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Cumberland Sunday Times from Cumberland, Maryland • Page 32

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Cumberland, Maryland
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32
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Pot. State 37 Fairmont 7 Pitt 26 West. Va. 7 Oklahoma 52 Iowa State 0 VaVTech .34 NC State .26 Columbia 0 Micli State 42 Minnesota 14 Army Penu 40 0 Illinois ...17 Wisconsin 14 Penn State 34 Rutgers .13 TCU Texas Maryland 25 Clemsoii 12 Ntr. Dame 27 N.

Carolina 7 Texas A-M 20 Rice ......12 Richmond 7 G.Wasli. ...0 Ohio State 20 Iowa .10 Michigan 30 Indiana ..0 Syracuse 26 Colgate' .19 Arkansas .6 .......0 UCLA .19 Wash'gton 17 Ga. Tech Alabama 2 ginia SPORTS TERP -BAGS unidentified Maryland linebacker smears back, Joe Paglie'i (40) of Clemson dfter good first y'e'sterday's'game'at Clemson, S. O. The from a 12-0 deficit to take their ninth, straight'game-of the season, 25-12.

i (AP Photofax) Posts Pass Record In Navy Will Nov. 12.W—George 'Navy's brilliant, quarterback, set ah academy all-time season recocd'Jor passing today as Midshipmen crushed Columbia's football team 47-0. Welsh completed 11 out of 16 passes against Columbia for.a total of 176 yards. This brought his 1955 mark to 1,143 yards; surpassing the total of set by Bob Zastrow back, in 1950. Welsh was brilliantly supported by; Tom' Forrestal, a sophomore who threw; just as-effectively --as the -In between steady production of Navy touchdowns, Claude Benham threw effective passes for Columbia but the Lions never got closer than 10 yards to Navy gained a total-pf 398 jyards in the air to set' igame record for the academy.

The previ ous mark made this year against Penn; State. Five of touchdowns came on passes, the most, spectacular coming''in the thirdUperiod. With the balloon Forrestal passed, to Ronald Brence on the 15 and! he ran the-rest of the way. Other' touchdovvn pass'plays were -Welsh to Ed Malynn for 10 yards in the first quarter, Forrestal to John Russell' for 22 in the second 'and Gus PraHalis to George Thomas for 35 in the fourth, and Welsh to Ron for 22 in the third. Twice -Navy halted Columbia drives by intercepting Benham's passes.

Welsh snared one on the Navy 10 in the second and Forrestal intercepted on the Navy 3 in the third period, right after Benham had grabbed one of Welsh's tosses almost out of the hands of Beagle, and'sprinted to the Navy 24'. Moore Hero InLioiiWui NEW N.J./.Nov. 12- WViRalfback Lenhy Moore galloped; for 179 yards and three touchdowns. today as Penn State topped The Reading, flash who was the country's highest ground gainer "in 1954, peeled off scoring runs of 60 and 22 yards to enjoy the of his crowd of at Rutgers largest, of the year- saw a keyed-up. Rutgers squad dominate the play in the first half with fullback Jack Laverty rack ing up the yardage and quarterback Billy and passing: But Penn.

State had too much power with- Moore and Co. Moore 1955- record to 687 yards as- he cut and' weaved through the Rutgers team at Near the end of the first quarter, after a 61-yard Rutgers 7 drive had ended on the Penn State 18 with an incomplete pass. Moore went over the.right.side cut to his left and ran clear to the goal line. Rallies Tar Heels 12 Notre'Dame, battled to a-7-7- draw the first half, stormed two third-period; touch downs and another in fourth to rout Mirth today in an intersectional football battle be- fore a crowd of 38,000. Notre Dame center Lou Loncaric intercepted a pass by Tar Heel quarterback Dave Reed and raced 75 yards for a touchdown in the closing; minutes to climax the thriller.

It was'Notre Dame's seventh win one loss this season, and its seventh straight victory over North since their series'began North Carolina now' has a 2-6 season record. The Fighting Irish started. fast, storming for a first-period touchdown in four plays with halfback 'Jim Morse going over from the 2. North Carolina, playing its best hnes 4a game of the season, stormed back in the second period to tie: the score on the running of halfback Ken Keller and the passing, of quarterback Buddy' Sadder. TarvHeels rolled 53 yards, in- 10 plays Sasser tossing a.

5-yard end Charles. for the score. Keller converted to tie the game at 7-7. The' Irish, dominating second- half play, rolled 66 yards for. a third-period Quarterback Paul Hqrhung went over from the 3.

Halfback.Dick Lynch scored from the 2 a short while later after a Tar Heel furnble by Ed Button was recovered on the 27 by Irish tackle Ed Sullivan. SATURDAY'S SCORES Br The Associated Press EAST Dartmouth 7,, Cornell 0 Princeton. 13. 0 Navy 47, Columbia' 0 Army 40, Penn 0 Syracuse 26, Colgate 19 Brown 14. Harvard 6 Boston College 40; Boston U.

12 Delaware 46, Temple 0 Dickinson 7, Johns Hopkins 6 Alfred e. Hobart 0 Rhode Island 25, Connecticut 0 Amherst 13. Williams 6 New Britain Tchrs 6, Worcester Tech 0 Trinity 46, Wcsleyan 6 Juniata 39, Swarthmore 0 Pitt 26, West Virginia 7 Penn State 34, Rutgers 13 Football Scores Hoppy Great AsBuckeyes Defeat Iowa; COLUMBUS, Ohio, 12 All-America Howard (Hopalong) Cassady put-on his greatest show in his farewell to'the home folks here today, scoring all three touchdowns as Ohio State defeated Iowa 20-10. The freckled, red-haired, speedster ground out. 169 yards'on the ground in 26 attempts, just 2 yards less than the entire Iowa team was able to make in 45 rushing plays.

A. crowd of 82,701, third largest in Ohio Stadium history, gave the 21-year-old Columbus senior the greatest ovation 1 eyer heard in these parts as he the game 18 Havertord 22, Susquehanna 7 Shippcnsburg 7. Clarion .7 Scranton 32, PMC .6 National Aggies 33. Long Island Aggies 0 Brandeis 20, Buffalo 13 Springfield 34, Hofstra 12 Lycoming 19, Lock Haven 19 Bridgeport 0, Wilkcs 0 Bloomsburg 17, West Chester 7 Gettysburg 34. Western Maryland 7 Millersville 21, Mansfield 6 Muhlenburg 18, Marshall 13 Montclair 35," Kutztown 7 Lebanon Valley 26.

Ursinus Drexel 27, Coast Guard 7 BaldwinWallace 20, California (Pa.) 13 Centre 40, Washington i Jefferson 7 Westminster 29, Slippery Rock 19 Thiel 20, Bethany 14 Grove' City 18, Edinboro 0 Potomac St. 37. Fairmont Geneva 20, Allegheny 0 Shepherd (WVa) 46, Newport. News App. 0 Lehigh 51, Albright 19 Tufts 32, Upsala 0 SOUTH Maryland 25, Clemson 12 Duke 41, South Carolina 7 Notre Dame- 7 0 14 Da 2 7 North Carolina -Louisiana St.

34, Miss. St, 7 North Carolina ...0 7 0 (Mississippi 27, Houston 11' Virginia Tech '34, N.C.'• State' 26 Richmond 7. George Washington 0 Notre. Dame scoring Morse (2, plungel Hornung (3, plunge), Lynch Loncaric (75, intercepted' pass); Conversions: Hornung, Schaefer, Ward. North Carolina scoring Touchdowns: Robinson Sasser).

Conversion: Keller, Wake Forest 13, Virginia 7 Randolph-Macon 7, Hampden-Sydney 6 Tennessee 20, Florida .0 Morehouse 7, Hoard 6 Auburn 16, Georgia 13. Vanderbilt 20, Tulane 7 Kentucky 41, Memphis State 7 Brown Upsets Harvard, 14-6 CAMBRIDGE, 12 wi' six-times beaten Brown-football team, led by unheralded reserve quarterback Dom Balogh, pushed across touchdowns in the third and-' fourth period today to upset Harvard. 14-6, before 16,500 fans at the Balogh, a 2lyard old senior from New Haven, turned in a sensational passing performance while directing the.fired-up Bruins to a convincing triumph in the 54th meeting the Ivy League rivals. Harvard, better than a touchdown favorite after its 7-6 triumph over Princeton last unable to against: a' hard- charging Brown'-, line. except for a brief period during the third quarter.

STATE FOOTBALL Bel Air 27, Wicomico 0 Cambridge 6. Crisficld 6 (tic). Hotf Scores Three Times, Wicklows Twice In SHEPHERDSTOWN, 12 walloped Newport News, Va. Apprentice. today 46-0, the Rams eighth straight football win of the season and 'their first undefeated campaign in about 30 years.

Shearer led the locals to victory in thf-r closing game, passing for three was ably assisted by George Holt, former AKI-Stale scholastic back Moorefield, who pushed his iotfch-' down total for the season to by on plunges of one and three yards arid yards for Dick Wddfws.of Cumberland, accounted for a pair of scores on 18 and 65 yards respectively, and lacked on an additional two extra points. Another lander, Barney Tucker, scored the scoring three times. Holt scoreo first TD of the game for Shepherd on a pass play. Terps Clinch Orange Bowl As Beightol Proves Hero CLEMSON, S.C., Nov. 12 Maryland survived darkest hour of.

football season'today by coming from 12 points behind to throttle a keyed up Clemson team 25-12 and all but wrap up an Orange Bowl berth against Oklahoma. Second string senior quarterback Lynn Bci- ghtol'' of Cum; Lynn Beightol beriand. tarting his first game of the season- as a sore throat limiteo the I brilliant Frank Tamburello to time duty, rallied'-Maryland touchdown passes, one to halfback Ed Vereb, the other to end! Bill Walker. Tigers Take 12-0 Lead A record overflow Homecoming Day crowd of 30,000 saw Clemson's hungry Tigers, only once before today, storm into a 12-0 lead before Maryland, the nation's No. 2 team, took charge.

The victory was. the 14th in a' row for this season. seconds before the finish. In leading. Ohio to its fifth VMI 14, Citadel 7 I.

Wofford 21, Davidson 9 Southwestern 46, Missouri School Mines 21 Georgia Tech 26,. Alabama 2 Fort Valley. St. (Ga.) 7.. Knoxville Gallaudet 12, D.C.

Teachers 6 Appalachian 35. Presbyterian 6 Catawba 33, Cutlford 20 Emoryi Henry 7, Tech 7 Virania 'St. 7. North Carolina 'AiT 7 age W3S 81,746. Boiling AFB 14.

Camp Lejeune 13 Alabama State 14. Savannah State 6 Louisville 45, Eastern Kentucky 13 Middle Tennessee 20. Eastern Tennessee 7 West Liberty 47, W. Virginia Wcsleyan 0. Shaw 41, Lincoln 0 Florida Normal 33, Paine 6 Western Kentucky 46.

Evansville 6 Scwanee 12, Washington Lee 0 Southwestern- La. 27, Northwestern La. 33 MIDWEST Ohio 'State 20, Iowa 10 Michigan 30, Indiana 0 State 42, Minnesota 14 Illinois 17, Wisconsin 14 Kansas State 21, Missouri 0 Hardin-Stmmons 53, Cincinnati 20 Marquette 18. Holy Cross 6 Kansas 12, Oklahoma 7 Purdue 46. Northwestern 8 Oklahoma 52.

Iowa State 0 North Dakota 18. South Dakota 14 Dcnison 27, Oberlin 20 Kent State Wayncsburg fl Findlay 41, Indiana Central 7 Central State 40, Anderson (Ind) 0 Capital 33, Otterbein 7 Defiance 19, Ohio Northern 6 Bowling Green 13, Ohio U. 0 Wittenberg 13, Ohio Weslcyan 13 Nebraska 37, Colorado 20 i 'MuskinEum 40, Mount Union 6 Iowa Tchrs 33. Mankato (Minn.) 7 Coe 28. St.

Olaf Grinnell 20. Monmouth 6 Southern Illinois 28, Illinois Normal 14 North Central (111.) 64, Elmhurst 0 Wheaton 32, MilUkin 13 QuanUco Marines 49. Great Lakes 14 Wooster. 35. Hiram Case 6, John Carroll 0 Washington (St.

Louis) 41,. Butler 20 K.iUmnzoo 13, Alhlon 0 Central 48, Eastern 111. 14 Fort. Sill 41. Brooke Medical Center 7 Kansas Wosleyan 28.

Neb. Weslcyan 2S Michigan Normal 13. Northern I1L 6 Western Mich. 13, Western Reserve Bradley 32. Valparaiso 12 Curroll (WIs.) 37, St.

Norbcrt 20 Knox 0 Cornell flows) 2t, Klpon 7 Miami. (Ohio) 21. Dayton 0 Lmuuton 14. Arkansas AfcM 6 Hanover -JO? Indiana State 6 SI Joseph's 39. Pier 11 DePauw 33, Wabash 20 Prlndpia 13, ROM Poly Illinois Weateyan 14.

Augtiitana 0 SOUTHWEST Texai 34. TuUa 7 i Twaa AMI 20, Rice 12 Howard Payrc 14, Sal ROM 13 straight conquest in the Big 10 and its 12th years, CassaHy scored tin 45- yard blast over tackle-the first time he had his hands on the ball. He came back four plays later with an 11-yard scoring dash around end, and climaxed his great day in the final period, with a 3-yard plunge through the line. Iowa's 235-pound end, Jim Free man, scored all the Hawkeye points. He booted.

a 16-yard field goal in the opening minutes to give the'invaders 3-0'edge. And in the second period he caught a 5- yard scoring pass from quarterback Jerry Reichow and then booted the extra-point. Cassady, with next week's Michigan game at Ann Arbor still to go, wound up his fabulous career here just as he opened it. Four years ago as a freshman he scored three times against 'Indiana. Today's three his'total to 36 and a new school point record of the 201 set in 191617-19 by'l Chic Harley, another Buckeye All-America.

Today's. straight time this.year the Bucks have gone over 80,000 here, boost; ed the at-home That is more thaii 10,000 higher The Yardstick By The Associated Press Starylind 14' 208 no 5 Clemson First Downs 12 "Bushing Yardage Passing Yardage Passes Attempted Passes Completed 3 Passes Intercepted by .5 Punts 39.8 Puntinc Average 1 Fumbles Lost 40 Yards Penalized 157 70. 13 4 0 4 sn.7 0 20 Both teams have now.finished their Atlantic Coast. Conference season, Maryland with a 4-0 league record, and Clemson 3-1. The Clemson team moved the opening kickoff 84 yards in 10 plays to set Maryland on its heels with a touchdown after 5 minutes and 25 seconds.

End Dalton Rivers, who had. not caught pass all; season, grabbed a 14-yarder on the goal line'from quarterback Don King for the 'touchdown. Halfback Joel Wells, a running fool in the first half, burst through for 50 yards and a touchdown on the first play of the second period to put Clemson ahead -12-0. Vercb Leads Scorers Maryland got back in the ball game late the second period after a 15-yard roughness penalty against Clemson had given 'the Terps a first down on the Clemson 36. Five plays later, Vereb smashed over from the 1 for the first of his two He now has 14 to lead major college scorers.

Maryland went ahead in' the third quarter, which it completely dominated, running 26 plays from scrimmage against for The Terps moved 73 yards in nine plays after the second-half kickoff, Beightol passing to Vereb.from the-18. for a touchdown. Fullback Bob Laughery made good the conversion and Maryland was home. Turned Into Rout Last-quafter touchdowns by Tamburello on an 8-yard run and than the previous record of 480,340 16-yard pass to Walter set a year ago. The season's aver- turned into a rout.

Maryland's defense, anchored by Pellegrini and tackle Mike San- dusty, contained Clemson, in the second half holding the Tigers to 15 yards rushing after Clemson had Perm Outclassed By Army, 40-0 12 Army up for Navy by maul-! 'The' Maryland passing attack ing Penn today, 40-0, and handingjalsd came to life after a first the Quakers the 17th straight which the Terps tried only two with only'one tie since mid-1953. With big Navy, game only two weeks off and an opeif date next Saturday, Coach Earl (Red) Blaik shook up his back- Field. He-installed Bob Kyasky as his starting left halfback and shift- TCU WEST wyomlHK so, Mexlrm Ot Ocnver 39, Ulah Statf Utah IT. Colorado AfcM Baft' Sttte li. State 13 WhTlworth SSi FjuUrt Statifon) OTMOU 7 UOW Orrcon Stxtr CaKfornla 14 of 4J, Whitman 12 Cestril 32.

Western Wish, rolled up 142 yards in the half on the ground. WVU Loses First Panthers Go WUd, 26-7 By WILL CRLMSLEY PITTSBURGH, Nov. 12 magnificent ends 'Mean John" Paluck and Joe Walon, jarred previously' unbeaten West Virginia into fumbling chaos oday and shattered the Mountaineers' bowl 57.996 at Pitt Stadium. The game had. a.

bizarre ending vith West Virginia getting its lone ouchdown after the contest jarently had ended and a free ex- ra point because there was no goal post. Walton snared a 6-yard pass quarterback Pete Neft to cli-. max 63-yard strike midway in he first period and his fellow flag- man Paluck, broke up West Virginia.plays to produce two more scores in the space of-a minute and 26 seconds at the start of the'second half. Third-Stringers Score Pitt's saucy third-stringers added "rub-it-in" score in the. final iwo.niinutes with Barrel Lewis go- over for the touchdown front the 6 to end a 78-yard, 10-play drive.

The game iwild" confusion. With only five play, officials ruled a pass ference play giving West Virginia conversion. SiX POINTS FOR end Ron Beagle (SO) outjumps Columbia defender Claude Benham to snare a 22-yard pass in the end zone during the third period of yesterday's game at Baker Field, New York. The pass was thrown by Navy's star quarterback George Welsh. The Middies crushed the Lions, 47-0.

(AP Photofax) Iowa State Buried 52-0 By Oklahoma Nov. 12 blizzard forecast for the OklaTioma-Iowa State gahie failed-toi'Varfive but the nation's No. 1 football team brewed up a touchdown storm of its own that chilled the Cyclones from Iowa 52-0. Instead of a cold front, the temperature soared into the 70s and 45,000 shirt sleeked spectators watched'the Sooners outclass Iowa State for their 534d straight Big 7 lonference game without a defeat. Oklahoma scored two touchdowns in each quarter for its 27th consecutive overall triumph, longest victory string in the nation.

The Sooners, driving toward their eighth straight Big 7 Conference championship, meet Nebraska in a showdown game at Lincoln, next week. Each team has iive loop victories and no defeats. Oklahoma's first team played only 20 minutes today with the second, third and fourth units carrying on. There wasn't much difference between them. In the first half, Iowa State never got by the Sooner 43, and in the second the closest it came was the Olahoma 36.

The thinly-manned and tired Cyclones had to be content trying to Desperation Fielder Wins For Uclans LOS ANGELES, Nov. 12 Lfl-The amazing Huskies of Washington al most sidetracked the UCLA Rose Bowl express.today but the Bruins came from behind to kick a field goal in the last 18 seconds of the game to eke out a Pacific Coast Conference triumph. Right halfback Jim Decker was the hero in this dramatic finale to a game that had 47,519 fans in a state of hysteria throughout the fourth quarter. The triumph gave UCLA its fifth conference victory against'no defeats and virtually cinched the bid to represent the Coast in the big bowl Jan. 2.

Washington, which had lost three slow down the inevitable touch-land tied one in its last four games, appeared to have added another first! down drives. Oklahoma's Tommy McDonald and Carl Dodd each made two touchdowns, and Bob Burris, Delbert Long, Clendon Thomas and Bob Derrick contributed one apiece. The Yardstick 8y The Auociated Press Wtsl Flit 13 First Downs Rushing Yardage Parsing fardagi: 8S Passes Attempted 13 4 Passes Complctrd. .0.. Passes Intercepted by--.

1' 5 Punts 39.8 Pantlns Average 40.5 3 Fumbles Lost 1.. 20 Yards Penalized US. The fans, thinking the game was over, swarmed on the field and tore down the goal posts. The field was cleared for a final play tm 1 which 'Joe Marconi swung around left and barely. got into the end zone for West Virginia's lone touch-; down.

With no, goal pos'ts to try the extra point, Pitt forfeited tha conversion. 6 It took Pitt just a total plays to score touchdowns in third quarter. Ncft Calte Daring Game Neft, who called an imaginative and a daring game for Pitt, knifed yards down the middle for one of the scores and Tom Jenkins plunged over from the 1 for the other after a 23-yard sprint by Corny Salveterra. It was a particularly bitter blow for West Virginia, winner of "11 straight games dating back to the loss to Pitt a year ago, since two Sugar Bowl scouts, Paul LeBlanc and Monks Simons were in Pittsburgh's sellout audience. The defeat killed West Virginia's chances.

It was the sixth victory in nine games for the spoiler Pitts- surghers who previously had cnocked Duke from unbeaten and untied ranks. Completely demoralized with their ace quarterback Freddie Wyant on the bench with a knee injury suffered early in the thir- quarter, the Mountaineers never got their touted offense, statistically the nation's best, off the ground. Paluck forced fumbles first 'by JBostoii College dramatic 'chapter to a dizzy foot- and then by Joe Marcon ball season as they went into the final three minutes with a 17-14 lead. The Huskies presented UCLA with two points on a safety to prevent the danger of a blocked punt. There were 2 minutes and 51 seconds left in the game and that left the Huskies in front 17-16.

The Bruins drove from midfield llltosses in the last periods. netted 102 yards in 14 rushes to lead all ground gainers, with Vereb, Maryland's No. 1 gainer, picking up 60 yards in 17 rushes. Clemson, which had lost three ed Pete Lash to right half. The previous games to Maryland -with- fleet Kyasky has been out due ou "scoring, was ready for this one.

a bad knee during most of theJBut the Tigers ran out of gas in the 'face of Maryland's tightened defense in the second half and the expert leadership of'Beightol, with This combination, with frequent substitutions against the out- manned Perm team, clicked for six touchdowns and completely bottled up the team that threw a first-half' scare into Notre Dame last week. other touchdown an; occasional -assist burcllo. Tamburello from Tarn- became ill the air off Decker's foot, today and went on to overpower intracity rival Boston University, Theu under- dog, had the Bruins and their back- gathering- of 29,87 fans had ei dunib i ou hardly seated themselves-comfort. at of th f' ably when the BC Eagles took to the 8 ins down for iouch the air for 51 yards and a touch- downs the second uarte down. Quarterback Billy Donlan Washington made it 17-7 or? a 34- pitched to Dick Gagliardi ield al bv ean Dertbv caught it on the 20 and whizzed the rest of the way.

Frank Cousineau then booted the first of four conversions. That score was registered at 1 the third period and an upset was well in the making. with less than three minutes gone in the second half. He pounced on the first on the. West Virginia 24 and Walton snared the other on the 25.

West Virgittia Outchsrged Pitt, its three-quarter ton outcharging that of bigger West Virginia's and using a confusing "long count" which took the charge slight of hand wizard who was expected to lead the Mountaineers back to a redeeming bowl performance, was rushed so fast-ajjd so hard that he could never get plays properly materialized. The signal caller was injured early in the second half when hit by a pair of Pitt linemen and saw action in only one brief series thereafter. had to turn over the starting to Beightol. plays were called on Howevert Tar did help penalties as the Cadets bounced causc back' from last week's 14-12 (tss ne Pal Ucbd drove over from to Yale. BC continued, adding another in opening period, two in the second and one each in the third and fourth quarters.

BU's Terriers Bullets Conic Back To Rout Terrors, 34-7 WESTMINSTER, Md.V Nov. 12 Wv-Gettysburg got back the groove at the; expense of Western Maryland's football team here today, scoring Victory. Pcnnsylvanians, shocked by Delaware 36-0 last weekend, were at their best today in posting their fifth victory'against two setbacks for the season. was Western Maryland's fifth loss in seven outings. Jackj Healy, which carried to Clemson's 9.

Two plays later, Tamburello scooted over the goal line for Maryland's third Trte ailing star also played a vital role in Maryland's final touchdown. After -Maryland had lost 20 yards in penalties, Tamburello raced 39 yards, for a first down on Clemson's-30. Then Beightol took over and engineered the final touchdown, with his pass to Walker. Just prior to the reserves the The stronger team outgained the losers 420 yards to 258. The Terriers rolled up 170 of those 258 yards in the final period While the winners' third and fourth-stringers were on the field.

Dickinson Shades Johns Hopkins, 7-6 CARLISLE, Nov. 12 W) Dickinson College won its second this play, Vereb had crossed thejgarne in nine starts by edging goalline from the .11, but an. oft- Johns Hopkins'7-6 today before a side penalty nullified the run. crowd of 3,500. Georgia Tech Keeps Hopes Alive, Bangs 'Bama BIRMINGHAM, Nov.

12 Bowl-hungcy Georgia Tech swamped once-mighty Alabama today, 26 2. to heighten the visitors chances of a major Year's Day invitation and keep alive their slender Southeastern Conference championship hopes. It was 'Bama's llth straight loss. Tech moved 73 yards quickly for an opening score, made from 5 yards out by fullback Dickie Mattison. Just 19 seconds later.

148- pound Jimmy Thompson added another (or Tech on a 28-yard sprint with an intercepted pass. End Tommy Rose set up a third in the opening minute of the second period when he blocked a and Ken Thrash fell on the at the Tide 13. Halfback Paul 3to- tenberry scored from 5 yards on the second play. added another on the final period, covering 79 yards in three plays. Mattison slammed through for 14, George VolXert got 31 mort and ToppyVann.

faking beautiW- ly. passed 34 tft Don Ellis for tht touchdown. 5.

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About Cumberland Sunday Times Archive

Pages Available:
33,125
Years Available:
1932-1977