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Arizona Republic from Phoenix, Arizona • Page 7
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Arizona Republic from Phoenix, Arizona • Page 7

Publication:
Arizona Republici
Location:
Phoenix, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

RTinUC KEPU8UC MAIL ftTV UCLA 41 fniinois 27 Oregon 0 Wash'ton 20 Not. Dame 33 Pittsburgh 0 Story On Page Mich. State 32 Penn State 21 Story On Page Maryland 14 N.Carolina 7 Story On Page Arkansas 16 Texas 1 14 Story On Pajre 2 TCU 20 Texas A-M 14 Story On Page Baylor 40 Texas Tech 20 Story On Page Story On Page 3 I Story On Page heAr: Sports News Classified Advertising Page One Section IV Sunday, October 21, 1951 E7D nn Jl IZOMA mm TO Cagers Admit Brihe Kentucky Ends BITS O' THIS AND THAT of the Phoenix Senators who just World Series, was in a tough spot irain in jrnoenix, but the Yankees trained here last spring. Chet had to be neutral, although he did have a secret favorite. Won't say wno was, tfiough Chet, by the way, talked to the told the Bombers haven't made up springs rookie school.

It looks like players who would be invited live within a couple of weeks And Murphy also says San Francisco is interested in Herman Lewis, slugging Phoenix first baseman, but doesn't know what to do about it right now since members of the own statuses while Owner Fagan is trying to sell the ball club WHICH REMINDS THAT IT'S PROBABLY old stuff by now, but the Seals rate Mike (Scooter) Bases, who played for Phoenix a couple of years ago, as their most valuable piece of property on some books that were made public by accident. The Scooter's worth $75,000, in the opinion of the Seals. The next most valuable player on thte books can be had for $25,000 Winston Churchill, who entered his horse Colonist in a race at Ascot, went up to the animal before the event and promised that if it won it would never have to race again and could, instead, "spend its time in agreeable female company." Churchill later reported to General Lord Ismay that the horse unfortunately "did not keep his mind on the race." WYOMING PUBLICITY SOURCES REVEAL that Harrv Geldien triple threat back for the Cowboys who already has received prominent mention nationally, has ruined his punting average for the season. In a game against the Colorado Aggies, during which there was a very strong wind blowing, Geldien got off one boot that he finally watched soar back over his head. He loss.

The NCAA, apparently fearing Doyle (right) of the state's attorney's office in Chicago. The players were charged with accepting bribes to shave points in important games. They now are players and stockholders in the pro Indianapolis Olympians. (AP Wirephoto) Cagers Charged With Fix ball players with Kentucky's great team, Ralph Beard (seated, left) and Alex Groza (seated, right) are questioned by Detective James Canavan (center) and Jack aouui juicing into ine i. arrangement, has sent out what it describes as an "authoritative summary of the NCAA experimental plan for the televising of college football games this fall." Federal officials occasionally have mentioned that the plan sounds like restraint and is somewhat monopolistic.

POST CARD FROM PAUL CLIMTE, now touring Mexico with Charlie Salas says, "This is a good country. Guess I can throw away my copy of official World Series applications the Dodgers sent me late in September. SUMO WRESTLERS GET 70 PER CENT of their power from the hips down, according to Al Richardson, the Hong Kong promoter who is touring them around the United States. Most of the rest is in their shoulders. They have a lot.

of trouble learning American rules for a later shot at the mat game as staged here. After four weeks they still walked away from opponents once they had tossed them to the mat. A psychologist says horses, too, can become moody and that they sometimes plunge into a trough of blues lasting three to five days. How come the horses assigned to me in the cavalry always were in such low spots? vmMk Chet MurDhv. business manaeer returned from New York and the back there.

The Giants normally Yankee brass in Gotham and was their minds about the site of next Florida, though, as most of the east of the Mississippi. He'll know Seals staff aren't sure of their recovered it himself for a 14-yard repurcussions from the government's perate bid from their own 36, reaching the USC 42 on a pass from Billy Mais, quarterback, to Don Robison, halfback. Another long pass went into the air but a Trojan defender. Dick Nunis, intercepted it on the USC 14. The gun barked the defeat of the defending conference champions shortly after.

The Southern California win was the Trojan's fourth in the conference. Billie Scores At Manzanita Duke Billie Saturday night be came the first jalopy driver to repeat a main event victory at Man zanita Park. Billie won the extended 50-lap feature with a wire-to-wire run ning. He was timed in 17:55 flat. Following were: Don Davis, Leon Taylor and Ed Camrud.

Bill Shaffer won the 20-lap semi main event in 11.03.8, leading John Hancock, Len Pritchard and Dan Hampelman. Bernice Houmont won the 10-lap Powder Puff Derby in 3:55.1, a new track record. Bye. Bye Rose Bowl USC Stuns California Before 84000, 21-14 Late ASC Bid Wahlin, Cooper, Welker, Morrison Star Oii.Of fense By JIM BLAKESLEE Republic Sports Writer SAN DIEGO, Oct. 20 A 96-yard kickoff return in the closing minutes Saturday night gave San Diego State a 27-27 tie with Arizona State College of Tempe.

Art Preston took the ball with only four minutes left to snakehip through the Arizonans. Ben Cruz tconverted to tie the ball game. San Diego previously was unbeaten and untied in four starts. The Arizona club, sparked by Tiny Harry Welker. dominated ground play, gaming olO yards on land.

San Diego held the air superiority, gaining 268 yards via the airways. ASC ran into one of the sweetest-running backs this writer has seen this season in Volney (Skeet) Quinlan. He was the difference for the Aztecs, but he had plenty of help from a spirited team playing before a homecoming crowd oi about 11,000. It was a nip and tuck battle all the way. The Sun Devils defense looked good on the ground but leaked badly when pitted against the strong passing arm of South paw Jesse Thompson.

DEFENSIVELY. Boh Reed. Earl Putman, Sam Duca, Bob Alford, Emery Harper and John Stewart looked good. The Aztecs capitalized on every break given them. ASC fumbles hurt three times in the game each time climaxing the Devils drive for their opponents goal line.

Early in the final period th Devils frittered away a scoring onDortunitv when Harold Self fumbled the ball from the one-foot iline while trying a quarterback sneak. RUT THE DEVILS ground defense, functioning, well all evening, held and forced the Aztecs to punt. The Devils marched for 75 yards with Buzz Welker and Duane Morrison burning up yardage with Bob Tarwater going the distance from the four. The kick was good and the Devils led, 27-20. Art Preston gathered in the kickoff and ran 95 yards to score with Benjamin Cruz converting to tie it up again, 27-27.

The Aztecs had bounced back into the game in the third period after Jim Bilton let an Aztec steal the ball from him after he tried a fielding catch of a bouncing punt. San Diego capitalized on the break which came on the Sun Devils 10. After a good goal line stand, Art Preston passed to Quin lan on a neat deceptive play to score. Ben Cruz's kick was good to tie the score at 20-20. But most of the action occurred before the half gun ended.

IN THE FD5ST half the Sun Devils took the kick off and put on a very business-like march for 63-yards and a touch-down in eight plays. Self mixed up a good ground attack with a sweet pass to Mitcham for the score. Morrison and Wahlin handled running duties, bleeding through the center of the line for good gains. An interference penalty against the Aztecs helped the Devils for 26 yards on a Self to Allen pass. The Aztecs bounced back and capitalized on a poor Devil punt to start a drive that started on the ASC 46.

Thompson passed to Chet Nicholson for the distance and a conversion gave San Diego a 7-6 lead. AN ATTEMPTED field goal by Tom Sansom was short, then Mitcham intercepted a Thompson pass on his own 20 to stop an Aztec drive. But Morrison fumbled to stop the Devils on the Aztecs 39. Ground plays failed and Thompson uncorked another pass to Quinlan for 55 yards and a 13-6 lead. Welker took the next kickoff and ran it 35 yards to his own 45.

He made nine on the ground and Morrison tore off 36 to the Aztec 10. Three plays later, Welker slipped into the end zone and Sanson converted for the tie. Jim Bilton picked up a punt on the 13 and was stopped there. Welker ran twice, for 26 and 55 yards, to put the ball on the San Diego four. There Wahlin skirted left tackle for the score, and.

Sanson kicked goal to put the Devils out in front 20-13 at half-time. ARIZONA STATE 14 7 17 SAN DIEGO 7 7 717 Tempe seoring Welker. Wahlin. Mitcham. Tarwater.

Conversion Samson 3. San Diego Quinlan 2. Nicholson. Preston. Conversions Cruz 3.

ST. GREGORY'S WINS Hard running by Jack Barnes, Chip Pennington and Anthony Daugherty behind solid blocking by Francis Arnold and Dennis Flani-gan gave St. Gregory's a 38-0 victory over St. Matthew's in a Catholic Grammar School League touch game at Monterey Park Saturday. Olympic Game Aces Confess Taking $500 Barnstable, Groza, And Beard Arrested For Shaving Games CHICAGO, Oct.

20 (UP) Three members of Kentucky University's "fabulous five" basketball team which represented the United States in the last Olympic games were arrested on bribery charges Saturday after weeks of whispered accusations. Ex-All-Americas Alex Groza and Ralph Beard were charged here. Dale Barnstable was arrested in his home at Louisville, Ky All three confessed taking $500 bribes to fix the Kentucky-Loyola of-Chicago game in the national invitation tournament at New York's Madison Square Garden in 1949, Vincent O'Connor, New York assistant district attorney, said. BUT O'CONNOR implied that the confessions were only the be ginning of another sordid story which already has roped in 32 of the nation's top college players from seven colleges. "Practically every game" Kentucky played dur ing the 1948-49 season is involved.

O'Connor said. In New York Frank Hogan, district attorney, said he knows of two other fixed games. The Kentucky team of the late 1940's was so fabulously successful that it made up half of the U.S. Olympic squad at London in 1948. The stars of the team formed their own professional team and entered the Professional National Basketball Association as a unit.

That, it developed, was their down fall. THE PRESIDENT of the asso ciation. Maurice Podoloff, went to New York police with a request that they help "cleanse profes sional basketball from the taint of fixes." He made his league records! available. Police went to work, I questioning known "fixers." New York buzzed with reports "Kentucky is next." This week, one month after Pod oloff appeared, police were ready to swoop down. O'Connor flew to Chicago with New York detectives and composed fixers Nicholas Englisis and Nat Brown, who were arrested originally in connection with the Bradley fix.

THEY CONFERRED with John Buckley, Illinois state attorney. Chicago detectives set out to find Groza and Beard. They found them, ironically, leaving the Chicago Stadium Saturday night after an all-star game in which their old coach, Adolph Rupp, supervised one of the teams. Ex-Kentucky Stars Cliff Barker and Joe Holland were with them. All four were brought in for questioning.

Barker and Holland were let go. GROZA AND BEARD first de nied taking any bribes. They were brought face-to-face with Englisis and Brown, who stuck by their story. The boys then confe-sed, O'Connor said. Both admitted tak ing $500 each to "shave the points" on the game against Loyola, al though the fixers said Groza got $1,000, not $500.

Another New York assistant district attorney hopped a plane for Louisville, and went after Barnstable, who now is a high school coach. up their startling win, two of their touchdowns coming after Buckeye fumbles, one after an intercepted pass and one when they took thej ball on their own 39, where, an Ohio bid for a first down failed on a four-yard plunge. The Hoosiers romped out front in the first three minutes when Bob Inserra recovered a fumble on Ohio's 14 by All-America "Vic Jan-owicz. Two plays later Lou D'Achille passed 14 yards to Don Luft, 6-foot 4-inch. 205-pound end.

D'Achille missed the extra point, but from there on it was all Indiana. The Bucks rolled right back with a 62-yard march to Indiana's seven, but the Hoosier defenders forced them back to the 14 from where Janowicz place-kicked for three points. THE HOOSIERS made a sustained march of 76 yards in seven plays, climaxed by D'Achille' 19-yard touchdown pass to fullback Gene Gepman to make it 13-3. Just before the period closed Jerry Van Ooyen intercepted a Tony Curcillo Central Michigan 19. Michigan Normal 13Illinois College 14.

North Central (111.) South Dakota 27. Morningside (Iowa) 7. South Dakota Mines 14. General Beadle Teachers. S.

Dak. Northern State Teacher (S. Dak.) 27. Yankton College 14. St.

Johns 31. Concordia (Minn.) 'St. Olaf (Minn.) 25. Sfc Mary's (Minn.) 13 St. Cloud Minn.) Teachers 22.

Winona (Minn, i Teachers 6. Indiana O. Ball State 0 (tie). Hanover 12. Manchester 5S.

Anderson 26. Wabash 41. Olivet 6. Indiana Central Cedarville (Ohio) 6. St.

Joseph's 12. Butler b. Augustana 14. Elmhurst 0. Qumcy 22.

Fort Hays Teachers 21. Northern Illinois 39. Illinois Normal 13. Illinois Wesleyan 26, Millikin 7. Ripon 7.

Knox 0. Wayne 16. Kansas State (Emponai 7. Kearney 19. Peru (Nebr 14.

St Benedict's Kans.) 33. Washburn 13. Concordia (Nebr. 66. Tarkio 8.

Southeastern Oklahoma 31. Northwestern Oklahoma O. m- Southwestern Oklahoma 32. Central Oklahoma 26. Cincinnati 41.

Western Reserve 0. John Carroll 7. Case 6. Bowling Green 27. Baldwin-Wallace 20.

Younestown 27. St. Francis (Penn. b. Rinfftfin i.i.

Ohio Northern 7. Beloit (Wis.) 27. North Dakota South Dakota State 7, North State 7 tie. DePauw 33. Kalamazoo 31.

Wofford 33. Presbyterian 14, Storer 6. Miner Teachers 0. Monmouth 31. Grinnell h.

Loras 26. Luther (IowaJ 7. Dakota Coc 19. Cornell (Iowa) 7. Eastern Illinois State 2 Northwest Missouri State 21.

St. Procopius 44. Aurora loiicse Platteville (Wis.) 7. Oshkosh Milwaukee 13, Stevens Point (Wis.) 13 (tie. Southwest Arkansas 16.

Texas 14. Texas Christian 20. Texas New Mexico Western 6 Highlands 6 (tie). New Mexico Western 6, A and 14. New Mexico New Mexico Highlands 6 (tie).

Tulsa 27. Marauette 14. Rice 2K. SMU 7. Southern State 35.

Henderson 14. Stephen F. Austin 27. Southwest Texas StAbilene Christian 5P. McMurry 13 Sam Houston State 33.

Lamar Tech 14. East Texas State 46. Midwestern 2o. Rocky Mountain Colorado College 40. Western State 19.

Bricham Young 20. Wyoming 20 tie). Utah State 20. Colorado A and 20 (tie). Montana 3K.

Montana Slate 0. Utah 17. Denver 14. Colorado Colleec 40. Western Colorado 19.

Westminster Utah 32. Ricks 13. Adams. State Colo. 11.

Panhandle A and 13. Far West USC 21. California 14. Illinois 27. Washington 20.

Washington State 26. Oregon State 13. Idaho 40. San Jose State 7. Stanford 21.

Santa Clara 14. UCLA 41. Oregon 0. Western Washington 19. College of Pu-cet Sound 0.

British Columbia 13. Eastern Oregon 8. Lewis and Clark 41. illamette 12. LEGION COURT CALL, Tryouts for the Luke-Greenway American Legion post basketball team will be held by Coach Paul Westlake at Alhambra School gym Monday at 7:30.

Counterpoint Again Beats Hill Prince NEW YORK, Oct. 20 (AP) C. V. Whitney's Counterpoint took the lead from C. T.

Chenery's Hill Prince in the stretch Saturday and went on to win the S53.900 Empire City- Gold Cup at Jamaica, the second time he had beaten the 1950 champion within a week. The chestnut son of Count Fleet, ridden by Dave Gorman, covered the mile and five eighths in 2:42 45 seconds, which equalled the track record set by Stymie in 1946. Last week Counterpoint beat the Prince in the $50,000 Jockey Club Gold Cup at Belmont. Third in the small field of four starters was Hull Down, with Nul lify fourth. The winner, now leading for the horse-of-the-year honors, was sec-! ond choice and paid $6.30 and $2.10.

Hill Prince was $2.10 to place, with no show betting. Value to the winner was 800, boosting Counterpoints earn-i ings to $209,725. Luke Snares 67-6 Verdict Special to The Republic WHITE SANDS, N. Oct. 20 Luke Air Force Base swamped White Sands, 67 to 6, in a service football game here Saturday night.

Bobby Hendricks, Raider quarterback, completed eight of 12 pass tries, five of them for touchdowns. Chuck Rosso, former Minnesota back, scored four TDs, two after taking passes and two on runs of 30 and 50 yards. The pass plays covered 30 and 70 yards and all efforts produced fine running displays by Rosso. The Raiders rolled up 722 total net yards against 205 for the Rockets. Luke rushed for 445 yards and passed for 277.

The yardage was good for 20 first downs, compared to six for White Sands. To Re-Form Hnv'c meetinc tntal attendance at all 10 parks during the 1950 season amounted to only 645,036. THE PRESENT league is made up of teams located in four states plus Mexico. They are Las Vegas, El Centro, El Paso, Tucson. Yuma, Bisbee-Douglas, Mexicali, Tijuana, Juarez and Phoenix.

El Paso led the league in total attendance for the 1951 season. The Texans drew 111,533 for the season to set a new record. Total attendance for the league was 645,036. Other uaid totals included Bis-bee-Douglas, 57,786: El Centro. 23.847; Juarez, 68.000: Las Vegas, Phoenix, Mexicali, 88.426; Tijuana, Tucson, 62,841, and Yuma, 50,557.

Kittens Smash Bruins, 52-0, Along Ground Arizona Phoenix Frmh Colleee First nouns 19 1-1 Net Yards Bnvhlnr 33 1S5 Yards Gained Pasin -7 72 Passes Attemprd Passes Completed 11 Passes Intercepted hy -3 Punting Average 32.3 2t.fi Fumbles 3 5 Opi. Fumbles Recovered 5 2 Yards Penalized 85 TUCSON, Oct. 20 (AP) The University of Arizona freshmen lost a net of seven yards passing. but smashed Phoenix College, 52-0, with a powerful ground attack before 1,200 fans Saturday. The Arizona Wildkittens were bolstered by a flock of backfield and lii.emen aces who have been playing with the varsity.

They accounted for four touchdowns. Bobby Jackson getting two and Dean McKown and Don Beasley one each. Other Kitten touchdowns were made by Guard John Vag-noni, Bert Claus, Ben Green and Carl Beard. The Phoenix College Bears moved nicely around midf ield with end sweeps and sharp passes, but could never penetrate the Wild-kittens' 20-yard line. Signs of things to come appeared early.

On the Bears first play they fumbled on their own 20-yard line. The ball bounced back into the end zone and Vagnoni flopped on it for six points. Jackson picked up his pair of touchdowns before the quarter ended on vicious line drives. The Wildkittens were kept to a single touchdown in the second period, with McKown sidestepping his way down the sidelines through half the Phoenix team for 39 yards. Ken Hammon did some nice passing and Dean Gordon fine running for the losers.

pass on the Ohio 33, from where the Hoosiers moved in for another score. A 16-yard pass from D'Achille to Luft featured the drive, with halfback Bob Robertson going over from six yards out for the score. The Buckeyes, battling to get back in the game, gambled for four yards on fourth down in the second period, but the Hoosiers took the ball on their own 39 and five plays later had another touchdown. D'Achille hit Jerry Ellis for 23 yards and then ran for eight. Then Dick Ashburner dropped an 18-yard pass into Ellis's hands and followed with a seven-yard scoring heave to end Cliff Anderson.

The Hoosiers racked up their final touchdown as Ashburner passed 29 yards to Gepman and then sent Gepman over tackle for the score from the four-yard line. Ohio's final gasp came in the last three minutes as Gepman fumbled on the Ohio eight and the Buck eyes scored on a Skvarka-to-Bob Joslin three-yard pass on fourth down. BORDER CONFERENCE Baylor 4H. Texas Terh 20. Bradley 34.

New Mexico A and 6. Houston Hardin-Simmons 27. Texas Westers 32. New Mexico 7. LaVerne.

13, Arizona State of Flaestaff 12. HilrH SCHOOL. CLASS Superior 20. Clifton 13. 41NIOR COI.I.KGK New Mexico Military Institute 6.

Eastern Arizona 0. Arizona Frosh Phoenix College 0. SERVICE Luke Air Force Base V7. White Sands. N.

Proving Grounds 6. COEEEGE EAST Michigan State 3-'. Frnn State 21. Notre Dame 33. Pittsburgh 0.

Dartmouth 34. Syracuse O. Cornell 27. Yale 0. Pennsylvania 28.

Columbia 13. San Francisco 32. Fordham 2i. California (Penn.) Teachers 20. Lock Haven Teachers O.

Harvard 22. Army 21. Colgate 32. Brown 14. Holy Cross 53.

NYU 6. Maine 4f. Connecticut 19. Lehigh 21. Rutgers i.

Coast Guard 2S. Amherst 20. Trinitv 41. Coiby O. New Hampshire 20.

Sprinsrfield 7. West Chester 27. East Stroudshure 13. Millersville iPenn. 14.

Cheyney 13. West Virginia 89. Geneva O. Princeton 60. La Fayette 7.

Hobart 26. Kenyon 14. Worcester Tech 12. Rensselaer 7. Wesleyan 28.

Unsala 14. Trenton Teachers 47. New York Aggies 0. Williams 13. Bowrtoin 12.

Bucknell 62. Buffalo 32. Susquehanna .37. VVaener 20. Kings Point 35.

Brooklyn College 13. New Britain Teachers 27. Montclair Teachois 12. I Middlebury 14. Tufts 13.

New Haven Teachers 41. Bridgeport 0. Fort Devens 21. Holy Cross Jayvees 14. "arnegie Tech 39.

Allegheny 0. Thiet 12 Edinboro O. Western Mar.vland 33. Dickinson 12. Bloomsburg 40.

Shinnensbere 14. Patuxent River iMd.i Naval 14. Quon-set Point CR. I. 0.

I'nion 32. ChamDlain 25. Hofstra 41. Clarkson 0. Northeastern 41.

Bates 13. Norwich 32, Loyola of Montreal 0. Massachusetts 40. Rhode Island 7. Scranton 13, Indiantown Gap 13 (tie).

Glenville 19. Shepherd 13. Oarion Teachern 25. BroekDort State Teachers 80. Rochester 7.

Vermont 0. Bridewater IS. Gallaudet 13. Westminster 27. Grove City 13.

Indiana (Penn.) Teachers 12. Slippery-Rock Teachers 6. Waynesbure 31. Bethany 0. Rider 27.

West Liberty 0. West Virginia Tech 19. Fairmont 6. Randolph Macon 38. Johns Hopkins 32.

Concord 14. Potomac State 12. South Maryland 14. North Carolina 7. Vireinia 34.

VMI 14. William and Mary 35. North Carolina State 28. Georgia Tech 27. Auburn 7.

Florida 33. Vanderbilt 13. Tennessee 27. Alabama 13. Mississippi 25.

Tulane 6 Duke 55. Virginia Tech 6. Fort Jackson 34. Boiling Air Force Base O. Virginia State 6.

Hampton Institute 0. Camp Leiuene 69. Cherry Point 7. Leland 12. Tougaloo Louisiana Tech 20, Northwestern Louisiana State 6.

Emorv and Henry 38. Maryville 12. Howard 20. Johnson C. Smith O.

Hampden-Sydney 26. Newport News Apprentice O. Middle Tennessee 33. Morehead (Ky.) State 13. Centre 10.

Louisville Junior arsity 7. Texas Southern 19. Kentucky State 14. Tennessee Tech 14. Western Kentucky Sewanee 29.

Mississippi College O. Kentucky 35. Villanova 13. Florida State 35. Sul Ross 13.

Temple 13 Delaware 7. Gettysburg 34. Muhlenberg 14. Richmond 25. Davidson 6.

LSU 7. Georgia O. Mississippi Southern 35. Southeastern Louisiana 6. Southwestern Missouri 2i.

Delta State and Elkins 60. Selam (W. Va.) 0. Stetson 14. Tamna 14 tie.

Midweot Indiana- 32. Ohio State 10. Michigan 21. Iowa O. Wisconsin 31.

Purdue 7. Colorado 20. Kansas State 7. Northwestern 16. Navy 7.

Iowa State 21. Missouri 14. Minnesota 39. Nebraska 20. Oklahoma 33.

Kansas 21. Navy Pier 21. Carthage7. Oklahoma A and 2.. Drake 14 Morris Harvey 14.

Kent State 14 (tie). 40. Hamilton 14. Muskingum 31. Wooster 8.

Miami Ohio 7. Ohio University 0. Ohio Wesleyan 21. Denison 14. Wavne fMich.

34. Brandeis 6. Illinois Wesleyan 26. Millikin 7. Valparaiso 34.

John Carroll 7. Findlay 23. Defiance 0. Davton 21, Chattanooga 6. Albion 33.

Wilmington 13. Heidelberg 35. Capital 14. Central State 19. Tennessee State 7.

Wittenberg 26. Marietta 0. Ashland 7. Hiram 7 tie. Mount Union 46.

Akron 7. Fort Leonard Wood 4. Camn McCoy 7. Culver-Stockton 19. Central 6.

Pittsburg (Kans.) 55. Southwestern (Kuis i 0. Western Metiigan 12. Washington University 7. STATISTICS ISC IS Calif.

17 2 II ft 35.H 1 S5 Bunblns Yarn's Passing Yards Pause Attempted Fahr Completed rnora Intercepted Punt Puntinr Averse Fumble iot Yard Penalized 168 1(B 2:1 II I 3 JO By RUSS NEWLAND BERKELEY, Oct. 20 (AP) Mighty California's football empire collapsed with a roar Saturday, leveled by a 21 to 14 beating by Southern California's thundering Trojans. A capacity crowd of saw the contest. The nation's No. 1 team in the Associated Press football poll bowed to the 11th ranked club in one of the tremendous upsets of the season.

CALIFORNIA, for a large portion of the game minus the services of Johnny Olszewski, star full back, fell as the charging irojans scored three touchdowns in the second half. Olszewski was injured early in the first quarter. The Bears, in command the first two periods, led at the half time 14-0. California went into the game a 13-point favorite. They left the field thoroughly beaten by the same keen rival that last defeated them in regular season play in 1347.

California was working on a spectacular record of 38 games without defeat in Pacific Coast Conference play. Only a 7-7 tie last year with Stanford marred the record. The Trojans thoroughly trounced the Bears 39-14 in Lynn (Pappy) Waldorf's first season four years ago. CALIFORNIA crashed to a 49-yard touchdown in the initial quarter and went 46 yards early in the second to hold -what appeared to be game control at the half time. But the Trojans surged back in the third period.

Frank Gifford, driving left half, raced 69 yards through a broken field for a USC touchdown and place-kicked the extra tally to put USC only seven points behind the Bears. Late in the same quarter, the Trojans put the ball into play on their own 40. They smashed and passed the 60 yards to tie the count. Gifford tossed a short, soft one, to Dean Schneider, quarterback, from Cal's 6 and Schneider jumped two yards for the score. Gifford again converted to make the game a 14-14 deadlock.

THE TROJANS sewed up the game as it neared the end. A 20-yard punt return gave them the ball on California's 22. In seven plays they went over, with Leon Sellers, fullback, driving straight through for the last two yards. Gifford booted the ball between the uprights. Only two and a half minutes were left.

The Bears made a des Ohio State Hopes Blasted In 32-10 Loss To Gallant Indiana Hoosiers SWIL Directors Allow Old Leagues EL PASO, Oct. 20 (UP) STATISTICS Ohio state First Downs Rushing Yardage 27 Passing Yardage 79 Passes Attempted 24 Passes Completed I Passes Intercepted I Puntinr Average 37 Fumbles I.ot 4 Yards Penalized Indiana li 137 148 17 10 I '4 I tin COLUMBUS, Ohio. Oct. 20 (AP) Indiana's underdog Hoosiers buried Ohio State's Rose Bowl and Big Ten championship hopes deep under the cleat-torn turf of Buck eye Stadium Saturday with a start ling 32-10 upset victory before amazed fans. The Hoosiers, with Coach Clyde Smith under fire, after losing onesided games to Notre Dame and Michigan, struck like lightning for three touchdowns in the opening period and then hung on to win an easy and convincing victory over khe star-studded Buckeyes.

Directors of the Southwest International Baseball League voted unanimously Saturday to allow the old Sunset and Arizona-Texas Leagues, from which the SWIL was formed, until Dec. 8 to reconstitute the old setup. SHOULD THE two old loops fail to sign up enough teams at that time, the SWIL should continue in its present form, the directors voted. The directors cited the lengthy and costly road trips, plus sagging gate receipts in the present 10-team league-as their reasons for considering the reformation of the two old leagues. In a report released at Satur- Twice the forward Indiana defense dug in and prevented scores with gallant goal line stands as the Hoosiers put on one of their finest shows with the entire Midwest looking on via television.

THE ALERT Hoosiers took advantage of Ohio misplays to rack 1u A.

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