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The Los Angeles Times du lieu suivant : Los Angeles, California • 29

Lieu:
Los Angeles, California
Date de parution:
Page:
29
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

ft- 7 BEATEN, 14 cc SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 13, 1938. BATTERED BRUINS SADDER BUT 'WEISS-ER' AS HOWIE CRACKS THROUGH FOR TOUCHDOWN art 5 x'r h'-Ax lsysbj ui 5 i f- 1 jTf 4 1 14 4. iStflinitolff! '-Til hi Mini MMi i Vifif ifHKiMirT rffhT TT 1 1 rm if i 1 i dipini tttti i mTHijiih imh rt wiii w.miiiWi iiiimwuim i wn'i i i in iii i 'fri i lllilllillmiipi in i-nafcn iiiiwwiiiilili liiMMMWwMMMaiiMw 'V'" forward wall for the Badgers' first touchdown yesterday at the Coliseum. Weiss traveled 7 yards to hit pay dirt behind the interference of John O'Brienguard, who is shown sweeping Merle Harris out of the way. The Howie Weiss Wisconsin's bone-crushing fullback, is shown plunging through a gaping hole in the Bruin BILL HENRY Tennessee Surges Over Vandy, 14-0 NASHVILLE (Tenn.) 12.

Throttled for some 45 minutes and not out in front at the Bears Drub Oregon, 20-0 Three California Touchdown Drives Put Skids Under Webfoots Irish Down Minnesota. Notre Dame Climbs Nearer National Title by Scoring 19-0 Win score came in the second period. Weiss was one of the big reasons why the Badgers triumphed, 14 to 7. Times photo br Jack Herod ALERT BADGERS BEAT BRUIN TEAM, 14 TO 7 Wisconsin Capitalizes on U.C.L.A. Errors to Score Twice Before 35,000 People BY FRANK FINCH There being only 35 shopping days left before Christmas, Bill Spaulding's butter-fingered Bruins, imbued with the Yule-tide spirit, pitched in and gave Wisconsin's Badgers a swell party yesterday afternoon before 35,000 fans at the Coliseum.

MIGHTY TROJANS UPSET BY HUSKIES, 7 TO 6 Johnston's Long Run and Conversion Shatter Troy's Rose Bowl Dream BV BKAVEN DYER SEATTLE, Nov. 12. Jimmy Phelan's belligerent Huskies sprang their annual upset here this afternoon by handing the highly favored Southern California varsity a 7-to-6 beating. intermission for the first time this season, Tennessee's Volunteers struck with two powerful drives in the closing quarter to SOUTH BEND (Ind.) Nov. 12 (JP) Notre Dame's football forces moved a scale higher in their day to defeat Vanderbilt, 14-0, and register their eighth straight Campu3 football, which Is the only-100 per cent genuine college football, is getting harder nd harder to find these days particularly here in Southern California.

Have you ever seen any of it? CAMrUS FOOTBALL march toward the nationa There was no about it, The better team won and that championship today by over victory. LONE THREAT Vanderbilt's Commodores, with all their trickery and cunning, around his own right end for Washington's touchdown In the This morning the burly Badg-i whelming Minnesota, 19 to 0, before 56,000 astonished spectators slim one-point margin doesn't begin to do justice to Washing era are chugging back to Madi could not muster enough magic son beaming over the 14-7 defeat opening quarter, Don Jones, another veteran, playing the entire game at fullback, added the extra who filled the Irish bowl. ton. The Huskies really were TTnntKQll etartor vrtii Irnmur act to offer more than one' serious they hung on the Bruins yester two touchdowns stronger than The Fighting Irish opened scoring threat against the hard- point, which meant victory. At our boys on the run of the play, the flood gates of their scoring day, and while you can't deny that the Big Ten troupe earned the duke, you've certainly got to the time few suspected this would be the deciding factor.

LANSDELL SCORES ny Washington and Merle liar ris got hot with their passes and the Bruins marched 88 yards, Bus Sutherland cracking right guard for a touchdown with 15 seconds of play remaining. ONSIDE KICK Battling to the finish, the Bruins pulled a fast one on the ensuing kickoff when Johnny Fraw- power in three quick thrusts to achieve their seventh straight victory of the season. The first Twice they lost the ball oil downs inside Southern California's 1-yard stripe. At the end of the game they were bowling though BERKELEY, Nov. 12.

() University of California's Bears, striking swiftly in the second and third periods, charged to a 20-to-0 football victory today over University of Oregon's hard-fighting Ducks. The Bears, apparently recovered from the shock of their beating by Southern California a week ago, tallied midway in the second period, going 38 yards for the first score, Fullback Dave Anderson went over from the 3-yard line. Immediately after the next kickoff, a weak Oregon punt gave the Californians the ball 39 yards from scoring ground. On the first play, Left Half Vic Bot-tarl passed 14 yards to Right Half Louis Smith and the latter ran 25 yard3 for the touchdown. Bottari again scored the point after touchdown with a drop kick.

Shortly after the third quarter opened, 'another poor punt Turn to Page II, Column 3 Badly shaken by this unex was an 84-yard gallop by Lou Zontini, fleet Notre Dame half give U.C.L.A. an assist on the The Bruins outgained and out-downed the visitors and, alas and alack, outfumbled 'em. Of the 18 bobbles committed, the Bruins were guilty of 10 of them. And back, within six minutes after the opening kickoff. The other ley executed a neat onside kick two were touchdown passes charging volunteer line.

Walter (Babe) Wood was the spark of Tennessee's victorious stand, scoring both touchdowns after directing drives that netted the scores on marches of 46 and 52 yards. Capt. Bowden Wyatt, who was a major factor offensively and defensively, made placements for the two extra points. REPLACES CAFEGO The bounding Wood, rushed into the line-up to replace the Tennessee ace, George (Bad News) Cafego, ran like a wild man in both touchdown drives and was at the spearhead of an- Turn to Page 14, Column 2 hurled by Bob Saggau, sensa the Trojan line for steady gains. TROJANS STUNNED The entire Trojan party was pretty badly stunned.

Nobody anticipated anything of the kind even though everybody agreed in advance that Washington was a much more potent club than its record indicated. Jimmy Johnston, veteran left halfback, who was a sensation as a sophomore only to bog down tional 18-year-old sophomore that Izzy Cantor fell on only 36' yards from the Promised Land. With time enough left for but one more play, U.C.L.A. called time out and drew a 5-yard pen Full pag of football picturti on Pago 15, Part II. pected turn of affairs the Trojans couldn't' recover until midway, in the second period when Grenville Lansdell grabbed a long, high punt and raced 71 yards through a broken field for Southern California's score.

GAS PAR MISSES They "rushed in Phil Caspar with the magic kicking toe, but the gadget ran true to its mud form and flivvered. Phil's attempt shot off to the right and Turn to Page 18, Column 1 halfback of Denison, Tex. To offset these lightning charges, Minnesota could not alty. The gun sounded as Johnny the Badgers, ever o'n the alert, recovered six of them besides seven of their own eicht fum Baida was smothered back on U.C.L.A.'s 4G-yard stripe after re get past, Notre Dame's 25-yard line. The Gophers tried twice to score with goals from the Turn to Page 16, Column 3 bles.

In other words, Wisconsin gobbled up 13 fumbles in all. covering Cantor's fumble. last season, closed his career against Troy by running 51 yards BLOW CHANCES Baida, scrappy 175-pound quarterback, and Jimmy Dctn, big Turn to Tnge 18, Column 7 But for their own miscues. the Bruins probably would have won the game. It certainly was no disgrace to bow before such a A well-drDled, resourceful team as Wisconsin, but as is often the Stagg's Team Smothers Chicago, 32-0 CHICAGO, Nov.

12. (JP) Amos Alonzo Stags still rules the Mid Read 'Em and Weep Washington, U.S.C., 6. Cornell, 14; Dartmouth, 7. Fordham, North Carolina, 0, Princeton, 20; Yale, 7. case, the losing team blew enough scoring chances to capture three ball games.

i-xc5 1 fr A -V Because of their off-key antics at critical junctures, the Bruins Iowa State, 13; Kansas State, Jt- never threatened until Wiscon 13, a game for the college boys played largely for their own amusement on the college campus. Games were played with natural rivals schools of similar size with similar ideals. Big time college has wandered far away from that original ideal in its search for the almighty dollar but there still is a little genuine campus football played and one of the historic contests of its kind out thts way is the annual Pomona-Occidental game. These two colleges have met longer without interruption than any two echools on the Coast and their uninterrupted rivalry is among the oldest in the country, going back into the '90's. ANCIENT RIVALS They're playing again next Saturday out on the patch of turf tucked into a bit, of Occidental's sloping campus.

Dormitories, college union and study halls overlook the between towering eucalyptus trees, beautiful Parthenon like Thome Hall looms up above the field on a hill. Pomona and Oxy grads, their kids tagging along behind them, lunch together before the game and relive the rivalries of bygone days and then go out on the field to Bee if Fuzz Merritt's boy is really as good as his old man used to be in the good old days at Pomona or to hunt up Oxy's Bob Smith and ask him if "Junior" is going to play a. tough game at tackle for the old alma mammy this afternoon. SOARING 8 AGEHEX8 Of course it's more than just a get-together for the old folks. Pomona, after several years of dignified freelancing, has tossed aside her lorgnette and dashed back into the fray with an unbeaten team that needs only a victory over Occidental to cinch the conference championship.

If that isn't enough they've lost the last couple of games with the Tigers and feel that they're overdue. Led by Jack Merritt, 190-pound whizzer who passes, kicks, runs, calls signals and in general raises hob with the opposition they've played spectacular and thrilling football end, in addition, have demon- Turn to Page Column 1 way todayStagg and his College sin had the ball game sewed up. With four minutes to play, Ken Auburn, 28; L.S.U., 6. Alabama, 14; Georgia Tech, 14. of the Pacific eleven.

The man who went West a second time because he wouldn't quit coaching at 70 came back Texas Christian Wins Another to the school he directed 41 years, received "all-time all-America coach" acclaim and then watched by Trimming Texas, 28 to 6 his Pacific team co-operate with a rousing 32-to-0 triumph over the University of Chicago. It was Chicago's home-coming at uti FORT WORTH (Tex.) Nov. and up with O'Brien's passes 12. VP) L'il David O'Brien and the 76-year-old Stagg's, too. So some 10,000 fans present could only cheer when the alert and breezed his unconqucred Texas Christians over their eighth straight barrier today with the rout was on.

On 12 plays and a 15-yard penalty, the Christians surged 78 yards for the first score, Sophov more Connie Sparks; the confer, ence's leading scorer, finally going over from the 2 with the score. O'Brien kicked the extra no! tit passing magic" that mystified vie i 1 hard-running Pacific eleven took advantage of desperate last-quarter Maroon passes to score its last 19 points. So alert were Stagg's Tigers they converted Chicago's best scoring opportunity into a touch- toryle8s University of Texas, 28-6. PL Twenty-four times O'Brien the first of four perfect ones cocked his poisonous right arm down of their own. The Maroons ne jarred through the posts.

ana 17 compilations for a net TOO. Texi tone t.S. Buck Cook t.T, Meyeri Bhook i d. Rhodei Aldrich c. Jicknon B.

Ttrlor A n. Nlr gain of 236 yard3 and one touchdown resulted. His passes set up the other three scores a step or two from the goal stripe. White R.T. bunn Horner Ft.

Peterson O'Brien Forn His touchdown pass to rangy Pat Clifford, halfback, was his had reached Pacific's 6-yard line in the fourth quarter when little Bobby Kientz intercepted Sollie Sherman's pass a step from the goal line and ran 99' yards to score. Soon afterward Tackle Irwin Grubbs derailed another pass arid sprinted 40 yards across. The final score came on one of Ta- Turn to fage 16, Column 7 Clifford L.H. Bryan Duckworth. H.

Borer lath of the year. Sprk p. Lewion SCORE BY QUARTER Scoreless the first period as exas slammed downfield punts LANSDELL SPEEDS 71 YARDS FOR TROJAN TOUCHDOWN Grenville Lansdell," Trojan quarterback, is shown as he receiving a Husky punt. Lansdell streaked down the started his sensational 71 -yard touchdown gallop after sidelines for S.C's only, points. wtrohot T.C.O.

.0 14 7 7 2D TeM .0 0 Touchdown Bperkii, Clifford. Cltnahin. Drl. Pointt tfter touchdown OBrien, 4. with a stiff wind at its back, the Christians suddenly opened.

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