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Sunday News from Lancaster, Pennsylvania • 35

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Sunday Newsi
Location:
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
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Page:
35
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THE SUNDAY NEWS, OCTOBER 28, 1 90-35 A Crudden SPORTS EDITOR The Observer COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio States twice-beaten Bucks battled their way back into the Big Ten title race Saturday, knocking Wis- sideline and Vanderkelen found him with the pass about the 40-yard line. PENALTY HURTS A personal foul played a big part in Ohios winning touchdown drive. Dave Francis had carried three straight times for about 15 yards, and as the big fullback banged into the center of the line he was the vitcim of an apparent slugging. The foul moved the ball to the Badger 29, from where fullbacks Dave Katterhenrich and Bob Butts alternated to reach the one in five plays. From there quarter- back John Mummey sneaked for, the winning counter.

The game ended a Wisconsin winning streak of seven, which was started after Ohio beat the Badgers 30-21 at Madison last year. Wisconsin 0 7 0 0 7 Ohio State 7 0 0 714 OSU Warfield 21 pas from Sperme (Vanraaphorst kick) IS Ron Smith 47 pass from Vanderkelen (Kroner kick) OSU Mummey 1 plunge (Vanraaphorst kick) Attendance 82,540. ing a 48-yard drive in 8 plays. Wisconsin tied it in the second session when quarterback Ron Vanderkelen passed 47 yards to sophomore halfback Ron Smith on a no huddle play. The surprise play came just after Jim Schenk had intercepted a Sparma pass and fullback Merritt Norvell had plunged for four yards.

The Badgers came out of the running play into their offensive positions while Ohio was still calling defensive signals in a semi-huddle. Smith cut for the right must feel that they had something to do with his build up last year, are now trying to knock him over because of the shabby showing of the Birds this Fall. gionally televised game. The loss dropped Wisconsin to a 4-1 record, moved Ohio up to 3-2 and maintained the Buckeye record of never having lost to the Badgers here since 1018. 8-PLAY DRIVE It was a rugged struggle all the way, with surprise maneuvers paying off until Ohio ground out the victory with a fourth-quarter 57-yard 8-play drive to clinch it.

Ohio scored in the first period on quarterback Joe Sparmas 21-yard pass to Paul Warfield, end WISCONSIN OHIO STATE First down Rushing yardage Passing yardage Passes Passes Intercepted by Punts Fumbles lost Yards penalized consins Badgers out of the undefeated class by a 14-7' score before a crowd of 82,540 in a re WE WERE SURPRISED and concerned the way the Eagles organization. Coach Nick Skorich and some of the Eagles news outlets permitted the Sonny Jurgensen-King Hill quarterback rivaly to deteriorate into a public, choice between one or the other to the total detriment of the esprit de corps of the ball club. This became clear when some of the gripes were aired in the news channels. Last year in his Freshman year as the No. 1 quarterback Sonny had a love affair going with the Eagles fans.

He was the cindrella man of the team. But some of those who cooed and wooed him last year seemingly deserted him very quickly this season. Last year the Jurgensen to Tommy McDonald passing team was the most feared aerial combination in the National Football League and carried the Eagles to within a half game of the Eastern championship despite the fact that Tom Brookshier the defensive ace did not play in the last four games. George Washington Overpowered 14-0 Victor Army KING HILL is a better faker and a much better runner than Jurgensen. but how does he move the team into touchdownland? Last week he didn't.

So the exiled Jurgensen was. called off the bench and responded with three TD drives. It seems to this department that there is a place for both Jurgensen and Hill on the Eagles team, but if they can not be integrated into the lineup opportunely and to the best advantage of the Eagles then the coaching de. partment has some questions to answer. It is ridiculous to permit the team to be come de moralized by the factions that, seemingly, have developed between those for and against Jurgensen.

We repeat wrhat we said last week. If some of the Eagles are envious and are loafing because of the big build-up Jurgensen has received on a national scale then they ought to be told pronto which side their bread is buttered on. Wildcat Air Game Whips ND EVANSTON, 111. (AP) Undefeated Northwestern's brilliant Tom Myers-to-Paul Flatley passing combination, clicking twice for touchdowns, swept the nationally third-ranked Wildcats to a record 35-6 triumph over shaky Notre Dame Saturday. Cadets Roll Up 362 Yards By Rushing WASHINGTON (AP) Armys three platoon football team, with halfback John Seymour doing most of the heavy duty ball carrying, overpowered George Washington 14-0 Saturday.

The Cadets did it the hard way on the ground in winning their fifth against a single defeat. NOTRE DAME NORTHWESTERN JURGENSEN TURNED in perhaps the greatest Freshman year in the NFL as he set all kinds of records for touchdown throws, yardage gained, etc. So this year the other teams in the league were waiting in ambush. If the Eagles coaching staff hasnt been resourceful enough to take the heat off this ambush with counter measures, we don't believe this is the fault of Sonny Jurgensen or Tommy McDonald. The air strike should have been diversified, although this, doubtless, has been hampered more than somewhat by the loss of Pete Retz-laff and the fading off of Bobby Walston.

But, the fact is, it, seemingly, has not been, and all of a sudden the burden of proof has been placed on Jurgensen. Jurgensen didn't establish himself as one of the fine quarterbacks and passers of the NFL in one short year on press notices. He did it on performances. And he must resent the fact now, that some of the people who LAST SUNDAYS GAME proved beyond question which of the two, Sonny or Hill can best cut the mustard with the touchdown drive. The public washing of linen has hurt the ball club.

It behooves the Eagles to end this sort of situation at once. The team has slipped this year we think because some of the guys are a year older, and because any team is bound to slip which loses such stalwarts as Brookshier, Pete Retzlaff and Ted Dean. To try to shove much of the blame on Sonny Jurgensen is completely unfair. We heard no such commotion when Y.A. Tittle and Charlie Conerly were vicing for the QB spot in New York.

Coach Allie Sherman used them both very nicely. S'LONG ARMY-GEORGE WASHINGTON Rutgers 94-yd. Kickoff Return Beats Penn, 12-7 PHILADELPHIA (AP) Bill leap into the end zone and Sic-Thompson's 94 -yard touchdow gned Molnar's placement kick, run with a kickoff in the second Molnar then kicked off to fumbles and interceptions, but Rutgers had driven from its own 44 to the Penn 16 after an interception when the game ended. Thompson, who took it on his 6-yard line and went all the way along the north sideline. Neither team could get rolling in the second half because of period gave Rutgers a 12-7 victory over Penn Saturday.

Thompsons run came 13 seconds after Penn gained a 7-6 lead on tailback Johnny Owens' 2-yard RUTGERS PENN Army gained 362 yards rushing but completed only four of a dozen passes for 66 yards. Seymour, 204 pound sophomore go team halfback, carried 22 times for 116 yards, including a 23-yard sprint that set up the first Army touch down. The celebrated Army defensive specialists, the Chinese Bandits, with help from the two-way regulars throttled the GW at-ials to 36 yards rushing and 45 yards passing. Dick Drummond, GWs All-Southern Conference halfback, gained only 31 yards in 12 carries as the Cadet defenders swarmed all over him. STOPPED 3 TIMES Army spent most of the game in GW territory.

The Cadets were stopped once by a fumble on the GW 7, again by a goal line stand on the 2 and a third time by a pass interception on the 13. Starting on its own 41, Army marched for its first, touchdown in the second quarter in 10 plays. Seymour carried the ball five times in the drive and set up the a second quarter touchdown against George Washington University in Saturday's game. (AP Wirephoto) WASHINGTON ARMY TOUCHDOWN Army Fullback Georga Pappas, 38, hurtles teammates and opposing players to chalk up Yale Ties Colgate In Last 3 Seconds Soph GunsN avy Past Pitt, 32-9 Myers, the nations No. 3 ma jor college passer, completed 11 of 18 tosses for 168 yards before reserves took over for Northwestern midway in the third period.

Flatley, the nations third best pass receiver, made several circus catches as he snared six Myers tosses for 102 yards, including touchdown grabs of 23 and 7 yards. A Dyche Stadium record crowd of 55,752 saw Northwestern, now a hot Big Ten title favorite, strike quickly for three first-half touch, downs on Notre Dame errors to wrap up their fifth straight victory. Northwesterns other touchdowns were scored by a pair of lads with real Irish names, Steve Murphy, who plunged for two, and Dick McCauley, who darted six yards for the last Wildcat score. A Notre Dame fumble on the game's first running play was recovered by Wildcat Larry Benz on the Irish 29. Eight plays later, Murphy dove two yards for a touchdown.

PUNT BLOCKED In the game-deciding second period, right after a Wildcat interception, Myers whipped a 23-yard scoring pass to Flatley. Then-following a blocked Irish punt on Notre Dames 20 the Wildcats capped a five-play scoring drive on Murphys plunge from the two-foot line. That gave Northwestern a 21-0 halftime lead and Myers settled the issue in the third period by first whipping a 40-yard pass to Flatley on Notre Dames 35 and then hitting his favorite receiver again with a 7-yard scoring shot in the end zone. Against Northwesterns third Stringers, Notre Dame finally scored in the fourth quarter on a 77-yard drive capped by soph fullback Joe Farrells 3-yard plunge. Notre Dam 0 0 0 4 6 Northwestern 7 14 8 6 35 NWN Murphy 2 plung (Uhlir kick) NWN Flatley 23 pass from Myers (kick failed) NWN Murphy 1 plung (Flatley pass from Myers) NWN Flatley 7 pas from Myer (Ma- chalskl pass from Myers) ND Farrell 3plunge (pass failed) NWN McCauly 6 run (pass failed) Attendance 55,752 Bloomsburg Tops Cheyney 32 To 6 CHEYNEY, Pa.

(AP) Bloomsburg State jumped to two quick first quarter touchdowns, then ran off with a 32-6 football victory over Cheyney State, Saturday. Bloomsburg State scored on runs of 7 and 54 yards, passes of 25 and 11 and a recovered fumble in the Cheyney end zone. NEW HAVEN, Conn. AP)-Arouscd Yale tallied twice in a fiery final period and tied alert Colgate 14-14 in a football thriller that probably created a modern fumbling record for the Yale Bowl. and scored one touchdown.

COLGATE-YALE Rutgers drove 70 yards in the first period to score first. The TD came on a 25-yard pass from quarterback Bob Yaksick to end Bill Craft. PAT BLOCKED A placement by Bill Herring was blocked by Fred Levin. Penn, after a first-period drive was thwarted by an interception in the end zone, went 49 yards in six plays for its second-period touchdown. The key play in the drive was a 39-yard pass from Owens to end Ron Ailshouse.

Owens made the pass after running 10 yards to pick up a bad snap from center. Ailshouse brought the ball to the Rutgers 9 and three plays later Owens went over. On the ensuing kickoff, Thompson took the ball on the 6 went up near a sideline, broke through a pile of players at the Rutgers 40 and went in untouched after outdistancing Penn's Mickey Brown in a race over the final 15 yards. Rutger 4 4 0 012 Penn .0 7 0 0-7 Rut Craft 25 pas from Yaksick (kick failed) Penn Owen 2 run (Moinar kick) Rut Thompson 94 run (run failed) Attendance 4,064 NORFOLK, Va. (AP) Roger Stabach, Navys sensational 20 -year-old sophomore quarterback, pulled the old sleeper play out of the football moth balls for an early 66-yard touchdown and went on to lead the Navy to a 32-9 victory over Pittsburgh in the Oyster Bowl Saturday.

Staubach, who gained the Navys No. 1 quarterback spot only two weeks ago, completed all of his eight passing attempts for 192 yards, gained 28 yards rushing four. The last one accounted for a touchdown. Colgate dominated the contest during the first three periods in which it built up a 14-0 lead. The Red Raiders scored with only four seconds left to play in the first half for a 7-0 lead.

They ran and passed 75 yards for the touchdown, a nine-yard pass from Dan Keating to Karl Baumgartner, Lee Woltman kicked the extra point. The TD drive took 15 plays, including two penalties. Colgates second touchdown came at 4:51 of the third quarter, five plays after Mike Heffernan, the Colgate center, fell on Hank Higdons fumble on the Yale 26. The score resulted on a 2-yard plunge by Jim Deegan. Woltman's kick was good for the extra point.

Yale went 79 yards for its first touchdown in 5:17 of the final period. Lee Marsh circled left end for the score from the 2. He tried to go around left end for extra points but failed. Yale went 79 yard's in 14 plays for the second touchdown, a one-yard crash through the middle by quarterback Brian Rapp. Rapp passed into the end zone to Marsh for the tying points.

Cornell Late Scoring Nips Tigers, 35-34 ITHACA, N.Y. (AP) Cornell, sparked by quarterback Gary Wood, scored a touchdown and an extra point with less than a minute and a half to play Saturday for a dramatic 35-34 football triumph over highly favored Princeton. Wood had a hand in all five Cornell touchdowns and put on one of the best running and passing performances of any Big Red back in the past decade. The 185-pound junior picked up 125 yards rushing and added 212 more on 13 of 16 passes. The winning touchdown came with 1 minute, 23 seconds to play with Wood tossing a 5-yard pass to halfback A1 Aragona.

That ended a 12-play, 80-yard march. Pete Gogolak, who already had converted the first four touchdowns, then came in and added the winning point from placement. Princeton 7 13 0 14-34 Cornell 0 14 14 735 Prin Riley 2 run (Gouldin kick) Corn Burnap 55 pas from Wood (Gogolak kick) Prln Meriml 18 run (Gouldin kick) Corn Wood 49 run (Gogolak kick) Prin lacavazzi 1 run (kick failed) Corn Aragona 2 pass from Wood (Gogo-iak kick) Corn Wood 2 run (Gogolak kick) Priiv lacavazzi 11 run (run failed) Prin lacavazzi 38 run (Howard pass from Riley) Corn Aragona 5 pass from Wood (Gogolak kick) Attendance 21.000 on a reverse to the GW 2. George Pappas bucked over from the one on the second try. Army began again from the GW 36 after a punt and punched across the goal line this time.

The Cadets scored in 8 plays with regular fullback Ray Paske diving across from the 2. The final Army score came at the start of the fourth quarter. The Cadets marched from their own 37, controlled the ball for 14 running plays and were on the GW 2 yard line as the game cod eluded. A crowd of 26,005 was on hand for Army's first football visit to the nation's capital. Army 0 7 0 714 Georg Washington 0 0 0 00 Army Pappas 1 run (Heydt kick) Army Paske 2 run (Heydt kick) Attendance 26,005.

Yales second touchdown came ith only 23 seconds left to play but the Elis had to make good on a two-point conversion to gain the equalizer. NINE FUMBLES Between them the rivals were guilty of nine fumbles in the 43 degree temperature and sunny weather, with Colgate recovering Michigan St. 26-8 Winner Over Indiana His first pass play, after Pitt had taken a 3-0 lead on Rock Lee-sons 37-yard field goal, was one to behold. On the Middies first play from scrimmage, halfback Jim Stewart limped toward the sidelines wh.le his mates gathered in the huddle. Staubach faded back quickly, Stewart dashed some 20 yards back of the Pitt secondary, and was all alone as he took the pass and trotted across the goal line.

Navy added another touchdown in the opening period on Johnny Sais 3-yard run after two of Stau. bachs passes had picked up 29 yards. Pittsburgh 3 0 6 G- Navy 12 0 6 1432 Pitt FG Leeson 37 Navy Stewart 66 pas from Staubach (Pass failed) Navy Sai 3 run (kick failed) Navy Orlosky 4 run (kick failed) Pitt Leeson 1 plunge (kick failed) Navy Orlosky 1 plunge (Western kick) Navy Staubach 22 run (Western kick) Attendance 32000 Carnegie Tech Rows 25 To 21 Holy Cross Beaten By Syracuse KEL NAGLE WINS AUCKLAND, N.Z. (AP) Australian professional Kel Nagle fired a four-under-par 68 Saturday to win the New Zealand golf open for the third time. He finished with a 72-hole total of 281, seven under par.

Colgate 0 7 7 0 14 ,0 0 0 14-14 PITTSBURGH AP St. Vin- Col Baumoartner 9 pass from Keating' (woltman kck (Cent came from behind Saturday Col Deegan 6 run (Wotman kick) Un(f kpa fornodiA TaoH 91 nn UTtRrFCTFR (APt 'Yaie-Manh 2 run (run t. led! ana near Carnegie lecn zo-zi on tutiwLsitn, Mass. (Art YaieRapp i run (Marsh pass from a triple reverse with 42 seconds Attendance 2,232. 'left in the football game.

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. AP)-Michigan States Spartans sent rugged George Saimes across the Indiana goal line three times and Dewey Lincoln once Saturday and beat the Hoosiers 26-8. The Spartans, ranked No. 10 in The Associated Press poll, had the class to compensate for five lost-ball fumbles. The bobbles came after they had scored twice in the first five minutes on Lincoln's 25-yard dash and a Saimes plunge set up by Little Sherman Lewis 29-yard run.

opportunist Syracuse football team capitalized on Mike Koski's touchdown runback of an intercepted pass, a fumble recovery and a nine yard punt for a 30-20 victory over Holy Cross Saturday. Dartmouth Winner Over Harvard, 24-6 Alabama Tumbles Tulsa By 35 To 6 TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) Ala-Ion a flashy running display for a bama kept tight reins on Tulsas 35-6 victory, passing attack Saturday and put Alabamas charging line often forced Tulsas passing quarter- Field Goals Can-v Terjts To 13-11 Win COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) I down in the second quarter for a John Ilannigan's second field goal, 10-0 lead, set up by a pass interference! South Carolina bounced back on Rallying from a 24-6 halftime break, with 23 seconds to play pass interceptions. A 39-yard redeficit, the home team closed to pulled out a 13-11 football victory) turn by Larry Gill in the second 24-20 and was not licked until the for Maryland over South Carolina 1 period resulted in a touchdown on MICH.

STATE INDIANA First downs Rushing yardage Passing yardage Passe Passes Intercepted by Punts Fumbles lost Yards penalized powerful Orange held on downs at their 7 early in the fourth quarter. Saturday. Pass interference by Billy brell, star halfback for South Beautiful deception and hard moved Maryland to the tra points and got them on a run running enabled Jim Gaskins to jo-yard line and Hannigan boot- around his left end. This enabled race 16 yards untouched for the yie ujwung three points from Carolina to go ahead 11-10 clinching score just 18 seconds be- 1 fore the end of the third period. i 1 1 1 1 aii a i a uiiaiu iinu ter.

Holy Cross was braced for a the 12. I when Dean Findley kicked a 24- Hannigan kicked a 31-yard field ar(1 ficId Goal in the third first for Kings second touchdown, four-yarder, and sub-signal caller Dana Kellys one-yard sneak were sandwiched around the bolt-from-the-blue Harvard score. Unitil that play. Harvard had been across the midfield stripe only three times and hadn't penetrated within the Dartmouth 30 on a single occasion. STH FIELD GOAL Wellsteads fifth field goal of the season and a seven-yard Harvard punt was about all that separated the Ivy rivals in the opening half.

Wellsteads boot came after a 65-yard Indians march stalled on the Harvard 15. In the second pe-riodv Taylors punt went off the side of his foot and out of bounds only seven yards in front of the line of scrimmage. That gave Dartmouth the ball at the Crimson 35. Minnesota Victorious In Jug Duel ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP)-Minnesota balked Michigan with an overwhelming defense Saturday and capitalized on a series of opportunities for a 17-0 victory in the traditional battle for the Little Brown Jug.

Sputtering themselves on offense, the Gophers turned an errant Michigan center snap and a pass interception into 10 Pins VeveraltimM. ill gotofl one the second quarter before for and one (or 61 yards fans in Michigan Stadium. Jerry Swanson bucked across! from the one-foot line. McBirnies booming punts sent quar-goal in the quarter a ca-i reer record of nine, most ever by I and hasHaiiipdcii Beals' SHINER SETS RECORD HoilkillS 15-0 Quarterback Dick Shiner and, 1 halfback Tom Brown also had a bLT1MORE AP Hampden- quarterback sneak on the fourth down, inches situation and the quick handoff sent the junior reserve flying into the end zone untouched. Syracuse had the ball on the Crusader 25 when Gene Corbett, CAMBRIDGE, Mass.

(AP)-Dartmouth saw its uncrossed goal line boast go up in smoke Saturday on an 86-yard Harvard pass play but easily stayed in the undefeated ranks with a 24-6 Ivy League victory over the Crimson. I The defensive-minded Indians from Hanover, N.H., came into the game, televised in the East, as the nations only major college which had yet to allow a touchdown. The visitors were In front 17-0 In the last period when quarterback Mike Bassett connected with halfback Bill Taylor on the long pass play, Taylor hauling in the aerial at his own 45 and going the rest of the way untouched. Dartmouth, now unbeaten In five games over-all, stands atop the Ivy with a 3-0 slate while Harvard is 1-2. DARTMOUTH LEADS 10-0 Dartmouth used a 32-yard field goal by end Bill Wellstead in the opening quarter and quarterback Billy King's 11-yard option play run in the second period for a 104) lead.

Ron Rubick returned a punt 38 yards to the Indiana 17 in the second quarter and Saimes went over from the one. Lewis ran a kickoff back 38 yards early in the final period, to the Michigan State 49, and it took 11 plays to send Saimes over the goal line from the Hoosier 3. Indiana, losing for the 17th straight time to a Big Ten opponent, moved 67 yards for Its touchdown in the third quarter, quarterback Woody Moore going the last three yards and passing to Jim Bailey for the conversion. A standoff in first downs, 15-15, didn't reflect Michigan State's 115 yards on punt returns against In diana's none. The Spartans had a 273-137 edge in rushing aw only a 90-117 deficit in passing.

Michigan Slat 12 I 0 554 Indian 001 8 VSO Lincoln run (kick (ailed) MSU Saimes 1 plung (run failed) MSU- Saimc 1 run (Lawis pais from Smith) I Moor run (Blly pat from Moor) MSU Salmas 3 run (past failed) Attendance 24,377. punting into a stiff wind, saw the (ball roll off the side of his foot record Maryland day with pass- Syditey scored twice in the second for just nine yards. ing. Shiner completed 17 of 26. half to whip Johns Hopkins 15-0 Syracuse 3o 1 binS the single game record and Saturday and remain in contcn- I setting a new high of 87 career tion for the Mason-Dixon Conference football title.

MC 37 pass lnt.rc.pl, on (Main. for his school. Syr-Nanc 3 run (Giardt pass from Mahle) HC McCarthy plunaa (run failed) Syr King run (Sweeney pass from Mahle) HC McCarthy 1 plunge (pa failed) HC Hennessey 3 run (Hargrave pas from McCarthy) Syr Gaskin 16 run (run fallad) Attendance 20,000 Brown caught eight, tying game mark and running record to a new An 11-yard pass from scored Maryland's the The victory gave Hampden-single the Sydney a 2-1 league record. est-career high of ern Maryland has a 3-0 iDixon mark, and both leaders Shiner to have one conference game re-Brown touch-lmaining. Harvard Dartmouth 7 0 1424 Harvard 0 0 0 46 Dart FG Wallsteed 32 Oert King 11 run (Wellstead kick) Oart King 4 run (Wellstead kick) Harv Taylor 84 pas from Bassett (pas failed) Dart Kelly 1 run (Wellstead kick) Attendance 32,000 Tulsa 0 0 44 Alabama 7 14 0 1435 Ala Namath 1 run (Davi kick) Ala Huribut 1 run (Davts kick) Ala Clark 91 run (Davis kick) Ala Clark 2 run kick failed) Ala Martin I run (Ogden paw to Martin) Tui Swanson run (kick failed) Attendance 25,000.

9 Minnesota 4 )0 7 417 Michigan 0 4 0 00 Minn FG Varslch 24 Minn Campbell 4 pas from Blaska (Var-ch kick) Minn Ca-c 58 pas from Blask (Version kick) Attendance 45,481 A AV. .1 s.48k8 -ft 18 If-j I IT if m-t If- 4 I i A A.

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