Early years Born in
Covina, California, Shaver played three seasons at quarterback for the Covina High School football teams. He helped lead the Colts to state football championships in 1925 and 1926 and also held the school pole vault record at .
University of Southern California Shaver enrolled at the
University of Southern California in 1928 and played on coach
Howard Jones "Thundering Herd" football teams from 1929 to 1931.
1929 season As a sophomore in 1929, Shaver played for the USC team that beat
Pitt 47–14 in the
1930 Rose Bowl to finish the season with a record of 10–2.
1931 season In 1931, he was selected as a consensus All-American, as he led the Trojans to a 10–1 record and a national championship. The 1931 Trojans lost their opening game to St. Mary's College, but won the remaining ten games. When USC faced
Notre Dame in 1931, Notre Dame was ranked No. 1 in the country and had won 26 consecutive games. Shaver scored two
touchdowns, both in the fourth quarter, to lead USC to a 16–14 come-from-behind win in
South Bend, Indiana. The game was the Trojans’ first win on Notre Dame's home field. Shaver later recalled that, after the game in South Bend, the USC team visited the grave of Notre Dame's former coach
Knute Rockne (who had died earlier in the year) to pay their respects. The Trojans advanced the
1932 Rose Bowl, defeating
Tulane 21–12. Shaver led the Trojans in rushing for the 1931 season with 936 yards. After the game, the
Los Angeles Times wrote: "It remained for a spectacle listed on the program as 'American Football' to provide the Tenth Olympiad with its greatest thrill to date. Chances are the game will become an international pastime before the memory of this night game dies away." Shaver and his wife, Stella, began raising oranges and tangerines on the ranch in the 1950s. Shaver was married to Stella Marie Chrisman. They had two children, Karen Shaver and Gaius John Shaver. In 1998, Shaver died of natural causes at his home in Fallbrook. He was age 88 and had been in failing health since suffering cardiac arrest in 1991. ==References==