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Show I ' 4 H - i ccnday notombeb , cir Golden Bears Grab Rail In Drive To Rose BovI By HAL WOOD : C east: Paci'iTBC ' 1A I I A!I ,1 L : one-hand- ........ 0 8 6 0 0 6 ........... UCLA Statistics: 4-- 6-- , r ... , v ' ' v - 15" '224 80 AO Passing Yardage '. Passes Passes Intercepted by 0 ....5-35.- 0 Punts ...... Fumbles Lost ,'. ..... .: 3 Yards Penalized ... 38 . " .5 j 20 - 3--0 6-1- 1" 5 0 6-3- 5.8 J 1 2 6 ' ed. Cal, leading 14--3 in the third quarter, was being pushed around at will by the Bruins as the Uclans scored and were marching for the touchdown that would have put 10-- 7 them in the lead. came into Then Kapp the, game and when California got the ball Halfback DENVER (UPD took complete charge. He piloted a the Bears on another touchdown George Pupich kicked drive, passing and running bril- field goal in the final two minutes liantly against a team that had Saturday to give the Air Force kept 'him bottled up all afternoon. Academy a 10--7 victory over lowly . The payoff on the big score was Denver University and keep the rd a pass from Kapp to end unbeaten Falcons in consideration i for a major bowl bid. Jerry Lundgren. At the final gun, both teams be That touchdown was necessary as UCLA came back to score again gan a fist fight that was broken up by the coaches. late in the .final stanza. Denver, winner of only two For most .of thefirst half, UCLA rethe had led by" three points games this season, surprised the rd sult of a field, goal by Falcons and the crowd of 18,000 Kirk Wilson. But just before the in Hilltop Stadium by battling from half ended, Cal marched 41 yards behind to tie 'the game at 7 in to score with Walt Arnold plowing the third period. But the Falcons . over from the one. The big gainer put all their determination into a was a run by third-strin- g late drive that carried from their halfback Grover Garvin. Garvin, 21 to Denver's 13. , With 1 : 50 left, incidentally, had a great day with Pupich booted his perfect place 19-ya- rd 14-ya- 13-ya- 7-- 23-ya- rd yards gained from rushing in plays. . That score gave Cal an 3 lead at the intermission. The Bears upped it td 14--3 in the third quarter when they marched 38 yards on eight plays, with Hart plunging over from the four. UCLA came right back and took 96 10 8-- Navy Passing Rolls Over Maryland Navy, propelled by a lethal pass attack after early, failures to gain on the ground, Saturday ' romped- - to a 40- - 14 win over Maryland before a 'Memorial Stadium crowd of 30,035. A fumble on the line by set Bellino Joe halfback Navy's offenthe stage for the first long sive drive of the game and saw Maryland sweep to a 0 lead. Navy didn't begin to; click until midway in the second period after Marylasd fumbled only two yards from a score. Navy recovered and second string quarterback Jim Maxfield' took to the air. Navy,' skillfully mixing short ground gains with Maxfield passes of 11, 10 and 11 yards," moved quickly upfield. "The Middies cli drive maxed their d with a touchdown pass from Maxfield to fullback Jim Maxfield tried to pass for two. extra points and break the tie,' but it was incomplete, leaving the score Maryland 7, Navy 6, mid way through the second period. Having, found Maryland's weak ness, to Je S ' faltering pass defense, Navy stuck to the air and closed out the half with another touchdown. Fullback Joe Mata-lavaplunged from the one for the- - score after a series of long gains, Marked by passes of 17 and 19 yards by8 quarterback Joe Tranwavy added two more cnim, touchdowns in the third period to push its "margin to 28-Matalavage burst away on .the Maryland 36 and ran for one score. Third-strin- g middle halfback Dick Pariseau intercepted a Rusevlyan pass on the 23 and raced for the other score. Bellino scored two extra points on a run after touchdown. A kick by fullback Ray Wellborn after the Pariseau score failed, leaving Navy ahead, 26-- after three periods. Maryland pushed across one more score in the final period on a three-yar- d plunge by fullback John but Forbes, Navy scored twice to the rout. " . complete 12 14 0 1440 Navy 50-ya- 80-ya-rd : 21-yard-er 12-pla- y four-yar- Ten-broo- k. ge - 7. -- Mata-lavage'- s" Buckeyes Tie Purdue, 14-1- 4 ......... 7 0 0 COLUMBIA, Mo. (UPD Quar- with games against Oklahoma terback Phil Snowden, scheduled and Kansas left to play. for only limited action because of Facing a 0 deficit at half time, a back injury, passed for one a touchdown and ran for two others Missouri came back with domito attack "ground Saturday to lead Missouri to a powerful game and score all its 33-- 9 upset over Colorado' in a nate the the final two quarters. in crushing final half rally and keep points Snowden threw to left end Russ its bowl game ambitions alive. Missouri's-fourth late hv the third period to Sloan The victory, the start it scoring drive. It was straight in the Big Eight, kept Char- 9-- t " still in contention for a bowl bid Missouri's Only completion. EUGENE f Ore. Webfoots finally found a scoring punch Saturday and defeated Stanford, 12-- on soggy Hayward Field before a slim turnout of 12,500 in a regionally-televise- d Pacific Coast Conference football game. The victory snapped a three-gam- e losing steeak for defending Oregon, which had managed only one touchdown In (UPI-M3reg- on's 0, . Dave Grosz and Fullback Marian Holland scored the touchdowns on one-yaplunges. which found its Stanford, ground game stopped by the tough Oregon defense and the wet turf, took to the air when the rain stopped and gave Oregon a V ; SEE s. Trailing they scored drive ending first on a fullback2 Bob Jams' in three-yar- d plunge. The passing 'extra' for points failed. try With time running, out," Purdue traveled. 62 yards on the passing of Quarterback Ross Flchtner to the Ohio State 7. Fichtner then rifled a pass to end Dick Brooks in the end zone for the second score .with ,2:02 remaining. On the vital try for the extra points', Fichtner ; crossed up the Ohio defense by handing the ball to halfback Clyde Washington, who tossed t a pass to Brooks in the end zone, tying the game ' . 63-ya- rd 197-pou- nd WHEEL CHAIRS " " 14-1-4: Tho Shaver Center A--'-- ' Electrio Shaver Specialists SALES REPAIRS SHAVERS SMALL. , CLIPPERS APPLIANCES 30 No. 2nd WestProve FR ....... First Downj 15 L 224 . . Yardage. 67 .. Yardage ......... ..... Northwestern Statistics: ; First Downs 0 0 7 Wis. Rushing Yardage..... Passing Yardage .....9 Passes . . . . v. . . . ... . Passes Intercepted by .1-1- Punts !..... .......i.. Fumbles Lost Yards Penalized 3 . 18-2- 0 1 7-3- 6.5 2 1 v , 86 50 MANY VOTERS .......... DlJfrict 16 15 : 10-1- 5, that made my campaign in tho . " and jr.' ' a recent election 7-- 16 Also ? I ' a Special " '' tho YOUNO success. THANKS to ' ' DEMOCRATS ' ' ' j of UTAH COUNTY. MARVIN F. WARREN My Sincerest Regards to my opponent; leRoy Tingey, a fine candidate- - for' his party. Paid Pol. Adv. by Marvin F. Warren WATCH FOR THE DUDE IN THE DERBY! i 14 84 106 8 2 1 6-3- 7.8 8-2- 6.6 N.W. K 13 235 the WORKERS of i 20-ya- rd ......... 113 83 6-1- to 017 613 0 17 0 one-yar- First Downs WASH. 9 '; Rushing Passing Passes ,1... ....... 6 Passes Intercepted by 3 Punts i,.tJ 7-2- 9.1 1 8 80 really? There are many confused ideas about nVash 'N' Wear' fabrics. Might be a good idea if we tried to explain it to you. Wear" cotton fabric is A "Wash processed so that it can be washed easily by hand, machine or laundry. If it is skillfully processed, it should dry out quickly and most important, iron out its own wrinkles and be ready to wear without ironing. ' Now there are all kinds of wtsh and wear . . . good, and bad, as with everything in life. The best "Wash W Wear" we have seen is the Manhattan Mansmooth n 100 Cotton Shirt Mansmooth is the only "Wash N Wear- Cotton with "Molecular Memory" a great scientific achievement Not only does Manhattan Mansmooth wash like a dream no matter how it is washed dry out in a jiffy iron itself . outbut, also, it is a shirt that never wrinkles in wear. It always looks freshly launderedr Amazing? Yes! And the price for this finest example of "Wash 'N1 Wear" Shirts . . . Manhattan Mansmooth is only $51 j , The biggest USED CAR RUCTION in the history of Utah County is going to be'lleld right here in Provo on the Ashton Used Car Lot SATURDAY; November 15 at 1:00 P.M. k Every used car or truck in our stock must go. Every' 3ar will be placed on the block with a minimum bid figure displayed on it, which will be the average dealer wholesale price for this region. Any prospective buyer can ask for any car to be put up for bidding. Come in and try to draw the LUCKY KEY which will fit one of our better used cars that we are giving A picture and description away ABSOLUTELY FREE. of the car we are giving away free will appear in the i Wednesday Herald. BALLOONS FOR THE KIDDIES! CIGARS FOR THE MEN FAVORS 1 FOR THE LADIES! . Y PtAN. mm- THE ACC's of AUTOMOTIVE : - O O m M VALUE! V i JrNJ . CZNTC3 ' 56 W. CCJTC3 Prore, Utah . OPEN MONDAY NIGHT " TIL 9 P.M. FIRST. NORTH; FIRST WEST PROVO, UTAH .i 5 So. Cal. ', .1 what LAY-AWA- Girls V-- 06 Statistics: na fourth conference win. After being., completely outtionally compared to sixth for Northwestern before the contest, classed in the first half as South- Fiimbles Lost ...... had a statistical edge, gaining 194 ern California scored in each pier- - Yards Penalized . yards rushing against 156 for the Wildcats and 104 in the air against 83 for Northwestern. But it. was fumbles that told the tale. North western-- ' lost the hflM ffwir H and Wisconsin only once, and the only pass interception of the day also; was by Wisconsin. seventh-ranke- d 9. ire complete and we have the time to help you plan your purchase t . Use our convenient CIHflCE FOn BOtUCCE x :.: 33-ya- rd to your Christmas Shopping early, while stocks 09 Live From New York Daily get the chance to meet prospective mates . . . pfcked by xpert$. John Cameron Swayzs, hostS The Badgers, : . 4-- 37 ; J - march. 66-ya- rd 156 Rushing Yardage .....194 83 Passing Yardage . . . 104 Passes 9 1 Passes Intercepted by 0 lie Rash's attempt to kick the Punts ..;6-2- 7 extra point failed. Fumbles Lost ...J 1, J 90 As the fourth period opened, Yards Penalizd 60 on a faked Snowden kept the ball handoff and ran 14 yards to the end zone. Rash's kick was good JOCKEY SCORES TRIPLE and Missouri surged ahead 13-PAWTUCKET, R. I.. (UPD A quarterback sneak by Snow- Jockey Ron Fisher scored a triple d line" gave Thursday at Narragahsett Park den from the Missouri its third score. Sopho- He won aboard Blue Rock ($6.60 more fullback Ed Mahre got the in the second, Recipe ($35.80) in tne third and Criss M. ($17.60) fourth touchdown in a in the sixth. run around left end. , Fred Brossart, also a sophomore, made the most spectacular run when he took a punt and sprinted 83 yards for a touchdown In the fourth period. Missouri ... 0 0 6 27 33 Colorado ...... ....9 0 0 0 9 Km. m m. i i i Miss. Colo. - . 714 ICUTV, CH. 2 . 1 - 1:30 p.m. 00 No-Iro- SEE THIS NEW ABC TV SHOW - The Indians got another big chance in the final quarter after guard Bob Peterson recovered a fumble by Oregon's Willie West on the Webfoot 33. Nicolet passed to Nikolai on the 15 but he fum bled the ball and tackle Jim Linden recovered for Oregon, 0 0 6 612 Oregon Stanford .....0 0 0 its last three games; After a rainy, first half In which neither team threatened seriously, Oregon put together scoring drives of 64 and 85 yards in the final 30 minutes. Quarterback bad time. With quarterback Bob touch-donvn- V 1 Oregon Ends Losing Streak With 12-- 0 Win Over Stanford . 14-- 0 6, second half to demonstrate theix scoring ability. But it was too little and too late. The determined Trojans took the opening kickof f and marched 7 yards to their ' first touchdown. Maudlin's rollout was the biggest gain, with fullback Clark Hplden plunging the, final two yards. ?uford carried the ball five; of 10 times on the drive. Southern CaL 7 7 7 021 0 0 6 Washington IlnIAfllS Missouri Ctushes Colorado In 33-- 9 Big Eight Victory ' after two first half Ohio a Wisconsin 14-1- ; ft. OPEN HOLE George Pupich (24) Air Force Academy back, moves through a hole in the Denver line Saturday afternoon. Pupich also kicked the field goal that gave the' Falcons a 10-- 7 victory over Denver. The goal was kicked with 1:53 remaining in the game. (Herald-UP- I Telephoto). Nicolet completing 10 out of 13 passes, Stanford threatened to COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPD Hard score but costly fumbles spoiled hitting Purdue surged from the its chances. brink of defeat with two last period touchdowns Saturday but APPLY FOR GAMES had to settle for a 4 Big Ten FINLAND (UPD The Lahti deadlock with Ohio State's slumpthe world Town, which, organized ing Buckeyes. ski championships last winter, A The rugged contest, elayed will apply for the 1964 w inter mostly iA a drizzle V before a Olympic informed sources record Ohio Stadium crowd of have toldgames, United the Press 83,481, eliminated both teams national. j from the Big Ten title race. The Boilermakers struck savagely behind a fierce line in the US FOJR final period . to salvage the tie 7, Maryland, V: rd rd 7-- 98-ya- rd, half-tim- 7-- 0 . V-:- .BALTIMORE, Md. (UPD ment. The Academy remains unbeaten, but was tied by Iowa earlier in the season. e The Academy gained a touchdown lead on an drive, with halfback Mike Quinlan going around left end for two yards and the touchdown. No time showed on the clock , as Quinlan scored on the last play of the half. V In that final Academy drive, fullback G alios picked up two crucial first downs and Mayo hit Lodgers on a ninety ard pass to the Denver 12. But Academy found itself .back on the Denver 13 on fourth down and went for the field goal. Pupich had missed a field goal from 21 yards out in the first period, and Denver's Pagano missed in the first half. a Air Force Academy 0 7. 0 310 0 0 7 ft 7 Denver Saturday as the Trojans defeated to University of Washington, 21-remain in the. running for the Rose ::: --S'.. r Bowl. Quarterback Maudlin's rollouts and the tiny Buford'a hard charges sparked two touchdown drives for the Trojans, while Southern Cars powerful line kept Luther Carr and company bottled up most of the afternoon. A crowd of 32,987 in Memorial Coliseum saw the Trojans score their third consecutive victory and iod, the Huskies came back in the J . Falcons Edge Denver, Wis 17-1- UCLA Cal. r By ALEX KAHN United Press International LOS ANGELES (UPD Reserre d backs Tom Maudlin and Don Southern California a gave smooth - clicking running attack consin won battle of breaks, can- verting two enemy fumbles Into a touchdown and a field goal to blast and end both Northwestern, 3, Ten Rose title and Bowl hopes Big for the upstart Wildcats. ' Wisconsin, winning its fifth game with one defeat and one tie, scored all its points in the second period. Its first touchdown was earned as sophomore- - fullback Tom Wiesner plunged over from the one to end 7-- 3 Coliseum Contest Bu-for- Wis. (UPI) : MADISON, 817 First Downs ........ 18 Rushing Yardage . .... 223 me ft'- 4. ed California 4-- . In 21-- 6 Title Hopes . i Wins So. Calif. Defeats Huskies charge. With SMppy Smith packing the baU eight times for 31 yards, the Bruins marched 72 yards in 15 plays with smooth scoring from the two., With the lead in danger, Kapp took over to lead another march. UCLA scored with two minutes to go when Chuck Kendall passed nine yards into the endzone to halfback Phil Parslow, wbp made circus , catch of the a bail. ;;x ,. Unite Press International CaliBERKLEY, Calif. (UPW fornia's Golden Bears took the inside track on the Rose Bowl race Saturday when quarterback Joe Kapp pulled them together in the final quarter "for a 20-- 7 victory over UCLA. The win, coupled with Oregon State's; loss to Washington State, put Coach Pete Elliott's team in front in the Pacific Coast Conference race with a 1 record. Oregon State and Southern .fornia each have 2 records. ' Saturday's battle turned into a late-gabrawl with halfback of Cal and guard Bob Jack Hart UCLA of being ejected, from king - the game; UCLA later was penalized 15 yards for unsportsmanlike conduct just before the game end- , SUNDAY HERALD auoroinniia, 1 1- it, V ' u |