atvi-iui " M l uigjuw a s M w a m LTQUVJ LTU 5? Huskers Strike From Far Out for 4th Touchdown t!r ' - . . , )LimcricMjj) Jf 7 ""'O " v MmmUM ' ?U i V,-.-- T ' i T(N) fall X i; . " ij I lScr.mm.9.Lin., " B r- f . .-rrr r . ---l111tll(,- --,T n mm ym-- -" r V-tTtn mi ii Mini .1 www m i ii - 1 - - .. . W.. . . - k. ... , I Next M Foe lluiiback Nips C State, 14-6 . . Special to The Sunday ' 'r Journal and Star Raleigh, N.C.-A7? ard punt return in the first quartet? was all ; that separated NMlTtarollna State, now ' twice beaten, from undefeated 'Maryland Saturday. Sophomore Ken Ambrusko, caught in an impossible clutch by Wolfpack defenders shook loose and slithered his way to a breath-taking touch- down run that triggered Maryland's 14-6 triumph over N.C. State. Thereafter, It was a take--your-choice batttewitbreach sustaining one drive for a touchdown, v j . .. The home-standing Wolf-pack, after Maryland marched 62 yards in 14 plays for a 14-0 lead 9:36 into the second half, put on an impressive 75-yard drive for its touchdown in the first 5 minutes of the 4th quarter.;.. .. ; - - Sub quarterback Bill Krig-er ignited the State-march. carrying personally 9 times . f or . 39 yards, including , t he . final foot for the TD. Glenn . Sasser's-.extra-pointrattempt . was short ironic in that his - Mckoff seconds - later - soared - .through - the- Maryland-e n d z zone. Maryland's second touchdown featured the throwing of Dick Shiner, No. Lpasser in 1 the nation last week, and halfback . receiver Tom Brown. The latter caught 8 "of Shiner's 11 completionsrin-duding a . key 22-yarder on 3rd down on the second Terp TD push. Shiner scored it on a 4-yard rollout keeper play. C. State had two shots at . a deadlock possibility in thfr fading minutes, but each time its attack failed. With 3 minutes ; left QB Jim Rossi completed a swing pass to Joe Scarpati, but he fumbled on'the run and Maryland recovered. v : State limited Maryland's groundattack to only 92 net yards. ' . With 14 seconds left Rossi was throwing on second down . from his own 48 and was on target but Brown leaped high into the air and inter-I cepted just as. the gun sounded. ' " Tont Nugent, ; coach of Maryland, said: "State, was extremely tough defensively. They are better defensively that many teams, in. the reon- State coach Earle Edwards aid: "Take that punt return Continued on Page 4D, Col 1 01 5 Husker touchdown, this was the i n nmm .inn. iuiM..imtfr vmm jPf jifr'yMre mhwiihih i hX .... Va;i.; . ': ' . ' 'in North Carolina State's ' Pierce No Stranger to -New York, (0 Billy Pierce, the stylish' southpaw ace of the San Francisco Giants, returns . to a .familiar battleground today at Yankee Stadium to face Bill Stafford of the New York Yankees in the 3rd World Series game. ' - - .;y.' The - weatherman - predicted a partly cloudy Sunday with a high near 70 degrees as the best-of-7 Series shifted to the American League champs park, all tven at one game each. Catcher Elston Howard and first baseman Bin Skowron, two Yankee regulars who SEC. He'll D r N. Corolina Stoto 6 Joe Scarpati leaves the ground to sail over left is Maryland's Louis Bury. Lest We missed the second came due to injuries, were expected tol return to action after a day of travel and rest. Only Stafford loosened up 1 briefly in Saturday's drizzle. "It looks like Howard and Skowron aggravated a chronic back condition.' ManagerAlvin Dark"" followed protocol by naming a left-hander to open for the Giants at the Stadium with its handy right field "porch". Not only left-handed . hitters but right-handers, too, often dump home runs into the lower stands in right Despite Pierce's perfect crowd-tickler. Jim Huge MOiiiifitilldlHt LINCOLN, NEB., SUNDAY, OCTOBER 7 1962 Be Here Saturday ; i . . . ...... - - . . Forget, 12-0 record at Candlestick saved him Jor Park, Dark the Stadium, which his club will be seeing for the first time under, game conditions. However, a team that h a d been through-a bitter pennant fight and an agonizing 3-game playoffs for the - National League championship, did not figure to be overawed by such little things as 68,000 fans, a triple-decked stadium and the tricky shadows and wind currents in the concrete stadium in the Bronx. , Pierce, 35, knew his way around the Stadium after his span of service with the Chi- caught Dennis Claridge toss, outran Cyclone on i 'i f ft Maryland placer. At Yanks eago White Sox, who traded him to the Giants last winter. Pitching against the Yanks for 13 years with the White Sox and . two with Detroit, Pierce had a 25-37 record. In theK National League this year he had a 16-6 record with 7 complete games In 23 starts. He won -a - big one" with an 8-0 shutout over Los Angeles in the playoff opener and snuffed out the last Dodger hope with a 1-24 relief job in the 9th inning of the final playoff game. The 25-year-old Stafford wound up with a so-so year Continued on Page 6D, Col. 1. Clarid Past Potent I-State By DICK BECKER Dynamic Dennis Claridge put Nebraska football fans' into orbit without benefit of capsule Saturday, directing the Cornhuskers to a rousing 36-22 victory over Iowa State. .... Thirty-four thousand thrill-hungry loyalists roared approval as the dazzling Husker quarterback traveled by land and air at Memorial Stadium, unhampered by spggy going. :.-;i::t::;r::;.Xv:r.::. He" scored 3 touchdowhspassedjf or another and passed tit two after-touchdown conversions to win a personal battle with the Cyclones' Dave Hoppman, an Ail-American in his own right. This battle, enough to . . please anyprofsssionaL iootball fan, blasted off in style as Nebraska roared to a 28-0 lead and 28-7 half-time advantage. After the intermission the Cyclones fought back in furybut it was too late as Coach BobJ)evaney's reju Tenated. . Conihuskers c h alked up their 3rd straight win of the year the first time a season has opened in this style at NU since 1952. - Devaney's daredevils also, got their Big 8 Conference bid off to, a glowing start, a beginning almost unbelievable to long-suffering NU partisans. " Md TJebraska turned the trick without the benefit of its starting backfield B i 1 1 IThunder -Thornton, Dennis - Stuewe-and - Dave -Theisen 'ail'sldnedtth-1m'uriesr- Final analysis will most likely show that this scoring orgy was probably decided by the two NU lines, whohowed that it swhat s- up frontjhatjeounts. Giants like Bob Brown, Dwain Carlson, Tyrone Robertson and Gary Too-good were just too' much for the Cyclones. v ' Claridge used this line superiority to drive the ball downfield time and time afgain. Final figures showed that the Robbinsdale, Minn., junior ran for 58 yards and passed for 153, a 218-yard total en 29 tries. Hoppmann, a fabulously sturdy, little tailback, ran for 71 yards and passed for 70 more for 141 yards -on, 32 attempts, - Nebraska dominated the first 23 minutes so completely that it appeared a rout was in the making. LJM after-ihatJt-was an even ball game with the Cyclones actually outscoring the Huskers 22-8 over the final 37 minutes. -- Claridge took the Huskers on a power march right off the hat. .. ' The Huskers got the kick-Continued on Page 2D, CoL 1 44-yard play. ge Lapsuie L'p, Statistics IS First Downs 13 Rushing 6 Passing 6 Penalties 1 NU 20 14 6 0 - 82 Total Number of Rushes 38 N?t Yards-Rushing v-. 147 p--- completed 7 Intercepted . ........ ... 2 153 15 W7" . 11 r& r Maryville, Mo,, (fl Nebraska. Wesleyan caught fire in tneHidie-we-OTduarterturday-iHBht and -came-i behind to post its first win in Missouri State College. Sunday Local No events scheduled. National Baseball World Series. San Francisco at New York. Tv-3 12 noon. Football Chicago v. Minnesota, TV-6 & 10, 1:15 p.m. Dallas v. San Diego, TV-7, 2:30 p.m. " Monday . Local Football Nebraska Quarterback Luncheon, Lincoln Hotel, 9th fc P, 12 noon. . - NaUonal Baseball World Series, San Francisco at New York, TV J, a.m. Classes Set Scuba' and ' diving courses are being taught at the Lincoln YMCAf- The" course -is divided into two areas for a total of 16 hours. Classes will be held Tuesday and Thursday. This includes 8 hours of lec ture in the use of mask, fins and open snorkel; equalization of mask pressure r and hyperventilation. Total Offensive Yards 217 Total Plays .....52 Punts 5 Average Yardage ....38.0 Punts Returned 1 Net" Yards . . . . . .... .77 3 234-JCickoffs Returned -.. 6- 387 77 2 40.0 2 n 4 68 Net Yards .......... .87 Fumbles 2 2 9 Lost by 1-2 0 Yards Penalized : 26 . 55 esleaii 2 games, 13-6 over Northwest Northwest held the Plainsmen at mid-field throughout thefirst half while-scoring sr In the 3rd quarter, senior halfback Tom .Whidden punched m from the 4 to cli max a drive which started on the Wesleyan 23. Jerry Hecox booted. the pont after touchdown to give the Plainsmen a 7-6 lead.. Ninety seconds later fresh. man end Dwight Tietjen intercepted a Northwest pass and raced 55 yards down the sideline ' for the insurance touchdown. - Wesleyan suffered through a 19-game losing streak until a week ago when it- tied Doane, 7-7. Last victory for 'the Plains-: men came in 1959 in the final game of the season when they clipped Doane, ' . Next outing for Wesley an win be Saturday when it travels to Aberdeen, S.D., to face . unbeaten and unthrealened ' Northern State Teachers Col- , lege. NWU is now 1-1-2" for-the season."'" -. " - Wwlnraa ..... .; ....... tt-Jj mwm ...'...:.-.:............ . NWM Brnl BJoow 4 ran Wck fnd ' NWU WhkMw 4 ma (Herat kicked) NWUTMJra 94 tnterewted mm (kick