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The Jacksonville Daily Journal from Jacksonville, Illinois • Page 10

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Jacksonville, Illinois
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10
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PAGE TEN THE DAILY JOURNAL, JACKSONVILLE, 'S AY, NOVEMBER 2, 1952 Jt'HONE Illinois Deaf Gridders Protect Record With 13-12 Victory out a 13-13 tie in the College Conference of Illinois championship game today. The standoff left the two schools Millikin-Lake Forest Battle To 13-13 Tie In CCI Title Combat Long. Dry Spell 10 Years Since Iowa Beat Mini, Meet Saturday CHAMPAIGN (Special) Iowa beaten Illinois in ten years and goipg to be on mind Saturday in Iowa City wnen the two meet for the 33rd time. Along the same line Coach Ray Eliot hat; never lost to a Hawkeye team. Illinois has won the last nme contests from Iowa, beginning in 1942, the year Eliot took over as head coach.

Illinois leads the Hawks 21 games to 9 in a series which began at Rock Island in 1899. and includes two ties. Illini have won close ones in the 10-game string. They nosed out the Hawks 12-7 at Iowa City in 1942. Pour years later two powerful postwar elevens battled evenly until Illini fullback Russ Steger punched over the goal early in the fourth period for a 7-0 victory.

The 1946 Illini went on to Big Ten and Rose Bowl titles. Last year's tussle in Memorial Stadium was strictly an Illini affair. Sparked by All-American Johnny Karras, and the passes of Quarterback Tommy Illinois ran up a 26-0 halftime score. They added 14 more points in the second half, and only when top defensive unit left the field did the Hawkeyes score. Mighty Maryland Outclasses Boston In 34-7 Encounter BOSTON devastating opening attack that reached almost DECATUR, 111.

spectac- point. a piay proportions gave ular plays enabled Lake Forest to Maryland its 19th conse- overcane a 13-0 Millikin lead and cutive football victory. 34-7, over hopelessly outclassed Boston Uni- Michigan State Stops Purdue In 14-7 Fray versify Saturday at Fenway Park. The Terps irom Maryland, who rank second nationally, clinched as co-champions. Each previously matters by scoring thrice on 29 had won three CCI games and this the opening period, contest'ended their league season.

Vel(on taUied tw0 of those The underdog Big Blue from De- hdowns on a four-yard slam catur outplayed Lake Forest most snatching a lateral Irom the way and had a 13-0 lead mid- Weidensaul. who had way in the second quarter. But Jack Sloviak Lake Forest I completed a pass from Che took the kickoff after the second! nlitT Blue touchdown and picked his way! Whlle Maryland spht-Toffen- 97 yards through the Millikin "as stunning most ot the for a score. Gene Tagliapietra booting the point. Midway in the fourth quarter, a attempts while holding the 2-yard pass from Stoviak Terriers ground attack to 568 crowd, its defenders smeared all three of Harry pass- 14 yards.

Oklahoma Tamps 32-yard pass caught by Tagliapietra on Miili- one. plays later Jerry Patterson sneaked over to tie the score. placement was A 16-yard touchdown run by co-j 1 A captain Roy Schaub, climaxing a fiOWQ 4 I second quarter surge started on the Blue 31. gave Millikin a 6-0 lead. Near the end of the period.

Jim Fitzgerald sneaked over from the one and Gordon Short kicked the extra point. Millikin led in first downs, 14-9. minus By L. E. SKELLEY AMES, la.

Oklahoma football express, rated No.3 in the nation, rushed along at its cus- jtomary dazzling pace Saturday in 41-0 victory over Iowa State. Tulsa Edges Aggies 23-21 By DALE BURGESS LAFAYETTE, Ind. top-ranked and beau- tiflly-balanced Spartans showed their offensive prowress in the first half and their copper-clad defense all the way Saturday in stopping Big Ten football leaders, 14-7. It was the 21st straight victory. Purdue, left alone atop the Western Conference standings by 22-13 triumph over Michigan Saturday, gave the Spartans their stiffest contest since an early season 17-14 squeak past Oregon State.

Michigan ferocious defense, headed by end Ed Luke and center Douglas Weaver, had all it could do to hold Purdue in a ild final quarter before 49.500 fans in Ross-Ade Stadium in summer-like weather. Purdue drove to the Michigan State 8 in the last four minutes on quarterback Dale brilliant passing but Weaver pulled dowrn a pass on the Michigan State 18. Michigan State held Purdue to 31 yards by rushing and gained 197 itself. fine passing by Samuels and Roy Evans netted 193 yards to Michigan 76 TULSA, Okla. Tulsa end Allen Cook blocked a punt for an automatic safety in the second quarter Saturday to provide Golden Hurricane with Tennessee Smacks N.

Carolina 41-11 KNOXVILLE, Tenn. Tennessee took to the air Saturday for the first time this season to smack down North Carolina, 41-14. The orange clad Vols scored their first three touchdowns on passes, set up their fourth with an aerial and grabbed a wayward Carolina toss and returned for their fifth. The sixth was registered on the ground. Oklahoma, gunning for its seventh straight Big Seven Conference championship, sent the undermanned Cyclones to their fifth conference defeat with a bewildering offense led by quarterback Eddie Crowder, a young man with a touch, and a solid defense that held Iowa State to 119 yards.

Wells moved to the 3 on quick openers and McAuliffe plunged over. The second touchdown came after fumble on the Michigan State 43. It was recovered by Spartan end Edwin Luke. Another 15-yard Purdue penalty and short passes to Wells and end Paul Dekkar helped carry to the Purdue 7. Yewcic ran wide to the right from a single formation for the score.

By Quarters: Michigan State 7 7 0 Purdue 0 0 7 Michigan State scoring: Touchdowns, McAuliffe, Yewcic. Conversions, Slonac 2. Purdue scoring: Touchdowns, Heningar. Conversion, Samuels. Flowers.

TV Favorites On Mat Card In Springfield Jim Spink's Nick Ohio In Tilt At Columbus Western Nicks Eastern 7-6 For Alumni Macomb Coach Vince DiFran- Western State Leathernecks survived three quarters of shabby football and edged Eastern State Teachers 7-6 in an IIAC conference battle here Saturday afternoon. The game wras played before some 6,000 Western homecoming celebrants. The first quarter wras played mostly at midfield. At one time only did Western threaten. The Lathernecks moved to the Eastern' ten in the first quarter but the Panthers held.

When Western failed to move a safety man into versecj jn the second half wThen proper position, quarterback Paul Foreman kicked Tigers Eleven Columbus, Ohio (Special) Illinois School for the Deaf protected its perfect season with a narrow 13-12 victory over the Ohio Deaf eleven here Saturday afternoon. Coach im Tigers ran their wTin skein to seven straight by rolling up a 13-0 first half lead, then fighting off a determined Ohio bid after the intermission. Statistics tell the story better than the final score. Illinois rolled up 104 yards rushing the first half while Ohio could produce but 11. The situation was drastically re ling caid result was that Purdue made first dowms to Michigan dowrn to the Leatherneck 11.

Another Western mistake was turned into an Eastern touchdown in the second period. With just 25 seconds to go before the half Leatherneck quarterback Bill tried a flat pass from his own 20. Defensive tackle Roe intercepted the heave and made like a fullback for the touchdowns. John Simmons missed the conversion kick. Springfield, Nov.

Bob Or-j western launched its winning ton ill oppose popular Ronnie (touchdown drive midway through Etchison here Saturday night tlie third period and it carried into Lanphier gymnasium in the main five minutes of the fourth canto, event of a three bout windup wrest- The Leathernecks started on their First bout goes at 8:15 12 In two other co-featured attractions. Gentleman Jim Dobie takes on Bob Hanke and former heavyweight champion Waiter Palmer does battle with young Reggie y- Purdue cut down Michigan 14-0 half time lead on halfback Earl one-vard scoring plunge in the third quar-1 sowski. Each bout will be two Tut ter after Samuels set it up with a of three falls with a 60 minute time 34-yard pass to end Bernard; limit. Flowers. Orton is a 6 ft.

6 in. 225 pounder! Michigan State tried hard for a i who has become the popular TV It was the 33rd conference game i bagger victory cushion in the final! favorite on weekly televised bouts I own 25 and ground the distance with short line plunges. Ted Mullens flipped five yards to Bob Jones for the score, the only Western aerials of the entire march. Cliff Sloan kicked and Western had its sixth victory of the season and still rests in second place in the IIAC. the winning margin in a 23-21 con- in which Oklahoma has not felt but Eugene Lekenta, whose 'from Chicago.

Tne big fellow tea- quest of its old state rival, Oklahoma A. M. The battle, which kept largest home crowd in five their seats to the very the sting of the losing score. There field are two ties in the string, coming from Colorado in the Soon- opening conference test this season. The Oklahoma Big Seven Oregon State, tureo a pile driver and is headed one missed a goal attempt from the a title bout with Champion, goal beat end, gave the winners second! record now is 3-0-1 with Missouri place in the Missouri Valley Nebraska left.

The Sooners ference. nre a shade behind Missouri, its After the score, Tulsa still 15 foe which made it three trailed by 12 points but the tally, straight with a 10-6 win over Neb- coming in the dying moments ofjraska Saturday, the first half, seemed to inspire! Oklahoma, striking with equal the Hurricane in the last two effectiveness from far out or close periods. I in, started its scoring wTith a 50------------------------I yard spurt by Billy Vessels Purdue 19. Phil Mateja, sharp safety man. grabbed a Tom Yewcic pass in the end zone to start last drive ending with interception.

Purdue ripped off two quick first downs at the start but Lou Thesz. Etchison, meanwhile, is ranked with Verne Gagne and Pat O'Connor one of the outstanding scientific grapplers contending for the title. Dilfusing vanes of a gas turbine resist temperatures in excess of 1500 degrees Fahrenheit. through the Iowa State middle. The trap play got its inception on a beautiful fake bv Crowder.

Paul Cameron Guides UCLA To 28-7 Win By RISS NEWLAND Dobie, meanwhile, one ol the! Berkeley, Calif. Rangy most colorful grapplers in wrestling. Paul Cameron, playing his first first fumble, giabbed bv Spaitan: from an early at- full game of the season, led the guard Frank Kush, ended the tack of polio and has one of UCLA Bruins to a drive on the Michigan State 39. best developed bodies in ath- smashing 28-7 win over the Cali- A 15-yard Purdue penalty andhetics. fornia Bears Saturday before 82,000 a Norman Montgomery punt that Ticket for the Jaycee sponsored I fans, traveled only 17 yards started Mi-, matches may be reserved at Roberts chigan first-quarter touch-j Brothers and Harvey Brothers in dowm drive at the Purdue Springfield.

Wayne Benson. McAuliffe and I enough to win the game. The Tigers scored early in the game on a 38 yards pass from Ed Feller to Harold Rash. Feller then flipped to Tom Klbecka to give Illi nois a 7-0 lead. The half was almost over when Rash, hard-running Tiger fullback, intercepted an Ohio pass on the 50 yard line and went all the way to pay dirt.

That gave club a 13-0 lead. Ohio scored in each of the next periods. Pushing the stubborn Illinois defenders up and downi the field, the hosts tallied first when Kronick reeled off two long runs Ohio gained 256 yards on the. to the ISD two yard line then ground and Illinois only 78. to Moreland in the end But the extra point following zone.

Kick for conversion failed. first quarter touchdown was Webster capped a sustained Ohio march with a two-yard line buck in the fourth quarter. The game ended when Ohio failed to push the ball over from the one foot stripe. Illinois had time, to kick out of danger before the gun cracked. ISD chalked up 11 first downs while Ohio collected 14, all in the second half.

Illinois attempted 12 aerials and completed four. Ohio connected x. seven for 24 passes. Both Ashland basketball team wh were penalized 50 yards, opens its schedule Tallu a travels to Mt. Olive Friday on Nov.

14th. Jerry Price and Art DeGroot arejniSm- the only returnees off the Panther club' that bowed to Jacksonville in the local Regional tournament last year. Currently working out for varsity posts are Jim Bergschneider, H. A. Votsmier, Gene Fanner, Paul Garvin, Edwin Hibbs, Howard Senters, Don Newell, Harold Edwards, For- LaRoss Jewelers rest Hickman, Winifred King.

Herb Dosters Sen7. Sta Pierce, Johnny Walker, Dick Ed- Watts D-X Ashland Cagers Open Schedule With Tallula letter men return to Coach Paul Moss'! BOWL'NG wards, Elliott Thornley, Darrell Budweiser Classic League 897 891 86 fc 827 984 896 821 872 86c! 925 869 Tinsley, Joe Willis, Richard Pete-! Bowl Inn 792 733 787 fish and Harry Bersch. 7-Up Bottling 750 738 Ashland is entered in two tourn- Team high 3 games: Virginia meet Dec. 9-12 951 925 and the Athens-Greenview tourney Team high single game: Dos ter VOTE DEMOCRAT OUR GOVERNOR WILL MAKE A GREAT PRESIDENT FOR PRESIDENT ADLAI E. STEVENSON FOR VICE PRESIDENT JOHN J.

SPARKMAN FOR GOVERNOR SHERWOOD DIXON FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR HERBERT C. PASCHEN FOR SECRETARY OF STATE EDWARD J. BARRETT FOR AUDITOR OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS BENJAMIN 0. COOPER FOR STATE TREASURER FRED A. CAIN FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL IVAN A.

ELLIOTT QUALIFIED, EFFICIENT AND RELIABLE (Political Adv.) Penn State Upsets 14-7 PHILADELPHIA State upset Pennsylvania. 14-7, before Ikc Jones for the last touch' 67.000 Saturday when Stewart intercepted a pass to set up the Left half Don Johnson, raping winning touchdown in the last four yards on a thrilling kickoff The 6-foot 185-pound tailback, who had seen only 40 minutes of action in six previous games, threw touchdown passes in the first and third quarters and directed the ground attack that accounted for the second period score. Tiny Ted Narleski, replacing Cameron late in the last period, completed a 21-yard scoring pass to Jan. 12-16. The Ashland Schedule: Nov.

Nov. Waverlv Nov. Plains Dec. Pawnee Dec. Dec.

Dec. Berlin Dec. Jan. Jan. Pleasant Plains Jan.

Jan. Jan. Greenview Feb. Chandlervilie Feb. Mason City Feb.

Feb. Feb. Bath Feb. Feb. i minutes of play.

Scheetz one of Glen passes and ran it back four yards to seven yard Tine. Bob Pollard made twTo yards i and then Chick Jones bullied throu- i gh center to score. This wTas the first time vania had been beaten although previously it had been tied, i The game was marred by frequent fumbles and interceptions. Penn State owed both its touchdowns to its ability to cash in on the breaks. Cornell Upsets Columbia 21-14 NEW YORK UP) winless i football team, bruised and beaten i in five straight games, struck for three touchdowms in the fourth per! iod Saturday and upset Columbia, 21-14.

Cornellfinal quarter explosion turned what had looked like a drab game into a thriller for a crowd of 22.000. In that one period. Cornell gained revenge for the two straight one-point losses Columbia had inflicted in the past two years. return, gave California its lone touchdown in the third period. The victory kept the hard- knocking, alert Bruins in the Pacific Coast Conference championship race and in the running for the Rose Bowl tied with Southern California, also undefeated.

UCLA tops the league with four wins. USC, idle Saturday, has won three. By Quarters UCLA 7 7 7 CAL 0 7 0 UCLA scoring: Touchdowns, Stockert 2, Smith, Jones. Conversions, Dailey 4. California scoring: Johnson.

Conversion, Keogh. Yale Trounces Dartmouth 21-7 Serv. High individual 3 games: A. Smiti: -201 226 High individual score: League Midwest O. Buyers 711 788 66-The 558 710 74b Baines Venders 508 579 54e Sporting Goods 622 651 614 Hardware 605 620 64if Silver Stiirr Inn 595 562 614 Brohans Cafe 586 570 619 i Larson 619 584 589 Modem Cleaners 707 614 60C Kute Kurl 532 661 655 Stag Beer 746 680 SOL La hey's Tavern 731 704 627 High team feries: Stag Beer 2226.

High team game: Stag 800. High individual series: Irene Miller. High game: Irene Big Ten Standings CHICAGO Ten standings: football Purdue Michigan Minnesota Wisconsin Ohio State Northwestern Indiana Illinois Iowa Pet. PF OP 3 0 01.000 102 40 3 1 0 .750 110 49 3 1 0 .750 57 61 2 1 0 .667 76 42 3 2 0 .600 94 77 1 3 0 .250 84 112 1 3 0 .250 59 97 1 3 0 .250 47 86 1 4 0 .200 55 120 Ohio State Noses Out Northwestern 24-21 By JERRY LISKA EVANSTON. HI.

smallest player in the Big Ten, 128- pound Tad Weed, booted a difficult 17-yard field goal to climax a 17-point fourth period rally which gave Ohio State a thrilling 24-21 victory over Saturday. Trailing 21-7 entering the final quarter of this nationally-televised conference game, Ohio State punched across two touchdowns for a 21-21 tie and then Weed calmly booted his deciding three-pointer with six minutes left. Weed, solely a kicking specialist, also converted after the three Ohio touchdowns. The 5-foot 5-inch Weed, with quarterback John Borton holding, plunked the big boot from a SRot about 15 yards to the side of the goal posts. Ohio scored first in the rousing contest as halfback Howie Caseady scooted seven yards to cap a 66- yard Buckeye drive.

Northwestern erased a 7-0 deficit in the opening on a fumble recovery in the end zone and moved ahead in the second period as quarterback Dick Thomas rifled twro long touchdown passes to end Joe Collier. After a scoreless third period, it appeared that Northwestern could easily nurse its 14-point lead. But a poor 10-yard Northwestern punt early in the fourth period enabled halfback Fred Bruney to scoot across from the two yard line. Minutes later, the Buckeye scored quickly on 42- yard payoff pass to Bruney, who grabbed the ball on the 10 and did some fancy dodging to make the end zone. The issue was settled as Norm Kragseth attempted to punt from the end zone and tackle Irv Denker of Ohio State blocked for a Buckeye recovery on seven.

An Ohio State clipping penalty set the stage for field goal try, with the ball snapped from the Wildcat 11. Friday Jr. Ladies League Coal Co Nesco 543 56a Illinois Chickery 504 496 NEW HAVEN. Conn. re-.

Nesco Factory 458 547 sourceful Yale football team moved Sears. Roebuck and 555 572 to the top of the Ivy football lea-! Jacksonville State Hasp. 576 720 gue Saturday by trouncing rough' High team series: Jacksonville Dartmouth 21-7 as Ed Woodsum, State brilliant end, tied the all- High team game: Jacksonville time scoring record. Trailing early State in the second period. Yale rallied to win impressively.

A Yale Bowl crowd of 40,000, many in shirtsleeves under the hot sun, saw the Elis move through the air, along the ground and return a punt for its touchdowns. The Indians registered on a pass. The key play beyond amazing record of six victories in seven games, and first over Dartmouth since 1947. Woodsum's touchdown w-hich sent Yale in front 14-7 before the half ended. It was a five yard pass that Woodsum caught on the goal line and was just the edge that the Blues needed.

High individual series: M. High individual game: M. MONTREAL 4 NEW YORK 1 MONTREAL (IP Maurice (The Rocket) Richard failed to set a National Hockey League all-time goal-getting record Saturday night but his Montreal Canadien teammates tallied more than enough as they defeated the New York Rangers, 4-1. Abel Janszoon Tasman, Dutch navigator, discovered the island of i Tasmania in 1642. Lasley Nursing Home State Licensed Accommodations for Men and Women.

844 College Ave. Phone 2908 FOR THE BEST LUNCHES ANYWHERE Come To Our DAIRY BAR You'll Agree, the Food Is Tops Cleon Surroundings Quick Service OUR DAIRY BAR IS OPEN DAILY 8 A. M. to 5 P. M.

Only Closed All Day Wednesday and Sunday Grade Dairy Products At your favorite independent grocer or for home delivery. Call 14S2 Locally Owned and Operated By Wm. T. Hudson and Sons.

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About The Jacksonville Daily Journal Archive

Pages Available:
124,267
Years Available:
1902-1974