Oregon State, California Meet in Semifinals Of CI By United Press International To o the coast's biggest and best centers have it out tonight at Portland when California takes on Oregon State in what figures to be a brilliant semi-final game in the Far West Classic tourna ment. California looked like the na tional champs o( not so long ago Thursday night when the Bears HERALD AND NEWS, Friday, December 28, !: The highly-ranked Henley Hor nets of Class A-2 ran roughshod over the ice-cold Klamath Union Pelican Jayvees on Pelican Court Thursday night to the tune of 66-36 to remain undefeated. Henley, led by big 6 - 7 Kent Gooding, raced ahead from the opening gun and the outcome was never in doubt as they took advan tage of KU's arctic-cold shooting to jump to a lead which never faltered but increased. The game ocores College College Basketball Results By I'nitod Press International Rochester Tech Tournament At Rochester. N.V. (First Round) Drexcl Tech 60 Illinois Tech 53 Indiana Tech 81 Pratt Inst. 73 Detroit Tech 67 Rochester Tech 45 Lawrence Tech 66 W.Va. Tech 63 I.os Angeles Classic At Los Angeles, Calif. (Consolation) Utah St. 71 Washington 61) Southern Cal 65 Stanford 57 (Semifinal) Colorado St. 75 Northwestern 50 UCLA 85 St. Louis 66 Rig Fight Tournament At Kansas City, Mo. (First Round) Oklahoma 4 Oklahoma St. 48 Kansas St. 61 Missouri 43 Gulf South Classic At Shreveport, La. (First Round) Sou. 'Miss. 85 N.W. Louisiana 71 E. Kentucky St. 69 TCU 66 Chico Invitational Tournament At Chico, Calif. (First Round) Cal. Poly 72 Humboldt St. 53 Pasadena 75 Lewis & Clark 74 Sacramento 61 Willamette 56 Chico St. 54 Western Wash. 47 Trrnlon Invitational Tournament At Trenton, N.J. (First Round) Iona 64 MassachusetLs U. 56 St. Francis 83 Rider 59 Georgia Classic At Savannah, Ga. (First Round I Florida St. 77 Georgia 69 Alabama 71 Georgia Southern 44 Gator Bowl Tournament At Jacksonville. Fla. (First Round) Florida 66 Rice 57 Ga. Tech 7.1 Va. Tech 72 'o.t.' Far West Tournament At Portland. Oregon (First Round) California 83 Seattle 77 Oreson Stale 80 Idaho 53 West Coast Conference Tourney At San Francisco (First Round) St. Marys 83 Loyola (Calif 71 San Francisco 56 Portland 50 Long Island Col Tourney (First Round) Adclphi 88 Queens College 56 C. W. Post 73 Hofsira 70 Norfolk (Va.) Tournament (First Round) Virginia Union 58 Morgan St. 61 Pembroke 77 Frederick 70 Hampton 81 Elizabeth City 79 Hurricane Classic Tournament At Miami. Fla. (Semifinal) Miami 94 Cornell 74 Pittsburgh 96 Louisiana St. 73 Queen City Invitational At Buffalo. N.Y. (Semifinal) Ariz. St. 89 Rhode Island 8.1 Canisius 85 South Carolina 72 All College Tournament At Oklahima City, Okla. r (Semifinal) Memphis St. W Toledo 61 Lovola 'III.' 81 Arkansas 62 Holiday Classic Tournament At Las Vecas. Nev. (First Round) Occidental 61 Calif. Western 49 Whittier 72 Seada Western 63 Ohio St. 66 Butler 62 Kentucky 95 Dartm u!h 49 Wichita 79 Minnesota 62 Temple 64 St. John's (N Y 1 Purdue 76 Yale 66 Riclmond P.I. 8 'esl?rn M! Oregon Prep Bapthall Results Wv'eart The Dalles 53 Eagle Hon. 50 Phoenix 49 Illinois Valley 79 Ronue River 54 Heniev 66 Klamath Falls JV 36 Lota on Sprogue River $10 Dn. $10 Per Mo. CALL TU 2-4644 r Wrif: 114 St. 7th disposed of another great West Coast club, Seattle, 85-77. in over time. Eddie Miles of Seattle hit 33 points and set a tourney record with H field goals, but the Chiefs just couldn't handle big Camden Wall of the Bears. Wall has been out for a month with a knee injury but returned Thursday night and turned in his Klamath Kails, Ore. PAGE-7 was tied at 2-2 and the Jawccs had a 3-2 lead and that was the only time they were in Die game. I he Pelican Javvees had their shots and just couldn't buy a basket. They were even missing layups early in the game which had them outrebounding the tall er Hornets and getting two or three shots at the bucket before losing control of the ball. But no one could hit the broad side of a barn. The Pelicans had such a cold night that they could amass only three points in the first quarter and only seven in the second for total of 10 at the intermission. The Hornets, meanwhile, tallied for a substantial lead which they increased in the second half. The host team made only three field shots in the entire first half and only 12 for the game. They did hit 12 of 17 from the charity line. And here is where the Hor nets slowed a definite need for practice. The Pelicans were whistled down 22 times and the Hornets could capitalize on only 14 of 30 charity attempts for a terrible 46.7 per cent. For a team which hits so well from the floor, they didn't do well at the line. And this could cost tiiem in league play if they don't im prove in this category. Coach Bruce Patterson of the Jayvees finally switched to speed during the second half because his big men were not hitting anyway. He had five guards in during one stint. He used five small bovs during most of 'he last half with freshman Bob Moore being the biggest at about 6-0. This did pay off in some respects and the smaller boys did a belter job scoring-wise, than their taller mates. The Hornets used big Gooding under the bucket to good advan tage in the second half when he tallied 14 of his 21 total points. The first half charge was led by the wing shooting of Mike Bcy- mer who dumped in 13 points. Charley Thompson added to the figure with 11 points, most of them coming under the basket in the second half when the small play ers were in the game. The Pelicans were led by little guard Lanny Guycr who for the first time this season showed that he can drive for the points. He hit 13 points to lead the Jay vees and his four baskets came on difficult drive shots. He hit five of seven from the line and was the only one in double fig ures. The runncrup spots went to Hal Holman and Buddy I.um mus with six each, all from out- ide shois. Henley looked good in the first half but they appear to be at their best when they can get a team to ploy their style and they tart running and hitting with. surprising!', big Gooding getting lo the basket before his guarding Frte on many occasions. Little Lc- Voy Young, the smallest player for Ilcniev at 5-10. did a tremen dous passing job during his stint although he scored oni; tne bas ket. The KU sophomores gained some measure of revenge in the opening game by downing the Henley Jayvees. 47-37. Kim Coon led Ihe winners with 20 points while John Jcndrzejewski had 10. Rob lwis topped the Hornets w ith 17 points. HMtlCV () Ai.fintton Gooding Bf v""' T NT'D vyi FG pr TP j i-j 1 11 i M 0 3 0 C-0 1 0 1 11 t II JO tl M FO FTA-FT PF TP Total! KU Jyvtl IUI VOO'f Enr.gM O 0-0 UNDER 25? Wt Con Insure You! Southern Oregon Iniuronct Agency Inc. II It. 6th TU 2-4671 (1 3 3 3 1 0 1-11' Heiftn J !-) 1 Bnn 1 0-1 Bur 0 0-0 I 0 Total, U IM' Stoe bv aua'tffl: 1 most brilliant performance ever. He scored 27 and pulled down 15 rebounds. Oregon State mauled Idaho. 80- 53, in the second game, setting up tonight's battle between the 6-foot- 10 Wall and the 7-foot Mel Counts of Oregon State, who was held to 13 Thursday night. Vandals First loss The loss was Idaho's first of rss-v'j .' i . . x- - ' -, J J K 1 xt- : ,s jjjjj " ' ' :, jrwf IT' - Cjt o J? 1 A 1 ' ' vtf , v ' I fern . .'. Va.-,. mik x- iimumum MriJL ul,lmtmm-uMM-mmA COUNTS STEALS BALL Oregon State's Mel Counts (21 ) reaches out to take the ball from the hands of Idaho's Tom Whitfield (441 during the game in Portland Thurs day night in the Far West Classic Tournament. The Beavers beat Idaho to gain the semi finals, 80-53. UPI Telephoto n v dm est dliaht Saturday SAX FRANCISCO (L'PD -The West, on the strength of Sonny Gibbs' great passing arm, was in stalled as a one touchdown favor ite today to whip the East in the 38th renewal of the Shrine All Star Classic Saturday. A croud of about 60.000 will jam into Kezar Stadium in fair. but cool, weather to witness the nationally televised battle in which everybody wins because all receipts go to charitv. Gibbs. a giant from Texas Christian, has so impressed West head coach Dan Dcvine of Mis souri with his aerial feats that the chances are passing will be the order of the day for about 80 per cent of the time. In the backfield with Gibhs or quarterback Jim Johnson of Mis souri will be Ronnie Goodwin of Baylor and either Kermit Alexan der. UCLA, or Charlie Mitchell, Washington, in the halfback slots: Willcmstte, LC Beafen In Meet CHICO. Calif. lUPP- W.llam- ettc and Lewis and Clark were beaten by two of the tournament favorites in first round games in the Chicago Invitational Basket ball Tournament here Thursday night. Sacramento Slate beat Willam ette 61-56 after holdinc a .14-22 halftime lead. Kirk McNeill of Willamette led all seffrers with 15 points, but 10 of the II Sacra mento State cacers who played scored. Pasadena College edced Lewis and Clark 75-74 after the Oregon team had taken the lead for the first time with nine minutes to play. The lead changed hands 13 time? after that before Jim Poteet hit the winning free throw with 10 seconds to play. PELICAN MARINA 928 Front OPIN -UL WINTER FOR YOUR CONVENICNCE. John ion $alct itrv tc. Motor ftpam . . . boff repairs , . . acctv wet and tupplitt for th bot pwntr. Um Hit win ttr to moh your boot rcodv for nctt twminor. St its tor avtrythinf yon the season but Ihe Vandals were playing without their "second El gin Baylor." Cms Johnson. He is ineligible for NCAA tournaments under the junior college transfer rule. Oregon and Iowa play Ihe first semi-final game tonight after win ning Wednesday night's games, but the betting at Portland is that the winner of tonight's Beav Mm. m and Bill Thornton, Nebraska, at full. The East had planned a sound Lee Allen Wins Bout In Trials ST1LLWATKR. Okla. 'LTD - Oregon wrestlers Lee Allen. Ron Finley and Aulry Killer scored victories in the first round of the Pan - American Games wrestling trials here Thursday. Allen, former University of Ore gon matman frmo Portland, nnd presently assistant wrestling coach tit Klamath Falls Union High School, defeated Judd Hum phreys, Utah, 142 in hte IM.5- und division. Finley of Oregon State scored a 5-1 decision over Dino Boni, Pittsburgh, at tlie same weight. Ehler. a former Portland State College athlete, pinned Roger Oie son of Oklahoma Stale after nine minutes and 33 seconds in the 171. 5-pound division. Other action in the latter divi sion resulted in a 2 0 decision for Dennis Fitzgerald, Hazel Park Mich., over Len Kauflman of Ore gon Slate and a 4-0 decision by Ronnie Clinton of Wyoming over Bruce Glenn of Oregon. CLIB PICKS WHITE WASHINGTON lUPI) The Washington Touchdown Club has selected Supreme Court Justice Bvron R. White as the govern ment figure who contributed most to sports in I'Jttf. White, a former Aii-rtiin-.ica football player at Colorado and later a professional star, will re ceive the Mr. Sam Trophy, named in honor of the laic speak er of the House, Sam Rayburn. on Jan. 12. SPEND NEW YEAR'S IN RENO FLY BOTH WAYS Coll For or Low I r Rotes I Cho;le Klamath Aircraft INC. KlomoJ-h Folli Airport Ph. TU 2-4681 er-Bear battle will breeze through the finals. Oregon State has never lost a Far West Classic game. Cal, play ing without Wall, split a great two game series at Corvallis earlier this month. Tonight's contest should be a great one. LA Classic At the Los Angeles Classic, it's avorite hrine Tilt running game, but quarterback Daryl Lamonica of Notre Dame has been so accurate in workouts with his passing that head coach .Jack Mollenkopf of Purdue has boosted the aerial attack to about 60 per cent of all plays. Lamonica will do all of the aer ial work for the East, but if he sets hurt it is probable that Bill Murkuwski of Ohio State will take over and run a ground game. The halfbacks w ill be Larry Ferguson, Iowa, and George Saimes, Michi gan Stale. Rov Walker of Purdue will be at full. The chief pass catchers will be ends Hugh Campbell. Washington Slate, and Gene Raesz. Rice. The East lacks the "big name" stars it has had in previous sea sons, but both squads this year were picked for offense and de fenserather than just big offense names. "The result is-that we have the right men for the right positions." says assistant coach Ara Parsegh- sian of Northwestern. The receiving ends will be John Mackcy. Syracuse: Art Graham. Boston College and Tom Hutchin son. Kentucky. The West will depend upon Stanford's Ed Cummincs. I96, as one of its top linebackers along with Jim Maples, 220, Baylor. George Reed, the high scoring fullback from Washington State, w,ll be in the defensive backfield; and Kay Mansfield, Washington center, has been switched to play middle guard. The east linebackers are Dave Mcggyesy, 220, Syracuse; and Bill Armstrong, 190, Ohio State. January Sale Prices on Quality Furniture NOW! Hurry! Sove! Ger S&H Green Stomps, Too Opn Fridor Till 9:00 12th & Moin UCLA and Colorado State in Sat urday's finals. The Bruins rolled through St. Louis 85-60 with Walt Ilazzard again engineering the fast break and leading scorers w ith 15 points. Dave Waxman of UCLA also had 15. Colorado State routed North western 75-50. in the other semi final as Bill Green hit 36 points. Torrid Loyola Whips Arkansas In Tournament By United Press International Mention Loyola these days and nobody bothers to ask "which one" anymore. There are any nunibr- of I"y olas scattered throughout the country, one in Los Angeles, an other in Baltimore and still an other in New Orleans. But the one everybody in col lege basketball circles is buzzing about is Loyola of Chicago, which led the nation in scoring last sea son and appears to be flirting with the country's No. 1 ranking this season. Seemingly oblivious to tourna ment pressure, the Ramblers, who currently rank second only to Cincinnati in the nation, scored their eighth straight victory with out a defeat by downing Arkan sas. 81-62, Thursday night to move into the semifinals of the All-College tournament at Okla homa City, Okla. Loyola entered the game with fantastic scoring average of 8.3 points per game and al though the Razorbacks held the Ramblers to their lowest total of the season, tliey still are aver aging 104.6 points per contest. Harkness Scores 22 The Ramblers had four players' in double figures against the Ra zorbacks, led by Jerry Harkness with 22 points. In tonight's semi finals, they will meet Memphis Stale, which beat Toledo 76-61 Wyoming laces Oklahoma City in the other semifinal. Five of the top 10 teams were idle Thursday night and of the other five Unit did phy, only one, fourth-ranked Stanford, lost, Southern California downed .Stanford, 65-57, in a consolation game of the Los Angeles Classic It marked the Indians' second setback in as many days. Garry Bradds, who has taken over Jerry Lucas' center spot (or third-ranked Ohio State, pumped ChicGco Bears' Ronnie Bull AFL's Rookie NEW YORK (UPI) - Ron Bull of the Chicago Bears, who lived up lo his collegiate reputation as a speedboy and handyman after a slow start as a pro, today was voted I9IS2 National Football l-eague rookic-of thc-year by Unit ed Press International. Desoite the fact that he had only limited pre-season train ing and plaed his first three games on defense, the 200-pound halfback from Baylor wound up the Rears' leading rusher with 363 yards and an average of 3 2 1 for 1 13 carries. He also demonstrated his versa tility by catching 31 passes for 331 yards r"d running back nine kicknffs an average of 26 yards each. The Bears made Bull their No. Broktt Shocks Whtol Balancing Alignmtnt Winter Brake Special Grey Rock Quality Broke Lining. Arc Lining to Fit Drum. Bleed and Adjust Brakes. Add Necessary Broke Fluid. Free Brake Adjustment for Life of the Lining East Main Brake S Alignment Specialists Ivan Eccles, Owner East Main & Wantland three short of the tournament rec ord. In losers' action. USC heaped more indignation on the slumping Stanford Indians with a 65-57 de cision. Tom Dose had 24 for the Indians, but the one-two punch of Gordy Martin (17 and Bill Morris (16) for Troy more than offset him. Utah State whipped Washington in 24 points in a 66-fi2 w in over Butler that provided the unbeaten Buckcves with their eighth con secutive triumph. Sixth-ranked Arizona State gained the finals of the Queen City tournament with an 89-83 victory over Khode Island and will meet Canisius for the title. Joe Caldwell sparked the Sun Devils with 24 points while Bill O'Connor poured in 41 points in leading Canisius to an 85-72 con quest over South Carolina. Eighth-ranked Kentucky handed Dartmouth its first loss of the season 9o-49, with Cotton Nash and Scott Baesler each netting 18 points for the Wildcats. Ninth-ranked Mississippi State and lOlh-ranked Duke enjoyed a night off but HUi-ranked UCLA advanced to the final round of the Los Angeles Classic with an 85-66 win over St. Louis. Colorado State also moved into the final mind when Bill Green scored 36 points in a 75-50 romp over Northwestern. California's Golden Bears rolled to an 85-V7 opening round victory over 13lh-ranked Seattle in the Far West Classic, Oregon Slate beat Idaho 80-53 in the same tour ney, and Georgia Tech nipped 14th-ranked Virginia Tech 73-72 in an overtime opening round Cator Bowl contest. Florida Tops Itice Florida also scored an opening round victory in the Gutor Bowl by beating Rice 66-57, and Kan sas Slate broke open a close game in the final eight minutes to lick Missouri 61-43 in the first round of the Big Eight toiirna ment. Oklahoma nipiied Oklaho ma Stale 49-48 in another open ing round Big Eight clash. Miami (Fla.) and Pittsburgh each scored opening round victor ies in the Hurricane Classic, Mi ami swamping Cornell 94-74. and Pitt beating Louisiana Stale 96-73. Of Year I choice in the draft last year nnd owner-coach George Ilalas explains why: "Bull combines power and elu siveness with fine balance. The liest runner wilh balance I can think of now playing is Jon Ar nett (of the Los Angeles Rams). Well, Bull is bigger than Arnett. And Bull hasn't reached his peak yet. "Bull fulfilled every cxpcctalbn I had of him and makes me look like a shrewd judge of college talent." In tlie vote of 42 writers who covered the past NFL season. Hull received 14 votes, compared lo five (or his closest rookie ri val, offensive tackle Merlin Olscn of Ijos Angeles. TU 4-3337 IVs MOST CARS 9SSIC 71-60, in the other consolation con test. Other Tourneys Anzi,., State won its first round game in the Queen City Tourney at Buffalo Vith an 89-83 win over Rhode Island. Joe Cald well had 24 for the Sun Devils. At San Francisco, the WCAC tourney title is still wide open. Santa Clara meets San Jose Stale and USF plays St. Mary's in to night's semi-finals. USF defeated Portland 56-90 Thursday night as Ollie Johnson hit 23 and held Portland's Steve Anstett to 13. Steve Gray had 29 as St. Mary's breezed past Loyola 83-71. BAKER SCORES TWO v ij - ' I . " , j mil, & 4 f-J ' . I ' ' , ' nS V" '. - .". -.' v.1;'- ...it and H e i t m a n trophy winner Terry Baker of Oregon State makes two points early in the game Thursday night against the University of Idaho, Idaho player is Bill Mattis (25 1. The Beavers won the game to gain the semifinals, 80-53. UPI Telephoto Rebs Game Choice MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPI) Two quarterbacks who passed for almost 1.800 yards and II touch downs this fall headline the list of 48 Rebels and Yankees playing in the siher anniversary of the Blue-Gray Football Classic here Saturday. The South was an early favor ite but the odds may be even when the game begins before an expected crowd of 25,000. The weatherman predicted gloomy skies, cool temperatures and the possibility of light rain or driz zle. The Rebels have won 14 of the nationally broadcast and televised EMERGENCIES and ESTIMATES BUD KENNEY Plumbing & Heating IIS Illh Tl' 4-ft?flS nvtlir IT'S BRBto X PIZZA PARLOR and Ye Public House You'll enjoy the subtle lighting at Shakey's. And, after all, she may buy her own Pizzo! OPEN AT NOON EVERY DAY 20 Varieties of PIZZA Tor 9 it with you or eat It here! 2725 So. 6th Ph. TU 2-6222 Next to Tower Theatre Tonight At the Chico Invitational, here were the first round scores: Cal Poly 72 Humboldt State 53, Pasa dena 75 Lewis and Clark 74, Sac ramento Stale 61 W'illiamette 56, Chico Stale 54 Western Washing ton 47. At the Holiday Classic hi Las Vegas, it was Occidental 61 Cal Western 49, Whittier 72 Nevada Western 68. Los Angeles State defeated Hamline in non-tournament action 83-64. Idaho's loss Thursday night left no major unbeaten clubs on the coast. Once-beat?n teams now in clude USC, Arizona State, Calfor- nia, and the Vandals. - t All-American football player games while the North has taken nine. Virginia quarterback Gary Cuozzo will pace tlie Rebel at tack. Cuozzo completed 98 of 181 passes for five touchdowns arid 1.116 yards this full despite the fact the Cavaliers were near the lxtto;n in the Atlantic Coast Con ference. The 192-pound star set six records at Virginia most yards passing, most passes at tempted, most aerials completed in one year as well as for his career. Iowa State signal caller Dave Hoppmann will guide the Yankee offense. Tom Jcrru BATTER DOT i