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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 30, 1954)
1 SATURDAY. OCTOBER 30, 1954 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE THIRTEEN MM 0 Owls Win Fourth Straight BREMERTON Paced by the throwing and running antics ol auarterback Ray Rosa, the.iiigh flying Oregon Tech Owls won their fourth straight game here last night by turning back a tough Olympic junior College eleven by a 32-6 margin. The unbelievable back from Daly City, California, did everything, but play defense for Olympic as the steller signal-caller broke loose a barrage of aerials that hit the Ranger defense from both sides and even from behind, and to top his exhibition of ball handling off led both clubs in net yardage with 72 yards in four carries. Tne first quarter and part of the second period was all Olympic as the Owls looked stunned, but not for long, as the visitors from Klanv ath Falls scored twice and con verted once to run-up a 13-0 half time bulge over the homestanding Rangers in the Bremerton Shrine game of the year. With a little more than eight ininutes remaining in the second quarter, Linous Allen, OH half back intercepted an Olympic pass on the 47 yard line and five plays later Rosa passed to end Paul Weaver for 12 yards and a touch down. Cal "Sugar Jet" Smith's kick was no good. The second Owl score came lat er in the second quarter as Ren Sloan Intercepted another Ranger aerial on the OJC 14 yard line. One pass from Rosa to Sloan garnered another TO, as the letterman OTI end stood in the end zone all alone. udie Canada's kick was good send ing the score to a halftlme margin of 13-0 in favor of the visiting Owls. Halfway through Uie third pe riod, "Suger .Jet" Smith returned a punt to the OTI 40 yard line, where after one Incomplete pass, Rosa pulled a brilliant demonstra tion of deception and on a ''keep it" play rambled 60 yards for a touchdown on an outstanding run. Canada's kick failed and the Owls led 19-0. Another Rosa to Weaver pass, good for a gain to the 34 yard line of the Owls set the stage for the fourth OTI score. Rosa dropped back and found Allen all alone be hind the Ranger secondary and with a perfect pitch, hit the Owl receiver, who took the ball in on the Olympic 48 and rambled the rest of the distance untouched cap ping a drive of 96 yards. Again tne extra point tailed for the Owls, and the score stood at 25-0. In the waning minutes of the Ihird period Oregon Tech recov ered a fumble on their own 13 yard line, and on the first play from scrimmage, George "The Mole" Johnson, all 140 pounds of him, took off for parts unknown and be fore Ranger defensive men could stop the little-barrelling-fullback a gain of 65 yards had been gar nered, moving the ball to the Olympic 22 yard line. Rosa, two plays later on the 21, again used his deception to fool OJC defenders and with the same ''kcep-it" plaj went into the end zone for the final OTI score. Can ada's kick wits good this time and the Owls had a 32-0 bulge, with only a few minutes remaining. After an exchange of the ball. Olympia intercepted one of Dave Thomas' passes on the Owl 27 yard line setting up their only touch down, but the clock was mov ing with very little time remain ing. On the final play of the Junior college game, quarterback Bob Fayette hurled a desperation pass to Paul Mitchell in the end zone for six points and the lone OJC score. The attempted conversion by the Rangers failed. Making It 32-6 for the final scoreboard fig ures. The mark of the game, which was witnessed by some 1000 or more gridiron fans, 'was the stel lar play of both forward walls, and the running and passing of Rosa, who was as "hot as a firecracker." Smith's punt and kickoff returns added plenty of life to the Shrine football game as did Johnson's 65 yard gallop in the fourth period. Rosa led the individual ground gniners with his 72 net yards, while Johnson had 66 r.nd Smith 40. For he Rangers, who out-downed the CLUTCH GUY nce 1146. 'ns I W 8EBH A MUST J ?. la 1 TO BEitgvE AT FbW i r-l LEAST OHS ALL- f, t r AMERICA BERTH A ''1 - fcj JZmX 111 fO OKLAHOMA ffi- -WSK? , ...7W6 YEAR I A M . J W' fKS&S-J AW I BP sti&iVafl At. Pf'.VJ (CALL HIM I ' w .. 4 X I 7 A clutch UV :Y mrJ$L Jd&W; Trojans Win Over Bonanza Sacred Heart closed out the foot-, bail season with their first league win of the year in County League action yesterday afternoon at Mer rill as they tripped the Bonanza Antlers by a 19-0 margin. Dean Michealls led the Trojan scoring machine as he countered twice for pay .din tallies. In the third period the Sacred Kcart halfback countered on an eiglit yard plunge, and in the final quar ter he ran over alter taking n pass from quarterback Dino Reg' inato in a play that covered 40 yards, Jerry Depuy scored the ether Sacred Heart TD on a six yard plunge in the second quarter. Score by quarters: ' Sacred Heart 0 6 7 6 19 Bonanza 0 0 0 0 0 Oregon Frosh Whip OSC Rooks EUGENE '.ft The University of Oregon Frosh, despite 14 fum bles, defeated the Oregon State Rooks 13-6 Friday night in the foot ball opener for both freshman teams, finm Wpslpv nf Mnnnlitln naccnH to Bob Dpirrnnt In thr onH iniw to put the Rooks ahead 6-0 in the nrsi quarter. . The Frosh. Who anriPflrpH strnno- defensivelv. went hplrt unrlfc until the last period when quarter- back Jack Henkel . scored two touchdowns one on a 42-yard run and the other on a seven-vnrrl plunge. - By THE ASSOCIATED PREJ8 . GOLF PINEHURST. N. C Spencer S Overton of Baltimore won hi 19 holes from medalist Thomas C. Robbins of. Larchmont, N. Y., to gain the final ol the North and South Seniors Invitation tourna ment. FORT WORTH-Polly Riley of Fort Worth defeated Mrs. Frank Goldthwalte of Fort Worth, 2 and 1, in the quarterfinals of the Women's Texas Open. Duck Runners Top Beavers EUGENE Wl The University of Oregon, winning tirst, second and third, defeated Oregon State College in a cross country race here Friday. Bill Dellinger, NCAA mile cham pion, was first for Oregon with a time of 12 minutes, 32.7 seconds for the near-three-mile course. Ken Riser was second and Stan Ruther ford third, Scores COLLEGE FOOTBALL By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS (Friday) Miami (Fla) 75, Fordham 7 Richmond 7, George Washington 0 The Citadel 14, Wofford 13 Marquette 14, Detroit 13 Denver 19, New Mexico 6 Vince Martinez Stops Opponent r. vuic uiticH. Keieree Marry Kessier gave Both Judges Jack Gordon and Ar. Marlines' future runs into a lam- . rminH , ,h. ,h,,.rt , -....,..,. v . ... tly-manager roadblock, the hand some Paterson, N.J., welter should be fighting for the title within a year. Martinez' managerial situation is all messed up at the moment. Billy Daly holds the contract with Tex Pelte as a partner. The boxer's father, Tony, and brother, Phil, are warring with Daly. Neither Daly nor Pelte were in the corner last night as young Vince stopped Carmine Flore on a technical knockout In a: 32 of the seventh at Madison Square Garden. Ironically, Al Braverman, presi dent of a rival managers' guild that is battling with Daly's group, acted as a Marlines .second. Martinez gave a brilliant exhibi tion of boxing skill against Fiore a perfect foil who always came forward with nothing more than the threat of left hook. Young Vince blocked the honk w!!h his glove and elbow, beat Fiore to the punch with a right hand and jab bed him all night with his stinging FRIDAY'S FIGHTS By THE ASSOCIATED TRESS, HALIFAX Richard (Kidt How ard. 138 1-3, Halifax, outpointed Orlando Zulueta, 136 , Havana, 10- , . MELBOURNE, Australia Bob by Sinn, 117 (., Melbourne, out pointed . Billy Peacock, 117 . (2. Philadelphia, 12. TOKYO Aklyoshl Akanuma, 125 Japan, stopped Baby Gony, 123, Manila, 4., ... . PHILADELPHIA Bobby Single ion. 120. Philadelphia, stopped Jimmy Thomson, 119, Scotland, 4. one round to Flore, the third, for thur Susskiiid had It 8-0. So did the 5-1 caid going to the seventh, I Associated Press. Hear What HYDRO DEVELOPMENT Means to You 1IARN TMI FACTS about (1) Hells Canyon Dam, (2) the Preference Clause In hydro-electric contracts, (S) the fallacy of Partnerships between government and private power. UARN what the people of Oregon stand to lose by tampering with the present program which has been so successful for the past 25 yeara, u explained by these prominent Grange men: IIMM MtClUHt, Hosier of the Oregon State Grange k AT OiU, Pas! Afosler of the Oregon State Orange it OSCAR NTtRSON, Chairman of the State Grange Agriculture Committee Special Broadcast . SATURDAY OCTOBER 30 i KFJI 8:30-8:45 p.m. flpottfortd tv Me Ortgon Stale Qrano. tlSi S. B. Salmon Portland, Oregon. Blmtr McClure, matter. UK THE EX- SACK WH'CHHE Idaho Coach Pulls Shocker Of Grid Year By JACK HEWINS SEATTLE Ufl The least we can do is nominate Skip Stahley as Coach of the Half Century. Ida ho wants to run him for Presi dent, , . For a guy who started the season with nothing and lost half of that, the Skipper undoubtedly pulled the shocker of the year by walloping Washington State. . . When Skip took the Job at Ida ho his close friends wondered what they'd wear to the funeral. Now they're scanning etiquette books to learn the proper attire for functions at the governor's mansion. . . Material was so thin he might not &ave been able to suit up 11 men without an influx of Junior college transfers. He hasn't sub stituted freely because he gets lonesome on the bench, . , At least a dozen times in 29 years Idaho had been given a 50-50 chance of beating the Cougars. This year the odds were-about 1 to 99 and that made victory much sweeter for all the unsuspecting Idahoans. . . Stahley is the eighth coach to head .up the Vandal hopes since Matty Matthews' 1925 team tripped WSC, 7-6. At that time Skip was a young man five years away from his first coaching job and not one of his 1954 players had been born yet. . . When Idaho scored its 10th point visiting Owls, Dan Fitzmorrls and Mitchell carried the bulk of the load with a total of 63 net yards apiece. . STATISTICS OTI OJC a 12 209 Fit-it downs Net yard running 1f Net yards paulni iHfl Total net yardase 3BS rasics tried Tasses complete Passes Incomplete Passes Intercepted by Yards -penalized Fumbles Klrkoff aver, lentth Punts aver, length Yards returned kickoffs Yards returned punts acere ay llaarlert: OTI 0 U 12 7 52 OJC 0 0 0 6 C Scoring for OTI: Touchdowns, Rosa 2i. Weaver. Sloan and Allen. Point after touchdowns. Canada 2i. For Olympic: Touchdown Mitchell. 38.5 17.0 121 58 12 442 34.2 a stunned Washington State fan croaked: "I hope stahley doesn't run up a big score.". . . Jerry Williams planned to make .this his last year of pro football but he's going bo well with the Philly Eagles he'll probably change his mind. ... " . Quite a bit of argument is ier- mentingi in Suiuiycal as ' to why Red Sanders is letting his Uclans run like wild horses and nobody has suggested that mebbe he Just can t stop em. Some say Sanders is irked over a story go ing around that his single wing is very dull entertainment and the professional Los Angeles ' Rams put on a abetter show. Maybo he Just doesn t like Taylors, having waxed the Stanford Taylor 72-0 and the Oregon State Taylor 61-0. . . Sanders is a stubborn guy. Ev ery time he comes to the North west he drills his team with a wet football, yet the UCLA boss has never seen his team play on a wet field in Seattle. mm iHt raiiNDir aus iini 904 Klamath Ave. Ph.6076 "Ve Said We'd Sell Out And We Are!" OPEN SUNDAY 9 to 3 For Your Convenience JUST A FEW OF THE ITEMS STILL LEFT I-BEAMS ANGLE IRON CHANNEL IRON NUTS AND BOLTS GATEYALVES SKID CHAINS FOR TRUCKS PLUMBING FITTINGS (Elbows-T's-Couplings, etc PIPE CABLE PULLEYS SPROCKETS ALL ITEMS PRICED LOW TO SELL FAST Klamath Salvage Yard 801 BROAD ST. But will he be a doctor? 1 NT I T, ' Tr-H"! mJi.,..mVmS -ii i ' ssssaaiaiaassssssssssssasssssssssssssssssaaaassssssiii I ; - nJ Your ambitions for your childwhatever they are can only come true if you act now! I ,f your dreams for your young child include a college education, why gamble on being able to afford it "someday"? It's so easy to be sure about it, if you start saving now the automatic way through the Payroll Savings Plan! It's lyttematid Just think if you sign up to save $3.75 a week, in 6 years you'll have $1,025.95 in 9 years 8 months, $2,137.30 and in 19 years 8 months you'll have $5,153.72. Eight million working people are now on the Plan saving for a home of their own, a college education for their chil dren, or any of those things made pos sible only through systematic saving. So join the Payroll Savings Plan right now or, if you are self-employed, join the Bond-A-Month Plan where you bank. Do it today! It's limplal Just tell your company's pay office how much you want to save any where from a few dollars to as much as you want. This sum is then saved for you every payday. It is invested in U. S. Series E Savings Bonds which are turned over to you, and which earn rood inter est for you. It's sural Once vou ioin. vour savin? is automatically done for you before youlU draw your pay. You don't have to do a thing. And your child's education will be provided for by money you don't even miss now. 7 h L " 'X&W:: Your baby's future starts today. . .when you save with United States Savings Bonds through the Payroll Savings Plan! The V. 8. Onotrnevnl aW nt pay lor this attvtrtiMutjt. TJtf Treasury Drpartmmt thanke.Jor tKtm patriot donation, tot Adoirtmnt Couneti mod Associated Lumber & Box Co. Balsiqer Motor Co. Car-Ad-Co East Sid Electric Ellinqson Lumber Co. First Federal Savings 4 Loan Assn. First National Bank of Portland Fluhrer's Holium Bakery Home Lumber & Supply Co. ' Klamath Basin Pine Mills Co. Klamath let & Storaqt Klamath Medical Service Bureau Klamath Production Credit Assn. The Landry Co. Loveness Lumber Co. Metier Brothers Midland Empire Insurance Aqcncy Modoc Lumber Co. Peyton & Co. Klamath Falls Branch U.S. Natl. Bank Word's Klamath Funerril Home Weyerhaeuser Timber Co. Wilson Title & Abstract Co. John Sandmeycr Insurance Agency