Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Daily Press from Newport News, Virginia • Page 33

Publication:
Daily Pressi
Location:
Newport News, Virginia
Issue Date:
Page:
33
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

iderSy'21-6; William' Ad Mary Tops 10 I nous Over Sp yyer-Lea mi Second Squad Keydets Score Army 28 California .10 (See Page C-3) Frederick .18 Apprentice 12 (See Page C-3) Florida State 14 Wake Forest 6 (See Page C-2) Oklahoma .15 Pittsburgh ...14 (See Page C-3) Purdue 51 Notre Dame 19 (See Page C-3) Florida 18 Ga. Tech .17 (See Page C-4) Duke 20 Maryland 7 (See Page C-2) Sparks Tribe 3rd Win, Hike Hopes For SC In 2nd Period Clemson Needs Rally To Trip Va ows Vl Richmond First downs 7 12 Hushing yatclacu 95 Passing yardage 70 93 Passes 11 24 Piisws Intercepted by 2 1 Pums 8-38 1 10-31 umbles Hist 0 0 Yards penalized 55 83 First downs 12 Rushing yardage VA 1st Passing yardage 211 e8 Passes 16-28 t-US Passes intercepted by 2 1 Punts 2-40 4-3o Fumbles Inst 2 2 Yard penalized SO 26 By HANK MALONEY Daily Press Sports Writer LEXINGTON The aer- ial artistry of quarterback Howard Dyer fired up unde By TOMMY SEWARD Daily Press Sports Writer WILLIAMSBURG Bob DAILY PRESS, Newport News, Oct. 2, 1960 feated Virginia Military In Stoy guided William and Mary's second unit, the "Gold" team, to two second-quarter touchdowns as the Indians defeated George Wash AFTER TRAILING, 7-0 I A rlv HP Pi (tw i 1 (v fs X-1" -iP i 1 1 3 i Late Syracuse Spurt Defeats Kansas, 14-7 stitute in the second half here Saturday to lead the Keydets to a 21-6 Homecoming Day victory over willing-but-out-manned Richmond, Until Dyer began hitting his receivers with the rapier-like precision, VMI looked far from the team that is considered a strong possibility to pick up its second straight Southern Conference and State Big Five ington University, 19-9, before 4.500 fans Saturday at Cary Field, but not before the "confident" Colonials had thrown a scare into the partisan crowd by jumping off to a 9-0 lead in the the first 12 minutes of the game. It was the same "Gold" team that caused Coach Milt Drewer some apprehension after the first Syracuse Kansas 22 4 First downs I Rushing yardage Passing yardage Passing Passes intercepted by Punts Fumbles lost Yards penalized 301 7-H 0 4-41 3 2(1 68 42 5- 1 7-43 0 46 two games of the year by its in The Keydets, now 3-0, led at halftime by only 8-6, but broke the game apart in the final two periods as Dyer, the famed gambler with a football, hit 11 of 15 LAWRENCE, Kan. UP) ability to hold its own as a unit.

"But things are looking up for them now," Drewer remarked in his dressing room office after the game, which left the Indians with passes for 146 yards and directed the attack flawlessly. ONE TD NULLIFIED a 2-1 record. Things went against William The score might have been con and Mary almost from the start. After the Tribe failed to move for Syracuse spotted Kansas a 7-point lead in the early minutes, then had to pull all stops for a fourth period touchdown and a 14-7 football victory Saturday. Syracuse marched 80 yards for its first touchdown following the second half kickoff, but the Orange failed trying to run for a 2-point conversion and trailed 7-6 going into the final period.

The nation's No. 2 ranked team needed siderably higher since VMI had one touchdown nullified by an offside penalty in the final period and lost two other six-pointers when butter-fingered receiver a first down following the opening kickoff and punted to the GW 37, the Colonials moved to the DAN BARTON SET FOR FALL AFTER SHORT GAIN Upending the Indians quarterback in the first quarter is George Washington's Ron Cind-rich, while an unidentified William and Mary player has taken end Paul Munley out of the play at the right. (Stafi Photo by Willard Owens). KEYDETS' JOHN TRAYNHAM DISCOVERS 'IMMOVABLE OBJECT Earl Stoudt, Richmond's sparkling all-around halfback, makes one of many tackles in VMI-Spider clash Saturday at Lexington. The Keydets won their third straight game by a 21-6 score.

a final tremendous push to settle the game. The Orangemen won it with a little more than 10 minutes remaining when Ernie Davis, a great running halfback, wedged into the end zone from the 1-yard line. A clutch pass for 18 yards dropped certain scoring tosses. VMI, now 2-0 in SC and Big Five play, had previously beaten William and Mary (33-21) and Buffalo (28-14). Richmond lost to Florida State (28-0) in its only previous outing.

A fumble by halfback Earl Stoudt, who was an all-around standout for the losing Spiders, set the Keydets' first scoring drive in motion midway in the opening period. Halfback John Traynham recovered for VMI on the Richmond 42. KEYDETS SURGE Traynham and Stinson Jones broke loose for eight and 12 yards, respectively, to give the Gabriel's Scoring Touch 33 before they were forced to punt. Charley Packan's boot was high and deep. Roger took the ball in his end zone, but before he could take more than a couple of steps, GW's Tommy Haly upended him for a safety.

PASS GOES ASTRAY In the closing stages of the period, Stoy, passing from his own five, had the ball deflected and it was intercepted by Charles Reed at the 18. On the next play, Packan hit Reed with a pass on the right side and Reed went to the one. Reed then took a hand-off and made a dive into the end zone. Warren Corbin's boot made GW 9, 0. Two fine catches by Jon Ste 4th-Period TD By Shingler from back Dick Easterly to half back Dick Reimer set up the play Gives N.

C. State 26-7 Win for Davis. Quarterback Dave Sarette Erases Gobblers' 7-6 Lead By CHARLES KARMOSKY Daily Press Sports Editor CLEMSON. S.C. Rollins to a surprise 7-0 lead midway through the first quarter and passed to Davis for the 2-point conversion that ended the scoring in the nationally televised battle By BOB MOSKOW1TZ Daily Press Sports Writer RALEIGH, N.C.

Gabriel's horn blew loud and long here Saturday afternoon, but Keydets a first down at the 22. Jones hit to the 17 and Dyer, on a keeper play, made it a first that was fiery all the way. Kansas shocked the Orange in the opening minutes when halfback Bert Coan swept end for 11 his tune was anything but heavenly to Virginia's deteat-laden Cavaliers. North Carolina State's masterful junior quarterback, Roman Gabriel, ran for two touchdowns and passed phenson and Ronnie Jones of passes from Stoy, the second good for an 11-yard TD, and Dan Barton's extra point kick started the Indians off in the second quarter. down at the eight.

battling doggedly to the finish, Virginia Tech threw a king-sized scare into Clemson here on a muggy Saturday afternoon before the Tigers, ranked No. 7 nationally, drove 73 and 49 yards in -the last two periods for a 13-7 triumph. Seemingly on the threshold of a stunning upset after blunting Clemson goalward for two others as the Wolfpack made a homecoming throng of nearly 15,000 happy with a 26-7 Atlantic Coast Conference triumph. yards and a touchdown a couple of plays after the Jayhawks had Traynham and Dyer combined to move the ball to the two, where a personal foul called recovered an enemy fumble on the A few minutes later, Stoy climaxed a 52-yard scoring drive Va.Teck Clemson against the Spiders gave VMI lead with but seconds remaining Syracuse 21. 21 10 First downs Rushing yardage half the distance to the goal one in the half.

These six points, too, John Suder kicked the extra N.C. St. 17 209 94 8-19 3 yard. V. V.

19 163 106 10-2B 0 35 pull victory from almost certain defeat. Though out-gaining the gridders from Blacksburg, in every department of play, the defending 231 108 8-17 1 i First downs Rushing yardage Passing yardage Passes Passes Intercepted by Punts Fumbles lost Yards penalized point and Kanses didn't relinquish the lead until Syracuse's fourth Passing yardage Passes Passes Intercepted by Punts Fumbles lost were accumulated following an intercepted pass. Halfback Al Tay 125 6 4-10 2 0 73 with a one-yard plunge to put the Tribe ahead to stay. The final score, which GW Coach Bill Elias admitted was the clincher, came in the final period when Jim Porach inter Dyer tallied on another "keeper" with 2:12 left in the period to shoot VMI into a 6-0 quarter touchdown. lor had gobbled up a Cuozzo Vards penalized 46 champions of the Atlantic.

Coast Davis, who picked up 123 yards aerial on his own 46, twisted his Conference had to fight an uphill lead. A pass from Dyer to end Dick Weede was good for the Gabriel definitely had the su on 17 rushes, led the 80-yard march in the third quarter that battle to gain their second straight way all the way to the UVA 23, marches late in. the second and third quarters inside the 10 and 20-yard lines, Coach Frank Mose- perior day over his younger rival from the University of Vir payed off in Syracuses first win of the 1960 season after the Techmen turned two breaks into cepted a Colonial pass on the GW 41 and returned it to the 12. After a loss of one yard. Calvin Cox, the third quarterback of the day for the Indians, needed only where he fumbled only to have teammate George Vollmir touchdown.

ginia, sophomore Gary tuozzo. a 45-yard scoring march on which Sarette passed the last 10 yards ley's Gobblers still led the Tigers by 7-6 with 7:18 remaining, but quarterback Warren Price tallied. to Ken Ericson for the score. HALFTIME LEAD Two plays later Gibson scored Three of Cuozzo's passes were intercepted, the first of which set up State's tie-breaking touchdown halfway through the second quarter. Another resulted in a second- WHEELS SEEK FIRST VICTORY Fort Eustis will be seeking win No.

1 tn the 1960 football season for the third time today. The opposition will come from host Ft Dix, N. J. in a game scheduled for 2. The Wheels' traveling squad departed Friday for the New Jersey post, preparing for its second consecutive road test.

The Wheels were defeated, 25-19, at Fort Le last Sunday. Fort Eustis suffered an opening game defeat at the hands of West Chester State, 27-17. Extensive drills on offense preceeded today's test with the Ft. Dix team. CARDS SWITCH SITE OF FARM ST.

LOUIS The St. Louis Cardinals and the Baltimore Orioles Saturday switched baseball affiliates in the Tri- pie A International League. The Cardinals announced the Rochester, N.Y., players will be transferred to Miami and that Miami players will be moved to Rochester. The Cardinals had been affiliated with Rochester for 32 years, first as owner of the club and for the past -four years under a working agreement. The Orioles had been affiliated with Miami under a working agreement for four years.

Kansas lost a late bid for vic tosi out wnen quarieroaut ixiwn- Tech possession for the firs. time two-point conversion. Richmond didn't collect its initial first down until the final play of the opening quarter when quarterback Mel Rideout hit end Ed Wood for a 16-yard gain to the Spider 34. On the first play of the second period, fullback Jim McGinnis broke loose on a trap play for a 38-yard advance to the Keydet See Stoudt, Page C-4, Cols. 5-6 tory on a penalty.

Curtis McCto des Shingler scored from four recovering fullback Ron Scruda- for a 20-6 halftime lead. Virginia never got off another first-h a 1 ton swept 21 yards around end yards out with only 4:04 to play.t fumble on the Clemson 45. Af three plays to hit paydirt. He sneaked over from the one to make it 19-9. TURNING POINT "Up until that interception," said Elias after the game in a See Drewer, Page C-S, Cols.

4-6 Dlav from scrimmage. Actt nice anu uun vauenr. ear and into pay dirt, but the Jay-hawks were called back for illegal procedure. The play followed quarter score that virtually locked up the Carolinians success. The end result saw the Cavaliers, badly beaten at the finish, uercu a ursi uown on ine iiger The hosts final score came halt See Virginia, Page C-4, Col.

5 against one victory. 34, the Gobblers stalled and tried Virginia 0 7 0 07 byracuse second touchdown. A punt rolling out of bounds on a field goal which led to a see ond break. N.C. State so suffering under the humiliation of vrs l.

run (Shaffer kick) Syracuse 0 Kansas 7 Richmond 0 VMI 8 0 i 14 0 0 07 0 6 6-21 619 0 Va. Ulehla 11, pass from Cuozzo (Bal William 4. Mary 0 13 Geo. Washington 9 0 their 20th consecutive defeat. Triumph enabled the Wolfpack to re Tech's five-yard line with just 38 seconds remaining in the third quarter put the Goblers with their ATTEMPT FAILS Aster Sizemore's three-point at lard kirkt KU Coan 11 run (Sunder kick) NCS Gabriel 1-foot, run (kick failed) cord its third straight victory of Syr Ericson 10 pass from Sarette (ran backs to the wall and gave the NCS Gibson 13, pass from Gabriel (Shaffer kick)m taueu) VMI Dyer 1 weak (Weede pass from Dyer) Rich Stoudt 3 run (run failed) VMI Dyer 1 sneak (Mitchell kick) VMI Willard pass from Dyer (pass failed).

Attendance 6300. GW Safety Hale tackled In end zone GW Reed 1 run (Corbin kick) 4 Jones 11 pass from Stoy (Barton kick) WJiM Stoy 1 rea (pass failed) Cox 1 run (pass failed i Syr Davis 1 run (Davis passed from till-then-frustrated Tigers the free NCS Vollmer 12, pass from Gabriel the year its longest victory string since 1957. Gabriel, who put six records in tempt was blocked, and Terry Strock pounced on the ball at Clemson's 23. Three yards by Strock and a personal foul penalty provided Tech with a first down aareiiej Attendance 40,000 dom to operate they needed to (kick failed) Attendance 14,500. to the N.

C. State books as a sophomore, finished his after at the Tigers' nine and price circled left end on the next play Veteran, Soph noon's work with 94 yards gained on eight pass completions in 18 to score, Navy Stuns Washington, IS-14, Mather 's 3-Pointer Earns Win Sizemore's kick for the extra Ohio State Tops Trojans, 20-0; Ferguson Tallies 3 Touchdowns attempts. FIRST SCORE Aid Arkansas point was good and that 7-0 Tech lead held up for the remainder of His first touchdown came with 4:15 left in the first quarter. He the first half though the Gobblers drove 34 yards to Clemson's 25 had to charge almost a yard on fourth down and barely made it. in the second period and the FORT WORTH, Tex.

(APj rsc ostiithroiiah the Troians on scorinscame in the fourth period deep in Tigers reached Tech's eight on a Jake Shaffer kicked the first of two extra points for a 7-0 lead. First downs 5I 75-yard onslaught before being Hushing yardaee 69 274ijaunts of 74, 2 and 19 yards as Buckeye territory. Navy Wash. First downs 11 18 Rushing yardage 69 193 Passing yardage 82 Passes 10-22 4-10 Passes intercepted by 1 2 Punts Fumbles lost 0 3 Yards penalized 67 49 Virginia promptly retaliated, massing ase t. Southern Cal souad-for only Ohio lost the ball twice on fum- Veteran Joe Paul Alberty and noon waiting for the vaunted power of Washington, third-ranked in the nation, to crush the challenging Middies.

But each time the Huskies ground out a touchdown, Navy's spirited crew managed to match driving 74 yards in 13 plays and Passes intercepted ny i nunea oacK to the 12 and relinquishing possession with less than a minute left before the halftime break. s-35jthe second time since it started ibles and once on an interception halfback Tony Ulehla took a Cuoz- flaming sophomore Billy Moore pooled their running talents to Punts 9-35 i Fnmhlra Imt 1 2 penalties. On the next play, a fourth-down effort, Schloredt was dropped on the Navy one and the Middies took the ball on downs. Although Washington's lead was only by two points, 14-12, the Huskies appeared to have the victory wrapped up in the final minutes. But then Schloredt, back to punt, i football in 1888 lost five consecu- zo pass for an 11-yard score.

Yards penalized 25 COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Full Wayne Ballard's kick tied the count at 7-7 after only three minutes of the period had elapsed. The Gobblers began moving impressively again to launch second-See Comeback, Page C-2, Col. 7 in the bruising battle. The victory avenged a 17-0 loss to Southern Cal a year ago and gave Ohio a 6-4-1 edge in the series. The last time the Trojans appeared here in 1948 they fell by this some 20-0 score.

back Bob Ferguson, a 220-pouna-er with a build like a fire plug, SEATTLE Of) A 3 -yard field goal by Gregory Mather in the final 14 seconds gave Navy a 15-14 football victory over Washington's highly-favored Huskies Sat Five minutes later Gabriel kept it, although the Middies failed each time to convert. Each team had one touchdown nullified by penalties. In the first period, all-America quarterback Bob Schloredt passed scored three touchdowns Saturday as Ohio State defeated South Va. Tech 7 Clemson 0 tive games. Ohio's defensive team, outweighed almost 20 pounds per man, turned the huge Coast club into a stumbling giant as it picked off enemy passes and grabbed fumbles to halt any scoring threats.

The huge size of the invaders proved a detriment as Ohio's bobbled the center pass and Navy 0 0 07 0 6 713 lead Arkansas on a 67-yard touchdown drive that beat Texas Christian 7-0 in a Southwest Conference football game Saturday Stymied in the first half and unable to get past midfield, Arkansas broke loose in the third period for its great scoring drive, with Alberty gaining 33 yards and Moore 22. From then on Arkansas had TCU in trouble continually. from about a foot out to produce a 13-7 lead that was a direct result of Roger Moore's interception of a cuozzo pass. I urday, took the ball on downs at the Price 8 run (Sizemore kick) So. Calif.

Ohie Slate 7 20 An overflow crowd of 57,000 to Pat Claridge in the end zone uiem aningier 1 run (run failed) ern California 20-0 Detore a crowa of 83,204, fifth largest ever to fill the Buckeye Stadium. Ferguson, from Troy, Ohio, ran uem Shingler 4 run (Armstrong kick) OSU Ferguson 74 run (kick failed) wasnington 4. rive piays later sat tensely through the calm after-Ibut the effort was nullified by Gabriel passed to Claude Gib 26,000 OSU Ferguson 2 run (Jones kick) OSU Ferguson 19 run (Jones kick) Attendance 83.204. son from 13 yards out for a 20-f speedy backs ran through them like kids running through a woods. reaching the Horned Frog 8-yard Standings The Bucks picked up 274 yards line and again pounding to the 14 Rebels Given Scare, Rally To Win, 31-20 rushing to Southern Cars 69.

The 'Bama Roars In 2nd Half To Win, 2 1-0 Griffiths Shoots 65; Grabs Pro-Am Lead Ohioans picked off four enemy passes and one fumble. in me fourth period. Texas Christian got the ball on a pass interception on its 17 and sped to the Arkansas 31 with only seconds to go. Johnny Fields in National League It was the 15th time in three RESULTS SATURDAY Harry Deitz tossed a 9-yard pass to Al Hughes in the end zone, but a penalty against Navy for an illegal backfield formation nullified that score. It was then, with 14 seconds remaining, that Mather booted the game-winninit field goal.

HUSKIES FAVORED Washington's Rose Bowl champions, favored by 10 points to two touchdowns, passed up a field goal opportunity on the last play of the first half. The Huskies had the ball on the Navy 8-yard line but chose to try for a touchdown and the hard-hitting Middies dropped Schloredt on the one as the gun sounded. games the Trojans had surrendered the ball in that fashion. Vandr Alabama HOT SPRINGS (A0) Unherald Pittsburgh 1, Milwaukee 3 Philadelphia 1, Cincinnati 3 San Franeisre 7 St. Louis Chicago at Los Angeies night tercepted Don George pass as time ran out.

Alberty scored the touchdown MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI)-Quar-terback Jake Gibbs scored one touchdown and passed to Bobby Crespino for two more Saturday 124 Gibbs, pass the Rebel 28. State's John Griffin grabbed the ball in mid-air and raced in the end zone with slightly less than GAME OPENED Ferguson, who scored only two 53 3-7 ILIB 8IA.MHM.S First Downs Rushing Yardage Passing Yardage Passes Passes Intercepted By Punts Fumbles Lost Yards Penalized ed Ed Griffiths Jr. of Youngs-town, Ohio, fired a bristling six-under-par 65 over he Homestead course here Saturday to take a 114 0 3-13 0 2 41 1 touchdowns last year as a sopho with a 1-yard smash and Mickey Cissell added the point. Early in of 14-undcr-par 57 to lead the besf-ball chase by four shots.

The second-place team was composed of Griffiths, Vincent McGraflh of Chicago, and J. H. McFarland of King of Prussia, who finished with 59. Third went to the team of pro Vincent night to lead second-ranked minutes gone. Jack Carter more, broke the game open mid Pittsburgh Milwaukee St.

Louis ..1 M. 7o the fourth period Cissell missed way through the first period. On three-stroke lead in the profes Pet. GB .414 Mi M3 12' 1 jie is .438 S7 JH 34) J79 36 94 a ad 1 18 47 5 54 a goal trom the xcu la when an the first nlav after Ohio had San Francisce BIRMINGHAM, Ala. OTt-Ala- Arkansas drive bogged down.

to. itlnrlnnail sional division of the 8th annual Homestead sponsored Pro-Amateur Invitational. luncii a uiii. lit; uiuivc vci iiqiu Mississippi 31-29 over Memphis: made the first of two conver-State. sions.

Quarterback James Earl Wright Ole Miss came right back, a 5-tll, "180-pound junior, gave! marching 65 yards in nine plays. x-Chirago guard and outran four defenders bama broke open a rugged def en- Arkansas Teias Christian Leskosky of Salem, Ohio, Roger Brkkman of Hensdale. 111., Stan sive oauie in me second nail Griffiths superb display was The game followed the general- ARK Alberty 1 run (Cissell kick) Attendance 38,000 (estimated). three shots better than Washing Memphis State a touch of great-With Gibbs going five for the script at the start when ness with his explosive runs and -tally. The drive included a pass Washington chopped off 48 yards AUSTIN (A! Texas quarterback ton, D.C, pro Winy lox, wno made his homestead debut in Placing night game.

GAMES TODAY Cincinnati (Hook 11-13 Puri-T 13-lOi at Philadelphia (Coairy t-14 er Mahatfey Milwaukee (Burdette 13-1'J) at Pills. burgh (Miifll 1.1-8). Si. Louis (Miller 4-3) al San Fran-flsre IMtCorinli'k 14-13). Chicago (Cardwell D-14) at Las Angeles (Williams 14-10) American League Mike Cotten arched two 55-yard and rolled over Vanderbilt's Commodores, 21-0, in a Southeastern Conference football game Saturday night.

After a brusing first half that three-under-par 68. Favored Sam Snead of Whits scoring passes as the Longhorns opened Southwest Conference play with a 17-0 romp over ineffective in eight plays to score the first time it got the ball. For the tally, Schloredt waited patiently behind excellent proteo-tion until Pon McKeta sneaked around the Navy's defenses to from Gibbs to Crespino, who smashed through two tacklers and went 30 yards to the six. Magnificent though Wright was, he lost in the battle of statistics in a 74-yard dash to the goal line. He got his second one on a two-ard plunge after the Bucks took the ball on a pass interception in the second period and his 19-yarder in the final period also came after a pass interception.

Ferguson in putting on his one-man show, gained 157 yards in 20 tries to more than double the Trojan output. Quarterback Tom Matte carried the ball 22 times for 68 yards, one less than the entire Southern Sulphur Springs, W. and home town boy who also played saw neither team muster any ley W. Crofthwait, Hyattsville, and Oscar Duley, Upper Marlboro, with 61. Griffiths started out innocently enough by bogeying the first two holes but then settled down with a birdie on the third and an eagle three on the par-five fifth to move under regulation.

The tournament winds up Sunday with the Saturday Homestead players tackling the tough Cascades layout and the Saturday Cascades battlers moving to the easier Homestead course. Texas Tech here Saturday night. A gritty Texas forward wall RESULTS SATURDAY thing resembling a serious of over the Homestead course, was only able to slice two strokes off bullet passes. Wright gained 122 yards with 13 passes and ran for a total 154 yards. But Mississippi, with Gibbs passing to Crespino, and its three-deep reserves, was not to be denied.

Trailing 20-19 in the 4th period, they came back on the running of fullback James Anderson, quarterback Doug El-j more and halfback Art Doty. citrn-ixaicn a Ji-yara loucnaown toss. sandbagged the Red Raiders to to Gibbs. The Ole Miss regulation tor a 69. Clereland Chicago Baltimore 3.

fVaahmgtee New York 3. Boston 1 Detreit Kansas City 4 CLUB bTANIHNGH Frt 85 yards Tech managed to caller gained 50 yards rushing and passed 13 times for 144 Over at the -more testing Cas on yards, for. a total offense of 194 New Yark Mi his two successful conversions. Neither team threatened seriously in the final quarter until the Washington fumble gave the Middies the chance they needed. yards.

fense threat, Alabama came alive in the third quarter, scoring two touchdowns and a safety. Tough defensive work by Alabama, which kept Vandy in its own territory most of the first half, paid off with points in the third quarter. Cal team. Matte also completed Baitinwe 6 of 11 passes for 78 yards. JI cades course, where the half of the field played, the leader was Art Doering of Pittsburgh, who fashioned a two-under par 69 to share with Snead third net zero yardage in the first half.

The Longhorns, opening their drive for a return trip to the Cotton Bowl, unveiled a deadly passing attack to go with swift striking halfbacks Bobby Gurwitz and Tack Collins. 1231 57 45 78 rt 88 Mississippi Memphis State 7 12 14 tuMr.s or fit" i it n. i .41 II .477 ti 31 .373 3f Anderson- got one on a three yard run and Doty added another so Nelson Long, Hot Sorines uuauic muve uii me siuuuu "asningwn 11 Jack Isaacs. Lanaiey Field 34-37-71 against the lighter but I 33-19 74! I Navy Washington 7 315 014 Kansas City 57 Hirman Peery Jr. Hot Springs 37-311 751 UiC iw mc Aivis rivlton, Lynchbura 37-39 76! airwave 22 i ttipq hiit rnmnlpfAH In team play, the red-hot four Teias Tech Texas Clarence King, Roanoke 37-39 7(4 Alahama 15 0 0 621 0 0 some of pro John O'Donnell of Ansel Snows.

Keswick Vanderbilt STATE Griffin 28, pass interception run (Carter kicked) STATE Killett 15 pass from Wright (Carter kicked) MISS Crespino 14 pass from Gibbs (kick failed) MISS Crespino 26 pass from Gibbs (kick failed) STATE Killett 2 run (run failed) MISS Anderson 3 run (run failed) MISS Doty 3 run (run failed) touchdown witn a two-yara thrust. A flurry of fisticuffs erupted with three seconds left and both benches rushed out onto the field. But order was quickly restored. Memphis State drew first blood when Johnny Brewer bobbled 40-37 77 1 In tha first nprinti Ihpv rpaf4ifH UtllEJ 111111 Cleveland I Perry 11-ID al Chicago lini 13-11). Baltimore (Pappas 14-11) at Washington iftamo 11-17).

Bomob (Wilson 3-J al New Terk (Terry le). Baltimore and amateurs Frank J. Mel Gianoiny. Petersburg WASH McKeta 31 pass from Schloredt (Fleming kick) NAVY Rellino 1 run (kick failed) WASH Jackson 3 run (Fleming kick) NAVY Hughes 26 pass from Spooner (run failed) NAVY FG Mather 31 Attendance 57,000 '(estimated). mac Alain, Danville LuKe Barnes, Roanoke Hagerty of Peoria, Peer Peter 3D-40-7K! Ohio's 22 through the air only to TKX Collins 55 pass from Cotten (Petty kick) TEX Cooper 55 pass from Cotten (Petty kick) TEX-FO Pettv it Attendance 52,000.

ALA Richardson 1 run (Brooker kick) ALA-Safety, Binkley ALA Rnnsunet 36 (pass from Skelton) ALA Moore 32 pass interception (kick failed) sen, N.Y., and A. W. Ayles, Ponte n. l. fjeaver, suunton have a pass interception halt the It'll CM1II4T, VU till 11 n-n ru Verde, fired a best-ball score Detroit (Fischer at Kansas City Uierberl 13- lit.

iTora Strange. Portsmouth 39-43-82: unve ana IWO Oiner lnierCCptlOnSi.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Daily Press
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Daily Press Archive

Pages Available:
2,151,916
Years Available:
1898-2024