regon led (Suns Past Shorter ied iaifas, 96-9 PAGE 12 A HERALD AND NEWS, Klamalh Falls. Ore. Thursday, January 17, 1961 Bing Crosby Tournament Sets Underway Thursday PEBBLE BEACH. Calif. (UPI The world's greatest fun (our nament, the $.10,000 Bing Crosby National Pro-Amateur event, got underway today on three golf courses with the pack expected to chase Arnold Palmer, and Gary Player. This is the tournament in which all of the gate goes to charity with Bing picking up the check for expenses. The professionals play for W5. ' 000 in the pro division and $15,000 ..In the pro-am, and if one man ' ' should w in both sections he could .' collect $8,300 for the four days . of work. While Palmer and Player, with victories in (lie Los Angeles Open and San Diego Open, respective ' ly. this year, are the advance slars, the defending champion is Doug Ford. ford is paired with young Dick Lolz, the California stale leur champion, and even if he fails to repeat in the pro divi sion, lie lias a good chance in the pro-am. home ol the oilier pros pair ings aren't quite as well-groomed for a golf course. Ken Venturi, for instance, draws comedian signer Dean Martin. Jerry Bar ber has Donald O'Connor; Na tional Open champion Jack Nick- laus has Bob Sterling and Cana dian star George Knudscn has Jim 'Mr. Magool Backus, the lit tle old wine-maker. The weather, perfect earlier In the week, has switched and indi cations are that it may be blus tery, with possible rains. But if it stays good." said Ed Eurgol, the former National Open champion, "we could have some! hot scores. The courses are play ing taster than 1 ve ever seen them." Palmer warmed up for the four days of play by firing a good five-under-par fi7 on ' Pebble Beach Wednesday. Player had 68. Venturi had a fie at Cypress Point and Ted Makalcna of Hon olulu had a 65, also at Cypress. Palmer and Player never have done well in this tournament in the past. Palmer's best finish was a tie for fourth place. Play er has been farther down the list. Tlie defending champions in the pro-amateur department are young pro Bob McCallister and amateur Albie Pearson, the Los Angeles Angels outfielder. How ever, Pearson had a 10 handicap last year, only five this time around. Alex ((arras (Goes On Carpet To Explain His Football Bets NEW YOHK (UPH - Star lac kle Alex Karras of the Detroit Lions may get his opportunity to day to eplain a televised state ment that he bet on at least one pro football game to National Football 1-eagiic Commissioner Pete Mozcllc. Itozellc refused to disclose when Karras will actually be called on the carpet but he warned that "a serious breach of league rules" may have taken plate and reports were that he will confront thp 245-pound play er sometime today, , "Alex Karras will lie given an opportunity to explain published statements attributed to him." said Kozcllo. "Such action consti tules a serious breach of thci player contract and the constitu tion and by-laws of the league.' In Karras' interview with an NBC television reporter, he was asked: "Do you bet on ball games?" "I have bet on a ball game," answered Karras. "Have you ever bet on a hall game in which you were play ing?" he was asked. "Yes. I have." replied Karras. Karras said he "assumed" there was widespread betting on NFL games hy coaches, manag ers and owners but stoutly de fended the inlegrily of the game and insisted he never had seen an indication of point-shaving. "I know of none whatsoever in this league." he said. "I think the hoys plav too hard to be shaving points. "I can't even conceive that idea because it isn't a sorl wlieie it is an individual effort answered Karras when asked if . It were mssihle to shave wints in NFL comvtilinn. "There's II football plavers Iwth dclcnse and offense and sure a qunrtprbai has probably complete control of Die hall game but so does the referee, so does our best receiv or, so does your best defensivei tackle." Karras also admitted some per- so.u with whom he "associated" in Detroit might be "in fact un-. desirable" hut said his associa lion w'lh them was in the casual course of visiting a restaurant or saying hello to them in his own bar. Rocky Columbo Wins Mat Event Truce Talks Will Begin Friday NEW YORK (LTD - The line ups wore completed today for the latest peace talks between the National Collegiate Athletic Asso ciation I NCAA I and the Amateur Athletic Union lAAUi, which will open here Friday with Gen. Doug las Mac-Arthur serving as arbi trator. Representing the NCAA will be Walter Byers, the association's executive director; William W Russell, president of the U.S Track and Field Federation, and Dr. Mason W. Gross, president of Rutgers University and co-chair man of the federation s newly- formed National Advisory Com mittee. The three-man AAU delegation will consist of Louis Fischer, the AAU president; Col. Donald Hull its executive director, and Albert Wheltlc, a Baltimore attorney and former AAU president. MacArthur was recently ap pointed by President Kennedy to arbitrate the dispute between the two bodies over control of ama teur sports in this country. The conference will be held in the gen cral's residence, starting at 10 a.m. (ESTi Friday. Representatives of both groups expressed hopes that these new est in a long list of peace talks will help solve their differences. ADD ( 0 ( IIINt; I-AIK SAN FRANCISCO M'PD - The San Francisco Forty Niners have added Bill Johnson as ollensive line coach and Jack Christiansen as coach ol the defensive hall- backs for the t!Hst National Foot ball l,caiic season. Rocky Columbo, the lough good guy, took home the bacon Wcdncs- day night when he won the six- man Battle Royal with a sensa tional victory over Ihe other five grapplers and also won his prelim inary tmut over llaru Sasaki. Columbo took home, also, the added $2110 purse in winning Ihe royal before a mediocre crowd al Ihe event. But the crowd enjoyed the royal immensely. Rocky Hunter, replacing Ruck Davidson who didn't return from a trip to Indiana in time (or Ihe card, was the first wres tler eliminated. Wild Rill Savage and Sasaki piled him up to put bim out of the match. Irish Pat O'Brien was the sec ond one out when lorrnzo Parent i nnd Columbo dispatched him rath er quickly. Rut Columbo was left lo fight oft the sinister duo of Savage and Sasaki when Ihe two loughies tossed Parent! from the ring lo eliminate him. They then proceeded lo try and nail the fast and elusive Columbo. He held his own with Ihe pair lor quite some time when the turn ing point came. Savage npplied a full nelson to Columbo while Sasaki prepared to finish him off with a judo chop to the kisser. Rut Columbo turned Ihe tide. He veered out of the way as Sa saki made his chop nnd the blow connected lo Ihe face ol Savage, decking him. Columbo then belted Sasaki one to the nose and pinned him while the groggy Savage was Irvine: lo come out of the log Columbo caught him liefore he did. rapped his midsection with a couple of shots and pinned him to win the royal. Savage won the one fall prelim inary event over Parentl when he npplied a knee lift lo the Jaw of Die Italian to lay him out nnd pin him. Hunter and O'Rrien drew in Ihe opening match. Co lumbo won over Sasaki when the Jap had him on the ropes and was running at him to hit Colum bo in the stomach with his head. Columlio leaped in the air. applied a scissors to Sasaki while in the air, rolled him over and pinned his shoulders in sensational style ...I,...,, m hi n . m i i i in i. , 1, j Oregon Techers Lead League PORTLAND (UPH Oregon Tech's Willie Anderson leads the Oregon Collegiate Conference in scoring, according to basketball statistics compiled today. Anderson, a 6-4 junior, has scored 103 points in five confer ence games for a 20.6 average. Dave Hughes of Southern Oregon ranks second with 101 points in the same number of contests. Sammy Smith and Hewlett Nash, both of Oregon Tech, rank third and fourth with 9.1 and 73 points in five games, respectively John Nelson of Portland Stale is fifth in scoring with 71 points. His average of 23.6 in three contests is the best in the conference. mi . . ANDERSON COPS REBOUND Oregon Tech's leaping Willie Anderson, with ball, comes in ahead of Southern Oregon's Ed Hill to snare a rebound, one of 19 he got dur ing the game. Looking on Is OTI's Sammy Smith, at left, and SOC's Dave Hughes (43). Anderson and Smith combined to lead the Owls to a 96-92 victory over rival SOC for their fifth OCC win without a loss. Russell Leads East Stars To Upset Over West, 115-108 LOS ANGELES I LTD - Even if Rill Russell doesn't score I point he's one of the finest play ers in basketball. When he scores 19 there's probably no one better And the Boston Celtics star did score 19 Wednesday night in ad dition to hauling down 24 rebounds and blocking a myriad of shots- Parry O'Brien. Will Compete LOS ANGELES (LTD- Olym pic track star Parry O'Brien said today he will come out of "re tirement" to compete in Saturday night's fourth annual Los Angeles Invitational indoor track meet. O'Brien, who was the first man to break the 60-foot barrier in the shot-put and set a world indoor record of fi.1 feet l' inches, won the Olympic title in 1952 and 1956 and finished second to Bill Nieder in 19fi0. llerschel Smilh. meet director. said the addition of O'Brien, who has won all three previous shot- puts in the invitational, means an Olympic champion or world or American record-holder is en tered in every open event on the program. so naturally the Eastern squad upset Hie West. 115-108. in the 1.1th annual National Basketball Association All-Star game. "Russell just dominated the game." moaned West coach Fred Schaus of the Los Angeles Lak ers. Russell also dominated the most valuable player voting, easily win ning the award for the first time in six all-star appearances. The 6-foot-10 center, along with some slick ball handling by Os car Robertson of Cincinnati and Bob Cousy of Boston, stunned the West squad which opened the game w ith what was hilled as Ihe greatest offensive lineup of all time. The win. before a crowd of 14,- 8.18 at the Memorial Sports Arena snapped a two-game Western win streak and gave the hast a 9-4 edge in Ihe series. The smaller, quicker Eastern lineup harassed the West on de fense and outran them on olfense to quickly build up a 19-10 lead with seven minutes gone in the opening quarter. Robertson led the ollensive at tack before intermission, scoring 16 points in addition to giving the East the spark he had given to the West the past two years. Even though Bob Petlit of St Louis and the West was the high scorer with 25 points, the West never could get any resemblanccl of an offense going. Midway in the fourth period the East had built up a 101-84 margin and coach Red Auorbach figured Rus sell could come out. However, the West shot back on buckets by Elgin Baylor, Jerry esl and Don Ohl to cut the gap to 102-93. Auerbach rushed Rus sell in as fast as the scorer would allow and the East had no trou-i ble for the final four minutes. Robertson topped the East in scoring with 21. Baylor tied Wilt Chamberlain at 17 points for runner up honors in the West. Smith, Anderson Pace Owl Attack By JERRY WAGGONER Herald and News Sports Editor The Oregon Tech Owls made it five in a row in Oregon Collegiate Conference competition here Wed nesday night when the iron man five." led by the prolific . scor ing sprees of "Sweet" Sammie Smith and Willie Anderson, turned back chief rival Southern Oregon. 96-92. Coach Jim Partlow s first five is a very good basketball team but the resemblance stops there after the first five. The Owl coach inserted substitutes in the last two minutes of the game when the Owls had a comfortable 14-point lead. And the substitutes all but blew the game before Partlow could get the first five, minus Hewlett Nash, back into the game the final 10 seconds. South ern Oregon pumped in 13 points while the subs could mark up only two. It didn't appear that the Owls played much of a defensive game. They allowed the Red Raiders many too many easy lay-in shots. But the Owls stayed well ahead by scoring almost at will. They could easily have passed the 100- point mark had Partlow left the regulars in. The Owls got their best scoring game ot the season wun tne 9t points. It is not a school record Small College Cage Ratings NEW YORK (UPD-The Unit ed Press International small col lege basketball ratings (with first- place votes and won-lost records in parentheses ; Team Points 1. Wittenberg (141 (8-H 285 2. Westminster (7 (6-3 1 271 3. Tennessee St. I3 (12-21 231 4. Grambling (2) 114-1) 196 5. Evansville 4 (9-3i 189 6. Sou. Illinois ( 2 7-4 146 7. Prairie View A&M (11-21 137 . S.E. Missouri U (11-01 9. Hofstra 1 1-4 66 10. S.E. Oklahoma (10-31 40 Second 1011 (tie1, Akron and Fresno State 23 each; 13, Orange State 21: 14 tie . Chapman and Santa Barbara 15 each; 16. 'Gan non 13: 17 die), Augsburg (1), Lamar Tech, Pacific Lutheran 1 and Southwestern Oklahoma 12 each. PRESCOTT TAKES DECISION LEICESTER. England (UPD-I Unbeaten British heavyweight Johnny Prcscott pounded out an eight-round decision over Ulli Kil ter Wednesday night to gain his second victory over the German in less than a year. It was the 19th success with two draws for Prcscott in 21 fights. but it is a scoring record be tween the two schools. The Owls connected on 40 of 86 shots for a very fine 46.5 percentage while SOC hit on 38 of 85 for an equally fine 44.7 per cent. Smith and Anderson put on a show for the near-packed Owl Gym. Smith turned in his finest game by ripping the nets for 32 points while getting in plenty of his clowning act. Anderson, who leads tlie league, popped the nets for 25 points and had the fans buzzing about his jumping ability. Both boys showed most of their scoring from underneath the buck et where a great portion of their points came from tipping in shots. But they were not the whole show. Van Zitck had a so-so night and still managed lo hit for 15 points and Norm Johns played his steady role from the shadows and got another 11 points. Only Nash, who was plagued by fouls, failed to hit in doubles and he missed it by only two points. Dave Hughes and Jerry Shults did most of the scoring for the Red Raiders although four were in double figures. Shults hit for 2.1 points, mostly from outside jump ers, and Hughes got 24 points, many too many of them while all alone under the basket. Brad Fla nary had 11 and Larry Hink 10 for Ihe losers. It was no contest despite the four-point margin at the final gun. The Owls were ahead all the way and the score was never even tied. They built up a 10-point lead at half. 44-34. and continued to march through the remainder of the game. The Owls soared to a 19-point lead late in the game, 91-72. and was coasting when Partlow in serted the subs. Smith and Anderson completely dominated the boards. Smith, the top reboundcr. pulled down 23 and Anderson hauled in 19 as they got more between them than all of Southern Oregon. The Owls had 56 for the game while the Red Raiders got only 27. The two clubs meet again next Wednesday night in Ashland. The Owls are idle until then. THE BOX SCORB SOC (HI HuQhes Hlnk Shults Hill Franks Flannrv Beabiio OTI (Ml Anderson Smith Nash Zitek John! Wilkrson Dennis Keller Slinkard Hawkins Totals u i) u n ii it n FaFj Fta-FI tub PI To 11-31 il 1 2 25 e-io en 13-78 5-11 5-10 5-7 l-l 15 Scort by halves; SOC OTI 0-M li-U St D II n i ? 0 t 14 34 5-J 44 Sl-H THE TIDE TURNED Rocky Columbo Is taking the rouqh end of the deal here when Wild Bill Savage ap plied the deadlock in the Battle Royal main event. But Columbo came out of this imellinq like a rote when Haru Sasaki threw a judo chop at him and hit Savage instead. Columbo went on to win the bout by pinning both Savage and Sasaki. Special Close-Out! LEATHER BOOTS by Chippewa ZITEK IN ACTION Oregon Tech's Van Zilek, with ball, leapt into the air to snare a rebound during action Wednesday night against Southern Oregon. He took the ball just before goinq out of bounds but got the past away before he did. Zitek scored IS points for the qame. Guarding him it SOC't Royce Klter 1411. Oregon Tech Just Arrived . . Carload of Fiber Glass Insulation! GET READY FOR THE NEXT COLD SPELL! 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