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Janesville Daily Gazette from Janesville, Wisconsin • Page 14

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Janesville, Wisconsin
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14
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Cards Finally Gain Role of Favorites Over Yankees 5 to 2 Victory Gives St. Louis 3 to 2 Margin McCarver, Gibson Heroes of Series Filth Game Packers Are Hurting For Good Placekicker ST. LOUIS (AP)-For the first time since the start of hostilities the St. Louis Cardinals found themselves World Series favorites over the New York Yankees today, Odds-makers made the high flying Redbirds choice following their 5 2 triumph Monday that gave them a 3 2 edge in the SCR.VMBLING l.NTO FOR FINAL Boyer, Cardinals' third baseman, reaches directly over head of bareheaded Warren Giles, National League president, to snare foul pop off bat of'Yankees' Roger Maris for final out of 10-inning fifth World Series game Monday. Cards won, 5 -2.

Cards' catcher is Tim McCarver who hit a 10th inning three-run homer to ice the game. (AP wirephoto) Gibson Forgotten Hero in Cards' Thrilling 10th Inning Victory McCarver NEW YORK (AP) The slugger gets the nod every time. So when he came up In the lOlh with men on first and third saying; jlrw that catcher Tim McCarver, count went to 3-2, then Tim who walloped a game-winning belted a sinker that didn't sink three-run homer in the 10th I into the right-field seats, inning for the St. Louis "We want McCarver, we want nals, was the hero of Monday's! McCarver," chanted the crowd fifth World Series game instead; at the airport that welcomed the of pitcher Bob Gibson. Cardinals back to St.

Louis Forgotten was the fact that Monday night. Gibson shut out the Yankees for Gibson Ignored eight innings, struck out 13, scored the first Cardinal nm There was no mention of Gibson, the fire-balling right-hand-i Gibson best of-seven Series. Eve rything appears to be stacked in favor of the Cards. First, they will be back home for the sixth game Wednesday after taking two out of three in New York. Pitching in Shape Second, their pitching, thanks to today's respite because of travel, is in tip-top shape with veteran Curt Simmons primed for his return engagement with young Jim Bouton of the Yankees.

Third. Cardinal Manager Johnny Keane thinks there is a strong possibility that Julian Javier, the convalescing second baseman, will be ready to make his first start. i 1 I. i Finally, the Cards have won bleachers at the mark fuiMength World Series for a homer tha tied the scorej participated "It was a fast ball down the j. A former basketball player, the Omaha, 28-year-old raced towards the ball, picked it up, whirling as he did so and Ihrew to first base to get Pepi-1 tone by a half step.

Down the Middle That brought up Tom Tresh and he whacked Gibson's first pitch into the center-field GREEN BAY (AP) The Green Bay Packers are hurting in one of their strongest departments in recent kicking. Paul Hornung, back after a year's suspension for betting on National Football League games, has had trouble regain. ing his old touch in the kicking department. And Jerry Kramer is sidelined, possibly for the season, after abdominal surgery. Hornung, a doubtful starter against the Colts at Baltimore next Sunday because of a pinched shoulder nerve, booted of 27 field goal attempts and 41 straight conversions when he set an NFL record of 176 points in 1960.

Kramer took over in Hornung's absence last year and led the Packers in scoring with 91 points on 16 of 33 field goal kicks and 43 conversions. In five games this year, Hornung has made only 5 of 11 field goal tries, missing some from short distance. And he has failed on two conversion attempts, each costing Green Bay a one-point defeat. "A year's layoff has hurt Paul more with his kicking than anything else," Packer coach Vince Lombard! said Monday. "It's a matter of not hitting the ball correctly.

And with Kramer sidelined, we are hurt even Hawkeyes Picked To Beat Badgers by Nine Points They defeated the Yankees in and made a great fielding playier, who should have had a said liioson, ottering jg2g no excuse. He had struck out Tresh with delphia Athletics Detroit Tigers in 1931, 1934 and in the ninth after McCarver; shutout except that Dick Groat's belted his homer with two on for on Mickey Mantle's the 5-2 victory and a 3-2 lead in; grounder leading off the Yankee! a fast ball in the seventh. Boston Red Sox in 1946 the Scries. ninth opened the gates to two; Tresh said, "That fast ball Yankees Outplayi unearned runs and a tie score. fanned Elston Howard with Mantle on first, then made out with the bases loaded in the' a great play on Joe Pepitone's first inning and tapped weakly line drive back to the box.

The back to the pitcher in the fourth ball hit Gibson on the hip and inning. He singled in the sixth bounded toward the third base! ger who won the game and the and singled again in the eighth, foul line. hero's role. the the Whiffed In First McCarver. a 22-year-old, 195- pounder from Memphis, struck Outplayed wasn't down the middle." should the Cardinals lose the Never mind that McCarver sixth game, they will still have never would have come to bat in the 10th except for Gibson's great play on Pepitone in the ninth.

McCarver was the slug- more. Hornung missed field goal attempts from 16 and 35 yards before he was injured in the second period of the Packers' 24-14 victory over San Francisco Sunday. Willie Wood, a defensive and punt return specialist, was pressed into duty as a place-kicker and booted the extra point after Green Bay's first touchdown. Wood attempted a field goal late in the half, but his weak effort bounced into the end zone. Hornung then managed to re- By CHARLES CHAMBERLAIN CHICAGO lAP) The 01' Swami was swept down the drain by Ohio State, Iowa and Minnesota last week, lowering his football sights to 14-8 and .636.

He hopes he can find the plug with these predictions: Illinois 20, Minnesota 17 The mini will have to regroup mentally and physically after that 26-0 beating by Ohio State to pull out this tough one in the Gophers' backyard. Should be interesting to see how quarterbacks Fred Custardo and Minnesota's John Hankinson stack up against each other. Michigan 19, Purdue Boilermakers usually are good for at least one big upset per season and this could be the spot. The Wolverines, unbeaten and ranked No. 5 nationally, come off a close 17-10 decision over Michigan State.

They must stay buoyed up for Purdtie, who buried Wisconsin 28-7. The game is at Michigan. Michigan State 14, Indiana 13 -Any time now, the Hoosiers are expected to win a Big Ten game. It may be this one on their home ground if they can maintain the last quarter momentum shown against Iowa. From here, it looks like a defensive struggle.

Iowa 23, Wisconsin 14 The Page 14 Janesville Daily Gizetto Tuesday, Oct. 13. 19M in the LAND OF BLACKHAWK Badgers return home after their massacre at Purdue and Coach Milt Bruhn will be faced with getting them riled up. They will have to be however, to make a showing against the inspired Hawkeyes, flying along undefeated behind Gary Snook's passing. Ohio Stale 20.

Southern California 13 The new-dimensional Buckeyes have Jumped into the No. 2 rating, but Coach Woody Hayes had not better be too cozy in this non- conference affair at the risk of an upset. It's a nationally televised game and USC comes off a 31-7 pasting of Texas gies. Notre Dame 27, UCLA The No. 4 Irish have scored 99 points in three victories, but they will find UCLA burned up after a 39-0 crushing by Syracuse.

Any overconfidence on their part and UCLA and Larry Zeno may puU a fast one. Northwestern 28, Miami of Ohio losing two tough ones to Illinois and Minnesota, the Wildcats can eat high off the hog. But they can't relax- too much against a school that has pulled Big Ten upsets in the past. Miami has a 3-0-1 record. Fifteen-year-old James Duncan of Cloverdale, Ohio, was declared "World Champion Coonj Squaller'' in a noisy contest at Hillsboro, Ohio.

The youth's specialty is calling raccoons out of trees without the aid of artificial devices. Using only his hands and mouth, Duncan won out over 50 contestants, and was awarded a handsome trophy by Bill Boatman who sponsors the world championship contest. In the artificial caU division, Lucien Basford won the first prize trophy. The coon squalling' contest was the second annual Coon Hunters Reunion which brought thousands of hunters and their hounds to Hillsboro from more than 20 states. The most elaborate Homecoming program ever by a Big Eight Conference high school, possibly the fanciest by any state prep school, will be between turn 'To "fo77 2i "yardi halves Friday night of the Jancs- First Overtime Win for Gibson NEW YORK (AP)-Bob Gibson's victory in the World Se- Homer Without a Doubf Biggest Hit NEW YORK (AP) Compared with winning the pennant.

joining the Cards in 1961 he pitched more than nine innings only 2-3 against Houston on Aug. 14, 1962, as St. Lou-i is lost 4-3 and 9 1-3 against Cincinnati on Sept. 7. 1962, when the Cards dropped a 6-5 verdict.

The Yanks' Pete Mikkelsen, victim of Tim McCarver's three-run homer in the 10th, yielded three homers in 86 innings covering 50 appearances during the regular American League season. They were to Joe Azcue of Cleveland, Ken Harrelson of Kansas City and Jimmie Hall of Minnesota. ries Monday was his first in an'Tim McCarver said the thrill of extra-inning game involving! winning three-run homer in 10th inning of Mondav's major Since, World Series game was like choosing between $5,000 and a new car. But, "without a doubt," it was his biggest hit ever. "Maybe it's a bigger thrill to me than winning the pennant," said the joke-making catcher for the St.

Louis Cardinals. "But how can you tell? It's like asking which you'd rather have, $5,000 or a Cadillac." McCarver's blast in the 10th inning gave the Cardinals a 5-2 victory over the New York Yankees and a Series lead of three games to two. Has Good Effect "It also will have its effect on him a good effect," said Cardinal Manager Johnny Keane. "And it probably will have something to do with my future, too," he grinned. Yogi Berra, the Yankee manager, was looking at it another way after the game.

With Gibson fanning 13 Yan -i He said a successful sacrifice kees, St. Louis outfielders had bunt attempt by Cardinal short- little to do Monday, each corral- 1 stop Dick Groat possibly could "If there was a base open," said Berra. "I would have put him (McCarver) on. If Groat had bunted, that would've given us an excuse to walk McCar ver." Scrap Back The Yankees had tied the score 2-2 in the last of the ninth on Tom Tresh's right-field homer off Gibson, who had pitched scoreless ball for 8 2-3 innings. He hit a fast ball down the middle.

Keane bowed his head when Tresh's ball went into stands, and when the right- handed Gibson returned after the final out, the Cardinal manager said: "Don't worry. We've been a the home edge in the finale with ace Bob Gibson a strong possibility to make his third start in the Series. Whitey Ford, currently nursing a tender right heel, would be Gibson's probable opponent. The closeness of the Series fails to tell by how wide a margin the Cardinals have outplayed the Yankees in the first five games. The Yankees hold a slight edge in over-all batting, but the Cards lead in everything else.

They have outrun, outfield- ed, outpitched and outmaneuvered the Yankees. Monday's game, won in 10 innings by the Cardinals on catcher Timmy McCarver's three-run homer, was a typical example. The Cardinals, except for shortstop Dick Groat's error in the ninth which paved the way for Tommy Tresh's game- tying homer, sparkled In the! field. I Yankees' Defense Poor In contrast, the Yankees'; that field goal and two conversions in the second half. Offensive guard Fuzzy Thurston reported Monday he had suffered a painful shoulder injury against the 49ers, but insisted on staying in the game, although he switched places with right guard Dan Grimm when he found he couldn't trap block.

"The game served as a sort of adrenalin," Thurston said. "It kept me going. I just wanted to play that much harder." "It was a bad injury," Lom- bardl said. "The pain must have been unbearable, but he refused to come out. Thurston is quite a man." Thurston spent Monday morning on the training table and said later he'll be all right for the game against the Colts, who took the Western Division lead by bombing St.

Louis 47-27 Monday night. "Sure I'll be readv," Thurston said. "Tliis is THE game." ville-Racine Horlick football game at Racine. Featured will be the University of Iowa band, which will put on the same show as it will Saturday afternoon at the Iowa-Wisconsin game at Madison. Dr.

Leon Fosha, music consultant of the Racine Unified School District, did graduate work at Iowa, is a friend of the Hawkcye band director and docs some arranging for the Iowa band. The band, traveling in buses, will arrive in Racine Friday afternoon and will tour the Wax Company, play at Horlick High's Homecoming, stay overnight in Racine and continue on to Saturday morning. Iowa Soph Is Scoring Leader CHICAGO (AP) Sophomore halfback Dalton Kimble of Iowa took sole possession of the Big Ten all games football scoring lead this week, breaking a tie with sophomore quarterback Bob Griese of Purdue. Kimble scored a touchdown against Indiana to boost his point total to 30 for the season while Griese managed but four! extra points and fell two points' behind Kimble. Fullback Mike Reid of Minnesota was third with 26 points followed by Ohio State kicking specialist Bob Funk with 22.

The leaders: FG Pat Tot, Kimblc. lowrt 0 ft 30 CiriFsc, Purdue I 1 7 2S Rcid, 2 1 2t Frank. Ohio 0 7 32 rustnrdo, Illinois 2 1 4 19 Il.inkinson. Mrnn 3 0 It S.mdcr. Ohio Siata 3 0 IS Timbcrlnke, Mich I 2 4 Nnwalrke, Ind 2 1 1 16 lladrick, Purdue 2 2 14 Featured with the Iowa band this year is Carl (Doc) Severinsen, trumpet soloist.

He was an NBC staff musician and appeared on the original Steve Al- McCan'er's home run was the first in an extra-inning Series game since Gil McDougald of the Yanks tagged one in the 10th Inning of game No. 6 in 1958. defensive play, as in the first four games, was sloppy and uncertain. New York was guilty of its sixth and seventh errors of the Scries, An error by catcher Ellie Howard on an interference The Colts announced Monday I show and NBC Bandstand, at the game will be shown soloist and conductor. scrapping team all year and we play helped the Cards fill the ling only one fiv ball.

Series totals are 23 flies caught by Cards' outfielders and 30 by the Yankees' outfield. have helped the Yankees out of the fateful lOth and kept McCarver from hitting. can scrap back again. He was right. Gitison and McCarver wore laughing and hugging each other after the game in the St.

Louis dressing room. In all, Gibson fanned 13 the dangerou.s Mickey Mantle twice. He had held the Yankees scoreless and limited them to only four hits going into the ninth. "When McCarver hit that homer," Gibson sighed, "I was the happiest man in the world." bases in the first inning, but young Mel Stottlemyre pitched his way out of the jam without any damage. closed circuit television in three Baltimom theaters Sunday.

The club explained "the clamor for tickets for the game has been the greatest since the 1959 championship game." The throe theaters have 6,000 seats, which will sell for $6 each. own park with a game lead." McCarver, who had also hit a couldn't escape. After pitcher Bob Gibson had singled with one out. Curt Flood hit a double play bail directly at Bobby Richardson. The usually dependable second baseman hobbled the pant clincher last Sunday, acknowledged this one "was the biggest one of my life although all I wanted was a little single or a fly ball to the outfield." 'The homer will have a good Horlick Is one of seven undefeated high school football teams in Southern Wisconsin.

Othrrs arc Madison West, also of the Rig Eight; Wilmot of the Southern Lakes; Brodhcad and Belleville of the State Line; Juneau and Oregon of the Madison Suburban. Oregon has been tied twice, but has not been beaten. James Duncan learned of his squalling talent while on a night hunt. "My brother started to climb a tree to get the coon," he said. "And I squalled that coon right down across him." Coon squallers everywhere will have the opportunity to challenge Duncan and Basford next year at the Coon Hunter's Reunion.

The raccoon hunting and trapping season opens concurrently with the rabbit, squirrel, pheasant and Hungarian partridge season in Southern Wisconsin Saturday, Oct. 17. North of Highway 21 the raccoon season has been open since Sept. 26. The coon season ends Dec.

31 statewide. Hunters will find another bumper crop of ringtails again this year. In the southeast corner of the state, including Walworth, Racine and Kenosha counties, trapping for raccoon is permitted all year. Hunting raccoon with hound dogs is the best way to harvest these animals, and it's really great sport listening as the dogs howl on a hot trail, then hear them bark "treed" when the coon is held at bay. Most hunters trail the coon at night, but you can trail these fur-bearers during daylight too.

Oct. 21. Janesville is in the large school sectional at Brookflcld Central. Two other Big Eight cross-country powers, Madison West and Racine Horlick, arc In other sectionals. West at Wausau and Horlick at Milwaukee Bay View.

Among medium-size schools at Brookflcld Central are Dela- van-Daricn, Fort Atkinson, Monroe and Burlington. The small school sectional at Sun Prairie includes Albany, Edg- rrton, Evansvlllc, Juda and Orfordvillc. Jefferson, Whitewater and Mukwonago compete at Homestead, which is near Milwaukee. Raccoon Hunting After a hard rain falls well toward morning and washes out tracks made just before the rain stopped or shortly after, any coon tracks found after dawn are reasonably fresh. Hounds can easily pick up these fresh tracks and intercept the coon before it dens up for the day.

Even without a dog you can stalk the animal cautiously on such a fresh trail, and usually find it sleeping at the edge of a marsh, in a hollow stump, or even up a tree in i)lain sight especially if the sun is shining. While hunting ruffed grouse up north or upland game in this area, we always make notes of often used raccoon trails and den trees, deer tracks, mink dens or runs, so when we decide to hunt or trap a particular species we know just where to go when the time comes. Look for coon trails leading from cornfields to a fairly dry cattail marsh, or leading to a den tree. Comes an early morning rain, you can be waiting on this trail before sunrise and catch old brer coon heading for home. Photo shows our grandson Boadie Swanson with a 24-pound coon that was caught snoozing in a marsh in broad daylight.

Bruhn Defends Quarterback Series Facts .400 St I.r iNt .1 York (A) 2 rivr-Gnme Tolali Not 44 C'ommijsionpr's Players' 13. (drst four onlvl New York rlubj 70. SI I.nuis rluh's American LraRue'i 67. Naliunnl t.caRUf'i 67. Tennis Association President Is Dead POMPANO BEACH, Fla.

(AP) James B. Dickey, president of the US. Lawn Tennis Association, died Monday after 42 years of activity in a sport he took up because "1 didn't have time for golf." He was 72, Dickey, who was elected USLTA president last Febiu- ary, was regarded as a moder-i IVCCpb ate on the issue of whether toQrVmnl Tnn let amateurs compete with OCnOOl lOp Football Rating By THE ASSOCIATED I'RESS Wittenberg retained first place in the small college football poll by squeezing out a 7-0 victory over Akron. San Diego State remained No, 2 as a result of its 45-8 whipping of Long Beach Slate. Florida State climbed from fifth to third with its 56-15 victory over Central State.

The ratings, first place voles in parentheses: 1. Wittenberg (8) 128 2 mega StaK (J 1. Florida A and 4. Limar Tech (2 5. Prairie View LADIES DAY "When Miss Shako lignals, shr really ilgnals!" 6i S7 6.

Delaware 37 7. Susquehanna 3li Abilene 33 9. Louisiana Terli 10. lexa.i A and 1 21 ban and ail hand, aatc. A "5 something to do with my future." single by Lou Brock and a force play, that would have been a double play were it not for shortstop Phil Linz' poor relay, resulted in a '2-0 Cardinal lead.

Keane obviously was referring to his relations with the ON LA CROSSE TEAM Neal Smout, of Janesville, a freshman at Wisconsin Stale University La Crosse has earned a place on the Indians' football squad as a center. A graduate of Janesville Senior High School, Smoul played football under Coach John Potter and also won letlers in wrestling, track and golf. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. h'an Smout, 2114 Cargill Court, Janesville, ries, St.

I.nuif (It) ah I 1 rionrt rf ,1 0 2 Hrnrk If 4 I 0 While Ih New York (1) 0 5 0 3 R'ch'rds'n 0 0 Maris cf 4 0 1 a-K Boyer 3b 3 1 0 Mantle rf 4 1 1 (ironl 5 1 3 McCarver ft (1 Shannon rf 11 ft 1 Maxvill 2b 4 I I (iibson i club's front office. He had been Gibson, beaten the, second ,3 the last i of the season after specu- ilalions that he would be fired. Mickev Mantles grounder and, I discussing next y-'s P-t until after the Se- slammed his dramatic game- lying homer that sent the crowd of 65,63.1 into a frenzy. Stormy 10th Inning Then came the stormy 10th in which the Yankees looked their worst. Pete Mikkelson, third Yankee pitcher, walked Bill White to open the inning.

Ken Boyer, ordered to sacrifice, bunted to the right of the mound. Mikkelsen neglected to field the ball and il went for a single. The sacrifice play was still on with Groat at bat, but Dick missed the bunt attempt and White was trapped off second. Howard fired to the bag but White turned and dashed toward third, sliding in safely when Pedro Gonzalez failed to hang on to Phil Linz' low throw. Groat failed to bring White home, bouncing out into a force )lay, but McCarver settled the ssue with a 3-2 clout into the right-field stands.

Things Belter "I'd have to say things look better now," said Keane in what could be the understatement of the Scries. "We go back to our Whitewater High, with a 5-1 record, has scored only six points in four of the six games, It beat Clinton in its nonloop opener, 6-0, posted 6-0 Southern Lakes Conference wins over Del- avan-Daricn and Mukwonago, and tallied six points in its only loss nonconference to Edgewood of Madison, 13-6. Whitewater's other conference wins were over Big Foot of Walworth, 13-0, and Burlington, 20-6, Burlington and Edgewood were the only team to score against Coach Jim Crummey's Whippets. Sectional WIAA cross-country meets In three classifications will be held Saturday, The 1965 WIAA golf tourna- ment will be played June 4 and 5 at the West Bend Country Club. No site has been selected for the Class and track meets, slated for May 29.

Basketball rules interpretation meetings, one of which must be attended by officials and coaches, will be held at 16 places. In this area they will be held at Janesville High, Oct. 22; Monona Grove, Nov. 11; and Waukesha, Nov. 3.

L. C. Onsorge, assistant secretary of the WIAA and a rules authority, will conduct the meetings. There will be demonstrations and basketball situation movies at all meetings. A wrestling rules interpretation meeting will be held at Stoughton, Nov.

10. 3 0 0 Howard 4 0 I Pepitone lb 3 1 1 Tresh If 0 0 Boyer 3b I 0 0 1 (I 0 (lonznlei 3h 1 1 Stoiilrmyre I 0 0 i-Loprj. 0 0 0 Rcniff 0 0 0 Mikkelsen 1 0 0 d-Hegan 40 10 3S 2 6 a Reached fust en catcher i Inlcrfer cnce. hPopped nut for C. Boyer In 7ih.

cSirurk out for Stottlemyre in 7ih dStruck tut for Mikkelsen in lOih. St. l.ouis 000 020 000 New York 000 000 002 B. Richardson, (Iroat, DP Manvill, Ciroat and While; l.inj. B.

Richardson and Pepilnne Louis 9, New York 7 IIR-Trosh, McCan-cr. Sn -While RBI Brock, White, McCarver 3, Tresh J. IP RER Gibson (W) 10 6 2 0 Stotllemyra 7 2 1 Reniff 4 2 0 0 Mikkelsen (1.) 2 2 3 3 (Mantle, Tresh) Slottle- mvre 2 (Flood, Groat), Mikkelsen 1 White). 13 (Lint 2, C. Boyer 2.

Mantle 2, Pepitone, Howard 2, Tresh, Lopez. Ilegan), Stottlemyre 6 (Brock, White, McCarver, Gibson 2, Ma.x- vill) Mikkelsen (Shannon 2, Gibson). Gibson (Howard) Smith IN) plate, A. Smith I A) first base, Secory (N) second base, McKinley (A) third base Burkhait (N) left field; Soar, right field. Ohio Advances To 2nd in Poll By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS both thumped on Saturday, also That blur that flew past the dipped out of sight.

other teams in The Associated! Texas continued to top the Press' college football poll thisj poU with 30 first-place votes of week was 1 linois but the flight the 40 ballots cast and 387 was a bumpy one and worse points. Ohio State had seven than that, it was in the wrong first-place ballots and 344 points direction. in the voting which awards 10 Thelllini, ranked No. 2 in last, points for first, 9 for second, week's AP poll of sports writers; etc. and broadcasters, took on fourth-ranked Ohio Stale last Saturday and came out on the short end of a 26-0 score.

The impressive victory moved the Buckeyes into the No. 2 slot and dropped Illinois right out of the Top Ten, But the IHini slide off the poll wasn't a lonely one. Kentucky and Michigan State, MADISON (AP) Wisconsin Football Coach Milt Bruhn says it's unfair to blame veteran quarterback Hal Brandt for the Badgers' failure in two thump- ings by Notre Dame and Purdue. "You can't keep blaming Harold for the way things are going," Bruhn said Monday in reviewing last Saturday's 28-7 defeat by Purdue. "Sure he completed only six passes against Purdue, but he had another half dozen dropped that were right in the basket," the coach added.

"Some of our receivers will make fantastic catches on passes off the mark, then turn around and blow one that's right where it's supposed to be. Receivers Share Blame "And I'm not adding the times when some receivers aren't running the routes right." Bruhn noted that he used two ether quarterbacks, Dave Fronek and Jess Kaye, and said, and they didn't do anything, did they?" Fronek had two of three passes intercepted by the Boilermakers, while Kaye was O-for-2 and has failed to complete a toss in nine attempts this year. Brandt ranked as the Big Ten's No. 2 passer last year when he hit on 86 of 181 attempts for 1,006 yards and six touchdowns. He had nine passes intercepted.

5 Passes Intercepted In three games this season, the senior southpaw has completed 31 of 64 passes for 454 yards and two touchdowns. And he has had five overhead shots intercepted, i The Badgers, attempting to get their offense in gear, ran through a spirited drill without pads Monday as they began preparations for Saturday's game with Iowa at Camp Randall Stadium. Players who did not see action in the Purdue game sent through a full-scale scrimmage with the freshmen. Nursing injuries were defensive tackle Mike London and Middle guard Phil Sobocinski. London has an arm infection and Sobocinski a pulled leg muscle.

etc. The Top Ten. with first-place votes in parentheses, and total points: 1. Texas (30) 387 2. Ohio State (7) 3.

Alabama (2) 4. Noire Dame (1) 5. Michigan 6. Nebniska 7. Syracuse Arkansas 9.

Louisiana 10. l-lorida Stale 307 2S1 142 19 R( .19 16 Delay Stadium Expansion Plan MADISON (AP) The State Building Commission declined to give approval Monday to a $3 million expansion project for the University of Wisconsin's Camp Randall Stadium. A subcommittee was directed to give the plan more study. The university has proposed adding 12,700 seats and new working press facilities. The project would be paid for from athletic ticket receipts.

Approval was delayed when Assemblyman Glen Pommerening, R-Wauwatosa, commission vice chairman, declared that "you'd have to have sellouts at every game for the next 10 years to pay for this expansion." Evansville IVs Win 3rd Straight EVANSVILLE The Evansville Jayvees beat Verona here Monday night, 20-6, for their third straight victory. Coach Rod Truog's Jayvees now have a 4-2 record. Evansville touchdowns were by Mike Losey, 20-yard run, Don Nelson, on a pass from Dennis Palmer, both in the first quarter, and Ron Krause, 25-yard run after intercepting a pass in the 3rd quarter. Lowell Crocker and Krause ran across for extra points. Verona scored in the fourth quarter.

Evansville had 76 yards rushing and 32 passing. Verona had a minus 19 yards, losing 68 rushing and gaining 48 passing. Evansville plays the Milton Jayvees there at 4:15 p.m. Monday, TIME OUTI "Quick! What's Japanese for I'm terribly sorry about that,.

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