MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON
PHOENIX PIRATES CAPTURE A-2 CHAMPIONSHIP WITH 13-0 WIN
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1963
-r ' .
Buccaneers Down
Catholic
ASHLAND Phoenix High
School's mighty Pirates, an in
domitable band ot gridironeers,
completed a fall campaign of
overwhelming football plunder
here on Saturday by capturing
their greatest prize.
They overcame a strong, pre
viously unbeaten North Catholic
Royal aggregation in the Ore-
con Class A-2 titular tinaie.
And now, the rampaging Buc
caneers reign as state cham
Dions in their class. They
turned back the Portland paro
chial school contingent by a 13-0
score.
Shaking off an early jolt,
which but for a penalty could
have been a pathway to dis
aster, the Phoenicians put forth
their hammering, s I a s n i n g,
varied ground assault and
touchdowned on relentless
drives in the second and third
quarters.
Tailback Jim Consbruck cli
maxed a 67-yard second period
promenade with a four-yard
crash across the goal in the sec
ond period and slipped over also
for the extra point. In the third
nanel Quarterback Ron Wil
liams, running from the tailback
post, sliced the last two yards
ot a 47-yarcl pusn.
Best All Around
This was victory No. 12 for the
Pirates, the "best all - around
team" in Coach Jack Wood
ward's long and successful ten
ure at the Phoenix helm. The
Buccaneers finished the year un
beaten and untied. They yield
ed just one touchdown through
the fall while running up a mas
sive total 397 points.
Climaxing their fifth straight
vear in the prep playoff witn
their greatest glory, the Bucs
are state champs lor the sec
ond time in three seasons. They
shared the mantle with Myrtle
Chargers
To Oppose
Oiler Club
By NORMAN MILLER
UI'l Snorts Writer '
The powerful San Diego
Chargers take on the well-rest
ed Houston Oilers Sunday in the
first of a home-and home scries
in which Coach Sid Gillman's
men can help determine their
likely opponent In the American
Football League's championship
playoff.
The Boston Patriots are at
home to the Buffalo Bills in an
important Eastern Division
game and the New York Jets
arc host to the Kansas City
Chiefs in two other Sunday
games that were postponed for
one week because of the death
of President Kennedy.
Houston, which had a bye on
Nov. 17 and thus has not played
for three weeks, holds a pre
carious lead over both Boston
and Buffalo in the Eastern race.
The Oilers are 6-4, compared
to 5-5-1 for the Patriots and
Bills.
To Play Again
The Chargers, leading the
Western Division with an a-2
record, meet (he Oilers twice
within the next three weeks.
Sunday's game will be played
at San Diego; the Dec. 15 meet
ing will bo at Houston.
San Diego conceivably might
knock Houston out of the race
with two dcfeals and thus ease
the way for cilher Boston or
Buffalo to tic playoff berth.
The Chrors also must keep
winninf their own playoff
prosper care the second-place
Oakland Ulilers refuse to let
up. The Haiders scored a 26-10
Thanksgiving Day victory over
the Denver Broncos and boost
ed their record to 7-4. That left
Ihc Haiders I'i games behind
Sun Diego with an outside
chance of catching up.
The "line" for Sunday's
games favors San Diego by Ti
points over Houston; Boston by
414 over Buffalo, and Kansas
City by 1 over New York.
North Salem, Grant Deadlock 7-7
For Oregon A-1 Co-Championship
PORTLAND (UPI) - Dlsap- ed up a 11-0-1 record anil Ihe
pointed North Salem and Grant Valley League champion Vik
reigned as Oregon high school ings posted a 9-1-2 mark for the
class A-1 football co-champions season,
today after battling to a 7-7 tic : Vikings Score Lale
here Friday nighl. j North Salem, which lost to
"it just leaves me wilh a hoi-1
low feeling," North Salem
Coach Spike Hillstrom said
after Ihe hard-fought game.
"The kids feel Ihe same way."
"We can si ill say we haven't
been beaten but the kids are
disappointed and I am too,"
Grant Coach Frank Bucklcwicz
said. "They'll get over it quick,
though, when they realize that
they didn't get beaten cilher."
The Portland Intcrscholastic
League champion Generals roll-
Royals
Creek in 1961. This time the
whole prize is theirs.
Phoenix, the lop offensive and
defensi A-2 combine in the
state thio year, again were su
perior in those departments as
they subdued the toughest team
to challenge them. And, the
poised Buccaneers, rated No. 1
in the polls this fall and favor
ed in this battle, showed their
fine worthiness of the experts'
rankings by making their dia
dem official.
The Pirates stuck almost com
pletely to the ground to prevail
in the title struggle. They were
stern on ground defense and
sufficient in suppressing rival
aerial operations, as they have
been throughout the season.
Three Royal passes were inter
cepted. With the running talents of
Fullback Jon Granby and Half
back Dennis Grennan, along
with those of Consbruck and Wil
liams, and a sharp line to make
them go, Phoenix dominated the
rushing game 211 net yards to
95. North Catholic fought spir
itedly with the running talents
of Halfback Mike Hryciw and
the running and passing of big,
tall Quarterback Ed Gorman.
The Royal general found re
ceivers for 84 yards on six pass
es. A big break which might have
changed the complexion of the
ball game came on the after
noon's third scrimmage play.
Phoenix's Consbruck fumbled
and Center Ron Molony of the
Royals scooped up the pighide
and lumbered 43 yards to the
goal.
But, the Pirates nine - game
unscored on record was allowed
to remain intact. Clipping by a
North Catholic player on t h e
Phoenix 26-yard line nullified a
touchdown. North took the ball
on the 41. Fullback Joe Kniscr
gained two yards but Gorman
was dumped for 12-yard loss
back on their own 49. A pass
failed and the initial Royal
threat was. over.
The ball switched hands five
times before Phoenix journeyed
the lirst time to touchdown
land. This was a 13-play march
with Consbruck, Grennan. Gran
by and Williams all having pack
ing duties and Consbruck rip
ping off nine and eight yard
gains. A roughing the passer
penalty picked up 15 yards for
the Pirates. '"
The Royals, who saw a first
quarter charge spoiled by a
Indians Come From
Behind, Down Cal
28-17 in Thriller
STANFORD, Calif. (UPI) -
Kicking specialist Brady Beck
booted field goals from 36, 48
nnd 46 yards Saturday to give
Stanford a como-from-bohind
victory over California in the
66th renewal of the West's "big
game of college football.
With Stanford trailing 15-17
going into the final quarter,
Beck came running off the bench
to split the standards with a
48-ynrd field goal that put the
Indians in front 18-17 wilh 12
minutes to play remaining.
The Indians scored a touch
down immediately after on a
fumble recovery and then Beck
came in four minutes before the
end of the game to kick another
46-yard field goal.
The six-foot-two, 192 - pound
junior had kept Stanford in the
running during the first half.
After California had taken a 3-0
lead In the first quarter on Tom
Blanchfield's 37-yard field goal,
Beck came in to kick a :W-yardcr
and the score was 3-3 nt ihc in
termission. The victory Snturdav evened
Ihe series at 28 wins each with
19 ties in a competition thai goes !
back to 1892. I
Stanford, a two-point pre-
game favorite, finished up Ihe '
Medford in the finals of Ihe
playoffs last year, tied Ihe
score with 29 seconds left in
the game on a one-yard touch
down run by halfback Hod Alli
son and an extra point kick by
quarterback Gib Gilmore.
The Vikings marched 63 yards
in 21 plays for their touchdown.
Grant scored its points in the
second quarter on a one-yard
touchdown run by halfback
Pete Carson and an extra point
kick by Tom Summers.,
SCORES FOP. PHOENIX Jim Consbruck (44) gets by the
last would-be North Catholic tackier, Vince Ripley (39), to
score first Phoenix Pirate touchdown yesterday in Oregon
Class A-2 high school championship football game on Southern
Oregon College's Fuller Field at Ashland. Phoenix went on
to win 13-0 and claim the championship, its second in three
years. Behind Consbruck, and blocking is Gary Smith (helmet
Greg Esp interception of a de
flected pass, made their sec
ond deepest penetration of the
day after the Phoenix opening
score. They reached the Pirate
28. Then a Williams' intercep
tion brought a halt.
12 Plays Needed
Phoenix tabulated in the sec
ond half on its first opportunity
with the ball. The Rogue League
and A-2 District 6b champs
took over on the Royal 47 when
Halfback Jim Keever's punt was
good for only three yards.
Twelve plays were required
to gain the goal. Grennan netted
six yards on two plays. Cons
bruck went for six and Grennan
for two more. A pass was in
complete and Dale Sauer ran
for five. Consbruck ran twice
for four yards each and was
hurt on the second run which
put the ball on the 20.
Williams showed his football
versatility and his fine running
skill by shifting to the tailback
spot. He reeled off 11 yards on
a weak side run. Granny gained
two yards. Williams went for an
other five and finally for two
more to score.
The Royals ambitions to get
on the scoreboard followed with
their biggest offensive bit. They
battled from their 35 to the Phoe
nix 17 in 10 plnys but gave up
the ball on downs when Gor
man lost to the 19. Hryciw got
away for 11 yards and Gorman
year wilh a 3-7 record, while
California finished 4-5-1.
Willi n crowd of 82,000 cheer
ing him on, Stanford's Steve
Thurlow ripped the California
line at will during the second
half. The Indians went ahead
when they got the ball on the
California five after a bad pass
from center. Thurlow ran it in
(or Ihe touchdown.
I'pjted Lead
A two-point try after touch
down failed. California then
went ahead on a seven-yard
touchdown romp by Jim Blake
ney wilh Blanchfield's point aft
er, making the score 10-9. The
Bears tipped their lead to 17-9
when Blnnchfield returned a
punt 69 yards for a touchdown.
Willi Thurlow nnd Dick Hags
dale taking turns, the Indians
marched 74 yards in 11 plnys
wilh Ken Bnbajian pounding
over from Ihe one to put Stan
ford back in the ball game. That
set the singe for Beck and his
game-winning field goal.
All of the second quarter and
most of Ihe first were played
in C alifornia lerrilorv. Kagsdalc
kept the Golden Bears in lion
ble wilh his punting, once kick-
ing the ball out of bounds on
the four, another time on Ihe 13.
The Generals moved 77 yards j wricz added. 'They wanted that (;ary l,appin of College of Ida
In 15 plays for their score. I touchdown and they came and ho. Back Dennis Ingram of Pa
It sure was a game of
halves," Hillstrom said. "We
told the kids at the half they
would have to cinch up their
bolls and they came back and
did a great job."
"The difference was Liall con
troll by North Salem in the sec
o' 1 hall.'' Buckiewicz said.
' ...nth Salem got in a position
where it rould run the hall on
fourth down against us."
Allison's touchdown came on
a fourth down play alter the
Vikings made first downs the
three previous times on fourth
down plays.
"Give them credit," Buckie-
for nine on this drive and a
Gorman to Hryciw pass picked
up nine.
Next bid by the Royals was
stopped by another Williams in
terception. Then, Phoenix appeared to
be on the way to a third touch
down as it moved from its 30 to
the North Catholic 29 on the
running talents of Grennan and
Williams. Grennan romped for
13 and eight yards and Wil
liams twice for eight. But a Pi
rate was called for holding and
that threw the march out of
gear. Williams punted to the
NC four.
The Royals of Portland saw
the time almost gone but re
fused to go down without a
fight. After two rushing plays
Gorman hit Mike Jarrell for a
20-yard passing gain. The same
combination teamed for another
38 with Dan Cooper making the
stop.
But, by then the game was
over and the Pirates were the
champs.
Happy Coach Woodword, re
luctant to take any glory from
Phoenix teams and stars of the
past, agreed that his 1963 aggre
gation, blessed with veteran
players, deep with capable re
serves and proficient on both
offense and defense, is his best
all around team. And, that is
covering a lot of ground. Wood
MEDFORDv&$&TMBUNB
PORTS
Trojans Roll
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Uni
versity of Southern California
demonstrated its worth as a
Rose Bowl bid contender Satur
day by pounding out a 26-6 vic
tory over UCLA before 82,460
fans in their traditional cross
town football encounter.
Willi both teams in the run
ning for the New Year's day
game, the Trojans proved too
deep in manpower for the Bru
ins, who two weeks ago regis
tered the top upset on the coast
by (lumping Washington.
Superbly guided by quarter
back Pete Beathard, Southern
California scored in every pe
riod. Beathard had a direct
hand in the first two touch
downs, passing six yards to Hal
Bedsole for the initial score and
rushing over the second touch
down from two yards out.
The Trojans then put on
marches of 68 and 80 yards in
the third and fourth periods to
make their triumph one-sided.
Willie Brown climaxed Ihe third
period scoring drive with a two
yard run, and Rich McMahon
scored from one yard out in
the final period.
Despite the one-sided margin.
UCLA was in the ball game until
S "
North Salem held an edge in
statistics. The Vikings were
10-8 in first downs and 162-120
in total yards, 121-11 by rush
in and 41-9 by passing.
In the first half. Grants held
a 6-2 edge in first downs and
a ?.M7 edge in total yards.
North Salem 0 0 0 77
Grant 0 7 0 07
Scoring:
Grant Carson 1, run. Sum
mers, kick.
North Salem Allison 1, run.
Gilmore, kick.
Attendance: 9.650.
55). Paul Diederich (52) and Ron Williams (12) block NC's
Dennis Schafer (77) out of play. Phoenix players on ground
after blocking in line are left, Gary McGarity (75) and Ken
Tycksen (65) and, right, Dave Westfall (72). Fine blocking
by all hands has been one of the keys to Phoenix success.
The Pirates were unbeaten in 12 games.
ward has been the Phoenix skip
per for 15 years.
Woodward, one to credit all
his players, had particular men
tion for Williams yesterday for
his tremendous marshaling of
the Buccaneer attack along with
ball backing and tough defen
sive play.
Consbruck had 76 yards for
Phoenix on 21 times with the
ball and made numerous saves
for the Bucs against Royal run
ners and receivers. Williams had
52 yards on 11 carries and Gren
nan 49 on 11. Granby packed
29 for eight.
Hryciw, who broke away once
for 20 yards, had 50 yards on
10 totes.
The Royals were held to a
scrimmage net of 27 yards in
the first half while Phoenix to
taled 103.
North Catholic, like Phoenix
had won over 11 rivals before
gaining the championship en
counter. No other team this fall
has held Phoenix to two touch
downs, a credit to Royal de
fense. The Portland club carried
the standard of the north fringe
of the state and the coast. It
was District 1 champ and won
from Willamina and Siuslaw in
playoffs.
Phoenix after its Rogue loop
sweep downed Douglas of the
Umpqua Valley League then
Vale in the semifinals.
Over Uclans
late in the third period. The
Bruins got their only touchdown
on an 85-yard drive, featured by
the passing ot Larry Zeno to
end Kurt Altenberg.
The star end pulled in a 53
yard pass on that drive and had
167 yards in pass receptions for
the game on eight catches to
receive the honor of lineman
of the game.
Coaches Dislike
Eight-Tilt Rule
PORTLAND (UPI)-A North
west Conference rule scheduled
to go into effect in 1965 which
would limit each school to eight
football games drew opposition
from conference coaches Fri
day.
The coaches recommended
that the rule should be modi
fied to allow nine games if de
sired
Ted Ogdahl of Willamette
said a nine-game limit made it
easier to arrange a five-four
or four-five home and road ra
tio. He contended that wilh an
eight-game limit, the schedule
is more likely to show three
home games and five on the
road, or vice versa, than an
even four-four split.
The league faculty representa
tives clarified a transfer rule
so that non-participant in ath
letics at another school must
play out 18 weeks before being
eligible for competition.
The faculty group approved
another year of eligibility for
onrt Noil Hnllnwav nnrl hark
I cific was denied another season
I 0f paVi
i -
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This is the third state cham
pionship for Phoenix. Woodward
guided the Pirate basketball
team to the Oregon crown in
1951 when the school was Class
B.
STATISTICS
Ph. NC
First downs rushing .... 1 1
First downs passing .... 0
Penalty first downs .... I
Total first downs 12
Net yards rushing 211
Net yards passing 0
Net scrimmage yards 211 179
Passes tried, com 2-0 17-6
Passes intercept by .... 3 O
Fumbles lost I O
Penalties and yards .... 3-2S 3-45
Punts and average ....3-34.6 4-16.5
INDIVIDUAL RUSHING
Phoenix TC Yds. Ave.
Conshruck 21 76 3 6
Williams 11 52 46
Grennan It 49 44
Sauer I .15 0
Granby 8 29 3.6
North Catholic- TC Yds. Ave.
Gorman 10 16 1.6
Hryciw 10 50 5.0
Keever 4 22 5.5
Kniscr 3 7 2.3
PASSINR
rhnenil PA PC Yds.
Williams 2 0 0
N. Catholic PA TC Yds.
Gorman 17 6 84
PASS RECEIVING
N. Catholic PR Yds.
Hrvciw 2 10
Keever 2 16
Jarrett 2 58
COLLEGE FOOTBALL ROUNDUP
Bowl Pairings Set With Wins
By Huskies, Auburn, Baylor
By United Press International
Washington won the right to
be host team in the Rose Bowl,
Mississippi and Alabama were
paired in the Sugar Bowl and
Auburn accepted a bid to the
Orange Bowl Saturday on the
final tradition-steeped day of
the regular college football
season.
The day's activity left only
Texas' opponent in the Cotton
Bowl open to reasonable doubt
and that is expected to be set
tled next Saturday when Navy
opposes Army in the annual
inter-service classic which was
postponed a week because of
the death of President Kennedy.
Washington won the Big Six
championship and the right to
oppose Illinois in the Rose Bowl
by defeating Washington State,
16-0, and Auburn clinched the
Orange Bowl berth opposite
Nebraska with a 10-8 victory
over Alabama.
Conference Title
Alabama accepted a Sugar
Bowl bid despite the loss and
Mississippi wor. the Southeast
ern Conference title and tne
other berth at New Orleans, la.,
with a 10-10 tie with Mississippi
Stale. Slill another bowl bid
was resolved when Baylor
topped Rice. 21-12. and clinched
tlie bid to the Bluebonnet Bowl.
Outside the range of the bowl
scouts but nevertheless as im
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Berry, Murphy Shine as
Ducks Crush OSU, 31-14
EUGENE. Ore., (UPD-Ore-
gon, paced by the offensive tal
ents of Quarterback Bob Berry
and the pass interceptions of
Halfback H. D. Murphy, crushed
Oregon State 31-14 Saturday in
the 67th renewal of the far
west's oldest football rivalry.
It was the first Oregon victory
in five years over its civil war
rival.
Cards Face
Cleveland
In Pro Loop
By GARY KALE
UPI Sports Writer
Charley Johnson of the St.
Louis Cardinals is a quarter
back who likes to chew his
cabbage twice.
Johnsn, having the best year
of a brief career, beat Cleve
land, 20-14, two weeks ago and
now must duplicate the feat to
keep the Cards at the top of
the National Football League's
Eastern Division.
The 24-year-old chemical en
gineer survived the earlier
Browns' clash because of his
ability to keep passes out of de
fenders' hands. Only two tosses
were intercepted by Cleveland.
Johnson was better against the
New York Giants last Sunday
when he had no interceptions
as the Cards won, 24-17, to
throw the conference into a
three-way tie for the lead.
Can Pad Lead
The Chicago Bears (9-1-1) can
improve their lead in the West
ern Division against we visiung
Minnesota Vikings (4-7). Green
Bav's Thanksgiving Day tie with
Detroit enabled the Bears to re
tain a half-game lead over the
Packers, who now are 9-2-1.
In Sunday's other action, the
Pittsburgh Steelers (6-3-2), still
with an outside chance at the
Eastern title, host the Philadel
phia Eagles (2-8-1); the San
Francisco Forty Niners (2-9)
are home to the Los Angeles
Rams (4-7) and the Baltimore
Colts (5-6) play the Redskins (3-
8) at Washington.
portant to the student bodies
and alumni involved, Yale de
f e a t e d Harvard, 20-6, Lehigh
beat Lafayette, 15-8, Memphis
State completed its first un
beaten season in 25 years by
downing Houston, 29-6, Texas
Christian beat Southern Meth
odist, 22-15, Oklahoma routed
Oklahoma State, 34-10, and Ten
nessee defeated Vanderbilt, 14-0.
Fullback Junior Coffey scored
on plunges of four and three
yards to give the Washington
Huskies their two tuochdowns
and the Huskies added two
points on the final play of the
game with a safety. Coffey
bulled over fiom the four in the
second period and from the
three in the fourth.
Tough Defense
Woody Woodall's 32-yard field
goal and Mailon Kent's eight
yard scoring pass lifted Auburn
to its triumph over Alabama.
A high wind and Auburn's tough
defense held Joe Namath to
four completions in 17 attempts.
Mississippi State sprang a
surprise by tying Mississippi
on a 49-yard field goal by Justin
Canale and a 32-yard touchdown
pass by halfback Ode Burrell
the only pass completion of Bur
rell's career. Jim Weatherly's
30-yard touchdown pass and a
20-yard field goal by Billy Carl
Irwin produced Ole Miss' points.
Don Trull completed 18 of 33
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DELV'D ing wjrehouses.
Berry, a junior from San
Jose, Calif., passed for two
touchdowns and directed the
Oregon offense with the poise of
a professional.
He completed 18 of 26 passes
for 249 yards.
Murphy, a baseball outfielder,
intercepted two passes headed
for Oregon State's great end,
Vern Burke, late in the first
half. Both led to Oregon touch
downs. Murpny also hauled down
one of Berry's scoring passes,
a 29-yarder in the third period
that put Oregon ahead 31-0.
Berry's other touchdown
aerial was a 5-yarder to end
Corky Sullivan.
Fullback Lu Bain got the
other two touchdowns for the
Ducks on runs of 4 and 13
yards.
Sophomore H e r m Meister,
who had played in only one
other collegiate game, kicked
a 22-yard field goal to open
the scoring and added four
straight extra points.
Meister's father, Herm Sr.,
once was an assistant coach
for Oregon mentor Len Cas
anova at Santa Clara.
Oregon State made only four
first downs in the first three
periods but rallied behind third
string sophomore quarterback
Marv Crowston to score twice
in the final period against Ore
gon reserves.
Halfback Bob Watkins got
one of them on a 6-yard run
Cos Praises
EUGENE, Ore. (UPI) - Ore-
on Coach Len Casanova and
Coach Tommy Prothro of Ore
gon State called quarterback
Bob Berry the key to the Ducks'
31-14 fooiball victory over the
Beavers here Saturday.
"Berry did a tremendous job,"
Casanova said. "We put in four
new pass patterns for this game
and used two of them."
"Berry had as good a day as
I've seen," Prothro said. "His
execution was excellent."
Berry, a junior, completed 18
of 26 passes for 249 yards and
two touchdowns. He also gained
passes for 187 yards, giving him
new collegiate record totals of
160 completions for the year
and 2,047 yards gained in one
season as Baylor won the right
to face L.S.U. in the Dec. 21
Bluebonnet Bowl game at
Houston, Tex. Trull scored twice
from a yard out and also dashed
26 yards for a touchdown.
A crowd of 51,000 in Yale
Bowl saw Randy Egloff score
on runs of five and two yards
as Old Eli overcame an early
6-0 deficit to win "the game."
Harvard scored first on Mike
Bassett's 48-yard pass-run play
to Scott Harshbarger but Yale
went ahead on Jim Groninger's one-yard plunges and a 20-yard
five-yard second-period d a s h j dash for Oklahoma; and Mai
and Chuck Merccin's e x t r a . ion Faireloth raced 72 vards for
point.
Lehigh scored its only win of
the season in the 99th renewal
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and Crowston the other on a 3
yard run.
Oregon played without per
haps its greatest halfback
ever, Mel Renfro, who cut his
wrist in a freak accident at
his home a week ago Friday.
Berry's two touchdown passes
Saturday tied him with Oregon
State's Gordon Queen for na
tional leadership at 16.
It was Oregon's 31st victory
to 27 for Oregon State. There
have been nine ties.
It also was one of the Duck's
most impressive wins ever over
the Beavers. Oregon defeated
Oregon State 28-0 in 1955 but
aside from that it was back in
1899 when Oregon won 38-0 that
the Webfoots have won so one
sided. That score was 38-0.
The decision left Oregon with
a 7-3 record for the season and
Oregon State with a 5-5 mark.
Oregon 0 17 14 0 31
Oregon State 0 0 0 14 U
SCORING
Oregon FG Meister 22
Ore .- Sullivan 5 pass from
Berry (Meister kick!
Ore Bain 4 run (Meister kick)
Ore Bain 13 run IMeister
kick i
Ore Murphy 29 pass from
Berry (Meister kicki
OSU Watkins 6 run (Shaw runt
OSU Crowston 3 run (kick
failed i
Attendance: 20.700.
Ore.
First Downs 27
Rushing yardage 201
Passing yardage 249
Passes 18-26
Passes Intercepted by 4
Punts 2-37.5
Fumbles lost I
Yards penalized 62
OSU
14
43
201
15-23
0
4-38 5
0
28
Berry's Play
13 yards in 14 runs.
Berry's efforts enabled him
to break two Oregon season rec
ords with 101 pass completions
and 1,793 total yards. The old
marks were 91 completions and
1,536 yards set by George Shaw
in 1954.
Prothro compared Berry to
Baylor's outstanding quarter
back, Don Trull.
"He does more things than
Trull and is a better scrambler,"
Prothro said. "I'd rather have
the scrambler."
Oregon State defeated Baylor
earlier this season.
of its rivalry with Lafayette
dating back to 1884. Cap. Char
ley Lamotta's six-yard touch
down run in the fourth period
provided the winning points.
Fullback Dave C a s i n e 1 1 1
scored two touchdowns and
quarterback Billy Fletcher
raced 82 and six yards for the
big plays in Memphis State's
ninth win against one tie this
season; reserve halfback Marv
Chipman ran six yards for a
touchdown and then took a
basket pass for a two-point con
version to clinch TCU's triumph
over SMU; Jim Grisham gained
218 yards and scored on three
a touchdown and set up the sec
ond Tennessee touchdown with
his line battering.
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