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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 12, 1942)
t i -- - . i - -- , ' gs Mo M ? to'OWim Axemen to 'Meagre Fred Hampson, Aypee man in the Portland bureau, asks our nominations for Willamette . Little-All-America candidates if any of the WU boys are worth nominating. if: r Well, we have one worth V I :4 TEDDY OGDAHL three games thus far, thanks to a j war-caused hit-and-miss schedule he's averaged just a shade; under six yards gain for every time he's parried the ball this fall, and has taken more jaunts up and down Sweetland than , the school gardener with his lawnmower when and j if Sweetland ever had a lawn. : In the season's opener against Port land "university's high-flying Pi lots Ogdahl ; scored two - touch downs, one on a 97-yard kickoff return through the entire Port land team. Accounts of that game were well annointed with the name Ogdahl from Portland by the way. 1 I v Lin field Remembers j The Linfield team came next and "held' the 'Cat leader to 186 yards in 27 tries, just over three time3 as much as the whole Lin field team could gain against Wil lamette. Teddy racked up two more touchdowns in that fray, bucked a conversion and passed to End Dave Kelly for another. Incidentally, about that last con version. Just a sample of his heads-up play can well be brought out right there. The conversion was actually a -placement try, but was blocked. Ogdahl scooped up the ball, started wide, saw he was trapped so -calmly picked out Kelly - and , shot a strike at him in the end 'zone. And bits of the old heads-up play such as that have accounted -for many a close rctory. ! ) -. Far instance, Billy Sewell "-"personally gave Washington ; State a 14-13 victory over Stan-, ford last year on the same kind of noodle work. Stanford's Milt Yncinich broke through to block Joe Beckman's attempted place kick for the 14th point, bat alert Sewell rabbled up the botmcinr oval on thervn and carried It across with what proved, to be what won the game. j Injured Ankle and All But back to Ogdahl. During the three-week lapse in the Bearcat schedule Teddy came up with a badly sprained ankle and missed almost two full weeks of practice. The "important date with College of-Puget Sound was coming jup and at that, particular .time it luu&m a u -wv v5uoi v ' .... It looked even worse - when jhe limped off the field only five - minutes into the game with the score at 0-0. But after that ball game was over and the statistics were figured up,. Ogdahl, bad an kle and all, had lugged the football 0 times for 120 yards, scored another touchdown and had ac tually romped to still another which was called back on a penal ty! That was nearly two weeks ago and he's still favoring that ankle, which only points out the guy has what it takes on the in side as well as outside Of coarse Ogdahl'a freshman and sophomore years mean nothinr to JhU season's elef tions, bat just a glimpse of a few statistics compiled by the fiery 'Cat while a man-In-m-tion member of Keene's Jaggef nant ot 'lL Be carried 43 times and passed me for sevea yards which in all resulted la a net gain of 381 yards almost lH yards per attempt. S a c h aa average bested the marks of Al Waldea, Gene Stewart and Bad Reynolds and was second only to Chaek TarnoV tH Per- to 1940 Ogdahl led the teas tn scoria, aad last year hi eight taocbdowBS brought hint to third. Re ap to this year 17S-. pound Teddy na be, well learned in tho art of eing Broivns and HatvUs Victors Parrish 'Mural GrufLoops Plavfag through the entire season without a single defeat, Huehie Bellinger's Browns and Dick Hendrie's Hawks won the evfn and eighth grade touch football league championships at aevenjn Kfi halves of their league, thus mak- lsnTlsn J&aun . - lng no juayciia Th. imii wtnttor games and tied ene to each half ef the. seventh grade play. The Bines, losing only to the Browns, fin ished second each time. Oa the winning Brown team were Bel linger, Warren Osborne, DaTey Chamberlain, Darwin Kerber, Beanie Csanmings, Ted Roake, Bruce Boatman, Charles SUab, Eldon Shaffer, Dale Greenlee, Cyril E3;f GranvCle Perkins, and Charles Andresea. ' 1 Warren Osborne, Browns, . and Bill BrunkaL Blues, tied for Jeague sterol honorawith 44 points apiece Davey Chamber lain, Browns, had 35 points for third place. The Browns scored 109 pcdnt3 to their opponenU 23 during tie season. 'YJ-m r--l:s won lrre games anJ 'L- tvo-U eZ;e aut the nominating he's Fullback Capt. Teddy OgdahL who we agree 1 with Coach "Spec" Keene, could i play in anybody's backfield. 1 Keene made the statement j awhile back that Ogdahl was as ' good a back as there was on the coast including Tommy Rob 't lin of Oregon. And when a gent 1 like Keene, - who's been in the coaching racket as many years as he has, makes a statement like that you can bet the euy in mention rates a nomination to the Little-All-America team. What's Ogdahl done? Briefly would have to be brief as he has played in only Yard-Gaining Marks Doomed : ; By DAVE HOFF CHICAGO, Nov. ll.-(-Each week of the waning football sea son convinces the American foot ball statistical bureau that it will be forced to draw a big blue pen cil through its three prize yard gaining records when the college campaigns end. Right now Hardin - Simmons' Rudolph "Little Doc" Mobley Is a cinch to s h a 1 1 e r the existing rushing figures. Frank Sinkwich of Georgia is virtually a sure bet to wipe out the former total of f ense , high, and Paul Governali of . Columbia has a good chance to mark up a new passing record. Sinkwich Threatens The statistical bureau pointed out these tottering marks Wed nesday: TOTAL OFFENSE (combined rushing and passing): the record is 1,928 yards by Bud Schwenk of Washington U. (St Louis) in 1941. Sinkwich has 1,619 yards in eight games and has two to play if he keeps up his present pace his final total will be 2,023 yards. RUSHING: The record Is 1,121 yards by Byron "Whizzer" White of Colorado in 1937. Mobley has traveled 1,033 yards in, six games with three to play at that rate his final mark will be 1,549 yards. Governali Is Close PASSING: The record is 1,457 yards set by Davey O'Brien of Texas Christian in 1938 and tied last year by Bud Schwenk. Gov ernali has passed for 1,197 yards in seven games and has two to play indicating a season's total of 1,539 yards. Catching up to the three offen sive leaders has proved a futile job but the runnersup are com piling formidable yardage fig ures. ; Governali trails Sinkwich in total offense with 1,304 yards, 107 by rushing and 1,197 by pass ing. Bill Dutton of Pittsburgh is third with 1,120 yards, Roy Mc Kay of Texas fourth with 1,066 yards and Evans of Kansas fifth with 1,055 yards. Cifers Leads Kickers Bobby Cifers of Tennessee re mained as the leading punter with a 44.96 yard average for 28 kicks. Second is Joe Colone, Penn State freshman, with a 43.8 yard average for 25 punts. .- Cullen Rogers of Texas A and M continued to set the pace In pass catching with 27 good for 340 yards. John Ferguson of Cal ifornia pulled down 23 aerials for 296 yards. places and doing things with a footbalL And so far this fall he's been cctting As la his plk ' skin lessons. As a team captain he has to bow to do on e effervescent spirit, hustling all the time, well re spected, and a perfect gentleman on the ' field at all times. Yep, Mr. Hampson, we noml aate Capt. Teddy Ogdahl for little-All-Amertea honors he's s real football player. - Docks for the second half eirhth - .... ' . MM n m . 1 A graae uue. iae sw wu second place when they were ; upset 1 te by the Eagles to their final rame. The Hawks ; nd Docks tied for the first half, and the Hawks wen the playoff 'game. Members ef the Hawks are Hendrie, Stanley Bacon, Dick Bennett, H1B, Dwalae Gra ham.' Walter Foster, Jack Mc Donald, Donald Perweto. Paul Benner, Charles Monroe, : Charles Xondbertv Steve Pauhis, Duck end, - led eighth grade scorers with 42 points, but Dick Hendrie almost overtook him with a late-season rally. Hendrie had 36 points while Dick Allison,' Falcons,' was tied third With 13. The Hawks scored 81 points to 12 for their opposition during the season. a J 25" Salem Oregon, Thursday Floundering Phils Said For Sale for Sure Now By JUDSON BAILEY 1 NEW YORK," Nov. ll-P-Sale of the Philadelphia National league baseball club, which has been in financial straits for sev eral seasons and often reported on the block, how is certain this winter and possibly! within a couple of months, it' was learned Wednesday. j The plight of the Phils has reached the point! where the league has determined that the club no longer can continue under the direction of Oerald P. Nugent, president since 1933, j and already has begun a preliminary audit to settle upon a fair price for the franchise. Directors Decide The league's standj was deter mined at a special meeting of the board of directors last week. The directors are the presidents of the Pittsburgh, Chicago, New York and Boston clubs and; Ford Frick, president of the league, who con firmed Wednesday that the ses sion had been held for the pur pose of solving the problem of the Phils. Nugent said at Philadelphia Wednesday "I myself asked that the meeting be called and was present, but I regard the matters we discussed as confidentiaL" No Definite Buyer j Whether the league has a pros pective purchaser in mind was not known and seemed doubtful, al though from time to time many inquiries have been j made. Be cause of the war the task of fi nancing the purchase of a ball Club is difficult j However, the league is intent on bringing about a sale and has decided against letting the matter drag. About this time a year ago the league advanced j a consider able sum to Nugent to help him lump some of the Phils pressing obligations and to give him work ing capital to operate during 1942, or until new resources Could be found to take over the club. Silver Foxes, Woodburn Tie WOODBURN An underdog Silverton football team thoroughly outplayed and outgained favorite Woodburn in their annual Armis tice day game here jWednesday, but couldn't dent the Bulldog goal line in the clutch and had to be content with a 0-0 tie. The Bull dogs, heavy favorites to thump the Foxes, didn't muster a threat the whole afternoon, while Silver ton paraded up and down almost at will between .the . 10-yard stripes. j Silverton came within a dropped touchdown pass of turning in a victory, as Quarterback Burr had Halfback Hagedorn's jpass on the goal line in the third period mo mentarily. Silverton made 20 first downs to Woodburn's six and was with in the Bulldog 15-yard line four times. The Silver Foxes tried a field goal from the 15-yaf d line with 15 seconds left in the game, but the attempt went wide. The two teams meet again at Silverton on Thanksgiving day. Linen ; Wdfcnra Pelts Pm. Sarertea - Nelson Reed LT. TJalbam Hanson Pavlieek Austin Hildebrandt B. Nelson B. Austin A. Hugill J. HugUl Gustaison Foot Wrenrten Dickman Burr Hagedorn Halter Bent ley Duncan Moon Official; GU Leiser and Earl Tool- Cross to wn Grid Winds up inj Tie Parrish and Leslie junior highs broke even in touch! intramural grid competition completed this week. The Parrish seventh grad ers won a 20-0 decision over the Leslies while the southend eighth grid squad trimmed ithe Parrish Hawks, 20-0. j . Davey- Chamberlain, Ronnie Cummings and Warren Osborne led the scoring for the Parrish Browns in the first game while Dick Hendrie scored the lone tal ly for the northenderstn the eighth grade game. Ray Valdex, Marvin Kuhn, Myron Ca vender, George tnrlmdew and Pete Straw chalked up touchdowns i for the Leslie L golds. j : ' " Nova Meets Mauri ell o v NEW YORK, Nov. jll-aVPro-moter Mike Jacobs Wednesday announced a ten - round . heavy weight fight in Madison Square Garden on December; 11 between Tami Mauriello, young Bronx belter, and Lou Nova, the Cali fornian who fought Joe Louis a year ago. . - C... L PT j Q i . , AL LIGHTNER Statesman Sports Kdltov Morning. Ifovembers 12 1942 1 Sab Winds up As 3-Year Old With Easy Win By SID F$DER NEW YORK, Not. 11.-;P)-A1-sab won a race on; about three-and-a-half legs Wednesday. Running against a strong field of older campaigners, Al Sabath's Chicago express wrenched his right front an k 1 e , just as he turned his kick loose rounding the stretch bend. But, sore leg and all, he charged past the field and won the "victory handicap" at Bel mont by a length, going away with every stride, to wind up his three year old racing campaign. As Jockey George Woolf pulled him up after the victory and pi loted him back to i the winner's circle, it was apparent to the crowd of 22,719 fans that he was lame. Oomes From Behind . The Sab came from fifth place, and once he poked his nose in front, after being taken wide at the head of the stretch, there was nothing else in it He zipped the last quarter mile inj 244 seconds on his way to a 2:02 15 clocking for the full route, j At the wire, the Sab a $3.30-for-$2 choice Wednesday was a length in front of Boysy, with the rank outsider, Charles Turner's Bon Our, taking the shot slot from Tula Rose by two jlengths. Mar riage, the early pace-setter, faded to sixth. Winding up his three-year-old campaign, Alsab picked up a $6850 pay check, thereby boosting his earnings for his! two-year ca reer to $345,165. Which will buy him a lot of hay as he spends the winter romping around the new Sabath farm in Kentucky that has been named after him. 2nd Air Iorce Triumph,- 54-6 TOPEKA, Kan., Nov. ll-if)-A hard-hitting Second! Air Force team from Fort George Wright, Wash., maintained its unbeaten record Wednesday with a 54 .to 6 triumph over an impotent Fort Riley eleven. j; , Three former collegiate gridiron greats, Harold Van Every and Vic Spadaccini of Minnesota and Billy Sewell of Washington State, paced the Bombers' offensive. 1 Van Every tossed! a 12 yarder to Bill Hornick, an end, early in the first quarter for the first touchdown! SewelTs long passes were effective but the Bombers also showed a powerful running attack.' -:' - 1 Football Scores HIGH SCHOOL j 1 Vancouver 13, Kelso 0. " Baker 14, La Grande 0. HiU Military 12, Puget Sound Naval Academy 8. ; -- Independence 18, Dallas 0." Salem 0, Eugene J. " : Junction City 14, f Alumni 13. ' -Newberg 40, McMinnville : 6. Prineville 30, ' Redmond 0. Woodburn 0, Silverton 0 (tie). Grants Pass 20, Roseburg 0. St Paul 13, St. John's (Milwau kie) 0. Khun&th Falls 40, Bend 0. Albany 28, Corvallis 18. Astoria 14, Tillamook C Heppner 12, Hermiston 0. , COLLEGE California Aggies 0, Nevada 14. Alameda Coast Guard 13, Col lege of Pacific 7. - Albuquerque Air Base 13, New Mexico Aggies O. San Francisco 33, 13. Fresno State N Redlands 13, Muroc Bombers 12. ; Second Air Force 54, Ft Riley 0. : Great Lakes 33, Cainp Grant 0. Morningside 13, Augustana (Sioux Falls) 27. j - - u--r-- ; Idaho Southern 7, Colorado Col lege2L I .. . Canuck College Loses a- VANCOUVER, BC, Nov. it- CP)-0'Dea ,of " Seattle handed Vancouver . college 4 27-13 beat ing in a football game here Wednesday.-. . - j ,j - BOSTON BULL iltBERT RC0eVa-?IO4 Hopsters Tip DaUas, 19-0 DALLAS It was a ten to one shot it wouldn't happen before the game, but those odds were knocked sky high and Dallas' Dragons be came ' another victim '. of this "whacky football season Wed nesday when an underdog Inde pendence Hopster eleven knocked out a 19-0 upset win over the pre viously undefeated and, high-scoring Dragons. Coach Ray Scott's i Hopsters started things off with a bang early in the first quarter after Dal las fumbled kickoff. Wayne Hauk went over on a 5-yard reverse from Hank Meret five minutes into the game, then drop-kicked the extra point . Maret Scores Second Maret scored the second Indep endence touchdown in the second period on a plunge from the one foot line after a long Hopster march. Ivan Finley raced 20 yards through the Dragon team to score again in the third period. Coach O. E. Anderson's Dragons threatened only once during the game, but that drove bogged down on the Independence 25. : Power house George LaFevre, giant Dallas fullback, was held to a total -gain of 45 yards all day by the hopped up Hopsters, whose own fullback, Maret proved to be the outsting star of the game. 340-Pound Buck Wins PENDLETON, Nov. ll-JP)-The winnah Herman Rosenburg. The Pendleton Gun club award ed its annual big buck champion ship to Rosenburg from a deer that weighed 340 pounds on the hoof, 226 dressed. Bob McAlpino turned in the largest horns. The spread was 100 Vs inches. By JACK . HEW INS PULLMAN,.WaslL, Nov. ll-iff) Versatile Robert Kennedy, Wash ington State - college's man of many football : talents, might be leading 4he nation's "big team' backs in scoring today if itwasnt for the guy who calls the signals. The guy who calls the signals is Fullback Robert Kennedy, who does everything but - take - the tickets at the gate for the front running team of the Pacific Coast conference. He's a football phenom, a mul-tnple-threat fullback. He slams through center ox. weaves through tackle. He punts, he passes, he catches passes, he "blocks, ; he backs up . the line and if he has a weakness it's in caning for somebody else to lug the ball or cuddle the pass on a touchdown Play. : Top Scorers ' As it is, bounding Bob tops the conference touchdown 'tabulators with 63 points, but he might have had 128 if Field General Ken nedy had not decided at critical moments that Fullback Kennedy would do' better, as bait than as ball carrier. v-r'T Twice against Oregon t State, for instance, he called -upon rhis halfbacks for the last few touch down yards. Kennedy, of course, might not have made them, but he did tally twice in that same game ",.. , . -s -. - j Bob Kennedy w Kennedy it It W ! e 1 . P- By Sords - 7 AMP TMAflS JUST MOW TbOGM As is Salem-Eugene Rooters Give f Em the Axe Salem and Eugene hick school rooters hooped It op down town after the hotly contested grid tattle en Sweetland field Wed nesday. Rivalry, always at a peak When these two institutions get together, was especially noted When Eugene rooters gave persattio Viking supporters who were. In possession of the huge agetraditionally bronght out from nnder cover when the two teams clash oa the gridiron. As far as; coald be ascertained late Wednesday niaht, Salem sup porters were still in possession ef i the- axe, and a few bloody noses were reported to bo'th sides. I No seriotts 'casualties." and no arrests reported. WHirly Whips Pimlico Field BALTIMORE,: Nov. 11 -(P) Whirlajray, in his last appearance of the eastern racing season this year, showed his heels to three second-rate routers Wednesday in the 30th running of the Governor Bowie handicap, feature of . the closing jday program at Pimlico. Abandoning his usual style, the top mpey winner of all time took over the lead after less than a mile ofj the mile and five furlong test,; and won with speed, in re serve.; j He earned a purse of $8625 to raise1 this all-time winning! to $548,461, At the wire, , Calumet Farm's Son of ! Blenheim II held a four length advantage over John A. Bell, jr.'s, Dark Discovery, the only fiDy in the field. That one, recent conqueror oi AisaD, in turn was a nose in front of Howard Welhf Equif ox, while H. L. Straus' Skirmish brought up the rear. ould Be Twice as asnt X BOB KENNEDY Bounding Bob he gets over the ground like the . cougar for which' his team la nicknamed called upon Fullback Kennedy Saturday when Michigan- State was chopping down : his ' fellow backs,! and the result was one of the greatest one-man shows , the Pacific coast has ever seen, He scored three touchdowns himself, and passed S3 yards to End Nick Susoeff for the team's fourth. One he set up with a 32 yard forward and another by grabbing a lateral and weaving 20 yards I through and over the de fense.; -r . Pniimia Gives Praise Said Coach Charley Bachman of Michigan State: "Bob Westfall (of lSchijjn) couli hit no .harder," h i I w r. w ---a. m . i-. - for Bob Kennedy T-nrimn . . j Cocky; ; Eugene; irir l. i m a i aa was wide-open for another upset Although T.uecnc rolled nn PeKran j Power House Glaims State Crown-'' ,-l .. ... - . - - . ... !! . Klamallis Crush Bend llv Look for New Fields to Conquer t By The , Associated Preas ' The marauding Klamath Falls Pelicans wound ;up a victorious season Wednesday with a smash ing 40-0 win over Bend, immedi ately claimed the Oregon high school football champiorfship and looked into Washington for new fields, to conquer! By drubbing Bend, 40-0, the Pelicans ran their unbroken vic tory chain to eight games and their point total to 239, compared, to opponents' 18. j . ; Eye Everett Team ', Even before the final gun sound ed Klamath Falls resounded with talk of an interstate game there Nov. 21 and Everett high, stand out Washington team, was men tioned as a likely opponent al though such an announcement from school officials was lacking. The Pelicans advanced an im pressive claim to the Oregon title. Among their victims were Eugene, leaders of the tough Willamette valley No-Name league; the cream of southern Oregon and Grant high of Portland; ; 5 Prineville Potent In the realm of the minor pow ers; little Prineyille stampeded Redmond, 30-0, jWednesday and pressed its bid for; at least a cen tral Oregon championship. The Cowboys defeated Bend, 12-0, in their first game of the season and have won ever sihee without hav ing a point scored against them. In southern Oregon, Grants Pass measured Roseburg, champions of the Tri-County league, 20-0, while Eugene was hard pressed to de feat an underdog Salem eleven, 7 0, in the top Willamette valley contest In eastern Oregon, Baker defeated La Grande, 14-0. Kelso Clipped From Undefeated Lists VANCOUVER, (Wash, Nov. 11. -flVvncou ver high, school rolled over unbeaten Kelso Wed nesday, 12-0, to clinch at least a tie for the southwest Washington Conference fob t b all champion ship.. - ':. .!-; '- "V:T ; "i -'-- r The defending ! titlists scored In the second and fourth periods and tallied IS r first downs and 248 yards to Kelso's j 8 and 118, but had to turn backs three Kelso of fensive drives under their 10 yard line to .win ... i- Good as Bob On one play-195 -pound1 Robert collided with 210-pound George Radulescu, Michigan State center, and George, , regaining conscious ness 45 minutes later, casoed that he was "never hit harder fa my Ufa." ' W-x-- Meeting him ' on . the campus. you'd never take the boyish blond. 21-year-old Kennedy lor a root ball terror. He's Just another sen ior lugging books from fclass to class. '"f -.zHfi ,!t.;;,J',. But on the gridiron Terror en Turf i . For the season to date Bob has carried the ball 590 yards, at 4.1 yards per carry. He has complet ed 11 out of 22 pass attempts for 193 yards, and four of these were touchdown heaves, r j Give me," begged Mike Pecaro vich, when he was. coach at Gon zaga university, "a back who can Jump 15 feet, run like a startled gazelle, 'block; like an avalanche, bit that line with the tenderness of a whale, kick 90 yards and pass 73." Mr. Pecarovich would have adored Mr. Kennedy. ' ; Remember . Every Tueadcrf & Tncrsdor jmaiieu on roiinia:- v Score- ia; Qzone .YiksiMoff Big Chance toXJpset . Favored Rival; Hamilton'Hurt, Lost for Balance of Season I By AI LIGHTNERT - Salem's Viking is still without a football win after his Armis tice day mix with Eugene, but he can boast at least, a moral victory. It was- a precariously perched and overconfident Axe man which finally emerged with a 7-0 win on Sweetland Wed nesday, the same Axeman who was supposed to have about 30 or 40 points worth of fun at the Vik's expense, but who instead Crew ri ti mm - fi . t in this whacky season. 74 nt varda tn Kalom'c ;rfe tn the first half, both squads left the field with a 0-0 score. Despite that difference in yardage, Salem had just about beat a hole in. the scoring door while the Axemen couldn't even find the hallway, thanks to their own sluggishness NO-NAMX LEAGUE STANDINGS WE Pet. Pf Pa. Eugene , ' , , r , 3 0 1.000 64 13 Albany , . s 1 .50 58 43 MUwaukie Corvallis Oregon City Salem ,-, ,,.,, .Jt I .667 21 37 ..J 3 .500 71 68 1 1 .333 44 S4 8 JXW-T40 7 and: a Viking' line which refused to be fooled by the 'T" varia tions used by the visitors. Ground Attack Cheeked The Viks kept the burly Axe man ground attack in Check throughout the game, but left one air lane open-early in the third quarter and it was through that lane that Eugene got her touch down, a ' 33-yarder, fullback Bob Kramer tp'i sub end Bob McKevitt. Captain Howard Stewart clace- kicked the point and there was the ball game. Coach Fritz Kra mer can take a bow on the touch- down play, as he sent McKevitt in just nrevious to-the toss with instructions for the whole thing, and it worked perfectly. Salem couldn't gain an Inch in the first quarter, and Eugene, al though on the offensive most of the period and breaking runners into the open often, always seemed to meet up With a Vik before they got too far. Some fine booting by Eldon Farlow kept the Axemen in the vicinity of midfield after Salem would take her1 fruitless licks at running. ! Farlow's Boots Help j It., was one of these kicks by Farlow1 which shoved Eugene back to her 13-yard linen the middle of the ! second quarter after the only real Salem drive backfired on the Axeman 40: TherViks had started from their own20. full- l.back Bob Kramer's kick having gone into the end zone. Owen Garland made two at left tackle, then little Bill Ransom at last got some protection for a pass, tossed; a beauty straight down field and end Ed Brandle hauled - it down after a sparkling over- the-shoulder catch. Brandle fought his way another five yards, mak ing the play good for 24 yards in all and moving the ball to the Eugene 49. ' The fViks seemed to catch firo right then and there, and on three thrusts4 by first Ransom, ! then Eugene-Salem yardstick: Salem Ens en i xaroa sainea. serunmagc 1I7 42 Yards lost, scrimmase .19 . 1 : ,1 220 . . e 1 Passes completed - 1 Passes had Intercepted S4 Yards gained, passes 103 Total yards i gained . S First downs, scrimmage . 1 First downs, passes idou zirsx -oowns t 28 Number scrimmage, plays 43 v nuiiiir ui (nulla -1, L i ,., 9 267 Yardage punts 34 Average length - ; t9 S Yards lost, penalties SO Garland and back to Ransom. Sa lem had fourth and inches on the 40. Taking no chances, Coach Tommy Drynan sent Farlow in to kick and , he delivered a beauty to the Eugene 11. Sub safety man Bob Hicks grabbed it and got but two steps before being knocked out of bounds on the 13, but Sa lem had finally backed the ina maculately white - clad AxemeSI deep Into their own backyard and were quite hepped up over it. , . Blocktag Brilliant j Two plays gained nine - yards, and Eugene elected to kick. Kra mer lofted a high one and 1 Ran som grabbed it on the dead run on the Eugene 47. He sidestepped two. ugene tackiers, picked up Brandle. Glen Widdows and Les Pur cell as 1 blockers, and those three opened up an avenue on the north sidelines. Only a do-or-dio tackle by . Capt. Howard Stewart on the Eugene nine saved a score right! then,1 so beautiful a blocking job had the three Viks subs done. - But the Axemen rose up and (Continued on Page 8) Trf lit f Catsesa' rented !e Aaaaslac SUCCESS far - iw0 years la CHINA. NO Blatter wt'o Vlut ailBKMS TDK AltULl- EO disorders, sansUls, heart. Iwag, llTr, kUaeys, stouiarh, gas, eoasUpatloa, ulcers, dla fcetis. fever, skla, tamala com plaints . i- , . . Chinese Kerb Co, 1 ' orneo Haurt ' Oatr ) Taes. a ' eat, ia. to p.m. art ISaaw aad Wed., te , v- 121 N.- Coral r