10-(Sec. II) Statesman, Salem, Ore., Sun., Oct. 27, '57 Top Teams Have Tough Afternoon Two Powers Pushed From Unbeaten List LSI), Mississippi Take Defeats By El) WILKS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Grandma may like to rail H perspiration, but the old gal i wrong this timf that watt plain old sweat that major powers such a Oklahoma. Iovta. Notre Dam. M'rhigan Slate and Army wiped off their brows after another round of college football yesterday Oklahoma, the nation's No. 1 Bears Fall To Oregon Ducks Extend PCC Margin With Victory (Caattaaed frtm preceding page I reaaalHder of ttir third period. A pan laltrceptioa by Chuck Oabarae on the fat U gave Ike WabftMlt good opportunity tale la Ike period, hut ike- were keld al Ike oe an a (nrtk dawa math ky Jim Skanley. Then early in the fourth quar- ter. Oie Duck marchwl .19 yards in eight play with a It-yard stint by Morris and a .lack c.antrre 'o WUlie West pat gctlinc in lo reach the nine. Si, ihe nine three plav later. Crabtrec pitched pa to end Hon Stoe- who made a bell -flop catch in Ihe end tone. morris nicaea tne point to make back before winning 20-12. It I7- with 419 of the period gone. Three of Ihe top 10 in this week Cal fame back, driving I. Ike I Assoc iated Press poll didn't make Oregaa IS agaiiut Ibe Hrhloo.' '' ""'hough fourth-ranked and un aecMd anil, but Ihey reie up hfatrn Dllk' weaned with a 14-14 Ihraw the Bean back to ihe U f'n! ,rl;d1Nor,l ('"r fram y.here Oregea initialed ! ol,n" a". B1 Mississippi was final TO socked lor its first defea'. 12-tt b I Arkansas, and Louisiana State lost Wito Crabtrae mixing up tha plays and uint Morris as the werknortc, the Ducks powered to Cat 11. Morris lost five and an incamplete pass made it third and IS on the 1C. Tkea TaoryUle faded U bis rifkt aa aa aptiaa, Uaklng far a receiver. Tie ed soat was j clogged srllh defenders, hut Utile , Skaaley. wka kad cut ta Ike rlgbt ceraer, raced lateral' alnag Ibe end stripe behind tke defease. Taurville spatted kini all alone and kit him wltk a perfect strike tar tb Uuchdawn. Crabtrre kicked the extra point tor the (inal 244. After driving to the Cal 11 and being thrown back to the 17 in the first period and penetrating to the Bears' 22 early in the second chapter, the Ducks sot their first scoring maneuver underway at 12:15 of the second when Harry Mondale. the rugged senior guard, recovered a John Stewart fumble on the Cal 30. A Crabtrec ta Btaver pats gaad far eight, and twa hart Jabt by Taurville reached Ike II. Tearvllle got tke call agaia and rambled off right tackle far 11. Crabtrec cut off left tackle for another eight, to tha one. Then on the last play. Shanley took a pitch out from Crabtrec at left end and stumbled over two defenders into the end tone. The beams point eame aa aa naarthadax play. Juat at Crab tree was abaxil U set Ike ball dawa far Marrti' kick, huge rrwvero Jacaoa caargea acroas the line. The hankies flew ta In dicate ffatdea aad all player momentarily baited. But Crab trre temped up the ball and legged It around right end to make it 74 with It: 11 left. A blocked punt by reserves in the latleT portion of the second chapter set up Morris' third field goal of the season. End Pete Welch, who had a whale of a game for himself, crashed through to smash Roger Ramseier's punt. Three Ducks tumbled it around on the eight before Bob Heard, a re serve center, tucked it in. Three play later found Oregon nly a yard nearer Ihe gaal line. With Crabtrec placing tke ball oa Ike 14, Morris' goal barely cleared tke Inside of the right prighl at the south end. This made it 10-0 with 3 54 to play. Cal made its deepest penetra tion of the half following the goal. Starting at the midfield stripe a pair of passes took the Bears to the Oregon 24. But a third aerial was stolen by Morris to end the threat. ralllarnU II t f Oreson ... t It t 1424 California arorlns Touchdown: Roberts (I, plunte). Oreson tcorlni Tauchdownt: Shanley I (I, plunie; IS. past from Tourvlite): Sioser IS. pa from Crtblreel. nld foal. Morris. Con versions: Crabtrec. i; Morris. Milwaukee Drops Three Coaches MILWAUKEE. Oct. 26 - The lhL.exl!: , . World Champion Milwaukee ,LTh' , quarter opened with Braves tonight dropped three mem- ,h WoIvw dinging desperately to bers of their coaching stall, Johnny , !hf narrow margin After hold Riddle. Charley Root and Connie 'nS ,h R'der on the SOCE 35 Pyan .... .. ... j . Whitlow wyatt was named to re- , n a ., . , , place Root as pitching coach and tJUIIU I ILaVlaU IV W iU -aaiV v V I at first base for Riddle. The club said ! a successor lor nyan. me tnira base coach, will be named later. The announcement said the enanges - ; oy manat-r r r no.K-y ju s- .- eral manager Johr . Qumn. The only member of the coaching staff re- tained was Bob Kelly, the bullpen coach. PILl'SO NAMED PORTLAND. Oct. 26 - Emil Piluso today was named manager of the Riverside Golf and Country Club ber. .team, had to rush from behind on a last period yard run by ( ten; don Thomas and a conversion bv Carl Dodd before gaining it 4lh cnnseciithe viriory with a 1413 'derision over Colorado j Sero"dranked Texas A&M'hnd jit relatively easy, running its win : ninr strfak t" with a 14 0 iob on Ravlor But the rest were ! T(ir -A hillers like the Oklaho ma came Iowa. No 3. struggled through mud and snow to slay unbeaten iwith a G-fl Victory oer winlesa Northwestern. And Notre Dame, raiient roughing it. fmellv decked Pittsburgh 13-7. rolling from be hird on a 74-yard scorin1: oast play from sophomore quarterback r.JinriT Ctartinif niiutnrKanlr Bob Wlniam, on, of ihr p!V(.rs hooted for fi-hting a the ri.h remjnM unbeaten. Ms'- "unee Rack Michigan Stale, chopneil down last week bv Purdue, also had to WOcp from behind, defeating Ilia-1 nois 19-14 Armv. expected to march over Virginia, had to hustle to Florida 22-14. 01' Miss was No I. I-SU No lo The second string powers, as a whole, had it a bit easier. Stan ford shocked DCI.A 204 and Ohio State needed a third period field foal for a 16-13 edge over Wiscon sin, but Oregon stayed on the Rose Bowl trail bv defeating Cali fornia 244. Michigan struck fast for a 24-7 vic'ory over Minnesota in a battle between two second-10 remlyra for ihe '.i'l'- rown Juj. Navy, 'with Tom Korrestal tossin" frur Tl) passes, walloped wlnless Penn 35-7. Freak Play Scores Iowa had itself a tussle in the mud at Northwestern before All America tackle Alex Karras re covered an NU fumble on the Wildcat 33 in the final period. Randy Duncan then get off a pass (hat bounced off Kevin Furlong's chest, off a defender and back ' Furl"nR T ho ,00.k " "vrr, iur a .ii yara piy ana retained Iowa's Bis 10 lead. Duke blew a 14-0 lead as NC Slate moved for the tying touch down after a 53-yard pass inter ception return bv center Jim Od do. The Wolfpack stopped Duke a foot short of the goal late in the game, but the Blue Devils still look like a rrwvt ht foe th ! Orange Bowl. Sacker Passes Work A pair of sucker passes, both by George Walker, caught Mis sissippi flat-footed, looking for rushing plays, in Arkansas' upset, while Walt Kowalczyk tore oft a 36-yard scoring sprint in the final period to save Michigan State further embarrassment. Elsewhere, Penn State knocked Syracuse from the unbeaten 20 12, and Dartmouth took over as the East's lone unbeaten, untied major team with a 2A-0 job on Harvard. Raiders Beat Wolves 2M9 (Cantlaued fram preceding page) the baU railing. Then on two straight keeper plays. Bowlen ran the ball to the SOCE 33, where he again unlim bered his pitching arm and hit Wyman Gernhart for the final yardage and the score. Jim Atkins' boot for extra point was no good. The final OCE TD was set up when Larry Gewer Intercepted a past and returned It 17-yardt ta the Raider Si. Bowlen faded back aa the first play and looped aae ta Gernhart for 33 yardt la the SOCE twa yard tripe. Lumgair then bulled over tar a 1M OCE lead. Atkint' attempt for the PAT wat again aa good. In (he second half, the superior i v. eight of SOCE bej;an taking its toll and the Haiders started a sus tained drive from their own 4i that ended with the first SOCK six-pointer. It was Larry Maurer on a four-vard plunge who crossed ' into paydirt. Lance Locke kicked uurr uuuiu, inev nau ine slippery Maurer pinned for what ,JZ.A ' 0 .V.. . ..... w. iwncu su w a vuie ius3 w urn tie fo(jnd day,jght cu, fm ,5 miAA. , B- ,., tB. . i a s-i v vu a v au w mj , Vvr- yards, for the winning touchdown. Locke then kicked the extra point to make it 21-19 for the Raiders. The OCE ground game was hurt tonsjderaby wh Bu,, was nurt , ,fave ,n Jame- OCE 7 It a II SOCE 14 7 tl OCE acorini: Touchdowns Russ tl ran); Gernhart (33 siu.ni fram East ten); Luasfair (t run). Canvtr albn Butt (run i. SOCE econn: Tourhdoons Xaur er i (4 run. tl run, IS past intercep tion). Convertloaa Locke I (kirks); McGIU (kick). Beaver o ' c I;" .f ,-.,.- i -w t'1. j . -- - r i P. - 1 ' 1 I SEATTLE. Oct. 26 Oregon State's Larry Sanchez, with ball, Don Milllch, whose hand is shown on Sanchei' knee, right, as the Beavers tried unsuc cessfully to cross Washington's goal line a few feet away early in their game here today. Running across In front of Wirephoto) Notre Dame Spill Pitt, By JERRY LISKA ter squabble. Iruh halfback Dick SOUTH BEND, lnd., Oct. 2 ( Lynch was chased for swinging at A spectacular 74-yard touchdown Panther on halfback Frank Rey pass play from soph quarterback I "oWs's one-yard touchdown plunge George Izo to "injured" halfback 'or a 6-0 Notre Dame lead in the Auhrev Lewis save unbeaten Notre first period. Dame a 13-7 victory over Pitts- bursh's Panlht-rs in a bitter, fist swinsinc foo'.ball halile todav. Three players, twa from Natre Dame and an from Pitt, were elected as the Irtsk won their fourth retnsreutive triumph t the thrilling lu-Uwti past, tha opening play of the fourth quar ter. bo got his chance because No. 1 Irish quarterback. Bob Wil liams, was tossed out with Pitt end Dick Sherer, for a third quar- NC State Rallies, Ties Blue Devils RALEIGH. Nr.. Oct. 26 North Carolina State, behind by 14 noinls refused to rnimhle h- ' fore Duke'i vaunted offerise today i .1 ana roarea naca: rjenina ciutcn passing to tie the favored Blue Devils, 14-14, in an Atlantic Coast Conference football game. (Continued fram preceding page) cursing him In Spanish either, for he's a Mexican himself . . . Also on the baseball side, Fresno (Cal State League) business manager Dave Steele dropped In the other day for a hello and to thank the village Senators for having sent the Fresno club both Gene Laursen and Teddy Rhodes during the 19S7 campaign. "They both helped us a lot," Steele related, "and that Rhodes came along like a whirlwind, hit 14 home runs for us and made us some money. We sold him to the Amarillo club for $500 at the finish of the season. Two major league scouts were interested in him too." He Wasn't Optioned Out By Senators Which will come as a surprise to some of the local folks, for It was believed that Rhodes was sent to . Fresno on option from the Senators club. Steele tells he eame to Fresno as Laursen's traveling partner and as a free agent, worked out with the club because he had nothing else to do and was eventually signed. Other baseball briefs: Lefty Jerry Cade, pride of the '58 Senators is now toiling for the Obregon club of the Mex ican Coast League, and both Ollie Brantley and Zeke King of last semester's Eugene Ems are in the Colombian I-eague. Cade could conceivably Ret a fling with the Los Angeles Dodpcrs come spring . . . Johrtsrud and New Cad Get the Needle North Salem assistant grid coach Herb Johnsrud has been the target for the needle lately, ever since he came up with swanky, new eanary yellow Cad illac. But then if you made the cabbage Herb does during the summertime, working on tugboats, mebbe you'd have one too . . . Speaking of the North Saiems. looks much like they'll be sitting idle when the post season grid playoffs arrive. Twill be a shame, for the Vlks truly have one of the best ball dubs in the state, one that is better than some of those getting into the playoff art. That's how important that 13-4 game with South Salem was ... By the way, don't make the mistake of selling Lee Gus tafson's Southsiders short in those same playoffs. As 8 A-l champs they'll play the 7 A-L winner (probably Mac Hii first. After that one it will likely be the winner of last night's Eugene-Marshfield mix in the semifinals . . . The District 8 A-2 champ (Serra Catholic's Sabres In all probability) draws a tough one in its first play off outing. Vale High's Vikings are to be the op ponents in the quarterfinals, at Vale. Supposing of course that Vale, now listed as the foremost in the state in the Class A-2 whirl, continues on with out Upset tea Takes Nose Dive mwWmaaaaamummX"'1VQtl0il:'rt tiT WP'4P Wa .. ii ! Yi' the play is Mike McCIuskey, No. 10, of Washington. (AP Comes From Behind to 13 - 7, in Fist-Filled Battle nut aaariiag raninert roared 56 arils in II plays for a second qi'rir'cr Imir-'iriOKn on quarterback Rill Knlirlen's one yard sneak. No. 2 Pitt quarter- Ohio State in 16-13 Victory MADISON, Wis., Oct. 2 Ohio State continued its march to ward the Rose Bowl by beating a stubborn Wisconsin foolball team, 16-13, in a bruising Big 10 game today. A 14-yard field goal by Don Suthcrin in the third quarter proven me margin aner tne teams i fought lo a 13-all score in Ibt1 opening period 1 1 ! f k. I . . k m i m wiBrontin n u Ah Ink sirArlnay TesiiehriakvMa - rtttrti ' , ,ti. 7.7 . is Tu-... V1.1. "':ou,hr' Con,,",",",: ! . - - - - - Wisconsin tcorin. Touchdowns: , I Lewlt t, (7, run; t, run). Conver- 1 .1.. I tJI-.-.k at Goal 4fl-'Wtoi1ft9!6! 'V19V''1lltVfl'Vlr t i - it h upended by Washington's back Ivan Toacie booted tht point lor a 74 half-time lead. Notre Dame's blocked point try lnnmerl larp unlit Irn arrhA a . . . . .. long pass to uewis. wno iook tne ., Trx Hardm-simmon. it ball to Notre Dame's 45 at full Trini:y (Te 21, Southwestern Lou tilt and eiiyilv romped to the , ,',,, T Solllh,rll p.nmr-dccKiinR touchdown. It was prairie view 2.-,, ';,, iiiiirn 14 the lirs; unit' iraci. far Lewis Te 21. Sam lloysion s:ai had h's hands on the ball since a,.n (oi!cce tt. nuiard s he was injured in the Purdue Tulsa 12, Air Force Academy 1 opener. Pittsburgh Notre Dama 7 t t 7 III 7 II Pittsburih arnrlni Touchdown Kaildea (I, plunge). Conversions: Tnnelc. Notre Dam aeorlna Touchdowns: Reynolds (1. alums l: Lewis (74. run past from Ito). Conversions: Stickles. 'Jug' Returns Mich. Rips a l Ki4innACA("s fVl I M 11 eSOld ! MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 2 l - Swift and riv Mirhiean Wtied j 4- by Jim Van Pelt and Jimmy Pace swept back into Big Ten title con tention todav by ripping Minneso ta's collapsing Gophers, 24-7. The Wolverines reclaimed the i iui. d ......... i,,4 .. ilk ICICUI Oiril Willis- UIUY.II ug first half fire power that flabher- gasted a Crowd Of 64.680 Idoking u ..it.. . r-.u .ki, llUl"luuy IUI m UUfllCl lUIIICUaLH. Instead, it saw Van Pelt and alternate quarterback Stan Noskin befuddle the slow footed Minneso tans with aerial strikes while Pace was leading a ground attack that piled up a 24-0 Michigan lead at halftlme. The Gophers found an answer for the Wolverine offense in the second half and shook the cob webs out of their own, but the big Michigan lead was unassailable, i It was the second Big Ten vic tory for Michigan, a five point : underdog, against one defeat. Minnesota, now a two-time loser, all but waved goodbye to its Rose Bowl ambitions. Pioneers in Close Shave Pf-IUTt awn ClM (Cn..!H Lewis Ii Clark College scored 1 three touchdowns in the last p0. rind one after time had run nut. i to e'ke nut a 19-14 Northwest Con ... ference football win over Pacific University. Th. .Isslsc Tn ssm. ts s time had been called with three- aeeonds left, although the Umer had let Ihe clock run out. The referee gave Lewlt ac Clark one , more play from the Pacific J- I . yard line. A double-reverse and pats Irom Koyce Mcllamel I Pete Hopkins worked on Ihe "lo-for-broke" down. Pacific had scored the first touchdown of the game in the open ing quarter on an 18-yard jaunt by- Bob Burnside. The Pioneers scored to start the final chapter on a Mc-' By CHABLES CHAMBERLAIN Danial to Bill Stempel pass. , EVANST0N. III.. Oct. 26 -A Jack Nehring scored the s final j fluke pass reception by second Pacific TD on a 73-yard romp (string junior halfback Kevin Fur around his own left end. Gary Fisk ;ions wjij, 94 minutes left to play kicked both Pacific extra points. The other Lewis It Clark tally was on a 64-yard punt return by Dave Jeans. Ron Stempel passed to Hop-! kins for the PAT Pacific L-Clark Pacific tcorlni Touchdownt Burnside (is run); Nehrint (73 run). vonversions r isr 2 (Kirk). Lewlt Clark arorlns: Touch downs B Stempel (I paas from Me. Daniel); Jeans t4 run): Hopkins (3S pasa-run from MrDanlel). Con version Hopkins (paaa from . Stempel). fOOTBALL SCORES (Ceatiaued fram precedla page) Akron rr, Smuii 1 S urrka 12. PrlaclBta IS SUr Ucileyaa It, Calif af Eat- parla 14 Carlkast T, WaHmar T (Hal Lakl rami 4S tlmkaril a llllnali Normai II, NarUtra lUliaolt 1 DralMa S). Capital 1 HhlDBtniaurs In, scainawa 14 Traalaa 4a, , Chayaay S Oaytoa 14. Xavlar 13 Bluflia n, r'indlay 11 ' Haihuiftoa (Me) Si, asmk Dakata IS MacalaMrr f7, Hamluia a BemMJI rl. Moorhta 14 Kivar FaUi 14. St. Claua 1 CiiisUvaf Atfalphua 3, at. Theaiu (Mlna.l S Winona (Mlna.) i, Mankata 1 S. D. Suit 31, S. D Asrlrultural 14 Huron S. p.) SI, Vanktna li Aufikurs 1), Minnesota (Dnlutn) Nartkara (S. D.) TC St, S. D. Tack IS SOUTH . Iraatiiat It, Maryland t Watt Vlrslnla Ik. William ana Mary t Army tt, Virginia It VMI St. Georst Watnialon M Nortk Carolina 14. Waka Foratt T Dukt 14, Nona Carolina tiatr 14 (lit) Maryiana Stata II, Nortk Carolina Collrsr 1 Florida 12. LSU 14 Flortaa Siata 20, Vlrslnla Trrk I Newport Newt 14, Shephtre I neorsla 31, Krnturky 14 MlitiMlnpl Slat 13, Alabama if, Shaw f, Jf Smith t " Urorsatowa (Ky) II, Caraoa-Nawmaa t Hawar 14, Flik I Middlt Icnnamat It, Morthrat t Milai SI, Lnt IS Blurlltld (WVa) Stata V, Knoxvlllt 1 North Carolina A4T 41, Wlntton Salem t Morrlt Brown tS, Kentuekv Stale 7 Flortnrt Siata IS, Eattera Tcnnta taa 11 Wllltabtrf II, Watklnston ant L 2t Bridftotlrr Zl, Davit Elklnt t Appalarhlan It. I.mory Henrv 7 Trnn Martin Branch S9, Watt Ocnrita a X'X'VTX . . .... .... Lamar Trch IS, Howard Payne n Colics or tha Ozarkt ta, Central Mlttourl I Hendrrnon (Ark.) tut 14, Arkanut Stat Trfhrri t Pitubiirs (Kan.) 21, Whhurn (N) a New Mexico Military 11, Trlnldid (Colo.) 14 Southern (Ark.) Stale is. I.ouilana Collese 7 Athland 24, Wllmlnston n Austin Peay (Tenn.) S3, Troy Stale (Ala ) t l.oaiivllle 40. Central Michigan I Tehneitee Tech 2S, Murray (Ky.) 14 Claflln I. Albany (a.) t Drake n, Bradley 13 Tenn. Tech 26, Murray State 14 Sterllnt (Kan.) 2. nana (Neb.) 7 Jackson (Miss.) State 33, Xavier (New Orleans) t Tnutaloo 14, Bishop 14 (tie) Mississippi couee zh, ouacnita a McMurry 7. McNeese Louisiana tack ts, Arkansas stata 19 Northwestern (La.) Stat 21, PelU Stat t St. AuiutUne 21, rayettevill SUM a Howard Collesa (Ala ) tt. Maryvili (Tenn ) 1 SOUTHWEST Arkansas U. Mississippi I Texas AZM 14. Baylor t I K AST Princeton 47. Cornell 14 Penn Slate tt. Syracuse It I Yale 21. Collate I l.ehifh 4 Columbia I Dartmouth 21. Harvard t Hrown 21, Rhode Island t Hoslon University 33, Holy Cross 28 niw iv Penn 1 Rutiert tt. Richmond U l.aKa.velte 3.1. Hiickneii u Colby II. Rnwdoin 1.3 Amherst tl, Wesleyan t Sprlnilicld to, American llonal t nraniris 14. Northeastern t Hamilton IS, Haverford t Penn Military 21. Drexel I California (Pa) I, Clarion I Host ( li.sicr 34. East stroudshuri I Tufts tt, wmiams ts (tie) Carnem, Tech tl, Washlnston and jciietson a Thiel 20. St. Lawrence t llofstra IS, Cortland I " - .'lumri.w , " tl UnhUnk... B I Worcester Poiv 3U. t oast t.uaro it i t,eneva zt, nnppery noca s V'"'r 2- 'Pf.'T "or? aiiiniaiM i. n tiiiniiiii.rr j Norwich IS. Vermont It Lveomlnj u. WHRes 7 I-ock Haven tS. Indiana (Pa) I Rochester .10. Kings Point t Rrockport IS. Ithaca 13 KutzloMii 71. National Aefles It j Middienury 4i. rpi a Halnhrtdee 14. Fort nonmouin i .. ....... v..-. 91 lIKrl.k, IB Delaware Stale' tt. Lincoln I ' titao'i i, rurman .s (Buffalo U IS. Alfred I Ncwbem to. East Carolina 7 Florida A&.M '5. Rethune Cookman S Auburn 4S Houston 7 Texat IS, Ri- 14 Texas Tech tt, Arizona t Pnmona-Claremont II. Redlands It Abilene Christian 4", SW Tes-at State t Stephen T Austin 32. Texas Al I Eastern New Mexico !S. Austin Collete 14 Southwestern okla. Slate 7, Southeastern okla. Slate Stephen t. Austin 3t, Texat Ail I Texas Beats Rice, 19-14 AUSTIN. Oct. 26 ih Texas' Rene Ramirei churned 80 yards on a kickoff after Rice had pulled ahead to give upstart Texas a 19 14 Southwest Conference win over the Owls here tonight. Ramirei, a whirling ramrod for the Steers, intercepted a pass to start Texas on its first scoring drive and then scored the next two Personally. A fired up Owl team trailing miaway in me miru penoa nreS 'wo, ,o';down!, wi,h n.s-fiAxknnLf Ii'initt U.tl alnrvsminrt h"" " "'"'"'V"' over ,rnnl ,np one ana snl"V MOW" arn "wtstner going jj yarns "r Rice t u t-ii Te ... a 13 1 t-ia Texas a i 13 a-is tail-. i t a . . aat II it run, Hoei,-her tn. run). Conver- tinns hiii t. J'" acorlns-Touchdownt- Tack ey (3. run). Ramirei (I, run) Ram , (li, run). Conversion: Lackey. Fluke Gives Hawks Win today broke up a scoreless battle in the mud and snow and gave unbeaten Iowa a 6-0 victory over Northwestern. Iowa . ill t Northwestern t I ai 7 I t 714 Iowa srorlnf Touchdown: rur I t I Is 1 long (31, past from Duncan). OTI BEATS DIXIE JC KLAMATH FALLS. Ore.. Oct. M i Oregon Tech moved on the ground for all its touchdowns tonight in defeating Dixie Junior College, 25-12. UW Team Clips OSC Beavers Handed Second Beating (Coaliaued fram preceding page) A preview of the sad day to come for the defending Pacific Coast Conference champions de veloped off the opening kickoff when the Beavers drove 61 yards and failed to score. They had four cracks at the line from the Wash ington three and were forced to give up the ball on downs on the one. Aside from the touchdown strike, iha Ctair iwvw sot rinse alain "v, ::v rrj " ,he ? '??!.,-he.r KJSSi I. beforn and three play was smashed dead :C ir...nr Washinglaa also had a long drive checked but this third quarter threat flailed an a fumble that was recovered by Oregaa Stale's Bob McKiltrlck at tke Beaver 11. The game was punctuated by fis tic flurries at the middle point and after the final gun. Oregon State s center, Buzz Randall, was thumbed to the sidelines for roughness late in the first half. After the game had ended, students trom ooin schools swarmed onto, numerous isolated fiehts broke out nd one Oregon Ste band.m. I in the melee. Washington slacked up IS first dowat to OSC't 13 aad had only a three-yard edge in passing 97 yardt to 94. Washington had tlx eampletiont in eight pastel aad Oregon Stale hit five oul of ten without aa interception oa either side. The real difference between the teams was in Washington's ability to sustain its attack and contain all the Beaver mreai. McKlttrick, at left guard, was Oregon Slate's defensive stand out. He turned in It tackles, re covered the Washington fumble and aace smothered Fergus for a nine-yard loss. Jones was the day's hardest working back on offense as well as defense. He carried the ball 15 times for a 64-yard average. Ore gon State's John Horillo on eight carries just over five yards. t t t t i OSC IVa-hineton t it 7 t is OSC rcorln- Toucnnonn: tuin-m-elt ('4. pa-a fin. Iron Sn-her). Ws'iinrloti fcorins ToiirhHnsyns: MIHir'i (I... pass-run from Frt" n: Pa- scno (4. run); Jonet (53, run). Conversion llltnn. 12th Straight Aggies Win Baylor Tilt By HAROLD V. RATL1FF COLLEGE STATION, Tex., Oct. 26 'P Texas A&M. with Jack in the-Box Roddy Osborne at the '.r(l lohn Trcw us-hu. onu Hv,-w - running like a truck and turning in ... .. , . st.slor iiji ( 1 1 1 1 1 1 M t t K SC .1. IIIOl IIU . I "I V ' .... , todav for Its lZtn Siraigm iriumpn. . , ,, ik-. -k I.. in a, -oa- i seculive game without defeat and wat staying an lop af the wild Southwest Conferenee race. A crowd of 42.000 watched the Aggies score in the first six min utes, then beat off the rugged Bears wi'h killing bis defensive plays until the last six minutes. ill .L" . nlj u ,...u ! wnen tuey runeu tu annum iwus-n-1 - , : - . .. j . down. In the final seconds tht;lckle nd race(J 36 yards for a Aggies smashed to the Baylor two. . . . ... , . lj I after the mighty Crow had rammed mo mBA, Rsdnr line fnr m touencown wiui a i-ytuu um. .. . ..a a,., Th.!ll1f second period after a fumble yards in a 4-jard drue. and 0nce more in the fourth on a ! KOIN-TV will telecast 2! con second A&M score came after pass play from quarter. sccutive S a t u r d a y professional Larry Hickman baymr tuimacK. ; back Hou8rd Winjs t0 Bnh Den). hockey conlesU direct from ihe kicking into a strong north wind.", w Mm Budo rinks nf ,hc National "ockey got the ball out only 34 yards 'rom Cali(orrja o move League starlinf, Sa,urday. Novem Crow again led the charge and. Quarterback Jim Kuhn ber 2 ami continuinc through to made the touchdown with an - for 4, ygrds rgn (of anJ tnenthe en( of ,he sea!lon on March Jard rl,n' 'scored from the four in a 75-yard 22. Baylor t t t T' Osborne i texts Ac. iconns aoucn.owns. p I u n t ). Crow (S, plunte). Conversions: Taylor, Conrad. Navy Defeats Penn, 35-7 PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 26 i Tom Korrestal pitched four touch ' riow n passes for Navy, two in the first 6', minutes, and the Mid- I . . v . ... . shipmen marked up a decisive 35-7 victorv over an outclassed Penn tearn todav six gamer this season and Pcnn's fifth straight defeat. fifth straight defeat. n.w Navy scorifis -Touchdowns: Hurst J (It pass-run from Korrestal: ir i fass from Forrestal: S3, past-run from orreslah: W ellborn 144. pass-run j from t'orrestal): Zemhrrnski f ?-' plunse). Conversions: Oldham 4. : Brandqulst. Penn tcorins Tnnrhdown: MrKIn nev (I, plunse). Conversion Oak hill. PSC Beats EOCE LA GRANDE, Oct. 26 Two intercepted passes led to the game's only touchdowns as Port land State defeated Eastern Ore gon 13-0 in an Oregon Collegiate Conference football game here to night. Center Herb Harms intercepted a pass and ran it back 21 yards Ift ,h, vrr nine-vard line in the second period. Moments later. Ward Sayles passed to Sam Rob- erts for the touchdown Later in the period. LeRoy Gar land ran back an intercepted pass 41 yards to the four-yard line. Chuck Withers carried it over from there. WSC Squeezes By USC 13-12 Bad Kicking Makes the Difference LOS ANGELES, Oct. 2 t - Two missed tries for extra points, a riUmal fir-lrf voal try in the last 20 seconds and an 89-yard touch down run by right end Don Ellingsen of Washington State killed the University of Southern California today. ... Owens Sets Mat Card Taggers to Meet In Main Eventer in mam cvenier Matchmaker Elton Owen yeater - o.V -ounced h . . completed re""n " . " "I I .Tuesday night, hst.ng a pair of nrelim scuffles along with the Tito Carreon-Johnny James vs. Karl1 von Himmler-DUrango Duran team battle. la the 1:34 o'clock opener It's to be head-butting Don Kindred, the kefty Negro villain against George Coleman, former ama teur star from Portland. Then la the aemlwlndup the young ana effective Nick Kozak Vancou ver, B.C., tries the grizzled vet- eraa Bob CummingS. i the I Xiw Cariws " v mmrnler explosive Larreon von mmrnier Won uproar Moa Atanl acl M:nrtlt nna inai when sornnHs James and Duran i joined in the mid-ring free-for-all. Rslaru rnuhnv Pflrlsnn trier! In restore order, couldn't do it. called ih mair-h nff and ihpn ininpH in the melee himself. Owea watted na time ordering up Tuesday's tag malner be tween the participant! 1 the big row, anticipating a routing ex cursion. Carlson is to do the arbiting cnores agajn Tough Win Vols Down Terps, 16-0 COLLEGE PARK. Md, Oct. 26 Tennessee poured through wr-ryianos worn down giants lor two last quarter touchdowns today and a 16-0 football victory. Tiie trim, ha"d-Mtting Vohin- leers nursed a first quarter safety seored an a bloeked kick until eonttant banging paid off for their fourth ttraight triumph. Tennessee's only defeat this sea son was a 7-4 loss to Auburn. Fullback Tommy Brorson scored Tennessee's first touchdown on a one-yard plunge to cap a 54-yard drive led by tailback Obby Gordon. Bronson set up the nest touch dnwa by tearing SI yardt ta Ihe Maryland 29. Coach Bowdra Wyatt lei hit freth second tiring rrs lake It the rest of the wav, with Cail Smith skirting Mary land's right end for the last nine yards. ..ttt it is It a I Tennen.ee . Maryta" . . v I- . . . iniT,irr nuimi fturiiofi wns : nronson (1. plunje): Smith (S. run). Conversions: Rurklow. Gent Safety: loincsinicui. Idaho Whips Bulldog '11' MOSCOW, Idaho, Oct. 26 l.tl Fullback Ken Hall hnnnei.H nff '' quarter oucnoown mat start- ed Idaho off to a 20-6 football vic- . ea laano ott to a zn-e lootnall vie- Mz5tory toiay vm" FrMn state in Dlasl th. ,.i ' (h. w . ... wl , t. .oi- . Vandals scoring again in r resno marcn in tne nnai ouarter. ! .. . . . rresae aiaie a a Idaho rretno tcorlni Touchdown: Kuhn ' 7 7 1 tl (4. run). Idaho acorlns Touchdowns: Hall (31, rim); Willis (1, plunte); Dehlln (er (13. pasa-mn from Willis). Conversions: Kramer t. Georgia Tech Eases By Fighting Tulane NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 26 sbs.,i,ute fullback Lester Simer- ail Ha 01 .ltoe1 IminhHAtllrl ft, aaittk ' ' wr sccona nan kickoii pusnerj vimrgid ircit to a iidru-pressea Simery.lle. a 20-year-old sopho- more from Atlanta squirmed a" ay uiiiii a iiui uc tu uihiic iiLr. 4 7 7 7 .73 In r c anA f ,1 ! 1 mi aH lu'A Inammatnc down the sidelines for the touch- down Hjs jaun, brok. a 7.7 an(j . ... . roused a sputtering Tech offense into hich gear . ' Cliridtmad If m No Kidding II 11 Now It die lima la make yaur selection of imprinted busi ness or peetonel tarda, lottert or carol kVeekt. Why not mako year choice In tha privacy of your own offko or homo at your aonvanioncaT A phono call will brlno yea tha lerfest ant) matt die tmctive collection to bo toon m the City af Salem, ranfinf from the vary modett to the most elaborate, "NO OBUOATION" . Phono MAR ft! PR Fir LIT Salom. imaroi nunm Mamkan Salam Chansbor of Commorco Ml i :ttry-si,taa. sJ!?aSK1f ' B - e. i ... .iT? The cougars won mc necuc af- fair, 13-12. kept alive their Rose Bowl hopes ard gave the Cougars their first victory over USC since 1934. The battle developed from a slow-moving affair to a thriller as the Trojans almost won the came in the final twn minutes before a crowd of 24,902. The defeat was WSC INC It ?l . ISt 231 t ins 1-17 ' 13-25 11 J-ll I )-JJ J t ts sa nm ! rA". rumhir. to. Vlra, p,. lo.l lurd (he fifth in succession and the longest losing streak in the Ion? and brilliant football history of Troy. The run by Ellingsen, a 5-10, 159-pound junior from Spokane, came in the third quarter of this Pacific Coast Conference game on a kickoff after the Trojans had erect up to a S-7 score. Ellingsen took the kickoff. hit a wedge of players on about his 35-yard line. ' exploded throuRh and kept going i untouched the rest of the wav. - oia i i i i v n uua mv nu - no" Trojans fumbled the hall . mm Wasninzion Mates eager ! hands ' m whatever chance i nafl to Win. 1 'railing. 13-6. quarterback Willie Wood, assisted by a fumble bv the fouears' great ouarlerbrck Bobby Newman, led the Trojans 64 yards in 12 plays, with the half back Rx Johnston plunjjing the final four yards. Rut the tying conversion sailed wide to the left as the dock showed less than two minutes to go I'SC got the ball on an on-side kick and passed its wav to 'He enemy 11. But on third down Coach Don Clark decided on a field goal try. With the ball held on the 18, and Cougars smrmrv; in from all angles, the attempt bv Ed Isherwood barely got over the line of scrimmage. The crowd expressed vocal as tonishment when the Trojans, on third down with one yard to go. tried for the field goal Instead of enntinuin" tn p sgipst the nanickv visiters, rsr had run a-d : rar-d the h'l f-on te ", j Ins; ine tn the sHo'I-m w i'h tho cnrb''- t"nn ig out of bounds to stop the clock. war .... Til i U isc til t it WSC tcorint: Tourhdownt Gray 11. pass from Newman: Ellinfsen. S3, kickoff return Conversion Brovell. USC tcorlni; Touchdowns. Wood 1, plunge; Johnston 4, plume. Army Whips Va. 20-12 CHARLOTTESVILLE. Va . Oct. 26 ijfv-N'i nth-ranked Army hitched its offense to the flying feet of Bob ' Anderson and the passing arm of Dave Bourland in a supercharged fourth npriod hprr tnriav and cania , . . . . , . uniiuu tu rue o.iuiii3iiimB Virginia. 20-12. . yj jma , tWO-t0UChdown Ul derdog in this battle before 25.000, led 12-6 when the Black Knights finally got moving. Army til 14 7 i Vlrslnla t I e It ( Army scoring: Touchdowns An . drrson t (13. run: 1', pass from Bour ' landl: Hawkins I3.V nass from Bour- land). Conversions: Walters clerk. ."""' '?""! Tou!:.h.0.nwl,r Kneian (17, paaa from wnittcyi, Bakhtiar (i, piunt,). ill tt I l Mockev I elccats : i-iTft ifarf KftV 7 10 0X311 rXOV. L me nrst tciccasi. rsov. i. wm feature the Boston Bruins and the Vnrk Panror. al Msriitnn Snuare Garden in New York (12:00-2:00 p.m. PST. Channel . Jim Moore. San Jose State end, scored on a pass play covering 75 yards while playing for Fullerton Junior College. Qunliti at its besi en's Wear High at Court Senator Hotel Cjt reeunad a arciuni 0r.,.. y. - ':"?vr"'.n. - " c ...a. I 's?f