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

The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 27

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
27
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE BOSTON SUNDAY GLOBE OCTOBER 2S, 1017 Twenfy.Seven snxm ttt-; 0 Wiftam and Mary Sams B. 47-13 Tips Melrose, 14-6 (See Page 31) kmhh mmm wtms m. 4 mm bt taw aaa a (eefageZS) ijrums tianaed Maiden Cath. Beaten (See Page 30) 1 X'- i i us i First Defeat (See Page 33) Columbia Halts Army; Dartmouth Trips Harvard, 14-13 Rossides-to-Swiacki Passes Hand Cadets First Loss in 33 Games By STANLEY WOODWARD Green Roars to 2-Touchdown Lead, Blazing Harvard Finish Falls Short By JERRY NASON A bristling Dartmouth' team laid it on Harvard for 14 points in the first half yesterday, then "was forced to fight for its life to rescue a 14-13 thriller which lent vigor and enthusiasm to the annual snatch for the goal posts at the conclusion of the game. i 5 ex i NEW YORK, Oct.

25 The lightning finally struck the Army in Baker Field this afternoon. After 32 defcatless games, a stretch extending back to the 13-to-0 Navy victory at West Point Nov. 27, 1943, the Cadet football team went under, 21 to 20, before Columbia and the hottest passing attack of the decade. Dartmouth waded through Statistics at Cambridge Dartmouth MrTrd Firit dawn II lit Net Turd ulned ruahinr IBM )4n roiward pamt Is rotwtrd eompleted 1 14 l'rd talned forward SJ 4W Own forward intercepted I 2listanre of ponti. averag.

41 37 Fumbles by rumbles recovered 3 I vard left tackle, causing Mr. Har- low to hastily insert burly Nick Rodis, ordinarily guard, but who cannot be shoved around very much. When it was third down, goal to go, John "Gionfriddo" Fiorentino. the Crimson right end, shed blocker and felled Harold Fitkin for an important loss at the 12. with Fitkin attempting to swing him on a pitch out to the left from Joe Sullivan ft i Ienaltle 4 I Varda lost Penalties 2 6 From line of scrimmate.

the Dartmouth defense with a mar it I velous play. the 6-point favorites from the Square with 64 and 56-yard scoring marches, with Hal Fit-kin running five yards over his left tackle on a pitch out from the for a touchdown in the first period, and Herb Carey traveling 14 yards in the second period around right end on a similar play. Carey, a Marblehead resident, converted both points with automatic precision via placement and Dartmouth left the field at intermission looking like a shoo-in. Two electrifying kick run-backs by Hal Moffie, elusive Brookline sophomore halfback, pumped life into the Harvard attack in the second half and turned the game over on its back. Bob Demoss Passes Purdue to 14-7 Win Over Unbeaten lllini LAFAYETTE.

Oct. 25 (AP) Purdue's better every weefc Boilermakers upset Illinois' defending: Big- Nine champions today, 14 to 7, as quarterback Bob DeMoss of Purdue bested Illinois' quarterback Perry Moss in a passing- duel. It was the first loss in 10 straight games for Illinois, previously undefeated this year but tied by Chip swept his left side, faking a running pass, and drove the In The principal executors were Gene Rossides, quarterback, who completed 18 long and short passes of the 27 he threw, and the tall end, Bill Swiaski, who leaped and plunged like a dervish and brought off the greatest line of near-impossible catches of the 20th century. Columbia went into the fourth period trailing, 20 to 7. It cut the deficit to six points when Swiacki, diving on his chest in the end zone, caught Rossides' long heave at the grass tops.

The Lions overhauled and passed Army six minutes and 37 seconds before final time when Lou Kusserow stormed over left tackle from the two after another diving clutch by Swiacki had put it in position. dian secondaries into a hasty retreat. Instead of passing, he con DARTMOUTH SCORES-Harold Fitkin plunges over goal line for Dartmouth's first period touchdown yesterday at the Stadium. Phil O'Donnell qf Harvard grabbed him but his momentum carried him across the line. Note block being thrown by George Schreck at John Gorcynski.

tinued to run, being sprung by five blockers. He cut sharply to his right and raced down to the 15 As he was about to be set upon he the T. Harvard took the ball on dowm at its 5, being 95 yards lrom victory, with four minutes to play. WaRy Flynn uncorked a 62-yard kick on1 fourth down, and the irrepressible Moffie ran the return by Hannigan for 10 yards to his 40. Harvard was now in a race with' the watch.

A running pass to tho right, Moffie to Ken O'Donnell nosed them across midfield, with the Har-" vard delegation on the left slope of the Stadium going nuts and the rival sections gnawing anxiously on their fingernails. Two shots by Gannon and a hand-off to the wriggling Moffie placed Harvard at the encmv 37. tint Yesterday's Sports Football The upset left Michigan the only undefeated and untied team in the Western Conference. nipped the ball to George (Red) Hill, the end, then wheeled and caved in defender Joe Sullivan. This extemporaneous block by Gannon let Hill go tip to the 5, where he was ganged out of bounds.

Gannon scored on the first play. Apparently it was supposed to be COLLEGE 15,000 See Medford's Brilliant Comeback Scorch Everett, 12-7 Seized Swiacki, a war-time transfer from Holy Cross, hoisted him on NEW ENGLAND Dartmouth 14 Harvard 1.1 William A Mary 47 Bo, ion II Vale 4U Sprint Hrld II Brown 13 Collate 13 I Ir i lllorkcd Kick Vital Moftie personally whittled the deficit to 6-14 halfway down the third period by flitting across his right end behind a wave of powerful interferences and squirting like a smash at the Dartmouth right tackle. H. was in left formation. Holy Cross 2ti Syracuse .1 uicir snouiaers ana cnargea in phalanx through the crowd up the hill to the dressine room.

Wcsleyan 30 Amherst A down. On the next Dlav Jim At this point the exalted phase of Noonan missed Ken O'Donnell fun. I Mate 27 Toast Guard Tufts 13 Northeastern Trinity 33 Williams Massachusetts Norwich New Hampshire 28 Vermont American Int 20 Beren Middlebury 13 St Lawrence a grapefruit seed into the end zone on a 5-yard run. By GENE MACK JJJ. escorted by a defender) with a running pass off the Harvard T.

On the following play Joe Sullivan set scnizopnrenia was so endemic in the capacity crowd of 35,000, that strangers embraced each other and the cops who were assigned to protect life and limb helped the maniacal The vital play of the contest, as Connecticut 27 Chamolaln off a wild celebration in the Dart- Gannon hit for the hole, found it jammed up, so swerved to his left and outran Joe Sullivan in a race for the far left corner of the field. Sullivan hurled himself at the runner to no avail just as they met the junction of the legitimate playing field and the end zone. Emil Drvaric was elected to convert the 13th Harvard point, and did so with a boomer that passed Yale Frosh 34 II I Slate Frosh Passes Set Up Score Rossides and Swiacki, also set up the first Columbia touchdown which Kusserow also scored. Rossides fired a long one which Swiacki wrestled away from Army's Bobby Jack Stuart on the 6-yard line. After each Columbia touchdown, Ventan Yablonski, meticulously place-kicked the extra point.

Jack Mackmull, missed Army's third try for point, in the last minute of was subsequently proved, tnen occurred. Bucky Harrison, Harvard Rensselaer It Worcester Tech men of Morningside tear down their CHELSEA, Oct. 25 Thrown back on their heels by a relentless touchdown march by mighty Everett High, a spirited Medford High eleven came from behind brilliantly to submerge the Crimson Tide, 12-7, at the neutral Chelsea Memorial Stadium this afternoon. EAST mourn stands by picking off a pass by Noonan intended for Bill Fitz. son of Harvard's first marshal, upon the Dartmouth 13.

own ROai-poStS. Uld Blues Who came Columbia tl Army 21' specialist from Milton was inserted to produce the extra point. He had not been unsuccessful in eight to weep remained not only to pray JT VJe 21 7.7.7.7 1" but to swing exuberant and unno-i Pennsylvania 21 Navy hullivan iwum back tin th omen 2B Princeton ticed left hooks at each other. to his 35 on the runback. ordered jhigh through the heart of the up In the clubhouse Lou Little.

1he one waster' into the middle anrf rights. rordnam It Kims -I llobart 6 I Hon i Marshall 33 Indiana stale Trmitle 21 Burknrll tl St Lawrence Fresh 13.. Ithaca Fresh Statistics of the Game Mednrd Everett prior attempts this Aiilimn. But Dartmouth responded with what appeared to be a premeditated kick-blocking play, with Dick Gowen at guard and Dale Armstrong, an end with much muscle, teaming up. Gowen it was who slipped into the kicking zone and Morningside maestro, burbled incoherently as the players hoisted him on their shoulders.

He set the scene for the upset last week when he assembled the operatives for the the clock ran out Like Two Ball Game It was two ball games wrapped up in one parcel, with Dartmouth prevailing in the game which lasted the first half after Hip Rowan had run 84 yards from scrimmage for the touchdown. It didn't seem important at the time, for Army was in the lead, 20 to 7. and had been knocking holes in the Columbia line with savage abandon. Dartmouth Rolls Again But the vibrant contest was far from over, Dartmouth quickly unloaded a 65-yard march from the ensuing kickoff. even" recklessly A dazzling 65-yard touchdown dash from scrimmage by husky Dick Rachels and a 52-yard scoring march, both in the second period, kept Medford's unbeaten record unscathed and virtually eliminales Everett from the Class A title race.

Before an overflow crowd of 15,000, Everett exploited the driving power of its hard-run If 12 Wasner Delaware 26 Gettysburg Johns Hopkins 47 Catholic Morris Harvey 14 West Tech 13 Syracuse Freshmen IS Fresh (I Ruteers 4B I.rhUh Kutst'n IPrnn) T'eh'ra S3 Rochester 43 namtlli.n flailed the effort by Harrison to I First downs 10 6 Net yards gained rushing. 165 J35 Forward pas5p? 2 Forwards completed 1 Yards gained, forwards .12 Own forwards intcrreptrd I "DiMmite of punts, iivriime 34 4.1 Kuniblrs II 1 Own (uinblrs rpcovrrrd Penalties 1 2 Yards lost, penalties 5 10 From line, of scrimmaKe. first post-game fight-talk of his life and accused them of quitting to Pennsylvania. Columbia's rebirth from 2 p. m.

until 2:45 and Harvard l.rnfra 411 Carnerle Tern Of spirit is attributed bV some In We.t Va Wfsleyan Warnburr in vr rsir7n Miihlenberr 4l Miihlenberr 4l 11, (j UlOLl IUC, Uosnla 0 fftochester Frosh Sampson aMtsnklln A Marshall 21 Dickinson 7 "Swarthmore 7 Ilrslnus here was little indication tha throwing a pass on which Tom Rowe. who had set up the first Indian touchdown turned back and made a falling catch on the Harvard 37 for a 23-yard gain. Tups McLaughry for the first time inserted Francis O'Brien, a 202-pound fullback from Philadelphia, oeing in cnarge most of the time thereafterbarring, of course, the driving march up the middle of the scuffed field by Dartmouth which the Johnnies finally got under control at their five. A beautiful pass tlay. Sullivan uiujiiujflj Kicmeai inumnn was in h.n.

on Jiianiatts 7 the oven when the game began. The Military 25' yards before Rachels burst through the sod with one arm. On the last maneuver of the third period Moffie inserted another run-back of 16 yards, doing it virtually on his own and being bumped off stride by a teammate. This put the ball at midfield. On the first play of the final quar-ler Chip Gannon, who had been submerged throughout the blue and gold afternoon, and who'd fumbled two or three times to the disadvantage of his team, broke down Drexel fl N.

T. Aiea 0 Alleitheny 7 Wash. Jti Jefferson 12 nrst time Army got the ball Urauuial "is i Grove City 13 the packed enemy defense for a first down on Everett's 33. Paglucia throwing 45 yards in the air behind I.arayette 20 Thiel 2 Fairmont The Arrny continued to knock holes in the Lion front throughout the second half but the Lions stopped each assault with a defense that was both inspired and bitter. And when the ball fell into the hands of the Columbians, they knew what to do with it.

Not since the precursor of this rurrent miracle mob beat Stanford, 7 to 0, in the Rose Bowl of 1934, has Columbia gained so unexpected, spectacular and so soul-satisfy-jng a victory. The players them-elves knew who did it for them. As soon as the whistle blew they Edinboro 'Pa.) Teachers 0 Va.) Tchrs. 0 Kllnnrrv Rnrk (Tie) and Rachels picked up another first ning trio of backs, Bobby Me-rola, Jim Carroll and Charlie Lander, to grind out a 7-0 lead in the first four minutes. Thereafter the Mustangs stemmed every threat of their weightier foes.

Startling Comeback aid O'Brien took the ball on four consecutive power plays right up to the Harvard 5. On one of them he rolled 19 down on the 23 and Kelley passed smashed to a touchdown in nine plays from its own 46 with Rowan galloping 24 yards in one piece and Arnold Galiffa, the now quarterback, firing a rocket pass for a first down on the six and ultimately sneaking over from the half-yard iron-clad protection, to Riwe, set up the initial Dartmouth score in the first period. See DARTMOUTH Page 33 Westminster 2 Bethany Va.) 13 Georgetown Freshmen 14 Temple Freshmen California (Pa.) Teachers 2ft Clarion (P.) Teachers 7 Alfred 20 Brooklyn 19 SOUTH yards through an obliterated Har to Greenleaf on the 10. Paglucia gained a yard and an offside penalty advanced the ball to Everetts' three when shots at the Everett line by Paglucia and Rachels failed, Kelley drove acros? the line. On the irst play of the second period, the Mustangs began their See COLUMBIA Pagre 30 Golden Tornado Alabama 17 Georgia 7 Georria Tech 33 CM Tennessee 4 Tennessee Tech Washington A I.ee 32 Davidson nub i Wake Forest goal line on a quarterback sneak i and Medford led 12-7 as the try to i Cornell Spots Tigers Lead, Surges Back to Win, 28-21 startling comeback.

Quarterback Tommy Kelley. whose pitch-puts were perfect all afternoon, flipped the ball to Rachels who headed around left end behind a screen of convert by air misfired. As the second half began Everett again resorted to potent smashes at Richmond 20 Hampden Sydney Haverford Colleie I Randolph-Macon 7 Arkansas 1 Missls'ippl 14 Maryland 21 V. P. Virrlnla, 3ft V.

JJ. 1. Furman SO Wofford Rluefleid 42 St. Paul Holy Cross Checks Jinx, Smothers Syracuse, 26-0 the lightweight Medford line, but blockers. About 10 vard.t bpvonri the line of scrimmage, Rachels cutjnow t.he advances of Mcrola, Car 82nd Airborne 14 Cherry Pt.

Marines 7 Tulane 40 Auburn to his riPht. and fmmH himself inirou, Lander ana lanoiiette were North Carolina 35 noriua the open. By CLIF KEANE Shaw .13 Morris Brown Allen 20 Benedict 13 Centre lKy. S3 Bethel ssisslpnl State 2 JHarain Simmons Only Bill Gochis, Everett safety man. had a ghost of a chance of overhauling the flying Mustang and he was soon outdistanced as Ra- Triumphs Over Arlington, 13-6 MALDEN, Oct.

25 Maiden's Golden Tornado, striving to get back in the scramble for the Class A title, won its fourth consecutive game today on the hard-running of Don Hickey and Dan Duggan, beating Arlington, 13-6. Hickey and Duggan sparked the Maiden attack, but the headline grabber was Don Mackey. He scored Maiden's first touchdown and set up the Western Md. 14 Mt. St.

Mary Howard 14 J- C. I) Louisiana Tech 24 not as devastating. Great defensive work by Ken Kinchla. Charlie Bowles, Chuck Bridge and Dick Murphy limited Everett to relatively short gains. The first determined Crimson thrust in the third quarter died on the Medford 9.

Another, in the early moments of the final period, came to grief on the Medford 30 where Bowles recovered a Merola fumble. At this point Medford nearly threw away its lead. From the 30 Northwrttrrn sti roiirte chels sped unmolested into the end After a conort fumbled the midwest Pass from center, Kelley's hasty treading a waterfall trying to master its intricacies, finally broke into the open with the single. wing. Only occasionally did Coach Ox DaGrosa attempt to mix the through the game, and always, with one exception, every maneuver backfired.

Notre Dame 21 lom to kick me extra point went PnrHn. 14 Illitloia awry and Medford trailed 7-6. Stopped dead deep in its own territory a few minutes later, Everett was forced to punt. Tony Del Isola PRINCETON, N. Oct.

25 (AP) Cornell's Big Red football team spotted Princeton two touchdowns in the early moments today and then rose to a 28-21 triumph over the bewildered Tigers on the throwing arm of Lynn Dorset, a 22-year-old third string quarterback. A top-coated crowd of 34,000 which turned up in Palmer Stadium for the 31st renewal of this Ivy League rivalry sat enthralled as Dorset brought the Ithacans from behind by completing all 10 of the passes he threw, three of them for touchdowns. Paul Cowie, a pint-sized Princeton scatback, sprinted 40 yards in the final period for his second touchdown of the day and sparked a 57-yard Tiger drive toward what might have produced the tying points if time hadn't run out with the home club still 33 yards away. The game was less than five minutes old when John Powers scored the first Tiger touchdown by diving the last yard of a 34-yard march, set up when Bill Koch recovered Winifred Wright's fumble on the second play after the kickoff. The Tigers followed with a 73-yard drive late in the period which wound up early in the second quarter with Cowie dashing around right end for.

the last two yards. Ken Keuf-fel booted the second of his three conversions and it looked as if the Tigers were going to have a runaway. But young Mr. Dorset, obviously tired of warming the bench, had other ideas. The 165-pound sophomore from Miami, took charge after end Harry Cassel had brought a kickoff back to the Cornell 36.

See CORNELL Pafe ii Nnrlhweotern 7 Indiana Wiaconiln MaraueMe 12 Mlnourl 2 Iowa State 7 Nrhranka 14 Kansas Stale 7 Bnwlinr Green 21 Kent State IS Cincinnati 27 Xavler 25 boomed the oval 55 yards down field SYRACUSE, N. Oct. 25-The Holy Cross team came here today with its familiar single wing and a prayer for football restitution, and trounced Syracuse University, 26-0, at Arch-bold Stadium. The jinx of having defeated the Orangemen but once in six attempts, and never here, faced the sputtering Crusaders. But when dusk had fallen, new life was instilled in the Worcester lads after having literally crushed the smaller home towners.

That the formation belongs in pastures other than Holy Cross environs was established today. Good football players like Veto Kissell, Ray Sullivan nd brother Bob, who had been Miehiian ji'. Mmnma but Kelley. onv nice run along the Kelly fired a short pass over the line and Gochis intercepted for Everett, returning to Medford's 33. Parker, Costello Pave Way Kissell probably was entitled to most of the glory among the backs Kentucky 7.

Mietinan hiaie isidcJines ran it back to midfield. Paglucia and netted eight Rushes by Gino Hartley Greenleaf Reserve Oberlln Capital 7 Oklahoma 7 Baldwin-Wallace 13 Denisnn S.H Ohis Northern IS Texas Christian 20. See MED FOR Pate 30 North Dakota 1ft Bradley Butler 21 Western Michigan 20 Manchester IS. Canterbury Eastern Kentucky 18 Valparaiso second with a spinning 40-yard run. It was the 14th meeting between the rivals and marked the 10th time Maiden has won.

Arlington never has scored a win over Maiden on the latter's home field. 86-Yard Drive Pays Off Maiden scored first and after Arlington came back, the Golden Tor Rio Granda 21 Koie folT as he burst through the heart of the Syracuse line with his bulllike rushes. But up front, where the ground work is laid, the right side of the line, manned by Fran Parker, tackle, and Tom Costello, piled up the Syracuse frontier as though it wer made of paper. See HOLY CROSS Tage 32 Wayne S3 Bunalo 1 St Olaf 14 Carleton 1 Carroll (Wis) 40 Albion 0 Tufts Retains Home Record as Northeastern Bows, 1 3-0 Gustavus AdoiDhin 14 Concordia (Moorehead) 7 North Central SB F.lmhurst Wichita AS Arizona State (rlarstaff) 7 Central MI.ourl Teachers 20 Culver-MOrklon 12 Kentucky State 4 Wilberforce Church nado clinched the victory with an i soutnern Illinois 2 Northern IllfnoU Teachers I Statistics at Medford bb-yard touchdown drive in the third period. Fmnnrlm State 3 Fort Have State 7 William Jewell 12 North- Chet Burgess started Maiden off Lake Forest 7 Illinois We'leyan onio wesieyan 27 De I'anw 14 By TOM FITZGERALD MEDFORD, Oct.

25 Tufts seized two glaring breaks to preserve its unblemished home record by defeating a game but undermanned Northeastern aggregation, 13-0, before 3500 at the Oval this afternoon. lluDuaue 13 I.uther 8 1 to its first touchdown by pouncing a Bob Carmody fumble at the 5 Arlington 10. Mackey carried twice then went over from the one- Tllf! First down 9 Net sained rushing 1S passes 7 Forwards completed 2 Yards Rained, forwards 37 Own forwards intercepted 0 Distance of mints, avpnsn fi 7) I Wabash Kenyon 0 Iowa Tchrs 81 Morninaside 13 jBeloit Knox 0 4 28 yard line. Arlington took the fol-i yj lowing kickoff and went all the si way for its only score. Dick Raia i iimnies Own fumbles recovered Penalties Yardsi lost, penalties 4 50 45 rarrirrl lh lfiflrrfT VaL- Kie i jjf wm pjHi Cincinnati 27 Xavier 2S McCook Nebr Jr 13 Dana Mount Union 21 Otierhein IS So Dakota IJ 20...

So Dakota State 7 Grlnnell 7 Cornell (la) A Moorhead Minn Tchrs 19 Manitoba 6 Stevens (Pt) Tchrs 2(1 Plattevllle (Wis) Tchrs Central State (Okla) 12 Southwestern Tech (Okla) 12 (tie) Hanover 20 Franklin A Upper Iowa 13 Parsons 0 From line of scrimmase. features 34 and then after Bob Salisbury carried once. Raia made a first down at the 49. Bob Carmody got off a 34-yard jaunt that gave the Spy Ponders a first down at the Maiden punted his present affiliates out of A "I See MALDEN Pare 29 A c70od nace To Talce Your Car embarrassment on more than one occasion. Nason was prominent in the defensive stand which stalled a 47-yard Tufts march at the N.

U. 10, mid-way through the third quarter. Some minutes after this the ball slipped from the hands of a North at 1 nomas (i j-aui 13 Aussburr (Minneapnis) fl Lawrence 47 Coe Central 20 Culver-Stockton 12 Toledo 38 Akron 7 Hiram 31 Ashland 0 SOUTHWEST Texas 12 Rice 0 Texas A AM 24 Bayor 0 Trinity (T) 20 Houston 0 Texas Tech 3fl 1 Texas Christian 20 Oklahoma 7 Prairie View 0 Arkansas state A MeMurry 20 Abilene '7 eastern back and was snuggled under the form of John "Baron" Baronian, Tufts substitute guard on the N. U. 24.

A costly fumble by the Huskies on their own 24-yard line near the close of the third period paved the way for the decisive t. d. which, was negotiated on a one-yard dive by fullback Bob Haines. In the dying moments of the game, a Northeastern prayer pass out of the end zone wound up in the possession of a Jumbo defender. Immediately thereafter, halfback Julie Doliner, whose running and uncanny kicking had been one of tufts highlights throughout the afternoon, romped home from 6 yards out.

It was Doliner who obliged with the point after touchdown No. 1, too. The two-touchdown margin isn't a wholly accurate measure of the difference between the two teams. Throughout the first half the heavily favored home forces spent most of the time on the wrong side of the field. Michigan Given Scare, 13 to 6, by Minnesota ANN ARBOR, Oct.

25 (AP) Vaunted Michigan barely managed to defeat surprisingly stubborn Minnesota today, 13 to 6. After a gain of a vard TVli FAR WEST Washington 25 Stanford 0 Montana 13 Washington State 12 Oreiron State 4S Portland 0 Brig-ham Young 27 Utah State 12 Colorado 14 Colorado A. Jb. 7 connected with LoiJ Bournazos on a pass which gulped up 19 yards to the four. In two tries Dolingcr whanged up to the one.

Then they gave the thing to Haines back in the f.b. post which he had yielded to Johnny Kochiss. Bob lowerrri Utah 20 Wyoming 7 Texas Tech 3 7 Colorado College 3S. Mines 12 Montana State 34. Idaho St.

(Pocatellot 12 thereby keeping alive Wolverine hopes for a Big Nine championship and a bid to the Rose Bowl. Colorado State 7 Western state 7 (tie) Nevada 21 1 Tulsa 13 Southern California 39 California 14 Oregon 34 San Francisco 7 It was Minnesota's great line that Southern Methodist 7 V. C. I. A.

North Texas State 27 Houston 0 UUh 28 Wyoming- 7 20 Tor Longer Lasting Luster HERE YOU can obtain a factory-tested and approved Porcclalmzc treatment which will toughen and harden the paint on your car; give a mirror-like appearance; eliminate waxing, polishing, and other temporary methods. Whether your car is new or old, Porcelainhing not only beautifies, but preserves the finish for many months to come, with but one application. The cost is only slightly more than you would pay for an ordinary wax job. Depend on us for all of your service needs large or small. Enter With Confidence Leave With Satisfaction NOYES BUICK SERVICE Buick Street, off" 881 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston Telephone STAdium 3610 Long and regu See YESTERDAY'S SPORTS 29 his head and went hurtling over a heap at the right side with plenty to spare.

Doliner twice booted outside at the N. U. one-yard line in the last period. The second of these wizardlike hoists came in the dying minutes. With the ball game practically settled, barring a miracle, the Huskies decided to try for the Wellesley Rolls Over Hingham Eleven, 34-12 Nason and Mclntyre Pester There were two operatives in Dobbs famous "Guild Edge" is felted in by hand the Dobbs way of giving extra strength to the brim and longer style-life to the hat.

Featured at $20. Other Dobbs from IS- to $40 miracle. So, Mclntyre retreated be threw the sand in the hitherto high-scoring Michigan machine, and for four and a half minutes a stunned crowd of 85.938 that jam-packed Michigans big stadium saw Minnesota lead the nations number one team 6-0 on the strength of a methodical march from midfield. Then Bob Chappuis, Michigan's great halfback, threw a fast low pass from the Minnesota 40 to Chalmers (Bump) Elliott, who caught it on his fingertips on the Minnesota 15 and went on to score just before the half ended. Jim Brieske's 101st extra point, of his college career put Michigan ahead 7-fi Gene Berrien! le added the second touchdown in the last period on a 21-yard run off his left tackle.

HINGHAM, Oct. 25 Wellesley Johnny Grinnell's battered invading party who proved continuously hind his own goal line and pitched one. He connected smack-dab with the Tufts captain. Warren McKin- High proved two strong for Hing bothersome to the Jumbos, one ham High here this afternoon when was JS. u.s terrine nanay man pinned a 34 to 12 defeat on the local team at the Hingham Stadium.

John Nason, who played with his usual enthusiasm in a new assignment at tackle. The other was Bob Scoring but, 7 points in the first, half, non, who was hauled down at the six. Doliner who was quite deserving of the honor, was handed the ball and after angling to the right, cut back toward the middle to score standing up. Wellesley turned on steam in the Mclntyre; who won a Tufts letter TREMONT ST. at BROM FIELD BOSTON MASS.

second half, scoring 14 points in the a few years back as a V-12 student third period and 13 in the final chap-This afternoon Bob personally See TUFTS ter. ijwiiMibitttUH hacked out a lot of yardace and rase 28.

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 The Boston Globe
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Boston Globe Archive

Pages Available:
4,495,786
Years Available:
1872-2024