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The Orlando Sentinel du lieu suivant : Orlando, Florida • Page 17

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Spnrls Classilied Poge I rhnh tela. 3-441 1 1 1 ORLANDO, SUNDAY, OCT. 18, 1953 SECTION IS (EDGINGTON Kt HCQLVARD ITil Notre Dame Comeback Trips Pitt Big Third Period Traps Panthers For 23-14 Loss SOUTH BEND, Ind. (A Notre Dame, sagging in the first half 14-7 after being victims of a Pitt ball-stealing act and a "sucker shift," yesterday shook off the effects with a 16-point burst in the last half to trim the pent-up Panthers 23-14. The nation's No.

1 team, looking like sandlotters at the start of the game, set 58,000 frenzied fans to cheering by scoring a safety and converting a fumble into a touchdown for a 16-14 lead in the third period. Then, after a 74-yard thrust failed at the outset of the fourth, the fighting Irish cinched their MA iVt T.V sip r. Tampa Line AP Wirephoto SSSIKmisaitnmmii rBelMwenwMl ii Trips Tampans Joe Heap Finds A Big Hole In The Pitt Line AP Wirephoto Florida Routs Citadel 60-0 THE YARDSTICK Pittsburgh Notre Dame 7 I First Downs 1 103 Rushing Yardage 224 22 Passing Yardage 90 Passes Attempted IS 3 Passes Completed 7 1 Passes Intercepted 1 Punts 3 37 Punting Average 34.7 2 Fumble Lost 2 SB Yards Penalised CO i-nit Knowles Finds A Hole In Comeback 7,000 fans were concerned. On tne third play, Marks flipped a short screen pass to Harold Knowles and they found out why the varostick F.rst Downs im Ii; III 11 Passes Attempted IZZl'-Z io e-asses compiexeo 1 Passes Intercepted Punts 42 Punting Average, Fumbles Lost j4 10 Yards Penalised Individual yardage: Stetson Marks 10 30 nowie 17 voiamuonp or 13'; mrmmw I3g. Tamoa M.nahan i isi: Leathers ss flS: Soack 2 tlH: Harris 22 Ss Clwa do total im.

everybody has been ravine about rw- Cnrin. ennhn. nore- He was collared before fie could The i I 1 I i I i r.w Harold Stetson By HARRY ROB ARTS The Stetson Hatters struck for a quick clinching touchdown in the final quarter here last night to whip the Tampa Spartans. 14-7, finally settling superiority of Florida's small college football twosome after ties of 6-6 and 14-14 in the previous two autums. Stan Marks, the Miami High product, put the foot back into football to get credit for set-; finer nn tho Hfrirlfr I The casev iunior booted a spiral that traveled 65 yards before it started rolling laterally at the Snartan two.

The frantic safetv ran it back to the 13, but the line inrew mem Dacs 10 me six anu at a 1 1 a. al 11 the short kick got only to the 33. You could have started the game right then as far as the LSU TOPPLES ATHENS, ua. up Louisiana State, using mostly straight power plays, rang up a 14 victory over injury-riddled, nut dead game Georgia yesterday. Fullbacks Jerry Marchand and Tommy Davis, and halfbacks I i I GEORGIA ELEVEN, 14-6 Maryland, mis aiso was me nrsi time the Bulldogs had failed to score at least twice mis year, 1'ass interceptions at me goai MW "'rll5 sdI cnmrlrted for 56 sards.

By BOB HOWARD JACKSONVILLE Florida went on its second straight scoring rampage against a minor opponent here last night as the Gators buried The Citadel under a lopsided 60-0 score before a Gator Bowl crowd of 16,000. It was strictly no contest after the Gators rambled 65 yards for a touchdown in the early minutes of "play. They punched home four more touchdowns in the second period and then continued the onslaught with two touchdowns in each of the last two quarters. Bob Woodruff emptied his bench before the night was over and a lineup composed almost entirely of untested freshmen was in there in the closing minutes. Citadel, fully expectinb to absorb a routine licking but not by mo onesided a score, never mustered a serious scoring threat.

The Bulldogs deepest penetration came on the final play of the first naif wnen a pass carried them to the Florida 18. Just about everybody got in the act, as the Gators trotted out a horde of backs, each operating with about equal efficiency against the badly outmanned visitors. Seven of them scored touchdowns and four others contributed extra points. The scoring leader for the night was Tommy Hadddfck, who bolted across for three touchdowns in the second quarter spree. Malcolm Hammack, Jackie Simpson, Dick Watson, Tommy Ives, Bob Smith and Joe Brod-sky counted one each.

Florida found The Citadel defense no problem throughout the night and ground out a hefty total of 489 yards on the ground while adding another 80 in passing. The Gators racked up 28 first downs on their way to the nine touchdowns. OATORS GO FOR TD After Citadel had been stalled in its first offensive attempt, the Gators set their scoring the yardstick LSU Georgia IS First Downs II 250 Rushing Yardaoe 1S2 SO Passing Yardaoe 140 IS Passes Attempted 23 Passes Completed 13 3 Passes Intercepted 1 3 Punts 44.3 Punting Average 42. 4 Fumbles Lost 1 10 Yards Penaliied 0 Al Leathers, Billy Joe's brother, lugged the kickoff back 25 and on the first play Bill Minahan pulled the old screen pass trick. H.

L. Hiers of Bartow rambled and twisted his way 39 yards to the Hatter 19 before his long frame was downed. It was here that the Stetson line ignored the weight advantage, checking Tampa on four yards in as many tries. They kicked out and the game ended four incomplete passes later. Tampa wasted no time in the openjng moments in establishing ll.rraliii Huerta wanted to win this game.

Charlie Harris bolted 37 yards with the kickoff and quarterback Minahan hit the air immediately. The first effort was aimed at H. L. Hiers, and, although it was a- ViyO-4 vA(4 41 tij4e a VlOtl iriTaBff. fererice was ru)e4 because safety Gene Stephenson got his arms entangled with Hiers.

This put tne ban on trie ix dux n. too CM mrr. Even a first down on the four didn't speed it Tom Spack. the stumpy fullback, knifed over right guard for the final half yard, and after center Ted Greene booted the point Tampa led, 7-0. It looked like a long night for the Hatters of chasing Harris, Spack, and the driving Leathers.

Stetson came back, making enough yardage to score, but a penalty helped stop them at the Tampa 13. Marks hit John Edgington, had a 25 yard pass-option run nulled by a penalty, then stepped 19 again on the same play, but it fizzled after a first down on the 13. Two runs failed to gain and two passes felL Tampa was going about gaining its slight statistical edge wben Stetson broke in to tie it up. Marks passed to the rugged Colantuono for 32 to spark a 47 yard drive. Colantuono took the short throw and kicked 25 yards before he was downed.

From the 13, Marks connected to Stephenson in the left flat and the speedy uimer rarK graduate sprinted into the end zone. The first of his two points tied it 7-7 and it looked like it might stay there. Tampa kept the Hatters at bay in the third quarter. They drove to the 29 and the 21, but Stephenson more than made up for his early pass, defense mistake. He speared one of Minahan's throws at the goal, running out to the 20 and knocked down a last down throw in the end zone on the next drive.

His work should be appreciated too, because at the time it looked like the hard-runing Spack, who accumulated 92 yards in 13 tries, would break free any time. He went for 13 and then for 17 before Stephenson's interception, and pitched in threatening 12 and 10 yard streaks in the next one. The Hatter line buckled and stopped him when they backed too deep, however, and Minahan had to turn to the air. The fourth quarter was an infant, and the fans were half expecting another Spartan drive when Marks, who became a quarterback because the others were injured, stood on his 20 an booted the one that sailed over the safety down to the wo. It brought a sudden change in the complexion of the game, taking Stetson out of a hole and putting Tampa in, with one swing of bis good right leg.

Tks lineups: TAMPA ssrt eed. Mires, wimetdi, Ondertus. Naer Trutacfc, CeWarO. G. Wavy.

Oavis. Zalupsfcs, Wrtevicri. Ouanne. Garcia. Greeine.

Mitlier. Lames. Peek. Skaroulis. MMrtm.

Spec Green, Mams, sjaachors. Muenorf, Chicsde. STETSON Moffard. Casey. Shanrecfc.

Olevefc, Edgington. Mendiey. J- Joe hem. Cope land. Vas.

Appel, Marshal. West. Poole, Gold. Siekanrac. Berer.

Procter. Knowles. Srady. Driver. Colantuono.

Marks, Park. Stephenson. Tampa Stetson 7 7 714 Ssnng CalsntuMls. i Points after touchdowns Greene, te I phenson -2. turn around, but shook the tackier like he was a bad rumor and stormed 16 yards down to the 15 Then lightning struck to the left.

ivick coiamuono, me misiae, j. took pitchout and fought the 15 yards around the end' and struggling away from three men down the Ari a Gene Stephenson, who learned placekicking through the neces- raisin fstratrtal! his second pawl, this one going IMTI trtrll UlC nrs i.ai imcman. Stetson had a 14-7 lead, and mat was n. annoua uir short drive accounted for two of tt-rnr lhrM first downs made in the last ha. Tampa made a brave effort for the third straight tie.

oriwMu, minutes, attempted 23 passes anJ on 13 for 10 yards. a Score by periods: LSU 14 Georgia coring: Touchdowns. Marchand. 2 Georgia scoring: Touchdown Rratfcew- Kentucky Stops State LEXINGTON, Powerful Ralph Paolone ignited a surprisingly strong Kentucky ground game that produced a 32-13 football victory over previously unbeaten Mississippi State last night. Kentucky struck for two touchdowns in each of the first two periods and apparently had the slightly favored State crew out of contention before the Maroons put together a 24 yard drive and one for 22 yards that stemmed from pass interception for touch- downs.

i A strong defense bottled up multi-talented Jackie Parker, the Mississippi State ace, and the AU-American candidate was not in the game for ei'her score. The tempo of the rushed bat- ie mas evident from the outset as fumbles figured heavily in th parlv mine i state 711 Kentucky 11 11 32 Mississippi State scoring: Touchdowns Stanton, Evans. Extra points Kentucky scoring: Touchdowns Paolone 2. Zampmg, Piatt, Hardy. Estra points Hughes 2.

Tech Defeats FSU By 32-21 RUSTOW La. lames Oliver scored two touchdowns to lead Louisiana Tech to a 32-21 football victory over Florida State University last night. Oliver's tallies came on runs of 64 and 28 yards. Gordon Brown scored once on a 24 yard pass play and uayle wise scored on a three-yard plunge for Tech. On the last play of the game, aMilford Andrews intercepted an FSU pass and ran 35 yards to score.

Charles Anderson made two conversions. Jim Taylor and Leonard Swan-tic kept FSU in the game. Taylor made one of his two touchdowns on a 52 yard pass play 'Originating with antic, who made one touchdown on a 6-jyard run. Bill Graham mad-three conversions. Score by periods: Louisiana Tech 19 32 Fla.

State University 1421 La. Tech scoring: Touchdi Oliver 2. Wis. Andrew. Conversion' Anderson 2.

FSU scoring: Touchdowns Taylor X. Swantic Conversion Graham himself as a prominent figure in Gator plans against Stetson last Saturday, raced to his right with a pitchout on the first play and went over for the fourth Florida touchdown. Three minutes before the end of the half the Gators swung goalward once more. In six plays they went 58 yards with Simpson sparkling on a 22 yard gain that carried Florida within striking distance. Dick Allen, freshman quarterback with a deadly passing arm, stepped back and flipped to Haddock.

The latter took it on the 10 and dashed into the end zone. It was a 21 yard scoring play and Rick Casares' extra point left it 34-0 at intermission. Florida started pouring its third and fourth stringers into the battle shortly after the second half opened. Even then, though. Citadel was unable to cope with the high pow ered scoring tactics of the Gators.

Charles Rierson, a versatile halfback who stood out for Citadel even in this humiliating loss, had kicked out of bounds on the Florida three when the Gators started hitting the scoring columns again. It required only seven plays to sweep 97 yards for the sixth touchdown of the night. Fred Ca son, another of the newcomers who had sparkled against Stetson in his first real try, chewed up 49 of those yards ton a burst to the Citadel 26. Fred Robinson passed 15 yards to Dick O'Brien and Watson banged through the middle for the final three. Cason added the point.

The score mounted to 47-0 on a drive that was started when Robinson intercepted a Citadel pass and returned to Citadel's 46. Florida ground out the yardage and Ives went over from the two for the touchdown. FROSH MAN LINE Freshmen were manning all of the line positions in the late stages of the fourth quarter when Florida pushed across its last two touchdowns. Bob Smith snagged an errant Rierson pass to set up the eighth scoring effort, returning to Citadel's 23. John Burgess added 13 and Smith finally went over on a six yard plunge.

With three minutes left a fumble paved the way for the final score, Ocala's Kaye Green recovering Rierson's fumble on the Florida .42. Eight plays later, Brodsky scored from the nine in a power lunge down the middle. Bobby Lance, the fifth quarterback to be used by the Gators, kicked the point. The Gator Bowl scoreboard couldn't record it, though, since it goes no higher than 59. In trouncing the South Carolina foe, the Gators evened their season's record at 2-2-1.

This was the last of two breathers before head ing into a rugged five-game slate that includes Louisiana State, Auburn, Georgia, Tennessee and Miami, in that order. The lineups: THE CITADEL LE Tison, Parson, Tindal. Shill. LT Cole, Cantrell. LG Ren ken.

Rowden. Droxe. Irwin, McDowell, Kelly. RG Darby, Cronin, Barrow. Hutchinson.

RT Thayer. Raetzman. RE Hill, La-vine. Ql Williams. James.

Hayes. Bianton, stroble, Cabrinka. RHR Allen, Walker, Prato. FB Rierson. narvey.

FLORIDA LE Btlyk. Manning, Kelly. Lock hart LT Hill, Chapman, Winne. LG Wright. H.

Martin, Vosloh. Ellis. May. Schwartxburg. R.

Martin. Eaton. rooks. KG Aqostino, Thomas, Green, Shackelford. RT Hunter.

Cas- sidy. Hatch, Burke. RE O'Brien. Brown, Tatum. Barrow, Adams.

QB Speers. Dickey, Allen, Lance, Robinson. LHB Scott. Simpson, Watson, Ives. Smith.

KM Davis, Haddock Wing. Burgess. FB Hammack, Dear. ing, Casares, Brodsky, Cason, Lang ham. Score by periods: Citadel 0 Florida 7 27 13 13 SO Florida scoring: Touchdowns Ham-mack.

Haddock. 3. Simpson. Watson. Ives.

Smith, Brodsky. Conversions Speers. Kelly 2. Casares, Cason, Lance. maneuvers into motion with a 65 yard drive that required only six plays.

A pitchout from Harry Speers, the starting quarterback, to Hammack covered 59 yards of this distance with Hammack being run out of bounds on the one. Hammack plunged over on the next play and Speers added the point to make it 7-0. The rout was on after this. There was no more scoring in this period but the six-pointers were coming in bunches in the next 15 minutes. A 78 yard advance accounted for the second Florida touchdown and the Gators needed only THE YARDSTICK Citadel Florida 12 First Down 20 98 Yards Gained Rushing 409 107 Yards Gained Passing SO 20 Passes Attempted 9 Passes Completed 6 Passes Intercepted 0 5 Punts 29 Punting Average 2 Fumbles Lost 1 1 Yards Penalized 22 Individual yardage: Florida Haddock 91 IS), Hammack 83 (7), Simpson 66 (3), Cason SS (4), Lance 46 13), Dear-ins 25 (5).

Citadel Rierson SS (10), Williams 21 (). Passing Robinson, 2 2 Com 31 Allen, 2 1 21 Speers, 2 1 13 Dickey. 2 2 IS yds. Rierson, 10 87 Williams, 7 3 Comp.a 20 yds. seven plays to make it.

Haddock raced the final 56 yards, after breaking through a cluster of Citadel defenders at tha Bulldogs' 40. It was clear sailing from there. Ray Brown and Hubert Martin threw the key blocks that sprung Haddock loose on his first of three scoring jaunts. Minutes later the Gators were across again. This time it was a 61 yard drive in seven plays.

Haddock, Bill Dearing and Simpson ground out big hunks of yardage before Haddock cut loose on another of those lightning fast dashes of his from Citadel's 18. Mikey Kelly kicked this point to make it 21-0. CITADEL FUMBLES Citadel received the ensuing kickoff but fumbled after two plays with Kelly recovering for Florida on Citdael's 35. i Simpson, who had stamped ster, got Tech out in front with a 15-yard touchdown run when the same was less than six minutes old. He struck again on a beautiful 39-yard scoring gallop in the third quarter.

Burton Grant kicked a 13-vard field goal, freshman Wade Mit chell passed 23 yards to end BUI Sennett for another TD. Bill Brigman threw to end Sam Hensley for 26 yards and an other score and Georee Jum phreys plunged two yards for the unal Tech counter. Quarterback Joe Davis went 13 yards for Auburn's onlv touch down at the end of a 50-yard drive midway, in the fourth. Auburn had little trouble mov ing the ball between the 30-yard lines but Tech's powerful He fensive line and Tiger fumbles made the difference when the chips were down. The Engineers turned three Auburn fumbles into touchdowns and a third quarter Tieer bobble by halfback Bobby Duke after the umpire had signaled a touch down nullified a score.

Tech'; Charlie Brannon pounced on the loose ball behind the Tech eoal giving the home team the ball at the 20. End Dave Davis got Tech out of holes twice with 59- and 55-yard punts. Score by periods: Auburn 6 Georgia Tech 9 7 14 36 Auburn scoring: Touchdown Davis. Georgia Tech scoring: Touchdowns Hardeman 2, Sennett, Hensley, Humphreys. Conversions Mitchell, Turner, Brigman.

Field goals Grant. third triumph of the season on a 37-yard surge in four plays that was capped by quarterback Ralph Guglielmi's nine-yard touchdown jaunt. Guglielmi also tallied Notre Dame's third quarter touchdown on a one-foot sneak. Pittsburgh appeared headed for duplication of an upset it pulled in beating the Irish 22-19 a year ago by taking a 7-0 first period edge and holding on for a 14-7 margin at the half. Bob Epps barrelled eight yards for the first Pitt touchdown, ending a 66-yard drive in nine plays.

In the second, Henry Ford stole the ball from pass catcher Paul Matz arms and raced 47 yards to the Irish 9. Pitt's "sucker shift" pinned a 5-yard off-side penalty against Notre Dame and then Dick McCabe sped the final 4 on a pitch out from Ford. Notre Dame's big moments came in the third. After Johnny Lattner and Neil Worden had guided the Irish 29 yards to the Pitt 27, Lattner finally was forced to punt. Score by periods Pittsburgh 0 14 Notre Dame 0 7 7 23 Pittsburgh scoring: Touchdown Epps.

McCabe. Conversions Blanda 2. Notre Dame scoring: Touchdowns Worden. Guglielmi 2. Conversions Mav- raides 3.

Safety Epps. (tackled by Var. rich ione.) TURPIN WINDS. UP SPARRING GROSSINGER, N. Y.

Britain's Randy Turpin, whose strange training program has been criticized, said yesterday he has completed the boxing phase of his training for his world middleweight title fight with Carl Bobo Olson. The former world titlist meets Olson of Hawaii in a 15-rounder at Madison Square Garden Wednesday night. Turpin last boxed on Thursday and all told he has sparred only 28 rounds since he arrived on these shores nearly a month ago- ASBURY PARK, N. J. Carl Bobo Olson will box today and tomorrow in final warmups for his midleweight title fight with England's Randy Turpin Wednesday.

The transplanted Hawaiian who now calls San Francisco his home will box six rounds Sunday and three rounds tomor row. Bob Clements Of Georgia And Bounds 1 La iZr dildy Lf I C4 (X, GEORGIA TECH BURIES AUBURN HOPES, 36-6 both teams and LSU missed an other opportunity when quarter back Al Doggett. a tri itru I halfback, fumbled attempting to hand the ball to Marchand. FOOTBALL SCORES FLORIDA Florida SO. The Citadel Nebraska 20.

Miami lFla.1 10 Stetson 14. Tampa 7 Louisiana Tech. 32. FSU 21 SOUTH Mississippi 4S, Tulana 14. Kentucky 32.

Mississippi State IS- LSU 14. Georgia Maryland 26, North Carolina V. M. I. 21.

Virginia 6 William Mary 13. Virginia Tech Georgia Tech Z4. Auburn Newberry 7. sVofford St. Augustine's IN.

12. St. Paul's Va. Alabama O. Tennessee Richmond 27.

Washington Lee 1 Elizabeth City Teachers 2S. Livingston 0 Virginia State IS. North Carolina College 7 Rhyne 2s. Gu.iord 14 Catawba 14. Appalachian 1 Morns College 71.

Savannah State Fairmont IW. Va.l State 3C Concord 0. East Tennessee 25. Carson-Newman 0. Clark 20.

South Carolina State 9 Middle Tennessee 14. Morehead Troy (Ala.) 13. Jacksonville (Ala. 7 Hampton 47. Winston Salem Florida AsM 20.

Morns Rrown Fort Valley (Ga.l 27, Alabama Bethune-Cookman 26. Benedict Presbyterian 10. Davison IS. Morgan State 40. Howard 6.

Mississippi Collego 14. Sewanee 12. Paine 13. Albany IGa.l State 13 ttiel. Tuskegee 7.

Knoville 7 Itiel. Xavier (La.) 90. Tougaloo 0. Dillard 13. Fisk 12.

Miles SO. Rust 0. Centre 32. Southwestern fTenn.l O. Hampden Sydney 26.

Johns Hopkins O. ao sn'a musmpi southern soutHatm I lfc sKlth.t uu. 12 i I Martin U-T IS. Northwest MiSS. 7 Morm Harvey 20.

West Liberty 11. Tennessee A.sVI. 13, West Virginia State S. EAST Army 14. Duke 13 Navy 65.

Princeton 7 Vale O. Cornell Colgate 24. Dartmouth 14 rown 27. Rutgers 20 Ohio State 12. Penn Columbia 6.

Harvard Penn State 20. Syracuse 14 A del oh. SO. Brooklyn College Amherst 21. Coast Guard 7 Temple 27.

Bucknell 21 Thiol 21. Bethany 2 Trinity 34. Colby National Aggies 13. Susguehanna 7 East Stroudsburg 9- Mansfield 0 Boston University 40. Brandeis 14 Tufts 47.

Middlebury 6 Northeastern 19. Bates Slippery Rock 14. Indiana IPa 1 Kings Point 6. Gettysburg 22. Lehign 7 Williams 20.

Bowoom 14 St. Michaels IVtl 7. Quonset Navy Base 7 Central State 34. Bluefield 32 Clarion IP I SI. Brackport 7 Potomac State 13.

7 Connecticut IS. Maing 10 New Britain State 30. Montclair 12 Franklin ea Marshall 33. Dreael state 6 American International O. Spnngfield (tie).

Swarthmorg 13. Hamilton 2. penn Military 13i Moaravian 7. Rhode Island 41. Massachusetts 14.

Clarion Pa.) 13. Brock port 7. Westminster 20. Grove City 14. Shippensburg 61.

Kutetown 0. Delaware 46. New Hampshire O. Scranton 2S, Bloomsburg 7. Muhlenberg 39.

Lebanon Valley 14. Geneva 27. Carnegie Tech 26. Lafayette 2S. Western Maryland O.

Virginia Union 26. Lincoln (Pa.) 6. Wahmgtnn 4i Jefferson 34. California IPa.) 32-Western Reserve 26. Buffalo St.

Lawrence 26. Alfred 7. MIDWEST Wisconsin 20. Purdue 19 I Notre Dame 23. Pittsburgh 1 Illinois 27.

Minnesota 7 Michigan State 47. Indiana 10 Iowa 21. Wyoming 7 Michigan 20. Northwestern 11 I Continued on Pego B-2J Charley Oakley and Lou Deutsch-mann consistently rang up gains through the Georgia line. LSU kept Bulldog quarterback Zeke Bratkowski's receivers well covered and only on Georgia's lone scoring drive was he able to connect with regularity.

After a double exchange of punts LSU put on a 66-yard sustained drive from its own 34 with Marchand plugging over from the two. Cliff Stringfield kicked the PAT and in 12 minutes of the first period the Tigers led 7-0. The partisan Georgia crowd of 23.000 was cheered shortly after the kickoff as the Bulldogs march ed back down and Bratkowski sneaked across for the touchdown. Sam Mrvos missed the extra point attempt. LSU got its second touchdown in the fourth quarter with Deutschmann and Davis moving the ball on the ground from the Georgia 43.

Davis went through the middle for the TD and String- neia again convened. ini! was me htm. ume 1951 that Georgia has lost three games in succession, ine uuu aogs naa lost to texas ana Makes Six Yards By Leaps AP WirephotOj ATLANTA Georgia Tech's hot-and-cold Engineers, sparked bf Hardeman's running, singed Auburn 36-6 yesterday in their best showing of the season. A crowd of 40,000 saw the victory push Tech's unbeaten THI YARDSTICK Auburn Georgia Tech tM First Downs 17 199 Rushing Yardage 224 Passing Yardage 147 19) Passes Attempted 13 Passes Completed 9 Passes Intercepted 1 9 Punts 7 32.4 punting Average 36.3 Fumbles Lost 1 ts Yards Penaliied 23 string to 31 games, the longest among major college teams. It was the 12th straight over the Tigers.

Hardeman, the senior speed- Colifornia Triumphs BERKLEY, Calif. California had to call on its first-string backfield yesterday to register a 34-14 non-conference victory over an underdog but inspired San Jose State football team. USC Spanks Beavers LOS ANGELES 4Jft Southern California spanked and blanked Oregon State in a Pacific Coast conference game yesterday 37-0, handing the sophomoric Beavers their fifth straight shutout of the season. CLEMENTS ilsujV', HARRIS lj.SU tyfg I I Naim im iin st.

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