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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1956)
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 19r.6 HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREQON PAGE NINB Owls, Indians Open Rivalry On Gridiron - Oregon Tech and Yakima Junior College, one of Washington' finest jCs. will open gridiron warfare at Uodoc Field Saturday night al the two achools clash for the first time on an athletic field. - Game time Is 7:30. Coach Rex Hunsaker's Owls from the Mile High Campus will be out seeking victory number two, while this will be the first Outing of the year for Yakima. Last Saturday night, Tech opened iis home schedule by handing Dicks JC a 20-13 defeat. ; One of the largest crowds ever to take in an OTI football game was on hand last week for the Ricks-Tech game, and with the lo cal campus being flooded this week with new students, another good-sized gate is expected to wit ness the second game of the Ore gon Tech season. Yakima It boasting one of Its best teams in the last several Ball Player Feared Dead : BALTIMORE W Air-sea rescue units today joined an extensive Search for Tommy Gastall, Balti more Oriole bonus catcher, who radioed he was in distress on a solo airplane flight. ;,The 23-year-old former Boston University three-sport sfar was last heard, from at 6:21 p.m. last night. He had taken off alone from Harbor Field in his own plane about 90 minutes before with fuel enough for live hours flying. In a radio contact with the field's control tower he got across that he was in serious trouble. '.""The static and interference from other speakers was bad tower operator James J. Wellner (aid, "but I thought I heard the -word 'fire' and he said "I'm go ing into the water. Wellner ; said he immediately scanned surrounding waters and put in a call for the Coast Guard. "1 assumed the plane was near the field when he radioed but 1 taw nothing." Wellner added. - Gastall, a native of Fall River, Mass., was one of the most sought after college athletes when he signed with the Baltimore Orioles June 20, ; 1955, reportedly for a bonus of $40,000. Colts To Hold Young's Jersey 'BALTIMORE, Md. (UP) - The Baltimore Colts folded up Buddy Young's No. 22 jersey today and announced that no other member f the club ever would wear that number. , Young, a speedy, five-foot, four inch scatback, retired Thursday after playing nine pro football campaigns without suffering a se rious injury. He gained 9,419 yards during his pro career. -The 30-year-old Rose Bowl hern from the University of Illinois will remain with the Colts as a scout and public relations man. He be comes the first Negro to assume an administrative position with a National Football League team. ' Syracuse University is still look ing for its first undefeated foot ball season. seasons with 10 returning letter- men from last year's club. In the Indians starting lineup will be eight experienced soDhomores and three treshmen gridders. The In dians are regarded as one of Washington's leading -junior col lege grid clubs this season. Hunsaker announced this morn ing that he would go with about the same starting lineup that Tech used against Ricks last week. In the backfield, Richard Pckala Is expected to be used at fullback. while Al Everson, Don Stonehill or Harry Juul will be the picks for tne two nallback berths. At quar terback, Hunsaker and backfield coach Ralph Carr will probably flip a coin between Bob Stoy and Charlie Gantcr. both of whom turned in excellent jobs in guid ing the OTI oflense last Saturday in the line, on will have Charles Eccelson at one end and either Al Van Iewven or Wes Par rish at end, Richard Perlick and Tom Wylie at tackle, Allen Jones and Frank Wilson at guard, and Armund Mayzell at center. In the probable starting lineup, only Ec- celston. Van Lewven and Jones are lettcrmen in the line, while Juul and Stonehill are backfield letter winners. For Yakima, coach Chuck Bray- ton revealed that he would go along with a power-packed veter an eleven in hopes of opening his season with a victory. In the Yaki ma backfield, Brayton will open with one freshman, and three veterans. At quarterback will be freshman Larry Grillo, while the fullback slot will be filled by Odcll Roters and the two half back spots will be given to Jerry Young ana uon cook. Dick Keenhouts. i a 240-pound tackle, will lead Yakima s hard charging line. Working with Keen bouts at tackle will be Larry Tobin. a 200-pound sophomore. Rich Akridge, Bill Brown and Ted Neth are battling for the two guard spots, while Bob Nance and Dean Haubrich are the two starting ends for the Indians. At center will be Dale Kepley. All but Kep- ley and Akridge are sophomore leltermen. Tech's forward wall will have a slight advantage in the. average weight per man. OTI's line aver age will be 204 compared to 201 for Yakima. But in the backfield, OTI will have to spot the In dians five pounds per man as the Yakima foursome carries the ad vantage 173-168. This will be Oregon Tech's final showing before local fans for two wcois. Next Saturday they clash with Compton Junior College, the nation's number one JC last year, at Compton. Then the following week, Tech meets Portland State College here in the Oregon Col legiate Conference opener. OREGON TECH FOOTBALL is no! plagued by the absence of quarterbacks this ytar lilt last, the Owls can claim three. Above, left to right, Bob Stoy, Charlie Ganter and Richard Pekala post during drills (or tomorrow night's gama with Yakima J. C. at Modoc Field. Pakala may start at fullback, and the quarterback berth It a toss-up batwaan Stoy and Gantar. - lieralii an CLAYTON HANNON SPORTS EDITOR Bragan Says Bucs Ready To Give Brooks Trouble Football Contests Bounce Into Nation's Sports View By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Whether or not the nerve-numb ing National League pennant race needs or' wants company, college football bounces into the sports scene tomorrow with Its first major program or the new season. No lest than six teams listed among the top 10 in preseason estimates will be in action, among them Notre Dame and Georgia Tech, third and fourth, in the Associated Press poll. Notre Dame, with few veterans but a number of eager sopho mores, meets southern Methodist FRIDAY'S BASEBALL By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NATIONAL LEAGUE W h Pet, 88 57 PITTSBURGH. Ml Bobby Bra gan promises his piuwirgn Pi rates will leea urooKiyn some oi the same bitter medicine that dropped Milwaukee one full game off the National League pace "We're ready to give Brooklyn more of the same," said Bragan alter yesterday s exciting 2-1 vic tory over the Braves In 10 Innings, "We ought to beat them at least three out of the seven games. Ronnie Kline faces Sal Maglic in tonight's Forbes Field opener of a four-game series here. The Pirates will follow with Vcrn Law against Carl Erskine or Roger Craig tomorrow. Sunday Bragan will call on the veteran Red Munger to face Don 85 73 68 63 62 57 Brooklyn Milwaukee Cincinnati St. Louis Philadelphia Newcombe, the Dodgers' 25-game Pittsburgh winner. The Pirate pitcher Mon-I" orlt j... ...i ..- o.l. j ...u. Chicago Udy niK. ii wm u ouu menu, who Tl.i,r.Hv'. 11, .nil. beat Milwaukee yesterday with a Pittsburgh 2, Milwaukee 1 magnificent four-hitter. The Dodg-I nines) ers aren't set for a Monday pitch- nv name scheduled er. ' The Pirates hold the key to the pennant race as Brooklyn must play them in seven of its remain Ing games, four at Forbes Field and the final three next weekend j in Brooklyn. The Dodgers' other i games are with the Phillies Tues day and Wednesday. GB .607 .578 4 .507 144 .466 204 .432 234 .422 27 300 3Ui (10 in- UCLA Opens Pacific Grid Play Tonight SAN FRANCISCO (UP)- The lid flips off the 1956 college foot ball season on the Pacific Coast this weekend with a flock of Inter sectionals and only one game that has bearing on the eventual Rose Bowl representative. The lone contest on the road to Pasadena pits Stanford's favored Indians against reouuaing wasn Inaton State in a night game at Spokane. Stanford figures in the Rose Bowl picture ana wasning- ton State il also an eligible, though highly unlikely, candidate. There is one other Pacific Coast Conference game that between Washington and Idaho In Seattle. But Washington can't go to the bowl because of rule Infractions and Idaho can't because the team does not play enough conference games. Onlv two other PCC teams have home field appointments for the first Saturday of the new season. California entertains Baylor from the wild and wooly Southwest con ference while UCLA plays host to Utah in Los Angeles tonight. The rest of the schedule Is a road trip one for the PCC teams. Southern caiuornia aiso tests a Southwest Conference foe by jour neying to Texas to play the bong-horns. In a night game at the Cotton Bowl in Dallas. Georgia Tech's experienced squad ploys an after noon game against Kentucky at Lexington In the television Game of the Day. Notre Dame Is rated a 13-polnt favorite over SMU; Tech 7i over Kentucky. Othera of the anticipated elite making their season's debuts will be sixth-ranked Maryland against Syracuse at college Park, Aid, Texas Christian, No. 7, against Kansas at Lawrence, Kan., Paul Bryant's ninth-ranked Texas At gies, entertaining Vlllanova at Col lege Station: and Pittsburgh, No. 10 and rated tops In the East, against West Virginia, a coal country rival the Panthers spilled from bowl consideration late In the 1935 season. Stanford and Southern Califor ' nia, left with the most after the Pacific Coast Conference shake up, play the features among Far westorn conferences, Btamora at Washington State and the Trojans at Texas in night fames. Jim Tatum's return to North Carolina Is launched against top rival North Carolina State and Vanderbllt meets Georgia at Nash ville In important Southern gamea. Most of the Midwestern powera wait another week before Joiping the fun. HAVING TV TROUBLES? 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