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The Salt Lake Tribune from Salt Lake City, Utah • 19

Location:
Salt Lake City, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DALLAS Tex Nov 16 (UP) Arkansas university Cinderella team of the Southwest Football conference will be ost in the annual Cotton bowl classic at Dallas next New Year's day sources close to the Cotton Bowl Assn said Saturday Frank (Bum) NVilliamq Utah State backfield sitar Seven clanh in Logan Saturday againat NIyoming hits pay dirt for Aggie touchdown in Big Cowboys' Caputo Ag back stands over Williams 'DON'T DO THAT TOUCHDOWNS TICKLE' SAYS BUS ttco 4 Caputo 0 Utah Wins 214 Ail os ies Coutorars Traump wo a LOgan Eleven Spots Rivals 0ne Touchdown Nelson 1 Sunday Nov 17 1946 zrbe (snit al(te treibunt I 41 I Redskins Stop Hall to Take at Gam rom ie 4siooesailAiliso i 0 I 7 9 t1rnrk09XP 1 Sunday Nov 17 1946 zrt)c (Snit akte 'itribunt ARKANSAS GETS BOWL BID 0 I i 4 cwo 0 IL- 1 DALLAS Tex Nov 16 (UP) Arkansas university 1E3 Cinderella team of the Southwest Football conference will be i i i i Ili CI i an oth 2 1 9 0 0 9 0 0 1' ri t' host in the annual Cotton bowl classic at Dallas next New 0 Year's day' sources close to the Cotton Bowl Assn said 1 Saturday e- 11 11 Iles tit Ru re- --i "Pr51600VMPMMPMPOmf- AgNIWA er Cou ars ti 9 1 flop 1 Redskins 'Stop 1 Lo' trail Eleven 1': 70---1 Hall to Take 0 I Spots Rivals I Nelson o' i-: i'''' 1''--''''''' '1 I $5-- ''f at Galile troni -): 1 --1 011e Touellitolvil I s- i- 1 st t- 7: 4 44- at 07- 140 i -7-: 1 :1: fl: i'' "-f 7 -i i i i ii tr 4 l': 1 A i I 5 -c 't I ---f 4 1 I 40i 'f 4- 0- I 1 -s' i I 4 --v- 4144' i 1 kk q' nt 1 4 1 -S' I -4 1 i 'r'' I 1 il a 1 4 44' 1 '4 ikt "I' 1 '4' 1 '7' 1 4 7- Viilliams i s-''''r-11 7 I -A t- I lkok 1 at: fr A 1 --'-'4 ''-ft 4 v--07 1 i' 1 1 4 i ---ye ----4 0: 1 1344 3 a Caputo 4 1 0- i i i --2----" 1 4 I -00 i '1 1 1 2: tr ii i'r 1 t0 -4 2 vv-t a i t''' -'a''''' 7''-l $1 3 1 i 41- t- 5 i 4 '414 4f i 1 ---4 4DON'T DO TIIAT TOUCIID OWNS TICKLE' SAYS BUS 9 Frank (nos) Williams Utah State "backfield star I Seven clapiti in Logan Saturday against Vi'yoming it i --v -4 A V' le 0" 4 i hits pay dirt for aec'tond A ggie touchdown in Big I Coboyis Caputo Ag hack tdands over 1Villiams 1 i 4 -e 1 l' ta11 S-61RAAlocutikwgomigattaw164itotoAirtxraosemoalsimazcoulvoiatemobbuoialokatoodbtoomodgiiikA bd saga 4-i 1 Tribune Sipecial KEZAR STADIIIM Sari Francisco their hard-charging line bottling up Fireball Forrest Hall except In the closing moments of the game tlhete university here 21-13 Saturday afternoon before 7500 stunned fans The crowd which appeared lost in the massive Kezar bowl had come to witness Hall add new laurels to his yard-gaining' collection but they stayed to watch the alert Vt forwards bottle up Hall while Frank Nelson and Darrell Hatert stole the offensive show -San Francisco didn't score until the fourth quarter when with 21-0lead the Redskins wilted long enough to allow Hall to score on a pass and then toss a pass to Steve Givovas to score another But when hail's second dropkick attempt was no goodthe outcome was decided Hall Heeled The ITtes had Hall hogtied most of the afternoon Until he made his touchdown run after catching a pass his best offensive effort had been a 9-yard sweep in the first period With Hall stymied the Dons were a sad outfit and to top it off one of their own fumblen deep in Don territory gave Utah its winning touchdown in the opening moments of the fourth period Nelson playing his best game of the rear returned to his prewar etandard lie Acored two of the touchdowne and WAX a big threat all afternoon It was Nelson who caught a nice pass from Mitt Smith midway in the first quarter reversed his field and went over mending up for the -first blood of the game Ray Peterson made the first of his three VIC cessful conversions and Utah led 7-0 'antigen ine hot except game tins upancisco after lost in come arela to ut they 't forFranko the until with ed long re on a Steve It when tpt was cidect most of sde his a pass been a period were a one of on ter-- touch- of the time of prewar ot the at ell caught midway his for the Peteree furah TrihunP 01 POri a I 1 -With their eSi rTA1 Ipt ridtTcAhf a rSgai nn cFiri an ne bot etc! tiling up Fireball Forrest Hall except ithete in the closing moments of the game nUonniterbseittoyrehe7r500e 21t1u3nSnaetdUrfdaanys after- The crowd which appeared iost in the massive Kezar bowl had come to NV i a Hell add new laurels to his yard-gaining' collection hut they istnyed to watch the alert l't for- wards bottle up liall while Frank Nelson and Darrell 'Uteri stole the offensive show -San Francisco didn't score until the fourth quarter when v-1th 21-0 lead the Redskins wilted long enough to allow Hall to score on a pass and then toss a pass to Steve hall Givovas to score another But when l's second dropkick attempt was no good the outcome was decided i Hall Bottled The Itt had Tall hotied most of es -g the afternoon he made hi touchdown run after catching a pass his best offensive effort had been a 9-yard sweep in the first period With Hall stymied the Dons were a sad outfit and to top It off one of trliiteoirrvogwrinv fumbles deep in Don ter- Utah its winning touchdown in the opening moments of the fourth period int ob eshtisgapmr eev aorf tFt'IlliNet In: Pin bti rt tOthill il no I ft a milt Ply: AO Ir et at In the opposition seven points in the first four minutes of the game the Utah Aggies uncorked a brilliant running attack to turn back a heads-up hard-fighting Wyoming eleven 21-7 here Saturday afternoon before a crowd of approximately 5000 fans in perfect football weather After the Cowboys had marched 57 yards to score on the lith play of the contest the Aggies roared 34 yards in six plays to knot the count In the same period ground out 67 yards for a touchdown in the second frame then climaxed a 62-yard march in the third canto by mending Johnny Caputo over right tackle for the clincher Wyoming 'put up a stout defense for the Aggie aerial attack in the first half preventing a single parts completion but they had nothing to hobble the feet-stepping Farmer ballcarriere who skirted the enda and knifed through gaping boles in the center to pile up 35o yards on the ground during the contest This coupled with a 78-yard net through the air in the second half gave Coach Dick Romney's lads the respectable total of 428 yards for their afternoon's efforts Twelve Fumbles Twelve fumbles highlighted the skirmish and the alert Cowboys pounced on five of the Aggie bobbles art well as scooping in three of the five they dropped thernmelvea It was a recovered Aggie fumble in the opening moments of the game which led to Wyoming's touchdown and gave the Farmer fans some anxious moments until the Blue and White 2- formation machine began grinding out Its yardage When USAC took the ball on the opening kickoff it was apparent to the whole crowd that the Farmers were in high gear Ev Sorenson returned the boot to the Aggie 27 and on the first play he scampered around his own right end for 56 yards to the Wyoming 35 behind some beautiful downfield blocking Two plays later Bill Ryan Aggie fullback galloped around right end and fumbled when hit by Wyoming's Johnny Rainwater center and Jim Clayton trickle Larry Powell recovered the pigskin for Wyoming on the Cowboy 43 and the lads from Laramie were off to the races Henry Kolasinaki who was the heart of the Wyoming attack all afternoon lateraled to Hank Rohn and tlae rugged fullback threaded his way to the Farmer 25 The same play around the opposite side put the the opposi- tion seven points in the first four minutes of the game the Utah Aggies uncorked a brilliant run- fling attack to turn back a heads- up hard-fighting Wyoming eleven 21-7 here Saturday afternoon be- fore a crowd of approximately 5000 fans in perfect football weather After the Cowboys had marched 57 yards to score on the llth play of the contest the Aggies roared 34 yards in six plays to knot the count in the same period ground out 67 yards for a touchdown in the second frame then climaxed a 62-yard march in the third canto by sending Johnny Caputo over right tackle for the clincher put up a stout defense Wyoming for the Aggie aerial attack in the first half preventing a single pass completion but they had armer ba ll nothing to hobble the fast-stepping Farmer it carriers ihrravigh gaping hl hhosidrtedthheeeendish atnhde center to pile up 35o yards on the ground during the contest This coupled with a 78-yard net through the air in the second half gave Flitizlelizi 1013neict a ok teafitif 000rmft a lads the re- 28 yards for their Twelwe Fumbles Twelve fumbles highlighted the skirmish and the a lert Cowboys pounced on five of the Aggie bobble'' i i 4 I i Cadets Pound Penn 34-7 Cadets Pound Inspired Irish Hammer Wildcat Squad 27-0 Iiisl)ired Irish Haiiiiiier NELSON GOES FOR SIX BIG REDSKIN YARDS Frankle Nelson (30) Utah halfback drive for mix period of Saturday'm game Reed Nostrum (16) yards against University of San Francisco In first I opens up the hole for Nelson Utah won 21-13 Dona Rally Buffaloes Tie 13-13 SOUTH BEND Ind Nov 16 UP)--Notre Dame which played three quarters as if it had left its heart in Yankee stadium in that scoreless battle with Army a week ago finally found its spark in 9-year-old Johnny Fanelli Saturday and cracked out three touchdowns in the final period for a 27-0 decision over Northwestern BYU Rolls Over Hapless Colorado Aggies 20 to 6 pligy his lone role as place kicker The kick WAS good and he hit twice later to run his record to 24 eon etniona in his 'mit 28 triea The Dons ronred beck and matte their only serioua threat in the fourth quarter an Petersons short kickoff was taken on the 38 Ryan passed to Rowe on the Utah 31 and Hall scooted to the Ute 19 before the Redskin forwards rose up to atop the drive The Dona never reached that stage of the field again on offense until late in the final quarter and by that time the outcome was decided In the second quarter Nelson streaked from his own 40-yard line to the five and after an off-aide penalty had set the Dons back to their own one Smith quarterback-sneaked over for the score Again Peterson came through from placement The third period and the remainder of the second were ding-dong affairs with the ball changing fumbles and al i made fourth kickoff Ryan 31 and rore the itop the It stage te until by that ed In treaked to the off-ende wick to i placenalnder affairs -on Gaining their sixth triumph in a campaign for the national collegiate championship the Irish hurled a total of 45 players Against the stubborn Wildcats to wear them down for fourth-quarter scoring drives of 61 50 and 15 yards in the sleet as a sellout throng of 1'18000 buttoned up its overcoats and roared approval Paniti a 190-pound sophomore from Morristown J- collaborated watt Ernd tiled) Sitko of Fort Wayne Ind and I3ob Livingstone of Hammond Ind to provide most of By JIMMY HODGSON FORT COLLINS Colo---The Brigham Young university Cougars finished the Big Seven conference football season with a convincing 20-6 victory over the Colorado A Rams before a small crowd of about 1500 fans here Saturday The Cougars rolled up a total of 40S yards as they rolled all over the field The big blue team didn't have to punt all day Their offense was unstoppable in midfield but the I i-- 'fl- I Long Runback Frank Aschenbrenner's 45-yard runback of Lujitekii punt put Northwetitern in a threatening position midway in the initial period but Pat Keefea pass was intercepted behind the goal line by Lujack to end the thrust which reached the 21 Northwestern behind Freshman Art Aturakowski's 22-yard scamper drove to the 22 in the second period only to have Terry Brennan swipe Keete's aerial again to end a threat Those were the only times Northwestern came within earshot of the no doubt about their superiority flex Olsen passed to Scotty Deeds to put jh ball on the ls-yard line Lyle Iler in two playa lugged it to the nine and Deeds lunged through tackle for the second counter Pete Liapis made the extra point to run the score to 14-6 The final counter vcam made with just 10 seconds left in the ball game Holler Deeds and Glen Clark did some hard running to drive 55 yards Clark took it over from the 1-yard line The try for extra -point was missed by inches Deeds and Koller came through with some great running for the Ft while Nilsen at center Owen Dixon at guard and Jim Keitzman at end were sensational on the line Olsen again came through with a fine passing performance as the Cougars completed 11 out of 23 tries 11 mid a total of 22 yards from scrimmage and 126 from passes as they rclied and rolled and rolled and never had to call on their punter once STATISTICS 3 USF IL so to 176 3 23 3 1 0 9 JSF I I al- It SF 11 "ta to 176 3 113 Utes- MIIIIMMIMEMEEP 1 I 3 0 9 USI i I STATISTICS Notre Northweittern Dome 27 STATISTICS Utah First down 423 a 1 Colo BTU Firia downs 21 10 Net yards rurahing 282 57 Net yards passing 120 88 Forwards 'attempted 23 13 Forwards completed 11 8 Forwards intercepted 1 1 Punt average 0 31 Fumbles recovered 3 2 Yards penalized 20 10 PHILADELPHIA Pa Nov 16 (AP)--Galloping Glenn Davis and his Army playmates turned in one of their more sizzling shows Saturday for the entertainment of a sellout crowd of just under 78000 customers and careened to a 34-7 victory over the ponderous Penn gridders They thus made it 27 straight starts without a defeat in their three-year run of wrecking collegiate football machines It was an Army team triumph as the Cadets came back hot from their scoreless deadlock against Notre Dame a week ago to push the supposed mighty Quakers all over the place But actually this one was strictly a Davin show The California comet did practically everything as he scored two touchdowns himself forward passed for another and lateraled for a fourth and put on what comes close to being the top performance of a career that has been strictly star-studded all the way Carries Nine Times Altogether he was in there banging away for 50 minutes and carried the ball nine times for a net gain of 59 yards or an average of better than 61(4 yards a carry This with his completions for 76 his kicking thrown in for good measure made it strictly Davis day in this out-sized concrete horseshoe And when it wasn't Davis taking the Penns apart it was his running mate Doc (The Monster) Blanchard belting away at the line or Arnold Tucker the unsung quarterback pitching passes until he injured his leg and had to be relieved Meantime the Quakers tossed a scare into the Cadets for a few moments in the first period when they got an Army fumble on the Cadets 30 and huffed and puffed to the 12 where they tried to settle for a field goal that did not click From there until Army ran out its third and fourth stringers in the final chapter however Penn wasn't able to get beyond its own 38-yard line Against those bottom-of-the-barrel Army reserves Penn managed a touchdown when Rodney Adams broke through to block a Cadet punt on the West Point 24 The ball rolled over the end zone and End Frank Jenkins fell on it By that time the Cadets had al-(Continued on Following Page) First dolt ns 4 Net yards rushing 52 rorwards attempted 10 Verwards completed 2 1 Ards gained passing 21 rarwards intercepted by 1 1 ds intercept runbacks runt av( (fr scrim) 26 1 ardage kick returns Oppo fumbles recovered 0 lards penaliztd 23 4 199 13 132 5 -5 3 38 44 Irish goni N4rthIAPhiPrill (lorgki Ivy Dilerrineemea Sarkimian trpet 11 arlp MRCKPnzie Schvall IdurakowAki Notre Hamo le Martin It Connor 114 Fischer Wendell rIC a Pit rangein rt Czarobski re 7111y on Ttnaell i In Livingstone rti Sitko tb Mello Net 11 rthl raohinrc Fora ards attempted Fora ard completed Yards gained Forwards intercepted Yards gained int4p11sses Punt as-g (fr PI erim) Yardage kick fumbles reeos Yardage penalized Punt it-vg (fr serY) Yardage kirk fumbles reeov Yardage penalized STATISTICS AVyorning VSAC Total yards scrimmage 185 374 Yard 100 scrimmage 40 21 Net yards 115 350 'Yards gained '78' Total yardage net 153 428 First down scrimmage 9 111 First down passes 0 5 Total first downs 9 23 Forwards attempted 8 18 Forwards completed 1 7 Passes Intercepted 1 2 Number of punts 8 3 Avg distance punts 55 47 Number of kickoffs 2 4 Avg distance kickoffs 55 58 Number of penalties 4 8 Yardage penalized 20 50 Number of fumbles 5 7 fumbles recovered 5 2 Ball lost downs 2 1 20 1 45 BOULDER Colo Nov 16 A P) Colorado's battered Buffaloes batted over the pregame dope and snarled up the Big Seven football race Saturday by tieing Denver's defending champions 13-13 The hefty Sliver and Cold lads wo-touchdown underdogs to the Pioneers who had won four-straight within the conference scored first through the air fell behind when Denver cashed in on a break early in the second half and then passed their way to the tieing score in the third period The Buffs scored early in the second frame as Dick Woodward caught Tex Reilly's long heave on the Pioneer two and fell across Denver stormed back with the next kickoff and scored when Jack Girtin hit Greg Browning with a short pass on the Colorado two rind the big end carried a tackler across the line with him to make it six-all late in the second period Denver went ahead on a break in the second half Bill Simmons dropped one and Jack Reed recovered for Denver on the Colorado 26 Bob Hazeihurst ripped 11 to the 15 then lammed it to the four on two more tries Bob Riddell lost five on a lateral but the durable Hazel-burst piled through for five to the four and then went the last four for the score George Miller hit this time and it was 13-6 The Ruffs bounded IVA back Into the ball game when Bob Phillipson intercepted one of Don Rezzer's passes on the Denver 36 Reilly quickly fed a flat pass to Dick Schropferman on the same play that had helped setArti the first touchdown and the fast halfback churned 17 yards to the Denver 19 Reilly then hit John Ziseh with a 16-yard pass and it was first down on the three On the first play Reilly swept to the left and went over standing up With the chips down big Jim Smith banged it straight through for the tieing 13th point The long-dormant Colorado running game came to life in the fourth period and the Buffs rolled from their own 31 to the Denver 24 before continued on nthWing Pagel g9 ore by quartens: Northwestern 0 0 0 0 Notr Len' 7 0 0 20-27 Norte DIIMP Senring: P111110111 for Mello) 2 Slovak for Sit ko POITITR after for Livingstone 3 4' placement West trier cold Coaches: Northwa Waldorf: Notre Frank Leahy Attendanee-56000 MSC Takes 3948 Win Over Bisons Colorado A Bob Chaff Carl 93 69 ee Bob Newcomer eerr Nay te center aanmd 3 0 Cox fdaeonnudt at tackle 3-1 line tackle were best on the VI Linetinft: Colorado A and Brigham Young most Bremkamp le ellrrei i'll largely who ptol aoYli mlotst was 3 the IP7fin Steffen It Zember lg Whitney interceptions Newcomer Nilsen 'Hach rg Dixon hicks to Sig Warinwk rt Stainey Riegel re Kietsman Then in the fourth period the Dons midlisort no ollen stepped up the pace Smith who rhartee th Deed fl Hopper th Koller had been matching Halls punting cox lb Chatterton all afternoon endod the third period Score by quarters: by kicking dead on the IJ 8-yard enlo A and 6 6 line On the first play a back-field Brigham Young 0 7 0 33-20 Scoring: Colorado A and Touch- fumble allowed the ball to roll free Ii 2 Clark and Jensen recovered for the 'Iles Extra points: Liapis Nelson lost a couple in the first attempt but went over standing up on the next play as the guards and Al A cr tries Whip tn tackles opened a wagonload hole Peterson's placement was good and Colo State Utah Utah led 21-0: then Hall who had 20-7 been largely only No 13 all after noon broke Into the secondary as LAS CRUCES 11 Nov 16 the ends decoyed Utah's pass defenders Hall took the ball on the what was termed a mild 20 and no one was near him as he upset the New Mexico Aggies de- scampered for the pay dirt Hall feated a supposedly stronger Col- dropliieked the extra point a Texas orado State team 20-7 i league hoot which barely cleared 1 I he erossba The New Mexico team started i The complexion of the game still 36 93 3 1 44 69 34 46 69 94 Nelson he pass he Dons who punting' 1 period 6-vard ack-field oil free first at-ling up rda and 1d od and cho had LI after dary as as de-on the -rX ea he Ilall a Texas cleared me still the backing-up power behind Johnny Lujackit alert quarterbacking 27 First Dawns That combination which helped Notre Dame roll up 27 first 1OWn it VI Northwestern 's four gain 523 yards by rushing A granite Irish 1ne limited Northwesterns ground of the best in the Big Nine competition with an average of 222 yards per a mere 62 yards For the first time this season however Notre Dame with Lujack doing most of the hurling completed only one pass That toss was completed behind the line of scrimmage for a loss of five yards Northwestern connected on two aerials for a gain of 21 yards Passing was kept to a minimum the last half after the quarterbacks assessed chances with a slick ball The game was only fire And one-half minutes 011 when the Irimh acnred their first touchdown on a G3- Vard pilph In eight filar featuring ihe line plaything of Sitkowho picked tp 34 and 14 yard en route rapped it with a 1-toot plunge ond little -No Barley of rarkersburg In to LiALIA 114 Ali ar i he 1-P and had trouble inside the scoring territory again Four times they were stopped once on the 2-yard line again on the five and on the four and the eight Rut the lads from Provo crossed the pay line three times and that was more than enough to tuck away the game and give the Cougars a good chance to finish third in the conference race has won three games lost two and tied one this season The Cougars got a scare when they marched down to the Rams' 20-yard line and were held only to have the Farmers march 60 yards to score Carl Cox crashed center for the counter The try for point failed whet Bob Hooper was forced Out of bounds came back to march to the 4-yard line where the Rams recovered a fumble to halt the drive But Scotty Deeds recovered Chaffee's fumble in midfield and Deeds spearheaded a strong drive and went to the pay line Deeds took the hall over Reed Nilsen made the extra point The Cougars were ahead just 7-6 at halftime Brighian Young rolled right to the Ram 2-yard line late in the third quart er but a back field -i ii-motion penalty and the determined Aggie line kept them from scoring But Coach Eddie Kimball's crew came back with a great drive in the final canto to score twice and leave pigskin on the Aggie VI and Kolasinskt made it a first down on the USAC11 holasinski Scores It appeared that the Ags would stifle the thrust when George Nelson dragged Rohn down for no gain on the next play Kolasinksi's pass was incomplete in the end zone and a smash over center gained nothing It was fourth and 10 when Kolasinski rocketed around right end and lateraled to Rohn on the six the play stopping on the Farmer one with first down coming up Kolasinski blasted over tackle for the six ienntinnect on Folinwhig Page) BOZEMAN Mont Nov 16 An ice-covered field proved to be no handicap for Montana State college Saturday as they whipped North Dakota State college 39-18 behind a powerful ground attack The Nodakm jumped into an early lead in the first period when Alvin Lund blocked a Montana State punt and Paul Moore scooped up the ball and raced 24 yards for a touchdown The isitors scored again in the third period on a long pass from Charley Basch to Moore and Jerry Mtilready bucked over for the lamt North Dakota tally in the last stanza In between went to work with it pulverizing ground attack Their first touchdown resulted from a pass while Neil Brook a took two steps from the goal line 34ontana State Fullback 1IlI Nelmon notched the next three scores for his team with long jaunts around end TRIBUNE FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD the scoring in the first period when they took the ball over on the Colorado 36-yard line Then on a series of plays they scored to go ahead in the game where they remained all afternoon Army 0 13 14 7-34 Penn 0 0 0 7 ARMY-QUAKER GRID DATA was as rosy as Utah 's cherry-red uniforms until Smith punted out of bounds and Nostrum eng-aged some extracurricular activity with a rival lineman which resulted In his being- banished from the game and the Dons given the ball on the L't 23-yard hn Grbovas made an impossible catch in the end zone covered by two receivers and the Utous led only 21-13 However when Halls second opk ick attempt was blocked the game was all but over Close Statistic's erry-red out of igect trx wah in his me and the L't an ne covhe -n Hall's pt was ut over 1 0 7 13 0-20 Washing 10 6 0 0-16 Colo 6 0 0 6 Oregon 0 0 0 0 Navy 0 0 7 0-- 7 Denver: 6 7 0-13 Penn State 0 12 0 0-12 Colo 0 6 7 0-13 NO SLIGHT MYSTERY Dame 7 0 0 20-27 N'westem 0 0 0 0-- 0 Illinois 0 9 7 0--10 Ohio State 7 0 0 7 Colo Mines 35 Hays 14 GOLDEN Colo Nov 16 (TlP) Mines led by Del Redding who scored three of their five touchdowns Saturday defeated Ft Hays 35-14 before 4000 fa Mt Redding- scored again In the third period as did Bob Taylor and In the fourth periodRedding ran for 35 yards and the final tally of the game Gulls Clippers Postpone Pro Football Tilt Army Penn First downs It 10 Yards gained rushing 193 135 Int-wards attempted 22 14 Forward completed 11 7 'I Ards gained passing 140 102 "-Skr a rde Intercepted by 3 3 Id Intercept runbacks 30 7 A it distance punts 40 ardti kick returns 120 119 fumbles recovered 4 lards penalised 4 5 39 Tin Y1 1-or rat At Vat 11 do 1 a ay t)pi of Utah 7 7 0 71-21 0 0 0 13-13 No Caroline State 27 Virginia 7 Duke 39 South Carolina Georgia Tech 35 Tulane 7 William Mary 20 George Washington Richmond 7 Virginia Teach 7 (tie) I 26 Citadel 7 West Liberty Teachers 7 Potomac State Florida A 32 Clark college Tho statistics make the game look closer thnn a actually was In first dols on both bad I 1 Utah moven bY rushing and four by passing and the Dons five by rushing and four-by passing Utah made one on a penalty and the Dons two Utah gained 276 yards on the ground am against 91 which shows the true pieture of the respective team Utah completed 8 of 15 passes and the Dons 10 of 23 The game wound up Utah' intersectional season with three victorios over New Mexico Arizona and against no defeats The victory was a particularly sweet one for Coach (Continued on Followine Pae me look In first even by ng and 3nd oen shows nothe ar- 'spective Of 15 Cs inter-victories orv was Coach get IT A 7 7 7 0-21 AVyoming 7 0 0 7 Oberlin 62 Allegheny Indiana State 3 Ball state Wabash 36 DePauw Arkansas State 6 Evansville 6 4 (tie) Butler 25 Valparaiso Kansas 34 IB1114nM State 0 Miami 20 Western Michigan 0 Culver-Stockton 8 Dubuque bake Forest 20 James Millikin Ripon 10 Coe Iowa State Teachers 46 Drake Ivionmouth 13 Knox Oberlin 62 Allegheny Southwestern Kansas 14 Washburn Oberlin 62 eny Southwestern Kansas 14 Wash- burn arrange for postponement of the game "three days ago" They pointed out that flights during bad weather -were believed "dangerous" by some team ment bers particularly married men and that while bus accommodations could have been arranged that was "dangerous" also during storms AERIAL BLITZ Bears Battle 'Washington In Pro Grid Headliner Al prI 01DSMOBILE OWNERS! of Louisville 25 Union Alabama 12 Vanderbilt 7 Kentucky 13 West Virginia Mississippi State 27 Northwest- ern Louisiana Kentucky St 13 Morris-Brown 0 Southwest Hampden-Sydney 13 Randolph- Macon 6 Texas Christian 14 Texas Virginia State 14 North Carolina Arkansas 13 A 7 Texas Tech 14 0 1 a a Prairie View 16 Grambling 6 A 7 Tuskegee 30 South Carolina Oklahoma 27 Missouri 6 State 14 Rice 27 Texas A 10 West Virginia Tech 7 Morris- Tulsa 17 Baylor Harvey 6 Texas college 56 Tillotson Villanovea 27 Florida20 Hardin Simmons 20 a Mines 7 Midwest Xavier 7 Houston City college 6 Southwestern i Okla I Tech 47 Eastern New Mexico 12 Notre Dame 27 Northwestern Rocky Mountain Utah 21 of San Francisco 13 Denver 13 Colorado 13 (tIe) A 21 Wyoming 7 YU 20 Colorado A 6 Weber 27 Modesto (Cal) 26 Colorado college 14 Grinnell East Army 34 Penn 7 33 Fordham 26 Cornell 21 Dartmouth 7 Columbia 46 Lafayette Yale 30 Princeton 2 Hamilton 7 Union 6 Boston 34 Coa8t Guard 7 Williams 21 Amherst 13 Tennessee 33 Boston college 13 Rutgers 55 Lehigh 6 Penn State 12 Navy 7 Georgetown 35 Scranton 7 Buffalo 28 Carnegie Tech Harvard 8 Brown Colgate 25 Syracuse 7 Mass State 27 Tufts I 26 Brooklyn college 6 Hartwick 34 Wagner Muhlenberg 47 Moravian 0 Vermont 12 Middlebury 12 (tie) Temple 27 Bucknell 6 Washington-Jefferson 33 Franklin-Marshall 7 Dickinson 25 West Maryland 20 John Hopkins 19 Haverford 7 New Hampshire 12 Connecticut 12 (tie) Marshall 29 Morehead 20 Gettysburg 34 Albright South Clemson 20 Furman 6 Georgia 41 Auburn Maryland 24 Washington Lee 7 No Carolina 26 Wake Forest 14 The Salt Lake Seagull-San Francisco Clipper football game in the Pacific Coast Professional Football league scheduled Sunday in Salt Lake City was postponed Saturday for reasons which left Salt Lake fans slightly bewildered Early Saturday Coach Fred Tedesco of the Seagulls announced be had received a telegram from the Clippers stating that "weather conditions" in the San Francisco area had "delayed'' scheduled flights including one chartered by the Clippers However weather bureau officials at Salt Lake airport reported only "generally normal conditions" at Oakland and San Francisco Saturday morning A light rain fell intermittently until 12:30 pm (MST) At 1:30 pm the bay area reported a "high broken strata of clouds" United Air Lines officials said there was no weather condition between San Francisco and Salt Lake City which would cause 'cancellation of flights and that all their regularly scheduled flights were operating as usual Clipper officials contacted in San Francisco told of reports of storm conditions moving in earlier in the week had caused them to "Get Ready for Winter Driving NOW" Our Staff of Oldsmobile Factory-Trained Experts Are Ready to Give Your Car EXPERT ATTENTION Winter Oil and Adjustment Ignition Check-Up Check Transmission Prompt Courteous Service NEW YORK Nov 16 (AP)--One of the finest pitching duels of the professional football season im in prospect Sunday when the western divisional leading Chicago Bears of the National league meet the NVashington Redskins runnerup to the New York Giants in the eastern sect iOn Sid Luckman Bruin quarterback Is apparently back in his old-time form as indicated by his three touch- down passes to -Ken Kavanaugh against the champion Los Angeles Rams last week Opposing him will be slingin Sammy Baugh the Redskins' ace passer who nursed sore ribs last week Baugh will be ready to play a full game if necessary In other games the Giants leading the 'Slzins by half a game will entertain the last-place Boston Yanks at the Polo Grounda The Philadelphia Eagles and Pittsburgh Steelers both still in the running for the eastern title clash at Pittsburgh lea-ie the Green Bax Packers runner of div tbe ing Ne sec la for ags be aki rib! to 1 inz ent at ph) hnT cot UT) in the western divinion will be at Detroit and the Chicago Cardinals play in Los Angeles Only three games are scheduled Sunday In the All-America conference but each will have a distinct bearing on the championship race The Cleveland Browns leading the western aivision with a record of eight victories and two defeats can clinch a tie for the title with a victory over the Chicago Rockets plus a defeat by San Francisco at the hands of the Yankees in New York With six victories and four defeats the Forty-Niners must win all their remaining four games while the Browns must drop all four to enable San Francisco to pass the Browns The Yankees on the other hand have a chance to win the eastern half However they would need the cooperation of the Los Angeles Dons who must defeat the Brooklyn Dodgers at Ebbete field Buffalo travels to Miami for a night game Monday Michigan 28 'Wisconsin 6 Dayton 14 Ohio 7 West Otterbein 53 Kenyon North Central 13 Elmhurst 6 Arizona la New Mexico 13 (tie) Illinois 16 Ohio State 7 Fresno State 13 College Pa- Michigan State 20 Marquette eine 12 Wayne 37 Case 6 Washington 16 Oregon Bowling Green 33 Xavier 6 Oregon State 28 California 7 St Augustine 2 St Paul Idaho 20 Portland 6 Detroit Tech 9 Adrian 6 Montana State 39 North Dakota Ohio Wesleyan 39 Denison Aggiem 18 Nebraska 33 Iowa State Stanford 27 Washington State 26 Minnesota 16 Iowa 6 IT A 61 Montana 7 Cincinnati 314 We8tern Reserve I San Jose State 6 San Diego 'ink itTf tAmT la re re 41 1 I SA a Cit 11" ow1441InsMt4 400660141 01-406 419k AMA A1kaA AM I ---setts posoAftoroaq 410 mtVItaho41m40eOWAMakWAW-04010R411umem 4 go Oa 4bggOk4 4'" to no 41k4.

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About The Salt Lake Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
1,964,073
Years Available:
1871-2004