1
THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER, SUNDAY MORNING, JANUARY W.Texas Routs Fla. St. f 47-20 PASO, Tex., Jan. 1 (AP). Whittenton, a tough, smart quarterback, ran, paased and pilot- ed Western to its second straight Sun Bowl championship today, a 47-20 rout of Florida State. Whittenton ran for two touch- downs, passed for three more, en- gineered the other two Texas West- e m scoring drives and kicked five of seven attempted conversions. He was voted the game's outstanding player. The teams traded first quarter scores but Texas Western erupted for 27 points in the second quarter to wrap up the 20th annual game before an estimated 14,000. The Miners, performing well un- der Whittenton's sterling guidance, widened the gap in the third quar- ter. Prom that point on the game got progressively rougher and duller until the two coaches, Mike Brum- below, Texas Western, and Tom Nugent, Florida State, came on the field to tell their teams to ease up on the rough stuff. Three times plays were nullified by personal fouls on each team. The rugged play and 60-degree Texas heat took its toll. Seven Tex as Western players were helped from the field, while Florida State was hurt about as bad. The Semi- * notes lost the service of halfback Lee Corso in the second quarter. Tfcxie* State 7 0 6 7—»> Texas Weetem. — 7 27 13 0—47 FLORIDA STATS SCORING: Touchdown* , — turner. Seemster, Odom Extra Points— > Graham Mis»\ TSXAS WBBTBRN SCORING: Touchdown* - Rutiedfe 2. Whittenton 2. Bob Forrest 2, INek Forrest. Extra point*—Whittenton 5. STATISTICS Fla. St. Tex. West Georgia Tech's Power in 2d Half Thwarts Arkansas in Cotton Bowl first downs ——— Rushina- yardage —~ Fauilif yardage Panel completed Piuses intercepted by Punts ,— .... Punting average —— Fumbles lost Tarda penalized 13 139 133 -12 of 21 0 6 26 2 25 17 233 149 at 13 2 •» 44 -> 53 Phila. Uhriks Play At Trenton Today The Philadelphia Uhriks will be out to increase their American Pro Soccer League lead today when they tackle the Trenton Ameri- cans in the New Jersey capital. This is the only loop game sched- uled, and a victory for the Uhriks will increase the local pros* advan- tage to a game-and-a-half. The Uhriks also have gained the third round of the National Chal- lenge Cup series by virtue of triumphs over the Little Club of the Philadelphia Amateur Lea- gue's First Division and Olden AA, unbeaten pace-setter of Trenton's Capital City League. Bruins Blank Rangers BOSTON. Jan. 1 lUP).—The Boston Bruins regained fourth Years night contest before 10,432. AP Wireohoto Georgia Tech's Paul Rotenberry (21), target of Bill Brigman aerial, is frustrated by Arkansas' leaping Joe Thomason in second-period action of Cotton Bowl game yesterday at Dallas, Tex. Tech won, 14-6, mainly on rushing before crowd of 75,504. Fort Ord, Forf Hood Meet in Shrimp Bowl GALVESTON, Tex., Jan. 1 (AP>. —Fort Ord, Calif., and Fort Hood, place in the National Hockey {Tex., square off here tomorrow in League from New York tonight by the sixfcn annual Shrimp Bowl beating the Rangers. 4-0, in a New j football game. Ord is favored in a high-scoring contest. Some 8000 are expected. It will be the first time for whites and negroes to play football to- gether here. Each team features several negro players. Reverse Verdict CLEVELAND—Bob Feller was defated, 4-1, when he established the major league strikeout record of 18 strikeouts against the Detroit Tigers in 1938. OPPORTUNITY FOR ELECTRONIC ENGINEERS and ELECTRONIC TECHNICIANS Bowls Drew 448J80 By Associated Press Nine football bowl games drew a total attendance of 460,939 yes- terday with an estimated 40,000 seeing one of them in far-off Japan. Rain held the Rose Bowl turn- out below the usual 100,000 or so mark but. the oldest of the post- season classics still was tops in at- tendance with 89,191. The Sugar Bowl attracted the second largest crowd, a sell-out of 80,735. The Japanese game was the Rice Bowl at Tokyo in which the U. S. Air Force delisted the II. S. Marines, 21-14. Another 34,408 saw the 'Gator Bowl on Friday. The figures: Rose—89,191. Sugar—80,735. Cotton—75,504. Orange—€8,750. East-West—62,000. Rice—40,000. Sun—14,000. Tangerine—12,759. Prairie View—10,000. Salad—8000. Continued from First Sports Page chores six times for 24 of the yards. A Mitchell-to-end Jimmy Durham pass was another vital nine-yard link ip the drive which Rotenberry capped by racing around right end from the three-yard line. Tech smashed 43 yards for the final period clincher with Hun- singer getting 17 of the steps in three carries before, turning the chore over to Mattison, a 207- pound sophomore who tacked on 15 more in four attempts to set Mitchell up for a one-yard scoring sneak. Mitchell then kicked his second conversion. Arkansas' famed "fullback draw," featuring Henry Moore, worked like a charm during the first half when he gained 81 yards with it— 37 yards in the lone Arkansas scor- ing surge. The Humphreys-Hunsinger-Mat- tison trio piled up 139 of the 285 yards Tech ground out rushing with Humphreys the top man with 103 yards. That was nearly as much as Arkansas' 141-yard total output on the ground. HEAVY ARKANSAS TOLL Tech completed only four of 15 passes for 3,1 yards, while Walker hit seven of 10 for 86 yards. After Tech got the winning spirit in the second half, its savage line play took a heavy toll of Arkansas' running game with center Larry Morris the wheelhorse defensively as well as on offense. Little Bobby Proctor, Arkansas wingback who played* better than half the game with a head gash, and All-America guard Bud Brooks topped what defense the losers could muster. Humphreys' contribution of 5.3 yards per carry earned him a close victory over Mitchell for the most valuable back selection by thej sports writers. The most valuable; lineman laurels went overwhelm-j ingly to All-America guard Bud Brooks of Arkansas. Tech slashed and tore Arkansas for a ponderous 285 yards on the! ground and made 31 in the air Arkansas managed 141 rushing 1 and 86 passing. Arkansas 0 « 0 0— 6! Georgia Tech 0 0 7 7—14 ARKANSAS SCORING: Touchdowns— Walker. GEORGIA TECH SCORING Touchdowns—Rotenberry. Mitchell. Con- versions—Mitchell 2. UP Tflephcto Duke quarterback Jerry Barger (36) gets up- action of Orange Bowl Game at Miami, Fla. Other ended by Nebraska's Dan Brown (20) yesterday as players are Robert Wagner (65), Nebraska, and former tries to reverse field during first quarter Johnny Palmer, Duke (53). Duke won, 34-7. GEORGIA TECH -Durham, Ellis, Sennett, Huff. Hair. Daughterly. Pul- ENDS- Webster. Jones TACKLES—Vereen. Christy Anderson. Phen'x, Thrash. GUARDS—F Brooks. Ecker. Willoch cher Miller, L. Roberts. Gossage. CENTERS—L. Morris. J. M. Morris, Carlen Summer. BACKS—Mitchell. Brigman. Shamburger, | Vann. Grant. Rotenberry. Volkert. J. L. Morris. Menger. Tnomofon. Gookin, Humph- reys Hunsinger, Mattison. Owen. ARKANSAS ENDF—Souter. Burns. Matthews, McFad- den. Lyons. TACKLEM---Bradford. Smith, Roth Fuller GUARDS—Roberts. Martin. Hardwick. B. Brooks. Olllim. CFNTTPRS—Fc-rd. Steelmar. 1ACKS—Carpenter. Proctor. Kolb, Walker. Ren; on, Thcmason. Underwood. Moore. Berry. % STATISTICS Arkansas, Georgia Tech Rushing vsrdage First dowiis Passing yardage Passes completed Passes intercepted by Punts Punting average 1 Fumbles lost i Yards penalized -— 141 10 86- -7 of 10 0 4 30.5 0 30 285" 19 31 4 of 15 1 4 nn o 30 Jim Garrity, Penn State, who won game for East All- Stars over West, 13-12, with placement kick for point in Shrine game at San Francisco. Duke's Power, Passes Crush Nebraska, 34-7 Continued from First Sports Page played in bright weather with the temperature in the middle 70s. Duke, favored by two touch- downs, didn't open up until the start of the second quarter. Then the Blue Devils rammed 65 yards in nine plays to score, with Pascal sweeping wide to his right for the last seven yards. A 16-yard run oy Pascal and an 18-yard pass from Orange Bowl Lineups DIKE ENDS—Sorrell. Benson. Sebastian, Moon, Kocourek Black. Stallings TACKLES Campbell, Deloatch, Hord. Knott*. Cox. Konicek. GUARDS—Birchfleld, Nelson, Fesperman, Torrance, Klinger. CENTERS Palmer, Palls. Snowberger. Murray. BACKS—Barger. Jurgensen, Murray. Pascal, McKeithan. Post, Beasley. Kredick. Bass, Blaney, B. Conner. Aldridge. Eberdt. Lutz. NEBRASKA Jerry Barger to Sonny Sorrell were | END*—Leohr. Butherus. westerveit. Mc- " v i Williams. Hewitt. Harris. Giles. TACKLES—Hollaran. Peterson. Neal, Glantz, Evans, Fleming. GUARDS—Bryant. Murphy. Taylor, Wagner. ,\ the key plays of the drive. FREAK KICK LOSES 2 YDS. Fullback Bryant Aldridge set up the score that gave Duke a 14-0 St. Mary's Wins ST. MARY'S, Calif.. Jan 1 <UP>. —Bill Sanchez whipped in 31 points last night to pace St. Mary's to an 87-82 victory over Arizona State (Tempe) in "the final time- up game of the season for the Gaels. ^OPEN TODAY SUNDAY 10 TO ST" TODAY'S SPECIAL ODDS & ENDS AT LESS THAN Vi PRICE SUITS HoflywooeJ Lounge Splashes Flannels Solids Sabs Worsteds. I- 2- or 3-Buttons Sands Coach At Scranton *«r Force Toos K ^nnes, 21-14 TOKYO. Jan. 1 (APV-The TJ. S. Air Force used two offensive teams today and double-timed to a 21-14 victory over the Marines in the eighth annual Rice Bowl football game before a colorful military crowd of some 40,000. One Air Force unit soared through the wild blue yonder from a spread formation; the other stuck firmly to the ground. The Marines grabbed 7-0 lead after five minutes but- the Air Force led, 14-7, by the end of the first quarter. A second-quarter Ma- rine touchdown knotted it 14-14 at halftime. The tired Marines yielded the winning touchdown in the third quarter. Leatherneck quarterback John Fry of Odessa, Tex., was injured on the first play. Baba Won <5ym Crown In Sr. A A U Event East Defeats West, 13-12 Continued from First Sports Page attempt by the East to keep the score deadlocked 6-6 at the half. The fans jamming atezar Sta- dium in near freezing weather watched Ray Berry, of Southern Methodist, block a punt in the third quarter^that set up another j ^Jjf in nine carries> began rip- ping the Nebraska line apart. He got away on one 29-yard jaunt and was almost in the clear before Don Glantz hauled him down from be- hind. Another 19-yard sprint by Pas- cal put the ball in position for Bar- ger's 17-yard scoring pass to Sor- rell. McKeithan's pass Interception set up the tally that made it 27-7, and before Nebraska had recovered from the shock the Blue Devils were off on another scoring drive of 51 yards. McKeithan broke loose for two 12-yard runs and Sam Kripal. CENTERS—ObcrUn, Torczon. Borguin > BACKS—Rov.ii. Erway. Fischer. Conr.stock. ciirk. Johnson. Greenlaw Korinek. Smith, "awards. halftime margin by intercepting a' g ^^, ZZ I ! o 7 *rt: 3 7 DUKE SCORING: Touchdowns Pascal, Kocourek, Sorrel, McKeithan. Eberdt. Con- versions—Nelson 4. NEBRASKA SCORING: Touchdown— Comstock. Conversion—Smith. STATISTICS Duke First downs 23 Rushing yardage 288 Passing yardage 82 pass from Don Erway at the Ne- braska 21. Barger faked a pass, then handed off to Aldridge, who broke through to the four. Barger sneaked for two more, than passed to Jerry Kocourek in the end zone. A freak kick in the third period! Passes"completed enabled Nebraska to score its onlyifSff '.nuSbSff 1 - TD, A punt by Barger to the N e - i ™ « average braska 48 bounced back sharply Yards penalized and was still heading toward the ~~ Duke goal when Barger knocked it! U O r t m a n Captured down at the 35. The punt actually A A ,, ,,- ,, r ,, ~. lost two yards. AAU Handball Crown Inspired by this opportunity, Don ; Mai Dorfman. Central YMCA. Comstock, Bob Smith and Ron won the Senior Middle Atlantic 7 ol 13 2 o 23 30 Neb i 6 /84 26| Ol 9 0 7 28 o 20 Clark punched to the Duke three. Comstock bulled over for the score with 8:38 gone in the period. It was then that Pascal, the top ground-gainer with 91 Western touchdown A comparative unknown by the name of Don Bailey, also of Penn State, putting on a great quarter- back show for the East, won the William M. Coffman Award as the most valuable player of the game. Hazeltine, for his great play in the forward wall, won the "Line- man of the Game" awsrd. , UNKNOWN BAILEY STARS It was Bailey who engineered one of the East touchdown drives AATJ handball championship in 1954 by defeating Jack Emas. Ger- mantown YMCA, 21-16, 21-11 Emas and Leon Levine captured the doubles title by defeating fel- low Germantown YMCA members, Bill Frith and Ray Kalish, 21-8, 21-16. The U. S. Intercollegiate cham- pionship was taken by Don Var- ner, University of Illinois, with a 21-18, 14-21, 21-6 decision over Cy de Meulemeester, University of Detroit. 1 Vi PRICE COATS Overcoats Top- coats, Single or Double Breasted 6-button Bennys. Vi PRICE BOYS' AND STUDENTS' SUITS & COATS BROKEN SIZES ODDS I ENDS Vi PRICE SLACKS " A l s ow All Wool Hi-Risers J i f Q Q Miracle Fabrics A: 1 Insurance, Too Joe Savoldi, star fullback on the 1929 Notre Dame football team and one-time pro wrestle/, is a South Bend, Ind., insurance salesman. 8th & Arch OPEN MON., WED., FRI. TIL 9:00. TUES. I THURS. 'TIL 0 P. M. OPEN SUNDAY M. TO 5 P. M. Joel Baba. Philadelphia Tur- —in the second quarter when he> Eberdt scored from the three, ners, won in the 1954 Senior Middle I passed to Garrity 15 yards to the | jj m Nelson kicked the extra Atlantic AAU all-around gymnas-jone and then scored on a quarter- i points after four of Duke's five tic championship with 979 points. William Coco, Temple Univer- sity, finished runner-up with 948. Sam Corgliano, Turners, was figth, 781. SUNBURY, Pa., Jan. 1.—Scran-!third, 875; Harry Johnston ton's Miners of the Eastern Profes- sional Basketball League have signed Robert (Bobby) Sands, for- mer assistant basketball coach at City College of New York, to re- place John Azary, Columbia Uni- versity graduate, as non-playing skipper for the balance of the sea- son. Sands immediately signed three former CCNY regulars. Jerry Do- mershek, Bob McDonald, and Floyd Layne, to start league play immediately with the Lackawanna Countians. back sneak. j j ^ t0 make his record for The West had scored in the first! season 25 bullseyes in 30 tries. period on Hazeltine's interception.! «,««„.= rHANCE The West went ahead again the j DUKE MISSES. t B A N t t West! third period when Berry broke j Duke lost a big second-period Branch YMCA, fourth, 799, and!through to block a'kick of George!scoring opportunity when, with: Charles Neely, Temple University, Broeder for the East. The West!Nebraska pushed back to its six.: These ore PERMANENT POSITIONS with a leader in the dynamic field of ELECTRIC COMPUTERS Your best chance for increasing responsibility and rapid electronic field is in the challenging field servic. work associated with digital w h o con t nbu te.d most to sports computers. Computer exparienca is not necessary. Yo« will racaiva extensive ^e Southwest for 1954 training in computer logic and circuitry and specialized training on specific <rh e selection was made by I computers. Good salaries start with the training period. After training you Texas Sports Writers Association Wyatt Is Selected No. I Southwesterner DALLAS, Jan. 1 (AP).—Bowden Wyatt, who coached Arkansas to a Southwest Conference football championship atad into the Cotton Bowl, was picked today as South- East and West Lineups BAST ENDS—Shannon (Notre Dame). McQuade I Pittsburg*). Dee (Holy (Cross), Kerr (Pur- due). Garrity (Penn Statei. TACKLES—Walker (Michigan). Hall (Iowa). Geyer (Michigan). Kraemer (Pittsburgh). GUARDS—B\illough (Michigan State). Smid (Illinois), Betlia (Purdue). Campbell. (Cin- cinnati). CENTERS—Allen (Purdue), Damore (North- western). BACKS—Guglielmi (Notre Dame). Bailey Penn SUte). Bolden (Michigan State), Drze- wicckl (Marquette), McNamara (Minnesota). Goist (Cincinnati). Heap (Notre Dame). Broeder (Iowa), Perkins (Syracuse). WEST ENDS—Hannifan (California). Berrv (South- ern Methodist). Sinclair (Texas A&MI. Alli- son 'Oklahoma). MadeTos (Chicago State). TACKLES—Lansford (Texas), Hess (Idaho). Ellena (UCLA). Aschbacker (Oregon State). recovered on the East eight and I Erway's kick carried only to the 31. from there Duke Washington,!Barger passed 19 yards to Sorrell, Washington State, scored on the!but Buddy Bass was knocked for first play around end. The point after touchdown at- tempt was wide and the score was 12-6. Midway in the final period, Guglielmi called the signals on a 78-yard touchdown drive that paid off with the Notre Dame star passing to end John Kerr, Purdue, for a touchdown. That set the stage for Garrity's winning con* version. The victory was the 12th for the East against 14 losses and four ties in the 30-year history of the game. PROVES WORKHORSE As expected, the East team stayed pretty much on the ground and featured the fine running of ?c°c\^LoLdertS ( s S n ^ s u ^ s r - 3013 McNamara, Minnesota, Leroy bury (UCLA). a seven-yard loss as he bobbled a lateral pass. On fourth down at the 12, Barger's end-zone aerial hit Bob Benson's fingertips and trick- led off. The game was the second under the Orange Bowl pact with the Big Seven and Atlantic Coast circuits. Last year the tieup produced the Nation's top bowl game between unbeaten Maryland and Oklahoma, the Nation's No. 1 and No. 4 teams, respectively. Oklahoma scored a 7-0 upset. A separate Orange Bowl Com- mittee made the agreement with the two conferences in the hope of avoiding such mismatches as the game of 1953, when Alabama stormed over Syracuse, 61-6, in the most one-sided game in major bowl history. westerner of the year—the person will be assigned to one United States. You -ill benefits. of our large computer installations in continental enjoy liberal travel aliowancas and other employe Bolden, Michigan State, Ron Drze ?K R ) £ - Ha2emne (C *" forni »>- PheistCT ;wiecki. Marquette, and Dick'Goist, ^ ^ S e l^'S^rfii' 0111011 " 1 ^ ' Drzewieckiran the ball (Rice), Tay" (Southern Washington . o 6 o 7 _ ]3 w as the workhorse, holTever, pick-1 MONTREAL, Jan. 1 fAP) —The 6 0 6 o—i2 ing up 25 yards in 16 attempts. Montreal Canadiens started off on wai ,ade bv the B a ^ r ^ a ^ a n d ^ T e r V . SrSSe 1 ! Bailey completed two out of five 1955 with a 4-1 victory over the _1.: 2zrr°.„ .?* m . Dy me conversion—jemes Garrity. penn state.!passes for 15 yards, and Guglielmi!Detroit Red Wings in a National WEST SCORING: Touchdowns—Matt Hazel- ! *_,,_ _,,,. _r _J_I, + «•__ AO tr^^i,-». T „„»,,<> » nmA tnnicrVi* tine. California, and rxfee Washington, j four out of eight for 48. I Hockey League game tonight. ikscale (Texas Christian!. Moegle ' . * 2 , ~~ :ayior (Kansas state*. Eidom j seven times for 51 yards and a 7.3!^-_ j ! M ( \A/t*t A Methodist). Bernardi (Colorado*. h f f nr fhp TEn<!t RniW ^anaOienS Win, •»-1 n (Washington state). Hardy (Coi-1 a v e i a g e , oest ior ine «asi. isaueyi IBast I West THe practical knowledge of computers obtained from actual experience at field installations wiH aid you greatly in advancement. All coftfoefs ore ImH in strict confi- dence, for furthtr information n- yarding oar comparers and iroininq programs contact: CAL BOSIN, Personnel Manager fclert-Mauchly Division Remington Rand Inc. 2300 W. AllegKeny Avenue " Philadelphia 29, Pa. Baldwin 3-7300 Minimum qualifications for Electronic fegjiiean Bachelor Degree—2 years elec- tronic experience Minimum qualifications for Electronics Tackniciam High school plus electronic school (armed forces acceptable) and four years electronic experience. holding its winter meeting in Dallas. Wyatt will receive a plaque at the annual Sports Achievement dinner here in February. He rolled up 43 votes to pilsh 31 ahead of Texan Buddy Parker, coach of the Detroit Lions. Washington State. STATISTICS First downs Rushing yardage Passing yardage Passes completed — Passes intercepted Punts East 16 174 63 Punting average Pumblest lost Yards penalized West 11 135 52 9 of IS 0 3 48 1 JOHNSONS FAIR 711 GLENWOOD AVE . PHILA., PA RA 5-5700 4§f|, or send brief resume of year education audi experience to: REMINGTON RAND, Inc. Enqineerinq Research Associates Division l i f t West Mineehaba Avenue. 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Page 1: THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER, SUNDAY MORNING, JANUARY … 23/Philadelphia PA Inquirer... · THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER, SUNDAY MORNING, JANUARY W.Texas Routs Fla. St.f 47-20 PASO, Tex.,

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER, SUNDAY MORNING, JANUARY

W.Texas Routs Fla. St.f 47-20

PASO, Tex., Jan. 1 (AP). — Whittenton, a tough, smart

quarterback, ran, paased and pilot­ed Western to its second straight Sun Bowl championship today, a 47-20 rout of Florida State.

Whittenton ran for two touch­downs, passed for three more, en­gineered the other two Texas West-e m scoring drives and kicked five of seven attempted conversions. He was voted the game's outstanding player.

The teams traded first quarter scores but Texas Western erupted for 27 points in the second quarter to wrap up the 20th annual game before an estimated 14,000.

The Miners, performing well un­der Whittenton's sterling guidance, widened the gap in the third quar­ter.

Prom that point on the game got progressively rougher and duller until the two coaches, Mike Brum-below, Texas Western, and Tom Nugent, Florida State, came on the field to tell their teams to ease up on the rough stuff. Three times plays were nullified by personal fouls on each team.

The rugged play and 60-degree Texas heat took its toll. Seven Tex as Western players were helped from the field, while Florida State was hurt about as bad. The Semi-

* notes lost the service of halfback Lee Corso in the second quarter. Tfcxie* State — 7 0 6 7—»> Texas Weetem. — 7 27 13 0—47

FLORIDA STATS SCORING: Touchdown* , — turner. Seemster, Odom Extra Points— > Graham M i s » \

TSXAS WBBTBRN SCORING: Touchdown* - Rutiedfe 2. Whittenton 2. Bob Forrest 2, INek Forrest. Extra point*— Whittenton 5.

STATISTICS Fla. St. Tex. West

Georgia Tech's Power in 2d Half Thwarts Arkansas in Cotton Bowl

f i r s t downs — — — Rushina- yardage — ~ Fauil i f yardage — Panel completed Piuses intercepted by Punts , — . . . . Punting average —— Fumbles lost Tarda penalized

13 139 133

-12 of 21 0 6

26 2

25

17 233 149

at 13 2 •»

44 ->

53

Phila. Uhriks Play

A t Trenton Today The Philadelphia Uhriks will be

out to increase their American Pro Soccer League lead today when they tackle the Trenton Ameri­cans in the New Jersey capital.

This is the only loop game sched­uled, and a victory for the Uhriks will increase the local pros* advan­tage to a game-and-a-half.

The Uhriks also have gained the third round of the National Chal­lenge Cup series by virtue of triumphs over the Little Club of the Philadelphia Amateur Lea­gue's First Division and Olden AA, unbeaten pace-setter of Trenton's Capital City League.

Bruins Blank Rangers BOSTON. Jan. 1 lUP).—The

Boston Bruins regained fourth

Years night contest before 10,432.

AP Wireohoto

Georgia Tech's Paul Rotenberry (21), target of Bill Brigman aerial, is frustrated by Arkansas' leaping Joe Thomason in second-period action of Cotton Bowl game yesterday at Dallas, Tex. Tech won, 14-6, mainly on rushing before crowd of 75,504.

Fort O rd , Forf Hood

Meet in Shrimp Bowl GALVESTON, Tex., Jan. 1 (AP>.

—Fort Ord, Calif., and Fort Hood, place in the National Hockey {Tex., square off here tomorrow in League from New York tonight by t h e s i x f c n annual Shrimp Bowl beating the Rangers. 4-0, in a New j football game.

Ord is favored in a high-scoring contest. Some 8000 are expected.

It will be the first time for whites and negroes to play football to­gether here. Each team features several negro players.

Reverse Verdict CLEVELAND—Bob Feller was

defated, 4-1, when he established the major league strikeout record of 18 strikeouts against the Detroit Tigers in 1938.

OPPORTUNITY FOR

ELECTRONIC ENGINEERS

and

ELECTRONIC TECHNICIANS

Bowls Drew 4 4 8 J 8 0

By Associated Press Nine football bowl games drew

a total attendance of 460,939 yes­terday with an estimated 40,000 seeing one of them in far-off Japan.

Rain held the Rose Bowl turn­out below the usual 100,000 or so mark but. the oldest of the post­season classics still was tops in at­tendance with 89,191. The Sugar Bowl attracted the second largest crowd, a sell-out of 80,735.

The Japanese game was the Rice Bowl at Tokyo in which the U. S. Air Force delisted the II. S. Marines, 21-14. Another 34,408 saw the 'Gator Bowl on Friday.

The figures: Rose—89,191. Sugar—80,735. Cotton—75,504. Orange—€8,750. East-West—62,000. Rice—40,000. Sun—14,000. Tangerine—12,759. Prairie View—10,000. Salad—8000.

Continued from First Sports Page

chores six times for 24 of the yards. A Mitchell-to-end Jimmy Durham pass was another vital nine-yard link ip the drive which Rotenberry capped by racing around right end from the three-yard line.

Tech smashed 43 yards for the final period clincher with Hun-singer getting 17 of the steps in three carries before, turning the chore over to Mattison, a 207-pound sophomore who tacked on 15 more in four attempts to set Mitchell up for a one-yard scoring sneak. Mitchell then kicked his second conversion.

Arkansas' famed "fullback draw," featuring Henry Moore, worked like a charm during the first half when he gained 81 yards with it— 37 yards in the lone Arkansas scor­ing surge.

The Humphreys-Hunsinger-Mat-tison trio piled up 139 of the 285 yards Tech ground out rushing with Humphreys the top man with 103 yards. That was nearly as much as Arkansas' 141-yard total output on the ground.

HEAVY ARKANSAS TOLL Tech completed only four of 15

passes for 3,1 yards, while Walker hit seven of 10 for 86 yards.

After Tech got the winning spirit in the second half, its savage line play took a heavy toll of Arkansas' running game with center Larry Morris the wheelhorse defensively as well as on offense.

Little Bobby Proctor, Arkansas wingback who played* better than half the game with a head gash, and All-America guard Bud Brooks topped what defense the losers could muster.

Humphreys' contribution of 5.3 yards per carry earned him a close victory over Mitchell for the most valuable back selection by thej sports writers. The most valuable; lineman laurels went overwhelm-j ingly to All-America guard Bud Brooks of Arkansas.

Tech slashed and tore Arkansas for a ponderous 285 yards on the! ground and made 31 in the air Arkansas managed 141 rushing1

and 86 passing. Arkansas 0 « 0 0— 6! Georgia Tech 0 0 7 7—14

ARKANSAS SCORING: Touchdowns— Walker. GEORGIA TECH SCORING Touchdowns—Rotenberry. Mitchell. Con­versions—Mitchell 2.

UP Tflephcto

Duke quarterback Jerry Barger (36) gets up- action of Orange Bowl Game at Miami, Fla. Other ended by Nebraska's Dan Brown (20) yesterday as players are Robert Wagner (65), Nebraska, and former tries to reverse field during first quarter Johnny Palmer, Duke (53). Duke won, 34-7.

GEORGIA TECH -Durham, Ellis, Sennett, Huff. Hair.

Daughterly.

Pul-

ENDS-Webster. Jones TACKLES—Vereen. Christy Anderson. Phen'x, Thrash. GUARDS—F Brooks. Ecker. Willoch cher Miller, L. Roberts. Gossage. CENTERS—L. Morris. J. M. Morris, Carlen Summer. BACKS—Mitchell. Brigman. Shamburger, | Vann. Grant. Rotenberry. Volkert. J. L. Morris. Menger. Tnomofon. Gookin, Humph­reys Hunsinger, Mattison. Owen.

ARKANSAS ENDF—Souter. Burns. Matthews, McFad-den. Lyons. TACKLEM---Bradford. Smith, Roth Fuller GUARDS—Roberts. Martin. Hardwick. B. Brooks. Olllim. CFNTTPRS—Fc-rd. Steelmar. 1ACKS—Carpenter. Proctor. Kolb, Walker. Ren; on, Thcmason. Underwood. Moore. Berry. %

STATISTICS Arkansas, Georgia Tech Rushing vsrdage

First dowiis Passing yardage Passes completed Passes intercepted by Punts

• Punting average 1 Fumbles lost — i Yards penalized - —

141 10 86-

-7 of 10 0 4

• 30.5 0

30

285" 19 31

4 of 15 1 4

nn o

30

Jim Garrity, Penn State, who won game for East All-Stars over West, 13-12, with placement kick for point in Shrine game at San Francisco.

Duke's Power, Passes Crush Nebraska, 34-7 Continued from First Sports Page

played in bright weather with the temperature in the middle 70s.

Duke, favored by two touch­downs, didn't open up until the start of the second quarter. Then the Blue Devils rammed 65 yards in nine plays to score, with Pascal sweeping wide to his right for the last seven yards. A 16-yard run oy Pascal and an 18-yard pass from

Orange Bowl Lineups

DIKE ENDS—Sorrell. Benson. Sebastian, Moon, Kocourek Black. Stallings TACKLES — Campbell, Deloatch, Hord. Knott*. Cox. Konicek. GUARDS—Birchfleld, Nelson, Fesperman, Torrance, Klinger. CENTERS — Palmer, Palls. Snowberger. Murray. BACKS—Barger. Jurgensen, Murray. Pascal, McKeithan. Post, Beasley. Kredick. Bass, Blaney, B. Conner. Aldridge. Eberdt. Lutz.

NEBRASKA Jerry Barger to S o n n y Sorrell were | END*—Leohr. Butherus. westerveit. Mc-

" v i Williams. Hewitt. Harris. Giles. TACKLES—Hollaran. Peterson. Neal, Glantz, Evans, Fleming. GUARDS—Bryant. Murphy. Taylor, Wagner.

,\ the key plays of the drive.

F R E A K K I C K LOSES 2 Y D S . Ful lback Bryant Aldridge set up

the score that gave Duke a 14-0

St. Mary's Wins ST. MARY'S, Calif.. Jan 1 <UP>.

—Bill Sanchez whipped in 31 points last night to pace St. Mary's to an 87-82 victory over Arizona State (Tempe) in "the final time-up game of the season for the Gaels.

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*«r Force Toos K ^nnes, 21-14

TOKYO. Jan. 1 (APV-The TJ. S. Air Force used two offensive teams today and double-timed to a 21-14 victory over the Marines in the eighth annual Rice Bowl football game before a colorful military crowd of some 40,000.

One Air Force unit soared through the wild blue yonder from a spread formation; the other stuck firmly to the ground.

The Marines grabbed 7-0 lead after five minutes but- the Air Force led, 14-7, by the end of the first quarter. A second-quarter Ma­rine touchdown knotted it 14-14 at halftime.

The tired Marines yielded the winning touchdown in the third quarter.

Leatherneck quarterback John Fry of Odessa, Tex., was injured on the first play.

Baba W o n <5ym Crown In Sr. A A U Event

East Defeats West, 13-12 Continued from First Sports Page

attempt by the East to keep the score deadlocked 6-6 at the half.

The fans jamming atezar Sta­dium in near freezing weather watched Ray Berry, of Southern Methodist, block a punt in the third quarter^that set up another j ^ J j f i n n i n e c a r r i e s > began rip­

ping the Nebraska line apart. He got away on one 29-yard jaunt and was almost in the clear before Don Glantz hauled him down from be­hind.

Another 19-yard sprint by Pas­cal put the ball in position for Bar-ger's 17-yard scoring pass to Sor­rell.

McKeithan's pass Interception set up the tally that made it 27-7, and before Nebraska had recovered from the shock the Blue Devils were off on another scoring drive of 51 yards. McKeithan broke loose for two 12-yard runs and Sam

Kripal. CENTERS—ObcrUn, Torczon. Borguin > BACKS—Rov.ii. Erway. Fischer. Conr.stock. c i i rk . Johnson. Greenlaw Korinek. Smith, "awards.

halftime margin by intercepting a' g ^ ^ , ZZ I !o 7 *rt:37 DUKE SCORING: Touchdowns — Pascal,

Kocourek, Sorrel, McKeithan. Eberdt. Con­versions—Nelson 4.

NEBRASKA SCORING: Touchdown— Comstock. Conversion—Smith.

STATISTICS Duke

First downs 23 Rushing yardage 288 Passing yardage 82

pass from Don Erway at the Ne­braska 21. Barger faked a pass, then handed off to Aldridge, who broke through to the four. Barger sneaked for two more, than passed to Jerry Kocourek in the end zone.

A freak kick in the third period! Passes"completed enabled Nebraska to score its onlyifSff '.nuSbSff1-TD, A punt by Barger to the N e - i ™ « average — braska 48 bounced back sharply Yards penalized — and was still heading toward the ~ ~ Duke goal when Barger knocked it! U O r t m a n C a p t u r e d down at the 35. The punt actually A A , , , , - , , r ,, ~. lost two yards. A A U Handball Crown

Inspired by th is opportunity , D o n ; M a i Dorfman . Central YMCA. Comstock, Bob S m i t h a n d R o n won the Senior Middle At lant ic

7 ol 13 2 o

23

30

Neb i 6

/ 8 4 26 |

Ol 9 0 7

28 o

20

Clark punched to the Duke three. Comstock bulled over for the score with 8:38 gone in the period.

It was then that Pascal, the top ground-gainer with 91

Western touchdown A comparative unknown by the

name of Don Bailey, also of Penn State, putting on a great quarter­back show for the East, won the William M. Coffman Award as the most valuable player of the game. Hazeltine, for his great play in the forward wall, won the "Line­man of the Game" awsrd. ,

UNKNOWN BAILEY STARS It was Bailey who engineered

one of the East touchdown drives

AATJ handball championship in 1954 by defeating Jack Emas. Ger-mantown YMCA, 21-16, 21-11

Emas and Leon Levine captured the doubles title by defeating fel­low Germantown YMCA members, Bill Frith and Ray Kalish, 21-8, 21-16.

The U. S. Intercollegiate cham­pionship was taken by Don Var-ner, University of Illinois, with a 21-18, 14-21, 21-6 decision over Cy de Meulemeester, University of Detroit.

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Insurance, Too Joe Savoldi, star fullback on the

1929 Notre Dame football team and one-time pro wrestle/, is a South Bend, Ind., insurance salesman.

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Joel Baba. Philadelphia Tur- —in the second quarter when he> Eberdt scored from the three, ners, won in the 1954 Senior Middle I passed to Garrity 15 yards to the | j j m Nelson kicked the extra Atlantic AAU all-around gymnas-jone and then scored on a quarter- i points after four of Duke's five tic championship with 979 points.

William Coco, Temple Univer­sity, finished runner-up with 948. Sam Corgliano, Turners, was

figth, 781.

SUNBURY, Pa., Jan. 1.—Scran-!third, 875; Harry Johnston ton's Miners of the Eastern Profes­sional Basketball League h a v e signed Robert (Bobby) Sands, for­mer assistant basketball coach at City College of New York, to re­place John Azary, Columbia Uni­versity graduate, as non-playing skipper for the balance of the sea­son.

Sands immediately signed three former CCNY regulars. Jerry Do-m e r s h e k , Bob McDonald, and Floyd Layne, to start league play immediately with the Lackawanna Countians.

back sneak. j j ^ t 0 make his record for The West had scored in the first! s e a s o n 25 bullseyes in 30 tries.

period on Hazeltine's interception.! «,««„.= rHANCE The West went ahead again the j DUKE MISSES. t B A N t t West! third period when Berry broke j Duke lost a big second-period

Branch YMCA, fourth, 799, and!through to block a'kick of George!scoring opportunity when, with: Charles Neely, Temple University, Broeder for the East. The West!Nebraska pushed back to its six.:

These ore

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Wya t t Is Selected

No. I Southwesterner DALLAS, Jan. 1 (AP).—Bowden

Wyatt, who coached Arkansas to a Southwest Conference football championship atad into the Cotton Bowl, was picked today as South-

East and West Lineups

BAST ENDS—Shannon (Notre Dame). McQuade I Pittsburg*). Dee (Holy (Cross), Kerr (Pur­due). Garrity (Penn Statei. TACKLES—Walker (Michigan). Hall (Iowa). Geyer (Michigan). Kraemer (Pittsburgh). GUARDS—B\illough (Michigan State). Smid (Illinois), Betlia (Purdue). Campbell. (Cin­cinnati). CENTERS—Allen (Purdue), Damore (North­western). BACKS—Guglielmi (Notre Dame). Bailey Penn SUte). Bolden (Michigan State), Drze-wicckl (Marquette), McNamara (Minnesota). Goist (Cincinnati). Heap (Notre Dame). Broeder (Iowa), Perkins (Syracuse).

WEST ENDS—Hannifan (California). Berrv (South­ern Methodist). Sinclair (Texas A&MI. Alli­son 'Oklahoma). MadeTos (Chicago State). TACKLES—Lansford (Texas), Hess (Idaho). Ellena (UCLA). Aschbacker (Oregon State).

recovered on the East eight and I Erway's kick carried only to the 31. from there Duke Washington,!Barger passed 19 yards to Sorrell, Washington State, scored on the!but Buddy Bass was knocked for first play around end.

The point after touchdown at­tempt was wide and the score was 12-6.

Midway in the final period, Guglielmi called the signals on a 78-yard touchdown drive that paid off with the Notre Dame star passing to end John Kerr, Purdue, for a touchdown. That set the stage for Garrity's winning con* version.

The victory was the 12th for the East against 14 losses and four ties in the 30-year history of the game.

PROVES WORKHORSE As expected, the East team

stayed pretty much on the ground and featured the fine running of

?c°c\^LoLdertS ( s S n ^ s u ^ s r - 3 0 1 3 McNamara, Minnesota, Leroy bury (UCLA).

a seven-yard loss as he bobbled a lateral pass. On fourth down at the 12, Barger's end-zone aerial hit Bob Benson's fingertips and trick­led off.

The game was the second under the Orange Bowl pact with the Big Seven and Atlantic Coast circuits. Last year the tieup produced the Nation's top bowl game between unbeaten Maryland and Oklahoma, the Nation's No. 1 and No. 4 teams, respectively. Oklahoma scored a 7-0 upset.

A separate Orange Bowl Com­mittee made the agreement with the two conferences in the hope of avoiding such mismatches as the game of 1953, when Alabama stormed over Syracuse, 61-6, in the most one-sided game in major bowl history.

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^ ^ S e l ^ ' S ^ r f i i ' 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 " 1 ^ ' Drzewieckiran the ball (Rice), Tay" (Southern Washington .

o 6 o 7 _ ] 3 was the workhorse, holTever, pick-1 MONTREAL, Jan. 1 fAP) —The

6 0 6 o—i2 ing up 25 yards in 16 attempts. Montreal Canadiens started off on wai ,ade bv the B a ^ r ^ a ^ a n d ^ T e r V . SrSSe1! Bailey completed two out of five 1955 with a 4-1 victory over the

_ 1 . : 2 z r r ° . „ .?* m . Dy m e • conversion—jemes Garrity. penn state.!passes for 15 yards, a n d Gug l i e lmi !De tro i t R e d W i n g s in a Nat iona l WEST SCORING: Touchdowns—Matt Hazel- ! *_,,_ _,,,. _ r _ J _ I , + «•__ AO t r ^ ^ i , - » . T „„»,,<> » n m A tnnicrVi*

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holding its winter meeting in Dallas.

Wyatt will receive a plaque at the annual Sports Achievement dinner here in February. He rolled up 43 votes to pilsh 31 ahead of Texan Buddy Parker, coach of the Detroit Lions.

Washington State. STATISTICS

First downs Rushing yardage — Passing yardage — Passes completed — Passes intercepted Punts

East 16

174 63

Punting average Pumblest lost — Yards penalized •

West 11

135 52

9 of IS 0 3

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