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The News and Observer from Raleigh, North Carolina • 21

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Raleigh, North Carolina
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SPORTS The News and Observer NEWS RALEIGH, N. SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 15, 1939. PRICE: DAILY. SUNDAY FIVE TEN CENTS CENTO VOL. CXLIX.

NO. 107. Duke Beaten, 14-13; Deacons Rout State; Carolina Wins, 14-7 PITT SCORES WIN IN LAST QUARTER Narick Passes to Cassiano for Both Pitt Scores; Kish Kicks Points Pitt Duke 6 8 First-downs Yards gained rushing .155 168 lost rushing 62 Yards Net yards rushing 147 106 Passes attempted 14 12 Passes completed gained passes. 114 Yards Passes intercepted by opp. Yards punt returns 20 Yds Yards lost kickoff, penalties 20 20 returned.

46 Number of punts 11 8 Av. distance punts Fumbles 2 Opp. Laterals tumbles intercepted OH By TED MANN. Pittsburgh, Oct. Duke's that score you heard was right.

Blue today lost their first regular, season was: Pitt football 14, Duke game in 13. two And it was as heartbreaking a loss as a Duke team ever will sufferand that includes last January's Rose Bowl defeat, for the Blue Devils lost today to a team they outgained. Yes, outgained but the Blue they Devils were outsmarted by as clever and spirited a football team as ever came down the road. It is not for the writer to make predictions on Pitt's future games but if the Panthers fight as hard and are as smart against other foes as they were against the Blue Devils today, they'll a whole flock of their games this year. It fell to the lot of True Toe Tony Ruffa to i be the principal in the play which, in the long run, meant the difference between a tie and a loss.

Ruffa missed on his placement try for point after Duke's second touchdown, made in the second period. Tony had been successful on his last 11 tries from placement on extra and maybe one reason for points, that miss this afternoon was that he just had taken what for him was a very new role-he had thrown a pass to George McAfee for the Duke touchdown. Those battling Panthers twice came from behind--they caught up with the Devils at 7-7, and went ahead at 14-13. First One-Point Loss. As a matter of record, it was the first time Wallace Wade ever has seen a team of his lose by the margin of an extra point, and that covers 21 years of coaching.

It was a -bang battle today and the Blue Devils proved a plentygood football team. It started off as if Duke might mow 'em down. George McAfee didn't wait long to set off on a 33-yard run to Pitt's 16. Pitt only eight yards on four gave up downs and took over the eight, punting out to the 43. George Runs 36.

After Wes McAfee had gained two yards and lost two. George faked a kick and went trucking around right cut back, and went down the end, field to the Pitt seven, where Cassiano finally got him. In four plays, three by Robinson and one by Lach, it was over, Robinson going the final two inches. Ruffa booted the extra and Duke was off, 7-0. point A minute later the quarter ended.

After an interception by George McAfee of one of Narick's heaves, Duke completed a pass--from Wes McAfee to George McAfee-and along came the "break" that in the long run was the ball game. Pitt Catches Up. On a backfield fumble by Duke, which put the ball in play on the Pitt 27. the ball bounced back to Pitt's 42. This happened on a play on which Wes McAfee went at left tackle.

He was tackled hard and the ball popped up in the air as if he were trying a lateral and came down in the hands of Jack Dickinson, brilliant Panther end, who raced downfield to Duke's ten, where George McAfee brought him down. On the first play. Emil Narick, Pitt's great shot one down the center to passer, Cassiano, who standing on the goal line. Kish added the point from placement, and the score was 7-7. Devils Go Ahead.

But Duke came right back in the second period and counted on one of the cleverest plays you'll ever see. Duke had advanced to Pitt's seven and it was fourth and four. Ruffa dropped back in kicking spot in a placekick set-up but the ball was passed to Ruffa, who threw to George McAfee on the two, and George went over. Ruffa's placekick -barely missed to the right. Panthers Win It.

Pitt won the game in the third period and it was hard-earned. The Panthers marched from their 43 to Duke's 34. Then, after they had gained only six yards on three downs, Narick shot a pass down Please Turn To Page Two. First Column. A Big Point POS.

PITT DUKE LE Rettinger Perdue LT. Kristifek Ruffa LG Gradisek Ribar Fullerton Burns RG Klein Johnson RT. Benz Winterson RE Dickinson Bailey QB Kish G. McAfee LH Cassiano W. McAfee RH.

Narick Eaves FB. Goodell Robinson Score by periods: Pitt 0 7 0--14 Duke 6 0--13 Pitt scoring: touchdowns: Cassiano 2: Points after touchdown, Kish 2, (placekicks). Duke scoring: TouchdownsRobinson, G. McAfee. Point touchdown, (placekick.) Pitt substitutions: End-Gervelis.

Tackles Benghouser. Guards- Corace, Fife. Center -Sinco. Halfback-Thurbon. Fullback -Bonell.

Substitutions: Duke: EndsDarnell, Piasecky. Tackles-Karmazin, McDonough. Guards-Nania. Quarterback-Killian. Halfbacks-Lach, Thompson.

Fullback-Davis. Referee-W. H. Friesell, Princeton. Umpire W.

Powell. Wisconsin. Linesman-R. M. Frew.

W. and Field judge-A. W. Palmer, Colby. Gallovich Leads Deacons To 32-0 Win over State Wake Forest Registers Largest Margin in Series with State Wolfpack W.

F. State First-downs 13 10 rushes 57 36 Yds. gained rushing 405 122 Yds. lost rushing 12 38 Net yards, rushing 393 Passes attempted Passes completed Yards gained, passes 135 Passes int. by opp.

Number of punts Average distance punts. 67 33 33 Opp. returned Opp. fumbles recovered 20 30 Penalties zPunts figured from line of scrim- mage. By HERB O'KEEF.

A special Baptist brand of lightning struck five times on Riddick Field at State College last night and when the storm had cleared up Wake Forest had a clean-cut 32-0 victory over State College, the largest margin by which Wake ever defeated State. The up-and-coming Wake elevensadly off form in its only other Big Five engagement, in which Carolina trimmed the Baptists, 36-6-scored in that final period, State and every quarter but, the fourth. In Howell Stroup, the center and a junior, put up a rousing battle which carried the ball to the Wake three, where the threat died as the game ended. Wake didn't take to the air a single time, but did score on one State pass when John Polanski, soph Wake back, intercepted a pass on the State 28 and galloped to touch- down. Gallovich Leads.

Brightest flash in the Wake attack was Richard (Tony) Gallovich, halfback from Vandergrift, Pa. He shared touchdown honors with Polanski, with two each, but Tony sparked the Wake offensive with several long runs. Marshall Edwards accounted for the other touchdown. Wake bumped Miami last Saturby a 33-0 30 score- did not take to the air single time then, either. Before last night, Wake's biggest margin over State had been a 21-0 score in 1918.

The Baptists lost by 19-7 last year. After the game, there was a bit of pulling and hauling around the State goalposts for a few minutes, and apparently some fists flew. No damage was done to the posts. After a bit of swirling up and down the field, the crowd adjourned without further ado. Scoring Story.

Here's how Wake did its scoring: First quarter-Taking the ball on the State 46, Polanski, Mayberry, and Gallovich alternated carrying the ball to the State five, and Polanski plunged over. Second -Gallovich opened the procession with a 45-yard jaunt to the State 30. Mayberry and Gallovich advanced it to the four, and Edwards scored. Gallovich galloped 65 yards on a reverse for the next. Third quarter Polanski, Mayberry, and Gallovich advanced the State 39, and Gallovich scampered over from there.

Polanski scored the last touchdown, intercepting East's pass on the State 28 and scoring from there. State's regulars could not stem the Wake atack but the 10 sophomores and one junior did themselves proud in the last quarter. Sparked by Dick Watts, State marched to the Wake three. First Quarter. The Wake Baptists, smarting under a sound defeat in their other Big five start, turned on the power during the first quarter to shove over a touchdown and take a six-point lead.

Mayberry began the scoring thrust when he took Rooney's punt on Wake's 30-yard line and scampered back 24 yards to the State 46. Polanski, Mayberry, and Gallovich alternated on gains through the line and around the end, with Gallovich setting up the touchdown by a 12- yard dash left end. Polanski smashed through right guard for the score. Pendergast's placekick for point was wild. An earlier Wake threat died aborning, State holding for downs on the Wolfpack 15.

The consistent Wake offensive strength and two bad punts from Rooney kept ball in State territory most of the time. East took the Wake kickoff following touchdown on his own 10- yard marker and pulled off a pretty run, behind some nich blocking, to the Wake 38-yard line. State could not gain and the ball went over to Wake on the Baptist 12 yard line on Rooney's punt as the quarter ended with Wake Forest leading 6-0. Second Quarter. The Baptists turned on a special brand of heat during the first 10 minutes of the second quarter, shoving over two markers.

That same speedster, Gallovich, started the procession with a jaunt from his own 25-yard marker to the State 30. He appeared to have a clear path for a score, but Art Rooney, State safety man, sidestepped a blocker and chased Gallovich out of bounds. Mayberry picked up nine yards in three plays, then GalloNiche reverse hustled to the around State the left 4-yard side line. on Edwards circled right end for the touchdown. Gallovich missed the kick for point.

The score was: Wake Forest 12, State 0. Only four minutes of the quarter had been played. The next score came in short order. Rooney took the kickoff on the State five and ran it to the State 29, but the Wolfpack could not gain and Rooney punted to Mayberry on the Wake 20. Mayberry Please Turn To Page Five.

First Column. MARTIN TERMS IT CRAZY BALL GAME' Here's Whitney Martin's Account of That Red-Hot Pitt-Duke Contest By WHITNEY MARTIN. Pittsburgh, Oct. SOcalled Pittsburgh football bubble exploded today-right in the faces of the Duke Blue Devils-and it wasn't filled with laughing gas. Charley Bowser's "mystery team" turned back the potent Duke eleven, 14-13, in a game which kept nearly 50,000 bundled and blanketed spectators in various stages of hysteria throughout the crisp Autumn afternoon.

And the Pitt Panthers did it the hard way, coming from behind to 1 tie the score in the second period, and coming from behind to win in the third. Pitt Transformed. Jock Sutherland, the silent Scot, peered down from the press box to see successor's team, rated so-so in calculations and considered an enigma after two victories, play the favored Southerners to a standstill. He didn't see a Sutherland football team. The relentless, crushing power of previous Pitt machines was missing, and in its place was a brilliant, unpredictable offense.

It was tight cavalry and pursuit planes in place of roaring tanks, and the crowd was thrilled to the marrow. In justice to the Blue Devils, it was anybody's ball game, and they were the victims of at least one heart-rending break which might have sent the 50,000 straggling muttering instead of cheering. The Blue Devils likewise boasted the outstanding man on the field in lithe George MeAfee, whose running and kicking were practically a two-hour menace. He left the game in the final minutes, to a thunder of acclaim. "Crazy Ball Game." It was a crazy, nerve-shattering ball game, replete with brilliant plays interspersed with horrid fumbling and breaks which turned promising offensives into disheartening disappointments.

Duke, with a brilliant kicker in George McAfee, started out as if to emulate its 1938 winning stylepunt and wait. McAfee's first effort shoved the Panthers deep into their own territory, and they couldn't dig out. Once they halted a march on the nine, but shortly after that the irrepressible George knifed through left side of the Pitt lines, reversed his field, and galloped 37 yards before Dick Cassiano hauled him down on the Pitt seven. Four plays later Robbie, Robinson nudged over from six-inch line, and Tony Ruffa placekicked the goal. ball which popped out of Wes McAfee's arms like a polished watermelon and was gathered from the air by John Dickinson gave Pitt its break early in the second period.

Dickinson roared down the sidelines 37 yards to the Duke 10, and on the next play Emil Narick zipped a pass to Cassiano in the end zone. Ben Kish placekicked goal to tie it up at 7-all. Ruffa's Pass Connects. Later in the period, after Gordon Burns had recovered Pitt fumble on the Pitt 44, Leonard Darnell rambled 19 yards on a double reverse. The Blue Devils necked away until they reached the 10, where Ruffa passed to George McAfee in a corner of the end zone.

Here Ruffa, with a record of 11, straight conversions, missed. Midway in the third period, Robwaved through an field infested with Panthers until he reached Cassiano. He dodged the Pitt safety but, as he whizzed by, Cassiano hooked Robinson's arm and the ball went tumbling along the ground. Cassiano recovered on the Pitt 43. Panthers Go to Town.

The Panthers then tossed their most brilliant attack, a foot-by-foot, inch-by-inch drive which carried to the Duke 28, where, with fourth and four, Narick whirled the ball down the field to Cassiano, who caught it and lunged over the goal as he was tackled. Kish, calm as a millpond, booted a extra point, and his swinging leg carried a Pitt victory right with it. The Blue Devils opened with everything they had in frenzied efforts to retrieve the lead. But in the waning minutes it was the fiery and 1 unpredictable Panthers who had the upper hand, and the Blue threats. faded almost before they started.

Cassiano, Ernie Bonelli, and Kish were stalwarts in the Pitt backfie' which on the whole couldn't do much with the Duke line. Robinson was understudy to George McAfee in the Duke stellar role. Coach Charley Bowser of Pitt declared after the game that he was "tickled pink" and that he thought "We were pretty lucky." Wallace Wade of Duke appeared dazed. He said: "It was one of the finest football games I ever saw." TOO OLD FOR WORK. BUT NOT FOR SPORT Noodles Hahn pitched a no-hit norun game for the Cincinnati Reds against the Phillies back in 1900.

That was some years back, and Noodles has advanced to the age when his employers, a packing company, have him on pension. He can't work but he can still play. He showed up every day during the baseball season for workout with the Reds, TAR HEELS STAGE GREAT COMEBACK Deacons Parade POS. WAKE FOREST STATE. LE Jett Phillips LT.

Pate Coon LG Givler Windley C. Retter Kapriva Savini RT. Crabtree Burt RE Woolbert Sullivan QB. Mayberry Rooney LH Edwards Sabolyk RH Ringgold Diyeso East FB Polanski Score by periods: Wake Forest 6 13 13 0-32 State 000 0 0 Wake Forest scoring: TouchdownsPolanski 2, Edwards, 2. Points after touchdown: Gallovich 2 (placements).

Wake Forest substitutions: EndsWaivers, Vanden Dries. Geer. Tackles -Kunkel, Pivec. Guards- -Tingle, Moser. Balionis.

Center- Clarke. BacksClark, Eustler, Juchinski. Edwards, Laton. State Owes. substitutions: Tackles Ends- W.

Thompson, Avery, Jones, Ramsey, Conrad. White. Guards -Barr, Johnson, Williams, J. D. Jones.

Centers-Stroup, Carter. Backs-Fehley, Watts, Pavlovsky, Stewart, Huckabee, Cathey, Traylor. Officails: Referee, Gerard, Illinois: umpire, Tebell, Wisconsin; headlinesman, Tolley, Sewanee; field judge, Perry, Elon. VIRGINIA CADETS TOP VANDERBILT Abisha Pritchard, Substitute Quarterback, Shines in 20-13 Conquest Duke will play at V. M.

I. on November 11. Nashville, Oct. Cadets of Virginia Military Institute swept to a 20-13 victory day over Vanderbilt, with Abisha Pritchard personally accounting for the Cadets' three third-period touchdowns. A crowd of about 5,000 shivered slightly from a brisk wind and the effects of the thrilling exploits of the Institute's unheralded substitute quarterback, who scored twice himself and passed for the other tally.

Vanderbilt used the airways exclusively in getting a touchdown the count momentarily third lead in the first period, ande tying quarter. Junius Plunkett, quarterback, did the engineering the Southeastern Conference team's effort. Pritchard passed and ran with abandon, but points didn't result until after the intermission. He climaxed a drive on his 35 by passing to End Gordon Irwin, who ran 25 yards for the counter. Prichard Goes 61.

After the succeeding kickoff and a punt exchange, Pritchard sped 61 yards to the touchdown that definitely put the Cadets in the game. Minutes later, Vanderbilt passed its way to another touchdown and was on the march again when Pritchard appeared out of nowhere to intercept Plunkett's long pass and scampered 78 yards to cap his spectacular performance. A 13-yard pass, from Plunkett 1 to Ed Hiestand, brought the home team's first score. It came on the second series of Vandy's first-quarter plays, climaxing a 30-yard drive. Halfback Hardy Housman took Plunkett's toss from the nine for the second touchdown, after the Commodores had marched from the 31 in the third.

Vanderbilt made 11 first-downs to the V. M. I. 7, and outgained the Cadets, 107 to 86, in the airways. The visitors' ground game was superior in yardage, 185 to 107.

HORNED FROGS LOSE 310 TO OWLS OF TEMPLE Philadelphia, Oct. scored two touchdowns in the third period and then put on a brilliant fourth- to defeat a favored Texas Christian University football team, 13-11, today before a crowd of 20,000. The points were the first by the Owls this year and gave them their first victory in three starts. It was the third successive defeat for T. C.

one of the nation's leading gridiron powers last fall. Trailing by 9-0 at half-time, Tempushed over two touchdowns to take a 13-9 lead. The turned back four T. C. U.

tries from the one-yard line in the fourth period, and then yielded a deliberate safety to insure triumph. BLOCKED PUNTS SET UP CATHOLIC U. TRIUMPH State will play Detroit U. on Saturday of this week. Washington, Oct University today capitalized on two blocked punts and upset a favored Detroit University eleven, 14-13 before 1,000 fans.

Joe Carrig blocked Albert Ghesquires punt on the one-yard line in the second period, and Rocco Pirro went over for the first Catholic touchdown. Carmen Pirro converted. Detroit marched 70 yards in four passing plays for a second-period score, but failed to convert. blocked Catholic U. the ball on Detroit's 20-yard line in the third, and Rocco Pirro went over for the counter.

Carmen Pirro converted. Harry Groth passed 20 yards to John Berringer who raced 25 more for Detroit's final touchdown in the third period. Frank Hayes converted. NAVAL BASE WINS. Norfolk, Oct.

U. S. Naval Training Station football team edged a 7-6 victory over East Carolina Teachers College here today. Stirnweiss Passes to Radman for Winning Score in Fourth-Period Rally 3 Carolina's George Radman, ball hugged by both hands, prances in the payoff dirt of the end-zone after catching the pass which brought Carolina's winning touchdown in yesterday's 14-7 triumph over New York University. The pass, thrown with perfection by Colonel George Stirnweiss, came on a play started at the 19-yard line.

That's Jim Mallory (91), Carolina end, in foreground. The N. Y. U. ace, Ed Boell (13), is at left.

Nearly entirely hidden by Mallory is another New York back, Bill Galu, nearest defender to Radman when he TEXAS AGS SPANK VILLANOVA ARRAY Homer Norton's Boys Offer Dazzling Attack in 33-7 Win Over Wildcats Tyler, Oct. Homer Norton, the gridiron master of Aggieland, turned loose a Texas Hurricane today that flattened the forces of Villanova College like pancakes, burying the hitherto-unbeaten Wildcats under a 33-7 score. Norton's greatest Texas A. and M. team blew with fury to pile up all its points in the first half and then, with second and third-stringers doing most of the work, coasted the remainder of the way.

A crowd of 14,000 witnessed the game, played as a climaxing feature of the annual Tyler Rose Festival. The Aggies scored early in the first quarter with Big John Kimbrough, who played less than a third of the game, smashing over from the two. Bill Dawson missed the goal. The Texans had another touchdown within two -Marion Pugh pitched a 31-yard pass to Derace Moser, who ran 18 yards untouched for the counter. Marshall Robnett missed the try for point.

A sensational punt-return by Moser carired to the Villanova 26 and set the stage for the next Aggie score. Pugh passed to Herbert Smith for 10 yards, Moser circled end for seven and Kimbrough started over tackle then cut out around end for the touchdown. Robnett kicked goal. The next two Aggie touchdowns were made in rapid order. After a 15-yard penalty had nullified a 35- yard touchdown pass, Bill Conatser took a punt on A.

and M. 30 and raced through the Villanova team for the counter. Bill Audish kicked the point. A fumble led to the final Aggie touchdown. Leon Rahn recovered a Fumble on the Villanova 10.

Marshall Spivey made two; Audish, three. Then Spivey cracked the line for the tally. Audish kicked goal. The Wildcats came back fighting to get their touchdown, early in the fourth period. Joe Behot flipped a pass to Bill Romanowski, who lateralled to Paul Stenn, and the latter ran 13 yards for the score.

Behot kicked goal. CITADEL PROVES TOUGH FOR FAVORED FURMAN State will play at Furman on November Furman will play at Davidson on October 28. Charleston, S. Oct. Furman's power tactics swept The Citadel Light Brigade off its feet for four minutes today, and in that short space of time the Hurricane scored seven points and spoiled The Citadel's homecoming celebration, Furman won, 7-0.

The Citadel's reputation for playing jam-up football ail the way was upheld when Graham Edwards heaved a 48-yard pass to Jake Burrows in the last 30 seconds of play. It was the Cadets' real threat. Citadel had the Furman's only, one-yard line when the game ended. Roten Shetley, big ball carrier. made Furman's touchdown when he broke loose on a 28-yard twisting, scrambling dash, and went over the goal less than four minutes after the opening kickoff.

He converted from placement the extra point. GENERALS GET 7-7 TIE WITH MEMPHIS OUTFIT Memphis, Southwestern Lynx failed to make good on two scoring opportunities in the fourth period today and were held to a 7-7 tie by the Washington and Lee Generals. Southwestern scored in the first period when Orenstein swept end for six yards. He converted. The Generals came back with a 70- yard march which culminated in a touchdown when Brown stepped off yards on a reverse.

Baugher converted. took the The play came STATE. Wake Forest 32, State 0. Pitt 14, Duke 13. Carolina 14.

N. Y. U. Mars Hill 6. Lees- McRae Hampden-Sydney 32, Guilford 0.

Campbell 60. P. J. C. Naval Base 7, E.

C. T. C. 6. SOUTH.

Tulane 7. Fordham 0. Holy Cross 13, Georgia 0. Auburn 7. Miss.

State 0. Georgia Tech 35, Howard 0. Furman 7, The Citadel 0. Tennessee 20, Chattanooga 0. Virginia 12 Maryland 7 Kentucky 59, Oglethorpe 0.

Virginia Tech 6, W. and M. 6. Richmond 6, Rutgers 6. Randolph-Macon 18 American 0.

V. M. I. 20, Vanderbilt 13. Alabama 20, Mercer 0.

C. Mich. Trs. 18. E.

Ky. Trs. 14. W. and L.

7. Southwestern 7. Erskine 6. Wofford 0. L.

S. U. 7, EAST. Dartmouth 0, Navy 0. Penn 6, Yale 0.

Army 6. Columbia 6. Cornell 20. Princeton 7. Duquesne 7, Manhattan 0.

Georgetown 13. Syracuse 13. Colgate 10, Brown 0. Temple 13, Texas Christian 11. Catholic U.

14, Detroit 13. Penn State 49, Lehigh 7. Scranton 31. C. C.

N. Y. 7. Bucknell 15, Albright 0. Western Reserve 19.

Boston U. 14. Rhode Island 40 Brooklyn 0. Amherst 26, Tufts 7. Williams 20, Hamilton 6.

Muhlenberg 7, Lafayette 6. Bates 13. Northeastern Morris Harvey 28, W. Va. Wesleyan 14.

Alfred 14. Buffalo 0 Gettysburg 60, Drexel 7. Penn. Poly. 26, Rochester 6.

Wash. Coll. 15, Johns Hopkins 0. Hobart 26, 1 Hartwick 0. Trinity (Conn.) 17.

Worchester 7. Norwich 17, Coast Guard 7. Ursinus 4. Penn Military 0. Vermont 0, Colby 0 Swarthmore 27, Susquehanna 12.

Clarkson 3. Springfield 0. Union 31, Middlebury 7. Dickinson 13, Delaware 7. Lebanon Valley 8 Franklin and Marshall 7.

Indiana Trs. 20. Edinboro Trs. 0. Lock Haven Trs.

19, Kutztown Trs. 0. Maine 6. New Hampshire 0. Bergen 20.

Wagner 20. Mt. St. Mary's 21, Western Maryland 6. Conn.

7, Mass. State 6. Clarion 13, Thiel 0. Montclair 18, Millersville 6. Fairmont State 7, Calif.

(Pa.) Trs. 6. E. Stroudsburg Trs. 26.

Shippensburg 7. Hofstra Ridge Potomac State 13, Shepherd 0. MIDWEST. Notre Dame 20. S.

M. U. 19. Ohio State 13. Northwestern 0.

Indiana 14. Wisconsin 0. Harvard 61, Chicago 0. Michigan 27, Iowa 7. Purdue 13, Minnesota 13.

Marquette 17, Michigan State 14. Nebraska 10. Iowa State 7. Butler 13, G. Washington 6.

Valparaiso 13, Indiana State 12. Depauw 0. Evansville 0. Earlham 9, Wabash 6. Rose Poly 33, Franklin 0.

Manchester 7. Hanover 0. Central (Mich.) Normal 28, Defiance 0. Ferris 19, Lawrence Tech 14. Carnegie Tech 21.

Case 0. Ohio N. 7. Heidelberg 0. Capital 7, Bowling Green 6.

Kent. State 6. Mt. Union 6. Denison 27, Kenyon 0.

Wittenberg 32. Bluffton 0. Ohio Wesleyan 12, Ohio U. 7. Toledo 26.

North Dakota 7. Findlay 21. Ashland 0. Marshall 21. Miami (O.) 0.

W. Mich. State Trs. 6, Akron 0. Missouri 14, Wash.

U. (Mo.) 0 Kansas State 20 Colorado 0. Baldwin-Wallace 63 Grand Rapids 0. Illinois Coll. 14, Elmhurst 0.

Cornell (Ia.) 33, Beloit 6. Emporia Trs 34, Iowa St. Trs. 7. St.

Olaf 3, Luther 0. St. John's 25, Concordia 0. G. Adolphus 13, Hamline 7.

Coe 7. Monmouth 7. Knox 12, Lake Forest 6. Northern St. Trs.

26, Spearfish Nor. 0. Peru Trs. 6, Kearney Trs 0. Michigan Tech 7, N.

Wisconsin Trs. 6. Albion 51, Sdrian 0. Hillsdale 6. Kalamazoo 0.

Olivet 31. St. Mary's (Mich.) 0. Dekalb 19. Wheaton Ellendale Normal 14, Mayville 13.

SOUTHWEST. Baylor 19, Arkansas 7. Oklahoma 24, Texas 12. Oklahoma Aggies 9. Tulsa Arkansas St.

7. S. Illinois Normal 0. ROCKY MOUNTAIN. 35.

Grigham Kansas 7. Colorado State 0. Colorado Mines 6, Greeley State 3. FAR WEST. Oregon 6, California 0.

U. C. A. 14. Stanford 14.

Southern Cal 26. Illinois 0. Wash. State Washington 0. Oregon State 6, U.

of Portland 12. Montana 6. Montana State 0. Idaho Southern 16, Compton J. C.

0. NEGRO COLLEGES. Shaw 13, Howard 0. Miner 7, St. Augustine's 7.

Virginia Union 6, Morgan 0. Morris Brown 12, S. A. and M. 0.

Grid Results Alabama A. and M. 25. Dillard 0. Greensboro A.

and T. 26, St. Paul 0. Lincoln 13. Cheyney Trs.

0. The parents of Ernie Lombardi, star catcher of the Reds, were born in Italy. six minutes from end of game. INJUNS SURPRISE UCLANS WITH TIE Stanford Bounces Back After Two Setbacks to 14-14 Tie with Bruins Palo Alto, Oct, to life after two dismal defeats, Stanford's Indians battled the University of California at Los Angeles Bruins to a 14-14 tie today. So confident was Coach Babe Horrell of the Bruins that he started his second team against the Indians, who hade been whitewashed by Oregon and Oregon State on two successive Saturdays.

But before a scoreless first period was over, Horrell rushed his first-string eleven into action. Battling even terms, U. C. L. A.

and Stanford each scored a touchdown in the second period. The Indians scored in the third quarter, and the Bruins evened the score in the fourth quarter. Bruins Score First. In the second period, Tim Groves, Stanford right halfback, fumbled, and Frawley, U. C.

L. A. fullback, charged around right end to the ton, Negro halfback, passed to McStanford 31, and Kenneth WashingPherson on Stanford's 11. Overlin then raced around end for the first touchdown. Frawley converted.

Stanford scored shortly after. The Indians took a punt on U. C. L. 30, with Norman Standlee and Frankie Albert carrying the ball, went to the 18.

Albert passed to Groves for a touchdown, and Albert converted. In the third period after each team had intercepted passes, Robinson punted from U. C. L. A's 29-yard line.

The ball hit midfield, took a queer bounce, and landed on U. C. L. 25 for a loss of four yards. Injuns Take Lead.

Standlee brought the ball to the U. C. L. A. two-yard line in a series of power plays, but the Bruins held.

Gilmore's punt from the end zone went out nthe U. C. L. A. 14.

Albert heaved a short pas sto Hugh Gallarneau, Stanford right halfback, who raced 10 yards to a touchdown. Albert converted, and led. 14-7 In the fourth period, Robinson intercepted Albert's pass on U. C. L.

28 and galloped 51 yards to the 21, where he was brought down by Albert. Fullback Cantor plunged over from the two, and Robinson's conversion deadlocked the score. SOVEREIGNS PLAY TIE WITH VIRGINIA POLYS Richmond. Oc. and Mary Sovereigns and Virginia Tech fought to a 6-6 tie in Richmond's Municipal Stadium today before a crowd of 8.000.

William and Mary started the scoring in the first quarter when Gondak blocked Warriner's kick in the Tech end-zone and recovered for a touchdown. Hickey's placement was wide. Virginia Tech drove 57 yards for its score, in the third period, with Clark making the tally on an endaround from the five-yard stripe. Rose attempted to convert, but his kick was no good. Tech made 16 first downs; William University of Kentucky's Wildcats raced through and around-and occasionally passed over--a slow and Oglethorpe team today for and Mary, four.

WILD WILDCATS. Lexington, Oct. 59-0 victory. SKIBOS WIN. 21-0.

Cleveland, Oct. Tech's driving Skibos rammed their way to a convincing 21-0 triumph over the Case Scientists today for their third straight victory of the season. DOUBLE UP. Two captains rule where one captain ruled before! University of Iowa has co-captains this year in three sports-golf, baseball, swimI ming. NYU UNC First-downs 12 Yards lost rushing 8 Yards Number of gained rushes rushing 178 48 Net yards rushing 170 Passes attempted 15 Passes completed Yards gained, passes 78 Passes int.

by opp. Number of punts 10 Average distance punts 40 42 Yards Opp punts returned 36 53 Opp. fumbles recovered Penalties 25 blocked kick not included. Punts figured from line of scrimmage. By ANTHONY J.

McKEVLIN. Chapel Hill, Oct. Stevens, the fellow who coaches New York University's football team, is an pert prophet-and he regrets it. Stevens told New York writers early this week. in discussing the Carolina-N.

Y. U. game scheduled for this afternoon here, "I think a pass will win it." He was right-a pass did win it. the very same pass play and by the same passing combination which last year produced a 7-0 victory for the Heels over the Violet in a game played in New York. The winning pass in this afternoon's game made the score 13-7 favor of the Tar Heels, and then Harry Dunkle placekicked point and the tally went to 14-7.

That was the way the game, played before 20,000 on sunshiny and chilly afternoon, ended. It was a glorious victory for the Ter Heels, who were outgained and outmaneuvered during most of the afternoon. The Violet scored on the final scrimmage play of the first period, and their 7-0 advantage held up until fireworks by ed the game into a deadlock and the very fourth Tar Heels first then into a Carolina victory. Colonel George Stirnweiss, who hails from New York City, was on the throwing end of the winning pass the pass which proved Dr. Stevens to be a great prophet.

It came six minutes from the end of the game. Dunkle, who did some fine punting throughout, 70 yards to the Violet 12. On third down, Boll's pass was tercepted by Dunkle at the tor's 19. An Opening- -A Score. There was an opening for victory-and the Tar Heels aren't boys for wasting an opportunity.

They lined up quickly after coming out of the huddle, Stirnweiss backed up to the 30-yard line and then fired a pass for George Radman, who had scooted out from his wingback spot and had dashed down field and then cut over to his then was perfectly thrown and Radman had glue on his fingers. He made the catch in the end-zone. Radman had gotten by Bill Galu, Violet defender who had hopes of doing something about that pass. Dunkle placekicked point- the game was settled. In last year's game at New York, the Stirnweiss-Radman scoring pass was worked from the N.

Y. U. 20- yard line. Perhaps the Tar Heels hereafter will designate this play as the "Violet pass." How Violet Scored. A pass also brought the N.

Y. U. score, and a pass set up the first Carolina touchdown. The New Yorkers went 80. yards for their touchdown, registered on a pass from Ed Boell to Alex Campanis.

It came on a play starting at Carolina's 47. Boell passed to Campanis, who made the catch at the Carolina 40 and then proceeded to offer one of the most spectacular runs ever seen in Kenan Stadium. He hot-footed it down the sidelines, pushing aside and shaking off tacklers, then cut in to the left and breezed by a late-arriving Tar Heel who had hopes of stopping Alex's progress. Bill Galu, sent in to placekick for point, was perfect with his kick. The Violet scoring drive started after Dunkle had punted from midfield into the end-zone.

Boell gained nine, then firstdown. Mikulka three, and then Boell added eight. pass failed; Carolina drew an offside penalty, and Campanis went off. tackle for a first-down at lina's 47. The scoring pass came on the next play.

Carolina Ties it. From the early minutes of the game until they put on their fourthperiod fireworks, the Tar Heels were stymied by the hard-charging Violet line. Carolina opened the game with a rush by getting a couple of first-downs-on a 14-yard trip by Stirnweiss and a 12-yard trip by Dunkle-the first time it gained Please Turn To Page Two Second Column. Carolina's No. 4 POS.

N. Y. U. CAROLINA LE Schilling Severin Petereit White LG. Helmoke Woodson Conlin Smith Castelli Faircloth RT.

Hyman Kimball RE. Kline QB Mikulka Stimweiss CH Barmak Radman RH Campanis Bobbitt FB Boell Dunkie Score by periods: N. Y. U. Carolina 0 0 0 14-14 U.

scoring: Touchdown--Campanis. Extra point- Galu (placement), Carolina scoring: Touchdowns-Stirnweiss, placement). Radman. N. Y.

Extra U. points- substitutions: -Dunkle Ends 2 -Mauceri, Mond. Tackles- Obler, Jovans. DeNisco, Clark. Guards Geffner.

Center- Feibish. Backs- Galu, La Manna, Yushkowski, Pace, Schneider, Frank. Carolina Abernathy. Brantley. Centermer.

Ralston. Backs -Lalanne, Slotnick, Sadoff. Officials: Trimble, Dubuque, cree; Sholar, Presbyterian, umpire: over, Penn State, headlinesman; bers, Denison, field judge,.

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