Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Times from Shreveport, Louisiana • Page 39

Publication:
The Timesi
Location:
Shreveport, Louisiana
Issue Date:
Page:
39
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The Shreveport Times Sundav, Oct. 20, 1957 1-D -'--ii 'L AWT1M 111 Tit a NORTHWESTERN QUARTERBACK Dale Hoffpauir (17) Louisiana Tech. End Billy Booth (82) of the Demons scis Pat Hin-by Lang- the embarrassed Demons. Doyan Foster (69) and ton (78) are identifiable Bulldogs. (Times Photo ston McEachern).

SIX FOR THE BULLDOGS Wayne Bourgeois (34) of Louisiana Tech rumbles up the middle for the Bulldogs' second-quarter touchdown against Northwestern last night. Dale Hoffpauir (17) and Charlie Hennigan (41) are is forced out of bounds after a four-yard pickup in the first quarter of last night's State Fair Stadium tussle with sored Bulldog Joel Thomas (50) out of the play almost. (Times Photo by Lloyd Stilley). State air Jinx Bulldogs ORT emons, 20-13 3y Beating NSC Tigers 21-0 ft: Aimers opviia uuuut isiana Tech's hoary old Indian sign Saturday night, and npmnns' marrh tn thp Hnlf Statps fnnfprpnrp fruit hall rham. TIGER STADIUM, Baton Rouge (Special) LSU's Tigers thrilled 50.000 homecoming fans here tonieht as thev rolled 1 -m iv JHit -Sum OT -W i up a 21-0 victory over Kentucky with the running of halfback Billy Cannon and fullback" Jimmy Taylor.

Playing in a chilly north breeze, LSU warmed up the and Cravens, and Robertson's pass-Tiger Stadium with the same ing. polish that gave them their I But LSU men swarmed through 20-13 win over Georgia Tech the Kentucky line on a fourth-down last week and made them into Plav at the Lsu four. th Turner a Southeastern Conference snfatKchetd obertson's nmierhniKD pitchout to Herzog and put LSU on povvernouse. the mo in from it pionship suffered a 20-13 jolt railing Dy a i6- margin at the start of the fourth pe riod, the Ruston Red made use of a pulverizing ground game and the unprecedented passing artistry of quarterback Jimmy McCabe to sustain two scoring drives and fashion a mild upset in the annual State Fair tussle. It was Tech's 27th triumph in the ancient series, to set against eight losses and four ties, and it was THE YARDSTICK Tech NSC First Downs 11 15 Yds.

Gn. Hushing 162 201 Yds. Lost Rushing 3 69 Net Yds. Rushing 159 132 Passes Attempted 5 18 Passes Completed 4 13 Pass Intercept. By 0 0 Net Yds.

Passing 64 170 Total Yardage 223 302 Punts. Average Fumbles 3 4 Opp. Fumb. Rec. 2 4 Penalties, Ydg.

3-45 5-35 ft Football LA. COLLEGE 26, Texas Lutheran 20. XAVIER 47, Alabama 0. DILLARD 13, Fisk 0. LOUISIANA TECH 20, NSC 13.

McNEESE 26, NORTHEAST STATE 6. LSU 21, Kentucky 0. SLC 21, Florence (Ala.) State 19. EAST Brown 20. Penn 7.

Harvard 19. Columbia 6. Yale 18. Cornell 7. Colgate 12, Princeton 10.

Army 29, Pittsburgh 13. Vanderbilt 32. Penn State 20. Dartmouth 14. Holy Cross 7.

Boston College 12. VHlanova 9. Hofstra 12, Northeastern 6. Morgan State 48 Howard 0. Boiling AFB 28, Shaw AFB 0.

Delaware 59. New Hampshire 6. Hamilton 21, Swarthmore 6. Wagner 19. Kings Point 0.

Gettysburg 37, Albright 13. Amherst 42. Coast Guard Academy 0. Temple 13, Lafayette 12. LeHigh 13.

Butgers 7. Muhlenberg 18. Lebanon Valley 6. Rhode Island 27, Massachusetts 13. Brandeis-Springfield.

cancelled, flu. Colby-Trinity, cancelled, flu. Bowdoin-Wiliams. cancelled, flu. Hobart-Alfred.

cancelled, flu. Connecticut 19. Maine 0. Washington and Jefferson-Thiel, cancelled, flu. RPI-Union, cancelled, flu.

Lycoming-Juniata, cancelled, flu. New Haven Teachers 27, New Britain Teachers 0. Brockport 0. Cortland 0 (tie). Buffalo 14.

St. Lawrence 6. Tufts 14. Franklin and Marshall 7. Millersville Teachers 31.

Wrilson (DC) Teachers 13. Wilkes 39, Ursinus O. Fochester 14, Vermont 6. Bates 13. Middlebury 7.

Norwich 14. Upsala 13. Aynesburg (Pa.) 13. Edinboro (Pa.) Teachers 7. Clarion 20.

Cheyney 7. Carnegie Tech 19, Indiana Pa.) Teachers 13. Penn Military fi, Moravian 0. Juniata 46. Kutztown 0.

Boston University 28. Bucknell 0. Geneva (Pa.) 34. Westminster 12. Grove City 14.

Allegheny 0. Lock Haven 27. Itacha College 13. Wesleyan 38. Worcester Tech 9 Shippensburg 20.

Bloomsburg 19. Virginia Union 43. Lincoln (Pa.) 6. SOUTH Virginia 38. Virginia Tech 7.

Auburn 3. Georgia Tech 0. Duke 34. Wake Forest 7. Maryland 21.

North Carolina 7, Navy 27, Georgia 14. Virginia Military 14, William and Mary 13. Tennessee 14. Alabama 0. Allen 7.

Fort Valley State 0. Davidson 33. West Virginia Tech 14. Clark 25. South Carolina State 19.

Randolph Macon 33. Washington Lee 6. Southwestern Memphis 32, Austin 7. Winston-Salem Tchrs. 32.

Hampton fi. Hampden-Sydney 34. Western Wary-land 6. Tennesssee Tech 27, Western Ken- 9 Marray (Ky) 21, Morehead (Ky) 7. Florida 27, Morris Brown 0.

The Citadel 26. Richmond 0. Florida State 34. ACC 7. Mississippi Southern 14, Memphis State 6.

SOUTHWEST Texas A and 7. Texas Christian 0. Texas 17. Arkansas 0. Arizona State (Flagstaff) 13.

New Mexico Highlands 7. Philander Smith 21. TouBaloo R. Stephen F. Austin 20, Southwest Texas 13.

Arkansas State College 32, Southeastern (Ark I State 7. Rice 27. SMU 21 Oklahoma State fi. Houston 6 (tie). Sam Houston 7, Lamar Tech 7 (tie).

North Texas 14. Tulsa 12. Baylor IS. Texas Tech 12. Texas 19, Sul Ross 7.

East Texas State 19. McMurry 6. MIDWEST Michigan 34. Northwestern 14. Purdue 20.

Michigan State 13. Illinois 34. Minnesota 13. Heidelberg 17. Denison 14.

Ohio State 56, Indiana 0. Iowa 21. Wisconsin 7. Colorado 42. Kansas State 14.

Syracuse 26. Nebraska 9. sir Results Bowling Green 29, Toledo 0. Miami (Ohioi 26. Ohio University 0.

Detroit 30. Xavier 'Ohio) 20. Bradley 19. Colorado State Univ. 0.

Missouri 35. Iowa State 7. Oklahoma 47. Kansas 0. Carleton 20.

Grinnell 7. Southern Illinois 28, Illinois Normal 21. Wheaton 19. Kentucky State 13. Atigustana (Rock Island.

111.) 20. Elm- hurst 12. Culver Stockton 25. Principia (111.) 20. John Carroll 32.

Findlay 18. Bluffton 58. Ohio Northern 13. Bethany (W. Va.) 49.

Marietta fi. Midland 6. Wayne (Neb.i fi (tie). MiUikin 28. Lake Forest 14.

North Central 111 6. Carroll (Wis) 0. Wittenberg 51 Mt. Union 7. Muskingum 16.

Wooster 0. Capital 13 Akron 13 (tie). Otterbein 13. Hiram 7. Ohio Wesleyan 26, Oberlin 0.

Coe 26. Cornell ilowai 13. Buena Vista 14. Dubuque 0. Kenyon 6.

Wilmington (Ohio) fi (tie) Western Michigan 25, Youngstown 14. Albion 57. Olivet 0. Hillsdale 31. Alma 7.

Central Michigan 52, Northern Illinois 12. Hope 14, Adrian 0. Northern Michigan 20. Ferris 7. Ottawa (Kans) 13, Sterling 0.

St. John's (Minn.) 23. Augusburg 0. North Dakota 9. North Dakota Aggies 0.

South Dakota State 21, South Dakota 13. South Dakota Tech 34. Sioux Falls 0. Jamestown (N.D.) 6, Valley City Tchrs. 0.

Wartburg 14. Iowa Weslyan 7. Luther 27. Beloit 13. Baker (Kani 47.

Bethany (Kan) 21. Bethel (Kan) 21. Friends (Kan) 7. Southwest Missouri 32. Northeast Missouri 26.

FAR WEST Montana Mines Northern Montana cancelled, flu. Stanford 21. Washington State 13. California 12. Southern California 0 Oregon 14.

Washington State 13. College of Idaho 18. Lewis Clark 13. Colorado State College 20. Colorado College 14.

Western (Colo) State 48, Adams (Colo) State 6. UCLA 26. Oregon State 7. Brigham oung 0. Wyoming 0 (tie).

Denver 12. Utah 7. Montana 35. Utah State 25. Puget Sound 20.

Whitworth 12. SPAR Football Lakeshore's 105 pound team, led by Warren Howard, staged a comeback in the last quarter to down Rusheon 20 to 13. Howard scored on TD runs of 15, 2, and 46 yards. Don Lawrence added the two PAT's. Tom Carter both touchdowns for Rusheon and Lovejoy carried the ball over for the point after touchdown.

In another 105 pound contest, the A. C. Demons edged out Cedar Grove 7 to 6. Kenneth Mayfield scored the Cedar Grove TD on a 8 yard off-tackle play. Jimmy Brou-sette scored both the touchdown and the extra point for the Demons.

South Highland's Cyclones downed Claiborne 7 to 6 in the Southwestern 75 pound League. John Freeman scored for Claiborne on a three yard run through the middle of the line. Steve Ware picked up the Cyclone's TD on a 10 yard run and George Conger added the Pat. Queensborough and the A. C.

Steere Tornadoes battled to a 0-0 draw. Neither team was able to pick up enough yardage to present a threat. Queensborough had a net gain of only 7 yards on 25 carries and the Tornadoes gained 45 yards in 26 tries. -By Walt Ditzen 43kifcMi S'vlW' 'i Defeat Mark yard line. When the third period ended, Taylor, Cannon and Broadnax had used plays to move the ball to the Kentucky 31.

LSU moved on to pick up its third touchdown in the first three minutes of the final period. Taylor, 4 41 1 11 uie Udl! in ocuiiiig pusiuuii me luur-yaiu line and Cannon smashed through the right side of Kentucky's line for the score. Taylor put his season score at 53 when he kicked the point that put LSU out front, 21-0. Kentucky held the ball for just six plays mostly passes by Robertsonbefore its offense was stopped at LSU's 48. From there, LSU fans got a look at a polished Tiger second team as Purvis, Rabb, Fugler and Robinson moved down to Kentucky's 24.

Then Hughes claimed Kentucky's first pass interception when he pulled in a ball thrown by Rabb at the one-yard line and returned it to the 21. Seven plays later, LSU took over again. The Tigers didn't move, and Cannon punted to Kentucky's 21. But on their first play Rabb intercepted Hughes' pass to Gallagher and LSU remained in possession until the game ended. Kentucky 0 0 0 0 LSU 7 7 0 721 LSU scoring Touchdowns: Cannon 2 (7.

run: 2. runl; Taylor (31, run). Conversions; Taylor 3. Lions Defeat Florence by 21-19 Count FLORENCE. Oct.

19 Southeastern Louisiana College won its first game of the season tonight by rallying to down Jack Redwine and his Florence State teamates 21-19. Redwine passed 2fi yards to L. C. Faller for Florence's first touchdown and then ran five yards to score another before the first period ended. Redwine scored another touchdown in the second period on a 56-yard run.

Joe Mosey made the only Florence conversion. After recovering a fumble early in the second period, Tommy Bell tallied for SLC on an eight yard run. Wayne Dugas climaxed two long fourth period drives with scoring runs of five and two yards. Ken Bailey made the three conversions which spelled the difference. Previously, SLC had scored only 14 points in three games, tying one and losing the other two.

SLC 0 7 0 1421 Florence 13 6 0 019 SLC Scoring- Touchdawns: Bell (8, rum: Dusas 2 5, run; 2, run). Conversions: Bailey 3. Florence Scoring Touchdowns: Faller 126, pass-run from Redwine': Redwine '2 5, run; 86, run). Conversion: Mosey. TWO TRIPS EACH Three Southeast Conference schools Alabama, Georgia Tech and Tennessee each have recorded two trips to Dallas' Cotton Bowl Football game.

Each of these vis- HHD mO 3NIISIHHD iting teams has a one-and-one Cot- ton Bowl record. Oil, THOSE BOBBLES B. K. Miller (32) of Louisiana Tech is ready to wrap up this fumble by NSC halfback Charlie Hennigan (41) in the second quarter of last night's important GSC scramble. Doyan Foster (69) of Tech is also identifiable.

(Times Photo by Langston McEachern). Baylor Bears Edge Texas Tech, 15-12 at the hands of the Bulldogs. coushed the ball ud. Charlie Hen- nigan was there to gobble it up for the other side and Tech's first" thrust was dead. A few minutes later back with a kick' to the Northwestern 28, and Tech smelled-blood for sure.

McCabe and Miller picked- VP -eleven in two runnings plays, then- Bourgeois and J. Slack" dupli-. -cated for a first down on the six. From there it was Bourgeois for two. McCabe for three and.

geois for the final yard with two minutes left to halftime. Slack toed the and. La. Poly nursed a 7-a when the teams left the field. TOLAR SCORES The Demons didn't' need much time to do something about it -when action resumed.

Tolar returned the second-half kickoff to the NSC 35 and on the next play squirted through a truck-sized gap in ine miauie vi uie wait. i tuuyic i i 11 of startled Bulldogs snapped at his" heels as he passed, but nobody rpallv had a eood shot at the- fire-- plug as he bolted 65 yards for the score. Jim Bruning tied the tally, 7-7. mere was nine aciion oi nuie during the remainder of the third." period, but Northwestern struck just as suddenly and from just as far out for its next TD. "A short;" gain by Hennigan had made UUVVII mi liic limn TP Hoffpauir faded to throw' on the second play of the fourth quarter.

His fake was perfectly and Booth had ample time io tloat. behind the last Tech defender. The rangy fiankman took the perfect pitch on the 20 and outraced all challengers to the end zone to complete a 54-yard payoff This time Bruning's placement, was wide, leaving Northwestern ahead, 13-7. The Bulldogs were not to be thwarted, though, and they tied -up-the contest by marching 55 yards after Hynes had made a suck sa--yard return of the kickoff. The ground game got past midfield before McCabe went to the.

overhead with a 12 yard pitch to White a 20 yarder to Hynes that carried to the five. Hynes lugged around the right side from his two, and.it was a brand-new ball game when -Slack booted wide of the goalposts. The Demons chugged for one" first down following the only to lose the football and the football game via a fumble at their 26 that Tommy Hinton picked off. Three plays netted only four" yards and on fourth down MccaDe called the all-or-ncthing-at-all" pass, play. Hynes raced past the Northwestern defenders into the end zone and the little Minden quarterback hit him perfectly in full stride for the clinching touch.

Wayne Bourgeois kicked a place-: ment that was never needed. The Demons nad plenty ot scrap-left, and advanced past midfield-during the dying seconds oji" a desperation aerial assault by Hoft-pauir. But three more plays, lost- 25 back to the 30 all hope died. Jackson, Site ot JL, Lrame The second annual national "junior college all-American all-star football game will be played at Hinds County Memorial Stadium, Dec. 7.

Mose Simms, chairman of the selecting committee, said the game is played for Mississippi charities selected by The Clarion-Ledger and Jackson Daily News. 1 sorely needed for the Bears' big game next weekend with Texas defending Southwest Conference champion. Bobby Peters, No. 2 Baylor right halfback, was carried off the field unconscious as the first quarter ended. He was taken to a hospital.

Statistically, the game was as nearly even as the score. Baylor ground out 232 yards rushing against 236 for Tech, but the Red Raiders had an edge of 64 to 44 yards passing. Baylor 6 3 0 fi 15 Texas Tech 0 6 6 0 12 Baylor scoring Touchdown: Hickman (2. plunge), Anderson (5, pass from Humphrey). Field goal: Beall (20).

Texas Tech scoring Touchdown: Rice (1. plunge; 71. run). Fan Fare when layior, Cannon and halt- back J. W.

"Red'' Broadnax weren't running, the LSU defense kept Kentucky's Woody Herzog and Bobby Cravens bottled up and down the passing attack of quarterback Kenny Robertson. Only twice, once in the second rprinH anH acain in th final nuar. ter, did Kentucky running attack 1 THE YARDSTICK Ky. LSU. Tirst Downs 14 12 Rushing Yardage 1fi 227 Passing Yardage lin Passes.

9 15 1-7 Passes Intercepted by 1 -2 Punts 341 540 fumble Lost 3 1 Vard-s Penalized 95 80 pound through the LSU line defense. Herzong and Cravens each took a jaunt into the Tiger secon dary only to be pulled down to stop the Wildcat attack. Taylor added nine more points to his season record to push his total to 54 in tonisht's contest. The other LSU scores came on Cannon's running attack. The Tigers scored in all but the third period of the ball game.

POLISHED PLAY Quarterback Win Turner and Warren Rabb turned in their most polished ball-handling performance of the season and LSU finished the game without a single fumble from scrimmage. The only ball-handling Boo-Boo by the Tigers came when Cannon dropped a punt from Kentucky's Lou Michaels early in the third period and the Wildcats got the ball. Kentucky picked up a first down 'on the running of Walker and Cravens to the 12 in the first quarter, but bogged down on the next series. Kentucky's Michaels kicked to Cannon at the midfield stripe and LSU was on its way to the first Tiger touchdown. With Taylor and 'Cannon leading the offense, LSU picked up five first downs and moved to the Kentucky 11.

Two plays later, Cannon swept around right end to the first touchdown with just five seconds remaining in the first period. Taylor kicked the extra point that put LSU out front, 7-0. TAYLOR SCORES Taylor sparked LSU's second period when he snatched a fumble by Herzog on the Kentucky 34 and streaked down the left sideline for LSU's second touchdown with the extra point to give LSU a 14-0 lead. Cravens produced the star performance for Kentucky in the second quarter when he streaked through LSU's line to the 41 before Robinson pulled him down. Then Kentucky's Robertson launched a passing attack which ended with an LSU interception by Skinner at the Tiger 33.

CAN'T MOVE Kentucky thought it had a scoring combination in the third quarter when LSU failed to move on its 'first chance with the ball. Starting at the Wildcat 16, Michaels was forced to punt after four tries. But Cannon fumbled the kick at the 50, and Livings recovered for Kentucky at the Wildcat 43. Kentucky launched a 51 yard drive behind the running of Herzog witnessed bv a crowd of 19.500 fans that set an unofficial attendance record for the traditional. Tech got the only touchdown of a wary, fumble-marred first half, fullback Wayne Bouregois slogging across to cap a short 28-yard drive in the second quarter.

NIGHT'S AWARDS The Demons juvenated after and belted the their cruppers came out re-the halftime rest Doggies back on with two long, sensational scoring plays. Fullback Charlie "Steamrollar" Tolar breezed 65 yards on the first scrimmage play of the second half without the touch of a human hand and quarterback Dale Hoffpauir flung a 54-yard strike to end Billy Jack Booth, who wound up being voted the best lineman of the night. Those two stunners accounted for NSC's 13-7 advantage at the end of three stanzas. But nobody had reckoned sufficiently with Paul Hynes, Tech's great-looking freshman halfback from Sulphur or with McCabe either, for that matter. Hynes' splendid galloping got both of the Bulldog's last two scores the first on a two-yard end sprint, the second on a dazzling 22 end zone grab of a McCabe aerial from the 22.

The kid thereby boosted himself into "back-of-the-night" laurels in his first crack at the arch rival. Northwestern had the upper hand in total yardage, 302 to 223. also stacked up 15 first downs to Tech's 11. Of the Demon total, 170 yards were accountable to Hoffpauir's 13 completions in 18 tosses. McCabe was good on four out of five for 64 yards.

Although Booth won the line award, Tech's mighty pillar, Tommy Hinton, was also a wonder of the world as he played the route and repeatedly slammed whole sections of line back in the face of NSC ball-carriers. Guard Doyan Foster and end Sherwood White also shone for the victors, as did tackle Charlie Johnson and center Fred Wyble of the losing side. GOOD DRIVE There were a couple of punts in the ball game before the Demons mounted the first drive. It was a good one, too, mowing down official Clyde Stallcup and driving as deep as the Tech ten before Tolar was jarred loose from the football and B. K.

Miller recovered for the Bulldogs there. The rest of the first period were consumed in a hobbling duel, with honors about even. The Tide began swinging in Tech's favor when Hynes hauled in a Demon punt on his one and returned it sweetly to the 28. Bourgeois and Hynes ripped chunks out of the NSC line then, and Hynes was down for a first near the Demon ten when he I -i 1 LUBBOCK, Oct. 19 Baylor's ponderous Bears had to dip deep into their reserves to stand off underdog Texas Tech and grind out a 15-12 non-conference football victory tonight.

A 20-yard field goal by junior halfback Arthur Beall as the first half ended proved the winning margin. Swift Ronnie Rice, who scampered 71 yards for one of his two touchdowns, almost paced Tech's Red Raiders to an upset before a dad's day crowd of 23,000. The issue wasn't decided until Bill Anderson, Baylor's No. 2 right end, gathered in Louis Humphrey's five-yard toss on the goal line for the last score early in the fourth period. Baylor entered the game minus eight regulars, who were left at home with injuries, and may have suffered further manpower losses McNcese Tops Northeast bv 26-6 Count MONROE, Oct.

19 (Special) McNeese State's Cowboys continued their bid for at least a tie in the Gulf States Conference race here tonight with a 26-6 win over Northeast State. Bobby Clark scored twice for the Cowboys on runs of nine and eight yards with Rogers Hampton and Bobby Morris getting the other two. Northeast scored on a 16-yard pass play from Nahton Cametto to Joe Driscoll..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Times
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Times Archive

Pages Available:
2,338,564
Years Available:
1871-2024