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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1956)
4 This Pass Unmolested By Receivers -.. no. n Passes Wfe: Mae U ' 1, iJ v " ' i f .J i ElTiFAE, Oct. 20 Paul Camera (32) of Stanford, followed bv Jim Shanley (30) of Oregon, both try for hall which sailed high over their heads and ended as an incomplete pass early In game between the TCC teams. Stanford clicked on most of its passes, however, and went on to down the Oregon Ducks, 21-7. (AP Wirephoto) earcats Upend Sunday Sorties: Tne bisRpst sports protect sinc the croct'on of Yan kee Sud.iit'i is about to he undertaken. Bob Schwartz, tlT n.rrc ?.10-pounler who has been dome some States man sports work in recent weeks, has vowed to go on I diet that will see him weigh no more than 200 one year from now. If you have n't seen Robert recently, you have no idea of what confronts him . . . Corvallis Gazette-Times sports chief Chris Kowitz. who got his bringin' up here in Salem, qualifies as the No. 1 opti mist in the Oregon State Heaver family. He's already filed his travel reservations for the Pasadena Dose Bowl game. "What the heck." shrugs Chris, "I can always cancel em if we don't make it" . . . After noting which Big Ten team will probably be at Pasadena Jan. 1 iMichigan Statci, perhaps 'twou'd bp best if no one from the PCC made th? grade , . . Oregon State's impressive win over California, witnessed by thous ands on their TV screen, did wonders for the Beaver ticket sales For example, the local V.'icklund Sporting Goods agency ran out of OSC UCLA tickets two davs after the Beaver win, and had to order up some more Incident ally, the Corvallis crew fully intends to do something Sat urday about that 61-0 walloping the 10!i4 team absorbed from Red Sanders' I kes in Parker Stadium . . . Also tabbed for the Montgomery. Ala., club in the Southern. Association next semester, along with Chuck Esscgian, is Bill Bottler, the Spokane Indians hurW. The hard-throwing hlond from Portland spent numerous campaigns in both the Western International and Northwest circuits, he cause he was nothing better than a thrower Rut last sea son he suddenly turned into a pit'her. had a big season and earned himself a promotion We remember another kid thrower who spent manv seasons in the lower minors, until he suddenly learned how to pitch. His name was and still is Bill Bevens . . . Beard Srwrex 'Uosf )'filutihh Vhirr llor'or Another laurel for Bill Peard, who has stacked up a mess of m during his long career in sports here: Bill received a tronhv in the mails the other dav. On it was inscribed, "Most Valuable. Player, Southwest Oregon Semipro league, 1936." H came as quite a pleasant surprise to the veteran catcher for Rov Hel ser's Drain Black Sox, and emphasized that Father Time hasn't yet been loo demanding of blond Bill (Cont. pagf ZZ. eel. 11 Portland State Bows To OCE Wolves, 6-0 PORTLAN D. Od. 20 I Special i Orejnn College nf Kducation won their first Oregon Cnlleffiale Con ference game Innicht hy scoring the only touchdown in the first quarter to top Portland State, R-0. OCK took the ooening kickoff and drove to the Viking 30, hut OCE PSC Yards galnrd rushing .l 2ti4 Yartii ;.alnrd passim 57 -r Virda lost rushing 12 II Parses attempted 4 Passes completed 2 3 Pisi-i had intercepted I Ittil (Irat downs . 11 Average punt yardage. . 7-23 I 4-3M Yards penalized in 40 Fumhles , 1 5 Fumbles Inst 2 there the Wolves fumbled and PSC recovered. In three plays OCE pushed the Viks back to their own from where the Portland club punted. Wymnn Gernhart took the punt the 29. Ted Owens gained two. Gernhart one and then quarter i I '.Mi ; XiXW , . f I I BILL BEARD SliU gaining laurels. back H'irry Santee passed to end Doug Zitek in the end zone for the touchdown An Owen-ln-Zilek pass for the conversion fell incomplete. OCK never seriously threatened after that and spent most of the time turning back Portland State drives. ! PSC drove to the OCE 8 follow : ing the Wolves' touchdown but lost the ball on downs. In the second . quarter another Viking drive i stalled on the OCE 21 and then. with just 51 seconds remaining in the game, they drove to the OCE 7 where the Wolves again put up a wall the Viks couldn't climb. The Wolves then took fiver and ran out the clock. The game, played on the Lin coln High field, was wetted down with rain throughout. oce n 0 o o i PSC o n n o-n OCE scoring Zitek 1 26. pass i from Santee). CI, 13-7 Favorites Bow In NWC Game By THOMAS G. WRIGHT JR. Staff Writer, The Statesman Willamette's Bearcats tied a slip 'xtv water can to the Oovotes tail ;!iitl sent CoJlcsje rf U.ihc, (ii'ibl n;' 1 : i t k nver the mnii-i'.sin on the short end of a ineddy 13 7 s-,ore. The victory erecliteil Irani an POyard mnback of the second half kickoff by Roy Barnes and bad pass from Coyote center ! Gil CoRa earlier, moved the Bear ! cats all alone into second place in the Northwest Conference. On top of those key maneuver College of Idaho time and time ri MS !1 71 1 ia J-4.1J wtr i i CD 14 S I 1 J-'S is It Yards talnrd rushing Yards rainfd passing Vprds Inst rushing Pa.sfs attpmntfd I'a-fsfs romnlflfd ra.ss Inlrrptfd hy Trtl-I first downs unls Vardi pfnallifd I'nmhlpv Rcrnvrrlfs I aain fumbled sway whatever on jportunit'es Piey could produce on a rain-drenched MrCulloch Field. ' In ?ll thy lost custody nf the i slippery hall on eiht occasions, and srvernl of the occasions were mic'illy painful l'or the Coyote ', tarse. ' B;:t the v. hole situation, except (c r Ha'fback K.rl Lodee's 35-yard ' rrrrp fnr 'he lone Idaho score. ; was rn rfin at all for the 3 Olifl , strong Willrmctte Parent's Pay crowd v, hien lilled all the dry ; srats in McCulloch grandstand to : watch l'ie procectiirs.1. ! Be.irrals ( over Ball i Willamette was much more for trna'e ".ith their l.inih'e'iis prob ' rps. rr.'o-, erinc ail hut one of i e!s;hi of iheir own for a total of j Hi recoveries during the night. ' Alter muddling throrph the down pour for most of the first ouarter, 1 t'";a sent a fourth down, punt ! formation ccntVr pass sail -n? from i (font. p.75c 22. rnl. fil Kick Finally Good 3rd Time ! rt'LLMAN. Wash , Oct. 20 It took a lot nf doing for Oregon I Slate's John Clarke to kick his j third straight conversion against i Washington State today. On the first try. WSC auarter hack Bunny Aidnch broke ihrouah I and bV!:ed the hall with his I chest But Aldrich had started too I soon an'l so OSC got another j chance from the one. I Th1' tirne halfliack Tonv Arana fumhled the snap from center and "the Cougars recovered. Rut W'T was once again penalized for off side and the Reavers got their third chance from the half yard nvrk OSC look a long count this time and twice almost drew Cougars of'side. The nnss hack from center wasn't too good and Arana(hareW hd lime to up end the hall. Clarke got his toe in the leather and it sailed low and straight through the unrights to make the final score OSC 21, WSC 0 LC Nips Chico CHICO, Calif.. Oct. 20 -An 18-play, 80-yard drive that culmin ! ated with quarterback Jim John son throwing a 6-yard shot to end i Bill Stemnel Rave Lewis & Clark 1 a 28-2H victory over Chico State in the last two seconds of play to nht. The accurate toe of guard Mack Weihe. who kicked (our conversion points, provided the unheatnn "d "unfTed Pioneers with, the marjtn 'of triumph. I Saxons Thompson's ol-Yarcler Gains Win By AL LIGHTNER Statesman Sports Editor A sudden and spectacular 81 yard run by halfback Larry Thompson in the second period, and a ball badly centered to Cor vallis punter Dick Stein in his own end zone in the final quarter were combined last night to. net the South Salem Saxons an 8-0 District 8 A-l football victory over the Spartans on Bennett Field. The win was a biggie for Lee Gustafson's flock, for it retained CorvalUi a.Salrm Vr4i jlnrd rushing 103 Mil Yardt galnrd pasKlng 5 Yarda lost ruthlnc !i PasiM atlrmplrd 5 3 Passrs romplrtPd I l'aM Inlfrrfptd by I TXjI flrkt downs 1 Avfracr punt yardagr j-n 4 J-29.J ards ppnallxrd . .3a 30 fnmhlrs ? 1 Rcrnvrrtfa . 'I 1 their chance for the district title. It was a nastv for the Spartans, as it dimmed their chance. As things now stand. Albany con tinues In lead the race with a rec ord of three wins, no losses and a tie. South Salem now has four wins and a loss. The Corvallis mark is three wins, one loss and a tie. Three Games Left Only three more district games remain for those retaining a chance at the coveted title. Next Friday North Salem plays at Al bany wh'le both South Salem and Corvallis draw a rest. Then on the following week North faces South here, while Corvallis goes against Albany. .lust when it appeared that the mi-iorahle weather conditions a steady downpour of rrin with oc casional blasts nf chiMv wind- vwiiild he the vie; or in lal nishl's ( nnl. pa?e !!, col. Ill Bruins Bounce Cal 34 to 20 By JACK STEVENSON BERKELEY, Calif.. Oct. 20 i Little Doug Bradley, playing his final game for UCLA, passed for two touchdowns and set up a third today as the Bruins whipped the California Bears, 34-20. A crowd of 48,000 in California's i Memorial Stadium also saw the Bruins twice intercept Bear pass es and return them for touch downs A third interception paved the way for a third score. 1TI.A shocked California with two touchdowns in the first four 1 ITt.A 1? . lit 111 c First dnwns Ruthin sardsee . .. fasslnr. ynrdaje '". Prs-es Intercepted ay Punts rumbles lo-.t Yards penalired n Ml 17 n. I s-:s 4 i M s A . V. minutes and the Benrs never were able to recover, although at one time they drew into a 14-14 tic. Klias Inlrrcents Pass Bruin halfback Louis Elias l opened the fireworks by intercept-1 ing a pass from quartcrhack Joe i Cnntcstwhile at the Bc?r 32. Brad- j ley, a 170-pound tailback playing i his finfl me because of the five-1 game PCC penalty decision in thej summer si'hsidy cases, threw to end Pete O'Garro for 23. On thej fourth playoff the short drive, full-j back Barry RillinRton pliingdi ovr Two minutes later Contestabile gamhied on a fourth and two (Cflnt. paire 22, cnl.7l I Sooners Drub Kansas, 34-12 LAWRENCE. Kan., Oct. 20 Powerful Oklahoma ground out its "4lh consecutive football victory. 34-12. today hut met unexpected competition from a souped-up Kansas team that scored the first touchdown against the nation's No. 1 outfit in the last eight regular season games. More than 31.000 (ans. miKt of them Kansas rooters, howled lustily as the Jayhawks matched Okla homa's first quarter touchdown Mien produced the only score of the last quarter acainst the sputtering defending national champions. In HeluYror) the first find last periods, however, it was all Okla homa and the Sooners won much as they pleased as halfback Tommy McDoneld. a 1955 All-America, and his understudy, sophomore David Baker, each scored two touch downs. Oklahoma led 7-6 after one quar ter, thanks to quarterback Jimmy Harris' conversion, then ' broke loose for three touchdowns in the second period and a 27-6 halftime lead. Oklahoma lost a touchdown in the third quarter when halfback Clendon Thomas fumhled at the goal line and Kansas' Homer Floyd recovered in the end wme. The Sooners hanged hack, fnr their only second half touchdown with Bake- MtiHlm.' H'""i lre rVTsrd lint and i then converting. te aaj Drop Durden Scores First TD for a , , " I ;r, A " 4 rin.MAV, Wash., Oct. 20 from 5 yards out in first quarter against Washington State today. Durden scored again and set up the third TD as OSC won, 210. Missing desperation tackle at Durden li Don El - lingsen (87). (AP Wirephoto) D Oregon PeMMM IsHO z. a xv v r t v a v r 1 1 i v tT.ri.Y,si Statesman, Salem, Ore., Sun., Oct. 21, '56 (Sec. IV)-21 Arnett, Roberts Lead USC to 35-7 Victory By BOB MYERS . LOS ANGLELES. Oct. 20 WV-The devastating backficld duo of Jon Arnett and C. R. Roberts wrecked Washington with a brilliant display of running, and the Southern California Trojans rolled on to a 35-7 triumph over their Pacific Coast Conference rivals from the POOTBALL 1 SCORES COLLEGE FOOTBALL FAR WEST olleee .Stanford 21. Orrfnrf 7 Oregon Stale 21, Washington SUte (I l'C ! .. 34. California 20 USC 35. Washington J Lewis A- Clark 28. Chico Stale 2( Pacific n FOCE 7 OCE , Portland Stale 0 Oregon Tech J7, Southern Oregon 20 Montana State M. Idaho State S Air Force Academv 49, Colorado Mine 6 W'hittier 32. Occidental 14 College of Pusct Sound 20. Central V-'ashin'ton 12 Whitworth 21, British Columbia 11 Lfwls and Clark :ft. Chun State 28 Western iColo.i State 50. Adama iColo.i State ft Carroll iMont.) 27. Hoclcy Mountain IMnnl.l 6 Arizona State of Tempe I. Hardin Simmons 13 . Vl?h State 48. Colorado A M 7 Extern W'shin?ton 27. Pacific Lu theran 7 Western Montana 26, Montana Mines l.i Wynminn 30. Ulan 20 Montana 21. Br'ghani Young H Ut.ih Stale 4S. C'olorarin A A M 7 Arizona 26, New. Mexico 12 MIDWEST Tulsi 3. Detroit O Michigan 34. Northwestern 2ft Michigan Slate 47, Notre Dame M Penn State 7, Ohio State 8 Iowa 34. Hawaii 0 Purdue 8, Wisconsin 6 itie) Mis:.ourl 20. Kansas State 6 Minnesota 18, Illinois 13 Indiana 19, Nebraska 14 Oklahoma 31. Kznso; 12 Colorado iZ. Iowa State 0 Miami lOhioi 16. Ohio University 7 South Dakota ID. South Dakota Stale 14 vt Ysle 2.V rnrncll 7 Coluinlna 2S. llarva-rt in Syraci'e 7. Ainix fl Penn 11. Pioun 7 Boston College .12. Rutgers ft Hnlv Cro.s? 7. Dartmouth 7 Hie) Virginia 2), I.ehirh 12 Cnnecticut 13, Ma'ne 7 Williams 13, Rnudnin 7 Nsvv l.'i. Cincinnati 7 Temple 27. Carnecie Terh I! Princeton ?8. Colgate 2ft Delaware 14. New Hampshire t Vermont 6. Rochester 0 SOUTH Davirijon 43. Stcisnn 7 Virginia Tech 18. Richmond 14 Wake Forest 14 Florida State H Mississippi state 19. Arkansas state hei 9 ,, .. , , Tul.me 10. Missi.sMopi 3 Tenucce 24. Alabama o p-.tburg i 2:. Duke 14 SS'cS.iM.AMa?and s wet Virginia 10. wnitam ana Mary 13 riorida 21. Vanderbllt 7 Navy 13. Cincinnati 7 Albany Wins 1-1-0 SPRINGFIELD. Oct. 19 'Sop. cial '-Albany's Bulldogs scored in r the first anrt lotirtn quarter nere tonisht to Wank SprinrifHd. 14 0. in a non-district name. .Inh-i Wil- tuiiinr in i i n r- rind 'on a 1 yard quarterback sneak. fr 4- 4- Corvallis 8-0 Sophomore halfback Earnel Durden (14, right foreground) scores State itatesiaan Northwest this warm, bright alter- noon in Memorial Coliseum. A momentous field goal by re' serve fullback Bob Isaacson that traveled 43 yards save USC a 9-7 lead in the second quarter and actually won the game. j But it was halfback Arnett,'', playing his last local game as a collepian before a hometown Wash, vac First downs S ?3 Rnshinf yardaee 21 432 Passing yardage 9 9 Passes t-s. 1-11 Passes Intercepted v 1 2 Punts 5-4S 7-21 Fumbles lost 7 I Yards penallied .... I 131 ; crowd of 44,749, and the speedy fullback Runaway Roberts, who applied the decisive blows right off the bat in the third quarter. Pushed back to their own five hy a penalty and a bobbled ball, Arnett, a senior limited to five games this season, and Roberts went to work. Stars Cain Ground As the crowd roared and the Huskies fell back. Arnett ripped off la and 16 yards. Roberts banged tti, Arnett 17 and C. R. 20 to reach the Washington II. Washington's defense stiffened but Arnett made four and three and Roberts drove the final four . for six points with three Huskies draned over his shoulder. From then on .Washington was never the sharp-looking team it (Cont. page 11, rol. SI Bucks Upset By Penn State COLUMRl'S. Ohio. Oct. 10 Penn Stale knocked much nf, the luster off Ohio Stale's Buckeyes today as the three-touchdown un dnrdnB Niltany Lions beat the two time Bit' Ten champions at their own game and won a 7-6 football victory before a sell-out crowd of o2."wt. It was a eame of lost npportuni- ,jo, wjth tne scoring packed in a thrilling, final four minutes. Ohio State's vaunted ground at- , "... , t tack, which had averaged 333 yards por game in victories over. Neb- raska. Stanford and Illinois, was neia to 18 yaras ny fenn state. After three quarters of frustra tions, in which Penn State lost the ball three times inside Ohio's 20 Penn State struck suddenly late in the fourth. A 73-vard Dunt bv Quarterback ; s.ii- Dl.. a,a . fthln'. a .fiuiirii lulu uiij uii Kftiiv B tf. anu the Bucks, unable to dig out of the coffin corner. ptint"d to the 45. Th rteen plays later sophomore Bruce Gilmore hanjed over from i Ilia l.fiial lute and Plum converted to give the Lions 7-0 lead. X- Jr-CS Uk Beavers pills WSC Durden Sparks 21-0 Victory By JERRY O'BRIEN' tmtttmav uaoU rw oa raa Oregon Slate recovered a fumble on the P"nKk.ckoff today and i i. iij.tin.s, (lean., ssii. .u "-r i went on to roll over Washington State 21-0 behind halfback Earnel Durden, a sophomore sprinter from Los Angeles. Durden scored two touchdowns and set up the third with a 30-yard fourth quarter run on a fake punt to keep the Beavers in the race for the Rose Bowl with the re maining West Coast eligibles. Washington State, the na tion's No. 1 passing team last week, threatened only twice on long marches and the aerial game didn't click consistently, -OSC Grabs Fumble The Cougars were in a hole from the start when Jim Frank- son, fumbled the opening kickoff and Ed. Rogers, recovered for the Beavers on the WSC 25. (Coat page 22, eel, 2) SAWINO-V St. b' tilt mi lablt. f glide to lra;. Speed Dill control lor powtr fnotdini. rrosi-cuttiac, ris pmi. datfoing' PSCD-DlAl-lMtint tt- HKtiea ot correct tool soeaOs. Ctelusnrt Powtr-Snitt from ?00 tpm to 5200 rpm' 236 N. Commerciol and 141 Alice Ave. fwBBStl m HUSBAND . Cr a, a ,-, ..-0.. . ' - , , ... Brodies Talented Arm Foils Vaunted Weh foot Defenders By MATT KRAMER " EUGENE. Ore- Oct. 20 UrwStanford vaulted its second Pacific , Coast Conference obstacle today on nation'! leading collegiate yardage producer who passed Oregon to; submission 21-7. . Oregon, which had the conference's best pass defense record prior to running across Brodie. could not Top Teams All Snare Grid Wins v Br ED CORRIGAN The AsKtclatett Preu The fond hopes that Texas Chris tian and Ohio State had been nurturing for undefeated seasons were snapped abruptly yesterday by Texas A and M and Pcnn State, respectively. . But there was no stopping the top three teams in the country. Oklahoma, Michigan State and Georgia Tech all triumphed without Incident. ' Apparently the Southwest Con- ference is going to turn into one of its usual knock-down drag-out battles. Texas Christian, No. 4 in , this week's Associated Press poll, I" the favorite until yesterday's itJ.. J;-V.:L a iisrn aw w Now, of course, the Aggies, who have one tie and four victories on their record, move into the favor ite's spot. But they're shaky choices at best. Little Don Watson, who was the main cog in beating the Horned Frogs i last year, did it again, setting up his team's only touch down ia the final period, then per sonally passing for it Ohio State, which was ranked right behind TCU, lost to Penn State by an Identical 7-0 score. Sophomore Bruce Gilmore plunged over from the 1-foot mark for Penn State's only score in the fourth M For tj, , ,h , - , q ti0M WM ho; muc) thcjr ' would be. Oklahoma whipped Kan sas, -34-12. By Sooner standards, this was close. But they had a 27-6 halftime lead. It was their 34th straight victory, once again breaking their own mark. Notre Dame Crashed Michigan State crushed Notre Dame, 47-14 and Georgia- Tech humbled Auburn, 28-7. The Spar tans' point-production against Notre Dame was the fattest since the two schools began playing each other back in 1897. Tech's victory over Auburn was strictly for revenge, The Plainsmen upset the Ramblin' Wrecks last year and it cost them the Southeastern Conference cham pionship. , Otherwise, the too teams came through as expected. Tennessee (Cont. page 22, eel. 1) SHOPSMITHt Is th revolutionary home power workshop bi one unit. It requires no more room than a bicycle, yet it gives you all the five major power tools you need to complete any project: Saw, Disc Sander, Lathe, Vertical and Horizontal Drills. SHOPSMiTH'i tacluiiv Speed-Dial gives you instant selection of correct tool speeds; you can Power Shift from 7D0 rpm to 5200 rpm! The built m 3 4 hp motor, all belts and pulleys, are enclosed for safety. You've got to see SHOPSMITH demon strated to believe it! ONLY SHOPSMITH LETS YOU COMPLETE THE JOB! I - atl aTtt-r -fc. J t fel SNOIHO-ir 0"C Stall tr. (vcluiiva ouill tttd duohcalt stfldmf Huilt-ia till. Quick cnsn diKl' NILUNO-Vertiral On to cm r at IS'V enrlt 0h SHOPSMITH Use till Homo til Doit, unlimited cancitr' POWIR-MOUNT-fof attacaiai loiattr. kaadttw, Pltw. tult under and sprlr tr. SHOPJMIIH nriuVYtt KM Mill till CllrlllTIIB 4mmril fintm Me SMai the right arm of John Brodie. lhv cope wun ine ocu tosses oi uie- staniord senior. Me inrew one- touchdown pass to his favorite . target, halfback Paul Camca. and all told completed 11 of 21 tries.:1 It was 21-0 by the end of the third quarter, and Brodie retired then along with the other Stanford Stanford Or, fink atowna ' ....... . 1 - J! .' Rushini yardact ., if Ml Passlni yardate ... i 11 , i rsw. : J4V2t 4VII . Passes Intercepted )r t s Punta ,.., .,1.l. 4-42 0 riinsMea lost .. 1 ' Yards penallied " regulars. Oregon managed a last-', minute score against the reserves. " The first Stanford score stemmed from a chronic Orepon failing thisr season fumblin It gave Stan-., ford the ball deep in Oregon ter-; ritory early in the game. Oregon stopped the first Stan-, ford drive on the 5-yard line, butj; moments later Brodie and his teammates came storming back 33 5; .yards end fullback Lou Valll? plunged the final two yards for; the touchdown. Drive Goes N Yards A 90-yard drive, startinj late;, in the first quarter, provided . the ? second touchdown. Brodie con- trihuted five passe: In the march 2 and climaxed it with a 20-yard ; toss to Camera for a 144 halftime margin. - ' 'I Brodie wound up the stint of the regulars by conducting a 73--yard drive in the third period. completing two key passes hr the j march. Valli scored the touch- - down, plunging over from a yard i out. vrr --st. , , A 43-yard pass.from quarter- back Roger Daniels to halfback n (Caat. page 22. eeJ. I) ' ...1, - , Hack to Join .... f . . . 5 Cardinal Club ST. 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