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The High Point Enterprise from High Point, North Carolina • Page 9

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High Point, North Carolina
Issue Date:
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9
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Sunday, October 19, 1941 tHt HIGH POINT iS etiitw i-HIGH POINT, NOHTH CAKOUNA PACE A P. I. TOPS DAVIDSON; DEACONS WIN Vanderbilt's Commodores A nd Fordham's Rams Still Unbeaten Perry Canters Over Goal For Deacon Victory Baptists Win, 7-0, In Hard- Earned Triumph Over Stiff State Resistance By FRANK B. GILBRETH Oct. A beautiful 18-yard run by Sophomore Johnnie Perry gave Wake Forest's heavily favored Deacons a hard-earned 7-0 triumph over N.

C. State in a Southern Conference football game played here tonight before 15,000. Perry's run came in the second nuarter and he added the point play, Navy's powerful foot- frnm li 11 i A.I i Navy Tars Topple Cornell, 14 To Busik Drives Middies Into Late Triumph Big Red Pushes Navy All Over Field In First Half, But Is Unable To Score By GAYLE TALBOT BALTIMORE, Oct. 18. Pushed all over the lot for the first 30 minutes of I from placement.

Deacons threatened continually during the contest but the Wolves always managed to the crucial time. State never got close to the Deacons' goal and did not make a single first down during the second half. The final count on first downs 15 for Wake Forest and four for State. The first quarter started out a ding-dong affair. Wake Forest smacked out two first downs in a drive from its 19 to midfield but the Wolfpack held.

After a punt exchange, the Deacons started another parade, this time from their 36. A pass fnom Red Cochran to Johnny Perry was good for 23 yards in that drive and Forest went to State's 18 but again the Wolves held. The quarter ended scoreless. State showed its first offensive spark on the opening play of the second period when Jack Huckabee went through the Deacon line for the Deacs held, and soon were threatening, after Pat Preston covered a fumble by Dick Watts on State's 28. State took over finally on a beautiful 18- yard romp for touchdown.

Perry converted. State came back with a beautiful passing attack which carried, to the Deacon 25. Polanski got hot and paced a Wake Forest advance from his 35 to State's 21. but the threat ended when Cochran fumbled and Charlie Riddle covered for State on the" Wolves' 25. Only a few plays afterward the Dedcons were rolling again.

This time, sparked by a 19-yard run by Cochran, they rolled from their 35 to State's 16, and, again, the Wolf- pack held and look over. The Deacons threatened once again in Ihe Fourth and once again State stiffened when the chips were clown. This time, the drive started on State's 39, where Bill Starford- intercepted Faircloth's pass. The drive carried to Stale's 23. After a punt exchange, Perry got off a 22-yard run which carried to State's 24.

But the scoring drive and the game end- Deacons couldn't put a ed with 7-0. -Perry, Red Cochran and Joltin' Thomasville's Horse Show To Continue am even West Virginia Minnesota Mauls Jack Jenkins Licked 27 To 0 i Panthers Of Pitt THOMASV1LLE, Oct. 18. Thomasville's first annual horseshow, which got underway here today, will continue tomorrow, with an exhibition.of saddle horses, including jumpers, in 21 classes. Both the Carolinas.

and Virginia will be represented in the show tomorrow, officials, said. Rose Hill Boys Knock Mountaineers Reeling With Quick Touchdown Parades By JUDSON BAILEY NEW YORK, Oct, 18. Football Scores (By the Associated Press) EAST Army 20; Yale 7. Navy 14; Cornell 0. Brown 28; Tufts 6.

The show today with Fordham Rams, those 0 Wake Forest winning. John Polanski were the principal threats of the Deacon powerhouse. State just didn't have any offense, at all, so had no stars in that department. closest thing which State produced in the way of a drive came immediately after the Deacons' score. Two soph backs, Art Faircloth and Flash Gordon, teamed for a 23-yard pass.

That longest gain of the night. the Wolves played a great-game against the superior Deacons. Ends Marion Stilwell and Gibson smeared play after play behind the line of scrimmage. The which tell the story of the game are the net yards gained by rushing. Wake Forest's net was 214; State's was 25.

Forest (') X. C. St.tte (0) Stllwcll Jones Bun- Carter Caton Gould I ball squad finally gathered itself in the second half to capitalize on two scoring opportunities and hand Cornell its first defeat of the season, 14 to 0, before a crowd of 45,000 in Municipal Stadium. Barnacle Bill Busick, re-entering the game in the third period after the Cornell boys had been pretty well worn down by the weight of Navy man power, eligi- i necred the two scoring drives, slipping the ball on a reverse to Sammy Boothe who scampered 15 yards for a touchdown in the third quarter and plunging across from the one yard mark for the second score two minutes before the game's end. The victory, Navy's fourth straight, ran the Middies' scoring record to 149 points to opponents' 2 for the season.

When the third quarter opened, Navy's two-team system finally began to show dividends. Busik's gang went back in midway of the period and it quickly was obvious that Cornell's line had softened somewhat under -the alternate pounding. When one of Stofer's punts was partially blocked and roiled out of bounds on Cornell's 42, Navy had the ball past midfield for the first time. Busik charged off right tackle to the 32, then skirted his left end for eight more, Cameron picked up three, then Busik bulled his way to the 15. There was where Navy foxed the Big Red.

Busik took the pass from center and darted to his right. As the entire Cornell team swung over to meet him. he slipped the hide to Sammy Boothe, and the boy from Evanston, sped around his left end into a clear field and raced to a touchdown untouched. Bob Leonard went in to place kick the point, as he did also after the Middies' second score. A pass interception set up the second Navy score, End Bob Zoeller snagging a Cornell toss and fighting his way to the Reds' 20 before the weary Cornell secondary pulled him down.

Busik passed (o Lars Wangaard Lo plant the ball on Cornell's one, and after giving Cameron one crack at carrying, took it on over himself with a plunge off tackle. Notre Dame 16; Carnegie Tech! an exposition of draft horses, at-' mighty gridiron Goliaths with! Clarkson 20- City College New tracting hundreds of persons, and he unpronouncable names, I York 0. a mile-long was TOr wc 0-7! Gcon Leads Vandy Against Tech Veteran Blocking Back Scores All His Team's Points In 14-7 Triumph By HSCAK THOMPSON knocked out of the ban game. Tenn He joined an ominous casualty 18 For two years Jack list, including the. squad's best Jenkins, 200-pound blocking Punch-Drunk Pittsburghers Swamped, 39-0, But Gophers Lose Captain Smith Bv JAY VESSELS Oct.

18. mauled Pittsburgh's punch-drunk Panthers, 39 to 0, day but the Golden Gophers' BucknellS; Boston University 0. crack captain. Bruce Smith, was ilramck IK- i i witnessed by thousands: i galloped to an impressive 271 The parade was led by "Uncle" i to 0 victory over the West Charley Hendrix, oldest horse'- man in. the Caroiinas.

The show this afternoon will get underway at 1:30 o'clock. A very Watts Huckabee Cathey PoUnskl Stewart Scort-by periods: 7 C. 6 0 0 Forest scoring 7 0 tovichrtown: Perry. Point after try utter toxich0own: Perry (ptucekick). Australia has issued an order permitting the sale of United States motorcycles to users of trucks who are engaged in essential and who desire to substitute a motorcyclew hen a delivery truck becomes unserviceable or is taken over the army.

fcrinurs Fighting Irish Take Carnegie Heroic Goal Line Stands Of Techmen Stand Out- As Notre Dame Wins, 16-0 BV DUKE MORAX PITTSBURGH. Oct. Notre Dame slipped and slid today to a 16-0 victory over underdog Carnegie Tech before a rain- sooked crowd of 7.719 who came expecting to see an Irish field day but left cheering the Tnrtans amazing goal line stands. The unbeaten Irish rolled up yards rushing while holding Tech to a net loss of 19 yards but bogged down time after time in the face of savage Tech resistance near the goal lines. Tech, supposed to be a victim by almost any score you chose to name, yielded only two touchdowns one in the first period and another to the Irish reserves in the final quarter.

The game concluded. at least temporarily, a iong rivalry between the schools in which the Irish won 15 out of 19 contests. The Tartans also gavr up a safely after beating back a dangerous Irish thrust on their own 1-2 yard line Jn the second quarter. The Tartans also threatened to add to their glory in the first po- i-iod when Jackie Fritz, 1 -18-pound Tech halfback who starred all day, intercepted a Notre Dame A Message To Business And Professional Men: A few of moderate bowling in afternoons or evf nlnrs will help you fed like new Drop In at Innch tlmn or whrn yon have the opportunHy this finest Mil healthful recreations. ARCADE BOWLING ALLEYS NORTH MAIN ST.

lc POIXT Yale Beaten By 20-7 Elis Toss Reai Scare At Blaik's Cadets By Scoring In Exactly 75 Seconds By SID FEDER NEW HAVEN, Oct. 18. new kick the Army mule, as powerful as the one in old Bourbon once it- hits you, booted Yale's footballers all over the bowl on a dreary wet day today, but only after the Elis threw a real scare into the Cadets. Picking themselves up off the floor after the.Elis had set off a touchdown firecracker for 56,000 fans in the first 75 seconds of the bal! game, the Cadets pulled themselves together and just paraded home before a Yale team that never really got going, for a 207 win. Hitting the victory column against Yale for the first time since 1935.

and. at the same time, running their 19-11 record to three straight triumphs, the Cadets went 58 yards for one score in the first period: sent Sophomore Ralph Hill on a 58-yard touchdown gallop to climax a 93-yard drive in the second and closed out the scoring with a 20-yard push in the third. What's more, after Yale pulled its opening rabbit out of the hat, the Army kept the Elis as bottled up as home brew the rest of the way. Yale failed to put on its customary second-half spree simply because the Army apparently had been drilled expertly under the new Coach Red Blaik in the Eli passing attack. The Blue took to the air waves all during the final two quarters, but, sparked by Halfback Jere Maupin and End George Seip.

the Cadets stopped every overhead march before it got too hot to handle. Yale, reversing the script it used against Virginia and Penn in its first two outings this year, started going to town in a rush with the opening gun. Army took the kickoff and, after getting no. where on three plays. Hank Mazur dropped back to kick.

Johnny Magee and Alan Bartholemy charged in on him and blocked the punt. Bartholemy caught it on the fly and dashed the 20 yards for the touchdown. Hovey Seymour added the point and the folks just couldn't believe this of the slow- starting Elis. For the next few minutes, Yaie outplayed the rattled Army outfit. But midway of the quarter, after an Eli drive bogged down on the Army 19, the Yale line, a fast-charging outfit up to that point, stopped like a six-furlong horse in a mile and a half race.

At the same (ime. the soldiers started rolling like a parade of army tanks. Georgia 7: Columbia 3. Fordham 27: West Virginia 0. Harvard Dartmouth 0.

Virginia Mountaineers today- Boston College 26; Manhattan to convince 12,500 rain-chill-' 13 ed fans in the Polo Grounds that they have a right to be among the undefeated football powers of the whole land. S.teve Fil'powicz, Jim Blumenstock, Joe Andrejco and an assortment of other unbridled race horses swept time after time through great, glaring holes opened by the Fordham forwards Odson, and its top back from Texarkaha, Rnn Stvpicrp" I has been clearing the paths for his Vanderbilt teammates but they let him carry the today and he personally the Commodores mendous test next week against Michigan. Minnesota, handicapiwd by the absence of Sweiger and Odson, had a hard time getting going and was i conducted Pennsylvania 23; Princeton 0. Amherst Rochester 2. up the ball i in the second period after the Rutgers 26; Fort Monmouth (N.i 0.

i i Gophers had been held scoreless Temple 14; Penn State 0. Wesleyan 32; Haverford 18. and altogether rolled up 376 yards by rushing. In the first half they knocked the Mountaineers reeling with quick-forming touchdown parades of 61, 66 and 75 yards and they kept right on plowing through the sieve-like West Virginia line in the last half even though they let up on the scor ng. They covered 69 yards in five plays for their final touchdown in the third period and brought their total of points scored in walloping Southern Methodist, North Carolina and West Virginia in succession to 70.

It ttok the raging Rams only seven minutes today to get the feel of the game and bag their f'rst score. After exchanging punts Fordham took the ball on its own 39 and the fearsome trio of Filipowicz, Andrejco and Blumenstock spurted to first downs on West Virginia's 47 and 38 and then Filipowicz flipped a 26 yard pass to left end Stan Pitinski for another first down on the eight. The next play Andrejco swept wide around the left side of his line and scored standing up. They bang right back for another touchdown three minutes later. After taking a punt on the Fordham 34.

Filipowicz fled round his right end 20 yards, passed nine yards to Jim Lansing, and Blumenstock capped the drive with a 34 yard display of broken field running to score after cutting through left guard. On the first play of the second stanza Andrejco ambled 50 yards to the west Virg'nia 25 and hammered at the stubbornly resisting Mountaineers until Sophomore Ben Babula finally slipped over left tackle for a touchdown from the one yard line after an offside penalty had helped them get a first down on the two. The other score came late in the third period. In a thrust that started on Fordham's 31 Filipowicz picked up 21 yards, Blumenstock 14 and Joe Ososki banked through left tackle 32 yards-for. the touchdown.

George Cheverko. i SOUTH American University 21; Johns Hopkins 0. Northeastern 13; Bates 0. Washington and Jefferson 14; Buffalo 6. Maine 14; Connecticut 13.

Delaware 28; Dickinson 0. Gettysburg 19; Western Maryland 0. Hamilton 34; Oberlin 0. Trinity 25; Hobart 7. Hofstra 20; Blue Ridge 7.

Lebanon Valley 27; Albright 13. Colby 18; Middlebury 6. Coast Guard 19; Norwich 13. Rhode Island 34; Massachusetts State 6. New Hampshire 14; Springfield I to the two-yard line and his touch- down partner, Bill Daley, catapult- ec over first score.

Then Smith passed 22 yards to Quarterback Garnaas. On the next play Captain Bruce ran 14 yards to the Pitt 16 but on the tackle Smith was hurt and the Panthers Mississippi 21; Holy Cross 0. Lafayette 40; Muhlenberg 0. i- ettin tne stiffest kindVf a bat- i to a 14 to 7 victory over Geor- XOIK urn- tie from the antners unt a Tech. I tain iln tUo hull 1 rt rt Some la.OOO spectators saw the rangy Texan crash through the Yellow Jackets' forward wall in second and third periods for touchdowns and kick the extra points to account for all of the Commodores' scores and keep their unmarretl.

And when he wasn't blasting hrough the Tech line, which he pierced 15 t'mes for 64 yards, Jenkins was stopping constant Jacket offensive threats which inally'produced a touchdown a minute before the game ended. Vanderbilt, only unbeaten and untied team in tjie Southeastern Conference, marched 76 yards foils first counter. Sprinkled-in this drive, the longest of the game, were a 20-yard pass from John 3urns, sophomore halfback, to End Sonny Baird and a 36-yard gal- op by Art Rebrovich which put the ball on Tech's 12. Jenkins smashed over in four 1'ne plunges. A bad kick by Capt.

Charley Sanders, who turned in a magni- 'icient performance at tackle for Tech, went out on his own 36- yard stripe to set the stage of Vandy's second score. G. Juniata 15: Susquehanna 14. Panzer 12: Upsala 6. Union Vermont 6.

New York Aggies Vermont Junior 8. Waynesburg Shippensburg (Pa.) Teachers 0. Williams 13; Bowdoin 0. American International 41; Worcester Tech 0. Marshall 34; Western Kentucky Teachers 7.

Randolph-Macon 13; Washington College 0. Lowell Textile 12; Massachusetts Institute Technology 7. Montclair (N. Teachers 27; Wagner 13. Millersville 'Pa.) Teachers 35: Mansfield Teachers 0.

Potomac State 27; California (Pa.) Teachers 0. Edinboro Teachers Clarion 0 (tie). Cortland (N. Teachers 24; St. Lawrence 13.

Grove City 13; Allegheny 0. Morris Harvev 37; Davis-Elkins 0. Westminster Geneva i. West Virginia Wesleyan 47; Bethany 0. Indiana (Pa.) Teachers 13; Slippery Rock Teachers 0.

East Stroudsburg (Pa.) Teachers 26: Kutztown Teachers 0. Green Mountain Junior Morrisville Aggies 0. Fairmont State" 20: Shepherd Teachers 0. Glenvilie 27: Concord 7. who place kicked points after the rst three touchdowns, missed on this try.

West Virginia was never inside Fordham's 30 and got past the Ram's 45 only twice, although a series of desperation passes help- get them 10 first downs, five less than Fordham. on the Notre Dame 43-yard line and raced back to the Irish ten. But Tech'? scoring opportunity faded when End Frank Ramsay dropricd a pass on the goal line after the ball had been deflected by a Notre Dame defender into his hands. The Notre Dame first team started the game and after several minutes of futile gestures, launched a 76-ynrd drive from thoir own 2-1 for the first touchdown. Big Stcvp Jnzwik, Notre Dame's express, cantered bver with the score from the Tech seven-yard line hut it was Angling Angelc Bartclli's dead-eye passing which set up the score.

The Tech safety occurred when Fritz was trapped and tackled back of his own goal line. After this score. Notre Dame went into shell, electing to stick to orthodox football which produced plenty of yardage but became emeshed in frequent penalties, the muddy going and Tech's stubbornness. Me Ever Joins Tar Heel Bowl Squads Staff GREENVILLE. S.

Head Coach Gene McEver of Davidson College has accepted an invitaton to be. one of the four coaches who will direct the North Carolina squad during the first Carolinas Bowl football game in Sirrine Stadium. December 6. Lions Club officials announced today. McEver joins a staff of Doc Newton of N.

C. State. Ray Wolf of University of North Carolina and Peahead Walker of Wake Forest. The South Carolina staff is composed of Frank Howard of Clemson. Dicey McLeod of Furman and Billy Laval of Newberry Because of the shortage of gasoline, office workers in Shanghai are being urged not to use motor busses, taxicabs or private cars in going home for the noonday "tif- fin." but to start the day earlier and work through until quitting time early in the afternoon.

Tech held the Irish varsity ed (he extra point. i scoreless in the third period but In addition to Notre Damp fat let up against the reserves in the yardage total, the Irish rolled up opening stages of the final quart- -JO first downs against, completed and yielded the final touchdown five out of eight passes for 74 after a 19-yard Notre Dame drive, yards while Tech connected with (. Miller scored from the one-. one out of nine passes for 21 yard line and John Warner boot-1 yards and their only first down. Alabama 9: Tennessee 2.

Southern Meiliodist 20: Auburn 7. Maryland 13: Florida 12. Tulane o2: North Carolina 6. The Citadel 13: Furman 13 (tie) Virginia Tech 16: Davidson 0. Duke 27; Colgate 14.

Virginia Virginia Military 7. William and Mary 28; Hampden- Sydney 0. Mercer 20; Wofford 14. Vanderbilt 14; Georgia Tech 7. Louisiana Tech 10; Louisiana Normal 0.

Southwestern Tennessee 35: Sewanee 0. Georgetown (Ky.) 13; Findlay 0. Morehead Teachers 10-1; Rio Grande 0. Southwestern Louisiana 39; Spring Hill 0. MIDWEST Minnesota 39; Pittsburgh 0.

Illinois 40: Drake 0. Indiana 21: Nebraska 13. Wisconsin 23; Iowa 0. Michigan 14; Northwestern 7. Ohio State 16: Purdue 14.

Missouri 39; Iowa State 13. Oklahoma 16: Kansas State 0. 0: Lake Forest 0 (tie). Denison 6: Muskincum 0. Case 40: Wooster 0.

Toledo 20: John Carroll 0. Heidelberg 13: Kcnyon 0. Western Reserve 19; Baldwin- Wallace 0. Ohio University 0: Akron 0 (tic). Kentucky 21; Xavier 6.

Otterbein 12; Bluffton 0. West Liberty Kent State 0 (tie). Cincinnati J8; Centre 0. Thiel 34; Hiram 0'. Ohio Wesleyan 21: 0.

Creighton 14: Washington University (Mo.) 13. Western Michigan 28: Iowa Teachers 7. Alma 46: Adrian 6. Albion Hillsdalc 7 (tie). Bowling Green 20: Michigan Normal 6.

St. Norbort Michigan Tech 0. Luiher If): Simpson 7. Duhuque 13: Upper Iowa 7. Butler 20; DePauw 6.

got 15 yards roughing the to their one ball carrier. for As Smith limped from the game, Daley again banged over. Midget Bud Higgins'jame in to keep the drive rolling, speeding 47 yards to score and the first half ended 21 to 0. When the second half opened, Higgins took all of the fight out of the punchless Panthers by spotting 75 yards with the kickoff to tne' Pitt 25.. A fumble stopped the threat.

Pit.t punted and the midget who weighs around 147. hauled it back 49 yards to the 21. Then he dashed to the one and did a mighty spring to jump over the game's fourth touchdown. dominated the matinee, pulling a punt br.ck 21 yards and snatching a lateral for 21. Pitt again got a fumble and tried a pass but Garnaas spiked this by grabbing the ball and running 73 yards for the fifth touchdown: Things bogged down while a variety of scrubs strugeled about so Higgins came back in.

He ran back a 42 yards to the Pitt 14. He passed to sub Fullback Plunkett on the five and then little Bud skipped over for the last score. Violin strings are made from the intestines of sheep, not cats. Some, however, are made from cattle and horses. Manchester 12; Central ilnd.) Normal 0.

Indiana State 32; Valparaiso 0. Central Michigan Ball State Rose Poly 32; Principia 12. Stevens Point (Wis.) Teachers Oshkosh Teachers 2. Platteville Teachers 19; Milwaukee Teachers 0. Heidelberg 13; Kenyon 0.

Dayton 16; Miami (O.) 0. Lawrence 22; Monmouth 9. James Millikin 4o: Knox (. Washburn 7: Wichita 7 (tic). Culver-Stockton Missouri Central 6.

Kalamazoo Western Ontario 6. North Dakota State 13; Omaha University 6. Bemidji I Minn.) Teachers 2 Moorhcad Teachers 0. Gustavus Adolphus 3V; Aberdeen Northern Teachers 0. Mankato Teachers 21; Duluth Teachers 9- Coe 12; Cornell (la.) 6.

St. Joseph's (Ind.) Illinois Wesleyan 12 (tie). Evansville 27; Earlham 7. Illinois Normal 2i; Eastern II- Teachers 6. Elmhurst 3: Carthage 0.

Baker 17; College of Empona 0. Springfield (Mo.) Teachers 19; Kirksville Teachers 14. Maryville (Mo.) Teachers 20; Missouri Mines 7. St. Cloud (Minn.) Teachers 14; Winona Teachers 0.

Valley City Teachers 10; Mayville Teachers 7. Jamestown College 19; Wahpe- lon Science 6. Ferris Institute 14; Grand Rapids Junior 0. SOTTHWKST Rice 0: Louisiana State 27. Texas 48; Arkansas 14.

Texas A. M. 14; Texas Christian 0- Panhandle (Okla.) 20; Las Vegas (N. Normal 16. ROCKY MOUNTAINS Brigham Young 6: Utah 6 tie) Colorado 26: Colorado State 13 Denver 40; Wyoming 0.

Idaho 16; Utah State 0. Montana 13; Gonzajra 6. Colorado College 20: Colorado Mines 19. Albion (Idaho) 35; Weber (Ogden. Utah) 0.

FAS WEST Oregon 19; California 7. Washington 14: U. C. L. A.

7. Santa Clara 7: Michigan State i Southern California 7: Wash- i itigton State 6. 1 Stanford 42; San Francisco 26. Triumphs, 16-0, Over Wildcats James And Smith Spark Gobbler Attack Against Injury-Ridden Davidsonians By FRITZ UTTLEJOHN DAVIDSON, Oct. Virginia Poly converted their own mistakes into points today to rack, up their first Southern Conference victory of the.

season, downing Davidson 16 to 0. Five thousand homecoming day fans, including Governor J. Melville Broughton saw the run over the injury ridden Wildcats almost at will to score two touchdowns and a safet" in first half and then fritter away scoring chances. through the rest of the game. Two plain named Virginians, Bill James of Hampton, a senior, and Bob Smith of Charlottcsville, a sophomore, sparked the Gobbler attack.

James, who runs, winds up and throws like an outfielder, ran and nassed' to set up the first score in a 54-yard drive in the first period and then skirted right end for three yards and the touchdown despite two penalties right at the goal and some questionable quartet-backing, Roger McClure a guard kicked the point. In the second Smith missed a prodigious 45-yard' field goal and as it turned out that play sei up a total of nine points for the Gobblers. The ball went into the end zone and when. Johnnie Miller sought to punt on second down, Ben Tate, Tecli guard smashed through and blocked the ball clear across the end zone for an automatic safety and two points. This in turn set up another score.

Earl (Red) Bethea, rushed in t.o kick for the Wildcats after the safety, punted far up field from his. 20. Smith caught Ihe ball on his 35 and raced 65 yards, untouched, for the Virginians' final score. McClure again boottd a perfect placement for the point. The Wildcats never threatened until just before the e'hd of half (IS) RG Davis McClure Hipp Judy RE Smith Chascn QB Spencer Kern Miller James A line plav and a pass.

Burns and lneri the drives, engineered by to Jimmy Webb, sophomore end I dynamic 138-pound Quarterback put the "ball on Tech's 13 and i Dav Spencer, fizzled out on 35 again Jenkins slammed through and 25 ard lines respectively, on-four smashes, at the line. Tech's shifty offense, with So- i phomorc Dave-Eldredge and Full-! back Bob Plaster supplying the I chief portions, carried to Vanriy's five-yard line 'n the third period before (he Vandy line stemmed the threat. Again early in the fourth the Jackets stormed to Vandy's 14, but Art Rebrovich i "sintth gobbled in little Johnny Bosch's pass on his own goal fine to halt this drive. The Jackets were not to be denied, however. In the last' three minutes they reeled off 58 yards for their lone touchdown.

R. W. Shelton diving from the 4- yard line after flipping a 25-yard pass to Eldredge. The young of the eagle is known as an eaglet. Score by periods: V.

P. I. 7 0 Davidson 0 0 0 0 James. Smith. Points after touchdown: McClure 2 (placements).

Safety. Tate. Tctrakaidecahedra! objects have sides4. The Sealyhnm terrier dog originated in Wales. Meteors travel at the rate of about 100,000 miies an hour.

Fresno State 3. HE WORLD'S BIGGEST SELLING LIGHTWEIGHT HAT! The fact that Dobbs Cross Country is the world's biggestselling lighnvcighthat should mean everything KJJOH Because if it weren't the lightest, the liveliest, the smartest looking lightweight, it never could have pleased so many thousands of men! Others $6.50 to $8.50 North Main Street i.

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About The High Point Enterprise Archive

Pages Available:
148,309
Years Available:
1906-1977