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Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York • Page 35

Location:
Binghamton, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
35
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Ace Giaun ole smK aoM irinaip 9 Sal Ready 15 Central 6 Cornell 41 Mich. State 24 Illinois 14 Brown 14 Penn 39 North U-E 7 Norwich 0 Colgate 10 Ohio State 20 Wisconsin 10 Yale 13 Dartmouth 14 i Princeton 24 Syracuse 40 California 55 Villanova 20 Northwestern 20 Miss. State 0 Tennessee 20 ISaxy 20 Lafayette 0 Minnesota 14 Penn State 14 Army 14 Georgia 0 Duke 0 After 6-2 HearnWin 12,000 See Cornell Rout Colgate, 41-18; 1 By CARL LUNDQUIST United Press Sports Writer New York Jaunty Jim Hearn, a Georgia peach of a pitcher, put Destiny's Kids back in front in the World Series yesterday when he hurled the New York Giants Michigan State Edges Ohio State in Thriller to a 6-2 victory over the crestfallen New York Yankees. A joyous, coatless crowd of 52,035, largest crowd ever to see a World Series game in a JNational pant, Sunday Press Soph's First Pass Earns 24-20 Win cheered on their indomitable darlings in a victory made easy by both the physical and mental miscues of the not-too-nifty Yankees. Sharing the exalted heights with Hearn as the Giants made it two victories out of three in the classic was another Dixie boy, Whitey Lockman of Charlotte, N.

who shot a three-run line drive home Section Oct. 7, 1951 Brilliant Calvo Leads Easy Win By JACK SLATTERY Sunday Press Sports Editor Hamilton Stu Merz took up where he left off last week against Syracuse with a touchdown after eight minutes of play and the Cornell team just plain took off here yesterday before a Colgate homecoming crowd of 12,000 as the Big Red rolled and rolled over a completely outclassed Red Raider team, 41-18. Rocco Calvo reached the peak that was predicted for him two years ago and under his expert into the lower right-field run fifth- stands in a weird five-run Columbus, Ohio (U.R) Tom Yewcic, 19 year old sophomore from Conemaugh, threw his first pass since he joined the Spartan! and it paid oft in a thrilling 24-20 last-minute comeback victory for Michigan State over hard-fighting Ohio State yesterday in as wild and wooly a football game as 82,640 fans could ask to see. With defeat staring them in the face, Michigan State showed the true test of a champion in the inning rally. Hearn, employing the same strong-armed craftsmanship as in the big playoff victory against Brooklyn last Monday, suffered only from lack of control and he finally needed relief help from Sheldon Jones when the Yankees scored their first run in the eighth inning.

JONES PUTS OUT FIVE Hearn walked eight batters and hh another which put him in V.1 it-! a rtenhon lliuie uuuuic man xjiilic uiiiiau A A 1 tnvnnA hMVlA i A Statistics Statistics the tally in the seventh, Leo rocher's frazzled nerves could take it no longer. Jones came in and 4.1 1 41 if ff f7" fey rciiiea uie siue. Cor. 19 247 219 24 13 2 4 35 1 58 Col. 22 197 281 42 22 2 3 28 3 0 First Downs Rushing Yardage Passing Yardage Passes Attempted Passes Completed Passes Intercepted Punts Punting Average Fumbles Lost Yards Penalized O.

17 186 184 18 10 1 6 40 2 36 3 M. 17 234 167 16 12 1 0 113 1 First Downs Rushing Yardage Passing Yardage Passes Attempted Passes Completed Passes Intercepted Punts Punting Average Fumbles Lost Yards Penalized Fumbles Even so the Atlanta dandy might have come through scathed. For with all of his wild- ness, no runner got to second fore the sixth and none to third until the eighth. He gave up only four hits, two in the first inning, another in the second, and the final one in the troublesome eighth. i i hi j- The Giants were In command in this one.

for the entire distance. Before the big wrap-up rally in v. the fifth, when all runs were un- guidance Cornell handed Colgate a crushing first-half defeat Calvo, who played only the first half, threw 15 passes and completed 10 of them for a 194-yard total. Two were touchdown passes. He scored one himself on a 14-yard run.

His pet receiver, Capt. Vic Pujo, gathered in five of them for 81 yards. STAR IN DEFEAT Brilliant in the Colgate loss were Ted Totten with two touchdowns. Karl Kluckhohn, a fine end with 10 passes caught for a total of 133 yards, and freshman Dick Lalla of Cortland. earned, they stepped briskly into the lead, 1-0, in the second.

nnnnv i nnmsnn rnifii a itmu making by coming from, behind to overcome a 20-13 Ohio State lead in the fourth period to win. The payoff came on a break. Ohio State's Bob Koepnick fumbled on the Ohio 45 and Michigan State's alert end, Ed Luke, pounced on the ball. Eight plays later, with a down- field drive sparked by Lee Bolden and Bill Wells, Yewcic dropped back from the Ohio 33 and fired sure and true to quarterback Al Dorow, who pulled it in and raced eight yards down the sidelines to score. End Bob Carey converted and the ball game was Michigan State's with only 2:32 remaining.

4 CHANGES IN LEAD It was a non-conference battle between two Big 10 titans. But, as yi double down the left-field line and rookie Willie Mays delivered his first World Series hit, a single to Ay. score Bobby. Acme TELEPHOTO. Lalla, who entered Colgate in January, proved to be little short of sensational as he calmly spotted and hit Colgate ends Kluckhohn THE BRAT AT WORK-Eddie Stanky slides into second base on the play that opened the gates for the Giant's five-run sixth inning yesterday.

Out by a yard, Stanky jarred the ball (arrow) out of Phil Rizzuto's grasp and raced on to third. The Giants won, 6-2, to ake a 2 to 1 series edge. and Gary Chandler despite a hard RASCHI, YANKS OFF Vic Raschi, not nearly as sharp as in the pennant campaign when he won 21 games, did manage to escape further difficulty until the fifth by allowing no more hits until that weird, frame. Eddie Stanky, who had been hit-less in the series until yesterday, led off the fifth by getting a walk. Then the little pest broke for second.

Although Yogi Berra's throw to Phil Rizzuto was in time cnargmg uornell line. In the last period, Lalla ran to his right, looked for a reciver. Penn Beats I found none and sped 59 yards down the sidelines for Colgate's nnai score. The former Southern Illinois Lucks Out 14-10 Victory Over Tier Conference basketball star for a put out, Stanky rammed him was spectacular in his home Acme TELE PHOTO. RICHOCHET TOUCHDOWN'- Stu Merz, Cornell half-back, leaps into the air to claim a stray football for the Big Red's first touchdown in a 41-18 rout over Colgate yesterday.

Thrown by Rocco Calvo it had been intended for Vic Pujo (56) but bounced off some-. body else's head. Dartmouth debut. the gridiron drama unfolded, fans couldn't help but think that the Western Conference title was at stake. The lead changed hands four times.

A tough-angle 16-yard field goal by Carey put Michigan State ahead 3-0 early in the first period, but Ohio came back late in the same period to go ahead 6-3. Vic Janowicz, who played like he was trying to make All-America, an honor he received last year, hit Ray Hamilton with a 34-yard pass in the end zone. Janowicz missed the conversion. Don McAuliffe cracked over the Cornell so dominated the play tnat no varsity starter played in the second half. After practically insuring its victory building up a Passes Rugged WisconsimWith so hard he lost the ball.

Stanky was off to third on the two-base error. The Yankees, who appeared edgy all day, showed how badly they were upset when Gil Mc-Dougald and Joe DiMaggio appeared to be fighting each other to retrieve the ball that had bounded into short centerfield. Dependable Alvin Dark then Si-b hrst-half lead, Cornell con tented itself with straight football Princeton's 15th Straight that revealed little more to the Philadelphia JPl Glenn (Bones) visiting scouts than the fact that Lefty James has a wealth of fine players to count on in the future. Adams, a 20-year-old aerial special-'st from ML Carmel, hurled Champaign, 111. (U.R) Illinois' sputtery offense held up for two successful touchdown drives against a rugged Wisconsin defense yesterday and the Illini lucked out a 14-10 victory before 56,207 fans to open the Big Ten one-foot line and Carey converted four touchdown passes yesterday to Colgate mustered three more first downs than Cornell and put lead Pennsylvania to an easy 39- (Continued on Page 2 D) to put the Spartans ahead 10-6 at 6:32 of the second period.

JANOWICZ SCORES 14 triumph over Dartmouth. together a passing and running attack that totaled 478 yards to A shirt-sleeve crowd of 35,000 Four minutes later, Janowicz climaxed a drive from the Ohio 27 when he plunged one-yard to Tigers Top Navy, 24-20; Kazmaier Flips 3 TDs Annapolis, Md. () Three aerial shots for touchdowns by All-America' halfback Dick Kazmaier flashed Princeton to its fifteenth straight triumph yesterday by a 24-20 score over Navy in a spectacular display of offensive saw Adams team with Tom Hanlon, a six-foot-two end from White Plains, for two fast scores In the Bombers Hit Bv Giant Flak grid season. The Badgers defense, composed of 1950 veterans, was all that its i press clippings promised and for first half, the Illini were held to a minus 17 yards rushing. Mean-l while, the Badgers' senior quarterback John Coatta sparked a 10- point second period which looked Football Result's first half and then came back to score and then put Ohio ahead 13-10 with his conversion.

pitch another pair in the last 30 minutes. After a scoreless third period, YANKEES quarterback Tony Curcillo, boot- COLLINS SCORES to be good enough to win. EAST Dartmouth never threatened BEATEN CLUB fireworks. leggea me Dan periecuy as wuiu ran to the right and hit Hamilton with an 18-yard pass on the 8. The dusky speedster raced seriously in the Ivy League fracas, But the Illini came back, though corneas 46b a 12-yard bulge but sustained drives of 77, 58, 52 and 38 yards were halted by an alert Cornell defense.

Pass interceptions by Pujo and Reggie Marchant stopped two of the four drives. On the other hand the Ithacans couldn't be stopped. Calvo directed his plays brilliantly. He mixed them up and kept the Colgate defenses continually on its heels. CORNELL MARCHES In the first half Cornell manufactured drives of 68, 53, 78 and 50 yards, all of which resulted in scores.

Only once did Calvo forsake apparently a beaten ball club throughout three periods. the remaining distance to store Statistics Brown Halts Yale at Goal Navy came close to beating the Tigers for the first time since Cornell turned the trick in the middle of the 1949 season, with a second-half comeback that netted all the middle points. Janowicz converted and Ohio Quarterback Don Engels, who State led 20-13. entered the game after starter From there came Michigan State's magnificent comeback. ine tigers sprung away to a Dorrow.

with six minutes left. First Downs 19 Rushing Yardage 10 249 Passing Yardage "ft 235 Passes Attempted 20 29 Passes Completed 7 13 Passes Intercepted 4 4 Punts 10 4 Punting Average 41 32 Fumbles Lost 1 2 Yards Penalized 55 119 nassed to end Paul Dckker from Tom O'Connell had to be lifted for a knee injury, used a bit of luck with his passes. Starting on his own 38, Engels pitched twice to end Frank Wodziak for 29 yards, then, after he was trapped for an 18 yard loss, the Illini cause 17-0 halftime lead. At that point the 21,000 sweltering fans in Thompson Stadium felt the Prince- In 1443 Upset Syracuse 46, Lafayette 0 Brown 14, Yale 13 Case Tech 38, Wash. Jeffer.

7 St. Lawrence 20, Hobart 7 Holy Cross 54, Fordham 20 Temple 14, Rutgers 7 Columbia 35, Harvard 0 Princeton 24, Navy 20 Maine 42, Vermont 0 Cornell 41, Colgate 18 Bucknell 47, Lehigh 7 Williams 7, Connecticut 6 Villanova 20. Penn State 14 Union 21, RPI 14 Middlebury 42. Hamilton 12 Colby 13, Upsala 7 Carnegie Tech 47, Bethany 20 Penn 39, Dartmouth 14 Springfield 34, Bates 12 Cortland 13, American Int'l. 8 the ground route.

He flipped a 32- Statistics By Sunday Press Wire Services New Haven, Conn. Brown's in AB A Woodling.lf 4 113 0 0 Rizzuto.ss 4 112 4 1 3 0 2 2 2 0 DiMaggio.cf 4 0 0 4 0 0 Berra.c 3 0 15 11 3 0 0 0 1 0 Collins, lb 3 0 0 6 0 0 Bauer.rf 4 0 0 2 0 0 Raschi.p 1 0 0 0 0 0 Hngue.p 0 0 0 0 0 0 aHopp 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ostrowski.p 0 0 0 0 0 0 bMize 1 0 0 ,0 0 0 Totals 30 2 5 24 8 2 GIANTS AB II A 2 112 2 0 Dark.ss 4 114 3 0 Thompson.rf 3 1110 0 Irvin.lf 3 1 0 2 0 0 Lockman.lb 4 1 1 10 1 1 4 113 4 0 Mays.cf 4 0 2 3 0 0 Westrum.c 4 0 0 2 1 1 Hearn.p 3 0 0 0 2 0 Jones.p 0 0 0 0 1 0 Totals 31 6 7 27 14 2 a Walked for Hogue In 7th. spired football forces halted Yale inches from the goal line in the but a 21-year-old lad from Honolulu named Tom Collins got in Penn's hair all day. Collins raced 76 yards with a the 4 with a touchdown pass that climaxed a 14-play drive. Carey's kick was good.

2 MINUTES TO GO With slightly over two minutes left, Ohio State still seemed to have victory within its reach. Yewcic, who helped spark Michigan State's slashing running attack all afternoon, fooled 'em all hen he sailed the pass that won the game. seemed hopeless. But Pete Bauchouros made nine yards and then Engels flipped a high pass downfield. It was intended for end Steve Nosek, but it fell short and Nosek was able only to tap it into the air.

End last seconds of a thrilling battle yard aerial to Dick Chggott for Cornell's last score before the half. There were but 32 seconds of play remaining. Unintentional, but significant was the fact that Vince Giarrusso failed to go on the field with the defensive unit and Cornell played the last few seconds of the second period with ten men on the field. p. N.

First Downs IS 12 Rushing Yardage 113 211 Passing Yardage 102 187 Passes Attempted 19 22 Passes Completed 10 10 Passes Intercepted 2 2 Punts 7 5 Punting Average 34 35 Fumbles Lost 1 4 Yarqs Penalized 30 40 and scored a 14-13 upset in the Bowl yesterday before 35,000 limp punt for Dartmouth's first touchdown and set up the second as he spr'nted 55 yards after making his fans. Franklin Mar. 27, Dickinson 6 Sputtering and stumbling most Statistics of the hot afternoon, Yale's attack caught fire in desperation in the At no time did scouts and observers in the press box feel that Janowicz' touchdown pass to Hamilton in the first period was tonians were out for a romp since Navy was stumbling all over itself. the first time the Spartan goal Northeastern 39, Tufts 7 Bowdoin 27, Wesleyan 9 Carnegie Tech 47, Bethany 20 Rochester 21, Amherst 6 Scranton 14. Penn Military 0 Coast Guard 27, Trinity 19 Wagner 19, Arnold 7 Juniata 13, Swarthmore 7 Brocknort 19, Ithaca College 0 Then Navy unfurled its sky First Downs 20 Rushing Yardage 110 Passing Yardage 111 164 Passe Attempted IS 32 Passes Completed JO 19 Passes Intercepted 1 1 Punts 7 Punting Average 3S 29.4 Fumbles Mst 1 2 Yards Penalized 59 26 rockets.

line had been crossed since their hectic 36-33 victory over Notre Dame last season. The Spartans went on to blank five opponents Bob Zastrow, Navy's pitching third interception of the afternoon. Adams went to the air 20 times and completed 11 tosses for a total gain of 190 yards. Hanlon, making all his yardage in the first half, lugged the pigskins 154 yards on four receptions. Johnny Moses and Alex Jaffurs took Adams' other two touchdown tosses, Moses for seven yards and Jaffurs for nine.

In between Penn added two others scores, on a 38-yard dash with a pass interception by sophomore George Bosseler and wizard, started with a 44-yard pass to Don Eisher on the Princeton 3. Ship'sburg St. 59, Shep'erd St. 0 Trenton Tch. 19, New Brit.

Tch. 7 before they tangled with the Buck-eves, but their vicious running at final period, only to bog down on the goal line as the clock ticked off the final seconds. Breaks played a prominent role in the outcome, accounting for three of the four touchdowns. Most of the stirring action, in which Brown was able to maintain its record of licking Yale in the odd years since 1941, occurred In the final half, and last period. Yale fumbled away its chances of leading the Ivy league.

Jim Ryan made two fumbles, both of which converted into Colgate's performance was inept. The Red Raiders just had the misfortune to run into a tremendous Cornell team. Actually things might have been even more conclusive as two Cornell touchdowns were nullified by rule infractions. Cornell started its first touchdown drive on its own 32. Calvo opened fireworks with a 32-yar4 toss to Merz.

He then, banged one into Pujo's arms on the 26. Todd Kolb was his next target. That Slip'ry Rock St. 13, Edin'ro St. 6 Rex Smith came over and made a tack, with passing at the right time yesterday, made Ohio State Morgan State 7, Lincoln (Pa.) 2 shoestring catch on the Badgers' Lebanon Valley 12, Muhlenberg 6 their ninth straight victim.

ZastrOw lobbed the ball with a Princetonian hanging on one arm. He threw a fourth-down pass to end John Gurski for the score. A minute later the Middies were back on the Princeton 13. Zastrow threw a perfect strike to Jim seven and from there it-was easy The crowd of 82,640 persons, the Bachoros made five and speedster Johnny Karras went the rest of on a one-yard line buck by another Gettysburg 21, Drexel 0 Cheyney State 3, Delaware St. 0 Ursinus 20, Haverford 7 Rhode Island 27, New Hamp.

0 St. Michael's 14. Norwich 0 the way. third largest ever to see a game In this huge horseshoe stadium, knew it would see one of the best games of any season and filled the Flied out for Ostrowski in 9th. Yankees 000 000 0112 Giants 010 050 OOx 6 RBI Mays, Dark, (Dark scored on Berra's error in 5th) Lockman 3, Collins, Woodling.

2B Thomson. HR Lockman, Woodling. Left Yankees 10, Giants 5. BB Raschi 3, Hearn 8. SO Raschi 3, Hearn 1, Ostrowski 1.

Hits and runs off Raschi 5 and 6 in 4Mi innings: Huge 1 and 0 in Un; Ostrowski 1 and 0 in 2, Hearn 4 and 1 in Jones 1 and HBP Raschi (Stanky), Hearn pass went for a 26-yard score, sophomore, Joe Varaltls. FORWARD WALL SHINES The first Illini scare came after the opening kickoff as O'Connell Brown touchdowns one by Vitold Piscuskas from the one-foot line in the opening period, the other by Bob McCue from the three- E. Stroud. T. 21.

Mansfield T. 6 Susquehanna 47, John Hopkins 32 Fairmont St. 19, Davi Elkins 0 completed five of six passes for 48 yards and Karras ran seven to Dartmouth's jsecond touchdown Was scored by Dick Calk'ns, who swung around his own right end (Continued on Page D) Predict Rain, Cool for Series finish a 71 yard drive. Sam Rebec yard line in the third. Brad Pen for five yards after Collins' 55- ca converted after both illini tal yard dash with an interception.

lies. HAMMOND SCORES dleton kicked both extra points. Yale scored in the second period, when Ryan shoved over from the one-foot line, and again Carl Sempier converted three times for Penn and Hank Fry twice New York (P) The weather Baldinger over the goal, but the end dropped it. Princeton scored next but Navy came right back for two last-period scores. Frank Brady swept his left end for 58 yards behind a horde of Navy blockers -and Zastrow churned 40 yards around the opposite flank.

Princeton played like the jungle cats for which they are named to pounce on the ball and set up the scoring opportunities for Kaz-maier. A recovered fumble, (Continued en Page 6 D) The Badgers made their move in for Dartmouth. in the last period when Brock stadium long before tne two university bands came on the field to raise the Stars and Stripes. It was hot and overcast and most of the crowd brought raincoats. Arnold Bows, 19-7 New York Wagner College scored a touchdown on the first play from scrimmage and was never headed, romping to a 19-7 victory over Arnold yesterday at Wagner Field.

The game was the opener for each team. bureau, in its 10 p. m. (EST) fore cast last night, predicted "occa Penn's big forward wall, led by the second period, but if was the defensive team which made the Bucknell 47, Lehigh 7 Sewanee 57. Bethel (Tenn.) 13 Wilkes 25, Bridgeport 7 Delaware 47, West Chester 20 SOUTH Washington Lee 34, W.

Va. 0 W. Mary. 46, Randolph-Macon 7 Tennessee 26, Duke 0 Maryland 33, George Wash. 6 South Carolina 21, Furman 6 (Continued an Pf ID) Hanlon and Eddie Bell at ends sional rain in the afternoon" for points.

(Rizzuto). DP Stanky, Dark to Lockman; Hearn, Dark, Lockman to Dark; Rizzuto, McDougald to Collins. Winner Hearn. Loser Raschi. Paparella (A), Plate; Barlick (N), IB; Summers (A), 2b; Ballanfant (N), 3B; Stevens (A), and Gore (N), foul lines.

A 52,035. Martin fumbled the ball on the three. It squirted into the end zone and Ed Woodsum dropped on it for a score. Bob Parcells, however, was able today's fourth game of the World Series. and Bob Evans and Gerry Mc-Ginley in the middle of the line, gave Dartmouth no quarter, restricting the Indian ground attack to a total of minus 10 yards.

The forecast said "Increasing Coatta, who set a Big Ten record in pass completions last year, drove the offensive unit to Illi- (Continued en Page D) to kick only one of the extra cloudiness and cooler Sunday with occasional rain." points..

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