Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Democrat and Chronicle from Rochester, New York • Page 51

Location:
Rochester, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
51
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Yellow jackets Down Vermont, Big Red Slips Past Yale, 7 25 12, for 1st Season Win; to 0, in Stiff Ivy League Battle CX 1 1 5 A v' A i vvf il Y3 '4mv-J'm' CALVO TO SAMPSON, COMPLETE: Harry Sampson, Cor- I nell (circle), took pass from Rocco Calvo on his shoulder in first quarter yesterday against Yale. Calvo, Big Red quarterback, is burled under group, far right. Cornell won, 7-0, to stay unbeaten. TOUCHDOWN SPLASH: Vermont fullback Al Tavares hits paydirt from three for visitors' first score against Varsity. Other Vermonters are Glen Coutts, left, Bob Brown.

Varsity players Rochester's Ryan Stars for Eli In Defeat as 32,000 Watch By ELLIOT CUSHING Democrat and Chronicle Sporti Editor Ithaca Yale applied the pressure for 60 tingling minutes in sun-soaked Schoellkopf Field yesterday but Cornell registered a second-quarter touchdown and protected it down to the final gun to achieve a hard-earned 7-0 victory over the previously unbeaten, Elis. Jeff Fleischmann, burly Big Red fullback, kept the Ithacans in the undefeated circle by plung- Shows Revived Offensive Before 6,500 at River Campus By DAVE OCORR A determined University of Rochester eleven scored three times in the second quarcr yesterday to notch its first victory of the season by overpowering a University of Vermont team, 25-12, at the River Campus gridiron. Before an estimated 6,500 fans the Yellowjackcts turned in their best offensive effort of Batavia Record in Sight Cardinal Priest Nabs the touchdown. Bill Kirk place-kicked the extra Cornell Strong Near Goalline Few in the multi-colored shelves of the big concrete crescent thought this would be the clincher at the moment for both teams had shown explosive offensives throughout the first half. But Cornell's rock-ribbed defensive platoons, white yielding ground between the 30-yard line stripes, overwhelmed the Elis whenever they threatened to get within closeup scoring range.

7th Straight from left are Harry Stathe, on Secor. Coach Elmer Burnham't victory of season against three Pittsburgh's Rally Falls Short, 28-23 Evanston, III. (INS) Northwest ern Wildcats turned back a desperately battling Pittsburgh Panther! eleven, 21 to 23 yesterday before 35,000 fans at Dyche Stadium. The Wildcats led. 28 to 0, at tht start of the final quarter but were almost caught by Pittsburgh's "Gar rison finish.

ine rantners, sparked by some fancy passing by Bob Oslerhouf. sophomore back, scored 23 points in as wild a rally as Dyche Stadium ever has been. But the Northwestern lead proved just too big to overcome, Dick Flowers pass to Keddie in the third quarter gave the Wildcats their fourth score and they led 28 to 0 going into the final quarter. A Northwestern penalty gave Pitt its chance, Osterhout scored on a quarterback sneak. Another penalty set Northwestern back on its goal line and a swarm of Pitt tacklers dropped John Milter of the Wildcats for a safety and gave Pitt another two points.

A few minutes later, Osterhout passed to Chris Warriner, who raced 33 yards for a touchdown, and raised Pitt's point total to 16. Osterhout was hot and shot another pass to Nick Derosa for another six-pointer a few plays later, making it 23 for Pitt, with the resulting conversion. Time ran out on the rally. CLOSED MONDAY ALL 0AY ground, Frank HoWd, and BUI Yellow jacket forces posted first ties, one loss, winning 25-12. Headline Notes Gloom of Irish In New Defeat South Bend, Ind.

P) The South Rend Tribune last night illustrated the gloom over Notre Dame's 20-7 football defeat by Indiana with a black memoriam-style box on its front page. ine nanntr headline la big, black 100 print type, said: "Don't Look Now, Directly under it was a box. with a black border, seven columns wide and an inch and a quarter deep. Tucked into the middle of the white space in the box was a small tine; 'Indiana Defeats Noire Dame." (Story on Page l) SMU Downs Rice, 42 io 21 Houston, Tex. 7P) Undefeated, untied Southern Methodist powered by hard charging Kyle Rote and pro tected by an iron-clad pass defense, knocked Rice from among the unbeaten, 42 to 21.

last nigrd before a crowd of 70,000. SMU struck for touchdowns the first two times it had the ball, then beat off a Rice comeback and rolled along easily as two pass interceptions got a pair of quick scores. The victory was the fifth Straight for the Methodists, the nation's third-ranking team this week. For Rice, starting defense of its 1949 Southwest Conference championship, it was the first defeat in 13 games. Its first conference loss since October, 1948, Rote scored the first and third SMU touchdowns and paved the way for another as the Methodists relied most of the night on power'instead of their anticipated aerial show.

NiiitMiiiiiiiiiiiitfiiitiiiiiiiUiititiiiiiiitititiiiiiiiiiinitHtiiNtg Special to The Democrat and Chronicle Batavia Climbing to within one of the all-time Batavia record for consecutive wins, held by Triple Threat, Cardinal Priest racked up his seventh straight before 5,194 fans here last Hi 7 and recovered a fumhlft In aititiiinnl to teaming with Dales behind the line. Several times the 195-pound junior stopped enemy ball carriers at the line of scrimmage with sharp tackles. Dick Latt Stands Out tor tne detested Catamounts, a Rochester boy, Dick Lalt, stood out as the sophomore line backer, con sistemly stopped the hard running rellowiacket hacks. Latt and Dave Banta were stalwarts on the reserve- weak Vermont line. In the back- field for the visitors the two K-men, Kehoe and Keefer, scintillated.

The triumph a. sweet one foi Elmer Burnham and his men as it broke the ice after a four game fam ine which produced three ties and a loss. The Rivermen are now all even with a .300 percentage of 1-1-3. The defeat was the third for the University of Vermont, which has one win. Summary on Page 9D Cornellians Bow In Cross Country Ithaca A Penn State College crosscountry team overwhelmed Cornell, 15-40.

over a triangular route here yesterday. The first seven men across the line were Penn State harriers. Syracuse Frosh crosscountry runners beat the Cornell subs, 17-38, here yesterday over a four-mile course. Syracuse nabbed five of the first six places. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit TUES.

AND TXUM, mOHTl TO ttU IATU1IDAYI TO il SB -si ing across trom the two-yard line after 11:56 of the second quarter. Big Jeffs winning lunge culminated a 62-yard drive launched after Todd Kolb poundced on a Yale fumble on the Cornell 38. Although Yale threw only two scoring scares into the Cornell camp, the Bulldogs, with Capt. Brad Quacken bush playing a smashing game at end, put. up a rugged defense which twice stalled the Big Red machine on the two-yard line.

The Blue's defensive legions thwarted Cornell's outside running game and ganged up in the mid dle to hold the pile-driving Fleisch mann to 72 yards gained in 19 rushes. Even on 14 First Downs Statistically the game was pretty much a standoff. Each team racked up 14 first downs. Cornell held a 32-yard advantage 182 to 130, in yards gained from scrimmage, but the statistics do not tell the full story. For all the gilt-edge scoring chances belonged to Cornell, and only Yale's dogged stubbornness, when pushed back against its goal line, held the Ithacans to their one-touchdown margin.

The day's biggest thrill for the 32,000 lightly-jacketed fans occurred whe a brilliant fourth-quarter 65-yard touchdown run by sophomore Bob Engle was nullified because Cornell was found guilty of an illegal use of glands infraction. Although Cornell was only penalized five times a new seasonal low for the Ithacans this one proved costly as the Red Shirts shook Engle loose for the only real breakway run of the game. Ryan Sparks Eli Attack The tie-breaking touchdown came shortly after Jimmy Ryan, former Rochester Aquinas Institute star, who quarterback the Eli's all the way on offense, had set the Yale attack into motion with three runs of 12, 8, and 16 yards. Jerry Conway, the Elis' right halfback in the Herman Hickman split-T, fumbled on the Cornell 38 and Kolb recovered for the Red. Engle ripped for a first down apd Fleischmann rammed to another on the Yale 39.

A center alley pass, Rocco Calvo to Vic Pujo, was good for 21 yards. Fleischmann took charge from there. He slammed to the 5, then the 2 where he punched the center of the rugged Yale line for SECTION Rochester, N. Y. Sunday, October 22, 1950 Downs Win tor Henley.

Dillon did the mile in 2:08.2. paying $15.30. NOTES: Plans for bringing Prox imity and Pronto Don together here Friday night wert virtually abandoned, as the great Vtrburst trot ter came out of the Toledo race lame last Friday Owner Ralph Ver- hurst said here last night he is considering retiring "Proxie" for the sea son Driver Adrian Burgett was roundly booed by the fans holding tickets on Rudine in the second, as the horse went Into a break leading by four lengths with no one nearby When Mr. Oakley won the third, it marked three consecutive winners from the No. 5 slot Claire Cobb, father of Eddie Cobb, one of the country's top drivers was a Downs visitor.

Results on Page 2D Kentucky Thumps Villanova, 34-7 Philadelphia (if)- Bowl-con scious Kentucky scored touchdowns the first three times it gained possession of the ball, dawdled away two periods, and then struck twice in the final period to thump Villanova, 34-to-7, yesterday before 17,000 fans at Franklin Field. Co-captain Wilbur Jamerson from Henderson, who scored three! touchdowns, passing star Vito Parilli and bone-crusher Bill Leskovar glittered as the boys from the bluegrass country won their sixth straight game. Villanova could not score until the final three minutes. Pro Basketball Syracuse Nats 74, Minneapolis Lakers 67. the Nation Tulane 27, Mississippi 20.

Florida 31. Vender bill 27. Florida A 14, North Carolina A A I 9. Virginia State 12. Hampton Institute 7 Randolph Macon 13, Washington (Md.) college 0.

William Mary 34. Virginia Tech 0. Potomac State (W Va.J 30. Concord (WVa.) 0. Xavier (La.) College 41, Lane 0.

Fairmont (WVa.) 35, West Virginia Wesleyan 20. Lemoyne 12. Fisk S. Shepherd (WVa.) 34, Clenville (WVa.) 0. Bowfhwest Southern Methodist 42, Rice 21.

Baylor 26, Tens Tech 12. Oklahoma 3S, Kansas State 0. New Meiico Western 31, New Mexico Highlands 0. Tesas 19. Arkansas 14.

Southwest (Okie I 34, Central (Ok I a 21. East Tetae State 33, Midwestern 27. West Teiaa State 39. Sam Houston IS. Fast Central (Okla.) I.

Northeastern (Okie.) 0. Far West Colorado Coltege 13, Colorado Stat 0. Denver 42. Brigham Young Wyoming S3. Utah 13.

UCLA 21, Stanford 7. California 27. Oregon Stata 0 Reed 13, George Fos 7. Lewis and Clerk 20. Williamette 6.

Western (Colo.) State 34. Panhandle (Okla. AAM) 19. Eastern New Meitca 35. Adams (Coto 1 7.

Psstern Wsshfnglon 7. Puget Sound 0. Western Washineton 47. Pacific Lutheran 0. Man)iu School 26.

Williams Froth A. Buffalo Freshmen 23, Hobart Freshmen 14. X. Frosh 27., Ithaca asm the year as they ground out 2V1 yards rushing. Under the direction of a cool and calculating sophomore field general, quarterback Ray Hasenauer, the Rivermen started at the opening whistle and, with Capt.

Coke Dales and Pete DiPasqualc knifing through the Vermont line, they moved from their own 49 down to the visitors 35. Hasenauer then hit jack-rabbit Bill Secor with a quick pass. The little end dodged to the 20. On the next play Hasenauer dumped another over-the-line bullet to Secor, who was downed on the two. Mike Gal lagher scampered over, but a Rochester backfield-in-motion penalty nul- ntied the play and set the Yellow- jackets back five yards.

Dales then hit oft guard for the touchdown. Jack Garnish's conversion was good. Catamounts Fight Back The Catamounts fought back. After a Hasenauer punt had given the Fuzzy Evans' team the ball on their own 25, Jack Keefer ran for 17 and his running-mate Bob Brown scooted for 21 on a neat reverse. With a first down on the Rochester 37.

Keefer and fullback Al Tavares alternated to the 25. Ralph Kehoe hit Art Pruneau with a short pitch and the lanky end went all the way to the eight-yard line. After a momentary stall, Tavares went over on a fourth-down, three-yard plunge. Phil Mann placement was blocked. In the second period the Yellow- jackets started to romp.

At the turn of the quarter Dales had ripped off the Vermont left side for 17 yards to the Rochester 44. Two plays later Hasenauer hit Secor, who traveled to the Vermont 26. Bill Reid smashed for eleven. Hasenauer's pass, in tended for Bill Seeler, went awry, but on the next play Reid went off Jackie to the two. DiPasqualc scored stand-! ing up.

Garnish missed the point after. Past Interception Helps Three minutes later Dick Lieb Inter cepted a Kehoe pass oil the Cata mount 35. Reid and DiPasquale took over as the Rivermen covered the required distance in six plays with DiPasquale diving for the score. Garnish's kick was wide. The final Rochester tally was ini- listed by halfback Bill Sharp.

Sharp snatched a Kenoe pass and ran 41 yards before he was downed on the Vermont 24. Sharp, Reid, and Dales brought the ball to the one-yard stripe and, with 35 seconds left in the half, Dales exploded into the end zone. Garnish missed the extra-point. This proved to be the ball game. The second half was scoreless until the last three minutes when Vermont tallied its second touchdown.

Bob Brown slanted off tackle from the five for the score. Southcaw passer Kehoe set up the six-pointer with several accurate tosses to Pru- neau and Brown as the Catamounts moved from their own 47 to the touchdown. Hasenauer Performs Well The 'newly-found Yellowjacket of fensive really got going as Dales, DiPasquale, Reid and Sharp, took hand-offs from Hasenauer and slashed through nice holes for good yardage. Hasenauer, who performed in all the offensive plays, gave the River Campus enthusiasts a glimpse of some deceptive ball handling anJ fine signal calling. Although he was credited with only four completions in fifteen attempts, the sophomore saw two penalties nullify two aerial gains and several times his accurate passes were mishandled by receivers.

The Rochester end play ws consistent and, the Vermont sweeps for the part were throttled. The standout defensive performer of the day was Fairport'i Dick Lieb. Lieb, who is used exclusively as a defensive line backer, Intercepted two) passes i I i i 1 ii these distinguished shoes by I 1 Ryan, who sparkplugged several of Harry Wrights Aquinas power houses, was the biggest source of worry to Cornell yesterday. The rifle-armed youngster completed 6 out of 10 aerials for 93 yards gained and carried the ball 15 times for a net gain of 46 yards. Actually he gained 60 yards but he was caught behind the line for several losses which cut his net yardage to 46 His 16-yard jaunt in the second quarter was the lotigest Yale run of the game.

Cornell Boys on 2-Llne Cornell found the Yale defenses impregnable on the goal line as early as the first quarter when the Big Red drove 47 yards only to bog down on the 2. Again in the third period, after Bob Caige had blocked a Ryan punt and Kolb (again) fell on it on the Eli 7, Cornell was stopped on the 2. Each time the alert and hardcharging Quackenbush contribu ted key tackles to jam the Ithaca drive. The end of the game found Cornell threatening for the time with the Big Red in possesion on the Yale 13. Yale's best scoring chance was wasted' as the Elis fell one foot short of a first down on the Cornell IS in the third period.

It came after Ray Bright blocked and recovered Bill Whelan't punt on the Cornell 43. (Other giory, photo on Page ID) COLBY UPSETS TRINITY Waterville, Me. (IP) Colby's hard-fighting Mules stopped Trinity's 11-game victory streak yesterday with an upset 6-0 win over the Hilltoppert. Colby halfback Ray Billington skirted around right end for six yards and the game's only score early in the second period. Trinity was undefeated last year and had won its first three games this season.

Florida A4M 14, North Carolina A4T West Liberty 26. RJrJer 6. St. Lawrence 3. Hofstra 26.

Indiana (Pa.) Teachers 16, Slippery Rock rm.t icacncrs I. Westminster (Pa.) 19, Grove City 0. Union 40. Champlain 20. Johns Hopkins 13, Catholic Univ.

13 (tie). Buffalo 32. Brooklyn 6. New Hampshire 14, Springfield 0. Kenyon 34, Hob art 20.

Maine Maritime 20, New England Col. 7. Thiel 21, Edinboro (Pa.) Teachers 0. Midwest Indiana 20, Noire Dame 7. Iowa 33.

Purdue 21. Oberlin 32, Hamilton Cincinnati 4. Western Reserve (. Illinois 20, Washington 13. Michigan 26.

Wisconsin 13. Michigan State 34, Marquette 6. Ohio State 41, Minnesota 0. Temple 26. Wayne 0.

Nebraska 19, Penn State 0. Wichita 17. Drake 14. Missouri 20. rows Stale 20 (tie).

Kansas 40, Oklahoma A. M. 7. Detroit 13. Tulsa 13 (tie).

Heidelberg 40, Otterbein 7. Northwestern 21, Pittsburgh 23. Bowling Green 34, Baldwin Wallace 34 (tie). Miami (Ohio) 42. Butler 7.

Ouantlco Marines 7, Dayton 0. Ohio Wesley 33. Denisnn 13. Michigan Central 33, Depauw 20. Kent State 33, Ohio University 13.

Indiana State 27, Indiana Central 7. Wilmington (Ohio) 32. Rose Poly 0. Michigan Normal I), Ball Slate (Ind.) 0. Hiram 34.

Taylor University (Ind.) 7. Mount Vernon 32. Akron University 19. Muskingum 49, Woosscr 7. Valparaiso 60, Carthage 0.

Btiena Vista (la. I 20. Weatmar (la tV Cabiver (lad.) 34, Manchester -(Ind, 13. night. Lome Tolhurst, who has driven the Cardinal on all winning trips had a tough race in the Class A pacing feature for $800, but the winner had enough ro stand off the bid of Linda's Boy with Levi Harner aboard.

The winner, off at 4-5, paced the mile in 2:07.2 and paid $3.60. He is owned by Helen and Thomas Hughes of Palmyra. Finishing Kick Larry Chief took the early with Cardinal Priest in the second slot. Then Margaret Stone moved to the top but the winner knocked her off. In the stretch, Linda's Boy came fast on the outside, but the win ner had enough kick left.

Larry Chief was third. Wes Litt's four-year-old Mr. Oakley copped the third, a Class Pace, in a snappy 2:11.2. Martha Marshall, the favorite, led for three-quarters, but Harold Wellwood eased Mr. Oakley out in the last 16th, paying $10.10.

Adrian Burgett came back win Future Counsel in the Fourth, a Class Pace, moving up from fourth posi tion on the outside to win easily in 2:08.3. Steady Hal and Money Maker set the early pace, with the latter tak ing the place, with Gallant Spencer third. The winner paid $12.90. Dust Up Repeat! Dust Up, the Hornell flyer ownsd by Frank Bronson scored its second straight in the fifth, although moving well up in class. With Johnny Baker driving, Dust Up took charge at the eighth pole arid was never headed, doing the Class pace in 2:09 and paying $17.00 Hector Chief was sec ond and Danny Stout third.

Ed Arthur drove his Dillon Flicka home first in the Class pace sixth race, nipping True Senator and Vic Throughout Centre 9, Wabash 7. Toledo 32. Bradley 20. St. Pmconiuoua 12.

Wisconsin Tech 6. Western Kentucky 41, Georgetown (Ky.) 13. Canterbury 3g. Anderson 23. Ft.

Hays (Kas.) Slate 26, Quincy (111.) 25. Meryville (Mo.) 27, College of Emporia 7. Peru (Nebr.) 32, Kearney t. Hamline 17. St.

Mary's (Minn.) S. St. Cloud Teachers 32, Winona Teachers North Dakota 21, South Dakota State 21 (tie). Murmi 32. Yankton 12.

Valley City (N.D.) IS, Mayville Teachers o. Illinois College IS. McKendree 12. Western Michigan 26, Washington (St. Louts) 7.

Missouri Mines 47. Northeast Missouri 7. Crinnell 13, Monmouth Parsons 3), Iowa Wesleyan 14. Loraa 30. Luther (la.) 13.

Coe 14. Cornell I la.) 12. Simpson 14, Dubuque 6. -Franklin 26. Earlham 20.

Central Michigan 33, Depauw 20. Ptatte-riBe (Wis.) 2S. Oshkosh Tehrs 0. Mission House (Wis.) 20. North western 14.

own Georgia 13, LSU 13 file). Southern Univ. (La.) '46, Langstoa (Okie.) 7. Tusculirm 14. Hiweseee 0.

Allen (SO 20. Moms Brown 'Ga 14. North Carolina CoUeee 33. Shaw 0. Washington Lee 47.

Davidson 12. Tennessee 14. Alabama 9, Virtinia 26. V. M.

I. 1). Wake Forest 13. George Washington 1. North Carolina State 1.

Maryland 13. Duke 41, Richmond 0. Furman 21. CHadel 7. Georgia Tech 20, Auburn t.

College Football Results Here, Sir, Is What We Mean by Finer: 1.5 tut RrxhMr 2J, Vermont 12. Pennsylvania 34. Columbia 0. Cornell 7, Yale 0. Duqueine 24, Si.

Bonaveniure 12, Willi, mi 21. Bflwdntn 13. Colby Trinity 0. Norwich 21. Loyola (Montreal) 20.

Army Harvard 0. Navy 27, Southern Caloflmia 14. Maine lrf, Connecticut 7. Lehish 16, Dartmouth 14. Princeton 34, Brown 0.

Coljata 23. Bucknell 12. Kentucky 34, Villanova 7. Rutiera 42, New York University 0. Fordham 27.

We Viritma 23. Haverford 13. Juniata 7. Scramon 26, Penn, Millitary College 0. Rhode Island State 3, Mast.

Univ. 27. Rensselaer Poly Injt. 13, Worcester Tech 0. Adelphia 4, Kinjt Point t.

Western Maryland 29, Dickinson 13. Kutnown (Pa.) State Teachers 12, Trenton (N. Slate Teachers 0. Carnegie Tech 14, Allegheny 13. Ithaca 7.

Cortland State Teachers Tufts 19. MiddJeburyO. American International 43, Lowell Textile 7. Syracus 34, Holy Cross 27. Buffalo 36.

Brooklyn 6. Montclalr State Teachers 28, New- Britain State Teachers 21. Delaware State 0, Lincoln (Pa.) 9 (Ik). Thiel 21, Edinboro (Pa.) 0. Ursinus 35.

Swarthmore 14. Kinaa (Pa.) 32. National (Pa.) Aggiei 0. Amherst 27. Coast Guard Academy 21.

Bates 14. Northeastern IJ. Clarion (Pa.) 22. Brockport t. Memphis State 2(1.

Southwestern La. 0. Howard (DC) 7, John C. Smith 6. Howard (Ala.) 35, Southwestern (Term.) Gallaudet 19, Bridgtwatei f.

Superior construction, the best of quality leathers, trend-setting styling, free-fitting comfort, precision workmanship, handsome detailing and long, hard wear. leer tmvrit e(yl itt 17.95 23.50 niiiiiHitiiiiiiitHiiiiiiiiittmiiHiiiitiiiiiimnfflttil LASm)OD'S 29 EAST AVENUE t. M. IU imniiiiiitiiiiiiiiitiiiMiiiiiiuiinianiiiiiitiiiinis aot Merit Shop at 7 Eait.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Democrat and Chronicle
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Democrat and Chronicle Archive

Pages Available:
2,656,577
Years Available:
1871-2024