Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 9

Location:
Los Angeles, California
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

CC PARTI 9 mm AT COLISEUM. TODAY by PAUL ZIMMERMAN lom torot HUSKIES BATTLE Hna fcalf.nf Via Tinea Unarl Dons Ruin Uclans Rate Edge Over i 1 AS 1 BUSY BRUIN Left Half Johnny Roesch, cocaptain today along with End Bill Hoyt, will start for U.C.L.A. team. Hatch, Washin gton's left halff figures to do most of the Bruins in this a fternoon's football clash at Coliseum. Wisconsin, Michigan Go a by 41-6 Count BY CHARLES CURTIS Any resemblance to a track meet at last night's Coliseum mix between U.

of San Francisco and Loyola was purely a coincidence both in the scoring proportions and the type of gridiron activities. The final count was 41 to 6 for the invaders and the 6396 chilled fans sat through an evening of long gallops that made it look as though the boys were prepping for the cinderpath semester. Barnes Rambles Tops in the long-running de partment went to Loyola's Jack Barnes, who raced a kickoff back 94 yards in the final period to save Bill Sargents outclassed Loyolans from-a shutout. This was Barnes' second marathon sprint of the year, as he returned a boot 83 yards against Redlands a few weeks back. Of the visitors' six touch downs only one came on a sus tained march, and the other five were on runs of 34, 40, 49, 60 and 82 yardc, honors for the longest gallop falling to a 200-pound guard, of all people.

This was Rudy Ragan, who intercept ed a Johnny Machado pass in the closing minutes and lumbered all those yards without the Lions getting a shot at him. The second longest was by Forrest (Scooter)" Hall, who lived up to most of the nice things said about him. His touchdown run of 60 yards was a neatly executed which started off inside right end. Rons Nullified He also returned punts and kickoffs well, though two first- half punt runbacks of 35 and 34 yards, respectively, were nulli fied by penalties. The other Don touchdowns, in order, were by Roy Barm (49 yards,) Joe Scott (40 yards.) Pete Matisi (34 yards) and Hal Jensen (3 yards after a 61-yard drive.) Hall's and Ragan's jaunts concluded the program.

Loyola was very much in the ball game at half time, when it was only 7 to 0. Costly penalties had jarred the Dons clear back on- their haunches a couple of times andj only Barni's sprint gave the Dons their, half-time margin. Loyola's deepest penetration was to the 24. But Ed McKeever's Dons were obvious masters of the situation and proceeded to wrap it up with two- touchdowns in the third quarter and three more in the finale. Smiling Ed decided on a lot, of points, even at the expense of such a club as Loyola, as it would make good reading in San Francisco.

So he kept such goodies as Hall and Quarterback Don Panciera in action well into the closing minutes. San Francisco rolled up the Impressive total of 509 yards by air and ground, 401 of it along the horizontal. And the swift Don backs averaged more than eight yards per crack, Hall hav- Turn to Page 11, Column 1 Villanova in 14-12 Victory PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 14. (JP) The good right foot of big John Siano gave bowl-bound villa- nova College its second extra- point victory of the season tonight as the Wildcats rallied in the second half to edge Georgetown University, 14 to 12, before 15,000 at swbe Parte Villanova engineered an 81- yard sustained drive in the opening period for a touchdown, watched Georgetown strike for two six-pointers in the second session and then pounded for a third-period score with Siano converting both extra points from placement.

Loyol in Crucial Bowl Clash Badgers, Wolverines at Peak Strength for Struggle Settling Title and Trip CHICAGO, Nov. 14. (Historic old Camp Randall at Madison, was the mecca attracting many Midwestern football pilgrims today as the Badger State capital awaited the Wisconsin- Michigan football game tomorrow with the championship of the SATURDAY MORNING, Chivdlry Dead Gal's Tartars Upset by 14-13 Edge rights should be- settled 1 at Madison, this afternoon where the surprisingly strong Wisconsin Badgers have enticed the marauding Michigan Wolverines from across the lake for a 'little football It can get mighty cold up around Madison at this time of year and there is a possibility that the Wolverines will find it very much so. But we don't think so. Except for that 48-to-7 lacing meted out to the Badgers by our California Golden Bears, and a tie game with Indiana, Wisconsin has enjoyed a fine season, OPEN TO PASSES You can take the statistics rolled up by the two teams and work up quite a case for Coach Harry Stuhldreher's lads until you get to the department of passes and a pass defense.

Michigan, led by the throwing of Bob Chappuis, has a pass completion percentage of .520 compared with .350 for Wisconsin, and the Badgers have next to the poorest pass defense record in the Big Nine this fall. 5 quite a story, no matter how good Wally Dreyer, Earl Maves and Jug Girard have been on the ground for the Badgers. Coach Fritz Crisler's unbeat en Michigan squad may be matched, speed for speed, for the first time this season, but 1 doubt that any college team today has the speed I saw the Wolverines display when they manhandled Pittsburgh at Ann Arbor last month. FAV OR WOLVERINES The Northwestern lads, who lost to both, give Michigan a wide edge, but it quite likely can be a very close tussle. that the Wolverines have at least an even shake on speed, you have to give them an edge in the ground department as well as on defense because they have much greater depth of fine replacements.

And that doesn't take into consideration the Michigan advantage in Ing, which is terrific. Moreover, the Badgers have met; outside of Purdue, only the weaker members of the conference. They have yet to tackle Minnesota and- will not meet Illinois, probably the No. 2 team in the Big Nine. Wisconsin followers are inclined to poo hoo the California defeat, blaming it on nine fumbles, California recovering six.

That naturally helped the Bears, but It doesn't take up a slack of 41 points. At least it doesn't In our book. IT'S THE WEATHER Southern California teams ways have found difficulty on the timing of their plays, espe-. cially passes, on the heavy fields they often encounter "up north. And, by the same token, northern teams meet with the same handicap when they hit fast, dry turf like the one at the Coliseum.

All of which makes the game between the Bruins of U.C.L.A. and Washington more inter- esting this afternoon. You see, the Huskies have been training all week at Riverside. Where they might normally have come in here under a handicap of an unaccustomedly fast field, they arrive today to play 'on an even basis because of five days' work down here. NEED PASSING Ah-a tha Wiocnnein team against Michigan, however, Washington has showed a great need for a sustained passing attack.

You get the idea when you look at the statistics. Fred Provo has done most of the tossing and has completed only 9 out of 42 attempts. Dick Ottele has done a little better with 7 out of 24, which still isn't any great shucks. But Coach' Ralph 1 (Pest) Welch thinks he has found the answer in Larry Hatch, who has just started passing and now has 5 completions in 9 efforts for 110 yards. That's more than half as much yardage as the other two together.

VAST DIFFERENCE Hatch, who had his best success in the air against California last week, could continue to do that and cause a lot of trouble because the Uclans are not too. hot on pass defense. Provo always might come to life with something like his 1946 record of 59 per cent completions. But against Carl Benton and Benny Reiges, the top two Bruin pitchers, these marks look puny indeed. Benton has completed 23 of 48 and Reiges 22 of 47 so far.

With their fine running attack, the Bruins are next to Impossible to beat when either or both of these gents are connecting. P.S4 You can put it in your hat that the teams with the best passing success in these two games will win today. (Listen to Paul Zimmerman and Braven Dyer over KFI at 11:30 this morning.) Football Team Beaten Visitors BY AL WOLF Washington's Huskies, who scare everybody but general ly wind up under the bed themselves, will attempt to salvage a little self-respect and maybe a Pest Welch's job at the Coliseum this afternoon. At 2 o'clock, before an anticipated throng of 45,000, they'll try to bedevil a U.C.L.A. combine that still has hopes of retaining a portion of its Pacific Coast Conference championship and maybe returning to the Rose Bowl as well.

If the Bruins stumble today, it'll be Southern Cal's turn to cavort at. Pasadena come New Year's Day, regardless of what happens when U-CJUA. and S.C. tangle a week hence. For that matter, Troy figures to get the West's nod despite anything the Bruins do or don't do now and next week, barring an utter but unlikely rout of their cross-town rivals.

Trojans to Scout Jeff Cravath's unbeaten warriors have an open date today, so they'll be able to their forthcoming foes, personally. They'll also have a chance to preview 1948, for the S.C. and U.C.LA. freshman elevens will tangle in an 11 o'clock prelim. The Bruins, with virtually the same club that hammered the Huskies for 39-13 victory last year, again are solid favorites.

Washington, in dropping five of seven starts, has shown scant passing proficiency and you can't brew strong without stirring in an order of overheads. The Huskies, however, have not been pushed around by anybody. Four of their setbacks have been by a touchdown or less and they even gave mighty Troy a trying time before succumbing, 19-0. It was a 6-0 any body's-ball-game until the fourth quarter. Rumors emanatmg from the Northwest say the Huskies have to win two of their last three games or Welch is out on his ear.

They lost to Cal last Saturday but appear cinches to beat Washington State in next week's finale. If those reports are true, then today's tilt tell3 the story. Strongest Stand? The visitors can be expected to make their strongest stand of the season, for they've had a full week of dry-land workouts in the Southland after almost constantly mushing in mud at home. The Huskies will. though, get but little help from one of their mainstays Guard Bob Levenhagen, a leading candidate for All-Coast, who suffered a broken arm last.

week. He's going to play some with the wing in a cast. Washington has no breakaway runners like Bert LaBrucherie's Al Hoisch and Cal Rossi, but the all-around ability of Quar- terback Dick Ottele (of Long Beach) may be tough to trump unless Benny Reiges repeats his peak performance of -the Oregon State game. Carl Fennema, another Long Beacher, will captain the visitors. Johnny Roesch and Bill Hoyt will lead the locals.

The season records: C.CX.A. 22 Iowa 7 2S Northw'itern 27 24 Oreeon 7 39 Stanford 6 8. Methodist 7 California 6 37 Oregon 7 WASHINGTON 8 Minnesota 7 7 Oregon State 14 2S St. 6 Oreeon 6 25 Stanford So. California 19 7 California 13 138 67 71 65 Trobabes Threaten Brubabes' Record unbeaten but tied frosh footballers close their cam paign today by meeting S.C.'s yearlings at the Coliseum at 11 a.m., preceding the varsity game.

The Trobabes have lost two games. Knds Darrell Riggs and Brech Stroschein and Quarterback Larry Lampkin are the biggest cogs in George Dickerson's array, while Halfback Ralph Pucci, the much-heralded youngster from Ohio, is Troy's topper. Probable lineups: Brubabea Trobaoea Albinl Ashcraft Downs Kinda liendenhall McGee Earl Kolf yucci faien Tola an way Bahr Pace Lewana Jenson St roesch ien Lampkin Duffy Hansen Kauffmaa L.T.R. L.Q.R. C.

R.G.I,. RTL. REL. S.H.L. r.

Facts and Figures on Bruin-Husky Grid Mix Times Washington vs. U.CLuA, 2 p.m. S.C Frosh vs. U.C.L.A. Frosh, 11 am.

Coliseum gates open 11a.m. Prices Reserved seats, $3. General admission west end, $2. General admission east end, $1.50. High school and kid 65 cents.

(Entrance opposite Gate 28.) Today in Sports ICE HOCKET L.A. Monarch! vs. coma Rockets, Pan-Pacific 8:30 p.m. TENNIS Weateide Tennis Club. aU day.

starttnc 9 a.m. AMATEUB BOXING Hollywood LesiOB Stadium, 7:30 p.m. Western Conference at stake. Madison has been buzzing with excitement all week and a sellout crowd of 45,000 will witness the decisive battle. The Badger ticket office reported' it could have sold at least 20,000 more tickets.

In Big Nine competition, Wisconsin, wrhich hasn't had a conference championship since 1912, has scored 114 points against Purdue, Indiana, Northwestern and Iowa, while holding their opponents to 35 points. Michigan has scored 111 points against Northwestern, Minnesota, Illinois and Indiana, while limiting the opposition to 34 points. Although Michigan has played a tougher schedule, Fritz Cris-ler, the Wolverines coach, has told his team the Badgers are "extremely dangerous," an opponent with speed, rush, defense and. spirit. Amateur Basketball Phillips 66'ers.

(Phoenix.) 25. 57; Nick Constructors HURRYING HUSKY Larry running and passing against Chicago Bears Here for Clash With LA Rams BY PAUL LOWRY The fast and burly Chicago Bears, defending world professional football champions, arrived yesterday morning for tomorrow's battle with the Los Angeles Rams, drilled at Wrig-ley Field in the afternoon and will repeat the assignment today. "This is the game we have been fearing all year," quoth Owner-Coach George Halas of the Bears as he gave his champs a sharp workout. Offers Compassion "I am sorry that my ex-proteges who form the present Ram coaching staff (Bob Snyder, George Trafton, Joe Stydahar and Dan Fortmann) have had injuries to some of their key players, but my compassion is tempered by facts. "If you have six injured men you still have 28 on your club, and you can only use 11 on the field at one time.

Perhaps you don't employ more than 20 in a game." That Isn't the way the Ram coaches look at it when they start counting off the players who are out. for the season and those sidelined by less serious injuries, but anyway that's what their old tutor says, and he Isn giving them any mercy tomorrow. They tied his ball club, 28 to 28, in Chicago last year and only succumbed, 27 to 21, in the return engagement at the Coliseum. Bears in Shape Halas brought 33 players with him "and the greatest coaching staff in the business, including some of the former greats of football in their playing days HunK Paddy Driscoll, Luke Johnsos, George Wilson and Gene Ronzani. AH of the Bears are in tiptop condition for tomorrow fray ex- Turn to Page 10, Column 2 Clemson at Duquesne.

Lafayette at Fordham. Vermont at Middlebury. Delaware at Muhlenberg. N.Y.U. at RutKers.

Amherst at Williams. MIDWEST Michigan at Wisconsin. Marquette at Indiana. Minnesota at Iowa. Kansas Et.

at Iowa St. Oklahoma at Missouri. Notre Dime at Northwestern. Illinois at Ohio St. Kansas at (Oklahoma A.ftM.

Louisiana Tech at Oklahoma City. Pittsburgh at Purdue. Cincinnati at Western Reserve. Miami (O.) at Wichita. 8ase at Baldwin-Wallace, hio U.

at Dayton. Wabash at De Pauw. St. Louis at rw.rnil-.. S.

Dakota St. at Toledo. SOCTH Georgia, Tech at S. Carolina at Duke, Auburn at Georgia. Mississippi St.

at L.S.tT. N. Carolina at Maryland. wake Forrest at N. Carolina St.

Boston Col. at Tennessee, Florida at Tulane. Virginia at West Virginia. wWashingon and Lee at William Mary. and Sewanee at Centre.

V.M.I, at Citadel. Chattanooga at Mississippi. SOUTHWEST T.C.TJ. at Texas. 4rkansas at S.M.TT.

exas M. at Rice. Baylor at Tulsa. Arizona at Arizona St. (Tempe.) Austin at Abilene Christian.

Texas Mines at Hardin-Simmona. Drake at New Mexico. Long Beach CC at Phoenix J.C. ROCKY MOUNTAIN TJtah St. at Denver.

Wyoming at Colorado. Colorado at Brlgham Young. Bruin Husky Line-ups Pos. LER LTR LGR RGL RTL REL LES RHL HUSKIES No. Wt, (29) Hagen ......187 (15) Vickery 208 (52) Burnett ..222 "(55) Fennema 195 48 Meyers 195 (51) Foster 229 (21) Bruce 200 (35) Ottele .200 (18) 185 8) Biddle .170 (75) Dallas 190 NOVEMBER 15, 1947 The only fly in the ointment was that Stinnett lost the game.

In spite of Frankie, Groom beat the Rattlers, 14-6. The girl astonished spectators by bowling, over two opposing linemen at one whack, but she also went down fiat on her back when Richard Ramming, 17-year-old Groom lineman, charged right over her. He had confided before the game that he intended to treat Frankie "just like any man." But the. girl crawled to her feet and staggered back into the huddlei No Free Kisses After the game, when Frankie came out of her private dressing room, the whole Groom team was waiting and demanding her autograph. One player said he would be glad to settle for a kiss.

He didn get it. The girl appeared in eight plays, five in the third period and three in the final, spending nine minutes in the game. "It was great fun," she said. It was Stinnett's final game of the year, but Frankie said: "I'll be out there with the team again next year." Coach Johnson said three more girls also wanted to join the team. Grid Scores PACIFIC COAST San Francisco, 41; Loyola, 6.

College of Pacific, 52; South Da kota, 0. Menlo Jaysee, Santa Rosa Jay- see, o. Whittier Frosh, SO; Caltech Frosh, O. Chaffey College, 13; Riverside Jaysee, 6. Pasadena CC, 14; Compton Col lege, 13.

Santa Monica CC, 16; Glendale College, 13. Los Angeles CC, Ventura J.C, 0. OTHER GAMES Vanderbilt, 33: Miami. 7. Villanova, 14: Georgetown.

12. Arkansas Tech. 38; Henderson. 6. Youngstown, 13: John Carroll.

2. Kent State, 6: Akron. O. Tennessee Poly. 33; Georgetown 6.

Arkansas Teachers. 20; Pittsburg tKan.i Teachers. 0. Sampson, 2: Champlain. 0.

Maryville. 15: Warrensbur. 0. Kenyon. 20; Hiram, 14.

Dana. 14; Nebraska Central, 0. Heidelberg. Wooster. 0.

Louisville. 23; Southeastern Louisiana. 0. Cumberland, Florida State. 0.

Waynesburg. 20; St. Vincent. 14. Missouri Valley, 31; William.

Jewell. 0. Washburn, 7: Southwestern Kansas. O. Eastern Oklahoma, 43; Texas Military College.

0. Southern Idaho. 40; Dixie (Utah) Jaysee. 2 College of Ozarks, 12; Magnolia 'Bradley. 19: St.

Ambrose. 6. Alma. Ferris, O. McMurry.

13: Howard Payne, 6. Findlay. 35: Mt. Union. 19.

Bain bridge Naval Air Station. 13; Penned a N.A.S., 6. Parsons. 12; Buena Vista. 0.

Kansas Wesleyan, 13: Baker, 13 (tie.) Ottawa, 33: Emporia, 0. Central Oklahoma, 27; Northeastern Oklahoma. 21. Peru Teachers. 26; York.

0. Turning back four last-period threats, Pasadena City College's bulldoggish Bulldogs scored the prize upset of the Western States Conference season by nos ing out Compton College, 14 to 13, before 12,000 delirious fans last night in the Rose BowL It was the first defeat of the season for the favored Tartars, and Los Angeles City College took over the loop lead by defeating Ventura College, 6 to 0. The Tartars' drew first blood on Don Rogers' 52-yard run, but Pasadena tied it up on. Dick Gorrie's pass to Tom Kelley for a 48-yard gain. Kelley scored again on the third play of the second quarter by returning a Turn to Page 10, Column 7 BRUINS Wt.

200 225 203, 225 210....... 225 208 195....... 175 No. (49) (21) (66) (57) (27) (69) (63) (58) (16) (32) (ID Clements Chambers Nikcevich Paul Dimitro Pastro Hoyt (C.) Reiges Rossi 160..... Roesch (C) 205 Myers 49 King, 51 Foster, 52 Burnett, 53 Weinmeister, 55 Fennema, 65 Melusky, 66 Hemstad, 68 Judd, 70 Berlin, 71 Tadich, 73 Davis, 75 Dallas, 46 Shipkey, 47 O'Meara, 48 Russell, 49 Clements, 50 Matthews, 51 Jack Brown, 1 53 Versen, 55 Fears, 56 Steiner, 57 Paul, 58 Reiges, 59 Capp, 60 Benton, 61 Naar, 63 Hoyt, 66 Nikcevich, 67 Cabell, 69 Pastre, STINNETT (Tex.) Nov.

14. UP) Frankie Groves, a slip of a girl who likes to play rough, got into a football game tonight and made sports history in Texas. And she didn't even smear her lipstick. The 16-year-old, 103-pound, 5- foot 3Ya -inch Frankie thrilled a crowd of 3000 as she twice went into- the Stinnett High School line-up and performed in such a manner as to draw praise from the coach, Truman Johnson. It was the first time in this State' that a girl ever played high school football and Stinnett folks wonder if it wasn't the first time in the nation's history.

Jake LaMotta Stopped by Fox in Fourth NEW YORK, Nov. 14. (JP) Billy Fox of Philadelphia scored a technical knockout over jaice La Motta of New York City in 2m. 26s. of the fourth round at Madison Square Garden tonight, Referee Frank Fuiiam stopping the one-sided bout to save the Bronx battler further punish- ment.

La Motta. never before stopped in his rareer. was no match for the hard hitting Phiiadeipnia negro. For a full minute oefore Fullam stopped it, La Motta hari been reeling from corner to corner and taking terrible punishment. His knees had sagged repeatedly, but he refused tQ go down.

Well before the end came, the crowd of 18,340 was yelling to Fullam to draw the curtain. The knockout was the 50th scored by Fox in 51 fights. The 22-year-old winner weighed 173 to La Motta's 167. Fox entered the ring a l-to-3 favorite, the odds having taken a drastic shift in his favor only a few hours before fight time. La Motta's followers obviously felt that the hard rock from the Bronx was several pounds over his best fighting weignt, ana many of them hedged their bets.

Want to Tune in? Here's Dial Key Stanford KMPC. U.CL.A. vs. Oregon, 1:45 p.m vs. Washington, 1:45 p.m., JvHJ.

Army vs. Perm, 10:45 a.m., KHJ. Michigan vs. Wisconsin, 11 a.m., KFI. Georgia Tech vs.

Alabama, 12 noon, KMX. Washington weight averages Line, 205; backfield, 186; team198. U.C.L.A. weight averages Line, 214; backfield, 184; team, 203. HUSKY ROSTER NATION-WIDE GRID MENU 5 Solid, 23 Coryell, 7 Watson, 24 Kean, 8 Biddle, 25 Gossett, 10 Olson, 29 Hagen, 11 Austin, 31 F.

Whede, 12 Stein, 33 Provo, 13 Stone, 34 McGovern, 15 Vickery, 35 Ottele, 18 Hatch, 37 Prechek, 19 I. Whede, 38 Hungar, 20 Harlow, 41 Levenhagen, 21 Bruce, 44 Bayer, 22 Anderson, 48 Meyers, I BRUIN ROSTER LOCAL Washington vs. U.C.L.A., Coliseum, 2 p.m. S.C. Frosh vs.

U.C.L.A. Frosh, Coliseum, 11 a.m. Cal Poly vs. Occidental, Patterson Field, 2 p.m. Pepperdine vs.

Humboldt State, Sentinel Field, 8 p.m. PACIFIC COAST Montana at California. Washington St. at Oregon St. Oregon at San Francisco St.

at Idaho St. Montana St at Nevada. Utah at Idaho. Willamette at Portland. Caltech at Redlands.

Fresno St. at Santa Barbara. Whittier at San Diego. Mt. San Antonio J.C.

at Cal Poly (San Dimas.) Taft J.C. at San Bernardino J.C. Santa Ana J.C. at Bakersfield J.C. EAST Holy Cross Columbia.

i Cornell at Dartmouth. Brown at Harvard. Perm St. at Navy. Army at Pennsylvania.

Vale at Princeton. Michigan St. at Temple. Susquehanna at Allegheny. Kings Point at Boston U.

Buffalo at Buclcnell. Lehigh at Carnegie Tech. Washington Col. at Catholie XJ. New Hampshire at Connecticut.

Colgate at Syracuse. 26 Thompson, 27 Dimitro, g. 28 Maurer, 29 Hunt, 30 Wilkinson, 31 Simpson, 32 Roesch, 33 Whitney, 34 Keefer, 35 Beardsley, 36 Eaton, 37 Nagel, q- 39 Short, 40 Ennen, 41 Miller, 42 Cogswell, 43 PoUizzi, 44 Leckman, 2 Strawn, 3 McConnaughy, 4 Leonard, 5 Jim Brown, 7 Hoisch, 8 Nelson, 9 Schroeder, 10 McLaughlin, 11 Myers, 12 Lewis, 15 Tinsley, 16 Rossi, 17 Johnson, 19 Steffen, 20 Mike, 21 Chambers, 22 Dobrow 24 Page, 25 Rowland, 4o woods, Officials Referee, Tom Wilson (College of the Pacific;) umpire, Bill Cole (S.C.;) head linesman, Doug Lowell (College of Idaho;) field judge, O. Landreth (Friends College.).

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Los Angeles Times
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Los Angeles Times Archive

Pages Available:
7,612,743
Years Available:
1881-2024