SUNDAY, OCEOBER 14, 1956
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE THIRTEEN
Stengel Mapping
Yankees1 Future
By ED CORR1GAX
NEW YUKK Wi Now that his1
wn status has been resolved
Jie's going to be back at the helm
for two more years maninr
I'asey Stengel of the New York
Rankees turned to ways and
Wans of keeping the world chamT
Pirates
Register
29th Win
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Oregon's big high school foot-
bill powers rolled closer to the
class A-l playoffs with victories!
Friday night. .
S Marslifield, ranked No. 1 since
life start of the Associated Press
pell this season, handed Spring
field, No. 8, its first defeat, 27-7,
in; a crucial district 5 game. The
attending state champions now I
afe unbeaten in 29 games, with:
20-20 tie with Medford on rec-l"ig
ord this season.
I Medford, No. 2. bolstered its
role as district 6 favorite by
trampling Klamath Falls, 47-19,
with fullback Loren Christean
scoring five times on short runs
and Eldon Francis making a 78
yard touchdown punt return.
Eugene. No. 3 and now Marsh
field's major foe for the district
S title, came from behind to de
feat Albany, rated sixth and a
favorite in district 8, by a 7-6
score. '
Beaverton and Gresham, ranked
No. 4 and 5 and co-favorites In
district 3, preserved their perfect
records. Beaverton defeated Hills
boro, 27-13, and Gresham out
scored Milwaukie, 31-21.
McMinnville, No. 7, also re
mained unbeaten and untied with
a 24-12 victory over Lake Oswego
in district 4.
Grants Pass, ranked ninth, re
mained in the district 6 running
with a 33-0 win over Ashland.
Pendleton, seeking its second
straight district 7 title, spoiled
me ualles perfect mark with a
13-6 victory. La Grande, another
leading contender in the district,
routed Milton-Freewater. 35-12.
In the Portland city league Ben
son and Lincoln remained un
beaten. Lincoln blanked Jefferson
the defending champion, 13-0,
while Benson trimmed Cleveland,
25-14.
Parkrose maintained its perfect
niarn witn a 6-2 victory over
David Douglas of Portland in dis
trict 3.
"St. Helens squeezed by Oregon
City, 21-20, to retain a chance for
the district 4 championship
South Salem and Corvallis re
mained in district 8 contention.
South Salem trampled Lebanon.
33,-0, while Corvallis edged Sweet
Home, 12-6. In another district
game North Salem beat Bend,
26-0.
Honkers
Top
Burns Team
The Lakeview gridders racked
up their fifth win this season with.
r'T" .,
, . , u j .k. " South Salem 3'J, Lebanon 0
Bob Lamb launched the scoring N (h Sa,em 26 Bend 0
parade when he went through m'Kores, Gr0e 9, Newberg
the first heat on a quarterback st Hlens 2t. Oregon Citv
sneaK. me viciors scorea iwice1Vest Linn 45 figard 13
in the second quarter, first when Pal.krose 6 DVid Douglas Port
Marvin Tyler broke loose for a anfji 2
33-yard payoff run, and then whenUvrtle Point 13, Bandon
Tyler tossed to Clyde Creel on a I Monroe 60. Mopleton 0
pass play netting 75 yards andlsiitherlin 33, Creswell 6
the score. Seaside 13. Tillamook 13 (lie)
Lakeview went scoreless during , Sheridan 26. Sherwood 19
the third period but managed to Talent 26, Jacksonville 0
push across two which were called: Hood River 20, Amity 7
back
jThe onslaught continued in the
fourth period when the winners
gtrnered three counters. First,
J(y Wilkie broke away on a 15
yird scoring run: a Tyler to Creel
nice wne nnrA fnt- a 1 l.vai-rf ernra
. 6" "
a(id Ron Daron wrapped it up:
t.. ij D.,rn.
H ,nt all .h. -av inm ih-
-v- - - ---
cud zone.
the win qualified the Lakeview
e for the 7-A2 sub district play-
oHs, and brought their present win
.
slieen to seven games including
tlfc two won during the late stages
,. f Bcaauu.
eAi ween iiaheview wiu
Redmond. ,
host
j Sports Notes
jEight of 11 guards on the Uni
varsity of North Carolina 1956 foot
ball squad are natives of North
Carolina.
ihe Schenectady team of the
Class A Eastern League is con-
nected with the Philadelphia Phil -
lijs.
;
The New York Football Giants
hil 26 rookies in their pre-season
training camp at Burlington. Vt.
I
eVillie Hartack. who leads the
najions jockevs, has purchased a
home in Miami Springs. Fla.
'
ftiree Former U.S. ambassadors1
ar directors of the Laurel race
track James Bruce 'Argentina',
GJorge A. Garrett 'Ireland'.
I .
Four former Michigan State box-
era turned professional. Tne.v arc
Chuck Davey, Jed Black,
Ojom and Chuck Spieser.
O People Read
SPOT ADS
-you are
pionship banner flying over Van
kee Stadium.
nigni now," be rasped our
weak spot is left field. Lf we make
a trade, it will be for another out
fielder. I'm let with Honk Bauer
"l a"a M,tey Mantle
About Enos Slauehter. 40. Sten-
sei iiuu ne aoesn i plan to go
along with him for another year,
adding he is reserving the right
iu manse nis mina.
"After all." he said, "we hnucht
mm in me urst place for insur
ance and pinch hittine "
Stengel, 66, signed a pew two
year contract yesterday, calling,
leponeuiy lor aDout 175,000
year. . .
"A lot of DeoDle have been sav.
ing I'm getting old and ought to
quit," winked the pilot who has
won six world's championships in
eight years with the Bombers.
'But 1 don't see why I should re
tire when my health is good. And
it s as good right now as it was
in the spring." :
You know," he continued.
"wed have an easier time mak-
a trade if we hadn't done so
well in the World Series.
But even so. we've got some
fine prospects of our own coming
up irom our farms. .
He named Tony Kubek and Bob
by Richardson, both of Denver's
American Association club. Kubek
is a combination infielder-outfield-er
and Richardson is a second
baseman, whose .350 batting ' av-i
erage would indicate he's ready
to push Billy Martin over to third
base.
Stengel, who will head for his
Glendale, Calif., home Monday,
also revealed he was going to pay
close attention to the no-windup
pitching delivery in the spring.
Don Larsen, used it in his per
fect no-hitter against the Brook
lyn Dodgers in the Series and Bob
Turley used it the next day in a
1-0 loss.
General Manager George Weiss
also had kind words for Casey,
along with a warning,
"If anyone is to be congratu
lated," he remarked. "I think -it's
the Yankees for being so fortun
ate, as to get Casey for another
two years.
But I know, too, that we can t
afford to stand still. All you have!
to do is look at the Dodgers as
an example. They won the pen-j
ant by 13'.i games last year, but.
stood pat and had a tough time,
winning this season.
Oregon Prep Football Scores
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Marslifield 27, Springfield 7
.Meal oid 47, Klamatn Falls 19
Eugene 7, Albany 6
Rrtauni-tnn 97 liillcrinrn 13
Granacr iWash.i 33, Umatilla 6
Gresham 31, Milwaukie 21
McMinnville 24, Lake Oswego 12
Grants Pass 3. Ashland 0
i fendleton 13, The Dalles
m.uiiuv .H.I.VI. .bv-Hiu
iz
Corvallis 12, Sweet Home 6
on
Davton 20. Banks 20 (tie)
Vcrboort 2C. Jewell 12
Alsea 64, Falls City 13
Reynolds 19, Wilson 6 (both Port
land) Arlington 30, Mosier 8
Stanfield 19. Pilot Rock 7
Mil, 1 eS DnAn..n K
T , i.
Umanine 21. Lexington 18
Touchct. Wash.. 20. Irrigon
20. Irrigon 12
c . n u,
Stayton 13, Weodburn 0
Ser'ra (Salem) 20, Mt. Angel 0
Corbett 27. Knappa 7
Silverton 27. Turner 7
1 1 a sey oa. aionawn
."uk .-j u n.r.-aie n
Trjanl,lc ke 19, Loiane 13
IWestfir 39, Sliedd 0
Junction City 31,
St. Francis iEi
j?onc 7
Pleasant Hill 20. Elmira 0
Central (Independence) 20,
Dallas
Eagle Point .IS. Glendale 12
i Lakeview 38. Burns 0
Kstacada 20, Molalla 12
Vemonia 26. Rainier 12
Moro 20. Echo 14
North Bend 20. Rosehurg 19
V .u U
Prtl"' Le"s"e
Lincoln 1.1. Jefferson 0
Benson 23. Cleveland 14
(Grant 40. Washington 0
Roosevelt 12. Franklin 6
j Redmond 14, Madras 0
Sandy 7. Canby 6
Colton 20. Mill City 0
Ncahkahmc 20. Scappoose 19
Powers 7, Gold Beach i 7 'lie'
jRrodsport 27. Siuslaw 13
ii;ii.m.ii. iPuprnei R. Oakriusc
I Willamette
6 Hie'
wesion jo.
Helix 55. 1
Roardman
Helix 55. lone 20
i
if tjVes the hides of more than
m horws MCn yeJr t0 rur.
nish oaseballs used in the major
leagues.
OSBURN HOTEL
EUGENE. ORE.
Mra. I t- rle.-Je f'Uf
Prevrlelere
Tborohlj Mederi
I '
Football
r :
scores i
TIME OUT
"Great Idea of yours to bring the
sports car so we'd save money ;
n gas!'
Hurricanes
Win Game
13-6 Friday
MIAMI, Fla. Lfi Miami's Hur
ricanes,' proving they could travel
through the air as well as on the
ground, defeated Maryland 13-6
Friday night for their third
straight victory of the football
season and their eighth in a row
over a two-season span.
Sam Scarnecchia. the No. 1
quarterback, .and his understudy,
Bonnie Yarbrough, each connect
ed with a touchdown pass after
Maryland's big line had barricad
ed Miami's rushing attack. Be
tween them, they completed nine
of 12 throws.
Maryland, one of the year's
most disappointing football teams,
showed it was going to be tough
when it stopped a Miami drive
one foot from the goal line in the
second period after the Hurri
canes had driven to a first down
at the seven.
But quarterback John Fritsch
spoiled this great defensive effort
by fumbling as he tried to run
the ball out and Don Johnson re
covered for Miami at the three.
Despite two straight penalties that
shoved them back 20 yards, the
Hurricanes scored on a 23-yard
pass from Scarnecchia to John
Bookman to go into half time with
a g.n margin
In the third period, Yarbrough,
a sophomore southpaw, led the
Hurricanes on a 75-yard aerial
drive climaxed by his six-yard
touchdown pass to Jack Johnson,
In a last-period rainstorm, the
Terps traveled 80 yards to score
on Fred Petrella's one-yard
plunge.. .
Pick Lions
Over Rams
uy annLt nniuni
United Press Sports Writer
The Detroit Lions, the only per -
lect record team in me iNauonanrayies.
t ' i, . -TM..:
r ooioau league s .n esiern liiyi&-
ion after two week:
Of plaV, are
6's point favorites to run t h e i rjsaddl" ciub
victory string to three gameslj!"'"'
when thev Dlav host to the Los I F
I Angeles Ranis in one of the pro
jtiiiuii a ma ounud guinea.
The Chicago Cardinals have uir
sei ine cuainpion ureveiaiui
Rrnivnc nnrl Nmu Vnrlf Ilianls foriMwIo-Lana a Fran'l 1
the Eastern Divisions only perfect I wsh tndiv. unit camy carrifr ins
Kt.l tk. ailhmaVM naitl'HKh Indiv. Series Eole .Coerm 4
, pnnvinrerl llipv ran keen It un. 1 he:
Cardinal clash with the Redskins
at Washington is rated a toss-un.
The Browns and Giants, picked
as the chief contenders for the
Eastern title when the season be
gan, meet at Cleveland and this
game also is rated even.
In the oilier games, the Bears
are 104 point favorites over thetMerrm mooi 3 shat sand 1
San Francisco Forty Niners atiTfJi. - ,J lrTTm1, ,
Chicago: the Stcclers are 2! point
picks to defeat the Philadelphia
Eagles at Pittsburgh: and the Bal
timore Colts are one point choices
against the Green Bay Packers
at Milwaukee.
All six games will be televised
on regional networks by CBS.
Lightest man on the Syracuse
roster is quarterback Chuck Fo
gcrty, 166-pound sophomore.
Gene (The Mouse Newton was
in the quarterback spot for 18 of
Tulane's 24 touchdowns in 193S.
Twenty-nine favorites have
j scored during the 81 runnings of
the Preakness Stakes at Pimlico.
-
WANT AD
to-it
re. ltH ' vNkVj
"We tt her through a Herald & News Went Ad
, ... to check on 'the brain'."
Panthers Top Stubborn
The favored Chiloquin Panthers
had to come from behind Friday
; night in Gem Stadium to push
under a stubborn Bonanza squad.
But it was only a matter of time, j
'The winners got underway late in.
it.. .itk iun
ning antics of Darrell Wilson and I
went on to chew out a 2 to H.
win.
! The losers had the first sprink-1
line of elorv carlv in (he opening
period when a Chiloquin punt
temp was blocked and Gerald'
i Jackson recovered for Bonanza on
, the Chiloquin 42. The underdog,
squad then found a weakness
i down the middle and pushed
(through the Panther mid-line,
Sparked by the power running of:
'van iorK ana wave uuane, ineiW,,,s uiuyireu. nn&uii uit-u wuim
Bonanza chargers found them- fur P'ays, pushing them into pay
selves on the Chiloquin 10-yard
line seven plays later. An end-
zone pass from Ronnie Roberts to
Duarte was good or the score,
and Duarte went off left tackle
or the conversion to put (he way
down unders out in front 7-0.
The thoroughly chilled Bonanza
griddcrs came right back to their
feet following the onside kickoff,
There was a fumble on the play
and Bonanza recovered on the
midfield stripe. But the cnthus
iasm was short lived. The Chilo
quin foreward held and Bill Tiskey
punted to the Panther 30. Then
the winning combination began to
Ore. Gridder
Faces Charge
CORVALLIS. Ore. 11 Paul
Lowe. Oregon State College foot
ball tailback, is expected to ap
pear in court Monday to answer
felony charges of stealing a bi
cycle.
Lowe, the team's leading ground
gainer, and another student, Bert
Washington, were indicted by
grand jury recently for the June
29 theft.
They appeared in court July 7
ana waived preliminary hearing
Further court action was sched
uled Friday but had to bo post
poned because of a crowded
docket. .
Lowe said he would plead inno
cent. He contends that Washing
ton loaned him the bicycle and
that he was not aware it did not
belong to Washington.
For a time there was a question
about Lowe playing in the Oregon
State-California football came Sat
urday. But Coach Tommy Prothro!
i and Dean of Men Dan Poling said
no action would be taken by the
school in the case until the mat
ter had gone to court.
ALLEY CAT LEAGUE
I Broiler
Troy Cook
! '"S;
'BalSEP'
Oil
, j-, sptg.
10
Rnndl
Swan Lake
! Brr "4'dd,r"c",!,o
rielraiiros JOf i bporllng uooai O
w',. .
rayieu
Balaiser
..f1Eri Team sriea Broiler 2308
High Team same Troy 871
MOOSE PA'S LEAGUE
V
O'Halrs Chapel 10
Merrill Moos'- Id
CP & WW Ward G
Shasta Sand Co. t
Investor 1
Tat'm Tavern 1
Loule'n Food I
Klamath Print Co. I
. w I,
Klamath Print Co. 10
T,at niRht't remlti-
O'llalri Chapel a CP 6c WW
High team fame Shaata Sand 9MI
High team srrlea Merrill Moone 'Mm
thKh lndtv. name Ben Bennedlct 3J
High Indlv. aerlea Bob Victorlnc M4.
Idaho Rider
Wins Event
NEW YORK in Deb Copen
haver. Post Falls. Idaho, won the
saddle bronc riding as three Pa
cific Northwest cowboys placed
Friday night in the Madison
Square Garden Rodeo.
Bob Schild. Pocatello, Idaho,
and Jack Carson, Lewiston, Idaho,
j were second and third in the bull
I riding contest.
WHOPPERS
roll. Darrell Wilson moved the ball
to nearly midlicld in two attempts, ,
and a long pass from Miller to
Manuel Ochoa put the skin on;
the Bonanza 13. A short plunge
moved it to the 10. On the next
i.... i;nn. - it I
self and spiked Ochoa in the
zone with a scoring aerial. Their;... vards and Fred Jacob admin-1
try ior point tailed with lionunza
leadi"E 7-6 early in the second
Period. -. , , , - !
at-;SCORE AGAIN
The Panthers came right back
ana launched another scoring
no auncned another- scorini;
drive When Bonanza was unable
gain ground alter the kickoff.
Munson Sandoval took the short
punt on the Bonanza 30 and
made it back to the 20 before
faraTtfiY? i A1ASTATE VeSg& ... IKS
I Mrill f I A MJ7I7i!arn 1 117.1 ItLSjlXJ&l I
j i u - i & j i siiz .t.i irJii trin tursA ill tit Sifrsi i
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dirt on the final attempt. The
kick was good and Chiloquin went
out front 13-7.
Bouncing right back into the
ball game.. Bonanza look Uie kick-
off on their own 35 and bean i
... v .
end-junker center plunge netted
istcred the needed plasma when
he broke loose and went to the I
Panther 30 before being knocked!
down. Jim O'Connor made it (o!
the 20, and a pass play put it on
the Pantner 7.1 ne drive aDDeared
to be bogging down when another
pass from Roberts to Jacob moved
it to the one. Nork went in for
the score and Jacob plowed over
for the conversion. Just about then
the Bonanza stock was selling at
a remarkably high figure . . .
That
14"
i l III il
Bonanza
the multi-point underdogs were in, effective combination of shovel
front 14-13. The half ended with: passes from Wilson to Butch
that score. iBarncs. Both attempts paid off
And that was all she wrote. The with the ball ending up on the
smooth clicking Panthers took . Bonanza 29. Miller passed to
command with tfi ,pp:iing sec- Barnes tothe 20, and two plays
A- nr ik. n.:.i I U...I
P0'1" - The third panther score was I
S(!t "P wnen Kavuia inter-
cepiea a pass on nis own so and
galloped to the Bonanza 18 before
e i n g pulled down. Sandoval
moved it to the 12, and a pass
'om Miller to Collins tallied the
"e "y P""" miivu
The remainder of the third quar
ter was marred by fumbles and
Interceptions with the period end
ing 19-14 with the Panthers on the
long end. :
The fourth period drive of the
fantners got underway with
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Miller went in for the score and
the try for point was good,
Just before the final gun sounded
Gary Daley squelched a Panther
threat when he intercepted on hie
own 13 and went back to the Bo
nanza 30 before being knocked
down.
The game statistics are aa fol
lows: , '
First Downs C 13, B 4; pass at
tempts, C 17, B IS; Pass com
pleted C 11, B 4; fumbles, C 4.
B 1; Own recovered, C-0, B-0;
Penalties, C 65-yds in 5, B 20-yda
In 4.
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