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The Miami News from Miami, Florida • 37

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The Miami Newsi
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Miami, Florida
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37
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AVBURN 21 GEORGIA TECH 0 NOTRE DAME NAVY 9 OHIO STATE 7 KENTUCKY 19 NORTH 13 TULANE 0 MISSISSIPPI 14 FLORIDA 13 VANDERBILT 7 FORDHAM 7 7" Cm Um () 7 NORTHWESTERN 0 MANHATTAN L. S. U. 6 mbsbsitb mate ungears Vandeirbllt O'HI THE Sp Greater Miami's Schedule Of Events MONDAY BOXING: Armory arena, 8:45 p. m.

TCESDAY OOLFs Greater Miami Honwn's Jolf asoriatlon, Miami Blltmore fonnrry rla, a. m. BOX1NU: Coral Gables coliseum, 8:45 P. m. WBESlUXji: lutlle arena, 8:45 p.

m. WEDNESDAY WRESTLING: Armory arena. 8:45 p. m. THTRSDAY FOOTBALL: Miami Fllon High vs.

West Palm Beach High, Bondey Burdtne stadium, 8 m. MIAMI, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1937 TBAC AUBURN TECH 21-0 GEORGIA ATLANTA, Oct. 23. Don't sell Auburn short: The Plainsmen, green and slow as the season started, still were good enough to come this far in the season unbeaten. They've been tied twice, a good defensive team getting its running attack started slowly.

But it was clicking here today and how. The left side of the Auburn line, with Rex McKissick at end. Bo Russell at tackle and Happy Sivell at guard is just about impregnable, and Captain Lester Antley at center is a whale of a defensive player. Tech, so the boys up here say, was badly bruised by the pounding Duke crew last week, seven of them having to play 60 minutes and take it. The team naturally enough, let down after that.

But it didn't seem to be a Tech let down that aided Auburn. They struck with terrific force, and Speck Kelly is one of the fastest starting backs in the South. Jimmie Fenton, brother of Benny out at the Miami Firestone station, is a finished back. He is fast, picks his holes beautifully, can kick one ball 50 yards and his passing is always hard to break up Captain Sims of the Yellow Jackets was the best back on the field for his team, but hadn't a chance with the Auburn forwards rushing on every play. The Plainsmen tossed a five-man line at Tech, with three backer-ups who roved at will.

This stopped the Tech trick stuff completely. Harvard All Fail To Stop Dartmouth's Indians Vanderbilt's triumph over L. S. U. was mighty popular up here, except with the gamblers.

The Commodores aren't so well liked, but everybody in the league wanted to see L. S. U. knocked off And how about that Vandy touchdown! Ricketson, Vandy tackle was pulled into the backfield and handed the ball. Hug-gins, Vandy quarterback, then started a sweep to the left, the L.

S. U. defense rushed over to stop the without-the-ball play, and Ricketson dashed 50 yards unmolested for a touchdown that must have caused Huey Long to turn over three times in his grave. CAMBRIDGE, Oct. 23.

Bob McLeod, fleet Dartmouth back, rips off five yards in rain and mud of first period as Indians scalped Harvard today, 20 to 2. Herb Christiansen, Dartmouth fullback, is on the ground, while Vernon Struck (32), Harvard fullback, races in as McLeod sidesteps another Crimson tackier. Villanova's powerful team which held Auburn to a scoreless tie, trimmed Bucknell 21 to 0, which may give you an idea of how good our own Hurricanes are, after a 6-6 tie with the Bisons. Drake's smashing victory over Iowa State also shows the Hurricanes have a tough foe there, and Georgia, which plays Tennessee next, didn't even drill against Mercer plays this week. They whipped the Bears 19 to 0 without much exertion.

All the fans are talking, however, of Clemson's overwhelming win over South Carolina. It's one of those games in which anything can happen in a state-rivalry tilt, and plenty happened to Don McAllister's crew. Two gals In short skirts and bare le pardon me, limbs were the big attraction on our side of the field. They were with three boys, the five making up the Auburn cheer-leading coterfe. The girls and their boy companions entertained all afternoon with variations of the big apple, with the girls occasionally kicking holes in the sky.

And oh. how, co-o-o-ld it was for such attire. After the third Auburn touchdown the five Tech cheer leaders-mere men hadn't a chance. Auburn's coach. Jack Meagher, isn't the pessimistic type.

In fact, he's so cheerful his fellow coaches think he's not all there. Kven this fall, when he started with many new men he cheerfully told Ralph McGill, sports editor of the Constitution, that he "was going to have a pretty good team. "Why he said; "the boys are green but look good. We'll be tough before the year is over. Fred Holman, Plainsman tackle, caused the penalty which aided Tech so much in the second period during that march which almost scored.

Officials caught him taking a right hook at a Yellow Jacket, slapped on the penalty and shooed him to the bench. Cunnel Jesse Yarborough of the Stingarees still is shaking his head as he thinks of those 15 points Boys high scored on his club in the last seven minutes of Friday night's game. Jesse'3 desire to toss the second stringers into the game for experience almost was fatal. This, so everybody feels, was due to the cold rather than the strategy. The entire Stingaree team was nearly frozen all the time the boys were here.

Those silk jerseys and light pants aren't so hot up here, and the team has no heavy coats or blankets. Even the boys on the field were cold, and when the reserves went in at the start of the fourth quarter they hardly could run and their hands were numb. They had sat on the bench for three quarters with the cold wind on them. Boys high made five first downs in that period, after four in the three previous quarters. Miami made 10 first downs, none in the last quarter.

They had Boys high so thoroughly whipped as the fourth quarter started that many half-frozen fans went home. The Boys ends and tackles had been well coached to stop Shifty Schemer. Coach Doyal evidently having scouted the Sting-arees well. But the Shifty one simply switched to passing and tossed the ball for two touchdowns. He had another too, but Johnny Reid dropped the ball with a clear field.

Roberts, great Boys passer, twice hit his receivers with 40-yard passes but once Greer dropped one, and Wiley dropped another. 'Twas co-old up here, folks. The game was played on the Cracker's baseball field, with the 50-yard marker at second base. An all-night rain that lasted until noon didn't help much. Frankie Rentz.

Jimmy Andrews and a few more of the boys came over from Athens, where they're in school at Georgia. Jim Scharman was down with the Auburn team. The Auburn coaches are holding Jim out this yeai. He'has a five-year course, they've good tackles, so he won't play until next year. The boys say the Earl of Hise is doing all right at Georgia, especially after he got into the first freshman game.

The Earl was soldiering a bit, but after he played, and can't go to another school, they cracked down on him and he's going fine. Joe Crum probably will be out for a couple of weeks. He rlayed part of the first half with his left shoulder dislocated. Doc Ferguson snapped it in place between halves, but it came out again soon after the third quarter started, and Joe was removed. That was the only casualty.

Yarborough used every lineman he brought, and all of the backs except Dubrueil, Kosey and Thurmond. These fans up here rise up and boo in the good old-fashioned manner when officials call decisions against the home team. Penalties really hurt Miami more than Boys, however, two of the 15-yard variety coming to figure in touchdowns. Gene Ellen-son evidently was holding when his act cost a touchdown, but the Stingarees got that one a minute later. Eidredge, a little white-headed sophomore, still is wondering about that 15-yard nenaltv thev inflicted on him.

He tackled a big ball carrier and EAST Commodores Upset Tigers By 7-6 Score By HENRY JflEMORE (Fnlted Press Staff Correspondent) NASHVILLE, Oct. 23. Employing one of the most mysterious plays ever setn on any gridiron, the under dog, Vanderbilt university football team, today vanquvhed the hitherto undefeated, untied and unscored on Tigers of Louisiana State, 7 to 6. Customers still were walking up the ramps of Dudley stadium when Vanderbilt, out-doing lightning, struck once and for the ball game. Vandy's scoring play, which confused almost everyone in the stadium, came within four minutes after the kickoff.

The game was opened by L. S. U. kicking off to Vanderbilt. Unable to gain, Vanderbilt kicked back.

The Tigers returned the compliment with a punt that went out of bounds on Vanderbilt's 44. On the first running play of the game Jimmy Huggins, Vandy's little halfback, picked up six yards off tackle. Then much to the be-wilderment of everybody. Including the Louisiana team, Vandy pulled a touchdown play. The ball went back from Center Hinkle to Halfback Huggins.

There was much bewildering business back of the line. The ball was flipped here and there. For a moment it seemed as if the play' were a quarterback sneak. A split second later it appeared as if Huggins were going wide on a sweep. Then and there -was not a person in the stands w-ho could tell you how it happened Greer Ricketson, a big tackle, appeared on the 50-yard line, with the ball under his arm.

He was surrounded by Vanderbilt Comrades. Honestly, there wasn't a L. S. U. player within 15 yards, so completely had the opposition been fooled.

Had it been necessary, Ricketson. slow as he is, could have run 500 yards without a hand being laid on him. The play was so involved there were many differences of opinion as to who carried the ball. The broadcasting expert said an end, McElreath, was the touchdown scorer. He was wrong, much to the surprise of nobody.

This observer asked Coach Ray Morrison, after the game, just what hap pened on the play. Morrison an swered: "I would be silly to tell you. All I can say is that Ricketson carried the ball." That play, which came out of the thin air, was the winner. Encouraged by its success a Vanderbilt line that was out' weighed by pounds, and a back (CONTINTEn ON PAGE TWO) Georgia Wins Easily, 19-0 (By Cnlled Pren ATHENS, Oct. 23.

Two sophomore halfbacks, Vassa Cate and Billy Mims, led Georgia's listless Bulldocks to a 19-0 victory over Mercer University today before a homecoming crowd of less than 5,000. Cate was directly responsible for one touchdown and indirectly for another. After a scoreless first quarter, Cate broke loose late in the second period for 32 yards and a first down on Mercer's 14. Mims went through tackle for eight, and then slashed off tackle again to score standing up. Mims' attempted place-kick was blocked by Mattox.

That six-point lead was all Georgia had at the end of the half but nine seconds after the third period opened the Bulldogs scored again. Cate took Fitzpat-rick's kickoff on his own 15-yard line, burst into an open field at the 35, and outran his pursuers for the touchdown. Mims' place-kick was good for the point. Mercer resorted to a passing attack and it cost the Bears another touchdown. Walter Trotman, a guard, dropped out of the line to intercept one of Landrum's passes on Georgia's 42.

Matthews, Mims and Oliver Hunnicutt, who didn't get into the lineup until late in the first quarter, ripped off long gains to march 57 yards for the third touchdown. "Coot" Vandiver, starting Georgia halfback, broke his leg in the first quarter. Stanford's Running Game Beats Huskies SEATTLE, Oct 23. (UP) Stanford university's powerful running attack crushed the University of Washington. 13 to 7.

today in a Pacific Coast conference football game. The defeat was the second of the season for last year's Razzle-Dazzle Doesn Work On Plainsmen (COVrDflTED FROM PAGE OXI) were good. But not one pass was good for more than five yards; not one ended up by giving the losers a first down. It was an 80-yard march, end ing up with one of the freakiest plays you ever saw a stolen ball touchdown that set Auburn on it3 way. Heath started with a 20-yard gain around Tech's right end.

He added six at center and then Kelly, with well-timed blocking to aid him, circled that same weak end for a brilliant run that carried him over the goal. Officials ruled he had touched the sideline on the Tech 21, however, and the ball came back to there. Then came the play that had everybody running around in cir cles. Kelly shot a pass toward Fenton but Page intercepted for Tech on the 16. Then, as Page pivoted to start running, Sivel, Auburn guard, simply took the ball out of his hands, ran over the goal and there was nothing the officials could do but award the touchdown.

You're supposed to keep that ball, once you get hold of it. Fenton calmly booted the first of his three-successful place-kick tries. From then until late in the second quarter nothing could stop the Plainsmen. Soon after the score Captain Antley recovered a Tccii fumble on the Tech 43 and Fenton promptly clipped off 11 yards, his mates knocking foes out of hi3 path. A fumble on the next play put the ball back on the Tech 30, from where Fenton darted over right guard, swerved to his left and flashed across the chalk marks for the second touchdown, the most effectively executed play of the day.

Simms, Tech safety man, had moved in close on the play. Heath knocked the Tech fullback in and Fenton outran the halfback and Simms. As soon as they took the ball away from Tech, tne rampant Plainsmen scored again, going 5j yards on 10 plays. Kelly started it with a 15-yard run, this time around Tech's left wing, and from there Heath. Kelly and Fenton clipped off yardage until Fenton went over from the four.

This ended an attack which for sheer power and brilliance sur-nassed anything the writer has seen since Auburn's victory over Florida in Miami three years ago. The Plainsmen clicked on every move and despite the fact that Tech was crippled after the terrific pounding Duke gave them last week, Auburn displayed a drive that any team would have found hard to stop. The long Tech offensive threat followed this, third Auburn touchdown, when the Plainsmen may have relaxed a bit. Captain Simms, Appleby and Konemann alternated in ripping off steady gains, and when finally forced to punt were given the ball again on Auburn's 23 when officials ruled Auburn had roughed the kicker. From there Simms, Appleby and Jones, who twice gained on an end-around play, fought their way to the four as the half ended.

The second half was devoid of spectacular football. Auburn seeming content to play defensive murii of the time. Occasionally Fenton land Kelly got away around the iTech ends but were stopped cold in the line. The Georgia crew could do nothing on offense, even when Auburn rushed a multitude of substitutes into the game in the final quarter. Auburn's superiority showed nlainlv in statistics, the Plainsmen running off 278 yards from scrimmage for 12 first downs, while ITech was getting 121 yards and half as many first downs.

The Plainsmen also drew 70 yards in penalties to 15 for Tech. Late Notre Dame Rally Beats Middies, 9 To 7, On Snow-Covered Field (By Vnitrd Pres SOITII BEND, Oct. 23. Notre Panic's inspired Irish, beaten for three periods, struck savagely twice in the fourth today and defeated the Navy, 9 to 7, on a snow-swept field. For three disappoint inij periods, the 4:5,000 spectators huddled in the pelting snow watched Navy rip through Notre Dame's underpowered line a1 if it were paper.

Onre the Middies scored, again they threatened In thi? first period. Suddenly in the fourth, the Irish found their fight and scored a touchdown and safety in the final minutes. Rain, Mud And Dazzling Runs By Sophomore Beat Harvard Bv STANLEY WOODWARD (Spfrlal to New York Herald Tribune and Miami Dally Mens) ALLSTON, Oct. 23. The remarkable running of Bill Hutchinson, sophomore back, who formerly operated for James Monroe high school, New York city, carried Dartmouth to victory, 20 to 2, over Harvard in the sludge and goo of Soldiers Field stadium this afternoon.

Hutchinson ran 62 yards for one touchdown, 55 for another and bucked over from the two-yard line for a third after longer runs by him and Bob McLeod had set up the score. This precocious New Yorker also scored two more points, though on the wrong side of the ledger, by-being tackled in the end zone when a pass from center bumped in the muck. Save for the running of Hutchinson, it was an even game, and it was played under the most frightful conditions on record. Rain, which fell in sheets throughout the second half, ultimately turned the field into a lake, with water standing two or three inches deep down the longitudinal center. The downpour.

pelted and flayed a crowd of 35,000 which huddled on the dank concrete of the nation's oldest athletic arena. Needless to day, it spoiled a game that promised to be one of the leading Ivy entanglements of the 1937 season, but it didn't alter the ordained result. Dartmouth, in general, and Hutchinson in particular, had enough class to rise above conditions and win a game which was rightfully theirs. Harvard fought it out to the wet end, when officials had to pull the pile-ups apart to forestall drowning. Occasionally the Crimson showed genuine flashes of offensive virulence, but the big Green, a term we use advisedly, was adamant when backed against its goal line and violent when its chances to score turned up.

Western Reserve Tops Boston U. (Special to York Herald Tribune and Miami Daily BOSTON, Oct. 23. Johnny Andrews, right half for Western Reserve, clutched a slippery football punted deep into his own territory in the beginning of the final quarter and galloped 75 yards down the field with his interference mowing down eight of Boston university tacklers. to score the only touchdown of the game between the two colleges held at Fenway park here this afternoon.

The extra point was made on a pass from G. Davis to Johnson, and the score stood 7 to 0 until the final whistle, marking the ISth successive victory for the Cleveland team in its string of 28 triumphs, having tied one game. More than 6.500 spectators seat in the rain and watched the game go scoreless for three quarters, with Boston having a slight edge and playing a more aggressive game. Andrews' spectacular run gave Western Reserve the victory despite this, however. Holy Crocs 6 W.

Maryland 0 Yale 9 Cornell 0 Brown 7 Columbia 6 Princeton Rutgers 0 Bowdin 30 Colby 0 Fordham 7 T. C. V. 6 Pittsburch 21 Wisconsin 0 Westminster 6 Geneva fl Union 6 Rensselaer 6 Hobart 13 C. C.

N. T. 7 Army 47 Washington U. 7 Worcester It Mass. State 0 Dartmouth 20 Harvard 2 Detroit 14 Boston College 0 Dickinson 18 Delaware 0 Williams 13 Tuffs 0 Hartwick 7 New Britain T.

0 Pennsylvania 0 Georgetown 0 Bates 7 Maine 0 Brooklyn College 19 Lowell Textile 0 Middlebury 32 Norwich 6 Hamilton 18 Rochester 0 Albright 25 Moravian 0 Niagara 19 St. Lawrence Oberiin 13 Swarthmore 13 Washington CoL 27 Susquehanna 0 Drexel 12 Juniata 0 Lafayette 13 N. Y. U. 0 Amherst 12 Wesleyan 0 Western Reserve 7 Boston U.

0 Muhlenberg 6 ITrsinus 0 Indiana T. 7 Slippery Rock 8 Villanova 21 Bucknell Duke 13 Colgate 0 Northeastern 8 Rhode Island 6 Cortland T. 28 Stroudsberg T. Fran'ln Marshal! 12 Penn Military 0 Conn. State IS Trinity 0 West Liberty T.

13 California T. Gettysburg 19 Lehieh 6 Kutztown T. I Montclalr T. 0 Johns Hopkins 13 Haverford 6 Providence 9 Springfield St. Joseph 7 Lebanon Valley 0 Buffalo 13 Kent State 0 Panzer 19 Wagner 7 Clarkson 13 Ithaca 7 Morris Harvey 2S Bethany 7 N.

York Aggies 12 Nassau Hoffntra Alabama 19 Geo. Washington 0 Trenton 6 Arnold 6 Smart Yale Team Whips Cornell, 9-0 By HARRY CROSS (Special by New Vork Herald Tribune to Miami Daily News) NEW HAVEN, Oct. 23. Yale was too smart for Cornell in the damp bowl this afternoon, and 40,000 spectators saw the big Red team go down in the mud, 9 to 0, the margin, of a touchdown and a goal from placement. Resourceful and versatile of defense and gambling with a wet, slippery ball on the attack, Yale was even a better team this afternoon than the score shows.

The big moment of the game came midway in the final quarter, when Clint Frank unpeeled a 69-yard run for a touchdown. It was a glorious romp over the wet turf. He took the ball on a fake reverse and cut through right tackle on a spinner. Once through the Red line he cut to the sidelines to outwit the Cornell outposts. The Yale blockers organized around Frank, and as he seemed about to go over the sideline he cut out into the field, sending his pursuers off balance.

Frank went on merrily toward the goal and Carl Spang, the Cornell end, almost seemed within reach of him to bring him down from behind, when Hessberg tumbled Spang out of tne picture with a deadly block, and Frank went on to score. In the first period after the game was only about eight minutes old, Yale from its own 45-yard mark, carried the ball to the 21-yard mark, where Cornell got stubborn. Dave Colwell dropped back to the 28-yard mark and with Al Wilson holding the ball booted over a goal from placement. Yale outrushed Cornell decidedly on the ground and was more successful through the air. Cornell's aerial attack, which they brought into action reluctantly with a slippery ball, was smothered by the alert Yale defense, and twice the imaginative Frank Gallaghery and once Charley Ewart intercepted Cornell passes.

There was much elasticity and an ever-shifting element to the Yale defense and Cornell was not able to get off on any sort of sustained advance. Piatt and John, the tackles, and Johnny Miller and Archie Hoxton at the ends, always had the jump on the Cornell line and the Cor-nellians attack was repeatedly diagnosed. Because of the kind of day it was, the teams trusted to a kick ing policy and, in spite of the heavy, wet ball, the puntin." which Eliott Hooper of Cornell did with his left foot and Dave Colwell with his right, furnished as exciting a kicking duel as the gridiron will see this season. Hooper averaged 45 yards on his kicks from the line of scrimmage and Colwell 40. LAFAYETTE TRITMrHS NEW YORK, Oct.

23. (UP) Lafayette successfully defended it3 undefeated, unscored on record by beating New York University, 13-6. today. brought him to earth. "That fellow Reached up and pushed me ill the face after I had him down, "and the umpire said I was roughing.

ball I think he got us mixed up. The nenaltv put the on Miami's two, and Boys scored. 1 sou TH Manhattan 0 Tulane 0 Waynesburg 0 Florida 13 L. S. U.

6 Georgia Tech. 0 Mercer 6 Syracuse 0 Sewanne 0 Wilson T. 6 American College Guilford 0 Kentucky 19 North Carolina 13 West Virginia 13 Mississippi State 14 Vanderbilt 7 21 19 13 32 19 Auburn Georgia Maryland Tennessee Gallaudet William Mary 38 Catawba 28 42 8 32 6 0 I19 13 26 Murray T. Miss. College 0 Davidson Elon 0 Chattanooga 0 Normal 0 Wash.

Lee 7 Shenandoah 0 Newberry 6 Virginia 7 Louisiana Normal 0 Centre Boone T. Howard Charleston T. V. P. I.

(Norf. Wofford V. M. I. Louisiana Tech 14 Georgia Mil.

Col. 7 St. John Md.) 7 States boro Hampden-Sidney Tusculurn Mercer Sewanee Dickinson T. Johnson City 19 Georgia 19 Tennessee 32 Minot T. 7 MIDWEST Wooster Greenville T.

Indiana Detroit T. Notre Dame St. Viator Ohio State Case Clarion T. Hiram Ashland Dayton Michigan Ferris Institute Adrian Michigan State Kansas Nebraska Ohio Northern Mansfield T. Hillsdale Fairmount T.

Denison The Prineipia Ohio Weslevan 7 Mount Union 0 7 27 7 9 13 7 19 6 19 7 6 7 21 12 21 6 7 11 7 0 13 13 Cullowhee T. 0 Cincinnati 0 Michigan Jayvecs 0 Navy Kalamazoo Northwestern Carroll Edinboro Thiel Otterbein Ohio University Iowa St. Mary (Mich.) Assumption Marquette Oklahoma Missouri Bowiinir Green Miilersville T. Albion Hhepperd T. Heidellif rg Shurtleff Rollins Ypsiiantl T.

Michigan Min. T. Olivet Wittenberg Miami (Ohio) CreiEhton F.iver Falls Terre Haute T. Wash, and Jeff. Illinois Wesleyan Rose Poly Lawrence Bluffton James Milliken Iowa State 2 Mt.

Pleasant T. 27 Marquette T. Alma Muskingum Toledo Kansas State Milwaukee T. Valparaiso Buller Illinois College Wabash Carroll Manchester Lake Forest Drake Platte vllle T. Beloit AuRustana Wheaton St.

Cloud T. Bradley Jamestown Concordia South Dakota S. St. Louis Kfllnmazoo DePauw Cornell College White Water Coe Macomb Eirlham St. Benedict Yanktown Mission House St.

Johns Stevens Point T. 1.1 Knox 19 North Central Elmhurst Winona T. 0 Omaha North Dakota S. 32 Dana 0 Wichita (I Catholic t. 2 Hope ft Kvansville Ripon 0 Oshkosh 0 Cedar Falls fi Carhondale 0 Franklin 13 Hastings 0 Huron 0 Milwaukee 25 Concordia 7 Culver Stockton 1 2 Buna Vista 2r Central Missouri 0 Dubuque 0 Olaf Kan.C Jr.

Col. Fort Dodge ft Penn fi Kirksville fi S'. Mary's 7 Piihurg (Kan.) A'itin lrt MacAleiter North Dakota 8 C.iriton Kemper Graoelnd Iowa Wesleyan Missouri Mines Hamlin Fort Hayes F.dmnnd S'. Thomas Winnipeg SOI THWEST Texas Tech F. Arkansas Bavlor Tulsa Southwestern Canvon T.

S. F. Austin 19 If 13 27 9 26 6 Cemeron Azcies So. Methndi-t Texas Aggies Oklahoma A.M. Abilene Chrisltan Alva T.

Denton T. FAR WEST Utah S4 Wyoming Western State 7 Greiey T7. S. C. V.

C. L. A. Prieham Yours Utah Washington Colorado P'ste Colorado Mines California 20 Washington State 3 Portland 13 Denver 1 3 Stanford Colorado T. 47 Colorado College 13 The officiating, aside from a tendency to allow both teams to Pile on unnecessarily, seemed to be very good.

Coach Clyde Crabtrce, who went to Macon to scout Lanier high, came in yesterday with reports of another great club over there. The Poets are always good. "But we've got to worry about Male high of Louisville next," quoth Cunnel Yarborough. "They're always good, too. In the winter, when I'm scheduling these teams.

I'm wantin' to take em .11 on, no matter how tough they are. But when fall rolls around and they start comin' at me, week after week, I wish I hadn't been so cocky." Just to show you how woefully weak the Stingarees were in getting down under punts and kickoffs, figures reveal that Boys gained 170 yards by running back punts and kickoffs. They gained 189 yards from scrimmage, and of these totals they picked up 181 yards in the fourth quarter, including a 22-yard kickoff return, and Greer's 50-yard touchdown run of Reid's punt. The Stingarees gained 223 yards, only 25 of it on returned punts, and none of it in the last quarter. 7LLAXOVA BEATS BICKXEIX PHILADELPHIA.

Oct. 23. (UP) Villanova College, its goal line still uncrossed thi3 season, defeated the Buckness University football team 21-0. today before 10,000 spectators at Shibe Park. 0.

K. In Wrestling ILLEGAL TSE OF HANDS ANI ARMS HV FLAYER TEAM IN FONfESSIO.N OF THE BALL The player nn right, tn attempting to ohtrurt his opponent, has circled him with his arm. Not In Football ILLEGAL rSE OF HAND AND ARM BY FLAYER OF TEM IN POSSESSION OK THE BALI. The player on right. In obstructing his opponent, has circled him with hi arm and grasped him with his hand.

Courtesy Spalding's Football Guide. Know Football says the bewildered Eidredge. I Syracuse Is Toppled I From Unbeaten Ranks BALTIMORE. Oct. 23.

(UP) i Maryland toppled Syracuse from the ranks of the undefeated and untied before 10,000 persons on a muddy field today, 13-0. The Old Liners outplayed Syracuse throughout, scoring touchdowns in the second and fourth. Not once did Syracuse hold the ball within 25 yards of the Maryland goal. SWEDE OF THEM, IIUH? EAST LAXSLXG. Mich.

When Ole Nelson and Helge Pearson of the Michigan State footbpll team write home they do it in Swedish. Indians Score Third Straight Grid Victory WILLIAMSBURG. Va Oct. 23 (UP William and Mary's gridders scored their third straight victory of the season here today, swamping American University of Washington. 38-0.

Centre Stops Lafferty And Defeats Davidson DANVILLE, Oct. 23. A stout-hearted Centre college eleven today stopped "Teeny" Lafferty, the highly-touted Davidson college halfback, and then went on to gain an 8-to-0 triumph, played on a snow-swept field..

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