Huskies, OSC Record Wins For Northwest PACIFIC COAST CONPfCRKNCB Southern < alifornU l 0 1.000 nrrtfoii Stair I 0 1000 Washington I 0 1.000 Oregon 0 1 .000 Stanford 0 1 .ooo Idaho 0 I .000 Washington Ntatr 0 I ,000 IT I A 0 0 000 ('tttitoiniH 0 0 .000 By Ihr AniHN'Iiitrd Press Two Northern teams of the Pa cific Coast Conference, Washing ton and Oregon State, basked in football glory Sunday after a gloomy weekend for the South ern giants of the league. Mighty UCLA fell, California lost and Stanford was white washed Saturday, leaving only j the powerful USC Trojans to up hold. Southern 111 vision dignity with their expected 42-15 win over Oregon Friday night. Sta tistics put the Trojans atop the conference heap with two vic tories. Hut there are happy hours in j Seattle and Corvallis, for Wash ington whipped the favored Min nesota 30-0 and Oregon State stunned Stanford 10-0. Huskies Itoll The Washington Huskies made the experts who rated Minne sota a two-touchdown favorite look pretty silly as the Gophers simply came apart before 58,000 shocked fans at Minneapolis. Knd Jim Houston was the Washington sparkplug, scoring twice and setting up a field goal with a 54-yard puss interception runback. Oiegon State, sailing along with two wins over Brigham Young and Stanford under thetr new coach. Tommy Prothro, again found 145-pound tailback Sam Wesley to be their boy. He snared a pass for a 51-yard scor ing play and helped set up Ted Searle's four-yard field goal. nianiorti rumlwn Twice .Stanford fumbled the ball away three times and had four passes intercepted by the alert Beavers. Maryland knocked the No. l team halo off UCLA 7-0, Illinois beat California 20-13, Kansas took Washington State 13-0 and Utah trimmed Idaho 20-13 in other Saturday encounters. Doug Peters' fumble on the one-foot line was a crusher for UCLA but Maryland gets the credit for an inspired perform ance, getting revenge for their 12-7 defeat by UCLA last year. The Marylanders ruined the work of the sensational Bonnie Knox, put together a sustained, 71-yard scoring drive in the third quarter and thereby ended the UCLA winning streak after 10 straight games. It was the first blanking of UCLA since California whipped the Bruins 35-0 in 1950. It was UCLA’s first shutout in 40 games under Coach Red Sanders. Cal Falls Again Stubborn California held Illi nois to a 7-7 halftime tie but succumbed in the second half to the yardage-eating Illini backs. It was California’s second straight loss, Pittsburgh having taken the Bears the week before. Kansas ended a 17-game losing streak by beating Washington State. The Jayhawks were in side the Cougar 10-yard line four other times without scoring. Next weekend: Texas visits USC at Los Angeles Friday night and on Saturday it will be Penn sylvania-California at Berkeley, UCLA-Washington State at Pull man, Idaho-Arizona at Tucson, Washington-Oregon at Portland, Ohio State at Stanford. Oregon State has an open date. READ EMERALD want ads Arnett Whips Ducks By Jack Wilson Emnrald Alt') Sporlt Editor Oregon’* Duck* were on top for one quarter, nearly equal for another and completely snowed under during the hint, two a* they absorbed a 42-15 drubbing from the older and deeper USC Tro jans In Los Angeles Friday night. Jon Arnett, the one-man baekfield who whipped Oregon alinoat single-handedly last year, turned the trick again. Ills 2H points and four touch downs broke the USC Indi vidual scoring record set by Marshall Outfield In 1928, hut fell short of the conference rec ord of 36 points, « TO’s, set hy Cal’s Olek Ounn against Ne vada In 1922. Oregon shocked the Trojans by scoring first and holding South ern Cal’s titans scroeless during the first quarter. In the second quarter the Ducks rocked the home boys again by springing loose sophomore halfback Jim Shanley, who sauntered 72 yards to paydirt. The half ended with the Trojans in control by the meager margin of 21-13. Depth and experience of Jess Hill's well-balanced eleven be gan to tell In the second half, as Arnett tallied 14 more to lead the way. Only Oregon score in that half came as USC's center snapped the ball into his own end Detroit's Kaline Nobs AL Crown NEW YORK (APi A1 Kaline. the Detroit Tigers' second year outfielder won th<* American League batting championship and in so doing became the first sophomore to turn the trick since 1906. That year George Stone of the St. Louis Browns, playing his second year in the majors, won it. Kaline's average, according to Sunday night's Associated Press figures, was a .340. He also was the only major leaguer to get 200 hits. Richie Ashburn of the Phila delphia Phillies won the National League title with a .338 mark. Willie Mays of the New York Giants and Stan Musial of the St. Louis Cardinals finished in a second place tie, each with .319. Vic Power of Kansas City, the American League runner-up also had a .319 average. There were only eight .300 hitters in the American League this year and only four over .310 who batted more than the required 400 times. Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox showed a .356 mark but he was at bat only 320 times, so his averages won't count in the final official list of the lenders. zone for an automatic safety. Oregon's big break in the i first period was Spike Hill- j strum’s Interception of Ells worth Kissinger's pass, intend ed for Chuck Griffith. Starting from their own 46, the Ducks then went 54 yards in eight 1 plays, best of which was Hhan ley’s 28-yard sprint around rl({ht end to the Trojan 15. Jack Morris crashed into the end zone from the two for the game's first tally. Morris’s place kick failed. As the quarter drew to a close, Arnett flipped a screen pass to Gordy Duvall for 21 yards to the Oregon three, and it took the Trojans only two plays, after switching end for the quarter, to blast Arnett through for the score. The agile Arnett also kicked the extra point, first of four perfect boots during the eve ning. Forcing Oregon to kick, USC easily drove 43 yards in seven plays, with Jim Contratto pass ing 30 yards to Arnett for the score. Once again the Arnett Un provided the extra point. The Ducks handed the Tro Amateurs Bounce Pros in Seattle SEATTLE (AP)—A 10-man team of amateurs won the seventh annual Hudson Cup golf matches here Sunday with a sur prising 9V6 to 5'2 victory over its professional counterparts. The play-for-fun boys, break ing a tie which existed after Sat urday's Scots foursome matches, won 7 out of 10 on Sunday's pro gram. The only previous amateur tri umph in the seven-year history of the event was scored at Se attle's Broadmoor several years ago. Leading the pro winners was Bud Hofmeister, of Hayden Lake. Idaho, who toppled Salem’s Bob Frail, University of Oregon div oter. 8 and 7. Jack Westland, a Washington Congressman from Everett, dropped Harold West of Eugene, 7 and 6, for the second high. Amateurs Bruce Cudd of Port land and Dick Yost of Seattle, came through with expected vic tories. Cudd slipped by Joe Steiger of Spokane, 1-up, and Yost got by Yakima’s Joe Greer, 2-up. Sports Staff Desk Editor: Jack Wilson. Staff: Chuck Mitchelmore, Jerry Claussen. Buy Your JACKETS 11 By H. L. Whiting From FENNELL'S MEN'S WEAR ON THE CAMPUS jans their third touchdown through a fumbled kickoff, Kr nle Merk recovering his own boot. Ernie Zampcse, third QB lined by L’SC in the game, threw a ten-yarder to Chuck I>-imhach in the end zone. Thin time Zampcse handled the con version. On the first play from scrim mage after the ensuing kickoff, Quarterback Tom Crabtree faked a handoff to Morris and gave to STATISTICS First downs Rushing yardage Panning yardage Passes attempted Pauses completed Passes intercepted Punting average Fumbles lost Yards penalized Orest 10 222 0 n 4 ... 7 .. 31 68 use 20 254 121 16 6 0 2 56 1 55 Shanley, who twisted and turned through the Trojan secondary, broke free on about the USC 30, and scampered past the goal posts with no one near him. Morris’s extra point try was per fect this time, and the gap nar rowed to eight points. The gritty Duck defense held the Trojans for downs on the five as time ran out in the half. The second half was all Ar nett. In the third canto the junior speed merchant took a lateral from C. R. I to tie rts, who had already gone seven yards, and whisked the remaining 25 to score. He also booted the PAT. After the Oregon safety in the fourth quarter, Arnett grabbed a punt on his own ten, eluded the grasp of soph Tackle Jerry Ker- i schner, and rocketed downfield for his fourth TD. Apparently not even w'inded from his ninety- ' yard jaunt, he calmply kicked PAT No. four. Roberts, a talented, block busting sophomore, closed out the scoring with a 31-yard end zone journey, and Kissinger kicked the final point. Fred Haney Out As Pirate Boss In Reshuffling PITTSBURGH (AP) — The Pittsburgh Pirates Sunday fired Manager Fred Haney in a move obviously designed to clear the decks for a change in the club’s top management. Haney disclosed to reporters that he had received a letter from General Manager Branch Rickey notifying him that his contract was being terminated. The two year agreement carried a pro vision on automatic renewal next season unless terminated by either party before the end of this season. Attendance High Sunday’s was the final game for the Pirates and they lost to the National League champion Brooklyn Dodgers 4-0. Curiously enough, the attendance reached 28,185 for the “Award Day con test.’’ It was the biggest crowd at home for the Pirates this sea son. Fans in the stands were not advised of Haney’s dismissal. A Pirate official who pointed up the significance of the dis missal as clearing the way for any possible change in the Pirate front office said also that it was not impossible that Haney might come back next year—after the general manager situation is settled. Rickey Quits, Too Rickey has said he will not continue as general manager. But his contract has an arrange ment for Rickey to remain for five more years in an unspecified “advisory capacity.’’ Haney, however, has no doubt of the finality of the action. Speaking softly and without any indication of anger at the dis missal, Haney told a reporter: “I've been fired before and it’s no great shock. In this business you either do or you don’t; we didn’t. 50 million times a day at home, at work or while at play There’s nothing like a eOTTLEO UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY IT > COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF EUGENE 2000 Franklin Blvd. "Coke" li a registered trade-mark. O 1955. THE COCA-COLA COMPANY