Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 October 1951 — Page 16
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By JOHN GRIFFIN United Press Sports Writer The most wide-open college football season in many and many a year was emerging today from the rubble of earlyseason upsets. Dazed “experts” throughout the nation now know that they | no longer can rattle off the names of such teams as Army, Notre Dame, and Michigan as sure national leaders before settling down to a close study of the teams. For, after only three weeks, Army has yet to win a game, Michigan has dropped two out of three, and Notre Dame suffered its first defeat, 27 to 20, to pass-happy. revenge-hungry Southern Methodist on Satur- | day. | “So, on a national scale, it looked like only California— y Tr o SON ES for three straight years the <i i oast FLAME ON WHEELS—A horror-stricken crowd watches smoke billow from a burning stock car kingpin of the Re at Langhorne, Pa., Speedway yesterday after a 10-car collision, in a scheduled 100-mile race. One race | to predicted form, along with
driver was seriously injured. Michigan State. Neither has - Fiery 10-Car
suffered a defeat, though each Football With Leahy—
'We Have No Alibis, (rash Injures
Giants,
‘ . : By United Press
. By FRANK ‘LEAHY ] IF A COACH can detive any consolation from the fact LANGHORNE, Pa, Oct. 15 By United Press Relief Driver Dick ‘Eagan, Spring-
that 58,000 people were treated to one of the most thrilling - '\ * at Foie the inner] The New York Giants, the only games played this season, then we have that to show fortoday of the 100-mile National Rncefente) tem i3 the Nationa! Saturday's effort. Sportsman Stock Car race which| oer ‘hac they can play tike When a team is geared to play _\was halted in the'83d lap when a ,p\;teurs and still win. football such as Southern Meth- the season all over again today. fiery 10-car pile-up blogked the. =~. io topped the pro cirodist played it is rather unfair to We feel badly over the fact that track and injured half a dozen ." ‘pistern Division today
attempt to single we let our followers down as we| PISS: is pileup vesterday was with two victories and a tie. The!
out individuals ‘had wanted so much to repa : ey i for special (them for their maryelous hin the Sin attident of the race, wit- iy gi there ee praise. But, by {last fall. But, the season is stint "0S y about 10,000 Spectators. ago Cardinals—was a triumph
mother of one of the
the same token H who saw her son's car
‘one cannot over- 4 look the amazing £'§ performance turned in by Fred Benners. nor the outstanding manner in = which his talent = was exploited by Mustang Coach Rusty Russell. Beénners may be the most ac-
{young and we will be working drivers of power rather than perfection.
cer mine of every day 10 pout in 3 mak of toisiaa Cou Steve Owl's player sentative secord. ahs. Fa Pre metal, fainted and was treated at made enough mental and physi-| ie n the sea- trackside for severe shock. cal mistakes to give the game to {son closes. s 2» ‘the alert Cardinals. They lost the | . 5-8 5 HER SON, Pdn Black, Mount ball five times on pass intercep- | IN other top games of the day Tabor, N. J., was the only driver tions and three times on fumbles jother upsets occurred. Wisconsin injured seriously in the big crack- but the rugged Giant offensive did what even Benners couldn't up. Black touched off the accident and defensive lines finally de|do.. They completed a pass in the when his car careened into a cided the issue. They hammered Ohio State end zone. And the fence and bounced back to the away until Eddie Price and Kyle Buckeyes had to fight back to'track. A car driven by Wally Rote were able to run through curate passer in football. gain a tie in the Big Ten's top Campbell, Trenton, N. J., then the tiring Cardinals for two last- ” nn = game. smashed into Black's vehicle. period touchdowns and victory. COACH RUSSELL realizing = Texas remained on top by play- Flames leaped from Campbell's 2 2 this had some of the finest pass ing very alert football to capi- car, but the driver crawled out un- The Philadelphia Eagles and patterns working to take advan- talize on Oklahoma errors to hurt. : Detroit Lions. also unbeaten tage of his star performer. SMUhand the 1950 national champs Eight other cars, their driver's when yesterday's six-game card did not show anything we didn’t their second setback of 1951. \vision obscured by a bright sun,|got under way, went down to deexpect and we have no alibis.| Princeton rolled on to their 16th Piled into the wreckage of the two feat as the league settled down They were better prepared in consecutive win by beating a autos. for its bitterest campaign since every way for the contest than fighting Penn team, 13 to 7. Lou! Black was taken to Mercer the end of World War IIL we were. Little's lads at Columbia seem no County Hospital at. Trenton, The Los Angeles Rams deOur boys tried very hard, but worse for their period of quaran- Where it was reported he suffered feated the Lions, 27-21, before a! that just wasn't enough. Benners tine as they defeated Yale, 14 to 0. compound fractures of the right record Detroit pro crowd of 52,907 would stand 10 yards behind the ia = leg and ankle, and possible frac- and the Green Bay Packers upline of scrimmage and as S00N| A pMY was unable to maintain tures of the facial’bones and skull set the Eagles, 37-24, to enable as he received the ball fromthe stride they hit a week ago injuries. the Giants to replace Philadelcenter he would start to fade up 3nd Dartmouth downed them with! . 3 =» phia as the Eastern leader. to as much as another 10 yards. 3 minimum of trouble. Two of RACE officials conferred for 7 5 = For our charging linemen this the West Coast's bi ames saw hours after the race was halted ; ed meant 45 runs of twenty yards the favorites ig out after before ruling Eagan, driving Se ee as the Mustangs attempted 45 tough struggles. Southern Cali- lief for Holly Bunn, Springfield. ,,, ‘s.n Francisco Forty-Niners passes. By the time our linemen fornia and Stanford remain as the winner. Ken Marriott, Balti- ow .4 (ef a 1ast-period Pittsburgh could catch up with the Texanichallengers to California as they more, Md., was second, and Don gq 010; rally for a 28-24 victory. he would have spotted a re- beat Oregon State and UCLA, Bailey, Dubois, Pa, third. Bunn n.. i [os Angeles, Green Bay, ceiver in the open. This sounds respectively. was in the lead when he turned go =~ ©rancisco and the Bears very easy, but it was the pin- $0" his car over to Eagan. now are tied for first in the West-
point accuracy of the thrower| A SPECIAL bouquet must go oy. 3 L. lern Division with identical 2-1 that made the plan work. |to Coach DeWitt Weaver of Texas Third for Stranahan records. Tech as his Red Raiders sur-| FT. SMITH, Ark. Oct. 15 (UP)
Leahy
Ri. =» Only the defending champion SOME ONE asked after the prised the sports world by down- —Toledo’s golfing muscle, Frank Cleveland Browns had an easy game if the only thing Benners ing Texas Christian, 33 to 19: His Stranahan, wore his third Wil- day. The Browns shut out the could do was pass. My gosh, the'team certainly must have been/lard Memorial golf tournament Washington Redskins, 45-0, to tie only thing Caruso could do was operating at high efficiency tolcrown today after his 5-and-3 Philadelphia for the runner-up sing. hand such a convincing defeat to'finals win over George Bigham spot in the Eastern race with two It is going to be like starting the high powered Horned Frogs. of Kansas City. victories and one defeat.
Caps Return Home Unbeaten
When Folk stepped into the
and upended Saturday night by penalty box again at 3:14 in the
Syracuse's Billy Gooden.
OFF to a flying start in the American Hockey League race,
the Indianapolis “Kids” are The Caps, who have 14 play- final period, the Reds were uled Wednesday night with heading for home after knock- - ers under 26 years old, hustled alert. Ken Davies slammed a Fred Huber Jr. publicity diinto a 4-to-1 lead at the end of rebound shot by the Caps’ rector of the parent Detroit Red
ing. down their first two oppo-
nents on the road. Rookie Goalie Glenn Hall at
Wings, explaining rules and in4:43 and as Folk returned to
the first two periods last night
The Caps, 3 to 2 sudden and then had to hold off a Is a Rt troducing players. i Providence rally. e ice after his two-minute » 2 SR rer over, Syracuse Ya penalty, the Reds’ Jack Stod- THE HOME schedule then | " gh, dard pulled Providence within will open Thursday night |
spoiler role last night with a 5-to-4 victory in Providence. That placed the Caps on top of the AHL’s Western Division race with St. Louis, another two-game road winner.
WHILE the Caps’ Bill Folk one goal, 4 to 3, at 5:19. sat out a penalty in the first # 8» period, the Reds jumped into a DOUG McKAY, one of four i-t0-0 lead on Rene Pepin’s goal 1 4i0nan0lis players who won't Bt 3129, ool how Ever, Sieg be new to Coliseum fans this season, got the clincher goal
Be re My th ito a at 6:14 after slipping around rebound by Goalie Bob Per- the Providence defense and rault. scoring. Providence knuckled Rookie Alex DelVecchio beat down for another tally at 7:26 Perrault to the punch at 8:52 by Chuck Sherza and the Caps withstood one more two-minute
against Hershey. It was a pair of ex-Indianap-olis forwards, Cliff Simpson and Pat Lundy that gave St. Louis a 4 to 2 victory last night in Buffalo. And should be holding up the
= n n LAST night's triumph was AHL's Western clubs at this
impressive since it was made without the rookie stalwart, Lou Jahkowski. The ‘right winger will remain in a Syracuse hospital several days while doctors check on a possible concussion. Jankowski, replaced by Player-Coach Ott Heller in the No. 1 line, was body-checked
in the Calder Cup play. The penalty successfully before time. ran out. ! The squads will arrive in In-
dianapolis Wednesday after Hockey Summary
Indianapolis (5) Providence (4)
Hoosier Team Wins Anti-Trust Hearings ET al
Powell
ter Frank —0'Grady made it" 4 to 1 at 18:39 after stealing the puck and fooling Perrault with’ an unassisted goal.
ean prt em
cinnati last night for their second straight loss.
° 1 Ciee Bedard | . - a Hirschfeld . LW... Kapusta Indianapolis §pares Folk Coffin, - O'Grady, 8clisizzi, Reibel, Bruneteau, ’ Hill R MR eNom: M McCall By United Press Rep Patrick J. illings . rovidence pares: orris, cCallum, xr AQ YC vy a, . ,_ Davies, Scherz, Deschenes, J, Michaluk,: : By United Press WASHINGTON, Oct. 15—Clark ,) \" who is backing they PCL's Stoddard. Pepin. Sullivan " eferee: Morrison. inesmen sieur
and DeSaulniers SCORING SUMMARY . FIRST PERIOD-—1, Providence. Pepin Leslie Stoddard. Davies) 4:37, 2 Indols Folk eibel . 3. Indplis., Heller (DelVecchlo, apearance girschfeld) 15'15. Penalties—Polk (3:28), Cubs’ A. Michaluk (5:20), Davies and O'Grady; (16:38), Hay (17.13), Powell (18:55)
Griffith, baseball patriarch Who gion <ajq he is particularly inpresides over Washington's ever-,...cted in the testimony tomorribons today ater. pulling to: SPITE Senators batted 1s ed vow ot "PCL Attorney gether to take the world's cham- 2 renewed von I ras 10 O'Connor, and the pionship heavyweight horse-pull- vestigation gress Wednesday of Chicago ing olles, Sesteriay. iriith headed the witness OWICE PK Wrigley ir. | GBEoI PERIOD, 4: Jon Delfarhie Duke and Jerry, a& Pair Of ji" ae the House monopoly sub-| oa n8% Sal] Wigley I Mnder a na ssied -10n," Piisiey= beasts weighing 5000 pounds and stood to favor raising the West| RD PEF
| THIRD PERIOD-—8§, Providence, Davies | driven by their owner Floyd God- committee reopened hearings on/cgaet League to major status, (Stoddard Kapusta, 4:43. 1, Providence, son, of Greensfork, Ind. pulled
{Stoddard (Davies, Bedard) 5:19. 8, Indpls., an 8500-pound sled 11 feet and 7
TROY, O., Oct. 15—An Indiana team of work horses wore blue
yhether alganize kasepall Shou though it might mean that Wrig- McKay (Refvel. Coflin) 8:14 9, Providence. | e exempt from anti-trust 1aws. [ley would be forced to sel! either|gcheits (Beichensy, J. Michaluk}, 26.
the Cubs or his Los Angeles club.
inches here at Miami County] . | Providence CORE, PY-PERIOD Fair Grounds. wis DER Slinegien salle] wp de Severe INDIANAPOLIS a sae - J > % . The 17th annual horse-puy Umpire Ernest Stewart, St. Louls Zaharias Wins On the Ice
drew a crowd of 4000 spectators.
Browns’ Pitcher Al Widmar, AMERICAN HOCKEY LEAGUE i
Seconda place in “the big pull” ce . : West D went to Joe and Tom, 4300 pounds, fori Ghicags Subs piayer Cy | @XCQS Open Easily Le es nn ven Pu. G 0g owned ang driven by Russell Fiiz- Stor Ee aylor Spine FT. WORTH, Tex, Oct. 15 (UP) INDIANAPOLIS oe 3 § 3 4 8.% patrick of Palestine, IIL : ing News —Babe Didrikson Zaharias today Cincinnati 1 8.8% 31 In third place was Jim and Bill, News. banked $300 first money from the Cleveland oon Division © | 4100 pounds, owned by Paul Swi-, Later witnesses will include 1 women's Texas Open| W L T Pts. GOG| nart of Denver. Ind other big league executives and 16th znnual women Hershey vinnie) 8002 3 3 ’ ; { J t after winning|8yracuse ........... O 1 0 60 FT 3 —————— |players, a sprinkling of sporte-{E0i1 tourHasien fourth time Buffaio ceeeieiaains 9 1:0 0 3 4, Ww Iki Ch . {writers and even a fan or so. Joel! ¢ title OP 3 100 ; o RESULTS LAST Nor! : a aiking ampion DiMaggio, the aging Yankee out- The Tampa, Fla. veteran swept INDIANAPOLIS 5, Providence 4. ELIZABETH, N. J, Oct. 15 fielder, was invited, but will not to an 8-and-7 finals win over de-| &ncitna's. Cleveland 1. i (UP)—John Deni, 50-year-old appear because he will be enroute fending champion Beverly Han-| NATIONAL LEAGUE... oo Pitaurgh granfathe, win to 10 JaDaR on & MEUROFIINE tu or of Tnain Oa, at River Ores Sgt x28 437% 73 walking champlonship vesterday THE hearing is not expected to Country Club yesterday when|petiolt ............51 1 8 21 1 3 ; : touch on baseball's restrictions Miss ‘Hanson's game fell apart Toronfo ............ eo 2113
m3 ours 32 minutes and 15 , 2410 and television broadcast in the second half of the 36-hole " * . of its games, in order to see how match. ) It was the first victory In the 3 new control plan works out. The finals match was evenly 30-kilometer class for Deni, a The subcomittee is expected to played through the morning 18. CYQO Football - truck driver and usher at Forbes tfy to aid%eff of the Pacific Mrs. Zaharias shot 5-under "par RESULTS ESTERDAY Field who has won nearly 20 na- Coast ILeagué to gain major and turned only 1-up on the Cali- wilip 29 friglon 1 0
RESULTS LART NIGHT Montreal 4, Boston 3. Toronto 3. Detroit 2.
i
: A +1 INDIANAPOLIS TIMES:
Cal. Takes Over Grid Spotlight
They Were Prepared’ ee Driver a os eh ATTRA ROTARY e rre TRI A -One-Race. Driver A ryateurs:— 2
{four punt returns and a runback
stopping off in- Detroit. A free | clinic in the Coliseum is sched- !
early stage of the season but | Cleveland, last year's Western | Division winner and runner-up |
in the second period and CenBarons lost-a-2-1.-game-in--Cin--
—hof. 3 ’ ? v ©. . ‘ * - -
MONDAY, OCT. 15, 1951.
ton. In the other league game, unbeaterf Cornell, 42-6 winner over Harvard, will try to make Yale its fourth victim.
bama this week, while other league ‘games are: FloridaVanderbilt, Georgia-Louisiana State, and Mississippi-Tulane,
league games this week send Purdue against the Wisconsin teani that held. Ohio State to that 6-6 tie on Saturday, and
CALIFORNIA had .to come from behind on: Saturday . to beat ‘Washington State, 42 to 35, and Michigan State had to
do the same to beat Marquette, Indiana to Ohio State. Southwest —Texas Christian, Missouri Valley -— Oklahoma 20 to 14. And this week Califor- Pacific Coast Conference— twice-beaten but 1-0 in the . Aggies and Drake, each unnia runs into Southery Cali-~ Southern Cal carries a 3-0 league, is the first loop foe beaten in ieague, chsh in only fornia, the West's ‘Cinderella’ league record against Cal's 1-0 this week for the Texas loop game, team which is unbeaten in four in that big one this week, Stan- Aggies, who downed Oklahoma 8 mn»
last week by 14-7 to send their SKYLINE SIX—Colorado Ag.
S.M.U.
starts. Michigan State is in for ford, only other team unbeaten
gies (1-0) meet Utah State this
a rough assignment against in ‘the loop, is outside against stock booming. comes once-beaten’ Penn State, one of Santa Clara this week. Other back from its Nofre. Dame week, while Utah (1-0) tries the top Eastern independents. league games are Oregon State- triumph to face Rice, while to keep pace against Denver.
Washington State and UCLAOregon.
# » » . , SOUTHERN Maryland and
Arkansas plays Texas in the only other loop action. . ” ”
A number of top notch intersectional games are on tap. Including that Michigan S8tate-
Meanwhile, the scandalwrecked Cadets of Army who took i 28-14 beating from Dart-
mouth, will try for their first North Carolina, eacn 2-0 in the BIG SEVEN-—-Colorado, Penn State clash, headliners win against Harvard, one of the ,nference, collide this week. Which trounced Missouri last should be He isnova, few teams they expect to beat. pyke, also 2-0, meets Virginia week, 34-13, to be the only Washington-Illinois, Northwest-
ern-Navy, Fordham-8an Francisco, and Bodton College-De« troit. Other top games this week include: Brown-Colgate, Dart-mouth-8yracuse, Delaware-Tem-Holy Cross-NYU, Prince-
team unbeaten in league play, goes against Kansas State this week, .the Wild¢ats having lost three and tied one. Other league games this week: lowa State-Missouri and Oklahoma-
Kansas. ple, A ton-Lafayette, Minn esota-Ne-
Notre Dame faces Pitt, and Poly while V. M. I, also 2-0, Michigan, which rocked Indiana, js “outside against Virginia. 33-14, for its first win on Sat- (Other league games this week: urday, comes’ back against pyrman-Citadel (Friday), Iowa. North Carolina St.-William & Mary. Southeastern—Georgia Tech
~ 5 » LOOKING ‘em over by con-
ferences: (3-0) and Auburn (2-0) meet Ivy League -Columbia, atop Big Ten—Illinois, Purdue, and this week. Tennessee, only the loop with a 2-0 mark, goes braska, Baylor-Texas Tech, MiNorthwestern tied at the top other team unbeaten in the against Penn this week with ami (Fla.)-Washington and
Lee, and George Washington-
the Quakers trying to rebound Wake Forest.
from that 13-7 loss to Prince-
Pass, Pass, Pass—
~~ + = Then Punt and Pray ead Pros = .. RR na rray
SRE LR A PRN Ta By OSCAR FRALEY ? 4 . United Presi Sporis Writer Pro Football star, limited Doak Walker -the NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDINGS Lion scoring whiz, to threa points Nationa! Conference after touchdown.
with 1-0 league records. In addition to Michigan-Iowa, two
Playing Like -
loop at 1-0, and ranked a national power, takes on Ala-
<
NEW. YORK, Oct. 15—The ‘collegiate gridiron caper mysteriously labeled “football” was higher today than a
Detroit vir $d » =» Georgia pine after a strafin} session which produced the Los Angeles 2 10 867 104 73) QUARTERBACK Bobby Thom- hest pitching since steady Eddie Lopat gave the Giants a Green Bay 2 1 0 #7 a2 88ason and End Bob Mann provided rer Hehtly non San Francisco 21 0 867 6 55Green Bay's scoring splurge a once over lightly. New York Yanks . 8 3:0 Soo 5 Ls ainst Philadelphia. Thon . There were, as usual, a number DICK KAZMAIER hurled one American Con sTency, Fis. OP 22 rth Pa : OMASON |, 0 so-called upsets —which mgans and set up another touchdown in New York Giants 2 0 1 1000 76 44 rew ree touchdown passes, that the sup- Princeton's 13 to 7 triumph over Piiadeipnia 21 3 867 & € two of which went to Mann and d t 4 p » ‘ Cleveland vas’ 3 3 0 $9 3 ¥ithe former Michigan end aiso|POSeC smart guy hn, Miller Pitched for on Pittsburgh 0 2 1 000 76 caught a TD toss from Quarter- didn’t pick ’em § Jim Miller pitched for one score Washington S dep is right. And in| and set up two that way as Dart-
RESULTS YESTERDAY back Tobinrote,
New York Giants 22 Chiceeo Cards 17 > i = Los Angeles Rams 27. Detroit Lis 31 Frankie Albert led San Fran San Francisco Forty Niners 28, Pitts- cisco to victory at Pittsburgh. urzh 24 3 reveiand Browns 45. Washington Red. He completed 13 out of 20 throws skins 0 7 “Ciwcazo Bears 24. New York Yankees 31 for 183 yards. i passing for ne a etiing up wo
mouth conquered Army, 28 to 14, Al Parks flipped the 25-yard touchdown pass with two minutes to play in a movie thriller 14 to 13 Auburn win over Florida. But Joe Davis hoofed the placement which came in quite handy. . ~ ” ” , A LAD identified as C. O. Brpsato also helped put the foot back in football as he booted a 15-yard field goal which gave Baylor a 9-to-7 decision over Arkansas, Meanwhile, there was some “old-fashioned” play, like in the
most cases those form reversals were accom - plished in a manner which threatens to’ ‘make basketball obsolete. AN example was SMU’s 27-20
h
Green Biv Packers 17, Philadelphia touchdown Fazies 2 _._____-_ others. Steeler Rookie Ray Mathews threw two touchdown passes in the last quarter to spark a fine Pittsburgh rally.
EMLEN TUNNELL, slim defensive halfback, produced the spectacular plays which made the unspectacular Giants line play pay * = = victory over off against the Cardinals. He - THE Bears were unimpressive Notre Dame in which Fred Benkept the Giants in the game in in peating the Yanks. They need- ners pitched all the Mustang the secsng guarier Teeny 82 ed a 42-yard touchdown run by scores as he completed 22 of 42 yards for a touchdown w a Bill Stone . , 2R8LS \ Frank Tripucka punt and he set Bins ear FArY renin i Ts 2 J » Texas-Oklahoma ground cruncher the stage for Price's 25-yard run Jonn Hoffman in the final pe- 389 g ue: B ! or roar, TeXas used only three passes and for the winning touchdown by re- ni 4 : yards against a two-team gyjahoma but nine as the Long- \ riod to gain their victory. total of 120 yards rushing. SMU aw - turning another punt 31 yards as z horns won, 9 to 7. the third quarter ended. 5 The rumors that Cleveland is got only 21 yards on the ground. ® un =n Tunnell picked up 181 yards.on over the hill” will be bitterly] But that ain't all. bub. Here's (CHUCK HREN of Northwest- ‘ denied by Washington. The Red-'a few more examples: ern ground out two touchdowns skins weren't expected to beat Aerials figured in all but one gndq 127 vards in 28 tries for a 21Cleveland but the Browns’ tri- score as Michigan bounced Indi- {5.7 win over Minnesota. umph at Cleveland yesterday was ana, 33 to 14. Johnny Olszewski gained 242 of the easiest they have registered Both scores were on passes as Cglifornia’s 351 yards in a 42-to-THE Rams-Lion game was one in three meetings with Washing- Ohio State and Wisconsin squared 35 conquest of Washington State. of the roughest ever plaved in ton during the past two seasons.'off, 6 to 6. : And Hugh McElhenny, Dean Detroit. The blocking and The Cleveland defense pounced 1.8 A Rockey and Bill Albrecht all were tackling was brutal, penalties on every Redskin slip. George! AL DOROW’'S heaves scored running as Washington crushed were frequent, fists flew, players Young. Ken Carpenter, Otto Gra- one and set up another of Michi- Oregon, 63 to 6. were knocked unconscious and ham, Emerson Cole, Dopey gan State's pair of last quarter But the exceptions were all tod Los Angeles Quarterback Bob Phelps and Bob Oristaglio scored touchdowns which beat Mar- infrequent in a week-end whefe Waterfield emerged as the hero. for ‘the defending champions, 'quette, 20 to 14. the accent was on pass, pass, pass Naiernien), in his sixth NFL : pe s— The “impossible” catches of —then punt and pray. season, threw two touchdown End Bill McColl led Stanford to - naa passes and his 37 and 42-yard College Football a 21 to 7 conquest of UCLA. Amateur Football field goals provided the Ram vic- Sante Gl n Sunder) Arte Bill Wade heaved four last per- ~~ =~ .—n Hie Ya tory margin. The Rams, who de-' st. Ambrose 39, St. Thomas 20. fod TD passes as Vanderbilt Be ay 1 Re Th
‘a St. Vincent 39, Kings (Pa.) 19, ing} i ‘ in-Air 26. Eight Balls 6, Northwest light tn shackling the opposition's Western Hontina If Baviern Wentans «. 7acked up Mississippi, 34 10 20. troisne’sr Meret chase’r
Fraley
of a missed field goal to thrill 28,095 Polo Ground fans.
- = 5
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