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The Philadelphia Inquirer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania • Page 65

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Penn Army 7 6 Fordham 35 Temple 6 Boston Col. 20 Uillanova 13 Princeton 27 Yale 0 ich.St. 30 Indiana 26 Illinois 0 Ohio State 0 aryland 53 1 Tennessee 46 J. Gar. St.

0 i Mississippi 21 Stanford 35 Oregon St. 14 Fordham Jolts Tern pie Edges A OCeinnieini? ramy aeinnip)ieir Villanova Upset by BCl i Cornog Scores From 3 eimim An azmaier A her Cadets Tally First Wildcats' Hopes Of Bowl Bid Fade Illustrated on Pcge 6 By STAN BAUMGARTNER Inquirer Sports Reporter BOSTON, Nov. 17. Boston College, in six of its first seven games, rose fefcke People NOVEMBER 18, 1951 Indepe SUNDAY MORNING, Paces Princefon to 21st Delaying Penalty Helps Quakers to TD; Meyers' Buck Caps Gray's 27-Yd. Drive Illustrated on Page 7 By ART MORROW More things happened at Franklin Field yesterday than Walter Camp, George W.

Woodruff, Glenn Warner, Knute Rockne, George Munger and Earl Blaik ever dreamt of in their combined football philosophies. it By the margin of 20-year-old Carl Sempier's place-kicking toe, Pennsylvania beat the Army for the first time since 1942 in a bitterly engagement that was notably free of rules in Inquirer Magic Eye Camera catches hi ghlights of Perm's touchdown march against Tom Bell tumbles and Penn recovers on Cadets' Rams Capitalize On Owl Errors Illustrated on Page 3 By FRANK O'GARA A large gob of gloss was rubbed off Temple's bright gridiron record yesterday when underdog Fordham battered the Owls to 35-6 submis sion before 7500 Alumni Homecom Ing fans at Temple Stadium. Temple, aiming for its seventh tri umph and a consequent tie for the second "winningest" record in the 27-year competitive history of the school. Dlaved lack-luster football throughout and was dominated by convincing margin'. The Rams, winning their fourth game in eight starts, capitalized on early mistakes for a 14-0 halftime lead, made it 20-6 on a eift TD early inthe final quarter and won going away.

PENALTY HALTS TEMPLE Temple made noises like a touch down in the early moments, but as Duke Wuzzardo weaved 23 to the en emy 12 with a pass from Ed McKer- nan. a clipping penalty hamstrung the advance. That was the only threat the proteges of Al Kawal could muster until they pounced on a third-quarter fumble 28 yards from the end zone and crossed the line on McKernan's floater to end Dick Stolte. Meanwhile, the alert Rams had pushed 14 points across and knocked on the door of two more scores. The first came after ball-hawk Dick Sharry filched a McKernan pass in the flat and returned 20 to the Temple 22.

Short gains made a first by inches on the one and left half John Hyatt slanted across. Two minutes before hail time, uie Continued on Page 3, Column 3 Sports 'DBesults College FOOTBALL PHILADELPHIA DISTRICT Boston College 20 Villanova 13 rnrHhim 35 Temple 6 Yale JV 19 Princeton JV 2 pun. 7 Army 6 Princeton 27 Yale 0 Princeton 150's 19; Rutgers 150's 6 Princeton Fr. 13 Yale Fr. 7 Susquehanna 19 Ursinus 14 Swarthmore 19 Haverford 7 West Chester 13 Drexel 0 STATE Albright 13 Muhlenberg 9 Bethany 33 Grove City 12 Bloomsburg 20 Indiana STC 0 Bucknell 33 Delaware 6 Carnegie Tech 35 Westminster 6 Dickinson 31 Allegheny 13 Kings 27 Wilkes 7 Kutztown 33 Cheney Teachers 13 Lebanon Valley 34 Juniata 0 Lehigh 32 Lafayette 0 Millersville 28 Mansfield 13 Penn State 13 Rutgers 7 Pitt 32 West Virginia 12 Bider 26 East Stroudsburg 7 Scranton 12 Waynesburg 0 EAST Eastern Intercollegiate League Cornell 21 Dartmouth 13 Harvard 34 Brown 21 Princeton 27 Yale 0 Standings W.

L. PC. Princeton 5 0 1.000 Columbia 4 1 .800 Penn 2 1 .667 Cornell 3 2 .600 Dartmouth 2 3 .400 Brown 1 2 .333 Harvard 1 4 .200 Yale 0 5 .000 OTHER EAST Adelphi 46 N. Y. Aggies 6 American Intl.

13 Springfield 0 Amherst Fr. 14 Williams Fr. 7 Boston U. 39 Wichita 6 Buffalo 33 RPI 20 Connecticut 21 Rhode Island 6 Hamilton 32 Union 20 Hofstra 19 Upsala 0 Kings Point 56 Wagner 0 Middlebury 51 Vermont 12 Navy 21 Columbia 7 New Britain T. 27; Camp Edwards 13 New Hampshire 7 Kent State 0 New Haven T.

39; Brooklyn Coll. 0 Syracuse 9 Colgate 0 Tufts 6 Massachusetts 6 Wesleyan 6 Trinity 3 W. Maryland 33 Johns Hopkins 6 Williams 40 Amherst 7 MD3 WEST Western Conference Illinois 0 Ohio State 0 Northwestern 6 Michigan 0 Continued on Page 6, Column 6 Billy Deuber (12) gains two yards to SO on a reverse. fractions but jam-packed full of almost every other sin defined by the founding fathers of-the game. Sempier, the unsung specialist from Verano, N.

resolved the issue by bisecting the uprights after a three-yard cut off -tackle by sophomore Chet Cornog at 7:59 of the third quarter. But even so, the Quakers top-heavy favorites over a Cadet ensemble that had won only two of seven previous affrays had to come from behind to win. CADETS REACH NEW HEIGHTS Forty thousand including an Army mule borrowed for the occasion from South Philadelphia's Quartermaster Depot stood and cheered, emitted agonized cries or merely wondered as Blaik's browbeaten Cadets rose to heights which even their coach regarded as unattainable, thereby serving notice to an assemblage of Navy scouts that the Middies are due for no light afternoon a week from next Saturday at the Municipal Stadium in the annual service classic. But whether they knew what to make of yesterday's proceedings is a moot point. Neither Munger nor Blaik was sure.

That developments were highly irregular may be gathered from the fact that Penn's great linebreaker, red-headed Gerry Mc-Ginley, started both touchdown drives. First off. thundering downfield under an Army quick-kick late in the first period, the son of Penn's 1925 All-American tackle inadvertently booted the ball, and that gave Cadet Bill MacPhail, an unheralded tackle, his nnnort.unitv to iumD into the spotlight. He recovered on the Penn 27, and the Cadets used this as springboard to a touchdown which came on a one-incn plunge Dy ine incandescent 1 quarterback Freddie Meyers, at 3:12 of the second quarter. REICH'S BOOT MISSES MARK But then the wind caught the placement directed by plebe Dick Reich, a stocky back from Steelton, and carried it off its course.

Reich had made good on 13 of 15 previous conversions. McGinley, who had given Army its opportunity in the first half, recovered a fumble by Tommy Bell on the Cadet 32 in the third quarter and his team drove from there to its touchdown. One event along the way will long be discussed. When Penn reached Army's eight, it was fourth down and one yard to go. Ronald Lincoln had stopped Cornog without gain at the start of the march, ioid John Rogers had held Billy Deuber to two yards on a reverse on the second thrust.

Cornog, even while being tackled, got off an 18-yard pass to Deuber for a first down at the 17, and on two lunges that sandwiched a slice by Cornog, Joe Varaitis brought the ball tp the eight. CADEJ LINEBACKER HURT But in stopping the sophomore fullback, Army linebacker Don Fuqua was so shaken that he appeared to be hurt, and two Cadet substitutes, warming up along the sidelines, started toward the playing field. Roland Bevan, the trainer, also stepped over the sideline. Meantime Fuqua had told Reteree Harry Dayhoff, one of modern foot ball's greatest officials, that He needed no relief. Dayhoff immedi- Continued on Page 7, Column 3 Xavier Shatters Cincinnati Streak CINCINNATI, Nov.

17 (INS). Xavier University today knocked Cincinnati from its perch as the Nation's leading undefeated college eleven with a 26-0 victory that may mean a Salad Bowl bid. Xavier, sporting seven decisions and a tie, snapped Cincinnati's winning streak of nine. Cincinnati's mo rale was broken early when halfback Jack Hahn intercepted a Bearcat pass on the Xavier two and romped 98 yards to score. Chet Cornog passes to Deuber for 18-yard gain to 17.

(Diagram of this important play on Page 7) 5 32. (31, at left) bucks up to 8. Cornog scores two plays later. Tennessee Rolls Over Mississippi OXFORD, Nov. 17 (AP).

Relying on straight football and its three battering backs Hank Lauri-cella, Andy Kozar and Bert Rechi-char undefeated Tennessee rolled a 46-21 football triumph 'today over the fighting but out-gunned University of Mississippi Rebels before 32,000. The Vols, ranked number two in the Nation and scheduled to meet Maryland in the Sugar Bowl New Year's Day, were given a scare in the first half by Mississippi's speed and passing attack, but the Ole Miss defense came apart in the third period. Lauricella's understudy at tailback, Harold Payne, drove for three Tennessee's touchdowns and Kozar made a pair with LauriceUa and Dick Ernsberger getting one each. JLrr.my Lear, quarterbacked the Rebels to first, second and final SJsw; Army, fiere it starts wnen Mich. St.

Defeats Indiana for 1 4th On Carey's Kicks BLOOMINGTON, Nov. 17 (AP). Michigan State's undefeated Spartans tottered on the brink of! the season's biggest football upset today but stood off Indiana's fired up Hoosiers, 30-26. It was a personal triumph for Coach Clyde Smith of the five-times defeated Indiana team, who for mally resigned under fire yesterday, and a bad scare for Michigan State the No. 1 team in the Associated Press Poll.

Indiana erased a two-touchdown Michigan State lead in the second quarter and held a 14-14 tie at the half. It came back again in an other two-touchdown outburst late in the fourth quarter after trailing, 30-14. CAREY'S KICKS DECIDE Michigan State's winning margin was the footwork of end Bob Carey, who kicked a field goal in the fourth quarter and converted three of four extra points. Or the credit could go to right halfback Bill Wells, who broke the 14-14 halftime tie with an 83-yard run that produced the only score in the third quarter. He scored again in the fourth on a two-yard plunge.

About 20,000 fans, braving freez ing 32-degree cold and snow flurries. saw Michigan State's 14th straight victory. INDIANA'S OFFENSE Gene Gedman, Indiana's never-stopped driving fullback, scored the first and last touchdowns in the Hoosiers' two big rallies. The plunging of Gedman and Bill Dozier alternated with the passing of Dick Ashburner, obviously was a higher quality asault than Michigan State anticipated. Indiana gave up the Spartan's first two touchdowns on fumbles.

Dick Tamburo, a line-backer, accounted for the first when he recovered a bobble by Lou D'Achille in the end zone and his recovery of another lost ball by Dozier on the 25 set up the second Spartan score. The marker came, finally, on a five-yard pass from Al Darow to Paul Dekker. Thereafter, the Hoosiers were very much in the battle, which turned Continued on Page 6, Column 4 Stars Hit 4 Homers, Win Tokyo Finale, 14-5 TOKYO, Nov. 17 (UP) The touring -U. S.

All-Stars hit four home runs, one by the A's Ferris Pain, to defeat the All-Japan All-Stars, 14-5, today and complete their goodwill tour with a record of 13 victories, one loss and one tie. Americans 10404104 0 14 14 0 Japanese 02100300 0 5 11 0 Lhman, Werle (7) and Tipton, Perry 7: Yonekawa. Bessho (3), Sugishita 5. Hattori (7), Kaneda and Doigaki, Kusunolii i3. Noguchi 5).

Winning pitcher Lehman. Losing pitcher Eessho. Home runs Fain, Martin, Strickland, Stringer. to inspired heights today to upset once-beaten Villanova College, 20-13, before 7782 chilled spectators. It was the Eagles' second triumph of the season and the first victory over a major opponent since they upset Holy 76-0, in the final game of For' Villanova it was a crushing defeat, a blasting of bowl bid hopes in a campaign which started in sen sational fashion with victories over Army, Penn State and Alabama.

BC deserved its triumph. The young linemen outcharged Villa nova's forward wall both on offense and the defense, permitting the Eagles' ball-carriers to gain 224 yards rushing to the Wildcats' 141. The defeat proved doubly costly when Jack Fitzpatrick, sturdy, 5 feet, 11, 225-pound guard was carried off the field in the first period with a broken ankle. It was Boston College's first tri umph in the spirited series since 1948 when they trimmed the Main Lin ers, 20-13. It also gave the New Eng enders a 9-7 lead in victories, with one contest ending a tie.

The Eagles fought hard throughout to shade slightly r-confident Villanova. Coach Art Raimo's team received the majority of breaks but could not win. Villanova's two touchdowns came after a recovery of a BC fumble three yards from their goal line and on a blocked punt by Nick Liotta which rebounded over the BC goal and was fallen upon by Joe Ferry, an alert Villanovan. Boston College, on ttie other hand, scored on three marches of 80, 68 and 42 yards, sparked by spectacular running by John McCauley, Dan Brosnahan, Bob Richards and Joe Johnson and clever passing of Jim Kane. Richards ran 21 yards for the Eagles' first touchdown; Johnson raced 56 yards for the second and Kane passed to Mike Roark for 20 yards and the final six-pointer.

However Art Raimo's men jumped into an early lead as they have done in every game this year by capitalizing on a BC fumble and pushing over a touchdown in the first period. SIMEONE RECOVERS Joe Sullivan fumbled Ralph Ce-cere's long punt on the BC 10 and Dan Simeone fell on it on the three. Three tries at running lost six yards but Brannau passed to Dick Bedesem for the touchdown. Tony Coletta booted the extra point. This was followed by the injuries to Fitzpatrick and Haner.

The Wildcats began to fade but it was not until the final seconds of the half that BC tied the score. The Eagles took the ball on downs from the Wildcats on their own 20 with about four minutes remaining. Sparked by great running by Continued on Page 6, Column 5 Tie for Title Clinched By Stanford PALO ALTO, Nov. 17 (AP). Stanford's unbeaten, untied Indians scored four touchdowns in a wild second half to defeat Oregon State, 35-14, today and clinch at least a tie for the Pacific Coast Conference title before 45,000.

The Indians' victory, their ninth straight, virtually assured them the Rose Bowl bid. They are currently No. 4 in the AP football poll. Even should the Indians lose their last contest to California next Saturday, Stanford's Rose Bowl bid was regarded as certain. DEADLOCKED AT HALF Deadlocked 7-7 at halftime, the fighting Redskins turned a fumble and two intercepted passes into three third-period touchdowns.

Oregon State converted a re- Continued on Page 6, Column 5 Wash. State's End Sets 2 Coast Marks PULLMAN, Nov. 17 (AP). Ed Barker, a 19-year-old junior end, broke two Pacific Coast Conference pass-catching records today as Washington State overwhelmed Montana, 47-10. Barker snagged seven passes for 78 yards, giving him a season's total of 40 catches for 723 yards.

The old marks were 39 and 671 yards, set by Stanford's Bill McColl last year. Rallies Fail Carl Snavely his, job. With minutes to play, two Tar Heel drives for a touchdown that would have meant a startling upset stalled on the Irish three and 10. Notre Dame tallied on power drives that covered 55 and 80 yards in the second and third periods but failed to convert each time. A field goal attempt also went awry.

Aroused late in the third period, North Carolina scored on a 37-yard pass from tailback Connie Gravitte to wingback Jack Cooke, then monopolized the last period with an 86-yard drive that stopped three yards short of the goal line. PASS BATTED DOWN A partisan crowd of 44.500 suffered when Gravitte's pass into the end zone on fourth down was batted away by Notre Dame defender Gene Carrabine. The Tar Heels ground back, but Continued on Page 2, Column I Back Gets. TD, Hurls 3 Others In Rout of Ya Illustrated on Page 6 By JESSE ABRAMSON Snerial to The Inauirer and N. Herald Tribune PRINCETON, N.

Nov. 17. With a minimum of shenanigans and a maximum of Kazmaier, Princeton's guileful, smooth-functioning team crushed Yale, 27-0, in their 74th football meeting today before 45,000 in Palmer Stadium. Just about what was expected to happen in this renewal aid happen, particularly the achievements of Richard William Kazmaier, the un quenchable, indestructible senior tailback executioner of Charlie Cald well's single-wing'operations. SETS IVY LEAGUE RECORD As the all-conquering Tigers rang up their 21st consecutive victory for an historic five-year mop-up of their Big Three opposition, Kazmaier had one of the greatest days of his brilliant career.

He threw three touchdown passes and swepUend for the other, completed 10 of 16 passes for 105 yards and rushed the ball 19 times for 132 yards. This gave him a record Ivy League total of 1707 yards for the season, with one game to go. The slim, 171-pound senior from Maumee, Ohio, shattered the Ivy League total offense record of 1610 yards compiled by Columbia's Paul Governali nine years ago. JUST LIKE LAST YEAR He shattered Yale all afternoon. just as he had all through his varsity career.

This was strictly a retake of Kazmaier a year ago. He duplicated his 1950 performance against the Elis of three touchdowns passing and one touchdown running, and almost matched his offense contributions to the yard. In three years, Kazmaier accounted for 10 touchdowns, passing and running, against Yale, and his value to his team was never more clearly demonstrated than it was today. The Yale Band knew a hero when it saw one. It also knew that noth ing in Blue could stop this invincible character in Orange and Black.

So the Yale Band, before the game, Continued on Page 6, Column 1 Royals Defeat Warriors, 86-72 Special to The Inquirer ROCHESTER, N. Nov. 17. The Philadelphia Warriors lost their shooting ability in the second half as the Rochester Royals came from behind a nine-point deficit to beat the Philadelphians, 86-72, tonight in their National Basketball Association game before 2688 The victory gave the Roya leaders uv the Western Division, their fifth triumph in six starts. The Warriors (2-5) fell deeper into the Eastern Division cellar.

ARIZIN SCORES 19 The Warriors dominated the first half as Paul Arizin poured in 17 points. But the picture changed in the second half as indicated by Arizin's two points for a total of 19, the first time this season he has scored under 25. Just behind Arizin with 18 apiece were Joe Fulks and center Neil Johnston. The possession ball tactics of the Royals paid off as they closed the margin to two points at the three-quarter mark and the outside marksmanship of Bob Davies and Red Holzman pulled them ahead. Davies led the scoring with 23 points and Holzman picked up 16, playing less than half the game.

Arizin got the Warriors off on the right foot with three field goals and two free throws as the Philadel phians held leads of 12-7 and 14-9 Continued on Page 2, Column 8 Maryland Rolls To Record Total COLLEGE PARK, Nov. 17 (AP). Mighty Maryland gave vent to its jubilance today over being invited to the Sugar Bowl with a 53-0 scoring celebration over helpless North Carolina State, eighth straight victim of the unbeaten Terps. The Terps ran their season scoring to 299 points, a new Maryland record, with one regular, game remaining plUo the New Year's bowl engagement with Tennessee. The old record of 274 points was set in 10 games, last year.

Maryland tallied in every period to extract ample revenge for last year's 16-13 upset by N. C. State. MODZELEWSKI POTENT After jumping off to a 14-0 first period lead, Maryland convinced chilled fans and televiewers in seven Southern cities that the rout was on with 19 more points in the second quarter. Fullback Ed (Mighty Mo) Modze- Continued on Page 2, Column 5 Illinois Tied By Ohio State Buckeyes' Defense Throttles Mini As 79,457 Watch COLUMBUS, Nov.

17 (AP). Ohio State's in-and-out Buckeyes knocked some of the luster off unbeaten Illinois' hopes for a Rose Bowl bid today as they held the seven-time winners to a 0-0 deadlock in a game which each club attempted unsuccessfully to give away. A crowd of ,79,457 watched the twice-beaten Bucks Halt several Illinois surges deep in Ohio territory to put the first blemish on the record of the Western Conference leaders. BUCKEYES' DEFENSE STRONG The vaunted Illinois ground attack was held to a net gain of 48 yards by the powerful Ohio line, which played its outstanding game of the season. Six times Illinois was inside the Ohio 35-yard line, and twice were inside the 10, but failed to score.

Ohio surged into the shadow of the Illinois goal post twice but muffed a field goal attempt from the eight on one occasion, and lost the ball on downs on another try. It was a see-saw game with Ohio intercepting four Illinois passes, but losing the ball four times on fumbles. Illinois intercepted one Ohio aerial and lost the ball twice on SUB BACK STARS Ohio had its two big chances in the second period, a fumble by the intended holder on a place kick ending its best scoring chance and incompleted passes ending the other threat. Illinois took command in the third session, only to have Martz Continued on Page 6, Column 2 Navy Wins First Game of Year, 21 -7 NEW YORK. Nov.

17 (APV Underdog Navy ended its season-long victory drought today with a 21-7 triumph over the Columbia Lions before 25,000 fans, including two brigades of wildly cheering midshipmen. Two long gallops, by Vic Vine and Dean Smith, respectively, and a stubborn, yard-eating ground attack which covered 47 yards, brought the Middie touchdowns as Columbia, its running attack smothered to the point of oblivion, found its usually effective aerial barrage Jfor the most part A hint that the victory-starved Middies were about to have a feast came in the opening minutes when Vine, a fleet 175-pounder, took a pitchout, snaked through a hole in Continued on Page 7, Column 2 Missouri Bars Louis 'For His Own Good' ST." LOUIS, Nov. 17 (AP) The Missouri State Athletic Commission voted today to forbid former heavyweight champion Joe Louis from future fights in Missouri. "For his own good, we have taken this action in the hope that it will speed his retirement," said chairman Charles P. Orchard.

Northwestern Nips Michigan, 6-0 ANN ARBOR, Nov. 17 (AP). Northwestern wiped out Michigan's mathematical Western Conference title chances today on a surging 16-yard second period run by fullback Chuck Hren. The 6-0 victory for Northwestern gave Michigan its first losing season in 15 years. A chilled crowd of 58.300 braved the freezing temperature and grey skies to watch Northwestern stop Michigan when it counted and rack up their second Big Ten victory in five games.

Northwestern Michigan 0 .0 0 0 0 NORTH' KSTTBN SmRTNn- Tnurhriram I ii Nofre Dome Victor, 12-7, N. Carolina Bucknell Wins, Sets Record; 1st Unbeaten Year Since '18 LEWISBURG, Pa, Nov. 17. Bucknell completed its first unbeaten and untied football season since 1918 today and set an all-time offensive record in bowling over Delaware, 33-6, before 7000 Three plays later Joe Varaitis Penalty moves ball to 3 and College Won't Tell Reason for Ousters QUINCY, 111., Nov. 17 (UP).

Quincy College officials refused today to tell why eight football players were expelled. Students and townsfolk alike were left in the dark by, the expulsion, which was ordered by Rev. Henry Freiberg, college president. Father Freiberg said only that the ousted players had been given "repeated chances to conform with school regulations, but persisted in ignoring requirements for good scholastic standing." The players themselves said they knew of no specific reason and Bron Bacevich, football coach, said he was "stunned" and added, "Frankly, I'm in the dark about the whole thing." ft to of Cornell's 'Wing-Short' Pass Defeats Dartmouth, 27-73 By ED SINCLAIR SvfcinJ to The Inauirer and Herald Tribune HANOVER, N. Nov.

17. Cornell's potent offense, which last week took the measure of Michigan, struck twice with electrifying precision after enemy fumbles in the second half and carried the CHAPEL HILL, N. Nov. 17 (UP) Notre Dame squeaked out a 12-7 victory today over a North Carolina team that unleashed two furious last period drives trying to avoid defeat that may cost Coach li i1 Vl 1 freezing but happy fans. It was Bucknell's ninth victory of the year and their 13th straight since losing, 23-12, to Colgate last year.

There was nothing indecisive about Bucknell's all-important victory. The Bisons established an Eastern Intercollegiate Football Association record for total offense by boosting their average for the season 470 yards a game rushing and passing. Army's team of 1945, paced by Felix Blanch-ard and Glenn Davis, held the previous record of 462.7 yards. MYERS, TALMAGE STARS Bucknell's touchdown twins. Brad Myers and Burt Talmage, accounted for better than half of the winner's yardage.

On rushing alone, Myers, Lancaster, and Talmage, Mt. Lakes, N. contributed a total of 288 yards. Talmage was the leading gainer with 185 yards. The two junior halfbacks both Continued on Page 3, Column 4 One-Eyed Gelding Wins British Race MANCHESTER, England.

Nov. 17 CAP). Good Taste, a seven-year-old one-eyed gelding, today won the Manchester Handicap last big race of the British flat racing season. The 28 to 1 shot caught front-running Solar in the final furlong and won the mile and a half event by a neck. The victory was worth $5600 to owner Joe Bullock.

At Lingfield Park near London. champion Jockey Gordon Richard rode one winner out of five mounts to finish the season with 227. This was 110 more than his nearest rival, Doug Smith, and gave him the rid ing title for the 24th time in 27 years. Richards now has ridden 4904 winners in his career which began 1920. Big Red to a 21-13 triumph over! Dartmouth before 14,000 at Me morial Field here.

Held to a tie in the first half by an inspired Indian team, the men of Ithaca stormed over the goal line for two touchdowns in the third period and except for a pass interception which Charlie Curtis hauled 67 yards for a touchdown early in the final quarter, held Dartmouth in subjection thereafter In winning for Lefty James his first triumph over Tuss McLaughry in these parts, Cornell played alertly (it recovered four Dartmouth fumbles while giving up none of its own) and with the crushing strength of numbers. The Big Red now has beaten six opponents this year, losing only to Princeton and Columbia, while Dartmouth has split eight decisions. Cornell plays Penn at Philadelphia Continued on Page 7, Column 8 Continued on Page Column 1 Urea..

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