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The Atlanta Constitution from Atlanta, Georgia • 29

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Atlanta, Georgia
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29
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i y'r JOHN BMDBERRY Dodd, Sanders Stage Verbal Gridiron Duel NASHVILLE, Tenn. A Friday night radio program, featuring Bobby Dodd, of Georgia Tech, and Red Sanders, of Vanderbilt, Is the current talk of the Tennessee hills. The two coaches proved themselves equal to any task in the show business with their sDon- 'T 1Ht ATtNTA CONSTITUTION Scpf, 2S. IS taneous ad libbing. It started when the announcer asked both coaches about the "scholastic standard" of their schools.

Dodd replied: "I know we have to be smarter at Tech than Vanderbilt because our boys can't play unless they learn the signals. This didn't faze Sanders, who came back with: "Well, all I ffy' know Is our boys look at a few books during the football season and wa don't have any who can't read or write." The announcer asked how many boys he had "ready to go" against the Yellow Jackets. "What do you mean 'ready to Red asked. "Well have about 35 in uniform, if that's what you mean." I Vols Shouldn't Lose The program gave Dodd an opportunity to get even with Gen. Bob Nev- land at Tennessee, who has been criticizing the Tech schedule this year.

Asked about the Tennessee team, Dodd replied: "Well, they have the best material in the conferenc over there, and, frankly, thy should win 'em all." Asked about Vanderbilt, Dodd replied with a grin, I know they have a good team and I'll have to say they have a great coach because he's standing right here by me." Dodd was asked what he expected from Vanderbilt and he replied simply, "The worst." In reply to the same question, Sanders said "Tech can do everything that can be done with a 'football." Both coaches said their teams were ready to play and that there would be no alibis. P-IU The old argument about the formation and single wing came up. "There's no end to the controversy, Sanders said.1 formation coaches think their system Is the best and -I lean toward the single wing. Both sides have strong points. Actually, though, it's just a question of personnel." Dodd agreed.

"I like the he said, "because we can use smaller men. I also don't believe that the defense can shift as quickly to meet the as it can for the single wing. However, as Sanders said, you can win either of them if you have the material." This is one of football's age-old arguments and It isn't likely to die any time soon. Dodd later strengthened his argument by pointing out the number of backs he has this season who wouldn't be playing on a ingle-wing team. Constitution Staff Photo Kenneth Rogers George Carden, 18, Chattanooga, Rams Into the Georgia Line for a Two-yard Gain as Eli Maricich, 33, Georgia, Waits to Tackle Him Writers Kid Dodd Nashville writers had a great time kidding Bobby Dodd about the size of his IFkMiffif Mk Mi? Irak hi 1 fotoball team.

"My, that's a big squad," Fred Russell remarked slyly on the practice field Friday afternoon. "Big!" exploded Dodd, "why that's the only college team in the country which doesn't have a 200-pounder in its starting lineup. I'll bet you 50 cents, and we'll weigh 'em, that our line doesn't average more than 181 pounds." "Nuts," prodded Russell "Look at that Patton out there. He must weigh 190. Pretty fair size for a halfback." "Yea," replied Dodd.

"And look at little Jimmy Jordan. We couldn't find any pads to fit him. Had to buy them in the children's department." Opir-Wimiy, Choo-Choo Railroads Texas, 34-7 By JACK JACKSON Constitution Sports Writer KENAN STADIUM, CHAPEL HILL, N. North Carolina's Tarheels came of age here yesterday afternoon. Carl Snavely's proud men in blue thrilled and shocked a capacity crowd of 43,500 fans as they avenged a 1947 rout at the hands of the University of Texas by trouncing the favored Longhorns By F.

M. WILLI ARI Constitution Snorts Writer SANFORD STADIUM, ATHENS It's beginning to look poses, like the only way Georgia can get by opening day of the football season without having its wits scared out is to draw a bye. prepared and cognizant most of the time of what was coming, simply couldn't keep up with th little, but speedy. Yellow Jackets. Hats should be doffed to Coacn Bobby Dodd and his staff for th excellent job they did in prepar- Continued on Pare 2-C man and Mathews.

Nor the backs, for that matter. Some clubs in the nation may have better ends than Tech but you couldn't prove it by me or Red Sanders, the Vandy coach. In the final analysis, it was Tech's overall team speed which won the game. Vanderbilt, well Continued From. Page 1 ered.

He leaped with two Vandy defenders, but when they came down it was Harvin who had the ball. It was a great catch. The payoff climaxed an aerial-assisted 80-yard drive. The play was Harvin's first as a varsity college ball player. All Fall Tech coaches have been predicting great things of him.

He's off to a fine start. Rated the dark horse of the Southeastern Conference in preseason predictions, Coach Wallace Butts' redshirted warriors came aroons close to becoming a cropper to "LOOKS LIKE A LONG WINTER FOR ME vastly underrated little Chattanooga here yesterday afternoon. itViWALLY BUTTS MOANS AFTER GAME Only a couple of quick fourth 34-7, and establishing themselves as one of the nation's top football By INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE The Boston Red Sox snapped the American League's three-way tie for first place yesterday by walloping the there throughout the third period although not a soul in the stands quarter touchdowns, one of them coming at bargain prices, enabled the Bulldogs to get by with a 14 to 7 decision before 12,500 fans. Trample Vols, 21-6 KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (U.P.) New York Yankees, 7-2, as Jack Kramer won his 17th victory.

The defeat dropped the Yan would have bet a Philippine cen-tavo that Tech wouldn't score again. It was that sort of game. The Jackets looked as if they could push one across any time Then after getting those 14 teams. It marked a happy beginning of a new season for the team which last year saw national prominence slip away as these same Texans crushed their hopes into the Lone Mississippi State's one-two Tulane Bops to 14 points, the Bulldogs did their dead level best to give them back to the Moccasins, succeeding in that generous effort only half way, which was in keeping with their mood for the day. ATHENS- Cpach "Scrappy" Moore, the ex Bulldoy quarterback whose Chattanooga football team came close to pulling great upset here this afternoon only to lose to Georgia, 14 to 7, said he was "immensely proud of his boys" for the way they performed.

He singled out Capt. Ralph Hutchinson, tackle; Vince Sarra-tore, a guard, and End John Javorsky for special praise. They were in there the whole game and Georgia was never able to budge, them. "I don't think the score today indicates the difference b-tween the two teams at all, but I believe It is a pretty fair story of the way this game was played, Coach Moore said. Coach Wallace Butts didn't like the Georgia quarter bar king at all, wasn't happy about anything and said so.

"Just think what North Carolina will do to us next week." said Wally. "It looks like a long, long Winter for me." punch Tom McWilliams and Harper Davis passed and ran the Maroons out of a hole today and then played cat and mouse with kees to second place, one full game behind Boston and the Cleveland Indians who defeated the Tigers in Detroit, 9-3, behind Cent Bearden's seven-hit hurling. Shaky support in the first inning gave Boston two unearned runs without a hit as both Tommy Henrich and Bobby Brown made errors. i They did everything else half way, too. Tennessee the rest of the way for THt STATISTICS Texas NC.

rirst downs 12 12 Net yards gained rushing 38 147 Forward passes attempted 33 14 Forward passes completed 13 7 Yds. gained forward pas'" S3 99 Forwards intercepted 3 3 Punting average 34. 64.3 As content as the Bulldogs were By GEORGE TISINGER Constitution Sports Writer NEW ORLEANS. La. Red Drew said he had lost something a decisive 21-to-6 victory before 35,00 fans.

Tennessee elected to shelve its traditional running game for a passing attack. But except for the iium lrtsi cell a mauaiua icom with nothing for three periods, it looked like they would have been content with 14 points in the last one, but they weren't and they almost wound up like they started Boston made it J'u the men from Tulane bore! br Johnnv Pesky and Ted Wil him out here yesterday afternoon! liams line double to left in the first period when it paid off. Mc when 60,000 people were kmd of third. The game, became a rout in awed as the Green Wave muddied the Crimson Tide, 21 to 14. all even.

The story of the scoring is easy. Georgia carved out a 79-yard march, beginning just at the end of the third quarter and ending It wasn't too easy to believe for those, who are used to seeing Ala EfcOWhJ PASSE5 FOR TECH'S SCORE soon after the fourth began, for its first score. Mp-'iV-Tiick luck; fis Msfe -Edge woke SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) The luck the Irish worked overtime yesterday as desperately pressed Notre Dame outlasted Purdue's Boilermakers, 28-27. It was a classic football season opener which had a record 59,343 crowd hysterical from start to finish at Notre Dame Stadium.

joe ueri scored it on a run around leit end alter taking a THE STATISTICS I Tulane Ala. First down 9 1 Net yards rushing. 213 Net yards passing 76 Forwards attempted 18 17 Forwards completed 7 Number of punts x-Avg. distance of punts 46.S 28.2 x-From line of scrimmage. Williams with his bullseye passes and Davis with his wiggle-hips had matters their own way.

After the first stanza, the Maroons rolled up a touchdown in each succeeding period. Tennessee fans got a lift in the first period when the Vols rolled 67 yards for their only score. Six pass plays, with J. B. Proctor on the business end, and five through the line put the Vols deep in scoring territory.

Fullback George Balitsaris hurtled across from the two. Powell's kick was wide. After the kickoff, McWilliams had his mates to the Tennessee Star State soil, 34-0, at Austin. It also marked the beginning of perhaps his greatest season for little Charlie Justice, who in the past two seasons has been one of the nation's most publicized athletes. It was Justice who accounted for four of the five Carolina scores, and it was Justice whose booming punts set Blair Cherry's team back time and time again.

The Asheville speedster threw scoring passes to Art Weiner and Bob Cox in the first 11 minutes of play, and sandwiched in a touchdown run of his own to give the Tarheels a 21-0 lead at that point. In the fourth period. Justice again circled left end for a fourth Carolina score, and a few moments later set up the fifth with a seven- they made up their minds and Vandy looked as if it couldn't score if they played two weeks, hand running. But Br. the fourth quarter start the fourth as Wally Moses singled, Rookie Bill Goodman doubled, and Pitcher Kramer whacked a afety to make it, Boston 5, New York 0.

Wally Moses greeted Reliever Bob Porterfield with a homer in the sixth. The Yankees broke the scoring Urn in the sixth on Henrich's dou-bl and a single to right by Brown. Kramer surrendered another New York tally in the eighth. Each team garnered seven hits, but shoddy Yankee fielding with errors both of omission and commission helped the Red Gox to shovel pass from Johnny Rauch, the play covering six yards. Then Geri kicked the extra point.

Chattanooga abandoned its con ed, this Mr. Joe E. Brown decided things could be carried too far so he fired a 15-yard pass to little servatism immediately and began passing on every play. Howard Derrick, a specialist in the aerial Jimmy Jordan, a lad so small they The Boilermakers, rightfully bama swagger through most anybody that comes along. But it happened yesterday in Tulane Stadium and an alert and possibly up- business, completed three in a buy his pads in the juvenile de boomed as the Big Nine's next row for a couple of first downs partment.

Jordan apparently was of the I aiiu-iuiuiiig iiuduc uuuxb luuft. uic several runs. Eli's Dwarfs Stem Brown lyard slant off tackle. and then had a fourth straight completion nullified by a penalty, which incidentally was the one they suffered all day. Then Derrick tried another pass Rose Bowl candidate, battled the Irish all over the turf and had the defending national champions behind, 13-12, in the third period.

That was the first time Notre Dame had trailed any body since their last defeat, 19 games ago. The Irish dissipated a 12-0 lead same opinion for he danced his way out of the arms of two tack-lers and tip-toed down the sideline to the cashier's window, 10 yards away. Jim Hutto blocked Bow-en's placement attempt and that was all the scoring, although again the 22,000 faithful wouldn't have and this time Ken McCall, a Geor North Carolina was unstoppable in that first period. The Tarheels gave one of the greatest offensive displays ever seen in Kenan Stadium. Justice started the fireworks.

NEW HAVEN. Conn. (UP) Levi Jackson. Yale's black lizht- gia safety man used especially when the other side is throwing, wmcn uicjr wsmuiieu cawjr ui struck- fntir timix In intercepted and ran back to the canay away irom Aiaoama ana made them look bad in the doing. WHAT'S GOING ON? Crimson men were- missing blocks that the water boy could have made.

On the last Tulane threat which almost ended in another scoi- late in the game, two Tidesmen had their backs to one play and were wildly groping about to see what was happening. The game was a dull thing for most of the first quarter and both teams feinted with their ground arms and stabbed gently through the sky. The first sparks started nine before the Vols knew what had hit them. Quarterback Truitt Smith rammed over from the two, and Jim Bledsoe's kick was true. After that Tennessee's defenses crumbled badly.

McWilliams and Davis rolled up three first downs from the Tennessee 32 the two before McWilliams shot the ball into the hands of Sub End Murry Alexander over th i goal. That and Bledsoe's boot made it 14 to 6. Davis was right there when Sub Tailback W. C. Cooper let one go toward Powe" and it landed in Davis' arms.

He had a clear field from the Tennessee 27 to a touchdown. Once more, Bledsoe's conversion was good. Moccasin 41. ine lbD-pound tanoacK set up the dared 4o wager that the Jackets In the National League," the New York Giants edged the World Series bound Boston Braves, 3-2, as Sheldon Jones bested Johnny Sain, who failed to finish. Rex Barney and a gang of daredevil Brooklyn base runners outfought the Philadelphia Phillies, 3-0.

last night to move into second place in the National League, six frames back of the league-leading Boston Braves. Doyle Lade outpitched Howie Pollet in a tight duel to give the last-place Chicago Cubs a 3-2 decision over the St. Louis Cards. BOSOX 7. YANKS 2 Two plays got a touchdown.

Floyd Reid lost three on the first second period and it took some same lace yesterday fading his story-book antics Jo squelch a team a J28-to-13 Victory Ver splendid Purdue team after that, Brown and giving hefty Herman including: jllickman a successful debut as 1. A bolt-out-of-the-blue 70-yard head coach of the Eli. touchdown return of a puntby Xhe ackfield star who sturdy Johnny Panelli. Morns-' bla2ed to nati, tn one but Johnny Rauch found Bob Walston all alone on the south sideline and tossed him the ball so neatly that a five-year-old would have romped to glory, which is xirst score witn a J8-yard punt re- wouldn't tally again, turn to the Texas 41. Thre elec-j The Tech line was terrific, trifymg plays later North Carolina Hook.

Billy Healy, Bob Bos-had a touchdown. After an in- lsons and more ends than you could complete pass Justice handed off keep track of. Griffin, Castleberry, to Wmgback Johnny Clements Brodnax, Anderson, Harvin, Nolan who made 20 to the 21. Then and Schoening, weren't of a mind Justice passed to big Art Weiner, to let Vandy get started. Neither Continued on Page 4-C I were the tacklers, Bradach, Cole- town, N.

senior, in the third 'a0 and thn stt N. Notre Dame was period when just what Mr. Walston did. Geri flvin? nn th Tulan sir1( nf the and field. Greenie Quarterback Joe added the extra point again ab.h.po.a.

1 3 3 with the clock showing only nine BOSTON b.h.po..!N. YORK O.D'M'g'cf 5 12 OlRizzuto.e Keeton passed one a small dis 4 3iHenrich.1b 01 Brown 3l J.Dim'g'.of OIKeller.lf ow They Fared Across the Mation year crippled with injuries, was his old self again as he made two touchdowns and contributed to the two others, made by Fred Nad-hereney and Dan Wagster. Brown exhibited only one great flash of power, in the third, when it rolled 80 yards in nine consecu-tije plays to set up a touchdown made by Arnold Green. trailing. 2.

A 23-yard field goal from a difficult an-ile by Steve Oracko of Lansford. Pa. whose place-kicking name was mud up until that moment for a 21-13 Irish lead. 3. A seven-yard payoff scamper by a fighting Irishman named Al Zmijewski, an unknown reserve tackle from Newark, N.

with an 4 Williamsjf 4 Sfphens.ss Oosrr.2b 4 Mosei.rf 8 Tebbets. Kramer, 4 0 Nijrhot.e SOUTHEASTERN minutes tc go, it looked like the Bulldogs were comfortably home in the win column. But they weren't by any means. After the kickoff. Halfback Eli Maricich got in front of another Derrick pass and intercepted it at the midfield stripe.

He ran it back to the Moccasin 32 before being hit down. Reid ran for three and Rauch Georgia Tech 13 Georgia 14 bMcQuinn eBauer Reynolds, a apes Vandy 0 Chattanooga 7 Xavier 7 Florida 0 Tennessee 6 Alabama 14 Brown scored on the opening (Savis Elkins 3 Devens 32 Dickinson 13 Fairmont State 19 Franklin-Marshall 13 Gettysburg 2t Howard 21 Holy Cross 1S Lafayette 53 Maine 13 Marshall 19 Kentucky 48 'Mississippi 14 i Miss. State 21 'Tulane 21 interception of a Bob Demoss pass nlav nf th nnri Bethany 0 Quonset NATS 0 Thiel 6 Glenville Lehigh 12 Drexel 0 Bluefield State 0 Georgetown 7 Fordham 14 Rhode Island Morehead Bates 6 Depauw 20 Evansville 12 Hamline 7 Hiram 0 Illinois 40 Indiana 33 Iowa 14 Indiana Teachers 9 Knox 7 Lawrence 28 McComb Tchrs. 13 Mich. Tech 32 1 eJohnson SOUTH Hanover 14 Western Ky.

fi St. Olaf 7 Kenyon 0 Kansas State 0 Wisconsin 7 Marquette 12 Central 7 North Central 0 Grinnell 0 J. MiHikin 0 Cornell Col. 14 Michigan State 7 Concordia 0 Capitol 8 Purdue 27 Iowa State 15 Starr.p dCollina passed to John Tillitski for a first centre 7 down at the 16. Lujie Brunson ran! ciark Cot.

6 Marietta 7 Louisville 0 Presbyterian 0 0 in the fourth quarter after Pur-jyard pass from Ed Finn to Charley due had slashed Notre Dame'selson. lead to 21-20. i Yale's little "Seven Dwarf And 4 Oracko's upright-split-Line," which spotted Brown 28 ting placement try following Zmi-j pounds per man, turned in an un-jewski's touchdown. Bootin Steve expectedly good performance. Yale had missed his point tries afteHmade a total of 291 yards rushing.

20 Pittsburgh14 to the 14 but Rauch took to tha y'Zitf air again and Ken Naylor, Chatta Furman 10 Totate 7 27 10) Total 33 7 27 7 Struck out for Reynolds In Bth. bGrounded out for Stirnweiss in 7th. cGrounded out tor Porterfield in 7th. 0 Ftied out for Crosetti in 9th. Struck out for Starr in 9th.

nooga quarterback, was on the re-ieo. Washington 1 Benedict W. A. V. P.

I. Emory Norfolk NAB E. Car. Tchrs. Mass.

State 7 6 SMU 33 7, Middlebury 31 01 Muhlenberg 27 7 New York AIT 7 0 Penn Military College Scranton 13 14 Susquehanna 13 McAlester 39 Boston U. 0 Muskingum 4H Bridgeport U. 0 Notre Dame 28 Delaware Nebraska 19 Moravian 14 Ohio State 21 CCNY Oliv 14 ceivmg ena oi nis pass ai me jvnit? High Point Col. 41 man i-uint UOI. 13 I Lenoir Rhyne 20 Missouri Notre Dame's first three touch- as against 134 for Brown.

Boston 201 0107 Bradley Rapidi J. tance to Jimmy Glisson for a first down on the Tide 27. For some reason they changed pitchers and Eddie Price missed with a couple. They were close enough to try a field goal with Euel Davis kicking, but it went wide, so 'Bama took over. Tom Calvin and Ed Salem started growing strong on the Crimson offense and for a minute or two it looked as if the Tuscaloosa folks were goinj, to get moving.

But they didn't. They went almost to midfield. though. BAMA ROLLS In fact, the second quarter had started growing a beard before the first real drive took form. Bama's snappy Welsh and Calvin were heading up something that looked good for awhile.

Starting on the Crimson 46, this pair led the field. After Ed Salem had missed with a throw, Welsh ripped around left end for the best Alabama -run of the game to date. He went down to the Tulane 36 but the next two times he tried he got but three yards. Salem then found somebody missing at right tackle and got four. Calvin got a first on the Tulane 24 and the Alabama side of the bowl started howling.

He -'downs. Richmond St. Vincents 7 Indiana Tchrs. 0 Rose Polv 12 Purdue's fourth and final touch 2 St Thomaa 3J McKendree Augsburg Luther 6 Louisiana Tech 17 Maryland 1 Memphis State 13 Milligan 20 N. C.

State 0 North Car. Col. 14 North Carolina 34 Wilkes 0 19 Of Louisville 7 St. Michaels 13 Tampa 13 St. Francis 31 Duke 0 Shippensburg Tchrs.

Delaware State 0) Slippery Roc', 20 Texas 7 Union 19 UatliinnlAM I I 1S rsiuiziown Mo. Mines 7 Westminster down came even as the closing gun sounded, on a six-yard pass from Demoss, a brilliant quarterback, to End Harley Jeffrey. This was a 2l West Michigan 29 Wilberforce St. Lawrence Western Reserve 0 Greensboro A4.T 7 Sou. Illinois 0 Blue Peter Wins Futurity Southwestern (Memphis) 19 1 Wabash 13 Williams 14 New York 000 001 0102 Pesky 2, Williams.

Moses. 3. Goodman, Henrick 2. Henrich, Brown, D. DiMaggio.

RBI Doerr. Williams, Goodman, Kramer. Moses, Brown. J. DiMag- o.

2B Williams. Goodman, Henrich. MR Moses. DP Stirnweiss, Henrich, Rizzuto and Henrich; Kramer. Stephens and Goodman.

LB Boston 6. New York t. BB Reynolds 3. Porterfield 1, Starr 2. Off Reynolds in innings; Por terfield 2 In 2: Starr none in 2.

HP By 6tarr (Goodman). Wild Reynolds. Starr. LP Reynolds. Umps.

Rommel. Berry, Paoarella and Summers. 2:43. Att 45,607 paid. Norwich vvayne 26 Geneva 6j Wooxter 8 1 Tenn.

Poly 26 SOUTHWEST Carson Newman 7 waynesburg 7 Miami 14 W. Virginia 34 Catawba 6, West Liberty 13 Er Texas state 7 'game the Boilermakers well could i Virginia 14 VMI 28 Va. Union 10 W. M. 14 after their Tulsa 19; rail Lock Haven Tchrs.

7 Arkfn 4 Brown 13 Baylor 42 Canisius 21 Lanoston U. 13 a moral victory Dame last defeat by Notre W. Va. State 7 Yale Davidson 6 Youngstown 33 EAST I MIDWEST Bishop no Randolph Field Sam Houston ojyear, NEW YORK (JP) Blue Peter casin 13. That ended that threat.

But pretty soon Buck Bradberry intercepted another pass at the Georgia 35, lateralled it off to Pat Fields and Pat raced to the Chattanooga 46 before they got him to stop. Tillitski rushed for a first down but Ray Prosperi was wide of his mark on two passes so Rauch came in to throw to Tillitski for a first down at the 20. Maricich picked up foui and Rauch took to the air again. This time Gordon Atchley, Moccasin center, came up with the ball at the 12-yard line. Atchley raced down the north sideline for just exactly 88 yards Continued on Page 4-C Tho rlaKhinff.

virionslv blocking won the $113,110 Futurity, racing's im. Texas state Be i Rice 46 0 Texas Tech 20 9 Tillotson 6 6 TCU 21 vniariovfl Rochester 6 1 exas 14 Paul Quinn Okla. AIM 14 Port Huron J. C. Findlay Detroit Tech Elmhurst Ohio U.

Army 28 Amherst 26 Bloomsburg Tchrs Brooklyn Col. 24 Bowdoin 28 Bucknell 29 California 21 Calif. (Pa.) Tchrs. Rollins Nips Erskine FAR WEST 7 Fresno State Indiana Cent." 7 Montana State 7 Mansfield Tchrs. 0 Newhaven Tchrs.

5 Tufts 7 Augustana 44 Alfred Green 13 Navy 7: Butler 69 19 Edinboro 0 Baldwin-Wallace 20 Ceney Tchrs. 6 Carleton 20 Champlain 13 Carthaoe 20 NYU 6 Canterbury 0 and tackling Purdues proved all richest and most important two-that Stu Holcomb's fearful Big year-old classic, before a crowd Nine coaching rivals feared this estimated at 38,000 persons yes-season. terday at Belmont Park. Demoss passed like a major Joseph M. Roebling's New Jer-Ieague catcher pegging to second, sey champion defeated the favored setting up all but one of Purdue's filly Myrtle Charm by a neck in four touchdowns with his sharp- a blistering stretch duel down the shooting.

Widener straightaway. ORLANDO, Fla. (JP) A pass interception in the third quarter enabled Rollins College to open its football season with a 7-0 victory Portland 6 N. D. Aggies 0 Washinaton 0 UCLA 0 Colorado 6 Stanford 12 Oklahoma 17 Polomar Col.

0 Montana 7 Colorado Col. 7 Clarion Tchrs. 33 Clarkston Tech 19 Cornell 47 Coast Guard Academy 20 Columbia 27 Ohio wesleyan 13 Minnesota 20 Beloit 0 Northwestern 19 Parson 13 New Mexico Franklin 0. Oregon 20 Coo 0 Santa Clara 20 Hardin-Simmon 7' San Diego Navy 40 Buena Vista Utah State 18 Otterbien 71 Wyoming 61 Arnold 0 Central Iowa 0 Rutgers Cincinnati 7 ver Erskine College here Friday ran again and got to the 19. but Colgate 23 Buffalo Dubuque 7 zugnt.

i Continued on Page 4-C American Intl. 0 Dennison 3 Colby 14.

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