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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1948)
skies Humble Myins ot- "lyt i first icore, and live mint fV. Kr. n.-A. Kine tossed 20 yards to P "LE tbt 0n"' 'y! 16-yard line, lted to an , ' .j,. foll fcJtbt Uwyi-itr fumbled the return and !S(rt:i,5W'nSS1 (Washington recovered on it mi nut m Inter lira. v..-, ----- - . vi- tnccprt varas 10 iviarsnaii fl, ?Tity Dallas who romped over from the BiU own offensive 'US! throwing and two plays later friroe ""L ' vi-rtnn Washington had their third touch- picks Off Pus Hungar boosted the ante to 27 0 when he picked off McCulloch's pass in the end zone in the third Tim SDarK inai uumea a F ... vwdaH 25 ' i- the FrfSSS march smashing' Tiie ! ' .I"""" r (ucjiro , brightly during me secuna penoa t Wt ck"-. .h.ir own I flared up again late in the final KrM. period. Tommy McGeorge'. inter. & , STS : " ,pring rd- passeiJand Mike Scanlan tossed the dis ite' ".u rd Hun-itance to Earling Johnson for the 2t!t the! final Washington wore. . L . . Webfoot Gridmen to Be in Charge of Oregon Club Meeting Members of the University of Oregon football squad will be in charge of Monday's noon lunch eon of the Oregon Club at the Eugene Hotel. "President Dick Reed announced that the entire meeting will be conducted by the football Web foots, who will not onlv rerort on the Oregon-OSC game, but will also toss questions at members and provide varied entertainment. The usual capacity crowd is anticipated. Register-Guard. Eugene. Ore.. Sun.. Nov. 21. 1948, Page IS Northwestern Clinches Rose Bowl Honors Wildcais Claw Illinois 20-7 Winners Take Second In Big Nine Chase EVANSTON. 111., Nov. 20 OI.R) MiehiganGrabs'PUl Victory Upset BM?f Of Day in Grid Play Plans will also be announced Northwestern's grid speedsters regarding the gigantic civic ban-! defeated Illinois Saturday, 20 to 7, quet to be held at McArthur Court i ,0 la,!e undisputed second place in 111 Dk MI.Ki.... ...AP-Hnic r"V'ir":..v:;;r , .,.! new york. nov so over the field by a fired-up band ; Michigan. Northwestern, r rn,! ei.t. d...i,.,. .v,. sota, Oregon and Calif books on its second straight all-1 von . io bM lving de victorious season with two rapier- tenaUon ' th? :, Bowl like thrusts for a 13 to 3 triumph. Ival 0 8 ,e f ,sa,"y rePre- ........... ... ........ . Minne- Califomia all The victoi"y gave Michigan its in nonor or Coach Jim Aiken, his I ,n B1S "me looioaii race and second consecutive Big Nine staff and the gridmen in the near E"ncn January l Derm in we;chamDionshiD. future. vi rum BUILD ..FASTER, BETTER, CHEAPER WEATHER-LOCKED MiUGut BUILDINGS You con toiily erct a Sandy-Silt building and hav H rtoay tot nm m a mairvr or aayi. Simply fit th "Mill-Cut" pitees together ac cording to drawings and Instruction we supply. Get our FREE literature and prices at once) ,.Mai7 Coupon Todayf. (IkinY.RIIT BUILDINB CO. ! f ANDY-BILT BUILDINO CO. !0M N. L ioxtt ' rotTUHO Mil 11 ti in4 m literature flvti maipttf. 1.loriattoR y.ur Mm-Cvt Iwlldlngt. MILLWORK PROMPT SERVICE ON HIGH QUALITY PRECISION BUILT PRODUCTS WINDOW & DOOR FRAMES WINDOWS & DOORS MOULDINGS INSIDE TRIM "MIDGLEY - MADE" Sine 1881 i W.ICV DIAIimr mi i rr jui rLMiiiiiu miLL w Pheaa 1059 Eujtn BRAND NRW pLDSMOBILE ENGINE L Fw 1937 . 1948 MODELS rprngl, low to eo ' '111.. v.. ENGINf ffinWK 7"ntlf Wock, new crankshaft, &cto L,"'1 'w 8-type pistons and aC nWteemateriSk thrUghUt ,tion Jour earliest conven- , GMAC TERMS vtt.-,- BarUii . . J "4,1M- 8ca Manager fSchirfz Motors OLDS CADILLAC - 'm I AS Body Shop 147 E. 6th Phona 6452 Rose Bowl as the Western Confer ence representative. J . I ' -V formality of electing attend Ilfll Jlir I nirn .mc ,1 munis ir ins ddwi reinnrn. I U IGII J LtlUjll ed. The league's faculty represen- ' tatives were exDected to send in , tlieir ballots for Northwestern Sat urday night. Playing before a capacity crowd of 47,000. the Wildcats were un- LOS ANGELES. Nov. 20 (UPJ ' questioned masters of Illinois and A dancing little halfback named i the-v on tn '" ws-v' Tn hi jack Kirby spelled the difference I un,plls c,aume lare,l' on lhe found Bui no matter how the faculty fathers decide on their $250,000 . 'question, they will not be able to i cause any more consternation Crush Bruins 20-13 As 82,754 homecoming v aivucu mc Kicatrat vivnu iu , u . . . . , , , a game in Ohio stadium in ,..,J. - ,. u" t"-v'" 20 years-Michigan struck fiKt """?"""?,,.... . ... . .... thr?Ji ,L JhZn ! "S'1"'5' recent occupation of Sen m.Pth.h n .imtT; 'ootball doormat and defeated then came through In almost the Penn S(a, , Niek Bolkov,c between two traditional football rivals Saturday as Southern Cali fornia overpowered a fighting University of California at Los Angeles, 20 to 13. Kirby gave Southern California Northwestern's Don Burson pitched only two passes. However, one of these went to End Joe Zur- avleff for 23 yards and a touch down. ! Pncr Trlt second , same manner for their score in the final quarter. Ohio's hopes, built up week long by pep rallies and fan tests, rose to the heights in the first 25 minutes of play as Ohio scored a quick field goal from 25 yards out. one-touchdown lead in the last 38 seconds of the first half when he took a 32-yard pass and ran 28 yards to score against a rejuve nated UCLA team that fought its heart out to remain in the game. Aside from that one, brilliant 60-yard play, the teams matched touchdown for touchdown before a crowd of 76.577 fans who sat on the edge of their seats in Memo rial Coliseum. USC on March Little Ray Nagel completed eight of 14 passes for 11)9 yards for his best performance of the sea son. But Southern Califoma ran up 268 yards on running plays, compared to 96 for UCLA. The Trojans made 19 first downs, to 13 for UCLA. The huge crowd was left limp by one of the wildest four minutes of play ever seen in the Coliseum, just prior to the end of the first half. Southern California, held score less for the first 26 minutes, marched 80 yards in 12 plays to score. Quarterback Jim Powers and Kirby were the sparkplugs of the drive, as Powers got it rolling deep into UCLA territory with a 25-yard pass to Kirby on the 16. And it was Powers on a boot leg run over tackle who set up the first score by driving to the one. Kirby went over. Watson Scores . But UCLA came back full, of fire and, with Quarterback Ray Nagel passing, moved 78 yards from the kickoff play to a touch down. Willis Diffy, little Negro halfback, took a 14-yard pass standing all alone in the end zone for the score. With 38 seconds of play left, Southern California appeared halted on its 40. But Quarterback Dean Dill, back to pass, sidestep ped two tacklers and threw a 32 yard pass to Kirby, standing in the clear on the UCLA 28, and that speedy halfback ran over for the second Southern California touchdown with the clock showing two seconds left. Both teams came back to score in the third period. Southern Cali fornia, on straight running plays, marched 66 yards, with Don Doll going over from the five. But UCLA fought back and in six plays got its second touchdown, chiefly on two 20-yard passes from Nagel to End Bill Clement and a 26-yard run by Halfback Ernie Johnson. Bob Watson went over. Michigan State Mops WSC's Cougars 40-0 EAST LANSING, Mich., Nov. 20 (U.R) Michigan State college chalked up its fourth straight football victory, smotnaring Wash Ington State 40 to 0 in an inter It was one of Northwestern's finest games and the fans, recog I nizing Bowl success for Coach Bob , Voigts. in his second year at his I alma mater, swarmed from the RENO. Nev.. Nov. 20. (U.R)- stands to carry him from the fields Coach Joe Sheeketski and mem The entire Northwestern line , hers of the Nevada Board of Ath- Nevada Denies Charges Made every minute of the game. Illinois gained only 149 yards rushing while Northwestern poured through for 239. While the Wildcats stayed out of the air except for the two passes, Bernie Kreuger, Illinois passing star, tried his best. Kreuger com pleted seven out of 18 passes for gains of 65 yards. His best throw of the day picked up only 22 yards to put the ball on the Northwest, em two and set up the lone 1111 nois touchdown after a 70-yard; drive. Third TD Easy Northwestern showed its super iority early in the game. The third time the Wildcats got the ball they marched 75 yards in seven plays to score with Aschenbrenner ripping 22 yards for the tally. Their other two touchdowns came in the sec ond period and they were content to rest on their laurels in the sec ond half. End Chuck Hagmann accounted for the second Northwestern touchdown with a 60-yard jaunt. Peewee Day had intercepted a pass by Kreuger. When he 'was trapped he flipped the ball to Hagmann who made the score. The third tally was nearly as easy. Day returned a Dwight Ed- dleman punt 12 yards to North western's 25. Gasper Perricone picked up two and Burson's pass to Zuravleff did the rest. Jim Farrar converted on two of his attempts for points after touchdown, but as it turned out he could have missed all three and the Wildcats would have been home safe. Don Maechtle succeed ed on his lone try for a conversion, Villanova Surge Stops SF 46-13 PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 20 (U.B Villanova College, a first half sleeping giant, smashed through with six second half touchdowns, five of them in the fourth period to blot out the University of San Francisco 46-13 before 10,000 at Shibe Park. Trailing by 13-7 at half-time, Villanova worked hard to spin off the tying touchdown in the third period. Then with unbelievable economy of motion, Villanova scored four touchdowns in the first nine minutes of the final period, and added another with seven seconds left to the game. WINS 60 GAMES PROVIDENCE, R.I. Charlie Radbourne, pitching in the 80's, won 60 games in one season, and sectional game before 36,045 spec- set a new record by hurling 22 tators. 1 consecutive games for the Nation Michigan State, which ranks , als then playing for the Provi- fourth to the nation on offensive ) dence, Rhode Island club. power, rolled up 53S yards ana 25 first downi In routing their west coast rivals. Washington State was held to 136 yards and nine first downs. Michigan States scored three times In the first quarter,, twice in the third period and once again 1 in the final quarter. 1 Washington State made but one serious threat to score. Late in the first period Halfback Jerry Williams broke away 49 yards to Michigan State's nine, but the Spartans held for downs and themselves unleashed a 97-yard march to score. The first Spartan marker came within five minutes after the kick off climaxing an 80-yard down field march. Fullback LeRoy Crane took it over from the one yard line. A fumble on the Washington State 21 by Halfback Don Paul set up Michigan State's second score. Halfback Lynn Chandnois went 14 vards for the touchdown. The third first-period marker re sulted from a pass from George Guerre to End Ed Sobcrak. A poor Washington State punt gave Michigan State Its fourth score early in the third period. The touchdown resulted from a 33-yard pass from Quarterback Gene Glick to Chandnois. Moments later Michigan State Center Bob McCurry snared a Washington State pass and ran to the visitors' Guerre drove to the five. On fourth down Chandnois dove over to score. With reserves dotting the Spar tan lineup, Michigan State march ed 88 vard to snre a 1e game ended.' Halfback Everett Grandel ius went over on a 13-yard run. BRAVES FIRST First team to win the World Series in four straight games was the Boston Braves of 1914. certain terms Saturday that pub lished charges that the Woltpack threw the Santa Clara football game for Reno gamblers were completely untrue. A nationally circulated sports newspaper, Sports Week, publish ed a story signed by Don Free berg which claimed Nevada's sur prise 14-0 defeat by the Broncos came as the result of a gambling coup engineered by Reno casino owners. In a letter to publisher Marly Berg of New York City, prepared by the legal firm of Thatcher. Woodburn and Forman, Nevada athletic officials declared "the University of Nevada athletic de. partment makes a categorical and complete denial of the charges and insinuations contained In the arti cle in your publication." sports Week was Invited to send an "accredited staff representa tive" to Reno to learn for himself the conditions which led to Ne vada's defeat by Santa Clara at Sacramento Nov. 7. The letter to Berg listed three primary reasons for Nevada's loss "the splendid play of Santa Clara," a 35 to 40 mile an hour gale which handicapped Quarter. back Stan Heath's passing and in juries to several key players. Ne vada officials pointed out that the woltpack was essentially a pass ing team in offensive play. "Thousands of Nevadans from all over the state were In the stands," the letter pointed out. "Nevada had an undefeated record to protect. The squad, its coach and the athletic department had everything to gain by a victory over Santa Clara, Including the possibility of an Invitation to play in one of the major post season Bowl games." Nevada fans, extremely Irate over the charges, pointed out that a Sugar Bowl official said after the Santa Clara game that the Wolfpack had "muffed" a near certain Invitation to the New Or leans classic. Just as mad were the owners of Reno gambling casinos said by the article under tire to have several Nevada grldders on their club payrolls. intercepted a Penn State pass late in the fourth quarter and hiked 23 yards for the touchdown that probably cost the losers a $100,000 bowl bid. Pitt's neighbor, Carnegie Tech alto won. Tech defeated Grove City, a rival Pennsylvania col lege, 7 to 0, for its first win since 042. George Washington spilled Georgetown, 13 to 7, for the first decision over its cross-town rival in a series that started In 1890. Louisiana State, battered six times in eight starts, licked its bruises with a 26 to 6 upset of Alabama. Those surprises were mixed among the games on a nationwide schedule that also saw a national collegiate record set for punt re turns and a guard suffer a broken ankle while trying to score and win quick delivery of an automobile. The punt return mark was set by Lee Nallcy of Vanderbilt, who brought back two kicks for 18 yards. That brought his season's total to 623, seven more than the old mark. Vandy beat Maryland, 34 to 0. It was Hays McKlnney of Geor gia Tech, who suffered the broken ankle. The lineman had been promised delivery of a car If he scored. When Tech was well on Its way to Its 54 to 0 win over the Citadel, McKlnney became a ball carrier. After several futile tries he suffered the injury. Michigan took to the air to bat down Ohio State, 13 to 3, and re tain the Big Nine championship. Northwestern ground out its 20 to 7'triumph over Illinois for second place while Minnesota pounded Wisconsin, 16 to ' 0. Purdue swamped Indiana, 39 to 0. Oklahoma and Southern Meth odist also clinched conference ti tles although the Texas Mustangs still can be tied for the laurels In the Southwest circuit. Southern Methodist again waited until late In the game to subdue Balor, 13 to 6, but Oklahoma started from the kickoff to murder Kansas, SO to 7. William & Mary was the major school to accept a bowl bid. The Virginians drubbed North Caro lina State, 26 to 6, and will ap pear In the Delta Bowl at Mem phis on Jan. 1. Clcmson, another Southern conference powci, re mained unbeaten with a 42 to 0 conquest of Duqucsne and North Carolina stopped Duke. 20 to 0. With only tradition at stake, Harvard marched to a 20 to 7 ver dict over Yale In the grand-daddy of all football rivalries. Iowa defeated Boston Univer sity. 34 to 14; Boston College trim med St. Mary's of California, 19 to 7: Tulane squeaked by Cincin nati, 6 to 0; Michigan State buried Washington State, 40 to 0; and Villanova trounced San Francisco, 46- to IS, in key intersectional games. IF YOU HAVE CALLOUSES TRY TRIMFOOT APPLIANCES AT PROUDFOOT'S FOOT COMFORT SHOP 663 Willamette Acmms from thn H.lllir TURKEY & MERCHANDISE SHOOT Sponsored by ' EUGENE GUN CLUB SUN. 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