Show a L- - r IN NEW POST m 3 j:U 'if a Pirates PITTSBURGH (AP) — Bobby veteran of Bragan a eight years as a minor league manager who makes no secret of his admiration for Branch Rickey is the new field manager of the Pittsburgh Pirates Rickey became chairman of the board after resigning as general He wasn’t at a news manager conference yesterday when Brar congan was handed a tract for an undisclosed salary ' ' I ' j16 9 ft A JJragan apparently referring to the help Rickey has given him made it clear he owes a lot to the Mahatma and will try to exploit the youth movement Rickey d r begin in his reign Rickey was succeeded by Joe L Brown one of his front office assistants “I am definitely a Rickey man" Bragan said “If I am a pretty good manager today it Is due to his counsel” Brown has said he’s making his own decisions and quickly declared that Bragan is a “Brown man’ adding: “I rise or fall on this selection k I am totally confident that he is the best man available” Just as he did in becoming manager of the Hollywood Stars in the Pacific Coast League Bragan follows Fred 'Haney as manager of the Pirates Haney was let out by Rickey at the end of last season after three years In Hollywood Haney — recently signed as a coach with the Milwaukee Braves — said he is glad the Pirates chose Bragan He said: “The old man Branch Rickey wanted him for three years It’s too bad he didn’t take him three years ago” While Ilaney was struggling with the last place Pirates Bra- gan was having fine success in Hollywood In 1933 his first year as manager he was voted the PCL’s most valuable manager for In winning the championship 1954 Hollywood tied for the pennant losing to San Diego in a playoff Last season after a poor start the Staw finished third A fiery manager not averse to arguing with umpires Bragan said he hopes to field a speedy Pirate team “I would like to nave a team which runs hell bent for election” he declared Bragan a native of Birmingham Ala and now a resident of Fort Worth Tex signed his first pro contract with Panama City Fla in 1938 and went up to the majors as a shortstop with the Philadelphia Phillies two years five-yea- !TS NOT FOOTBALL ACT ld ! ' - GETS WHAT HE GOES AFTER Welterweight ‘champion Carmen Basilio took time out ffom deer in the training to bring down this Y N Old near the Central Adirondack? camp Carmen Forge is prepping for a title defense against Tony DeMarco at Boston on Nov 30 125-poun- d ix-poi- nt j THE SPORTS HIG WAX H WITH AL WARDEN Confessions of a Dirty Player “Our league plays hard competitive football but never dirty football” That’s Bert Bell president of the National Football League talking But according to the current issue of Sport Magazine many of the players in Mr Bell’s league are laughing through the gap in their — mouths at this statement Not dirty? Man it’s filthy dirty! Jint ask Sport magazine j I "ben I let him have it” In short’ according to this play- - er wjat use£j t0 g0 on jn lhe Bo ' Admitting alarm over the m - inian coliseum was a Maypole creasing evidence of intent to Dance in comparison to the blocd- letting activities taking place on maim Sport asked a ou football fields on vet to tell just what’s going comto The player who confesses SPORTS QUICKIES ! hard-bitte- n Bill Sothoron of Brigham of the a!w wisest ' cily asks ioT And thats probabl L Sullivan ale John Demp jack choice considering that he names and Joe Louis when they names and may be meeting the ssey were heavyweight champions and fellows he talks about this season also the name of the boxer col- “Penalties are only for the the fouls people in the stands can lecting title biggest purse for a fight the confessor “like off single Sullivan earned $1221320 durid&eSr interference ing his career in the long ago and r or down-fiel- d with the earned $6500000 Joe clipping That's kid stuff Dempsey Louis’ was $462672169 actake What the fan doesn’t see and to late Frank Menke’s the cording doesn’t know about is the real book sports stuff which sends At Chicago in 1927 Gene Tun-ne- y the ambulances rolling to the picked up $990000 in suchospitals” his title cessfully defending Oh sure the officials can see This was Jack against Dempsey what’s going on but according the count “long fight” to Sport they have been warned not to play Doug Muir present Utah state too often or the customers w' i 1 1 match play bowling champion think the NFL is soft And there’s will at Paramount Bowl perform eaten of the being always danger a in Ogden challenge cut by Mr Bell if an official goes match 8:30 at S§turday pm He “flag crazy” and starts tolling off recently nosed out Paul Chase to penalties win title the “This isn’t a game the way it’s He is a stylist Claude Perry being played now” says Sport’s Ogden’s Hail of Fame bowler Otto vet “This isn’t a sport three times allYerage Jimmy Graham called it vicious last year events champion locally and Max-i- e His words weren’t harsh enough Kosof No admission will be It’s become sadistic” ' charged a a a UNIQUE TACTICS ' Utah State and Brigham Young To prove his point the author names some of the specialized should provide a football thriller mayhem taught and employed in at Provo next Saturday The Couthe NFL Some of the more po- gars were picked for “cellar” hontent and murderous tactics used ors when the 1955 season opened are the “forearm shiver’ “dead yet gave Wyoming a terrific scare last week at Laramie The Utags dog” “hilo” “Missouri Rock” should win this one of All and “opening the gates” and are serviceable these practiTickets for the cal when the intent is to maim A&M kill or game at Utah Stadium Nov butcher slaughter just The only way to stop this crip- - 12 are moving at a good clip now s Bud Jack ticket manager at Utah pling — to from banish is writer the reports Strange as it may se£m says the game for all time such guys as Colorado A&M have never been Philadelphia’s Suicide Seven and “terrific” at the gate in Salt Lake City This game may be an the Pittsburgh Steelers’ Nomel-linLoo i exception Ernie Stautner and of the San Francisco 49ers ODDITY: Prior to 1920 Ogden “You watch the Eagles’ defensive line operate” says the Sport High School gridders blasted East article “and you know some- High at the present Ogden stadbody’s got to get hurt Norm ium 101 to 0 The following year (Wild Man) Willey Mike Jarmo-lu- k East slapped down the Tigers at Wow! East Bucko KilroyTom Scott Salt Lake Cily 134-Jim Richardson Wayne Robinson and Ogden will meet in one of the s next week in and Charlie Bednarik comprise Class A the meanest roughest line in the Ogden league They stop at' nothing Utah is an odds-oearly favorThey’ll lay you out just as soon 1955-5to win the ite Trimble their 'as look at you Jim Skyline coachr just says they’re rugged League basketball championship I wonder how rugged Jim would And in preseason play the Utes be on the receiving end I know tackle Kentucky in late Decemdamn well Bednarik squealed one ber at Lexington the-earnin- gs j fecays back-in-motio- n pass-receive- j blood-and-gut- s drop-the-handkerch- six-gam- e j Darrell Brewster of Cleveland teams with Chicago’s O&den Compton center and Lindon Crow in what looks like a comedy trio heading They are after an Otto Graham pass intended for Brewster which went incomplete ofL-stag- e o between-the-goalpost- 235-poun- d 0 semi-final- n 6 I s For n u THE OGDEN OB UTAH OGDEN STANDARD-EXAMINE- K NOVEMBER THURSDAY EVENING S 1955 SEEK SECOND PLACE Warriors Test North Cache Tomorrow ENSIGN RITCHIE --By final round of Region One play tomorrow The only “big” game will be- played here in Ogden when the Weber Warriors will host the North Cache Bulldogs at the Weber athletic field Kickoff time will be 2:30 pm begin at 2:30 pm at Brigham It will be an anti-climat- ic - “ City jin the Region One standings by Ben Lomond will make a desknocking over or tying the Bull- - perate attempt tomorrow 4o get dogs Since Ogden High cinched the title last week teams will be battling this week only to make the first division The Tigers could knock the Bear River Bears dow n a peg if they-withe 2:30 pm The game at Bears are currently in a deadlock for third place Box Elder which is tied with Bear River for the number three position can nail down third place if they can beat South Cache if Ogden defeats the Bears The Box Elder-SoutCache game will Garland-Tremonto- later He was sold to the Dodger In 1943 and started his association He switched to with Rickey catching but after appearing in only 25 games in 1947 asked Rickey to find him a manager’s job Rickey made him manager at Fort Worth in the Texas League e where he stayed five years Rickey came to Pittsburgh and helped get Bragan his job as manager of Hollywood - Mean-wHil- n h out of a last place tie with the South Cache Spartans when it takes the field at 2:30 pm against the Logan Grizzlies at Logan Ogden is expected to roll to its seventh consecutive victory when it plays the Bears In fact it would continue a long winning streak in Region One play The Tigers have been beaten only once in their region during the loss to past three years— a Ben Lomond in 1953 Weber has looked great since losing to Ogden and deadlocking Box Eider and should nail down the number tu'o spot tomorrow 7-- 6 Major Farms Tom Masntz esf End ANN ARBOR Mich (AP) T?m Maentzf whom they called “that other end” when Michigan’s football season started finds himself Associated Press lineipan of the W’eek — an honor he says belongs to the whole squad The junior from Holland Mich was voted the week’s best lineman by the nation’s sports writers and sports-castefor his blazing performance last Saturday against Iow’a His pair of touchdown catches literally pulled Michigan out of deld rs feat “It sure is an honor” said Maentz “But the team really earned it” As the season started Maentz was overshadowed by big Ron Kramer Michigan’s other versatile end who himself snagged two passes for 79 yards and a touchdown Saturday Maentz grabbed five passes for 169 yards and two scores including the one that gave Michigan its first lead over the Hawkeyes in the last three minutes of the T Bob Can Boot 'Em PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Senior Bob Lebengood of Reading Pa has no kick After Penn’s first four games he led the Ivy League in punting with a 358 yard average for 17 boots non-leagu- e - ! ' -- two for Boise Last week Ricks dumped ' tomorrow’ has anything to offer Cardinals ' for a real deal Hamey spoke at a press conference called yesterday to introduce Eugene Martin the club’s new farm director Martin will coordinate minor league activities under Hamey and Bob Carpenter Phillies owner and president Ramey said his objective is to stock the farms so well that talent is in excess so that like the New York Yankees of the American League when a club needs players it’ll have to look to the Phillies as the National League club with the mostest He said several clubs with higher classifications than the Class C Bannocks had offered him a job for 1956 t If h-r'ir- f j NOW' -- All-Sta- giv-nam- while-Man-jin- Top Scorers (AP) — Larry toss of Denver scored three touchdowns in his team’s 336 wii over New Mexico last week to climb from a seventh place tiji into the second spot in the Skyline Conference scoring race j But statistics released today by Conference Commissioner E L (Dick) Romney showed only one ' change iamong the top leaders during jthe past week Jerry Jester ol Wyoming regained first place irf punting getting off four good kifcks in Wyoming's 14-- win over Bfigham Young That gave the Wyoming back an average of 41 yards on 28 punts Jack Hill of Utah Stale who had zoomed up to first place- a week tjiarlier dropped clear out of the kop seven punters In sec- end Plice behind Jester as Lou Mele of Utah with a 380-yaraverage and Brigham Young s DaltomOverstreet moved up from fifth td third with a 369 average Ross! 18 points for Denver gave him a season total of 42 just three r Willie Frank less than of Denver Joe Mastrogiovanni of Wyoming tied last week with Utah’s Ulerb Nakken for second place propped to third with 38 Utah 4 as idle and Nakken dropped clear down to fifth place Donj Williamson of Montana unraplced a week earlier climbed to secohd place in punt returning with an average return of 166 yards Frank still had a comfortable lgad for first place with a mark Of 20 Jimmy Bowen of Denver tightened bis hold on first place in passing He completed 12 passes against New Mexico for 214 yards to run4 his season’s total to 690 yards gained on 43 passes in 75 SALTj LAKE CITY 0-game S pace-sette- rtrr7? -- ! (17-11- Provoans Get spot-Bobb- j j tew A- - mm Yob irth Swift plant Ironth: Salt tk City OGDEN (focottd EM4-2S- 1I Affilieta Utah Hid in Wt OgtUn) legon 49 and Ta"tw C ' y o'G y g® uDKeel fes attempts Terry Hurley of Montana remained in first place in pass receiving with 295 yards gained on 20 ceatches Jester continued as the conference’s best ball carrier with 533 yards gained on 107 carries j Denver rolled up 588 yards against New Mexico to boost its total dffense yardage to 2500 Wyoming was second with 2122 Colorado A&M continued as the defense leader limiting opponents jto 1359 yards Denver was second with 1500 C"" 150 Year 3 Used Shotguns ’ REM 11-- 48 AUTOMATIC 9 50 o WIN MOSEL 12 Magnum With Rib V4- Excellent 12 go REM 11-4- S AUTOMATIC $ $ r p SO ms win mobil 12 W C 4r HIGGINS 5 PUMP f 1 Worth $73C0 FREE With Purchase of 14-- ft Boat at Regular Price ef TWIN jf KGITEI'S 307 Vash Dlvde TN50 Very Goad Free Outboard Motor ”45" 4 Vi HP 4 r ypSO $ jMagnum Vary Goad I vJr 4 lik New 12 ga Vary Goad " Yi :t win-net- -- - d ar 7 6 - at leaif ' Aluminum ’ J p50 K y Also Avaikhh SP0K j y a £ j Announcement by Cotton Bowl jPresident Felix Wednesday that representatives Would be present foi those games revealed Tennessee had moved into $72§© 12 ga Vary Good '"1st 17-42- 01 only Instances of' Cottton Bowl prospects meeting each York and Norm Zauchin of BosTed Williams of the ton received two votes apiece and Rec Sox first baseman Mickey Walt Dropo of Chicago was Verjhon of the Senators second awarded one SCATTERING OF VOTES basman Nellie Fox of the While There w?as only a scattering of Soxj and pitcher Early Wynn of the Indians drew the other four - votes for other outfielders Smith r berths Cleveland received five Eprra led the voting beingjof him a total of nine with his by 55 w’riters tie land Fox were Tight behind four third base voles Jackie Jen-wit- h 54 votes apiece Kaline had sen of Boston and Hank Bauer of 53 I votes Kuenn received 52 votes Willians 50 Ford M0 New York got two apiece and 27 and Bill Tuttle of Detroit and Jimmy Vernon Bodne 32 Piersall of Boston one each Wynn 19 Iox batted’ 311 Mantle and Press American League Ku£nn were both at 306 and Ver-no- p team for 1955 selected by 56 was 301 Power hitters baseball writersr from the eight Bobne at 284 and Berra at t272 were more quiescent but made league cities First place votes up I for their low'er averages with and batting average or pitching th extra punch record in parenthesis s There- - were no OF—Mickey Mantle New York in the American League (54) (306) but Ford with an 18-- mark and OF— Ai Kaline Detroit (53) a f!62 earned run average had th best overall mark Wynn was (340) OF — Ted Williams Boston (50) 1741 and had a 282 earned run (356) mark for Cleveland IB— Mickey Vernon Washington (27) (301) HITCHING CLOSEST BATTLE 2B — Nelson Fox Chicago (54) The closest battle In the ballot ing was for the second pitching (311) 3D— Ray Boone Detroit (32) spbt and Wynn with his 19 votes barely shaded Billy Pierce of the (284) SS — Harvey Kuenn’ Detroit White-- Sox and Frank Sullivan (306) off the Red Sox with 18 apiece (52) C—Yogi Berra New York (55) Other pitchers to get votes were Tommy Byrne of New York 6 C272) P— Whitey Ford New York Ray Narleski of Cleveland 5 Bob (40) (18-7) Herb L(£mon of Cleveland 3 P— Early Wynn Cleveland (19) Score of Cleveland7 2 and Billy ) Detroi? 1 Hoeft of Berra of course had it all to himselffor the catching post with Sherman- - Lollar of Chicago getting the lone vote against him Fpx similarly monopolized the 300-Pounder second base Avila of ceveUnd picking up lhe only tw0 PROVO (UP) — Two Provo votes There were single votes far joe DeMaestri of Kansas City hunters have returned with one Billy Klaus of Boston Willie Mi- of the biggest deer taken during randa of Baltimore and Chico the recently ended state hunt The huge animal weighed alCarrasquel of Chicago now of 300 pounds and had 12 most Cleveland whejre Kuenn was big man all the way points on ope side of its antlers ?At third base behind Boone and seven points on the other Both Garth Harrison and GerGeorge Kell received 10 votes for Chicago Gil McDougald of New ald Hair shot at the animal but York had five Hector Lopez of neither was sure which bullet Kansas City and Al Smith of stopped it in the Birds Eye area Cleveland received four each and of Spanish Fork canyon Ithaca Featherweight Pump 12 Gauge Only Reg $911(5 MARTIN Garland A Sjieniih Fatk IS Pttnnr pJOptfielder A for clmcsf BROWNING AUTOMATIC ?' ' - thus will center on them for the time being These are the Berra BOURDON the majors ber 27 to 14 Earlier Boise beat Weber 25 to 18 The two top teams both have played Carbon Boise walloped the Price team 46 to 0 and Ricks walked over the Utah team easily 33 to 14 Three other ICAC games are set for this weekend Veber plays a night game against Compton in California Dixie entertains Snow’ at St George and College of Southern Utah plays Trice All games are Ed KENTUCKY’S FINEST Idaho (UP) — Frank Lucchesi manager of the Pocatello Bannocks in the Pioneer baseball league last season today was considering offers from several teams Lucchesi was released from a list of players by special sanction of George Trautman president of minor league baseball and Ford Frick who heads -- We- were outfielder one Vic Power Kansas City’s sophMickey Mantle and pitcher Whitey Ford Detroit placed out- omore star fell three votes befielder Al Kaline shortstop Har- hind Vernon in a dose battle for vey j Kuenn and third- - baseman first base Bill SkowTOn of New catcher Yogi POCATELLO li't-Vf — The Yankees selected Lucchesi Gets His Release $ ” By UNITED TRESS Undefeated teams from Boise and Ricks clash at 'Rexburg tomorrow afternoon for the championship of the Intermountain Collegiate Athletic Conference The Broncos from Boise Junior College are seeking their eighth straight ICAC title and rank as faoriles But the Vikings from Ricks are way up for the game Neither team has been defeated in either league or play this season Ricks has plaed h e conference games against PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The salvation of a major league basei ball operation is down on the farm says General Manager Roy Hamey of the Philadelphia Philt j lies Hamey said he doubted any big deals would be made in the National League this winter “If yoii want to catch the clubs in front you’ll have to develop your owm talent” he said The Phillies GM said that not even “Trader Frank” Lane late of' the Chicago White Sox and now general manager of the St Louis club-owne- d U cities ali-st- n l All-Sta- Two Pioneers mWr l:L n fifth-plac- e the picture -- game By CARL LUNDQUIST INEW YORK (UP) — The pennant winning Yankees and! the Tigers each placed three men today on r team picked thejjUnited Press American League a in ballot of 56 baseball writers from each of the league Mc-Knig- ht j Utah-Colorad- ! DALLAS (AP) — Georgia Tech' 1’ennessee Mississippi State gnd Auburn will get the eyfe this week as the Cotton Bowl starts looking over prospects for its Jan 2 football game Others on the list are West Virginia Mississippi Army and Navy Tech hooks up with Tennessee fand Mississippi State with Auburn Saturday and the Cotton Bowl’s attention other - - J one-yea- s Yankees Detroit Each Rate Throe Mon on Mythical Selection FOUR TEAMS IN LINE FOR COTTON 'BOWL' I V ld ?:'- - F - i STORE Phono 3-12- 31 D0TTLED If! 00 n D in tni is mil ed |