XXXID MVulaxlyl-vil "l-VIIJI MUINMAX, rjzjrj:zlvjjszn xui IV46 1 UIN VAX - IV L5i~I~ Zhi. 11 Bloso lr Drop Y 0 t ' 0r LEAHY'S LADS LUCKY: P d d Burdue's B i f r U set Fails, IrishWN, 27 SOUTH BEND, Ind.-(AP)-The Luck 'o the Irish worked overtime today as desperately-pressed No- tre Dame outlasted Purdue's Boil- ermakers, 28-27. It was a classic football season opener which had a record 59,343 crowd hysterical from start to finish at Notre Dame Stadium. The Boilermakers, rightfully boomed as the Big Nine's next Rose Bowl candidate, battled the Irish all over the turf and had the defending National Champions behind, 13-12, in the third period. That was the first time Notre Dame had trailed anybody since their last defeat, 19 games ago, when they lost to Great Lakes, 39-7. THE IRISH dissipated a 12-0 lead which they fashioned early in second period and it took some story-book antics to squelch a splendid Purdue team after that, including: 1-A bolt-out-of the blue 70- yard touchdown return of a punt by sturdy Johnny Panelli, Morristown, N.J., senior, in the third period when Notre Dame was trailing. 2-A 23-yard field goal from a difficult angle by Steve Oracko of Lansford, Pa. - whose place kicking name was mud up until that moment--for a 21-13 Irish lead. 3 - A seven - yard pay-off scamper by Fighting Irishman Al Ziijewski, an unknown re- serve tackle from Newark, N.J., with an interception of a Bob DeMoss pass in the fourth quar- ter, after Purdue had slashed Notre Dame's lead to 21-20. And 4 - Oracko's upright- splitting placement try follow- ing Zmijewski's touchdown. Bootin' Steve had missed his point tries after Notre Dame's first three touchdowns. PURDUE'S FOURTH and final touchdown came even as the clos- ing gun sounded, on a 6-yard pass from DeMoss, a brilliant quarter- back, to end Harley Jeffrey. This was a game the Boilermakers well could call a moral victory. The slashing-viciously-blocking and tackling Purdues proved all that Stu Holcomb's fearful Big Nine coaching rivals feared. DeMoss passed like a. major league catcher pegging to second, setting up all but one of Purdue's four touchdowns with his sharp- shooting. S S SP O RT S MERLE LEVIN, Night Editor - M O W Wildcats Drub On LongGains LOS ANGELES - (P) - North- western sank the Bruins of UCLA, 19-0, today with two spectacular long range scoring explosions and! a rockwall defense. Quarterback Don Burson dropped back and fired an arch- ing pass some 46 yards to his left end, Joe Zuravleff, who stepped across the goal line for the first touchdown in the second quarter Midway in the third quarter Gasper Perricone, a 200-pound re- serve fullback from Denver, got loose for 50 yards and a touch- down. The third score, just before the! game ended, was anti-climatic. The alert Wildcat secondary inter- cepted a Bruin pass and in seven plays crunched out 29 yards, with fullback Art Murakowski going over tackle for the last six yards. Handsome Jack Kramer eased the first place traffic jam in the American League today when he elbowed New York out of a triple tie with a 7-2 victory that gave the Boston Red Sox half the lead- ership with Cleveland. The 30-year-old righthander was in complete charge most of the way. Not a ball was hit to the outfield until the sixth and only seven ventured into that foreign territory during an afternoon of heartbreak for 65,607 Yankee customers. A grey-haired old gaffer named Wally Moses, who celebrates his 37th birthday in a couple of weeks, continued his chosen role of Yan- kee-baiter with two hits and three runs, one his second homer of the season. It came off Bob Por- terfield shortly after he replaced starter and loser Allie Reynolds in the sixth. S, * * GENE BEARDEN, the pitcher the New York Yankees gave up on two years ago, kept the Cleveland Indians in a tie with Boston for the American League lead today when he hurled the Tribe to a 9-3 victory over the Detroit Tigers. The triumph gave Cleveland 92 victories against 56 defeats, the same as the Red Sox who knocked the Yankees out of a di ans o~l i irs -3 eme r Inin onTo Re'na in in Ttefo irt three-w/ay tiny into third place, one full game behind when they whipped the Bronxites in their back yard, 7-2. Bearden limited the Tigers to seven hits in registering his 17th victory against only seven defeats in his first full season in the major leagues. It was his third straight against Detroit without a setback. THE NEW YORK Giants spoiled Boston's chances of clinching the National League flag by defeat- ing the Braves 3-2 before 15,377 fans. The Braves wasted several scoring opportunities and errors preceded the scoring of the sec- ond and third Giant runs. John- ny Sain, mnaking his 10th start in 33 days, suffered his 15th de- feat. He has won 22 games. It was a tough defeat for Sain whose great pitching in the last few weeks was a major factor in the Tribe climb well ahead of the rest of the league. IN OTHER daylight games in the National League, the last- place Chicago Cubs scored three times in the ninth inning to just about end the penant hopes of the St. Louis Cardinlas ';by dgiing the Red Birds 3-2. Howie P'oL'et had a two hit shutout going into the final frame, but gave up four singles in the fateful ninth, including pinch hingles by the Bruin's Hal Jef'fcoat and lthank 8 chenz. Polett'sr,'c'ord nee v, sads at I13 wills and losses. joiyle Lade notched his fifth victory, as he feld the Cards scoreless unti the eig-hth inning. At Pittsburgh the Bucs out- slugged the Cincinnati beds, 16-6, as rookie hurler Bob Chesnes hung up his 14th win of the year. The youthful Pirate ace has lost only five. Bears Clash With Packers' In Grid attle NEW YORK - (P) - Although the All-America Football Confer- ence has six mid-season games scheduled tomorrow and the older National League offers only two early-seasoncontests, theh60th struggle between the Chicago Bears and Green Bay 'Packers takes precedence over all the rest. They'll meet in Green Bay, Wis., tomorrow in the first game of the year for the Bears and the first teal test for the highly-regarded Packers. The other National League game brings together the injury-riddled Pittsburgh Steelers and the Washington Redskins at Washington. * * * THE ALL-AMERICA Confer- Ince slate sends both of that cir- cuit's undefeated teams, the San Francisco 49'ers and the Cleveland Browns into action. San Francisco, winner of four straight, visits Buf- falo while Cleveland, unbeaten in three starts, plays at home against the Chicago Rockets. The Baltimore Colts, leaders of the Eastern Division, take on Brooklyn at Baltimore. A fourth Conference game this week sends the New York Yankees, under the new leadership of Red Strader, to Los Angeles to play the Dons EAST' Cornell 47, New York Univer- sity 6. Army 28, Villanova 0. Columbia 27, Rutgers 6. Maine 13, Rhode Island.State 7. West Virginia Tech 20, Shep- erd 12. Southern Methodist 33, Pitts- burgh 14. Yale 28, Brown 13. Coast Guard Academy 20, Arnold 0. Brooklyn College 24, New Haven (Conn.) Teachers 0. Colby 14, American Interna- tional 0. Bowdoin 28, Tufts 7. California 21, Navy 7. Colgate 25, University of Buf- falo 0. Amherst 26, Rochester 6. Holy Cross 18, Georgetown 7. Gettysburg 28, Drexel 0. Lafayette 53, Fordham 14. Bucknell 29, Alfred 6. Williams 14, Norwich 0. Massachusetts 7, Bates 6. Lincoln 60, Army Chemical Center (Md.) 0. Franklin & Marshall 13, Le- high 12. West Virginia University 34, Wooster 6. Susquehanna 13, CCNY 7. Nebraska 19, Iowa State 15. Baldwin-Wallace 20, Ohio Wesleyan 13. Denison 38, Otterbein 7. Bowling Green 13, Ohio U. 7. Knox 7, North Central 0. Washington (St. Louis) 19, St. Louis School of Mines 7. Valparaiso 19, Luther (Decor- ah, Ia..) 6. Carleton College 20, Beloit 0. Lawrence 28, Grinnell 0. Olivet 14, Grand Rapids 0. St. Cloud (Minn.) Teachers 27, Univ. of Manitoba 0. Texas Christian University 21, Oklahoma. A&M 14. ' SOUTH Duke 0, North Carolina State 0. Georgia Tech 13, Vanderbilt 0. Furman 10, Washington & Lee 7. North Carolina 34, Texas 7. Georgia 14, Chattanooga 7. Mississippi State 21, Tennessee 6. Miami (O.) 14, Virginia 14 (tie). Tulane 21, Alabama 14. Virginia Military Institute 28, Catawba 6. George Washington 13, Vir- ginia Tech. 0. FAR WEST Wyoming 61, Colorado College 7. Football Scores Montana State 33, North Da- MIDWEST kota State0. Notre Dame 28, Purdue 27. Santa Clara 20, Oklahoma 17. Iowa 14, Marquette 12. Northwestern 19, UCLA 0. Indiana 35, Wisconsin 7. Oregon 20, Stanford 12. Illinois 40, Kansas State 0. Minnesota 20, Washington 0. Ohio State 21, Missouri 7. New Mexico 9, Colorado 6. I r t.i CHINTZ BEDROOM ENSEMBLES Perfect for dormitor ),lix ing, 10 lasic and pillow cover sets. Plain color and stripe coibntations. Marny colors to choose from. 34.95 to 39.95. GUATEMALA FABRIC FOR SKIRTS Now Available! N~dA ART SISP 330 Maynard Street M L All popu tar sizes including 8 mm. Kodachrome BOYCE PHOTO CO. regu- Pipes 723 North University "- ' ,J l. .. 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