Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, October 21, 1962, Image 14

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    Tt 4B EUGENE REGISTER-GUARD, Sunday, Oct 21, 1M2
Wildcats Rally for 18-14 Win
Northwestern Clips Ohio
COLUMBUS, Ohio lev-Northwestern
spotted highly - favored
Ohio State g 14-point first period
edge Saturday and then roared
back for an 18-14 victory over
the Bucks to retain undisputed
first place in the Big Ten.
Thus the Ohioans, rated no. 1
In the pre season poll, were en
tirely deflated after their pres
tige had been punctured two
weeks ago by UCLA in a simi
lar upset.
Halfback Bob Klein returned
Northwestern's opening kick
off 90 yards for a touchdown,
Army Trips
Virginia Tech
WEST POINT, N.Y. tfV-Pow-
erful Army, the pride of the
east after it upset of Pcnn
State last week, had to fight for
Its life with stubborn Virginia
Tech Saturday before it hung
up a 20-12 victory before 25,124
fans.
Pete Cartwright, a junior
quarterback drove the Cadets
crazy with his passes in a los
1 East '
lng cause, hitting with two
touchdown passes. Cartwright
kept the pressure on Army
through the waning minutes of
the game with the help of an
interference call until the Chi
nese Bandits finally took the
ball away from him on the
Army 33.
When Ken Waldrop fumbled
on the Army 39 and Lynn Jones
recovered for Virginia Tech,
Cartwright had another chance
with less than two minutes to
go. The aroused Army team
swarmed over him and he failed
to complete three passes. On
the fourth down Bob Schwelck
ert, Cartwright's replacement,
was thrown for a 15-yard loss
by Bruce Hein.
Navy, 26-6
NEWTON, Mass. W Navy
alertly converted Boston Col
lege mistakes into a 28-6 foot
ball victory Saturday with the
Middies' sophomore one-two
punch of Frank Staubach and
Pat Donnelly delivering the
knockout blows.
The teams were locked in a
8-6 duel and BC was driving
toward an apparent go-ahead
touchdown when guard Al Kre
kich intercepted a sideline pass
at his 14 and ran it back 30
yards.
Penn State, 20-19
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. W
Penn State guard Harrison
Rosdahl blocked a 34-yard field
goal attempt by Tom Mingo on
the last play of the game Satur
day to spoil a gallant bid by
Syracuse for an upset as the
Nittany Lions won 20-19
The Lions scored the winning
touchdown 10 minutes earlier
on Dave Hayes' one-yard
plunge, capping a 58-y a r d
march.
Dartmouth, 10-0
HANOVER, N.H. CB-A 06
yard runback of a pass intercep
tion by halfback Tom Spangen
berg next to longest play in
Dartmouth history catapulted
the undefeated Indians to a
1CM) victory over previously
unbeaten Holy Cross Saturday.
Harvard, 36-14
NEW YORK Hi Harvard's
football team, combining hard
running with crisp passing,
scored in every period to over
whelm favored Columbia 38-14
for its first Ivy League victory
Saturday.
Com h
I .mi I.ellK.mo
II. of O. hemline
couch for im il
yein. Lou's U, of
O, CollrKlAif tenm
hiv won 7 out of
th punt in Mnr.
lirt fir th A.U"
Mtictionrri VarMu
itvcriiK wm 9112,
,mi Ik former nil
nt Matt rham-ftlnn-
11 l iUt,
nifmhT of AMI1'
Stuff of Chump.-
rinn't fnriet nnr new low
and late in the period the
Bucks marched 71 yards in 14
plays to send fullback Dave
Francis over from the nine for
a second score.
Then Northwestern uncovered
its vaunted air arm in Tommy
"Gun" Myers, sophomore from
Troy, Ohio, and the Wildcats
moved on to victory. In the sec
ond quarter after Chuck Logan
had hit quarterback Joe Sparma
behind the line, shaking the
ball loose for a recovery by
Jack Cvercko, Northwestern
moved 42 yards in 10 plays with
In Big Six Tilt
Southern Cal Routs
California by 32-6
LOS ANGELES Wl Towering end Hal Bedsole hauled in
touchdown passes of 46 and 79 yards Saturday as the heavily
favored Southern California Trojans smothered California 32-6
and launched their Rose Bowl bid in the Big Six Conference.
The unbeaten Trojans, after fooling around in the scoreless
first period, broke the game open in the second quarter with
two touchdowns in a four-minute span and were never threat
ened. The game was played before 38,500 at Memorial Coliseum.
Bedsole opened Southern
California s bid to keep its high
ranking no. 3 in the nation
intact with his opening touch.
down. He fielded a long, arching
c I
First downs 18
Rushing yardage - 114 128
Passing yardage 180 329
Passes 1S-25 17-29
Passes Intercepted by 0
Punts 7-36 4-45
Fumbles lost 0 2
Yards penallied 82 120
pass from quarterback Bill Nel
sen, gathering it in as he stood
in the end zone with two Cali
fornia defenders on his neck.
Less than four minutes later
Nelson threw an 11-yard scoring
pass to halfback Jay Clark after
the Trojans had set up the score
on a pass interception by center
Armando Sanchez on the Cali
fornia 23.
Early in the third quarter
Pete Beathard, who alternates
with Nelsen in the quarterback
role, threw from inside the Tro
jan 20 toward Bedsole at the
California 45. California's Tom
Blanchard tipped the ball into
Bcdsole's huge hands.
Tho 6foot-5 junior, who
weighs 213, took off. He eluded
Blanchficld and then literally
slapped down his last pursuer,
Allan Nelson, at the 10.
Bedsole and the Trojan quar
terback managed to steal the
show from the flag-dropping of
ficials. Tho game was inter
rupted 24 times for various in
fractions and the officials were
accorded hearty rounds of boos.
The Trojans added another
touchdown in the third quarter
on a 19-yard run hy Willie
Brown and got their final score
in the fourth on a five-yard
dash by Beathard. The Trojans
were unable to add an extra
point until after their last
touchdown when Ken Del Conte
made two points on a run.
California, trailing 0-18, fi
nally got a sustained drive go
ing. Quarterback Larry Ballictt
ushered the Bears 75 yards in
12 plays. But it took heroic ef
fort and four downs to get the
final yard. Balliett was stopped
tnree times. On the fourth he
was thrown back to the three
but was able to push the ball
into the end zone to Ron
Vaughn.
California
Southern California
(I I)
0 12 12
ft 8
8-32
I'SC Redsole 48 pass from Nelsen
(kick faUedl.
IISC Clark II pass from Nelsen
(pans failed).
1ISC Hedsnle 79 pass (mm Beath
ard (pass failed),
("al Vaughn 1 pass from nalltett
(pass failed!.
ilSO Hrnwn 19 run (pass failed!.
USC Beathard B tin (Del Conte
I runt.
Attendanre 38,800.
NOW! Your Opportunity
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Learn From A Champion!
COACH LOU BELLISIMO
University of Oregon Coach
Will Instruct for 2 Series of
(5) 2-Hour Lessons
Series 1 Surfing Sun. 1(1-11 a.m. Oat tlt
Series aiartlnf Toes. Ml p m. net. Urd
1A hours of fun and J1A
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beginners, and advanced
Sinn up now , , , Don't be disappointed!
rmvATi instri crniN At n avaii ahi k
prices. Snark har arallahls.
Myers hitting Paul Flatley with
a nine-yard scoring pass.
Late in the period, Roland
Wahl intercepted a Sparma
pass and 11 plays and 53 yards
later fullback Bill Swingle was
in Ohio's end zone on a one.
foot plunge. Both attempts for
two-point conversions failed,
and Ohio clung to a narrow
14-12 edge.
The payoff came with about
five minutes to go In the final
period as the 'Cats stole Ohio
ground-eating thunder and
rushed 42 yards in six plays
Pitt Shades
UCLA,8-6
PITTSBURGH (3 An im
provised two-point conversion
pass from Jim Traficant to Rick
Leeson provided Pitt with an
8-6 fooltball victory Saturday
over previously unbeaten UCLA.
The two-pointer followed Paul
Martha's six-yard sweep around
left end on a pitch-out midway
through the third period.
Fullback Leeson lined up to
kick the conversion with Trafi
cant holding. The snap from
center was high. Traficant
dropped back looking for a re
ceiver. Leeson dashed into the
UCLA Pitt
First downs 12 17
Rushing yardage 12.1 210
Passing yardage 138 88
Passes 88 7-H
Pssses Intercepted by 2 1
Punts 8-31.8 7-28.4
Fumbles lost 1 1
Yards penalized 20 71
right corner of the end zone
and snared Traficant's toss in
between two UCLA defenders.
Engineered by sophomore
quarterback Larry Zeno, the
star of the 9-7 upset of mighty
Ohio State, the Bruins marched
back minutes later for a touch
down on Kermit Alexander's
one-yard sweep.
But Zenos pass on a two-
point conversion attempt failed
when Alexander pulled in the
pass and was tackled near the
10 yard line by end Joe Kuzne-
ski.
Zeno tried to bring the Bruins
back in the fourth quarter as
they reached the Panther 21.
However, the attack stalled and
Zeno, . whose field goal two
weeks ago beat Ohio State, at
tempted a field goal from the
29. It sailed wide to the right.
The ' Bruins stormed back
again in the final minutes of
the game but sophomore Marty
Schottenheimer of Pitt inter
cepted Zeno's pass on the Pitt
28.
Pitt scored first in the third
quarter after the teams played
a scoreless tie through a punt
dominated first half.
iIcla o (i o
Pitt o o a o a
Pttt Martha 8 run (Leeson pass
from TraftcanO.
UCLA Alexander 1 run (pass
failed).
Attendance (0.4111.
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Iratttrt M tftt prtet
3th & Washington, Eugene
with Steve Murphy tcoring from
the one.
N ns
First downs 21 IB
Rushing yardage 117 197
Passing yardage 177 78
Passes 18-30 8-18
Passes intercepted by 1 2
Punts 8-27 1-34
Fumbles lost . 0 2
Yards penalized 58 40
Northwestern 0 II 0 18
Ohio State 14 0 0 014
OSU Klein 90 klckoff return (Van
Raaphorst, kick).
OSU Francis 9 run (Van Raap.
horst. kick).
NW Flatley t pass from Myers
(pass failed).
NW Swingle 1 plunge (pass
tailed).
NW Murphy 1 plunge (kick
felled).
Attendance 84,378.
Wisconsin, 42-14
MADISON, Wis. IX) Unde
feated Wisconsin, the nation's
tenth-ranked football power,
rolled to its fourth straight vic
tory by crushing Big Ten rival
Iowa 42-14 Saturday with the
help of a 28-point second-period
outburst.
The surprising young Badgers
survived an aerial blitz by
Iowa's Matt Szykowny and ex
ploded with an awesome attack
engineered by quarterback Ron
Vander Kelen.
The slick Wisconsin signal
caHcr passed for three touch
downs and set up the others for
his fleet of swift, hard-hitting
backs.
Sophomore Ron "Pint o"
Smith led the scoring parade
with three touchdowns. He
caught a 10-yard scoring toss
from Vander Kelen and ran for
two other touchdowns from nine
and four yards out.
Purdue, 37-0
LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AT Quar
terback Ron DiGravio threw
three touchdown passes and
scored once himself Saturday in
a 37-0 Purdue victory over Mi
chigan, its first over the Wol
verines in 33 years.
Purdue rebounded furiously
from its upset by Miami of Ohio
last week and piled up 412
yards from scrimmage to Michi
gan's 97.
Purdue scored on its first
play, a pass from DiGravio to
Tom Fugate, fleet sophomore
halfback. Fugate was all alone
on the Michigan 20 when Di
Gravio threw from the Purdue
46.
Michigan State, 31-7
SOUTH BEND, Ind. W)
Michigan State's fiery fullback,
George Saimes, scored on slash
ing runs of 54, 49 and 15 yards
as the reckless Spartans
spanked Notre Dame 31-7 be
fore 60,116 rain-splattcrcd foot
ball fans Saturday.
It was Michigan State's sev
enth successive triumph over
Notre Dame and the second
straight year the explosive 187
pound Saimes personally
wrecked tho Irish.
A 13-point favorite, Michigan
State led at halftime only 12-7,
but broke the game wide open
with 19 points in the third quar
ter. Minnesota, 17-0
MINNEAPOLIS Ml Surpris
ing Illinois, riding the aerial
thrusts of quarterback Mike
Scouting Report Set
A scouting report by assistant
coach John Robinson on Wash
ington, Saturday's Oregon foot
ball opponent, will be the main
topic Monday noon in the Eu
gene Hotel at the weekly meet
ing of the Oregon Club.
Coaches will also give a re
view of the Air Force game and
the Wehfoots' ends will be
guests at the meeting.
OHLY
SMALL
fEAWRE
IS THE
PRICE!
the name you
AUTO"know
tomorrow
State
Midwest
Taliaferro, kept the pressure on
listless Minnesota most of the
way but the Gophers had
enough offensive punch to grind
out a 17-0 Big Ten victory Sat
urday. The Gophers marched 51
yards in the first half for a
touchdown and then added a 27
yard field goal by transfer stu
dent Colin Versich and a last
second touchdown in the fourth
quarter.
Oklahoma, 13-7
LAWRENCE, Kan. Wl Joe
Don, Looney's 61-yard scoring
burst and booming punts and
some great Oklahoma line play
gave the Sooners a 13-7 victory
over Kansas Saturday. The vic
tory served notice Bud Wilkin
son's club is on its way back to
the top in Big Eight football.
Looney, a speedy 207-pounder,
tied the game 7-7 with his 61
yarder in the third quarter.
Then the Sooners wrapped it up
with a 56-yard scoring drive
early in the final period.
Missouri, 23-6
COLUMBIA, Mo. MV-Johnny
Roland rolled up 155 yards in
19 carries, scored two touch
downs and led unbeaten Mis
souri to a 23-6 Big Eight Con
ference football victory over
Oklahoma State Saturday.
Roland ran six yards in the
first period and 18 in the third
for his two scores. Halfback Bill
Tobin ran five yards for a sec
ond quarter touchdown and Bill
Leistritz booted a 25 yard field
goal in the same period.
Iowa State, 57-19
AMES, Iowa Wl Iowa State
eXDloded nut nf a fhrpp-onmp
losing slump by crushing Colo
rado 57-19 behind the running
of Dave Hoppmann and Ozzie
Clav in a Ri0 Eiphr. CnnfarAnoA
football game Saturday.
The Cvclones' attack in their
first conference trtnmnh wa n
vicious that it produced four
touchdowns In one nine-minute
outourst midway in the game
affainst the nntmnnnori Rnf.
faloes. Hoppmann scored twice
on one-yard plunges, sprinter!
19 yards for another touchdown,
and passed for a 40-yard score.
Nebraska, 26-6
LINCOLN, Neb. OTl Unde
feated Nebraska allowed Kansas
State its first touchdown of the
season Saturday before roaring
back to overpower the Big Eight
Conference football rival 26-6.
WSU Rally
Overcomes
Indiana, 21-15
SPOKANE, Wash. MV-A 50
yard touchdown pass from Dave
Mathieson to All-America can
didate Hugh Campbell with just
1:18 left brought Washington
State a 21-15 victory over Indi
ana in an intersectional football
game here Saturday.
All but one of the touch
downs came in the exciting
fourth quarter, including all of
WSU's.
Campbell, who appeared to be
covered by Nate Ramsey, pulled
in the perfect pass on about the
10 and knocked over the cor
ner flag as he fell into the end
zone.
Just moments before, Indiana
had also battled from behind
and gone into a temporray one
point lead on a gamble for a
two-point conversion.
Campbell, who had a sore an
kle and didn't rate a reception
against Stanford last weekend,
was sensational in the Cougars'
21-point fourth-quarter outburst.
On the previous WSU drive,
he had made a leaping catch of
a Mathieson pass on about the
i wsu
First downs 20 I
Rushing yardage 215 79
Passing yardage 128 134
Passes . 11-18 9-18
Passes Intercepted by .. 0 0
Punts 4-29.5 7-33
Fumhles . 2 0
Yards penalized 107 50
10 and had fought his way in
side the four. Mathieson-to-Campbell
completions also ac
counted for much of the yard
age on the first Cougar drive.
After going behind by a
touchdown, as Washington State
scored the second time in the
fourth period, Woody Moore un
wound on a series of comple
tions that carried the Hoosiers
70 yards in eight plays. The pay
off came off on a three-yard
throw to Ramsey in the end zone
and then Moore hit Marv Wood
son with a two-pointer that gave
Indiana its last lead.
Indiana had scored the first
time it got possession in the
second half moving 53 yards in
13 plays. The Hoosiers stayed on
the ground on the way except
for a key 11-yard pass from
Moore to Jim Bailey. Woodson
finally went over from the two.
Fullback George Reed scored
twice for WSU on plunges of
one and two yards.
Indiana ft 0 7 815
WSU 0 0 0 2121
Ind Woodson 2 run (George
kick).
WSU Reed 1 run (pass failed).
WSU Reed 2 run (Campbell pass
from Mathieson),
Ind Ramsey 3 pass from Moore
(Woodson pass from Moore).
WSU Campbell 50 pass from
Msthieson (Branco kick).
Attendance 15,500.
IMPORTANT NOTICE:
t
TO ALL OCCIDENTAL POLICYHOLDERS
IN STORM-STRICKEN AREAS
We at Occidental realize that these coming weeks may be a time
of extreme hardship for many of you whose homes and businesses
have been ravaged by the storm.
To help, wc have arranged a special, extended grace period for the
payment of all premiums on Occidental Life and accident and sickness
policies.
The grace period for the payment of any premium falling due between
October 1 and December 31, 1962 is extended to February 1, 1963.
The special grace period is available for all Occidental policyholders
whose homes or businesses have suffered storm damage,
If you, as a policyholder, feel there is any other way in which we
may be of further help, then call your Occidental representative
or write directly to me at our home office, 1151 South Broadway,
Los Angeles, Calif.
HORACE W. RROWER,
President
Occidental Life
Insurance Com fumy of California
Led by Whitmyer
Washington Stops
Stanford by 14-0
STANFORD, Calif. Wt Wash
ington halfback Mat Whitmyer,
starting his first 1962 game,
raced 10 yards for one touch
down and set up the other with
a 35-yard burst Saturday as the
Huskies whipped Stanford 14-0
First downs 11 15
Rushing yardage 148 119
Passing yardage 102 139
Passes 3-5 10-20
Passes Intercepted by... 1 0
Punts .. 6-46 7-37.43
Fumbles lost 1 0
Yards penalized 30 30
in their Big Six football battle.
Taking over for injured
Charlie Mitchell, the 170-pound
Whitmyer, from Washington,
D.C., scored in the opening
quarter. Whitmyer also inter
cepted a Stanford pass on his
eight in the final minute to as
sure the shutout.
Late in the second, his run
deep into Stanford territory set
up a 28-yard scoring pass from
Pete Ohlcr to Jim Stiger.
Washington's rugged defend
ers played just as large a role
in putting the Huskies record
at 4-0-1. They stopped Stanford
three times inside the 10, at the
two, four and one.
Washington lost little time in
hitting the scoreboard in the
first quarter, moving 60 yards
in four plays with a key 45-yard
pass from Bill Siler to end Lee
Bernhardi, carrying to the Stan
ford 10.
On the next play, Whitmyer
skirted his right end with a
pitchout to score.
Jim Norton booted both con
versions.
Stanford failed to penetrate
Huskies territory in the open
ing period, but dominated the
second until Bill Douglas
stopped Stan Lindskog two
yards from the Washington
goal, thwarting a tdnve that
covered 60 yards.
With less than two minutes
left in the half, Washington's
lig..lning, aided by good for
tune, struck again. Whitmyer's
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35-yard sprint to the Stanford
39 was followed by a forward
fumble by Ohler which Duane
Locknane grabbed at the Indian
28.
After defender Ed Cummings
dropped one Ohlcr pass, the
Washington quarterback calmly
pitched another that Stiger took
behind Clark Weaver in the end
zone with the clock showing 21
seconds. That 83-yard thrust
had taken just five plays.
Washington 7 7 0 014
Stanford 0 0 0 00
Wash Whitmyer 10 run (Norton
kick).
Wash Stiger 2B pass from Ohler
(Norton kick).
Attendance 24,000.
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