Berry, Hill Lead Oregon To
35-20 Victory Over Air Force
By GENE MEAKINS
Air Force Academy, Colo.
-OJPli- Sophomore quarterback
Bob Berry, in a great display
of ball control, guided Oregon
university to five successive
touchdowns for a 35-20 vic
tory over the Air Force acade
my Saturday to spoil the dedi
cation of the Falcon's new
football stadium before 33,
343 fans.
The fivc-foot-1 1-inch, 185-
Huskies Defense
Stalls Stanford
By HAL WOOD i back Pete Ohler took the club
Stanford, Calif. - OIPli- Wash-! 83 yards in just five plays to
ington staged a pair of first
half aerial touchdown pitches,
then put up an impregnable
goal line defense the rest of
the way to defeat Stanford,
14-0, in a Big Six grid battle
Saturday.
The Washington offensive,
piloted by quarterback Bill
Siler, went 61 yards in just
four plays for a touchdown in
the first quarter; and quarter-
Jones Gets
TKO Over
Bob Foster
New York - IW - Light
heavyweight contender Doug
Jones of New York floored
substitute Bob Foster of Wash
ington D. C. in the first round
and scored a technical knock
out over him in the eighth
last night in their nationally
televised fight at Madison
Square Garden. It was Fos
ter's first defeat.
When Referee Teddy Mar
tin stopped the bout at 23 sec
onds of the eighth round, Fos
ter's string of 12 consecutive
professional victories was end
ed. The gamblers had guessed
right, making Jones the 7-2
favorite.
It was the second time that
Jones had beaten Foster -but
not in professional com
petition. Jones beat him when
both were in the Army Air
Force in 1957.
Foster, now 23, was a mid
dleweight then.
Jones, weighing 1B2 - the
Kccond heaviest of his career
-floored Foster wilh a left-
right combination to the chin
shortly before the end of the
first round for a count of
nine. Foster, scaling 174, had
his knees buckled four times
earlier in that session.
Foster was substituting for
virus-sickened heavyweight
contender Zora Folley.
Warriors Buy Boston
No. One Draft Choice
San Francisco - (lil'D - Gary
Phillips, Boston's No. 1 draft
choice of ltKil, has been pur
chased from the Celtics by
the San Francisco Warriors.
The 6foot-3 inch Phillips
had a three year scoring aver
age of more than 18 points
per game at Houston and was
used sparingly by the Celts
last year.
Oregon State's Rooks
Prep for Medford Tiff
With U of O's Freshmen
Oregon Slat university.
Corvallii - Tommy Prothro
hai been missing 10m of that
lis and heft that most coaches
search for in a football team,
but he may have partially
found the answer in his 1962
freshman club that meets the
Orogon Froh in Medford next i
Saturday night,
One of hit starting tackles,
Pat Valley from Ban Leandro.
Calif., weight 230, and start
ing guard Bill Stellmacher
lrom Albany checkt in at 220.
Ducklings
Are Victors
Bv 13-12 Score
EuoensWIW-End Ray Palm
caught a nine-yard touchdown patter to compare with Gor
patt with 1:21 remaining In don Queen of last year."
Ihe final period lo give the Queen it now No. 2 quar
Oregon Ducklings a 13-12 vie-j trback on Ihe Braver vanity,
lory over the Washington ! b,n'nd incomparable Terry
Stale Coubabet in a freihman
football gam Friday.
Palm, who also blocked a
Washington Slate field goal
attempt from the Oregon six
yard line wilh only lecondi
left in the game caught the
pin irom quarterback Jack;l"ng runnrrt and (air pan
Sovtrtign. r1. Speed will come from
The Duckling tcornd lhoir hallbacki Jim Smith ol Sacra
oiher louchdown in tht third, rnento. and Tim Oimer ot San
period on a 20-yard run by t Joat. Calif,
fullback Tim Casey. The In preparing for Ihe Med
Coubabei tallied their touch- ford battle against Oregon
downt in the fint period on j Froih. ihe Rooks have been
rum of 10 and 85 yards by scrimmaging against Ihe OSU
halfback Bill Gaskins. Bud varsity. Long probably will
Harrington kicked the deeid-jtake a 30-man squad lo Med- j
Ing extra point aUer Oregon's j ford 'or ,n Hoks opening,
first touchdown. ' game of the season,
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21. lSb4
pound quarterback from San
Jose, Calif., passed for three
touchdowns and ran for an
other. Halfback Larry Hill
scored the other Oregon touch
down on the game's lnnet
play, a 49-yard end run.
The Oregon Ducks stored
five straight times after their
64-yard drive from the open
ing kicknff was stopped by a
blocked field goal on the Air
Force 16.
score 21. seconds before the1
half. j
Wilh the offensive stymied ;
most of the second half, the I
Husky defensive line, anchor-1
ed by Rod Schever. Dave Phil-1
lips and Jake Kupp, and out
weighed 30 pounds to the man
held three Stanford drives on
the 22, the four and the one I
to clinch the victory.
Stanford made plenty of
yardage in midfield, but when
the chips were down, the
light but fast Washington wall
contained the Indian's aerial
and running attack every time
it was necessary.
The opening touchdown was
set up when Siler passed 45
yards to end Lee Bcrnhardi on
the Stanford in. From there
halfback Nat Whitmyer took
a pitchout and raced round
end to score.
In the second quarter Wash
ington took the ball on its
own 17 wilh a niinule and
one half to go. Siler r;u:cd
around end for 10; Whitmyer
took a pitchout and went
around end for 34, before Oh
ler fumbled on a keep that
gained 11 yards. With time
running out Ohler threw a
pass that Stanford's F.d Cum
mings grabbed but dropped as
he fell to the ground. With the
ball on the 28 Ohler then pass
ed into the end zone to Slie
ger who faked his way out of
the Stanford secondary de
fense. That completed the
scoring for the day,
Ski Club
To Meet
Mogue Snowmen ski club
will hold its first meeting of
the 1)(I2 - Hill.'! season on
Thursday, Oct. 25.
The meeting will shut
promptly at 7:,'l() p.m. at the
American Red Cross building
here.
Snowmen support of the
Ml. Ashland ski area will he
discussed. Officers will be
elected. Jack Hanoi is chair
man of the nominating com
mittee. Dues will be accepted from
old and new members. Re
freshments will be served.
it is anticipated that the
Rogue Snowmen will repeal
their dry land ski school.
Classes have been conducted
at the county fairgrounds the
last two years for beginning,
intermediate and advanced
skiers. They have been con
sidered most successful with
an average attendance of 3(1
students.
The center, Phil Nelms, and
fullback, Craig Ording. each
tip the scales at 215. And one
of the best prospects of all is
205-pound Tom Hobbs from
Roseburg.
Valley. Incidentally, is the
son 01 ex-Denver Dlaver
Wayne Valley, who
now owm
the controlling inlereit in the
Oakland Raiders of the Amer
ican Football leaque. He came
to OSU at a top. rated college
prospect and hat looked good
in early drills.
STRONGER
Jerry Long, an assistant var
sity coach in charge of the
Rooki. teelt that over all thit
freihman tquad it belter than
last year's, "In moit posiliont.
we're ttronqer." Long lellt.
"but we probably haven't a
Bauer who rankt tecond na
tionally in total otfrrue.
Mar CrowRion from Ver
nonia likely will at Art at quar
terback for the Hooki. backed
up by Brian Barnes from Jef
ferson of Portland. Roth are
Berry directed Oregon on
drives of 80, 77, 74, Hfl, and
73 yards before the Ducks
were forced to punt for the
first time with eight minutes
left in the final period.
Despite the savage offense,
Oregon did not lead in the
game until midway in the
third period when Berry pass
ed six yards to end Dick Im
walle for a touchdown. The
corc broke the 14-14 halftone
deadlock.
Oregon then raced to a 35
14 lead, before the Falcons
could muster enough strength
to march 67 yards and a final
touchdown in the closing min
utes. The Air Force scored on
drives of 83 and 8(1 yards in
the first half, with Oregon
coming back after each score
to tie the game at 7-7 and 14
14. The Air Force held Ore
gon's great halfback, Mel Ren
fro, pretty well in check, but
Berry's passing and the run-
ning
of the entire Oregon
backficld overwhelmed
the
Falcon defense.
Oregon's line, which could
not stop the Air Force in the
first half, came through with
a great effort in the second.
Standouts in that defense
were end Rich Schwab, guard
Bill DelBinggio and fullback
Bruce Snyder.
Berry's 32-yard pass to Im
wallie in the second period
opened the scoring for Oregon
after the Air Force had scored
on a one-yard smash by half
back Dick Czarnola in the
first period.
Berry sneaked over from
one yard out late in the sec
ond period aflcr Air Force
quarterback Terry Isaacson,
by far the Falcons' standout,
had scored on a five-yard run.
The second half Oregon
touchdowns were counted on
that six-yard pass to Imwalle,
Hill's run, and a two-yard pass
from Berry to halfback Cary
Tommeraason.
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Atli-ndnncf: :1H.343.
StatUttrs uf the All Knrcr-Orc-ftnn
gtnnr;
First down ...
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PfiHsinn ,vnr(1jie
Piis.tr in Incepted bv
Funis
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Football Scores
KATlllt.MV NKillT S,'(Hii;S
Hy t iillrrt I'rfNi httn tiHlloimt
' Score nl lending Rnrne npper
on piiue one. Olher icoiea follow;
VVKST
Arizona SI, 21 Cal Pnlv 20
Nevada St. 14 Snn Krmiclco St.
14
Mnntnn Si, 33 Idaho 1.1
Wynnilnit 31 Arizona ft
HriKhiiin Young 21 Montana 0
UlHh 7 Nrw Mexico 7
Utah Si. 21 Colnrado SI. 11
l.iiiflcld 2R Whitman 7
Cnhtornia Aiimc 7 lluniholdt St n
Kiu'riimenlo St 40 Chicago SI. TA
Univrrailv of t'alilornia I l)avi
Bra turn 7 llumlmldt St. 0
t; AST
New ltanipxhlre 19 Vermont H
CarncRie lech 14 Franklin At Miir-
Khiill 12
Untgcr '!t l.ehlgh i:i
SiiNmiehanna 22 WeKlern Mary-
land H
HoMra 21 King Point 0
Cortland 2t( King tl'a ) 6
Mitckocll 28 Lafayette 6
Mitsnchiittetli 42 llhode Inland B
t;etthuig 'Ml Muhlenhrrg 13
l.vconung :i2 C W Pom 14
(.rove City H Delnwarr Valley 7
WeMeyan 7 WorceMrr Tech 0
Ithaca 23 Urtdgeport 14
St. Lawrence 21 Norwich 12
Wagner 12 I'psaln 0
Connecticut 14 Maine H
t'nion iNVi 44 Rmscliicr Poly (I
j-(tinhorn 2R l.ockhuvfi) 14
Allerd 2ti Unhurt li
AinhcrM 2! Coast C.tmrd 0
lirnckpnrt SI, 14 Trenton SI 8
Lebanon Valley 30 Moravian 8
William 7 Howdoin 0
Vilhinova 22 Delaware 10
Trinitv iConiti 22 Colhv 8
Morgan St 34 Dclewaie St O
Slipperv Hock 20 WcHtmtnMer 13
Northeaster 14 Springlteld U
Male 12 Middlehurv
CrMiiii 4 Suarlhniore 8
Kutitiun 4H Chevnev 6
SOI Til
Tampit III PieM)Vterian 0
Kiivellrvdle St. 14 Si, AiiRUMin
College ti
Kairniont St. 13 Vel Virginia
Tech 13
(luillorrt Pi KiTiterlik 10
Florence Si. 27 Tiov St ft
Alabama A.V M 2 ft Knoxvllle Col
Ictie
ItlucMeld St. 2A Wet Virginia
St Pi
Concord 13 Shrpherri 12
Sii it nn ah St. 22 Me or diet Col
lege 14
L.iM Tciinr..re St 2' Wodnrrt i
Johnson C Sinilh 33 Slmw H
iihinglnn At Lee 22 John- Hop
kin H
Sew ree 30 Randolph Macon N
We. V'ligiuia 2 (ieoige W ah
itti:tn m
William & 1rv 21 Furnian 7
Fnk lis Howiud 12
Klonda AAiM Sfi Hethnne-Cook-nian
ti
MUniMppI Vocational 43 Jar
vi. Chi iMian n
Trnnc.ee Tech 1 Muriav St
12
Cl.ii k HI Alabama St. 0
Minn i- vr
John Cut roll 2tt Alieghenv 0
IVhimim 7 Ml t'nion h
hilew nlri SI .tfl W
(Mtlumikee Branch' H
roil.ill
Omaha 3 Kmporia St 7
Ibth.im tK.m i 7 McPher.on 0
orlheat Missouri 4il Mitsourt
Mil
4(1
HhI.Im m WnlU. -r 34 Knuon 14
ViMiiiKiltiwn Iti Alhnirht 7
Ntrll, I'm oil HA l South Caro
lina U
Viinmm Mihistv 20 vulon 1
aiMt 7 Hti-t illr il
llhnoi St NiiiiiiMi.t 6 Nntlhrtn
Mir hi tun (I
W,iMii- Si (l Wrstern Rrwrv P
Mihk.ri 2 North t'urk 0
.iv t. t iOIiiki . ion
f'rnli-l Muhiin :'4 Klfrn
Mm Iuk ,,,
lllitiot. r1rvii in AiigtiUn 7
I'oiu o-1! m 7 lllin.M Cri n i;i - I' 7
t'amll WW. I'. I Kr M.rr! 7
Mowli"( (.it'rM 4", Koil St h
ohm r : MttiM lOhim n
Tulim '.n I o.im illf. 7
t'.mpnna ;u Hrth-i Kn
Coe 18 C'otnrU Collri 0 i
-1L
PULLING ONE IN Jim Grisham (45) Oklahoma fullback
looks almost headless as he pulls down a pass for a 12-yard
gain In the first period against Kansas Saturday. Coming in
lo tackle Grisham is Kent Converse (64) center for Kansas.
Oklahoma won the game, played at Kansas, 13 lo 7. -(UPI)
Raiders Roll Over
E. Oregon, 39 to 7
Ashi.tnd Southern Ore
gon college's Red Raiders of
the Rogue, exponents of spec
tacular football, treated home
fans lo another wide open ex
hibition here on Saturday and
in the process clobbered East
ern Oregon 39 lo 7 in an Ore
gon college conference scuf
fle.
Performing before a home
coming audience, the Raideis
grabbed the uppcrhand for
keeps in the second quarter.
They dominated the second
half.
Southern Oregon combined
the offensive talents of pass
ers Doug Olson and Bill Bail
ey, runners Korm Bennett, Al
Barnes and Doyle Bransom
and receivers Howard H;ut-
man, Dave Hughes and Ben '
nett in fashioning the win. j
While the attacking unit j
was amassing 509 yards at
scrimmage, the Haider defens
ive aggregation allowed the
Mountaineers but 211 yards.
An 81-yard touchdown prom
enade was the only deep
Eastern Oregon penetration.
63, 51-Yard Scores
The 'long ball' got two
touchdowns for the Ashland
ers. It set up two other scores.
Olscn passed to Kerm Ben
nett for (ill yard.s, to Howard
Hartman for 51 and five yards
for touchdowns. Bill Bailey
hurled to Dave Hughes for
five yards and a score. Ben
nett and Jess Munyon lomh-
Nebraska 2 Kansns SL 8
(Irinncll 22 Beloit 0
Depauw 30 Centre R
Indiana Central 42 Franklin 42
Drake 10 Wichita 0
Western Michigan 2t Toledo 0
Kalamaon 1?) Albino 12
Southeast Missouri St. 21 South
west Missouri SI 0
Hi pon l,i Lawrence 14
Wjirrenslnirg 13 Northwest Mh
xouri St 0
Hope 211 Kaslern Illinois 7
Concordia iN I) i 30 Augsburg 24
Fort May St. Pittsburg St. 20
Si Thomas 20 Mainline 0
SIM THW FST
North Texas St 14 Cincinnati R
liranihling 23 Prairie View AAM
Arkannas AA-M !' Wilev 7
Central Oklahoma St. 42 North
west Oklahoma St. 0
New Mexico Highlands 2fi Alii
lene ChrtMInn 20
Trinidad 14 Mcsn 0
Kastern New Mexico V. 23 Colo
rado Western 7
Mtin.w t oi l n.i-: scout s
Hv Cntled Prrss InleriMttoiul
Ml nil (t U l ;'H ,Marvl,ind J4
Washhurn 34 SI. llrnrdiiU 13
Tornado JV
Wallops KF
Klamath Falls - C'.reg Dip
pel scored the first throe
tiim-hdiiwns yesterday as Med
ford high ran ovi
. . .
rails 38 tu B in n junior var
sity fonthall gamp iirrc.
The Junior Tornado was on
top 7 to (I at the quarter. 2(i
to 0 at the half and 3H to 0
at the end of the third quar
ter Pippi'l went 33 yards nn
Medford's first scrimmage
play for the opening tnuih
dnwn. He countered on the
first play of the second quar
ter on a six yard run and
then look a Jack Mullen pass
for 10 yards.
Curt Wyatt scored from 3t
yards out nn an inside re
verse. A Mullen to Frank
Toews puss was good fur 15
yards and a goal. Jim Cox
crossed for Ihe Tornado on a
17-yard run. Hon Wallace kick
ed two Medford extra points.
In the fourth period Klam
ath recovered a Medford dim
j hie nn the 1 1 yard line and
the Pelicans senred nn a three-
I,f
IV 11
yaid Itandy Smith to
Graham pass play.
Kennedy Fuel Oil
Please note our new phone number . , .
IT'S NEW! IT'S DIFFERENT!
779-1515
MLDr'OHD
downed on respective one and
three-yard tries. Olsen kicked
three conversion poinH.
Rich Barton completed the
long EOC march with a 12
yard scoring run. He toed the
extra tally.
Southern Oregon's aerial
circus sdw Olsen connect on
15 of 22 passes for 316 yards.
Hartman catch nine for Iti2
yards and Hughes snare seven
for 98. Barnes and Bennett
each picked up 5B yards rush
ing and Bransom 42.
Barton, troublesome to SO
on pitchouls was the day's top
ground gainer with 88 yards
on 23 carries for the Mounts.
It-il Williams nnllnrl Rft vsrHc
for the eleven from La
Grande.
Mountaineers Lead
Score was 0 to 0 at the
quarter, 13 to 7 at the half
and 20 to 7 after No. 3 inter
m i.ssion.
SOC tabulated first but
EOC led 7 to briefly in the
fracas. The Raiders went 90
yards in four plays for their
initial marker. Bransom ran
for three yards and for six.
An Olscn pass to Hughes went
for 18 and Olsen and Bennett
teamed for the fi3-yard strike.
Kastern fought right bark
off the kickoff for its only TD.
The drive took nine plays
with Barton reeling off runs
of 2(i and 25 around the (lank
on pitches.
Southern Oregon then fol
lowed wilh Its second scoring
surging, traveling 63 y.irds in
10 plays with the points com
ing nn the five-yard Olscn to
Hartman cast. A Hartman In
Olscn heave gained 14 yards
along the way.
57-Yard March
The Raiders moved 57 yards
lo the goal in the third quar
ter with the push consuming
10 plays and Bennett tabulat
ing from the one. Bennett had
an 18-yard gain and Olsen
kept for 13. SOC went 80
yards in five plays for their
first fourth quarter marker.
There was a 15-yard Olsen to
Hughes pass and seven-yard
gains by Barnes and Bransom
before the 51-yard Olsen to
Hartman pass.
On the next Raider oppor
tunity wilh the ball an Olscn
llartman combination clicked
for 43 yards. Two plays later
came the Bailcy-llughes scor
ing play.
SOC went 73 yards in the
closing minutes for the final
! score. An Olson-Hughes pass
clicked (or 45 yards. Bransom
l l l J . a n.,n...' in
1 1.1(1 l , l - a, l ( l Mil. . ut.tn .
lo the Utrrr-yarct line. Munyon
scored front tluiro.
ST VTISTIt S:
SOC FOC
First dnwns rush fl R
First down p.is U
Firt down. penalties 1 0
Total lo st dow tis I'l 1 I
Pusni-s tried coinp 2R IR l 4
Passrs intercepted hv 3 1
Net ard rush 1"A
Yards gained pas X Trt
Nci scrim ards ... -t' ' ' 1
Penalties and ardi . 4 3
Fumbles lost ... I 1
Punts and nvcrace
Basketball
N w Mt i n sknn i i.
ASiM I I
Hv I mini 1rri Intrr n.tlnMi.
SMiii'imr inn I"" AiU'-lr "i2
Chu-.iKo lt:i Ctm'inn.iti M!l
St 1 om 1 -J 1 tVii.nl 111
Pro Football
ami km n nmrn i I i i t. v.
l I nurd 'r? Inir rnl ml
Vitir(l. It r Mil to
iOnl K.imr v IH-.1 n lt d I
MAIL TH'BUNE. MLDFORD.
MEDrORDti'WrRIBUNI
SFdDMTTS
WSU Gets Revenge
By Downing Indiana
By ROBERTA ULRlCH I Nate Ramsey carried the ball
Spokane, Wash -HPU -Quar- three to six yards per ground
terback Dave Mathieson
1 1 in a i .i ..fc
found All America end Hugh
Cambell for the - winning
touchdown pass and Washing
ton State found sweet re
venge Saturday as the Cou
gars down Indiana universi
ty, 21-15 in an intcrsectional
football game.
The win was the first ever
for the Cougars over a Big
Ten team and avenged a 33-7
loss to Indiana at Blooming
ton last year.
It also continued the Big
Six's domination of the Big
Ten this year, and gave WSU
a record four wins and one
tie for the season.
The game went scoreless
until halfway through the
third period when Indiana
halfback Marvin Woodson
dived into the end zone from
the two. Woodson, quarter
back Woody Moore, fullback
James Bailey and halfback
Wildcats
Stun Ohio
St., 18-14
Columbus, Ohio -WPD- Un
beaten Northwestern, behind
once by two touchdowns, com
bined the passing arm of so
phomore Tommy Myers and a
stout-hearted defense to upset
Ohio State, 1814, in a Big Ten
football game Saturday.
A record Ohio stadium
crowd of 84,376 homecoming
fans watched in stunned dis-
! bplicf as lhc Wildcats punch-
cd over a loucnaown wun o:j
left in the game and choked
off a last-minute Buckeye ef
lort on the Northwestern 8 to
win their first game here since
1943.
Ohio State breezed into the
lead al the start when sopho
more halfback Paul Warfield
returned the opening kickoff
90 yards for a touchdown and
quickly added another 14-0
lead.
Third-ranked Northwestern
came back for touchdowns to
trail 14-12 at the half and
scored the winning touchdown
in the fourth period as the
seventh ranked Ohioans went
down to their second defeat
in four games.
Fullback Steve Murphy
scored the winning touchdown
on a one-yard plunge over
right guard to put the Wild
cats into an 18-14 margin in
the waning minutes.
The Buckeyes valiantly tried
to pull the game out of the
fire. Aided by two pass inter
ference penalties, Ohio drove
I to the Wildcat 8 with less than
two minutes left, where three
consecutive passes by quarter
back Joe Sparma were knock
ed down or overthrown and
the desperation drive stalled.
U. S. Equestrian Team
Learned Its Lessons
Harrisburg. Pa. - lUPII - Bill
Steinkraus, captain of the
United Stales equestrian
team, credited the Yanks' fine
showing in the Pennsylvania
National Horse show to les
sons learned during a Euro
pean tour last summer.
i "Winning close to 100 rib
bons and trophies in major
continental events not only
requires advance training but
is an education in itself,"
Steinkraus said. "Without this
opportunity to teach our
selves and our horses, it
would have been practically
impossible to do as well as
we have here this week."
HORNERACTI VATED
New York ITI - The New
York (tianls have activated
versatile halfback Sam Horn
er, who was acquired early
this seasnn from the Washing
ton Redskins Horner is a 198
pound, former VMI star.
Be Choosy . . .
Gel-
Jacuzzi
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3
OHLCON
j play and Moore passed once
t..:,-.. ... .
to Bailey for six as Indiana
moved 54 yards in 13 plays.
The Cougars scored early
in the final period after guard
Lorin Christean gave WSU
possession by falling on Wood
son's fumble on the Indiana
29. Ten plays later fullback
george Reed plunged over
from inches out on the fourth
down.
WSU faked a kick, but a
two pointer failed when Camp
bell was caught on the five.
Washington State went
ahead less than five minutes
later when Reed scored again,
this time on a two-yard run
through a hole in the Indiana
line.
The Cougar's drive of seven
plays went 60 yards, 40 of
them on a Mathieson pass to
end Gerry Shaw, ruled com
plete when interference was
called on Bruce Ellwanger.
Mathicson's passes to Camp
bell were good for 17 yards
and for two points after the
touchdown.
Indiana took to the air for
its second touchdown with
Ramsey scoring on a three
yard pass from Moore, cap
ping a 70 yard drive of seven
plays. The Hoosiers went
ahead on a conversion pass
from Moore to Woodson.
But with one minute, 18
seconds remaining, Washing
ton State won it with Mathie
son's pass, 42 yards to Camp
bell, who took the ball on the
eight and ran down the side
lines into the end zone.
The Mathieson - Campbell
combination was good for a
final two points.
Vancouver Tops
Los Angeles
For 4th Win
By United Presi International
The Vancouver Canucks,
Cinderella team of the 1962
Western Hockey league sea
son, are still eluding the toll
of midnight.
The Canucks finished a re
sounding last in the league's
Northern Division last year,
but out of the Canadian night
a goalie named Gillcs Ville
mure joined them in the off
season and since then they
haven't lost a game.
They made il four wins
without a loss Friday night
when they slapped down the
Los Angeles Blades, 6-2. In
the only other WHL action
Edmonton clipped Calgary,
2-1.
Vancouver spotted the
Blades an early goal, but tied
it up in the first period and
went ahead in the same stan
za with quick goals by Larry
Popein and Buddy Boone, a
couple of long-time hockey
veterans.
Trade Goali
The two teams traded goals
in the second period and the
Canucks pulled away on win
ners by Jimmy Baird and
Barry Ross in the third. Vil
lemure stopped 28 tries by
the Blades.
Al Edmonton, the Flyers
made it two in a row over
the Stampeders in a game
dominated by the defensive
lines for both teams. Calgary
opened the scoring in the sec
ond period on John Kosian
cic's lu-fonlcr, but Ray Ki
nascwich of the Flyers lied
it less than three minutes
later.
The winner came off the
j stick of Knobby Walsh in a
i screen shot at 10:23 of the
same period. Then the ric-
fenscmen took over and the
final 30 minutes were scoreless.
LININGER S
DIAL 773 7555
St. Mary's Rallies
Over Henley, Heads
Rogue League Alone
BoniK leaoi e sTAMHNOs: . version. Darland's 50-yard run
St. Mary'i
Henley
Phoenix
Easle Point ....
;Hb7
4oo
j,
ooo
LaKeview
i ''""" valley 2
!Bu River 1
Sacred Heart 0 5 0
Klamath Falls - An 80-yard
punt return by Tom Darland
earned St. Mary's high of
Medford the nod Friday night
in a Rogue league football
crucial with Henley's Hornets
on the Henley field.
The Crusaders rallied from
two touchdowns behind to
overcome the Hornets 19 to
13. This was the Medford
teams sixth triumph of the
season-the fifth within the
circuit -and left them the
league's lone leader as the
only unbeaten team.
Illinois Valley whipped Sa
cred Heart 44 to 0 in another
test.
cu unnl...
uuu. iiu.ii.7 .-.li.v!, weie in
the second period. St. Marv s
scored nnce in the third wo-
sion and twice in the fourth.
Darland's spectacular run
back came with less than four
minutes left to play. Earl All
britton had kicked from the
Henley 40 -yard line. SM
formed a picket as Darland
took the ball on the Crusader
20 but several Hornets did
have a shot at him before he
crossed the goal.
Steve Reiling wen the last
yard of a Hornet drive for the
opening points of the fracas.
Mike Beymer was the re
ceiver and Allbritton the
thrower on a four-yard scor
ing play. Bugs Lewis kicked
the extra point.
Marv McGee scored the
first two St. Mary's TDs, from
three yards and from one
yard out. A Darland pass to
Naumcs made the one con-
Lavorante Condition
Still Serious Despite
3rd Brain Operation
Los Angeles - ll'PI) - Alejan
dro Lavorante remained in a
coma and in serious condition
Saturday despite a third brain
operation within the one
month period of unconscious
ness. Attendants of California
Lutheran hospital predicted it
would lake at least a week
more before the outcome of
the last operation could be
determined. Neurosurgeons
replaced the "brain flap" re
moved in the second opera
tion. The piece was removed
Sept. 23 because excessive
swelling applied pressure lo
Lavorantc's brain. The piece
was replaced Thursday when
doctors decided the cerebral
swelling had eased sufficiently.
The ONLY Time-Tesrcd
GLASS FIREPLACE SCREEN
Enjoyed by Thousands in the Rogue River Valley
fllOi
PHONE 772-7166
SMITH LUMBER CO.
Corner 8th and Fir Sts.
IMPROVEMENTS-
l oTOlto the Henley 10 opened the
I door for the first s.M counter.
! McGec crossed the pay line
on fourth down,
i SM next got to the Hornet
1 17 aided bv a 40-yard pass,
Jim Calhoun to McGee. Aflcr
Henley took over and failed
to move, Allbritton punted
and Darland ran the ball back
55 yards to the 23-yard line.
The Crusaders fought from
there to the tying score.
Henley led statistically with,
12 first downs to SM's four,
and 198 net scrimmage yards
to 152. SM was held to one
pass completion in eight tries
while Henlev completed five
of 15.
Rciling had 90 yards in 23
packs for Henley and Dar
land 7fi in eight for SM.
STATISTU'S:
SM
3
I
lFirs, rushing
First downs Dassinc
. F" downs penalties
Total first downs
Passes tried, conip. .
Passes fnlerccpted by
Net yards rushing
112
40
132
Yards Rained passinc
Net scrimmage yards
198
1-15
Penalties and yards
11-80
Fumbles lost
1
Punts and average fi .17.0 3 -28 5
Sander
JtVl
Remember the old electric
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