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Evening star from Washington, District of Columbia • 41

Publication:
Evening stari
Location:
Washington, District of Columbia
Issue Date:
Page:
41
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Georgia Tech Blasts Duke Jinx, 26-7 Title-Bent Uclans Brush Past 9 Unbeaten Engineers Bag First Victory On Enemy's Soil Score Three Markers In Second Quarter, Come From Rear By the Associated Press. DURHAM, N. Oct. Tech stayed in the thinning ranks of the Nation's undefeated teams today by whipping Duke University, 26 to 7, before a homecoming crowd of 26,000. It was the first time in the 10year-old series that the Yellow Jackets had won on Blue Devil soil and they did it with a three-touchdown splurge In the second quarter and another march into pay dirt just before the final gun.

Ralph Plaster kicked two extra points. Dnkp nnpnpH thp srnrincr in tho first quarter when Moffatt Storer raced 55 yards on a reverse from Euddy Luper. Bob Gantt converted. Georgia Tech, a great team today, was at its peak in the second quarter. Plaster Rams Over Touch "rwn.

Freshman Clint Cac.S'oerry passed to Jack Marshall for 21 yards and Plaster hit the ne for 5. Castleberry made 2 more yards and Pat McHugh crashed through for 5 to the Duke 20. Plaster rammed through center for a touchdown, but Jack Helm's try for the point was no good. Bobby Sheldon, on the next payoff drive, returned Storer's punf 63 yards to the Duke 11. Rabbit Jordan gathered In Eddie Prokop's pass over the goal, but again Helms missed the point.

Tech tallied again after Storer fumbled a bad pass from center on fourth down. Tech took over on the 15 and on the first play Prokop passed to Jordan for the touchdown. It was a narrow squeak because Jordan knocked the ball into trie air ana caugnt it as 11 ieu. Plaster converted. Try for Field Goal Fails.

In the fourth. Red Eaves blocked Storer's fourth-down punt and Marshall recovered on the Duke 17. Helms tried for a field goal from the 28, but it failed and the Blue Devils took over again. Then Sheldon intercepted Luper's pass on the Duke 34, got 9 through the line and Plaster made it a first down to the 23. Prokop, back to found no receiver open and ran 17 to the 6.

Plaster lost 5 when Leo Long tackled him but Prokop made it up with a pass to Marshall on the 3, and Plaster went over and added the point. Pos. Georgia Tech Duke L. Marshall Cittadino L. T.

Anderson Poole L. J. P. Jordan Troxell Manning C.Davis Hardy Burns R. West Nanni R.

Helms Gantt Stein Lone L. Castleberry Luper R. McHueh Storer F. Plaster T.Davis Georgia Tech 0 IP Duke 7 0 7 Georgia Tech scorihg: Plaster (-). J.

Jordan ifor Marshall' Point after (2) placements'. Duke scoring: Touchdown Point after (placement). Harvard I (Continued From Page C-l.) 1-foot line and Wayne Johnson plowed over. Richards set up the second score few minutes later in the third period when he skirted his right end again and weaved and threaded his way to the Tiger 3 only to have his mates lose the ball on downs. But the disappointed Harvard linemen made amends by slashing through as a unit to block Bob Perina's punt and O'Donnell recovered for the Crimson on the Tiger 6.

As the fourth quarter opened, O'Donnell took it to the 1-foot line, being thrust back just as he apparently had crossed the line. Leo Flynn, sub left halfback, made the ecore around his right end on the next play. m. MUU With Princeton leading 14-12 by virtue of its second period scores with Bob Sandbach's conversions, Harvard's cause seemed hopeless. With two minutes to play, Princeton started to freeze the ball by banging into the Harvard line.

But Dave Marshall fumbled and Sid Smith, a sub guard, fell on the ball on Harvard's 36. An extra time out against Princeton moved it up to the 41 and on the next play with less than a minute remaining, Comeford faded back and tossed a long, desperate aerial diagonally downfield. Lyle, out-distancing Sandbach and took it over his shoulder and sprinted the remaining 30 yards for the winning score. Pos Princeton (14). HtfTvard (Iflt.

L. E. Harr Barnes Morris Dur wood L. Edwards Teal C. Perantoni J.

Fisher R. G. Kinniry Stannard R. Headle.v W. Fisher R.

Schmon Forte West Anderson Perina Wilson Franks ODonnell F. Sandbach Johnson Scorp by periods: Princeton 14 Harvard Princeton scorine: Gallagher (for points after touchdown Sandbach rj) Harvard scoring: L. Flynn (for Lyle (for O'Donnell): point after touchdown Barnes (place-kick). Statistics. H'v'd.

First downs 9 in Yards gained rushing (net) 91 Forward passes attempted 14 Forward passes completed 4 2 Yards by forward passing 79 89 Forward passes intercepted by 4 1 Yards gained, run-back of lntercepted passes 20 1 Punting average (from mage) .33 Total yards, all kicks 94 84 Opponent fumbles recovered 1 1 Sfards lost by penalties 36 35 Idaho Downs Montana On Three Pitches, 21-0 By the Associated Press. MISSOULA, Oct. 31Three touchdown passes gave the University of Idaho Vandals a 21to-0 football victory over Montana University today. Montana rallied in the waning minetes of the first half and drove to the Idaho one, but the Vandals took over on downs. Plebes Win at Soccer ANNAPOLIS, Oct.

31 Piercing a stubborn Collegian -defense for goals only twice in the entire game, the Navy Plebes' hardbooting Kern, assisted both times by Kappoch, eked out a victory today over Baltimore City College. A Sports Program For Local Fans TODAY. Football. Philadelphia vs. Washington Redskins, Griffith Stadium, 2:30.

Hockey. Washington Lions at Indianapolis Capitols, Indianapolis. TOMORROW. Boxing. All-star card at Turner's Arena, 8:30.

Inaugural program at Uline Arena, 8:45. TUESDAY. Boxing All-star card at Uline Arena, 8:30. Brown Stars Absent As Yale Conquers Old Rival, 27-0 Bulldogs Hurl for Three Tallies, Snatch Foe's Pass for Another By the Associated Press. NEW HAVEN, Oct.

The Yales discovered today that the Brown Bear, a very wide awake footballing animal up to a week ago, had gone into hibernation early this The Bear showed about as much ability to move forward as you'll find in a 1916 jalopy without gas. So the Yales went on a decidedly pleasant aerial tour of the bowl for themselves before 22.000 fans and wound up with a 27-to-0 win for the third most lop-sided score In the 62-year history of this ancient series. Three times the Elis tossed their own pitches for touchdowns. The fourth time Brown obliged by serving one up that was intercepted and turned into a 52-yard Yale touchdown gallop by Sam Scovil, a 19-year-old sophomore. Two Big Bears Absent.

On the other hand. Brown couldn't do a thing, particularly the two best Margarita and Howard (Make Mine Vanilla) Extract were on the ailing and unavailable list. Dan Savage did a crack one-man job, but he couldn't handle it alone, ana as a result the Browns made only one first down the first half. Yale hit the jackpot first in the second quarter by going 36 yards for a score. Ed Taylor pitched to Fred Dent for this one, after Townsend Hoopes got 29 yards on a dash inside his own left tackle.

Taylor and Dick Jenkins combined on a 54-yard pass play for the second Yale just before the half endetj, on Elis Take Breather. The Elis eased up in the third quarter, but put their final two touchdowns together in a hurify in the final chapter. Spencer Moseley, the center and backbone of the Yale line, intercepted a pass on the Yale 46 to start the first of these two scoring sprees on the way. Hoopes toured left end for 17 yards and Hugh Knowlton, who was Taylor's relief pitcher, heaved to Jenkins for 17 and then shot a long one to Nick Cooley for the marker. Brown received the next kickoff, but promptly gave up the final Yale touchdown when Scovil grabbed Savage's pass and went all the way.

Pos. Brown III). Yale -MacNeill Lynch L. Smith Eliell Smith rvfi Moseley raw Davison Fialer Kipnril -IV. Jenkins Potts Taylor R.

Remick Hoopes Bowen Ferguson Score by periods: Yale 0 14 0 Brown 0 0 0 Yale sconne (sub for Jenkins). Jenkins. Cooley (sub for Scovil (sub for Potts). Points after (3) (placement). California Conquers Oregon by 20 to Remain in Race By the Associated Press.

BERKELEY, Oct. California's Bears clung to a slim mathematical chance for the Coast Conference football championship today with a 20-to-7 victory over University of Oregon in a bruising clash that saw the losing team provide the individual star. Tom Roblin, a Blocking quarterback, furnished the game's outstanding high light in the third period. Coming back from the halft'me rest, with California leading, 13-0, Roblin was switched to fullback and personally led an attack that netted a touchdown after a 67-yard march. The Bears, however, held control most of the way.

They started with the opening kick off and plunged ahead 100 yards for the first touchdown. I Spartans Score Late To Gain 7-7 Draw With Temple the Associated Presi. PHILADELPHIA. Oct. State's favored Spartans had to turn on the heat in the last period today to settle for a 7-7 tie with an inspired Temple team before a home-coming throng of 10,000.

The Owls dominated the play for three quarters and sent Fullback Joe Papiano crashing over from the 2-yard line in the third period. Guard Sid Beshunsky place-kicked the point. State's tfuchdown came with six hinutes left when Halfback Dick Kieppe, the hero of the Spartans' upset of Great Lakes last week, broke loose on a twisting 15-yard pay-off run to cap a 68-yard drive by the Invaders. Halfback Jack Fenton booted the tying point. Breeze for Redskins Expected Against Eagles Today Tribe Much Improved Since Tough Battle With Philly Club By LEWIS ATCHISON.

The lads from down under, down under the other four clubs In the National Football League's Eastern Division, will be with us this afternoon when Philadelphia's nonflying Eagles invade Griffith Stadium for a tussle with the Redskins. The kick-off is scheduled for 2:30. Running roughshod over all competitors for the eastern crown, the Redskins are expected to make short shrift of Greasy Neale's gang. The Tribe is close to home in its pennant drive and the Phils are out of it. merely playing out their schedule because the rules demand it.

On fAt-m IIFn oU mrrf nvi cViAillfl nrin couple of touchdowns. The Redskins en masse and personally think today's fracas will be a mild workout and nothing more. To be sure, the Eagles gave them a rough party in Philly about a month ago but didn't pack a winning punch and since the Skins have improved like a keg of old wine. They reached their peak last Sunday in Pittsburgh. slipping the Steelers a 14-0 setback, and even if they are a trifle off this afternoon they seem to have enough left to deal with the Eagles.

Vic Carroll Available. Vic Carroll, who got into the Pittsburgh game in the last couple of minutes, will be available today, so the only missing casual will be George Smith, still recuperating from a knee operation and not expected back for another 10 days. Carroll will bolster a line that seems to need no reinforcing at this stage of the campaign, but it's nice to know he's ready again. Then, too, Ray Flaherty has S. Baugh, Sir Richard Todd, St.

Andrew Farkas and other heroes of the training table in fine fettle and ready for battle. Baugh's field generalship last week had a champagne sparkle and Sam'l tossed in a couple of runs with his usual passing, the likes of which, if repeated today, will cause much woe and consternation in the Phils' ranks. But Neale has promised to touch off a few explosives before the afternoon is over and has a collection of backs who can be troublesome. Take this Tommy Thompson, for example. He throws those long passes that either miss or go for touchdowns.

He leads the loop in yards gained on passes and a slight mental lapse in the Tribe backfleld will be all he'll need to slip over a haymaker. Steele a Record Holder. i The Eagles also have Ernie Steele," who holds the record for running back punts; Bosh Pritchard, the former V. M. I.

star; Twenty Grand Davis, who runs with the speed of the bangtail bearing the same handle; Bert Johnson and Dick Erdlitz. All good men and true, if not quite as good as the Skin ball handlers. The visitors are not deep in manpower, a factor which has contributed more to their mounting string of losses than any other, but while their first-stringers are fresh it's liable to be quite a game. While Washington is here the Chicago Cardinals, their opponent next week, will be at Green Bay for the express purpose of putting the quietus on Curley Lambeau's pennant aspirations. Green Bay is only a game behind the undefeated and pace-making Bears and the Cards, too, retain a mathematical chance of winning.

A loss will put a heavy frost on the hopes of either team but would be more damaging to the Cardinals. In the East, Brooklyn, Pittsburgh and New York are clinging to mathematical possibilities but one will be erased in the Steelers-Giants fray and if Cleveland should come through with an upset over Brooklyn the Redskins may wind up with what the boys like to call an insurmountable lead. Georgia (Continued Prom Page C-l.) on seven out of eight plays and connecting with four passes to Poschner, Van Davis and Lamar Davis, Georgia drove 69 yards to the touchdown. Final Tally Is Gift. The final tally was a gift.

Taking the ball on his own 45. after a weak Georgia kickofl, Alabama's Russ Mosley was thrown for a 5-yard loss when he attempted to pass. A 15-yard penalty for holding pushed Alabama back to the 25. Mosley exploded oft tackle and the ball squirted from his hands as Georgia linemen hit him. Coming in fast.

Dudish grabbed it in midair and galloped unmolested for the third touchdown. Georgia threw the ball early and often, gambling at times recklessly to overcome Alabama's great line. Sinkwich carried the ball 20 times for 44 yards, lost 8 and was credited with a net of lowest running performance of the year. But his overhead game was spectacular. Thirty-three of Georgia's 37 passes were thrown by the Bulldog All-America, 17 complete for 230 yards.

L. Sharp Poschner L. Whltmlre Ellcnson L. Hecht Miller C. Domnanovich Godwin R.

Leon Ruark R. Olenskt Williams R. Weeks Van Davis Q. Sabo Keuper Mosliy Blnkwlch R. Craft L.

B. Sails McPhee Score by periods: Alabama 7 0 3 Georria 0 0 0 Alabama reorlng: Field (placement). Point after touchdown Hecht (placement). Georria rcorinc: (2). Dudish (for L.

Pointa alter (for Sinkwieh) (3) (placements). AU. Ga. First down; 11 15 Yards gained rush in 107 62 Forward passes attempted 12 Forward passes completed 8 18 Tards by forward passes intercepted 4 0 Yards runback intercepted passes 17 0 avertie (from se rimma set 41.8 89.1 Tota all kicks returned 63 Opponents7 fumbles recovered Mt by pmatiM I BRIGHT HOYA Dornfeld (left, 15), Georgetown fullback, made 8 yards on this off-tackle play in the game with Boston College in the Hub yesterday. He was stopped by Joe Repko (38).

It seldom happened for the Hilltoppers, who were beaten by the great Eagle outfit, 47 to 0. P. Wirephoto. Faircloth Hides Ball, Strolls Over Goal As N. C.

S. Wins D. C. Youth Plays Large Part in 21-14 Upstt Of North Carolina By the Associated Press. RALEIGH, N.

Oct. as thrilling a game as ever was played in their colorful and spirited rivalry, the Wolfpack of N. C. State College upset favored North Carolina, 21-14, in a Southern Conference football game played before 14,000 fans today. The Wolfpack took the lfad in the second period with two touchdowns, added another in the third and then fought off a desperate Tar Heel rally in the fourth.

North Carolina scored once in the second period and once in the fourth. Faircloth's Trick Works. Art Faircloth from Washington, D. scored the first State touchdown from the North Carolina 17 by hiding the ball behind him and strolling through the Tar Heel line and across the goal. A few plays later he passed to Bolo Stilwell in the end zone for the second touchdown.

Walt Pupa and Billy Myers, both sophs, shared honors in the North Carolina touchdown trips. Pupa engineered the first in three plays after the Wolfpack kicked off following its second rally. Pupa passed 11 yards to George Sparger and then 43 to Joe Austin who grabbed the ball on the 15 and ran across for the score. Mvers' Passes Click. Myers starred in the Tar Heels' fourth period uprising.

He passed to Jack Hussey for 21 yards and then to Sparger for 14. He picked up 16 yards on a run and passed to Sparger again to the State 4. In two tries at the line, Myers scored. Joe Suniewick, sub for Doak. set up the third State score in the third period by returning a North Carolina punt 23 yards te the Tar Heel 23.

Faircloth made a first down on the 12 on the same play he used to score the first touchdown. George Allen made four and then Bill Moser smashed the North Carolina line four times, scoring on the last smash. Pos. N. Car.

(14). N. C. State (21). L.

Hussey Stilwell L. Hcymann T. Moser Strayhorn C. Riddle C. Highsmith J.

Allen R. Karres Caton R. Wolf Kwiatkoskl R. Turner J. Gibson Q.

Cooke Doak L. Myers Teague R. Austin Clark F. Croom Senter Score by periods: North Carolina 0 7 0 North Carolina State 14 7 North Carolina scoring: Austin and Myers: points after touchdown (2) North Carolina State scoring: (sub for Teague). Stilwell.

W. Moser: points after (2), Faircloth Tulane's Sparkling Air Attack Shatters Vanderbilt, 28-21 By the Associated Press. NEW ORLEANS, Oct. Green Wave combined drama with heads-up football here today to defeat Vanderbilt, 28-21, before 20,000 and down the jinx which had denied it two wins in a row since the beginning of 1941. Marty Comer, veteran Tulane end, snatched three touchdown passes to top the attack.

Sophomore Back O. J. Key hit him with a pair In the final quarter to pull the Greenies from behind. Lou Thomas connected with a 19-yard shot to Comer in the second. The Greenies gained 192 yards rushing to Vanderbilt's 123, and completed 10 passes for 95 yards to the Tennessean's 74.

Sustained drives kept the game spilling almost constantly from one end of the field to the other. Tulane splashed 69 yards for its first score in the second after Vanderbilt had crossed -with a 50-yard attack In the first. Vanderhilt went 80 yards In quarter, poli ishing off the parade with Jlmmj Webb's 46-yard pass to John North Lou Thomas was steadily gooc with his confusing runt passes ovei the middle of the line and broki free on one touchdown spring iron 20 out. Most of Vanderbilt's striking power came through long swings arounc the ends. Art Rebrovich seemet particularly hard to stop on wide sweeps, setting up a touch; down plunge from the one-half yard line by Teammate Jack Jen kins in the opening period.

Vandy's Bernie Rohling rippet through tackle from close in fo; another touchdown. Rohling's run; through the line had Tulane on it heels in the opening minutes play. Ole Miss Has Walkover UNIVERSITY, Oct. 31.Scoring at will, the Johnny Hebe of Mississippi swampet an offensively weak Memphla Stab eleven, 4S-0. JL Stuhldreher Ties, Coaching Record Bt the Associated Press.

MADISON, Oct. "Guess this is my lucky seven year," says Coach Harry Stuhldreher of his Wisconsin eleven. Now in his seventh season as head grid coach at the Badger school, Stuhldreher has tied the record for the longest tenure In that job. Phil King, a Princeton graduate, coached the Badgers from 1896 through 1902. Long Scoring Thrusts By Washington Trip Oregon State, 13-0 Walters Runs 57 Yards, Erickson Passes 76 For Touchdowns By the Associated Press.

SEATTLE. Oct. spectacular long-distance touchdown thrusts gave Washington a 13-0 football victory over Oregon State on a slippery field today, to keep alive the Huskies' slim Pacific Coast Conference title hopes. A crowd of less than 7,000 saw shifty, speedy Gene Walters, substitute halfback, break the Ice in the second period to send the Huskies along the victory path with a brilliantly executed 57-yard touchdown run. Washington added its second tally in the third quarter on a 46-yard pass play from Halfback Bob Erickson to Sam Robinson, the highgeared right half.

Robinson, taking the ball on a perfectly timed toss as he raced across almost parallel with the line, ran 30 yards to score. Oregon State threatened only once. Sooners Beat Iowa State, 14-7, With Early Punch By the Associated Press. AMES, Iowa, Oct. Sooners, packing; all their scoring into the first half, downed a lighting Iowa State team.

14 to 7, today before a crowd of 7.500 cyclone homecoming football fans. Iowa State valiantly tried to crack its losing habits but could couldn'l quite match those 14 points the Sooners posted in the opening sessions. The Cyclones got seven points back In the third period when Royal Lohrj cracked over from the 1-yard after his brilliant 24-yard punt return had set up the scoring opportunity. Minnesota's Power Conquers Stubborn Wildcats, 19 to 7 Frickey, Playing Out of Position, Sparks Gophers; Scores on 78-Yard Runback Br the Auoeiated Press. MINNEAPOLIS, Oct.

had too much power for a stubborn Northwestern team, and defeated the Wildcats, 19 to 7, today for its second Western Conference win in three starts. Herman Frickey, Gopher regular right half who ran from the left half spot today in place of the injured Bill Daley, sparked his team to victory, scoring two of Minnesota's touchdowns, one on a twisting 78-yard runback or a Minnesota's first touchdown came near the end of the first period after the Wildcats stopped the first Gopher drive on their 4-yard line by a pass Interception. A few minutes later, after another interception, Northwestern punted to Priekey his 22 and he went all the Way back for the first score. Bill Garnaas place-kicked the point after touchdown. Wildcat Fumble Costly.

A Northwestern fumble, recovered by Minnesota on the Wildcat 25, set up the second Gopher touchdown. Frickey, faking a pass, dashed to the 3-yard line and Vic Kulbitski plunged across. A booming 74-yard punt by Don Buffmire, Wildcat halfback, that went out of bounds on the Minnesota 11, set up the Northwestern touchdown shortly thereafter. Three line plays gained only two yards, but on his last chance, Buffmire threw a strike to Clarence Hasse in the end zone. A1 Pick kicked the extra point and it was 13 to 7 at the half.

After a scoreless third period, Minnesota started on its third touchdown drive when Frickey intercepted a Northwestern pass on its 25-yard line and ran it back three yards. Frickey shot a pass to Cliff Anderson for 18 yards, and then took it over the last stripe himself on a short tackle plunge. Daley Early. Daley, the Gophers' leading scorer, kicked off for Minnesota to start the game, but retired after a few plays for the rest of the day. Northwestern was without the services of the injured Otto Graham, the league-leading forward passer.

A crowd of 38,000 saw the game, which marked the 50th year of football relations with Northwestern. Pos. Northw'tern Minnesota (IP). L. Motl Anderson L.

Karlstad Wildung L. Kapter Perko C. Urlaub eolheim R. Burke Billman R. Vincent Mitchell R.

Btumgartnei Q. Kean Sandberoe L. Scrtba Dalej R. Buffmire Ftickej F. B.

Hirsch Kulbltskl Northwestern 7 7 Minnesota 7 Northwestern scoring: Touchdown Hasse. Point after (for Buffmire). (placement) Minnesota scoring: Kulbitskl. Point after (for Bandberg), (placement). Pitt Outgains Plaid By 316 Yards for 19-6 Victory the Associated Press.

PITTSBURGH, Oct. Pitt eleven hardened by tough opponents and outweighing Carnegie Tech, its home town rival, by an average of 18 pounds a man, wasn't forced great deal today in whipping the Tartans 19-6 before a meager crowd of 5,000. Rolling up a total of 344 yards to Tech's 28 on the ground, Pitt was exceeded statistically only in the forward pass department, Tech completing 10 for 117 yards compared with Pitt's 5 for 83 yards. The Panthers intercepted five ol the Tartan's passes or the tussle might have been closer. Longacre Dazzles Dartmouth As W.

M. Wins by 35-14 By the Associated Press. HANOVER, Oct. and Mary raced through a woefully inept Dartmouth team today, 35 to 14, to remain among the Nation's undefeated, although once tied, college aggregations It was a monotonous afternoon for the press box announcer who had to toll off the amazing running feats of one Bob Longacre from Johnstown, who slipped over the left side of the Dart mouth line three times to score There wasn't the slightest doubt of the outcome after the first quarter, which saw Longacre break away at the mark on a 43-yard scoring jaunt around his right end, and then saw Jackie Freeman, a sub back, match the play a few minutes later from 4 yards farther out. Dartmouth resembled Dartmouth on very few occasions, but one of these was at the start of the second period, when two passes ate up 8(1 yards and clicked for a score, Johnnj Monahan, juggling the ball for a few seconds on the play, but flnaUj holding It TKe Tjtneaitiia I out ior a 35-yard stroll midway In the third quarter, paving the was for John Korczowski to acore a moment later from the 4, and chalked up another a few minutes later from the 6 after Ramsey recovered a I mouth fumble on the first play lowing the kick-off.

With the score 28-7 at that point Dartmouth's subs, played most ol the remaining time and effected the last score at the start of the final period. Even this gesture was the result of a "break," however, officials ruling that Longacre had Interfered with a pass intended foi Cannon and awarding Dartmouth the ball on the 1, from where Chit Oeotge pulllam took it over. Longacre had the last say, though with a 17-yard scoring dash latei in the period. Pot. W.

A- M. (35). Dartmouth (14) L. Vandeweghe Ctnnor L. Bass Andersor L.

Ramsey McKlnnor C. Warrington Browr R. Holloway R. Fields Daukai L. Loniacre Q.

Forkovltch Burrouahi R. Knox CrowleJ R. Kas P. Johnson Douglai William and Mary 14 0 14 Dartmouth 0 0 0 William and Mary scoring: Touchdowni Loniacre (3i. Freeman (sub for Lontacre) Korcsowski (sub for Forkovltch).

Point after (5) (placi kicks). Dartmouth seorlnt: Touchdown (sub for Cannon). Pulllan (sub for Doublas). Point after touch (2) (place kicks). Oklahoma Aggies Ahead OMAHA, Oct.

31 A. and M. overpowered the Creightoi Biuejays 30 to today in a Missour Valley Conference football game. AUTO GLASS ANY SHAPE SCAT MAM TO Oft DM Toronto Wosman H.W. 29M Concede Big Weight Advantage, but Win With Ease, 20-7 Waterfield's Passing Is Deciding Factor; Foe Tallies Early By FRANK FRAWLET, Afsoelatcd Press Sports Writer.

LOS ANGELES, Oct. battling Bruins of the University of California at Los Angeles swept aside another barrier in their drive to a Pacific Coast Conference football title today by soundly thumping Stanford, 20 to 7. Pifty-flve thousand saw the game. Outweighed 15 pounds to the man in the line U. C.

L. A. nevertheless outplayed the Indians in all departments, and the score very easily could have been larger but for penalties that stopped promising drives. U. C.

L. A. won the eame with a sharp passing attack, Quarterback Bob Waterfleld throwing and Halfbacks A1 Solari catching, but it had to come from behind to beat the heavier and slower Stanford team, which turned a Bruin fumble into a touchdown seven plays after the opening kickoff. Fumble Sets Up Score. Ev Riddle, U.

C. L. A. halfback, fumbled on his 26 as he returned the initial kick, and Rog Laverty, Stanford end, recovered. Buck Fawcett and Willard Sheller alternated at the tackles, and Sheller soon was across into pay dirt.

Henry Norberg converted. It took the sunned Bruins a long time to get their attack going, but in the second quarter Waterfleld found the Indians were not covering their right halfback defense area properly and from the 40yard line he threw a bullet-like pass to Solari, who stiff-armed Bob Frisbee and ran 32 yards across the goal. Ken Snelling converted to tie the score. Waterfleld intercepted a Stanford pass a few minutes later and ran to the Indians' 30. He whipped a sharp pass to Solari at the gams spot through which the first touchdown was made and A1 galloped to the 8.

Three plays later Snelling plunged through right guard into the end zone, but he failed to convert. Waterfleld Pitches Touchdown. The final touchdown in the fourth period came on a whistling throw of 24 yards from Waterfleld to Vic Smith who snatched the ball on the dead run and went eight yards to score. Stanford's attack was no puzzle to the Bruins, who used a six-man line throughout, with Center Bill Armstrong and Fullback Smelling backing up in sensational fashion. Pos.

Stanford (7). U.C L.A. (20). L. E.

Norberg Milt Smith L. T. Stamm Finlay G. Taylor Lescoulie C. Armstrong P.

O. -Laprade Snarlis R. T. Bandaccl Fears L. E.

Lnverty Wiener Q. B. Hammett Waterfleld L. H. Dana Solari R.

Sheller Piddle F. Fawcett Snelling Stanford 1 7 0 0 7 U. C. L. 0 13 0 TJ.

C. L. A. Snelling. V.

Smith (lor Solari). Points after touchdown Sn'lling placements' Stanford scoring Sheller. Point after (placement). Shift Mississippi Date To Beat Gas Rationing By the Associated rress. STATE COLLEGE, Oct.

31. State and the University of Mississippi will play their annual football game here Saturday, November 21, Instead of Saturday, November 28. School officials announced the shift in dates. Gasoline rationing will go into effect in Mississippi November 22. T.

C. U. Suffers First Loss as Baylor Kick Takes 10-7 Duel By the Associated Press. PORT WORTH, Oct. Baylor's Golden Bears down massive Texas Christian day, 10-7, bouncing the Frogs from the Nation's undefeated ranks on a 17-yard field goal by Bert Edminson, then repulsing two 'J T.

C. U. drives that carried the Bruins' 1. A crowd of 12,000 sat as the battling Bears came fronf behind to topple the last team in the Southwest T. C.

U. scored in the first a pass interception by Ralph Porter paving the way. Baylor tied It up In the secondO ouarter. Johns Hopkins Drubbed if BALTIMORE, Oct. 31 better-drilled University of BuffalpQ eleven overpowered the John kins giidders, 26 to 6, today in a game which saw the home battle to a second-half standoff after two damaging periods.

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