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® VIOLETS GET EVEN There Were Plenty of Thrill WITH LATE TALLY Sensational Catch of Pass Ends G. U.’s Undefeated, Unscored-on Status. BY FRANCIS E. STAN, Btaff Correspondent of The Star. EW YORK, October 24.—The N twice-beaten Violets of New York University retained a portion of the Indian sign they hold over Georgetown today and knocked the undefeated Hilltoppers from the list of untied and unscored- upon elevens by holding them to & n-7 tie before 16,000 spectators in ‘Yankee Stadium. With & thrust that stood out in sharp contrast in a battle of hard- tackling iinemen, Quarterback Bernie Bloom of the Violets whipped a long, low pass in the final quarter to Half- back Harry Shorten for a touchdown to prevent Georgetown from winning a victory it has coveted for six years, or ever since a Hoya eleven last de- feated New York U. in 1929, Earlier in the dramatic battle, Larry Hardy, Georgetown center, had crashed through the line to block & punt by Danny Dowd, scoop it up, and race 35 yards for a touchdown that promised to elevate Hilltop foot ball to new heights. Throughout the entire fray the Violets were the ag- gressors, but despite the superiority of their running game it looked as if Hardy's touchdown and the extra point added by Wilfred Valiquette would suffice, Makes Sensational Catch. HEN, hurled back only a few mo- ments before, while less than four yards from Georgetown's goal, New York made its aerial thrust. Taking Fullback Bill Duff’s punt in midfield, Bloom raced back to the Hoyas' 30-yard line, there to Wwhip the pass for the tying touchdown. Both Tony Barabas and Dooley were on the ball, but Shorten in some miraculous manner made the catch from beneath their very noses while across the goal line. George Brown, a guard, booted squarely over the goal post to tie the score. The Violets outplayed the Hoyas. Not until the dying moments did Georgetown's at- tack start to function, with the result | that New York University made 11 first downs to 6, gained 164 yards by rushing to 111, and gained 52 yards on passes to 27. Hilltoppers Alert. THE saving grace of the Hilltoppers was their alertness in intercept- ing passes. Five times they nullified Violet marches by snaring passes | thrown by the enemy, and on other | occasions when New York University threatened to score Barabas, Al Sny- der, Hardy and Stralka rose to the | heights by desperate stands. In the dying moments of the first | period Nolan gave Georgetown its first and only real chance to march to a touchdown when he intercepted & Violet pass on the enemy's 22-yard line. Aided by a penalty against i N. Y. U, the Hoyas reached the 11 on first down, but Mal Stevens’ team made a goal-line stand, took the ball | on downs and kicked to safety, Georgetown'’s score, coming with only four minutes left to play in the first half, was due to a brilliant, spec- tacular play by the lanky Hardy. N. Y. U. had rammed to & first down | on its 45, but the Hoyas braced and Dowd dropped back to kick. Hardy, coming out of his roving position back of the line, drove in fast and smoth- ered the kick, which rolled toward the | goal, Without losing stride he raced | past Dowd, picked up the ball on the run, and carried it across. ‘Whistle Halts Hoyas. HAD not time been against them, | the Hoyas might have scored again. Seemingly panicky, the Vio- lets attempted a pass in their own territory after taking the kick-off; Hardy leaped to intercept it and shot a lateral to Barabas, who carried the ball to New York's 25. Here Tommy Keating started a lateral that made it a fiset down on the 15, but before Georgetown could follow up the whis- tle sounded. Neither team could click in the third quarter, but once the final period started the Violets’ attack began to roll. Recovering a fumble by Keat- ing on their own 43, the Violets reeled off four consecutive first downs to plant the ball on the 10-yard line. Here Georgetown’'s weary warriors gallantly rallied and hurled back big Ed Willlams, a Negro fullback, and the fleet Mike Stelmach, who had gained consistently a few minutes be- fore. Finally the Hoyas took the ball on downs, less than 4 yards from their goal. The worst seemed to be over, but less than a minute later Bloom and Shorten struck. Line-ups and Summary. Pos. E. . rgetown o New York U.. o Hardy ). int Touchdowns — (Georgetown), @horten (N. Y. U. Points after touch- (dfi'n—vu)lilllflu (Georgetown), Brown Substitutions: Georgetown—End, Nee; 2 troskey: s, ardy; . . New York U— Littlefield; tacl Mond, glrfl, ri; backs. Psu- mma, Saverese, orten, T ley, Ends, Dunney. orschauser; ine. 8ivak, KANSAS STATE SCORES MANHATTAN, Kans, October 24 (#)—Kansas State mauled an under- dog Kansas University Jayhawk in their annual Big Six Conference foot ball game here today, 26 to 6, before 14,000 fans. Kansas State ran up s 26-0 lead in the first three quarters and bhad everything its own way. and Mary (Norfolk branch) by | By the Associated Press. | NOXVILLE, Tenn., October 24. | —Thomas (Red) Harp, 155+ pound halfback, pulled down & punt and raced 70 yards for a touchdown in the last period today to give Tennessee's Volunteers a 15-to- 13 decision over the hitherto unbeaten Duke Blue Devils. Approximately 20,000 home-coming day fans witnessed the brilliant scor- ing duel, with Maj. Bob Neyland and Tennessee's aggressive gridders main- taining the “Knoxville jinx” over Wal- lace Wade and Duke, previously un- conquered in four games and rated one of the Nation's strongest elevens. Trailing, 9 to 6, after Tennessee rallied to score a safety and a touch- down early in the third period, Duke seemed to have grabbed victory when Elmore (Honey) Hackney fired a bullet pass for a touchdown to Capt. Clarence (Ace) Parker in the end zone to move ahead, 13 to 9. Harp's 70-Yard Run Decides. and Harp and Parker sparring for nessee halfback wrapped his arms around one of the Duke quarterback’s long boots on the 30-yard ling, swept teammates formed a beautiful line of interference and galloped across the goal for the winning points, Tennessee played brilliantly all the way. With their offensive checked for most of the first half, the Volunteers’ light but hard-charging | line stoped three Duke scoring threats almost on the goal line.” Once they threw up a stone-wall defense to halt a drive at the 3-yard line, again on the 1-foot line and another time at the 4-yard stripe. It was after that last stand by Tennessee the Blue Devils scored. Harp punted from behind his goal to Hackney, who took the ball on his own 46, almost stumbled, but re- covered his balance and skirted down the side line 54 yards for a touch- down. Hackney missed the extra point. Early in the third period Phil Dick- ens, running and passing star of the battle, punted to Duke's 3. Parker dropped back deep in the end zone on punt formation, but attempted to pass. Frank Crawford, Tennessee tackle, leaped high to bat the ball down be- hind the goal for an automatic safety. Safety Arouses Vols. 'HE Volunteers appeared to take on new life after scoring and started a touchdown drive after Parker punted from his 25. Dickens passed to Bow- By the Assoctated Press. ITT'S infuriated Panthers ' handed Notre Dame its worst defeat in 22 years to- day as six other major teams were wiped off the undefeate ed list and Minnesota’s Gophers, turning loose the power for -the first time this year, rolled up its twenty-first consecutive victory. Upset by Duquesne in shocking fashion a week ago, Pitt gained double consolation this week. First Duquesne, unbeaten, untied and unscored upon, was knocked off by West Virginia Wesleyan last night. ‘Then the Panthers routed Notre Dame, 26-0, before a crowd of 70,- 000 to put themselves right back in the running for a possible Rose Bowl nomination. , Meanwhile, 50,000 watched Min- nesota roll over Purdue, previously unbeaten, with a tricky lateral- passing offensive, 33 to 0. The Boil- ermakers put up a great fight for the first balf, but bowed to Minne« sota’s superior reserve strength in: the end. i Joining Notre Dame and Purdue in the beaten list for the first time were St Mary's of Californis, .'/\ ITH about 5 minutes left to play “breaks” with punts, the little Ten- | toward the side of the field as his | the score of 16 to 15. 'Harp’s 70-Yard Punt Return To Tally for Vols Gives Duke 15-13 Beating, Season’s First on Duke's 27. Dickens swept around |end for 14. Halfback Melvin Herring !Ilfltd at the line, but on the next play raced to the goal line to take a pass from Dickens for & score. Her- ring place-kicked the extra point. After six minutes of play in the fourth period, Duke bounced back into 24-yard toss to Parker, who leaped over two Tennessee players to pull down the ball over the goal. Hackney place-kicked the extra point. Tennessee opened up a passing at- tack, but Duke's defense was too alert. defense equally impenetrable, and, with the ball resting on the Blue | Devils' 36, Parker booted another of | his long kicks down to Harp on the 130, and the diminutive halfback | breezed the 70 yards for the winning | margin. Duke's line when the game ended. Line-ups and Summary. Du‘k:n:l(!l. Tennessee (15). S NIHOHINAC Y WxNwm-0 Q- o 0 Duke scoring—Touchdowns, Hackney, Parker: point from try after touchdown. Hackney (placement). Tennessee scoring— Touchdowns. ~Herring. Harp Dickens): point from try after touch- down. Herring (placement); safety, Craw- | ford. RED RAIDERS MAKE SNAPPY COMEBACK (sub_for | Down Lafayette, 41-0, With Keen Running and Aerial Attack. Score in Each Period. BY the Assoclated Press, HAMILTON, N. Y., October 24— Hammering at the line with a pow- erful running attack and completing many passes, Colgate’s Red Raiders rebounded from the defeat of last week by trouncing Lafayette today, 41-0. From the moment in the first quarter when Red Chesbro, tackle, scored on a tricky lateral pass play, the Raiders were complete masters of the battling but overpowered Leopards. The home team scored in every quarter and might have run up & larger score if Coach Andy Kerr had den Wyatt for 28 yards and first down kept the first eleven in the game, bus Pitt’s Rout of Notre Dame Marks Jittery Grid Day Catholic U. Among Seven Major Teams to Have Clean SlfltesvSpoiled—Gophers Roll On. Michigan State, Duke, North Caro- lina and Catholic University. St. Mary’s lost,a grueling 7-6 decision to Fordham's Rams, who thus will take a perfect record into the battle with Pitt next Saturday. Michigan State bowed to Mar- quette's unbeaten array, 13-7, and Catholic was bowled over by Mis- sissippi, 14-0. Duke, which had looked like one of the country’s finest, bowed to Tennessee’s fighting Volunteers in & spectacular engagement at Knox= ville, 15-13, while North Carolina was no match for Tulane’s unde- feated Green Wave and surren- dered, 21-7. While Pitt’ and Fordham were upholding Eastern intersectional prestige, Manhattan and Syracuse dropped decisions to foes from oth- er sections, Manhattan was beaten by Detroit and Syracuse by Mary- the lead when Hackney completed a | However, Duke found the Tennessee | | The Volunteers were driving into | SPORTS SECTION he Swunday Star WASHINGTON, D. C, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 25, 1936. N. Y. U. Holds Hoyas to 7-7 Tie : Maryland Trounces Syracuse, 20-0 Race Drake of Gallaudet is living up to his name by racing through the foe for 35 yards, but his team finally lost a ha TROIANS PLASTER STANFORD, 14101 Dunn’s Touchdown Scored on Intercepted Heave, Settles Issue. By the Associated Press. - PALO ALTO, Calif., October 24. — Coupling savage ground and serial thrusts with breaks of the game, Southern Califor- nia’s Trojans continued pounding toward an undefeated foot ball record today with a 14-to-7 victory over Stanford's Indians, Thirty-five thousand fans saw the 1936 gridiron creation of Howard Jones | thunder through and over a Stanford team for the first time since 1932. Southern California’s first touch- down came in the second period. A pass thrown by Stanford's left-handed fullback, Jake Brigham, was inter- cepted by big Gilbert Kuhn, U. 8. C. center and captain. He was spilled at midfield, from where the Trojans brought all their power to bear in a ground and aerial attack. Wehba, substitute left end, caught a pass over the goal line. Wehba also added the extra point. Stanford Drives 73 Yards, AN INTERCEPTED pass in the fourth period gave the Trojans a two-touchdown lead. Coye Dunn, sub- stitute half, hauled down Brigham's throw 35 yards from Stanford's goal, and behind good interference sprinted over the line. Stanley, substitute right end, place-kicked the extra point. Before Trojan followers were com- fortably settled after a wild cheering outburst, Stanford came back with a touchdown of its own, at the end of a 73-yard drive. Calvelli, substituted fullback, went over from the 1-yard line, and Luckett, substitute quarter- back, added the point. Varied Sports College Soccer, Penn State, 2: Lafayette, 0. Navy. 1: ¥ale, 0. Pennsylvanis, 3; Cornell, 2. Cross Country, North Carolina, 20; Washington and Lee, 35 army. 24; Princeton, 43; Columbis, 54. Nesro Foot Ball. Virginia _State, 14; North Carolina A 2 nttucky industrial. 9: Tuskesee. 0. house, Morris Brown, 0 14; Pisk University, 7. Scholastic Foot Ball, Virginia Eiscopal, 39; Virginia Presby- e " High, 13; Glass High (Lynch- re). 7. fleld, 33-0; Villanova stopped Bose ton University, 25-7, and Yale trounced Rutgers, 28-0. The Eastern program otherwise was marked by Princeton's 7-0 conquest of Navy before 51,000; Dartmouth’s 26-7 rout of Harvard; Penn's impressive 48-6 parade Brown; & 41-0 victory for Colgate over Lafayette, and Core pell's 13-7 defeat of Penn State. In the Midwest, Northwestern, which tackles Minnesota next week, Kkept its undefeated record intact by trampling Illinois, 13-3 as Michi- gan upset a favored Columbia eleven, 13-0, and Ohio State knocked over Indiana, 7-0. Ne= braska took a strangle hold on Big Six honors by whipping Oklahoma, 14-0, as Missouri earned its first conference victory since 1932 in trimming Iowa State, 10-0, and Kansas State fomped over Kansas, 26-6. The Southwest Conference race found Texas A. and M. still on top; although held to a scoreless draw by Baylor. Rice unexpectedly upset Texas. 7-0. as Texas Ohris- tian and Mississippi Stats of the Py Sports Program For Local Fans TODAY. Horse Show. Inter-American competition, Meadowbrook Saddle Club, East- West Highway, 2. TOMORROW. Boxing. Cowboy Howard Scott vs. Mexi- can Joe Rivers, 10 rounds, feature bout, Turner's Arena, 8:30. TUESDAY. Foot Ball. Tech vs. Western, Tech Stadium (public high title series), 3:30. FRIDAY. Foot Ball. Catholic University vs. Loyola of the South, New Orleans, La. Roosevelt vs. Eastern, Roosevelt Stadium (public high title series), 3:30. Woodrow Wilson vs. Bethesda, Md., 3:30, Richmond University Frosh va. :l;;yhnd Frosh, College Park, Md., Georgetown Prep vs. St. Albans, Massachusetts and Wisconsin aves nues, 3:30. ‘Washington and Lee High vs. Woodberry Forest, Orange, Va. SATURDAY. Foot Ball. Georgetown vs. Shenandoah, Grifith Stadium, 2:30. Wilson Teachers' College vs. Gallaudet, Kendall Green, 2:30. George Washington vs. Rice In- stitute, Houston, Tex. Maryland vs. Florida, Gaines- ville, Fla. American University vs. Bridge= water, Dayton, Va. Howard University vs. College, Howard Stadium, ROANOKE TOPS W.-M. AFTER 13-YEAR WAIT Strikes Twice in Opening Half for 13-0 Win—Indians Muft Scoring Chances. By the Assoctated Press. WD.L!AMBBURG. Va,, October 24. —Roanoke College struck twice in the first half here today to achieve its first victory over Willlam and Mary in 13 years, 13 to 0. Two concerted drives totaling 79 yards brought the Maroons’ touch- downs, but the rest of the game they were occupled chiefly in checking William and Mary advances. The Indians had a number of op- portunities to score, but just could not cash in on their chances. Landon, Morgan Boutheastern Conference battled to another scoreless tie. In the South the defeats of Duke and North Carolina over- shadowed the rest of the proe gram, but Vanderbilt surprised by holding Georgia Tech to a score- less tie and Florida gave Kentucky s tussle before surrendering, 7-0. Auburn and . Louisiana State, un- ' defeated, but tled, were returned Arkansas, 19-7. In the Southern Conference, North Carolina State won from Virginia Tech, 13-0; ‘Washington over Virginia, 13-0; Virginia Military over Richmond, 20-0, and Davidson over Citadel, 21-0. Washington, Washington State and Southern California remained unbeaten .n the Pacific Coast Con- ference race. Washingtou won from California, 13-0; Southern California upset Stanford for the first time since 1933, 14-7, and ‘Washington State eked out & 3-0 victory over Oregon. Utah State moved to the front in the Rocky Mountain Confer- ence by handing Utah ita first de- feat, 13-0. s in Game at Kendall Green ir-raising battle yesterday to William —Star Staff Photo. COLUMBIA FALLS BEFORE MICHIGAN Intersectional Upset, 13-0, Is Wolverines’ Initial Victory of Season. By the Associated Press, NN ARBOR, Mich, October 24—Kicked around by Mid- A west rivals in three games, University of Michigan's foot ball team found its scoring punch to- day and conquered Columbia Uni- versity, 13 to 0, in an intersectional upset before 25,000, ‘The victory, the first for the Wolver- ines since they won from Penn a year ago, preserved & 10-year string of triumphs over intersectional foes that began after Navy defeated Michigan in 1926, Bad Kick Hurts Lions. A REVAMPED line-up played heads- up foot ball as the heretofore luckless Wolverines capitalized on breaks to score in the second and fourth periods, while repelling re- peated threats by the Lions, who had lost only to Army this season. Led by the elusive Sid Luckman, Columbia was in scoring position several times, reaching the 1-yard line in the third period only to be repulsed. In the second period Hubert Schulze, the Columbfa punting ace who amassed an average of 51 yards against Army, got off a poor kick from his own goal line. The ball bounced backward to the Columbia 18, Wally Hook lugged the ball to the 11, Then Cedric Sweet. on a line buck, found a hole and crossed the goal line, standing up. John Smithers plaece-kicked the extra point. Scores on Interception. WITH only two minutes remaining of the final period, and Columbia passing desperately to overcome the one-touchdown deficit, Stark Ritchie snared the second of two passes thrown by Joe Vollmer, Lion half- back, from behind his own goal. Ritchie took the ball on the Co- lumbia 35 and raced across the goal line. Smithers’ try for the extra point was wide. Line-ups and Summary. ~ Columbia (0)s Michigan (13). Schul: Patanelli (c.) Siegel 2 ichigan I ‘Touchdowns—Sweet, ichigan scol mxrl.u. Point touchdown—=8mith- ers (place-kick). L. S. U. 19-7 VICTOR OVER RAZORBACKS Makes Hard Running Game Tell, Despite Wet Fieldl—Arkansas Tally Is Fluke. By the Associated Press. Smmoa'r. La, October 24— Louisiana State University's Tigers turned back the University of Arkan-~ sas Razorbacks, 19 to 7, before 15,000 fans st the Louisiana State Fair to- A steady rain made for heavy foot- ing on the playing field. The ’ hard- attack dominated the play, although Arkan- several long gains through [ 3 Holy Cross Pass Downs Plaid, 7-0 By the Associated Press. mem Mass., October 24 +7" Holy Cross’ undefeated Cru- saders, forced to fight a desperate defensive battle for three full periods, suddenly turned to the at- tack with eléctrifying, last-quarter thrusts to score & touchdown and defeat & powerful Carnegie Tech squad, 7-0, before 19,000 spectators today. A sensational 34-yard gallop around left end by Charlie Brucato on a tricky and perfectly executed fake quick-kick play and a bull's eye forward pass from S8ophomore Henry Ouellette to O'Donnell swept the Crusaders 44 yards to their touchdown just when the big crowd was resigning itself to a scoreless tie. " W. and M. of Norfolk Gains Decision by 16-15 With Drop-Kicked Goal. N ONE of the tightest games ever played at Kendall Green, Gallau- ] det lost a heartbreaker to the Norfolk division of William and Mary College yesterday, when a fleld goal provided the medium by which the visitors eked out a 16-15 decision. Tied, 13-13, after they had gotten off to a two-touchdown lead in the second quarter, the Blues watched the game sail out of their hands as| Claiborne Nixon's drop-kick soared | over their goal from the 15-yard line in the third period. Makes Deliberate Safety. FIGHTING desperately, Gallaudet | stormed down the field, only to | fumble on its foe's 15-yard stripe and, | rather than risk a blocked punt which | might have turned the tide in favor | of the Blues, Nixon, the William and Mary kicker, touched the ball down | in the end zone for & voluntary safety. Previously, two long runs within the last four minutes of the first half | enabled the visitors to match Gallau- | det’s two touchdowns earlier in the period. Padgett, a sub back, returned a punt 80 yards for the first and Ed- monds, another sub, galloped 40 yards after catching a pass for the second. At that it was a moral victory for | the Kendall Greeners, who were | slaughtered, 34-0, by the same team last year. Drake Scores for Blues. RACE DRAKE, stubby quarterback, | scored both of Gallaudet’s touch- downs, crossing the final white line on short line plunges after passes had placed the ball in scoring position. Weighing only 132 pounds, Drake managed to elude would-be tacklers almost every time he carried the ball. | Gallaudet's line performed superbly throughout the game and showed a vast improvement since the 18-0 de- feat by Bridgewater two weeks ago. Robert Harris played exceptionally well while Ray Hoehn, Norman Brown and Leo Lats did good work at the ends. Line-ups and Summary. W. & M. (Nore Gallau- folk) (16). det (15). Adams _ - _Brown ulbertson _ Mrkrobad __ Thorpe Reidieberg Tollefson - Hoehn Drake BUCKEYSON PACES HOT TERP ATTACK Defense Also Is Powerful as Orange Is Checked Along All Lines. BY. BURTON HAWKINS, Staff Correspondent ot The Star. YRACUSE, N. Y., October 24.— Marked for execution by a dese perate Syracuse foot ball team, blushing Bill Guckeyson rammed his bid for all-America gridiron hone ors down the collective throats of an Orange eleven that resembled so many lemons as the sharp-faced lad led Maryland to a 20-0 victory here today before 15,000 spectators. Blushing Bill played an integral part in the scoring of two Maryland touch- downs and probably missed being an important factor in the scoring of the third only because he was on the bench at the time. An alert Terrapin line effectively throttled Syracuse’s dangerous leathere lugging triumverate of Vannie Albae nese, Ray Reckmack and Marty Glicke man, Much of Maryland's crack defene sive work featured the elongated Vie Willis and Blair Smith, ends. Both boys repeatedly tore through the Syracuse line to drop the Orange backs in their tracks. Guckeyson in Command. UCKEYSON was the ring master for the day, however, as he cracked his whip in fine fashion. He with Virginia last week and come pletely befuddled Syracuse's welle planned but ineffective attempts to bottle him up. Guckeyson paved the way to Marye land's first touchdown early in the second period when he recovered Perkins’ fumble on the Syracuse 34. Bill then cracked right tackle for 9 yards, but the Terps were penale ized 15 yards for holding. Marye land regained the distance, however, when Syracuse was penalized for une- necessary roughness. Bill then uncorked a sizzling pass to Jumbo Jim Meade, who was stopped in his tracks at the 6-yard line. Guckeyson started around left end, shook off two tacklers and crossed the goal line standing. Gormley booted the extra point. Breaks Aid Terrapins. Nolan’s punt 15 yards to Marye land’s 40, Guckeyson quick-kicked, the ball glancing off the leg of Morison, Syracuse safety man, at the 10-yard line. Meade pounced on the ball at the Syracuse 6. After two smashes at a desperate Syracuse forward wall proved futile, Coach Frank Dobson replaced Ellinger for Headley at quarterback for Maryland and his strategy was successful on the fole lowing play. Running far to his right, Guckeyson drew the Syracuse secondary over in | his direction. Bill then faded back and shot a pass across the field to | Gormley, who was standing alone in | the left part of the zone. Gormley's attempted placement of the extra point was low. Syracuse made its most potent bid for s touchdown late in the second quarter when it launched an aerial barrage, which carried the Orange from its own 25 to Maryland's 34 be- fore the half-time whistle terminated the threat. After Syracuse fought Maryland on even terms throughout most of the third quarter, Ellinger put the third touchdown drive in motion late in g | that period when he sliced off rignt nd Mary scoring: downs—Padgett, Edmonds. Field goal fter touchdown—Edmonds, Gallaudet scoring: Touchdowns—Drake (2). Point after touchdown—Hoffmeister. Safety—Nixon (intentional). Substitutions: Gallaudet—Akens. Har- ris. Barron, Wolach, Atwood. Breedlove, Latz. W, M__Matthews, Padgett, Gildner, Riganto, Edmonds, Carter and Chapman. Offcials: Referee—Mr. Cohill (Wash- ingion_ College). = Umpire—Mr. (Maryland). Pield judge—Mr. (Columbis ) BEARSBATTERED BY HUSKES, T34 Washington Moves Closer to Rose Bowl, Victim Out of Title Race. By the Assoclated Press. EATTLE, October 24 (A).—Uni- versity of Washington charged another lap closer to the Rose Bowl today, with a 13-to-0 foot ball triumph over California. ‘The victory was the third straight for Coach Jimmy Phelan and his Huskies and kept Washington in the Pacific Coast forefront with an unde- feated, untied record in conference competition. Minnesota, however, holds & 14-to-7 win over the Huskies in intersectional play. Cain and Haines Score. '|‘WINTY thousand spectators saw > tor Bilt ‘Washington virtually eliminate | Budko! California from the Coast League race when Jimmy Cain and Byron Haines dove over the Bear goal line for touch- downs. -Both scores were made from the 1-foot line on fourth downs, Cain div- ing over center for the first score in the second period and Haines circling left end for the other in the third. ‘Washington hurled the Bears back with only one first down and that was made on the first two plays. WILSON HIGH ON TOP. tackle and raced 20 yards to the 4| Orange 34-yard line. A lateral from Headley to Meade carried down to the Syracuse 7 and Headley then pranced around right end to the 1-foot line. Meade bat- tered right tackle twice to score and Gormley added the extra point, Theatens Near Close. ARYLAND threatened again in the final period when Mike Sure gent, Old Line guard, intercepted More ison's pass on Maryland's 41. Head- ley and Meade made a first down on Syracuse's 48, but the Terps were set back 20 yards on successive offside and holding penalties before Meade punted out of bounds on the Syra- cuse 39. Smith partially blocked Reckmack’s attempted pass and caught the ball in midair while falling on the Syrae cuse 29-yard line. Syracuse braced, however, and Meade kicked into the end zone. The statistics fail to demonstrate Maryland's superiority, although the fact that Syracuse made a net gain of only 49 yards from scrimmage is indicative of the margin. Line-ups and Summary. {vl. Maryland (20). Syracuse (0). Smith Rek: uckeyson, Gormley, Points after touchdown—Gorms (place kicks). Substitutions— . (Bulick for Fletcher. Gormiey alton for P. Dearmey. Head- linger for Headley. Heade . Weldinger for Meade, ick. J. Dearmey for Sure gent. Eenell for Birkland: Svracuse. Per- ins’ for Reckmack Jamieson for Kane, Glickman for Morison Hemingway for Handler. Taylor for Nolan. Baylock for A Ritree R . Carrinaton _(Virst . A Car n n pmpire A H, Siarpe THS Linesm — ng (Penn). Pleld judge—! Pirst downs . ___ Yards gained rushing_ Yards lost rushing . _ Forward passes attempted rward passes completed ards zained by forward Forwards intercepted by. % 5 S CremBa5Bisnn tw - Fimpe e o where: Eicked. merely picked up where he left off A LITTLE later after returning }