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The Herald-Journal du lieu suivant : Logan, Utah • Page 5

Lieu:
Logan, Utah
Date de parution:
Page:
5
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

Utah Staff 14 Utah? Dame 3 eh. State 12 UCLA 20 frtncttenU Southern Col Dartmouth 21 Arkamm 42 Tuba 13 Tteh 24 Wichita 3 California 7 Stanford Indiana 21 Ohio State 9 Wake Forest 21 BYU 20 Aritono State 14 Michigan 7 Memphis St. 20 Ariiona 3 Wyoming 10 Illinois20 New Mexico 10 Houston LSU 62 Northwestern 6 Iowa State 9 Florida State Tulane 0 Utah State Pounds Utah 14-7 SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 21, THF Logan (Cachf County Utah lnt inilPWAI JUUKNAL AT THE UTAH STATE University Honor Banquet Tuesday evening, members of the Utag football team will be honored for i their successful season, while the USU basketball squad will be introduced. Above, football coach Tony Knap (left) shakes hands with eager Tom Stewart, while bas- I ketball mentor LaDell Andersen (right) meets footballer Garth Hall.

The banquet will begin at 7 p.m. and will be highlighted by the awarding of the hustle and outstanding player awards to members of the football squad. Reservation should be made in advance. Michigan State Retains Tag As Best In U. S.

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPD Dwight Lee back pedaled almost casually into the end tone, lifted up big long arms for the floating football, and all of a sudden, incontrover- ttbly, Michigan State was No. 1. With 10 consecutive victories, the Rose Bowl bound Spartans proved with power and poise this golden autumn afternoon Saturday that they are the best football team in the nation for 1965. The Spartan fans knew it as they surged to their feet hailing Lee's touchdown.

And the crushed Notre Dame fans, watching their 4th ranked Irish sink to a 7-2 record, knew it too as they sat in silence across the field. But the Spartans' 12-3 season clinched had to wait until the luck and the legs of the Irish rati out. The Cocky Irish, with their fans boasting 1, here we come," dared the Spartans right from the start to run the ball against them, electing to kick rather than receive the opening kickoff. Then, with their clever, thiev- alone on the Scoreboard for points which stayed there all ing ways, the Irish hung up 3 almost two and a Half quarters. Those three points came when Tom Longo's recovery of Lee's fumble on the Spartan 19 set up a 32 yard Ken Ivan field goal with only three minutes 23 seconds gene in the game.

Notre Dame could have rolled then, except for a technicality. Neither by air nor by ground could they move against the Spartans and it was only a matter of time until a long runback by a Dan McGinn quick kick set up Clint Jones' 3 yard run for State's first touchdown. Barefoot Dick Kenney of Hawaii missed the conversion, though, and the Irish were still only three points away. Murray And Shivers In Starring Roles By Joe Watts Herald Journal Editor SALT LAKE CITY Utah State University concluded a fine football season Saturday with its biggest win of the season over University of Utah in a tightly fought contest at Salt Lake City. The score was 14-7.

It should have been more for the Aggies. Heroics were turned in by penetrated to the Aggie 27 Roy Shivers and Craig Mur-jwith passing, with 2 minutes 1 ray, offensively, and Bill Sta- remaining. ley. defensively, before a Then Bill Slal th crowd of 20,357. adrenalin chas- Afgies completely ed Ute quarterback Jack rushed the Utes, gaining 270, Gehl ke in4ful! retreat for a yards on the ground to the iloss of 2 yards to ice the Utes' 73, with Roy Shivers i con test totaling a sensational 152 yards to set a new Utah State stale vvas sU erb on de- season rushing record.

fense throughout the game. Craig Murray bulldozed for Lance Gross als was in 116 yards to add stature to the man bone-crushing tackles. Aggie ground game. Aggie seniors, Craig Mur- Senior Co-Captain Murray. ray, Ron Sbranti, Tom Cruik- scored both Aggie touch- i shank, Rudy Curinga, and downs.

He was the leading Richey played their scorer for the Staters last I final game in the USU blue year, but these two touch- and white, downs marked the first time Craig Murray carried the he had crossed the goal line ball 21 times for 116 this year. This was his best Jan average of 5.5. Shivers Missouri (Sugar Bowl) Clobbers Kansas 44-20 back Paul Christman in 1940, to reach, a career total of score. Bill Bates boted a 33- yard field goal. 3,000 yards.

Lane ran 19 yards for a score to break a 13-13 tie touchdown with :52 seconds left in the. first half. He passed 39 yards to Montore Phelps with :22 seconds left in the game for another touchdown. Halfback Johnny Roland tied a school record with three short touchdown runs, and halfback Charlie Brown bolted 86 yards for another Woke Forest Punches Memphis State MEMPHIS Tenn. (UPI) Memphis State gambled its hopes for a possible bowl bid on a two-point conversion pass Saturday but failed and lost a 21-20 thriller to underdog Wake Forest.

Wildlife Award Is Presented The award for 1965 Wildlife Conservationist of the Year was presented to A. Perry Plummer at the Salt Lake office of the Utah Fish and Game Department Friday, November 12. This award was presented to Mr. Plummer for his outstanding contributions in the restoration and improvement of wildlife habitat in Utah. Mr.

Plummer, range scientist, with the Intermountain Forest and Range Experiment Station, U.S. Forest Service, is leader of a cooperative research project with the Utah Department of Fish and Game on game forage revegetation. Responding to urgent needs for rehabilitation depleted winter range for deer, Plummer displayed exceptional judgment and diligence in planning and directing the LAWRENCE, Kan. (UPD Quarterback Gary Lane ran and passed Missouri's eighth- ranked Sugar Bowl-bound Tigers to a 44-20 Big Eight victory over fired-up but out- manned Kansas Saturday. The swift 200-pound senior ran for 60 yards and passed for another 155 in engineering Missouri's seventh victory against two losses and a tie.

The victory gave Missouri a 35-30-9 lead in the nations fifth oldest football rivalry. The Jayhawks finished the season with a 2-8 record, their worst since 1954. Needing just 12 yards entering the game, Lane became tiie eighth player in league history, and Missouri's first since All America quarter- Vandals Gain Share of Title MOSCOW, Idaho (UPD -Fullback Ray McDonald scored three touchdowns and gained 164 yards Saturday in leading Idaho to an unexpectedly easy win over Montana State that gave the Vandals a share olthe Big Sky Conference football championship. The conversion a 11 pt; applied in adjacent stalest atiftn Rftn ohl- 4 Qh The Vandals closed out 1 capped a desperate 83-yard 1 During the past year, he wQas to hlt sm heir campaign with an im-scoring drive that inspected and recom-iy ers ne f-yard stripe, and. inew research and in getting Quarterback Billy results into practice, ers attempted conv i Within three years, tentative pass, with one minute, 28 sec- results were pushed into pilot' performance.

Shivers broke the old average. lugged 25 times for 152, a 6 onds left in the game, was I trials field evaluation, bated down by Mike KelleyiNow, only ten years after its and the Tigers saw the research is in chances for a Liberty Bowl'wide scale application in, bid go down the drain. and is beginning to 11 Thp pnnvflrsinn a in "Urn, ing mark set by Tom Larscheid in 1961 of 1044 yards; Roy finished the current season with 1138 yards. The Aggies nearly doubled the Utes' total yardage 402 to 205. The 64th meeting between the schools was played under partially cloudy skies.

It was Coach Tony Knap's first win over the Utes and left the record between the rivals at 4416-4 in favor of Utah. It also was the first Aggie win over the Utes since 1962. The first Aggie touchdown came in the last moments of the first half. Ron Edwards tossed a long bomb to Dave Clark who caught the ball on the Utah 16 yard line, but Clark fumbled, then recovered inside the Redskin 10. This was nullified, and the ball was called dead at the point of the yard stripe.

Many Ute fans questioned whether or not the ball actually was caught. With 37 seconds left in the half, Craig Murray dived in with the first score of the game, from a yard out. MacArthur Lane added the point after touchdown. The first half didn't end here. There was another Aggie scoring attempt, after Henry King intercepted Jack Gehrke's pass on the 45 yard line and ran it out of bounds to stop the clock.

The play ended on the Redskin 44. This gave Lane a field goal attempt; but the ball hit the middle cross bar and bounced back onto the playing field. Utah came back in the second half to tie the score after only five minutes of play. On a 4th down and 5 situation on the Aggie 32 yard line, Gehi ke chose to pass, and hit wingback Gary Heard for a 32-yard scoring play. Lane Walsh added the PAT to tie the score.

Utah State then started a sustained drive from its 21. yard line, with the big play being a 30-yard pass from Edward to Dave Clark to the began toj The game wrapped up the season for Utah State an 8-2 record and the Uets finished thier poorest year since 1950 with 3-7. Fighting broke out with teams involved in the final seconds of the game. However, tempers were soon cooled, and players went off the field congratulating each other. The coaches were on the field throwing their players around herding them back to the bench.

Weber Names Top Gridders OGDEN Weber State tailback Henry Owens and defensive guard Sid Otton were named the most valuable players on the Wildcat football teem this fall. Owens, the sophomore razzle- dazzle runner, was voted the most valuable back and Otton drew top votes as the most valuable lineman. Owens also copped the offensive player award, and Otton was the team's most outstanding defensive player. Two other Wildcats were honored by their teammates. Sop fullback Lee White was named the most improved player and guard Bruce Handley received the offensive lineman award.

The Wildcats finished a very successful season with eight wins and one loss under new coach Sark Arslanian. Owens led the team in scoring and rushing while Otton was the top defensive player in several games and is being boomed for ail-American honors. JACK GEHRKE, quarterback for Utah Redskins, had a dough afternoon against Utah State, as this photo would (Herald Journal Photos by Alan New Mexico Upturns Iowa Stale ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (UPD tackle Paul Smith led the fired tip New Mexico Lobos to a 10-9 upset Homecoming win over Iowa State ruining any Cyclone chances for a post season bowl! bid. The 228-pound Smith kept heralded quarterback Tim Van Galder off balance all day with his bruising line play.

Van Galder arrived in Albuquerque only 12 hours before game time after attending his father's funeral in Fresno, California; Friday. How Top Ten Fared How the nation's Top-10 football teams fared Saturday: 1-Michigan State beat Notre Dame 12-3. 2-Arkansas beat Texas Tech 42-24. 3-Nebraska was idle. 4-Notre Dame lost to Michl gan State 12-3.

5-Southern California lost to UCLA 20-16. 6-Alabama was idle. 7-UCLA beat Southern California 20-16. 8-Missouri beat Kansas 4420. 9-Texas Tech lost to Arkansas 42-24.

10-Purdue beat Indiana 26121. UCLA Heads For Rose Bowl LOS ANGELES (UPB-Sopho- more quarterback Gary Beban threw two touchdown passes in the final four minutes of play Saturday to bring UCLA from behind for a 20-16 upset victory over University of Southern California and virtually clinch- the west's Rose Bowl bid for the Bruins. With USC leading, 164, Beban finally found the range. He hit wingback Dick Witcher with a 34-yard scoring pass and two minutes later unloaded a 52- yard bomb to Kurt Altenberg for the go-ahead touchdown. While a crowd of 94,058 look- i i'.

ed on in amazement Bruins'came through their explosive scoring efforts after it appeared USC had game sewed up. Trojan halfback Mike Garrett gained more than 200 yards rushing to becbnjefT" all-time Pacific Eight ference leader for one season and USC's powerful defensive team held the Bruins until Beban came through with thip type of performance that has made him the outstanding sophomore quarterback in the country. The victory left UCLA with a 7-1-1 season record. Stanford Edges California In Battle Of Big Rivals STANFORD, Calif. (UPD Ray Hadley, who failed to achieve season expected of him, smashed 11 yards for the touchdown Saturday that gave Stanford a 9-7 victory over California and marked the fifth straight time that the Indians have downed the Bears in their big game.

A festive crowd of 78,000 watched the Stanford halfback, who was playnig his final game, kept a 70-yard drive going in the last period with an 11-yard smash and then carry the ball over, again on an 11-yard gallop. The tally came left in the contest and just after the Bears' Tom Relies had scored from the four climax a 62-yard march and give California a 7-3 lead. Terry Desylvia booted a 24- yard field goal rd through the third period for a 3-0 Stanford advantage. Stanford's fifth victory ia the 68th annual traditional matched the series record i of five in-a-row which coach Andy Smith's California "Wonder team" racked up against Stanford in 1919-23. a 0 a their campaign pressive display of power in a game played in a driving rain.

They had 414 yards total offense and completely throttled the Bobcats 54-0 McDonald's 164 yards boost- etl his season total of first time in history an Idaho runner has gained more that 1,000 yards in a season. scoring only a minute, 29 The touchdown came on a seven yard pass from Fletcher to halfback Billy Hale. inspected and seconds, mended treatment for imately 125,000 acres in addition to carrying on his. ra- search. li Hi lat Murray Davis Class A Football Playoff Tulsa Topples Watshockers WICHITA, Kan.

Tulsa's record-setting pass com- A razzle-dazzle scoring play Jin the final two minutes gave favored Davis a hard earned 21-14 win over Skyline Saturday to advance the Darts into Utah's Class A high school football finals. ion showed plenty of power in dumping Millard 32-6. The Class finals will be played point of the game. Although the official scoring was over, the Aggies hit payl dirt twice unofficially. Ron, Edwards, scrambling away! from Utah onrushers, found; Clark in the end zone for beautiful pass play, but a holding penalty voided the score.

Moments later, Shivers, etton of Bill Anderson toj Qrem blanked South 14-0 in on at noon with the Class A title who had impressed Utah's contest to follow. biggest crowd of the yearj Halfback Bob Winegar took with his razzle-dazzle perfor- a handoff on a reverse play mance, got away on a 62-yard 1 vard Twilley was slowed considerably Saturday by W'chita State but the Hurri. canes had enough force to topple the Wheatshockers 13-3. The victory earned Tulsa the Missouri Valley Conference championship with a 4-0 mark. the other Class A semifinal and will meet Davis for the big school crown next Saturday at Ute Stadium in Salt Lake City.

Delta and Union earned tickets into the Class finals Delta beat Beaver 14-0 in a game played at Delta and Un- yards touchdown. kickot'f and for Davis 1 winning far a UMU.II Orem got both its scores in the first half in marching past Scuth. Ai1 AUred tallied on a 33 yard run and teammate Brian Engleking crashed over from two yards out for the other Orem score. down. But a clipping penalty against the Aggies nullified that score, too.

The Utes had the pressure or. the Aggies in the lait 3 minutes. After Jtrry Pullman had intercepted au Edwards aerial and returned ft to the 50 yard marktr, the Skins THE DRIVING FORCE of Roy Shivers, Utah State's all- American candidate is demonstrated in this photo, as the Aggies defeated University 14-7. Shivers and. Craig Murray starred in the backfield for the Farmers..

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À propos de la collection The Herald-Journal

Pages disponibles:
967
Années disponibles:
1965-1965