Reliving the ‘Run for the Roses’
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Don Cantrell
Two noteworthy football names out of the Harbor area from the early
days, Harold Pangle and Bob Milum, always appear in the local
conversations when Oregon State becomes a Rose Bowl possibility.
And that’s the picture at this hour. Coincidentally, the Pacific Coast
Conference at this time finds Oregon State possibly facing the Oregon
University Ducks for title showdown within the next two weeks.
It is rare for Oregon teams to be battling it out for the coastal in
the same season, but that is the picture. Both teams currently have 8-1
records. Oregon has only lost to Wisconsin, 27-23, while Oregon State has
only lost to Washington, 33-30.
Pangle, who grew up on the west side of Costa Mesa, starred at Santa
Ana High in the late 1920s before Harbor High opened its doors in 1930.
He advanced to Oregon State where he became an outstanding halfback for
the Beavers.
Although the OSU Beavers did not go to the Rose Bowl while Pangle was
there, his ’33 team stunned USC and broke its 23-game winning streak
under legendary Coach Howard Jones, 0-0, on a soggy field in Corvallis.
The noted writer Grantland Rice wrote poetic words about the Beavers
from his coverage of the game. And Pangle was nominated for an
All-American halfback slot.
It is fair to say the Beavers fielded an “iron-man team.” There were
no substitutions for OSU.
With Milum, a ’55 Harbor High grad and a member of the fine ’54 Sailor
football outfit, one of his dreams came through after he enrolled at OSU.
The Beavers made it to the ’56 Rose Bowl and Milum and mates were
inducted into the OSU Hall of Fame.
He later learned that only he and ’47 Newport grad Roy Ward had made
it to the Rose Bowl in those days. Ward was a noted end for California
Berkeley under the famed Coach Lynn (Pappy) Waldorf. As a junior at
Newport, Ward was also a basketball mate of George Yardley. Yardley later
won numerous honors at Stanford and subsequently became an NBA Hall of
Fame member.
One interesting thing that Milum recalls, “from my three years of
varsity football at Oregon State was that there were five fullbacks,
including me and three went into pro football.”
He said one of the proud years was his junior season. “We were ranked
sixth in the nation at one point and won the conference, but we didn’t go
to the Rose Bowl because of the ‘no repeat’ rule,” he said.
The Beaver coach was Tommy Prothro and Milum had utmost regard for
him. “He was a great coach,” he said. “He really knew how to recruit. He
could take an average kid and draw a great talent out of him. Prothro was
very cerebral, very smart.”
Milum also has similar praise for the present Beaver Coach, Dennis
Erickson. He recalls the two national grid championships he won at Miami
University years ago and the struggles he had directing the Seattle
Seahawks. He was elated to see him reach out for the opening at Oregon
State.
Reflecting back, Milum said he was drawn to Oregon State “because I
liked the single-wing formation. And Prothro installed the single-wing.”
He would up playing fullback on offense and right wing on defense.
It was a familiar picture of him from his ’54 grid season at Harbor
when he played right half on offense and defense, then backed up
All-Sunset League fullback Charlie Berry on offense when he was out of
the game.
Milum, who weighed 160 pounds as a Tar senior and was only 17 when we
entered college, recalls numerous impressive Harbor peers on the grid,
but three he lauded from in ’54 was tackle Dick Mirkovich, tackle Bob
Cantu and fullback Berry. He called them, “real studs.”
He said, “Berry was a real raw-boned athlete. He hit with constant
impact. It always reminded him of his older brother, Bob Berry, who was
an all-league fullback as a junior and senior.
A classmate, Salty Green, who lives in Alsea, Ore., and played on the
‘53 Newport grid team, is fond of Oregon football and has attended two
Oregon State games with Milum of Santa Rosa this season.
Green has an interesting record connected with the Rose Bowl. He has
attended 40 consecutive Rose Bowl games over the years. He is trying to
break the record held by his dad before he passed away. He and his dad
owned and operated a big fishing craft in Balboa for years.
He is looking forward to the next Rose Bowl, especially if Milum’s
Beavers make the grade.
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