Likely related to the article, "STANFORD MACHINE CRUSHES U. S. C., 13-9: GRID SPECTACLE KEEPS 70,000 FANS IN FRENZY Ernie Never's Educated Toe Makes Breaks to Enable Card Eleven to Subdue Trojan Squad STANFORD DOWNS U. S. C.," Los Angeles Times, 18 Oct. 1925: A1
View of a players and referees at a football game at the Coliseum between the teams of the University of Southern California and the University of California at Los Angeles.
The camera down the Coliseum's field during the USC and Notre Dame football game. The Band of the Fighting Irish marches in rows across the image, towards the left, as they step onto the field. Balloons float above them. In the background, the stadium's stands stretch across the image. The Coliseum's peristyle entrance stands in the distance, off-center to the left.
Another photograph of a play in the same football game appears with the article, "TROJANS DOWN UTAH IN GRID OPENER, 35 TO 0: Battling Utes Hold Foes to Lone Touchdown in First Half but Fall as Game Progresses," Los Angeles Times, 25 Sep. 1932: E1
The Trojans, from the University of Southern California, played the Duke Blue Devils at the Rose Bowl on January 2, 1939 to a crowd of over 93,000 fans. They beat the Blue Devils 7-3.
Referee rushes to ward players with ball during a during a football game between the USC Trojans and Stanford Indians (the Cardinals as of 1972) at the Coliseum.
View of seven Bruins football team players crouched down in a line-up on Spaulding Field (l to R): Kerns Hampton, Tom Rafferty, Fred Haslam, Homer Oliver, Verdi Boyer, Houghton "Fat" Norfleet and Bill Maxwell.