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The Philadelphia Inquirer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Page 81

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Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
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81
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Penn State 20 Lehigh 27Uillanova 16 Princeton 14 Drown 7 llotre Dame 21 Ilavy 7 Michigan 33 lova 21 Syracuse 49 Yale 20 Haryland 27 Holy Gross 9 Dartmouth 0 S. Carolina 0 Penn 0 Temple 14 Richmond 14 ire Baiee freak Prince John Wins $282,370 Garden Satters Navy $50, A fv Welsh Outplayed Ufa $Ufofovx nyxmx ''if 1 it. SUNDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 30. 1955 sports section By Paul Hornung In Battle of Stars Bj JESSE ABRAMSOM Special to The Inquirer and N.

Y. Herald Tribune SOUTH BEND, Oct 29. Notre Dame and its invaluable 19-year-old quarterback, Paul Hornung, vanquished Navy's unbeaten football team, 21-7, for the 10th straight year before a record 59,475 this chilly, rainy afternoon. With variations on a well-remembered theme, it was once again the same old story for the Irish against their oldest continuous rival. Their line overpowered the enemy, their running auacK rouea zzs yaras over the Sports IBesults College FOOTBALL soggy turf in short and long overland marches, their defense wouldn't let Navy run and shut down on George Welsh's passing until they had their 21 points banked.

It Was, in short, Notre Dame's game all the way as the Irish, beaten by Michigan State, snapped a Navy streak of nine games which LOCAL Rutrere 1 started after Notre Dame beat Drexel 34 Johns Hopkins 13, Navy, 6-0. in Baltimore a year ago. Hampton (Va.) 35 Lincoln 0 GREAT HOPES DASHED Lehigh 27 Temple 14 I Notre Dame was favored, an old Nat Assies 20 DC Tchrs. 0 Penn State 20 Penn 0 habit. The chief difference in the ipre-game auspices was that the r-v; f) i ir 1 PMC 14 Lycoming 13 Midshipmen had greater hopes Ursinus 14 Warner 6 thiff than thow hair 4 Villanova 18 Richmond 14 rh rH' (Z Wesleyan26 Swarthmore thplr an.

by sTATfc tie in 19 years of frustration Bethany 27 Allegheny 13 Notre Dame. Touchdown? Yes, official ruled Penn State sub end Leo Kwalik had the ball on the goal line when knees hit the ground in final half-minute for Lions' third score yesterday at Franklin Field. Penn halfback Pat Salve is doing his best to prevent the touchdown which came on 10-yard pass from reserve quarterback Milt Plum. For Inquirer Magic Eye pictures of entire play, see Page 9. Bucknell 26 Harvard 261 Terry Brennan, the Notre Dame California STC 19 Clarion STC 6 coach, had refused to concede any Carnegie Tech 16 edge to Eddie Erdelatz, visiting Cheyney STC 1 Trenton STC 6 brain from Annapolis, and his un- Edinboro 12 Mansfield E.

Strodsburr 40 Kutztown 14 Continued on Page 7, Column 3 Geneva 20 Slippery Bock Gettysburg 15 Lafayette Indiana STC 13 Lock Haven Juniata 54 Susquehanna Pa. State Conquers Improved Penn, All three top contenders seem to smell money on stretch drive at Garden State yesterday. They finished in right-to-left order as depicted here: Elmendorf Farm's Prince John, with Angel Valenzuela up, took first prize of $157,918.50, followed by C. V. Whitney's Career Boy and Needles.

Career Boy 2d by NoselVillanova Nips Maryland St. 45 Wilkes nuami (Ha.) zi rut Moravian 35 Albright 13 New Haven 25 Bloomsburg Twice in First 9 Minutes Rand-Macon 19 Dickinson St. Vincent 52 Lebanon Valley Scranton 25 Muhlenberg 12 Shippensburg 14 MillersviUe 2 By HERB GOOD Richmond for as stronz as it did in last year's use more power than necessary i catch state unawares with a Thiel 19 Grove City 12 9' "QU conquest, but was completely with Syracuse on the horizon this series of plays from a balanced At Garden; Needles 3d Before Record 44,737 W. Maryland 13 Westminster 7 au uuw, moment ycatcrudy as SUDerior ln every Dhase and Ob- week. But the Nittany subs ap- line and fcy running more to the 1 i voKm iv An4 vm iamaco4a i i I i 1st '55 Victory IVY LEAGUE uui oui-tcaoivc viouiiy naa no aesire vo run up parently wanted to impress the I left than usual.

The Penns also Cornell 34 Columbia 19 at5 vanquisn uaivemir oi, T-LZ: Qny Eagle because they struck cave State defense a bit of trouble Princeton 14 i Brown Yale 20 Dartmouth 7 Pennsylvania. 20-0. before 23,206 1 Nittany team In its last brilliantly through the air in the (with new plays from an unbalanced at Pranklm Field. 1 i iseven engagement iux uie nnai minutes grao me mu-a iu ing-T ln whi the baiKarrier with the By JOHN DELL the bells and blow Standings the Ring: on a 65-yard advance. ine nea ana iiiue nasnea its uuaicers.

Charts, Race Results on Page 6' By JOHN WEBSTER Elmendorf Farm's unheralded Prince John, gaining a clear lead in the homestretch, held on with rare courage under Angel Valenzuela's lash to finish a nose before Career Boy's rush for an Coach Rip probably would It could have been a much more sirens; fire the cannons and shoot yaje 4 1.000 Harr'd 12 9 33 "I51 oense of the year and ran to the weak side. As a result Penn was able to make its best statistical showing of the season, although it never fought with surprising vigor for a have been satisfied with a 13-0 interesting game had Penn not team that has now lost 15 in a final tally as he had no desire to lost the ball via a fumble on a the rockets! One of Philadelphia's Pr'ton 4 0 0 1.000 Brown 13 0 Ete Three has won a football Cornell 3 2 0 140 .200 .000 kickoff following State's first ID'm'th 120 .333 Penn 010 RECORDS unparalled $157,918.50 victory in the third running of The Garden State, the world's rich-test race, yesterday at Garden State race track. Maryland Wins touchdown. The latter came on a peneiraiea Deyona biaies u. 63-yard drive with the game's I Nittany Lions enjoyed only opening kickoff.

The Lions had to i a 192121 margin in net yards march only 27 yards from the point rushin and an edBe of Just PENN STATB 35-. row. Yet there wasn't much to the contest simply because the Nittany Lions grabbed a 13-0 lead in the first nine minutes before Perm had a chance to rush the ball. MOORE UNDER CONTROL The Penns managed to keep under control Lenny Moore and Krai. 24 defeated Boalaa Oct.

1 lut ta Arai. 35-C. Witnessing the dramatic finish a lost) EAST American Int. 32; New Britain Tchrs. 7 Army 27 Colgate 7 But the visitors had of the fumhle rprnvprv fnr thpir unuaiuwwus.

Villanova University's spirited band did it. It beat the University of Richmond, 16-14. In these time when Villanova, Penn and Temple have a collective seasonal record of 1-16 of the $282,370 spectacular was the Ort. A defeated Virginia. 2C-T.

Oct. 15 leal ta N7. 34-14. Oct. 22 let ta W.

Virrtaia. 21-7. Oct. 29 defeated PENN. 20-.

Not. fcyracuae As Vereb Gets 3: second tally. largest crowd in the history of New a 77-0 in the air by completing seven cf 13 passes, while Penn could not find the tartrpt on PLAYS BOTHER STATE i Jersey racing 44,737 persons. They Nov. at Ratrera Brandeis 33 Bridgeport 1 Bill Kane, the two elusive fast k.

I saw Frmce John, a 24-1 shot, finish 2 rttubaria ifl a Brockport 21 Ithaca 6 hur arajft iinnKla 4-oii ah 4- wAnnV am A e) A aa a. akaa aa RECORDS out me mue ana a sixteenth in a sensational 1:42 35 and qualify for the 2-year-old championship of 1055. 55G.474 FOR 2D HORSE inereaiier me renns. sparxed jany of its five aerial attempts, by the leather lugging of sophomore halfback Frank Riepl and HELD TO 49 YARDS veteraa fullback Stan Chaplin, who Penn had Its defenses so well contributed 46 and 43 yards against Mot re that he gained spectively, dominated play until only 49 yards net from scrimmage, the final quarter. mott of it on short gains.

His Coach Steve Sebo seemed to longest sprint is a 19-yard sweep Sobart 8 St LS5 downs BiU Straub' Ho- Colby mn and fLeo Kwalik that account. Massachusetts 54 Vermont 15! ed fr states ud victory in sixoet. ft-t sr. Oft. (VI RICHMOND 24 defeated Randolph-Mann.

33-d. 1 lt to W. Virginia. 33-12. 8 defeated 2 I -a.

15 low 1 The Citadel, 14-12. 22 tied Vlrtinla Tech. 7-7. 29 lost ta VILLANOVA. 1S-14.

5 DaTidaaa Career Boy. closing with a OtU isiaria. no. 12-Atar Continued on Page 9, Column 7 1 State didn't look anywhere near 2 COLLEGE PARK. Oct.

29 (AP). First-ranked Maryland, with co-captain Ed Vereb's three touchdowns setting the pace, rolled to a 27-0 victory over South Carolina before 23.0C0. Vereb put the Terrapins ahead early by carrying for all but 10 yards of 59-yard drive and scoring from the three. It tied the old Atlantic Coast Conference scoring record of 54 points, and his two later touchdowns set a new record of 66 points, which he has on Oct. Oct.

N.I. mighty rush under Eric Guerin's powerful ride, just missed with the eor rillu NaT. 24 silks of C. V. Whitney.

His surge, bringing second money of $56,474, in A MarT VILLANOVA carried him to the line one S5f PiTS.Jr'M. length in advance of D. and H. tea caiiece, 28-14. Stable's Needles, the 17-10 favorite, ol: JSl II 34-n who hung on the outside after 2J -a-d.

is-14. Early Princeton TDs Edge Brown; Yale Rally Turns Back Dartmouth 11 TDs 3 at rianaa at. around right ei.d on State's, first TD march. On the play he proved his elusiveness by slipping out of at least six tackles before being stopped. Several other times he gave the Penn fans heait failure when it looked as if he dght get loose, but the alert, Quakers got him just in time.

Although he didn't run wild, Moore still was as good if not better than any back to visit Frar.klin Field this year. Penn's most glorious defensive moving irom ma place on tne 19 at Haaataa buviaotivvvii mm iiiiii ic a uiu dui 1 1 $37,355.50, by 4Vi lengths. for the Terps, haven't lost since Miami beat them midway of 1 onn Urta-N a ww wri nwww im n. V. 1 r- KT rc TJ TJ "ULauiC leal.

OO W. AA AUUU1U11 liaUUJ dVrt-aa HTM aa I on the Year, bringing up the rear of .) Main Line Campus last evening. There was a celebration of Villa-nova's- first triumph after five straight reversals. There were verbal toasts for John Ferruolo. rush for fourth money of $14,118.50 age; one pass for 13 yards; one in PRINCE JOHN PAYS $50 I terception, and two punt returns Half Ends, 0-0; Beagle Stopped By BILL LAUDER, JR.

Prince John returned $50, $18.80 who played like a m-o ouarterback: moment came eirly in the fourth Quarter when it dug in valiantly and took the on downs at the four after State recovered a fum ble on Penn's 11. for a total of 12 more. Tigers Hold Tie For Ivy Lead By EVERETT B. MORRIS Special to Th Inquirer mn4 New York Herald Tribune The nrst touendown came arter ana ss zu across me Doara. uareerior speedy Dave Parr who Mi minutes.

Howie Dare took ajBoy, the second choice of the big tanced all pursuers to takf a lone 10-yard pass from halfback Dave crowd, paid $5.60 and $3.40. Show. Ferruolo pass for a touchdown Nusz seconds before the first pe Bpecial to The Inquirer and Nm York Herald Tnbua NEW HAVEN, Oct. 29 CAPT. SIIADA INJURED In going through its 19th straight game ithout a victory.

tickets on Needles were worth a and for John Bauer, a halfback modest $2.80. who shifted to fullback and ran as When the last wager on Gene if he belonged there to scom riod ended to cap a 53-yard scor PRINCETON. N. J- Oct. 29.

lng drive LJ? Penn may have the service, of Princeton clung to its half of the Vereb scored in the third period aion -aream race went into tne another touchdown. There were congratulatory sla is Ivy League lead with Yale today by squirting through center for 10 macnines. tne nandxe on the event yaids, and faced 19 yards for his totaled $535,629 for a new one-final score in the last quarter. 'race high. The previous mark.

Carolina, JJzZa? 984. was set in the first Garden Maryland scoKiNQ itate, Oct. 31, 1953. The total for on the shoulders of Ron Cherubini, by getting the jump on unexpect-a solid 225-pound citizen, whose tough Brown and then hang-end-zone tackle in the first period liner on for 14-7 decision which threw away scoring opportunities ln the first half against a stubborn but outmanned Dartmouth and finally scored three times in the second half for a 20-0 victory. The Elis, with Dennis McGill and provided the safety that made the; did not exactly delight the 22.500 Vcreo 3.

plunte: 10. run: 19. run). Dare he dav. $3,249,977.

has bppn tonned difference. crowd. hOTT. j- Jim Shada, captain and guard, for Continued on Puge 9, Column 1 Lehigh Downs Temple for 5th 10. pau tram Muaz).

PAT: Kdmlo. Lauglwry. Perlom. STATISTICS Villanova played its best game of The home force, smooth and only once by the $3,336,093 of May 31, 1954. when the previous high attendance of 44,569 was set.

Carrying the common burden of the year. For the first time, the powerful, marched 58 yards for a Cats OUtrUShed their ODDOSition. flrst-rvrlrvi tniirhrlnwn and made another in the second quarter four 128 net yards to 115. The Main Lin-ers made it a comDletelv harjpv oc. 122 pounds to fabulous triumph.

C. 12 71 119 10 of 26 1 37 53 Ml. Flnt down 17 Fuhin yajdage 249 Pasting Ttrdage 71 Paste eornuieted 3 of 7 Pasaea Intercepted by 4 Punta 4 Pintinf avaraaa 4 Fumblea lcat 1 axda penalized S3 V.5 plays after blocking a Bruin punt Prince. John, a flashing chestnut; casion for 7935 home stadium root- Apparently the Tiger was on his Al Ward setting the pace, rushed the ball a net of 291 yards while holding Dartmouth to 90. Dartmouth's best opportunity was through the air with Bill Beagle tossing, but the country's leading passer at least until today was able to complete only eight of 21 passes for 82 yards and he had four of his tosses Intercepted.

THREATENED TWICE 11 Continued on Page 6, Column 4 Continued on Page 7, Column 1 RECORDS I By OSCAR YOBLIC'K Inquirer Reporter BETHLEHEM. Oct. 29 iVictoryless Ten pie University's Unbeaten Michigan Scores 20 Pts. BROW Seat 2 laai ta Telamftla. 14-12.

Or. 1 tftl to Vale. 27-2S. Ort. drfeated Dartaaaatk.

7-d. Ort. IS kut ta Ratters, 14-12. Ort. loot to KHoO l.l.nd.

1-I2. Ort. 24 loot ta rINCITON. 14-7. Sot.

5 eraet! Not. 12 at Htrraxd Kar. 24 Collate PBIXriTOM SeaC 24 defeated 41-T. Ort. 1 defeated feloaibia.

2K-T. Ort. ft defeated Pf.NNBlLV.AMA. T-4V. In Last 9 Minutes to Beat low a The two Ell quarterbacks.

Dean fifth game cf season was Us best here today it it was not good better averages. Loucks completed four of eight for 68 yards and Win-ienouSh nd L' hi8" University terbauer five of seven for 65 yards rolled to its fifth straijht conquest, and one touchdown. Although! 27-14, before 42C3 at Taylor Sta-Loucks is the No. 1 there was little to choose between Loucks and Winterbauer today. The Engineers, who played five Yale threatened twice in the first clos ame! in losing their opener 29 W.

I iom lOIKaiO. 19'. ANN ARBOR. Oct, (AP). Mighty Michigan, in rores.

tvasnevsKi. was anomer without warning collapsed in the 22 defeated ru. ss-2. 4 4 an Ort. 2 defeated Brm, 14-1.

touch-i111 a painful string of defeats by final nine minutes Not. emotional avalanche of a frwan ktUi 1 w. NOT. 3 at Harare! 12 Vale IS Dartaaaaitk downs, poured across 20 points in Micnigan. th flml nin minute to nrotPPt! Th HiaVprpt vVit Viouant 6icai uiw-aoiis uata.

ior mini- igan 15 years ago. Evashevski half. An interception stopped the 10 vomeu and ui beating Dela- V-VV 9 its Derfect record and national m-i openly pointed his team for this way to an victory but Brown and ware, Bucktell, Gettysburg game, hoping to avenge successive had other ideas. The which Continued on race 9, Column ranKung wun a magnmcens w-i SOUnd football for the first 50 Continued on Pace 5, Column 3 uphill victory today over Iowa. I minutes, but then suddenly and 14-13 losses In the last two years.

1 had lost lour 01 its five engage-His Iowa team took a 21-13 lead ments rebounded vigorously and into the fourth quarter and lost made a game out of it. A crowd of 72,096 went into near i RECORDS hysterics as quarterback Jim Mad- dock fired touchdown passes of 65 another touchdown ln the opening Red Scribes See Stanford Win STANFORD. Calif Oct. 29 (UP) RECORDS IOWA TEVfLl FIRST HALF THRILLS fifl virds and Tnnv BrannfT Seal. 4 loot to Hate CreM, 41-1.

Ort. Ort. Ort. Stanford wrapped up San Jose The losers surged 55 for a TD in the second period. After a bizarre series of events in the final minute of the half they were five yards from a possible tie.

minutes of the final period when holding was detected on an apparent touchdown pass. 65-YARD TD PASS Michigan's comeback not only foiled the Hawkeyes but rebuked State, 34-18, today in a loosely- played game before 33,000, Includ-ing a group of Russian newspaper-1 men who had enough after the irst t. Brown's comeback gave promise swept 30 yards in the dying minutes JlzlT "iw to climax one of the greatest rallies JJJ- tn Big Ten football history. Iowa t. 22 iot ta l.a.

33-13. had led 14-0 at the half and 21-13 'mLZJX'" 33 after three quarters. 12 The dramatic triumph, achieved 191 before a national television audi-f 7 ence, gave third-ranked Michigan oX ii-r. Its sixth straight victory making ,5.., n-t. the Wolverines stronger than ever ort.

22 defeated Miaaata. 14-13, I 4oot ta hrroi toa, iB-fc. 15 Ut ta Bar.aeli. JH-. 22 loot ta laruofie lorh, IS-14.

2 toot to rk 27-14. Mualraaerg 12 Dela oar. lit at Itaatoa 0. LEHIGH 24 laai to Caell, 1 dHratedDelaaare, It-13. fc defeated Ba.

aaelt, 21-211. 11 defeated GMnM'l, 21-11. 22 deleated Ba cera, 21-14. 2 defeated lUrXE. 27-14.

ft V.M I. 12 ot If Lafajetu for the sec the Wolverines' critics who were of more excitement A wM 1 --a half. if- I Ort. The Soviet scribes departed with the Indians ridinf; on a 27-0 cush-! ond half, but that promise was never realized. The defense took over, play became sloppy and uiuinpi c53cu uj cuc victories over Northwestern and Minnesota in the past two weeks.

naia ion. thanks to the rjassincr of nuar- nothing of any account material The Michigan triumph started At Vrirepnoto hninna f.ir a rvt in th TJnu. Tln-1 terback John Brodie. But the Rus- i nil'. Illiaaoa when Maddock pitched a 65-yard 'ized except a missed try for a field came Jan.

2. Darfmouth's Bob Rex commits aerial robbery yesterday, intercepting Yale pass. Yale won, 20-0. 12 Indiaaa lip Olua at. sians missed all of San Jose's scoring because of their impatience.

For Iowa and Us luckless coach. Continued on Page 5, Column 4 1 Continued on Page 3, Column.

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