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The Philadelphia Inquirer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Page 33

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Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
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Yomiks 5rfi I am Dodgers, 4379 Shea DiM Sports Dtiiptsniilttss Again Homer Triumphs aggio Hits Financial Garden Sports Business PUBLIC efigg LEDGER College FOOTBALL. SUNDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 5. 1947 abcde.lg PHILADELPHIA PHILADELPHIA A M. 21 Swarthaa.

flair Om 1 Temple 13 Pcaa Lafayette 0 filawui 21 Brawn 7 IweitkMM 2 Harerf ar 1 8 Craiaas Drexel Miss om Wo sis by 10 Lefjoims STATE Lavagetto Strikes Out in 9th, Inning With Tying Marker on Second Base By STAN BAUMGARTNER Inquirer Sports Reporter BROOKLYN. N. Oct. 4. It can't happen twice, even in Brooklyn.

The magic that carried the spectacular Dodgers to an epic 3-2 triumph against the Yankees yesterday was of no today against the wizardry of freshman hurlcr Frank Shea as the New Yorkers defeated the Brooks, 2-1, in the fifth game of the World Series bpfore 34.379 who paid $165,921 at Ebbets Field. The Yanks now hold a 3-2 lead in games as the Series returns to Yan BntaM 19 W. A J. 14 IHrkiasm 27 Grave Citr 1.1 14labara T. 7 fl.rl.a (inktri Weatera Marylaaa Mrraaa Thlel 7 iiniu 21 WMtmmttr 7 7 lftaau Valla 21....

Moravian 20 2 Irtish 21 Cm. LtstcaUa I. Paal Pal -a a. i'ii'y Equals Mlnbr S3 Alarlrht yaw Dim 4t PHI rVaa State S4 BarkiKll kee Stadium. i Series at a Glance Track Mark Skivaeaaeara S.

T. 2S S. T. 6 MiasrT Kara S. T.

2 Indiana 8. T. 6 Waraeaaarv 12 Alliance as Liberty 14 California P. T. 12 TaaaMa 27 Geneva 7 YESTERDAY'S RESILT New York Yankees.

Rrooklva Dodgers. 1. STANDING OF THE TEAMS w. l. r.

CAST New Yark Yankees 3 2 Brooklyn Dodrera 2 3 sod St. Lawrence V. B. C. G.

A. iAt Camden Shea, a 24-year-older hurling with the consummate skill" of a veteran, was calm, clever, cool! under fire. He cut corners of the plate with machine-pun control when the occasion demanded and held the Dodgers to four hits. DiMAGGIO BELTS HOMER Jolting Joe DiMaggio supplied the winning margin in the fifth with a Celarade f- ft rsv trr- jj i' Lark Haven 14 Camargo Runs 2d, Letmenow Is 3d i mighty sock into the upper tier of the M. P.

1. 71 era Irk sUaia Paint A. Navy S' Sarinlfteld C. C. N.

V. ayraeate 1 tarter 1H Krystene Cr'lere Mainrr Boston 14! Nary F.cbea Merlhravtera Boa doia i VYilliaaaa 7 1 Hofslra 7 Braokiyn Rhea Island 7) Kew Yark Attiee $25,000 'Cap Alfred 2 AataarM 13 Army 47 RMnmri T. 19 Baffaia 14 larkaaa 32 CeUate 29 ratiakii 13 Caaaacttrat 1 4 eeaaarUrat l. T. 27 Dartmaata pirlB.il V.

19 IMkinraa C. 12 Maauitaa 14 Barrard 19 Kenlack Fraafc Maine 24 Muwkimu 7 Mlediebery 19 Mentrlair IX IS. T. IT. 19 ew Hamnskrre 33...

-NaT-Bete J. C. Becaeiter IS Kairsrs 21 at. Lawrrare Freak 27 Trially 33 Tafta 32 termeat 27 avesleyaa 19 Tale 14 Tale Freak 29 Lnien 13 Western Beaerre 6 Morriaville Affiea 7 Batea 12 Devena 7 telby 3 W. P.

I. Cornell Andover today a jrmni i.e Brooklyn Dodgers at New Yark Yankees. First Cam IRK Brooklyn I I I 3 New Tork 4 Batteries: Branra. Brhrmaa (S. Casey tit and Edwards.

Brooklyn: libra, rags aad Berra. New Verb becoad Came M. Brooklyn al 3 New Vork I I I 2 1 4 Id I I Batteries: l.ombardl. Gregg (Si. Bebrmaa 7 Barney (7) and Edwards.

Braoklya: Beya-aids aad Berra. ork. Bird Game ft. B. New Yark 22X11 13 Braoklya I 2 13 1 Batteries: Nrwsom.

Kaarhl (2). Draws 3, Chandler 4, Fag aad Lollar. Berra (7. New Yarkt Hattea. Braaca S.

taaey (7) aad Edwards, Brooklyn. Fsarth Cam R. B. New Yark 1 I II 2 I Brooklyn 2 3 13 Batteries: Beveaa aad Berra, New forks Orrgg. Behrmaa Casey aad Id oar da.

Brooklyn. Fifth Gaata m. m. New Yark I I I Brooklyn MM 4 Hatteriesi dhea and A. Kssibmh, New fork: Itaraer.

Malten IM. rwbrmaa til, Casey tat aad rdtrards. Braoklya. Bemalnlng fasmaa lsih game today al New Vork; KevontB game. If aeressary Maaday.

ATTEND iNTF. AND RECEIPTS Attendance 34. 379. Beeelpts IbS.2I .50. t'ammisslaner's share 24.KSH 2S.

F.arh leagae's share 27. srh rlub's share :IV25H.27. A I tendance (or the Hrsl five game 2I4.1M. Receipts (or the first Rva games S1.I33--911.33. Commissioner's share far the Brat Bre gaaaaa SI70.0H6.67.

Each leagae's share far the first tvs gsmss SII7.S37.40. Each rlab's share for the Srsi Sva games SI I 7. 537.40. Players' sbara for the Srst fear gsmis no S4A3.li74.lt3. (Players share only la Srst fear left-field stands for his second home run of the Series.

The wallop put the Yankees in front, 2-0, but the run was needed before it was all over. Yet as great as was Shea in hanging up his second World Series victory, the Dodgers again stv; in the threshold of an unbelievable victory in the ninth. But this time Cookie Lavagetto, the lyrical hero of yesterday whose two-run pinch double smashed Floyd Bevens bid for a no-hitter and achieved a 3-2 victory, struck out with the tying run on second. Even in defeat it was the Dodgers' most thrilling moment and Shea's finest exhibition of pitching. Bruce Edwards, first man at bat for the Dodgers in the ninth as he was yesterday), stung a single to left.

The huge crowd, greatest in the World Series history of Ebbets Field, rase to its feet as one man, sensing another tingling finish. When Carl Furillo sacrificed Edwards to second the stage was set. But Shea would not buckle. He forced MIDWEST CONFERENCE lawa Ohio State Indiana WESTLBN TUiaat. 1J Parda 24 nr tseaasia big six cosrrmENcr 27 7 BIG SEtES COXFtBENCe 1 tab Aim 2C Colarada A.

A 13 Wr.sa.at 12 Brians- meant 7 MISSOIKI ALLET CONFERENCE Yalta 2S 14 Ik xlls-v I I. i OTHIE MIDWESTERN GAMES Spider Jorgcnsen to lift an easy fly Aacaatana 19 Aarora CaHecc IS Kail Mate 21 BemedH T. CarrnU 7 13 Caearada College 7 Cawrerdla III. 7 toratU talleee 29 laytaa 2 as aorta Mate 12 Evaaavtlle 7 Ferrta last. 39 0 13 9 7 6 7 13 6 6 6 lllinala Caller Eareka Collee Charleston T.

Winona T. Wabash Canterbary W. Colorado Male Wilaea J. C. Rlpoa Bawline Greea Washburn Carbondalc Extension Kneit to Tommy Henrich- for the second out.

COOKIE ON THE SPOT Lavagetto then stepped to the plate to bat for Hugh Casey and a cheer GrianeU 14 0 AUInnri FUltedaJe 21 Hope 14 that carried to Borough Hall rocked the stands. A hit would tie a home run would win. But this was another day, another hour, another pitcher Lavagetto swung and missed the first 'Too Much Shea Asserts Reese, Strikeout Victim strike one; then followed three straight balls. He swung and missed a second strike. The count was 3-2.

ladiaaa. CeatraJ 12 DeBane ladtaaa Jtat 13 Valparaiso leal Carroll 35 Teledoe 1 K.l.ata.oo Caslra 2 Krayaa 41 KUITto- 7 Lake Perat 27 2 LaaTeaea 34 Carletoa lenisvilie 37 Depaaw 0 MrAtoter 7 BL Mary. 0 Mieklcaa 49 Stanfard 13 Mirkiaa Slate 7 Mlsialppl slate 0 Mieairan Tetk. 7 Eaa Claire T. 0 Mdwaakea T.

13 Platteville T. 9 MiaatMU 2S Nebraska 13 Moarekead T. fMJaa.) 7 Mankata T. 0 ortk Ceatral 32 Jamea Mllliken Karth Dakota 13 Aagastina 7 North weaaera 27 ICLA Cthta V. 14 Batler 7 4hta Weeleyaa 2S Otterbeia 20 Oklahoma 2S Teaa A.

M. 14 Olivet 20 A.snmptlon 0 The next was a whizzing fast ball that cut the outside corner. Lavagetto cut with all his might, missed NO HOLE THIS TIME LAFAYETTE STOPS PENN'S FARQUHAR JONES ON LINE SMASH Leopards' John Kane (40) and Henry Ciemnieafci fourth quarter yesterday on Franklin Field. But the dam-(17) halted the Quaker fullback without gain in the age already had been done: Penn, 59, Lafayette, 0. again and struck out.

The game was over and the band played "Heart By JOHN WEBSTER Shaking off the stubborn Lietme-now on the stretch turn, William Helis Miss Kimo streamlined away from her opposition and equalled the track record for a mile and a sixteenth as she won, galloping, in the sixth running of the $25,000 Vinejand Handicap yesterday at Garden State Park. Favored by the 24,062 fans on the bright, warm afternoon. Miss Kimo finished 10 lengths in advance of her nearest rival in the filly-mare field as she won under Jockey Ovie Scur-lock in a breath-taking 1 :42 3-5. Miss Kimo carried 117 pounds, one less than topweighted Bridal Flower, in gaining a $22,050 victory for New Jersey's leading owner and breeder. RAMPART LACKS RALLY Christiana Stable's Camargo, who came between horses on the turn when making her move, took the place, a length and a half before Letmenow, who races for Hal Price Headley.

The latter was third, three-quarters of a length before Helene K. Haggerty's Rampart, who was close early, but lacked a rally as she finished fourth. Then came Bridal Flower, the King Ranch's second choice; Brook-field Stable's early-footed I Declare, and finally Joseph M. Roebling's Frantie's Bid, a straggler most of the way. Miss Kimo returned $5.90 straight.

The day's total mutuel handle was $2,046,451. In taking her fifth stakes victory of the season, the three-year-old daughter of Hash-Nedvive boosted her season's earnings to $97,920. Her previous scores came in the Cleopatra and Artful Handicaps, the Misty Isle Stakes and the Fairy Chant Handicap. MISS KIMO REGAINS LEAD Following the race, Helis, master of the Helis Stock Farm at nearby Jobstown, received a handsome trophy in the winner's circle. I Declare, piloted by Charley Givens.

and Letmenow. the invad-1 er from Chicago, manned by Joe Sneller, preceded Miss Kimo from the gate, but the favorite was right! after them in the pulse-strumming rush for the first turn. Rampart, twice a winner at the meeting, also was included in the first flight in the dash for position. Scurlock shoved Miss Kimo to the front on the turn, but the six-year-old Letmenow, racing on he outside, joined the leader on reaching the back stretch. Rampart moved past I Declare to lie third.

Going to the half-mile pole. Letmenow thrust her head before the favorite, but Miss Kimo held on grimly and regained the head end before reaching the turn. It was nip-and-tuck until the two leaders, well in advance of Rampart, were half way around the bend. Then the hot pace they did a half in :47 25 and the three quarters in 1:11 35 took its toll. Letmenow faded suddenly on the outside and Miss Kimo drew off with a rush.

Whistling into the straightaway, the Helis filly continued to draw out she completed a mile in 1:35 45 and distanced her opposition. Letme- aches." It was the best-played game of the Series, but after yesterday's heroics It seemed quiet and almost colorless. And yet it was packed with trainer ft I airaennree t. Claad T. 2S Dalnth At.

Olal 2S Lather lawal at Thoaaaa IS t'earerdia ShartleC ZS Bene Paly af Terre Haala atmaaoa 3 tuaac Falls 13 Sprlaalleld T. Saata Dakota 33 Parsana Meveaapoint T. 13 Oshka-k T. Hi.hiri. II Waahincton.

St. L. line pitching, dramatic plays and tense moments. SHEA MAGNIFICENT Shea was really his UCLA Defeated By Northwestern Uprising, 27-26 stuff was not puzzling but his con IPenn Crushes Lafayette, 59-0; 57,283 See Luongo Score Four By ART MORROW The walls still stand in Easton: Lafayette College survived the opening of the University of Pennsylvania's 71st football season with remarkable durability at Franklin Field yesterday. Not a Leopard had to be carried off the gridiron as the Quakers pushed over nine tosacjidowns, added five extra points and rolled to a 59-0 victory.

A crowd of 51,283 enjoyed a right friendly sun, and the occasion provided 83 collegians By ED SAINSBURY EVANSTON. 111., Oct. 3 52 of them in the Red and By HAROLD (PEEWEE) REESE Dodgers Shortstop (WrttMD rapwrlallf far IMS) BROOKLYN, Oct. 4 (INS). It was Just a case of too much Frank Shea today, and believe ne he was no one-hoss shay.

He had everything, especially in the clutches. He had a fast slider hitting the corners all day and cither he was terrific when the chips were down or we were not so hot. Take your choice. In tomorrow's game, it probably will be little Vic our lefty, against Allie Reynolds, the Yanks' righthander. Just as it wai in the second game of the Series.

COUNTING ON VIC But this time we are hoping that Vic cat. reverse the result. We have a lot of confidence in Vic because he's always won the game had to have and I can't see any reason why he shouldn't do it again. He certainly has enough stuff to beat the Yanks and this time we aren't likely to be playing easy outs into triples like we did in that second game in the Stadium. We've simply got to win tomorrow.

If we don't it'll be all over. So you can expect to see every- Continued on Page 2, Column 6 Northwestern University's underdogs Blue garb of Old Penn with a healthy aiternoon Iroiic. And no one had reason for. trol was uncanny. He kept the Brooklyn batters constantly reaching for balls they did not want to swing at.

but did not dare to let go for fear they would be called strikes. He walked five men but they were on pitches that were dangerously near the strike zone. In the seventh inning, with bases loaded and two out, he fanned Pce-wee Reese for the third out with one of the most perfect pitches-the writer has ever seen, a fast ball that cut the corner and was just within the strike zone. Reese looked at the ball, heard himself called out, sighed and walked away shaking his head in puzzled fashion. It was Shea who also drove over the first Yankee run and broke a scoreless tie in the fourth.

AIDS OWN CAUSE With two out in this stanza Rex Barney, who has a barrel of stuff, but is as wild as a Florida hurricane, gave away three touchdowns on breaks today, then came driving back with an almost unbelievable surge in the second half to upset the U. C. L. Pacific Coast League champions. 27-26.

It was UCLA all the way the first complaint: The result was, if anything-, less lop-sided than expected. half. Frankie Aschenbrenner and Holy Cross Beats Temple On. Long Marches, 19-13 By MORT BERRY Inquirer Sports Reporter WORCESTER, Oct. 4.

Holy Cross pitted its running power against the air might of Temple University today and Holy Cross won the 13th of the football series, 19-13, before 16,000 nervous rooters. Exploiting personnel superiority to the fullest, the Crusaders drove to 80 and 59 yard first quarter touchdowns, and then had to hang on desperately as clever Temple used guile and offensive vari- ations to boss most of the rest Tom Worthington, a pair of half backs, led the Northwestern come back. ASCHENBRENNER FIRST Aschenbrenner was the first to Weatera T. (Macomb) 13 Carthare taliece j.i Weatwarth M. A.

7 Christian Brathera 0 Waeatoa 49 lllinala Wealeyaa 13 atirhlta 29 Bradley 7 Wltteaaer 7 Wtlminiten SOCTH SOl'THEASTEBJt CONFERENCE Georgia 34 L.8.O. 19 Geortrta Teek 20 Talane 0 North CaroUaa S. 14 Davidson 0 a. 1. 13 Gearre Washinatoa 7 Tanner Wit 14 Alabama 7 SOCTHERM CONFERENCE Wake Ferest IS Clemsan 14 W.

M. Citadel 7 OTHER SOL'THEBN GAMES Aaaara 14 Leaieiaaa Terh 0 2 Menmoath 0 Bethaae Cook ma a 33 Edward Watera, 0 Cansa-Nceau 33 Emory A Hrnry 0 Catawfca 21 Hlrhpoint 0 etaflia Callece 10 Morris Colletre Coacard State 0 Shepherd State 0 Tmae 19 Teaneasee 7 last Carolina T. 12 Atlantic Christian 7 Florida Normal 19 Lrlaad 0 Cioii.crd Hampton Sydney 0 Ramatea Ifist. 13 J. C.

Smith Hanover 19 Geerretowa 13 Jarasoarlllr Navy 23 Stetaea 0 Krntacky 20 Xavier 7 Jtllrorr Collere 14 Northeast Center 7 Kishi Prep 7 W. Va. Prap 7 1 oanlsns Cotlece 0 Eaat Texas Baptiat 0 Lontsvillc Manic I pal 0 Lincoln V. 0 McMnrry 20 Centenary 12 Maacheater 20 Earlham 7 JHaryvtlle T. 28 Centre 0 Mraaku mate 13 Missoari 8.

tl M. 0 Mtsslsaippi 33 South Carolina 0 Mmataaipai 47 Mexico U. 13 More ho use 12 Benedict 7 Marraa State 31 Delaware State 0 Morria Brown Alien 0 oiewberry 19 Lenlor-Rhyne 13 Narth Texaa 8. T. 20 Florida 12 Paine CaUeee 30 Albany S.

T. 0 Poteaaae State 31 Morris-Harvey 7 Pliaccaa Aaae 20 St. Aurastlne 12 Randolph Macon 23 Johns Hopkins 18 Biver Falls 7. 20 Stoat Int. 0 Rollins 20 Richmond 7 Bast Callece IS Jarksen Collere 14 9.

Cam State lOraaxebarO 13. Knoxville 0 S. Carolina Nerro 13 Knoxville 0 amer T. 20 LaCrosse.T. 0 W.

La. last. 40 S.E. La. Collere 7 Teaneasee State 32 Laarstoa 0 Vrrjinln 41 V.P.I.

7 Vtriinia State 2S IU or ft eld 0 Weatera Keatarky T. 14 Arkansas State 14 W. Va. Wesleyan 20 I.lrnvllle arose Virginia 35 A 1.. W.

Vtreiala State 0 Haward I. 0 Vt'llhertarea 34 Krntacky Stat SOCTH WEST SOUTHWESTERN CONFERENCE Arkansas T.C.C. OTHEB SOCTH WESTERN GAMES Aberdeea Normal 14 Dakota Wesleyan 7 Abtleae ChrlsUaa 13 Ariisaa St. (Tempo 7 Artsona 49 Mantaaa 7 Arkansas state T. I Onaeklta 14 arrall Collere 3S E.

Mantaaa St. Normal shine. As Northwestern trailed, 13- Continued on Page 2. Column 4 7, at the half, he took the third period kickoff on his own three-yard line, out to the rightthen outsped the entire UCLA secondary for the tying touendown. World Scries DBoxscore FIFTH GAME NEW YORK YANKEES Less than five minutes later it was Worthington 's turn.

He caught a LUONGO SCORES FOUR It took the Pennsylvanians three minutes and 14 seconds to score the first touchdown, and they stopped ith 13 minutes 38 seconds of the final quarter remaining. Matters might indeed have been worse. Co-captain Bill Luongo, from Germantown High School via the U. S. Army Air Corps, paced the big parade with four, six-pointers, all starting with crashes through or off guard his first for five yards; second, two; third, 29, and fourth, 34.

One more touchdown and Bill would have equaled the University record held by Paul Scull and Eddie Allen, but Coach George Munger, not straining the quality of mercy, allowed neither Luongo nor any of the other first-stringers to disport as much as half the game. SCHNEIDER SCOOTS 51, 20 Second in the list of scorers was Don Schneider, the wee whippet who broke loose for runs of 51 and 20 yards. Johnny Quinn broke into the point column by snatching an eight-yard pass from Walt Krich- punt by Benny Reiges on the North western 34, cut for the side line, and romped all the way with never a Continued on Page 7, Column 5 hand laid on him. That made the count 20 to 13 for of the game. HAMMER OVER TACKLES Until Temple got its chances.

Holy Cross marched with the close order precision of well-drilled troops. Veto Kissell, hard driving 205-pound fullback, and Bob Sullivan, an exceptionally fast 196 pounder, gained Steadily on thrusts through left and right tackle repeatedly. When the march was dulled by the 6 Temple defense at the 27. Holy Cross used a course Temple was later to follow. Bill Brennan, who operated the Crusaders (which at times had a back on the wing) threw a touchdown pass to Tom Kelleher, the right end who learned sh.

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 sb. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 rbl 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 tb. 0 3 0 4 0 0 0 0 3 3b. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 hr. 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 a.

4 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 2b. 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 h. 0 2 0 1 0 0 A 0 2 ab. 3 4 2 4 4 3 3 2 4 r. 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 Continued on Page 2, Column 3 B.Av.

Stirnweiss, 2b .350 Henrich, rf .333 Lindell, If .438 DiMaggio, cf .278 McQuinn. Ib .150 Johnson, 3b .222 A. Robinson, .000 Rizzuto, ss .222 Shea, W2-L0 Rutgers Downs Western 21-6 NEW BRUNSWICK. Oct. 4.

Coach Harvey Harman's Rutgers University football team opened its home schedule today with a 21-6 victory over Western Reserve. Notre Dame Rolls Over Pitt, 40-6 By DUKE MORAN PITTSBURGH, Oct. 4 (AP). The Notre Dame Gridiron Express ran late today but Engineer Johnny Lujack's adroitness generated enough steam to bring the Fighting Irish home on schedule with a 40-6 victory over a surprisingly tough band of Pitt Panthers. It was Notre Dame's first start and the 64,333 shirt-sleeved fans on hand blinked in disbelief as the Panthers made things hotter than the 80-de-gree temperature for almost a full half.

Totals 29 2 5 2 0 I BROOKLYN DODGERS ling; Anthony (Skippy) Minisi went his football at Philadelphia's North- cast uatnonc riign facnool. Gene B.Av. ab. Stankv. 2h .188 3 34 yards on a cutback, and Bill Tala-rico accounted for the final touch Yanks 1-2 Choice To Take Series ST.

LOUIS. Oct. 4 (UP). With the New York Yankees one up in the World Series race. Wagering Commissioner James J.

Carroll Ret the Bronx Bombers as 1 to 2 favorites to take the fourth and last victory tomorrow with Allie Reynolds on the mound. Odds of 8 to 5 are carried on the Dodgers if Vic Lombard! hurls at Yankee Stadium. DeFillippo kicked the extra point. 9 9 0 down on a 54-yard aerial maneuver Temple had the ball only twice in the first 15 minutes and never was Western Reserve Po. Rutrera Ne.terik L.I Garrabrant Roman L.T Pandick Lewla Kushinka Ooll C.

Gardner arson O. Read Shaw T. Heritage I Slsler E. Snwick Oastllla QB Burns I.ahr L.HB. Herlng Corbln R.HB.

Winkelrled Zwlreck FB. Vigh Western Reserve 6 0 0 6 Rutgers 13 6 2 0 21 RUTGERS SCORING Touchdowns: Hatrh-eir. 2: Sabo. Extra point: Heritage. WESTERN RESERVE SCORING Touchdown: Stuckert.

Referee. George T. While; field Judge. L. C.

1 a-baugh; umpire, Irwin W. Weiss; linesman, Hilton T. Btlph. Cincinnati 29 St. Banaventcre 14 Darla A Flkiaa 12 Salem a treaver 20 Oklahoma A A 14 Rardla Slmmaa 19 Oklahoma City 7 Moastoa I.

35 Daniel Baker 12 Lambrath Jacksaa ITenn 7 Arkansas Col. 6 Maiaolia. Arkaaaaa A AM 30 Hendrlx 0 Miami to. 35 Keatarky Slate 7 Middle Tennessee I Milltzaa 0 Miaot T. 40 Battinraa Forestry 0 New Mexico 20 Kansas lata IS Bio Grande 17 Wllberferea 7 able to advance it into rival territory.

After Temple's first series was engineered by Bob Deuber. One of Bob Evans extra-point placements was nullified by a 15-yard holding penalty, but the vet Reese, .250 J. Robinson, lb- .278 Walker, rf .263 Hermanskl, If .125 Edwards, .158 Furillo, cf .300 Jorgensen, 3b .188 Barney, W0-L1 Hatten, W0-L0 a-Gionfriddo .000 checked. Holy Crass moved 59 yards in 11 plays one Jess than it needed eran tailback made good on five of sb. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 rbl 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 h.

0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 tb. 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 3h. 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 hr. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 o. 2 2 5 0 2 9 2 3 0 0 1 1 0 0 2b.

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 h. 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 r. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Continued on Paffe 4. Column 7 Continued on Tage 4, Column 3 2 3 0 0 1 0 1 I 0 0 Continued on Page 3. Column 1 2 4 4 4 3 3 4 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 Earns Behrman, W0-L0 b-Vaughan .500 c-Reiser .250 The Irish started ff to do -he expected by scoring in the fir.st six minutes as Terry Brennan piinged three yards to climax a 57-yard march.

But from there on until tl'e last fe minutes of the half, it wp.s strictly a Pitt si w. FUMBLE BALKS SCORE A fumble on the one-foot line balked one Panther touchdown after the kickoff following the Irish score. But Pitt recovered a fumble on the Irish 21 with the second quarter half gone and went on to score, sub Halfback Carl DePasqua running over from the seven. Notre Dame blocked a placement by Halfback Louis Cecconl, which Columbia Sinks Navyt 13-6, As Rossides, Kusserow Star Princeton Beats Brown, 21-7 .000 -W2-L0 .000 .250 d-Miksis, 2b Casey, e-Lombardi f-Lavagetto 1 27 10 30 Totals Stymie Last in Co-Feature By FRED IIAVDEN NEW YORK, Oct. 4 (AP).

Warren Wright's Calumet Farms Edded the famed Belmont Futurity purse to its record-breaking cre-year earnings today when Citation won and his filly partner In the entry Bewitch placed third. Calumet picked up $78,430 with Citation and $6800 with Be-witch. which brought the stable's 1947 earnings to $1 239 021 The 58th Futurity grossed $106,030 before a crowd of 40.266. a Walked for Hatten In 6th. PRINCETON, N.

Oct. 4. ANNAPOLIS, Oct. 4 (AP). A superior Columbia eleven, bottling up Navy's impotent attack most of the way, dealt the Middies sceond defeat of the season today, 13-6.

in a hard-fought but drab game. It was the 10th straight loss for Navy, which opened the 1946 campaign with a Victory over Villanova and has been trying to crash the winner's circle ever since. Princeton University's football team today opened its 78th consecutive b-Doubled for Behrman in 7th. Walked for Stanky In 7th. Ran for Reiser In 7 th.

Ran for Edwards in 9th. Fanned for Casey in 9th. Continued on Page 2, Column 4 In fact, the capacity crowd of I who wagered $2,991,003 for the 0 0 0 0 02 01 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 day. New York Yankees 0 Brooklyn Dodgers 0 1 Sandwiched between the Calumet Juveniles was Whirling Fox. a Whirl-away colt belonging to William Woodward.

Whirling Fox trailed the Juniata Triumphs, 21-7; I st Victory Since 1 942 HUNTINGDON, Oct. 4 (AP). Juniata College opened its 25th football season today with a 21-7 triumph over Westminster College. It winner by three lengths, and edged Bewitch by a neck. Another length gridiron campaign by trouncing Brown, 21-7, before 25.000 spectators, largest Princeton opening day crowd since the Princeton-Penn game of 1935.

The Tigers began to roll early when George Franke intercepted a Brown pass on the Bear 40 and returned to the 18. Six plays later Franke crashed the center of the line for a touchdown after five minutes of play. FUMBLE AIDS 2D TALLY Princeton took advantage of another brrnk late in the first quarter when Bob McCormick recovered a Brown fumble on. the Bear 45. Four line plays and a complete pass brought the ball down to the Brown 14.

From there George Sella took a Hoffman Gains-Tourney Semi-Final Harry Hoffmann. Philadelphia champion; Ray McClung, Newton B. Meade and Frank Remmey gained the sonv-final round of the Philadelphia Rifle Club men's tennis tournament yesterday at 8th st. and Tabor rd. Hoffmann eliminated George Martin, 6-3.

6-1. McClung. defeated Dan Gallagher, 6-3, 5-7, 8-6. Meade beat Hugh Quinn, former cham was Juniata's first. victory since 1942.

back in fourth was Robert J. Kle- 000 thought the visiting Lions would run Navy right out of Thompson Stadium in the first half, which ended surprisingly with the teams tied, 6-all. FUMBLES HURT NAVY Fumbles, Navy's old bugaboo, pass interceptions by Columbia's alert secondary, plus some brilliant punting by Bob Russell, kept the Sailors away from touchdown territory on all but one occasion. That was when Bill Hawkins, Navy fullback, rambled 55 yards for a score midway in the second period. On the other hand, a smart gang Continued on Pas 4.

Cilumn 6 West Virginia Rally Routs W. 35-6 CHARLESTON. W. Oct. 4 (AP).

West Virginia University warmed up in the second half after a lukewarm start in 80-degree heat and sizzled to a 35-6 victory over Washington and In the first qua.tcr Tom Kcane went 53 yards for the first touchdown. After the intermission, the Mountaineers got two touchdowns in the third and a pair in the last period, the final coming with less than 15 seconds left. Earned runs New York. Brooklyn, 1. Double plays Reese, Stanky and Robinson; Reese.

Miksis and Robinson. Left on bases New York Yankees. II; Brooklyn Dodgers. 8. Base on balls Off Barney, 8 (Stirnweiss.

Lindell. Rlxiuto. Henrjch. A. Robinson); Hatten (W.

Jonnsorr) Behrman DiMaggio); Shea. 5 (Reese. Gionfrlddo. Edwards, Reiser). Struck out By Barney, 3 (DiMaggio, W.

Johnson. Hatten (Shea); Behrman. 2 (Lindell. McQuinn); Casey (Stirnweiss); Shea. 7 (Edwards, Jorgenson, Stanky, Reese, J.

Robinson. Lavagetto). Hits Off Barney, 3 (2 runs) in 4 2-3 inning; Hatten. (no runs) in 1 1-3; Behrman, 1 (no runs) in Casey, 1 (no runs) in 2. Hit by pitcher By Case i Lindell).

Wild pitch Barney. Passed ball Edwards. 2. Losing pitcher Barney. Umpires McGowan fA.L.), plate; Pinelli (N.L.), Rommel, (A.L.), Goetx (N.L.), Magerkurth (N.L.), Byc (A.L.).

rf. Time 2:46. Attendance 34,379. Scils-K batting average. berg's Better Self.

A field of 14 competed. It was the seventh victory in eight starts for Citation, who now has earned $119,005. Bewitch boosted her earnings to $213,675. The Calumet entry paid $5.70, $2.40 and $2.90, and Mike Dzvonar scored one touchdown in the second quarter, tossed a pass for another and plunged over from the two-yard line in the final period. Juniata 0 14 0 7 21 Westnunater TOO 0 7 JTTTTIATA SCORIJK Touchdowns: Dzronar.

art rHnnta after touchdown: Drvonar. 3 WWTafTITSTTR SCORINO pion, 6-3. 6-3. while Remmy also the winner stepped the straightaway put out a former titleholder, Phil Clark, 6-3. 6-4.

VosjeUAosrs) Dasnotaa. Point sltrr touchdown: Continued on Pace 7, cAnmn Continued on Faffst, 4 Column 5 alarsanant.

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