WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 16. 1957
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
PAGE THIRTEEN
Braves, Yanks Count
World Series Shekels
NEW YORK HV-The Milwaukee
Braves and New York Yankees
counted their ends of the richest
World Series ever today.
Yankee pitcher Sal Maglie. who
tried to work both sides of the
street, was satisfied with one cut
of the money pie instead of the
two he almost landed.
The 30 Braves voted a full
series share were wealthier by
$8,924.36 for whipping the New
York Yankees 4-3 in the series. It
was the third highest stake in 54
years of series play.
Thirty-three Yankees got $5,
606.06 portions, fourth highest for
losers.
Commissioner Ford Frick re
leased the figures. He also
squashed Maglie's opportunity to
collect from both sides.
The Yankees voted the Niagara
Falls money pitcher a $2,803.03
share for the month he spent with
them after he was traded from the
National League Brooklyn Dod
gers Sept. 1.
The Dodgers consigned a $1,
507.19 thircj-place pot to The Bar
ber, who would have earned $4,
310.22 in a series in which he was
ineligible to play.
But Frick stepped in. An aide
said he "believes that no man
should be allowed a cut from both
leagues. So he decided that Maglie
(would have to take the allotment
from the team with which he fin
ished the season, in this case the
Yankees."
The Braves voted $6,693.27
three-quarter shares to Bob Hazle
and Nippy Jones, who joined the
team late in the season.
They alloted three one - third
Beavers Lead
PCC Statistics
LOS ANGELES, Oregon State's
undefeated Beavers lead the Pa
cific Coast Conference in both to
tol offense and total defense after
after four weeks of play, figures
from the rcu commissioner s of
fice showed today.
Oregon State has averaged 373.8
yards per game on offense while
permitting foes but 215 yards.
Washington State is second in to
tal offense with 335 yards while
Oregon ranks second defensively
with 229.5.
The Beavers lead In rushing of
fense with 294 yards per game
while Stanford has 226.3. Outstand
ing passing team is Washington
State with 185.5 yards to 114 for
UCLA. Oregon has given up the
fewest pushing yards defensively,
132.5 per game, to 144.5 for Stan
ford. Southern California has al
lowed the fewest yards passing,
51.7 while Idaho has allowed 56.5.
Outstanding kick return team is
Oregon with a 35.8 yard average
on kickoff returns to 22.2 for UCLA.
Idaho has averaged 14.8 yards on
punt returns and Stanford 14.1.
UCLA has intercepted the most
passes, 11, and has the best punt
ing average, 39.7 yards.
Grade School
Grid Jamboree
Termed Success
The Klamath Falls grade school
football jamboree held on Modoc
Field last night went over with
a big bang and a fine turnout of
spectators was on hand to cheer
the gridders of the future.
Five games were played, with
junior varsity teams sixth grad
ersbattling it out in the first
game. . The R o o s e v e 1 t-Peli-cans
squeezed by Fairview, 13-6.
In the second junior varsity
game, Conger-Riverside and Mills
fought to a 0-0 draw.
The third game jilted the Klam
ath Junior High Midgets against
each of the junior varsity teams,
which played one quarter each.
The Midgets scored a safety
against Conger-Riverside and a
touchdown against Fairview, but
were held scoreless by the Roose-velt-Pelicans
and Mills. Mills
pushed across the only score for
the junior varsity teams. Final
score: Midgets 9, junior varsity
teams. 6.
In the fourth game the Roosevelt-Pelicans
topped Fairview. 14-
0, while in the final tilt of the
evening Mills defeated Conger
Riverside, 14-0.
Thursday afternoon the Klamath
Junior High Midgets will tangle
with Fairview on Modoc Field at
4:15.
Juck Sez:
"MOVE IT"!!
Regardless of price or deal we will sell this
beautiful 1957 Studebaker Commander 4-door
this week! YOU moke the deal of a lifetime,
WE make room for the EDSELS!
Equipped at follows: Turquoise and mid
night blue finish. Automatic transmis
sion, radio, 'heater and white tidewall
tires, directional signals.
IF YOU ARE AN ECONOMY
MINDED BUYER, DON'T FAIL
TO CHECK OUR DEAL THIS
WEEK!
Just Phone TU 2-2581, ask for Emil,
Dean or Wolly ....
They Will DEAL!
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EDSEL SALES. INC.
11th & Klamath Ph. TU 2-2581
shares and $7,500 to be split
among bat boys, groundkeepers
and part-season players.
The Yankees voted a full share
to Bill Dickey, coach who was out
all season because of illness.
They also passed out two half
shares, two quarter shares and
$3,250 to bat boys and ground
keepers. The 394,712 spectators at seven
games contributed $2,806,538.24.
Attendance and gate receipts
were records. The players share
the proceeds of the first four
games.
The St. Louis Cards second
place team in the National League
earned full shares of $1,636.22. The
Chicago White Sox, American
League runners-up earned $1,521.
39 per full share.
The Boston Red Sox shares
amounted to $1,004.33. The fourth
place Cincinnati Redlegs and De
troit Tigers received $541.25 and
$466.67, respectively.
Biggest share of all went to a
nonpro. Uncle Sam hauled away
a tax bite of $247,738.96. He'll get
another installment when Yankees
and Braves players ante up next
April 15.
NCAA Raps
Universities
KANSAS CITY un Indiana
and West Virginia Universities
are latest recipients of severe
hand spankings by the NCAA
Council's annual fall meeting
Tuesday. Neither school, however,
loses its right to participate in
the J4 NCAA-sponsored champion
ships or 27 cooperating events.
Indiana got it for football re
cruiting violations already toned
down by action on. the part of
the Big Ten Conference and its
own school administration.
West Virginia was chastized for
violations concerning the recruit
ing of a basketball player who
eventually enrolled at another
school.
Id other actions the council said
the University of California at
Berkeley, which was placed on
probation Nov. 13 of last year,
will be restored to full rights and
privileges of the NCAA as of Nov.
13th this year and Ohio State Uni
versity, under probation and in
eligible for all NCAA champion
ships and cooperating events
from Nov. 13, 1956, for a one year
period, was restored to full rights
immediately.
The council upheld its original
ruling on University of Southern
California a two-year proba
tion dating from Nov. 13, 1956.
The school will be eligible f o r
NCAA events effective Nov. 13 of
this year, but will not be eligible
for the Rose Bowl until 1959.
Tommy Heath
Is Bevo Boss
PORTLAND, Ore. (UP) Tom
my Heath, former manager of the
Sacramento Solons and the San
Francisco Seals has been hired
as combination general manager
manager of the Portland Beavers
of the Pacific Coast League.
Heath, 44, resigned last
week as field manager after serv
ing two seasons with the Solons.
He managed the Seals from 1952
through 1955.
Clyde Perkins, executive vice
president of the Beavers who an
nounced the appointment, said he
believed the combination general
manager-manager job was a new
trend in baseball.
Heath comes to Portland at a
time when the future of the PCL
is in doubt because of the transfer
west of the New York Giants to
San Francisco and Brooklyn
Dodgers to Los Angeles.
He takes over the manager's
job formerly held by Bill Posedel,
who resigned after the Beavers
finished last in the 1957 season. As
general manager, Heath replaces
Joe Ziegler,
TEDDY IS READY
CHICAGO (UP) Quarterback
Ted Marchibroda: signed as a
free agent early last month, has
been put on the active player list
by the Chicago Cardinals. Marchi
broda completed 12 TD passes
last year while with the Pittsburgh
Steelers, who named him their
No. 1 draft choice in 1953.
aetata mxamm$,
Klamath Pels Host Tornadoes
For 35th Annual Grid Meet
The Klamath Union High School
Pelicans host the state's 10th
ranked Medford Tornadoes Friday
night at Modoc Field to open their
District 6-A-l conference play.
This will be the 35th consecutive
meeting of the two schools on the
football field, and the Tornadoes
will enter the fray odds-on favor
ites to post their first win over the
Pels on Modoc Field since 1945,
when they upended Klamath. 51-0.
Since the beginning of the
KUHS-Medford series, the Torna
does are way ahead in the win
column, taking home victories 20
times, while the Pels have come
out on top eight- times, five of
the tilts ending in a tie.
Over the years Klamath Falls
has been able to total up only 256
points against the Medford squads,
while the Black Tornadoes have
been able to push across 641 points
against KUHS teams.
The Pels have blanked Medford
seven times, while Medford has
shutout the Pels 17 times, five
times in a row in the games of
1924-28 and 1930-34. The Pels have
been able to hold the Tornadoes
scoreless for only two consecutive
years, 1936-37.
The worst defeat suffered by the
Pels at the hands of a Medford
team was back in 1927 when the
Tornadoes rolled up a monstrous
98-0 victory. The widest point
spread the Pels have been able to
come up with was in 1943 when
they posted a 40-7 victory.
NEW YORK (N'EA) - Ev
erybody knows that the modern
college football team is as strong
as its recruiters.
When a school playing pressure
football goes into a slump, the
first thing you hear from the coach
is, "We're not getting the good
boys any more.
Active old grads real and syn
theticdig up the horses. That's
the only way to win consistently in
football today. Forget the unbal
anced line right or left, the belly
series and spirit and all the other
things coaches tell you about.
The man who wins college foot
ball games is the old grad with
enough money to enjoy an undying
love for alma mater. He's the
mysterious, influential alumnus
you hear about. He sits on the
50-yard line in an expensive top
coat and Willi a classy silver flask
on his hip. Without him, there
would be a lot fewer accomplished
football olavers because nobodv
would be paying carfare for a
visit to the campus and putting I
good clothes on big kids who oth-
erwise could not afford them. One
way or another, the influential
alumnus sells the school to the
boy.
Whenever a team stands out for a
protracted period, you know pros-:
elyters are doing a good job, but
try to find one of them. They keep!
under cover like T-man. j
"I'm afraid we can't help at all,"
says Fred W. Stabley, director of!
sports information at Michigan!
State. "We have absolutely no one
of the John Galbrcath type, or j
anyone even remotely resembling :
an Oklahoma oilman. Truthfully,
there is no one in our sphere who
would fit the picture. 1 have
cnecKca tins out Dotn wim our
alumni office and athletic officials,
so I know I have covered the field.
Sorry I can't help you on this
one."
Nil!
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The last Pelican victory over
the defending Southern Oregon
Conference champions occurred in
1953 and in 1955 they were held
to a 13-13 tie.
Although the Whitebirds will en
ter the game the underdogs, the
traditional rivalry between the two
schools makes the game much
more even than the oddsmakers
figure.
Since 1946. only one game has
been won by more than eight
points, that game coming last sea
son when the Pels were topped
47-19.
So far this reason the Pels have
posted only one win against four
defeats, while the Tornadoes are
batting .500 with two wins against
two losses.
The Marshficld Pirates grid
squad, ranked number one in the
state, is the only mutual opponent
for comparison. The Pels were
downed in their opening game by
the Pirates, 27-0, but were able
to contain the brutal Marshfield
ground offense during the first
half holding them to a 6-0 half
time lead. One Pirate score came
on the fluke of a new ruling. Med
ford bowed to Marshfield, 12 0.
The KUHS season record stands:
Marshfield 27, KU 0; Eugene 33,
KU 13: Redding 6, KU 7: Spring
field 31, KU 0; and Vancouver,
Washington, 40, KU 7.
Medford's record to date is:
North Salem 7, Medford 6: David
u3
All those good football players.
especially the ones from Pennsyl
vania and Massachusetts, just
naturally drifted to Michigan
Slate. And Duffy Daugherty
couldn't be expected to chase them
away. 1
"Kowalczyk is happy about ev
erything," Coach Daugherty re
marked a couple of years ago,
when the big halfback from West
field, Massachusetts, was a sopho
more. "His mother is coming out
to see him play in one game. I've
got a friend who owns a plane
and he's going lo fly her out for
me.
Daugherty making friends with
people who own . planes is more
important to his coaching than
anything he puts into Michigan
State's multiple attack.
Oklahoma hasn t lost in the Big
Seven for 10 years, has won 43
straight games.
But we don't have any alumni
of that type who help us," says
Harold Keith,
the Sooners gifted
tllt thumper
Bud (Wilkinson)
has found that this type of fellow
only Kts in the way, rather than
helps."
Where all those top football
players come from. Keith doesn't
know' Fu how keeP PP'
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Sports Editor
Douglas (Portland! 7, Medford 27;
Marshfield 12, Medford 0; and Cen
tral Point (Crater) 14, Medford 40.
The year by year results of the
Klamath Falls-Medford series:
KF Med.
1923 . 6 20
1924 0 54
1925 0 21
1926 0 34
1927 0 )8 i
1928 0 32 !
1929 7 0 1
1930 0 14
1931 . 0 6
1932 0 21
1933 0 6
1934 0 20
1935 14 20
1936 3 0 '
1937 0 0
1938 0 6 1
1939 0 0!
1940 - 14 Hi!
1941 21 32 !
1942 32 0
1943 40 7 j
1944 0 21 !
1945 0 51 1
1946 6 7
1947 0 0
1948 7 27
1949 21 18
1950 7 7
1951 13 12
1952 7 0
1953 26 18
1954 0 13
1955 13 13
1 1956 19 47 1
1 1956
Northwest Teams Of PCC
Get Slight Scent Of Roses
By BOB MYERS
LOS ANGELES Wi The Pa
cific Coast Conference football
season is proceeding just about
as most everyone anticipated it
would before hostilities got under
way a month or more ago.
that is lo say, there is a pleas
alPlf,f -
Bowl in the great Northwest coun
try, and little or no satisfaction
at the other geographical end of
the league, meaning the Southern
California sector.
Nor is there much joy in the
midsection, or bay area of San
Francisco, where California and
Stanford have been undergoing
severe pain on successive Satur
days. Of the nine member PCC
schools, only California, Washing
ton State, Stanford and Oregon
are eligible for a shot at the Rose
Bowl post-season game with the
Big Ten representative.
Oregon State can't return be
cause of the no-repeat rule, and
I UCLA, the University of Southern
California and Washington are in
the conference doghouse for ath-
letic misbehavior.
Idaho, while a voting member
and recipient of a fraction of
Rose Bowl money, doesn't play a
representative schedule, so it is
out of the bowl picture.
The only unbeaten team Is
Coach Tommy Prothro's Oregon
BE SAFE & SURE!
COLD WEATHER
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E95
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AP Poll Tags
Geremia As
Top Lineman
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Monte Stickles, an end, kicked
the field goal for Notre Dame
that beat Army last Saturday and
thereby hit the headlines.
His teammate, tackle Frank
Geremia. who made it possible,
was virtually overlooked in the
excitement that followed Stickles'
winning three-pointer.
That oversight was remedied
Wednesday when Geremia, a jun
ior from Sacramento, Calif., Wi s
named the Lineman of the Week
in The Associated Press poll.
This was the situation: Army,
ahead by 21-20, had the ball deep
in its own territory midway in
the last quarter. Army's Dave
Bourland tried a jump pass over
line. Geremia deflected it into
the arms of teammate Nick Pie
trosante, thus paving the way for
buckles feat.
It was the turning point of the
game and a "real tough break"
for the Cadets as Army Coach
Earl Blaik phrased it. He added:
"The lineman (Geremia) who de
flected the ball actually was on
his knees."
Geremia is 20 years old and of
Italian descent. He weighs 215
pounds and stands 6-3.
He received some stiff opposi
tion in the balloting by sports-
at end for Michigan Slate in the
rout of Michigan, was praised
highly, So was Dick Wallen, UCLA
end, for his topflight performance
against Washington.
Wallen caught four passes for
UCLA against Washington, inter-
n cepted two that halted Washing-
ion uireais ana recoverea a wasn-
said "Wallen's got one of the
finest pair of hands (for catching
passes! in college football.
Other linemen who stood out
included Jim Brackins, Oregon
State guard.
HOCKEY
Scores
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Montreal 3, Chicago 3 (tie)
Staters. This has occasioned
surprise because the Beavers have
a good team.
The big surprise of the cam
paign is Washington State. Thanks
to a resourceful, imaginative
coach in Jim Sutherland, the Cou
gars are definitely in the Rose
iturew
victories over
California and Stanford,
Sutherland's crew still has a
rough row ahead in Oregon, USC,
Oregon State, UCLA and Wash
ington, along with Idaho.
Coach Len Casanova's Oregon
outfit managed to get bv Idaho
and UCLA fur its two PCC victor
ies and the Rose Bowl race could
well be between the Webfools and
Washington State.
California has lost four straight
games, including one PCC con
test. But the Golden Bears, un
der a new coach. Pete Elliott.
put up some stout resistance in
losing to Michigan State and Navy
on successive weekends.
Stanford blew an 18-0 lead to
Washington Slate's aerial minded
quarterback. Bobby Newman, and,
with a shellacking from Rice the
week before, suffice to say gloom
acep around the fences of the
Stanford Indian.
I
PHEASANT SEASON OPENS
Sat., October 19th at 8: p.m.
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Sooners, Spartans
Face Easy Pickings
NEW YORK (UP)-lf you be
live in the "wizards of odds,"
those gridiron Giants, Michigan
State and Oklahoma, face easy
pickin's again this weekend.
Michigan State, which took over
first place in the United Press rat
ings this week, is a 2ioint favor
ite over Purdue in their Big 10
Conference game at East Lansing,
Mich.
Oklahoma, a c c o r d i n g to the
Broadway oddsmakers, should de
feat Kansas by at least thirty
four points in their Big Eight con
ference tussle at Norman, Okla.
The Sooners' spread over Kan
sas is the largest on the weekend
slate, but it could be an "under
lay" for one important reason:
Bud Wilkinson's boys, unbeaten
in their last 43 games, are not
too happy about surrendering their
No. 1 rating to .Michigan State, so
they probably will open all cylin
ders against Kansas.
In the East's biggest game.
Army has been installed a one-
point pick over Pittsburgh in their
sellout contest at West Point. The
Panthers have run off three
straight victories since losing their
opener to Oklahoma, but the Ca
dets, beaten by Notre Dame last
week, figure to rebound.
Minnesota rates as a 13-point
choice over Illinois in their nationally-televised
game. In other
Big 10 conference battles, defend
ing champion Iowa is rated 7
points better than Wisconsin,
Michgan is 14 over Northwestern,
and Ohio State is 28 over Indiana.
Three games were listed as
"even money" bets, including the
Washington State vs. Oregon
squabble for first place in the
Pacific Coast Conference. Other
"pick 'em" games were Califor
nia vs. y Southern California and
Auburn vs. Georgia Tech.
In Friday night games, West
Virginia is 13 over George Wash
ington, Miami (Fla.) six over
North Carolina State, and Missis
sippi 14 over Tulane.
Other Saturday games by sec
tions:
East: Boston College 1 over VII-
lanova; Harvard 1 over Columbia;
Pcnn 1 over Brown; Holy Cross
6 over Dartmouth; Yale 7 over
Cornell; Princeton 21 over Col
gate... South: North Carolina 7 over
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Maryland; Florida 6 over Missis
sippi State; Louisiana State 7 over
Kentucky; Tennessee 13 over Ala
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Midwest: Missouri 1 over Iowa
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