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Show Eighth Ranked Bruins Defeat! Sunday Herald Michigan Dumps OhioSt. 17-3 Seventh Place Trojans 14-7© COLUMBUS | third period to put the ball onthe first Bruin touchdown, Dow LOS ‘ANGELES (UPI) —|their crosstown rivals. the Bruin one, and Dan Scott|rolled out for 18 yards to help). Reserve quarterback Norman oe weanGooee plunged over for the score. set up the score. Dow,filling in for injured Garb /0*S: 0 .Facilic ” Beban, guided UCLA to-’an tion, athletic directors ve UCLA,bottled up mvst of the! Wolverines a 17-3 victory in the traditional Big’ Ten season , ender_for. both teams. Detwiler, a senior halfback scored one touchdown and Tolled up 140 yards in 20 carries to keep the Buckeyes’ defense in continual hot water. His. touchdown,an eight-yard smash earlier in the second period, iced the gamefor ‘the Wolve|rines, who won their sixth in 16 starts against Ohio State Coach Woody Hayes, Past A.F.A. 10-9 BOULDER, Colo. (UPI)— and to Rick Cathcart for 13. But Colorado steamed into field again the Buffaloes got stubgoal range and John Farler born and stopped the Visitors on RAY ARMSTRONG does some high stepping to avoid a South ern California tackler but NW Routs The booted a 34-yard fourth quarter the 9yard-line, and Hall booted the fancy footwork did little good as the UCLA star was jailed two steps later by USC's three-pointer to wipe out a sav- his second three-pointer. Bill. Suroncyk (41). UCLA won the game 14-7. (Herald-UPI Telephoto) age Air Force Academy chal- Air Forge ‘took their 9 lead lenge Saturday and gain a 109 on-a drive which moved the ball 71 yards to the nine, but victory. Quarterback Bill Melzer led “a Parler’s kick, with 5:14 left Colorado dug in once more, parade of five Northwestern ir the traditional season wind- \pushed AFA back to the 13 and touchdowns Saturday in a rok up for both teams came on the ‘Hall entered the act again, licking unexpected, 35-7, rout of Colorado's TD cameafter a end of a.Colorado drive which| fraditonal Big Ten. rival li started ‘on the Buffalo 20 and) 16-play march that started on n moved to the Air Force 17 on| the Buffalo 27, .The big plays Northwestern, a definite un the power running of fullback were a 21-yard scramble by Mc derdog DALLAS (UPI) — Dennis Biut that run served more as thus far off this its fall,so-so showing i Wilmer Cooks and .Farler, a Call, a clutch fourth down and like @ Partee’s 20-yard field goal with|a one slash for five yards by JACKSON,Miss. (UPI)—Sureted anger flag in Baylor's flanker. A Force—on field: goals Cooks and a 10-yard third down 15 seconds left carried Southern face than it did to subdue the The, Air footed wingback Doug Cunning- Methodist’s Kardiac Kids to a of 18, 26 and 82 yards by Dick Pass ae a int £ a ham churned across a muddy Baptists, who prompily cranked 24-22 victory over Baylor up three touchdowns—two on| Hall—took an early9-0 lead and |{WUPaCK. McCall, wi . i on the four, slid to his left and field for two touchdowns and Saturday and shot them into the one and 36-yard passes from Ted Ot Baltic alist q i Colo. sliced through an opening for other runs that set up field undisputed Southwest Confer-| Ter; Bec! Ho eeten the- score. goals to lead Bowl .-— hungry: ence lead and only a step away are cree slash wae area coor ‘ Be The heated seriés between the| Mississippi to a 34 0 rout of| from a trip to the Cotton Bowl.|by Richard Defee, ference ‘and left Ilinois,-once a. = . of second his Kick, Partee's two schools now stands at 6-3| Vanderbilt Saturday. (Continued from Page 17) around this time of year. That was during the “Dark Ages” of BYU football. But nowadays the fans hate to see the grid season come to an end. zi That’s the best sign of all that the football renaissance is in full swing at’BYU. And there’ is no question but what Coach Hudspeth and quarterback Carter have been the prime movers of this rebirth and the kindling of football spirit that seems to know no bounds. : One réason for this new football spirit in Cougarville is that Coach Hudspeth brought an exciting-to-watch, fast-moving type of offense that stirs the fans’ imaginations and keeps them almost constantly on the edge of their seats, Win, lose or draw, the Cougars are almost always fun to watch, Even in a relatively poor performance against Arizona’ State early in the season the Cats left their fans limp at the end as they were in the ball game down to the bitter end and actually could have won the game without too much ofa stretch of the imigination. “The Cougars have the most electrifying and imaginative | The tough Air Force effort ‘offense I’ve ever~seen in- the- Mountain West,” one_veteran bid.The But. } caneee Salt Lake sports scribe said following BYU's victory over uaea Aa WishkC Utah last weekend. If Hudspeth is the architect of this explosive attack, Carter Duke js the guy who makes the attack go. He must rank waeGe 44. among BYU’s most exciting gridders ever. And he must cer- sere a coe tainly rank as one of the most astute quarterbacks, if not the most astute, in the history of the school, Colorado's chances for (95, Cuzade- Talos,Big.Right Conference)“ coach. After Carter had directed the Cougars to victory over New Mexico in 1965 in a game that gave BYU its first conference football championship in the-histery of the school, Coach Hudspeth said he felt it would be hard to find a betterback than his own. ace signal. And Hudspeth without question. still feels that. way. The BYU. mentor has always had a lot of faith in Carter. Even when Carter was a brash sophomore, Hudspeth let him aise the team with a minimum of assistance from the ich. National ExposureWould Have Helped called on an angry Air Force PeFores fn the tnt hal Illini 35-7 EVANSTON, I. (UPI) — Rebels Eye 20-Yard Fie ld Bowl After 34-0 Victory Gives SMU 24-22 Win ‘i » | Goal _ Baylor completely dominated|Rose Bowl. possibility, with @ The Rebels, keenly eying athe year under just such] the second half except for the|H}0 mark in the league : ; . ie bid,apesee ae pressure siluations, ,cancelled| quarter.= id, wrapped. up their fifth) out a 44-yard three-pointer by fading moments we ji ae j: —_____“"Jstraight win on the running of|Baylor’s Bob Purvis wilh 2:48 Levan bitveg mes, 284) Louisville Tips Swarms area Bruce Newell a Se oo me i 7p) zara Ja two plays and in Cc rdii Jody Graves. eR6Oe. Say. and $1 in vaseoe a the threyard araing ls 29.=O18 . tackietotsekie punclng by! T 41-21 Cooks, a. abyard- ramble by} +O “FEA Farler and a 15-yard penalty Carter Also Has the Records —Michi- to shreds Saturday to earn the -But late in- the same period. first half, put together a 42-yard’ the Trojahs moved 87 yards in Buffalos Squeak i What's more he has the national, conference, and school records to back up his play. In fact, Carter has broken so many records in three years of varsity play that the statisticians have almost lost track of the exact number. But it isn’t his record-breaking feats that impresses me most about Carter. Rather it’s his ability to consistently come up with the big third-down play at crucial times in a game. T also like the way be comes back from adversity and performs in-an inspiring manner. And I liked the way he refused to alibi for his lack-lustre play against Arizona State. He played a lousy game against the Sun Devils and he was the first ‘o admit it. He blamed nobody but himself for his poor performance, And then he came hack to play superbly — sensationally at times — against New Mexico, Arizona, Texas Western and Utah. Carter faces adversity like he expects to find his greatest success just around the next corner. That takes real character and his confident, positive approach to the game probably explains why he has never experienced two bad games backto-back. His confideut outlook and his analytical mind that searches out the weak points in an opponent's defense can’t helpbe prove an- inspiration to- his.team not to. mention his (UPI) gan’s liard running JimDetwiler ripped Ohio State's defenses upset 147 victory over the/Menday-at San Francisco to drive at the start of the third| five pl: Universtiy of Southern Califor-| determine the West's Rose Bowl period. addition to scoring) on Hul nia Saturday before81,980. fans | team ———--inccrnpeenmenteme es to keep alive the’ Bruin hopes} Dow scored UCLA's**first for a repeat trip to the Rose} touchdown in the third period on Bowl. a five-yard run.and helped set Halfback Cornell Champion’s}up- Champion's score in the 21-yard touchdown sweep|fourth period with a 26-yard around end. in the fourth. period} spurt and a 13-yard pass. broke a-7-7 tie to bring UCLA, Fullback. Mike Hull raced. 57 its second straight win overlyards “for the Trojans in the Sports With Schwartz 19 SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1966 Utah County. Utah Grid Victory Cunningham scored on a dtiv-| ‘The victory, coupled withlboot =P e* ™"iNS) LOUISVILLE, Ry. (UPI)— ing $4 - yard punt return and) Texas. Tech's 21-16: upset_of} Partee had beaten Texas with| eedwert a 19 - yard dash and Kept the|sicth-ranked Arkansas at Lub-| fielg goal with 18 seconds and ae ‘Commodores with their back dock a few minutes earlier, left " : ,|L@vias had caught a pass with against the goal posts most of SMU needing only a win or a tie| nie seconds ‘ defense and Pete (The for the afternoon with grinding POW-|next Saturday agsinstTexas|entoute toileellnehsparea Tulsa, 2048, en oy turned two Buffalo fumbles into) CHAPEL HILL, XC.(UBD|" ee ee eae Tulse, behing 2018 at ihe ield goals. ‘alcons forced| Duke quarterback Larry A i ¥ S smash’ came the first fafal fumble one play|a standin at the slant of the Purdue Drubs|, Ps Hct: ste some of istaalquite sat te rmn'by GateLabifk after the opening kickoff when| season, combined with Blue De- the thunder from jetstar Jerry |Gingon’s 40-yard runback of alit 20-48 in the third period, but ee eeee ial ack Neil Starkey fell on ee at Nok im zndmonbp einena ueeg Indiana moved SMU over the Mini Wit, ons poh = ioes 4 be as rs _< the: ‘The Falcons moved the balllrolina Saturday. : a 214 lead and a downhill run|rin, “which tied the leaguelMickey Settles ‘end Bil Den fromthe Colorado 28 to the tWo-| ‘The Blue Devils survived al [ry 51-6 Tilt for victory. record. |Cardinals a 22-18 lead, yard-line,. but the Buffaloldetermined North Carolina at7 defenders toughened and forced! tack ted by quarterback Jeff . ireintacd : “s Hall's first field-goal.___| Beaver whose passing Kept the| LAFAYETTE, tad. uPh —|- Virginia Tromps me The Falcons’ scrambling paid) my, ‘until the fourth|R os ¢ Bowl- bound Purdue, off again when Mc Call fumbled| period Davis ‘on his 47 after a 2l-yard gain and. Falcon linebacker Bruee Burkey-recovered, é AFA sophomore quarterbac Steve Turner fired the falcons into field goal range with passes to Carl Janssen for 17-yards Tigers Nip sparked by y| Maryland 41-17 scored one from the|Candidate Bob Griese, humiliated injury-riddled Indiana Satur- CHARLOTTES VILLE, Va. day in their traditional ““Ol (UPI)—Virginia’s ball hawking Oaken Bucket” football finale, Cavaliers played like the days 516, to’ complete its best of old Saturday, tromping] football season in 23 years, Maryland’s Terps 41-17 for an That gave Purdue an 82 Atlantic Coast Conference. vicseason record, with losses only tory before 16,000 chilly fans. to Notre Dame and Michigan Virginia defenders pounced State, the nation’s two top- on three Maryland fumbles and tanked teams, and Big Ten Cavalier quarterback Bob Da-| athletic directors were expected|vis made the most of them, three and passed a ‘69. yard bomb to Dave Dunaway, the first td pass of his career. brese, _Duke’s workhorse, ‘vaulted over the goal-line twice: from one yard out on fourthdown plays. OklahomaState 5 ‘Drubs KSU 21-6 |i put their vote of approval tossing for two touchdowns and Kansas Saturday night on the Boilerma-|setting up two others with his MANHATTAN, Kan. (UPI)—|kers’ first trip to the post-| passing, 70 Saturday Oklahoma ‘State relied’ on alseason bow! classic, COLUMBIA, “Mo. (UPI) — 'seldom-used passing attack Sat.| Griese, an All-America as a|RAMSAY’S RECORD (UPI) urday to upend. Kansas State|junior last year, passed for| PHILADELPHIA cond — three touchdowns, plunged for| Jack Ramsay, general manager Gary Kimbrink|21-6 and mark the second con-|' "ang added a field goal in|of the Philadelphia 76'ers of the Qu It’s too bad the 185-pound Carter ‘didn’t get a chance for rifled a third quarler S4yard|secutive season the Wildcats! the mismatch, the largest score|NBA, had a 29-72 record and 10 a lot of national exposure this year. It would have greatly en- touchdown pass to Earl Denny have not won a game. piled up by the winning team in| pos! hanced his chances for All-American recognition. If Eastern| ito -give_Missouri_a rugged -7-) ‘Big Right football victory over: Kansas Saturday, preserved by The loss also closed: out the| this-ancient series since-Purdue icoaching career at Kansas State eee la game-hearted Tiger defense injof Doug Weaver, the popular ithe fourth quarter. Kombrink drove the Tigers 78 yards in nine plays for the game's only score on Missouri’s ee possession of the second We help fillstockings for thousands of families everyyear. er On hind andight situation Wildcats a first quarter’ touchfrom Missouri fired a strike to building of that pride and spirit, McDonald Shines as Idaho [ii Whips WeberState 42-12 i zie 5 - ii si ¢ REEF urll ra MOSCOW, Idaho Ray 46-Kombrink down before scoring two quick who TDs in the second period to two [take a 1446 ‘halftime lead, Florida State Scores 28-0 Win ‘TALLAHASSEE,Fla, (UPI)- flich r Giffs... pou pore Ski Dillage FIFTH ANNUAL SWEATER SALE! ‘ Men's and Women's Dozens ef im- Colorful Nordic Patterns and solid eolors friends and relatives droppingin. It's the one time of year when extra Bees to been heloing thousands of fyMay we help yourWer , we certainty. HOW MUCH CAN YOU USE? 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