Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1951 — Page 11

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Section Two

Sports Y=

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~The Indianapolis

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Times

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SUNDAY, OCTOBER

7, 1951

PAGE 11

~ Editorials, Page 20 Features, Page 21

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FOOTBALL SCORES

STATE

Wabash +1ve:e<:13 013 0-26 Butler ....e0e:040 6 7 0 1826

Rose Poly eves 00. 0 0 6— 6 Manchester ..... 01s 7 1-27) Valparaise ..... 0 0 7 25-32 St. Joe ..iinees 0 830 0—3 Marietta «rs. L019 7 6-32 Anderson ....... 0 0 0 13-13! INEIRNE «ce vcxss 0 6 1 0—18 Pittsburgh ...... 0 6 0 0— 6 Purdue ..:1.oe + 0 20 0 14—34| JoWs ..ceespeees 713 8 7—30| i BIG TEN 2 nunols .........7 0 7 0M Wisconsin ...... 010 0 0—10 Ohlo State y.... 8 7 0 7—20 Mich. State .... 3 7 0 14-24 Michigan «...... 8 0 7 0—I8 Stanford ....... 20.0 0 3-23 Northwestern ... 7 0 0 13—20| Army .......... 0 014 0—14 MIDWEST

>

Kansas State ... 0 0 8 0— 8

Wilberforce ..... 7 14 14 21—56 five-run rally in the fifth frame. Stanky, who had walked to start the inning, sent the

© 0 0 3 3

Earlham senesns Indiana Central . 0 0 0 0— 0 DEPAUW +rvvvees 0 7 * 7-1 Ball State ...... 0 .0 0.7— 7]

» p

Giants

BOOTING

‘EM HOME—Eddie Stan

Taylor ......... 6 7 8 0—19 ball flying (in circle) and made third on the play.

Baldwin-Wallace 20, Akron 186. Beloit 85, Lake Forest 0. : Case 38, Wash. & Jeff. 7. University of Cincinnati 34, University of Hawali 0. Drake 39, Iowa State Tchrs. 6. Jowa Wesleyan 6, Simpson 2. Ill. Wesleyan 13, Ill. Normal 6. Kent State 42, W. Reserve 20. Kearney 20, Nebraska 19. 5 Lincoln (Mo.) 19, Langston 0. Marquette 8, Jowa State 8 (tie). Marshall 35, Western Kentucky State 21. . Missouri Military 20, Kemper 0, Moorhead 14, Winona 0. McPherson 20, Baker 6. Ohio TU. 18, W. Michigan 0. Rolla Mines 12, Warrensburg 86. St. Ambrose 21, DuBuque 0. University of South Dakota 34, Augustana 7. Toledo 26, John Carroll 12. Xavier, 0. 32, Miami, O. 14. Wash. (St, L.) 33, Central Col. 0.

frain-soaked

ky. in typical Gas House Gang s

le, kicked

7NeDrASkS Soo 806 0-8 "j4 ball out of Phil Rizzuta's glove when he slid info second base during fhe Giants’ ~~ #he New York Giants’ Al Dark sid sately during the Giants™ fiveran uprising inthe po tit: - InQ1aBaPONs - THAR, FD 10305 ERP); o-oo mm et

HOUR—The Yanks’ Yogi Berra dropped the ball at home plate as

third World Series game af the Polo Grounds yesterday. The Giants won, 6 fo Z, fo

gain a 2 to | lead in the Series.

Butler Surge Ties Wabash 26-26

Purdue to

Dale Samuels Passes IU Ground,

34-30 Win

By KURT FREUDENTHAL

United Press

LAFAYETTE, Ind. Oct

Sports Writer

. 6—Dead-eye Dale Samuels

unlimbered two mighty touchdown strikes in the fourth

period today to give Purdue's Boilermakers a thrilling 34- 6—Indiana’s Hoosiers, feared what happened here today. The score was 26-26. to-30 Big Ten football victory over Iowa before some 25,000 35 a passing team because of

fans in Ross-Ade stadium. It was as thrilling a football

clash as ever was run off in this

EAST {big oval. For Purdue, though fav-

‘ored to win, never led until’ Sam-

Yals ..... ssesse 0 TT 0 Gl}... Brown ...cceveeee 7 0 7 0—14i0et. Por a a Fos. | (Nah) ————————————————— —————— | Oet. 13—Pittsburgh at Jowa. Rolunbly Sorte : Ji ’ Sou38 yeis deady passes connected for a, Me Atheir Ath touchdown with just Holy Cross .....14 14 13 13—54 a minute to go. Fordham ....... 013 0 7-20 es & Ss east SAMUELS’ two touchdown Villanova ...... 8 0 14 0-20 54505 overshadowed the dazzling Penn State ..... 0 7 0 7—M gigplay of galloping George Rice, Wn 12 & = 14__=a an unheralded sophomore halfDm eapeeeeeec 12 @ 7 142 back and bulldozing Bob Reich- ——— to lardt, who carried the brunt of Cornell +..¢.....13 21 7 0—41 the Iowa attack. Colgate ........ 0 6 0 12—18 Purdue trailed 30 to 20 with

Bowdoin 27, Wesleyan 9. ! Brockport 19, Ithaca 0. Bucknell 47, Lehigh 7. Carnegie Tech 47, Bethany 20. Cheyney 3, Delaware State 0. Coast Guard 27, Trinity 19. Colby 13, Upsala 7. Delaware 47, Westchester 20 E. Stroudsburg 21, Mansfield 13. Franklin & Marshall 27, Dickinson 6. Geneva 19, Grove City 0. Gettysburg 21, Drexel 0. Indiana (Pa.) 18, Col. Sthte (Pa.) 8 Juniata 13, Swarthmore 7. Lebanon Valley 12, Muhlenberg 6. Maine 42, Vermont 0. Middlebury 42, Hamilton 12. Morgan State 7, Lincoln (Pa.) 2. Northeastern 39, Tufts 7. Pfnceton 24, Navy 20. Rochester 21, Amherst 6. Rhode Island 21, New Hampshire 0. St, Lawrence 20, Hobart 7. St. Michael's 14, Norwich 0. St. Vincent's 14; Clarion State 2. Scranton 14, Penn Military 0. Shippensburg 59, Shepherd St. 0. Slippery Rock 13, Edinboro 6. Springfield 34, ‘Bates 12. Susquehana 47, Johns Hopkins 32. Syracuse 46, Lafayette 0. - Temple 14, Rutgers 7. Trenton 19, New Britain 7. Ursinus 20, Haverford 7, Union 21, RPI 14. Wagner 19, Arnold 7. Wilkes 64, Bridgeport 7. Williams 7, Conn. 6. Worcester Tech 14, Mass. 13,

SOUTH Kentucky ....... 700 017 Georgia Tech.... 0 0 6 7—13 Vanderbilt ...... 0 12 10 0—22 Alabama ....... 7.6 0 7-20 Wm & Mary .... 0 " 7: 0— | VMI

casas “we 0 7 18-20]

LSU ..rviveisniv O° 0 9% o—1|

RISO <oorvenneres 9.0 0 GB

Tennessee +...... 7 6 7 6—26 DUKE ccieersense 0 0° 0 Oe TIMING veeereiersT 7 0 Ould Baylor ..eessiace WT 7 6—27| Miss. State ...... 8 0 0 O— 6 Georgia ......... 0 0 0 0— 0]

Benedict 27, Lane College 0.

Bluefield State 36, Winston Salem! |

12. Catawba 37, Western Carolina 7. Citadel 34, Davidson 14. | “Clemson 6, North Carolina St. 94 Cortland 183, American International 8. | Emory Henry 338, Hampden-Syd- | ney 7. Fairmount 19, Davis-Elkins 0, Fisk 88, Knoxville 2. Livingstone 0, Paine 0 (tie).

Continued on Page 12—Col. 5 | Pro Football Pl Eagles 21, Sa Francisco dors 14.

less than five minutes to go. But no one headed for the exits when Samue!s’ aerial circus toek over.

He fired a long pass to Sophomore Tom Redinger in the end zone. But the play was called back because of unnecessary roughness. On the next play, he shot a bullet pass to Halfback Phil Klezek, who cut over to the left sidelines and raced 47 yards for the score. The inspired Boilermakers then went for the “big one.” They bottled up Iowa after the Kickoff, and when Charles Denning was forced to punt out on the Iowa 48, Samuels took charge again. 2 & x

ON.THE fourth play, he tossed a 38-yard pass into the hands of |Redinger for the ‘game-winning [tally, and the stellar .tailback added his fourth extra point. Samuels recoiled for 27 passes and completed 14 of them for 212 | yards. Rice showed tremendous speed, as he raced for the Hawk's first three touchdowns in the first half. The 20-year-old tow-headed kid| “from--Oelwein; Ia: tennis champion in 1949 and 1950, {took the opening kickoff in his lend zone and dashed down the |right sideline unmolested for pay{off territory.

—and Yankee

Diagram Photo, Page 12

AND BEFORE the half was ended, he added 69 yards and scored on a 55-vard pass play

from Quarterback Burt Britzmann. Sub-Quarterback Phil Mateja

set off the Purdue spark in the second period by taking Dening’s Kickoff and racing 92 yards to the Iowa end zone. Then Coach Stu Holcomb's boys got back into the game for good, scoring twice more before the half ended. Sub Fullback Jerry Thorpe climaxed a 90-yard drive by slamming across from 15 yards out, and after a pass interception on the Iowa 26, Samuels sneaked over from the one. . They were all even at 20-20 at the half, and then Reichardt came back to boof a 35-yard fieldgoal which for a time looked like Iowa's margin of victory. In fact, the visitors appeared safe when Duane Brandt intercepted a Samuels’ pass and made it to the Purdue 20 from where Britzmann passed to Fred Ruck for another tally. But then, smiling Dale Samuels took over and his payoff pitches made him look like a pro. Pirst downs Rushing yardage .... Passing yardage .. Passes attempted .. Passes Completed ,... Passes intercepted .... Punts ‘v ’ Punting average .

Fumbles Lost Yards penalized

In Tune NEW YORK, Oct. 6 (UP)—

It was a big football Saturday throughout the nation today

207 115 15 5 40.1 | 60

SRL

Stengel was mindful of the fact. : Commenting on Eddie Stanky’s scissor-kick of the ball

his state's out -of-Phil-Rirzuto's hand in

the frantic, five-run fifth ning, Stengel shrugged said: “That little guy field goal on us.”

inand

Kicked a

© BULLDOG WITH TEETH—Butler's Don Kelly first down in the first quarter of the annual Butler

ing to stop the rampant Bulldog

RON

or

is Wabash's Joe Dooley (33).

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5

Air AHack Sinks Pitt

By LEE LINDBERG

United Press Sports Writer

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Oct. e

the aerial artistry of left-p hand Quarterback Lou D'Achille, & added a flashy running game to o

behind and sink Pittsburgh's — Panthers, 13 to 6. A rugged bunch of blockers on °C

: . |The churning legs of Halfbacks 1 ittle their tricks today to come fromip Kelly and Johnny Riddle and

Oet.

1

Bulldogs’ Rally Gain Share of Iron Key

By FRANK ANDERSON

Times Sports Writer

6-2, Lead Series 2l Jaunty Jim Hearn

® Puts Destiny Kids On Top of the Heap

By CARL LUNDQUIST

United Press §

porta Writer 9

NEW YORK, Oct. 6—Jaunty Jim Hearn, a Georgia

peach of a pitcher, put destiny’s kids back in front in the World Series today when he hurled the New York Giants

to a 6 to 2 victory over the crestfallen New York Yankees.

A joyous coatless crowd to see a World Series game cheered on their indomitable easy by ‘both the physical an too nifty Yankees.

of 52,035, largest crowd ever in a National League park, darlings in a victory made d. mental miscues of the not

Sharing the exalted heights with Hearn as the Giants made it two victories out of three in the classic was another Dixie boy, Whitey Lockman.of Charlotte, N. C., who shot a three-run line drive home run into the lower right field stands in a weird five-run fifth-inning rally.

HEARN, employing the strong-armed craftmanship as in the big playoff victory against Brooklyn last -Monday, suffered only from lack of control and he finally needed relief help from Sheldon Jones when the Yankees

scored their first run in the eighth inning. Game time today is 1:05

TV and radio programs will start at 12:45. Hearn walked eight batters and hit another which put him in more

And when he forced home the tally in the- eighth, Leo Durocher's frazzied nerves could take fit na longer. Jones came in and retired the side. Even so the Atlanta dandy

have come through un-

meight seathed. For with all of his wildmess, no runner got to second be-

Stan Musial Reports On The World Series, Page 14.

fore the sixth and none to third until the eighth. He gave up only four hits, two in the first inning,

same ——

How They Stand.

(Best-In-Seven) N. Y. Giants .... 2 1 N. Y. Yankees ... 1 2 YESTERDAY'S RESULT Giants 6, Yankees 2. TODAY'S SCHEDULE N.Y. Yankees at N.Y. Giants

667 333

i {Rizzuto flied out and McDougald fouled out to end the game. Some silly base running Kept

{trouble than Little Orphan Annie. the Yankees from doing business

/in the third inning. Hank Bauer? was safe at first on an error by {Lockman. Raschi, attempting to sacrifice, bunted badly and Hearn whipped the ball to Dark at second forcing Bauer. Dark’s throw flew past Lockman for what would have been"an error. But Raschi, running head down to first, went clear past the skin of the infield before he realized the throw had gone past Lockman. Raschi made. a big but-jton-hook turn and Ilumbered {toward second, but Lockman had

CRAWFORDSVILLE, Oct. 6—Butler's football spirit is another in the second, and the plenty of time to retrieve the ball

nough to make Wabash fit to be tied. And that's exactly

It took two fourth-quarter touchdowns for Butler to ull even with the Little Glants #2 9 nd deny Wabash sole possession WABASH RECOILED and f the Iron Key for this season. struck back immediately. The

play on their own 35. Three plays NEXT OPPONENTS 13—Ball State at Butler.

Oct. 13—K { Wabash. ] ny Jerry Huntsman, who lofted a out, they got this big tally with dirt.

the forward wall opened wide the elastic arm of Quarterback touchdown pass to End Ken Beasholes in the Pitt line to spring Ron Hallam supplied the two Dig jey on the 10. Vaino Grayam's

o_o 8 NEXT OPPONENTS | Oct. 13—Indiana at Michigan. Oct. 13—Pittsburch at Iowa.

with a 1-yard stab as the final

cores for the Bulldogs. kick gave the Little Giants a Kelly capped an 80-yard drive 7-8 lead.

final one in the troublesome eighth. = = td THE GIANTS were in com‘mand in this one for the entire distance, before the big wrap-up rally in. the fifth, when all runs were unearned. They their

second. Reversing

nobody retired. Bobby Thomson rifled : double down the left fie..

and fire it to Dark, who wound up with a putout on his own miscue. It was perhaps the weirdest double ‘play in series annals. | = = » | RASCHI, even so, might have ‘made the bag with a slide but

by hitting the

That was the tempo for the

* ;und Yankees, who seldom look as bad line as they did today, even when los-

and Rookie Willie Mays delivered ing and particularly when they are

the hard-running Hoosier backs period opened. Ten minutes later in the period was a big disap-|to_score Bobby.

loose for repeated gains to hand Hallam hit Riddle on the Wabash pointment to Butler's Joe Gris-|

Pitt its second defeat of the sea- I: tie.

5 and Butler had enough for a som. Grissom scooped a HuntsThe pass play covered 55 man heave out of the air on the

he won 21 games, did manage to

The second Wabash touchdown his first World Series hit, a single shooting for the World Series

greenbacks. But those five big un-

Vic Raschi, not nearly as sharp earned runs made the Giants the las in the pennant campaign when |better club at least for this golden

'autumn afternoon.

Manager Casey

iriod, with Gedman again. steal- hauled the Wabagh game Kkick-

Idrive bogged and Pitt stiffened, plays later, Kelly broke to the

Son. 2 2 =a vards. Fullback John Manka Butler 26 and turned it over to escape further difficulty until the NEW YORR YANKESS, v . K « kicked the point on Kelly's effort, 5 fifth by allowing no more hits R 0 AE FULLBACK Pu Gegman, : but was “3 on Riddle’s. Quariervack Frea Davee bu until that weird frame. Woodling, If .. 4 1 1 38 0.0 fast-stépping 187-pound junior, sr = = with it so He gave it to ean Eddie Stanky, who had been Rizzuto, ss .... 4 1 1 2 4 1 staged the scoring show of the SO, AFTER 60 minutes of foot- End Bob Holstine, who popped hitless in the series until today, McDougald, 2b 3 0 2 2 : : day by accounting for both In- p.i ‘action, vocal indignities by up as the wrong man on a Davis led off the fifth by getting a walk. DiMaggio, cf .. 4 0 : ’ diana touchdowns. both rooting sections and several lateral. Holstine scampered in Then the little pest broke for sec- Berra, © ..... ’ 3 : 0 : 10 : : s i nd behind the stands, with the lateral : ond. Although Yogi Berra's throw | Brown, 3b sees § Pitt struck early in the second fights in a ced. HK e lateral from the 15. "opi Rizzuto was in time for a Collins, 1b .... 3 0 0 6 0 0 Jerid to chimix 2 Syaiyune Shvearch meer FiGravanrs kirk Was wide. putout, Stanky rammed him so Bauer, rf eed 00 2-00 They advanced, with Left Half- this: Lr 7 5 =» 11. Stanky was | Raschi iesse 1-0 0 0 00 back Lou Cimarclli doing most: Twenty-two Haier wins, 14 fof BUTLER USED the second Dh caren 0 00 0 00 of the ground gaining, to the Wabash and five ties. quarter to tie at 13-13. The Bull- . x HOPY «124s» ++ 00 0.00 Indiana 17, from where Right In the Iron Key series Butler dogs put a Holstine punt in ac- ,THE YANKEES, who appeared Ostrowski, p .. 0 0 0 0 0 0 ‘Halfback Bill Reynolds cut leads 10-2-4. Since 1933 the Little tion on their own 47. The ball edgy all day, showed how badly Mize ...... 'i»1 0.0 0 0 0 around his own left end behind Giants and Bulldogs have used was out on the’ 32, bit Littleithey were upset when Gil- Mc-| =. = <= w= ein impressive blocking for the first the Key to open the doors of OP- Giant Ted Steeg was detected /Dougald and Joe DiMaggio ap-/ Totals ...... 30 2 524 8 3. touchdown of the game. Paul portunity. clipping on the play. peared to be fighting each other Hopp walked for Hogue in 7th. Blanda's kick from placement . 2 a Three Davis passes to Crumley to retrieve the ball that had Mize flied out for Ostrowski in was wide. WABASH'S BIG, bass drum and line bucks by Manka and bounded into short centerfield. 9th.

didn't beat any louder than the Johnny Riddle took the ball to the! Dependable Alvin Dark then | NEW YORK GIANTS

Gedman stepped into the pic- f { ture EE Phar in the en pulses of Butler players after Wabash 9. Kelly circled left sent Stanky home with a single 2 AB R- H 9 A r period. He took a handoff from the going got rough. Wabash held end to the 2. Wayne Walls stepped through the drawn-in iofleld. Stanky, 2b ..ue 2 1.1 32 D'Achille. started. wide. around & 26-13 lead at the end of three over tackle for the touchdown on Hank Thompson, the Be Dk : ! : : : 0 his own left end, picked up ef- quarters. That's when Butler got the next play. Manka's kick was right fielder; followed with his Thompson, rf . 3 1418 fective blocking "and raced 85 mad. You know what happened 800d. The half ended, 13-13. first series hit, a single that sent{Irvim, If ...... 3 8 5 vards tp score then. : Wabash must have eaten raw Dark to third. The ball went just Lockman, a . 4 ! ] 19 a TD Ae "i rine The fourth-quarter was ex- meat during the half because it past the outstretched glove of M DHISOm iL Uz Ta Achilic missed hie ex i point plosive, but it had precedent. The came snarling back on the second Second Baseman MSDougals, hi Wests lity 10021 and muffed an Indiana lead. blast had been building up from half kickoff. Steeg ran the ball] Monte Irvin, until today the Westrum, ¢ ... 4 ry "the opening KickofT: from the Wabash 4 $0 the Butler Prize hitting star of the Serge, Hoar, P coors 3 : 3 3 3 : THE HOOSIERS scored their| Butler scored the first time it 20- An offside shoved the Little Was fooled CEG esd iii nie = winning marker in the third pe-'got the ball. George England Giants to the 25 from where Half. topped a slow Totals ..:...3F 6 T2114. 2

ale : 11] back Joe Dooley zig-zagged right base. Bobby Brown fired the ball : end for the score. Grayam's kick to Yogi Berra—and it was In/New York (A).. 000 000 011—2 was no -good; . - \plenty-of-time-to-nail. Dark. with New. York. (N).....010. 050. 00x—8 {what would have been the third pg, patted In—Woodling,

out. But the jittery little catcher | yy. ve Dark, (Dark scored on

ing the honors. When an Indiana off to the Butler 48, Then, two

D'Achille faded back and looped Wabash 30. On first down Manka # ¥% = a pass to Gedman, who leaped ran wide to his left, lateraled RIDDLE RETURNED the en-| high into the air in front of the'to Kelly on the 25 and supplied SUN Kickoff to the Butler 33. dropped the ball and the rout WaS Berra’s error in 5th) Lockman 3. cov} : hg Then the ball started going the ON in full swing. | Collins. Two-Base Hit—Thomson. o a key block as Kelly took it all going x = = , av a ; : . Soiaht . Home Runs—Lockman, Woodling. . the way. Manka's kick was wide.. Continued on Page 15—Col. 1 LOCKMAN, the blond speed- Lett: on Bases « Yankees. WW: ster, followed with his home TUN | ~ionts 5. Bases on Balls Off— shot. It was a drilled line drive goo.py; 3 Hearn 8. Struck Ont . land wrapped up the gift victory.|ge paconi 3, Hearn 1, Ostrowski Raschi, normally the Yankee 1. Hits and Runs Off—Raschl 5

| {payoff pitcher who usually comes 46 in 41; innings; Hogue 1 and

Continued on Page 13 —Col.

iiaped off 20 yards around the right flank for a abash Iron Key battle at Crawfordsville. Try-

Wa

{through in the big ones, slowly {lumbered to the centerfield club{house as many a dejected Na-

© |tional League. hurler had done

before him this season. Bob Hogue, the ex-National Leaguer from the Boston Braves came in to put out the fire, but it was a devastating holocaust that left only embers of defeat by that time. The Yanks were unable to put their walks and hits together profitably until the eighth when Hearn started out by hitting Rizzuto with a pitch. McDougald singled for the fourth Yankee hit and the first since the second inning with Rizzuto holding up at second. The once great DiMaggio, only regular on either team without a series hit, failed for the 11th straight time by popping up. It looked as if Hearn might be out of the woods, when Berra, also a hitting bust, grounded out, the runners advancing to second and third.

» ss = BUT Bobby Brown walked to fill the bases. Then, when Joe

»Collins also walked to force home

Rizzuto, Durocher summoned Jones, who retired Hank Bauer

" CAVEMAN CAVORTER—Wabash's Ted Steeg took a pass ‘other run in the ninth. With one

from Jerry Huntsman but was ru out of bounds by Butler's George England on the 47-yard line. fa

on a weak roller. The Yankees obtained their

0 in 12}; Ostrowski 1 and 0 in 2; Hearn 4 and 1 in 73}; Jomes 1 and 1 in 115. Hit by Piteher — By Raschi (Stanky), By Hearn (Rizzuto). Double Plays—Stanky to Dark to Lockman; Hearn to Dark to Lockman to Dark; Rizzuto to |McDougald to Collins. Winning | Pitcher—Hearn, Losing Pitcher- | Raschi. Umpires—Paparella (A), Plate; Barlick (N), 1b; Summers | (A), 2b; Ballanfant (N); 3b; {Stevens (A), and Gore (N), Foul Lines. Time—2:42. Attendance— 52,035.

Park Gridmen Triumph, 25-0

Park School's improved gridders gave their parents a happy homecoming and Dad's Day welcome yesterday. Coach Seward Wilshire's eleven downed Ohio Military Institute, 25 to 0 for its first victory in two starts. Park scored in the first period when Jack Schwomeyer threw 35 yards to John DeVoe. In the second, John DeVoe put on a brother aerial act with Steve DeVoe for a 20-yard TD pass playe..John went over for the point. Dave Young and Jerry Slating

+ tallied the final TDs in the third.

Young went for six yards and |Slating raced 20 dround right end.

out, Gene Woodling homered well Park won the first downs, 11

into the right field stands. But

'to 3.

; stepped Dark, acting nonchalantly as if - Giants put the kickoff in briskly into the lead, 1 to 0, in the the ball was not being fired to usual him, grabbed it and tagged Vic, took them to the Butler 45. That tactics in which they make most! who disdained getting his neat was close enough for Quarterback of their runs after two men were gray pants soiled

»