Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, November 15, 1954, Page Three, Image 3

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

    Webfoots Beat Couoars
By Gordon Rice
Emoridd Sport* Editor
Oregon came from behind twice
in (he flrat half and broke the
game wide open in the third pe
riod Saturday to defeat Wash
ington State 20-14 in the Ducks’
first Homecoming victory since
1948.
In so doing, Oregon sewed up
the mythical Northwest cham
pionship and ended four years of
Cougar domination in the series.
It whs the sudden awaken
ing of the Oregon line in the
i
What have VICEROYS got
that other
filter tip cigarettes
haven't got ?
THE ANSWER IS
20,000 FILTERS
IN EVERY VICEROY TIP
Inside every Viceroy tip is a vast network
of 20,000 individual filters to filter your
smoke over and over again. You get only
the full, rich taste of Viceroy’s choice to
baccos . . . and Viceroys draw so freely.
Yes, you get Viceroy’s remarkable new
tip . . . with 20,000 individual filters . . .
plus king-size length for only a penny or
two more than cigarettes without filters.
WORLD’S LARGEST-SELLING
FILTER TIP CIGARETTE
New
King-Size
FilterTip
yiCEROY
—-. m»
Only a Penny or Two More than Cigarettes Without Filters
„ _ (KnifraW Photo bv Sam Thomf-on >
Oregon I'ullliack .fasjter Mrfin* (41) gets au»y for plenty of
yardage in the third quarter of the Washington State game.
Cougar (iuard Kevin Scanlon <«X) comes in at McGee as Foil,
hack Chuck Beokel (3.5) *pratvls on the ground after making a
futile dive for the ha 11-carrier. McGee raced 25 yards to the WSC
14 on the play.
second half that finally niiulr
the difference in the game. The
Cougars found a Dork line
that had more holes in it than
a worn-out sei\e and roared
through for 163 yards in the
first two periods.
Sometime between the end of
the second period and the start
of the third, something caused I
the Duck forward wall to begin
playing the type of football they]
are capable of. Even Coach Lon
Casanova was at a loss to ex
plain the change after the game. '
Regardless of what caused it.!
WSC netted only 12 yards on the
ground in the entire second half.
Reeve Scores
Tied 14-14 at the start of the
second half, Oregon scored what1
USC, Bruins
Tied for Lead
USC and UCLA remain on top i
of the Pacific Coast conference
standings this week, although
Southern California has won one
more game in the conference.
The Trojans won their sixth
game Saturday by beating Wash
ington while UCLA was idle.
Oregon strengthened its chances
for third place by beating Wash
ington State, but California kept
pace with a convincing win over
Oregon State.
The standings:
' W L T PF PA
CSC . .... 6 0 0 188 48
CO.A 5 0 0 232 36
Oregon 4 3 0 153 131
California .3 3 0 150 113
Stanford 3 3 0 e4 145
Wash. .State 3 4 0 o5 S3
Idaho 13 0 1(1 54
Washington 1 5 0 57 135
Oregon State 15 0 33 193
Games Last Weekend
Oregon 36. Wash. State 14
California 4o. Oregon State 7
CSC 41, Washington 0
Idaho 45. N'orth Dakota 0
San Jose State 19. Stanford 14
IM Schedule
3:50 Theta Chi B vs. Sigma Chi
B. court 40.
Sigma Nu B vs. Phi Gam
ma Delta B, court 43.
4:35 Hale Kane B vs. Campbell
Club B, court 40.
French Hall B vs. Nestor
Hall B. court 43.
proved to bo the winning touch
down on the first play of the
third period. End Hal Reeve, who
played one of the finest games of
his career, picked off a flat pass
by WSC Quarterback Bob Iver
son on the Cougar 27 and went
all the way.
Halfback Dick lames added
the clincher midway in the
same period when he rambled
10 yards behind good blocking
to score. Reeve led .fames Into
the end zone, and his block on
the WSC two cleared out the
last man.
Quarterback George Shaw had
set up the TD with two 22-yard
passes to Reeve and Jasper Mc
Gee. Shaw missed the extra
point, as he had on the previous
score, but it didn't make any
difference.
Both of Oregon's comebacks
occurred on spectacular plays in
the second quarter. The Cougars
scored first as they took the
opening kickoff and marched a;l
the way. TJuck Captain Ron
Ph**if-ter won his ninth cormecu
itivc flip of the coin and elected
to kickoff.
Washington Sta’tc took the bail
on their own 33 ar.d went a!) the
way in 32 plays through the
Oregon line. Iverson made the
STATISTICS
Srt VarH-t ^
f'a"f ■, C'ltnjilfttil
f'RA-ie*. FT*/? I nt* rccj U-ti
NVt Y*rti- Pn *, -1 r»fc
T'ttiil ( )iir n+f
Vtrnt !>»>wnh
P tTmr.’r
Fusnblrk l
Ore. WSC
93 I'/5
... ift
. 10
0
139
234
... 15
’ 1
i 3
6
2
h4,
261
3
3
TD on a quarterback sneak from
three yards out. Frank Sarao
added the extra point.
Oregon came hark to tie the
l score in the second period as
I Shaw ran the final 16 yards on
! a quarterback keep play. The
run was one of two beautiful
runs Shaw made during the
afternoon. Shaw also added the
extra point.
Washington State came right
back to take the Oregon kickoff
and march to its second touch
down. Iverson went over from the
12 fer the touchdown, as the
Cougars went 72 yards in nine
plays.
Same booted the extra point,
but an illegal . motion penalty
nullified it. Sarr.o kicked it again,
this time from the seven, but the
same penalty was called. So he
kicked it again, this time from
the 12. and made it again.
Shaw Stars
Shaw made his second beauti
ful run with less than a minute
to go in the first half and set
up a second Oregon touchdown
for a spectacular finish to the
half.
He took a WSC punt on his
own IS and raced 30 yards
down the west sideline to the
Cougar 81 before he was final
ly hauled down. Then on the
next play he threw a pass to
End Leroy Campbell on the
five yard line and Campbell
went over standing up.
Rooks Whipped
By Frosh, 13-2
The Oregon Ducklings ground ‘
out their second victory of the
year over the Oregon State
Hooks Friday afternoon at Cor
vallis as they took a 13-2 de
cision.
The Frosh wound up their sea
son undefeated with the win.
They had previously beaten the
Rooks 13-6. and whipped Grays
Harbor Junior college 26-6.
The Rooks opened the scoring
in the first period with a safety,
four plays into the game. Jack
Henkel, a former Eugene high
quarterback, was trapped behind
the line of scrimmage for two
plays in a row by the Rooks
rushing defense. The second time
Dwayne Fournier, Oregon State
end, crashed through and nailed
Henkel in the end zone for the
Staters’ only points.
Frosh Drive Halted
Following the Rook two-point
er, the Frosh were unable to
WHY
Pay a Penalty for Being Under 25?
If you are married, you can now have public liability and
property damage auto insurance with one of the finest com
panies in the West for $15.20 per 6 months.
You can also save up to 33% on collision and comprehen
sive. •
Don't throw your money away. Get the facts.
ftfcrt/f/ower
HOME OFFICE IN SEATTLE
PH. 4-9444
Jerry Brown
Agent
Ret. Ph.
4-2957
962 OAK, EUGENE
make it all the way to the
Stater?’ goal line in spite of sev
eral drives. Four times they had
the ball inside the Rooks’ 28 yard
line, but were unable to make it
past the 10 as the Oregon Staters
defense held.
The second half opened on a
somewhat better note for the
Frosh as they advanced the
hall to the Rook 26 in the first
five minutes, but failed to
score when Henkel fumbled,
and Ted Searle, OSC fullback,
recovered.
On the next Oregon series.
Quarterback Dick Jarvis piloted
the Frosh fiom their own 41 to
the Rook 42 in four plays. On
the next play, Jarvis handed off
to Jimmy Williams on a trap
play and Williams went all the
way for the score.
Point Missed
The try for the point by LeRoy
Phelps was missed, and with five
minutes gone in the third period,
the Ducklings held a 6-2 edge.
The final Frosh score came
later on in the third period
when Phelps took a reverse
from Jim Shan ley on a punt
return and went 89 yards to
the OSC 15. Four plays later,
Jarvis crossed over standing
up on a sneak. Phelps' place
ment was good, making the
score 13-2.
Volleyball Managers
To Draw for Places
All team managers who have
teams in the voHeybaH play
offs are to meet in the intra
mural office at 8:36 today to
draw for positions in the play
off tournament.