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The Times Herald from Port Huron, Michigan • Page 25

Publication:
The Times Heraldi
Location:
Port Huron, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
25
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

19 12 MSU 24 Ohio State 28 1 Illinois 26 Notre Dame 28 i Navy 1 4 Purdue 19 Duke 6 N'Vestern 6 3 UCLA 7 Stanford 6 Pitt 14 Iowa 14 Army 0 Wlves Hong To Regain Jug Michigan started anotherl The Michigan attack wascenter and booted it Just 14! Ward gained 108 yards rush- Flnt Mbia. II Ill 17-17 Rushing yardega march midway in-the second sprinkled with a number of long vards tne midfield stripe. ing to pac the Michigan ground The Gophers needed 13 plavsa which rolled to 311 yards. Mich. II 111 II -tt I runs.

Carl Ward's 36-yard scamper late in the second to brine the ball to the three ruing yardage Passe him Intercepted by Punt Fumble tart Vardi penalised quarter bat had to settle for three points and Timberlake kicked a field goal from the 19. Antnony added 8 and nmter-lake 79 yards to the total. Minnesota had the edge in There, on a fourth down play, I quarter wai the longest. Tim Lofquist was nailed at the five, ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) berlake had one of 24 and Anth-lateralled the ball to Aaron passing as it gained 163 in 17 onv chinned in with a 23-yard' Brown who lost two more yards! completions in 27 attempts Minnesota went to the air Michigan survived a last-quar ft added 25 on Michigan late in the second quarter and ana Micnigan took possession wnue run earlier.

i three of nine. moved into Michigan territory The Wolverines had advanced) for the first time. Passes from oainerl even Minnesota I IS: gamea seven, Mlch 7 11 -ll lie nui, 1 1 nica John Hankinson to Kenny Last picked up 29 yards and brought yards on three plays and Kemp punted to the Minnesota 48. Minnesota, which had used up 46 yards to the Gophers 18 before Lofquist picked off the pass and ran for the touchdown which brought Minnesota to Mich Anthony 1 run (Tlmbarlak kick) Mich FG Timberlske 28 Mich Safety ball cantered out of end all of its time outs, went to thellf? i Mich Timberlaki 1 run (Trmberlsk air in an attempt to get the kick) within striking distance the ball to the Wolverines' 30. Michigan held after giving up three yards on a run by Fred Farthing and regained possession again seconds before the half ended.

Minutes later Michiean'g Stanlpmializer but were still in theiri Minn Kramer 11 pass from HanleraoB Unjii fallal when the final! Minn Lofquist Kemp had tl pas intercept to hurry his a high pass puntwn territory from i gun sounded. (pans railed) I because of i Attendance ai.s.T ter surge by Minnesota and regained possession of the Little Brown Jug for the first time in five years with a 19-12 Big Ten football victory Saturday. Minnesota, which penetrated Michigan territory only two times in the first three quarters, scored twice in the final period and made the score close. A 91-yard touchdown run with an intercepted pass by Kraig Lofquist gave Minnesota its final points. The Gophers marched to the Michigan three-yard line minutes later but lost four yards on a fourth-down running play and Michigan took over.

Before the last-quarter surge, it appeared the Wolverines would gain an easy triumph. They scored in each of the first: three periods and kept posses sion of the ball for almost twice as many plays as Minnesota. Michigan marched 52 yards the first time It had the ball, jwith Mel Anthony diving into ANTHONY DUMPED Michigan fullback Mel Anthony Is upended after a three-yard gain against Minnesota Saturday at Ann Arbor. Minnesota's Aaron Brown (89) and Willie Costanza (60) put the stop on him, while Joe Pung (55) came up to help. (AP Wirephoto) the end zone from a yard out.

Michigan later got to the Minnesota 10 and tried to pass from a field goal formation but failed. Quarterback Bob Timberlake accounted for 10 of Michigan's final 12 points as he kicked a 29- Bucks Clobber Badgers To Retain Big Ten Lead COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Sanders' score, the Bucks in the end zone with a nine-yard Fullback Willard Sander moving 51 yards in six plays to i scoring toss, plunged for two touchdowns I send the big fullback in from! That marks the 10th time in yard field goal in the second quarter and scored on a one-yard sneak in the third. An errant pass from center rolled out of the end zone for a Saturday as Ohio State's top-1 the one. five games that Ohio State has safety in the third period and two more Wisconsin's lone threat came ranked Bucks overpowered gave tne winners Wisconsin 28-3 in a Western turned a pass Interception or fumble into a score in 19 such turnovers. Conference grid game witnessed by 84,365 fans, third largest points.

Minnesota scored its first touchdown on an 11-yard pass play from John Hankinson to Kent Kramer. The Wolverines did not try a pass until its second to last play of the first half. Then, Timberlake hit Ban Farabee for a seven-yard gain and a in the third period when Jesse Kaye booted a 28-yard field goal after a bizarre assault. The Badgers lost 20 yards in penalties in the drive from their own 31, and a 22-yard gain by fullback Ralph Kurek was nullified by one of the infractions. Holding a lead, Ohio State settled back to its ground-eating tactics, and moved 86 yards in 20 rushing plays for Sanders' second score at the start of the Big Ten Standings SAFE FUMBLE Michigan State's Dick Gordon, who picked up 105 yards rushing in the Spartans' 24-6 win over Northwestern Saturday, lets go of the football after making a short gain against the Wildcats.

The whistle had blown, however, and MSU retained possession. (Times Herald Staff Photo By Ralph Polovich). MSU Gobbles Up Wildcats Ptt. op 711 12 crowd ever to cram the Buckeye Horseshoe. Toe conquest, third straight in the Big Ten, cemented Ohio State at the top of the league standing, and moved the Bucks a long step toward a Rose Bowl bid.

Ohio broke away to a 14-0 first quarter lead on a six-yard run by sophomore halfback Bo Rein and Sanders' first score. Rein counted after Tom Bugle blocked Carl Silvestri's quick kick attempt and Ohio's Dwight Kelley recovered on the 11. A short punt by Silvestrl led Pet. Ohio State 3 0 1.000 Purdue 1 0 0 1.000 Illinois 2 1 0 .667 Michigan 2 1 0 .667 Iowa 1 2 0 .333 Minnesota 1 2 0 .333 Wisconsin 1 2 0 .333 Michigan State 1 2 0 .333 Indiana 1 3 I Northwestern 110 8 31 St 56 33 41 54 69 44 when the Spartans furious de-Tom Myers and David Milam territory only twice in the first fenders set up a 24-6 Big Ten were hurried on their throws to'half, going to the 26 and to the fourth period. Two minutes later Tom Kieh such a degree that oetween m.

ihe only time tne Wildcats MSU II 231 84 7-17 I 4-39 9 142 NW First downs 12 Rushing yardage -11 Passing yardage 119 Passes 11-32 Passes Intercepted by Punts 7-4 Fumbles lout I Yards penalized 15 fuss recovered a fumble on the win before 66,311 homecoming fans in Spartan Stadium. first down. That pass sustained a Wolverine drive which got as far as the Gopher 10. Anthony was thrown for a four-yard loss on a third down play and the Wolverines lined up for a field goal. But Frosty Evashevski, in-' stead of placing the ball jumped up and threw a pass to Carl Ward in the right Badger 28 by Wisconsin's left- them they completed 11 of 32 were in State's and of the field passes.

The Spartans picked in the last half was when off three passes, two by sopho-j Milam steered them 70 yards in handed passer, Harold Bradt, and two plays later, Don Unver- IN HANDLING the Wildcats more Larry Lukasik. 116 plays for the lone Wildcat their third Big Ten loss in four In running up their highest TD. With 804 left in the By ED SENYCZKO (Times Herald Sports Editor) ferth hit halfback Leon Lindsey EAST LANSING Michigan games, the Spartans scored the score of the season, the Spar-jgame. Fullback Steve Murphy State University's modern-era first three times they had the tans scored 17 points in iustjscored the tallv from one vard Ward, dominance The pass was low and couldn't catch it. over Northwestern ball in the first quarter.

over seven minutes in the first out. It took a pass interference continued Saturday; Northwestern Coach Alex quarter. Spartan quarterback penalty against the Spartans behind Steve Juday passed for two; to actually set up the score. (University Satuday's College Football Results By Tbe Associated Preaa EAST Marshall 28, Louisville 6 Navy 14, Pittsburgh 14 Boston College 13, Air Force 7 Holy Cross 20, Buffalo 14 Princeton 56, Pennsylvania 0 Colgate 21. Kings Point 0 Duke 6, Army 0 Rutgers 38, Columbia IS Massachusetts 28, Boston University Dartmouth 48, Harvard Yale 23, Cornell 21 MIDWEST 17-0 so fast our offense and de- touchdowns and ran in for an-i State was charged for interfer-fense never had a true test other.

ence on the seven and Mur- and neither did Michigan "Our play in the first quarter Pfy slammed into the State line Our same plans went right out was the best both offensively! three times before he scored. After taking the opening kick- the window in that first quar- and defensively that we've put ter. We had hoped "to be able together all year," Coach Duffy to run more than pass." Daugherty said. "It really helps off Northwestern was unable to move the ball and Myers punted to the MSU 49. The Spartans The Michigan State defense when your defense can get you limited the Wildcats, who av- the ball deep in your opponent's "rove to me inu wnen oare leraged over 100 yards rushing territory.

Then your drives can Kicer Kicnara rvinney ooot ed a 42 yard field goal. per game, a minus 10 yaras on ue sijh omu huiv. entered MSU the ground and quarterbacks! Northwestern Oklahoma 44, Kansas State 0 Montana 7, Western Illinois 0 Nebraska 21, Colorado 1 Olivet 25, Kalamazoo 12 Alma 13, Adrian 7 Oklahoma 44, Kansas State 0 Chattanooga 27, Xavier, Ohio 14 John Carroll 49. Case Tech 20 Drake 24, Omaha 19 Purdue 19, Iowa 14 Cincinnati 28, Tulsa 23 Wittenberg 40, Denison 14 Missouri 10, Iowa State 0 Capital 23, Akron Oberlin 26, Kenyan I Kansas 14, Oklahoma State 13 Toledo 21, Western Michigan 13 Wabash, 21, Ohio Wea-teyan 0 Kansaa 14, Oklahoma State IS John Caroll 49, Oase Tech 20 St. Norbert 20, Whitewater Manchester 27, Anderson 7 Butler 7, Indiana State DePauw 27, St.

Joseph's, Valparaiso 33, Ball State 22 Taylor 23, Hanover 7 Wabash 21, Ohio Wesleyan Michigan State 24, Northwestern I Toledo 21, Western Michigan 13 Bowling Green 41, Kent State 0 Youngstown 26, Baldwin-Wallace 6 Wavne State 13. Eastern Michigan 0 Flags Start Sow, a- WILDCAT halfback Woody Campbell fumbled on the first play from scrimmage following the kick-off and junior end Robert Viney recovered for MSU on the Wildcat 21. Six plays later MSU quarterback Juday passed six yards to sophomore end Eugene Washington for thr tnnrhrlnwn Inn Rnhir-Vi lrirkai4 Finish Fast, Win defensemen Byrel Klink and eJftra pojnt By ED SENYCZKO (Times Herald Sports Editor) uamn anu tup uu- Mven. whn ios( varffe fPV. ing to elude the rush of the Coach Lloyd Maxfield will inson, Woodstock tallied at 6:59 i in the first period with Ron Spartans defenders, failed to hit Northern Michigan 33.

Southern Illinois time to decide which comes Ryan beating goalie Norm Jacques with an angle shot from the right side. The Flags, who looked rather on three passes and punted to the MSU 41. State drove 59 yards in seven plays for the score with Juday ragged in the first period. real- senior halfhack Gor- players will stay with the Port Huron Flags for the International Hockey League season opening Friday. The Flags scored a 3-1 exhibition victory Saturday night before 1,020 fans in McMorran ly were sailing in the final per iod and the youngsters Ray Germain, David Green, Gary Pntt Terrv and Rlakp don, who made a tumbling catch in the end zone.

The play covered three yards. Juday passed 44 yards to Washington to put the ball on the NU 4. Bobich again converted. Sports Arena over Woodstock's 'turned in creditable per- HEAD STAND Stanford's Craig Ritchie is flipped into a head stand on a runback against Notre Dame at South Bend, Saturday. Notre Dame's Ken Maglicic (62) rushes in.

(AP Wirephoto) Senior A. Athletics formances. Despite missing their starting Hi ami riprl the in thP spennri neriod when he! Northwestern had the ball for Albion 27, Hope Central Michigan 12, niinois State 0 Cincinnati 28, Tulsa 23 Notre Dame 28, Stanford I Michigan 19, Minnesota 12 Ohio University 10, Miami, Ohio, Ohio State 28, Wisconsin 3 Illinois 26, UCLA 7 FAR WEST Utah State 42, Colorado State 7. 13 Southern California 26, California 11 Oregon State 31, Syracuse 13 Utah 16, Arizona State I Idaho 28, Washington State IS Oregon 7, Washington 0 SOUTH Wake Forest 21, Maryland IT Georgia 21, Kentucky 7 Georgia Tech 7, Tulare The Citadel 17, Furman 0 North Carolina State 24, Virginia 18 Alabama 17, Florida 14 Tennessee 3, LSU 3, tie Mississippi State 18, Houston 13 Canadiens Gain l-l Tie MONTREAL (AP) Mon only eight plays in the third intercepted a pass! quarter and gave up the ball Bob Quaine and Doug Conlan, who are developing the Port Huron area's first ski resort, are leaving nothing to chance in their effort to provide skiers with the finest of conditions and facilities. Quaine revealed an arrangement with Port Huron Motor Inn's general manager Daniel Murphy to provide skiers, who would like to plan a ski week or weekend, a luxurious haven.

In announcing the unique agreement, Quaine and Murphy said special rates will be available to skiers who plan to ski at Jack Pine Valley, located five miles west of Lakeport. i MURPHY SAID, "Transportation will be provided skiers staying at Port Huron Motor Inn to the ski area and skiers will be able to use all the facilities we have here. They can swim, bowl, ice skate, enjoy our steam rooms, exercises and massages. "We also plan to arrange parties for the skiers while they stay at the Inn." Quaine and his partner, brother-in-law Conlan, are quite enthused by the interest shown in the development. "We have 220 charter memberships already," Quaine said.

"We've started construction on the 40 90 foot ski lodge and work is well underway on the four slopes. We are still shooting for a Dec. 1 opening, weather permitting," he said. Quaine said that Robert Dock of Dock's Sporting Goods will operate the ski shop and be in charge of rentals. Quaine said the lodge will have a fireplace, snack bar, and the slopes will be from 850 feet to a quarter-mile long.

"We'll have a snow making machine and plan to have the slopes lighted to provide skiers with night skiing," Quaine said. Sounds like fun, doesn't it? EMORY CLARK, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Clark of Spring River Farm on Thornville Road in Metamora, had a hand in earning a gold medal for the United States Olympic team. Clark was a member of the Vesper Boat Club of Philadelphia which won the medal in the 8-oared shell event.

COACH JOHN Heering, Port Huron Central" High head baseball coach tells this story on himself It seems that when his son Rick was quarterback-ing a football team he called a play in the huddle and Coach Heering, who was officiating, stuck his head into the huddle and remarked, "you haven't set up that play." Young Rick had the perfect answer: "It seems -there's one Heering too many in this huddle." in front ot goalie Kon baiter and beat him from 12 feet out. Frank St. Marseille put the on a punt to State's 35. The Spartans needed just 15 plays, 12 in the third quarter. Irish Smash Stanford 28-6; WolsEti Crashes For 3 TDs Flags ahead in the second period by stealing the puck from John! to score the final touchdown Juday carried over on a boot Hartig and going in on Salter at 17:19.

Germain got the insurance SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) Irish season pass reception total leg rollout by diving, leaping into the corner of the end zone from two yards out. The victory was State's first This came on as Nick Eddyi fAnlr a Hunt-to nirrh nut nnH marker at 17:20 in the final Second-ranked Notre Dame of 523 yards by Jim Kelly in Buw nrrnc. frft Sranfm-H period when he, Ross and Lou smothered Stanford 28-6 with a 1962. two-vard line worked the puck in in the Big Ten and came after brutal defense and loosed the treal's John Ferguson scored with less then five minutes left to play and gave the Canadiens Stanford was completely thwarted by the hard-rushing In the first half.

Stanford Wl Passes and Ger- losses to Michigan (17-10) and passing of John Huarte and failed to register a first 11 "aiana uwui. ine apartans running of Bill Wolski for their 1-1 tie with the Detroit Red Irish defense until with less than four minutes left Ray The inHianc u-h imi Nt. Duu 'cuuun, iu-ycai-oiu guai- nave oeaien iNonnwestern learns fifth successive football victory Wings In a National Hockey six consecutive years. Handley hit Dave Lewis with a Saturday. League game Saturday night.

Dame 24-14 Alto, wound last year at Palo up with only four three-yard scoring pass, cap Ferguson's power play goal GORDON, who carried onlv Wolski smashed for three touchdowns, but it was the first downs. ping a 32-yard drive. was impressive in the nets. He played the final period and half of the second period. The lanky netminder kicked out 25 evened it after Alex Delvecchio 42 times in the Spartans' first record-breaking passing bar In the third quarter, Wolski Handley, the nation's leading rusher with a 106 yard average had snapped a scoreless tie in the first minute of the final rage of Huarte and Notre four games and gained 181 yards, picked up 105 yards in 17 in the final 20 minutes.

Jac in five games, was held to 43 slammed over from the one-foot line after the Irish had pounded 83 yards in 12 plays from their period by beating Montreal ques piayea tne first l'2 per 17 carries. yards on 19 attempts. goalie Charlie Hodge. iods and made five saves. Dame's defense, the nation's best against -rushing, which enabled the Irish to win their first five straight since their Myers, who has completed 43 own 17.

Huarte's 37 pass attempts and It was after Wolski's nine- FIRST PERIOD 1-Wooostock Ryan (Black) 1:59. Penalties Hartwig (tripping) passes in 95 attempts and gained 611 yards, had probably his Adrian Edged yard touchdown run starting the 21 completions set a -record at the Irish school which produced such famed passers as Angelo Bertelli, Johnny Lukac, Bob Goyette (cross checking) Goyette last unbeaten season in 1953. Huarte, completing 21 of 37 fourth quarter had put the Irish ALMA (AP) Chuck Rinehart KoUKhing) Black (roughing) ulsl uay "'c ycai. nc icu LeCaine (interference) 13:52. 17 aerials and completea five SECOND PERIOD intercepted an Alma pass on the third play of the game and ahead 28-0 that Stanford finally began to make progress against Irish reserves.

for 56 yards and had two inter Williams and Ralph Guglielmi. tosses for 300 yards including a 54-yard scoring shot to Wolski for a 9-0 lead in the second 2 Port Huron LeCaine (unassisted) 7:48. cepted. After the scoreless first peri ran it 80 yards to a touchdown, 3 Port Huron St. MnUI rimaa.1 asited) 11:19.

od, the Irish broke the ice early quarter enabled end Jack Snow but the stubborn Scots fought The iron-ribbed harrassing to establish a Notre Dame sea in the second quarter on Ken back and finally pulled out a Penalty Garant (tripping) 11:42. EAST LANSING, Mlcy. add Northweat- THIRD PERIOD er-Michis-an State 4 Port Huron Germain (Ross, Ka-'Northwestern I l-l zowski) 17:20. iMichigan State 17 0 0 Irish defense held Stanford, boasting the nation's best individual rusher, halfback Rav 13-7 victory over Adrian in their son recora tor pass receiving MIAA football game here Satur Penalties Ball (elbowing) 5:14: Hartigi7MUS FG Kenney 42 yardage of 595 in only five games. MSU Washington pas from Judav (roughing) St.

Marseille (rough day. Handley, to a game total of only Ivan's 28-yard field goal. Huarte followed with a 54-yard scoring pass to Wolski and the Irish scored still another second quarter touchdownv one second before halftimt. ing; Savea bv neriod Both teams now are 1-3 in Snow failed to grab a scoring Salter lo league play. Adrian is 1-5 over (Bobich kick) MSU Gordon 3 pas from Juday (Bobich kick) MSU Juday 2 run (Bobich kiclt) NW Murphy 1 run (run failed) Attendance 06,311 past but speared eight Huarte one yard by rushing as the Indian passers were consistently thrown for huge losses.

Jacques 3 32 0 5 1725 14 7 I Sneddon all, and Alma 2-4. toue for 113 yards topping the Attendance: 1,030..

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