10 MAIL TRIBUNS, MedforJ, Or., Sunday, September 21, 1938
Tornado Triumphs
Over Scot Eleven
19-0 at Portland
Barging to touchdowns in
the second, third and fourth
panels and making one tre
mendous goal line stand, the
Medford Black Tornado foot
ballers wrote up their second
non-league triumph of the sea
son by trimming David Doug-
Bonanzans
Win From
Talent 37-0
Merrill Bonanza's Antlers
getting off to a quick start,
.bounced Talent 37 to 0 in a
District 5B football game Fri
day night.
The Antlers grabbed an 18
to 0 margin in the first quart
er and were in front 24 to 0
at the half.
Dan Nork ran 28 and 74
yards for touchdowns, Gary
Atwood, Garly Dayley and
Chester Schooler on three
yard charges and Albert
O'Connor on an eight-yard
pass play with Jim O'Connor
tossing. Atwood ran for the
one extra point.
The Antlers, who had two
much speed for the big Bull
dogs, piled up 327 yards and
had seven first downs. Talent
totaled 83 yards with four
first downs.
COP Beats
California
Berkeley, Calif. -JUPD-Duane
Scott bowled over from the
two yard line with two and a
half minutes to play Saturday
to give College of Pacific's
harassed Tigers a come-from-behind
24-20 victory over
California.
Dick Bass, the Tigers' run
away halfback, accounted for
12 points by scooting 78
yards for a touchdown and
passing for three two-point
conversions. He ground out a
total of 215 yards net while
Having the finest afternoon
of his injury-ridden career.
The Golden Bears, riding
high on a crest of penalties,
apparently had the game
latched up earlier in the last
quarter when Joe Kapp scor
ed from the four then passed
to Hank Olguin for the two
point conversion.
But then halfback Tony
Aflague of COP, whose weak
four-yard punt had put the
Bears back in possession at
midfield, intercepted a pass
by Gus Gianulias on the COP
43 and they moved down for
the winning touchdown.
Bass, who had gone 78
yards for a touchdown in the
third period, chipped in with
a 20-yard run in this one
while rolling up his total for
the day to 215 net. After Scott
had smashed over from close
up, Bass passed for his third
two-point conversion of the
contest.
Exhibition
Games End
United Press International
Ten clubs of the National
Football league conclude
their exhibition schedules to
day. The Chicago Bears visit the
Washington Redskins, the San
Francisco Forty-Niners enter
tain the Philadelphia Eagles,
the Los Angeles Rams play
host to the Pittsburgh Steel
ers, the Green Bay Packers
and Chicago Cardinals play
at Minneapolis and the New
York Giants meet the Balti
more Colts at Louisville.
WHO HOLDS AMERICAN
SINGLES 80WUNC
Lee Jouglard of Detroit set
the ousting high individual
mark of 775 at St.Raul,M'mn.,
in the American Bowling Con
gress competition, 1951
George Wade of Steubenville,
Ohio, cante within one point of
tie"9 this record in 1956.
TOP THIS! To any reader submitting
contrary proof. Tip Brady will.serd a
si?ned. wallet-sized diploma. Write to:
BEAT THIS, co this paper. Box 575.
Sausalito. Calif. Enclose self -addressed.
Ramped envelope.
. A muin ' '".
las high 19 to 0 at Portland on
Friday night. '
Drives produced all Torna
do TDs with Halfback Gerry
Lyons punching into the Scots'
end zone twice and Fullback
Skip Bennett once. End Mike
Murray added one conversion
kick.
Medford boomed 60 yards in
14 plays for its opening TD.
Lyons picked up gains of 15
and 16 yards along the way
and cracked three yards off
tackle for the score.
For the second marker the
Tornado moved from midfield
in seven plays with a Dick
Ragsdale to Ron Reich pass
collecting 20 yards. Bennett
crossed the pay line from the
three on a weak side plunge
and Murray toed his extra
counter at this stage.
Final touchdown drive be
gan well into Tornado terri
tory and it was 12 plays be
fore Lyons broke off tackle,
shook off two or three David
Douglas defenders and ram
bled 31 yards to the goal.
Rocked Back From Seven
Medford's big stand was in
the third quarter when a pass
interference call gave David
Douglas the ball with first
down and goal to go on the
Tornado seven-yard line. Four
plays later Medford had po
session of the pigskin on its 18.
Calvin Dean was the Tor
nado defensive star of the
night coming up to make
tackles on several big runs by
Scot ball packers. He also
picked off a Douglas pass in
the Medford 10 and ran it
back 50 yards before he was
brought down.
Fred and Al Funston and
Jim Clark turned in yeoman
work from linebacker spots.
Lynn. Knight was a sparkling
performer in the defensive
line along with Pete Rasmus
sen and Don Harrison, while
Don Peek turned in a good
night as safety.
Pat McLaughlin and Den
nis Barr drew ' plaudits for
work at offensive center:
Medford ran up 251 net
yards from . scrimmage with
196 from rushing and 55 from
passing, while holding Doug
las to 49 on the ground and 34
in the air for 83 total. The
Scots, however had the first
down edge, nine to eight. The
Tornado completed three of
nine passes and DD five of 14.
Some 60 yards of penalties
hampered the Tornado.
The Medlfordites have an
open date next Friday and on
Oct. 3 go back on the gridiron
as hosts to potent Marshfield.
Chicago Bears Show Snap
In Gridiron
(This is one of 12 dispatch
es on the 1958 prospects of
National Football League
teams.)
By ED SAINSBURY
Chicago - (UPD - The 1958
Chicago Bears won't finish
last in the National Football
league's Western division,
owner-coach George Halas
says, but he won't predict that
they'll finish first either.
Halas, returning to active
coaching' after a two-year
lapse in which assistant Paddy
Driscoll directed the club to
the division title before a 1957
slump, claims he can't rates
his team since he wasn't an
active coach last year.
"I just know that anybody
that says we're going to win it
is awfully premature," he
said. "I won't say we won't,
but I won't say we will."
Actually the Bears could
have a good chance. Last year
during the- training season,
and . the actual season, the
Bears were lackadaisical. The
year, they're not. There's a
snap to their performance that
was missing in 1957, and both
the players and coaches re
turning admit that "we're
working all the time."
Defense Looks Strong
Defense should be the strong
point of the club. And if the
offense improves, the Bears
might go all the way.
A year ago in overall de
fense, the club led the league,
ranking second in defense
against passing as well as the
ground attack. This year the
same horses are back plus
some rookies and a returned
service man, Charlie Sumner,
in the secondary.
"We're better now than we
were last year," defensive
coach Clark Shaughnessy said,
''and we'll get better all sea
son. We've got one real find
in rookie Bill Roehnelt, and
Jesse Whittenten is working
out fine in the backfield."
The defensive setup should
be expert with Bill George
calling the signals from a line
backing spot, and veterans
Fred Williams, Bill Bishop,
M. L. Brackett, Doug Atkins,
and Jack Hoffman up front.
Offense could improve. Ed
Prep Scores:
FRIDAY FOOTBALL
United Press International
Banks 20. Hood River 7.
Klamath Falls 12, South Eu
gene 7.
Waldport 20. Powers 12.
St. Mary's (Medford) 31, Sacred
Heart (Klamath Falls) 6.
Brookings 28, Phoenix 12.
Gresham 20. Parkrose 0.
. Marshfield 39, Hillsboro 7.
Yreka 13, Lakeview 0.
Myrtle Creek 12. Bandon 6.
Astoria 27. Newport 0.
Hermiston 25. Scappoose 20.
Forest Grove 20, Tillamook 6.
Clackamas 19. Sandy 13.
West Linn 27, Kewtoerg S.
Medford 19, David Douglas 0.
Oswego 26. Tigard 13.
South Salem 39. Milwaukie 0.
Beaverton 13. Springfield 6.
Reynolds 20. Silverton 0.
Oregon City 13. McMinnville 7.
Madison 27. Lincoln 20.
Benson 7, Washington 7.
Jefferson 47, Roosevelt O.
Franklin 13, Grant 0.
Cleveland 13. Wilson 0.
Bend 13, Sweet Home 7.
Adrian 45, Middleton 0.
Meridian 14, Nyssa 7.
Detroit 19, Sisters JV 6.
Siletz 13. Chemawa 7 .
MacLaren Boys 32, Colton 7.
St. Boniface 13, Jefferson 12.
Nestucca 18, Salem Academy 0.
Stayton 12. Woodburn 0.
Serra 26. Turner 6.
Prineville 24, Lebanon 0.
North Salem 19, Albany 13.
Tillamook Catholic 28, Sher
wood 6
Crater 47. Eagle Point 13.
Mt. Angel 37. Gervais 12.
Seaside 53, Clatskanie 6.
Cottage Grove 33, Willamette 13.
Wy'East 41. Madras 7.
Illinois Valley 27, Douglas 6.
Roseburg 21, Corvallis 12.
The Dalles 6, Redmond O.
Mac Hi 48, St. Patrick 0.
Dallas 13, St. Helens 13.
Willamina 43. Amity 7.
Pasco 32. Pendleton 14.
Central of Monmouth 27, Can
by 0.
Baker 32, La Grande 25.
Estacada 27, Neahkahnie 0.
Vale 35. Emmett 0.
North Bend 7, Grants Pass.
Toledo 35 Gold Beach 7.
Ontario 26, Weiser 0.
Sheridan 16, Philomath 7.
Cascade Locks 39, Mosier 26.
1 Yamhill 12, Dayton 0.
Harrisburg 19, Coburn 19.
Vernonia 23. Knappa 0.
KF Pelicans
Tip Eugene
Klamath Falls Blake
Griggs and Wayne Dennis
combined on a 33-yard pass
play and John Hancock plung
ed two yards for scores Fri
day night in a 12 to 7 football
victory for Klamath Union
High school over South Eu
gene. Hmcock's plunge capped
an 80-yard march.
Eugene was started on the
way to TD territory on a run
by Jack Calvin from the Axe
men 20 to the 45-yard line.
In ten plays, and on the sec
ond move in the fourth quart
er, Calivin went the last six
yards. George Howard kicked
the bonus.
First downs favored Kla
math 10 to eight and yardage
was a close 209 to 204 in the
Pelican's favor. KF had 140
yards on the ground and 69
through the air while Eugene
rushed for 165 and passed for
39.
CUBS SIGN COLLEGIAN
Chicago -(DPB Victor Han
sen, 21-year-old senior at Illi
nois Wesleyan university, has
been signed by the Chicago
Cubs and assigned to their Ft.
Worth affiliate in the Texas
league.
Preparations
Brown and Zeke Bratokowski
are battling for the quarter
back spot and each will get
starting assignments during
the season "on how they per
form the week before," Halas
said.
Rookie Start
At fullback a rookie, Mer
rill Douglas, a power runner
from Utah, was expected to
spell regular Rick Casares. A
rookie also could help at the
tail back spot He's Ralph An
derson fr6m Compton Junior
College, but he'll have to beat
out veteran Bill McColl for
the job.
The single halfback spot
might be improved. J. C. Car
oline was switched from the
defensive platoon to offense
and has been impressive.
Rookie Johnny Morris from
Santa Barbara has looked
good, and Willie Galimore has
been a standout, scoring four
touchdowns in a recent exhi
bition game with Cleveland.
But Halas figures on Gali
more only as a "spot" per
former and one of the other
pair probably will get most
of the work.
"With Galimore's speed,"
Halas said, "he's going to look
mighty good out there when
the other teaem is a little
tired."
Several newcomers could
break in on the line, ends Bob
Jewett, Bob Carey and " Ed
Cooke, and interior linemen
Ted Karras, Dick Klein, Don
Healy and Willie Lee.
Veterans who will spark the
offensive line include Abe
Gibron, signed as a free agent
for his first Bears season; Bob
Kilcullen, Stan Jones, and
Earl Leggett, in the interior
and Harlon Hill and Jim Dool
ey at the ends.
"SLAMMER" SETS MARK
Sea Island, Ga. -UPD- Sam
my Snead set a record for
the Sea Island golf course Fri
day when he shot a nine-under-par
63 to beat Paul
Harney of Worchester, Mass.,
in a match being filmed for
television. The match prob
ably will be seen on ABC
TV's "All Star Golf" program
sometime next February or
March.
MEDFORDftliiTroUXE
SnPODIHiTS
TOUCHDOWN CATCH - If these two players appear to be
working together, it's the wrong impression. Loyal Higin
botham (12), Crater halfback, is shown grabbing a pass for
the Comets' second touchdown in 47 to 13 grid victory over
Eagle Point high on Friday night. Tryingto prevent the catch
is Bill Turner (45), Eagle halfback. The aerial was thrown
by Crater quarterback Wayne Allen.
Crater High Downs
Eagle Point 47-13
Central Point-Crater high's
Comets built up a four-touchdown
margin over three quar
ters and had the edge in a
rash of fourth period scoring
Friday night to overpower
the plucky Eagle Point high
football team, 47 to 13.
The fracas was marked by
long gains for touchdowns and
fullback Kerman Bennett tab
ulated four times for the
Comets. Crater led 7 to 0
after one stanza, 19 to 0 at
halftime and 26 to 0 after
three panels.,
Eagle Point, its goalward
aims hurt by penalties and
muffs in the earlier going,
roused back to make, a game
of it in the final quarter. The
two clubs twice traded touch
down for touchdown in the
closing session and Crater ad
ded another marker in , the
dying moments of the game.
Comet defenders busted in
to spill Eagle Pointers for a
number of substantial losses
but Eagle bucks, the three
Bills, Skeeters, Turner and
McClure, were a constant
threat to break away and
achieved several long romps.
29-Yard Pass
Crater marched 63 yards in
eight plays for a TD the first
time it got the ball. Bennett
went over the left side for
the last three and took a pitch
for the extra point. Big gain
of the drive was a pass play,
Wayne Allen to Loyal Hig
inbotham, for 29 yards put
ting the ball on the three.
A fumble recovery in the
second chucker gave Crater
the ball on about the Eagle
five. One play lost a yard and
third down, after one pass
was incomplete, Allen tossed
to Higinbotham in the end
zone.
Near the close of the stanza
with the ball on trie Crater
40, calm and poised quarter
back Allen uncorked a pass to
Bennett who eluded one tack
ier arid outran others to go
all the way to the end zone,
a 60 yard play. Crater had
obtained the ball on its own
34 but was set back to the
22 when a Wayne Allen to
Allen Barnes throw was com
plete for a 12-yard loss. This
was overcome,' however, by
an Allen to Higinbotham ear
ial good for 16 yards. Allen
then went seven for a first
down on a fourth down fake
punt gamble.
Midway in the third canto
Crater got the ball on its own
48. Barnes gained four yards
and then 21 to the Eagle 27.
From there Bennett took a
hand off and went the dis
tance to score. Barnes ran the
conversion.
Hooper Intercepts
Roger Hooper intercepted
a pass to EP the ball on the
Comet 40 as the fourth quar
ter began. The Eagles gained
the goal in nine plays with
Skeeters going the last two
and adding the conversion.
Crater then moved from its
own 39 yard line, to the end
zone. Passes Allen to Bennett
for 35 yards "and Allen to
Higinbotham for 15 ate up
most of the ground and Barnes
tallied for the two. Allen
heaved to Higinbotham for
the bonus.
Eagle Point took the kick
off and in three plays moved
from its 33 to the Crater
48. There Skeeters boomed
through middle and raced to
the goal, veering to the left
halfway to his destination to
avoid tacklers.
Allen gathered the Eagle
kick-off on his 20, drifted to
, the right pulling over the EP
defenders, and handed to Ben
net who swung wide to the
left and down the sideline
with some good blocking and
scampered for an 80-yard TD
run. Another Allen to Higin
botham chuck converted for
40 to 13. Scoring closed out
two plays later when the
Comets Gary Johnson ran 36
yards on a pass intercepted
and then passed to Harold
Twedell for the extra point.
Crater held the Eagles to
a net of only around 10 yards
from scrimmage in the first,
half.
STATISTICS:
Net yards rushing
Net yards passing
Total net yards
First downs rushing
First downs passing ..
Total first downs
Passes tried .
Passes completed ,
Pass interception by ....
Opponents fumbles rec.
Cr. EP
175 . 147
162 14
337 261
10 5
3 2
13 7
17 6
9 3
1 1
.. 1 0
IV Defeats
Douglas HS
Cave Junction Grant
Dickey crossed the goal for
three Illinois Valley high
touchdowns Friday night as
the Cougar gridman Tomped
27 to 6 over Douglas of Dil
lard here.
Dickey had runs of 95 and
40 yards around end for TDs.'
He went three yards for
another after Dan Slanaker
had intercepted a Trojan pass
and returned the ball to the
Douglas 15. .
Mike Hanby journeyed 25
yards on a keeper for one IV
touchdown. Dan Slanaker
kicked three - extra points.
Phil Hill tallied for Douglas
on a six-yard run.
Dickey piled up 204 yards
on 18 scrimmage tries, with
135 of it in two carries. IV
had nine first downs and the
Trojans eight.
The rhododendron is the
state flower of Washington
and West Virginia.
FOR SEPTEMBER ONLY Oil ALL
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Season's Start Features
Four Major Grid Upsets
By UNITED
PRESS INTERNATIONAL
Four major upsets marked
the first full Saturday of col
lege football activity Satur
day but not a single one was
traceable to the controversial
new optional extra point play.
Nebraska, which won only
one of 10 games last season,
sprang the biggest upset of
the day when it downed Penn
State, 14-7. Pittsburgh scored
an impressive '27-6 victory
over UCLA, North Carolina
State beat North Carolina, 21
14, and Wake Forest routed
Maryland, 34-0, in the other
major upsets.
Coaches generally ap
proached the new optional ex
tra point play along similar
lines. They elected to try the
conventional kick on early
touchdowns and then went
for the two-point play later in
the game. All told, coaches,
used the two-point play about
60 per cent of the time.
Sophomore halfback Pat
Fisher went 92 yards on a
kickoff return to give Nebras
ka a fourth-period 7-7 tie and
the Cornhuskers later staged
a 46-yard drive for the win
ning score. All three tries for
the extra points were by con
vertional kick - and all were
successful.
Outrush UCLA
Quarterbacks Ivan Toncic
and Bill Kaliden led a Pitts
burgh offense that outrushed
UCLA, 229-80, as the Panthers
handed the Bruins their first
opening game loss since 1950.
Toncic scored Pittsburgh's
opening touchdown and then
passed 56 yards for its second.
North Carolina State ruin
ed Jim Tatum's long-anticipated
third-season opener as
yards and Ron Podwicka went
over on a one-yard ylunge.
North Carolina was a 13-point
Pittsburgh
Tops UCLA
Los Angeles -(DPD Pitts
burgh's pro-type offense, exe
cuted with all the skill of the
play-for pay performers, Sat
urday spoiled the debut of
UCLA's new head coach,
George Dickerson, with a 27-6
defeat for the Bruins in their
intersectional clash.
Led by junior quarterback
Ivan Toncic, who was bril
liantly spelled by Bill Kali
den, the Panthers scored in
every period to upset the fav
ored UCLA team before 30,
578 fans in Memorial coli
seum. Toncic scored the Panther's
opening touchdown in the
ursr period, raced a pass in
terception 56 yards for the
second score, and , then gave
way to Kaliden wno perform
ed just as well. -
UCLA waited until the fi
nal 15 seconds of the first
half to score its only touch
down which was set up by
tailback Bill Kilmer's 58-yard
pass to halfback Marv Luster
to the 2. Kilmer then scored
through the line.
A process has been devel
oped for putting tiny german
ium transistors in printed cir
cuits which promises to fur
ther reduce the size of elec
tronic equipment.
It has been found that two
minutes of exposure to high
intensity gamma rays makes
golf balls more durable and
longer driving.
More than 43 million of the
49 million U. S. households
will receive a newspaper to
day.
INCLUDES:
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favorite.
Quarterback Norman Stead,
starting his first varsity game,
passed for three touchdowns
in Wake Forest s upset of
Maryland. Maryland never
came closer to scoring than
Wake Forest's 26-yard line. ,
Other scores around the na
tion included: West Virginia
66 and Richmond 22, Boston
college 48 and Scranton 0,
halfback Ken Trowbridge tal
lied on runs of 15 and 20
Webfoots
Win 27-0
Over Idaho
Eugene, Ore. (UPD Oregon's
Webfoots successfully opened
a defense of their Pacific
Coast conference football co
championship Saturday with
an easy 27-0 victory over Ida
ho beore 14,200 fans at Hay
ward field.
Coach Len Casanova's team
turned' what had been a
reasonably close contest into
a rout in the final period with
three touchdowns, two of
them coming within 40 sec
onds. Idaho failed to generate a
serious scoring threat. The
closest Idaho came to the
Oregon goal line was the 25
yard line in the third quarter
when Bob Eyler intercepted
a pass and returned it 36
yards.
Herman, McKinney, a soph
omore halfback from Port
land, and Willie West, a vet
eran of Oregon's Rose Bowl
team of last year, thrilled the
crowd with long runs in the
final period. McKinney took
a short pass from Paul Grov
er and scampered 59 yards to
a touchdown. West returned
a punt 42 yards to the Idaho
24 to start the fourth period
and Charlie Tourville scored
from four yards out.
Canyonville
Tops Chiefs
Rogue River-Canyonville's
solid Class B grid aggrega
tion spanked a too confident
A-2 Rogue River high eleven
26 to 0 at Canyonville on Fri
day night.
Morgan ended a 75 yard
drive with a one-yard shove
for the first TD. Kamer ended
another drive by ramming
over from two-yards away.
Ulan circled left end on a
pitchout for 51 yards and a
touchdown and Williams burst
through the middle and ran
41 yards for tally No. 4. Ulan
added two extra points with
bucks.
The Douglas county club
led 6 to 0 at the quarter at
20 to 0 at the half. Canyon
ville had 16 first downs and
Rogue River 11. C o a e h
Charles Peil ran Rogue Chief
jayvees into the action in the
later stages of the fray and
said they showed more de
side than the varsity players.
He indicated that he was giv
ing a good look at his second
string backs who appeared
"like they wanted to run."
SWEDE LOWERS MARK
Turku, Finland -(UPD- Dan
Waern of Sweden, a sub-four-minute
miler ,set a world rec
ord for the 1,000 meter event !
in an international track meet
Friday when he was clocked
in 2:18.1. The accepted world
record of 2:19 is shared by
Audun Boysen of Norway
and Istvan Roszavolgyi of
Hungary.
1
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ftnU
Villanova 28 and West Chest
er Teachers 0, Clemson 20
and Virginia 15, Florida 34
and Tulane 14, Texas Chris
tian 42 and Kansas 0, Vander
bilt 12 and Missouri 8 in the
nationally - televised game.
College of Pacific 24 and Cali
fornia 20, and Washington
State 40 and Stanford 6.
Beaver Grid
Star Dies
Portland - (CPU - Francis
Allen (Bust) Randall, star
center on lha Oregon Stat
college football team, died
at University of Oregon
Medical School hospital
here Saturday after treat
ment for leukemia.
The 22-year - old senior
linebaker was an all-coast
center on last year's OSC
co-champion team. He had
been in the hospital here
since Aug. 26.
Randall was the son of
Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Randall
of Estacada, Ore., and was
graduated . from Estacada
high school in 1955. That
same year he was an all
stale high school center and
played in the Shrine all-star
game in Portland. He was
affiliated with Phi Gamma
Delta social fraternity on
the Oregon State campus at
Corvallis.
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