hanev. ceneral manager of the new l-os Angeles Angcis. and retired umpire Beans Rear- don I George Jessel. who founded lhe Hollywood Friars Cluh. wa lhe, waster of ceremonies and his aharp humor set the tempo for urh masters of verbal barb as W;llon Berlt, George Burns, Bud- in 1:14.0 of the second round andjvincing pin in 1:45.0 of the third big Ed Anderson lost a hard-.round in his match with Paul Sen-I- fought 14-7 decision to Wayne Cook in the heavyweight division for a 178-pound championship in either the district or state wres tling tournaments were dashed Saturday when it was learned that Art Mills, one of the finest on coach Delance Duncan's mat roster, had dislocated an elbow and would be unable to perioral 10r lne Dalance 01 lne seasun Mills suffered the injury a' season L, VIA . j. GEORGE MILLER . . . tourney bound in the closing seconds of his;Klamath Reservation Jaycces' match with Prinevitie s Jim Hon- aay. Mil's fell "Po" his arm in An examinauon loiiowmg matcn proved mat me eioow was dislocated and that Mills was all through for the year. Only one more bout, with Red mond this weekend, remains on the KU schedule prior to the all important district competition slat ed in-Grants Pass on Feb. 25. Winners in the district struggles will continue to the state cham- can had noted that the boy would undoubtedly provide an important 15 points in the district matches and continue to a state champion- bjp O'Malley included manager Char-jto ley uressen oi tne .MiiwauneejacKie nooinson ana neconnng me Braves, manager Gene Mauch of first major league club to employ 'the Philadelphia Phillies, home a Negro baseball player. Unrt F rnin R3nL-c if (ho Chi., niirn.hpr also WaS Serenaded ! cago Cubs and most of the Los Dodgers residing in South-i ern lalilornia. Were are no Angcis present But in a more serious vein Ha- ney added: "Leo belongs to the game He, has done a lot for the game. And now that he's been given the chance, he s still going to do a lot for it. O'Malley Joins In O'Malley added his bit In the "roasting" by declaring that "Leo has been a pain in the neck to me for many years." And he added that as a lawyer Durocher became his favorite client while go. the Chico 130-pounder. Gilman caught his man, Terry Gough, 167. in 1:33.0 of the third canio. Lyle Thompson decisioned Chi co's Stan Benson 9-5 after having the tough Californian in two pin-' ning situations ana iianK wu- liams, the able Owl 157-pounder, earned a 6-4 nod over Ken Har ris. W i n d e 1 1 Winterbottom, 177- pounder from OTI, had little1 trouble securing a 7-1 decision at the expense of Clyde Forest. The bout marked Winterbottom's re turn to the mats after a bout with the flu. Owl coach George Miller plans Mustangs can end up no betterFeb. 23, to run through Feb. 25. paging Buckeyes might lake heed a heavy practice schedule thislthan a clear-cut second in the B While the Chiloquin squad has;of what happened to Mississippi week in preparation for the bigjehase. and no worse than tied for'yet to lose a league encounter it'State and Kansas Stale, conference meet on Saturdav. All the number two slot, a victory came uncomfortably close last Until Monday night those two the conference schools with the exception of Portland State Col lege will take part in the tourney. The results: 123 J. Weavtr (OI pirtntd Angles (CI 9'Ain limit 130 Kubesh (oi pinned Seng (c) UW-d!. (CI pinned L. W..,.r to i:"o I3rdi 9-3 157 Williams (O) dec. " '5' .if 167 Gilman (01 Dinned Gouch (Cl 1:33.0 (3rd) j 177 Wlnterbollom (01 dec. Forrest (C) 7-1 Hvy Cook (C) dec. Anderson (0) n-7 The linal score: Oregon Teen 24, Chico State I Indian Fives Slate Three-Day Tourney CHILOQUIN (Speciall Eight of, the Inn Pacific Coast All. Indian baseball teams will compete in'pairs the Thursday winners, will three-dav elimination tourna-iget ment starting here Thursday af-'Saturday night championship ternoon to determine the team tojround. represent the area in the annual The ultimate w inner of the tour- Indian Tournament here in March, The eliminations will begin at 4:30 Thursday with a two-game session and continue through Sat- urday with a doubleheader each ietevening. There .are no afternoon games planned on either Friday or Saturday. Thursday's opener pairs two Portland teams, the Phoenix Inn five and the Red Hawks. At 5:30 p.m. Hoopa and Sprague River ' will square off. The evening opener matches the Thunderbirds with San Francisco at 7:30 while the Chiloquin Hunt-I ers.and the Beatty Lakers will' compete in the nightcap which s Medford-KU Tickets. Ready Klamath Falls basketball fans planning to attend the Black Tornado-Pelican game In Med- ford this Friday night must pick up their tickets Immediate ly, according to Jim Johnson. KU athletic director. The tickets can be picked up at Johnson's office at Klamalh Union. Through an arrangement with Medford officials a block of JO seats was made available for KF fans. the Dodgers eventually signingfie( at 495 cjp several times during the evening Film star Kirk Douglas and pro oucer-airector mervyn ieioy sang aeai seconos ana never 10 -."(r three me,u here starting with in gin rummy with more thamlne New Yory Athletic Club three points" in his hand. :games Frjay. In finally introducing Durocher,, Brumel beat Thomas in Je-sel declared: j(ne Olympics in Rome last year, "The man the Friars Huh hon ors rightly returns to his chosencan rjva ;prolcssion ann oaseoan gains o the return of one of the most colortul personalities the game has ever known, "This affair in my opinion Is the finest expression of friendship I have seen in 50 years of public life." Tuesday, February 14, 1961 HERALD AND NEWS, County B Cagers In League Finale COUNTY LEAGUE L pc chjtociuin o i.ooo z Mermi Sflcred Henri Bonania Gilchrist Bly PICK UP County 4 7 1 0 IS The Malin Mustangs the late season surge from them, gallop into Chiloquindraws the spotlight as the feautre tonight bent on knocking the game of the evening, one that! league champion Panthers out of'could cast a predictive shadow, their unbeaten status. While theion the tournament, which opensithe O men, but Ohio State's ram over the oowerful Chiloouin ouintl would become a meaningful tn- umph. All B league action comes to a close tonight although some of the squads face one more non-counter before m0V'n8 0nt0 ,hC 0re80" Tech court next Thursday to open the annual three-day county tour-! nament. The third place Merrill Huskies will come up against an improved Sacred Heart Trojan quint on the Academy floor while last scheduled to start at 8:30 p.m. Thp Fridav night action, which underway at 7:30 as will the AII-!ney will automatically become an lentrant hi the big eight team All Indian tournament which brings to Chiloquin fans the cream of " Indian basketeers from the west ern half of the United States. The All-Indian tournament, ini- Sl tiated by the Jaycees in 1954. cur- renllv rales hk'h amnnc national tournaments of its type. Admission charges lo (he elim ination action are $1.50 for adults $1 for students and 50 cents for children. lafNI CXalX J OlIlT RpflH rw OI On Records NEW YORK lAPI-Records are beginning In topple in the of- fensive-minded National Basket- ! ball Association, with rookie Oscar j Robertson knocking off one and Wilt Chamberlain closing in on three. Robertson, who has scored 1,7531 points for the Cincinnati Royals and is averaging 30.2 points a game, has surpassed the scoring record for backcourt performers established last season by De troit's Gene Shue. Shue had 1,712 for the season. Robertson passed that total in his 57th game. Robertson is a distant third in the individual scoring race behind the pacesetling Chamberlain, of Philadelphia, and runner-up Elgin Baylor of Los Angeles, league statistics released today show. The Stilt has amassed 2,327 points for a 38.1 average, will crack his 1959-60 record of 2,707 if, he maintains his present clip and could hit the 3.000-mark m thei ! Warriors' final 18 games. Chamberlain now leads Baylor- , . . SoVlf'f iPIO " I W U I I I W 'Slates Meets NEW ygRK (AP) Valery, n'was full of praise for his Ameri- MIO-TOWM OFFICE SPACE $40.00 CONTACT: DREWS Monitor 71J MAIN cm PAGfc Klamath Falls, Ore. i place Bly travels to Bonanza to' ao oattirt wnn tne uiin-piace Antviiaa linen up wun ine nrsi live aijenn oi me regulation rz noies at lers in a final effort to break into the win-column. The only other game on tap finds the Gilchrist Grizzlies, who, 'are already through with league showingiplay. hosting LaPine. i expected The Mustang-Panther contest Friday night when it came fromiteams were rambling along inU'Ould come next, if they do let oeninn to trim Bonanza o7-54. lin rates the second place berth'almost as comfortably as Ohio off a squeaking 50-48 win at the, has been in the Big Ten. Then expense of the Merrill Huskies. ine annual tracas on the 0llthe boom as effectively as Clancy court includes all seven of thejever did and now almost any county quints plus the orphaned 'thing could happen in the South Paisley Broncos who each year, eastern Conference and the Big make their only venture in Klam- Eight. ath Falls their entrance in thei Ohio State, meanwhile, made it meet. The tournament winner auto matically becomes the team to represent the league in the dis - u in pmj'uiis iui ine I igill to COn' tinue to the state B quarter-finals. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Oregon High School Basketball Marshfield 68, Willamette i Eu gene I 45 Jesuit iBeaverloni 45. Molalla College Basketball EAST Bonaventure 95, Providence 79 Vermont 76, union 68 SOUTH North Carolina State 83, land 66 Citadel 91, VMI 83 Wash & Lee 78, Virginia 68 Florida 78, Auburn 60 LSU 65, Vanderbilt '61 Kentucky 68. Mississippi St. 62 Georgia Tech 81, Tulane 79 Alabama 55. Georgia 51 tot) Mississippi 57, Tennessee 55 Tennessee A&I 89. Southern Itli - nois 79 Eastern Kentucky 81, Western Kentucky 72 MIDWEST Ohio State Northwestern 65eek. Iowa State 68, Nebraska 62 Kansas 88. Missouri 73 Iowa 63. Wisconsin 61 Xavier (Ohioi 87. Miami tOhio) 79 Colorado 81. Kansas State 80 Purdue 64. Indiana 55 Michigan 78, Michigan Stale 67 Ohio U. 83. St. Francis (Pal 60. SOUTHWEST Oklahoma City 93, North Texas Slate 70 FAR WEST Arizona 81, Hardin-Simmons ft8is'PP" State, St. John's (NYl, Kan- Arizona Stale Stale 70 108, Wcsl Texas National Basketball Association Monday Result Cincinnati 104, Los Angeles 100 Pacific Seeks K W A 1 INJeW IVlentOr 'he has accepted an offer to be come athletic director and head of the physical education depart-! jment at the University of the Pacific next September. Stagg compiled a 63-53-7 record in his 14 years as Pacific footballl coach. His teams won a share of the Northwest Conference lilies in! UCLA, 23; 15. West Virginia. 17; 1949. 1951 and 1952. 16, Memphis Slate, 10; 17, Wichi- stagg said the offer from the la, 7; 18 Kiel, St. Josephs (Pa I University of the Pacific was too and Indiana, 5 each: 20 Kiel, I g0xi to turn down. He added thaljohio U. and Providence, 4 each, lit also will put him in the samel Others: Oregon and Vanderbilt, town-Stockton. Calif. as his 3 each: Dayton, Loyola (Calif.) -.famous .father. Amos Alonzo.and Mississippi Stale. 2 each stagg. now 98. Houston. St. Louis and Wake For- Dr. Miller Ritchie. Pacific est. 1 each, president, said. "We don't have v-iitstssssssMisssssssiissss an immediate plan for naming a successor, but we will take some )tjme belore a decision is made We hope to get a person to handle football coaching, athletic director and the physical education depart- iment as did Paul." Newspaper SPOT ADS art inexpensive- iruim PHOENIX. Ariz. IAP Amaz-lthe ing Arnold Palmer, 19W)'s undis - puted king of golf, is off and w in- nine at an even faster Dace this - j " ' tyear. The lonc-hilline: Miami muscle-' Iman dcleated Doug Sanders byi three strokes in a playoll .Monday to cop the Phoenix Open cham-l pionship. his second in six tourna-jcsl iinisher. Palmer went alter ments, and mark the fourth time, Sanders early. He took the lead this season he had finished among with a birdie on the second hole the top five money winners. 'and never relinquished it. At this time a year ago. Palmerj Kentucky, Colorado Lower The Boom; Ohio Staters Breeze To 24th Straight By TIIF, ASSOCIATED PRESS u probably isn't an omen for Jia-jtiieir conterence basketball races Kentucky and Colorado lowered 9-0 in the Big Ten standing and, f I I n I J q(J DUCKSi Bonnies Hold Poll Berths By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The continued rise of Cincinnati and Kansas Slate to positions of'acimiUed to(ay that he thought' he linnnl n..nminn,. n..,..l-nJ ll.!. MCeiVS VUllIln III lilt JS.V1UI IcIICU , , ,1 ii ., ... , Press basketball poll as Ohio State and St. Bonaventure continued to u.u .u. i uoiu me u,p io places. npp.il i-mij iiuiiiiiisj la UIHK w uisiuiu ine ouini'ves ho-im aim J:...l. .1 tl....l .inn. . . . ,. .. . ,, ,11311 1IUII llinu "IIU lll il T IU IC he Bonnies (18-1. unless they get, jn ,he UUe at Miam, Bcach oeaien meanwnne, w,e iwo iea.s irom ine poweriui iiuuianus con ferences keep moving up. and they could be ready to hand out those lickings by the time the lournameni runs a.uu.iu. For the ninth straight week Ohioi Mary.;State drew all the first place votes oi ine H7- pane, o. spuus and broadcasters for a perfect 360, 35 second-place votes and. one third for 323 points. Cincinnati, not even in the lop 10 two weeks ago. moved up to fourth as it moved to the front in the Missouri Valley Conference ; race. The Bearcats (17-3) were fifth last week. Kansas State 115-31 held 10th place in mid-January, dropped out for a week and then climbed back to sixth this The top 10 teams, with first place votes in parentheses: 1. Ohio State 1361 360 2- St. Bonaventure 323 261 237 1 198 190 146 122 97 1 88 3. Duke Cincinnati 5. Bradley 6. Kansas State North Carolina 8. Southern California 9. fowa 10. West Virginia Others receiving voles: Missis- sas, Memphis Slate, UCLA, Utah, Purdue, I-ouisville, St. Joseph's (Pa.), Wichita, Drake, South Caro lina, Vanderbilt, Kentucky, Provi dence. UPI Voting NEW YOHK (UPH-The United! teachers trophy and an expense Press International major college paid trip to England and a match basketball ratings iwith first-l wjth the British senior champion, place votes and won-lost records! a record field of 3B2 is compel through Feb. 11 in parentheses) :ing this year. Tcm Points! The 55-and-ovcr group will play Ohio Stale (34i 18-0 349 St. Bonaventure Ul (18-11 316 Duke (17-21 Southern Cal (16-.1i Bradley (16-41 Cincinnati (17-3i North Carolina f 15-4) Kansas State '15-31 St. John's (13-41 Louisville (17-41 10. Second 10 teams: II, Iowa, 1 12. Kansas, 29; 13, Utah, 24 Foundation Gem Seed Excellent Reading WOLFF RANCH Chiloquin, Oregon Days Phone 783-2453 Nires Phone 783-2374 er (om Phoenix j pay window only once. That was when he won the Palmjfiied nothing but pars and bird- Springs title. He wound up the ics. He came in with a three-un- vear with einlll chamnionslliDS and lofficial prize money totaling more . ; . - - - than $75,000. Playing with the aggressive. chance-taking style which has stamped him as the game's great-' After both players, tied at the 24 straight in their two-year string, in The Associated Press poll, out Amidst all this furor, Independ with an 89-65 victory over North-1 o' tne B'S EiRM lea(l- 'enl St- Bonaventure. ranked sec- western that wasn't particularly pleasing to Coach Fred Taylor. Helby c,.llshinR'Missu,.j g,. Mis. thought his team "seemed to let' sissippi Sate slm ieHds the SEC down a bit." The Bucks' turniUiih an 8-1 record but Florida! down possitny against acter mined Iowa Saturday. Kentucky, going nowhere but making itself felt in the Southeast-! ern race, handed Mississippi State's Maroons their first con ference defeat, SR-n2, on the Ma roons' court. Colorado saved enough of an early lead to beat .Conference, whose winner auto Kansas State 81-80 and knock the matically qualifies for the NCAA Wildcats, ranked sixth nationallyitournament. Challenger Admits 'Something Wrong' By OSCAR FRALEY PALM BEACH. Fla. lUPlt A n..im t....nA lnnnrnn l.l.nL-cnn ,,, . . ,, . . Iworlds heavyweight champion-1 , , . J rn .. . , . June. ... . . .nmplhinI, Hp(i. , i,...nnn ' said the Swed- IIIIVIJ n a.t niuilfi. . . rt , ... . Convntjon Hal, on M;lrcn 13 Whitey Bimstein. his veteran trainer, backed him up with the assertion that "he looked goofy" i the night of the fight after losing , , , v,.ninh. ,..,' . ..uin, ni.j ' Bjmslcjn bit 0fr -M he ate tle night before the fight in a place fre(uented by gamblc,.s. The big boob trusts everybody and he might have had something in a cup of tea or something." Talks To Doctors Ingemar acknowledged that he had conferred with doctors Sweden on the possibility that he' had been doped and they confirmed that in a drugged stale he would have been more suscep tible to Patterson's punches. t can t say myself that I ac tually was doped," Ingemar cau tioned. "But if you are doped, you Grey-Beards Open Senior Links Action DUNEDLN, Fla. 'API - The omvi-ipnrrlc rnnfntilanlfi 55. years-of-agc and over - held the spotlight today as the 22nd annual Professional Golfers Association SIR OOO Seniors Tournament opened over the PGA national1 course. The youngsters, or those in the 50-54 age bracket, bided their lime until Wednesday when they also will slack their bid for the jis second round Thursday and the so-54 contestants will olav 205 their second 18 Friday. Friday I77might the field will be cut to 125 156 1 and ties for the final two rounds 146 Saturday and Sunday to complete 134'the 72 holes for the big prize. 131, Among the more prominent of 69' the newcomers is Jimmy Dema- ret, the rollicking Texan who has three times won the Masters and whose clegibilily for (he seniors competition will come as a sur prise to many fans who consider him part of the contcmimrary younger golf scene. Gene Sarazan, a callow 58; A! Watious, who admits to 62; Mor tie Dutra. HI: Jock Willowcit, 57. and Bill Mchlhorn, 62, are just a few of the over-55 who could hit a hot streak and take It all. 70, bogicd the first hole, Palmer! drr-nar R7 in snite of a one-stroke pen;lltv (or an unplayable lie in r- - r me iop oi a paim nee on :-u. 10. He recovered for a par 5 on that one. Sanders, ho got into the play - o(( h a Arizona Country Club course reCord 62 Sunday, finished Wth a 70 on two birdies, two 'bogies and 14 pars. He beat Pal - mer on only one hole, that when ne Diraiea me nun. mis omer Diru - Kansas, which had been tied'ond u-ith k.i:tn mnvrwt mil in frnnt and Louisiana State moved up to 20 games although he was out tie beaten Vanderbilt for second I scored 30-28 by Jim Hadnot of - i c-3 while Kentucky, winning four straight, is 6-4. One other conference leader met its first defeat when Eastern Ken tucky whipped Western Kentucky 81-72. Western now is 7-1 and Eastern 7-2 in the Ohio Valley Ifeel good. That's why people take dope. Well, I felt good but I felt! funni, I fall Inn nnnrl An1 Pal. ' terson never before knocked out anybody with one punch." Johansson pointed out that in the bout he ."acted entirely dif ferent" than he ever had before. I i was (aligning ai people De- side the ring for no reason at all," he said. "Even between rounds 1 would look down and laugh at strangers. I was acting entirely different than I ever had before. And then there was the way I was fighting. I didn't! move." Looking over slow motion films of the bout, Johansson pointed out that in the second round, when he staggered Patterson, he did not1 follow up his advantage but stood watching his opponent. "What was wrong with me? he asked rhetorically. "If I follow up right then if I could, the fight is over. You tell me, how could inll miss such a chance?" Breaks YVIIh Custom Breaking with boxing custom, Johansson shunned seclusion and went to New York the night be fore the last bout and appeared on a television show. Then he had dinner at a mid-town restau rant. "He could have eaten something bad," Bimstein admitted, "but he also could have been given some thing in his food or in something he drank. That s what we think happened." Bimstein emphasized thai, In all his years as a trainer, work ing with such as Jimmy Brad dock and Max Baer for title fights, he never had seen a fight- cr lo mo than two or three pounds" overnight. "They dry out a couple of pounds," Bimstein declared, "but nK,cm.a,r lost six pounds. He looked like a ghost and he didn't have diarrhea. For one. I'm sure somebody must have slipped him something." Johansson, listening tight-lipped, nodded agreement. From the way I was knocked out," he added, "I should have had some bad after-effecta. B u t the next day I didn't feel any thing. Not even a headache." GET YOUR COPY i For Dr. rVnfon's eamplmt haakUt, "You CAH Cot BtlUr Crodti," mail $1 lo "f.ducalion floofcftl," in rnro of this ruwtpaHsr, Or you mny buy tho hookUt at tha nmeipaper offiro. MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY TO THIS NEWSPAPER fr PIsom Mnd mt the compltlt booklet on "You CAN Get Better Grades" (Enclosed il il In check, money order or cosh.) T P.O. Box 941 ie came on the par-3 eighth hoi and was matched by Palmer. The winner took $4,300 in prize .i '. . .,'.'. money. Sanders won $3,000, and 'day's gate receipts, giving each mey spin mi per cent ot tne extra an estimated additional JI.0O0. His prize, exclusive of gate re- ceipls. ran Palmer's official tour- ;nament money for the year to $12,425 and lifted him to second place on the bankroll list. Gary Player, winner of the rich San Francisco Open, picked up $825 in Phoenix and still leads the pack iwnn u.zi. to Ohio State nationally. breezed to a 95-79 victory over NIT tournament-bound Provi dence. Tom Stith led the Bonnies to their 10th straioht and 10th in Providence. Iowa clung to second place with a 63-61 victory over Wisconsin as the reserves who took over for four ineligible regulars won their second straight. Third-place Pur due trimmed Indiana 64-55 and Michigan won its first Big Ten game, beating Michigan Stata 78-67. Whiiebirds Number One Despite Woes By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Klamath Falls. Roseburg and Grant stayed 1-2-3 in the Asso ciated Press High School Basket ball Poll this week, but the other top teams were shuffled consid erably. Only one new team made the elite group. South Eugene dropped out of the top 10 and Beaverton gained 10th place. Eleven of the 15 sports writers and broadcasters who cast their vote thought Klamalh Falls was still tops. Four gave the nod to Roseburg. Third-place Grant tha only undefeated A-l team in tha stale got only one vote below third, that one a sixth-place tally. Wilson jumped one notch to fourth place, replacing Medford, which fell to eighth after a week end loss to Grants Pass. Central Catholic of Portland, despite a narrow win over Astoria, 38-36, jumped from eighth place to fifth, and Marshfield continued its steady advance as it moved up one notch to sixth. Bend, leader of the Intermoun- tain League, moved from its ninth-place position of last week to seventh this week. Medford was in eighth and South Salem stepped up a rung to the ninth spot. Although the three leaders re mained in great favor, mora teams were mentioned in this week's poll than in any previous week. Twenty-one teams were thought worthy of a place on at least one of the 15 ballots. The poll, with 10 points for a first-place vote, 9 for second, etc. (won-lost records jn parentheses) 1. Klamath Falls (16-1) ... 148 2. Roseburg (13-2) 133 3. Grant (16-0) 122 4. Wilson (16-1) 87 5. Central Catholic (14-2) . 70 6. Marshfield (12-4) 67 7. Bend (15-3) 61 8. Medford (13-4) 50 9. South Salem (10-6) ... 15 10. Beaverton 13-3 .... 14 Others: North Eugene 13, Scan- poose 10. Tillamook 9. North Bend 8, South Eugene and Grants Pasa 5, Madras and Milwaukie 3, La Grande 2, Corvallis and Woodburn .Got 'Bottof ; Grdr I.' 1301 Esplanade C3