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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 19, 1956)
FRIDAY. OCTOBER 19. 1956 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE THIRTEEN ouShbra ' "regpn Foir - IHIomeeoDubi ed nlostS OC Foes Vie Here Saturday The Oregon Tech Owls roll out the carpet for their alumni this weekend, and are out to serve the "old grads" with a first-doss cele bration, a victory over Southern Oregon College's Red Raiders Sat-: urday aiiernoon ai mmoc neia. Game time is 2 o clock. Coach Rex llunsaktr's Owls, trying to snap a three-ame losing streak are at high spirits and have promised to give to the school's returning alumni a big win over the highly favored Raiders, who are billed as the co-favorites in the Oregon Collegiate Conference football ratings. While Hunsaker's small, b u t spirited band of gridders await their clash with Southern Oregon, the Raiders under the coaching ve of Al Akin have been groom ing their "Power-T". offense, plus working on pass defense in hopes (tf clipping the Owls aerial wings. So far this year. Tech's main weapon in gaining yardage has been on the passing arms of quar terbacks Bob Stoy and Charlie Canter. With Tech in possession of two boys who can heave the pigskin Sith deadly accuracy, and South ern Oregon claiming a little - All- American quarterback who also fills the air with passes, the con-! ference clash is shaping to M a wide-open and free-scoring affair iefore the final horn has sounded. " Southern Oregon will counter with Bill Seymour, who ranks very high nationally in small college quarterbacks. The "Slinging Sam- mv" of Southern Oregon was in jured the first two games, both of which were dropped by SOC, then Seymour returned to the team and has led them to two straight uuu wins. ' According' to the latest statis tics released by the National Association of Intercollegiate Ath letics. Seymour is the nation's number one passer. Last year against OXI, Southern Oregon passed 24 times, Seymour heaving ? times. As a team the Raiders completed 14. while Seymour was hitting 12 of his 17 attempts. Two f his tosses went for touchdowns. i In the past meetings between the f schools. Southern Oregon has won three while Tech has managed Jo pick up the honors in two. The big win for the Owls was in 1952 when Southern Oregon folded like broken kite and bowed 89-0 to Jlunsaker's club. Last year, SOC won 33-0. As the Raiders move into their jhird conference fracas of .the season with a perfect record, Akins vili have several Klamath Basin Jiigh school graduates on his club, and one or two who may start the game for the Ashland colle gians. Accompanying the SOC eleven on their trip over the Greensprings will be Henley's Jim Tacchini and Marion Jack, Matin's rvtrv v. . y;; v..-) " AM ' ' ' ... ' .; . aSrM -v-,.- y'i I '-J,X" ' " . A J'-fA.. j, "i ' 7 K1'-- " I J ? . I OREGON TECH'S BIG Al Van Lewven, a 200-pound package of qrade-A football talent will be seeing lots of action Saturday afternoon as the OTI Owls meet Southern Oregon College in the annual Homecoming Game for the Techmen. Game time is 2 o'clock on Modoc Field. Van Lewven, who hails from North Bend, has been the outstanding lineman so far this season, and will start at an end position against SOC Saturday. Football Season Running True To Form With Very Few Upsets CLAYTON HANNON ' SPORTS EDITOR NY Boxer Leads US Olympic Team Trials SAN FRANCISCO W - Classy Vince Ferguson of New York, winner of 52 straight fights, goes after two more tonight as he leads the United States' finest amateur Oregon's Defense To Get Test From Tribe SAN FRANCISCO (UP) Thel Bradley are closing out their five Oregon Webtoots, who have not game string, yielded a touchdown via the aerial ! DAIt KHORSES route all season, nave to deal with Stanford's John Brodie Sat- By JACK CUDDY leach season in the football par- can't score as long as you have llnilfri PrpRR Snort Writer lit, ,i;t..;h,,tari nnnCnUu'the ball. NEW YORK (UP) - The fool- everywhere. Thev have followersi " makes for long scries ot anagcnieni wi n me Board Meets To Vote On Nats1 Move WASHINGTON MV-Calvin Grif fith's effort to move the Washing ton Senators from the nation's capital comes up for a directors' vote today. The five-man board of directors meets late today to consider of fers the club president says he has received from Los Angeles, San rrancisco, Minneapolis and Louisville. The Senators, finishing deep in the second division, drew small er crowds than any other big league team in the last two years, and Griffith yearns for greener pastures. He leans toward Los Angeles, and he and other heirs of the late Clark Griffith hold a con trolling interest in the club's stock. Reports are that a majority of the board will swing along w' 'i Griffith, but H. Gabriel Murphy, largest single stockholder with 40 per cent, vigorously opposes any shift. Murphy has threatened court action to prevent a transfer. Six of the eight American League clubowners must approve any move. And that may well be a stumbling block. Griffith must also obtain a rm. isfactory contract with Los Angc- lies, if that city is chosen, and boxers into the final phase of their Olympic trials. Ferguson, 18 - year old NCAA light middleweight champ from Wisconsin, was one of five colleg iate titlists to advance to the semifinals of the three-day Olym pics slugfest. A sixth NCAA rep resentative. C h o k e n Maekawa, Michigan State bantamweight from Hawaii, goes into the final against Dave Abcyta of Idaho State, a Western regional winner. Vince uncorked a dazzling ar ray of crosses and countcrpunchcs to stop Air Force champion Dave Smith of Seattle in the third round. Ferguson floored the rangy Smith with a right cross on the jaw and hit him twice more in the stom ach. Then the bout was halted. The original field of 105 was trimmed to 30 for 10 semifinal and 10 final fights to select the United States boxers for the Olympic Games at Melbourne, Australia, next month. Middleweight Paul Wright of Flint, Mich., interservice and AAU winner, punched out a three round victory over Ed Hawkins, a fellow Air Force boxer, last night. Another Wisconsin entrant. NCAA lightweight champ Orvillc Pitts, had the most Impressive victory in the marathon 42-bout card. With one punch a scaring left hook he knocked out Donnio Hall of Louisville in the openin; round. Other collegiate champs to reach the . semis were welter weight Gil McLanc of Louisiana State, default over Henry Brown of Wichita, Kan.; middleweight i Roger Rouse of Idaho State. KOI victory over George McCorkle of! the Air Force; and heavyweight Harold Espy of Idaho State, who outpointed Jesse Barber of Los Angoles. urday the same guy who passed them dizzy last year. Brodie currently leading the nation in total offense with 748 yards with virtually all of it slacked up through his fancy aerials, took a personal hand in wrecking the Ducks last year, 44-7. Everything he threw seemed to hit during a first half splurge. Will it happen again? Couch Len Casanova of Oregon is taking an optimistic view. He figures if he can maintain his air tight defenses against Brodie that the Ducks may snap a three-game losing streak. However, Stanford has been posted as an eight point tavorite. Washington and Southern Cali fornia, two of the three teams banned from the Rose Bowl for two years after being found guilty of conference infractions, meet in a regionally televised PCC tilt at Los Angeles. TROJANS FAVORED I he ninth-ranked lrojuns, arc 13-point favorites to defeat the Huskies, currently tied with UCLA for first placo in the conference race. . ' The Bruins, also banned from the bowl for conference infrac tions, meet California and have been made one-point underdogs by the slide rule gang. Actually, the Bruins . shut ' out their last two conference oppo nents and have won three out of four this year while Cal has dropped the same, number. the Bears are scheduled , to take the wraps off Jerry Drew. hard-hitting fullback, for this! one. Drew, a sensation with tho 1954 Cal squad, spent last season out with an injury then was dinged for taking illegal loans and restricted to five games this season. This marks his first time out while UCLA's quarterback Bob Bergdahl and tailback Doug Oregon State, a good choice to slip into the bowl, meets Wash ington State at Pullman. The Beavers downed California, 21-13, last week while the Cougars took a 28-0 lacing from UCLA. Jim Sutherland, WSC's new coach, is aiming to . get the kinks out of a sharp passing attack which the Bruin defenses clobbered. The Beavers are 13-point favorites. College of the Pacific, with Coach Jack (Moose) Myers in a grim frame of mind, has em barked to play Marquette in Mil waukee. The Tigers departed aft er leaving Myers cold with their final scrimmage at home. , San Diego State endeavors to stretch San Jose State's losing streak to three straight in a night game on the Aztecs home lot while Fresno State Is a heavy favorite to defeat San Francisco State. In regional tilts A r 1 1 o n a (Tempe) State meets Hardin Sim mons and Arizona tackles New Mexico. Idaho, pulverized 41-0 last week by Tempe, gets the day off. OTTO WHITE ARCH-EASE BOOTS Packer Stitchdowni Oil resiitant composition tola 33 50 36 00 39" Siia 5 to 13 Width A to EEEE Alto Available Caulked DREWS Manstore 733 Main ball season so far has been just about as formful as the cuties in a Broadway chorus line. And like the girlie dancers it is rare when any of the teams get out of step. There hasn't been an old-fashioned shocker of an upset so far. Here and there underdogs win. to be sure, but the bookies are claiming that most of their upsets keeping tab on every team, watch- "punch-puncn-punch" plays with ing for injuries, for stalcncss aft- occasionally a breakaway runner er a big game, for a club that is getting through for a long gain or getting "up" for a special oppo-!a touchdown. When a favored riant I team gets the ball and hangs on And when the nprlav earris and lu "lu -'""- uiner --veijunc 5 nj-recment oeiore Hie pl ?rlH,PfrH'nl scoring an upset are mini- Oct. 31 deadline for transfers ef- Pacific Coast League and with Phil K. Wrigley to purchase his l,os Angeles Coast League fran- cinse. Griffith has only 12 days to get Klamath Union's Modesto "Mighty Jtfo" Jiminez. Slated for possible starting Chores for SOC tomorrow after noon include Norm Hedgepeth and team will come close to beating a team that was rated a big mar gin occasionally and that s about the size of it. What' the cause for this close . 1"X.T...:.-j. .--.- adherence to form? Well, oneiOne of the big ones is the new tt 'Ui who does a big vol-1 "high fashion" of ball - control in Collev L i AUcman 0 Jack al f folba11 bllsiness insists: the college ranks. There is a fackle; Ch"chARomine, "jahnCaS that II is because teams are be-1 strong trend to w a rd possession rett or Jimenez at guard; and Bill;in scoutca more ciosciy man eve. Stewart at center. Working with before. Seymour in the Raiders backfield MULTI-MILLION will be fullback Ralph Clarno, and I The hound dogs who are keep fcalfbacks Ted Tenney and Larry i ing a close watch are the repre sentatives or ine men wnu iiimkc the football odds and who conduct a multi - million dollar business the point spreads are posted each ' . upptf that rfinri:pnt an nrniratp! line on the entire operation, per-l And- of course, this also could haps more accurate than ever be-ibe ,he week wl,en form ls smashed fore obtainable. In the past many10 P!CCCS on ,hc college gridirons, upsets simply were due to wrong , to- Because the upsets certainly information, or perhaps no infor- are bemnd schedule. mation at all. Ifective for the 1957 season. BOWLING Thurs. Fri. Sundays Sfudents 35c Adults 40c O.T.I. Attention Hunters! Klamath Falls Wild Duck and Goose Processing Plant We Pick, Pock and Ship your Bird! any place (n the- USA. Our plant ii tha mail modirn on tha Wait Caatt. Wa Mia tha only successful dry duck picking machina on tha marfcat. VISITORS WELCOME Oak and Sprinq Srteeti Phone TU 4-4395 ilaurer. Fullback Don Korns and tiaiibacks Andy Travis ana cnucK Crandall are certain to see lots of -action. i For Tech, Hunsaker will prob ablv ooen with Stov at Quarterback directing the OTI forces, while jReltnn Ollison may draw the first I cracx ai me luuoacx cnorcs. . m lhallbaek will be two of several jboys who include Wallie Wood, jHarry Juul, Al Everson and Rich Pekala. In the line for the Owls. CAI Van Lewven will be at one end jfpot, while either Charles Eccle ton or Wes Parrish will cover 3he other wing. Tom Wylie and Norm Kollen will be at tackle, I Frank Wilson and Al Jones at ; guard for Tech. Armund Mayzell will start at center. DUCK HUNTERS GET YOUR SHOTGUN SHELLS FLEET'S 222 Se. 7th Ph. 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