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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1957)
MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1957 HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PAGE NINE 3ooibaU $XJ)hSA By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FAR WEST Stanford 21, Washington 14 Oregon 14, Washington State 13 UCLA 26, Oregon State 7 California 12, USC 0 Puget Sound 20, Whitworth 12 Oregon CQE 31, Portland State 6 College of Idaho 18, Lewis and Clark 13 Central Washington 20, Pacific Lutheran 0 Idaho 7, College of Pacific 7 (tie) San Jose State 46, San Diego State 0 Western Washington 39, British Columbia 7 Linfield 41, Pacific University 7 Whitman 13, Willamette 13 (tie) Eastern Washington 59, Carroll (Mont.) 6 Southern Oregon 33, Oregon Tech 12 , . EAST Brown 20, Pennsylvania 7 Harvard 19, Columbia 6 Yale 18, Cornell 7 Colgate 12, Princeton 10 Army 29, Pittsburgh 13 Vanderbilt 32, Penn State 20 Dartmouth 14, Holy Cross 7 Boston College 12, Villanova 9 Delaware 59, New Hampshire 6 Temple 13, Lafayette 12 Lehigh 13. Rutgers 7 Rhode Island 27, Massachusetts 13 Connecticut 19, Maine 0 Maryland 21, North Carolina 7 Boston University 28, Bucknell 0 Virginia 38. VPI 7 Bowling Green 29. Toledo 0 MIDWEST Ohio State 56. Indiana 0 Miami (O.) 26, Ohio University 0 Iowa 21, Wisconsin 7 Colorado 42, Kansas 14 Syracuse 26. Nebraska 9 Detroit 30. Xavier 20 Michigan 34, Northwestern 14 Purdue 20, Michigan State 13 Illinois 34, Minnesota 13 Missouri 35, Iowa State 13 Louisville 33, Dayton 19 Cincinnati 14, Marquette 0 SOUTH Navy 27, Georgia 14 VMI 14, William and Mary 13 Tennessee 14. Alabama 0 Auburn 3, Georgia Tech 0 Duke 34, Wake Forest 7 LSU 21. Kentucky 0 Mississippi Southern 14, Memphis State 6 - North Carolina 35, Virginia State 0 The Citadel 26, Richmond 0 Florida State 34, Abilene Christian 7 Mississippi State 29, Florida 20 SOUTHWEST Texas 17, Arkansas 0 Oklahoma 47, Kansas 0 Texas A&M 7, TCU 0 North Texas 14, Tulsa 12 Baylor 14. Texas Tech 12 Rice 27, SMU 21 Oklahoma Stale 6, Houston 6 ROCKIES Montana 35, Utah State 25 Denver 12. Utah 7 Brieham Young 0, Wyoming 0 Colorado State 20, Colorado Col lege 14 Idaho State 26, Montana Slate 13 New Mexico 14, Arizona 0 Hardin Simmons 27, Wichita 14 Grade Schools Plan Grid Tilt The Junior High School Midget grid squad will face the Mills School team at 4:15 p.m. Monday, October 21, on the Modoc Field. The game is a makeup from earli er during the season. Thursday afternoon at 4:15 p.m the Junior High Midgets will meet the Conger-Riverside squad on Mo doc Field. Elementary athletic director Joe Peak reports the following results from the elementary league games Saturday: Mills 0. Roosevelt Pelicans 7; Mills junior varsity 8, Roosevelt junior varsity 0; Fairview 13, Conger-Riverside 14: and Fairview jun ior varsity 0, Conger junior var sity 7. "f'.HJ :',V ' !" J . fit 8-. V . fc.l)4 FULLBACK BELTON OLLISON moves straight through the middle from the Southern Ore gon I i-yard-line for the first Owl score Saturday night in the conference game with SOC at Ashland. The Southern Oregon defenses were caught completely off guard inas much as OTI lined up for a pass play and then th-inap went direct to Ollison who pow ered right down the middle. Moving in for a block oi the play is OTI's Jack Bitier (No. 72). Two unidentified SOC men are attempting to t.iake the stop. SOC won. the game 33-12. Photo by Kettler SOC, OCE Top OCC Pile Oregon Collegiate Conference W L Pet. Oregon College .'. 2 0 1.000 Southern Oregon 2 0 1.000 Oregon Tech 2 1 .667 Eastern Oregon 0 2 .000 Portland State 0 3 .000 Saturday's results: Southern Oregon 33. OTI 12 OCE 31, Portland State 6 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Southern Oregon and Oregon College of Education both dis playing offensive power are deadlocked for first place in the Oregon Collegiate Conference with 2-0 records. Southern Oregon dropped previ ously unbeaten Oregon Tech out of a first place tie Saturday night by clipping the Klamath Falls team, 33-12. The Southern Oregon victory was sparked by Lee McGill, who scored twice. One touchdown was on a 50-yard pass-run play. A freshman from Calgary, Alta., was the key factor in OCE's 31-6 crushing of Portland State. Quar terback Jim Bowlen accounted for 350 of his team's 553 yards gained as the Portland team suffered its third straight loss in conference play. The conference's two unbeaten teams will meet next Saturday, when Oregon College of Educa. tion travels to play Southern Ore gon at Ashland. Eastern Oregon and Portland State both without a league win- will meet in La Grande Saturday Oregon Tech will step out of the conference Saturday to meet Dixie Junior College at Klamath Falls. PC Football Roundup NEW NICKNAME NEEDED NEW YORK (UP) The Athlet ic Department and student news papers are conducting a contest at New York University in an ef fort to give the school a different athletic nickname than Violets. A prize of $50 will be presented to the student who comes up with the best new nickname. By SCOTT BAILLIE United Press Sports Writer UCLA imported coach Red Sanders from Vanderbilt eight years ago to rebuild a shattered football empire and he is doing it again today with a weakened eleven that has been deprived of its seniors and barred from the Rose Bowl because of Conference violations. Sanders' Raiders" dragged seventh-ranked Oregon State down from its undefeated pinnacle last Saturday with a smashing 26-7 up set that obscured the rest of the football action on the West Coast. While Dan Peterson 168-pound Bruin center turned in a whale of a game in the line his team mates constantly hurled back Oregon State's vaunted offense with solid linebacking and roared over for four tallies of their own. Tailback Don Long passed for one of the touchdowns and scored another while Kirk Wilson kept the Beavers off balance with his customary punts of 50 yards. Oregon, in the meantime, moved to the head of the class among the four teams left eligible to go to the Rose Bowl by hanging on for a 14-13 triumph over Washing ton State. Trailing 14-0 in the last period, the Cougars sought to duplicate their rally of a week before acainst Stanford but a missed point after touchdown by quarter back Bob Newman stopped them. Newman plunged over for the score to make it 14-13 with s minute to play and then his place ment hit an upright and bounced off to the side. Jack Crabtree had put Oregon ahead with a short buck then Jim Shanley hooked up on a 36-yard pass play from Leroy Phelps for the other touchdown before the Cougars woke up. Stanford, also eligible for a Rose Bowl bid but now a game and a half behind the Ducks in the In the fall of 1953, Carmen Ba silio had Kid Gavilan on the floor yet failed to relieve him of the welterweight title. Tickers for World's CHAMPIONSHIP MIDGET TAG TEAM WRESTLING Armory, October 25 Now On Salt At DICK REEDERS Browns, Colts Upset In Pro Grid Action brief season fired Baltimore into '45 seconds left, a 27-3 lead when the reviving j Rookie quarterback Sonny Jur Lions got to work. Detroit still gensun was the Eagles' big man was down 27-10 with only nine as lie passed for one touchdown minutes remaining but rallied be- against the previously unbeaten hind a Bobbv Lavne-to-lloi)a!on! Browns and scored another on a Five teams hold a share of first , Cassadv pass combination to nidi i sneak. place, everyone s oecn wnippeu at least once and what looked to By DON WEISS The Associated Press Philadelphia' bounced Cleveland. Detroit stunned Baltimore and just like that it's a jamup today in the National Football . League. be a possible pullaway for the Browns and Colts now has all tne earmarks of another flip-flop don- ncybrook. Both the Eagles and Lions created the chaos yesterday by getting even with opponents they'd bowed to quietly In earlier games. The Eagles beat Cleveland 17-7 and Detroit upset Baltimore 31-27: The Colts had led 27-3 midway of the third period. Cleveland's loss dropped the Browns into a first-place tic in the Eastern Conference with New York's world champion Giants, who routed Pittsburgh 35-0 in their home opener. Detroit and Balti more share the Western Confer ence leadership with San Fran cisco, which pulled even at 3-1 by I cuffing Green Bay 24-14. j In other games, the Chicago' Cards routed Washington 44-14 to I tie Pittsburgh for third in the East i both only a game off the coleaders pace, and Chicago's slumbering Bears finally got into the win I column, calling on rookie Willie1 Galimore for four touchdowns in! a 34-26 victory over the Los An-1 gelcs Rams. I Four touchdown passes by John- j ny Unitas giving him 12 for the burgh team that never got past New York's io-yard-line. . Y. A. Tittle handled the brunt of the 49ers offense, throwing for two touchdowns and plunging for another. Galimore, ran for four touch- it out with thret quick touchdowns. Veteran Chuck Conerly passed ( downs from within the Rams' 20. two in the last 90 seconds. LEne's:for 155 yards iind two touchdowns: The Bears led 34-13 before two 29-yard toss to Cassady did it with . for the Giants against a Pitts-1 late Los Angeles touchdowns. dolly, you're safe with Oil Heat daddy says it can t PCC race, rallied to down winlcss Washington. 21-14. Chuck Shea erstwhile third-stringer who has become a life-saver at fullback. scored twice for the Indians while gaining 129 yards in 29 carries. One of his touchdowns came on a 22-yard run. California won its first game of the season in five attempts by downing Southern California, 12-0, as the Trojans lost their fourth straight in as many outings. Jack Hart and Darrell Roberts scored from close up to cap a pair of sustained drives. College of the Pacific rallied for the second straight week to gain a 7-7 tie and remain at least un defeated. This time the Tigers scored in the last period to pull even with favored Idaho. As time ran out, COP then moved to the eight but was hurled back to the 12 from where an attempted field goal .by Chuck Chattield wont wide. Ken Hall gave Idaho a 7-0 lead in the first quarter and Tom ' Flores evened it for the hosts. 1 San Jose State, which had been out of its league as far as coach Bob Titchenal was concerned, fi nally got into it by blasting San Diego State, 46-0. Seven different men sc(d for the Spartans with quarterback Dick Vermeil at the controls. Cal Poly handed Fresno State its latest loss, 14-7 when fullback Walt Gurney set up the clinching touchdown with a 73-yard punt re-i turn. New Mexico blasted sluggish Arizona, 27-0, in a top regional tilt. Other results: Chico State 20 Sacramenio Stale 13, Redlands 20 Peppcrdine 7, Oregon College 31 Portland State 6. Whitman 13 Willamette 13, Puget Sound 20 Whitworth 12. Fights By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS I BOSTON Jimmy Connors.! 127, New Bedford, Mass., out-; pointed Henry (Pappy) Gault, 125.1 Spartanburg, S.C., 8. I HOLLYWOOD, Cam. Lauro Salas, 129, Los Angeles, outpoint ed Lulu Perez, 129, .New York, 10. KINGSTON, Jamaica George Knowles, 160, Nassau, Bahamas, outpointed Sammy Walker, 160. Boston, 10. STELLARTON, N.S. - Richard (Kid) Howard, 134?, Halifax, N. S., outpointed Jackie Hayden, 133, New Glaseow, N.S., 12. . . .mommy know P that's s clean- POLES OUTPOINT RUSSIANS WARSAW, Poland (UP 'Poland defeated Russia, 2-1, Sunday to hand the Soviet team her first set back in a bid for the world soc cer title. A crowd of 100,000 saw the game at Katowice's Chorzov Stadium. MUFFLERS REPLACE THAT IEAKY MUFFLER nuwi PftfCfS Reg. Stock Mufflers or Hollywood Deeptone Fiberglass or Steal Pocks We Give C Green Stomps SMITH AUTO SUPPLY 919 Klamath X heat . S it think Oil Heat's hest . . . don't you? If your child's safety and well-being are important to you, doesn't it make sense to heat your home with a fuel that is BOTH modern and safe? Truly safe? Compare all features of different fuels. 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