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

The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 43

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
43
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE nOSTOV SUNDAY flLOnE-XOVEMHEB t. lfT.3 ForlyThre -0 ''-0-0000' 'X00 'lAi0f' ''00 mSdTOUDOWN PASSEP? AYN (LEFr) WATCHES DEXTER LEW1S CET BEHIND DAVIDSON SAFETY MAN BILL ROWLAND (44)' ON Lowenstein of Harvard Devastates Davidson With Passes, 42 to 6 je ptoston iunbaj (lobe Sports Scores Touchdown, Throws for 5 Others ttth artmo Yale, 32-0 1 ops 7 By JERRY NASONT Carroll Lowenstein, Harvard's 153-pound G.I. returnee and football captain emeritus, came up with a spectacular pinchhitting performance and stamped his genius on a 42-6 Stadium win over Davidson yesterday. On the 17th play of the game, Capt. Dick Clasby suffered a severe arm bruise and was removed.

Li'l Lowenstein, whose original debut at Columbia had backfired, went twinkling into the game, which was scoreless, at that moment. He made a shamble of it, squirting seven yards like a wet grapefruit seed for touchdown No. 1 and throwing five subsequent scoring passes, believed to be a Stadium record. The little man had, with thejhis '51 days sent Harvard hopes Richmond Interceptions '0' iVt "2 Beagle Throws Four Touchdown Aerials; Eli Fumbles Costly By CLIF KEAXE NEW HAVEN, Oct. 31 The Yale band was living in Halt B.C., 14-0 collaboration of receivers Dextemoaring for next Saturday's Lewi, Bill Weber, John CulverjPrinceton came.

and Frank White, such a However, a price was paid for Eagles Thwarted Five Times on Scoring Thrusts k' nv travesty of what had originally victory, viewed by merely 8500 under clcarine skies. been a "dog wasn't even ngnt" that Clasby suited up in the Harvard was kick- 0 7 0p00 0 1,. By BOB 1101 BROOK Bob Hardy, blocking back and line backer to the left, received a simple fracture of the left second half. ine on first down in the last You can take a team 11 like that too lichtlv" remarked and Mr. Jordan cleaned clbw on the third play of the Coach Mike Holovak bPm'h of every operative save fiame.

tnere is a possibility he lately. ouinuriQge -oo, a sopnomore uc "uk 1UI mc-asuii. the past here today, spelling out the names of many of its greats, and its football team was thinking of its previous record this year when it was walloped, 32-0, by Dartmouth in a stunning upset before 38,000 in the Bowl. Dartmouth's sophomore slingshot artist, Bill Beagle from Danville, passed for four of Dartmouth's touchdowns against the hapless Eli defense, and Leo McKenna of Concord, proved he was a capable understudy. center.

Joe Conzelman took over an The only trouble was that Bos TT Mm T. A i Mr. Coon was indisposed andidld a pretty solid job, consider ton College discovered this fact too late and Richmond the reluctantly passed up this oppor tunity to make his varsity debut. ing his lack of variety experience. The beauty of the five touch downs Lowenstein triggered yes HARVARD Page 44 University of Richmond, suh displayed an excellent pass defense, took advantage of a break Lowenstein recapturing his delicate pasing touch and darting ball-carrying technique of BEAGLE and upendr-d the favored Eagles 14 to 0 at Fenway Park.

Yale had gone through five Club Photo by Gil Frirdnrrg) ESCAPE Dick Zotti, Boston College back, leaps out of the grasp of a Richmond tackier on ground at left and picks up nine yards before the trio at right (left to right) Ked Revile (75), Bob Sgro (68) and Bob Hallinan brought him down in first period. Holovak had warned his games without defeat, including a pair of ties. Dartmouth's fortunes were at their lowest ebb charges, and though they generated considerable steam dur ing the afternoon, found them in years after suffering five Straight whippings. selves thwarted on five different assaults at the Richmond coal. ner, twisting toward the right, and then racing straight down the middle, took Beagle's pass at the five and nobody was within 10 yards of him.

Yale's offense was hamstrung on the next kickoff, and Pruett punted into the Green end zone. The Green was sitting coyly on its six-point lead in the early minutes of the second period with McKenna at the helm. Then, Yale got gift-minded again at the five-minute mark with Brink fumbling But, as alert as a team of Jimmy Kane pass-pitching quarterback ho had a field day against Aavier and rordham Syracuse Rips H.C., 21-0 on Stark's Run, Passes hod four of his aerials intercepted by the Spiders and Doc Mauro one. Pinkertons all day, Dartmouth took advantage of five Yale fumbles, converting three of them into touchdowns. The Yale record of losing its fumbles reached 13 straight for the season.

This game was advertised as passing show with Dartmouth, unable to find the right guy behind center all season, uncovering Beagle right off the bat. Passes to Turner B. C. Gains on Ground The Eagles amassed the meaeer on his 19. Tackle Emery Pierson tracked that one down on the spot, and in four plays, McKenna mesmerized the Yale defense with a smash to the seven and a pass in the flat to Turner.

Turner had drifted around left end as McKenna brought the whole Yale secondary into a huddle over the middle with a Oklahoma A. M. Beats Tulsa After total of 57 yards on five completions. While Richmond was handling the B. C.

passing attack very ablv, the Eagles, with little Dick Zotti at the helm piled up yardage on the ground and compiled 237 yards through the grinder but no score. The Spiders a fast-arriving Five Years, 28-14 Three plays after taking theifake quickie pass. Turner then By ERNIE ROBERTS WORCESTER, Oct. 31 Syracuse wore orange and left Holy Cross black (and blue) in a Halloween sham-boozling today which destroyed New England's mythical No. 1 team by a 21-0 margin.

A three-touchdown trick within a nine-minute span by quarterback Pat Stark, toughest visiting bogeyman, was no treat for 15,000 in this haunted house at Fitton Field. kickoff, Yale's Hub Pruett! edged into the flat and McKenna fumbled on the Eli 45, and the ballllcd him with a short pass. Again cot a Yale defender challenged Turner and he raced into the end zone. power in tne isnutnern Conferencemarched 80 yards on 12 plays in the second period for a 7-0 lead and enough points to win the game. They added seven more points In the fourth period when a B.

C. fumble on the 27 set un the For a limited time only! WESTINGHOUSE It also was: A. The worst de feat for an Eddie Anderson- shot ahead to the Dartmouth 34, Where Louis Turner bosomed it. Beagle, the kid they say just walked into Dartmouth a couple of years ago without any persuasion, was at the throttle when the Big Green chugged out of the huddle. In seven plays, with Turner sweeping the ends and Bill Jennison trucking through the line, Dartmouth was ahead with the final punch a thing of beauty.

Poised like a professional on coached club since the Iowa doc clincher. tor returned here following that STILLWATER, Oct. 31 (I'D Runs by halfbacks Dorsey Gibson and Bill Breddc yanked Oklahoma out of a first-half slump today to defeat Tulsa, 88-14, in a Missouri Valley Conference game before 18,000 persons, AXM was outplayed in the first half, 14-7, but Bredde's 45-yard return of the second-half kickoff set a new tempo that netted the Aggies their third conference victory in four starts. It was the first time had defeated Tulsa in years, and rlnched the Aggies a share of the Missouri Valley championship. Yale Fumbles Again The EH looked more distrauglit than a kid who just had his candy stolen him but they were jiMfffea to look even more forlorn wher) Beagle took over again in the third period.

On Yale's first play from scrimmage after the Dartmouths had B. frustration came' as re. 78-0 business in '49, and maneuvers on defense until pitchin' Pat Stark took off on his spree late in the third period. 49-Yard Scoring Run The six-foot senior, whose home is within shouting distance of the Syracuse campus up in New York, ran 49 yards for the first touch suit of five attacks that could have B. The first time in 39 years that a Crusader elecen has been shutout in.

three consecutive produced scores and didn't. They got to Richmond's 16 in the first period, to the 10 in the second period and fizzled. (Quantico, Brown and booted to the Yale 13. Mathias! games. down in this bristling battle.

fumbled on a guard smash and now Syracuse have blanked the In the third period thev liter hen he exploited a Purole de the Yale 32, Beag faked left and right and then waited until Turner sped deep into the secondary. The Yale defenders seemed to disappear like phantoms as Tur ally smothered Richmond, getting fensive weakness against long to the four before staggering to backer-up Paul Mackey came uplPurple.) with the ball at the 15. Holy Cross was hapless on DARTMOUTH Page 48 offense but it had the muscles B. C. Page 44 passes by throwing to halfbacks Bruce Yancey and Bob Leberman for the last two touchdowns.

The big Crusader opportunity came at the tail of the first half 'A Northeastern Extended, hut Tops Vermont for 6tk Straight, 3318 Table EVlcdel with matching coti8olette base valued ot $2i5' included at NO EXTRA COST Unbeaten Notre Dame Swamps Navy, 38 to 7 SOUTH BEND, Ind, Oct. 31 (AP) Unbeaten Notre Dame, the nation's No. 1 team, poured a four-touchdown, second quarter broadside into inept Navy and then coasted with reserves for a 38-7 victory watched on 'i 0 with the score still 0-0. A fumble recovery by fullback Chick Murphy opened the door on the Syracuse 42. Senior quarterback Don Jolie (who started the first game of his varsity career and played approximately 50 minutes) pitched the Purple down to the six yard line.

With 12 seconds of time remaining in the half, Jolie threw a running pass to big end Bob Dee which he nabbed on a jumping catch in the extreme right corner of the end zone. But linesman Walt Coffee ruled that Dee landed out of bounds and hence no touchdown. There was no complaint from the home club; the call was right. H. C.

page 45 television by ailing coach Frank Leahy today. The fifth straight Irish tri KM -i. down was the handiwork of Larry Wilson of Brookline, who understudied Toyias after Angie was lugged oft on a stretcher with a bruised hip in the second period. Watson more than lived up to his nickname of "Century Sid." In 14 rushes he went for 137 yards, giving him a season's total of 768 in seven games, NORTHEASTERN Page 47 pana well pin the national college ratings in their specialties. Northeastern had a powerful response to this aerial attack in a heavy-hitting ground game that produced a net of 338 yards.

And the biggest contributions came from fullback Sidney Watson, who provided two of the His fleet backfield mate, Angie Toyias, also went over twice, and the other touch By TOM FITZGERALD Northeastern rested its case for consideration as New England's foremost small college football team yesterday after hammering out a 33-18 victory over University of Vermont at Kent st. in its season's final. You are cautioned, however, Hot to let that score lead you to any false conclusion that Joe Zabilski'a apt pupils enjoyed a umph of the season marked one of the worst trimmings of the 2399 Middies in an unbroken 27-game half Joe Heap on a short plunge and a lucky tip from a Navy defender in the end zone on a 28-yard pass by quarterback Ralph Guglielmi. Guglielmi romped 49 yards for the third Irish touchdown after intercepting a pass by Navy quar series which now includes a Notre Dame victories. Notre Dame's 26-point out complete A terback George Welsh, who also had tipped the touchdown pass to Heap.

Cva: burst in the second quarter after a scoreless first period turned the game into an Irish jig before 58,154 fans. Acting Coach Joe McArdle emptied the 50-player The fourth Irish toucnaown in Turn-To Wins $269,395 Race Price Includn Tti. Ux nd warranty. the second quarter came on a 32-yard drive with fullback Tom McHugh diving over from tne one. After that, Irish subs pushed the Irish bench.

Five different players scored Notre Dame touchdowns, the first two contributed by regular right N. D. Page 44 This feature packed television is in beautiful mahogany finish. Single dial. VHFUHF tuning.

100-mile plus tuner. Cavegnano's Horse, Favorite, Finishes CAMDEN, N. Oct. 31 (UP) YOU CAN' BE -SOBE i IF IT'S Cain Hoy Stable's Turn-to, fcavt trade-in TV sett from $24.95 up. carefree afternoon an the sunshine in gaining this sixth straight victory after their disheartening 13-7 loss in the opener against Rhode Island.

truth is the home forces end their partisans in the gathering of 5000 were astounded to discover the wheed-up Ver-monters holding a 12-7 advantage by the end of the first period. What is more, the Catamounts, smartly coached by Eddie Donnelly, the former B. U. assistant, were trailing by only 18-20 in the middle of the third quarter, Semans Able Passer Most of this commotion by the visiting short-enders was caused bv the passing of their junior quarterback. Mike Semans, a Boston Latin product, and his pet receiver, left end Nat Campana.

Westihghouse Fourth place was worth $13,469.75 to Best Years, who was followed across the finish line by Fisherman, Full Flight, Red Hannigan, Errard King, Thither, Bobby Bro-cato, Sea O'Erin. Nirgal Lad, Road Star, Marshall, Pointing Star, First Watch, War Doings. Swift Sword, Our Gob and John B. P. sweeping to the front on the turn into the homestretch, won the richest purse in racing history today when he scored by two lengths in the $269,395 Gar 111 year-olds while James Cox Brady's best 'years was fourth.

Errard King, carrying the silks of Joe, Gavegnano of East Boston, Mass. finished eighth as an 8 to 5 favorite, while C. V. Whitney's Fisherman was fifth. Correlation, who Taced in the middle of the pack for the first half mile, just beat Goyamo by a neck for the place.

The stewards viewed motion pictures of the stretch run before they let the result stand. They found Arcaro i mnftiini i hd i i v-st, i den State Stakes. rrvnn A The Irish-bred colt, purchased for $20,000 at the Keeneland sales a year ago, picked up a net purse of $151,282.25 in the mile and a sixteenth race after flash-! blameless for a bumping with full 'Full of Run' "Turn-To was so full of run at the three-eights pole I had all the confidence in the world that I would win," said Moreno after the race. It was the eolt's third victory in RACE Page 50 ing across the finish line ahead Flight deep in the straightaway, mi M. of Robert S.

Lytle's Correlation. Correlation earned $53,879 and Altogether, the Vermont passing! REFRIGERATORS RHOIOS TEIIVI8ION W.iei HEATERS BICYCLES -'7J CABINET MAROWARS TOY! flWT pmi.Ktircts Til 9f Woodvale Farm Goyamo was paid $8.40 and $5.60. while Goyamo fame accounted for ZIB yaras ana i fame kept Messrs. Semans and Cam- third in the bulky field of 20 2- learned 35,409.25 and paid $6.80..

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:
4,496,054
Years Available:
1872-2024