FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 8, 1957
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE THIRTEEN
Major Football Teams Seek
To Nail Down Bowl Berths
By UNITED PRESS
The University of Oklahoma,
battle-scarred in its last two foot
ball games but still boasting a 46
game winning streak, tries to nail
down an Orange Bowl berth Sat
urday against up-and-coming Mis
souri. Oklahoma is an 18-point favorite
despite Missouri's 5-1-1 overall
record and 3-0 in Big Eight play.
Missouri has lost only to Texas
AIM, which displaced Oklahoma
this week as the nation's No. 1
team in the United Press ratines
Since Bud Wilkinson became Ok
lahoma coach in 1947, the Sooners
have played 63 conference games
without a loss.
The other Orange Bowl team is
sure to be Duke, unbeaten in the
Atlantic Coast Conference but a
six-point underdog this week to
Navy.
Bowl Possibilities
Other possible bowl lineups:
Rose: Oregon vs. Ohio State or
Michigan State. Oregon, 5-0 in the
Pacific Coast Conference, is fa
vored by 12 points over Washing
ton. Ohio State, 4-0 in the Big Ten,
is a seven-point choice over Pur
due. Michigan State is picked by
14 points over Notre Dame, which
shows signs of reeling under a
murderous schedule.
Cotton: Texas A&M or Texas vs.
Navy. Mississippi, Mississippi
Stale, Tennessee or Georgia Tech.
Favorites Saturday include' Texas
A&M by 12 points over Southern
Methodist, Texas by a over Bay
lor, Mississippi by 11 over Louisi-
ana State, Auburn (probably the
best team in the South but a bowl
ineligible) by 8 over Mississippi
State and lennessee by 7 over
Georgia Tech. The most attractive
Cotton Bowl paring would be Tex
as A&.M-Navy.
Sugar ana liator: The same
teams in the running for the Cot
ton Bowl are possibilities here,
too, except that Navy won't play
in the Sugar Bowl because of
Louisiana segregation laws. The
Gator Bowl also might be inter
ested in West Virginia, a six-point
favorite over Pittsburgh this
week; Boston College, a four-point
choice over Boston University;
and Syracuse, a seven-point favor
ite over Holy Cross.
Regional TV Battle!
Regionally televised games in
clude Navy-Duke at Baltimore,
Oregon Washington at Portland.
Ore., Purdue at Ohio State, South
Carolina at North Carolina (North
Carolina favored by one point),
Arkansas at Rice (Arkansas fa
vored by one point), and Nebraska
at Iowa State (betting is even
money").
Miami of Florida is the choice
over Florida State Friday night in
the first major game of the week
end.
Other Saturday favorites:
lntersectional Army over Utah,
Penn State over Marquette, Hous
ton over Mississippi Southern, Le
high over Virginia Military. De-troit-Villanova
is "even money."
East Dartmouth over Cornell,
Princeton over Harvard, Yale over
Pennsylvania, Brown over Cornell,
Colgate over Bucknell, Rutgers
over Lafayette.
Midwest Iowa over Minneso
ta, Michigan over Illinois, Wiscon
sin over Northwestern, Indiana
over Cincinnati, Kansas over Kan
sas State, Oklahoma State over
Wyoming, Drake over Wichita.
South Vanderbilt over Ken
tucky, Florida over Georgia, Ala
bama over Tulane, Clemson over
Maryland, Virginia Tech over
Wake Forest, North Carolina State
over William & Mary, George
Washington over Richmond.
Southwest Texa$ Tech- over
Tulsa, Arizona (Tempe) State over
Texas Western, Hardin-Simmons
over Arizona.
Far West Oregon State over
California, UCLA diver Washington
State, Stanford over Southern Cali
fornia, Colorado-' over Colorado
State V., Denve over Air Force
Academy, Idaho over Utah State,
College of Pacific over San Jose
State.
Out Of
Doors
By WARREN PAGE
It's getting frosty up in the hills
and the bugling season has come.
If there be any more truly
American sound than the mating
whistle of a bull elk it can only
be the popping of Fourth of July
firecrackers. The wapiti is an
American animal, and nowhere
else in Ihe world, save down un
Los Angeles Proves Jinx For Mexico's Raul Macias
By HAL WOOD
United Press Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES (UP) As far
as little Raul (Raton) Macias is
concerned, they can take all of
Los Angeles, load it aboard a
large, economy-size Sputnik ana
ship it to the moon.
The little mouse, as he is af
fectionately called by his wor
shippers in Mexico, has lost two
lights in his life both right here
in the city of the angels.
He had a good alitn mis nine,
kMUn J',,M llic r:nnlA nHJu Thai, lrna.H that
jiiitir mail uau iusi. many iiau
k&tuthLarrrBa.a:n .ft, Mef
heats. City to watch their idol win the
undisputed world's championship
eree's vote, the smiling French
man replied:
All I care is .that I've got the
crown and the crowd."
The 175 cops walking their
beats might just as well hav.
been home minding the kiddies.
The Mexicans are noted as riot
ous winners. But they were, in
this case, wonderful losers.
der in New Zealand where a few' when It developed mat ne nau
transplanted wapiti do their mat-1 badly smasiied icii nana irum iu
: :.u ii. n, civth rminit nn when he lost his
bugle be heard. battle with France s Alphonse Ha-
Ducks Can Snare Rose Bid
With Win Past Washington
It is a majestic, wild sound.
full of wilderness. The bull who
stands out on a timbered promon
tory and pumps from his lungs
the air pressure behind the ear
splitting whistle is a majestic
animal. He stands 800 pounds of
wild masculinity. No sound, not
even the choppy song of the moon
struck coyote, is as much a sym
bol of the Rocky Mountain wilderness.
From far off. his peculiar ven-
triloquial whistle can be heard for
miles on a still dawn. The tune
is a three or four note ' scale.
breaking up to a piercing peak
and then sliding fast down to the
bottom note. The young bull
squeaks a thin shrill; but the old
one, the six or seven pointer who
will ultimately command a harem
of half a dozen or more com
plaisant cows, carries a bass roar
even into the peak pitch. His bu
gle has a steamboat quality that
warns every other bull within ear
shot that he is indeed the boss of
Elk Mountain.
Close-up, the whistle becomes a
full - blasted bugle, begun and
ended with coughing grunts of
side-heaving effort. It rasps out
in a multi-tone bellow as evi
dence that the bull's entire wind
pipe, his neck outstreched and
head low, is vibrating with effort.
Go into the high country of
Idaho or Wyoming or Montana, or
even farther north across the bor
der into Canadian fastnesses
where the wapiti seeks solitudes
empty of man, and you may be
one of the lucky ones who hear it,
the true call of the wild.
limi for the world's bantamweight
championship. But he didn t use
that as a cause for his defeat,
"i inct ran't seem to get un-
harked in this town," lie said
ihmnBh his interpreters
It was in 1955, when he was
sailing smoothly on the road to
success, that he met Billy Pea
cock here and, for his pains, was
knocked out in the third round
However, it is an ill wind that i
blows no good, as some Russian
inventor said years ago And at
least there was one victory for
the Mexicans here Wednesday
night.
They proved themselves to be
good sports much better than
fearful police had anticipated.
The Los Angeles police depart
ment had placed 175 men on ac
tive duty around Wrigley Field to
control the mob of 20,000 in case
Macias lost on a close decision.
Well. Raul lost a split decision
but the Mexicans never uttered
DROPPED TO BEST DAD
TiF.TROIT UP) Three and
An p. half-vear-old Carrie Ane,
daughter of Detroit Lions tackle
Charlie Ane, changed her mind
about her father after the Lions
dropped two straight games in me
National Football League this sea
son. "She used to call me the
greatest football player in the
world' but changed it to 'the best
d.iddv in the world" after we lost
to San Francisco and Los, An
geles," Ane commented.
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He was whipped but good. And
they knew it. Even if referee
Mushy Callahan didn t. They
gave a smattering of applause
when judge Dynamite Jackson's
vote was announced: but their
mouths fell open in disbelief when
they heard the announcer report
that the referee had voted in fa
vor of Macias. There were a few
boos, but mostly silent amaze
ment. Then when judge Frankie
Van's report came, they gave the
new champion a rousing send-off.
Even Halimi didn't expect this.
And when asked about the ref-
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EUGENE, Ore. Iffl The Uni
versity of Oregon can clinch at
least a tie for the Pacific Coast
Conference football title Saturday
and even the coach appears sur
prised.
"This is the most amazing team
I ever coached," says Len Casa
nova, whose players, lightly re
garded in most quarters eariier
this season, have won five strsight
conference games.
A victory over Washington at
Portland Saturday would iinch a
tie for the conference crown and
probably bring the Rose Bowl bid.
"They surprise me ecery time
we play," says the graying Casa
nova. "When I watch Ihem as in
dividuals on the practice field, I
know we don't have enough depth
lor this conference.-
"And then they get into a game
and almost make me think Wis is
the best team I ever had. I can't
figure it out myseU. As individ
uals, welL . . but they play to
gether as a team very well.
"Take our second unit. On the
practice field I get to feeling they
can't do it. But in a game, well,
this team's strong point comes
out. They drive. Never quit. They
have what I call scrambling aDU
ity." The team has some standouts
of course, such as halfback Jim
Shanley, a 180-pound will of the
wisp who somehow squeezes
through holes tnat oDViousiy are
too small for mm.
"A tremendous ball player and
probably the best I've ever
coached," said Casanova of Shan
lev, whose slants' through the line
and broken-field running has
cracked more than one team's de
fense.
There are also Harry Mondale,
198-pound guard who anchors the
line; quarterback Jack Crabtree,
who in some games has called up
to 80 per cent of the plays at the
line of scrimmage to take advant
age of defensive shifts after the
huddle; and fullback Jack Morris,
a 9.5-second sprinter who is the
handiest of men and may even
be the1 key to this team.
Morris does everything. At 190
pounds he backs the line on de
fense. On offense he drives hard
enough to do the line-plunging.
and is fast enough to carry pitch
outs around end in Oregon's split
T offense. He also punts and
not the least in importance docs
the place kicking.
This last has been hard on Casa
nova, but great for the team s
record.
Casanova coached at Pittsburgh
and Santa Clara before he came
to Oregon. At Santa Clara he saw
three teams go to the Sugar and
Orange Bowl games. He isn't cer
tain now whether any of those
teams were better than this one,
but he knows this team provides
more thrills.
Oregon won its three road games
by a total margin of five points.
All from Morns toe. A Morris
field goal downed Idaho, 9-6, and
his conversions accounted for a
14-13 edge over Washington State
and a 27-26 victory over Stanford.
It would add 10 years to my
life if there were some easier way
to win." said Casanova.
One-Eye Dillon
Says Passing Is
Better In NFL
GREEN BAY, Wis. (UP) One
eyed Bobby Dillon, the Green Bay
Packers ace defensive back, Sat
urday blamed "better passing" for
the fact that he's returned five
interceptions only one yard.
Last year, one-eyed Bobby re
turned seven for 244 yards to lead
the National Football League.
"I haven't been as lucky this
year. The passers have been too
sharp. Lvery pass that I ve inter
cepted there's been one or two
men right on the spot to nab me,
he said.
Dillon figures his best defensive
work this year has been against
the Chicago Bears and Baltimore
Colts.
"I've only been able to grab one
pass from the Colts this year, but
I ve knocked a lot of them down
When our guys up front are rush
ing the passer, it makes it easier
for me. he said.
Dillon, now in his sixth season
of professional play, said he
guessed the two things that made
him able to make so many inter
ceptions were "quick reactions
and speed."
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