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Bayou Tigers Down Bulldogs 34-27;
Teams Tied Until Last
Few Minutes Of Play;
Smith And Cook Score
BATON ROUCE, La.—Georgia’s fighting frsehmen
amazed the football world Saturday night by holding
the famed and highly favored Bayou Tigers of Louisi
ana State to 34-27 verdict in a free-scoring game
First Period
Louisiana State Kkicked off but
the Georgia attack bogged down
on L. 8. U.ss 30 after Cook ran
through a broken field for 32 yards.
Van Buren, Schroll and Nagata
churned through the Georgia for
ward wall to the Bulldog's 31.
Then Schroll andy Van Buren alter
nated in plunging through to the
3-vard line. Van Buren went over
left tackle for the touchdown and
kicked the extra point. 39 OB
%7, Georgia 0. :
The Bulldogs swasted little time
tying the score. Benton returned a
short kickoff back to the Georgia
87, and Cook circled end to mid
field. Smith lost 5 yards and L. 8.
U. was_penalized 15 yvards for
holding to the Tigers’ 44. Cook
passed so Harris for 10 yards and
plunged five for a first down on
the 15. Cook passed to THarris on
the Tigers' 7 and Cook seroed on
an end run. Jarnigan = converted
fro mplacement to tie the score
.
" Van Buren returned Georgia’s
Xickoff to his own 28 as the quar
ter ended. Score, L. S. U. 7, Geor
gia 7.
Second Period
Schroll pisked up 4 and then
drove to the L. S. U. 40 for a first
down, but the Tigers were penal
ized 15 for holding and Van Bu
ren kicked to the Georgia 15 where
Cook was downed in his tracks.
Smith lost 4 and Cook punted to
Van Buren who returned 10 yards
%o the Georgia 35. Van Buren
crashed over tackle down to the
Bulldogs' 21-yard line. Nagata
failed to gain, but Van Buren ran
through tackle to the 12. Schroll
got 5 at right tackle and on the
mnext play scored through the same
spot. Van Buren’'s placekick was
good. L. 8. U. 14, Georgia 7.
= Georgia drove 63 yards following
the kickoff, but the Tigers bhraced
and took over on their own 2
yard line. LSU couldn’t get under
‘svay and the Bulldogs came right
“back to score, Cook passing 16
wards to Smith for . the second
Georgia touchdown. The scoring
drive carried 30 yards. Jernigan's
placekick was blocked by Hartley.
LSU scored their third touchdown
of the half. Schroll plunging over
from the 3-yard line after Van
Buren's 62 yard run placed the hall
dn scoring position. Van Buren
again converted from placement:
The half ended with Georgia in
possession of the ball near mid
‘field. Score: LSU 21, Gebrgia 13.]
3 |
Third Quarter '
- Schroell. returned the Georgia
‘kickoff 15 yards to the LSU 34.]
Van Buren lost five at end and|
punted to the Georgia 15, Cook
returning 19 yards. Georgia could‘
mot gain and LSU got possession
of the pall on the Bulldogs' 3%
Van Buren picked up 5 in two
‘attempts, and then passed to Webb
on the Bulldogs' 11. Van Buren
drove to the five and then plunged
over for a touchdown, Van Buren's
try for extra point was wide. LSU
27, Georgia 13, "y
- Rutland returned LSU’s kickoff
20 yards to the Georgia 33, but
‘Rutland fumbled and last 8 on the
‘mext play. Cook completed two
passes to Benton that adanced
‘the ball to ‘midfield, but Griffith
intercepted Cook’s mnext pass on
‘the LSU 85 yard line and returned
2 yards. Van Buren plunged 6
‘yards, but Schroll lost 2 anad
Georgia, drew an offside penalty.
UGridfith Jost 5 and Van Buren
‘punted to the Georgia 10, The
‘teams battled in midfield for the‘
‘remainder of the period. wnh‘
‘!flchm}l intercepting Cook’s pass
‘on the L.SU 38 yard line and then]
‘adding 2 yards at tackle as the
‘guarter ended. LSU 27, Georgia 13.
Fourth Quarter
- .The Bulldogs scored ther third
touchdown of the game early in
the fourth period. Bulldog linemen
‘broke through to block Knight's
punt and recover the ball on LSU’s
42. Cook got 8 yards in two tries
and Rutland drove for a first
down on the 30. Cook shot a pass
to Smith for 15 yards and on the
next play connected again to Smity
for a touchdown. Jernigan's kick
;v;as good. Score LSU 27, Georgia
- Starting from the Georgia 48
Cook gained 2, but the Bulldogs
were penalized 15 for holding.
Georgia was forced to punt, and
LSU started from _its 31. The
Tigers were penalized back to
their 5 for clipping. Van Buren
punted out to the 42 and Cook
climaxed a drive that tied the
Bcore at 27-27 by passing to Smith
for a touchdown. Jernigan's place
kick was good.
LSU struek back to score the
Wwinning touchdown in the last 40
seconds of play, Van Buren going
over from the Georgia five after
his pass to Nagata on the 5 was
allowed for interference. Van Bu
ren kicked the point and LSU led
84 to 27. Cook's passes were wild
@and LSU had the ball on their
©own 25 yard line as the game end
%:. Final score: LSU 34, Georgia
* Ocean-caught fish contain cop
per, iron, calcium, phosphorus,
~ gnd other minerals. =
Yugoslavs Throw Back
Several Atfacks;
Desiroy Armored Train
T LONDON-—(P)—Yugoslav patriot
armies have hurled back several
more German attacks on the stra
tegic Adriatic port of Split, stiil
hold the greater part of Susak in
the north, and hbave Kkilled hun
dreds of the enemy and destroyed
an armored train, tanks and other
dguipment, a communique said
Saturday night,
The enemy suffered “heavyt
losses” in the effort to regain
Split, said a Yugoslav liberation
army bulletin issued here.
The port could serve as a bridge
head for an Allied invasion of the
Balkans, and amid wreports of
spreading unrest in that shakily
held “back door” to Germany
there ‘were increasing indications
that the Yugoslav (fighting had
grown out of the guerrilla stage
to a major operation, possibly di
rected by the Allied hih command.
Susak, a port city adjoining
Fiume, was seized 16 days ago
by the patriots, and Saturday's
bulletin said street fighting was
continuing, ; :
At Gorizia, north of Italian
Trieste, Slovenian troops were
said to have yielded the airfield
there under heavy German pres
sure, but before withdrawing they
knocked out one enemy armored
train and several tanks. The fight
still swirls outside the city.
Airmen"Dest:oy Nazi
Planes Attempting
To Flee Corsica
(Continued from Page One)
Naples plain,
German . broadeasts continued
to spread alarms of additional
Allied landings on Italy’'s east or
west coast while Berlin propagan
dists declared the Salerno landing
alone had cost the Allies 20,000
casuaties. 7
Salerno Casualties
In Washington, however, the
War Department announced that
American casualties at Salerno up
to nd including Sept. .5 were 3,-
497 killed, wounded and missing.
In the face of the day's German
reversals, Berlin propagandists
stepped up their flow of peace
rumors in an apparent effort to
frighten the Allies into believing
that some sort of Nazi peace with
Russia was possible.
Escorted by Allied Spitfires,
American Marauder bhombers at
tacked the Donguengsse air field
at St. Omer in northern France
yesterdayy afternoon. A British
Air Ministry announcement said
fires still were burning in ' the
twin German industrial cities of
Mannheim and Ludwigshafen al
most 48 hours after the RAF’s
heavy attack of Thursday night.
Bitter Resistance %
In the face of bitter resistance,
Australian troops have fought
their way acros sthe Bumi River
within three quarters of a mile of
the enemy air and supply depot
base of Finschhafen, New Guinea,
Gien. Douglas MacArthur announcs
ed today (Sunday)e With . their
south shore beachhead firmly es
tablished the Australians drove
steadily toward the town, Wwhich
is on the Huon Penisula only 75
miles from Japan's strategic island
of New Britain.
In their bid for Finschhafen the
Australians already have captured
the airijeld. Capture of the town
itself would run the solid line of
New Guinea coast in MacArthur's
hand an additional 60 miles—from
Lae to Finschhafen.
Russian Charge Starts
Nazis Reeling Back
To White Russia |
(Continued From Page One) l
-
the stronghold from which Adolf
Hitler himself directed the 1941-
42 winter onslaught which carried
his armies virtually to the gates of
the capital.
On the Kuban bridgehead, Rus
sian warships are interfering with
the evacuation of German and
Rumanian troops to the Crimea,
according to the Red Army news
paper Red Star, which declared
that “in the lower Kuban the Ger
mans are abandoning their guns
and even their infantry weapons.
The German war bulletin said
Nazi columns were attacking in
the Lake Ladega region in the
Leningrad salient, and claimed
that tank-supported Soviet coun-*
terattacks had been thrown back
in the Murmansk sector. i
FARMER MEETS HIS MULES ]
DUNLAP, Kas—(P)—Pfc. Ralph‘
Hayes, a farmer, sold his favorite
team of mules last:February 38 just
before he entered the Army. The
other day on Guadalcanal he heard
a famillar hee-haw and, going to
the source of the sound, found his
‘mules, They also are working for
,Uncle Sam on Guadalcanal.
Bend an Oar, Sailor 3
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Trainees at ¢he Sampson, N. Y. naval station—nation’s second
Jargest boot camp—learn how to row, row, row-the boat without
worrying about getting seasick. -
Spud Chandler Wins
As Yankees Clinch
The League Pennant
NEW YORK — (AP) — With
Spud Chandler pitching’ bis 20th
victory of the season, and his bat
tery mate, the veteran catcher Bill
Dickey contributing the game
winning single, the Yankees fin
ally clinched the American League
pennat Saturday by beating De
troit, 2 to 2, in a thrilling 14-inn
ig struggle.
The Yanks now have won 91
games and lost 53, If they lose all
of their remaining 10 games while
the second-place Washington Sen
ators win all of their remaining
nine, the Yanks will still finish on
top by a one-game margin. ¢
Southpaw Frank “Stubby” Over
mire gave Chandler a stubborn ar
gument all the way and would
have won a 1 to 0 shutout in the
regulation nine innings, but for a
two-base muff by rookie Dick
Wakefield that paved the way
for an unearned Yankee tally in
Probable Pitchers
NEW YORK.— (AP) ——'Prob‘abie
pitchers in the major leagues Sun
day (season won-lost records in
parenthesis): | b : g
AMERICAN LEAGUE
(All Doubleheaders)
Cleveland at New York—Smith
(16-6) or Poat (2-5) and Kennedy
(10-6) vs. Bonham (13-8) and
Donald (6-4).
Detroit at Boston. — Trueks
(13-10) and Bridges (12-6) vs. Lu
cier (2-3) and Woods (4-6).
Chicago at Washington — Smith
(9-11) and Ross (10-7) vs. Leon
ard (11-12) and Candini (10-7).
St. Louis at Philadelphia—Mun=
cries (12-11) and Sundra (10-14)
\; Harris (7-19) and Fagan (2-6).
- i
NATIONAL LEAGUE
_(All Doubleheaders)
Phigadelphia at St. Louis — Ger
heauser (10-18) and Barrett (8-13)
SIDE GLANCES
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|___COPR. 1943 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. T M_REG Y. S, PAT, OFF, i §-28
“She’s awfully dumb if she thinks the boys are going to
be fooled by that phony accent she picked ‘up visiting
e twa weeks in Boston last summer!” 4
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA.
the third. The run matched the
one the Tigers made in the top of
the third on Overmire’'s single, a
sacrifice and Joe Wood's one
baser. *
After that Chandler and Over
mire hooked up in a magnificent
duel before a scant crowd of 6,-
342, Both were especially effec
tive from the ninth on. Chandler
retired 15 of the 16 batters’ who
faced him in the five overtime
frames, the last 14 in succession.
Except for Joe- Gordon’s single in
the 12th, Overmire also mowed
down the Yankees without trouble,
The break came in the 14th,
With one out, Overmire walked
Bill Johnson. Dickey then boune
ed a single over second base and
Johnson romped home with the
pennant-winning run.
Overmire yielded only six hits
to Chandler's eight. s
vs. Byerly (0-0) and Kiprst (9-5),
Brooklyn -at Chicago — Higbe
(11-10) ‘ana Head (8-9) vs. Pas
seau. (15-11) ang Hanyzewski
(6-7).
Boston at Cincinnati—Andrews.
(14-18) ‘ana Tobin (13-12) vs.
Vandeér Meer 12-13) ana Riddle
(20-10), .
New York at Pittsburgh—Melton
(9-10) and Adams. (11-7) vs. Sew
€l (21-9) and Resigno (6-9).
A cream improvement specialist
has been 4dded to the staff of the
Extension Service to work with
county and home agents and with
farm people in improving the
quality .of cream marketed in
Georgia. 5
Prices for low grade cotton this
‘year are much lower than are
prices for better grades, especially
if the cotton is one inch or longer
in staple, accrding to the Georgia
Agricultural Extension Service.
—By Galbraith
i(lhin Trounced By
|luwa Pre-Flight;
‘Army Downs "Nova
BY ORLO ROBERTSON
NEW YORK — (AP) — . The
1943. college football season, shorn
of its pre-war trimmings, mus
tered most of its strength Sat
urday and when it was all over,
the list of winners looked right
familiar.
Ohio State, the nation’s No. 1
team last year, dropped its first
opening ggame since 1894 but a
quick glance down the score sheéet
showed such well known elevens
on top as Notre lfime, Minnesota,
Army, Pennsylvani® Georgia Tech,
Navy, Duke, Michigan, Tulsa, Penn
State and Southern California.
The Buckeyes from Ohio found
their 17-year-old boys were un
able to cope with the experience
of such former professional stars
as Dick Todd and Perry Schwartz
and went down to defeat at the
hands of lowa Pre-Flight 28 to 13.
Pittsburgh, also built around
civilians, renewed relations with
Notre Dame after a lapse of six
years but it was not a pleasant
renewal tor the Panthers. Clark
Shaughnessy had predicted his boys
would lose by 30 points and he
wasn't far wrong as 60,000 fans,
the largest crowd of the day, saw
the Irish roll to a 41-0 triumph.
Missouri Turned Back £
Minnesota, far from being the
power house of old, had enough to
turn back Missouri 26 to 12. Mich
igan’'s power-house had a breath
er at the expense of Western Mich
igan, 57 to 6, but two othe big
team elevens, ran into tartars in
two service elevens. lowa bowed
to Great Lakes Naval Training
Station, 21 to 7, and Wisconsin
took it on the chin from Camp
Grant, 20 to 7. ; Sy
Navy, Army and Pennsylvania in
the east showed that they must
be reckoned with when laurels are
handed out at the end of the sea
son. The Middies measured the
North Carolina Pre-Flight 31 to
0, Penn smothered Princeton 47
to 9 in a battle of Ivy clad schools
while Army, displaying an array
of fine backs, whipped a Marine
and Navy studded Villanova elev
en, 27 to 0, after a slow start.
Other eastern games saw Yale
chalk -up its second victory in
three stars with a 20 to 12 triumph
over the U. S. Coast Guard Acad
emy, Cornell turn back Sampson
Naval Training Station 27 to 138;
Colgate nose out Rochester 7 to
0 .and Penn State shoutout Buck
nell 14 to 0. B
‘Dv;;(e- Whips Richmond
Duke, as predicted, had a mere
workout in whipping ‘Richmond 61
to 0 despite the fact that the Vir-:
ginians were strengthened by sev
eral members of last year's power
ful William and Mary squad.
The only game in the Southwest
involving major college teams Saw.
Tulsa pick up where it left off
last year, turning back Southern
Methodist 20 to 7. Oklahoma gen-:
erated enough power to defeat the
Norman, OKla., Naval Training
Base as did such Southwest Con
ference elevens as Texas Aggies,
Texas, in games with service
teams. Arkansas opened the sea~
son with a 59-0 shutout of “the
Missouri School of Mines. -
Moving west, Colorado took Ft.
Warren into camp, 38 to 0, and
Colorado College beat New Mex
jco 20 to 7. Out on the West Coast
only California of the big teams
had any serious trouple. The Gold
en Bears defeated a depleted St.
Mary’s squad 27 to 12, Washington
scored over Whitman, 35 to 6, in
the only .one of three games re
‘maining on the Huskies! schedule
"afrd Southern California, probably
the hest team on the West ‘Coast,
‘whipped U. C. L. A. 20 to 0 <
WORLD TODAY
(Continued From Page QOne)
frighten Allies into believing
Nazi-Russian ‘peace possible;
rumors came from neutral
countries.
il i
WASHINGTON: War De
partment announces Salerno
casualties, including killed,
wounded and missing total
3,497, up to and including Sept.
15.
b
SOUTHWEST PACIFIC:
Australians fight way over Jap
opposition across Bimi - River
to within three-quarters of
mile of Nip air supply depot
base of Finschhafen on New
Guinea.
e A s
__________—————-____-
HAVE YOU NOTICED?
That the Bulldog Bowling Al
leys on Broad street across from
the University campus have
been clesed up for he past sev
eral days while being complete
ly . remodeled.
They will reopen Monday un
der a new manager—Mr. Frank
E. Murray—who promises fans
a good time. New alleys have
been purchased, ond in fact, yoc
can hardly recognize the place,
it looks so new.
Included in the equipment
purchased to bring the éstab
tishment completely up-to-date
are a number of bawling shoes .
which patrons may use free of
charge.
s s & ;
Tech Tops Tarhee
Maroons Are Defeated §
5 . . Yo %
By Griffin High, 13-Og
By BOBBY OLIVER
Athens High was handed a 13-0 defeat Friday night
playing against a strong Griffin High team in Lightfoot
Stadium, Griffin.
The teams were fairly evenly
matched during the entire game—
Griffin chalking up both tallies as
the result of long passes of about
40 yards each. The last one wasn't
good for the actual touchdown,
but set it up by placing Griffin on
the Maroin one-yard line.
; ~ First Half
. Martin took the kickoff for Ath
ens and brought it back 15 yards
to the Athens 40. Bradberry lost 5
on a reverse play and Owens re
covered it through tackle and
punted.
From then on until the Griffin
touchdown drive the game was
principally a punting duel between
Owens for Athens and Wheaton
of Griffin. itk :
The drive began when Griffin
returned one of Owens’ punts to
their own 41-yard line. Wallace
took the pigskin on an end run
and several plunges through the
Maroon line to bring Griffin to the
Athens 45. Wheaton and Wallace
carried it to the 32, where a pass
accounted for the first touchdown.
The point was made by a quarter
back sneak. Griffin led 7-0.
The second tally was completed
within a few minutes when a _ long
pass brought Griffin to the Maroon
one-yard line, where Wallace lung
ed across to pay dirt. Griffin
fumbled and dropped the extra
point. ;
~ Second Half .
The second half saw the Ma
roons return to the field fighting.
Owens was slinging the leather on
almost every play, but the drives
bogged down.
Athens looked threatening for a
few minutes when Wheeler inter
cepted a pass on his own 29-yatd
line. From there Owens passed to
Harvi\ Bradbérry and Wheeler—
mixed with a few running plays,
this brought the sock to the Grif
fin 25-yard line. eek G L%
‘Owens let loosee with anothr
barrage —of passes inteéded for
Bradberry and ~ Wheeler, but all
were incomplete. The Tast one was
a beauty in the Griffin end zone,
but the ball slipped from Brad
herry’s hands, As the final whis
tle blew, Athens was rolling down
the field once again on a series of
passes. ; : e
Playing for Athens were Par
ham, Owens, Bradberry, Pender
grast, Nash, Martin, Saye, Briscoe,
Bailye, Harvill and Wheeler, =
Outstanding for Griffin were
Wheaton and Wallace in the back
fleld, and Sullen, Autry, Green and
others in the line. = ; :
Athens High meets Marist next
week in what should be a hard
fought game, The Maroons will
resume hard practice again Mon
day for the Marist tilt. i
~EXfBULLDZO‘\?YSHINES
AS JAX NAV
BEATS BENNING TEAM
BY WAYNE OLIVER
JACKSONVILLE, 'Fla. — (AP)
—Qeorgia boys stole the show to
day as the Jacksonville Naval Air
Technical Training Center turned
back the 124th Infantry eleven of
T't. Benning, Ga., 13 to 7, in a hair
raiser before 5,000 Sailors and
Marines.
Gugé Letchas, former University
of Georgia halfback, started the
NATTC Air Raiders on the victory
trail early in the game. :
A 73-yard quick kick by Letchas
backed the Benning Gators deep in
their own territory and.their punt
out gave the Nayy the ball on the
Army 41. Runs of 11 and eight
yards by Letchas and a 12-yard
‘sprint by Bradley Davis, former
Arkansas State flash, featured. the
Air _Raiders’ touchdown march
"which was. climaked by the payoff
plunge from, the one yard line by
iFullb&ck, Dominic Sanzotta, late
of the Detroit Lions. '
The Navy held a 1% to 9 edge
in first downs. . :
Arnall Summons General |
Assembly To Enact |
Prison System Reforms
(Continued From Page One) |
Clem E. Rainey, Royal K. Mann
and Vivian L. Stanley.
At ‘the conference, termed .“very |
pleasant” by the governor, the |
board was presented = ‘list of 27|
recommendations regarding the
prison system. Point number one, |
that a Director of Corrections be
appoifited, was not considered in
view of Head’s ruling, although |
board members “were in accord |
that a ons-man operating agent is|
needed,” Arnall said. The board |
generally approved the other rec
ommendations, the 'governor said, }
“I anticipate that the legislature.|
will complete its action on prison |
reform within oneé week's time,” |
Arnall said. “I am calling the leg
islature for one purpose — that of
enacting prison reform.”
He said that it was the first
time in Georgia history that the
legislature had been called to meet
in extraordinary session for such
a specific purpose. 1
bl i i j
Clothes can be protected from |
insect damage by beéing kept
élear:)tgn’d sgc_ix_‘ede'lp%ri they can
‘not reached by insects, hiS'mel
‘economists of the Extension Serv
ice point out. g [
Football Finais
; By The Associated Press
A SOUTH
Georgia. Tech 20; North Craolina
9 g
Duke 61; Richmond 0.
Camp Davis 24; Wake Forest 20.
Bainbridge Navy 9; Camp Le
jeune 0.
MID-WEST
Depauw 0; Oberlin 0.
Wooster 22; Ohip Wesleyan 14.
Miami ((O.) 34; Bethany (W.
Va.) 12,
SOUTHWEST
Oklahoma 22; Norman N.A.S. 6.
Arkansas 59; Missouri Mines 0.
Tulsa 20; Southern Methodist 7.
Texas A. & M. 48; Bryan Air
Field 6. :
Texas 65; Blackland Field 6.
Army 27; Villanova 0.
Pennsvylvania 47; Princeton 0.
Pennsylvanija State 14; Bucknell
0.
" Colgate 7; Rochester 0.
Notre Dame 41; Pittsburgh 0.
Cornell 27; Sampson Naval
Training Station 13.
Muhlenburg 13; Lakehurst Naval
iAr Station 0.
Worcester Tech 21; Bates 7.
Yale 20; Coast Guard Academy
12.
West Virginia and West Virginia
Tech — cancelled.
i - MID-WEST
QGreat Lakes 21; Towa 7.
Michigan 57; Western Michigan
6.
Minnesota 26; Missouri 13.
Towa Pre<Flight 28; Ohio State
18.
Camp Grant 10; Wisconsin 7.
SOUTH
Curtis Bay Coast Guard 13;
Maryland 7. :
Virginia 7; Richmond Air Base
T
SERGEANT AND CADET
SCRAPPING FOR SLOT
AT FULLBACK OCT. 2
Marine Corps sergeant and a
Hawaiian-born Naval aviation ca
det are scrapping for the right to
start dt the fullback slot for the
Navy Pre-Flight School Sky
crackers when they meet the Ar
my's Daniel Field eleven here on
the night of Oectober 2.
The Marine is James Randall,
a 25-year-old 177-pounder Who
won four letters in footbhall, two
in basketball and two in swim
ming hefore he was graduated
from Ft. Myers (Fla.) High School
in 1936. His rival is Robert Moh
ler, 22-year-old 170-pounder from
Ocean Springs, Miss. He was
graduated from Ocean Springs
High in 1940, after lettering four
times each in football and track
and once in basketball.
Both Randall and Mohler were
transferred here from the Naval
Flight Preparatory School, Natchi
toches, La.
|
\"®,BOW
MONDAY RIGHT
At 8 o°clock
BOWLING ALLEYS
NORTHEAST GEORGIA'S FINEST
Under (ompie!e N:w Managemenf of
MR. FRANK MURRAY -
GIVE YOUR HEALTH A TREAT
BOWL REGULARLY °
On Our Re-Modeled Alleys
SUNDAY, SEPTENRep ai
\»
TECH HAS
D I
iNUNLY
sHull
'Ju!
201 Upst
of
OVER CARoI
. B 8 € ¥
Qz’hifi'&i,ii
BY ROMNEY WHEELs
ATLANTA —ap).. R
gia Tech made up in SCra Geo
it lacked in stw-np's:? -
and toppled a might N
sity of North Carol »y,{ t'"‘_“
t2am, 20-7, before an ‘M:‘;';'Jr:fla
?f)ening day crowd of 2{:{;;0
Fech, doped i
two touchdow: -
captain, Cente o
and two other ke 4 ~
juries, outchargeq e
Carolina’'s giant { i
capitalizing on breaks anq o]
ing fast when it count 3
The Yellow .Ju i
three Carolina fu " '
of them led direct ' -
downs, The thirq 6o N
tacular 80-yard pare
kop of Cleveland, Onhi ?
had turned back a foury &
North Carolina drive which shed
ened to tie thé score. Propen |
scored in the thirg qua ;
short plunge, while 1 ] .“‘
of Memphis too )t el
pass to account foi e first god
Prokop kicked two extra p
The lineups
N. CAROLINA GA. Tef
LE—Poole ........ f
LT—Maskas . ;_f,‘
LG—Strathorn ... St
C—Harris .... '
RG—Johnson ,
RT—Aland ... l\-,‘,
Ri~—Turner ~. -
QB—Palmer ... J. Faull
LH-—Myers .... Broy
RH—Bryant .
FB—McCollum Set rfschwd
North Carolina 0 0 K
Georgia Tech .. 7 0 7 (-4
North Carolina scoring: Toid
down, Fiten (for Bryant): ol
after touchdown, Grimes (for ]
guae,
Georgia Tech scoring touchds
Hill, Prokop 2 (for Broyles) pof
after touchdowns Prokop 2
Five Former Coaches
Report At Pre-Flight
Five former college thle
coaches have reported at the Unf
ed States Nav reflicht schq
here, where they wi 1€ ra
more than 2,000 aviatior ind
of the Navy, Marine Corps 4
Coast Guard.
The ex-college mentors are Lig
tenant Edward Gulian, forme
at Shippenshurg (Pa.) S
Teachers’ College Lieutend
Robert ‘G. .Klenck, formerly of
Loouis University; Lieutenant R
ert C. Adams Jr., the Taft Schd
Watertown, Conn., Ensign Willi
B. Feldhaus, line coach at the U
versity of Indiana and Ensign
F. Rupert, Ashland (Ky) Junl
College
A good thick stand )
grazing crops will give earl
grazing and permit grazing Wi
the land is wet because the tis
sod protects the s he Lixt€
sion Service points oul