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Show PAGE SIX PR'OVO TOTAHy SUND'AY HERALD, SUND'AY, NOVEMBER T, 1942 9-6j;::Utes Whip Coloags 3314 ow to Aggies - Safety, To Win forAgs; Many (Y Th reats Fizzle BIG SEVEN STANDINGS Team W. L. Pet. Colorado 3 0 1.000 Utah 3 1 .750 Denver 2 ,1 .667 B. Y. U 1 2 .333 Utah State 1 2 .333 Colorado State 1 3 .250 Wvomine 1 3 .250 Saturday's Results -Utah State 9, B. Y. U. 6 Utah 33, Colorado State 14. Colorado 28, Wyoming-7 Denver 44, Fort Douglas 6 Next Saturday's Schedule Utah at Colorado U. Denver at B. Y. U. Utah State at Colorado State BY DE MAR TEUSCHER An alert Utah State team that made and capitalized on the breaks and threw up repeated strong goal-line defenses handed the Brtgham Young Cougars a 9-6 Seating in the "Y" homecoming homecom-ing game Saturday. It was the first conference victory in two years for the Aggies and spoiled the day for the Cougar grads who came back to the campus in the hopes of seeing a "Y" triumph. The los extended the B. Y. U. "home jinx" to five straight games and marked the first time in three years the Aggies have beat the Cougars. B. Y. U. hasn't won a home game since midseason last year. The Aggie offense functioned function-ed effectively when yardage was needed and the stout line stopped three Cougar drives in the last quarter. A couple of inopportune penalties hurt the home team greatly. The Aggies opened the scoring early in the first quarter. B. Y. U. took the opening kickoff and drove up the field to the midfield stripe. Herman Longhurst then broke away on a reverse to the Ag-gie 32, but the play was called Aack and B. Y. U. penalized 15 yards for holding. That seemed to turn the tide, and Bob Orr's punt was blocked by Jim Martin, Aggie Ag-gie guard, and the visitors recovered recov-ered on the Cougar 15. Dick Williams Wil-liams drove to the nine, but the B. Y. U. line stiffened and stopped the drive on the eight yard line. Orr attempted to boot out and Ferron Sondregger Aggie captain streaked through to again block the kick. The ttall was recovered in the end zone by Orr to give the Aggies a safety and two points. 66-Yard Drive-Late Drive-Late in the first quarter the Farmers started a drive from their own 34. With Dick Williams and George Nelson alternating, the blue clad Utags marched steadily down the field to the B. Y. U. five as the quarter ended. end-ed. On the second play of the second quarter Jack Seiferling, frosh star, stepped through a wide open hole and went over for a score. Lefty Sorenson converted convert-ed making the score 9-0 for the Utah Staters. After receiving the kickoff the Cougars drove to midfield and then punted out to the Aggies on the five. On the exchange of punts that followed the Cougars wound up with the ball on the Aggies 37. Rex Olsen threw a pass that went' incomplete. Olsen gained five yards and on the next play went to the 30. Olsen again packed pack-ed the ball and went to the 21-. Longhurst took the ball on a reverse re-verse and romped all the way down to the Aggie two-yard line. On the next play, Longhurst took the ball around end -for the score. The conversion atte mpt was blocked and the scoring for the day was over. Aggies Threaten In the third quarter the Aggies threatened when they drove down the field only to be stopped on the Cougar 11. On fourth down at the point, Burton Silcock at- A nnouncement! Mrs. Floreni Pyne Billings wishes to announce that her song . . "OUR COUNTRY'S CAUSE" is for sale for 35c, at the following stores: HEINDSELMAN JEWELRY THE MUSIC BOX The Utah County Beauticians Society Have Agreed To Close Their Shops Monday and Tuesday, Nov. 9-10 "-, In Order That AH Beauticians May Attend the State Beautician Convention BUT WILL REMAIN OPEN ALL DAY WEDNESDAY . . NOV. 11 uchdown tempted to pass and was dumped for a loss on the 26 by Thane Stone. In the waning moments of the quarter the Cougars went deep into the Utah State territory, terri-tory, but a long pass was knocked down on the goal line. The Cougars started another drive in the early moments of the final period when Mike Mills, who played a great defensive game, recovered a fumble on the Aggie 25. Olsen went to the 17 on a wide play and two plays later Chatterton had picked up a first down. Longhurst lost a yard and then picked up six on the next play. Longurst pounded to the five-yard line, where the Aggies stiffened and threw the Cougars back. Silcock ' punted out for the Aggies but the kick was short and went out of bounds on the Utah State 22. Chatterton picked up seven in two plays through center. Chatterton smashed through to a first down on the 20, but the Y was offside and penalized. The Cougar offensive slowed up and the Aggies held and took possession on their own 15. The Cougars made their last futile bid after an Aggie kick went out of bounds on the BYTJ 30. Orr whipped a pass to Stone for a first down on the 40. Chatterton Chat-terton drove through for six yards. Orr again connected to Stone for a first down on the Aggie 44. Orr whipped a pass to Mills on the 35. Chatterton drove down to a first down on the 21, but again the Aggie line held, and a long pass was knocked down on the goal line. The Aggies sTiowed a potent offense that gained yardage consistently con-sistently through the Cougar line. The tricky "T" formation was clicking on quick opening plays and shallow flat passes that had the Cougar defenders running in circles. Bill Twitchell made yardage yard-age again and again on a tricky lateral play that started out like a reverse. The Aggie aerial attack at-tack also clicked for good gains. BYU unleashed a flashy attack through the zone which clicked throughout the game but they couldn't deliver when the chips were down. Olsen tossed several passes to Reid Riggs for good gains and Orr connected consist ently. Chatterton, Orr, and Longhurst played good ball for the Cougars, and Olsen turned in a sparkling performance at tailback while he was in the game. However, the highly touted BYU line failed to live up to notices and the Aggie men drifted through it time and time again to break up Cougar plays. The Brighamites proved once again that they have a great offensive team in between the 20-yard 20-yard lines. For the Aggies, Twitchell, Seiferling Seif-erling and Dick Williams played great ball in the backf ield. George Nelson smashed the line like - a piledriver and Melly Wood showed some great open field running. Captain Ferron Sondregger turned turn-ed in a great game for the Aggies on the line as did Dick Foiker-son. Foiker-son. , Dick Romney showed once again that he has the finest collection of young backfield men in the Big Seven as his sophomores and freshmen came through in great style. The "Y" men outgained the Aggies but they did not have the stuff to capitalize on their breaks as the Utags did. This one seemingly seem-ingly unimportant fact spelled the difference between victory and defeat. i The lineups: Brigham Young Utah State Mills le Ryan Ure It. . Sonderegger Bowers lg . . G. Corenson Nilsen c Maughan Hull rg Martin Bird it Folkerson Stone re Batt Oliverson .qb...F. Williams Orr lh D. Williams Longhurst . . . . rh Seiferling Chatterton . . . . f b Nelson Score by quarters: Cougars 0 6 0 0 6 Aggies 2 7 0 09 Scoring: Touchdowns Seiferling, Seifer-ling, Longhurst. Conversion G. Sorenson. Substitutions: B. Y. U. Olsen, hb; Weed, qb; Hecker, hb; Riggs, Blazer AERIAL ATTACKS OUR NO WEEK... GROUNb WORK ON SATUGPAY. . . MAZUR I? ATTACHED TO AIR TRAINING CZNTEQ. Bisons Stampede Over Cowboys By 28-7 Score BOULDER, Colo., Oct. 31 (U.R) Colorado university rolled over a"" fighting Wyoming team, 28 to 7, today to almost break the heart of Bernard ("Bunny) Oakes, former for-mer Colorado coach whose major ambition is to produce a Wyoming football squad good enough to beat C. U. Colorado ripped out touchdowns in the first and third periods and added two more in the final quarter. . Wyoming's brilliant Earl (Shadow) Ray slapped over for his team's only score in the second period and converted to tie the score at 7-all at halftime. The victory left Colorado's untied-undefeated record in Big Seven football this year intact. For Oakes, who left Colorado two years ago after his team demanded de-manded he be fired for "breaking conference rules" and other alleged al-leged reasons, the defeat today had only one bright spot. Colorado rolled over Wyoming at a point-a-minute clip last year. The game was rough and full of penalties. A crowd of 10,000 watched the two traditional rivals meet in an atmosphere supercharged super-charged by the fact that Oakes had come back to Boulder for the announced purpose of whipping the team he used to coach. Colorado's speedy John Zeigler ran for a touchdown on the first play of the game after snagging a pass, ine pass ana run were STATISTICS U.S.A.C. B.Y.U. First Downs it 14 Rushing 8 8 Passing -. 1 6 Penalties 0 0 Net Yards Rushing 168 155 Yards Lost 17 10 Net Yards Forwards ... 26 8 Forwards Attempted ... 5 15 Forwards Completed ... 3 9 Punts, Number 6 4 Blocked by 2 0 Punts, Average 30 33 & Kickoffs, Number 2 3 Kickoffs, Average 59 47 Punts and Kickoffs . . 88 Gl Fumbles 4 0 Ball Lost 2 0 Penalties 3 3 Yards lost on penalties . . 15 35 e; Berry, hb; Miner, g; Liday, hb; Peterson, fb; Dyer, g; Richins, e; Call, t. Aggies Silcock, hb; Wood, hb; Russell, hb; Gutke, hb; Gregory, Greg-ory, hb; Duncan, hb; Twitchell, hb; Sanders, g; Ingersoll, t; Hulse, t; Griffin, e. WHY HESITATE? Are you denying yourself the benefits of Chiropractic because it employs methods which appear radically different dif-ferent from those usually offered you? Remember, ALL healing methods offered you today were considered "radical" when they were first practiced. prac-ticed. DR. E. L AIKEH Chiropractor 32 WEST CENTER ST. Phone 71S J Mazur ACADEMY'S good for 8Q yards. Bob Knowles converted. Wyoming started clicking and was on the six as the first period ended. Then came Ray's long march. Colorado was hammering at the goal again as the half ended. Zeigler and Walt Clay, Colorado's Colo-rado's flashy backfield combination, combina-tion, teamed up in the third quarter quar-ter and Clay went over standing up from the 21. Again Knowles converted. Don Brotzman intercepted inter-cepted a pass on his own 25. Tex Reilly carried it to Wyoming's 16 and Clay took the ball over for a touchdown. Knowles converted. The final score was made by Reilly from the seven after three men had been thrown of the game for roughness during Colorado's march to scoring territory. , Vosifc Note the new arrangements of merchandise related items all being grouped for your convenience wide aisles and shopping buggies checking service being much improved by our new "Voy Call" system. If you have never traded at Safeway, you'll learn a lot from your first shopping trip to one of these modem stores. -o Sidelights On Cougar-Aggie Grid Encounter A brief flurry of fisticuffs ensued en-sued on the "Y" greensward after the Cougar-Aggie game as a gang of over-enthusiastic Aggie students stu-dents tried to tear down the goal posts. But the upstaters were far outnumbered out-numbered by BYU cohorts, who soon had the situation well in hand. Several "Y" alums were seen in there defending the posts, including Garth Chamberlain, tackle on last year's strong Cou gar team. mm' Looks like the Cougars will have to bring Greeley State or some other "Little Five" team to Provo if they're going to break that home field jinx. The Y-raen haven't won a home game since Greeley came here last year. They tied Colorado U, and lost to Colorado Colo-rado State after the Greeley win last year, and have dropped derision de-rision to Wyoming, Fort Douglas and the Aggies this year. The Provo Carpenters' union set a record when they bid $20,000 in war bonds for the football used in the Cougar-Aggie game. The bid was made by Spencer Madsen, business manager for the union, between halves of the game. The previous high for a football auctioned auc-tioned in Utah was $7500. Always a genuine thrill at a football game nowadays is the stirring flag raising ceremonies. The sight of Old Glory rising to the top of the flagpole while the band plays the Star Spangled Banner never fails to give any loyal American a tug at the heart strings. The ceremony at Saturday's Satur-day's game was very impressive, as was the half-time demonstration demonstra-tion by the "Y" co-eds. BAYLOR UPSETS T.C.U. 1 0 TO 7 FORT WORTH, Tex., Oct. 31 U.R A game Baylor University eleven with a brick wall for a line, dropped sluggish Texas Christian Chris-tian university from the ranks of the nation's undefeated, untied teams here today. 10 to 7, before a crowd of 12,000 fans. The Baylor Bears turned in two breath-taking goal line stands in the final period to protect their slender three-point lead gained in the third quarter when Bert Ed-minson Ed-minson booted the ball at a tough angle through th goal posts from the 17-yard line. This N SEE HOW MODERN SCIENCE HAS FACILITIES FOR HANDLING FOOD REQUIREMENTS FRANK NELSON STARS AS UTES BLAST COLOAGS SALT LAKE CITY, Oct 31 0IE Sophomore Frank Nelson, working work-ing like a demon at his tailback spot, scored two touchdowns and passed for another as he led the University of Utah to a 33 to 14 victory over Colorado State in a Big Seven conference foottll game hrre today. Only 5500 fans saw the game. Nelson scored his first touchdown touch-down after five minutes oi the opening quarter, intercepting a Colorado Statf pass, and racing 55 yards for the score. Quarterback Quarter-back Chet Kim kicked the point. The Colorado Aggies had their own hero in Quarterback Chet Maeda. Marda's swinging arm was in perfect condition and he passed for both of his team's touchdowns. Pass Nets Score Maeda tied the game at 7-all in the second period when he hurled hurl-ed the oval to End Charles Mueller Muel-ler for a 25-yard gain and a touchdown. touch-down. Fullback Dude Dent kicked the point. In building up for their first touchdown, Colorado State Aggies rollod for four first downs, including in-cluding a 23-yard pass from Maeda to Halfback Jack Davis the play followed by Maeda's scoring scor-ing toss to Mueller. The tie that resulted didn't last long. Halfback Wally Kelly of Utah ran the C. S. C. kickoff back 42 yards, and then alternated with Fullback Woody Peterson and Nelson in packing the ball to the Coloag's one-yard line. Nelson scooted left eid for the touchdown and Peterson kicked the point. There were only six seconds to go in the second quarter when Utah scored its third touchdown. Nelson got off a 24-yard run; George Brttridge, Utah substitute fullback, made a first down to the C. A. C. 19-yard line and then Nelson pitched a strike to "Snd Tally Stevens on the Aggies' four. Bettridge lugged it over, tut Kelly's drop kick for the point was wide. Utah led 20-6 at the half. Tn the third quarter. Nelson passed 20 yards Jto Chet Kim for a touchdown, but Kim failed to convert. There were more fireworks in the final quarter, Utah starting it when Center Burt Davis, Utah captain, intercepted a Coloag pass and ran it 28 yards for a touchdown. touch-down. Peterson converted. But Maeda was still hot. He threw a long pass to Mueller, who was finally brought down on the Uta'h 22 after gaining 47 yards. Another pass, Maeda to Jack Davis, Da-vis, was good for the touchdown. Fullback Dent again converted. Store T Wisconsin Smashes Ohio State By Score of 17-7 By TOMMY DEVINE United Press Staff Correspondent MADISON, Wis., Oct. 31 UE Two brilliant backs and a stout- Hearted line that refused to be awed ty a reputation led Wisconsin Wiscon-sin to a smashing 17 to 7 triumph over Ohio State today before a sell-out crowd of 45,000 fans. EIRoy HirsCiJ, a Will o' the Wisp sophomore halfback and hard-driving hard-driving Pat Harder were the backs who made the Wisconsin attack tick, but it was the great Badger line led by Dave Schreiner and Fred Negus that repeatedly repelled re-pelled the thrusts of the Ohio State backs who averaged over 400 yards per game until today's contest. The loss knocked Ohio State out of the list of perfect record teams. The Bucks had. won five straight before facing the battering batter-ing Badgers. For Wisconsin the victory kept it unbeaten, with a record of six triumphs-and a tie with Notre Dame. The setback was only the second sec-ond in a stretch of 14 games for Ohio State teams coached by youthful Paul Brown. The other loss came last season at the hands of Northwestern. Wisconsin took charge of the contest early and had the upper hand excepting for a brief span in the fourth quarter when Ohio State marched 96 yards for its lone touchdown. Wisconsin's first touchdown came one minute and 24 seconds after the second period opened. Harder made the marker on a plunge from the one-foot line, but it was the slippery Hirsch who set up the score with a great 59-yard 59-yard run that started on the Badger's Bad-ger's own 20-yard line. Harder converted to make .the score 7 to 0. KOUO TODAY . . . Hear ... MRS. GEORGE F. BALLIF at 1:15 p. m. and ELISIIA WARNER Candidate for State Senator at 9:15 p. m. Speak For the DEMOCRATIC PARTY SPRINGVILLE, jj DEVELOPED YOUR You'll find a wide assortment of quality goods, attractively at-tractively displayed and economically priced. You'll find a pleasant atmosphere and efficient service, too. Please accept your Safeway grocer's invitation to come in tomorrow. . Later in the period Wisconsin took an Ohio State punt on the Bucks' 4S-yard line and marched to the 19 before the attack bogged. bog-ged. Harder then dropped back to the 26-yard stripe and kicked a field goal to give the Badgers a 10-point advantage. Late in the third quarter Bob Baumann punted out of bounds on the Ohio State four-yard line and the Bucks began a concerted march that carried them to the Wisconsin 31 before the period ended. At the start of the fourth quarter quar-ter they took up where they had left off and Paul Sarringhaus climaxed cli-maxed the drive by plunging over from the three-yard line. Gene Fekete converted. The Bucks' march of 96 yards was accomplished in 17 plays. Wisconsin didn't leave any doubt that they were masters of the situation by coming back immediately im-mediately after the kickoff and driving 66 yards for its second touchdown. The score came on a beautifully executed 14-yard forward for-ward pass from Hirsch to Schreiner Schrein-er who was standing alone in the end zone. Schreiner juggled the ball as it reach him but held on to it.. Harder again converted. Golden Bears Tip . Oregon Team 20-7 BERKELEY, Calif., Oct. 31 np Jolting Jim Jurkovich, Berkeley's brittle halfback who has spent much of his college football foot-ball career in the injury ward, led University of California's improving improv-ing Golden Bears to a 20 to 7 victory vic-tory over University of Oregon before 33,000 fans in Memorial stadium. Pail PoIiH.al Advertisement morrow 245 South Main Springville Utah |