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The San Francisco Examiner from San Francisco, California • 20

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San Francisco, California
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20
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

IUIIR1M TEOTH 1 A Ell won RaKPhall AAthnll hckhill Every Tuesday morning special Twvf Every Tuesday morning special ran amateur sports page, covering bowling, billiards, bush baseball ii a boxing, swimming, track and field, tennis and all the leading sports covered by best observ- aim inner minor sporu man Hi KJ WW -WW r-sw JtSU ers and writers in the West. Imtes agers, send in vour scores early. ittoiwrcH of t( OniWes REO.ufPAT.orr, CC SUNDAY SAN FRANCISCO, OCTOBER 8, 1933 SECTION I PAGE 20 In Al 1 o)q) stmmi mm i Touchdown! Bears' First Score Williams Hugging Ball Over the Last Stripe Jc 1 CUE'S WILLIAMS making the first California score with a punch through tackle. Williams made four then put the ball on the three-yard mark. His next plunge was over.

THE PICTURE SHOWS Williams hugging the ball. Wonder what he is saying? Perhaps it is, "Well, you Gaels, that's one. Watch us from here." Or maybe he liked the rest. THREE CALIFORNIA MEN, Carlson (13), guard; Carlton (IS), tackle, and Calkins, center, cleared th way. Keefer (56) is not shown, but he made the touchdown possible by his long advances.

N1CHEL1NI, GAEL HALF, is looking on. Yes, Mr. Nichelini, it's a touchdown! Lindsey (57) tried to stop Williams, but too late. Erdelatz, another end (No. 82), did not help any.

-Yesterday's Grid Scores- Ott's Home Run Ends SHOULD HAVE MAJOR ELEVENS Bobby Grayson Scores SUFFER LOSSES Cardinal Touchdown Read 'Em and Smile Or Maybe You'll Weep WON-CLIPPER Game in Tenth Frame Washington Rally Falls Short When Kuhel Strikes Out Santa Clara Coach Concedes PACIFIC COAST. 4plirailin W. Tpvai O. iNrmittin III, O. Stanford Nothing; Phelan Texas Christian, Alabama, N.

Y. U. Fail to Win; Kansas Pulls Surprise on Notre Dame Santa Clara Makes Uphill Battle With Spectacular Aerial Attack I California 14. St- Mary's 13. Washington Coach, Interrupts Stanford 7, santa ciara 0.

(Continued from Page One) By Curley Grieve I.iiv.ri'nip l.t. I iirlplcn or-lh Onlriil II. KtinlmiM ('Mrrnll I'i. llliiioiN Welles nil 7. SI.

I)lu ail. Mlllllli'slpp O. uiiklun ulls II. Inn iv Ilnlilli Tpi Ii 0. Mlnnisihi (1.

Imllnim II. (op 11, II. Kn 11 Inlip I'illll iilhiT 0. Innn H'pulpjaii II. nliiinhia t'nllpep 7.

IlllanU Niirmiil Ml. IlliiKils Aia- llppi.v O. IVI nlli Kuri-kH n. Wahash 7, rraukllii (I, OUIiiliiinia II. Ill' I in nip III.

MarsllaM 0. Aurnrii II. Morton II. lip I'mil 'ift. almiraUii II.

(By Associated Press.) Another smashing performance by the powerful Trojans of South Champs STANFORD UNIVERSITY STA-hack back went. Stanford, U. S. 33, Washington State 0. Oregon State 8, Gon.aga 0.

Olympic Club 14, Nevada 0. Idaho fifl, Whitman 0. Oregon 14, Columbia 7. 1 Infield 19, Pacific Lutheran 6. Menlo 52.

Salinas 6. Lassen High 13, Chico Teachers 6. By Clipper Smith As Told to Abe Kemp It was a hard ball game, but now that it is over, I concede Stanford nothing. I thought that we were entitled in fair enough, so he gesticulates again to Little Mel Ott to resume his journey around the bases. There Is really no doubt in the minds of many of the 28.454 spectators who DiUM, Oct.

Bobby Grayson, tacked up seven points on the score board here this afternoon and Stanford made it stick. Made that one touchdown and a fighting' for life, and gambling on those seven points. STOPPED TWICE. Twice Santa Clara marched through the air and came face to face with the final, vital white NF.YV YORK AB. R.

H. Player. 1 l' 1. II I i I 1' 1 Cnnroril'n 0. iiilnvii ilolnhiH 0.

1 win rii i.w.rt i pay to see this last game to two touchdowns; the first when, McCov caught that forward nass HIGH SCHOOLS. ennversinn bv Rill Corhus survive I 1 Potomac State 51, Armstrong fi. San Shepherd 14. Shennndoah 7. the most daring, spectacular, aerial jPe grates playing field and ran to a touchdown onlv n'si- iRtialiiis (llghtwelglit) in from end zone.

Twice they were it i ct tense that nas neon launcnert Rafael Military Academy 0. OUUUV Mail UlMJrilJ i nc on Jlj clear of any assistance from bounce, 5 or otherwise, or that Schultc's Davis, cf 5 thnvn Hid more thnn nerhans ex-! Jackson, 3 0. 3 2 13 1 1 2 7 0 1 A. 0 4 1 (I 4 1 5 have the officials rule that a Santa Clara man had touched the ball Salinas 13, Holllster 0. (I 0 1 1 11 0 I KAST 0 before McCoy.

frustrated. Once, the first time, three mighty thrusts by Joe Paglln carried ths ball from the five to the one yard line, and right there Halfback White saved (he day by breaking" through two interferers and throw since Southern Methodist, visited the shores and sent chills up and down the spine of 40,000 St. Mary's rooters. It. belongd to Santa Clara, tricky, talented Santa Clara, who this af Manrusn, 3 2 ppdite it3 papfape, but Manager Joe Cronin of the Senators, and his I thought that a Stanford man touched the ball before McCoy got comrades, put up quite an argu- Koniiniaolier.p 3 mm' uf, I) 1 Oglethorpe 6, Manhattan 0.

Fordham 57, Muhlenberg 0. Boston CoUeire 37, Loyola (Baltimore), 0. Grove City 12, Morris Harvey 0. St. I.ttwrrnre 0.

Cnlsntr 4. I llnuilnin II. St. Anphn' lit. ternoon hoped to achieve their ing Kaliskl for a twelve yard los I his hands on it.

1 PHELAN SAVS YES. 4 11 3(1 15 Totals fondest dream a double, triumph on an altPninted nd run Arguments with baseball umpires get nowhere. Cronin is eloquent, but Pfirman stands pat on his de WASHINGTON Western KentucKy 7, Tennessee Pnlii 6. I'nion College 6, Eastern Kentucky f. Kentucky Industrial 15, Virginia Slut 6.

7. Npu licrrv 7. liMiirin '1 11 1 ii 110 fit. Trniipsspp MlwMssiiml Stalp 0. Hriila a II.

iivh Ift. S'uith arcilina It, V. I'. I. I I.

Miirvlauil II. Aliihiniii 0. Mis.isliiiii II. iivliiimliMi mill l.v 7. M'lltiam and M'irv 11.

Kntcry anil llpnrv 7. Hoanokp 0. rlwnunn rtll rapiilinp Slalp 0. IMikp Vi akp orpul II. filt-iSnr-h phI Vircinia 0.

Marshall Ml. Willpnlipru' O. Illi-nm 7. 7. Arkansas Tpmis i'liristian 0.

unilp-liilt 'id. North nrnliiiH 1.1. Kpi'litrkv 7. liporeia Tprh II. Ulrlisiillp Tp iphprn lissonrl ll.

Tpmis A. and I. 111. McMnrr.v O. Ilailitsnn Wnrfnril III.

MplliTlisI "7. Tpm Alinpa (. The second was when Beckrich A. E. cision.

Sc'nulte. the home town Player. AB. i i caught a oass in the end zone. ll.

Miiliif 7. 1 i I rum (l, iinniTllrllt Shite 0. O. 3 4 3 hero on the strength of tying up Mjer, 2b 5 the game with his ponderous punch Goslln. rf 4 in the sixth, comes up out of the Manush, If 5 crowd so crumpled and shaken by I Crnnln, ss 5 0 thought that should have been i ntr t.

A.iihm.i Ann, V. M. I. ruled a touchdown. rniumhia Lfhicii o.

W'lprn 7. M.mnt St. Miirj'i tairor note; jimmy rnelan, "vrmwima iipenpiu u. Kulitcr I'rovlcliMire 0. coach of Washington, interrupted Unfvanl Itiiim u.

H. (I 1 1 3 2 0 2 1 0 I) 0 ern California and inspired play by California's Golden Bears and the Kansas Jayhawkers marked the nation's football program as a succession of upsets rocked the. gridiron woild. While such nationally-famous elevens as Texas Christian, New York University and Alhambra were suffering either defeat or tie, Southern California continued its long string of victories with a crushing 33-0 conquest of Washington State, runner-up to the Trojans for the Pacific Coast title last year. Meanwhile California overcame a two-touchdown lead that St.

Mary's Gaels piled up in the first period and eked out a 14-13 triumph in the last period. Kansas, at the snme time, turned in a sensational performance, outplaying Notre Dame in the Kamblers' seasonal debut: although a scoreless lie was the final result. New York University struck a tartar in West Virginia Wes-leyan's Bobcats and went down to defeat. 3-0, when Bamiim booted a field goal in the fourth period. Texas Christian, Invading Arkansas' stronghold at Fay-rttevillo, found the Ra7.orhacks too strong there, liowed 13-0 and thus suffered major reverse In Its bid for another Southwest conference, crown.

Alabama, annually one of the South'a major powers, could gain no heller than a scoreless draw with the University of Mississippi. WARNER LOSES. Another result the experts hardly had foreseen came in Carnegie Tech's triumph over "Pop" Warner's Temple Owls. Otherwise, the East produced no Navy Mrrrpr II. at thi point to bear out Smith his tumble that they put a substi- Schulte, 4 tute runner on the bases for him Kerr 0 later on.

Kuhel, 5 Adolfo Luque, a Cuban, 43 years Bluege, 3b 4 old, and in the big league twenty- Senell, 4 three years, is pitching for the Crowdcr, p. 2 Giants at the finish, the Senators 1 Kussell, 1 over California and Stanford in the was a cose cau.but that sec-same year. thrust was even closer. An excited throng of 35,000 saw; Sobrero had heaved a 35-yard the Bronco dream fade but by a pass to Johnny Breckrick, which margin so close that a slide-rule found Stanford on its 9-yard line, would be required to estimate it. I again face to face with "the pros-Here was the set up: When I pert of seeing those 7 points wiped Grayson crashed the Bronco right aside.

tackle for two yards and a touch- Taglla and Breckrick tried the down in the first period, it seemed line but, as was the case all day, like the beginning of the end for a It was butting their heads against Santa Clara attack that had been the stadium walls. Then came a bottled up and smothered with Red pass, arched beautifully, by the jerseys And when the Cards arm of Sobrero, deep Into the end marched 42 yards in the second rone. period and lost the ball on a fumble CLOSE TO TIKING on the Bronco seven-yard line, it i Frnrn onp pnd AI Powd left the spectators muttering to aml from othpr rughpd Arnp themselves: "Santa Clara is out- rich. Each saw hallbut npt classed'" Parh other. Each leaped high, CALLS ON BOMBERS.

touched the precious pigskin and At that auspicious moment. Coach rebounded from each other just as John HopkliiN I Holiltuttnn rnlli'se 0. CiiriirKir Ti-i'h 'ft, Trnmlr 0 Virginia Woslrynn V'cirk l'niv. It. MnntirtttJin 0 l'pion Hi'bur! II Mtihlpnlwrs (I, Kor.lhnni fit.

CnniPBip Tpph Tpmiilp 0. Hrrarnw MarltMin Mhuni I I. Hiinnipp (I. Knplhnm n. Ilnvprfdril 0.

I 'iit. St. O. llirkinsan II, Suiirllimnrp 0. contention on the last touchdown mentioned.) Our blocking was bad throughout.

I thought our pass offense would work against Stanford and it should have worked. MioKlhsliipl nlpp llnltiphlirg Tpai'll- Kiii" 31. Mart Hill 7. III. Hn.Onr 0.

Illrnilncham Sonlllprn '10, Soulhwpslt'rn of lmphl 0. 1 Koruv" l(l f'NT A IV I I Tali Aeci-s I'I. Mmilnna Slalp if. rju i nriipu iiirnninmi 7. uaitors note: rneian inter- 1 nil.

rrmnut driving Hal Schumacher, the "sinker" ballist, away in the sixth Totals ....39 3 1(1 30 9 (I after Schulte's home run. Kerr ran for Schulte In ninth. AnjI Luqiie stopped the Senator. rk (iYhhiTm their tracks. Jack Resell, the wsHnon 0 3 0 0 0 0-3 man from Gainesville, who: has worked in four games in the! Runs hatted In Schumacher f2), series, takes the place of Alvin Mnncusn, Schulte (3), Ott.

Two Crowder for the Senators in the base hits Davis, Mancuso. Home .1 iait.c-.i rrinppnlop 10. mhpM a. rupted again to state that Smith, nrrx, n. Wnt I hpst.

7 arp Itallimorp 11. j.u.Fig ll.ilaiv Li -I i ii pun irtlp .1:. l.phnimn hIIpt a. interring that Santa Liar a should ijifmHt, i. ym o.

Clemson in Surprise Win Over Carolina CT.EMSON COLLEGE IS. C), Oct. (AP)- A rejuvenated Clem-son TiRer kicked a highly favorite North Carolina State team out of the Southern Conference race by loivill Tptilp ftl. Marnrr 0. St, Mi.

hu Viruli have won.) Hipper hmitn called on his Bronco neisner thrust his 155 pounds on th Stanford's defense was splendid 7. fromLseene. But t'np hnll roller! hark of i ney ciesocnnea and the bova in their linp rlpsprvo a SI. Ansplm'a Hi. Northpaslprn fl the blue sky overhead with a sud the end zone while one or the piv llampslltrp aft.

Itnilnn ll, same sixth, and pitches great ball until little Mel Ott nails a fast iall on him in the tenth. MEL IS DANGEROUS. Little Mrl came to the Giants as a high school catcher. He. was wi'iiu i.ii 1 1 run Holy Crpss 'SO, Cnthnllr.

runs Schulte, Ott Sacrifice hits Ryan, Double plays Jackson to Terry; Cronin to Kuhel. Left on bases New York 7, Washington 9. Bases on balls Off Crowder 2 (Mancuso, Ryan); Schumacher 1 (Goslon); Luque 2 (Rus- CONCEDES NOTHING. 1 like the work of their ends and think Maentz and Grayson played ball. first used as a pinch hitter in 1927 denness and accuracy which left the Stanford players confused and gasping, and the Red and White looters in the stands screeching with alarm.

Head Bomber Frank Sobrero led the parade, end Assistant Bombers Frisky Kaliki and Carlson followed. Before that period terminated, winning, 9 to 0, here today. I Four thousand Homecoming Pay spectators saw Clemson, tied by I Presbyterians and crushed by Georgia Tech, find itself and out-'. wit and outplay the heavier North by the Giants, then he became a sel1' Schulte). Struck out by Crow-rep-nlar and for ih.

fiv KPa-! 4 (Ott 2, Jackson, Schumacher) other might have captured it. That close was Santa Clara to tiring the count and just one receiver too many spoiled their party. Of all the bombing by the Broncos, the first fell with the most electric effect. It vas cast by Head Bomber Sohrero as the air squadron was mobilized. It was flung in that sec- Hamilton I Hnfflllo II.

Hpnsllpr I'. I. .1,1. York C. i 0.

IVuNliinetiiii and lrrfprnn III. hurt 7. Middlrliury William fl. Kli.n 7. LiiiicIpt a.

St. Ilonaypnlnra 'I'I. lininlrr 13. M. Thomas I'lll O.

lfrp i 7. lo'-'-l-r n. I pp Mnnlrlair 1.1. Kasl Mrondshiirc Trpnlon Tpaplirr O. Mlrlilcan lit.

Slalp Ohio Slalr 7ft. Vlninla 0. sons he has led the Giants in home KusSP 3 Rr, Schumacher, Moore); Schumacher 1 (Bluege); Carolina team. (Editor's note; Smith was shaking like an aspen leaf; outraged because of the turn of events and they had marched the ball from nlmnmt rmmrtrilmri tt. JtriHt, I PHlprn Rwril Kpsprvp 111.

ylonnl I man. a. Luque 5 (Russell, Myer, Gosliii, Bluege, Kuhel). Hits off Crowder, 7 in 5 1-3 innings; off Russell, 4 In 4 2-3 Innings; off Schumacher, 8 in 5 2-3 innings; off Luque, 2 in 1 .1 a. 1 runs and runs batted in.

He is a mild little chap, who never has much to say. He is accounted one of the best ball players In the big leagues, and he has played great ball in this series. Little Mel has a count of two ineir own iweniy-yarn line period from his own 20-yard Stanford twenty-four yard linp dirPPliv front of Coachl with one yard to go for a first "Tiny" Thornhill as he towed on deep. The interviewer attempted milsdiilp in. rindlar 0.

to console the Santa Clara coach 'n bv remarhin that one same did Pnrriiip Ohio O. major upsets, although Yale's 14-7 victory over Maine was scarcely as decisive as Eli supporters had hoped for. Princeton and Harvard, other "Big Three" teams, made their debuts under more auspicious circumstances, the Tigers swamping a strong Amherst College eleven, 40-0, and Harvard running over Bates, "3-0. Syracuse and Colgate opened with easy victories, the former (Continued on Page 21, Column 8.) clown. At.

mat juncture a welcome the sirlo iln 4 1-3 Innings. Wild pitches Crow- ally, the timekeeper, ended th" half, Tennessee Swamps Mississippi, 20-0 KNOXVILLK Oct. 7. (AP) Showing surprising strength a stubborn flisalsslppi State Eleven today forrcd tha University of Tennessee to employ its regulars nearly half of the game before bowing to a 20 to 0 defeat. strikes and two balls when he 1 dr, Schumacher.

Winning pitcher not make a season, to which Smith, st'f o. in the -Luque. Lowing pitcher-Russell. in fiction but poignant in Then throughout the next two RULED ILLEGAL. It smacked Ike Britschgl on the.

head, rebounded into the arms of smashes at Russell's pppeder Spparfisli 7. periods, the Bombers went to work reality, remarked "I don't core Mriilii i.i. faniial tenth. The ball sails high in the air empires Plate: Muran (N.U; first base: Moriartv (A.L.); second base: with renewed dilieenre." Lone and turning In the waning sunlight, and I Howllnj Bliilflnn fl. what becomes of me.

That is just in Ohio Nnrthprn fi way I feel for I don't concede ohrrii c. iit Akroii 19. h-nt Stale H. Stanford anything. lillnaia 11.

tVanhlmrtoa 6. Pfirman (N.L.); thir base: Ornis- I on me O'j-yara im ana fhort spirals whipped through air channels' Into outstretched arms. (Continued on Page 23, Column 4) (Continued on Pare 24; Column 3) by (A.L.) Time of Game 2:39..

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