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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 26, 1942)
Sports Briefs NEW YORK, Oct. 26 W) Go ing back, going ba-a-ack, going back to Nassau hall. . . . Sup pose every old grad gets that ; fnilnir nhnnt his collcee some time, but it didn't hit you until you went down to Princeton to cover the Princeton-Brown game last Saturday. ... The place hasn't changed much. . . . The campus still has that air of peaceful seclusion; the same big trees shedding their leaves on tlie. green quadrangles. ... Of course,' the walks seem a lot longer now. Some of the build ings you remembered as new look mellowed and weather ' beaten and so do some you did n't remember at all. ... Those khaki and blue uniforms all over the place (the navy has taken over three dormitories) make a difference, too. Still, when you were a freshman twenty years ago there were some fellows around who had been in the "Princeton navy" in the other war. . . . Twenty years agoi Maybe that's why those boys you knew look so broad of beam and thin of thatch now. The stadium looks the same, except that you sit in a reason ably comfortable, covered press box now instead of out on the hard concrete. . . . And you don't have the enthusiasm you had for Bully Dickinson's team back in '22. , . . Remember, that was when Bill Roper told 'em, "A team that won't be beat can't be beat." . . . And he was right . . . When they went out to play Chi cago you stood in front of a loud speaker and suffered as John Thomas kept crashing through the line. . . . You started to walk away when they were two touch downs behind, but just then they picked up a fumble and ran for a touchdown. And pretty soon Maud Crum made another and we were ahead 21-18. . . . And iinauy atter rvax. aKer maae that tackle that stopped Thomas on the one yard line what a snake dance you had down the street i. ir . .. . t: . vt i uu saw yuui xu&i xuie gtiuie that year, too. . , . Princeton - wasn't snnnospd in win that ei ther, but Yale couldn't get past the one yard line and pretty Knnn RnV, Rpnttin ffnf. nwsv fnr n good run and Ken Smith kicked a field goal and you won 3-0. . . . Come to think of it, this year's team is a lot like that one. . . . These kids weren't supposed to beat Navy or Brown or to tie Penn, but they did it. . . . And you don't begrudge Williams its victory because it has a good team and you remember its coach, Chuck Caldwell, as a pret ty swell guy. You're back on the campus again in the quiet of dusk, the crowd gone, and you see Prince ton as you like to remember it. . . . Going back, going ba-a-ck. . . . Say, fellow, what are you getting sentimental about? You have lived within sixty miles of the place for fifteen years and you haven't been going back. Hank Armstrong, Fritzie Zivic T l V I i SAN FRANCISCO. Opt 5R IIP, Two welterweights who play rough and ask no auarter. Fritzie Zivic, the Pittsburgh puncher, and Henry Armstrong, the negro boy who once held three boxing championships, meet tonight in a 10-round fight lining up as San Francisco's most attractive ring engagement in years. . Gate receipts, with an $8 top ticket scaling, were expected to total more than $30,000. STRAIGHT 1 , i Br fir rulUrtoot J.f" .'r " Make ft ftM" no Mistake- i?4 W It's Your Hfe,! Ji-v 1 OLD FRIEND KENTUCKY BOURBON . v Distilled In the "Blue Grass" State this choice Kentucky Bourbon Is AGED FOR " KIVE YEARS . . a combination that's hard to beat! You will enjoy the smooth richness of UNCLE DUDLEY . . especially at these easy-to-buy prices 20 FULL QUART SAN FRANCISCO WORLD IMPORTERS, INC. SEATTLE UCLA bonierence But Big Ten at Stage for Showdown Nation's Grid Teams Sat For Sectional Title Sep aration; Irish Better By AUSTIN BEALMEAR NEW YORK, Oct. 28 (&) With most of their intersections! struggles and non-conference "breathers" out of the way, the nation's college football teams come up this week to that point of the season in which the var ious sections can begin separat ing the champions from the also rans. The Big Ten conference reaches a show-down stage, with a drastic revision of the stand ings a definite possibility. Ohio State, which lived up to its No. 1 national rating by knocking off northwestern, 20 6, Saturday for its fifth victory of the year and the third in the conference, meets unbeaten but once-tied Wisconsin in the day's top tilt in that league. Wisconsin blanked Purdue, 13 0, in its first conference outing Saturday and moved in among the loop's first three. Illinois, knocked out of the undefeated ranks by Notre Dame. 21-14, will go after vic tory No. 3 on a clean conference slate against Michigan, tripped by Minnesota, 16-14. Northwest ern will try for its first league win in four starts against Min nesota and Iowa, 14-13 winner over Indiana, will tangle with Purdue. With no league op ponent to play, Indiana must tackle the well-rested Iowa Pre- Flight Seahawks. Notre Dame, getting better by the week, moves into Cleveland for a go at a Navy team that has won and lost on alternate Sat urdays and was sunk, 21-0, by unbeaten Georgia Tech last week. ' . The southeastern conference may find its 1942 champion in the winner of Saturday's Dixie headliner between two unbeaten powers, Georgia and Alabama. Loyola Falls To St. Mary's Eleven, 73-0 LOS ANGELES, Oct. 26 UP) Loyola's Lions of Los Angeles checked themselves off the na tion's rapidly diminishing list of undefeated gridiron elevens to day, subdued victims of a 13 to 0 defeat by the St Mary's Gaels. For two scoreless periods, the Lions matched the Gaels play for play, then weakened a St. Mary's pushed over a touchdown in each of the two remaining quarters of a Sunday game watched by 20,000 spectators. An intercepted Loyola pass, followed by a drive through-the left side of the Lions' line, spark ed by Fullback Tony Compagno, accounted for the Gaels' first touchdown, while a couple of long passes, one of them to Com pagno, and a short line plunge gave them their second tally. . When a son Is born in Mala bar, India, the proud father cele brates by planting five coconut trees. mm Bruins Still Five Laps Away Who Can Stop Them ? Indians Get Chance Thrice-Beaten Oregon State Virtually Out of Picture; Oregon Meets Cal Br HUSSELL NEWLAND SAN FRANCISCO, Oct 26 UP) The University of California at Los Angeles Bruins are bounding down the championship highway, undefeated, untied and yet with only two coast con ference victories to their credit ' They are still five laps away from the title but from where a lot of observers sit they are as good as In. Who can stop Ed win "Babe" Horrell'i well-coached team? It may be Stanford. They meet next Saturday in Los Angeles. This could be the "irresistible force vs. immov able object" engagement hidden in the UCLA schedule, u one is there. After the third game of the season, stanlora seemingly naa less chances than a single doughnut in a soldier's canteen. Tunes have changed, ine In dians upset Southern California, 14-6, last week to stamp them selves formidable opposition for the bustling Bruins. Meanwhile, UCLA proved its worth by outscoring, if not out- gaining or outdowrung, Santa Clara, 14-6. The win was most impressive because until then Santa Clara was the lone sur viving major team in the west which had an unblemished rec ord. Stanford apparently has mended one weak fence. It has come up with a fairly strong defense against passes. Its line is the equal of the UCLA for ward wall, if not stronger. The game Saturday may be 'make, or break" for: UCLA. Once over Stanford,, the Bruins should go through the balance of their schedule, namely, Ore gon at Eugene: and Washington, Idaho and Southern California in the south. - Oregon State and Washing ton, both whipped last week, and California and Oregon, first time conference winners,' lock trips Saturday. Rugged going is promised at Seattle and Berke ley; respectively. -, California upset most of the selections by soundly, thumping Washington 19 to 6 in a north ern massacre last week. Oregon had no difficulty in running up a 28-0 score on Idaho. Oregon State, defending con- PAGE SIX Bears Present Halas With 45-14 Sendoff Famed Owner, Coach to Leave This Week For Naya! Post; Redskins Down Lions CHICAGO, Oct 28 (ff) The mighty heritage of the Chicago Bears one of football's greatest organizations will pass on to a new head coach this week. . . Speculation centered on either Luke Johnsos or Heartly (Hunk) Anderson as the man to maintain the pro grid dynasty built around the T formation by George Halas, who expects to take up duties in a few. days at a mldwestern naval aviation base as a lieutenant commander. "I will name my successor Thursday or Friday," . Halas said, after watching his Bears give' him " a- sendoff by smash ing the Philadelphia Eagles 45 to 14 yesterday. Five different men rambled to touchdowns mostly through the passing efforts of Sid Luck- man and Charlies O Rourke to hand Philadelphia its sixth de feat in seven contests. The Beats meet the hapless Lions in Wrigley. field this Sun day while the Chicago Cardin als go to Green Bay, Cleveland to Brooklyn, Pittsburgh to New York and Philadelphia to. Wash ington. The Lions suffered their sixth straight : set back . . yesterday when the Packers rumbled to a 28 to 7 decision as Cecil Is bell extended to 17 games his string of touchdown passes. Weakened' resistance to diS' ease follows swift in the wake of mass air attack. Germany ap pears to be suffering acutely as a result of the mass call-up of doctors.T Lancet, British medl cal Journal. . . , w BONE-DRY SHOES Lace-to-toe are - light and 'comfortable.' .'. ... 8-in. logger heel....i.$895 ... DREW'S MANST0RE 733 MAIN It. 4. on Road to unamnion Collapse Of Minors Forecast ' 18-19 Year Draft Expected To Raise Havoc With Clubs CHICAGO, Oct. 26 W) Col lapse of class C and D minor baseball leagues was foreseen today by Bill Webb, supervisor of the Chicago White Sox farm system, by drafting 18 and 19 year olds for war service. Webb believed some 70 ball clubs would fold and only 20 per cent of their 400 players would survive. After talking with other farm bosses, Webb opined that the top minors class B, A, Al and A-A leagues, which lean heavily on the majors for. material as well as money could be strength ened greatly by seasoned play ers, If the majors boosted their reserve lists and reduced their active lists. ference and Rose bowl cham pion, (virtually sidetracked now) was walloped by Washing ton State, 26-13, but should line up on even terms with Wash ington. Idaho and Montana finally pick on rivals closer their own size. They meet each other in Missoula. Respective records in dicate an Idaho win. The United States produced 192,100,000 of the 1940 total world production of 307,300,000 metric tons of petroleum. October 26, 1942 Lou Nova, Ernie Nordman Slated For Portland Go PORTLAND, Oct. 26 UP) Lou Nova, Oakland, former contend er for the heavyweight fight title, and Ernie Nordman, Goodland, Kas., will meet In the ten-round main event of a boxing card here November 6, Matchmaker Joe Waterman announced Saturday. PANHANDLE, Tex., (IP) Broadway Actor Winston O'Keefe Is home from Fort Riley for a 10-day furlough but he isn't bragging about the cavalry lieutenant's boots as he had planned. The ranch-born O'Keefe chose cavalry so he could be with horses. Now his outfit has been mech anized. noon W 'mmm wruim to. noun, t Villi MM .7TV ship Bob Steuber Holds Grid Score Lead Missouri Back Tollies Three Touchdowns; Sink wich Takes Second Place NEW YORK, Oct. 28 (&) Bob Steuber, tho human adding ma chine who plays left halfback for the University of Missouri foot ball team, annexed 20 more points Saturday and easily re tained his grasp on- the nation's scoring honors. Steuber outsped the Iowa State College tacklers for three touchdowns and converted two of them, the day's efforts bring ing his total for six games to 83 points. His one-day outburst, how ever, was surpassed by Jim Secrest, University of Rochester halfback, who counted five touchdowns, and was approached by all America Frank Sinkwich of Georgia. Secrest turned on his speed for the benefit of Hamilton col lege, which was defeated for the first time this season, 33 to 0. Sinkwich, playing only part time against Cincinnati, got three touchdowns, raised his total to 66 points and took over second place. Gene Fckete of Ohio State, erstwhile runnerup, grabbed eight points In his team's win over Northwestern but skidded to third with an aggregate of 60. Secrest's 54 gave him fourth place. Bob Kennedy, WSC fullback, still leads in the Pacific coast conference with 44 points. Four Remain On Unbeaten Grid Roster NEW YORK, Oct. 26 (P) Only four college football teams throughout the nation remained unscored on today but at least 33 others still were unbeaten and untied, some of them after playing as many as six games. Tulsa (Okla.) university boast ed the outstanding spotless rec ord, having piled up 2S6 points without yielding a score in five games, but the high scorer in the unbeaten ranks . was . Fresno State, which swamped Fort Ord, Calif., 80 0, yesterday for a five game total of 270 points against only six for its opponents. Previously unbeaten powers in every section of the country dropped by the wayside the past week-end, .including such teams as Illinois, Santa Clara, Arizona and Brown. Fresno State Claims Nation's Scoring Lead FRESNO, Calif., Oct. 28 UP) Fresno State college today laid claim to being the nation's high est scoring football team after an 80-0 rout of the Fort, Ord army eleven yesterday. - Fresno's Bulldogs scored 12 touchdowns to run 'their scoring total for the season to 270. Tulsa university's players,, former top scorers, have tallied 296 points so far this fall. , . HIS DREAM MAN DENVER, P) Fully clothed, Bob Coffield lay down for a nap in his room. When he woke up his pants had been removed and left neat ly folded across a chair. But his wallet, containing $09, was gone. See to it that what reaches Germany Is unfit to eat. Let rain soak the wheat sacks; Let the po tatoes freeze. See that the fish and meat are rotten. British Broadcast to transport workers to occupied countries. OXFORD miT aoow WTTM TV A IHOWtt I ONI O-0 TWO l.n When in Medfozd Stay at HOTEL HOLLAND Thoroughly Modern Jet and Anne Earley . . Proprietors OLST 1 conn iho cocktaii touNta California Rises to Victory Oyer Washington jim jurnoricn. vioii; miKii seven yarai over rigni tncklo dolor Doing uownia Dy fete Suitck, University o( Washington halfback In the first quarter ol the CalKornln-Waalilngton n k yn a m I flamllla Uhhu D.Im.. IBOI f 1 1 . . .. I . I i I I r III . I . " .iwn.y rvipwt a slump, won 19 to 6. Solari Al Solari (361. University oi N -A ik fee fj4h - " r i f" V sV ' : kle on this play against Santa Clara, currying the ball to the UCLA 40 ynrd line. No. 48 for UCLA Is Snelling. For Ssnta Clara, No. 15 U BoUnd and No. 48 McCnlfrsy, UCLA won the game, plsyod at Los Angelei, by a score o( 14 to 8. This win Santa Clara's lirnt doteat ef the season. LOST KANSAS CITY, (.IP) Two of ficers In a police cruiser met a stray steer on Southwest boulc- vard last night nnd the prlco famous Wgfas A TRIP AR0UNP THE W0R10 M 3 DAYS, 19 HOURS, 8 MINUTE5 AND 10 SECONDS PUT A HIGH MARK ON THE RECORD 0OOKS. BUT THE HfGH MARK IN BOURBON ENJOYMENT IS THE MARtELOUSLV SMOOTH FIAWR OFT0PAy'$ TEN HIGH ! I x NXWW ; V I dtQuort ' Uw.oiW.u;bwtWiiikjLiAya'"-'ld. 66 piool.Jluom oa, faiiiornia center, u ins uiocKor iauiornin unnpping qui pi (NEA Telephoto) Gains Eight Yards for Bruins Calllornin at Loi Annoloi hnllbaclc. nnlnorl emhi vrrl nil . of beef being what It Is prompt ly went Into action. Using a few fnncy driving tricks, they corrnlled tho steer with tho cur. roped It nnd drove 1 to licndqtinrlcrK. Tho city JiiIIit ...and Ten Higi 1 whiskey smoothness) TODAY'S TEN HIGH IS SUPER-SMOOTH BUT NOT ''rVISHy-WASHy"! ITS REAL BOURBON, EVERY DROP ALL WHISKEY-. 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