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The Daily News Leader from Staunton, Virginia • 10

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Staunton, Virginia
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10
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Eastern Grid Picture Scrambled; VSD Surprises Clifton Forge IS Staunton, News-Leader; Oct. 6, 1957 North Carolina Upsets Stopping Forrestal, TopFive Teams Win As Expected" lth JL What might have been never was turner Mars iVlsta and except for the fatal sec-ith the Navy 13-7 Mounties, finding they couldn't bat the breeze on power plays, resorted to trickery and reeled off a series of fakes and handoffs that caught the Raiders with their pants down. Brainy little Freddie Llptrap masterminded them from their own 40 all the way. They first scored moral victory for the losers, who honors. Army also must play VSD 8aw a hopped-up version had not been able to score on! another top Eastern foe, before0f tne cuTtcm Forge Mountaineers Oklahoma since 1951.

jit can start thinking In terms of aneak through the middle for a Michigan State, No. 2 behind. tn? lnamplw isore in the second period to The Associated Press The top five college football teams in the nation roared to expected victories, yesterday, but KSiu'STm KcM rSSE threw the scramble for Eastern; a. in we. nlaa nationally supremacy into a Jigsaw puzzle! elevised, game -Mtanesote third team haTno froubV wib Chaooga Both "team ga their Nq back extra points and so the score stood iWM'hlngton state, 20-13; to 7 down to the final whlsUe.

nuuuiu, ocvciiiui yvit, maicn meir own nrsi stanza wucn- an outbreak or we nu that that miiiht not work itself out' until the waning days of the PH. had a tough time of son. it, but got past Purdue, 21-17 'with Dick Larson scoring twice Oklahoma, the No. 1 muscle: and passing for another touch- almost caused the game to be different team from the one which called off. i kowtowed to Waynesboro in last Oregon State, No, 9, the de-l week's 54-13 debacle and their im-fending Pacific Coast Conteren-! Pavement was obvious in the smooth bauhandllng of Llptrap and proved to be the winning touchdown midway in the third period.

Navy quarterback Tom Forrestal, rushed by end Buddy Payne, got off a hurried pass and it fell into the arms of tackle Leo Kussavage, who raced 82 yards to score standing up. Shupin's placement was blocked. 4A 15-yard dipping penalty nullified a Navy touchdown in the second period. The Middies drove from their 25 to the Tar Heel 8. Prom there Forrestal pitched a pass to end Pete Jokan-ovich in the end zone but the play war, called back.

by Forrestal, who earlier this week was labelled by Eddie Erde-latz as one of the finest quarterbacks In the country Two of them were late in the fourth quarter when Forrestal threw the aerial book at the defenders in an effort to pull the game out of the fire. M.Hurst was the game's leading ground gainer with 88 net yards in 13 carries, for a 6.9 average. Schuler led North Carolina with 42 in 8 carries for 5 3. Navy 77 North Carolina 8 6 013 Navy Scoring: Touchdowns Hurst (1, run), Conversion Old ham. North Carolina: Touchdowns Reed (1, plunge); Russavage (32, intercepted pass Conversion Shupln.

down. Fourth ranked Duke, looking more and more like the logical Atlantic Coast Conference cham pion, trampled Maryland, 14-0, iw uiuucouaijiii league u- lumph. Texas No. 5, raced' Navy, 6, its a1'0; nd hin North outfit of the country won its 42nd straight game, crushing Iowa State, 40-14, in a Big Eight Game. The only factor that led.

to any to the" final outcome was break of the flu among the western, 22-13. Michigan, the lOth ranked team in the country, po lished off Georgia, 26-0. Notre Dame took xome of the heat off coach Terry Brennan byl coastine to its second straight! ldianfl- fe a maor tel next week against Army. the lv gue-which it- turned in victories. and the Sooners were lna But No.

stubbed cations. Carolina handed self appeared set for a topsy-the Middles a 13-7 beating. Navyjturvy season a week ago things had high hopes of finishing Wei returned to normal. Brown and season as the myWical Eastern! Princeton, the co-favorites, each Ws Blast Richmond For 28-6 Win Brown, breathing the rarifiedrJarlne 7 Champion Now things don't look so cer tain and We title may not be: decided until the Army Navy, game on Nov. 30.

The Cadets polished off Perm State, another; pretender to the crown, and projected themselves square-' ly into the fight for Eastern; Duke Pounds 140 Defeat Over Stubborn Maryland ond period, their defenses were well night impregnable by lano or by air. In the first canto Clifton Forge received the kick, but ran out of ammunition after picking up five yards. The Raiders took com mand and crashed irom tne au yard line to paydirt in seven power plays, featuring Wallace "The Cadillac" Currier who picked up 38 of the 70 yards. Sullivan and Taylor picked up the remaining yardage. Tommy Sullivan faked through for the extra point and it pointed towards the Raiders' first league win.

Midway of the second quarter, Scores Illinois 40, Colgate 0 Minnesota 21, Purdue 17 Nebraska 14, Kansas State 7 Wisconsin 45, West Virginia 13 Notre Dame 26, Indiana 0 Texas A and 28, Missouri 0 Xavier (Ohio) 39, Miami (Ohio) 19 Washington (St. Louis) 21, Wabash 13 Peru (Neb) 32, Chadron 13 Hastings 7, Doane 0 Kearney 87, Midland 0 Oklahoma State 26, Wichita 0 Iowa 20, Washington State 13 Oklahoma 40, Iowa State 14 Lockbourne AFB 26, Scott AFB 0 Valparaiso 27, Evansville 7 St. Josephs (Ind) 34, Butler 13 Franklin 23, Erlham 20 Rose Poly 50, Principia 0 Belolt 19, Indiana Central 7 Taylor 13, Anderson 7 Depauw 26, Indiana State 6 Concordia (Minn) 49, Hamline 6 Carleton 14, St. Olaf 6 Moorhead (Minn) 40, Winona 14 Dakota Wtsleyan 13, Black Hills TCHRS 0 Southern (SD) Tchrs 20, Gen; Beadle Tchrs 0 Minot 13, Ellendale 0 Central (Mo) 26, Eureka 6 Lehigh 27, Western Reserve 6 Capital 38, Hiram FAR WEST Utah State 19, Wyoming 19 (tie) Montana' State 21, San Diego 7 Carroll (Ont) 14, Western Montana 6 Idaho State 41, Western Colo State 13 Oregon Tech 14, Portland State 0 Eastern Wash 7, Puget Sound 7 (tie) Idaho 21, Utah 0 NFL Baltimore 21, Chicago Bears 10 Cleveland 23, Pittsburg 12 New York 24, Philadelphia 20 FLU-RIDDEN SOONERS BEAT IOWA STATE, 40-14 NORMAN, Oct. 6 Wr-A wobbly Oklahoma team obviously oft stride after a bout with the Asian flu, caught a stubborn Iowir State eleven today, and it until the late stages of the Big Eight Conference contest that the Sooners were able to finally pull away with a 40-14 victory.

RICHMOND, Va, Oct. 5 JFh- VMi's rapid and resourceful "J' Boys" Duke Johnson, Pete Johnson and Bobby Jordan ran Richmond ragged today as the Keydets posted a 28-6 Southern Conference football victory that kept them unbeaten after three starts. Living up to their billing as a three touchdown favorite, the swift, deceptive Keydets used a 58-yara drive and a Richmond fumble to storm to a 14-point lead in the opening quarter Richmond, stymied often by Jor dan's brilliant punting, had only one sustained march and never threatened to erase its early def icit. The "Three-J's" scored a touch down apiece in We rout before a sum crowd of 4,000 at City Stadium. Quarterback Johnston had We first VMI score on a one yard plunge that ended VMI's first fruitful push, one that carried nearly We length of the field in We middle of the first period; Halfback Johnson hit tackle for eight sards and the second VMI score moments later, after the Keydets pounced on a Richmond fumble on the Spider 18.

Jordan, also a halfback, collected his six-pointer in the third period on a five-yard sprint. Johnson added two oi We lour extra-point kicks for VMI to run his scoring total for the game to eight points. Richmond's lone scoring tally came in We second period when the Spiders went 72 yards. Fun-back Buddy Davis got We touchdown on a two-yard plunge. VMI belabored We hard-press ed Richmond line for 254 yards aground, 77 of these by Jordan, another 68 by fullback Sam Wool- wine and 53 by Johnson a comeback kid whose athletic career was almost ended in 1956 when he was felled by polio.

Richmond's slim hopes of staying in contention died in We second period when David Ames, a driving halfback who picked up 59 of We Spiders' 133 rushing air of the upper regions for the first time in many a moon, slap ped down defending champion Yale, 21-20, and Princeton smashed to a 47-8 'victory over, upstart Columbia, which last week licked Brown. by less than one foot and Duke took over. An 11-yard pass from quarter back Dickie Lewis to end Ed Cooke and a 7-yard run by half back Fred Hamilton were features of the abortive Maryland drive, Maryland bad another scoring chance late in the third quarter when a Duke punt was short and downed on the Blue Devils' 48. The Terrapins pushed the ball to the Duke 39, where it fell short of a first down by inches. The Blue Devils threatened near the end of the first half with a drive from their own 25 to the Maryland 10.

Dutrow circled end for 29 yards and Brdhead picked up 16 yards over to highlight the march, but Maryland stiffened and took over. Carlton was the leading gainer in a Duke ground attack that pick ed up 275 yards rushing. He gained 112 yards in 23 tries for a 4.9 average. Dutrow scamp ered 88 yards in 17 tries, averaging 5.1 yards. McElhaney turned in the best average with 5.9 yards.

Fullback John Forbes was Mary land's top rusher with 35 yards in seven carries. Quarterback Bob Rusevlyan picked up 20 yards in lour tires. Maryland 0 0 0 0 0 Duke 7 0 0 7-14 Duke Sflnrlnar Carlton Tl," plunged): Dutrow (2, pass from Carlton.) Conversion: Carlton 2. N. c.

sHtebeats CXEMSD, 13-7 CLEM SON; S. Oct. 5 (JPf- Halfback Dick" Christy breezed 87 yards for a-touchdown wltn the opening kickoff to set. North Carolina State on the road to its third Atlantic Coast Confer ence football victory, 13-7, against a rugged Clemson team here to day. State struck again in the final period, 'moving 58 yards in five plays to score, fullback Don Hafcr plunging the final half yard.

Hunter's conversion was good. 0 BULLETIN MIAMI. Oct. 5 Little Fran Curci. 152-pound quarterback, sparked Miami's Hurricanes to a surprising 13-7 victory over Baylor tonight before 41,160 football fans in the Orange Bowl.

from the 17 on a pass play which was nullified by an offside penalty, but they i came back and on a desperation fourth down play, full-" back Bobby Smith pierced the line for the games' second and final touchdown with Billy. Campbell bucking for the extra. The second and third quarters were largely even-steven as both teams failed to get out of the rut, the Mounties because Coach Lew- ellyn had changed his defenses by inserting sharp-eyed Dick Fogle in the ragged middle to put the hex on their faking, and the Raid ers because of a series of penalties which nullified some mighty fine running by Currier. Incidentally, Currier, for once was a rock wall at his line-backer position, making numerous tackles and balancing the defensive scales In the Raiders' favor. He racked up 141 yards rushing, and would certainly have made more had he not taken a bad fall in the third quarter after thudding 20 yards and attempting to hurdle a tackier.

The hurdle was good but the fall was not as he crashed heavily on his right hip. A lesser player would have been carried off on a stretcher, but The Cadillac got up and limped gamely back to his position. That was the turning point in the game as it hampered Currier's running, even though he gritted out a 20 and then a 13 yard Tommy Sullivan and rrea martin were defensive standouts, mak ing the majority off the tackles. Sullivan, Martin and Currier together accounted for three-fourths of the tackles alone. Coach T.

C. Lewellyn has done a magnificent Job with the personnel at his disposal. Assistant Coach Jim DUettoso has been out with an unexpected heart-attack since August. It does not seem possible that he will be with the team tor the rest of the season, although he has been lending his moral support for some time. Billy Bowman, a promising halfback is out with a compound fracture received in the Buena Vista game and Lewellyn is hard put to replace him.

Buchanan comes to town Friday. Come out to the ball game! Game Statistics Clifton Forge first downs yards rushing yards passing passes punts punting avg. fumbles lost yds. penalized 7 0 7 8 142 0 1-3 5 31 0 4.1 0 Best Flat-tops at A ail JVC Next Strand $42.50 VSD 10 227 50 4 35.5 1 20 VSD (7) CF (7) i WW -A Navy, which had an edge in first downs by 16-12, started fast and appeared headed for a touchdown on the opening kickoff. The Middies drove from their 34 to the North Carolina 28 before the Tar Heels dug in and pushed them back to the 36.

A 24-yard run by Hurst featured the drive. After a clipping penalty had nui- lined Navy's second period touch aown, rorrestai wnippeo a pass to fullback Dick Dagamoat on the Tar Heel five. Dagampat bobbled the ball and North Carolina guard Fred Swearingen raced in to intercept it and stem the threat. Reed did a fine Job directing the Tar Heels offense which gained 181 net yards rushing. Halfbacks Jinr.

Schuler. and De Cantis. and fullback Ed Lipskl headed the attack. The alert Tar Heel defense inter- cepted five of the 20 passes thrown Furman Tops GW, 13-12 In SC Tilt GREENVILLE, S. Oct.

6 JP) -Furman spotted George wash ingtoa two touchdowns in the first period and then came from behind for a 13-12 Southern Conference football victory here tonight. The extra point placement by freshman Shelly Sutton after a second period Furman touchdown was the deciding point Furman blocked both of GW's extra point trys. Halfback Dick Shaw spoiled the first and end Tom Avery the second. The Colonials soon had another chance. Center Ron Demelphl recovered a Furman tumble at the Hurricane 32.

A holding penalty erasei a 28-yard run by Sommer, however, and Claypool punted over the goal line. Furman came to life for the first time. Bill Weir started a drive with a 15-yard dash. The Hurricane made five first downs, going to the GW 10, before the drive bogged down. Moments later Grant recovered a fumble at the GW 37, and the Hurricane moved to a score.

Charlie Gay went 13 yards for the longest run, before Horton plung ed across. The entire third period was played on the Furman side of the field with the exception of We first two plays after the kickoff. The Colonials kept threat ening, once going to the Hurri cane four before a fourth down pass was out of-theend isone. Again they were turned back at the 26. From there, Furman began to move.

Baker directed his team in ten plays to a TD, despite a 15-yard holding penalty at the GW 10. He passed to Siminski in the end zone for the scoring play. George Washington threatened briefly near We end, with Boomer and Colma combining for 43 yards in three plays to reach the Furman 42. But Gene Head intercepted a pass at his 43 and Fur man needed only to run out the clock in We -final seconds. Bowling Results LADIES 3A DUCK PIN (As of Thursday, Oct, 3) STANDINGS Team Ii Fts Ave.

112 103 89 106 102 92 Ave. Twigg's Al's Cab Early. -Dawn City Cab Kables Local 423 2 2 2 1 .1 1 TOP BOWLERS Name Harrell 126 Goode 120 Kline 117 Jack 115 Gayheart 97 WESTINGHOUSE Women's Bowling League (Ag of Oct. 3.) Team Stralghtshooters 7 2 Strtkettes 6 3 Pet. .778 .667 .556 .444 .333 .222 Llnemasters 8 4 Alley Kats 4 5- Blltz Kids 3 6 IPinnettes 2 7 Ten Five Bowlers Name Ave.

Polly Smith 93.0 Peggy Baker i 87.8 High Shirley Via 86.3 105 CHAPEL HILL, N. Oct. 5) North Carolina turned a recovered fumble and an intercepted pass Into touchdowns today to upset sixth ranked Navy 13-7 today before a wildly-cheering crowd of 25.000. The impressive victory gave Coach Jim Tatum's Tar Heels a big lift back up the football lad- de- Navy's vaunted offense, which had crushed Boston College and William and Mary, was held in checlr by a tight Tar Heel defense until early in the final period when Harry Hurst, of Pauls-boro. N.

J.n. scored from the one to climax a drive that carried from Navy's 27. Ned Oldham kicked the extra point. The once-beaten Tar HppIs smr. ed in the first period after Fmil De Cantis of Scranton, re- coverea a rumme Dy Oldham on Navy's 22, Nine plays later quarterback Dave Reed plunged over irom me one.

Bob Shu- pin convenea. worm uaroung scored what Series 3rd Game box score oct. 5 MV-The official box score of the third game wie iwi world Series-NEW YORK ABRHO A auw 5 113 0 0 a Mantle cf 3 Berra 4 McDougald ss ...1 Simpson lb ....1 a-Howard lb ......2 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 Collins lb 0 Lumpe 3b ........5 0 Coleman 2b ......4 1 Turley ...1 0 Larsen .........2 1 Totals 34 12 9 27 MILWAUKEE Schoendienst 2b Logan ss 3b Aaron cf Covington' If Adcock lb Trowbridge d-Jones McMahon f-Pafko Hazle rf Rice e-Demerit Crandall Buhl Pizarro Conley b-Sawatskl E. Johnson AB A 5 0 3 0,2 0 4 2 6 3 3 0 1 0 0 4 3 0 1 0 .11 .0 1 0 2 .35 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 2 2 9 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 3 c-xorre id Totals 8 27 14 1 a Walked for Simpson in 3rd. Struck out for Conley in 4th Grounded out for E.

Johnson in 6th. Grounded out for Trowbridge in 7th. Ran for Rice in 8th. Hit by pitch for McMahon in 9th. NEW YORK (A) 302 200 50012 MILWAUKEE (N) 010 020 000 3 RBI Kubek 4, McDougald, Simpson, Schoendienst, Lumpe 2, Mantle 2, Aaron 2, Bauer 2.

HR Kubek 2, Mantle, Aaron. SB McDougald. SF McDougald. DP Schoendienst. and Torre.

Left- New York (A) 7. Milwaukee (N) 14. BB Buhl 2 (Mantle, Berra), Pizzaro 2 (Bauer, Howard), Con ley 1 (McDougald), E. Johnson 1 (Mantle), Trowbridge 3 (McDougald. Coleman.

Larsenh McMa- bon 2 (McDougald, Larsen) Turley 4 (Logan, Covington, Hazle, Mathews). Larsen 5 (Covington, Mathews 2, Rice, Pafko). SO Piz zaro 1 1 (Kubek), E. Johnson Bauer), Trowbridge McMaho 1 (Collins, Coleman). Turley 2 (Adcock, Lo gan), Larsen 4 (Covington, Sawat-ski.

Adcock. Crandall). HO Buhl 2 in 2-3. Turley 3 In 1 2-3, Pizar ro 3 In i 2-3, Conley 2 in 1 2-3, E. Johnson 0 to 2, Trowbridge in 1, McMahon 0 in 2, Larsen 5 in 7 1-3.

R-ER Buhl 3-2, Turley 1-1. Pizarro 2-2, Conley 2-2, E. Johnson 0-0. Trowbridge 5-5, McMahon 0-0, Larsen 2-2. WP-Turley.

PB Rice. Larsen. l-buiii. McKinley (A) Plate. Donatelli (N) first base.

Paparella (A) second base. Conlan (N) third base. Chy- lak (A) left field, Secory (N) right Receipts (net) $274,816.53. Standings Team Buena Vista Ties Pet 4 0 0 1.000 Lexington 0 0 3 3 2 3 1 3 3 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1.000 Waynesboro Natural Bridge 1.000 Central J5O0 Clifton Forge 375 333 R. E.

Lee I VSD Buchanan 0 Wilson Memorial 0 tl'l Friday's Results Buena Vista 54, Buchanan 0 Lexington 26, Lee High 14 Waynesboro 27, Wilson, Memorial 0 VSD 7, Clifton Forge 1 Thantday's Results Central 13, Natural Bridge 0 SEHVICE STATION soon Psing Per Opcrctcr TO LEAS2 0315 cr i .000 uuton Forge was an entirely "16,1 8nore1 end defenses. The Raiders also-showed improvement over the 26-6 trashing by Buena Football By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS EAST Syracuse 27, Boston Unlv 20 Princeton 47, Columoia Maine 49, Vermont 0 Boston College 13, Quantioo Dartmouth 6, Perm 3 Army 37, Penn State 13 Vlllanove 21, Florida State 7. Bowling Green 7, Delaware 0 Brown 21. Yale 20 -Holy Cross 32, Dayton 6 Cornell 20, Harvard 8 Rutgers 14, Connecticut 7 Wesminster (Pa) 13r Waynes-burg 7 Alfred 13, Kings Point 0 Harverford 19,, Wagner 7 Hobart 27, Rochester Univ. 20 Cortland 42, Bloomsburg (Pa) 12 Montclair 27, Cheyney 13 Tufts 40, Bates 6 Bowdoln 13, Trinity 8 Williams 26, Colby 19 Springfield 20, Northeastern 13 Rhode Island 28, New Hampshire 13 Lafayette 14, Buffalo 6 Amherst 61.

Union Buckness 19, Temple 8 Muhlenberg 18, Albright 14 Naval Station 34, Massachusetts Maritime Academy IB National Agricultural College (Pa) 20, District of Columbia Tchrs 2 Looming 34, Moravian 13 Wesleyan 20, -Coast Guard 7 Hamilton Rensselaer 7 Kutztown 191 Mlllersvllle 7 Clairon 14, Grove City 0 Swarthmore 14, Dickinson (Pa) 12 Hampton Institute 8, Delaware State 0 Hofstra 26, Upsala 0 Shippensburg 28, East Strouds- burg 19 Urslnus 6. Susquehanna 0 Slippery Rock 12, Brockport 2 Penn Military 13, Bridgeport 6 Franklin and Marshall 13, Johns Hopkins 6 OUTH Virginia 27, Wake Forest 30. Miami 13, Baylor 7 Florida 14, Kentucky 7 Furman 13, George Washington 12 South Carolina 27, Texas 2o Hills Tchrs North Carolina 13, Navy 7, North Carolina State 13, Clemson 7 Auburn 40, Chattanooga 7 Mississippi 34, Hardin Simmons 7 Kentucky State 37, Knoxvllle 0 The Citadel 21, Davidson 7 Centre 7, Washington Lee 6 Shepard (WVa) 34, Davis and Elklns 6 Glenville (WVA) 14, Ooncom (WVa 13 Tuskegee 35, Flsk 6 North Carolina 13, Virginia Union 0 Bridgewater 7. Guilford 0 Sewanee 14, Mlllsaps 0 Xavier (New Orleans) 30, Alabama State 0 Tougaloo 38, Jarvis 0 Tennessee 14, Miss. State 9 Duke 14, Maryland 0 William and Mary.

13, Virginia Tech 7 Thiel (Pa) 34, Bethany (W Va) 6 Southwestern (Memphis) 27, Hendrix 6 MIDWEST Michigan 26, Georgia 0 from lO" to '15 .00 m't ma msw bfe. As Professional Football suns 0 But their depth was too much for lowa State. Still, it marked yards, was lost on an injury. After Ames departed the Spiders went downhill in a hurry. VMI's final touchdown came with Keydet third-stringers populating the field.

The Keydets moved 31 yards for this one, which merely added insult to injury, speedy Art Brandriff chasing wide around right tackle for the last yard. Jordan, the BouWenv Confer ence's top punter in 1956, got off one kick that carried 56 yards In the last period and another that rolled out on the Richmond one in the third period. The runaway started the second time VMI got possession of We ball. After being pushed bacs to their two by a holding penalty the Keydets marched Wrough Richmond with ease. Woolwine went 45 yards in three carries, Johnston added 17 yards and, without using a pass, VMI went the 98 yards' to the Spider goal.

Johnston's plunge and conver sion-made it 7-0 and Richmond never came close to catching up. Virginia Military 14 0 7 7-28 Richmond 0 6 0 0 6 VMI Scoring Touchdowns- Johnston (1, plunge); Johnson (8, run) Jordan (5, run) Brand riff (1, run). Conversions: John son .2, woolwine, Richmond Scoring: Touchdown Davis (2, plunge). MINNESOTA RECOVERS AGAINST PURDUE MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 5 W) Quarterback Dick Larson, obscured We last two years by We attention lavished on Bobby Cox, rallied a stumbling Minnesota team in We second half today for a big 21-17 Big Ten victory over odds-bucking Purdue.

He raced 72 yards for pne touchdown on a punt run" back, passed for another that sent Minnesota into We lead for good in the third quarter, and sped over four from four yards 'out for the clincher in the final quarter. 45 and 14 yards in the second, third and fourth quarters respec Hanulak tossed 32 yards to Ray Renfro in the second period and O'Connell fired 25 yards to Mill Campbell in the final period for the Browns-' other scores. Quarterback Earl Morrall's ra dar arm accounted for both of the Steelers'-touchdowns on passes to Earl (Jug) Girard for 22 yards in second quarter and 31. yards in the third period. Both of Gary Golck's attempted conversions were blocked by Campbell.

Cleveland 0 10 10-23 Pittsburgh a 0 6 6 0-12 New York, 24 Philadelphia, 20 PHILADELPHIA, Oct, 5 CfV-The New York Giants converted a blocked punt and an intercepted pass into a pair of touchdowns to night, posting their first National Football League victory of 1957, a 24-20 decision over the winless Philadelphia Eagles before 28,342 fans at Connie Mack Stadium. Trailing 10-7 early in the second quarter, Andy Robustelli, a seven-year-veteran of pro play, flashed through- the Eagles defense to block an attempted poinf by Jerry Norton. The ball rolled out of bounds on the Philadelphia 1, and from there Alex Webster bolted across on the next play. Ben- Agajanlan converted the first of his three points after touchdowns and the Giants were ahead to stay. New York .7 7 7-24 Philadelphia 10 0 10 0-20 STUDEBAKER Parts Service Yailey Motor Sales 628 Greenville Ave.

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DURHAM. N. C. Oct, .5 Duke's methodical Blue Devils, held to a one touchdown margin since early in the game, ground out a second score with only seven seconds left to defeat a stubborn Maryland team, 14-0 here today, A crowd of 25,000 saw the Blue Devils rack up their third straight Atlantic Coast Conference victory The Blue Devils scored in 12 plays the first time they had the ball and it appeared they were off to another one-sided triumph. However, Duke mistakes and Maryland's stubborn line forced the Blue Devils to go scoreless for two quarters.

The final Duke score game at the end of a drive that began on the Duke 21. They scored 16 plays later when halfback Wray Carlton passed to George Dutrow in the end zone from 2 yards out. The first Blue Devil drive cov ered 74 yards and was featured by a pass from quarterback Bob Brodhead to fullback Hal McEl- haney which covered 33 yards and ended on the Maryland 1. Carlton plunged over for the score. Carlton, a junior, also kicked both of Duke's extra points.

A mlscue, rare for the Blue Devils' machine, gave Maryland a scoring chance that fell short in the second period, Brodhead fumbled a Maryland punt and guard Rob Breedlove covered it for the Terps on the Duke 41. Maryland moved to the Duke 20. However, the Terps missed two chances to make first downs Roundup Baltimore, 21 Chicago Bears, 10 BALTIMORE Oct, 5 Ufi The Baltimore Colts snubbed a try for a tying field goal, went instead for a touchdown and got it, then Went on to beat the Chicago Bears' 21-10, before 46,558 approving fans tonight. It was the second straight de feat for the defending champions in the western division of the Na tional Football League, while the Colts were winning their second game without a defeat. The turning point in a resound ing defensive battle came in the third period with the Bears hold ing a 10-7 lead.

The Colts were on the Chicago 8-yard, line, need ing three for a first down but they gambled for the works. Quarterback John Unltas. shak ing off an earlier injured leg, shot a Jump pass to End Jim Mut- scheller, who held it over the goal after first Juggling the ball. That was enough for a Colt de fense that held the Bears to a net 23 yards rushing, but it made sure by setting up another touchdown. Chicago 7 3 8 0-10 Baltimore 7 0 7 721 More to Md) IT'S FUN1 Especially with Friends or League Play Register Now For WINTER BOWLING SEASON! Duck or Ten Pin Play Automatic Pin Spotters Air Conditioned ARCADIA Bowling Parlors 121 E.

Beverley St 01. "ial 5-5263 Coast to Coast by Mallory Exclusive) naw "DURAFELT keapa -It handsome-, Cleveland, 23 Pittsburgh, 12 PITTSBURGH, Oct. 5 U-Three field goals and two conversions by Lou (The Toe) Groza and touchdown passes by Chet Hanu-lak and Tommy O'Connell tonight gave the Cleveland Browns a 23-12 over the Pittsburgh Steelers and undisputed possession of first place in the Eastern Conference of the National Football League. Groza hiked his eight-year field goal total to 108 with boots of 29.. NOTRE DAME TOPS INDIANS, 26-0 SOUTH BEND, Ind, Oct.

5 Notre Damte sent four different backs across-Indiana's goal line and blanked We 26-O today. The Irisa now have two victories in two starts, matching Weir successes in We school's worst-in-history season last year. The stout Notre Dame defense, which stopped Purdue last week in a 12-0 Irish victory, held Indiana to 12 yards by rushing in We first half and 84 altogether. Notre Dame picked up 253 yards on the ground and 65 in the air. WISCONSIN SMASHES WEST 45-13 MADISON, Wis, Oct.

6 W-A Wisconsin team with considerable power -on the ground and a good aerial game overwhelmed West Virginia 45-13 in an Intersection football game-before today. The Badgers scored in every quarter, running up a 28-0 lead in We first half, and added 14 points in the third quarter and a 27-yard field goal in the closing seconds. The Mountaineers showed flashes of form on We ground but had little in We way of a forward passing game to back It op. r-O 73 Did 6-070? jjj 4TUUCUU0.1 Eileen O'Brien 82.3 8 98 Newest Textures, Patterns, Colors Michael, Stearns Mirror-Test From Luxurious, xoluaiv Cravanart procd It kp Its good look In any waatharl Rain navar get a ehanca to soak In, spoil Ita ehapa, wilt Its fin fait. You coma through the heaviest downpour In fin tyl looking your bat-groomd always.

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