Bos&Shows 'Em How WsDone
to)
"S"
Santa Clara
May Get Bid for Orange Bowl Game
r -. i i
v ' x jc . v ? . y i at
a 9
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7;
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r j ., -.. .. i,
Dec. 10 Tangle
With Pacific
Also Studied
Oklahoma Favored
For Sugar Bowl Spot
OKLAHOMA CITY. Nov. 20-ttP)
Santa Clara, although twice de
feated and once tied, may receive
a bid to the Orange Bowl game, a
Miami spokesman said here today.
The post season bowl same pic
ture : was brought into sharper
focus yesterday after Oklahoma
turned back the Californians, 28
21 in their intersectional battle.
Van Kussrow, Orange Bowl
scout, said he was favorably im
pressed with Santa Clara in its
showing against the Big Seven
conference champions.
"The team displayed great
spirit and ability against a strong
opponent," Kussrow said, "and it
is definitely in the running for
the Orange Bowl."
Kussrow said the Orange Bowl
also was interested in Oklahoma
but sources close to the Sooners
Kaliaroa that rsnh dil lrilbl.
Head Coach Harold Hank f the Salem Vikings takes time eat during practice session to display a shoot- j., players are eyeing a return
log fundamental to some oi us aspiranw. i-r wo jiyer mrm uk ima, uwi AawmD, na - engagement in New Orleans Sugar
ling, Larry Faaias, Larry Daggeu ana sieve Atcirnojit. iw iiu wu7 wyru nn ww
oats and move Bearer their opening games at Klamath Falls December 1-9-10.
8 The Statesman, Salem, Oroaen, Monday, November 21, 1949
could be named coach of the year on the Pacific coast? Kip Taylor fense become
Buckeye Fans
Hail Eleven
BowL
Abe Goldberg, Sugar Bowl rep
resentative, watched yesterday's
game.
I personally favor Oklahoma
for a return trip to Sugar Bowl
but I have only one of 15 votes
to decide the choice," Goldberg
saia
Power Is fine, balls-eye pass
ing Is also bandy to have around
and dent let anybody ten yon
that deception tart also a aoefal
weapon to harenn the grid ar
senal.' .
Orange Hit Peak
It's been a roagh and try tog
task for the Oregon Staters la
learning the latracacies of the
ma tie-flavored Michigan system
as taught by Kip Taylor bnt Sat
nrday they passed the test with
flying colors against the Webfeet
The Staters were definitely .,
the sproad to their surprise win
over Michigan State bat to the
Dack mix they hit their peak.
The who's-got-the-baU routine
la the Beaver backfleld had the
Jam-packed crowd gasping and
the Oregona bewildered.
On the first and third Orange
toachdowns via aerials the OSC
trickery three men handled the ,
ball ended np In ridiculously
easy scores aa the pass receivers,
John Thomas and Gene Morrow,
stood oat there yards from any
Dack defender and gobbled- up
tosses from Bin Sheff old and Ken
Carpenter.
Watch OSC Sophi
Taylor haa firmly planted his
system and It's too bad that he
loses a anmber of his key1 men
through graduation. But WATCH
Messrs Gene Morrow, a gifted
passer and highly-promising
uartorbaek, and BUI Sheffold,
talented runner, capable passer
and a mad man on defense. Tea,
watch these sophomores to the
next couple of years ...
Start Praying, Font
With local Bogetiations toward
purchase of the Solona a complete
flsslc, Salem ball hounds can only
sit back and pray that Joe Gor
don isn't too parsaaalvo to his
apparently determined efforts to
go get the Senator franchise1 for
Kagono. Everyone agrees that It
weald bo fine to have Eugene to
the WI league ALONG WITH
SALEM. Bat It weald Indeed bo
aa odd twist If the Lane county
city gained Itself a club and In
the same move Salem found It
self minus oao ... Alex Grosa,
the ex-Kentucky ace, Is show
ing 'em as a freshmen la the Na
tional Hoop league He's leading
scorer with a paltry 21 point
average ... Another guy getting
"along fine to the pro cage sport
Is Jack Nichols, the former
Bosky. He's scoring well with
the Washington D. C. crew but
his defensive play Is the real eye
brow raiser ...
C of C$ Please Note
Deserving at least an encourag
ing alfp oa the back from the
Salem chamber of commerce
boys Is the lad who' soon goes
bach to Chicago aad the blgtlmo
to represent the state to the Na
tional Match Flay Bowling tour
ney. While wheeling against the
big-wigs, rraakle Evans win bo
earrylng "Salem, Ore. to big
letters oa the back of bis shirt.
meets the demands
If ' Tough to, Lose
As; those last precious seconds
tick relentlessly off the score-
7
SAN FRANCISCO. Nov. 20-JPU
A post-season arid contest be-
COLUMBUS, O., Nov. 10-WV tween the University of Santa
The State's Rose Bowl hopefuls Clara and Collese of the Pacific
Anybody with a chamber-of- were welcomed back to Columbus was considered a very likely nos-
eonuaerceish point of view knows I early today by the wildest hap- Isibility. the Chronicle said to-
that s no small boost ror our city. I plest crowd to swarm over down- night.
It mlsbt bo added that the fund town streets since V-J day of The two teams would meet Dee.
provided by the State Bowling World War II. 1 10 at Kezar stadium hero and
Association fftr the trip HARDLY The Bucks will forget about would be sponsored by the San
football for the coming .weeks be- "ancisco nress ciud.
tnrm atartlnff nr.iMr.Hnni fnr h Should the BrOnCOS and the Col
trip to Pasadena in mid-December. !ge 'ih Pacific Tigers play here
But from th lnok f thinr in t)ec " proceeds of the game.
the downtown area this morning, Su4aritee to each team,
Columbus wont forget about it for 222? JfnK wt, j500
one second. Thousands and thou.- J&lJtSZ
mil nf f.n. thrnnot th. i "K " " VMW1
: , - w... 1 students.
w President Robert I. Burns of
eye Bowl candidate since 1920. College of the Pacific at Stockton
Police and fire sirens blared, indicated hu unrWoatoH t.a
Automobiles battled up the crowd- with its outstanding Quarterback
od streets with horns going full Eddie LeBaron, would accept the
oiasi. Ana au uus i or a uea iooi- cnaiienge.
ball game. He said the team favors S the
But th w w with Michigan 1 game. We want to play i the
strongest team we can find in the
roses and the western conference n"0ii" t.W sta ais
co-championship. ,1 - f JSS
The Rose Bowl bid Isn't official r.T, .1 Z' l :- fl
M n..r.. ! I "f ' w WV AV Ul 'UTS. IV
w .vubv. j . I era ma hilt huH htmvaH lt aMmt
Tomorrow night the celebration ance on the outcome of the Okla
win continue at the annual Ohio I noma game.
&ute rootbau appreciation ban
quet. With 1500 expected to crowd
the men s gymnasium on campus
at 5:45 p. m. to pat the Buckeyes
on the back, ltH be the biggest
banquet the Bucks' have ever been
tendered.
V.ij
! JOE GORDON
IlgkU for Kafa Fraaclilse
1 f
board clock Bang! Bang! Bang!
and always Interesting study Is
the losing footbaU coach. Some
are said to tear their hair (If any)
and 'crash their hats to pulp
under their feet. The ones we see
around here are a bit less violent.
however. In their displays of
gloom. '
Officials Meet
At HS Tonight
Welch, Nelson
Win Golf Play
UWISTON, Idaho, Nov. 20-0P)
-Professional Bill Welch and
amateur Tommy Nelson of Lewis-
ton carved 11 strokes from par
in 19 holes to win a pro-amateur
best-ball golf tournament today
They were tied with profes
cinnal Marvin IHwA V,rH r9
v. i m . I - " w
sasaetoau wnisue looters do- c.v...
It was pretty l.bvlon. whsa longing to the Salem Officials as-! .JS
Mlehlgaa 8Ute's Biggie Maaa. socUUon, and all those who In ia hi... both with t-nnH.r.nr
resounding upset staring Ws tend officiating In games the com- 62s. Welch knocked In a ten-foot
Michigan SUtors squarely in the ling season are urged to be pros- birdie putt on the par-five 19th
ui,i MMvyw m i ui ivi uirauiij wuaxit ai uie i tn break the tie
T u Vu TTd sZ Third were professional Roy
said 1$ seconds left when Biggie, President John Kolb of the organ- mm 0t SDokane and Charles P
a dyaamle hgndier of the spartan lzauon wiU f o oyer the new rules Boren, Lewiston amateur, who
Bmiual ; UF mutm mm m I uuuigc. liu uuciyiCMUUIU UUIl I nad a bCSt ball Of 68
Strode aneeaalngly to and froi sat are in effect for the 1949-50 cam- Ward uncork) a in.imH
a oi wearuy fncn'l"- discussions wui do neia par 85t trIng th, Leton Golf
rea nis neaa in nana, ana gave on inem. i Country club course record for
the reins Into tno hands or fate. . . I The data for th Or.nn Kirh I th ht nHviHiai rrA Mk.
And Jim Aiken on Saturday. scnool Activities association ex- day. The curtev-haired shotmak
ue was a bouncing. Dooming oi- anunauon nas not been set, but
rector of the strategy along the Kolb may have that date for an-
sldellnes. After the two Beaver nouncement tonight.
touchdowns to the third quarter
ta maka It 11.1 ha anaratad with
bo slack In gusto. He hadn't Cv Rnclrt
given up . . . BUT the third Bevo Vtli V DUsKCl
period via that beautiful piece of
deception which saw two OSC
receivers a mile out to the open
brought the first crack la the The first City basketball leaaue
Aiken armor. Jim looked upon meeting of the season win be
er coupled nines of 32 and 33,
Mission a five-foot sidehlU putt
on the 18 th green for a new
Lewiston course record.
Football Scores
Meet Tuesday
NATIONAL
Los Aneelas Hams 38. Chlcafo Car
amais 28 ue)
pntaburrti Stealers SO. Gracn Bar
Packers 7
Detroit Lions 43. New York Gianta Jl
Chicago Bears 31. Wathlngton Red
il. juii ....u.j iv. k.u m i i-t. i . . 1 iklna 31
h., .m,,.. hi. a iusuay nignt, starting ai Philadelphia EagWt 43. New York
w- aevre, amva bu wttcrca iu o ciock in room 1UV 01 ine BuUdOm v
fedora off his head and complied senior high school building- Pres
with; the demands of the moment ldent Otto Skopil of the organ'
ny wiping us orow oespainngiy iizauon win be in charge
LaT"? P10" coming- season are
1. . T 10 discussed and all Interest-
been: "WaitTl next year." . . . m ip0nsoring and managing
And ! as for OSCs Kip Taylor, teams are asked to be present
don't teU him grid coaching cant It Is hoped that another Citv
have Its moments of elation. He's league such as last year's will be
had two such moments to two put into effect again.! Last rear
ALL-AMERICA
Cleveland Brawns 31. New York
Yankees 0
Los Anieles Dons 31. Baltimore Colts
110 .
Buffalo Bills 10. ChicafO Hornets
Rams, Eagles Near Crowns
ft:
In Rival National Pro Loop
By Ralph Roden i
NEW YORK, Nov. 20-(i?VCieveland's niuh invincible Browns
clinched their fourth consecutive All-America Conference football
title today while Philadelphia and Los Angeles moved a step. closer
towards divisional crowns in the rival National league. : 1
The destroyers from Cleveland
Okeh by Us, Too
Clip Taylor Boomed
Coast's Top Coach
By Jack H twins
SEATTLE, Nov. 20-()-Who but the Thin Man of Oregon State
De-Emphasis
Of Defense Hit
By Hollingbery
SEATTLE, Nov. 20 -UP- Orin
E. (Babe) Hollingbery watched
Washington's 34-21 victory over
Washington State, then asked in
print today; "Since when has de-
retained their championship by
humbling the New York Yankees,1
31 -0. The Browns scored all of
their points in the first half. The
Yanks threatened in the second'
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE f
STANDINGS
Eaatera DtoUkta
W L T Ppt LOT A
rnuaaeipnia S 1 0
Pittsburgh i 11
N. v. GianU 4 S
Washington , SSI
N. Y, BuUdon .111
Fog Dampens
Slicker Play
Weather kept first round play in
the annual Slicker tournament
muffled Sunday with only a few
golfers braving the cold fog to
turn in scores at the Salem Golf
club.
Only eight teams of SO scheduled
went the round Sunday. In the
American league McMullen said
and Devers took the 1-0 measure
of 'Filler and Fish. The Texas
league managed two matches with
Herdrie and Lengren falling to
Hunt and Graham Mi to 2 and
Toombs and Jones clipping Guer
ney and Zigler, 2-1. Hazel and
Duffus scored a 2 Vi to Vt victory
over Kimmell and Gustafson in the
Colst circuit.
Unplayed matches ; will be
caught up next Sunday barring re
currence of the murky mist which
blanketed the course, yesterday.
Comeback?
-'""Sgfftjll'9' ...(
sW
is a toll, quiet sort of person who never does any pre-game weeping
about the said condition of his team. Even so. his O. S. C. Beavers
nave gone into almost all their i
games with nothing more than the
sympathy of the fans.
They still though Kip was rub
bing the hide off his rabbit's foot
when he brought the team up to
the Michigan State game with a
record of five victories and no de
feats north of California. Loyal al
umni were walking around Port
land the night before the tussle as
suring each other they didn't care
how big a score Michigan State
ran up on their Beavers. They just
hoped it would be a nice day and
nobody would get hurt.
But in the two opposing football
camps It was slightly different.
Frankly, we though Kip's boys had
been eating of the lotus. Thejrwere
confident - - almost cocky. Mich
igan State's coaching staff was
worried. Why? "This guy Taylor
used to work for us, they said-
We know what he can do.
You know what he did. He
knocked over one of the nation's
best teams; No other Pacific coast
coach can make that statement.
And what did Taylor say after the
game? "Give the credit to the kids
and. the assistant coaches."
We'll take Taylor as our coach
of the year overMarchie Schwartz
and Red Sanders. For two seasons
we've been hearing about the great
material at Stanford and if any
body was overdue it was Marchie.
Sanders accomplished wonders in
rebuilding morale in a single sea
son at U. C. L. A- but he, too, fell
heir to great gobs of material.
What Taylor stepped into was a
vacuum of manpower and a gen
eral discontent over the still unex
plained retirement of Lonnie Stin
er. In the choosing of coach least
likely to succeed he won by
landslide. Any September predic
tion that Taylor's team would lead
the north would have been laugh'
ed out of print
Kip s a master at taking advan
tage of enemy weaknesses. While
coaching Ann Arbor high school
he did some scouting for Fritz
Crisler of Michigan. One day he
came back from a Notre Dame as
signment and outlined the Irish
soft spots so well that Michigan
rolled to a two-iouchdown victory,
Next season he again reported on
Notre Dame, charting the Irish
plays completely.
How about those weaknesses
you tipped us on last year?" said
Crisler. "Coach," Kip said, "This
Notre Dame team hasn't cot
weakness." The winner: Notre
Dame.
a lost art?"
The former WSC coach, writ
ing a guest column for the Post
Intelligencer, saicf both teams
were at their offensive best in the
windup of the football season yes
terday but were woefully weak on
defense-
Hollingberry pointed to the score
as proof of his contention, then
added:
'I don't want to annar riaH
or defense-minded . . . but I have
always felt that defense is a fun
damental equally as important as
offense."
He had words of praise, how
ever, for each club. He said that
with such performers as Don Hein
rich. High McElhenny and Roland
Kirkby back next season Wash
ington should be one of the out
standing teams on the coast. The
Cougars' Marv Cross and Don
Paul were described as among the
iinest running backs in the con
ierence this year.
Hollingberry is now a Yakima
businessman.
Western Dlvisioa .
I W L T Pet. PF PA
Los Anaelea S 1 S .857 1 13S ' 181
Chicago Bears t 0 .667 (i 132 ; 14
Chicago Cards . 4 4 1 .500 ; 267 S01
Green Bay I T 0 .222 M 237
Uetroil , S T Oh u22 S 181 187
half but the mighty Browns, like
the Rock of Gibraltar held, and
four Yankee bids were frustrated
within the one-yard stripe. !
Philadelphia's Eagles moved to
Cleveland , . 8 12
San Francisco 8 J 0
N. Y. Yankees ,720
Buffalo L 4 S S
Chicago Hornets 4 7 0
Loa Angls Dons 4 T 0
Baltimore -j 1 10 ft
En mors have It that Joe Louis' I
current series of exhibition
matches la Just a test to see If the
Jolter still haa enough dynamite
In his system to make a come
back bid for the heavyweight
title. He floored his last op-1
ponent Johnny Skhor throe
times In a ten-round mix.
Non-Existent
Title Aim of
Two Elevens
Cheshul Next
For Bomber
NEW YORK, Nov. 20-fiPr-Joe
Louis retired heavyweight
champion of the world, continues
his 10-round no decision boxir
tour Tuesday night, meeting Joe
Cheshul, Bayonne, NJ- conten
der at Newark, NJ.
The 35-year-old Louis, floored
Johnny Shkor three times then
coasted through . his recent ex
hibition at Boston first on the
tour.
The next is scheduled for Kan
sas City, Nov. 28, with Johnny
Flynn, Rochester, the opponent.
Then Louis meets Pat Valentino,
San Francisco, at Chicago, Dec. 7.
Another headliner comes to
morrow night at Montreal, In
10-round middleweight scrap be
tween Laurent Dauthuille of Paris
and Kid Gavilan of Cuba. The
Frenchman beat Jake La Motta
just before La Motta won the
middleweight title from Marcel
Cerdan.
If he beats Gavilan, there will
be a lot of clamor for a title go
with La Motta.
Geveland Sale
Slated Monday
CLEVELAND, Nov2(HP)-Sale
of the Cleveland Indians to a
group of local businessmen appar
ently is scheduled for tomorrow.
A news conference at ll a. m.
(EST) Monday was announced by
the club's public relations repre-
ATLANTA, Nov. 2WvlVTulane
and Kentucky are fighting for the
Southeastern Conference football
championship which doesn't exist.
Disheartening, isn't it?
There has never been an of
ficially proclaimed Southeastern
football champion and unless
there are some drastic mind
changing and rule rearranging,
there never will be.
However, every November talk
swells about who will take the
crown. All that conservation
should be "who will end the sea
son on top or the newspaper
standings?
That s the honor Kentucky and
Tulane are agitating for although
even the standings are unofficial
ctnckly by newspapers and for
newspaper readers.
To make things more ridiculous
the Southeastern executive com
mittee selected an out-of-league
football game as one which counts
for this championship which
non existent. :
Kentucky ended its schedule
making for 1949 with only five
conference games, one short of
the required six. The committee
selected Kentucky's game with
Miami, Fla., ' ; as a conference
counter to; give the Wildcats the
necessary six to be considered
for the "championship" and for
bowl consideration.
The results of that game will
be entered in unofficial confer
ence standings, count lor or
against Kentucky in the unoffic
ial "championship" race and help
determine if Kentucky is eligible
for a bowl bid.
within a game of clinching their
third straight Eastern division
title in the National league ; by
pulverising the 'New York Bull
dogs, 42-0. The Detroit Lions
abetted the Eagle cause by up
setting the New York Giants, 45-
121. The loss dumped the: Gianta
Into third pjace behind the Pitts
burgh Steelers, who moved up: by
drubbing the Green Bay Packers,
30-7. ill
The Los Angeles Rams battled
the Chicago Cardinals to a 28-28
stalemate to retain their Western
half lead over the Chicago Bears.
The Bears scalped the Washington
Redskins, 31-13. I i
Cleveland s triumph over the
Yanks shoved the New Yorkers in
to third place. The idle San Fran
cisco 49ers took over second. The
Buffalo Bills took over fourth
place, last playoff spot in the AAC,
by blanking the Chicago fiornets,
erstwhile tenants, 10-0. The Horn
ets fell into a fifth place lie with
the Los Angeles Dons who tripped
the Baltimore coits, zi-io.
Virginia Back Dies
In Auto Accident
CHARLOTTSVILLE, Va.. Nov
A fO riana WiTTsnitr YTniTif w
sentative. Marshall Samuel, who L vi;rtt fc-irwir . aaii
said it would be concerned with eariy today when an auto
T 1 v """" mobile he was driving went over
Champions of 1948 were being L embankment.
Old. I Attonriant at a hrwnital hara
Ellis W. Ryan, 45-year-old in.- w. hs-h f . hrr nrir
surance execuuve, neaos tnesyn- 25-year-old senior, marine
dicate wnicn nas been negouaung veteran and father of a year-and
with Bill veeck, the Tribe s pre- ..half-old daughter, scored Vir
sident and largest stockholder.
ND Opponents Show Effects in Subsequent Tilts
fginia's second touchdown in yester
day s game which Tulane won 28
14.
Table of Coastal Tides
weeks
PCC Grid Standing
there were two divisions of the
circuit The winner of the City dr-
Br Whitney Martin
NEW YORK, Nov. 20-()-ome
Taam
California
tCLA ,
Stanford .
JSC
Ceafaraaea
W L T Pet. , FT OP
Orafon Stata
, Orafon
Washlnftoa , .
Washington State.
laano
af
fontana
a wi
t 1400 120
.714 184
Ml
Ml
Mi
as
MO
SO
140
15 07
150 100
180 161
183 164
ISO 103
114 900
85 191
40 121
Came Injury Fatal
For Prep Gridder
MILWAUI-CE, Nov. 20 -")-Fred
BartheL 17, died today of in
juries suffered yesterday in the
final game of bis high school foot
ball career.
BartheL, an honor student and
quarterback for Milwaukee Rufus
to
0
0
t
n
a o
so
5 4
Alt Oaaaaa
T Pet. PF OP
0 1.000 80S 114
0; Ml S37 ISO
.667 SOS J01
.714 S14 188
.700 138 ISO
.400 ISO 110
JOO 167 MS
J3i 140 SOS
478 SM S70
jee 170 aoo
1'
1
:
0!
i
Oi
Cal Gal Netsters
Win in Argentina
enough leagne schednlea. Is just
a little tod much to digest la a
eult usually la qualified to enter weatera schools are getting around
State AAU tournament each vaar. to admitting that a game with
? I . V . A A I A . I.
novre uimci aaaea to weir vouin
normal season.
Item what wt have seen of
Frank Leahy's team we weald say
It vlars exceptionally clean foot-
BUENOS AIRES. Nev. S0-UP-1 ball. Tremendoaslr hard foothalL
In an all-California match. Bar- bnt clean, & and any team which
nara Scofleld of San Francisco to- maeta H hi eoinsr U ret soma saw
day aereatea Mancy ChaTTeo of dost knocked oat of it.
Ventura in the Women's Singles As to the effect on the future of
Maal ka 41 t.M..t..l IT.. . a v t . . . .
Kina-hiah a-hl Wtlavl on tha T""1 " - a seam wnicn ia nrave caougn so
177 T, " T7 Ii Zam 7.Z nM tournament or ine Kepuouc. Ifaee the Irish there la some one
aiucuuaa aa ma tmmm iwuw uj I 1 ne SCOre WSS O-a. 0-2. Uaau That la. iha ramaa m-kU-h
24-14 victory oyer Milwaukee x0m Brown, another San Fran- teams played lmmedltely follow
Custer. He had been taken out dscan, was beaten in the men's Ing their games with Notre Dame
a few! moments earlier with what fal by the Argentine star, Enri- don't Indicate whether the batter-
armaaUrf tr 1. tniurv. Morca, 7-o, o-, o-a. ug mey took from the ragged
ww " I aM 1 j .t i. B.-11, M.mjI.m mmwm m - - a
T.-i.-i w i4.il i l drown aoao taiieu ia uie incni numm tm
" "-I.M. Urn imammA larlth I BOdV and Bint a aaL
i ' ' . I UVUWiW Jioaaaao "-aa" v a-a i w " mmvmrwm
pnysicians round a Drain concua-1 yiadimlr Cernik, the self-exiled Here's what the teama whleh
ion and intercranial hemorrhage. I Czech, In losing to the Argentine met Notre Dame this year did the
He underwent an omersencv on- combination of Morea and Aleio fouowing satorday:
eration and died early today. RusselL 2-0, 6-4, 6-2,-8-6. I Indiana Lost to Ohio SUto, 46
to 7.
Was hist; tea Loot to Oregon
State. 7-S.
rardae Defeated Miami (Fla.)
14-6.
Talaae Defeated Aubarh, 14-6.
Navy Tied Talaae. M-XL
Michigan State Lost to Oregon
f tate, 25-26.
North Carolina Defeated Dake,
21-26.
It will bo noted that three lost
the next week, three won, aad one
tied, so there's ao conclusive evi
dence there.
Indiana has lost seven of Its
eight games, so Its defeat by the
Irish probably had little to do with
the walloping It took from. Ohio
State, unless yea want to figure
that the Notre Dame game ruined
the Boosters for the rest of the
Washington lost to Oregon State,
bat the teams seemed evenly
matched oa paper, so agala yoa
cant say the Notre Dame game
had anythine- to do with It Wash
ington haa lost six games, bat it
started losing evea before It met (compiled by vs. Coast : co-
deua Survey, pomana. wrron.
SI
the Irish.
Pardae had beea licked twice
before.
TBiane, a line team despite tneijj
terrific beating It took from
Leahy's Legions, came back with
a victory over Auburn. By the 4
vavpiui0 uia.i u nutui jwtc
seen ex pec tea on ue pre-scaooB
Lratlng of the two teams. Maybe
the Green Wave was rolling a Ut
ile more gently than It weald have
rolled had It aot faced the Bright of
the Irish; just a week before.
Navy eame ap with one of Its
best fames la Heine Talaae. so the
Middies apparently suffered ao ill
effects from their 46-6 walloping.
Michigan State, whleh had! lost
only a squeaker to Michigan prior
to Ita defeat by the Irish, loot to
Oregoa State the next week, bat
again that isn't significant f Tea
just dealt know whether the Spar
tans would have beaten Oregon
SUto evea if they had never
beard oft Notre Dame.
No. HIGH WATER
Tuna
1 :21 a jn.
11.21 p.m.
1-J7 a m.
1:04 p.m.
8:31 am.
1 :40 p nv
4:10 SJn.
1 :37 p.m.
8:11 am.
2M pjn.
HC
4.8
LOW WATER
Tuna Ht.
0:17 SJn.
7 JS p.m.
744 a.m.
8:2 pom.
1M a.m.
0:18 p.m.
0:51 a.m.
106 p.m.
OAS a.m.
10 :ii p .m.
-1
M9 2S9
.623 159
111
150
.555 i 258 150
-78 804 ' S3
025 ;106 871,
All -America i
W L T Pet. t Pf 1 PA
.889 J25 164
.717 t 381 213
,700 j 165 153
.4441 196
343
J64 1. 173 t 254
.364 ' 237 303
.001 1 150 i 30?
Whitman Routs
EOCE,48-20
WjLLA WALLA, Novi: 20-Mi
Punching out seven touchdowns,
four in the last half. Whitman
closed out its 1949 football season
here Saturday with a 48-20 vic
tory over Eastern Oregon College
of Education at La Grande.l i
Whitman led at halftinie, 2M4.
The Mountaineers from La
Grande scored first in the open
ing period, with Harry S Winston
sparking and scoring. The. Mis
sionaries hit back, withr Baxter,
Tom and Charles Smith? and the
passing combination of Boyes-to
Drew Miller and Ken Meyer hit
ting the goal line. Meyer's; con
version kick was good. As were
six of seven during the game. I
Whitman scored twice, in; the
first period, again in the second.
But Eastern Oregon's v Wilklns
provided the most spectacular
play Just before the first nan
ended by intercepting a pass 'and
running 72 yards for a touchdown.
Shortly after the second half
began. Jay Childers of Whitman
intercepted an EOCE aerial and
ran 32 for a score. From then on,
the Missionaries had little trouble.
OSC Alums to Fete
Coach Kip Taylor
i t i ( ..
PORTLAND, Nov. 20-WT(-Or-gon
State college alumni here will
pass I out the plaudits here ; to
morrow noon to football coach
Kip Taylor of the Beavers; U
Taylor is ' scheduled-: tp ! speak
at an alumni luncheon ' in the
Imperial hotel. Movies of t the
Oregon State-Michigan j State
football game will be shown.
" . !:?'.
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR QCITS
MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. i2Q i-OflFV
Frank G. McCormick ha submit
ted his resignation as director of
athletics at the University i f
Minnesota. President J. I MorriU
said today McCormick had i pre
sented a letter last September 1
asking to be relieved next June 30.
Morrill said the resignation, has
not -been accepted and that he is
still hopeful McCormick can be
persuaded to withdraw It j :
RE-ROOFIIIG?
Be thrifty I . . the friendly little Scotchman foi a
FREE EbilWAlCiJ
a4!m
KOMI PNDS0N5 -NTg.WAiAaAPC.,
255 N. Commercial ! ra. 31