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B—10 Cards, G. W., Ea (. I TURNS BACK N. C. STATE, 76 Munhail Is Shining Light.- Winning Point Kicked by Makofske. BY JOHN B. KELLER. NSPIRED by a homecoming crowd of 8,000 in Brookland Stadium, Catholic University's Cardinals soared to a 7-to-6 foot ball triumph over a fighting Wolfpack from North Carolina State College to snap a losing string that had run to three games and increase their suc- cessive wins over yesterday's rivals to three. Made desperate by a series of sear- ing setbacks, the Cardinals took to the air in the second period for all but 1 foot of a 60-yard flight that ended with Burke Vidnovic snagging a lateral from Specs Foley and wing- ing 5 vards to the final line. Then Bob Makofske left-footed the ball across the bar in fine fashion and it was well he did. for with fangs bared, the Wolfpack raced back to battle in the second half to have the Cardinals on ragged edge right down to the finish. Getting the ball on the Catholic U. 45, when Foley made his only poor punt of the game, North Carolina State mixed passes with ground at- tack and in six plays reached the 21. There Nick Hayden heaved a pass and | Connie MacBerry, snatching the ball from the hands of a pair of Cardinal defenders, raced on 10 yards to the goal. IT WAS a tense time for old grads and undergrads of Catholic U. as ¥E. V. Helms set himself to kick the ball held by Joe Schwerdt. Conver- sion meant a tie with little chance left Misses Vital Place-kick. the Cardinals to regain command. But | Helms' kick went low and wide. Cheers from the Cardinal supporters must have rocked the Capitol, miles away. It was a bitter battle between teams eoached by proteges of the late Knute Rockne, with Dutch Bergman in charge of the home side and Hunk Anderson, mentor of the Wolfpack, having tutored their boys in slight variations of the Notre Dame system. The Wolfpack seemed to have absorbed more of the ancient system for they outrushed and outpassed the Car- dinals, but the latter had an advan- tage in one department that offset to a great extent the ground and air gains of the visitors. It was in punting that the Cardinals excelled and this stood them in good etead. Fifteen times Catholic U. kicks went sailing down the fleld, most of them propelled by the foot of Foley, and the kicking average was 37 yards. The 14 kicks of the Wolfpack, mostly booted by Charley Gadd, averaged | 33 yards. Munhall Leads Attack. HERE was a difference of 93 yards | in Catholic University's favor and | though the ends and tackles of both sides were s0 swift that punt returns were scanty—the Cardinals’ average was but 2 yards and the Wolfpack's | half a yard less—it made a tremendous difference between the teams. ‘While the substitute Vidnovic got the Cardinal touchdown, it was Charley Munhall who proved the out- standing player among the victors. His sharp drives ripped the Wolfpack line often and it was his toting of a pass made from the 47-yard mark by Vidnovic in the second quarter to a | ecant foot from the North Carolina Btate goal that blazed the way to his team’s score. Munhall also was a stalwart on de- fense play, smashing play after play launched by the Wolfpack. Charley was good in everything he did to| gnare a bit more of the game’s laurels | than Foley gained through his kicks. Another outstanding defensive play- er for the Cardinals was Hermie Bchmarr at end. He was so effective that the Wolfpack early stopped di- recting plays toward his flank., but| even then he found himself able to | erack up play after play. Cards’ Strategy Is Baffling. PEARHEAD of most of the Wolf- pack attack were Eddie Berlinski and Joe Ryneska, but it was Hayden, Tom Lawler and Andy Pavlosky.| hustled into the game late, who| opened the way to the North Caro- lina State touchdown. And the touchdown-making Berry at end was Do weakling in .defense. Catholic University's touchdown drive was started by Munhall from his 40 with a short drive into the line. A pass, Vidnovic to Foley, for 12 yards, followed, then that long one from Vidnovic to Munhall. It took three North Carolina State tacklers to dump Munhall at the 1-foot line. The Wolfpack braced to stop Makof- ske and hurl back Vidnovie. ‘Then came a play that completely baffled the defenders. The ball came from center to Makofske, who spun to transfer it to Foley. Vidnovic, tailback. was swinging from the left side well to the right. Foley flipped the pigskin to Burke and there was no one to check the latter's 5-yard @ight to the goal. A pass, Pavlosky to Hayden, start- ed the Wolfpack on its scoring way in the fourth. It was good for 9 yards, then Hayden plunged to a first down on the Cardinal 34, a gain of 2 yards. Lawler and Paviosky then alternated in toting the ball to the 21, where Hayden fired the telling aerial to Berry. . ARKANSAS TRIMS S. M. U. Spectacular Touchdown Jaunts Crush Mustangs, 17-0. DALLAS, November 14 (#).—Uni- wersity of Arkansas grabbed every break to humble Southern Msthodist, 17-0, in a Southwest Conference foot ball game today. Owen's field goal and spectacular touchdown jaunts by Rawlings and Bobble Martin crushed a Methodist team never able to steam up its of- fensive, ¢ CATAWBA IS 34 Even Reserves of Locals Run Wild—Sampson’s 96- Yard Sprint Features. BY BURTON HAWKINS. EORGE WASHINGTON'S Co- lonials scalped & scrappy, but woefully outclassed band of Catawba College Indians, 50-0, in a track meet disguised as & foot ball game yesterday at Griffith Stadium before 5,000 spectators as Vic Sampson, 150-pound streamlined sophomore sensation, paced the butchery with three touchdowns, one of which was a 96-yard sprint over the pay-off line. In annihilating the Indians, the Co- lonials carved out their sixth victory | of the season and thus tied the best ‘prvvmu.s win record of any team in | George Washington history. | Coach Jim Pixlee, in a fruitless, but | nevertheless well-meant gesture, used nearly everybody on the George Wash- ington bench but the managerial staff | in an effort to give Catawba an oppor- tunity to function after the Colonials had rolled up a prohibitive lead. | G. W. Reserves Shine. | MINGLED satisfaction and a rather pleasant sort of embarrass- ment must have sHoved Pixlee's pulse beat up a bit as he saw his re- | serves pick up where the first team left off to complete the shellacking with a startling fourth-quarter toma- hawking which was mercifully termi- nated by the final shrill blast of the referee’s whistle. The Colonials launched their initial | touehdown drive midway in the first | quarter when Herb Reeves gathered | in Charley Clark’s punt on George | Washington's 35-yard line. Reeves nd George Jenkins collaborated in | advancing to the Catawba 21 when | Ray Hanken, on an end around play that clicked throughout the game, skirted left end and shook loose there tacklers on his successful journey to | the goal. Tim Stapleton, G. W. guard, person- lnuy accounted for the second score | when he tore through the Indian line to block Clark’s attempted punt from | Catawba's 30-yard line. He scooped | the bounding ball up on the run and | scampered untouched for a touch- down. Then G. W. Runs Wild. FTER a 78-yard advance Samp- son went over from the 2-yard line to score. Jenkins, Reeves and -Hanken went nearly 70 yards for the fourth score. G. W.s final four touchdowns were scored in rapid succession in the last period as Pixlee inserted substitutes freely. Turner intercepted Clark’s pass on Catawba's 44 and four plays later Carroil sliced off right tackle to tally. Hallberg intercepted another Clark aerial and Sampson led the way to a score, Canning paved the way for the sev- enth touchdown when he recovered Clark’s fumble for George Washing- ton on the Indians' 29. Carroll went across. Sampson saved the best for the final. Taking Al Goodman's kick-off on his own 4-yard line, Vic cut over to the right and went 96 ds to final line, B o X ~-Weinberg Cottinenar ‘ottingha Rebholz WICODIVOC L Maggiolo 6 26—50 00— o nken (2 after touch: s from Canning), Can- eeves ore by periods: George Washingion Catawba = carcuchdowns—Sampson (: arroll (2), Stapleton: poi downs, Faris ( Lo ning (placement), ubstitutions '(George Washington)— Berry. Burnham, Canning, Carrol. Grech, Faris. Hallberg. Johnson. Kenslow, Mahan. Sampson. Schiering. ~Stapieton, Turner. Peiffer. Morrison, . A. Du Four (Catholic Uni- versity): umpire. Charles E. Hoster (Frank- )'lll "lndc‘cglril‘h;lh h:lld" lmelfi!llll. Maj. . H. (Lebanon Valley): 3 P. A. Cohill . ’%Ym“o:l‘fl. i 1 0 Catawba. First downs . - ] -Yards gained rushin Yards Jost rushing Forward passes “Passes complet Yards gained o <} O DB A DB 30 o s 10 Number punts_ -Distance punts Average yard; turn of puni “Return of kick-offs “Pumbles __ & -Own fumbles recovered Penalties ________ Distance of penaities (Picture on Page B-12.) FURMAN SCORES, 23-6 South Carolina Gains More, but Fumbles Chances. GREENVILLE, S. C., November 14 (#)—Furman decisively whipped, 23 to 6, a fighting South Carolina team that outgained the Purple Hurricane in yardage, but fumbled away its chances today. ‘The home team, playing the dedi- cation game in Sirrine Stadium, was never threatened from the minute Capt. Bob King, star end, booted a field goal from placement on the 20- yard line early in the first period. RSP -1 PR AT & @ Terps Fall Down As’Chuter Lands MAYBB the example of 19-year- old Kim Scribner, Maryland freshman student of engineering and parachute jumper par excel- lence, had something to do with the way the Terrapins went “up in the air” in the last period at College Park yesterday and dropped a 13-to-7 decision to Vir- ginia Military, Scribner, a frequent parachute jumper, leaped from a plane dur- ing the halves of the Homecoming day game and his designated point of landing was supposed to be within view of the field. He leaped gracefully, but much to Scribner's consternation he landed atop a tlephone pole. He was unhurt. ) COLONIAL VICTIM | Davis and Ambrose Schindler—trav- d gles Win; Hoyas, Terps Lose : Yale Conquers Tigers ° MANHATTAN NAILS KELLEY AGAIN ACE Just Before Cards Got Ppints That Won Battle Bob Makojske didn't get the Burke Vidnovic went over on the SPORTS SECTION he Sundiy St D. C, SUNDAY last yard for C. U. in the second quarter score against N. C. State at Brookland yesterday, but next play and the former kicked MORNING, the extra point that was to decide the issue. counted in the last quarter but goal. HUSKIES HURDLE BOWL OBSTACLE |Virtually Clinch Western Assignment With 12-0 Defeat of Trojans. BY the Associated Press, EATTLE, November 14.—Univer-| sity of Washington virtually | clinched the Western bid to the Rose Bowl, trouncing Uni- | versity of Southern California, 12 to | 0, today to move within one game ‘of | the Pacific Coast Conference foot balli | title. The worst the Huskies can face in | | Washington State here Thanksgiving | | day is a tie with the Cougars for the | title. If they lose, the Western Rose | Bowl team will be decided by ballots of conference moguls. Has One Big Period. STRIKING twice with precision in the second period, Washington smashed over two touchddwns to re- main undefeated in conference com- petition. The only blemish on the Husky conference record is a 14-to-14 tie with Stanford. In intersectional competition Washington lost to Min- nesota in the season opener, 14-7. Southern California, led alternately by two great quarterbacks—Davie eled fast at times but not consistently. The closest the Trojans could maneu- ver to the goal was the 16-yard line. Jimmy Cain, a fiery little halfback who has played with an injured| shoulder two weeks, started the | fumble on the U. S. C. 40. Huskies on their way to victory after Johnny Wiatrak, center, recovered a Passes for Touchdown. CAIN caught a pass for 14 yards,| ran his left end for 15 more, watched Waskowitz lose 5, and then on the first play of the second period | grabbed a lateral from Wasky and| set sail for the Trojan goal. Three minutes later the Huskies had rolled up three successive first downs on line drives to reach the U. 8. C. 9. The touchdown came on | a third-down pass from Waskowits | to Frank Peters. Line-ups and Summary. ‘Washington (12). 3 Johnson Markov Btarcevich Wiatrak ~ Slivinski U 8C . . | Washington ___77 12 0 Washington scoring—Touchdowns, Cain, Peters. C. U. Summary Catholic U. (7). Schmarr Katalinas Anthonavag _Yanchulis N. C. State (( C Kirschner Gadd Berlinski Murphy M: T “Makofske ~ Ryneska Score hv jod: Catholle U or 07 0 0—7 N. C. Bt 0 0 0 6—6 Touchdown—Vid- down _(placement), 3 scoring: ‘Touch- down—-Ber poit after touchdown. ssed (viace . Helms. Hon: U.—Vidnovie, Deatd. Dempses. Chindensks, Grsco. Am aid, Dempsey. Chiudenski, Greco. Am- brose. Perron. Carroll. . N. . State-—Rob- inson. Tsaacs. Schwerdt. 'Regdon. Helms. Davis Hayden. Entwistle. Lawier. Pav- Y. Referee—E. J. Cummings (Boston C.). Umpire—R. D. Darlels (Georgetown). Head linesman—W. 8, Lilly (Del Pleld judge—M. G. Ramey (V. M. Statistics. scoring: fter touch . C. State Pirst downs ___ Yards Yards RR2350 Punts. number. 1Punts, averase ey ® CmaSiw Raios! *One tProm Tipplers Scarce At Tigers’ Field B the Associated Press. P_RINCE'I‘ON. N. J, November 14. —A milk wagon bearing a sign reading “Drink Milk Instead” re- ceived little notice at the Yale- Princeton game today, but it was not because the capacity crowd was engaged in drinking stronger beverages. The wagon started around the running track between the halves, apparently to remind the crowd of the request of Dr. Harold W. Dodds, Princeton president, for ab- stinence at Princeton games. The crowd was so great, however, it got only a few feet and had to with- draw. Drinking appeared to be negli- ble and only a few scattered bottles were found in the stands. The goal posts went down a minute after the final whistle, but excite- ment resulting from the thrilling game rather than alcohol seem- ingly furnished the impetus for the attack. SNAP FOR HOLY CROSS PROVIDENCE, Rhode Island, No- vember 14 (#).—Holy Cross scored al- most at will against a weak Brown team in registering a 32-to-0 triumph here today. The Crusaders scored two touch- downs in each of the first two periods, | largely through the use of regulars, then used the reserves through the entire last half of the game. Bill Osmanski, Crusader sophomore from Providence, made three touch- downs in the first 20 minutes. Touchdowns BY FRANCES E. STAN. l l Military’s Flying Keydets staged a stunning last-period | reversal of form yesterday at College | Park to spoil the University of Mary- land’s homecoming day and win a 13-7 victory over the favored Ter- | rapins. For three periods the V. M. L's were a punchless, uncertain outfit |could have entertained for playing | jured near the close of the “first half which somehow contrived to be trail- | ing by only a 7-to-0 count, thanks | chiefly to the erratic. indifferently | directed Marylands. Then, striking | with a force they had failed to show | simple single-wing back and punt for- | previously, the Keydets staged an 80- | yard march to tie the score and cap- | italized on a “break” to shove across | the winning touchdown with less than | two minutes to play. Upward of 7,000 spectators watched | NOVEMBER 15, 1936. The visitors Jailed of a tie by missing the —A. P. Photo. Maryland Beaten by V. Mr 13 to 7, as Key dets Get Two in Final Perio land took one of the V. M. I. booter’s ginians' were penalized for unneces- sary roughness. Here, with ridiculous ease, Maryland scored on four line kickea the Hoyas out of several tough | thrusts, three of which were engi- neered by Guckeyson, who crossed the goal line. Johnny Gormley's place- ‘What reasons the Terp quarterbacks safe was beyond comprehension but, at any rate, the Terrapins didn’t show their vaunted varied offense and their noted doublt wingback tricks and mation plays that served to get no- where. Virginia Military’s comeback was gradual. In the third period the GEORGETOWN, 130 {Butter-Fingered Handling of Ball Brings First Hilltop Defeat. Spectal Dispatch to The Star. ROOKLYN, N. Y, November 14—Georgetown’s foot ball team was blasted out of the undefeated class today as & versatile and opportunist Manhattan College eleven smashed through the the second period to garner a deci- sive 13-0 victory at Ebbetts Field before a crowd of 20.000. lapses, particularly on their lateral pass plays, which boomeranged into decided breaks for Manhattan, and with their running game throttied by the New Yorkers' hard-charg- ing forward wall, the Hilltoppers never were able to gain sufficient mo- mentum to put in a serious bid for a score, Finding Georgetown's pass defense vulnerable in all zones, Chick Mee- han’s Jaspers went to town via the air to register their initial triumph over Georgetown in four starts and to subject the Hoyas to their first de- feat in seven engagements this cam- paign. Manhattan completed 8 passes in 14 attempts for an aggregate gain of 104 yards, and whenever bottled |up by Georgetown's tightly - knit ground defense, which was often, it resorted to an aerial game to break into Hoya territory. Jaspers Count With Pass. THE first tally came on a pass from Fullback Pat Byrne to Ed Krin- gle, halfback, Kringle took Byrne's 22-yard toss over his shoulder and scampered 5 more yards over the goal | line. Rushed, Kringle failed to con- vert. After an exchange of punts, in which Elmer Moulin outdistanced the Jasper kicker, Manhattan got roli- | ing again and, starting on its own | 35, put on a 65-yard drive that cul- minated in the final touchdown, with Dick Tuckey, fullback, scoring from the 1-yard line on an off-tackle buck. Larry Hardy blocked Kringle's SING a page from the “Rover | punts on the enemy 35 and moved to | place-kick for the extra point, but Boys” as a script, Virginia | the 20-yard stripe when the Vir-| Georgetown was offside and the Jas- per back converted on his second try. Superb punting Fy Moulin, who spots, and yeoman service by the Hoyas' center trio of Hardy, Jim Hill and Herb Stadler, played a large part | | ment accounted for the extra point.|in preventing Manhattan from run- ning up the score’ Stadler was in- and was assisted from the field. Hoyas Tough Near Goal. (GEORGETOWN put on two atirring goal-line stands in the first half, one in the initial session, when it took | the baill on downs from the Jaspers, | after Manhattan had advanced to the 2-yard line. and in the second quarter, when the victors found it Hoya defenses for two touchdowns in | Handicapped by frequent fumbling | N 223 VICTORY | Makes Uncanny Touchdown _Catch, Spikes. Several Scoring Stabs. ] B> the Associated Press. RINCETON, N. J., November 14.—Larry Kelley, who recently sald, “There can't be an all- America team without me,% led Yale to a spectacular 26-23 vice | tory over Princeton today before a capacity crowd of 57,000 who saw the | Blues, rallying sensationally around | their inspirational leader, come from behind twice to overtake the Tigers. Kelley, who caught a pass on this | same Palmer Stadium turf two years {ago to plaster a 7-0 defeat on the | Tigers and spoil an otherwise spotless | season for them, was bottled up come pletely in the first half, but the Tigers relaxed their vigilance in the second half and that was all the Williams= port, Pa., wizard needed. He made & | seemingly impossible catch of a touche down pass and broke up several Tiger scoring threats With Kelley blocked out most of the time and Clint Frank, the Eli's flashy running and pass-throwing back une | able most of the time to make an im- | pression on the heavier and more pow- | erful Princeton line, the Yales, despite a touchdown in the last minute, looked as though they were in for a revenge- | ful beating as they trailed 7-16 at half time of the sixtieth game between the institutions. Yale Barely Beats Clock. HE Tigers gained a 3-0 lead in the first quarter when Ken Sandbach place-kicked an 11-yard field goal and | went into a 16-0 lead in the early | stages of the second, Jack White tally- ing both touchdowns. He went over from the 1-foot line, culminating a | 54-yard drive angd then slanted § yards | off right guard for the second score With the clock ticking off precious minutes Yale put over a touchdown, just getting under the wire before the half. Charlie Ewart ran back a quick kick 48 yards to the Tigers' 35, start- | ing a drive which ended with Frank plunging over from the 1-yard line and Tony Mott converting. The Yales came back to the game refreshed by the intermission and in | the 30 minutes of play that followed outsmarted and outplayed the Prince- tons. To start things off Al Hess- | berg, replacing Humphrey, ran 20 | yards to score and Mott again con= verted, pulling Yale up to 14-16, A few minutes later Kelley tallied | by a couple of Princeton secondaries, | stretched his 6-foot-1-inch frame and from Frank on the Tigers' 28. He started for the goal and Jack White loomed in his path on the 10. Kelley cut to the side, straight - arming White, and scored. Stoess blocked Mott's places ment try and the Blues led, 20-16, AFTER stopping Princeton _on_the 4-yard line in the fourth, the Keydets outplayed the Terps, but iIn | necessary to hit the line four times Yale forward wall vielded another Ti- a tentative sort of fashion. Then. | from within the 5-yard marker before 8T touchdown: Bill Lynch, subbing in stunned silence as the Terps went | ostensibly heartened by sticking their putting over their second touchdown. for Dean Hill, went over from 2 yards | down to their third defeat of the sea- | son and the surprising Keydets won | their fourth consecutive Homecoming | day game. Until V. M. L actually | tied the score a Maryland victory was | taken for granted, the only wonder | being why Frank Dobson’s fleet-run- | ning backs had failed to register more than one touchdown. Terps Get Early Score. EFORE the game was 10 minutes heads in the lion's jaws and emerg- ing unscathed, they cut loose. TAKINO the ball after a punt by Maryland's Jim Meade had rolled into the end zone, V. M. I. hammered the” line for a first down on its 31, and then sent Billy Robertson sweep- ing around end for 20 yards, placing the ball in midfield. Suddenly shift- ing tactics, Andy Trzeciak whipped a pass to Bill Shomo, an end, for.an- Bob Snyder, Maurice Nee and Jack Fleming, the ends, also came in for a share of glory as they broke through consistently to mess Manhattan play All three stood out in covering Mou: lin’s booming punts, frequently stop- ping the Jasper safety man in his tracks. The New Yorkers accumu- lated only 45 yards on runbacks of punts and kick-offs to Georgetown's 76. Trailing two by touchdowns, old Maryland had scored fter | oener first down on Maryland's 22.| Georgetown opened the second half Terps into pay-off territory by his kicking supremacy over Andy Trze- downed on Maryland's 4-yard line. 'R it back to the 32. On the first| ot From here Robertson, without benefit | PIaY from scrimmage, Keegin got away | L g’ ciak, the Keydets' quarterback. Mary- BY BILL DISMER, JR. SURPRISINGLY good Ameri- A can University foot ball team, alert and well coached, brought joy to a homecoming crowd for the first time in three years yesterday when it sprang a genuine upset by de- feating Johns Hopkins, 14-6, in a well-played game before 5,000 Orange and Blue supporters at Central Sta- dium. Undergraduates and alumni alike thrilled to the sight of A. U. striking twice for touchdowns within the space of three minutes in the second quarter, and then battle gamely to protect its | lead when backed up to its own goal line in the last 15 minutes of play. Considered “cripples” before the game started, due to the fact that all but three of their starting line-up were ailing from everything from cracked ribs to sprained ankles, the Eagles piled thrill upon thrill, climaxing their stellar performance in the waning mo- mehts of the game by turning back a scoring bid after the Bluejays had made a first down on the Eagles' 9-yard line. Poor Kick Leads to Score. 'HAT Hopkins scored on a subse- quent drive which started a minute later when a poor punt by Hal Toner traveled only to A. U.'s 15-yard line, was no disgrace to the weary Orange and Blue linemen, who had held their highly-touted foe in check throughout the game. An old Tech High player, Jack Rhodes, paved the way for A. U.’s first score by intercepting a pass off George Kahl, the visitors’ outstanding player, late in the first quarter to give his team the ball on Hopkins’ 39-yard line. From that point Emerson Bartlett, Larry (Peanuts) Howard and Hal ‘Toner alternated in taking the'ball to the Jays' 5-yard stripe, from where Bartlett raced around left end for the touchdown. Howard, the smallest player on the fieid, but the one who was the biggest reason for A. U's two touchdowns, added the first of his two extra points with that long missing but effective A ' American U., With 130-Pound Back as Hero, Thrills Grads With 14 to 6 Upset of Hopkins method of the drop-kick. A short while later, after A. U. kicked off fol- lowing its touchdown, Howard took a punt on his own 35-yard line, and, twisting and squirming, broke away from Hopkins' ends, eluded the rest of the opposing team and romped 65 yards for touchdown. The little halfback, weighing only 130 pounds, continued his sensational | ball carrying throughout the rest of the game. Eagle Line Is Praised. BUT that A. U. line deserves a world of credit for its individual and collective work. Even prior to its valiant stand in the fourth quarter, the Eagles had exhibited the stub- borness of mules, with Sam Maize, Pete Sitnik, Joe Carlo and Rhodes proving outstanding in the work of bringing down the Jays. The win- ners’ tackling was hard and accurate, and only the referee’s whistle saved | the ball for Hopkins on numerous occasions when jarring contacts made its ball carriers fumble. All in all, it was a gala day for American U. followers, and last night Coaches Walter Young and George Menke should have felt like emulating Dan and Glen Schweigert, the acro- batic brothers of A. U., who performed on the parallel bars to the delight of the crowd between halves. Line-ups and Summury. American (14). Johns H'kir HITOBAIOTE Q American U. . Jolins Hopkins _ Touchdowns—Bartlett, Points_ after touchdowns—Ho! (drop-kicks). _Substitutions — American, Trenarne_for Hansborough. Britton for Rhodes, Schineider for Carlo, Winslo for Howard. Rauche for Sh mpire " (Lovola). inesman—L. W. (Maryland). (Picture on Page B-13.) 'S | marching back | from behind Maryland's goal. | Bill Guekeyson had jockeyed the | on the next play Trzeciak flipped to | ¥i Halfback Oscar Saunders, who was of interference, legged it around end to score, while Trzeciak place-kicked the extra point, tying the score. Maryland's Meade gave the Key: dets a second scoring chance Jess than two minutes later, when he fumbled on his 28, and V. M. 1. re- covered. A pass, Trzeciak to Saun- ders, put the ball on Maryland's 10- | yard stripe, but the gallant Terrapin line repulsed four mighty thrusts and | hattan punt 22 yards to the Jasper | took the ball on downs less than a yard from the goal. Undismayed, the Keydets came after Guckeyson's great punt had sailed out to midfield They hammered the line for a first down on the 40, and Trzeciak passed to Saunders on the 25-yard line. Here, with the last few minutes ticking away, Maryland literally kicked away the game. Thrice V. M. I. hit the line for no gain, but on the fourth down a Keydet blocker dove for Ellinger's knees and was greeted with what of- ficials called an ‘“‘unsportsmanlike act.” In reality, it was a kick, and drew a 15-yard penalty that placed the ball only a yard away from the Terps’ goal. Joe Ross, a sub back, plunged over on the second thrust, | and the ball game was over. ‘Too late, Maryland tried to come back via a scintilating aerial attack, but the whistle stopped a march that | started on one 30-yard lne and ended on V. M. L’s 30. Lineups and Summary. Y. M. 1 (13). Maryland () e - willis Zulick _ ‘Wolle De_Armey - _Surgent Birkland Smith Meade ckeyson Gormley < NPCOzIIOCOCY E 3! 0 0 0 0—7 Scoring: 2 ~—Touchdowns. Saun- ders (sub’ for ‘Kovar). Ross. Extra point after touchdown. Trzeciak (placement). Maryland—Touchdown. Guckeyson. Extra point after touchdown, Gormiey (place- ment), Maryland substitutions—Tackle. Pletch- eri center, Walton: backs. Daly. Ellinger. 1. substitutions—] i 5 mo: Dbacks, Saunders. Beard. Md. K] R = Pumbles recovered Yards lost b: Average i of 23 0 13—13 | th a rush as Valiquette took the kick-off on his 12-yard line and into Manhattan's secondary and when hit on the 40 he fumbled. Vali- quette, however, picked up the ball and continued to Manhattan's 40- | yard line. The Hoya attadk stalled here and Moulin was forced to punt. Keegin Thrills Crowd. KEEX}IN brought the fans to their | feet on the final play of the quarter when he ran back a Man- 43. The Hoyas picked up their a tack from this point and displayed their best offensive effort of the da advancing the ball to the New York- ers’ 20. Keegin threw a pass to Jim Sheeran that carried to the 30 and | & buck and a Manhattan offside pen- | alty put the ball in scoring posi- | tion. At this point the Hoyas again | lapsed into a fumbling exhibition on | their behind-the-line passes. The | Hilltoppers relinquished the ball on | their own 45 when Keegin failed to | get off a fourth down pass. | Line-ups and Summary. Manhattan (13). Georsetown (0) r = 5 | Touchdowns: Manhalttan—Kringle. Tuckey. _Point after touchdown—Man- hattan. Kringle (place-Kick). Substitutions: Georgetown-—Ends. Noo- non. Flething. Bodine, Willlams. Donahue: tackles. Robertson, Stralka: guards. Shuka. Tehaan, O'Brien: centers. Fuardo. Rioski: backs. Wychunas, Barabas, Keegan, Shee- ran. Meglen, Referee—H. E. Armstrong (Tufts). Um- pire—C. A. Reed (Sprinefield). Linesman V. A Schmid (Buncknell), "PField fudge —R. G. Barbuti (Syracuse), Statisties. Pirst downs rushing 5h Passes completed Ground gained by tAverage dis! Run _back of Pumbles Ball lost. Penalties _____ Ground lost. menalties +One first down by penalty. tPunts averaged from line of scrimmage. Picture on Page B-13.) ROANOKE ENDS WITH WIN. SALEM, Va., November 14 (#.— Roanoke College closed its 1936 grid season today with a 13-0 win over both touch- Snyder | on a delayed buck. Sandbach cone verted and now Princeton led. 23-20. By this time the crowd was in a frenzy and it went completely wild as Frank skirted Princeton’s left end and ran 13 yards to his second touche down, During the sequence of plays | leading up to the final score of the | game, Kelley made another spectacus= lar catch, netting a gain of 42 yards | to the Tigers’ 49. And before the | final whistle, Larry dragged down Dick White on the Elis' 18 after White had taken a pass and appeared headed for a touchdown. Line-ups and Summary. 7 Princeton (3 be LT c RG BF RE QB |LH Frank |RH Humphrey _ FB Miles Score by periods: Yale Princeton _ _ Stoess Ritter Cullinan - Montgomery Toll Rawls Sandbach J. White - Kaufman Hill A 3 0 3 | Yale scoring—Touchdowns. Prank 2 Hessberz (sub for Humpbrays). Kelley points after touchdowns, Mott (2) (sub for Miles) iplacement) Princeton scoring—Touchdowns. J. White ?). Lynch (sub for Hill): points after touchdowns. Sandbach (2) (placement); field goal, Sandbach (placement). 713 8 .| Statistics. First downs = | Yards gained rushing S Forward passes attempted _ Forward passes completed Forward passes intercepted by | Yards by forward passing.._ | Lateral passes attempted passes completed. y lateral passes _ verage (from serim- _ i} Late; s Yards b Punting mage) ____ ‘otal yards. kicks returned __ 9 T | opponents fumbles recovered Fards lost by penalty “Includes punis and Kick-offs (Picture on Page B-14.) BAUGH STARTS T. C. U. Tosses Two Scoring Passes, Then Watches Centenary Lose. FORT WORTH., Tex., November 14 (#).—In one brilliant offensive period, Sammy Baugh threw two touchdown passes and then retired to watch his inspired Texas Christian University | teammates trounce the Centenary Gents, 26 to 0, here today. It was the worst defeat the tricky Gents, for many years the nemesis of Southwest Conference teams, had taken this season. oYy S=%a SumSoania o3iis uh Oregon Downed By Bears, 26-0 By the Assoclated Press. Bmxm.!:Y, Calif.,, November 14. —Passing and pounding the line in championship form at the tail end of an otherwise dise appointing foot ball season, Uni- versity of California’s Bears over- powered University of Oregon, 28 to 0, today in a Pacific Coast Conference game before 20,000 fans. Eliminated earlier as a title contender, the Bears followed up their upset victory over Southern California a week ago by inflicting the worst defeat Oregon has suf- fered this season. fal