Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan • Page 34

Location:
Detroit, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
34
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 (i ll Saturday, Oct. 21, '67 DETROIT FREE PRESS Allen Park 'Squeaks' To Loop Crown Rod Wimpfarey scored the first yard pass play, Ray DeMarti to Frank Dovelle. touchdown on a 60-yard punt return. Then Terry Cross recovered a fumble in the Romulus Grosse He Wins Bob Wischer's 18-yard run onds, aided by two pass interception calls and an offside penalty, to score with 15 seconds remaining on Ron Reckinger's one-yard smash and Bob Curry's extra point. Curry had to kick his conversion twice.

His team was offside on the first attempt. end zone for another. The third came on Ken Sexsmith's 55-yard sprint after intercepting a pass. for a touchdown with five min Redford 32 Pershing 32 Allen Park 7 Edsel Ford 27 Cooley 0 0 Trenton 6 Lincoln Park 0 Walled Lake I9j RO Kimball 26 Roseville 18 Wyandotte 40 Farmington 13 Hazel Park 14 East Detroit 0 Monroe 7 Undefeated Allen Park made it to the winner's circle again Friday night but only by the skin of its teeth. The Jaguars, No.

6 ranked Class A in the state, edged Trenton, 7-6, despite making only three first downs, and thus also captured the Suburban Six League title. Allen Park went on a 40-yard drive in the final 59 sec utes left sealed a 21-13 victory It was Romulus fifth loss of for Grosse lie Friday night as! the season without a victory. the Raiders defeated Flat Rock Earlier Clancy Eldridge had scored on a 15-yard run and Wyandotte Wonder Wyandotte's Byron Hebert Allen Park got the ball past midfield with 2:40 left on a 59- Tim Stachio on a 10-yard pass from Chris Walker. Pat Maher scored in the first period for! scored a touchdown and threw TD passes of 48 and 13 yards to Ron Rushlow Friday to rout Monroe, 40-7. The victory kept Flat Rock on a 74-yard run.

Roseville Sews Up 2nd EML Crown Dales Rip Wayne Melvindale marched with the opening kickoff to a touchdown and went on to blank Wayne, 19-0, to stay in the Sauk Trail race. Joe Brownkowski went four yards for the first touch down. Fumbles Pave Way For Pair of TDs, 18-0 Roseville High nailed down a second straight Eastern Michigan League football title Friday night utilizing two jonn Owens five-yard run and Don Tobe's two-yard plunge the Bears atop the Border Cities chase. Hebert broke loose for a 61-yard run to break open the game. Cosmos Crushed David Hart scored four touchdowns and picked up 163 yards rushing in 11 carries Friday night to lead Willow Run High to a lopsided 51-0 football victory over Hamtramck in the Twin Valley conference.

Hart scored on runs of 44, 24 and two yards and on a 31-yard pass from Jerry McCoy. The victory assured Willow Run the conference title. gave the Cardinals their second "SlLfr I win in four games. fumbles and one long scoring drive to defeat East Detroit, Rouge on Run River Rouge's Panthers turned to the spectacular to chalk up its 18-0, before 6,000 fans. Ken Fiott threw three touch down passes.

Two of his scor ing aerials went to Bruce Vin-cent for six and four yards second victory in the Twin Valley League Friday, blanking Komulus, 20-0. Fiott's other scoring pass was to Randy Matiyow for 37 yards. I Both the first and final touch downs came after Roseville had recovered East Detroit fumbles. RO Kimball Clips Hazel Park, 26-14 Royal Oak Kimball remained in a tie for the lead in Center Line Rolls Friday's Prep Scores Center Line High, heading toward a Warren- Conference football title, breezed past War the Southeastern Michigan Conference Friday night by coming from behind to beat Hazel Park, 26-14, for its third" victory in four league games. ren Friday night, 26-6, with Ron Karlis hitting Duane Bonk and John Jakienicz on touchdown PREP FOOTBALL The defeat dropped Hazel Park one game off the pace be passes.

The victory gave Center Line hind Kimball and Ferndale, both winners Friday. a league record of three vic tories and a tie. Kimball scored first when quarterback Jerry Wasen sneaked over from the four, but Kimball failed to convert. Then Hazel Park came back to move Clintondale Can Fly The passing combination of Bill Reinseldt-to-Joe Taylor pro yard smash and Keith Sanders ahead 7-6 on Dave Beverlin's TD and conversion. Free Press Photos by JIMMY TAFOYA vided the punch necessary as Clintondale won its second game in three starts by edging Elliott Haskings gives it the hip here but can't elude Kettering's Harold Jones KIMBALL WENT ahead to stay in the third quarter when South Lake, 22-14, in the Bi-County League Friday night.

The combination clicked for fullback Gary Crocker scored twice on runs of three and 10 IDs of 24 and 28 yards in the yards. Hazel Park picked up a final touchdown on an 80-yard third period and Dick Kluge went three yards for the other score in the fourth quarter. pass play from Mickey Mick of Jeff Federoff. Both Kimball and Ferndale 'Big Five' Win In City League FRIDAY'S RESULTS CITY LEAGUE Osborn 19 Southeastern Cody 33, Southwestern 12. Western 31, Murray-Wright 7.

Henry Ford Central i. Finney 13, Cass Tech 13 (tie). Eastern 28, Northeastern i. Mumford 13, Northwestern i. Redford 32, Cooley 0.

Pershing 32, Kettering 0. Denby 34, Northern 7. SUBURBAN Livonia Franklin 25, Oak Park 1J. Riverview 26, Robichaud 13. Lutheran West 32, Inkster 7.

Grosse He 21, Flat Rock 13. Monroe Catholic Central 21, corse 13. Livonia Bentley 20, Plymouth 7. Dundee 19, Erie Mason 0. Center Line 26, Warren t.

Clawson 14, Madison Heights i. Melvindale 19, Wayne 0. Clintondale 22, South Lake 14. RO Dondero 25, Fordson 13. Garden City East 13, Taylor Center I.

Mt. Clemens 20, Pontiac Northern 14. Edsel Ford 27, Lincoln Park 0. Allen Park 7, Trenton Saline 14, Dexter 6. West Bloomfield 33, Clarenceville 2.

River Rouge 20, Romulus 0. Fitzgerald 38, Cousino 0. RO Kimball 26. Hazel Park 14. Walled Lake 19, Farmington 13.

Avondale 6, Utica 0. Waterlord 27, Livonia Stevenson 0. Ferndale 14, Berkley 0. Miiford 34, Holly 14. Roseville 18, East Detroit 0.

Port Huron Northern 26, Port Huron 7. Willow Run 51, Hamtramck 0. Birmingham Seaholm 27, Southfield 7. Wyandotte 40, Monroe 7. Lutheran East 26, Oxford 6.

L'Anse Creuse 33, Lake Shore Garden City West 27, Dearborn Lowrey 12. Troy 12, Rochester 0. Gibralter Carlson 21 Ypsilantl Roosevelt 0. Ypsilantl Lincoln 0, Milan 0. CATHOLIC LEAGUE Immaculate Cone.

26, Anchor Bay CC 0. Mt. Clemens St. Mary 14, Nativity 6. STATE Lake City 39, Onekama 0.

Muskegon Mona Shores 7, Muskegon Heights 6. Oscoda 6, Tawas 0. Muskegon 39, Muskeqon CC 19. Traverse City 27, GR Central 20. Midland 19, Alpena 7.

Sag. Buena Vista 38, Cadillac 6. on a three-yard buck. Fordson won the statistics picking up 240 yards rushing and passing to 157 for Dondero. Dales Won't Yield A brilliant defensive effort sparked Ferndale to a 14-0 victory over Berkley Friday night.

The Dales held Berkley to only one-yard rushing while Baylee Reid personally collected 104 yards as Ferndale rushed Clinging to Top Lutheran East stayed on top in the Central Suburban Conference scoring its third straight victory by-whipping Oxford, 26-6, Friday night. Dan Gluszawski passed for one touchdown and scored another himself to lead the rout. There He Goes have 3-1 records in the con ference. Sherwin Munn, the in one of runners great breakaway Overcomes Shock metropolitan Detroit football, BY HAL SCHKAM Mackenzie, Redford and Mumford on the West Side' Southfield stunned Seaholm with a 60-yard touchdown pass got away on two long scoring dashes Friday night to help Mt. Pershing and Denby on the East Side.

That's all that re mains in the City League football race. Clemens High defeat Pontiac Northern, 20-14, in a non-league With two weeks to go and tie3 likely, there still is the game. Munn scored on runs of 66 and 46 yards. The Bathers' other touchdown came on a 53-yard pass play, Ken Rosebush to Sylvester Fisher. on the first play of the game Friday but Seaholm came back for a 27-7 victory.

Rick Ellison hit Dave Weiland with the 60-yard bomb when the game was only 29 seconds old. Gar Thomas, a 170 -pound speedster, came back to score three touchdowns for Seaholm on runs of six, 28 and two yards. Dick Trickey got the other score on a six-yard run. Fitzgerald Romp Warren Fitzgerald scored in every quarter to hand Cousino its fourth straight setback in the Arrows Clawson Takes 1st Clawson rallied from a 6-0 Warren Conference Friday allow Cooley inside its 30-yard line all day in racking up a 32-0 victory. Mark Sokall scored on runs of 28 and five yards and Mike Carner, who scored once, for 176 yards in seven carries.

Bob Swan threw to Bill Elwood and Kert Shin-sky for other touchdowns. LOXNIE WARREN 'S 23-yd. punt return and Derrick Dob-son's 25-yard run with a pass interception, both for touchdowns, brought Mumford a 13-6 victory over Western. Rick Cason scored all four touchdowns on runs of 60, 13, 12 and seven yards to lead Eastern past Northeastern, 28-6. It was Eastern's first victory of the fall.

Cass Tech came from behind in the final four minutes to tie Finney, 13-13. deficit to win its battle for first night, 38-0. Fitzgerald rolled up 313 yards place in the Oakland A Conference with Madison, 14-6. Paul Ragala scored from the rushing in the game as Wally Russell scored a pair of touch eight and three-yard lines for downs on runs of 19 and seven Risk Lead League-leading Michigan Arrows will face their long-time nemesis, the Flint Wildcats, in the top game of the Midwest Football League Saturday night in Mt. Clemens Memorial Stadium.

Although Flint hasn't been a yards. Dave White, Tom Camp problem of who will be playing for the right to meet in the City League finals and the eventual Goodf ellow Game. Three weeks of play, however, have left these five pow-erhou es unbeaten. PEKSHIXG dealt Kettering out of the East Side race Friday with a 32-0 trouncing. Marvin Lane passed to Glenn Doughty for two touchdowns of 12 and 10 yards and Dennis Truner scored on runs of 13 and seven yards.

The big scoring p'ay, however, was Elliott Hoskins' 65-yard -oin for a touchdown. Denby, which has given up only 21 yards in three games, rolled for 335 yards in total yardage in a 34-7 conquest of Northern. Terry Fuller and Ray Kadalboski caught long touchdown passes for Denby as the Tars scored in every period. Redford scored its third straight shutout on the West Side. The Huskies, who earlier blanked both Southwestern and Western, didn't Clawson, which ran its record to 4-1.

Bill Ball tallied on a 32-yard run for Madison, which fell to second place with a 4-2 mark. bell, Bob Balligan and Dennis Knack scored the other touch Lakers Win Offensive Duel, 33-26 It was strictly offense Friday night as West Bloomfield upped its Wayne-Oakland League football record to 5-0 and remained in first place by outlasting win-less Clarenceville, 33-26. The winners scored twice in each of the first two periods and once in the fourth to keep-' Clarenceville from registering a major upset. ROBIN BREXNAN" went over from the eight to start West Bloomfield's scoring, then passed 55 yards to Gary Hahne-feld. In the second period, Brennan clicked on 38 and 47-yard scoring tosses to Fred Ringe and Terry Conley, respectively.

The clincher for West Bloomfield came when Rod Arendsen scampered 60 yards. downs for Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald is now 2-1-1 in league competition. real contender since Joining the UAnse Holds It L'Anse Creuse routed Lake THE STANDINGS EAST SIDE WEST SIDE league two years ago, the Wildcats have been rough on the Arrows. Last year they spoiled a perfect Arrow season with a 6-6 tie and upset them the previous year, 19-14.

Shore, 33-0, Friday to hold first place in the Bi-County League Breaks for Dondero Royal Oak Donderdo took advantage of the breaks Friday night to defeat Dearborn Ford-son, 25-13, in a Border Cities League game. The victory gave Dondero a 3-1 conference record and kept the Acorns alive in the BCL race. Roger Duty scored twice on short plunges' for Dondero while Tom Faraday tallied on a five- Ernie McPherson's two touch Ypsilanti is hoping that Flint downs paced L'Anse Creuse's Denby 3 0 Mackenzie 3 0 Pershin 3 Redford 3 0 Kettering 2 Mumford 3 Northern 2 1 Ford 2 1 Osborn I 1 Cody 2 1 Finney 1 1 Western I 1 Eastern 1 7 Southwestern 1 2 Cass Tech 2 Central 1 2 Northeastern 0 3 Northwestern 1 2 Northwestern 3 Cooley 3 Murray-Wright 0 3 Chadsey 0 3 Played fie same. 33-0 victory. Mike Schmidt, Mickey Thiery, can pull another upset.

The Vikings are only one game behind the Arrows and face fourth-place Dayton at Dayton. EIGHT IX HIS clutches and Capt. Glenn Doughty of Pershing has another touchdown. Doughty scored twice on passes from Marvin Lane as Pershing rolled past Kettering, 32-0. Bill Hosner and Greg Dyer scored the other touchdowns.

nun i iMBMi: I Dribbling on the Xway The Alphabet of Life BY MARK BELTAIRE ADD FREEWAY DEBRIS: A perfectly serviceable basketball resting forlornly against the median of the westbound Ford. Pat Walker Spotted this Sign of Our Times on the marquee over the Mermaid's Cave on Library: Topless Go Go Girls Park In Rear certainly a prudent suggestion to cut down on a potential traffic jam in front of the place. The crooks are apparently keeping up visions he's doing in his three-part series for Impressario magazine on the University and its principal benefactor, the late Mrs. Alfred Wilson. Borth tripped over a wire, fell so hard he ruptured a blood vessel in his hip.

And the doctor told him that if he hadn't been carrying a whole flock of credit cards in his right rear pocket, he might well have broken his hip. He received a massive shot that, as Borth tells it, completely integrated him. "From my hip to my toes, Tm white, black, blue, red, green, yellow and orange." And to top it off, he received his annual flu shot shortly thereafter, and for the first time in his life suffered a violent reaction. Mailbaggage BY BILLY GRAHAM QUESTION A friend of mine is, I believe, very sensitive in religious matters. I think he's too careful and believes he has sinned when really he hasn't.

h.l. ANSWER Three cheers for your friend 1 Most of us are not sensitive enough to the voice of conscience and the spirit of God. Great care should be taken in spiritual matters, for they are concerned with eternity. Most people today consider the material side of their lives, and neglect the spiritual thinking it irrelevant. Thank God for at least one who is extremely careful about his relationship with God.

Jesus said: "Straight is the gate and narrow is the way that leads to life, and few there be that find it." We should all fear that we might not be counted in that few who find the Way. Talking Point How often does the evening cup of joy lead to sorrow in the morning. James Hogg A man cannot be too careful in the choice of his enemies. Wilde We sometimes see a fool possessed of talent but never of judgment. La Rochefoucauld day's biologists know that if they are to understand how living things work, they must use the methods of chemists and physicists.

They must look not just at cells, but at length of the ark shall be three hundred cubits, the breadth of it fifty cubits; and the height of it thirty cubits. A window shalt thou make to the ark, and in a cubit shalt thou finish it above; and the door of the ark shalt thou set in the side thereof; with lower second and third stories shalt thou make it." Fifteen minutes after the announcement was run, there was a caller at the station door to pick up his plans. Tip of the Topper to Tommy and Florence Long, who are saying farewell to the saloon business after 49 years of serving hospitality to Detroiters. They've sold their last spot at 21413 W. Eight Mile to Ed Shave and Dave Anderson, who are in process of redecorating, will rename it Basin Street.

The Passing Parade Christy Borth, the Squire of Parshallville, has joined the group of believers that all bad things come in combinations of three. Shortly after he returned from a trip to Expo 67, he was attacked on his by a swarm of yellow-jackets who bit him eight times. Borth was only slightly comforted when his friend, Bill Stirton, told him: "You were lucky. If you had been bitten 10 times, you'd have absorbed the equivalent of the bite of a rattlesnake and you might no longer be with us." A few days later, Borth was walking across the campus of Oakland University to obtain information for some re- the molecules that make the cells and at electromagnetic forces of the atoms that make molecules. Forty-six of the world's leading scientists who study living things in this way have been meeting at Columbia University this week to discuss their work.

Their concensus is that we now know a great deal about the alphabet and words of the genetic code, but very little about how to read the sentences for meaning. They know what the molecules do, but not how they do it. If scientists can learn how molecules read and write the code, they may be able to do the same. Scientists can write the genetic code, it would mean they could recognize non-living molecules to order. They could rewrite the flawed genetic sentences that lead to inherited diseases, or they could program into chromosomes the instructions for an entirely new species of animal.

Many of the geneticists at Columbia will mention such prospects only in informal discussions. By nature, they are cautious in predicting the future. Some say it is 100 years away. But if progress in the new biology is as unpredictable as it is in other sciences, the day may be mucfy closer when man can custom design molecule systems that will be alive. Mrs.

Ethel Wallis. Ambassador Apt. No. 205, 2064 E. 96th Street with the seasons.

A cobber wearing a Halloween mask, pink and orange with brown checks, held up Najon's Bar, and a short time later another thug held up the St. Philo-mena Credit Un BY BOYCE RENSBERGER Free Press Science Writer NEW YORK Living matter does not exist. Living systems do exist. This is one of the most fascinating concepts emerging from what scientists call "the new biology." When you begin to look closely at living things, you see an unbelievably complex organization of atoms put together in such a way that the system moves about, reproduces itself and exhibits the other characteristics of life. The individual atoms and molecules are not alive, but when they are organized into systems, it is the total of chemical reactions that occur which is alive.

It's Much Like saying letters of the alphabet have no meaning until they are combined in certain ways to form words and sentences. Before the days of microscopes and sophisticated chemical analysis, there was little difficulty in telling apart living and non-living things. For most laymen today there is still little doubt. But for researchers in genetics and development the study of how living things are created and grow the difference between life and non-life is almost irrelevant. To- Cleveland, 44106: "My most heartfelt thanks to you for your article concerning my daughter, Cathy (who is waiting for her strength to build so she can receive a kidney transplant from her motb er at the Cleveland Clinic).

The mail has been flooding in. Twenty letters on the first day, 30 on the second and this morning another 20. They are so encouraging; some remark on great physical illness of Thirsty Scots Scoop Whisky GLASGOW (UPD It was a sight to bring a drinking man to his knees and it did. Dozens of thirsty Scots scooped up Scotch whisky that ran in the street Friday when a pair of 50-gallon hogsheads fell from a truck and burst. Drinkers rushed to nearby shops, bought bottles of mineral water, poured out the contents and used the containers to recover the liquor.

ion and tied up the clerk with the type of ribbon used for Christmas wrapping. Now, if only some other imaginative mugger could arrange to conk a victim with a turkey drumstick we'd have all the season's holidays accounted for. Rick Johnson, program director at arranged for a project for those terrible rainy days we suffered through. He suggested that listeners send in for plans for a certain type of craft to be con-ftructed in their spare time. "The long duration, and how they overcame it.

Many are from chil dren Cathy's age (13) who want to become pen pals. Grandmothers are high on the list, and many came today from lonely service men. Each seems to have some understanding of her situation." i i.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Detroit Free Press
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Detroit Free Press Archive

Pages Available:
3,662,340
Years Available:
1837-2024