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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 2, 1963)
i Washington USC Troj By United Press International Washington is "in" and South ern California is "out" and what a difference a year makes. The Washington Huskies, de veloping rapidly after some shaky performances, rolled over Washington State, 16-0, Satur day and right on into the Hose Bowl game as the West's best in 1963. A year ago. Southern Californ DUCKS ROLL Dennis Keller IHB 22) of University of Oregon takes handoff from Bob Berry (QB 15 and is off for big gainer. Other player is Doug McDougal IRE 81) of Oregon State University. Oregon won the annual Civil War struggle by a 31 to 14 count. UPI Telephoto Sport Parade: Experts Study Boxing Injuries By OSCAR FRALEY I'PI Sports Writer NEW YORK (UPD-Brilain's medical experts are taking a close look at boxing's head in juries and, pending a report next year on which the sport could rise or fall, British sourc es report today that both sides are readying their ammunition. College Sc ores West Kan Francisco 88 Nevada 64 Utah St. 97 Loyola (Cal.l 83 W. Wash, St. 84 So. Oregon 55 Calif. St. 109 Calif. Baptist 79 Portland 82 San Fran St. 55 San Diego 69 Whittier 64 Los Angeles St. 103 Ca!. West 72 E. Montana 82 Dickinson St. 53 Rocky tMtn 79 Black Hills St. 7 East Harvard 84 Bowdoin 60 Pittsburgh 82 iFairficld 62 Buffalo 59 Buffalo St. 40 LaSalle 76 Albright 44 Northeastern 85 Brown 58 Lycoming 86 Millersville St. 81 Wagner 58 Fairleigh Dickin 55 Adelphia 58 Jersey City 56 Duquesne 99 American 59 St. Joseph 73 Mt. St. Mary 62 St. Peter's 94 Monmouth 56 Canisius 96 Scranton 61 Slippery Rock 87 Geneva 67 St. Francis 95 St. Vincent 74 Columbia 89 CCNY 84 Providence 64 Catholic U 61 South N.C. St. 69 VMI 57 West Virginia 67 Furman 65 Duke 92 Perai St. 62 Virginia Tech 77 Richmond 5.1 Loyola (Md 79 Old Domin. "5 Louisville 113 Georgetown 82 Citadel 67 Erskine 59 Midwest Toledo 96 Tulane 60 Kent St. 77 Indiana St. 67 Mich. St. 109 N. Mich 86 Beloit 83 Coe 74 Ohio St. 63 Cal 'Davis Br' 42 Northwestern 80 W. Mich 78 Wichita 82 Wyoming 67 De Paul 80 North Dakota 50 Missouri 65 Air Force 64 Baldwin Wallace 62 Ashld 50 Minnesota 76 Kansas St. 66 Cincinnati 101 G. Wash 65 Illinois 59 Butler 52 St. Louis 100 So. Dakota 70 Creiehton 85 Colorado 72 Dakota Wesleyan 85 Mayville 66 Moorhead 65 No. Dak. St. 64 Hope 86 Lake Forest 62 Michigan 90 Ball St. 76 Miami 10.) 67 Fmdlay 30 Bradley 83 Hardin-Simmons 63 Auftustana ' II 1 - 91 Chicaco St69 Wittenberg 70 Otterbein 45 Calvin 91 Whcaton 86 Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch s Tfc. n. T. - Fur 1 ftnt tim iewne tfl fcoiantf f n ii, imp i-ra rQwMnftr pam withnut nitVnrr. In eu tfitr r. hile wn' rliinf pun, ictal reduction (Srinktr) took pluc. Ml tmiunijl ll-rtiul wtrt Huskies Get Rose Bowl Nod; Almost Got Vote In Close Ballot ans ia, paced by its three "B" boys of Hal Bedsole, Hal Beathard and Willie Brown, beat every one in sight. That earned the Trojans the national champion ship and. of course, the right to ! piay in the Hose Bowl. Eleven victories in all includ ing a 42-37 decision over Wis consin in the Hose Bowl rep resented the finest year in Southern California's "historv. "The grinding of axes can be heard from both sides." asserts the boxing writer of the Lon don Times. The panic started for those who want Co keep boxing in business at a conference of (he British Association of Sport and Medicine on the medical as pects of boxing. One of the first reports was that "punch drunkenness" was more common among profes sionals than among amateurs, and more frequent among the second-raters or the prelimin ary boys than among those of championship caliber. A noted surgeon reported that he believed the risk of head in jury might be greater in foot ball (soccer) from contact of the head with a heavy wet ball. This would seem to be borne out to some extent by a chart from the Royal Free Hospital which reported treatment of 45 sporting head injuries over the past six years. Of these, 10 were from football and only one from boxing. The question is, of course, whether boxers go for lieal ment after they have been knocked out or batted around like a handball. In most cases, you can bet, they shrug off the medico and merely accept the marbles with the money. One doctor held that there were other risks in the boxing professional aside from being slapped permanently silly. He found that many lived too high and drank too much and con Bearcats, Duke Show National Title Talent By SANDY PADWE I'PI Snorts Writer Cincinnati. Duke and Wichita made some vivid and lasting impress-ions during the opening weekend of the college basket ball season. Judging by their performanc es against relatively strong opening game opponents, the three teams ranked second, fourth and fifth in the nation should offer Loyola of Chicago plenty of opposition for the na tional title. The Bearcats beat George Washington, 101-65: Duke beat Penn State, 92-62; and Wichita defeated Wyoming. 82-67. Ron Bonham hit on 11 of 16 shots from the held and had 31 points for Cincinnati while teammate (ieoree WH-on helped Relieves Pam pfcy i i vrtr,n " itfiryt- qV,ii5"il w IWi.- I PJ'bJ1l!l-di'V f -viis,ar initito. 7V nftointt il now Tilblt In jTiji!fr or iiim online nm rpiralin U. At all drug coanura. There seemed little that could stop the mighty Trojans from doing it all over again in 1963. The Dark Horses The pre - season forecasters said this: "The race to the 1964 Rose Bowl is dominated by a thunderous thoroughbred in a field of five strong dark horses." They were right about the dark horses and dead wrong about the thorouahbred. 1 J, tended that the quota of danger in boxing did not seem suffi cient to "do away with it." Some of the maneuvering would have done credit to a U.S. investigating committee hamming it up before a full set of television cameras. One physician asserted that he had seen "quite a number of head injuries from boxing during the past 20 or 30 years." Then, a member of the medi cal subcommittee of the British Boxing Board of Control blew a slight whistle on him. "We did find one boxer and," he said of the previous physi cian, "he had given him a li cense to box. We did not agree and we were upheld by the stewards of the board of con trol." Then he added the line which typifies the tragedy of a world in which boxing commissions have no iron-hard agreements internationally. "This boxer," he explained, "went away somewhere else to box." As an addendum, he added, the post mortem reports on eight boxers previously killed in the ring "showed no evidence of any previous brain damage." Once, in other words, was enough. The result of the entire con ference seemed to indicate that school boxing was run with rig id care, amateur boxing could use a bit more caution in spots but that professional boxing is the same the world over. by collecting 14 points and 14 rebounds. Jeff Mullins was Duke's top scorer with 25 points, but the most impressive aspect of the Blue Devil opener centered on their defense. It was so strong that they led by 40 points dur ing the second half. Wichita, trailing 30-29 at the half, cracked its game open on a 36-point splurge by Dave Stall worth. The Wheatshockers had to overcome a sensational per formance by Wyoming sopho more Leon Clark, who had 33 points. Dr. Neil F. Black will be in his new offices at 917 Pine, Corner 1 0th beginning Monday, December 2nd While the Trojans stumbled, Washington kept right on im proving, and in the end beat Southern California out of the rigK to play in tile New Year's Day extravaganza at Pasadena. Junior Coffey, demoted to the second string two weeks ago after a poor p e r f o r mance against UCLA, was the hero in the biggest game of the season for the Huskies. He plunged over for their two touchdowns and sparkled all along the way. much to the delight of 56,000 homecoming fans at Seattle. Two Hours It took the Big Six athletic directors two hours to make up their mind, but they voted for Washington M-U over Southern California (3-1) to play in the Rose Bowl. Of Washington. Tom Hamilton Big Six executive director, said: "Jim Owens has a fine squad and it should be a credit to our conference. After a rather slow start, the club caught fire and finished in a blaze of glory." Southern California, still strug gling even at the end, beat crosstowrv rival UCLA, 26-6, to Navy Seeks Bowl Bid; Must Get Past Cadets By FRED DOWN i'Pl Snorts Writer Army and Navy will meet next Saturday in I lie annual in terservice classic which they regard as the beginning and the end of their seasons, but for the third time in seven years the game will be "big gire than both of 'em" as far as the rest of the country is concerned. Because behind the pageant ry and the traditional pomp will be the possibility that this year's Army-Navy game will create a head-on meeting in the Cotton Bowl between the nation's first and second-ranked college football teams. Texas, rated No. 1 by the UPI board of coaches, has al ready earned a Cotton Bowl berth on the strength of its per fect season and Southwest Con ference championship. And now it's up to Joily Roger Staubach and his Navy cohorts to beat Army and win the second ranked Middies an invitation to oppose the Longhorns on New Year's Day. Howl Lineups The other big New Year's Day berths were resolved Sat urday as follows: Washington defeated Washing ington State, 16-0, and was se lected by the Big Six to face Big Ten champion Illinois in the Rose Bowl Mississippi and Alabama were matched in the Sugar Bowl despite disappointing windups of their campaigns. Auburn beat Alabama, 10-8, and won the right to oppose Nebraska in the Orange Bowl. Fullback Junior Coffey scored two touchdowns on short plunges to lead Washington to its victory while Auburn tallied its points on a 32-yard field goal by Woody Woodall and Mailon Kent's eight-yard scor ing pass. Mississippi State scored a moral victory when it battled Mississippi to a 10-10 tie but Ole Miss' disappointment was cased immediately after the game when it was invited to Look Picks Yern Burke NEW YORK i UPI i Vein Burke, Oregon State's great pass catching end, today was named to the 1963 Look Maga zine All American football team. Burke was one of two West Coast players named to the 24 mon team. The other w as guard Rick Redman of Washington. The magazine said Far West players eliminated from con sideration because of injuries which sidelined them for all or part of the season included half back Mel Renfro of Oregon, full back Junior Coffey of Washing ton and quarterback Pete Beat- I hard of Southern California. finish the season at 7-3. Wash ington wound up at 6-4. Iing Wait Illinois, coached by Pete El liott, won Uie Big Ten title w ith a 5-1-1 record and was 7-1-1 overall. The lllini last played in the Rose Bowl in 1952 so it's been a long wait for them. They beat Stanford, 40-7, then, anil prior to that whipped UCLA, 45-15 (in 1947. The Washington Huskies seem to rise to tlie occasion when the occasion happens to take place in Pasadena. They wal loped Wisconsin 44-8 in the Rose Bowl in 1960. and came back in 1961 to whip Minnesota 17-7. Meanwhile. Stanford, suffering through another agonizing sea son, took out all of its frustra tion on California, beating the Bears, 28-17, on three long field goals by Braden Beck in "The Big Game." Elsewhere in the West, Ore gon routed Oregon State. 31-14; San Jose State defeated Uni versity of Pacific. 32-20. New Mexico shut out Brigham Young, 26-0, and Abilene Christian edged Fresno State, 32-29. New Orleans, La., to play Ala bama. Another Bowl Settled Still another bowl berth was resolved when Baylor defeated Rice, 21-12, and accepted a bid to the Dec. 21 Blucbonnet Bowl game in Houston, Tex. Don Trull scored three touchdowns and completed 18 of 33 passes to set new season records of 160 completions and 2,047 yards gained. Randy Egloff scored on runs of five and two yards to lead Yale to a 20-6 victory over Har vard in the big eastern tradi tional battle. In other games, Lehigh downed Lafayette, 15-8, Memphis State beat Houston, 29-6, Texas Christian topped Southern Methodist, 22-15, Okla homa routed Oklahoma State, 34-10, Tennessee downed Van dcrbilt, 14-0, Stanford topped California, 28-17, Southern Cali fornia toppled UCLA, 26-16, Oregon beat Oregon State, 31 14, Ohio State edged out Michi gan, 14-10, Georgia Tech scored a 14-3 victory over Georgia, Holy Cros9 upset Boston Col lege, 9-0 and Pitt defeated Mi ami, 31-20. Board Eyes New Coach KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UPD The University of Tennessee athletics board mot today to hire a new football coach who can push Tennessee back to its old days of gridiron glory. Coach Jim MaDonald, who held the top job for only five months and compiled a 5-5 rec ord this season, was moved to the post of assistant athletic di rector at an undisclosed salary. McDonald, former Ohio State fullback, tried to fit a multiple offense into Tennessee's old sin gle whig attack but it didn't take. McDonald succeeded Bowden Wyatt last June after Wyatt fell victim to five mediocre seasons and a growing howl from fans that single wing football is too old fashioned. Alumni and fans complained that high school stars who learn T-formatlon football don't want to play for Tennessee. The athletics board, meeting in closed session said there was a chance it could name a suc cessor today, but it wasn't likely. The meeting was scheduled for 9 a.m. EST. gi4ir5 ETERNA-POWER 0 ETERNA POWER , . - , ii.,., .TOTOxvxxvvi ImJSJSmmm HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Giardello If 2U I f . V : 40 V) ft 31 y TITLE FIGHT PRINCIPALS Joey Giardello of Phil adelphia will challenge Dick Tiger of Nigeria for the Middleweight Championship of the World when the Title Fight Tops Week's Boxing Menu NEW YOKK-tUPl) - Niger ia's Dick Tiger will make the third defense of his middle weight crown Saturday night against American Jocy Giardel lo at Atlantic City in the fea tured performance of three world champions on this week's boxing schedule. Italy's Sandro Mazzinghi de fends his world junior middle weight title against American Ralph Dupas at Sydney, Aus Greer Sparkles In Baltimore Win National Basketball Association By United Press International Eastern Division W. L. Pet. Boston 15 1 .968 Cincinnati 15 10 .600 Philadelphia 9 10 .474 New York 7 16 .304 Western Division W. L. Pel. Los Angeles St. Louis San Francisco Baltimore Detroit 14 8 .6.16 13 10 .565 9 10 .474 5 12 .294 5 15 .250 Sunday's Results Los Angeles 114 Cincinnati 109 Philadelphia 132 Detroit 121 'Only games scheduled) Saturday's Results Boston 109 San Francisco Baltimore 120 Detroit 101 Philadelphia 132 New York 123 Ios Angeles 97 St. Louis 96 Hal Giccr of the Philadelphia 76ers is waging a one-man bat tle to prove that the "little man" still belongs in the Na tional Basketball Association, And his campaign couldn't come at a better time lor the 76crs, who have been hit by some untimely injuries. Greer, the backcourt star from Marshall College, scored 43 points for the second consec utive night as the 76ers defeat ed the Detroit Pistons, 132-121, in a neutral court game Sun day in Cleveland. He had 43 against (lie New York Knickerbockers Saturday night in Madison Square Gar den. His Sunday F-plurge helped make up for the loss of Ivee Shaffer, who had been leading One of the most ancient breeds of dog, the Bascnji is barkless, but not mute. EXCLUSIVE SURGICAL STAINLESS STEEL HEADS THAT CAN ACTUALLY BE WASHED IN WATERI BUILT-IN POWIR TO SHAVE ANYWHERE WITH OR WITHOUT A CORD! GUARANTEED ONE YEAR! NO TRADE NECESSARY! PAY LESS Diicount Pric Falls. Oregon Monday, December 2, 1963 Tale AC! WUGH1 HUGH! RUCK CHtSHw.) CHE SI (us) WAIS1 TH'CH MCK CALF BICEPS FOREARM rin WRIST AKKIE 3 tralia on Monday, and Ameri can Carlos Ortiz, world light weight champion, meets Teddy Meho of Ghana in a none-title scrap at Accra, Ghana, Satur day. In the week's nationally tele vised fight at Philadelphia's Blue Horizon Arena Friday night, former light heavyweight champion Harold Johnson en gages contender Henry Hank of Pclroit. the Philadelphia team in scor ing, Shaffer suffered a dislocat ed kneecap Saturday. The 76ers also arc missing Dave Gambee, who has a leg injury. Greer had plenty of help, from Johnny Kerr with 21 points and Paul Neumann with 17 but the biggest surprise was Coach Dolph Schayes, who played in Shaffer's spot and had 15 points and 10 rebounds. It was just the fourth appear ance of the year for Schayes. In the only other game, the .Los Angeles Lakers pulled away in the final minute at Cincinnati to snup the Royals' five game win streak, 114-109. ' Jerry West converted 13 of 21 field goal attempts and had 37 points for the evening. Elgin Baylor had 27 but it was Rudy LaRusso who provided the key play for Los Angeles. With 1:25 left, LaRusso took a rebound from Jerry Lucas under the Lakers' offensive boards and Hipped in a back handed layup to give Los An geles a 110-107 bulge. and urn ... WO' 'n.zr GIT THI OINUINI UJRTR ITIHSTEH Amtriev'i (erfftit Selling TOILET TANK BALL Ttit officlcnt Wotcr Matter inilanlly itopi the flow of wotir aftor tack flushing. 75c ATHAROWAMSTOMS NEW A . I W 1 u a m e s r SCHICK ETERNA-POWER COMPLETE CORDLESS SHAVERS 77 1 1 mm i Of Tape F--- -'v wt-. : xJi - 34 'lJ 160 , H:, 40 rmm? J 10 f ft? t' . . fiWt rV. -Al 1 '?f '' 'l?- ' 1 x ''4 two meet for the third time This tale of the tape gives the of the two fighters. Willie Paslrano of New Or leans, who won the 175-pound crown from Johnson last June 1, easily outclassed wild-winging Mike Holt of South Africa, in a non-title 10-roundcr Satur day night at Johannesburg, South Alrira. Also on Saturday night, heavy weight contender Eddie Mach en of Portland, Ore., scored his fourth straight knockout on the comeback trail in the eighth round over Davo Bailey of Philadelphia at Reno, Nev. For the big fight in Atlantic City Convention Hall Saturday night, 34-ycar-old Tiger is fav. orcd at 3-1 to keep his 160 pound crown against 33-year-old Giardello of Cherry Hill, N. J., whom Tiger already fought twice in non-title bouts. Each won a unanimous but disputed 10-round decision. Tiger won the title from Gene Fullmer last Oct. 23 on a de cision at San Francisco and kept it on a draw with Fullmer at Las Vegas, Neb., Feb. 23. Dick stopped Fullmer at the end of the seventh round in their OPEN 8 A.M. TO 6 P.M. Pull Front Wheels Inspect Your Brake Linings and Drums Clean and Repack Front Whee.1 Bearings Adjust Brakes and Add Heavy Duty Brake Fluid if Needed All Work Done By Experts ANY SIZE WHITE WALLS lii fjL flj124 fflhSv forfji - Wm Plus Ta and two trada-ln tlrsi &$itj ol nmt slit off your car. N)? rfwyouf dobuyi MILES more , Jt STOB? Ph. PAGE-J Tiger Saturday in Atlantic City. comparative measurements UPI Telephoto third title bout at Ibadan, Ni geria Aug. 10. Promoter Murray Goodman expects an attendance of 15,000 and a gate of $130,000 for Atlan tic City's first world title fight. NOW GOING ON! LUCAS DECEMBER STORE-WIDE SAL Furniture Floor Coverings Lamps ALL REDUCED! Terms to suit YOU! FURNITURE 195 E. Main $ Any American Car TU 4-8109 Jim spikt SI ii mm