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The Daily News Leader du lieu suivant : Staunton, Virginia • 6

Lieu:
Staunton, Virginia
Date de parution:
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6
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THE STAUNTON NEWS-LEADER, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 31, 1943 PAGE SIX ima Overwlhelms 'MI ECeydete by 3.4 0 DARTMOUTH WHIPS YALE BY 20-6 COUNT FOOTBALL FINAL SCORES AMA Juniors Lose To Harrisonburg Harrisonburg." Oct 30. Continu NOTRE DAME MOVES AHEAD TOWARD NATIONAL GROWN BY CRUSHING NAVY, 33-6 CAVALIERS T-FORMATION WORKS TO PERFECTION AS THEY SCORE FIVE TIMES SERVICEMEN hind. Today's' defeat was the worst ever suffered by Navy at the hands of the scrapping Irish, and gave them fourteen victories against three defaets in the long series with the Sailors. East Dartmouth 20, Yale 6 Army 13, Pennsylvania 13 (tie) Pittsburgh 45 Carnegie Tech 6 Penn 6tate 32, W. Virginia 7.

Cornell 33, Columbia 0. Holy Cross 14, Colgate 7. 1 Rutgers 26, Lehigh 6 Bucknell 19. Muhlenberfl 0. Camp Kilmer 13, CCNY 12.

Worcester 39, Case 9. Brown 28, Princeton 20. Mid-West Wheaton 20, DeKalb 13 Wooster 21," Patterson Field 3 Earlham 18, Franklin 6 Simpson 13, Cornell (Iowa) 0 Indian State vs Wabash, Cancelled. Michigan 42, Illinois 6. Indiana 20, Ohio State 14 Northwestern 42, Minnesota 6 Purdue 32, Wisconsin 0.

Notre Dame 33, Navy 6 Iowa Navy 19, Ft. Riley 2. Bowling Green 24, Alma 0. Kenyon 38, Otterbein Missouri '54, Nebraska 20. Kansas 25, Kansas State 2.

Baldwin-Wallace 53, Xavier 6 South Duke 14, Georgia Tech 7 IT'S NOT TOO EARLY TO GET HOLIDAY-SEASON CLOTHES CLEANED 1 Those dress-up clothes you reserve for party occasion will have occasion to come in view around Christmas'1 time, espec- tally if there are service men on PENN STRIKES IN FOURTH WITH SPECTACULAR 71-YARD RUN TO TIE ARMY 13 TO 13 'eave and furlough whom you'll want to help celebrate! We ask only that you don't wait until the day or even the week before Christmas to have those clothes cleaned I Any rush of work in view of our limited facilities and manpower can only mean that well have to disappoint you I So do the smart thing have your clothes cleaned right now ready for a wonderful time when Kris Kringle jingles his sleigh bells I ing their victory march, the Harrisonburg High Blue Streaks yesterday won their fifteenth straight game of the season when tney handed the Augusta Military Acad emy Junior varsity a forty-four to six walloping. The Streaks got off to an early scoring start when after a series of plays Slpe ran the ball over and Bradshaw kicked for the extra The Junior varsity's lone touchdown was made against a team made up of second and third string Streak players, the first team having retired to the bench after setting a comfortable margla The Cadets charged down the field from the forty-yard line to score the touchdown. The Streaks forward wall proved impregnable to the Augusta attack during most of the game and the line paved the way for every touchdown through excellent blocking. Yesterday's contest brought the Streaks' total points for the season to 143 as compared with the eighteen points scored against them. All of the three touchdowns scored against the Streaks have been against the or third team.

DUKE DEFEATS TECH, 14 TO 7 Atlanta, Oct. 30. (JP) Breaks broke up a ball game here today, and a mighty Duke football team which made them came away winner over Georgia Tech, fourteen to seven, in a dizzy engagement that attracted 30,000 fans. Duke's hard-charging line and alert backs took the but It was the fourth period before the Blue Devils were able to pull away with tfiewihning margin. Duke gained 166 yards rushing to sixty-one for Tech, and 112 by pass ing against fifty-five for Tech.

Duke scoring Touchdowns, Davis, Carver (for Sacrinty). Points after touchdowns Gantt (for Cittadino) 2 (placements). Georgia Tech scoring Touch downs, BQwn (for Broyles). Point after touchdown, Prokop (place ment). AMA ELEVEN BEATEN 20-13 Augusta Military Academy's chances for the state military school football championship received a severe setback Saturday afternoon when the Fort Defiance boys lost a hard-fought game to Fork Union Military Academy by a count of twenty to thirteen.

It was the first defeat of the year for the AMA boys who had high hopes of being able to finish cn top of the heap in the state. The game was' played at the AMA bowl. Michigan Easily Beats Illinois Champaign, 111., Oct. Bill Daley and Elroy Hirsch, Mlchl- gans heralded lend-lease backs from Minnesota and Wisconsin, turned on the power against Illinois' undermanned football team today for two touchdowns each, and the Wolverines had no trouble in scoring a forty-two to six success for their fifth victory in six starts. Before an Illinois homecoming crowd of 13,500, Michigan jammed across three touchdowns in the flisl half, and three more in the second, but even Daley and Hirsch had to tip their helmets to a diminutive pair of Illlnl halfbacks, Eddie Mc- Govern and Eddie Bray, who did a lot of classy running and collaborated on a pass play for the lone Illinois touchdown.

Playing In his last' football game before reporting Tuesday to the Norfolk Naval Training Station, Daley smashed over the goal line from the two yard line in the first period, and again from the ten in the second quarter, and his long gains helped set up the two mark ers. New Haven, Oct. 30. TV-i Dartmouth's Indians, one of theij East's ranking teams earlier season, showed that Navy! transfers durinor the oast two weeks i Bf 111 1 11 i. f1 uu jcib uiem enougu maii-j power to whip their time-honored iiym, xaie, twenty to six, on- muddy field.

Deprived of such early-season stars as Joe Anderjco and Bronll Macys, the Indians didn't do much; to impress a slim crowd of 5,000. 2t 1 1M3 KuppoihriiM i i TURN IN NICE FINAL GAMES New York, Oct 30. The Navy and Marine football players who leave the college campuses within the next few days turned in outstanding performances today Notre Dame continued to set a fast pace In the nation, Angelo Bertelli, headed for the Marine training base at Parr is Island next week, probably gave his best performance In leading Notre Dame to a crushing thirty-three-six triumph over unbeaten-untied Navybefore 82,000 fans-the largest turnout of the day. The 173-pound commander of the Irish's i lornmumi uhiiu uve out um 1.1 a ..4. of eight passes, three of them for touchdowns, counted the final score himself and added three extra points.

And while the Irish were rolling to their sixth successive triumph, undefeated Army and Pennsylvania failed to reach a decision in the rain and mud of (Philadelphia's Franklin field. They ended up in a thirteen-thirteen deadlock when the Quakers completed a seventy-one-yard aerial from Joe Michaels to Bob Odell in the last period. A crowd of 71,000 saw this thriller. Thus the stage was set for next week's foremost games when Notre Dame, minus Bertelli, tangles with Army at New York, and Navy meets Penn in Philadelphia. While this was going on Purdue's Norfolk-bound sailor Tony But-kovich paced the Boilermakers to their seventh straight victory, whipping Wisconsin thirty-two to nothing.

Bill Daley wound up his playing days for Michigan with two touchdowns and long gains that set up two others In a forty-two-six rout of Illinois. Don Buffmire and Herman Frlck-ey, who with eight teammates leave Northwestern's campus next week, were outstanding in the Wildcats' forty-two-six whipping of Minnesota's Gophers. Duke Has Close Call Down in the south, Duke nosed out Georgia Tech fourteen to seven with a last period touchdown. Tul-ane put up a great stand against Georgia Pre-Flight, but the passing oi sieve rmpowlcs, once of Ford-ham, and expert place kicking of Pat Harder, formerly of Wisconsin, gave the Skycrackers the decision, fourteen-thirteen. Southern California retained its position at the top of the Southern division of the Pacific Coast league by beating California for the sec ond time this year, thirteen to noth ing.

Washington remained unde feated, beatrng the Second Air Force forty-one-severi. iexas and the Texas Aggies re mained in running for the Southwest Conference title with comparatively easy victories. Texas defeated Arkansas, thirteen-nothing, and the Aggies downed Southern Methodist, twenty-nothing. Tulsa, however, had its hopes of going un- ceaten-untied for the second straight year marred when Southwestern of Texas held the Okla- homans to a six-six tie. There were a few mild sunsets such as Holy Cross' fourteen-seven licking of Colgate, and Indiana's twenty-fourteen win over Ohio State with Bob Hoernschemever throwing the winning pass In the final minute.

Dartmouth, with many one ureen early season stars transferred by the Navy, returned to action after a three-week lavofl and whipped Yale twenty-six. 0 HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL John Marshall (Richmond) 13. Hopewell 12, Thomas Jefferson, Richmond. 8: Jefferson, Roanoke, 7. Woodrow Wilson 0, Maury High 13.

SHUT OCT WINS Baltimore, Oct. 30. Green-tree 6table's Shut Out raced to a nose victory over Slide Rule, after the two had battled stride "for stride down the stretch, to win the $25,000 nmuco special before a crowd of approximately 20,000 persons at Fimiico race course today. QUALITYjBY KUPPENHEIMBR Tulane 13. Virginia 34, Virginia Military 0 Arxansas A.

M. 35. Miami (0) 0. Camp Pickett 9, Johnson C. Smith University 6.

Maryland 43, Greenville Amy ait is. Virginia State College 33. Camp uuiner o. Wake Forest 41, Clemson 12 Carolina 27, N. Carolina State 13.

camp LeJepne 14, Camp Davis 0. Ft. Monroe 18, Richmond Air Base 13. Curtis Coast Guard 7, camp Lee e. Southwest 1 Southwestern 6.

Tulsa 6 vtle). Oklahoma 21, Iowa State 7. xexas A. M. 13, Arkansas 0 Rice 13, Texas Tech 0 Far West -Southern Cal.

13, California 0 San Diego Naval Station 28, University of California at Loa Angeles 0. Washington 41. (Sookane Second ait race 7. TROJANS WHIP BEARS 13 TOO Los Angeles, Oct. 30.

South ern California maintained Its rec ord of being unbeaten, untied, and unscorea on, as it turned back a stubborn University of California football eleven today, thirteen to nothing. Thirty thousand fans saw the game. The Bears gave the Trojans all kinds of trouble, especially in the third and fourth quarters, and twice Coach Stub Allison's boys had golden scoring opportunities. Troy's line and pass defense proved equal to the occasion, however. The Trojans, minus two backs and two ends called into the Arm ed Forces, were guilty of poor ball handling, and frequent fumbling on quick-opening plays of their formation, prevented them from scoring at least two more touchdowns.

Southern California did look good, however, on its two scoring plays. The first, registered in the second quarter was fifty-one-yard pass and run engineered toy Quarterback Jim Hardy and Gordon Gray, a freshman. The other came with only one second to go. George Callahan had Intercepted a pass thrown by California's Bob Frlsbee and scampered to mldfleld. In seven plays the Trojans smashed through the wavering Bear defense to the twelve.

With only one play left, Callanan skirted his left end, behind beautifully-timed interference, across the goal. WAKEFOREST BEATS TIGERS Clemson, S. Oct. 30. JP Wake Forest's demon Deacons came from behind to spoil homecoming festivities for Clemson's young Tigers before 3,500 spectators today, forty-one to twenty-two.

Displaying two brief flashes to the good form they have enjoyed spasmodically this fall, Clemson's Tigers marched eighty-six yards through a clearly superior Wake Forest line to open scoring late in- the first quarter. Midway in the second quarter Coach Frank Howard's youngsters ciearea the way for a seventy-flve-yard touchdown run by Tieer Wine- back Jim Whltmire, who also con tributed sixty-four yards in Clemson's first touchdown parade. Clemson missed both extra points, however, and sandwiched between the two Tiger scores were a pair of Deacon touchdowns and two extra points by Clifton Hobbs. The score midway the second quarter was Forest fourteen, Clemson twelve, and the Tigers were never again a danger to Coach "Peahead waixers formidable veterans. Warfare Welfare GIVE DOUBLE "All The World's1 In Trouble" FARLEY'S Georgia Pre-Flight 14, it of Tvincton.

Oct. 30. tfV-The TTnluprKttv. of Virginia Cavaliers rfrmrwi in on Virginia Military In stitute homecoming festivities for nearly two-and-one-half hours here today, served uoacn rum "array's particular brand of to 2,500 fans and paraded to a thirty-four to nothing victory. The CavaUers simply were too much lor the Cadets out here today.

They blocked VMI's punts, and stole their passes, and worked their formation to perfection. rive different Cavaliers did the touchdown making. After a scoreless first period, Charlie Sackett ploughed through the line for six yards, lor the first tally early In the second chapter. The third quarter for the Cavaliers really put the game away. They scored three times, first on Allen Clay's six-yard Jaunt, again when Captain Bob Seller grabbed a block mint and ran ten yaros to ms mot rul the third when Louis WaldroD plucked a VMI pass out of the air and zig-zagged mny- i six yards.

The final score came mid-way in the fourth quarter when Jere Hanson, who was carrying the ball for the Cavaliers for the second time this season, shot down the sidelines on a forty-two-yard sprint. The accurate toe of Lucien Burnett was good for three extra points, and Gerold Uster booted the fourth conversion. Little Phil James, 151-pound substitute back from Hampton, started the Cavaliers on the way to their first touchdown. He picked up Halfback Billy Collins' punt on the Cadet forty-six-yard line, and squirmed to the twenty-six. i -It took the university ooys omy eight clays to travel the distance Sackett, a six-footer from Lynchburg, swept wide to the' right to the twenty, and Jack Murray made a first down on two thrusts to the fourteen.

Burnett ran to the seven. After two line plays gained little, Sackett cracked the line for a touchdown. What happened In the third period was really what ruined VMI's homecoming. The quarter was only a couple of minutes old, when Virginia started rolling goalward again. Bryant Hicks, VMI's slx-f oot-two-lnch tackle from South Carolina, punted out to the Cadet forty-three, Sackett skirted right end to the forty, and Burnett added ten more on an off-tackle drive.

Murray ripped through the twen ty-five. When two plays failed, Bur nett snot a beautmu bullet pass floating onto the fingertips of Carl Broaddus, who was knocked down on the nine. Murray gained three, and Clay covered the rest of the distance of six yards on a line drive. The Cavaliers got their next pair of touchdowns in just about the time it takes to tell about It. Pos.

Virginia L.E. Broaddus L.T. Roberts L.O. Wood C. McDonald R.G.

Pearce R.T.6eUer RX Cofer VMI Stapleton Hicks Harris Little Jarrett Smith Davis Watklns Q.B. Clay L.H. Sackett Butterworth R.H. Murray Collins P3. Burnett Allen Virginia 0 7 20 7-34 V.

M. I. 0 0 0 0-0 Virginia scoring Touchdowns, Sackett, Clay, Seller, Waldrop (substitute for Burnett), Hanson (substitute for Sackett); points after touchdown, Burnett 3, Euster 1 (substitute for Murray), 0 PREP FOOTBALL Petersburg High school 19, Newport News High 19 (tie). Granby High school 12, Hampton High school 9. Woodberry rarest 39, Benedictine Regular calls will be made by our route-men for laundry MONDAY NOV.

1st Staunton Steam Laundry Phone 495 Waynesboro 69 NOTICE Cleveland, Oct. 30 (JP) Notre Dame's mighty Irish took a long stride toward the National championship, and their first perfect season since 1920, as they smothered hitherto unbeaten untied Navy thirty-three to six today before 82,000 fans in Cleveland's jammed Lakef ront stadium. It was the sixth straight win for the South Bend team, and it gave the Irish 261 points to thirty-one for the pombined op position. The victory belonged to Notre Dame, but the story belongs to "Accurate Angelo" Bertelli, the 173-pound quarterback and pas ser deluxe, who sang his collegi ate swan song, for the duration at least, loud enough for the world jto hear. If ever anyone came up with a 6tory-DooK linish, Bertelli did it today, on the eve of reporting td' Parris Island, S.

for further-training with the Marines. Accurate Angelo'j -passed eight times. Five of them were com pleted, three for touchdowns and they were the first three markers, which put the game on ice, and brought hl3 scoring pitches for the season to eleven. He got the final touchdown him self, and between his passing and plunging he found- time to kick three extra points from place ment. On top of all that, the tall.

blond kid was the magician who made Notre Dame's formation legerdemain work for thir teen first down? by rushing and a total of 323 yards. So completely did Notre Dame smo'thfir Navy's ground attack that the Middle; wound up with a net loss of seven yards via rushing. They had eight first downs, all but one through the air, as Hal Hamberg, aided occasionally by a mate, completed eight of thirty-nine tosses for 188 yards. N. D.

Strikes First The Notre Dames, struck after a punt exchange early in the first period. With the ball on Navy's 48, Bertelli hit Halfback Julius Rykovich who scored without a hand touching him. At the start of the second period, Bertelli connected for a six-yarder, and an eight-yarder, and made it three In a row wfth a long one to Creighton Miller which covered fifty-two yards for another touchdown. Then Navy started moving, as Hamberg connected on three of four passes for the lone Middle touchdown. He threw a seven-yarder to sub back Bill Barron, a fourteen-yarder to Hillis Hume, and picked Barron out of a mass of Notre Dame defenders and hit him for the touchdown.

A three-yard pass from Bertelli to end John Yvnakor on the fifth play of the third period gave Notre Dame its third score, after fullback Jim Mello ran for thirty-eight and Miller for twenty-five on consecutive plays. Late in the same session Mello Intercepted a pass on his own forty, and reached the six before being hauled down, Miller finally plunging three yards for the touchdown. The last marker came late in the contest, Bertelli plunging over from the two after Vic Kulbitski. sub fullback, scampered around his left end for seventy-two yards to the Middle six, where sub back Jim Pettit caught him from be BINGO Sponsored by Ladies' Auxiliary of Staunton Fire Department MONDAY, NOV. 1 1943 at the FIREIIOUSB 20 GAMES FOR 25c Phone 90 SERVICE Philadelphia, Oct.

30. Pennsylvania, a five to two pre-game underdog in1 its own home town, struck with a -spectacular, seventy-one-yard pass and run play early in the fourth period today, and gained a thirteen to thirteen tje with Army in a gridiron test between unbeaten elevens. Pennsylvania was back on Its own twenty-nine -when Joe Michaels cocked his arm for a long toss to Bob Odell. a very great football player today. Odell reached up over the heads of four Cadets on the Army's thirty-five and then was chased across the goal line by all members of both teams.

Frank McKernan, the Quaker place kicker, trotted in from the sidelines, and added the extra point that brought ectasy to most of the 71,000 rain-soaked" spectators, and brought new life to the Quaker team Prior to that touchdown play, the Cadets had soundly outplayed Penn and seemed to have broken the jinx that has never allowed them to beat Pennsylvania on Franklin fleM. The Cadets scored In the first when George Maxon fumbled on the one-yard line, and the ball was recovered in the end zone by Tom Lombardo for a touchdown to climax a flfty-three-yard march. Pennsylvania's first touchdown also came by the aerial route, Joe Kane tossing to Frank Quillen after Glenn Davis, famed Army back fumbled an attempted second period punt return on his own twenty- nine with Walt Bubien recovering. McKernan missed that point and set the stage for his re-appearance in the fourth after Maxon registered another Army marker shortly af ter the third period began. Army's second score came when Michaels sent a puny punt that only traveled nineteen yards, that was partly blocked by Stanowicz, and only traveled to the Quaker thirty-five-yard line.

From this point the Cadets started a steady march down field, Maxon doing the heavy work, and finally hit center and went over from the one-yard marker. Murphy's attempt from placement was wide. 0 Ohio State Tikes 20-14 Trouncing Columbus, Oct. 30. TV- Indiana's all-civilian football team, with Bob (Hunchy) Hoernsche- meyer hurling two touchdown passes and setting up a third score whipped all-civilian Ohio State twenty to fourteen today in a West' era Conference thriller before 458 sun-bathed specators.

Hoernschemeyer decided the con test in the final minute, hitting end Pete Pihos for a twenty-flve-yard gain through the air, and then firing twenty-yards to Halfback 5ornrMcDSnnell in the end zone Only minutes before Ohio had over. come a thirteen to nothing deficit by counting two touchdowns and converting each time. The victory was Indiana's first over Ohio since 1937, and the third of the season in the conference against one defeat Observe Others! Correctly STYLED Glasses To appreciate the importance of just look around. Study the effects Glasses have on appearance. Then remember that WB style Glasses to compliment our patrons personalities! B.

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