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COME FROM REAR | TOBEAT LA SALLE Explorers Score Touchdown and Field Goal Before Redbirds Start. BY FRANCIS E. STAN. ACE to face with defeat, Catho- lic University's Flying Cardinals pulled themselves from the brink of early-season disaster at Brookland Stadium yesterday and rallied to overcome the surprisingly strong foot ball forces of La Salle College, 14 to 10, Approximately 6,000 spectators watched in mild amazement as the Explorers dazzled the Cardinals with a first-period aerial attack to build up a 10-to-0 lead, which stood as the first early advantage gained over Catholic since the Detroit game a year ago. La Salle took no chances on fits ground offensive cracking the Card line and, as later events proved, it was a wise precaution. Instead, with 18-year-old Harry Williams pitching and the veteran Felix Kadel catching, the Explorers bombarded from the air with two quick thrusts. Once the battery of Williams and Kadel pitched a touchdown and again it worked La Salle so close to the Cardinal goal that a place-kick easily was achleved. Only a good share of breaks and a keenly developed sense of opportunism enabled Chtholic to overcome this lead. Williams' Passes Are Dynamite. LA SALLE'S early offensive repre- sented the Philadelphia school's bolt and it almost was enough. Not until near the half was Catholic able to cut down that lead and not until late in the third quarter were the Cards able to shove over the winning touch- down by the veriest fraction. It was by far the greatest scare thrown into them since Mississippi began to whit- tle down that 20-to-6 lead in last New ‘Year day’s Orange Bowl game. Quarterback Spec Foley paved the way for La Salle’s touchdown in the | first few minutes when he fumbled a punt by Capt. Joe Sciaretta on Cath- ! olic'’s 20-yard stripe. Ed Botto, & tackle, recovered for La Salle and the Pennsylvanians’ push was on. Sciaretta, who later was to be the “goat,” reeled off 10 yards and a first down on the Cards’ 10, and then, after an end run, lost yardage. Wil- liams whipped a pass over the goal line to Left End Kadel, who took it above the heads of two Cardinal backs and scored standing up. Sciaretta’s placement made it 7-0. The Brooklanders still were pon- dering their fates when Marty Brill's team struck again. With the ball on their 25-yard line, the Cards at- tempted to launch a passing attack themselves, but it came to grief on the first try when Halfback Len Za- toris intercepted & heave by Foley. Adamaitis’ Heave Cuts Lead. GIVEN the ball on the enemy 30- yard line, the Explorers lost little time. After three ineffective aerials Williams _connected with another heave to Kadel—the same play that scored—and La Salle reached the Cardinal 5-yard stripe. Here another pass and two line plunges failed to gain more than a yard, and Sciaretta booted a perfect placement over the crossbars for three more points. Bergman, alarmed at his back- field’s inability to cope with a pass- ing attack, had a new’ ball-carrying and secondary force in the game when the second period started, in Walker, Munhall, Gorman and Vid- novic. This combination, later aug- mented when Bill Adamaitis substi- tuted for Vidnovic, helped to snap the Cards out of it midway the period when Vidnovic tossed a long pass from midfield to Walker. The Card receiver failed to catch the ball, but interference on him was called and Catholic was given a first down on La Salle’s 25. A lateral, Gorman to Adamaitis, was good for 15 and placed the oval on La Salle’s 10-yard stripe, but three pass plays lost ground and Adamaitis desperately faded back on fourth down and searched for a receiver. He found him in Munhall, who made a nice catch over the goal line. Frank Cairo, sub tackle, kicked the extra point. Walker’s Punt Brings Break. A GREAT punt by Howard Walker paved the way for the winning touchdown later in the third quarter. Stopped on La Salle’s 39, Catholic directed Walker to kick and the punt he got off stopped as dead as an ex- plosion shot on a green. Gleefully the Cardinal ends pounced on the ball on | L. La Salle's 4-yard line, forcing Sciaretta to kick from far behind his goal. ‘The La Salle captain's punt car- ried only to his own 27-yard line and Catholic made the most of its oppor- — Irish Carroll was mot making many gains yesterday as th of yardage he picked up is shown here in this first-quarter picture, Swinging off to left end, the fleet Car before Spann brought him down. DASH OF 80 YARDS SINKS DARTMOUTH Osmanski’s Score With an Intercepted Pass Puts Over Crusaders, 7-0. | By the Absoclated Press. | ANOVER, N. H., October 10.— i An 80-yard dash down the i right sideline by Bill Osman- | ski, a sophomore backfield re- placement from Providence, R. I, to- day gave the powerful but offensively sluggish Holy Cross Crusadgrs a 7-0 victory over a fighting tribe of Dart- mouth Indians. The majority of the packed crowd of 15,000, largest to gather here in years, groaned as the Indians flubbed five scoring chances, two from inside the 5-yard line, while out-rushing their brawny visitors, nine first downs to four, and 170 yards to 155. The fleet and shifty Osmanski, in at fullback for Jabber Joe Yablonsky with six minutes remaining, started racing for the touchdown that en- abled the Crusaders to gain their first triumph in 33 years against Dart- mouth, after he -intercepted the eleventh of the thirteen passes at- tempted by the air-minded Indians. Pass Partly Blocked. JARTMOUTH, due to the amazing efforts of Wamen King, 150- pound understudy for triple-threat Fred Hollingworth, spent the first 9 minutes of fourth period play banging at the Holy Cross goal line. King started a drive from midfield late in the third, only to have Fullback John Handrahan fail to plunge for the yard that would have given the In- dians s first down on Holy Cross’ 3-yard line. After an exchange of punts, Hank ‘Whitaker booted one outside on Holy Cross’ 1-yard line. Argio Latanzi, an- other of Holy Cross’ great array of backfield spares, kicked out nicely to his 35. Just after that Hollingworth returned to action. He tried to pass and his. heave was tipped by Ecio Luciano, the Holy Cross right guard, on his 25-yard line into the hands of Osmanski, 5 yards back. Runs Unhampered. THI Providence speedster cut over sharply to the sideline as his-mates rallied to his support. He picked his way through several - Indians but after he hit his stride, never was chal- lenged by pursuers. Rex Kidd provid- ed the seventh point with a place- kick. Line-ups and summary: Pos. Holy Cross (7. Dartmouth (0). E.____8hield Merrili tunity. Adamaitis and Bob Makofske | F- banged the line for 10 yards, and a lateral pass, Foley to Adamaitis, found the receiver racing to the 6-inch line before he was torced outside. For two plays it looked as if La Salle ‘was going to thwart the Cards. Fight- ing desperately, the Explorers twice hurled back the Catholic ball carriers for no gain. ‘Then, on the third try, Irish Carroll barely managed to plunge across and Cairo climbed off the bench to add the fourteenth and final point. Cath. U. (14), -Schmarr (c.) rroll. Munhall. Touchdowne—Cairo (2), Scie ywns—] after —-Icl.lml“ 1flllellle';§) Al utions: uorglni Vidnovie. Ffl\m\. ‘Head 12' "I Georzstown). n? (M-rriand). 2 magaki. SEoint fos i nsil. Fom ir: —Kidd (place-kick). v Can’t ‘See’ Cards, But Wins Passes By the Associsted Press. answer to “what price heckling?” at Catholic Univer~ sity’s bowl at Brookland seems to be two free tickets for the next game the Flying Cardinals play. - Standing out in the crowd of 6,000 yesterday was a gentleman who rooted loudly for the BEx- plorers of La Salle, who finally went down to defeat by a 14-10 count. If there was a fervent hope on the part of Cardinal supporters that he wouldn’t be back next Davis ‘fta | from Evanston, Ill, was the hero of SPORTS SECTION = he Suntday Star WASHINGTON, D. C, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 11, 1936. Cards Get Scare, Prevail, 14-10 : Last Minute Score Wins for G. U. 6% 8 [4//7HONAVAGE st Yardage Was Hard to Get as Catholic University Nipped La Salle e Flying Cardinals came from behind to nose out La Salle, 14 to 10, but one of the few hunks dinal halfback cut in sharply for a gain of several yards —Star Staff Photo by John Mueller. Sports Program | Pitt’s Erasure of Buckeyes From Title Chase, Minnesota Win From Nebraska Top Day For Local Fans TODAY. Bicycling. Second annual National Capital Sweepstakes, Ellibee, 2. TOMORROW. Boxing. Phil Furr vs. Jimmy Lucas, 10 founds, feature bout, Turner's Arena, 8:30. THURSDAY. Wrestling. Ernie Dusek vs. Cliff Olson, fea- ture match, Turner's Arena, 8:30. FRIDAY. Foot Ball, Arkansas vs. George Washing- ton, Griffith Stadium, 8. Central vs. St. John's, Central® Stadium, 3:30. Eastern vs. Calvert Hall, Balti- more, Md. Washington-Lee High vs. Hand- ley High, Winchester, Va. Landon vs. St. Paul's, Baltimore, Md. Gonzaga vs. Roosevelt, Roosevelt Stadium, 3:30. SATURDAY. Foot Ball. Georgetown vs. Bucknell, Grif- fith Stadium, 2:30. DePaul vs. Catholic University, Brookland Stadium, 2:30. Bridgewater College vs. Wilson ‘Teachers College, Central Stadium, 2:30. Maryland vs. Virginia, Chare lottesville, Va. American University vs. 8St. John's, Annapolis, Md. Western vs. Petersburg High, Petersburg, Va. Howard 'vs. Virginia State, Petersburg, Va. By the Associated Press. ITT'S rugged Panthers removed P Ohio State's Buckeyes from the national championship picture today as college foot ball enjoyed the most spectacular day of thé young season. While Pitt, depending entirely on power plays, was beating the for- midable Buckeyes, 6-0, before 71,000 in Columbus in a game that was hardly as close as the score indicated, Minnesota scored its nineteenth con- secutive victory as Andy Uram broke | loose for 75 yards in the final minute of play to give the Gophers a 7-0 triumph over Nebraska's Cornhuskers. ‘These were the two major engage- ments of the day although Fordham, Army and Yale in the East; Georgia Tech and Auburn in the South, and Southern California and Purdue in the Midwest scored impressive vic- tories. The spotlight otberwise was shared by little Southwestern of Memphis which spilled Vanderbilt's highly touted Commodores, 12-0, using only 12 men, and Butler of Indianap- olis held Chicago of the Big Ten to & 6-6 draw. Meyer Paces Army. PACED by little Monk Meyer, Army struck through the air to turn back Columbia, 27-16, in the day's most colorful engagement. Fordham, avenging a defeat of two years ago, toppled Southern Methodist's Mus- tangs, 7-0, while Yale, after staving off Penn's early drives, cashed in on & Clint Frank-to-Charley Ewart pass in the thfrd quarter, to nip the Quakers, 7-0. ‘Tech, revealing a superbly varied attack that should carry the Yale Turns Back Penn, 7-0, After Twice Holding Quakers For Downs Near Scoring Line EW HAVEN, Conn., October 10.—Yale's tricky little boys in blue made two vallant goal stands, gained their sec- ond wind and then took to the air to wreck Pennsylvania's heavier grid- iron machine, 7 to 0, before 15,000 fog-shrouded spectators today. Shoved back on their heels in the first and second periods, but holding off the Quaker charge that reached their 9-yard and 1-foot lines, the plucky Elis took the kick-off that opened the second half and cashed in with the only score of the game with 10 plays that netted 78 yards and a touchdown. -Clint Frank, 175-pound redhead the winning drive. Dancing over the slippery grensward with miraculous footwork and ailming his serials ac- curately, the Yale torchy steered the boys in blue to Penn's 11-yard stape and then fiipped a high, floating pass to Charlie Ewart, New Haven junior, who caught it near the Quaker goal. With Ewart holding the wet ball, Dave Colwell, Loveland, Colorado’s Fite Egiifige’ L eezs by the Penn forwards, Colwell's kick was blocked and recovered by Jim Hauze, Quaker center, on Yale's 14. Frank Murray and Bill Kurlish ham- mered to the Eli 11, but on the final crash at the line, Bill John, soph tackle, hauled Lew Elverson down to blast the threat on the Yale 9. The Quakers opened a whirlwind drive in the second that missed by a foot. Starting on their 30, with Elverson and Bill Kirkleski carrying the hod, they drove to Yale's 3-yard stripe in eight plays. Kirkleski pound- ed to the 2-yard line and an offside penalty brought the Quakers a yard from the goal. On the final crush Bill Dickens and Al Wilson leaped in and nailed Murray on the foot line. The end of the half saved Yale considerable embarrassment as its backs stood behind the goal line in kick formation. Yale Far Outgains Foe. YALE outgained Penn 202 yards to 128 and piled up 11 first downs to 8 for the red-and-blue-shirted bat- tlers from Philadelphia. The big dif- ference Was in passes. Yale com- pleted 6 out of 15 for a total of 84 yards, while Penn threw nine, com- pleted two and gained only 18 yards through the air. The defeat was the fifteenth in 16 games for Penn against Yale. . ) RO PP 4O Kurlish 0 0—0 0 7 0—7 down, Ewart. Point: m‘{s:hm ey Touchdown, Comel (prace: T44e _substitutions—Tackle. _Peterson: i .| guished by many in ¢ | and blocked punts before 18,000 fans. Engineers far in the Southeastern Conference race, routed what had been considered an exceptionally strong Kentucky array, 34-0. Auburn scored a touchdown to triumph over Ten- nessee, 6-0. Southern California’s Trojans had entirely too much on the ball for Illi- nois and Bob Zuppke's charges went down to a smashing defeat, 24-6. Purdue, with Cecil Isbell again in starring role, spoiled Harry Stuhl- dreher’s Big Ten Conference debut with a 22-14 pasting. Michigan State and Baldwin-Wal- lace invaded the East to whip Car- negie Tech, 7-0, and Syracuse, 19-7, respectively, but West Virginia upheld Eastern prestige in a 28-7 lacing to ‘Washington and Lee, and Navy spilled Virginia, 35-14. Holy Cross wore down Dartmouth, 7-0; Princeton was not too impressive in whipping Rutgers, 20-0; Harvard showed considerable power in tossing Brown, 28-0, and Villanova continued its winning ways at Penn State's ex- pense, 13-0. Notre Dame was hard-pressed to top Washington University, 13-6, but | Marquette ran through St. Louis, 32-6. Indiana bgushed aside Mich- igan, 14-3, in a Big Ten Conference | game as Northwestern and Iowa won easily over non-conference rivals. Missouri pulled a big surprise in the Big Six by holding Kansas State to a 6-6 draw. Kansas, 21-7. Duke Continues March. JUKE'S march toward another Southern Conference title con- tinued as the Blue Devils blanked Clemson, 25-0. North Carolina won from Maryland, 14-0. Alabama nosed out Mississippi State in a gruelling Southeastern Conference engagement, 7-0, as Tulane's surprising Green ‘Wave bowled over Centenary's gen- tlemen, 19-0. ‘Washington's Huskies moved up in the Pacific Coast Conference race with & 14-0 conquest of U. C. L. A. as Stan- ford and Oregon tied at 7-7 and ‘Washington State tripped Idaho, 14-0, Arkansas had to come from behind | sensationally to win from Baylor, 14- 10, in the Southwest Conference race as Texas A. and M. eked out a 3-0 triumph over Rice. Texas upset Okla- homa, 6-0, and Texas Christian rallied to whip Tulsa, 10-7, in non-conference tests. Utah and Utah State both won in Rocky Mountain Conference compe- tition, the former beating Western State, 35-0, while State was account- ing for Wyoming's scalp, by the same score, 3 —— OREGON ENDS IN 7-7 TIE WITH STANFORD Indians Early Score Is Matched by Webfoot Team's Drive in Second Quarter. By the Associated Press. y ALO ALTO, Calif., October 10.— University of Oregon’s Webfoots and Stanford’s Indians battled to a T-to-7 tie today in a Pacific Coast Conference foot ball game distin- passes Beaten in its first two starts, Stan- s | ford scored in the opening period, tak- n | ing the ball on its own 29 and ad- verson | VARCING to Oregon’s 46. On the next play, Vigna darted through the line, cut to his left and shook off two tack- lers to fall over the line. Left Guard Ferko added the extra point. 35 yards. Iowa State swamped | | | Uram Takes Lateral, Goes 75 Yards to Score That By the Associated Press. INNEAPOLIS, October 10— M Minnesota-Nebraska game a ! Dick Merriwell finish today | run in the last 68 seconds of play for the Golden Gophers' nineteenth con- Fifty-five thousand spectators yelled as Uram, snatching victory from an Beats Nebraska, 7-0. Big Andy Uram gave the with a sensational 75-yard touchdown | secutive gridiron triumph. apparently hopeless deadlock, returned Ronald Douglas' punt for the only | score of the game. The Gophers and Cornhuskers had fought each other to a virtual stand- still for almost four periods, when Nebraska, in those waning minutes, | was forced to kick. Douglas booted to Bud Wilkinson, | Gopher quarterback, on the Minne- sota 28-yard line. He ran forward 5 yards, stopped dead and flipped the ball backward to Uram. The en- | tire Nebraska team was massed on the left side of the fleld and Uram | scampered wide to the right, Field Clear for Run. OT a foe had a chance to lay a finger on him as he streaked down the sidelines for the score. The Cornhuskers started with a bang in the first, with McDonald, end, n;ukinx 27 yards on an end-around play. batted into the air by Wilkinson and Uram, but John Howell, quarter, snatched it for & 22-yard gain. ‘The Huskers got to the Minnesota 15 on a forward pass and a plunge into the line, but Minnesota stiffened and took the oval on an incompleted pass. Again in the third Nebraska threat- ened with a 27-yard heave from An- drews to McDonald, but King, Gopher end, spoiled the march when he nabbed the next pass on Minnesota's 4-yard stripe. This was Nebraska's last bid for the game. Line-ups and Summary, Nebrasks (0. Minnesota (7). IO XA IOLY L} [ Score by periods: Nebraska Minnesota + Scorine t o 3 touchdown. Wilkinson, piace-kick) " 17 CONNECTICUT MAN TAKES RIFLE LEAD Eric Johnson Wins Short-Range Pos. Event, Is Third in Another of Camp Simms Meet. RIC JOHNSON, Hamden, Conn., took a lead for the individual aggregate championship in today's matches of the National Capital Rifle Club’s two-day tournament at Camp Simms. Johnson won first place in the na- tional short-range individual event with a score of 399 out of a possible 400, and placed third in the Potomac Dewar match with a score of 393. These were the only matches fired today, which counted in the individual aggregate. W. P. Schweitzer, Hillside, N. J., and J. C. Lippencott, jr., ‘Elizabeth, N. J, captured the two-man events fired today, the Dewar and the two- man short-range, scoring identically total of 792 out of a possi- events today will close the McDonald’s forward then was | o TWELFTH IN ROW TOTIGER ELEVEN Tremendous Power of Last Season Missing in 20-0 Win From Rutgers. By the Assoclated Press. RINCETON, N. J, October 10. —Princeton’s team stretched its winning streak to 12 games today by defeating Rutgers, its oldest rival, 20 to 0, before a crowd | of 20,000 at Palmer Stadium. Princeton today fafled to show the tremendous power which carried it to the top of the Eastern ranking last year. Although the score and sta- tistics were heavily in its favor, i was slowed down considerably by a stubborn Rutgers defense. The Scarlets' offense, however, was | completely squelched by the Prince- ton forwards. It made three first downs, but for the full game lost 9 yards by rushing, while Princeton col- lected 16 first downs and gained 201 yards on the ground. Lynch Dropkicks Field Goal. M LYNCH, sophomore fullback from Birmingham, Mich., brought Princeton its first points, drop-kick- ing a field goal from his own 36-yard line in the opening quarter. after Rutgers had halted a 30-yard advance at that point. ‘The Tigers’ first touchdown came in the second quarter. A sudden shower made ball handling difficult, and Tony Naparmano, Rutgers halfback from Newark, fumbled on his own 31- yard line. Tom Mountain of East Orange, another sophomore, recov- White of Lebanon, Pa, carried the ball to the 5-yard mark. From there Mountain crashed through the left side of his line to score, and Ken Sandbach. of Maplewood, N. J., quar- terback, converted. Sandbach Boots Three-Pointer. SANDBACH made a perfect place- ment from the 25-yard stripe in the third quarter. The final score resulted from an- other “break” in the final period. Rutgers had held for downs to stop a goalward drive, and had the ball close to its goal line. Wally Pringle dropped back to kick, but threw a pass instead. Jim Salsich of Colum- intercepted the toss and dashed 16 ‘yndu for a touchdown. Sandbach | was rushed in to kick the extra point. | Line-ups and Summary. Rutgers (0). Princeton (20). Harvi ___ Bave A g | | | | 00 DmzwngQ OH g Stanowicz Score by periods: Rutgers __ Princeton” 3 3 7—20 Scoring: Princeton—Touchdowns, Moun.. tain, Salisch: field goals. Lynch, Sand- bach: points after bach (2). HARVARD SUBDUES Three Crimson Touchdowns . Called Back Because of Penalties. By tne Associated Press. AMBRIDGE, Mass, October < 10.—A stubborn Brown team went down to a 28-0 defeat before an improved Hal eleven in the thirty-eighth renewal of their rivalry at the stadium today. Lowering skies and a hint of rain held the crowd to a scant 15,000 The Crimson's four touchdowns were scattered through the first, sec- ond and fourth periods. George Roberts, Harvard's flashy quarterback, accounted for the first of the Crimson's tallies in the opening period with a 35-yard dash through the Brown line. Oakes, substituting in the Crimson backfield, added the second and in the final period Bob Stuart, also a substitute, accounted for the other two tallies. Penalties Prove Costly. THR“ times Harvard men crossed the Brown goal line, only to be called back. In the second period Gaffney broke through to block a % | Brown punt on the visitors’ goal line and’Kevorkian fell on the ball, but a teammate was offside. On the next Roberts took the ball and ran half the length of the fleld to cross the line, but a clipping penalty wiped out the score. Again in the final period Russell, substitute center, grabbed a loose ball on a Brown lateral that went awry and ran from the center of the fleld for an apparent score, only to have it called back. Line-ups and S g Harvard_(2R). _“wint Har 2 ‘Touchdown: < for. rts). 2. Points after touchdown—Allen (place- kicks). 2. Struck (place-kicks). 2. . FUMBLE AIDS BOSTON U. Blazes Way to 6-0 Victory Over Toledo's Eleven. TOLEDO, Ohio, October 10 (A)— A third-period fumble proved costly to the University of Toledo’s Rockets today, Boston University recovering on the Toledo 10-yard stripe and put- ting over & touchdown in two plays to win & muddy battle 6 to 0. ered for Princeton, and he and Jack | bus, Ohio, quarterback replacement, | touchdown, Sand- | STUBBORN BRUINS KEATING SUPPLIES * VICTORY YARDAGE {Heads 31-Yard Drive, Flips Touchdown Lateral in 7-t0-0 Triumph, Bpecia! Dispitch to The Star. INCINNATI, Ohio, October 10. —=Scoring a touchdown with less than 15 seconds to play, Georgetown University defeat- ed Cincinnati, 7-0, last night before 5,000 spectators, who saw the Bearcats twice set the Hoyas back on their own 2-yard line. After Tommy Keating, replacing | Mouline, advanced from Cincinnati's 31-yard line to the 8 on four plays, | Georgetown scored when Keating flipped a lateral to Joe Keegin, who skirted right end for the touchdown. Georgetown was in trouble repeat- edly, although it gained almost twice | as much yardage as Cincinnati. Not | until the final period could George- town’'s backs gain consistentiz on the sloppy field, Keating Quick to Start. (GEORGETOWN had the ball Cincinnati's 31-yard line wk Keating was rushed into action. O the first play Tommy circled left end for eight yards and then hit right tackle to place the ball on Cincin- nati’s 19. He picked up three, five land three before he lost in trying | to crack center. He then tossed the payoff pass to Keegin. Valiquette con- verted the extra point and the game | ended immediately after Georgetown ! kicked off, Georgetown fought with its back to the wall throughout the first half | and twice was forced back to its own * 2-yard line, Hilltoppers Fooled. 'HE Hilltoppers ran into an unex- pectedly sturdy forward wall and after two plays had failed to net a gain, Fleming booted to Haby, who zig-zagged back 27 yards to the Cin- cinnati 48. The Bearcats experienced trouble in plercing Georgetown's line# | however, and Gant punted to Keating, who returned eight yards to the Hoya 20. On the next play Georgetown was set back to its 2-yard line by & clip- | ping penalty. Fleming kicked the mud-caked ba!l out on Georgetown's 24, but again the Hoyas held and tovk the ball cn downs on the 21. Georgetown punted on the third dewn tc Cincinnati’s 35 | Gant, Cincinnati ful'back, finally sliced through the Georgetown 1 | for 11 yards on two plays, but Ha | lost & and when the Bearcats drew li | a penalty for holding, Gant pun‘ed 5| out of bounds on Georgetown's 43. Keating smashed off right tackle for 11 yards and then fumbled, but Shuker, Hoya guard, recovered and Georgetown appeared lheaded for a touchdown when a Iateral, Keating to Duff, netted 5 yards and Keating ad- vanced 5 more for a first down. An Old One Still Works. CINCINNAT['S line held at this point and the Bearcats took the ball on their own 25-yard lme. After, failing to gain through the lines, Gant tricked the Hoyas on the moth-eaten Statue of Liberty play and raced to Georgetown's 46 as the quartar ended. Three stabs at the linc wicked up only 8 yards and Gant punted out on Georgetown's 2-yard line. Duff booted back to Georgetown's 31 and Gant battered through tackle for 7 yards. The Hilltoppers again braced, how- ever, and took the oval on their 22. A punting duel throughout the sec- ond quarter kept the ball deep .1 Georgetown's territory, but after a lateral from Nolan to Moulin gained | 10 yards, Fleming booted to Cincin- nati’s 25. A clipping penalty and 5- yard loss put Cincinnati back to its | 5-yard line and after Gant kicked ou ! on the Bearcats' 32 Georgetown aga. threatened. Duff battered right tackle for yards, placing the ball on Cincinnat. 17 and then advanced 5 more whe. | the Bearcats were offside. Duff cracke i | the line for 5 yards on two plays to | plant Georgetown on the 7-yard lin: at the half. With Fleming out-punting Gant and with the aid of several penalties, | Georgetown pushed Cincinnati back to |its 1-yard line in the third quarter, but after an exchange of kicks, Manny blocked Duff’s attempted boot and Doud and Feldhaus recovered on Cin- | cinnati’'s 45 to end the threat tem- porarily, Line-ups and Summary, Cincinnati (0). | Georgetown (7). Williams Straike WREOREROrFrY - Keating Valiquetis y Georgetown Cincinnati Touchdown: Georgetown—Keegin. Point after wuchdu-n-—vnxgneue. Georgetown substitutions—Nolan. R. H.: Fleming. L. E.. BUHL G nnat{ _substitution: . Lk E: lein. C.: Seibert. L. E.; Shelby . Robb (Pittsbure). (Oincinnati'. McLaren Charles Umpire—Mr. Head linesman—Mr. Chor‘z ‘(Pittsburg). _Fleld Jjudge—Mr, ~ Harrington (Cincinnati). EASY FOR MARQUETTE 0 St. Louis U. Is Defeated, 32-6, in Chicago Game. CHICAGO, Ill, October 10 (#).— Art Guepe and Ray Sonneberg, a pair of fleet backs, conducted Marquette to a 32-to-6 foot ball victory over St. Louis University at Soldier Field to- | day. Approximately 20,000 persons wit- nessed the game, proceeds of which went to charity. Sonneberg scored once in the first | period and twice in the final quarter and Art Guepe accounted for second and third period touchdowns ang added the extra points on both occa- sions.