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The Baltimore Sun from Baltimore, Maryland • 22

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The Baltimore Suni
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Baltimore, Maryland
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22
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2 THE SUN, BALTDIORE, SUNDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER 14. 1937 Harvard Eleven Dents Stubborn Davidson Defense For 15-To-O Victory FOLEY MAKES 2 TOUCHDOWNS Halfback Scores Second On Brilliant Run Of 63 Yards Forward Pass Carries Notre Dame's Irish To Army's Three-Yard Line CORNELL HOLDS Teams Play To Deadlock In Rain At Hanover Before 15,000 Fans Visitors Attack, Rushed By Crimson, Is Unable To Get Started Indians Drive GO Yards To Score After Fumble Gives Ilhacans Break HARVARD, 15; DAVIDSON, 0 By tht Associated Preil Cambridge, Nov. 13-MYind DARTMOUTH, CORNELL. 6 IDy th vlori(ited TrcsaJ Hanover, N.

Nov. 13 The notorious jinx that haunts Dartmouth football teams, In a numcralogical guise this season, caught up with the undefeated Indians again today, and Cornell's powerful forces held them to a 6-6 deadlock before a rain-soaked and overflow crowd of 15,000. Two weeks age the Indians went to the Yale Bowl with high hopes of winning their third straight victory over the Elis in the twenty-first renewal of thai Ivy College series, but they left with a 9-9 tie. The setup was exactly the same today, for the Indians had played twenty previous games with big Red teams and had won the last two. Roth Smothers Fumble As one sauallv shower swiftly fol WIEPHTO i NEW YORK Harry Stevenson, Notre Dame substitute (at left), tossing a forward pass to Ennio Arboit, another Irish reserve (at extreme right), to plant the ball on Army's three-yard line during yesterday's battle won by the Irish.

The play went for nothing, however, as a fumble on the goal line a moment later prevented a touchdown. Sunlikt On Sporto NOTRE DAME BEATS ARMY Irish Get 7 Points; Miss Five Other Chances To Score Hats Off To Hopkins! it a Not Decmphasized Londos Is Signed and rain were the deciding factors to day as a spasmodic Harvard attack punched out two touchdowns, a point after and a safety to beat Davidson. 15-0, in an intersections! game. A crowd of 4,000 shivering spectators cheered the gallant of the North Carolinians, who held the high-powered Harvard eleven scoreless for the first period, then grudgingly yielded two touchdowns by Frank Foley, left halfback. The first came in the second period after a lo slow march and the other in the third on brilliant 63-yard run.

Alternating at the position with George Roberts, Foley provided the peed and power that led the Harvard offense all through thw long, dreary afternoon. Besides his two touchdowns, he raced 55 yard across the goal line in the first, only to be called back for a roughing penalty incurred by Ken Booth, Crimson tackle. Davidson's running attack never got under way, as a strong Harvard line rushed kicks and line plays alike. Thmdsosi Warden I. '-fjftiwa Ht-trr! Winter Keorkia: S- Purdy Graham lTiwa Ta! Tt r.

Hmn.i Booth K. Daiishtrra Bto .1.. Bohens i K. Dtnrva Struck n. 6 7 215 Tourtujowm Harrd.

Fol Point after teucodowa Booth Riihi. Sif'j ITilliama. U. Of California Drubs Oregon, 26-0, In Wet Contest At Portland Portland. Ore- Nov.

13 (JPy University of California's undefeated football team trounced University of Oregon. 26 to 0, today in their Pacific Coast Conference game played on a muddy, rain-swept field. Twenty thousand fans saw the Bears, favorites to represent the coast in the New Year's Day Rose Bowl game at Pasadena, punch over three touchdowns in the second period and add a fourth in the third. Anderson, California fullback, crashed to a touchdown from the 2-yard line on the second play of the second quar ter, after the Bears had marched from their own 48. Halfback Bottari ran a punt to the Oregon 23 to touch off the second drive Oregon Halfback Lasselle had been forced to kick from behind his own goal line.

Anderson slashed through tackle to the 15. Halfback Chapman made it first down on the 3. then circled the Oregon left side for the touchdown. Tackle Stoll set up the third scoring chance when he recovered an Oregon fumble on the Webfoot 34. Two passes, Bottari to Quarterback Meek, gained the 5-yard line.

Sparks, substitute end, caught Bottari's third heave for a touchdown. In the third period Ingram, sub halfback, gained 24 yards and 19 yards on successive runs to place the Bears on the Webfoot 18. Thomas, a couple of plays later, went over from the 3-yard line. California Oregon Poiaian tB y'rbT Iw aroaa I.T Fbkett r.ans ajKjranim Hecw Ktirkbia i Amato hstea BotMTtWl Sdsen Stoil K.T..... ehwarta ik 9 Bottari -iH Chapanaai R-H Anderson Laelle Row Score 'T rxnoda: California 0 0 0 Toochdona California.

Anderon. Char-anao. Spars fnt for Dotmanl. Thomas (sub I'hauuiant. foint from try after toochdokn Vfk.

si-arks Referee Bobr-T afoins Umpire Mike Jloran (W. 8. i He.ri linMinan IH. Yi. S.

li'rr ((Jon- w). fieid juuxe ferry Mitchell (Washias- Manhattan Subdues North Carolina State New York. Nov. 13 HVA couple of crack mud horses, Ed Kr ingle and Jake Kopicki, conspired on a rain soaked gridiron today to lead Manhattan's green-clad Jaspers to a 15-to-0 intersectional victory over North Carolina State's Wolfpack. The heavier Manhattan eleven led by a field goal before the game was 5 minutes old.

A Manhattan punt bounded against Di Yeso on State's 10-yard line and Jack Daly, a ball-hawk all day, was on it for the Jaspers on the seven. Three plays got nowhere, and Kr ingle, with Caruso holding the ball, dropped back to the 13 and booted the ball between the uprights for three points. Before the period was over, Daly burst through State's defense to block Lozier's punt and Pomecter fell on it on the 15. Spisak and Kopicki reeled off a first down and Kopicki bobbed through center for four yards and a touchdown. Krtngle attempted placement was wide.

Holy Cross Noses Out Brown, 7-0, In Rain Providence, R. Nov. 13 Holy Cross remained amon? th nation' unbeaten football teams by defeating Brown, 7 to 0, today during a driving rainstorm that made playing conditions the worst they have ever been at Brown Field. The storm kept the crowd down to a few thousand and forced both teams to resort to straight football. The Crusaders were content to protect an early lead.

They scored a touchdown in the first period on a 37-yard march climaxed with a 22-yard coring run by Bill Osmanski. Holy Cross used only five plays in this drive. lowed another, the evenly matched Indians and Ithacans played cautiously, ittempting" to force a break. One finally came Cornell's way in the third period, when Sid Roth. 200-pound guard, smothered Bob MacLeod's fumble on Dartmouth's 33-yard line.

The Ithacans grasped their opportunity tightly and started rolling. Whit Baker, right halfback, crashed twice to Dartmouth's 17 as the period ended. Starting the last period, Baker completed the first aerial of the game, a five-yard flip over the line, to Vinny Eichler, his quarterback, who fought his way to Dartmouth's four, from where Bob Rose, a fullback replacement, drove inside his left guard for a touchdown and then missed converting the extra point. That reversal inspired the Indians to supremo heights. Fred Hollingworth raced back Rose's kickoff 20 yards to Dartmouth's 40 and ten plays later Colby Howe faked a reverse on Cornell's 2-yard line before skirting his left end, entering Cornell's end ions) untouched to register the tying point.

Pass Gains 24 Yards The longest gain in that furious 60-yard scoring march was the game's second completed pass, a Hollingworth-MacLeod toss that wiped out 24 yards. The rest of the yardnge resulted from the short Lut bruising slams Howe and MacLeod made through Cornell's stonewall line. There were six minutes remaining when Thil Dostal, the Dartmouth placekick specialist, came in to try for the seventh point, but the gridiron was so treacherous that even he couldn't produce. Three minutes were used up when Cornell tried to rush from its 20 after Dostal kicked off into its end rone. Finally the eager Indians took a punt in midfield and started another furious drive against time as well as Cornell Gain 33 In Eight Plays As they pounded 33 yards In eight plays, to Cornell's 17, Coach Earl Bisk sent in substitutes to stop the clock.

It appeared that the time he was saving would be enough to permit tht players to crash through with the winning touchdown. But the last chance for victory sputtered out when Lud Pyrtck, one of the subs used to check time, fumbled-on an end-around play. Sam Stahl and Eli Hooper, the Ithacans' punting guard, recovered the slippery ball on their 13-yard line. iv seconds before the game ended. I'arlmoul li I tl Miller IMIkea Ihu-ksorth Holland MrKeeter I'i Koth tahl er Van Itaiat 11.,., Ni-n tichl It naker If Btnn ft ZitriHea tchddsniu ltavtn tlatea Ibdbt'Ewortt Marlrod Howe Part mouth.

ortiell Ton hdoMiis llarlmniith. Iloe; Cornell. Ho (nh for Hmwni. Snliat itutea lartmniith. ends, t'arka, l'rtet.

Hull: U'-klea. l.tal, Tar.inr; fuard. CainoN Cottoue. Knur. Ilntrh-iin' Cornell, end.

liurke: guard, llnsninf-way. Vines hacks, NeUon, Hose. Moulton. Maryland-Georgetown And Navy Princeton Tilts Head State List The Navy visit to Princeton and the Maryland-Georgetown clash in Washington head an attractive list of games involving State college football teams this week. Navy, rested since the Columbia Vic-, tory, has 'Jgh hope for a triumph over the Tiger.

The contest is doubly interesting here because Princeton is one of the two teams scheduled to play Navy in the Stadium next autumn. The Midshipmen need a victory, having scored only over Columbia in their major contests this year. The Tigers, though, are in even greater need of a triumph. Since this is their last game of the campaign, they will shoot the works, while Navy will be under compulsion to keep as much back as possible with Army comin up the following Saturday. Army, in the meantime, will have little St.

John's as Its guest of the afternoon, and the Creylegs' regular will see only as much action Gar-Davidson and company think they will need in preparation for the Navy game. Maryland and Georgetown will battle in Washington in one of ths bitter rivalry games of the season Having been held apart because olj the intense feeling between the students of the two institutions for manyi years, the Hilltop and College ParW universities resumed relationship only) a few years ago. British Links Copied Johnny reports that the holes laid out by I'erry In Hutchinson, Is the best exampl nf British llnksland coif In The land formation duplicates th ami dunes of the. British coastline. PrslrlsJ winds substitute for salt-water breaarss HOPKINS DOWNS AMERICAN, 25-6 Jav Backs Run For Long Gains Aided By Great Line Plav (Continued from 1st Sports Page) stubborn type line play on the part of the Amerk U.

forwards, led by Davido, Schul and Carlo, had temporarily halted the Jays' running attack, when Kerstetter faded back from the Hopkins 30 and tossed a heave over the left side of the line to Spilman that was good to the American 45. Bower stopped the Hopkins ace by a shoe-string tackle with the field ap parently wide open for another touch down. However, runs by Maxcy, Kerstetter and Spilman brought the ball to the American 22, from where Kerstetter carried it around left end to the 3-yard line and followed with a right-end dash for a touchdown. Spilman 'place-kicked the point. Goaded by this additional Hopkins affront, American U.

came back fighting in the fourth quarter. They passed an. ran the ball to the Hopkins 25-yard line, from which point Schulze caught a beautiful pass from Toner that was good to the Hopkins 5. Ellis broke up a line buck. Two passes failed, and then Schulze connected with another pas that was good on the goal line for a touchdown.

An attempted pass for extra point failed. It was American only bolt, however. Hopkins ran in almost the entire squad of substitutes daring the remainder of the game, and the subs showed form that rivaled the varsity. Nicholson, substitute back, cut around left end for a beautiful long run for a touchdown before the game ended, Hot in Haltwrt American Moor L. I'ajr Kojratft I'tvM-a Victor Mairj y.R...

-loop carta Itnuon Harm Sitnik SclmU if aiza Toner StniM 3teiaon Siv.lmaa H. Score by period: American A 0 ft John Hopkin. AST Srorin Touchdown. American 6 Schulr Hopkua. Kerstetter.

Hay. Xichoiaon after Spilman. Official Refer, clem Sriiii (St. John'al; umpire. Howard Ejrth (Carnegie); bead Unesauu).

Howard Cnidard (Springflcid. 'iron. Rodo. Lehiierc, Buck, I'enniman, Ciua-ter. ileNiint.

Tr4ia. Hectii, Kiiboume, Fuller. HtU. Karpuk Jliliigan. American I'niteraity: VV inkier, i)ando, Uowaid, Bcnrer, jiancborougli.

Guard Falls On Fumble To Win For Georgetown Sew Tork. Sot. 13 W) Id a netting of thick. Kooey mud and an aluioxC continual downpour of rain, tieortretown University- football won a comedy errors from New l'ork Uni versity, wo O. today before 8.W1O fano who huddled in the Polo Grounds and spent most of their time trying to keep dry.

The jrame was more a combination of water polo and submarine warfare than football, with the local Violets making one more miscue than their rivals and thereby losing the ball fame. In fact, a play of the "bonehead" Tariety. pare nd simple, in a wild few minutes midway of the fourth quarter reallr decided the lue in favor of the Ilnyas from Washington. to then, the Violet had held their own. tn spite of a deceptive attack on the part of Georgetown, featured br lateral panne from Tom Keatinic to joe Mel-lenditk.

and tricky reverses between these two. In the fourth onarter. however, everv- ihintr waa niuideuly chanced when titan Mikulka apparently lapsed into a day dresin Jnut a Georgetown print came sailing In his direction. The ball xL-11Ipi oft hit knee and rolled toward the Violet foal, but Mikulka made no ef. fort to chase it as Bob Snyder.

Georgetown left end. dropped on it on the 3-yard line. Mcllendick then elected to buck the line, but was hit a he came charging inrougn. tue Dan uouneed out of hi arms and into the end xone. Bernie Bloom crabbed it on the fly.

hut It was too slippery for him to handle also and it slithered around In the end sone until John Frank. Georgetown left sruard. fell on it for the touchdown. The try for extra point was blocked. out toe pan game was over right there.

Boase Family's Job Vnrmtn Rai nrTinial a( 11. i and Ancient Golf Club, of Scotland, has an unbroken family connection of n-rly l.V Tear with the eluh in or treasurer's Capacity. 1 of the game was made by a drunk carrying an umbrella. He skirted both teams and outran two policemen on a 60-yard dash, attempting to present an umbrella to Sweeney, before he was finally collared by two cops and tossed off the field. The Lineup New York, Nov.

13 Lineup and summary of the Army-Notre Dame game follows: N'otrs Uaius ArrnT t.K Knls Iteinor Slmlicr not at Skaer 'H'rtr U.rtline Kuliaru-h SI til a shclluH IslM'll Smu.l OHtMlly g.B loan SteTeiiMi II Wilson Arboit K.H Lopii Sinioiiieh Sclmenk feeitre by Tnod: Notre Dame 7 0 0 0 7 Army Scorii! Toudi'lowii: Notrt Dame Simon Ich Poiut slur touchdown liuilly luiactnicutl. Statistics Army Xotrs Dauie irt iloiin 10 27 gained by milium Kornanl oa aUiriiHrteil. 4 Forward Hansen completed 64 gained by forward 81 loat. attrtnutrd forward naawa. 0 .1 patae interr-pird 5 tamed, runbark of int.

21 4' average tfrnm 77 yards, ki'ka '2 fmnblr recovered. 1 5 Yards loat br 40 Include punti and kirkofTs. PASS WINS TILT FOR MINNESOTA Intercepts Northwestern Toss, Then Go Over For 7-0 Win NORTHWESTERN, 0 By the Associated Press Minneapolis, Nov. 13 A Northwest ern forward pass that backfired for a 53-yard Minnesota gain set the stage for a 7-to-0 Golden Gopher victory today. Duttiner the latter within one game of undisputed possession of the 1937 Big Ten title.

With the contest less than fiv min utes old, Capt Ray King grabbed a Wildcat forward on his own 30 nnrl raced down the field to the North western 17. Then the deadlv Van Evrv.tn-TCinir passing combination nroduced the onlv score in a fiercely fought battle that found Minnesota dominating the play in all but a few instances. Gophers March The SDectacular olav that sent Min nesota on its victory drive came after Northwestern had smashed directly into Minnesota territory right after the opening Jsickoff. With the ball on the Gophers' 40. Don Hean shot a snappy forward diagonally across the field, intended for Swisher.

Instead, the pigskin dropped into a cluster of tnree Minnesota men. On the fourth down Harold Van Every, carrying on for the injured Anay uram, hred a short pass from the 17-yard line over the line of scrimmage. CaDtain Kins sneareri tha hall on the 4-yard line and charged over to score. Horace Bell, Negro guard, converted. Northwestern Koratch T.

Minnesota Kred Schtilts K'llbitak! Twedrlt Midler Kliwr Van KVery lore Btitilar Outlich t' llaman flolilak Voiijui K.T Hy K. Vanao Heal If La-kar f. Scorp by tx'riodt: Minnesota 7 0 0 0 Northwestern I) Tourlirtwn King, l'oiut after touchdown Bell (iiHurment). Michigan State Beats Carnegie Tech, 13-6 East Lansing, Nov. 13 (ZD-Michigan State took to the air to down a fighting Carnegie Tech eleven, 13 to 6, here today before a home-coming crowd of 20,000.

All of the touchdowns were scored in the first nine minutes of the second period. With two brilliant halfbacks, Merlyn Condit and Ray Carnelly, lugging the ball, Tech put the Spartans back on their heels with a 60-yard march to the one-foot line as the first period came to a close. On the initial play of the second period, Fullback Jack Lee went over from the one-yard lint. SYRACUSE TIES COLUMBIA, 6-6 Taylor Scores For Lions, Sadat-Singh For Orange -On Muddy Field SYRACUSE, COLUMBIA, 6 IBy the Associated Presjl New Yoik, Nov. 13 Jupiter Pluvius won the decision over both Syracuse and Columbia today as the two elcvons dipped and splashed on a muddy field to a 6-to-6 tie before 12,000 rain-drenched persons at Baker Field.

After two brief scoring spurts In the first half, one by Columbia in the opening period and the other by Syracuse in the second, the game relapwfd into a muddy battle in midfield. Columbia had its first victory in a month in its zrasD when. ftr Hnh Taylor had slammed over center for a toucnaown bid Luckman kicked the ball squarely between the goal posts. But a holding penalty nullified the point and, when the Lions' end Schulze tried a second kick 13 yards back, it was off. Luckman Leads March The Lion touchdown climaxed a march that started when Luckman took a kick on his own 28.

With the inevitable Luckman doing most of the work, the Lions went to the 1-yard line via an interference penalty on a forward pass. Syracuse shook Wilmeth Sidat-Singh, fleet halfback, loose for a 41-yard touchdown romp in the second. The Orange put the ball in play on its own 40 after Harold (Babe) Ruth had returned a kick. On the second play Singh went wide around his right "end and took a lateral from Ruth. He swept down flald behind fine blocking for th xmr Jim Bruett's placekick, which would nave won the game, was wide.

The lineups: SvrarniMi Mark, ski II.M.er G. Iiaiivlierty Hftlft Kckii J. Taylor fllirkmau inkle Baylock Score fcy lienmia: Columbia unlit Swe, nev Waldo Jtatflllall Stanejk ltckman Taylor Uonouj Syraoiiw Ann Columbia i) SjriHuje goring: Touchdown HMatMlna-h Taylor Lolutuuia scurini! Tuuchdowu Fan Joins Irish Eleven On Field; PoliccGet Him New York. Xuv. 13 m-Thv famous twelfth uihii" lindtlftit which culivi-m a iiuiuth Kame year ago, was rfpoateU at the Yaukfo Stadium today a a sic-intor ilccl.lcl lo rant his lot with Dhiiih and help the lrUli score a second touchdown.

When Army hud the ball on Its own 10-yard line early In the third iiarter. a spectator rani" out of the open stands and took his placo In the Irish line, ltefore a play hail started, two policemen came after him ami pushed him Hack to the runnlttjr track uesldo the Held. The Toluuteer had no Intention of hclnff taken out of the play an easily. He eluded his guards and rushed back onto the field Just In time to miss an attempt to tackle the Cadet runner and wind up at the bottom of a pile of players. He was hurried off.

the field again and tills time started to remove his coal prior to another effort. The police didn't let their attention wander but shoved him rlirht on out of the stadium where he was lost In a. crowd. Oregon Stale Passes To Draw With S. Cal Tia Antfeles.

Nov. 11 (A; Oregon State dazzled Southern California with sn aerial attack today and held the Trojans to a V1-V2 tie. Troy made Ita first score In prosaic fashion. Ambrose Schlndler passing and ruu ti I us: the ball across tho goal on a 40-yard drive. Granville Lansdcll.

sub riuarterba.k. engineered a second drive of 27 yards that netted the final Trojan score. Late In the second quarter Halfback Joe Gray, of Oregon State, passed six times and mixed lu a couple of runnlne plays for to yards and tho first score. Oray kept on firing. He found Hob Mountain, substitute back, 44 yards downfleld.

He flrerl short ones to Klmer Kolberjr. Bill Duncan, fellow-backs; one to a tackle. John llackeu-hruck In short, ho completed six more, the Beavers went 64 yards and the core was tied. Attendance was By JESSE A. UNTH1CUM AT LONG LAST the Firemen won a football game from the Marines.

It required nine tries to accomplish it but the Smoke Eaters finally came through in a blaze of glory. They not only won, but gave their opponents a handy coat of whitewash. That was thrilling to followers of the Firemen. The University of North Carolina rooiWs will cheer yesterday's victory over Duke for days to come. There were other gridiron victories that brought joy to a campus here and there, but our hat goes off to Johns Hopkins.

They deemphasized football out Homewood way. You cannot buy a ticket to see a game. Everything Is free, including an up-to-date program There's one asset they have at Hop kins. They didn't deemphasize the spirit of those young men who are out to play the game for sports sake. Fans who visited Homewood vesterHav went away amazed.

They saw a real football team in action, and it dollars to doughnuts the Johnnies down at Annapolis do not feel so good about the annual game with the local eleven November 27. Hopkins beat Swarthmore nr7 trie latter yesterday won from St. John's. I hat comparison would indicate it is the Homewood crew's year to win. it it st They Made Fine Impression CROM HALF A DOZEN sources A came word last night about the Hopkins team.

Every report was favorable. Kerstetter. half hark. 5r a fact hard runner who made some long gains and at least one good forward Dass. Praise also was eiven the umrV of Spilman.

a good runner who knows now to pick his holes. Some rated him ine Best man on the field because of his change of pace and kicking ability. Day, Ellis. Nicholson and Traesis aLm showed up well. In fact, its a pretty good football team and Coach Gardner Mallnnno should be proud of his outfit, which beat Swarthmore and American Uni versity on successive Saturdays.

-if And Then There's Morgan AND DONT overlook Morgan Col- balnea vit wren Biier week. Other unbeaten teams have Kn falling by the wayside, but not Mor gan, ine local Negro college team journeved vesterrlav to Hamntnn Va to meet the college eleven of that town! it was the same old story Morgan, 26; Hampton, 0. When a team manages to feat through an entire season the students throw out chests. It is an Occasion calling for real relehratinne But when a team plays through 47 games ana still holds its college colors aloft that is something else. Morgan is undefeated since 1931, although there have been several ties.

They say it is a world record, and Field Goal Gives L. S. U. 9-7 Win Over Auburn Bdton Rauge, Nov. 13 (TV Auburn's fumbles gave Louisana State breaks enough for the Bayou Tigers to chalk up a 9-7 victory today in a Southeastern Conference football battle witnessed by some 30,000 fans, A field goal Cotton Milner lucked in the first period proved the margin of victory.

The teams emerged with a touchdown apiece from a fourth stanza marked by dazzling runs and bruising line play. Auburn's quarterback. Walker, fumbled a bad pass from center in the first period and Baur, L. S. U.

end, recovered on Auburn's 18. After several attemps to gain through the line Milner kicked the field goal. Spirit Jeemy no one has come forward to prove otherwise. -A. J.

A. boys who bet on college foot- A ball games took it on the chin azain vesterdav. In niekin? winners the bettor.i lose in the event of ties, and two. of the key games yesterday resulted in deadlocks. Columbia tied Syracuse and Cornell finished on even terms with Dartmouth.

Oddly, both scores were the same, 6 to 6. Also on the list was the Purdue-Wisconsin contest, which had a 7-7 finish. This has been the heaviest betting year in football history, it is reported, and the fans have been yip against it week after week. The season has been marked by many upsets as well as ties. a -it it Big Winter Campaign To Come THE END of the football season is J- just around the corner, but sport tans will find no lull when December's icy hand is thrust forward A big winter campaign is in prospect.

Ed Contos announced yesterday the signing of Jeemy Londos, the boss of the bunch, for his main rassling bout December 6 in the Fifth Regiment Armory. Harry Jeffra and Indian' Quintana agreed to terms several days ago for a 10-round bout in the Armory November 26. The ring sport has been dormant here for a number of weeks. The Oriole hockey team will open its Eastern League season this afternoon in Madison Square Garden, New York. 6- tr Jeemy's Opponent JNot Selected ONDOS' OPPONENT has not been selected, but Contos is planning to match him aeainst foreign performers he is bringing to the United States, George Pencheff, who rassled more than an hour with the star here in September; Max Krauser.

of Pal claims the European title; Hans Van-derwalt, South African luminary, and several others are being considered. Quintana is one of the high-ranking bantamweights, but he will meet Jeffra this time with the championship not at stake. It is aa overweight affair, Mike Jacobs, the New York promoter, holding the rights to all of Harry's titular engagements. ft Oriole Ice Team In New York Today TTUCKEY FANS must wait another week before see in? the Orioles in action in a league game. They saw the local club play an exhibition tilt with Hershey Wednesday night, and were imm-essed favorablv with the speed of the puck chasers.

Baltimore will meet the New York Rovers this afternoon on the Garden ice, and a number of local fans will be in the seats when the teams cross sticks. The first local league combat will be Dlaved next Sunrlav. uith the Birds meeting Atlantic City, an old rival. Stanford Rolls Over Washington State, 23-0 Palo Alto, Nov. 13 (-Stanford's Indians, reaching peak form after early-season defeats, crushed Washington State's Cougars, 23 to 0, here today.

Some 15,000 fans saw the Stanford attack begin clicking midway in -the second quarter, when Carl Littlefield. Washington State fullback, fumbled to give the ball 11 yards from scoring turf. Pete Fay, left halfback, sped around end for the touchdown. The Indians blocked Halfback Bayne's punt to score again in the third. Neil Rasmussen, left end, scooped up the ball on the 3-yard line and stepped across the goal line.

Soon after. Quarterback Bill Paul-man placekicked a 31-yard field goal. By CRANTLAXD RICE (Continued from Page 1, Main Section) casions it had the ball. Long, Wilson and other Cadet backs handled the wet, slippery ball exceptionally well. Army picked up 195 yards by passing as against 27 from rushing the ball.

Both teams handled the slippery ball superbly, the lone exception being the Irish fumble on Army's one-foot lme in the third period with a sure touchdown in sight. 15-Yard Penalty Checks Irish Just after the start of the second period Andy Puplis, one of the star backs of the day, caught a bounding punt and ran 35 yards, chased by five Army tacklers, before he was thrown. From this point the Irish attack cut its way down the field to Army's 5-yard line, where a 15-yard penalty for holding set the Irish back well out of touchdown reach. Outside of the costly penalty and the even costlier fumble it was Army's scrappy defense that kept Notre Dame at bay. Time and again the big crowd, expecting a sure touchdown, saw the strong Cadet line rally just in time to save an.

almost certain score. Tonell! Makes 35-Yard Dash When Mario Tonelli broke through and ran 35 yards in the fourth period Notre Dame again got under way. But the green wave finally was broken up and rolled back just two yards from another touchdown by a defense that held up brilliantly through the last three-quarters. It was a game that Notre Dame dominated all the way. Her offensive line play was better, the kicking of Stevenson was a leading feature and the driving power of Notre Dame backs carried more sip and dash until that last thin strip of sod came into view.

In the closing moments of the game Mike Corgan of the Irish intercepted an Army pass on Army's 15-yard line. Corgan in two fast, hard hitting charges picked up 13 yards, but again Army held on her own 2-yard line and the fifth green wave was checked. Irish Without Passing Attack In these various marches Ekner Lay-den used at least eight or nine backs, but witi the exception of big Simon-ich they did most of their running up to Army's 3, 4 and 5 yard line where they could make no further headway. Notre Dame lacked scoring power, due in part to only a minor passing attack, where Long and Wilson, of Army, excelled by a wide margin. Throughout the first three periods of the game a steady rain beat down upon the field, soaking at least 30,000 spectators whe happened to be in the open stands.

It was remarkable that Army passed so well and that Notre Dame kicked so ably with a ball that was coated with sticky goo. It was remarkable that the Irish backs held their feet so well over the rain-soaked field. The kicking of wtevenson, the line play of McCarty, Bnoir and Sweeney, to name only a few, was well above par where hard, deadly tackling stopped Army's fast backs before they could pass the scrimmage line. Army's Defense Superb Army's defensive line was superb when danger threatened, and the all-around play of Wilson, Long and other Army backs was alert enough to save more than one score. Notre Dame deserved to win by every count in football, but it takes nothing away from Army's goal-line defense, under deep danger the greater part of the afternoon.

The longest run.

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