Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Hartford Courant from Hartford, Connecticut • 41

Publication:
Hartford Couranti
Location:
Hartford, Connecticut
Issue Date:
Page:
41
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

fife PART FOUR Pages 1 to 8 porta Automotivo Financial IIAliTFOKD 1, SUNDAY, OCTOHKU "JO, VM(. Trojanowsld Scttinii Up Vital Uconn Touchdown "7 ttt. Blanchard And Davis Spark Army To 23rd Consecutive Victory Connecticut Edges Maine Trinity Conquers Hobart Yale Ties With Cornell ft i v. -v. West Point, N.

Oct (AP.) Army's reserves, labelled! the weakest part of another great sIMtslli I I 1 11 llull.lll W.yirY Cadet foot hall team, got the workout they needed today in a smashing -IS to 11 victory over Coluni-hia, hut they only made Glenn Da I'M I'l 1 jXh Coast Guard Overwhelmed By 69 To 0 Unbeaten Harvard Snaps Winning' Streak Of Academy Kletcn in lux.m imK. Cambridge, Oct. The V. S. 1 Hlt llrVIU 1.1 tnilni'il luililnu Kirn .11 I ni i hi lis 1 1 rut il er I I-m uaritit ri'ini'lrlml 7 ii its liiiliiril, "I 'I I'flSHI1 I li'lHitllln lltleirretl In I tuiiU I lift uiili i' nf Itiitai t't'lP't 1'iisstvii 1 I'iiiiiIiik nveniKi' i from a liniiiiiurl Inhil )niiU nil Kii teliiriifil iinaienl tululilt trnut'tei' I in ils 1 1 A I ii'n 1 1 ir Si i 4 i vis ami I lot- rUancliard look bet ten than ever.

It was Blanchard Hnd Davis, deprived for the most part of the; help of Quarterback Arnold Tuck-; er, who really accomplished the; rout of the previously unbeaten Columbia team, and gave Army its' 23d consecutive victory. .111 in iui 1, e. Slorrs, Ocl. 10 t'onuecticul's hint hall team blew hot and cold but dually found Ihe power to overcome superior speed rep-icseitleil in the University of Maine backtlelil, 2 to I'll, A ginne that should not have hern close tuinril out to be ail Ull-conilortiibly tight stpieak for the Huskies of CniiiircUcul, h'lt'sl thr liondcioiis but etinibersonie Con-liecticut eleven let Iheir rivals get away to a Hn touchdown lead Then Hie Hunkies look charge vMth two quick, decisive I bird period tout 'hilovvttK that ftut thrnt ahead In and, finally, they bogged down again and permitted Maine to score ihe only fourth quarter touchdown ami scare the lityllgbls out of a HaifgUay crowd of Uconn supporters. For more than half the game Conned lent was like a sleeping linn mm Ithaca.

iN. i. A IikIiI-ing, undonlog hi ii. ii lootb.ill letini Miiceedi'il in Nt.ippm I i lodits ami In Id Yale's Miw erhousi' elfVcn In i to Ii tic before fans i hoellkopl Field. It ws line ol lln inn-1 cM'itlni; gainesl these two I II vnU have eer f.t .1 Hie Itu: team was tin In ay I mm it touchdown when tin tuial wins, tie blew.

It louk nn. those fatuous last diti M.mds by tin IMue 1o hall the Ocpi iate ailt'ge In Ihe final seconds id the thrill Ing encounter. Jackson, the nncl dangerous ol Yale's bull earners, scored his team's lone toucbdnw an II yard end sweep In the mvuihI quarter but only once in the cnllie game wits be able to jeet loose nit a run of any length. In lad, none of the Kll Imektt could get through the inlotit Cornell dclcm.e with anv 'J Blanchard bulled through he Guardsmen plunged in over line in his old-time style and depth at the Stadium this the ends for four touchdowns, top-1 'Hie Indian Summer afternoon, nint? off tiis nerformance with a'Hnd there wasn't a man in the II I' AN lil.1i I.N. A ilnbart College cli ven that 18 alleviate sailor east who could gave up wo liillchdow ns lielorr some of the TtMj 'I'lliuty l''leil sitectators were cnnifort ably sealed, caused a peck of (rouble tor Trinity yesterday.

However, the Vv t-'i, 1 Vr-rvl upstate New Yorker, never could quite match the Hillloiipei eat ii I- I degree ol regulantv ami ihe game Hall Irojanomki riofiitig mllim rr lie tamcra't Ion in ihe developed Into an 'even battle of period nhen he cut back to the inside, rammed through a big hole and rait 21 -sards to the M.iine passes. 11-yard line. Two plays later Pill Moll smashed through center lor the touchdown that put ('on- I'l' itaeklin necticul ahead, 14 to 1), the first time in the contest that the Storrs men had enjoyed the lead. V'''' Vi'1' 'I'lMi'lrrback Jicid. Moll (So.

ii) is leading 1 rotation ski and Lenny Artttsen (So. 14) is tuttiinc a defender to wu were well set on I.U nhivs 93-yard pallop into scorinR territory with a Columbia kickotf. Davis seorrd only once on a nfi-yard run around end in the second quarterbut he set up another score by running l-'S yards when he received a bad pass from center on an attempt to punt and he ran 55 yards with the second-half kick-off before being forced out of bounds. In between times he made lesser gains, tossed a few passes and did the kicking. Army's other two scores came on passes, one from Ril Gustafson to Hank Foldherg, the other from Arnold Galiffa to Jim Rawers.

Jack Ray converted six out of seven tries for extra points. Gustafson, who quarterbacked the first -st ring haekficld except for a few plays early in the game when the injured Tucker came in to get the Cadets moving out of difficulties, did a fine job. their plight. For the Cadets from New London, out-armed in every department of play, went otf Ihe deep end early in the first quarter and never got up for air as the unbeaten men of Harvard submerged them, H9 to 0, in an overwhelming display of superiority before a gathering of 15, 600, It was a sad end to the budding winning skein of the previously undefeated Coast Guardsmen, who had won their first three starts, hut the personnel and game canny Dick Harlow threw at them today were more than they could possibly cope with. The Crimson employed a "5-3-2-1" defense practically all the way, and it functioned with equal efficiency against both ground and aerial thrusts.

The Cadets' running attack was completely smothered, they winding up with a net loss of 19 yards compared with 364. Coast Guard actually excelled in the air, 107 to -19 yards, but seven giant mat wanted to snooze, knowing II could wake up In ample time to handle Ihe situation. No amount of prodding could rouse the physically ulrongrr Uconn personnel until the third quarter surge In which the Huskies dem-oust rated their all-around su-petioiily. They might have gone on from there to hiilld Up a gnod-sled margin, hut they sst upon their LM.I.'l lend and allowed Maine (o come on again ami cause a great deal of uncertainly (0 run lliroiigh (he Connecticut stands. A couple of scampering scat hacks named "ftabhil" Uomhkow- the outside (('ourant Photo).

and a good ninny opportunities went hy the imams on inirrcep-lions and Ineompletious. One of Ihese Inlereeplintm resulted In the game lying score as Norm Paw- With Malice Toward None son scooped a Fursp pass out of the air tuid scampered fH yards down the side lines for the tally assault and a laic touchdown merely served to slash Trinity's margin of victory to Ils final I'l-1 1 figures. It was easily Ihe most spectacular encounter Ihe local eleven has participated In since the kcIiooI's postwar return to the gridiron, and the top operallve in the Trinity attack was a local youth. Harold llelnlf from Hartford High, while his cotinlerpiirt for lloharl was lan I'andlscia, a sophomore halfback out of East Hartford High. 'Ihe game aluo marked Ihe return of Eddie Tryon, former Nuffield Academy sinr, (0 this area for his first visit In connection Willi football since he played In a professional game with lied Grange.

The Slateamen hail three mistakes to blame for their bad start which provided all the op-liorliinitles the rapidly Improving Trinity eleven required. A Hipping penally on the klckoff set the visitor back tn llirlr five and a poor punt, set Trinity up on the yard line, Only two nlays were necessary Coach Howie Udell tried every Wesleyan Has 26-0 Edge I Vermont Tilt Cardinals (in in Third Victory in Row Willi Middlchury Victim thing to crack the Cornell wall By contrast, Columbia tricky BY BILL LEE Editor ski and Entile King, shook themselves loose on lateral pass plays operating from the formation lie sent young Frank 1oNezo in to pass In the first half and the and sweeping dm Connecticut. Hartford lad compleled pair ol attack couldn't make any headway against the Army regulars and not much against the second-stringers while the Cadets' substitute backs showed very little until late in the ends with such consistency that of the 35 passes it essayed were beauties for a total (if Itli yards, hut the Big Ked solved his tilyle In the second half and his accurate last ditch tosses were hatted .1 1 I I.I.. 1 I game, even when they had the regular line in front of them. Middlchury, Oct.

-iSpe- 1 ciaU Wesleyan University's loot- College Football 1 iiiineetieut was never at any time allowed to relax, however, much some of the Ucntm operatives were sure they had the game In hand. A wind that blew minor gale played a major part In the eon-test, and the Hlaek Hears, disguised for the day In white lerseyg, made good use of their first quarter advantage In that respect to get off In front, Malnn Skirts Emit. ball eleven coasted to their third ,.1 COR some college football squads, the war is not yet over. Conditions are abnormal and it may lie another year or two tie-fore they level off. Players you might suppose would be better than ever because they are older are finding it hard 1o find the zest that made them click in pre-war days.

There is a marked difference on Ihe mental side. It niny be that the player's approach is different lhan it was before he gave up football to fly H-17 over Europe or lead a platoon of riflemen over some Pacific trail. It could he that Ihe spirit is willing but the flesh weak, the physical factor bring attributed to the fact that It is two years, or three, or four since the player was trained for fool hall. In any case, squads loaded with war veterans who were bright football stars in or thereafter are not as overwhelmingly power- fill Ho Avtu.i.ln ll.nn. I i intercepted and returned for a gaudy profit of 160 yards, which more than nullified the gain.

Moral Victory Achieved. Harvard scored only once in the first period, and in the light of latter events, that, was a moral victory. But the Crimson stepped its production up to 21 points in the second quarter, slumped to 13 in the third and then laid it on in the final session with 28. The Harlowmen exhibited the crisper blocking, harrier, surer tackling and a flock of hard-runnine. elu- to cover the remaining distance, llcinU turned Ihe Hobart Hank and raced to a lust down on the win of the season here this aller- 1h(, hl, thn stol.v noon at Porter Meld by defeating; the Kame would best be lol'd the I'anlhers of Middlchury Col-bv the lirst down statistics of the lege, 2ti to 0.

The Cardinals scored; wild fourth quarter. Yale made twice in the second, once in thej seven first downs to three lor third and again in the fourth quar-: Cornell hut Interceptions tw ice ter. I shipped the Yale drives ami two Middlchury made Its only scot- Inenmplelions halted the third ing threat in the fourth quarter! Hilly Booc, the youngster whose hen it mnnaeerf In wm 1 hi- hull! kicking toe Ins been almost I1111II- A short punt by Hill Moll gavf Kt. Alfrrd .18. Clarksnn Tech 7.

AmliPrsi 1.1. Colby 6. Army 'IS, Columbia 14. Palfs 20. Nnrthenstrrn 0.

Boston U. Tulls 0. Bowtloin 26, Williams 0. Brooklyn Collctte l'f. Wagner 19.

Brovvn 'M, Dartmouth 1.1. Bucknpll 21. Buffnln 0. Colcnlc 17, Kinns Point 7. Connecticut 21.

Maine 'JO. Delaware 27. (Jcttysburg fi. Drexel .11, llarrforfl 0. Franklin and Marshall 43.

Cl'NY 0. Harvard (ifi, Coast Guard 0. Hofslra 21, Trenton Teachers 0. Lafayette 7, Washlnulon and Jeffer and Frank Eblen broke through 'he visitors early possession on the i mi iiii'iu in i it liner a stuny 01 squan rosters in stve backs. On the offense, Ihev Knnt'x generated esneciallv devastating i Ihe middle on a simple buck inside guard to score.

However, it was Eblen's first and final effort for the alteruoon, the brilliant freshman hark from West Hart up the field, via the aerial route.j '(': in I'' Connecticut forty, and 1hey went from there to tbrlr first touchdown on some sparkling wide sweeps by Onmbkowskl and Hal Parody, Oombkowski making the touchdown on a lf-yard run around his left end after Walt GI football players of 1946 are being banged up. too. Iniuries are and II later to the Weslevan 2H yard line ii x. 11 developed as a sad 1 the extra point i developed as a sad miss. The Yale ford Injuring his leg and retiring far more numerous, and 1 imagine the answer is the pap of' from one 1o three years between the last time the player was trained for football and the present season.

Again this corner is reminded of something Bob Nevbtml. the vrmw thmiiKh In ro bes was ie ou tam intt! i't nm.siaiiuiiiKj 1,1. om action alter I'ete Vibrrt son K. I. .11.

kicked tie first of his four conver- rejannwski had missed a fackle ground gainer for the Hvpi-i defeat in the third scoring two of their four nun n- i 1 ,,.1 11.,, ,,.1 Tennessee coach, said early in the war. Neyland was coaching 1he rt.tfnc tiliitf. limit. imwer their end sweeps, getting three or four men in front, of Ihe ball carrier in ripping off sizable gains. After the first: quarter, ('oast Guard saw that it had to sink or swim on passes, and Quarterback Sid Vaughn, key man in Nelson Nitchman's T-Format ion, began throwing the ball.

After one drive penetrated to the 31, Harvard started building up its interception total and that hone was sions I lust beyond (he line of scrimmage, When Trinity kicked off again onihkowskl missed (he conver-Carnovale ran lite hall back lOision, and an important failure It yards to the 2d, hut the daring! turned out to he. Ail-Army team that used the training far for its game with the New York Giants, ies of Yale to get readyjuns ''Hie last minute of the eontesl i defense. i a wild, desnerale alfair. Yale Statesmen gambled on a first I Mornhkowski personally took A Mn lnlM.r,l,l (,..... 1 1 PHYSICAL CONDITION IS VARIABLE TIIINfi.

which saw the heimrOwn 3. tried three unsuccessful I and lleint Intercepted charge of a drive early the sec- Il, i 'in l.t.M 11 Wl Ml-lnr tttul ninl'Hit tniiric Ihe toss the 'Warier that 50 on Four moved yards Ihere was a little dinner for the football writers and Neyland jstnpped within the shadows of Ihe! losses and then Jackson kicked was answerinc ones! rifS' lhat 1hp llis 1)0 in the best Condition any football squad ever during the afternoon that a Mass. State JYs IS, Wesleyan 8. Mlchltan Slate 3(1. Perm State 16.

Muhlenberg f2. Kwarthmore 1.1. Moravian 12, Crsinus 0. New Britain Teachers 27, Mont-la I 12. North Carolina 21.

Navy 14. NYU 6. Rochester 0. Penn 40, Virginia 0. Princeton 14, RulBer.i 7.

Pittsburgh 7. Marquette 6. Rhode Island Slate 14, Mass, State 6 Rutgers JVs 2R. Princeton JVs 7. Scranton 31, Albright in, Shippensburg IX Slippery Rock 7.

Springfield 11. New Hampshire 6. St. Mary's XX I'ordham 2. Syracuse 21, Holy Cross 12.

Thlel 14, Clarion (Pa.) Tchrs. 13. Trinity 21. Hobart 14. Union 27, Rensselaer 7.

Vermont 0. Norwich 0 ftlel. Wesleyan 26, Mldtllehury 0. Western Maryland 1.1, Washington Md.t College 6. Yale 6, Cornell 6 (lie).

American International lk.nn Middlchury goal, the visitors went "ul bounds 'he Hig into scoring action In the first few! minutes of play In the second!" Vale If, quarter when Jack Morton flipped! "I11 r.iugbness pen- ally sel (he ball the Eli later the locals had their Maine's second touchdown, six-pointer. i Marl Hagnpian lugging the ball Unbuilt Scitre across on a another wide end run First Dick Wrisenfluh bucked fmin th llnr- This for tw yards. Then VVhiley K11.1- V. 'lmn 4.) klewM'Z pitched lo Mario I'nnsallej for a first down on the 20. 4..

4.. r.y t.r1lllin Hit (t VI the country. on one a flat pass (nan the Middlchury with less lhan ten seconds re- i yard line lo J'lnl Dundas who jniaining. The Cornell team banged alter U'elsenfliih bucked for three 'J I ill.UJM OJJUI caught the ball on the goal line! lwliT tniHsinK liy m.hn and fell across to score. Another! tjm(.

expired touchdown was made by Forbes in Yale's touchdown' In the second more, ivutiKiewie lieaved a snort To (Jain Victory loss out on Ihe flnt lo Hob inland nils same period when he carried1 quarter came at the end of 75 wiiii ihciii lino me eiKi.one. i ft Two successive penalties for 15,1 IVCT lIOlV I TOSS and live yards put 1 unity in a 'ollege 0 the hall on a plunge through center for six nioro points. A Middlelmry fumble on ils own 27 yard line set the stage In Ihe third period for another Cardinal touchdown when Dundas recovered yard march afler Art Fitgcrald had intercepted one of Hums' heaves on his own five and carried it to the 23. It took ten plays and Ihe aid of three penalties to carry the ball into pay dirt, a pair of Furse to Filgrrald passes doing hole early In Ihe second period and resulted in a Hobart drive that reached the Trinity IS liefore Worcester, Oct. If).

(AP.) -After being pushed around through Ihe first period and part of the second while Holy Cross Pandiseia, carrying on a deep re me nan ana rornes carried it on the next piny through Ihe Panther! mnBl verse evaded the defensive end WHR Mwinj SyracUBB and halfback at the ine nr-nm--University revived today and came mage and outran Wrisenfluh i defeat (he CmHrr. 91.19 Hartwlck 15, Paner 0, 1 id ent. Alma 14. Albion 1.1. Ashland 1,1.

Wittenberg 7. Butler 41. Depauw 6 Cincinnati 11. Ohio 0. Dayton 20.

Toledo 1,1. Great Lakes 25. Fort Sheridan 7. Hamllne 12, Dakota Wesleyan 7. Heidelberg 40.

Capital fi. Illinois 27. Wisconsin 21. Iowa 1.1, Indiana f. Carroll If).

Case 7. Kalamazoo 13, Hope 0. Lawrence 21. Grinnell 13. Lincoln University 7.

Kentucky right tackle for twelve yards and Tlw. aim jiij-iil mi 1 1.1m ji 1 11 1 1 it 1 Ihe endone. Dick Morris vorivert- ten yards and a first down on the Cornell 49 and the second picked up 3,1 yards to the fled seven. A a first down on Ihe 15. Another Forbes plunge through the center of the line scored the touchdown.

The afternoon's scoring was penalty set (he Elis back, but completed after Myron Griswnld Jackson took a lateral from Furse The Cross tallied both its touchdowns within five minutes on forward pass plays, the first touchdown coming with four minutes to go in the opening period and the second being scored 55 seconds after the opening of the second quarter. With leas than three minutes remaining in that same second 0. ed as he did later afler the other Hobart marker. At Ihe outset of the second halve the Statesmen marched half the length of the field, but gave Ihe ball up when Charlie Remilen punted over the Trinity goal line and the Hilltoppers answered with a drive ot 80 yards for their third touchdown. tossed a pass from the Middlchury 40 to Dick Whiting on the Panther Manchester 14.

Bluffton 0. Miami 28, Xavier (0) S. Michigan State Javvees 21. Notre and skirted tne end, carrying a pair of tacklers over the goal line with him. In the waning minutes of the (Concluded fin 1'age.

4, Column 3.) Cadets crossed the mid-field stripe. Their next best effort was a drive to their own 48 mid-way in the last quarter. Coast Guard suffered a body blow on the third play of the second half when Vaughn, tackled hard while returning a kick, had to leave the game and hobbled off the field. The Cadets threw up a doughty defense the first half or the initial period, stopping the first Harvard march at the seven, but Tom Gannon brought a punt back to the 22, and the Can tabs rolled to a touchdown on five plays. Gannon capped it off by going over from the five on a smash inside left tackle.

Emil Drvaric, star guard, hooted the first of his nine placements, missing only once in the 10 tries he attempted. The next score came early in the second quarter, the payoff punch being a 24-yard pass play from Leo Flynn to Johnny Fioren-tino, six-foot end, who had slipped behind the secondary and took the toss alone on the goal line. Flynn also had a hand in the next touchdown, skirting right end from the eight at the end of a drive which had its inception back on the 16 where Ken O'Donnell, brother of the ailing Cleo, intercepted a pass. Coast Guard's passing boomeranged into the fourth Crimson touchdown when O'Donnell intercepted another aerial, this time snagging it out of the air on the Cadets' 32 and snaking his way down the sidelines to score standing up. Dashe 58 Yards.

Flynn once more took over the spotlight in the third, sweeping left end from the 12, and Ralph Petrillo added another touchdown shortly after, going around right end from the two, and it was 41 to 0 going into the final period. name Jayvees 13. "No," Neyland answered emphatically, "These boys are in great condition to perforin their military duties. They are in great shape for soldiers but not for football players. These boys have had to be brought along slowly despite Ihe excellence of their general physical condition, Football muscles are different from those used in other sports.

"There is only one way to get in shape for football and that. Is by playing football. A wrestler trained to engage in the fiercest sort of bout might be exhausted by three minules of boxing. On the other hand, a boxer trained to go 15 gruelling rounds might blow himself all out of wind in 1hree minutes of football." Now; many of the men playing football in the colleges today have not played seriously in two or three years. Moreover, in most, cases it is many months since they lost the general excellence of physical condition that Army training gave them.

Some were worn out, hurt or wounded in war service and spent weeks or months in hospitals or rest areas. It. is hardly reasonable to expect such men to play with the zip and zing that marked their performance as pre-war sophomores or juniors. Even those who got through unscathed and these would be the majority, of course are hobbled by their years of football inactivity. For one reason or another, the football players of the 1941-19'il era who cut their schooling short to go off to war are finding ty rugged duty, now that they arc back on campus, to play football the way they played it before they went into service.

The season is not yet at the halfway point and it may be that many of the veterans will find the way back most of Ihe way if not. all the way. Meanwhile, the coaches and spectators will have to be patient. Equally important, the war veteran football players will have to be patient with themselves. THE MIDGETS DID ALL RIGHT.

Believe it or not, there was a $100,000 business in the town of Avon this summer. That's what the midget autos did at Cherry Park. That is a great deal more business than the trotting horses ever did at the Avon oval. There were times during the abbreviated season of midget racing cars that the 10.000 seating capacity was not enough. Ed Otto, who operates Hinchcliff Stadium in Paterson, N.

as well as Cherry Park, had intended to put not a cent more than $20,000 in fixing old Cherry Park over for the midgets. He wound up spending $65,000 and finishing the season with the enthusiastic intention of spending much more next season. For one thing, Otto wants to expand the seating capacity at 12 yard line. The next two plays put the ball up to the eight yard marker and on the third play Leonard Schumann skirted the left period Syracuse partly blocked a The a pass from ivunkiewic lojCrusa(icr punt and side of the Middlebury line to rp Tennessee Vols Orangemen added another 15 sec ci. 111 inn Lt'iiuuicu ij vatus HOU Heintz got loose for 23 more, onds before the half ended after Kunkiewic and Heintz nicked UP recovering a Holy Cross fumble.

make the score 26 to 0. Bert Vnn-derclute kicked Iwo of the points after touchdowns, while Captain Jack Medd won the honors of being the most outstanding line Minnesota 46. Wyoming 0. Missouri 33, Iowa State 13. Nebraska 16.

Kansas 14. Northwestern 14. Michigan 14 (tie). Ohio Wesleyan 13. Oberlin 0.

Oklahoma 28, Kansas State 7. Ottenbeln 33. Ohio Northern fi. Purdue 14. Ohio State 14 (tie).

St. Joseph's 19. Indiana State 0. St. Louis 27, Drake 6.

Upper Tow-a 28. Luther 0. Wabash 34. Rose Polv 0. arthurg 12.

Buena Vista 7. Wheaton 27, Klmhurst 0. Wooster 21, Denlson 0. Snnth. Derail Alabama For First Time The third Orange touchdown nisi ti.jvt 11 tat tin mit'r o(j W'eisenfluh drove over after the man or the game, WKSf.EYAN MIDDLKHITIV 10- Knoxville, Oct.

(Concluded on I'age 4, Column 5.) Nor (h Carolina was scored when a Crusader punt was blocked behind the goal line. The Cross started off the game as if it would be a walkaway, Syracuse never getting beyond mid-field in the opening peroid. Seven plays after taking the Oranee (autlln w'lisnn! 'AP.) Tennessee derailed Ala- Ttliimfitnni hnma' tiifh rirlmcr r.H ftlr.r.ltrmfc Camp Ie 12. Aberdeen Proving T'inrfln; irounds 0. Ir It Is rt Tf Oh lh rh Burton Oary Moro MrM Viindf rrlnt HMnhru nundim Morton Forbe Vnnr Roblnnon cr two Hmri goal 100 ay ana pur.

logeiner jkick on their own 48 the Crusa Duke 41, Richmond 0. Port Belvoir 30. Quantieo Marines S. Kort Eennins 44. Cherrv Point M.

nes 0. Pepin; sustained drives to dump the Rose M' 'low' hanipions from the leaten ranks, 12-0, before a crowd of 40,000. It was the first defeat for Baltimore. Oct. 10.

fAP.) Smashing from behind with two sudden touchdowns in the last quarter, the North Carolina Tar ders scored on a pass from Red Comer to Ray Rail. The play, initiated at the eight yard line, started as a sweep and Comer suddenly halted, turned and flipped Furman 14, Citadel 0. Georgia 3.1. Oklahoma A AM 13. Georgia Tech 26.

Louisiana State 7. (Jeorge Washlneton 50. Wnvne 1'ni. th levari. Suhmltutlonn Heels remained in the undefeated I'" IS ICIIiMilll'U 111 lilt tillllt ll rtlt tj erslty 6.

i-fti, 1 Whiting. rnnk 1 homas team in a mrrnowerino' Rail on the goal line. nsnnirkl. Ijirriate, Mlllrr. St humnrm.

regular-season game Since IjCorgia 0, Veto Kktirll intorrrntPil in fir. Berntirrt, Boil, (iriswold. win dors, lull, turned the trick in l'MI It ended Navy' 21'14, in a football! mssch inierceptea an or-StudwHi. Mirtriiehury, Rickson, nl lJ'- before persons. jnnCc Pss on the latter's 33 and Guilford 3fi.

Wofford 0. Kentucky 10. Vanderhilt 7. Louisiana Tech 7. Mississippi S.

Miami 20. Florida 13. Mississippi State 48. San Franels- 20. North Carolina State 14, Wake For-t 6.

o. Johnson. Kalley, Zaumseil, a. hatl fi-httr, the 'uro moved un the cht i f.l I is. -r ikhi rseyiana 01 ine th aa n.

Morrus. Carney, Cook. Touchdowns: Hildas t-'nrhns .1. I i 1 1 "ay Ol 113 TO-TU mil nC t.imu. ti.

it. a. j-ornrs Wl. it ttriB I ho Blra.rhl rri.li nr. i now ine lloodgates were Cherry Park to around 13,000.

For another, he intends to install a Schumann. Points after lourhdow reallv nnon nr. A it-- ins. i i I nacks, and again, as against Uuke 01 (ne seconn penoa uene Randolf Maron 6, HamDrien svd-1 1 permanent lighting system that will he tne test tning 01 its Kina in 1 r. uiaiiri low Vanderclute (2im, (placements).

itst wrrk otM'cMlippo passed into the end zone sent in was tackling fiercely lh. Vaet ey 0 and running as if his life depend- 3 11 ins me ui'uena-i t. ui. iii.u u.t- hem into plenty of trouble, while to Walter Roberts for the toucli- ScholasllC roolhall Southerners took advantageidown. 1 'he ols were a determined flf lKiinno' at temnt for the ex- Tennessee 12.

Alahama 0. Tennessee Poly 20, Kastern i ky 7. Ken-ed on it. Vince Moravee nlttnaintr Between ma piare in raierson and i.ncrry rarK, hoi. ois hS- fullback eot into the trmrw sociates did $400,000 worth of business.

Tilings worked out far better Tulane .12. Auburn 0 Rulkeley 25. Hartford S. club and would not be denied, de-. n.no rh(0 Iheitra points were bad.

a. 1 f. it nm. 1 usKcsee institute is. lk i nu.r.

uniii witn a nnek rnm ths Iha nafl uno apcctea in 111s nix jtar nvun. 1 iidi nv ji- is mint icew Brnain 14, now lMMn 1h Kanlt. as UrrW slippery freshman Mar. to spend another $10,000 in addition to the he has already put and Petrillo promptly followed A punt hy Lomer was partly blocked and the Orange took the underdog, Harry Gilmer, the Tide's; maae the iniiial enrr in thn firt VMf 25. Datidson 0.

William Marv .14. U'athlnilnn 1. Woodrow VVilon K. Mtdrtlelown 0. uffleld 3.1, Ktngswood 0.

great passer, put on an exhibition, prriod, while Walt Pupa took over ball on Holy Cross 38. A "Sliver ee 18. l-oomls 6. Tail 0. Slovenski pass to quarterback to tally a pair of touchdowns early that had the partisan crowd on edge, but the Vols stopped the aerial cascades when it had to.

Three times in the last quarter, Cilmcr passed his team inside the Larry Lllis was good for the score. Slovenski, in for McConnell, flipped from the 23, Ellis catching it on the seven and angling over. A fumble by Frankie Burke led in the fourth quarter. Navy's second team, showing more stuff than the regulars, knotted things up as the second ouarter oocned when Boh Hunt into the place, even though he started out promising himself he wouldn't put a nickel more than $20,000 into Cherry Park. Cooling weather induced the midgets at Avon to switch two weeks ago from Sunday night to Sunday afternoon.

Today marks the close of the season since, unlike the harness horses, the midget autos don't go in for "overcoat meetings." This form of entertainment seems to have sold itself hereabouts without any great fanfare. When Ed Ottos racers return next summer they are likely to get a warm welcome from a new group of sports addicts. Norwich 40. Stoningtnn 0. Malnville 26.

Derby 0. Crosby yi. Abbey 6. Torrlngton IS. Bristol 7.

Karmlngton 1.1. (iilbert 0. lllllhouse 12, Hamden 0. Iwls I.J, Merlrten 2. Wilbraham 14.

Monson 0. Choate 13. Deerfieid 7. Gunnery 2S. Berkshire 1.

Hopklna Cirammar 12. Kent 7, Vols 10, but to no avail Snuthft. Texas 20. Arkansas 0. Texas AAV.M 14, Texas Christian 0.

Texas Tech 13, Baylor 6. Far Weal. Anion State of Flagstaff 14, New exico 6. Bradley Tech 20. Colorado College 0.

Brigham Young 10, Colorado 7. Denver 20. Utah 14. Montana State Inhersity na State College 7. San Jose State 26, Idaho 14.

Snu'hern Calif. 2R. Washington 0. wnn ine games most spectacular dash, a 58-yard touchdown gallop. He also went arou id left end, was stopped almost dead first on the 40 and then on the 20.

but both times shook loose and didn't stop driving until he twisted across the last chalked stripe. The Cadets (Concluded on rage 4, Column .) Hillsides to Oppose Wethersfield Trojans Wethersfield. Oct. 19. (Special.

The undefeated Middletown lo the second Orange score less r-cyianas crew, wnn lion blocked Max Srjellman's attemnt- Stanford 33. Santa Clara 26. t'CLA 1.1. falifornl. Pauline Bet Wins.

Mexico City, Oct. Blonde Pauline Betz, United States I'tah State 47. Colorado AM 0. Washington State 0. Oregon (tie) Western State 19, Colorado Mines 7.

a substitute tailback in a starringjed punt from the N. C. four, and'than three minutes later. Syracuse role, drove 46 yards to a tally injjoe Ta'iente flopped on the hall! recovered on the 33 and three plays the second period and then stopped' in the end zone. Hawkins made it'latcr Ted Hoople, sub left half an Alabama drive in the third 1-7 with a placckick.

jwhose father once starred for Syr- period at the 32 and drove back! F.arly in the second half, in thelacusc. lofted a long left handed ti8 yards for a second touchdown, midst of a Carolina drive, Dick pass to quarterback Paul McKee Lund scored both touchdowns on Scott. Navy's great center, inter-. who caught it sitting down in the short plunges, the first after he cepted a Justice toss on Navy's 15, 'end one. had accounted for most of the and picking up fine interference; With the third period about a yardage and the clincher after 58 yards to the visitors over Jack Kerchman broke Walt Slater.

Tennessee's captain, 'The Middbes reached the one and through and blocked another punt had engineered the effort to with- Hawkins ploughed over renter. 'by Comer behind the Cross goal in inches of the goal. Lund re- placrkirked point. n(l looked line and McKee hugged it to his placed Slater and scored in one. like Navy's day.

xhest for the score. 'American Hockey. Hershey 2, Providence 1. New Haven 2. Pittsburgh 0.

Cleveland 5, Buffalo 3. Indianapolis 6. Springfield 2. St. Louis 7, Philadelphia 3.

Hillsides will nlav the tinrfefeatorf Mt. Hermon 6, Williston o. Greenwich Basslrk 0. Stamford 7. Ansonia 6.

Kast Haten 11, Mliford J. MM ford Prep IS. Jesse Ie 6. Stratford 20. Danhury 11.

Shelton If. Naugaturk 6. Seymour 7, St. Mary's Aradrmy 6. South Kent 12.

Westminster a. Kastern Military Academy 11. Admiral Blllarrt 7. Putnam O. S'affnrd (del.

Chapman Tech 21. Robert Ktirh 1.1. Killtngly 27. Windham Mariaiapolls Academy 3.1. Plalnfield Trojans here tomorrow afternoon! singles champion, unleashed her at 1 -fi I I.

T'l ttuji.i i i rr cart'is tvlat' 1 trim hnp AIl-Ameriea. ttm, nt ut.ut.lt. 1 lit- i vj i.ii.t rwi in nrooK- management will sella limited. fellow Californian, Margaret Os- 'number of tickets at Ihe gate.l borne, fi-4 and 15-13, in the wom- ISUIialO HlSonS 17. San Fran- Fane vtill nm Ko mAmittA National Hockey.

Boston 1. Montreal 1. Toronto 6, Detroit 3. KCO 49-erS 14. 1:15 n'rlnrk i i him- i ivui najiitut..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Hartford Courant
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Hartford Courant Archive

Pages Available:
5,372,109
Years Available:
1764-2024