Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, October 08, 1963, Page 9, Image 9

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    Sooners
7
3
rev
i -
A PEACEFUL STROLL Los Angeles Dodger manager Walt Alston takes a final quiet
walk through the stadium which was the scene of the Dodgers' final contest with the
New York Yankees Sunday as the Dodgers wrapped the Series in (our straight games.
The Dodger manager will now return to his Darrtown, Ohio home. UPI Telephoto
Nat'l Hockey Loop
Opens Play Tonight
BOSTON (UPI I - Boston's last
place Bruins, dreaming of escape
from the National Hockey League
cellar they have occupied for
three years, open the NHL seas
on tonight by hosting the Mont
real Canadicns.
The Bruins, who haven't gained
the Stanley Cup playoffs for four
years, w ill present an only slightly-revamped
lineup for the 1963-
Dunsmuir
Extends
Win Skein
DUNSMUIR Dunsmuir High
School's Tigers picked up another
pigskin victory Friday night in a
13-0 win over Trinity High School.
Dunsmuir now has four wins
and no losses this season.
Both tallies were made on quar
terback keeps, Gary Homer from
the three in the second quarter
and Joe Blevins from the eight
in the third quarter. Ed Flowers
made an extra point after the
first TD in an off-tackle plunge
and 'Blcv'ns' kick after the sec
ond score was no good.
Charles Avery, Tiger halfback,
returned a Trinity kick 85 yards
across the goal line but this play
was called back. Avery had
stepped out of bounds.
The Trinity 11 was expected to
win thus contest from the visiting
Tigers but their offense was pri
marily contained in mid-field.
The Dunsmuir jayvees had
things pretty much their own
way too, taking the preliminary
game 54-0.
Susanville
Tops Braves
ALTURAS The Lassen Griz
zlies from Susanville gave t h e
Modoc Braves their third defeat
of the 1963 season Saturday after
noon at the Modoc field. The
Grizzlies, spearheaded with two!
touchdowns by Ed Murin ana one
by Ed Smith, topped Modoc, 20-8.
Murin scored in the first quar
ter and the third quarter of the
game. Gary Honea passed over
the left side of the line for the
second quarter TD to Smith. Mike
Vineyard kicked the two conver
sions and missed on the last try.
Modoc's first score was made
near the end of the first bulf. The
Braves were making a goal line
try (or a score when the ball was
fumbled on a push over center.
Lassen recovered in the end zone
where the Modocers immediately
smothered the ball carrier for a ;
two-point safety.
In the second half Chris Dan
hauser plunged tlie hall over led
tackle for a touchdown after a
sustained drive from mid-field.
In the preliminary game the
Modoc junior varsity was .de
lected 20-19 in a closely fought
game by tlie Lassen junior team.
Distributed by
SPECIALIZED
1434 Main
Retain Poll Lead; Ducks
-
vV
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IS-; rn
I tVS
64 season, their 39th in the 47-year-old
league.
The Canadiens, on the other
hand, have undergone drastic sur
gery after finishing their last
season their first title failure
in six years.
Chief change in the Montreal
lineup will be Gump Worsley.
long-time New York net-minder,
who was traded for the veteran
Jacques Plante.
All other clubs will be in ac
tion before the end o( the week.
The Chicago Black Hawks host
the New York Rangers on
Wednesday night and then move
to Detroit the following night to
help the Red Wines eet started.
The defending champion Toronto
Maple Leafs are the last team
to break away, entertaining the
Bruins on Saturday night. That
same evening the Canadiens will
be at home to New York.
DOWNES TO FIGHT
LONDON (UPI I Former mid
dlewcight champion Terry Downcs
makes his first ring appearance
in six months tonight when he
meets Rudolph Nehring of West
Germany. Nehring is the first
German since World War II to
fight a main event in Britain
DODGER WIN BASEBALL THREAT?
Silent New York
Beginning Of New
By OSCAR FRALEY
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The
National League is so cocky to
day over (lie manner in which
lite Dodgers walloped the Yank
ees four straight in the W:orld
Series that things threaten never
to be the same in their regard
for the silenced Bombers or the
American League.
The boasting has become so ar
rogant in "El Pueblo de Nuestra
Senora la Reina de Los Angeles
de Porciuneula" the original
full name of the City of the
Angels that it's even hard on
the eardrums of a feller who
picked them to w in in six games
Those Dodgers arc so high that
they have a scheme afoot for sell
ing season tickets to the World
Series.
It was only last Friday that the
National League came up with a
plan allegedly designed to aid the
lowly New York Mets and the
Houston Colt .43 s, who lire more
than their share of blanks. Each
of the other teams are to put up
(our playirs and tlie two have
nots will naw over the merchan-
disc in this baseball fire sale.
Sharp Cutting Edge
So imagine the cutting edge on
the vocal scalpel used by Dodger
Vice President Fresco Thompson
when he said:
"The greatest idea I've heard
to strengthen weak clubs i mean
ing the Yankees of course) is that
the Colts and the Mets are going
ATTENTION
4-Wheel Drive
Owners!
Stop Shimmy
Reduce Wander
Eliminate Steer
ing Wheel 'Jerk'
Reduce Steering
Gear Wear
STEERING
STABILIZER
SERVICE CO.
Ph. 4-5103
-.1 n 1
i iii
Tourney
Draws
Winners
ALMADEN, Calif. (UPI i Win
ners of five of the past six PGA
tournaments have entered the
$25,000 Almaden Open Golf Tour
nament, scheduled for Oct. 31
Nov. 1-2-3.
Chairman George Bruno said
the men are George Knudson,
who won at Portland; Bobby
Nichols, Seattle;, Tommy Jacobs,
Salt Lake City; Johnny Potts,
American Classic; and Bill Cas
per, Insurance City Open.
Other tournament winners en.
tered in the Almaden include
Tony I-cma (Memphis) and Dan
Sikes (Doral).
TITLE BOUT SET
BERLIN (UPD - British Em
pire champion Henry Cooper and
countryman Brian London will
meet for Ingemar Johansson's
vacant European heavyweight ti
tie.
The championship committee
of the European Boxing Union
in making the ruling, said Ger
many's Karl Mildenbcrger and
Wim Snoek of Holland did not re
ceive enough votes to be consid
ered leading contenders for the
crown.
lo let the A m e r i c a n League
choose five players from each
club."
One National Leaguer pointed
out that the NL's doormat Mets,
afler all, had beaten the Yankees
in New York's Mayor's Trophy
game and held it possible that
"over (he full season they prob
ably would have won the Ameri
can League pennant." That's sub
limely ridiculous and would have
to be taken with a ton or so ofl
salt but illustrates how much
higher ' is the National League
than John Glenn ever thought of
going.
sanny houlax. won the car
awarded annualiy to the scries
top star. Ralph Terry, who
copped it last year when the
Yankees somehow beat the Gi
CAR
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NEW YOKK (Uri) - The
United Press International ma
jor college football ratings (with
first-place votes and u on-lost rec
ords in parentheses i:
Team Points
1. Oklahoma (2I (2-0) 322
2. Texas (2 (3-0' 257
3. Alabama (7 (3-0 251
4. Pittsburgh (2 (3-0 163
5. Wisconsin (2-0 151
6. Navy (li (3-01 150
7. Ohio State (H (2-0 147
8. Penn State (3-0' 111
9. Southern Calif. tl (2-D 87
10. .Nebraska (3-0 57
Second 10 teams II, Missis
sippi. 53; 12. Illinois. 32; 13. Duke
28; 14, Georgia Tech. 22; 15,
Nortnwestern, 21; 16. Oregon
Slate 20; 17, Arkansas, 12: 18.
Missouri, 9; 19 tie . Oregon and
Kansas, 7 each.
Others Louisiana State, 6;
North Carolina State, 5; Iowa, 3;
Rice and Syracuse 1 each.
NEW YORK (UPI-Ok!ahoma
maintained its grip on first place
Record Chinook Egg Take
Forecast For
The highest spring chinook egg
take in 20 years is in prospect
at the Oregon Fish Commission's
Dexter Dam egg-taking facility
on the Middle Willamette River,
Ernest R. Jeffries, the agency's
fish culture director, has an
nounced. Hatchcrymen from the Willam-1
ette River station near Oakridge
arc expected to take over 10 mil
lion eggs this season from adults
currently on hand, more than dou
bling last year's excellent take of
4'j- million. Over 5.000 adult
chinook will be handled this sea
son, Jeffries said. This is the larg
est number of mature fish taken
at Dexter since the fish holding
facility was established in 1955.
Survival of adults over the sum-
FIGHTS
By United Press International
SALT LAKE CITY KUPI) -
Tony Doyle, 195, Draper, Utah
knocked out Jim Baker, 385, Chi
cago (4); Don Smith, 230, Salt
Lake City, knocked out Sonny
Hett, Spokane, Wash. (5).
PALMER LEADS WINNER
DUNEDIN. Fla. (UPI) - Arn
old Palmer, the first "hundred
grand" pro golfer, has won
$127,55 in official PGA earnings
this year through last weekend's
Whilemarsh Open. Palmer's $26,-
000 g a i n e d for his Whitemarsh
victory put him a considerable
distance in front of Jack Nick
laus' $85,990.
'Bombers' Perhaps
Diamond Game Era
ants, watched as the names of
past winners were flashed on the
scoreboard. He was able to chuck
le when it said "Mazeroski
Pittsburgh 1960." Terry was the
victim that year of a Mazeroski
home run which won the final
game.
Terry Got Even
"I put him into the driver's
seat and he didn't even offer me
a ride," said Terry. "I got even
later. I was speaking in Pitts
burgh and he was attending the
dinner so I said he wasn't the
only .250 hitter I had made fam
ous. He came to me later and
told me not lo make him look
so bad. that he w as really a .260
hitter."
However, Terry and tlie other
Yankees won't be doing much
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in our new cars. Prices good during
month of October only, so hurry in!
19th; OSU 16th
and Texas vaulted past Alabama
into second spot among the na
tion's major collegiate football
powers today in the weekly ra
tings of the United Press inter
national board of coaches.
The Longhorns' advance sud
denly made their meeting with the
Sooners this Saturday at the Cot
ton Bowl in Dallas a clash be
tween the two top rated college
teams in the nation.
Penn State was the only new
comer to the first 10 in the
major college list, jumping from
13th to eighth with a 28-7 victory
over Rice.
Pittsburgh, Navy and Ohio
State also moved up inside the
top 10 while upset victims North
western and Georgia Tech tum
bled to the second ton. The Panth
ers jumped from eighth to fourth.
Navy from sixth to fifth and
Ohio State from a loth place tic
to seventh.
Wisconsin Held Position
Wisconsin, idle last week, held
its No. 5 position. Southern Cali-
Willamette
mer months was excellent this
year due at least in part to
cooler water temperatures. Dur
ing some seasons the mortality
of ripening adults has been high
a result of disease outbreaks
abetted by relatively warm wa
ter in the holding pond.
If all goes well, future hatch
ery produced runs on the Middle
Willamette may be even high
er. This year's excellent spring
run essentially 4 and 5-ycar-old
fish originated from annual re
leases of l'-i million yearlings for
each of the 1958 and 1959 broods.
Liberations of yearlings of the
1960 Middle Willamette brood
totaled one million. Of the 1961
brood some l.S million were start
ed downstream. Now on hand at
the Willamette Salmon Hatchery
at Oakridge are 3.4 million year
lings of the 1962 brood awaiting
liberation during late winter.
Temperature conditions In the
Middle Willamette main stem are
such that during most years rela
tively little survival can be -ex
pected from eggs deposited nat
urally in the stream. Because of
this fact, the mainstem Mid
dle Willamette spring chinook run
is considered to be maintained
for all practical purposes, by Fish
Commission hatchery opera
tions.
The 1963 total .Willamette River
spring chinook run was calculated
at 48,100 fish of which approxi
mately 13,500 or about 28 per
cent were taken by sport fisher
men.
speaking this winter. The sten
torian tones you hear will he
those of National Leaguers ex
tolling their league's magnifi
cence. Here are a couple of early
samples.
"The Yanks would be lucky lo
finish fourth in the National
League against our kind of pitch
ing."
"We played the series perfectly
Take that leaping one-handed
catch by Frank Howard on Mickey
Mantles drive in the second
game at Yankee Stadium. Why,
a fellow who is only six feet, six
inches tall would have missed
it."
Howard is six feet, eight.
That makes him Ihe smallest
man in the National League as
of the moment.
Per Gal.
In Cast Lots
SALE!
fornia remained No. 9 and Ne
braska, tied with the Buckcves
for 10th last week, look over sole
possession to complete the 10
elite. x
The Sooners, idle last week
after their upset of defending
national champion Southern Cali
fornia two weeks go, will be
nealliiy and rested lor college
football's biggest game of the
young season Saturday. Thev re
ceived 21 o( the 35 first place
voters and totaled 322 points.
Texas trounced Oklahoma State
34-7 to gain the nod over Ala
bama by tlie 35-man board of
coaches, although the Crimson
Tide received seven first place
votes to only two for the Long-
horns. 'Bama defeated outclassed
Vanderbilt, 21-6, but was un
impressive.
Staubarh Led Navy
Amazing Roger Staubach navi
gated Navy up a notch with a
26-13 win over Michigan and re
ceived one first place vole. Pitt
garnered two first place ballots
and Ohio State the other.
Texas was a distant second in
the 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 point distri
bution for votes from first to 10th
places, totalling 257. Alabama had
251 points, Pitt 165 and Wiscon
sin 151.
Illinois, Arkansas, Oregon and
Kansas broke into the top 20 or
the first time this fcason.
Mississippi headed the second
10 for the second week followed
by the Illini, upset winners over
Northwestern, Duke, Georgia
Tech, Northwestern, Oregon State,
Arkansas and Missouri. Oregon
and Kansas tied for 19th.
Ohio State, No. 7, meets I2tli-
ranked Illinois this weekend in
the only other pairing of lop 20
teams.
Battered
Rams Eye
Chicago
LOS ANGELES (UPD-The Los
Angeles Rams looked just about
as battered as their record would
indicate today as they continued
drills for Sunday's game with the
Chicago Bears.
Five players had X-rays: Jon
Amett and Dick Bass for sore
backs; Lamar Lunday, a .shoul
der separation; Joe Scibclli for
possible kidney injury; and Da
vid Jones, for a finger injury on
his right hand. All X-rays proved
negative, although the injuries
were painful.
The Rams have lost all four of,
their National Football League
games.
Portlanders
Post Wins
SEA ISLAND, Ca. (UPD Bill
Blakely and Ed Murphy, both of
Waverley of Portland, posted
opening round wins in the Nation
al Seniors Amateur Golf Tourna
ment Monday.
Blakely, runner-up In the tour
ney last year, defeated Herman
Wilke 4 and 3 and Murphy topped
X. D. Hartcr 1 up.
Dr. Millard Rosenblatt of Tual
atin, Rudy Taggesell of Portland's
Columbia - Edgcwatcr and Ted
Miller of Royal Oaks of Vancou
ver, Wash., were bealen in the
first round.
INTRODUCING THE DEPENDABLES FOR '64 1
Compact
Something new in compacts! Fimlly-siza room. Family-sin fun.
Dart is a fresh new compact In Ihe large economy size.
Dart's a little bigger outside, s lot roomier and mora comfortable
Inside. A bigger engine under the hood, s lot more fun on the open
road. And bringing up the rear? A whopping trunk with more
usable luggage space than many full-size cars.
Yet Dart is a compact You can tell by the great gas mileage. By
the way it slips into skimpy parking spaces. And by its small compact
price. In short, lew compacts cost less than Dart, Not one gives you
424 SOUTH SIXTH STREET
, -
SQUADRON WINS FIELD GAMES Mayor Robert Veatch, right, presents a trophy
to Maj. Leonard W. Provanca, commander of the 408th Air Base Squadron which placed
first in the annual Field Day Games held at Kingsley Field, Sept. 28. Observing the
presentation is Col. Edwin J. Witzenburger, commanding officer of Kingsley Field.
USAF Photo :
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore.
Waterfowl
Draw Annual Scatter-Gunners
Another opportunity opens for
scatter-gunners this coming week
when the state-wide waterfowl
season gets under way. Accord
ing to the game commission, the
midweek opening is set for 1 p.m
today. Shooting time for Oct. 12
will be at 8 a.m. to correspond to
tlie opening of the general upland
game bud season, but the remain
der o the shooting days through
tlie season ending on Jan. S, gun
ners can start banging away at
one-half hour before sunrise to
sunset.
On the shooting schedule will be
ducks, geese and coots, and Amer
ican and red-breasted mergan
ser. Hunters are reminded that
the snipe season docs not start
until Oct. 26, and the brant sea
son is not scheduled until Nov
18. Hunters are urged lo check
the waterfowl regulations avail
able at all license vendors.
State-wide bag limit for ducks
is four per day, eight in posses-.
sion. this bag limit may be in
creased by two mallards and tlie
possession by four mallards in
Baker, Gilliam, Malheur. Mor
row, Sherman, Umatilla, Union,
Wallowa and Wasco counties. In
other words, waterfowl gunners
have a bonus of two mallards in
the daily bag, provided they are
taken in the above named coun
ties. PeopU Read
SPOT ADS
yeu are new.
families, if you've
Compact Dodge Dart
ef
THOMAS DODGE
-SEE "THE BOB HOPE SHOW", NBC -
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- - o
M l . ' 1
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SCI'.;--! vL.
Tuesday,
wo-! ...
Season Opening To
The bag and possession limit
may include not more than two
wood ducks w hich is an increase
over the one wood duck allowed
last year. Only one hooded mer
ganser is allowed in tlie daily
bag, two in possession. Gunners!
are reminded there Is no open
seaon on redheads and convas-
back ducks, so be sure and check
your birds before you pull down
to bust them out of the sky.
The goose limit is set for three
birds per day, and gunners may
nave six lor -a two-day limit or in
possession. Tlie day's bag may
be increased to six birds, provid
ing three are snow geese. Of,
course, the hunter may take six
snow geese for the day's bag. The,
possession limit remains the
same at six birds. This vcar.
also, one hoss' goose will be al
lowed in the daily bag. Usually
very few of these small geese
siop over m Oregon.
Gunning prosDecls aDDear tlie
oest tor several years accord
ing to Chet Kebbc, chief of the
game commission waterfowl pro
IMMEDIATE OPENING
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Apply:
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Highway 99 North of Anderson
Telephone Anderson 365-7631
P. O. Box 1688, Redding Calif.
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CHRYSLER
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TV. CHICK YOUR LOCAL USTINC
1SW 1
J
October 8, 1963
PAGE-9
gram. Local ducks and geese
have found fair to good water
in tho marshlands and potholes
all summer and nesting is re
ported good to excellent in most
waterfowl producing areas. These
are tlie birds that provide Ore
gon hunters with Hie bulk of early
season shooting.
From the nesting grounds of
tlie northlands, reports indicate
the Pacini Flyway should nave
an excellent supply of ducks end
geese. Fine shooting is the pros
pect if these flights of birds de
cide to stay awhile in Oregon.
The early pintail flights will give
gunners some line shooting in
most areas except on the west
side. Klamath and Tule lakes
appear the best bets for pintails,
with other marshlands of eastern
Oregon providing fair to good
gunning.
Although some early shooting
will be available on the west
side, best hunting is not expected
to materialize until late October
(Continued on Page 10)
KLAMATH FALLS, OKESON