The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, November 01, 1942, Page 12, Image 12

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11
e- - -
Churhirf Chuck Off to the Rac es in WU-CPS Homecoming Game,
Methodlist
?!
-: A - 77
1
Maicfiiiiie
-f "Had quits a time at St
piVxsHs-ir " frmm
tK vnrtc rv-n-t wets reallvifun: We had a ball team made
JJMMY ROBERTSON
11 '4Uii r,ln rrrani
Uil Li it? VllA Ul VilW yivvu
touch" self at the plate. They're
in a winter league , down there, so i-eiry .jacjc rucnaras wui
- rrai fVvaro in Ump. 1
- "But here at Pasco it appears I'm all through with base
ball for the duration. Not much time is allowed for athletics
an hour a day for exercises, but merely for exercises and not
sports.-' ' j
"This flying is great and
first solo hop last week and have about nine soio nours now.
We fjy the N3N and N2S trainers very light but sturdy ships.
' A little of the-Oregon "dew" got a bit far north the other day
and forced us to sit one p. m.
"Levi McCormick, (the Spokane Indian 'Chief'), is on thfe
football team here at the base and they say he's quite a hall
back. , Marty Martinez, (ex-Spokane and Portland player), was
also out as a halfback but hurt
hero-rrre snme doubts as to his
"Regards to the gang it's
Is that stuff rough!" .
' o
. Dallas, Dayton Has Ivory
Note 'fcr "Spec" Keene.
Lever et al." It would be well
see at one Roger Todd, who
and rlavs left end for Coach
How that .young giant can catch passes! When you look at
- those things: he calls hands
way home stop off at Dallas
Anderson. He has a fullback,
r could aive a brick well a battle. He's just a little fellow, too.
: standing only 6-foot-3 and weighing just under 200. Knows
where to go when out in the
might check on the blocking
' Dallas halfback. . This well-bult
high school docker we've seen in many seasons, and he loves
it. In fact the Dallas-Dayton game Friday was beyond a doubt
' Tthe hardest rock 'em-sock era engagement we, ve witnessed in
many moons, and either Dallas or Dayton would be well
recognized in; the No-Name loop. All three of these, boys, are
seniors, ;men, .and don't say we
The Most Discussed Fish
It's the fishermen with rod
' with nets come voting time on
Just-how we feel towards the whole thing doesn't make a heck
' cf a lot of difference. We like to hear the tales of the local steel
, head, battlers, ot the big ones thy caught and the bigger ones
' that got awav of how they stood
waiting for the strike which would set 'em on fire. That's fun no
' end, as we caught a steelhead once and it's great sport Accord
ing to these sportsmen steelhead angling will soon be just so
many memories of how it used to be if the bill fails. .
Then we read where the state game commission endorses a
vote of "No" on the bill. Where the men who are fighting in for
eign lands will be denied to sortie extent; fish foodstuffs if the
measure is passed. Where the whole fishing industry in Oregon
will go to pot if her voters endorse the bill.
-You weigh each claim . ccn-efully,: listen first to some silver
tongued orator who's for it and who gives you facts and figures,
end then to some leather-lunger who blasts the whole thing 40
bits with mere facts and figures. When they're through Mr. -and
Mrs. Voter jare right back where they were before th bill even
came up-on the hedge.- , ' - ;,Cf
Surely mere must be some way to. give the sportsmen their
game-fishing and the commercial boys their salmon catches be
sides turning the whole issue over to Mr. and Mrs. Voter, who,
for the most part care nothing c&out fishing or how they are
caught " . -'- C" .
Georgia
Michigan Mauls
Illinois, 28-14 ;
ANN ARBOR, Mch.; Oct SI.-(-Michigan
swirled through
highly-regarded Illinois tor .four
touchdowns . and administered to
the Blinl a drubbing every bit as
decisive as the 28-14 -score. before
a happy - throng of - 33,000 - here
Saturday.; ?;i 'x
I , Coach ..Fritg; CrislersV olyer?
ine surging back from sT defeat
by .M i n n e s o t a1-a . week 'ago,
cracked the: Tllini ;defensesfor
touchdowns In ' every "quarter 'In
giving Coach Ray Elliot's fregurw
. gent eleven Its first western "con
ference beating of the season.;
Plane' Second Best in v " .
Argument With Hunter
KAJLISPE1X. Mont, Oct. tl-(iff5)-An
i airplane that made the I
mistake of flying over a dock
blind flattered sway with Its "
wing full of buckshot. It was
disclosed In Justice court Friday
wiih the arralrnment of Dallas
Ecklun J on a charge of Injuring
an airplane.
Ec&Iond was fined $1C9, but
tie amount was ; suspended
r. hen he said he merely fired In
T.e air to warn the pilot there
vs. a duck hnnter there, sd
t " t l.ftil pali for tie &ua-
fs. . - -
Mary's pre!UghCi,writes Avksflon
his new station at Pasco, "and
up oi oincers ana caaeis wiuai
1 I A l I L
was a i pretty, lair , country,
club. Lt Gg) ; Paul Gregory,
YSeattle Rainiers). Avas one
rtvirhes and also OUT, top
pitcher. Li Gg) Jesse Hill.-(ex-.
' Trojan football great and later
an Oakland and New York
s'YrmVee outfielder), was our
T . -'- , -- i - t . . . .
other coacn ana piayea cenxer
field. Cadet John Uebomez
he tilaved with Kenny Qow
and Curly Leininger down In
Bisbee in 41 was another
our players along with a num
ber of former Cautornia, UOT-A
and TjSC stars. I got to catch
cUnrro Villt WfTS TT1V USTial SOfl
..Mwf ' - -
planning on entering the team
, ! i".
t
I'd surely sold on it. Took my
on . the ground, but orainariiy
his snouiaer quue oacay ana
future in baseball. !
now back to the . . , and boy
Worth Scouting
Lon Stiner, John Warren, Henry
worth your while to' have a. look-
stands 6-feet 5-inches, weighs 190
Ted Hippi s Dayton hign gridders.
you 11 see why. Then on your
and look up one Coach O. E.
George LeFevre by name, who
open, too. While you're at it you
by one CapL Snuify bmith,
youngster is the most vicious
didn't warn you.
in Oregon'
and reel against the fishermen
the well-hashed steelhead bill
shivering on the bank ior hours
Rally Stops
Sinhiyich Slings
Mil mjusl r rame tot wui
' ATLANTA, Oct 31-P-Georgia dash and Georgia daring,
personified by aU-Anerica - Frankie I Sinkwick'and his j pais.'
snatching' partner, George Poschner, took the measure of' a great
-rtiaDama xootDau team, 21-1U,
Linfield Licks
Wolves,-7-0 ,
rffUnfieldjroilfgt;. defeated
Halfback, Bill, Stewart plunged
oyer for. the touchdown on three
plays from the . J 0-yard , line the
third period. He, converted. "
Ortiz TKO Winner
Oyer! Nat .Corum f .
HOLLYWOOD, O ct 1
Manuel Ortiz, NBA-recognized
world's bantamweight champion,
won a sixth round technical
knockout Friday night over Nat
Corum, Portland, Ore., Negro in
a ' see-saw non-title bout, Ortiz
weighed 120, Corum 121 la.
Ortiz, of El CentroCalit; had
Corum standing helpless, hands
dangling, when the bell ended the
fifth-round. , ;
gonpiaege or Jucatton sat-i ftTxailmg6-ld;: going; into1? fbk
SftaU game ' - 1
f0SSS.SmJf:t .tH:-. -.Jnectedfor touchdowns to his ohd
iAiiiujia: n 1 ftLsPwarx mimffswi 1
y.
CHURNEV' CHUCK FURNO. Willamette nniTcnlty halfback, cancht
by the, camera while takinc a 14-yard jaunt In the third Quarter of
the homecoming- football battle between the Bearcats and Collere
of Paget Sound on Sweeiland field Saturday; In front of jthe play
and ready to block out Lorter Bill Grerory Is Tackle Andy Rorers.
In far background (left). Is Logger Capt. Bob Mayeumber, while
far right la George Constable, Willamette; guard, : who has Just
blocked out Austin Fengler (In
of the chief Bearcat threats of
lower photo members of the
their favorite team driving toward the Logger goal.
Scdom, Oregon, Sunday
WebfootsWoUope
By Bears;
By RUSS
BERKELEY, Calif., Oct.
Bears clung to a slim but mathematical chance for the Coast
conference football championship
tory over University of Oregon
the losing team provide the indi
vidual star.
Tom Roblin, a blocking quar
terback miscast for the position,
furnished the game's outstanding
highlight in a third period drive
that saw Oregon hopes kept alive,
temporarily. Coming back from
the half time rest, with California
leading 13-0, Roblin was switched
Ore.1
Calif.
10
143
18
- S
74
5
31.5
122
1
:4S
First downs
..8 i
Yds. gained, rushing, net 118
For. passes attempted : 17 :
For. passes completed 1 i
Yards by far. passes ... 11 :
for. passes intercepted 1 !
Punt. ave. from scrimmage 31
Total yds. kicks returned 68
Oppo. fumbles recovered . 1 i
Yards lost penalties S1J
z r r
to fullback and personally led an
attack that netted a touchdown
after a 67- yard march. He packed
the -ball 11 times for a total gain
of 57 yards to, finally smash, over
from the two yard marker .
The W e b f o o t s actually ad
vanced the oval 69 yards, because
Roblin's team mate and the only
other man to carry the ball dur
Two Sifiks
before 33,000 dizzy-fans with a
sensational -fourth-period attack
Saturday: t: : i .-3,1 1
It wag i Georgia's seventh
straight victory "of me season, and
the BulldogV 13th In a row ; since
ibaina; humbled Jhem
timeTfoungstown 0.) school boy
inu 10 nuri DacK4uie crimson tide.
Thenar Anir. thidish, substitute
halfback, sloped"; an-Alabama
fumble out "of the sir to score' the
coupe "de grace.. Leo -j Costa,
Georgia's T place-kicking expert
booted the extra points.: I . f
' ' " j '.
WCETies Lutes l! J
"TACOMA, Oct 3L-iT-A fa
vored Western .Washington col
lege of Education' team came from
behind to score "a' ttiird. Quarter
touchdown and gain it 7-7 tie with
Pacific Lutheran college In their
Washington , intercollegiate J con
ference football game here iSatnr-
daywi-:,4-
- ... . -.
Crira
ago. ( m ot Alabama it .. was- the
front of Constable). Furno; was one
the day. Willamette won, 33-2. Ie
Bearcat band and pep corps watch
AL LIGHTNER
SUtMmu Sports Editor
Morning, Novombor 1. 1942
Roblin Stars
NEWLAND
SM - University of California's
Saturday with a 20 to 7 vic
in a bruising encounter that saw
ing the thrust, lost two yards on
one try. . ' I
The Bears, however, held game
control most of ; the way. They
started with the; opening j kickoff
and plunged ahead 100 yards for
the first touchdown. ;
! - I
Frank Porto,, fUllback, received
the opening kickoff at the goal
line and charged back 40 yards.
From there he and Jim Jurkovich,
often-injured left halfback who
came out all in one piece Sunday,
alternated at off tackle j rushes
and sweeps at the end. to: get up
to the two-yard line. Jurkovich
varied the attack once,: however,
by whipping a pass to John Fer
guson, right end, good ; for 10
yards. .'
Porto went over ' for. the' first
touchdown. For the ' balance of
the first half the' Bears were in
command. A pass interception
gave them the ball on Oregon's 28
late in the first period and they
crossed the northern- goal after
switching sides-for-the second
(Continued on Page L3) ,
son Tide
Flyers Waylay J
.WALLA-WALLA, Oct 31 UP)
Pasco's ' - Naval Reserve 4 Flyers
struck . twice on land and twice
through the air. for a 27-11 vic
tory ; over ; Whitman college here
Saturday. Marv . Harshman, lit
tle ail-American fullback - from
Pacific Lutheran, figured in both
departments,' In, scoring,, . together
witii stellar work by Art Ahonen,
former husky . halfback7 and Levi
I McCormack, . former WSC " half,
now witn the Flyers.
1-
Toronto, Montreal '
Win'Hockey Openers
TORONTO, . O c V 31-r(ff7T h" e
Toronto Maple': Leafs ouilayed
uie New York Rangers all the way
Saturday, night to score an easy
7-2 victory .'In their bpenmg game
of. the National . Hockey 1 league
season, before a crowd of 11,777.
- r.-T-...'. .-;
MONTREAL, Oct 31-tfPV-The
Montreal Canadiens won their Na
tional Hockey league opener Sat
urday nigh t, capturing a fast
moving game from the ;Boston
Bruins, 3-2, before a packed house
in the forum.'; Maurice Richard,
the Canadiens only rookie, made
his debut in the game and assist
ed in Ttls team's first goat ' -'
i 1
l-A
- V
i
OSC Bows
Hiisldes Humble
On Long Gallops; Day Stopped
By JEM HUTCHESON
SEATTLE, Oct. 31P-Two spectacular long distance touch
down thrusts gave Washington a 13-0 football victory over Ore
gon State on a slippery field Saturday, to keep alive the Huskies'
slim Pacific Coast conference title hopes. T 1 !
A crowd of less than 7000
substitute halfback from Taco
ma, break; the ice in the second
period to send the Huskies along
the victory path with a brilliant
ly executed 87-yard touchdown
run. 'i-
Washington added a-touchdown
In the third in a 46-yard pass play
from Halfback Bob Erickson to
L-Sam Robinson, the . high-geared
right half. Robinson, taking the
SEATTLK. Oct 31 JAP) The
orescm state college-Washington loot
oau stausucs:
OSC
Wash.
First downs : 12
11
258
4.
i
'.
L 13
Yds. gain, rushing (net) 118
For. passes attempted 14
For. .passes . completed S -
Yds. by forward passing 35
For. passes intercpt. by 1
Yards gained run-back.
ox intercepted passes . 0
Punt. ave. (from scrim.) 37.7
Total yds., all kicks retrn S6
" 39 .1
S3
0
IS
Oppo. fumbles recovered 1
Yds. tost by penalties ilO
ball on a perfectly timed toss as
he raced across almost parallel
with the line, ran 30 yards to
score without an Oregon . State
tackier touching him,
The up-and-down Washington
eleven was geared up forthls
game, and its break-away run
ning, hard, charging and alert ball
hawking brought it the' margin of
Victory...,. - '
field conditions called for a
battle of hard-socking plungers of
the powerhouse fullback type but
strangely enough, it was the end
runs, wide off tackle slants 'and
aerial thrusts that , brought most
or ine yardage gains.
Washington almost . completely
bottled up" Joe Day; the highly
touted Oregon State line" smacker.
Walt j Harrison,-. Washington's
candidate ; for all-American : cen
ter honors, stood head-and-shoul
ders above the.' field, in defensive
play. - x ' yxr-i;
He tackled In , deadly -. fashion
and figured in just about three-
fourths of the Washington tackles
while he was In the game.
Insert Beavers Threaten' 10 PT n
Oregon ; State threatened ; only
once. That was In !a drive : that
started late In the third and car
ried over into the fourth period.
With successive downs, the; Bea
vers treyeied ;.from t their own 20
to Washington's S before they lost
the ball with' a' futile, fourth down
pass. Rill Mcinnis .-as the irjark.-
plug of the'OSC drive as he per
sonally; accounted- fori 5 yaws,
Including theT15-yard dash.;
Oregbri:vSia4held-a -12--11
edge .on-JSrst- downs, v'ii i V v i . c ?
Ozcgon: sitat e" ad.; difficult
throughout: the sme, In : hanging
onto .the -ball, and frequently its.
- (Continue on Page 13) -
Brother Finn Meets:, j,
Brother Finnr-Poitl ;
ASTORIA, .Orei OeV ll-VPi
Jee and John Clckey, twin bro
thers, played on opposing teams
Friday as Astoria defeated the
Seaside high .school football
team, 34-.
Joe Is Astoria's quarterback; .
John, a guard for Seaside. Each
was appointed captain for the
game. -
vThe Hlckey family moved
from Astoria this faXL John en--
tered Seaside hirh- school,' bat
Joe decided to"
13-0
1 :
Beaver Eleven
i
4"
saw shifty, speedy Gene Walters,
Quaieis rush
Cadets liFrbm
By GAYLE TALBOT
PHILADELPHIA, Oct 3 !.-)-
Venn's power -packed, football
force bided their time for two
periods Saturday and then struck
swiftly and surely three times in
the second half to dump Army
from the list of the nation's .un
beaten teams 19-0 before an esti
mated throng of 68,000 in Frank
lin field. ! f, . '
, Two, Quaker touchdowns , result-
ed from pass interceptions deep
in Army territory. Army's vaunt
ed offense,', which had clicked so
effectively j In four previous
games, was stalled at every im
portant stage by Penn's forward
walL J;.
Penn struck first early in the
third quarter, when ; Halfback
J ohn Welsh intercepted an ill-advised
pass ; by Army's Captain
Hank.Mazu and rah. it "back 3$
yards; to : the Cadets!.- four yard
line before j being , hauled down.
Bert Stiff, jthe Quakers abrasive
fuUbac cfack;ed 'across the line
on his third attempt ' -? " v : "
tes
CnLEVZLAND. Oc-iL-fvlrloi'
tre-Dame's fighting . Irish, beaten
and tied Jn! early-season contests,
continued On. the ' comeback trail
to. the Jfootball, heights Saturday
by. def eating a. i stubborn Navy
eleven 8 .to .O for ; their 4 fourth
straigbt conquest X, ,
.The Notre Dames struck for a
tpuchdown lirtl the first two min
utes of the seeond 'period, sending
their ."pitching' quarterback, An
gelo'BertellL jDver froml'lhe oni
yard line on ri. snealr; lay after a"
ou-yara marcn.- They, lynched, It
with all7-jrd field ' goal i from
placement; laf the-; fourth;; session
Ddlfclv-iS
FOREST. GROVE. Ore- ' fVf si
H)r"CcUge ot.H Idaho 1 staved
oft. ..repeated--; Pacific imlversity
threate Saturday to hold the" fav- i
ored Badger to a scoreless tie In t
norcnwest conference football
game.-. c: -T.,: -. s . '
Funback i Sprangle of PstUr
engineered inarches that kept the
Badgers .on.Idaho ground most cf
the game, but couldn't dent tv,.
line near,, touchdown territory.
Silverton Bows, 14-0
" CHEMAWA-f-The Chemawa In
dians downed, the Silverton Silver
Foxes, 14-0,. here Friday afternoon.-
r ' ' ' " ' -
List
a ;-
Sliows Powei-. "Flii's -.-
" 1 , 1 . " I - - l . , .
: Ogdahlj 'Furno.' pbiiglas Loose .
;J Surprising Sc6reBfirige Against ;
Mired Down Lumber jacli Eleyen
"i ' . By 'ALl LIGJITNER f :
It was a sorry: day Saturday i or- the wise guys who claimed
this was the year to knock Willamette from the- Northwest con
ference), football throne, and claimed College of Puget Sound wag
the team tSdo it, as the Bearcats called on a little of everything
in the bookv made it all work t perfection and crushed the hog
gers under 'anJ avalanche-like score-of-33-2 on Sweetland field.
Bruins Sweep
Over Stanford
;20-7
,: -
'SAN ntANCISCO. Oct: 31 ( AP)-
Pacific Coast conference football
standings: i
W LTdPfPa
UCLA I , .3 0 0 71 14
Washington
Stat
4
S .
.3
o lis
Washington
1 69
Stanford I,
California .
Southern California
Oregon State ..,;, ,
Oregon
Idaho ,i
75
47
J
1
J
-1
1
.0
32
64
42
28 114
Montana ,
16 124
By FRANK FRAWLEY
LOS ANGELES, Oct 31 (JF)
The battling Bruins of the Uni
versity of California at Los j An
geles swept aside another ' barrier
in their drive to a Pacific Coast
conference football title Saturday
by soundly thumping . Stanford
university,' 20 to 7. -
Titty five thousand spectators
saw the game.
Outweighed 15 pounds to, the
man in the line, UCLA neverthe
less outplayed the ' Indians' In all
departments and' the score easily
could have been larger , .but ;for
the penalties that stopped promis
ing drives. " ' ; ; . ''V; ; ;-4T : ;
UCLA won the came : with a
sharp1 passing attack, Quarterback
Bob - Waterfield - throwing - and
Halfbacks Al j Solari and ? Vic
Smith catching,-but it had to come
from behind to1 beat' the. heavier
and slower Stanford team which
turned - Bruin fumble Into a
touchdown seven plays after the
Opening kickoff.
Ev Riddle, UCLA halfback.
fumbled on his 28 as he returned
tile initial kick, and Rog Laverty,
Stanford end, 1 recovered... Buck
Fawcett and Willard SheUer, al
ternated at the tackles and Sheller
soon was across . into pay dirt
Henry Norberg converted.-;
ii took the stunned Bruins a
long time to get their attack' go
ing but in the r second quarter
Waterfield found the Indians were
not covering their right halfback
defense area properly and from
the 40-yard line he threw a bul
let-like pass to Solari,.' who, stiff
armed Bob Frisbee : and ran 32
yards across the goat Ken Snell-
ing converted to tie the score.
From there it was all UGLA. .
Success!
f '
u
See what can happen when yon
cast off the bank at the month
of the SBets? That's how - Mrs.
Lereta MIHer Roseheun,1f Sa-
. lem, hooked .the 35Vi-POund
, Chinook she's shewn holding. A
twenty-minute battle ensued
and what blisters! Incidentally,
. It was the only one caught be
tween her ad her hosband, so
,rshe Clint go along last for the
lniuns
For the first time this
season '
Coach ."Spec" Keene's Reds looked
like the powerful juggernaut of
old and proceeded to push thfs
Sounders all over a gridiron that
would have been a paradise for
Porky Pig. r : - -
- Five counting touchdowns and
another ' which 7 was ' called back,
late in the second quarter because
of a clipping infraction went
zooming across the previously un .
beaten Lumberjacks goal during
the bitterly contested homecom
ing tilt 1 while : the . only scoring
Puget Sound could muster against
Statistics. 1 CPS-WlIlamf t game : i
WU -----i CPS
247-rYards sained scrimmage 31
- s Yards lost i scrimmage .
t 15 Passes attemDted : l
'l.
10 Passes completed
m.
2 -Passes had interceded
ioo i sros gained passes
405 Total , yds., pass and scrim
r iri oowm scrimmage
I First downs penalties
i J rotai first clowns
45 Number scrimmage plays 24
4 Number ot - punts -., tt 7
34 Average lengUi - ' . -,. , , ;, , aa;
21 Average length returns , , if
1 numntr ot penalties
65 Yards lost penalties
3 Fumbles ;
2 Fumbles recovered
the 'Cats, hard-charging line was
on a fumble of an extremely elu
sive ball by Rd Hardy which
eventually slithered out of his
own end .- zone for - an automatie
safety in the second period.' .
. .The; Bearcats accomplished the
rout with - only "intermittent help
from their super-charged fullback, !
Capt 'Teddy Ogdahl, a the hard
running back vfras forced fronjf
the game because of a hurt to his
already injured; ankle midway in
the opening period and saw only
part time action thereafter.
Ogdahl Chief I Gainer' I .
Even at that Ogdahl packed the
leather; 20 times for 117 yards to
lead the 'Cat offensive. And when
he went out Churin' Chuck Furno,
Bob Weaver, j and "Hula" BoT)
Douglas tciok" over in a big way,
Furno's ,man - in - motion dashes
and returns of CPS! punts kept the
Bearcats In Puget r territory mosl
of the afternoon. Weaver's bat
tering lunges , gained 53 yards in
nine ; attempts and ; Douglas com
pleted : eight of 13 1 aerial thrusts ,
despite a ball Which .invited any
thing but passes. ' To make the
Willamette ozone threat all the
more impressive; Cecil fChief
Connors hit his target twice in as
many attempts to give the Keene
men a pitching percentage of .667
for their day's work. . ; .
On the ground the 'Cats gained
247 yards to the Loggers' 27, and
those figures represent Just abou4
how badly CPS was outclassed,
The I Logger attack was built
aroun'the passing of Bill McMas
ter and;" Jack Spencer and the
lightning-like thrusts of the lat
ter, but the . surging -. Willamette
forwards gaye nothing, to speak oi
through the link and the vaunted
j: CPS passing attack . was complete- '
ly submerged. . ; -vk' -
In4fact it was" a wobbly Puget
pass "which- gave the; "Cats .their
t second touchdown late in the itirst
wivruiirrna .owanson let fly
on his ewn 20 after, being, .badly
rushed, but ..the ball got only as
far, as Ken Jacobsen'f outstretch-
JJted hand on the 27 attd ."Jake" gal-
: loped over from . there, i
'Furno Gees Over
The 'Cats had previously scored
'after'si 47-yard march midway in
; ue period.- Two aerials by Doug-,
i las, the first to Dave Kelly for 15
f yards and the . next to Furno fee
i 9"s VQit V,mmVi4 4 V. 4.' it.
six, and after i a luie , buck by
Weaver; gained two, " Furno scoot-
ed around his left end on a vary
deceptive play and wound up in
the end zone untouched., Weav- '-,
ers placekick was good for- e 7-0
iconi::;V.:.;Cv:.;;:'V'.:- -
1 1. Another Intercepted CPS. aerial . .
i t set- up the third . score which1 came ;
'- only: three ? nlayi i i Jtt ter the T sec- -
uondi-'Cst leucheJownl; .V. ; -. . -.-V
1 1': McMasters-brought" Andy Hog'-
ers kickre-ft-out to1 he 3L. fcut on
th,e -fiFstsciunage. play -Douglas f- ;
uitrcerjte;Spencer's'pass-o the
34sif fouht-Wr way i; back':, to V'.
the ouners .lSllila made
three1 'Sver eftf ilklf and;; then .
on a delayed reversev Connors. .to
' Furno, Cuck rambled around left -
i sziiyt r tut - j ati 4iu uic , nw .
i -Weaver-;lsO :kicked-tm'-converr 4
tsion to' make it 20-0, and it . was
very apparent that CPS, had run
up .against a , team that was siz
zling despite the weather. ,
yty:'-1 ;rr -Losrgers
Threaten . -,
But the Loggers' aerial threats,
which had wound up In two
touchdowns for , Willamette, now
began to click. , With Spencer
pitching and Swenson doing most
of the catching, the Sounders ma
neuvered to the 'Cat 10 before be
" (Continued on Page 13) :
V.
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