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Democrat and Chronicle from Rochester, New York • Page 53

Location:
Rochester, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
53
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

VARSITY OUTPLAYS FAVORED TUFTS, 14 TO 0 Varsity's Victory Featured by Line, Passing of Welter By FRANK LILLICH Photos on 1'age '21) It was Homecoming for tlie University of Rochester's footballers yesterday, and the Kivrrmcn welcomed their return to familiar soil by jarring favored Tufts, 14 to 0, before 7,000 RITER' SUNDY OCTOBER 19, 1917 Game Statistics Ilocheter Tufts fans in River Campus Stadium. Rochester had all the better of the going in a battle in which bruising line play held the spotlight. The Varsity forwards, clearing the way to a decided statistical advantage for the home forces, also set up two first half scores which provided the margin of victory. Both touchdowns. climaxing Klmt down II Yards cainrd, mohlnc 12 Yard icatnrd, forward Forward attempted 13 Forward romphtd a Forward Intercepted hy 1 lard Interception returned.

2 4 Number itf punt II I'lintlnc sir. from wrrimmace 38 Total yard all kirk returned 87 Fumble .1 Own fumble recovered I Yard loot, penalties la 4 S4 4 IS 4 i I nt 4 1 IS short marches in the first and second periods, came on pass plays, with Quarterback Jack Welter, who showed decided improvement in the aerial department, pitch ing fofthe payoff on each occasion Virtually all the game thrills were concentrated in the opening half aa Tufts, unable to generate a real scoring inrear. curing ins afternoon, showed stellar defensive play in the final two periods. Too IJite for Tufta By then, however, it was too late. Bob Branigan, UK co-cap Vrx f-JWrnmB 1 tain and guard, had thrown such a teeth-rattling tackle at Tufts' Julius Doliner in the initial period that the latter fumbled a punt SCHOELLKOPF SIZZLER: The weather and Navy's foot-ball team were too hot for Cornell yesterday, but a record turnout of 35,500 fans enjoyed summer weather despite the 38-19 loss to Middies.

Picture, taken by Democrat and Chronicle Chief Photographer Fred Powers from Gannett Newspapers plane, shows Schoellkopf Field layout and crowd. through the line, then dropped back to punt, wobbling one out of bound at the 27-yard rHripp to set off the Varsity's Touchdown Express again. Another Welter Aerial After an incomplete pflss. Halfback Ufb Murphy picked up four yards, then snared a Welter aerUl for nine more. Hoesterey crashed the middle for 12 to the two-yard stripe; but then was stopped cold and Murphy was tossed back on the five.

Here Welter threw a third down over-the-line rmss to Wren in the end zone, and Wren again converted to wind up the day' With time running out in the half, the Rivermen started a drive from midfield which reached the Jumbos' 14 before Haines' interception ended the march. Rochester was In a hole after the second half kickoff when Doliner punted out of bounds on the Varsity 10. The Jumbos, however, couldn't advance after taking Welter punts on the UP. 39 and 40. and they only were to get one more chance.

That came late in the fourth period. Halfback John Daley connected on a 12-yard pasa from the Tufts 34 to Warren McKinnon. and on the next play hit Itus Johnston for 21 yards to the Rochester 33. The Jumbos picked up seven more yards as they lost the ball on downs on the Itivrrmen's 26. Th.

victory was the third of the season for the Varsity, which Iot only to DePauw. and marked the second loss in four starts for the Massachusetts aggregation. It was the second meeting between the two schools, Rochester having defeated Tufts way back in 1904, 16 to 5. Between the hnlves a dozen members of the UU Quilting Club provided the cnteratinment, with a Navy Overpowers Courageous Cornell Before Record 35,500 Crowd, 38 to 19 Brown Edged By Green in Thrilling Duel Sauer Rated Most Valuable In' 47 season Game Statistics Hanover, N. II.

-CP) In the Touis 4.1") Hank Sauer. veteran Syracuse outfielder, By ELLIOT CUSHING Democrat and Chronicle Sports Editor Other Photo on Page 6D Schoellkopf Field, Ithaca Navy made its first invasion of Ithaca a triumphant yesterday as the Middies co-ordinated air and land power to defeat a stubborn but out Nvy Cornell was named by the Sporting News thrilling finish on Memorial Fidd since the famous "fifth down" game against Cornell in Dartmouth' Indians yesterday scored a touchdown with only irst downs 2 4 Yards gained rushing 3.1 if Forward passes attempted 2 IT Forward passes 1.1 Yards sained, forwards 1S2 152 Forward passes 2 1 Yards gained, runback Intercepted passes 15 61 Punting; average (from scrira- mnce) 2. 40 Total yards all kicks returned 13S 4 Opponent fumbles 'J Yards lout, penalties 35 41) II seconds of playing time remain matched Cornell team, ViS to 1J. A record Cornell crowd of 35,500, shedding coats and wraps in the unseasonable 82-degree temperature, saw the more potent Middies, leading by only five points going into the closing quarter, finally draw away from the tenacious Big Kod ing and defeated Brown University 13-10. with two game-clinching fourth As 10,000 shirtsleeved fans, Mt- period touchdowns.

last night as the International League's most valuable player for 1917. Hammer I Hank led the league In bitting: with .338, collected the most hits, 182, scored the most runs, 130, and batted In the most runs, 141. Sauer, who between the 4jts' ting in 6 degree temperature, they rammed over the deciding reeched, either for Dortmouth to Pulverized by the grinding Middie attack which rolled up 35 Wcore or Brown to hold, the Big touchdowns. Lineups: Pos. navy I.K Markel yards to Cornell's 19, the men of CORNELL BolRer kireen advanced steadily from its of which penetrated to the Ithaca 4, the other, to the 20, but was powerless to stop a thirds launched in the waning moments of the half.

With Hawkins chewing out large chunks of groundage through the Cornell forwards and Baysinger dropping passes into the laps of receivers, the Middies moved 51 yards to tally with 2:45 remaining in the first half, Hawkins slamming over from the two. Wills' accurate place kick sent Navy into a 14-13 lead, a lead which it never relinquished. In a race with the time clock, Bob Home passed to Phil 'Ryan for 35 yards to the Cornell 14 where the Navy end was tackled out of which End Carl Wren promptly covered on the Tufts 36. It took the Varsity only three plays to score after that one. The second period tally eame after the Varsity forward wall, hurrying Fullback Bob Haines as he dropped back to his own goal line to punt, rushed him into a dribbling boot which went out of bounds on the Tufts 27.

This time it took Rochester seven plays to punch over the score. Coach Elmer Burnham's forwards were sparked by Wren, who Rallied a touchdown and two extra points; Center Tom Hoffman, a 60-mlnute player who sparkled both on offense and defense, and Branigan. Far Ahead Statistically Statistically, the Rivermen collected a definite advantage. They rolled to 13 first downs, 124 yards rushing and 63 passing while their foes from Medford, Mass. were limited to A flret downs, 54 yards along the ground and 46 through the airways.

In addition to Welter, who threw all of Rochester's 13 passes and completed a half dozen, Fullback Howie Hoesterey came in for a ahare of the backfleld Bpotllght as the day'ei Number 1 ground gainer. Hoesterey lugged the leather 13 times for a total advance of 58 yards. Aside from the two touchdowns, there was only one serious scoring bid, with the Rivermen moving to the Tufts 14 in the final eeconds of the second quarter. A penalty set them back, and Welter's last-play pass was intercepted by Haines in the end zone and run out to the 7. First Score After Fumble Neither team notched a first down in the first quarter until Wren covered Doliner's fumble of a Welter punt.

Then Fullback Frankle Walter crashed for 11 yards on two plays, and Welter found elongated Chuck Gray all alone on the 15-yard strip. Gray took Welter's aerial and ambled the remaining distance to the goal line unmolested. Wren added the first of hie two conversions to give the Rivermen a 7-0 advantage at the 12-mlnute mark of the quarter. Welter's 45-yard second quarter punt was downed on the Tufts, 9, and the Jumbos were in trouble again. Haines picked up a yard Westphal iwn ZO lor ine score, lauiea ny Ithaca stayed hard at the Sailors' heels by promptly cashing an early first quarter scoring opportunity Qulnn Btight Half Hal Fitkln who took LT N.

Ktnlth LAI Kmerson Scott RfJ Schlweck RT Khlmshak RK Ryan Pastuck Fascavage Loux kitch from iusvtr Joe Sullivan and striking back with two electri HANK SAL Kit has alternated nd skirted his own left end, nip- Pistaalo fying touchdown runs by Harry ing into the end tone a foot from CjB Baysinger Dean LH McCully Dawson RH Schwoeffermann Holland he sideline. 'Dartmouth's victory was hard FB Hawkins Wright Navy 7 10 1 14 38 Cornell 7 6 0 19 ought as Brown jumped off to a 0-0 lead in the first half and Navy scoring Touchdowns, Baysinger, Hawkins 2. Ryan. Home (for Baysinger); temed headed for a triumph in bounds, stopping the clock with 3 field goals, Wills; points after touchdown, his S2nd meeting between these Id Ivy rivals. wills Cornell scoring Touchdowns, Kretz (for Holland), Cassel (for Bolger), Dawson; points after touchdown.

Dean. seconds remaining. Here Wills rushed in to send a low place kick over the cross-bar and Navy led, Brown raced to a 6core in less Acmt Telethoto COLGATE'S Walter Piebes (38), fullback, runs into trouble after 4-yard gain against Princeton in second quarter of game at Princeton. N. J.

Tigers won, 20 to 7. Story on Page 41) Substitutions: Cornell, Kmij: Rogers. Cassel and Norm Dawson. Explosive Fullback Navy bristled with all the offensive weapons of modern football warfare. It had an explosive fullback in Bill Hawkins, who bulled his way to two touchdowns and levelled the Red defenses with his pile-driving line blasts.

It had a deadly passer in Reaves (Ribs) Baysinger, the son of the Syracuse University fotball coach, who had a field day hitting receivers with his 'baseball-like pitches against a sleepy-eyed set of Cornell sentinels. It had a sure-toed kicker in ha.n four minutes of the opening 17-13 as the teams trooped for their cassel, Robeson; tackles, Clark. Farrell Gryska. Davis; guards, Pascavage histle but a holding penalty nulli- Schrauth, Quasey; centers, Cronln, ed those six points. Then, a few backs, Mercies, Bradley.

Kretz. Babul Shawskl. Navy: Ends, Fraslsr, R. Smith; minutes later, the visiting Bruins roved right back to the one foot but Dartmouth stiffened and tackles, strahley, Tagliente; guards. Hunt Cooper, Goldlng: barks.

Home, Moore Gerber, McCully, Russell, Abromltis Arnold, Wills. Dean in the end zone. It wasn't smashing, crashing, slashing demonstration of football as it ehouldn't be played, to the accompaniment of a rapid fire game description over the public address system. The lineups: Tuff Rorhe.teT I.K Kohert Ory I.T Sililuntx ll Hermit Ylrrell ilnffaa TUi Sieve Mvl1q RT- Rirenl.m O' Neill RK Wei len Wren Zin'-ner IIH yy.en UK rni.iRione Oermo KB Tryder Hoe-fere Rochester 7 7 ri I Tuft. fl Points after touchdowns Wren 2 fpUce-mentl.

Touchrlowng: Gray, Wren. Rochester mibstrtirtlons: Wclcerrrn Moore. Benttie. Hiw4, Smith. Rexi Woodams.

Murphy. Tally. Tvmeson. Vai-Orier. Exr-er.

Bowllan. gtOcKInc, Walter. Phillip. Welter. Tuft Kuhotltution: HVne.

O'Keefe. Alexander. Neil. Rom, WaJh, Knrhiu' Haley, Ive. Schneider, Hiiches, A-ker-nn, Lorlnir.

Raurnaion, Johnnton. Ree-1 lohn.on. T. Reed. Roy.

G. Heed. LtlrR. Referee, Howie Krecltleton. St Bor-ventnre; umpire, Herbert Benonl.

Colcat: head llnenman. Carl fhamberlaln. field JudKe. Harney Pmlth. Illinoij.

Time of quarter. 15 Chiefs and the Cincinnati Reds since 1942, will be given another chance with the Reds next season. California Clips Cougars, 21-6 Berkeley, Calif. CP) California's Bears combined power football, alert playing and a fjw breaks to defeat the scrappy Washington State College Cougars, 21-6, yesterday before a crowd, estimated at 36,000 fans. It was the fifth straight victory for the unbeaten Bears and their first Coast Conference win of -the season.

California scored all its points during the first half, held the offen-elve edge in the third quarter, and was outplayed, in the fourth period, when Washington State scored its lone touchdown. until Hawkins smashed across kept the goal line uncrossed. However, Brown refused to be from the Cornell one to culminate Billy Direct Dies; denied and Fullback Arn Green a 79-yard Middie drive with 5:25 finally bucked over from one foot remaining to play in the game dressing rooms. 70-Yard Drive by Navy Navy opened a 70-yard drive shortly after the start of the second half. The march was highlighted by a 31-yard run by Hawkins.

Assisting him on this drive was Alvin McCully, second most back on the Navy roster. The scoring play was on the freakish side, Ryan gathering in a Baysinger aerial in the end zone after it had bounced high in the air off the hands of two Ithaca defenders. Wills again converted to make it Navy 24, Cornell 19. Cornell looked like a thoroughly Set Pacing Marks cut; That score climaxed a 33 yard that the Bid Red was beaten. young Jim Wills, an obscure substitute before last week's game and whose name was not even included among the list of 55 Navy drive.

Center Joe Condon came in and kicked the point. Cornell Scores Quickly Cornell brought the shirt-sleeved Hanover, Pa. JD Billy Direct, standard bred horse with two Then 40 seconds after the start players carried on the program. of the second quarter Condon Crescent crowd to its feet by capitalizing on a Navy fumble in the opening minutes of play. Bay- world record pacing titles, Wills converted the try for the extra point after five Middie touchdowns and booted a 20-yard field stood on the Dartmouth 26 and placekicked a field goal for three died yesterday at the Hanover Shoe Farms.

He was foaled in singers rumDie was recoverea Dy goal with only 3 seconds remaining more Brown points. Fred Westphal, Big Red tackle, A 43-yard scamper by Fatkin, 1934. James C. Overbaugh, an official beaten team at this stage but the on the Sailors' 11, and on the third play from scrimmage Dean passed in the first period to give the Sailors a 17-13 advantage at half time. hero of the final tally, put Dart mouth back in the game, four min doughty Big Reds came up from the depths of despair to shock the to Kretz in the end zone for a touchdown.

Dean converted and of the farms, said the horse had been ill for several months with utes and IS seconds after half time I'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiimiimmim Rugged Forward Wall But more than all this, Navy intermission. sweltering -throng with a thunderous 97-yard touchdown bolt. Backed a heart ailment. The Indians started on their own Cornell led, 7 to 0, three minutes and 19 seconds afjer the opening whistle. Pacing as a 4-year-old, Billy Di 44 after a Brown punt and ground brought along a rugged, tightly knit forward line that completely smothered the Big Red's running rect set a world mark of 1:55 for their way to the 43 in four plays.

Navy roared right back with a the mile on a mile track at Lex Then on a quick opener Fitkin game, forced it to resort to the 77-yard push that was sparked by ington, Ky. In 1938 and 1:59 lor the same distance on a half-mile air lanes whenever it came in pos the running of Bob Schwoeffertnann session of the ball. iraoK at jn. a year a fit aA 9'm All of Cornell's scoring was ac later. lipped through a hole in the line, Bpun to avoid the secondary defenders and sped untouched to the end zone w-ith several Bruins in futile chase.

Herb Carey kicked the point. up against its own 3-yard line by a "seeing eye" Baysinger punt, the Ithacans gambled and won. With Dean deep in his zone, the Navy defense rushed to block his first down kick. Instead the Cornell quarterback shot a pass to Dawson who gathered it in on the 10 and galloped down the right sideline into pay dirt. He was ably assisted by a beautiful midfield block by John Rogers, who rubbed out Schwoeffermann, the last Navy man with a chance to haul down and Hawkins and the passing of Baysinger.

Baysinger scored from the one on a quarterback sneak and Wills first extra point tied the score at the 7:30 mark. An outstanding sire, the horse complished through the medium of the skyways. Navy blended blasting overland power with de begot three pacers with records of 2 minutes or better for the mile, Direct Kxpress, Knslgn Hanover Summaries: vastating aerial thrusts to achieve victory, the first Navy triumph in and Morgan Hanover. Cornell didn't wait long to recapture the lead. Forty-five seconds after the start of the second a 10-game losing stretch that dated Ithaca Trins back to the early part of the 1946 season.

I i THAT'S WHAT THE MAN SAID quarter, Harry Cassell, a substitute end, intercepted a Baysinger aerial the speeding Dawson. Despite its many obvious ad JL. Sampson, 20-0 vantages. Navy still had a tiger Ail-Around Strength But Navy manpower and superior all-around strength was too much HOCKEY REPLAY ORDERED New Haven, Conn. UP) Maurice Podoloff, president of the American Hockey League, said yesterday that Friday night's game between Washington and Hershey, called off because of fog, with the Hears holding a 1-0 lead, 'definitely will have to be replayed." i Sampson JD Ithaca College and raced 61 yards down the left side line ta give Cornell a 13-7 margin as Dean missed the conversion.

Navy Thrown Back The embattled White Shirts threw back two Navy thrust, one for the stout-hearted Cornellians in by the tail going into the fourth period, with Cornell rebounding on a spectacular third quarter 90-yard run by Norm Dawson, who snatched a pass thrown by Bob counted three times in the first half yesterday to whitewash Sampson. 20-0. the all-telling final period, which saw the invaders control the ball as Hum Paw.ineau, Ithaca's passing ce, connected twice with Bill Kyder for first period scores. Lind Results of College Football Games Throughout Nation North Dakota University 25, North say Northam punched over a second period touchdown on a short buck to climax a sustained drive. Sampson reached the visitors' two-yard line in th second period, fcut kt the ball on a ball Trinity 25, Hobart 7.

Navy Piebes 7. Maryland Freshmen 6. Niagara 27, Waynesburj 7. Potomac State 7, Davis and Elklni o. Glenvllle 14.

Concord 13. Arnold 20. Lowell Textile Indiana (Pa.) Teachers 13, Fairmont EAST Rochester 14, Tufts O. Army 40, Virginia Tech 0. Navy 38, Cornell 19.

Purdue 62, Boston University 7. Dartmouth lj. Brown 10. Princeton 20, Colgate 7. Pennsylvania 34, Columbia 14.

Maine 13. Connecticut 7. Harvard 7. Holy Cross 0. Wet Virginia 40.

New York Unlver. O. R. P. 1.

33. Union 24. Western Maryland 41, Washington College Wlsconio 9, Ysle 0. Navy 150s 13, Rutgers 150i 0. Wesleyan 40.

Hwarthmore 7. Cornell Frosh 14, Klski 0. New Hampshire 21. 8prinffild 17. Rutgers 38.

Fordham 6. Bates 12, Northeastern O. Bowdoin 14. Williams 0. Brooklyn 39.

Wagner 14. Rhode Island State 20, Massachusetts 13. Vermont 33, Norwich 0. Rider 0, Trenton State Teachers 0 (tie). Keystone Junior College 6, New York Aggies 0.

Lebanon Valley 35. Mt. St. Mary's 0. Penn State 40.

Hyracuse 0. Kast Stroudsburg Teachers 21, Cortland Teachers 0. Lafayette 27, Bucknell 7. Clarion (Pa.) Teachers 19, Thlel 7. Duquesne Freshmen Western Virginia Freshmen 3.

West Virginia Wesleyan 27, Carnegie Tech Amherst 13. Colby 7. Ithaca 20. Sampson o. Clarkson 27, St.

Lawrence 12. Scranton 19, Youngstown S. Middlebury 7, Coast Guard Academy 7 ti). Mississippi 27, Tulana 14. Davidson 49, Hampden-Sydney O.

Randolph-Macon 35, Catholic Unlver. 0. Kentucky 14, Vanderbllt 0. Texas 21, Arkansas 6. South Carolina State College 2, Ciaflln University 0.

Quantlco Marine 57. Camp Lee 0. Cherry Point Marines 13, Pensacola Naval Air Station 8. Kort Valley State College 21, Edwards Warters Collese O. GeorRla Tech 27, Auburn 7.

Wake Forest 39, George Washington 7. North Carolina 13, William and Mary 7. Duke 19, Maryland 7. Richmond 21, V. M.

I. 20. Virginia 32, Washington and Lee 7. Mississippi State 34, Duquesne 0. Delaware State 11, Johnson C.

Smith 7. Florida A AM 8, Morris Brown of Atlanta 0. Western (Ky.) 15, Bradley University 13. Chattanooga 20, Centenary 0. Florida 7, N.

Carolina St. 6. SOUTHWEST Texas Christian 28. Texas A A. NT 0.

Southern Methodist 14, Kica 0. Baylor 32, Texas Tech 8. East Texas State 33, University of Houston 7. Georgetown 12, Tulsa 0. Wichita 7, Abilene Christian 0.

'AR WKfST Montana State 13, Montana Unlver. 12. Utah 13, Denver 7. Colorado 9, Brigham Young 7. Idaho 20, Portland 14.

USC 48, Oregon State 8. California 21, Washington Stata 8. UCLA 39, Stanford 6. Oregon 8, Washington 0. Wyoming 33, Utah Stat ltf.

Dakota State 20. Butler 14, Wabash 0. Valparaiso 55, Great Lakes 0. Franklin 7, Earlham 0. St.

John's (Minn.) 19, Hamllne 12. Oshkosh Teacher 19, Stout Instltuta 12. Mission House 20, Concordia (111.) 0. Toledo 14, Dayton 13. Kansas 13, Oklahoma 13 (tie).

Ohio Northern 7, Wittenberg 0. Wheaton 3S, Elmhurst 0. North Central 13, Lake Forest 6. Georgia 20, Oklahoma A. A M.

7. Missouri 47, Kansas State 7. Wllberforce 101, WriKht Field 0. Missouri School of Minea 14, Central Missouri Teachers 7. Washington University 40, Arknasas State 14.

Whitewater Teachers 7, Plattevllle Teachers 7 (tie). Southern Illinois State 7, Western Illinois State 0. Anderson (Ind.) 38, MrKendree 0. St. Joseph's (Ind.) 6.

Ball State 6. Hanover 14, Manchester 8. WartburK 9, Buena Vista 7. St. Thomas (St.

Paul) 7, Gustavus-Adolphus 6. Marieta 20, Kenyno 6. Omaha University 39, Sioux Falls (S. 0. Georgetown 12, Tulsa 0.

Culver M. A. 23, Earlham College Simpson 20, Parsons 8. Emporia State 7. Southwestern 7 (tie).

Iowa Wesleyan 28. William, Penn 2. Marshall 24, Evansville 0. SOUTH Alabama 10, Tennessee 0. i CRADLE HEEL TREDS It's a wise man who makes comfort the deciding factor in his choice of a shoe.

Comfort with no sacrifice to looks and that means Cradle Heels. The cupped-for-comfort heel holds up to 80 of your weight, balancing you as nature intended. Choose your favorite style in Cradle Heels at Eastwood's. San Francisco Tops Marquette Milwaukee IJVy A withering aerial attack which produced three touchdowns paved the way for a decisive 3t-13 victory for the University of San Francisco over Marquette University in an interec-tional football game before 13.000 fans at Hilltop Stadium yesterday. The Dons took command in the opening quarter after a pair of pocr Marquette punts and remained in the drivers seat for all except a few moments in the third period when the Hilltops counted on the longest run of the day, an f5 yard punt return by Fullback Lorry Plate.

The sharp passing combination rf Jimmie Ryan and Joe Scott connected thjee times for touch W. Va. State 7. Grove City 25, Hlrman (Ohio) 0. Allegheny 14, Westminster (Pa.) 7.

Lehigh 9, Gettysburg 7. Slippery Rock State Teachers 7, Shlp-pensburg (Pa.) State Teacbera 0. Haverford 33. Drexel Johns Hopkins 19, Penn Military Col- Dickinson 33, Susquehanna 27. Buffalo 40, Alfred 7.

Alfred Frosh 12, Buffalo Frosh 7. Hartwlck 21, Urala 0. Hofstra 26. CCTNY 14 MIDWKST St. Louis 41, Drake 2..

Notre Dame 31, Nebraska 0. Illinois 40. Minnesota 13. Indiana 41. Pittsburgh 6.

Michigan 49, Northwestern 21. San Francisco 34, Marquete 13. Carleton 2fi, DePauw O. Western Mlchgan 14, Iowa State Teachers 0. Hillsdale 26, Albion 0.

John Carroll 28. Baldwin-Wallace 19. Bowling Green 2, Ohio University 0. Ohio Wesleyan 7, Case 0. Heidelberg 20, Capital 0.

Akron University 19, Mount Union 14. Wlchta 7. Abilene Christian 0. Iowa 13, Ohio State 13 (tie). Michigan State 20, Iowa State 0.

Kent state 13, Kalamazoo 0. Denison 28. Wooster 0. Miami (Ohio 8. Xavler 6 (tie).

I Oberlln 20. Hamilton 7. Ashland 42, Eluffton EASTWOODS 29 East Ave. STORE HOURS 10 A. M.

to 5:30 P. M. CompUfe Shorn Sfore Pus foifwoocf Fitting downs, the plays covering 36, 48 and51 yards. SniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiiiiiH.

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