Evening Star Newspaper, November 1, 1931, Page 65

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- Maryland Routs Virginia Poly, 20-0 : Georgetown Bows o Bosto SPORTS SECTION The Sunday Star WASHINGTON, D. C, L 2 2B 4 POPPELMAN LEADS TERPS T0 VICTORY Oid Line Star Scores Two Touchdowns and Paves the Way for Third. 31.—Ray Poppelman, Uni- versity of Maryland full- beck, blazed his way across a chilly windswept gridiron here today and personzlly escorted the 0ld Liners to a 20-t0-0 triumph in Virginia Polytechnic’s homecom- ing game. The Cobblers held Poppelnan’s run- mates, Bozey Berger and Shorty nd -when BLACKSBVRG, Va., October i i B it its ii !;g éeg =§§§ | E E i : i o el E&;gfi il :§§§s§ z i | | £ g ] 7 g I ’l:; ¢ 3 3 5 ol 'E § L s g . H 3338 i L < 11 E 4 1 ,% ; - H ] ¥ L i g g i ss, but Groth intercepted it on 19-yard line. Poppelman Does It Again Poppelman returned Casey’s punt to Poly's 48 and then went straight through center for 27 yards. He picked up 10 more, but the ball went over cn downs on Poly's 14-yard line. Th> next time the Old Liners had their attack clicking all the way and did not short of the goal. Starting after Ca: . Kiernan FfRRIE picked up another first down. the ball again, he found a ho'e at cen- ter and battled his way to the goal line for the finsl touchdown. Chal- mers kicked goal fnd so was 20 to 0 Poly came back to qualities in the fin. ow its Sghting and ran holding the by Groth ond & 1 y son throygh the centsr of Marviand's line carried the Gobblers to the 23- yard line as the game ended. Maryland continued its unbeaten march through Dixie teams with total of 331 yards from scrimmage. Terps completed only one pass in | with two n seven tries as compared but this one five tries for V. P. I, lan no’ ities, while two 15-yard setbacks killed Poly marches i | B. * | approached scoring -~ Tepulsed every | fort of the visitors. ~The Hilltoppers coq | took to the air and attempted 23 for- op | HOVAS LOSE PONCH WHEN GOAL NEARS Reach 10-Yard Line Twice| | in Final Quarter—Shimmins } i Losers’ Star. By Specal Correspondent. OSTON, Mass., October 31.— An aroused Boston College foot ball eleven broke out in a scoring burst to de- ' molish a stubborn Georgetown | team, 20 fo 2, in the annual clash | between these Jesuit institutions Park today. | The Hill center e 2 e Hudson, an alert em{ i nailed Walter for a safety | and the 3 3 Pete AL it £ i i gz giek i an gnt-st The big B. C. centr made himself as_the greatest B. C. | . He was ably assisted | Maloney, whoss blocking started the| heretofore weak B. C. offense on its wav: Ed Kelley, who repiaced th'..l Rellv ot fullback, and Freitas and| Walter Kelley. Pete Chesnulevitch, C. junior ball earriers, was tireless | :fl mndz“clou to 200 yards in rushing | " King, Bordeau, Bonoghue and Shim- in the backfield and Dubofsky and Carolan were the outstanding play- ers for wn, The Blue and Gray were, itly weary and bruised | from pre hard games. College did not have the bet- ter of the statistical view of the game. Georgetown made fourteen first downs | to eight by the winners, but most of | the Hilltoppers' came when he ball was | in the middle of the field. When they position the B. C. e ef- forwards braced and { wards and completed only six. Three | 'were intercepted. B. C. attempted nine | - and completed four, one from W. Kelley | to Maloney that practically scored the | s | cecond touchdown. which meant the game. Only one B. C. pass was inter- | | cepted and it did not mean anything. | B. C. was penalized a total of 70| | yards, mostly in the last few minutes, when the Eagle subtitutes were disor- ganized and unable to elick on the of- | fense. Georgetown was penalized 30| yards on six trips. | G. U. Fighting at Finish. Georgetown was at its best in th: fourth period. when it reached the B. C. 10-yard line twice. A brilliant 20-yard | dash by Donoghue on a faked pass took the ball to the By C. 13-yard line. and then added two more. But Dono- | ghue's pass on fourth down went over the goal line and the scoring chance | Wwas missed. | The Hilll came right heck after the kick out by Freitas. ue worked a behind the line pass to Caro- ! lan for 10 vards. A penalty helped and then I two rushes Shimmins made it first down on the B. C. 13-yard stripe. The same pass from Donoghue to Caro- Jan took the ball to the 5-yard line. But Alen'y’s fumble. which was recov- ered by Reynolds for Boston College, ended the last G. U. chane to score. A Doroghue fumble gave B. C. the ball at sudfield shortly after and the Hill- | toppers mever threatened again. Mills | rushed in many reserves. bu the Ea senced flcwry' and clinched it with | blocked punt. | Line-ups and summary: | au gles the | | Rie: | Dubotsky | McManus ton _College—Velho. in, " Brennas. min, Uegher. tackle after tackle on the defense and | fig) ‘stamped | the sensational | * ¥ | Shimmins went through for four yards | second score. Harrls, Irish guard, made | | turns spinning through the center and | ¢ > Sl'NI);\{' MORNING, NOVEMBER 1, 1931. S > @ A FEW HAZARDS IN THE KENWOOD OPEN. m""'":'_f‘ Schwartz Leads Notre Dame x| To a Flashy 19-t0-0 Victory Over Carnegie Tech Eleven oft the tackles for substantial gains. It was in this parade down the fleld that the crowd realized the power and perfection of the Ramblers’ offensive. Koken put the ball in scoring position with a 13-yard thrust off tackle, and then tossed a lateral pass to Leahy, who went over at the corner of the fleld for his second touchdown. Libbus Lewis, regular right end of the Carnegie eleven, received a frac- tured leg when he collided with Murphy, Notre Dame reserve quarter- back, in the third period and was car- ried from the field. Line-ups and Summary. Notre Dame &y By the Associated Press. ITTSBURGH, Pa, October 31.— Notre Dame's powerful foot ball array, led by the irrepressible | Marchmont Schwartz, < swept down the field for three touchdowns mmm;‘nmmmx to humble a_hard before 52,000 spectators at Pitt Stadium today. The Tartans. who have been poison to the Ramblers in recent years, came back to hold their famous adversaries | scoreless in the last two periods, three | times halting them within their 10- yard line. | The dazzling array from South Bend | went into the game steamed to the | limit, determined to keep its record of | GIee 23 starts without a defeat, inviolaie. Preceding the initial kick-off, two gally | Kozak caparisoned bulgers stood beneath the opposing goal posts and blew..“taps” for Knute Rockne, late ccach of the | Irish, and the contest was dedicated | to his memm | 96 It was a beautiful gesture, but it| :Yldled disaster for Carnegie. With the | -American Schwartz away | for one brilliant dash after another, | Notre Dame's t backfield corps tore | the nmnsfi red line to shreds | from the start and its line smashed Carnegie's weak offensive tures. | ‘Within three minutes of the , it was evident the Engineers were not to repeat their sensational victories of | 1926 and 1928 over the South Bend Touchdowns nkovic h - (place- ment). Referee—] ¢ UmpireMr. Eckies (W. and J.) man—Mr. Lipp (Chicago). Miller (Penn State). Routed Foe First To Nick Tulane o By the Associated Press. b EW ORLEANS, La., October 31. —Tulane’s goal line was crossed for the first time this season by Mississippt A. & M. catching the Green Wave at low tide in the sec- ond period and scoring & touchdown. Except for this quarter, Tulane held the Aggies well in hand and ran up a total score of 59 to 7, with second-stringers playing most of the ame. B The Aggies' touchdown represented the first score they had made against a Southern Conference team this season. It came when the ball was on Tu- lane’s 30-yard line, and off of a short forward pass, Herrington to Wich- man, who made a brilliant cross- field run through three Tulane tacklers for a touchdown. ‘Head lines" crew. Schwartz opened the avenue to vic- | tory midway in the opening period, when he spilled through a hole at tackle, shook off two men and raced 58 yards down the side line for a touch- down. It was onlv one of a dozen sensational sprints by the slippery half- | back in the course of the game. He| gained a total of 188 yards in 23 at-| tempts. | It was early in the second period. | after Coach “Hunk” Anderson had | thrown a flock of reserves into the fray, that Bernie Leahy, a substitute fullback, cracked through the center of Carnegie’s line for two yards and the | the touchdown possible by recovering | l:meblocked Carnegle punt on the 8-yard | The third Notre Dame score climaxed | a valorous march of 74 yards, in which Schwarts, Leahy and Mike Koken took | Japan Base Ball Crazy Land Raves Over Visiting U. S. Players—260,000 Tickets Sold for Four Games in Tokio. are regarded as heroes whose every | action attracts attention. In Tokio the mewspaper Yomiuri, at whose invitation the diamond stars have come, feted the visitors yester- day at a Japanese lurcheon atop plant, where large quantities of Japanese fried fish and also beer were consumed. In the party, besides the 14 play- ers, are the wives of several, an um- pirc. a manager and a trainer. Twelve games are on the schedule with various Japanese teams. e team is com- poscd of Mickey Cochrane, Bruce Curningham, Frank O'Doul, , Frisch, Lou Gehrig, Lefty Grove. Willie Kamm, Maranville, Tom Oliver, Muzdy Ruel and Al Simmons of the majors; and . Kelly and Ralph Shinners BY B. W. FLEISHER. OKIO, Japan, October 31— Regardless of the Man- churian trouble and the economic nervousness, the Japanese public is base ball crazy, following the party of major and minor league players from the United States wherever they are vis- ible. Though the first Tokio game is still a week away, 260,000 tickets at the Melji Shrine Stadium, demands for more, but additonal Goorge the m . The visitors had arrived at Yoko- hama day before yesterday. r Asrout | By the Assoclated Press. - | fairly ripped apart the toothless and all Field judge—r. | b As Wolverines | RINCETON, N. J., October 31.— ‘The Michigan Wolverine Pack, | headed by a fleet youngster | named Stanley Fay, set upon Princeton’s hapless Tiger today and hideless remnant of a once-powerful | animal. Going all the way back to 1881 for | " revenge of a walloping that took place | Princeton was one of the mighty and | Michigan just eleven ambitious young- | sters from_the West, the husky visitors | the futile Tiger, 21 to 0. | defeat this season by a major opponent. Michigan _predecessors in this Fall campaign—Brown, Cornell and Navy— have piled up larger totals at times, that seems to get easier each Saturday. from the Big Ten Conference walloped | It was Princeton's fourth successive | He but none has done more decisively a job | L For the inxst and third quarters today, the Tiger fine, aided by Tom Craig’s fine kicking and the desperate attempts of Millard Draubt to go places with the | | ball, formed a barrier that Michigan | couid not break. But during the re- | mainder of the game Michigan's big | backs—Hudson, Fay, Hewitt. Tessmer, | Jack Heston and Everhardus—domi- | | nated the play behind a line that was roc;.-nhbed from leeEm}il lw p:“ln/.'l y, & nimble-hip] youngster, scored two of Michigan's three touch. | downs, and Capt. Hudson pounde: across for the third in the final quarter, when Princeton, desperate for a touch- down that has not come since the Brown game, passed and failed from her own 20-yard line on fourth down rather than kick. Given the ball on downs, Hudson | needed but one play to cover the 20! yards to the goal line. Fay, with a beautiful 35-yard dash in the secon quarter, tucked the game away for with all the &;nu that would | have been needed to beat this Prince- | ton eleven. "With one wild stand on the 1-yard line that took the ball from | the Wolverines on already to Princeton's credif, Fay took the bail | from Harry Newman on s fake place- kick formation, and dodged down the Tiger Yardage All in the Red ° Avenge Defeat Of 1881 With 21-to-0 Victory their total efforts to gain from scrim- mage. Michigan piled” up 11 first downs and gained 223 yards rushing the scrimmage line. Prificeton com- pleted 1 forward pass in 14 for a gain of 7 yards, while the Wolverines tossed w;sndmmantmmmm:s yards. Line-up and Summary. in the cradle-days of foot ball, when ' AU ozer Morriso Lajcunesse Samuels ‘Williamson Tessme: Fay .. Hudson' (€)' o | Princeton /11 Michigan_scoring: Touchdowns—Fay (2), udson. Points after touchdown—Newman for Tessmer). 2 (placement): Petoskey (sul Ve (platemeni (Penn umbia) back (Pennsyiv Palmer (Colby). HOLY CROSS SMEARS Ofmcials: Referee—D. W. Umpire—T. J. ) Linesman—W. nesman—W. ania), Field judge—A. W. BROWN’S GRID SLATE Hands Bruins First Defeat of Sea- son in 33-to-0 Clash at ‘Worcester. By the Associated Press. WORCESTER, Mass,, October 31— The Brown Bear was chased out of the field of undefeated foot ball teams to- dc:y with a 35-to-0 drubbing by Holy 0ss. ‘The largest crowd in the history of Hoiy Cross foot ball turned cuy to see the home team win its first game since it stamd playing Brown, off and on,, in 1898. The frst period had been under way only a short time when Chase of Brown heaved a pass toward Sawyer, but Marty Murray, Holy Cross g}ucked the ball almost out of Sawyer's ands and ran 63 yards for a _score. On the next kick-off Harris of fumbled and Colucci recovered for Holy Aided by nn(:‘(kznnell. Kelly ly n College, 2-20 ¢* ¢ LASTCHALF RALLY NETS GREEN A TIE Hanoverians, Held Winless by Blue Since 1884, Gain Glory. With a Draw. By the Associated Press, EW HAVEN, Conn., Qctober 31.—Down from the hills of Hanover today came a Courageous bands of Dart- mouth foot ball players to fail in a quest for a victory over Yale, but gain glory enough in coming back from almost certain defeat to tie the Blue, 33 to 33. Since 1884 ths gresn ‘clad warriors from New Hampshire have sought in vain for victory over Yale. Today they had it within their grasp for a fleeting ‘| Donner, the Green leftend, sift through . Yale and Dartmouth Stage 33-33 Thriller : Oregon Upsets New York U., 14-6 —By TOM DOERER | | TEMPLE'S PROWESS 'Line Plunging Big Factor in Victory of Underrated Far West Eleven. By the Assoclated Press. EW YORK, October 31.—An underrdted team in Yellow and Green from the Uni- versity of Oregon plunged its way across Yankee Stadium today to 't and odds and deliver a sti 6 defeat to New York versity. A crowd estimated to its feet in minutes of the its way EEEEE 5 8 i g °F 10 B i § i 2 i § ] i i E i L a'éggé%;;; E- 5 5 § i | g | i I i Ei g sedieg § §8 gia B : &3 t g 3 ! ;‘E& f g i gl 55 ! i i g : B : E? I | 5 H : g ] g i i i i ; b i i EiE sfigf’ i ¢ § 3T E g% i § g 7 g £ i 1 z_EK I H i : ‘ £l § | it o £ a g H 58 1 A a4 Ui § g8 § gof A L Hi: gF '3 L) g : £ g i ngE Feis? i | : 88 g it ] I 2, that dash 8 § line & a few moments to attemptted punt Yale's line, scoop it up and run for a Yale still was 35-yard touch- ry: a3 th (). ). m"‘i&‘r {5up Tor B Totade b Booth (olsce: i McCall (%), Don- h: Touchdowns—] nor i woaleeMorton (3. (Biace-Kickay. Eolits after touchdowns—Morton (3) (place- DEFEATS LAFAYETTE A Smith’s 25-Yard Placement Boot Accounts for Only Points of Thrilling Battle. : EES i o | z ? I P Egsk §§ £ L fHli §fp i | | \on i i i il i W B % g g i 5 B § i i 75 §agaf 7K i i g g & Summary, OLIVER THOUGHT DONE C. U. Back's Ankle Fractured, x;)ny Reveals; Cards See Irish. H, Pa. WLTS THEVILETS i

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