The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 19, 1941, Page 8, Image 8

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    Sport
Sparks
By RON GEMMELL
Last Prep Pigskin Hocus-Pocus
As far as your correspondent
has been able to determine (and
he has peered I into the wood
shed, under the bed and into
the attic), there is no manner
by which a comparison between
Everett's Seagulls and Salem's
Vikings, who get together here
Thursday noon In a Turkey day
tussle, can be obtained . . . The
Gulls and Viks for some reason
have-simply refused to meet the
same opponents i. . . Possibly this
Is because the Gulls operate in
northerly Washington, in what is
termed the Cross-State league,
while the Viks vie for honors in
westerly Oregon in what is named
the No Name circuit but, being
mere sportster of sorts, your
correspondent wouldn't know.
On their record, however, the
Galls appear very touch guys,
Indeed, and especially so with a
football . . . The opponents they
tneet (and defeat) in their own
state are of such known strength
as to place the Gulls as the
Washington state high school
champions . . . Their victims
number such prep powers as
lloquiam, 28-7; Lincoln of Ta
coma, 18-0; Seattle Preparatory,
14-0; Yakima, 28-0; Walla Walla,
27-0; Belllngham, 38-19; and
Stadium of Tacoma, 13-0.
The Gulls, in fact, haven't met
with ol' debbil defeat in their
own league for two seasons now,
and their 21-18 setback by Butte
high of Montana last Friday was
their first loss in two full sea
sons ... At that, Butte came from
behind to best the Everetts, and
the margin of victory came through
conversion points rather than
touchdowns . . . Point-edly speak
ing, the Gulls have averaged ex
actly 23 points a game while hold
ing opponents to 6.1 points per in
winning seven of eight for the sea
son. O
r
If
-
If
' .y-
4 -
IScav?"
J-
1,
Brother Greens
"ft V,
For these "touchdown twins" it's the last high school football action
when Salem high tangles with the Everett Seagulls here Thursday
noon. They're Rex Hardy, left, and Dutch Simmons, the swift half
back duo of the Salem Viks.
Gulls Gonna Pay for Medf ord
Mishap, Say Salem's Vikings
It is no secret around the Salem high football camp that the
Viks, considerably crestfallen over their poorly effort at Med-
ford last week, Thursday plan to make the highly rated Everett
Seagulls pay for what the Pearpickers did to them if they can.
For 19 of the Viks, including nine of the 11 starters, Thursday's
mix will be the last high school football competition, and they
fully expect to make their final effort a noteworthy one.
Six members of the forward
16 Ounces Heavier?
The GemmeH - gotten - together
weight chart, which took 30 min
utes of good Pacific Standard time
to construct (and which therefore
will no doubt bring down a shaken
'fmger from the boss), reveals in
' ciear-cut American arithmetic that
the Gulls will present about the
same line heft as the Viks but
will have about eight pounds per
Lfl Gridders
Show Big Boys
Way to Do It
By MATT KRAMER
Associated Press Staft Writer
s
jtalistically Spealdn
41
Ira
Tins'
H
eap
Better
Cinch
Murals
Third Position
rrrv intk amtrac UTAvnrvoa
W L T Pet- Pf Pa
Parrish 5 0 1 1.000 101 la
Leslie i -3 2 1 .600 . 37 25
Greens , !JZ 3 1 .400 43 45
Reds .. ..0 5 1 .000 19 111
Gain More,,
Yards Than
Allow Less
'40
Champ
wall, Including End Rollle Haag,
center Bob Sederstrom, Tackles
Lloyd Griffiths and Ray Loter
and Guards Bill lind and Don
Page, are seniors, while three of
the four starting backs, Full
black Bud Coons and Halfbacks
Rex Hardy and Dutch Simmons,
will be playing their final prep
game.
Only End Jim Weneer and
Newport, Amity and Arlington Quarterback Owen Garland, of the
high school teams will give a les- number one eleven, will have fur
son in football durability to Ore- ther competition after Thursday's
a tm. cuisn wan tfte seagulls
" " nnnnJ ...ill
The minor powers, unbeaten in be dorming the red-and-black for
class B Dlav. meet in a series of tho int Hmo fnrinHa va vnTm-
man advantage in the backfield games that may determine the B ons, John Hoffert, Erwin Winken
. . . The line balance of power de- championship of the state. werder. Bob Barber. Willard Mc-
Amity started off the week by Claughry, Herby Booth, Bob Pal-
City Intramural league play
ended Tuesday afternoon when
the sophomore Greens further
cinched down third place by de
feating the winless Reds, 19 to 6,
on Olinger field. Tom Drynan's
Parrish eleven previously won the
title with an unbeaten, once tied
record.
Joe Holland's Red aggregation
completely outplayed the Green
eleven in the first half but Bobby
Daggett's boys scored one touch
down in the third period and a
brace of others in the final stan
za. The Reds mustered up a touch
down against second string oppon
ents in the fourth quarter.
After a sustained drive down
field on which Don Chapman,
Lester Purcell and Frank Car
rath carried the ball, the latter
scampered over from 10 yards
away for the first touchdown.
The conversion try from scrim
mage failed.
Purcell contributed the second
Green tally when he drove off-
tackle after John Dowd had inter
cepted a pass. Chapman hit center
for the conversion.
Carruth intercepted a Red pass
and ran 43 yards to give the
Greens their final pay dirt ad
venture shortly before the game
ended.
Following three successive
failures to complete a dead man
pass the Reds rolled to their
lone touchdown via that route
when Chester Teeter took in
Wimpy Carver's Wobbly pass
and raced SO yards to score.
Carver's scrimmage attempt for
the conversion was halted.
By GAIL FOWLER
SEATTLE, Nov. iMAnother dizzy twist to an upset
Parifff f-nast conference football season-tanford'a de-
fendine . chamDionshiD Indians are better offensively and de
fensively this year, than last, and yet the Indians are farther
awav from the Rose Bowl than a year ago.
The conference's official statisticians, the American iooiDaii
statistical bureau, disclosed in this week's compilations that the
Stanfords are the conference's leading team in total oiiense,
rushing offense and rushing de
pends upon whom Vik Coach Har
old Hauk starts at the right guard
slot, 179-pound Bob Palmateer or
149-pound Don Page.
! If it Is Pace, who has been
getting the call of late because
of his aggressiveness, then the
Gull forwards will hold a bal
ance of power of almost Jive
pounds per individual ... But
If Palmateer Is the starter, the
Salem line will aggregate 1243
pounds to Everett's 1244 pounds
a meague difference of exact
ly one pound or about l'i ounces
per man.
Paced by 18T-pound Gordon An
derson at quarterback, the Gull
backfield aggregates 677 pounds
to the Viking quartet's 645 pounds
-a balance of 32 pounds or an
even eight pounds to the indi
Vidual in favor of the Gulls,
Their comparatively heavy back
iield, coupled with the advance in
formation that they operate large
ly from
drubbing Dayton, 33 to 7, for
its ninth win of the season, and
will play Arlington, winner of
10 games, at McMlnnvllle
Thankgiving day.
Newport will wind up its regu
lar schedule the same day against
Toledo, and two days later will
meet Arlington.
The Dalles, one of the two re
maining unbeaten major schools,
will invade Pendleton Thanks
mateer, Bill Pettit, Harrison Wild
er and Ben Former.
Vik Harriers
Run at Hill
A seven-man Salem high sen
ior harrier team and one junior
entry compete in the annual Hill
giving day. Other standout Turkey Military academy cross - country
Hav amM win tfvprptt unrf. today in Portland, along
feated in Washington play, invade W1U B,fvc" 7"-uUi"'1 , "u
Salem, Pacific university freshmen DCV" " v i ,f B"""
at Corvallis, Roseburg at Ashland
and Albany at Eugene.
The Albany-Eugene game will
determine whether Albany climbs
into a tie for the No Name league
leadership with Salem and Corvallis.
The week's schedule will virtu-
Minnesota formations.
would indicate the Gulls' attacking ally wind up the season's play
iucj are largely oi me power
variety . . . They are known to
have plenty of speed, however, in
this lad Larry Hatch, whom Wash
ington observers are already boom
ing for future all-American, but
It is rather doubtful jf they can
boast any more, swift than the Viks
have to offer in Wingbacks Rex
Mardy and Dutch Simmons.
! o
fc Other Thanksgiving day
games: Hillsboro at Forest
Grove, Cottage Grove at Junc
tion City, Dallas at Tillamook,
Beaverton at Tigard, Marshfield
at North Bend, Sherwood at
Newberg, Rainier at St. Helens.
Weekend games: Canby at
Sandy, University high at Leban
Coach Vern Gilmore said his
senior team would, be headed
by Floyd Runyan, transfer
from. Montana, and Lettermen
John Hagan and Wallace Lang.
Keith Lang, Lloyd Merk, John
Bosch and Richard Jensen
round out the team. -
utan smitn, sopnomore, is
scheduled to run in the junior
event,
Hoop Officials
Exam Scheduled
Examinations for basketball of
ficials are scheduled at Salem
on, Enterprise at Joseph, West school November 25, at 7
Linn at Molalla, Scappoose at Hill
Military, Milwaukie at McMinn
Hating: 35.7-5.2
j Comparisons on the principals ville.
I uie Willamette-Whitman fracas
at Walla Walla Thursday are as
abundant as those on the Everett- A li;,rni, HIa-Mc
Balem game are few ... In beat- "JAY CI lYXOflllS
jng uie same lour conference op
ponents, tne Bearcats have amass
jed 190 points to 7 scored against
them while the Missionaries have
talked 47 to 28 against them .
This represents a difference in of
aciuivc pvwu wi no pomw ana a EUGENE. Ore.. Nov 1R-iP-
efensive difference of 21 points University of Oregon Coach Tex
gainst mutual opponents, both in
4k. Will tl-- I " -"
pm, it was announced Tuesday
by Director of Athletics Vern Gil
more
Officials holding 1940 cards are
not required to take the exam
ination, said Gilmore, but must
post their' fees with the AAU.
REDS (6)
McDowwell
White
Elwood
Widdows
Tomkins
Morgan
Cherry .
Teeter
Vogt
ogura
McHone ..
Official!
LE.....
.LT
LG
C
RG
.....RT.
...RE.
RH..
J
Kreutz. referee
umpire; Campbell, bead linesman,
3 '
(19) GREENS
Kowitz
Thompson
Wells
Smith
Gorton
Bisbee
. Zahare
Carruth
. Purcell
. Dowd
Chapman
orcutti
fense, and rank second in total
defense and forward passing de
fense.
' A year ago undefeated Stan
ford won the title with an av
erage of 286.4 yards per game
from rushes and passes. This
year Stanford has averaged
305.3 yards in its eight games,
yet two losses besmirch the
record. A year ago Stanford
held the foe to 181 yards per
game. This year they've kept
opponents down to 179.6 yards
in eight games, and only rank
second, California, their Novem
ber 29 opponent, being first.
Here's what the statistics show
on the other two bowl contenders
tied with Stanford:
Oregon State The Beavers
rank second behind Stanford in
total offense with a 240.7 yard
average per game from rushes
and passes. A tipoff on their pass
ing game may be found in tne
Gets Posies Along With Others
and p a s s 1 n g) Stanford, 305.3
yards average per game; Oregon
State. 240.7; Montana, 235.5
UCLA, 219.3; Washington, 216.6
Idaho, 19r.5; California, 190.33
USC. 183.8: Washington State,
182.9: Oregon, 171.9.
Rushing offense Stanford, 209
yards average per game; Mon
tana, 183.5; Washington 177.7
Oregon State, 164.9; California,
421.9; Oregon, 116.1; UCLA, 114;
Washington' State, 110.8; USC,
105.5; Idaho, 103.9.
Forward passing offense
UCLA, 49 completions of 121 at
tempts for 737 yards, and 105.3
yard average per game; Stan
ford, 96.3; Idaho, 87.6; USC,
78.3; Oregon State, 75.9; Wash
ington State, 72.1; California,
64.8; Oregon, 55.7; Montana, 52;
Washington, 38.9.
Total defense California, 175.8
yards yielded rushes and passes
per game; Stanford, 179.6; Wash
"pass intercepted" column. The ington,. 185.3; Montana, 197; Ida
Beavers have only had six tosses ho, 213.8; Oregon, 214.6; USC,
intercepted out of 110 attempts. 215.3: Oregon State, 216.3; UCLA,
They completed 47 for 531 yards, 216.3; Washington State, 223.6.
or a 75.9 yard average per game. Rushing defense Stanford,
The Staters have the fourth best 103.4 yards yielded per game;
punting team, but are only two California, 104; Montana, 107.1;
yards behind the leader, Oregon. Washington, 111.6; Oregon, 115.9;
In other classifications they're Oregon State, 122.1; Washington
pretty well down the line. state, 148.8; USC, 151.7; UCLA,
WASHINGTON The Huskies 159.1: Idaho, 170.3
are almost strictly a rushing
club. They're third in rushing
offense, averaging 177.7 yards
per game on the ground. And
they're third in total defense,
holding the enemy to 185.3
yards per game from rushes and
passes. But they're last in for
ward passing, gaining a mere
38 yards per game, and they're
last in punting, with a 33.80
yard average. They showed
signs of Improvement In these
last two Items In their Califor
nia game.
The figures:
Total offense (Gains rushing
Forward pass defense Idaho,
43.5 yards yielded per game;
UCLA, 57.1; California, 71.8;
Washington, 73.7; Washington
State, 74.9; Stanford, 76.3; Mon.
tana, ' 89.9; Oregon State 90;
Oregon, 98.7; USC, 99.5.
Punting Oregon, 39.83 yards
UCLA, 38.59; Oregon State,
37.47; Stanford, 36.91; USC, 36.67;
per punt; Washington State, 38.61;
Montana, 35.97; Idaho, 35.59; Cali
fornia, 35.38; Washington, 33.80.
0
Martin Bars tad, c-captain of the Willamette Bearcats, vha, along
with five other senior members of the cluo, received tne traaiuonaj
bouquet of flowers during the annual "Whip Whitman' banquet
Tuesday night.
'Whip Whitman' Speechsters
Warn 'Gits of Missionaries
With the cheers from Tuesday night's annual "Whip Whit
man" banquet still dinning in their ears, Willamette'! 27-man
football team entrains here tonight for Walla Walla, where it
tangles with the Whitman Missionaries in the traditional Thanks
giving day skirmish Thursday.
The 'Cats take with them the warnings of several banquet
speakers, who cautioned them that many Willamette teams in
past which were rated superior came back from Whitman nursing
the wounds of defeat
Bevos Battle
Montana Club
This Saturday
Parrish Meets
Jayvees Today
TT.J.i....J J 1 V. '
week's contest doesnt count on
unaeieatea, once-tied Farrish Oreeon State's conference .land
1 11- 1 At .1 "
niuK.es us aecona-annual anempt i mK
Speakers who thus warned
them, and others. Included As
sistant Coach Howard Maple, W.
L. "BUI" Phillip. Judge E. M.
Page and Paul T. Jackson, su
perintendent of the Chemawa
Indian school.
Coach Spec Keene thanked the
student bodr and band for the
OREGON STATE COLLEGE, I coooerition and loyalty shown
Corvallis, Nov. 18-(Special)-Ore- the team throughout the season
gon State's football team, leading ajded m the presentation of
tne race lor tne facmc coast con- the traditional bouquets to the six
ference championship, meets Uni- seniors of the team. For his Dains.
versity of Montana in Portland Spec also got a posy.
Saturday at 2 o'clock in a kings-x Seniors so "flowered" were
contest Montana Is a member of Gordon Moore, Martin Barstad,
the conference, but plays .only a Buddy Reynolds, Gene Stewart,
partial schedule, so that this Wally Olson and Irv Miller.
Registrar Walter Erkksoa,
principal speaker, beat his ei-
8 Salem. Orecjon. Wednesday Morning, November 19,1941
to scale a bit higher in the foot'
ball world when it tangles with the
Salem high Jayvees at 3:30 p. m.
j today on Olinger field.
Last season Tommy Drynan's
northend juniors were drubbed
32-6 in a post-season skirmish
with the Jayvees, but this year
think they're capable of returning
I the lefthanded compliment
There is no charge for the game.
Bowling
Scores
The Montanans have won six
of their eight games this sea
son, having dropped derisions
only to Washington and UCLA.
A victory over Oregon State
would be a tremendous upset
but not an Impossibility for
this Grlaxly outfit Quit Is said
to be the best out ol Missoula
In many seasons.
Oregon State goes into the bat
tle with five wins and two losses.
forts toward keeplag the gath
ering merry rather than wor
ried over what th a Bearcats
may or may not do at Walla
Walla.
Keene, whose boys have rolled
over four other Northwest con
ference foes about as they wished,
reminded them that this Is a
championship game and that they
can expect Whitman to play accordingly.
Named by Keene to the "on-to-
White Passes
Army Exams
DETROIT, Nov. 8-(-Halfback
Byron "Whizzer" White of the De
troit Lions of the National Foot
ball league passed his physical ex
amination Tuesday for induction
under selective service, but it was
disclosed that the former Colorado
all-America might enlist in the
naval reserve.
The chief clerk of White's
draft; board said the football
. player had applied for a naval
Intelligence post, reporting for
active duty after the close of the
professional football season. De
troit has games with the Chi
cago Bears and Cardinals.
The army medical examiner
pronounced the former Rhodes
scholar to be a "fine physical
specimen.
The Orangemen have victories Whitman" ter were:
over aianioro, wasningion, uau- Ends Bill Pr u.r.K.n
fornia, UCLA. and Idaho. They Barbour. Rill Kn r. -
n. . - - J J w in - : l I
w c i c uciuku uj Traauingion i Goodman.
state ana outnern California.
MERCANTILE LEAGUE
Glenn
Handicap - 58
Myers IBS
Walker
Bramel
DuU ..
Ashby
Total
Hosier
.12
1M
130
140
730
58
140
121
115
130
157
721
Goes to Los Angeles
136 144
Riches 14 145
Brown " 166 154
Walton ; . 131 161
165 110
744 6M
Saunders
Total .
UNIONVALE Mrs. J. W.
Monmouth
Handicap
Chimn
" . 1 - .1 . t - - . . 1 i I " r
r urrest xeii ior xjus Angeies in I cox
response to a telegram that her r"ily.
j Howard
aaugnier, Mrs. w . f. monroe, Dewey
had broken her leg and ankle.
Over Weather, That Bible (Texas, You Know) Can Take It
S?L , kmh. As Well as Dish It Out, Says Mr. Martin
Total ..
Valley Motor
Thompson
Misson
Farrar
Doerfler .,
ColweU
Total ...
108
144
148
162
100
113
775
168
90
154
156
139
705
Dividing four (the number of
mutual opponents) Into 143 and
21 (the offensive and defensive
difference, r e s p c e t Ively), the
comparative rating system would
Indicate the outcome of the tra
ditional game: Willamette 15.7,
Whitman 5.Z . . . Inasmuch as It
Is rather difficult to score either
seventenths or two-tenths of a
point In modern collegiate foot-
balL however. It Is probable even
Einstein would settle for U to I
which Is probably about rixht
at that.; r t -
By WHITNEY MARTIN
NEW YORK, Nov. lMSpecial
to The Statesman) -Those are bit
ter pills Dana X. Bible is swallow
ing these days,
juries, looked at the
Tuesday, and moaned.
He complained that a record-
hrealcinff rainfall had nrvmM
the football squad from all but 1Ul.u8h .they
two outdoor practices since the ar f -. Wlth
Armistice . day Santa Clara game.
Be added that' injuries of six
first-string players had failed
to respond to treatment, and
Oregon might have . to' use a
makeshift lineup against Wash
Ington at Seattle Saturday.
: "uwevcr, u;
I vi - w
a Si5,ooo-a-year
salary. Which is
plenty of sugar,
at that.
But the little
guy can take it.
Oh,- yei, he can
take it. ' He can'
While Willamette has wonekht I Frank Boyd. 'who has a knee to
Of the last nine meetings with I Jury,
Whitman, the Missionaries still
1 i
Jead In total
-since 1920
v 12-9 superiority, manufactured
number of vlctnriat
Whitman, enjoys shifts Lineup
SEATTLE, fcov.f 18-CrVUni-
'AtrW' verTashM
7eiS-t0 .iS?; ot an eyeful ot Oregotfir.offens.
Since 1523,
! Walla' colic
how ever, the Walla ivC .formations - Tuesday in ft
s!ar.s have wra tatU, .,..;ni i-
.cne-the . 8-7 thing in 1939, when p cfoF insi
Y.illamelie waltzed tovenough KT-A Ja.,-
3 ards to choke a Hitler but fum
tied the baU game away,
rjcaxail Uzn U .
niCKKEALL A. J. (Bud)
r..r?y was taken to the z Mc-
'rimnville-hospital as result, ol
series cf boils the Infection
settling in hij hand, Ramsey Is a
: guard at the penitentiary.
During the scrimmage, the "Ore
gon' lineup"" Wore heavy- pads-to
make the landing easier for var
sity tacklers And 'blockers.
In ne major lineup change,
Coach Jlmm y Phelan . said
Wayne Sterling, the happy Ha
waiian, would start at right
. tackle because k ef Us strsng
;, showsg In the California game.-
an 1 rt I " ri1
without lifting Kuam
his voice in a plaintive lleat to
blame dame fortune.
. We have watched him take It
many j times. There, was that
chin, bleak Thanksgiving- day tn
-1931 When he sat, a melancholy,
: forlorn figure, In the frighten
ing expanse ef Pitt stadhun and
watched the Panthers crush his
Nebraska" team, 49r to 0 prob
ably the worst llckmr a Bible
,team ever took :
. We recall it so distinctly because
he was the proud son that day.
His folks had come up from Ten
nessee or Kentucky to watch one
of his teams for the first time.
And we also believe that game
sprouted, his mania for speed, and
more speed. - .
"We are missing them by Just
that much," he explained, holding
his hands about 24 inches apart.
"Speed beat us." '
And there was the time, just
two" years later and in the same
setting, -that we watched a really
fine Nebraska team, which includ-
led Bernie Mastersorf end "George
Sauer and the ethers who as sopb-i
omores had suffered the ignomin
ious defeat, go down to a 6 ta 0
iossV:h '-?'. ': - v.. -
A Thkt .defeaif was even more
heartbreaking than the 40-0 deb
able." The kids - thought: they,
might win that one. They were
seniors, and It was " their last
chance to avenge the drubbing.
But it wasnt in the books. It
never was in the hooks "for. a Bi
ble-coached Nebraska . team to,
beat Pitt, which was riding along
on the crest of its mercenary pow
er under Jock Sutherland. Ties,
yes. . But moral victory has a
hollow ring.'-- .-j., "
- Sa It's no wonder the bald lit
tie man with the gentle manner
can -watch What seemed, to be a
phenomenal Texas team-held to a
tie one Saturday and defeated the
next and still kept on' an even
keel. .: . ' , : . -
It really is astounding the way
the Longhorns have changed-from
a wonder team to a wondering
team.' They scored 230 points In
when TCU saw what' Baylor had schachtsiclT
done , the TCU boys said to them
selves: -,'v- '" '' -
irThey can't be so tough. We
beat Baylor. Let's go get 'em."
They're just kids, understand,
even though about . nine ot the
Texans are married- In fact, one
Board Walk
Handicap
MiUer
Cross
Junta
their first six games. In their past ohison ZZ
Total
Dr. Semler
two they've scored a total of 14.
A ..psychologist possibly -could K?5fy
come up with a theory, -and using Mitchell
a little home-made psychology we Burton Z
Would guess that Baylor caught I
the Bible students when they were st7to?I
i i J- t..i:-.. i, vli i 1 1 .Handicap
ucsuiwug w uwoc eu. uuik tutu i MOrcan
beeju-written about them, and that "el
5
. 152
119
136
125
171
.. 699
Christensen
Total
Dr. Pepper
ErUgaard
Simons
Chapel
Warner
Jarvis.
TotaJ
135
130
113
166
172
70S'
51
133
136.
134
129
113
69
:i7s;
153 !
141
. 130
165
. 764.
108
156
13S
150
90
140
782
152
112
149
146
191
750
5
115
142
124
175
1(2
723
146
122
122
114
164
668
As has been his custom the past
few week. (" n r Vi Jjn Ktin.ii
58-174 :
114 390 pruwaoiy wm sena many urange
f It 2i5 Players into action Saturday.
us 379 Three full teams have seen play-
Jf jwsjing time in almost every game
this season.
After the California game at
Berkeley last Saturday, which
the Orangemen won 7 to a. Dr.
Del Allman, team trainer, said
none of the' players had any
serious Injury. George Bain,
first-string left tackle, is nurs
ing a face laceration, but this
will be protected la order that
he may perform against Montana.
The Orangemen probably will
159 463 go to Portland Friday for a work-
jui inn i ou that
177 507 r.
7142169 stadium.
tie.
109 389
130 421
170 470
167 459
131 406
7072145
ICS 324
173 473
95 381
134 446
110 309
168 431
7882343
148 466
123 325
Tackles Martin Barstad. Nell
Morley, George Constable, Andy
Rogers and Paul Cookingham.
Guards Gordon Moore. Wallv
Olson, Bob Bennett. Jim Fitzger
ald and Tony Fraiola.
Centers Pat White and Al
Barrett
Quarterbacks Jim Buraessacd
Ken Jacobsen.
.Fullbacks Al Walden. Earl
Hampton and Glenn Nordquist
Halfbacks Ted OgdahL Chuck
Furno, Gene Stewart. Buddv Rev-
nolds, Irv Miller and Cecil Con
ner.
Gervais Wilis
Hand Friday for a work- O 1? O
afternoon in Multnomah OlX Ol OGVGIl
scene of Saturday's bat-
S 15
109 376
162 423
128 378
169 469
149 483
7222144
Pilots Plan
Demise of
mLutefisk 11
133 404
150 402
150
117-
156 492
70S 2080
81
145
134
114
153
136
UtKVAlb Seventem r-,.T.
high gridders earned letters in the
recently concluded season during
which Gervais racked up six vic
tories in seven starts to run the
two-year record to 11 wins and
t"o losses. .
Gervaia 141 victory record
ads ever Hubbard. 2-t
ever.Silvertoa B, M-ft ever Me
WU B, 12-e ever St. Paul. 12-1
over St. John's and n.s ....
Weodburn B, The one less was
TACOMA, Nov. ?18--Port-
land university is so hepped un
51 153 over its chances of ending Pa-
104 376 citic Lutheran college's brilliant I -1 DTlna andefeated team,
119 367 I winntner ttr.sk" V-r-vi -4-14. -
137 4o I that a special train of Portland 1 B3ri who won letters include
735 -M4-m7 fans Will com to the game, Coach Z"0 Pal Srrolsky, Dan
178 151 504 1 Matty Mathewi Tuesday notified i y.yrge Jungwirth and Gil-
147
149
155 - 142 427
, 145 . 114 424
774 713-2251
?t j Cliff Olson, Lute coach.
axon. . oi ue
scribe referred to the TCU win Takayama .
as'. victory for. the single men gr.
over the married men. Tanak :
"And what a kid can do depends 2
a good deal on what he thinks he Total-IZ
can , doV and ' when these Texas 8eSlBdifi'
Christian boys replaced their awe Densmore.
of Texas with an "Aw, Texas" at- stietton
titude they were off to a running r
Start.. . .. Schrank -
1 Joe Iiouis opponents used to be i. ? ' "
licked before they got in the ring onid '
Kftfnr i mtimT At rirav anila Aim- I - JZ J "!
11?
110,
130 '
133
178
658
, 160
, 110
, 146
. 149
134
.088
1M ISO 440
110
159 J73
US S57
135 416
189 819
7582113
114
131
148
152
699.
covered it wasn't necessarily fa-1 McLaugbton
tal to get Jn there and try. Just hSSowT
unlortunate. ? ; ;v'V'.-:.;.:
,. Anyway, getting back to ear
Mr. Bible, when it comes to .
teaching reverses or taking them -'gracefully,
he ranks . with the
best. - - , '
Brown
Total .
Capital City
Kirchner
Hoard
?1
151
174
170
, 12S."
154
790
,115.'
128
Earl ChappcU a 159 -Wallace
- 144.
Woelke 181 .
Total- 737
36
181 ;
08
107
120
147
.059'
, -:i
'-It
- 10
170
155
149
.110
174
T74
12T
121
165 .
137
12S
web-footed
people who are going n te
watch Oregon play Washington
in Seattle Saturday plan to stop
eff la Tacoma Friday sight far
our ' little battle,' filled
Mathews ever the telepheae. "By
the way, hew are. year beys.
"Not so good," murmured Olson.
107 2&s I "Harshman's still in the hospital.''
iS- "That's too bad.-. Matty com-
lei 432 1 miserated. . : " -
"We're in the best shape ' this
season. u ;: .
Olson sent -his revamped La-!
theraa'SiaeBp through a long
werkeat -en deftnse ' against
PerUand's reckless aerial attack
Tuesday aftoraeea,Traaalag
Freshmaa Staa Grieb, Its, and
Senior gtaa Fries, 115. at the
fallback spot ta the absence ef
Mary Ttarsnman. : , .
i " ,"uiu B1JU UU
bert McCullough; Juniors Dale
Safer, Art McCalL Ben Andreas,
Bill Berringer, Jack St John,
Charles Range and Elmer Jorgen
sen; and Sophomores Dean Beost-
er, neriiyBering. Irv Cutsforth,
Ed Grassman. Carl Leonhart and
LaVeme .Zgxers.
100
140 490
2877
10 48
160 81
128 457
151 470
120 355
131 479
726-2290
130380
157 406
148 472
126 427
146 463
.7122140
ran
ii r k . . ... i
III V ; . - I
mmm I, I jA. MM m r-i Jl
Dr.X.TXaa. j.T DtA ChasuM JD.
: DEL CUAN LAM
ars Tr i tim.
a ear b B