Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, October 18, 1952, Page 13, Image 13

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    EATtmnAV, OCTOKKR IB, 10BJ
IWliMJ) AND NEWS. KLAMATH FATJA OREGON
PACK TlirHTErTN
TIME OUT!
lhi
,V -r-
r defennlre guys piny gnnd
hull, and Mini Mr linn 77 In 70
bccall.e the iiffcinie boss down!
Big Ones
On Grid
Schedule
My OHM) 11(1111 HI HON
NKW YoltK kiv The notional
rnllt'Kiiite lootbnll program, wall
atudurd with , crutmi" guinea,
Miiiultl iiiuiwvr "l Hum (wo limit
lions Inihiy, Acl both concern
tennis In Intel by U10 service ucu
dcmic. Ann', liruirn only once hi lhic
Itiimrti niffiM IMiuUuiKn'fe fan
triers, surprise eonqiiciora ol Noire
Dunte. nl West folnt in a game
Una olmuliW answer the uuesllua
whether tlia Cudcu huvc relumed
In lonllinUn lnl llliihl.
Nuvv, utibcnlrn m three iM,
iih("i u ill) nil conquering Muiy
limit 1.4 U 1. The question here In
whether tli Middles are strong
, moult" lu extend llieir lungest
winning alrritk in seven yearn.
Holh itainca will b played be
Imr packed house. Willi Mime
97.OUO.ln MicUle Stadium l the
I'oiiii mid .UU0 Jammuig Uyrd
Biadnfhi at college 1'ark, Md.
Alter Ihelr llurcpiiliit win oner
Notre Diunr, the Panthers lire
rated tllulit Invuriln Ui luru hack
llic Cadelit, who thumped Dart
mouth s eelt mio to juijip buck
into Ilia or id n en limelight-
. Mo lilOH 1.
Maryland, mnked No. 3 nation
ally and unbeaten In the last It
t smiles, in 11 polio choice over the
' Middle but stranger things have
hspiiened.
. In addition to the Navy-Mary-Imid
atlair. three other major pair
Inui Involved undefeated teams.
Ttie Illv Heven Conference ha
showdown v. Ith defending cham
pion Oklahoma ('J-u-l tangling
with the No. 1 contender. Kiiuu
( 4-0 1, nl Lawrence, Kan. The Boon,
era are given the edge despite the
fine woik displayed in the Kansas
Utktleld by Phil Reich, former
Armv are.
I-OTAL BATTI.r
The first pivotal battle tor the
Pacllic Coast Conference title and
' the Homi Howl assignment brings
together Btaiilord's T-iieared In
ftiaiu 14-01 and the single winded
tltlaiis ol UCLA, also with 4-0
rernrd.
Nebiaxka 14-01 bringa It apot-.
lei rernrd ea"t to do battle at
Mate College. I'a . against the un-1
bMrn but one lied Nlltaiiy Lloiu
of Perm State.
Hvrstu.tr, anoiher unbeaten
Jlnitern II In college competition,
travel to - fart Lansing, Mich.,
with hope o Miappiim Hie 18-Kanie
'liinlnic alteak of Mirlintan State,
Uie nallon a t"P ranking, learn.
from a lelevlMon viewpont the
fume of the week la Cornell Yale
at New Haven. II will be televtaed
nationally. 'The NCAA elan haa
ranted iiernii'Mon for local tele.
rat.i of the Navy-Maryland and
Oklnhnina-Kiimai mrn.
TOPK HAP
Outxlrie of Navy-Maryland the
1 South' top wrap flmirea In be th
. neiuiiborhona haille between Aia
; hatna and Tennessee. Oeorgia
Trrh. favorite to lake the Mouth
eastern Confcrenre title, meet
weak Auburn and Duke, apparent
powerhouse of the Southern Con
ference. plnVa Nnnh Carolina
Wate. VlrKinia, ranking Southern
Independent, shouldn't be troubled
by VMI.
Purdue, the W11 10 leader wllh
11 2-0-1 record, heads Into trouble
wllh Notre Dnnie (1-1-H. Ohio
Slate take on wlnlr.n but threat
enme 'Wa'-hlnnlnn Slate tn an Inter
aertlonal rnnteat at Columbus.
t -!
- SEEIN' THINGS Thii isn't
a two-hoaded football player.
It'. t...t . . !. L.
bwiuiii in iiz ow
ween two University of Day
ton, 0., itari. In front ii Dick
Miyata, 230.pound. Hawaiian
guard. Peeping over hit
shoulder is Bobby (Ramblin'l
Reciter, an extraordinary 153
pound scatbaclc from Toledo.
Baker,
Franklin
Tumble
By JIM Ol'F
Ao lulcd I'rraa Nporla Writer
Ilie uallea downed previously
unlieiitrn, untied Baker, 120, In a
liuijor upnet of OieKon lilHll achool
iiimniiii piny I'rKUiv iiIhIii.
The vlcioiy pul The Dallea ahead.
ol linker, .ranked No. I In thla
ween a AKaocluted Preaa poll, in
the luce for the District 1 chain-
ploiihhlp In CIiim, 1.
Another of the lop 10 teams In
the poll to fall waa Franklin ol
rnrlliind, ranked No. S. The Uuak
era were crushed by Jcfleraon, me
no. 10 iram, 42-0. Jeffpraon Uiuk
hecoiuea a favorite to win one 01
the Porilitnd lennue'a two plnceit
111 1110 ainie nin acimoi piny-oil.
Grant, ranked No. 4 In the mill.
continues to lead the Portland
leuuue after a 20-0 win over Cleve-
land.
t HK'IAI,
Klamath Falls, the No. 1 team,
won a crucial game, deleallnu
Medlord, 7-0. on a third period
touchdown by Jim Douiiherly. The
Pelicans now can clinch the Dis
trict 6 tltli by defeatinii Orant
Pans, last year s state champion
but fur off form this year.
Hlllsboro, rated No. 6. look un
disputed lead In District 4 with a
convim inK 36-1 win over Oreiton
Cliy, Its closest rival.
lend clinched tie for the Dla-
trirl ( title by edulm Lebanon.
20-24.
AI.IIANV I.ONK8
Albany, which had been tlrd with
Bend, lost a non-dislrlct name to
Euiiene. ranked No, I In the poll,
27-19. Corvallla won a non-district
game from Springfield, l-7.
Marshlieid, rated No. 1 In the
slate alnce the atari of the poll.
romped to a 30-0 victory over
RredMwrl, a Claaa 2 team. The
Pirates nlKh-ecorlnir halfback.
Tom Crabtree, recorded three
more touchdowns. A teammate,
Stan Lewis, raced 711 yard for tne
lonuesl touchdown run.
Marshlieid . only threat In Dis
trict t aimeara to be Eugene.
lAVDHITK
Central Catholic of Portland, the
No. 1 Iram and favorite for the
Dlnlrlrt 1 title, overwhelmed Part
rose, 43-7. Its chief rival. Orejham,
waa played to a 12-13 lie by Baiem
In a non-diatrlct gene.
Prlnevllle. ranked No. 7. contin
ued unbeaten and untied by crush
ing Lakevlew. 45-0. In a Class 2,
District I game.
Also In Clans 3. university 01
Fuuene cinched a aub-dlstrlct
championship In district by rout
Ins Willamette of Eugene, -40-0.
t I.ONKR
81. Helena moved a step closer
tn a sub-dlstrtct title In District I.
It defeated ClaUikanle, 13-0. Kain
Irr stayed In the race by outacor
Inn ScaiHwose. 34-11.
The other District I aub-dlstrlct
title will be decided Saturday st-
lernoon when Lake Oswego meeia
Columbia Prep of Portland.
Willamlna. leader in uumri .
crushed Banks, 40-14, In a non
district contest.
Silverton continued undeleated.
untied and ahead In the District 4
race by downing Molalls. 19-l'i.
But ML Angel stayed on Ita heela
wllh a l-7 win over Woodburn.
Mustangs
Whip 'Cats
B KDDIK BKiBY
Ttie Klamath Wildcats' three-
game win skein was snipped by
Malm yesterday on Modoc Field
bv a 10-0 score
'I he Malm forward wall made
the difference aa It opened holes
lor the fai-l Mustang barks to
scamper through. Pat Madden
scored Ural for Malm when he
scooted around end five yards aft
er a 67-yard drive.
Klamath lost the ball on downs
aa the result of a bad pass from
center and Malm marches 33 ysrrti
lor Its second score, oien Bteyskal
crossed the goal and Clark Unruh
passed to Red Lyon for the extra
point.
Lyon paved the way for Mslln's
last score when he Intercepted
wildcat pan. Madden scored on
sn end run from the three-yard
nne.
Don Dexter kept the Wildcats
out 01 more trouble with his sDsr-
kllng runs while Mike Chase, Tom
iiiHiuana ana ueraia Del Faltl
were defensive atsndouta for the
losers.
Cougars Eye
Pigskin Upset
COLUMBUS. O. I Washing.
Ion State's thrice-defeated Cougars
hoped to mnke Ohio State'a no-
and-comlng Bucks their first vic
tims Ssturdsy as they clashed In
an Intersections! grid game before
some 73.000 fans.
The Invsders. pre-sesson choices
lo domtnste the West Coast pic
ture, have dropped decisions to
Stanford. Southern Cal and Bay
lor, but nave had a two-week peri
od In which to correct offensive
and defensive faults and are ready
lo shoot the works against the
Ohloans,
Figure-filbert have the Bucks
tagged as two-touchdown favorites.
HOCKEY
WKSTKRN HOCKEY I.KAOt F.
Victoria a New Westminster 1 ,
Vnncouver 4 Tscoma I
Calgary 4 Seattle 1 ,
Frank Secory. new umpire (n the
Nntlonnl Leattue. works for an oil
company during the winter.
We collect . , , er fell yon why.
Find eut mere about eur service
ky flying ui a try.
Carter's Collection Agency
Ph. el 21 411 Mala
JUDO JACK TERRY will get another chance to put an ex
heavywoight boxing champion asleep Wednesday night at the
Armory. Here Referee Jack Demptey is the victim; Terry will
oil up his sleeper hold when he joins five other wrestlers here
in a battle royal starring Primo Camera, also a former heavy
weight ring king, now successfully touring the mat circuit.
Camera
Mat Foes
Signed
Matchmaker Mack Llllard yes
terday sinned battle royal oppon
ents to Join huge Primo Cnrnera
next Wednesday nmht at the Ar
mory in a show Uiat carries a
sell-out tag
That is, Llllard chose sll but one.
Camera, the Ambling Alp of box
ing fame how packing arenas wllh
hla wrestling ability, agreed to ap
pear only with one stipulation.
He demanded that one of the
six wrestlers be a heavyweight.
He chose his friend. Hardy Krus
kamp, a 320-pound grappling vet
eran.
IK TIIKY WIN
In the event. Camera and Kru
kamp win the battle royal the
laal two wrestlers to survive the
test thev would re-apiear against
tne fourth and filth eliminated per
formers. The other five wrestlers will be
Jacg Terry. Tony Ross, Tor Ya
mato. Jack Kiser and Buck Dav
idson. Here's how the battle royal will
work:
The seven enter the ring at the
same time
M.IMINATKI)
The first to go will be through
for the evening.
The next two come bark In the
opener, the fourth and fifth In the
seml-windup and the last two In
the main event.
Ponderous Primo -g and JUS
pounds Is expected to Jam the Ar
mory. Advsnce ticket sales at Cas
lleberry Drugs already shows bri.sk
action.
Nags Get
Test In
Laurel
LAUREL. Md. W-A long range
effect on International horse rac
ing probably will come out of to
day's Washington D C. Internation
al race as well aa Just the Immed
iate winner among four foreign
and three United Stales thorough
breds. The 860.000 Laurel rsce Is being
watched as an experiment by
horse experts on both sides of the
Atlantic. They all admit it's not
a case of the best American thor
oughbreds racing the best Euro
pean, but the ingredients for such
future events are present.
The most Important aspect to
breeders and owners Is whether
horses can be taken across the
ocean and quickly be ready for a
good showing. This test Is being
made In the Laurel race.
FOREIGN HORSES
Zucchero, owned bv Oeorge
fnlU mnA Wll...n ....... k.. B f
...r.iog nuu -.iin..., uniini M.r I. s
Boucher were flown from England
Just last Tuesday. The other two
foreign entries, Max Bell's Indian
Hemp representing Canada ana
Barop H. Thyssen's Nlederlander
from Germany, have been over
here only 1 few weeks.
Meeting the Invaders at their
own game, on the Infield turf at
a mile and a half with a walk-up
start usual European conditions,
are Brookinrade 8tnble'a Greek
Ship, Hasty House Farm's Ruhe
and Mrs. H. b, uiraus pilaster.
Flit NT TIME
This Is the first time several
horses from different countries
have met. In 1923, the Epsom Der
by winner Pnpyrus and the Ken
tucky Derby winner Zev met In a
match race In New York, ihc
American won easily.
A majority of American experts
figure that the American entries
will run onc-two-ihrea In tne
Laurel race. Greek Ship, the most
successful turf runner of the year
In America, la rated the choice
with Pilaster second.
Zucchero Is given the best
chance of upsetting the American
applecart.
OFFICE SPACE
For rant in Stuart-Drew
bulldlnq. Inquire at Drew's
Monitor, 733 Main.
Weights
Favor
Tom Fool
NEW YROK W Greentree
Stable's Tom Fool, champion 3-yeur-old
of 1951, gets another
chance today to show whether he
can carry his speed more thsn a
mile when he meets 13 top flight
handicap horses In the mile and
one-eighth of the SSO.000 added
Orey Lsg at Jamaica.
The son of Menow has won four
of his 10 starts this season. Three
were at a mile and the other was
a six-furlong sprint. When the dis
tances were more than a mile,
such as last week's Roamer Han
dican and Uie Travers In August,
the Greentree colt wound up sec
ond or third.
The weighta, however, favor
Tom Fool this time. He'll pick up
119 pounds, seven less than when
he was beaten two lengths by the
Aphelm Stable's Quiet 8tep In the
Roamer. Quiet 8tep will carry 112.
Tod wemhl of the field and prob
able choice is the King Ranch's
4-year-old To Market, winner of
the Hawthorne Gold Cup two
weeks ago In the good mile and
one-quarter time of 3:01 2-5. He ll IjCing. 149 l4. Buffalo, N. Y. out
pack 123 the same weight he car-1 pointed Christian Christensen.
rled In the Gold Cup. 1 152 S',, Denmark. 10.
v 7 if t
f
v
1 1 4
' L
La1
4
YOGI'S BOY Yogi Berra's two-and-a-half-year-old son, Law.
rence, Jr., helped his famous father Collect his catching equip
ment and belongings at Yankee Stadium. The catcher had every
reason to smile. A nice boy end his fifth winning Series check..
Cal 22-Point
Grid Favorite
BERKELEY. Calif. Wl Cali
fornia's Bears, the nation's too
rushing team, unleash their crush
ing football power on wlnless, out
manned, little Santa Clara here
Saturday. California Is a 23-polnt
favorite to rack up Its fifth suc
cessive win.
PROTECTION
CALL 4706
CITV ice tf supply to.
689 SPRING ST KLAMATH FALLS
Bucceroni
Offered
Layne Go
By Mt RRAY ROHK
NEW YORK iAn Hard-hitting
Danny Bucceroni was offered a
Garden bout wllh Rex Layne Sat
urday following his narrow squesk
over husky Dave Davey.
The lanky Philadelphia heavy
weight, making his first start alt
er a five-month layoff, beat the
22-year-old Puyallup, Wash., lad
on the strength of a nine-count
knockdown In Uie second round ol
their ten rounder at St. Nicholas
Arena Friday night.
Bucceroni acted like he had
beaten a contender Instead ol a
rookie.
"Sure I'll take Layne," he said
after Matchmaker Billy Brown of
fered him a December bout with
the Rocky Mountain contender.
"I'd like to get Rocky Marclano
or anybody else.
CI.OKF.
"I never thought the fight was
ss close as the officials had It,"
Bucceroni added.
"I was sure I was way ahead
and Just coasted at the end of the
fight. That kid Is a great pros
pect. He's a good defensive fight
er and very R.ime." 1
The 187 '4 pound, -2 Bucceroni.
s 2 to 1 choice over his 211 pound
foe. floored his husky rival for nine
witn a rignt to tne jaw in the sec
ond and piled up a huge lead.
He missed often, however, as he
kept shooting for a knockout, ana
the farmer boy from Washington's
Puyallup Valley pulled up close
with his Jabs snd short combina
tions.
ROL'NDH EVEN
Both ludnes. Arthur Aldala and
Jack O'Sulllvan scored the light
even In rounds, 4-4-2, but gave the
nod to Bucceroni on points. Alda
la s points were 7-5 while O'Sulll
van had It 6-4. Referee Al Bene
had Bucceroni the winner on
rounds, 6-4-1. The AP scorecarQ
agreed with the referee's.
Under New York rules, a knock
down counts heavily and that was
the difference.
It was Bucceronl's 38th win
against three defeats. The loss
snapped a four-year, le-fight win
streak for the Davey. His
record now Is 23-2.
It waa Davey's debut on a na
tional television fight show snd he
wss downcast over his defeat.
The crowd of 3,428 paid 86.389.
ias t m
NIGHT
New York Danny Bucceroni.
187 ' - - Philadelphia, ' outpointed
uave Davey, 211, Tacoma, wash.,
10
New Orleans Charley Joseph.
155 New Orleans, stopped Leon-
era ceassr, 144 4. New Orleans,
6.
CoDenhaeen Denmark Itmmv
7stllllllEUS
v
FSESTOHIi
. YOUIt&T.
YOU'tt IAS
f OU'N JUMI
WE HAVE IT!
ASHLEY
CHEVROLET
410 So. 6th
th. 4113
y .
B
if J i','jh-"J ' I r 1 II. 1"',
'v75&
AIK ARM Tom Tewcie (left) calls signals and passes for Michigan State. Quarterback Tony
Redos I center) throws a long ball for Pennsylvania State. Chuck Spaulding, Wyoming tail
back, harries the defense with short .sharp pitches.
Brethauer
By JACK HEWIN8
SEATTLE otl Speed and weight
are generally considered basic re
quirements for football players, but
when you add up all the equipment.
tne gid witn heart and desire la the
one who makes your first team.
Which brings us around to Monte
Brethauer.
Oregon's senior left end Is a foot
ball replica of Joe Cloidt. the skin
ny, bespectacled wtngman who
gave Washington three years of
honest effort and got hardly a
nickel's worth of recognition out
side the squad.
LIGHT
Brethauer is 6 feet 1 Inch tall but
Carries hardly enough meat to cov
er his bones, weighing In at 168.
During the UCLA game in 112
degree weather he shrank to 155
pounds. Like Cloidt, he plays both
offense and defense and turned In
M minutes of action against UCLA.
Although not fast he makes
up for his apparent lack of physical
ability by using his head and
being letter perfect in his assign
ments," says Coach Len Casanova.
An assstant coach slouched off the
practice field one evening grumb
ling "we bad a lousy workout
Monte made two mistakes."
Seems like the guys of Monte's
make up are doomed to go un
noticed no matter bow well they
work. Last week Brethauer was
leading the Coast Conference in
pass receptions with 18 and hardly
got a mention. An Oregon wingman
of a few seasons back, Dick WU
klns, was big. fast and flashy and
got a lot of well-deserved publicity.
Monte has beaten his Oregon re
cord. WORKING
Monte and Cloidt before him
appears merely to be out there
working: Just punching the football
time clock. Yet Brethauer has a
good chance to break Bill McColl's
conference and national record of
106 receptions In three years of
varsity play. Within reach, too. s
Ed Barker's coast mark of 47 in a
single season.
Prior to the Saturday game
against Washington Monte has
caught 78 In his college career and
needed to boost his average only a
shsde to overtake McColl. His 18
for this season left him 39 back of
Barker.
Brethauer showed up at Oregon
with' no advance notice and
couldn't work his way into the
frosh lineup until the final game.
Since then he's been a general
handyman around the Webfoot grid
camp, catching passes, kicking
off. sharinir in the minting and
playing either end or halfback on
defense.
TRAINER
And in the locker room he's a
volunteer assistant trainer, taping
other players and ministering to
their bumpa and bruises.
Good ends are plenty: around
the conference this season and Babe
Curfman has one at Idaho he
wouldn't awap for anybody. That's
Rav Lewis, a senior who faked
freshman quarterback at Utah
State Into tossing a wild lateral
and then fell on the ball to open
the way for Idaho's winning score.
As the defensive platoon left the
field and the offense came on.
Lewis stopped to talk with quarter
back Wayne Anderson, who then
stuck his head in the huddle and
said:
Did vou hear old Banjo Eyes
Lewis? Now let's do some blocking
and get the Job done."
This is what Mr. Lewis said to
DANCE
Community
Hall
South Sixth
Saturday
9:00 to 1:00 Standard
Music By
Les Gardner
' and nil
WESTERN SWING BAND
KF1W Broadcast
. Saturday, 5:00 p.m.
Adm 41.00 (Tax Inc.)
Oregon's Unsung Hero
Mr. Anderson:
"We've been saving your bacon
all day. Now we got the ball tor
you on the three, there are three
minutes to play and we're trailing
Owen's Football Book
Gets 'Smash Hit' Tag
By GAYLE TALBOT
NEW iTOiuC in Large Steve
Owen, the old Oklahoma boy who
coucnes uie new York Omnia, has
authored a book called "My Kind
01 Fooloail," and 11 comes very
close to being the most consistently
entertaining piece of sporte litera
ture ever turned out by a story
teller and his official grammarian,
in this case Joe King.
Yve happen to belong to a school
which seriously feels that sport
books, line comics, have become
somewhat too numerous in recent
years. It would take up all a man's
time to review them. But this one
is good, worth spending money tor.
Owen has been in football prac
tically forever, the past 27 years
as coach of the Giants. He la recog
nised as a master of the profession,
in a tight little gTouo composed of
him and Paul Brown of Cleveland.
He Is a big man and a big eater
who always has enjoyed lile, and
for every football anecdote you
might have heard, Steve knows a
dozen. Most of them are in hla
book.
bKKIOl'S .
There Is some serious stuff, too.
for younger coaches who would
like to know bow Steve does It
There are pages of diagrams, but
nobody can force you to look at
mem. Mainly It is the story of a
wonderfully interesting life, of a
heavyset kid who was born in a
log cabin in the outlaw country.
first came to New York in a cow
boy outfit in 1936.
It is not possible in limited space
to give any Impression of the
weaitn or amusing incidents re
counted by Owen from his long
career. Somewhere along the line,
Steve has run Into them all play-
(ers,
coaches and other assortee?
characters and . be has a little
special memory of each of them.
To choose one at random, there Is
the great Jim Thorpe, and we will
let Owen tell it-
"Old Jim played wlngback at
right half, and I played left tackle.
By The Associated rresa '
BASEBALL
New York Enos (Country)
Slaughter. St. Louis Cardinal out
fielder, was acclaimed for the
"comeback of the year" In an
Associated Press poll of baseball
writers.
GOLF
Ft. 8mlth. Ark. Betty Jame
son of San Antonio, Tex., won the
Hardscrabble - women's Invita
tional Oolf Tournament, defeating
Marilyn Smith. Wichita, Kas,, 3
and 1 in the 36-hole final -
FOR
H. E. HAUGER
1330 Main-
by three. If you don't hack this one
over, don't look around for any
help, we'll let you stay in there
and take your beating.
"The defense rests."
The day before in Tulsa I had been
overawed by the great man. I used
my Hands very gently on Mr.
Thorpe and took my time going
In. Jim didn't pay much attention
to me.
GETTING OLD
"The next day I floured Thorpe
was getting old and dln't care, so
I decided to hike in there real fast
and ignore old Jim. I lined up and
took off. First thing I knew I was
on my back on the ground, with the
wind knocked out of me. Thorpe
had hit me. and the ball-carrier
had gained about IS yards through
my position.
Thorpe hauled me to mv feet
and advised: 'Son, never take
your eyes off their wlngback, be
cause he can hit you from the
blind aide something awful."
11
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