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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 15

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Sports Section Delving Into History Wyllys Terry, one ot the football pioneers "at Tale, dashed 115 yards from scrimmage to a touchdown. Trie two remarkable features of this great run are that it is the longest scoring dash in the annaU of the game and that it has been such for half a century- It was registered against Wesieyan on Nov. 4, 1884, just 50 years ago todayfl In the Autumn of that same year Terry -was one of the organizers of Brooklyn's Crescent Athletic Club. Eddie Monro Atlanta Manager Atlanta. Nov.

3 4) Appotntmetn of Eddie Moore, aggressive little third baseman, as manager of the Atlanta Club of the Southern Association for 1935 was announced today. Moore named manager of the crackers near the end of the pa.1 season. Led the Atlanta club to a whirlwind finish that included a winning streak of eight straight games. Daily Eagle NEW YORK CITY, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1934 15 A Tigers Beat Harvard, 19-0-Yale Trims Dartmouth, 7-2 Fordham Victor, 13-12 Lions Blank Cornell Jaspers Win Maryland Defeats Virginia, 20 to 0 College Park. Nov.

3 Freddy and Tony Doing Their Stuff 83-Yard Drive By Elis Beats Green Eleven New Utrecht Booters Win Championship New Utrecht High School's soccer team defeated Franklin K. Lane, 3 to 0, yesterday morning at Ulmer Park to win the P. S. A. L.

Division III championship. Manuti Nanni, Walter Muller and Paul Gioia tallied the goals. Final Quarter Drive Crushes Crimson Team Little Roughness as Rivals Meet for First Time in Eight Years 1 "1 Hchind perfect Interference of "Fearless Freddy "Harlow (No. 31), Tony Sarausky, 11), makes long gain around Tennesse's right end in football battle at Polo Grounds. College Football Results Mixing forward passes, laterals and reverse and spinner plays during the first half, the University of Maryland today rolled up 20 points to defeat University of Virginia 20 to 0.

The Cavaliers made only two first downs to Maryland's 14. Rams Buckle And Tennessee Loses, 13 to 12 Sarauskv and Borden Big Factors in Ford-ham's Comeback Win By TOMMY HOLMES After two defeats In a row, Ford-ham's fighting eleven moved back into the vicoty roclumn yesterday when they came from behind in the fourth period to defeat Tennessee, 13 to 12, before 35,000 at the Polo Grounds. Tony Sar'ausky was the Fordham back who pulled the fat out of the fire with a 62-yard touchdown dash. He carried the ball on a sweeping run around left end, cut back in after Tennessee's secondary defense had been drawn in behind the line, crashed uncerimoniously through two of three tacklers and finished the journey running all by himself with all enemie: far to the rear. Fordham's first touchdown came in the opening period on a deceptive combination forward and lateral play in which Captain Lester Borden finally got the ball and whizzed 32 yards over the line.

The extra point, place kicked by Sar-ausky," turned out to be the decisive margin of victory. Visitors Start Slowly Tennessee took some time to get started. Not until the second period did the Southerners start swarming through and over the Fordham defense. Phil Nickens did some enthusiastic line bucking in a down-field march and finally smashed through right tackle for three yards and a touchdown. Early In the third period another Tennessee back, Charley Vaughan, threw a forward pass to Lewis Pounders for the last seven yards and a touchdown.

After Fordham's unexpected re- gcoevry, Tennessee several times threatened a reprisal but their middle of the period when Vaughan Just failed to make first down on Fordham's 21-yard ine. Referee J. P. Egan threw Vaughan out of the game for his heated protest of the decision. The lineup: Pos, Fordham Tennessee L.E Panitin Pounders L.T.

Crawford L.Q McArdle Hatley Miskinis Claxton R.O Waldron Wat-math Sabo Bailey R.E Borden Rose Q.B Krouse L.H.B. Vauahan R.H.B. Palmer F.B Dulkie craif Referee J. P. Eran.

Duquesne. Umpire A. R. Hutchens. Purdue.

Linesman H. Strelt, Poly. Offers of Cash Bewilder Baer Hollywood. Nov. 3 Max Baer took a bewildered look around today, wondering much of numerous offers he would accept to while the time away until he starts working on his motion picture here In February.

He will pick up a little loose loose change in California for the next week or two, refereeing wrestling and fistic bouts, and then take to the road. He is interested in an offer to make a picture in England. A radio broadcast Is being considered. Cleveland would like to have him make a personal appearance at its automobile show Jan. 12.

A bunch of exhibition fights are vbcing dangled before him. One would take' him to Des Moines in January against Johnny Miler. Birmingham, has another with Babe Hunt, veteran trial horse as the target. Baer's manager, Ancil Hoffman, and his theatrical booking agent, Leo Morrison are looking the price tags over carefully to pick out those with the biggest figures. Columbia Beats Cornell, 14-0, After Pep Talk Coach Lou Little Inspires Team Between Halves -Barabas' Sub Scores r-niVK mm uy ki.ii Held scoreless in the first half by a gallant Cornell team, Columbia responded to Lou Little's inspira- tional dressing-room lecture be- tween halves with a pair of touch- downs in the third period to win tne meeting oi tne two oia ri- vals, 14 0.

yesterday at Baker Field. Some 18,000 saw the pepped-up Lions put on a 60-yard march to shove Joe Vollmer, substitute for dteh injured Al Barabas, over for the fiirst touchdown in 12 plays after the kickioff. A short time later, Ed Brominski swept around his right end for 30 yards and the final touchdown. Brominski converted both extra points. Before and after these scoring plays, Gil Dobie's men from Cayuga were able to hold their own with the highly favored pupils of Dr.

Little. In fact, only the half-time whistle prevented a Cornell touchdown when Walter Switzer, Cornell's great captain, passed and ran to the Columbia four-yard line. Then in the fourth period Switzer threw another scare into the Columbia secondaries when touchdown passes slpiped off the finger tips of Cornel rleecivers in the end zone. Lions Lead in Statistics In keeping with the final score the statistics of the traditional frav gave Columbia the edge. The Lions rolled up 13 first downs to Cornell's eight and sained 288 yards to their opponent's 191 The i Po: Cornell coiumbis Nnnn Furei Bor'ind1.

"Davi i L. E. L. T. mciss ciampa R' H' -Nelson Wuerz Ferrara Tomb Vollmer Bromskl Nevel r.

Officials: W. T. Hallnran Providence: man. Harrv' Von Kerobura. Harvard: a.

oeiees. Temple. If I lrvrn To Navy, 26-0 Borries a Veritable Buzz-Saw in Middies' 6th Straight Victory Annapolis, Nov. 3 UP) Navy's unbeaten admirals overshadowed the generals from Washington and Lee In every phase of football here this afternoon before 22,000 fans and won, 26 to 0, to run their straight string of victories to six for the season. The teams feinted for an advance through several interchanges of punts in the first quarter, but when the game was seven minutes old, Borries, Pratt and King started a march that carried from Navy's eight to the Washington and Lee 16.

There the generals dug in and took the ball on downs. The lineup: Pus. Wash. Lee Nav L.E Bill Mini L.T Lambert L.G. Berry Burn C.

Robertshaw R.O Bonino Zabrlskie RT Dyer Cutler R.E Mandelkorn Q.B Beaton Borries L.H Moore Pratt R.H.B. Mattox Kln F.B Bailey Clark Referee Trimble. Dubuoue. Umpire Barron. Penn Stale.

Head linesman Gass. Lehlah. Field Judge Armstrong. Tufla. i By GEORGE CURR1E Cambridge, Nov.

3 Harvard's band came marching into the Stadium on Soldiers Field this afternoon, tunefully blaring the tactful strains of "Auld Lang Syne" In honor of Princeton's first visit to the red-leaved, creeper-clad daddy of all football horseshoes in the past eight years. Princeton cemented its friendship with the Crimson by three touchdowns and a winning score of 19 0, which makes the total for the past four battles between the pair Tiger, 101; Johnnies, 0. But the reunion was accompanied by an atmosphere redolent of what college rivalries should be. Even when a few exhilarated Princeton men swooped down upon the goal posts as the sun sank behind the Walthanv Hills, the minor warfares that developed were almost entirely among the men of Old Nassau themselves, so eager, were they for a pine souvenir. Harvard i out $22.66 in its lumber account, but Harvard feels, justly, that it stripped the magic robe off the wonder team of the East and was well repaid.

ONLY ONE PENALTY DURING CONTEST This series, with a tradition of toughness that broke it asunder in 1926 under the pressure of "signet ring" charges from Cambridge and bitter counter-charges from the New Jersey lair of the Orange and Black that Harvard was trying to wreck the old "Big Three," was dignified today by a penalty against Harvard for unnecessary roughness. In this dreadful department of the game Old Nassau was as innocent as the proverbial new-borne babe. The Uory of the game is virtually on of statistics. On the straight attack, Princeton gained 238 yards to the Crimson's 77, and taking to the air. the Tiger completed eleven passes for 141 yards to Harvard's four attempts that resulted in zero.

In fact, the "10.000 men of Harvard" were stunned when they wit nessed two of their team's passes plop into Princeton arms for devastating boomerangs. One got the notion the Crimson was rtying to hold down the score, a mental attitude not calculated to elbow an old rival on to the-anxious seat. Harvard never held the ball In Princeton territory, save- once, when it managed to get it to the Tiger's 49-yard line. The first down score for the mathematical-minded was Princeton, 18; Harvard. 4.

And one of the Crimson's was a penalty marker for offside. The lineups. Pos. Harvard Princeton II Dubtel MacMlllan L.T Burton Stoess L.G Lane Weller Comfort Kslbauah Oundlach John RT Adlia chamberlain BE Kelly Lea Q.B Haley Kadllc L.H Lltman m. Kaufman B.H Hedblom Sandbach F.B Jackson Constable Officials Referee.

W. O. Crnwell. Bwarlh-more; umpire. W.

R. Crowley. Bowdoln; field Judne. E. E.

Miller. Penn Stat; linesman. A. H. Sharpe.

Yale. Sutler Bulldogs Meet First Defeat St. Louis, Nov. 3 (P) After a slow i Mart, Washington University's Bears outwaded the Butler Bulldogs today to erase the Indianans from the select list of undefeated football teams. The score was 32 to 7.

The Bulldogs took to the mud like ducks to the water in the first half to lead 76, but the heavier Bears became acclimated and swarmed all over their weary opponents in the final quarter. rippen Win fry Out With Cards A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. H. H.

(Cotton) Plppen at Beatrice, Oct. 14. Cotton pitched for the Houston Texas League club the past season and was bought up by the St. Louis Cardinals for trial next Spring. After a few weeks in Beatrice, the Pippcns plan to go to Texas to spend the Winter.

Maryland, 20 Virginia, Mass. State, 14 Amhersti 9 Monroe. 13 Brooklyn J. Navy, 1 W. Northeastern, 31 Arnold, f) N.

V. V. MS, 31. Stoney Brook, Oberlin. fl Allegheny, Penn, 41 Lafayette, Piltsbunrgh, II) Notro Dame, Princeton, III Harvard, P.

M. 25 St. Joseph's, Rhode Island. 4 4. Tech, Rochester, 20 Hobart, 1 Rutgers, 52 Boston St.

Lawrenre, 21 Alfred, 1 Shenandoah, 13 Baltimore, 7 Swarthmore. 12 Syracuse, IB Penn Stale. Temple. 14 Holy Cross, Thiel. 20 F.dlnhoro, Trinltv.

27 Wesleyan, Tufts. 211 New Hampshire, ft Continued on Paire 16 Skibos Smash Violet Eleven Carnegie Turns Back N.Y.U. Team for First Time Since 1929 By CHARLES HECKELMANN Flashing a brilliant array of running and passing plays that had both power and deception behind them, the Skibos from Carnegie Tech smashed out a hard-fought victory over New York University yesterday afternoon at Yankee Stadium. The score was 6 to 0. The Tartans, who had been able to win but one game in the eight games already played in the N.

Y. series which began in 1926, finally turned the tables on the powerful Violet eleven to put an end to the jinx which has been stalking Carnegie Tech since 1929, the only previous year the skibos defeated the New Yorkers. After twice threatening the Vio let goal in the first quarter, the Tartan backfield finally clicked -as Terrible Terebus, Skibo left halfback, hurled a 30-yard pass to Burns donw on the Violet five-yard line. From here, Joe Mihm, ace Carnegie fullback, crashed through center for a touchdown, after three line plunges by Terebus and Lehman had failed on the two-yard lin.e N. Y.

U. made a gallant stand in 1 the last four minutes of play as the Violet boys unleashed a skillful passing attack that had the Tartans completely bewildered. With Stellmach on the throwing end and Continued on Pae 16 i It first down on the two-yard line and on third down plunged two lnrhes to tally. A furiously fighting St. Francis line stopped Wagner when the homt club was one foot away from scoring midway In the third quarter.

Late in the last period the Friars advanced 59 yards but were hel dfor downs two yards from the goal. Pos. Wagner Si L. i.ewln Rvnm L.T Peterson Dunbvan L. Corhln Reilh Pino Pitom H.

O. R. T. R. F.

Q. L. H. ley Hllriee Kav'insuh Orrnneii S'rlnati WrCo MrKaba r. B.

Keiiy Leonard itb Morton Star of New Haven Victory Dartmouth Passes Futile By HAROLD PARROTT Staff Correspondent of The Eagle New Haven, Nov. 3 Yale's spectral snatcher of victories over Dartmouth stayed unsommened in his eel lsomewhere beneath the step-banked sides of the Bowl as old Eli clearly earned a 7 to 2 victory this crisp, Autumn afternoon before spectators Instead it was a deft shovel pass, a v'ery earthly device indeed, as as tne flesh and b)ood d.ivingi churning, cleated feet of Stratford Morton that sent the shivers up Dartmouth's spine, Yale's drive, an undenial push of 83 yards on 18 successive plays in tne first quarter, with the irre- nreSsible Morton noDDine over on the last one from the one-yard line, was a thing of beauty Men in blue tore huge holes in a highly touted Green line. Jerry Roscoe ran his backfield co-workers with nice ujgdement and held the ever present threat of that shovel pass which he would flip to Morton as the problem which Dartmouth couldn't solve until the second half, when it was too late. MORTON MADEDAY SAD ONE FOR GREEN Morton was a sensation today, making it doubly sad for an out-rushed, outplayed Dartmouth team which could hark bnck to two Mortons of its own, Bill and Ronald, who did bis things for the Green 1 ntohe Trebly sad. too.

for this was the first team to come down from Hrnover without i decent forward pass or a decent punter, and every one knows how rich the Green is in the forward passing deeds of Dooley. Oberlander, Mor- ron ana Mccaii. uartmoutns Passes were a joke today as Yale smothered one after another, and kndergarten kicking by Deckhert in tne first nall: continually had the Green in trouble. Jsesioes great lo-ruay onen- sive, Yale concocted two other drives in the first naIf- ne wwch enaea wini uanmouin taKing tne ball on its four-yard line and an other on its ten-yard line. The lineup: Pos.

Dartmouth Yals L.E Train L.T Bennett Wright L.G. Strauss Ray Qrosscup R.G... Hagerman Davia otiF c. Curtln R.E Camp Kelley Q.B Deckert Roscoe L.H.B Morton R.H.B. Chamberlain Rinkin F.B Handrahan Fuller Referee w.

D. Very. Penn State. Umpire T. J.

Thorp. Columbia. Linesman L. A. Young.

Penn. Field judge A. W. Palmer, Colby. Parvin Rides Four Winners, One 2d Arlington Downs.

Texas, Nov. 3 (Charles (Chuck) Parvin, 17-yeRr-old, 95-pound apprentice jockey from Homedale, Idaho, electrified 20.000 racegoers at Arlington Downs today, riding the first four winners and coming in second on his fifth mount of the day. In the fifth race ho hntloH rvn Au Pot into second place in the Martha Washington Handicap, be- hind Clarify. Parvin's winners were Polyhote, Megai, Captain Red and Little Cynic, only the. last a short-odds favorite.

Now Bill Can Play Hot Corner Safety If anybody starts a backfire to stop the Detroit Tigers in ie American League next season, Bill Roggell, shortstop of the Tigers, will have the authority to put it out. He was made an honorary fire chief at Kingsville, when he and Pitcher Tommy Bridges visited that town. Tommy only received a key to the town and a chicken dinner, but Bill, in addition, was maue an honorary fire chief, the induction ceremonies being made from atop a fire truck at the main Intersection of the town. was feared he had again Mistained a concussion of the brain. Lowell had the.

edge 7 to 4 on flir rfftvcnc hut Rrnnklvn hpM fies- perately when danger really throat- ened. Captain Sid Glickman was called upon to do yeoman's work for the Maroon, he carrying the ball on every other play. The lineup: 'n Brooklyn Unterberg Gellal Ootts-'her Salerno L. Kahn R. Welsh l.

o. Hnrwood c. R. R. T.

r. Cowan Luft Baranowskl Knlgin Boaat-a Turk Kristall Rpietfiman 8'illnnn Nshem Connnllv Gilrktnan L. H. Referee Tuo'l'r C. Y.

tlmpiro Cooper. 3' John Head lin-sman- ml wild. nut, C. C. M.

V. Time oi qurir il LOCAL Brooklyn. Lowell. 0 Carnerle, fl K. V.

Columbia, 14 Cornell, Fordham. 13 XI Manhattan. 21 C. C. N.

I.i Wagner, 6 St. Franels, 0 EAST Albrlsht, 14 Moravia, Bates, 2 Bovrtoin, Clarkson, 27 Buffalo, 0 Collate 38. Klski, 0 Conn. State, 13 Coast Guard, 0 Cortland Tchrs, 2. State, II Boston College, 6 Villanova, Brown, 13 Springfield, 1 Delaware, 0 E.

Stroudbiirs Tears, F. 4 Muhlenberg. C.eltysburg 14 Lehigh. Hamilton, 1 R. P.

1.. II Juniata, A Lebanon Valley, ft Maine, 211 Colby, Jaspers Defeat Beavers, 21-0 WhelanandConnell Lend Spectacular Touches to Ebbets Field Game By RALPH TROST "Using much power and very little guile, Manhattan's Wearers of the Green roundly trimmed the valiant, but not very strong, C. C. N. Y.

Beavers, 210, before 15,000 (the largest assemblage to have witnessed a City College football game) in Ebbets Field yesterday. The Jaspers scored on both ends of the field; scored In all periods. They tallied twice in the normal fashion ordinarily referred to as' "runnack attack" and twice in a manner far from normal, what with Jim Whelan Intercepting a pass on his very goal line and running 100 yards for a touchdown, and Jack Connell using his big chest to de flect a City College punt twice as far backward as the ball had flown forward far enough to cross the Lavenders' goal line, where Jack fell on the ball for one of those automatic safeties. Out of the statistics column comes the startling information that Manhattan had but 10 first downs to the Beavers' nine. Not counted among first downs were those last mentioned, two scoring methods em- ployed by the victors the inter- ccpted pass and the blocked kick.

Equipped with a shifty pass at tack, Bennle Friedman's charges unleashed 17 aerials and completed 10. Through the air ity College Continued on Pate 16 plunging Fordham back (No. St. Francis Prep Loses, 6 to 0, to Westhampton 'Honest Abes' Rally to Crush Jeffs, 24 to 6, After Fumbling Start Patchogue, Nov. 3 St.

Francis Prep made a valient effort to get back into the winning column here today but they were taken by surprise by a strong Westhampton Beach eleven which meted out a Sto-0 defeat. rr.t. i.i unawares early in the second quar- ter when the victors marched the ball from their own 20-yard line to midfield. At this point Jack Cytra shot a 30-yard forward to George Shako, who gathered it in on the 0 and ran unmolested for what I proved to be the winning points. The Franciscans put on a great rally in the third quarter but lacked the scoring punch when they came within touchdown territory.

In the last quarter Matty Belford filled the air with several passes in a vain effort 'A3 score. Most of the shots went into open spaces and the game ended with Westhampton in possession of the pigskin. Red Sox Rookie No-Hit Pitcher Hilary Zummer, 19-year-old rookie pitcher of the Boston Red Sox. hurled a ten-inning, no-hit, no-run game. Oct.

15, against the South Side Boosters of Saginaw, his home town. Zummer struck out 12 and did not walk a I batter, his team winning, 1 to 0. Pitcher Playing With Hockey Club Leroy Goldsworthy, who pitched for the Winnipeg Northern League Club the past season, is playing with the Montreal Canadiens in the National Hockey League. He became a member of the Canadiens in a trade that sent Howie Morenz to the Chicago Black Hawks. Jewels, Visstes In Tough Game With the American Basketball League season getting under way next week, both the Jewels and the Visitations will taper off against strong opposition tonight In exhibition games.

The Jewels will clash with the famous Celtics at Arcadia Hall and the Visitations meet the Renaissance quintet, colored champions, at Prospect Hall. Schnabel Defeats Sammy Gold on Mat Hans Schnabel pinned Sammy r.niri in minium 74 uwnriru ti i ,1... fllpd X- tini In 15:37. Patsey Fallettl tossed Hans Moeller In 16:22. Martin and Billy Rudy drew and Johnny Carlin pinned Mario Glglio In 15:08.

(IF. TITLE TOl'RNEY Several of the leading players will compete in the New York State Docket billiard championship, starting at Dwycr's. Flatbush Ave. and Fulton tomorrow afternoon. The competitors Include C.

Harmon. P. Judlce, J. Cnncannon, A. Woods.

I Rough Illini Eleven Beats Cadets, 7 to 0 Portman Gets Touchown That Toppes Cadets-Victors Still Unbeaten Champaign, 111., Nov. 3 (IP) In a corral drenched with driving rain and fetlock deep in mud and water, Illinois addled the Army mule with a touchdown handicap in the first five minutes of battle today and then rode him over a spectacular finish to hang on for a 7 to 0 victory before 41,000 soaked spectators. The Illini won with great football, but never will they forget their fide for life in the closing minutes of play when the Mule kicked back even with its famous Jack Buckler relegated to the sidelines by Injuries. The final mulish kick sent the Illini reeling to their own fie-yard line, but they finally got their second wind and lashed the mule back to square their f-jur-game se-rips with Army and remain standing among the' ranks of the nation's eridiron undefeated. Po.

Army Illinois L.E Bhuler Dykstra L.T Miller Antllla L.Q Sllllman Bennis Clifford Sayre Bearly Oryboskl RT Beall Galbreath R.E Edwards Neuon Q.B Kim Beynon L.H Buckler Llndbero R.H Grove rroscnauer F.B. Slanconk Theodore Officials Referee. Dr. J. H.

Nichols. Oberlin: umpire. H. G. Hedees.

Dartmouth; field Pred Younn. Illinois Wesley an; head linesman. Lee Daniels. Loyola. Earned Run in Case of Walks A reader wants to know how to count a run in this With two out, batter walks and next man singles.

Next two batters walk, forcing in a run. Is this an earned run? is the question. The answer is that it is an earned run. Experience in Minors Is Not Necessary Is Is not necessary for players with preparatory or college schooling to have minor league experience before they may be signed by clubs in either the American or National league. of tha Washington Senators-and Wicde-meyer of the Chicago Cubs may be regarded as coming under this classification.

Shaute Leading N. Hurler Joe Shaute, veteran southpaw and former Brooklyn Dodger, who Joined Scranton as a free agent In June, after being released by Cincinnati, won 16 games against three defeats, to become the leading pitcher, from the standpoint of percentage, in the New York-Pennsylvania League in 1934. This fine performance gave him an average of .842, while he allowed 3.80 earned runs per each nine innings worked. Phillips' Romance Ends in Marriage Clarence (Red) Phillips, rookie pitcher of the Detroit Tigers, who led the Texas League in winning percentage and earned run averages the past season, announced that he had been married to Miss Vivian Cromwell of Ida, re cently. The romance developed while both were attending ijast Central Oklahoma Teachers' Brooklyn College Sans Stars Pla ys Lowell Scoreless Tie Unbeaten Syracuse Eleven St.

Francis Humbled by Wagner In First Game of Season, 6 to 0 Lions, 16 to 0 largely to the second march, Glnter taking it over. Syracuse made it safety In the third period when Ed Jontos, big guard, broke through the State forwards to block a punt by Mikelonls behind the blue and white goal line. The Nittany quarterback recovered the ball and was downed by a multitude if Orange tacklers. Top State College, Nov. 3 The powerful, unbeaten Syracus eleven today tore through Penn Btate's heavy line for two sustained touchdown drives, added a safety to its total, and defeated the Nit-tany Lions, 16 to 0.

The Syracuse marches occurred In the first and third quarters and covered 74 and 78 yards. In the first period, the drive was featured by the brilliant running of Lou Stark and the sophomore star. Vannie Albanese, who scored the first touchdown. Both of these backs were Injured. Stark severely.

In the second quarter. They were replaced by Olnter and Rerkmack, Nitiany After pounding away at each other's lines for almost the entire 48 minutes nf the same. Brooklyn! -AitMnA mj nniAii T'ovtlli rotlroM from Lincoln Field yesterday, tied, 0 0. The contest furnished a dead- ly parallel to the clirsh between the' two elevens last year, which also resulted in a 0 to 0 standoff. Each team had several opportunities to score yesterday but stubborn de- fense work counteracted the at- Jacks.

The Maroon started without the rrvices of two backs, Simels and Stanislaw, and this hurt Brooklyn' chances. Joe Sullivan. Lowell star. was second quarter. He was iSiten to: the Coney Island Hospital where It i I I i I St.

Francis College's first official football team made Its debut on the gridiron yesterday and bowed to the Waaner College eleven. 6 to 0. at Wagner Field, Grymes Hill, S. I. The triumph, coming In the last quarter, wan the first of the season for the Hilltoppers, who hadn't won a football game since Oct.

15. 1932. Wagner that year was held to a scoreless tie by an unofficial St. Francis team, beginning the Staten Islanders' record of ten successive defeats or ties. Bobby Power, fleet-footed Wagner fullback, scored early in the fourth period after Bernard Blom-quist had recovered a fujiible on 8t.

Francis' 16-yard line. Power made Pos. Syracuse, Penn Slate W. Sinner Pray IT Siren Weber Jontos Harth Sinner Cherundln Perra ult Kreirman Vvta Schuyler fnhnslon Morlnl Mera Mikelonls LH.S'ark Knapp -Jiinunrln Riael i 8. Albanese Silvano v.iHia, n.

miuvtnv, ir. ihiiit. w.ivarrirn jremi uir iiin in wic Townsend, T. Maresca, P. Widtman 1 and Piazza, a lophomort, who contributed.

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