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Arizona Republic from Phoenix, Arizona • Page 4
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Arizona Republic from Phoenix, Arizona • Page 4

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Arizona Republici
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Phoenix, Arizona
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REPUBLIC MAIL REPUBLIC CITY USC 20 Stanford 23 Princeton 24 I Ga. Tech 13 Illinois 14 Texas 45 California 55 Vanderbilt 22 Washin'tonl3 Michigan 13 Navy 20 Kentucky 7 Wisconsin 10 N.Carolina 20 Minnesota 14 Alabama 20 Story On Page 3 Story On Page 3 Story On Pae 4 Story On Page 2 Story On Page Story On Page Story On Page 4 Story On Page 5 Fhe Arizona; Sports News Classified Advertising El Page One- Section IV Sunday, October 7, 1951 UVJLf 7( IT mm (MS iv Devil 5.JimHearn out Cats Defeat Buffs ayne. 0-Z Victor Running Game Wins. For Arizona, Solas Winner At Mexico City MEXICO CITY, Oct. 6 (AP) Charlie Salas, Phoenix, Arizona, won a split decision over Nick Moran, Mexico City, in a 10-round bout Saturday night.

Salas weighed 147 and Moran 146. The two judges gave the decision to Salas and the referee to Moran. THE BOX SCORE TUCSON, Oct. 6 (Special) Finding the Border Conference brand of football much more to their liking after intersectional losses to Utah and Oregon, the University of Arizona rolled mostly on the ground Saturday night to a 28-13 victory over the West Texas Stat Buffaloes. Displaying their usual fine running game, and a spurt in the second half via the airlanes, the Arizonans scored after drives of 72, 64, 51, and 91 yards.

The Buffaloes, defending loop champs, deadlocked the Cats in the third period, 7-7, but their line couldn't cope with the Wildcat forward wall and the hard charges of Kurt Storch, Gil Gonzales, Ken Cardella, and Don Wal-lenderf. WEST TEXAS erased Arizona's 7-0 halftime lead and tied it with a 68-yard march down field, fullback Tom Airhart going over from the two. John Poindexter con verted. The Wildcats came rushing back and went 64 yards to score, Wal- lendorf plunging over from the one. The third period ended, Ari zona 14-7, after Jim Donarski booted his second of four good placements.

STARTING FROM their own 41 after pass interception by Sid Davis, the Wildcats moved to the first of their four-period scores. New York (A) AB A Woodling If 4 113 0 0 Rizzuto ss 4 112 4 1 McDougald 2b 3 0 2 2 2 0 DiMaggio cf 4 0 0 4 0 0 Berra 3 0 15 11 Brown 3b 3 0 0 0 1 0 Collins lb 3 0 0 6 0 0 Bauer rf 4 0 0 2 0 0 Raschi 1 0 0 0 0 0 Hogue 0 0 0 0 0 0 (a) Hopp 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ostrowski 0 0 0 0 0 0 (b) Mize 1 0 0 0 0 0 TOTALS 30 2 5 24 8 2 New York (N) AB A Stanky 2b 2 112 2 0 Dark ss 4 114 3 0 Thompson rf 3 1110 0 Irvin If 3 1 0 2 0 0 Lockman lb 4 1 1 10 1 1 Thomson 3b 4 113 4 0 Mays cf 4 0 2 3 0 0 Westrum 4 0 0 2 1 1 Hearn 3 0 0 0 2 0 Jones 0 0 0 0 1 0 TOTALS 31 6 7 27 14 2 STATISTICS Arir. Wfst Tex. First Down 26 19 Rushing Vardaeo 33: II PasKinc Yardatcr SO 28 I'asM-x Attempted 12 IS Passes Completed 4 5 Pauses Intercepted by 3 1 pnt 1 3 Puntint Average 41 39.3 Fumble IxM 1 Yards Penalized 121 S5 Fninl-ilf Out 'Of RriiiiirU Richard Lisaljeth, Wayne University quarter- i umme vjiu kji xo unus back is at the bpttom of the heap after fum. bling the ball which went out of bounds on the Wayne 26 yard line.

Al Derbis, foreground, and Sam Duca at the rear were in on the tackle for Arizona State College at Tempe. The Sun Devils walloped the visiting Tartars, St)-6. (Republic Staff Photo by Ralph Camping) a Walked for Hogue in seventh, Flied Out for Ostrowski in ninth. NEW YORK (A) NEW YORK N) 000 000 0112 010 050 00 6 RBI Woodling, Mays, Dark, Lockman 3, Collins. 2B Thomson.

HR Lockman, Woodling. LOB Yankees 10, Giants 5. BB Raschi Hearn 8. SO Raschi 3, Hearn 1, Ostrowski 1. HO Raschi 5 in 4 innings; Hogue 1 in 1 Ostrowski 1 2, Hearn 4 in 7 Jones 1 in 1M.

HBP by Raschi (Stanky), by Hearn (Rizzuto). DP Stanky- Dark-Lockman; Hearn-Dark-Lock- man-Dark; Rizzuto-McDougald-Collins. Winner Hearn. Loser Raschi. Paparella (A), Barlick (N), Summers (A), Ballanfant (N), Stevens (A), and Uore unj.

i 2:42. A 52,035. Detroiters No Match In Landslide ASC WAVNK First down 17 Rustling laritag 139 famine Vardaee JH Passe A lirmptrd 4 IK Film Completed 7 I Passes Intercepted 3 Punts I 5 Funtlnr Atrrui 54 30 Fumble lmt I 1 Tarda Penalized 45 85 By JIM BLAKESLEE TEMPE, Oct. 6 The Arizona State College Sun Devils sprang a potent offense and a rough defense on Wayne University of Detroit here Saturday night to swamn the visitors, 50-6, in an lntersectional football game There was little doubt about the outcome of the game from the time the Sun Devils first began T.T,Atrtine- the Tartars' defense the first time ASC got the ball. And they got the ball when Keith Gunville stormed through the Wayne line to block a punt off the toe of Wesley carios ana me Sun Devils eovered the loose ball on the Tartars' 3D-yard line.

SLX PLAYS later Harley Cooper skirted left. end for the score ana Tom Sanson converted to give the Devils a 7-0. lead. Duane Morrison and Marv Wahlin, both of Casa Grande, carried the mail on the series with Wahlin picking up the bulk of the yardage to set up the tally. Midway in the first period the Sun Devils missed another scoring after recovering a fumbled kickoff and gave the ball to Wayne on downs on the Wayne six-yara ne.

ASC's defensive squad rose up and stopped the Tartars and forced them to kick. Then the Devils began their second touchdown march, with Wahlin going over Ihn two. The Sun Devils ground attack innrl well through the first half and Wahlin picked up another tallv on another two-yard plunge after Bob Tarwater set it up with thrust. he auarter and voif enHpd. Sanson booted a i ncAA hoal to eive Arizona Ctota 91-fl hulce.

Tn the second half, Coach Larry cjomrine- eave his rampaging most of the time off and Dick Mackey moved into the slot left unoccupied hv the regular general, Harold Self. Markov's signal calling func- tioned well and so did his passing -m With two minutes gone he heaved a 43-yard touchdown to a very sparkling end. Gene Mitcham IT WAS after the next kickoft that Wayne took the bit in its teeth and began its only scoring drive. Picking up little yardage on Richard Brown the nuarterback began passing to Roger Craig and James Johnston-Johnston caught a touchdown! pass, good for 30 yards after the Tartars -used 16 plays to move the ball 39 yards to the ASC 30. That made the score 30-6 and the Sun Devils score-conscious once more.

Cleveland Oden gathered in the Wayne kickoff on his own 12 and romped 30 yards. Then he carried for 14 and five. Mackey called Buzz Welker's pet end sweep and the Buzzer scampered 39 yards to DEVILS LED, 36-6, at the end of the third quarter but the drino offense wasn't hap- -Dy. Oden and Welker ripped first downs on three nnssed to Welker for eight yards, and Oden ran 11 yards to the one-loot line. ne ui the next play.

Ed (Moge) Pomeroy then intercepted a Brown pass for the Sun Devils on his own two and ran it out to the 44. Jim Bilton tore off a a 31-yard run and MacKey mppeu 26-yard pass to Jim Aitken to the one-foot line, trnie- vjaroa toted the leather over the stripe and Sanson converted lor me iincu 50-6 score. Sellout Looms For AAA In 3rd Tilt Jones Checks Late Surge To Preserve Series Win By CARL LUNDQUIST NEW YORK. Oct. 6 (UP) Jaunty" Jim Hearn, a Georgia peach of a pitcher, put destiny's kids toack in front in the World Series Saturday when he hurled the Naw York Giants to a 6-to-2 victory over the crestfallen New York Yankees.

A joyous coatless crowd of 52,035, largest crowd ever to see a World Series game in a National League park, cheered on their indomitable darlings in a victory made easy by both the physical and mental miscues of the not1 too nifty Yankees. Sharing the exalted heights with Hearn as the Giants made it two victories out of three in the classic was another Dixie boy, Whitey Lockman of Charlotte, N. who shot a three-run line drive home run into the lower right field stands in a weird five-run fifth-inning rally. HEARN, EMPLOYING the same Strong-armed craftsmanship as in the big playoff victory against Brooklyn last Monday, suffered only from lack of control and he finally needed relief help from Sheldon Jones when the Yankees scored their first run in the eighth inning. Hearn walked eight batters md hit another which put him in more trouble than little Orphan Annie.

And when he forced home the MaglieToGo Against Sain NEW VORK, Oct. 6 (UP) Sal (The Barber) Maglie will pitch for the Giants Sunday against Johnny Sain of the Yankees as Leo Durocher's Cinderella squad seeks to take a stranglehold on the World Series. The heavy bearded, curve-balling Maglie has a record of 23-6 for the regular season. This is his first World Series. Sain, like Maglie a righthander who specializes in curves, compiled a 2-1 record for the Yankees this season after they purchased him from the Boston Braves in August.

He had a 5-13 mark with the National League club, for a total record of 7-14 over the year. tally in the seventh, Leo Durocher's frazzled nerves could take it no longer. Jones came in and retired the side. Even so the Atlanta dandy might have come through unscathed. For with all of his wild-ness, no runner got to second be fore the sixth and none to third until the eighth.

He gave up only four hits, two in the first inning, another' in the second, and the final one in the troublesome eighth. THE GIANTS WERE in com mand in this one for the entire distance. Before the big wrapup rally in the fifth; when all runs were unearned. they stepped briskly into the lead, 1 to 0, in the second. Reversing their usual tactics in which they make most of their runs after two men were out, they got this big tally with nobody retired.

Bobbv Thomson rifled a ground double down the left field line and rookie Willie Mays delivered his first World Series hit, a single to score Bobby. Vic Raschi. not nearly as sharp as in the pennant campaign whn he won 21 games, did manage to escape further difficulty until the fifth bv allowing no more hits until that weird frame. EDDIE STANKY. who had been hitless in the series until Saturdaj', led off the fifth by getting a walk Then the little pest broke for second.

Although Yogi Berra's throw to Phil Rizzuto was in time for a putout, Stanky rammed him so hard he lost the ball. Stanky was off to third on the two-base error. The Yankees, who appeared (Continued On Page 2, Col. 7) on downs on the 5-yard line to halt an 83-yard Spartan march as the second quarter opened, but Michigan State came back in turn with a 6-play series that covered 37 yards. Don McAuliffe plunged one foot for the score that gave the Spartans a 10-6 edge.

Ohio State, sensing an upset over the front runners, went 73 yards in 11 plays after the kickoff to send Janowicz into tne ena zone for the score that gave Ohio a 13- 10 lead. hanDened in the third! "tberiod but Ohio broke loose earll in the fourth when Dick Walther Hip 3, in it 28-13 back from fullback this, week, gained 118 yards in 22 carries to pace the Wildcats back. Arizona recorded 333 net yards on the ground and 80 in the air. West Texas rushed for 204 yards and only 29 yards passing. Ari zona's pass defense was sharp, the Buffs completing only five of 18 tries.

Three were intercepted. Arizona next Saturday plays host to Texas Western, another conference foe. ARIZONA'S only first half touch down came on an 11-yard oharge Dy Kurt Jstorch over right tackle, capping a 72-yard drive that took 14 plays. The Wildcats only once went to the air during the touch down jaunt. Kenny Cardella, left half, took a pass for a three yard gain from quarterback Bruce McCauley.

On the other 13 plays during the drive, Cardella, Storch, Gil Gonzales, and Don Wallendorf chewed off steady gains all the wav downfield. Jim Donarski converted' Ari zona's TD with his No. 11 eood placement in 13 tries this season. West Texas didn't penetrate the Arizona 35-yard-line in the first half. FOOTS ALL SCORES BORDER CONFERENCE Aniona State Tempet 50.

Wayne 6. Arizona 2ft. West Texas State 13. Arizona State Flagstaff) 6. Whmjer a Hardin-Simmons 32.

Midwestern 21. of Houston 6. Texas Tech 0. Abilene Christian 20. Texas Western 13.

Jvew Mexico Li 20, New Mexico Aggies 0. HIGH SCHOOL, Class A Phoeniv Tech 13. Yuma 0. St. Mary's 40.

Cathedral of El Paso 0. COLLEGE Brown 14. Yale Maine 42. Vermont 0. Cornell 41.

Colgate 18. Burknell 47, Lehigh 7. Williams 7. Connecticut S. uianova 20.

Penn State 14. In ion 21. RPI 14. Middlebury 42. Hamilton 12.

Colby 13, Upsala 7. Ca rneiarie Tech 47. Bethany 20. Penn 39. Dartmouth 14.

Maryland 33. George Washington 6. Case Tech 38. Washington Jefferson T. St Lawrence 20, Hobart 7.

Holy Cross 54. Fordham 20. lemple 14, Rutgers 7. Columbia 33, Harvard O. Princeton 24.

Navy 20 Springfield 34, Bates 12. Cortland 13. American International 8. franklin Marshall 27, Dickinson Northeastern 39. Tufts 7 Bowdoin 27.

WesJeyan 9 Carnegie Tech 47. Bethany 20. Rtchester 21, Amherst 6. Scranton 14. Penn Military 0.

(oast Guard 27. Trinity 19. Vagner 19, Arnold 7. Juanita 13, Swarthmore 7. rSrot'KDort 1Q fi hui -j i Shippensburg State 59.

Sheppherd Stat Trenton Teachers 19. NW Rritsm ers 7. triippery Rock State 13, Edinboro Stat Morgan State 7. Lincoln rpal 2 Lebanon Valley 12. Muhlenberg 6.

Gettysburg 21. Drexei 0 (heyney State 3. Delaware State 0. I rsmus 20. Haverford 7.

Rhode Island 27. New Hampshire 0. St. Vincents 34. Clarion State 2.

Worcester 14, Massachusetts 13. Midwefct Michigan State 24. Ohio State 20. Indiana 13. Pittsburgh 6.

Stanford 23. Michigan 13. Purdue 34. Iowa 30. Marquette 6.

Iowa State 6. Illinois 14. Wisconsin 10. Northwestern 20. Army 14.

Moorhead State 14. Winona State 0, Xavier i0 32. Miami 0 14. Kolla Mines 12, Warrensburg State 6. McPherson 20.

Baker 6. Washington University 33, Central College 0. Ohio University 13. Western Michigan 0. Kansas Slate 6, Nebraska 6.

South Vanderbilt 22. Alabama 20. Mississippi State 6. Georgia O. Wake Forest 56.

Richmond 6. Georgia Tech 13. Kentucky 7. South Carolina State Xi. Claflin 0.

Virginia MiiitArv rrn William um Washington Lee 34. West Virginia 0. Western Maryland 45, Randolph-Macon South Carolina 21. Furman 6. Clemson 6.

North Carolina State 0. Louisiana State 7. Ric 6. Southwest Texas 45. North Carolina 20.

Southwestern Oklahoma State 14, New Mexico Military Institute 0. Tyler JC 34. Paris JC 14. Texas A 14. Oklahoma 7.

Texas Christian 17. Arkansas 7. So. Methodist 34. Missouri 0.

West Idaho State 13. Montana State 6. UCLA 44. Santa Clara 17. California 55.

Minnesota 14. Southern California 20. Washington IS. Oregon Slate 34. Idaho 6.

Colorado 3.3, Kansas 27. A 13. Colorado College 6. Wyoming 37. Utah State 0.

1'tah 7. Brigham Young 6. lennessee b. uuke o. Florida 40.

Loyola Los Angles) 7. PROFESSIONAL Philadelphia 21. an Francisco 14. Luke Eleven Tops Nellis LAS VEGAS, Oct. 6 (Special) The Luke Air Force Base Raiders notched their second consecutive grid victory of the season here.

Saturday night by swamping Neliis AFB, 40-6. Bill Williams, Bob Hendricks, and Dick Montoya were Luke's offensive stars while Ken Laburn and Don Fancher were defensive standouts for the winners. Nellis did not score until there was les than two minutes to play. Classic At Fairgrounds Western 34-27 yards and ran seVen for two first half scores, with Jim Powell, adding the third Mustang score of the first half. THE AGGIES LED.

IS to 7, at the intermission. Black passed seven yards to J. D. Merrill for the only Phoenix score of the first half. Curran got second half scoring underway with a 5 5-yard scoring gallop, but the Mus tangs retaliated with the two touchdowns by White which proved decisive.

Musketeers Triumph Over Miami, 32-14 OXFORD, Oct. 6 (INS) The Musketeers of Xavier University rolled over Miami for the third straight year Saturday, defeating the Redskins 32 to 14 at Oxford. New Mexico 'umps Bears, A desperate four-quarter scoring surge by Phoenix College fell one touchdown short as New Mexico Western College snared a 34 to 27 victory over the Bruins Saturday night at North High Stadium. Trailing 34 to. 14 at the beginning of the fourth period, the Bruins scored twice to draw within seven points of the New Mexico eleven.

Quarterback Jim Black tossed a 49-yard pass to Bill Glaze for one TD, while Dick Curran, the Bears' most sparkling back scooted 23 yards for the other fourth period score. New Mexico Western held onto its slim lead in the final moments as the injury-riddled Beais failed tq muster another touchdown drive. Bob White, a driving Mustang fullback, scored four touchdowns for the winners. He rambled bb Gil Gonzales carried the leather eight times in 12 -plays and tallied from two yards out. Arizona's final TD followed 91-vard march.

The UA runners romped freely to the Buff 37, and then Buce McCauley pitched to end Leo Brandt on the 23. McCauley faded on the next play and whipped the ball to right end Dick Christensen in the end zone. A' pass interference play set up West Texas's final TD late yj tne game. Airhart plunged over from the two. The Cats had the ball on the West Texas two when the game ended.

A 40-yard pass from McCauley to Christensen put the leather in position to score, but time ran out. i STORCH, moved to right half standing drivers as Tony Betten- hausen, Johnny Parsons, Henry Banks, Mike Nazaruk, Roger Ward, Walt Faulkner, Jack- Mc-Grath, Joe James, Johnny McDowell, Manuel Ayulo, Pat Clancy and many others. Jimmy Jackson, a former driv ing ace at Indianapolis, will be the starter while Ralph DePalma, an other Indianapolis stalwart, will serve as referee as an engineer for the General Petroleum Co. BOB BALL the eight and on last down tossed into the end zone to Dekker for a one-yard, scoring play. That brought the Spartans to within three points of the confi dent Ohioans but the Spartans weren't through.

After the kick off fullback Bob Kopenick of Ohio fumbled on his own 46 and Edwin Luke. Soartan end, fell on the ban. After five plays, one of which lost eight yards, the Spartans were on Ohio's 28 with fourth down and five to go. That's when Dorow nut under center with the ball and lateraled it to Ycic, who uncorked the finale. ft I 20 Knights Take 40-0 Victory EL PASO, Oct.

6 (Special) Coach Chink Coleman, former local athlete and coach of Cathedral High here, brought his St. Mary's Knights of Phoenix to this city Saturday night, and they crushed Cathedral 40-0. Sparked by Ruben Madril's 96- yard touchdown return of the second half kickoff, the Knights rolled to their second win in as many starts this year. Madril also passed to two other touchdowns, Dick Rochford taking one and Jack Stovall the other. Stovall also took an aerial from Gene Orabuena in the fourth period for the final TD, after the fleet Orabuena had dashed 36 yards to tally.

Benny Villa also tallied from the eight, completing a 70-yard march. Henry Meza added extra points after the third and fourth markers, and Kelly Pierson was responsible for the other two points when he tackled Larry Foght in the end zone. St. Mary's scored on the third play of the game when Rochford raced 40 yards after taking Madril's pass. From then on it was all St.

Mary's. Jim O'Connor, center on offense and guard on, defense, played an excellent game, while Bill Whitney was a defensive star. Foght and Denny Aguierre were top backs from the home viewpoint, while Al Lowenberg was the outstanding lineman. Texas Christian Whips Arkansas LITTLE ROCK. Oct.

6 (AP) Texas Christian University's fighting Horned Frogs staved off a series of Arkansas threats and then roared to a 17 to 7 victory in. the opening game of the Southwest Conference football race before 29,500 here Saturday night. any ball toter ever to show here, i The yearling caught passes all over the field and ran over, around, and through the Ohio defenders. Each team held the lead twice in the torrid first half, after Capt. Bob Carey of Michigan State opened the counting with a 16-yard field goal halfway through the first period.

Ohio came right back with a five-Dlav passing surge for 72 yards with All-America halfback Vic Janowicz chmaxing the drive with a 19-yard pass to end Kay I Ohio dug in and took the ball Texas- Aggies Upset Oklahoma Power, 14-7 COLLEGE STATION, Tex Oct. 6 (AP) Texas A and Saturday night out down the swashbuckling giant of college football, smashing Oklahoma, 14-7. The Aggies cut down last year's national champion with a brutal defense and a tremendous ground game. It was the A. brand of ball the coaches preach: tackle low, run hard, body block.

Three times the Aggies fumbled and frittered away scoring-chances before they sent Glenn Lippman crashing 25 yards for a second period touchdown. Oklahoma tied the score in a twinkling, on a 74-yard run by Billy Vessels just before the half and an extra point by Jim Weatherall that matched one by Darrow Hooper of A and M. It was not until two more goalward marches had been stopped by the massive Oklahoma line that A and got its revenge for last year's licking by the Sooners. Lippman made up for that 34-28 defeat on a one-yard plunge and Hooper clinched it with his second extra point. The second annual 100-mile American Automobile Association big car racing classic at the Ari zona Fairground Nov.

4 iooks iiKe will be one of the biggest sports events ever staged in Phoenix. Tickets are being eaten up so fast that Dr. Vaughn Mcouire, promoter, is afraid he won't have enough to accommodate tne demand. As of Saturday night, citizens of nine states already had dispatched reservation requests. AT Tins EARLY date there will be gallery representatives from California, Utah, Nevada, Colorado, New Mexico, Texas, Wisconsin.

Missouri and Arizona. The $6 box seats are completely sold out virtually a month ahead of time although there still are choice $5.50 boxes and grandstand ducats available. Tickets are on sale at Porter's, Owl Drug, Paul Jones Car and Maza Drug. Arizona itself probably could tax the Fairground to the limit what with Bobby Ball, a local boy, com- Detine for the big purse which car ries a $7,500 guarantee or 40 per cent of the gate receipts, which ever is the greater. BALL, LONG a midget ace in Arizona, pierced the limelight when he finished fifth in the 500-miler at Indianapolis last Me morial Day.

He will be steering a new Blakely Special in which he finished fifth in a 100-mile AAA event at Denver two weeks ago. Due to compete will be such out of Ohio intercepted Dorow's pass on Ohio's 49. The Bucks moved right in then for another score with quarterback Tony Carcillo passing 24 yards to Hamilton for the counter. It was there the aroused Spartans, feeling themselves slipping from football's throne," fought back as a champion should. Dorow, a sure-armed passer, opened his aerial attack with completed passes for 17 yards to Bolden, nine to Paul Dekker, and an- other 27-yarder to Bolden.

Two ground plays netted sfend Dorow hit Dekker for 11 yards to From Behind To Baitans Come fore 82,640 fans. It was the third largest throng ever to jam tne Ohio Stadium. In a wild msh reminiscent oi Notre Dame three toucnaown last quarter surge which whipped Ohio in 1935, the bpartans came to life with scoring marches covering 74 and 46 yards within a minute span in the final session after Ohio had taken a 20-10 yead. The payoff punch was a beauty. A 27-yard pass from sophomore halfback Tom Yewcic to quarterback Al Dorow on fourth down.

Dorow under center on the T-for-rrfljtion, lateraled the ball to who cut off to his right, while D6row headed for the left sideline and scooted toward the goal. Yew-cic's long pass across the field hit Dorow around the 10-yarct line, where he shook off two tacklers and fell into scoring territory with the points his team needed. Ohio ranked seventh nationally this week and'was favored to win the Big Ten title. Michigan State is eligible for the Big Ten title. Although he did not figure in the scoring, much of the credit for the Spartans's victory must go to Lerov Bolden, a 16o-pound 5 JL STATISTICS Ohio Michigan State State Tlmt own lardar PmsIdc Vrdiie Pannes Attempted Pannes Completed Passes Intercepted Punts Funtin Averara Pumbles Lost Yards Penalised Fumbles 11 ISA 1M 18 10 1 0 134 161 1 13 1 4Zt 113 36 3 COLUMBUS, Ohio, Oct.

6 (AP) Michigan, State's sparkling Spar tans proved their right to the mnkine as the nation's No. 1 foot ball power Saturday when they sureed back from a 10-point deficit In the final quarter to defeat sev- enth-ranxea unio stave, tt-tv, fntir 7-inrh replacement halfbacfclamilton. wbo is as speedy and elusive as.

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