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Clarion-Ledger from Jackson, Mississippi • Page 21

Publication:
Clarion-Ledgeri
Location:
Jackson, Mississippi
Issue Date:
Page:
21
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SECTION TWO CLASSIFIED SPORTS DIAL 3-2421 FOR THE CLARION-LEDGER After 5:30 P.M. daily and on Sunday and holidays use these numbers: Advertising 3-9278. News and Sports 3-2421 or 3-2422, Circulation 3-9204 or 3-2428 (For non-delivery of paper call circulation before 9:30 A.M. daily or 10 A.M. Sunday for special delivery.) 9 Established 1837 Jackson, Mississippi, Sunday Morning, Oct.

21, 1951 Full AP and INS Report! Ole Miss Upsets Tulane 25-6 In Homecoming Feature Delta Hinds Defeats Decatur In How Top Ten Teams Fared I FOOTBALL MBSSSSSSSSBBBBBBBSSSBSSBSBBBSBBSBSI Rebel Defenders Shine As Greenies Held; Muirhead And Lear Star On Offense To Missouri Team 27-26 High-Scoring Event 49-28 for the start of the final Decatur attempted conversion was wide, Cleveland, Oct. 20 () Kenny Hazeltine of Southwestern Missouri score. Lee made three and Ball Jones led 26-7. By PURSER HEWITT Clarion-Ledger Managing Editor HEMINGWAY STADIUM. followed with a pass that was In The Hinds Junior College Eagles took top honors in a highscoring game last night at Tiger Stadium by defeating East Central Junior College by the score of 49 to 28.

Oklahoma Gets Win Over Kansas intercepted a pass in the last seven tJnl- minutes of a football game here tonight and raced 30 yards to nose complete. Crowson and Ball moved the ball to the one from where Ball went over. The final score of the night came in the final quarter when Jones' Jack Reagor and Tom Catlett tackles Southwest's Kramer in the end zone on an attempted pass for versitv. October 20 The great Green Wave couldn't even dampen a roaring regiment of Rebels today NORMAN. Oct.

20 (INS) a saiety Things started popping fast and both teams were tied upat the end of the first at 7-7. At the half Hinds NEW YORK, Oct 20 MV-Here's what the teams named the nation's) ten best bootball outfits in this week's Associated Press poll did today: 1. California lost to Southern California, 21 to 14. 2. Tennessee defeated Alabama, 27 to 13.

3. Michigan State defeated Penn State, 31 to 21. 4. Texas lost to Arkansas, 16 to 14. 5.

Georgia Tech defeated Auburn, 27 to 7. 6. Texas A. M. lost to Texas Christian, 20 to 14.

7. Maryland defeated North Carolina, 14 to 7. 8. Illinois defeated Washington, 27 to 20. 9.

Princeton defeated Lafayette, 60 to 7. 10. Baylor defeated Texas Tech, 40 to 7. out Mississippi Delta State Teachers College, 27-26. It was a game in which the teams battled on pretty even terms throughout.

Delta State opened the scoring JUNIOR HIGH Enochs 13, Laurel 0 JUNIOR COLLEGE Hinds 49, East Central 28 Pearl River 35, Co-Lin 0 Itawamba 13, Holmes 6 Sunflower 28, EasJ -Miss. 13 Jones 28, Southwest 7 Northeast 19, Perk 7 SOUTH Ole Miss 25, Tulane 6 Ga. Tech 27, Auburn 7 Florida 33, Vanderbilt 13 Maryland 14, North Carolina 7 West Va. 89, Geneva 0 Duke 55, VPI 6 Mm. Mary 35.

N.C. State 28 Virginia 34. VMI 14 Fort Jackson 34, Boiling Field 0 Tennessee 27, Alabama 13 Sewanee 29. Miss. Colleee 0 Oklahoma opened defense of its Big Seven Championship by overcoming Kansas, 33-21, behind freshman halfback Buddy Leake at Nor SCOOBA, Oct.

20 Sunflower Jun ior College pushed over three touchdowns in the second half here tonight to defeat East Mississippi with a touchdown by Bobby Sand man today. Leake, playing fon the injured Oct. 20 Itawamba Junior College played poor hosts to the Holmes Bulldogs of Goodman here Saturday night by coming through with a 13 to 6 victory. Tom Holloway scored both TD's for the locals, getting his first in the initial period on a pass from Ephriam Godsey that covered 31 vards; and his second on a pass from Vern Seible that covered' 28 junior college 28-13. Billy Vessels, scored in the first, second and fourth quarters as the Sooners came from behind in the East Mississippi scored the first ers irom tne 10 after a long drive.

But Southwestern came back strong and John Batten went over from the four. Paul Mullins' kick put Southwestern ahead 7-6. Delta State scored twice in the time they got the ball. A halfback. led zi to 14 and at the end of the third it was Hinds 42 to 21.

It was the great running of Billy Hugh Montgomery. Bob Smith. Willard Rechal and Billy Juenke that gave the Eagles the win. Roy Price was also on the beam last night as he kicked every one of the extra points kicked. At present Price has kicked 31 out of 34 Attempts.

John Crechale. Jessie Greer, Billy Holloway. Billy Irby and J. B. Middleton were Good on defense final quarter to defeat the Jay Patterson, set the score up with a and Ole Miss Deal xuiane 25 to 6.

A homecoming day crowd saw Johnny Vaught's boys completely outclass and outplay the Louisiana invaders. It was the first time in 23 years Tulane had invaded Mississippi and it may be that long so roughly were they treated today. Ole Miss scored in the first, third and fourth periods on a long pass, a ten yard run, a four yard plunge with Jimmy Lear figuring in two of the three payoffs and Allen Muirhead the other. Muirhead made the last two. -Two factors spelled victory for the Rebels, team spirit and team speed.

The game was bitterly fought in the two lines with some hawks. vs yard aasn around end to sun- Oklahoma held a 14-0 lead before llower's 20. Gyp Garner, fullback. yards. Billy Godsey made good his conversion on the second attempt.

Kansas quarterback Jerry Robert scored two plays later from the Camp LeJeune 69; Cherry Point 7 Holmes finallv reached Davdirt in son tossed to Orban Tite for a Jay- four yard line. Gray, center, kicked second quarter, once on an 80-yard march and Fred Foster's 15 yard pass to Claude Woodall. Woodall's kick put Delta State a-head 13-7. La. Tech 20; Northwestern St.

6 -4- hawk touchdown on the final play me exira point. the final period when Allen Abies passed to John Abies for 49 yards Leland 12, Tougaloo 0 of the first period. Oklahoma made Sunflower broke into the scoring column in the second period when Emory and Henry 38; Marys- lor Hinds. Delta recovered a fumble on the viue 12 it a 20-7 when fullback Buck Mc Phail scampered over from the 10 in tne way to the Fulton one-yard line. Phil Conway went over on the Enochs Bulldogs Bear Laurel In George Ball.

Charles Duffee. and 20 and scored five plays later on Cloar, Scooba quarterback, while attempting to pass was tackled in Fort Campbell 32; Vandy 'B" 20 At this, point Kansas surprised iirsi play. rioya smith were the offensive a quarterback sneak from the one and led 19-7 at halftime. the Sooners and 50,000 spectators, Tne attempted conversion was tne end zone for a safety. power of the visitors.

While on de wide. scoring two more touchdowns. Rob Then Southwestern began to Game Saturday fense it was Dorman Pope, Steve Webb. Maury Dorocke and Willie Statistics of the Tulane-Ole Miss football game. ertson passed to end Bill Schaape Sunflower's first touchdown came later in the second period, when Baylot.

halfback, went over from the five. A pass from Mullin to move. Ray Haley climaxed a drive by going over from the one and in tne second period and drove Jones who stood out. Tulane eight yards in the third quarter for LAUREL, Oct. 20 The Enochs Mullins converted.

But Ralph Stutts SUMMIT. Oct. 20 The Jones Bobcats invaded the lair of the Southwest Jr. College Bears here Saturday and defeated the locals First downs 12 Hinds led in first downs by 15 to nine. In penalties Hinds had Baylot set up the score.

The ex tne last Kansas marker. of Delta raced 44 yards for an- Bulldogs of Jackson kept their unbeaten mark intact Saturday night point try was no good. The Sooners went ahead again seven for 75 yards, and Decatur by a 28-7 score. After a series of three fumbles by pushing over a pair of fourth otner tally and Woodall kicked the point to end the quarter with the score, Delta State 26 Southwestern seven for 50 yards. In the first quarter.

Jack Parker with the ball changing hands each quarter touchdowns for a 13 to 0 The Hinds Eagles, in two min Miss. 17 244 101 14 4 2 30.4 55 as fullback Dick Heatley scored from four yards out in the first minute of the last canto. Leake added the final six-pointer on a time Sunflower recovered Scooba's victory. 14. utes and thirty seconds, slapped Rushing yardage 115 Passing yardage 129 Passes attempted 19 Passes completed 8 Passes intercepted 1 Punts 8, Punting average 37.3 Fumbles lost 3 Yards penalized 45 fumbles on the ten.

On second down scampered 41 yards for the first touchdown while in the second period Buddy Saulsburg of the Bob David (Cotton) Farmer, Bulldog In the fourth John Batten of B. Carolla, fullback, scored- The try one-yard plunge. fullback, scored all the Enoch points. He clomaxed drives of 80 cats went over from the one-yard Southwestern sparked a long drive and went over from the one and Mullins' kick made it Delta State over tne first score of the night. Billy Hugh Montgomery.

Willard Rechal and James Ratcliff carried the ball from the Hinds 41 to the Decatur 33. Ratcliff faded back and ior extra point tailed. This was in the third quarter. and 60-yards by going over from line. The Bears eot their lone TD In LSU 7, Georgia 0 Howard 20, J.

C. Smith 0 Midd. Tenn. 33, Morehead St. 13 Centre 10, Louisville 7 Texas Sou.

19, Ky. St. 14 Tenn. Tech 14, West Ky. 7 East Carolina 19, Guklford 14 Fla.

St. 35, Sul Ross 13 Richmond 25, Davidson 6 Lenoir Rhyne 33, West Can. Tchrs. 7 Tampa 14, Stetson 14 (tie) Kentucky 35, Vilanova 13 Wofford 33, Presbyterian 14 Southwest Missouri 27, Delta State 26 La; College 17, McNeese St. 21 Memphis St.

41, SLI 7 N'East La. St. 66, Ouachita 0 La. Tech 21, N'Western La. 6 EAST Harvard 22, Army 21 Bucknell 62.

Buffalo 32 Pennsylvania 28, Columbia 13 Cornell 27. Yale 0 Lehigh 21, Rutgers 6 Coast Guard 28. Amherst 20 Dartmouth 14, Syracuse 0 San Francisco 32. Fordham 26 Sunflower next score came a 26 Southwestern 21. Minnesota Downs the second quarter when Quarter- few plays later when Oswalt, halfback, went over from the three.

three and four yards out and plunged for the extra-point after the first TD. It was an exceptionally hard Dacs jonn Kramer passed to Carol Nebraska 32-20 occasional evidence of rew roughness, but the difference was this: Tulane indulged itself In occas hurled a beautiful pass to Leonard Williams who took the ball on the Decatur five and bulled his way Isbell Is Star Holloway for 20-yards into the end zone. Don Marion converted. Little kicked the extra point. Sunflower's last score was in the ional lapses-of lethargy.

MINNEAPOLIS. Oct. 20 over. Roy Price kicked the extra ui Also in the second quarter, a 20- fourth period on a pass from Little iougnt ball game with tne defen sive elements of both teams turn' ing in great games. As Baylor Wins The Ole Miss boys never let up.

point. Minnesota punched over three to Poss, halfback. Little converted. yard pass to Jack Parker payed off with a score. Parker's made his William Younz fell on a Juenke touchdowns within 2 1-2 minutes in East Mississippi scored the game They were keen, fierce and fighting every step of the WACO, Tex.

Oct. 20 (m Bay second conversion here and the fumble on the Hinds right and East Central took over. An offside pen last touchdown late in the fourth period. A series of passes from the second quarter today to break its game with Nebraska wide open and score a 39-20 victory. visitors led 20-7 at intermission.

Parker went 32 yards around Cloar, quarterback, set it up. San The score was tied 7-7 when the lor spotted upstart Texas Tech. a first quarter six-point lead, then roared to a 40-20 victory here today. Larry Isbell, a fancy flinger, got hot in the second period to right end for the fourth touchdown alty placed tne baa back on the 13 but George Ball made up the five yards through center. Herald Crowson picked up five and then ders 6cored from the one.

The try for extra point was no good. Columbia Knocked Off Unbeaten List PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 20 Chet Cornog ran and passed Pennsylvania to a 28-13 victory over Co in the third quarter and when the Gophers went on their scoring splurge. The only sour note was the attendance, estimated at fifteen thousand paid for a game that deserved several times that many. Perfect weather surrounded the game that climaxed one of the grandest weekends in all Ole Miss history.

The game was just five amd a half minutes old when Ole Miss Bet Backs Paul Giel and Ron Wallin throw two touchdown passes after Ball passed to Floyd Smith over led the Minnesota attack. Giel sneaking across Baylor first tal tne goal. Norman Lee kicked the point and the score was tied 7-all scored two touchdowns himself and ly. lumbia today. threw pass after pass to put the at the end of the first quarter.

Blocked Punt Gives LSU 7-0 Win Over Georgia 77 ball in scoring position for other six pointers. Wallin, a husky 218-pound- up a touchdown tnat covered al Hinds came roaring back in the opening minutes of the second quarter. Taking over on their own most the length of the field. From er, bucked over for one touchdown and piled up yardage with other MSC Takes GSC Lead With 35-6 Lead Over S' Eastern 22 Hinds started a touchdown his own six, the pride of Greenwood, Quarteerback Lear, ran for ATHENS, Oct, 20 V- A cllowed L.S.U. to pick up the mar drives.

Holy Cross 53, NYU 6 Princeton 60, Lafayette 7 Mich. State 32, Penn St. 21 Morris Brown 44, Allen 0 Trinity 41; Colby 0 Maine 49; Conn. 19 Hobart 26; Kenyon 14 Wesleyan 28; Upsala 14 Susquehanna 37; Wagner 20 Midlebury 14; Tufts 13 Carnegie Tech 39; Allegheny 0 'Hofstra 41; Clarkson 0 Temple 13, Delaware 7 Scranton 13, Indiantown Gap 13 march. Rechal picked up 12 through center and then Billy Hugh Mont ties.

blocked kick by a freshman guard As the hard but clean tilt ended gomery sliced through the line. tonight gave Louisiana State a 7-0 a urst down on a iae pucnoui play, similar to the one Farley Salmon used to work successfully. Next Lear actually pitched out to Georgia was knocking at the door, picked up his Interference and Tarheels Give BY HARRY TAYLOR victory over Georgia in a bruising tut cnarne oaKiev intercepted traveled 63 yards for the score. Southeastern Conference football Bratkowski pass on the last play Price kicked the extra point his Muirhead, the sensational Canton HATTTESBURG, Oct. 20 Miss.

Southern moved into first place in clash. cl recovered a Polk fumble on the Southeastern 44 following a punt. McElroy again carried and David Lee Walker passed to Bob McKel-lar for more yardage. Tony went over from the two. freshman, moving the stakes up to 27th of 30 attempts.

The Danville, 111., quarterback's passing artistry had propelled Sid "Frenchy" Fournet. a 200- Maryland Scare COLLEGE PARK, Oct. 20 W) Maryland had to struggle mightily today to wrest a 14-7 vic the Gulf States Conference Satur Decatur was not out by any the 33. Lear faded and passed 33 yard to Bud Slay, of Waynesboro, round yearline from Boealusa. ueorgia to the visitor nine.

sliced through late in the third Aided bv a pass interference. The first scored by Rouchon and the big end scored without a hand laid on him. Lear missed the quarter to block Zeke Bratkowski's day by downing the Southeastern, Lions 35-6 at Faulkner Field here. Prior to Saturday's encounter, this drive carried 64 yards, almost tory from a hard-socking North Carolina array and stay undefeated boot in the end zone. Billv West.

til Dy air, out oaKiey's interception at the goal line spelled another loss when a pass from Legros'to Mc-Kellar covered 49-yards all the way to the Lion eight. Four plays later Rouchon bulled his way into the in lour games. the Lions led the loop with a 2-0 normally a fullback but tonight a whale of a defensive guard, fell on the loose ball for the touchdown. ior Georgia. The North Carolina Tar Heels conference record while the de The first half principally was a threatened to stage an uprising against the seventh-ranked team Another freshman.

Cliff Strinar- fending champions from the Hub City had won their only circuit workout ior the big defensive lines. Both teams stuck mainly to the ground, and Bratkowski who had in the nation by gaining, at least field. Fournet's high school teammate, kicked the extra point. encounter. Alter the decisive score.

Brat- been racking up passing records point. Ole Miss made a great goal line stand to halt Tulane in the second period when Kent and McGee ran wild on a 62 yard march to the Rebel seven. Three plays later Tulane was still on the seven, thanks to Jim Ingram of Birmingham, Harold Maxwell of Laurel and Ray Thornton of Crystal Springs. On fourth down, Ingram intercepted a Tulane pass in the end zone and ran out to safe territory. Lea Pasley, the brilliant Sardis first year man, ran the third period a ue.

They had Maryland's back to the wall almost the entire second half. Southern's over-all record is now four wins and two losses while end zone. The Southerners showed exceptional good downfield blocking a-gainst the Lions here while McElroy, in addition to starring on offense, did his part on the defensive side. Others from Southern looking good defensively were Edide Kau-chik and Muscarella. kowski.

Georgia's sophomore aerial taued to complete a single aerial artist, pitched the Bulldogs covered the receivers like Southeastern had a 4-1 mark. wnich was scoreless on both sides to LSU's 14. But too many Georgia blankets. With only a minute to play they left Southern opened the scoring in the initial quarter when Quarter (tie) Rochester 7, Vermont 0 Northeastern 44, Bates 13 Williams 13. Bowdota 12 Mass.

40, Rhode Island 7 -West. Va. Tech 19, Fairmont 6 Gettysburg 34, Muhlenberg 7 MIDWEST Indiana 32, Ohio St. 10 Michigan 21, Iowa 0 Iowa St. "21, Missouri 14 Minnesota 39, Nebraska 20 Northwestern 16, Navy 7 Notre Dame 33, Pitt 0 Wisconsin 31, Purdue 7 Colorado 20, Kansas St.

7 Bradley 34, New Mex. Wayne 34; Brandeis 6 Muskigum 31; Wooster 8 Miami (O.) Ohio U. 0 Oberlin 40; Hamilton 14 Dayton 21, Chattanooga 6 Central St. 19, Tenn. St.

7 Indiana St. 0, Ball St. 0 (tie) St. Joseph's 12, Butler 6 Monmouth 31. Grinnel 6 Coe 19, Cornell (Iowa) 7 Tulsa 27, Marquette 21 Toledo 32.

Marshall 14 eceivers auea to hold his heaves 1 the 31,237 fans breathless by bare means. Taking over on their own 40. Decatur started marching. Charles Duffee. John Graham.

Kil-Patrick and Ball marched to the Hinds 32. From this spot, Ball hurled another aerial to Floyd Smith who caught the ball on the 15 and went to the five. Graham and Duffee made it with Duffe going over. Lee kicked the point and the score was tied again. Hinds came back on the kickoff for another six-pointer.

Taking over on the kickoff on their own 25 Crachal. Ratcliff took the ball to the Decatur 42. Ratcliff faded back and passed to Williams who took I the ball on the 14 and continued through for the score. Price's kick was good again. Floyd Smith tied the score again when he received the kickoff on his own 20 yard line and raced 80 yards for a Lee's kick was good.

On the next kickoff. Hinds took the ball on their own 44. Crachal took the ball to the 35 from where Billy Jeunke smashed through for at critical moments, back Tom LeGros bucked over ly missing the needed score, from the one yard line. Here Webb Many times desperate Georgia! Illinois EfJaes ives foundered, in the closing! "-uac cnves foundered, in the closing Farish made his first of five sue Washington 27-20 cessful conversions and the South kickoff back for 50 yards and Tu erners were in front to stay. lane never quite got out of that hole.

Sullivan Beats Vandy And Wade For Florida 33 73 Southeastern quickly got back in Alter one trade oi kicks Maxwell minutes when Bratkowski's receivers bobbled his tosses. At least two were dropped in the end zone. In losing its third in a row, Georgia put forth a superb defensive effort, but the one lapse when Fournet barreled through SEATTLE, Oct. 20 Sophomore Tommy O'Connell pitched Illinois to a fourth-quarter, tie-crack- the ball game when Hubert Polk intercepted a pass and a few took a Southern punt at MSC's 49- plays later, Lear darted ten yards for the second score and kicked the in gtouchdown and a 27-20 football yara line, nanaea on io niaaiey victory over Washington today. Boudreaux heading for the side goal.

mistakes that cost them so heavily lines, picking-up his blockers, and Another Harol, you spell this one GAINSvTLLE, Oct. 20 (if) Haywood Sullivan, master of the forward pass, turned into a runner in the Auburn and Georgia Tech going all the way with a beauti defeats without Harol Lofton of Brookhaven, set up the third score ful piece of running. Puford Long and J. (Pappa) Hall to lead Florida to a convincing 33 13 win over Vanderbilt today. Doug Lambert attempted con moved up from the defensive pla with his recovery of a fumble at the Tulane 28 early in the fourth Cincinnati 41, Western Reserve 0 Parilli Leads Kentucky To Win Over Villa nova version was wide.

Sullivan ran for two of Florida's 35 yards and the score. Price kick was good. toon, struck out witn long runs to get Florida in position for its Elmo Lang climaxed an 80-yard five touchdowns when all his re period. Pasley, Showboat Boykin of Greenville and Muirhead alter drive in tne second period by tak In the third quarter Hinds scor first touchdown. Fullback Floyd Huggins scored It a little more ing a 35ryard pass from LeGoss.

nated in carrying to the four yard Buckley McElroy and Tony Rouch- ceivers were covered. He reverted to form to set up another score with a long pass and tossed to End Jim French for a fourth. Florida took advantage of two than three minutes after Vander line and Muirhead went over. Lear missed again, but nobody cared. on both contributed valuable yard bilt had racked up six points on a Wade-to-Ben Roderick throw for 35 age to tnis marcn.

The alert Ingram recovered a Tu Phil Muscarello helped set-up the breaks A Vanderbilt fumble on its 10 and a short Vanderiblt kick but there was no doubt the home lane fumble with four minutes to go on the Tulane 36. Rocky Byrd of Pascagoula tossed to George third Southern marker in the third quarter when he recovered a Lam SOUTHWEST Arkansas 16, Texas 14 Okla. 27, Drake 14 TCU 20, Texas 14 Oklahoma 33, Kansas 21 Baylor 40, Texas Tech 26. Houston 35, Hardin-Simmons 27 Rice 28, SMU 7 S. F.

Austin 27, Southwest Tex. St. 20 FARWEST USC 21; California 14 UCLA 41; Oregon 0 Washington St. 26, Oregon St. 13.

Stanford 21; Santa Clara 14 Illinois 27; Washington 20 Utah State 20; Colo. 20 (tie) Brigham Young 20; Wyoming 20 Idaho 40, San Jose St. 7 Montana 38,. Mont. St.

yards. Vanderbilt's Commodores moved 42 yards for another score, John Dodd dashing over after Wade threw 13 yards to Ted Kirkland. Florida smacked back 66 yards and when Sullivan ran .13 yards for bert fumble on the Louisiana 31-yard line- Scrappy Hart scampered 31 yards on the first play but team earned its Homecoming victory. The high scorine came in snite Brenner of Memphis for a first down, Lindy Callahan of Laurel ran for another and Pasley squired Bullet Bill Leskovar. the man Fill-ion beat out of a job, as they kept the Villanova defense softened for the aerial attack.

Villanova found its punch for a quick first period touchdown on a 50-yard drive and again in the final stanza after capitalizing on Parilli's fumble on the Kentucky three. The Babe's favorite target was a 210-pound Sophomore end, Steve Meiliger, who gathered in three of Parilli's aerials for tallies that covered 50. 24 and 18 yards. Little Emory Clark, a senior ed twice. From a punt on the Decatur 35.

Rechale and Smith teamed together to go over with Rechal making the score from 16 yards out. Price's kick was good. Again in the third. Hinds scored with the aid of a 21 yard run by Juenke. a 13 yard run by Rechal and a roughness penalty to the Decatur one.

Rechal went over and Price kicked the point. Bob Smith raced over In the early minutes of the fourth quarter from the 26 yard line where the Eagles took the ball on a nice run by Rechal for 15 yards. Pete Powell hopped on a Hinds fumble on the Eagles' 18 yard line LEXINGTON, Oct. 20 Babe Parilli, Kentucky's All-America candidate, unlimbered his brilliant right arm to pitch four touchdown passes in a 35-13 football rout over previously unbeaten Villanova here tonight. The Kentucky Babe missed by one the touchdown pass record he shares in the Southeastern Conference as the four scoring heaves covered 121 yards to stop the nation's 12th ranking team.

Villanova found another danger in the running of Tom Fillion. a of showers that fell several times down to the one. Muirhead scored both sides were off side and It was no play. through the game, if anything, the the -score it looked like the -score it looked like a see-saw easily and when Lear missed, again But. on the second try.

McElrov rain bothered the tossing of Vandysfgame between the offense-minded nobody cared. Bill Wade after he made a terrific teams. Last year Florida won a 31 Tulane and Ole Miss subs battled tried the same hole on the identical play and went over unharmed. start with two long tosses for a 27 thriller and the year before It was Rouchon getting the final quick six points in the first two Vandy took it 23-17. pair of markers for the victorious the last few minutes and in the very last 60 seconds of the game, Dempsey completed a series of passes to Weidenbacher, the last one minutes of the game.

But Florida patched its defense Southerners. Florida's Gators lived up to their halfback, gathered in the other aerial on a 29-yard payoff throw, i slashing sophomore fullback, and1 together in the second half and swept to the one-sided decision. Utah 17, Denver 14. His last came after Phil Musme- role as favorite by avoiding the (CbHmc4 On Fare I 'M i If I SCENES IN REBEL yiCTORY The Ole Miss Rebels rolled to a 25-6 victory over the Tulane Greenies ot Hemming-way Stadium Saturday afternoon and during the upset win, Clarion-Ledger Photographer Bobby Moulder snapped the thrilling action shots shown above. In the left photo, Ronnie Kent of Tulane (41) -gains some ground for the losers as Cecil Doyle (42) throws a block on the Rebs' James Kelly (25) in the foreground.

Other Rebels in the shot are Ray Thornton (82), Carl West (26) and Marvin Trauth (74) while another Greenie is Dick Fugler (74). In the center photo, Wilson Dil- lard of Ole Miss (46) takes a Tulane punt and prepares to scamper upfield as Othar Crawford (60) rushes up to do his part. At right, Jimmy Lear of Ole Miss (14) sends the Rebels in front 12-0 as he falls into the end zone for the second touchdown of the game. Lear's conversion made the score 13-0 moments later. Lear is shown as he was tackled by Charles Daigle (33) in' the end zone as Bobby Nuss (63) end Alfred Robelot (53) watch helplessly.

Other Rebs in the picture are Lee Lasley (42), sensational frosh from Sardis; end Othar Crawford (60). (Photos by Bobby Moulder) rmrr.

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