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UCLA Routs
Troy in Fourth
102,548 Witness J
By BOB MYERS , ,
LOS ANGELES UP -4 The Unbeat
en Bruins of UCLA blasted South'
era California out of the airlanes
Saturday, defeating the Trojans by
a 34-0 score before 102,548 fans to
win the Pacific Coast Conference
championship ; for the second
Rounding out a . perfect nine
game season before .the largest
football turnout in the nation this
year, the Bruins fired one touch
down shot through the air that ac
tually wonthe gameCin the first
seven minutes.
It was a "pass play for 4s yards
from little halfback Primo Villanu
eva to end Bob Heydenfeldt. 't J
Despite the loss. Southern , Call
fornia is due for the official selec
tion to represent the PCC in the
Rose Bowl against Ohio State, con
auerors in the Big Ten conference
The Trojans finished second in
the PCC with a 6-1 conference rec
ordi UCLA is ineligible for the
coming bowl game, having played
there last Jan. 1. " ':.
Held scoreless the 'second Ind
third quarters, UCLA buried the
Trojans under a barrage of four
touchdowns in the fourth to keep
alive the Bruin bicf for the mythical
national collegiate championship. s
The. break, and the braking point
for; the underdog Trojans, came
late in the4hird period.
The Trojans marched across the
midfield stripe for the first time on
a pass interception by center Mar
Tin Goux and then moved from the
UCLA 44 to the Bruin eight, first
down with a touchdown opportunl
But a pass by quarterback Jim
Contralto was grabbed up by UCLA
halfback Jim Decker and away, he
went He .travelled 98 yards to
cross the goal, but a clipping pen
alty against a teammate set the
ball back on the USC 23.
The Bruins failed to cash in on
Hiicihrsalr hiir th Trnianc serl
dead. I
Soon after UCLA back Johnny
Hermann stepped in to field anoth
er Contratto pass, raced 44 yards
and JJCLA went on to pull in front
14-oV - . if
The ' two middle quarters had
been a desperate struggle between
two great lines on a field where the
temperature was reported 119 de
grees at kickoff time. Slowly the
giant Bruin line began to tase its
toll, but only after a tremendous
fight by the Trojan forwards,
Bob Davenport, the Bruin's bread
and butter fullback, crashed one
yard for the second touchdown, and
Villanueva fired a pass for 12 yards
and six points to bis blocking back.
, (Continued on Page 8.)
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M-4
Beaver Romps Six Yards in First Quarter TD. Drive
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Shaw Keeps Nation's Offense j
Lead in Guiding Oregon Win j
CORVALLIS. Ore. UP) Versatile quarterback George Shaw
nosed out California's Paul Larson in their total offense duel Sat-
urday, and in so doing, conducted Oregon to its first victory in six
years over traditional, rival Oregon State, 33-14. . - r
Shaw, the nation's .leader in total offense, went into the game' 'i
with a 40-yard edge over Larson. Shaw added 121 vards. while
Larson was making 110 in the final game of the season for both
players, f or tne season Shaw gaineff 1,536 yards.
He not only passed to three of
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CORVALLIS Dick Mason, Oregon State halfback, hurdles two Oregon tacklers fori Fallback Jasper McGee (41) and End 'Hal Reeve (88). A three-touchdown second
a gain oi six yarns in mis ixrsvquarter toucnaown arive ior usu several piays qoarier neipea tne isucks win, io ii. suic5inn rnows aj i nomas nngnt ana
i . ii . j : . m l a - I I 1.1 isl. . t ! I , -
later me ueavcrs scoreu. uregon men cio&ing n uu maava ire v. iu i. uuuu ivuu wkmcu. s
Jack Patera (67), Guard Reanous Cochrane (66), Center Ron Pheister (50),! ' i . - ' ' f 1
Its Been Gr&at, Kip . . .
5-
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Pioneers Win
8tli in Row
PORTLAND Lewis and
Clark, downed Eastern Washington
Colleze of Education 38-13 Satur
day to extend its .winning streak
to eight games.
Halfback Jim Smith and end
Jim Quick scored five of the six
touchdowns for the Pioneers co-
champions of the Northwest Con
ference.
Tbe Evergreen Conference team,
winner only once this season.
icored in the first half on a 94-
yard kickoff return by John Difaj.
Dale LaPierre added the -final
Eastern Washington touchdown, in
the last quarter on a 12-yard run,
Minutes later quarterback Jim
my Johnson scored for; Lewis and
daft. ; " ? 1.
It was the final game
season for both teams.
of I the
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M&
Buckeye! Rally
Wins, 21-7
FINAL BIG TEN STANDINGS
W. I, T
Ohio , SUte .7
Michigan
Wisconsin , iS
Minnesota .4
Iowa ; A
Purdue .
Indiana .
Michigan State
northwestern
Ulinoia
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0
0
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0
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Pet.
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game
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6 (Sec. 1) Statesman, Salem, OreSnncUry, Not. 21. 19S4
Football Scores
7.
Coach Kip Taylor of the Beavers shows his glum as he views the
. shnrt end nf th srort in thf cim which saw the Docks win.
33 14, to end a five-year string in which Taylor had never lost to to climb back on
(Ties count ',i game won.
COLUMBUS, Ohio l Ohio
State in-on the Big Ten champion
ship, a trip to the Rose Bowl and
a hefty claim to the national toot
ball title Saturday ii a come-back
21-7 win over the University o
Michigan.
A crowd of 82,438, plus a national
television audience saw the Bucks
surge back in the final quarter aft
er being stalled by ia poised Wol
verine eleven during most of the
game. 1
The win only the third in 12
seasons against the old rival Michi-
. . . m 1 41
gan gave tnejStuDDorn bucks weir
first unbeaten, untied season in ten
ycars.- ... . !
And Ohio became omy me secona
Western Conference team in history
to win seven straight games in the
rugged league. Only Chicago'a 1913
team had done it before.
The Bucks came from nowhere
tne football
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
FAR WESTiS ' j ,
Oregon 33, Oregon State 14.
UCLA 34. Southern California Oi
Washington SUte 28. Washington
- I v
California 28. Stanford 20.
Oregon Tech 44, Southern Oregon
14. ... !
Idaho 7, Brigham Young 0.
Clorado 38. Kansas SUte 14.
Lewis and Clark 38, Eastern Wash
ington 13. ' t
Utah 41, Montana 30
EAST F
Prinecton 49, Dartmouth 7.
. Syracuse 20, Fordham 1.
Rutgers 45. Columbia 12.
Perm SUte 13. Pitt 0.
Boston University 19, Temple 7.
'Harvard 13, Yale 9. i
' Holy Cross .46. Connecticut 26.
Western Maryland 12, Johns Hop
kins 7. i i
Delaware 20. Bucknell 0.
Penn Military 28, Albright 6.
SOUTH : I ,!
William 4c Mary 13. Wake Forest 9.
West Virginia 28. North Carolina
state 3. i
North Carolina 26, Virginia 14.
Kentucky 14. Tennessee 13. r
WSC Thumps Huskies in Worst
Defeat of Series History 26-7
Oregon.
Good Work, George . . .
49ers
Pitt Stealers
PITTSBURGH San Fran4
Cisco's 49ers, using Joe ; Perry and
John Henry Johnson for a pair of
battering rams and quarterback Y,
A. Tittle for a slingshot,: lambasted
the Pittsburgh Steelers 31-3 Saturn
day . night .in a. National Football
League game. i ' j
Tittle, nursing a broken left hand
pitched two touchdowns Xo end Bill
Jessup for 44 and 28 yards. Perryj
the NFL leading ground gamer,
plunged over from the 2, and Johrn
son scampered 24 yards for the
other tcore. J
Gordy , Solatu kicked ' a 25-yard
field goal and tacked on four con
versions. Soltau missed; a 33-yard
field: goal attempt in the second
Quarter.
The final 49ers tally in the fourth
Quarter a 28-yard pass from Tittle
to Jessup climaxed a 69-yard
drive. Perry raced 30 yards to the
Steelers' 30 to set up the score.
WAKE FOREST FALLS
'WILLIAMSBURG, V. . (A
Charlie .Sumner returned to full'
time duty at quarterback where
he gained fame a year ago and
passed William tt Mary to a 13-9
football victory over Wake Forest
Saturday in a see - saw battle that
was in doubt right down! to the last
play, is '
throne. Held to ' only four f irst
downs in the first three periods.
Ohio came to life 1 after holding
Michigan on the six-inch line to
take the ball just as the third ses
sion ended. r
With the score deadlocked at 7-7,
the Wolverines had a first down on
Ohio s four, out four! cracks at the
line served only to jturn the ball
over to the Bucks, woo promptly
marched 99 yards, 2 feet and 6
inches in 12 plays, ! climaxed by
Dave Leggett's 8-yard touchdown
toss to end Dick Brubaker.i
Late in the session, Howard
(HoDalone) Cassady; Ohio's out
standing star of the day, intercept
ed a pass and ran it back to his
own 38, and 11 plays later he ended
the 62-yard drive with a one-yard
plunge for the final score, Little
Tad Weed. l5-pound, place-kiaking
specialist, booted all three place
ments for Ohio.
Michigan marched 68 yards In
12 plays at the start of the game
for its only toachdowp, an intricate
back lateral play -sending left half
back Dan Cline into I the end zone
for the score. Ron Kramer,' Michi
gan's great sophomore end. Who
played a fine game on both offense
and defense, booted the extra point
The Wolverines, who piled up six
first downs to .Ohio's one in the
opening . period for their 7-0 lead.
marched from their own .14 to
Ohio's eight in the second session
Quarterback Lou Baldacci - tried
two futile- passes and a line play
after whica Kramer missed a tieia
goal from the 14.
Ohio's Erst offensive gesture
came just after that; Jack Gibbs.
third string fullback who bad
played only IS minutes this year.
intercepted a pass by Michigan's
Quarterback sensation George Shaw and Oregon Coach Leo. Casanova I Jim Maddock and raced it 45 yards
walk triumphantly from tne Farter Stadium field as ther discuss to the Wolverine 11
nappuy tne game inai enoea tne use. jinx. . . . . .. . : v 1 a penalty movea ymo oacx u ue
16, but Leggett passed to sopno
more end Fred Kriss in the end
rone for the touchdown which tied
it lust before halftime.
Cassady. whose big effort was a
- , .w . , -i -.i ; r j,
J m ; I 1
Persley KO Victim Of Bud Smith in 9th
"MIAMI. Fla. W- Wallace "Bud
Smith, a 9-5 underdog, knocked out
Arthur Persley with smashing
right hand to the heart Saturday
night in 1:18 of the ninth round in
a battle .between lightweight title
contenders at tht Bayfront Park
Auditorium.
j The sudden blow crumpled Pers- J 53 - yard break over tackle in
ley,; me no. s agntweignt contend-1 Ohio s second touchdown splurge
er, Smith drove home a left tolled the Buck eround earners with
the jaw as Persley went down but 94 yards in 14 plays. Fullback Fred
it fvas obvious that the right Hand Baer 'paced : Michigan with 75
puncn ua oone t&t job. ' yards in U tries.
Maryland 48, George Washington
Duke 26, South Carolina 7.
LSU 7. Arkansas 8.
Auburn 27. Clemson 8.
Vanderbilt 34. ViUanova M. :
- v MIDWEST j
Wyoming 28, Tulsa 27. 1
Missouri 41. Kansas. 18. .
Oklahoma 55, Nebraska 7. :
Michigan SUte 40. Marquette 10.
Ohio Stat 21. Michigan T.
Northweatern 30. Illinois 7. '
Wiaconmai 27. Minnesota 0.
Notre Dame 34. Iowa 18.
Purdue 13, Indiana 7. . -'
Dayton 13, Xavier 0.
SOUTHWEST
Rice C. TCU 0.
Baylor 33. SMU 21.
New Mexico 39, New Mexico A
M 27. '
Texas Tech 81, University of Hous
ton 14
New Mexico 39, New Mexico A&M
27
1 CANADIAN
Montreal 24. Hamilton 19.
Oregon Prep Football Playoffs
Six-Man Chajnptonsnlp
Glide 39. Culver 14. ,
Class B Semi-rinaU '
Union 14. Mora 8.
Bears Topple
Tribe, 28-20
Late Stanford Rally
Nearly Stops Gil
i ' ' By JtUSS NEWLAND
BERKEtEY, Calif. fl - Cali
fornia's fayored Bears after rolling
up a tremendous lead going - into
the third period, had to fight with
everything they had to stave off an
inspired Stanford team Saturday to
win their 57th annual "big game
28-20. r - ,
A capacity crowd of 81,490' saw
the Bears hold a commanding lead
of 28-0 just after the third period
opened. Stanford, fighting for every
ncn, scored two touchdowns in that
quarter and another in the final
period. - . -. .
The Indians were knocking for
another touchdown -later in the
quarter, but a fourth-down pass
was batted down in the end zone,
and they lost the ball on Califor
nia's 17. :?
California went into the game
favored by 14 or more points. The
Bears were lucky to soueeze
through in the final minutes.
Paul Larson, California's great
quarterback, scored one touchdown
and passed to another, but he was
bottled up and thrown for losses in
the latter stages of the colorful
contest" bjh the rushing Stanford
players. !: '
The Bears score! ' three touch
downs in a wild second period that
accounted .for the victory.
Another i California . touchdown
early in the third gave the Bears
a commanding 28-0 lead. The first
three California touchdowns came
after two Stanford fumbles and a
pass interception, :
Stanford s . 0 013 720
California j 0 21 7 028
Young. Brodie, Dorn. Conversions,
Atkinson; Tarr. ,
California scoring: Touchdowns.
Larson; Williams, Drew, Hamfan.
Conversions, Larson 4)s
VANDERBILT WINS
. NASHVILLE, tenn. m Van
derbilt combined an effective pass
ing and running game Saturday to
defeat ViHanova m
Oregon's .five touchdowns, but also
came up with the game's key play, ,
changing the course of the game in
the second quarter.
- His teammates took a bad maul
ing from the fired-up' Staters in the
first period and still were deep in
trouble in the second quarter until
Shaw intercepted a pass and ran it
First downs
Rushing yardage
Passing yardage
Passes alt em pled
Passes completed
Passed intercepted
runts
Punting average
Fumoies lost
Yards penalized
qrernn OSC
- U 17
, 18W 149
123 15f
IS 20
... 5 10
by 3 2
1 1
. 38 5 48
1 3
: 35 40 .
back 33 yards to the Oregon State
43 to get Oregon out of its own
territory for the first time. -
Oregon State was leading 7-0 at
the time.
From there Shaw guided the
team to a touchdown, and. in the
next few minutes added a 150-yard
touchdown pass and then a six-yard
scoring pass to put his team ahead
at the half, 19-7.
In the final half he added a 52-
yard touchdown pass and a 66-yard
runback of a kickoff.
In addition. Shaw kicked three
conversions, but he was not the
only Oregon standout. Halfback
Dick James, Oregon's darting half
back, added two more touchdowns
to tie UCLA's fullback Bob Daven
port for the Coast Conference scor
ing championship with 08 points
each. r
Both came on passes,' one for
six yards, and the other a 52-yard
play in which he caught . Shaw's
toss on the State IS, eluded one
tackier and went over standing up.
- For the first time in 10 games
this season, Capt. Ron Pheister of
Oregon lost on the coin clip u that
started the game, and f .thing
looked dark for Oregon when the
Staters took the kickoff and drove
59 yards to a touchdown with quar
terback Jim Withrow passing It
yards to end Wes Ediger for th-.
score. . -
But Shaw rallied his' team in th
seoond period, and the Staters
could not score again until late in
the fourth quarter, when an Ore
gon fumble gave them the ball on
the Oregon 14. The touchdown came
six plays later with, halfback Dick
Mason plunging over from a yard
out .
Shaw lost four yards in four rush-
a wiid-sconne I
football game 34-19 and end the
longest losing streak in Comrno- ing plays, but completed five of J6 '
uore nisiory. v i iconunuea on next page)
Ores
Whip
oh Tech
sSOCE,
Pet PT PA
.730 ISO' 63
.750 94 39
.500 77 99
.500 99 110
.000 38 14S
By, JACK HEWINS '
PULLMAN: "Washi (JP) Frank Sarno targeted Jim Haeertv on
a 47-yard pass play to break a second quarter stalemate Saturday
ana irom mere tne cougars or Washington SUte chopped out a
26-7 Pacific Coast Conference football triumph, over Washington.
.was uie worst aeteai every
administered by the Staters in 47
meetings with their j traditional
cross - state enemy. I
The burly line i and bruising
backs of the massive Cougars, who
had swapped fumbles with the un
dermanned Huskies through a dull
first quarter, cut loose in the third
quarter with a 19-point scoring
splurge. i .1
Most of the yardage was chewed
out on the ground, with fullback
Duke Washington and halfback
Jim Hagerty ripping the Washing
ton line to ribbons. i - I
With a minute and 104 seconds
eft in the game Washington avert
ed a shutout, aided by a pass in
terference ruling.' The decision
came on a fourth down gamble
and gave the ball to the Huskies
on the Cougar 6. On third down
Sobby Cox pibAed again. Corky
Lewis gathering in the ball for the
tally, i .. . ; . !. j
.Sophomores and. juniors carried
most of the lead for the two teams.
but the game was a farewell ap
pearance for several standout
players on both clubs. , j
The cf owd of 17,500 Well under
the stadium capacity of , 25,000
said goodbye to the Cougars' alter
nating fullbacks,, Chuck Beckel and
The Duke. Purnell also was wind
ing up his college career, as was
Tackle Ted Brose. i . I
Washington State 0 7 19 0 2
Washington ' 0 9 0 717
Washington State scoring
Touchdowns Hagerty 3, Purnell.
Conversions Sarno, Keith
Washington scoring:; Touchdowns
Lewis. Conversion Derby.
Oregon Collegiate Conference
Pinal Standings
W L,
Oregon Tech . .3 1
OCE i, 3 I
Portland SUte' J
Southern Oregon 3 . 3
Eastern Oregon 0 4
- t
ASHLAND m j. Oregon Tech's
ootball team defeated Southern
Oregon 44-14' Saturday to win the
co-championship of the Oregon
Collegiate Conference.
Oregon College , of Education won
a share of the title last week when
it defeated Oregon Tech. ;
Odie Canada scored twice for (he
winners with Doug Crippen. Cal
Smith, Willie Stinson and Bill
Fleetwood adding touchdowns
Jim Wright and Chuck Crandall
had touchdowns fori the losers.
Glide Tips Culver j
For Six-Man Title
GLIDE, Ore. Iff) Glide over
powered Culver here Saturday to
win the high school footbalL six
man title in Oregon, 39-14. . j I
Wayne Ferguson and Gene Pol-
ley scored two touchdowns each
and Dick Smith scored one and
passed to Another to lead the win'
ners.
mtiit
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May We Open a Charge Account for Tan?