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The Times from Shreveport, Louisiana • Page 35

Publication:
The Timesi
Location:
Shreveport, Louisiana
Issue Date:
Page:
35
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 UK MlHKVI.IMHrr TtMK Siiiulny, Sqt. 2, 1 1k LSU's Last-Half Rally Outpoints 'Bama, 13-3 Inside Corner JACK FISER By JACK USER Times Sporti Editor LADD MEMORIAL STADIUM. Mobile, Sept. 27 Louisiana State's Bayou Bengals, slammed back into first half humiliation by an inspired Alabama Crimson Tide, came to life for two second half touchdowns here tonight and marked up their second victory of the 19.r8 season, 13-3. For thirty minutes of the warm, clear evening it was apparent that all those bear stories about how high Paul Bryant can get a foot-Lall team were giltedged.

Not only did 'Bama's alert line smash back everything the Tigers could muster in the offensive line, the Crimson horde turned an LSU fumble into a field goal by tackle THE YARDSTICK (tm, Umwvtm mm Him i -J i tre Dame back Jim Crotty (24) recovered the ball on the Hoosier 21. (AP INDIANA FUMBLE Jarred by a Notre Dame tackle, Indiana back Don Costa (40) fumbles in the first quarter of the Notre Dame-Indiana game in South Bend. No threatening was 'Bama's. Nothing really serious happened, but this short running game did get a first down midway through. When LSU held, halfback Ferdy Cruce quick-kicked a 62-yard down to the Bengal seven.

There was a stretch of inconclusive sparring that built up to the first break of the contest. Ole Lou had charged up to midfield on ground plays and Cannon sent in, obviously with something special in mind. Billy knifed through a huge hole in the right side and was off for a big gain to midfield but lost the handle of the ball when tackled. It bubbled high into the air and settled into the arms of 'Bama's Morrison, who happened to be standing near. He set sail for the East sideline behind a quickly-formed cordon of blockers and raced all the way to the LSU four before several Tigers knocked him out of bounds.

Jackson and Mack Wise could glean but three yards in three rips at the angered Bengal forwards, so on fourth down Fred Sington dropped back to the eight and booted 'er through from a slight angle to the right. Alabama, incredibly, had a 3-0 advantage. The pounding Tide lineman slammed sub quarterback Durel Matherne down for three straight losses to forestall any possible comeback before intermission. TIGERS SCORE The Bengals finally stirred themselves after the Tidesmen had failed to move far with the second- half kickoff, marching 67 yards to tally. Robinson and Cannon alternated at ripping the apparently tiring 'Bama line until "The Howitzer" zoomed for 19 and a first down on the enemy seven.

A penalty set the drive back temporarily, but on third down from the nine Rabb fired down the middle to Robinson, who nabbed it between two defenders just shy of the goal lines anj was literally tackled into paydirt. Davis place-kicked his third extra point of the campaign and Lou led, 7-3. A great Davis punt that sailed out on the Alabama three put the Crimsons back in the hole a few minutes later and when Henry Lee Roberts hauled the return punt to the 31, Ole Lou was knocking again. But this time Matherne couldn't move 'em, and Davis tried a forlorn chance field goal from the 38 that dropped far short. Alabama had to punt again early in the fourth period, though, and Cannon got it back to the foe's 44 after taking a handoff from Robinson.

Then Billy picked up seven. Rabb kept for one and Robinson squirted through the left side on a quicky for 13 -to the 21. Cannon took it the rest of the way in three rams, making the TD from the 11 on an explosive burst through the right side. Davis' boot went wide this time, leaving LSU in possession of a 13-3 lead. That proved to be more than plenty, for all of Alabama's early fire had gone out by then and the Bengals stopped all subsequent threats with ease.

Ted Williams Holds Alabama LSU Fir-t downs 7 17 Rushing yards 100 183 Passing yards 0 7.1 Pwsses attempted 3 13 Passes completed 0 6 Passes had intercepted 0 1 Number of punt 8 7 Punting average 43 0 36 5 Fumbles lost 1 1 Yards penalized 50 73 Slim Batting Edge Sports jgp; scw.s Hear Jark Hsor "World ol Sports" at 5: IS ra. and "Sports Final" at m. Daily Monday Through Friday on KWKH The Wave Picks Up Speed MOBILE, Sept. 27 Having caught Tulane's aerial circus in action against the Texas Longhorns, we can now make out a pretty fair case for the Greenies as one of the most spectacular losing football teams we can recall. Make no mistake about it, the Wave will continue to lose more often than not, because it is composed of young bucks with an awful lot of mistakes to get out of their systems.

But in between enemy touchdowns, which will continue to com'; in bunches like grapes, Andy Pilney's flaming youths will also be scoring a flock of 'em themselves. Reflect that in its two losing efforts to date Tulane has tallied five touchdowns and 34 points more than 1957 national champion Auburn was accustomed to score in three or four winning efforts. Furthermore, the Wave's proven ability to move the ball is bound to increase as young players become more and more familiar with their assignments. Friday night, for example, sophomore halfback Percy Colon looked like about the niftiest ball-carrier on either squad. He hit the holes fast and hard for his heft and displayed nlenty of snakepants in the cluttered field.

Observers who had watched him debut against Florida a week earlier said that Percy had picked up worlds of poise in the interim. A new offensive threat materialized for future Tulane foes to cope with, too: Carlton Sweeney, the Lake Charles quarterback who has always been characterized as the good-throw, no-run type, suddenly blossomed into a brilliant ball-carrier capable of netting more than a half-hundred yards rushing. The pass-catching of all hands continued to impress, too. Pilney and his aides rate all sorts of praise for the overtime labor that must have gone into transforming a red shirt like Phil Hei'fington into an offensive hatchet with eight catches in two games. The same is true to a lesser degree of Ferriday's Leo Young at the opposite flank, although his potential had been at least partially recognized all the way.

All these shenanigans ill not make Tulane into a really good football team this year, but they'll go a long way to keep the public coining until Andy recruits a flock of front line mules who're big, strong and numerous enough to root it out on even terms with teams like Texas and Florida. Notwithstanding all the sophomoric mistakes, they were nearly enough to beat a superior Longhorn team Friday night. The town was buzzing well into the wee hours Saturday about the near-touchdown that the Greenies had frustrated bv the halftime horn. McNeese Clobbers NSC Team, 25 to 8 The Baltimore-New York game was rained out. Warren Spahn marked up his 22nd victory of the season as the Milwaukee Braves, champions of the National League, whipped the Cincinnati Redlegs 6-1 in their next to last game of the regular season.

Spahn hit one of the Braves' three home runs. Richie Ashburn of the Philadelphia Phillies increased his lead in the tight race for the National League batting title by rapping out three singles in five times at bat as the Phillies edged the Pirates 7-3. Ashburn's average now is .3469. Willie Mays rapped a sharp ninth inning single to stay in his neck-and-neck race for the title but the St. Louis Cards trimmed the San Francisco Giants 11-7.

With two hits in five tries Mays fractionally improved his average to .3445. The Chicago Cubs clinched at least a sixth place finish in the National League by defeating the Los Angeles Dodgers 7-4 before in the final game of the year at the Coliseum. LAKE CHARLES, Sept. 27 (Special Quarterback Sammy Strib-ling scored twice and passed fur a third here tonight as McNeese State's Cowboys dumped Northwestern State 25-8 in the first Gulf THE YARDSTICK Demons Cowboys First Downs 11 11 Net Yds. Rushing lf'9 219 Passes Attempted 13 3 Pa ses Completed 2 Net Yds.

issing 69 59 Net Yds. Gained 193 276 Passes Had Intercepted 1 0 Punls and Ave 737 9 629 7 Fumbles Lost .1 1 Penalties and Yards 322 867 States Conference game of the reason for both teams. Stribling scored first in the initial quarter on a three yard scamper then passed to Olen Clark for the second six-pointer in the second quarter. The firey quarterback then proceeded to go eight for the third TD before halftime to make it 18-0 at the half. The third period was scoreless and in the fourth McNeese came along to score again before the Demons could get on the board.

It was Frank Gouder from 10-yarris i out this time with Ed Garris kick- ing the extra point. Fullback Charlie (Tank) Tolar finally put the Natchitoches crew on the scoreboard after that going o'er from the one. Quarterback Dale Hoffpauir added the two extra points on a run. It was the Cowboys ground at 1 1-7 SIZZLER Fred Sington, heir to a great Alabama football name. That enabled the Tide to leave the field at the midway break with a hard-to-believe 3-0 bulge.

But 'Bama's bolt was about shot right there, although few could have realized it at the time. Ole Lou's manpower superiority had worn Bryant's thin forces down and the Tigers began churning up turf as soon as play resumed. Billy Cannon, the incomparable, led a third-period march with a great hall-carrying spree, then stepped back while quarterback Warren Rdbb hit halfback Johnny Robinson with a ten-yard scoring aerial. Then, to prove to one and all that it was the tame stuff, "The Howitzer" came back early in the fourth quarter to ramrod a 56-yard payoff push only this time he get into the scoring act himself for the first time this season, tearing off right tackle from the 11 for the wrap-up points. The Bengals elected to stick with the kick once again when extra points were in order.

Fullback Tommy Davis, putting in more playing time than first-stringer Red Brodnax, made the first and missed the second. It was not an ttnjust oi'tcome for the contest, although the underdog Red Elephants kept the crowd of 34,000 in stitches while they had it. Not even a potentially tragic collapse of some end zone bleacher, in which five limbs were broken, could dampen the carryings-on of 'Bama partisans until the Bengals finally wheeled into high gear. For the second straight time Cannon was supreme among rushers, picking up 86 yards in a dozen carries. This time he had splendid assistance from fellow halfback Robinson, who carried for 44 yards in his ten attempts.

Davis was next-best with 29. For 'Bama quarterback Bobby Jackson was the main show offensively although neither he nor any other Tidesman completed a single pass. Jackson topped his team's groundgainers with 38 yards. The most sensational offensive gesture for the losers was a 45-yard sprint with a mid-air fumble by halfback Duff Morrison that set up the second-quarter field goal. LSU had 17 first downs to the losers' seven while amassing a total yardage advantage of 225 yards to 100.

Defensive heroes were many for both sides. For the Tigers, Texar-kana-bred guard Tommy Lott sparkled as did the dependable pivot, Max Fugler, ends Billy Hendrix and Don Norwood and Robinson. For the Tide, which was sensational at chasing passers and knocking 'em down, tackles Dave Sington and Carl Valletto were tops. Said LSU coach Paul Dietzel of his first victory over Rryant: "Naturally I'm thrilled with our second-half comeback. Bear did a tremendous job of getting the Alabama team ready.

They were a hard-hitting bunch that never quit. But our side didn't quit either and I'm proud of 'em." SLUGGING MATCH The first period of Saturday night's ball game was a pure slugging match, with neither side daring to play anything but close-to the-vest football. Rabb passed to Robinson for 15 yards and a first down on the third scrimmage play to Pierce down to the Alabama 33, but the Tide held hard and forced a kick. It was not until just before the end of the chapter that Ole Lou got its next first down, fullback Davis churning for it at the Tide 49. In the interim, most of the Fan Fare STATE COLLEGES LSU 13, Alabama 3.

LA. TECH 14, Ark State 7. Sam Houston State 6, SLI 0. McNEESE 25. NSC 8.

LA. COLLEGE 39, Livingston State 0. NORTHEAST STATE 23, Delta State 0. GRAMBLING 48, Alcorn 6. XAVTER (NEW ORLEANS) 27, Tuskegee 26.

EAST Pittsburgh 17. Holy Cross 0. Penn SUte 43. Penn 0. VMI 33.

Villanova 6. Maine 37, Rhode Island 8. Dartmouth 20, Lafayette 0. Brown 22. Columbia 0.

Hofstra 34. C. W. Post 0. Cornell 13.

Colgate 0. Syracuse 24, Boston College 14. Rutzers 28, 0. Lehigh 8 Delaware 7. Yale 8, Connecticut 6.

Boston University 28. Massachusetts 14, Amherst 12. Springfield 0. Howard 20. St.

Paul's 6. American International 8. Upsala 0. Middlebury 8. Wesleyan 0.

Northeastern 12, New Hampshire 0. Lebanon Valley 2. Wilkes 0. Maryland State 20. Virginia State 6.

Western Maryland 34, Bridgewater (Va.i 12. Army 45. South Carolina 8. Juniata 24, Scranton 0. Buffalo 6.

Harvard 3. Oberlin 19, Hiram 6. Westminster iPa.l 14. Theil 6 Slippery Rock iPa.l Teacheri 6. Edmboro (Pa.i Teaches 6 triei.

Bates 27. Union iNYi 6. Tufts 26. Bowdoin 6. Colby 26, Brandeis 0.

Worcester Tech 19, New Britain Teachers 6. Hobart 20, Lawrence 7. Hamilton 26, Kings PT 6. Cortland 36, Alfred 0. Norwich 18.

RPI 8 Ithaca 14. East Stroudsburg 9. Navy 14. William and Mary 0. Rochester 20.

Allegheny 0. F. and M. 32. Dickenson 0.

Moniciair State Teachers 12, National Agriculture 12. Albright 21. Drexel 0. West Chester 19, Mansfield 0. Shippensburg 10.

Shepherd 6. Yermonl 30, Coast Guad Academy 30 i tie i. Trinity 12. Williams 0. California iPa.

i Teachers 13, Indiana (Pa. i Teachers 0. Youngstown 20, New Haven Teachers 15. MIDWEST Michigan State 32. California 12.

Northwestern 29. Wash. State 23. Nntre Dame 18. Indiana 0.

Michigan 20, Southern Cal 19. UCLA 18. Illinois 14. Purdue 28. Nebraska 0.

Ohio State 23. SMU 20. Iowa TCU 0. Ohio University 13. Toledo 8.

Missouri 14. Id-iho 10 Oklahoma 47 West Virginia 14. Tufts 28, Bowdoin 6. Colby 26. Brandeis 2.

Wichita 16. Cincinnati 16. Western 111. 6. Bradley 6.

SOUTH Clemson 26. North Carolina 21. Miss. State 14. Florida 7.

Virginia 15. Duke 12 Maryland 21. N.C. State 6. Geo.

Washington vs. Citadel, postponed. Auburn 13. Tennessee 0. Maryland State 20, Virginia State 6 Winston-Salem 18.

Kentucky State 18 Vermont 30. Coast Guard Academy .10. Western Maryland 34. Bridgewater (Va.i 12. Southwestern (Memphis) 28, Miss.

College 8. Vanderbilt 21. Georgia 14. Pensacola Navv 14. Memphis Navv 8.

Wake Forest 13. Virginia Tech 6. Memphis State 13. Tennessee Tech 0. Louisville 20.

Eastern Kentucky 7. Mississippi 27. Kentucky 6. SOUTHWEST Bavlor 14. Hardin-Simmons 7.

Houston 39. Texas A and 7. Texas Tech 32, West Texas State T. Stephen F. Austin 34, Southern State 0.

Lamar Tech 26, Corpus Christi 0. Okla. State 21. North Texas State 14. Wiley 42, Bishop 8.

Tulsa 27. Arkansas 14 FAR WEST Wyoming 21. Montana 14. Montana State 3, North Dakota State 6. Rice 30.

Stanford 7. Colorado 13, Kansas State 3. Washington 24. Minnesota Colorado College 46, Pomonca (Calif) 12 San Diego U. 13.

New Mexico Western 10. Westminster (Utah' 19, Eastern Montana 0. Iowa State 14, Arizona 0. BAROMETER NATIONAL LEAGUE tack vs. the Demon passing show with the McNeese version coming out better for a total of 278 yards to 198.

NSC 0 0 0 8 McNeese 6 12 0 723 Cincinnati Tied CINCINNATI, Sept. 27 W-The I'niversity of Cincinnati, held scoreless for three quarters, tonight settled for a 16-16 standoff with underdog University of Wichita. It was the first Missouri Valley Conference football game for both teams. MacKay Bumped BERKELEY, Sept. 27 M-Budge Patty dumped Davis Cupper Barry MacKay in straight sets today and plays Mike Davies of England tomorrow for the Pacific Coast tennis championship.

The score was 8-, 9-7, 6-4. CHOCTAW'S LOSE MEMPHIS. Sept. 27 Southwestern of Memphis picked up stream in the second half to trounce Mississippi College 28-8 Saturday. DIXIE SERIES Corpus Christi 5, Birmingham 3.

Best-oi-seven series tied, 1-1'. LITTLE WORLD SERIES Minneapolis 7, Montreal 2 (Minneapa-lis leads best-of-seven series. 2-OK McCabe passed to Hynes for two insurance points. Coach Joe Aillet's Bulldogs out-gained the Redskins 242 yards to 104 on the ground and 47 to 18 upstairs, but had to rely on the two breaks to score against an A-State defense that tightened near its own goal. Tech scored first when halfback J.

W. Slack of Bossier City dove over from two yards out, climaxing a 20-yard drive that was set up by McCabe's recovery of a Don Riggs fumble on the first play of the game. Slack's attempt at kicking the extra point was no good. The Indians roared back on a 13-play. 47-yard drive in the third quarter with quarterback James Billings sneaking across from the one yard-line with two minutes left in the period.

Barefoot kicker Lamar Lee literally toed the PAT for a 7-6 Arkansas State lead. Defensive standouts for the Bulldogs, who now own a 1-1 season record, included Minden fullback Max Rudd, Ruston's Bobby Hinton, Allen Stough of El Dorado, and Garris. -By Walt Ditzen It goes without saying, too, that not all the commentary was kind; most of the bar-stool quarterbacks carped bitterly over the Wave quarterback judgment in calling a couple of time-consuming running plays with the ball on the Texas four and precious seconds ticking out. They figure, of course, that passes are the ticket in a situatjon of that sort because they permit the offense to crowd more plays into the remaining time. All we can say is, teenage football players are like that.

If they weren't, the pros might start drafting right out of high school. Not Quite a Contender As for Texas' barely-victorious Steers, they were about as unimpressive as a winning team can be. This, remember, was a Texas team that drew considerable pre-season support as a Southwest Conference championa solid, well-coached, hard-hitting aggregation made up principally of juniors, which figured to surpass a creditable 1957 showing. Against this team was arrayed one of the Southeastern Conference doormats a club that had been nowhere and was destined to repeat in the majority opinion. -Yet the Lcnghyrn defense, supposedly its strong point, was literally shredded by the Greenie quarterbacks as big Richie Petitbon shot all 11 of his passes straight to the mark (although one was muffed) and Sweeney made good six of nine.

To be sure, Texas did eventually make some defensive adjustments that quelled the Wave chuckers until the ball game was out of reach, but the memory still lingers of a secondary that looked far from airtight against an offense 'that still isn't established among the great ones. It wasn't simply a case of giving Tulane the short ones while guarding against the "home that strategem is feasible only if it stops the opposition short of the goal line. One can't help wondering how the Steers' so-called "protective hull" will fare against a really polished passer such as SMU's Don Meredith. Longhorns' vaunted zest for "knocking" was still there, and Royal got a lot of good line play out of this big, three-deep forwards. His running game worked well when it had to and quarterback Bobby Lackey handled the club right cleverly, catching the Wave woolgathering at intervals with the belly series and reverses off that series.

But Texas was not a championship contender Friday night, even though it did get back a lot of the self-respect lost on the same sod last New Year's Day. The Barber Chair Louisiana Tech Squad Chills Arkansas State By The Associated Press Ted Williams and Pete Runnels each lashed out three hits in their down-to-the wire battle for the American League batting championship Saturday. But Williams forged into a slim .3267 to .3244 lead as they led the Boston Red Sox to a 9-5 victory over Washington. Gus Zernial pinch-singled in the tying run and Al Kaline hit a three-run triple in a five-run eighth-inning raUy that brought the Detroit Tigers from behind and beat the Cleveland Indians 5-1. Howard Reed, 21-year-old rookie making his first major league start, hurled Kansas City to a 2-1 victory over the Chicago White Sox.

National League CINCINNATI MILWAl'KEF ab rb ab rb Orimn, Jb 4 0 1 0 Haas, cf 4 110 5Bailey 0 0 0 0 Schndst, 2b 1 1 1 2 I.vnch. rf 4 0 2 0 Mantilla, 2b 2 0 0 0 Pinson. rf 4 0 10 Vthws, 3b 4 0 0 0 Rbnn. 3b 5 0 0 0 Aaron, rf 2 0 0 0 Fridley, If 4 110 Demerit, rf 2 0 1 0 Drooo. lb 4 0 0 0 Cvnm.

If 2 0 0 0 Dotterer. 4 0 2 1 Taylo, 2 110 McMlln, 4 0 1 0 Torre, lb 4 12 1 Hook, 1 0 0 0 Crandall. 3 0 0 1 2Rurf(fr, 1 0 0 0 Rice, 10 0 0 Wieand. 0 0 0 U'w. s.

1110 Pena, 0 0 0 0 Spahn. 2 112 3BelI 1 0 1 0 ISruton 10 0 0 Acker, 0 0 0 0 Buhl, 10 10 41-oies 10 0 0 i Total 37 9 9 1 Total 32 6 9 6 1 Fanned for Spahn in 6th: 2 Fanned for Hook in 4th: 3 Singled foi Pen in 7th: 4 Fanned for Acker in 9th; 5 Walked for Gammas in 9th. Cincinnati noo nno 1 Milwaukee 004 ini OOx 6 Gramma's. Wise PO-A Cincinnati 24-4. Milwaukee 27-12.

LOB Cincinnati 12. Milwaukee 7. 2B Pinson. Fndley, Dotterer. Taylor.

HR Spahn. Schoendienst, Torre IP F.R BB SO Hook (L, 0-1) 3 3 4 4 2 5 Wieand 2 4 2 2 0 2 Pena .1 0 0 0 2 2 AcKer 2 2 0 0 1 1 Spahn 22-11) 6 5 1 1 2 3 Buhl 3 4 0 0 1 1 i Wieand pitched to 2 in 6rhl. Smith. Dascoli. Donatelli, Crawford.

2:39. A 19.670. ST. LOtTS ab rb Burton. If 5 0 11 SAN FRANCISCO rb i 0'Cnel2b-3b I 5Brandt Dvenprt3b 4 White i Bresoud.2b 0 0 0 0 Tate, ss Noren.

rf Musial, lb Boyer. 3b Green, Smith, cf fl 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 Spencer. 2b cf Wagner Cepeda. lb 1 2 CunghmrflbS 2 3 2 2 Kasko. 2b 5 Jackson, Kirkland.rf 4 0 1 3 1 2 Maoe.

1 1 Rodgers, ss Brosnan, 1 0 1 1 Thomas, Schmidt, 1 Lockman McCormckp Monzant, 2sneake del. 3Jablonski Jones, 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 12 0 0 0 0 Totals 42 11 16 11 Totals 37 7 12 7 1 Fouled out for Schmidt in 6th, 2 Filed out for Monzant 6th. 3 Doubled for Giel 8th. 4 Filed out for Davenport in 6th, 5 Grounded out for Connell in 9th. St.

Louis 001 411 20211 San Francisco 311 000 02n 7 Rodgers. PO-A St. Louis 27-10. San Francisco 27-10 DP Musial, Tate and Mabe LOB St. Louis 8.

San Francisco 6. 2B Cepeda. Musial. B. G.

Smith, Cunningham. HR Wagner, Green. SB Boyer. Mabe 2. SF Rodgeri.

IP ER BB SO Jackson 1 1 ii 6 4 4 1 0 Mabe (W, 3-9) 6N 4 3 3 2 6 Brosnan l'j 2 0 0 0 1 Jones 1 2 2 0 0 0 McCormick 3 6 5 5 0 0 Monzant (L, 8-11) 3 4 2 2 1 2 GiH 2 4 2 2 0 2 HBP Monzant (Burton). Venzon. Secory. Conlan, Sudol. 2:44.

A 18,753. CHICAGO ab rb T.Taylor 2b 5 12 0 Dark. 3b 4 0 12 Banks, ss 4 0 0 0 LOS ANG FI.ES brhrb a Gilliam.3b Roseboro.c Fairly, cf Furillo, rf Hodges, lb Zimmer, ss Demeter, If Neal, 2b Williams. Bessent, lLarker Mauriello.p Craig, Podres, SGentile 4 110 3 111 4 12 1 4 12 2 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 4 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 10 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 Moryn. II 4Bolger King, cf linn 10 0 0 innn 0 0 0 0 Thomsn.cf,lf4 2 3 2 Long.

ID .111 Uackson.rf 0 0 0 0 Marshll.rf.lb3 1 1 1 Newman, 4 1 2 0 Hillman. 2 0 0 0 Anderson, 0 0 0 0 2Will 10 0 0 Henry, 0 0 0 0 Elston, 0 0 0 0 Totals 33 7 10 5 I Totals 14 4 1 Struck out for Ressent in 2nd. 2 Popped out for Anderson in 7th. 3 Ran for l.ong in 9th. 4 Popped out for Moryn in 9th, 5 Fouled out for Podres in 9th.

Chicago 100 002 004 7 Los Angeles 100 030 000 4 Fairly. Hodges. PO-A Chicago 27-7. Los Angeles 27-12 DP Bessent, Neal. Zimmer and Hodges; Banks.

T. Taylor and Long: Gilliam. Neal and Hodges. LOB Chicago 6, Los Angeles 5. HR Rosebnro.

Furillo. Thomson. SB T. Taylor. Elston.

SF-Dark. IP ER BB SO Hillman 4'n 8 4 4 2 6 Anderson l'j 0 0 0 0 2 Henry I .1 0 0 0 0 0 Elston (W, 9-81 2 0 0 0 0 2 Williams 'j 3 1 1 1 0 Bessent l'j 0 0 0 0 0 Maunello 2 2 2 3 4 Craig (L, 2-1) 2'i 4 4 3 0 1 Podres 1 I 0 0 1 0 Gorman, Burkhart. Dixon. 2:42. A 12.897.

PHILADELPHIA PITTSBI'RGH brhrb ab ab rb Ashburn. cf Young. 2b Bouchee, lb Post, rf Andersn, If Herrera, 3b lPhillev Jones, 3b Ferndez, ss Hegan, Cardwell, 5 13 0 Schofld. ss 0 0 4 2 1 Virdon, cf Klzwski, lb Skinner, If Powers, rf Mzerski, 2b Bright, 3b Kravitz, law, Face, Williams, 2Thomas 4 1 2 5 1 3 3 1 1 3 0 1 1 1 1 noo 4 0 1 4 0 0 4 0 2 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 ooo ooo Totals 37 7 15 7 1 Totals 35 3 9 2 1 Homeied for Herrera in the 8th; I Grounded out for Williams in the 9th. Philadelphia loo OiTO 0517 Pittsburgh.

OOO 010 011 3 None. PO-A Philadelphia 27-10. Pittsburgh 27-14. LOB Philadelphia 6, Pittsburgh 7. 2B Anderson, Cardwell, Post, Bouchee.

Bright. 3B Skinner. Kluszewski. HR Kiavitt, Philley, Young. Bouchee.

IP Caldwell iW-3-61 Law ii. 14-12 7'j Face Williams 1 9 11 1 ER BB SO 3 3 2 5 4 4 0-5 2 2 10 3 110 1 Baik Cardwell. Don- atelli, Landes. Barlick. 2 23.

1.104. JONESBORO, Sept. 27 (Special i Louisiana Tech's Bulldogs capitalized on a fumble and blocked punt to defeat the Arkansas State Indians 14-7 here to- TIIE YARDSTICK Tech Ark First Downs .14 (i Yds. Gained Rushing 242 104 Yds Lost Rushing 14 IB Net Yds Rushing 228 r'H Passes Attempted 12 10 Passes Completed fi 2 Net. Y'ds.

Passing 47 18 Net Yds. Gained 27S K4 Passes Had Intercepted 0 4 Fumhles Lost 1 2 Punts and Ave. 719 0 532 0 American Leajrue BOSTON ab rb Buddin, ss 4 2 2 1 Runnels, lb 6 3 3 3 Williams, If 4 2 3 1 Stephens. If 0 0 0 0 Malzone, 3b 4 1 3 2 Jensen, rf 3 0 10 Piersall, cf 5 0 0 0 Lepcio, 2b 4 0 0 0 White, 4 12 2 Sisler, 10 0 0 Kiely, 3 0 0 0 WASHINGTON ab rb Yost, 3b 3 112 ChriMev, If 0 1 0 0 lFlUgld, lb 4 0 0 1 Sievers. If 5 0 10 Courtnev, 5 0 1 0 Plews.

2b 4 12 1 Lemon, rf Allison, cf Bridges, ss Ramos, 4 0 11 4 110 4 12 0 0 0 0 0 Romnsky, 0 0 0 0 2Aspromnte 10 0 0 Constble, 0 0 0 0 3Schaive 10 0 0 Snegs. 0 0 0 0 IKiIlebrew 10 0 0 Totals 3a 9 14 9 Totals 36 5 9 5 1 mtnrinM I. .1 2 Struck out for Romonoskv in 4th; 3 Grounded out for Constable in 7th; 4 Flied out for Griggs in 9th. Boston 410 300 0019 Washington 211 OOO 0015 Lepcio. Kiely.

PO-A Boston 27-17. Washington 27-10. DP Malzone. Lepcio and Runnels; Bridges. P'ews and Fitzgerald.

LOB Boston 11, Washington 8. 2B Lemon. 3B Runnels, Bridges. HR Yost. Runnels.

Wiihams. Romonoskv, Kiely. SF Malzone IP ER BB SO xSisler 0 2 2 2 1 0 Kiely 5-2i 9 7 3 3 2 3 Ramos iL. 14-17) 1 3 4 4 3 1 Romonosky 3 4 4 4 1 2 Constable 3 4 0 0 2 3 Griges 2 3 1110 xPitched to three batters in first Stewart, Papareila, Chvlak, Tabac-Chi. 2:29.

A 4.233. DETROIT ab rb CLEVEI- Avila 2b 2Wertz Moran 2b Nixon Power lb Minoso If Colavito rf Doby cf Jackson 3h IHarrell 3b JVernon Hunter ss INaragon Mcl.ish Grant dshick AND rb Boiling 2b 4 111 3 0 0 0 Kuenn cf Kaline rf Harris lb Maxwell If 3Groth If Martin 3b Wilson Veal ss 4Zernial SBertoia ss Foytack 6Francona Lary 3 110 4 0 13 3 0 0 0 2 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 2 0 110 0 3 0 0 0 4 0 10 2 0 0 0 10 11 110 0 2 0 0 0 0 10 0 10 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 3 0 0 0 10 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 oooo Totals 31 5 6 5 Totals 3" 1 5 1 1 Ran for Jackson in 7th; 2 Struck out for Avila in 7th: 3 Ran for Maxwell in 8th; 4 Singled for Veal in 8th: 5 Ran for Zernial in 8th; 6 Walked for Foytack in 8th: 7 Flied out for Harrell in 9th! 8 Grounded out for Hunter in 9th. Detroit ooo ono 050 5 Cleveland Ooo 100 000 1 None. PO-A Detroit 27-11, Cleveland 27-12. DP Colavito and Power; Martin and Harris.

LOB Detroit 4, Cleveland 7. 2B Colavito. 3B Kaline. SB Wilson. McLish.

Martin. IP ER BB SO Foytack 15-13) 7 3 114 5 Lary 2 2 0 0 0 0 McLish (L, 16-8) 7 4 4 4 2 1 Grant 0 1 1 1 2 0 Woodeshick l''j 1 0 0 0 0 McKinley. Stevens, Flaherty, Rommel. 2:12. A 3.652.

KANSAS CITY I CHICAGO ab rb I McAny, rf 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 OOO 0 0 0 Klshk. 2b 10 Fox, 2b Landis, cf Battey. Maris, cfrf Hsdley. lb Cerv. If If Small, rf Tuttle.

cf Smith. 3b Chiti, Paxes, ss Demstri. ss Reed, 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 Jackson, lh Callon. If Phillips, 3h 0 0 0 psitio. ss 4 1 2 0 1 1 1 Wynn.

2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 32 2 6 2 I Totals 31 1 5 1 Kansas City 010 ino 2 Chicago 000 Ono 0101 Fox. PO-A Kansas City 27-14. Chicago 27-9 DP Smith. Klim-chock and Hffdle.v; Battey and Fox. LOB Kansas City 10.

Chicago 7. 2B Baxes, Fox. HR Chiti. Feed. IP ER BB SO Reed 1-01 .951144 Wynn L.

14-161 9 6 2 1 6 PB Rattey. Berry. Runge, Rice and Union. 2:40. A 2.092.

TEX ARK AN A IS VICTOR, 24-14 TEXARKANA, Sept. 27 (Special) Texarkana Junior College grabbed its second win of the season here tonight with a 24-14 victory over Del Mar Junior College. James Hargett scored the first Texarkana TO on a two-yard plunge with Steve Marler scoring the PAT. Don Byers passed to Wade Fowler for the second marker and fullback Don Cron went seven for the third plus two extra points on a run. Cron also added a 13-yard field goal.

Gerald Ripkowski passed to Larry Witte from the 10 and ran from the three for both Del Mar tallies. night, but the Rustonites had to scramble from behind in the last nine minutes to turn the trick. Faul Hynes. Tech's 190-pound sophomore halfback phenotn from Sulphur, bulled across the goal line from one yard out with 8 09 left in the game, erasing a 7-6 Arkansas State lead and climaxing a 39-yard drive that required 13 plays. The game-deciding drive was set up when Tech end Charles Garris blocked a punt.

Following the touchdown, quarterback James I. Pot. GB i Milwaukee 92 61 .601 Pittsburgh 64 69 54 9 8 San Francisco 79 "4 .516 13 Cincinnati 75 78 .490 17 I St. Louis 72 81 .471 2H 'Chicago 72 82 .48 2d', i Los Angeles 71 83 ,41 21 'i Philadelphia 68 85 .445 24 MAYBE YOU DIDN'T CATCH IT, but the son of a former Shreveport baseball hero made himself conspicuous in that Missouri-Vanderbilt television grid contest last week He was Jerry Curtright whose dad was former Sport and Chicago White Sox outfielder Guv Curtright NORTHWESTERN STATE'S JACK CLAYTON has a neat recipe for assessing credit or blame on the new extra point rule: "Well, that depends on whether or not we make it," Jack told the Natchitoches Quarterbacks. "If we do, it'll have been Clavton's decision If we miss, it'll be Cracker Brown's or Walter Ledet's" RECRUITING-WISE, TEXAS did all right in Louisiana again this year In addition to Homer's well-publicized Ray Wilkins, the Fish squad includes the all-state tackle from Morgan City, Bill Vincent and Mickey Bass of Monroe Incidentally, one of the graduate assistants who'll help Bill Jones coach the Fish is former end Bobby Marks, another Pelican Stater LSU THIS WEEK RECEIVED the sweetest, and certainly the most belated symbol of football recognition in its long and hectic history A silver football symbolic of the Bayou Bengals' 1944 Orange Bowl victory over Texas was flown to Baton Rouge from Miami In fact similar balls were "passed" to officials of all colleges which have participated in the Miami classic during its 24-vear historv It's a silver anniversary stunt ARKANSAS' PIGGIES HAVE ADDED a new piece of football haberdashery to their wardrobe this fall It's a set of red practice warm-ups with numbers, to replace the old anonymous gray jobs that were employed for Friday workouts on the road Whatever else gives, Frank Broyles plans to field the Southwest's nattiest team RADIO STATION KWKH WILL CARRY play-by-play broadcasts of all Washington Redskin games this season The first one's today's game with the Philly Eagles, beginning at 11:80 a.m.

Saturday's Results Milwaukee 6, Cincinnati 1. Chicago 7. Los Angeles 4. St. Louis 11.

San Francisco 7. Philadelphia 7, Pittsburgh 3. Today's Games Cincinnati at Milwaukee Purkey (17-Hi or Newcombe (7-13) vs. Push 10-fil. Philadelphia at Pittsburgh Moorhead I -6 1 vs.

Daniels i0-3i. St Louis at San Francisco Jones (14-121 vs. Fitzgerald 0- i Only games scheduled. AMERICAN LEAGUE Pet. GB New York 90 Chicago 81 Boston 78 .592 .529 .510 .503 .490 .477 .399 Detroit 7' Cleveland 76 Baltimore 74 Kansas Citv 73 Washington 16 Saturday's Results Baltimore at New York postponed.

ram. Detroit 5. Cleveland I. Boston 9. Washington 5.

Kansas Citv 2. Chicago 1. TndftT's Games Baltimme at New York 12'-10-9i and H.irshn-an U2-I4' vs -Pappas Stuidi- vant i2-bi. and Larsen m-M. Detroit st Cleveland Lary 1 16-13) vs.

Bell ill-lfl' Kansas Citv at Chicago Garver H2-11I vs. Trosky (O-Oi vs. Mcllwain (0-')i. Boston at Washington Brewer (12-1J1 vs. Kemmeref i6-15i..

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