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The Greenville News from Greenville, South Carolina • Page 11

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WAKE FOREST ROUTS CRIPPLED FURMAN TEAM, 52-13 rf Northwestern Routs Kansas State EVANSTON, 111., Oct. 4. (UP) Northwestern unleashed a flashing offense sparked by a new sophomore sensation, 19-year-old Otto Graham, to overwhelm hapless Kansas City today, 51 to 3. Northwestern scored three touchdowns in a sensational display of running in' the third quarter, two each in the first and fourth and one in the second. Three Grid Tilts Here this Week Three grid battles are scheduled for local gridirons this week-end, with both local high schools and Furman in action here.

Greenville plays Asheville School for Boys at Sirrine 1 stadium and Parker meets Easley at Parker Friday night. Furman plays host to N. C. State Saturday night at Sirrine. Clemson goes to Boston to meet Boston college's Eagles.

PAGE ONE. CARTER (Scoop) LATIMER, Sports Editor. OCTOBER 5, 1941. -Bengals Of Clemson Rout State Wolfpack By 27-6 Count Spark Tigers HFRP.IF HI IMP IG I Yankees Nose Dodgers To Take Series Lead 1 IILIIUIL ULIIU. OPPOSITION IN Cochran Bores Through For Deacon Score SouthpawRusso LEADS PARADE 'TiLuer .0 DECISIVE WAY Country Gentlemen Get Under Way Slowly Then Sweep Field i wins Domoers To 2-1 Victory Fitzsimmons Hurt After Holding Yanks Scoreless For Seven Innings BIG EIGHTH INNING Furmans Suffer Worst Defeat In 25 Years As Deacons Run Riot HAMER, BARNETT SCORE AT CHARLOTTE (Continued From Page One) By SCOOP LATIMER (Sports Editor, The News) Turn back the football Daces IH 'A .3 It I i years and you won't find a stag gering score Dy wmch Furman's Purple Paladins were so badly beaten as last nicht when thn Wnto Forest Demon Deacons smashed the Greenville team to a 52 to 13 defeat, in Sirrine stadium, before ..4.

i 4 i Cfii c5 tidy jjf o.uuu siunned spectators. In the gloom, near the game's end, an ambulance rolled to th Wake Forest bench to remove Hcr- and it was feared that his kneecap might be fractured. When the Yankees came to bat in the eighth, Hugh Casey, the Dodgers' demon, relief pitcher, had taken Fitzsimmons' place. He forced Johnny Sturm to fly out, but then his troubles began. TROUBLE REALLY STARTS Red Rolfe shot a single to right-center, and Tommy Henrich bounced one into the same spot.

Rolfe stopped at second and Joe DiMaggio, gripping his bat down near the handle and taking a wide stance, stood up to the plate as though he meant He did, too, for, after fouling off four pitches and oert a. jnne, a senior end, who was injured after his spectacular receiving spelt Furman's doom in me iirst, nair as the score stood 34 to 7. The tall bov from Chattarrw. W. Va had not played in vain, arid nis mates carried on to this record-shattering triumph, inspired by Herbie's spirit.

His back injury was diagnosed as serious. CHARLIE TIMMONS RUN HELTER SKELTER The Demon Deacons ran and running the count to three and two, he slashed a single over second base. Rolfe scampered home with the first run of the game and Henrich passed at will to Furman's utter confusion by scoring eight touchdowns in a parade that netted 424 yards. And all this tramping was done in addition to the monotonv went all the way to third. of 153 yards in penalties charged against tne Norm Carolinians.

Coach D. L. (Peahead) Walker's Charlie Kelier then gave Casey the knockout punch by singling to center, scoring Henrich. The fact that the Yankees had made four straight hits off Casey finally convinced Manager Leo Durocher of RED COCHRAN, one of the many flashy backs Wake Forest turned loose on Furman last night, is snapped above boring through Furman's line for the Deacons' fifth touchdown late in the third period. Owen Koontz is the Furman player who is tackling the Deacon soph a couple of yards too late.

Wake Forest players on the left are Givler (61) and Furman players Charley Edens (86) and George Turner (83). On the right is Deacon Starford. The Demon Deacs battered the Hurricane, 52-13. (Staff Photo by Frank Simpson). starting backfield of John Thurman Cochran, Raymond Manieri, John Polnnski and John Weslev Perry performed behind a great line riveted by Copley, Preston, Kapriva, the Dodgers that his relief pitcher just didn't have it today.

Casey re Football Results tired and Larry PTencn came and forced Bill Dickey to hit into a double play. DODGERS COMI BACK The Dodgers came roaring back in their half of the eighth, but fell one run short of tieing the score. Dixie Walker hit Russo's first pitch in that inning for a double to center. Russo threw out Mickey Owen, but then Durocher sent Augie Ga lan in to bat for French. With the Fitz's Injury Big Break For Yanks Says Leo Fitzsimmons Out For Series, HermarrAlso On Ailing List RUSSO TAKES PRAISE Army Turns On Rally To Whip Citadel, 19-6 Kaydets Bounced Back After Citadel Score To Gain Victory ANDY VICTOR STARS count two and two, Galan swung at one and missed it all the.

way Va i By JOE SHERMAN MUNICIPAL STADIUM, CHARLOTTE, Oct. 4. The growling Tiger of Clemson fed its smashing ground power to a thoroughly game North Carolina State Wolfpack here before 15,000 howling spectators this afternoon and returned to his jungle lair with a 27 to 6 Southern conference victory dangling from his belt. DIFFERENT TIGER A diiferent Tiger scored each Clemson touchdown in the scoring spree set off by Booty Payne on a six-yard scoring jaunt midway the first quarter. Sid Tinsley, the little tinymite from Spartanburg added one in the second period, the third passed scoreless, and Marion Butler and Charlie Timmons added one each in the fourth quarter.

Timmons, running his point total for the year to 28 points, put three extra point placements through the uprights. It was a typical Clemson football story of 1941 today as the big and powerful Tiger team rolled away to a powerful start, bogged down, lapsed temporarily in the second quarter as State hitting passes all over the field, and then came back strong to crush the always fighting ftbunch from West Raleigh. The North Carolinans started their scoring drive from their own 37 and paced by bull's-eye hitting Doug Dickerson, razzle-dazzled the Clemsons right on back into their own end zone. Two straight passes A to Foy Clark moved the ball to VClemson's 21 and a sensational running and jumping pass from Dicker-son to Andrews moved the ball to Clemson's eight. From there Gordon, Dickerson and Senter pushed it over running, with Senter scoring the one.

WOLFPACK STUBBORN Regardless of the score, never a moment passed that the Wolfpack was not very much in the ball game. It was the power of Clemson's well-conditioned line, the uncheckable charges of tackle George Fritts, whose play in the State backfield made it look as though he belonged there, and John Cagle, and the precision blocking of Marion Craig. Norwood McElveen, Tom Wright and Footsie Woods that wore the Wolves to a frazzle. Again the Clemson aerials failed to click, but again the unbelievable power crashes of Charlie Timmons, colorful open field antics of Payne, Tinsley, Marion Butler and Harry Franklin and the hole-opening of the Clemson line bore ample touchdown fruit. The day's running chart showed ttalemson's backs with the following gains from scrimmage: Timmons 87; Payne 70; Tinsley 49; Franklin 42; Butler 28, and Sweate 11.

With three straight victories to their credit tonight, the Tigers march on Boston college next week aus an undefeated team, and the 'Eagles are looking for revenge for that 1940 Cotton bowl affair which the Tigers won 6 to 3. Padgett won the toss and elected to defend the south goal, state receiving. Timmons sent a powerful boot sailing into the state end zone, fstate's ball on its own 20. Stewart smacked right tackle for three yards. Watts flipped a short pass to Gibson.

Payne making the tackle after a six yard gain. Stewart slipped through for three yards and the game's first down on the State 33. -Blalock nailed Stewart after two Hyards. Watts picked yup four yards on a fake pass. Cagle dragged Stewart down for a yard gain.

Watts punted high to Franklin on the Clemson 35 and Booty Payne re- covered Franklin's fumble on Clemson's 29. Payne circled to the right, pickling up six yards. Timmons smashed for two yards. Franklin circled to (Continued on Page 3, Col. 2) from here to Yankee stadium.

Pee Wee Reese came up, however, pick ed on the first pitch and knocked a single down the first base line, scoring Walker. Russo ended the inning by forcing Pete Coscarart who played second base after Billy Herman injured his right side, to pop to Red Rolfe. For a sick man, Russo pitched a NEW YORK, Oct. 4. (U.R) Manager Leo Durocher, bitter over today's tough-luck defeat, declared in the dressing room that his Brooklyn Dodgers would have beaten the whale of a game.

He allowed only four hits and one of them in the fourth inning was a fluke. Ducky Medwick topped a ball and it rolled down the third base line. The SWfc5iWMV -t Yankee infield, thinking it was go jaeciuow, uivier, Jones and Cline to rack up three touchdowns before the end of the first quarter. Once the rout started Coach Dizzy McLeod's crippled Purples proved unable to cope with the enemy but continued the fight against overwhelming odds. Ralph Hamer on a dazzling reverse swirled and swerved for a scintillating 41-yard run and Furman's first touchdown near the end of the half, and as the game drew to a close Jim Barnett streaked 23 yards for the second Furman score when Wake Forest was leading 52 to 7.

HAMER, BARNETT SCORE The Deacons mixed passing and running plays to the best advantage, gaining 233 vards aground and 191 in the air. The Purples netted 175 yards, stepping off 150 in rush attack and picking up only 25 in a futile aerial game. Only in first downs were statistics close, with Furman matching 11 of these to Wake's 13. Ralph Hamer, with 91 yards, and Jim Barnett, with 71, were the longest ground gainers, while Polanski of the Deacons battered his way to 63 yaHs but played only part of the game with the rest of the regulars who were rested after exhausting themselves in the runaway. Defensively Furman was weak from end to end and even in the secondary, except for the speed of pony backs in overtaking pass receivers or runners who broke into the clear.

Both teams used numerous subj stitutlons and the Deacons were tough customers on defense except in straggling moments near the end of the half and also at the close of the parade. Not since Georgia Tech's Golden Tornado, paced by the great Red Barron, whipped Furman, 56 to 0, a quarter of a century ago, has another team passed the half-century mark in scoring against the Greenville Baptist eleven. CRIPPLED SQUAD Furman entered the game without the services of several regulars, including Tackle Hazel Oilstrap, F.nd Harold Mann. Fullback Waliy Brubcck and Spinback Tom Size-more. Some of these boys played a ing to roll foul, gathered around and watched the ball.

It rolled fair Whitewater (Wis.) Teachers 19, Central (Wis.) Teachers 13. Lawrence 0, Knox 0. Stout Institute 39, Eau Claire (Wis.) Teachers 0. MacAlester 19,. St.

Johns 18. Western Illinois Teachers 35, Illinois State Normal 23. Michigan Normal 0, Illinois Normal 0. Toledo 35, Detroit Tech 0. Dubuque 0, Luther 0.

Indiana State 19, Eastern llli- nois Teachers 6. Ball State 6, Northern Illinois Teachers 6. Central (Ind.) Normal 7, Valparaiso 0. Rose Poly 22, Austin Pcay 7. Hamline 37, Mankato Teachers 0.

SOUTHWEST Texas 34, Louisiana State 0. Texas Christian 9. Arkansas 0. Texas Weslcyan 15, Southwestern (Tex.) 6. Abilene Christian 20, McMur-ry 6.

ROCKY MOUNTAIN Colorado Slate 27, Wyoming 0. Colorado College 19, Western State 0. Colorado Mines 0, Montana State 0. FAR WEST Washington State 13, California 6. Oregon State 9, Washington 6.

Ohio State 33, Southern Cali-. fornia 0. Stanford 33, II. C. I A.

0. St. Mary's (Calif.) 6, Model Field 0. BOOTY PAYNE instead. REISER FINALLY CONNECTS The next hit off Russo came in the seventh when Pete Reiser smacked the first pitch against the screen in right-center field for a double.

But Russo bore down, struck out Medwick, forced Cookie Lavagetto to ground out and sneak ed across a third strike on Doipn Camilli. Old Man Fitzsimmons was doing a pretty fair job himself befpre he was injured. He was hit frequently. Churning Charlie Timmons and Walter (Booty) Payne were two of Ihe bis; reasons why Clemson rolled to a 27-6 victory over N. C.

State yesterday at Charlotte. Payne accounted for the Timers' first touchdown while Timmons' line-smashing was the chief factor in the majority of Clemson's touchdown drives. an offside penalty but Polanski reversed to Perry for seven yards and Polanski tried to drive the midriff for three yards and a touchdown. Furman met the charge but was offside and penalized to a yard of goal. The whole left side of Furman's line stopped Cochran and on fourth down Polanski handed the ball to Perry who skirted Furman's right flank to cross goal, standing.

The Deacons had scored in the first five minutes of nlav on a sustained 51-vard drive. Perry failed to convert with an attempted placement, and Wake Forest led 6 to 0. but when he got into trouble he gathered up all his strength and blew the men down. Dl Magglo opened the second inning with a single, but Fitz forced the next three men to ground or fly out. In the fifth, with two out, Joe Gordon and there your world series hero on the basis of what has happened so far rammed a ball against the left field fence for a triple.

A yard higher and it would have been a home run. Old gave Phil Rizzuto intentional Box Score pass to get at Pitcher Russo, With the count two balls and two strikes. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS EAST Colgate 7, Pcnn State 0. Dartmouth 47, Amherst 7. Yale 21.

Virginia 19. Rochester 13, Oberlin 6. Army 19, The Citadel 6. Cornell 6, Syracuse 0. Fordham 16, S.

M. U. 10. N. Y.

U. 6, Lafayette 0. Pennsylvania 19, Harvard 0. Purdue 6, Pittsburgh 0. Holy Cross 13, Providence 0.

Buffalo 6, City College of New York 0. Rutgers 26, Springfield 0. Rates 7. New Hampshire 6. Wayncsburg 25.

Potomac State 0. Maine 14, Northeastern 12. U. S. Coast Guard 48, Worces-.

ter 0. Trinity 9, Vermont 7. Columbia 13, Brown 6. Bowdoin 13, Weslcyan 7. Massachusetts State 8, Connecticut 6.

Susquehanna 6. American 0. Princeton 20, Williams 7. Navy 40, West Virginia 0. Hamilton 21.

Rensselaer TechO. Haverford 45, Alleghany 7. Case 33, Lehigh 26. Norwich 21. Colby 7.

Tufts 20, Middlebury 0. Youngstown (O.) 12, Morris Harvey 7. Clarkson 20, Ursinus 7. Bucknell 12, Muhlenberg 0. Hobart 13, Union 0.

La Salle 26, Blue Ridge 6. St. Lawrence 13, Ohio Northern 0. Shippensburg (Pa.) Teachers 36, Ktitztown Teachers 0. Boston University 14, Cincinnati Rhode Island State 39, Lowell Textile 0.

Bergen Junior 40, Trenton Teachers 0. Clarion Teachers 35, Alliance 0. Slippery Rock (Pa.) Teachers 6, Westminster 0. West Virginia State 47, Rio Grande A. Indiana (Pa.) Teachers 26, Mansfield Teachers 6.

Brooklyn College 12, Panzer 6. Edinboro (Pa.) Teachers 31, California (Pa.) Teachers 0. SOUTH Wake Forest 52, Furman 13. Georgia 34, South Carolina 6. North Carolina 20, Davidson 0.

Tulane 32, Auburn 0. Georgia Tech 20, Chattanooga 0. Clemson 27, N. C. State 6.

Virginia Terh 3. Georgetown 0. Mississippi 27, Southwestern 0. Mississippi State 14, Alabama 0. Kentucky 7, Washington and Lee 0.

Vanderbilt 42, Tennessee Tech 0, Eastern (Ky,) Teacher 6, Murray (Ky.) Teachers 0. Georgetown (Ky.) 7, Mllllgan 6. MIDWEST Notre Dame 19, Indiana 6. Michigan 6, Iowa 0. Northwestern 51, Kansas State 3.

Marquette 28, Wisconsin 7. Nebraska 14, Iowa State 0. Kansas 19, Washington University (St. Louis) 6. Heidelberg 37, Ashland 0.

Western Reserve 7, Ohio University 0. Dayton 7, Marshall 0. Ohio Wesleyan 19, De Sales 7. Wabash 19, Marietta, 0. Bluff ton 6, Capital 6.

Grove City (Pa.) 19, Hiram 0. Lake Forest (III.) 21, Wheaton 0. Missouri 21, Colorado 0. Albion 12, Adrian 0. Michigan Terh 32, Northland 0.

Iowa sute Teachers 32, North Dakota 10. Kenyon 12, Otlerbeln 7. Lawrence Tech 26, Western Ontario 7. Illinois 45, Miami (O.V 0. Depauw 7.

Carleton 6. Ripon 13, Cornell (U.) 0. Fllz fed vn one of his patented knuckle balls and Russo killed the rally by striking out. FITZ PULLS OUT AGAIN WEST POINT, N. Oct.

4 OP) For one period here today it looked as if the Citadel eleven might spoil Earl Black's debut as Army's first civilian coach in 30 years, but the Cadets applied the pressure in the middle two quarters to win, 19-6. West Point, which hadn't won a gridiron engagement since little Williams was nosed out by one point in this same Michie stadium just 366 days ago. scored on the fifth play of the game, but The Citadel came back with a sensational touchdown eight minutes later, near the end of the quarter. Army's touchdown resulted from a long pass, Frank Hank Mazur to Jim Kelleher, the left end. Mazur, standing on his own 45-yard line, rifled a long one to Kelleher, who took it on The Citadel 12 and stumbled over the goal line for the tally.

Mazur's placement for the extra point was wide. CITADEL ROARS BACK The South Carolinians tied up the ball game with almost 12 minutes of the opening period expired. Citadel took possession of the ball near the midfield stripe, and immediately Andy Victor tossed a forward to Prank Campbell on the Army 3. Campbell was immediately tackled by Mazur. A line buck failed, but Victor lugged the pigskin over on the next His placement was no good, however.

Trom that time on, The Citadel was forced to plav defensive game, although Victor and Al Salvato. who replaced the injured B. M. Dukes at quarterback early in the game, gave the Southern rooters plenty to cheer about with their passing and kicking. Citadel never presented a scoring threat after that, and rarely had possession of the ball.

When they were in possession, it was Victor's Eassing and ball-carrying that rought the crowd of 39,000 shirt-sleeved clustomers to their feet. Salvato was brilliant in booting The Citadel out of danger. Twice kicking from his own end zone, he booted the ball to midfield. Army took the lead midway through the second period on Jere Maupln'g 42-yard touchdown run through the left side of The Citadel line, and assured the victory in the third stanza, when Mazur zigzagged his way 21 yards for West Point's third touchdown. CITADEL Pos.

Army Kicrstead LE Kelleher Damon LT White Wolf LG Michel Kennedy Evans Belscr RO Murphy (C.) Thompson Olds Campbell RE Hanst Dukes QB Jan-ell Gold I ll Hatch Newell RII Maupin Victor FB Mazur Citadel ...6 0 0 8 Army ...6 7 6 019 Rebels Defeat Southwestern OFXORD. Oct. 4. (4V-The University of Mississippi rebels came Again in the sixth Fitzsimmons was in trouble with two men on base, one out and Di Magglo and The Lineup Keller coming up. He forced Di Magglon to fly out to right and short time and big Dewey Proctor, also on the casualty list, got into the game but suffered a recurrence of his injury.

After Wake Forest's sensational end, Cllne, was injured as two Furman tacklers scissored him with a double tackle when he caught a pass to set up the fourth touchdown. Coach Walker sent in Copley who also played a good game. But Cline perhaps would have been good for several more spectacular catches the way he was grabbing the ball in Joe DiMaggio fashion Wake's Co-Captains Polanski and Olvler met Furman's leader, Cornwall, in midfield for the conventional toss of the buffalo nickel. Furman won and elected to defend the East goal while the Deacons kicked off. Breezy Craziel took the tumbling boot on his five and advanced Yanks had Freddie Fitzsimmons been able- to complete the game.

"We'd have beaten them 1 to 0," Leo the Lip exclaimed. "That was Just about the toughest ball game anybody ever lost. Cripes sake, you've just got to have luck, and the Yanks had It today." Durocher was fuming all over the dressing quarters, snapping angrily at phorographers when they wanted to shoot some pictures of Fitzsimmons' left which was injured in the seventh Inning. While Lippy stormed, unlucky Fidz sat glumly before his locker in shorts. He lifted up a brown bandage and exposed the swolltn, purplish kneecap.

He explained that when the Yanks' young pitcher, Marius Russo, hit the ball in the seventh, it came at him so fast that he couldnt recover from his pitch before the ball struck him. "It certainly was hard luck," Fllz admitted. "I never won a World Series game, and it looked as if I had one In my mitts today when this thing happened. I was feeling strong and was working fine. I'm pretty sure they wouldn't have got to me, If I had been able to finish the game." The Injury will prevent the 40-ycar-old knuckle ball specialist from appearing again in the series.

He went to the New York hospital this evening to have the knee X-rayed for a possible fracture. Billy nerman, the Dodgers' second baseman, also will be examined tonight by physicians because of a pulled muscle in his left side. Herman suffered the injury in batting practice. It didn't bother him until he was batting in the fourth inning. He swung hard at the ball, and his side pained him so that he could hardly run to first base before being put out.

Pete Coscarart replaced him in the line-up. Meanwhile in the Yanks' dressing room. Russo, whose drive sent Fttz-slmmon to the locker and who won the Rame, was praised warmly for great pitching in his first world scries start. "Sure, I was excited when I first went out onto the nioundd," he admitted. "I was so tense I was afraid of making a boner or of grooving one through the center.

But 1 took my time about everything, trying to get control of myself. And after a couple of innlngis, I felt swell and It was Just another ball game. Some friends are giving me a party tonight at Ozone park, and I'll certainly en-Joy it." Series Game To Start At 2 P.M. BROOKLYN, Oct. 4.

UP) -Tomorrow's world serirs game between the Brooklyn Dodgers and the New York Yankees will start at 2 p. m. (Eautern standard timet instead of the 1:30 getaway of the week-day games because of a Sabbath law, Maybe folks who had trouble getting used to the change from daylight time will find this one easier, worked carefully on Keller, finally making him ground out to first case. Tomorrow It will be Kirby Higbe, fireball right hander, for the Dodg crs and Alley Donald, another right hander, for the Yankees, HEAVY LOSSES MILWAUKEE, (IV- Weigh On the Deacons next kickoff Furman tried to uncork an offense, but Coyle was smothered on a supnosed hlpper-riipper play and Hicks fumbled and CoDlev recovered for Wake Forest, giving the Deacons another set-up for a touchdown 10 yards from coal. Coach McLeod substituted Edens for Nettles.

ANOTHER TOUCHDOWN The Deacons were penalized five yards for excessive time in the huddle. Cochran got two vsrds off guard and Polanski rjounded center for three more. Then came the big dividend. Cochran faded back and shot a bullet nass to End Cline for a touchdown. Pcrrv nlace kicked the extra point and Wake Forest led.

13 to 0. A Furman man covered Cline but the Deacon held fast to the leather as the two went to the ground. Breezv Brazlel took the next kick-off on the two vard spot and burst off 28 yards. Coyle on a reverse failed to gain. Proctor chiseled a yard, and Covle punted to Cochran who reeled off a most spectacular gain of 55 yards before Proctor brought him down.

He reversed his field, was picked bv an avalanche on lnterferers. and behind this slanting fence he went to Furman's 16. But there was a clipping penalty and the Deacs were set back 15 yards. They retained the gain, however, now 31 yards from goal. DEACS BOOST LEAD The Purples braced on two line plays, got a lift on a Wake offside penalty, but Cochran fired a pass lng-ln and weighlng-out figures at Marquette early gird training ses slons showed that the squad lost a ton of weight In two weeks but gained it back, of course.

NEW YORK AB II PO A Sturm, lb 4 0 1 12 0 Rolfe, 3b 4 1 2 1 2 Henrlch, rf 3 1 1 2 0 DiMaggio, cf 4 0 2 2 0 Keller, if 4 0 12 0 Dickey, 4 0 0 4 1 Gordon, 2b 3 0 1 2 4 Rizzuto, ss 3 0 0 2 3 Russo, 4 0 0 0 4 Totals 33 2 8 27 '14 BROOKLYN AB II II PO A Reese, ss .1.4 0 1 3 1 Herman, 2b 1 0 0 0 1 Coscarart, 2b 2 0 0 0 3 Reiser rf 4 0 1 5 0 Medwirk. If 4 0 1 3 0 Lava set to. 3b 3 A 0 1 0 Camllli, lb 3 0 0 ill 0 Walker, rf 3 1 1 2 0 Owen, 3 0 A 2 1 Fitzsimmons, 2 0 A A 2 Casey, 0 0 A A A French, 0 A A A Galan, r. 1 A A 0 A Allen, 0 0 A 0 0 Tolals 30 7 27 8 Bailed for French In 8th. New York AAA 000' 0202 Brooklyn 000 001) 0101 Runs hatted in: DiMaggio, Keller, Reese.

Two base hits: Reiser, Walker. Three base hit: Gordon. Stolen bases: Rizzuto, Sturm. Double plays: Rizzuto and Sturm; Reese and Camllli. Earned runs: New York 2, Brooklyn '1.

Left on bases: New York 7, Brooklyn 4. Bases 6n balls: off Russo 2 (Herman, Lavagetto) off Fitzsimmons 3 (Rizzuto, Henrlch, Gordon). Struck out: by Fitzsimmons 1 (Russo), By Russo 5 (Camllli 2, Medwlck, Galan, Reiser). Pitchlnr summary: 4 hits and no runs off Fitzsimmons In 7 Innings: off Casey 4 hits and 2 runs In 1-3 Inning; no hits and no runs off French In 2-3 Inning; no hits and no runs off Allen In 1 Inning. Losing pitcher: t'ssey.

Umpires: Grieve (ALl plaie: GoeU (NL) Ih: Mr-Gowan (AH 2h: Plnelll (NL) 3b. Time 2:22. Attendance 33,100. N. C.

State Po. Clemson til well LE Blalock Jones LT Fritts Riddle LG Padgett Allen C. Wright fCaton RG Wood Boltrek RT Cagle Gibson RE Chlpley WatU QB Craig Cathey HB Payne Huckabee HB Franklin Stewart Timmons ft CLEMSON 1 8 0 1427 N. C. STATE 0 8 0 06 Clemson scoring: Touchdowns, Payne.

Buller (for Craig). Tinsley (for Payne) and Timmons. Point from try after touchdown, Timmons 3 (placements). N. C.

State scoring: Senter (for ft Ca they). Clemson End, Locklalre, Pierre, Dickson; tackles, Hamer; guards, T. Wright, Jordan, Sandlfcr; renters, Jameson; backs, Rothell, Tinsley, Butler, McElveen, Sweatte, Parker, Alford. N. C.

State Ends, Andrews, Ow-eni, Avery. Fltchett, Wilson, Turner; tackle, Moser, Gould; guards, Williams, Gibson, Barr; Centers, Carter, OH: backs, Faircloth, Gordon, Doak, Senter, Bobbins, Clark, Nelson, Dickerson, Callaway, Singer, Benbenek, Morgan. CLEMSON STATE 17 First downs running 2 First downs passing First downs penalty 1 17 Total first downs 12 31 Gains from scrimmage 84 14 Lot from scrimmage 41 9 Passes attempted 22 to the 15, but Wake was oflslde for the kick and had It all to do ovcr again. Tills time Brazlcl roared back 15 vards to his 27. Proctor reversed to Brazlcl for a two yard loss.

Proctor fumbled, picked up the ball and lost five more as the Deacs swarmed him. Coyle punted 26 vards out on Furmans 46. to give Wake the offense inside Purple territory for an early break. Cochran dented the left side of Furman's llrtt for a yard and Polanski crashed for seven more but Wake was penalized five yards for offside. DEACONS CUT LOOSE However.

Polanski burst off his right tackle, drove through Furman's secondary and raced 40 yards and was headed for a sure touchdown until Proctor caught him from behind with one desperate lunge. It was do or die, and Proctor took the flying chance as he closed in on big Polanski. He snagged him nine yards from goal and went out. injured on the play. Jim Elvlngton replaced him.

Cochran banged through the middle five yards, with font- to go for tne payoff. The Deacs 'next took Giant-Dodger Act Is Staged At Tigertown CLEMSON. Oct. 4. P) While the Brooklyn Dodgers continued to show Bill Terry they're stilt In the league, Proi.

John D. Lane made a similar demonstration as the Boston College team stopped over en route to Tulane. "Hey Bud!" railed one Bos. ton collegian, "We want yon to settle an argument. Is this Furman or Clemson?" "This Is lcmson," said the professor, "Until we beat you In the Bowl two years to, we never heard of Boston College." to cnne wno got Denina Furman safety man and took the pitch on th erun to cross the goal unmolested.

It was a net gain of 38 yards. Perry added the extra point with a placement and the Deacons held a 20 to 0 lead, with four more minutes playing time left in the first quarter. Furman's press agented black magic carried no deception against the fast-charging Tarheels who (Continued on Pag Col. At back today from last week's upset' by oeorgptown to trounce southwestern of Memphis, 27-0, today before a homecoming crowd of approximately 8.000,.

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