to Qrid
Clash in
, 4-
CHUCK ELLIOTT (aboTe), left guard f the Uaiverstiy ml Oregea
football team, and Ererett Smith (ri(ht), left half of the Oreroa
; State eollece Beavers, who will come to classical football blows to
day startinr at 2:04 p. m. on Bell Field, Corrallis. The gamfr ls
listed a tossap. f
Vikings
Chemawa Nabs
Big-9 Crova
With 48-0 Win
CHEMAWX (Special) Raiding
a Canby goal almost at will after
being held scoreless in the: first
Quarter, Chemawa's Indians won
the Big 9 league football cham
pionship Friday afternoon at Can
by by handing that prep squad
a 48 to 0 shellacking. The game
also wound up Chemawa's ea--aon
with an. unblemished record
no defeats and no ties.
Fallback Fete Georxe plaared
over Cantor's goal early I 4he
second aaarter from five yards
oat and the rout was oa. Three
more toacfedowns followed m
rapid succession, Jastia WQsoa
piiHm one after a 15-yard gal
lop aad Doa WUUaam passing
to Herb Bennett for the other
two. Both passes wont for St
yards each.
Tony -Skahan bucked five yards
for Coach Lefty Wilder' Beds'
score in the third quarter and
Sdgar Saluskin followed that one
with a- pass to Bennett for anoth
er. Preston Davis blocked a Can
by punt 4n the last quarter to
et up the final Indian score,
George bucking it over from the
five.
r George ecoaato for two
- eoavtralsaa with Has banks aad
the others were tarae la by
galaakia. TflUlaans, Kkahaa and
Kalph Saauaers.
Canby threatened at ao time
despite iplaying the Redskins to
m tndiill in the first quarter.
Chemawa oooade 11 first downs
to CanbyVfive. ...... ,
lkM Lt Yon
P Dis n T.T aperb
a". Eter IG Trethwoy
whidnrd RT ' Irwrtw
Bennett -
Skahan i
Wiiiioms
SumroeTe
Georg
. Motailnr
CorrvU
Tony Ott
-RH.
Pilots, Vandal
Bolli Optimistic
5 BOIS Idaho, Nov. 19
Opposing ctche surreyed their
hopefula carefully Friday night
and came forth with cautiously
optimistic ipredictiona as to their
prospects Saturday when the Unl
Tersity Portland Ftlota tangle
with the University of Idaho Van
dals. " ; "
Coach Francis Schmidt of the
Vandals and Mentor R. I Mat
ty" Matbewa of the Piteta sent
their squads through light work
outs Friday; afterneon- . Each
voiced the' opinion that the game
.-will be toogh -batae.
Football" Scores
COLLEGE
Reed IV OCE 0. -Pasco
Fryers S3, Whitman 7
OSC Rooks 27. UO .Frosh 0
HIGH SCHOOL
Marshflekl 13, Euffene 0
1 Newberg 6, West Lina-0
' ' Forest -Grove 13, Tigard 0 .,
i Milwaukie 20, CorvaUis 0-
Iimsboro 21, Beaverton S ;
rartlan d Cciols
Uncola Washinstoa
Roosevelt 19, Benson 9
Franklin 3, Commerce 0
Oregon's Super Grid Classic Today in Corvallis
j. - - -st. X
:::4
-it ......':.
;:"::
A
....; .Sr..:''..
Massacred By Medford .
8th Straight
On Hapless Salems, 33-12
MEDFORD (Special) Medford's Black Tornado swept
over a hapless Salem high eleven here Friday night, 33-12, in an
annual cross-state football battle which saw the winners com
pletely outplay and out-maneuver their northern rivals.1
The outcome was never in
doubt after the Pearpickers grab
bed their first of five touchdowns'
with but four minutes played in
the first quarter, mrm---
jvieaiora neia a ?
20-0 lead at
balf.time a n i) l
Salem was un
able ; to hatchi
.anything r e- f5l-!?:
threat of her J;;
own 32 and pro- '
ceeded to march
to a ! touchdown,
11
a 33-yara pass,
risht half Hal
BILL RANSOM
Adams to left half Steve DippeL
turning the trick. Dippel, one of
the fastest prep sprinters in the
state, got behind Salem safety Bill
Ransom and caught the heave on
the dead run. Bill Bayliss missed
the conversion.
Medford Scores Agaia
' Another Peerpicker drive start
ed on the Salem 34 after Eldon
Farlow booted out, and on the
SALEU . MEDFORD
114 Yri Hinad. -Marfan ma 1SS
28 Yd. Tort. MihwBgt
l- -Yd, cained. oaaai 1H
llSi'. TotaT Tvla. -eaiMd 30
9 Firrt downs, acriwunaaa 10
rint downs. puan 3
1 Flirt downs. pasMlttsa ,
10 Total first was 13
- atacmoawl IS
1 rswi comalitad i S
. hd UiterceoUd
first play of - the second period
Bayliss plunged over from two
yards out and then followed with
a perfect phicekick.
Bayliss again went over late in
the period from " the one-yard
mark after a long march. Adams
converted o make It 20-0.
Medford got her fourth touch
down arly in the third quarter
after Salem was completely stop
ped in midfidd. Adams fired an
aerial to Dippel for the last 20
yards and then, again split the
vprighta.
Vtks Coaie to Life
The Vikings suddenly began to
click late in the period and threw
the .Black Tornado back to the
shadows of its own goal with in
spired line work. Medford kicked
out and Ransom brought it back
to the Peerpicker 33. A series of
off -tackle smashes by Ransom and
up-the-middle plunges by Owen
Garland brought the VOcs to the
Medford 2 yard line from where
Ransom went wide to. his right,
cut back' over tackle and scored.
His attempt to run the conversion
was smeared:.''
The most sparkling play of the
came' came early in the fourth
period when Adams grabbed Far
low's punt on the Salem 34 and
Turner,
PORTLAND, Ore- Nov. 20-CP) f
Costello Cruz, 157, Santa Barbara,
Calit, stopped. Leo Turner, 155,
Portland Negro, in the second
round of a return boxing engage
ment here Friday night '
Cms, who wen a ton-roand
deoLOon over Tamer ba their
first meetlag; opened caalleasly.
J-r -'f'.-. -i"r 1 ;; ''',-v " "!" V': it-- S Jr' " . S-:ir:: : "vL- -"::V-"::'-,;"-:':i
rry;r Xv JllX ..ir -y- :
- .t- i : L a,. ''
i - .
. ... .. . ,. .: .. . .' .. 1
f::i-:w:::.;r;x.
.
Loss
weaved his way through the
grasping Viks for Medford's final
touchdown. A terrific block by
Left End Doug Montieth on. Sa
lem Tackle Jack Slater helped
pave the way. The block was so
hard that Slater was carried from
the field. He gained consciousness
ten minutes later and re-entered
the game. ;
Viks Drive Ag-Jn
Salem had one more drive left
in her system late in the game
and motivated it after Gordy Mc
Morris intercepted a pass on Med
ford's 22. Garland, McMorris and
Bob Warren took turns at the
Tornado line, and then a six-yard
plunge by Louie Hough brought
the oval to Medford's three. Gar
land crashed over with one min
ute left to play. He missed with
a conversion try.
The Pearpickers dominated the
statistics, piling up a total of 304
yards and 13 first downs to Sa
lem's 115V4 and 10 respectively.
The lotf was the Viks' eighth-!
straight this season and leaves
only a Thanksgiving date at Ever
ett, Wash, on the Salem schedule.
Lineups:
S-tssa Msdtar
Wcncer LK Mon-eth
Slater
LT.
LC
Mitch
WUson
WhMowa
Calsbcer
Da-la
Slctr
PlMkctt
: Baker
.'Dippel
ota.
RT.
-HE-
Mailer
ugh
JLH.
MeSfarrie
Carlawt -
Adams
ess 12
S 14 s
Sm touchdowns.
Car land. Medford touchdowns.
Dtppel it), Bmjhm 2). Adams. Con-
Dispel. Adams (Z).
Woodburn Whips
Molalla, 25-0 , i
WOODBURN Coach LeRoy
Pierson's Woodburn high Bulldog
football teem traveled to Molalla
Friday and handed the Buckaroos
a 23 to 0 setback in a . Big-9
league game. The winners domi
nated throughout and fought off
every Molalla challenge, p. .; I
Woodburn's starting lineup was
Al Hugfll. Ed Murphy BUI Hugfll,
Bill Austin, Joe ; Pavlices4 Bob
Austin, Joe Peltz, Jim Jenson, Al
Halter, Carl Gustafson and Bill
Bently. 0 ? f, ; j -
The Bulldogs wind up ; their
season at Silverton Thanksgiving
day against the Sflver Foxes.
Hubbard Quits Reed
PORTLAND, Nov. 20-vT)- Al
fred Hubbard, 'football coach at
Reed College hereannounced his
resignation Friday to become a
lieutenant (JG) in 6 the navy's
physical training program.
Hung
Waener KO Victti:
bat at the start ef the sceoad
round knocked Tamer srocgy
with an overhand chop,
i Almost helpless, the Portland
Negro hit the mat for a nine count
few times before . Referee Tom
Louttit stopped it at 2L ;
KeDer Warner. 18S, Salem.
Oro shewed aggressiveness bat :
: X., -v'. 4' -T ' V " -
Slingin'Sam
Lengthens Lead
CHICAGO, Nov. 20 (Special)
Slingin' Sammy Baugh, Washing
ton's No. 1 Redskin, increased his
lead over Cecil Isbell of Green
Bay, for passing honors in the
National Football league last
week by completing 19 of 26 at
tempts against New Yark.
Official statistics compiled this
week, find Baugh first-in numbeiM
of completions (108) and In per
centage of completions (.584). Is
bell also completed 19 passes
while the Packers were losing to
the Bears, but his percentage
slipped when he needed 37 at
tempts to keep pace with the
consistent Redskin.
Isbell More Productive
Isbell continues to be the most
productive, -however. He passed
to Don Hutson for the Packers'
only score, bringing, to 20 the
number of games in which he
has thrown one or more touch
down passes. It was his 17th in
eighth games, against 13 for
Baugh.
Ray McLean, the tiniest of the
Bears, moved into second, place
behind Hutson in the scoring ta
ble, going over for two touch -
downs, against the Packers -to
bring, his . total for the season to
7. McLean now is only 68 points
behind Hutson. Gary Famiglietti,
McLean'? team mate,- was held
scoreless by the Packers and
dropped Into a- third place tie
with Pug- Menders of Brooklyn,
and Frank Maznicki, the Bears'
place kicking rookie.
Kennedy Witt '
Carry Burden
PUIJLMAN, Nov. 20-(yP)-Pre-
dictions here Friday in view of
injuries among . the Washington
State team were that Fullbacjc
Bob Kennedy, " top- conference
point maker, would carry the
brunt of the Cougar attack
against the strong Second Air
Force Bombers Saturday In Spo
kane. .
Nick Susoeff, all gxwst end, was
also expected to do yeoman duty
as observers, recalled he had so
far been able to - fathom offen
sive moves by opponents as . they
attempted to circle his end.
Rooks -Wax. Ducklings
. EUGENE, Ore., Nov. 20 (ff)
The Oregon State Books scored
in every quarter Friday, night to
defeat the Oregon Frosh, 27 to 0,
in the final football game of the
season foe both teams. -c
The Frosh never threatened and
were hurled back for a total loss
of 15 yards in rushing and passing
attempts. Halfback Don Samuel
led the Book charge.
oalclassed agslast Ernie
Nerdaiaa. 152, Goodlaad. Koa
la the seml-flaaL Wagner car
ried the fUht to Nordman la the
first reu-d, bat ran-late two
hard rtxhthsnd peaches ta the
second. The first pat bins down
for a ill of six, t e second for
keeps.. r - r T- :
M ' J . ", W
.
Scdanx, Orecjon, Soturdar
an-
171
ia jciievens
n ire i o .
iVllClUS
Duckev
Georg
Nation's Gridiron Interests
NEW, YORK, Nov. 20 (JF)
out in themiddlewest two important football questions are going
to be answered Saturday afternoon.
In the south it is! whether or not Georgia and Georgia. Tech.
Pep Dethrones
Chalky Wiight
Feather Title (Taken
By Ex-Boot Black '
By SID FEDER
NEW YORK, Nov. 20 ' (JPi
A new featherweight . champion
came -.out of. the Connecticut
breeding grounds of featherweight
kings Friday night when Willie
Pep, a shifty little ex-bootblack
from Hartford, outpointed Chalky
Wright in IS rounds to take the
crown beT&re a tremendous, roar
ing crowd in Madison Square
Garden. Pep weighed 125 H;
Wright 125. j
; Scoring the 54th straight tri
umph in his unbeaten run as a
fighter, Pep piled up a big early
lead with the use of j a left jab
that appeared to have a perma
nent parking place in Chalky's
face, and then galloped out of
harm's way as the aging Califor
nia negro chased him 'around the
ring all the way down the stretch.
Action Not Fast !
' In spite of roars of approval
from, the big New England dele
gation on hand to cheer Willie on,
the fight was a slow battle most
of the way. And the fact that
Pen fsrot on his bicycle" to come
home with the crown, plus the
Chalk's inability to cjorner- slip
pery j Willie, couldn't make either
of them stand around bragging
about being a successor to Louis
"Kid Kaplan, or Bat Battalino,
the previous 127-pound - bosses
who came out of the nutmeg state.
Aided aad abetted by thous
ands ef Connecticut fans . who
came down to root their here,
home, ' the taraoat soared to
new records for a featherweight
championship beat, with 11,521
easterners paying to sit fat oa
the i fasa aad eontrtbattag a
gate of 7U6S.?a.
Bombers Given
Sendoff Rally
SPOKANE. Nov. 2t-(P)-The
ex-college stars who" make up the
Second air force football squad
got a collegiate send-off Friday
night ! for their game Saturday
with Washington State; at a pre-
oe pep rally, complete , with
bonfire. .
As the flaming. 20-foot high pile
of wood scrap lit the Fort George
Wright parade grounds, Coach
Capt. Red Reese and his players
were interviewed and the fort
band; blared fighting tunes.
The speakecs were agreed ' on
one item; ''' '.-
-WT1 win."
Mudcats March Near
Title With 6-0Win
The Mural B league's Mudcat
footballers kept their slim hopes
of winning the loop title-intact
Friday at the high school when
they overpowered a heavier Pile
driver eleven to gain a 8-0 tri
umph. The Piledrivers t were
eliminated as a , competitor for
titular honors as a result.
gala Harold alarcam re
j a Flledriver; paat 5
te the Drlver It midway
la the first period te set ap the
score. On fourth down with the
ban resting en the three, Mar
eam i crashed : center, and . went
ever. He missed the conversion
: try.:f.:,1- -t-S: .. i
Captain- Dale Yarnell'a "Drivers
threatened with a brilliant thrust
late in the game, but the gun
stopped j it . on the -. Mudcat two
yard.; stripe. ' 0'' 0 'V - :
. 4 Oatstandmg ' f eatare ' ef the
' contest was the smooth panting ;
tamed In bv both teams. Sev-
each were made, rare exhibi
tions ' ta iatnunaral type foot
ball. - -
.Both the A and B leagues wind
up respective schedules next week
with two games . slated for each
LSaaday and Tuesday.-..,. f. - -
. ! - - '
TVIufal Grid
i
n"f)fl "ids
AL UGHTNER
Stateaznaa Sports-Editor
Morning, Narember 21. 1942
e Battle, How
HAT i r - m
lviaue uut i on
Down in the ideeo south and
tne nation s two top ranking elev-
ens, ; will enter- their November
28 engagement unbeaten and un
tied. The middle,, west question
concerns the Western conference
title for - which Michigan,:. Ohio
State and Wisconsin are in the
running.--- - r .r 'b- r- - -
Georgia Tech figures to have
the easiest-assignment of the five,
meeting Florida, the team that
Georgia walloped 75-0 two weeks:
ago. Georgia, riding high; . wide
and handsome with All-America
Frankie - Sinkwich at the helm,
takes on an Auburn outfit good
enough to trim Louisiana State
25-7 last week. f
SO.tOO to See It i '
Michigan and Ohio State will
need no outside help in deciding
their part of the Western confer
ence flag race for they tangle at
Columbus before whatH probably
be the. largest football crowd of
the season. Close to 80,000 fans
are expected to fill the Buckeyes'
stadium. Wisconsin, only team
that has beaten Ohio State, goes
against Minnesota, the only col
lege outfit to whip the Wolver
ines.' : ;
Itll be the last conference game
of the season for Ohio State and
Wisconsin but Michigan yet has
to meet Iowa's Hawkeyes, who
handed Wisconsin its lone set
back., j The Minnesota-Wisconsin
game will be different from other
years in that itll be the Badgers
that are favored over the thrice-
beaten Gophers. ;
Eagles Have Breather
Meanwhile, Boston college's
Eagles figure to continue on their
unbeaten way with Boston uni
versity having little to offer in
the way of opposition to the team
that i has bowled over seven
straight opponents.;
The only intersections! game in
the east matches Missouri, favor
ite to win the Big Six crown for
the second straight year, and
Fordham . but it has lost some
of its attractiveness since the
Rams definitely are not the Bams
of old. !
Tale-Harvard Mix :
Traditional games compose the
remainder of the eastern program
with Yale in a position to win
the Big Three title in its annual
tussle with Harvard; Army meet
ing Princeton; Columbia and
Pitcher Paul Governali closing
out a rather dismal season with
Dartmouth, and Pittsburgh and
Penn State clashing in the first
of their home-end-hosne series to
be played on successive-Saturdays.
Manhattan-Holy Cross, Syr-
aeuse-Rutgers. and Lafayette-Lehigh,
with the middle- three title
at stake, complete the slate.
little-William and Mary, tied
only by Harvard, plays Jim Crow- j
ley's North Carolina Cloudbusters
in one of the south's top games.
Other contests include. Kentucky
Tennessee, North Carolina State-
Duke, North Carolina-Virginia,
Furman-Clemson, Davidson-Citadel,
South Carolina-Miami, Van-derbilt-Alabama
and Washington
and Lee-Maryland.
Irish Meet Wildcats
In the midwest, Notre Dame
and Northwestern, always a crowd
pieaaer, tangle with nothing at
stake; .Indiana and Purdue settle
the- championship of the1 state's
Big: Ten- representatives; Illinois
takes on Great Lakes Naval Train
ing station; Arkansas invades De
troit! and Michigan State plays
host to West Virginia.
' Tulsa, hoping for a Bowl bid,
has a Missouri Valley engagement
with Creighton, while Iowa State
takes on Kansas State at Man
hattan and Nebraska meets the
powerful Iowa Naval Cadets.
Rice, key to the Southwest con
ference title picture, has a chance
to knock out Texas Christian ak
Baylor, also a contender along
with U Texas, ''meets Southern
Methodist
Stirier Father Dies ;'
HASTINGS, Neb-Nova-p)
Funeral services wffl be held
here Monday f or Aloase Stlaer,
78. father of Orexon State Foot
ball Coach Lonnie Stfaser. The
elder Stlnar died ia O m a h a
Thursday whae vfaitlag at the
home of another sea, EarL Coach
Stlner will not be able to attend .
the services. ...
AdditiQiial Sports
15,000 to .Witaesg
46th In stall in ent
Betwe.en Rival lis
Orange Hopes for Victory Hinge
On Condition of Day, Shelton;
Ducks Enter at Full Strength
PROBABLE STARTING LINEUPS
Oregon State
'; .. .., .... ' '
No- Name Wt.
64 Zellick 183.
68.Wfckett 19a.
93ZielaskowsU ..200
25 Gray iQ!t
69.
Parker in
Bain . 207.
96
62
84.
Proctor
Clement
..180.
207i
..178 .
45McInnia .
86.Beanchamp
42Gustafson
170.
.185:
ByALJGHTNER
.Statesman Sports klitor
- There are no bowl bids waiting for the winner this time
the 46th time the Oregon State iollege Beavers do football battle
with University of Oregon's Ducks but the 15,000 fans who are
expected to sit in on the ancient classic today starting at 2:00 p.m.
Stanford Given
Edge Over Cal
BERKELEY, Calif- Nov. 20
(JP) Steeped in the traditions of
half a century of intense rivalry,
the far west's most colorful col
lege football clash will have its
1948 renewal here Saturday
Stanford's Indians vs. California's
Bears. ;-. '. :
It is the "big game" between
the two universities and annually
climaxes their seasons although
each will have . engagements to
fulfill In the schedule.
' . . i . . .....
No Capacity Crowd
For one of the few times in the
history of the contest founded In
the spring of 1892, less than a ca
pacity crowd will , be on hand.
War conditions in general have
cast a damper on the. classic and
the most Optimistic sources! est!
mated not more than 50,000 for
the attendance.. The Memorial
stadium seats half again as many.
Stanford, disappointing in its
early season efforts, turns up as
the favorite. Its T-formation
functioned sensationally in more
recent games to vanguish South
ern California, Washington and
Oregon State!!
. L-.v; ..'
Cat's Slump Hart
California, pre-season choice of
many to win the conference title,
slumped alarmingly to lose three
games after a narrow squeak in
Its opener.
The schools have met 48 times,
nine of them Rugby contests.
Stanford holds the ' edge - in . vic
tories, 21 to 19. The rest were
tied.
OCE 11 Beaten
By Reed, 134) "
PORTLAND,' Ore- Nov. 20-JP)
Reed college closed .its football
schedule Friday with a 18 to 0
victory over Oregon College - of
Education. -!;, ' .- . :: :
Both Reed touchdowns came in
the second period, . Earl Erickson
plunging for .the first and' Don
Magleby catching a long pass from
Jack Nelson for the second.
Huskies Given
To Bust UGLA Bowl Bubble
Lois ANGELES, Nov. 20 (P) Coach Pest Welch drove the
University .of Washington Huskies through a brisk drill Friday,
preparatory to their clash Saturday with the UCLA Bruins.
It was the first outdoor workout for Washington since last
Monday, when inclement weather
halted them until they 'boarded
a train. Welch said his team was
in fair physical condition with
the exception of Walt Harrison,
star center. Harrison received an
ankle injury In last week's game
with St. Mary's Navy Pre-Dights,
but will start against the Bruins.
UKes Mast Wla . : .'::.:'".'
; UCLA must get by the Wash
ington hurdle to stay in the race
for the Pacific coast conference
title. The Bruins appeared to be
the standout team , of the coast
until they ' stubbed their toes in
Eugene, Ore., two weeks ago and ;
Oregon beat them, 14 to 7. If they
have regained their earlier form
they should take Washington, al
though the Huskies showed a lot
in holding the Pre-fllghts to a tie,
outplaying them most of the way.
Haskles Maeh Heavier ,
Washington, will field a line av
eraging 209 pounds, outweighing
the UCLANS 14 pounds to the
man, but Don Deck's' 243 pounds
at right tackle accounts for much
of the marked disparity. 4
i .The Huskies may put the high
ly effective Bruin passing game to
stern test.-' :"
. Creson 3 C?.fr3 wtr C:s
; Oregon
Pos. ; Wt. Name
No.
...20
-.72
.LER185 Nowllng ,
..LTR205 Kufferman
-LGR. 200Curwell
. ..C. ; .208 Bodncr
.RGL ...200Rhca L
.38
4
...42
RTL.195.Moshofsky 43
REL 1 98 JShepard ! 56
.1.Q 1955arles 53
ilHL.175 .Reynolds 45
.LHK.:184Dyer An
.185RoWin
.77
on Bell field, Corvallis, will sure
ly think winning this installment
means a bowl bid so sizzling will
be events. . Whether they're bat
tling for the Coast conference
crown or battling to' stay off the
bottom of . the pile it makes no
difference when these two arch
enemies of the gridiron come to
grips. -: .
: And that's why today's game,
like every Oregon -Oregon State
Football fans who wish to
listen to play-by-play results
of the Oregon-Oregon , State
game today may do so by tuning
In stations KALE, - Portland or
KWIL, Albany. Station KEX.
Portland, will broadcast the
Stanford-California -bis same"
at Berkeley. . 1
affair, is rated strictly a tossup by
the railbirds. who claim to kne
their football. ; i
Along about this time last year
the fever pitch was high the
Beavers needed a win over Ore
gon to gain1 the Rose Bowl bid.
The;y got 1 l-7, went on to the.
bowl and whipped Duke univer
sity in that memorable and trans
planted classic. i ;
Records Almost Sum
This year both teams have been!
beaten four times by conference
cousins. Comparing respective of
fensive and "defensive strength,1,,
against i Washington State, Wash
ington, Idaho. California ! an J
UCLA the Ducks have .scored 57
points while having 49 counted
against them. The Beavers have
scored 62 points against the same
elevens but 77 have been tallied
against the Staters.
Call It a coincidence or what-'
ever you like, but that "77" comes
in for more consideration, as that
is the number worn by "Terrible
Tommy" Roblin, great Oregon
fullback who could easily be the
shining light of today's meeting
and the difference between a win '
or loss for the Webfoots. Rollin
has spearheaded' the Ducks, all
season and despite their miserable i
record ' has1 been mentioned as- a
strong candidate for All-America -honors.
As Rollin goes so go the
Oregon" chances.'
Ducks te Beat Shape
From a physical fitness stand
point the Ducks must be given
a slight edge. Coach "Honest"
(Continued on page 9) ,
Even Chance
only teams able to score on Wash
ington through the air, but Bob
Waterfield's . pitching and ; the
adroit catching of Al SoUri, Milt
Smith, Herb , Wiener, Vic Smith
and Burr Baldwin will give the
husky defenders many j anxious
moments.'-..,'..:.'' j
. Washington has lost two games
but if it should beet UCLA and
then Washington State next week
it would be right back in the run
ning for a Rose Bowl bid.
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