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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1952)
UCLA 13 OREGON 6 WASHINGTON 39 IDAHO 14 CALIFORNIA 34 MARYLAND 13 COL. PACIFIC 13 MISSOURI IP STANFORD 28 KANSAS 13 SANTA CLARA 13 TCU 0 BAYLOR 17 ' WAKE FOREST 14 COLORADO 20 SAN JOSE 14 GEORGIA 19 VANDERBILT 7 NE.BRASKA 46 S. DAKOTA 0 PENN STATE 20 TEMPLE 13 GA. TECH 54 CITADEL 6 Sans Rally to Defeat Stubborn Ducks 13-6 foots Fool 'Experts' I Surprise Showing nst powerful bruins By DICK STRITE Tnc AMfiKf.KS Pin this in T . won't be playing any football game for a r. iMreMtfon that is rated anything in the $5 anth to five-touchdown favorite. The Web ! 7 weltering cash customers, lost 13-6 to ? f4, oruins here Saturday afternoon a moral fire was such a thing. F'Snnva's newly-clad while-and-green grid- ,i,,nned the Bruins, potential Pacific Coast !lnc with a touchdown early in the second IAN COUnRT HOME NtIMHt CLASSIFIED SPORTS SECTION C EUGENE, OREGON, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1952 1C Shouldn't, give up attempting to score what M have been the most stunning reversal in re talnly luve oeu sR-vard Dass after the Lnhcen held to the Bruin one-foot line in the UP" - ithan four-minutes of the third quarter remain-' ,1h Narleski's "dead ball" kicks stopped on the Jrd line and put the Webfoots back on their "5 j .i. n fourth attempt, the ball barely frl 15-yard reUun end li lirst Bruin tnucn- 1 plavs, Narleski TKMI'F.RATURE ' W his left tackle lor While the fans sweltered, the touchdown. Dailey' , player were virtually roasted jjuide and the count 'ajve and the effect of the 112 tem l perature on the Coliseum floor and i mnutw lne extreme humidity caused the $ MuUM"" Webfoots to wilt but not quit. Zm passed with OREGON'S FIRST TALLY ; session on its four I Oregon came close to winning km; Ail-American jS fjrst game from the Bruins; itcrcepted tne ac- smce the 1B4K Cotton Bowl team! give the Bruins tne tvon 26-7. (Jim Aiken was in the unn 10. Paul Cam-islands close by the press box.)l irlh down attempted The touchdown tallied by ShawJ ards and a touch- was the first score for Oregon over TV 90m hit- vs:M (V4 1 tRegi.ier-Guara pnoio ay wojcoti, wmsnirt engraving.) Yankees, Brooklyn Bolster Flag Hopes By ASSOCIATED PRESS The New York Yankees and Brooklyn Dodgers took giant steps toward a World Series date Saturday by bolstering their league leads with important shutout victories. Eddie Lopat blanked the Philadelphia A's with four hits for a 2-0 decision over Alex Kellner as the Yanks scored twice in the eighth on doubles by Phil Rizzuto and Yogi Berra, a single by Hank Bauer and-an error by Dave Philley. Sore-armed Carl Krskine and Jackie Robinson teamed up on the prt. r.n I Boston Braves to eke out a 10th .nn.i i inning win for Brooklyn. 1-0. that ;'"llrt - "5 55 'So deleft the second-place New York Jeiphl"""l77 72 !ii7 n j Giants in a near-hopeless position. l The Yankees clung to their IVi I415 2B 'game American League lead over 1 40 Cleveland Siturday but Brooklyn prt. r.B practically ended any chance of 599 s inoihcr fteiv York Giant "miracle" iu it ,by opening up a five-game lead in I'm lvi I tne National with only seven, to 1442 2S i play. 1273 s.ii4 Cleveland crushed Detroit in a night game, 11-3, with Al Rosen and Luke Easter hitting home, runs to stay on the Yanks' heels. Saturday night the Philadelphia Phils' Robin Roberts sent the Giants reeling into a near-hopeless position by beating rookie Al Cor win. v3-2, for his 2fith win. The "magic number" - required to clinch the pennant for the Dodgers now has been reduced to three. Any combination of three Brooklyn wins or Giant defeats will send Chuck Dressen'j Brooks AMP.RK'AN W I. Npw York 89 5B Cleveland RS cnK'aj Ph a Washington 76 Boston 74 St. Louis fil Detroit 49 N'ATION'AI. W I. Brooklyn -.93 54 New York .68 59 St. l.ouls tin t2 Philadelphia 82 fi5 Chtrago 74 7S Cincinnati . 65 82 Boston ..63 84 Plltaoureh 41 109 Beavers Batter San Francisco COAST LF.AGl'B W I. Hollywood 109 69 Oakland, .103 75 Seattle 94 84 Portland .. 90 88 San Diego 88 90 l.os Angeles 85 93 San Francisco j 78 100 Sacramento . 65 113 Pet. r.r .612 .579 6 .328 15 .506 19 .494 21 .478 24 .438 31 .365 44 NO IT'S NOT A CONGA LINE It's just Eugene halfback Jerry Wicks eluding the desperate grasp of two Springfield jna"am"" 03 1,3 " into the World Series, defenders in Friday night's 41-7 Axemen victory. The two white-shirted Springfield defenders trying vainlv to catch PORTLAND, Ore. tin The Port-: The Yanks still are in a tough Wiitlre n..A 1 J 'I ie I 1- I W.....L.. mi t j..f, j (. . . , , . . 5. . - - '.. 'land Rpaveri: hattlintr for a first wrestle with the Indians. Thev i bU lone Play of UCLA in three seasons. Two years' "h a " '"' a "VV, 3b ! division finish fn the Parific Coast have seven to go and Cleveland .-but Oregon was s it was 280 and last year 41 ' n.1"' . . mm tn piy oirapn up nis teams seconotoucnoown. : League, w,lloped ,he San Fran. only six. The "magi "er Tor Nou0feo;Xn,Cf nslve halfback end and Brethauer played fine' . j C 1 the Bruins had "' h .mt a'rH .Lt whfni fa! penal,y for "legal shlfl moved Hodges played the best game of ball, too," Sanders said in the (jflfl SCOrGS IZZ. N.rie.:!T,,h. X ?.L hb ri r:, 0rrron bal:k ? NovlkoH their careers and that both Bret- dressing room. !VJ,, JV,U,Ci .-.a .i hutinr " . . . . - mane a yam, a uiinnam pass lanen nauer and Barnes were outstand- tu. i.. r !:...:.. i-iillege '"; !""' - Monte Bret- ing. Failure of the running attack' lh'7 Sh' 7a Iw, .. UO-UCLA Statistics fright tackle for eight . . ... 'nr ",nf 1,1 ln,e, s ""vi-, to ltincuon was enargen to uulas. and a bruised leg for Barnes, Sa le touchdown. This! " , " , . V , "u ! "ne ,01ensIve ; bol of the Bruins will he out for placement was good " '" , 'b?" ?" 4sh,nrt, of the K""1 llne andl Sanders said that Oregon is vast-! three weeks with two bad knees. It was the final 13-6 , b,,'nP? n'1 b,"lses1 of . PCC eon-1 UCLA took over. lv un((,r.ra,(,d and ,ha, his ,eam Sanders picked out Moomaw and T ... , test. Ihev will return home Kun. . , . , .. ... . and 50 iccontis re-i v . -. " , " V, ........ ...... niirnes sioppen nanesxi on inc is over-raied, "Barnes is a. great NarlesKi as the best o the Bru ins. day, arriving a Mahlon Sweet air-! hait.yarr line and thon he plin(e(l , 'nnrt nn a llnitArl nr.fl at ahnnt ........ Oregon defense had , - . Merrill earner recovering nis own w Ith the Webfoots fine " , t ,, . '"""'e on " arreil wry Widow Waltr." i , numme start Aiongni maae two as me period id Emery Barnes on """ " K " enuett. , ,,in.t II,. nrln.';yruaRe lOllOWing Uregon S KICK- T!i first llnnhim n.i nf Hie f The Pacific Coast. Narleski's bounding pun not!,,,,, pffriod itiM and tn, he.C' ' sigh-jump champion "' ,Me "l"u-,u" variety, oouncea ; nit Brethauer for a 13-yard gain Noyikof . iian of the week" Sivvay f""V fna"' aid Ioomaw "called back to the 38 because of Ifflf. In the press box were ''ovcr'rt for ,he Bnllns on llle offside. It was then that Dunham Elliott I rliH . ii,,n . Oregon 10. Emmett Williams was an,i sha.,, tinl,i .Kfir nasa and run i"."A'' tpect of any player. I rca,1.v responsible for holfliri i perfectly, Shaw taking the toss a:Van Leuven l itent in the first half un,,lnK piays in net tt yarrt snnrt n ,ne goni linc and, - jjd Sanders two-limed 5;ar(l and tncn Merr.jtl Brbcr about a vard beyond Bill Stits. Sa- Totali ... le second halt nd """"" ",,w" ;" '"'"i-bol was also fooled as snaw went UCLA ,A offense to the ta ucntiown pass into me enaijnt0 the end 7.one for the touch-! Narleskl more plays. 'one- 'down 23 seconds after the period ?", ... ... ... V 11 In mipna Hind attack was nf: wmhi aiterwjtiu tuai nai-iupeneu. itii.v it-u.v .-,iuiit:ti j-.in- stjts IS 7 ... 1 -. 2 37 12 0 4 0 9 17 , I-CI.A .vg yl ncl ave. tdiStockert -.... 3. o .37 3.1 o'stalwlrtt 14 n 14 2.3 OjNurlcskl 2.0 0, Jones 3.n n 4.0 0!3AMK STATISTirS 1.1 0 Yards gained rushing" .. 8.0 0 Yards lost rushing 2.5 0 ct yards rushing Passes attempted 0 Passes completed ii'asses nad intercepted yg yl net are. in: arfls gamed passing 95 17 78 .33 124 . 4 12 . 1 13 3 8 viiih nnntism leski's first dead punt stuck on !erson Harvey's attempt placement. J. Smith .... ...... K.,-, .i , , , , i- ' .1 le bhavv playing left "", two but Novikolf game was'potent. epl off reat punt that car- eat Barnes intercepted, a Narles- iderstudv for "one. yarns lo Ine Ul-UA z0- ski pass on the Oregon 42. Urd us nni "n,,,cn fl,,u J'u" neiiKryem siui- nauer iook iunnam s pass 85 2.6 S l.S 13 13.0 8 2.7 9 1.5 1 -1.0 37 7.4 2 Net yardage, rusn pas p Runback Int. passes. n' First downs, rushing n i First downs, passing With UCLA in possession in mid-.staiwick TOTAIJ5 ... 53 203 48 157 2.9S rr passing: 0, Total first downs mi S(hr. ii.. .Pe ne Bruin running play to a eight and Albright made eight to S;!;"; kdine mid I nine-yrd loss and a pass to nolh-'ihe UCLA 42, Novikoff made two Dunham .is loff with it . I"1 "nrt Merntt Barber returned and then Milt Davis intercepted i UCLA. Ji, j-.n.. M..!..!.,). nil nt fnnv varHc in tho r I lU. OS ,.,nrt M.i-lbl 17 uwiii avui jaiua i v liuilllillll .1 Itd.tS Ull Lilt: a v cl V , ' - - - to his own 40. ! irrr A wa. .nl1inff hofrtr (Hp RKCEIVING 7 9 Cameron 1 0 No. scrlmmase plMys No. klokoffs Avg. length klcknff Yards klckoffs returned . Avr, kickoff return pa pc pi Yds. ret Tn!Ai;'n'Blh punt, . 4 ,, tn ,iards punt returns 3 115 .440 HAv,. pu rt.t,lrn ..... , . . .j!No. penalties pi yds. pet Yards lost penalties . IIS! Ball lost on downs 0 0 .000 0,N fnmhles Opp. fumhiea recovered .. pa l Nn. -i : TD -.3 25 0 -A J5 0 ..1 -18 0 ..1 1 0 ORE UCLA I ...05 203 ....17 ....78 U7 ...18 II ....8 3 1. .-..115 45 -.193 202 ... 0 , 33 ... 5 10 ... 3 3 ... 1 1 ...9 14 ... 82 79 -2 3 ..43.5 40.0: .. 56 211 . 18.7 10.5 7 8 .37.8 35.5 18 36 . 4.5 : 9.0 8 1 78 15 LCLA 13, Oregon 6 Oregon State 14, Utah 7 California 34, Col. Pacific Washington 39, Idaho 14 Stanford 28, Santa Clara 13 Colorado 20. San .lose St. 14 Penn State 20. Temple 13 Yale 34, Connecticut 13 Tuft 13. Bates 13 Georgia Tech 54, The Citadel Virginia Tech 27, Davidson 14 Duke 34, Wash. Ar Lee 0 Georgia 19, Vanderbllt 7 Maryland 13, Missouri 10 Kansas 13. TCU 0 Iowa St. 57, S. Dak. St. 19 Nebraska 48. S. Dakota 0 Bavlor 17. Wake Forest 14 Iowa State B 30 Buena Vlstt 7 Texas 33, La. Slate 14 Pacific U 9. W. Wash. 7 CPS 7, Pacific Lutlt 0 1'tah State 7. Montana 0 Arkansas 22. Okla. AiiM 20 Texas AAM 21, Houston 13 Arizona 57, Hawaii 7 Texas Tech 48. vr. Texas St. j Drake 14, Iowa Tchrs 12 Vlllannva 25. Kentucky 8 Kansas State 21. Bradley 7 Boston U. 6. Wichita 0 South Carolina 33. Wofford 0 Clemson 53, Presbyterian 13 Florida 33, Meison a Brighcm Young 14 San Diego NAS 7 San Francisco Chattanooga nn teorge:nv,-n i. . o rmunu Alabama 20 Mi-ilsslppi Southern S Mississippi 54 Memphis State 8 USC 35 WSC 7 Denver 34 Colorado College 12 Llnfield 13. Whitman 8 Santa Rosa (JCl 19 Oregon Tech 0. League, walloped the San Fran- only six. The "magic number" for Cisco Seals 10-4 before 2.217 sun- Casey Stengel's fourth straight baked baseball fans Saturday. flag now is any combination of The Beavers sewed up the game six. with five runs in the first inning,! Cleveland trailed Detroit in the chiefly on the wildness of Seal' early stages but caught fire on flinger Tom Del Sarto. The first the homers by Rosen and Easter, three men walked and ,loe Broviai The only positive action of the was hit by a pitched ball to score daytime baseball was the elimina- the first run. Don Eggert's single tion of the St. Louis Cardinals scored another and the bases were from the pennant race. By losing cleaned when Eddie Basinski dou- tn Chicago, 4-1, the Cards fell bled. 'eight games behind the Brooks The Seals' biggest scoring wi,h onlv seven to play. They still splurge off left-hander Royee. Lint nave n outside chance to nip the came in the eighth when Bill Mc-:Gi!,nts for second money. Cawley whacked his fourth home' Warren Hacker, a red hot pitch run of the year with two aboard, er down the stretch, held the. Cards It was Lint's 11th consecutive vie- to three hits to win his 14th at the tnry. The Seals got another tally expense of Gerry Staley's 14th de in the fourth. " feat. Slan Musial went unless in four the fourth on three singles and "i"'1", Frankie Baumholtz Brovia's double and two more in ,ne engender from Chicago, had the eighth on Eggert's lfllh homer nne ,n .""J ,'1mes " bJ,t nar, of the year with a man aboard. rn": .M.u,,al " hatt'n lead,; M,u,s,lal . . is hitting .3333, Batimhoitz .3316. Linescore: - R H F NATIONAL I.F.AftUF. otto 100 H30- - 4 9 1 R H B SIHI 3H0 ZOX 10 II 2 New York 000 OIO 010 2 5 1 Del Sarlo. Bevenr 111. Shanrinr (SI Phllartolnhla 000 002 I0x 3 9 2 and Ortelg; Lint and Glsdd. Corwin. Wllhelm (81 Koslo 18) and Yvars, Weslrum (51; Koberts ana Bur gess. R H K non noo ooo I l s 0 ono noo ooo o o 3 J Frsklne and Campanella; Spahn and Chicago Cards 10, Dallas Texans 0 ninJf Tun jn the nin, inning Sat- illv-i-Catcher Boston cst Kvasl'cvskl plaved a dirty trick k g. V. . "' y,hfn ,he ,ormer Michigan star quit Sc. ehi "nd r'm"l'ed( "I am leaving a Pacific i'b certainlv No. Yds. TO Oregon ... 0 4 38 0 UCLA 0 .2 42 1' Touchdowns Oregon: O Nsrleskl: 2. 8 0' Conversions UCLA: Dalley 0 (I 8 Shaw. aarl.hall k:nk. , Irnnhln it i.i. 'J'A 1 uiau ui m muiign ne senred autir. rvuii.irir.ii i Mdowns. Narleski! Ted Anderson made four and halt en(lcd- "inK t0 tn 0reKn 18 Brethauer kd nn tha Iuja t. .1 ... ... hfnro hoinir heir! for downs. shaw r men iook a jtunnam pass over nis - Anderson . .. 1 tnolher one dead nn haaH an4 m,Af ian,nia ino caKnii As nrevintislv mentioned. Narles-: jnhnsnn " . .-'i third Quarter, and and did it,A ,1 isnAiKMt B ki's second straight dead ball onl" fod placed one on yard short of a touchdown. It was the Oregon two set up the tying TTT t M F9 r- He missed his good for 27 yards. Novikoff then touchdown. In four running plays, KAfirAI'C Al 111 I ZL iNaricsm maae is, von statwicn XWVf V Vff A T T AAA A four and Cappy Smith three to set , up Narleski's final five-yard touch down dash. 713 UCLA: HCLIMBER y DICK STRITE Isn't as important as the 35-7 defeat at rc, i. uoi, nere Fr d :u. ,j ...... fee the n , '"Kin wuuin innicaie, nut in inis lin h , lB,nW hllbble wcnt bust' Fnr 'hat loredioih? J'ear when nearly half of the touch l " ,lne the WSC aiiarterhacklnir w evtremelv Following an exchange of punts lain in the third nerind. 1JCLA started moving from its 38 and a: SALT LAKE CITY Itpv-Alternate i-.varrl m from Narleski to Slal. 1' suave and sloppy, touted Ore- wick made first down on the Ore-lgon State Saturday night settled From Utah Eleven gon 29 as the quarter ended THROWN FOR LOSS On third down Barnes stalled the score came midway in the second quarter. Halfback Frank Branham. speedy Utah mainstay, provided: the second thrill. Earl in the clos- for a 14-7 football victory over un derdog Utah in their season open er before 15,000 fans in the UtCing quarter, he look the ball on Stadium. 'a h.inrlnul and ffallnnerl 35 varrU Narleski and then .lack. MacLeod Sam Baker, said to be one of the fnr the longest run of the. night, and Keith Peterson tackled him forjbest fullbacks on the Pacific Coast n,ut the Beavers held and took the ai 14-yard loss. That forced Narles- inis year, kept Oregon State in the j ball lo play a freeze-out for the ki to punt and the ball died on thcigame but with oodles of help from , remainder of the game, four. the pitching arm of quarterback' It was on the next , play that;Jim Withrow and halfbacks Ken Monmaw inlercented Dunham's Brown and Jack Pinion. j In the first quarter, Baker and In (h-ii iL- r. 1 f ,"c LOI8irs attempted only one pass in the en PiKeffg HUC,1',',,wn Mn ot nuarterback Bob Burk- wuchd,wn , game. Burkhart average.; 14.5 passes, ! Oregon 10. Three plays netted six'than the 1951 Skyline champions, ; solid arm. Withrow-set up the first Jams nnr. Hi . . ' I ... r ; ,, . ., li.i.i,. nn,,n.. n..n.l,n,l ihn lr ttntf irt four nr nwti nn a 3fi-varfi nass In Ned 12 """"" "-, ""wns a game last year. Friday I and men Cameron lane , - 'r, r.i.. on'ih. lit. F'n. Barker , i """P'eicd lor 38 yards and noting one-man scoring pass to f.rniciu mica "t" ,,,. .-. r Darker, who set . . . . . ... ..tc nfir-i- in nnnninB irun. Three plays later Baker went over er ith an avcrice a 7a I T "m?mnavKKn- .t , -u " Vmsr from the 12 and end Jim Cordial ht3for22va J . 4,6 recepl"ns fop 86.4 yards it was after the cxchnno that TOUGH (.OIXG , I eonveron w yards aBamst th Tmianc ucr AiA . ,.. i r.:. M.,ibffc n,.n ni, tun :citrt..0 fn,t it in..i. matle nis nrsl 01 wo conversions. vering potential receivers. 'nine yards to the Oregon 31. Nar- going to keep pace with the razzle- '?8R, Ida., and end Rh'r0l t c..n.tnce n, is onf rinrn.d in ih! Twenlv Dounds per man heavier! Pinion .capitalized on With row's Acorn 6, Solons 5 OAKLAND, Calif. Philadelphia Eagle M. Ft. Jackson 7 Ray Noble doubled home the win Detroit Lions 45, Vyashlngtott Skins 7. HIGH' SCHOOL Marxhfield 40 Cottage Gmv 7 Central Catholtr 13 Mllwmtkle 7 Ashland 44 Phoenix 6 Salem 34 AMnria 0 North Bend 24 Grants Pass 7 Albany 41 Lebanon 0 Pasco. Wash. 27 Pendleton Toledo 32 Concordia 14 r.ugene 41 Springfield 7 Tillamook 42 Taft O Crater 20 Rogue River K Pavton 13 Central I'nion 0 HilUboro 32 Beaverton 20 ' Klamath Fall 38 Rtvcehurg 8 SUvertnn 3R F,.tacada 0 Drain 19 Willamette 0 The Dalles 20 Milton-Freewater 7 "Wallowa 31 F.nterprlse fi Oakridffe 31 Pleasant Hill 14 Hermislon 13 Hood River 0 Molalla 2f Wood 'mm 0 Monroe 4fi Lowell 1ft Yamhill 24 Sherwood 7 Rattle Point 7 Mvrlle Creek Tillamook Catholic 41 Gaston 0 Jacksonville 39 C.lendale 0 Cascade Locks 52 Dufur 7 Canbv 13 Sandv 7 Wrv-E?5t 12 Madras 12 Vancouver Wash. 34 Med ford 13 Sluslaw 42 Elmlra 0 Maupin 13 Stayton 0 Wheeler 52 Ray City O K nan pa 25 Nehalem A OreRon Citv 14 Ncwberg 7 Forest Grove 19 Tigard 0 McMlnnvllle 27 West Linn W Prineville 13 Columbia Prep 0 Bend 34 Corvaliis fi St. Helens 34 Vernonla 1 Gre.'ham 32 Parkrose 0 Mosier Ifl Glenwood Wash. J4 Unlvcnitv 35 St. Francis ft Lake Oswego 47 .function City 21 Ml. Angel 25 Dallas 7 Culver 19 Arlington 12 K. Falls 38 Rocseburg ft ft a R H K " " ui t ..i nnn nin nno I 1 1 00O 011 tlx 4 Stalev. Chambers r8) and D. Rice. Fiifselman (8); Hacker and Atwell. AMERICAN' LEAGUE R H B . ono ooo ono o 4 2 ono noo nzx z 5 Astroth; Lopat 5 i and 0211 000 mn "j 9 J ono ,W2 flOx 11 9 1 Madison 171, white urday to climax Oakland's comc-from-bfhind victory over the cn'icapo j Sacramento solons. R II F Sarrampnlo . OOfl 0O4 100 S 11 4 Oakland 000 010 321 1 II 0 nspnbantn. Elliott IBI and MrKecg. phllHlnhl an: Mahrl, E'ans 171, Van Cuvlt (9) I.;" v ZC "" N"b"- !NrKe!lnS;k and Angels 5, Padres 1 j LOS ANGELES (111 Los Angeles JfcvHand clubbed San Diesn. 5-1. in a Pa- nrv. wieht' n cific Coast League game here Sat- "jj?1,rnert"0'fl r,"rcU' G"'m'k (8) urday as Gene Baker hit his 14th home run of the season and Wil- , m m lie Ramsdell gave up six hits. si. Louis . 000002025915 J 1 I inncrnre t Rnenvin. Alnma 181, and Lollar; Lit unescore. ijcrield. Harris! IS) Angus (SI Stuart S 0 uourinpy. ' J ISPcnndl R H B and chlracn . .. . noo noo 000 0 8 1 St. l.nul . 000 100 03x 4 10 0 r.rls:.om. Porlsh (71, Kennedy (81 and Suds 8, Stars 5 ILo",ri r"'1"1 Cmalm- H SEATTLE, Wash (IP Sparked by 2'"" , "J," " """-, , i' . . ... , T ' . , ., WasliliiEton . o.n aon onx 10 15 0 rookie pitcher Tom Lovrich. the i',rnpii, Nixon (4i, Schmo isi and Seatlle Rainiers pounded out. an f,nh'-'-A fi!irho '" sh"' "astsrson R-2 victory over the Coast league 1 ''"" champion Hollywood Stars Satur- osT VAMIABLF. day night to take a 2-1 edge in" poCATELLO, Idaho i-Ken the final series of the season. I Kimball, the record-breaking Idaho Lin,score; - Falls Russet pitched, was named noo nmi tin a o .1 samrciay as ine rioneer leagues 011 240 nox- 8 12 0 most valuable plaver for 1952. Kimball. San Dlrco Lo ngel. t Smith and Tf den. om noo ono 1 ion i2n mx 's Okrip; Ramndpll Hollywood ... SpfltMp Prim and I.undbcrj;. Malonp; l.ovrlch and . Minutes later, Wilhrow set the Passer 7h aR!imsl ,lle Trnjj p sser '"rt m coverino r.oin. na.eaw t. . " K"-"iini icvcivuis. nine VarOS 10 ine ureumi i. ""1EOina I" KUt-u pate nun ine iflitic- - , "eloor ,,r?'0 rtwi'h WSC's failure lo dominate lleriri passed to Dailey for nine dazzle Utes and were forced to con-j .Zl ! Mum 1- ; ""- """sues show. Burkhart and two and lo Stalwiek for lour to ine n. fine tneir game 10 tne ground ior ; .. . ;. ." :,,.. u. thtlin nl r,,yurds in ,hat manner. ich accounts ; Narleski failed and then passed to 1 tho remaining three quarters. . -' " " ' "7 "du,a V'!,g,C-,The m M 188 ,SlvCl!ert f0r;inerw!lnine,,P.ouchr' Ihl'on'lv" wd 117 C "" advancing d In Bd mn.i M ln flrs' downs 16 to 10. leskis second and winning loucn-;the only crowd-thrillers, vjuaner-. "lnSl Pffprlii.n j lk.nl. nrt RiMaljih toecorl a nift V . I1CICI. ?lw 'ullback frIr r.on ,he flcld was Dick Bower, ao"n- . , ... . ot iv.rH nlrl to halfback lack1 Two costly fumbles verified Ore. Ith-Z . rolled up l Barnes left .1 nt" r t rorn State's opening game jitter, I " any iroian. . . . Doini. ana was given a imimiman." - . ,., ... . , ; ovation. jLhJWN h 3 1 ViH.MSn1 ha,'f' l",d lth0Uhf ! Dunham's fumble Z: " e the ri,l I , " '"chlown run. of tr e(l and aemptin Iriumnh ,S: circ,,, h Pw ht will ....red by Jim Sals ? ho will nol o. ' ' I Oregon 40, but a timely tackle by rouble in ii.' .p ay 0r!nn this season, failed lo show 'Ceee Hodges killed the UCLA 1 !nd hjUk.., rp- Iwtcept for the. nower nf fnllhaelr ! throat The Webfoots moved fast, lm Sears anrt Ik. i.M... ... !... on . iu ITf-r.A he. - ...... me niviv; j uiiiuiiK - iroill ineii i" ' ' - -- where (he speed v halfback showed b"! , u,ah, was equally nervous as l.!- u 1. 1- k.'ii i..mhr. evidenced in frequent delayed (le afier being . , .... ,u n.i n ' cisions and faulty tackling. g to run was .. .. -...i" Vu--, li-.iani' The punting ot quarterback Car- shury on the ' . .,h:. ,., mn...i'n i.hen lor Cowley or Utah kept the Beav '- . - ers back on their heels. Twice his nH k.i le score. Exeeni inr ik. j-.. 11 1 l- . , . n-u. n-Krio ,,.l fast hnnloc Knmn the Troi... . m 'SPars and the trickv ninninir of from their 20 to the UCLA 44 be-: HERSHEY. Pa. an' impotent Wj,,hve . 'ttle in 'he way of attack. WSClfore penalties and mistakes ended delphia Eagles barely paused forjto push their way across boots gave Utah momentary edge in the Oregon State coffin corner. Fhila-jbut the lighter Utes were unable n.,, " P"ient uilh ii. , J 1 ivrteiv. ov lore penalties aim n...n.. i 1 ""de fsc ,he ci'lnniary single-wing or! the offensive. Stils intercepted scoring pi,vs click was the terrific Dunham's pass on the 42 and re- M-Orcson Co.. I turned to the Oregon 23 with 12 IAhp.u. , "n lotion Ro.AM t.-j - t.j ... j. :i-- tin a n. nnH . V " "a0U lasi . """ n"" Dau wan"" lv I my when ... ,and " threatened to be cut. Wh kept Vnn'd,P,ay0 were relMsfd- i"0liins S,,V' "" tourndo 'ey a,ive" w 'he fact that he tr."rs"a' tilth uhdown" in h 30-17 loss to the New tr: ' tllfhl U. li. .' p, snd r.i. n ." m,nl hack 34 yards and later L'7' "lansEPr i1" 'he New York 31. t hmi..' nf 'he Tnu-n Hn... jij 1.1. ' lnPlri( breath Saturday as they .unloaded statistics a scoring blitzkrig that mined ine ri,,. Fort Jackson "Golden Arrows. 5nin arda seconds remaining. UCLA gaincd;56.7 at Hcrshey Stadium. p", ,u' mSK 12 vards as the game cnoea. 1 rawM compipipn . . . . r. 1 a. pa iniercenipn n Casanova, in his dressing room, ruiiiiiAnr, rm.nr.na Pun , said his players were a lot farther CHICAGO l-The Chicago Cubs P,,mln aypr. sn s along then he had hoped and they Saturday announced purchase of V.rd ppnaiiwd """i; s showed the best lacKiing ne ""' i" "1" , '" ; fiah n 7 0 0- seen since coming to uiron. ' , , . : ......... ...r..n ,, Utah-' OrefoJ. , T2Wn Ho,,sft- h' P""-1 Iniadmits thev ran nut of gas. mostly 'of the Western League, and ;1oe TmtM,.: C! J ,M mtar tour because ' his fear of injuries and.Hattcn. 34-year-old lefty, from Los ; "p'-B',' poje 3C) 'lack of scrimmage. e mw uii riiBe,c. V osc w 7 28 wm 89 290 bi 82 102 Eli 1J 14 f. s 8 a 1 mumss n 7 , 14 if i i it. . w a M& lAiirhHnu.n: lanl: Oreion Slate Com. . KOIW HORSK.MKN OF 1!)S2? There Is no shortage of harkMclil material at Notre Dame, this fall. Among the, hall tarrying corps, roach Frank Leahy ran call nn this one composed nf (left lo right, halfback Paul Reynolds, quarlerhark Tom Carey, fullback Nell Worden, and halfback Francis Taterra. . Another Irish back to watch Is Johnny Lattner, who will be sen In the Notre Dame opener against Pennsylvania, Sept. 27.