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The Philadelphia Inquirer du lieu suivant : Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Page 63

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Penn 28 Columbia 13 Kentucky 35 Uillanova 13 Temple Delaware 13! Princeton 60! Michigan St 32 71 Lafayette 7 1 Penn State 21 Cornell 27 Yale 0 Indiana 32 Ohio State 10 Arkansas 16 Texas 14 S. California 21 California 14 Beard Conf onress ii Cornba Stairs Whops oiumoio os Groza, Taking Bribe in enim An Third Kentucky Ace Admits Garden Fix; NBA Suspends Alex, Ralph Indefinitely CHICAGO. Oct. 20 (UP). Three former members of University's Fabulous Five National championship basket Get Gains 126 Scores 3 TDs Price Shatters 3 Lion Passing 23 of 40 Pegs for 27 1 Net Indepen-dlTff SUNDAY MORNING, People OCTOBER 21, 1951 ball team admitted taking bribes to fix a tournament game, New York authorities announced today.

Ex-All-Americans Alex Groza and Ralph Beard were arrested In Chicago and confessed, Assistant District Attorney Vincent O'Connor said. Dale Barnstable, the third Kentucky star, was 81,490 See USC Upset Cali ornia Illustrated on Page 7 By ART MORROW It was the ground forces vs. the air arm at Franklin Field yesterday, and the ground forces won. Pennsylvania rebounded to topple Columbia from the ranks of the unbeaten and unscored upon, 28-13. Darting runs and crunching drives matched lightning bolts from the sun-gilt blue; it was strictly a battle of maneuver.

The ball swept so quickly and so often from one end of the gridiron to fern a fvpif jk fcs J-'rvffllfi ''CHi I Al -Jr Hi Crff r-V'rNi'- jf Lt? iTSFk Sports College FOOTBALL PHILADELPHIA DISTRICT Drexel 16 P.M.G. 0 Juniata 34 Haverford 6 Kentucky 35 Villanova 13 Natl. Aggies 19 Wilson Tchrs. 19 Penn Frosh 33 Columbia Frosh 13 Penn 28 Columbia 13 Penn 150's 6 Princeton 150's 0 Princeton Fr'h 20; Ford ham Fr'h 7 I'rinceton 60 Lafayette Temple 13 Delaware 1 Vrsinus 25 Swarthmore 20 W. Chester 27 E.

Stroudsburg 13 STATE Albright 6 F. M. 0 Bloomsburg Shippensburg 14 Bethany 31 Waynesburg 0 Buckneil 62 Buffalo 32; Carnegie Tech 39 Allegheny 0 Clarion 25 Brockport 20 Gettysburg 34 Muhlenberg 14 Indiana STC 12 Slippery Rock 6 Iebanon Valley 40 Moravian 0 Lehigh 21 Rutgers 6 Lincoln, Pa. 34 Delaware State 0 Michigan State 32 Penn State 21 Millersville 14 Cheyney 13 Notre Dame 33 Pitt 0 Scranton 13 Indianlown Gap 13 Susquehanna 37 Wagner 20 Thiel 12 Edinboro 0 Westminster 27 Grove City 13 est Virginia 89 Geneva 0 W. Maryland 33 Dickinson 12 EAST Alfred 45 St.

Lawrence 7 Bluefield St. 58 St. Paul Poly. 6 Coast Guard A 28 Amberst 20 Colgate 32 Brown 14 Cornell 27 Yale 0 Cornell Frosh 13 Yale Frosh 1 Dartmouth 14 Syracuse 0 Harvard 22 Army 21 Hobart 26 Kenyon 14 Hofstra 41 Clarkson 0 Holy Cross 53 X.Y.U. 6 Kings Point 35 Brooklyn 13 Maine 49 Connecticut 19 Massachusetts 40 Rhode Island 7 Middlebury 14 Tufts 13 New Britain 27 Montclair 12 New Hampshire 20; Springfield 7 New Haven T.

41 Bridgeport 0 Northeastern 41 Bates 13 Northwestern 16 Navy 7 Norwich 32 Loyola (Montreal) 0 Oberlin 40 Hamilton 14 Rider 27 W. Liberty 0 Rochester 7 Vermont 0 Rutgers 150's 18 Cornell 150's 6 San Francisco 32 Fordham 26 St. Michael's 20 American Itnl. 13 Tenn. St.

33 Carson-Newman 2 Trenton Teachers 47; N. Y. Aggies 0 Trinity 41 Colby 0 1'nion 32 Champlain 25 Wayne 34 Brandeis Wesleyan 28 Cpsala 14 Williams 13 Bowdoin 12 W.P.I. 12 R.P.I. 7 MIDWEST Western Conference Indiana 32 Ohio State 10 Michigan 21 Iowa 0 Wisconsin 31 Purdue 7 Big Seven Conference Colorado 20 Kansas State 7 Iowa State 21 Missouri 14 Oklahoma 33 Kansas 21 Mountain States Conference Brigham Young 20 Wyoming 20 Utah St.

Aggies 20; Colo. Aggies 20 i Utah 17 Denver 14; Missouri Valley Conference Oklahoma A. M. 27 Drake 14 OTHER MIDWEST Albion 33 Wilmington (O.) 13 Ashland 7 Hiram 7 Augustana 14 Elmhurst 0 Bacone JC 27 Parsons JC 13 Beloit 27 North Dakota 7 Bluffton 13 Ohio Northern 7 Bowling Green 27 Baldwin Wallace Bradley 34 New Mexico 6 British Columbia 13 E. Oregon 8 Chicago (Navy Pier) 21; Carthage 7 Cincinnati 41 Western Reserve 0 V.

Michigan 19; Michigan Normal 13 Coe 19 Cornell (Iowa) 7 Concordia (Neb.) 66; Tarkio (Mo.) Culver Stockt'n 19; C.Fay'te(Mo.) Dayton 21 Chattanooga Dubuque 20 Simpson Farlham 58 Anderson Findlay 23 Defiance Grand Rapids JC 7 Ferris In. Continued on Page 4. Column 6 4 Inquirer Magic Eye Camera catches Joe Varaitis (31), Penn's hard-hitting fullback, as he starts and finishes second-quarter play that picked up two yards and Quakers' second touchdown against Columbia yesterday at Franklin Field. Top, Varaitis, about six yards from end zone, charges through middle as mates open hole for him. Bottom, Joe goes over and lands on back (he twisted in air as he hit goal line).

Other identifiable Quakers include Noel Schmidt (21), blocking back (42), tailback; Gregory Olekszak (65), guard; Anthony Cugini (75), tackle; Joe Bushek (78), tackle; Tom Hanlon (85), end, and John Moses (89), end. Varaitis scored three TDs in Penn's 28-13 victory. Crowd of 40,000 watched game. the other that 40,000 came away with the wry-necked feeling of people who have 3ust watched an exhausting tennis match. AIR FILLED WITH PASSES Eight times George Munger's Red and Blue marched the ball into Light Blue territory, and seven times Lou Little's Columbians marched it back.

There was always something happening: The Lions kept the air filled with passes, and the Quakers continually swirled back. Columbia scored first, fell behind in the second quarter when Penn tallied twice, and did not surrender even after the Quakers recorded their fourth touchdown early in the final period. Sophomore fullback Joe Varaitis thrice barged across the goal line, and at the other times his blocking shook the Lions. But the siege gxin of the Red and Blue was another sophomore. 190-pound Chester Cor-nog, from Summit, N.

scion of a family famed in Swarthmore College athletic annals. The 19-year-old tailback sparked three touchdown drives, and passed 17 yards to Eddie Bell fcr the tally that put the decision beyond Columbia's reach. EX-GREATS HONOR CORNOG Carl Sempier, 20-year-old junior from Verona, N. place-Kicked all of Penn's extra-point chances, and since the score was a mere 14-13 at halftime and the Lions kept roaring back in the third and fourth quarters, it looked for a time as though his toe might spell the dif ference. But Cornog, converted from de fensive safety into the regulai tailback because of the injury to Glenn (Bones) Adams the week befo)e, accounted for 126 yards on the ground, plus 33 more overhead, and drew the accolade of a group of some 20O former Penn greats as the Red and Blue's standout player on the offense.

Red-headed Gerry McGinley, the fiery line-backer whose father was an All-American tackle at Penn, gained recognition as the Quakers' defensive star, a fact which will come as no surprise to any one who has watched the Westfield tN. 200-pounder perform. PENN INTERCEPTS 5 PASSES With offensive center Jack Evans sidelined along with Adams, and tackle Bob Evans rushed into action to help stop only one of Columbia's thwarted threats, Jack Shanafelt and Johnny Laino also stepped into the defensive breach. Inasmuch as the Lions penetrated beyond Penn's 10 four times, their work was of extreme importance. But there were times when it seemed that the intercepted pass could serve as Penn's only effective defensive gesture, so great was the Continued on Page 7, Column 4 CornellTriumphs; Merz Scores Two NEW HAVEN, Oct.

20 (AP). Rocco Calvo, the Ivy League's leading passer, pitched unbeaten1 and untied Cornell to a 27-0, triumph over Yale in the Bowl today, before 35,000. The Big Red team's sharpshooter! tossed two touchdown passes to Stu Merz during a sizzling opening period in which Cornell piled up a 20-0 lead. Hal Seidenberg bulled and slipped across for the other two tallies, both of which were set up by Calvo aerials. Yale's strategy of passing every time it got the ball during most of the first period boomerajiged and two of these aerials led to Cornell tallies.

The Blue never recovered from the early disaster but to ats credit never quit. The victory was the Ithacans fourth in a row this season, and sev- Continued on Page 7, Column 7 Co, picked up at his home in Louis ville, and he, too, confessed, District Attorney Frank Hogan announced in New York. Both Groza and Beard are player-owners of the National Basketball Association's team at Indianapolis, and late today both were suspended indefinitely from further play in the professional circuit. As college players, the. three admitted taking bribes to fix-one game against Loyola of Chicago in a National Invitation Tournament at Madison Square Garden in 1949.

But, Hogan said he knows the players took bribes for at least two other games that season, and O'Connor went even further. He said "practically every other game" played by Kentucky in 1948-49 was involved. Groza and Beard aDDeared before Judge Irwin Hasten on a fugitive warrant on a New York charge of "fixing and falsifying results of a basketball game Groza and Beard were on bail, posted by a professional bondsman, after Municipal Judge i John T. Zuris agreed to come from home to receive their bond. Before their arrest.

Groza and Beard had planned to go tonight to Molinei where their pro team, the Indianapolis Olympians, were to play an exhibition game, but a provision of the bond was that they not leave the city. 'ORDEAL' SIGHS BEARD "What an ordeal," sighed Besrd after he signed the A desk sergeant told him to call his mother in Louisville. "I know the number," said Beard. Then he added, as if to himself, "I'll play no more ball." Groza said, "What is there to say?" when asked for comment. They will appear before Circuit Judge Theodore Kluczinski Monday to plead to the fugitive charge.

Both were expected to agree to return voluntarily to New York. PODOLOFF HELPS PROBE O'Connor said that Maurice Podoloff, National Basketball Association president, had given material help to the investigation. O'Connor said that Podoloff gave information on the background of players, personnel of teams, and schedules which was of "real assistance to us, particularly in regard to our timing of the move in the Kentucky case." "It is refreshing to find that the sport of pro basketball expressed such interest, if the interest was necessary to clean up the game," O'Connor said. Podoloff announced that Groza and Beard have been suspended indefinitely from professional play. NBA CALLS MEETING He said he was calling a meeting of league directors Monday in New York City to make a "complete appraisal" of the situation.

Groza and Beard are owner-players of the Olympians, members of the associa tion. Podoloff arrived in Chicago near midday and conferred with O'Connor. The first break in the Kentucky case came last night in Chicago when Groza and Beard admitted taking the bribes after being confronted by the "fixers," Nicholas (Nick the Greek) Englisis and Nat (Lovey) Brown. Then another New York assistant district attorney. William Sirignano, who also was in Chicago, flew to Louisville to question Barnstable.

GOING TO NEW YORK Sirignano telephoned Hogan to report Barnstable confessed taking a S500 bribe to "shave the points" on the same 1949 Loyola game, which Loyola won in an upset. Hogan said Barnstable agreed to go voluntarily to New York for further ques- Continued on Page 8, Column 4 Fixes Alleged In College Football COLORADO SPRINGS, Oct. 20 (AP). Lee Mortimer, a New York Daily Mirror columnist, asserted last night that "college football fixes are going on and will be revealed in the near future, just as in basketball." Mortimer spoke at a meeting of the Winter Night Club, a businessmen's organization. Authorities, he said, now are investigating two college football games played in the 1950 season.

topped the 1947 net by $50. Bed O'Roses, carrying the silks of Alfred G. Vanderbilt, earned the major portion of the purse when she came from the middle of the 15-horse pack to take command in the stretch and win by 32 lengths. Val-adium. performing in the silks of H.

LaMontagne and a member of the mree-norse neia group, was second xyeV: whos rtcir coupled with Our Request. Fourth I Place went to Drifting Maid, winner i UA "ic iu. wees-ent The season's largest crowd of 25. 733 wagered $2,038,179 on the eight-race program. START DELAYED The start was delayed briefly by the actions of Aunt Jinny, who Dr- sisted in rearing up, and when the Continued on Pae 5, Column 2 74,265 See Indiana Sidetrack Ohio State COLUMBUS, Oct.

20 (AP). Indiana's underdog Hoosiers buried Ohio State's Rose Bowl and Big Ten championship hopes today with a startling 32-10 upset victory before 74,265 amazed fans. The Hoosiers struck like lightning for three touchdowns in the opening period and then hung on to score an easy and convincing victory. They romped out front in the first three minutes when Bob Bears' Streak Ended at 38 By Late Rally BERKELEY, Oct. 20 (AP).

Mighty California's football empire collapsed with a roar today, i levelled by a 21-14 beating by Southern California's thundering Trojans. A capacity crowd of 81,490 saw the contest. The Nation's top-ranked team bowed to the Hth ranked club in one of the tremendous upsets of i the season. California, for a large portion of the game minus star fullback Johnny Olszewski, fell as the charging Trojans scored three touchdowns in the second half. Olszewski was injured early in the first quarter.

BEARS LEAD AT HALF, 14-0 The Bears, in command the first two periods, led at the halftime 14-0, and had a 14-7 advantage after three quarters. California went into the game a 13-point favorite, yet were thoroughly beaten by the same keen rival that last defeated them in regular season play in 1947. California was working on a spectacular record of 38 regular season games without defeat. Only a 7-7 tie last year with Stanford marred the record. The Trojans thoroughly trounced the Bears, 39-14, in Lynn (Pappy) Waldorf's first season four years ago.

California crashed to a 49-yard touchdown in the initial quarter and went 46 yards early in the second to hold what appeared to be game control at the halftime. TROJANS SURGE BACK But the Trojans surged back In the third period. Frank Gifford, driving left half, raced 69 yards through a broken field for a USC touchdown and place-kicked the extra point to make it 14-7. Late in the same quarter, the Trojans put the ball into play on their own 40. They smashed and passed the 60 yards to tie the count in the final period.

Gifford tossed a short, soft one, to quarterback Dean Schneider from Cal's 6 and Schneider jumped two yards for the Continued on Page 4, Column 3 Gold Cup Won By Counterpoint, Mark Equalled Chart, Results on Page 5 NEW YORK, Oct. 20 (UP). Counterpoint smashed back with another brilliant exhibition of speed and stamina today to win the $50,000 Empire City Gold Cup by a length and a quarter from Hill Prince. He took the "Horse of the Year" championship at the same Counterpoint, who outran last season's champion in the stretch at Belmont Park a week ago in the Jockey Club Gold Cup, came roaring back in more convincing fashion today to prove he is the better horse. Counterpoint and Hill Prince swept around the last turn on even terms and a crowd of 35,678 watched breathlessly as they pounded down the home stretch.

Then the tension was broken with a mighty roar as Counterpoint moved away. They were only half way through the stretch but as far as the huge crowd was concerned, it was all over. WINNER MOVES AWAY Although he had a mile and a half behind him. Counterpoint moved away inch by inch and he swept under the wire in 2:42 4-5 to equal the track record set by Stymie in 1946. Victory was worth $35,800 to owner C.

V. Whitney and boosted Counterpoint's life time earnings to $209,725. Ke won most of that total this year. As a juvenile he started only twice and failed to win. But this season things have been different.

After a slow beginning, Counterpoint won the Peter Pan Handicap, the Belmont Stakes, the Lawrence Realization, the Jockey Club Gold Cup and now the Empire City Gold Cup. Only four horses started with Hull Down finishing third, four and a half lengths farther back and Nullify last, another 12 lengths to the rear. Counterpoint returned $6.30 to win with both horses paying $2.10 to place. There were no show tickets sold on the small field and the track lost $1040 in a minus pool for the place. Hill Prince had been backed down to 7-20.

Khumbaba Victor At Rockingham SALEM, N. Oct. 20 (AP). Khumbaba, Bob Casey's two-year- old bay gelding, finished fast in the mile and a sixteenth feature race at Rockingham Park today to score an upset victory over River Divide Farm's Service and favored Oreo. 20.000 by coming to the front after, was a three-horse battle among Serv- mi.njaoa iijU U.

1L' ice Friedman's Oreo and Dv nati. Parilli Passes Halt Villanova Ky. Halfback Tosses For 4 TDs, Hands Wildcats 1 st Loss By STAN A I'M ARTS ER Inquirer Sports Reporter LEXINGTON, Oct. 20. Villanova dreams of an undefeated season and national gridiron recognition were buried deep beneath the blue grats of Kentucky tonight as Vito Parilli passed for foar roucn- downs and an inspired Kentucky eleven battered the Main Liners, 35-13, before 35,000.

Villanova struck first to take a 7-0 lead. But after the first five minutes, Villanova was outclassed. They were halted on the ground and disintegrated in the air. Ken-. tucky scrred five touchdowns and crossed the goal a sixth time only to have the TD recalled.

The Main Liners' line was ripped to shreds; their secondary was out run by Steve Meilinger, Bethlehem, and Emery Clark. Bill Brannau was given so little protection for his passes that he was unable to click consistently until the fourth period when Kentucky's third and fourth stringers were in action. FIRST LOSS FOR VILLANOVA It was Villanova's first defeat after three victories. It was Kentucky's third triumph after three setbacks. Parilli was amazing as he hit with the skill of a sharpshooter.

He completed" 11 tosses in 23 tries for four touchdowns, missing by one his mark of five touchdowns set last season. He gained 188 yards in the air, only 10 short of the entire yardage gained by Villanova. Three of his touchdown passes were to Meilinger and one to Clark. The fleet Bethlehemite took a 30-yard toss from the quarterback and ran 20 more yards for the first score. He grabbed a 24-yarder in the end zone for the third six-pointer and snared a 12-yarder and ran six more for the fourth TD.

Clark tallied the second touchdown on a 25-yard toss and five-yard gallop. PARILLI FUMBLE COSTLY Parilli began throwing from the first scrimmage in an effort to open up the Villanova line and he succeeded. Yet it was a fumble by Pa-rilli that eventually gave the Villa-novans their first touchdown. The quarterback fumbled on his 10 shortly after the first period got un-derway and Roy Kershaw recovered for Villanova. The Wildcats missed the chance to score, but got another opportunity when Paul Tomko took Parilli's kick (his booting was also magnificent as he got off coffin corner boots at the three- and eight-yard marks) at midfield.

Brannau tossed to Joe Rilo on the 15. Bob Haner bucked through to the 11 after fumbling and Ben Ad-diego went the rest of the way on sweep around left end. Haner Continued on Page 4, Column 8 All-Stars Down Jap Titltsts 7-0 TOKYO, Oct. 20 (UP). Mel Par-nell, Boston Red Sox, and Bill Werle, Pittsburgh Pirates, pitched a group of major league All-Stars, to a 7-0 victory- today over the Japanese champions, Yomiuri Giants, before 50,000.

Dulce in Romp; Rival Loses 14th NORFOLK, Oct. 20 (UP). A freshman quarterback keyed Duke as it beat Virginia Tech 55-6 today. Jerry Barger, 19, guided the massacre before 20,000. Sprinting halfback Piney Field had three touchdowns one on a 74-yard run.

Field's run was surpassed by an 84-yard jaunt by Halfback Charlie Smith, who also scored another. Barger scored once and Lloyd Caudle and Jack Kistler once each against a Tech team losing its 14th Straight. inserra recovered a tumble on Ohio's 14 by All-America Vic Janowicz. Two plays later Lou D'Achille passed 14 yards to Don Luft, 6-foot-4, 205-pound D'Achille missed the extra point, but from there on it was all Indiana. BUCKS HALTED AFTER 62 YDS.

The Bucks rolled right back with! a 62-yarc march to Indiana's seven, but the Hoosier defenders forced them back to the 14 from where Janowicz place-kicked for three points. The Hoosiers made a sustained march of 76 yaids in seven plays, climaxed by D'Achille's 19-yard touchdown pass to fullback Gene Gepham to make it 13-3. Just before the period closed Jerrv Van Ooyen intercepted a Tony Curcillo pass on the Ohio 33, from where the Hooiiers moved in for another score. OHIO STATE LOSES GAMBLE A pass from Achille to Luft featured the drive, with half back Bob Robertson going over frcm six yards out for the score. The BucKeyes, battling to get back in the game, gambled for four yards on fourth down in the second peri- Continued on Page 8, Column 3 Temple Rallies, Beats Delaware For 4th Straight By JOHN DELL Inquirer Sports Reporter WILMINGTON, Oct.

20. Touchdown runs by Ted Robinson and Jack Ramsey gave Temple Univer sity's resilient football team its fourth straight victory tonight. The Owls scored their points in a sec ond-half comeback for a 13-7 vic tory over an aroused University of Delaware eleven before 8300 in Wilmington Park. After Delaware took a 7-0 half- time lead on a pass, Robinson raced 54 yards for a tying touchdown and Ramsey went 18 for the clincher, which enabled the Owls to duplicate their longest winning streak in Al Kawal's coaching, tenure. His first Temple squad also won four straight in 1949.

DELAWARE STAR OUT But for 30 minutes tonight it appeared as if Temple was heading for its second defeat since its opening 19-0 loss to Syracuse. Delaware, despite the loss of Joe Scarcia, its leading ground gainer who underwent an appendectomy this morning, scored the third time it laid hands on the ball, as Don Miller, quarterback from Prospect Park, made a 49-yard scoring pass connection with Joe Lank. The 6-1 end wriggled away from a defender and ran 38, after taking the 13-yard flip. Bill Craver place-kicked the seventh point. Even after Robinson, a freshman from Bridgeton, and Ramsey, junior i from North Cathoiic, made the top i runs in Temple's superior ground attack, which piled up 295 yards to Delawaie 112, Delaware's, passing threatened to tie.

The Blue Hens out-gained the Owls in the air, 131 to 56. With 53 seconds left, Tom Fannon, former St. James (Chester) passer, fired to Frank Serpico for a 47-yard Continued on Page 6, Column 6 Sturdy One in Upset-Wins $40,000 Handicap SAN BRUNO, Oct. 20 (AP) Sturdy One upset the dopesters today to take the $40,000 added Tan- foran handicap. The four-year-old thoroughbred, ridden by Ralph Neves at 118 pounds toured me rruie ana a iunong in 1:51, nosmg out Blue Cloth and Akimbo.

Blue Reading, winner of his last four starts, ran out of the money. The winner, owned by Mr. and 'rS anu u.uu. ma owners drew $26,400. bringing his I total earnings to $126,170.

Pitt Routed, 33-0, By Notre Dame PITTSBURGH, Oct. 20 (AP). Notre Dame bounced sky high from its defeat of last week in mauling a stubborn but outclassed Pittsburgh football team, 33-0, today a game blending fumbles, pass in terceptions and a few spirited flareups. The Irish started with a few sputters, but then rolled over the hapless Pittsburghers before 61,207. There was just too much drive and too many accurate passes in Notre- Dame's attack, while Pitt found its running attack smothered and its own passing attack boom-eranging disastrously.

PROFIT BY LESSON The Irish profited by their lesson in pass defense against Southern Methodist last week. In Johnny Mazur, Plymouth, Notre Dame showed a first class passer, and his tosses to Bill Bar- Continued on Page 4, Column 2 Pro Eagles' Defense Checks Longhorns FAYETTEVILLE, Oct, 20 (AP). A hopped-up band of Arkansas Razorbacks, acting on orders of their Governor, defeated Texas, 16-14, for the first time in 13 years today. Arkansas used a Texas fumble for its first touchdown. A 67-yard march a field goal and a three-play drive of 60 yards for a third quarter touchdown gave it a margin it was able to hold.

The Arkansas defense, something coach Otis Douglas borrowed from his old pro team, the Philadelphia Eagles, was so effective in the pinches that Texas made only four gt downs Fred Williams, a senior tackle who ucuu tidsscs, Continued on Pae 8, Column 2 Arkansas Surprises Texas; TCU Rally Trips Texas Bed O' Roses Wins Richest Vineland 'Cap at Camden Race Charts anh Results on Page 5 By J. J. MURPHY Long 3d Period Gains Give MSC Victory Over State Illustrated on Page 4 By FRANK O'GARA Inquirer Sports Reporter STATE COLLEGE, Oct. 20. Penn State's courageous football team gave 30,684 largest crowd ever to see a sporting event in Pennsylvania, outside of Philadelphia or Pittsburgh a wealth of false optimism and thrills to- uie vmeiana rianaicap.

ieature race at Uarden State yesterday, was the richest race for fillies and mares ever run at this course. The winner's share of the 525,000 added purse was $22,100. which Frogs Win, 20-14, Get 3 TDs in 11 Mins. FORT WORTH. Oct.

20 (UP)- Ray McKown, a sophomore ball of fire, engineered a blazing three-touchdown final quarter for underdog Texas Christian today to upset fifth-ranked Texas A. 20-14, before 34,000 stunned fans. The 185-pound, six-footer from the Texas Panhandle scored twice and engineered a third scoring drive, all in the final 11 minutes of play. McKown, a third string quarterback until TCU's first two signal-callers went out with injuries last i "'c "lstj touchdown and slashed from the 1 Jor TCU's final marker with! Trr 1 I.r, r'IZrT on Page 8, Column 1 I Rice Beats SMU On Drake's Passing DALLAS, Oct. 20 (AP).

A slash- lng Rice football team, showing the creat Fred Benners something bril- lianc in a passing game, soundly trounced Southern Methodist Uni- versity tonight, 28-7. Dan Drake stole the nassins maeic of Benners, conqueror of Notre Dame a ago. and routed the Mustangs. He thr?" torch-down aerials to Bill Howton, left end. 0 1 2 7 0 0 7 cuchrfo- n5 D.

Johnson. Wnsru 4 JCiidown Norton. Con- JJiirton 3. S.Mlt SCO" version Siollesverck. gii day before becoming the fifth straight victim of powerful Michigan State, 32-21.

The Nittany Lions, trailing by 0-13, roared back with a touchdown just before halftime, and went ahead at 14-13 early in the third session when Bob Pollard pranced 65 yards with a punt and hometowner Bill Leonard kicked his second extra point. But the speed and bewildering plays of the Spartans soon conspired to kill the enthusiasm of the homecoming crowd at Beaver Field. MSC RETALIATES Michigan State shoved out in front again by retaliating in kind seven minutes later Jim Ellis' 57-yard scoring shot with a punt and piled Continued on Page 4, Column i.

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