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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1963)
lows rogooB Teeb WiA 2-J nsnim Passing, Running Game Husky Good For Conference Win Buries Beavers P Ain St Offense Ml) Oi 'v By BILL COULD Herald and News Sports Editor -MODOC FIELD - Portland State was reported to have now an improved football team. This was unquestionably proved here Saturday night. The Viks displayed a tremen dous defense to add to their al ready glowing offense and it added up to their second Oregon Collegiate Conference victory of! ire young season. 4. i i When the final horn sounded here Saturday night the Vikings 1,-J 1 i IUU1 IlldUC It IWU SUdlglll HI counting action and three in a row over the Oregon Tech Owls, this time by a 26-7 score. The Viks were known to have two of the better backs in the league in Andy Berkis and Bit lie "Bye-Bye" White. However, , too little had been written of the Vikings' Mike Schrunk at quarterback and end Jim Hollingsworth. These two gave the Owls fits throughout the important confer ence fray and their talents added to those of Berkis and White ac counted for the four touchdowns the Viks registered. The Owls, seemingly o u t- classed throughout the second half of the contest, were never theless breathing down the backs of the Viks throughout the first half. And, in the first period, gave the strong Vikings all they could handle in preventing the first score of the night being collect ed by the home club. It was a sustained drive by the Owls started following the opening kickoff carrying from the Owl 25 to the Viking two before Prep Football Scores By United Press International Grant 47 Washington 13 Franklin 7 Jefferson 6 Benson 18 Lincoln 6 Madison 13 Roosevelt 6 Beaverton 29 Grcsham 12 Milwaukie 14 David Douglas 12 Sunset 19 Astoria 13 Central Catholic 20 Clackamas 7 West Linn 18 Tillamook 6 Lake Oswego 25 Forest Grove 0 McMinnville 30 Dallas 14 Oregon City 45 Newberg 26 Tigard 12 St. Helens 7 Canby 20 Scappoosc 13 Parkrose 26 Wy'east 0 Jesuit 31 Molalla 0 ' Sandy 6 Silverton 0 Reynolds 13 Estacada 7 Lebanon 19 Albany 0 North Salem 27 Corvallis 6 North Eugene 26 Springfield 6 North 'Bend 19 Sheldon 19 (tie) Marshfield 34 Willamette 13 Cottage Grove 21 South Eugene 13 Roseburg 34 Thurston 6 Medford 6 Crater 0 Grants Pass 19 Klamath Falls 0 Ashland 15 Yrcka (Calif.) 6 Pendleton 45 Milton-Freewater 0 Baker 20 Hermiston 0 La Grande 19 Redmond 7 Bend 32 Madras 13 ,The Dalles 28 Princville 6 Ontario 32 Weiscr (Idaho) S Emmett (Idaho) 21 Nyssa 12 Hood River 27 Neah-Kah-Nie 0 Seaside 39 Rainier 6 Willamina 19 Nestucca 14 Yamhill-Carlton 40 Salem Acad emy 0 Amity 20 Dayton 7 Philomath 13 Sheridan 0 Siuslaw 20 Recdsport 13 New port 25 Toledo 7 Taft 27 Waldport 6 Central 25 North Marion 14 Santiam 32 Scio 12 Serra Catholic 26 Gervais 0 Stayton 25 Cascade 6 Woodburn 25 Mt. Angel 6 Central Linn 34 Harrisburg 0 Riddle 19 Myrtle Creek 0 ; Illinois 46 Henley 19 Eagle Point 35 Lakeview 21 ! Bandon 19 Coquille 11 Gold Beach 20 Pacific 0 Burns 27 Pilot Rock 0 Heppner 7 Grant Union 0 Vale 38 Enterprise 0 Chenowith 12 Sherman 0 Corbett 31 Regis 19 Merrill 44 Malm 7 Bonanza 7 Chiloquin 7 Sisters 41 Arlington 13 Triangle Lake 19 Wcstfir 19 St Paul 54 Oregon Deaf 35 Alsca 27 Detroit 14 Maupin 6 Umatilla 0 McEwen 34 Wattsburg 6 Jefferson 38 Sileti 7 Valsetl 25 Eddyville 19 Mohawk 26 Falls City 12 Condon 13 Stanfk?ld 0 Weston 33 Cove 0 Riverside 40 Echo 6 Athena 34 Waitsburg ttaj'h.) Brookings 33 Myrtle Point 6 Oakland 28 Lowell 0 Drain 48 Oakridge 13 Sutherland 12 Glendale 6 the fourth down pass from Mike Glines to Vic Ventura fell short of a first down on the Viking one by a yard. The Vikings then began their first drive of the evening and it wasn't completed until the Port land State eleven had lighted its side of the scoreboard. It was a 98-yard drive in 11 plays, with the payoff the first aerial of the evening attempt ed by Schrunk. The Viking general went back on the third down play and ri fled the shot to Hollingsworth. The big wingman gathered the ball in on the Owl 35 and ran the distance to the end zone. The payoff toss had covered 55 yards and gave the Vikings a 6-0 lead at the 5:28 mark of the first stanza. Jerry Humphreys added the PAT via placement and it was a 7-0 game. The Owls came right back with a drive of their own which start ed on the Oregon Tech 36 fol lowing a Portland State punt. It was big Bob Battle and Claude Shipp alternating in the ball carrying to move the club to the Portland State 36 and the pass ing of Glues moving the Owls even deeper into Viking territory Two key plays kept the Owl drive alive when it appeared des tined to die as others. The first was a fourth down and three on the 'Portland State 14 and the Owls" Glines rolled right and dove for four yards and a first down' on the Viking 10. After losing in three plays back to the Portland State 12, Glines again spotted his glue-fingered favorite target, Ventura, and hit him on the Portland State one- foot line for a first down. Glines then carried over and Dave Dirkson, the Owls' talented placement kicker, came through with the extra point and it was a deadlocked contest at 7-7. The potent Viking offense was not to be contained easily, how- ever, as White took the ensuing kickoff on the Portland State 11 and returned 44 yards to the Ore gon Tech 45. Four plays later the Viks had the go-ahead tally as again Schrunk spotted Hollingsworth and hit him with a 38-yard touch down aerial. Again Humphreys added the PAT via placement and it was a 14-7 game. The Vikings struck again in Top Ranked Oklahoma Falls To Texas 28-7 DALLAS (UPI) - Daring Duke Carlisle engineered an almost flawless offense and baffled Okla homa's No. 1 ranked Sooners with perfect execution of the option play Saturday to spark second ranking Texas to a 28-7 upset victory. The 6-1, 174-pounder quarter back, whose starting role seems always in danger of being wrested away, drove Texas 68 yards with the opening kickoff for a 7-0 lead to set the tempo of the game and Texas' terrific defense duo of Scott Appleton and Timmy Doerr saw to it personally that the Okla homa offensive gears seldom meshed. Oklahoma didn't cross midfield until midway in the third quarter after Carlisle and halfbacks Tom my Ford and Phil Harris had erected a 21-0 lead on the way to the Cotton Bowl's second major upset in less than 24 hours. South ern Methodist University beat sixth-ranked Navy on the same sod 32-28 Friday night. The victory, the sixth in a row for Darreil Royal-coached Texas team over his alma mater, ended any doubts that last year's fourth ranked Texas entry was ready to make an impressive bid for this year's national championship. It was Texas' fourth win in a row. Pokes Beat CSU LARAMIE. Wyo. (UPI) - Wyo ming's Cowboys put the heat on to defeat Colorado State Univer sity 21-3 Saturday after the arch rival Aggies scored an unexpected field goal but then could not file the ragged edge in their olfenstve attack. The Cowboys' record-smashing quarterback, Tom Wilkinson, teamed up w ith wingback Darren Worman in the last minutes of the game to send hapless CSU home with its third defeat. It was the Pokes' third victory alter failing in an upset try last week against Kansas. Tide Halted TUSCALOOSA, Ala. 'UPI'- A Florida Gators that has been asleep awoke with a roar Satur the thud chapter on 78 yard drive requiring six plays includ ing a 38-yard gain by White as Berkis blasted over from 11 yards out. It was Berkis again adding the final tally of the night as he scored from a yard out with 12:36 left. This capped a drive of 74 yards in 13 plays. Throughout the evening it was the outstanding passing and run ning of the Viking club and the Owls' Glines gave the home crowd pleasure with his own night of aerial warfare. In the end, however, it was the overall team speed and polish of the more experienced Vikings paying off with the victory. Score (by quarters): Portland State 7 7 6 6 26 Oregon Tech 0 7 0 0-71 Portland State TDs: Hollings worth 2 (55 and 38-yard passes from Schrunk); Berkis 2 (11 and 1-yard runs); PATs: Humphreys 2 I kicks). Oregon Tech TD: Glines (1- yard plunge); PAT: Dirksen (kick). GAME STATISTICS PSC Flrsl Downs Rushing Passing Penalties Yards Gained Rushing is Yards Lost Rushing Net Yards Rushing 220 20 passes Attempted Passes Completed Passes Intercepted By Yards Gained Passing Total Yards Gained Punts Average Fumbles Lost Penalties - Yards 1-29.0 5-32.4 33 6-! 184 4 45 OREGON TECH Individual Statistics Rushing Player TC YO YL Net Avg. Glines 6 -37 -29 4.S ShiDP 14 43 -5 31 2.7 Battle IS Luke 7 41 0 41 5.6 Smith 10-3-3 -3.0 Banta 10-5-5 -5.0 Totals 44 140 it II 1.1 Passing Player PA PC Yds. Avg. Glines 28 15 154 10.2 Smith 2 0 0 0 Totals 30 15 1 54 1 0.2 Rece v no Player PC Yds. Avg. Ventura 8 61 7.6 Luke 6 79 13.1 Burt 1 14 14.0 Totals IS 154 1M PORTLAND STATE Individual Statistics Rushing ' TC YG YL Net Avg. Player Schrunk I Humphreys White Berkis Arthur Becker 6 22 9 74 13 71 0 22 5 32 J 30 6.0 2 0-3-3 3 28 0 28 Guslatson Pierson 2 0 2 Totals ) 229 t 220 Passing Player PA PC Yds. Avg. 15 10 252 25.2 5 t 14 14.0 Schrunk Becker Totals .41 1 day and slapped down third-! ranked Alabama 10-6 on halfback Dick Kirk's 41-yard run, a field goal, and a brick wall defense. Although kicking specialist Bob Lyle's 42 yard field goal in the opening minutes and Kirk's fourth-quarter dash were Flor ida's big plays, it was the defense that kept the mighty Crimson Tide stranded. Not until the final period did Alabama generate a serious of fense. Quarterback Joe Namath led a 67-yard march climaxed by his one-yard plunge for the score. A two-point conversion try failed and, with only two minutes left, it was too late for the Crimson Tide. The big breaks we etaoi shrdd Army Nips Penn UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. -(UPI i Underdog Army com pletely bottled up Penn State's high-scoring offense and rode the talented toe of Dick Heydt to a 10-7 win over the eighth-ranked Linns Saturday. Heydt kicked a 32-yard field goal midway through the open ing period and the three points proved to be the margin of vic tory. However, the score docs not indicate the margin of superiority which the Cadets held over the Nittany Lions. State had only two scoring op portunities in the game. After Army swept to a 10-0 lead early in the second quarter, State man aged to get back in the ball game near the close of the half on a 69-yard pass play with Pete Liske tossing the bomb to Junior Pow ell. Comeback Win EVANSTON. 111. 'UPI' - Tom Myers changed from goat to hero in a twinkling Saturday, launch ing two fourth quarter touchdown passes which brought Northwest ern surging to a 15-8 comeback victory over stubborn Minnesota Myers, second-ranked national ly In total offense, was bottled up practically all afternoon by driving Minnesota linemen and secondary. The Wildcat' classy quartorkack aoaleted only four ' f ,vt HAZARDS OF QUARTERBACKING Syracuse Quarter back Wally Mahle is swarmed by a host of UCL play ers in the first quarter but managed to get the ball away before being grounded. The pass from the Syracuse 20- iP(0Mr PAGE 1C HERALD AND U.S. Leads ATLANTA (UPI) - Arnold Pal mer and Dow Finsterwald fired a best ball six under par 29 on the front nine Saturday en route to a 3 and 2 mashie massacre which powered the U.S. to a 12 to 4 Ryder Cup lead over the battered British. The Palmer-Finsterwald team was six under par in a 5 and 4 morning win over tiny Brian Hug gett and big Dave Thomas and then in the afternoon was seven under par as they blasted aside bushy-haired Neil Coles and Ire- Receiving Player PC Yds. Avg. 5 154 30.8 2 27 13.5 Hollingsworth Grove Humphreys Berkis Totals 2 m 33 o 2t6 j4li I passes going into the final 16 minutes of play and had three intercepted. To make tilings worse, Myers fumbled away the ball on his team's first serious scoring threat of the game. But he connected on five of five pitches in the final period and that made up for all of it. Falcons Rally LINCOLN, Neb. (UPD-Quar-terback Terry Isaacson piloted the Air Force to a 17-13 come- from-behind victory over Nebras ka Saturday w ith an 80-yard, six- play drive in the dying minutes of tire game. Playing before a sun-baked crowd of more than 38,000, Isaac son got the clincher from the un derdog Falcons with a 38-yard pass to end Fritz Greenlee. There were fewer than three minutes remaining when he launched the payoff pitch. Aggies Breeze LOGAN, Utah (UPI) Utah State's alert Aggies turned three first quarter fumbles and a pass interception into touchdowns and went on to wallop New Mex ico 47-14 Saturday to post their 16th straight home field victory. A crowd of 9,021 in wet Romney Stadium saw the aggressive Aggie line stop the Lobos cold while a fleet of hard-running backs picked up huge chunks of yardage. Badgers Win MADISON, Wis. (UPD-Dcadly passing by junior quarterback Harold Brandt and flashy running by halfbacks Carl Silvestri and Lou Holland led defending cham pion Wisconsin to a 38-20 victory over Purdue Saturday in the Big Ten opener for both teams. It was the third successive win this season for the Badgers and Purdue's second loss in three starts. Brandt completed 14 of 22 pass es for 196 yards and a touchdown on a 31-yard toss to J,m Jones. The Badgers' signal caller also plunged two yards for Wisconsin's NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore. Ryder Cup land's Christy O'Connor, 3 and 2, for a second point. These were the two feature matches at East Lake Country Club before 10,000 sun-bathed spec tators as the United States won five of the day's eight best-ball matches, halved two and lost but one. With 16 singles matches Sun day, the U.S. needed only five wins to wrap up the big gold cup for we 12th time in 15 contests. In the day's other matches, Billy Casper and Billy Maxwell turned for two victories; Tony Lema and Johnny Pott scored one; Julius Boros and Gene Lit tler halved a match as did Bob Goalby and Dave Ragan while the latter team suffered the day's only loss in the morning round. Tech Triumphs KNOXVILLE, Tenn. UPI Billy Lothridge and his 14th ranked Georgia Tech Engineers assaulted Tennessee with slide rule precision and mule - kick power for a 23-7 Southeastern Conference victory Saturday. The 21-year old senior quarter-, back from Gainesville, Ga., ran for one touchdown, passed for another, set up a third and kicked a 28-yard field goal. Ten nessee could not move against Tech's rocky defenses until tail back Wayne Bush capped a 52 yard drive in the final period by diving over the Tech line from two yards out. Indiana Tumbles IOWA CITY, Iowa (UPI)- A surly Iowa defense smashed open the gates and quarterback Fred Riddle rifled five touchdown passes Saturday to lift the re juvenated Iowa Hawkeycs to a 37-26 homecoming victory over winless Indiana. The cat-quick Iowa defense set un five scores by intercepting three Hoosier passes and pouncing on two enemy fumbles. The de fenders also dulled the Indiana attack by sending marvelouSi Marv Woodson to the sidelines with a first-quarter knee injury. Riddle, at the Helm ot the1 Hawkeye offense, hurled scoring passes of 76, S, S, 4 and 3 yards to spark Iowa to victory in its' opening Big Ten game and boost its season mark to 2-0-1. Big 10 Deadlock COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPll-Dan- dy Dick VanRaaphorst broke his own Big Ten I if Id goal record. with a 49-yard kick In the wan ing minutes Saturday to earn Ohio State a 20-20 deadlock with plucky Illinois, which had rallied with two last period touchdowns from a 10-point deficit, VanRaaphorst came in when last ditch drive by the Buckeyes lost steam on the Illinois 31 be fore a record Ohio Stadium home coming crowd of 84,712. It was one of the most dra yard line went incomplete. UCLA tacklers are Ken Fran cisco, Walt Dathe (partially hidden I, Mitch Johnson (79) and Jim Colletto. UPI Telephoto Sunday, October 13, 1963 Play 12-4 Casper and Maxwell in the morning round beat long-hitting Harry Weeuman and Scotsman George Will, 3 and 2, playing five under par golf for the 16 holes they needed and in the afternoon they were four under par beating Tom Haliburton and Geoffrey Hunt. Lema and Pott combined in the afternoon for a 1 up victory over Peter AUiss and Bernard Hunt, 'shooting a four under par 33-33 66. They were even after 16 holes but Pott got the winning margin with a three-foot birdie putt on the 17th. Gorillas live in the high for ested mountains of Africa and travel as a family. matic and hotly contested games in the giant horseshoe stadium in years, as the rebuilding Illini twice took the lead only to lose it through a fumble and the rec ord breaking field goal. Stanford Falls HOUSTON (UPI) - The Rice Owls used a late fourth period field goal and a pass interception runback Saturday night to break open a tight game with the Stanford Indians and went on to win 23-13 over the team from the coast. ine uwis and Indians were deadlocked 13-13 with 4:04 left in the fourth quarter when sopho more place kicking specialist Lar ry Rice put the Owls ahead 16-13 on a 22-yard field goal. Two plays after the following kickoff. Owl linebacker Dale Cal- lihan picked off a Stanford pass and ran it back 45 yards down the let sideline for a touchdown. That put the game out of reach. Tiger Victory COLUMBIA, Mo. UPI)-Sopho more quarterback Gary Lane opened the scoring with a 50-yard touchdown run Saturday and then engineered two more scoring drive to lead Missouri University to a 21-11 Big Eight Conference victory over the surprisingly stub born Kansas State Wildcats. Tlie Missouri Tigers, ranked 18th in the nation, were rated a 24-point favorite. But aside from Lane's 50-yard scamper early in the first period, the underdog Wildcats fought Missouri on even terms in the first half. 1 HUNTING SEASON SPECIAL CAR WASH . . . 1.25 . . , Monday through Thursdays, and $1,50 on Fridays and Saturdays, Thil it our regular $1.73 car wash. Offer open to all for remainder of October. SPARKLE CAR WASH 4023 So. Sixth Ph. TU 4-5543 Linfield Upset By Lewis-Clark PORTLAND (UPI) Quarter back Bill Henselman threw two touchdown passes as the Lewis and Clark Pioneers upset de fending champion Linfield 21-7 in a Northwest Conference foot ball game Saturday. The Wildcats, ranked eighth in the NAIA poll, suffered their first regular season loss in 25 games and their first defeat in 14 con ference contests. Rivals Tie ANN ARBOR, Mich. fUPD- Underdog Michigan pushed across a first period touchdown and then bottled up Michigan State a lightning-fast offense Sat urday to battle the arch - rival Spartans to a 7-7 deadlock before a sellout crowd of 101,450 fans. Both teams attempted to pull out the tough defensive game with field goals in the final pe- rzoa. nut micmgan Mares iu flooicn missed trom 32 yards out and Michigan's Bob Timberlake was wide from 43 yards out in the final minute. Sports Shorts HOOVER ON WAIVERS PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - Tom Hoover, tlie Philadelphia Jftcrs' No. 1 draft choice, has been placed on the waiver list. Hoover, 6-10, dropped out ot Villanova and played for the Camden Bullets of the Eastern Professional Basketball League last season before becoming eli gible for the National Basketball Association draft. FARM DIRECTOR RETIRES PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - Gene Martin, a veteran of 45 years in baseball, retired Thursday as farm director of the Philadelphia Phillies. Martin, who was succeeded by Clay Dennis Jr., his administra tive assistant, will remain with the club as a specialized scout. PREXY GIVES WARNING NEW YORK (UPI) Commis sioner Walter Kennedy of the Na tional Basketball Association warned all league personnel to day that they "must be circum spect in their private associa tions." Kennedy, who left for a tour of all league franchises, said NBA personnel "must not associate with undesirables." DROPS FROM LEAGUE FAIRFIELD, Conn. (UPI) -Fairfield University, one of t h e more powerful members of the Tri-State Basketball League in recent years, "regretfully an nounced" Us withdrawal from that conference Thursday. The withdrawal, to become ef fective at the end of the 1963-64 season, was necessitated by an ever-increasing number of re quests for non-league games ac cording to George Bisacca, athle tic director and head basketball coach. SEATTLE, Wash. (UPD-Wash- ington's long-dormant offense ex ploded like Typhoon Freda on the first anniversary o fthe great Pa cific Northwest windstorm Sat urday and practically blew Ore gon State out of the stadium as the Huskies rolled up an easy 34-7 victory over the previously unbeaten Beavers. Oregon State did not score un til the last play of the game. Tiny Steve Bramwell set the Husky fireworks off in the second period when he returned Len Frketich's punt 92 yards for a touchdown. Tlie 154-pound halfback hobbled the punt on his own eight - yard line, but scooped up the ball and headed downfield as the crowd of 53,700 roared. Bramwell was not the only Washington hero of tlie day. Full back Charlie Browning smashed over for two scores with plunges of four and two yards. Quarterback Bill Douglas passed 28 yards to Ralph Winters for Washington's fourth touch down and set up both of Brown ing's scoring runs with passes to Al Libke, a reserve quarterback who functioned as an end on both plays. Washington's last score came on a 40-yard pass from Todd Hul-I lin, a signal caller seeing action Irish Trip USC 17-14 SOUTH BEND. Ind. (UPI Notre Dame spurned the forward pass Saturday and stayed on the ground with three terrific run ning backs to upset ninth-rated Southern California 17-14 on Ken Ivan's 33-yard field goal in the fourth period. The Irish, with quarterback Frank Budka directing the of fense all the way, tried only live passes. They completed two for 10 yards and one was intercept ed. But Budka, whose leg was broken against the Trojans last year, along wiin sopnomore nan back Bill Wolskl and Junior full back Joe Kantor, had the punch through the line to beat the vaunted Trojans. It was the first win of the year for the Irish and for Hugh Devore, the interim coacn. Notre Dame had lost by five points to Wisconsin and one point to Purdue. Berry's Passing Rips Idaho 41-21 EUGENE. Ore. (UPI) Quarter-I back Bob Berry riddled Idaho's) defenses with his sharp passing; Saturday as Oregon rolled to its third straight football victory, 41- 121. Berry completed 9 of II passes (or 186 yards, including long scor ing strikes of 39 yards to end Rich Schwab and 57 yards to halfback Mel Rcnfro. Oregon, playing before a crowd of 19.200 that included New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller, broke the game open in Hie second quarter after the underdog Idaho team fought lo a first quarter 7-7 standoff. Berry's two touchdown passes and a 10-yard run by fullback Lu Bain cave the Ducks a 28-7 halt- lame lead. Bain had scored their sweep around left end. Halfback Larry Hill got tnei other two Oregon scores in the second half, one on a 4-yard run and the other on a 35-yard run- bark of an Intercepted pass. Idaho, behind quarterback Gary Mires, moved 71 yards In 18 plays for Its first touchdown. Mires EDUCATION... get the facts about a guaranteed plan. Ad Jim Crlimm for the first time, A end Joe Man- cuso. Oregon State's second - string quarterback Warren Woodworth kept the Beavers from being shut out when he swepf left end for 15 yards to cap a 70-yard scoring drive against a team of Husky , benchwarmers. - Washington looked like It was. up to its old tricks, which re-: suited in three consecutive loss es this season, when Browning fumbled on Oregon State's nine after the Huskies had moved 61 yards with the opening kickoff, but that was the last time the Huskies looked bad Saturday. Oregon State s vaunted passer; Gordon Queen, was checkmated. . He completed five of only IK passes for 67 yards. -: The closest Oregon State could: get to the Washington goal line- other than their scoring play was; when they reached the Husky 13 in the third period. They lost the ball on downs then. : Wash. 7 8 7 14-34 OSU 0 0 0 77 Contest Scores Following are the scores of games listed in the Herald and News' football contest. Tie Breakers Grants Pass 19, KUHS 0 Illinois VaUey 46, Henley 19 Portland State 26, Oregon Tech 7 Others Chiloquin 7, Bonanza 7 (tie) Merrill 44, Malin 7 Alturas 27, Merrill 7 Air Force 17, Nebraska 13 Florida 10, Alabama 7 Army 10, Penn State 7 California 22, Duke 22 (tie) Colorado 25, Oklahoma State 0 Georgia Tech 23, Tennessee 7 Idaho State 14, Montana 13 ;' Oregon 41, Idaho 21 Illinois 20, Ohio State 20 (tie) Iowa 37, Indiana 26 . ; . Iowa State 17, Kansas 14 '" Missouri 21, Kansas State 11 Michigan 7, Michigan State 7 (tie) Northwestern 15, Minnesota 8 SMU 32, Navy 28 Utah State 47, New Mexico 14 North Carolina 14, Maryland 7 Notre Dame 17, Southern Cali fornia 14 Texas 28, Oklahoma 7 Washington 34, Oregon State 7 Wisconsin 38, Purdue 20 Rice 23, Stanford 7 Syracuse 29, UCLA 7 scored it from a yard out. Tlie Vandals second halt scor ing came on a 19-yard pass from reserve quarterback Mike Mona han to halfback Bill Scott and a yard plunge by halfback Rick Naccarato. The final touchdown came late i the game against Oregon's third and fourth stringers. Rcnfro, the Ducks' versatile All-American, switched to quar terback for one series in the third quarter the first time he has played there since he was in high school. Renfro moved his team to two first downs and completed his first two passes but a double re verse play on fourth down fell a yard short Berry came back in for one more offensive series and reserve Jack Sovereign came in. Rcnfro also tried an extra point after the final Oregon touch down but It was blocked. Oregon now has a 3-1 record for the season, having lost Its opener to Penn State. Idaho is 2-2. Oregon , 7 21 7 641 Idaho 7 0 8 8-21 Call JIM CRISMON Firrt N.Hm.I lank lids. tui.i 2-3434 Rm.i 4-462$ Oi4mtWe4rtLtfe "Year Fvtvre ll Mr lualnt is TetJey"