Forfy-Niner, Brown
Elevens Head Loops
NTIONAI, FOOTBALL LEAGUE
KaMrrn Division W L T Pet.
Cleveland 4 10 .800
New York 3 2 0 .600
Pittsburgh 3 2 0 .600
Chiraeo Cards 2 3 0 .400
Washington 2 3 0 .400
Philadelphia 1 4 0 .250
Western Division W L. T Pet.
San Francisco 4 10 .800
Baltimore 3 2 0 .600
Detroit 3 2 0 .600
Los Antrlej 2 3 0 .400
Green Bav 2 3 0 .400
Chicago Bears 1 0 -230
Sunrtav's Result!
Wahmcton 31. New York 14
Pittsnurzh S. Philadelphia 0
Cleveland 17. Chicago Cards 7
Green Bav 24. Baltimore 21
San Franrisco 21 Chicago Bears 17
Los Angeles 35. Detroit 17
Next Sunday's Game
Chicago Bears at Los Angeles
Detroit at San Francisco
New York at Green Bay
Philadelphia at Chicago Cards
Washington at Cleveland
Pittsburgh at Baltimore
By EARL WRIGHT
TJniled Press Sports Writer
The San Francisco Forty-Nin-crs,
shocked by the death of
their president during another
of their narrow victories, and
the Cleveland Browns took un
disputed division leads Sunday
in what promises to be the wild
est races in National Football
league history.
Anthony J. (Tony) Morabito,
advised to "get out of football"
after he had a heart attack sev
eral years ago, suffered another
in the second quarter at San
FrancLsco. He was dead when
his Forty-Niners wiped out a
17-7 halftime deficit and edged
the Chicago Bears, 21-17. The
Bears were five point favorites.
The Forty-Niners started the
day tied with the Baltimore
Colts and Detroit Lions for the
Western division lead. Los An
geles Rams whipped Detroit,
35-17, and the Green Bay Pack
ers upset Baltimore, 24-21, on
Babe Parilli's 75-yard scoring
pass to Bill Howton in the last
29 seconds.
Those results left San Fran
cisco alone at the top but Coach
Frankie Albert couldn't enjoy
the third victory his team has
recorded this year by four points
or less.
"We'd rather lose them all by
100 points than lose what we
did. Tony was the greatest own
er," Albert said while tears
trickled down his cheeks.
Cleveland, grinding away be
hind a defense that has allowed
only 46 points .in five games,
rallied to beat the Chicago Car
dinals, 17-7. The Browns had
been tied with the New York
Giants for the Eastern lead but
were left alone at the top when
the Washington Redskins down-
Women's Goif
It was prematurely reported
last week that Mrs. William Mil
ler was the winner of the
RVWG trophy. The story con
cerned the' fall handicap tourna
ment at the Rogue Valley
Country club course. Mrs. Miller
won the championship flight of
that tournament.
She also won the RVWG but
the scores on this competition
were not computed until the
end of last week. The RVWG is
a medal tournament played on
six times duiing the course of
the ladies golfing season. The
best four out of six plays deter
mine the winner.
Final play on this trophy was
held last Thursday, and the
final results tabulated indicated
that Mrs. Miller with 78 3A
points copped the prize. Runner
up was Mrs. Edward Sickles
with 79 3.i. Mrs. H. G. Dowson
won the nine hole trophy with
44V4.
For the individual play last
Thursday, the winners were: A
Group, Mrs. Warren Lesseg, net
79 B Group, Mrs. Wm. Ruffner,
net 83; C and D Group com
bined, Mrs. L. T. Anderson, net
78; 9 Hole Group, Mrs. Paul
Haviland, net 36.
Here is the corrected Fall
Handicap trophy winners:
Championship flight, Mrs. Wil
liam Miller; first flight, Mrs.
William Blackledge; second
filght, Mrs. Jack Eidswick;
third flight, Mrs. John Day;
fourth flight; Mrs. Tom Harns
berger. The play this Thursday will
be "Never-wasers," the partici
pants being those lady golfers
who have not won any days
plays during the season.
THIRSDAY PAIRINGS:
Mrs. Frank Tamnev. Mrs. Alton
Hart. Mrs. William Ruffner; llrs Ed
Jhlne. Mrs. William Schei. Mrs. Jack
Mitchell: Mrs. Noble Vincent, Mrs.
Ted Groomes. Mrs. Tom Culbertson;
Mrs. William Blackledge, Mrs. John
Day. Mrs. C. B. Collins.
Mrs. Robert Templeton, Mrs. Ray
Fnsbie. Mrs. L. W. Bates; Mrs. War
ren Lesseg. Mrs. Mahr Revmers. Mrs.
William Miller: Mrs. Richard Finch.
Mrs. Sam Colton. Mrs. B. L Nutting
Mrs. Edward W. Sickels. Mrs. H.
Nulton, Mrs. Belle Schenck.
Mrs. William Stark. Mrs Paul
Walker. Mrs. Ken Teeters; Mrs W.
T. Clark. Mrs. Rose Bunch: Mrs. Fred
Coleman. Mrs. Dean Lambert. Mrs.
Lee Flmk: Mrs. Dick Knieht. Mrs L.
C. McLaughlin. Mrs. Miles Doran;
Mrs. Frank Benesh. Mrs. C. H. Bar
ren. Mrs. Reese Alexander.
Mrs. Ray Sorenson. Mrs. Ed Gor
don. Mrs. Ira Smith; Mrs. Ralph Bar
clay. Mrs. Floyd Somers. Mrs. Jerry
Oison: Mrs. Wayne Safley. Mrs. Ben
ton Smith. Mrs. Wiliiam Knope; Mrs.
L. T. Anderson. Mrs. W. F. Cowning,
Mrs. Don McGeary; Mrs. Tom Harns
berger. Mrs. J. W. Barnard. Mrs. W.
A. Samuelson: Mrs. William Deather
age. Mrs. Paul Dix.
Mrs. M. W. McGrew. Mrs. Tom
Polk: Mrs. Charles Mclntyre. Mrs.
Keith Ratp;- Tr S MrOnnan Wrr
Galen Sanner: Mrs. Dorothv Dowson. !
Mrs. R R. Parson; Mrs. Dick Allev. ;
Mrs. Davirt T nn-rv- "Mt-c 1
Scroggin. Mrs. Vincent Nicoletti; Mrs.
Jerry Lausman. Mrs. John B. Riplev;
Mrs. Robert DeLorme, Mrs. Glenn
Keyes.
Mrs Edward KJiever. Mrs. John
Bunker: Mrs. Tom McFadden. Mrs.
Paul Haviland: Mrs. W. B. Dziarnaga.
Mrs Jack Kerr: Mrs. Darold McDon
ald. Mrs. R J. Rementeria: Mrs.
Royal Bebb. Mrs. D. H. Adams: Mrs.
James Dunlevy. Mrs. John Raapke;
Mrs. W. H. Pyle, Mrs. L. W. Buono-core.
ed the Giants, 31-14. The Red
skins, 11-point underdogs, pull
ed the upset of the day.
Coach Buddy Parker's Pitts
burgh Steelers moved into a second-place
tie with New York by
shutting out the Philadelphia
Eagles in the other game, 6-0.
Heart Attack
Fatal for
SF Owner
San Francisco (IP) Anthony
J. Morabito, whose driving am
bition was to win a National
Football league pennant, died
Sunday in the grandstands as his
San Francisco Forty - Niners
moved another notch to just that
goal.
The 47-year-old owner of the
Forty-Niners collapsed in his
usual 50-yard line seat of a heart
attack. He never recovered, and
he never knew his team stormed
from behind to whip the Chicago
Bears, 21-18.
All efforts to revive Morabito
failed, and Dr. William E. O.
Grady, the team physician, pro
nounced the colorful sports fig
ure dead on arrival at St. Mary's
Help hospital.
Brother Takes Control
Morabito's death unquestion
ably had an effect on the out
come of the game. When he suc
cumbed, just before halftime,
Chicago led, 17-7. The San Fran
cisco players were not notified
until the second half, and with
in minutes they scored their
second tally.
Victor P. Morabito will assume
control of the Forty Niners as a
result of the death of his brother,
Anthony.
Victor holds 25 per cent of the
Forty Niner partnership while
Anthony held 40 per cent. The
professional football club was
managed by both brothers. The
directorship now reverts solely
to Victor.
Other stockholders are Albert
J. Ruffo, Franklin Mieuli,
Lawrence J. Purcell, Dr. William
E. O'Grady and James A. Gin
ella. No immediate plans were
made for a meeting of stockhold-
SpOrt jt-l OSCAR FRALEY
Parade xSkf Spor Wri,er
ers.
Eugene Now
State Choice
Coos Bay W The longest
unbeaten string in Oregon high
school football history has end
ed. South Eugene defeated Marsh
field 9-0 here Saturday night to
mark the first defeat in 41
games for the Pirates. South
Eugene got a safety in the sec
ond period and a touchdown in
the third period on a pass from
Charley Warren to John Pol
hemus. It was the first touchdown
scored on Marshfield this sea
son. The win established South
Eugene as the state title favorite.
OSC Drilling
For Cougars
Corvallis (IP) Oregon State's
Beavers, losers for the second
week in a row, opened drills to
day for a homecoming date here
Saturday with Washington
State's pass-minded Cougars.
Oregon State fell victim to
Washington by a 19-6 score at
Seattle last Saturday after see
ing their unbeaten record go by
the boards a week earlier again
UCLA. It was Washington's first
win of the season.
The bruising game was accen
tuated by high partisanship on
both sides. Police had to lead
two persons off the field in the
second half and sporadic fist
fights broke out after the game
as the victorious Huskies car
ried Coach Jim Owens off the
field on their shoulders.
Race Crash
Kills Driver
Concord, N.C (IP A 31-year-old
Richmond, Va., truck driver
and veteran auto racer was
killed Sunday when his car tum
bled down a 15-foot embank
ment while making a turn on
the Concord speedway.
The crash in which Earl Bry
ant was killed instantly, came
on the eighth lap of the U.S.
Modified championship and Lee
Kirby Memorial race. Bryant
was making a turn with several
other cars and left the race track
on the outside, crashing down
the embankment and into an
eight-inch pine tree.
Banjo Matthews of Asheville,
N.C, won the 200-lap event,
clocking 53.5 miles per hour.
Tokyo TP Japan stood at
the top of the golf world today
because an Oriental Gene Sara
zen and a Manchurian-bom
mashie artist proved once again
that while you drive for show
you putt for dough.
That was the story as Nippon
mopped up in the International
Trophy and Canada Cup
matches at Kasumigaseki Coun
try club to wallop the best
hitters from 29 other nations
over a demanding 72-hole route.
Torakichi (Pete) Nakamura, a
41-year-old refugee from the
rice paddies, won the individual
International trophy with a 14
under par record 274 for the
72-hole distance. They said he
"can't hit it out of his own
shadow" but he finished seven
shots ahead of America's Sam
Snead, South Africa's Gary
Player and Welshman Dave
Thomas.
And Nakamura, a slant-eyed
carbon copy of Sarazen, teamed
with slender Koichi Ono, a nat
uralized Japanese from Man
churia, to cop the Canada Cup
twosome title with a total of
557 19 shots under par and
nine fat strokes ahead of the
second place total of 566 carded
by Snead and Jimmy Demaret.
Nakamura"s individual 274
broke by one stroke the Inter
national Trophy record of 275
set by Canada's Stan Leonard
in 1954. This time Leonard fin
ished in a tie for fifth with Ono
at 283 while Demaret had a 285
which locked him with Aus
tralia's Bruce Crampton. The
Japanese, however, fell one shot
short of matching Australia's
record winning total o 556 in
1954 but it was- no contest as
they stroked home nine shots
ahead of the Yank's 566 with
South Africa third at 569, Aus
tralia fourth at 572, Wales sixth
at 573 and Canada seventh at
576. ,
"We're all proud of you Pete,"
said International Golf associa
tion President Frank Pace in
presenting Nakamura the $2,500
top prize $1,500 for individual
honors and half of the $2,000
team prize.
"Me too," Pete grinned, kiss
ing his putter.
"He ought to kiss that putter,"
said Demaret. "That's the club
that won the wholei ball of
wax."
Willamette,
Linfield Top
NW Football
Linfield and Willamette held
down the top spots in the North
west Conference football race
today after winning key games
Saturday.
Linfield remained on top with
a 3-0 mark by walloping Whit
man 35-21 at McMinnville. Wil
lamette had too much punch for
College of Idaho and defeated
the Coyotes 33-21. The Bearcats
now are 2-0-1.
The other league game saw
Lewis and Clark score on the
last play of the game to defeat
Pacific 19-14. The score came
on a 39-yard pass from Royce
McDaniel to Pete Hopkins.
Monday, October 28, 1957
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE NIKE
Hansgen, Wallace
Cop Race Trophy
Danville, Va. (LP) Walt Hans
gen of Westfield, N.J., and Char
lie Wallace of Chevy Chase,
Md., who pooled their efforts to
win the President's cup sports
car classic at the Virginia Inter
national raceway Sunday, visit
the White House Tuesday to re
ceive their trophy.
The unusual situation of a tie
occurred when Hansgen, the fa
vorite, spun his D-Jaguar from
the track midway through the
two and one-half hour race to
avoid slamming into another
car, and shattered a flywheel in
the process. Hansgen then
switched to Wallace's D-Jaguar
and finished with an average
speed of 76.82 miles per hour.
DUE TO THE REMODELING OF THE LARGE
DININGROOM OF THE ROGUE VALLEY
COUNTRY CLUB, THERE WILL BE . . .
NO MEETING
TUESDAY, Oct. 29
The next regular meeting of the Med ford Rotary Club
will be held Tuesday, November 5th
Med:
une
Star in Defeat Selected
On UP Backfield of Week
New York HP) All-America
football memo:
A star in a losing cause rarely
makes the United Press back
field of the week but there's one
today Bob Stransky of Colo
rado. "Hard-to-stop all season long,
high-scoring Stransky led Colo
rado to within one point of tying
mighty Oklahoma and for that
was selected among the week's
big four along with Tom Forres
tal of Navy, Jackie Douglas of
Stanford and Rene Ramirez of
Texas. All four were named for
the first time this year.
Oklahoma's prime All-America
halfback candidate, Clendon
Thomas, pulled off the clutch
touchdown run 8 yards that en
abled the Sooners to tie, 13-13,
and eventually to win on Carl
Dodd's conversion, but to that
point Stransky was the star per
former. He dashed 40 yards with
a pass interception for Colorado's
first touchdown and hit a touch
down pass for a 13-7 lead that
almost, but not quite, made foot
ball history.
Forrestal Throws Four
Navy's Forrestal, warming up
for a shot at Notre Dame next
week, played only 25 minutes
against Pennsylvania but hurled
four touchdown passes in that
brief stint. Stanford's Douglas
threw two touchdown passes and
set up another score in a 20-6
victory over UCLA. Ramirez,
who set up one touchdown with
an interception, scored once on
a plunge against Rice and added
the gamebuster on an 80-yard
kickoff return for a 19-14 up
set. It was a week end loaded with
superlative performances, in
cluding multi-touchdown jobs by
Johnny Maio of Boston U., Billy
Austin of Rutgers, Danny Nolan
of Lehigh, Charley Britt of Geor
gia and Tom Greene of Holy
Cross.
Maio scored four times against
Holy Cross while Greene hit
three touchdown passes against
Boston U. Austin scored four
against Richmond while Nolan,
hailed as one of the nation's best
split-T generals though Lehigh
is rated in the "minor" class, ac
counted for two touchdowns by
running an two more by passing
against "major" Columbia.
Scores One, Passes Two
Britt scored one and passed
for two more as Georgia wallop
ed Kentucky.
George Walters of Arkansas
and Tommy Bronson of Tennes
see were week end standouts
and so was North Carolina
State's heralded Dick Christy,
who caught a pair of touchdown
passes in a 14-14 tie with Duke.
Dan Sachs of Princeton, a
quickly-recovering flu victim,
scored three in 18 minutes
against Cornell and Army's
Dave Bourland saved the Cadets
from and upset by Virginia with
two fourth-period touchdown
passes.
Linemen mentioned promi
nently included:
Ends Jimmy Phillips, Au
burn; Les Walters,' Penn State;
Buddy Payne, North ' Carolina;
Bobby Marks, Texas A&M; Dan
Pelham, Florida.
Tackle Alex Karras, Iowa.
Guards Bill Krisher, Okla
homa; Joe Sabol, Penn State.
Centers Don Stephenson,
Georgia Tech; Jim Oddo, North
Carolina State.
Ellen Forslund
Match Champion
Portland (IP) Ellen Fors
lund, Beaverton high school
physical education instructor,
Sunday captured the Oregon
Women's match game bowling
championship surpassing her
nearest rival, defending titlist
Janet Harman of Vancouver,
Wash., by more than eight
points.
Miss Forslund finished with
an average of 194 pins for her
24 tournament games, .and a
point total of 111.15. Miss Har
man ended with 103.02 and sec
ond place.
L7
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JO uu
Buy
At
Builders Supply
QUALITY
BLOCKS
Bricks, Flues,
Drain Tile
727
W. McAndrews
Ph. SP 2-4107
M
v
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Phone SP 2-5271
248 E. McAndrews Road
JVl
full
9
TILL
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12.95 value
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