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Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania • 33

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Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
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33
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Id mt 9 Panther Rally Falls Short By JACK HENRY The clock ran out on the luckless Pitt Panthers in the FINANCE CLASSIFIED Stadium yesurday, i dramatic uphill struggle falling just State carted a 1614 decision short of the mark as Ohio I I I I I nay. iT, mi nu i Vic's Kick! I back to Columbus, A crowd at 34.717, welcoming of Indian Summer, i ncarcrly lilted an ejebrow when All-America halfback Vic Jano-' iUM-z boated a 2(yard field goal 'in ihe (hiid quarter to lattPti Ohio StKte's lend at 16 0. Lltf imaiely that proved the marzm nir tact, tuftflIU, tn.lfrt li.e LMiK Bt ft Mitasi, fpm c.iu-.of victory for Pitt unloaded a rutO. j4Cvt. IMIHI 4 It 14 ICr.tH Hm a JtMt.iA, tidft Ctn4tt, Am i'f.

1 i.uihb. Tacisir -Hi 'ifthu, Knjtf, lbfB, Jttottf. r.iuiti-Tkatr p.u, RrMtlfictt, fVntrrv a-Tr4, to -rim. Ar.tfrnn. r.ii1! Ju'irl.

Wl. hfui hf ur(e kui ATI ft.t 1414 fII1e 3, Kpt. tttta'ti 4Uirg uiKtdvB-JWKrtlai 4iHM 14 point comeback in the final period. Onre again Pitt dominated the xtatiNtirs, but such headway in arithmeiic provides cnt con-Hollition In absorbing the tenth consecutive defeat, seven of them this season. The success was Ohio State's fourth In seven tries.

Woody Hayes Buckeyes will be the first to concede that they have little to hrag about, but their effort followed Western Conference policy to th letter. That consists of denying Pitt i Mie bowl ttXtf tucMuw-Jtnowaft II' 4 r4' Juo H-frr Lyit C.mpr plrt. Ktitf-: b. I mtf. T.

hwd Uf.eanun. Pu Curtat, e.4 JuUfw Jwi M- tttirhltr. ikag'e membership with one hand while dealing out foot-'ball defeats with the other. Cornell-Upsets Michigan FX OKI) BROKEN' Ohio State ata.ved on the pruund on both of Its touchdown marchp and relied upon the L'lyrla tO.l pair, Tony Cur-rillo and Janowicz, lor all points. Pitt traveled 43 yards for Its first touchdown and extended the parade to cover 75 for Its swond.

The latter was made COR.SItX ji STATISTICS MrtHMr4 I rkt9 JyJiWith only 38 eeconds of play to 5 14 10 1 4i riiiaiJUlls it The Panthers led In first downs. 21 to 11 They retted 205 yards asainst 137 overland and had much the better of it up- ITHACA. N. Nov. 10.

1 stairs with 127 yards against 33. fAP.I Aroused Cornell Ohio State's superiority was re-Stormed back with three touch-l stricted to ountinff. in which downs i a violent second half Janowicz quick kicks plaved a rauy today to upset lavored, prominent part, and in pass in- Michigan. 20-7. before 33.300: tprreminnn fafns.

Proof of how thorntiohlv Pitt Trailins. 70. at the halftimn commanded the situation d'urintr Lefty James' nrize du Dili it comeback is furnished bv capped a brilliant comeback! second half figures. In that ith tourhdowns by Limly stretch Pitt racked up 17 first Stu Mere and Hal Seidenberg. downs against lour, gaining 141 Jack Jaeckel, starting his first 'ards rushing and 116 in the air game at quarterback in place of against Ohio State's combined the nilin Hooco disruut-i total of 42 yards.

i i a Si ed the Michigan dpfense with' Hobby Bestwick passed for 99 hi brilliant mixing of ground yards. Lou Cimarolli rushed for and pass plays. 42 and Chris Warriner nabbed Michigan scored on a 42-vard1 42, Pac pass from Don Peterson toTod Pltl 8 indlduaI S- Jack Wag. Stanford in the second ceriod. I M.

'ards was v-SaSi WW 17 i JkMN'TeJecrapb rbott bf Mrr imam. Jaeckel's 35yard pass play 8 eDeCUV Bill Whelan set up the tieingi 8 rndl drWe 80 "shed anoiher 'TOUCHDOWN' CALLED BACK the long run on a forward pais to Chris Warriner in the fourth quarter of Pitt-Ohio State game at the Stadium yesterday that was called back because the officials said Warriner stepped out of bounds. The pass by Bob Bestwick started on the Pitt 26-yard line and after Warriner made the catch he bumped into an Ohio State player, bounced off and went the remainder of the way. However, he was called back to the Ohio State 47, it was he had supped out. in 11 plays.

RHUBARB The decision on the play at the left produced a brief argument. It happened right in front of Pitt bench and Panthers said they didn't see their man move out of bounds. As usual, the officials won. Hull skirted rtehf mrf fmm 1.. the- four lor the- sroi.

Kirks first nf un nhnMni.i a made it 7 7. SCORES Jaeckel hit Stu Merz ith a I Jim Merrell fell on Bill Gas. short pass just over the line Parovic's opening kickoff on the and the halfback went all the Ohio State 44 and the visitors way on a scoring pjayj hammered away at the Pitt dc as the period ended dense on 13 plays for a 6 0 lead. Texas SMU Tie, 14-14 COLLEGE STATION nncr Michigan State Drubs Irish, 35-0 EAST LANSING, Nov. 10.

(AP.) Big Dick "1 NEW YORK, Nov. 10. AP.) Desperate In the face of al-l un.8ner1 Kay Hamilton and Jan- Nov. 10. (API Southern Meth- odistand Texas elimi rated themselves from the -Forced to play much of the Michigan's "Pi 'j1 owns on i.u i i Hill Put ch passed from his 4b' 3j and 25.

Jano. way without their crack passer, 13- but wlcz then shot up the middle to Mitch Price, the Columbia Lions defensive player, intercepted 12 ani1 Curcillo knifed right turned loose a group of hard jand slammed his way to ,0 feach the two. Put running backs loday to snapitwo. Seidcnbcrg's second Penalized to the one, from Southern Conference football race today by battling to a 14-14 tie. scored in the first pe Panin poured through the center of the Notre Dame line for 88 yards and a touchdown on Michigan State's first play today to touch off a sparkling football offensive that brought victory to the speedy Spartans, 35 to 0.

at me mitwie or the line Vie turciuo sneaKed over. COLLEGIATE LOCAL TEAMS Lehigh 31 Carnegie Tech 7 Ohio State 16 Titt 14 DISTRICT Allegheny 19 Westminster 6 Bethany 14 Geneva 0 Brockport T. 27 Edlnboro 7 California T. 26 West Liberty 7 Janowicz" extra point try was riod on a 55-yard drive with Bob wide. me iinai score, ne lineup: JOrilKlAX lt anil terry.

Crem. Stanford Dartmuuth's four-game winning streak, 21 to 6, -in a rough Ivy League contest at Baker Price was forced from the game by an ankle Injury shortly Columbia 21 Dartmouth 6 Cornell 20 Michigan 7 Delaware 23 Lafayette 7 Drexel 35 Swarthmore 6 E. Stroudsburg 31 Ithaca 0 Gettysburg 21 Albright 20 Hobart 14 Hamilton 6 Hofslra 7 AJfred 7 Holy Cros 39 Marquette 13 Johns Hopkins 31 Dickinson 13 Kings Pt. 13 New Haven 6 Kuiy.towii 33 Millersburg 14 Lincoln 20 L'psala 12 Maine 40 Bowdoin 34 Mansfield 27 Lock Haven 14 Pitt threatened late In the first quarter when Bill Reynolds rii aio -juamua. BarlHoionuir.

Km. It was the worst octeat a Notre Dame team, couched by Prank Leahy, ever suffered, the tuarda Kinyon. Timrn, Krltey. after he had pegged the Lions) Smith circling leu end from the three lor the eeore. SMU tied it up in the second iei iod a Jerry Norton spearheaded a 71-yard surge, making ihe touchdown himself on a five-yard dash.

The Aggies roared 70 yards Crutan Stoumntaar. Mrtchlorl, Lud- previous hijjh mark having toen Purdue's 28-to-ll score in 1950. wl. P-'ftlt fiurd, Wn)tr. movea me sticks to the Ohio 31.

Bill Sichko then fumbled and Carroll Smith recovered for the Red Jerseys on their 28. Curcillo didn't try a pass until 17 minutes had elapsed. He tried to make up for lost time, hut hi Panin's surprising charge down the field was the longest Stanford Rallies, NipsUSC RiUit latilea mtuie. Zaiaott. Ptdtr- B'Cht md-Ptrkard, Ocin-nun.

Tupor. McDonald, Zuifad- to tneir nrst score ana a Mo-t lead early In the second eriod. From there on his backfleld mates, Vernon Wynott, Frank Toner and Howard Hansen, alternated in shredding the Big Green defenses on two more to go ahead with only IS sec Clarion 19 4 XI 31 Juniaia 13-Penn State 32 Potomac 33 S. Carolina 34 onds remaining in the half on a Slip. Rk.

14 Wash-Jeff 0 Grove city 7 Syracuse 13 Ft. Monroe 7 W. Va. 13 Wilson 7 pass which Smith took on thei Tuikbam. tslt tulfbarka Putlch, SMU 25 and lateraled to Glenn flings missed.

At this point Jan-owicz' toe came to the rpscup. Maine Maritime Mass. Maritime Rfbt htlfWIu lindtord. CMdhajn. 0 touchdown marches.

They bare Lippman. Shepherd 20 Wilkes 7 (Conllinifd on Pg 3 pnri) ly lell short on three other (Continued on Page 8 Sport) The tying touchdow-n was run of the day and set the ca-pucity crowd of into a frenzy. Unbeaten Michigan State, winning its 13th consecutive victory, scored three touch-clowns the first lour times it gained the ball and slammed down Notre Dame's attack so hard that not until the last play Shinntnsbur? 9 Indiana. 0 STATISTICS thrusts, scored by. Al Hansen from one r.

a SUnfur foot out. The scoring: Though the Indians scored first on the recovery of a blocked punt when the game a. ir li houtlipr-i alrlhodllt trorlnt" Touchdowna Tint down Ruilunf jurdap Piultlf PaMrt attftnptrd PfiMra complrttd Pftafees liitM-CBliUd Puliti PunHnx avfrttgl uniblf)t lost Yarfia pvllalupd 18 71 91 3.1 i 3 7 40 4 1 15 was only 40 seconds old, they 13 i 2 a 4 of the tnira penoa uiu wie jlhsh 9. Md. State 26 Mlddlebury 40 Moravian 6 Muhlenberg 14 Nat'I.

Ag. 20 New Ham p. CO Norwich 20 PMC 13 Princeton 54 I. Stat 52 Rutgers 28 Springfield 42 St. Lawrence 41 Lehigh Breaks Tech Streak, 34-7 were almost completely out I T.xaji A A acortnlf Touclidownt Union 13 Arnold 6 Scranton 0 Gullaudet 13 Tufis 0 Worcester 20 Wagner 0 Harvard 13 Brooklyn 0 Brown 21 Mass.

14 Rochester 6 get to miufield. mil nnrrett's cunt that rolled classed Irom there on. They 1 made only one other serious on Stale's 12 set the stage at the very start of the game for Pan- W. Va. State 0 No.

Car. Col. 0 Va. Tech 32 Glenville 0 EAST Adelphl 39 Ursinus 19 Amer. Inter, 6 Connecticut 0 Army 27 Citadel 6 Bloomsburg 1G i West Chester 7 Boston U.

35 Oregon fi Brandeis 12 Rider 7 Bridgeport 33 Montreal Low 19 Rucknell 21 Colgate 20 Coast Guard 35 RPI 14 Colby 13 Bates 6 scoring threat and were saved LOS ANGELES, Nov, 10. from a disastrous route only be (AP.) Stanford's Indians, set aflame bv a scorching 9ti-yard cause the center of their line was valiant in the clutches. The smito, uppmann. cuuvnaiotu Hwuiier a. Kiner On 'Star Team ST.

LOUIS, Nov. 10. (AP.) Ralph Kiner, of the Pirates, was one of seven reeaters named to the Sporting News' 1951 All-Star baseball team as selected hy 208 members of the Baseball Writers' Association of America. By CHARLES J. DOYLE Lehigh University, whose football teams havi.

in a spectacular run. jne impound fullback almost fumbled the ball on a handoff from quar-tirhark Al Dorow and then touchdown run by fullback Bob scoring: 7 6 Susquehanna 27 Haverford Temple 34 NYU scourge on Carnegie Tech for manv vears. hrnl Darttniiuth. Trinity 40 Amherst 27 Mathias of Olympic decathlon fame, came from behind in the final minutes today to defeat Southern California, 27-20. The victory gave Stanford the Inside Mfiw tVIJoIr.uV.!3"8' five-game winning streak at Forbes Field yesterday.

T5 34 (Continued on Pstre 4 Sportil broke Notre Dame's closely-bunched secondary before anyone realized what had happened. John Petitbon set off in hot pursuit and almost snared Panin on the goal line. track to the Rose Bowl. ine jignier team jrom scnen-ley Park gave the Engineers a terrific fight in the first half, but live minutes after the third Stanford was trailing, 14-7, as the final ouarter began to un- Pan sunerea a Droen nmr Jnda Sflavh). era i.

Pakot. WlUon. Galanda. LanM. and a possible broken rib during, fold before a roaring crowd of i period got under way, the I vaders began to roll and before the quarter ended the spectators Whltenltht.

VodtnleaT. ihP psme but kept on playing Uuarda Oaianda. Peojiirt. ytuau wnen iviainias iook a kic-r olT in front of his own goal Luni letitll, CtmpbaU. ruHIlTlf.

Odfh. Huinlak. lie was taken to the college hospital lor X-rays. AT SEASON'S PEAK Tho dvnamlc Snartans, who Barka -Hwn, tuchok, Sehwhtw. Oliifn.

priffiih. Bia, Blumeldl, knew should be in a I different league. Approximately 3.000 fans were Otrf, MiUar, I-CRIOH nut to see. the Indian summeri tm, Hun. MunWd n.m- va.

grid spectacle, a big portion of i "c.BA.y'&..'''!". Bmn. posts on the four-yard line and, racmg to the right, sped all the way. Quarterback Gary Kerkorian, the most consistently brilliant performer on the field, missed the try for extra point. The- Troians, on the move had come from behind to win ihpir taut four games, starting nrparnnn.

Marfan. with a 2i-to-20 thriller against liltrtil ait-ijifs niuililil vi the Pittsburgh district. TW KUTII WIN I 14 i.uani. Mlsliirclo. smilot, Tily.

Born. Gln.l, Kllam, urr. PW. Bolir. Orrmnmi.

The" victory was the twelfth themselves for this coveted vic Ohio Slate, were at their season's peak today. They ground out 351 yards in rushing against 104 lor Notre Dame and made a net of 463 to Notre Dame's 18'J. This was the first time a Notre for the Bethlehem battlers in i ciam." rmtnia; tory, went further ahead was I VJ 1 moot later when Kerkorian their 14 games with the Scots. 'K -w aak. a a am -o i a.

hit In the end zone and Iumti Larneie won one game, iasu ,1 Dame team had been scoreless; away six valuable points. That i ySl iv I ft rr-, nans, bti-u, at net iiiliiiii. Fn nt aflne f.ni sent UCA in front, UMd, nnn set the stage for one of Ihe most scrappy Oluan. Bjdrar. ere on Paul Terapklon.

nm )udn Ray Grimm since Army and the Irish fought to a 00 tie in 1946. An 11-inch snow was cleared off the field and stands before the game and playing conditions wnrp nlmost nerfect. W'ith a 54- early 1 t. Mt a. the vcree 01 a touchdown Vi-d'-JL- I jt r.

In the second period, lust rxffor nass touchrfnwn attempt In-goal try that Lehigh tooK oir its snacKies ano stead of a field on nauoacK joe Kryiaf.went awrv I in I I 1. Lehigh put the ball tn nlav a "O-yara run 10 mean ine uxtu- degree temperature and a bright nun. The game, one of the big-f thp duv nationally, was amazing Ilnisnes in memorial Coliseum history. MATHIAS SCORES The clock showed seven minutes left when Stanford began oroll from midfleld. Kerkorian found reserve end Sam Morley for 28 yards to punch deep into Trojan territory.

A penally put the ball on the nine. Asaln Mathias went to work, televised throughout the snrl hroHftrast on five networks, on the 20-yard line and on the first play, Kryla. a stocky sophomore from New Rochelle, N. spun off tackle and ran 80 yards for the sensational score. lng deadlock.

The only touchdown of the first half of the battle was the feature of the contest. The Tartans were just as effective as the Invaders throughout the first neriod and before Michigan Stale, fifth-ranked nationally and aiming for the ton. presented a bewildering pounding the line lor four, louri 1 i i lr Dick Pradetto. fleet 185. array of backs and a pulverizing ana one 10 scuir Bianum the middle of the second perur -lound center of th invadine- ck knotted tne, -jl I kJ la.

7 a Kerkorian was reached they had the bal earn, who lives in North Rmu. count, 20-20, with about Ave mm-, rf --S' 'It v. a on the enemy's 17-yard line. mer. played a big part in the utes to go, The flaming ten fe, 1 VJ PKOS RECOVFRS mat openea tne nooa Herb Weiss tried to throw rifle troupe pass from his own 17 and line tner n.

Linebacker Skip s-ft. S. A I Sk Iv struck agal rr: I ii loiTpnfpd an SC desne 1 a' '1 I lladi 11. cs 10 cross on tne way aown tne 'dw. i ,1 7" i nela- rrauetto, running inter.

ation pass by Frank otttora and raced 29 yards to the Tro LJir uci 1 1 wr. 1 a wiu 1111 vpj line headed up by Don coieman, the little Negro tackle. Panin looked the best but he was closely pressed bv Vlnce Plsano. Don STcAullffe, Al Dorow and Bill Wells. Michigan State scored twice In the first period and once in each of the other periods.

ttSANO SCORES Following Panin's 88-yard touchdown run there was an exchange of punts and then Stale started a march from Its 32, Only six plays were needed In the relentless 68-yard drive with (Continued on Tage 2 Sports) ference, pushed both of them out of the way. The Tartan cheering section jan 12- out a yell, but there was a 1- rom that point the Engineers in the ointment. Johnny! had the bi? rte MUtniHS gOl IWU, nnnuiicin pnssed to Wes Lauhscher three, but: an offside put Ihe Indians back to Ihe 12. Halfback AP Wtrfphoto. Luchok had lust been taken out of the hot battle with a lame left leg.

If he had been In the contest at this time, the Scots WKISS TALLIES Weiss, from Johnstown, got hot early In the third pe-(Continued on Tags 5 ports) the Spartans' first play from scrimmage at East Lan-sing, yesterday. Irish player on the ground is Dick Szymanskt (No. 52), The Spartans won, 35 to 0. FIRST SPARTAN TD Dick Panin, Michi-" gan State back, breaking through tackle and dashing 88 yards through the Notre Dame team for a touchdown on Harry Hugasian more man made this up with one lunge to might have called for a forward (Continued on rage 2-Sports).

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Pages Available:
450,564
Years Available:
1927-1960