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Show t li u v H3 - - - - 0 r.zriJena - 20 - - 0 Ufmi 5iavo San Jriso It' Kansas Wash. State - - 7 lovd - - - 7 Pitt - - - - - 35 California - - 15 Oregon - -W. Virginia 35 - 0 10 9 Oregon State - 22 Ddylor - - - - 15 Purdue - -- -- Notre Dame -- 17 I Minnesota - - 24 Arniy - - - f - 8 1 ' Kbiv f.loxico - - 6 -- tjal.'--;--...,26.;- - 25 - 21 j IVvonilnn UCLA - - Stanford : Michin an- - - 13 -- Illinois - lO Northwestern 4 9 7 6 -L- I 4 2 Redskins Down Lobos 19 to 6 BYU Eleven Earns First Win of Year Coach Hal Mitchell's broad and bravny shoulders appeared to be sagging a little as be put the movie projector dbwia on 'the table i - i .Heck," Nelson snorted, !the coaches only gotta worry about the basketball team. The. principal has to worry about the whole - studentbody.". Nelson's remarks reminded a Utah County coah of fhe year hhad to administer first aid to his principal after each game of a state tourney because the educator got so emoticmally wroiight up. -. ;; V- ; r ; . Dick Danner and Ted McAlister who have umpired many games in the Central Utah Baseball League in recent' years, feel 5the loop could be the best amateur baseball circuit :'n the state, if Orem and ' X f Payson had' lighted parks. The lack of lighted parks at Orem and Payson have re, X " sulted in forfeited games, (hey claim. "Orem has to play its home games as twilighjt affairs,1". pointed out Orem tr.es to start its games at 5 or S:30 p.m.-buis it hard for many players to get off work and to the ball field " . before 6 p.m. or maybe later. , , 6 .or at) too espec"And .it's simply late to start a game aftej-ially late in' the reason when it starts getting dark little learlier." Danner added: Down at Payson theyfve iried to pVay Satand Sunday afternoon but without much succesi,COne - urday Saturday I recall, Payson had seven or eight players show up, and the other team only six. Somej players don't, like to fmd, in : fact, won't play on ' Sundays and that causes a lot of heldaches and problems! . "If Orem and Payson had lighted parks,, then they could:do away with twilight and Saturday and Sunday afternoon games jand play 1 all their games at night." ; f ; : J ; V Mc-Alist- er t ! , ; : Dkk Ballou, director of the BYU Marching (Band, should have ft X j: been a football coach. n y caustic-tongued " He drives his band in just as d and fashion as any coach does hislfootball team. - Th other afternoon there were as many spectators watching task master (and perfectionist Ballou verbally whiplash his - ihusicians andj half time through their paces in preparation for the -Monana-BYshow! in' connection with Saturday night's igamc as Avork qut. ; there; were watohhig,the Cougar gridders above the Standing on a platform elevated about 12 feet or so ' j west parking lot Ballou shouted at his musicians: Come on, - we've got to drive . . . drive"1 7; '.' drive ; . . we've a: lot of work to accomplish and you're going to be unde pressure got " ' . from' now until Saturday.": a into And he dug the spurs lagging band member witn: ney, down there, vou're not playing in your high school band in palifornia band in ProVo, Utijh, where nowi' You're a member of the BYU .' ' I' ft we reauy do tnings. 1 SUli again, he yelled: "I know I'm askinr a. lot from you. But other bands have oone it ana so can you." $ a nard a and be Ballou Dick' perfectionast may fDriving' Bsfnd BYU the made have Marching his tactics but taskmaster, one of the best, if not the best, in the Inoermountain area. . hard-nose- pre-garj- ie T U ( i ( m ' ' . r" ' nig-hYs- : '! - f intercepted by Punts Fumbles lost Yards penalized Outpasses Spartans Munson 7 ; 1 S f f Tx. (UH) A - a 2-- senior 180pound i" 1-- 2.. SOUTH Knoxville Kentucky St; Washington & Lee 29 Oberlin 13 Auburn 14 Kentucky 13 Southern Methodist 10 Air. Force 0 Virginia St. 13 ..Howard 6 N. Car. St. 7 Clemson 3 Davidson 10 VMI 10 (tie) Washington & Lee 29 Oberlin 13 60 Princeton 7 Colombia Pfenn State 28 Rie 7 Dartmouth 28 Penri 0 Syracuse 40 Holy Cross 0 Drexel 30 Lebanon Valley 6 Massachusetts 21 Bucknell 6 Colby 7 Tufts 6 Brown 7 Yale 7 46-ya- rd pass from pBen EUedge to end David Parks "and a record-tyin- g field goal from H. L. Daniels gave Texas Tech a 10-- 0 Southwest Con ference win over Texas A&M Sat urday night. 0 . Bowdoin 32 Wesley an 0 Midctlebury 20, Wbrchester Tech 6 Western Md. 31 pa. Military 6 Texas Tdch Wins LUBBOCK, 0 Duke 30 Maryland 12 . There's a real flyer on the BYU frosh team. He is ' tailback by 'the name of. Ed, Poppleton from Glens- FerryJ" Ida. ; Earl JLindley, who went up to Idaho- to recruit Poppleton found him !out working on the famdy farm, and put the stopwatch on him. ; VI couldn't believe my eyes, though,' LIndley said! "He ran on plowed ground." the 100 yards under 10 seconds lS5-pou- nd EAST 5--31 1 75 ' College Football! Scores 1 4-- 33 , Football Briefs 84 2 from Lodi , dalif ., joutpassed San Jose's Rand Carter, who came to Logan heralded as one of the West's top passers. The Aggie! quarterback hit 15 out of iJ6 atilemtpts for 229 yards inicludinig' a. 22 yard pass to end Roger Foulkffor the games first touchdown in the second period. Munson alsq scored the game's final toachdpwn with 2J29 left on the ckfck .with a 3 yard plunge senior Mattson, a from Port Chicago, Calif,, found a ' big gap jin; the Spartan line and went li yards for a score that gave the home team a 13-lead in the third period. . Aggies mprove Record The outcefme left Utah State with a record for the season The and left the Spartans at - 40-ya- rd Passes Auburn 14 Kentucky 13 So. Methodist 10 Air Force "0 Alabama A&M 28 Morehouse 6 Georgia 27 jSouth Carolina 7 Oregon 35 )Vest Verginia 0 Mississippi State 7. Tennessee 0 Florida 35 jRichmond 28 Juniata 12 iAlbright 6 North Carolina 21 Wake, Forest 0 William & Mary 27 Furman 17 North Caroiina A.&T. 69 Shaw 0 v Bcston U 6 Colgate 6 Pittsburgh 35 California 15 j Trinity 27 St. Laurence 13 New Hamp. 25 Rhode Island Delaware 64 Gettysburg 1 13 Slippery Rock 21 jShippensburg 13 Amherst 41 Am. International 16 Southern Illinois 13 Louisville ,7 Temple 9 Connectjicut 7 ' ... FlordiaA.&M. 14 Benedict 0 Coast Guard 9 Nprwich 7 Eastern Teim. 27. Chattanooga 22 Alabama 21 VanderbDt 6 MIDWEST Mississippi i20 Houston 6 Colorado 21 Kansas St. 7 L.S.U. 7 Georgia Tech & Nebraska 21 Iowi St. 7 Illinois . 10" Northwestern 9 'Xs SOUTHWEST John ' Carroll 26 Lake; Forest 14 Memphis sj;. 28 Tulsa 15 ' Drake 23 South Dakota 0 St. 28 Tulsa 15 0 Memphis 19 , Warfjurg! Dubuque Arkansas IS Texas Christian 3 Purdue 7 Notre Dame 6 ' Sam Houston 34- - Arlington St. 28 ' Navy 26 Michigai 13 Texas 34 Oklahoma - St. 7 Miami (O ) 27 Wl Michigan 13 Webber 28 S. Colorado St. 14 Nebraska 21 lowi St. 7 Austin Coll) (Tex.) 23 Millsaps 0 Akron ; 36 Ohio Wesleyan 7 Cincinnati 35 Xavier 22 WEST Northern Illinois 118 Omaha 7 21 20 25 St. Utah San Jose St. , 0 Kansas Wyoming 20 St. Ohio U. 21 Kent St: 0 San Utah Jose 'St 0- . 10 UCLA 9 10 Nortii western Stanford 9 n1inois 7 17 Iowa 8 24 Minnesota Washington ; Arny 13 Missouri 24 Idaho 0 Pugct Sound 21 E. Washington ' 13 41 23 Montana St. 0 Nevada South Dakota Drake . Quarterback Stars as Iowa Downs WU 17 to 7 SHUTTLE,. Wash. (UPI)--Iow- . a . . 39-ya- rd j i : long-scori- ng ; 22-ya- rd Med-ved- , ! 42-ya- rd ; 18-ya-rd up- with an but a holding i penalty nullified half?. ing had tied things . Washington has now ' lost three smash- late in the third the touchdown, 11-ya- rd period. '. .;., : .s. Washington had other chances straight games. - na Bruins Trip Stanford in i - i " I directed his teaitn to its first score, covering 54 yards in 10 plays. The big gainers in the drive were a shovel pass for 15 yards to CampbfU, an eight yard run by Campbell and anoth er short toss to Jack! Hannum. The second Aggi r touchdown drive started after San Jose placekicker Dick j Ttley missed a field goal; attenipt from 50 yards out. Tile Aggies took over on the 20 and went 80 yards in nine plays. ' On the final scorihg drive San Jose held the Aggies for three plays and Munson dove, into the end zone on the fourth down 0 7 7 6 20 Utah State ft 0 0 0 0 San Jose USU Foulk: 22 pass from Munson (Pella kick! USU Mattson 11 run (Pella X kick) USU Munson 3 run (kick ' !' failed) Attendance 9,000 Statistics: USU San Jose ' ! , . j First downs Rushing yardage' Passing yardage Passesw,u,j .. , j' f 18 161 229 15-2- 1 67 89 :Xi 6 9-- 20 Passes intercepted Py l Punts 47 Yards penalized 1' Fumbles lost 6-4- 1 t I , . . j 1 . j . 1 V ' 0 ! Scoring: 2 842.8 . ; ,0 1223 6 ! pass .from Renko' 51 (Duff kick) STANFORD, CALIF. (UPI) The UCLA Bruins won their first ivo Linton 3 run (Souires kick) 19 pass from WJ1--! football game of the season Satur- Wyo'.'-McLj kinson (Squires kick) day when they defeated Stanford, 10-Dowler 5 pass from Wilkin-- I on Bob Richardson's last Wyo ' , son ' (Squires kick) quarter interception that set up the 1 run (run failed) winning touchdown. CUBaughman : 20 KU Roth 9 12 j Interception; pass minutes left with, Trailing in the game, Richardson picked off (pass failed) a pass In the flat from Stanford ;U Baughman 2 run (pass failed) reserve quarterback Dick Berg on Attendance: 18,121. the 45 and returned it 40 yards to the five. . 7 Three plays later John White pounded over from the four to tie the score and Larry Zeno kicked the point for the ic ' tory. V ; It was a tough setback for the Indians, who now are 2 for the season under new head coach John k i i Ralston. Stanford had what looked 1f 1 nt mitf tttt v Art &; like a comfortable lead when reg jrmiaajjCjuirm lun; ular quarterback Clark Weaver left Mold PalmerX golfs biggest mon-- j the game late in the third period ejy winner, afid jits , top drawing with a leg injury. The inexperi card, roared from a third place a! oveif enced Berg replaced him and tie with sizzling 66 to take third the lead the Saturday ;in threw the pass that set up the win round $125,000 Whitem a rsli the pf touchdown. ning .;. ; .; I. y. .. j Open. Statistics: Palmeri I of Latrobe,. Pa., waj Stanford UCLA followed the majority of th4 by - 15 First downs . 8 tournament's crowd of 13,000 as ' 138 Rushing yardage iai he tore into the 6,807-yar-d White 134 133 Passing yardage Club layj Country VpUey 0 Passes hut and bosted elsrht birdips nnd 2 Passes intercepted by 4fwo bogeys in a carefully-playe- d . Punts ' d round . which included a 1 Fumbles lots ! d on: the par four,. drive 65 Yards penalized . 50 1 , 3-- ; Palmer Gains in tie-breaki- ng Links Action ftf 1-- ! . I f -- i 9-2- , 11-2- 4 -1 j -3 325-yar400-yar- . Scores Lowly Illinois ir;;;iX;-:-X'''- 10-- 9 i Upset Over Northwestern ! times for losi Lbw - star Toni Myers X ,! r39 jyards. North- - es of -Yet Mfers got free often enough t t ii. ti: j to 10-complete 17 of 32f passes for 218 10 Saturday,! the Bjg season, capitalizing on a bad pass from.) yards. And one of his pitches coh CHAMPAIGN, HI. (UPI) ly Illinois sent unbeaten eti l . 7 f 9, San Jose made pne serious scoring bid in the; game, driving to the Aggie three ik the fourth quarter where the Utah "State line dug in and took over on downs. ' Munson Kansas ean ; j 9, Seals Sigh Three More to Team j head back for San Francisco. Seals coach Bud 'Poile Friday signed veterans Duke Edmundson and Larry McNabb jand new goal-- l tender 12ob Perreault. Prior tcj that only Jean Marc Picard . had signed a contract. The coach said he was also signing rookie Larry Lund to a conditional contract; which to a five game try ' outf Lund was a Saskatchewan junior player last year but has looked sharp at .center ice! for the Sealst . . : : -- - Plankenhorn's ered 29 yards to Tom O'Grady, fqr the Wildcat touchdown. fancy place kicking. Joe Cerne's pas from center on It was Northwestern's first loss the ' try lot poinis was high arid to the mini since 1959 and the Wahl's hand. Neither Wahl men which the Wildcats left behind skipped nor Stamison had a chance to rvjn ' them may be the reason. :t or: pass.tvV.v.''X j r, ::r Neither punt, specialist Merlin The Wildcats the nursed lead Norenberg, nor George Bunda, who? until Illinois defense stiffened bj holds the, ball on place kicks, made Northwestern' . i ' . territory ' t 'X: thetrip Rector punted from ibis 27 and Thus a punt by Ron Rector which' the- - ball rolled out of bounds on rolled off the side of his foot and the 32. On the first play Mike Talitraveled only five yards preceded aferro jiateraled t Ron Feamwhc Illinois' only touchdown. And at ran wiae ana passed to Jim War bad pass from Center which Roland; ren, behind Wahl in the end xorie. Wahl couldn't field prevented Petef ! Stamison got the Wildcats In Stamison from? trying to convert front btiefly in the' third peripd after Northwestern's only touch! when! he- - booted A field f down. . , X f Butwho goal. Plankenhorn, hd But Illinois might have won thQ converted after the Ulini tccie, game regardless. The surging Dlin eveued this with 10 seconds lift linemen charged through repeated in the same session with a ly and nailed Northwestern passing boot. center The CALGARY, Alta. i(UPI) San Francisco Seals had moref men under conjtracj Saturday as they prepared to brfeak "camp and; ' ' I :U-hin-n victory also marked a successful home debut for new Aggie Ooach '.; ; ;. Tony Knap.-;:- ' V 15-ya- rd Tilt 10-- 9 " , Hawkeye place1 kicking special- to score. The Huskies penetrated Iowa a to Iowa's 11 iij the third period, quarterback Fred Riddle passed ist . Jay Roberts gavj 44 yards for one "touchdown Sat- safety margin with X b but the Hawkeyes rose up to huri field goal, in the! final period. ,y urday and scored another himself Riddle's touchdown was set up Washington fof two consecutive to pace the Hawkeyes to a 17-- 7 victory over wmless Washington. when Washington was Icalled for lasses and thai threat died. The west cast team got as Ai disappointed crowd of 55,200 pass interference against left. end saw Riddled hit right halfback Cloyd Webb, giving Iof a the ball deep as the Iowa 17 in the first on Washington's one. p ;:.:" Paul Krause wtih the but that drive ' bogged Riddle had to try twice before period, In In the second period. pass 's down and endd when Ron' the fourth period Riddle sneaked he penetrated the Husky defense. field goa attempt from the over from less than one yard out Browning brought th crowd to line failed. for what proved to be the win- its feet in; the first period when I Roberts missed two he swept around right end for an V; ning touchdown, field goal attempts in the first dash into the end zone, Washington's Charlie Brown. ; . " ; 8--24 BYU-Monta- I . . Mexico in 1959., Munson nddled the San Jose' defenses with passes and Mattson, who played most of the game because- starter Larry Campbell sat r out the entiije second half because of the flui 34-ya- rd 8--19 - .' J 44-ya- rd Passing yardage Passes - ,v r -- , - Utah LOGAlj; Utah (UPI) ' amtodtiousl Aggies, 'got jState's excellent indmduiaj performances from senior quarterback Bill Mun-so- n and second unit fullback Bili Mattson, Saturday and rolled to a 20-- 0 victory over Sam Jose ... , Vv. State.', ; Win before 9,000 fans in , The Romney Stadium was Utah State's 15th straight home field victory. "The last Aggie loss at home was a 28-- 6 setback " to New . 19 97 ' ; Muhson, MaUson Star As 20-0 Defeat Spartans Ags ; j : ball bounces around Crazily jduringr Saturday LOOSE XBALL-L-T-he game jin the BYU Stadium, as! Phil Brady (42) and Bob Jones 15) of the. Cougars and Tom Hauck (52) of the Grizzlies try to do something about recovering it. George pennis (73) of Montani is the player trying to grab Brady. The Cougars won t he game, 27 - 0. Wardell sparkqd the Cougars to their third touchdown late in the second period, p; tching two pass- es, the first to Guy Hale for 15 yards and. the second to Lynn Mathie for, nine yards which put the ball on the Montana nine- yard line, Four plays latpr Santiago dived over center fof the touchdown with Baker again getting the extra point over tcj give BYU a 21-- 0 r. halftime lead. The BYU scoring in the third quarter was confined to a couple of field goals bjf Baker. The first field goal by Baker came with nine minutes aid 30 seconds to play and the BfU place kicking specialist drilled it home from thff Montana line for a .field goii. That made the score 24-- 0 for BYU. With three minutes and 40 sec onds to go in the period, Baker booted a field goal from the 30 yard line of Montana for a kick, making the score 27-- 0 at the end of the third quarter. Statistics: BYU Montana 12 Rushing yardage 218 First downs J 1 ? Third Touchdown i ' : , ! . 0! - . 6 4. -- - j ID-pl- ay ; , ; contest, had the lead 14--7 at half-time and held Ion through ,the r third period, ,211$. KUs recovery began with Baugh man jumping into the end zone iwin. from the one with 36 seconds left Kansas struck on a pass in the third j period to mark suc drive that car interception good for a touchdown cess foria 79 ried on RoUi the second yards. Sophomore Cowboy jby guard Greg Tom Wilkinson, throw final of then hit cjuarterback the quarter, play 6': 02 on down 'from his own second with in the ing remaining again two-yar- d saw the key inter- -' make Roth a on 16, full cave, game by back Armand : Baughman to edge jeption.j . XX: '.. j. the Cowboys. ' The Jayhawks, playing' their first Wyoming showing greater fin game at ' Laramie before 18,121 esse through the early part of the fans fifth largest crowd in Me came morial Stadium history fight back with a drive from their wn 34 for' ithe clincher. Gale Say- -j t era. hitting ;for a key first and! ten at midfield, and ia penalty ihat put Wyoming on its own 12: bided the final Kansas drive. J 0 14 7 021 Wyoming f rd 17-ya- rd 1 - j . 20-ya- rd 1 ' nd 25-2- 7-- 0. X) j X one-yar- ' ,. g6-ya- r ; LARAMIE, Wyo. XUPDKansas University, almost outfought by an underdog Wyoming team,? battled back in the final period Saturday 1 o salvage a intersectional ' , N , Jay hawkers Rally Tjo 25-2- 1 Whip Wyoming v iX to play in the first quarter on a drive. jThe drive was run by sparked by a on a righi end sweep and Brady cutback that moved the ball from the Montana 37 to the Montana 11 yard line. Four plays later Santiago d plunged across Worn the line. Baker booted a conversion and the Cougars led The Cougars' second touchdown came early, in the second .quarter after Dan Smetko of Montana tried to fake a punt on fourth down and wa: trapped and pulled down on be Montana line. Two plays later Brady swept around his, right end 14 yards' for a tohchdowri. Baker again booted thej extra point and the Cats led. 14-- with 13 minutes and ,26, seconds of play left in the second quarter. ' 84-ya- rd Speaking of football coaches not being able io s icep before or after a game,; H.vDavid Neson,the principal of BY High,! isn't so sure he wants to see another Wildcat basketball team in the state tourney. ''"v,X; I XX:':X;- - V;:'" The Wildcats won the Class B championship last March and Nelson almost went without eating or sleeping during; the four days and nijghts of the dribble derby. r .jf; Somebody sale! they thought only coaches reacted to tbe game Way. V - BYU scored its! first touchdown with four minute and 51 seconds . tnat f'-- scoring. . j 188-pou- 1 , -- . . - I Field! Goals . Frank . Bakerr BYU's boot- old ' place-kickin- g ed , two field goals in the third quarter to complete the BYU ; , 6, 2 - . UTAH SUNDAY OCTOBER 6, 1963. UTAH. COUNTY, ' I ', -. PROVO. - for a second straight western athletic ' conference championship Saturday night by defeating the Lobos, 19-- before 20,000 disappointed fans at University Stadium. . , Ends Roy Jefferson and Frank jEtoy were the biggest; thorns in ew Mexico's side, scoring two f the Redskins' touchdowns. f Jefferson, a junior rom Compton, Calif ., also was a defensive standout. He crashed through time and again to smear New Mexico runners. New Mexico's vaunted pass de- - , x , hard-chargin- 2f7-- of a local cafe early Thursday" and prepared to tell land show the Provo Downtown Coaches Club the horrible and sad details,, on the debacle: at Arizona . Big! Hal seemcd to be carrying the weight of, the .world on his powerful frame and hej probably thought he .was, too, ' because bis football team had been badly clobbered two weeks nmning. This was the same gang of "gridders he had pointed to with pride before the, start of the season. He looked a little haggard and bleary-eye- d But. bis condition wasn't due to drinking beverages containing too much alcoholic content! ' , Rather, .it was due to fatigue brought on" by a lack of , sleep. Eddie Kimbali; atiifetle director at BYU and a guy who himself has experienced the tortures- of hell that sometimes comes in Ray Schwartz coaching a foothall team, gave s the Downtown Coaches an iidea of the kind of life Mitchell had been living for the past jseverat days. "If you Downtown Coaches have been disappointed," jEddie becan, "let me vtell you , Coach Mitchell has! been 10 1 times ' ''' , : as disappointed. ;'v " don't believe he has had a total of 10 hours of sleepj for the past four or five days. I personally know,, he didn't sleep atf all one ' night as he stayad up running the films of the gape over and over again trying to put the pieces together in a "proper panner.' The general who once said, "War is hell, might have added, "but sometimes so is football coaching." ' 7 Herald Sports Editor Young . University Brigham Cougars found .Saturday night, 'There's no placel like home," as 0 they., swept '.to a victory over Montana before 10,185 fans in the BYU Stadium. It was the first! win of the season for Coach Hal Mitchell's charges after two straight losses on the. road. . The Cats werej led to victory by the' running of Phil Brady' and the passing of southpaw swinging Doug Wardell ancl great defensive play on the part of the BYU line. Lou Santiago! a stocky, hard- running, fullback,! scored two of the i Cougar touchdowns,- and Brady picked up the other one as the Cats moved but 21-- 0 at half-time. I fense, best in the nation last year, could not cope with the throwing of quarterbacks Ernest Allen- ' of Missoula , Mont., and GjaryHertzfefiit of Chico, CaUf. jjust to keep tiie Lobos honest, Alen and Her tzf ejldt decoyed full' bck Allen' Jacobs most of the first half. Then they turned him loose up the m- idle during the sicond half. ; The clinching touchdown came i4 r the final period when Utah drove to the? New Mexico three oil the running of Jacobs and hblfback Ron Coleman, Then Ailen, who generjalled two of the Uree Utah touchdowns, rolled out and threw to Jefferson in the end zone. ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. (UPI) Two guys named Roy and a g Utah! line put a crimp in New Mexico's ambition By RAY SCHWARTZ KM , . and Jim ; - 6-- 0 j . ! 24-Va- rd tl-ycl- rd ;tt. i |