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Chattanooga Daily Times from Chattanooga, Tennessee • 46

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48 SPORTS NEWS "THE CHATTANOOGA TIMES; CTTANOOGA; SUNDAY," NOVEMBER SPORTS NEWS Tarheels Rip Terps, 49-20 Tulane Whips Baylor, 35-13 'BREAKS' PLAY PART GREENES' SCORING I SEWAN'EE END SNAGS PASS Jim Russell (24), Sewaneo Tiger end, snags a pass over the line from Fullback Walt Bryant (28) for a 20-yard gain in the first quarter of the Sewanee-Kenyon game at Sevane yesterday afternoon. (21) and Kauai (75) for the Kenyon Lords try desperately to break up the pass, but Russell hauled It in for the completion. Seuanee won an easy victory, 47-13, to remain unbeaten for the season, with only a tie to mar their perfect record. Time suff Photo by Bob Ejpt. VANDERBILT MAULS MARSHALL BY 56-0 Spectacular Runs Feature Sewanee Win Over Kenyon BY BEN GOLDEN rimes Sport Writer.

A Look 'at -Television We didn't get to make the trip to Atlanta to see the game yesterday, but enjoyed looking at it. It's not nearly so far to go to -see a football game there, cost so much less, requires no fighting to eat, and very little to get through traffic, and it takes so much less time, to go to Jim Moore's on Lookout Mountain and watch the game by television (WBS-TV, Atlanta). Taking along numbers from programs of previous Tech and Alabama games, we ear-poppea up the mountain and across the line into Georgia. It was explained that the curvature of the earth is such that the Atlanta tower barely levels off with the mountain top. Plans to try to see Memphis' UT-Rebel game, too, were dropped.

"To far away; the waves peter out," you were told. Arch Trimble said there were a few sets on the mountain, none on Missionary Ridge, and one in Lakeview. Football Program-Sized Flicker Movies Over a screen about the size of a football program came the images, movie-like; in fact, like the rainy "flicker" movies of the early days of that Dancing light dots were all about the bodies of the men. But that didn't distract too much once you became used to It, and once the blinds were drawn tighter to relieve the, slight eye strain of the brightness at the ends of the screen. Observers were advised to come back about 10 feet from the screen, so that the images would be clearer.

They were. The first thing you missed most' was the colors o'f the uniforms. Tech's navy blue shirts were just a "blacker black" than Alabama's red. But everything was there. Even the men's shadows, which were particularly sharply outlined.

"Must be a sunny day," someone pointed out. The camera stayed trained entirely on the compact scrimmage group as the teams lined up, moving off the field of play only to see the crowd and to see and hear the cheering students during the time outs, and to look frequently at the scoreboard and the clock. So set was the camera on the scrimmage group that men back to punt was not shown, though the punter was quickly picked up as the ball was passed to him. The figures were small, about two inches tall. The announcer identified players for you, and it was well.

However, as the ball was downed, the camera changed to a close-up. The figures were thus enlarged about double, you could now see numbers clearly, indeed just as clearly as can be seen from the press box, if not more so. This was nice, but for the fact that you had to depend on the announcer for the position of the ball on the field. On Following the Ball It was hard to follow the ball. Not especially hard when It was in flight, but particularly hard when Tech's back-field sprayed in three or four directions as the ball was napped.

Alabama's Notre Dame box formation, however, enabled you to discern better where the ball was most of the time. You wondered how the cameraman followed the ball as well as he did. The Tech quarterback would take the ball from behind the center and fade back, handing off the ball, or faking hand-offs, to other backs. The cameraman was in a tough spot there, and we thought he did very well. Many times, for instance, he could have easily gone on back with the quarterback, who was acting as if he were going back to fass.

You thought the cameraman had lost the ball by stay-ng with the scrimmage line. But the quarterback had handed the ball off, and a back had hit the line for a pile-up. It is this very deceitfulness in football attacks that keeps the cameraman from starting a play with his clear close-ups, no doubt. Some plays would get away from him, and fast. Of Healy, McCoy and Humphreys Jim Healy and Bob McCoy were watched.

McCoy got away for one long gain. He was bothered a bit by passes into his territory. Healy (No. 56) was in on lots of tackles. Buster Humphreys was used primarilyas punter.

Once he punted, and got down the field to make the tackle. The second-quarter Tech fumble of a punt was seen well. Alabama recovered and scored immediately. 7-0. In the third quarter Alabama was trying passes, and it was noticed that Tech started with a six-man line, shifting to a five before the ball was snapped.

The right guard pulled out to watch for a pass. The pass was to the left and Dinkey Bowen intercepted and got off a beautiful run. He scored soon after. He missed the point, the Tide led, 7-6. Alabama's Elliott Speed was a demon on pass defense.

In the third he lugged an interception for a long touchdown run. 14-6. The Shadows Lengthen The shadows of the figures were lengthening somewhat now, the game nearly over. Tech threatened, and worked the ball down to the 1-foot line, fourth down coming. Bowen took it over.

The clock was shown you a minute to go. And there was the electric buzzer, just as clear as you heard it a week ago in Atlanta the signal for the observers quickly to arise and chatter, jump into automobiles and drive a mile or so of radio description at the UT-Rebel game before our mountain ears heard: "And here's a final score: Alabama 14, Georgia Tech 12." he might be trying to get them to dress so they could play. Reed Bell, Tiger candidate for Little All-America honors, along with the first team played only, a few minutes of the game. During his brief stay, Bell threw a key block that enabled Dud Calhoun to run 47 yards to the Lords' 4. Calhoun took it over on the next play.

John Stewart turned in an exciting 20-yard gallop for a score in the second quarter that put the Tigers out in front, 13 to 7. Four tacklers had their arms around Stewart, but he wouldn't stop driving and broke away each time he was hit. Jim Ed Mulkin scored for the Bees by hitting the center of the line for the last five yards. Ed Hamilton kicked 5 out of 6 extra points and scored one touchdown for 11 points in this game, as many points as he scored all last season. Kenyon is located in Gambier, Ohio.

Duff Green's injured knee may keep him out of the next game. The Sewanee men will meet the LAST-PLAY MARKER GIVES SMU MARGIN 22,000 Home-Coming Fans See Arkansas Lose Game on Final Gun FAYETTEVILLE, Nov. 13 iJP) Southern Methodist University's Mustangs scored on the last play of the game to defeat the Arkansas Razorbacks, 14 to J.2, here today. An Arkansas home-coming crowd of 22,000 watched Halfback Paul Page snag a 16-yard pass from Gilbert Johnson and fall into the end zone aa the final gun sounded to turn a seemingly certain defeat into victory. The win was SMU's fourth against no losses in their bid for a second straight Southwest Conference title.

Stars Are Stopped An expected duel between SMU's Doak Walker and Arkansas' Clyde Scott failed to materialize. Scott was carried from the field with a knee injury in the first quarter. Walker carried the ball seven times, but wound up with a net 10 yards lost. His two placekicks, however, produced the points that spelled the difference. Scott netted 31 yards on the five times he carried before leaving the game.

Arkansas was hurt seriously by 14 penalties for 121 yards. The Razorbacks scored in the first period when Fullback Leon Campbell piled over from the SMU 1-yard line, culminating a 60-yard drive that started with a 19-yard punt return by Scott. Arkansas Leads, 12-0 They made it 12-0 in the third quarter as Campbell broke through the left side and ran 68 yards for a touchdown. Campbell cleared his clast obstacle by stiff-arming Walker out of the way on the Mustang 20. The usually reliable Jim Reich-ert was wide on his first try for point and his second kick was blocked.

SMU marched back 80 yards its ursc laiiy. rami i-ayne, HITS SMSON'S PEAK Wave Stays in Bowl Picture With Spectacular Win Over Stout Rival NEW ORLEANS. Nov. 13 CT Tulane's Green Wave stayed in the bowl picture and lust about knocked Baylor out of it here to day by thoroughly trouncing the Bears, 35-13. About 45,000 persons saw Tulan run up its highest score of the sea son, and that against one of the Lfinest defensive clubs in the South west.

All Baylor had was the passing of Quarterback Adrian Burk, which engineered the Bear touch downs, but backfired on two inter ceptions which set up Tulane scores. The Wave line completely outplayed the Texarrs, opening huge holes for Fullback Ed Price and Halfbacks George Kinek and Bill Svoboda. Meanwhile, Quarterback Joe Ernst passed on about even terms with Burk. Price's hard running paced Tulane on a 71-yard drive to its first touchdown. He circled left end for the last 11 yards.

Baylor came right back for a 54-yard scoring march on Burk's passing. He threw five yards to Harold Riley for the touchdown. The Wave surged 66 yards to another touchdown, made on Ernst's 21-yard pass to Kine on fourth down with 15 seconds remaining in the half. A third-period punt exchange worked the ball to the Baylor 34, where Ernst sparked another score. Svoboda crashed right guard for the final foot.

Again Baylor brought the kick-off back for a scoring march on Burk's passing, this time 72 yards. Jasper Flanakin took a toss from Burk and slipped away from Tu-lanj tacklers to go the last 27. Tulane intercepted three Burk passes in the final period and turned two of the minto touchdowns. Price went one yard around right end for the first six points, and his brother-in-law, Ray Prats, went six in the same direction for the next. Dick Sheffield kicked five perfect placements for Tulane.

Henry Dlck'rson made one and missed one for Baylor. The net rushing yardage, 292 for Tulane and 39 for Baylor, about expresses the superiority of the Wave's line play. Tulane completed nine passes in 14 attempts for 102 yards, and Baylor made 14 out of 24 good for 129. PENN STATE BEATS TEMPLE CLUB, 47-0 Subs Get Chance to Glitter in One-Sided Win state; jvov. is UP) Penn State's third and fourth-string backfields turned on the steam to swamp an outclassed Temple University football team, 47-0, before 16,000 fans today.

Johnny Chuckram and Sophomore Vince O'Bara, who have spent most of the season on the sidelines let the Nittany Lions through their 17th game without s. defeat. They scored one touchdown apiece and each tossed a pass good for another score. Captain Joe Colone provided the home team fans with their biggest thrill as he bulled his way through the middle of the Temple line for a 66-yard gain to spark a 93-yard drive for the Lions third touchdown. The heavy fullback, playing his best game in two years, also tallied the first touchdown in the opening minutes of the game.

CALIFORNIA IS VICTOR Bears Stay on Unbeaten List With 44-14 Victory BERKELEY, Nov. IS UP California's Bears, generating the same tremendous power that has kept them unbeaten and un tied, scored a crushing 44-14 victory over the Washington State Cougars today. A crowd of 40,000 watched the bruising Bears rattle off long touchdown marches, turn intercepted passes into scores and tally on a safety. The Cougars, though badly beaten, scored touchdowns In the second and final quarters. The last was on a spectacular 87-yard kick-off runback by Jerry Williams.

It was California's ninth win of the season. The Bears made an impressive showing to remain neck snd neck with Oregon In their race to the Rose BowL VPI Ties Richmond RICHMOND, Nov, 13 0T Virginia Tech's long'-overdue victory ship, anxiously awaited for seven long Saturdays, almost came in today but not quite. Beaten every previous Saturday this fall, the Techmen outdid Richmond's furiously battling Spiders in slmost "every phase of the game, but had to settle for a 7-7 draw before a Richmond homecoming day crowd of 12,000 in City Stadium. wood for, the first Columbia marker after Bill Olson had intercepted a Navy pass on the Lion 48. Two forwards by Rossides, who completed eight of his 11 heaves during the day, and a 13-yard toss from Johnny Nork to Lou Kus-serow ate up most of the yardage, Lockwood's 17-yard return of the second-half kickoff started the Lions toward their second score.

Kusserow and Rossides ripped off long gains despite a driving rain and Kusserow circled right end for the final 16 yards and the touchdown. Columbia Touchdown! Columbia: Lockoe4. Ku row. rouit afui ioucJdwa aUaaevita. IN CAROLINA SURGE Maryland's Total Is Highest Against Winning Club in Past 14 Games WASHINGTON, Nov.

13 (OD- Alert North Carolina made five touchdowns on five breaks today a it breezed to a 49-to-20 victory over napless Maryland in a Southern Conference game before 34,588 wind-chilled fans. The triumph kept the power-laden Tarheels among the nation's unbeaten and enhanced their chances for a bowl bid. The only blot on North Carolina's record is a 7-to-7 tie last week with William and Mary. North Carolina scored in every period, delivering the knockout punch in the second period when it tallied three touchdowns. It scored twice In the final period.

Bob Cox made seven consecutive conver sions. Maryland had one small consolation. Its 20-point total was the highest scored against North Carolina ton the past 14 games. Three of North Carolina seven touchdowns stemmed from intercepted passes and two on fumbles by Jittery backfield. But even without these breaks the Tarheels were far superior to tneir Maryland foes.

Maryland was in the ball game only in the first period when it scored the first time it rot its hand on the balL But once North Carolina got rolling, it was a rout. Maryland's last two touchdown's came in the final period both against third and fourth-stringers. Little Vic Turyn, star quarter back of Maryland's T-formation, was the goat of the game. Three of his passes backfired into the interceptions that developed into North Carolina touchdowns. And both the fumbles converted into touchdowns by the North Caro linians were committed by him.

Maryland won the battle of statistics, making 12 first downs to North Carolina's 11, picking up 247 yards rushing to 97, and com pleting seven of 18 passes for 102 yards while North Carolina completed seven of 15 for 82 yards. But it was on fumbles and pass interceptions that Maryland blew whatever chances it had. TIDE TOPPLES TECH ON BREAKS, 14 TO 12 From Page Forty-Five 80 yards, mostly on Southard's passing. Tech Tackle Clay Matthews hampered Alabama passers, runners and kickers. He blocked one punt and partially blocked another.

Guard Bill Healy joined Brodnax and Matthews on many plays to catch Tide runners hunting fori pass receivers or for blocking support and throw them for big losses. Both passing attacks were weak until near the end of the second and fourth periods. ALABAMA Left Ends Lry. 8teinr. LeKTaeklea Hannah, Richeson.

Selman. Left Guards Fortunate Holdnak. Centers LoclcrldEe. Soeed. Sullivan.

Lauer. RiKht Guards Franko, Mlaerany, Smitn. Riht Tackles Miller. Therls. Right Ends Cain.

Hood. Whit. Quarterbacks Brown. Avinier. Left Halfs Pettua.

Welsh. Salem. Right Haifa Cadenbead. Coclrran. Fullbacks Noonan.

Taylor, Calvin. GEORGIA TECH Left Fnds Castleberry. Griffin. Harvln. Left Tackles Matthews.

Bradach. Left Ouards McKinney. Pope. Centers Bossons. Hook, Smith.

Right Guard Healy. Right Tackles Coleman. Luoton. Right Ends Brodnax. Nolan, Anderson.

Quarterbacks Southard. Brown. Left Halfs Harrison, a 1 1 n. Petit. Bowen.

North. Right Halfs Cobb. McCoy. Queen. O'Nell.

avlor. lutlbacks Jordan. Humphreyi. Alabama 0 7 7 014 Georgia Tech 0 0 612 Alihim, firnrina Touchdowns. Caden bead.

Speed. Points after touchdown Sa'em 2 iplacements). Georgia Tech Scorine Touchdowns. Bowen 2. BOSTON EAGLES TIE WILLIAM AND MARY From Page Forty-Five Hugher crushed Clasby with a key block.

Boston College rolled up 22 first downs and 466 yards by rushing and passing to three first downs for the southerners, who could gain only 198 yards on the ground and in the air. Hard-charging BC forwards bottled up All-American Fullback Candidate Jack (Flying) Cloud. Free Us of their hands cost the Eagles heavily on several occasions. Several times the officials halted outbreaks of flying fists. Shirts should be fastened to the clothesline by the tail, since wear at this point will show up least.

JUMP PASS COMPLETED BY -r-u k- Michigan and Indiana, Jo Poloe (39). center. A v. Ball caa Michigan WIRT GAMMON MISSOURI'S LATE DRIVE BEATS COLORADO, 27-13 COLUMBIA. Nov.

13 UPh Missouri's Tigers, trailing at the halfway mark, came to life in the last half of their Big Seven Conference football game with Colorado today for a 27-to-13 victory. Badly outplayed in the first half, Don Daurot's Missourians came back strong in the last two quarters. They scored two of their touchdowns by air and the other two by ground. Missouri was handicapped by Injuries, suffered in its humiliating defeat by Oklahoma last week. Three of its mainstays, Backs Mike Ghnouly, Lloyd Brlnkman and Win Carter, were out.

ice after slightly more than five minutes of play, plunging over trom the 2-yard line. His defensive Dick Kempthorn, touched off the second period with a similar score. Then Chuck Ort mann, Michigan's passing ace, who completed eight of 15 aerials for 123 a 13-yard touchdown pass to End Harry Allis for a 21-0 lead befora namune. Then came the deluge. Ortmann plowed into the Hoo-sier end zone from the 2.

Quar terback Pete Elliott hit End Dick Rifenburg with a five-yard scoring pass. Wally Teninga started the final period with a two-yard touchdown sweep around end, Sub stitute Fullback Don Dufek made it from the 1 and another substitute. Norm Jackson, plunged over from the 1-foot line. SEWANEE, Nov. 13 Sewanee's Tigers continued their way on the undefeated trail by beating Kenyon's Lords, 47 to 13, before 2,000 spectators this afternoon.

Coach Bill White used 59 men in the high-scoring fray. Every man in uniform, except the Sewanee Military Academy's cadet band, got in the game. The 'B" team pushed across the final touchdown. The game was featured by spectacular touchdown runs. John Guerry made the longest run to glory land by pulling a sneak through the center of Ken-yons line, breaking out in the clear and crossing the double stripe 68 yards away.

The play came early in the fourth quarter. Jackrabbit Tommy McKeithen ran 56 yards for a touchdown. He must have thought the Lords of Kenyon had suddenly turned into beagle hounds from the way he turned and twisted to avoid being touched by eager tacklers. McKeithen averaged 13 yards per try, gaining a total of 120 yards in nine attempts. Coach White sent in his second team at the end of the first period and on the first play from scrimmage John Mooney, Kenyon's quarterback, faded back and tossed a pass to Sam Montague on Sewanee's 30 and he ran the rest of the way for the Lords initial score.

This same combination scored again in the third quarter on a four-yard pass that climaxed a 90-yard Kenyon drive. The Lords took a Sewanee kickoff, and as usual fumbled but recovered on their own 10-yard line. Then the Lords showed their only offensive drive. A 130-pound, 5-foot 5-inch tall halfback supplied the spark. Jack Kasai, by far the lightest man on the field, took one of Mooney's bullet passes, out in the flat on his own 3, and ran the ball to the 39.

Two plays later he made it to Sewanee's 46, and on the nevt trv enr tn the Tltrr' MR fnr thir firBt. AnVirr. rnw rhP th another Coach White had run out of 'White gave the nod to Lon Varnell and the team coach sent his team in with only one day of rest. They had beaten TPI's Bees, 14 to yesterday White was seen talking to some cadets of SMA. The crowd thought Nalley Returns Punts Yards, 11 Short of a College Ftecord 77 BY TOM! KETTERSON United Pren Sport Writer.

NASHVILLE, Nov. 13 (U.E) Vanderbilt rolled easily to a 56-to 0 victory over powerless Marshall today but missed one of its main objectives by 10 yards the intercollegiate punt return record for its safety man specialist, Lee Nalley. Nalley needed 87 yards on punt returns to break the record of 616 yards set by Colgate's Bill Geyer in 1941. He gotonly 77, being run out of bounds on a 22-yard return just before the game ended. How.

ever, he still has the Maryland, Tennessee and Miami games to go. Though failing to set a record in his specialty, Nalley provided the crowd of 16,000 its best thrill, a 66-yard touchdown run with an intercepted pass in the third quarter. Vandy Stop. Itself Vanderbilt scored 21 points in the first quarter and then another touchdown early in the second and then stopped itself by slipping in two dozen different substitutes before the first half ended. Zealand Thigpen and Dean Davidson scored two touchdowns each, and Nalley, Jamie Wade, Jim Tabor and Bud Curtis one each, Curtis' on a 45-yard pass from Wade.

Zack Clinard booted eight extra points. 495 Yards From Scrimmage Sparked by Bob Hartley, Marshall drove 48 yards to Vander-bilt's 21-yard line in the second quarter and 54 yards to the Vandy 23 in the third. Vanderbilt had 24 first downs to Marshall's nine, and a total of 495 net yards from scrimmage to Marshall's 152. Except for two plays, Vanderbilt contented itself with straight football, preferring to cruise on simple' bucks and reverses rather than all-out plays. One exception was Wade's third-quarter pass to Bud Curtis.

The other was Wade's sleight-of-hand ball handling for a second-quarter touchdown that could be called a combination hidden ball-Statue of Liberty play. Taking the pass from center, Wade faked a handoff and then stood still for several seconds with the ball held behind, him in the small of his back. When Marshall was thoroughly confused though everyone in the stands saw the ball Wade merely walked past the line of scrimmage for a few steps and then trotted the rest of the way with several interferes for a 19-yard touchdown effort. Vanderbilt missed another score, perhaps, when half time caught it with the ball on Marshall's 1-yard line. KANSAS CLUB PRESSED IN BEATING WILDCATS MANHATTAN, Nov.

13 (JP) Gerald Hackney, a crushing fullback, and pint-sized Dana Atkins came within six yards of powering Kansas State to. the football upset of the year today. But the Wildcats couldn't quite make it, losing, 20 to 14, to Kansas for their 22nd straight Big Seven Conference defeat. Kansas, favored to win by Just ab6ut any score it cared to. protected its undefeated league record with a three-touchdown first-half flurry that left the heretofore im-poten K-Staters 20 points to the strong Washington University team of St.

Louis next Saturday in the final game of the season. SEWANEB Ends Russell, Stoney. Tackles Hannah. Whltakar. Guards R.

Collier, Austin. Center Pratt. Backs Bryant, C. McDavid. M.

Wat kins. R. Collier. KENYON Ends Montague. Mallory.

Best. Tackles Smukler. Basinger. Wilson. Guards Sesler.

He ring, Wahlstrom. Center Weaver. Backs-Mouney. Haskell, Jenson. Brun- son, Kasai.

Mantno. BCORE BY PERIODS Sewane 7 1J 7 2047 Kenyon 0 7 0 13 Touchdowns Brvant. Stewart. McKeithen. Hamilton.

Calhoun. Quarry. Mulkin. Montagu 2. Referee Ector.

Umpire Lindsey. Head- linesman Moore. Fiald Judge Sprayberry. SHY GUY WINS HONORS IN LOUISVILLE FEATURE LOUISVILLE, Nov. 13 UP) The Detroit-owned Shy Guy whipped Sun Herod in a strenuous duel for one and one-eighth miles today to win the 1 Louisville Handicap, closing-day feature at Churchill Downs.

The Dixiana entry of Charles T. Fisher fought it out with Sun Herod, another Detroit-owned entry, for the full distance and barely was able to pull a length ahead as he hit the wire. Shy Guy packed 121 pounds to 125 for P. L. Gris-som's top-weighted Sun Herod.

Checkerhall, a game challenger all the way, earned third money, i i i i V. tunte anu icugLua ucuuiu Sun Herod and two and one-half in front of Dinner Hour. VMI Defeats Citadel LEXINGTON, Nov. 13 JP) Virginia Military Institute's Key- dets marched with military precision today to defeat The Citadel, 34 to 6. The Keydets grabbed two touch downs in the first period, repeated the performance in the second and added a fifth in the final period.

ene ooerts ana uick jviciyissic of Mooney'a passes on the 20 and accounted for most of the yardage got to the 4-yard line. Then and Kyle Rote dived over from a Mooney passed to Montague for yard away. the scoref After stopping a Razorback The rugged T-quarterback was drive on the SMU 11. in the wan- on cf the best passers the Tigers ing minutes, the Mustangs started have met this year, rolling from their own 16. Rote's All of the teams used by Se-35-yard dash and passes from wanee were able to gain against Johnson to Rote, Walker and the Lords' inept defense.

The Wayne carried to the Arkan-, Tigers had to punt only once, and sas 21. that was when the Sewanee An offside penalty gave the team was in the game. Methodists the ball on the 16 andi nullified a pass interception by I men. Billy Bomar and Prince Mc-Arkansas' Alvin Duke. Johnson! David were the only Tigers that passed to Zohn Milam, but the big 'did not get in the game.

Both were end caught the ball out of the end first-stringers and both were zone. Then, with good nursing injuries. Johnson faded back and pitched I When the bench was emptied. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BEATS HUSKIES, 32-7 LOS ANGELES. Nov.

13 Southern California's Trojans hooked up with their old rivals, the Washington Huskies, today and proceeded to bang out a 32-to-7 victory. Washington, losing its sixth game of a luckless campaign, was never a serious threat, but most of the 44,345 onlookers stayed on for the finish. Jeff Cravath's Troys got off to a 13-point lead in the first quarter, the first on a 66-yard drive the second after a gift fumble on the Huskies' own 4-yard line. From then on it was a Trojan clambake. Washington's striving athletes were never able to dent the enemy 40-yard stripe until the third period, Mighty Michigan Zips by Land, Air To Crush Loss-Groggy Indiana, 54-0 to Page, who made the catch with his back to the goal, turned and fell across the line.

AMATEUR NOTES Chemcot wants tame Monday night Alton Park Gym. Call Ralph Whita J-0392-R. MlCTIIC.AN-fCh.rie. Ortmaan lulKaa A.mrarH tin. 1.

For be seen near bead of No. 59. woa In a romp, M-0 0, (to Columbia Machine Rolls Over Navy, To Scissor Four-Game Losing Streak ANN ARBOR. Nov. 13 tjp Unbeaten Michigan opened up a land-and-air attack today that pulverized defeat-groggy In beating In 23 years.

A chill-nipped crowd of 84.800: watched Coach Ben Oosterbaan's Wolverines widen a slim 7-0 first-period lead into their biggest victory margin in eight straight wins this season. It was Michigan's 22nd successive triumph in three seasons. George Taliaferro, the Hoosiera' elicit triple-threater, provided a brief spark in the early action. But the maize and blue forces began to roll at the end of the first period and wound up with a flood of reserve talent pounding out five last-half touchdowns. Michigan' fullback.

Tom Peterson, broke the scoring NEW YORK, Nov. 13 CT Columbia snapped a four-game losing streak today with a 13-0 gridiron triumph over a Navy team that positively refused to cash in on numerous opportunities to put together its first victory of the season. Led by Gene Rossides, the home club drove 52, and 71 yards for touchdowns midway in the game after turning back two Navy threats in the opening period before a capacity crowd of 35.000 in alternating rain and sunshine at Baker Field. Only 12 seconds of the first half remained when Rossides tossed a four-yard pass to End Bill Lock- left of No. threw a jump pa.

at ttt nnw Am ArhOT. JllCfl- VPSieromT UieniWB Indiana: Jerry Morrical (71), tackle; John Ooldsberry (78), tackle;.

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