Evening Star Newspaper, November 1, 1936, Page 30

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PORTS. THE SUNDAY STAR, ’WASHINGTON D. C, NOVEMBER 1, 1936—PART ONE. SPORTS. Villanova Stopped : Harvard, Princeton Tie : Dartmouth, ‘Irish’ Win CRIMSON, INRALLY, Scores in Last 4 Minutes of | r Upset—Tallies First Over Tiger Since 1920. BY BILL KING, Associated Press Sports Writer. AMBRIDGE, Mass, October 31.—Harvard’s gallant foot ball youngsters jumped Princeton’s great veteran team at the start, gave ground against wvastly superior odds and then put cn a heart-stirring finish to gain a glori- ous 14-14 tie today before 35,000 frén- mied spectators at the stadium. As was the case (6 years ago, when the last Harvard touchdowns were scored against Princeton in a game that ended in a similar deadlock, the amazingly improved Crimson forces waged a brilliant aerial battle to fin- ish on even terms. Battered to its knees by Army and Dartmouth, Harvard was forced to start four sophomores, including a sub center with only five minutes of game experience. But this revamped and inexperienced eleven fought the sluggishly starting Tigers tooth and nail and drew first blood in the second period. First Blood for Crimson. THREE long overheads, from George Roberts, an early backfield re- placement, to Don Daughters, moved Harvard 40 yards to Princeton's 3- yard line. From there Mal McTernen scored on a tricky end run that caught the Princeton secondaries flat-footed. The Tigers lost little time tying the score on a 25-yard end sweep by Bill Lynch, sub fullback, after Jack White had returned a Harvard punt 25 yards and Ken Sandbach had passed to Biil Rawls, for about 20 more. Another Sandbach - Rawls pass, which worked for 35 yards, gave Princeton a first down on Harvard's 3-yard line in the third session and the Tigers appeared to have the game under control, when Dick White, who replaced Charlie Kaufmans at right half, plunged over for the second touchdown. Ties in Last Four Minutes. ’l‘HERE were but four minutes left when Harvard soared to glory. Bob Stuart, who replaced McTernen, intercepted a Princeton pass on his 9-yard line and then completed three passes from Art Oakes before carry~ ing a do-or-die heave that wiped out the last 35 vards to the Princeton goal line. Charlie Allen, a sub guard never before used in such a capacity, came out of the line and place-kicked the tying ‘point. Harvard played and fought like | champions all the way and carried out instructions to the last letter. Dick Harlow had ordered them to kick from a spread formation to put leg- irons on speedy Jack White, scuff their kick-offs to prevent long run- backs and use a double shift, which he introduced at Colgate in 1923, to build a fence about Steve Cullinan, Princeton’s most dangerous defensive And the underdog players | Line-ups and Summary. Harvard (14). Princeton (14). Ritter Cullinan tromery _ Toil cLea Sandbach White n DI IO Score by periods Harvard ___ Princeton 277 _ Harvard scoring: __ Touchdowns—Me- Ternen. Stuart (for McTernen). _Points sfter touchdown—Struck (placement), Al- len_(for Kessler). (placement). Touchdown—Lynne . Points (place- Harvard subs.itutions—Ends. Jameson, tackle. Booth: guard. Allen: cen- backs. Roberts, Watt, Boston, Ford, Princeton Bayer. Vrewink; Winkle. Mountain, Harper 2 Referee—R. E. Kinney (Trinity). pire—G. H. Lowe (Lafayette). 3 man_F, R. Wallace (Washington College). Field judge—A. W. Palmer (Colby). substitutions—Ends, kle, Dickey; guards, Bothwell:" backs, Whi ite, Daniel. Walsich, Um- Statistics of the Game. Har, Prince. Pirst Downs_ - 1 13 Yards gained rushing ~ 82 Forward passes attempted _ ___ 16 Forward passes intercepted by _ Forvard passes compieted by__ 11 Yards by passing __________ Punting_aver. from scrimmage_ *Total yards kicks returned Opponents’ fumbles recovered Yards lost by penalty___ == 10 (*Includes punts and kick-offs). PENN STATE'S SOPHS WHIP SYRACUSE, 18-0 Initial Major Win of Campaign Nittany Lions’ TFirst Over Orange in 7 Years. BY the Associated Press. STATE COLLEGE, Pa., October 31.— ‘Three sophomore backs crossed the Syracuse goal line today as Penn , Btate crushed Syracuse, 18-0, before & house party crowd of 10,000. The triumph was Penn State’s first . major victory of the season and its : first win over Syracuse in seven years. ‘The game marked the first time in| the history of their series that either team has scored more than two touch- | L downs. Silvano, Harrison and Metro gained the bulk of Penn State's ground os the Lions outfought their foe in evary period. Penn State led in first downs, 21 to 8, 14 gained by rushing. The Lions gained more than 300 yards by rushing and completed 3 passes for a gain of 57 yards. Albanese and Reckmack, stars of former Orange victories over Penn |, State, supplied the punch in Syracuse’s > . only scoring threat, a drive to the * 32-yard line in the second period. Line-Ups and Summary, Syracuse (0). - Rekstis '®5¢ | the Nation's undefeated major college uchdowns—Denise. Metro. Harrison. ORIty RetereeR. B, Goodwin. (W. 3 m DR, N Gt Mubien 3 . N, Gaul # ). Linesman—H. B. Ornter (Gorneil). ‘Time ‘of periods, 16 minutes. —— 'W. AND J. SNAPS SLUMP. WASHINGTON, Pa., October 31. (#).—Scoring a touchdown in each quarter, the Washington and Jeffer- son Presidents broke a two.game los- ing streak today by sweeping through ; Marjetta College, 25 to 6. » an Lynch, | L. Head lines- | 34| onio : Alabama Conquers Kentucky, 14-0, < nesota end, is picked up bodily Northwestern player in this second-period play. No. 50 EVANSTON, Ill., October 31.—Dwight Reed (No. 26), Min- at the line of scrimmage by @ is John More Than One Upset Marked Wildcats® Win Over Gophers ENDS BATILE, 1414 Zitko, end; No. 61 is Robert Voights, tackle, and No. 66 is Less Schrieber, guard, all of Northwestern. ~—Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. BUCKS UPSET, 72, AS 55,000 WATCH {Notre Dame Rises in Might Near End of First Half to Get Touchdown. BY WILLIAMS WEEKS, Notre Dame became the raging, fighting Irish of tradition for two minutes today—just long | | enough to fashion one touchdown | eyes, 7 2 Half of the battle was fought out | |in & driving rain. It produced noth- | ing quite like that fourth period a Associated Press Sports Writer. OUTH BEND, Ind., October 31.— | | that upset Ohio State's favored Buck- 7 to 2. | year ago at Columbus when the m-l‘ | spired Irish staged one of the most | spectacular of foot ball come-backs | to conquer a great Ohio eleven, 18 to 13. But there were thrills enough to | keep a near-capacity crowd of 55,000 | soaked spectators bouncing up and ‘down until the final gun cracked. Notre Dame, rated as the under- | | dog after being smashed down to | almost humiliating defeat by Pitts- | burgh a week ago, was outplayed | | in the first period, and for most of | the second session appeared headed | for another beating. Bucks' Bid Efls Weakly. “ AINING momentum in the second period, the Buckeyes pushed _ Chubel | Notre Dame back steadily, but all | back. | they got out of it was a safety when | 243-pound Charley Hamrick, Ohio’s | | left tackle, blocked a kick from b!.i | hind the Notre Dame goal line, made | | by Jack McCarthy, sophomore half- | Arising to inspired heights in the | last two minutes of the first half, | | the Irish started driving and never | stopped until Nevin (Bunny) Me- | Cormick, slender junior halfback from | Livermore, Calif., crashed the last 3 vards over the Buckeyes' right guard for a touchdown. Line-ups and Summary. Ohio State (2 Notre Dame (7). Wendt i O'Neill | Steinkemper “Cumiskey ““Dye = Kabealo _ Bettridge McDonald by periods tate = Wilke Kovaleik | - Danbom Score. st 5 Notre Dame __ Notre Dame scoring: Touchdown-Me- Cormick (sub for Kovaleik). = Point from try after touchdown—Danbom (place- kick). Safety—McCarthy, EPISCOPAL 7-0 VICTOR McDonogh Bows to Undefeated | Club After Close Battle. Special Dispatch to The Star. ALEXANDRIA, Va. October 31.—| A 30-yard drive for a touchdown in the last quarter kept Episcopal High School's foot ball team’s slate clean today as McDonogh eleven from Bal- timore was defeated, 7-0. It was the fifth straight victory for one of the strongest Episcopal teams in years. Held even for three quarters, Epis- copal won the game when Waldrop went over on the sixth play of a series which started on McDonogh's 30- yard line. Randall added the extra point from placement. Waldrop made several spectacular runs in addition to his scoring plunge. Episcopal (7). McDonogh (0). Revelle arnard Sharretts Phelps - Stevens Sweeney Ashmeler Baugher Wiiliams 0 7—7 McDonogh 0—0 ‘Touchdow: touchdown—Randall " (3 stitutions: Episcops andall. ‘McDonog nes. aisel, Paplis, Kelly. " Referee . . _Umpire—Mr. Hallett. Head lines- man—Mr. Jankowski. Time of quarters— 12 minutes. after — TIDE SURGES ONWARD to Remain Undefeated. LEXINGTON, Ky., October 31 (). —Alabama kept its position among foot ball teams by defeating Kentucky, 14 to 0, here today. It was the fourteenth consecutive victory of the Crimson Tide over the Wildcats, and & homecoming crowd estimated by University of Kentucky officials at 17,000, attended. | Ends Get Touchdown, Kick Point, | standings. :Cleurly Outclasses Dixie Team, 7 |team on the sunset side of the Rockies, | RANDOLPH-MACON AHEAD| Paliscak Stars in 25-7 Victory Over Hopkins Eleven. BALTIMORE, October 31 (#)— With Fullback Bill Paliscak person- ally accounting for three touchdowns, Randolph-Macon overpowered a fight- ing Johns Hopkins eleven, 25 to 7, to- day before 1,000 fans. Jimmy Bair, the Virginians’ quar- terback, staged a flashy finale to the contest by returning a Hopkins punt 70 vards in the last period to score Randolph-Macon's fourth touchdown. MAROONS GAIN 7-6 WIN OVER WISCONSIN Block Big Badger Boot as 18,000 Look On. B the Astociated Press. MADISON‘ Wis. October 31.—The University of Chicago foot ball | team scored a 7-to-6 victory in a| homecoming contest with Wisconsin | today, holding the hapless Badgers | in the cellar of Western Conference A crowd of 18,700 at- tended. William Gillerlain, an end, was re- sponsible for the Maroons' slender margin of victory. He booted the ball between the goal posts in the first quarter after Warren Skoning, full- back, made the touchdown. The Ma- roons engineered the scoring play within 3 minutes after the game started, when Robert Fitzgerald, an end, intercepted a pass thrown by | Clarence Tommerson, Badger half- | Early in the fourth period a 48-yard run by Tommerson to the Chicago 9- | yard line paved the way for Wiscon- | sin’s score. Roy Bellin, halfback, broke through the left side of the Chicago line on second down to score, but Gillerlain blocked Christianson’s | attempted place-kick for the extra | point, and the Maroons clung to a 1- | point lead. SANTA CLARA HANDS AUBURN 12-0 DEFEAT Beaten First Time, as Own Slate Is Kept Clean. By the Associated Press. AN FRANCISCO, October Only undefeated, 31— untied major University of Santa Clara, upheld the | prestige of Western foot ball today with a convincing 12-to-0 victory over an outclassed Alabama Polytechnic eleven. Twenty thousand fans sat in on the intersectional classic which saw a previously unbeaten team, ranked as one of the strongest in the Old South, bow to the superior all-around play of a Santa Clara eleven of machine- like perfection. ‘The greatest Santa Clara team ever assembled, conquerors of Stanford earlier in the season and with only seven points scored against it in five gages, struck sharply twice in the first half to maintain its unblemished record. HAGERSTOWN VICTOR Scores Over Martinsburg, 18-7, in High School Game. Epecial Dispatch to The Star. MARTINSBURG, W. Va., October 31.—Hagertown High used its weight to pound away to three touchdowns in the annual game against Martins- burg High today, to win, 18 to 7. Blessing and Hartle alternately led the visitors’ attack, Blessing scoring all three touchdowns. Martinsburg managed to tally after four successive ‘plays in & march from midfield. Hagerstown (18). Martinsb'g (7). Stuckey MEFORAIOL WxTEE-=0 o ‘Touchdowns—Blessing (3), Devers. Point after touchdown——Powler. ' Substitutions: Martinsbure—Ditto_for Johnson. Thomp- fon for Althers. Calishan for Btuckey. Hagerstown—Potroff for Bashore. Murphy, for_Hennessey. Hagwood for Blessing. LASTPERODPUSH CETSBOSTONC.TI Rally Offsets Early Score Made by Michigan State in 13-13 Battle. By the Associated Press, OSTON, Mass, October 31.— Staging a 91-yard march early in the final period, the Bos- | ton College Eagles punched{‘ across a touchdown and converted | the extra point to tie the famed Spar- | tans of Michigan State, 13—13, in a | spectacular game played before 10,000 | persons at Fenway Park today. | ‘The Eagles opened the scoring in | the first quarter with Fella Gintoff passing to Tom Guinea for 23 yards and the score. Gintoff missed the try for the extra point. In the second period a long pass, Jack Pingel to Milton Lehnhardt, re- sulted in State's first touchdown. | With the ball on B. Cs 43, Pingel tossed to Lehnhardt on the 25 and the | latter scooted over for the score.| Haney failed to convert. | Later in the same stanza, Pingel's passes to Nelson and Kutchins and an interference ruling on one forward set the visitors on the Maroon and | Gold nine-yard line, Eagles Mix Plays to Tie. THREE line plays by Pingel made eight yards and on fourth down a trick pass, Pingel to Haney, gave the Spartans their final touchdown. Haney place-kicked the extra point. The Eagles’ second touchdown re- sulted in a series of aerial and ground maneuvers. Ira Jivelekian passed twice | to Atilo Ferdenzi and once to Bill| Flynn for substantial gains. Jivelekian | swept the Spartan left flank for three yards to score. Gil Dobie immediately sent in Gintoff for Jivelekian and the | former tied the score with his place- | ment kick. Later in the same stanza, after an intercepted pass, Gintoff attempted a field goal from the State nine-yard line, but the kick failed. Last year the Eagles scored a stun- ning upset by downing the Western- ers, 13—6, and today's result was al- most as unexpected. Line-ups and Summary. Mich!gan Boston State (13). -Lehnhardf Zindel Fertig ~Ketchma Dahigren Swariz ~_Kutchins par Coolidge _ Haney Score by period: Michigan_State Horsfall i 013 0 0—13 Eoston College _. 6 0 0 713 Michigan State scoring: Touchdowns— Lehnhardt. Haney. Point after touch- down—Haney (placement), Boston College scoring: Guinea. _Jivelekian. Point after touch- down—Gintoff (place-kick). D. (Lehigh). Touchdowns— Referee—W. D. Maginnes Umpire—J. T. Clinton (Yale), Head lines- . L. Fite (Bowdoin). " Field judge . Hoban (Dartmouth). GEORGIA TECH BOWS IN THRILLER BY 14-13 Folger Leads Aggressive Clemson to Upset Victory -as Last- Minute Kick Misses. BY the Associated Press. ATLANTA, Ga,, October 31.—Clem- son College Tigers, out-weighed and |y, rated to lose, defeated Georgia Tech's Yellow Jackets, 14 to 13, with ag- gressive foot ball on Grant Field today. The veteran halfback, Mac Folger, known to his mates as “Ripper,” car- ried the ball on the touchdown drives in the first and fourth periods, Tech outgained the visitors on the ground, but Clemson was superior at passing. The Tigers completed 12, against 8 for Tech. Tech earned 18 first down, against 9 for Clemson. A desperate fourth-period drive of the Yellow ~Jackets was halted at Clemson’s 7-yard line. On the final down Tech tried for a field goal. The ball flew wide and Clemson held the ball on its own 25 when the final Wwhistle blew. KANSAS, ‘ARIZONA TIE Scoreless Tilt Marked by Tight Defenses, Loose Offenses. Referee—Mr. Colley (F. pire—Mr. Dorsey (Duke). —Mr. Young (Lynchburg). ters—12 minutes. —_— During the half Kentucky staved off four touchdown drives in the very shadow of its goal posts. The best Kentucky could do was to drive to the Alabama 1-yard line in the 'third quarter before losing ball on downs. 3 gave the Jefferson High Sc! gicians & 10-to-0 scrappy Lane High School Maher Pield this afternoon. LAWRENCE, Kans,, October 31 (P). EASY FOR OLE MISS Centenary Is Whipped, 24 to 7, by Powerful Attack. SHREVEPORT, La., October 31 ()—Launching a bruising attack behind & heavy line that badly bat- tered a much lighter foe, the Univer- sity of Mississippi Rebels defeated the Centenary College Gents, 24 to 17, before a crowd of 8,000 at the Louisi- ana State Fair today. Mississippi was forced to stage a heavy running atack in the fourth period for the three touchdowns that | brought victory. INDIANA HEADS IOWA, BUT SIMMONS STARS Hawkeye Back Paces Three Fine| Goalward Drives as His | Team Is Beaten, 13-6. BY the Associated Press. BIOOMING’ION, Ind., October 31. —Oze Simmons, Iowa’'s Negro fullback, three times led the Hawk- eyes up to foot ball's pay-off window today before 20.000 persons in Me- | morial Stadium, but they cashed only | one of the tickets and bowed to In- | diana, 13 to 6, in the ninth renewal | of their Big Ten gridiron rivalry. | Indiana scored on an intercepted | pass in the second quarter, Roy Eads | taking a wild toss from Frank Balazes | and running 38 yards for the touch- down, and a pint-sized reserve back, Harry Cherry, from Indianapolis, was | the spearhead of a 50-yard drive for the second touchdown in the third | ¥i period, George Fowler bucking it over from the 1-yard line in two tries. Towa's lone touchdown came late in the fourth period on a pass from | °/Sha Simmons to his Negro end, Homer | Harris, from Indiana’s 15-yard line, climaxing & four-play drive from Towa's 29. e N. C. S. BEATEN, 21-6, BY NORTH CAROLINA Tarheels Stage Sparkling Rally | in Second Half—Wolfpack Is Outgained. By the Associated Press. 'HAPEL HILL, N. C., October 31.— Big Jim Hutchins, Dick Dashiell, Crowell Little and Tom Burnette led the Tarheels of the University of North Carolina in a second-half come- back which overwhelmed North Caro- lina State, 21 to 6, here today. Outplayed in the first half before | 17,000 spectators, the Tarheels put up | & real battle to dominate the last| periods. The Wolfpack rolled up 16 first downs to 13 for North Carolina, but | netted only 220 yards in all ways ex- cept kick returns, while the Tarheels rolled up 248, Line-ups and Summary. N. C. 8t atson - Hutching 0 0—8 7 14—21 C. | Btate), Little, Score by period: Norih' Carolina & North Carolina __ Sc Touchdowns Rten o NPy touchd o a uchdown (North Carolina), - Burnette, 3 (pla als—Referee Carrington (Virginis), 'mpire Perry ,(Sewanee), Headlinesman .'l';olzzy (Sewanee), Pield Judge Clddy (Vir- inia). TIGERS STIL'L UNTAMED L. 8. U. Easily Trounces Vander- bilt to Remain Undefeated. NASHVILLE, Tenn., October 31 (P). —Louisiana State University, defend- ing title holder in the Southeastern Conference, rolled on toward another championship today with an easily~ won 19 to 0 victory over Vanderbilt. ‘The Tigers of Baton Rouge remained within the Nation's unconquered ranks e TULANE IS GIVEN SCARE Louisiana Poly Stages Uprising, but Is Beaten, 22-13. (GAMEYALETEAM | y but Elis Bid for Win at Last Moment. Associated Press Sporta Writer, EW HAVEN, Conn, October N winner all the way and beat- ing Yale, 11 to 7, the Dart. another chapter to its history-making victory of 1935. first triumph since the rivalry be- tween the two institutions started But the Indians, after taking a lead of 4-0 on & pair of safeties by Charley 11-0 early in the fourth when John Handrahan crashed over from the 1- ously close to being victimized by one | of Yale's famous rousing last-minute Big Green Is Far Superior, BY BOB CAVAGNARO, 31.—Looking the part of a mouth foot ball team today added Last year'd 14-6 victory was their in 1884. Ewart, Yale back, and stretching it to yard line for a touchdown, came peril- rallies. Kelley Averts Shutout. ALE'S boast that the Elis have never failed to score since Lippy Larry Kelley, cracker-jack end, made the team in 1934, was maintained when Kelley caught a 17-yard pass in the end zone with three minutes left, sparing the sons of Eli a whitewash. ‘That was the lone cheering note the game provided for Yale supporters, who made up most of the crowd of 60,000 in the Yale bowl as the Blues, after victories over Cornell, Penn, Navy and Rutgers, were toppled from the ranks of the undefeated. With one minute left, Bud Hum-| ] phrey, reserve back who tossed the touchdown pass to Kelley, shot a 25- yard pass into the end zone, in- tended for Archie Hoxton, sub-| stitute end. Yale Checked at Finish. i FRED HOLLINGSWORTH, Dart- | mouth left halfback, and another | Indian, were standing on either side Rated Grid Star, Never Saw Game MINID, Calif. (#).— Although touted as a gridiron star as a result of standout performance in scrimmage, Irwin (Swivel-hips) Rodgers of Menlo Junior College spent his first game on the bench. Coach Hal Dunker thought he ought to see at least one game of foot ball before going into action. Brought up in Hongkong, young Rodgers knew the game only from occasional flashes in the newsreels. WEST VIRGINIANS GRITTY BUCKNELL SPANKS CATS 64 Tomasetti’s 46-Yard Dash Paves Way to Touchdown in Last Two Minutes. BY the Associated Press. EWISBURG, Pa., October 31.— An underrated Bucknell eleven, inspired by a homecoming crowd of 12,000, rose to the heights today with a stunning 6-to-0 victory over the previously undefeated Bucknell outplayed the visitors from the start, but not until the last two wIN IN AIR %-m:lnd untied Villanova College team. y minutes of play, when Lou Toma- Outdo Western Maryland Eleven in Spectacular Passing Battle. By the Associated Press. ORGANTOWN, W. Va, Oc- | tober 31.—The West Vir- ginia Mountaineers con- quered Western Maryland 33 to 20 today in a spectacular pass- ing contest which kept a crowd of | 10,000 foot ball fans chering wildly throughout the game. Kelly Moan for the Mountaineers, and Leroy Campbell for the Terrors, | vied for honors with Moan slightly outdoing his formidable left-handed opponent in touchdown tosses as well as personally smashing over two touchdowns. Moan’s Pass Gets Lead. 'HE outstanding play came in the fourth period with the scoré dead- | locked, 20-20. Campbell had just | passed to Drugash for a touchdown to | tie the count. Eller returned the fol- | his 48. Moan dropped back on the first play and tossed a bullet pacs to Barna who clutched the ball on settl, sophomore halfback, broke into the clear on a reverse and 1an 46 yards to the Villanova 4, did the Bi- gons develop a scoring punch. After Tomasetti's long run Villa- nova was penalized half the distance for roughness. Villanova held for one play, but on the next Stuart Smith, co-captain, plunged for the score. Green missed the try for extra point. Although Villanova threat:ned three times, Bucknell held the upper hand throughout, making 11 first downs to 6 and gaining a total of 229 yards to 60. . EARLY LION TALLIES ' BALK CORNELL, 20-13 Columbia Piles Up Score, Then Fights fo Stave Off Game Ithican Eleven. BY the Associated Press. NEW YORK, October 31.—Beating back a magnificent last-half rally, Columbia defeated Cornell, 20-13, to= day before 28,000 on sun-drenched | lowing kick-off for West Virginia to Baker Field. Columbia took advantage of the in= experienced Cornell team's first-half errors, scored two touchdowns in three minutes at the end of the first quarter of Hoxton as the ball struck him in | the 8-yard line and went over the and led 18-0 at half time, to which the chest. It looked like an incom-: pleted pass, but officials ruled inter- ference and gave Yale the ball on ! the Indians’ 1-yard line. Despite the break, Yale couldn't capitalize on it. In fact, the game ended with Yale in possession of the ball on the 10-yard line, having been | pushed back when Al Hessberg was, thrown attempting a sweep around the | Indians’ right end. | Dartmouth’s touchdown drive was started when Bob MacLeod inter- cepted a Yale pass on the 31 and | ran to the 16. Handrahan ploughed to the 1-foot line and then went over, | Ray converting from placement. Line-ups and Summary. Dartmouth (1. 1 — Wright | - Kelley Ewart NEEOXBHANT Ty Frank ~Hesshere oring: Touchdown—Hand- ranan. Point ‘after _touchdown—Ra: (placement). Sateties—Ewart (2) ‘ouchdown—Keiley. Point afier —Beckwith _(placement). . Water (Wil- liams) “Thorp (Columbia Linesman. A. Young (Penn), Field judge, P. L. Egan (Villanova) Statisties of the Game. Dai an ' Dart- Yale. mouth. 7 13 236 iz First downs Yards gained rushing___ Forward passes attempted Porward passes completed Forward passes intercepted by 0 Lateral passes complete: Yards by lateral passes__~ _ Punting average (from scrim- ST sl g i *Total yards. kicks returned_ Opponents’ fumbles recovered_ Yards lost by pen: oo 4B *Includes punts kick-offs. BAUGH WINS FOR T. C. U. Slings Passes That Upset Baylor in 28-0 Clash. FORT WORTH, Tex., October 31 (#)—Sammy Baugh's bullet passes boosted the powerful Texas Christian Horned Frogs back into the thick of the Southwest Conference champion- ship fight today with a 28-to-0 victory over the Baylor Bears. Slingin’ Sammy, standing out as one of the most dangerous scoring backs in the Nation, personally heaved three touchdown passes and, after he left the game near the end of the first half, watched Substitute Back Montgomery fire another to & wide-open end for the fourth score. DAVIDSON NOSED OUT. GREENVILLE, S. C., October 31. (#)—Outmarting Davidson’s Wild- cats, & fighting Purman team upsct the North Carolinians 14 to 13 to- day by blocking three punts, inter- cepting five passes and outkicking them when accuracy counted. y | West Virginia = | Western Maryland Gpeut Sake! Men’s Fall Suits Topcoats &, Over- coats Custom- Made to Your Measure In & superb selection of woolens in Fall Patterns and Styles $250 Take owr word — yowll be Pleased. We've beew serving Washington .men for 43 yeers. TAILORS 405 11th St. N.W. . 2. Frostens goal line standing up. | West Virginia clinched the game a moment later when Barna grabbed Campbell’s kick, which Volkin, Moun- taineer guard, had blocked on the | 10-yard line. Moan smashed it over in three plays and kicked the final point. Line upsr and Summary, Po! L. = LG. " e R i t | Benjamin ‘Sadowski Campbelil | _ Adriance Lathrop 13 0 0 20— 014 0 West Virginia scoring Moan (2). Lorenz. Isaac after touchdown—Moan | Western Maryland scor Lathrop. after ments) 4 Benjamin. Drug touchdown—Lathrop Referee—A. W._ McMillan re—J. E. Shea (Ohio State) Is: (Pitt). Umpii | Field | Linesman—E. Cavanaugh (Pitt). judge—T. J. Davies (Pitt e VITA ““60-Secon and t he ;o SECONDS to rub—hair- l'nwrishing oils are replen- “ished. Cisculation quickens. Your hair takes on new life. OOD-LOOKING HAIR alone won't carry you to fame and social success. But well-kept hair isadefinite asset in a man's busi- ness and social life. Yet many men never think of it as a “plus” —never give their hair even the little time it needs for health and grooming. Tight, dry scalp is often to blame for dull, lifeless, unkempt hair. And to waken your scalp— to bring “your hair back to life and lustre—there is nothing like Vitalis and the stimulating “60- Second Workout.” Vitalis and massage quickens stores the flow of natural, nour- g A was added two points on a safety in the third period. Trailing by 20 points, Cornell then made its bid. Johnny Batten aired one to George Peck, who raced untouched to the goal but missed the conversion. On the kick-off Cornell started a 64-yard drive which ended when little Jerry Holland swung 11 yards around the Columbia left flank on an ende around play to score. Bob Rose cone verted from placement. HAMPTON NEAR TITLE Beats Portsmouth High, 14-0, ia Virginia Series. HAMPTON, Va., October 31 (#).— Hampton High School’s red and white warriors moved a step closer to the State championship foot ball title here today, defeating the Woodrow Wilson Presidents of Portsmouth, 14 to 0, at Darling Memorial Field. The victory was the fifth in the league for the Crabbers, LIS d Workout"’ 2 10 SECONDS ® prush—your hai and lustrous, but with no leather” shine. to comb and ir looks rich “patent- ishing oils—leaves your hair alive and lustrous and easy to comb, Loose dandruff goes—and with it, one threat of falling hair. And yet there’s no trace of that objec- tionable “patent-leather” look. Give your hair a chance. Geta bottle of Vitalis from your drug- gist. Start your first “60-Second Workout” today—keep it up regularly. 2 application Sealtube., It is the most sanitary pack-

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