Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, January 08, 1963, Page 7, Image 7

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    HERALD AM) NEWS, Klamath
WHERE DID IT GO? Di
bine on a "London Bridge
ck
Illinois met in Champaign, III.,
iiutsnniiea wju man. riiqnt
See college scores for final
Co!!
eqiaie uroun
ot To
LOS ANGELES IUP1I - The
.National Collegiate Athletic Asso
ciation i.NCAAi closed ranks to
day behind the U.S. Track and
Field Federation in its battle
with the Amateur Athletic Union
while holding up an example that
the warring groups could
exist.
As tlie NCAA convention went
into its second day there were
reports that the White House was
exercising pressure to bring the;
struggle to an end quickly
through the good offices of Gen.
Douglas MacArthur, who had
agreed to head an arbitration
panel in the dispute.
And cooler heads in the NCAA
ranks were urging the collegiate!
group not to adopt a proposed
amendment to its bylaws under
which an athlete would be barred
from NCAA championship compe
tition if he competed in a meet
not sanctioned by the track fed
oration.
Colleges
To
Defy
NEW VOfiK iLPli - Seven
rollegei in the New York City
area signified their intention of
defying the NCAA by going
ahead with plans today to enter
teams in the Knights of Colum
bus track meet at Boston this
Saturday.
Coaches of Kordham, Colum
bia, lona. Manhattan. St. John'a
and Seton Hall along with a
spokesman for New York Univer
sity said Monday they will enter
their teams in the K. of C. meet
unless ordered not to by their
athletic directors between now
and Saturday.
The coaches took their stand
despite a recent letter by the
Eastern College Athletic Confer
enre. to which all seven schools
belong, supporting the National
Collegiate Athletic Association
i XC A A I and the NCAA-backed
U.S. Track and Field Federation
in its dispute with the Amateur
Athletic Union (AAU over the
control of amateur athletes in
this country.
The NCAA feels member col
leges should not comete in
meets sanctioned only by the
AAU such as the K ol C. meet
The athletic directors may be
holding the trump card, however
One of them. Arthur L. Mahan
of Villanova University, which is
also a member ot tne tastern
College Athletic Conference, over
ruled his own coach at the NCAA
convention in Los Angeles Mon
day. In another development here,
George Eastmcnt, the chairman
of the C.S. Olympic Track and
Field Committee, announced that
the United Stales definitely will
compete in the Pan-American
Games at Sao Paulo. Brazil,
April 20-May 5. even if il has
lo rely on non-collrziate alhletes
.Uli Anniversary
uorsi;
Come end Helo Uj Celebrate
5 YEARS OF PROGRESS'
.Friday, elan nary 1 1
Tho I1.K Of KI.AMATII FALLS
So. Oh o-d Kioi-aih
Tuesday,
Th
les U4I, Uhio Mate
nd III
othi
effect while ball goes
th
Monday night. Foreground
is toarv Dradas Jo . mi
result.
Falli, Oregon
Use Amendment
A high-ranking NCAA official
agreed the college organization
would be guilty of using the
same tactics as the AAU if it
adopted the amendment and he
said, "The convention isn't over
and the amendment hasn't come
up yet."
The NCAA plugged an appar
ent breach in its stand behind
the track federation when Villa
nova University athletic director
Arthur L. Mahan reversed the
position of his track coach.
James F. Uumbo Jim Elliott,
who had threatened to take his
learn into the Knights of Colum
bus indoor meet at Boston with-l
out federation sanction.
Villanova's track team defi
nitely will follow the policy of
the Eastern College Athletic Con
(erence and the NCAA and will
not participate in track meets
unless sanctioned by the U.S.
Track and Field Federation."
1962 Football
Decreased 30
LOS ANGELES (UPH-Foolba!l
fatalities decreased nearly 30 per
rent during l2 and could be re
duced even more. Dr. Floyd II.
Eastwood said today in his an
nual report to the American Fool-
ball Coaches Association.
Dr. Eastwood, chairman of the
Football Fatalities Committee.
said football deaths had dropped
from 37 in 11 to 26 In 1962, a
decrease of 29.7 per cent.
The report noted that 7 of 19
deaths attributed directly to par
ticipation in football came by
mid-September.
'Our whole problem of pre-sea-
son training is tremendous," Dr.
Eastwood reported.
Dr. Eastwood's report staled
that some of the main causes of
deaths during the past season
ere gang-play, vicious head
tackling and (ace-blocking. He
recommended de-e m p h a s 1 s on
that type of play and said if it
were more closely regulated it
aould bring about a correspond-
ing decrease in football fatalities
in the future.
Dr. Eastwood also stressed
more and better supervision,
pointing out that 23 per cent of
the lootball deaths during the 31
years that they have been
chocked have been found to oc
cur in unsupervised sandlot play.
Among his recommendations
were; Complete physical exami
nations by a team physician both
before and during the season;
reculation of hich school compe-
lilion by an age-hcight-weight sys
tem between competing schools
and learns; and a spring practice
period for all teams of at least
10 to 20 days.
In his breakdown of the lalali-
GUARANTEED REPAIR
SERVICI AT WARDS
H'-H B0"0, two. TV. .poHancf
. Wtrct thnlcln n lus'
phnt cll wnv' You'll Ilk. th
Wvict - - ftd th Br,ci! ClH
wty.
MONTOOMHY W0
Se.vICI DE.A.TMtNT
TU 4-J1U tf ft ..ftt
Vembr f D.I.C.
PAGE-7
inois' Tal Brody
I 1 2 1 corn
State and
linois, and
the game.
way as Uhi
is Bob Starnes,
led au-ov lain
UP! Telephoto
urae
Mahan announced at the conven
tion. And athletic director Walter L.
Haas of the University of Chica
go gave a lengthy report on the
success of his school's 10th an
nual holiday meet which was
jointly sanctioned by the track
federation and the central dis
trict AAU of which he is a vice
president.
Haas admitted that following1
the meet his track coach, Ted
Hayden, received a letter from
John Bauer, district AAU prcsi
dent, saying it could no longer
sanction meets also running un
der the track federation's banner
Haas said the University of
Chicago sponsored five other
open meets and he hated to sec
its good relationship with the
AAU disrupted but was under ob
ligation as an NCAA member to
seek the sanction of the track
federation.
Fatalities
Per Cent
ties, Dr. Easlwood reported of the
19 deaths directly attributed to
football play, 12 occurred in high
school, 6 in sandlot and 1 in
semi pro play.
The oilier seven fatalities were
ascribed to indirect causes such
as heart failure, heat exhaustion
and other conditions. Two of the
indirect fatalities were in college,
one in semi-pro and four in high
school play.
Other conclusions drawn by Dr.
Eastwood were that backfield
players incur more lnl.il injuries
than linemen with the halfback
positions the most hazardous and
defensive players are subject to
slightly more hazards than play
ers on offense.
Dr. Eastwood is counselor at
Los Angeles State College and
started compiling tne annual re
port on football fatalities for the
coaches association in 1931.
January I, 1943
INVENTORY
CLEARANCE
ALL SHOTSHELLS AT WHOLESALE AND BELOW
16 or 20 gauge 39.00 case
12 gauge Super-X 49.00 case
28 gouge 44.00 case
Johni.n
GOOSE DECOYS
14.88 ....
39 5 StvrofMm
GOOSE DECOYS
29.88,.,
WINCHESTER Model 12, dQ flfi
12-ga. pump 1t.UU
BROWNING 12-go. LQ Art
automatic shot gun 07UU
NEW MODEL 99E SAVAGE JJ QQ
ALL NEW GUNS PRICED AT
WHOLESALE TO CLEAR
Drtitic Rfduthoni On Com.ltf. St.tk el UxJ Gum
JOE'S Sporting Goods
418 Main
'aimer
Cincinnati Holds
Onto Top Rating
NEW YORK lUPH - Cincin
nati was voted the No. 1 college
basketball team by unanimous
acclaim for the third straight
week in the United Press Inter
national ratings, but the runner-
up Loyola of Chicago Ramblers
are beginning to challenge the
Bearcats' popularity.
Coach Ed Jucker's Bearcats
scrambled to a 63-50 victory over
Wichita last Saturday for their
11th straight win and 29th con
secutive triumph over a two-season
span.
Loyola ran its record to 13-0
with three successes last week
nd drew 290 points in the ballot-i
ing of the 35-man UP1 Board of
Coaches. The Ramblers had col
lected 2!H points in the previous
weekly poll.
linois (O-li and Arizona State
U2-1I retained their No. 3 and 4
rankings, Ohio State moved up
one rung to No. 5 and Duke took
three giant strides to sixth place.
Georgia Tech, the only other
school in the top 10 with a per-
led record (9-01, surged from
13th place to the No. 7 spot. Mis
sissippi State also advanced into
the elite with a move from lltii
to eighth place.
Wichita fell back a notch to
ninth place and UCLA, which lost
two squeakers to Washington dur
ing the weekend, dropped from
tilth to 10th place.
Points are issued on a 10-9-8-7-
6-5-4-3-2-1 basis for votes from
first to toth places. Cincinnati's
perfect 350 points was 60 better
than Loyola. Illinois received 219
points, Arizona State 177, Ohio
State 159 and Duke 147.
The ratings were based
Cofege
College Basketball Results
By United Press International
EAST
CCXY 70 Bridgeport 61
Columbia 74 Lehigh 66
Acadia 63 Rutgers 50
Gannon 79 Belmont Abbey 59
Phila. Textile 100 Delaware 53
SOUTH
Auburn 79 Mississippi 44
D. Lipscomb 58 Chattanooga 66
Union U. 78 Christian Bros. 52
Howard U. 71 Lincoln U (Pa 60
Alabama 77 Mississippi St. 72
Ahil. Christian 93 McMurry
Win-Salem St 92 Virginia St. 60
Kentucky 106 Vanderbilt 82
Memphis St. 96 Hawaii 60
Tenn. St. 82 St Francis (Pa) 61
Rand-Macon 74 Roanoke 65
Lane 76 Knoxville College 73
Richmond 74 Furman 71
S. Carolina 68 Virginia 64
Aus-Pcay St. 85 Southern III. 71
Georgia 78 Louisiana St. 67 (o t.)
Bcllarmine 92 Union College 68
MIDWEST
Kansas St. 58 Air Force 42
Illinois 90 Ohio St. 78
Indiana 85 Purdue 71
Augsburg 63 St. Thomas 46
Oklahoma 91 Iowa St. 85
MacAlesler 73 Gust-Adolphus 59
Minn iDuluth) 57 St. John's 45
Oklahoma St. 81 Missouri 56
LIQUORS
WfrkdsM 8:01 ll"l
Jock'l Super Market
Tul.lol.., Calif.
12'
Strvut Iniulattd
BOOTS
8.95
14.95 M.n'i er W.m.n'l
ICE SKATES
9.88
All llltl
in stock
Opens
games through Saturday Jan. 5.
Oregon State led the second 10
after slipping from 10th place.
North Carolina was 12th, followed
by West Virginia and Colorado
State University (tied for l3lh,
Kentucky, Auburn, Colorado and
St. Joseph's (Pa.i. Stanford, Wis
consin, California and Utah State
were tied for 19th place. Kentuc
ky was seventh last week.
NEW YORK (UPD The Unit-I
ed Press International major bas
ketball ratings (with first-place
votes and won-lost records in pa
rentheses l :
Team Points
1. Cincinnati (351 (11-01 350
2. Uyola (111.) (13-0) 290
3. Illinois (9-l 219
4. Arizona State ( 12-1 1 177
5. Ohio State (9-1 1 159
6. Duke (10-2) 147
7. Georgia Tei 1 9-0 KHi
8. Mississippi Stale (9-2) 71
9. Wichita (9-3) ' 70
10. UCLA (10-4) 64
Second 10 teams 11, Oregon
State. 50; 12, North Carolina, 26;
13 (tie1, West Virginia and Colo
rado State Univ., 23 each; 15,
Kentucky, 19; 16, Auburn, 15; 17,
Colorado, 14; 18, St. Joseph's
(Pa., 12; 19 (tic). Stanford. Wis
consin, California and Utah Stale,
8 each.
Others - DePaul, 7; St. Louis
and Niagara, 6 each; Bradley
and Notre Dame, 5 each; Miami
iFla.) and St. Bonaventure, 4
each; Kansas and Texas, 3 each:
Bowling Green, Pittsburgh, Okla
homa State and Texas A and M,
2 each; Kansas State, Virginia
rech, NYU, Vanderbilt. Seattle.
Princeton
each.
and Pennsylvania, 1
Scores
Colorado 75 Nebraska 47
Huntington 78 Scwanee 71
Midwestern 72 Arlington St
64
Michigan 88 Iowa 67
SOUTHWEST
E. Tex. St. 69 S.W. Tex. St. 59
Dallas U 56 Tex. Lutheran 48
Aril St (Flag) 84 Ft Lewis AM 63
W. Tex. St. 84 Easter, N.Mcx. 49
WEST
Seattle U. 79 Idaho 72
Santa Clara 66 Loyola (Calif) 58
Carroll 78 Westminster 68
USF 71 Pepperdine 60
ADDS SIX TRACKS
NEW YORK (UPD Six tracks
were added 10 the Harness
Tracks of America membership
Monday, raising the total to 29
The new harness racing ovals
were Liberty Bell Park in Phila
delphia: The Meadows, Washing
ton, Pa.; Wolverine Raceway,
Detroit; and Grandview, North
field and Painesville raceways in
Northficld. Ohio.
DON'T MISS
YOU SEE A MOUTH FULL OF BIG TEETH when you
try to tie uo huqe mountain lion ALIVE. Scene from
JIM BOND'S UNFORGETTABLE FILM, "THE MOUN.
TAIN LION."
See Jim Bond in Person With
Three Great Color Spectaculars
"THF MOUNTAIN LION," RARE moviei of dan.
geroui liom getting tied up ALIVE.
"ALASKA'S FABULOUS RAINBOWS," howing
10 end 12-pound rainbowi fighting light tackle, big
unfriend! Al.iko been. . . .
"WILD WINGS," featuring thoumndt of bird;
wonderful camera work. . . .
MILLS SCHOOL
TONIGHT ONLY
DOORS OPEN AT 7:00; SHOW AT 8;00
ADULTS $1.25; CHILDREN 7Sc, Tax Included
T'tl.ll t U.S. National lank, Ith i4 Main: Firit Natianal
lank, Surh and Main; The Gun Stare. Alto al the doer.
Sponsored by Klamath Falls Joyceei
Coif Seas
W' .-V. --.MS.-
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BODY ENGLISH Using all the body tnglish he can
come up with, Arnold Palmer watches his ball stop near
the cup on the 18th green at Rancho Golf Course in
Los Angeles Monday. Palmer eased the ball Into the cup
on the next stroke to par the 18th hole with four strokes
and win the 37th annual $50,000 Los Angeles Open Golf
Tournament with a score of 274 for 72 holes.
. UPI Telophoto
Patterson Will Announce
Fight Site In
NEW YORK (UPD-Announce-I
ment of the site and date for the
return Sonny Lislon-Floyd Patter
son heavyweight tille fight is ex
pected within 24 hours, now that
the World Boxing Association
WBA has unexpectedly ap
proved it.
Emilc Bruneau of New Oilcans.
chairman of the WBA's World
Championship Committee, an
nounced Monday night that the
WBA's ban against tlie return
bout has been rescinded.
Ex-champion Patterson, who
has the privilege of choosing tho
site and date under the return-
bout contract, has been consid
ering four cities: Baltimore, Ml
ami Beach, Cleveland and Las
Vegas. Ncv.
In those (our areas, at least one
taxing commission not identified
by Patterson had been reluctant
lo sanction the fight because
of the WBA ban. .Now that imped
iment has been removed.
Promoter Al Bolan of Cham
pionship Sports. Inc. 'CSI has
Guarntd tha Pinut Sarvlca
KLAMATH
Radiator Works
1 901 So. 6th
TU 4-642
THE BIG FIGHT
ft
mm
f:
24 Hours
visuea mice 01 me cities and re
ported lo Patterson on their pos
sibilities as sites.
Bruneau stressed that tlie cham
pionship committee had reversed
its Christmas Eve decision be
cause the WBA Ratings Commit
tee on Jan. 2 had boosted ex
champion Patterson from second
among contenders lo first.
Bruneau explained that Patter
son's boost had followed automa
tically the dropping of top con
tender Eddie Machcn of Port
land, Ore., completely out of the
rankings because of a mental ill
ness.
Now despite tlie WBA'e oppo
sltlon to return-bout contracts
Lislon is defending the tille
against tlie top contender.
Lislon took the title from Pat
terson on a first-round knockout
at Chicago Sopl. 23, and tlie re-
lurn-bout contract was signed be
fore that bout. 1
THE DEPEMBIiS BUIU BY DODGE ! I
BUMPER GUARDS
fo
WHEEL COVtRS
Tht cji en lop il I '(3 Dodl 329 2-door
lndin. It h I unilnad, rust-prolKtid
body, chiirhijh lull, in illirnilor,
lell-idjustin bnkes, I 225 tu. in. 6,
nd it will jo 32,000 milH betwlin
miior (rtiM 0bi.
Thi cir en the boltom il Ihi nm
modil, l 'U Dodia 330 2-door ledm.
WicinuylhtsamOodlniniib)ul it,
Thirt'ionedifttrcflCf.lt'siquippedtht
THOMAS
424 So. 6th Street
irnte thi rteuieut 1 et I auitau t nu oos.i euin-eil "m.ii"
n With Victory
'Golfer Of
Captures
LOS ANGELES UPI It was
the same old monotonous story
today with Arnold Palmer again
on top of the money heap exact
ly whore he was when they
closed the till cn golf's money
register for 1962.
In his wallet was a $9,000
check, his pay for a first-place
in Uie $50,000 Los Angeles Open
which ended Monday in a typi
cal, patented Palmer finish.
He came from three strokes
off the pace to win handily with
a five-under-par 66 and a four
round 274 total. It was Arnie'si
38th tournament win in seven
years as a pro. But it was his
first victory in the Los Angeles
Open having never finished
better than 10th in his heretofore
jinx event.
"I want to thank tlie splendid
gallery, all my friends and
everyone," said Palmer, casting
a meaningful glance skyward as
he pocketed tlie loot.
The $9,000 in his first tourna
ment of tlie year put him well
County '5s1
Slate Three
Contests
There are three Klamath Coun
ty League games on tap tonight
with Merrill hosting Malm, Bo
nanza entertaining Bly and Chit
oquin hosting Gilchrist.
Merrill will be favored over the
Mustangs tonight. The Huskies
have been coming on strong as
of late and Malin hasn't yet
Jelled. The Huskies are led by
Ken Smith, Jim Thompson and
Dale Kurtz. The Mustangs are
paced by Tom Brown, Tom To
fell and Randy LeQuicu.
Chiloquin, the league leader and
favorite, will be a strong pick
over Gilchrist. The Panthers have
loo much strength in Al DeBorto-
U, Tony Wilder and Greg Harris.
Bonanza will be a slight pick
over the improving Bly Loggers.
The Antlers have hddie Sim
mons, Fred Dearborn, BUI Newlun
and Ernie Nichols leading the
way. Bly has a well balanced
team In Jim walls, joitnny ho-
dowa, Merle Clemens and Greg'
Davis.
Pop( Read
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SALES AND SERVICE
Klamath Falls, Ore.
Year1
LA Open
ahead of all. Last year he banked
a record official $81,448 in PGA
winnings.
Calls Play Erratic
Playing what he termed "er.
ratically," he put together a
round of eight birdies, a bogey
and a double bogey. After turn
ing back the not-too-strong drives
for the front spot by Art Wall,
Don Fairfield and huiton La
Clair, he made a virtual runa
way of it in his decisive margin
over the second-placers imports
Canadian Al Balding and South
African Gary Player, who each
finished with a 277.
"The big hole was the 17th."
said a perspiring Palmer as he
quaffed a soft drink at tlie fin
ish. "That's when I really won
it."
To be sure, he did by rolling
in a birdie putt which he mod
estly said was from 50 feet out.
When the little bail dropped in
the cup his army cheered, "Go,
Arnie, go." A waitress In the
Rancho Park golf course restau
rant tossed a tray high in the
air with a scream of excitement.
Palmer tlirew his arms over
his head and yelled, "Wos." He
then rushed to the cup, plucked
up the ball and kissed it.
In The Bag
After that it was a matter of
cold, cold facta no one could
catch him.
The would-be front runners fad
ad. Fairfield came In with a 70
(with a 3-over-par pressure seven
on tlie 15th) for a total of !78.
Wall, who went into Monday's fi
nal round with a two-stroke lead,
soared to a 74 and a final 279.
And LaClair came in with a 72
and a final 280.
Pel Boosters
Meet Jan. 9
The Pelican Booster Club will
resume Its weekly meetings fol
lowing the holiday break and
will meet Wednesday night at
the Willard Hotel, beginning at
6:30.
Coaches A Keck of basket
ball aud Uelance Duncan of the
wrettllog team each will give
a rundown of past garnet and
meets and for the ones coming
up this week.
BALDWIN HOTEL
31 Main St.
Wtjrm, eld-fuh'oncd hoiplfaf.
Ity, Lara, comfortabf lobby.
Da My, wMy, monthly rotos.
Handy parking.
BUMPER GUARDS
WHITE WALL TIRES
THE IDW PRICE
13B3 DODGEM!
doom eivieieN CHRYSLEFJ
fgj msiwi uerowiio
en xee-iy, Tuitotr menTi, i a to i it,.