montana vs. washington

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MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON SEPTEMBER 22,1951

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Page 1: MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON

M O N T A N A v s . W A S H I N G T O NS E P T E M B E R 2 2 , 1 9 5 1

Page 2: MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON

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Page 3: MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON

J H e e t t& e

(10) PH IL G1LLIS: 20, 202, 6-2, Jun io r,Bend, Ore.— Breaking in to the starting line-up in the sixth game of the season against Stanford, G illis proceeded to catch seven consecutive passes and was H einrich’s main target of the afternoon as he h it 19 passes in 24 attem pts. Kept his starting assignm ent for balance of the year. Is an excellent blocker as w ell as a good receiver. Can also play defense and started 1950 season as regular defensive left end.

A lthough an excellent football player, G illis’ first love is skiing and he was a mem ber of the Huskies’ jayvee ski team last w inter . . . as a sophomore, G illis caught 20 passes, one of three Husky receivers to h it the 20 m ark . . . the former Bend prep star is a converted back and was named to the 1948 Oregon All-State team as a halfback. W ill be the H uskies’ con­version kicker.

* * *(2 ) JIM W ARSINSKE: 19, 180, 6-1, Soph.,

Billings, M ont.—Shared tim e w ith Pete Elich at left end on the 1950 freshm an team. W as an All-State end w hile p laying at B illings high school. In size and playing style is rem indful of Joe Cloidt, captain of the 1950 varsity and also a M ontanan. W arsinke is being groom ed to play either offense or defense.

* * *(74) DEAN CHAMBERS: 20, 205, 6-2, Soph.,

Seattle (W est Seattle)—T he Husky coaches like the way this sophomore tackle does th ings, and w hile he w ill start the season as a reserve of­fensive rig h t tackle, he w ill be pressing for a

(C ontinued on Page 9)

HUSKY SPORTS BOOK O N SALEOn sale in the Stadium today, and available

by mail, is a recently published U niversity of W ashington Sports Y earbook, a handsome rec­ord of the Huskies in all nine intercollegiate sports during the 1950-51 school year.

The book, designed for stra igh t read ing as well as reference, is the first of an annual series which w ill provide W ashington sports fans w ith a continuous and lasting record of their teams. I t sells for a dollar.

Included are sections on football, basketball, baseball, track, crew, skiing, golf, sw im m ing and tennis.

Football, of course, is em phasized, w ith 18 fact-filled pages answ ering such questions as: H ow many yards d id R ollie K irkby m ake for the Huskies in his three varsity years? W h a t are the new school records the 1950 Huskies broke? And w hat defensive player saw the most 1950 action?

G racing the cover is W ash ing ton’s A ll-Am er­ican quarterback, Don H einrich , w ho also is the subject of a special feature, "A Breakdown of H einrich’s Passing.”

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Page 4: MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON

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Page 5: MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON

1

HUSKIESUofW STADIUM

Volume 5 N um ber 1

Editor . . BERT E. ROSE, JR.

M anaging Editor—. . . . JOHN THOMPSON

Business M anager—. . . . CLYDE ROBINSON

Staff P ho tographer—.................JAMES SNEDDON

CONTENTS

Meet the Huskies 1Washington Sports Yearbook 1Athletic Directors 4"Wild Bill" Kelly....................... 5As They W e r e ......................................... 6Western W ashington Band Day .... 8Coach Howie Odell 10Washington Coaching Staff 11Washington P la y e r s 12-15Washington Roster (a lphabetica l) 16Two-Deep P la to o n s _________ 17, 20W ashington Roster (numerical) 18Montana Roster (numerical) ........ 19Montana Roster (a lphabetica l) 21M ontana C oaching Staff ............ 22Montana Players 23-25C apta in Ted Holzknecht ................ 27M ontana C am pus Scenes 28Watch These Sophomores 30Husky Athletic S taff.................... 32For Your Information 35Index of Advertisers . 36

The University of W ashington Football Program s a re published for each home gam e by the ASUW Athletic News Service, Bert E. Rose, Jr., M anager. Business and Circulation Office, 108 Lewis Hall, C lyde A. Robinson, M anager. N ational Advertising Representative, C harles E. Thorp, 370 Lexington Ave., New York 17, N. Y.

The O f f ic ia l W a tc h f o r T im in g T o d a y 's G a m e Is Longines— "The W o r ld 's M o s t H o n o r e d W a t c h "

Page 6: MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON

■ A T H L E T I C D I R E C T O R S

I #4 RVEV CASS/LL ^

HARVEY CASSILL has brought the University of

W ashington into athletic prominence since becom ­

ing the Director of Athletics in February of 1946.

He has b rought national meets in basketball , crew,

track a n d swimming to Seattle, landing the b a sk e t­

ball finals ag a in for this winter. The en la rg e d

stadium also is due largely to his efforts.

..

CLYDE HUBBARD has s t reng thene d M ontana a th ­

letics im m easurably since assuming the h e ad a d ­

ministrative job in M arch of 1949. He was the most

active cam p a ig n e r for the c h a n g e in athletic con­

ferences for the Grizzlies, a switch th a t has left

them on an even footing with their leagu e com­

petition. He held th e sam e position a t College

of Puget Sound from 1927 to 1929.

----- m

C lYD t HUBBARD

Page 7: MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON

A QUARTER of a century has passed since M ontana unloosed an unforgettable quar­

terback, "W ild B ill” Kelly, against the Huskies here in Seattle, but even tim e hasn’t dim m ed the lustre of his perform ances here in 1924 and 1925.

One of the greatest backs of all tim e on the Pacific Coast, Kelly pu t on a one-m an show tha t overshadowed all else on those afternoons— despite W ashington victories and a couple of pretty fair Husky backs, G eorge W ilson and Elmer Tesreau.

N o t long after the 1924 game got under way, Kelly—then a sophom ore— broke loose for 85 yards, only to have it called back. A m om ent later, he re-traveled the route, th rough the entire Husky team, and this one counted.

H is Seattle shows w eren’t flukes. A daring quarterback w ho’d run on fourth dow n in those days when a th ird down p u n t was "autom atic”,

Bill was like an octopus. A fter seeing h im ru n like a deer, pass, block, kick and tackle, football fans w ere sure he had six limbs.

In many ways, K elly had a sp lit personality on the field. Deeply religious and an excellent student, he was far from being an in trovert out there before a football crowd.

Over a t Idaho, they never w ill forget the stun t he played on the V andal coach, Bob M atthews. A t one po in t of the trad itional Grizzly-Vandal clash, he beckoned for M atthew s to come ou t on the field. T he Idaho m entor naturally w on­dered w hat was up— but not for long. H e h adn’t taken a half dozen steps on the p lay ing field before K elly tu rned around to the referee and ho llered :

"Hey, w hat about that? M atthews can’t be on the field.”

W hile M atthew s w atched in u n b e l i e v in g(C on tinu ed on Page 34)

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Page 8: MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON

f w

mm

IF Y O U ever ru n across anyone w ho tells you th a t the earthquake tha t jarred Seattle a

couple of years ago was only a quiver, you can bet he was sitting in the U niversity of W ash ­ing ton S tadium 26 years ago w hen S tanfo rd ’s A ll-Tim e All-Am erican, E r n ie N e v e r s , a n d W ash ing ton’s greatest fullback, Elm er Tesreau, m et head-on w ith the force of tw o runaw ay locomotives.

W e r e . . .

I t was on a m em orable N ovem ber afternoon in 1925. T he Indians came n o rth a solid favorite to brush aside unbeaten W ash ing ton and to w in th e ir way in to the Rose Bowl, a rew ard eventu­ally won by the Huskies, thanks to th is one col­lision.

T he Indians were only four yards away from paydirt and lacked inches of a first dow n w hen they lined up for a fourth-dow n play. T he ball w ent to Nevers, w ho hu rtled every ounce of his fighting fury a t a hole in the H usky line. B ut there, charging w ith equal v igor from his line- backing position, Tesreau h it him .

W hen the referee m oved in to pick up the ball, neither Nevers nor T esreau go t up. T he Stanford ace was knocked cold and E lm er’s rig h t arm dangled at his side. T h e ligam ents in his r ig h t shoulder were to rn loose— an in ju ry w hich still bothers him today.

A ll that was forgotten , though , w hen the referee looked at the ten-yard sticks and then waved his arm tow ard the far-d istan t Stanford goal, assuring the near-hysterical W ash ing ton crowd that Tesreau had go t there in tim e and it was W ashington’s ball.

T here were so m any o ther g rea t m om ents in football for the H usky fu llback th a t the fans elected him to the school’s all-tim e team last year a t his old position.

O ne of the m ost courageous football players ever to p u t on a un iform , he’s rem em bered, too, as the sophom ore w ho played in the Rose Bowl w ith one knee so painfu lly raw from 50 to 100 small boils th a t he d id n ’t know his o ther leg was broken.

I t was on N ew Y ear’s D ay in 1924 and the Huskies w ere playing N avy. Tesreau took the field w ithou t the benefit of any sleep the n igh t before. He and the team physician, D r. Palm er, spent the n ig h t feverishly soaking his knee and lancing the boils in a desperate effort to keep him in the line-up.

Somehow or o ther, tho u g h , he was in there for the opening kickoff and stayed in as the tw o teams battled evenly. Finally , in the second half, Tesreau broke th rough the M iddie line and past the secondary, on his w ay to a sure score. T hen, w ithou t w arn ing , he fell in a heap, untouched b u t unable to move. T hey la ter discovered th a t his leg was broken— b u t for how long, nobody w ill ever know .

T h a t Pasadena tr ip was an unlucky one for Elm er all along. A fter the gam e ended, the Huskies ran off to the locker room , tw o blocks

ELMER TESREAUW ashington 's All-Time Fullback

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Page 9: MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON

StandbyFHUIT COCKTAIi

Top le ft :

Elmer a t work for Pacific Fruit and Produce Company.

Top r igh t:

The Tesreaus in their flower garden a t home.

away, unaware that Tesreau was still ly ing help ­lessly on the ground near the sidelines, w atching the big crowd file out.

Tw o of the team m anagers, re tu rn in g to pick up the equipm ent, found him later and helped him to the locker room long after the others had left—and had used up all the hot w ater.

"I th ink that ice-cold show er was the w orst part of the entire day,” Elm er says now, recall­ing the tortuous chain of events.

W hen W ashington g rid fans get together and start one of those " if only . . .” discussions, they invariably get around to T esreau’s hard luck in both Bowl appearances. As a senior, against Alabama, he was handicapped by the bad shoul­der from the Nevers collision, and the Huskies w eren’t the same football team w ithou t the ir bruising line-backer at his best.

A nother th rill in T esreau’s football history was a 28-yard touchdow n gallop that broke a long w inning streak of C alifornia’s "W onder Teams” under Andy Sm ith. I t was the only score of the 1925 game betw een the Bears and Huskies, W ashington w inn ing 7 to 0. T h a t was only one of 28 wins the H uskies registered in the three years he played for them , as com pared to three losses. One of these, a 7-to-3 upset at the hands of Oregon in 1924, coupled w ith a 7-to-7 tie w ith California, kep t them from w in ­ning three straight Coast titles w hile Elm er was on the team.

If it h adn ’t been for the Ivy League’s trad i­tional disregard for freshm en, though, Elmer Tesreau never would have starred for the W ash­ington Huskies. A four-sport letterm an for all four years at Chehalis h igh school, he was awarded a $75-per-month scholarship to D art­m outh, w here his uncle, Jeff Tesreau, for many years a p itcher w ith the N ew Y ork G iants, was head coach.

Elm er was only 16 years old at the tim e he(C ontinu ed on Page 36)

U pper: Elmer chats with his d au g h te r, V irginia, over a cup of coffee.

L o w er: Tesreau looks over some of the produce bound fcr Hawaii.

Page 10: MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON

TR A D IT IO N was born a year ago in the U n i­versity of W ashington Stadium w hen six

fast-stepping h igh school bands en terta ined H usky football fans a t the Kansas State-W ash- ington gam e in the first W estern W ash ing ton Band Day.

N orm ally , one doesn’t th in k of som ething a year old as being traditional, bu t the colorful pageantry proved to be such a spontaneous suc­cess th a t the Band Day has been in stitu ted as an annual affair at the Stadium.

O ne of the six prep bands w hich w ill take p art in today’s show, R enton, also was on hand for th a t gala affair tha t opened the 1950 season, dedicated the new section of the Stadium , and inaugurated this football trad ition a t W ash­ington.

R en ton’s 60-piece band under the d irection of Randy R ockhill w ill be joined by m usicians

from Anacortes, V ancouver, Y akim a, Brem erton and Stadium h igh school of Tacom a. W ith some four hundred m archers on the field at once, they’re expected to equal last year’s spectacle both in color and rhy thm .

Before sw inging in to the them e of the show, w hich is "H om e T ow n B and”— a natural since it embodies the p rincip le of the en tertainm ent —each of the bands w ill represent one of the H uskies’ 1951 opponents.

V ancouver’s 70-piece band w ill honor today’s foe, M ontana, spelling ou t a b ig "M ” w hile sounding the G rizzlies’ fight song. In like m an­ner, Y akim a w ill pay tr ib u te to Southern Cali­fornia, Anacortes to Illino is, R enton to Stan­ford, Stadium to O regon State, and Brem erton to W ashington State.

They w on’t forget the Huskies, either. At the conclusion of the half-tim e show, all six

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Page 11: MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON

prep units w ill com bine in p lay ing "Bow Down to W ashington."

As in last year’s perform ance, all the bands w ill get a chance to honor th e ir ow n school and home town before the gam e, m arching the length of the field w hile toasting the ir respective teams.

W estern W ashington Band Day was conceived last year jointly as a dedicatory program for the Stadium and as a means of honoring six cities which supported the U niversity for many years.

It still has a jo in t purpose, even though the Stadium was properly dedicated twelve m onths ago. The new idea, along w ith the view of hon­oring the six cities, is one of p rovid ing Husky football fans w ith the h ighest class en te rta in ­ment possible. The spectators made it evident that they consider the show "tops” w hen they greeted it so enthusiastically in 1950.

Viva La Band Day!

MEET THE HUSKIES . . .starting assignm ent from the first game. W as a regular tackle on the 1950 freshm an team after gain ing All-City honors in his senior year at W est Seattle. One of the fastest tackles on the squad and a sure bet to be a star by the tim e he becomes a senior.

Chambers was coached in high school by W oody U llin, form er W ashington tackle and captain of the 1934 Husky team.

(C ontinued on Page 29)

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Page 12: MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON

H O W IE ODELL begins his fourth season as head coach of the W ashington H uskies this

afternoon w ith h igh hopes of fielding his finest team yet. A lthough he prom ised no "m iracles” w hen he arrived on the campus in 1948, w arn in g th a t the bu ild ing process would be slow, he gave the school its most successful team in a q u arte r century last fall.

T he Huskies w on e igh t games ou t of ten and both defeats were by a one-touchdow n m argin in g rueling battles tha t could have gone e ither way.

Odell no t only has b rought w inn ing football to W ashington, but the colorful, w ide-open style tha t fans everywhere like. H is H uskies operate ou t of the w inged-T m ainly and fill the air w ith passes, particularly the short variety. D urin g th e ir last fourteen games, they have av­eraged four touchdowns a contest.

M uch of O dell’s coaching success is due to the tireless energy he puts into his w ork. H e places g reat em phasis on the use of m otion pictures as

a tra in ing aid and spends long hours w ith his staff poring over movies of previous games and practices. He has received m uch public ity on his system of grad ing the players on each play, using a sliding scale to indicate how w ell each did his assignment. T he H usky starters are chosen from that.

T he Husky m entor played his college football under the late Jock Sutherland a t P ittsbu rgh and was the top scatback on the squad as a senior, w eighing only 147 pounds.

A fter his graduation , he served as assistant backfield coach at P ittsbu rgh , m oving on after tw o years to backfield coach positions at H ar­vard, Pennsylvania and W isconsin. He then got his chance at a head coaching job a t Yale.

D uring his six years a t N ew Haven, the Eli w on 35 games and lost only 14. And during those same years, the com bined efforts of Y ale’s three most hated rivals— H arvard , D artm outh and Princeton— netted only tw o w ins against the Odellmen.

10

Page 13: MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON

NEIL “ SKIP" STAHLEY

JIMMY DoANGELIS

W 4 S H /A /G T 0 N

REG ROOT

JOHNNY CHERBERG

RED BADGRO

PERRY MOSS

Page 14: MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON

h a e .: - J

fcUBH r j / i

BILL ALBRECHT, HB

FRANK LARIZA, FB VERN LINDSKOG, C JIM LUCE, TTRACY KING, E

BILL EARLEY, HB ERNIE FURNIA, HB

NEIL BOYD, E DEAN CHAMBERS, T

PHIL GILLIS, E TED HOLZKNECHT, G

Page 15: MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON

DOUG McCLARY, EJIM M ANGAN, T

SAM MITCHELL, QB

HUGH McELHENNY, FB

JIM NOE, C GENE NORTON, G JIM O ’BRIEN, T

BUD OLSEN, E FRED ROBINSON, G DEAN ROCKEY, QB FRED RUDNICK, G

Page 16: MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON

CLYDE SEILER, T BOB SIEGEL, LBDICK SANDBERG, LB

DUANE WARDLOW, TDICK SPRAGUE, HB LARRY SMITH, T DAROLD TALLEY, E

JIM WARSINSKE, E JiM WILEY, LB LOU YOURKOWSKI, T BRYAN ZUREK, G

Page 17: MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON

MILT BOHART, C KENNY DUNN, HB DICK IMER, HB

STAN KUCINSKAS, T JACK N A O N , HB JACK NUGENT, FB JOHN ROTH, T

TOM SPRAGUE, HB BUD TICE, C HENRY TIEDEMANN, HB PETE VAS, G

Page 18: MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON

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SAVIDGE"9TH. AND LENORA

No. NAME Pos. Wt. Ht. Age Class Home Town

40 A lbrecht, Bill HB 170 6-0 20 Soph. Southington, Conn.65 B arone, Vince G 205 5-11 19 Soph. Elizabeth, N. J.

5 Beckman, Kent E 187 6-2 19 Soph. Long Beach, Calif.26 Bergh, A rne QB 188 6-4 18 Soph. S eattle (Q ueen Anne)

9 Black, G eorge E 210 6-5 19 Soph. Kennewick57 B ohart, Milt C 190 6-2 20 Soph. W enatchee

3 Boyd, Nell** E 188 6-2 21 Sr. Pasco74 C ham bers, Dean T 205 6-2 20 Soph. S eattle (W. Seattle)33 Dunn, Kenny* HB 182 5-10 20 Sr. C am as19 Earley, Bill* HB 198 6-1 19 Jr. Hoquiam

6 Elich, Pete E 196 6-3 18 Soph. Bellingham17 Furnia, Ernie HB 182 6-0 20 Sr. M ontesano10 Gillis, Phil* E 202 6-2 20 Jr. Bend, O re.22 Heinrich, Don** QB 181 6-0 20 Sr. Bremerton66 Holzknecht, Ted** (capt.) G 187 5-10 21 Sr. Missoula, Mont.43 Imer, Dick HB 175 5-6 20 Soph. H ighland, Ind.63 Keller, W ard G 210 6-2 20 Soph. Snoqualm ie Falls

4 King, Tracy* E 200 6-3 19 Jr. Vancouver77 Kucinskas, S tan T 196 6-3 19 Soph. Southington, Conn.34 L anza , Frank FB 168 5-9 23 Jr. Port O rchard59 Larson, M anning T 178 5-10 19 Soph. Bremerton55 Lindskog, Vern 185 6-2 20 Soph. Olym pia16 Lokovsek, Leo* LB 200 6-1 23 Jr. Enumclaw71 Luce, Jim T 230 6-1 20 Soph. Everett70 M an g an , Jim* T 225 6-3 21 Jr. M alden, Mass.

8 M cClary, Doug E 208 6-7 19 Soph. Olym pia32 M cElhenny, Hugh** FB 197 6-1 22 Sr. Los Angeles, Calif.25 M itchell, Sam* QB 175 5-11 21 Jr. W estfield, N. J.46 N aon , Jack HB 177 5-11 19 Soph. Bremerton52 N oe, Jim C 191 6-1 19 Soph. Billings, Mont.69 N orton , G ene** G 208 6-0 22 Sr. Snohomish31 N ugent, Jack FB 193 6-1 21 Soph. C en tra lia75 O 'B rien , Jim ** T 200 6-3 21 Sr. Park Ridge, III.

1 O lsen, Bud** E 195 6-2 23 Sr. Bremerton24 Robertson, C larence QB 165 5-10 20 Soph. Renton61 Robinson, Fred G 212 6-0 21 Soph. New Haven, Conn.23 Rockey, Dean QB 170 6-1 19 Soph. O lym pia72 Roth, John T 205 6-3 19 Soph. Winlock60 Rudnick, Fred* G 215 6-1 20 Jr. Puyallup41 S a n d b e rg , Dick LB 182 5-11 20 Jr. Toppenish78 Seiler, Clyde* T 203 6-3 20 Jr. Erie, Pa.48 Siegel, Bob LB 195 5-11 19 Soph. Phoenix, Ariz.58 Smith, Larry T 197 6-2 19 Jr. S eattle (Franklin)39 S p rag u e , Dick* HB 180 6-1 19 Jr. Spokane14 S p rag u e , Tom HB 198 5-11 18 Soph. Spokane7 Talley, D arold** E 192 6-2 21 Sr. Longview

51 Tice, Bud C 180 6-2 21 Soph. S ea ttle (Ballard)42 Tiedem ann, Henry** FB 185 6-1 22 Sr. Berkley, III.64 Unrue, Dick G 210 6-0 19 Soph. Seattle (Roosevelt) _54 Van H orn, John G 189 6-0 18 Soph. Hackettstown, N. J.68 Vas, Pete G 210 5-10 21 Soph. Seattle76 W ard low , Duane T 198 6-4 19 Soph. Hoquiam

2 W arsinske, Jim E 180 6-0 19 Soph. Billings, Mont.49 W iley, Jim** LB 189 5-11 22 Sr. Bremerton73 Yourkowski, Louie* T 203 6-3 19 Jr. Renton62 Zurek, Bryan** G 215 6-0 22 Sr. Los Angeles, Calif.

Ind icates L etters Won

THE WEST'S LARGEST DODGE-PLYMOUTH DEALER

16

Page 19: MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON

COCA-COLA BOTTLING, INC., Seattle, Wash.

UNIVERSITY OF W A S H IN G T O N OFFENSE

LTYOURKOWSKI (73)

Roth (72)

LGZUREK (62)

Robinson (61)LINDSKOG (55)

Tice (51)

RGNORTON (69) Rudnick (60)

RTMANGAN (70) C ham bers (74)

LEGILLIS (10)

Olsen (1)

RHEARLEY (19) Furnia (17)

QROCKEY (23) Mitchell (25)

LHD. SPRAGUE (39)

A lbrecht (40)

REMcCLARY (8)

King (4)

McELHENNY (32) Lariza (34)

M O N T A N A STATE UNIVERSITY DEFENSE

LT LG RG RTLAMLEY (40) ANTONICK (32) JONES (31) MILLER (43)

M orrison (41) Ingram (35) Orlich (30) Merrill (42)

LE REMAUS (50) MOOMAW (57)

Rothwell (52) Anderson (56)

LB LBMURRAY (20) MIRCHOFF (81)

Roberts (23) Laird (84)

LH RHGRAVES (71) BYRNE (94)

W old (70) Thomas (92)S

SHERBECK (72)Vucurovich (61)

17

Page 20: MONTANA vs. WASHINGTON

U N I V E R S I T Y O F W A S H I N G T O N S O U A D

N o. N a m e Class Pos. A g e Ht.

1 — O lsen '5 2 E 2 3 6 - 22 — W a r s in s k e '5 4 E 19 6 - 0

3— Boyd '5 2 E 2 1 6 - 2

4 — King '5 3 E 19 6 -35— Beck m an '5 4 E 19 6 - 2

6 — Elich '5 4 E 18 6 -37 — T alley '5 2 E 2 1 6 - 2

8 — McClary '5 3 E 19 6 -79 — Black '5 4 E 19 6-5

1 0 — Gillis '5 3 E 2 0 6 - 2

14— S p r a g u e , T. '5 4 B 18 5-1116— L ok ovsek '5 3 B 2 3 6 - 1

17— Furnia '5 2 B 2 0 6 - 0

19— Earley '5 3 B 19 6 - 1

2 2 — Heinrich '52 B 2 0 6 - 0

2 3 — R ock ey '5 4 B 19 6 - 1

2 4 — R obertson '5 3 B 2 0 5 - 1 02 5 — Mitchell '5 3 B 2 1 5-112 6 — Bergh '5 4 B 18 6 -43 1 — N u g e n t '5 3 B 2 1 6 - 1

3 2 — McElhenny '5 2 B 2 2 6 - 1

3 4 — Lariza '5 3 B 2 3 5 -93 9 — S p r a g u e , D. '5 3 B 19 6 - 1

4 0 — Albrecht '5 4 B 2 0 6 - 0

4 1 — S a n d b e r g '5 3 B 2 0 5-114 2 — T ied em a n n '5 2 B 2 2 6 - 1

4 3 — Imer '5 4 B 2 0 5 -64 6 — N a o n '5 4 B 19 5-114 8 — S ie g e l '5 4 B 19 5-114 9 — W ile y '52 B 2 2 5-115 1 — Tice '5 4 C 2 1 6 - 2

5 2 — N o e '5 4 C 19 6 - 1

5 4 — Van Horn '5 4 G 18 6 - 0

5 5 — Lindskog '5 3 C 2 0 6 - 2

5 7 — Bohart '5 4 C 2 0 6 - 2

5 8 — Smith '5 3 T 19 6 - 2

5 9 — Larson '5 4 T 19 5 -1 06 0 — Rudnick '5 3 G 2 0 6 - 1

6 1 — R obinson '5 4 G 2 1 6 - 0

6 2 — Zurek '52 G 2 2 6 - 0

6 3 — Keller '5 4 G 2 0 6 - 2

6 4 — Unrue '5 4 G 19 6 - 0

6 5 — B arone '5 4 G 19 5-116 6 — H olzkn echt '52 G 2 1 5 - 1 06 8 — V as '5 4 G 2 1 5 -1 06 9 — N orton '52 G 2 2 6 - 0

7 0 — M a n g a n '5 3 T 2 1 6 -37 1 — Luce '5 4 T 2 0 6 - 1

7 2 — Roth '5 4 T 19 6 -37 3 — Y ou rk ow sk i '5 3 T 19 6 -37 4 — C h am bers '5 4 T 2 0 6 - 2

7 5 — O'Brien '52 T 2 1 6-37 6 — W a r d lo w '5 4 T 19 6 -47 7 — Kucinskas '5 4 T 19 6-37 8 — Seiler '5 3 T 2 0 6-3

i1 8 82001 8 71 9 61 9 2 2 0 8 210 202 1 9 8 200 1 8 2 1 9 8 181 1 7 0 1 6 5 1 7 51 8 81 9 31 9 7 1 6 8 1 8 0 1 7 0 1 8 2 185 1 7 51 7 719 5 1 8 9 1 8 0 1911 8 9 1 8 51 9 01 9 71 7 8 2 1 5 2 1 2 2 1 5 2 1 0 2 1 0 2 0 5 1 8 7 2 1 0 2 0 8 2 2 5 2 3 0 2 0 5 2 0 3 2 0 5 2 0 01 9 81 9 6 2 0 3

AFTER-TASTEW H E N Y O

C h e s t e r f i e l dM O R E COLLEGE MEN A N D W O M E N BUY

CHESTERFIELD THAN A N Y OTHER CIGARETTECopyright 1 9 5 1 , L i g g e t t & M y e r s T o b a c c o C o .

M O N T A N A S T A T E U N I V E R S I T Y S Q U A D

No. N a m e Class

2 0 — M urray '5 3

2 1 — Linsey '55

2 3 — R oberts '53

3 0 — Orlich '53

3 1 — J o n e s '53

3 2 — A ntonick '53

3 3 — S te w a r t '5 3

3 5 — Ingram '52

3 6 — Burke '54

4 0 — L am ley '52

4 1 — M orrison '52

4 2 — Merrill '524 3 — Miller '52

4 5 — Leonard '52

4 7 — Bartsch '5 4

4 9 — H olland '5 3

5 0 — M aus '5 3

51 — S a m u elso n '55

5 2 — R oth w ell '52

5 3 — G erlin ger '5 3

5 5 — N ickel '55

5 6 — A n d erson '5 4

5 7 — M o o m a w '5 3

6 0 — C am p b e ll '55

61 — Vucurovich '5 3

6 3 — H ubbard '5 3

6 4 — S h a d o a n '5 3

7 0 — W o ld '52

7 1 — G r a v e s '53

7 2 — S h erb eck '5 27 3 — Yurko '5 3

7 4 — A n d r e a se n '55

8 0 — Carlson '5 3

8 1 — MirchofF '5 3

8 2 — M a y te '5 2

8 3 — Platt '55

8 4 — Laird '5 3

9 0 — Flem ing '52

9 2 — T h om as '5 39 4 — Byrne '5 2

Pos. A g e Ht. W t .

c 2 0 6 - 2 2 0 0

C 18 6 - 1 1 9 0

c 2 1 6 - 0 185G 19 6 - 0 1 9 0

G 2 1 6 - 0 2 0 5G 2 0 6 - 0 2 0 5G 2 0 6 - 0 195G 2 1 5 - 1 0 185G 2 1 5-11 175T 2 3 6 - 2 2 0 5T 2 3 6 - 1 2 4 0T 2 1 6 - 0 2 0 0

T 2 1 6 - 2 2 2 0

T 2 1 6 - 0 195T 18 6 - 1 1 9 0T 2 0 6 -4 2 1 5E 2 1 6 -4 2 0 0

E 18 6 -4 190E 2 2 6 - 2 195E 2 1 6 - 0 2 0 0

E 18 6 -3 18 0E 18 6 - 2 2 0 0

E 2 2 6 - 1 185B 18 5-11 1 7 0B 2 2 5-11 1 9 0B 2 2 5-9 1 8 0B 2 0 5-11 165B 2 1 5 -7 170B 2 2 5-11 180B 2 3 5-11 170B 2 0 5-9 1 7 0B 18 6 - 0 175B 2 0 5-11 185B 2 4 5-11 1 8 0B 2 9 5 - 1 0 185B 18 6 - 0 1 9 0B 2 0 5-11 2 0 0

B 2 3 5 - 1 0 17 0B 2 2 6 - 1 175B 2 1 5 -9 1 8 0