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The Philadelphia Inquirer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Page 33

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Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
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33
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A to 5cireless ne oetore 6 irmy OITDODS Borae 5,00 Sports Sports Business Financial Garden eT mtm 3 r-' s-i t-i v-a PUBLIC LEDGER Mini Twice Reach 7, Outplay Cadet Eleven Pointers, Saved by Punting Of Gradoville, Extend Streak to 31 By FRANK O'GARA Inquirer Sports Reporter NEW YORK. Oct. 11. The liBhtnine that is reserved for the PHILADELPHIA SUNDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 12.

1917 II Sets amoeim immortals of sports, the bolt that inevitably must strike Army's proud and impregnable football citadel, could not be forped by th University of Illinois from the skies over Yankee Stadium this sunny afternoon. Twice only seven yard." removed from a touchdown as a tub- their loyalty between hopes and iriTi ira line, aaal. '''11 lanTimaaaimnir-r" -lae biti 11 mifi mil 1 11 (AP Wirephoto) ALERT PENNSYLVANIANS BRING DOWN DARTMOUTH BACK AFTER TWO-YARD GAIN The Indians' Conrad Pensavalle is nailed by Bob yesterday's frame at Hanover. Also on the move are Oristaglio (left) and Carmen Falcone in first period of Penn's Bob Sponaugle (74) and George Savitsky (5). College FOOTBALL.

PHILADELPHIA DlSTatlCT abifa 7 frM Mafckanbrrt 47 Swarthaaaca 7 32 O.rtmntk Katrna 13 Frtncta 7 lFrvw 2 Temple 12 niBu Haaerford iliaaaa 13 Holy Crass 6 STATS Alabama 2C Daqoeana Alinbnr 14 Dlcklnsaa 14 ftta-anabarr II Clarloa 7 Rwkarll 11 Delaware 12 artiaB 13 Mananrld 9 M. 41 Ukin.a Valley Ort 24 (rf lilr laartaaa T. 27 California ft. T. 7 l-alarvtt 11 l.rtlyahart 13 l.uaaala V.

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7 Amheral 4 Kbfale laland 4 Hobart Marshall 20 Rider 4 Coraell roab 1 4 Colgate 11 14 Hamilton 4 Arnr 4 Certlaad frmh W.P.I. Careliaa St. College 4 Trenton T. 4 Maine 7 Ft. Itevens Wtlliama klan Point A.

4 llhaea 4 Brerkeart T. 6 Norwlrb 4 Mlddlebarr 7 trrmunl 7 Colby 6 Harvard 37 Ham It Hrrrra Jr. C'allvga 14 Italaa I. 34 vaaaaaa Vlrawa 5 Ilaffala 54 4 aniatas 2S C. V.

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24 Virginia 47 Cennecttrnt lal 17 Columbl 7 MIDWEST WESTERS coMiRrvrr Miaaeaota 37 erlbetern 21 India 14 fTANDI.NGS T. W. T. C. 4 1 Ona Indiana 4 11 .2.0 4 1 POO Mirhiian 4 4 4 .404 I .74 4 14 4 Uhle St.

4 1 4 4 .500 W. I. 1 4 1 4 1 4 1 1 1 1 Mlaar a tavre a leva Pardee BIG SIX CONFERENCE Kearaaea 14- loaa State 7 STANDINGS V. L. T.

C. W. L. T. C.

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24 Bailer 21 allfarnia 44 4 aaitaa 14 (arttlu 35 arrall 13 CaatareiUe or aril allege 21 Daketa Vaealeraa 31 8. Dakota Mines Caae Dr trait Ina. Irch 4 anrordla 111. Oble Wealcjaa 19 Cnlrrr M. A.

14 St. Joseph' (Mo. 1 4 Wlsrenain 7 Hirao. 6 Coe 4 Ripe 7 niafllon 4 SiBipaoa I I Haron ollcce 7 Itatua 24 Cincinnati 21 Itrnnteaa 54 Mrloit 7 iwpaaar 13 Rorhrster 12 Iee.Be 14 Haatln 7 Ifabaac 26 CalTrr-Morkloa IS aarlhaaa 13 Wllmlnctoa 4 Okla. A.

4 M. 24 Mirr.F Alflea 7 UlraaiKiN.U.I Nor. 19 JaJaealowa 4 Perria 14 Milton 7 fraaklli 26 Reae Poly 4 (leaeral Beadle 34 Kertbealera J. V. 14 Haaam 24 Anderaoa 7 Mndelbarr 14 Otlerbeia Hope 24 Alblaa 4 lUlneis WealeTaa 17 Elmbarit 4 iDdiaaa Ceatral 14 Maarbrster 12 ladiaaa atate 21 S.

Illlaeia Norm. 8 Iowa btate T. 32 Import 4 Janiee Mtilikia 14 Eaateral Stat T. 13 JLaaaamaaoa 24 Alma 4 Kaaaaa S. Dakota Slate 4 Kaex 19 Lawrence 13 Laacwla II Laacstea 8 Erma 24 Illiaoia Normal 7 Lather 13 Aoubnri 6 Mmak T.

21 trainer 6 Maxeortte 41 Detroit 18 Miami (0- 33 Bowline Greea 19 Mtrhicaa Tb 7 Nor them Mirbltaa 7 Mllwaakee S. T. 14 Wbltrwater 4 Mtaet T. 32 Majaille T. 4 Mala a Haaae 44 Lewis 4 Mtaaoarl 21 Colorado 4 Ml.

1 men 39 Wittenberg Nevada 51 Portland 8 Nertbeaatera Coll. 24 Mllwaakee Ext. 13 ena Dakota 47 Manitoba 4 atre Daaae 22 Pardee 7 Oklahoma City 69 Colorado College 6 Peea T. Wajne T. 4 Plalterlllo T.

14 Oabkosb T. 4 BiTrrfalla T. 27 LaCrosae T. 14 Ambreae 26 Aagaatana 4 III. 8 ft.

Clead T. 12 Mankata T. 4 J. l. Jeha'g I.

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14 tsew I 27 Seatbweatera (Mrmphial 4 Texaa 34 Oklahoma 14 1 pper laws 48 William Prna 4 Vtartberg 24 Wisconsin Teeb 4 Waahlngtea i SI. 35 Oberlln 7 Veatera Mllltarr 47 Country Day 4 aeatera Keaeraa 24 Ohle U. 7 eaters state Norm. 24 Michigan College 12 mbeatoa 3 2 Carthage 7 easier 13 Kent State 6 yeming '53 Celerade Mines 6 SOUTH SOUTHEASTERN CONFERENCE Aebara 24 Florida 14 TanderMIt 14 Miaaiasippi 6 Keatacky 26 Georgia SOUTHERN CONFERENCE 4satb Carolina 2 Firman ft W. M.

21 V.P.I. 7 15 G. Waablngtoa Wake Forest 19 N. Carolina 7 ftertb Carolina St. 14 Clemaoa OTHER SOUTHERN GAMES itppalarbiaa 22 Lealor-Rbyae 4 Aahaille Rl It more 12 Marahall 4 Caraew-Newman 13 Teaa.

Wesleyaa 13 Catawba 44 rater a Carolina 4 rtaBio 13 Georgia S. I. C. 4 Daeldsea 12 W'olTord 7 aaory Henry 6 Hampdea-Sydney 4 Fiak 19 Diliard 8 rharida Normal 146 Friendship 4 Fart Valley State 4 KaoiTllle 4 4ewrgia Teeb 24 V.M.I. 4 Hamptea 7 Greeaabore A.

T. 6 Mardia-Simmeas 35 Arizona 7 Howard 13 Virginia Union 7 Jarkaaa College 19 lad. Col. 4 L. a.

19 Texas A. at M. 13 Xisaissippi Cohere 25 entre 12 Moms Browa 19 Marrboaaa 4 Peaomae State 16 Shepherd State 4 Presbyterian 6 Eraklae eaatiea Marine 24 Raadolpb-Maeaa 7 BetbaBe Ceokmaa 34 Carolina S.T.C. 13 Loaislaaa St. 24 Mia 71 Teaaesoee 26 Tagaloe 21 ircinta state II 2 1 Vtrglaia C.

44 Western Remark T. 13 West Liberty T. 33 Wesleyaa 24 trrima S. 13 Virginia Teeb 13 Westera Maryland 21 tastoa bales T. 33 Dsala-Hklna t.sllford Albany State l-ane 12 Alabama S.

T. 4 St. Paal 4 Cbattaaooga 7 Campbell 4 Cheyney 6 I. C. Smith 4 Tenneesee Tee 7 oncord T.

15 Morris-Harvey 4 Kentucky S. a C.lenallle 4 Catholic II. 7 Uvingatoa 9 Continned an Page 4, Column 1 capacity crowd of 65.000 divided fears of the prospective exploit i of a modern Thor, the mighty H1r Nine and Rose Howl champions finally had to settle for a 0-0 draw. With it. Invincible West Point further defied the law of gravity by piling up its 31st game without a defeat.

4TII UNBEATEN SEASON Notre Dame, which coincidentally gained a scoreless stalemate in the sole '46 game played by the Cadets at today's site, was -the only other team to escape defeat among West Point's rivals in a span now three games old in its fourth season. The game by no means was all in favor of the Illini, despite the fact that they outgained the Army in total yardage by 212 to 162 and in first downs by 15 to 9. But theirs were the only close-up scoring opportunities of the savage game of conservative tactics. And to them accrued and likewise disappeared four more reasonable chances to hit the jackpot against an equal number of the same nature for West Point. UNKNOWN" SAVES CADETS The Army rose superbly to thwart the aggressors each time aided no end on one occasion by the halftime halt but the greatest saviour of the streak was a nigh-nameless athlete who would have been incognito but for the public address system.

He turned out to be a back with the cognomen of Bill Gradovilte weight, height, hometown, class and other incidental information still unknown. Brought up from the squad only two days ago and thereby shunned by the program, Gradoville play ed little longer than enough to punt six times, and his boots won the tie for Army. His average was a non astonishing 43 yards, but his quick-kicks and towering drives were run back a mere five yards total, and they either extricated Army from holes or put the Illini in them A play that might have broken the Continued on Pace 2, Column 6 35,000 See Navy Tie Duke, 14-14, In Last 10 Sees. By JOHN CHANDLER BALTIMORE, Oct. 11 (AP).

Navy staged a tingling movie-thrillr finish todav and scored in the final 10 seconds when Fullback Bill Hawkins rammed over the Duke goal from the one-yard line to gain a 14-14 tie and end the Middies' 10-game losing streak before 35,000. The spectators had Just about settled back for another Navy defeat when Duke broke a 7-7 deadlock with three and a half minutes remaining in the fourth period on a Fred Folger pass to end Ed Austin, good for 45 yards and a touchdown. NAVY STAGES SPURT They hadn't reckoned on a fighting Navy team that came from behind twice to knot the score against the favored Blue. Devils from Durham. After Duke's score Ben Moore, 155-pound Navy scatback from Granada.

carried the kickoff 42 yards to Navy's 47, almost breaking into the clear. Bob Home, second-string quarter back who engineered Navy's first score, flipped nine yards to Bill Earl. Hawkins shot to the Duke 35 in two plunges. Home passed again to Earl on the 20. After a pass misnred.

Home rifled another to Bob Schvoefferman on the one. End Bob McElroy dropped a Home pass in the end zone on first down as the Navy crowd groaned, but the Annap olis followers got their chance to yell when Hawkins drove over the middle on the next play. SUB WILLS DELIVERS Jim Wills, who never had played in a college game before, calmly stepped in from the Navy bench and place-kicked the extra point to tie the score. The desperate Duke defenders deflected the ball slightly, but it sailed over the crossbars. Navy's line with Center Dick Scott in on almost every play, smashed down three Blue Devil assaults In the first half, on the Middies' 28 and Continued on Pars 2, Column 7 Penn's Fourth-Period Drives Crush Dartmouth Eleven, By ART MORROW Inquirer Sports Reporter HANOVER, N.

Oct. 11. Four touchdowns roared across the north goal line in an uncontrollable flood and the dam of Dartmouth College resistance burst in the final quarter at Memorial Stadium this afternoon as tfie University of Pennsylvania converted a tense football battle into a 32-0 rout. It was not easy. Anthony (Skippy) Mi nisi, the fleet wingback, sped 15 yards through abcde fS Virginia Defeats Harvard 1st Time By DILLON GRAHAM CHARLOTTESVILLE, Oct.

11 (AP). Harvard ventured south of the Potomac today for the first time in its long gridiron history and took its worst pasting in vears. a 47-0 shellacking by University of Virginia. The Crimson, victor in its first two games, made only a few feeble gestures and never threatened, and whether Virginia concentrated on a running attack by Grover Jones, Bruce Bailey and Billy Pennel or took to the air on passes by Joe McCary and Bailey, Harvard was helpless. WORST SINCE 1935 It was the worst defeat by a Harvard team since Dick Harlow became coach in 1935 when Princeton whipped the Crimson, 35-0.

The victory wassfcweet for Virginia, which had lost all of its eight previous games with Harvard beginning in 1915. Harvard started Chester Pierce, a Negro, at tackle. This probably was the first time a Negro had played against a Southern team on a Dixie campus. Pierce played well and was applauded when he left the game. PAPIT SCORES More than 24,000 watched with glee as Virginia started pouring it on for two touchdowns in the first period.

The Cavaliers, unbeaten now in three games, wasted no time start ing a parade of touchdowns to which John Papit, freshman back from Philadelphia Northeast High, contributed. Harvard's captain and fullback. Vincent Moravec. suffered a broken knee cap in the opening period. Harvard Poa.

Virginia W. Flynn L.E. Elliott Houston L.T. Xlrkland Drennan O. Thomai Olynn C.

Frlzzell Feinberc R.a. Baumann Pierce T. Barbour Hill E. Weir ODonnell QB McCary Kenarr HB Bailer Oannon HB. Tennel Moraver FB O.

Jones Harvard It a VlrKlnla 14 7 1 13-47 VtROINU SCORINO: Tnurhdnwnx Bailey 2. Papil lnr Jitnrm, Oritnea (for Bailey 2. OMman lor Joneai. Point aitar touchdown Grlmca 6 Ma irk 30,089 See Double Jay Trail by 5 Earshot Runs 3d In Trenton 'Cap As Meeting Ends By JOHN Streaking into the lead on, hitting the far side ana masterfully rid den by Jockey Ovie Scurlock, Wil liam Helis Cosmic Bomb drew out through the homestretch to shatter the track record as he triumphed by five lengths in the sixth running of the $50,000 Trenton Handicap yes terday as New Jersey's long racing season came to an end on a golden autumn day at Garden State Park. Under top weight of 120 pounds Cosmic Bomb completed the mile and a furlong of lightning fast foot ing In 1.48 2-5 as he led home the favored Double Jay and five out classed opponents.

He shaved three fifths of a second from Bon Jour's standard, set under 101 pounds in his 1944 Trenton victory. QUALIFIES FOR SPECIAL Ridden out through the home stretch, the dark brown son of Phar- amond 2d-Banish Fear shook oft the menace of Double Jay, from the Wilmington-owned Ridgewood Sta ble, and in defeating that sophomore rival for the second time in a row, qualified as the season's finest three -year-old. Furthermore, the New Jersey-owned colt automatically qualified to start in the storied Pimlico Special Oct. 31. Second choice of the 30,039 witnesses.

Cosmic Bomo paid $5 straight. His $43,900 first money boosted his total earnings to 490 for the State's leading owner and breeder. The day's mutuel handle, was the high for the 42-day meeting. It topped the Labor Day total of $2,478,620, poured into the mutuels by a holiday throng of 39.472. The total attendance for the season at the Marlton pike course was 683,021.

The total wagering was 597,616 for a daily average of 657. Total handle for last year was $74,637,142. EARSHOT 8 LENGTHS BACK A distant third at the line was Earshot, four-year-old Helis filly, who was the running mate for the winner. She finished eight lengths off well-beaten Double Jay and a half length before King Ranch's Bridal Flower, whom she carried out slightly in the stretch. Completing the field were C.

L. DuPuy's Apple-knocker. C. V. Whitney's Bright Sword and Art-Dale Stable's Gorget.

Though Gorget, from the outside, broke on top, it was the Helis filly, Earshot, who whistled down the in side to gain the lead in the opening strides. Coming out slightly, she aided materially in shuffling back Double Jay, who was ridden by John ny Gilbert. Earshot, piloted by Lar- Continued on Page 6, Column 3 Stud Poker Wins Owners CHICAGO, Oct. 11 (AP). Stud Poker, four-year-old gelding owned by Edward Voynow, Chicago, climaxed a rise from the claiming ranks today by capturing the $22,750 Illinois Owners Handicap at Hawthorne.

The winner slipped through on the rail in the stretch, and under a hustling ride by Don Macandrew defeated Henry Tikulski's Bob's Pick by a heat. John Marsch's Mighty Story, 2-to-l favorite, was third, two lengths behind. A crowd of 22,024 saw the 35-day Hawthorne meeting come to a close. The last lap of the Chicago season begins Monday at Sportsman's Park, which runs for 24 days. Stud Poker, coupled in the betting with Pound Ruler, returned $12.

$5.80 and $3.40 across the board. 126 pounds, was perfectly ridden. He was rated off the pace for the first mile and a half, then was sent up. The South American horse, a noted stayer, took command in the middle of the turn and under a hard drive by Arcaro, who had ridden him in his two previous outings, gained the photo decision for his fourth straight victory. It marked the third time he has beaten Stymie, who went in at 125 pounds.

The gray son of Pantalon had whipped Stymie in the Whitney at Saratoga, and the Manhattan Handicap here. CLOSES FAST Talon, owned by Richard N. Ryan, closed fast from the outside and just failed to get up. He earned $20,000 for his owner. Phalanx trailed far back, made his bid in the last half-mile nut never menaced the leaders.

Stymie, whose training was far below par due to soreness in his feet, failed to close with his usual burst of speed. The total handle swelled the handle for the regular 18-day Belmont meet which ended today to $36,035,643. Rutgers Beats Princeton Tigers Bow, 13-7; Cowie's Long Dash Nullified by Penalty NEW BRUNSWICK, N. Oct. 11 (AP).

Underdog' Rutgers defeated Princeton, 13-7, today for the third time in 78 years of the first and oldest intercollegiate football rivalry in the United States. Both of Rutgers previous victories were scored here, the first corn-ins in 1869, 6-4, in the game that introduced the sport to an unsuspecting Nation. The second was in 1938, 20-18, when the Rutgers sta--dium was dedicated. The crowd of 30,000 today was a record for the stadium. RUTGERS RAMS LINE Rutgers ability to smash th tackles and run the ends was the undoing of Princeton, which last week defeated Brown and was considered to have one of the possible strong teams of the East.

Princeton, pushed all over the field in the first half, came alive with the final quarter partly played. Paul F. Cowie. the Princeton sprinter who holds the Purple Heart medal and was a Nazi prisoner of war, took command. He was a major factor in the single Princeton touchdown, and a few minutes later took a punt on his 31 and ran to Rutgers' 24.

But Oeorge Sella fumbled, and Princeton's chance to tie or win evaporated. SABO SCORES An awkward bounce by one of Herman Hering's punts near the end of the first period set up the first Rutgers touchdown. X. Boiling Robertson, Princeton guard, lunged for the ball and Ernest Gardner. Rutgers center, recovered on Princeton's 32.

Hering and John Sabo punched out steady gains until finally Sabo scooted around his left end from the two-yard line to score. Harold Heritage converted. A penalty against Princeton thai called back a mediocre punt started Rutgers on its way to its second touchdown. Hering was the mainspring of the advance from midfleld, tossing two short passes and running and bucking it to the Princton seven, at which point he took a lateral flip and darted around his right end to tally. WEBER GOES OVER The only Princeton tally came halfway through the final period.

Dick West with the ball on Princeton's 25, passed to Bill Gallagher who caught it on his 40 and ran to Rutgers 27. Sella made a first down on Rutgers' 16, Cowie darted to the three, and John Weber scored. In the closing minutes of the first half a penalty cost Princeton a touchdown after the longest and most spectacular run of the day. Cowie, who has done 100 yards In Continued on Page 2, Column 7 Brown Trounces R. I.

State, 55-6 PROVIDENCE, R. Oct. 11 (AP). Brown, showing its best offensive of the season, handed a weak Rhode Island State football team a 55-6 trouncing before 15,000 today. The Bears scored in every quarter, running up one of their highest totals in recent seasons.

R. I. Plata roe. Mclaughlin I. E.

Carlln Apnatolnu 1' Q. O'Rmirka C. Muddiman O. Hanlewlelt T. Lnmbardi E.

BTk: QB Vento HB. Ben Curia HB Brown BKKhbr M'altara Hodnaal Condon laa'ueia McClrliaa J.Patrrn KoxaK Naiaon Or fl Mnnteealvo FB Rhoda laland Stata Brown 81 14 14 55 RHODE ISLAND STATS BOORTNO Touchdown. KatKn (aub lor MctAuchUn BROWN BCOR1NO Touchdowna. Koaak. Orrrn.

Zeoll 4ut for Korak Blaaell fiub tor Nelson), Younc (aub for Oram), OaSnry lor J. Faiarno). Rodawit ub lor youd. Point after touchdown Houston 7 fsub for J. Paterno) (dropkicka).

of 26 passes, mixing them cleverly with running plays when the Columbia defense shifted to stop the aerial barrage. Neither team could show a consistent offense until the middle of the second period when Yale, taking the ball on its 10, where Vanderveer had intercepted a pass, started a steady march. With Bob Furs passing accurately and Ferd Nad-herny blasting the line, the Bulldogs advanced to the Columbia five before the running and passing attack was stymied. Bill Booe dropped back to the 15 and placekicked a field goal to put Yale in front at the half. 3-0.

KIRK DRIVES OVER Yale made its lead 10-0 early in the third quarter when Nadherney intercepted Lou Kusserow's pass on the Yale 42 to provide the spark. With Bob Furse passing and Nad-herny and Jim Fuchs running, the Bulldogs drove irtraight down the field, with KirJc driving over fr the Continued on rag 2. Column 20,000 Watch Villanova Defeat Holy Cross, 13-6 By MORT BERRY Inquirer Sports Reporter WORCESTER, Oct. 11. The tempo of football activities on Fit-ton Field today made the polka seem like a dirge as Villanova College scored a richly deserved 13-6 victory over Holy Cross College before 20,000 exhausted fans.

With pulse-tingling suddenness, Villanova moved 35 yards for a score the first time it gained possession, and, after retaining only a one-point lead at halftime when the Crusaders struck back on an Purdue Extends Notre Dame But Loses, 22-7 By DALE BLRGESS LAFAYETTE; Oct. 11 (AP) Outrushed and outfought for four quarters, Notre Dame defeated Purdue today, 22-7, on Quarterback Johnny Lu jack's passes. Coach Frank Leahy, of Notre Dame, complained early this week that his team lacked a consistent ground attack. The Irish had a net gain of 89 yards rushing, to Pur due's 128. Time after time, tackle Phil O'Reilly and Ends Norman Ma- loney and Clyde Orlmenstein broke through to stop Notre Dame.

Notre Dame's style also was no mystery to Stuart (Stu) K. Holcomb, Purdue's new coach and end coach for the Army the last three years. Notre Dame beat practically the same Purdue team last year, 49-6, with Fullbacks John Panellt and Mike Swistowicz reeling off frequent long runs. They were back for today's game, but Purdue was set. Lujack, though, was a problem Purdue couldn't solve.

He completed 14 of 23 passes for 176 yards. He passed for one touchdown, ran yards for another, and set up the third with another forward. A 21-yard pass, Lujack to Left Halfbak Terry Brennan, produced Notre Dame's first touchdown after four minutes. Purdue tied it, 7-7, six minutes later. Steady gains by Halfbacks Norbert Adams and Harry Szulborski, helped by a 15-yard Notre Dame penalty for unnecessary roughness, took Purdue to Notre Dame's 14.

Quarterback Bob Demoss passed to Szulborski for the touchdown. Lujack threw two touchdown passes that were nullified by penal ties, one for an off-side error, the other because of a man in motion. That's when Lujack carried the ball himself and went 26 yards from pass formation for a touchdown. A Purdue fumble recovered by Guard Joseph Signaigo set up a Notre Dame field goal near half time. Emil Sitko picked up nine yards in three line plunges and Steve Oracko kicked the three pointer from the Purdue eight.

Lujack completed passes to Sitko on the 6 and Simmons on the 2, and Simmons went over standing up in the last half. Notre Dame Po. L.E. L.T. G.

C. G. T. E. QB L.HB HB.

FB. -13 .1 -7 a Purdue Heck O'Reilly Murray Carnaghi Horvath Barbolak Maloney Feldkircher Szulboraki Adams Mllllo Martin Oracko Fischer Strohmeyer Wendell Szarobski Wightkin Ashbaugh Brennan Sitko Panellt Notre Dame Purdue NOTRE DAME SCORING Touchdowrn Brennan. Lujack. Simmons. Point after touch down Oracko (placement).

Field goal Oracko (placement PURDUE SCORINO: Touchdown Szulbor ski. Point after touchdown Haverstock (placement). Dr. Martel Die's; Played With Phils WASHINGTON, Oct. 11 (AP).

Dr. Leon A. Martel, 64-year-old surgeon and gynecologist, who once played major league baseball, died unexpectedly today. A year after his graduation from Georgetown University Medical School in 1908 he joined the Phila delphia Phillies and in 1910 "ie Boston Braves. He later retired to pursue his medical career.

a broken field for the first of his two touchdowns and the first of his alma mater's five, only three minutes and 38 sec onds after the initial kickoff. But then the Hanoverians began bearing down. FUMBLES HURT QUAKERS Fumbles coat the Quakers two scoring chances in the second quarter, and in the third Coach Tuss Mc-Laughry's high spirited Indians, who held Holy Cross within the five-yard stripe on no fewer than 11 occasions, actually took the offensive. They drove all the way to Penn's 15 with the second-half kickoff, and six points did not look like muoh of a lead as the teams went into the final period. The dam collapsed with startling suddenness.

"Eddie Lawless, partici pating in the game despite a pulled thigh muscle, got off a 47-yard punt that soared so high Bull Schweder, the third-string guard, was able to get downfield and drop mercurial Joe Sullivan in his tracks on the Dartmouth nine. Francis O'Brien, who never played football at Northeast High, returned the compliment by kicking dead to Penn's 33, but then it happened. AWAY GOES DOONEY Ray Dooney, a fireplug of a man at 5 feet, 8 inches, and 200 pounds, took the ball on a buck and found himself behind a flying wedge. The whole right side of the Dartmouth line, unyielding in the face of the trip-hammer blows delivered earlier. caved in and Penn's left side moved on like a wall ahead of Dooney.

Ray got all the way to Dartmouth's 47 before going down, and three plays Continued on Page Column 3 Syracuse Rally Beats Temple By STAN BAUMGARTNER Inquirer Sports Reporter SYRACUSE, Oct. 11. One of the best individual performances of the season by the Owls' Phil Slosburg went for naught tonight as Syracuse University's football team rallied from an impending 12-0 second-quarter defeat to triumph over Temple University, 28-12, before 20,000. With Slosburg spearheading an apparently unstoppable attack by his spectacular running and passing. Temple pushed over two touchdowns in the second quarter, took a two-touchdown lead and seemed well on the way to victory.

SCORE AFTER FUMBLE Paul Dubenetzky then undid everything that Slosburg had accomplished. A fumble by the big fellow on his own 28. gave the dispirited Orange the ball, handed a beaten team a breath of life, and in almost less time than it takes to tell Rico Monte 1st, Stymie 4th In $100,000 N. Y. Handicap 83-yard seven-play second-quar ter attack.

Villanova secured its second straight triumph over Holy Cross with a third-period score. WILDCATS GAIN OS GROUND Paradoxically enough, Villanova ran wild on the ground where it was expected to make little progress and was able to complete only one of 11 passes. The net gain through the air was three yards. And Villanova was expected to make its forward progress on passes. Holy Crass, the powerhouse team, was outgained on the ground, 255 yards to 138.

But in the air, the Crusaders totaled 59 yards on four completions, the first of which was a 19-yard touchdown with Walt Brennan throwing and Bob Barton catching in the end zone. Al Barker, the seasoned guard who kicked the decisive point in Villanova's 14-13 triumph last year, gave Villanova its chance to roll when he recovered as Bob Sullivan Continued on Page 2, Column 8 in 2d Half Eleven, 28-12 it, sent them rolling on to victory. They scored their first touchdown shortly after Dubenetzky's fumble, added another in the third quarter when the secondary came up slowly on a lateral pass, picked up another at the start of the fourth when Dubenetzky passed directly into the hands of a Syracuse player on the Owls 31-yard mark, and then finished with their final six-pointer a few minutes before the final whistle on a 50-yard march. SLOSBURG GAINS I5S YDS. Joe Nejman missed both Temple tries for the extra points while George Brown.

Syracuse point-kicking specialist, booted all four tries to run his string of consecutive conversions to 28. It was a disappointing finish to a battle which started on such a high note a game which seemed to be the rebirth of the Owls after their setback at the hands of Holy Cross a week ago. Slosburg was magnificent as he Continued on rage 4. Column 2 35,000 See Yale Triumph Over Favored Columbia ,17 -7 NEW YORK. Oct.

11 (AP). Ar-irentine-bred Rico Monte, three-year-old from Arnold Hanger's Stable, won the $100,000 New York Handicap at Belmont Park today before 41,565 who wagered $3,006,606. Ridden by Jockey Eddie Arcaro, Rico Monte engaged in a stirring stretch duel with his stablemate. Talon, and won by a nose in a photo finish as Mrs. Ethel D.

Jacobs Stymie could do no better than fourth to fail in his bid to regain the world earnings lead from Armed. The entry of Rico Monte and Talon was installed favorite and paid $4.70 to win. The winner covered the two and one-quarter miles in 3.48 25 and collected $73,700 for his owner. PHALANX 3D Behind the first two came C. V.

Whitney's three-year-old ace, Phalanx, five lengths away. Stymie was 13 lengths off the pace. He collected $5,000 fourth place money to increase his total earnings to still needing $2000 to pass Armed's leadin? winning total of $761,500. Rico Monte, under top weight of By WHITNEY MARTIN NEW YORK, Oct. 11 (AP).

Playing without two of their stars, Levi Jackson and Jack Roderick, the Yale Bulldogs outran, outpassed and out-kicked the Columbia football team at Baker Field today, to hand the favored Lions their first defeat of the season, 17-7, before a capacity crowd estimated at 35,000. Although they had a decided edge in all offensive departments, the Bulldogs almost literally stole the game, five interceptions either pav ing the way for Yale scores or check ing promising Columbia threats. Columbia's next foe will be unbeaten University of Pennsylvania next Saturday on Franklin Field, Phila delphia. LIONS BEDAZZLED The Lions, rated a great second- half team, were unable to match the drive of the Elis in the final two periods, and were bedazzled by the diversified attack. Yale completed 17.

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