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Hartford Courant from Hartford, Connecticut • 47

Publication:
Hartford Couranti
Location:
Hartford, Connecticut
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Page:
47
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PART FOUR 1 'mtwsA Sports Automobiles Running Free he ftwt MB Pages 1 to 10 HARTFORD, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1940. Steve Juzwik's Runback Of Intercepted Pass Gives Notre Dame Win Over Army-Jake High Runs Intercepted Pass 88 Yards To Give Brown Victory Over Yale Underdog Harvard Eleven, Aided By Rain, Holds Princeton To Scoreless Deadlock 'Bones' Stepcyk Appears Blocked, But Finds Hole In Yale Line Tigers Fail To Score On Game's Only Chance West Pointers Outplay 1 Opponents But Lose, 7-0 Cadets Drive to Within Striking; Distance Five Times Only to Be Hal ted Each Time by Stirring Stands of Irish Team Small Crowd of 15,000 Sees Allerdice's Passes Ruined by Rain; Attempt at Field Goal by Bob Sandbach Batted Down Penn Rolls Princeton-Harvard Game Statistics Notre Dame-Army Game Statistics Notre Dame Army First downs 4 16 Yards gained by rushing H. 3 38 4 1 23 Georgetown Wins Over Syracuse Hoyas Keep Unbeaten Record, Walloping Rivals in Eventful Contest by 28-6 Score i Syracuse, N. Nov. 2-AP.) 1 To Victory Over Navy Middies Ineptness in Air and Quarterback's Mental Lapse Aid in 20-0 Defeat p.

First downs Yards gained rushing (net) Forward passes attempted 17 Forward passes 8 Yard by lorward 39 Yards lost, attempted forward pamea 0 Forward passes Intercepted by 1 Yards earned, runback Intercepted passes Punting average (from scrimmage) 42 Total yards all kicks returned 199 Opponents' fumbles recovered 1 Yarda lost by penalties 35 174 18 6 63 0 1 0 39 221 (net) 62 Forward passes attempted 8 Forward passes completed 0 Yards gained by forward passes 0 Yards lost, attempted forward passes 0 Forward passes Intercepted by Yards gained, runbaclc of passes 101 Punting average (from scrimmage) 45 (x) total yards, kicks returned 78 Opponents' fumbles recovered Yards Ict by penalties 0 22 41 41 30 (D Includes punts and kickoffs. Cambridge. Nov. 2 Georgetown went through its 22d Aided by the heavy rain, Har-j straight game without rard's underdog football forces held! thrashing Syracuse by 28 to 6 in an a superior Prinseton team to fun 0f nasses. lone runs Philadelphia, Nov.

With the obliging help of Navy's passers and some Middle quarter-! backing that might as well have "stood in bed" Pennsylvania's footballers rolled over the Naval Academy 20 to 0 today before 70,200 fans on Franklin Field. BY J. LEE. (Sports Editor.) Yankee Stadium, New York, Nov. 2.

Army mauled Nctre Dame all over the muddy turf of Yankee Stadium today, but the Irish won the scoreless tie today before a drenched'ancj amazing fumbles. I crowd of 15,000. one of the smallest to witness a "Big Three" gridiron! 7,0 recoveries of Ambles m'i Although knocking the Navy rim trip ranlt of t.hp nnhparpn nnr! the ranks of the unbeaten and! from football game, 7 to 0, on an 81-yard untied, the Quakers were outrushed! ninback of an intercepted forward battle In Harvard Stadium. srectly to a Georgetown tcucnaown. As the ancient rivals battled In1 another launched a thrust that the mud that mined most of Sharp-; ended In an unsuccessful try for a shooter Dave Allerdice's passes and field goal and still another halted a put leg Irons on such consistent promising Syracuse drive on the ground gainers as Bob Peters and Georgetown 36-yard line.

I Bob Jackson, the Tigers failed on The alert Hoyas twice intercepted pass by Steve Juzwik in the first the games only scoring cnance. ipasses ana once snarea a iawrai That chance did not come until; snuff out flaring Syracuse opposi- time after time oy the 2 to 1 underdogs, were outfought all the way, but were able to capitalize on the Middies' ineptness in the air, as well asa mental lapse, to get back on the victory road again after their first loss of the season last week to Michigan. One Is Gift. One touchdown was a sheer gift, when Navy's signal-caller elected to period of what will be recorded as one of the most startling results of the 1940 season. An Army team that was reputedly the most impotent West Point has ever known outdid the South Benders in almost everything except the score.

Five different times the terrific striking force of this heretofore despised Cadet eleven carried the soldiers within striking distance of Notre Dame's goal line, and it was only in keeping their end zone protected against these repeated Army late in the third period after theitlon. Even the Hoy a line got into sklmpv and uncomfortable audience; that game and Bill Erickson. substi-had become bored by the splendid tute center, stole a Syracuse atrial Sunting duel between Peters and land pounded 49 lumbering yards be-larvard's Loren MacKinney and byifore he was dumped a yard from the futile attempts of the rival Syracuse goal line. i carriers to crash the opposing lints. Syracuse, however, recovered a 1 fnmhlM lnnrctwn fnmhla art the next Dlav Harvard had punted 12 times and;" oiI.h3li- try a tourth down pass inside his own 30 yard line in the second period, and it back fired like the kick of a double-barrelled shotgun.

Another tally came on a 76-yard run by 150-pound Johnny Welsh with Princeton before Peters set the! excuse row ftage for the Tigers' opportunity by; final period to prevent a shutout booting the soggy ball 40 yards toand in one other spurt of power v.r,?. five drove from its 47 to the Georgetown Courant Photos. nicture vou would figure that the Brown ball carrier would be thrown for a loss. But such was not the case, an intercepted pass one of six I From the looks of the above "Bones" Stepczrvk. who was earning tne leatner, started on wnat appeared to ot an ena run, oui cut, oacs; snarpiy to iino.

a noie on the play. speedv Trtmsonite carried it back: to! 13. J8' the Yale line and he made 18 yards lorays mat tne msn lived up to their exhalted reputation. Crowd of 78,000 Present. The tense closeness of the struggle fairly amazed a throng of 78,000 that included dignataries of military and cival life, Army men in Navy pitches the Quakers grabbed during the afternoon.

In fact, the one honest-to-gosh score which Penn really counted "on Its own" and with no help frbm rus 2u. wnere ne was mi so nara mi he fumbled and Bill Morris, the big Georgetown scored as soon as It Princeton tackle, recovered. nan me rau in me iirsi penoa. on Thentnst am the Titers anneared a 42-yard pass from Julius Koshlap ttofi under wav. thev drew to Louie Ghecas, Not five minutes Navy came in the first five minutes.

This happened the first time uiiuorm ana muni, Notre Dame Penn got its hands on the ball and nca and great and back-in-motion penalty that after Koshlap recovered a them to a halt on Harvard's fivei fumble on the Syracuse 35, the yard line with fourth down coming Georgetown halfback tossed a 22- poor, small, clergy Bears End Long Famine In Whipping Elis, 6-2 Bruins Have to Put.on Gallant Goal Line Stand in Fourth Quarter to Take Ball Away From Threatening Bulldogs on Own One-Yard Line Up ana live more 10 go. syara pass to due ivicraaaen 10 sev Since couldn't pass and; up a touchdown plunge by Jim Cas-Peters and Bob Perina. then in ac-Ulglta. Yvon Robert Matched Against Leo Numa Yvon Robert, the popular French-Canadian wrestler and former champion, heads Thursday night's wrestling card at Foot Guard Hall, meeting Leo Numa. of Seattle.

Numa last week won over Ed Don George. In the semi-final, Rudy Dusek will tangle with George Manson, an up and coming youngster. mm iauy me meitmg pot that makes this annual meeting of Army and Notre Dame their big day of the year. For those who came chiefly to watch the stirring SDectacle of th was the work of a neat zu-yara i gallop by Francis Xavier Reagan, the Quaker ace. who got back into 1 the "leading man's" role today after understudying Tommy Harmon last week.

Statistically the big edge was i with Navy in this 25th renewal of Yale-Cornell Tickets Go on Sale Monday Tickets for the Yale-Cornell football game Saturday at Yale Bowl. New Haven, will go on sale Monday at 9:30 a. m. in the accounting department of The Hartford Courant on the second floor. The price for reserved seats is $3.30 and the tickets allotted The Courant are in Portal 18 on the Yale side of the field and Portal 2 on the Cornel! side.

General admission is $1.65 and children under 12 will be admitted for 60 cents. Corps of Cadets on parade, It must tion for Jackson, couidnt be de- John Lascan, Hoya right end, appended upon to run. Coach Tad Wie-; propria ted another fumble on the man rushed in another Bob, Sand-; Syracuse 20 in the second period to bach, the placement specialist, to pave the wav for a touchdown bv try to clinch the game with a field Barrett. In the third Koshlap dashed goal, i 16 yards for another tallv to climax Sandbach went back to Harvard's; a drive from the Hova 40. one of the East's annual gridiron classics.

The Middies piled up 17 12. sighted his target in careful! Syracuse's Leo Canale broke awav fashion and then advanced toward the last quarter for a 35-yard run first downs to six, gained 176 yards rushing to Penn's 102 and 147 yards passing to 57. But Penn ran the pass interceptions back 152 yards, and, it so happened that each Quaker interception came just as the Middies were rolling forward and were well Into Vols Turn Back Louisiana State Eleven By 28-0 tne slippery oau mat, Aueraice put the ball 20 yards from the for him. He did manaee to get his; Georgetown goal line, and subse-right foot on it, but that was plunged over for the tallv. 11.

Burgy Ayres and MacKinney Hovas had only a sUght edge crashed so fast that they blocked Sn nrst d0WT1Si to 10 and were the ball together and another vards to i79 but galnd vard recovered it on nlS 21. i Vsr1 on nse tn Svrarnse'a IU I the nome-ciuD territory. As usual. Penn showed a world of power and showed it right Smearing that attempt gave the, tj'neun. Lineup: ITnlnnsp Full Pnwpr in quirk.

The Quakers kicked off. Yale, with nothing else to do but pass, lost the ball on their own 26 when their aerial attack failed. Brown, however, got only to the 17 when the game ended. Bears Thrill Crowd. Starting from their own 20-yard line late in the third period when High's kick from his own 40 rolled into the Yale end zone, the Elis put on a drive that wasn't halted, until thev had had four cracks at the Brown goal line from within the Bears' five-yird stripe.

But the Bears, with victory slipping out of their grasp, put on a goal line stand that left the supporters of both Bill BeU got the Yale drive started when he ripped through the Yale and Brown Game Statistics New Haven. Not. 2 (API Statistics of the Yale-Brown game: Tale Brown First dn'wns 9 7 Yards gained by rushing (net i 118 150 Forward passes attempted 10 0 Fonrard pusses completed 3 0 Yards gained by forward pases 17 0 Yards lost, attempted forward passes 0 0 Forward passes Intercepted bv 0 1 Yards gained, runback of int. passes 0 88 Punting average (from scrimmage! 37 4 33 5 Total yds kicks returned 87 43 Opponents' fumbles recov- ered 1 1 Yds. lost by penalties 30 SO courageous Harvaros sucn a nit; "GEORGETOWN 6VRACTSE le Dve mat mey run not appear in anyi n.ii i nnr, punted back and Penn was Clearing; Path tO COn-(0n the way.

Taking the boot on danger thereafter, despite the gal-'S Paul Christman Hurls Missouri Passes for Three Touchdowns as Tigers Wallop NYU Team ference Title lant attempt the Tigers made Fen, ing the last peTiod. Tice With about eight minutes remain- Lm rb Weber lng. Princeton rushed and passed I from mimieia to Harvaras wnere Courtney Peters faked a right end sweep and Hohip tterl to Perina on Harvard's New Orleans, Nov. 2. (AP.) Tu-lane's resurgent Green Wave snapped the Clemson Tigers" 13-game winning streak today, 13-0, Maine Canal their 36.

Welsh, Ed Allen and Reagan ground out yardage to Navy 28. Then Reagan, who showed his usual brilliance in ball-carrying today he played 58 minutes whizzed round his own right end, cut back toward midfield. and. back of crunching blocking, just breezed to the wire. As far as the rest of the afternoon counted, the folks might as well have gone to a movie right then.

Busik and Lenz. Fired with ieht. Naw rushed and That play, however, wm ruled 1 Arnica a Trinrtrtn hack- hurt hppn rcor' 1 Score by periods: ..14 7 7 0-2S 0 0 0 8 6 in Illegal motion, and the next time srraru nave oeen a disappointment, for the rain that fell all night and until a half hour before game time precluded any possibility of parade. The Cadets merely marched around the borders of the muddy field and then hurried to their seats. Had they paraded on the field, there might not have been a gridiron lefe for the game to be played on.

The sun came out early in the game and shown brilliantly ther est of the afternoon. Irish Attacks Repulsed. Except for Juzwik's touchdown run, Notre Damec rossed the Army's side of mid-field only once during the game. This was when a poor punt slithered off the toe of Cadet Johnny Hatch's kicking foot and was downed on the Army 43 yard stripe, a point beyond which the Westerners did not budge the ball an inch. It had been said during the week preceding the game that Notra Dame's chief difficulty would be in holding down the score, so as not to unnecessarily hurt the feelings of an old and respected friend.

The Armv team solved that problem for their arch rival from Indiana. The inspired West Pointers showed Elmer Layden's all conquering team a neat way of keeping the score down. hTey did it by outgaih-ing the Irish. 237 yards to 62, by outrushing them. 174 to 62, by limiting the supposedly brilliant Notre Dame aerial attack to precisely zero.

Army Hits New High. All up and down the line of statistics, save in points scored and kicking effectiveness, the Army had it over their traditional foes like a circus tent. True to the tradition of the Corps, this twice beaten and once tied Brown forwards for nine yards and 31.000 spectators, a penalty against Brown gave Yalel The Tigers got only four first a first down on its own 34 as the downs. Tulane rolled up 22 first third quarter ended. After Seymour! downs and was constantly driving had picked up five more yards to! into Crimson territory.

BY RONALD MELCHER. Yale Bowl, New Haven. Nov. 2. Every dog has his day.

but it defin Columbia, Mo Nov. 2. (AP.) Paul Christman stayed in the game only 23 minutes today, but his unerring passes counted for three touchdowns in a Missouri Tiger drive which routed New York Uni Gardella insured his team a draw Bitt and running the ball jtuiia), KoshUp: point after touch-out of dangerous territory. oown. Lio 3.

Buivtn sub lor Koshiapt itely wasn't the Yale Bulldog's dayistart the iinai penoa, ne quicsi The touchdowns came on an 80 I 1 wuwA.MVV, tit, I. Hi 11 V- 1 (1 UU I in tne uowi irus anernoon as tne kicked ThP. ball went to OXearv rushed all the wav. with BUI BU ia rim-ruirnui pymruw scoring. IV1CRS limes.

(touchdown. Canale: Georgetown uhs About one out of every three plays fpJ- K'V- wuev. Elis. who have only one victory to lioim lytic; naiiujK iiiuun i-o i Brown 21 and he managed to run 1 0j the first half and a 30-vard run slk from Pasadena. and Cliff it back five yards.

Brown couldn't ar an intercentea bv Fred Lenz. from Latrobe, spear- i h.4 tipt ull.relP.l5? Pa55 reo: hoariinff ths advance Spvpti times. Brown's 21 and he managed to run sik from Pasadena. and Cliff headin? the advance. Seven times.

WjL'Vn kick 19 times, for an average Of 41tnero: Relchey, Erlrkeon: yards, While Princeton's 17 boots jbackn. Bulvln, Doolan, Barrett, Falcone. 6 1, suo muDacK From the beginning it i uic iviiuujca gun luaiuc cuia ov 1 vard line- once 'ere toside the paruauy swppru vy scvciai mic players and Captain Hal Whiteman were goon ior an aaoiuonai yara. oum, wcutoiui. j.mieia: yr- only a question of how lone the a thi This 3btn renewal oi mis ancient rK.r;ri.

fighting visitors could last against Tulane power. The Greenies pushed into Crimson territory five times before scoring. A fumble stopped them once on the 25 and four other times took It on Brown's 37. He carried it back to the 27 before he was finally swarmed under by a host of Brown tacklers. Yale Threatens.

This was just the break that Yale 20. once inside tne ten, ana once they were held for downs on the five. Once Bill Buslk ran a kick back 51 to the Penn 7. only to have the thing nullified when the referee ruled Navy's forwards ran into the kicker. However, they still pay off classic, which dates back to 1877.1 Kansom: auard! Fellows: backs, must be considered a moral victory ney.

Banaer. Heaid. Mimbito. Rodiek. for Harvard, which has yet to top ajCordtuco.

Watt: referee. Oeore Ferbos. sore disappointment to Princeton judre. e. Burt.

Canutus; at I ana, iur uie rauiu, uir iuui wr ivuuaace, i.utw. the series and the first scoreless draw in 59 years. on the points you score, and that was Penn's department. However, probably even the Quakers were Powerful Dukes Rout Harvard came out oi it witn me show for their seasons work, suffered their fourth defeat of the year as the Brown Bears, who haven't beaten a Yale team since wav back in 1932, galloped off with a 6 to 2 triumph. Playing before the smallest crowd that has ever witnessed a football game in the Bowl, the attendance was announced at 6000, and for the most part in a driving rain that made ball handling a precarious job, the Bears intercepted a Yale pass for a touchdown in the first period and then stood off a savage Yale attack in the fourth quarter to prevent the Elis from tying the score.

The Bulldog was finally halted on Brown's one-yard line and the Bears took no chances on a blocked punt as Ernie Savignano, Brown took the pass from center and grounded It in the end zone to give Yale a safety and Its only points of the game. Pass Boomerangs. Brown grabbed the victory just when It appeared that the Yale satisfaction of playing up to it 1940 standard, for about ail It has surprised at their second touchdown. Naw had the ball on its own 29 was looking for and then nearly took full advantage of the opportunity. A Brown penalty gave the Elis five yards and Hovey Seymour twice found a hole in the Bears' line for a first down on the 14.

Yale was set back five yards for being offside, but a forward pass from Bell to Bartholemy got this ground back. Ted Harrison was then inserted in the Yale lineup when it was fourth down with five to go and the Eli with fourth down, a yard to go and 26 seconds left in the half. Navy's auarterback called for the fourth shown to date has been a stubborn defense. The brunt of that defense was borne today by Ayres and Dick Pfister. easily the game's most efficient lineman, for he did the most to check the Princeton ground attack.

Army team gave a magnificent per- down pass. It was incomplete and formance against an enemy it re-Penn took over. Allen faded back. sDects but never fears. It was far Clemson took over in the general vicinity of its 30-yard lieji Then, taking the ball on a punt over their goal line, the Greenies began marching.

After two first downs Lou Thomas, cut back sharply over left tackle and ran 41 yards to Clemson's 16. Then Jim Thibaut faded back to toss a 16-yard pass to Al Bodney, who was alone across the goal line. Thibaut place kicked the point. After Clemson got the ball on an incomplete pass across its goal line in the final period Maness tried a 10-yeard pass to Blalock. Gloden took the ball at a gallop, picked up blockers and crossed the goal line standing up.

Thomas's place kick attempt was blocked. The Wave gained 383 net yards rushing to the Tigers' 52. Lineups and summary: HARVARD PRINCETON tossed a lone one to Bernie Kuc and wav the best performance the left hander completed a pass to The lineups: IBarnea le Wilson ler Morrta Peabody Klnnlrv Bartholemy for a first down on the Brown six. It didn't seem as though the I Ayres lrwin Pf inter rf Robin on Brown team could stop Yale this I Gardiner rt Rice time. But the Bears, who have suf team, which has been kicked around IKoufman re Stanley Macklnney qb Allerdlce Spreyer lh Jackson Lee rh Peters versity 33 to 0 in an lntersectional footbrjl contest-It was the same Christman who defeated the Violets in Ne wYork a year ago with his aerial wizardry.

The Tigers, winners of nine straight games on their home field, counted in every period. But no touchdown was as spectacular as one Christman manufactured with Charles Seattle's aid in the first. After a Violet punt Don (Bull! Reece placed the pigskin on the 34 with a 4-yard plunge. On the next play, Christman faded back and dropped the ball into Seattle's arms on the NYU 34. with Joe Frank of the New Yorkers only a step away.

The two clattered down the east side lines with the Missourian always inches In front and every one of the 19.000 sun-warmed spectators on its feet. Christman was the first down the field to congratulate the sophomore halfback who started his first game. A 20-yard gain on a flip by Christman to Jack Lister opened the doors for the first marker, and in the third period he spanked4wo-yard effort to Captain Jack Crocker for the fourth tally. With Christman resting, Harry Ice took over the attack duties for the Tigers and once broke away for 36 yards on his favorite sweep around right end. Four other times he seemed headed for substantial gains only to slip and fall to the turf.

New York, playing without Negro halfback Leonard Bates, couldn't get ita offense clicking efectively until the fourth period. In the second, however, the Violets put on a drive of 47 yards that carried them to the Tiger 18. The march was kept going by an Interference ruling on Frank's 29 yard toss to end Paul Boroff. Seconds later the same Frank's aerial to Joe LaManna was dropped on the goal line. The Invading Violets played a darting short passing game, tossing often when deep in their own territory.

Four were intercepted, two of the thefts leading to Missouri touchdowns. Christman completed only the three passes that figured In the fered more than their share of woe against Yale during the 60 years series which has seen them win but five times previously to this after- all season, was about to add another upset to the season's record. Yale had the ball on Brown's 10- U. luardella rr ttusee Harvard aunetitutea: ma. morgan: ackle.

Miller: guard, Lowry; back, jaiu imc ran? iu wic gitine wnrninnn hoH n-hat 4t tlf tn the clutch Rav Anrternn threw th fir.t voin noon, naa nat 11 tOOK in tne ciutcn. zynski in the "coffin corner" and, the end waltzed over. The fourth quarter was about half ovsr when Penn wound up its scoring. Welsh grabbed the Navy pass on his own 24 and blockers sprang up all over the field. He cut once to the right, once to the left, then out galloped the opposition to the goal line.

The lineups and summary: NAVY PEN'N Foeter' le McKernan Donahoe It Engler Vltuccl Shlfkman Sims Frlck Sltwka rg Brerhka Churning rt Yard Wangaard re Warner Chip qb Dm is Lens lh Reagan Buslk Welsh Cameron fb Allen Score by perloda: Two successive line thrusts rjy bey CLEMSON TULANE I rteldrn. "V.l"5"'""L'"v..e mow and an attempted end run le Rodney Princeton untuute: enas. nayior, Sonnstreth. Schmon; tackles. Ransom.

ti nMrM tnmrS left His stiU three yards Bi.ndin ft was fa ken In bv Jake inn nfishort of the Brown end zone wlthlJdrtt Jlule llas tSKen OV jaite High, SOn Of ulrri.m trirt Sharp Flower IHowley; guards, Headley. McAllister, ttlt; center. Allen: backs, Perina, Sandbach. Clark. Georgia Tech, 41-7 Durham.

N. Nov. 2. (AP.) Duke scored on the first scrimmage play today, turned loose a barrage of passes mixed with powerful and deceptive line plays, and routed Georgia Tech, 41 to 7. to celebrate homecoming before a crowd of 34.000.

Big Jasper Davis, Duke fullback, headed over his left guard, cut back to his right and raced 78 vards untouched on the first Duke play. The Blue Devils passed for two more touchdowns in the first quarter and after that Coach Wallace Wade kept relief men streaming In. Tech was held to two first downs in the first half but four minutes before the game ended the Engineers obtained dividends on the aerial game. Unbeaten Rensselaer Trips Vermont, 12-0 Troy. N.

Nov. 2-(AP.) Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute's undefeated, untied eleven scored twice in the first half today to defeat the University of Vermont, 13 to 0. It was the Engineers sixth victory of the season and their fourth straight shutout. Sammy Schwartz, slippery RPI halfback, went over from the two-yard line in the first quarter to climax a 37-yard drive soon after the opening whistle. An attempted pass for the extra point was incomplete.

RPI scored again early In the second half when Hoopes, dashed 37 yards. Schwartz's run for the extra point was stopped, Aeferee. E. A. oeuea, Temple: umpire.

I. E. Coogan, Navy: linesman, A. B. to crack the line on fourth Jt nSfour but was stopped.

Both teams, how-bb Hornick ever, were off side on the play andjNanesa qb McDonald Lehigh: field Judge. E. E. 4lller, Penn State. this save the Elis one more chance, team has given this season.

Perhaps the aroused Cadets played a mile over their heads. Pos-siblv the Irish were excusably overconfident. Whatever the reason, a game that was supposed to turn into a disorganized rout of the Army became a bruising, hard-hitting contest, the result of which hung on a thread throughout the entire 60 minutes of gruelling, though not often exciting, action. Cadets Threaten Repeatedly. With Notre Dame bottled up on its own side of the field save for the one vital burst of clutch running by Steve Juzwik, the smashing Army attack reached the Irish four and 20-yard lines in the first period, got as far as the "20" and the -19" in the second, and threatened twice more in the final quarter, as their hard-driving runners moved to Notre Dame's 24 and six vard lines In last ditch effoits to match the spectacular first period touchdown of the South Bend forces.

Some of the late comers had not yet found their seats before the Armv was knocking loudly at the touchdown door. The opening kick-off went to Bob Raggau and Herschel Jarrell. the Army back, hit him so hard that the ball was Jolted out of his arms. Tom Far-rell, West Point end, pounced oa tar (Concluded on Pica IJt Beshunsky's Field Goal a former Brown football hero, on his own 12. It took High but a few strides to break into the open and he easily outdistanced the would-be Ell tacklers into the Yale end zone.

Alan Bartholemy, Yale's brilliant end. chased High for the last 40 yards, but he was never close enough to the Brown fullback to even attempt a tackle. The touchdown run, which was Wins for Temple, 10-7 Again Seymour tried to find a hole, but there were no openings in the Brown line and the Bears took over on fceir own yard line. Give Ells Safety. Pennsylvania 7 6 0 720 Lewlsburg.

Nov. remnle broke its Bucknell "Jinx Pennsylvania acorlng: Touchdowns. Reagan, Kuczvnskl (sub for McKernan) Walsh. Point from try after touchdown. Davis 3 (placeklcks).

Navl substitutions: End. McTlghe. odav by scoring a 10 to 7 victory With the ball almost on their own goal line the Bears had no inten the longest seen In the Bowl this' iver the Bisons on Sid Beshunsky's leld goal from the 25-yard line Froude, Zoeller. Montgomery; tackles. tions of giving Yale a chance to vlth only 48 seconds to play.

season, eventually proved all that Brown needed to end an eight-year famine against the Ells. Only on two other occasions were the Bears CralK lh T. Thomaa Floyd rh Olaaa rimmona (b Thibaut Score by periods: Tulane 0 7 0 613 Tulane acorlrut: Touchdown. Bodney, Oloden laub for Thibaut): point from try after touchdown, Thibaut (placement). Substitution; Clemnon.

ends. Chip-ley. BleMln. Pierce. Pauley.

Sandlfer: tackle. T. Wright. Cable: cuarda, Tl-dale. Hamer: center.

C. Wrtaht; quarterback, Rlon: halfbacka, Coleman. Mc-Elveen, Parker, Pearce. Tulane: Ends. Defraltea.

Oolomb. Brtnkman, Mullln: tackle. Bentz. Brek-ke: guardn. Wolbrette.

Stern, Owens: center. Mandlch: quarterbacks. Orush, T. Olaaai halfbacka, Smith, Ely, Caaslb-ry. Pima: fullback.

Oloden. Referee, Buck Cheevea, Oeorcla; umpire. W. Powell, Wisconsin: lineman. Oeorse Gardner, Oeorgla Tech; Held Judge, H.

O. Mouat, Armour. block a kick and tie the score. Sa-vigno took the ball in his end zone and grounded It. This gave Brown Temple had never beaten Bucknell in a Lewlsburg gridiron before and ever able to penetrate Yales 20 free kirk from Its own 20 and a v'hen the Bisons scored in the sec yard line.

As the first half came tojit turned out the strategy was cor- md Quarter on a 12-yard forward orown nna me oau on xaiesirect. Eggert promptly kicked out Flothmann, Opp; guarda, RowneN'. Feldmeiter, Hill; center. Harwood; backs. Boothe.

Boyer. Werner, Clerk. Rowse. Gutting, Blount. Penniylvania substitutions: Ends.

Kucr.ynskl. Shane. Martin. Crsemer; tackles. Cohen.

Donaldson: guards, Mendelson, Hunt. Hartwig; center. Hitler; backs Dutcher, Chandler, Rein-water. Olfford. Officials: Referee, Leo Daly.

Boston College; umpire, E. T. Hughltt, Michigan; linesman. Joseph McKenny. Bos-ton College; field Judge, F.

B. Wallaca. Washington. tass, Walt Wenrlck to Ed Glass, it 18. But it was third down with about of danger and the nearest that Yale ooked to a crowd or 10,000 as five to go and It seemed unlikely at hough the "Jinx" would hold good.

The Owle tied the score in the came to the Brown goal line after that was the 26-yard line. With the exception of High's (Concluded on rage 7.) tne time tnat Brown would make a first down. The other time that Brown was In scoring territory was in the final seconds of the game. scoring. The trio added 85 yards to hird period on Andy Tomaslc's 14 ard run, the Missouri ground covering total..

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