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Arizona Republic from Phoenix, Arizona • Page 5
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Arizona Republic from Phoenix, Arizona • Page 5

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Arizona Republici
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Phoenix, Arizona
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5
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REPUDLIC REPUBLIC CITY MAIL UCLA 21 Princeton 12 Ohio State 3 Wisconsin 6 Arkansas 33 TCU 20 Ore. State 40 Duke 14 California 7 Brown 0 NoVestern 0 Indiana 0 Texas A-M 21 Baylor 7 Wash'ton 14 Ga.Tech 14 Story On Page 4 Story On Page Story On Page Story On Page Story On Page 1 Story On Page Story On Pe Story On Pag FUBIIC Sports News Classified Advertising Page One Section IV Sunday, November 4, 1951 JWL "O1 KM A rizona To BsNewM Humbles JL TUCSON, NOV. 3 THE BOARD of directors of the Arizona High School Coaches Association was serious about restricting or banning proselyting of high school athletes during the All-Star games held each summer In Flagstaff. Constant pressure on the players by representatives of colleges who wanted the men to go to their schools were proving an upsetting factor, Resident Gov Aker of Safford reported. The scouts were coming rteht into the dressing rooms and trying to pull players off the field during practice periods, he said.

But the problem was to make a rule that would affect not only Arizona's four-year colleges, but the out-of-staters who thronged the scene in the past few years. The state's prep coaches for the most part would to see tneir athletes continue their education and playing in the state. YOU TELL US WHAT TO DO," suggested- J. F. (Pop) McKale, Arizona director of athletics.

"If we don't do it, ban us from the I J1 campus. Give such an action a little publicity just once and it'll work" Various discussions, including the methods used by the Texas and Utah coaching schools, were advanced. The tone of the meeting got tougher and plans calling for permissible contacting of players at given hours each day were abandoned for one completely prohibiting any form of contact. THE MEETING BROUGHT UP SOME HUMOR. iVjrV If school, put forth the suggestion that WW77 West lexas Duca Stars; 13,000 See Border League, Home-Coming Battle By JIM BLAKESLEE Republic Sports Writer TEMPE, Nov.

3 The Sun Devils of Arizona State College swamped the West Texas Buffaloes. 34-0, here Saturday night to score the first victory over a Texas team since 1940. It made a complete Home-com ing for about 13,000 wildly cheering but sometimes lethargic fans. AND SAM DUCA played one of the best defensive tackle games of his career for the Devils. Duca accounted for three of four beau tiful goal line stops on Buffalo oacKs 10 stop a scoring drive, the Buffs had the ball on ASC's one, but lost it on the eleven when Duca got through.

The Sun Devils rolled on th ground but mixed enough aerials into the fray to keep the Buffaloes guessing and had a commanding 21-0 lead at the half. Halftime ceremonies were mark ed by 12 high school bands from Glendale, Peoria, Snowflake, Pres-cott, Tempe, Wickenburg. Tolle- son, Gilbert, Superior, Morenci, iscoiisaaie, ana playing in unison with the Sun Devils. Tire FOOTBALL, game opened with a bang after Gene Mitcham kicked off to the Buffaloes. On the second play Leon Evans rambled through the center for 26 yards and it looked like a bad night for ASC.

But that was the first of two 1 first downs the Buffaloes were McKale, discussing last year's It was the coaching staffs you had other unofficial representatives'. "I talked to the father of one he offered in support of his idea, see how much weight I pulled. "Later, the mention of the current scandals in basketball, which iinauy had involved an official of drew a rueful admission from "I always thought some of the "But I didn't think they could get Lovett, who later added seriously that he thought officiating In his area was very good this year and improving all the time, was only Headed For Trouble weiker, far right, fleet Arizona State College at Tempe leather lugger, gets some nice blocking by Harley Cooper (36) who is taking Ken Echols (82) of West Texas State out of the picture. But closing in fast is a herd of Buffalos, including, left to right, John Poindexter (79), Tom Airhart (44), Don Patterson (57), and an unidentified man in the foreground. Arizona State won the game, 34-0.

(Republic Staff Telephoto by Willis Peterson) Last Minute Pass Brings Illini Win Over Michigan joking, of course. THERE WAS SOME DISCUSSION AS to what constituted contact of a player. "If you're downtown," Donn Kinzle, ASC at Tempe athletic director, suggested, "and a player is coming toward you, you've got to be allowed to say, Partly in a serious vein, the directors finally decided that three seconds of conversation should be allowed free under such circum-. stances. One coach believed that, a visiting coach should be allowed two words of greeting, "Hello" and the player's name.

SHORTLY BEFORE THE COACHES TOOK up discussion of whether or not to recommend to the AIA shift of University Week to ASC at Tempe permanently or full time without taking a vote on it, McKale brought down the house. The. subject of Texas football, which McKale describes as a holy war, was mentioned. jgjable to muster in. the first half touchdown from their own 17-yard line.

JOHNNY KARRAS, heralded Illinois halfback, was held in check by alert Michigan most of the way, but he romped 15 yards to spark the mini's scoring drive in the longest run of the game. After Karras' run, O'Connell flipped three passes to reach Michigan's 19. Fullback Bill Tate smashed 13 yarfis to the Wolverine 6. Then O'Connell uncorked his payoff toss to Smith. Sam Rebecca converted to give Illinois its final 7-0 verdict.

Emphasizing the bull-dog nature of the scrap was the fact that each eleven had to punt 10 times. ILLINOIS NOW has Iowa, Ohio State, and Northwestern left to play. The mini's chief threat in the Rose Bowl competition is Wisconsin, which downed Indiana 6-0. Michigan, which had swept past Indiana, Iowa, and Minnesota, made its strongest threat in the second period, advancing to the Illini eight. But.

Quarterback Ted Toper fumbled and recovered just as the half ended to nip the Wolverines' bid. MOUNTAINEERS ROMP MORGANTOWN, W. Nov. 3 (UP) An aggressive West Virginia University football team, aided by the accurate passing of Gerald Mclnerney and the line smashing of Bill Jarrett, snowed under Western Reserve 35-7 before small crowd of 5,000 shivering fans Saturday. Gats Paced By Stanton In Victory New Quarterback Personally Conducts Border Loop Win By ARNOTT DUNCAN Republic Sports Writer TUCSON, Nov.

3 Allan Stanton a defensive end converted to quar- terDacK tnis week, personally con ducted Arizona to a 32-20 victory over New Mexico here Saturday mgnt. A completely unexpected bombshell as far as the Lobos were concerned, Stanton completed 15 of 28 passes for 338 yards and four touchdowns and scored the other himself. Before a crowd of 15,000 fans. Stanton proved he had learned since Monday and was willing to use more plays than Wildcat signal callers had employed in the past two years. Basking in warmth early in the game, the fans were chilled before the end, but it was the Lobos who received the frost iest sensation as the game wore on.

THE TUSSLE, played for the traditional Kit Carson Rifle at the 35th meeting of the two schools, counted in Border Conference standings although the Lobos dropped out of the Cactus Circuit to 30m the Skyline Loop last fall. Games signed for before last Sep tember count, according to a Bor der ruling. Shaky in the opening moments. Stanton pulled himself together right away. Sizing up the Lobos' eight-man line on his first call, Stanton began throwing passes im- i mediately and kept on riddling the increasingly alert New Mexico defense with accurate flips, lobs and long throws.

The Clifton youngster also ran effectively like a split quarterback, bootlegging the ball and faking handoffs to slam into the line on delayed bucks in addition to the popular quarterback sneak. He added 40 yards rushing for 378 total yards. BILL GLAZIER, regarded as an outstanding pass catching prospect in his sophomore year and somewhat overlooked since that time, and Dick Christiansen were Stanton's favorite targets. Often rushed badly and frequently passing while falling or off balance when tackled, Stanton never-the-less kept looking for men to pitch to and Glazier was the man who usually shook his guardian at the crucial moment. When he had the ball.

Glazier ran like a hipper-dipper halfback. Christiansen, who dropped one aerial in the end zone when he ran into a goal post while catching it, was a powerful runner with the leather. New Mexico, muffled through out the first half except for Chuck Hill's 92-yard scoring return of the game's opening kick-off, came to life offensively in the second half. Laterals proved a strong source of profit. THE LOBOS MISSED a fine chance to tally in the third quarter when, after making a first down on the Arizona one-foot line, they fumbled, the ball and lost it.

Stanton matched Hill's kick-off return with but 3:20 gone in the game when he fired 24 yards to Christiansen to cap a 67 march in 10 plays. In the second period he connected with Glazier for 11 yards and six points after moving the Cats 80 yards in 11 tries. It was 13-6 at half. The third quarter was wild, three touchdowns coming in the final minute and 40 seconds. After Stanton and Glazier had combined for a 10-yard scoring play earlier, New Mexico recovered an Arizona fumble late in the going and rushed 18 yards in seven plays, Hill making the final four.

Stanton promptly tagged Glazier for 68 yards on the first play after the kick-off. The Lobos took the next kickoff and Roger Cox im mediately lateralled to John Watson for 44 yards and another Lobo TD. EARLY IN THE fourth heat Stanton scored his own six pointer from 214 yards out after lofting a J-J-yaro: gainer into Christian sen's arms' and a 20-yarder into Glazier's. That ended the scoring. Jim Donarskr Arizona guard, converted two of five tries, having another blocked.

Jim Bruening was a power on defense for New Mexico, while Arizona had a host of able defensive men, perhaps headed by Bob Matock. With Stanton handing off to Gil Gonzales, Kurt Storch, Kenny Cardella, and others, Arizona added 222 net yards rushing to its total. Gonzales was most effective of the lot. Wildcat defenders held the Lobos to 154 yards rushing and 87 passing to dominate the play more than the score indicated. ARIZONA 7 12 732 NEW MEXICO 6 0 14 20 Arizona scoring: lourrtotwns iW1stian-sen.

Glazier 2. Gonzales. Stanton. Points alter toucfMjrswn uonarski 2. Kmr Mevic ttrorina: Touchdowns Hill 2.

Watson. Points after touchdown STATISTICS Illinois Mlrhlaan II II First Down RiHihlna Varcfare. Pawling Yard acre FaHrM F'mk Complrt4l Pafc Intercepted Punt Puntine Arrriii Fumh! Lnt lard renaiizrd J3 Jl 77 50 IB 8 3 3 1l 10 ss. is.s 1 3 45 13 CHAMPAIGN, 111., Nov. 3 (AP) Rose Bowl hopeful Illinois scored in the final 65 seconds on a quick 8-yard pass to defeat rugged Michigan, 7-0, in a snow storm before a capacity crowd of 71,119 in snow-powdered Memorial Stadium Saturday.

The mini's victory strike, capping an 83-yard march, came on a toss from Quarterback Tom O'Con-nell to End Rex Smith, who grabbed the pass wide open in the end zone. It ws the sixth straight win for undefeated Illinois which now is in commanding position to win both the Big Ten title and a Rose' Bowl bid. 1 ILLINOIS, RATED third in the weekly Associated Press poll of sports experts, never advanced beyond Michigan's 22 until its payoff blitz in the closing seconds. In capturing their third conference victory, the Illini went hammer and tong against an inspired Michigan eleven which had been undefeated in three previous league starts. It seemed almost certain that the snow-pelted contest would end in a scoreless deadlock until the Illini suddenly caught fire to sweep to a Race Drivers a to.

watch and not the alumni and player last summer at Flagstaff, "and we didn't get him. You can the National Basketball Association. Jim Lovatt, Winslow cage coach. officials were that way," he said. to any of the players." picking cotton untu noon meya us, he said, thus closing the Auburn 49.

Louisiana College 0. Mississippi State 10. Tulane 7. Clemson 21. Wake Forest 6.

Vanderbilt 19. Chattanooga 14. Morris Brown 57. South Carolina State 6. West Virginia State 14, Virginia 35.

Missouri 0. Xavier (Louisiana 45. Clark 0. Lane (Tenn.i 32. Miles (Ala 14.

Hampden-Sydney 25. Bridgewater 0. Western Kentucky 46. Delta State 6. Southwest Louisiana Institute 34, Louisiana Tech 7.

South wrst Arkansas 33. Texas A JL TCU 2U. Baylor 7. Rice 21. Pittsburgh 13.

Texas 2a SMU 13. Rocky Mountain Colorado 47. Iowa State 20. Utah 2S. Utah State 20.

Brigham Young 21. Colorado A 19. Colorado College 26, Colorado state 0. Western State 40, Idaho State College (Pocatelloi ft wis and Clark 42. College of Idaho 14.

narK tonegi 34. Montana 7. yoming Far West UCLA 21. California 7. Stanford 21.

Washington State 13. Oregon State 40. Washington 14. Oregon 14. Idaho 13.

Oregon Tech 27. Vanport 7. California Assies (Davis! 13. Santa Barbara College 7. Results Recap For Top 10 NEW YORK, Nov.

3 (AP Here's what the top 10 teams in the Associated Press' weekly football poll did Saturday: 1. Tennessee defeated North Carolina, 27 to 0. 2. Michigan State, idle. 3.

Illinois defeated Michigan, 7 to 0. 4. Maryland defeated Missouri, 35 to 0. 5. Georgia Tech was tied by Duke, 14 to 14.

Princeton defeated Brown, 12 to 0. 7. Southern California defeated Army, 28 to 6. 8. Baylor was defeated by Texas Christian, 20 to 7.

9. California lost to UCLA, 21 to 7. 10. Wisconsin defeated Indiana, 6 to 0. ParilliV Passes Spark Kentucky LEXINGTON, Ky, Nov.

3 (AP) Kentucky's Babe Parilli tossed three touchdown passes Saturday to pace a 32-0 football victory over Miami (Fla.) and pull withm nine scoring heaves of his own national recond. The Babe passed for 23 touch downs last year. Saturday's pro duction gave him 14 for the year with three games to play. He was the master of an easier than-expected situation in which the Kentucky offense rolled at will and the defense stopped Miami's attack as cold as the 28-degree weather. KENTUCKT 7 12 7 32 MIAMI Kentucky scoring: Touchdowns Mel- linger 2.

Clark, Hamilton. Conversions H. Jones 3. Radio Grid Log SCNDAT FOOTBALL Giants; 2:49 to 5:30 p.m., L.A. Rams 1 "X7.

Stagg Voted Double Honor SELINSGROVE, Nov 3 (AP) Amos Alonzo Stagg, who at 89 will argue if you call him an old man, today expressed his thanks for be ing voted into the football halL of fame on two counts. Stagg, now coaching with son at Susquehanna here, was the only man doubly honored. He was chosen as a play er at Yale and as a coach at the University of Chicago. "It's very much news to me, but it very pleasant news, he said. "I didn't know there was to be an election and to this moment, I didn't know they had elected me.

"I am thankful that they think I'm worthy of being in the hall of fame on either of the elections i as a coacn or as a piayer. Stagg was notified of his election upon his return from Huntingdon, where Susquehanna de feated Juniata College for its fourth win. He holds the post of coach emeritus and his son, A. A. Stagg is coach.

CW Wins After Gun COLUMBIA, S. Nov. 3 (AP) Quarterback Bob Cilento's pass to Jack Baumgartner, left halfback, in the end zone a split second after the game had ended gave George Washington an upset 20-14 South ern Conference football victory over South Carolina here Saturday. Cilentos short four-yard pass climaxed a fourth-period George Washington drive that brought the Colonials from behind into a tie and then to victory. MIKE NAZARUK have their work cut out for them if anything is to be done about the amazing Tony Bettenhausen, the Tinley Park, 111., Express, who has been running away from the field like a Citation pitted against a $1,000 claimer.

Bettenhausen is so far ahead of the pack in the 1951 AAA point derby that he scarcely can be located with a telescope. Bettenhausen drives the Murrell Belanger Special, a comparatively-small 241-cubic inch model that Lee Wallard won with at Indianapolis this year. Bettenhausen made the sad mistake of turning that car over to Wallard for the 500-miler, choosing a larger Belanger car. BUT BETTENHAUSEN has won eight AAA races in that same (Continued On Page 3, CoL 7) if I Aggies Dump Axers, 48-12 LAS CRUCES, N. Nov.

3 (AP) The New Mexico Aggies rolled to their first football victory of the season Saturday night, overpowering Arizona State College of Flagstaff, 48-12. The Aggies struck for touch downs twice in the first period and twice more in the second before Flagstaff's Lumberjacks were able to score a point. After building a 42-6 half time lead, the Aggies were content to match third period touchdo vns with the visitors. Garland Neal, the best offensive player on the Lumberjack squad, plunged over from the one "for the first Flagstaff score after a drive from their own. 25'.

Manuel Ruiz passed to Leggett who lateralled to Neal on the Flagstaff 38 to get the final scoring play of the game under way. Neal went all the way. Iowa's Spurt Ties Gophers IOWA CITY, Iowa, Nov. 3 (AP) Big Bill Reichart turned a sub-freezing afternoon into warm joy for nearly 40.000 Iowans Saturday by rallying Iowa to a 20-all tie with Minnesota in a stirring fourth quarter spurt. Minnesota, holding a.

20-0 lead going into the final period, thanks to the gifted running of Sophomore Paul Giel and Senior Ron Engel, appeared to have the 35th renewal of this intense football series all wrapped up. Indianapolis WALT FAULKNER The cream of the Indianapolis drivers will make their second annual appearance at the Arizona Fairground Sunday afternoon in a 100-mile American Automobile As sociation race that has stirred the interest of the entire country. Reservations have been made by populaces of some 25 states and indications are the staid concrete stands at the fairground will be taxed to BUT EVEN WITH the last-min ute rush for tickets, it was pointed lout Saturday night by Dr. Vaughn MeGuire. promoter, that there are still plenty of choice seats avail able.

Enlargements of seating capacities will enable about 20,000 people to attend. 5 Compete Here Today are the 26 official entries for the 100-mile AAA big car championship at the Arizona Fairground Sunday afternoon, the 18 fastest "If Texas Tech hadn't been out have i-eallv kicked the tar out of subject firmly. SERVICE Luk Air Force Bas 54, Force Base 7. nmD Lejeune Marinei Edwards Air 30, Ouantico Marines IX COIJ-EGE fcast Southern Cal 28. Army 6.

Princeton 12, Brown 0. Columbia 21. Cornell 20. Rutgers 13. Fordham 7.

Notre Dame 19, Naw William and Mary 20. Penn 12. Holy Cross 34, Colgate b. Dartmouth 14. Yale 0.

Norwich 20. Middlebury 13. St Lawrence 20. Holstra 0. Williams 40.

Union 0. Connecticut 20, New Hampshire 0. Rennselaer 20. Qarkson 0. Amherst 21.

Tufts 13 iu Northeastern 13. Coast Guard 13 tuej. Hohart 41. Haverfor! 6. Rochester 14.

Oberlin 0. JhMantimeO. Loyola (Mon treal! tie. Bucknell 28. Temple 7.

Maine 24. Colby 0. Bowdoin 27. Bates 12. Boston University o2.

New LYork Kutztown (Pa.) Teachers 26. New Bnt-jjtTeachers 6. Upsala vs. Wagner, postponed, ram. New Haven State Teachers vs.

Mont-elair Teachers, cancelled, rain. Geneva Pa- vs. Slippery Rock, ean- College (Pa. vs. Adefpn" postponed, rain and wet grounds.

AOc. viirWl. VO 26. Kings Point 0. American International 6.

w-St Bonaventure 39. Younjcstown 6. Norwich 20. Middlebury 13. Tren -Teachers 26.

Cheyney Teachers CIndiantown Gap Military Reservation 46. White Hill Pa.) 0 Lincoln vt. i. rui Albright 2. Kitt stroudsburg tPa.) Teachers 20.

Cort ana crthmore 6. fSSuTSnd" MarshaU 35 Ursinu. 0. Michusetts 6. Vermont O.

Massachusetts 6, a.rVSd 6, Diexel 0 Spnngtieia i. Lebanon Valley 15, Pennsylvania Mill- UGettysburg 34. Dickinson T. Susquehanna 21. Utaiton and Jet- Ohlo AnsSSS? 6 w.vnKburi 26.

Westminster e. Mldwevt It- Northwestern 0. Wisconsin 6. Indiana w. Wisconsin ii Ti- i Minnesota 20 tue.

Purdue 2S, Penn State o. 1 (Cio 27 Buffalo 7. benlsSi 3S. Wittenberg 7 OhTo Wesleyan 13, Mount Union Capital is" Ohio Nortnern TnllaV VII. llim' 12.

Muskingum 54... Marietta 3. Wayne (Detroit Washington (St. Lotiisi o. Kalamazoo a.

Alma 2Q. Hillsdale 12, ewis U'hAatnn IS lmnursi J- -rii. 26. vjnn Mllliken IX StiSTimS (Mo 0 LirlSSn (Mo. 25.

Alcorn (Miss.) 14. Wichita ftlm. Otter be tfi 12. Hiram 12 WV Wansville 7. Eastern Kentucky Western Miehixan 20.

Butler 0. LOTth Dakota Mines 6. Dickinson (N leV. Teachers 0. Simpsfwi 19.

Central (Towa 15. ,1 rMMAl1 Tnul le (Mo.) 13. MaryviHe (Mary- Benedirt'g 12. Southwestern (Kans. nMtk ftlahama IS.

Georgia J4.v" Centucky 32. Miami FU O. 1 A irr. Tmi tA fti) Georgia ie re wasmngion ju, jnutn ixin v. mngto Tennessee 27.

Nr sonn troina Vestern Reai Virginia The Cits taaei u. on me grounu ana me oun uevuj held on the next series of downs; forcing Jim Bob Harris to punt. Duane Morrison, hard-running halfback, made 38 yards from his own 25 on the first play. Then Buzz Weiker, Morrison, and Bob Tarwater alternated for eight plays with Tarwater stepping over from. the one.

TOM SANSON kicked his first of five successful conversions. He made ope other but had it called back on a 15-yard penalty and the second attempt fell short and wide. That was the end of scoring in the first quarter as the ball was traded back and forth on punts with neither team being able to penetrate the other's defense. Second quarter was played on nearly even terms until 12 minutes had passed. Then Harold Self, who called a beautiful game from quar terback, started finding openings in the Buffaloes' line.

He sent Cleveland Oden, and Harley Cooper through for seven-to-nine yard gains and Tar water finally carried it over from the three to make the score 14-0. THE DEVILS stopped the Buffs cold after the kickoff and took the ball on the West Texas 24. On the first play. Self caught the Buffs by surprise and passed to Mitcham, who made a fine running, juggling catch, for the score, 21-0. field West Texas stormed onto the field for the third quarter acting like they had been supercharged.

They stopped ASC and took the ball on their own six where Dick Mackey succeeded in kicking it out of bounds. In eight plays they were on the Sun Devils 11-yard stripe with Evans getting solid gains and Joe Ogden and Marvin Smith getting 28 and 23 yard gains respectively. THERE THE SUN Devils dug in and took th4 ball on their own six on downs with Duca and Emery Harper being key men in the stop- ping department. Two 15-yard penalties and three plays put the ball on the Buffs 47 and brought Coach Frank Kim-brough out on the field to talk to the officials. Self bootlegged the ball and then passed to Mitcham for the Devils fourth TD.

The score became 27-0. The final tallv was set nn on a Self to John Allen pass play good ior yarns. Allen ran some 40 of it with little blocking to help and finally was brouzht down on the two-yard line. Jay Smith cracked it over on the second play. Sanson kicked true and it was 34-0.

THE BUFFS TOOK the kickoff and moved to their own 34 where they kicked. Cooper fumbled on the ASC 48 on the second play and the Buffs recovered and began to. rolL A Bobby Lane to Barnhill pass helped set up the ball on the one. That's where, Duca dug in with Bob Reed getting the second stop in the series of four that lost 10 yards. Women Golfers Gird Qualifying Tuesday The Arizona Country Club Women's Golf Association has scheduled qualifying play for the A and tourney Tuesday.

qualifiers gaming berths in the feature: No. Driver 1 Henry Banks 2 Walt Faulkner 3 Johnny Parsons 4 Joe James 1 7 Paul Russo 9 Jack McGrath Car Name Blue Crown SpaTk Plug Agajanian Piston Ring Wynn's Proofing John Zink Russo-Nichels Hinkle Spl. Spl. Grant Spl. Friction Spl.

Spl. Spl. Chapman Spl. Pat Clancy SpL Bob Estes Spl. Lutes Spl.

Coast Grain Spl. L. E. Spl. Gdula Spl.

Federal Engineering Detroit Spl. Deck Manufacturing Co. Spl. Dietrich Used Car Spl. Leitenberger SpL 10 Bill Schindler 14 Freddie Agabashian 26 Jim Rigsby 28 Neil Carter 31 Manuel Ayulo 38 Frank Armi 42 (To be named) 44 Johnny McDowell 48 Mike Nazaruk 55 Bob Scott 57 Andy Linden.

66 Dempsey Wilson Entrant Lindsey Hopkins J. C. Agajanian Ed. Walsh M. A.

A. S. Walker P. Russo R. Nichels Jack B.

Hinkle H. A. Chapman Pat Clancy Bob Estes W. J. Lutes Bob Weinberg Lee Elkins Edward I.

Gdula Federal Automotive Associates Louis and Bruce Bromme Emil Dietrich George H. Leitenberger Everett E. Johnston Bill Johnson Brown Motor Co. Karl Hall D. J.

Caruthers Lee Elkins L. E. Parks Hart Fullerton Murrell Belanger trating their attention on Bobby BalL the local phenom who baffled about every fan In the country by finishing fifth at Indianapolis this year in his maiden start on the big saucer. BALL. HAS BEEN divorced from his Blakely Special because of crankshaft troubles and instead will pilot the supercharged Fuller-ton Offenhauser Special, formerly steered by Troy Ruttman.

But Ball and everybody else will Belond Equa- Flow SpL Streamline SpL Brown Motor Co. Spl. Karl Hall Spl. Viking Trailer SpL McNamara SpL Parks Offenhauser SpL Fullerton SpL-Belanger SpL 67 Pearce Woods Jr. 69 Gene Force 71 Rodger Ward 72 Bill Vukovich 73 Gordon Reid 76 Jimmy Davies 79 Bobby Ball 99 Tony Bettenhausen SUNDAY'S RACE shapes up as one of the classiest assemblages of throttle daredevils ever to appear in Phoenix.

The century number gets underway at 2:30 p.nu, preceded by the time trials which start at 12:30 p.m. Gates will be opened at 10 a.m. and the warmups begin at 11:15. All sorts of elements are Involved in this 12th officially-sanctioned AAA race of the year. Phoenicians, of course, will be concen ITakopuLk 4.

VMl 35. Davidson 13..

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