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Show TlhiouisaMdls Search For Becks A Deer Season Opeinis Hunters Forced To Vor'i Hard For ail As Veaf her Heavy Foliage Proves Aid To Game From all indications, deer hunter! hunt-er! were finding the going extremely ex-tremely difficult Saturday in quest of their skill. Although the sportsmen by the thousands flocked Into the mountains moun-tains and forests,' few deer had been seen on the streets of Pro-vo Pro-vo up until a late hour Saturday. Usually several of the , hunters have returned to their homes with their deer by noon. Thus, indications were that the bucks were remaining high in the mountains ' and that the Army Rolls Over Fightino Harvard Eleven 20 to 7 , By OSCAR FRALEY United Press Sports Writer WEST POINT. N. Y.. Oct. IB (U.R) The army's top brass saw one of its top football teams, led by Georgia Gil Stephenson, burit loost for two touchdowns in the third period at sunswept Michie Stadium today to down hard-fighting hard-fighting Harvard team. 20 to 77 Gen. Omar Bradley, army chief of staff, and Secretary of the Army Kenneth Royall led a large braided delegation to witness this renewal . of a famous series but the biggest man on hand was Stephenson, the lowly yearling from Colombus, Ga., as he scored all three touchdowns to keep th hard-pressed cadets in the ranks of the undefeated. The handsome 185-pound hurricane, given his chance , ' when one of Army's rerular backs was Injured, spun his way up the center of Army's opening touchdown In the first quarter. Then, after an In and out Harvard team which was "in" today crunched crunch-ed back to tie it up, they called on him again. Galloping Gil didn't let them down. He battered over from six yards out in the third period and then broke that hustling Harvard line again a few minutes later with a four scoring yard smash which put the game out of Harvard's Har-vard's reach. It was a hard fought game from the opening moment, with the suspense sustained until Stephenson Ste-phenson broke it open in the third quarter before a roaring capacity crowd of 26.921 And when they filed from the stadium at the end, with Harvard still trying desperately to score again, the talk was of the Georgia boy who had carried the ball 21 times for 170 yards. . Army struck swiftly for its first touchdown, going 49 yard in two plays after Gus Dielens of Vineland, N. J., returned a punt nine yards to the Harvard 49. Bobby Jack Stuart of Tulsa, Army's second ranking ace of the day with 121 yards in 15 tries, got eight yards and then Stephenson Steph-enson went all the way, 41 yards down the middle in a spinning; smashing waltz. Jack Mackmull of Dayton, Ohio, added the place ment and Army led 7 to 0. - Harvard's crimson clad grid-ders grid-ders weren't daunted. Led by the passing of Charley Roche and the running of PauV-Shafer of Ra-vena, Ra-vena, O., and Jim Noonan of Brookline, Mass., they marched once to the Army 38 and. then finally crashed through on a 51 -yard march. Cadet Walt Vannoy of Lynchburg, Va., cot off a poor punt which went 23 yards and out on Harvard's 49. , Noonan leaped high to spin a pass to Dave Mazcone on the Army 39 and then swept the end to the 17. Roche crashed right tackle to the nine and then flipped a touchdown touch-down pass to Bill Henry just before the half ended Emel Drvaric, a Harvard guard from Milwaukee,- cooly kicked kick-ed the point and it was squared up at intermission. Two penalties cost Harvard a chance to take the lead as the second half opened and Cade? Jim Cains' fumble was recovered by Harvard's Sam Butler of Lo-gansport, Lo-gansport, Ind., on . the Army 21 Then the army juggernaut started start-ed to move. With Stephehson carrying mosi -of the load, the Cadets roared 7f yards for the tie-breaking touchdown, touch-down, Stephenson going over from the six. But when Mackmull missed the point the decision still was in jeopardy. So Army weni back for the clincher. Bobby Vinson of Hot Spring? Ark., started the Cadets off returning re-turning a punt 17 yards to Harvard's Har-vard's 48. Arnold Galiffa passes to Dan Foldberg of Dallas. Tex., ofi the 26, Stephenson got - fou; and Galiffa whipped, another strike to Foldberg on the four. Then it was Stephenson again, and he barreled through standing up. Texas Mines Trips E5YU By 34-20 Score sportsmen were doing plenty of climbing and tramping in the for ests in search of their game. Stormy weather for which the nimrods had been praying all week, struck the state Thursday and Friday, but, with the exception ex-ception of a few scattered areas, same officials said u was not heavy or severe enough to drive the bucks down from the higher ranges. The sportsman faced sun another problem h eavy ' foliage. The storm also was not severe enough to atrip the foliage off the trees and brush, making It extremely difficult to spot the bucks. Furthermore, game officials ursed sportsmen to use extreme caution in handling their guns, pointing out that the extra heavy foliage increased the danger of hunting accidents. ..One hunting fatality was reported re-ported Saturday in the Central Utah area, when a 24-year-old Salt Lake man shot and killed his wife in a freak accident ir Diamond Fork canyon. Mrs. William P. Clements 23, Salt Lake City, was the victim of the accident. She and her hus band, along with a friend, were hunting in the Diamond Fork area when they spotted a deer. Clements inserted a shell into his gun, just as his wife spoke to him. Clements turned around to hear what his wife was saying when the gun discharged. The bullet entered Mrs. Clements body just below the heart. All highways leading into favorite fa-vorite hunting areas were crowded crowd-ed with cars early Saturday as the vanguard of an expected 95,- 000 nimrods started their search for the bucks. The season, which opened at dawn Saturday, will continue con-tinue until the night of Oct. 26, and state license agents have reported a tremendous demand for licenses. Last year, 88.400 participated in Utah'c deer hunt, according to state game officials. State game department wardens ward-ens have been employed throughout the state to man a strict check on game regulations Although numerous road blockades block-ades were set up Friday night, their location remained a mystery to everyone "save Chief Deputy Merrill Hand and his warden staff. They will be" maintained until the end of the season. Hunting dances and other fetes were held Friday night in Beaver. and Orangeviller and other noted jumping-off places, close to deer ranges. Fast Train From Arkansas Cyclones Roar From Behind To Clip Buffs AMES, la., Oct. 16 (U.R) Iowa State bounced back from a bad break on the opening play today to upset Colorado, 18 to 7, before 15,000 homecoming fans. Colorado end E. Pudlik recovered recov-ered Iowa State quarterback Don Ferguson's fumble of the open ing kickoff for a touchdown. But Iowa State was the more alert team the rest of the way. Shortly after the Colorado touchddwn, Iowa State countered by intercepting a pass and driving driv-ing to the visitors' 31-yard line, then springing halback Webb Halbert around right end for a score. The home team trailed at the intermission, 7 to 6, but fullback Bill Qhauncey scored twice in the second half, once on a 50-yard gallop after taking a third-period lateral from Halbert, and again on a line smash in the fourth. Iowa State racked up nine first downs to seven for Colarodo. It was Iowa State's second Big Seven Sev-en victory against one loss, and the second conference defeat against one" win for Colorado, conqueror of Nebraska last week. Fists Fly As Tech Tips Auburn, 27-0 ATLANTA, Ga., Oct. 16 (U.R) Undefeated Georgia Tech trotted out a brigade of bantam backs and a deadly passing attack to roll over Auburn 27 to 0, today in a Southeastern conference game that featured a wild last quarter riot , ' , The entire squads of both teams and some of the 38,000 fans converged con-verged on the field in a mad slugging melee. The battlers broke it up when the Tech band struck up- "The Star-Spangled Banner." Discounting that spectacular diversion, Tech won every round. The tiny Tech backs wheeled through holes in the scrappy Auburn Au-burn forewall all afternoon to set up three aerial touchdowns and one aground. 1 EL PASO, Tex., Oct. 1 (Special) Brigham Young uni versity Cougars were convinced Saturday that .what - they had heard about :Flying Fred Wendt was definitely true. The Cougars had been told all week to "Watch Wendt," but the blonde Miner fullback, who is the second best ground gainer In the nation according to latest figures, just couldn't be stopped Friday night as he led his teammates team-mates to a 34-20 victory over the Cougars, before 8500 fans. It was the fourth consecutive victory for the Miners and the third straight loss for the Cats. Wendt put on a truly dazzling j display as ne scored lour loucn-downs loucn-downs and kicked four extra points as well as carrying the ball 180 yards and boosting his rush-ing rush-ing figure to 628 yards In four games. Wendt scored on runs of 27, 37, 12, and 7.7 yards and his four conversions came on five tries. The Miners rolled up a 20-0 lead before the Cougars could get going. In the econd quarter, Coach Eddie Kimball's boys found the necessary spark and drive to go 65 yards for a touch down. Dave Chadwick. Don Bushore and Don Benson sparked the touchdown drive, with Chadwick scoring on a seven-yard dash around left end. The Cougars scored twice in the fourth quarter after the Miners Min-ers had built up a 34-7 lead. Taking Tak-ing the ball on their own 40, the Cougars produced a touchdown in six plays. Bushore passed to Lylc Koller for 29 and three more plays moved the ball to the Miner Min-er 15. Jay Hamblin then slashed inside guard to score. A few mintues later, BYU was back on the Miner 20 from which point Bushore hit Benson with a pass for a touchdown. But the Cougars just didn't have time to catch up, before time ran out on them. The fine defensive play of Capt. Kimball Merrill and the defensive defens-ive play and running and passing pas-sing of Don Bushore, who alternated alter-nated between the quarterback and halfback positions, were outstanding out-standing for the Cougars. Although Wendt was the big star in the Miners' attack. Sugar Evans, the Orediggers' left tackle, played a terrific defensive game as he repeatedly broke up Cougar plays before they could get started. start-ed. The lineups: Brigham Young Left ends Stone, Long, Egbert, Weidauer. Left tackles Merrill, Bills. Left guards Tree, Gillespie, Hayrock, K. Hamblin. Centers Hill, Lindstrom, Mag- leby. Right guards Dalley, Anderson, Ander-son, Dimmick. Right tackles Oldroyd, Kimball. Kim-ball. Latimer. Right ends Clark, Deeds. Quarterback Bushore, Eccles, Dearden. Left halfbacks Koller, Alger, Lloyd, J. Hamblin. Right halfbacks R o u n d y, Chadwick, Berry. Fullback Benson, Thiel, Osborne, Os-borne, Wood. Texas Mines Left ends Groundy, Wilkin son, Fager. Left tackles Evans, Norwood, Holley. Left guards Kelly, Marcell, De La Cruz. Centers Hanson, Everest, Tittle. Ti-ttle. Right guards Balemcia, Fogle, Huffman, Crawford, Marino. Right tackles Rhoads, Shock-man. Shock-man. Right ends De Groat, Ed-mondson. Ed-mondson. Quarterback Bowden, Mel-ear, Mel-ear, Brewster. Halfbacks Fraser, Gooden, Holdeman, Steele, Ferguson, Fer-retti. Fer-retti. Fullbacks Wendt, Cargile, Hammond. Brigham Young . 0 7 0 13 20 Texas Mines 13 14 7 034 Brigham Young scoring: Touchdowns Chadwick, J. Hamblin, Ham-blin, Benson. Points after touch-i i Baylor upset Arkansas, but no" opponent can afford to take the Razorbacks lightly Not when the Fayetteville lads cracked Texas Christian, and as long as they possess the Olympic hurdler and triple threat, Smackover Scott. Provoan Sets World Mar' In Mot orboat L. O. Turner of Provo broke the world's record Saturday for 225-cubic inch hydroplane motorboats establishing a mark of 92.4 miles per .hour on the Salton Sea course in California. Word of his world-record breaking achievement came in a telephone call to Lynn LeVitre, commodore of the Provo boat club, Saturday night Turner, piloting his famous Green Hornet II, flashed over the measured mile course to better the previous record of 91.6 miles per hour held by Tommy Hill of Alameda, Calif. Utah Capitalizes On 3 Breaks To Overpower Denver U .,1 7-0 DENVER, Colo., Oct. 16 (U.R) Utah university grabbed threj lucky breaks here Saturday night and rode them to a 17 to 0 triumph over Denver university in a Big Six conference football game before be-fore 13,571 snow-powdered fans. The game was a scoreless battle for more than three . quarters, with Denver having a wide margin on both offense of-fense and defense. However, when the Indiana started feeling the lock running in their favor, there was no denying them. A few plays after the final period started, "Clyde Nichols scored from the 13-yard line after ! J .. : . ' . : 10. Sunday, October 17, 1948 SUNDAY HERALD College Football Scores East Army 20, Harvard 7. Brown 14, Holy Cross 6. Pennsylvania 20, Columbia 14. Connecticut 34, Maine 6. Rutgers 22, Princeton 6. Pittsburgh 21, Marquette 7. Dartmouth 41, Colgate 16. , Missouri 35, Navy 14. Penn State 37, West Virginia 7 Fordham 41, St. Francis (Pa.) 0 Duke 13, Maryland 12. Cornell 34, Syracuse 7. Lehigh 14, Gettysburg 13. Delaware 7, Bucknell 0 (Friday) (Fri-day) Boston College 20, Villanova 13 (Friday) South North Carolina 14, North Carolina Car-olina State 0. Randolph-Macon 20, Catholic U. 13. Tulane 20, Mississippi 7. Mississippi State 27, Cincinnati Cincin-nati 0. Tennessee 21, Alabama 6. Virginia 41, Washington & Lee 6. Georgia Tech. 27, Auburn 0. Vanderbilt 26, Kentucky 7. William & Mary 30, V.P.I. 0. Southwest Texas 14, Arkansas 6. Texas Christian 27, Texas A & M 14. Georgetown 13, Tulane 7. down K. Hamblin 2 ,(plase-ments). ,(plase-ments). Texas Mines scoring: Touchdowns: Touch-downs: Wendt 5, Fabrel; points after touchdown Wendt 4 (ulacements. Oklahoma 42, Kansas State 0. Texas Mines, 34, Brigham Young 20 (Friday) Midwest Wichita 20, Utah State 7. Michigan 28, Northwestern 0. Yale 17, Wisconsin 7. Ohio Wesleyan 26, Case 13. Ohio U. 37, Western Reserve 7. Miami 9, Xavler 0. Minnesota 6, Illinois 0. Ohio State 17, Indiana 0. Purdue 20, Iowa 13. Notre Dame 44, Nebraska 13. Iowa State 18, Colorado 7. Drake 17, Bradley 14 (Friday) St. Louis 31, Rockhurst 7 (Friday) Colorado Ags Squeeze Past Cowboys, 20-21 LARAMIE, Wyo., Oct. 16 (U.R) The hard-charging Colorado A. & M. line blocked a Wyoming kick with less than 30 seconds to i i. i . piay nere ioaay to preserve a 21-20 Skyline Six football conference con-ference victory. Wyoming scored touchdowns in the second, third and fourth periods and the Aggies scored twice in the third and once in the fourth. George Jones, burly Negro end, was the Aggie hero of the game as the entire Ram :ine smashed into the Wyoming 'orwards. Jones blocked Eddie Talboom's extra point kick to save the win. The day was bitterly cold for the players with snow falling during the first quarter. quar-ter. The weather held down the aerial game, which both teams have ued previously with marked success, and bothered ball handlers. For most of the first half, both teams slogged along in midfield with the Aggies having the better time of it. Three times in the first two periods the Ags drove deep into Wyoming territory, only to be choked off by a stout Cowpoke defense. The Cowhands threatened threaten-ed once before they drove to their first touchdown. West Colorado A & M 21, Wyoming 20. Montana State U. 14, Montana State Col. 0. Occidental 40, California Poly Branch 0. Colorado Mines 18, El Torro Marines 7. (Friday) Washington State 10, Washington Washing-ton 0. California 42, Oregon State 0. Oklahoma A&M 27, San Francisco Fran-cisco 20. Stanford 34, UCLA 14. Oregon 8, Southern California 7, Wichita Tips USAC, 20-7 WICHITA, Kan., Oct. 16, (U.R) Striking twice in the first half, the University of Wichita won its third straight victory here today to-day by defeating Utah State 20 to 7, before a chilled crowd of 7,000. Wichita scored once in each, the first, second and fourth periods, while holding the westerners west-erners to a lone count in the final 30 seconds of the second period. Wichita halfback s peedster Jimmy Nutter set up Wichita's first score late in the opening period by returning a Utah State punt to the Aggie 11. Art Hodges hiend Mik Knoplck with a jump pass good for 16 yards and a touchdown two plays later. Hodges kicked the point. Utah State roared back to knot the score in the next minute when a pass from Frank Caputo to end Kent Murdock was good for 41 yards, and Jay Van Noy went the necessary 16 remaining yards. Hodges went over from the one to score in the second period for Wichita. A 79-yard march after checking a Utah State drive at its own 15 ended the scoring, with Morrison going over for Wichita from the seven. flDAHO STATE COLLEGE WHIPS COLORADO STATE POCATELLO, Idaho, Oct. 16 (U.R) With at least one score made in every quarter, Idaho State college col-lege rolled over a Colorado State college eleven at Pocatello, Idaho, Saturday afternoon by ,38 to 6 score. ( Some four thousands fans witnessed wit-nessed the game in the Spud Bowl here. One Cent Wallpaper SALE Now In Progress Plate A Auto Glass Shop 272 West Center 7 the Utes had ' driven from the Denver 40-yard line in five plays., including the scoring dash. Utan got the ball when Denver elected to kick from their own goal line on first down, and the ball car ried only to the 40. The second Ute score came on another break. Gil Tobler intercepted inter-cepted Lou Rillos' pass on the Denver 37 and ran it to the 18 Nichols got to the 14, Hal Tate carried the ball to the 12, and there the Ute attack bogged. Bud Gleave, the Indian placekick, artist, came in and booted a wobbly wob-bly field goal to give Utah a 10 to 0 lead. After that Denver seemed to lack the fire they had in the first three periods, and were un able to get going offensively. The final Utah touchdown, also was set up on an intercepted pass. Tobler took one of Howard Ben-ham's Ben-ham's heaves on the Denver 37 and ran all the way for the score. Gleave again booted tha extra point. Missouri Fhshes Power To Crush Navy, 35 to 14 BALTIMORE, Oct. 16 (life) The intrepid Missouri Tigers. strutting their stripes on every stripe of the field; moved mercilessly merci-lessly today to a 35 to 14 victory over Navy's punchless midship men, who dropped their ninth straight game. A crowd of 27,000 saw the game. The Missourians, rating among the national powers after last week's amazing ' upset victory over Southern Methodist, scored in every period and left the Navy gobs looking like shipwreck victims. Low Cost CASKI LOANS 5 " a month repays $50 loan - 110.05 monthly repays 1101 $20.14 monthly repays $200 $30.21 monthly repays $300 orrics hours t i. n. I I p. m. Amily ; t.a. m. to 1 p. at. Saturday Appointments may fct made for after hours. Phono 111. KEN HOUSTON. Manager IJ 3 Firestone Stores Provo. Utah FOR Front End Alignment Wheel Balancing Brake Retiring COME IN TODAY OR CALL 39 For a Free Estimate Ob Year Car FOR USED CARS . 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