HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PACE EICHT sr rac Army-Navy Grid Classic May Be Shifted to City Annual Battle Between Service Teams May Become Part of Sixth War Loan " By BUS HAM ; WASHINGTON,' Nov. 15 (.41) president Roosevelt today ap peared to have checked to the war and navy secretaries and nnT the question of -shifting the Army-Navy football game tc a big town setting. Presidential Secretary Steph en Early reported this morning that the president has not yet received recommendationsjrom Post Keglers Set Record Mark Monday Monday night on the post al leys, in the Marine Barracks inter-company bowling leasjie, Sgt. Clvde McNew and Set. Uit ford Smith had two of the hot test nights of any of 'e keglers McNew hit 206, 191. and 27 to total 624. the highest series the league has had since the alleys opened. Smith came up with 620, on games of 211. 210 . and 199 and the second top standing in the barracks' league competi- tl0"l" company, led by Smith and McNew, out-classed K company by a little less than 600 Pinsi as it rolled a 2792, on games of 918, 960, and 914. The Officers and "F" company also won three, swinging the league lead into a three-way deadlock. Keglers other than Smith and McNew to smash the wood for 200 or better, were Bggebeen, 215; Wachter 201; Root. 222; Buckley 200; Krowiorz. 207; Na gel 222. and Stevens 209. LEAGUE STANDINGS W. Lt. fCl T Co. 3 Officers 3 F Co 3 L Co. .'. 2 C Co 2 A Co 2 G Co 2 H Co 1 D Co. . B Co.. M Co. -. H & S .: E Co K Co 1.000 1.000 1.000 .667 .667 .667 .667 .333 .333 .333 .333 .000 .000 .000 On The Beam Fop Navy Rose Bow Game Looms By The Associated Press - Rose Bowl-hungry Southern California invades Berkeley next Saturday ors its second 1944 game with' faltering University of California, victim of a 7 to 0 mud battle defeat by the Univer sity of California at Los Angeles Bruins last weekend. USC's Trojans rested Saturday and are pointing to a November 25 meeting withUCLA for the final decision on the Pacific Coast conference's representative in the New Year's Day classic at Pasadena. The Troians and Bears tied. 6-6, the first time they met, Octo ber 7. Out of the Rose Bowl race, Washington's Huskies take on another army club Saturday al ter absorbing a 28 to 0 licking at the hands of the powerful Fourth Air Force over the week end. UCLA prepares for the crucial game with USC by engaging College of Pacific, knocked over by San Francisco Coast Guard, 13 to 0, Saturday. Best coast service game of the day will be the Riverside clash between Fourth Air Force and San Diego Naval Training station. either the war or navy depart ments, or the office of defense transportation, thus implying that their attitudes may finally determine the matter. At the war department, it was saict tniu no ticcisious cither lor or against such a shift have been made. The navy department said to day that there were no new developments," but a treasury department source let it be known that plans have been made for designating the con test as the "Sixth War Loan game." if arrangements are completed to make a big gate possible. ficneral D w 1 B h t D. tisen- hower's recent appeal for a highly successful Sixth War Loan drive may be a factor in bringing about a transfer of the Army-Navv football game to a big city stadium. ReDresentaiive Weiss (D- Penn.) said today he feels Eisen hower's appeal is one ot tne reasons why fresiaeiu noose velt is considering the advisa bility of shifting the game from Annapolis. Air. rtoosevcii oiscioseu piana yesterday to talk with Secre tary stimson aooui ine intuitu. There never has been such a "natural" in the long and color ful series between the two serv ice teams, Wreiss said. "Ana u would be a shame to pass up this swell opportunity." "Why, it would sell millions of dollars worth of bonds per haps a billion, if handled prop erly and give the war loan drive the biggest boost we've ever had," he declared. The game now is scheduled for Annaoolis. December 2, with attendance limited largely to Annannlis rieorjle a maximum crowd of only approximately 20000. The explanation has been: to hold down on unessen tial travel. Weiss said that he "has s hunch" that Baltimore will get tho contest, if it is transferred from Annapolis. He estimated hat 70.000 spectators can be crowded into the Baltimore sta- riinm for such an attraction. The naval academy, as the home team, will probably have fho oho re of the site, it me game is shifted, Weiss said he hH learned. He added that the academy thinks tnat Baltimore i? as far awav from Annapolis as the team should go for this game. . '" --. -a. . ..' Portland Boxing Commission Asks For Nova Refund PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 15 UP) The Portland boxing commission demanded today Frank Pacassi, manager of Lou Nova, a heavy weight, that he return 5500 ad vanced as expense money for a fight here November 24 "or face charges." The Van Nuys, Calif., fighter, matched with Joe Kahut, Wood burn, Ore., lightweight, had ad vised Promoter Joe Waterman from New York City that he had broken a finger and could not fight here. Waterman said he advanced the money to Pacassi, and his request for its return has not been answered. Waterman said Pacassi in formed him that he and Nova had parted company, and that Jimmy Johnston now was hand ling the Californian. i C! l'!Vt ifa Arky End Wins Honor As Lineman . .i.i:.u. ill ,uiii nrllon aaalnst Th.s. boy. compos, on. of th. m?v w "-"".J fr'd;n joi Sulllv.n and Bob : id.ii w iiy,. " powerful Army on Doc.mb.r J.nKins. Our football prognosticator, Johnny Foster, has loft for Los Angeles where ho will remain for a while, and we lound th. following note in our type writer when w. arrived thu morning. We wish Johnny the best of luck and have en joyed working with him through the arid season. . . football or just to show LOUIS WORKS FAST BUFFALO, N. Y., Nov. 15 (IP) Sgt. Joe Louis, world heavy weight champion, used one right hand punch to knock out Johnny Davis, Brooklyn, in 53 seconds of the first round last night be fore 7107 fans in Memorial audi torium. FIGHTS LAST NIGHT By The Associated Press LOS ANGELES Manuel Or tiz, 117, El Centro, Calif., TKO Luis Castillo, 117; Mexico City, 9. (Title bout). -' - HOUSTON, Tex. Cpl. Fritzie Zivic, 152, Pittsburgh and Camp Normoyle, knocked out PFC. Chuck Hirst, 151, Waco army air field and Detroit, 5. HARTFORD, Conn. Willie Pep, 126, Hartford, outpointed Charles (Cabey) Lewis, 126, New York, 10. GUEST DEPARTMENT Back in the GUEST DEPART MENT, back with my back to tho wall and uacK lor a lew more last scrit'ilings. Last night l picKca up ins paper and turned to th. sports' page first, like I always do. and started glancing about for news. . . . Brother. I found it and it was all about your prog nosticator. Guess I was a matter of dis cussion at the Quarterback club by our coach because I said Bend would whip Klamath by that now familiar i to o score. Being a prognosticator. and I still claim to be a shadow of one, I looked at the odds and old games and came to th. conclusion that Bend had the better team. I hadn't seen them olav on drv or wet turf. When the Klamath BQYS came out on the field and had played their hearts out on the slippery and gooey lerrain ana pulled through with victory over Bend, it oian i surprise me ai all, because I saw Klamath play its best game of the season. I graduated from KUHS a few years back and wherever I traveled since. I have always kept tab of our grid squad. I know a nood number of the football players; . I've seen a couple of the bsckfield players grow uo from grade school on ' and they know I've always been 1011 per cent with them and wished them all luck be fore each aame. i After they beat Bend, a few of them showed up at the dance that night and called me over and heckled me about my pre dictions. Deep down it made me feel good to tap 'em on the shoulder and sort of laugh off my blunder and they laughed it off with me. Those are the kids I know, swell fellows, and I m orettv sure that they know they could ask me to do anything for them and I d readily accept. It's a funny thing, I haven't met our coach. Believe me. Marble. I do follow football and have for some time. What I've stated in the few para graphs above should show that I've been for the boys all along and just because I'm against the T-formation doesn't mean I'm aaainst the team. A real honest argument couldn't be made now. If in five years the T-formation is still go ine strone and hasn't faded out like so many sports fads that have come and cone. well. Ill admit I was wrong, BUT NOT UNTIL. I hope there is no hard feel ings on either side. I would like to meet our coach and have a cup of java with him and just talk, anything. . . we're friends. nniiiB n talked about man was a surprise to me and 1 had made arrangements to go south long before I knew about it. Believe mc, I'm not running out of town. Ha! I'm leaving today, so there won't be anymore predictions fcr the rest of the season. I roally enjoyed writing In the GUEST DEPARTMENT. I want to thank the paper and your swell snorts editor, Paul Haines, for all his trouble. Maybe next year I'll be back to write them again, but I'll meet our COACH first. Good bye now. record round to boat him out or Sncad blows higher than most of ut got on New Year's v.. Uv all indications. Jackson Is irninu to be riiihl close by pi'olly sunn when lie joins this lists ut Portland tor the upon on 'outlier TA-2B. T ie Hoys Will shoot it out there for War Bonds and 150,000 smackeroos in cash. You don t save much out oi 50 bucks a month in th. navy, o saw uo your pock.ti. boys, her. comes Samuol Jackson Snead, tho hottost guy In golll GOLF SHOTS Samuel Jeckson Snoad. the hill-billy with the perfect swing in golf, is back on tho tournamont fairways to givo winter golf the tame lift Babe Ruth would live baseball. Yes sir, Stammin' Sammy's back right where he left off to enter tho navy. After receiving a medical discharge because of a bum back, Jackson toured course in Atlantic City in 68 and to prove it was no fluke, fired a par-shattering 66 in Philly a few days later. Sam was the leading money winner cf golfdom in, 1938. copping 19,600 sltnoleons, and just before he entered the service ho walked off with the PGA championship at Sea view, hard bv Atlantic City, this in 1942. Strange as it seems, this tour ney was the first major trophy tnat tne Big Boy of golfdom had ever captured. Everyone, in cluding Sam, thought he was in with the United States Open crown in 1037 with 283 for the distance, when Ralph Guldahl came roaring home with a rec ord 281. Guldahl nosed the Kinc of Swing out in the Masters at At lanta with the incredible feat of shooting the last nine in 34 shots. Samuel was in with a record 280. Guldahl promptly lowered, it to 279. The biggest explosion of all came in the National Open of 1939 when he had the title practically nailed down only to take an eight on the last holel But the bovs who should know, Walter Hagen, Gene Sara- zen and others, say that Slam min' Sammy has the perfect swing in goit. We saw him pound th. pill In St. Augustine, Fla., our selves not so many years agn when he teamed with Simon pure Wilbur Wehrle to capture the pro-amateur two ball four some title. Jackson really low ered tho boom that day, lad dies, and powdered the old apple into the blue, blue hori zon. Th. incrediblo Snead is the biggest crowd magnet in golf today. When Samuel doesn't win he goes down in spectacu lar fashion one way or anoth er. Either somebody fires a ALL OVER Our Klamath Pelicans ended up the grid season on a 50-30 ba sis, and that isn't bud. They came out with three wins, three osses and one tie. Here are the final scores against cttch oppon cut for the season: K. F. 0. Grant 33. K. F. 18, Salem 0. K. F. 12. Ashland 12. K. F. 12, Grants Pass 0. K. F. 0. Modford 21. K. F. 6. Eureka 19. K. F. 13. Bond 6. This adds to a total of 61 points scored by the Pelicans anainst 70 marked mi dy their opponents. This breaks down to an average of 8.7 points per game for the K-men against an average of 10 markers per tilt for their opponents. Everything considor.d, we think Coach Marbl. Cook and his Pelicans did a darn good job for the season. We said early in the soason that th. boys were starting at th. bot tom of th. gridiron ladder with new coach, a new sys tem and a new team. They progressed steadily, however, after their 33-0 shellacking by Grant and wore never beaten near that badlv again. In fact. Grant rolled un al most half the points scored against the Pelicans all year in that opening debacle. The boys were in there doing their best in every ball game and a 50-50 break is not bad 111 any league, especially when they met the probable state champs in Mcdford. So let s slam the lid on tho 1944 Klemath Union hiah school grid soason with th. thought that th. local lads played the gam. for all they were worth and played It to th. hilt. Herald and N Wash Tubbi By Leslie Turner HI ll) JS-il.ll J u y3U.JOSE-6ET THE USHR39MS OFF THESE JAPS ?UIC THfcRS 5 NOT . MINUTE TO LOSE.' JrY fom M, ready to rum aoain. art ! J fyt' -XTs JifL r ' ' ll Big Flankor Soloctod Bolt By Prois Poll Duo to Fino Play Against Rico Saturday By TED MEIER NEW YOHK. Nov. 15 (A" Mike Schuinchyk, Arkansas end, itli.lfxrl Inilliv us lite line man of tho week'ln thu seventh , weekly Associated Press poll. Stnndliitf li feet 4 inches and weighing 205 pounds, Scluinv chyk won the honor becuuse of his outstimilltiM play tiKi'lu" HIcp. Ills feats Included over- eoniliii! a lO vuid lend to lai'klt! George Wiinisley, of nice, alter an BB yaid gain rushing tho Hlce punter so hard that tne kick win blocked by another Arkan sas player Ihus setting up the touchdown that knocked Hlce nut of first place In the South west conference. On defense lie itluvod left end. When Arkan sas got the bull he switched to right end from where he inane several end-around runs, for good gains. Schuinchyk, termed by his Coach Glen Rose the "outstand ing player on tho field is the fourth end to be selected for the weekly award. Hank Walk er, of Virginia; Leon iiiiiinieii of navy, mid Jack Ktis.-iull. ot Rniidolph Field are tho terminal players previously named. rrank Lamorigiii, ArKuiuua guard, and Bob "Bluster" Mc Clure, Nevada tackle, likewise stood out, Lainbright scooped tin n 11 ice fumble iiutl ran .1(1 vards fur a touehduwn, then broke up a ouiin periou nice threat bv intcrccDtllti: a pass. Although Nevada lost to Fleet Cllv (Calif.) bluelnckets. Mo dulo was all over the field In the name plaved during 11 snow storm. LI. J. M. Melevlrh, Fleet City coach, lauded McClure as "one of the finest conego tac kles on the west const." Harold Watts, Michigan cen ter, who helped whip Illinois by recovering two llllnl fum bles, and navy's center, Jack Martin, also were prulsedi Er nie Knotts, Duke guard, piled up Wake Forest plays repeated ly with his great defensive piny- 17 Grid Elevens Still in Running For Orange Bowl MIAMI, Flu., Nov. 15 Ml Seventeen learns, eight of them from the south, are still In the running for the New Year's day Orange Bowl football game, Schedule Chairman C. r. (Jack) Baldwin said Monday, They are: Tennessee, Mississip pi State. Georgia Tech, Alabama, Duke, Georgia, Wake Forest and Virginia from the south; Tulsa, Oklahoma A. St M., Texas, TCU. Texas A. St M. and Arkansas from the southwest; Michigan State and Iowa State from the midwest and Holy Cross from the cast. PGA AimGolf Course For Every Miliiary HospifJ CHICAGO, Nov. 15 (!') Eil Dudley of the Urtuiilmimr Coun try chili, Atlantic City, N. J yes le'liiiiy was elected to Ills fourth tt'i'in us president of thu l'rofes xinnul Golfers iissucliitlon, hold ing Its 2tllh convention. Frank Sprngcll of Kenl Conn, try club, Grand lluplds, Ml.'li., was reelected secretary, and Wil lie Mitguli'c, Houston, Tex,, Coun try club was reelected treasurer. CHICAGO, Nov, 15 (fl'l A riolf course for every military inspltal In the United States Is the aim of the Professional Golf ers association. Impressed with a report on the value of the sport in rt'i'oiidl tlonliig of hospitalised service men, the I'GA tiiunnlmously iip irovei the plan mid' dedicated Its 211th niiiiiiiil convention to the project which will extend throughout the nation, The association already has participated in construction of a number of courses at govern- in. ml I ,. . succesi, nl k.;(, prompted l'(iA'sa,rKl!i) Project at cl.wll" convention y,.tL.r,r "'. l'lA niiw .ill pi oval and tin' progi niuii niiw Wh .""' war ll'l),'ln,.','?1 "i, io i''',ll' "hers placed I , I, punned Unit (,,:,. ",l J, ill-i,.l...i . --' ill . . """'"ily WllllHr,. flUiyiillnhu, svn'.v " I'niii lo cunilruti courses. i.,.,,n,cl, .S'f5 coins,.,, lmi uliie-liyu Jtailces"' h"U iikii iii have ii n(nc.hni. 1 t "very howi, t,h I?! lOKSIIlle III ilri.. r nuns lor I'm, loll'.sl, III " union oi S Wool,! I. . '".'"I Oei'.sionsoii. liiur,,,.,,,"'' lie s, 1,1 ,.T. "iaj same maimo' r """WNe Piluso Pitted Against Malone In Semi-Windup Supporting tho main event at the iiriitory Friday night will be a tiiilor-iniido mutch between popular F.rnlo Piluso and Karl Malum. This bout will be over shadowed only by tho Bcleiistrov "Musk" wlilug-dlng and should be one of the best seinl-wlndiips In qiiHo awhile. Last Friday Ernlo outfoxed "Ulood-aniKitils" Davidson In the Nfliil-itn and Malono butted biceps with llulldog Jackson lo a draw In the include. Tin overture for this week will be announced Thursday by ; Promoter Mack l.illard, along with the referee for the evening. Allen AddinTMoS rriaen Loltulolori Royal Typowtitcn Desks - Chain . rilu For thot. hicd-to-git id PIONEER PRINTING AND STATIONERY ft 124 So. 9th KltmukiJ IT'S THE BUSH LEAGUE IIORNELL, N. Y., Nov. 13 (fl'i Scorekeepers in the I'ony lenmie arc uoliuj to have trouble with the llornell Pirates next season. President Fred llcrinn has dis- r...t.,.,l thnl hi IH4n rnlrr in. (eludes William Hush, Charles Bush and Carl nush. William ami Carl are pitchers and Charles is an outfielder and first baseman. Whan In Modlord Slay at HOTEL HOLLAND Thoroughly Mod.ro Jo. and Ann. Eorloy Proprietors II VA Ortiz Retains ( Title With TKO In Ninth Canto LOS ANGELES. Nov. 15 (P) Little Manuel Ortiz, the" farmer from El Centro. Calif., retained his world bantamweinht cham pionship today by virtue of a plucky rally in the third round of a scheduled 15-round battle with Luis Castillo of Mexico City. Once under way, Ortiz turn ed on a stream of right crosses and uppercuts that flowed straight to a technical knock out in the ninth. Their slua Ring match last night was the titleholder's twelfth defense of his crown, and his second vic tory over Castillo by the T.K..O. route. Ortiz rallied after being floor ed for a no-count In the second, ind won every round from the third to the ninth. Castillo went to the canvas in the sixth and ninth, but came up without a count. 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