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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 75

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Los Angeles, California
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75
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tQgangClCgCimCS SUNDAY, SEPT. 18,1 935-Part II 7 kees Defeat Sox, hcrease 1 to Yan lUlilMf Mill liaaillliaaaaiaanaiaaiailllllliaiM I CI (Ufa Rizzuto on List of Injured BY PAUL ZIMMERMAN Sports Editor NEW YORK, Sept. 17 New York's Yankees won another big victory today, beating the Boston Red Sok, 4-1 to put thera a full game ahead of Cleveland in the tight American League race but it came close to being as costly as last night's win. Little Phil Rizzuto, veteran shortstop, was hit on the back of the head with a pitched ball in the fourth inning and, while the blow split his plastic '-cf Voiv ni; -v' tUy MJ Fir 4 AWW Oviw- CY fV. rf- rf.

fsTANtiy) 41 lSSs--- fJ ley! GOLDEN ARM Ronnie charges ot full speed to left, halts suddenly at 28 and lobs Rosen end zone. This was In 21-0 Timet Ml si Bruins Long Way From -Hyland BY DICK HYLAND In retrospect, and considering all angles of the Bruin-Texas Aggie contest Friday evening which ended with a 21-0 victory for the Uclans, it may be said again: fiiirwi 4 tt ft lis ail 1SI 4 i' tv AV 3 m'M 4 Cay helmet, the doctor's report was that his injury was not serious. Mickey Mantle, the league's leading home run hitter, pulled a muscle last night and Bill Skowron suffered a broken toe in batting practice. So there was no great elation in the Yankee clubhouse yesterday after the former Seattle hurler, Tommy Byrne, pitched his way out of trouble in the ninth after loading the bases, to win his 16th victory against four defeats. One-Game Edge Although the New York margin is only one game, the Yankees now enjoy an actual two-game edge the Indians, losing for the second straight day to Detroit, have two more losses than the Gotham prides and joy.

"We have to win all the rest of them," said Manager Casey Stengel. "That's the only way you can look at it the way we've been going this year." His players were equally pessimistic. Yankee pitching is so thin that non3 knows whn trouble is going to strike. Jensen Homers Byrne had held the Red Sox to two hits, going into the ninth, one of them Jackie Jensen's home run, but, as Stengel was saying in the dressing room, Jackie would have had three home runs and a triple if the game had beeii played in Fenway Park, Boston. That's where New York closes the season with four games next week.

The former All-Americah from California hit his homer today, a king-sized poke, into the "left-field stands in the sixth inning for Boston's only run. He hit two other terrific fly balls in the same region and another to deep center As it was, Elston Howard robbed Jensen of a homer in the second, reaching into the third row of the left-field stands to spear the long smash. It was easily the finest catch made in Yankee Stadium this year. Good Support Byrne got sterling support and had a 2-hitter going until he weakened in the ninth. Norm Zauchin led off with a single to left and Grady Hat-ton pushed him along with a scratch hit that Joe Collins couldn't field in time back of first, after Sam White had popped out.

After getting behind, 3 to 1, Byrne then struck out Jim Piersall. Dick Malzone, batr ting for Pitcher George Susce, drew a walk to load the bases and then, with the count ,3 and 2, Eddie Joust sent $. towering fly into deep center to end the ball game. The Yankees went to work on Bill Henry early, scoring two runs in the first on three hits and a stolen base. They got another in the third when Henry's wildness loaded the bases.

After he departed Susce came on and walked Billy Martin to force in another run before the Red Sox reliefer could get the side out. Boiton wat Klaua.ss riwnrt Rnlhng.M Williams. 1 J4ns4n.rf Zawnlo.lb Whlt.c Harton.3b Malcona FVraU.rf ilrnry.p-li Conralo ABHOAN.w York 4 0 A 1 0 0 0jlarrt.il 3 0 0 0 0 0 rwr.rf AH HO A 2 10 0 0 0 0 0 2 112 0 0 0 6 3 3 0 0 0 10 4 15 0 3 0 0 3 4 11 0 B.rra.4 2 16 0 Bauor.rf 2 0 1 Homrd.tf 4 10 0 0 0 OWilHni.lb 4 0 2 0 Brrne.p 1 0 0 21 2 0 0 II 0 0 0 01 HID 3 13 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 11 4 1 1 10 10 -I IWatt 31 4 24 61 To'al, 29 7 27 7 f'armll ran for Riuuio is 2nd. Hal'-! for KIbiib in falsnoa ran for Ha'tnn in 9th. Oon.oli walked fr Sn-, In 9th, Jooat filed jt for (iotlman In 9th.

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8ou. Tuao 2a. alio. Attaianca 40.94X Bruin win Friday night. cl Eya photos by Julian Bob Roblnton 87 61 .588 4 6 82 64 .562 8 8 74 73 .503 WA 7 62 85 .422 28H 5 51 94 .352 38 Vi 4 50 95 .345 39 3 s---.

4 These 1955 Bruins are one long way from equaling their departed brothers of 1054. The green but willing Aggies again and again handled the Bruin forwards once Coach Red Sanders relieved his first stringers. Indeed, there were times when individuals on the first Bruin team were handled without ceremony by the young, outweighed Texans. If that is so, what will the Marylanders do to them! Own Miscues The Aggies were contained F'riday. as much by their own lpiscues as they were by the Bruins.

Sanders had almost perfect defenses set up against his one-time assistant, Bear Bryant, and Bruins leaped on these mis-cues with aU four feet to keep the visitors in the hole. The Aggies penetrated but once past the Bruin 20 yard line, to the 15, and were immediately bumped back to the 24 when Rommie Loudd decided that was far enough and grabbed Texan Quarterback Wright for a 9-yard loss. Several things remained sol Knox takes pass from center, idly in mind when the game was long One, Center Steve Palmer is quite likely to become the equal of Donn Moomaw before the season is long under way. He was blanketing the field from sideline to sideline Friday evening and was under the first Texan pass thrown when it came down. That took the Bruins off a hot spot after Bradley had fumbled the opening kickoff.

Two, Rommie Loudd wants to play football this season. His defensive work was the finest it has ever been and his pursuit of plays relentless and everlasting. Large Headaches Three, no one is going to push Tackle Gil Moreno very far this season. Four, Don Shinnick yet has things to learn about defense, but his blocking on offense was steam-rollerlike, especial ly off tackle. Tom Adams, the big sophomore from Riverside, is going to make the Bruin rooters forget Bob Long so soon as he learns how to spear-point the Turn to Page 8, Column 3 When Rocky Marciano defends his heavyweight boxing championship against Archie Moore Tuesday night in New York, Sports Editor Paul Zimmerman will be.

at ringside to bring Times' readers special coverage of the event. Before the fight he will visit the camps of both boxers, and, in daily stories, write his report on the training methods and condition of the principals. Furthermore, an entire picture page in Wednesday's sports section will be used to depict the fight in its various stages. Be sure to read The Times for Zimmerman's accurate analysis of this fight between the only undefeated heavyweight titleholder in the history of boxing and the 38-year-old challenger. ball to Johnny Hermann In Tigers Dump Cleveland Again, 3-1 CLEVELAND, 17 -H) Al Rosen wore the goat's horns today and the Detroit Tigers, for the second time in less than 24 hours, defeated Cleveland 3-1 to dump the despairing Indians a full game behind the league-leading New York Yankees.

Cleveland's third successive defeat together with New York's 4-1 triumph over Boston put the Indians one game behind in the all-important loss column. Cleveland has only six games left to eight for the Yankees. Rosen, In the throes of a dismal batting slump, left five runners on base, four of them in scoring position, in two successive times at bat. He also committed a glaring error which led to Detroit's tie-breaking run in the fifth inning. Kaline Comes Alive In all, the Indians stranded 15 baserunners as time and again, Frank Lary, a gritty little right-handler with a big curveball, halted them in their tracks with men in scoring position.

The broad-shouldered rookie pitched an erratic game, walking six besides giving up 10 hits but ha'was superb in the pinches to post his 14th victory against as many defeats. Al Kaline, hitless in his last 15 times at bat before today's game, was the Tiger batting star. He drove in two runs and scpred the other, socking a double, two singles and drawing a walk in five times at bat. Dttrelt RlllUI.M Toriwon.la Killncrt MiMPll.lf Tiltle.ef WHwn.c Urj, AB A CIln4 93! 6 3 7 llArlls.2b 4 3 2 3 0 2 0 0 4 0 1 0 K.ln.lh 3 2 3 0 AlloKrlll 4 0 6 0 Hfsn.o 4 10 AB HO A 4 0 3 0 3 18 4 4 12 0 4 10 0 5 114 3 17 0 0 0 0 0 3 14 1 2 0 2 0 3 12 2 110 0 0 0 0 1 2 111 110 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 112 arlrttlind.M Harrell.M L4moD.p-li Ktner Moui.9 Tntill 38 13 27 7 Totl 33 10 2713 Niniinn KiundM out for Hrcnn in $tb. Jlilrhcll 4inll fur Striokliofl in ilh.

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7a. aUuad- U.tVsW FORENSIC BOUT If Gab Will Do If, Moore's Cinch fo Win BY PAUL ZIMMERMAN Sports Editor NEW YORK, Sept. 17 Regardless of what happens at Yankee Stad ium Tuesday night, Archibald Lee Moore has won the free-style pre-fight forensic championship hands down over Rocky Marciano, the defending heavyweight boxing king he hopes to depose. It may be the contrast of Marciano's quiet, approach to the impending 15-round fight but certainly Moore, the world's light heavyweight king, has been the most vocal contender the heavyweight ranks have seen in a long time. Final Workouts The San Diego scrapper's oratorical attack doesn't seem to have affected the odds, however.

They are 13 to 5 in favor of the only undefeated heavyweight champion in boxing's history and 'that's just a notch or two shorter than the opening price when the fight was signed. Each fighter is expected to indulge in final workouts tomorrow and come on into New York on Monday, so the die is cast so far as training is concerned. Fuel for Talk Moore's controversial assault on the champion started, of course, long before the bout was ever signed. It was initiated in a campaign to get the bout before Marciano took on Don Cockell. Since i.he fight was signed has hardly let up.

The wonder is that he's had breath enough for workouts. The general thought is that the champion can neither box nor Turn to Page 8, Column 1 National League Prt. Brooklyn 4 S3 .639 Milwaukee 82 68 124 New York 75 71 "14 184 Philadelphia 74 73 .503 20 Cincinnati 72 77 23 Chloaso 70 77 .476 24 St. Louis 64 S3 .435 30 Pittsburgh 57 88 .393 36 Games behind leader. Vesterday'i Results Xew York.

8: Brooklyn. 5. Chicago. 3: Cincinnati. 2.

St. Louis. 4: Milwaukee, 1. Only game scheduled. (ianie Today New York (Gomez, 9-8) at Brooklyn (Ersklne, 11-8).

St. Louis (Poholskv. 9-10) at Milwaukee (Spahn. 15-14). Pittsburgh (Law.

10-9. and Hall. 5-5) at Philadelphia (Wehmeler, 10-11. and Rogovin, 3-3). Cincinnati (Nuxhall.

16-11) it Chicago (Hacker, 11-14). BUKICH SCORES TWICE, PASSES FOR TWO MORE BERKELEY, Sept. 17, Rudy Buklch. passed for two touchdowns and ran over another pair himself today as Ft. Ord defeated Ft.

Carson, 32-19, in an Army football game. Bukich, who played for Southern California and the Los Angeles Rams, passed to Stan Wacholtz for a six-yard score and to Paul Cameron for a 41-yard tally. His scoring runs went 62 and 16 yards. Cameron ran a punt 60 yards for the other Ord TD. Tony Curcillo scored two Carson touchdowns and Ronald Bean plunged one yard for the other.

LSU Scores Victory for New Coach BATON ROUGE, Sept. 17 Wl Louisiana State University, showing off a new coach, outhustled, outplayed and outscored mighty Kentucky, 19-7, tonight in the season's football opener for both squads. Junior Quarterback Matt Burns pitched two scoring tosses to Halfback Vince Gonzales, and Halfback Joe May raced a kickoff back 95 yards to get Coach Paul Dietzel off to a winning start at LSU. All-America Candidate Bob Hardy was humiliated by the hustling LSU squad, having a key pass intercepted and being thrown for large losses in the fourth quarter. Dietzel, 31-year-old former Army and Kentucky assistant, displayed a well-coached, scrappy team that fought back viciously every time Kentucky threatened.

When Hardy hit his favorite target, End Howie Schnel-lenberger, for a 16-yard scoring pass in the third quarter, May ripped off his long scoring dash on the next kickoff. SCORE B7 QUARTERS Kf ntuckr 1 LSU 0 1J 0-19 Kentucky scorlnr: TD Schnellenbfr-ttr (16-yard trora PAT Hushes, LSU icorlnt: TD Gontilei 2 fl3-yard Pt from Burns: 29-rard pass from Burns): Mar OS-yard, klckoft IS-turs). FAT Orihinv. vSV 4 4 DEFT THEFT Elston Howard, New York left fielder, leaps high to rob Boston's Jackie Jensen of homer in second inning. Yanks took full-game lead with 4-1 win.

Wlrtphota AL Pennant Race at a Glance Pet. New 90 56 .616 8 Cleveland 90 53 .608 1.6 ZIMMERMAN COVERS CHAMPIONSHIP BOUT Chicago Boston Detroit Kansas City Washington Baltimore 1 It AX lilliliill Games behind leader. Games left. Yesterday's Results New York, Boston, 1. Baltimore, Washington, 1.

Detroit, Cleveland, 1. Chicago, 12; Kansas City, 8. Games Today Boston (Nixon 12-8) at New York (Turley 16-13). Detroit (Miller 0-1) at Cleveland (Garcia 11-12 or Score 15-10). Washington (Stone 6-12) at Baltimore (Wilson 11-17).

Chicago (Donovan (14-8) at Kansas City (Ditmar 11-12). Remaining; Schedule NEW YORK (8): Home (D Boston (1) Sept. 18, Away (7) Boston (4), Sept. 23, 23, 24, 25; Washington (3), Sept. 19 20.

21. CLEVELAND (6): Home (1) Detroit, Sept. 18. Away (5) Chicago (2), Sept. 20, 21; Detroit (3), Sept.

23, 24, 25. CHICAGO (6); Home (5) Cleveland (2), Sept. 20, 21; Kansas City (3), Sept. 23, 24, 25. Away (1) Kansas City (1), Sept.

18. Paul Zimmerman k--'----ii-------''--in-lf1ar--laalama--ltil n.tt A a.

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