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' Foot Ball, Racing ; - Golf and General | SPORTS AND FINANCIAL he Swnday Star | Financial Stocks and News Bonds — Part 5—10 Pages WASHINGTON, D. C., SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 10, 1929. Georgetown-Navy Play Scoreless Contest : Illinois Defeats West Point, 17—7 < @ Michigan HOOVER SEES TAME TILT AT ANNAPOLIS Neither Hoyas Nor Middies Add to Prestige in a Battle of Lines. | Statistics Favor Army, But Alert Zuppke Line Contrives to-Stop Cagle. BY ALLAN GOULD. Associated Press Sports Editor. MEMORIAL STADIUM, CHI- (Continued From First Page.) town line and this time Hudak gathered in the ball to follow with a 40-yard run to goal. Once more, however, it | was ruled the play had ended before | Spring lost the ball and Georgetown was balked again. Navy Close to Score. Navy came close to getting two points in the third period. A Navy punt left CAGO, IIl, November 9.—The Army's invasion of the West- ern Conference today crum- bled on the Plains or_Illinois champions gallop to victory by the de- spectacuiar “breaks.” The swift and stunning turns of the stripe. Instead of immediately kicking the ball out of this dangerous position, the Hoyas elected to run it. Leary was given the oval while standing far back of his line in & kick formation and at- tempted to swing around the Navy right end. Hard pressed, Leary reversed his field and went back of his own goal line in veering toward the Navy's left flank. Joe Bauer bore down on Leary ‘Quickly and toppled him apparently just as he reached the final stripe. It looked | as though the Navy had gotten a great | | Zuppke's alert, stage a great comeback, geu tne jump on the Soldiers and run up a fist-half lead that clinched the game. These two astonishing “breaks” each resulting in a touchdown, came in the dazed. The first bombshell to strike the Cadet ranks was a freak punt by Hertz Mur- rell from behind his own goal line, a break with a safety, but when the X referee had unscrambled the players| center, after picking up the bounding the ball was found resting a foot be- | ball only 8 yards from the Army goal. | nd the danger mark. Just & dozen | Jches had separated Georgetown from Intercepted Pass Costly. | ‘The second “break” came after Red defeat. Each side had its brilliant players, | Cagle had led a forward passing counter | but there was no team play to help|charge deep into Ilinois territory. It | these scintillating gridmen with their | struck as Arnold Wolgast, an alert end | worth. Behind the Navy line Spring | and youthful opportunist from Aumm.‘ 11l broke in to intercept a short lateral and Gannon did about all they could | to make it a poor afternoon for George- | pass from Cagle to Murrel and race 80 town. Most of the gaining Navy did|yards to another touchdown. 5 In little more time than it takes to was credited to these two agile ball| tell, Ilinois, with the aid of a first toters. But Georgetown had to match | them, in fact, outmatch them with|period goal bK‘Dnugll.s Mills from the Scalzi and Leary. After a rather slug- | 20-yard line, had run up its entire total gish first nalf this pair found its foot- |of 17 points. The Army, led by Capt ing in the last two periods, and for a|Cagle, came back gamely in the second time ran wild. Scalzi was especially | half but its most gallant efforts pro- flashy at running back punts. Several [duced only one touchdown and never times he dodged and squirmed his way | seriously threatened the lead of the through broken fields for long gains|Big Ten champions. after catching the booted pigskin. Once, | The famous Cadet redhead personally | in the fourth period, he ran back 30 |took the ball across for West Point’s yards after taking a kick and almost al- | only touchdown, on a 3-yard dash ways he had th- Navy chasing him all | through the line, but the best he could over the fiela whenever he grabbed a do otherwise was to harass the Illini punt. with a long rahge passing attack that repeatedly produced big gains. There were plenty of thrills for the big and colorful crowd, which included a host of Army notables led by Secre- tary of War Good and Gen. Summer- all, chief of staff. “There were long runs, passes that were almost as long and as wierd a collection of “breaks” as lng game has witnessed in some time, but there was not much question about the outcome after Bob Zuppke’s charges romped out in front in the first half, outcharging and outguessing the Army with as fine an exhibition of line play as the Illini has shown this year. | Line Due Most Credit. ‘The victory, in fact, belonged almost exclustvely to this alert Illinois line. Not only did it check the running at- tack of the Army through most of the Both Lines Play Well. As has been mentioned both lines played well, but several members of eacn stood head and shoulders aboye the others in their efforts. For George- town, Cordovano at tackle and the ends, Provencial and Gehringer gave splendid performances. The fiankmen voppled many of the wide swinging plays tried by the Midshipmen while Cordovano time and time again charged furiously by the opposmg Navy linemen to bregk up the attack in its making. Bryan and Bowstrum, rangy tackles, kept Georgetown at bay more often than not. They were the bulwarks of the Mid- shipmen’s forward wall. Byng, the Washington boy, did well, too, at end, much of the time. Georgetown flanked him occasionally, but he accounted for & number of tackles. game, keeping Capt. Cagle from get- There was much good kicking done. | ing off on a single spectacular dash Mooney and Scalzi took care of the ) from scrimmage, but two of the for- booting for Georgetown, and each got|wards registered the touchdowns that plenty of distance into his efforis. | settled the issue. Capt. Crane, at guard, Mooney once got off a poor kick inlo | and Louis Gordon, a giant tackle who | the wind, but it did not hurt the |spjlled Army plays all over the gridiron. | Georgetown cause, for Navy could make | shared the main honors with Kawal no headway after getting the ball, and | and Wolgast, the opportunists. had to do some kicking itself. Several| TIts running attack checked, the times Mooney got off 50-yard punts | Army and Cagle took to the air. With | once booting such a punt from behind | anything like a “break” the Cadets his goal. Scalzi was credited with a 60- | might have turned the tide and won yard boot that left the ball dead within | the game, for they seemed well on Navy's 10-yard stripe, but 20 yards of | the way to a touchdown twice in the| players kicked for Navy, but Bowstrum | ang see Wolgast dash to a touchdown did the bulk of the booting and he | 0% nC% SPEHVe “Tyice again, in the A o A e had o | third quarter, the Army made over- , considering A | v sing ol Aeaiiat wing, that/sweps | Desd.. sdvancestitaward the loppoting | goal line, failing by 6 inches to score Farragut Field throughout the fray. | foe aret time after having five chances Few Tackles Missed. to make only 3 yards. On the sec- There was little to choose between the | | ond drive, Capt. Cagle took matters al- tackling of the two teams. Each hit the most entirely in his own hands and ball runner sharply and few tackles finally scored, passing to Messinger Jor r' ’ . d making the remaining were missed. Georgetown'’s tacklers may |20 yards an ere Meen a trific better than Navy's |8 yards to the goal line in two slashes most of the way, but the Midshipmen | at’the line. grabbing the ball runner did so in neat i Favor the Army. 8nd efcient manner. There were hard | Figures Faver e e falls aplenty, but at that few playe Altogether the Army gaine ya v ds for ‘ such an extent that time | through the air, averaging 23 yar ::f; (\;u;: ‘gk:‘:xc out. The only severe | 5 passes completed out of 12 -flempw-} hurt of the game was inflicted upon |Illinois gained only 38 yards on vy Was injured | Passes completed out of 7 thrown. e, N e e of his team. | The Cadets registered 12 first downs mates while trying to get to a forward | to only 5 for Illinois and Jm:t hlhg;\; pass in the fourth period. He had to held their own at rushing, ‘wi Give way to one of the many Bauers|yards to show for the attack from With the Navy squad after suffering the | scrimmage to 123 for Illinois. hurt. Cagle saved his biggest shot through Not many penalties were inflicted | the air for the third period. With the during the contest, but it seemed that | ball on Illinois' 35-yard line, after a Georgetown got the worst of the breaks | 22-yard run-back of a punt by Red in tnis respect. Twice penalization | Carver, quarterback substitute, Cagle Noses Out Harva TWO BAD ‘BREAKS” FATAL TO SLDIERS e R 0 K3 L <4 rd by 14—12 : Maryla NOTABLES WITNESS G. ‘U.’S SCORELESS TIE WITH NAVY AT ANNAPOLIS as a throng of 68,000 saw the Big Ten | cisive margin of 17 to 7 in a series of | | i Georgetown attacking {rom its 9-yard | wheels of foot ball fortune saw Bob | hard-charging eleven | second quarter and left the Army forces | twisting, lofty spiral that traveled less | than 20 yards and was converted into | a touchdown by Ed Kawal, big Illinois | Several | cecond quarter, only to be checked once |t checked Georgetown's advance and | made one of his famous see-saw dashes. twice penalties against the Hoyas ma-| He dropped back, started an end run,| ferially aided the Midshipmen in their | reversed, and while on the run near! progress. There was much criticism of | midfield heaved the pigskin toward the Phe work done by the officials, But that | goal line. i always happens in big toot ball games. | * Dick O'Keefe snared it on the side- Tt ‘seemed. though, that some mistakes | lines, 3 yards from the Tllinois goal, | might have oeen mace in certain rul-|for a net gain of 32 yards, but the| ings against Georgelown. | Army did not havl'zhthehpukr:ch to, put " the ball across, although they got an Outcome Evident Early. = lextra down. Five chances altogether | Tre first period was nol vely OIfthrough a double offside. Frost Peters before it became known that only 4! gave a great exhibition for a man who er . 3 ert Mr. eshurmy Sfter receiving the opening 1llinois out of danger. The alert | kickofi Georgetown found it couid not penetrate the Navy line nor flank the| Navy ends with any degree of success. and a punting dual b-tween Mooney and Bowstrum began. F a tum Bowstrum did the oetter kicking, hmi once Mooney got his leg well amb-red B up his booting kept Navy well out of failr scoring territory. she mdship- men did get within Georgetown's 40- yard line about midway oi the periog, but then tried a pass and saw the ball = around midfield. Line-up and Summary. Position. ft end. .. Left tackle. Left guard nter .. 5 Rawal Right guard.... ¢ tackle Crane (C ) Wall Yananshus Peters also was busy knocking down | Cagle’s passes besides intercepting one | Rothstein Burdick | Top: Commander-in-Chief Hoover of the Navy was an interested spectator at the Georgetown gridiron battle. In his box are shown Gov. Albert Ritchie of Maryland, Mrs. Charles Francis Adams, wife of the Secretary of the Navy; Pres- ident Hoover, Mrs. S. S. Robinson, wife of the commandant of the Naval Acad- emy; Secretary of the Navy Adams and Mrs. Hoover. ‘enter: Johnny Bozek, G. U’s star halfback, being downed after plowing through the Middies’ line for an 8-yard gain in the second period. Right: Bozek again on an end sweep in the first period, which netted 8 yards before he was forced out”of bounds. BEORGIA IS UPSET BYN.Y.. 271019 Bulldogs’ Smashing Game in! Last Half Fails to Over- come Violets. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, N. Y., November 9.— The Violets of New York Uni- versity defeated the Bulldogs of the University of 'Georgia before a crowd of 42,000 per- sons at the Yankee Stadium today, 27 t0 19, in a game in which the two teams took turn-about in furnishing the thrills. New York dominated the first half to the exclusion of even a Georgia gesture, while the lads from Dixie were in the saddle throughout most of the second half All of Georgia's scoring_came after the intermission, N. Y. U, finishing the e — o first half with a lead of 20 to 0, with every indication that it would grow rather than shrink. Coach Harry Mehre must have worked at a high rate of speed between the halves to point | out his boys' faults, for the Violets’ best | in the second half was one touchdown LA'I’E '|'U 'I'RIUMPH Drake Is Polished Off, 19-7, With Two Touchdowns in Closing Period. DETROIT TRAMPLES W, VRGN, 50 LEHIGH IS BEATEN BY AROUSED TGERS | Titans Pass and Smash Way' to Topheavy Score Over Mountaineer Eleven. through the medium of an intercepted | forward pass, while the Georgians scored three in a dazzling exhibition of | rushing and forward passing. Georgia outrushed and outpassed | New York, but the home team had a better long-running combination. Three | of the winners’ four touchdowns were made on startling dashes of more than half the length of the field. Georgia piled up a total of 14 first downs to 10 for New York and com- pleted 6 of 11 passes, while the best N. Y. U. could do with 'its passing game was one out of eight. The one com- pleted, however, was vital, for it was good for a gain’of 43 yards and placed | N. Y. U. in position to score. Line-up and Summar; N. Y. U. (27). Position. Georgia Nemeck I..Lett end 2 L. Left tackie Left guard Center Rig| Princeton Shows Power in 20-0 Victory—Wittmer Offensive Star. BY WILLIAM WEEKS, Associated Press Sports Writer. OLDIER FIELD, CHICAGO, No- ethodically pound- ing its smaller opponents oncannon Chalmers . Oherin Follert Roland Right end. ... Quarterback Left haifback ... _Right halfback LPullback ........ Score by perlods— N. Y. U Georgia NOY Lamark, Sherin) 7 0 U scoring: Touchdowns. Follety Gaudet (substitute Points after touchdowns—Oheri; (placement kicks): Follet (placement) vea 39 T ——e TARHEELS T0O STRONG By the Associated Press. | By the Associated Pres RINCETON, N. J., November 9.— ORGANTOWN, W. Va., Novem- The thirty-second attempt of a ber 9.—The Titans of the Uni Lehigh foot ball team to win a | versity of Detroit smote Wes! foot ball game from Princeton ' Virginia University’s Moun- el failed again today as a thorough- | taineers the hardest blow they Arvant , 1y aroused Tiger eleven swept down the | have suffcred on the gridiron this sea - 5 . FARrent | Balmer Stadium field for a 20-0 victory. | son by overwhelming. them 36-0. here periods today, Notre Dame's big Tassapoulas | Thirty thousand chilled fans alterna- | today. Their might increasing as the | mob scored two touchdowns in "D > Leathers | tively shivered from cold and cheered | game progressed the Michigan gridders | session to defeat the courageous ks Maitert | from sheer enthusiasm as the refuve- | passed brilliantly and slashed the West | Bulldogs, 19 to 7. before 55,000 specta 22 Paris | nated Princeton team hung up its sec- | Virginia line to. bits in the last three | tOrs at Soldler Field Stadium. - Davidton lond victory of the scason. It was a |periods. West Virginia's only showing | Sheer numerical superiority played a ."Roberts | fighting but a badly outclassed Lehigh was in the first quarter when the |big part in the victory of the Ramblers, | aggregation that bowed in defeat to the | Mountaineers reached the shadow of | who, after trailing by one point for well-coached Roper eleven. | the goal but were repulsed, and from | three periods, found it easy to rush All of the Princeton scores can be | then on were pounded mercilessly. | over two touchdowns in the closing min- attributed directly to the speedy Witt- | Brazil, the Titan captain, passed and | utes of play, after the shock troops had i mer, whose end runs and twisting line | pattered at the line in a masterly fash- ; softened up the Bulldogs, and, incident- I plays were those of a real foot ball [ion, Snitz Ross, who went in as sub |ally, had been scored upon in so doing. Georaia scoring: Touchdowns.-Maflett, Paris. | player. He counted one touchdown in | for Berg, also performed brilliantly. | Coach Tom Lieb acting for his injured (substitute for Roberts) {ihe opening period and then followed | Brazil scored the final touchdown after | chief, Knute K. Rockne, sent in the e A e T Gl Umpine - | With two more in the second quarter | 25.yard advance, ripping the West | regulars and made it the same old stor: "B, Sorinker (Penasylvania). B o fockle, made t%e| Ross made a 60-yard run, shaking jing Notre Dame were shoved around e P! : Klers handily, to score | for gains that led to Drake’s touchdown the extra point good, O g early in the first period, the varsity Line-Up_and Summary, the fifth touchdown of the game. forward wall was more than the Buli- Princeton (20). _Position, Lehigh (.| Pairing up on an aerial thrust, the |dogs could handle, and their offense | Lea !1::& ‘r.ncnklt.. g‘:‘)mw captain and Ross.got another of the |wilted. More pounding by Capt. John nd }Iolds Yaletoa 1 LR 'THRONG OF 87,000 | SEES CRIMSON FAL Brilliant Gridiron Duel Won as | Breaks of Game Go to Alert Wolverines. BY PAUL R. MIKELSON, Associated Press Sports Writer. NN ARBOR, Mich., November 9. —Harvard's gridiron stalwarts, in their first invasion of the Midwest, played and fought their_fighting hearts out today, | but fell before a grim and alert Mich- | igan eleven by the slender margin of | 14 to 12. Resuming their Intersectional war- fare which halted just 15 years ago the two teams engaged in one of the most thrilling and brilliant duels in pigskin history—a game that had an immense throng of 87,000 spectators virtually delirious from the starting whistle to the final second. ‘The breaks won today for the Wolver~ ines. Outcharged, outgained and be- wildered by a great rain of Crimson passes, they followed the ball for those breaks and were rewarded. With the score 6 to 0 against them at the end of the first period. Alan Bovard, Mich- igan center, recovered a Harvard fumble on the enemy's 27-yard line a few m.nutes later and on three smashes at the line Roy Hudson converted it into a touchdown. “Dynamite Joe” Gembis, whose toe gave Michigan the winning edge, then booted the oval from place- ment _for the extra point and a lead that Harvard never overcame as hard as it fought. Michigan Profits Again. In the fourth period the Wolverine benefited by two more “breaks of the game.” With the ball in Michigan's possession on Harvard's 49-yard line Bernard White was sent into Harvard’s backfield as a substitute. Forgetting his coach’'s warning, he talked before the ball was snapped into play and a 15- yard penalty resulted, giving Michigan a first down on the Crimson 34-yard stripe. The loss put Harvard in a hole it was unable to climb out of. Failing to gain, Simrall booted out of bounds on Harvard's 13-yard line. Har- vard fought back too daringly and tried a pass. Jim Simrall, alert Michigan quarterback, intercepted the heave on his 25-yard line and carried it back 8 yards from where the Wolverine backs, led by Alvin Dahlem, slashed their way to the 1-foot line from which point Maynard Musson hurled his 210-pound bulk through the Crimson forward wall for a touchdown. Gembis again obliged wuhtu perfect placement boot for ex po Harvard scored its first touchdown when the game was only a few minutes old. Taking the ball on his 41-yard line on a lateral pass from Barry Wood, Putnam circled to his right, half re- versed his fleld and dashed through the entire Michigan team for a touchdown. He was aided by beautiful blocking. Wood was rushed by a swarming Michigan line for his attempt at extra | point and it was low. Harvard’s Passing Dazling. After Michigan's come-back with two touchdowns the issue appeared hopeless for the Crimson. But they fought back and pushed over another touchdown, and then threatened to win by one of the most deceptive forward passing at- tacks ever seen the Michigan stadium. The invaders scored their second touchdown on a march of 66 yards, most of which was made by passing, Wood to Edmund Mays, a sophomore substitute. The passing at- tack took the ball to the 1-yard line, where White plunged through his left tackle for the counter. Bovard, one of the outstanding heroes of the day for Michigan, crushed through the Harvard line and blocked Wood's attempted drop-kick. Harvard made one more serious threat after that, passing for yardage to the Michigan 20-yard line. On the third down, Wood erred by hurling a pass over the Michigan goal line, which was incomplete, and gave Michigan the ball just before the game ended. So virile was the Harvard passing attack that 15 out of 26 of its aerial thrusts were completed, for an amazing total of 172 yards. Only one was inter- cepted and that was fatal. Harvard made 18 first downs to Michigan's 8, largely because of its deceptive passing attack. The two teams tied in gaining ground by rushing, each gaining a total of 166 rards. Today's victory was a great one for the weary Michigan team, which thrice | has been defeated by Big Ten rivals this season. Line-up and Summary. ). Position. Michigan (14). Lett Truskowski ; “Poorman | Bovard | Steinke | ~. Auer | Hewitt Simrall | Dahlem | Gembis | Morrison | ‘Right guard. ‘Right tackle ht_end to shreds during the first three ke 0 ! 0 812 : 0 714, Touchdowns—Putnam. | | g 8% Harvard White. Michigan _ scoring: _Touchdowns—Hudson, ! | Morrison. Point after touchdown—Gembis. | | _ Referee—Mr. Maskers (Northwestern). Um- pire—Mr. Schommer (Chicago). Pield judge | —Mr. Hackett (West Point). Head linesman | —Mr. Lip (Chicago). i | | | scoring: 100,000 SEEKING SEATS i FOR ARMY-IRISH GAME | WEST POINT, N. Y. November 9 (#).—More than 100,000 applications | for the 37,000 seats allotted to the | Army for the foot ball encounter with ! Notre Dame November 30 have been | received, the Army announced today,! closing date for all applications. i ‘The Army’s share of boxes also has, been oversubscribed more than three| times, it was announced. | i < 3—13 Draw OLD LINERS RALLY TOTIEBULLDOGS Berger, Varsity Novice, Is Star, With Two Touch- downs From Passes. BY H. C. BYRD. EW HAVEN, Conn., November 9. —The scene of many a stern conflict and dramatic moment, the Yale Bowl today had en- acted within its tremendous portals a play of intense human emo- tion and soul-stirring feats that inspired nearly half a hundred thousand per- sons to frenzied acclaim. Human machines and individuals have at times seemed to rise above themselves and attain heights un- dreamed, and so today a group of men from Maryland, calling themselves a foot ball team, rose to stun into silence one side of the great bowl and give the other opportunities for demonstrations })1 wild enthusiasm entirely unlooked or. It was an embittered and desperately struggling University of Maryland eleven that today with half the third quarter gone, and the score 13 to 0 against it, turned and with a cold, intel- ligent savagery fought its way to a 13- to-13 tie with what is truly a fine Yalc team. No foot ball team that has ever come from the South to invade a Northern gridiron accomplished more within a given time and with the odds vastly against it than did that which today represented the Ol dLine State, and while every man who stepped out of the field did well, it was a substitute back, unknown, unhonored and unsung, who stretched his slender legs into long strides that ended in two touchdowns, Berger a Varsity Novice. It was “Bozy” Berger, who never tock png in a foot ball game except as a substitute end on Maryland's fresh- man eleven last year, who caught onc forward pass for a touchdown, shortly after caught another in the middle of the fleld and ran to the 4-yard line, from where he himself took the ball across on a wide swing around end. It was a peculiar game of foot ball. ‘The first period was played almost until its very end as if neither team was wor- ried much about what might happen. At least, that was the way it seemed, but actually it was a case of two good teams battling desperately and almost evenly for an advantage that neither seemed able to gain. Two great fighters of the squared circle often are so_good that neither “seems able to be doinz much, and so the first period was fought through until its last minute. In that last minute Maryland began to make mistakes which gave Yale big advantages. With less than a minute to nd a strong wind behind its back, 1#%d tried a forward pass on its own 15-yard line. Yale intercepted it. brought the ball back 5 yards and had possession in scoring territory for the first time. Maryland fought off that time every rally that Yale made. It got out of its predicament only to get back in a few minutes after the teams chan, when it fumbled on its own 35-yard line, Yale recover- ing. Yale made one first down, was held and the ball again changed hands. Maryland punted out of danger to the middle of the field. Then Yale fumbled and Maryland recovered. only as prompt- 1y to fumble again and let Yale recover. Booth Finally Scores. Yale is t0o good a foot ball team to be given so many chances and not to make good on some of them. This time, with Booth in the game, and used mainly as a threat to allow other Yale backs to get away for 4 or 5 yard gains, Yale made good. However, with the ball on the 2-yard mark, it did take four downs to get it over, and it went over then with Booth carrying it, only by inches. Booth made_the point after touchdown on a drop-kick. The remainder of the half was fought out on almost even terms, but right at the beginning of the second half Yale for five minutes made the Southerners seem like the proverbial 30 cents. It caught the kick-off on short but consistent gains, carried the ball to the 27-yard line. Here Booth started on a swing around end, but was struck by three Maryland tacklers five yards behind the line of scrim- mage so hard that the officials psnal- ized Maryland 15 yards for rough play. That put the ball on the 12-yard mark, from where a series of gains ranging from one to three or four yards, with Miller doing virtually all the ball carrying, produced Yale's sec- ond score. Booth had his attempt at drop-kicking for the extra point Shortly after the. kick-off to Yale the Old Liners got possession of the ball on their own 30-yard line. They be- gan to rip Yale's line open and to get away for gains outside of tackle. Rob- erts, who had taksn Miller's place at halfback, was proving just about as hard to stop as Booth. By steady gaining Maryland carried the pigskin to Yale's 45-yard mark, where.Roberts was rammed against the ground so hard that he had to be taken from the game, and Yale suffered a 15-yard penalty for roughing. Berger Gets Into Action. Berger took Roberts’ place, and after slices through the line and a double pass had netted 16 yards, Chalmers dropped a forward into Berger's arms behind the goal line for a touchdown. McDonald went in for Heints, but missed the goal. Yale began to realize that things were not so rosy, especially as Maryland seemed to continue to gain ground. But late in the fourth quarter, when a Yale punt had rolled to Maryland’s 15-yard line, the Yale stands yelled in glee. - blocked. . With the ball in that position, Mary- land’s case did not look any too good, but Evans and Chaimers began m!!lke such successful cracks at the Yale line intercepted by Scalzi of Georgetown. A ihe end of the period Navy had the ball, but it was far back in its own tory. Bbring and Gannon, who had carried the ball repeatedly for Navy from the G | Duncan | fouchdowns after Brazil had hurled the | Law, John Cannon, Tim Moynihan and | McLernon | ball 35 yards to his fellow star. On lthe rest of the Irish line and the de- Blackmar | the first score, Brazil and Parseca |fense was gone. -+~ HASH) pounded the West Virginia line until in a scoring position and Brazil then skirted right end to cross the goal. _Fullback . Score by periods: TUHBOLS +o . vissunss Army 1llinois that the ball was driven up to Yale's 40-yard mark and the Yale secondary began to come in. Left guard Center s "'Right guard.’. Right tackle FOR GAMECOCKS, 40 TO 0 v, e By the Associated Press. e A COLUMBIA, S. C., November 9.— !B scoring: Touchdowns—Wol North Carolina_ turned the annual | ¥eckley P Kick—Mills. ~Points after | “hattle of the Carolinas” into a rout! GATEy e " | TENNESSEE RESERVES BEAT CARSON-NEWMAN s s | hat “offered the opening of which The Missouri Valley champions gave | | Evans took advantage, and a long for- everything they had, and for three pe- wn—Peters (sub for Mills) (drop- | ing of the game, appearcd tired by their efforts before the sccond period was far under way, and what gams they made for a time were not startiing | by ‘any means. Instead of picking up | distance when given the ball in the second riod these .wo Navy backs more often were dropped for losses Georgetown in this period twice went Scross the midfield line into its oppo- nent’s rt of the field, but once lost the ball when Johnny Bozek fumbled a forward thrown by Scalzi and Clifton | {he Pacific Coast conference champion- recovered the ball for Navy. ship, brushed aside another obstacle The Midshipmen soon had to kick|today with a stunning 53-18 victory ~(Continued on Fifth Sport Page.) over Montana's Gri oy kicks, 2) Stuart). Point after louchdown—O Keefe. Referee—Mr. Madigsohn (Michigan). Um- -Mr. Knight (Dartmouth). Field judge 3 Young _(Illinois Weslevan). Lnesman--Mr. Daniels (Loyols BEARS libUT GRIZZLIES. BERKELEY, Calif., November 9 (4).— California’s undefeated Bears, crashing Army scoring: Touchdown -Casle (sub for Head | | down the gridiron trail that leads to| ay, drubbing their ancient rivals, the | Lowry ..... riods it was sufficient. Briley and Wen- University of South Carolina, 40 to 0. |Levine ".. The Tar Heels kept up hammering | _Score I'ne attacks, mixed with forward passes, 7 that led to scores in each period. The Line-Up. 8. Carolina (0), Position. N. Carolina (40). | Lava B F o H Left tackle Lett guard Center Right guard Ware TAft halthack /s . Right halfback s g o Line-up and Summary. troit(0). Position. ‘West Va. (36) Y(Rl.ll; - Lel Behnke Anderson’ Buckman A ¢ ‘o Princeton Touchdos )" " Point r touchdowns (kick irom placement). NAVY TIED AT SOCCER. | . ANNAPOLIS, Md., November 9.—The | Bers . Naval Academy and Harvard soccer | Parsac v | teams played to & 1-to-1 tie hore this| Bcore by periods: | afternoon, the teams being unabie wo | J&Sh Virsinia..... reach a decision though two' extra periods were played. 0 0201 0 0-0 ns—Wittm: Barfield, of the line functioned well, except for a lapse shortly after their own score, o | which permitted Howard, who started at fullback for Notre Dame, to prance almost unimpeded through left tackle for the Ramblers' first score. The try for the extra point was missed, and Drake, with the aid of penalties and some Notre Dame fumbling, clung P grimly to its one-point margin until the <8 19 13 13=s3|total collapse in the fourth period. Joe vin, Ross (3, |Savoldi, the wandering Italian of Notre ; ° Dame, was not used. 13 [ i Right end ... . ’Quarterback . Left haifback . Right_halfback Bartrug Shana Fulback .. F. Glenn Gresset ! Rhame . | Boineau Stoddard . M. Blount. Touchdowns—Brazil (2), Na Points after touchdown, RODe. w: Nash .. Spaulding zel, Drake ends, stopped the dashes of | ithe shock troop backs and the middle | { By the Associated Press. KNOXVILLE, Tenn., November 9.— : While Tennessee’s touchdown twins, | Eugene McEver and “Buddy” Hackman, {Coach Bob Neyland and Bobby Dodd | watched Vanderbilt in action today, the | Volunteers’ reserves, led by a flashy sophomore, Paul Heydrick, romped to a 73-t0-0 vietory over the plucky ‘Car~ son-Newman parsons. Romping along as though he might bid for McEver's fame some day, Hey- 8 73-to-0 victory over the plucky Car- touchdowns. Two extra points raised his individual score to 32. | | ward pass to Berger threw the latter in the clear for what would have been another touchdown right then and there had not Eliis, one of the fastest sprinters in the country, hauled him down at the 4-yard mark. But it was Berger who took the ball across on the next play. Then McDonald was called upon to make the point necessary to tie the dcore, Twice within the week he had to meet the same emergency. He made good just as he did against Virginia and enabled his team wind up a great _game of foot ball with a tie (Continued on Second Sport Page.)