Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 25, 1963, Page 9, Image 9

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TEAM CHAMPIONS The th ree team chAmpions in the annual Women's City Bowl
ing Championships are shown here. At left is Class A champ, Brown's Plumbing and
Heating. Left to right, team members are Pearl McDonald, Dolores Hawley, Marie
Johnston, Vivian Coleman and Mabel Pang. They rolled a team total of 2833. Cen
ter view is the Class B champs, House of Shoes. Left to right are Olea Houck, Jean
Thomas, Alene Hammil and Dorothy Brumble. Fifth member of the team, Freddie
Vetkos, was not present at picture-taking time. Top B total was 2803. Far right,
the Class C champions, Pin. Wheels. Seated, left to right, are Rose Chapman, Reta
Scott end Laura Barr. Standing, same order, are Lore Kongslie and Eliiabeth Dart.
Winning total was 2726 pins.
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DOUBLE WINNER Mabel Wachter rolled away with
two trophies in the women's tournament which concluded
Sunday when she captured both the Class B singles with
a 660, and the all-events handicap with a 1792 total.
Top scores for the singles are shown on the slips at right.
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WINS BIG TROPHY Eldina Greenwood is shown here
with one of the top trophies in the women's tournament,
the all-events scratch which she won with a pin total of
1643.
i
Millie M.IT(IUIMy.iP
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WIN SINGLES EVENTS Three winners of events in three of the four singles classi
fications are shown with their trophies. Left to right are Mary Wilkinson, Class A
with 644; Ellen Doty, Class C with 618, and Paggy Glacomelli, Class D winner with
575.
Owl Cagers A cclaimed
Best In OCC History
Ily I'nilr-ri 1'rrss luicrnational
Oregon Tech. proclaimed by
many as Ihe best basketball team
in Oregon Collegiate Conference
history, has ended its season with
OTI's basketball anil wits.
ling teams trill hold their an
nual winter sports banquet
Tuesday night at the Wlnema.
It will be an awards night
for both teams. The Owl bas
ketball club raptured Ihe OCC
erown for the third straight
year, and the wrestling team
won third In the conference,
only one point behind second
place SOC.
The public Is Invited to the
banquet which begin: at 6:30
p.m.
its third consecutive champion
ship trophy and a (lock of records.
The Owls defeated Oregon Col
lege of Education 7-ne al Mon-
w . fa. . 3 . . 1
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WIN A DOUBLES Nancy Groves, left, and Bert War
nor teamed up efforts to capture the A doubles event
in the women's tournament with a combined total of 1235.
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B DOUBLES WINNERS Ardis
.Monday, Kehmar.v 25, mfi.l
IIKRAI.n AM) NEWS. Klamath Kails, Ore.
PAC.K-s
Beavers Polish Up
For Cougar Series
McMahon, left, and
Joan Hardman topped all efforts in the Class B doublet
event of the tournament as they knocked over I 164 pins.
By I'nited Press International
Oreuon State's Beavers looking
ahead to the NCAA basketball
playoffs and the Oregon Ducks
Imping In break even for the
'season play two games e.ich this
week.
The Reavers meet Washington
Stale at Pullman next Friday and
Saturday nights and the Ducks
play Portland Tuesday night and
Seattle next Saturday night at
Eugene.
Southern California overcame a
nine-point deficit early in Ihe sec
ond half to xist a H7-.W revenge
win over Oregon State at Corval-
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V ritlUS3 lull Ituin, leu, nv
teamed up to win the Class D doubles action with I 183
total. The Gas. C doubles victors, Sue Barry and Mar
qaret Heaton are ict shown. They won the C event with
a total of I 173.
Forman Wins Road Event
KIT.KVF. 'ITI' - Ke;th For
mn of Ihe I'mversity nf Orecrni
and .l;m Trwe of South Sa!em
H ;h Mwnl von the Orein Tra k
an.-t Fieid Fivietatmn r'd runnini;
( rv.mprsriips SturHay.
Forman won the Ki-miie oen
(limpet it nn in M OT 5. Webinot
fieshman Ken Moore nf F.ugene
was se'.n secmvl behind and
Mike lhner, al of Oregon, was
third.
Price won the fivemi high
school race in 1 S. elfng
(irant's frnig Misner hy half a
Keoond eraid Brown of Ashland
a another two second behind
Cincinnati Faces Top Challenge
From Buckeyes In NCAA Action
By MARTIN I.ADKR
ITI Sport Wrttrr
If lurmihoiit is fair play, thr
University of f'irK'innati can ex
port a rufln surprise from Ohio
SUitc in tlie upcominti NCAA has-
kotball Hiamp Kinships.
Two years in a row the Buck
evos brought the nation's top-
ranked team into the postseason
carnival only to he knocked off
in the finals hy Cincinnati. This
season it's the Bearcats who
boast the No. I squad, but Ohio
State seems primed to turn the
tables and finally capture thr
elusive title.
Cincinnati, after sweeping its1
fir-t 1 mm est a. has hit its low- j
est nit of the season. Tlie Bear-
cati lost their first Kame last
week and tlien on Saturday night
had to nvercome a 14-jxiint defi !
cnt to edte Tulsa, .xi-M. on their jj
rrome cotirt (.
The BiK-keyps. on the other
hand, have played mtirh better
ball than they had a rifiht to a(t-!
er losing such ?.r a Jerry!
lAicas and John Hav'.icek. Thrir1
R3-"n victory over Iowa on Satur
day was their seventh in a row
and gave them a 17-1 rword for
the seavn.
Illinois. hoAeer, kept parr
with Onto Mate in the Bi2 Ten
Conference by bating Wi.sronKn.
ft-77. Tonight's action could nun
one of tit ro-UMfier. The llltm
meet trwigh Minnesota and State
plays weak Northwestern.
The tournament picture became
a little clearer after the weekend
activity but there are still sever
al berths in both the NCAA and
the Natioiidl Invitation Tourna
ment awaiting the teams that can
earn them in the final days of
the regular whedute.
Pittsburgh. St. Joph's of Phil
adelphia. Arizona State U. and
Texas earned berths in the NCAA
Saturday. The Panthers over
whelmed Penn State. B3-fi7. St
Joes beat taSalle. fiMfi. to win
FUEL
OIL
DELIVERED
7 DAYS A WEEK
Ph. TU 4-6788
7 DAYS A WEEK
Ph. TU 4-6788
Jay Hawk
PETROLEUM
213S So. 6th
or
So. 6th and Crait
the Middle Atlanlie Conference
I'niversily Division championship
for the fifth MraiRht year. Ari
zona State II. lopried New Mexi
co, 7B-fi2. and Texas smothered
Southern Methodist, W-7B.
PitLvbursh. with a 17-5 record.
will meet New York University in
an opening round game March
II. St. Joseph's plays an at-large
team on Hie same program.
lis and Oregon nn over Wash
ington State B4-72 at Eugene
Saturday night.
Big Gordon Martin srnred 2fi
Kints for the Trojans, uho ero
lie.ilon by 27 points hy the
Heavers Friday night. Trailing 3T-
m at halftime and M-.10 with
a minute gone in the second hall.
Uiey went ahead to slay at 51-49
uith 9 50 left to play on a layin
hy Pete Hiilman.
Mel Counts of On'gon Slate
fouled out with 7:44 to play alter
picking up three fouls in the open
ing half while trying to defense
Martin.
Counts scored 18 points and Ter
ry Baker tallied If, lor Hie
Beavers.
Tlie decision, before a capacity
crowd of to. 109. gave Southern!
California a 17-lt record and left
Oregon State with a 15-7 mark, on
22 starts and fifth victory over
Washington State.
Center Glenn Moore, who
did not start because of a flu at
tack, led the Oregon scoring with
20 points.
Scoring:
SOl'TIIKnN CAI. (B7l-Hillman
5, Young in. Martin 2fi. Morris 11.
Sloniger 15, Holman, Wey, Par
sons.
OltKGON STATE M' Pauly 7.
Kraus, Counts IB, Baker 16,
Peters 10, Torgerson 3, .larvis 4,
Rossi.
HAVE NO, THANKS, EVEN OFF YER COPENHAGEN
A SERGEANT, I DUTY? GIVES E A REAL
SMOKE? USE COPENHAGEN. v r ' MAN-5I7E TOBACCO
l " ( J ' UFT ANYTIME
DATEDl Avj UllifrUHl TRV A PINCH
FOR 5yTElTrrt,7-: OP REAL
FRESHNESS TOBACCO TASTI
Pioneers Top Whitman;
Prep For N AIA Tourney
By United Press International
Only one game remains in (lie
.Northwest Conference basketball
scredule, and it is little more than
a tune-up for Lewis and Clark's
hid In gain the NAIA tournament
in Kansas Citv.
The Pioneers won their 13lh
game in 14 league starts Satur
day night, a 97-00 romp over out-
lassed Whitman. College of Idaho
upsel second-place Pacific 52-4ti
al Forest Grove and Liniield
Honor Given
To Brothers
ATLANTA HIP!' - RoseburgV
Paul Brothers has been named to
the 15th annual All-America High
School football team, it was an
nounced Sunday.
Brothers was the only player
from the Pacific Northwest picked
for the 55-man squad, which is
ponsored by Coach and Athlete
Magazine nf Atlanta.
BROOKS COPS TOl'RNKY
.SINGAPORE IUPH - Alal
Brooks, 21, nf Johannesburg,
South Africa, shot a nine-under-
par M to win the Singapore Open
golf championship Sunday. Brooks
finished with a 72-hole total of
27B.
Three American representa
tives. Boh Watson. Bob Gajda
and Bob Mc Allislcr. all finished
in the rear of the pack.
edged Willamette 72-71 at Salem.
Lewis and Clark plays Lin-
field Tuesday night at McMinn
ville. The Wildcat need a victory
to give I hem undisputed posses
sion of fourth place In the six-
team conference. A loss would
drop them Into a tie with Wil
lamette '5-101.
Pacific finished second with a
10-5 record, College of Idaho was
third at 7-8 and Whitman ended
up last with a 4-11 record.
Lewis and Clark meets Oregon
College of Education in a best-of-
three series for the District 2
NAIA title starting Friday. The
winner gets a berth in the nations!
tournament at Kansas City. I
mouth Saturday for their lth
victory in 16 league games. Eat-
ern Oregon topped Portland State
64-fi2 in a Saturday night contest.
Oregon Tech's 15-1 record is tlie
best in conference history. The
only blot was an overtime loss
to Portland State in Portland.
The tall Owls scored 1,383 points
in 16 games, breaking the old
mark by 242 points. Their aver
age of 86.4 points a game is 15
points better than the old mark
set by the 1958 Owls.
Sweet Sammy Smith captured
his third straight league scoring
title with a record-breaking 362
points and a 22.6 average. Team
mate Willie Anderson finished
second 340 points and also
shattered Smith's old mark of 321.
Smith finished will) 37 points
Saturday as Oil handed the sec
ond place Wolves their seventh
loss against nine wins in league
action.
Portland State finished third at
6-10 despite its final loss to East
ern Oregon.
Eastern and Southern Oregon,
which finished its schedule earlier
in the week, ended in a tie for
fourth, place with 5-11 records.
Oregon College of Education's
runner-up role brought it a berth
In the District 2 NAIA playoffs
opposite Lewis and Clark. Oregon
Tech U ineligible for the playoffs
because it is not an accredited
four-year school.
GRLBER WINS MARATHON
NEW VOftK (UPD - Austria's
Adolph Gruber, a three-time
Olympian and twice European
champion, won the 26-mlle, 385-
yard Cherry Tree marathon Sun
day. Gruber, who was timed in
2:37.40, finished about 350 yards
ahead of John Gerlepp of the
Millrose Athletic Club in tlie run
through the streets of the Bronx.
mt.'inv ':p i'
BOXING
Klamath Auditorium
Wd., Feb. 27, 8 p.m.
10 Round Main Evnr
"CHIEF" KIN CARUTHERS
t.rrat Minimi
vt.
Ramon "Buffalo" Hamandet
MffmHtll, Mf lira
6 Round Special
JIM BUKCR
Kltmilh
IODIC FIRST RIDIR
HMlrro 1 tntrilta
Hrlltr I (
PRICES
K1n PMiU I .
f.fn'ral A4mtilan II M
nrrlrmr-n in anl'trm
4 ftlM'ntt . l m
Ailttftr 1 lrhl at
n4 Chmtk Wtfn.
ALASKAN SAFARI
NEVER BEFORE SHOWN In Color!
by JIM and BARBARA CLARK
Alaskan Guidai in Parson
1 ? VI- - . : T -W -
1 HOUR and 45 MINUTIS ot action packad
Adinlur In SPARKLING COLOR!
Mova in for clOM-upt of Gritily, Moom. Caribeu,
Wolvci. Wolverine, White Shoop nd many ethtrt.
Hunrtrt takt Caribou and Mooto that eo In tho
rtcord book, plus Griisly. Rocord Whit Shtop alio
taken.
Fly up tho Alcon by float plane; loo peck of IS
Wolvot on e kill; see tremendous trophiat tokon by
tho hunters.
Fiihin., Bif Game Hunting, Bird Hunting,
Wildlife and Wildtmau.
Mora wildlife then ever thewn before.
Don't Mill Thil Exciting New Show
(Something for tho whole family)
Mills School Auditorium
East Main & Orchard Ave.
Thuri. & Fri., Feb. 28 and Mar. 1, 8 p.m.
Adulti $1.25 Student 75c
Come in end book your Aleiken Hunt!
Watch "Prviw" on tho
"Sportsman", KOTI-TV
Wednesday at 6:45 p.m.