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L2 THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, OCTOBER 25, 1931—PART FIVE. Penn, Harvard, Fordham, Purdue and Marquette Triumph in.Intersectional Tilts Works on Charity Mat Card Thursday Night PAUL JONES ILLUSTRATING PET HOLD, THE HOOK SCISSORS, WHICH HE WILL TRY ON RAY STEELE IN FEATURE OF PROGRAM FOR UNEMPLOYED. WISCONSIN FOLED BY RED AND BLLE Badger Fumbles Nullify Big First Down Margin as Quakers Win, 27-13. | Sl | | | BY GAYLE TALBOT, Associated Press Sports Writer. | HILADELPHIA, Pa., October | 24.—Pennsylvania’s high- voltage foot ball machine, striking swiftly and with deadly precision served notice on its Eastern contemporaries today by | defeating a powerful Wisconsin | team, 27 to 13, before 65,000 spec- | tators at Franklin Field. | Favored beforehand to take & beat- | ing from the Western eleven, which | last week was strong enough to humble Purdue, the alert and Blue team completely turned the tables, scoring | at times with ridiculous ease and run- | ning up a_27-to-0 score before the | Badgers collected themselves to gain two touchdowns late in the contest. *All four of Penn's touchdowns camc | swiftly, unexpectedly, two of them on | brilliant runs from 'midfield by Carl Perina, big fullback, and Jerry Ford, a | Teserve halfback. The other two re- | sulted directly from the alert play of | the Penn forwards, who recovered a fumble and a blocked punt deep in Wis- consin territory. The Red and Blue at no time wasted its energy trylng to make a sustained drive down the fleld. It was not necessary as long as Wis- consin was fumbling every few minutes. | If_there was any solace to be gained | by Wisconsin it lay in the fact tuat its hard-running backs, led by Russ | Rebholz, piled up 11 first downs to 3 | for Penn. The winners, however, gained 186 yards from scrimmage, com- pared to 166 for Wisconsin, The losers gained 97 yards on four passes, two of which downs. led directly to their touch- Perina’s Punts Help. Sadly outclassed in their punting de- partment, where Rebholz couldn't match the bnf of Perina, Wis- consin found itsel a disadvantage all the way, forced to start all of its drives deep in its own territory. The time and again plugged along to midfield or beyond. but until late in the third period, when they turned to the air, they bogged down before they could get within scoring distance. Penn, taking advantage of the breaks that gave it the ball in Wisconsin ter- ritory, was able to run up the score with quick thrusts at its opponent's goal line, Perina _gave the Red and Blue its first touchdown midway of the opening when he shot his 205 pounds off , shook off & pair who hoped to down him and raced 43 yards down the sideline. A fumble by Rebholz of one of Per- ina's punts just before the first period ended gave Penn an obportunity to scora its second. The ball was gobbled | D up bv George Munger, Penn halfback. | on Wisconsin's 20-yard stripe end it ‘was only a matter of three plays until M passed to Onderdonk for the touchdown. For§ Makes 51-Yard Run. through the center of the play, Linfor swept around right to cross the goal. Less than a minute of play remained when the Badwers. in a partine gesture, sailed 55 yards in two dassling plays for their second ssore. The first. a pass | from Stran to Elliker. planted the oval | on Penn's 10-vard lire. The second, e | double nass behind the line, saw Ku dert slip cff tackle for a touchdows. | Line-up and Summary. Penna. (27). Position. Wisconsin (13). g . Thurmer thbert W05 0" Schneller | . 13 7 027 ° o L] 718 | Penasyivanis scoring: Touchdowns—Per- a. Colehower, Onderdonk (sub for Smith). rd (sub for Munger) 'oints from try after touchdown—Smith (2). Ondardonk (all lace-kicks). Wisconsin scoring: Linfor (sub + Kunderl (sub for McGuire) YR louchdown Lintor | k) Officials: Referee—Mr. Umpi r._Schommer Judge—Mr. : SURPRISES “OLD MISS” BSouthwestern Rallies for Tie After | Foe Gets 20-0 Lead. | Pield MEMPHIS, Tenn., October 24 (#).— " Bouthwestern, surprising even her most enthusiastic alumni, came from under | & 20-to-0 score at the half to tie the Uonh'lvlrslty of Mississippl here today at | all. Mississippl scored all of her points in the first period. An intercepted for- werd pass paved the way for the first Southwestern score in the third and two more were added in the final quar- ter on a line play and a pass '[20 YEARS AGO IN THE STAR. | INEW YORK GIANTS came back yesterday to win the fifth game of the world series over Philadel- phia, 4 to 3, on the Polo Grounds. New York now has won two col tests and the Athletics three. Mar- quard, Ames and Crandall pitched for the Giants and Coombs and Plank for Philadelphia. Doyle, Giants’ second baseman, made four | of his team's nine hits.” Rube Old- | ring of the Athletics got & homer. Tech yesterday defeated Enstern in the public high school foot ball champlonship series. Eckendorf for Tech and Weaver for Eastern were backfleld stars. RAMS BUTT DRAKE | Fordham Scores in Every| Period to Win, 46-0—Foe Threatens Once. EW YORK, October 24.—A | bewildering forward pass line smashes by a brilliant | backfield, today gave Fordham Drake University. Starting immediately with the open- ried the fight to the Missouri Valley Conference champions throughout the down in the first period and added two in each of the final three. Paul Schneeman, a substitute back, | slashed off left tackle to carry the ov tercepted forward pass halted the Towans' efforts. downs came by running plays, the Rams gave the Bull their most trouble by flips advanced 15 to 30 yards, one of the latter enabling Jerry Pepper, back By the Associated Press. attack, bolstered by hard University a 46-to-0 victory over | ing whistle, the Fordham Rams car- four periods. They tallied one touch- Only once did Drake threaten when to the Rams' 26-yard line, but an in-| Although four of Fordham's touch- | the serial route. Frequently Fordham subbing for John Janis, halfback, to score. . | e Janis, Murphy Lead. | Janis tallied two of the seven touch-’ downs, both on line plays frem within | the Drake 5-vard stripe. Capt. James Murphy, Fordham half, scored _twc | others, on® on a 24-yard jaunt through | his left tackle and the other on a 2-yard | smash off center. ‘Those two Fordham backs dominated their team’s offensive play, with John De Lisola, center, giving McMichael a contest at center in defensive tactics. Line-up and Summary. Pordham (46). Posiilon. Drake (0) roy. ..LE. . Briley Fitzzeralt C.. Murphy Closs »"Lindsirom | . Wieland ‘Brewer Lansrud Score by periods v i 0, Fordham .. % 8 Pordham touchdowns—Janis (2). J. Mur- | 5 (sub for Janis). McDeérmott. am points after touchdowns owskl, Zapustas (sub Officials: 0o o0—o0f 13 1346 e (Pitts JACK GROSSMAN HURT. 'WORCESTER, Mass., October 24 (). —Jack Grossman, star halfback on the Rutgers eleven, was taken to & hospital today suffering from concussion of the was kicked on the scrimmage in the game . His condition is not head dus with Holy serjous. | quarter, when | offensive on Purdue’s 39-yard stripe, | | where a Rollermaker fumble had been | SELIMA AT LAUREL | ¢ | H PURDUE TROUNGES | CARNEGIE'S ELEVEN Scores Late for 13-6 Win of Foot Ball Contest Played in Rain. By the Associat>d Press ITTSBURGH, Pa., October 24. —Puraue University, Car-| negie Tech’s first Western Conference foeman, defeated Carnegie, 13 to 6, here today in a well matched, stubborn battle in the rain. A crowd of 20,000 was in | the stadium. | Matters were virtually even through the first half and until late in the third the Boilermakers got their first touchdown on a brilliant | 60-yard run by Halfback Heckler, sup- ported by excellent interference. Heckler | place-kicked the extra point. | Before the third period ended, Purdue | began another offensive that wound up | with the second touchdown in the | early minutes of the final quarter. The Boilermakers took the ball on downs on their 27-yard mark and drove down the fleld until donner crashed | through from the 1-yard line to cross | the goal. . | The Tartans, with the game near an end, rushed in reserves and began an | Tecovered. Pounding ‘the line steadily, | gaining by, a S-yam penalty against | Purdue, and aided by one short pas: the Tartans reached the 20-yard linc. | A pass was good for 8 yards and thei | Bevevino, subclitute quarterback. tossed | the ball to Sayles, substitute at half, in | the end zcne to score. Carnegle totaled 14 first downs, against | 8 for Purdue, and gained 203 yards, | against 276 for the Bollermakers. The Skibos gained three of their first downs on passes and annexed 58 yards in seven completed passes in 17 tries. | Purdue tried only four passes and com- | pleted none. Line-up and Summary. . Position. 0: I EI0T Onb; Pardoniver ecker usvis Yunevici Ecore by periods. Purdue Carnesie z ing: Touchdowns—Hecker, Par- | Point after _touchdown—Hecker Carnegie scoring: Touchdown —sa Kavel). _Referee—D. W. Very State). Umpire—C. J. 'Mc Carthy (Germantowsi gcademy). Head lines. min—J. J. Lipp (Chicago). _Field sudge— F. ace (Washington' College). HUSKIES AND CARDS BLANK EACH OTHER By the Asscciated Press. SEATTLE, October 24.—The Univer- sity of Washington fooled the experts and held the powerful Stanford Uni- | versity eleven to a scoreless tie in & Pacific Coast Conference foot ball game | played in a downpour of rain today, | Except for one march by Stanford | early in the third perfod when Coach ' “Pop” Warner's tricksters marched | down to Washington's 13-yard line, the | huskies surprised the 20,000 water- | soaked spectators by playing the South- | erners off their feet. This one attack by the Cardinals after Harold “Dusty” Allen intercepted a Husky pass on Stanford’s 37-yard line, was the only time the Indians were in Wi territory. Throughout the first two periods Coach Jimmy Phelan's youngsters pounded time and again at the front ‘Mohawks, Once Underdogs T will be David against Goliath this afternoon at Grifith Stadium when the Mohawks and Northern Celtics | clash in the South Atlantic Foot| l | Ball League and, just turned about in | rears, the | bel¥ | opposite fashion from former ye |east, in & benefit game for Wilson Mohawks, once the power of the local semi-pro gridirons, will be the “David.” The clash will start at 2:30 o'clock. The unexpected landslide over the | champion Apaches by the score of 32 to 3 last Sunday will make the Northern | | Celtics big favorites over the Hawks today. A decisive victory for the Cel- tics, barring a flock of injuries, would leave only the Irvingtons of Baltimore between them and the league cham- pionship. Four unlimited class games will head- | line today's foot ball program in the | Capital City League. One of the best | should be the tilt between St. Stephen’s and Dixie Pigs. The Pigs have shown | well to date, only three first downs having been made against them in two mes. schedule: MITED DIVISION- Seaman ners vs. Brookland , Gonzaga field. p.m.: Mercury vs. Del Ri Gonzaga ficld. 3 pm.: Dixie Pigs s Stephen's. Seat Pleasant. 3 pm Marions vs. Orifi-Blue Cos Bilver Bpring 3 pm 0. POUND - DIVISION Broskiand. Brookiand: 3 pm Midians. West Potomat No. ) Petworth vs Brentwood: Mount 'Ra p.m.. Northern Preps vi. il- | Centenni ver Spring. 1 pm | -POUND DIVISION —Northeast Motors | vs. St_Stephen's Preps. Seat Pleasant. 1 p.m.: Notre Dame Preps vs. Pede Columbia v p.m jer. 3 West Northern Virginia Foot Ball | will figure in six gridiron at- tractions tomorrow afternoon with the clash here between the Alex- Fraters and Oakwood A. C. of | d, undefeated for three sea sons, holding the spotlight as the out- standing contest to be presented on home soll. Oskwood 4. C. will present the ol t armay of talent gathered in the Old Dominion capital under one [ for many years when it squares off with the Fraters at 3 o'clock in Baggett's Park. A record crowd of local fans is ex- pected to witness the Northern Celtics operating under the co-management of Charley Corbett and Buck Grier, when they go gunning for the Mohawk A. C.'s scalp and their second triumph in the South Atlantic League at 2:30 pm. in Grifith Stadium at Washington, Charley Deuterman will take his Al- cova Motor Co. team to Richmond to- morrow for & contest with Councillor A. C. The Motorists will be playing their first under their new coach, game ugustine, former W Mn-em lu.-lury.'“ ; ‘ LEXANDRIA, Va, October 24.— A Northern Virginia sandlot clubs y Hopkins Furniture Co., formerly Iro- quois A. C.. will make its debut under its new moniker tomorrow afternoon in a battle with the Lorton Reformatory eleven at Lorton, Va. Del Ray A. C. is to enteriain the Mercury A. C. of Washington, cham- plons of the Capital City Unlimited | League last Fall, in a loop contest at Dunean Field, play starting at 3 p.m. Temple Baptists of Washington will come here tomorrow for a game with Bill Hammond's Colonial A. C. at 3 p.m. on Guckert's Field. Alexandria High School will play Chester High gridders at Chester, Va. next Friday afternoon, while Washing- ton-Lee High School of Ballston will entertain Hopewell High of Hopewell, Va., the same afternoon on the Gen- als’ fleld. | Episcopal High will round out the program en Saturday, facing Gilman door of the Stanford goal line. Sandlot Power, | Battling Celtics Potomac No. 3. 3 pm.: A Trojans, West Potomac No. Congress Heights and Hyattsville Business Association, formerly the Dor-A eleven, will play today at 2 o'clock on the Congress Heights fleld, Eleventh and Savannah streets south- pache Preps vs. 3. 1 pm. Nelligan, injured member of the Heights team. The clashing elevens are 135- pounders. An oyster supper will follow the game. Lorton Reformatory gridders and the Hopkins Furniture Co. eleven will op- pose today at the former's field. T0 LAUGHING QUEEN Barely Beats Sarietta in Mile Race—Clock Tower Scores in Maryland. IS | Special Dispateh to Thy AUREL, Md., ber 24—W. R.| Coe, Wyoming sportsman, furn- | tshed the winner of the sixth running cf the Selima Stakes to- day, when Leughing Queen stepped the ile in 141 to take down a $23,370 purse. A head back of the daughter of Sun | Briar and Cleopatra same R. A. Fair-| bakn's Sarietta, a long shot. Third| money went to the Greentree Stable's | Delicacy, who shut R. S, Clark's Kakapo, | the favorite, out of the picture, The race lost its punch when C. V. Whitney's Top Flight, undefeated in six starts, was scratched late this afternoon after being shipped from New York for | the race. North Carolina Stops M’Ever, Gives Tennessee’s Undefeated Eleven Scare in 7-0 Struggle By the Associated Press. had ENAN STADIUM, Chapel Hill,|yard line and Derryberry, Tennessee | fumbled a punt on his own 34- N. C., October 24—Tennessee's | €nd, hhld recovered the ball. powerful Volunteers ran into had h alertness, chances, to T unexpected defensive strength |occasions, but forward walls that would here this afternoon, but earned a cne- | not dent and alert backs who broke up touchdown, 7-to-0 victory over the Uni- | passes checked every effort. The Volunteers made 16 first downs versity of North Carolina to continue |io 4 for Carolina and gained 169 yards their record of no defeats in 1931. net from scrimmage by line plays, com- North Carolina’s Tar Heels, playing ipll‘ed with 64 yards netted by Carolina. | before & crowd of 15,000 persons, in- The Tar Heels completed 4 passes for cluding Gov. O. Max Garaner, showed (46 yards, two 20-yard heeves being a stone-wall front to the Tennesse2ens completed in the last quarter. on every occasion but one—in the sec- ond period. Gene McEver, Vols, was held practically gainless by the alert Tar Heels. His longest run was for 25 yards, returning a kick-off, and on numerous tries he was stopped for no gain or a slight loss. Tennessee, leading the Southern Con- ference .in points scored when it in- vaded Tar Heelia and fresh from a 25-to-0 rout of Alabama last week, was figured to beat the North Carolinians by several touchdowns. Recovered Fumble Decldes. Of the field of 13 named over night for the Selima, 9 went postward with R. S. Clark's Kakapo a 2-to-1 favorite. Other Horses Sgratched. In eddition to C. V. Whitney's Top Flight declining the issue, due to an ailment which fillies usually suffer with in the Spring; Willis Sharpe Filmer's Sun Tweed, Sylvester W. Labrot's Bos- | cobel and the Brookmead Stable’s Re- buff 2lso remained in their stalls. The start was held 13 minutes, Pintail and Rabbit Skin had to_be placed outside the stall gates. The field on nine went to the first turn in a pack, but Earl Pool astride x:k‘gn shot into the lead via the rail. As the field left the back stretch Sarietta took a head lead over Kakapo, and increased the advantage to a length swinging for home. At e sixteenth pole she started lhorhu:lkln helx;‘ th.'lde nndqu.vohnny Bejs! roug! ughing Queen up very fast to nail the purse at the wire. Clock Tower Scores. The seventeenth running of the Maryland Handicap, stole the honors from the Selima when Morton L. Schwartz's Clock Tower, perfectly ridden by Pete Walls came with a great burst af speed through the stretch to whip | John Whalen’s Pilate, after they had| covered the mile and one-quarter in the excellent tire of 2:02 4-5. Albert Robertson, Astride Pilate, tried to steal the race in the early going. He broke the colt from No. 8 lane and stepped the first quarter in 22 3-5, the half in 46 2-5, three quarters in 1:11 1-5, which equaled the track record for that distance. Robertson kept send- ’“fl Pilate along and he raced by the mile pole in 1:36 3-5, which was & sec- ond faster than the track record. In the meantime, Walls was taking Clock Tower ak fast in the center of the track. Wi be straightened out in the home stretch he let the colt feel the sting of the whip several times and Clock Tower literally jumped to victory. lNévy Kicks and Drives Way To 15-t0-0 Win Ineffective Princeton Team BY EDWARD J. NBIL. Associnted Press Sports Writer. | RINCETON, N. J, Oct. 24— | Navy rose up today to pour an- | other blast into the ragged hulk | of Princeton’s foot ball team, al- | ready torn by the fire of Brown and the might of Cornell, While & crowd of 30,000 locked down | from the wide cement reaches of Pal- mer Stadium upon a futile remnent of | Princeton glory, Navy, anything but a | mighty array itself, fired a pair of | broadsides in the second period and an- other in the final quarter, to smash the | Tigers, 15 to 0. | Once the fire died out of a line that outcharged the Navy forwards through the first quarter. while the backs ran | in almost all but the right directions, the Midshipmen took full command of the situation end never relinquished the edvantage. Tschirgl Kicks Field Goal. ‘ Half way through the second quar- ter a short kick gave Navy the ball on the Tiger 45-yard line and the Mid- | shipmen backs, Joe Tschirgi, Eddie Konrad and “Soup” Campbeli, drove ( | to the 19-yard line before the Princeton ! stitutes, aided by penalties of 40 yards, forward wall stiffened. Tschirgi then | | dropped back to place-kick a fleld goal | while standing on the 29-yard line and | the game might as well have ended | there as far as the element of compe- | tition was concerned. | Just three plays later Navy had a| touchdown, the result of the first of | Princeton’s many costly fumbles. Ceppi, young fullbazk, dropped the ball after the kickoff following Tschirgl's goal and Bryant, big Navy tackle, recovered on Princeton's 24-yard line. | immediately scooted around the Prince- |ton right end to score in the coffin | | Country School of Baltimore here on | corner. | Hoxton Pleld. | No. 5 Engine Cogpany is seeking gmel with 150-pound foot ball teams. lephone Manager Edward Fields at Alexandria 311, Navy threatened to score again in the third quarter, but “Bullet” Joe | Kirn, saved most of the day for later | engagements, tossed a wild pass over | the Princeton goal for.a touchback after another Konrad | De r fufple gave the juq Over Ragged, Middie backs a chance to plunge from midfield to within 22 yards of the goal line. Gets Second Touchdown. Before the quarter ended, however, Konrad laid the corner stone for the final Navy touchdown by kicking out- side on Princeton’s 8-yard line. The quarter ended with the hapless Tigers penalized to their own 3-yard line for offside. As scon as the fourth quarter opened Millard Draudt kicked to Navy's 40- yard line and Navy's substitute backs, | eaded by Pat Hurley and Sammy | Samuels, hammered down to Princeton’s | 3-yard line, but again a pass, this time | from Quarterback Denny to s:muela." spoiled another touchdown. Samuels caught the pass just beyond the end zone and Princeton regained the ball on her 20-yard line, but an intercepted Tiger pass on the 38-yard mark, | Hurley's plunging, Samuels’ running and Kirn’s passing brought the ball back | to the 6-inch line. Denny sneaked | across for the touchdown on the fourth down. The sole serious Princeton threat came at the fag end of the struggle, with both teams crammed with sub- | Princeton stumbled down the field from her own 20-yard line to the Navy 15, ;heu the final whistle ended the con- st. Line-up and Summary. Navy (18). Position. Princeton (0). E Smith . Johnston James I Reedy . Tuttle iC.) Underwood Bl Elilott nny Tochirel Konrad ampbell Score by periods: Navy Princeton Navy tco ny. el icials: Rel o} el Techjrel ai— e S m 8 { Kentucky 0 ‘The lone Vcl marker ceme from a |Officials brief offensive flash shown after Pea- cock, a Carolina backfield substitute, | a1 “wild Bull’ of the Ten- nessee completed two for 24 yards. Line-ups and Summary. Tennessee (7). Position. Derryberry . LE Saunders ... Stewart a3 Hi Brackett . Feathers McEver Wynn Score Tennessee ... North Carolina’ Tennessee scoring: Point _after ow) Umpire—Mr. Bates (S8awanee) Wr. Wessling _(Cincinnati). Darwin (Vireinia) INDIANA BEATS STAGG 'NEW YORK U. BREAKS AFTER ELEVEN YEARS COLGATE WIN STREAK| Hoosiers Go as They Please ti !1'Namara’s 64-Yard Sprint Across Roll Up 32-to-8 Score Against Chicago. BY WILLIAM WEEKES, Assoclated Press Sports Writer. CHICAGO, October 24.—Indiana’s Hooslers today satisfled a 21-year-old thirst for victory over Chicago, drinking deep of a 32-to-6 triumph on Stagg Field, before 10,000 spectators. & scoreless period in which the Maroons began to sag and with the ex: of a few moments in the third period, Indiana conducted the ball game about as i pleascd. The small Maroon squed cracked in the second s2ssion, when Indiana scored twice and collapsed Goal Marks Game Witnessed by Throng of 50,000. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, October 24.—~Two bril- liant thrusts, one a 64-yard dash from scrimmage by Bob McNamars, gave New York University a 13-to-0 vietory over ite today before §0,000 per- sons ankee Stadium. ‘was the fifth meeting between the two schools tion | and gave New York University the edge in victories, 2 tied. ‘The victory left New York Univer- sity’s slate for the year clear of defea only one touchdown having bo: to 1. Two games were scored completely under the weight of Hoosler |against it, and halted a Colgate victory reserves in the final quarter, and In- |streak which had extended diana added another 19 points. There was no particular Indiana star, but there were several who dominated the play. Quarterback Vic Dauer, Half- back Gene Opasik, Saluski, who ripped off long runs; Ivan Fuqua and Lyons, Negro end, who played whale of & defensive game and caught a pass for Indiana’s second score; Edmunds and Jones, fullbacks, cracked the Maroon line whenever required. It was Indiana’s first victory over Chicago since 1910, as well as its first triumph of the 1931 Western Confer- ence season. Line-up and Summary. Indiana (32). Position. Chicago_(6). LE 5 Wi " n Spearing . H Beore by periods: Indiana Chicas . Edmi : down—V _Dauer. acements). seoring: Touchdown—Temple (sub for Zim- mer), Referee_Fred Gardner (Cornell). Umpire Reid (Miehigan). Field judze—G. I. Bimpson (Wisconsin). Head linesman—H. L Ray (Illinols). KENTUCKY OUTLASTS V.P.1. TOWIN, 20 T0 6 Gobblers Make Battle of It Until Johnson and Kelly Cut Loose in Second Half. STOLL FIELD, Lexington, Ky., Octo- ber 3 () —University of Kentucky kept its Southern Conference foot ball slate clean by turning back Virginia Polytechnic Institute in a stubbornly fought contest, 20 to 6, here this after- noon. ‘Brilliant open fleld running by Ship- wreck Kelly, Ellis Johnson_and Kercheval broke down the Gobblers’ re- sistance in the third and fourth periods after the teams had battled on fairly even terms in the first half. Johnson scored in the first period after gains by Kelly and again in the fourth after a brilliant 58-yard run on catching a punt. Kerchev: whose punting was a big help to the Wildcats, tallied the \other Kentucky touchdown in the third after he and Kelly had n made long gains. The Virginia Gobblers cored in the second when Hardwick ossed a pass to Groth. The latter made substantial gains in the first half but A ! Kentucky stopped him in the last half. Dp) Score by period e 5 Tedta T 10 1 62 s Touchdown—Groth. Ken- tucky " scoring: . Touchdo Gubsticate’ for Urh-nlé‘ki' l';"'f“ L ¥, Lane (Cincinnati). 7. Magoofin (Mic L d V. P. I scoring: H, Judge—H. N ¥ Nferwen (Onio Braie ¢ MP. Carrington (Virgini 11 games. Colgate's last defeat was at the hands of Michigan State last year. ‘The violent Violets, alded largely by the educated toe of McNamara, who several times sent long punts booming outside within Colgate's 10-yard line, kept the pln‘x{n of the 60 utes of play. Score by periods: New York University CHEVRO ;| agal o L —t Pleid udee— Week’s Grid Tilts For D. C. Elevens COLLEGE. Friday. Catholic University vs. Duquesne st Pittsburgh (night). Saturday. American University vs. Shepherd College, at A. U. field, 2:30 o'clock Georgetown vs. Boston College at Boston. Maryland vs. V. P. I. at Blacksburg. George Washington vs. Iowa at Jowa City. Gallaudet vs. Penn Military Col- lege at Chester. SCHOLASTIC. Tuesday. Business vs. Eastern, public high school championship game, Central Stadium, 3:30 o'clock. Alexandria High vs. National Training School at N. T. 8. Friday. Central vs. Tech, public high school championship game, Central Stadium, 3:30 o'clock. St. Chrisf 8t. Albans. Georgetown Prep vs. Gonzaga at Gonzaga Stadium. S8t. John's vs. Washington-Lee High at Baliston. Saturday. Emerson vs. 8t. John's Freshmen at Annapolis. MARQUETTE'S LATE DRIVE GETS 70 WIN Beats Boston College With Overhead Attack Made in Last Period. By the Associated Press. OSTON, October 24.—The Golden avalanche from Marquette launched a brilliant last-geriod offensive drive that meant a 7- 0 victory over Boston College today. For three periods the evenly ml:h:“and “::u unnbl:m': galn an; , relied on 5 T covered a fumble on the Boston Col 40-yard line that gave Marquette first w&:mmlty t0 score. An over- head attack brought the ball to the 4-yerd line, but the Eagles took the ball on downs. Kelly kicked out to midfield, but Marquette was not to be denied and in with Ronzani passing to Elliott 8isk it aZvanced to the 4-yard line, Ronzani scored. Sisk added hdown. Harry Downes, center, and Johnny Freltas, quarterback, were the outstand- ing Eagle players. Freitas’ run back of punts was one of the features in the fumbled end 3 hind the go avold two Marquette tacklers and ran back to the 28-yard line. Marquette had the advan! in first downs with & total of eight five by Boston College. Marquette made five in the last quarter. Line-up and Summary. Marquette (7). Boston (0). Becker . 3 SYRACUSE WINS AT LAST Waits Five Years for 7-0 Vietory Over Penn State. by beating Penn State’s foot ls, 7-0, but the Nittany Lions offered surprisingly rugged resistance the way. mmla:eonu-olnmflm CRIMSON TOPPLES TEXAS STEERS, 357 Crickard, Wood Leaders of Fine Attack That Scores in Each Quarter. BY BILL KING, Assoclated Press Sports Writer. | TADIUM, Cambridge, Mass., October 24—The Harvard Tornade struck the Texas Steers today and stampedea’ them for a 35-7 intersectional victory. A Crimson whirlwind in the per- | son of Halfback Jack Crickard |smashed and battered the Lone | Star tackles for three touchdowns and Barry Wood, Harvard's sharp- shooting captain, paved the way | for the other pair of scores with his.aeadly forward passing. | Texas fought with all the wild fury | of a fear-crazed herd, but Wood, out- standing quarterback of the year, played the invaders as if they were an accordion. He pushed them out with serial threats to enable Crickard to tear through their tackles and pulled them in when he found & situation that called for a pass. Harvard not only generated tremen- dous power for its runninf game, but also had enough defensive force to crush all but one of the Texas ad- vances. The Crimson players were caught off gpard in the third period, when Howarll Clewis, substitute full- back, ran 55 yards for the lone Texas touchdown after receiving a lateral from Jimmy Burr, who took the flat pass that Ronald Fagan, quarterback replacement, tossed over center. After this, the Steers attempted sev~ eral times to work this forward-lateral oomblmut:g. g:xt the Harvard were on e play and held slight gains. s ol Steers’ Air Aftack Checked. The vaunted Texas teams were Very | giq tne el :{lllg f?; Koy Hopitrd e B T BB mengan oy T, Gategpte 3o s Pressa’s s Utar A COLUMBUS CLUB TO MEET. morrow future activities will be ngfi“lo‘“h‘- university. Auto Brake | Service Co. Passenger cars and commercial vehicles relined at prices within your means with KEASBY & MATTISON CO. AMBLER AUTOBESTOS brake lining. Woven or fiber ASBESTOS brake blccks to suit your particular type of brake. 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