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The Evening Independent from Massillon, Ohio • Page 18

Location:
Massillon, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 1958 JTHEJSVJSN1NG INDEPENDENT, MASSILLON. OHIO By FRITZ HO WELL PASADENA, Cal. State's Buckeyes, if they svant to be fair about it, should chip in to have third-string halfback Don Sutherin's right shoe gold-plated. The 194-pound senior came off the bench to boot a fourth-period field goal from the 24-yard line yesterday, giving the nation's second-ranked team a squeaky 10-7 verdict over Oregon's 1 underdogs before 98,202 44th Rose bowl game. THE SHAKY Pacific Coast con- ias seen its rep-- drop 11 of the 12 games with Western conference foes since the past was signed in 1947, figured this one was a moral victory.

It came close to being more than if 21 'VL st a bowl haking block. Fullback rJm WES j3Ck rriS 0led hJS Hth C0n most first downs sc.ored against'version in 19 attempts to tie it the Bucks this season. The Ohio! In the third Quarter Mnrris carpet 1 WM IOIVMI of The scoring was short and took over on the 20 and 8n7 6 klrSf 7Q CkS all on the ground, bat- ir their way to thc ot terback Frank Kremblas sneak-; with only 58 seconds gone in a 37 1 a ei hrow period. Suthcrin came 3n 8 paSS ff the bonch and with Kremblas a UJSt0 of holdi ng. Toronto bov angled 1 ne vard line a 24 vard between the Kremblas converted uprights for the winning margin.

The Ducks marched 80 yards in i ,10 plays in a drive which'bridged! THAT WAS the ball game but 'Ifon Sf i cl ern is -i there Wre man decd sion, with Halfback Jim along the way. For in- rW fr mJ uarter -i sta just as Sutherin's field (back Jack Crabtree and circlmgigoal won the tilt, senior Joe Canena lor live yards. Half his frst start at List MCO utstandsng piayer picked up REVIEWOF THE YEAR-By Alan Maver HICKORY carried the ball but. once.i Favored Outfits Cop Bowl Frays scrimmage) touchdowns, as he passed scored two By ORLO ROBERTSON The Associated Press A tJhe four major footba11 ailll proved that figures don't lie. Favored Navy, interception.

Alississippi and Ohio State came through wfth individual! Baker nun up an Orange bowl star-studded victories. record when he intercepted a Navy the nation's No. 3 team in total offense and fjf assoa ced 94 ards for ed fifth in the final Associated Press poll wallooed Rice' to UC down in the Cotton bowl. seventhInToTai pro'vSeTIhe ffiwS? halfb3Ck fense and ranked fourth, ripped out a 48-21 decision over Duke in the Orange bowl. Mississippi, eighth offensively! Ohio State's victory with a 24- yard field goal.

completely dominated the and ranked seventh, buried points with a safety in each of Rice Owls but missed several op- under a 39-7 score. And Ohio! the last three periods'after Texas I portun ities to SCOre because of I 4-L i r. DPnal PC a 11 A ftt n-iKl State, llth in total offense with 2 ranking, edged Oregon 10-7. THE SURPRISE of the four games was not the outcome but margins of victories. Navy, 0klahoma and Mississippi all were favored but by no such one- sided scores.

By contrast, Ohio State was picked to finish in front by three touchdowns. Yet it took a field goal in the final period to settle the issue between the Buckeyes Southern had scored in the first quarter. The four major bowls, played before national television audiences, were sellouts. The largest penalties and fumbles. A pass interception set up the Southwest conference eleven's lone touchdown.

While Forrestal was voted the tries. Although Oregon lost lit No. 1 guard, Harry Mondale, on the play of the game, the Web- I foots did a fair job of stacking up "up the middle" egon In Rose BoivI 0- 7 Nod the 34. In the second session the 24, but he fumbled wfaen Oregons took the ball on downs tackled. Cannavino recovered on their own 12 as they stalled; and Oregon's wti a 61-yard Ohio drive.

In the gone al hm 8 star Picking off 10 aer- threw Kremblas for 20 yards matching star, losses on two plays. ials for 144 But despite the sturdy defense! Don Clark of Akron, Ohio'i No. best the Bucks have had to' 1 halfback who missed last contend Oregons Big Ten games with a groin JU U1 up n't keep a drive going because of i injury, rushed for 82 yards in 14 lunios famed up the middle" the pass interceptions and but Bob White, the sopho- sault bles. more fullback, paced the ground- uregon staned the season with. In the second period, after halt-'gainers with 93 in 25 tries.

Shan- only 45 players, and nine of them! ing Ohio on the 12, Oregon surg-Uey and Morris each carried 11 naant appeared a game. But to the Buckeye 29. There! times for the Ducks, the former seldom have so few done so much'Crabtree mussed up the pass'for 59 yards, the latter for 57. the determined from center, Shanley kicked the' So well did the Oregons move the Bucksibounding pigskin in a futile re-! the ball, digging themselves out jcovery attempt, and Ohio's Don'of deep situations time after time iv Tiif p-rccT- n. i rank of fell on it.

In the) that they were not forced to punt nit riKST period the fourth, after moving from Ore- 1 even first time in years i the gon's 20, Crabtree hit end Ron the Bucks haven't forced a foo from'Stover with a 22-yard pass to to kick. tim, time. Baker Has 94-Yard Gallop Luck Okies the Sooners 231 Ok- 0-JfribuffJ t-j Feature! Syndicate i xjan.ci stole a pass and raced'driving 65. 70 and 85 varda for SSSfiVSS ouchdown ja 48-21 Orange Bowl football vic-i game was minutes old. It; lory over Duke.

as the longest sprint in Orange; But Bud Wilkinson, coach of! Bowl history. jthe Sooners. acknowledged that Six of Oklahoma's touchdowns'97 yards for jhis team got the breaks in the resulted from breaks and luck! se entn. wi Blue (Of the Sooner scores were Orange Bowl "The things that happened to! into a hectic fourth quarter. ifjj ictor e.

Duke normally don't happen Two Duke fumbles, an intcr- Maryland This was Ive never had so many touch- cepted pass, a blocked punt and! 0 the Bowl's' downs given to me," he said. a high snap from center led four Oklahoma scores Atlantlc LADY LUCK joined the Soon-J While Oklahoma was cashing year the Big Eight ers early. With Duke threaten-! breaks for points, the Blue Devils champs will play a team selected ing, Oklahoma Quarterback Dav-jhad to get theirs the hard on the open market. 7fi V.HI.C3, vvcic seiiuuis. j.ne largest was vinea ine crowd of 98,202 was in the Rose! game outstanding back, he re- af CCJVed Preat Viflln frnm nu bowl at Pasadena, Cal.

The Sugar bowl in New Orleans was jammed with 82,000 fans, the Orange bowl in Miami with 76,318 and the Cotton bowl at Dallas with 75,504. cetved great help from Ned Old-1 ham and Harry Hurst. Each! picked up 50 yards and scored ai touchdown. The other came when! second-stringer Roland Brand-j 1 JJ The addition of 23,000 at thei quist lun ged the last yard, three smaller bowls brought the A 27 int last quarter settled 1 total turnout to 357,024. Among the day's stars WVU And Kansas Try To Extend Skeins Bi Surprise Woody Says Navy Irish (Few Tickets Oregon Was Clash Sought Remain For Bulldog Tilt the Webfoots.

The Ohio State victory gave the Big Ten a 11-1 margin over mun-n, us.iaaomas uave trinmnVi CT Coast conference in the! Ba ker and Ohio State's Don Suth- nst series, which started 'in 1947 erin. foe. Louisville defeated Drake 34-20 Alter Baker's in the Sun bowl, Prairie View PHILADELPHIA is trying to make its Municipal stadium the scene of the' total turnout to 357,024. tfte Issue between Oklahoma andj By The Associated Press Both 1 Among the day's stars were rV 7 he oone capitalized on! West Virginia and Hill won Navy's Tom Forrestal, Mississip-ifL IK mls take ln "eking up nation's top-ranked college bas-l Wednesd; pi's Ray Brown, Oklahoma's Dave straight Orange bowl'ketball teams-go into action to-londs. A iBaker and Ohio State's Don tnu against an Atlantic Coast ni nt as the deluge of holiday.

Graves round i me outllt UL tilt' i i PASADENA, CaL-Ohio Stale's Navy-Notre Dame football game KM i. mnasium uckeyes defeated California by'as well as the Armv.Navv game sh ould be bl g'ng at the seams IB margin of Jim Hague's field in 1958. Lanton McKmley and the T' Ti rt nr-r- r- r. i A t-" and Texas Southern tied 6-6 Jn the Prairie View bowl and East ex as State nosed out Mississippi in the Tangerine Southern 10-9 bowl. Prairie View put together its YES we have Duofold FORRESTAL, directing an almost flawless attack, passed for 153 yards and chipped in with some fancy running a the Middies picked up 375 yards through the air and on the ground.

Brown ripped off one run of 103 yards (92 yards from line of long run, the wjui iu seconas lett cavp dwindles to the van-The Citadel a 59-57 ishing point. converted two Duke West Virginia, No, 1 in The; by mi Carney fn block ed punt, a wild snap Associated Press poll, entertains net just as the nter another pass in- Camsius in its first game sincejgave Spring Hiifa shattering North Carolina's Georgia. Ken-1 Harvard overwhelmed New aiiu aijutJier pa; terception into Broiyn was almost the entire show in Mississippi's first Sugar. bowl victory after losses to Geor- Kansas, also gia Tech in 1953 and Navy in er lis llth in a ow by enter- Dec. 21.

unbeaten, samcaithe margin of Jim Hague's field in 1958 Wednesday night in the final (17-14) in 1950 and tripped! Wp nnur al -yassillon Tigers square off Fri- A long field goal by Raylup Southern Cal 21-7 in 1955 Lore ai BaUl da ni "holiday. Graves with 10 seconds left gavel It was aft er the IQnS amp that'nlor! aierftr vl ng Cp the game Tlckcts wil1 be at a minimum i earned aP th ra ire of Wednesday decS NT'TO victory 5 Sve.o^^SerS^J^^ otner Big Jen could have en told Navy is extremely in- a few reserved seat ducats left at noon today. Doors to the gym will open at goes 1955 Navy's 'Greatest 1 Eleven Hangs On For 20-7 Win 11 taining Oklahoma State. The Senior Bowl tournev Hampshire 78-56 and Amherst nipped Springfield 51-45 in the first round games at Durham. Mobile, and the New Hampshire Invitational at Durham, N.

alo wind up tonight. The Citadel plays Spring Hill for the Senior Bowl championship while In non-tourney games Wednes- a't day night Ohio State ended a seven-game losing streak and chalked up its first victory of the season by nipping Yale 69-67 and North Carolina State, ranked llth nationally, walloped Virginia 84- better than Jon Arnett, the South-! ern Cal star. Mann said an agreement be- 5 wit 1 tlle reserve game start" tin 1 CCillClli AtUl jtween the Naval Academy and; ing at Fans are reminded to -nnifftt hv BaIUmore for lhe game "to be llse the entrances off South iis pjayed in Baltimore alternate avc St est 'he board of Jlv was the one hnrrlfp fnr education offices), estimate where nuraie lor Philadelphia to overcome. ed to would have finished in the Bigs Ten. He evaded answering with 'cipal stadium holds McKmley has a 5-1 record a.s HEALTH UNDERWEAR Tthpat WooJ wrthocrt best protection.

See us today about four Doofoid- torv over Rirp rians. Ryan to Ken lory over Kice. Ryan gained 151 yards Tom Forrestai passed and pilot-'Passing and 69 running King) ed the Middies to a 20-0 lead by Hill, Rice's All-America quarter- jthe early part 01 the third period back, showed little, gaining 13! i yesterday. Then Navy hung on yards passing and 14 running as Rice surged to a touchdown! and powered on a 95-yard drive'nn i -w-x that reached the Navy two as! JDclVS Sawyer For 18th Straight with an OSUWins First Game By The Associated Press Ohio State has broken the ice, winning its first game of the 2." ne evaaea answering witn aiaumm start spring practice April! than lOO.OOO persons. Pressed for an answer, he Y.

0. TO PRACTICE Massillon will be going for its second straight win over the Bull! dog who were beaten he-e itime ran out. i NAVY, EASTERN" champion, now has a victory in the Cotton Bowl, one in the Sugar Bowl and a tie in the Rose Bowl. It has For Mika making comparisons. Let's say that Oregon was a big prise to us.

They moved the 35 well as anyone we've met. Crabtree is a fine passer, Stover a fine receiver, and their defense was as good as any we've seen. Len Casanova realiv did a job Zora I basketball rt In th ys for over i get a lift for the start of the went toK hl 6 iidn have one of its better days, 'but that generally "bad days are in Y. O. team The 0 "eam at Canton Memorial of Cantor! ut the Ben als their Canton K'Jrn nday long time foc at canton K.

of C. floor. 'hopphouse. iabout a heavyweight title fight Buckeyes remained a myj- jwith champion Floyd Patterson, ry warm-up campaign as, wclc lwo preLiy gooa Dau C1UDS Folley, 25. of Chandler.

st game after game when out there, but we didn't throw fcAC. ill LUC I3QWJ In Two Piece and Union Salts i never lost a bowl game. 1 Tf HTQB tVio firt-l nn experience, record and rank- i PRICES THE WORKWOMAN'S STORE a rr i gdiiJt. --vw uj.1, QSyS Ifa hls he li ioui mere, DUC we didn't throw were supposed to be one of I any pass interceptions or fumble onf erence powers. thc Ml away They and dropping seven the ball game.

decisions, they edged Yale' "They don't pay off on statistics (Wednesday night 89-67 after: or first downs. They pay off on Harry and Sale UP TO off Owned and Operated by Massillon Sportsmen for Sportsmen (HOP Tt3-5740 37 N.Srie St, 1 0 3 yard5 1 3 5 Sl'tt WAS HARDLY in h.Tftime Iwd.iSe"^^:^ we it name 0 01 8 the 10 rminfler a the PUrted from the in termis-(better team always wins. Oregon iKn PP def Clt t0 a 4M7 tie with tried a field goal from the 24 a touchdown each for NavyJj" 5 a saw his Lakers Sawyer was dropped in the eighth' 11 minutes remaining. But OSU 1 yards and missed it We tried auiS 1 as manv a nth rounds went ahead ancj managed to from 24 yards and made it. as Zve1 sScus a fight is set up fiS within six games of front running Angeles, it would draw a record Boston in the Eastern division i crowd-over 100 OOo" I Blg Ten; Dolph Schayes paced the Nats adding he would like an outdoor champlonsh 'P dn at Sat- with 21 points as he sank all, battle next spring.

f- the rellmi nary seven of his free throws to run The decision gave Follev his Micn 'g a rhjate f'- 1 Catching two passes and mak- his string to 45 straight for a 18th straight victory for a'total fn chl 8a? a number of tackles, including club recorj. The league mark of record of 37-2-1. Sawyer now has Minn to foiir in a row the first time IT sh a 13 5 record a no '5 l) "ad possession of the foot- Wlspnn Massillon's big Jim Houston For Houston man. Thj-eeField Goals Decided Rose Tilt PASADENA. Cal.

A ihree times a field goal has won the Rose bowl game for a Big Ten team, twice for Ohio State. Don Sutherin's 34-yard boot did it Wednesday for Ohio Slate over Oregon. 10-7. Once before Ohio Siate did it. in 1950, with a 17-yard field coal by Jim Hague tc win fornia 17-14.

Anci in 1956 Dave yard kick brought victor. Michigan Slate over UCLA 14. None of thc officials gave Sawyer a round. Under the 10-point- must system. Referee Charley 'co'n! Reynolds had it 100-77.

Judce Xorvel Lee 00-76 and Judse Harry Volkman 100-76. The AP favored Folley, 100-77. Folley weighed 190. Sawyer scaled 188. Teams DALLAS (AP) There was by the Los Angeles Dodgers no joy in these parts today County Supervisor Kenneth mighty Southwest conference Hahn.

a commission member. isk for rcconsidcra- 1 For tl'iC first linio in history liio iion of ihc ronial conference had teams in t'nrcr defeated by a 4-4 major bowl games and lost mission's meeting last week. to Indiana (1-6) for an figured prominently in the Ohio regionally televised I state victory Rose bowl victory New Year's Day. As OSU marched to its only touchdown in the opening quarter, Houston caught a flat pass from Quarterback Frank Kremblas of Akron for a gain of 37 yards. almost made it but was hauled down at the Duck two.

LOS ANGELES (AP) The: 1 1313 lhe sneaked across. Memorial Coliseum commission'gj 11 tehenebXall eev went QCn Sk fo up 22 yards. On this few moments later the Rucks Open Talks For Coliseum BOXING stalled and turned the hail to the Ducks. The former Tiger all-Ohio in Ton- sson ce rcm Dodgers Rico dofeai.d LE TOPCOATS 35 $45 ALL WOOL SUITS 345 ALL WOOL .00 SUBURBAN COATS $19.95 ALL WOOL SUEDE JACKETS $19.95 ALL WOOL 515.95 JACKETS ALL WOOL $10.95 JOE GOLDENFELD 169 LINCOLN WAY, W..

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About The Evening Independent Archive

Pages Available:
216,307
Years Available:
1930-1976