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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 6, 1963)
e!ican Srapplers READY FOR OPENER The Klamath Falls Pelican grap. pie team, second in the district and third in the state last year, opens the 1963-64 season Saturday in the David Douglas Tournament in Portland and this pair of matmen will be seeking to pick up their mat success where it College Scores CollefiG Basketball (Intuits By United Pits Iirlvmallnnul East MIT 82 Trinity (Conn. I 81 Gannon 84 Grove City 78 Havcrford 65 Dickinson 62 (oil Juniata 82 Lock Haven St. 60 Soutli American U 53 Mt.St. Mary 54 Louisiana W- 66 SMU 62 Loyola (La) 72 Sou Miss. 69 GeorRia 87 Clemson 86 Catholic U 69 Baltimore U 56 Southern U. 114 Bishop 78 Clark 71 Virginia St. 60 Glassboro St 86 Dela. Valley 61 Dela. St 109 Lincoln U (Pa) 63 Midwest DePattl 78 Idaho St. 67 J. Carroll 70 Carnegie Tech 63 .Southwest Texas A&M 61 Houston 58 Centenary 77 TCL! 72 Arlington St 81 Austin Coll 66 Jacksonville 86 Lamar Tech 60 West E. Los Angeles 75 Glendale 71) Cal Poly 1)5 Occidental 60 S. Barbara 68 L. Beach St. 64 Pacific Luth 92 W'csfn Mont. 39 Golden Mate Tournament at Aaisa and Costa Mesa Calif. First Round l Aziifa 123 L A. Baptist 76 Upland 104 Cal Baptist L A. Pacific 83 Life 70 DKu-lit 2 N.MA Tlpolf Tournament at Salem and Forest Grove, Oil. (First Bound) Eastern Ore. 74 Willamette 62 Linfield 87 Ore. College 61 Uwiii & Clark 89 Portland St. 40 Pacific 92 Ore . Tech 61 CARIIOIX CAPTAINS HtlSH . SOUTH BEND, lnd. (I'PD -Jim Carroll of Atlunld, Ga., will captain Notre Dame's (oolhall team next season. Carroll's election was announced Thurs day at I ho annual ciic testi monial banquet honoring the team. Do Your Christmas Shopping . -a J v - Sett from Our Wonderful "World" S 1964 John, on and Homclire Moton Water Skit Boor Speedometers Ski Ropci Life Belts Life Cushions Depth Finders Anchors Horns Deck Chairs Spore Props, etc. Let us store your boat end motor for winter. We will pickup and deliver, too free. We'll be glad to winterize your motor, too. PELICAN 928 lUfflUifaJ.i . iiiumiiS mafraniaiirti iiitii v. , . amxwHtitJ il Humboldt State Owls' Foe In First Action The Oregon Tech Owls open the 1963-64 wrestling season Sat urday afternoon when they host Hie Humboldt Slate mat team. Starting lime for Die initial meet of the year is 2:30 p.m. The Owls were to have met Pacific tonight in the first home test of the season, however, this meet was cancelled with the Badgers at a late hour Thurs day. No reason was olfered for Uie cancellation. Howard Morris' Owls will at tempt to riuplicato a pair of wins .posted over the Lumber- Former Ace In Trouble SEATTLF. UJPli - Richard "Kcwpic Dick" Barrel!, long time pitcher with the Seattle Rainiers of the Pacific Coast league, pleaded guilly Thursday lo a charge of shoplifting. Barrett, 57, and on relief, was arrested Wednesday alter taking three pieces of chicken and some chicken liver from a sloie. lie appeared before Muni cipal Judge Waller T. Mc Govern. A $50 fine and 30-day j;iil senlcnce were both suspended since Barrett had no previous record. "Would you like lo live on $46 a month for food'.'" asked Bar rett. "That's all we have afler the rent and my little lile iiisuranco premiums are paid. We gel some surplus food but the meat it's ton sally and I can't eat it." Barrett has diabcles as well as a liver ailment. He liegan playing baseball when he was 18 with Williams port, Pa., in 1!C5. r a 1 -ar w Tl .il ofTChristmas Gifts! MARINA Front ended last year. On the left is Bob Ewing, 191-pound class state champion and AAU champion, and at right is Grant Humphrey, 136-pound runner-up and AAU run-er-up and member of the Oregon prep mat team which toured Japan last summer. jacks last year in Hie meeting Saturday. And in place of the scheduled meeting with the Badgers to night, the Owl mentor has slat ed a full meet-condition scrim mage. The Owls have top men to place against the Lumberjacks in Hank Isenliart. John Norton and Verl Miller among others. Isenliart goes in the 137-pound class and will meet Dave Hook well, the defending Far Western Conference champion. Norton will be clashing with Darwin Schager in the 157-pound action and Miller will mrel Lar ry Warmsley in (lie J(i7-pound division. Last year Hie Lumberjacks ended the season in third place behind (lino Slalc and the Cal Aggies in Far Western action. The Owls are favored slightly to collect Hieir first win of (he new season based on Uie two wins recorded over basically Hie same team last year. The lineups: lil-pouiicl: Terry Bond, OTI s. Phil Western. IIS. Clll-pniind, John Tliennes. OTI vs. Larry Nownkow.-ki, HS. l37 pouiKl: Hank Isenliart, OTI vs. Dave Rockwell. US. 147-pmind: Don Head, OTI vs. Jerry McPhearson. HS. 157-Kiuiid: John Norton, OTI vs. Darwin Scliagor. HS. 167-pmiml: Verl Miller. OTI vs. Larry Warmsley. HS. l77-Mimd: Noah Wright, OTI vs. Tom Oglcsby. HS. Heavyweight: Jack K u I I e r, OTI s. Dennis Grotting. IIS. CHRISTMAS PACKAGE FOR THE SPORTSMAN a a a a la A NEW CONCEPT! PORTABLE i in "GENERATORS a A oNir A2FJT I MM direct drive " a j ,a UAkltM UNBEATABLY ' 2 nUNUA DEPENDABLE! ' S299.95 a ST attK . -. MYDAUUC. JOrMUIHIOM SHOCKS, nOHX t tl DOUSII SMOI CAM TYPI SHAKIS, FRONT t IIAI tiiMiNoouj ruuiNo powii 1 srno transmission 4 STROM - NO CAS A Oil MIXTURI CARRYING CAPACITY: Up TO JSO IM. HUS RIOIR llNJURrASSIO CAS MWAOI (U TO JCO M.P.O.t i LEE MILLER'S McCulloch Saw Shop & Honda Sales 6940 So. 6th TU 4-6500 Sieaea AFL Pacers Seek Titles By United Press International The San Diego Chargers and Houston Oilers go stumping for decision titles Sunday in .pivotal American Football league games. San Diego, boasting a 9-2 rec ord that is the best in over-all AFL warfare, can clinch its third Western Division crown in four years with a win over the Raiders 7-4i in Oakland. Oakland has the longest win streak of the season five while San Diego is unbeaten in its last four starts. A sellout throng of 20.5(10 will fill Frank Youcll Field for the rematch. Houston's Cask is much tough er. The Oilers tangle with the revived Boston Patriots in a showdown for the Eastern Divi sion swcepslakeu that has he come an annual Texas donny brook for the jiast three years in Jeppeson Stadium. A Boston victory would give the iPats a 7-5-1 mark and a lever toward ending Houston's three-year reign in the East. The Oilers tnow 6-5' dashed Boston's title aspirations about this time last year and in 1961. In other games, the New York Jets (5-5-1 1 try to stay in Eastern contention by beating the last-place Bills ( 5-6-1 ) in Buffalo, and Kansas City's de fending champion Chiefs 12-7-2 enlorlain the Denver Broncos 12-8-D in a clash of Western .also-rans. Fight Results Bv I'uKeH Press luternatVmal LOS ANGELES (UPDMan ny Elias. 121, Phoenix. Ariz., outiKiinted Vicente Garcia. 118 Mexico (10. Mcculloch 250 $184.93 into First Meeting By BILL GOl 1.1) Herald and News Sports Editor A turnout of 80 now reduced to 60 grapplers seeking posi tions on the new Klamath Falls Pelican wrestling team. This is the early picture for the Pels as they head into tne 1963-64 season Salirnay at Da vid Douglas in the annual Scot mat tournament. A total of 14 lettermen reiurn from tlie Pelican team of last year which captured third place in the stale. Of this number of veterans, coach DeLancc Duncan counts six three-year men headed up by state and AAU 191 - pound champion Bob Ewing and Grant Humphrey, runner-up in ftate and AAU 136-pound mat wars and a irwmber of the Oregon prep team which visited Japan last summer where lie posted a 6-3 record. Anotlior top throe-year man is John Stilwell in the 130-wund division and district champion in this class last season. Other three-year vets are Dave Davis i15i, Tom Carnes UI3i and Terry Christianson U68, all seniors. One-year vets are Gary Wish art 11231, a senior who has im pressed in early workouts; Doug Davis, a junior in the 130-pound class: senior Larry Tice ' 1 4 1 ; Richard Swiscgood, a senior in Hie 148-pound division; Andy 'No Money' Venture Parlayed Into Buy PHILADELPHIA (UPD -Trim and slim Jerry Wolman, a smiling 6-(ooter who went to Washington on a whim and "footballed" a barren strip of land into a building company fortune in the $36 million brack et, had the Philadelphia Eagles to blend into his successful business ventures today. He picked up the land tract in the capital 10 years ago with "no money down." He tossed $5.5 million, plus a few odd thousands, on the ta ble Thursday to outbid three other buyers for the National Football League team and now needs the approval of Commis sioner 'Pete Rozelle and 12 of the other 13 franchise holders to slep out as a grid magnate. He'll keep the team in Phila delphla. he assured all. "There's no question about that." Wolman said. He even plans to move here. Wolfman, whose age is 36, puts his lifetime earnings al an average of $1 million a year, offered $5,503,500 for the clt. a lab of $60,500 for each share of stock which cost Eagles in vestors $3,000 apiece 15 years ago when the club was pur chased from the late million aire sportsman Alexis Thomp son. A Philadelphia group headed by Credit Corporation head Jack Wolgin bid $5.1(10,000, a Cherry Hill. N.J., group which jiaaa . ,iiijiwiaauu)iJa.iat,i Wigs BUY ON BUDGET TERMS - OR LAY AWAY VT ELECTRIC DRILL RlnnlfB flanltvn' aWIMWII H WWVIIWf j Copeland's Low, Low t-nrurmas rneo uniy 95 isVK Black & Decker 6V'i-inch Black & Decker E JIG SAW Copclond ' Prii 2395 Black & Decker Heay Duty Orbital Sander Complete selection of power tool accessories grinding wheels, buffers, saw blades ond many 3 others! Also hand tools J. W. Martisak 157', a junior; Mike McKibbon U681, a senior; Dave Coulson il78i, a senior and Bill Mills, a senior wrestling in the heavyweight class. Last year the Pelicans took third in the state and second in the district competition and posted a dual match record of 8-2-1. In addition to the letlermen listed, the Pels will look to a large group of impressive non letlermen who have done well in frosh and junior varsity ac tion. Glen Miller, a 168-pound soph omore, has been particularly outstanding in this group and was last year's district frosh champion in his division. The Pels open the new mat season with a pair of tourna ments away from home Satur day at David Douglas and Dec. 13 at Grants Pass before host ing their own tournament Dec. 28. Schedule: Dec. 7, David Douglas Tour ney (Parkrose, Klamath Falls, Giants Pass, Lebanon, Madi son, Clackamas. Gresham, Da vid Douglas), there; Dec. 13, Grants Pass Tourney; Dec. 23, Klamath Falls Tourney 'Ash land, Henley, Sweet Heme, KU); Jan. 4, Roseburg Tourney, there; Jan. 10, Crater, there; Jan. 18, Klamath Falls Tour ney (Burns, Henley. Crater, included race traelr ow ner Gene Mori bid $5,105,000. A last day bid of $5, 120.0(H) by a Baltimore group headed by James Keelty Jr., former president of the Baltimore Ori oles Baseball Club, drew little consideration, for some in volved technical reason. Wolman picked up all of the marbles when the stockholders considered the bids. They also voted ibat if for any reason Wolman weren't acceptable to the league, Wolgin could make a pilch to Rozellc's office as second highest bidder, and if he failed, the New Jersey group would be next in line. But. as one observer com mented, "with that kind of money and his personality, Wolman should be a cinch." Eagles President Frank Mc Naniee explained how Wolman was a charmer when he said the new buver "was acceptable in everyone's opinion, everyone was impressed with him. He met all of the standards, all re quirements, and wo were pleased with all he did and wilh all he represented." "Besides, he put in the high est money." Mc.N'amee said. The happlrtt ptnplr In the world FLY PIPER Learn at Klamath Aircraft Klamath TalU Airport TU 'MiKl .f' t,'N --T ' Im 3995 galore! V: COPELAND ') Lumber Yard 7 66 Main, K. Falls TU 4-3197 ! Kl'1: Jan. 24. Ashland, there; Jan. 25, Grants Pass, there; Jan. 31. Medford. there: Feb. 7, Grants Pass, here; Feb. 15, Mcdfvrd Tourney; Feb. 21, Med ford, here; Feb. 22. Prineville, here; Frb. 2ft-29. District Meet, Crater; March 6-7, State Meet, Conallis; March 19-20-21, Slate Freestyle AAU Tournament, Clackamas. Service Classic On Tap PHILADELPHIA d'PI) - In any rivalry like Army-Navy, the intangibles often play strange tricks and this is exact ly what Paul Dietzel will be hoping for Saturday in Phila delphia Stadium. His psychological warfare campaign against Wayne Har din and Navy has been a mas terpiece, but whether it can change the expected outcome is the question some 100,000 fans will be awaiting at kicknlf time. The Middies have been in stalled as ll-point favorites and many of the experts are call ing the current squad one of the best in the Naval Acad emy's history. Navy has an 8-1 record and All-America quarterback. Ro ger Stauhach. Which all leads back to the psychological war fare. Hardin, the Middie coach, is proud of his team's accomplish ments and is not afraid lo say so publicly. The trouble is, Dietzel has a way of getting these comments to his team. His favorite quote is one he found alter last year's Army Navy game. He has kept il on his desk since then. It reads: "The turning point of the game came when we showed up." "That quote." Dietzel said with a wry smile, "was attrib uted to Wayne Hardin." Dietzel then reached into bis pocket and l)cgan reading other elip finus, just as strong. "These hoys can read," he said, "they know what has been said about them by the Navy people." Despite the psychology, Diet zel realizes it will take a maxi mum effort to heat the Mid shipmen. "We have a lot of respect for the Navy team," he said, but this is a great challenge. I nev er went into a game I ex)ect cd to lose. If you expect to lose you usually do." How to succeed in snow business. It's easy. Gt a truck with: la) An air-cooled engine in bacV. (b) The initials VW in front. And there you are: o rooring success in the snow. The weight of the Vo'Vswagen engine sts directty Over the drive wheels. So you go, while others grunt. (for years people have put sandbags in sedan tnjnls lor the same reoson.l Eght inches of snow is considered tractable lor o VW. It plows through mud, sand and slush just as easily. Fully loaded. IFuNy loaded means 1830 lbs. Nearly twice th load of regular trucks. I And once you get through the drifts, you'll a'so get 20 to 30 mpg. And a truck that will never freeze up. Or boil over, either. So how wou'd you rather be pushed? Py an engine in the rear? Or by your friends? Maury's Foreign Cars af t eiAa.lt 2727 S. 6th PAGE-3B Friday, Dmbr (, 19M HKHA1.D AND NEWS. Klimalh Falls. Orr(a SALESMAN WANTED eaninqla SIMl C. .P.0'9. I- "'''''"' " tut Mill (,'!. kncled. aiMi. wulrie,n. .r firm will trim you Worousnly. SHry " comm.uion aim will im abovi i .v.r.,. Incomt tar praauc.r. Sillilaclary arraastrntnli lor transportatian and tapanitl. Repliai cvilainiai a full backoraund al your itllmg apritnca will ba btld in tlritl tanl.danca. Adviso u whtro yau tan ba called ler par tonal inttrvitw. WRITE TO: J. H. BENNINGTON, Bennington Stttl Bldajs. Ce. 5059 Bryant, Klamath Fatli, On. SATELLITE Restaurant and Lounge Klamath Falls Airport PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT WE AT ECCLES MOTOR CO. ARE GOING ALL OUT TO MAKE THIS MONTH OUR GREATEST VOLUME MONTH OF 1963. WE HAVE ON DISPLAY A COMPLETE LINE OF THE NEW, IMPROVED CAR OF THE YEAR - FOR EXAMPLE: A NEW 1964 RAMBLER AMERICAN TWO-DOOR SEDAN WITH RECLINING BACK SEATS, WEATHEREYE HEATING SYSTEM AND EVEN SEAT BELTS IS ON OUR FLOOR F.O.B. KLAMATH FALLS FOR JUST $2193.00. am ECCLES 606 C VOvSa;; h Of kii, laH Have Fun On Bing's Satellite Diner's Card If entitles you to 12 dinners ot the Satellite . . . one dinner FREE each month with the purchase of one at reg ular price. Make it on EVENT at least once a month with a wonderful dinner in the exciting atmosphere of the Satellite Dnp in at the Satellite in person or just mail u check for $7.50 and ou're as sured of o fun night at a saving eoch month for a year. NOTICE MOTORS So. 6th '(IF 19 3 -s