Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, October 22, 1956, Image 13

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MONDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1956
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE THIRTEEN
Penalties Fail To Deter
UCLA, USC Powerhouses
By SCOTT BAILLIE
United Press Sports Writer
1 28-20. last year.
ftrneu received
damaee in the third Deriod. One
wild ovation came on a 62-yard return of a
auuiiicm vui.tuima auu LLLA: mm AA tia i . . . . ..
rolled along today as the custom-iSat y naUDacK Larscneia'
ary top dogs of West Coast W. inZ yJL .L.u . 'h.5 ,a?.h;l J Riley of San Jose State
hall desDite last summer', nnaL ZZi" " .":,;uru . "' and
ti for conferenre vim? " i'. f'" ver. lne. S'ounU
. . . . : -niB t-Lirt inrnon
Hal Jackson of San Die go
which left both teams striDnert nf ih o--."'c.."ue as?lnsl teams battled to a 27-27 tie in the
,.,.. j .. j . . . "- ucare, wno now nave hnrrW .HIv
ssuspenaea ! lost four out of five with a hra-o I i. V, . j
. " ""t ui uvr, wmi a Drace; Fresno S nti nvernnu-pren Sn
Francisco State, 28-0. with quar
terback John Steinborn scoring on
touchdown runs of SI and 18
yards.
.ff ..... niiim .ciiint' tj i a . c i c-
m.o.u quanemacK jonn Bro-imained undefeated in a regional
e, who went into the OrBonninw k ,)..,;..., u.ji
The triumphs left UCLA t th!;ir U'":-13. wnue Arizona lambastd
head of the mythical trnkSS "T, r,,iN5? "e.....
against Webfoot defenses but one K-.ni. n,,!,,,, c um,;i,T,,.ii, .01
was for a TD Fullback Lou Vallii British Columbia 12, Puget Sound
their manpower and
Arnett Playing the fourth of his turned one for 42 : yards and a
allotted five games, smashed ; score and Dick Wallen stole an
Washington. 35-7. last Saturdav oihr L d"en S,01e an
wnue uiiA Deiiea oui uaiuornia, S
34-20. after letting the Bears enjoy 1 die,
a Driei ue,
race with a 3-u record and 4-1
on the season while undefeated
Southern California and twice
beaten Stanford, which came out
of the conference probe clean 1
had 2-0 PCC marks.
Stanford helped clear its decks
for next week's grudge battle with
revenge-minded Southern Califor
nia by downing Oregon, 21-7.
The grudge angle stems from
two points. Stanford not only was
1 20. Central Washington 12, Oregon
accused of looking down its nosejCOP VICTORIOUS
at the two Los Angeles schools College of the Pacific smashed
during the gridiron scandals but Marquette, 28-6, with a three
also upset Southern California, touchdown explosion doing the
East Oregon
Leads Pack
In OCC Race
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Oregon Tech pulled a major
Oregon Collegiate Conference
football upset Saturday by defeat
ing a strong Southern Oregon
team 27-20. Oregon College of
Education remained in the race
for the conference championship
by beating a stubborn Portland
State team 6-0.
Eastern Oregon, playing outside
the conference, lost 13-7 to Pacific.
The OT1 victory, the first of the
season for the Owls, was accom
plished by a three-touchdown third
quarter that broke a 7-7 halftimc
deadlock.
Portland State meets Eastern
Oregon and OCE goes against
Southern Oregon in next week's
conference games. OTI leaves the
conference for a non-counting
game with Lassen Junior College.
Oregon Collegiate Conference
W L Pet.
Estern Oregon 2 0 1.000
Utegon College 1 1 .500
Southern Oregon ..J 1 .500
Portland State 1 2 .333
Oregon Tech ... 1 2 .333
Saturday results: Oregon Col
lege of Education 6, Portland
Slate 0; Oregon Tech 27, Southern
Oregon 20.
... i 8 ? .wnl. 1S ralea a I Education 6. Portland State 0.
.""r i . , .5asl"g lavo";clRedlands 14, Pomona-Clarcmont
r'"" "u lne K0se Howi,o, Whittier 32, Occidental 14. East,
drubbed Washington State 21-0 as (era Washington 27. Pacific Luth.
uuraen scored on runs oferan 7, Oregon Tech 27, S. Oregon
28 and five yards. The Cougars 120, Pacific (Ore.) 13, E. Oregon
passing attack, a key offensive 7, Willamette 13, Col. Of Idalio
weapon of Coach Jim Sutherland.!?, Cal Poly 65. Long Beach State
o wen uuiueu up.
12, Lewis & Clark 28. Chico State
26. Linfield 14 Whitman 13, Hum
boldt State 20 W. Washington 13,
Sacramento State 15 Alameda
MAS 0.
U.S. Athletes Break
Records During Meet
LOS ANGELES (UP) The Unit
ed States Olympic track and field
team served notice to the world
today that it will be one of the
best teams ever to represent any
nation in the Olympic games.
The athletes who will represent
America at Melbourne next month
put on a dazzling display in a
practice meet at nearby Ontario,
Calif., Saturday, breaking four
listed world records and two
American marks.
After the meet, head Coach Jim
Kelly beamed his approval and
Japs Defeat
Brooklyn Nine
TOKYO (UP)-Brooklyn Manag
er Walt Alston admitted today
Japanese players are "better than
I expected them to be" and that
sentiment went double for big, sad
Don Newcombe.
Newcombe, who doesn't seem to
be able to do anything right since
the World Series, was knocked out
of the box again Sunday as the
Japanese All-Stars defeated the
Dodgers. 6-1, before a capacity
crowd of 45,000 at Korakucn Sta
dium. It marked the fourth straight
time since the start of the World
Series Newcombe had been
knocked nut of the box and the
first time that a major league
team has lost two sames on a
Japanese - tour. Brooklyn also
dropped a 5-4 decision to the
Tokyo Giants last week.
Coach Hanged
In Effigy
EUGENE m Len Casanova,
University of Oregon football
coach, was hanged in effigy from
a tree on the campus early Monday.
A sign on the effigy, a figure
wearing a T-shirt from nearby
Lowell High School and carrying
a bouquet of roses in the right
hand, said: "Ca$, you ain't noth
ing' but a hound dog. -
The university's football team
was defeated Saturday by Stan
ford, 21-7. A year ago after a 44-7
rout by Stanford, Casanova was
hanged in effigy from the same
tree one coming to be known
students as "effigy tree."
After last year's hanging, a
student rally crowned Casanova
"king of the campus" in a move
intended to show student support.
Sports in Brief
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
TRACK
ONTARIO, Calif. - The U. S.
Olympic track and field team bet
tered four world records and two
American marks in the first of a
scries of meets before the Mel
bourne games.
HAMAR. Norway Norway's
Egil Daniclsen, using the contro
versial Spanish style, threw the
javelin 304 feet 1.68 inches. .
GOLF
LAWTON, Okla. - Betty Dodd.
San Antonio. Tex., shot a 74 to
take the first round lead in the
5,000 Lawton Ladies PGA Open.
SWIMMING
SYDNEY, Australia Lorraine
Crapp, 18 year old Australian
swimming star, bettered five wo
men's free-style records four
in the 440-yard race, and the other
in the 100-meter free-style event
at an Olympic squad carnival.
CLAYTON HANNON
SPORTS EDITOR
Detroit Beats SF;
Cardinals Nip Eagles
By EARL WRIGHT
United Press Sports Writer
Who will stop the all-victorious
Detroit Lions and Chicago Cardi
nals, and can Coach Paul Brown
halt the plunge of his champion
Clevelai browns?
Those were the big questions in
the National Football League to
day as it finished the 'first third
of its season with fans- crowding
the stadiums to get .the answers.
Sunday's six games drew 236,211
spectators.
The "old pros probably will an
swer the questions. They took
charge Sunday as 'the pro circuit
ditched its electronic devices and
returned the signal calling chores
to the quarterbacks and defensive
captains.
WINNING GOAL
Bobby Layne, playing his ninth
Auto Racers
Eye Monza
INDIANAPOLIS (UP)-Tcn of
this country's best auto race driv
ers, headed by 1956 champion
Jimmy Bryan, will compete in the
famous 500-mile event at Monza,
Italy, next year.
Duane Carter, a former race'
driver and director of competition!
for the United States Auto Club,!
said the first invasion of Europe!
bv American drivers since the:
mid-30s most likely will result in
foreign entries in the Indianapolis
"500" next Memorial Day.
It was expected that the top
drivers in the May 30 Speedway
classic here will join Bryan on the
U.S. team in the Italian race
June 30.
said he was extremely satisfied.
"We'll have one of the greatest
track teams in the world to repre.
sent us at Melbourne," he said,
Although four world records
were surpassed, only one was a
bona fide mark. Other records
broken Saturday have all been
surpassed earlier this year ' and
new marks are awaiting approval.
The new record that went into
the book was set bv the 1600-meter
relay team, but it was for a dis
tance of one mile. The ouartet nf
Charlie Jenkins, Arnie Sowell,
Tom Courtney and Lou Jones sped
me aisiance in i minutes. 8.6 sec
onds, cutting two-tenths of a sec
ond off the old mark set by an-
oiner American loursome in Lon
don four years ago.
But the most amazing thine
about the record was that two of
the runners were substitutes in
the relay. Courtney and Sowell
replaced Jim Lea and J. W.
Mashuurn, both of whom sat on
the sidelines with minor injuries.
Another brilliant performance
was turned in by Leamon King,
a University of California sprinter
wno is an alternate on the team.
King came from behind to win
the 100-meter dash in world's
record time of 10.1 seconds. He
tied a mark set by Ira Murchison
and Willie Willliams earlier this
year that is up for approval.
Parry O'Brien, acknowledged to
be the world's greatest shot-
liuttcr. once again bettered his
own listed world mark with a toss
of 61 feet, 4'.j inches, but thi3
was far behind his 62 foot, 6 inch
record awaiting official sanction.
The other world mark was in
ihc hammer throw by Hal Con
nolly, who registered a toss of
213 feet, 8 inches. This passed
the old record, but is still more
than five feet behind a throw bj
Connolly earlier this year.
Three Bouts
To Offer
Comebacks
NEW YORK (UP)- Three able
scrappers who lost their latest
bouts will try to bounce back this
week in the three most interest
ing fights on the schedule.
Tonight at St. Nicholas Arena,
ex-lightweight , contender Frankie
Ryff of New York meets Frank
Ippolito, also of New York, in a
10-rounder that marks Ryff's first
start since his ninth-round knock
out by Larry Boardman at Madi
son Square Garden, June 1.
Ryff, who was ranked eighth
among contenders before the
Boardman defeat, is favored
at 3-1.
Wednesday night, big Johnny
Holman of Chicago, eighth-ranking
heavyweight contender, will try to
upset unbeaten Eddie Machen of
Redding, Calif., at the Portland
(Ore.) Armory. Machen is ranRea
seventh and favored at 4-1. He
seeks his 18th straight victofy.
Friday night at the Garden, two
unranked young - middleweights
tangle in a 10-rounder. They are
Yama Bahama of the British West
Indies and Tony (Tex) Gonzalez
of East Orange, N.J. Bahama is
favored at 8-5 to bounce back aft
er his upset defeat by Pat Low-
rey on Aug. 9.
NFL season, kicked a 17-vard
field goal with 17 seconds remain
ing to keep the Lions first in the
Western Division with a 4-0 rec
ord, nis kick gave the Lions a
20-17 triumph over the San Fran
cisco t orty-Niners before a capac
ity crowd of 55,662 at Detroit.
Lamar McHan, former Arkan
sas tailback who is coming into
his own in his third campaign
with the Cardinals, fired a 23-yard
scoring pass to Gern Nagler to
toucn otf a 17-polnt final quarter
lor a 20-6 victory over the Eagles
at Philadelphia. The Cardinals
lead the Eastern Division with the
league's only other perfect, 4-0
record.
At Washington, the Redskins
won their first 1956 game by
downing the Browns, 20-9. Brown
and his Brownies have made sev
eral notable comebacks in sweep
ing six straight Eastern Division
titles ' but now are in the toughest
spot of their fabulous history
Sharing the cellar with Washing
ton on a 1-3 record.
George Blanda, a 29-year old
quarterback, did everything but
collect tickets at Chicago while
helping the Bears (3-1) hold sec
ond place in the Western race with
a 58-27 victory over the Baltimore
Colts. He threw three touchdown
passes and kicked seven extra
points and a 30-yard field goal.-.
Charley Conerly, who is 32,
threw touchdown passes - to Ken
MacAfee and Alex Webster and
set up Ben Agajanian's 14-yard
field goal within three minutes
and 29 seconds during the second
period at New York to spark the
Giants to a 38-10 victory over the
Pittsburgh Steelers. The Giants
(3-1) took undisputed second place '
in the Eastern race, breaking a
tie with the Eagles.
It was the same story in the
other game as the Green Bay
Packers posted their biggest point
total since 1952 while whipping the
Los Angeles Rams at Milwaukee,
42-17. Tobin Rote, playing his sev
enth season as Packer quarter
back, threw three touchdown
passes and scored himself on a
two-yard plunge.
Tough Weekend Faces Top
College Teams In Nation
By TIM MORIARTY
United Press Sports Writer
Another tough weekend lay
ahead today for most of college
football s top-ranked teams some
of whom already are quaking in
their cleats after the rude treat
ment handed Ohio State, Texas
Christian and Mississippi.
Top-ranked Oklahoma and second-ranked
Michigan State, who
escaped the season's first "lost
weekend" with their winning rec
ords intact, look safe for another
week. The Sooncrs face Notre
Dame, still bloody from its 47-14
Al Rosen May
Be Switched
To Kansas
NEW YORK (UP)-Third base
man Al Rosen, tossed on the trad
ing block by Cleveland a month
ago, was being offered to Kansas
City today along with a pair of
pitchers for third baseman Hector
Lopez, first baseman Vic Power
and pitcher Art Ditmar.
The Indians arc ready to turn
over Rosen and right-handers
Mike Garcia and Art Houtteman
for the KC trio but up to now the
Athletics feel the Tribe is asking
too much.
' General Manager Hank Green-
berg of the Indians said last Sept.
17 that the 31-year old Rosen "has
completely lost his confidence and
can not piay Dascuau in uicvc-
land."
' It is considered a foregone con
clusion the Indians will trade Ros
en this winter but he has indicated
he will quit baseball if he is dealt
elsewhere. Rosen was the first
playqr in history to win unani
mous selection as the American
League's most valuable player in
1953 when he batted .336 but he
has failed to come anywhere near
that mark since.
defeat at the hands of Michigan
State, while the Spartans resume
their Big Ten conference schedule
against Illinois.
Now look at the tough hurdles
facing other highly-rated teams
this week:
Third-ranked Georgia Tech runs
into a Tulane team that earned
its spurs last Saturday by dump
ing eight-ranked Mississippi, 10-3:
fourth-ranked Ohio State, nursing
7-6 upset by Penn State, must
face always dangerous Wisconsin;
while fifth-ranked Texas Christian
will attempt to rebound from its
7-6 defeat by Texas A&M against
Miami.
And the "toughics" don't end
there.
LION UPSET
Mississippi has an Important in
tersectional date with Arkansas,
ninth-ranked Southern California
must entertain Stanford and 10th
ranked Baylor, idle last weekend,
bumps into Texas A&M.
Of the three major upsets re
corded last weekend. Penn State's
victory over Ohio State stood out
as the most important. The Nit
tany Lions, providing added proof
that Eastern football definitely is
Brown Quarter
Incurs Injury
WASHINGTON (UP) - The
Cleveland Browns, wallowing In
the worst slump of their 11-year
history, suffered an additional
blow Sunday when George Ratter
man, their No. 1 quarterback, suf
fered a torn knee cartilage during
a 20-9 loss to the Washington Redskins.
Before leaving for Cleveland,
Coach Paul Brown said he feared
Ratterman might be out for the
season and that his football career
might also be ended. Ratterman
was carried oft the field after he
was injured in the first quarter
and was replaced by Babe Parilli,
Cleveland's other quarterback.
on the upgrade, broke a scoreless
tie with less than four minutes to
play when halfback Bruce Gilmore
plunged over from the one-loot
line. Quarterback Milt Plum then
added the decisive extra point.
Southern California warmed up
for its meeting with Stanford by
clobbering Washington, 35-7. while
Georgia Tech crushed Auburn,
28-7, Johnny Majors led Tennes
see to a 24-0 victory over Ala
bama, and fullback John Hernn
stein's three touchdowns helped
Michigan down Northwestern,
34-20.
SYRACUSE IN RUNNING
Syracuse remained in the run
ning for the mythical Eastern
championship! by edging Army,
7-0: Pittsburgh tallied three times
within five minutes during the sec
ond quarter to down Duke, 27-14,
and North Carolina- presented
Coach Jim Tatum with a 34-6 vic
tory over his former , Maryland
team. y
Yale took over undisputed pos
session of first place in the Ivy
League with a 25-7 triumph, over
Cornell, but Princeton looked
equally as strong in outlasting Col
gate, 28-20, in a non-league struggle.
The other major conterence
leaders: Southeastern, Georgia
Tech (3-0); Big Seven, Colorado
(3-0); Atlantic Coast, South Caro
lina (3-0); Pacific Coast, UCLA
(3-0); Skyline, Wyoming (4-0);
Rocky Mountain, Montana State
(4-0); Southern, Virginia Tech,
West Virginia and George Wash
ington loach 2-0); Big Ten, Mich
igan State and Iowa leach 2-0);
Southwest, Baylor, Texas A&M
and Southern Methodist (each 1-0),
OPEN BOWLING
Every Afternoon
LUCKY LANES
TU 4-5245
DEER
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DUCK HUNTERS
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Attention Hunters!
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Oak and Spring Streets '
Phone TU 4-4395
oerience 1?T
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Actually it's not too for off and we certainly don't
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ANTI-FREEZE Are you protected .. .
need more?
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