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The Jackson Sun from Jackson, Tennessee • 34

Publication:
The Jackson Suni
Location:
Jackson, Tennessee
Issue Date:
Page:
34
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2-C THE JACKSON SUN, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1958 Georgia Tech Defeats Clemson Eleven 13-0; Floyd Faucette Stars Cil' mi Wara Butt to Si -f-H i) i4L JL form. A sore ankle kept him out of practice all week and his timing particularly on passes appeared off. Tech scored again in the second period after a 25-yard pass from Joe Delany to Jimmy Beasley gave Tech a first down on the one. Fred Braselton sneaked it over from there. The victory over a team ranked 17th nationally in the Associated Press poll spurred Tech's hope for a Gator Bowl bid, provided they beat Alabama and Georgia in the two remaining games.

Clemson 0. 0. .0 0 0 Tech 0 13. 0 013 Tech-Faucette 54 run (kick failed) Tech-Braselton 1 run (Wells kicked) Orvis Sigler, a 1948 South West Missouri State graduate, is in his fourth season as coach mirmf nil i i ii Tt i if "'fif ii a.v vvv. Tech is Gerald Burch, right end.

Other Clemson players are: Doug Dagneault (43), left halfback, and Lou Cordileone (74), tackle. Tech won 13-0. (AP Wirephoto) TECH TOUCHDOWN Georgia Tech quarterback Fred Braselton (hidden by mass) sneaks over the goal from the Clemson one to score the Yellow Jackets' second touchdown yesterday at Grant field. No. 86 for By MERCER BAILEY ATLANTA (AP) Fleet Floyd Faucette put on one of the greatest running exhibitions on Grant Field in many a game Saturday, and led Georgia Tech to a 13-C football victory over Clemson, His 54-yard run for Tech's first touchdown-was a beauty.

Zipping through a hole on the right side, he danced away from Clemson linebackers, cut across the field to the far sideline and simply out ran the angling Tiger secondary men. He chipped in with several other big rains, spinning away from tackier after tackier. He rolled up 116 yards in 10 carries, Tech's superior overall speed and alert defensive play were the big factors. Center Maxie Baugh-am turned in a magnificent defensive job, intercepting one pass and making several key tackles to stall Clemson's power machine Tackle Billy Shaw and fullback Marvin Tibbetts also were trojans on defense, helping hand the Tigers their first shutout in 15 games, Clemson, pointing for the Atlantic Coast Conference title and 8 bowl bid, undoubtedly was handicapped because star quarterback Harvey White was not in top YES SIR HAVE We have a Complete Line of Oxygen Therapy Equipment and 7 Cases fensice thrills in the last 1:42 after getting the ball on Vanderbilt's 43, the only time the Wildcats started a drive in enemy territory. Sub quarterback Jerry Eisaman appeared trapped but got loose to pass 16 yards to halfback Bobby Cravens on the Vandy 27, Glenn Iowa State Beaten by 20-0 Margin By JACK DONOVAN Associated Press Sports Writer AMES, Iowa (AP Iowa State lost a Big Eight Conference game to perennial champion Oklahoma as expected Saturday but the Cy clones gained football respectabu ity in the process.

The three-touchdown 20-0 vic tory was less than Oklahoma figured to win by but few of the 000 fans thought the undermanned Cyclones could stay 60 minutes with the talent-rich Sooners. Two Iowa State fumbles in the third quarter which Oklahoma converted into easy touchdowns were the big margin of scoring difference. The aggressive Cyclone defense forced Oklahoma into numerous fumbles and three times Iowa State stopped potential Sooner scoring drives deep in Cyclone ter ritoryonce on the 1 and again on the 5. Three times Iowa State ad vanced boldly against the nation's 9th ranked defense only to bog down on the Sooner 12-yard line, the 36 and the 18. Jimmy Carpenter scored twice for the Sooners and Bobby Boyd accounted for the other touch down.

All came on short yardage plays. The triumph was Oklahoma's fourth without defeat in the conference and left little doubt it will again represent the Big Eight in the Orange Bowl New Year's Day. It was Iowa State fifth con ference setback. Oklahoma 7 0 13 020 Iowa State 0 0 0 00 Top-Ranked Iowa Hammers Minnesota 28-6, To Win Big Ten Championship And Earn Trip to Rose Bow) I DUCK HUNTERS BE PREPARED! Co by Johnsey's Sporting Goods 443 N. Royal I.C.R.R.

Phone 7-1082 Equipment for every Job! ATTENTION WELDERS 1 Used Portable Welding Machine 6 Used Torch Outfits Complete By BILL HUDSON LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) Kentucky and Vanderbilt battled to a scoreless tie in a Southeastern Conference football game played in the rain here this afternoon. Slippery footing and rugged line play wiped out an expected high-scoring contest, but the 28,000 who stayed to the finish saw the Ken-tuckians get one last opportunity after the game apparently was over. This do-or-die effort expired though, when guard Pascal Benson's attempted field goal from the Vanderbilt 24 fell far short. A field goal try by center Joe Bates from the Kentucky 20 in the fisst period spelled an end to Vandy's most serious march.

The deadlock spoiled hopes of either team achieving a high fin ish in tne SEC race. It was Van-derbilt's third tie in conference play. League rules specify a tie counts half a game won, half a same lost. Kentucky's chances of finishing even in the Dixie race were killed because the Wildcats now have won two, lost four and tied one with one to go. Kentucky had the slight edge statistically, gaining 201 yards to Vandy's 168.

But neither side ever forced the other to put up a goal line stand. Kentucky packed most of its of- ocs (Continued pom Page 1-C) ful of police challenged them, and two unidentified men started fishtins. There was almost no conflict between Tennessee and Chatta nooga students, however, and the riot seemed to be directed toward the police themselves. Traffic Officer Johnny Collins. 26, tried to arrest the fighters and was struck in the head with rock.

He suffered a concussion. Patrolman Bobby Pointer, 28, suffered a possible broken foot when the patrol wagon transmis sion exploded, and Policeman Vernon Waggoner 30, was cut with a knife on his right hand. Pointer, Garrison said, also was struck in the head with a soft drink bottle as he hobbled from the wagon after its clutch struck his foot. I thought it was an excellent football game and I'm sorry it had to end on such a sorry note," Garrison said. He had high praise for OlgiatL "Mayor Olgiati mounted the hood of an outomobile in the mob and did his best to stop the rioting," Garrison said.

"He tried to be a peacemaker but failed." The 50 or so officers on hand at the game saw that Olgiati's plea and their own efforts were getting nowhere, and radioed for help. More than 100 state, county and city officers, as well as two city fire companies, answered the call for reinforcements with sirens screaming. The policemen tossed tear gas into the crowd, as firemen hooked up their hose and sprayed water onto the crowd. Statistics KNOXVTLLE (AP) Statistics By JIM KLOBUCHAR MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Unbeaten Iowa won the Big Ten football championship and a trip to the Rose Bowl Saturday by hammering winless Minnesota 26-6 behind Willie Fleming's two spectacular scoring sprints. Fleming sped 63 and 46 yards in the first half to propel the nation's second-ranked football power to its sixth victory and fifth in the Big Ten.

The Hawks' only blemish is a 13-13 tie with Aii Force. Iowa's victory, linked with the Ohio State-Purdue tie and Wisconsin's triumph over Northwestern, mathematically clinched the Hawkeyes' fifth Big Ten championship and their second in three years. Fleming, a sophomore and 10-second speedster, combined with quarterback Randy Duncan to deliver the big offensive salvos that dealt Minnesota its 10th straight defeat. Fleming's two- touchdown shots were near duplicates of Rout Blue Devils 50-18 Mid South Oxygen Co. We Have Everything that it takes to Weld Anything Jackson, Tenn.

Phone 2-2131 his 61 and 73-yard scoring dashes which helped defeat Michigan a week Late in the first period he slipped through a small opening at left tackle, burst away from a line backer and boomed down the sidelines to score from the 46. Fleming hit the same hold mid-way through the second quarter, got a one-step lead on the Gopher corner line backer and outraced everyone into the end zone. Duncan, the Hawkeyes' All-America quarterback a i-date, fired an 11-yard scoring pass to Bob Prescott later in the quarter and then hit Don Norton from the 10 in the fourth quarter. Minnesota got its lone touchdown in the third period when second string quarterback Larry Johnson connected with halfback Bill Kauth on a 30-yard pass. Minnesota's all sophomore backfield didn't have the speed or finesse to bother seriously the tough Hawkeye line.

Iowa 6 15 0 728 Minnesota 0 0 6 06 IT 7-ox. Army. Duck HUNTING COAT Reg. $11.20 HiV-Tl" 'li 'i -iiTrnrri i nm i lira neon Ed Shaw ran for four, a pass fell incomplete, and Eisaman was trapped on his own 40 as the game ended. The Commodores were penal ized for being off sides however, and Kentucky got another chance after time expired.

Benson's kick fell short. Kentucky had only one other opportunity, moving 71 yards in the first quarter to Vanderbilt's 17 before Lowell Hughes fumbled and tackle Larry Wagner recovered for Vandy. Vanderbilt in the same period moved 48 yards to Kentucky's 20 but this threat died on a short field goal attempt by Bates. Vandy had another golden op portunity just before the half, starting from the Kentucky 34 but could gain only eight yards be fore losing the ball on downs. The Commodores final opportun ity in the last period came when guard George Deiderich pounced on Rich Wright's fumble at the Kentucky 27.

Four plays netted one yard and Kentucky took pos session. Kentucky's defense throttled Vanderbilt after the first quarter and did an especially creditable job on 205-pound halfback Tom Moore. Moore, second in SEC rushing, was limited to 27 yards in 18 runs. Fullback Jim Butler carried the brunt of Vandy's ground attack, gaining 46 yards in 12 plays. Cravens was Kentucky's top ground gainer with 54 yards.

Half backs Charles Sturgeon and Shaw added 45 and 41 respectively. Kentucky's two conference wins were achieved in the rain. A light drizzle started just before game time and at times came down heavily. LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) Sta tistics of the Kentucky-Vanderbilt game: Vanderbilt Kentucky First downs 7 11 Rushing yardage 118 177 Passing yardage 50 24 Passes 5-10 2-5 Passes intercepted by 2 0 Punts Fumbles lost 1 0 3 Yards penalized 15 45 LSU Tigers J.

W. Brodnax driving over from the one. Guard Larry Kahlden grabbed a Blue Devil fumble on the Duke 40 and LSU moved for a touchdown in five Rabb hit end Billy Hendrix for eight yards and a score, then tagged Hendrix with another pass for a two-point conversion. This climaxed a 22- point second quarter for LSU. Halfback Johnny Robinson slashed 45 yards off right tackle for a third-quarter Tiger touch down and Cannon romped 25 yards for another in the fourth quarter.

The final LSU tally came on an 8-yard run by Durel Matherne after Don Purvis raced a punt back 56 yards. Duke scored in the third quarter on a 12-yard pass from Brodhead to end Claude Moorman and in the fourth quarter on a one-yard smash by Carlton. Duke .6 0 6 1418 LSU 6 22 8 1450 Shore Stars For UC 11 1 DYERSBURG, Tenn. Roger Shore, Union City's ace back, blasted into the end zone from three yards out with only 21 seconds remaining in the game to give the UC eleven a 20-13 victory over Dyersburg here Friday. The Trojans had fought back from a 13-0 deficit to tie the Tornado with a touchdown by George Rice in the third quar ter and another by Ray Guess in the fourth period.

A poor punt set up the first score and a sustained march accounted for the other. Rice kicked the extra point that knotted the score. Earlier in the game, in the first quarter, hore scored for union city on a pass-ana-run play good for 45 yards. In the second period Don Bishop scor ed for the Tornado and added th PAT to give the visitors a halftime bulge. Following Dyersburg's tying points, Union City put together a long scoring drive which paid off in victory in the final seconds of play.

UNION CITY 20 Ends Lannon, Milner, I Blakemore. Tackles McCowan, Tally, Grasfeder I Guards Williams, Fritts, Finch. Centers Stone, Fox. Backs Owens, Shore, Bish op, L. Grasfeder, Kirkland, Ed-mundson, Quillen.

DYERSBURG 13 Ends Armstrong, Page, Agee Tackles Tidwell, Johnson, Rogers. Guards George, Ryland, Gurley, Gardner. Centers Guttery, Tweedy. Backs Finley, George Rice, Glen Rice, Guess, Clymer. Score by quarters: Union City 6 7 0 720 Dyersburg 0 0 6 713 Scoring touchdowns: Union iCty Shore (2), Bishop.

Dyersburg Rice, Guess. Scoring extra points: Union iCty Bishop (2). Dyersburg Rice. NHL Results By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Chicago 4, Detroit 3 en a vour mm these By W. B.

RAGSDALE BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) Top-ranked Louisiana State, behind 6-0 early in the first quarter, snarled back with a parade of touchdowns Saturday night to shatter Duke 50-18 for the unbeaten Tigers' eighth straight victory Duke took a 6-0 lead early in the first quarter when George Dutrow tossed an eight-yard running pass to Wray Carlton in the end zone. But LSU. to the delight of 63,000 partisan fans, knotted the score in 41 seconds on a 63-yard pass play. Billy Cannon outran the Blue Devil defenders and Warren Rabb hit him with a perfect pass.

The "Chinese Bandits," LSUs defensive specialists, put the Tigers ahead in the second quarter after guard Em lie Fournet blocked a Duke quick kick and end Gaynell Kinchen pounced on the ball on the Blue Devil one. Merle Schexnaildre, the "Bandits" linebacker, smashed over on the first play and Cannon came in to kick the extra point. The Tigers took over a few minutes later when a Duke kick rolled out on the Blue Devils 35. LSU scored in four plays with fullback STUDENTS l' on $8.95 of the Chattanooga Tennessee Chat Tenn First downs 14 8 Rushing yardage 130 64 Passing yardage 117 74 Passes 12-20 4-8 Passes intercepted by 1 0 Punts 33.1 37.7 Fumbles lost 2 1 Yards penalized 55 25 Humboldt' Wins Sixth HALLS, Tenn. Hall dropped its 10th straight game of the year here Friday night as the Humboldt Rams rambled to a 32-6 triumph in a Big Ten Conference tilt.

The teams fought on an even basis through the first 12 minutes of action with the score standing 6-6 going into the' sec ond quarter. The Rams cracked out a pair of scores in the second period to leave the field at halftime on top 18-6. Humboldt scored once in each of the last two quarters to run up the final 32-6 count. Sub back Charlie Harrison was the only Ram with more than one TD as he scored a pair. Humboldt has now won six and lost two in loop competition.

HUMBOLDT 32 Ends Boals, Couch, Gardner, Trimmer. Tackles Smith, Thompson, D. Henley. Maitland. Guards Riggins, Parker.

Centers Vasquez, Keenan. Backs Newell, B. Henley, Warren, Hawks, Bunch, Harri son, Ma this. HALLS 6 Ends Ward, Belton, Young er. Tackles Jennings, Nolen.

Guards Hurt, Nunn, Koonce. Keene. Centers Davis, Murchison. Backs McGarrity, Alley. Voss, Pickens, Baker, Grady, FbUlips, Tatum.

Score by quarters: Trenton 6 12 7 732 Halls 6 0 0 06 Scoring touchdowns: Hum boldtHarrison (2), Henley, Bunch, Hawks. Halls Pickens. Scoring extra points: ilenley (2). South Side, Chattanga In Bowl Tilt KINGSPORT (AP) Chattanooga Central and Memphis South have signed to play in the fifth annual Exchange Bowl here Thanksgiving night. The selection-was announced officially Saturday by John Gibson, chairman of the team selection com mittee.

Earlier plans for a leading South Car olina high school team to meet Central had to be revised be cause of a Sotuh Carolina rule against high school teams par ticipating in post-season games. Both Central and South Side hrve perfect records so far this season. Central has won seven games and South Side eight. Central will meet Oak Ridge next Friday in its only date before coming here. South Side has a game Friday against Whitehaven and will close its regular campaign the next week against Memphis Chris tian Brothers.

Austin Peay Victorious CLARKS VILLE Tenn. (AP) Austin Peay came from be hind three times yesterday to defeat favored East Tennessee 25-19 in the victors' homecom ing game. East Tennessee's Buccaneers took an early first period lead when Jim Krause raced 30 yards for a touchdown and Bill Sowders added the extra point. me Governors came back with a 48 yard scoring pass from Moulton Burlison to Bert Simpson and a placement by Jim Harrington to tie it up. Neither side scored points aft er touchdowns again.

In the second quarter. East Tennessee again scored. Jack Burnett pushing it over from the three, and again Austin Peay knotted it with a pass from Burlison, this time to Clifford Simms from nine yards out. This time the Governors had to wait till the final quarter to even it up, and then made the game-winning extra touchdown. A five-yard scoring pass from Pratt Busby to Bob Monnet tied the score.

The winning tally came hard. The Governors lost the ball on downs on the Buc five with time running out, but on the first ETSC play Jim Harrington pounced on a fumble. Ted Potter took it over with two Reg. $4.95 GUM CASES SUDTS jlff Imitation Leather Cover Padded Flannel Lined Zipper Opening Carrying Handle 1 1-oz. Army Duck HUNTING COAT $13.95 1 1-oz.

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Pages Available:
850,592
Years Available:
1936-2024