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The Daily Plainsman from Huron, South Dakota • Page 11

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Huron, South Dakota
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11
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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30, 19G6 THE DAILY PLAINSMAN, Huron, South PAGE ELEVEN Scalpers Defeated By S.D. Tech, 20-14; Northern Next Fumbles Are Big Factor In Huron Loss RAPID CITY The' Huron College Scalpers, who shocked Hie South Dakota Intercollegiate Conference last week by socking Southern State. 48-13. lost its momentum here Saturday and dropped a tough decision to South Dakota Tech, 20-14. NEXT SATURDAY the Scalp- ers will entertain Northern Slate of Aberdeen, which already has clinched the SDIC crown, in Huron's final home game.

Against Tech, the Scalpers were able to mount a powerful ground game which ground out 332 yards to Tech's 183 but fumbles and the passing com- bination of Bill Brodsky-John Alaas swung the decision to the Hardrockers. HURON STRUCK first in the opening stanza. Frank Lasagna. who blossomed out with a great performance against Southern, galloped over eight yards and Jon Brookhart plaeekicked the extra point. Tech crossed Huron's goalline in the second period on Jerry Mitzel's 14-yard run but the Scalpers took a 7-6 halftime edge into their dressing room as the conversion try failed.

The Brodsky-Maas duo swung into action in the third period with a five-yard pass play and Maher Baraket converted with a placekick to put Tech on lop 13-7. THE TWO TEAMS exchanged touchdowns and extra points in Ihe closing quarler. Huron's counter came when quarterback Bob Sparks sneaked over from two yards out and Brookhart again converted. Tech matched the Huron effort as Brodsky tossed a 38-yard touchdown pass to Maas and the same passing combination click- ed for the extra point. HURON'S offensive drive was slowed frequently by fumbles.

The Scalpers hobbled the ball five times and on four occasions there was a Tech defender on hand to pounce on it. Tech fumbled twice, losing the ball once. Tech had an advantage in the air, throwing 16 passes and con- necting on seven for 84 yards, including the two touchdowns and extra point. Huron hit on 3 of 12 attempts for 55 yards. Tlie score by quarters: Huron 7 0 0 1--14 Tech 0 6 7 7--20 Penn State Races To Easy Victory Over California UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.

(AP) Fullback Dan Lucyk, who starled the season as a third stringer, slashed for yards Saturday in leading Penn Stale to a surprising 33-15 Iriumph over California. Quarterback Tom Sherman, the defensive stalwart switched to quarterback several weeks ago, scored four of Penn Stale's touchdowns, but il was the pow- er, running of Lucyk, a 203-yard junior, that set the Golden Bears up for the kill Penn State trailed briefly in the second quarter after Califor nia had matched a Lions' TD and led 7-6 on a successful con- version. Sherman scored the first four Penn State touchdowns, three on short yardage runs. Rapid City Spills O'Gormau, 35-14 RAPID CITY A Jerry Smith raced for three touch downs Friday night to lead Rapid City to a 35-14 football victory over Sioux Falls O'Gor- man. Smith scored on runs of 16 and 54 yards and look a 22-yard pass from Bill Gilford for an- olher TD.

Brian Winler went seven yards and Paul Trcick ran 43 yards without a fumble for Ihe other Rapid City TDs. Rex Rolf- ing kicked three extra points and the Cobblers, 8-1 for the season, scored two points on a safety. O'Gorman trailed 35-0 before Dan Donohue hit Tom Francis with an 11-yard TD pass in the fourth quarter. Pat Gillespie scored the final O'Gonnan TD from the 1 with 12 seconds left. Marv Johnson booted two extra points.

Rapid City, seeking its second straight 9-1 season, ends the campaign next Friday night at Wcsl Virginia Tics Kentucky, 14-14 W. Va. A Sophomore Pete Secret, who wasn't, on rnslrr at the sea- son's a passed for one touchdown nnt! a for another as inspired Vir- ginia lied a I I 14. Secret drove West Virginia (vt a in (hp opening period and went over 1-yard line Hie a i fir.sl loudidown His swipe over a le tii'd Ihe score a scored i (ln a I a pass i a Nebraska Blisters Missouri, 35-0 LINCOLN, Neb. (AP)-Eighlh- Nebraska strapped Mis- souri with a tenacious defense Saturday and rambled to a sur- prisingly a 35 to 0 Big 'ighl foolball victory before a Memorial Stadium crowd of 65,095.

The regionally televised Corn- niskcr victory ran Nebraska's regular season win string lo 17 mes and fortified the I-Iuskcr bid for a fourth straight confer- ence crown. Missouri, its own lille hopes iolled by a 10-10 lie with Iowa Slale lasl week, was lefl with a 1-2-1 mark for the season 2-1-1 the loop. It was the most lopsided Ne- Draska win over Missouri since 1922 when the Tigers bowed 48-0. The last shutout in a 60-gamc Nebraska Missouri series was posted by Missouri in 1960, 28-0. A pair of touchdowns in each of the second and third quarters put Ihe game out of reach of Ihe Tigers and Husker Coach Bob Dcvaney iurned Ihe game over to second slringers of a one- louchdown final period assaull.

So stiff were Nebraska de- fenses that Missouri was able to cross the midfield stripe only once before the game's waning moments and that incipient sec- ond quarler threat was choked off when Larry Wachholtz pirat- ed a Gary Kombrink pass, sixth interceplion of the year for the Husker safety man. A fumble recovery by Ben Gregory and a pass interception by Kaye Carstens' set the stage for two Nebraska touchdowns after Nebraska's opening 68- yard drive ended in an unsuc- cessful 31-yard field goal try by Wachholtz. But Nebraska defenders quick- regained possession for the of- fensive unit and Pete Talman's one-yard touchdown plunge on Ihe second play of the second quarter gave Nebraska its first counter. Less than five minutes later Gregory recovered a punl relurn bobble by Jim Whitaker and on the nexl play, shook off three tacklers lo score from 1G yards oul. Early in Ihe second half, hard running by halfback Harry Wil- son conlribuled to a 13-play, 73- yard drive made good on Bob Churchich's one-yard keeper.

Carstens made his inlercep- tion less than three minutes laler and ran 42 yards with the pirated ball to Missouri's 7 from where Gregory scored. A 5-yard touchdown pass from reserve quarterback Wayne Weber lo end Tom Smilh cap- ped a 10-play, 52-yard drive in the fourth quarter for Nebraska. Montana State Blasts UND With Poiver Display, 59-21 GRAND FORKS (AP) Mon- tana Slale, Ihe No. 3 team in the Associated Press Small- College football poll, lurned in a powerful offensive perform- ance to crush North Dakota, 59- 21, here Saturday. 'It has to be our best offen- sive performance of the year," said Bobcat Coach Jim Seeney FOOTBALL Saturdar S.

D. 'Tech 20, Huron 14 Black Hills 19, Wealeyan 7 Montana State 59, North Dakota 21 Stale College Iowa 13, S. D. State 7 N. D.

Stale 13, Of South Dakota 0 Michigan State 32, Northwestern 0 Nebraksa 35. Missouri 0 Minnesota 17, Ohio State 7 Iowa 20 19 Kent Stale 28, Toledo 20 Ranrfolph-Macon 35, Western Maryland 8 North Carolina State 42, Virginia 21 Maryland 14, South Carolina 2 Lincoln University 28, Moot-head State 14 Drake 17, North Texas 13 Weslcyan 12, Hamilton 6 Northeastern 24, Kings Point 8 Colgate 21, Lehlgh 15 Maine 31, Colby Dickinson, Pal, 14, Lebanon Valley 7 Alfred GO, Ursinus 8 Rochester 40, St. Lawrence 6 Thiel 14, Carnegie Tech 7 Albright 13, Moravian 7 Southern Connecticut 10, Hofslra 0 1'rincelon 24, Brown 7 Notre Dame 31, Navy 7 1'enn State 33, California 15 Rutgers 16, Boston 7 Cornell 31. Columbia fi Dartmouth 28, Yale 13 Syracuse .13, Pittsburgh 7 Harvard 27, Pennsylvania 7 Villanova 13, Xavler, Ohio 7 Delaware 20, Temple 14 Williams 14, Union, N. Y.

12 George Washington 49, Furman 2S Kentucky 14, West Virginia 14 i Buffalo 35, Holy Cross 3 Lycomlng 17, Franklin and Marshall 0 Swarthmore 31, Muhlenberg 8 Georgia Tech 48, Duke 7 Georgia 28, North Carolina 3 Virginia Tech 23, Florida Stale 21 Clemson 23, Wake Forest 21 Dayton 20, Ohio 12 Bethany, W. Va. 28, Case 0 Heidelberg 22, Otterbein 0 Hope 43, Kalamazoo 29 Kenyan Oberlin 3 Southern Methodist 13, Texas 12 Connecticut 15, New Hampshire 14 Norwich 14, Middlebury 0 Bales 35, Bowdoin 13 Rensselaer Poly 13, Worcester Tech 0 Massachusetts 27, Vermont 21 Bddgewater State 21, Nichols 20 Chcyney State 14, Bloomsburg State 0 Gettysburg 19, Lafayette 18 Delaware State 22, Monlclair State 6 Amherst 28, Tufts 6 Springfield 25, Wagner 7 Trinity, Conn. 57, Coast Guard 15 Alabama 27, Mississippi State 14 Florida 30, Auburn 27 Tennessee 38, Army 7 William Mary 22, Virginia Military 15 Central Ohio 20, Wesl Virginia St. 0 Washington Lee 14, Bridfiewaler 6 Tulsa 13, Cincinnati 0 Colorado 24, Oklahoma 21 Western Michigan 35, Marshall 29 Bowling Green 17, Miami, Ohio 14 Texas Christian 6, Baylor 0 'Jackets Stiug Wesleyaii, 19-7, In Homecoming SPEARF1SH (AP) Black Hills State scored single touch- downs in Hie last Ihree periods Saturday and defeated Dakola Wesleyan 13-7 lo climax ils home- coming activilies.

Dave Buum and Bryan Nullall tallied on one-yard plunges and end Gale Malson look a 37-yard pass from quarterback Todd Ja- cobson for Black Hills' touch- downs. An exlra point was scored on Jacobson's pass to Bill Kohn. Wesleyan tallied in the final period on a 30-yard pass from Bob Giesey to Dale Naftzger, and Giescy kicked the point. afler Ihe viclory over UND, ranked No. 4 in the AP chart.

MONTANA STATE rolled lo ils sevenlh win in eight starts as halfback Don Hass, the lead- ing small-college ground gainer in the country, scored i touchdowns. The Bobcats' only loss this season was a 35-23 de- cision lo No. 1 North Dakola Slale on Ocl. 8. Hass gave the Montanans a 14-0 lead with only eight min- tiles elapsed in Ihe firsl quar- ter.

North Dakota's Pete For- insh scored on a five-yard run and the Sioux moved to within seven points. Porinsh scored in the second frame on a 10-yard pass from slar quarterback Corey Cole- hour, but Errol Mann's kick was wide. Montana State eruptec from that 14-13 margin and left the Sioux in the dust. The Bobcats' ace kicker, Jan Stenerud, booled a 26-yard field goal and quarterback Dennis Erickson plunged from the one yard line to move Montana State ahead, 24-13, at the half. STENERUD also added eigh points with 100 per cent showing on extra-point kicks.

UND scoring came to a hal in the third quarter after enc Jim Hester took a five-yard touchdown pass from Colehour I and scooped up another Cole hour aerial in the end zone for the two extra points. Montana State's Doug Boyc scored in a 58-yard passing ef fort from Erickson, and Hass crossed Ihe goal line for the Bobcats' three more times be fore the final gun sounded each time from the one-yard line. Hass carried the ball 21 times for 110 yards as Montana State rolled to a rushing tota of 288 yards. NORTH DAKOTA amassed 261 yards in the air, on Cole hour's 17 completions in 37 at tempts, but managed only 9: yards on the ground. Montana State had 110 yards passing.

Colehour's favorite receiver end Bill Predovich, was in the game periodically, but he was bothered by a pulled tendon. Montana 14 10 21 14--59 7 6 8 0--21 Attendance: 4,100. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) Curl Wilson and John Winter- mute shredded Ohio Stale's de- 'enses for more than 100 yards ushing apiece and Minnesota's lefcnsc made the crucial plays the Gophers' 17-7 upset viclo- over Ihe Buckeyes in a re- gionally televised Big Ten fool- jail game Saturday. The victory gave the Gophers 2-1-1 Big Ten record and dropped the Buckeyes to 1-3.

The Gopher defense shook Ihe jail loose from OSU quarter- back Bill Long as he tried to jass early in the second half and recovered the fumble lo set ip a touchdown lhat shoved Minnesota ahead 14-0. Wilson scored on a three-yard keeper to cap Ihe 23 yard slrike. Ohio State bounced back to score its only touchdown on 10-yard pass lo Bob Rein. But the Gophers then clinched the victory with a 21- yard field goal by Jerry Beavan after Minnesota recovered an onside kick and drove 44 yards to set it up. Tulare Downs Wolsey In Homecoming Game, 33-13 TULARE The Tulare High School Chiefs ended the season Friday nighl by beating Ihe Wolsey Cardinals 33-13.

It was a homecoming game and the Chiefs were in command from the beginning to the end. After both teams played a scoreless first period Vaughn Meyer tossed a six yard pass to Randy Olio for the opening score. The extra point was no good. Meyer continued to lead the way as he scored on a 13 yard run lale in Ihe same peri- od. Larry Kohnen added Ihe exlra point After half time the Chiefs came back out and scored again this lime on an eight yard run by Meyer.

The exlra point failed. The Cardinals came back af- ter this lally on a GO yard pass play from Jim Ruedebush to Dennis Ranson. The extra point failed. The Chiefs retaliated with some poinls of their own Meyer ran six yards for a score. Meyer also tossed Billy Stoner for the extra point In the fourth period Kohnen added the final Chief score thi one on a 12-yard jaunt.

Bobby Brugger got the extra point. The Cardinals added their fi nal tally on a 12 yard pas from Kent Larsen lo Tony Lai- sen. The extra point was Kent Larsen. The standouts for the Wolsej Cardinals on offense were Den nis Ranson and Greg Larsen Greg Larsen was also a stand out on the defense. Tulare had five players which played an outslanding game.

Four of Ihem are seniors. Those who played their last game were Brugger, Kohnen, Rodney Binger, and Terry Schullz. The olher was Junior Vaughn Meyer. Wolsey 0 0 6 7 13 Tulare 0 13 13 7 33 Gophers Shock Bucks, 17-7 Michigan State Sputters SCI Defeats To 22-0 Win Over Wildcats Coyot Top- Hold Ranked Bison, 13-0 VERMILLION (AP) The North Dakota State Bison feated the University of South Dakota 13-0 here Saturday, stretching their string of victories to 25, and their NCC card to 5-0. USD did manage to hold the Bison to their lowesl point pro- duction of the season, however.

LEADING the Coyote defensive effort was linebacker Don Ab- bott, 185-pound senior from Ha warden, la. Abbott intercepted one NDS pass, recovered a fumble anc made a number of jarring tackles. Steve Chambers and Brian Re- zatto also stole Bison passes dur- ing the contest, Chambers' stea: leading lo Ihe best USD threat of the afternoon. That came with about eight minutes left and the sophomore from Treynor, galloped 45 yards to the NDS 23-yard line after swiping the Terry Hanson aerial. A PASS from Jim Nixon to John Biezuns carried the bal ahead two yards and then Nixon ran seven yards.

Biezuns drove to the 10 for a first down and Nixon got Iwo more. Then Nixon was thrown for a 10-yard loss, was injurec and left the game. Reserve Glenn Ruhr connect ed with Larry Hultgren for a seven-yard gain but a fourth down pass was incomplete. NDS scored in the second and fhird periods. The first tally came on nine-yard run by Ken Rota after a 12-play march drive had covered 67 yards.

Hanson threw only one pass in the march and it was incomplete The score came with 13:21 lefl in the half. IN THE THIRD period, NDS took over on the USD 36 after Joe Collins had punted from his seven. Hanson hit Lowell Linderman for eight yards and a persona foul penalty against the Coy otes gave NDS a first down on the 14. Mike Hasbargen plunged to six and Hanson tossed a TD pass of eight yards to Mike Bel mont. That ended the scoring with 8:25 quarler.

remaining in the EVANSTON, 111. (AP) lichigan State, the nation's No. team, clicked spasmodically subdue stubborn North- western 22 to 0 for the Spartans' ilth straight Big Ten victory nd seventh of their undefeated eason. Although Michigan State not score more than one ouchdown in any quarter, the Spartans' great defense held Northwestern lo only six rush- ng yards. The Sparlans, a 21-point fa- 'orile, were leading 12-0 at half- Big Star In Clark Victory CLARK The Clark Comets, jehind the fine throwing arm of junior quarterback Jim Gar- lardt, finished the season with a victory as they defeated Brit- on 38-13 here Friday night.

The victory was Ihe sevenlh for Clark, who has suffered only a pair of Garhardt passed for four two of them to Larry Sutton, another standout player on the Clark squad, and another pair to Terry Helms. Garhardt's tosses to Sutton were for 50 and 59 yards. Sutton also converted a pair of extra points for the Comets. Other Clark scoring came from Bruce Hanson on a seven- yard pass from Bob Douty, and from Bruce Wika who trounced 52 yards for his score. Britton's scoring came on a 10-yard pass play in the second period, from Mark Suther to Lyle Pearson with Mike Stadler scoring the point after, and from Suther on a one yard plunge in the third stanza.

The victorious Comets held a 19-0 first period margin and look a 25-7 lead wilh them go- ng into the final period. Clark added 13 more points in the third period while Britton could manage only a single touch- down to rack up their 38-13 vic- tory. time when top-ranked Notre Dame's 31-7 conquest of Navy was announced to a Norlh- weslern homecoming crowd of 44,304. The news failed to give Michi- gan Slale enough incentive lo overpower the scrappy Wildcals during a final half in which slar Spartan fullback Bob Apisa limped off with an injured knee. Michigan Stale's versatile attack produced only two im- pressive scoring drives.

One came the firsl lime the Spartans had the ball and they rolled 74 yards on 11 plays with Clint Jones scooting nine yards around end for the touchdown. After that, Michigan State mffed and puffed to score a second touchdown in the second quarter after a 12-yard North- western punt and a 39-yard field goal by barefoted kicker Dick Kenny in the third period. The second Spartan touch- down came on Apisa's one-yard ilunge after quarterback Jim- my Raye's 31-yard pass to end Gene Washington. Clark Britton 19 0 13 6 0--38 0--13 Cornell Dumps Columbia, 31-6 NEW YORK (AP) Cornell behind hard-running Pete Lar- son's three touchdowns, easily defealed Columbia 31-6 in an Ivy League football game Satur- day. Larson tallied Cornell's first touchdown with a 2-yard plunge in the first quarter and capped his fine day wilh two third-peri- od scores, racing 25 yards for one and snaring a 34-yard pass from quarterback Bill Abel for the other.

Cornell, leading 10-0 at Ihe half, broke the contest open in the Ihird quarter when it scored three limes lo go ahead 31-0 Purdue Edges Illinois 25-21 LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) Purdue's Bob Griese shook off pass inferceptions and lurled Ihe Boilermakers lo a 25- 21 victory over Illinois Salurday on a touchdown in the final 80 seconds. The victory gave Purdue sole possession of second place in Big Ten football standings and the inside track to the Rose Bowl. Griese completed 19 of 35 passes for 288 yards and all three Purdue touchdowns. He also kicked two extra points and a 22-yard field goal and passed for a two-point conversion.

The winning touchdown came on a 32-yard pass from Griese to Jim Finley. Griese had to bring the Boil ermakers from behind twice. They went into the fourth period trailing 21-10. The Illinois pass defense picked off five of Griese's pass- es in the second and third quar- ters. Phil Knell got three of them but the big grab was made by Bruce Sullivan on the final play of the third period.

He took the ball on his own 7 and ran 93 yards to put the Illini ahead 21- 10. Illinois drove 80 yards after the opening kickoff and scored orf a four-yard run by Rich Johnson. Purdue drove 75 yards in five plays to tie the score as Griese hit Jim Beirne on a 19-yard touchdown toss. An Illinois fumble gave Purdue the ball on the Illini 12 in the second quarler and Griese kicked the field goal. Illinois drove 71 yards in 12 plays in the third period to re- gain the lead, Bob Naponic going the last 13 after fading to pass.

State 13-7 On Fielders CEDAR FALLS, Iowa (AP) State College of Iowa lurned two 'ield goals and a 68-yard touch- down drive into a 13-7 North Central Conference football vic- over South Dakota State liere Saturday. South Dakota Slate scored first midway Ihrough Ihe opening quarler as Boh Hoeg galloped 76 yards to put the ball on (he On Ihe nexl play Tod Vlacik rushed inlo Ihe end zone. Bob Nelson kicked the extra point. two minutes left in the first quarler, Slale College of Iowa's Jerry Malloy kicked a 25-yard field goal to cut State's lead to 7-3. Malloy booted another field goal this one 26 yards with nine minutes left in Ihe second quarler lo cut the edge to a slim one point.

SCi look possession of the ball on their own 32 and marched 68 yards in 12 plays. Ed Mulholland carried it over from the one- yard line with 2:46 remaining in Ihe half. Malloy kicked the extra point. The second half was scoreless and defensive, but State had ball most of the time in an effort to make up the deficit. At one point the Jackrabbits got as close to paydirt as the SCI 16 before losing the ball on downs.

SCI, meanwhile, got no closer to scoring than the SDS 40. A final Jackrabbit drive moved the ball from the SDG 41 to the SCI 24 but a pass interception on the next play spoiled the re- covery try. The ball was hurled by South Dakola Slate's Tom Anderson and was intercepted by Tom Pinkham on his own seven-yard line. He managed to bring it back to the 13 and a first down before being stopped. Hoeg led the Jackrabbits 'In yardage with 111 yards in 11 car- ries.

Darwin Gonnerman man- aged 31 yards on 13 carries. Stale College of Iowa's Terry Fox led the attack with 107 yards in 14 tries. Outdoor Notes Air Ann Fractured Hanratty Takes To Ground To Lead Irish Over Navy, 31-7 I A I A A Terry Hanrally turned on Ihe a ground power when Jim Seymour's absence crippled his arm Salurday and led Ihe top-ranked Irish lo their sixlh straight victory, 31-7 over Navy. Four interceptions, three of I by linebacker John Por- Sine, helped Notre Dame throt- tle llir a nffcnso. The mid- dies did break Irish Ibrrc- a i when John Berfinor blocked Mob Gladicu.x's punt and recovered for a fourth period score.

a a sneaked over for Iwii i a TOsN and Lar- ry Cdtijar and a i each M'ort'tl nnre. Joe A i uhose field noal I only of I the first period, added the exlra points. With bolh Ihe 6-fool-4 Sey- mour and Paul Snow, his nor- mal replacement, unable to play because of injuries. Hanratly was far from the passing mar- vel of early season. He com- pleted only three of 14 and had Iwc intercepted in the first half.

The Irish, a four-touchdown favorite, struggled through an erratic first half in which their offense produced only 102 yards, 67 on the ground. However, Hint big line, led by (I Kevin Ilaroy and (hose strong linebackers, a Ihe only a a when the Irish held for downs on i stopping a first-period Navy a Tom O'Leary's Interception pul Ihe Middies in a hole in the first period, and Azzaro came Ihrough with his field goal. An interception by Pergine on an- other John Cartwrighl pass, moved Ihe Irish down deep in the second period, and conjar bulled home from Ihe seven. Notre Dame marched 51 yards early in the third period for a score on a a a meal; from Ihe one. Shortly a half- back Nick Eddy suffered a leg injury, his replacement Gla- dicux, plunged home from the one.

Afler Berfiner broke through and blocked Gladieux's punt, Ihe Irish moved quickly to an- oilier score, 70 yards in four plays with a a carrying over from the seven on a sneak a his left Michigan Trims Wisconsin 28-17 MADISON, Wis. (AP) Jim Delwiler crashed for two touch- downs and helped produce an- other with a 51-yard kickoff re- turn as Michigan wore down fumbling Wisconsin 28-17 Satur- day in a Big Ten football game. Detwilcr scored on two plunges from the three-yard line and set the stage for a 23-yard touchdown romp by Dave Fish- er with his kickoff return to the Badgers' 36. Wisconsin, trailing 14-7 at halftime, blew glillering scoring opportunities in both halves against the Wolverines--a learn that blew apart Minnesota 49-0 a week ago. Wayne Todd lost a handoff on a third down play at the Michi- gan two in the second period and Dick Volk recovered for Michigan.

In the second half, Kim Wood fumbled at the Michigan 28 and Tom Stincic recovered for Ihe Wolverines. Yale Proves Easy For Dartmouth Associated Press Sports Writer NEW I1AVICN. Conn. A Quarterback Mickey Beard's passing, running and faking lead a to a 28-13 viclo- ry over Yale Saturday and kepi Ihe Indians in Ihr Ivy League foolball tille picture. Beard threw touchdown pass- es of and eight yards and In- loraled to halfback Gene ev.ie/ on a 42-yard scoring play a Bulldog defens tops in the lea.m punctured a a had born By TAL LOCKWOOD (State Game Warden) Duck hunting in this area has really turned out to be some- thing this year.

Many of the old time hunters claim that it has- nol been Ihis good for 40 years, and we can believe that. Seldom will this part of the country re- ceive up to five inches of rain in a single night in mid-Octo- ber. This jusl doesn't happen in South Dakota, but it did. We had been fortunate from the middle of the summer on for the nice rains that we had been receiving, but no one bad been expccling what we receiv- ed this month. It didn't help our short pheasant hunting season success any, nor did it assist farming operations, bill il real- ly did attract the web-footed fellows.

They seem lo be en- joying the unusual conditions immensely even if Ihe farmers aren'l. Ducks certainly must have a tremendous system of commu- nications, either that or a very uncanny nature of sensing the parts of the country where things are good. Whatever their technique may be it certainly didn't, take fhcm long to find the area of flooded corn, milo, and stubble fields. The heavy rain left a water holes in pastures and agriculture fields. This combin- ed with the bumper crops still standing in (he fields is the best conditions possible for mallards.

Thus Ihe mallards are thriving, and in (urn so are the hunters. I The type of duck hunting a (he present conditions offer would have to be rated as lop notch. And it certainly has been just a because it has I brought out duck hunters that I haven't been hunting for years. I Everybody and his dog (nol jusl a figure of speech I a been enjoying the good hunting. Decoys have come back into i own around here Ihis year.

Alany hunters either purchased new ones or dug out Iheir old ones and put them to work. Probably one of the most beautiful sights a hunter can witness is a flock of mallards selling Iheir wings and gliding inlo a raft of decoys. This has become a common sight for many hunters the past 10 days now, and if good fortune is with us it should hold up for some time yet. If you haven't yet been out you should get with it as you are certainly missing a magnificient sight if you have not yet experienced ducks com- ing into a small Waterhole in a corn or small grain field on a beautiful Indian summer morning or evening. SDS SCI 0 0 -3 10 0 0- 7 0-13 Tiger Harriers Place Fifth In Yankton Meet Coach Harry Mansheim's Hu- ron High School cross country team placed fifth in the Yank- ton invilational meet Saturday and Huron's Kerwin Johnson placed tenth with a lime of 10:33 over the two-mile course al the Yankton Stale Hospilal grounds.

Sioux City Cenlral took team honors followed in order by Yaukton, Sioux Falls Washing- ton, Lennox, Huron and Vermil- lion. Other schools entered did not have enough entranls lo com- pele for team laurels. Gene Coons of Sioux City Cen- tral won individual honors in 10:09. The rest of the field trail- ed him as follows: 2. Tom Col- lignon, Yankton; 3.

Wilson, Sioux City Central; 4. Piper, Sioux Fall's Washington; 5. Ko- son, Sioux City Cenlral; 7. Holl- ing, Lennox; 8. Weherseck, Len- nox; 9.

Schwin, Sioux Cily Cen- tral; 10. Johnson, Huron; 11. Bevin, Sioux City Cenlral; 12. Searing, Sioux Cily Cenlral; 13. Ramsley, Yankton; 14.

Knulson, Yankton; 15. Bellinger, Mitchell. Olliers from Huron who placed included Mike Moore, 27lh with lime of Sieve Wilson, 34lh; Gene Sloan, 3Slh; Allen Dielrich, 42nd and John Mar- tin. 44lh. ANYTIME ON SUNDAY you can make a 3-minute station call to anywhere in 48 states for only $1 or less.

Additional time equally low in cost. Northwestern Bell.

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