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Register-Guard, Eugene, Ore.,
Pago 22 Wed., Nov. 7, 1951
Webfools Ready
for Grid Trip
! Dunham Likely to
! Miss Boston Game
It appeared mora than likely
tHat ; Oregon quarterback Hal
Dunham will sit out his second
tj-aight Webfoot contest when the
team plays at Boston Saturday.
JDunham, regular quarterback
until he sprained his ankle in the
Washington State game 10 days
afcjo, was in uniform, at Tuesday
drills, but he threw only one pass
lr aerial drills. In dummy scrim
mage, Dunham didn't work at all,
freshman George Shaw and
adbhomore Barney -Holland did
mpst of the quarterbacking along
With Wally Russell.
Jshaw fired two "touchdown"
passes to Ted Anderson in the
dijmmy scrimmage. This is the
came combination which netted
Oregon's two touchdowns in last
Saturday's 14-13 win over laano.
Shaw also completed one
mighty heave of 50 yards to
Wpyne Johnson. Another fresh
man, Lloyd Powell, also looked
gobd on the receiving end of sev
eral tosses. The Ducks also worked-
on the optional run-pass play,
wfjich wasn't used at all against
1119 Valiums, Willi uuii oiutin mir
necting with Kay Karnofski once
lot a score.
t"his was the seventh straight
drill' without any body contact
wdrlc. Instead, the,backs tuned up
on, running and passing offense,
while the lineman practiced de
fensive maneuvers against the
Junior varsity.
The Oregon traveling squad for
the) Boston game is to be an
nounced Wednesday. The 37-men
making the cross-continent trip
leave here by plane Wednesday
niflht arriving in Boston Thurs
day. Terriers Perfect Pass
Defense for UO Game
WESTON, Mass., Nov. 7 (P)
Coach Buff Donelli of Boston Uni
versity drilled his squad on pass
defense Tuesday in anticipation of
a big aerial attack by Oregon in
Saturday's intcrscctlonal clash in
Boston's Fenway Park.
The contest figures to bo a real
air! duel. Oregon, with star pas
ser, George Shaw, a freshman, is
ranked sixth nationally in for
ward passing. Boston University,
with the capable Harry Agganis
doing most of the tossing, is rated
leventh in that department.
The BU pass defense has been
good this year, although Donelli
admits "We've been hurt some by
pasfing." The Terriers have al
lowed 37 completions on 104 tries.
Don Ace Rambles for Yards
;:r :: :
'"..,f'-V4'v"-
OLLIE MATSON, San Francisco's All-Amcrican candidate
back, moved to the rushing leadership in the nation with
1279 yards thus far this season, He also paces the nation's
griddcrs in touchdowns, 17, and points, 102.
'
Mat son Tops Country
In Rushing, Scoring
Coquille, Tiders to
Clash Here, Nov. 16
The Univcrsity-Coqiilllc first
round state high school foot
ball playoff earns will be held
at; Civic. Stadium, Friday night,
Nov. 16. Coquille captured the
District 6-A-2 crown while the
Timers were the 5-A-2 titlisls.
Tho winner of tills came will
m(ct the winner of the game
between Grants Pass anil Dis
trict 5-A-I champion (Marsh-
fiejd, North Bend or lloschurg)
n tin second round of the
tingle elimination playoffs, Nov.
23: Coquille has won six of
seyen games this fall while
University's cluli Is unbeaten
In' seven starts going into Fri
day night's game with Eugene.
.,1,11,,! i. !!,. ......... i i .p.. 11,11.14 . i M"f.' ,' "!!" '
I ' 'k ' " ''
NEW YORK, Nov. 7 (IP) Ollie
Matson, the elusive fullback of
San Francisco, seems to have the
1951 ground-gaining title all
wrapped up.
The 6-2, 205-pound line-smasn-
er has amassed 127D yards rush
ing to lead Johnny Bright of
Drake, his nearest competitor, by
352 yards. The high-striding
Bright, who led the nation in
ball-carrying for the past two sea
sons, has totaled 927 yards, but
he is through for the year.
Despite playing with a broken
jaw, the Drake senior rolled up
106 yards rushing against Great
Lakes last Saturday. However, he
reinjured the jaw and definitely
will be out of action when Drake
ends its season this week against
Wichita.
According to statistics released
by the NCAA service bureau
Wednesday, Bright tops the nation
in total offense with 1553 yards,
but he will be hard-pressed to re-
U Bowl
PrnnywtKfl PniCi slinnrd n S-l virtnr!
vcr on GuorrliT l.umlwr Tursdny nttfht
Willi Kny lloffmim rolling hitih srrlos.
filtl, innd Al Dirt. Huh ttiimr. 212, both
inc Ppnnywlso. HtirMiarN suffrn'ri n 4-0
fhiilpm Al the hmids of Ktthnistrin s.
hny Wlllljnn.s of the winning club rolh'il I
both hlKh st'iU'n nml intnn-. Ml. 103, Tor
inlnitl 'l'.iNi hlimketl MiHirchoiiM Rich-1
ftpltH 4l. Virgil .font's of Tprmlnnl
rollotl IiIkIi writ's. Miiv Hurils ovprc;mir
nnriWi'i Shnts 3-1. Swede Horsey rolled
the jilgll series. M!t. nnd H.ilph Hrlckcr
the high giime. 122, both for Hurrls.
In Lookout Drtm I.e;igue Action Ttiivt
1ny night, Iternie Ashrroft took high
gam lit id serif. 107, 47!. to lend Hrtnk
Inauls lo a 4-(l luilont over CJarrlson
Cnlea Art Jitnttt pju-eil Wtllninetle
I 'heal re to n 4- vlctoiy mer Ivrll
Inrgft with a 112. 517. oh Miller high
Sniur of ITti nnd Hob Krwm's high series
of 4SR Its I Nt'sbitt Or;intie to a 3-1 win
over Lowell Id-i rtMllou. lliit lwi'll i Store
TOOK ( M 4-U decision iroin lllll n.
Williams' Trade
To Chisox Fails
CHICAGO.'Nov. 7 CUB Lou
Boudrcau, new manager of the
gold-plated Boston Red Sox, was
willing to shed his top salaried
employe, Ted Williams, for i;ni
cago's Chico Carrasqucl Wednes
day, but the White Sox weren't
ready to deal.
"I'm afraid that (Paul) Rich
ards is going to have to worry
along with Carrnsquel for a while
longer," Gen. Mgr. Frank Lane
said.
"No, Carrasquel Is one of the
fellows we're going to keep," Lane
added. "We'll deal a lot of fel
lows, but Carrasquel, (Orestes)
Minoso, (Nelson) Fox, (Eddie)
Robinson, (Billy) Pierce, - and
(Saul) Rogovin, we're going to
keep those."
Boudrcau disclosed that the Red
Sox already have discussed a
Williams-Carrasquel dicker with
the White Sox, but Lane said the
negotiations were indirect.
Lane agreed that he'd talk to
the Red Sox about getting Wil
liams, but not at the price of Car
rasqucl. "Who wouldn't want Williams?"
he nsked. "There's a lot of ball
players around we'd like, and
Williams is one of them. But we
won't give up Carrasquel to get
him. But we might give up other
players or money or something for
him."
Shaw Nears Mark in Interceptions
Cameron, Gifford Set
Coast Offensive Pace
tain his crown. Matson, who has
two more games remaining, pick
ed up 228 yards against Santa
Clara on Sunday to bring his sec
ond Dlace total to 1279 yards.
which is also his ground-gaming
figure. Frank Gifford, Southern
California, issixth with 658 yards
gained on 136 rushes in eight
games.
Matson has also scared the most
touchdowns in collegiate circles,
17, and heads the nation s scoring
parade with 102 points.
Matson Is closing the gap rap
idly in his quest to eclipse the all-
time season rushing records for
number of carries, yards gained
and average yards per game.
He has carried the pigskin 185
times, 44 less than Byron Town
send's record of 228, which the
Texas back established last year.
The Dons' ace needs 292 yards in
his last two games to better the
mark of 1570 yards set by Fred
Wendt of Texas Mines in 1948.
His seven-game average is 182.7
yards. Wendt is the present
record-holder with 157 yards per
game.
Oklahoma's Buck.McPhail paces
the rushers in " yards-per-carry
with 58 plunges for 574 yards and
a 9.9 average.
Don Babers, Oklahoma A & M's
sophomore quarterback, is the
forward passing completion lead
er with 105. Don Klosterman of
Loyola (Calif.), 101, and Babe
Parilli of Kentucky, 98, in their
final seasons are setting career
completion records every time out.
Klosterman has connected for 310
passes and Parilli 293 to top the
mark of 291 previously held by
John Ford, of Hardin-Simmons
and Sammy Baugh of TCU.
Other departmental leaders in
clude Parilli, most touchdown
passes, 14; Lynn Aplanalp, San
Jose State, highest per cent of
passes completed, 63.3; and Lcs
Richter, California, conversion, 30
points in 32 attempts.
LOS ANGELES, Nov. 7 Frank
Gifford, Southern California tail
back, has assumed the lead in
rushing in the Pacific Coast Con
ference and UCLA sophomore
Paul Cameron has regained his
total offense lead, it was dis
closed Wednesday.
Statistics released by the PCC
Commissioner's office showed
Gifford has gained 658 yards in
136 Dlavs for 4.8 yards per rush.
Cameron has 1080 yards in six
games on 412 yards rushing and
668 passing in 184 plays. Gary
Kerkorian, Stanford quarterback,
holds a big lead in passing with
63 completions in 107 throws for
902 yards and a 58.9 comple
tion mark. He has had five inter
ceptions and has thrown to five
touchdowns.
Gifford replaced Johnny Ols
zewski of California as the No.
1 runner.
Olszewski netted 588 yards for
7.6 yards per play in his first
five games but has been out since
with injuries.
SHAW NEARS MARK
Bob Burkhart, Washington
State, is second in passing with 52
completions, and Sam Mitchell,
Washington, third. Kerkorian is
second is total offense and Gif
ford third.
Record-breaking performances
may be forthcoming this weekend
at the receiving end of the aerials
where Ed Barker, Washington
State, and George Shaw, Oregon,
are in command. Barker caught
10 tosses last weekend to boost
his season total to 31, just eight
off the PCC season record of 39
set last year by Bill McColl,
Stanford, Barker has 627 yards
and eight touchdowns, also close
to the PCC season records of
671 yards and 10 TDs.
Shaw, a double-duty freshman.
tied the PCC season record of 10
interceptions last week when he
stole three Idaho tosses. Jake
Leicht, also of Oregon, first in
tercepted 10 in 1945.
OREGON HALTS AERIALS
Southern California's Trojans
and the California Bears domi
nated the team statistics.
The Trojans are the No. 1 de
fensive team by a wide margin
and exhibited their best form last
weekend in allowing Army only
10 .yards passing and throttling
the Cadets to a -10 yards from
scrimmage The performance gave
Southern Cal a defensive rushing
mark of 91.4 yards per game in
its eight outings, by far the best
in the Conference. The Trojans
first in total defense, 203.6 yards.
Oregon has the best pass defense,
110 yards per game.
The Golden Bears hold offense
honors by a narrow margin over
Washington State. Cal has aver
aged 398.3 yards per game, to
380.0 for the Cougars. Cal leads
the PCC in rushing, with 286.9.
Oregon is the No. 1 aerial team,
with 167.3 yards per game.
Oregon State leads in intercep-
BI'SIMNG TC TG YL Ktt
Giflord. SC 138 658
Olszewski. Cal 77 601 13 588
McElhenny. Wash 102 608 25 583
Baker, OSC 116 531 13 518
Bailey. WSC 101 553 37 516
Mann. OSC 100 565 10a 457
Head. WSC 39 461 31 430
Cameron. UCLA 97 544 132 412
Hueasian. Stan 94 401 lSf 386
Powell. Cal 46 329 1 328
PASSING PA PC PI Yd.
Kerkorian. Stan 107 63 5 902
Burkhart, WSC 103 52 7 854
Mitchell, Wash 96 51 4 678
Cameron. UCLA 81 48 S 868
Dunham, Ore 10:1 45 10 554
Mais, Cal 79 37 6 628
Schneider. SC 67 32 432
Shaw. Ore 69 30 8 361
Morrow, OSC 71 29 11 349
Rockey, Wash 58 2 8 6 340
tions, having snared 20 opponents'
passes and returning them 250
yards. The Beavers also lead in
punting with a 40.4 yard average
on 50 kicks.
The individual averages: ,
TOTAL OFF Rush Pass Total
Cameron, UCLA 412 668 1080
Kerkorian. Stan 54 902
uiitnra, tt5a
Burkhart. WSC -42
Mann. OSC 457
Mitchell, wash
Olszewski. Cal
McElhenny, Wash ,
Mais, ual
583
234
854
248
672
30
956
892
812
705
. -99 628
Baker, OSC
Hugasian. Stan
Powell. Cal
Barker, WSC
Christian, Ida
fticuoii. stan .
West. Cal
Bailey. WSC
Kerkorian. Stan
Richter. Cal
Robison. Cal
RECEIVING
Barker, WSC
McColl, Stan
Stockert, UCLA
Thomas, OSC
Earley. Wash
mcuiary, wash
30
. 30
30
30
No. YJi." TD
.11 OZ7 B
427 6
279 4
244 1
302 2
253 1
139 2
196 3
18? 0
: -38 654,
TD PAT FG
10 16 0
. 5 23 2
. 4 20 0
.7 0 0
,7 0 0
.6 0 0
6 0 0
.5 6 0
6 0 0
.6 0 0
.5 0 0
. 2 15 1
. 0 30 0
.5 0 0
... 28
24
22
20
... 20
17
16
No.
10
9
4
A
Zimmerman, SC '7 111 4
Albrecht. Wash
rjunis. sc
i.ee, cal
Yds. TD
lllft
100
19
rUNTING
Mann. OSC
Anderson. Ida
Koch. SC .
Moore, UCLA
Horn. Stan
Ulfford. SC
Indiana Coach
Smith Resigns
Hoosiers Looking
For Grid Mentor
i
BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Nov. 7
(fl) Indiana University began
looking for something it never has
had a football coach who can
win consistently in the Western
Conference. Officials had no idea
who he could be.
Clyde B. Smith is the tenth who
couldn't make it. He resigned
Tuesday, effective at the end of
this season, with two years to go
on his contract.
Alvin N. "Bo" McMillin, Smith's
predecessor at Indiana, came clos
est to a winning record in Big
Ten competition. His 14 I. U.
teams broke even in the tough
circuit, winning 34, losing 34 and
tying six. His 1945 team won
Indiana's only conference cham
pionship. '
Smith, a short muscular man
who refrains from liquor, tobacco
and profanity, walked into athletic
director Paul "Pooch" Harrells
office and said he was quitting
because "I'd like to be happy for
the next three weeks and coach
the boys like they deserve to be
coached." He did not elaborate.
Smith's four teams at Indiana
have won eight games, lost 24 and
tied one well under the Univer
sity's all-time 218-220-36 record.
In the Big Ten they have won four
and lost 17, also under the 67-143-18
record.
Scattered alumni began sniping
at Smith after his current squad,
expected to be liis best, lost one
sided games to Notre Dame and
Michigan and defeated Pittsburgh
by only one. touchdown,
The clamor subsided for a time
after Oct. 20 when Indiana upset
Ohio State, 32-10.
UO Sixth National
in massing oitense
NEW YORK, Nov. 7 UP) Holy
Cross' powerful Crusaders keep on
rolling up the yardage. The once
beaten New Englandcrs, for the
fifth time in six weeks, top the
nation's major footbal teams in
tearing up and down the gridiron
with a prodigious average of 455
yards per game.
Coach Eddie Anderson is pleased
at the figures but he undoubtedly
would settle for less yardage if it
would bring victories over his next
four opponents. That could assure
the Crusaders of a bowl trip on
New Year's Day.
Holy Cross accounted for 334.5
of its average by ground plays and
120.5 via the air.
College of Pacific, which has
averaged 70 ground plays per
game, leads the way in rushing
with an average of 342.6. Loyola
of California, with Don Kloster
man pitching passed every time
you look around, is first in passing
with an average of 217.3 yards per
game.
"The figures, released Tuesday by
the National Collegiate Athletic
Bureau's mathematical master
minds, shows Tulsa second in total
offense with 449.3 and second in '
rushing with 337.2. j
Princeton moved into third place j
in overall oifense with a 422.0 av- j
erage. Oklahoma's Sooners, who !
piled up 584 yards in shellacking
Kansas Sfat
from 28th pla V?
total offensr'V.!fit;
aee. Oki3h .u,ef
oma 4 ."'
in passin? in. ... M
game. MJ ftj'
Princeton has the v
average, having J"
per cent of the aSPfe'
and Wake Forest !
in pitching for t0,Sfe
M aerial
Oregon is in si-th
ward passing with
43.8 per cent8 compfe
games, the Duck,
"u passes atten. :
scored P iaht t...t
ials. The Tto
averaEe f 167.3 per6-
Thev it.
.Price $7.50
"The New"
WHXIAMS
1015 Willamette
Schulz Motors
OLDS CADILLAC
G co-age
8th & Pearl
Died 4-1429
EVERYTHING BEST
FOR YOUR CAR
man
Burkhart. WSC .
Sprague. Wash
No. Tdi. Ave.
- 33 1380 41.8
24 998
- 19 760
. 29 1138
. 23 1S
- 18 688
PUNT RET. No.
Williams. SC 27
Dalley. UCLA 15
McElhenny. Wash . 3
NuKent. Wash 5
Rolfler, WSC 10
KICKOFF RET, No.
Williams, SC 10
Novikoff, Ore 9
Pool. WSC 8
Dalley, UCLA 1
Mann, OSC 7
Berry. WSC 9
Anderson. Ore 10
'One same missing.
25S
133
111
110
Yds.
249
5(18
173
168
162
17.0
44.3
22.2
11.0
Ave.
24.9
23.1
21.6
24.0 '
23.1
17.3
15.1
FIGIIT BROADCAST
The Kid Gavilan-Tony Janiro
fight, a ten-rounder in Detroit
Wednesday night will be broad
cast over KERG, starting at 8
p. m. ,
SUITS FOR FALL
BOTANY 500
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It's often the little unseen flaws
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44 West 10th, Eugene, Oregon
Dial 5-2341
nirrflFs:'
on. r.A Mnin. Sprfsf6
Dial D-si