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St. Louis Post-Dispatch from St. Louis, Missouri • Page 69

Location:
St. Louis, Missouri
Issue Date:
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69
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TTTT I I angen -i. i i ii i i- I -i -i i -i. n. i s-' Michisan 33 Minnesota 25 Arkansas 7 U.C.LA.l47 Nebraska 19 Harvard 23 Ga. Tech 27 leva 21 I Southern Csl- 10 Texas Aggic3 MOMUNG ONE-MAN SHOW BN 21-7 NOTRE DAME VICTORY MIZZOU, SPARKED BY HUNTER, UPSETS COLORADO, 20 TO SCORES ID, Polkinghorne Turns Quick Kick Into Gain for Bears N2VV .1 Notre Damcfl fr jf i' ('.

vr "-mnfffV )Tt Vnvtl Wlinnrilr By a Pnst-Dlfpatrh Photorrnnher. Excellent blocking helped DON POLKINGHORNE (25) of Washington U. turn a strategic quick kick by Washington and Lee into an advantage for the Bears in the second quarter of the game at Francis Field. With the ball on their own five-yard line, the Generals tried to catch the Bears snoozing as Jack Daughtrey quick-kicked. However, Polkinghorne raced back toward his own goal, gathered up the ball on the run and, with heln from his teammates, returned about 14 yards to the W.

and L. 34. Earlier, Polkinghorne had scored a touchdown. Washington and Lee's No. 51 is DICK JOHNSON, i.i'irr 'H nr DISPATCH 85-Yard TD Run by Bob Ladd Scsres LOCAL at.hlnK(on 1 27.

ahlngtt A 0. Riowv-lt 0. .11. nuti(r lHtNtpODril, ihXun l.J, WiiicM. it.

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II st on I'nttonvtll 7, ILLINOIS I'HI A-vumitlon iy, Liiifuin Lat St. I.f.nut 7. M. Vlnrrnt (TrrryvllU-) 30. Bollrvim aUtcdrtU U.

MISSOVUI VALLEV 1. 1 0, Irw'lnnatl 0. A AM. 14, lulna 0. ttithiut.

21, llutlston 7. BIG SEVEV Missouri 20, i olorado 1. Drake '41, loua Male it, Nebraska Kansas I'. 14. Oklahoma, I.

40, Kanta Mt 7. BIG TEN Indiana 21. Ohio I. 14. Muiran State 27, Wisconsin 0.

MirhlKaa 'Sd. loua 21. Ohio Male 4ft, 0. i'urdiu; 1J, llluiiilf U. IXTERSECTIONAL Minnrwt t5, sonlht-rn allfinnia 19.

irKim Marquette I). Aavit-r to.) J9, Boston College 12. EAST Alfred 2U. Buffalo 14. Arm o1kuI 7 Ilftimnv 27, Alleuheny 3 3.

IWudnin 1H, hatiF U. ItTunuVift Wi. 7. ltrnckMrt -1, alitorma lla.) lartnn fl. i arm ule Teca lti, tttmigtuii A heyney (Pa.) 7.

Trenton om-ord (W.Vi.) 7, l'oUmiae (W. Ya oiuipotlrut 20. New Hampshire 7. I onii-ll ultiniltia 1 ortland MulfK 2ft, Hofstra 0. KnUfrs 7.

lirexcl 4(hnt Hnpkii'l F.iliiiiiorn i. ti. I uirmuiil (V. Va.) 14, West Ceiit ta 20. Slippery Rock 6.

1.1, Lafayt-tte 14. liumptcm Inst. M-V Linmln (l'a.) 0. Lurwtrd '-iti, Binknell 2tj. liohitrt 'Jii.

Larrnre 14. Juniata fi, Mlsqurhanti 0. 27, Temple 14. Value (olliy 0. MurMnml State Jl, Wllke fla.) 0.

erIltIlt 15. Minmi (Ha.) 21, I'itislmrnh 7. Mi Mlchurv 1, Nrwirh O. Moravian Albriiiht 1'cnn Militarv 14. Lyrominf 13 r-tin State 20.

1'rnn O. I'rlnretdn 14, Brown 7. ItMfhcstcr 20, 7. llhode I'land 20, Sprincfleld 7. Sr.

-Irseph's lnd.) 28. Hall State 0. tV. Va. 27.

12. Srrnnton 2.1. Muhlenbertf 12. hhenherd 4'. tanadit 13.

SvrariiHe 49. Hulv Cr(s H. 1 iii-l Crove Hv rs, T'flft 4(i. Apil'iirst 2H. Trinitv 27, I S.

oast Guard 0. I ni 1 tlHam H. J't. 6. I intn 14.

H'Jift P. lManna Ifi, liirhmond 14. esi'an Swarthmore 7. Wesi.rn Marsland 1. 0.

-Mninster 7. Waynesbur? 7. nrester Terh 45, Rensselaer Tolv lale 20, Dartmouth 0. MIDDLE WEST Akron ti Womter 6. Albion 20, Alma AurttThon 21.

Itt(ianr 1 R. A.lilun.1 llnitnl-tJiIl ti H.ih.l (oilriin i-Nt-nttm. Kan.) 19. Bsk. n.

r.ri-on (O.l 27. Mrhll 26. Yita iln.j 14. Iltihmiue 6. liltlfflun 1.

7, Wnlmsh 7. 1 rnlnil Milivsilkff SI. 12. liHllHiiiHta 7. laton 7.

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7. 1'rnitlilm 1. VnrHiam 7. H'unilton K'Mivoti 0 llfiilrlbrrir 27. Mount I'nlon 0.

41. Knlnnwriui 7. Hiram roll'sif JH. Ulterlieln 15. II.

(12. OIIvpI 13. Navv I'irr 19. Hosf rulv fi. Illinni.

20. l.fi ollejf 20. We.li'inn 19. Mllllk.n 12. lndl.infi Crntral 7.

fi. I-ua tnte Tc'irs. 1 H. 12. iim irroll 21.

iMf Ttrh l-nn-st Klmhursit 15. Ii. Cnrlotdn 0. Lincoln Vi t.1. 14.

Airnm A M. J. 1 tidier (H.I 2fl, AilTU'ftoa '111.) 14. 'lnml (O.l Kent Stair 7. 1 rlittan Normal 14.

1 atrrn 1M- ''V (Minn in. MK-h. Tech 0. Mii.ktiiTitm M. rnpllKl 14.

Nortbui.t Missouri (Mar)IIle) 11. Miocrn i hlo Vorthirn 19. Jhrttll. 0. dh'o 42.

sanrv 12. 27. 'orthcm Illinois 12. '-rson. 2r.

Wartlmr" 19. 33. l.or 13. 7. I l('T(isf (1.

M' 33. Miowcti'm (Tel.) 7. Vi-. (Unf 47, M'Mimiiiitti 0. o- rprrtrHl la.l 7.

'ol'Tl (Capf Girardeau) 1" 12. t- r. rtr itl' 13. T.au rtalre 0 24. Butler 14.

V.es'crn llllnola 13, Southern Illl- lo 11. 1'aTie fl. V.hraton 12. Norlh fcntral (111.) SOUTH Altinnv State 22. savniiTMin Stale 6.

Atlin V. 2tl, Knowille (i. Arii A. Ii M. 20, Arkansas Tnh 7.

rkansai Slate 13. Oimehlm 13. Arkansas state 21. Mrmiihls State So. Brthaoy 27.

AHeRripnv Tnlletre 13. -n. Hanover 13. Irm-ion 19, Vake 1-orpt 13. 1a1rlson 2H.

stitson 13. lrlav-Te State 37. St. Pauls fl. Trjin.

Slate 14. Tenn Tern fl. Continued on Page 2. Column 1. Ailing Ace Paves Way To Tierer First Win Missouri.

Colorado. 13 0 0 0 20 12 12 By Special Correspondent of the Post-Dispatch. BOULDER, Oct. 29 Missouri's bearded football play ers won themselves some badly needed shaves and spoiled a homecoming celebration for favored Colorado with their first victory of the season today, 20-12, before 30,000 spectators who learned what a returning Jimmy Hunter could mean to the Tigers. Missouri's well-deserved triumph was both a surprise and a disappointment for the season's largest crowd at Folsom field.

Colorado's Buffaloes had been expected to atone for their 56-21 loss to Oklahoma last Saturday. Colorado did make a comeback bid with two touchdowns on desperate passes in the final period after Missouri scored all its points in the first half. It was Mizzou's first victory in seven games this season for a 1-2 Big Seven conference record. The Tiger players and their coach, Don Faurot, vowed two weeks ago not to shave until they had won a football game. Faurot now has a career record of 14 victories in 17 games against the Buffalos.

Missouri rolled to a 20-0 halftime lead on Hunter's brilliant manipulations with the Split-T offense invented by Faurot. His sharp passes to End Harold Burnine paved the way for all the touchdowns. What a Difference! Hunter back in the lineup after suffering a thigh injury five games ago, supplied the spark to a previously stumbling Tiger offense, wrecking the Buffalos, with key passes, scoring two touchdowns and recovering a Colorado fumble on the three-yard line to halt a third quarter home team drive. Burnine, Missouri's talented target, contributed mightily to the Colorado downfall as be grabbed seven catches for 87 yards, including several clutch grabs en route to all the Tiger tallies, Hunter and the running Tigers got fine support in the upset from a cold-fingered set of Buffalo backs who lost the ball on fumbles six times to wreck any Colorado offensive threat until the final quarter. The Buffs uncorked a pair of touchdown passes in the waning minutes, but it was a case of too little, too late as the Tigers ended a losing streak of seven straight since last Thanksgiving.

Missouri, picked to lose by 13 points, marched 61 yards in 13 plays for the first touchdown midway through the first period. Halfback Joe Wynn and Fullback Gene Roll handled the ground assignments with Hunter throwing to Burnine for a key 18-yard gain to the Buff 25. Sonny Stringer, who also had been hurt, got into the aerial act with a 10-yard halfback toss to Burnine to the two, from where Halfback Bill Rice crashed over with 10:59 gone. Roll converted and the Tigers were on their way. Missouri added a pair of touchdowns in the second period and the handwriting loomed large on the wall for Colorado at the half as the Buffs trailed, 20-0, at the intermission.

Stringer launched the second touchdown drive following the Tiger kickoff when he scooped up a deflected Colorado pass Continued on Page 3, Column 5, ovn Wash. Lee A hx POST PART FOUR SUNDAY MORNING, Ax no j. ROY By Bob Broeg The long run, pyschologically devasting as well as physically effective In football, fired up Washington University's Bears and cooled off Washington and Lee's Generals yesterday at Francis Field, where about 7500 homecoming spectators saw the Hill-toppers break away to a satisfying 27-0 triumph. STOCK )'OU PUSSES FOR 01; UTS FIRST LOSS 0 7 0 7 14 0 7 21 SOUTH BEND, Oct. 29 (UP) Notre Dame torpedoed Navy dreams of its first unde-, feated football season today with Quarterback Paul Hornung a one-man show in leading the Irish to a 21-7 victory in 'a rainstorm before a record crowd of 59,475 fans.

Hornung, 205-pound plunged a yard for one touchdown, passed to End Gene Ka-pish for 15 yards for another score, intercepted two Navy passes, and crashed for 43 yards in 13 carries despite steady rain and a slippery field. Most important of Hornung's plays, though, were nine-yard runs on third down for first' downs deep in Navy territory on the drive for the first Irish touchdown. On the same march, loo, he called a fourth-down run with six yards to go and crashed for seven yards himself to kce the parade alive. Lewis Tallies No. 2.

Notre Dame's second touchdown went to Sophomore Aubrey Lewis. He romped around end for 11 yards after Navy had to punt from behind its own goal line when Notre Dame was halted on the one on a drive beginning after the sec ond half kickoff. Dick Guest's punt went out of bounds on the Navy 30, and it took only four plays before the Irish scored to put the game away. Ilornung's second pass interception, when he was downed on Navy's 36, pet up the last Irish score on Knpish's pass reception. Fullback Don Schaef-er, who carried 87 yards on 16 rushes, converted after each Irish score.

In all, Notre Dame gained 323 yarns rushing. The Irish triumph ended Navy's winning streak at nine games, with the victory string beginning after Notre Dame's 6-0 decision a year ago. It was Notre Dame's tenth straight win over the Middies and fifth triumph in six games this year. GC-Yird Middic Drive. Navy's consolation score today came against Irish reserves in a CG-yard parade requiring 12 plays.

George Welsh's passes of 13 yards to Ron Beagle and 17 to Peter Jokanovich, the latter reaching the Irish 2, were the major gains, while Edwin Oldham plunged the final two yards for the touchdown. Notre Dame threw only s'x passes, completing three for 13 yards, while Welsh hit on 13 of 25 for 155, but had three intercepted. The previous Irish attendance record was 59,343 for the Purdue game Sept. 25, 1948. Notre Dame scoring touchdowns, Hornung (1, plunge), Lewis (11, runi, Kapish (15, pass from Hornungi.

Conversions, Schaefer 3. Navy scoring touchdown, Oldham (2, Conversion, Oldham. STATISTICS Noire Pame. First downs Id Itushlui; yniri.iKe 112 I'assliia lardae l.Y jk ii a a 5 I S3 lasses attempted eotnpleted Int. hy I'nots 2.1 II I li I'mittn- average 3 umnieH iom 1 ards penullied Martinez Kayoes Cuban in Third BOSTON.

Oct. 29 (UP) Dark-haired Vince Martinez of Patcrson, N.J., took another step tonight in his quest for the welterweight crown, knocking out a pame Mario Terry of Havana, Cuba, at 2:02 of the third round in a scheduled Boston Arena 10-rounder. Martinez, on the boxing shelf for the past year because ot managerial troubles, toyed with Terry in the first round before dropping him for an eight count in the second with a left jab and a right to the heart. Martinez weighed 150 to Terry's 144'ld. Associated.

Fvess Wirephmo Prince John Takes World's Richest Race, $157,918 of $282,370 CAMDEN', N. Oct. 29 (UP) Elmendorf Stable's Prince John, turning back two determined challenges in the stretch, won the $282,370 Garden State Stakes today by nosing out C. V. Whitney's Career Boy in the richest horse race in history.

It took not one distant aasn, but two to discourage the Vir ginians' notions of vanishing with a victory, W. L. suffering Its fourth straight setback ln a return to the gridiron after a vcar layoit lor roiooi- ing to a program of deemphasis. The Bears' win was their third in six starts. Even though the only score of the first half came suddenly on a 38-yard bolt over the weak side by workhorse Fullback Don Polkinghorne of Washington the visitors left the field at the intermission with a statistical advantage and a perfect right to believe it still was anybody's ball game.

Picks Up Blockers. But on the opening kickoff of the second half, Wingback Bob Ladd of the Bears gathered in the ball down the center of the gridiron at his 15-yard line, raced to the right sideline and, picking up blocking to indicate that the athletes of Gray Fox Carl Snavely had practiced carefully the clever art of returning kickolfs, Ladd raced 85 yards untouched along the north boundary for a touchdown. That did it and the Generals went quietlv thereafter as Washington picked up two more third-quarter touchdowns and passed up opportunities in the fourth period only because Snavely and his staff cleared the Bears' bench of substitutes. The only times ball-bungling Washington and Lee passed midfield in the second half was going, not coming on defense rather than offense. Individual standout for the Myrtle and Maroon on old grads' day was Polkinghorne, the churning-legged little man wbo whirls, spins and plunges off Washington's sincU1 wing.

The 18-year-old, Normandy sophomore surged for 122 of the Bears' 190 yards rushing, averaging 6.6 a carry. The Francis Field turf was soft and at times seemed to be a handicap, but the direction of passing indicated the ball wasn't slippery enough to disturb an aerial game. However, passing Illinois Is 13-0 Loser ToP uraue Purdue Illinois. 0 0 0 0 6 0 13 0 By Robert Morrison Of the Post-Dispatch Staff. CHAMPAIGN, 111., Oct.

29 Purdue used the Illinois line for a punching bag today and as a result the Iillini suffered their first shutout defeat in six years, 13 to 0. The Boilermakers discovered they didn't much need the passing of their nationally prominent Len Dawson and stayed relatively close to the ground as they wrecked the homecoming for Illinois fans in a crowd of 61,262. It was the first time since a 1951 scoreless tie with Ohio State that Illinois failed to tally in a game and the first time since Michigan's 13-0 victory here in 1949 that Illinois had been scoreless in defeat. Illinois, whose total offense had ranked fourth in the country with- a 375-yard-per-game average, was in Purdue territory only three times this dreary, drizzling afternoon during which a sharp, 20-mile-pcr-hour wind added to the misery. Iliini Held to 83 on Ground.

This time Illinois's rushing attack, which had averaged 255 yards a game, was held to mere 83 yards by Stu Holcomb's team, which itself covered 285 yards on the ground and controlled the game with 82 plays to Illinois's 40. Purdue's aerial gain amounted to only 67 yards as Dawson attempted only one pass in the second half after completing six out of 10 for the 67 yards in the first 30 minutes of play. Helping to grind the Illini into the sodden turf were two senior Purdue halfbacks, Jim Whitmer and Jim Peters, as the Boilermakers changed the pattern of their offense away from the passing of Dawson and the plunging of Murakowski. Whitmer carried the ball for 93 yards and a 5.2 average as he aided in the first touchdown drive of 82 yards, capped by Murakowski's one-yard scoring plunge. Peters, a fresh replacement, lugged it 11 times for 62 yards as he spearheaded the second touchdown march, an 80-yard move topped by Pcters's one-vard plunge in the fourth quc.rter.

Murakowski still was an Important wheel horse with 63 yards and a 3.1 average, but he was only a cog and an infre quent draw-play threat as the other hacks helped breach the Illini from tackle to tackle. Only 23 Yards in Air. Abe Woodson didn't play for Illinois, because of a sprained ankle apparently, and there was little speed or power in the Illinois running attack. As for passing, the net was 23 yards and Miles Stout committed one of the worst throwing blunders when he threw directly to a Purdue man early in the third period. It was Murakowski intercepting and returning to the Illini "32, but on this occasion, the Illini held a foot from the goal.

Two other times Purdue drove deep into Illini territory only to be stopped. In the second quarter Illinois held on its 13 and at the end of the game time ran out on Purdue reserves at the Illini 22. But the scoring marches saw as Bears lU. i A A A ft 0 0 0 0 7 23 0 27 Lineups and Summary WASHINGTON 127) Korkel. Kriikelman, louvr.

Hrtcll, J. Meel. I. 1. Kolliiijrer, Unit, snnone.

S. 4olinton. nhlms, lliikhes, Mood. II, (. II.

I ndil. I.rnoh. Kiniolo K.T. llorliiuiri. IliOmnkorlilrr, Maeh, R.K.

saner, AtldiMin, Mruling, Mon- ken. Q.H M. HnlHner. Mu.by. Mike Slesel.

I. II. Me sliKrl, Miles, K.H. H. I.adif.

Iluerrklln, J.iun, Smltn. F.B. PolkiiKhorne, Metralfe, miver. (0) liiUfsnle, Brown. smllh.

r.nMn. Brantley. Chlsholm. I). Johnson, salstiur)'.

Melna, NrMrlt. It.T. Mntrintt, amlirla. H.1:. I'errTMHtn.

i.B. IMiiKlitrey, Knox, Klall, I'ate. II. llrlsroe. Ilailey.

la. Solford. Washington seorlnr: ToDrhdowns rnlklnrhorne CIH-rnnl: H. ladd I Hfl-jard klrkotf return); Ion Sauer (re-envered fiimhlcd In end tone! Miles (l-)ard pilings). Conversion.

Sauer (31. Referee Karl Hansen: timnlre Clstr Houston: linesman (jeoree MuImt; Held Jurfjrr Harry Ileeker. Vt ashlnrton. IV. I I First dnuns 10 1 arils rushine 19(1 131 I'anls passlnl; 29 29 1'nsses all'-mpled 12 fl I'assrs eompleted 2 4 had intereented 1 I'llnt" 4 rl 1'tinllnc averatr 34 33 Funihos 2 9 I'umliles lost 2 .1 lards penalised 25 40 yardage was negligible on both sides.

And Washington and Lee, totaling 163 yards over-all to the Bears' 216, managed only a combined 29 yards on the ground and air in the second half that was all Washington U. Interception by Polkinghorne At the ouset, as mentioned, the Generals powered offensively from an exaggerated spIit-T that gave them first down once on the Bears' 26 and again on the 40 before the home team rose up and stopped 'em. A third time W. and L. entered the danger zone, but Polkinghorne picked off an enemy pass at the Washington 23 on the first play of the second quarter.

The Bears, tided by a 15-yard Continued on Page 2, Column 3. -eV PAGES 1-SD OCTOBER 30, 1955 Career Boy and Needles made their bids, for Career Boy was second choice and Needles an 8 to 5 favorite while Prince John was an ignored longshot at 24 to 1. Down the straightaway the three horses pounded with Prince John losing ground slowly but giving up every inch reluctantly. Under that relentless drive, Needles was the first to crack. But then he came on again.

With Jockey Eric Guerin rid ing, Career Boy still closed the gap but he failed by inches as Prince John flashed under the wire the winner by the length of his nose for the $157,918 major cut of the purse. The chestnut colt returned S50, S18.80 and S8.20 across the board while Career Boy paid $5.60 and $3.40. Needles, who only was a head farther back, paid $2.80. Then came Happy New Year, Lawless, Call Me Lucky, Espea, Hohodah, Polly's Jet, Nail, Gun Shot and Bold Bazooka. Prince John, second in the Sanford Stakes and the Washington Park Futurity, finished the mile and one-sixteenth 5n a sparkling 1:42 3-5, only three-fifths of a second off the track record and far faster than, the 1.46 1-5 it took Turn-to to win the inaugural rtintung two years ago and the 1:45 recorded by Summer Tan last season.

It was Nail, the Belmont Futurity winner, which went to the front at the start with Prince John close up. On the turn, Prince John went to the front while Career Boy still was back in fifth place and Needles seventh. But the race rapidly turned into a three-horse affair in the stretch and, under the punishing whip of Valenzuela, Prince John hung on to the bitter end. In seven previous races the colt only had earned $39,900 but now he has gleaned a fair return for the $14,300 owner Max Gluck paid for him as a yearling. Air Force Academy Loses Again, 33 to 0 DENVER.

29 (API-Halfback Homer Floyd scored three touchdowns today as his Kansas Jayhawk Freshman football team handed the Air Force Academy Falcons their second successive drubbing, 33-0. Tigers' Big Hunter Whacks Away 4 1 I 4 VI! After battling for the early lead in the mile and one-sixteenth race, Prince John, who never before had won a stakes race, took the lead as the field of 12 crack two-year-olds straightened out at the head of the stretch. But, with little Jockey Angel Valenzuela in the saddle, Prince John still had his work cut out for him. Up from the rear charged Career Boy and Needles, the favorite earning the silks of the D. and H.

stable of J. C. Dudley and B. T. Heath.

A crowd of 44,737 roared as I I'nitffl Telepho'o. yards on the ground in the He is pushed down by JOHN Missouri touchdowns and he Aerial Man Sails Through ihe Air w-. the Boilermakers move without mishap as Dawson directed a varied attack and later concentrated on straight handoffs for quick openers. Early in the game Illinois advanced to the Purdue 13 but Continued on Page 4, Column 1. Missouri's JIMMY HUNTER (No.

22 at right), gains a few Tigers' 20-12 upset victory over Colorado in the lofty Rockies. BAYUK (30). Hunter's passing paved the way for all three scored two himself. PAUL HORNUNG, Notre Dame's great runner, passer and defensive star in the Irish 21-7 victory over Navy, sails through for a first down in the game at South Bend. The upsetting! tackle was work oj the Middies' VERN DANDER (right).

ill -1 "I Tt. mi all J4.

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