- TWO MEDFORD HAIL TRIBUNE
TO PLAY WINNER
DISTR1CT2 TOGA
Defeats Newberg, 32 To 0;
Eugene Downs Albany;
Other Scores
Portland, Ore.. Nov. 18 (U.R)
Gresham high school today
wai chosen to represent district
No. 3 In the Oregon high school
football playoffs,
Orejhom .was chosen over
Eugene, the nearest contestant,
and Cottage Grove and Colum
bia Prep, also undefeated in
league play.
Gresham will play the win
ner of -the : Medford-Coqullle
game, which determines the No
1 district competitor, while
Roosevelt high of Portland and
La Grande meet . Thanksgiving
day in the other semi-final game.
A conference faculty commit
tee met today to pick Gresham.
since several teams had claims
en' the playoff, berth, Eugene
was defeated In a non-conference
brush with North Bend; which
had been Jefeated by Coqullle
and Coos Bay, Gresham also
trimmed Oregon City 21 to 0
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Sunday. Not. 19, 1944
and Eugene beat the same team
only 14 to 0,
Gresham has scored 278 points
to 19 for its opponents and
wound up last night with a de
cisive 32 to 0 win over undefeat
ed Newberg.
Eugene defeated Albany, 27
to 0, Cottage Grove blanked
Lebanon, 26 to 0, and Columbia
Prep eked out a 18 to 13 win
over' Columbia Prep last night.
Other week-end scores were:
Gresham 32, Newberg 0
Hood River 13, Astoria 0
McMlnnville 26, Tillamook 6
Roseburg 14, Reedsport 6
Seaside 6, Hill Military 6
Arlington 13, Grant Union 0
; Dayton 37, Sheridan 32
Toledo 35, Junction Clty 23
Woodburn 33, Molalla 0
Parkrose 13, Sabln 7
- Central Catholic 26, Salem 0
The Dalles 20, Pendleton 0.
G.P.FR0SH HOLD
MEDFORD JRS.
Junior High Conference
Team W L T
Ashland j.5 0 0
Medford 1....2 3 1
Klamath Falls 1 4 1
Medford junior high football
team was held to a 6 to 6 tie by
Grants Pass frosh at Medford
high stadium Friday afternoon
in the closing game for each
eleven. .
Medford scored in the third
quarter on a long pass - from
Gaines to Brittson. Gaines' try
' for point was blocked, the first
one he has missed this season.
Grants Pass, late in the fourth
. period, scooted 30 yards around
end for their score. An attempt
ed run for the extra point was
forced out of bounds.
Last few. minutes of the game
the air was filled with passes j
as both teams tried desperately
to score. Two interceptions were I
made by each team during these
final hectic minutes,
Medford showed a lot of
spark until Richard Davis, 14, of
the Grants Passxteam was In
jured, after which the - local
team "went to pieces," Davis was
removed to hospital and was
released to return to his home
Saturday morning. His attending '
physician said he was not ser
iously Injured.
PORTLAND' OPEN
GOLF MEET GETS
TOPNOTCH FIELD
Portland, Ore., Nov. 18 U.
Every train brought new ar-
i rivals this week-end to compete
I In the $19,100 Portland Open
golf tournament starting Thanks
giving day, klckoff competition
nn 4U .-nil t ttnM'm Ulin.
ter circuit.
., ., , ,. . ,w
rorimna. . n7
time athletics attracted a top-;
notch field of the nation's best
golfers, including Bob Hamilton,
the P. G. A. match play cham
pion, Byron Nelson, all-American
champion, and Mrs. Betty
Hicks, women's champion. '
Hamilton, the Xvanoville, Ind.,
sharpshooter who upset Nelson
for the PGA crown at Spokane,
was among the first to arrive
and predicted the tough Port
land golf course would require
a score of about 28S to win, three
under par 72. Top prize Is
$2666.70 In war bonds and
stamps.
A flock of low-handicap ama
teurs will be gunning for the
engraving on the rose-encrusted
silver loving cup donated by
Robert Hudson, Sr., sponsor of
the tournament. The amateur
field was up to 41, while there
were 62 professionals and 15 wo :
men on the lists. A few lata en
tries were expected. N
The first score pro's to unllm
ber found the weather a bit
chilly but the weatherman had
warmer days predicted. The boys,
from the east weren't bothered l
particularly. Those arriving
early included Jack Gage, ex
California amateur champion;
Bruce Coltart of Atlantic City,
Joe Fazio of Pine Valley, N. J.;
Hamilton; Mike Turnesa of New
York, Joe Zarhardt of Norris
town, Pa.; . Mike DeMassey of
San Francisco; Willie Goggln of
White Plains, N. Y.; and others
from nearer Portland. ,
The boys were anxious to size
up ' Slammin' Sammy Snead
when he practices Sunday or
Monday to see what army lift
did to his game. He's supposed to
have a bad back but shot a 68 .
in Atlantic City and a 66 in
Philadelphia.
, -
Clnuni time Co. OlsHlfM MM
m Too ute to ciusio. is .so
m l
YMA1
RECORD TO BEAT
IDTI
Mighty Navy Blasts Purdue,
32 To 0 Middies Use
Four Teams In Rout
PhUadelphia, Nov. 18-(U.R)
Unbeaten Army s point-a-minute
football forces maintained theirj
avBraffB nn ,lln.haVeH pnVUnl
average on sun-baked Franklin
field today and gave Pennsyl-
its gridiron history, 62 to 7.
Glenn Davis, the galloping
plebe from Los Angeles who Is
the nation's leading scorer, roar
ed to three touchdowns to spear
head the Army drive before a
near capacity crowd of 70,000
fans. The Pennsylvania rout was
Surpassed only by the 76-10 beat
ing the - Quakers took from
Princeton in 188S.
As the soldiers scored their
eighth consecutive victory in a
final tune up for their conclusive
game with Navy, Cadet Dick
Walterhouse of Washtenaw,
Mich., came in for a major share
of the glory. For the 20-year-old
youngster, an extra point spec
ialist, booted five points from
placement for a season total of
44 that tied the intercollegiate
record set in 1942 by Clyde La-
Force of Tulsa.
Army, despite its . one sided
triumph, looked ragged on de-
fense it failed to block and
tackIe wltl usual sharpness.
Baltimore, Nov. 18 (U.R)
Mighty Navy, tuning up its big
guns for the climatic battle with
Army two weeks hence, blasted
its way to an effortless 32-0 vic
tory today over a game, but thor
oughly out-classed Purdue
eleven before 23,000 fans.
The Middles played without
their biggest gun Power Run
ner Bob Jenkins, who favored a
leg injury. .
But Navy didn't need Jenkins.
It had power to spare and ex
ploded it (or five touchdowns
.two In the tint nerinri nn in
the third and two more in the
fourth. Thev wasted nthpp nn.
pbrtunities. four times moving
iiiaiue rurauces la yard line
The amazing Bluejacket line
was ' an. impenetrable wall a .
' Purdue suffered Its first shutout .
in 18 games. Only once did the
IlKllanHBkM . I . n. I . . I
wasiin the second period when
they drove to Navy's 32. They'
never again crossed the midfield
stripe. ... .
Navy used four full teams In
the rout. There were stars ga
lore, but If any single Individual
stood out above the rest It waa
triple-threat Hal Hamberg who
played his first full game In a
month.
CAROLINA. 1 3-8
New Haven, Conn., Nov. 18
(U.R) Yale's undefeated football
team scored Its seventh consec
utive victory today, defeating
North Carolina, 13-8, In a game
that kept 10,000 shivering fans
on their feet in a spectacular
fourth period In which the
southerns threatened to ruin the
Ell bid for a perfect season.
CORNELL-DARTMOUTH
Ithaca, N. Y., Nov. 18 (U.R)
Francis Snavely, nephew of
Coach Carl Snavely, sparked the
Cornell football team to a 14
to 13 victory over Dartmouth
today before 13,000 fans.
(DON'T SAY "RECAPS"
the guaranteed perfect circle recsp with
The je -
,.
W
O.K. RUBBER WELDERS i4
no. iiiersiQ6 at
Harold O. Kreger,
BEARS, 32-0 FOR
E
Berkeley, Cal., Nov. 18 (U.R)
University of Southern Califor
nia's Trojans gained the inside
track to the 1949 Rose Bowl
game today by crushing Univer
sity of California 32 to 0 before
a crowd of 60.000.in Memorial
Stadium.
U.- S. C.'s touchdown twins,
George Callanan and Jim Har-'
dy, led a powerful ground often-!
sive that soon overpowered Cal
ifornia's once-powerful forward
wall and netted two scores in
the first period and one in each
thereafter.
It was the worst defeat suf
fered by Coach Stub Allison's
Californlans since 1930 and the
second worst in the 30-year his
tory of the series.
Los Angeles, Nov.' 18 (U.R)
The University of California at
Los Angeles Bruins ran wild to
day, burying the helpless Col
lege of. Pacific Tigers under a
54 to 7 avalanche.
Coach Amos Alonzo Stagg's
feeble Tigers had the Bruins at
bay or most of the first period,
but once the UCLA landslide
started rolling neither second
stringers nor third stringers
made any difference in the scor
ing parade.
Spokane, Wash., Nov. 18 (U.R)
The Second Airforce football
team defeated the University of
Washington Huskies 47 to 6 at
Gonzaga Stadium here this af
ternoon. Spectacular runs by Bill Pren
tice, ex-Santa Clara fullback,
and Ray Evans, former Univer
sity of Kansas half, gave the
superbombers six of their seven
touchdowns, each of the two
scoring three tallies. Susie
scored the other Airforce touch
down on an eight yard plunge.
Roderick of Washington scored
the only Husky touchdown.
BATTLElYALIS
Six of the top flight men In
the light heavyweight division
will clash In a battle royal on
a special Thanksgiving; wrestr
ling card at Medford 'tfrmory
Thursday night. Those who will
participate are Pete 'Bolcastro,
Bulldog Jackson, Ear) Malone,
Pat (Rowdy) C-'Doudy,' the Gray
Mask and Jack Kiser. Kiser Is
Pacific coast champion.
The card will be started off
with all six men in the ring at
the same time. The first two to
be eliminated will return for
the first regular match of three
10-mlnute rounds. The next two
out will meet in the tour 10
mlnute round semi-windup and
the last two left In the free-for-all
will clash in the one hour top
main event.
This will be the first card of
Its kind at the local arena for
three years, Promoter Mack
Llllard said, and promises to be
a sell-out. . '
Iowa Pre-Flight
Indiana, Both Win
Bloomlngton, Ind., Nov. 18
(U.R) Young Bob Hoernsche
meyer pitched three touchdown
passes and threw another that
set up a fourth score today as
Indiana University sailed to an
easy, 47 to 0 victory over Pitts
burgh. ' Columbia, Mo., Nov. 18 (U.R)'
Iowa Pre-Flight's high-ranking
eleven rolled over a crippled
civilian Missouri team by a sev-en-douchdown
margin today,
score 61-7.
- SAY "TXCA0WBL9S
3
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Proprietor
Foottall Scores
By United Press
Syracuse 43, Colgate 13.
Michigan 14, Wisconsin 0.
Navy 32, Purdue 0.
Penn State 34, Maryland 19.
Lafayette 64, Lehigh 0.
Army 62, Pennsylvania 7.
Yale 13, North Carolina 6. '
. New York Univ. J3, Brook
lyn College 7.
William and Mary 26, Vir
ginia Military Inst. 0.
Duke 34, South Carolina 7.
Alabama 18, Mississippi
State 0.
Brown '12, Columbia 0.
Indiana 47, Pittsburgh 0.
Minnesota 46, Iowa 0.
Camp Peary 19, North Caro
lina Pre-Flight 7.
North Carolina State 39, Rich
mond 0.
Notre Dame 21, Northwest
ern 0.
Ohio State 26, Illinois 12.
Swarthmore 3, Princeton 0.
Scranton 332, Bloomsburg
STC Navy 6.
Cornell 14, Dartmouth 13.
Great Lakes 32, Marquette 0.
Oklahoma 20, Kansas 0.
Cherry Point Marines 35,
Chatham Field 0.
Harvard 12, Tufts 6.
Kansas State 0, Olathe
Navy 0.
Iowa State 9, Drake 9.
Kentucky 40, West Virginia 9.
Randolph Field 54, South
western 0.
Florida A & M 14, Clark 7.
Texas Christian 7, Texas 6.
Depauw 13, Miami (Ohio) 7. '
Iowa Pre Flight 51, Missouri
7.
Georgia 49, Auburn 13.
Oberlln 26, Ohio Wesleyan 0.
Texas A. & M. 19, Rice 6.
Southern Methodist 20, Ar
kansas 12.
Tennessee 27, Temple 14.
Tulane 36, Clemson 20.
Langston 18, Arkansas A. &
M. 14.
Colorado U 40, Colorado Col
lege 6. .
Second Air Torce 47, Wash
ington 6.
Wiley 45, Southern Univer
sity 6.
I M.a,,,,,
IT TAKES PLENTY OF 1111010
THS WAR in the Pacific Is
the most costly war Amer
ica has ever engaged in. It's
simple arithmetic. A mountain
of special, costly equipment is
needed. A B-29 Superfortress
used in the bombing of Japan
costs $600,000 in War Bonds.
And this is just one of the many
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