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Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania • 28

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Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
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28
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it1011 2 4 PI krill toothy SUNTELECRAPII NOY. ft INS a I 11 RUM itt A4 I as 0011 TS MI Will Penn State Consider Bowl Bid This Year? PITT A after losing, 41-0, to Ohio State, Pitt'. Panthers yesterday came through with a surprising 20-13 victory over Purdue at Lafayette, Ind. zov.i9iW4,0, ":4:,. AP Wirephota.

In play pictured above, little Lou Cecconi is carrying the ball for Pitt in first quarter. He fumbled when tackled by Bob Hartman (18) of Purdue, Boilermakers recovering. r'r. I -14' vr71A10051- ,4 1 4 'V .1 f'-h 44 S. ('''''t, l'l It $14'4 'rib t' r' 1, 4 1 a.

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Panthers yesterday came through with 1 777:: a surprising 20-13 victory over Purdue at Lafayette, Ind. Bob Hartman (18) of Purdue, Boilermakers recovering. elly Natty Keck SPORTS EDITOR It will be interesting to see what Penn State does when and if it receives another bowl bid or two after what happened when it went to the Cotton Bowl in Dallas to play Southern Methodist last New Years Day. Many a Penn State man in the inner circle breathed more than a single sigh of relief when that safari was over 13 7179 and done with and said "Never agent! The fact that the Lions didn't 4,40, play their true game in being held ''s to a 13-13 tie was not surprising, as 1 11 later revelations developed a near- player revolt over the conditions of L. training restrain t.

What was ex- I pected to be a pleasure jaunt and a re- st' ward for the players turned out to be Li a nightmare. a First of all, the Southern prejudice rs fs.f against Negro players on the squad had I )t. t.4 -tv, to be overcome. Because of their presence the squad was billeted in an out-of-the-way place and a few of the players finally jumped the reservation. MIMI' CONZELMAN The same situation is likely to present Itself again if a Southern bid is accepted and where else can the Lions go with the Rose Bowl contest in California a closed corporation between the Pacific Coast and Western Conferences? State will not accept a bid that would exclude any of the members of its squad.

If you think that's all of the story, brother, you ain't beard nothing yet. The biggest headache was among the alumni and other followers of the State team. Many of them wanted to so- company the squad and take their wives along and it became necessary to exclude all of them from the official party. Others thought they were entitled to a free ride. Also there was the problem of the extension of the season a full month.

It was difficult to keep the players interested in hard work after they had been going at it daily since the first of September. Then, when the trip itself and the game turned out to be drudgery rather than fun well, it all added up to something that left a lot of bruises. Maybe Pitt can take the Lions off the spot by upsetting them here next Saturday, huh? Football Season Nears the End I never knew a football season to go as fast as this one. It seems as if it was just a few weeks ago that it started and here it Is going into its final week for most of the teams. The high schools I are virtually through, the colleges wind up next Saturday or the I week after and even the Steelers have only one more home game to play after the meeting with Jimmy Conzelman's prize col- ection of Chicago Cardinal beauties this afternoon.

That's with the New York Giants on Dec. 5. 1 It's been a good year with the college elevens just beginning to show some sort of post-war improvement. After being put through the screening process, the same big names are back on top. Notre Dame Michigan Army North Carolina California Penn State Southern Methodist Georgia Tech.

The script doesn't change much. Them as has gits. At home, there was a bit of improvement, although there was none of the whoopla of the past. Pitt, winner of only one game '1 last year, has won five of eight games with a modified ached ule, but Duquesne has done none too well and Carnegie Tech is still victoryless. There is hope, though, that all will be better entrenched next fall.

IN 11 1 In A Wirephoto. PASS FAILS Bill McPeak, Pitt's right end (89), breaking down a Purdue forward pass by Bob DeMoss intended for Bob Heck (28), the end. .1,.., .....1 Irish Tie Rockne Mark, Edge OutWildcats, 12-7 Upset Purdue, 20-13 Tartans Lose To Lehigh No Change! LEHIGH Left endsVerris. Clarivino, Left tackles--Heyman, Valerian. Left guardsJ.

Smith. Arthur, Bolen, Kluge. CenterMurray. Right guardsBerndt. Bran-port.

Right tacklesPoster, Bast. Hilt. 1 Right endsMorris, A. Smith, La Sand QuarterbacklScannella, Collin. Waiter, Cane.

Left halfbacksGabriel, Kincaid, Navarro. Right hallbacks--Moynt. Noel. Holmberg. Herder'.

FullbacksKuhar. Murphy, Hauling. CARNEGIE TECH Left endsTougere, Left tackleKeats. Left guardsWiseman. CentersWindish, kemavir.

Right guardeSlovicek. Madden. Right tackleMeyers. Right ends--Dousherty. Williamson.

QuarterbacksMagnifico, Minuich. Left halfbacittSogners. Slane, Kenney. Right halfbacksArmour, Stincle, Sauey. FullbacksHoltz.

Luchok, Score by quarter': Lehigh I I 0 8-20 Carnegie Tech 0 0 0 0-- 0 Lehigh scoring TouchdownsGabriel 2, Navarro. Points after touchdowns--Hosen 3 (placements). 4. al I ,111:.,.: iii 44,40,4044.11 ,40:40. 10.

0 1 401, -tes 0.roli -it'll 10: 171't it fr0 rtI: 4 1. il 14,41,, Ai. .4 000. "Iwo ttc I .4 I 1 4 A .1 ot A '-'1'. IN o'; i.

-4 4 .4.4 0 i 't told.0,..,,,,,,..,,,,,,,,,,,, ,7,,,,,,,,,,.,,: :4,,,,,:.,,..,,..,7,..,,.....,,,....,,,,,,,,.,...,,..,,, ,1,. 5k '4 i r. I 46,,,0,,,, I By JACK HENRY Staff writer LAFAYETTE, Nov. Joe Robinson, almost as reliable as mother-in-law jokes to radio comedians, produced an electrifying Pitt touchdown run of exactly 100 yards in Ross-Ade Stadium here today to help the Panthers upset Purdue, 20 to 13. The crowd of 30,000 warmed up despite the 47 degree temperature when the Connellsville Negro lad broke away on his kickoff return late in the second quarter.

He also accounted for another Pitt touchdown on an eight-yard reverse in the closing period. Robinson's perfect distance effort was acclaimed as the most Clawed! spectacular individual perform- pm. Pitt Purdue anee in a game that abounded in It Geremsky Bolkoske (smut Oreille long runs. Relegated to runner-up t.6- Rarbouskis Mormy Itsdosevich Sprang positions were Harry Szulborski's a. Boldin Gibron Coleman Rarboiak 56-yard twister and Kenny Gor 11: MePeal Whitmee gal's 82yard gallop for Purdue's tn.

Mende Ceecont Roseate two touchdowns. H. HOW Adams F. DePasqua Isalborsid In winning Mike Milligan's var. Score by q11111.1en: ally achieved what no other Pitt Laittsdue 7 7 0 -20 0 8 0 7-13 team ever has done since Purdue urorimnti swept all previous decisions in Vac 2 ipiacementsi.

Missed Point, alter 10,1: the live-game a 1 s. I a 1 marked Pitt's first triumph on i tut 7'; IgnunZilgr the road over a Western Confer- Trbova Piticement ence be since the Dream Back- TacPlitterteeitunt.et;liht:,doi;r1kyrea".(itterd"s I. field disposed of Wisconsin 10 :it.oldt.;0,1r. Thomas, liaralovmt, years ago. Hardists, Loom Abraham, Recker.

Purdue substitutes: Nodskook. Bland, PURDUE ERRATIC- 11.10117.Kall.rrrasi7e7gionvichb, cremfddinTnuleards Horvath, Smith, Hard, Weiser. Centers Stu Holcomb's losers, appar- Crawford, Scrigrg: ently still groggy from early-sea- um. son losses to Notre Dame, North- Itilcrlf1111 western and Michigan, frequently E. P.

Borrows, (''''t). 13. The drive sputtered out four amazed onlookers by their list- lessness and erratic judgment. plays later when Cecconi Aim 13. The drive sputtered out four plays later when Gemini By CHARLES EINSTEIN International News Service SOUTH BEND, Nov.

13. Notre Dame's Fighting Irish licked hard-fighting Nor western, 12 to 7, today in their toughest game of the year and tied the greatest records of the late Knute Rockne. The Irish came from behind in the last quarter with a fury born of despair to push over their win. ning touchdown. The victory was the 20th in a row for Frank Leahy's znen and their 26th game without defeat.

Teams coached by Rockne corn. piled an identical record two decades ago. The green-clad warriors of Notre Dame marched 63 yards 13 plays and Bill Gay literally hurtled over the Northwestern line for the winning touchdown. Meanwhile, 59,305 spectators screamed the joy or wrath that together marked this mercilessly-fought contest. Frank Tripucka, a mere slip of a youth entrusted with quarterbacking the Irish fortunes all day, blueprinted the winning march scarce minutes after he appeared to have thrown the game away.

It was a Tripucka pass, thrown to the left, that was intercepted by Northwestern's Art Murakowski and carried 92 yards for the Wildcat touchdown. Jim Farrar kicked the extra point that put Northwestern ahead, 7 to 6, with less than five minutes remaining in the third period. NO COMPARISON ar Winpboto. IRISH WIN Notre Dame bad a close call against Northwestern at South Bend yesterday, winning by only 12 to 7. Here's fullback Art Murakowski of the Wildcats sweeping wide for a gain in second quarter as halfback Fr ank Aschenbrenner blocks out a tackler.

Army Wins, 26-20, In Final 30 Seconds Cense Has the 'Horses' Whereas many coaches are at their wit's end about replacements after they run through their first string, the problem of hoary-headed Jimmy Conzelman of the Chicago Cardinals runs in the opposite direction. He has so many high-salaried stars that his main worry is how to get them all into action and give them an opportunity to earn their pay. It wasn't always thus. For many seasons the Cardinals were the poor relations of George Ha las' Bears in Chicago, a perennial tail-ender. Now, however, they're loaded, as we shall see this afternoon.

Starting with Charley you can run your finger down through the roster and find such backs as Boris Dhnancheff, Pat Harder, Corwin Clatt, Venton Yablonski, Elmer Angsman, Biggy. Goldberg, Jerry Davis, Paul Christman and Ray Ma ilouf, such ends as Mal Kutner, Bill Dewell, Bob Dove, Prank Bob Eavensberg, Jack Doo Ian and Sam Goldman, tackles Joe Coomer, Chet Bulger, Bob Zhnny and Walt Szot, guards Garrard Ramsey, Ray Apoiskis, Loyd Arms, Plato Andros, J. Badacezewski and Nichols and centers Vince Banonls, Bill Blackburn and Bill CampbelL Maybe there is a better team in professional football this year than the Cardinals, but the records don't show it. We'll find out more about the Cleveland Browns and San Francisco '49er5 after their game in Cleveland this afternoon. fumbled on the oneyard line, Bob Grant retrieving for the Rivi (Picture on Page 7.) BETHLEHEM, Nov.

University scored its fifth victory of the season, downing Carnegie Tech, 20-0, on a rain-soaked field before 7500 chilled spectators here today. It was the twentyfourth defeat for the Tartans since 1942 and Lehigh's tenth win over the visitors since the series was started 41 years ago. Dominic Navarro, Pittsburgh Junior substitute halfback, provided the thrill of the afternoon by smashing through center for four yards and a touchdown in the last 15 seconds of the game. Dick Gabriel, sophomore halfback, scored for Lehigh in the first and second periods. His first tally came after eight minutes play in the first quarter and ended a 61-yard drive.

His second score was on a lateral from Joe! Scannella on the three-yard marker. This climaxed an aerial thrust which started on the Lehigh 36 after an exchange of punts. Gabriel has scored 72 points. Bernie Rosen, Lehigh place-'kicker, after running his string of extra points to seven in two games, had his final try blocked. Nick Simcic, a freshman back, As the outstanding Tartan player.

In the second period he tossed three accurate passes to John Williamson for a gain of 37 yards, which put the Plaid on the Lehigh 23, but the Brown and White held at this point Tech Statistics PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 30 seconds away from defeat at the hands of an amazing University of Pennsylvania eleven, Army struck 15 yards through the air for a touchdown and a 26-20 victory that tore the hearts out of the majority of 78,000 spectators today. Overwhelming favorites seeking their eighth straight triumph. at the West Point crowd. That the Cadets were forced to fight he didn't personally superintend from behind three times and the season's crowning upset was needed a dazzling 103-yard run- back of a kickoff by Bobby Jack no fault of the man who is built Stuart to subdue the battling like a mall box.

Quakers. It was a thriller all the Army, the nation's No. 3 team way. i Ine A Di.eto a at the West Point crowd. That he didn't personally superintend the season's crowning upset was no fault of the man who is built like a mall box.

Army, the nation's No. 3 team In last week's Associated Press FOOTBALL SCORES poll, made only one first down in the first 30 minutes of play on a pass. Penn made seven. The final tally was Army 11 firsts, Penn 9. The lineup: Brightest spot of their play was the ball carrying of Hurricane Harry Szulborski.

This baby faced junior, whose program weight of 169 Is padded by a half dozen pounds, always was dangerous. He accounted for 133 yards in 16 carries and added 33 more on two pass receptions. To date in 149 attempts he has gained 792 yards, an average of 5.3. Pitt drew a break in the opening seconds of the game when Nick Bolkovac's kickoff was fumbled by Roger Roggatz and Ted Geremsky, starting at end for the first time, recovered for the Panthers on the Purdue 25. Lou Cecconi picked up nine yards at right end and Lindy Lauro broke through right tackle for a first down on the 3 3 5 The big clock showed exactly a hall-minute to go when Arnold Ga HIM, Army quarterback, fell back and fired a strike of Donora, to John Trent, an end, beyond Penn's goal line to settle the issue.

The vast crowd, a mo ment before yelling almost as one, fell silent, stricken. Only seconds before Ray Doe. ney, Penn's stocky 200-pound fullback, had blasted through Army's line and legged it 42 yards for the score that put the Quakers In front, 20-19, and apparently spelled Army's doom. at Statistics Purdue 23 Statistically there was little comparison between the teams. Notre Dame had the ball all over the field.

Notre Dame stopped Northwestern on the Irish nine-yard line in the first period and smashed back 91 yards in 15 plays to take a 6-0 lead. John PaneM plunged over for the score. Steve Oracko kicked the point but the play was called back because Notre Dame had a back in motion. Oracko's next try sailed wide. Later, so did his second try-after-touchdown and two field goal attempts.

Heroes were plentiful on both teams. The play of Alex Sarkis. Ian. the Northwestern center, and that of Murakowski, and a halfback named Day and a runner named Aschenh renner brought hope to the Wildcat fol lowers until the final gun barked. The Irish were without their ace ball carrier, Emil Sitko, hut they had Terry Brennan to gain 78 yards in 12 carries, Gay went 70 yards in 11 tries.

And the surging Notre Dame line and line backersLeon Hart of Turtle Creek, Pa. Bill Fischer, Mike Swistowicz a Jerry Groom were in there, too, smashing hard at the purple-clad Evanston warriors. Notre Dame netted 308 yards on the ground to 103 for Northwestern. Northwestern had 65 yards in the air to 61 for the The lineup: ARMY Left enegTrent. Kellum, Lott tackleaFeir.

Aton, examen. Left guardsLunn, Henry. Centers Yeoman, Bullock. WHS. Henriktom Righi tuarda--Galloway, Magna'.

Berm RIgt tacklep--Davle, Right ndoperish, Kuge, QuarterbacksGAMMA MOCrent, Castellon, Die lens. Left halfbacksStuart. Vinson, Calm, Shalt's. Rieht halfbacksStott, Shelley. Gillette, FullbackgStephenton.

Itlekbahn. Cowen. Ono, Hum. PENN Left encleWettlaufer, 011sttelt. Roberts, Left tacklesDetorre, CouneY.

Left guardsTokarczyk, Lemonick. loft. man. CentemBednarik. Rowell.

Right guardsAdams, Schenhier. Right tacklesReichenbach. Conway. Right einteSponaugle, Afoot. QuarterbacksFalcone, Ta torte, COUIRM.

Left hallbackeSlca. Bognefl, Alberta, Cook, Right belfbaokiRhOMIL To MIMI. 3n YullbackaDooney. lamb legt. Boom by quarters: Army I T-213 Penn 0 0-30 Army Icor Inr TouchdownsScott, Stuart 2, Trent Points after touckdownYeoman 2 (Manakins).

Penn scorimr Toueheowne Prem Dooney 3. Pointe after toualattownAgrocs 3 tplactitickel. 10 4 55 15 239 16 Leh Igb Yea 17 First downs 7 271 Yards tuned rushing 41 3 Forwards comOleted 2 0 Forwards Intercepted by 0 30 yards gained passing 48 302 Total offense 10 16 Runback of kickoffs 10 8 Number of punts 5 v27 1 A arise dtstance of punts 174 1 Fumbles 4 8 Own fumbles recovered 2 2 Opr, fumbles recovered 1 10 Number of ponsities I 10 Yards lost on penalties Tulane Trips Baylor NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 13. (AP.) Tulane played its best game of the a on today to trounce the Baylor Bears.

3513, before an estimated 50.000 spec. tp tors. 4 I 40 60 278 5 24 Pitt First downs 7 By rushing 8 BY passing 1 Number of rushes 45 Yards gained rushing 122 Yards lost rushing 28 Net gain rushing 96 Passes attempted 4 Passes completed 2 Passes Intercepted 0 Net yards sainetl 21 Total plays. rushes and pssses 49 Total net yards pined 117 Punts. number 10 Punt average 3 6 lis Punta blocked Kickoffs 4 Punt returns.

aumbor 4 Punt returns. yards 66 Stripa returns, number 3 Kickoff returns, yards 1111 Fumbles, number 2 Ball lost fumbles 2 Pensities. number 5 Yards penalized 35 Lafayette 27 Ohio Wes. 7 Lincoln 21 Winston Salem 0 Maryland St 26 Bridgeport 13 Mass. 13 Tufts 13 Middlebury 13 Vermont 12 Moravian 6 Juniata 6 Muhlenberg 40 F.

M. 7 Navy Plebes 18 Penn Fr. 12 Navy 150s 25 Rutgers 150s 7 N. Britain 6 Lowell Textile 6 N. Hamp.

20 Conn. 7 PMC 31 Ursinus 0 Penn State 47 Temple 0 Potomac 7 National Agric. Cot 7 Princeton 20 Yale 14 Princeton JVs 26 Yale JVs 7 Rochester 47 Clarkson 0 Rutgers 40 NYU 0 Scranton 48 Albright 0 Springfield 35 Amer. Int. 0 St.

Lawrence 7 Gettysburg 7 St. Michael's 19 Norwich 0 Swarthmore 33 Drexel 13 Union 25 Hamilton 7 Washington Coll. 7 Catholic 6 W. Maryland 13 Leb. Valley 0 Wesleyan 16 Trinity 0 Yale Fr.

28 Princeton Fr. 20 SOUTH Alabama 14 Ga. Tech 12 Bluefield 7 Knoxville 6 Claffin 6 Bethune 6 Clemson 21 Wake Forest 14 Delaware 14 Rollins 13 Dillard 34 Jackson 0 Duke 62 Geo. Wash. 0 Fayetteville 26 Livingstone 0 Fla.

State U. 26 Miss. Coll. 6 Florida A. M.

36 Atlantic Clark 12 Fla. 15 Ga. State Coil. 13 Ft.Jackson 46 Ft.McPherson 0 Ft. Valley St.

6 Benedict 2 Greensboro 14 Va. State 0 Georgia 42 Auburn 14 Hampden Sydney 20 Randolph Macon 6 Kentucky 34 Florida 15 Langston 7 Ark. Coll. 13 Maryville 20 Carson-Newm'n IS Milligan 21 W. Va.

Tech 7 Miss. 16 Tennessee 13 (Continued on Page 6.) 1 a 24 4 IS 6 4 I IS LONG RETURN-Little Bim bo Immediate ty atoned for this miscue by Lig. al nrgd George the 1 0 t' se A punt this point Lou's buddy and romantic adviser, Carl De Pasqua, dove over left guard for a touchdown. Nick Bolkovac booted the extra point and the surprised hosts found themselves trailing, 7-0. Johnny Kerestec became the workhorse as Purdue tried a comeback.

He racked up a first down on the Pitt 29 and Szulborski then took a lateral from Bob DeMoss to move the sticks to the 12. George Radosevich spilled Kerestes for no gain, Szulborski was held to a three. yard advance, Bill MePeak trapped DeMoss for a three-yard deficit and Robinson batted down Szulborski's desperate aerial. Purdue finally hit the comeback trail late in the second quarter when Gorgal returned Bill Hardisty's punt to the Purdue four. DeMoss overshot the target on a pass, but on the next play Szulborski swept right end, reversed his field in clever lash.

Ion and bolted 56 yards for a score. Bernie Barkouskie knifed through to block Rudy Trbovich's conversion attempt, leaving Pitt in control at 7-6. 100-YARD RUN The flurry over Szulborski's run had not died down when Trbovich kicked off. Robinson made the catch on the goal line and moved into high gear down the left sideline. He passed up I Purdue defenders as if they were frozen to the turf and 40 yards from his target he veered off to the center of the field to gallop over unmolested.

The crowd still was roaring when Bolkovac kicked the extra point to build Pitt's lead to 14-6. Purdue paraded 65 yards to give the home crowd some hope In the third quarter. Szulborski and Kerestes alternated in packing the leather on this drive which penetrated to the Pitt nine. Purdue obligingly switched tactics and called Herb Camp-field's signal twice and Gorgal's once. The three running plays netted nothing and on fourth down DeMoss' pass was incomplete.

Early in the fourth quarter Wit) Forsythe picked the ban right out of DeMose hand to (Continued 00 Pigs 7.) COLLEGIATE LOCAL N. Car. State 20 Duquesne 6 LOCAL TEAMS ABROAD Lehigh 20 Carnegie Tech 0 Pitt 20 Purdue 13 DISTRICT Allegheny 40 Ear lham 0 Alliance 18 Edinboro 0 Davis-Elkns 13 Glenville 0 Geneva 12 Bethany 6 Grove City 7 Westminster 0 Juniata 6 Moravian 6 Kutztown 13 Rider 6 Quail. Marines 26 St. Francis 0 Shippensburg 28 Indiana Tehrs.

18 Slip. Rock 20 Clarion Tchrs. 7 W. Liberty 13 Concord St. 6 OHIO Ashland 19 Hiram 0 Baldwin-Wallace 41 Mt.

Union 21 Bowling Green 38 Morningside 7 Canisius 26 Toledo 21 Capital 7 Otterbein 6 Cincinnati 26 W. Reserve 13 Dayton 13 Okla. City 13 Defiance 14 Bluffton 0 Denison 41 Case 7 Findlay 16 Ohio Northern 6 Miami 41 Wichita 16 Ohio U. 14 Butler 6 Thiel 20 Wilmington 0 Wash-Jeff 21 Muskingum 14 Wooster 31 Wittenberg 7 EAST Amherst 13 Williams 7 Army 26 Penn 20 Bergen Jr. Coll.

14 Arnold 7 Bloomsburg 14 E. Stroudsburg 0 Boston Coil. 14 Wm. Mary 14 Boston Coll. Fr.

41 Dartmouth Fr. 7 Brooklyn 31 Alfred 7 Buffalo 47 Bucknell 13 CCNY 47 Hof stra 6 Coast Guard 13 RPI 6 Colgate 20 Syracuse 13 Columbia 13 Navy 0 Cornell 27 Dartmouth 26 Devens 13 Champlain 0 Hartwick 25 Wagner 12 Harvard 30 Brown 19 Haverford 21 Susquehanna 7 Hobart 24 Sampson 0 Holy Cross 13 Fordharn 6 Johns Hopkins 9 Dickinson 6 Point 27 Ads Iplits 19 IVINNING PLAY-Then Army took an out-of-bounds kick in its own 26, and with the minutes ticking off, Galli fa began throwing footballs. In six plays, including a 21-yard Galiffa-to-Dave Parrish aerial, 'the Black Knights swept to the Quaker 15, and on third down Galina hit the jackpot. For Ga liffa, the winning toss made last-minute amends for two glaring fumbles he committed in the first half, on each of which the amused Penn team capitalized in full. Dooney, in addition to his touchdown dash in the final period, had passed to end Bob Sponaugle from one-yard out for Penn's first score in the opening quarter and had lugged the leather across for the Quakers' second tally to keep his team in front, 14-13, at the half.

DOONEY STARS-His father died on and the funeral at Atlantic City has been postponed until Monday so that Dooney could get his shot it a leo, 14-, 1 r' IC r' 4' I. 11 I vi 4 2.,,,,:444,1, 1 Iti, 4 i 1,, 2 1St lk 4 eA4 V1 Atet.V4'- 'gL 1 1' 4 .141 ,.) 1, 141 4v.r.s..--- i ''''''N'''' tl, ,4 At 1, -kl, A VA rt l' 'it air' I I 'ip 1,14. -1 7.4 1 -1t, '-e lit, -ill 1 -7 $,, ,0 rt t-, tIzikiCele 14' 't -A 1,, t- 4,,,,., 4,4 et '-7 4' 4, 0 ik 4 t. --N. f-', A ..1 -7.

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A A. '''A "Ii; .4 i' ....,4 .410, 44,...,: ,,,1 1 igka, 46? 44,, ,,,4 -1, le 1 04--4 1 0,, i i 't 1 NORTNNWITERN Left endssturavieff, Thomas. Left tactiesAlaWil, Maddock. Vetted swarthNemeth, Daniels. Nowickt.

Wietechs. 'Patter. Right Day, Anderson. Right Forman. I eh endsHa mann, Stones iter.

QuarterhacklItiratin Left Wittier, Farrar. Right hattbaskaTsmnitHIL P. DAL NorthtnEtnn. Fullback, Sturakowsti. SuradhetM, Pile.

Mato) Perlieette. NOTRE Et Left endsa-Martin, Flynn. Let IscalsonterIchee, Melt. Caul Hudak Lett euareaFircher, Macao. Joni-don, Croton, Grothaus.

suardaWenitell, to, laleFailon SOT ndsHart, Tagenan WI' tams I ofthallbacktBwmari. Smith ales dry Right hallbackaSwIstowicz. Coutre, Lan. ripbseqataa holt. Walther.

bY quarters qorthwirdem 0 0 0 I Nnt re rump Et 0 0-1E lerte ler Tour', dnyrn---Mursle, yr, in Pr int atter touchdownFarrar placement otre Dame acorn's. Irish Statistics Army Statistics rinrthlvestern Notre Dame 10 101 Net yards 1,1 Prward passel! attempted I 0 4 65 Vrdk Prwntd 6 1 4 tntervepted by 106 runback interceutibr.s 11 PuntIng average 47 0 Total yrds, all Wag returned b2 1 fumbles 2 0 'furls loot lot Familial Penn Army First downs 17 'Yards rained rusit.ng (not 142 Is Forward parses attromtcd 2 I Forward Yards by forward palters 126 4 Forward passes intercepted be 1 2 3 Yds gained runttark Intercepted passes 14 33 Punting average from acrImmate I 30 142 Total nrels all kicks returned 139 1 OPitoanre4tiottrnira rerTiraterett CY Coire---cze Resugs SOCCER Penn State 2 Corntil 2 Nave 1 lees rthmore Ya. I Pr1neet00 tRostacoorralr We, WM 40 21(anil (0 41. C10 Cincinnati W. 184.

AP Pi irephoto. of a kickoff. Running interference for him is quarterback Arnold Galifla (16) of Donors. Army won by 26 20 score. I03-YARD RUN Bobby Stuart (42) of Army on his way to team's second touchdown on 103-yard runback I.

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