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The Baltimore Sun from Baltimore, Maryland • 21

Publication:
The Baltimore Suni
Location:
Baltimore, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
21
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE 21 Navy Conquers Duke Gridders, 21-0, Scoring Twice In First Period THE SUN, BALTIMORE, SUNDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 7, 1945 Football Scores BLUE DEVIL FOREST PARK STATE NOTRE DAME TRIUMPHS, 40-7 Irish Trounce Georgia-Tech Before 32,000 Fans 'v Navy 21 Duke 0 21 Richmond 0 PREP Forest Park. 14 St. Joe 7 Gilman 21 Severn 2 EAST Army. 54 Wake Forest ff Penn 12 Dartmouth.

0 Holy 21 Yale 0 32 0 7 7 Tufts 7 Harvard 6 Penn State 27 Colgate 7 Pitt 38 Bucknell. 0 Cornell. 39 New London 0 Brown 51 Boston. Col. 6 30- Muhlenberg.

0 Swarthmore 13 6 W.Virginia 42 Drexel 0 R.P.I 25 14 38 C.C.N.Y.... 0 Conn. 28 6 19 Wore. Tech. 0 Kingspoint.

12 0 SOUTH Notre Dame 40 Ga. Tech. 7 40 V.M.I 7 Florida 6 Tulane 6 Miss. 20 Auburn 0 43 13 14 Vgnderbilt. 7 N.

Car 14 V.P.I 0 S. Car C. ETind'. 6 Clsmsoo. ...13 N.C.SUle.

0 Camp Dr.uick 7 Ft. Monroe. .0 20 Gulf 7 26 L. S. 7 MID-WEST 61 7 20 Northwest'n 7 Indiana 6 Illinois 0 Purdue 13 7 Ohio State.

42 Iowa 0 Mich. State. 7 6 Iowa 13 Kansas 13 W. Michigan'21 Ohio 20 28 Bowl. Green 0 Denison.

26 Otterbein. 14 27 Wayne 6 Ft. Ben'g. .21 Great Lakes 12 Valparaiso. 32 Central Ind.

2 Wabash 35 Wooster 19 S. Ill 6 6 N. 111. Tchrs. 7 Wheaton 0 Luther 25 La Crosse T.

0 Lawrence ...14 Ripon 7 Washburn ..14 Wichita 0 Butler 56 Earlham 7 OlatheNAS 32 Kan. State. 14 Dubuque ..18 Upper Iowa 6 Ind. St 32 I1L 2 Ball State. 29 Franklin 6 7 0 SOUTHWEST Tex.

Aggies. 19 Oklahoma ..14 Texas 33 Texas Tech. 0 Missouri .10 S. M. 7 Arkansas.

27 T. C. .14 Ja'ville NAS 35 Corpus Ch'ti 7 Rio Grande 14 Wittenberg. 0 Tulsa 19 Drake 0 13 Rice 7 5 iSff! aw. fracas at Durham, N.C., yesterday.

Gordon Carver the Duke back on his knees who spilled Scott. Navy triumphed, 21 to 0. CLYDE SCOTT FUMBLES The ball flys out of bounds and is awarded to Duke in the first quarter of the Sailor-Blue Devil Long Runs By Army's Backs ATTACK INEPT Hoernschemeyer, Scott, Kelly Arid Jenkins Excel By CRAIG E. TAYLOR ISun Staff Correspondent! Durham, N.C., Oct. 6 Navy's first team, big, fast and slick, ripped through Duke for two first-period touchdowns, held the Blue Devil attack in an iron grasp through the remainder of the home-coming day football game and tallied again in the fourth session to win, 21 to 0, as 44,000 watched in Duke Stadium today.

Duke, the team that scored 136 points in two earlier contests without a first down against its ground defenses, was totally inept on the attack. George Clark, its key man, went into action for only a few minutes, since he had not recovered completely from injuries received last week. Without him, Duke had no weapons with which a very competent Navy ds- Eob Hosmschsmfycr, Clyde Scott, Eob Jenkin3 and Bob Kelly, were the Navy's attacking backs who were most instrumental in the two touchdown drives that carried 22 and 52 yards. Navy Scores Early The Midshipmen put this game en ice before Duke had an honest chance to advance the ball. As the water-soaked throng watched the action on a field which a tarpaulin had kept from being a quagmire, the Navy regulars kicked off, gained the ball when Gordon Carver punted from the Duke 14, and rolled back from the Sailor 40 to the 6, where the ball was lost on downs.

Undaunted, Kelly took Carver's first-down punt and returned the ball from the Blue Devil 45 to the 22. After Hoernschemeyer sneaked center for a yard, Kelly cross-bucked to the 15. Jenkins burst through center, veered to the right, and rammed to the 1-yard line, and on next down, bucked it across. Currence Boots 3 Points -Jack Currence, Navy's place-Xicking specialist, came in to kick the first of three extra points that extended his string to ten without a miss this year. Navy kicked off again, smothered one Duke running play from the 16, and set in motion another drive from the Navy 48 when Hoernsche-meyer's runback of eight yards advanced the jball to that point.

Kelly was stopped at right tackle for a yard, Hoernschemeyer passed to Leon Bramlett for 7, and Bill Barron, in for Kelly, ripped through his side of the line for a first down on the Duke 31. Hoernschemeyer Scores Hoernschemeyer lateralled to Scott on the right for 3, Jenkins was smothered at left tackle, but Hoernschemeyer, running back to pass, found receivers covered and the way open, so he began to run. He passed the line of scrimmage, and then veered to his right for a touchdown as Barron threw a key block. Two touchdowns in a little more than 10 minutes broke the heart of the Duke team, which made lit tie or no progress at any time. Only once in the first half did the Blue Devils have possession in Navy's half of the field and this was only an advance of two yards across the middle, which was promptly pushed back.

In the final quarter Duke made Its greatest advance, to the Sailor 22, on a pas3 from Bob Frye to Bill Duncan but this threat was fought off by the Navy reserves, who tackled Duke passers for huge losses before they could get the ball away. Scott Starts Long Run The third Navy touchdown came Jn the final period on the longest run of the game. It was a play which struck with the sudden explosive force for which the is noted. Gordon Carver punted out of bounds on the Navy 17, and Navy on the first play sent Scott driving into the right side of the Duke line. He raced toward the sideline, outrunning Arnold Bryson, the only man who had a chance to get him.

Bryson made a leap, but could not grasp Scott's flying heels as the amackover kid kept his course, ktaying inside the boundary and then sprinting the remaining 35 yards at a speed which was only a common canter for this star of the track. Duke wanted to win this game. The entire campus was steamed up for the chance to go into one of the leading positions of the national grid parade. But Navy, ada mant on defense, had the necessary dynamite in its backfield to roll to a convincing victory. Navy Duke Duo en L.K Mote Riser Carrtnston Scott Deramme.

Cocpedge Bramiett Hoernschemeyer C. Scolt Kelly L.T..... snarKey L.G Perinl trowaer Knotcs Marshall Austin KrisTa Aumrr F.B... Carvrr HasgerLr Jenkins Navy 14 nut 731 Scortnc Nayy Touchdowns Jenkins n.mnvhfinmr. Scott.

Tries for onint Currence. 3 in 3 placekicks. Duke Touchdown None. Substitutes: Navy Inds. Wallace.

Mar- kel. Tickles N. Smith. Lawrence. Strahley Chlmihit Guards Turner.

Currence Brown. Hunt. Larkln. Sauer. Centers- Jesse.

Borenson. Backs Pettlt. Minlgl. fiiindhrlm. Welsh.

Bartos. B. Smith, Wlillams. Ambroal. Duke Ends.

Koffen- Vierarer. Dunran. Hayden. Center Deroaatls Tackles Scioncla. OXesry.

Guards Dl- mnnd. Backs R. Smith. Fry. Larue, Bryson, Clark.

MtCuiir. Cftrisiner. Statistics Duka Nav 5 First downs 1 Rushing. 2 Passing 57 Net yards rushing 182 2 lost 48 23 Net yards forwards 10 14 Forwards attempted I 12 completes Intercepted by Interceptions Punts, ftu-aber Returned by Blocked by. BEATS ST, JOE Rally In Last Half To Win Third Straight, U-7 Forest Park sloshed through a murky evening to come from behind and score a 14-to-7 victory over the Mount St.

Joe football team at the Stadium lest night. The Foresters thereby ran their string of straight wins to six, dating from late last season. The game was featured by a 70- yard touchdown run by Jack Buck- noiz in the tmrd period to bring the count up to even terms as the conversion was made on a pass from Bill Reinke to Doug Sutherland. lnis run came with startling sud- deness and changed what had ap pearea to be a Mount St. Joe evening into an uncertain affair.

The Foresters came back in the final quarter to put over the winnine tally on a pass, from Buckholz to Keinke, and a pass conversion, Keinke to Euckhola. Casts Take Visibility wss st 7ro squared oft, but it didn't taae Ui3 JoseDhites Ions to start (hoir parade to a scorins txtsitlnn. Thrv worked the ball with Geppl and laiianeo taking turns to run it from their own 40 yard mark up to the Parkers' 40. Here Tallarico made' a touchdown run around tha right side, and Kirchner booted the point. In the second quarter St.

Joe was thwarted twice after working the ball to Parker's 10-yard stripe with passes. Each time they were penalized for holding and finally had to kick. In the third period the Joseph-ites began their tour toward pav dirt from way back in the misL. Tallarico opened the trek with an end run to the 47. Buckholz Breaks Loose Here Geppi, Sokolowskl and Wdtowicz alternated in totintr thp slippery pigskin for gains of five and ten yards at each try.

They reached the 15-yard mark only to De stopped as" Sokolowski was thrown for a 15-vard loss. The For. esters took over, and it was here tnat JBuckhoiz broke loose and ran through the entire opposition for his touch-down gallop. Nothing more happened during the period, but after the Forresters had lost the ball by a fumble on their own 20 they got to again as they recovered a St. Joa fumble.

Here the Foresters started a convoy of the ball that carried all th way. Schwartz opened with a 17-yard off-tackle run to the 32. Buckholz failed to gain, but Reink moved it six more. Schwartz added another six yards. Here Buckhoh tossed to Geppi and the St.

Joe 47 was reached. Dyke and Buckholz tried th; right end and deposited the ball i the 35. Reinke and Schwartz moved it to the 30. Buckholz then aired one to Reinke over the line. Reink then passed to Buckholz and thet was it.

Mount St. Joseph Forest Park Rehftlr Rommaf Li. I r. r. R.C Roberts Streckli formws'l Sulllv.

i Morri Sorok TucK Dyki Reinl- J. Buckho! Liberia W1.11S De Lisle ino Croaan n.xrir WoytowltV sokoio wsat Tlla.rlrn Gepol P.B. Score by Quarters: Forest Park 0 0 7 714 Mount St. .7 0 0 0 7 Touchdowns St. Joe, Tallarico; Forert Park, J.

Buckholz, Keinke. Extra point--Mount St. Joe. Kirchner (placement Forest Park. Tucker (nlacementl.

Buc' -holzioass fromRelnke. Substitutes Mourt St. Joe, Ament, Slaughter, Klrshncr, Smiti Oaeeler. Service, Muir, Becker. EppK Hauensteln.

Palm: Forest Park. Schwarn, Cheslnck. Hodman, Ricfner, Dublck. Needle. W.

Buckholz. Cameron, Sutherland, New Streamline Executive Desk No. JSL-360 Makers of blah rada executive furniture, since 1876 Center island base offers many advantages. Wood and finish genulns walnut. Enduro or wood tops.

Levelling facilities glva rigidity. Convenient, easy-gliding drawers. "THE KING OF THEM ALL" OPEN THURSDAY NIGHTS BELTS BULBS STRAPS SURGERY HARMFUL INJECTIONS LOST TIME 0 DOUBLE SIS A I '1 Rout Wake West Point, N.Y., Oct. 6 IP) Army's amazing collection of foot ball toters ran away from Wake Forest today to the tune of 54 to 0 as almost every play the Cadets engineered on a wet, slippery field was turned into a touendown threat. From the first six minutes, when two of the Army's breakaway run ners sprinted through the bewildered North Carolinians for touch downs, it was obvious that there wasn't much Wake Forest could do to stave off a rout.

But it wasn't until the third quarter that the Cadets really revealed their strength, piling three touchdowns on top of the 27 points they accumulated in the first half. Cadets Make Long Runs Runs of 50 yards or better ac counted for four Army scores, as Tom (Shorty) Mc Williams set the pace with an 80-yard touchdown sprint, all-America Glenn Davis ran 65 yards to score and Doc Blanchard and llerschel Fuson tal lied on dashes of 52 and 50 yards, respectively. Still another long run, a 53-yard dash by Third-Stringer Bob Rich mond, paved the way for the final Army score. McWilliams and Fuson each made two touchdowns. Wake Forest, which came here Lafayette Cains 7-7 Tie With Princeton Princeton, N.J., Oct.

6 (JP) A stalwart Lafayette football team marred Princeton's return to intercollegiate gridiron circles this afternoon by holding the Tigers to a 7-to-7 tie. Lafayette's touchdown and conversion late in the third period countered the first-quarter Princeton score. The offensives of the two teams were hampered by a downpour which continued through the first period and left the Palmer Stadium gridiron a quagmire. About 4,000 spectators braved the rain, California Defeats Washington, 27-14 Berkeley, Oct. 6 (California's Bears scored a 27-to-14 victory over the Washington Huskies today before an estimated 40,000 fans.

California Fullback Billy Agnew, formerly of the Army Air Corps, helped tie Washington at halftime. In the final period former Navy Air Corpsman John Buestad gave the Bears a 21-14 lead after the fourth period opened. Hasslinger To Play The Hasslinger state champion softball team will take on the Link Radio outfit of New York at Clifton Park today at 11 A.M. Forest, 54 To 0 touted as one of the best Southern Conference teams, didn't have the speed or the line strength to match Army. The Deacons' attack suffered considerably when Fullback Richard Brinkley was hurt in the second quarter and Halfback Nick Sacri- nity limped off with a knee injury in the third.

But even xf these two had played the full game, the Deacons could have done but little better. 443 Yards By Rushing Wake Forest gained only 78 yards by rushing, as compared to Army's 443, although passes en abled the Southerners to matcn Army's eleven first downs. The only Wake 'Forest scoring threat came in the fourth quarter, wnen Army's third team was on the field, and then the Cadets braced and threw it back. The lineups: Wake Forest Bruno Oarrlson Harris Foreman Ratteree Hobbs Harris Oenovlch N. Sacrinity B.

Sacrinity Brinkley Army Pitzer Coulter Oerometta Enos J. Green Nemltz Foldberg Tucker C. Davis Fuson F.B.. Blanchard ticore Dy penoas; Army. 13 14 21 6 54 tirolr.

ft Army scoring: Touchdowns Fuson 2 Davis, Wayne (sub for Foldberg). McWilliams (sub for Fuson) 2, Blanchard. Burckart. Points after touchdowns: wal-terhouse (sub for Tucker) fi. Tufts Spoils Harvard's Football Debut, 7-6 Cambridge, Oct.

6 (if) After scoring with their first nine plays, Tufts waged a grim battle with a steadily improving Harvard football team to gain a 7-6 victory today at the stadium. Billy Irwin tossed a 17-yard touchdown pass to Bill Rohrs, his left end, and then kicked Tufts' seventh point. The Harvard touchdown, also made through the air, came late in the second period when Charlie Roche contacted Herb Fritts with a 22-yard aerial and the latter scam pered 20 yards into the Tufts' end zone. Lee Flynn dropkick try for the Crimson's extra point was blocked. Fort Benning Defeats Great Lakes By 21-12 Great Lakes, Oct.

6 (IP)- Dick Weber, formerly of St. Louis Uni versity, threw three touchdown passes today to give the Fort Benning (Ga.) Doughboys a 21-12 tri umph over Great Lakes Bluejackets. Weber replaced Jeff Burkett at left halfback in the second quarter and immediately started to prove troublesome. His first touchdown heave a 19-yard toss went to End Monk Edwards, formerly of the New York Giants, with 90 sec onds remaining in the first half. Atlanta, Oct.

(IP) A powerful Notre Dame eleven warded off an early Georgia Tech flurry and then unleashed a versatile attack to completely outclass, the Jackets, 40-7, today. A capacity crowd of 32,000 attended. Tech got away to a flying start, driving 52 yards to score in the first six minutes, only to have the Irish tie the count before the ftuarter ended and then sweep aside everything the Jackets had to offer. The visitors spread the glory among half a dozen backs and five of them scored touchdowns, two by Halfback Elmer Angsman, who was used sparingly. Notre Dame scored twice on long passes, twice on sizable runs, and added two more on short plunges.

Jackets Score First Tech tallied first when Jack Peek returned Francis Daar.ewicz's punt 23 yards to ibe Tech 48 and George Mathews plowed to a first down on lr a Irish 40. John Mcintosh passed 17 yards to lid Iloltsingsr, Mathews slipped around end for 16 and on a fake handoff, Hvltsinger ran around the weak side to score. Dan Kyker's placement made it 7-0. The Irish took charge then and dominated the playing, scoring in every quarter. Dancewicz passed 39 yards to Phil Colella near the goal to start the scoring and Stan Krivik, a much-decorated ex-air force pilot, came in to tie the score with the first of four dropkicks.

Then, in the second period, Notre Dame drove 54 yards, mostly on short thrusts by Colella and Frank Ruggeno, capped off by a 19-yard scoring jaunt by Angsman. Just before the half. Joe Gasparella un leashed a 48-yard scoring pass to Bill Zehler who dragged two tack- lers over with him. Brennan Runs 61 Yards Coming back in the third, with a tired Tech team facing Irish sub stitutes, Terry Brennan spiked a Tech threat by intercepting a pass at his 7 and lugging it back 61 yards to set up another score. Angsman cashed the ground offen sive with a 3-yard -lunge and Kyker's kick made it 28-7.

After Notre Dame punted out on the Tech 10 in the fourth period, a penalty put Tech on its 1 and Bobby Davis's punt came out short to the Tech 28 from where John Agnone scored around end on the first play. With four minutes to play, Ag none, Joe Yonto and Lmu Slovak combined to drive 65 yards, the latter lunging over from the five, making the final score, 40-7. The Irish led in first downs, 15 to 10: yards gained rushing, 295 to 159, and completed four of eight passes for 101 yards. Tech tried 22 aerials and completed nine for 72 yards. Notre Dame Skoglund Fischer Mastrangelo Walsh Ravai Berezney Cronin Dancewicz Colella Brennan Georgia Tech X.

D. Busbin Davis Bowen Dult G. Hills Gaines E. Kllzen Holtsinger Mathews Mcintosh Ruggeno Score by periods: Notre 7 14 7 12 40 Georgia 7 0 0 0 7 Notre Dame scoring Touchdowns. Co lella, Angsman (2, sub for Colella), (sub for Colella), Agnone (sub lor Brennan), Slovak (sub for Brennan), Points after touchdown Krivik (4.

sub for Rua- gerio, diopklcked). Georgia Tech scoring- Touchdown. Hoisinger. point alter touendown Kyker (sub for Kilzer, placement, Holy Cross Laces Yale, 21-0; Koslowski Stars 11 1 1 New Haven, Oct. 6 (IP) Big Stan Koslowski, who as a kid hoped someday to grow up to be another galloping ghost like Red Grange, his idol, ran and passed his Holy Cross footballers to a 21- 0 triumph over Yale in the bowl today.

Koslowski, who even wore jersey No. 77, famed by Grange, played a prominent part in every one of the Crusader scores as Yale dropped its first game since the end of the 1943 campaign, and suffered its first shutout in 26 contests. The blond Koslowski, aided by solid line play, and excellent blocking and pitching by Veto Kissell and running of Joe Byers. outsmarted and outfought the Klis as some 25,000 fans a big crowd con sidering a steady rain fell until just before game time looked on in amazement at the Holy Cross power and Yale inability to cope with it. Columbia Crushes Syracuse, 32 To 0 New York, Oct.

6 (JP Colum bia's promising Light Blue eleven smeared old Bill Orange under a five-touchdown deluge today, 32-0, handing Syracuse its third straight setback on the rain-soaked turf of Baker Field. Fulback''Lou Kusserow, a 175- pound freshman from Glassport, toured 51 and 47 yards on re spective scoring gallops and added a third tally on a 36-yard play after catching an aerial from Gene Rossides. Bainbritlge Will Open Grid Campaign Today Bainbridge, Oct. 6 Spe cial! The Bainbridge football Commodores will open their third year of football at 2.30 tomorrow at Tome Field when they play host to the Atlantic City Naval Air Base eleven, which is coached by the former world's heavyweight wrestling champion, Lieut. Com.

Don George. Pro Football The National Professional Football League's schedule for today: Detroit vs. i Green Bay, Milwaukee. Chicago Bears at Cleveland. Chicago Cardinals at Phila delphia.

Washington, at Boston. New York at Pittsburgh. ii i ,4.. MINNESOTA WINS BY 61-7 Hands Nebraska Worst Beat ing' In 28-Game Series Lincoln, Oct. 6 (IP) Minne sota's merciless Gophers had their production line in full swing here today and turned out nine touch downs to swamp a game but out classed Nebraska Cornhusker elev en, 61-7.

A crowd of 25,000 watched the contest. Winning their sixteenth straight victory for Coach Bernie Bierman, who came back to Minnesota after thret years in the Marines, the Gophers poured over six-pointers with monotonous regularity. Hudson Scores Three Substitute Fullback Hudson Mealey went into the game shortly after the opening kickoff when the great Vic Kulbitski was jniured. He turned in a tnree-touchdown per formance and made good two place- kicks for a total of 20 points. A powerful Minnesota line held Nebraska to a minus 17 yards on rushing plays, while Gopher backs rolled up 504 yards on the ground good for 24 first downs.

All of Nebraska's first downs came on passes or penalties. It was the most one-sided game in the 28-game series between the two teams. The Gophers warmed up with a single touchdown in the opening quarter, Mealey crashing center from eight yards out and Merlin Kispert adding the point. Then they stepped up their output to 14 points in the second, 20 in the third and 20 in the fourth. Gopher Backs Roll Fullback Dick LuU contributed two touchdowns for Minnesota, while Bob Kaspar, Bill Shearer, Bob Carley and John Westrum added one each.

The Gophers stuck to straight power foot ball, but their touch downs covered just about everything in the books: short steady stabs between the tackles, an end sweep runback of an intercepted pass, and a blocked punt. jNebraska snowed a fancy second- quarter passing attack to sandwich i a touchdown between Minnesota scores. Halfback Mack Robinson completed five of six tosses in a 51-yard march, pitching the last five yarjs to 17-year-old Freshman Don Sailors. Bui Sloan converted from placement to end Nebraska scoring. Maryland Trips Richmond, 21-0 Richmond, Oct.

6 (IP) Maryland, bolstered by a number of former North Carolina Preflight players, tonight defeated a scrap ping university of Richmond eleven 21 to 0 on a wet and soeev football field before a small crowd of less than 2,000 persons. Maryland reserves plaved the final quarter, easily holding the Richmond eleven in check. Superior weight and drive both in the varsity and reserve teams proved too much for a scrappy Spider eleven which outdistanced their opponents in the air but lacked the power to put this advantage to good value. Maryland scored on the first play of the game after taking the ball over from Richmond on downs, Bill Poling, 160 pound back from Athens, Ohio, took the ball on his own 33 and galloped 67 yards for the first touchdown. He added the extra point from placement.

Ihe Old Liners scored again in the second quarter when Harry Bonk, freshman back from Bladens burg, and a former Dartmouth and North Carolina Preflight grid der, culminated a Maryland drive, by going through center to score from the 5-yard line on fourth down. Poling booted the extra point. Maryland Elchmond Diservlo Bode McCarthy Sooper i ohnston i L.H Bunt Schrecongost Schwartz Drach Crossland Turyn Poling Behr Null Zlzak Mathias Johnson Josefowicz Vesprile Scafedi Bonk Stoneburner Score periods: Maryland 7 Richmond 0 S.orinar touchdowns: 7 "7 021 0 6 0 Bonk (2). Poling, Points aftr touchdown Poling men la Barnes (for Poling). 1.

2 (Place' FAR WEST 27 USC. 26 Wash. State 33 Oregon 33 Colorado .18 Color'do Col 43 Wash 14 St. M. Pre.

14 Oregon 0 Idaho 7 Utah 13 Kansas AAB 6 Gilman Defeats Severn By 21-2 Gilman School opened its varsitv football campaign yesterday after noon on Its home Roland Park Field -with a handy 21-to-2 victory over aevern. Rain fell continuously through out but failed to mitigate Gilman's superiority both overland and in the air. The Roland Parkers scored halfway through the first quarter, when Halfback Dick Tucker south-pawed a 35-yard pass to Quarterback Graham Menzies, who made a nice running catch over his shoulder in Severn's end zone. Gil Hooper's attempted conversion was wide. Early in the second period, a coffin-corner kick by Severn's Till-son put Gilman in a hole on their own 2.

Attempting to punt out. Hooper muffed the pass from center and he was smeared in the end zone for a safety. However, the big fullback atoned for this temporary setback by getting off a 54-yard punt which rolled dead on Severn's 2. Tillson, also trying to kick out of danger, fumbled, and he was smothered in the end zone by Gil-man's big line for a safety. Leading, 8-2, at the half, Coach Ferris Thom-sen's Gilmanites pushed over two touchdowns in the third quarter to clinch the soggy contest.

Gil Hooper broke off tackle for a 48-yard jaunt to pay dirt and later Tucker again passed to Menzies for a 30-yard touchdown toss. Ullman Boyce l.amdln L.T.... Magruder L.U... 8tump Slack llutchins Crawford R. E.

Menzies Q. Tucker L. H. Gould. R.

HoopeV F.B... Score by periods: Gilman 6 Severn 0 Touchdowns' Gilman Severn Wlutaker Burden Wyatt Fisher Hernandes Lake Pchoen 0. Youna Tillson Vandenbert H. Lake 2 13 0 2X 3 0 03 Menzies. 2.

Hooper. Points after touchdown Crawford (placement). Safeties: Oilman Tillson (tackled In end sone). Severn Hooper (tackled In end one. Substitutes: Gilman Carey, Cherry, T.

Albert. Harvey, Nash. McLean, Humpstone. G. Thompson, Griffith.

Evans. Price, Edens. Severn Hall. Capshan. Carroll, C.

Lake. Bradley. Boas. Rixey, Schwlnd. Time of Quarters 12 min.

ALLEYS OPEN For Leagues' ARCADE BOWLING ALLEYS NORTH AVE. MARKIT hon MU. 31J Frea Parkins MICHIGAN TOPS WILDCATS, 20-7 Northwestern Scores First, But Bows To Late Attack Evanston, 111., Oct. 6 (Michi gan's high-geared scoring machine overwhelmed Northwestern today, 20 to 7. The Wolverines, blending run ning and passing plays in a dazzling and deceptive attack, took complete charge of the game after the Wildcat lightning struck them down briefly before the game was in progress 2 minutes.

Thereafter, Michigan hard- charging line and swift moving hacks functioned efficiently to score In each of the first three quarters, while 40,000 spectators looked on in Dyche Stadium. Connors Shakes Loose i Dick Conners, Northwestern's ball-carrying ace, shoved the Wolverines back on their heels as the clock registered 1 minute and 33 seconds of the opening period, conners slanted off his left tackle and sprinted 66 yards for a touchdown. Jim Farrar placekicked the extra point. Michigan bounced back quickly with power and punch. Taking the ball on the Northwestern 48 alter a punt, the Wolves moved to the 36 on line thrusts.

Joe Ponsetto passea to Art Renner for 18 yards. Walter Teninga took a lateral and galloped to the Wildcat 4. Jim Foltz whizzed around his left end to cross the goal line, but Ponsetto failed to make the additional point. Elliott Plunges Over Fond started another drive by returning a punt to the Northwest ern 23. A pass, a lateral and three thrusts into the line carried to the 1-yard stripe.

Pete Elliott bucked over to put his mates Ponsetto added another point from placement. The Wolverines took immediate advantage of another opportunity in the third quarter, when Harold Watts pounced on Jim Farrar's fumble on the Wildcat 24. Elliott picked up four and" Jack Weisen- hurger contributed five on plunges. Elliott added another ten on two power plays. Dan Dworsky skipped through center for the final five yards.

Ponsetto came through with a placekick for the last point of the contest. Mtchiiin Norlhwejf rrn Rennrr L. Morris Johnson L. Hagmann Tomasl L.u Scnuetz Walts Miner Wllklns R. Lecture Hinton R.T..

McNeill R. Oorski Ponsetto Farrar V. H. Balrstnw Nuisbaumer R. Conners Dworsk F.

Travers bcore oy period: Michigan 6 7 7 0 20 Northwestern 7 0 0 7 -Mirhtean Kcnrlnr Touchdowns. Foltz (sub for Dworsky). Elliott (sub for Tenin ga), Dworsky. Points after touchdown Ponsetto 2. placements).

Northwestern scoring Touchdown, Conners. Point after touchdown Farrar (placement). BETTY KALER PATTERSON PARK'S PEPPER get plenty of vocal support are rnnr am i iWswiijdi'V IELWITTOEin)? free nn EXAMINATION DEMONSTRATION CONSULTATION LITERATURE Reason should teach you not to place a bulb or ball in opening of rupture, which keeps muscles spread apart. D0BBS TRUSS CO. SINGLE S10.

40 i 30 1V3 S3 4 48 87 77 10 6 Punts, avers Returned by KkkotTs. average kicks Punts Ktckoffs Ball lost Penalties. lost on penalties Pinal senTe Touchdowns 3 12 12 2l Conversion 330 N. CHARLES PROFESSIONAL BALTIMORE 1, MD. PHOXE LEXINGTON 1492 (SUITE 509) OPEN II A.

M. ts P. M. DAILY Ntw Dtsln Single Strata! SIS Doubls Scrotal $20 11 in rr -it rr 'iiTsTiTJTiTr' fmn lor-iiswrTirn-Tiigrw sTr-rTTT-r-r-n mmtmtwm 3 BERNICE SIMON ANNA JEAN SCOTT UPPERS Making sure that Patterson Park's football warriors will these three attractive young cheerleaders for the Blue and White..

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