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The Philadelphia Inquirer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Page 23

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Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
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23
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II ii ii FINANCIAL on Pa(e( 9-10-11 Late Auto News PARCEL POST Football Games SOCCER, DOGS, HUNTING BOXING, WRESTLING en Pag 12 PHILADELPHIA, SUNDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 4, 1932 a SPHAS SPILL MOOSE AS 'CA TS WIN OPENER J'1 mm. mm, A MBflSMMM MANHA TTANAND CARNEGIE SCORE TRIUMPHS Middies Were Atertand Fields' Forward Pass Flivvered Cadets' Effort to Block Kick Was a Trifle Too Late iWiiiOTiiiiUn. it'll uniiiniimifKi urT irfliiw rnimmmn irt If n-nhmiJtri m't nrMwuff-o'f ffi-ifV --nfifiiriiirt -r fc 4- fc i Fast and sure the Middies were on this play, breaking up Fields' attempt to make a forward. Clark, of Navy, managed to get this boot off behind goal line just in time. ill El SCORES UK LOOSE SPEKC ffiELIi NETS HAITI CADETS MAKE 53-YARD MARCH IN SECOND PERIOD FOR SCORE, THEN BATTER GOAT FOE FOR TWO MORE TALLIES IN FINAL QUARTER I 1 ESI 0 ID OUT DEFEAT Vi SIX- GRIND SHOTS GEORGETOWNERS RUTGERS Pi GO II TO Statistics Army Day Army Navy 11 Vidal Crosses Navy Stripe for Initial Touchdown and Buckler Counts After Tossing Pass to Frentzel, Which Brings Second Six-pointer; Losers Fail to Uncork Running Attack Redhead and Vet Triumph After Thrilling Last-minute Spurt Kavel Gleams as Carnegie Teeh Runs Roughshod Over Hilltopper Warriors New Yorkers Come From Behind to Edge Out Jer-.

sey Team in Charity Tilt First downs 19 irst downs from scrimmage 1.1 First downs from passes. .1 Army, Petitions Navy, Lawlor left end Murray Lincoln Left tackle Brooks Bummerfelt Lett ftuard Reecly Evan Centre Hit bold Jablonaki Hirht ruard Burnt Atmatrong Binht tackle Kane Xopctak Rtrht end Pray KacWilliami. Quarterback Slack Fieldi Left halfback Clark Brown Rirht halfback Walkun Kilday fullback Campbell First downs from penalties 3 1 1 i i IP 1 i5l CI i 'i .1 1 11 IS! Hi -I Ii sn I 1 i 0 7 0 1320 0 0 0 00 Army Navy NEW YORK, Dec. 3 (A. Flamlng-halied Bill "Torchy" Pe.

den, of Vancouver, and his veteran partner. Freddie Spencer, of Plainfleld. won New York's 53d six-day bike race by a point margin tonight after a terrific duel with Norman Hill, of San Jose, Calif and William Grimm, of Mnplewood. N. J.

Five the nine teams which finished the race were tied in distance, but Spencer and Peden wound up with a margin of 14 points over Hill and Grimm. A combination formed as the result of a spill a little over an hour before the finish, Alfred Letoumer, of France, and Franco Oeorgetti, of Italy, was third in point total, followed by Reggie McNamara, Newark, N. and George Demp- Moose Tassers hail to Function Well, But Hebrews Play Brilliantly When Cy Kaselman is shooting, opposing team might just -as Mil fold up, and that sums up the Eastern Basketball League last "TO when S. P. H.

A. sent Moose Jown to defeat at the Elks Hall. 38 to 24 score and it is the 1 old story. Eddie Gottlieb's plajf are a8ain resting in first There was no stopping of those wng shots of Kaselman. He landed frL 1 nigftt and one was rff a different angle.

Georgie wmco was assigned to guard Cy, teke two Buards to ha he greatest shot in basket-Klray' This does not mean that saselman was the whole show for of ni! durlnB the 40 minutes of Play did Moose have a chance. drihhL p.ua? outclassed and out- Cntzmadia, and th tonChif did ei the better of the Sphas Invariably got Possession of the ball. no has been a star in XhT. he has plaved since joiningthe team, was not the same iejlonPage 7. Colnmn 6 WASHINGTON, Dec.

3 (A. Unable to stop either Carnegie Tech's passes or Its running attack, luckless Georgetown University ended a dismal football season today by taking a 51 to 0 beating. From the time that Sayles. Carnegie Tech fullback, plunged over in the first quarter, it was apparent that the Hoyas were in for a bad afternoon, and a game that ended in a rout. Whether t.

Bevevino or Mc-Curdy threw the ball, Sklbo forward passes clicked with precision. If the; Georgetown secondary drew back, George Kavsl and the other bucks ran the ends and the line with equal success. Kuval ran almost 99 yards lor the last ccore alter intercepting a Georgetown pass. The Georgetown bull curriers hardly ever got puti. the rangy Carnegie Tech line wilh its guard, Sample.

Bradley and Viskovich gained infrequently and the Georgetown passing game I'd to interceptions which helped pile up the Sklbo score. Carnegie scored twice in tiie Yards gained from scrimmage 250 Yards lost In scrimmage 42 Forward passes attempted by 15 Forward passes completed by Forward passes intercepted by 4 Yards gained by 71 Tunis made by 11, Yards of punts 4(14 Average distance of punts 37 Yards of punts returned by 24 Fumbles made by 3 (Inn fumbles recovered by 3 Opponents' fumbles recovered by Yards penalized 109 Kiekofls made by 5 Average distance of kick- lifts in yards Kleknffs returned by, in yards 0 K5 12 4T' 39 23 1 NEW YORK, Dec. 3 (A. An offside penalty which gave the Manhattan football team another chance to score the point after touchdown when the first try was wide today, cost Rutgers a chance for a tie in the charity football game between the two schools at Ebbets Field, Manhattan winning, 7-6. Rutgers drove through on a 67-yard march to a score in the third period of the bitterly contested game only to have Manhattan come back with a forward-passing attack in the fourth quarter to tie the score.

Al Mover's first attempt for the point from placement was wide, but Rutgers was detected offside and the ball sailed squarely between the uprights on his next try. The one-point margin of victory was not unfair on the basis of play through the game, as Manhattan was a constant threat throughout the first half of the contest, only several great defensive stands Rutgers keeping the Green Shirts from a score. Rutgers made only cne real advance of the game, its scoring march, the alert Manhat- Touchdowna Tidal. Frentiel Bin klf r. pointt after touchdowns Buckler, Brown (placements).

Substitutions Army, Johnston for Brown. Tidal for MatWilliama. Buckler for Fields. Kin for Edwards, Frentiel for Johnston. Winn for Lincoln.

Edwards for King. Buck-man Evans. Stancook for Kildav. Bur-linrame for Kopniak. MacWilliams for Vi-dal.

Brown for Frentzel, Fields for Bucklir, Stillman for Jablonski, Vidal for MacWilliams, Edwards for King. Frenuel for Brown, Buckler for Fields. BurlinRam for Kopesak, Buckman for Evans. Stancook for Kilday. for Stillman.

Summerfelt for Goooh. Brown for Frentzel, MacWilliams for Tidal, ftuinn for Edwards. Hutrhinon for Armstrong, Lincoln for Winn, Kildav for Stanoook, Elliott for MacWilliams. Fields for Buckler, Hall for Jablonaki, Gallagher for Summerfelt. Xavy.

Borriet for Walkup. Chun(r-Hoon for Clark. Cutter for Harbold. Errk for Campbell. Bentley fnr Brook.

Johnston for Burns. Cutter for Harbold. Erck for Campbell. Slack lor Becht. Brooks for Bentlv, Ben tier for Brooks, Bums for Johnston.

Miller for Clay. Harbold for Cuttur. CampbMl for Erck, Kulp for Murray, Mac Arthur for Bentley. Officials: Referee Wilmer 6. Crowell.

Swarthmore. Umpire Tom J. Thorp. Col uric bia. Head linesman Williim G.

Hollenbark. Pennsylvania, Field judge J. P. Eean. Du-quesne.

Time ef periods 16 minutes, By PEKRY LEWIS SPORT'S grandest spectacle; the season's most featureless major football game this was the gridiron dish served 80.000 persons yesterday afternoon on Franklin Field as the Army's powerful machine overwhelmed a lighter Navy team. 20 to 0. It was the 32d renewal of gridiron hostilities between the two service academies and marked the resumption of "official" football warfare after a break that severed relations in 1927. It whs the first meeting in this city between the two since 1922. There was much anguitih for the Middies In yesterday's revival, tremendous satisfaction for the Cadets and a feast of color under summer skies for the bifSRest crowd that ever attended a football game in Philadelphia.

There wasn't a thrill a minute, for It wasn't that sort of a game, hut no other gridiron struggle ever had a more gorgeous setting. As a matter of fact, those human walls looked with 80.000 pails of eyes upon two very tired and weary football teams. The Army, rallying from an overwhelming defeat at the hands of Notre Dame a week before, had enough inherent power left to pound into submission a Middle team that lost its spark and had nothing lea except boundless courage The Cadets pounded out a couple of touchdowns and went into the air for another. From these, two extra points were reapzd with placement kicks. "Pick" Vidal getting one and Brown the other after missing his first attempt following Army's second trip across the goal line.

The first touchdown came early in the second quarter after Army had operated a 53-yard march, climaxed when Vidal bored through the Mlddie line, to score from the four-yard ribbon. This yardage was clicked off in 13 smoothly executed plays, one of them a forward pass from Buckler to Kopcsak good for 12 yards. Th'rre was no more scoiing until the third play of the fourth period. Army had penetrated to the Navy's 23-yard stripe, but here II i 0 I sex Australia, and fietro Lilian i aiid Eduardo Severgnini, of Italy, i These Jive tennis each covered 241)2 miles and 9 laps in the 146 hours of the grind, winch started i last Sunday. The race.

of the greatest thrillers ever seen on the steep pine 'saucer in Square Garden, Continued on Page .1, Column 8 Continued on Paije 4, Column 4 Continued on Page 3, Column 6 KELLY WINS HONORS IN CASEVS" HUN AND Sasse Praises Middies and Cooper-Union No Match for Main Line Passers ST, MARY'S ELEVEN TO KEEP SLATE CLEAN luuds Buckler; Cadets Happy CONTINl'ED ON PAGE 2, COLUMN 1 Franklin enin hovored over aZkU? FieId- Enthused thou- SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 3 (A. A run of 71 yards to a touchdown hv rantnin John "Hurrv" Cain eave Alabama's Crimson tide a 6 to 0 Gridiron Drama and Sidelights from Ancient Army-Navy Battle victory over St. Mary uaeis coaay and kept intact its record for no defeats on invasions of the Far West. Some 20,000 fans had hardly set-tiH in their at whpn Cain, one tgay' 80016 sad- mlIled tide of mighty WSff the as ended: the 33d t)avyeen y's Cadets and hmZn MldcUes had become mere a wlorful scene, thousands.

Here SBh'f rriage in his Midrib was a Cadet, rSSfi hk hands with wts one Midship- 8wre who IS? caped 22- ehr side of the most dynamic fullbacks in By STAN BAIMGARTNER mHE Army was on parade and ithe Navy stood at attention hpfnre 80.000 on Franklin Field the history 01 old uixie, oroKe loose on his history-making dash. The game was about three minutes old and Alabama was backed up on her own 19-yard line. Cain tt hall His linemen ODened the other eight who saw service in the Blue White. While Shevlin was gathering 13 pt.int.s in the two halves, lurry went wild in the lust few minutes of the second session to net an even dozen points, caning four twin-pointers In succession in less than two minutes time. Art Lynch followed with eleven, while each of the remaining seven Wildcats got at least one field goaL Captain Metro Weston, one of the two s'-iiiors on the squad, did not start, but played most of the game in a reserve role.

Cooper Union had a lot of trouble locating the basket from the floor and even more from the foul line, making only four of 15 free throws. Captain Friedman, who led the New Yorkers with six pointers, was the wor.it offender in this respect, missing six in a row before he came through with two points from the tree throw line. There was not a single penalty called under the new rules against "ireezing" the ball and the pivot play, largely because the game was so one-sided the Wildcats never had any need for their maneuvers and Continued on $age 7, Column Villanova opened the local college cago season with a 62 to 20 victory over Cooiier Union before 800 fans last night In the Main Liners' gym, leading all the way nnd hardly working up a healthy perspiration in the process of over-powering the New Yorkers. From the time Johnny Shevlin, sophomore guard, popped in the first goal from long range a few seconds after the initial tap-off. Coach George Jacobs' Wildcats held the upper hand and made the visitors like it.

Huck Finn, towering centre, added a field goal and Art Lynch added a foul before the visitors scored. Captain Chick Friedman, fouled as he dribbled in, tallied first for Cooper Union and George Bojarsky, following up after two mates had mtssed shots under the put in another, but Villanova came back on a field goal by Earl Larsen and a foul by Lynch, nd pulled far out in front again and stayed there throughout. Coach Jacobs u.ed two complete teims. but a substitute sophomore John Barry, one of the seven second-year men on the squad, stole the show from high-scoring Johnny Shevlin, another sophomore, and In the last race he'll ever run Jiminy Kelly, former Georgetown University track captain, carried Marquette's colors home first, in the eleventh annual Knights of Columbus cross-country run, over the Vil-lanova College course, yesterday afternoon. Kelly, a Germantown boy.

stepped away from Doug Clark, last year's winner and also a Marquette entry, in the last half mile to win by 50 yards. His time for the two-and-an-elghth-mile course was 11 minutes and 57 seconds. "I've been running for more than ten years and that's about enough," Kelly declared as he took his shower. "I'm hanging up the spikes and shorts tonight." Jimmy, a slender, blonde lad of 24. started running in the Green and Whit of Germantown High School.

He finished second in the mile in the Public High League championships of 1926. He came in third in the mile In the Intercollegate track and field championships on Franklin Field here two years ago and fifth in the vaded the West Point dressing room in the southwest corner of the stands. The Cadets were in a gay and festive mood as a result of the 20-0 victory over Nacy they had Just written into the annals. Passing among the players, happy but also tired, were many dignitaries from the military world captains and majors and colonels, all proud over the Army team's performance. Navy Blue In marked contrast the scene in the Navy dressing room across the field stood out.

Here a far different atmosphere prevaded the place. Defeat was in the air, and the Midshipmen were all in the throes of disappointment, sharp pangs of regret, nostalgic longings for what have been, one could see, were the hearts of the gallant warriors from Annapolis. And Coach Edgar E. (Rip) Miller he of "Pour Horsemen" fame in his playing days at Notre Dame-strode through the room among his proteges, strewing words of cheer, of encouragement In his wake. And Navy men came In to comfort the i Continued on Page 2, Collmn 7 up a hole through the opposition's tussle of the season, a tilt whose only thrills were embodied in the drills that preceded the opening toot of the referee's whistle.

Don't be sorry because you missed it. Just pat yourself on the back because you had the good sense or the good fortune to save After the opening drills and the first Army touchdown Franklin Field was merely a "yawning" chasm. It was distinctly a Navy crowd and when the Midshipmen failed to do anything the only noise one heard was the yesterday afternoon and when taps were sounded the figures read: Army 20, Navy 0 For the seventh time in succession and the 18th in 33 struggles, the kick of the Army mule was more powerful than the butt of the Navy goat. When It was all over the mule gleefully galloped across the field, nipped the blanket that covered the goat and carried it bark to the Cadets. These few sentences t'-l the whole story of, the most ccArless grid right tacKie.

ine smray ibu huiu Montgomery, ringing down the curtain on his collegiate football career, darted through the first defense. Gaining momentum, he swerved toward the left side of the field and weaved down along the side lines. Three St. Mary's tacklers challenged him, but he shook them off. Two others clutched as the flying legs of Alabama's leader but missed him completely as he ducked from nn did the kindred, if touting die.

the Bathered wenh d.ress'nR rooms, and hlLUmieli- many the Junto W8iting amo the membdof congratulation tution. ulemoer of the rival insti- PPiness, contentment per- Continued on PJe 4, Column 1 Continued on Fae 2, Column 3 Continued Pr 4. Column 6.

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