The Chemawa American (Chemawa, Or.) 19??-current, November 01, 1944, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE CHEMAWA AMERICAN
4
7?
S j
SPORTS ^REVIEW
By
Fritz
Woodburn Wins Two
Bucking up against a surprisingly strong Indian
eleven, the Woodburn Bulldogs eked out a close
7 to 0 victory on September 29 at Woodburn. Che­
mawa plaved in Woodburn’s territory all afternoon
but failed to score though threatening four times.
One Indian drive brought them to the Bulldog’s
three-yard line, only to lose the ball on downs.
Chemawa lost their second Duration League foot­
ball game to Woodburn by the score of 7 to 6. Che­
mawa scored first when Williams went off tackle for
27 yards and a touchdown. The conversion failed.
Woodburn came back to score in the second half
and they made the conversion which won the game.
It was a very muddy field and ruined Chemawa’sT-
formation, causing many fumbles.
Buckaroos and Indians
The Mollala Buckaroos came to Chemawa on
October 6 for the second home game of the season.
After a thrilling afternoon, they went home with the
score deadlocked 0 to 0.
Chemawa went to Mollala on October 20 to thor­
oughly scalp the Buckaroos 26 to 0. At the half the
score was zero. Four touchdowns with two extra
points were made during the second half.
Silverton Holds Edge
On Friday, the 13th, the Silverton Silver Foxes
came to Chemawa to play the third round of the
Duration League. The score at the half was 13 to 0.
After a good pep talk by Coach Chief Thompson,
the Indians came out on the field and started to
march. They scored two touchdowns and made
the conversion for an extra point, bringing the score
to 13 all.
The Chemawa Indians were beaten at Silverton
18 to 6 on November 17. Although Chemawa ran
up sixteen first downs to their five, luck seemed to
be against the Indians.
Hobby Clubs
(Continued from page 3)
The Music club is for students who know how to
read notes, and who have had some experience play­
ing in a band. This club is supervised by Mr. Shep­
ard.
rhe Stringed Instrument club is under the dir­
ection of Mr. Bray. There are some good guitar
players so we expect some good music from this
club soon.
air with a pass from Merle Williams to Chester
Ashman for the first touchdown. The conversion
was missed. The second touch-down came late in
the third quarter with another pass from Merle
Williams to Howard Logan. The extra point was
made good when Calvin Simmons bucked it over.
Chemawa 13, Amity 0
After stopping a 65-ya rd kick-off gallup by Amity’s
hefty fullback, Chemawa got rolling to beat Amity
13-0. The first score was on an end run bv Wil­
liams, and the second a pass from Williams to Ash­
man. Hoffer kicked the only conversion point.
Intramural Football
A rib-bursting, action-packed football game was
enjoyed bv the students of Chemawa when the A
division was defeated by the B division 13-6. Un­
able to withstand the charging force of the “Red-
Devils” the “Apaches” could not gain much ground.
The following Sunday the Red Devils were
bounced by the Apaches 10 to 12.
The tournament is now over with the A Division
becoming the champions.
The final game was played Oct. 29 and the
Apaches were playing good ball all the way. The
final score was 12 to 6.
Football Squad
Chemawa vs. Canby
The varsity is as follows: right end, Fred Miller:
right guard, George Miller; right tackle, Glenn Fritz-
ler; center, Bryson Liberty; left tackle, Earl Davis;
left guard, Terry Francis; left end, Chester Ashman;
quarterback, Merle Williams; left halfback, Calvin
Picard; right halfback, Eugene Hoffer; fullback, Cal­
vin Simmons.
On Friday, October 27, the Chemawa Indians
journeyed to Canby. The game was hard fought.
In the first quarter Chemawa struck through the
Support the 6th War Loan. Buy War
Bonds to defeat the foes of Freedom.