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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 85

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Los Angeles, California
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85
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vwyw '1rylV1l'l'1 tN'lTerr''ir 0g SttgClCg CimCS3 SUNDAY, SEPT. 24, 1950-PartII Loyola Lions D0CH 50-4 epperdine, BY JACK GEYER Whether or not Loyola has the best team in its history wasn't answered at Gilmore Stadium last night where 11,800 fans saw the lauded Lions of Playa del Rey ruin Pepper- 'i. t5 i "Xly (yy 1111 f-iiS -V v. All iu' pi l' 1 I 1 1 i I Lion line-backer who spent as much time in Pepperdine's back-field as some of the WTave half backs. George Musacco, the Lions' big fullback, could get but 30 yards in a dozen carries.

But the halfbacks, Skippy Giancanelli and Neil Ferris, ran Ferris scampered 56 yards In eight rushes and Skippy 41 yards in 10. In net yards gained, the Lions rolled up a mighty 439 to 128. LOYOLA LE Brlto. Collins. KlinKhtmmer.

L.T Cheatham. Lehman. LQ NIpd. Menottl. Hussell, Tarantino.

RG Nanry Monroy. RT Komada, O'Shann. Routt. RE Snyder. Evans, Laplacette.

Berbtct. klosterman, Becnel. Robinson. LH Ferris. English.

Dwyer. Zaleskl. Giancanelli. Rubio. Seellg, Conijlia.

Musacco, Nolan, Sulik. PEPPERDINE LE Hensley; Miller. Embree, Nordyk. LT Vollnogle. Glesler.

i LG Plum, Patton, Niti. Scott, Hayden, Tagupa. RG Hill, Brooks, Hamilton. RT Clark, Rivers. Bjghead.

Acosta. Llfland. Schreager. Hyduke, Hopper. Lovelady.

LH Smouse, Dankworth, Bieck. RHDaher. Meltvedt. B. Taylor.

Battsole, Bland, D. Taylor. SCORE BY QUARTERS Loyola 6 7 30 750 Pepperdlne 7 0 7 14 Loyola scoring: Touchdowns--Musacco, Snyder, 2: English; Klinkhammer; Dwyerj Conislio. Points after touchdowns Klos terman, 6. Safety fcvans Daher'a punt).

Pepperdlne scoring: Touchdown Hill, Bighead. Points after touchdowns Brook STATISTICS Loyola Pepdn Net yards rushing 178 Net yams passing ....263 Net yards sained .439 First downs rushing. 6 First downs passing First downs penaltlei 1 Total first downs 12 Forward passes attempted 19 Forward passes completed 11 Passes Intercepted by 3 Number of punts 3 Total yardage on nunts 101 Yards all kicks returned 67 ..129 Penalties against 3 Yards lost from penalties 70 Number of fumbles 3 Owu fumbles lost 1 -13 143 12S 3 Si 13 1 S45 118 4 30 2 1 INDIVIDUAL BUSHING MOURNED Justin McCarthy (Sam) Barry, who coached basketball, baseball and football during a 21-year span at SC, died yesterday in Berkeley. Sam is shown at left os he looked in 1929 when he first came to the Southland. In the next photo he holds a basketball, the game he, perhaps, loved best of all.

During World War II Barry served four years in the Navy, going on inactive duty with the rank of commander. At right is a recent photo of the famed mentor relaxi ng at his desk. Times photos SAURY'S DEATH STUNS FANS SPORTS PARADE By BRAVEN DYER Loyola TCB TYA YL Net Av. Musacco 12 33 3 30 2 5 i Giancanelli 10' 41 0 41 4 1 8 5-3 0 S6 7.0 Xlosterman 2 13 -2 5 '2 14 0 14 7.0 Conielio 8 10 13 -3 1 2 2 2.0 3 2 2 .68 S'llilt 6 21 21 3.5 7. 35 0 1 35 5.0 ecucl 2 0 -20 -20 1 PEPPERDINE' i Smouse 6 1 15 -14 jf Daher 8 32 9 23 2 8 I 3atesole 5 0 5 IS I Meltvedt 2 7 O.

7 3.5 Taylor, B. 2 ,8 -8 Bieck 1 2 0 2 2.0 I Bland 3 12 0 Dankworth 3 4 7 -3 Hyduke 1 ,0 Lovelady 3 0 27 '-27 dine's Waves, 50-14. But one thing was certain. It isn't the worst team in Loyola's history, not by a passel of points. Stymied throughout most of the first half, Coach Jordan Oli-var's charges roared out of the dressing room pumped full of something besides good advice, as the third quarter began.

30 Points in Quarter They immediately went on a scoring spree that resulted in 30 points before the clock clicked off another 15 minutes. After that it was no contest and the game degenerated into a comedy of errors and penalties as both Coach Ray Richards and Olivar used reserves liberally. Dapper Don Klosterman, the Compton cannon, made the most noise as Loyola's big guns exploded their way through and rocketed their way over the Wave defenses. Three TD Passes Klosterman connected for three touchdown tosses during the course of the evening. He hit End Fred Snyder for a pair of teedees, one on a seven-yarder and another on a 26-yarder.

His prettiest effort was a 37-yard pay off pitch to Halfback Bill Eng lish. Biir took the ball on the two, skillfully evaded defender Darrel Taylor, and skipped into the end zone standing up. Don completed nine out of 15 attempts for 221 yards and three touchdowns. Only one was in tercepted. And, just to polish off the evening, Klosterman kicked five out of six conversion attempts.

A bad center pass fouled up his first try. Pepperdme running attack was nonexistent, i ne vv aves, hampered by the injury to Dick Dankworth which kept his appearances down to a minimum, wound up with a minus 13-yard totaL i Fifth Wave, Back Many-of the lost yards could be attributed to Mike Nolan, the UNCLE SAM TAPS PEPPERDINE COACH Ernie Case, Pepperdine College backfield coach former UCLA grid great, got V- tapped by Uncle Sam yes terday. He was ordered to report to Hamilton Field Oct. 11 for active duty. Case was an Air Forces lieutenant in the last war.

He flew 16 missions in B-26s before being shot down over Sardinia. Het spent a year in a prison camp. Case is married, has three children. 0 yourself. 5 'At SC Barry produced many All-Americans, including Forwards Bill Jerry Ne-mer, Ralph Vaughn and Jack Hupp, and Center Lee Guttero.

At Iowa he had an All-American-in. Guard. Charles i Sam's excitable antics during close and heated basketball games earned him the nickname Elevator Sam. Since his return from the war, however, Sam calmed down considerably. He was very ill during the last basketball season and missed part of it when an attack of pneumonia sent him to the hospital.

Barry leaves his widow Ruth, and a son, Victor. Barry Tva3 a member of Delta Upsilon fraternity. White Callanan Mortuary, 664 Washington will be in charge of the funeral signed in 1929 as SC's head cage coach and assistant football coach, Jones recommended his old friend, Barry, for the job. During his dozen years under the famed Headman, Barry performed a variety, of chores, which" wasn't new for the South Dakota workhorse. Barry became recognized as one of the' best football scouts in football.

Spartan Coach On the practice field, Barry worked -with -the Spartans, the SC "goof squad." This group, unable to make the varsity team, worked under Barry, learning the plays of the next week's opponent. Barry's: basketballing Trojans were famed across the country. In 1939 the Trojans played before 18,245 fans in Madison Square Garden and defeated Long Island University, 57-49, halting' a Blackbird winning streak of 42 straight victories. Duke's Long Run Sparks Georgia Victory; 27 1o 7 ATHENS, Sept. 23 () John Duke, tall senior end, scooted 43 yards to set up the touchdown that broke a 7-7 deadlock and sparked Georgia to.

a 27-7 upset defeat of highly rated Maryland today before a sundrenched crowd of 33,000. Georgia broke the game wide open with two touchdowns in the final quarter. The Bulldogs, hitherto lightly rated in the Southeastern Conference, counted first through recovering a Maryland fumble, and forged ahead, in the third period to achieve the first major surprise of the young 1950 season." Hal Cook snaked over from the 1-yard line for Georgia's second and decisive touchdown after Duke's long run on a pass from Fred Bilyeu had put the ball on the Maryland four. SCORE BT QUARTERS Georeis 1 .07 1327 Maryland 0 7 0 7 Georgia scoring: Touchdowns Bilyeu, Cook. Mixon, Raber.

Points after touchdowns Walston. 3. Maryland scoring Shemonski. Point aft PASSING Loyola "Closterman 3ecncl liobinson Pepperdine Onher lovelady Att. Compl.

Int. TY" 15 221 3 1 17 1 7 24 1 81 0 55 Ragged Variety Rolls Up 47-0 Win NASHVILLE, 23 () The Vanderbilt Commodores, using sophomores liberal ly and looking ragged at times, mixed a deceptive passing and rushing offense to roll over Middle Tennessee State College, 47-0. Aon Di7iiu mm mm Fistically. speaking it's a largeweek, both locally and nationally with Art (Golden Boy) Aragon meeting John I I Davis at the Olympic and Ez-; zard; Charles defending his I heavyweight against Joe Louis. The first bout Is Tuesday night, the second Wednesday, and there is a most interest- ing angle to both scraps, only half of which has been disclosed: -Joe the challenger gets the lion's share of the gate, dragging down 35 to only 20 for Charles.

It could be that gets it all, at; that, because there are reports that he owns the champ. TAB LOUIS The deal doesn't surprise me greatly, but the local one does. Davis, who holds the California: lightweight and welterweight titles, gets only 20, while Aragon is to receive tWhy? Probably because Aragon refused to fight under any other financial ar-: rangement and Davis, too tough for most opponents, has to take what he can get or remain inactive. picks for the parlay? Louis and Davis. Nat Fleischer, editor of Ring Magazine, tabs Joe Says he shaved off 22 pounds in two weeks and is hitting with all his power.

That should do it. The Aragon I saw on his back, out, of the ring, after a. punch from Tommy Campbell, can't whip the Davis I saw shellacking Carlos Chavez. The only fly in the mentholatum is the possibility that Chavez Is so far gone that Davis looked better than he really is. STANFORD LOADED? Switch reels to football Aubrey Devine who plaj-ed at Stanford a couple of years ago, is bombarding us scribes with epistles which, in effect, say that Marchie Schwartz is loaded more than his most enthusiastic supporters claim.

Listen to this from a letter to Jack McDonald, sports editor of the San Francisco Call-Bulletin: "You say California and SC this year have more material than Stanford. Listen, Jack, a Notre Dame scout told a close friend of mine that Frank Leahy trade Marchie even up on a material basis. "Cal this year must play sophomores who were beaten by the Stanford frosh last j-ear, and who played on a weak freshman team. 4 "SC? It has a bunch, of All-Citrus BeltAll-Ainericans who never have played in a college game and I'll betcha Ai Car. michael blows up higher than a kite.

He comes from a long line of Santa Ana JC great3 like Al Cantor and Johnny Fouch, so naturally he can't be stopped. "Do you know that Jeff Cra-vath would give his eye teeth for a pair of third-string halfbacks from Stanford this year." Well! Young Aubrey is pretty outspoken, as was his famous dad. More football Francis Powers, former Chicago sports scribe who saw the light, finally, and moved to California permanently, says: "California will win the PCC title again; Pappy Waldorf has plenty of horses." Powers was very close to Pappy when Waldorf coached Northwestern and, his opinion, now that he is close to the Berkeley picture, must be given considerable attention. AH those players in Pappy's deep freeze must have impressed Powers no end. FORD SURPRISE If Casey Stengel's never-say-die Yankees win that pennant again, you can dust off that promotional blurb, "This, is a Ford' year." Referring, of course, to Lefty Ed Ford, the 21-year-old whiz who came up from the minors to bolster New York's sagging mound corps.

The portsider with the baby face won his eighth straight game the other day and you can imagine where the Yankees would be without him. Ford began his professional career in 1947 with Butler in the Middle Atlantic League. With Binghampton last year after a season with Norfolk in '48, Ford moved up to Kansas City this spring. Oddly; the kid originally was a first baseman, but Paul Kritchell, chief of the Yankee scouting force, detected something special and suggested a trial. Ed was an instant success, combining a swell curve ball with better-than average control, "for a southpaw.

Ford has filled the Yankee pitching gap caused by the failure of Joe Page. I imagine when the full story of 1950 is told, Page will be judged the flop of the year. Good guy, too, who probably has suffered horribly at his inability to help as he did only one short year ago. using his hands The play was called back and Kansas penalized to its one-yard line. A bad punt by another sophomore, George Mrkonic, traveled out of bounds on Kansas' 25-yard line.

There were three plays and a 15-yard penalty, also for illegal use of hands, and TCU was backed to the Kansas 27. From that point Gilbert Bar-tosh passed to End Wilson George for the winning touch- Continued from 9th Page he worked as an accountant for the State of Wisconsin until September of 1916 when the lure of called him back to Madison High as assistant football and basketball coach. In 1917 Barry assumed the head coaching position for football, basketball and baseball at Madison. After a highly successful one-year term, he was appointed director of athletics and head coach of football, baseball and track at Knox College in Galesburg, 111. While at Knox, Sam developed many championship teams.

His success at' Knox, brought him to the attention of the University of Iowa and in the fall of 1922 he became assistant grid coach and head baseball and basketball coach at Iowa. Lasting Friendship Iowa Barry became associated with Jones, a friendship that was to bring the versatile Barry to Southern California. Barry's first season at Iowa resulted in the Hawkeyes' tying Wisconsin for the Big Ten cage title. This 1923 season stamped Sam as one of the smartest young coaches in the country and during his seven-year reign at Iowa, his teams were the most feared in the conference. Again in 1926 the Hawkeyes tied for the Big Ten crown.

Howard Jones moved to SC in 1925 and when Leo 'Calland re San Diego JC Tops Valley, 31-6 A bad case of fumble-itis and the accurate aerial arm of Quarterback Jim Mellos teamed up to give San Diego Junior College a 31-to-6 triumph over Valley yesterday in the Metropolitan Conference curtain raiser at Van Nuys High School. Mellos pitched three touchdown tosses, good for 25, 11 and 15 j'ards. And this, plus the help of bunch of Valley miscues, four of which set up San Diego scores, made; the difference. San Dieco JO Loftug Rogers Roznos Johns Kahan Fackrell Kaneyukl Mellos Duke O'Brien Valley JC Baker Rebol Rosen Sutalo Woodward Sweet Braniean Wiand CantreH LE LT LG RG RT RE LH RH Albert Loed Papzian SCORE BY" QUARTERS San Dieso JC 6 8 13 631 Valley JC 0 6 0 0 San Diego scoring: Touchdowns Loed, Kaneyukl. 2: Loftus, Duke.

Point after touchdown Kaneyukl. Valley scoring: Touchdown Papzian. WRESTLING-' WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 27th, 1950 OLYMPIC AUDITORIUM 13th GRAND LOS ANGELES (tag Ham match) BARON LEONE and THE GREAT MOTO vs. ERNIE DUSEK and EMIL DUSEK lit LORD BLEARS vs.

IVAN THE TERRIBLE BOBBY BECKER vs. MATT MURPHY SE0RCE BECKER vs. BOB WAGNER i.A;M-''rri.'-s.h ff lit plain factory Back in '96, of clothes, and stores in the inviting the than prevailing One day our showrooms, surroundings public would extra racks and tailors' hands. price tickets he threw open People came, another. This it really saves Zeeman's were already making a good suit selling only to stores (some of the finest land).

Nobody had ever thought of public to buy direct from the actory at less retail prices. founder, walking through the wholesale suddenly pictured those neat, workmanlike as a new kind of clothing store, that the be delighted to come to. So he rolled in filled them with suits fresh from the Freed of the middleman, he attached well below anything ever seen before. Then the doors to the public and never stopped coming! One man tells unique plan of Zeeman's works, because money. If you don't mind selecting from a er touchdown Dean.

Duke Humbles COLUMBIA, S.C., Sept. 23 () Duke University turned an early South Carolina fumble into one touchdown arid drove 96 yards for another to take a 14-0 Southern Conference football victory here today. Superior passing by Duke Left Halfback Billy Cox was the margin of difference between the teams in this season opener for both, played before 25,000 under a sweltering sun. SCORE BY QUARTERS Duke 7 0 7 014 South Carolina .0 0 0 0 0 DuKe scoring: Touchdowns Mounie, Souchak. PAT Souchak, 2.

Villanova Bags 39-28 Victory VILLANOVA. Sent. 23 After a nip-and-tuck first half, viuanova struck from behind with three touchdowns in the sacond half to open the 1950 football season with a 39-28 vic-torv over Dunuesne tnrtav Du- quesne led 20-19 at the half but Bob Haner twice -crashed over from the 1 in the third ouar- ter and Joe Rilo added another in the fourth on a 25-yard gallop. Fordham Extended EASTON, Sept. 23 Fordham's heavily favored Rams had to rely on the toe of Jim Erickson to eke out a 20-19 victory over an inexperienced Lafayette College eleven today.

Dale Carnegie Course Public SoaakincH Human 1 Relations Salesmanship Increase. Tour Income, Develop Poise. Courage. Con fidence. Learn to speak in public New classes now forming.

Information CAU-WRITE DALE CARNEGIE COURSE South Carolina rack, we invite you to see for Jf- I i I TGU DEFEATS ERRATIC KANSAS ELEVEN; 14-7 LOS ANGELES: 6th LONG BEACH: 4th Pin (frf. Fvi. GLENDALE: 234 N. ironrf (M. t) SAN DIEGO: 2nd flow.

525 1 LAWRENCE, Sept 23 ()The Horned Frogs of Texas Christian University got plenty of breaks against an erratic Kansas Jayhawk eleven today but waited until the last four minutes to cash a 14-7 victory. A partisan crowd of 32,000 pictured Kansas' first victory over TCU in their eight meetings when sophomore sensation Charles Hoag raced 89-yards over the goal with about four minutes remaining. But a Jayhawker was caught' msMf mti omv SSS-ofiB) cei Telephone PR. 5171 dowrru A 426 S. Sarins VA.

1187.

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