SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1865 WUW & _UNDAY, OCOBER 24,C185it llZEZ i ~ E.FiILY. .. PAGE SEVEN # NATIONAL ROUNDUP: Rugged Razorbacks Roll, 55-20 BIG TEN ROUNDUP AVI,4' T l Edges Purdue, By The Associated Press Texas Beaten BULLETIN: Texas was upset 20-17 by Rice in a. late night game yesterday. The loss was the fifth-ranked Longhorns' see- ond consecutive defeat as they lost to top-ranked Arkansas last Saturday. LITTLE ROCK - Swift, power- ful Arkansas, playing for the first time ever as the nation's No. 1 team, made out-muscled North Texas State its 18th straight vic- tim, 55-20, last night. Tailback Bob Burnett scored three times on runs of one, 11 and two yards and wngback Jim Lind- sey bulled one and 15 yards for touchdowns as Arkansas continued Its winning streak, longest in the . land by a major college team. Wingback Harry Jones, a 195- pounder speedster, galloped . 83 yards for another Arkansas score, but later was injured and taken to a hospital for X-rays. His In- juries were not determined. The Razoibacks rolled up 533 f yaids in total offense, and Eagle quarterback Vidal Carlin hit on 32 of 54 passes for 306 yards, four intercepted. North Texas flanker John Love; third in the nation in pass receiving, caught 14, setting a school record, for 167 yards. After Jones' long scoring run, and a one-yard scoring dive by quarterback Jon Brittenum, the Eagles, trailing ,14-0, made a comeback bid. A missed etra point left the Razorbacks in front, 14-13, and they piled up ,a 55-13 advantage before the Eagles scored again. Nebraska Victorious LINCOLN-- Third-ranked Ne- braska bombed Colorado with long gains and scoring spectaculars yesterday including a 95-yard pass-run touchdown, and whipped the previously undefeated Buffa- loes 38-13. The big thriller for a homecom- ing crowd of 54,110 came late in the first quarter of the Big Eight Conference game after a- Colo- rado punt had put Nebraska in the shadow of its own goal. Quar- NHL : Wings Lose; Hawks Roll By The Associated Press, MONTREAL -- Jean Beliveau and little Bobby Rousseau led Montreal's stand-pat Canadiens to a rollicking 8-1 victory over De- trot last night in their National Eo~keyLeague opener. Beliveau, the big, veteran cn- ter, scored both his goals and Rousseau one of his while the Canadiens had a man advantage in the rough game. " The Canadiens romped out to a 3-1 lead in the first period, made it 6-1. after .two and coasted in against the 1964-65 regular-season champions. TORONTO-Bobby Hull, Chica- go's blond bombshell, struck for three goals last night, pacing the Black Hawks and goalie Glenn Hall to a 4-0 victory over the Toronto Maple Leafs in a Na- tional Hockey League season open- er. Hull, the dynamic left wing who flirted with the NHL single-sea- son scoring record last winter be- fore being slowed by leg injuries, fired two goals in the opening period and completed his hat trick midway through the third period. Hall, beginning his 12th NFL season, held the Maple Leafs in check td post his 63rd career shut- out. He was ably assisted by an alert, hard-hitting defense, that kept the home club, off balance throughout. BEST DEALS ON '66 Mustangs-Falcons-Fords USED CARS-ALL MAKES SEE OR CALL JOHN HARRISON,,: at Henderson Ford Soles, 662-3261 terback Fred Duda hit end Free- man White with a pass, and White outhustled Colorado defenders to score. It was the season's sixth straight victory for Nebraska. For Colo- rado, it was the first loss after three victories and two ties. * * *j Irish Rollj SOUTH BEND-Battering Lar- ry Conjar's four touchdowns swept Notre Dame to a crunching 28-7 football victory yesterday over un- beaten. Southern California whose heralded Mike Garrett was al- most completely shackled. Con- Jar's feat tied a modern Irish single game scoring record. The Trojans and national rush- ing leader Garrett never had a chance against a devastating Irish attack in the nationally televised game. Conjar spearheaded the relent- less Notre Dame ground game, pil- Harriers Win Michigan's c r o s s country team, under the guidance of track Coach Don Martin, won its fourth consecutive meet yesterday. The harriers defeat- ed Spring Arbor College 20-37., Michigan's first place finisher was Jim Dolan, who knocked three seconds off'of the course record as he toured the U. golf course in 20:13. ing up 116 yards on 25 tries, in- cluding his four scoring smashes of two yards or less. Garrett, who took a five-game total of 852 yards into the game for nationally fourth-ranked USC, wound up with only 43 yards on 16 carries, most coming after No- tre Dame had swept to a 28-0 lead. * s * . Tigers Win, 51-0 PRINCETON-Charley Gogolak kicked three field goals, break- ing a national collegiate season' record, and Ron tandeck passed for three touchdowns and ran for another as unbeaten Princeton an- nihilated Penn 51-0 yesterday in an Ivy League football game. The victory was the fifth for the Tigers this season and their 14th in a row overall. Only Ar- kansas has a longer winning streak, among major college teams. Auburn Upset AUBURN - George, Sumrall's 26-yard field goal gave Southern Mississippi a 3-0 upset victory over Auburn yesterday, but it was Tom- my Brennan's three pass intercep- tions that really made the differ- By The Associated Press ence. Brennan, a 5-10 junior fullback LAFAYETTE - Second-ranked from Savannah, Ga., stopped one Michigan State scrambled back Auburn drive within scoring dis- from the brink of extinction on tance early in the game and an- the running of Bob Apisa and other near the close of the first Clint Jones and beat Purdue 14-10 half. yesterday on two fourth-quarter * touchdowns. Clemson over TCU i The victory moved the Spartans along toward the Big Ten football CLEMSON-A 26-yard second championship and a Rose Bowl quarter field goal by Frank Pearce trip as they ran their conference stood up for a 3-0 Clemson vic- record to 4-0. tory over Texas Christian yester- The rugged Spartan defense day in a defensive football game kept Purdue in the hole through- studded with 23 punts, 12 by TCU. out the second half after the The Texans managed only two Boilermakers had built up a 10-0 first downs and ran and passed halftime lead on the deadly short for only 72 yards. Clemson had 18 passes of Bob Griese and the hard first downs and gained 302 yards. running of Randy Minniear." * * * Forcing Griese to punt from near his goal line in the second .Ole Miss Wins half, Michigan State finally start- E ed clicking. OXFORD--Mississippi's hungry The first Spartan touchdown Rebels used devastating line play was all Jones and Apisa except and an aggressive defense yester- for one carry by Dwight Lee. day to batter game Vanderbilt Apisa went the last few inches, 2417 in a Southeastern Confer- and Jones got a two-point con- ence football battle. version on a pass from Steve Ju- The victorious Rebels capital- day from a fake kick formation. State converted three Wisconsin Burt, and the Buckeyes recovered With a first and goal situation on fumbles into a touchdown and two on the 11 to set up Sanders' second the Iowa three, the Wildcats Bob Funk field goals and rolled touchdown. needed four plays before McKel- to a 20-10 victory over the * * vey plunged over from the one. Badgers in a Big Ten football'IowaShutout Early in the fourth quarter, game yesterday. EVANST N DennisBootheNorthwestern pounded- its way to Two of the fumbles came in the the sophomore quarterback withbolstered the20,a shaky leanDickie second period as the Buckeyes, a reputation for passing, kept clinching 38-yard field goal. rebounding from a 32-7 pasting at Northwestern on the grouid yes- n - . a k r 4 Mhe hands of Michigan State a week ago, scored 17 of their points on, the first of two Will Sander touchdowns and Funk's first field goal, a 19-yarder. Their only untainted tally came at the start of the crucial second period. Down 3-0, the Buckeyesa mounted an 85-yard drive sparked by two key runs of 24 and nine - ...........-.... .........-.--_-.- terday and guided the Wildcats to a 9-0 Big Ten football victory over Iowa. A homecoming crowd of 45,129 saw Boothe attempt only two pass- es, of which he completed one for nine yards. However, the 2Q-year- old from Mundelein, Ill., engineer- ed a powerful ground attack led by workhorse Bob McKelvey to i ized on a bad break for Vandy, Winning Drive a long pass and a pass intercep- The winning touchdown drive tion for their touchdowns after a washelped by 20 yards of Purdue scoreless first period.wsheedy20yrsfPrde s f p d penalties for offside and .a per- sonal foul. Jones went from the .Tulsa Romps eight, getting a fine block from Apisa. TULSA-Quarterback Bill An- Purdue got its points in the derson passed for six touchdowns first half on a 20-yard field goal and end Howard Twilley shatter- by the versatile Griese, a seven- ed another NCAA pass receiving yard touchdown pass from Griese record yesterday as Tulsa hum- to Jim Finley and Griese's con- bled Cincinnati 49-6 in a Missouri version kick. Valley Conference football game. I Griese stayed with the short Twilley caught 14 passes for jpass most of the time in the first 226 yards to rush past the career half, hitting end Bob Hadrick and yardage mark of 2,453 set by Hugh flanker Finley with bullets over Campbell of Washington State in the line. He did not call on his 1960-42. line to hold the Michigan State line for long ones. Navy Crushed Hadrick caught two passes in the first quarter drive that put ATLANTA--Sophomore sensa- Purdue in a position for Griese to tion Kin King fired three touch- kick the field goal. Minniear broke down passes to shaliter Navy's de- away for a 23-yard run on a fenses yesterday, and Georgia fourth - and - one situation. The Tech added two long punt returns BoermakerouedstoThe to win its fourth straight football secnd period in the touchdown game 27-16. drive that carried from their own King's pinpoint passing and dev- four after they had held the Spar- astating speed: boosted the Yellow tans for downs. Jackets to a 23-0 halftime lead. He The seven-yard toss to -Finley pitched scoring strikes of 18, 17 put the ball in the end zone, and and 10 yards and set up a 31-yard Griese kicked the extra point. field goal by Tommy Carmichael.* * Tech put the game out of the Midshipmen's reach in the first OSU Rolls five minutes of the second half. MADISON-Opportunistic Ohio Indiana Loses, .8.7 BLOOMINGTON - With no time left on .the clock, Washing- ton State passed for a 2-point conversion and defeated Indiana's Hoosiers 8-7 yesterday. It was the fourth time -this season the Cou- gars had won with late rallies. The favored Cougars moved 62 yards in eight plays for the score after they got the ball with 1:31 to go on their own 38 after an Indiana punt. Tom Roth led the drive which, ended in the Hoosier end zone on, a 5-yard pass from Roth to Doug Flanburg as time ran out. Roth then threw to Al McWashington for the winning two-point conver- sion. Indiana's Glenn Holubar had intercepted a Roth pass on the next to last play of the game but the theft was nullified by a Hoosier offsides. The Cougars' furious finish was similar to those in which they beat Iowa, Minnesota 4nd Villa- nova in the closing seconds of earlier ganes this season.d * * * IMini RompI CHAMPAIGN -- Sophomore Cy- ril Pinder's 80-yard touchdown run in the second quarter broke a 7-7 deadlock and opened the way for a 28-14 Illinois victory over Duke yesterday in an intersec- tional game. Sophormores scored three Illini touchdowns, two of them growing from recovered fumbles, while 14-10 quarterback Fred Custardo tallied one, passed for another and boot- ed all extra points. It was a raw, windy day and Duke, suffering its second straight loss after four victories, had trou- ble battling the elements as well as the alert Illini, who boosted their record to 3-3. The Blue Devils lost quarter- back Scotty Glacken and end Rod Stewart, both starters, with in- juries in the second quarter. Custardo c lo s e d a 75-yard march with a seven-yard scoring sweep after Illinois took the open- ing kickoff. Duke tied it 7-7 in the opening minutes of the second with a 64- yard trust set up by Glacken's 19-yard toss to Chuck Drulis to the Illini one. Jay Calabrese rip- ped over from there and Mark Caldwell converted. Minutes later, Pinder broke off tackle and through the secondary -for his 80-yard touchdown bolt. Later, Calabrese's fumble was re- covered on the Duke 10 by Ken Kmiec and on third down Cus- tardo speared rookie Ron Bess for a six-yard TD and a 21-7 halftime lead Neither rain nor snow nor heat nor Liz{ CLINTON JONESI yards by Tom Barrington. Sander crashed over from the one for the touchdown. Then the fumbles started, punc- turing the Badgers' dream of a homecoming upset over a rival that has defeated them 24 times in 35 meetings. There have been four ties. After the kickoff, Ike Kelley jarred the ball loose from Chuck BOB GRIESE Northwestern's second Big Ten triumph in three games. Northwestern was in complete command from the opening kick- off but left the field at halftime with nothing better than a score- less tie. The Wildcats took the second half kickoff and finally moved to a touchdown with a 69-yard drive, aided by 35 yards in penalties. A button-down in a basket weave. (Something old, something new.) This Arrow shirt gives you best of both worlds. 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