Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 September 1951 — Page 13
8
. 30, 1951
os aks, ener
UDENTHAL ports Writer
, Ind., Sept, and rugged d the breaks ige today to son opener, 14 ) fans in Ross-
ghorns, ranked ie nation after ar Bowl chamreek ago, played Ly. . th expert prein the first two tremendous de-
NENTS ne. it Texan, ited Purdue at. n behind in the
ms, who recov- » fumbles, and nningham, who fumble and inDale Samuels’ he Texans’ de-
» the mainstay an aggressive red both of the also converted . second-string 'back Don Barbrunt eof the ference chamDawson. two desperate ie’ final period. ogged down on as Texas threw goal-line stand. second attempt es later when
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Smile On SMU
1202 Kentucky Ave.
SUNDAY, SEPT. 30, 1051
‘OSU
Lady Luck Fails to
By United Press
COLUMBUS, O., Sept. 29
Ohio State took to the air to| | beat Southern Methodist’s| §
Mustangs at their own passing game, 7-0, today and gave
Woody Hayes a triumphal debut §
NEXT OPPONENTS rite TR re as head coach of the Buckeyes before a record - season-opening crowd of 80,735 fans, :
Quarterback Tony Curcillo hit!
End Bob Joslin with a 21-yard pass in the end zone midway in the second period for the line touchdown. Ohio Sate's brilliant defense saved the day from there, It was a touchdown-and-go ball game all the way and the crowd got a collective crick in its back as Southern Methodist's Quarterback Fred Benners put on an aerial display in the fourth period that kept the fans on their feet, » . ” BUT LADY Luck wouldn't smile at the Mustangs as it did last year when Benners, a lithe 195-pound passing genius, passed to a 32-27 last half victory in the first meeting between the two schools.
Time and again Ohio's mankilling defense intercepted or smashed Benners’ intended receivers so hard they fumbled. In the final period, the 21-year old senior from Dallas hit eight con-
AERIAL ARTISTRY—Indiana Central's Dave Shaw heaved an aerial against the Franklin
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
1-Yard Pass
Diagram Photo By Tim Timmerman and J. Hugh O'Donnell, Grizzlies at Delavan Smith Field yesterday.
Big Bass Are Good to Fry By ROD REEL | Mrs. Phillips said she cut it up| The booklet is worth gettin Who said you can’t fry a big into servng size séctions, dredged Your hands ‘on for Don ‘ 4 bass? : them in flour and “just fried it.” [piece on fly casting alone. If you | Some folks have and let me tell | That's just about all there is can’t score at your favorite sport- | you they're dead wrong. jto it, believe me. ‘ling goods counter for the bo oh Don't take my word for it-—lis-| 2 & =» : [try writing the company at Sot ten to the advice of a fisherman's BUT IF old Rod can give you Bend. . uy t [a wife. |a hint, sprinkle the flour with| Don't let the cold keep you in— ‘Mrs. Jim Phillips, of 1009 High pepper and rub salt on the sec-|the fish don’t feeljt. ° . St, was telling me about it yes-/tions before dredging. I also sug-| 86 Trips’
terday while Jim was off to Pat-|gest using pure lard for the cook- School No. No. 66 By 12-0 Count
ton Lake again. He wanted to go jing. : fo Yelow Wand this week, but a From then on just cook 'em like end talked him out of it, any pan fish long and slow, Scheo } #2 a ; .| Now somebody come along land | School No. 86 downed 5 , MRS. PHILLIPS told me how tell me you can't bake a big bass| NO: 66 in the first eity public she fixed a big bass Jim had and we'll see what happens, {school grade school football comIpetition in history yesterday at
taken at Patton Lake last week. | f 9 8 > “I think they're really good,” | RAN INTO a whale of a good Shortridge field. i [she sald. “Pd heard that talk|article on the principles of fly! Bill Spivey scored two touchabout not being able to fry the casting recently. It's written by downs for the winners. He tallied big ones so I thought I'd try.” Don Allen and appears in a pub-|on a 3-yard plunge through center Jim landed the big 5 pound | lication of the South Bend Bait|and ranback a punt return 85 beauty with a Brafford Red and |Co. The booklet is called “Fish yards. Jack Holmes is coach of White bait. It was 23 inches long. ing — What Tackle and When.” the winners and Bill Clark But back tp the cooking: IReally a handy guide. icoaches the losers, : Rey
naam
Jo em— fF all oh
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V / i] y ER Bin ———— .
~—(_The “BUY WAY” of Indianapolis ) — >
——
pa = > a CN AR DT CHEER
—
Continued from Page 11
Scranton 36, Moravian 0. ’ Springfield 28, Cortiand 12. Temple 20, Brown 14. Thiel 46, Hiram 0.
secutive passes in nine. That put Trenton State 20, Kings College 7.
the Mustangs on the Ohio 15 before Henry Stollenwerck fumbled and Ohio's alert Sonny Gan-
Wesleyan 28, Middlebury 6. ! Western Maryland 18, Gettysburg
Florida State University 40, Troy State College 0. Lejeune Marines 7, Xavier (0.) 7 (tie). ; Louisiana College 13, Alabama Tchers. 0.
Maryland State College 7, Central State College Wilberforce 6.
Morehouse 19, Dillard 0.
Junior College 13. !
Lafiisy, Suar , er ackios — Olamm, Desn, 'Gadwalie-
der. 2 Cen 'y Sick nels ey mong, Be Miller it Bnd — White, MNooks, Knight,
Right Mahsw Crisler.
A oS warer: "Fis Ryrpste nx Busgel oie Western Kentucky Sinks Evansville College, 41-7
Times Special *
6 71-20 0 0— 0
Virginia Geo. Washington. 0
MI Sess sansrens 1 Richmond ....... 0 0 0— 0
Alcorn A&M 19, Southern 13. | Bethune-Cookman 38, Allen 6. | Carolina Col. 7, Norfolk NAS 6. Fairmount State Teachers 37, Concord 7. Fayetteville Teachers 6, Edward Waters 2. Florida A & M 54, Benedict 0. |
oh ow
BOWLING GREEN, Ky. Sept. 29«— Western Kentucky had too much speed and power for Evans-
et: Ep Shgtiansogs (¢ :
ville College, winning 41 to 7, here
Valpo Scores Easy 46-7
Win Over Indiana State
VALPARAISO, Ind, Sept. 29 (UP)—Valparaiso scored an easy, 46 to 7 football victory over Indi-|
tonight. | The hosts were led by Don Wat-
gon, who scored two TDs on 14 and 11-yard touchdown runs. Evansville, which lost its first game fn three starts, scored in the sec-
NEXT OPPONENTS 6-—Indiana_ State (open). t. 6—Valparaiso at 56 Joe, |
ana State tonight in a game marked by a 91-yard run.
ond period on a five-yard plunge), .... po grabbed the kickoff from!
hy Lemois Wires, capping a 48yard drive in the second quarter, ‘ Fvansville went to the six and four-yard lines in the first and fourth periods, respectively. The hosts won the first downs, 21 to 7; and outrushed the losers, 278 yards to 126. Evansville made 17 yards passing, Western, 158.
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State at the start of the second]
He shared scoring honors with
yards. Henry Meir and Norm Arnold accounted for the other two] scores and Arnold converted four, times. State got its lone store in the|
| third quarter on @ 12-yard run by|
Tom Henik with Pete Kokinda converting. .
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half. Pahr also scored two other! . touchdowns for the winning Cru-| Colorado A&M 41, Colorado Mines!
saders. | o
Rush Rowedder, who made two Oregon tesnnsnss touchdowns on runs of 27 and 10|Arizona
|Stanfora aessanne
dee became the hero of the day| 6. : Morgan State 45, Delaware State by recovering, Ohio ran the clock! westminster 38, Juanita 18. \ out from there, West ia State oward 1. Morris-Harvey 34, West Liberty It was the second defeat for Went ¥ wor Tet ji Stippery| State Teachers 0. Coach H. N. Russells Mustangs, Rock o. Pensacola NAS 18, Millsaps 7. Tech, pian ll Worcester Tech 46, Mass. Mari- St. Vincent 31, Davis-Elkins 6. Bow» time 6. Sewanee 20, Hampden-Sydney 7. OHIO CAPTAIN Bob Heid, SOUTH Shepherd, 21, Montgomery JC 6. Tack Jets Logan, and Joe J. C. Smith 19, St. Paul 0. Cam smashed Florida ........ 0 0 0 0— 0!Stetson 42, Jacksonville NAS 0. Southern Methodist's rugged line ee i ’ again and again to upset thelGeorsia Tech .. 7 0 1 3—27 Tuskgee 7, Fisk 0. Mustangs when it seemed they'w Carolina ..... 0 2 0 14—16 VPI 20, Davidson 20 (tie). _ would certainly score, Little Fred Georgia .......o. 0 0 7 21—28 W. Virginia State 33, Howard 7. Bruney, defensive ack, Winston-Salem Tehers, 19, Kensaved the day twice with Aare TROHIORRES +++ +++ M : 3 S14 tucky State 14. 2 ceptions in the early stages. Miss. wads ; Virginia Stats 39, 21. Ohio State won the statistical po ol rreeee 0 OT 1-1 Bluefield battle, collecting 18 first downSiny, yy (Win) ... 7 0 0 0—7 SOUTHWEST to 14 for SMU, "All-American Vie Janowiex, Miss. U, ....... 3 3 ] M31 Del Mar 58, Texas Lutheran 6. playing both offense and defense, Kentucky Sassen Oklahoma ......21.21 7 0—49 also proved a thorn in SMU's side cory "er ele 0 70 94 131 Wm & Mary .... 0 T 0 0— 7 with long runs, effective passes. "o.. ‘sei ... 0 0 6 0—6 and savage tackles. The Hneups: _ Nebraska ...... 7 0 0 0— 17 Armstrong, Gen-| Auburn vesnnten 3 7 0 10-24. TCU cass snenans 021 0 7-28 ao Vanderbilt ..ccc. 0 7 0 T—14 Lett Missouri ......... 0 020 oh . AlaDEmA c.cses 0 0 1 0— Okina. ASM ...... 013 6 = Ronan, Ly gy iccciiees 0 6 7 0-18 {Arkansas ...... 0 6 17 7-30 Carolina.. 14 6 0 5-26 Ariz. State....... 7 6 0 Oltadel ....c... 0 0 7 0-7 {Arkansas State 18, Wiley College Southern State 85, Little Rock! 13.
Clemson 20, Rice 14. East Texas State College 27, Louisiana Polly 7. Hardin-Simmons 20, Trinity 6.
7 14—84 Midwestern 34, Austin 12. INorth Texas State 62, Sul-Ross 8.
Prairie View 7, Bishop 0. Texas A&M 20, Texas Tech 7. Texas Coll. 24, Sam L. Huston 0.
Texas Southern 40, Butler Coll. 8. (UP)—Tennessee lived up to its another TD and later in the State 28, McMurray national top billing today by scor-|quarter Halfback Frank Pirman|
West Texas 20.
WEST
Wyoming ..eeess 0 0-14 620 Denver ......... 0 7 0 7-14
rado 6.
Texas Western 41, New Mexico qowns, the Volunteers whipped luncheon season tomorrow With,
A&M 1.
South Dakota State 58, Augustana
College 7. FAR WEST 013 7 21-41
USC “pn
Joe Pahr galloped the 91 yards San Diego Navy . 0 0 0 7—
USC (B) scicvees Camp Pendith ..
010, 0 7-17 020 7 0-27
Minnesota Loses
| |
The Greyhounds won, & to 0, for their second straight Hoosier College Conference victory.
FOOTBALL SCORES
5-0 in last Minutes of Game
By United Press MINNEAPOLIS, Minn, Sept.
'29—Washington's mighty football (team rallied in the last three minutes to beat Minnesota 25 to 20
XT OPPONENTS get: ¢-Minpes ot ChB.
Sugar Bowl
{gar Bowl champions today as a last-minute desperation pass by
HIRI HRNRRHuN
Champs Upset
OXFORD, Miss., Sept. 20 (UP) Mississippi scored a shocking 21 to 17 upset of Kentucky's Bu-
Babe Parilli slipped from Jim Profritt’s grasp in the end zone. A crowd of 20,000 rebel-mad fans watched raw freshman Halfback Lea Paslay put a scoring punch into the Mississippi eleven that was a Southeastern Conference misfit a year ago. But Parilli, equalling any of his top passing performances, com-
As Nationally Advertised
in an intersectional thriller today after blowing an early 18-point
lead.
The Washington machine, rated
pleted eight out of 10 throws for 70 yards fn a last grand drive that failed only when Proffitt, his usually sure-fingered end, dropped what would have been
In The Indianapolis Sunday Times, today
ninth in the nation, glanked and sputtered for most of the game
{after rolling to three touchdowns
by the middie of the second period.
Minnesota, fired up to make Coach Wes. Fesler's coaching de‘but a success, refused to quit and |grabbed the lead 20 to 18 late in
ithe game. | Washington marched 49 yards ‘in the last three minutes to win. { Fullback Mel Holme, who only {minutes before had put Minnesota {ahead by plunging for a touch{down, fumbled, and Dick Sand-
727 berg recovered for Washington broke loose with two last-quarter = y—sg/on the Minnesota 49 with only touchdowns here today to de- =
‘three minutes left. Sophomore {Dean Rockey passed to Bill Ear-
0—13/ley on the Minnesota 33. A pen-|
|alty moved the ball to the 20.| {Then Rockey passed to Fullback {Hugh McElhenny, who raced into! ithe end zone with the winning! touchdown. a ———————————————— |
Tennessee Lives Up to Billing
' KNOXVILLE, Tenn., Sept. 29!
{
ing quick touchdowns against Mississippi State on a blocked kick and a fumble and ‘turned the irest of the job over to its defensive platoon for a 14 to © victory before 35,000 fans.
i . ; | Colorado State 39, Western Colo-. Using Coach Bob Neyland’s Show Films of ND Game
familiar strategy of converting! the enemy's mistakes into touch-
across their scores almost before the crowd had settled back from the kickoff. yell.
Mississippi State, reeling con-| |stantly from Hank Lauricella’s| {booming punts, was never able to] penetrate past the Volunteers’ 40-| {yard line. Na f I
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the victory pass. With 30 seconds left to play, Mississippi took over on its 7-yard ‘line and put on a deep freeze for two plays to save its four-point {margin. It was the second defeat {in a row for the blue grass Wild\cats, who hadn't lost two straight
{since 1948.
‘St. Norberts Defeats St. Joseph, 19-7
| ’ Times Special WEST DEPERE, Wis, Sept. 29 | St. Norbert's defending Mid-| ilands Conference champions
TITHE RTH
Hin
i RTT a! . Ott: S_Great Lakes at St. Norbert.
feat St. Joseph of Indiana, 19 =
{
Fullback John Ritchay plunged = over from the 5 for St. Norbert's = first-quarter touchdown. St. Joe |S took a 7-6 lead In the second |= quarter on a 95-yard pass play,
to
{from Quarterback Tom Paonessa. {to Halfback Don Schubert, who also kicked the extra point.
‘RIFLES and HUNTING SUPPLIES
‘Browning Automatic Shotguns, (2 & 16 Gauge $112.85 Browning 12-Ga. Bear Rib Barrel Remington (1-48 Automatic Shotguns ...... Barrel Shotguns, All Gauges____$21.95 Iver Johnson Single Barrel Shotguns, All Gauges $21.95 | Stevens 311 Double Barrel Shotguns, All Gauges $59.95 ode! 8TOAP Pump Guns___$79.95
1 Winchester Model 42 Pump Gun, 410 Gauge _$84.45 Stevens Model 820 Pump Guns, 12 Gauge _____ $59.95
20-Gauge Bolt Action Repeating Shotguns_____.$26.95 Bolt Action Repeating Shotguns__.__$21.95 Stevens (2-Ga. Bolt Action Repeating Shotgun $34.95 Mossberg 16-Ga. Bolt Action Répeating Shotgun $29.95 | Stevens Single Shot 22 Riffe___________.____ Mossberg 151 M-DeLuxe 22 Automatic Rifle “55” $32.95 Mossberg 161K-Standard 22 Automatic Rifle___$29.95 Stevens 87 Automatic 22 Rifle 300."
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In the final quarter, Ritchlay pounced on a St. Joe fumble for
went over from the 1-yard line, after St. Norbert had intercepted a pass on the Pumas’ 33.
IU Alumni Luncheon fo
The Indianapolis Alumni Club of Indiana will open its 1851
pictures of ‘the Notre Dame-IU football game. . Coach Clyde Smith of Indiana will' be on hand’ to show the = films. The luncheons will be held |= every Monday at Indianapolis|= Athletic Club and films of the = preceding game will be shown,
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