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Casper Star-Tribune from Casper, Wyoming • 10

Location:
Casper, Wyoming
Issue Date:
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10
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Pa are Ten SPORTS THE CASPER TRIBUNE HERALD CASPER, WTO. Sunday, November 14, Uk KlAMii) Mil? SOCMAN NORflKIEKKI MALE5 TBYt LO7E G0VJ00V BM FBOn B0BfiLn8 STEflLS pnss BUCKEYES 1,1 Whirlwind Finish Saves Tide for Loss to Tech AHB RA8ES 85 YARDS TO S60HE 013 HEWER I Wyoming Yields to Pioneers, 21 to 6, After Tutting Up Stubborn Fight First OREGON STATE TIES TROJANS BIRMINGHAM. Nov. 13. (JP) The Crimson Tide of Alabama, out-played most of the way by Georgia Tech, overhauled the Engineers, 7 to 0, today in a whirlwind finish before close to 26,000 spectators.

The closely-won decision coming on a 43-yard drive with a little more than four minutes to play remaining, left only the Thanksgiving day encounter with Vanderbilt between Alabama and the Southeastern conference championship. COLLEGE FOOTBALL FINALS By LOUDON KELLY DENVER, Nov. 13. (IP For the third year in a row, Wyoming's Cowboys gave Denver university a stubborn first half battle, only to get lassoed in the second half, Denver winning today's Rockv Mountain conference grid contest, 21 to 6. Denver, runnerup to Colorado in the 1937 title chase, was ahead only 7 to 6 at the intermission: Halfback Ralph Cook from Douglas, flew 85 yards with a stolen forward pass to keep the Cowboys in the game until D.

U. warmed to its work in the third period. The Pioneers pushed over two touchdowns in the latter stanza and broke up Wyoming's passing game effectively for the rest of the game. Wyoming, up against a better line and superior reserve power, elected to gamble from the beginning, trying a spread-formation pass on the second play from deep in her own territory. Late in the period Oliver Wallace, Denver guard, stole one of Fullback Jack Farris' long spirals and rambled 30 yards to Wyoming's 20.

Denver went from there. Fullback Bill Mott scoring the first touchdown across the middle from a yard away. Denver was agam in Wyoming's front yard soon after the second period started when Herb McCarthy, off a reverse, threw a forward pass. Cook grabbed it and led a parade of D. U.

players down the sideline for Wyoming's only touchdown. Howard Dickson's place kick that would have tied the score, skimmed uncier the crossbar. Straight football earned Denver its next touchdown and a stolen pass started the winners off on their final raid. Starting from Wyoming's 46-yard line, the Pioneers reached the scoring stripe in eight plays. Orlando Maio shooting through right guard for the payoff.

He ripped off gains of 18 and 13 yards in the offensive. Wyoming kept on pitching passes and Mott pilfered one on the Denver 35. returning the ball to mid-field. Charley Loftus Maio's relief, was the head man in the subsequent march. On Wyoming's five-yard line, fourth down, he slipped back to pass, found no one loose and swung STANDARD LEAGUE Iso Vis 824 895 920 Stanolind 867 922 788 Red Crown 963 818 1017 Perfection 864 970 929 Ethyl 805 802 844 Polarine 855 807 823 Live Power 779 806 833 Atlas 785 813 757 High score: B.

Smith flso Vis) 236: Parody (Stanolind) 195; Borg-strand (Red Crown) 240; A. Edwards (Perfection) 215; Each (Ethyl) 212; Toman (Polarine) 221: Jabel-man (Live Power) 185; Williams (Atlas) 198. TEACHERS LEAGUE Willard 390 409 358 Grant 302 365 401 Washington 327 327 317 Casper 354 352 413 High School 326 345 34S Park 319 314 304 McKinley 291 290 267 Lincoln 306 304 300 High scores: Long (Grant) 185: Walker (Hisrh School) 167; Terriere (Casper) 163; Beere (Willard) 163. OIL CITY LEAGUE R. M.

Drilling 651 749 737 Nat'l Supply 711 605 756 rt-i Oil fi3Q 691 763 U. S. G. 670 745 701 111 Pipeline 737 703 647 R. M.

Gas 695 686 683 High scores: Cline (Drilling) 179; Pittman (Supply) 217; Cline (Ohio) 169; Estes (Survey) 179: Orwick (Pipeline) 200; Lange (Gas) 172 Standard League Standings Team Won" Lost Pet. Red Crown 14 7 .667 Iso-Vis 12 9 .571 Ethyl 12 9 .571 Stanolind 11 10 .524 Atlas 10 11 .476 Polarine 10 11 .476 Perfection- 9 12 .429 Live Power 6 15 .286 High team game to gate, 1.017, Red Crown; high team series, 2,798, Red Crown; high individual game, 254, Bill Smith; high individual series. 656. Bill Smith. Individual averages: B.

Smith, 188; Lytle, 186; Each, 184; Hussion, 179; Parody, 179; Reeve, 178; H. Smith, 177; Bond, 176: Boles. 175: Waggoner. 174: J.Williams, 172; Jabelman. 172: Borgstrand, 172; Warner.

171; Osborn, 170; Dailey, 170; Hawks. 170. RAGE RESULTS BOWIE. Nov. 13.

(JP) A. G. Vanderbilt's Chance View bested a good field on a muddy track here today to win the $2,500 autumn handicap, first stake race of Bowie's fall season. Araho stable's Mucho Gusto was second, and B. M.

Myer's Thor-son. third. 11D LOSES OUT IN CLAIM TO Oil TITLE Championship Is Fixed by District Board A Friday Night CHEYENNE, Nov. 13. (JP) Wyoming's high school football championship race narrowed down to the semi-finals today with the lour strongest teams in the state scheduled to battle it out for the finals November 19.

Casper and Kemmerer will meet at Casper to settle the southern state championship, while in the northern part of the state Lovell will meet Sheridan at Sheridan for the title in that section. The winners will meet for the state title Thanksgiving day. The athletic board of district three meeting at Greybull Friday night, declared Lovell the winner of the Big Horn conference title over Wor-land who also claimed the title. Worland contended Lovell had Jailed to schedule a sufficient number of games to make them eligible for the championship. Six games must be played In the district.

Lovell played its sixth in a return match with Cowley Armistice dav. and Worland contended the final game was not scheduled by October 15, the deadline for scheduling games. Commenting on the ruling. M. A.

Miller, superintendent of the Washakie County high school, said: "We feel the decision of the athletic board is unf air and not in accordance with the minutes of the last meeting of the Big Horn Basin Athletic association reauiring all games to be scheduled by October 15. Lovell refused to schedule games with Worland and Thermopolis. not withstanding that Lovell. Worland and Thermopolis had simultaneously open dates." Worland also had been reported as contending the board of the state athletic association had decided in favor of Worland In considering the controversy. E.

M. Thompson of Rock Springs, association secretary, however, said today "the state board has not been consulted in the matter and therefore made no decision. The determination of the district winner rests entirely with the athletic board of district number three. This board met and ruled Lovell the winner." Lovell will enter the semi-finals the underdog against Sheridan, and Casper is expected to defeat Kemmerer without much difficulty. Should Casper and Sheridan enter the finals the two schools will be meeting for a second time in two years for the state title.

Last year Sheridan defeated Casper 14 to 0 to win the crown after being held to a scoreless tie with the Mustangs in the Armistice day battle a few days earlier. This year Casper defeated Sherilan 25 to 0 in a non-conference Armistice day battle. The Lovell decLsion left Worland runnerup in the Big Horn conference. Laramie won second place in the southeastern district. Gillette in the northeastern and Rock Springs in the southwest.

Torrington won the title in the central district, a subdivision of the southeastern district. BLUE BEUILS TMEG0UI3T J)URHAM. N. Nov. 13.

(JP) A brilliantly fighting University of North Carolina football team outplayed a favored Duke university eleven today to dump the Blue Devils from the undefeated column. 14 to 6. Duke opened the game by pushing the Tarheels deep into their own territory and scored midway the first period! on a 13-yard sweep at left end by Honey Hackney, fleet Devil quarterback. Little, gritty quarterback of the Heels, smashed a half yard oversight tackle to score in the early minutes of the second quarter at the end of a 63-yard march. Tom Burnette's perfect placement put the Heels ahead.

Three minutes before the game ended Bumette tossed a pass to Watson, who took one stride into the end zone for a nine-yard gain and a touchdown. Bumette added another point bv placement. PITT PAI1TI3ERS BLAST WAY TO UICTORY OUER UEBBASKA III LAST QUARTER AFTER TRAILING Husker Fumble in Final Minutes of Play Paces Way for Panther Victory TO EASY Illini Stopped Short in Columbus Game COLUMBUS. Nov Ohio State's belligerent EurbC converted a pass, a penal plunge into three touchdowns tVS 1 to defeat Illinois. 19 to 0 a coming crowd of 41.921 saw tbe The unexpectedly high score the second largest an Oh'o ever had run up on th? 'ba'Vv3 Illini.

It evened the all-Uir at 12 victories and two ti- each kept the Bucks in the upptr brack-of the Big Ten. u- Held to three first down; all passes, the Illini never in game. They gained but 52 var-'liS rushing, and lost 43 by he 5 route. Passes netted them 61 Dick Nardi. senior halfSf counted two both short line plunges, while Co-can Jim McDonald, shifted to fuiK from his usual signal-caiiine scored the other in the f'Kt minutes on a pass from Nick vW? McDonald ran 53 yards to STANFORD IS cTnint-iu uni Ul IHUL 111 PALO ALTO.

Nov. Stanford's Indians, reaching pea form after early season deV? crushed Washington States Coue 23 to 0, todav before the sms'v football crowd of the local wa" some 15.000 fans. The Stanford attack bepan click, ing mid-way of the second ouartp' when Carl Littlefield. W. ti' back, fumbled to give Stanford tit ball 11 yards from scoring turf Pe Fay.

left halfback, sped around Kd for the touchdown. Stanford blocked Halfback Bayas'i punt to score a third period touchdown. Neil Rasmussen. left ri scooped up the ball on the three, yard line and stepped across the gnai line. Soon after.

Quarterback Bill Paul, man placekicked a 31 -yard field tr-al In the fourth quarter Jims? Coffis, left halfback, intercepted a pass and ran 66 yards for a touch-down. HARVARD HELD TO TWO SCORES BY DAVIDSON CAMBRIDGE, Nov. 13. 3) A hard-fighting Davidson football team today held Haired to two touchdowns and a safetvia the mud of Soldiers field, the Crto son winning, 15-0. A crowd of 4.000 raln-drencfcd spectators saw Frank Foley, substitute halfback, score both Harrad touchdowns.

He scampered 63 yards in the third period for the secoii tallv. OPEN 1 IIS Georgia Tech twice threatened 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 Joe Kilgrow set the stage for Alabama's touchdown. He went through the field and raced 28 yards before being run out of bounds on the three by Dutch Konemann. On fourth down Kilgrow rifled a pass to end Tut Warren who caught it barely a yard over the goal.

Kilgrow then kicked the seventh point. Central (Mich.) State Teachers 30, Kalamazoo 0. Washburn college freshmen 12, Emporia State freshmen 7. Louisiana Normal 3. Mississippi Teachers 0.

Tougaloo Alcorn 0. Arizona 23. New Mexico 0. New Mexico Aggies 33. Western State Teachers 6.

Wayne Normal 6. Omaha U. 19. Illinois college 27. James Millikin 0.

Bradley Tech 6, Knox 0. Milwaukee State Teachers college 6, Whitewater Teachers 26. Oregon State 12. Southern Cali fornia 12. Central Oklahoma Teachers 6.

Northeastern Oklahoma Teachers 39. Hendrix. Conway. Ark 20. Bacone Indians 0.

Hartwick 19. New York Aggies 0. Upsala 27. Panzer 0. Olivet 26, Adrian 0.

Alma 7. Hillsdale 20. Union college (Kv.) 0. Eastern Kentucky Teachers 14. Shiprvensburg Teachers 7, Indiana (Pa.) Teachers 7.

St. Joseph (Ind.) 13. Elmhurst 13. Carroll (Wis.) 39. Wheaton 13.

St. Norberfs 33. Michigan Tech 0. Louisiana Normal 3. MississiDni Teachers 0.

St. Benedict's (Kas.) 0: John Car roll university (Cleveland) 7. College of Pacific 13: California Aggies 6. Iowa Teachers 0: South Dakota U. 13.

University of Chattanooea 33: Union 0. Michigan Tech St. Norbert's 33. San Jose State colleee 13: Hum boldt State 2. Cornell (Iowa) 13: Carleton 6.

Southwest Missouri Teachers (Springfield) 0: Missouri School of Mines 35. McKendree Shurtleff 0. Eureka college 0: Illinois State Normal 80. East Central Teachers (Ada. Okla.) Northeastern Teachers 39.

Whitman 26: Albany (Ore.) col lege 0. Abilene Christian colleee 0: Dan iel Baker 3. Wisconsin Mines 28; Aurora 6. Shenandoah 6: Apprentice school 39. FRIDAY'S GAMES By The Asociated Press East Rhode Island State 13.

Provi dence 0. West Virginia Wesleyan 7. Salem 0. South Miami (Fla.) 21. Catholis U.

0. Wake Forest 24, Woofford 0. Northeast Center of Louisiana State 21, Henderson (Ark.) Teach ers 8. Midwest St. Thomas iMinn.) 7.

St. Olaf 7 (tie). Coe 7, Grinnell 0. Warrensburg (Md.) Teachers 13, Kirksville Teachers 6. Mpn'ville Teachers 26.

Central (Mo.) 0. William Jewell 13. Culver Stockton 7. Kansas Wesleyan 19. Baker 6.

Ottawa 14. Bethany 6. Fort Hays State 7. College of Emporia 3. Nebraska Central 13, Dana 0.

Grand Rapids Jr. 34. Ferris Institute 14. Rockhurst 13. Chillicothe Business 7.

Doane (Neb.) 33. Sterling 0. Southwest Texas A. and I. 33.

Stephen F. Austin 6. North Texas Teachers 14. Trinity 7. Northwestern Oklahoma (Alca) Teachers -14.

Southwestern Okla-(Durant) Teachers 12. Arkansas Tech 54, Southwestern (Kan.) 0. East Texas State Teachers 39. Ban Marcos 13. North Texas Aggies 27.

College of Marsnau 7. Far West Willamette 6. Pacific 0. Pomona 0, California Tech 0 (tie). ENG13 S01300L GRID SCORES MONTANA Billings 33; Anaconda 0.

IKES' TO HOLD TURKEY SHOOT The annual pre-Thanksglving turkey shoot sponsored by the Casper chapter of the Izaak Walton League will be held at the trap-shooting range near the lodge today, starting at 10 o'clock in the morning, announced Bill Stone, president. The public is invited to participate in the sport. Ammunition is available at the lodge, where coffee and sand wiches will be served during the day. a around left end for the touchdown. Right End Fred Powers placekicked two of the conversion points and Ferdinand Dreher the other.

Farris, sophomore from Legington, did all of Wyoming's passing until he left the game in the fourth period and he hung up some pretty pegs for his receivers. TIGERS LEAD COLORADO FIRST HALF BOULDER. Nov. 13. (JP) Trailing 6 to 0 at halftime, Colorado university's undefeated, untied Buffaloes went on a last half scoring splurge to trounce Colorado college, 35 to 6, today.

Byron "Whizzer'! White. all-Amer-Ican backfield candidate, sparked a third period rally which netted Colorado university 21 points, all scored by White. The U. reserves poured it on in the final quarter when Tomlin-son and Hickey made a touchdown apiece. For the second time this year, the Buffs found themselves behind after Gordon (GoGo) Bugg.

fleet C. C. back, intercepted one of White's passes in the second period and ran 60 yards for the Tiger score. Colorado was outfought and out-charged during the initial half, but the Buffs came back after intermission with blood in their eyes. WRESTLING By the Associated Press TORONTO.

Yvon Robert, 219, Montrea. drew with Danno O'Ma-honey, 221. Ireand. one hour. CAMDEN, N.

J. Ray Steele. 210, Glendale. defeated Mike Ma-zurki, 206. New York, two of three falls.

20. They gave the ball to Curlv Stebbins and then to Marshall Goldberg, w-ho got good interference for the first time and carried the ball to Nebraska's 9. Fullback Frank Patrick and Stebbins smashed through to the two and Patrick lunged over for the score. Frank Souchak jumped off the bench to kick the extra point but the ball hit the right upright and skidded off the wrong side and it looked like Pitt was licked. 6-7.

Nebraska took the next kickoff. On the first play Ervin Plock fumbled but recovered on his 32. On the second plav. a oass from center bounced off Substitute Halfback Bill Anderson's knee and Albin Lezouski pounced on it for Pitt on Nebraska's 33. Dick Cassiano almost single-handed -ran the ball to Nebraska's two and Stapulis plunged over for the winning touchdown.

This time Souchak did not miss the kick and that was the finish. Desperate Nebraska passes from its own goal line failed and Pitt, paced by a 20-yard sprint bv Stapulis, had the ball on the Corn-husker 32 as the game ended and the "Big Apple" dance began. The battle was that between a frustrated giant and a cautious invader on the alert for a break. The Cornhuskers. working behind a line that starred the famed Charlie Brock.

Bob Mehring and Elmer Dohrmann. hardly gave Goldberg a chance to break loose, even booting their first two kickof fs out of bounds purposely. So the statistics were all in favor of Pitt. Pitt made 13 first downs to two for Nebraska and gained 250 yards from rushing while tossing Nebraska to a total of minus nine yards. Nebraska tried 10 passes and completed but one while the Panthers completed two out of five.

Today's thriller gave Pittsburgh eight victories, one defeat and three ties with their intersectional rivals from the tall corn country. The loss was the first in seven games for Nebraska, conqueror of Minnesota, this season though they have been twice tied. Pitt's conquest gave them a season's record of seven victories and one tie (a scoreless one with Fordham) and left them in an apparent commanding position to lead the nation's 10 ranking teams for the second straight week. But most of all. Pitt gained respect for Nebraska today.

They'll never underrate those Cornhuskers again. AERIAL THRUST DEFEATS PENN PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 13. TV-Michigan took to the air with a slippery ball today to score a second period touchdown and defeat Pennsylvania. 7 to 0.

jn an intersectional fotbaU game played in rain and mud. A penalty on Pennsylvania of half the distance to the goal line for slugging gave Michigan the ball on Penn's 33, and Stark Ritchie passed vj Gorman furucxer lor the score, POn THE Yin ru mm mm MEMORIAL COLISEUM, Los Angeles, Nov. 13. (JP) Oregon State caught up with Southern California with a dazzling aerial attack and proceeded to hold the Trojans to a 12-12 tie before 35,000 football fans today. Unable to penetrate Troy's staunch line, and- trailing 12 to 0, Joe Gray, Oregon State's brilliant halfback, flashed a relentless overhead barrage in six minutes of the second quarter that brought two touchdowns and tied the score.

Troy made its first score in pro saic fashion, ambling Ambrose Schindler passing and running the ball across the goal on a 40-yard drive. After losing the ball on downs In four goal line cracks from the six-yard stripe. Southern California's Granville Lansdell, sub auarter-back, engineered a second drive of 27 yards that netted the final Trojan score. Both tries for the extra point were missed. BRIGH AM YOUNG RUNS WILD IN BEATING 'AGS' LOGAN.

Utah. Nov. 13. (JP) Brigham Young university ran wild over Utah State today in a Rocky Mountain conference football game, winning 54 to 0 for its first victory over the Aggies in four years. Jack Christensen led the charere for the Cougars, turning in a 72-yard dash for a touchdown on the first play from scrimmage of the third period.

Utah State suffered a severe blow at the very start of the game when its ace. "Scooter" Magnus son, was injured and removed from the play. The longest gain of the game was made by Charlie Roberts in the last period when he took a punt on his own seven and ran 93 yards for the score. FRAI STARS YALE IN Adds Four Counters Against Tigers NEW HAVEN. Nov.

13. (JP) Yale's ereat Clint Pranfc fnr tho 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 today, two of them on spectacular 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. On the opening kickoff Yale was downed on its muddy 22.

The ball was snapped to Frank, and he loped across, set the sphere down gently, and that was the ball game. A foozled Princeton punt permitted him to drive across again from the five before the period ended. In the third he came back with sprints of 52 yards and five yards to finish off his day's work. Coach Ducky Pond pulled him in out of the rain then, along with all the other Yale regulars. HUSKIES REPEAT AGAINST BRUINS SEATTLE.

Nov. 12. (JP) Proving their scoreless tie against the California Bears last week was no fluke, the Washington Huskies lambasted the University of California at Angeles Bruins. 26 to 0, in the Washington stadium today. Some 10,000 fans braved rain, wind and a second-half snowstorm to see the slippery, skidding mud battle and watch the Huskies work beautifully-executed passes with the soggy ball for twe of.lheir four touchdowns.

It was the first snow at a football game in Seattle In years. The Bruins never seriously threatened the Washington goal line. Washington scored a touchdown in the second and third quarters and piled up two more in the final period. Halfback Merle Miller plunged for one and caught a pass for another; Jimmy Johnston romped 36 yards- for the third; Dan Yarr grabbed an aerial shot for the last one, just petore tne final gun CIiriKHPHOnSEISP rs ru fc) a 0) mm mm Wyoming 6, Denver 21. Brigham Young 54, Utah State 0.

Utah 45, Colorado State 0. University of California at Los Angeles 0, Washington 26. California 26, Oregon 0. Grove City 6. California 7.

Allegheny 16. Westminster 13. Washington State college 0, Stanford 23. Idaho 6, Gonzaga Assumption 0, Bluffton 39. Colorado college 6, Colorado university 35.

Texas Christian' 14, Texas 0. Texas A. and M. 6. Rice 6.

Western Illinois Teachers 0. Western Kentucky Teachers 28. Auburn 7. Louisiana State 9. Baylor 7, Southern Methodist 13.

Lawrence Tech 14. St. Mary's (Mich.) 7. North Dakota 0, Detroit 40. Nebraska 7, Pittsburgh 13.

Holy Cross 7. Brown 0. Kentucky 0. Boston college 13. Bowdoin 0, Tufts 0.

Coast Guard 0. Connecticut State-0. Delaware 6. Drexel 8. Temple 0, Bucknell 0.

i Cornell 6, Dartmouth 6. St. Vincent 0. Waynesburg 0. i Syracuse 6.

Columbia 6. Georgetown C. New York univers- i ity 0. North Carolina State 0. Manhattan 15.

Ohio XT. 13, Rutgers 0. Princeton 0, Yale 26. -Notre Dame 7. Army 0." Toledo 0.

West Virginia 34. Wooster 12, Denison 6. Illinois Wesleyan 7. Akron 12. Illinois 0, Ohio State 19.

i Norwick 0. Trinity 51. Amherst 13. Williams 6. I Middlebury 7.

Vermont 0. Harvard 15. Davidsonr 0. Rensselaer 0. Mass.

State 13. New -Hampshire 14. Springfield 6. Clarkson 0. St.

Lawrence 6. Wesleyan 6, Rochester 0. Connecticut State 0. Rensselaer Poly 4. Marvland 14.

Penn. State 21. Carnegie Tech 6. Michigan State 13. Michigan 7.

Pennsylvania 0. Indiana State Teachers 7. Michigan Normal 33. Oberlin 0. Case 13.

Xavier 12. Baldwin-Wallace 20. Ohio Northern 0, Mount Union Ohio Wesleyan 13, Western Re-serve 41 Marietta 19. Muskingum 13. Miami 7.

Dayton 21. Washington and Jefferson 0, Lafayette 6. Geneva 6. Franklin-Marshall 18. Ursinus 15, Gettysburg 6.

Muhlenberg 18, Lehigh 7. Lebanon Valley 0. Albright 16. St. John's (Md.) 0.

Swarthmore 13. La Salle 9, Pennsylvania Military college 0. Roanoke 14, Susquehanna 7. City College of New York 6. Mora vian o.

North Carolina 14, Duke 6. Clemson lO. Florida 9. Canisius 6. Western Maryland 0.

Union 0, Hamilton 7. Furman 12, South Carolina 0. Iowa State 3, Marquette 0. Indiana 3. Iowa 0.

American U. 6, Johns Hopkins 25. Naval Academy squad 33. U. of Pennsylvania squad 0.

Appalachian 37. Guilford 0. Washington and Lee 14, William and Mary 12. St. Louis 7, Creighton 6.

Northwestern 0, Minnesota 7. Kenyon 0, Wittenberg 66. North Dakota State 0. George Washington U. 33.

Oklahoma 7. Missouri 0. Purdue 7. Wisconsin 7. Kansas State 7, Kansas 0.

Alabama 7. Georgia Tech 0. Hiram 3, Detroit Tech 9. Hope 0, Albion 6. St.

Joseph's (Philadelphia) 7, Washington college 6. Virginia Tech 14. Virginia 7. Hampden Sydney 0, Richmond 19. Citadel 0, Virginia Military 27.

Erskine 13, New Berry 0. Sewanee 0, Miss. State 12. Lenoir Rhyne 6. Stetson 20.

Vanderbilt 13, Tennessee 7. Tulane 6. Georsia 7. Capital 14. Otterbein 6, Bloomsburg Teachers 12.

East Stroudsburg (Pa.) Teachers 0. Beloit 9, Chicago 26. Augusta (Rock Island, HI.) 0, Monmouth 0. Arkansas 32. U.

of Mississippi 6. Oakland City 0. Rose Poly 61. Depaw 32. Wabash 0.

Georgetown (Ky.) 31. Hanover 0. Franklin 6, Ball State 6. Western State (Mich.) 14. Butler 13.

Tulsa U. 32. Washington U. (St. Louis) 7.

Evansville find.) college 0, Southeast Missouri Teachers 34. Mississippi college 0. Oglethorpe 12. Hiram 3, Detroit Tech 29. Juniata 26.

Bridge water 0. Haverford 0. Randolph-Macon 29. Cincinnati 0. Marshall 28.

Slippery Rock 0. Alfred Holbrook 7. Transylvania 39. Union college Ky.) 0. Eastern Kentucky Teachers 0.

Slepherd college 20, Gallaudet 0. Gonzaga 21, St. John's 6. Millersville Teachers 20, Wilson Teachers 6. South Dakota State 7.

DePaul 44. Oklahoma City U. 7. Oklahoma Aggies 27. OF 0 jiS "ggggjsBRKTAKE HOLD) HAKE EVERY ROAD AN ROAD ALL YEAR ROUND By PAUL MICKELSON PITTSBURGH.

Nov. 13. (IPs In a last period surge that lifted 71.000 stunned spectators off their seats. Pittsburgh's Panthers of football broke loose again today to blast surprising Nebraska from the ranks of the undefeated. 13 to 7.

The big clock showed nine minutes and 55 seconds left to play and Nebraska ahead. 7-0. when the Panthers clawed out of their cage with a relentless attack and a choice bit of luck to come from behind to a thrilling conquest for the third time in as many weeks. First, thev marched 80 yards on 13 plays, missed on a placement to tie the score, 'and then grasped a Nebraska fumble to push over the winning score with less than five minutes to go. The huge crowd, second largest ever to cram gigantic Pitt stadium, and the largest ever to see a Nebraska team play.

was limD with excitement at the finish which found the elated Pitt students swarming on the field doing the "Big Apple." This was the sequence of events in the dramatic struggle that was billed to be just another Pittsburgh runaway: Third period Cautious Nebraska out-slicked th. city slickers as Andrews took Bill Stapulis' pass on his 40-yard line, ran a few steps to his right and then lateralled to Jack Dodd. who cut down the left side of the field for a beautifully blocked run of 60 yards for a touchdown. Lowell English placekicked perfectly for the extra point and Nebraska led. 7-0.

Fourth period It opened with Pitt on its own 35. after starting out late in the third period from its i lrc2zc 20, at 2 P. M. i START Quickly RIGHT NOW is the time to prepare for the next muddy, slushy, driving season. Don't delayl See the amazing newGoodrichSuperTractionSilvertown the tire that's specially constructed to go forward or back up when the going is tough.

It's made with massive, heavy cleats that dig deep into mud give it a real "tractor grip." YouH save yourself time and money with a set of these Super Traction Tires on your car. Come in today and let us equip your car for comfortable, fall-season" driving. Goodrich TrSStlon Silvertoviis1 MAKE EVERY ROAD AN OPEN ROAD Attend "GAY NINETIES" -High School Auditorium, November 17, 18 Benefit Kiwanis Milk Fund. i Cold-thickened, heavy, summer oil slows op i starting. That's why you should let us drain, flush and refill your crankcase now with 3 Mobiloil Arctic.

Thrn i youH be sure of quick easy starts and full en- fine protection thru- out the winter. And I tf 3 for flit! rwnr fill with Winter Mobilgas. rJOVBMDEEl hiring DMISSION ADULTS, 75c PLUS TAX STUDENTS, 25C PLlJS TA CHILDREN, 10 NO RESERVED SEATS i.

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