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 3 Sunday, Novmbor 4, 1951 Tigers Draw WitHi Ole Mi; Field Goal Tops Tmlaee Substitute Mississippi State Back penalty almost offset a couple of short gains and Coach Slick Morton sent Polovina in to try his field goal from a slight angle to the right. It went right where it had to go and State was on top, 10-7. Hi ts Uprights From Six for Clincher Tt LANE RUSHING Player: C. G. Kent 12 34 Bailey 1 3 Dempsey 3 2 untying touch but Weidenbach killed it by bobbling the ball away L.

2 0 3 0 3 0 Tkeseibl Game Marks First Tie In History of Series By JACK FISKK Times Sports Editor Tiger Stadium, Baton Rouge, Nov. 3 Louisiana State and Ole Miss spent 60 hectic minutes trying to hand each other a football game here tonight, and finally compromised on a 6-6 tie the first deadlock ever played by the two arch-rivals in 39 years of gridiron strife. Both the Bayou Bengals and the Rebels made like juggernauts at one time or another during the frosty evening, and both had heaven-sent chances to pocket the decision. Both cold fingers kept hobbling the football, penalties Kept coming up at inopportune McGee 14 33 Weidenbacher 5 13 Clement 2 18 at the State ten. A long State pass TULANE FASS1NU Player: A.

It. Pt. By JACK F1SER Times Sports Editor Tulane Stadium, New Orleans, Nov. 3 Halfback Pete Polovina rushed into a bog-down situation in the fourth quarter this afternoon to boot the field goal that gave Mississippi State a 10-7 win over Tulane in abattle of Southeastern conference "have-nots." Weidenbacher 1 0 2 0 N. 32 3 I 33 10 18 N.

0 11 72 23 N. 9 39 35 38 51 11 N. 37 that carried to the Greenie eight was canceled out by an offside penalty and the Maroons couldn't get going again. The clubs still struggled on more or less equal terms through the third period, with neither able to mount anything like a sustained march. A break in the weather came midwav of the final period McGee 1 1 Dempsey 18 Clement 3 "1 STATE RUSHING Player: C.

G. Duplain 4 9 Stewart 17 49 Beach 14 36 Rushing 8 15 Polovina 12 40 Wilson 14 .61 Verderber 2 11 You've undoubtedly got your own ideas, friend, about this business of stalking the wild mallard in his native With both clubs sunk up to the hubs in their own mis- L. 0 10 1 0 2 5 0 haunts UVrp not out to scoff at those ideas, or even to ex- takes and a 7-7 deadlock shap-t y-, line ud the Maroons finally. Perod from behind a large eight- press a personal opinion of the sport. But, there a piece up, ie idiooub midiiy Qf manufacfure ft.

MISS. STATE PASSING when Tulane's McGee charged into'pvpp. C. lt.Pt. State had made one first down A.

a time and the result was just onejto Mart first fide toUch- me suujeci mat was ome wiuieu oy a nuiu xveu iac minwav of the final chapter and 4 4 the center of the line, but left the-verderber long soiree of frustration Falls. and has since become known as a classic of rode it within the Tulane ten-yard MISS. STATE Tu. Mis. 10 14 95 198 106 37 21 11 ball behind.

Guard Loren Ashley tulane recovered at the Wave 41 to start a First downs steadv drive downfield. Wallv sRushing yardane Beach and Bill Stewart alternated paes attempted of itinninrv chni-t hi 1 1 ctondu "I i I Tac Pnmnlptl zone, there it ground to a stop. That was when Polovina, the sturdy junior from Steubenville. Ohio, sprinted in for his clutch effort. The snap was true, the boot sailed hard and straight, and State and punted.

Roy Bailey hobbled the ball over his. own 39' and the Maroons had a big chance. It almost paid off, too, because Gil Verderber passed to Ed Evans twice for 15 yards a piece and State had a first on the Tulane nine. Two line slugs gained seven, but the Wave got mad then and took it 5 iPasses intercepted by 10 4 4 2 9 10 40.7 32.9 10 llldl jjiuuulcu imtre nipt and laid the ball on the Tulane jPunting averaee eight, first and goal to go. A delay Yards "penalized had a ball game.

Florsheim Shoes $17.95 up down drive. Barton's 17-yard gallop was the big painer on the march as the Tigers charged down to the Reb 28. There Labat ran through left tackle, shook off a couple of tacklers and set sail for the northeast coffin corner. He just made it with the TI) that put LSU in front. Stringfield's placement wag wide.

It took Ole Miss just three plays from the kickoff to tie it up. Quarterback I threw one incomple-tion and Lea Pasley took over for a 10-yard shot to Bill Bridges for a first down at the LSU 46. At that point Lear took plenty of time to let Showboat Boykin get behind the Tiger secondary, then hit him with a long, arching shot. He ran into the end zone untouched to knot the count. Boykin's extra point ioot was also "wide, leaving the score at 6-alI.

The Tigers were back in Relel territory when the third quarter ended but the Rebs took over this time at their .11. its type. Hope you'll accept the fun in it as well-meant and timely. Here 'tis, as it appeared in Cedric Adams' famed column in the Minneapolis Tribune: FIRST, YOU SPEND 50 bucks for a dog. You take care of him two or three years, train him, sit up nights with him, dig his bones out of the flower bed, chase him out of the tomato vines, pay your neighbors for the chickens he eats, and then after three years, the neighbor runs over him with the car and you pick up your own ducks.

So much for the dog. Then you should have a little equipment, such as a good gun. That's another 50 smackers. Hip boots will cost you about 20 bucks. The boots should be three feet high and waterproof, so when you wade through three feet of water, the mud, the cattails, another swamp slush won't leak out of them.

Then you start collecting shells, a shell box, a vacuum bottle to keep your coffee cold in, some game carriers, a duck call (preferably one that won't work, because it's less likely to scare the ducks away) and a hunting cap to trickle the water down the neck. HERE'S HOW Other than that tally, the two clubs enjoyed only one brief minute of offensive That came in the second period, when Tulane recovered a fumble and passed for a touchdown, only to see State roll back 85 yards -with the succeeding kickoff and knot the count. Greenie quarterback Fred Dempsey was the author of his team's score with a neat 19-yard pitch to halfback Ray Weidenbacher that got pavdirt in one play. away on tne one-toot line, nenevea of that strain, Tulane got slightly the better of the going for the next few minutes and had State backed up to its own 25 as the first period ended. The next break went to Tulane when State's Zerk Wilson fumbled and Jerome Helliun recovered at the Maroon 19.

Then the ball game abruptly exploded into offensive rat race. On the first play Dempsey passed into the right flat to Ray 'Weidenbacher, who twisted away from a grasping Bulldog and spun over in The dry spell broke for lust one minute aiifl II seconds of the third quarter, when each team poured cross a touchdown, and missed an xtra point to keep the scorelxard operators awake. LSU's score was personal triumph of Lerov Labat, the original Klack Stallion of the Bayous, who broke into the clear from the Rebel 28 and all the way to put the big homecoming crowd into jianilenonlum. Three plays later. Ole Miss Quarterback Lear, who had not completed a pass in six consecutive quarters of action, broke his string by tossing 4(1 ards to Showboat Ho.vkin for the tying touch.

Ttoth extra point placements, bv I.SU Cliff Strlngfield and Ole Miss" Itovkin, went astray. So did a couple of fielfl goal tries by String-field and the Rebels' F.d Lewcon that might have meant the ball game. The first half belonged to LSU. Gus Tinsley turned loose his crack freshman backs for the first time and they kept the Rebels slammed back on their heels with a determined aerial and ground attack that gobbled up ground in mid-field. But nothing worked Inside the Ole Miss 20.

Then, after the teams had traded their touchdowns, Ole Miss took over and monopolized the fun-making for the entire last period as coach Vaught's split-T ill ices tore the Tigers asunder. This also failed to turn the tide, mainly because of a cosily fumble The Maroon hero prior to Polo- the corner. Tommy Comeaux place- vina's jackpot placement was a race-gaited halfback named Norman Duplain who can negotiate the 100-yard sprint in 9.8 in track kicked a 7-0 lead for Tulane. That bulge lasted no longer than it takes to say Norman Duplain. iseason.

I nis dov it was wno The fast-moving kid from nearby. YOU HAVE TO have pre-season conferences as to where a Tulane kickoff 85 sizzling The rest of the ball game be Jul longed to Ole Miss, though the SAVES YOU MOXET you should go. Each guy goes out and drives 200 miles to yards to knot it an up. Aside from those moments of grandeur, the contest looked more like something down at the corner lot. Both sides showed frequent score remained the same.

A 15-yard penalty against LSU for roughing the kicker handed the Rebs a first down on the Ticer 47 and for a find the ducks and then if there are five in the party you agree on five places to go. The Little Woman spends the day baking, mending your socks, collecting your stuff, you Biloxi fielded Comeaux' kickoff on the 15, cut sharply right through a tailor-made gap, moved back to his left and outdistanced two pursuing Greenies for an 85-yard scoring scamper. Pete Polovina booted the point that tied it, 7-7. The remainder of the first half amounted to a comedy of errors as both sides fumbled, threw inter ON (in in LsH carlv tn crct enmo cler arvrl rrau-1 nut nf hfrt si Signs of having an few minutes it seemed that, break' might have been the Bengals' down-: offense, but died with a 1..: i i every effort nines uuuiig uie uigui iu vvnt-uiei uie mduu iws an imercept ion or some cjii vi not. iuu get up in me ueau ui tut: iiiyiit, waive er type ot oacKtire.

It was that kind of a ball game. ceptions and generally kicked the True to their 1951 tradition, the gong around. fall. Pasley and Muirhead clicked off 41 yards in two sprints around the exposed LSU flanks for a first at the seven. There the would-le payoff drive fizzled as Billy West 'picked up Muirhead's fumble at the fen.

whole house, use three pans, two forks, several knives, a crock of grease to fry two eggs for breakfast. You stack the dishes carefully in the sink, stumble into the car with a Greenie's managed to play the first Tulane made one big stab for the Th "Viking" Shown in Brown Grain $19.95 iuujjic cm uuiti guvs jidiL dsicep, uuee uujs, guns, vucit, A II shells and S150 worth of assorted equipment, and steal away! 1 exaS A 1 OUllipS tLX-COllege Stai'S After a punt, the Robs came surging right back for a first at the from town to beat the other guys out there. You find 47 ten that stifled a Pace Polk to Win Abilene Christian 20 bv virtue of Lear's 16-vard sneak on the Bengal sure-shot drive. In the end. tired, cold and the deadlock.

Kinssville. Texas. Nov. 3 (U.R). Camp Polk, UP).

llb sides looked through the middle. Two line ready to settle for! plunges got four yards and a Lear pass missed fire. Then Ole Miss' Texas nulled a maior Texas Two long runs and a 33-yard conference upset tonight, defeat-j touchdown pass, plus a rugged de l.SU did everything in the offensive line but score in the first period as Reb fumbles and persistent. Tiger running kept, the action deep in Mississippi country. ing Abilene Christian 14 to 13 to knock the Christians from first to third place in the standings.

quarterback Jack Fink completed 11 of 17 passes, one for a Kd Lewcon came in for a field goal attempt that sailed short, and wide. The visitors never got another big chance after that and the Tigers had moved for a couple of first downs when the final horn sounded. fense, gave the Camp Polk Armadillos an 18-7 football victory over the Fort Sam Houston, Texas, Rangers here today. Polk's fullback Alfred Wade ran 62 yards around right end for the first marker, in the second period. I A 37-yard run bv halfback Wally touchdown, to give the Javelins their surprise victory.

ACC's Jerry Mullins scored first Because every pair gives you the extra weal of a second, you save the price of one re placement and over any given period of years, those savings really mount up! That Vrhy Florsheim Quality is the soundest hoe-economy for you. from the four-vard line in the first Triplett, former Penn State star quarter. But the try for extra and a Detroit Lions regular last Doint was missed. Iseason, set up Polk's second score, other hunters standing around arguing about daylight. i THE RAIN TRICKLES down your neck, your right I foot goes to sleep, your long underwear itches and then some little d.

fool down the line shoots his gun 400 ducks get up in the dark and fly away. That's when the hunt begins. You and the other 47 hunters start in different directions to find a duck to shoot. Finally you find a swamp, grab your gun, shells, carrier, duck call, cigarets and matches, pick yourself a nice dry spot and spend an hour building a good blind. After another hour you find the ducks aren't flying there so you wade out in the middle of a swamp, accumulate 17 pounds of swamp water, muck, cattails and mud in your nice waterproof boots.

You climb on a hummock of mud and try to hide between two cattails and a piece of brush. The wind comes up and blows four inches of cold rain through your coat, your glasses cloud up, your teeth chatter, you think about your nice warm home and the Little Woman, and you wonder what d. fool invented hunting. While you meditate, 16 ducks come from behind and are two miles away by the time you get your gun up. ALL GOOD THINGS come to an end and pretty soon 3Tou actually shoot a poor, thin little teal.

He drops a quarter Board Names 32 to Grid Hall of Fame AT ramp ri-ht back for 60 'in the third quarter. Triplett was knocked out of bounds on the Fort yards in 11 plays and Reggie West ai no, ham two ana ciuarieroacK i. tit Bridges sneaked over for TD. The next, mat Ker came vwitu onuges Mail Orders Add 2 Sales Tax passed to Andv Hillhouse, all Southwest conference end from Texas who went over stand ing up. versions.

In the second quarter, ACC capped a 60-yard drive when Tommy Hinson went over from the nine. Hinson kicked the extra point. Then, Fink's long passes finding their mark. went 73 Th Tigers ftrst big chance came when tackle Rudy Yea-ger scooped in a fumble the Rebel 41. LSU moved it 21 yards before bogging down.

A few plays later Jimmy slammed around the right side for 25 vards to put the ball on the Ole Miss X. Alter an intention grounding penalty, quarterback String-field tossed to Al Guglielmo for 29 and a first at the 17. That hope also petered out mid Stringfield's attempted field goal from the IS was wide. And still Roshto kept rolling. He drove off the right side for "4 to the Rebel 27 as soon as his side got the ball back.

This time a fumble by Strlngiield stopped the drive and gave Ole Miss the ball. LSU pushed into dangerous territory once more before the first period ended, but James Kelley's interception ended that one. Tinslev's Tigers kept the initiative for most of the second quarter, but it put no points on the THE Fort Sam's Ken Shobe, another former Texas performer, made a 38-vard run in the third Ochoa yards for the game winning touch-; quarter and halfback Art down. The scoring play was a 10-'bucked over from the one. SHOE STORB Shreveport, La.

Quar 529 Marshall St. from Fink to Jackjterback Ben Thompkins booted the extra point. yard pass Sportsman. a mile awav. And while vou look for him.

four other bis This Fall You Don't You INVEST a rne ouir in fat mallards fiy over where you were not where you are. Soon along comes Joe with enough to make out your limit, so you drive 40 miles home. The Little Woman cleans the ducks, removes the heads, tails, feathers and several pounds of horrible-smelling insides and winds up with what would be about 20 cents worth of meat. She spends the next day roasting the ducks. You sit down to a big feed, and fill up on wild rice (S1.75 a pound), baked potatoes, carrots, peas, some of Aunt Sarah's cucumber pickles, cranberry jelly, pie and coffee oh yes, and the 20 cents worth of duck meat.

BOY, WHAT A THRILL! Then you sit back in the good old comfortable chair while the Little Woman wrestles with the dishes. Ah, what a hunt! It's the good old back-to-nature life. The simple life for simple well, anyhow, it's fun! Southerners Slaughter Northwestern Creiv, 76-0 New Brunswick, N. Nov. 3 (JP) Thirty-two players and 21 coaches were elected today to the football hall of fame at.

Rutgers university, scene of the first collegiate game 82 years ago. The selections by the honors court were the first for the project. Chiefly they were of famous figures of the past century or early part of the present era. Nine of the eleven men selected by the nation's sports writers and sportscasters for the Associated Tress all-time AIl-American team were included in the list. AH of the players chosen for the first three AP teams were nominated for consideration in the hall of fame.

Other elections from the list are expected to follow. The .12 players chosen were: William M. ilollenbeck, Penn; Hector Cowan. Princeton; Col. Charles D.

Dalev, Army. Walter Eckersall, Chicago; George (lipp. Notre Dame; Harold 'Red-' Grange, Illinois; T. Trux-ton Hare. Penn; V.

V. "Pudge" Heffelfinser, Yale; W. V. "Fats" Henry, Washington and Jefferson; Frank Hinkev, Yale; Harold "Brick" Mueller. Call-fornia; Bronko Nagurski, Minnesota: Krnie Nevers, Stanford; Adolf "Germany" Shulz.

Michigan: Admiral John II. Brown, Navy; George Wilson. Washington: Alvin "Bo' McMillin, Centre: "Chick" Ilarley, Ohio Frank Kinard. Mississippi; Kd Mahan. Harvard; Ted Coy, Yale: Don Ilutson.

Alabama; Sam Texas Christian: Homer Hazel. Rutger A. A. Stage. Yale; "Duke" Salter.

Iowa; Karl "Dutch" Clark, Colorado college: Nile Kinnick, Iowa; and Elmer Layden, Notre Dame. roreboa rd. At one point the Rental moved down to the Mississippi 32 on a Mvard from Stringfield to Warren Virgets. Another time a delay penalty enabled ISU to make It a "first on the Reb Nothing came of either opportunity, and the half ended with both goal lines untrodden. Early In the third period Ole Miss moved into Tier territory for the first time as Lindy Callahan parked his mates down to the Bengal 16 on straight running plays.

Allen Muirhead was smeared for a big loss on a fourth down play and LSU took over at the 22 HART SCHAFFNER MARX by America's Newest Sensation en wheels! Hattiesburg, Nov. 3 Mississippi Southern. (Special) 'one to Dick Caldwell for 10 yards defending and one to Tony Rouchon, cover end you'll get a new kind of suit that wears and holds its shape and press season after season in the new fiqure-flattering 2-button model Gulf States conference champions. ing 13 vards, Harley-Davidson 125 A the careful, expert needlework in all sizes. rebounding with a vengeance after last week's upset loss to Chattanooga, scuttled Northwestern State Louisiana.

76-0. before a chilled 6.300 homecoming crowd here at All adds up to years of satisfaction fair enough dividend for a suit investment. Miles To Gallon GORMAN'S HARLEY-OA VtDSON SALES. INC ISOi Texas Avenue The WARWICK MODEL Reflects the new trend to th natural shoulder look. It's smart without being flashy, conservative without being stuffy.

It's light on padding, strong on th kind of fine tailoring that's mad Hart Schaffner Marx clothes so famous. The Warwick is available in a wide range of fabrics. Mitcherson, besides connecting with Faulkner on the 22-yard last play of the tilt, drilled Boling. a freshman, on a 10-yard payoff pass. Eddie Kauchick.

used primarily as a linebacker, drove over from four yards out. Bucky McElroy, the Southerner ball carrying ace. was used sparingly, and didn't play offensively until the second half, since the Southerners play the Bama Crimson Tide next week. He averaged eight yards per try on 44 yards net. Ray, the GSC's ace passer before tonight, missed 15 straight flips, mostly because his receivers dropped the pigskin.

They made their lone threat in the fourth period, onlv to see Huston Oakes, fleet soph back, snare a Ray toss in the end zone and race 63 yards deep into his own territory. The Southerners scored shortly after. The Mississippians added 445 yards rushing and gained 170 yards In the air. Their ace punter. Hart, did not have to kick all night.

Ray completed eight of 35 flips, while Southerners' four passers. Legros, Mitcherson. McHenry and Walker added 11 for 17 for their best night of the season. The Demons gained 85 yards on the ground, racking up 11 first Faulkner field Saturday night. Playing offensive men defensive-, ly and defensive men offensively to confuse Alabama scouts, gave them their first whitewashing of the season.

Captain Krwin Kaylot. senior Vicksburg fullback and Junior End Elmo Lang led the 11-touchdown scoring parade with a pair of markers apiece. The Southerners scored in the first 43 second of play on Granville (Scrappy) Harts smashing 56-yard spurt. Only in the second quarter did the attack faulter. They led 30-0 at the quarter.

37-0 at halftime, 57-0 at the end of the third period. Coach Pie Vanns charges added their final score on the final play of the game as Soph. Quarterback Jimmie Mitcherson pitched his second scoring pass of the night, this time to Cecil Faulkner in the end zone. Besides Baylot, Lang. Hart and Faulkner, Tonv Rouchon, Dick Caldwell.

Lindy Stewart, Eddie Kauchick and Hermon Boling added six pointers. Webb Farrish added Cash in a Flash on 50 79 Diamonds Luggage Cameras Watches Radios Eetc. Watch and Jewelry Repairing Factory-Trained Personnel All Work Guaranteed at Reasonable Prices OTHER HART SCHAFFNER FROM $69.30 to ft MARK SUITS $110. C. G.

Creamer AW Manager Sf eight extra points and Center Dave downs to Southerners 20 all told. Allen added two more on a safety) It was a hot time in Hattiesburg I when he tackled passer M. tonight for the Southerners. Kav the end zone, OHAT CLOTHING CO. 523 MARSHALL WARD BLDG.

Charge Accounts Invited WINS 22 New York (SF). Sal Maglie became the first Giant pitcher to win 22 games since Carl Hubbell turned the trick in 1937. Maglie's record came in 1951. PHONE 2-1677 i Baylot scored on runs of nine and jlO yards out. Lang snared a 25-i scoring pitch from Tom Legros and went 42 yards on an end around play.

Freshman Leemon McHenry pitched two payoff flips for scores, 319 TEXAS ST. v..

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:
2,338,316
Years Available:
1871-2024