Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 22, 1954, Page 13, Image 13

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    MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1954
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
PAGE THIRTEEN
lidli"W
ops
Owls Garner Share
In OCC Championship
Oregon Collegiate Conference
Final KUndingi
By THE ASSOClATr.ii PKKSS
W L Pet. PF PA
Oregon Tech 3 1 .750 150 65
O.C.E. 3 1 .750 94 39
Portland State 2 3 .600 77 99
Southern Oregon 3 3 .500 M 110
Eastern Oregon 0 4 .000 33 145
Saturday result:
Oregon Tech 44 Southern Oregon 14
ASHLAND Coach Rex Hun
taker s Oregon Technical Institute
Owls closed out the 1954 Oregon
Collegiate Conference' with a big
eplash here Saturday afternoon on
the high school football field as
they trounced Southern Oregon
College by a 44-14 score giving the
mile high school a share of the
OCC championship with Oregon
College.
Played In warm sunshine, Uie
final conference battle was a re
newal of the relations between the
two schools, who In 1952 met on
Modoc Field and the Owls ran with
easy ability to an 89-0 victory to
add insult-to Injury to the broken
SOC team.
Saturday It was just about the
same story, but not to the exagger
ated score, as the gridders from
the Mile High Campus in Klamath
Falls scored in every quarter
against the fired-up Red Raiders
lrom SOC
A bleak lute In the first period
of play set up the first OTI touch
down as, a Red Raider punt fell
dead on the SOC eight yard line,
giving the Owls a first and goal to
go with better than two minutes
remaining in the quarter.
On the first play, fullback Doug
Crlppen bucked his way to the
seven and then Ray Rosa the quar
terback from Daly City, Callfor
ornia swept to the two yard line
on a keep-it play, but an offsides
penalty against the Owls on the
next play moved the pigskin back
to the seven yard stripe once
more.
A play Into the line for no gain
made it fourth and still goal to go
for the Invading Owls. Rosa
dropped back to pass and spotted
Willie Stinson in the end zone and
hit him with a strike for the
score. Cal "Sugar Jet" Smith
failed in his conversion attempt
and the Owls led 6-0.
Just four plays later, the Owls
had another tally as Smith gath
ered in a SOC punt on his 29 yard
line and behind OTI interference
rambled some 71 yards for a touch
down. Again Smith's kick was no
good, this time the scoreboard
registered a 12-0 verdict in favor of
the OTI eleven.
In the final seconds of the first
period the Red Raiders fumbled
and Crippen fell on the-lost IrelH
giving tne Owls possession again
on the OTT 47. -
Two plays latep and into the sec
ond quarter, Rosa hit Odle Canada,
a returning letterman .who played
one of his best games in Owl
spangles on defense and offense,
with a pass to the SOC 29 yard
line good for nine yards and set
Montreal
Favored
In ' Playoff
TORONTO Wi The Montreal
Alouettes and Edmonton Eskimos
tangle Saturday for the Grey Cup
for the first time in the 45-year
history of Canada'sf ootball clas
sic. Already, the experts are pick
ing the Als, Eastern champions,
to win the cup donated by Gov.
General Earl Orey in 1909.
The power-laded Als, with Den
ver's Sam Etcheverry pulling the
nigger for two touchdown passes,
whipped the Hamilton Tiger-Cats,
defending cup champions, 24-19
Saturday to take the Eastern Big
Four Union total-point series 38-28.
The Eskimos' entry into the final
as Western Canada's standard
bearers in the annual East-West
clash came much easier. They
polished off the Kitchener-Waterloo
Dutchmen 38-6 Saturday night
In the cup semi-final.
Edmonton led Kitchener 7-8 it
the end of the first quarter and
came up with a four-touchdown
linal quarter to wrap up the game.
THATA WAY Bob Brannum
aeems to be pointing with his
thumb to show which way the
ball went at Charley Share of
the Milwaukee Hawks appears
to have twisted the Boston Cel
tic's elbow at Madison Square
Garden. (NEA)
up the coming OTT score.
Rosa, the master of the iplit-T
option play, faded back and con
nected with another aerial to the
30 yard lino and Canada, the speed
burning halfback, worked his way
to pavdirt. Canada also converted
giving the Owls a 19-0 lead.
Three exchanges 'of the pigskin
gave the Owls the ball on the 20
yard line of SOC. but a five-yard
penalty and two Incomplete passes
lorced crippen to punt
Little Jimmy, Wright, the 5-5
hunk of man, who carried the
hopes of SOC most of the after
noon, gathered the kick in on his
45 yard line and turned to the right
sidelines where he went all the
way through Owl defenders for the
score. A 55 yard gallop and the
Red Raiders first score. John Gar
rett tallied the extra point giving
me uwis a 18-7 margin
Two third quarter TDs account
ed for 13 more points on the Ore.
gon Tech side of the scoreboard
as Lercy Springsr'a punt was
blocked on the 15 yard line, and
Canada, playing head-up football,
grabbed the falling pigskin and
raced to me SOC three yard 1 me.
A handoff to Canada garnered the
First downs ruihlnr.
First downs putting
First downs penalties
Total first downs
Yards gained rushing
Yards lost rushing
Net yards rushlnjt
Yards gained passing
Yards lost' -passing
Net yards passing
Total net yards
rumbles
Fumbles lost
Panes tried
Passes complete
Passes incomplete
Passes intercepted by
Penalties
Ysrds penalized
Punts ,
Aver, length punti
Touchdowns
Conversions
Score
Scare by on
OTI
SOC
OTt SOC
4
1 3
O 1
a 9
329 108
4 40
" as 9
n io
2 o
76 107
301 176
4 7
3 3
IS 5.1
7 6
7 IS
3 1
5 7
103 81
7
33.3 18..1
7 . 1
J 2
44 14
irtert:
13 7 13 13 44
O 7 0 7 14
Scoring for OTI: Touchdowns, Smith,
Canda izi, Crippen, Thomas and Fleet
wood. Conversions. Canda and Smith.
Cor SOC: Touchdowns. Wright and
Crandali. Conversions, Garrett 12).
TD and the attempted conversion
by the Portland grldder failed.
The second third period score
was set up as the Owls recovered
a SOC fumble on the mldfield
stripe, when Greene Rudd and
Spike Carter broke through to
smash an attempted reverse by the
Red Raiders.
Crippen, who had one score
called back because of an Infrac
tion against the Owls, took the ball
from Rosa on a stutter play and
went six yards on the fourth play
of the series for the score. Again
the try for point failed, giving the
Owls a 31-7 lead.
Oil an insuing k 1 c k o f f, SOC
moved the ball from their own 31
to the OTI 49, where a holding
penalty against the Owls moved
the pigskin to the Ore-Tech 34 yard
stripe and giving the Raiders a
first down.
Bill Seymore, one of the SOC
gridders, who were suppose to
miss the OTT battle because of
disciplinary reasons, pitched a per
fect strike to end Chuck Crandali
in the. end zone for a score. Gar
rett made it two for two by kick
ing the extra point.
Oregon Tech tallied twice in the
fourth period also, as Dave Thom
as ran over on a keep-it play from
Ihs five yard line with 10 minutes
remaining. "Sugar Jet" Smith's
kick was good making it 38-14.
Four minutes later, Lyle Fleet
wood garnered the last TD on a
buck from the one yard line, after
he and Linous Allen carried the
ball from the SOC 20 yard line
following Bud Garland's pass In
terception. This put the finishing touches on
the scoring for the day as Smith
again found it Impossible to pierce
the extra point column making the
final scoreboard leading 44-14.
Following the game in the OTT
dressing' room, pandimontum
broke loose as the Owls celebrat
ed their lirst taste of OCC cham
pionship since the league opened
five seasons ago, as OCE has held
the honor the four previous years.
This time OCE Is again in, but
only on a partnership basis, with
the Mile High Campus crew.
The OTT coaching staff, soaking
wet, from, showers, which they
hadn't planned, until the OTT grid
ders carried them into the water,
were very pleased with the show
ing of their entire team in the
final gamp.
This conquest was a big win for
the three gridiron mentors, who
have been looking for that first
OCC championship and were glad
to grab onto the title even as a
half owner.
DELIGHT TO SEA . . . Who
wouldn't be pleated to hive
Kathy Darlyn Smith at a
crew member? What poor
fith would mind getting
hooked by her off
St. Peteripurg, Flat., where
the fishes?
Cougars
Bounce
Huskies
'PULLMAN. Wash.'t.fl Basket
baller Ron Bennlnk. a student
trainer in the 1 oft season, picked
up a dirty tape, and helped put
away the helmets Saturday, then'
took the sports spotlight at Wash
ington State College.
The football team had just bowed
out as a 26-7 winner over Washing
ton's Inept Huskies.
Bennink, the top billed star of
a potentially fine five at WSC,
takes over from Frank Sarno, Jim
Hagerty and Duke Washington
whose performances brought duwn
the house in the football finale.
8TANDINS
The Huskies, loaded with stand
ins for injured and Ineligible regu
lars, got a mild panning from their
own cheer leaders and a pounding
from the big Cougar line in the
windup before some 17.500 people.
Except for 29 scoreless minutes
at the start and an early 71-yard
drive that carried to the WSC 23,
the Huskies were never in it and
WSC came close to making it em
barrassingly one-sided.
With 43 seconds left In the first
half, Sarno found Hagerty free in
the Washington secondary for a
46-yard touchdown pass play. The
stocky, 205-pound Sarno kicked the
point and the trend was set.
"It was a close first half any
way," said weary John Cherberg
whose Huskies had ended their
worst season in 34 years with a
2-8 record. "This was WSC's bes
game. We were thin, but there's
always next year."
And Cherberg and staff will be
bncx.
RECOGNIZED '
"Definitely yes," said Harvey
Casslll, the UW athletic director.
"Recognizing - all . the. .problems
they've had. I am completely satis
fied with the Job they have done."
Tne job was too big Saturday,
however, as the Cougars scored
three times in the third quarter.
Halfback Hagerty. who will also be
back next year, gained 53 of the
67 yards in a scoring march for
the first of them.
Hegerty, who made 18 points.
went 23 yards on one play and
then went over, from the one to
end a 74-yard drive five minutes
later. Without Hagerty, the Cougars
rolled 49 yards after a Bob Cox
fumble, the payoff coming on an
8-yard pitch from Bob Iverson to
Men Purnell.
WSC almost had two more In
the fourth quarter, getting to the
six and 20 before stalling with a
26-0 lead.
"It was a team victory for us,"
grinned Al Kircher, the Cougar
coach who soothed a lot of alumni
"wolves" with the thumping de
cision. "The Huskies weren't as
slrone as I thought."
GLOOMY
Tilings got so gloomy for the
Huskies, one of their cheer leaders
took to the loudspeaker in the
fourth quarter to tell his crew:
"Thank goodness we didn't play
the Vandals". The Washington root
ers then gave 15 organized "rahs'
for Idaho, 10-0 winner over WSC
his season and first foe for the
Huskies next fall.
Sophomore Cox, who may have
been listening, kept his team on
an 80-yard march for a touchdown,
completing six of eight passes.
Toe biggest was a fourth down.
23-yard throw to Dean Derby ruled
complete on the six on Hagerty's
Interference.
With 70. seconds remaining. Cox
tossed to end Corky Lewis for the
score and the unanimous token ap
plause that usually goes to a fight
ing unaeraog at that stage.
ifc , ',r-4 -m
ALL-AROUND KID . . . Bjorn
Thofelt it the youngest win
ner in the history of the
world modern pentathlon. The
19-year-old Swede prevailed
in Budapest. He it the ton of
Col. Sven Thofelt, who took
the five event honor at the
Olympic Garnet in Amster
dam in 1928.
I
CLAYTON HANNON, Sports
time out '
'Ain't easy to get a bowling team
together up here in the far
north!"
Nationals
Topped By
Black Lab
WELDON SPRING, Mo. im
Major VI, black Labrador that
spent much of its puppyhood in a
long Island bar and sometimes re
trieved empty beer cans, reigns
as the national retriever cham
pion. Tne six-year old male - dog.
owned by Mrs, Fraser M. Born
of Southampton, L.I., N.Y., iutned
in a flawless performance to out
class five other finalists, including
the defending champion, in land
and water tests Saturday.
King Buck, , owned by the MlTo'
Kennels of Brighton, 111., had won
the title the past two years and
was bidding for a record third
consecutive championship.
Other- dogs reaching the finals
were Massie's Sassy Boots, owned
by William Cline of Chicago;
Spring of Swinomish, owned by
C. R. Tobin of San Francisco;
Black Boy XI, owned by Lewis
S. Greenlead Jr., of Greenwich,
Conn., and Rip's Bingo, owned by
David Paper and Clilf Mortenscn
of St. Paul, Minn.
T.I-!.
NO PAIN Sal Maglie of the
Giants operates i Niagara Falls,
' N.Y. liquor store during the
off-season with nary a thought
. of an aching back. (NEA)
Jack Hepplnstall, Michigan State
trainer, was an outstanding 60ccer
player in his native England be
fore coming to this country in 1013,
In 17 racing seasons Delaware
Park, the state's only thorough
bred track, has returned $14,477,
242.83 to the state via taxes.
Klamath Sportsmen's
Assoc. Mcctinq
Tuet., 8:00 p.m., Wincme
Vote on new constitution char
ter membership - nominating
comm. eppointmenti.
OPEN Every Nite
Till 9 P.M.
JOE'S Sporting Goods
418 Main
UUv.
ri - V,
More Sports
On Pages 14-15
Editor
Oregon
Whips
Beavers
CORVALLIS, Ore. (fl Oregon's
George Shaw, who has already
agreed to play in the year-end
East-West Shrine game at San
Francisco, claimed national total
offense honors Monday following
his team's rout of Oregon State
Saturday 33-14.
, Tile season's football windup for
both , clubs, Oregon's first win In
the series 1n six years, saw the
versatile Shaw stage another great
performance.
Through the victory, Oregon took
third place In the final Coast Con
ference standings, with five wins
and three losses, and a season
record of six won, four lost. OSC
finished with one win and six beat
ings in conference play and a sin'
gle victory and eight losses over
uie season.
PASSED
Shaw passed to three of Ore
gon's five touchdowns Saturday
and gained 121 yards, to bring
his season's unofficial total to
1.536 yards. He went Into the game
with a 40-yard bulge over Paul
Larson of California Slid Larson
was held to only 110 yards In
Gal's victory over Stanford Sat
urday. But fired-up Oregon State1 roared
at the outset. The Beavers took
the kickoff and drove 59 yards to
touchdown land. Quarterback Jim
Withrow passed 11 yards to end
Wes Edlger for the tally.
OSC moved again In the second
period. But Shaw intercepted a
pass and ran it back 38 yards to
the Oregon State 48 to . get his
team under way.
Shaw shared honors with his
halfback, Dick James, James
scored two touchdowns,'' one on
slx-vnid pass and the other a 62-
ynrd play in which he caught
Shaw's toss on the State 15 and
ran for the score. It brought his
season scoring total to 66 points,
which tied him with UCLA's full'
back Bob Davenport at the top of
the conference scoring race,
DIRECTED
Before the half ended, Shaw dl
reeled his team to Its first touch
down, tossed a 60-yard scormg
pass for another and then con
nected with a six-yard toss for
the third one to give Oregon a
19-7 halftlme lead.
In the last half he added another
52-yard touchdown pass play and
a 66-yard runbaefc of a kickoff.
He kicked three of his team's
conversion points. He also com
pleted five of 16 pass attempts for
126 yards and lost four yards In
four rushing plays.
The Beavers' halfback Dick Ma
son plunged over from a yard out
for OSC's final score in the last
quarter, after an Oregon fumble
had been recovered on the Oregon
14.
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I f ! S
o M! dl
n w i-i tin
Buckeyes Whip Michigan;
UCLA Wallops So. Cal 34-0
By ED CORRIGAN
Rr THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The scramble of lucrative bowl
berths was not over by any means
Andrews,
Smith In
Spotlight
By THE ASSOCIATKD, PRES
Boardwalk Billy 'Smith and
Punching Paul Andrews, the two
leading light heavyweight contend
ers, share the boxing limelight this
week.
Smith, a , dynamic clouter from
Atlantic City. N. J., takes on
heavyweight Archie McBrlde at
New York's St. Nicholas Arena to
night. The 33-year-old Smith kay
oed Gene (Tiger) Jones, Willie
Bean and Harold Johnson In quick
order hi his three fights this year.
Du Mont will telecast at 10 p.m.,
EST.
Andrews, a tall, 24-year-otd ex
paratrooper from Buffalo, N, Y.,
gets his big test Wednesday night
against Joey Maxim, the ex-light
heavyweight champion, at the Chi
cago Stadium.
Handled by Marshall Miles, who
managed Joe Louis, Andrews is be
ing groomed for shots at both the
light heavy and heavyweight titles.
He has a 38-3 record.
Wildcat Billy McNccce, of Isllp,
N. Y., and Ted Olla, of Milwaukee,
two free-swinging mlddleweights,
mix it up tonight al Brooklyn's
Eastern Parkway Arena.
ABC will telecast at 10 p.m., EST.
Reno Makes
Strong Bid r
For Olympics
. . i
RENO, Nev. W Reno Is plan'
nlng to make a strong bid for the
1B60 Olympic winter Games.
William Brussard, manager of
the Reno Chamber of Commerce,
said 8unday Reno representatives
will present the Ida to J. Lymnn
Bingham, executive secretary lor
the Winter Olympics, . as soon as
he returns from a trip to Mexico.
At a meeting in Chicago Inst
week the U.S. Olymplo Games Se
lection Committee received bid3
for the 1960 Winter Games from
Colorado Springs and Aspen, Colo.,
jointly; Sun Valley, Idaho, and
Lake Placid, N.Y. A decision was
postponed until December.
"If jr., too,
VY General
knowleclae,
our customers.
JIM OLSON MOTORS
522 So. 6th St. Klamath Falls, Ore.
-See your
itoday, but no matter how the final
jpairiugs line up the "natural" of
uie year won t take place.
The Rose Bowl Is the only one
of the four big postseason extrav-
aganzas filled. It will pit twice-
beaten Southern California against
mighty Ohio State. UCLA, possib
ly the only team In the country
capable of giving the Buckeyes an
argument, played In the Rose Bowl
last Jan. 1,- and by Pacific Coast
Conference edict, can't appear
again.
TRAGEDY
As far as college football goes,
that's a genuine tragedy. Both
Ohio State and UCLA boast proud
9-0 records. Both are undisputed
musters of their conferences
UCLA the PCC and Ohio State the
Big Ten and they rate the Nos.
1 and 2 teams in the nation.
If there was any doubt as to who
was best In the PCC, It was dis
pelled last Saturday when UCLA
Idaho
Blanks
BYU 7-0
BOISE, ' Idaho VPI Washington,
llouk out for Idaho in your foot
ball opener next fall!
The Vandals, winding up the
season here Saturday with a 7-0
victory over Brlgham Young of
the Skyline Conference, ran their
winning streak to four games.
They will open against Washing
ton at Seattle next Sept. 17.
A second quarter touchdown. In
which halfback Bill Lawr plunged
ovar from four yards out, was the
margin of victory. Burdette Hcss's
kick was good,
The game ended the season for
Coach Skip Stanley's team with a
record of four wins, including ft
10-0 victory over Washington State
and another over. Utah, for the
best record since 1949. It Is the
first time in 31 years, since 1923,
the Vandals have won four
strnlght.
Despite the score, the game was
somewhat one-sided. The Vandals
held Brlgham Young In their own
territory until the last quarter. In
the final minute, a Ron Bcau
Willard stolworthy pass took the
Cougars to Idaho's 25, but another
desperation pass was incomplete.
Idaho finished Its abbreviated
Coast Conference schedule with
one win and two losses, the latter
to Oregon and Oregon State. Its
333 conference record topped both
Washington and Oregon State and
tied it wlUi Stanford. I
Today's Hydra-Matic GMG
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GMC dealer for Tn'pfe-Cfiecfted
clubbed Uie Trojans 34-0. Ohio State
Inieanwhile, was winning Its sev.
lenui Big Ten game, a ih decision
over Michigan.
Two other teams emerged with
bowl assignments. They were Ar-
kansas for the Cotton Bowl host
and Nebraska as the visitor for
Uie Orange Bowl. Both sneaked in
the back door.
Arkansas was beaten by Louisi
ana State 7-8, and Nebraska suf
fered a 65-7 pasting at the bands
of Oklahoma. But . . . Baylor beat
Southern Methodist 33-21 in a South
west Conference game. Since 8MU
was Arkansas' only competitor for
the Cotton Bowl assignment, the de
feat spelled finis for the Mustangs.
Baylor still can tie Arkansas for
the league title, but the Razor
backs had the forethought to whip
Baylor earlier In the season to
clinch It.
APPEARING
Oklahoma, like UCLA Is barred
from appearing hi the Orange Bowl
two years In a row, the runner
up gets it tills year. Oklahoma's
victory over Nebraska gave the
Sooner their seventh straight Big
Seven title.
Kansas Slate was the only team
that had a chance of overtaking
Nebraska In the race for second
place. Colorado beat State 36-14
and that settled tilings.
If Duke can get past North Car
olina Saturday: the Blue Devils no
doubt will get the Atlantic Coast
conlercnco spot in the Orange
Bowl. A vote Is taken, but Duke
will have a spotless record com
pared to one tie against Maryland.
Conversely, If the Blue oDevlls lose,
Maryland probably will get the nod
for the second straight year.
Should Mississippi win the South
eastern Conference championship
by getting past Mississippi State
Saturday, 01' Miss will act as host
team In the Sugar Bowl. Baylor has
a good chance of being named tho
visitor.
SELECTORS
'Hie settling of the Southeastern
race also will enable the Qotton
Bowl selectors some width in de
ciding the team to oppose Arkan
sas. Auburn and Kentucky, winners
of their last five In a row, appear
to have the InBlde track.
Wichita finally won a Missouri
Valley crown with a 20-0 victory
over Detroit and probably will get
a bid to the Gator Bowl. Any of
the teams passed over for the Cot
ton or Sugar bowls can get the
other spot.
The mythical Ivy League title
still is unsettled because Harvard
upended Yale, tho leader, 13-9, As
result, Harvard won the Big
Three championship (Harvard-Yale-Frlnceton)
and this one is
more important to the three teams
Involved than the league crown. .
Notre Dame beat Iowa 34-11. i
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