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The Greenville News from Greenville, South Carolina • Page 13

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Greenville, South Carolina
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13
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'V Clemson Tigers Spoil N. C. State 4y-12-6 ome uommg Airman Loses Two More By Injury Palmetto Teams Steadily Improve Newberry and Presbyterian college, perennial rivals, usher in this week of South Carolina football, playing at Newberry Friday. On Saturday Clemson's up-and-coming Tigers play Alabama at Tuscaloosa Furman meets The Citadel at Charleston, and South Carolina invades Philadelphia to play Villa-nova Wildcats, who were beaten by Bucknell, 18 to 0. Verily, a hard week.

Furman's football team with an infirmary crowded with invalids suffered two more casualties in the Bucknell game yesterday when Woodham Harris, substitute guard playing for the injured regular, Marvin Brodie, was forced to leave the game, and Fox Beattie, another guard, pulled a ligament. Neither is seriously hurt but their injuries were felt yesterday. PAGE ONE. NOVEMBER 4, 1934. CARTER (Scoop) LATIMER, Sports Editor.

FURMAN FIGHTS GAMELY AS BUCKNELL WINS, 19-0 iiss 6 Crippled Team Sunk GAMECOCKS PICK GOBBLERS, 20 TO 0 Bengals OfNeely Outsmart Charges Of Hunk Anderson Bristle In Tiger Victory South Carolina Outplays V.P.I. In Fast Battle 19-To-0 Victory Taken By Hosts Of Smoky Town With Pun Pass And Prayer As Final Bid Four Thousand Chilled And Thrilled Fans Amply Rewarded As Furman Plays Open Game To The Last Ditch Even At Tremendous Sacrifice By SCOOP LATIMER Returns To War McCown, Hinson, Et Al Run Wild Through Strong Tarheel Eleven Birds Of Carolina Too Good For Birds Of Virginia In Columbia Tilt BEFORE LARGE CROWD Irish Put Up Great Scrap But Fail To Halt Pitt's Steam Roller FANCY BALL TOTING STARS SCINTILLATE Lashed by human fury even greater than the brisk wind which swept the field, Furman's crippled but courageous football team crumpled before the cyclonic drives of Bucknell's power brigade here yesterday and went down to a 19 to 0 defeat before a crowd By ASHLEY HALSEY (Avtnriatrd frm Slaff Wrilrrl A hursts nf sneerl Biir.knell COLUMBIA, Nov. 3 AP) Southj Carolina thrashed an ill-starred P. I. eleven, 20 to 0.

today in a thundering herd presented the most devastating physical force unloosed on Manly Field since Alabama's Crimson Tide rolled back the Hurricane here in 1924 by a similar three touchdown I comeback after two Southern con ference defeats. Passes netted the Gamecocks two touchdowns and a substitute back: rammed over a third after march Statistics Henry (Slick) McCcwn, left, and Hob Lee, right, figured prominently in Clemson's 12-to-6 victory over N. C. State yesterday. Lee, a substitute, went over the Tigers' first touch-down, and McCown's blocking and plunging proved to be a most important factor.

By JOE SHERMAN RIDD FIELD, Raleigh. No I 3 The great American dope bucket was blasted high over Riddick field here this afternoon and its contents spilled abruptly on some 7,500 homecoming spectators as Jess Neely's roarine Clemson Tiger flew into N. C. State's mighty Wolfpack and left the field victorious with a juicy 12-to-6 morsel. TIGERS START EARLY Clemson opened the scoring early in the first quarter when State's powerful goalward drive ended as Venice Farrar, State's big line plunging back, fumbled and "Dad" Brown Tiger tackle, pounced on the ball in midficld.

Randy Hinson called a pass but the Pack was alert and broke it up. On the next play Hinson, fading back diep, hurled a 30-yard bullet pass to Roddy Kis-sam, who traveled on five yards to State's 14 yard line before bein? pulled down by Stephens. Hinson was knocked out on the play, Berry replacing. Bill Dillard took a spln-n-r from McCown and shot through the line to State's five, Clemson recovered her own fumble for no gain and Berry failed at right tackle. The Pack had braced and Hunk Anderson's mighty forward wall, that features seven stalwart linemen in general and one Carl Issacs in particular, seemed equal to the occasion.

Big "Slick" McCown, the Tiger's human battering ram, flew into the middle of the line for a yard that placed the ball on the six inch line. Again Berry called on PITTSBURG, Nov. 3. (AP) The Golden Hosts of Pittsburgh, sturdy as steel, today broke up Notre Dame's victory march, 19 to 0, but only after the hard bitten Hoosiers warned the gridiron world by their cie-hard play that the stars of Notre Dame will shine again. More than 64,000 shouting fans filled the stadium for the homecoming battle which marked the 25th anniversary of the first football battle between the schools.

Pitt swung into action early in the second period, Leon Shedlosky, taking Andy Pilney's punt on his 35 and weaving 65 yards for the first touchdown. Weinstock was wide on his kick. Late in the third period, Mike Nicksick was shaken loose on his own 45 yard line and sprinted 55 yards for the second touchdown. CONTINUE MARCH Well into the last period, Heinie Weisenbaugh, a human house, grabbed Pilney's pass on his own 34 and shoved it to the Irish 30 yard line. L.

Shedlosky cut back and raced to Notre Dame's 4 yard line. On the next play Nicksick slammed through the line, reinforced by Jack Robinson, to register his second touchdown. Score by periods: Pitt 0 6 7 619 Notre Dame 0 0 0 0 0 Touchdowns: Nicksick (2), Sned-lesky (sub for Larue). Point after touchdown, Weinstock. Harry (Red) Fisher, Fur man's plunging fullback, who is recuperating from severe illness, will be back in the lineup for the Hurricane against The Citadel at Charleston next Saturday.

RESULTS ooo ooo ing 55 yards single-handed in plucking the Gobblers for the second consecutive year. The victory gave the 19113 co-champions ah even .500 standing in the conference and upset predictions of a V. P. I. success in the annual battle of the birds.

Handicapped by the absence of Duncan Holsclaw, star halfback, the Gobblers launched a fast-running offense built about Capt. George Smith at quarter but spent their strength in vain lunges in the first half. SMITH FUMBLES Smith, a brilliant back, fumbled on the Gamecock's one-yard line after averaging 5 yards a try on a second period drive that seemed unstoppable. Stroud, big South Carolina center; recovered and the Gobblers never again came within close striking distance. Shack McCrady of Columbia, shifty reserve halfback, burst loose for a 50-yard run off tackle in the final minutes of the game and scored two plays later to climax the rout.

A pass from Hal Mauney, triple-threat quarterback, to Bob Robbins margin. The wild attack of the rampaging Bisons didn't strike without warning, tor it was not until after Fur-man asserted a scoring threat in the first quarter that the easterners took advantage of Joseph Rezni-chak's flashy return cf a punt and utilized a 23-yard pass from Rezm-chak to Stuart Smith and Rezzy's six-yard end run for the first touchdown in the second period. TOUCHDOWN PLAYS The Purple Hurricane, living up to its name and to pre-game predictions, made a contest of it, and in addition threw a scare into the Pennsylvania Bisons by filling the air with passes and Roy Stevens' long kicks to match the boots of the great John Sitarsky. And but for the fact that Joe Rhu-bright, he of the snaky hips and rock-crushing power, took a kick-off to start the second half and raced 78 yards as a preface to another touchdown, the chances are Bucknell's interception of a pass and a short touchdown drive in the final quarter never would have happened. Furman was hazarding forward flips with careless abandon in desperation to either pull the game out of the fire or at least thrill the customers.

For them it was a chill and a thrill. Despite the absence of four regulars. Bill Hutt, Harry Fisher, Bob King and Marvin Brodie who wat.rhpri thp tramp i.i wranc nr heard HI, Dl HER CI ASH McCown and this time the big Bengal fullback moved the entire Pack line back two yards as he crossed Chattanooga 13, Mississippi College 0. noward 0, Western Kentucky 0. Centre 46, Louisville 0.

Citadel 18, Woiford 7. Union (Tenn) 0, East Tennessee 0. Birmingham-Southern 18, Mur- physboro 0. Carson-Newman 7, Cumberland 6. Tennessee Wesleyan 31, Mars Hill 0.

MID-WEST Illinois 7, Army 0. Minnesota 34, Michigan 0. Northwestern 7, Wisconsin 0. Iowa 0, Indiana 0. Purdue 2fi, Chicago 20.

Ohio State 76, Western Reserve 0. Michigan State 13, Marquette 7. Kansas 0, Iowa Slate 0. Oklahoma A. and M.

19, Detroit City's Annual Classic To Be Staged Here Friday Afternoon IX PITS INI into tne glory land, ellers failed to annex the extra point. WOLVES BEWILDERED A bewildered pack of State Wolves lined up for the next kickoff wondering how everything had happened so quickly. Neely's fighting cage at halfback brought the opening score shortly before the hdf and another pass from Maunev to Walker Yonce, halfback, was good for a second touchdown early in the fourth period. Yonce, a substitute who proved the nemesis of the Gobblers in their 12-0 defeat by South Carolina at Blacksburg last year, DARTMOUTH ASIDE If figures don't fib and that's what teacher told us!) then Greenville high's Red Electrics will have of Tigers showed the sari? JM4 it detailed to the ill and wounded and determination that eaiV I to victory over South Carina lastt a man-size task on their hands on Manly field next Friday afternoon 7 To 0 Victory Taken By Elis to keep their slate clean against Parker's Golden Tornado tn the two schools sixth annual clash. First downs: Furman 3, Bucknell 9.

Earned first downs: Furman 3, Bucknell 9. Passes: Furman tried nine, completed two for 19 yards; four were Intercepted and three fell incomplete. Bucknell tried four, completed two for 31 yards; two fell incomplete. Punts: Furman punted 13 times for average of 43.8 (Stevens kicked 12 times and Watson once, Watson's kick being good for 15 yards). Bucknell punted 15 times, about evenly divided between Sitarsky arid Rhubright, for an average of 40 yards.

Kirkoffs: Furman kicked off three times for 150 yards, or an average of 50. Bucknell kicked off twice for 100 yards, or average of 50 yards. Punt returns: Furman returned nine punts for 47 yards. Bucknell returned six punts for 84 yards. Fumbles: Furman fumbled four times, recovering each time.

Bucknell fumbled once, recovering. Substitutions: For Furman Wakefield, Beat-tie, Lemmond, Jones, Boney and Watson. For Bucknell: Dclaney, Pe-thick, Crouse, Drayton, Drayton, Rhubright, Raymaley, Zanarina, Rosatti, Wilson, Rondeau and Whitkey. Scoring: For Bucknell; Reznichak 12, Miller 6, Smith 1 (placement). Net gains from rushing: For Furman: Blair ran 13 times for 31 yards gain, eight yards loss; net of 23.

Stevens ran three times for net gain of seven yards. Stephens ran once, losing a yard. Culclasurc ran once, gained five. Boney ran four times, gained 21 yards. Watson ran four times, gained three.

For Bucknell: Sitarskv ran twice for eight yards. Reznichak ran 19 times for gain of 86 yards, lost 10 for net of 76. Smith ran nine times, gained 36, lost 10. for net of 26. Miller ran four times for net of four.

Rhubright ran 10 times for net of seven. Raymaley ran five times for a net gain of 11 yards. Whitkey ran once for gain of four. Total yards gained from rushing: Furman gained 69, lost 11 for net of 58. Bucknell gained 163, lost 27, for net of 136 yards.

To Keep Slate With Han over Clean 6. Washington U. (St. Louis) Butler 7. 32, To be candid about the situation from toe to toe, pnlzy-walzics, Par ker is doped to all but upset the red raiders and thereby gain their week.

The Benin's wert dancinf happily around orf the field and read' for anything Hunk's men might pull out of the bag. Things quieted down considerably as the two big teams, approximately equal in size, fought doggedly through the remainder of the first quarter. Alex Stevens, the Clemson boy with an educated to-5, battled on even terms with State's portside punter, Venice Farrar and neither team threatened. State's big backs, Ray Rex, Venice Farrar and Howard kicked the extra points from placement after the first and third scores. Fumbles slowed the Virginia Tech attack and cost them dearly at strategic moments.

Alert Gamecocks recovered four of seven Gobbler garbles and allowed V. P. I. only once to pounce upon. Foots Dickson of Greensboro, N.

one of the ablest blocking backs to perform here, intercepted a Gamecock pass on his 15 later in the first period and thrust the South tirst triumph over Skipper "Speedy" Speer's city highcrs; that is, if you and you and you judge Johnny Gantt's charges' noble stand against in the Infirmary, Fuirnan made a fighting last stand against a superior team of power and precision and only praise was to be heard last night from fans who thawed out from the cold to discuss how Bucknell, even with its three touchdowns, made only one sustained drive to the goal. FIRMAN STRONG DEFENSE And the lone march to the holy grail covered a scant 29 yards after Sitarsky brought back a punt 20 yards. All of which proved conclusively that a team of polished and powerful running backs can't hack away the Gibraltar that is Coach Dizzy McLeod's line for a succession of more than two first downs. Furman's only offensive threat rame in the opening period when Blair, Hurricane quarter, passed to Rov Stevens, big halfback, on the Bucknell 35. Stevens fumbled afoer safely catching the pass and Bob hpartanburg and Gaffney as any thing like honest-to-gosh football.

On these two occasions an eleven Bardes turned in many short gains NEW HAVEN, Nov. 3. Down on the harrassed Yale goal line the oldest "hant" in all football, the jinx that rules all Dartmouth elevens in the Yale bowl, cackled merrily again today and the Elis staggered miraculously through to another triumph, 7 to 2, the 15th and probably the sweetest in a half century old rivalry that never has seen a Hanover victory. Walloped by Columbia and Army, victorious only over Brown and Pennsylvania, the game young Eli underdogs toppled Dartmouth from thp unbeaten, untied, unscored- that is comixjsed principally of freshmen and sophs has gone to nui, were never able to go far against Neely's battline forwards. Brown.

and Black stopped a great Der- the battle front and held both teams, which are rated the greatest in Palmetto land, to remarkably low centage of the pack plays at the line while Shore and McCowi were scores. GREENVILLE FAVORED smacking those Wolves lucky enough Carolinians into the under-dog position with a 78-yard punt. Smith, reeling off 127 yards from scrimmage during the game for an average of 45 a try, tore almost past the safety man repeatedly to plant the ball on South Carolina's one yard strie. Running wicie around end to score, he fumbled and Bob Robbins recovered lor the Gamecocks. SCORE ON PASS A 47-yard punt by Mauney put the ball deep in Gobble territory oreaK mrougn me line.

The second quarter got under wa? upon class with an opening blast of Greenville, which, incidentally, is boasting of one of its finest) clubs in moons, has never clicked this season except for the Furman Frosh and progressed speedilly as Rex and Bardes of State collected several yards to the Pack's advantage while tremendous power. Twice in the final the EAST By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Boston College 6, Villanova 0. Brown 13, Springfield 7. Western Maryland 2, Catholic V. 0.

Columbia 14, Cornell 0. Fordham 13, Tennessee 12. Vandeibilt 7, George Washington U. 6. Trinccton 19, Harvard 0.

Carnegie Tech 6, New York U. 0. University of Pennsylvania 41, Lafayette 0. Pittsburgh Notre Dame 0. Rutgers 52, Boston University 0.

Temple 14, Holy Cross 0. Navy 26, Washington and Lee 0. Yale 7, Dartmouth 2. Albright 14, Moravian 13. Oberlin 6, Allegheny 0.

Massachusetts State 16, Amherst 9. Shenandoah 13, Baltimore U. 7. Bates 2, Bowdoin 0. Clarkscn 27, Buffalo 0.

Conn. State 13, Coast Guard Acadcmv 0. Cortland Teachers 29, Trenton Teachers 0. Delaware 7, Dickinson 0. Thiel 20, Edinboro 9.

Franklin and Marshall 48, Muhlenberg 6. Gettysburg 14, Lehigh 0. East Stroudsburg 7, Ithaca College 6. Lebanon Vallev 0, Juniata 0. Maine 20, Colby 6.

Manhattan 21. City College of New York 0. Northeastern 31, Arnold 6. Hamilton 7. Rensselaer fi.

Rhode Island 44, Worcester 0. Rochester 20, Hobart 7. E. Pcnn Military College 23, St. Josephs 0.

St. Lawrence U. 21, Alfred 7. Swarthmore 12, Johns Hopkins 0. Trinity 27, Wesleyan 0.

Tufts 26. New Hampshire 0. Union 30, Williams 21. Drexel 0, Ursinus 0. Vermont 7, Norwich 0.

Susquehanna 6, Washington College 6. Waynesburg 9, Genava 0. Westchester Teachers 31, Lock Haven 0. Shippenberg 14, Bloomshurg 9. Lowell Textile 0, Brooklyn College 0.

Davis and Elkins 41. I'inlay 0. New York Aggies 0, Montclair Teachers 39. SOUTH Richmond 14, Georgetown U. 13.

Alabama 34, Kentucky 11. Duke 13, Auburn 6. Georgia 14, Florida 0. Tulane 15, Mississippi 0. North Carolina 26, Georgia Tech 0.

Maryland 20, Virginia 0. South Carolina 20, V. P. I. 0.

Bucknell 19, Furman 0. Davidson 18, Catawba 0. Randolph-Macon 20, Bridge-water 0. Miss. State 3, La.

State Univ. 23. I.enoir-Rhvne 25. Guilford 6. Millsaps 13, Louisiana Tech 7.

Newberry Freshmen 0, Citadel Freshmen 48. St. Johns (Md.) 25, Hampden-Sydney 13. Sewanee 7, Tennessee Teachers 6. Clemson 12, North Carolina State 6.

V. M. I. 13, William and Mary 6. Centenary 8, Ouchita 0.

uuiara, roiger ana mccowti proved Clemson's best offensive bets. Always alert and Dlavine the same Dartmouth line blocked Tommy Curtin's kicks, and the best Dartmouth could get from all that was an automatic safety, and her two lone points of the afternoon. heads-up football that has brought the Tigers into the southern football spotlight this year, Neely's men carried the game to State Fifteen straight piays gained irom three to 10 yards in the march and a few minutes later and the Gamecocks took the return kick on V. 27. Mauney threw a pass straight downfield to Fred Craft, end, for 15 yards and repeated on the next play with a 12-yard aerial which Robbins caught in the far corner of the field.

He tumbled over the line for the score. when Rankintr was tossed back eitrht. varris from Dartmouth's sev tut when Speer gladiators whipped the Baptists' by a lone touchdown, despite the fact it has four victories and one defeat on its current) record. In their remaining sdvere test against the Columbia Caps the Greenville warriors gave good account of themselves the first half, but during the final stanzas cracked and allowed the Capitals to sub-dun them, 13 to 0. 'Tis true that Parker has copped only one contest, and that against the Greenwood Emeralds, but also is it so that the district tribe has been showing huge improvement from battle to bat-tie until last Thursday it was a miracle Gantt's late in the second quarter for their second touchdown.

An exchange of punts gave Clemson the ball on her --own 30-yard stripe. Harry Shore," en, he came right back with an end run that put the ball on the Green one-yard line in position for Morton to score. V. P. I.

stiffened in the third to tne man that Neely has moulded into one of the most versatile guards in this section, nulled nut; nr th Drake 20, Haskell 7. John Carroll 14, Akron fi. Ashland 8, Kenyon 2. Toledo 22, Bowling Green 0. Heidelberg 19, Capital 6.

Baldwin-Wallace 14, Case 13. Cincinnati 7. Marshall 0. Kert State 26, Hiram 6. Ohio Wesleyan 10, Miami U.

(Ohio) 6. Depauw 49. Georgetown (Kv.) 6. Michigan State Teachers 13, St. Viator 0.

Wabash 0, Evansville 0. St. Olaf 13, Luther 0. Ohio Northern 7, Wittenberg 0. Wooster 22, Muskingum 14.

Xavier 40, Maryville fi. Western Michigan 13, Central Michigan 0. Hope 11, Hillsdale fi. Defiance 0, Lawrence Tech 0. Adrian 33, St.

Marys (Mich.) 0. Pittsburgh Teachers 12, Wichita 7. Oklahoma 31, Missouri 0. Freighton 12, Grinnell 6. Hluffton 19, Holbrook 6.

Cornell (Iowa) 6, Knox 0. Monmouth 12, Beloit 0. Slate Normal 0. I)e Kalb 0. Ripon 6, Carroll 6.

Valparaiso 19. Pepaul 0. Earlham 6, Rose Poly 0. Central Normal 6. St.

Joseph 0. Coe 8, Carleton 7. South Dakota State 38, Dakota Wesleyan 0. Morningside 11. South Dakota Emporia Teachers 9, Southwestern (Kan.) 7.

St. Benedicts 6, Ft. Havs State 6. Bethel fi, Friends 0. SOUTHWEST Southern Methodist 7, Texas U.

7. Arkansas 7, Texas A. and M. 7. Texas Christian 34.

Baylor 12. Rice 27. Texas A. and I. 0.

ROCKY MOUNTAIN Colorado 40, Colorado Mines 6. Utah Aggies 15, Brigham Young 0. Arizona State 12, Western State 0. Colorado Aggies 1G, Wyoming 0. Denver 26, Colorado College 0.

Mines 0, Montana State Reserves 14. San Jose State 7, Fresno State 7. Washington 14, Oregon State 7. Stanford 27, U. C.

L. A. 0. Santa Clara 20, California 0. Oregon 13, Montana 0.

University of Idaho 12, College of Idaho 0. break up a Gamecock pass from the 25-yard line for the score. ltne to take a pass from Folger and in return sail the Dieskin 15 vards V. P. I.

stillened in the third to break up a Gamecock pass from the IS A down field into the waiting arms of 25-yard line on their goal and again I IlL'I S. to check the South Carolinians on Tasting blood, the Yellow Peril nt- rlin nnA knh.nJ their 3-yard line in a drizzling rain. n.ichtv Dirlcprsnn smstshorl Annlhnr annul fl I trr in th arose to the occasion and Anderson's men suddenly found themselves on the defensive. Alex Stevens broke through th center of the line for an 18-vard jaunt that carried him tn Stat' GATORS. 14 TO I JACKSONVILLE, Nov.

3. (AP) The Georgia Bulldogs throt .1 between Greenville and Par- lnfnra P.8' and while the Tornado is yet tended for Captain Tom Craig, rw.c iY, Gamecock end standing just over firPPnsward tne oId ada8! tnat lt ls in? goal line. I into krnnnht tled the dancerous Florida aerial Stroud, big Gamecock center re- riown 0ff the by the plucky a P. I. fumble two plays dLstrict lliRn squad tnis scason.

Turner. Purple end. recovered on the Bison's 29-yard stripe. The threat was short-lived, howevei, McGaughey, Bucknell center, intercepting a Wurman pass on his wn 25 a few plays later. The Greenville team did not seriously threaten arain during the contest, although every pass was labelled "dynamite" and it happened that Bucknell -as better at intercepting them than Furman was in successful execution.

The passes were either thrown inaccurately or mishandled on the receiving end. OUTFIELDER IN FOOTBALL Anyway, this Bucknell boy by the name of Sitarsky, whom Mrs. Sitarsky up in her home town of Rutherford, N. had christened John which is short for Jack, proved to be a roving outfielder after the fashion of Tris Speaker. He caught alien passes off his ears, behind his back collar button and over his head.

Anything that looked like, a Furman home run he tucked to his waist for an easy putout. and if there's one man Coach Hooks Mylin should decorate with a spray of spinach he is Mr. Sitarsky. He kept Furman from scoring just how-many touchdowns, it's hard to tell. A name like that would look good backing a Russian opera.

But his forte was i backing up Bucknell. Furman earned only three first downs to Bucknell's nine in a game that was as clean us a piece of laundry coming from Yung Lung with a tickee Confucius. One penalty was imposed that a defensive five-yard infliction against Bucknell late in the final quarter and this flawlessness was due to no oversight of officials who were particular aggressive eye-witnesses throughout the battle. CIVIL WAR MINUS PREJUDICE The boys, from above and below the Mason and Dixon line, battled hard and clean in the greatest in-tersectional game of year in the south. Grant and Lee would have been proud of their offsprings, granting that Reznichak descended from a Grant and that a Lee family album contains pictures of descendants on the Furman eleven.

Yesterday only the 50-yard chalk remained a vestiee of the Mason 29. A Clemson pass fell incomplete and then Riddick f'eld witnessed one of the most thrilling plays that was ever paraded before a stadium full of customers. Eerry flipped a four yard pass to Stevens, uhn vie later and Mauney passed tc Yonce attack today and made two of their own tosses count for touchdowns to bounce out of a three-game losing streak with a 14 to 0 victory over lor the second touchdown. Conen-! haver, aggressive Gobbler guard, blocked Yonce's try lor the extra At any rate, whether Parker wallops Greenville or whether they don't, it will well be worth the admission price of 50 cents, which has been tentatively agreed upon by all parties concerned, to get the spectator out for thrills. tackled in his tracks and while falling tossed the leather point.

i Shack McCradv came into the iit-r, who gave tne command the Gators. Twenty-two thousand persons, the largest crowd ever to pack a Florida stadium, saw the game. John Bond, triple-threat halfback, personally took a hand Knth Rnllrioe scores. In the second wara marcn, triple time." game with the ball on South Caro- i lina's 45 and broke off tacklel for 50 i DOWN THE ROAn There will be plenty of color to yaras Deiore btowe, V. r.

I. substi-, the coition next Friday; in fact tute back, overhauled him on the 5. i thp thincs look on Daner there period he flipped a short pass to Gleen Johnson for a nine yard gain McCraay drove over lor the third snouId be plenty of competition touchdown in two line bucks the aggregation as from the minutes after the previous score. I indent bodies as well. Fittro, Gobbler end, hit Game-1 pillowing is how the battles have cock ball-carriers from all angles.

nrieH in he rmsr Lee took Stevens lateral on his own 29. headed for the sidelines and ran head on into five would-be tacklers. A complete reversal of his field put him on the road to the opposite corner of the field. Another cutback straight down the center of the field from the 10-yard line gave the boy from Greer a total of 29 yards and Clemson's second score Again Fellers failed to kick the extra point. It was hardly conceivable and a touchdown.

In tne last quarter, he pulled, in a long heave from the hand of Maurice Green just as it entered the end zone. The ball travelled 30 years in the air. Both extra points were place-kicked by Bond, who also gained 41 varris from scrimmaee as his con and starred on defense with Copcn-haver and Carpenter. Craig, -Greenville 13; Parker 0. -Greenville 21: Parker 0.

-Greenville 25; Farkrr 7. 20- dumped on the southern soil but he bumped away from at least four Furman men. And the two short wide end runs for touchdowns found a Bison in position to be thrown for a loss by Roy Stevens but Roy, the only Furman man to set through a fine Bucknell interference wall, was just a moment late. He possibly did well to get into the Bisons' backfield so closely knit was the screen on the end run. Furman, handicapped by loss of regulars, was woefully weak in blocking and its game necessarily reverted to punting and passing and a prayer.

PRECISION AND POWER On the other side of the fence Bucknell had precise blocking in checker-board fashion, the men moving up one by one in an avalanche. It was not a sweeping style of interference, such as is employed after Notre Dame fashion, but more like a parade with men falling in line down the home stretch. Especially was McGaughey. the Bison's heavyweight center, a berserker in backing up a six-man line on defense, and Smith, a halfback, also was a pile-driver in diving into a slot to stop up the slightest aperture Furman made in Bucknell's wall of granite. Roper made several good tackles, and so did Blair and Guy Williams tackling plays that were obvious to the fans in the open spaces.

ROY STEVENS CROWDED Roy Stevens, always crowded on his punts because Bisons sifted through, managed to keep ahead of his rivals, despite one partially blocked boot. Bucknell, by the way. which beat Villanova a week ago 13 to 0, hasn't failed to block a punt in a single game. Statistics, for the certified public accountants and others who may be interested, are to be found elsewhere in this section. Suffice it to say Furman gained 69 yards from rushing and Bucknell clicked off 163.

To make a thick story thinner (Continued on Page 3, Col. 1) McDougail, Gaftney, and Stroua were outstanding for South Carolina. V. P. I.

rolled up nine first downs to eight for the Gamecocks, averaged 42 yards on punts to its op- tribution to the Georgia superiority '28, 29 and '30 the schools severed relations. Greenville Tarker 0 (spring game). '33 Greenville fi; Parker 0. me nan enaea alter two State passes fell to the ground, that thtl in that respect. i 1 ...0,0 7-H -t olumbia Lions Texas And S.

M. 13. i ponents' 39, but yielded the supre nut wanviiig away wiw the team that state hails as he best in a score of years. FLORIDA 0 0 0 0- macy in tne air to a faoutn Carolina gain of 4 yards by passing leavuig tne field in a dead ti Georgia scoring toucnaowns. Down Cornell Deadlock, 7 All onipared with its 9.

as tne naif ended, the husky Cleij sua team iookpo as iresn as mor he lineups: Bond and G. Johnson (sun ir Green); points after touchdown. Bond 2. V. I.

I. Ps. S. Carolina AUSTIN, Nov. 3.

(AP) The University of Texas and Southern Methodist Fittro IF Banks LT traif Gaffney Tomlin Stroud Fowble and Dixon boundary as the two teams fought back and forth in a Mnnnlfinnnt nnrttinrr filial katit'DOn Pd at. 7-7 tvt i I Copenhaver LG C. mg glories. Evidently the bovs Ir the taste of victorv served then-Columbia last week and were ou pick up another good meaL Taking his men to the dres room during the intermission. Hi Anderson must have reproduced of the pep talks of his old teac and master, the immortal Kn Rockne.

When State took the fi UJ ouuiuwcai tun- i jnnes ference game. j5otnick Texas scored shortly after the Dodge came oneneri anH niam nvDj Thomas Concord Whips Appalachian ATHENS, W. Nov. 3. (API Resoning to the air for most of their gains, the Mountain Lions of Concord college today handed Appalachian state of Boone, N.

a 20 to 6 lacing here. Concord scored first In the opening period, climaxing a march from their own 40-yard line with a 20-yard aerial from Roney to D'An-tom. The try for extra point failed. The visitors evened the count In Iluskey Rowland Mauney Smith Wildcats Wn From Wisconsin EVANSTON. 111., Nov.

3. (AP-Northwestern's Wildcats clawed their way from the Big Ten "Cellar" today with a 7 to 0 win over Wisconsin. Fred Lind, Wildcat left halfback. NEW YORK. Nov.

3. (APi Columbia's Rose Bowl Lions came up with a two touchdown thrust in one period today to turn back Cornell's big red invaders 14 to 0. The Lions were without the serv-ces of Al Barabas, their crack star. Until Coach Lou Little lead them a severe lecture during the half time intermission, they tailed to resemble the team that turned back Stanford and opened th" season with a victorv over Yale. Except In the third when Eddie Brominski.

Tommy Tob and Joe Vollmer, filling in for the injured Barabas, led "then, their two touchdowns the Lions were battled for the second semester those bcl Alexander Robbins McDougail had set their jaws and one glanc revealed that Dlentv of trouble fo Carpenter HI5. Ottaway HO. Dickerson FR. Score bv V. P.

I. S. Carolina 1 1 la gill in. tut ui nil ik uuv. i Roy Stevens and Sitarsky, interspersed with Bucknell's occasional bursts of speed and bombshells.

Furman's tackling was sporadically efficient but now and then the hard-running, stiff-arming Bucknell backs made Purple grapplers look like Atlantic City taffy pullers. When they tried to tackle Reznichak around the equator, instead of the legs, this big boy was hard to down. PUNT, PASS. PRAYER Rhubright on his 78-yard run from the kickoff should have been l.ILm 1,1 1L. extra point.

For nearly three periods the Texas fought doggedly to stave off a charging Southern Methodist attack but faltered in the closinp minutes of the third period and Bobby Wilson, phantom triple threat Mustang back, slashed around his right end, cut back through a gaping hole in the secondary and the Tigers was brewing in their1 1 0 0 00 7 0 1320 touchdowns. mmas. STATE TURNS OV Scoring summary South Carolina. Robbins, Vonce (sub' the second peHod when Ward drove made the only touchdown of the game in the first quarter, breakinc away for a 20 yard run to the gna! line. Duvall.

full back, booted the extra point with a placekick, The second half was a new football game. Clemson continued to hit the Pack just as hard but Rex, (Continued on rase 2. Col. 3) for McCrady (sub for; through the line from the one-vard Robbinsl; points from try after' stripe after a drive down the field. Orr tied the count with a place kick.

touchdown, Yonce 2, (placement). The try lor point failed. on even terms by the Ithaca eleven..

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