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The Tampa Tribune from Tampa, Florida • 21

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The Tampa Tribunei
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Tampa, Florida
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21
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SECTION SPORTS NEWS TAMPA SUNDAY TRIBUNE SECTION MARKETS WANT-ADS TAMPA, FLORIDA, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1951 ID). itches Gaaetts Into ead ernes Heairjni 6 To 7 Georgia Tech Upsets Kentucky By 13 52,000 See Yanks Lose A Jackets Rally Late For Victory Gator-Loyola Grid Game Too Late For Tribune Editions The University of Florida, Loyola football game, played in the Rose Bowl at Pasadena, last night, finished too late for all editions of The Tribune. The fame started at 11:15 o'clock (EST) and did not end until almost 2 o'clock Sunday morning. The Tribune could not delay publication of its editions, and still serve all of its thousands of subscribers. WFLA, The Tribune radio station, stayed on the air long after its closing hour, and provided listeners with a complete account of the game.

Complete details of the game will be carried in all editions of The Tribune Monday morning. Texas Stings Tar Heels In 45-20 Rout THE RULES OF FOOTBALL ARE CLEAR ON THE SUBJECT of protecting the passer after he has thrown the ball, and why officials in high school and college ball won't enforce them has always been a mystery to this column, and to all of us who consider football a sport. The rule says: "No player shall charge into, or throw any player to the ground after the player (including the passer) is obviously out of the play. "A passer who is standing still, or fading back, is con-sidered out of the play after the pass. The defense must make a definite effort to avoid charging into him after it is clear the ball has been thrown.

"The penalty 15 yards. Also suspension from the game if flagrant." AT THE RISK OF MAKING EVERY COACH AND FOOTBALL -s si I KwJ -iaM. wV k'Jr z2' 4 fas i ssOCi' if sr w. ZL 4 -tr z' fj 7 it. I official in the country sore at us, we are urging, as we have done for many years, that the rules protecting the passer be called, and that a boy who is a good passer not be subjected to the brutal beating that is handed the throwers in modern football.

As we understnad it, and we will expect denials to pour in from all corners, the officials do not call the rules because the coaches do not want them called. Coaches say the only good defense against a passer is to rush him vigorously. We have also heard that some of them say the best defense against a good passer is "to destroy his will to pass." Which means, in plain, old passer such a savage beating that he won't have any heart for his work. This can be accomplished only by concentrating two or three of the biggest and toughest defensive men on the passer and hammering him into the ground after every throw. Some day this kind of football is going to cost the life of a fine kid.

NOBODY WANTS FOOTBALL game. We all know it is rough and New York, Oct. 6 Hereare two action shots in the third At top, Bobby Thomson of the New York Giants, scores after inning. At bottom, Phil Rizzuto, Yankees shortstop, is out at first inning. Al Dark made the tag.

(AP Wirephotos). a lot of courage are not playing the game. But, because it is a rough game, with tremendous bodily contact, certain rules have been made to protect players, like the passers and kickers, who are often out of position after they throw or kick. From long observation we believe the rule against piling on the kicker is enforced to large extent. If it were not many boys would be seriously hurt every week because the kicker is often completely in the air after he gets the kick off.

But the rules against roughing the passer have never been enforced to our satisfaction, either in college or high school ball. Why? Because the forward pass has been developed into such a deadly weapon that the coaches and officials are in agreement that passers must perform at their own risk. We are not picking out any one instance as the basis for this complaint. All college teams are about equally guilty. We doubt that any player on the Florida team has taken such a brutal beating in each game as Haywood Sullivan, although it is probable that passers opposing the.

Gators have been banged around just as vigorously. WE ARE NOT WRITING THIS PROTEST AS A FOOTBALL expert, because we have no pretensions along that line. It is written because, during a long period of observing on the football scene, we believe lack of enforcement of the rule protecting the passer is going to lead to disaster. The rule, obviously, made because there was a need for it. So why isn't it enforced? If the rules protecting the passer are to be flaunted they should be removed from the book altogether.

In its place a rule like this should be inserted: "The passer is fair game for the defense at all times. He should be pounded, harrassed, roughed and otherwise mistreated until he no longer has any. desire, will, or physical ability to pass. A defensive player can tackle, block, push, slug or kick the passer at will. Anything that destroys his will to pass is legal." Should such a rule be written into the books there would be a great hue and cry from all corners of the land.

BUT WHAT ARE THEY DOING TO THE PASSERS RIGHT NOW? Third Game Lockman Cracks Three-Run Homer As National Loop Champs Win By CARL LUNDQUIST NEW YORK, Oct. 6. (U.R Jaunty Jim Hearn, a Georgia peash of a pitcher, put Destiny's Kids back in the front in the world series today when he hurled the New York Giants to a 6 to 2 victory over the now crestfallen New York Yankees. A joyous, coatless crowde of 52,035, largest crowd ever to see a world series game in a National League park, cheered on ihelr inaominable darlings in a victory made easy by both the physical and mental miscues of the not-too-nifty Yankees. i Sharing the exalted heights with Hearn as the Giants made it two vic tories out of three in the classic was another Dixie boy, Whitey Lockman, of Charlotte, N.

who shot three- run line drive home run into the lower rightfield stands in a weird five-run fifth-Inning rally. Relies ed by Jones 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. Hearn walked eight batters and hit another which put him in more trouble than little Orphan Annie. And when he forced home the tally in the seventh, Leo'Durocher's frazzled nerves could take it no longer. Jones ctme in and retired the side.

Even so the Atlanta dandy might have come through unscathed. For with all of his wildness, no runner got to second base before 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. The Giants were in command in this one for the entire distance. Before the big wrap-up rally in the fifth, when all runs were unearned, they stepped briskly into the lead, 1 to 0, in the second, reversing their usual tactics in which they make most of their runs after two men were out, they got this big tally with nobody retired.

Bobby Thomson rifled a grand double down the leftfield line and Rookie Willie Mays delivered his first world series hit, a single to score Bobby. Raschi Has Trouble 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, w-ho had been hiUess in the series until today, 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 for a putout, Stanky rammed him 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 McDougald and Joe Di-Maggio appeared to be fighting each other to retrieve the ball that had bounded into short centerfield. Dependable Alvin Dark then sent Stanky home with a single through the drawn-in infield. Hank Thompson, the substitute right fielder, followed with a single that sent Dark to third.

The ball went just past the outstretched glove of Second-Baseman McDougald. Monte Iffln, until today the prize hitting star of the series, was fooled by Raschi and he topped a slow roller toward third base. Bobby Brown fired the ball to Yogi Berra and It (Continued on Page 2 Column 2) The Box NEW YORK. Oct. 6.

UF) Official box score of today's third game of the 1951 World Series: NEW YORK (A) AB A Woodling, lt 4 1 1 3 0 0 Rizzuto, 4 1 1 2 4 1 McDougald, 2b ...3 0 2 2 2 0 DiMaggio, cf 4 0 0 4 0 0 B(4, 3 0 1 5 11 Brown. 3b ........3 0 0 10 Collins, lb 3 0 0 6 0 Bauer, rf 4 0 0 2 0 0 Raschi, 1 0 0 Hogue. 0 0 0 0 a-Hopp 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ostrowski, p. ....0 0 0 0 0-0 b-Mize 1 0 0 0 0 0 Totals ..30 2 5 24 8 2 a Walked for Hogue in Filed out for Ostrowski in 9th. NEW YORK N) AB A Stanky, 2b 2 1 1 2 2 0 Dark, ss 4 1 1 4 0 Thompson, rf 3 1 1 1 Irvin.

If 3 1 0 2 0 0 Lockman, lb 4 1 1 10 1 1 Thomson, 4 1 13 4 0 Mays, cf 4 0 2 3 Westrum, 4 0 0 2 11 Hearn, 3 0 0 0 2 Jones, 0 0 0 0 1 0 Totals 31 6 7 27 15 2 NEW YORK (A) 000 080 0112 NEW YORK (N) 010 050 OOx 6 Earned runs: Yankees 2, Giants 1. Run batted in: Mays. Dark, Lockman 3, Collins. Woodling. Two-base: Thomson.

Horn runs: Lockman. Woodling. Double plays: Stanky to Dark to Lockman; Hearn to Dark to Lockman to Dark; Rizzuto to McDougald to Collins. Left: New York A 10: New York 5. Bases on balls: Off Raschi 3 Irvin.

Thompson, Stanky); Hearn 8 (Woodling. Mcfougald 2. Raschi. Berra, Hopp, Brown. Collins).

Struck out: By Raschi 3 (Thompson, Stanky, Hearn) Ostrowski 1 (Lockman): Hearn 1 (DiMaggio). Hits: Off Raschi 5 In 4Vi innings: Hogue 1 in lj; Ostrowski 1 in 2: Hearn 4 in 7i: Jones 1 in IV. Hit by pitcher: Raschi 1 (Stanky); Hearn 1 (Rizzuto). Hearn: Loser: Raschi. Umpires: Joe Paparella (AL).

plate; Al Barlick (NL), first base: Bill Summer (AL), second base: Lee Ballanfant (NL). third base; John Stevens (AL), left field foul line: Ert Gore (NL). right field foul line. Time: 2:42. Attendance; 52,033 (paid).

Receipts; 1243.961.10. AUSTIN. Texas, Oct. 6. (JPh-Texas found the running attack it has been searching for today and combined it with a proven defense to crush North Carolina, 45-20.

Left Half Gib Dawson, a 170-pound speedster from Douglas, finally ran the way Texas coaches knew he could and hit pay dirt twice. He opened the Longhorn scoring by catch ing Quarterback Jones' 10-yard pass in the end zone for Texas' first tally in the first quarter. North Carolina's Tar' Heels cracked right back with an 87-yard drive. Fullback Dick Weiss took the ball on a spinner and drove through his left guard eight yards to put North Caro lina briefly in the lead as Abie Wil Hams kicked the extra points. But the blistering Texas attack was just getting warmed up.

Stung at being behind for the first time this season, the Texas Long horns smashed to three touchdowns in five minutes. Dawson lit the fuse in the second quarter with a breath-taking 56-yard run. He swept right end, cut back sharply to his left as Jones threw a key block and then outran the North Carolina secondary which had over-shifted to his right. The drive covered 65 yards. North Carolina then kicked off Instead of receiving and Texas swept 62 yards in four plays.

Fullback Richard Ochoa got the big bite, 48 yards straight through the middle for the first touchdown of his varsity career. Recovers Fumble Clifford Polk recovered a North Carolina fumble on the Tar Heels 16 to set up the next score. Jones slid off left tackle from the one. where Dawson had put the ball with a nine-yard sprint. Dawson kicked three extra points to account for a total of 15 points, one-third the Texas total.

The 45-20 victory disproved complaints of some Texas backers that the Longhorns might be great on defense but were impotent on offense. Texas scored in every period and revealed ability to sustain its attack by marching 35, 65, 62, 69 and 74 yards to touchdowns. The Longhorns continued to make the most of opportunities. A recovered fumble on North Carolina's 16-yard line led to a score, and Bill Bible's 34-yard runback of an intercepted North Carolina pass to the Tar Heel six paved the way for Dean Smith's six-continued on Page 3 Column 7) Tampa Runs Wild Over Gamecocks University of Tampa proved too strong for the Jacksonville (Ala.) State College team last night winning, 40-0 before a crowd of about 7000 fans. Tampa threatened in the early part of the opening period when they moved from their 48 to the Teachers three-yard marker where they lost the ball on downs.

During the march the Spartans picked up three first downs coupled with a 15-yard penalty against the Teachers for a personal foul. Se-quella and Harris led the ground attack. Dacus quick-kicked on first down and the ball rolled out of bounds on Tampa's 47. Sequella got away for 30 yards to the 23 but the attack bogged and the Gamecocks took the ball on downs on the 17-yard stripe. Chicko Intercepts Pass Chicko intercepted Washburn's pass on the 20-yard marker and ran all the way for a Aplin (Continued on Page 5 Column 5) fashioned English, to hand the TURNED INTO a panty-waist tough, and kids who haven't and Piatt St.

bridges, with three addi tional stations on Davis Islands. The course will be along the river from Lowry Park to Tampa Bay, around Davis Islands and back up the river to the park. Other entries are: D. J. Casseira.

Louis E. Sine, Lem Connelly, H. Alday, Vern Flannagin, Jim Chadoin, Bob Lazenby, Buzzy Wolf, Bob Redding, Barney Gugel, Harold Fuller, Frankie Rodrequez, Whitey Miller, E. A. Crum.

W. C. Adams, M. J. Larisey, W.

J. Ward, Bob Niel, F. L. Brock, Dan Levesque, H. J.

Fuller. Johnny Hicks Stars In Southeastern Conference Game At Lexington Lexington, Oct. 6 u.pj--a Georgia Tech team inspired by Johnny Hicks breakaway running took advantage of a disastrous strategical error by Kentucky today to upset the Wildcats, 13-7, before 35,000 fans. Holding a one-point lead as the fourth period or a bitter defensive struggle began, Kentucky tried to make a yard for a first down on it own 38-yard line. Halfback Larry Jones slipped and fell, giving Tech the ball on the Kentucky 36.

After Fullback Glenn Turner and Halfback George Maloof banged the ball down to the 21, Quarterback Darrell Crawford, who stole Babe Parilli's thunder this hot Autumn afternoon, passed to End Pete Ferriss, who went all the way to the one-yard line. Crawford Scores Then Craaford himself sneaked over center for the touchdown and Turner added the point that handed Kentucky its third consecutive defeat something that hadn't happened to the Wildcats since 1948. Johnny Hicks, a thunderbolt from wasn't in there when Tech scored its winning touchdown, but it was the 170-pound sophomore halfback who shook the Engineers out of the doldrums late in the third period. Hicks took the ball on a deceptive handoff from Crawford on the Tech 21, and burst through a gaping hole off tackle to streak 74 yards to the Kentucky five before Emory Clark hauled him down from behind. Maloof made half the distance in one crack at the line and Turner plowed over for the touchdown.

Kentucky fans felt a litUe better when Turner's kick just missed the uprights, leaving Tech trailing, 7-6. But then came that fatal decision by Kentucky to gamble on making a first down deep in its own territory. It was the chance "The Rambling Wrecks" had been looking for, and they didn't pass it by. The Kentucky offense which has sputtered and fizzled through the past three games was a thing of beauty this afternoon for the first four minutes of the game. Taking the ball from the opening (Continued on Page 4 Column 3) VMI Rallies By 20-7 Count WILLIAMSBURG, Oct.

6. (U.PJ Virginia Military Institute sprang a bewildering formation on William and Mary and tumbled the de-emphasized Giants of the Southern Conference 20-7, with three late touchdowns here today before 16,000 perspiring fans. Galloping George Chumbley, VMI's junior halfback, powered the Keydet attack in a second-half drive to come back after William and Mary opened the scoring, accounting for two touchdowns himself. Halfbacks Ed MiodzewskI and John Connors powered an 83-yard march from William and Mary's 10 and Quarterback Dickie Lewis cut around left end for the Indian score in the third period. L.

Q. Lewis. William and iwarys extra point specialist, con verted In his only chance of the afternoon. Minutes later Chumbley, ended a VMI march half the length of the field dashing two yards around the left end to score and Fullback Tommy Birges kicked the extra point to tie the score. Halfback Curley Powell set up VMI's next tally with a 34-yard run to the William and Mary 21 in the fourth period.

Chumbley took over again one play later to drive within two feet of the goal line, then fell over for the score. Birge's second conversion attempt failed. Quarterback A. J. Marchand, sneaking over from six-inches out at the end of a drive VMI'a own seven-yard line, added the last tally with seconds to go.

Blrge made the conversion. WILLIAM MARY 0 0 7 07 VMI 0 0 7 1320 Toucnaowns: William and Mary: Lewis; VMI CKumbltj (2). Marchand. Points touchdowns: William and after Hines VMI: Birge (2). Temple Upset Favored Rutgers By 14-7 Score PHILADELPHIA, Oct 6 CP) An underdog Temple University team turned a fumble into a second period touchdown to break a 7 to 7 tie and beat Rutgers 14 to 7 this hot Indian Summer day at Temple Stadium.

Paul Maguire, a block busting halfback, smashed over with the winning TD from the Rutgers five. Woman Pilot To Compete In Outboard Marathon Today ACTION IN WORLD SERIES gams of the world series today. Willie Mays' single in the second second as he tried a steal in the Miss. State Wins Over Georgia, 6-0 By HAROLD FOREMAN STARK VTLLE, Oct. 6 (U.R) Mississippi State twisted the Georgia Bulldog's tail with a touchdown right after the kickoff today and hung on through a flurry of last-quarter passes by Zeke Bartkowski to score a 6 to 0 upset.

Twenty thousand fans watched the Maroons score within two and one-half minutes as Halfback Wally Beach went around left end for eight yards to the goal. But the hair-raising thrills of the game were saved for the closing minutes when Sophomore Bratkowski began hitting his mark with pass after pass. He moved the ball from the Georgia eight all the way up to the Mississippi State 22. Bratkowski Replaced Here, with 17 seconds lefi to go, Coach Wally Butts, of Georgia, replaced Bratkowski with Billy Grant. Grant faded back to pass, couldn't find a receiver, and lit out around his own left end only to be knocked out of bounds on the nine as the game ended.

A short time before that, Georgia had moved down to the Mississippi State 14 and Bratkowski hurled a pass which End Gene White snared, but White was a couple of feet out of bounds. Bratkowski set a new Southeastern Conference individual passing record by tossing 39 times, breaking the for mer record set by Harry Gilmer, of Alabama, against Tennessee in 1946 Bratkowski completed 14 of the heaves for a total net gain of 144 yards. Mississippi State kicked off to open the game. Bratkowski punted to the State 28. Tomy Kotowski returned to the State 46.

Frank Branch passed to Tom Rushing, good to the Gedrgia 34 and after Beach ran it to the 31 Branch completed another pass to Ed Evans, good to the 23, Beach hit the lina to the eight and then went (Continued on Page 3 Column 2) Five of Cornell's six tallies came in the first half and Cornell Coach Lefty James used his reserves during the rest of the game. Colgate made two of its three touchdowns against the Cornell second and third stringers in the final quarter. Cornell 13 21 7 041 Colgate 0 6 0 1218 Cornell scoring: Touchdowns Merz, Seidenberg. Calvo, Engel. Cliggott, Scazzero.

Conversions Kirk 5. Colgate scoring: Touchdowns Tot-ten 2, Lalla. Isbell Paces Baylor To Win Over Tulane By PRESTON McGRAW NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 6. (U.R) Bavlor University, by the grace of Larry Isbell's passing arm and kick ing foot, beat Tulane's stubbornly re sisting football team, 27 to 14, today Forty thousand spectators, panting from the heat In Sugar Bowl stadium, saw Isbell, as cool as if he were practicing behind a barn, punt favored Baylor out of tight spots and throw the passes that brought it victory.

Without Isbell, it might have been a different story, even though seven of Tulane's top players had bad colds and two first string men Tackle Dan Roeas and End Hike McLean couldn't play because of injuries. Tulane's sophomore quarterback, Pete Clement, sprang an unsuspected pass attack. Tulane even took the lead early in the second period and held it until three minutes before the first half ended. Baylor started its first scoring drive on its 46. Isbell's passes to End Stan Williams, Haf back Jerry Ccody and End Harold Riley put the ball on the Tulane 28.

Then Isbell missed a pass. On the next play, he faked a pass started to run the right hand side of his line, cut through the whole Tulane team in an S-curve and scored stand ing up. Ties Score Tulane tied it up within two mln utes. taking the ball on its own 26 Tulane advanced it to the Baylor 10 yard line in four running and tw nassins Dlavs. Fullback Ronnie Kent slipped around left end for the score, Tulane went on the offensive again just after the second period started Fullback Charlie Daigle, substitutine for Kent, grabbed an Isbell pass in the middle of the field and ran to the Baylor 29.

Clement started pass' ine and in four tries had it on the (Continued on Page 4--Column 6) Virginia Crushes Virginia Tech By 33-0 Score ROANOKE, Oct. 6 (JP) Held in check during a rough and rugged first half, power-packed Virginia unloaded its offensive guns after intermission here 'today to clout willing but weak Virginia Tech. 33-0. The favored Cavaliers punched over two touchdowns in the opening period, spent most of the second quarter fighting off Tech threats, then went wild in the last two periods when Quarterback Rufus Barkley found the passing range and Fullback Gerald Furst started hitting the crumbling Tech line for enormous running gains. Harold Hoak, junior halfback, tallisd the first two Virginia touchdowns.

Halfbacks Bobby Pate and Pete Potter and End Bill Chlsholm got the other Cavalier scores. Virginia 14 0 6 1333 Virginia Tech 0 0 0 0 0 Football Scores SOUTH Tampa, 40; Jacksonville, State, 0. Georgia Tech, 13: Kentucky, 7. Parris Island, 20; Quantico Marines, 14. Washington Lee, 34; West Vir ginia, 0.

Western Maryland, 46; Randolph -Ma con, 7. Tennessee, 26; Duke, 0. Maryland, 33; George Washington, 6. Fort Jackson, 40; Shaw Field Air Force Base, 0. Wake Forest, 56; Richmond, 6.

VMI, 20; 7. Vanderbilt, 22; Alabama, 20. Baylor, 27; Tulane, 14. Mississippi State; Georgia, 0. Virginia, 33; Virginia Tech, 0.

Virginia Union, 26; Howard, 6. South Carolina, 21; Furman, 6. South Carolina State, 35; Chaflin, 0. The Citadel, 34; Davidson, 14. Leland, 70; Rust, 0.

Emory and Henry, 33; Hampden- Sydney, 7. Case, 38; Washington and Jefferson, 7. Virginia State, 62; Shaw, 0. Xavier 25; Grambling 7. St.

Augustine. Johnson C. Smith, 0. Leland, 70; Rust, 0. Miles 47; Tougaloo 3.

Maryland State, 52; Brooklyn College, 0. Bainbridge Naval Center, 41; Wilson Teachers, 8. Morris Harvey, 56; Concord (W. 0. Ohio 13; Western Michigan, 0.

Northern Michigan, Ferris Institute, 7 (tie). Albion, Hope, 0. Puget Sound, 58; Eastern Washington, 0. EAST Maine. 42; Vermont, 0.

Columbia, 35; Harvard, 0. St. Lawrence. 20; Hobart, 7. Holy Cross, 54; Ford ham, 20.

Princeton, 24; Navy, 20. (Continued on Page 5 Column 7) Indiana Whips Pittsburgh Grid Team By 13 to 6 BLOOMINGTON, Oct. 6. (JP) Indiana whipped Pittsburgh foot ball team, 13 to 6, today on two touchdowns by Halfback Eugene (Pat) Ged- man. The Duquesne, lad ran 85 yards for one and caught a 16-yard pass from Quarterback Lou D'Achille for the other.

Smarting from last week's 48-6 'loss to Notre Dame, Indiana roared back today with a fancy offensive combination starring Gedman, D'Achille and Halfback Bobby Robertson. Flaying an Indiana squad showing 25 Pennsylvanians on its roster, Pitt started out strong with a second quarter touchdown by Halfback Bill Reynolds. Reynolds dashed 17 yards around end to top off a 58-yard Pitt march. Indiana 0 6 7 0 13 Pittsburgh 0 6 0 0 6 Joan Bedford, a woman pilot, will compete in the 25 mile marathon outboard race today on Hillsborough River starting at 2 o'clock. She is the only woman in a field of 22 drivers.

Lt, Col. John Baumberger of the Civil Air Patrol and Fred Hansen of OEM amateur radio hams, will use two-way radio and follow the race relaying various positions to the judges stand at Lowry Park. There will be automobile stations receiving the information at Columbus, Garcia, Fortune. Cass, Lafayette Cornell Passes Way To 41-18 Victory Over Colgate I aL? IF jr HAMILTON, N. Oct.

6. OP) Cornell's well-oiled football machine exploded a furious passing and running attack today to trounce outclassed Colgate, 41 to 18. About 12.000 fans nearly filled Colgate's stadium despite an intermittent drizzle throughout the game. Quarterback Rocco Calvo's passing accounted for two of Cornell's six touchdowns and set the stage for a third. Hal Siedenberg and Bob Engel turned in most of the Big Red's ground yardage and each bucked over for a touchdown.

Calvo completed 10 of 15 passes for a total of 184 yards. ENTERS BOAT MARATHON TODAY Joan Bedford is the only woman driver entered In the outboard marathon on the Hillsborough River today..

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