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The Sunday News and Tribune du lieu suivant : Jefferson City, Missouri • Page 10

Lieu:
Jefferson City, Missouri
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10
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Page 10 THE SUNDAY NEWS AND TRIBUNE. JEFFERSON CITY. MISSOURI Sunday, November 13, I960 Missouri University Tigers Whip Oklahoma For Ninth Straight Grid Victory This Season Lincoln University Tigers Lose for Recovery, Tennessee AI Wins Tigers Outplayed At Every Step In Moss NASHVILLE, Tenn. (Special)-Tennessee AI football team ruined Lincoln University's bid for a prize comeback Saturday by defeating the Tigers, 38-8. The Tigers seemed to be out- With Four Minutes Left Cowpokes Turn Nebraska Fumble Into 7-6 Victory LINCOLN, Neb.

(AP) and plunges by Chester homa State turned a Nebrask fumble into a touchdown in th final four minutes of play Satur day and racked up a 7-6 Bi Eight football triumph. Frank Parker recovered Pa Fischer's fumble on Nebraska' 29 midway in the final period. Be fore that time the Oklahoman played every step of the way. Early in the first quarter the Ten- Nebraska's sTySd fine nessee team blocked a Lincoln a a luie punt for a safety. Moments later fullback Leon Jones took the ball on the two-yard line and smashed into the end zone to make the score 8-0.

Right after the touchdown, Lincoln's halfback Lou Heffner received the kick and ran it back 73 yards. It looked as though Lincoln was going to bring the score up to date but he was stopped on the 18- yard line and in four plays Lincoln ran out of downs. Tennessee scored again in the second quarter on an 11-yard pass from halfback Paul McNeal to Henry Arnold who was waiting fo it in the end zone. Jones ran the extra point and the score at th Then Jim Elliott passed for 1 40-Year Jinx Over As Ole Miss Wins From Tennessee KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP)--Mis sissippi broke a 40-year-old jinx Saturday and crushed Tennessee 24-3 on its home field on the pass ing of quarterback Jake Gibbs and the running of fullback James half was 16-0.

Scored Again The third quarter had barelj started before Tennessee scored again. The AI crowd moved the ball rapidly down the field and then Arnold plunged over from the one- yard line. Jones made the extra point and the score was 30-0. Moments after receiving the kick Lincoln was out of downs again and Tennessee moved the ball back down toward the end zone. Halfback Stanley Handle took the ball from the two and lunged over for the final touchdown.

Halfback eGorge McNeal ran the conversion and the score stood at 38-0. Lincoln received the kick and managed to bring the ball steadily toward touchdown territory. At one point Willie Barnes hurled the ball 52 yards to Robert Walker who went to the three yard line. The ball was handed off to Heffner who galloped into the end zone. ne touchdown, connected on received the pass for the extra 11 tosses to halfback point.

The scoring was over at TM a fourth period was a completej Tennessee 3 3 standoff with both teams moving the ball up and down the field never getting close to paydirt. Passing: Good Statistically, the Nashvillians led the race without contention. managed 19 first downs to six for Lincoln. They piled up 182 yards rushing to a mere 30 for the Tigers. The passing was some better, nd Ar TM stron won championships Lincoln racked up 109 yards through in the 't tle Dlxi Basketball tour- the air while Tennessee made 185.

3 TM" 1 Saturday night. The Tigers started home late 1 Ashland took the boys' champ-T Saeturday night with lumps in their lon sh beating Harrisburg 52-41 I throats, one of the team officials I a Armstrong beat Ashland 61- Anderson. These Southeastern Conference teams have met here 13 times since 1920 and Mississippi has never won. It was the eighth victory of the season for the undefeated once- tied Rebels, who now need only a triumph over Mississippi State to wrap up their fourth conference crown for Coach Johnny Vaught. The loss was Tennessee's second of the season and it left the Vols with a 5-2-1 record.

Mississippi, No. 4 in the nation, ook the opening kickoff and and stormed 76 yards for a ouchdown, with Anderson slicing ff tackle from the 2. Allen Green made good the first of three con- Gibbs, who riddled Tennessee's econdary with 11 completed pass- out of 13 for 112 yards and Pittman, Jim Dillard and Elliott put the ball on the eight yard line, Elliott took it over on the next try. Ted Davis kicked the conversion point that gave the Cowboys their one point victory. It was the first meeting for the two teams.

The victory boosted Oklahoma State to a 2-4 record in the conference. 3-5 for the season. Nebraska stands 1-5 in the loop, 3-6 for the season. Nebraska's breakaway quarterback, Pat Fischer, reeled off an 84-yard punt return for a touchdown in the first quarter and until the explosive turn of events in the last period, the Parents Day- crowd of 24,000, smallest of the season here, had match as settled. regarded the Ron Meade had missed the conversion kick but it hadn't seemed consequential.

Meade tried a 40- yard field goal in the second quarter but it, too, went awry. The contest lived up to advance billing as a tossup between two relatively rugged defensive crews who have trouble moving the ball. Oklahoma State crossed the midfield stripe only three time prior to Nebraska's fatal fumble Nebraska, except for Fischer'; explosive run, was just about impotent. Booming kicks by Dave Hannah of Oklahoma State. the Big Eight's leading punter, and Ne Draska's third-rated Archie Cobb Kept the opposition on its heels except for a second quarter lapse vhen Hannah booted a couple hortied, one of only two yards.

Both teams managed respect- ble yardage. Nebraska covered 01 and Oklahoma State 187, but ic gains weren't made where hey count most, in enemy ter- Tulsa Overcomes Sluggish Start For 12-8 Victory TULSA, Okla. (AP)-- Tulsa shook off its first half sluggishness to score touchdowns in each of the last two periods Saturday and defeated North Texas State's Gophers MINNEAPOLIS (AP)--Purdue's Boilermakers, four-time .1 with a disdain for the mighty, caught Minnesota Saturday with a first half aerial offensive and whipped the nation's No. 1 ranked football team, 23-14. With their dream of an unbeaten season and national title fading, the Gophers scored two second half touchdowns but were beaten by Bernie Allen's 35-yard field goal in the third period.

Purdue got a freak touchdown on the final play. Two Touchdowns Eagles 12-8. Hurricane fullback Bo Bolinger ground over from the 1 yard line for the deciding tally, his second score of the afternoon to climax a 77-yard drive. Tulsa then dug in to stem a de- pu it out. Allen's rifle arm shot Purdue to two first half touchdowns and a 14-0.

lead before Minnesota recovered. Minnesota swept back on touchdowns by Bill Munsey and Roger Hagberg, but Purdue twice braced in the final four minutes when Minnesota threatened to termined North Texas drive that bogged down at the Hurricane 31. The victory left Tulsa's chances of a tie with Wichita for the Missouri Valley conference championship resting on the Eagles' ability to whip the Wheatshockers next Saturday. Uphill Fight The winners had an uphill fight all the way Saturday after North Big Ten Race The loss dropped Minnesota to second place in the Big Ten race behind Iowa. The Hawkeyes, who were knocked out of the No.

1 national rating last week by Minnesota, clinched no worse than a tie for the Big Ten crown by beating Ohio State in their final conference game 35-12 Saturday. Minne- Texas took the game's opening sota can match Iowa's 5-1 record kickoff and marched 70 yards forjiy beating Wisconsin in its finale its touchdown. Reserve Chuck Holloway sprinted 15 yards around end for the score. Duty passed to end Lewis Whitson for a 2 point conversion. Outplayed decisively most of next week.

For Purdue the victory was only No. 3 of the season, two against national powers Ohio State and Minnesota. Sooners' Defeat Is First on Home Field In 18 Years, First to MU Since 1946 NORMAN, Okla. (AP) Two team in the Associated Press poll long scoring jaunts of 77 and 0 yards by halfback Norris Stevenson led the Missouri Tigers to a 41-19 football victory over Oklahoma Saturday and kept them on the road toward the Big Eight Conference football championship. It was Missouri's ninth straighi victory and sixth triumph in the conference, and Oklahoma's third loss, leaving the Sooners far back in the race for the firs; time in 14 years.

The decision also placed the No. 2 nationally ranked Tigers in good position to become the top because of Purdue's victory over No. 1 Minnesota. Missouri had a wide margin a the end but the score didn't por tray the toughness of the game. Oklahoma got a homecoming crowd of 56,500 to its feet on the fourth play of the game when Halfback Mike McClellen sped 70 yards down the sidelines after a cutback through tackle to get the Sooners off to a 6-0 lead.

Tha was the last time they enjoyec the advantage. Missouri immediately showec muscle, storming 67 yards in 14 Lame-Duck Coach Makes Good Cincy Snaps Losing Streak With Win Over Marquette MILWAUKEE (AP) --The University of Cincinnati, fired up by lame-duck coach George Blackburn, snapped a five-game losing string and a long touchdown famine Saturday while rolling over Marquette's hapless football Warriors 33-13. Blackburn, who submitted his resignation earlier this week effective at the season's end, called )klahoma State 0 0 0 8--7 6 0 0 0--6 Titles fo Ashland, Armstrong Cagers ASHLAND (Special) Ashland' ebraska Nebr--Fischer 84 punt return kick failed) )kla St. Elliott 8 run (Davis ick) Attendance 24.000 (estimated.) Statistics Oklahoma State Nebraska First downs 11 10 Rushing yardage 156 201 Passing yardage 31 0 Passes 3-0 0-10 Passes intercepted by 1 Punts Fumbles lost 0 Yards penalized 25 1 1 39 said. They went to Nashville for the girls title.

Cairo took a three-game winning streak whicn rd place In tne division made up for losing the first three 1 i a 60 52 decl sion over Renick. of the season. Now the loss side trida 'g nt Auxvasse boys the scale has swung heavily to the downed Hallsville, 39-35, in the consolation championship game, Cairo tSatistics girls won tne irls consolation title Tenn. State a 62 30 victory over Harris- Iowa Returns Lead bottom. Lincoln 6 30 109 32 7 1 3 1 first downs yards rushing yards passing passes attempted passes completed passes intercepted fumbles lost fumbles recovered punting average Individual Scoring 19 burg and Auxvasse won the girls' 182 tnird P' ace witn a 39-35 win over 185 Hallsville.

23 Third Place Boys IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP)--Gouging chunks of yardage in a furious running attack, Iowa shot back into the Big Ten -lead and and contention for the national football title with a 35-12 conquest of Ohio State Saturday. Junior halfback Larry Ferguson's flashy 91-yard scoring dash down the sidelines and sophomore fullback Joe Williams' yard touchdown burst highlighted 14 Renick 9 12 13 Hawk-eyes' nationally-tele- 2i a i 14 17 14 15-- 601vised victory. Lincoln U. Second Renick: T. Hitz 22, Wood 17, Blossj The stunning triumph assured! In CrOSS-CoUFltry Run the half.

Tulsa came to life just! before the intermission to stop a 79-yard North Texas surge to its 5. From the 13 Joe Oliver tried a field goal that went wide. Punt Return Sparked by a 48 yard punt return by halfback Joe Cheap midway of the third period, the Hurricane plowed 46 yards in 10 plays for its first touchdown by Bolinger from the 3. As the final quarter opened. Bolinger intercepted an Eagle Purdue 7 Minnesota 0 7 3 6--23 0 8 6-14 Dyas Kicks Win, Record for Auburn AUBURN, Ala.

(AP) Mighty Ed Dyas kicked three field goals a new national record and A fo tteH vlc over from the 1 for the clincher. After each Tulsa touchdown ri ht foot points on kicking. The unerring accuracy of Dyas' him 12 field es failed jthis year--at least one in each of North Texas 8 0 0 0--8: the Tigers' eight games--and a Tulsa 0 0 6 6--12! tota of 16 is college career, most ever kicked by a college if fin G. fin Georgia's scoring came on two Mi law 11 WW I I I fi i oa i by Durward but it was the dreaded pass- Sing of quarterback Francis Tar- jkenton which put the ball in position to try for the 3-pointers. Locked at 6-6 with only 46 seconds to go.

Dyas. a 205-pound from Mobile, put one for 22 yards. Cross-Country STILLWATER. Okla. A Billy Mills of Kansas took first jlace in the Big Eight Conference cross-country meet Saturday.

But Oklahoma State runners took a cam title. A Mil-Is finished in 15:03.6. Oklahoma State's John Har-! aughty, Jack McPhail and Harold Smith raced past the 3-mile i sh line in a tight group to place i 3 and 4 and shove KU's Bill Dotson back into 5th place. Haraughty turned in a 15:04 clocking. The favorite, Bob Hanneken of 3 0 3--6 3 3 3-9 Huskies Muscle Win Over Car SEATTLE (AP) The muscle Missouri set the pace for the Washington crunched out 1 rt irst two miles but finished sixth.

rri Team scoring-low score a 27-7 football victory over Cali- i a Bears to win the Big Five a i i i a i 0 i atld a11 bUt Clinch rsysnriSw? rr" straislrt se Bowl bld S-SkSK JS "i Five MM Ih. west- Kansas had won the team title or representative to the bowl. FOOTBALL SCORES iBy the Associated Press) BIG EIGHT Missouri 41, Oklahoma 19 Kansas 34. Colorado fi Iowa St. 20, Kansas St.

Oklahoma St. 7. Nebraska I MIDWEST Michigan 59. Indiana 7 Illinois 33. Wisconsin 14 Iowa SS, Ohio St.

Purdue 23, Minnesota II Cincinnati Marqnctte 1.1 Miami (Ohio) Dayton EAST Army 7. Pitt 7 i Navy II. i i i a fi Penn St. Holy Harvard 'J2. Brown Boston College Boston It Rutgers 2'i.

a a 0 Yale Princeton Dartmouth -'(). Cornell 6 Colum-bla Hi. Penn 6 Detroit 13, i a a 7 SOUTH Miami (Fla) Notre Dame tl LSI' 7. Mississippi St. Alabama Ifi.

Georgia Tech It Florida 51, Tulane Clemson 12. S. Carolina 3 Maryland N. Carolina 19 Kentucky III. Xiivicr Mississippi 34, Tennessee Duke Wakr Forest 7 a i i i a A Mary 8 Auburn Georgia VMI 3D, The Citadel SOUTHWEST A a a 3fi.

SMU 3 Houston 7. Florida SI. i 111, Texas Tech 7 Trias TCU 3 Hlce 31. Texas II Baylor So. Cal.

It Tulsa 14. Texas St. 8 WEST UCLA Air Force 0 Oregon St. Stanford 31 Washington St. IH, Idaho 7 Oregon 30.

W. i i i a fi Washington 37. California 7 Utah lii. Montana i MISSOURI COLLEGES Tennessee AI Lincoln I i i College 13. Central 7 SE Missouri St.

31, Missouri St. 0 St. Mary's of the Plains Tarkio 14. i i a Jewell Graceland 14 NE Missouri 34. Kolla Mines 14 Maryvllle 41.

Warrenshnrg 18 upon sophomore Larry Harp to direct the attack and the slender quarterback came through in spectacular fashion. Stymied by penalties in the first period as their touchdown- less streak was extended to 12 consecutive quarters, the Bearcats nailed down the decision with three tallies in the second period. Harp, working the bootleg play with the skill of a pro, skirted right end for 22 yards for the first touchdown. Halfback Fred Oblak cracked guard for two yards and another six points before Harp rolled out and passed six yards to Ed Banks in the end zone to provide Cincinnati a 19pO halftime advantage. After a scoreless third period the Warriors dented the Bearcats' goal on a 51-yard pass maneuver Terry Zang to Kevin Weinberg.

Then, before the final gun sounded with a couple of displays of fisticuffs, Harp sneaked for another touchdown, Marquette's Joe Schulte passed 19 yards to end George Andrie for a tally, and Howie Converse swpet nine yards around end for the Bearcats' last six points. The victory was Cincinnati's 'ourth in nine decisions with one game left. Marquette. which started off with three victories in its first four games, wound up with a 3-6 record. Cincinnati 0 19 0 14--33 Marquette 0 0 0 13--13 Cine Harp 22 run (Chernck kick.) Cin--Oblak 2 plunge ikick failed 1 plays for the tying touchdown.

Bonnie Smith plunged two yards for the score and Bill Tobin kicked the first of five extra points, giving him 21 straight for the season. He added two field goals of 32 and 29 yards to wind up with 11 points for the day. It was a glorious day for Coach Dan Devine and his strong band of Tigers as they handed the Sooners their first conference defeat at home in 18 years. The verdict also ruptured a 14- game winning streak the Sooners had forged against Missouri. Two fast touchdowns in the second quarter catapulted Missouri to a 24-6 lead.

Smith smashed through center on a trap play and went 30 yards and minutes later Stevenson surged around left end on a power sweep on his first long distance gallop that covered 77 yards. The Sooners still showed fire and countered with their second touchdown late in the period on a 36-yard run by halfback Melvin Sandersfeld. This gave Oklahoma new and it came out for the second half with a vengeance. The Soon- ers used up much of the third quarter with a 71-yard sweep in L6 plays, scoring a touchdown Kith less than five minutes left in period. Quarterback Jimmy Carpenter Blunged over from the one yard ine but fullback Ronnie Hartiine was top gun in the-surge, picking up 58 yards.

His big shot was a 26-yard smash up the middle that carried to the Oklahoma 37. From here he added 26 more yards in "ive tries to put the Sooners on he Missouri one yard line. Oklahoma threatened again moments later after taking a bad 3unt on Missouri's 35. But the Sooners lost five yards in four plays. Stevenson's 60-yard sprint came on the first play of the final quarter and Smith counted his hird touchdown of the day from he 3-yard line to put the game safely away.

Stevenson's two long scoring Hirsts gave him individual rushing honors with 169 yards in 13 arries while McCiellan carried he same number of times for 18 yards. Oklahoma's touchdowns wore tie first ones made on the ground against the strong Missouri defense which had limited its opponents to five touchdowns in the previous eight games. Missouri 10 14 0 17--41 Oklahoma 6 6 7 0--199 CIN--Banks 6 pass from HarplOU--McClcllan 70 yard run kick 'pass failed.1 Marq--Weinberg 51 pass from Zang I MO--Smith 2 run (Tobin kick.) Weinberg i CIN Harp 1 plunge (Hynoski from 3 straight years. The favored Huskies hammered 72 yards in a dozen plays from, the opening kickoff to score, a ran up all their points before California made a last-quarter tally. Butler's Bulldogs Beat Washington ST.

LOUIS (AP)-Butler's Bull- MARQ Andrie 19 pass from Schulte 'kick failedi CIN--Converse 9 run (kick failed) Illinois Barelv Defeats Central FAYETTE. Mo. Illinois College scored a winning touchdown with only three minutes remaining Saturday to defeat Central College's football team 12-7. MO--FG Tobin 32 MO--Smith 30 run (Tobin kick) 77 run (Tobin kick) OU--Sandorsfeld 36 (run failed) OU--Carpenter 1 run (Hartline i MO--Stevenson 60 run (Tobin i MO-FG Tobin 29 MO--Smith run (Tobin kick.) Attendance 56,500. Statistics Missouri Oklahoma First downs Rushing yardage The score came after a 66 yard Passing vardage drive.

Tom Francis went 2 yards Passes off tackle for the TD. Illinoi' scored its first touchdown in the Punts third quarter on quarterback lost 12 300 40 3-4 Passes intercepted by 3 Volk's 16-yard keeper play. 0 'Yards penalized 21 323 25 2-8 1 1-38 3 25 Carr Lincoln: Heffner 3 yard run; Walk- Wood I. 4 er conversion; Barnes passed. First Place Girls Washington gave the big Cali-dogs, beaten just once the past nuL-uuL-K iu TIT iouj i crown wirn a 1 1 rprnm rnia a workin over in "tsitwo seasons, launched three scor- Haines 3, drive, throwing its big i passes Saturday two by! uuuul i i i i iviwiieMHd a earn crosS-COlintrv im thi HH fnr chnrf hut upset 23-14 by Purdue.

The! a four team cross-country raceibacks up the middle for short but Tenn State: Jones 3 yard A a iGophers must beat i at Forest Park in St Lcmfc.ieffective gains. Ray a luopnert, must beat Wisconsin next 7 12 20--43; vveek to share the championship. 13121818--01: Iowa i a Crump 10, Hesse 16, and used a st i Aaron plunged the last two yards. quarterback Phil Long--and clipped Washington 33 6 to finish! with an 8-1 record. 1-2, had 34 points to 46 for minutes and Washington had 'turn back 1U second! 55 for James Millikin and 81 for its second tally less than four min- jHarris Teachers.

The winning time utes later, going 49 yards in just drive us 9 nl Senior halfback John Skirchak Jones conversion; Arnold 1 vard P. McNeal on 9 yard run. Buckhorst 5, Cox 12. conversion bv Jones: Randle on Armstrong: Steinmetz 21, Craig- I 1 ifor the thrpp milo rnurso wn; 2 yard run, G. McNeal ran con- 15 Espenschied 25.

i Williams also scored on a two- 1O 16 Bourse was 15.aO. 3 plavs. version. Bellino Sparks Another Win First Place Boys Ashland jHarrisburg Ashland: Nichols 3, 'Rice 10. Cantrell 7, Ta ison 16.

lyard plunge. Quarterback i Peoples placed fourth for A pass interception by center "ijTiff Hollis added a 12-yard touch- i i best finish and Archie: Roy McKasson, Washington's All 14 4 in down and Matt Szykowny scorel jHaymna was fifth. The two Tiger i America candidate, set up a sec- Nichols 3 i sneak. runners covered the first two miles jond-quarter touchdown and the Ohio state quarterback Tom 'almost side by sire with St. Louis Huskies marched 95 yards for and fullback Bob Ferguson scored Ohio State's touchdowns.

0 U's first and second placers. Also placing for Lincoln were: tor. Clifford Aitch. 10th; Luther Brown, California their final tally in the third quar- 7--35'13th: and Wylie Rogers, 14th. i Washington 0 0 0 7 7 13 7 7 0--277 ANNAPOLIS.

Md. fAP)--Joe Bellino, scoring four touchdowns in one of his finest individual per-i formances as a Navy player, i powered the Middies to a 41-6 football victory over Virginia Sat-; urday and set two new Nava-11 Academy records. Razorbacks Uproot Stubborn SMU Watkins Provides Push Iowa State Pins 20-7 Loss on K-State FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (AP) MANHATTAN, a (AP)Pow- One of the runs by the sas a backs rooted to ercd by fullback Tom Watkins Cotton Bow 1 lv 0 lichdown smashes Iowa Chester. rocket" was for 90 came on an eight-yard pass piny a no cKJnney Aloore kc ed a 26-3 Southwest ardson just before the halftime gun.

The Cyclones left the field at a i i with a 13-7 lead. That pinned a 20-7 defeat on Kan- scoro ciayberg cracked State Saturday before a slim It was the final Big eight game a dash of 39 yards and a plunge Conf crence victory over stubborn' crowd of 5.500. of one yard which took him fourl Methodist. It was the fi cracks at a stubborn Virginia line' If the azorbacks beat Texas season for both teams. to make jTech in Lubbock, next Sat- 1 a a State went winless Brilino gained 198 in i 7 a lhe v11 clinch the host spot' 11 seven conference games a 0 ct the hnrk-s Cavi i the Cotton Bowl and a1 a ncw coach Weaver id- lost their 2.Vn"':traieh* for tne conference champion- Iowa State flnlsn ed with a (25 carries.

Dave Hoppman a I Watkins 1 run (kick failed) "shin. '4-3 league record. jthe ground gaining star, a i i Richardson 75 run (Blay- over for his touchdown. Watkins. a 182 pound senior who ranks third in the Big Eight individual and recovered.

But the Wildcats scored two touchdowns and kick-j ed three extra points, raising his season total to 85 points. Skirchak took a short spot pass' from long in the first quarter and loped all the way for a 58-yard scoring play. The Bears, now 2-6: for the season, bounced back with: a 55-yard scoring drive in 18 Al Huenfeld scoring from the; three. But Skirchak scored again a 14 halftime lead and the Bulldogs applied the clincher in the third period with a 14-yard scoring pass from Long which bounced off ed Ken Freeman in the end zone and into the hands of halfback Elmer O'Banion. After O'Banion's 45 yard T.D.

run, an 82-yard screen pass play. Lance Middle- Time for a SAFETY CHECK! had against a a a a State completed 4 pa a a bll in rushing, the first two Iowa ing more effective. State touchdowns on plunges of 1 Iowa State cs for 40 yard? but inept ,1 ing kept quarterbacks John Sol- mos and Ron Blay-lock from be- passing was the difference. 7 7 6 13 833 Washington 0 6 0 0--6 and 2 yards. a a State Watkins picked up 93 yards on! --S Watkin.s 2 run i Rick kick) 7 6 0 7-20JFlorida Invited league record.

Iowa State put the game on yards on 31 tries. Hoppmann.jlock i in the fourth quarter. Re- a nifty 171-pound sophomore I Clayberg 4 run (Rick kick) Madison, missed the Kansas and Missouri games and was in with one minute and 2fijonly a few plays against'Colora-i i i him a new season record for an Academy McKmney provided key plays on His 749 vards for nine a Arkansas touchdown i i out a previous a Drives. Alternating field general rv tal lback Dave Clayberg went of H9! VHi-ds set by Fred Franco Moore dug out vital yardage in 1 I 9f. four ard and a in 1M2 each push and scored once on a toilch( ow with one minute and 2(5 Hiy 24 points were the highest one-yard plunge.

left to play. HJS run cap- scored -in a single game bv a Sophomore halfback Jim 'nrfh yard nve Blg gainer in was -'tuoborn defeat i Hushing yardage Navy player and were added teuton flashed 42 vard" on a a W3S a Td thc ia r'. cr ended a i yardage the 80 he alreadv had return for ArkanV-' wingbackjWildcats held a i four time-Passes for a modern Navv record, down late in the a i' i Buraon to hat nsid 8 vard i stopping a intcrcctcd Virginia 0 6-6 SMU a 51 10 was the i a the 1. Ear; Punts left to play. His run because of injuries.

(first downs drive. Big gainer i K-State was stubborn in yardage Attendance 5.500. Statistics I-State K-State 8 To Play Gator Bowl GAINESVILLE, F-la. A Florida's Gators, with their best I Southeastern Conference season; in history, Saturday were invited'' to play the postseason Gator Bowl; Dec. 31 at Jacksonville, Fla.

The invitation was extended by i John Piombo, chairman of Every Car Should Have a BLACKWELL TUNE-UP! Winter driving demands a properly adjusted well tuned motor. We invite you to have this service done hy our experts. We use only Genuine Parts in making replacements, and We Guarantee Satisfaction. If not already a user of our service, we invite you to join our growing list of Satisfied Customers. DRIVE IN SOON Virginia Navy 0 0 0 6 6 0 21 13 7--41 Arkansas a a was in the thick of i i the i a time at the 1.

a 3'thanks to a 75-yard touchdown pier the Wildcat? had forced a lost 6 by Junior halfback Jack Rich-iClayberg fumole at the K-State i a penalized 20 358 llSlGator Bowl Selection 30 30; soon after Florida finished its' 3-9 4-13'SEC slate with a 21-6 victory over, by 0 2 Tulane. Tne victory gave Florida 3-37 a 5-1 record in SEC play. 1 1 Florida cannot accept until the; 25 30 season is over. Over 38 Tears' Experience Servicing Automotive Equipment Jefferson A Miller Phone.

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