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The Journal Times from Racine, Wisconsin • 26

Publication:
The Journal Timesi
Location:
Racine, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
26
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

KAC1KE SUNDAY BULLETIN Not. 5, 1961 See. Ttgt 2 Loss Sighted, Sank Same ods 23 to 9 Dim SOUTH BEND. Ind. CP) RCOBINO Purdue D110 "2 Navy fullback Nick Markoff (34) almost fumbled the ball on this play as he lost a few yards against Notre Wolverines Wallop Duke's Blue Devils 28-14 in Intersect ional Football Clash and the Wolverines retaliated in the fourth period.

The final Wolverine touchdown came on a 45-yard pass from Glinka to end Bob Brown. The Blue Devils scored after taking the ensuing kickoff, going 85 yards with Burch cracking over from the three. Michigan scored its first touchdown after a 39-yard drive with McRae and Dave Raimey sharing the work load. Raimey, picking up 16 yards in W.W grind Purdua 0 13 Tllinoix 0 1 S3 Pur Grlnr, rrcoverrd fumble In and tons i kick fallrdi. Ill -Young.

kickoff run back (kick ri rdi. Pur Weill, It. pass from Hogan (Obi sick i. Pur TO, Ohl. Si: 111 PO.

Pluuknihorn. 3. Pur -Ortlnsr, 31, pass from Digravlo uni sicsf. UTATIRTItd Purdu Illinois Flint Dawns II 11 Rushing Yardac 170 7 Passing Yardage 11 3D ft', uum bT 1 Punt Fumbles Lost 0 Yard! Penalized 84 1 40 Frosh Cardinals Tip Whites 18-7 MADISON WV-The Cardinals turned two recovered fumbles into third quarter touchdowns to defeat the Whites 18-7 in Wisconsin's annual freshman intra-squad football game Saturday at Camp Randall Stadium. Although the White team had the advantage in first downs and yardage -gained, an alert Cardinal defense led by tackle Al Pirano of Waukegan, halfback John Monahan of Kankakee, 111., and end Ralph Farmer of Madison intercepted three passes and recovered five fumbles to nail down the victory.

Sails over Head Early in the second period, the cards scored atter a centering snap sailed over White punter Carl Silvestri's head Silvestrl, an all-state back for Shorewood High last year, picked up the baa, but was dropped on his 3, from where halfback Ron Smith of East Chicago, scored on an end sweep. Pete Heebmk of Madison in tercepted a pass at midfield at the start of the second half and raced to the Cardinal 14 to set up the Whites' only touchdown. Silvestri ran to the one in three carries ana quarteroacK bod Allison of 1 111., sneaked across. Recover Fumbles The Cardinal defense then got two quick touchdowns, aft er fumble recoveries. Monahan recovered a fumble on the White 4 and two plays later Harold Brandt of Hindsdale, 111., sneaked into the end zone from one yard out On the next a 1 the Whites fumbled again, with Farmer recovering on the White 27.

Monahan raced to the 19 and quarterback Jim Hennig of Green Bay, trapped while back to pass, broke loose and went the entire distance for the final touchdown. Adios Butler Smashes Another World Mark INGLEWOOD, Calif. CP) Adios Butler smashed another world record this one by the astonishing margin of three full seconds and completed i sweep of the three-leg Ameri can pacing classic Saturday. The fastest harness horse of all time covered a mile and one-eighth in 2:11 15 and fin ished lengths ahead of his nearest rival, Mr. Budlong, In the final dash of the $80,000 event.

O'Grady Stars as Wildcats Trip Hoosiers 14-8 for Homecoming Greg Mather, 220-pound Navy end with a magic toe, kicked his seventh and eighth fields goals' of the season Saturday and the Middies defeated Notre Dame 13-10. The square jawed senior from Los Angeles also hooted his 20th straight conversion of the season after a one-yard touchdown sneak in the second quarter by quarterback Bob Hecht. Notre Dame started the place-kicking business with a 45-yard fielder by Joe Perkow- ski in the first quarter, me 3-0 lead held until Hecht's touchdown at the end of a 75-yard drive featuring a 72-yard pass from Hecht to Jim Stewart. Batted Wrong Way Angelo Dabiero, fleet- and hard-working Irish halfback, had the misfortune of tipping the long pass Into Stewart's hands at the Notre Dame 3. Mather kicked the ball over the goal posts twice in the second quarter to get one fielder.

He did it from 37 yards but the Middies took too much time and he had to do it again from the 42. Notre Dame caughtup In the third period on fullback Dick Naab a one-foot plunge and Perkowski's conversion. Quar terback Daryle Lamonica passed 12 yards to end Dennis Murphy and halfback George Sefcik got off an 11-yard drive set off by a pass interception. Irish Fumbles Hurt A Notre Dame fumble put the Navy in position for Mather's 22-yard winning field goal, five minutes deep in the last It was a game of breaks the kind made by hard tackles and alert defense. Notre Dame positioned itself for Perkow ski's field goal after Lamonica intercepted a Ron Klemick pass and ran it back 23 yards to the Navy 33.

Mathers winning goal came after Capt John Hewitt inter cepted Lamonica fumble on the Notre Dame 10. Whitewater Edges Out St. Norbert WHITEWATER JP) Whitewater State cashed in on fumble recoveries in the first and fourth periods, sending Larry Gocker on short scoring plunges, and shocked heavily- favored St Norbert 12-7 Sat urday in a non-conference foot ball meeting. The victory was Whitewa ter's fifth against three losses with one game left St. Nor bert, one of the nation's small college powers, finished its sea son with a 7-2 record.

Whitewater's Dave Poisel re covered a fumble on the St Norbert 10 in the opening pe riod. Gocker capped the short march by plunging into the end zone from one yard out St. Norbert marched 75 yards for a second period touchdown, Louis Distelzweig tossing end Dave Stolp for the final four yards. Ed Hammen then booted the extra point, giving St Norbert a 7-6 halftime lead. Ron Bronson recovered a fumble on the St.

Norbert 34 to set up the winning touch down. Gocker finally plunged across the goal from the 2. St Norbert was stopped twice in the final period on pass Interceptions. ALL STANDARD MAKES ELECTRIC SHAVERS REPAIRED CLEAN ID OILED ADJUSTED All work done ond guaranteed by experienced workmen using Genuine Foctory Port. PROMPT SERVICE RACINE SHAVER CENTER Hazlett Barbers 416-GthSt.

ME 7-1161 Navy 6 .10 6 Notre Dame i. 3 6 1 313 610 NO ro, rerKOwsiti. Nay Hecht, I. plunge Nvv Mather. 43 (Mather kick).

Nl Naab, 1. plunge iPerkowskl kick) Navy FO. Mather, 33. tTATISTlCS Navy ND 13" 12 13 '-41 1 -3 3 3t First Downs 10 Rushing Yards .124 PasaliiH Yardaae 105 Passea 1-31 Pannes Intercepted by 3 Punts Yards Penalised I Colorado Nips Missouri 7-6 BOULDER. Colo.

W) Colorado sailed through the air for a touchdown in the fi nal minute of the first half and fought off Missouri's fourth-quarter comeback for a 7-6 triumph in a battle of Big Eight unbeaten football teams Saturday. Missouri gambled for victory with a two-point conversion try but the pass from halfback Mike Hunter, who pitched the 10-yard touchdown pass, lofted harmlessly oyer the end zone. Undisputed Lead Colorado's triumph in clear, crisp weather before, 43.200 fans and a western television audience sent the Buffaloes into undisputed first place and into top consideration for a trip to the Orange Bowl In Miami. Colorado entered the game ranked eighth in the AP poll and Missouri was tenth. Missouri made one last desperate try to triumph with a 44-yard field goal try by halfback Bill Tobin but it wobbled short and wide.

Halfback Leon Mavity'a 25-yard punt return to Missouri's 47 ignited the Colorado touchdown march with barely a minute left in the second period. Pass Connects Halfback Teddy Woods scampered 12 yards and quar terback Gale Weidner hit end Jerry Hillebrand with a 14- yard pass to the Tigers 21. After one incomplete pass. Weidner connected with halfback Bill Harris for a touchdown. Harris tucked in the ball on the 10 and eluded one tack ier before scooting into the end zone.

i Neither team was effective on offense in the third quarter. Early in the fourth period Missouri took a punt on Its 37 and marched 63 yards in 13 plays for the equalizing touchdown. Quarterback Ron Taylor started the scoring play with a pitchout to Hunter, who then rifled the ball to end Don Wain-wright on the goal line. Wildcats See Pairs, but Have Good Reason EVANSTON, 111. UP) Northwestern football players weren't seeing double Saturday when Indiana took the field.

Actually there were seven duplications of uniform numbers on the Hoosiers squad. Vandals broke into the In diana locker room last night arid made off with nine jerseys, four warm-up jackets, two pairs of pants and one helmet GET PlII-nATTLIIIG, LlVELIER-LOnCER RUBBER Ebonite1" First in modern bowling ball FREE! 10 Games With Purchase of New Ebonite Ball Bowling Bells Plugged and Re-Drilled OPEN DAILY 11 A.M. to 1 A.M. HAtfGG Pro Shop 429 Main -ME arfsy''taV CHAMPAIGN, 111. Ml i -T.

Sophomore quarternacKS uary Hogan and Ron DiGravio each hurled touchdown passes Saturday to guide Purdue to a 23-9 Big Ten football victory over Illinois. The Ulini absorbed their seventh straight loss In a stretch from the final game of 1960, but their rookie halfback, Cecil Young of Miami. provided the biggest thrill of the game. He took a kick from the 4, shook off two tacklers, picked up his Interference and broke out for a 96-yard scoring run. 5 Breaks jGrange Record It was a school record, beating by one yard the touchdown kickoff returns by Red Grange in 1924 and Johnny Karras in 1949.

Just 17 seconds earlier, John Greiner scored for Purdue on a fluke play. Hogan's pass was Intercepted on the Ulini 2 by Thurman Walker. Walker was hit hard by Greiner. He fumbled the ball. It rolled into the end zone and Greiner pounced on It All this left the score knotted at 6-6.

the kicks for points failing. But Purdue went ahead to stay, 13-6, 25 seconds before nalftime when Hogan, a 195 pounder from Charleroi, hit sophomore Tom Boris of Presto, for 65 yards and on the next olav passed to rookie Harold Wells of St. Louis for a 16-yard touchdown. Skip Ohl booted the point. Purdue Pads Lead Ohl added" a 32-yard field goal In the third as Purdue padded out a 16-6 edge.

Early in the fourth quarter Jim Plankerhorn booted a 29-yard field goal for the Illini. It was set up when Ron Fearn stole Hogan's aerial and returned it 37 yards. DiGravio, the Boilermaker's No. 1 sophomore from Weymouth, hooked up with junior end Greiner on a 31-yard aerial touchdown in period and Ohl added the point The victory left Purdue with a 2-1 Big Ten record and still verv much in the title race. It has Michigan State, Minnesota and Indiana yet to play.

Alabama Wins No. 7 TUSCALOOSA. Ala. Ufr- Alabama's defense, as alert and staunch as ever, provided the openings and the Crimson Tide whipped Mississippi State 24-0 Im 4k ram 1 1 rn The running of fullback Mike Fracchia and the running and passing of quarterback Pat Trammell provided the spark on offense when it was needed, running unbeaten Alabama's string of victories for the sea aon to seven. The Alabama defense, rated among the best in the nation, crabbed a Mississippi State fumble on the opening kickoff.

The Tide scored four plays lat er, with the game less than three minutes old, and never was in trouble the rest of the way. The difference was wider than the score. Alabama had one touchdown called back on a penalty. Another drive was stopped when Curtis Lloyd in tercepted a 13-yard Trammel pass on the goal. Mississippi State mustered only one serious threat in southeastern game, driving to the Alabama 20 in the second quarter.

But the Tidesmen stopped the Bulldogs, then blocked a field goal try and Tommy Brooker returned it 58 yards to set up an Alabama field goal. Arkansas Strikes inClosing Seconds FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. Arkansas struck for 90 yards In the last five minutes Satur day to defeat Texas 15-8 and remain in the running for the Conference football title," 5 Apparently beaten in their homecoming game after the Aggies had seized on their first real scoring opportunity to go ahead 8-7 in the third period with their attack bogged down by an alert Texas defense, the Porkers took the ball on downs at their 10 and scored In 12 plays. The playoff was a six-yard pass from quarterback George McKlnney to end Jim John with 57 seconds remaining. i pi' Dame.

Tackling Markoff was (61) and Bob Lehmann (65). two plays carried to the five, from where McRae swept right end for the score. Early in the second quarter Michigan went 53 yards in six plays with McRae taking Glinka's 15-yard pass after working into the clear in the end zone. Then the light halfback intercepted Walt Rappold's pass on the first Duke scrimmage play and streaked untouched into the end zone. down.

Dave Damm's kick made it 70. i Intercepts Pass Early in the fourth quarter, Northwestern took charge on the Indiana 48 when Al Kim brough intercepted a Byron Broome pass. The Wildcats powered their way to the In diana 17 and Grady went around right end, shook off three would-be tacklers and stumbled into the end zone for Northwestern's final touch down. Indiana, moving deep into Northwestern territory twice in the first half only to be re pelled, put across a touchdown in the final two minutes of play. The Hoosier drive, sustained by Broome's passes, started on the Indiana 43.

Broome com pleted four passes and then hit Capt. Bill Olsavsky with a 7- yard toss for the touchdown. Broome then passed to Dick Wervey for two more points. O'Grady did most of North western offensive work. He completed 7 passes in 13 at tempts for 113 yards and car ried 22 times for a net of 101 yards on the Davis Cracks Brown's Mark SYRACUSE, N.Y.

Of) Ernie Davis smashed Jimmy Brown's career record for scor ing and rushing yardage Sat urday, gaining 119 yards and scoring two touchdowns in Syracuse's 28-9 come-from-be hind victory over Pittsburgh. A rain-spattered crowd of 40,000 saw Pitt run up a 9-0 lead in the second period be fore Davis and his Syracuse mates got started. At the end Syracuse was crashing through the, Pitt line for chunks of yardage. Three lost fumbles by Pitt in the third period turned the tide in Syracuse's favor. Getting adequate revenge for last year's defeat by Pitt which snapped a 16-game Syracuse winning streak, the Orange scored twice on the ground and twice through the air.

Davis' churning drives for 119 yards in 22 carries boosted his career total of 2,143 yards as compared to the 2,091 Brown totaled at Syracuse in 1954, '55 and '56 before he joined the Cleveland Browns in the Na tional Football League. KRANZ for OFFICE FURNITURE Wlrapboto Notre Dame's Mlekey Bltsko Duke's Mixture KCORINO Duke 0 0 I 14 Michigan 7 14 0 738 Mich McRae. S. run (Bickle kick Mich McRae, II, pan from Olinka (pasa (ailed i. Mich McRae, 34, pa Interception (Mans pass Irom Ulinkai.

Duke Burch. 1. run maaa failed) Mich Brown, 41, pau Irom Olinka (Bickle kick). Duke Burch, 3, run (Lefiett past from Kappoidi. TATtRTim Oukt Mich Plret Downs 19 It Rushing Yardage 116 188 Passing Yardage 129 Pasaea 10-20 1-11 Paaaea Intercepted 11 Punte -3 6-30 Pumblea Lost 0 '1 Yards Penallied 3 0 Hoosier Hotshots? Rf-ORINd Indiana 0 0 6 6 Northwestern 0 7 0 7 14 NU Flatley.

31. pasa Irom O'Orady luamm kicki. NTT n'Oradr 17. run Dimffl kick Ind Olaavskr, 7. pass from Broome (wervey paaa tram STATISTICS Indiana NU 16 174 113 1-14 1 6-3 First Downs 15 Rushlnn Yardasa 180 4 10-30 1 -33 1 43 Passing Yardage Passes Passea Intercepted by Punts Pumbles Lost Yarda Penalised Duffy Gophers Hungrier MINNEAPOLIS CD "Minnesota just wanted to win more," coach Duffy Daugherty said Saturday after his No.

1 ranked Michigan State football team took a 13-0 surprise licking from the Gophers. Daugherty, speaking in a quiet, shocked atmosphere in the Spartan dressing room, felt a few key plays changed the complexion of the ball game. "If George Saimes hadn't slipped in the second period," Daugherty said, "we might have reversed the trend of the game and put some pressure on Minnesota." He referred to a fourth down inches to go play with Minnesota leading 6-0. The Spartans had the ball on the Minnesota 11, hut Saines slipped and fell for a yard loss. Coach Murray Warmath, shouting above the din of the joyous Minnesota dressing room called it a "team all the way," and added "you can't help but single out the excellent play of quarterback Sandy Stephens and halfback Bill Munsey." "You can see why we missed Munsey so during the 1 a three games," Warmath said.

benched by injuries in the Gophers" second game, scored both touchdowns Saturday and turned in a sparkling defensive effort. OTTAWA TRIUMPHS OTTAWA (V- The Ottawa Rough Riders whipped the Toronto Argonauts 35-23 Saturday in the Canadian Football League. AP ANN ARBOR, Mich. UP) Bennie McRae, stung twice this season by give-away-fum-i bles in critical situations, re deemed himself Saturday with a three-touchdown spree in Michigan's 28-14 victory over Duke. The spindly legged, 172- pound speedster bedeviled the Blue Devils with his versatile plays as the Wolverines took an early command with three first half touchdowns.

McRae, a senior halfback, scored all of them. He ran five yards for the first one, caught Dave Glinka's 15-yard pass for the second and 40 seconds later returned an intercepted pass 34 yards for the third. Defense Foils Duke Michigan's heavier defensive line fouled up Duke's offense thorughout the first half. The Blue Devils couldn cross into Michigan territory until the second half, when two long drives resulted in touchdowns by Dave Burch. Just a week ago McRae fumbled in the final two min utes and permitted Minnesota to score its winning touchdown in a 23-20 triumph.

Two weeks before he bobbled the ball on the second play against Michigan State and the Spartans turned it into their first touchdown in a 28-0 rout. Those are the Wolverines' only losses and knocked them out of Big Ten contention. But Saturday the halfback showed brilliance with swift, elusive running in the inter- sectional contest before 56,488. Blue Devils Come Back Duke outplayed Michigan in the second half. The Blue Devils marched 58 yards in 15 plays for their first score, with Burch doing most of the work on the ground and scoring from the one on fourth down.

Drive 85 Yards The next time Duke had the ball it was halted after reach with their last touchdown early ing the Michigan State five (74) pounced on the ball after by the Ililni's Kin Klmmerman. -oh. EVANSTON, 111. Ut) Tom O'Grady, Northwestern's teen-age quarterback, passed and ran the Wildcats to a 14-8 homecoming victory over Indiana Saturday in a Big Ten football game. The 19-year-old Chicagoan, earning his first-string job in a 12-10 triumph over Notre Dame last week, threw a 21-yard touchdown pass in the second quarter and scampered 17 yards for another score in the final period.

Fourth Victory It was Northwestern's fourth win in six games and evened their conference record at 2-2. Indiana, which has been unable to whip a Big Ten opponent since 1959, suffered its fifth setback against a lone victory over Washington State. O'Grady and Northwestern's tough defense proved too much for the tough but depth-lacking Hoosiers. Late in the second quarter, Northwestern forced Indiana to punt into the wind and the Wildcats took over on the Hoosier 44, O'Grady hit Bill Stinson with a 23-yard pass and after tossing an incompleted pass he hit fulback Paul Flatley with a perfect aerial over defender Nate Ramsey's head for a touch- a fumble by Purdue's Ron Wlrnphoto JO -j. 6.

i YESI Now the time 1 to order your CITIES SERVICE OIL CO. C. t. () Martin ronsltjnm Aftnt ME 3-1609 1331-Hlh Reclne Illinois tackle Bob Scharbert DiGravio (17). DiGravio was hit.

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