Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 October 1950 — Page 15

Secfion Two

c ; Indianapolis Times. 6) Features, —= —

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1950

Editorials, Page 26 |

PAGE 15

Butler Stops Cardinal Air Attack

Fairview Squad Scores 5 TDs, By Ground Route

By FRANK ANDERSON Times Sports Writer

. MUNCIE, Oct. 14—Ball State is & teachers’ college—but Butler| handed out the lessons today. And! the lessons learned put Ball State! in a defeated state, 33-to-7. . |

Butler in winning picked up its, first win in four outings, while! Ball State sank to its second defeat in three starts.

It was a richly deserved triumph| for Coach Tony Hinkle's Bull-| dogs. They confounded critics of| their ground game by depending on it for four of their five touch-! NEXT OPPONENTS Sat pi a 31 PALL 8 STATE. downs and 255 of their total offense of 349 yards. They also confounded the losing Cardinals by|

defense. - QCard Passes Scciched

Ball State’s vaunted throwers were able to pick up only 53 yards in the air as the Bulldogs played| Scotch on defense. And the 139 yards the Cardinals gained on the ground came for the most part while Butler benchmen were seeing action. The defense-minded Bulldogs were a punter’s nightmare. They blocked three punts, one of which cost the Cardinals two Ddoints. oats up fo 4 The safety came in the third peess tank. riod when the Bulldogs were out - in front, 13 to 0. | + Both teams sparred for the first 341% minutes of play. Weak Jinks were spotted, noted and filed by Capt. Tim Crawforth and used) to determine the line of attack.| The line became apparent in the last 30 seconds of the first yuarter. Card Pass Defense Leaky

Crawforth found a leaky pass defense and exploited it by Areas ing 32 yards to Halfback Lou Weidekamp on the: a Then Crawforth called on Weide_kamp and Fullback Pem Corneius for road work and they complied by lugging the leather to rhe five as the period ended. After that Crawforth drew o his notes and just got out the add

over on the first play of thé A ond quarter. Then Guard Floyd Jennings kicked the point. Capt. Tim wasted little time | thinking of his next touchdown decision. End Jim CY Te solved it for him by b punt and covering it on a ne fnal 47 shortly after the initial touchdown. With the way ahead revealed Crawford tossed 10 yards to Crumley for a first down on the 37 and sent his runners ahead with lightning rapidity to the goal.

muscular legs churning the yards. But Jennings missed Re kick. It was 13-0 at the half.

opportunity to score again as the third quarter opened. Tackle | John Lawyer blocked Quarterback Bob Baker's punt on the Cardinal 12 and covered the ball. But Weldekamp making one of his few mistakes of the day, fumbled on the 10 and the Card{nals recovered. But the fumble was to .result in tragedy for the Ball Staters. . They moved the ball to the 24 in line smashes and sent Baker jack to kick. He met the ball and ball met Butler Center Don Rodick. The leather then rolled 24 yards back to the end zone

{Continued on Page 18—Col. 1)

Wisconsin Stops Hawkeyes, 14 to 0

Badgers Intercept 5 Of 13 lowa Passes

IOWA CITY, Iowa, Oct. 14 (UP)—A fast striking ball thief named' Ed Withers ran back one intercepted pass for a touchdown and set up a scoring march with

NEXT OPPONENTS 21—Durdue at "Mente another today as an , an otherwise outplayed Wisconsin team beat fowa, 14 to O. Towa, trying desperately to get pack into the Big Ten race after losing its opener to underdog Indiana, learned the same lesson Illinois was taught last week when it lost to Wisconsin, 7 to 6. “You * can shove the Badgers around on the ground — but it's mighty dangerous to.try.to get past them in the air™ Withers seemed to have a sixth

‘(Continued on x Page 16-—Col. 8)

Big Ten Standings Br United Press

EL JAMES aep ARAL Ro wa hreava raha tea.

stealing a Ball State trick—pass|

The Bulldogs reached the prom-/ gp ised Jand again with Weidekamp re, “f long-range movement to]

The Bulldogs missed a golden,

urricanes Blow Over Purdue, 20-14 Bulldogs Put Bite On Ball State, 33 - 73% Siete Whies 1U.

Mike Maccioli Picks Up Five Yards For Hapless Riveters Speed and Deception

1}

Miami's Hurricane at Lafayette. Walter Chwalik (82) made the tackle. The Boilermakers were eset, 20-14,

Dinsrain photo by Henry Glesing and J. Hugh O'Donnell air, they marched 82 yards in| Purdue's Mike Maccioli (21) gains five yards after waking a handoff from Quarterback Dale Samuels (10) in the third period of yesterday's intersectional clash with [10 plays for their first touchdown, goo” 0 pelt Bo ns on & te

D'Achille Ties . | Miami Upsets Completion Record Upset Heroes By KURT FREUDENTHAL By JIM DAILEY United Press Sports Writer i United Press Sports Writer

BLOOMINGTON, Oct. 14 Ohio! LAFAYETTE, Oct. 14—Miami’s State, striking with ligntning Hurricanes swept up from Florida {speed and a deceptive ground at-|today to upset the upsetters by |tack, today whipped Indiana 26 knocking off Purdue, 20-14, be-

{to 14 and got off to a successful NEXT OPPONENTS

Oct, 21—Bost C. at MM start in defense of its Big 10, Jb JIPURDUE at tows

{championship. 2 ak- | Coach Wes Fesler started — etree ry RT ly, failing to score in the firstgiadium. ) period, but they caught fire after| nga although - undefeated, the. Hoosiers opened the scoringinag not been given little chance

in the second stanza, and neither goainst the Boilermakers, who EXT OPPONENTS : Oct NO STATE ai Minnesota. had catapulted to national promiOct. 21—Notre Dame at INDIAN |nence last week by ending the

39-game undefeated string of Notre Dame. But Miami apparently hadn't read the press clippings, and the Purdue eleven had.

the Hoosiers or the hot weather. with temperatures in the high 70's, could stop them. Ohio State concentrated on a bruising ground attack, and the ! ! expected passing duel between Miami, outplayed completely in versatile Vie Janowicz, OSU's the first half by a hard-charging brilliant triple-threat, and Indi- Purdue line led by Darrell Brewana's sophomore tailback, Lou S!¢T and Leo Sugar, caught fire D'Achille, never materialized. when a Purdue pass was blocked Completes 20 and taken over for a touchdown But D'Achille tossed 39 aerials to tie the score at 7-7 in the third

|—a new Big 10 record in one period. game—and completed 20—=to tie Blocks Punt a record—in a vain effort to keep! Both teams’ first scores were the Hoosiers on top of the Big 10/the result of hard-charging linesheap. Iowa's Glenn Drahn held Men rushing in to break up pass the previous record with 31 plays or punts. Purdue's line passes last year, and D’Acnille’s had the upper hand at the beginpass completion tied the mark set ‘ning, and the payoff came when [by Otto Graham of Northwestern Sugar broke through to block in 1943. Elmer Tremont’s punt, picked up Indiana's Gene Gedman and the ball and trotted the rest of {Don Luft caught six passes each, the way for the score. {tying the conference mark held It seemed all Purdue from there {jointly by teammate Cliff Ander- on, but two Hurricane linesmen son and Northwestern's Max collaborated to turn the tables. Morris. With Purdue knocking on the OSU Workhorses {touchdown door again end Leo Walter Klevay, a speedy junior Martin blocked Dale Samuels’ halfback; Janowicz, Charles Gan- pass at the point of origin. Guard dee, and Quarterback Tony Cur- | Joe Lyden picked it out of the air cillo were Ohio State's backfield [to race 53 yards for the tying workhorses, and their line, led by touchdown.

Miami ...

Purdue “ el BB Tackle Dick Logan, kept the Miami Takes Fire ; i Hoosiers’ ground offense we i i . ‘bottled up. Miami was afire after that.

Starting after a poor Purdue kick landed on the Boilermaker 40, two passes took it to the 18, from where Frank Smith went for the

Still, Indiana was first to break the ice. Striking through the

with D’Achille’s short toss to End |,veq trap play over left tackle.

Notre Dame Ekes Out |

STATE a i |Harvard ........ teeesees 0 7 0 0— 1 kickott on his T-yard line, jo.0 tor a hair raising ‘50-yard n V er U a noe IS Trveeeses 0 7 0 7—14/ Cornell ......... 0 71 7 14—28 picked up his interference and run during which he seemed Miami (Fla) «ee 01 B20 pi aaa “40 0. 4 raced right down the middle for mong at least twice. 3 verted vs

Bob Williams’ Passi 10 Injured Players Ta

By PRESTON McGRAW, United Press Sports Writer

ng Saves Irish; ken Out of Game

NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 14—Notre Dame beat Tulane 13 %o 9

Saturday of defeat,

a. today. But the brains, the driving legs and the passing arm of ing machine. Weidekamp went quarterback Bob Williams was all that saved the Irish from another, ..c Flyers spoiled the Indianap- z—

Tulane, rated 13 points under Notre Dame when the game,

|started, poured six long years of

Tech Coaching

humiliation and frustration into 60 minutes of savage play. In! five games before today’s, Notre, Dame had scored a total of 204 pois to 19 for Tulane. 'oday’'s defeat was Tulane's

Notre Dame, defeated only once

Sl | 3 | d latin in a row at the hands of eup gvea e {in its la: its last 41 games. But Notre

Times Predicted Move Last May

{shake up the Tech High School |

At least five injured players [ieee Lawrence 39. Migatevury o. a a coaching staff under a guise as had to be taken out on each side. TOW night and will open the Indi- Franklin ,...... 714 7 12—40 Scranton 3 Ga point-after-touchdown kick that The figures. however. Yd 't tell forecast by The Times last May 7, Rose Poly ...... 00 0 0— 03a 3: Wagner . went wide was the margin ol 8 n Hal Headrick, a 210-pound Tu-'anapolis Coliseum season this 2 Thiel 2. Cliagion "0 aoits 0 ___ the story of Miami's poise in thre nas been completed, The Times jane guard, was knocked out Thursday night against Cincin-| BIG TEN Trinity 21. Hobart 6. defeat tonight for the Hanover jit SOT¥ 0 HATES Bos mer learned last night. twice. Tulane shocked Notre! nati. amt ee on romero. |S pa” af. Norwich 1. | pet. 21_mEXT OPPONENTS ov gx (WO touchdown trap plays, which Reserve Basketball Coach Pow- | Dame - supporters — who were! Only in the final period tonight 10WA «..cccveees 000 0—0w Willian He) Muss. a | (Remecoming). i they seemed to have for the opell Moorhead, Who has compiled 2bout a third of the total crowd did Indianapolis outplay the Fly- Wisconsin ...... 70 0 T—14 ama a 21—CANTERBURY at Anderson. ne moment. I aaa —by scoring in the first two min- ers and St. Louis Goalie Red N'western ...... 6 0 7 0—I3, SOUTH Panthers as they lost a narrow = or finely. w one of the most enviable records : scorpion bY i o Canterbury’s ie answer, finally, was in the utes of play. Almas rose to the occasion with Minnesota ...... 0 6 0 0— 6 J ouisiana na State... 0 00 0—0 21 to 20 decision t an line play, Purdue had the allin Tech history, has been de-| Fullback Harry Hahn of Tu- brilliant goal tending. He had to groe=——"""""""43"g 4 14" sy Georgia Tech .... 0 0 7 6—13 Knights, } round superiority. but the ormoted to freshman basketball lane took the kickoff on his own|stop a dozen shots in the final Army veseersanns pA i Apter i - vy The Hoosier College Conference 4 ono woe cod to be ovérwhelmed coach. [17 and drove to Tulane's 37. Hal 20 minutes while . Cap Goalie, ch'gan ... 6 0 0 0—6 Georgetown ..... T0 0 7-1 triumph. 6, left the po pe Boilermakers’ fierce play Neither Hanson H. Anderson, Waggoner, 2 halfback and trans- Brennan saved nine, MIDWEST Mains seers TT 4 es Knights ith 5 pertect season rec ¥ tne first half rincipal at Tech, nor Charles fer from Little Rock, Ark., Junior, It was a rough and tumble ores N. Carolina ...... 7 0 0 B— 7 ord for their four starts ants ) Shp athletic director, has an-|College, drove it to Notre Dame’ 8 game from the start as both Minsgary Bate. & : i 3 ed Wake Forest .... 0 0 7 6—13 Bobby Courtney was the Can- pains Sue ig Suapie nounced publicly the long-term. 39 ih two FuUNINg plays. ph p- Vanderbilt ...... 7 6 0 7—20 terbury sparkplug with two long 7ot his passes away only by dint behind:the-scenes shakeup that| Then Tulane Quarterback Joe | (Continued on Page 17—Col. 4) Towa State ...., 0 14 7 0-21 Mississippl ...... 7 0 7 0—14 runs. both punt returns. One was I ae A aa ir began with the addition of Charlie Ernst passed to Halfback Ells-! Meuse |Kansas ......... 12 714 0-33 - — ‘a 90-yard sprint and the other." “0 CEU fof oa ey a8 Maas and Jack Hanna, ex-Tech Worth Kingery. Kingery took it to| A ks Ni Mich. State 18.18 1 0—gs N- Carolina State 0 0 0° 0— 0, 55.yard dash, both in the first | (HRN FEE, UNE TUTE, OSS stars, late last semester. the Notre Dame 5 and Halfback | ttucks Nips Wn. and Mary... 7 0 0 Fogg Duke eines 0 0 0 1— 7 orioq ly of the short. bullet variety. As Demotion of Moorhead has George Kinek went around right S 7 6 | Ohio U. .. — Georgia. .. . ..ss 6 7 71 7=27 Richard Syrek converted all p found Tech officials completing ¢0d for the touchdown. partans, - jon Xa TAL ¢ I : Dd Miss. State ... . 0 0 0 0— 0 Canterbury extra points. (Continued on Page 18 18—Col. 5) the cycle in the coaching changes | Williams Passes ‘An out-played but not out- —— — — mer Univ. of Ky. .... 0. 1-28 6-—41 Canterbury .... 14 0 7 0-21 sent rmeieimmgemgen that ousted likeable George Williams went calmly to work fought Crispus Attucks = Tiger: Jbioh a 2 ituw. 4, {Univ. of Cian. .. 7 0 0 Se 7 Hanover ....... 013-0 7--20 Sprague as head baseball coach four plays after Notre "ame took |. ET Ir yi PERE - Stn p—m—p——et i dlc p er OWS al icotball team rocked Sacred Bluffton 18. Olivet 0. [Ww st Virginia...17 15 7 at the close of last semester. the Tulane kickoff. He dropped i Te 1s, |Richmon Eginia. . le . Y : —% park Schoo! Loses

Policy Is Incogsistent

Maas, who coached baseball and basketball in his first year at | Decatur Central last season, has|

and replaces Moorhead as assist-. ant basketball mentor. Hanna is assistant football coach. Last May The Times stated that Sprague, despite a fine record of 23 victories and six defeats, would | be replaced by Maas as head base- | ball coach and that Maas would become hardwood assistant to

(Continued on Page 18—Col. 8)

Olympians Lose To Lakers, 77-70

PIKEVILLE, Ky. Oct. 14—A sell-out crowd of 2500 fans jammed Oliver Memorial Gym here tonight to see the Indianapolis Olympians drop their second straight exhibition game to the Minneapolis Lakers, 77 to 70. Despite the fact that he fouled out late in the third quarter, George Mikan paced the scoring on both teams with 20 points on

OF nine fleld goals and two free

throws. Alez Groza topped the s with six field goals six gratis tosses for 18 tallies. Kevin O'Shea, former Notre

taken over as head baseball coach 6 Irish Injured,

All-Ametican, soared. nine "Hob ‘winners, Al

NEXT OPPONENTS |

Oct. 21—-NOTRE DAME at Indiana. Oct. 21-—Mississippl U. at TULANE.

Dame failed to find an easy mark!

y JIMMIE ANGELOPOLOUS before 76,000 fans in Sugar Bowl consolation out of learning what Manchester ..... 6

[Stadium. | Knocked Out Twice

pass into the arms of right end Jim Mutscheller, who took it to!

(Continued on , Page 18—Col. 6)

Two Seriously

NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 14 (UP) Coach Frank Leahy announced tonight that Tulane or the heat ha hurt six of his best football playerg, two*seriously. Halfback Billy Barrett, unconscious, and Guard Paul Burns were taken to Touro Infirmary with head injuries. Barrett ref;ained consciousness at the hosp:tal. Doctors said X-rays showed ac¢ fractures. Burns. had a mild concussion, and perhaps a fractured cheek bone. Halfback John , Petitbon = suffered heat exhaustion. Center Jerry Groom had a hemorrhaged thigh. Quarterback Bob Williams reported a. badly bruised left to|shoulder. And Fullback John Landry had a black eye and a wealth of bruises.

The quality of “Tdlane’ s was “surprising.” Tulane Coach Hi Frnka said his team Ivor “very well”

pas Lose Opener College

Don Luft the payoff pitch. Smith's second touchdown and

| That tally, however, apparently apamis third came o n the same G viel Scores |was all OSU needed to be rallied gon of trap play, but trom farther |to victory. For on the very next|, : ye cut over the tackle spot, play, Klevay took Joe Matesic's thon twisted and shook off tack-

° ern T UY — Me Flyers Outplay Local Indiana ......... 0 8 Fw ltRIoN serereriveen 8.7 7 Olt be the Bucks were ona run- Pass Connects y play Chio State ...... 0 18 7 6—26 Rutgers ...... 6 0 718-26 n "The second Purd d For 2 Periods TTT 7 0 0 2— 9 Templ 14 0 0 6—20 ng. on he_SCore. Was Squa [Tulane tetesrrie td 0 0 29 emple ....... . 0| They held Indiana, and the next the result of one of the BoilerBy BILL EGGERT Notre Dame .... 7.6 0 13 time they got the ball drove 41 makers’ many desperation passes “Times Sports Writer ‘Ball I State ...... 0 0. 0 7— 1 Teed 0. |yards in seven plays for their connecting. They recovered a ST. LOUIS, Oct. 14 — The St. Butler ..... 0138 14 6—33 12 |second marker, climaxed with fumble on the Miami 42 late in rr EN : {Janowicz’s 11-yard toss to Cur- the fourth period, worked it to the olis Caps’ American Hockey Taylor oven ’ ’ : 9-13 3 0. ieillo. 35 on short passes, and Samuels | League opener here tonight, skat-, ~~" ‘1’ '° rede Jeyeachers 24, Concord Indiana's George Byers tem- pitched to Neil Schmidt for the ing away with a 4 to 1 victory Wabash sevens +0 0 7 7-14 8 ° porarily stopped OSU's attack score. before 8328 fans. OX sevunveree «0 7T 7 0—14 Canada) 0. ‘when he intercepted one of Jane, Samuels was unerring In his terest — 3 wicz’' tosses in s end zone, but two conversions, and Gordon It could have been worse as Oberlin .........14 14 6 0—34 the visitors took advantage of Watson missed one of his three Indianapolis erred frequently and DePauw .. .... 0 6 7 0-13 Arnold Bowman's fumble near fri hich looked li the Flyers missed cashing in oni stan —...2 0 oo J rno > ries which looked like a possible the opportunities. Augu ie —48 J imid-field and scored six plays one-point margin if Purdue should SD ls frst AIT) apa ceeeen20 14 T T= later, Gandee going over for the connect with another of its long decision this season, having enyoR ..s:..000 0 013 013 touchiowa. 1 's back, and Passes plaved a 4-4 tie earlier with Cleve. Hutingon veess 0 0 0 0—0 o Tehrs. 6. | That broke Indiana’s back, and| pyrdue had all the best of it! land. t. 308 .:v2000:. 7 0 0 0— 17 (Continued on \ Page 18-Col. “+y|71agistics-wise. but couldnt waten Play Here Thursday | tna. State 1ririi0 0 0 0— 0 e Miany fife when the Burr er i arte ima mre ope a nd. Coll. 7. canes smelled ar upset victory. For the Caps, they got some Ind. Central .... 0 6 12 13—381 ‘Canterbury Edges The Boilermakers outplayed Fig OR St 3 A 7 7 6-26 sh H 21 20 Miami in first downs, 13 to 11, ey have to do to perk up for Canterbury .... 14 0 1 0—21 Fox. 58, Coll. 0. anover, - - in rushing 163 yards to 115, and (the remaining 69 games. They gapover ....... 013 0_7—20 Rocwiaier 1" Ugion DANVILLE, Oct, 14 (UR)—a [2 JRSSING With 150 yards 19 a

are scheduled in Buffalo tonior-| ——

mere 75.

Heart's dreamboat for an unde- o.com 34 Olaf 21.

_—

7 |teatec season by coming from be-| Case 20. Ohio Wes. 1. . {Tennessee ...... 14 a 3 = 122-7 to Detroit y {hind in the final 46 seconds of Concordia RI Chattanooga ra 070 0 Siibtn Seidl 0 el Id y r play to hand the previously” un- Denison 4 ede » . \FIOFAB oreeesess 0 713 a DETROIT, Oct, 14—Park School beaten Spartans a stunning 7 to 6 Rrakg Sh. tows, STO IE {Auburn ....000.. 0 0 NE, aes 7/6f Indianapolis went down to its Gre hounds Win jietback ‘at the CYO ‘Field. last Tiinats Coll, 33, Eureka b {A. & T. College 55. Shaw U., 0. third defeat of the season today 4 night. Ol. Normal 23. Charleston 1 Tehers. 21. ibany State 0. Paine 0. . oo as Detroit University School The Hard Way A hyper-tensioned crowd of Jamestown Coll kau ahpeton 6, Alors ASM 2, Miss. Indege ‘ 2.7 deci John Carroll a oungstown 0. Aogalachian i cningter 7. picked up a 22-7 decision. Indiana Central's gridiron 2500 shrieking fans saw the Kalamazoo 23, Hillsdale 27, t Kent State 57, Marietta 0. Bethune-Cookman 13, Benedict 13. Park, which has one tie ‘0 its Greyhounds tried hard to please courageous Tigers strike it rich | Wentucky State 24. Lincoln 6. Blefield State 13, Winston-Salem 13. credit, .was' held scoreless until on a 30-yard desperation pass iawrence 34 Grinnell 6. bilfsrd is: Toneajons 12, ht. fourth . The score ® 1ady—Homecoming Queen Joan from Pervis Henderson to glue- | MeC cCalester n, Vy of J. ui eo. |E Ken j a 7. L 2OU fquarier. Dennis of Indianapolis — their 35. | Eliza Cit i CR {came on a pass from Steve Coi-|,, High School Day and fingered Ed Stewart on the goal | Michi ay Tech 40, Wen higan_ 0 Earelion hide dw ters 0. Brown *% | wer" to John DeVoe and covered lumni, g a line in a last-minute attempt to Yen his Stas 54, Wash 1. (8 Low) 0 Florida A. 2 aM Howard Colleee's Riser Dad's Day followers at Delavan orningside oo. sta 65 yards overall. Jack i turn defeat into victory. Morris arvey ant Tile 1 | Ft. Valley State 34, Lane College 6. Smith Field yesterday afternoon. i Dio on ldwin Wallace 7. Franklin-Marshall 25, W. Maryland 0. tucked over for the PAT. Attucks had been set back on| RS Avis fince 17. | Glenville 81. 14, Davis. Elkins ¢. iT big tom were Jack| And some 4000 Central Homeits own 13-yard line after taking | Nek Wesleran' 2 id Ft 12. aston. #1. Louisville 1. Renct “NEAT OPPONENTS chler, Bol, Gearhart and Jim — a punt deep In its tertory with Naik BUel of Bol Bulte vo Reinihte $F Heb fons, (Check Renchler picked up two 8 RNASE AL Pits less than three minutes remain-| |Rerihern STC. i. Yankion 5. en are 48, Hampioa Init. 12. | ck. R p p $ |Qakiand 13, Findiay a a eralina A & T 35 Shaw 0. - (touchdowns himself on an rere ing. 3 Doane 8. Northwestern STC 12. La. College 10. | 40- coming backers were sent home 1 Oatches P Bera. Bi adron 0 ner Smith &2. Rust |yard off-tackle sprint and a o> Oldham Catches ass | Principia . Remoer Nashburs 6. Foiomas State 53, Montgomery Sol > {vard run with an intercepted pass. happy after Coach Walt BartAttucks’ durable end, William | Procopiys 16, x Ea delnh-i fscon Ed Cathalie " Renchler passed to Gearhart for] tkiewicz’ Greyhounds outran ManOldham snared a 24-yard pass to pa Foun A Fails 1 Shepard 14, Batem o he third Detroit touchdown and chester, 31 to 26, in a free-scoring the Attucks 47 but a 15-yard hot State 40, N. 1 akota Slate 0. lima 47. Okiona 0, threw to Osbeck for two PAT’s. conference game, personal foul penalty set Attucks) {Fs a ui, aryl i ea ie Cpraon- Newman v, o. Park was victim of a safety| Central did it the hard way. If back to the 32. Plucky little Har on’ 38. Fimburst 1 wrelaln 20, Wath. A on 4 in :the third period when -Back had to overcome a 6 to 0 lead old Harvey, Tiger quarterback, Wichita, SS 3 fealsina Tech 21. Western 23, Morehead 2. v {Bill Colley fell on a bad center manifested by a hard-charging made another first down in the y Wilsen Teachers 1 18, ‘Galiaudet — | pass in his own end zone. iManchester line in the first period

flat with a 22-yard stab of anoth- EAST

Detroit .......18 0 9. 0-22 and a 13 to 6 halftime deficit.

Ty »- ’

er Henderson pitch, then Hender-| guerre d™ 70790 20 0—27| SOUTHWEST Park 1.:aeaeee 00 0 T= 7 | “me ultimate winners poufed son, "after misfiring on another Penn. State ....0 0 0 7— 7 Southern Meth. .. 0 14 21 21—36 . lovers ely heave. fallea ta fd 3 receive) 014 7 or Okla. A. & M.... 0 0 0 0 0Georgia Tech Wins \barrage that battered the stubhjand circled left to the pnp ah gai 14-1 TEXAS .:+.5:20.. 0 7 0 6-13] BATON ROUGE, La. Oct. 14 bornly-resisting Spartans despite Be for. Be creas hh Oklahoma ...... 7 0 0 7—14|(UP)—John Weigle gathered in'a two-touchdown counter-attack Then Heiderson, Who conmrcted Na: BOR, ~vsers 014 0 OT: CU. o.oo. 81370 019] two touchdown, passes tonight, by the Black and Gold. ~~ * on cany TouF of 11 aerials but VY seescepunes Texas Tech ..... 0 0 6 0 gjone of thefn sitting down, in the|' yanchester's Jim Minor pas intercepted by alert| pe 8%E Coc) T14 O FOIOS or cmeseen: TAD | Lomi the visitors while Bill Crowe, ® seen s »; y fo for Spartan defenders, heaved down Yale or eT Ten Villanova .eesses. 0 0 0 Tou 7 State, 13-0, before 42,000 scampered 38-yards a (Continued on Page 17 —Col. ® Columbia ....... 0 7 0 1—14/ (Continucd on Page 11—Col. 7) ltators, a i {Continued on Page P-

; hay ee RE oa ad

? . 2 y od on