to Oregon 11—and had 14 first downs to rffhow agaiiist tin*''Webfoots ’ 7. Jumv tltHI ' Web foots Explode However, in tliV’^eeond quarter UCLA Full back Phillips tumbled after the Bruins had punched oyer three first downs, and Webfoot Find Tony Crisli curled himself around the ball it floundered about the Oregon ,‘>2. From here Oregon Halfback Tommy Kohlin slammed through Hie line for 4 then grabbed the ball on a deep reverse from Teammate Curt Medium and gal loped all ,the way. Ihd the oval was hauled back to the do, where Kohlin nicked the sideline en URZISNS MOWED DOWN RfcCN’SR ASHCOM SEGAlE UCLA MACKEY (VERSON MECHAM - INTERFERENCE FORMS iASHCOM REGNEft CURT} SOIARI '5RSON mecham $ SSGAie MECHAM IVc?SGN KOCH OREGON MECHAM STARTS 11 NE Of SCRIMMAGE OREGON TOUCHDOWN! DOUGHERTY SEGAIE WIENER MECHAM ASHCOM DOUGHERTY .WIEN68 SEGAIE WIENER MECHAM ■Liie weuiuui/S Aii-amencan uanaiuaie, uuri lYiecnam, loose ior uregon s lone touchdown m the UC-.A game. Duke Iverson smashed Brum defenders to open the way. (Photo by J. H. McCrcrv, via air mail from Los Angeles Times.) •* onto. However, oil the following play All-America Candidate Mediam, churning behind Duck Quarterback Duke Iverson aiul Cjuaril Kay Segale, feinted in at the Bruin right end then broke out and around and pulled up only because the goal posts barred his way. Fullback dimmy Newquist parted the uprights for the seventh point. We relaxed in mass contentment and passed sage re marks, to wit: “We don't give a damn how much yardage and first downs UCLA runs up. The payoff comes on the score," et cetera. Oregon Ahead and Then . . . (begun lias ahead, 7 to 0, and retreated to its dugout for (he halftime respite. However, ere the second half was far underway, I ( LA had surged i 1 yards to score and then lock the count at i-all, and herein lies the sad tale. A scant two minutes later, Hrtiin Safety-man led Forties pulled down one Meeham's spiralling punts and lugged it back all the way to (begun s _, where 1 oinuiy llobliii s desperate lunge tripped hie: up. In three plass the Bruins were over, and in another (hey converted to crack the deadlock in their favor, 14 to 7. •And thus the game ended. What are people saying about the tilt? Well, Dick Friendlich pens in the San Francis^ Chronicle: "Tex Oliver’s Webfeet . . . were about as close to the Rose Bowl this afternoon as they ever will be. Pasadena is, I believe, only a few miles away, and there is nothing to keep the Oregon players from taking a street car out to the Arroyo Seco tonight and looking over the stadium. They won’t get another look at it this year, believe me." Won't Quit Yet Realism. \ es, this may be all too true. However, sentiment toward the Oregon team riled up by an innate stubbornness, mo lies me more reluctant than not to strap on my water wings with the green ship in this gale. Results of Saturday’s gridiron eruptions: Stanford is king of the mountain, with Oregon, Oregon State, Wash ington, UCLA, and USC lodged just one ridge below. Everything happened last weekend—WSC nicked OSC, 7 to 0; UCLA stunned Oregon, 14 to 7; Stanford clanked over Washington, 13 to 7; California smothered USC, 14 to 0; Santa Clara was thoroughly humbled by Oklahoma, [ ^ t0 6—and everything can happen again next week. UCLA Deplumes Ducks Underrated Bruin Topples Webfoot's Bowl Dreams By WALLY HUNTER Hopes for an Oregon conference championship took a ride Sat urday at the expense of UCLA’s twice-thrashed Bruins—but the ticket went only one way, and it was labeled oblivion—the Ukes paid for the Webfoots’ ticket with two iightning-like thrusts in the third quarter that left the bewildered Ducks on the short end of a 14 to 7 score. It was the Bruins and the QT the whole way, except for a brief spurt in the second quarter, when tire YVebfoots roared through the UCLAN defense from their own 31 to score. At half time they still held a 7-0 lead but it was short lived. Taking the halftime kickoff the victorious Bruins numbed the Oregons with a 70-yard prom enade that was climaxed on the 21-yard stripe when a sub end snagged a pass to score. A con version tied the score and that was the last time Oregon was in the ball game. Mecham Shines Halfback Curt Mecham, who looked like an All-American ev ery inch of the way, had one of his towering punts returned for 60 yards in the same quarter— and this put the clincher on the game for Babe Horrell's men. The mail was deposited on the two yard line, at the climax of the downfield trip, and from here a slot was punched in the Oregon forward wall through which a Bruin back rambled. This affair climaxed fhe Ore gon drive for the league leader ship and sent glimmering all hopes for an Oregon team in the Rose Bowl for while the Ducks were muffing their chance Oregon State was tak ing a terrific lacing from a powerful and underrated Wash ington State outfit. UCLA had a tremendous ad vantage in yardage gained—235 yards to the Webfoots' 116 and it was the punting of Curt Mecham that kept Oregon out of the holes most of the game. Students who work their way through school—about 60 per cent—at the University of Texas average better grades than their non-working colleagues. Conclusion from a recent meta bolism test at Texas Technologi cal college is that mountain-born coeds should eat more than those .vho come from the prairies. Alpha Gam, Chi 0 Win Vollyball Tilts The Alpha Gamma Deltas rode to an easy victory last night over the Alpha Chi Omegas with a final score of 43 to 17 in the third week of league volleyball. The second game of the double head er was between the Chi Omegas with the Chi Os posting a score of 27 to 15 over the hard fighting Pi Phis. Mary Louise Vincent and "Lis ’ Daggett played a strong defensive game for the losing team. Four stars shown on the Chi Omega eight, with their consecu tive “set ups" and' deadly “spikes." They were: Aileen Ce des, Barbarale Jacobs, Nancy Lewis, and Robin Nelson. Following are the games for today at 4:45: Kappa Kappa Gamma vs. High land house, indoor gym. University co-op vs. Alpha Chi Omega, indoor gym. Hendricks vs. Alpha Phi, out side gym. Susan Campbell vs. Alpha Del ta Pi, indoor gym. Kappa Alpha Theta vs. Zeta Tau Alpha, outside gym. Ann Rutherf ord, rising young Hollywood starlet, is honorary sweetheart of nine different col lege fraternities throughout the United States. Upsets Soften Stanford’s Road to The Rose Bowl By HARRY GLICKMEN Sneaking of unsets, and who isn’t after Saturday’s amazing round of them in coast conference games, this dreaded of all football outcomes has practically paved (he way for Stanford’s second consecutive championship and Rose Bcwl journey. Before Saturday’s games five teams were tied for first place with two wins and one defeat apiece. After Saturday’s games Stanford stands alone at the top of the ladder with three wins and one loss. Five teams, Oregon, Oregon State, U.S.C., Washing ton, and U.C.L.A., are tied for second with two wins and two de fats. Washington State, with two wins against three defeats, and California, with one win and two defeats, are next in line. That’s the summary of things after upsets took their toll in conference games. Only one team, Stanford, ran true to form. They defeated Washington, but that can be termed an upset also, for the Huskies were the pre-game favorite. Nothing short of a miracle can keep the Indians out of the Rose Bowl now. Paced by Frankie Al bert, Stanford defeated Washing ton by a score of 13 to 7 before a huge throng at Seattle to gain undisputed leadership of the league. ^At Pullman Washington State scored upset No. 1 by thumping Oregon State, 7-0. The Cougars made an 81-yard drive for a touchdown in the first quarter, and maintained, the iead while staving off sev eral Beaver drives. Upset No. 2 came at Los An geles where U.C.L.A. exploded its Q-T and bounced Oregon by a score of 14 to 7. The Bruins had things pretty much their own way, leading in every depart ment. Oregon scored in two plays in the second quarter and led at halftime. In the final half the Ukes scored two rapid touch downs to win the game. The California Bears man aged to win their first confer ence game of the season with a 14 to 0 victory over U.S.C. to post upset No. 3. The Bears scored in the second and final cantos to win the bitterly con tested game. In the non round-robin games the Idaho Vandals, looking better with each start, routed Willam ette by a score of 33 to 6, and Montana, trailing until the fourth quarter, defeated its traditional rival, Montana State, by a score of 23 to 13. Babes ’ Ruin Bowl Hopes For Oregon If you’re after the answer ti why the great Oregon grid team tumbled from the Rose Bowl pic ture over the weekend, the sola tion is simple—As with all greats their downfall was merely a cou pie of “Babes.” But they weren’t the type thal wear skirts, lipstick, high heek and such—no indeed, they were a couple of gents whose name: are football bywords up and dowr Believe It or Not DON'T GUESS CALL JESS GODLOVE The Plumber 31 East 7th Ph. 547 omeloxi $ , .. ASSOCIATED | lltli and Hilyard On the Oregon Campus Headquarters for Oregon stickers. Wooden shoes as long as they last—buy now. wjm the coast this dreary Tuesday morn. They were Messrs. Edwin C. “Babe” Horrell of the Uclan tribe from the south and Orin E. “Babe” Hollingbery, head man at Washington State. > 8 "" Ducklings Work Against Varsity; FeldmenOut After their weekend conquest of the Washington Babes, John Warren’s freshman football squad was a lively bunch of ball players, as they began a two weeks’ prep aration for their second and final game with the Oregon State Rooks, November 7, in Corvallis. Two players, both of whom have started the two Duckling tilts, were missing from Mon day’s drill. One of them, Marty Feldman, big right guard from South Gate, California, was lost to the team for the remainder of the season when he suffered a broken leg in the Babe en- , counter. Although serious enough to keep him on the sidelines the rest of the present football year, Feldman didn’t realize he had broken his leg until the following day. Davis Out Bill Davis, pile-driving fullback from Grants Pass, was also ab sent. Davis is nursing an infect ed foot, but is expected to be in The rest of the squad was fa voring the usual bruises. Although the FroSh broke .through and smashed a four year losing streak with the Husky Pups, their traditional foes, the Rooks from Corvallis, also did a little point-manufac turing of their own. The Baby Beavers played the Portland University frosh Friday night, and while holding the Pilot freshmen to two scores, crashed over for four touchdowns them selves. The Warren men drilled with the varsity on defense Monday, with part of the outfit having a little dummy scrimmage. Heavier work is slated later in the week. Two Attend Conclave Dr. Hugh B. Wood, professor of education, were in Salem last assistant professor of education; and F. L. Stetson, professor of education, are in Salem this weekend attending the state high school principals’ conference. VMM IT PAYS TO USE A PORTABLE EASY TERMS AT CO-OP