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The Lincoln Star from Lincoln, Nebraska • 56

Publication:
The Lincoln Stari
Location:
Lincoln, Nebraska
Issue Date:
Page:
56
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Tr-yT', wnwiWii i i.iMi I i wrii. i tmmmmmM 1 Ulim. lull J' I' 111 'i III v- 'TvV 3 2 Sept. 6, 1970 Lincoln Sunday Journal and Star fiants Tagge, Ingles, Kinney, JlMOtllCl Eagles Roth Ro(d)gers Shine Cont. From Page 1G when he tried to pitch the ball forward to uc" punt, Tagge directed the Reds to a 68-yard a teammate after being stopped and had the scoring march in nine plays.

pitch picked off by an opponent. Rushinrdafl. 4i A part of the W1 mt The lowest point for the offenses came early passing yardigi i 24i UP by 8 TaK8e to Guy In8les Pas that covered in the second half when In the span of seven pet 14-214 14-J4-I 31 yards and junior Jeff Kinney collected the plavs there were four interceptions with 'un, flnal 18 tnree goin8 over defensive backs Tom McClelland, Bill Kosch, s-a from a yard out for the third touchdown. Gary Hollstein and Joe Blahak picking off And the Reds marched 77 yards for the one each. Princeton, N.J.

fourth tally, taking 14 plays to do it with The top defensive unit slipped to its lowest Quarterback Fran Tarkenton now directing the attack. Joe Orduna, ebb when It permitted the third offensive unit, completed his first 12 passes showing no ill effects from two knee operations, running Wake Forest plays off play cards, and threw for three went the final 10 yards with 3:28 left in the to drive the length of the field against it. touchdowns Saturday as the half to make the count read at intermission: The drive that started at the Whites 33 New York Giants beat the Reds 23, Whites 0. wasn't stopped until a third down fumble at Philadelphia Eagles, 27-7, in a Whites finally got on the scoreboard the one-yard line was recovered by the No. National Football League exm- innt5chird bition game at Palmer Stadium.

had to borrow Red team PlaCe kickr Paul mtn your scout squad can do that to PhiiaiMnhia in Roge" to do it. whafs supposed to be your best defensive HkJrfant. The Men-toed senior, whose longest field players, than you've got to be concerned," preseason play and the Giants goal is 55 yards one the up. raney pointed out. now stand 2-M.

The loss rights from 52 yards away to prove he's ready But he did see one ray of sunshine even niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiti (or the season- also was a perfect five for in ftiat dismal performance by the defense. five on extra point kicks Saturday. "Runty did a good job of running the third Wire Failure Jones then directed the longest drive of the team," he noted. The sophomore from Ogallala Because of a breakdown in same, a 91-yard march In 12 plays, hitting had been moved back to quarterback from the nationwide Associated Kinne witn 18 and 43'yard PaS8 t0 halfback only this week. Press sports wire, the stories 8obblc UP the yardage and Orduna carried Although disappointed in the lack of con-on the nine other NFL exhibi- over from the five.

sistency shown Saturday, the Husker head football games played Sophomore sensation Johnny Rodgers set up coach offered one reason why consistency may Saturday night were not trans- next touchdown by returning a punt 49 have been lacking. mitted. yards to tne white 11 and 0rduna scored "We've put in more plays both offensively Scores of games which could his third touchdown of the day three plays and defensively this season than ever before," be obtained: later, from 10 yards away. he said, "And maybe we're trying to do too Sophomore fullback Bill Olds wound up the many things. Pro Scores scorinS for the day when he caPPed a 46-yard "This week we're going to cut down what march by bulling over from the two-yard line we're trying to do and just work on what we with 27 seconds left- Plan to use against Wake Forest." Giants 7 If- addition to Rodgers' 49-yard scamper that Devaney said he expected all the injured B.mma Detroit' s2t the sixth TD the sbty speedster players back by mid-week at latest, but in- waswngton 2, Miami 2i also set fans hearts to pounding on a couple d'cated Saturday's scrim ma wac fVto WILLIS VAN SICKLE STAFF PHOTO Cornhusker halfback Joe Orduna (31), sweeps left end for one of his three touchdowns in Reds' 47-3 win over Whites Saturday.

Stacked up in the line is defensive tackle Tom Robisch (68). Three Clubs Still Bunched NL Eastern Race Tightens homer helped the Yankees down the Indians. Reggie Jackson's grand slam homer in the eighth paced the A's to their fifth in a row against the Royals. Rookie Milt Wilcox, starting his first major league game, still got credit for the Reds' victory although relieved in the fifth. In other National League games, Jim Wynn's two-run homer led Houston over Los Angeles 7-2 and Bob Bailey drove in two runs to lead Montreal to a 6-0 victory over St.

Louis. Also, Atlanta claimed a 5-2 rain-plagued victory over San Francisco in the first game of a twi-night doubleheader. The game, decided by two home runs by the Braves' Bob Tillman, was delayed by rain three times totaling two hours and 13 minutes. By Associated Press The Pittsburgh Pirates clung to their narrow lead in the close National League East baseball scramble with the help of the New York Mets Satur-day. The Pirates beat Philadelphia twice 4-3 and 6-4 after the Mets had defeated the Chicago Cubs 5-3 The first Pittsburgh victory over the Phillies was the completion of Friday night's game that had been suspended after six innings because of technical difficulties with an automatic tarpaulin.

They followed by tripping the Phils again in the regularly scheduled game. As a result the Pirates now lead the Cubs by Vh games with a record of 73-64. The Cubs, 72-66, are half a game ahead of the Mets who are two games back of the Pirates at 71-66. The Pirates held a 4-1 lead when Friday's game was suspended and they hung on despite Tim McCarvers two-run homer. Three runs in the fifth, featured by Willie StargeU's RBI triple, put the Bucs ahead for good In the regular tilt.

Jerry Grote's two-run double in the ninth gave the Mets a four-run lead and enabled them to stave off the Cubs' rally in their half of the ninth. It took Tug McGraw's relief pitching to pull the Mets through. Cincinnati beat San Diego 6-2, Oakland tripped Kansas City 8-3, the New York Yankees overcame Cleveland 3-1 and Baltimore shaded Boston 3-2 in other day games. The Orioles beat the Red Sox on Dave Johnson's eighth inning homer. Bobby Murcer's Missouri Football Team Trimmed ith Sophomore Barber ion Roster rushers.

"A couple of guys on the freshman team -needed haircuts," Bastable said Friday. "I told them -1 knew a good barber and gave them the address. When they got there, the barber was waiting' me. "The word gradually spread among the squad. Right now, I'm cutting seven or flight heads a week.

do it in my room. I've got everything a barber's got except a barber's chair. Bastable said he can give the Tigers "whatever kind of haircut they want a razor cut or some of these wild styles, or just a regular haircut." Columbia, Mo. iSh- The Missouri Tigers should be the best groomed college football team the country this season. Wherever they go, they take their barber with them.

The barber is Jack Bastable. He's a sophomore and a specialist, not only with the clippers bnt also as a punter and field goal and extra point kicker. On the Missouri Roster. Bastable is listed as a tailback, and he may do some running with the ball, too. Bastable, a 5-foot-ll, 190-, pounder from Arlington Heights, 111., first started cutting the Tigers' hair last season when he was one of the freshman team's best Bastable is known among the Missouri squad as "Jack, The Barber." lot of guys don't have time to go to regular barber shops during the football season," Bastable said.

"I give pretty decent haircuts. Every time a guy needs a haircut, the rest of the players get on him to see Jack, The Barber. "Football players are really fussy about their hair. When I'm cutting a player's hair, he gets up five or six times to look into the mirror to see how I'm coming. If a player's in the hospital or can't get to me, I can get to him." Bastable said he started bartering on bis brothers.

He Shoemaker Ties Mark Del Mar, Calif. W) Blanked on his first four mounts, jockey Bill Shoemaker came through in the ninth and final race at Del Mar Saturday to tie Johnny Longden's lifetime record of 6,032 winners. Cheered on by 18,992 fans, the largest Del Mar crowd in four years, the determined Shoemaker broke on top with Esquimal, the favorite, and made it a wire-to-wire victory in the 1-1-16-mile run on the turf course. Shoemaker will resume his efforts to break the record set by the retired Longden on Monday's Labor Day card with seven mounts. Longden's last winner was at Santa Anita in the San Juan Capistrano Handicap March 12, 1966.

Huff Sets Pace At Ager Meet John Huff with a 63 is leading the Jim Ager Memorial Golf Tournament after the first round at Holmes Golf Course Saturday. The tourney will conclude today with 18 holes at Holmes. John Hulf 80-17 43 Al Wellman 86-20 46 Carl Ruby 75-7369 Wayne Johnson 80-1268 Bill Lien 77- 7-70 Don Hergert 00-1070 L. W. Nelson 82-1171 Bill Waggoner Steve Sandelln 16-1571 Rinne Wilhelm Darryl Bailey 62-10-72 Jim Howat 98-26-72 Daryl Vandehoef 83-1372 of other plays, of contact drills.

CFL Ho returned a punt 70 yards for a touchdown, "We can't afford to bump them anvmore omaha 3i, Fort worth 2i but nad jt nuujfjed by a clipping he said. "We've got to let those that are lllillliiliniiillllilliiillllllllliliililillliiiiiiillllliliiiiiii went 48 1 yards with a handoff from Jones, hurt get healed and keep from getting anybody snapped a five-game win bHt tn showed he was still a sophomore else bumped up." streak for the Eagles in the Tarkenton connected with I A AA Lc a Pancho rookie tight end Bob Tucker Yldy DC YY tOViP for New York's first two 1 ItQTriof rirl Tucker, fighting for a spot I iCZZS" By Don ForsytJie on the Giants' roster, grabbed Sf'Ttf i HV Pi li a six-yard pass with 6:35 left 13 IlUC in the first quarter, after a iM-JUiaa drive that took 8'2 minutes. t. Fot Hills, N.Y. ffl He took a 50-yard pass with Plled UP es hat Nicola Pmc, a tennis gypsy 48 seconds left in the same seemed that lon8 Bl Eht from Yugoslavia with a temper quarter for another Giants aImost as quick as his racket -rSnts snored flPaln in Remember back in 1SG6 when Michigan State and Notre cut down ffancbo Gonzales ui LnlnA LarV.7n ol Dame P11 ttat 1M0 tie the Fighting Irish were 6-2, 7-8, 7-5 in the third round of receiver acquired from San A conducted by the Naticnal Coliegiate Sports Service Francisco.

oI the top teamg of 1960s piaced 1966 Michigan always limiP'iiHftl SSAr'SrS Vote, No, Measure of Succes, Morrison with 1:15 left in the In the same poll, voters tabbed the top five coaches Jtrone wd ft I. JTJSL first ha for his first in- 0f the decade as Bear Bryant of Alabama, Darrell Royal complete pass of the after- of Texas, Woody Hayes of Ohio State, John McKay of Southern noon. The Giants quarterback Cal and Ara Parseghian of Notre Dame in that order. The age difference actually is then failed to complete three years. Pilic is 31, a racket more passes before the half Yet only three of those five rank In the top five in craftsman who has beaten the ended.

winning percentage during the decadte of the 1960s. Bryant best, and Pancho, once the New York closed out its first was the winnlngest coach in the 60s with an .836 percentage; master of all he surveyed, is a half scoring with a 22-yard Royal was second with .810 and Hayes fifth with .758. slowing 42. fieldgoalbyPete Gonzales blamed his defeat Gogolak. McKay was eighth at .743 and Parseghian back in 14th on the center court r- t.

n97 Place witn a -732 waning percentage. Nebraska's Bob Devaney turf. PhTadehia with a .790 mark ranked third and Frank Broyles of Arkansas P1M at .771 was fourth in winning, but failed to make the top a JJ eA NY Tucker 50 pass trom Ta-kentor. fjve in the Voting. aJTJ.

W-f fc- pas, trom Tarkenton In another survey conducted by the NCAA on defense towSRorlvirihMfr0; and its relation to success, study showed that a good Sd5gdht" ny-fg Gogoak a. pass defense is not necessarily a key to winning, but that Tnm Mir tMlseley good rushing defense and a good total defense does lead SLf AusS to winning records. Three of America's principal Hf 1T During the 1960s, the top three teams in pass defense, threats Arthur Ashe, Jf lUliJIlY Toledo, Dayton and Kent State, all lost more games than Stan Smith and Clark Graebner I they won. The only major colleges in the top ten In pass entered the fourth round If defense wene all members of the Big Eight and all three along with Pilic, Tom Okker of I -r 0111110' posted winning records In the 60s. Holland and Roy Emerson of Australia A fourth) Qm Nebraska was the fourth best team in the nation in pass Richey, plays his third round I PI defense in the 1960s, allowing only 97.3 yards per game while match Sunday as does favored L'VyWVlv Missouri ranked sixth with a 101.9 allowance and Oklahoma Rod Laver of Australia.

Wethersfield, Conn. (A 10th, allowing 105.3 yards. Graebner, New York paper Pudgy Bob Murphy rolled in 1 tj. executive, won a three-hour, his second consecutive 66 ttU8n Ana wm slara bang battle from Bill and took sole control of the lead Jn all top ten teams in defense against rushing Bowreyof Australia 6-3, 4-6, 6- Saturdaym the second round of winni recordg throu ms and the teams 7, 64. His clinching break the $100,000 Greater Hartford ank that ten are much better ovin for football came in the hotly contested Open Golf Tournament.

pr0wess than are most of the teams in the pass defense ninth game of the fifth set. Murphy, seeking to snap a leadership. Smith N() ranked two-year victory drought, had a American from Pasadena 36-hole total of 132, 10 under However, no Big Eight teams rank in the top 10 in rushing CaUf eliminated the last par for the 6 defense whlch may be a tribute to fine runners such as Rusj'm threat cqam cham. Wethersfield Country Club Galc Sayerg of Kansas, Harry Wilson of Nebraska, Steve onTexlweU 7-? course. Owens of Oklahoma a id others.

MetreveU lost heart when he The former National hit a volley an inch over the Amateur champion held a one- In total defense, the Big Eight is represented byjebraska back nm stroke lead over hometown and Missouri who tied for seventh, both allowing 222.7 yards decisive of tibreak hero Jim Grant. Grant, who per outing. in the first set. hasn't even come close to win- The top 10 teams in total defense enjoyed a winning at6" ning in three years on the tour, percentage of .729, the top ten in rushing defense won .721 Ashe, seeded seventh, had a sparkling, seven-under- per cent of their games and the top ten in pass defense trounced Roy Barth of San par 64 for 133. only had a winning percentage of .561.

Diego, 6-4, 6-2, 6-3 and by a quirk of the draw qualified orant, 28, is a Haraora ABC-TV noil of 12 football experts from across next to meet Okker, the man he W. J- Nebraska eighA a pra bg wjnajng vpar. ny th Missouri ninth. upen in io. UKKer inrasnea years om.

jim Osborne of Honolulu 6-3, 6- Don Bies, a 32-year-old The order: State, 2. Texas, 3. USC, 4. Notre 2,64. former club pro from Seattle DamCi 5 Penn state) 6 Mississippi, 7.

Arkansas, 8. Nebraska, Tm a little weary of ten. in only his second full Missouri 10. LSU. nis," Ashe, just off a successful year on the tour, followed at Davis Cup campaign, said.

"I 134 after a 66. don't think I am hungry any ftjyg Lotz Receives snaae raiiers more don.t g0 out and prac. Don Bie 686-iM 4 tice as I should." Bin Maxweii 678-ns CiisniiieiViii In Amateur jomwkopf 69135 Suspension aiiwicui Emerson, six times Wethersfield, Conn. UH PerUand, Ore. Norfolk, Australian champion and win- JohnLotz 29 a golf tour reg- golfer Jim Shade was far ner of two U.S.

titles as an p.oimoL 66-36 ular from Hayward, down the list in the 70th US. amateur overpowered young tZiSSt SltiS was suspended and fined Satur- Amateur Golf Championship Bobby McKmley of St Ann, plte Brn M-To-m day by the Tournament Players Saturday after 63 holes of play. Chuck's kid brother, 6-2, Stfcis Division of the Professional Shade had a four round total Golfers Association after be- of 295. He shot a six over par 76 Margaret Smith Court, the 'Momero coming involved in an alter- in the final round Saturday, big, strong Australian girl who cation at the $100,000 Hartford after starting out the tourney js bidding for the fij.st Jim coibjrt ttlfclft Golf Open, it was learned. the first round with a 71.

slam sweep of major women's Lotz will not be able to play Lanny Wadkins of Richmond, titles since the late Maureen S-i3 in the Robinson Open, the next Va won the championship on Connolly achieved the feat in Archer ftl'jS tour stop, which is two weeks the Waverley County 1953, settled a week-old score Tofnrny. Aaron away was also learned. Club course with a total of 279. quickly on the center conrt. Jloyamlescn p- got the idea from his father, Russians Top U.S.

By Thornam father always cut, my hair," Bastable explained. "In high school, I felt better going to a real barber Instead of getting those home made Jobs. Then I began cutting my brothers' hair, and I've been cutting hair ever since. 1 1 haven't gouged anybody yet." Bastable hasnt fully decided what he'll do after he is graduated from Missouri but one thing is certain: "I'm not going to be a barber," he said. "Before I quit barbering, though, I hope to get coach Dan Devine.

in that chair." Klamath Falls, Ore. UP) Big Ron Thornam socked a two-run homer in the seventh inning Saturday, leading Omaha, to a 2-1 victory over Phoenix in the American Legion baseball World Series. Levittown, edged Wilmington, 5-4 in an earlier game. i Thornam, a 6-5, 210-pound catcher, hit the ball about 375 feet over the centerfield fence after Dave McClanahan had tripled. Phoenix .000 100 000-1 6 1 Omaha 000 000 20x 2 5 1 Hudson and Messner; Johnette and Thornam.

HR Thornam. A 2,509. Feature Races Firestone 'W' Whites 40 OFF Dunlep B. F. Goodrich A 1 first Um Tim Al Sim Chtck Yrar Tiro Size Get Ovr Price Turin, Italy The Soviet Union basketball team upset the United States, 78-71 Saturday night, lifting Russia's gold medal total to a leading 23 in the sixth World University Games.

The United States, shut out on the next to last day of the competition, has 20. The Russians won five golds during the day-long competition, three coming in track and field. Viktor Saneyev won the triple jump at 56 feet, 6 inches, Nadia Chizova won the women's shotput with a heave of 64 feet, Vi inch and Nikolai Avilov won the decathalon. Playing a tight defensive game and capitalizing on the mistakes of the Americans under the basket the Soviet Union grabbed a title that everyone predicted the Americans would win. Frazier Claims Rasslin Victory Stan Frazier pinned Tarzan Tyler for one fall and won another on a foul when Tyler's teammate, Brutus, came into the ring to capture his handicap match witii the unpopular pair in the main event of the rasslin matches at Pershing Auditorium Saturday night.

Frank Hester topped Frank Altaian in the opener. Billv 433-2111 St. 27 At Rockingham Park Pilot Knob 8.80 3.80 Moon Reindeer 2,80 Warwick Castle GATES Automotive Servict 2.80 2.40 3.60 gllllllliiiilflUIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllilM MIDWEST SPEEDWAY 4600 North 27th Sunday Sept. 6 8:00 P.M. Rain Date Sept.

7th Over by 10:15 P.M. 9 Big Events 20 Car A Feature 30 Car Feature I I i 4 Good racing, and plenty of crashes! Red Cloud decisioned Dave Cox in the special event and Gene Antone took the best two of three falls over Kay Noble in the semi windup. ADULTS ONLY $150 6-12: 75c FREE UNDER 6 WITH ADULT AGES ftiiiiiuniiiuimniiiiiniisiuuiun JV A AfcijfciAifr nfti 0.

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Pages Available:
914,989
Years Available:
1902-1995