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— SPORTS SECTION he Sunday Star WASHINGTON, D. C, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 1935. = 21, (s « B9 avy Is Scuttled by Notre Dame : West Point Mars Yale’s Clean Slate, 14-8 + + + + + + + + + + + + ~ Colonials, Hoyas Both Nosed Out, 7-6 : Carnegie Tech Upsets Purdue, 7.0 RAMBLERS DOWN MIDSHPHEN, 44 Hook Up Brawn and Brains to Triumph Decisively and Stretch Streak. (Continued From First Page.) by starting marches which ended abruptly a few plays later. The Mid- dies merely lacked what they had a | year ago in Buzz Borries—a “climax runoer.” s First Win Since 1932. 'HE triumph was the first for Notre Dame over Navy since 1932, when the “Irish” swept to a 12-0 victory in Cleveland to extend to six in a row their victories over the Naval Acad- | emy in the series of annual classics naugurated in 1927. In one respect the South Benders' fifth straight triumph of the current season particularly was notable in that | it was achieved with little help from Bill Shakespeare, star triple threat, who withdrew after one perfunctory appearance at the start of the game. ' Ably filling the shoes of Coach Elmer Layden’s ace, whase removal was regarded as a move to save him for Ohio State next week, were a pair of second-stringers in Francis Joseph Gaul of Waterville, Me.. and Andy Pilney of Chicago, who led the attack that left the Navy a shattered, de- moralized hulk in the second period, saved from a more severe beating by the half-time whistle and thereafter by a reserve-dotted foe. | Gaul Scores on Pass. EARLY in the second period. Gaul, taking an unerring pass from | 10-Man ‘Eleven’ Is Valley Loser SHEPHERDSTOWN. W. Va., Oc- tober 26.—Shepherdstown High School’s grid team routed a badly crippled Strasburg High team by a score of 19-0. Due to the non-arrival of part of the Strasburg team, they were forced to play a quarter and a half with only 10 men and four of those were substitutes. LATEVIOLET DASH TOPS.G. U ELEVEN Machlowitz Runs Back Kick L3 TOUGH LUCK DOGS Questioned Decision Puts Deacons in Position to Score—Leemans Zips. By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. | AKE FOREST, N. C,, Octo- ber 26.—A scrapping band of Wake Forest Demon Deacons fought for and re- | ceived the breaks here today to out- point George Washington Univer- | sity's eleven, 7 to 6, and halt a losing streak that had stretched to five games. | Taking advantage of a questionable decision by Referee Carrington, whose ruling gave them the ball on the Colonial 12-yard line early in the fourth period, the Deacons lost no time grabbing a lead that held up to the finish despite a furious G. W. | rally in the dying moments. | A perfectly thrown forward pass by Quarterback Walt Kitchin was caught on the run by Halfback Vin- son Edens, who romped 4 more yards over the goal line and then place- kicked the extra point. | This scoring chance came as the result of Referee Carrington's ruling | | that the ball had been fumbled by | Tufly Leemans, G. W.'s ace back, when | the latter faded back to pass. But @ By a Staff Correspondent of The Star. lose by two or three touch- setting the undefeated Violets of New 000 at Yankee Stadium. placement after touchdown by Salva- | from the stands it appeared evident | B W.INT5L0SS | 40 Yards to Win—Capital NEW YORK. October 26— downs on the early season | York University here this afternoon A final-period 40-yard run-back of | tore Somma proved the deciding fac- Team Scores Early. Georgetown's Hoyas, rated to records, came within one point of up- before a crowd of approximately 20,- a punt by Capt. Machlowitz and a i tors after the Georgetown lads had led that the ball had left Leemans’ hand | and was batted down by Right End | 17 to 6. from the first tew minutes of the | Forest Glass, who was almost on top | game, 6 to 0. The final score was Of the Colonial star. Glass then re- | trieved the ball and possession was | awarded Wake Forest over G. W.'s claim of an incompleted pass, which, if ruled by the official, would have The Violets outgained the Hoyas consistently, but the Washington team Pilney while in full flight, skippedymade up the deficiency in outplaying down the sidelines for & run of almost | the local aggregation when in danger. 45 yards, evading the entire Navy|The G-Men made their own breaks left the ball in the Colonials' pos- | session. secondary to cross the goal line for the first score. Marty Peters, hero of the Pitt tilt, who also was conspicious by his absence, had a capable kicking | understudy in Ken Stilley, who booted the extra point for a 7-to-0 lead. Hardly had Navy's kick-off after this touchdown nestled in the waiting arms of Pilney than Notre Dame's ruthless attack was under way once more. Pilney, ripping through the arms of three Middies, tore 20 yards down the field. When finally he was grounded young Francis Layden and Fred Carideo, kid brothers of two of Notre Dame'’s most illustrious, took up | the ball-carrying burden and accounted for the two straight first downs that moved play to Navy's 10-yard stripe. Here Carideo drove through the line on a split play for 5 vards, but Navy, answering the frantic pleas of 2,000 midshipmen. dug in desperately and smeared the next thrust for no gain “Irish” Make Right Move. AD Notre Dame elected to direct its two remaining downs through the line it is doubtful if Navy would have been beaten by more than one touch- down, but Pilney, in running position, | straightened up and rifled a low, un- | expected flat pass just over the goal| line and into the waiting arms of | Layden. Again Stilley converted. | From the first whistle the teams be- gan to bring up their punches from the floor, but the initial period ended with no serious damage to either side. | For a moment it looked as though a | great kick by Shakespeare might pro- vide Notre Dame with a “break” in the first quarter, but in Sneed Schmidt | of the Navy the mighty Shakespeare | met a worthy kicking foe. Standing on his own 10-yard line, | Bhakespeare got off a tremendous| punt which sailed far over the head of Tommy King, Navy safety man.| and rolled crazily toward the Middies’ | goal line. King, fearful the ball would | not go into the end zone, picked it | up and was downed on the 9-yard| line, but Navy pounded to a first down on its 23-yard line and then Schmidt | kicked out of danger. It was not until Notre Dame’s second-string eleven was rushed into the game at the start of the second quarter that things began to happen. | For a moment the effect threatened to | be disastrous’ for Pilney promptly fumbled as he was tackled and Schmidt recovered for Navy on the Notre Dame 20-yard stripe. Break Wasted on Middies, Tms was Navy's big “break” of the game, but the Middies were help- | less before the rock-ribbed South | throughout by hard and alert playing. | They handled every situation, except | one. Machlowitz, who played an erratic | game, took Joe Meglen's punt in the |last period and raced through the en- tire Georgetown team for a score. The Washingtonians made a desper- | ate effort to stop him, but could not | get their hands on the Violet cap- tain, Georgetown Scores Early. | Two Field Goals Tried. 'WICE, shortly after, the Deacons, sensing their first victory of the | season, came surging back toward the | goal only to find a militant Colon:al line too much for them. Edens at- tempted two fleld goals, both of which fell short. Then, with Leeman’s leading the way, the Colonials unleashed a ter- rific assault that carried 80 yards to & touchdown. Halfback George Jen- The start: Pilney of Notre Dame pegged a pass to Gaul (extreme left. arrow shows ball), which he received on his 45-yard line and with perfect interference he | romped— AR ATTACK RUNS FEW minutes after the game got kins catching a 40-yard pass from under way Meglen's punt was | Leemans in the end zone after the hall fumbled by Machlowitz on the Violet | D8d ben touched by the outstretchea 10-yard line and Vaccaro recovered |Nands of two Deacon defenders. But for Georgetown. Gaining 5 yards by | G W-s hope of pulling the game out the penalty route, the Hovas then |Of the fire even to the extent of gaining pulled a spectacular lateral, Meglen | tie, faded like the setting sun as | to Tom Keating. and the latter | C2PL Harry Deming's placement-kick crossed the goal standing up. sailed wide of the posts. Co-Capt. Meglen booted at the goal | Leemans, who absorbed a physical posts, but the ball was wide by a cou- | beating and reinjured his bad hip, but | ple of feet, and this failure cost the | wouldn't leave the game. drew a 15- Hovas the game. | yard penalty when the Deacons piled The Violets threatened often dur- on him after a skori run He then ring the first half, but penalties, fum- ' called for a spread formation from | bles and the Hoya line held them at | which he burst forth in three thrill- | bay. The Georgetown ends, Snyder | ing dashes of 7, 19 and 18 yards that | and Cavadine, were spilling the local | carried G. W. to Wake Forest's 20- boys at the crucial moments. vard line. Lawrence Hardy, Georgetown's sophomore center, was the outstand- ing star of the Hoya line. He was charging through on offense and stopped a number of Violet attempts to gain through the middle of the | again and passed to Jenkins near the line. The youngster recovered oneside line. The latter, however, was fumble and intercepted a pass, wm{mlm to be outside the playing times halting sustained drives of the | field when he caught the ball. Still opposing team. | fighting, Leemans once more ran back Meglen's punting also tended ' and from the 40-yard line hurled a keep the Violets away from the pay- | beauty into the end zone, where Jen- | off line. He consistently booted the|kins was surrounded by Wake Forest | ball for, more than 40 yards, several men. Two of them tried to knock ' of his Klcks being good for more than . the bail down, but in so doing merely | half the distance of the fleld. tipped it into the waiting arms of the | Hoya Passes Miss Mark. Colonial. GEORGE.'I'OWN made one long drive | during the third period. Hardy | In intercepted a pass on his own 45-yard | faked a pass and romped to the 5-| yard line, only to be called back when | a teammate was declared off side. But nothing daunted, he dropped back Leemans Gets Ovation. ‘THE first quarter G. W. got & taste of the poor iuck that was its | PERFECT RECORD | Homecoming Crowd Stunned as Big Ten Powerhouse Is Wrecked, 7 to 0. BY T. E. APPLEGATE. Associated Press Sports Writer. APAYETTE, Ind., October 26— A scrappy band of Tartans from Carnegie Tech, overcom- ing the odds against them with came out of the East today to whip the hitherto unbeaten Purdue Boll!l'-‘ makers, 7 to 0, and stun a homecom- | ing crowd of 17.000. Turned back on the 1-foot line in] the first period, the Carnegie fighting | engineers bottled up the high-powered | Boilermakers’ offense in scoring terri- tory, then uncorked a perfect for- ward pass in the final period to| score their first victory over Purdue | in a four-game intersectional series. | Play Nets 70 Yards. i BACKED up to their 25-yard line by | a Purdue punt, the Skibos sent Jerry Matelan through the line for five yards, then the 159-pound Pitts- burgh halfback faded back and tossed | Here the daring G. W. quarterback | a sparkling, accurate aerial attack. | line and his teammates then started a parade down the field. Keating, Nolan and Meglen, with the aid of effective blocking by Herron, reeled off consecu- tive gains through the line and around the ends for three first downs to the | Violet 17-yard marker. | After Nolan had added a couple more | yards, the Washingtonians tried pass- ing, but the Violets managed to knock them down. Meglen, on fourth down, | attempted a field goal from placement, but was unsuccessful. | The Hoyas looked at their best in | The line was making holes this drive. | Bend line and the alert backfield |and the backs were finding them. The Twice the Annapolis eleven struck at | N. Y. U. line was giving away and it the line, but picked up only 2 yards. is possible that the Hoyas would have | Switching to the air, Navy tried one‘driven to another score if they had | pass that was broken up by Pilney, | not resorted to passes after reaching and then, out of a place-kick forma- tion, attempted another that fell in-| | the 17-yard line. The highly touted N. Y. U. passing complete into the end zone, giving |attack failed to function as well as in dish throughout the game. Prom their 42-yard stripe the Colonials paraded |a long pass to Gene Rosenthal, his | | running mate, which grossed 70 yards. | 35 yards on reverses and spinner plays | with Trinastich knocking off 16 yards for the longest individual gain. At Wake Forest's 25 Ben Plotnicki, who | started in place of Leemans, fired a pass intended for Jenkins, but the lat- | ter deflected it into the hands of | Trinastich, who was called back for | thus scoring illegally. Had Jenkins missed the ball entirely Trinastich’s catch and scoring dash would have been the goods. As expected. Walt Kitchin, 19-year- old son of the Wake Forest College president, was the Deacons' offensive reliance. He made one gain of 17 | yards on a clever run in the fourth/ | period and hurled three other passes! T bestdes the scoring toss to pile up 95| yards on aerial plays. | Notre Dame the ball on its 20 and| setting the stage for the 80-yard drive that culminated in the first score. Ripping viciously into a Navy line that suddenly showed signs of ragged- ness, Carideo picked up a first down on his 34, and Pilney followed by faking & forward pass and racing around end for 9 yards. Again Carideo was given the ball and he accounted for another first down on Navy's 45, from where the Pilney-to-Gaul aerial circus was launched. Notre Dame did not wait here. On‘ the first down Pilney dropped back and zipped his pass to the stoeky, 167-pound Gaul, who grabbed it over his shoulder as he raced around end. did a little toe dance to keep from stepping out of the lines, and then headed goalward. It loo"ed as though he were doomed for an early landing. Navy tacklers bore down on him from all sides, but somehow their desperate fingers slip- ped T his gold silk pants and only King and Schmidt were left in his path. King went down as the crush- ing weight of a brawny Notre Dame lineman struck his knees in a perfect block and Schmidt, under threat of the same from another blocker, was out-maneuvered by the fast-cutting ball carrier, Ostensibly, that was the spark the (See RAMBLERS, Page 10.) i . George Washington's attack func- | tioned better than at any stage of the | campaign thus far. It netted 196 yards from scrimmage and 33 on| passes, with Leemans accounting per- | sonally for 90 yards in 13 carries. Tuffy did not enter the battle until the second quarter and played less than half of the game. But during his presence Wake Forest players ad- miited he was the best back they had faced in two years, including Duke’s " (See TOUGH LUCK, Page 11.) MICHIGAN STATE VICTOR previous games. Smith was tossing the ball in all directions early in the (See GEORGETOWN, Page 10.) TEMPLE WINS SIXTH GRID GAME IN ROW Scores Two Last-Period Markers to Down West Virginia, 19-6. Smukler Is Injured. By the Associated Press. | Rosenthal hauled in the ball on the | | Purdue 45 and outsprinted the Boiler- | The finish: Across the goal line (No. 5, extreme right) with the first of the two touchdowns that gave the Ramblers a 14-0 triumph over the Middies. Purdue, Villanova Slip BY HERBERT W. BARKER, Associated Press Sports Writer. DIZZY whirligig for the first month, the foot ball cam- paign struck a more sedate gait yesterday, but not in time makers' defenders in a dash for the | to save Purdue’s Boilermakers and goal line. Harry Stuhldreher’s Villanova Wild- Charles Spisak, Carnegie quarter-|cgts from suffering their first defeat kick as Matelan held the ball for him. a tie. | | back, added the point with & place- |y surprising upsets. While such favorites as Minnesota, halfback, hauled in one of Spisak's| s a top-flight contender for the Big faded away from Tartan tacklers, | finally dashing into the clear just past | midfield, only to stumble and fall. Stopped at 5-yard Line. 'HE scrappy Carnegie forward Wwall turned back all the Big Ten pow- er house had to offer in scoring ter- ritory. Twice in the second period Boilermaker marches were turned back at the 5-yard line. ‘The light Carnegie backs were un- able to make many dents in the Boilermaker line, but found the an- swer in the smartly executed forward plays. The game was unusual in that not a single penalty was called on either team. Line-ups and Summary. . Cagnegle T. (7). Purdue_(0). Keller _ Reed "y -Is| - W. Banderfur Fehring Abbott | VJORGANTOWN, Va.. October 26.— ~ Glenn Warner's ponderous Owls | from Temple University soared to vie- | tory today by a 19-to-6 score over ihe rugged Mountaineers of West Virginia | University. | A home-coming day crowd of 12,000 | watched Temple bombard the Moun- taineer goal and count two touchdowns |in the final period to register their | sixth consecutive triumph of the sea- son and remain among the East's group of undefeated elevens. Until the Owls put on their last-period offensive the Mountaineers kept the score almost even, although Temple never seemed in danger even without the services of its ace fullback, Dave Smukler, who was forced out by In-_ Juries after six minutes of play. | Washington U. Routed, 47 to 13. Reserve Back Stars. EAST LANSING, Mich., October 26 | (#)—Michigan State College roared g, | back into the winning column today | with & versatile attack which downed | Washington University of St. Louis, scoring—Touchdowns. from iry after touen: es (Northwestern). U (Michigan). Pleld 47-t0-13, before 8,000 foot ball fans. Al Agett, halfback who replaced | mpire—A. ~ G. Reid 'udle—mck lJ‘llhr (Indiarapolis), Head inesman—J. J. Lipp (Chicago). Kurt Warmbein in the line-up, was the star in the victory by which State sought to wipe out the sting of the defeat by Boston College, which bumped it out of the undefeated | nnn;utved.lum-admm‘ which resulted in touchdowns, and twice carried the ball over the goal line himself. HOBART HAS EASY TIME. GENEVA, N. Y. October 26 (F).— Hobart College went on a scoring spree in the final period today and defeated Kenyon College, 38 to 6. Using many substitutes Hobart rolled | up 25 points in the fourth.gusrtes, | punts on his own 25-yard line and | Ten crown, was thrown for a dead loss by Carnegie Tech’s fighting Tar- tans, 7 to 0. Villanova, a powerful scoring array, yound up on the short | end of a 19-to-15 score as Gus Dorais’ | Detroit Titans pushed over a fourth- period touchdown. Otherwise there were few surprises, unless Stanford’s 6-to-0 conquest of Washington on two first-period field goals by Monk Moscrip could be classed in that category. Sports Program For Local Fans “TODAY. Horse Show. Inter-American, East-West High- way, 1. 1 Soccer. Sun Radio vs. Sabaudia, Rosedale Playground, 1. Littoria vs. Occoquan, Rosedale Playground, 3. Mitchell Bros. vs. Silver Spring, Sil- ver Spring, Md., 2:30. TOMORROW. Horse Show. Inter-American, East-West High- way, 1. Golf. District open tournament, Indian Spring. TUESDAY. Foot Ball. Eastern vs. Roosevelt, Eastern Sta- | dium (public high school title game), 3:30. Golf. District open tournament, Indian * | the Midwestern independents, handed ARMY, one of the East's unbeaten | arrays, outplayed Yale's game Bulldogs before 45,000 at New Haven to earn a 14-to-8 decision. Navy, ap- pearing before the day’s biggest crowd —65,000—found itself overmatched by | Notre Dame’s Ramblers, 14 to 0. } Minnesota’s Gophers emerged from a dog-fight with Northwestern's im- | proving Wildcats victor by a 21-13 real § | score, while Ohio State, shocked by A bad break after Carnegie had | onio State, Notre Dame, Princeton, | | scored robbed Purdue of a chance for | North Carolina, Rice and California | Tommy McGannon, Purdue | were marching on, Purdue, regarded an early Indiana touchdown, came back to trounce the Hoosiers, 28-6. Dick Crayne and Ozzie Simmons paced Towa's sensational Hawkeyes to a well- earned victory over Illinois, 19-0, and took rank with Minnesota and Ohio State as the principal Big Ten cham- pionship contenders. Michigan, beat- ing Columbia, 19-7, made up. partly for Purdue’s defeat. Marquette, one of the strongest of Mississippi its first defeat of the sea- son, 33-6. Rough on Vandy. IN THE Southeastern Conference, Louisiana State nosed out Vander- bilt, 7-2, while Alabama took advan- tage of the breaks to crush Georgia, 17-7—the Bulldogs’ initial reverse. | North Carolina’s Tarheels, meanwhile, maintained their undefeated status with a convincing 19-0 verdict over Tech, upset conquerors of Duke a week ago. Joining Army in the Eastern top- flight were Holy Cross, Princeton, Dartmouth, New York University, Pittsburgh, Temple and Syracuse. | Holy Cross surprised the experts by | turning back Colgate, 3-0. Princeton trampled Cornell, 54-0, and Temple won handily from West Virginia, 19-6. New York University, undefeated, had to score in the fourth period to | turn back Georgetown, 7-6, and Pitts- burgh had its troubles with Penn | | State before winning, 9-0. Syracuse turned back Brown, 19-0, and Dm—i | mouth won over Harvard, 14-6. Man- | hattan, which tied Holy Cross a week | ago, was soundly beaten by North/ Carolina State, 20-0. Stanford Checks Washington. Wm Stanford wes checking ‘Washington, California and ln.f University of California at Los An-| gelese ufl“n\l‘d*hlk all-victorious ¢ R P ¥ T R Jfi 3 D e, 4 r; A MEYER BRILLIANT HERO OF TRIUMPH Scores One Marker, Hurls Pass to Sub Flankman for Another. BY ALAN GOULD. Associated Press Sports Editor. EW HAVEN, Conn, October 26, —Yale, handicapped by its own kicking mistakes at the outset and never fully able to get out of the hole, was tumbled from the unbeaten ranks today by Army. | The Cadets from West Pcint emerged with a 14-to-8 triumph, their fourth in a row over the Elis and fourth suce cessive victory of the 1935 campaign. Before a crowd of 45,000 the Soldiers capitalized two first-half scoring op- portunities with an attack featuring the brilliant Charles (Monk) Meyer, West Point’s newest ball-carrying sen- sation, and then successfully stood off Yale's sensational counter-offensive in the last half. Meyer was the outstanding individual star of the game, that was punctuated with thrills from start to finish during a balmy afternoon. The fleet Army halfback from Fort Sheridan, Ill.. who led the Cadets to victory over Harvard last Saturday, scored the first touch- down on a 6-yard end run in the first period and passed to Russ Janzan, sub- | stituting for Capt. Hill Shuler, for the second tally in the closing moments of the second period. Meyer was pretty much the whole show for Army, although the Soldie:s outrushed, outplayed and outsmarted the favored Elis. The Cadet ace, play= ing the entire game despite a head in= Jjury that nearly knocked him out in the final quarter, did nearly all the passing, as well as most of the kicking From Unbeaten Ranks As Dizzy Month of Foot Ball Comes to Close and running. Great on Defense, Too. ESIDES taking the play away from Yale's brilliant passing combinae | tion of Jerry Roscoe and Larry Kelley, which accounted for Yale's touchdorn in the second period, Meyer was & standout on the defense. He broke up two Eli advances in the Jast half by intercepting passes deep in the Army territory. Onme resulted in a safety and two points for Yale as Meyer tumbled back into his own end zone, but the Army star took the threat ous of the last Eli drive with a spectacular shoestring catch of a pass by Yale's Charley Ewart after the Elis had ad- vanced nearly 40 yards by the aerial route, Piling up 13 first downs to Yale's 11 and outrushing the Elis by 176 yards to 115, West Point nevertheless needed | the early “breaks” to win from this resourceful, hard-charging Blue team. A poor kick-off at the start of the game by Jack Wright. which Army re= covered on its own 40. and a subse- quent punt by Capt. Kim Whitehead that was blocked partly and sent spin- ning out of bounds on Yale's 20-yard stripe combined to put the Elis “in | the hole.” | It took three Army thrusts, nevere ‘\ theless, before the gallant Eli forwards | finally vielded to sustained Cadet pres= | sure. Army lost the ball on downs on | Yale's 5-yard line and again on the 3-yard stripe before Meyer finally engineered a scoring attack. Three | plays netted 26 yards and a touchdown | as Meyer hit the line for 2 yards, passed to Grove for 18 and then skirted Yale's left end for the score, to which Grove's place-kick added the | extra point. —Copyright, A. P. Wirephotos, Yale Scores on Long Drive. YALE bounded back with & 70- | touchdown drive, featured by two spectacular pass catches by the color= ful Larry Kelley. The talkative Elf end made a circus catch of the first progress. U. C. L. A. walloped Oregon, 33-6. and California accounted for Southern California, 21-7. Denver, with five Rocky Mountain Conference victories to its credit, invaded Salt Lake City and took a 39-14 beating from Utah for its pains. Rice, coming back from its defeat by Southern Methodist, upset Texas, 28-19. Texas Christian gave further evidence of tremendous power by a 27-7 triumph over Centenary at Shrieveport. | In the Big Six, Nebraska stopped Oklahoma, 190; Kansas surprised Kansas State, 9-2, and Missouri played a 6-6 draw with Iowa State, from Roscoe for a 30-yard gain, pute ting the ball on Army's 39. Then after the Eli running attack collapsed with the ball on Army's 20, Kelley raced into the end zone and snagged a fourth down pass with another leaping catch, while two Cadets were at his elbows, Henry (One Play) Gardner, whose place-kick for the extra point beat Navy last week, failed to get the ball through the uprights. This cost the Elis their chance to tie the score and the Army’s counter-attack for a second touchdown soon furnished the decid~ ing points before the half ended. After losing the ball on downs on | Yale’s 24, Army came right back to | march 46 yards for the score. Meyer | shared the ball lugging with Groves before finally passing to Janzan in Foot Ball R Local. Wake Forest, 7; George Washing- ton, 6. the end zone, from the 6-yard line on the first play after the substitute’s entry. N. Y. U.. 7; Georgetown, 6. Maryland, 20; Florida, 6. St. John’s, 19; American Univer- | sity, 7. | Willlam and Mary (Norfolk Branch), | 31; Gallaudet, 0. | West Virginia State, 38; Howard, 6. East. Notre Dame, 14; Navy, 0. Army, 14; Yale, 8. Western Maryland, 7; Mount st,‘- Mary’s, 0. Middlebury, 14; Norwich, 0. Moravian, 0; Susquehanna, 0. Northeastern, 13; Lowell Textile, 6 Pennsylvania, 67; Lafayette, 0. Pittsburgh, 9: Penn State, 0 Rhode Island State, 1 Guard, 7. Hamilton, 13; Rochester, 0. Rutgers, 27; Lehigh, 6. Providence, 12: Springfieid, 0. Yale drove as far as Army’s 20, in the third quarter, before picking up two points on Meyer’s safety. This was more or less of a “boner” by the Army star, who needed only to bat down the ball to avoid any undue risks near his own goal line. Subsequently the Elis tried desper- | ately to penetrate Army® defense with |an aerial barrage, with Roscoe and Ewart alternating the throwing end, but lacked success until the closing moments, when Meyer's interception turned back the last threat for the Cadets. Line-ups and Summary, Army (1) Coast | 4> NIEORIIOCCEY Swarthmore, 19; Johns Hopkins, 6. Syracuse, 19: Brown, 0. Williams. 20; Tufts, 0. _ Prank hitehead 0—14 0— 8 70 Union,’ 21; Renssalaer, 0. Albright, 23; Ursinus, 0. Army scoring: Touchdowns—Meyer and La Salle, 7; Westchester Teach- ers, 0. ‘Temple, 19; West Virginia, 6. Massachusetts State, 30; Worcester | ze Poly, 0. Bloomsburg Teachers, 6; Mansfield ‘Teachers, 0. Janzan. Points from try aftes touchdown S-Grove and Goldenberg _(placements). }":}‘e"uormx. Touchdown—Kelley; safety, ubstitutions: Army—Ends. Hipps, tackle. Isbell; guard. Obman: & Underwood. Jan- ple). nesm: (Continued on Page 11, Column 4.) e R‘m i eld judge—! *