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Beckley Post-Herald The Raleigh Register du lieu suivant : Beckley, West Virginia • Page 15

Lieu:
Beckley, West Virginia
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15
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Mountaineers Liske Tosses Three TD Passes To Lead Attack By BURTON W. SIGLIN United Press Internationa! UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (UPI) Penn Slate mounted an irreslible second half air and ground attack as Pete Liske threw three touchdown passes to gun down on finnan ned West Virginia, 34-6. i lie Lions, held to a single touchdown in the Hist naif by a stout Mountaineer defense, rolled al will the last two quarters and made a rout of wiiat iiad been a close contest. Liske threw two touchdown passes to Harold (Junior) Powell and another to Bill Bowes as the Lions piled up more than 400 yards their heaviest attack of the season.

Only twice did West Virginia and they manged one touchdown after State led 21-0 The Mountaineers' score came on a 54-yard pass play with Jerry Yost tossing to halfback Tom Woodeshick. Had Many Opportunities Despite five excellent scoring opportunities, Coach Rip Engle's men could push across only one touchdown in the first half The score came late in the first period TM a 75-yard drive which ended with Liske's 17-yard aerial Powell the end zone. Four other Lion drives broke down near the Mountaineer goal State reached the West Virginia 2, 4, 12, and 13. An illegal forward pass killed one thrust and UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (UPI) --Statistics of the Penn State- West Virginia football game.

Penn St. W.Va First downs Rushing yardage Passing yardage Passes Passes intercepted Punts Fumbles Yards penalized 38 341 194 18-24 3 0 0 40 12 112 94 8-21 1 30 Roger Kochman was thrown on the five-yard line on a fourth down and inches to go situation another failure. A goal-line pass interception stopped another drive and a State attempt at a field-goal was wide at the tail-end of another But starting the second half State drove 59 yards in eighi plays for their second score. Dave Hayes went the last four yards on a straight line buck Half WVU DHvt Then State stopped a Mountain- er counter-drive on the four and rom that point drove 96 yards in 9 plays. Liske tossed to Bowes or the final 13.

West Virginia's touchdown came hortly afterwards and the State margin was cut to 21-6. But Liske nded another 54-yard drive with lis second touchdown pass to 'oweli which carried seven yards dS the Lions pulled away. Gary Klingensmith, sophomore lalfback, scored the last marker a four yard thrust at the end of a 37-yard drive. Liske and sub quarterback Ron Coates and Don Caum threw 24 passes and completed 18. West Virginia's passing attack vas stymied in the first half but mproved in the second as Jerry Yost threw his eleventh touchdown aerial of the year, Caum had another tremendous lay on defense, knocking down hree passes in the end zone and ntercepting another and running back 20 yards.

Buddy Ton-is tore through the Vest Virginia line for more than 00 yards and Roger Kochman nicked up 85 yards in 17 caries. State's opening drive carried 65 ards before Kochman was halted on the 4. On that series Kochman ran the ball four straight imes from the West Virginia 14. Tom Yeater and Woodeshick picked up 29 yards apiece to leac he Mountaineer rushing attack But John Burnison has the long est single run from scrimmage, 24-yard advance which pulled the Mountaineers out of a deep hole "rom their own six. West Virginia linebacker Pete played splendidly for Mountaineer line, especially in he first half before the constant State pounding weakened it.

Penn State 7 Post-Herald, and Register; Beckley, W. Sunday Morning. Nov. Drop2ndTo Powerful Marshall Comes From Behind To Surprise Xavier By 13-6 HUNTINGDON, W. Va.

Marshall University capitalized on Xavier miscues and twice repulsed Xavier threats within.Mar- shall's five-yard line to pull off a 13-6 upset win here Saturday. Xavier scored on a 14-yard pass HUNTINGTON, W. Va. (UPI)-Statistics of the Marshall University-Xavier football game: Abe Saperstein And The Globetrotters 'Trotters To Appear Here First downs Rushing yardage Passing yardage Passes Passes intercepted Punts Fumbles lost Yards penalized MU Xavwr 14 75 59 4-7 1 124 37 2-4 0 Xavier 29 yard line. The i school drove 14 plays for the with the big gainer a 27 yard pass from Bryniarski to Sob Daumeyer.

Marshall came roaring back as 'ullback At Rinehard returned the kickoff 29 yards to the mid-field stripe. Hamiin flipped a 27 yard to end Jim Cure to take the ball to the 10 and Williams slashed off tackle one play later for the score. The Big Green solidified their 0 1 30 20 from Walt Bryniarski to Fred Reherman while John i i a scored on a nine-yard run for the Big Green and tackle Box Maxwell recovered an Xavier fumble in the end zone for the other touchdown. Xavier took an early lead after Bob Leuenberger intercepted a pass by Bobby Hamiin on the lead in the second period when, George Potts fumbled into 1 end zone when he attempted to run with the ball after a bad pass from center in a punting situation. Xavier drove deep into Marshall territory twice in the final period.

At one time, it had the ball first and 10 at the Big Green 11 yard line but could pick up only eight yards in four plays and Marshall took over. With three minutes remaining, Xavier drove down to the Mar" shall three again but lost the ball on downs. Marshall came right back and Hamiin fumbled on the Xavier two-yard line as the gun sounded ending the game. Xavier 6 0 0 0--6 Marshall 7 6 0 0--13 X-Fred Reherman, 14 pass from Walt Bryniarski. (kick failed) MU--Williams 9 run (King kick) MU--Maxwell recovered fumble in end (kick failed).

ONTGOMERY WARD 7 20--34 0 6- 6 Stale AA, A Grid Races Undecided By United Press International Aaron Davis of Parkersbur came up with what was probably the biggest point of his life Fri day night as the Big Reds edgec Weirton 7-6 to vault into the Triple A playoffs. Davis plunged for the extra point following a 45-yard touch down run by defensive back Pau Hickman with a recovered fum ble. The one point was the margin of victory as Weirton scored min utes later on a 40-yard punt return by Ron Williams but the Re Riders failed on the extra poinL Parkersburg will probably rnee Bluefield in the playoff which will be held in. Charleston. Bluefield was to have met Princeton Saturday after Friday night's tilt was postponed because of rain, one of many games to be called off because of a heavy downpour.

Clarksburg Victory, in third place, will play off its postponed game with Washington Irving Monday night. Things are really up in the air in the Double-A race with second rank Keyser and third-ranked Bridgeport both defeating undefeated teams Friday night. Keyser took the measure off Romney 20-13 as scoring star Chuck Bradfield ran 6 and 37 yards for touchdowns to give him 115 points this season. Bridgeport defeated Kingwood 14-0. Keyser was second in the Double-A ranks prior to Friday's contest with a ranking of 11.6 and Bridgeport was close behind at 11.5.

Summersville, which closed out its season last week, was tops with a rating of 12.05^ In the "small school" ranks, third rated Williamstown was the only team to see action, defeating West Union 20-0. Sophia has won the Class A division title Harrisville is second and Winfield is third. Harrisville meets Pennsboro tonight and Winfield takes on Clendenin. If Winfield wins, the Generals will go into their fifth consecutive playoff regardless of how the other teams fare. In other action Beckley defeated Hinton 6-0 as Billy Karbonit returned to his old form.

Karbonit had not run the ball the past several games but he made up for it Friday night. West Virginia 0 Scoring: PS--Powell 17 pass from Liske (Coates kick) PS--Hayes 4 rush (Coates kick) PS-Bowes 13 pass from Liske (Coates kick) WVa--Woodeshick 54 pass from Yost (run failed) PS--Powell 7 pass (Coates kick) PS--Klingensmith 4 failed) Attendance: 33,400. from Liske rush (kick If someone mentions that there will be a home, run smashed and a long-pass touchdown scored Dec. 4th in the Raleigh County Armory Field-House, there can be only one explanation: The Harlem Globetrotters. The inimitable zanies of the basketball court will be playing the San Francisco All-Nations in the feature of a huge program of fun, frolic and frills, and only the wandering minstrels of Casaba- dom could get away with playing baseball and football during a regulation cage tilt and get away with it as they have done for more than three 'decades.

The diamond and gridiron takeoffs are a standard trademark of every Globetrotter game, even in remote foreign countries, since a long retired Trotters squad invented 'em on the spur of the moment during a sudden lull in a game in the Midwest. Even if Owner-Coach Abe Saperstein and the players were of a mind to abandon these gags after all these years, the fans just wouldn't let them. They start putting up a clamor for "BASEBALL!" and "FOOTBALL!" midway in the games until they By 43-22 Margin Irish Roll Over Pitt By GENE BLUDEAU SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI) -Daryle Lamonica's four touchdown passes and three fumble recoveries made it a great day for Notre Dame's Irish Saturday as they ran up their highest score in four years in a 43-22 surprise over Pittsburgh. Lamonica, who has been troubled by interceptions all season, was on target Saturday.

He was intercepted once, but he completed 17 of 27 passes for 214 yards, easily eclipsing Pitt quarterback Jim Traficant who connected for only three passes for 43 yards. Lamonica steered the Irish to three quick touchdowns in the first period and then generated three more touchdown marches one in each of the next three quarters. The 43 point total was the biggest Notre Dame score since Joe Kuharich became coach in 1959. And the Irish were pressing for another score when the game- ending gun sounded. Lamonica's favorite target was Jim Kelly, a junior end who set a Notre Dame record with 11 pass receptions.

Kelly surpassed the old Irish high established by Monty Stickles, who snared eight in a game against the same Panthers in The Irish surprised the crowd of 52,215 by ripping through Pitt's defenses for a touchdown in the first four minutes of play. They added two more touchdowns with less than four minutes remaining in the first period. Kelly caught his first of three scoring passes a nine-yard flip into the end zone from Lamonica. Ed Rutkowski. who booted all 6 ran (Rutkowski La- T) Eliey 6 run (Rutkowski kick) itt--Traficant 4 run (pass failed) Kelly 5 pass from Lamoni ca (Rutkowski kick) itt--Clark 56 run (Martha run) rD Stephens 40 pass from La monica (Rutkowski kick) The speedy halfback scored onj a 12-yard run to provide the Beckley win.

He set up the touchdown with a 47-yard run to the Hinton 15-yard line. Irish extra points, surprised the Panthers when he ran for two points from a place kick formation. Ron Biiey also scored in the first period and Kelly caught a five-yard touchdown pass from Lamonica in the second to give the Irish a 29-14 edge at halflime. Lamonica threw his longesl touchdown near the end of the third period when he uncorked a 40-yard toss to Clay Stephens. He also completed Notre Dame's scoring with a 13-yard pass to Kelly.

The Irish outplayed their old time foes in every department racking up 23 first downs to 12 cross team ed for the Panthers, 177 yards rush through rain and mud on the 4.2- WYU Defeats Pitt In Track MORGANTCTON, W. Va. (UPI) West i i i a University's mile Morgantown Country Club Saturday to defeat Pitt course 40-17. The victory was WVU's fifth for the season, against three defeats. The team's next outing will be at the Southern Conference meet Nov.

19 at Charleston, S. C. Last year's conference meet was won by Furman with a team score of 37. WVU came in fourth with 89. Coming in first in Saturday's meet was WVU's Roger Meador of Charleston.

His time was 21 minutes, 33 seconds. West Vir- to 168, and 243 in the air to only 67. But Pitt provided the most spej tacular action of the game with touchdowns on two Ion? runs. Ed Clark broke loose for 56 yards to score in the second period, anc Fred Mazurek returned Rutkow ski's kickoff 93 yards in the fina five minutes for the Panthers third touchdown. The victorv was the third thi season for the Irish, who have beaten two Eastern teams, bu have lost four times to Big Ten ginia's Charles Rea and Joe Kubic spectively.

came in second and third, re 22 7 0 14 pposition. ptre Dame 'ittsburgh Scoring: kick) Kelly 9 pass from mom'ca (Rutkowski run) 7-43 8--22 Ninth-Place Gophers Take 10-0 Victory By BOB DODOR MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) Min nesota nicked Iowa, 10-0, Saturday with solid Hawkeyes assistance from th themselves to kee he Gophers squarely in the Bi Ten football title battle. The victory gave Minnesota ranked ninth in the nation, a 4- record in the conference to giv a piece of the league lead, an a 5-1-1 overall mark. Iowa ha a 3-4 season record. Minnesota nailed its first poinL with less than three minutes lei the half when Colin Versic banged a 27-yard field goal.

Th Gophers collected their lone touch down early in the final period a four-yard race by quarterbac Duane Blaska. Iowa errors ruined three chanc the Hawkeyes had to scor early in the game and contribu ed as much to the Gopher 'vie tcry as the Minnesota offense. TV-ice in the first half th Hawkeyes fumbled deep in Min nesota territory and the Gopher recovered. Minnesota's touchdown cappe a 44-yard drive covering 10 plays Blaska barely leaned the ball intc the end zone after the Iowa lin displayed one of its bravest goa line stands of the season. The Gophers had a first down on the six and blasted to the tw before the Hawkeye line smashe fullback Jerry Jones back to th four.

Tnen on fourth down came Blaska's touchdown by an eyelash. It was the fifth shutout for the Gophers this season. They have the nation's best defensive record against rushing. Despite Minnesota's defensive reputation, Iowa posted a 125 yards rushing, the best performance against Minnesota on the ground this season. re obliged in the closing minutes the contest.

Another Globetrotters' stock-in- rade stunt that seemingly will ever die no matter how long the onder aggregation goes on is heir "Magic Circle," the enter- aining precision pre-game warm- circle done to the toe-tingling lythms of their theme song, Sweet Georgia Brown." This ombination of precise passing and Itra-fancy comic ball handling ets off every Trotters game in xactly the right mood. More Sports Page 19 urdue Remains Running For Big Ten Crown By JJM BROOKS EAST LANSING, Mich. (UPI)-- urdue made use of Michigan State fumbles, penalties and er- ant passes Saturday to hand the parfcans a 17-9 setback and stay the running for the Big Ten itle with 3-1 conference mark, Purdue's Tom Bloom returned an intercepted pass for 47 yards and one touchdown and the Boilermakers got their game-winning ield goal after the Spartans had been penalized 15 yards for roughing. Michigan State, State, despite a ack that outgained Purdue 309 vards to 206, gave the game away by losing four fumbles and hav- ng two passes intercepted. After a scoreless first period, Michigan State capitalized on a Purdue fumble on the Spartan 21 and grabbed a 3-0 iead on a 27- yard field goal by tackle Jim Bobbitt.

After Purdue scored on Bloom's nterception early in the third period, Michigan State regained Duke Keeps AAC Record Spotless With 10-7 Win DURHAM, N.C. (UPI) Duke broke up two Maryland touchdown drives with last-ditch pass interceptions Saturday and virtually sewed up the Atlantic Coast crown with a 10-7 victory over the Terrapins. Maryland and Duke went into the game undefeated in ACC play and the Blue Devils, with only Wake Forest and North Carolina left on the schedule, now are heavy favorites to repeat as the conference champion. The victory gave Duke a-4-0 conference record, against a 4-1 mark for Maryland. Duke's points came on a field goal by halfback Bill Reynolds and a touchdown plunge by fullback Mike Curtis.

Maryland got its only score in the opening seconds of the fourth period with a five-yard sprint by quarterback Dick Shiner. The Maryland attack looked brilliant at times in the first half, only to bog down in touchdown territory on pass interceptions. Duke 0 3 7 0--10 BECKLEY, W. VA. Dial 252-6491 Store Hours Monday 9 to 9 Tues.

thru Sal. 9:00 to 5:30 ANNOUNCING Bowling Shop COME IN SEE OUR COMPLETE SELECTION OF BALLS, SHOES, BAGS, CUSTOM MONOGRAMMED, 7 LETTERS FREE. 0 0 0 7 7 Scoring: Duke--FG Reynolds 38 Duke --Curtis 1 run (Reynolds kick) Md Shiner 5 run (Hannigan kick) Attendance: 26,000. Michigan Wins ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI)-Michigan capitalized on a fourth period pass interception to earn a 14-10 victory over Illinois for the Wolverines' first Big Ten triumph of the season.

Reserve end Ben Farabee was the Michigan hero when he picked off a Mike Taliaferro pass and sped 41 yards to the Illinois one. Quarterback Bob Chandler punched over from the one two lead when halfback Sherman Jj iays Lewis went 54 yards for a touch- aown down on his first carry of the But the point was missed after the touchdown and Purdue went back ahead to stay after two minutes of the final period. Skip OhI supplied the lead with a 27-yard field goal. The Spartans almost came back again but a holding penalty wrought the ball back from the Purdue 5 to the 21 and on the next play quarterback Chuck Migyaka fumbled. The Boilermakers picked up an insurance touchdown on a march that was sparked by fullback Roy Walker's 50-yard sprint to the Spartan seven.

Three plays later he plunged over from the one. Michigan State 0 3 6 0 9 Purdue 0 0 7 1 0 1 7 Scoring: MSU-FG 27 Bobbitt i i. I later for tne winning touch- It was the third straight deci- Pur Bloom 47 pass interception (Oh! kick) MSU--Lewis 54 run (kick failed) Pur--FG 27 Ohl Pur-Walker 1 run (Ohl kick) Attendance 70,059. sion for Michigan coach Bump Elliott in his personal rivalry with his brother, Pete, coach of the mini. Michigan.spotted the Ulini 10-0 halftime lead before an umbrella-dotted crowd of 49,756 which turned out to watch the final home appearance of the year for the Wolverines.

But the running of senior halfback Dave Raimey, which set up Michigan's first touchdown in the third period, and Farabee's interception, turned the game's complexion in the second half. Michigan, held to only three first downs and 12 yards rushin in the first half, made it 10-6 late in the third period when Raimey's running moved the ball down to the Illini four. Chandler passec four yards on fourth down to Bob Timberlake for the score. Then Farabee's interception turned the tide for Michigan. 8--1 0--10 Minnesota Iowa 3 0 0 0 7-10 0-0 Minn--FG Versich 27 Minn Blaska 4 run (Vcrsich kick) Attendance: 65,087.

Kelso Heads IMiorse Field LAUREL. Md. (UPI) Kelso headed a field of 13 horses from nine countries formally entered Saturday in Monday's running of the $125,000 added Washington D.C. International. But the chances that the thoroughbred champion of 1960 and 1961 would start in the global classic were slim.

"If it were my horse I wouldn't run him. I am going to recommend to Mrs. DuPcnt that we scratch Kelso," trainer Carl Hanford said after the gelding was schooled at the starting gate. "Everywhere you ran on the course water squirts up," he said. Heavy rain lashed the track most of Friday evening.

On the other hand trainer Jack Price said Carry Back probably would start. He, too, wants a firm track but said "the track would have to be awfully bad for Carry Back not to run. I intend to wait until Monday afternoon before deciding. Right now it is pretty soggy but it may be fairly firm by Monday." Michigan 0 0 6 Illinois 0 10 0 Scoring: 111--FG 30 Plankenhorn Hi Summers 1 run (Planken horn kick) Mich Timberlake 4 pass from Chandler (run failed) Mich Chandler 1 run (Chap man pass from Chandler) IT! Tech, Bluefield Tie John Loftis plunged over from one-yard out with four minutes remaining to give West Virginia Tech a 13-13 tie with Bluefield State here Saturday. Loftis gave Tech an early lead when he scored on a one-yard plunge in the first period.

Claudis Watts tied it up with a four yard run and Bluefield went ahead in the second period on a 61-yard pass play from William Scott to Sherman Ross. The game was marred by penalties and a brief scuffle in the second half. Tech was assessed 125 yards in penalties and Bluefield State 40. Bluefield 7 4 0 1 3 Tech 7 0 0 -13 John Loftis 1 yard plunge (Suchat Ingkaknl kick) Caludis Watts 4-yard run (Firjik Johnson rush) William Scott to Sherman Ross 61-yard pass (PAT failed) John Loftis yard run (PAT failed) reg. 22.95 Hawthorne ball custom-measured and drilled 3 TO 4 DAY SERVICE Custom-fitted, drilled and polished by experts for complete grip-comfort Balanced-tested hard thunders down the lane with no wobble No more groping through the ball-racks for a "not bad" fit.

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