Word: oregon
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...University of California at Los Angeles which started to play Conference football in 1928, played it without brilliant success until this season. Against Oregon, three weeks ago, the last play of the game was a 75-yd. run for a touchdown which won for U. C. L. A., 12 to 7. Against Stanford last week, Verdi Boyer, California reserve guard, blocked two punts that brought two touchdowns that gave Stanford its second thrashing in two weeks, 13 to 6, before a crowd of 55,000 at Los Angeles...
...Someone charged that he had played professional baseball before he went to college. While the matter was being investigated, Tulane, without Felts, drubbed the Texas Aggies. 26 to 14. Pop Warner's new Stanford team used a bewildering collection of reverses, double-reverses, spinners, laterals and forwards to muddle Oregon State in one of the longest games on Pacific Coast Conference record. 27 to o. It was too early to guess what Princeton's new coach, Herbert Orrin Crisler, can do with the remnants of the team whose record last season was the sorriest in Princeton history, but his start?...
...hypothesis," continued Herring, "look at the Republican set-up for a minute. Delaware, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, the Dakotas, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Utah, Vermont, Washington, Wyoming, totaling 137 electoral votes seem a probable nucleus of Republican states...
...last nine presidential elections, it appears that 23 states are normally Republican, 11 normally Democratic, and 14 usually doubtful states. There are certain Republican states such as Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Maine that shifted their allegiance in the split of 1912, and New York, New Jersey, Oregon, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia which usually are Republican in a Presidential year...
Washington. Oregon and California stopped, looked and listened last week as Franklin Delano Roosevelt preached them his gospel of "a new deal." At Los Angeles, the two-thirds post of his campaign tour, the Democratic nominee turned the corner and headed east with his no-error record still standing. If September crowds and applause meant November votes (which no rule says they do) the Pacific Coast...