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Evening star from Washington, District of Columbia • 59

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Evening stari
Location:
Washington, District of Columbia
Issue Date:
Page:
59
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Maryland Defeats Deacons, 13-2 Giants' Only Hope Is for Tie After Split with Houston SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 29 (AP) Bob Bruce baffled San Francisco. 4-2, in a double-header nightcap today, virtually eliminating the Giants from the pennant race after they had stayed alive with an 11-5 decision in the opener. The split left the second placers 114 games behind Los Angeles with the Dodgers needing only one victory over St. Louis tonight or tomorrow to cinch the flag.

Another Colt victory over the Giants in closing game also would win the pennant for the Dodgers. Only if the Dodgers lost both games and the Giants won tomorrow would the race end in a tie. That would necessitate a best of three playoff beginning here Monday. I Larker Raps Barner Norm Larker, booed vigorously by the Candlestick Park crowd of 26,268 for his arguments in the first game, put the Colts on top to stay in the second with a two-run, thirdinning homer oft loser Juan Marichal (18-11). NIGHT BASEBALL St.

Louis L. Angeles 000 Broglio and Oliver; Drysdale and Roseboro. Bruce, a young righthander now 10-9, fanned nine and puzzled the Giants with his pinpoint control. He yielded six hits. The Colts got only five.

Jack Sanford labored through innings in the opener to win his 24th game and the 100th of the season. Loser Ken Johnson was clouted for five runs in the first inning. Tom Haller, Willie McCovey and Orlando Cepeda homered for the Giants in the opener, but only Matty Alou could connect in the nightcap. Houston got a quick run in the nightcap when leadoff hitter Carl Warwick walked and rookie DaVe Roberts doubled him home. third homer of the year evened the count in the bottom of the first Inning.

Squeeze Bunt Works infield single, a hit batsman, a sacrifice and an intentional walk to Jose Pagan loaded the bases for the Giants in the second. Marichal gave himself a lead by pushing a two-strike squeeze bunt single toward first base. The Giant righthander walked two men in the third, but a double play meant only one was I 1 i Gophers, Missouri Play Scoreless Tie MINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 29 (AP). Minnesota and Missouri battled to a scoreless tie today before 60,133 fans in a football game highlighted by goalline stands on its two and again on its one.

The tight defenses bottled up Johnny Roland and Bill Munsey. Minnesota had the edge statistically but Missouri got off Picture on E-8 the longest play of the game, a pass from Jim Johnson to Bill Tobin in the third period, good for 55 yards. Munsey hauled down Tobin from behind on the Minnesota 30. Missouri then pushed to the 26 and tried a field goal. A five-yard penalty for delay of the game forced Tobin to kick from the 38.

His attempt fell about seven yards short. An interception by Vince Turner on the three with CARDS TEST FRONT-RUNNERS Redskins Expecting 37,000 Today By LEWIS F. ATCHISON Star Staff Writer In what could be their most exciting home debut since the Redskins discovered Washington, Bobby Mitchell Co. take on the Cardinals at 2 p.m. today at D.

C. Stadium. Club officials predict a turnout of at least 37,000, with a Rcdskins-Cards Numbers. Page E-2 chance that last Redskins record of 41,062 for the Colts game will be surpassed. Mitchell is the magnet.

His sensational 50-yard run with a pass in last 17-16 upset victory over the Browns, following a three-touchdown splurge at Dallas, is the talk of the town. Is Mitchell for real? Or was it trick photography fans saw on the box? Are the Redskins truly title contenders or lucky front-runners? Today should SPORTS aboard when Larker put the Colts ahead. 3-2, with his ninth i home run, a high fly near the rightfield foul pole. Two singles sandwiched around an error produced another run and finished Marichal in the fifth inning. Bruce erased the best late threat when he got Cepeda and Haller to fly to left with two on in the eighth.

First Game HOUSTON SAN FRANCISCO akrkM akrkM Warwick cf Jll 0 Hiller Jb 3 110 Spangler If 4 2 10 M.Alou rs If 52 2 0 Temple 2b 22 11 Mays cf 40 0 0 2b 1 00 0 McCovey If 3 3 2 2 Larker 1b 50 2 2 cF.Alou rs 10 0 0 3b 50 0 0 Cepeda 1b 42 2 2 Roberts rs 40 2 1 Baller 42 2 4 Ranew 50 0 0 Davenpt 3b 411 1 Hartman 0 0 Pagan ss 4010 Johnson 00 0 0 Sanford 30 0 0 aWiUtams 10 0 0 Miller 10 0 0 2 0 1 0 dGoodman 10 10 Brunet 0 0 0 0 Totals MS 04 Wais Mil 11 0 -Popped out for Johnson in 2nd; b- Ran for Temple in 6th; c-Ran for Me- Own in 6th; d-Sinsled for Tiefenauer 302 010 000- 5 Sae Fraaebea 540 200 00a-11 E- Aapranonte. Renew. Davenport, Amalfitano. PO A- Houston 24-0, San Francisco 27-13. DP-Davenport, Hiller and Cepeda.

LOB-Houston it San Francisco 6. 2. SF-Cepeda. IP EBBBSO Johnson (L. 7-163 1 3 5 3 2 1 Tiefenauer 4 7 6 4 1 4 Brunet 11 0 0 11 Sanford (W, 24-7) 5 2-3 0 5 5 5 0 Miller 31-3 1 0 0 1 2 HBP-By Miller (Roberta).

U-BoMoes, Landes, Smith, Steiner. (SeeeaS Game) HOUSTON SAN FRANCISCO akrkM akrkM Warwick es 2 1 0 0 Kuenn If 40 0 0 Temple 2b 40 0 0 Hiller 2b 40 0 0 Roberta 3 12 2 M.Ah>u rs 4 12 1 Larker 1b 4 112 Maya cf 30 0 0 3b 40 0 0 Cepeda 1b 412 0 Mejias rs 4 0 0 0 Hsller 3 0 0 0 Smith 4 0 10 Davenpt 3b 3 0 0 0 Hartman 4 0 0 Pagan aa 2 0 10 Bruce 4 110 cF.Akm 10 0 0 Marichal 20 11 Miller 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 bODell 0 0 0 0 Totals 32 4,4 Jll a- Hit by pitched ball for Miller in 7th; b-Ran for Bailey in 7th; c-FBed 01,1 Hontaa IM NS 000-4 Saa FraaMeen, 110 040 000-2 E-Pagan 2, Davenport. PO-A HouMon 27-9, San Francisco 37-12. DP-Hlller, Pasan and Cepeda 1 LOB-Houston 4, M. Aloe.

HR-M Alow Ijrker. SB-Pasan. S-Davenpert, Warwick. IP a SO b3m 2 0 0 0 0 3 HBP-By Bruce (Hdier). by Broee (Bailey).

WP-Bruee. U-Undes. Smith, Steiner. Boggess. A-M4H.

1 six seconds left thwarted final drive as Duane Blaska fired a long pass intended for Munsey near the goal line. first opportunity came in the first period when Paul Benson recovered John- fumble on the Missouri 21. Munsey and Jerry Jones punched to the three where on fourth down Munsey tripped and could gain only a yard. A second Minnesota drive that failed started in the second I quarter from the Minnesota 11 i at which point Daryl Krugman had panted out of bounds. A 13-yard run by Jones and a 30-yard pass from Blaska to Jim Cairns were the longest offensive thrusts in a steady march that finally reached the Missiuri 10 and a first down.

Munsey was stopped at the line but Jay Sharp broke i through for 4 and Blaska made 4 more around end. Then on i stopped a yard away bring some answers, for the Cardinals are five-point favorites. The question most fans are asking is whether the Redskins can win without magic. If not, how long can bounding Bobby continue his game-winning heroics? A defensive line that stopped Clevei bruising runners four times inside the three-yard line, and legwork put the Redskins in first place for the first time in years. Keeping them there will be even more difficult.

Mentally the Redskins are up for the game. Physically they're in better shape than last week when Halfback Billy Barnes and Defensive Halfback Bob Freeman missed the Cleveland game because of injuries, i They got a fright earlier this week when middle Linebacker 1 1 Bob Pellegrini pulled a groin Irish Stymie Lase Drives to Top Sooners NORMAN, Sept. 29 Dame beat off a pair of late Oklahoma challenges here today and defeated the Sooners. 13-7, In a nationally televised football game. The Sooners drove to a first down on the Notre Dame three- STATISTICS First down.

Bushins yardass 202 Passing yardage 78 26 Pasaaa 6-8 4-10 Passes Intercepted -1 Punta 2-26 2-37 Fumbles lest 1 2 Yards penalised 40 SO yard line late in the fourth quarter but the Fighting Irish yielded only two yards before Quarterback Monte fourth-down pitchout was wild. Notre Dame recovered on the 12. But the Irish gave the Sooners another chance a minute later when Quarterback Daryle Lamonica fumbled and End John Flynn recovered on the Notre Dame 30. Lamonica redeemed himself quickly, picking off Norman Smith's first-down pass at the 15. Rutkowski Scores Notre Dame drove for touchdowns after receiving the opening and second-half kickoffs.

Halfback Ed Rutkowski capped the 69-yard opening drive with a burst into the end zone from the seven. Rutkowski also kicked the extra point. The Irish gave Oklahoma a lesson in ball control after receiving the second-half kickoff. using 11 minutes and 35 seconds to go 89 yards. Fullback Bill Ahern scored the clincher from the nineyard line but kick was wide to give Oklahoma hope.

Halfback Paul Lea scored only touchdown on a one-yard plunge seconds before the first quarter ended. Lea's touchdown came at the end of a 58-yard drive. Fifth Over Sooners The victory was Notre fifth over Oklahoma in six meetings. It was first game of the season, while Oklahoma opened last week with a 6-2 victory over Syracuse. Both teams moved the ball weu on the ground but Notre superiority in the air, coupled with rollout threat, kept the Oklahoma defense spread wide.

The Irish line also was especially tough in third-down situations, stopping Oklahoma repeatedly on crucial plays. Lamonica completed five of five passes for 26 yards and added 37 yards running. However, he lost 12 yards when caught behind the line attempting to pass. Frank Budka, Notre Dame's alternate quarterback, completed one of three passes for 16 yards. After pitchout near the Oklahoma goal was snatched up by Minick, many in the crowd thought Notre Dame had scored another touchdown as Minick swept the distance of the field with Sooner players in pursuit.

But Officials ruled the ball dead on the 12. 3 1 Notre 7. run (Rut- 1. run (Jantan klek). A To.

8 rualkuk, 1 Riders Blitz Cats OTTAWA, Sept. 29 The Ottawa Rough Riders scoring once in each quarter, blitzed the Hamilton Tiger Cats 27-0 in a Canadian Professional Football game today and pulled to within one point of the leading Tiger Cats in the Eastern Conference. muscle, but he was running i again Friday and is expected to start. Since moving from Chicago to St. Louis the Cardinals have been invincible against Washington.

won four straight, rolling up 132 points to 45. Wally Lemm, who coached the Houston Oilers to the American Football League crown last year, is shooting for a pigskin double with the Cards, and off the first two games his team has a chance. Paced by 32-year-old Sam Etcheverry, one-time Canadian football star, the Cards skimmed by the Eagles, 27-21, and then gave the champion Packers a real go before bowing, 17-0. The Cardinals are rated stronger than last team, which took the Redskins apart here, 24-0, and clobbered them Sunday WASHINGTON, D. SEPTEMBER 30, 1962 ki 1 Quarterback Dan Armour of William and Mary dives to the Navy one- NAVT ZU foot line in the fourth quarter of game at Annapolis.

Armour, who scored on the next play to give the Indians a 16-13 lead, was tackled Iby Ron Test (71) and Vem Von Sydow Staff Photo by I Paul Schmick. Colonials Tied With BYU, 6-6, In 2d Period BULLETIN PROVO, Utah. George Washingto nand Brigham Young traded touchdowns early in the second quarter and were tied, 6-6, with 7:42 remaining in Ute half. PROVO, Utah, Sept 29 (AP) Young University and George Washington both sought the first football victory of the season tonight in 65- degree weather. Both teams have two losses for the season.

FIRST QUARTER Dick Drummond slipped on his 16-yard line returning the kickoff and made 9 yards in three carries before Warren Corbin punted to Brigham Young's 33. Tailback Eldon Fortie bioke off the right side lor 36 yards to 31. Two plays later Buddy Pqllock intercepted a Fortie pass on the Colonial 20. Corbin punted to the BYU 32 and Fortie again turned his right side on the next play for 33 yards to the GW 35. Fortie ran for a first down on the 22 but BYU stalled and gave up the ball on the 19.

Corbin again had to punt, this time to Fortie, who returned it 15 yards to the GW 46. The Cougars failed to move and Tony Fredicine returned a BYU punt to the GW 28. at St. Louis, 38-24. got strong-armed guys up front like Frank Fuller, Ed Henke, i Don Owens, Luke Owens and Joe Robb who held the Packers well in hand for a half.

Behind i them are veterans like Dale i i Meinert, Bill Koman and Marion Rushing. i This crew stopped the crippled Eagles with 28 yards on the ground and had things well in hand at Green Bay i until Jim Taylor got untracked 1 in the second half. i A year ago the Cards ganged up on Norman Snead with an eight-man rush that held him to 11 completions in 29 tries. Defensive Coach Ray Willsey, who showed them how to do it, is on the side this time, but the Cards forgotten. If Snead on his toes wind up on his back again.

Navy Fights Off Late Threat 1 By ROBERT SOMMERS ANNAPOLIS, Sept. Donnelly knifed through the William St Mary line to spill Scott Swan for an 8-yard loss and moments later Jim Campbell dumped Dan Henning, the quarterback, to preserve a 20-16 victory for Navy here today. A homecoming day crowd of 20,639 sat in on a frustrating afternoon for the Midshipmen in the Navy-Marine Corpe Stadium, an afternoon on which William St Mary scored more points than it ever has in this 27-game aeries. The previous high was 14 pointe in 1956 when Navy won, 36-14. Moments earlier, Navy had taken the lead as Donnelly capped a 77-yard drive by plunging over from the three.

WiHiam St Mary, a three touchdown underdog, then moved from its own 35-yard line to 12 in eight plays, with Quarterback Dan Henning; sparking the drive. Middies Halt Drive Swan took a handoff from Henning and started around his left end when Donnelly cut through from his linebacking position to nail him on the 20. Henning then threw incomplete into the end zone and finally Campbell broke through pass protection to spill him on the 24 on fourth down. Actually, Navy was lucky score the winning touchdown on the seventh play of the drive, a 15-yard pass from Henning to End Dave Lipke. pass led Lipke a little too much and he fell making the catch.

He had stolen behind the Navy pass defense and was all alone on the 17. Although Wayne Hardin, Navy coach, said before the game that he would be satisfied with a one-point victory, Navy was far from impressive considering the rest of its schedule. It meets Minnesota in Minneapolis next week and all Hardin would promise after today was that the Midshipmen would show up. pentrated Navy territory six times, converted two of the sorties into touchdowns and one into a 37-yard field goal by Steve Bishop. Navy crossed midfield five times and scored three touchdowns, the longest a 56-yard pass and run from Ron Klemick, quarterback, to Donnelly, who outraced two defenders for the final 35 yards.

Navy showed it could move the ball by picking up 325 yards. Klemick, who went all STATISTICS W. M. Navy Flrat downs 15 20 Rushing yardaco 127 140 Pnaaing 80 185 Paaaea 7-13 18-22 Psaaea Intercepted by. 3 0 4-38 2-31 Fumbles lost 2 2 Yards penalised 85 70 the way at quarterback, passed for 185 yards on 13 completions in 22 attempts.

Donnelly and John Sai led the ground gainers with 66 and 61 yards respectively and Jimmy Stewart, a 5-foot 8-inch, 165-pound wisp of a lad, snagged seven Klemick passes to lead all receivers. Charley Weaver, who came here with the reputation of being William St best back, lived up to his reputation. He caught a 13-yard pass from Henning for the first touchdown early in the third period after a weird play set up the score. Break for Indians With the ball on 35- yard line following the kickoff. Swan attempted to skirt his own left end, but was hit hard at the line of scrimmage.

The ball squirted from his arms, but Stan Penkunas, fullback, was trailing the play, picked up the ball on the bounce and plodded 49 yards before he was stopped by Donnelly on the Navy 12. After three plays failed to gain an inch, Henning threw a strike to Weaver, who battled a Navy defender in the end zone for the touchdown that put within four points at 13-9. Navy then drove from its 38- Football Stores WASHINGTON AREA Cbeyney St. 21, D. C.

Tehrs. 18 Del. Valley 21 8 Navy 20 William Mary 16 Virginia State 19. 6 OTHER TOP GAMES Arkansas 42 Tulsa 14 Army 9Syracuse 2 Auburn 22Tennessee 21 Boston Coll. 13 California 25 Jose St.

8 Clemson 7N. C. State 0 Colgate 23 Cornell 12 Colorado 6 Kansas State 0 Columbia 22 Brown 20 Dartmouth 27 Mass. 3 Duke 21 Carolina 8 Georgia Tech 17 0 Harvard 27 Lehigh 7 Holy Cross 16 Buffalo 6 Win, Lose or Draw, E-2 Siegel at Large, E-3 Major Averages, E-7 yard line to the 9, but Dick Korns, Indians' center, nailed Klemick. who had faded to pass in a fourth and eight, situation, and dropped him on the 17.

get anywhere in its next series and punted. On the first play, Bgn Dris- coll intercepted a Klemick pass on the 38 and the Indians, with Dan Armour at the helm, i moved 61 yards on 11 plays with Armour sneaking over from the 1-yard line of the third play of the fourth period. kick was good and William and Mary led, 16-13. Navy seemed to get a spark after that and, with Donnelly, i Kip Paskewich and Sai doing i the running, mixed up with a few Klemick passes. Navy i moved 77 yards for the winning 1 See NAVY, Page E-4 on Air Television Football Buffalo at Dallas, WMAL-7 3:30 pm.

Bowling Championship Bowl 1 WMAL-7, Noon. Bowling Teens, WMAL-7, 1 pm. Radio Football St. Louis at Washington, WWDC-1260, 2'pm. Detroit at Baltimore, WTOP-1500, 2 p.m.

Baseball Washington at Boston, WRC-980, 2 pm. Idaho 9ldaho State 6 Indiana 26Cincinnati 6 lowa 28Oregon State 8 Kansas U. 0 Minnesota oMissouri 6 Montana 14...5. Dakota St. 18 Nebraska 25Michigan 13 Notre Dame 13 7 Ohio State 41 Carolina 7 Oregon 35 Utah 8 Penn 13 Lafayette 11 Penn State 20 Force 6 i Princeton 15Rutgers 7 Stanford 16 St.

13 Utah St. 43, Montana St. U. 20 I Washington 28Illinois 7 I Washington St 21, Wyoming 15 i Wert Virginia 14VPI 0 Wisconsin 69... Mex.

St. 13 Yale 14 I Other Scores on E-4 Terps Cash In Shiner's Pass, Soph's Run By STEVE GUBACK Star Staff Writer WINSTON-SALEM, N.C.. Sept. favored by 11 points, launched its Atlantic Coast Conference title bid here tonight by hitting its target right on the nose. Scoring in the first and third periods, the Terps clipped Wake Forest, 13-2.

in the 18th annual Piedmont Bowl attraction before a crowd of 12,000. The Terps got their touchdowns on a quick 36-yard pass from Dick Shiner to Tom Brown and on a sustained 87- yard drive in which Len Chiavemin cracked the final 9 yards. Maryland dominated the game, never letting Wake Forest penetrate its 20-yard line. FIRST QUARTER It took Maryland only 4:50 to get the jump on the Deacons and take a lead. The Terps won the toss and elected to receive, but pick up a first down and Don White punted to the 41.

Wake Forest also failed to gain, but on fourth down, punter Steve Warren fumbled the snap and was downed by Terp End Tom Rae on the! Deacon 36. Maryland took over and on the first play Dick Shiner passed to Tom Brown, who made a leaping catch all" alone on the 15 and trotted for the score. John Hannigan provided the placement, the 20th straight of his career, for a 7-0 lead. Wake Forest got two points back when Shiner, dropping back to pass from his six, was hit In the end zone by Ed. Wilbert Faircloth for a safety.

The Terps had been backed up deep in their own territory on a 55- yard punt by Steve Bozarth. The big line held Wake Forest without a first down In the first quarter and as the period ended, a 33-yard pass. Shiner to Ernie Arizzi, highlighted a march that carried to the 12 as the period ended. SECOND QUARTER Brian Piccolo, Wake Forest fullback, took the steam out of the drive by turning a third-down screen pass from Shiner to Rae into a 13-yard lass. With fourth down and 17 yards to go, Hannigan attempted a field goal from the 30 which was wide and short.

The Piccolo-Hannlgan combination was heard from again. Piccolo stopped the Terps the next time they had possession with an interception of a long pass on his 24 and later had another field goal try from the 22 that was wide. The Terps set up the field goal by driving 50 yards on the running of Arizzi and two Shiner to Funk passes for 26 yards, but fizzled after getting a first down on the Wake Forest 15. Wake Forest picked up its initial first down with 5:20 left on a march from its own 20 to the 43, chiefly on two passes from John Mackovic to Jim Tejeck. Maryland stiffened and forced the Deacons to punt.

Maryland punted out from deep In its territory and the Deacons mounted one quick threat. A pass from Mackovic to Henry Newton carried to the Maryland 21-yard line, but it came on the final play of the half. THIRD QARTER Wake Forest was penalized 15 yards for delaying the start of the second half, but quickly made that up. With Don 17-yard burst providing the torch, Wake marched swiftly from its 23 to 29, before Joe Hrezo intercepted a Mackovic pass. From its own 18, Maryland mounted a sustained drive that produced a touchdown with 5:45 left.

Arizzi got the drive off with a 14-yard sweep to the 32 and the Terps hit on two key third-down plays to keep it going. Brown got one on a 10-yard reverse and Shiner hit Tom Rae with a 25-yard rollout toss for the other. This put the ball on 22. After a first down on the nine, Lenny Chiaverini took a handoff and thundered over right tackle for the score. A holding penalty nullified Hannigan's placement, so the Terps went for two points, but Shiner's pass was too long.

Score: Maryland, 13; Wake Forest, 2. Late in the period, the Terps had two more scoring bids go awry. The quarter ended, Maryland, 13; Wake Forest, 2. FOURTH QUARTER The next time Maryland has possession, it score, but it did use up considerable time. In a short-yardage ground attack, the Terps consumed nearly eight minutes and marched the ball from their own seven to Wake's 39 before running out of puff.

Don punt was then downed by Walter Rock on the Deacon 2-yard line. That set up another Maryland threat, but it failed to pay 1.

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Years Available:
1852-1963