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Lincoln Nebraska State Journal from Lincoln, Nebraska • 5

Location:
Lincoln, Nebraska
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Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

INJECTING NEW LIFE v- of FOOTBALL IS SAFER Uaiph leacHae. Liacoia hiqh ceoca. Is paapfof lift into lh I club. tie rqaaiiatict format lettered cfalefes. At lh hamaeomlna gaa with Omaha Central ipecial eMeafloa wai ffrta to foraitf Jled and (lack play- art.

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woa furaiaf aoaM flip flop ali tprleo hoard la a ajm etas ea4 apratotd kit aalie aol leaf eve. 1 1 LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1937 llMv-N jut 4 Si 4 DA HOWELL'S PUNTS TQHNNY tL. NqtreDame Pounds Outclassed Army Cadets to Bits But Wins Only 7-0 SHAHS FUILESEM Lone Touchdown Nebraska Will Entertain These Hawkeyes Saturday INDIANA SUPS BY SOLDIERS NEVER HAVE CHANCE AS 78,000 LOOK ON I i-! -7 Jil -n ClV- i 1 QUARTS R6ACKL WCHAfcD ANDEIZSON, center. CALIFORNIA USES ifWrnnnu mtam routs pkoon Ill Ml I 2ND put my Scarlet Makes Valiant Try Ho Check March, But Stapulis Scores. (Continued from Page 1-A.) Pitt players swung over to stop the return.

After Andrews bad advanced five yards, he punched the ball to Jack Dodd on a backward pass and the Gothenburg speedster headed for the south goal The play waa so well concealed that only three members of the Pitt secondary and one Panther lineman were apparently aware of the exchange. Fred Shlrey, Nebraska tackle, mowed down the end and a perfect wall of blockers mowed down the Panthers who attempted to rush over to head off thrujv Goldberg Misses. About 20 yarda from the Pitt end zone, Marshall Goldberg, Pan ther safety, appeared to have a chance to make the tackle but he leaped for a high tackle and brushed Dodd'a shirt. The exhibition uncorked by Goldberg's desperate effort. al most tumbled the Nebraska half back off balance, but the Gothen-burg lad half stumbled for several yards and then regaining his stride raced into the end zone.

Then came break No. 2, which cost Nebraska the ball game. Petro's kickoff- rolled out of bounds and Nebraska scrimmaged from its S3. Losing four yard! on two plays, the Huakers were faced with the necessity of selecting a third down plunge or punt The I Scarlet elected to rush the ball in an effort to use up some time. The decision, was fatal as Bill Andre-son fumbled and guard Walter Raskowskl recovered to give Pitt the ball on Nebraska's 33.

1 There were 7 minutes to play but the Panthers needed only three to get the touchdown. Bill Calli-han had been forced to the sideline! because of Injuries following the first Pitt score and the Nebraska defense was badly sagging The- Huskers, before giving way to the final touchdown plunge, made one last gallant attempt at a goal line stand. Pitt, with first and ten on the Nebraska 13, twice sent Cassiano into the Una and picked up 7 yards. A third by Stebbins got only one. fourth effort with the husky Stapulis carrying1 the ball broke) thru the right side of the Nebraska wall and brought a touchdown.

Phelps Fires Passes. Forced'deep in its own territory, Nebraska with Thurston Phelps doing the tossing, never gave up. Standing on his goal line, Phelps fired three passes before the Huskers gave up the ball One of these tosses directed at Hugo Hoffman, missed by inches. Hoffman had eluded the Pitt secondary and would have had a clear field for a touchdown but the pass led him just a trifle too far and the ball rolled off his finger tips. Whereas the second half was crowded with thrills, the first two quarters were largely given over to the efforts of the Nebraska team to halt the crushing Pitt running attack.

From wing to wing the Husker forward displayed great ball while the Nebraska secondary came up with frequent bone jarring tackles to nail a PltJt back who had broken thru the line. Meantime Johnny Howell was giving a great kicking exhibition. 'Without wishing to take away from the fine Pitt team any of the glory which goes with the winning of a well played football game, it must be told that two unfortunate breaks factored materially in hobbling the tired Comhuskers during that last quarter. Break No. 1.

Break No. 1 for Pitt came only a few minutes after the Comhuskers had scored their touch (Continued on Page 6-A, Col. 8.) plunging one yard over the goal late in the second period. Tom Burnette, changed shoes and booted the extra point From that point on North Carolina was superior, driving often into Duke territory. The second score caught Duke flat footed.

Three line smashes brought the ball to within four yards of Duke's the fourth play Carolina was penalized five yards for too much time between plays. On a fake placekick. Brunette passed the ball to Watson, who stepped over the goal The statistics showed North Carolina in control thruout, their two ilips occurring when Dukfl 4 scored and when Hackney broke loose in the second period to return a punt 73 yards. North Carolina yards gained from rushing totaled 203 to Duke's 92. The Tarheels piled up 13 first downs to five for the Blue Devils.

IOWA U. IN FIELD 3-0 Miller Boots' From 12 Yards in 4th Period; Kinnick Hawkeye Star. CAMI STATISTICS. lad. la.

Flrot dowaa I It arda (aJatd by raialaf 151 Forward paaata attempt! 7 II Forward paaaea oomplrtrd 1 I Varda galard by forward paam. 114 larda loat attempted forward paaara IS I Forward paaaea latmpted 4 1 tarda lalned raaback lotererpted paaora 14 I Faattni arrraf (orrtmmai) a 4J a) Total yarda kkka 14 I Varan loat by praalttea II II (x) laetadra ptuti and ktekoffa. IOWA CITY, lows, UP). George Miller, Indiana burly center whose greatest football delight is to drop into the back field to kick a field goal, thoroly enjoyed him self as he did his favorite act from the 12 yard line to give the Hoosiers a 3 to 0 victory over a fighting Iowa U. team.

Somewhat less than 10,000 ihlv ering spectators, most of them faithful Iowans hoping for the Hawkeyes' first Big Ten victory, sat in silence to suspense as Miller stepped back early in the fourth quarter from his customary pivot position and booted the ball direct' ly between the goal posts. Outplayed by Hawks. Indiana, outplayed by a surpris' lngly revived Iowa State team for three quarters, craftily protected its small margin during the remainder of the fourth period. The Hoosiers Jook few chances with their famed air attack, and left it to husky Corby Davis, the Indiana fullback, to cary them out of danger with his low, booming' punts into the wind. With the brilliant Nile Kinnick, sophomore quarterback, doing bli triple threat performances in all conference manner, the Hawkeyes smashed over the ground and thru the air deep into Hogaier territory on several occasions.

The final spark, however, never came to ignite an Iowa touchdown drive. The Hawks began a march on their own 85 and reached the Hoosier 15 as the halftime gun sounded. Undiscouraged, they roared back in the third period. Kinnick shot a long pass to Bill (Continued on Page 6-A, CoL 2.) Crimson Tide Forced to Put on Whirlwind Finish for Decision. BIRMINGHAM, Ala.

IJT). The Crimson Tide of Alabama, out played most of the way by Georgia Tech, overhauled the Engineers, 7 to 0, in a whirlwind finish before close to 26,000 spectators. The closely won decision, coming on a 34 yard drive with a little more than four minutes to play remaining, left only the Thanksgiving Day encounter with Vander-bilt between Alabama and the Southeastern conference championship. Georgia Tech, under the leadership of Captain Fletcher Sims, twice crossed the Crimson goal in the second period, once on a drive to the, one foot line where many believed the Jackets scored despite an adverse ruling. Captain Jack Kilgrow set the stage for Alabama's winning touchdown after the Tide had advanced to the eGorgia Tech 31.

The Alabama field general went thru tackle, reversed the field and raced 28 yards before being run out of bounds on the three yard stripe by Dutch Konemann. Line thrusts netted one yard, but on fourth down Kilgrow rifled a pass over center to End Tut Warren who caught it barley a yard over the goal. Kilgrow then kicked the seventh point. DARTMOUTH- AGAIS IS TIED; THIS TIME 6 TO 6 BY CORNELL HANOVER, N. H.

CW. The notorious Jinx that haunts Dartmouth football teams, in a numerical guise this season, caught up with the undefeated Indians again and Cornell i powerful forces, held them to a 6-6 deadlock before a rain soaked and overflow crowd of 15,000. Two weeks ago the Indians went to the Yale bowl with high hopes of winning their third straight victory over the Elis in the 2 1st renewal of that "Ivy col lege series out tney left wita a 9-9 tie. The setup was exactly the same Saturday, for the Indians tiad played 20 previous games with Big Red teams and had won the last two GOAL VICTORS Irish Muff 5 More Chances to Score in Battle of Mud and Rain. OAMI STATISTICS.

Army H.l. Flret imi 1 1 Tie. eaiael rnehlni 11 1M Ferwar4 erneee elteniptea terwaxa aaeere complete! 4 I ytt. (nine ky lor. annee 14 II for.

nwi Intercepted I 1 Yds. (alaes, ma. of tai. aaaera I '11 Pant n. (trom eertmnaeei 4e el Total hleae retnraea IT It Oa.

fnmblea reeorereo: I 1 tai. lout ay aeanltlea eineraaei ornate ana kiekeffa. BY ALAN GOULD. NEW YORK. UP).

Displaying no parte ul signs of wear and tear from one of th country'! most formidable football the Fighting Irish rushed up and down a muddy, rain swept gridiron to give Notre Dame a decisive victory over Army. The final score was to out me eoiaiers were back on their heels from start to finish and outclassed in everything but the bracery of their goalline standi. A crowd of ,78,000 spectators, Including 15,000 who defied the season's worst weather to sit in 'the Yankee stadium's open stands, saw the Irish capitalize a first period "break" to register the game's only touchdown and then miss five additional chances to core. Four times the Irish lacked a scoring punch, twice inside the Army's 5 yard line, but the game was nevertheless a rout from a (round gaining standpoint Simonlch Sett Pace. Notre Dame's "show troop" backfleld, paced by big Ed 81-monlch at fulback, put across the deciding points early in the game after a fumble by Army's Jack Ryan was recovered on the Cadet 13 by Joe Beinor, star left tackle of the Fighting Irish.

Simonlch bulled his way over the goal line In four plays, the last from the 4, and Charley O'Reilly, second string quarterback, placekicked the extra point. There after Notre Dame, using three full teams, held possession of the slippery pigskin fully 80 percent of the time and conducted a series of forays deep into Army's territory. Twice the cadets held for downs Inside their own 0. On other ocacsions a Notre Dame fumble and an Intercepted pass ended Irish thrusts. The game ended as a Notre Dame substitute back, Harold Gottsaker, came within four yards of crossing the goal Una on the final play.

So completely was West Point outclassed, offensively, that the Cadets crossed mldfield only twice with the aid of long passes and penetrated only once as far as Notre Dame's 81. Notra Dam Army DIWP Mill Belnor Ruett McCarthy Kuharlck Bellow Sweeney O'Reilly Iltnnm A bolt Simonlch Notra Dana Kobee father Bkaer Bart Una Btalla Iebell Samuel Ryan Wlleon Long Schwann 07 e-e Array Notra Datna touchdojra. Simonlch: point after touchdown, O'Reilly (pacement). WASHINGTON LIVES UP TO RANKING. ROUTS UCLANS SEATTLE, Wash.

(INS). A slim crowd of 10,000 sat thru a rain and snowstorm to watch the Washington Huskies, quite at home in the rough weather, repel the invading Bruins from U. It. SO to 0. In trouncing the southerners, the Huskies lived up to the reputation they made for themselves last Saturday when they held the powerful California Bears to a scoreless tie.

Washington gained S86 yards, and the Bruins wound up with a minus 14. John Montague if iu rruvc vruii STUArVLCAMERON. NEW YORK. (UP). Is it true what they say about Montague We ought to know at sundown Sunday for shortly after noon he tarts a golf match with Babe Ruth and two ladies over the long tough, championship oourse of the Fresh Meadow Country club at Flushing.

For the first time since John Montague, Hollywood's mystery golfer, was acquitted of robbery charges at Elizabethtown, he takes his eight ounce driver out of the bag in an attempt to make good all the fabulous stories that have been told about him. Can ha bust 'em 300 yards off the tee Can he put his iron shots along a clothesline to the green? Can he chip 'em within six Inches out of a trap filled with wet heavy and! And can he link 'em from if JACK DODO. Ntbratka's Only Score, on 60 Yard Run. ON ILL1N0IS.19T00 Bombarding Buckeyes Win ai Please; Jim McDonald, Dick Nardi Score. COLUMBUS, O.

m. Ohio State'i belligerent Buckeyes converted a pass, a penalty and a plunge into three touchdowns to defeat Illinois, 19 to 0, before a homecoming crowd of 41,921. The unexpectedly high score was the second largest an Ohio team ever fyad run up on the battling Ullnl. It evened the all time series at 12 victories and two ties eaqh and kept the Bucks in the upper bracket of ne Big Ten. Held to three first downs, all on passes, the Ullnl never were in the game.

They gained but 52 yards by rushing, and lost 48 by the tame route, winding up with a net gain of four yards on the ground and 61 thru the air. Ohio, despite the fact that Coach Francis Schmidt used 34 players, with a make shift lineup In the game most of the time, rolled up nine first downs, five by rushing and four on passes, to advance 91 yards by rushing and 153 on passes. The Bucks completed seven of 14 passes, whie the Ellni made good on five of 16. Dick Nardi, senior halfback playing his last game in the Buck stadium, counted two touchdowns, both on short line plunges, while co-Captain Jim McDonald, shifted to fullback from his usual signal calling post, scored the other in the first four minutes on a pass from Nick Wasyllk. McDonald threaded thru a broken field for 53 yards.

WHIZZER WHITE SCORES 21 POINTS, 22 MINUTES BOULDER, Colo. (DNS). Whlr-kt White, Colorado university's bid for Ail-American quarterback, scored 2r points In the third quarter as his Buffalo mates ran wild In the last half to defeat Colorado college 35 to 6 in a rough game before 7,000. White played brilliantly the 22 minutes he was in the game. His replacement, Rex Tomlinson, a sophomore, dashed 43 yards for a score on the first play after he took the Whlwer's place.

White ran 78 yards from scrimmage for one of his scores and from the 5 and 6 on others. His 78 yard dash was one of the most sensational pieces of open field running ever witnessed on a local gridiron. LAFAYETTE EECORD CLEAN. EASTON, Pa. VP).

Lafayette's undefeated and untied football team won its seventh straight game, pushing over a. third period touchdown on a 3Q yard march to defeat Washington Jefferson, 6 to 0. Tony Cavallo carried the ball over. Gets Chance nuncw iuuuy any distance once he reaches the green? He gives the answer Sunday. He will team with Mrs.

Sylvia Annen-berg, Long Island women's champion, against Babe Didrikson, the United States feminine sensation of the '36 Oylmpic games who is now a professional linkswoman, and Babe Ruth. It will be a four ball match and lrklividual medal scores also will be kept This exhibition, which is a brainchild of Bill Co rum, will be played strictly for salary. They are charging a dollar a head and after 6,000 admissions have been sold cops will bar the gates. Granny Rice, who is teaming with Corura in staging the show, feels that 8,000 is absolute tops for a golf gallery. Proceeds will be presented to Mayor La Guardta to be used for any charity he chooses so long as it benefit! boys.

Tiger Sensation-Scores All Points in 26-0 Victory Over Muddy Field. BY GAYLE TALBOT. NEW HAVEN, Conn. CK. Yale's great Clint Frank, for tlje second straight Saturday, scored all his team's touchdowns as the Bulldogs trounced their traditional rival, Princeton, 26 to 0, in rain swept Yale bowl.

To his three scoring runs against Brown a week ago, the shifty, hard running Eli leader added four more Saturday, two of them on spectacular, weaving trips from past midfield that brought the sodden crowd of 40,000 to its feet. He didn't play the fourth quarter, or the damage might have been worse. What- made tlur All America star's performance the more brilliant was the fact the field was a loblolly, fit neither for man nor beast, and there was a wind blowing lengthwise of the bowl that turned umbrellas inside out Just to prove he needed no favors from the elements, Frank scored twice with the wind, then twice against it Tigers Never Recovered. He bounced the Tigers back on their tattered ears at the outset, and they never looked like recovering. On the opening kickoff Yale was downed on its muddy 22.

The ball was snapped to Frank, and here he came weaving around his left end. Next thing he had cut back sharply, dodged two tacklers, and was running free with the wind down the right sideline, nobody near him. He loped across', set the sphere down gently, and that was the ball game. A foozled Princeton punt per-(Continued on Page 6-A, Col. 1.) Bears Are Flawless as Put --Over 3 Scores irr2nd Period Blast.

BY HENRY M'LEMORE. PORTLAND. Ore, (UP). With a tremendous show of offensive strength in the second period. California's Rose Bowl bound Bears pulverized a helpless Oregon university eleven 26 to 0 before a crowd of 20,000.

Held in check during the first period, partly by Oregon's spirited defense and partly by the quag-mjre condition -of the sand and tan bark gridiron, the Californians broke loose In the second and hammered across three, touchdowns. Coach Stub Allison, never one to rub it in, jerked his first stringers after this burst of scoring and played the last two periods with his second and third string performers. The varsity, a powerhouse in itself, accounted for the fourth touchdown on a march that went 80 yards. The California varsity started to roll late in the first period with the ball at midfield. With Dave Anderson and Sam Chapman banging away at the tackles, the Bears reached the Oregon 5 as the period ended.

Anderson whammed to the 3 on the first play of the new period, and then went over for the score. Chapman kicked the extra point Webfeet Stop Drive. Johnny Meek put the Bears In scoring: position a few minutes later when he intercepted Jay Beal's pass on Oregon's 35. Vic Bottari cut off tackle to Oregon's 7, but the Webfeet repulsed this drive with a brilliant stand and took the ball on their own 1. Oregon kicked out and after Bottari had returned the punt to the enemy's 23 yard stripe, the Californians required but five plays to drive across another score.

Chapman made the touchdown. His troy for the point was wide. Bill StolL Bear tackle, started his team's next drive by recover ing an Oregon fumble on the Web- feet's 34. Botari fnjjped a' pass to tuonunueci on rage o-a, (jol After a two year layoff, Iowa and Nebraska football teams wlirclaih Saturday In Memorial stadium. The inkers won 14 to 13 In 1934.

The Hawkeyei are coached this year by Irl Tubbs, who made his debut as head Iowa tutor at the start of the season. Football Scores STATE COIXEOaV M. La oh t'retihtoa I. Omaha. V.

II, Wayne Normal S. BIO BIX. rrttahorch IS, Ncbraaka 1. Oklahoma 7, Mlaaoorl I. Kaaaaa 8ttta 1, Kaoaaa I.

Iowa Htata Marfortta a. BIO TEN. Ohio Mata II, Illmota I. minnoaota 7, nortnwraMra a. hlrtn II, Beloit I.

rarduo 1, Wiaroaala T. (Tic.) Indlaaa Iowa U. I. Mtehlfaa 1, fonnistvaata S. EAST.

-Boatoa eolten IS, Kmtaeky I. Hotjr Croaa. Brown l. 'I'omple I Borknrll I. (Ttev) Hanrard 15, Oavtdaoa 'I.

Ohio U. 13. Butfrra I. Nrw Hampahlra 14, BprtaffleM I. Notn Dame 1, Army I.

Amlwrot 18, WUUame I. lalo Is, rrbwctoa l. Trinity II, NorwMl I. MMdtebory 1, Vrrmont I. Maaa.

State IS, Bennorlaer Umel Delaware I. Uowdola-t, Tnfta I. (lie.) (out Guard I. Conn. State I.

(Tie.) Cornell I. Dartmoatk I. (Tie.) Nt. Vlnneeat Wameeear S. (Tie.) St.

Lawrence Clarkaoa I. Maaa. Wenleyan Borfceeter I. Keneaelaer Poly 4, Conn. Htata I.

fena Mate tl, Maryland 14. Mk-Mian state 13, araeate Terb I. l-afayrtte Waklnftoo Jefferaaa I. raaklla-Naraliall 11, Ueaeva I. I ralnm 11, (iettyabart I.

Moiilrnberi 18. LeMih 1. Albrlrht II, Lebanon Valley I. DWBniunore is, ih. eonna (mo.j v.

Laftalle I rena Military I. Koaaoke 14. Buaqaehannm 1. V. C.

N. f. Morarlaa I. Geo. Waaklartoa li.

33, N. Dab. Stata I. t'aalalaa Weetern Maryland I. Hamilton 1, laloa I.

4obna MoPklni IS, Amerleaa O. S. Ht. eWphe (fkli.) 1, Maahlatton eoL I. Manhattan IS, Ma.

Carolina Mate I. Morian U. Hampton I. (Hnrcetowa I. N.

V. I'. I. Rloomabarr Trk. It, K.

tMroadbartr (la.) I. Brooklyn rollen 44, Fort HamllMa I. W. Liberty Tebra. 21.

(onrerd I. Shepherd Coil, to, Oallaodet I. Oonaaaa 11, Rt. lobna I. MilU-ravllle Trhn.

Wllaon I. Jonlata I. Raadolob-Maeoa tl, Hurrrferd I. ManhaU tl, laetnnatl I. Htlpery Boek II, TMel I.

Commblal, Syraeaae I. (TV). Hartwlek II, New Tort A(flea I. tl. raaier l.

Went Virginia 14, ToMw aatinwn Tcbra. tl, Bertea Coaaty i. C. I. Wayne (Det.) tj, Bafralo ladkua Tckra.

7, Bhlpoenbarg 1, (Continued on Page 8-A, CoL 4.) running track beside the field. The volunteer had no intention of being taken out of the play so easily. He eluded his guards and rushed back onto the field just in time to miss an attempt to tackle the Cadet runner and wind up at the bottom of a pile of players. He was hurried off the field again and this time started to remove his coat prior to another effort. The police didn't let their attention wander again but shoved him right on out of the stadium, where he was lost in a- crowd.

Nile Kinnick, called the greatest sophomore back In the Big Ten," wai a teammate of Nebraska's Lloyd Grimm at Omaha Benton high. Dick Anderion, center, li one of the mainitayi of the line and Jack Elcherly one of the leading Hawk leather luggers. BAYLOR UPSET, 13-7, BY S.M.U. AERIALS Sophomore wing's Flips in 1st and 4th Quarters Good for Scores. DALLAS, Tex.

(UP). Southern Methodist, proving that upsets are the rule in the Southwest conference this year, pounded a strong Baylor eleven for a 13 to 7 victory. Only a fortnight ago, the Methodists had upset similarly a favored Texas team, which came back last week to hand Baylor its first defeat of the season. Baylor drove to the S. M.

U. yard line soon after the game started, but its passes failed to click and the ball went over on downs, starting S. M. U. on a drive which enabled Ewing, S.

U. half, to pass over the goal line to Capt Pete Acker. Sprague failed to convert. Bullet Bill Patterson passed thru the Methodist defense near the end of the second period, shooting an aerial from midfield to Huessner, who stepped across from the 3 yard line for Baylor's score. Ger-nand converted.

Both teams tightened their defense in the scoreless third, but in the final period, Ewing's 32 yard pass over center to Jackson gave S. U. a second1; touchdown almost immediately after the period began. Belvllle converted. JOE CRAY ENABLES OREGON STATE TO DEADLOCK TROJASS LOS ANGELES.

UP). Oregon State dazzled Southern California with an aerial attack and held the Trojans to a 12-12 Troy made its first score in prosaic fashion, ambling Ambrose Schindler passing andi running the ball across the goal on a 40 yard drive. Granville Lansdell, sub quarterback, engineered a second drive of 27 yards that netted the final Trojan score. Late in the second quarter Halfback Joe Gray of Oregon State passed six times and mixed in a couple of running plays for 65 yards and the first score. Gray kept on firing.

He found Bob Mountain, substitute back, 44 yards down field. He fired short ones to Elmer Kolberg, Bill Duncan, fellow backs, one to a tackle, John Hackenbruck. In short, he completed six more, the Beavers went 64 yards and the scon was tied. North Carolina Spills Duke From Undefeated List, 146 Twelfth Man' Rushes on Field Help Notre Danie Whip Army DURHAM, N. C.

UP). Duke's Blue Devils were blasted from the ranks of the nation's undefeated football teams by an underdog North Carolina eleven which scored a 14-6 upset before 43,000 specta tors, second largest grid crowd in Duke history. With only a tie with Tennessee against their WadesDevils started out early to measure the Tarheels who took a 14-0 walloping from Fordham two week ago. A series of breaks gave the Dukes the ball deep in North Carolina territory before the first period was half over, and Elmore Hackney ripped 18 yarda across for a touchdown. Hackney's attempt to placekick the extra point was wide.

Crowell Little, quarterback, scored first for North Carolina, NEW YORK. UP). The famous "twelfth man" Incident which en livened a Princeton-Dartmouth game a few years ago, was repeated at the Yankee stadium as a spectator decided to cast his lot Notre Dame and help the Irish score a second touchdown. When Army had the ball on its own 10 early in the third quarter, a spectator came out of the open stands and took his place in the Irish line. Before a play had started, two policemen came after him and pushed him back to the.

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About Lincoln Nebraska State Journal Archive

Pages Available:
379,736
Years Available:
1867-1951