Resorts and Travel Jstmday |&laf Farm and Garden ** SIXTEEN C PAGES WASHINGTON, D. C., OCTOBER 12, 1952 Maryland Crushes Georgia, 37 to 0; Navy Whips W&M, 14 to 0 Ohio State Jolts Wisconsin’s Rose Bowl Hopes, 23-14; Pitt Upsets Irish, 22-19 Virginia Wallops GW, 50 to 0; Penn Stops Princeton, 13 to 7 Football Results

„ „ , WASHINGTON AREA. Baldwin-Wallace 19 Kent State 13 Scarbath M« rvla n d 37 Georgia Beloit 27 (Wls.) 6 Tricks Buckeye O Carroll Great Howard 10 Virrlnia Union 0 Bethany (Kans.) 14 Bethel 7 Ft. Brlvoir 33 Norfolk Air Sta. « Bluffton 10 Olivet 0 Montgomery .1. C. 13 Shepherd 6 Bowling Green 21 Bradley 14 Naval Rtc. Sta. 13 Ft. Meade 13 Butler 28 Ball State 6 & Navy 14 . . William Mary O Capital 49 Maretta 12 Virginia George Washington SO _ 0 Carleton 28 Knox 13 Work Perfectly Wilson Tchrs. 19 Gallaudet O Carthage 33 Defense Culver-Stoektoa 7 Halls 5 Central State 14 West Va. State 10 Adelpht 13 Bridgeport 0 Cincinnati 20 Xavier 13 Albright 7 Gettysburg 0 Coe 28 Wabash 27 Alfred 33 Cortland State 28 Coll, of Ozarks 46 Hendrix 14 Amer. International 41 Northeastern 7 Colorado Mines II Western State 14 Army 37 _ Dartmouth Concordia (III.) 33 Mission House Easy 7 6 In Triumph (Minn.) Badger —. 7 Concordia 13 Bowdoin 31 Amherst Maraletter 7 " - Drives Carnegie Tech 40 Johns Hopkins 6 Dayton 20 __ Louisville 0 .ZsilT 'i»,iliniHll.fl'liPi' 'XU nmii, Clarion 2« Thiel 6 Defiance 31 Ashland 13 I Coast Guard 40 Wesleyan 7 Evansville 13 Valparaiso 7 Terps Finally Colgate 13 Rutgcfrs 7 Franklin 13 Rose Poly 0 Show Underdogs Gain 395 Concord 25 Glenviile 71 Htmlinr 39 St. Mary's (Minn.) 0 Drexel 47 Ursinus 39 Hanover, 18 Earlham 11 Strength in Ending Yards Before Hamilton 33 Wagner 20 liridrlberg 28 Wittenberg 0 Stunned Harvard 42 Washington (St. L.) O Miram 33 Grove City 7 Hobart 20 Allegheny 7 j Hobart 26 Allegheny 7 Bulldogs' Holy Cross 35 NYU O Huron 33 So. Dak. Wesleyan 13 Comeback Crowd of 80,345 Indiana (Pa.) Tchrs. 7 Edinboro O Illinois 18 Washington 1| Juniata 30 Haverford O Illinois Statr 21 Illinois Normal 7 By By th# Associated Press l.rbanon Valley 10 PMC 7 Indiana Central 7 Anderson O Merrell Whittlesey Lehigh Stor Staff Correspondent COLUMBUS, Oct. 26 Buffalo 7 lowa State Trhrs. 27 No. Dakota 1 I 11—Ohio Lock Haven 27 Calif. (Pa.) Tchrs. 12 lowa WesleVan 1 (Forfeit) Dubuoue 0 ATHENS, 11.—Look State’s once-beaten Buckeyes hit Maine 24 _ _ New Hampshire 7 Kalamazoo 58 Adrian O Ga.. Oct. Maryland State 60 Delaware State O Kansas 43 lowa State 0 out. Navy! That was the cry of the heights of gridiron greatness Willersville 27 Kutztown O Lake Forest 33 Simpson II Maryland's today they top-ranked Morgan State 34 Lincoln (Pa.) O Lawrence 35 Cornell (Iowa) 6 flred-up football team as defeated Morris Harvey 14 Marshall 13 Lincoln (Mo.) 52 Kentucky State 0 today after the Terps Wisconsin. 23-14, and trampled Muhlenberg 37 Lafayette O Loras 27 Luther 21 crushed Muskingum 27 Slippery Rock O Manchester 38 Taylor 6 Georgia, 37 0, in Sta- the Badgers’ Rose Bowl hopes _ to Sanford National Aggies 20 __ Brooklyn Col. 20 Marquette 37 _ Detroit 26 deep New Britain Tchrs. 21 __ Loyola 7 McPherson 26 Coll, of Emporia 26 dium in a manner that the 34,000 in the sod of Ohio Stadium. Pennsylvania 13 Princeton 7 Miami (Ohio) 65 W. Michigan 6 sad-eyed fans had utterly Penn State 35 West Virginia 21 Michigan 28 Indiana 13 believed The stunned crowd of 80.345 Pittsburgh 22 Notre Dame 19 Mich Normal 13 E. Illinois 7 impossible. watched the underdog Buckeyes Rhode Island 7 Brown O Michigan State 48 Texas A4M* 6 35 Rochester 27 Union I I Mich. Tech. . Minnesota (Dul. Br.) 7 For the first time since the St. Lawrence 49 Champlain 20 Miiliken 25 Elmhurst 19__. 7 St. Michael’s Vermont 0 Minnesota 27 Northwestern 26 game, Maryland Shippensburg 14___ F.. Stroudsburg 7 Montana 17 Denver 7 Statistics Springfield 20 Massachusetts 20 Moreheadl 27 Winona 7 Susauebanna 24 Swartbmore Morningslde Augustana . . Wls. Ohl* 20 33 6 First downs is 16 Syracuse 26 Cornell H Nebraska 27 Kansas State 14 Statistics Rushing yardage 166 254 Trinity 20 Tufts 12 N. Dak. (gr. 48 So. Dak. State It Passing yardage Upsala 43 Moravian 6 No. Michigan 31 Jsi 141 Ferris Inst. 19 Passes attempted . 27 Villanova 20 Wake Forest 0 Oberiin 28 First downs ***! completed 13 DePauw 6 Rushing **2s Passes 18 8 Waynesburg 41 Chincoteague NAB O. Ohio State 23 Wisconsin 11 yardage 375 lm) Passes Intercepted ff 3 West Chester 24 Delaware 20 Ohio Imv. 22 ...Western Reserve 7 Passing yardage 114 i.y» Punls .24 Bethany Passes attempted :>« Westminster 33 _ 01 I Oklahoma AAM 35 Wichita 21 10 Punting average 30 82 7 Wilkes 27 Ithaca 0 Otterbein 32 Kenyon 14 Passes completed 8 11 Fumbles O' 0 lost 1 2 Williams 9 Middleburg P atteville 26 _ Oshkosh 0 Passes Intercepted ... 2 Yards penalized 5 65 Yale 35 Columbia 28 Pittsburg (Kans.) 17 Washburn 7 Punts 3 7 SOUTH. Purdue 41 lowa 14 Pur.ung average 36.9 38.4 AAT College 26 . Hampton 13; ; St. John’s (Minn.) 13 Augsburg 0 Fumbles losi 2 1 outplay the Badgers practically Alabama 33 VPI O I Grinnell 14 Yards penalized 2U 60 in Albany State 41 Edward Waters 6 |SMU j. 5 Missouri 7 all departments, halting five Wis- Alcorn 19 . Mississioni Ind. O' SW Oklahoma 21 NW Oklahoma 14 Auburn 51 Wofford 7; Toledo 6 John Carroll 3 consin drives inside the 20-yard 0 looked the part of a real football Catawba 21 Western Carolina Wavne (Nebr.) 21 Midland 18 line with its Hu’" 33 South Carolina 7 Westminster (Utah) 14 Weber 7 powerhouse as it scored its 16th stubborn defense. E. Tenn. State 33 _ Maryville 13 j W. Texas State 17 .. New Mex. AA M 7 Elizaoeth City 20 St. Paul’s 0; West Va. Tech 11 Akron 13 consecutive victory, and made a Ohio was regarded as the big- Emory Henry 26 Guilford 7 i Whitewater 20 . Milwaukee 7 bid for a climb in national rank- gest stumbling Florida 51 Ciemson 13 j Wooster 28 Denison 14 block in Wiscon- Georgia Tech 14 Tulane 0 SOUTHWEST. ing before next Saturday’s en- sin’s path to Pasadena and the Georgetown (Ky.) 83 Wilmington 13 IE. Texas State 18 Lamar Tech 0 J. C. Smith 26 St. .Augustine O Houston 33 Tulsa 7 gagement with the Middies. That Bucks proved too big for tha I.a. Tech 34 Central Oklahoma 6 Oklahoma 49 Texas 2(1 game looks like the top col- Badgers Lenoir Rhyme 14 Appalachian 12 Texas Christian 47 Trinity 9 now visitors to hurdle. The LBU 34 _ Kentucky 7 Texas Southern 46 Grambilng 14 legiate attraction in the Wash- entered the contest heavy favor- Marion Inst. 7 Hiawassee O FAR WEST. —Jack Scarbath for Memphis State 34. Murray 7 California 41 Oregon 7 ington area's football history, what SCARBATH SCORES (arrow), Maryland , lunges over the Terps’ second touchdown in the second ites and ranked at ths Nation’s Mississippi of Puget 21 Vanderbilt 21 Coll, Sound 34 E. Washington O with Navy winning today. period yesterday against Georgia at Athens. Tom Cosgrove (54), Maryland center, rushes in to take out a defender. Georgia team, Mississippi College 7 Howard 'Ala.) O Colorado A4M 14 Wyoming 0 No. 1 but the unimpressed Miss. Southern 32 SW La. Inst. 12 Idaho 6 Utah State 3 Georgia’s comeback, which players are Joe O’Malley (53) and Frank Salerno (79). —AP Wirephoto. Ohioans took charge in the open- Miss. State 14 North Tevas Siatae 0 Pacific Lutheran 14 Whitworth 7 brief Morehouse 6 _ . Dillard O Rocky Mountain 31 Montana Mines 6 included a three-game winning ing minutes and maintained con- North Carolina State 28. Davidson 6 San Francisco State 14. Occidental 0 trol win Payne 7 Western Md. 6 Stanford 41 Oregon State 28 streak this season, was shattered j i to going away.

Randolph-Macon . 7 Western Md. 6 20 Rice 0 after a spirited first period ' Long Sewanee 27 Millsaps 13 V.W. Montana 19 E. Montana 7 in Score on Marches. Stetson 25 Furman 14 SERVICE which the Bulldogs had the edgt. Cavaliers Score Early, Penn Tops Buckeyes Chatanooga 6 Bainbrldge ' j The left little Tennessee 26 Princeton 3 4 Little Creek 13 doubt Camp Maryland's rugged defensive Panthers Tenn. Slate 40 Allrn 7 Polk 39 Connaly 0 team Win Is First Over AFB of their superiority. They marched Tenn. Tech 28 E. Kentucky 14 Great Lakes 19 Ft. Knox 6 posted shutout, and has The Citadel 18 Newberry 7 Parris Island 21 Indlantown Gap 13 another 88 yards in 12 plays for a touch- Washington A Lee 21 Richmond 20 , SCHOLASTIC. not been scored on since the sec- Then Give Colonials Kentucky 7 „ Heartbreoker, 13-7, period, yards W. State 39 Morehead Bullls W yoming Seminary In down in the first 64 14 7 j ond quarter of the game MIDWEST. Coolidge 13 Montgomery Blair 0: Auburn Notre in 15 in six plays for a third-period Adams State 19 E. New Mexico 12 Episcopal Christopher's Dame Years 27 St. 7 two 0 weeks ago. Albion 11 . Ahna Staunton M. A. 32.. McCaiUe School 6, and 55 yards in 11 . Pag« Rudy touchdown, Arkansas 20 Baylor 17 St. John’s 3’j Northwestern 6: Scarbath’s Tricks Working. (Picture on 'tS-t\ Mattiola to Johnny Jacobs, Ending Stuyvesan Worst Defeat plays Arkansas AIM 32 Arkansas State 6 39 Sherwood 0 Since'os and a 92-yard touchdown punt Streak at 24 for a fourth-period score. Augustana 26 North Central 18 Woodrow Wilson 19 Washington-Lee 12! As Coaeh Jim Tatum said last ly 9m Associated Press They tacked a 68-yard drive in By George Huber return by Notre Dame’s Joe Heap. on week, there may be SOUTH BEND, Ind- Oct. 11.— By Charles M. Egan eight plays late in the game for | Star Staff Correspondent Heap’s run midway in the final Sports Editor of The Star in the Nation as good as Jack Pittsburgh's underdog Panthers N. a field goal to clinch the verdict. Scarbath, (Pictures on Page C-5J period put the Irish behind only PRINCETON. J., Oct. 11.— Navy Sets Stage for Terps, but there are none bet- stunned Notre Dame, a two-touch- 20-19, but the deadlock for which The longest winning streak in Wisconsin also went long dis- ter. The bombshell had CHARLOTTESVILLE. Va., Oct. down was striving college football ended on a note tances for its scores, moving 39 his bag of working favorite, with a vicious first Notre Dame collapsed tricks to per- 11.—George Washington’s football on a point try, first marred by a of frustration at Palmer Stadium yards in seven plays in the second fection today, period clawing and then staved off 1 Beating bamboozling the team took a king-sized lacing penalty and then by a bad pass this afternoon as Princeton—- period and 70 yards in nine plays W&M Decisively Bulldogs with the furious Irish, 22-19, in foot- pitchouts, laterals, from Virginia this afternoon, ab- a from center. victorious in 24 straight games in the final quarter for touch- his ball By Francis Stann own ‘keep’ play, and inter- sorbing a 50-0 defeat in a game thriller today. Even then, a successful con- dating back to October 22, 1949 downs. spersing the It was first victory Star Staff Correspondent Statistics ground game with that was just about as one-sided! Pitt’s over version. wouldn’t have helped, be- missed out on a half a dozen Despite the fine showing of the passes. Notre Dame since 1937 following (Pictures on Page C-5.) Navy W&M forward as the score indicates. ( cause Pitt’s Joe Zombek tackled scoring opportunities and lost to Ohio offensive team, it was the Total first downs 13 8 rushing Maryland scored all five of its It was the worst defeat the Notre Dame’s in a stubborn Pennsylvania team, Buckeye defensive unit which ANNAPOLIS, Oct. 11.—Navy, First downs 5 5 First downs passing 6 3 touchdowns from inside the 10- Colonials had suffered at the the end zone for a safety with 30 13-7. frustrated the Badgers and pro- moving First downs by penaltie* 1 0 Statistics toward its momentous en- yards rushing yard line, seconds left. vided the Net 163 71 and the Terps had such Pittsburgh Notre Dsme It was a heartbreaking defeat astounding upset. Five, gagement with Maryland next Passes attempted 18 20 First downs 6 17 As far Notre Passes completed 9 6 versatility they had five different as Dame was con- for the Tigers, who literally threw times the Buckeye defenders took week, matched stride with the gained Statistics Rushing yardage 269 162 Yards passing 147 43 backs going over. Don Decker Passing yardage lfll 131 cerned, the game started with the the ball away from the Badgers unbeaten Terrapins today by Passes intercepted by 1 t GW Va. Passes attempted 11 32 Punts 10 14 booted four out of five extra First down* . 7 14 Passes completed 5 14 second half. Fresh from half-time Penn Princeton after the invaders had struck in- downing William and Mary, 14 to Punting average 35 35 Rushing yardage 1! 163 Passes intercepted 2 0 First downs . 9 13 6 points, and the seventh man in rest, the Irish punctured what had side the Ohio 20. Three times 0, before a homecoming day Fumbles fi Passing yardage 52 164! Punts ¦ 8 6 Rushing yardage 95 113 Fumbles lost 3 1 , the scoring column was Bob Passes attempted 17 24 Punting avenge 5)6 39 been an iron-ribbed Pitt defense Passing yardage 168 134 they took the ball on downs, once crowd of approximately 19,000. Penalties 6 8 Passes completed 6 11) Fumbles lost 1. 1 Passes attempted 13 23 Yards lost penalties PO 80 Laughery, who booted Maryland’s Passes Intercepted 14; Yards penalized 45 60 with a 78-yard touchdown drive Passes completed 7 11 on the 12, once on the 17 and Midshipmen's 3 ) The fabulous de- first field goal Punts 4 in seven plays. Passes intercepted 5 1 once on the 14. record against Yale and since its 42-7 tri- Punting average 29.2 36 Punts 8 6 fensive umph Georgia Fumbler lost 1 2 eight straight Fullback Neil Worden 12 Punting average 29.5 41.2 71 net yards rushing, but where over a year ago. penalized 121 65 Irish wins. Notre batted On another occasion, a pass Cornell suffered by comparison Yards yards through I Fumbles lost 11 Navy’s defense excelled today was The Maryland coaching staff Dame was eighth ranked in the Pitt’s middle. It .Yards penalized O 61 in the end zone this raw, leaden afternoon but j was here Mavraides seemed grim before the game. Un- hands of the Cavaliers since a Associated Press poll. committed the ended Wisconsin’s thrust. not so much as the Indian’s of- against passes. Twenty times the 1 Irish opening crowd first of his two conversion misses the book fensive iless they are magnificent game 1905, for An home at their conquerors dur- Outgained on Ground. pace. In two games, visitors from Williamsburg tried fakers 55-0 in and Vir- and Pitt second, only ! they were worried about this ginia it was the most one-sided of 45,503 saw the Panthers strike led. 13-6. ing most of the scoreless Navy’s defense had yielded for two touchdowns in about five Midway in the third period, the half. The Badgers’ vaunted ground of eight yards rushing, to move through the air. Their Georgia team that had beaten triumph since it walloped Ran- But something always hap- attack held a net minutes deep in the first quarter Panthers struck for their third pened whenever Princeton threat- was to 166 yards while whereas William and Mary had first 10 aerials were incomplete Tulane and Vanderbilt and hum- dolph-Macon. 66-0, in 1928. Ohio piled up 254. and then was on its feet through touchdown, a 48-yard march in ened—the something, usually oc- Jim Haluska, moved the ball a total of 1,144 in and they up with only six bled North Carolina State. Tatum A crowd of 18.000, including Wisconsin’s fine sophomore quar- wound a second in which the Irish i seven plays with Mattiola sneaking curring at a time when nearly yards in three games for an did not believe Georgia be about 5,000 high school youngsters, half terback, completed 18 of 27 passes completions for a 43 yards. could nearly pulled the game out of the across the 1-foot line. 'everyone in the capacity average yards per game. mere held of sgt in on the debacle at Scott! from crowd for yards, of 381 This was the 18th game be- scoreless because its fine fire. Blanda, 184 while John Borton, 1945, passer, Zeke Stadium as the Cavaliers remained Paul Pitt’s conversion jof 49,300 was convinced the Ohio’s sophomore Off to its best start since tween the two schools since 1932, Bratkowski. It was a contest of spectacular signal-caller, lead in the unscored upon for 1952. The re- specialist, sent his placement neat- Tigers were going to score and completed eight 12 141 Navy took a 7-0 late when they began ,the rivalry in Bratkowski Harmless. plays—a 78-yard touchdown run ; ly the uprights for of for on 17-yard sult—never in doubt after the first through what wipe out the skimpy Penn lead. [yards. Wisconsin an 18-to-16 second quarter a football. It was Navy’s 16th tri- But Bratkowski proved to be by Pitt’s Billy Reynolds, a 63-yard naa sweep few added to pre- Usually, it was a pass intercep- in first But which featured a success- umph, although the last time harmless as far as scoring Panthers pass play from (See PITT, Page C-3.) ,edge downs. scored early in touchdowns vious one-sided triumphs this year j tion that thwarted the Tigers, most of them in its own territory. ful lateral pass. Then, the schools met William and Mary were concerned. The Terps period. Navy moved 88 ; gave over Vanderbilt, 27-0, and Vir- who outplayed Penn badly in the the third won by a 3-0 score. This was | him room to complete 11 passes, Red-haired Howard (Hopalong) yards in four to boost the ginia Tech, 42-0. last two quarters after the Cassady, plays in 1942 at Thompson Stadium. but too often Maryland had all Ohio’s 155-pound fresh- count to 14-0. Two offside pen- Quakers had struck quickly for halfback, the big While it was not a spectacular of the Brat’s receivers well Virginia Scores Quickly. Redskins Opening Home Season man was thorn alties against the Indians helped j Virginia was put in position for jtwo touchdowns in the second in Wisconsin’s side. The little fel- game, Navy proved adequate in hounded. He tried 28 passes in 1 period. Five times passes thrown during this drive. all. two short touchdown drives early low carried the ball nine times for William and Mary was held to (See NAVY, Page C-6.) ;in the first period. It made good Today as Underdogs to Cards by Bob Unger and Bill Tryon— 113 yards rushing, caught two The Terps had a new star at their lineup, should have root- Kazmaier’s chances, and from then on I a Dick successors at passes for 51 yards and a touch- fullbadk in Dick Bielski, who jboth ing hadj did just about It pleased. The By Lewis F. Atchison „ section of their own. A lot of tailback—wound up in Penn down, and ran back several kicks been hampered by injuries as fans are curious to see the team until) produce Pro football makes a hurried hands. One of these for long yardage. Spartans Extend Streak to 18, today. The 205-pound Colonials were unable to Chicago Bears Baltimore-1 any of the football magic they visit to Washington today, with ! that upset the came on Penn's four-yard line and Alan Ameche, Wisconsin’s an gained exactly nine yards ! week, and most expect the in! [showed in their victories over the Redskins home to lift the)Hast started the drive that led to the sophomore fullback, was the his freshman year and carried! 'Cards to repeat at the Redskins’ touchdown. Trouncing Texas A&M,48-6 !North Carolina State and Wash- curtain on the 1952 season against) .Quakers’ first An- Badger workhorse, carrying 25 *' once for six yards this season, but expense. The visitors are favored other broke Pi’inceton drive By 9m Associated Press ington and Lee. For most of the the Chicago Cardinals before) up a times for 105 yards. Halfback he broke loose today. by three to seven points. on Penn's seven-yard line. EAST LANSING, Mich., Oct. vStatistics afternoon they were backed so starting out on the road again. Harland Carl gained 46 yards in The threat p.m. Although the Redskins ran all only caught passes 11.—Michigan State added a Tex. A&M Mich. St*te of Bielski at the full- close to their own goal, they; The kickoff is scheduled for 2 The fumble Princeton 12 tries and six Fir?t downs 12 30 back spot further confused the at Griffith Stadium. over the Cards in their first meet- made all during the raw, ifor 99 yards and one touchdown sparkling pass attack to its bruis- Rushing yardage 79 SB3 hardly had breathing room. murky) ____ ing, Baugh complet- Passing yardage 139 3(19 Georgia defense, which hardly had George Washington never stirred Presenting a cast of 33, includ-) with Sammy afternoon also proved costly. for Wisconsin. Wisconsin got its ingly effective running game to Passes attempted 23 23 of mg newcomers, ing first passes, ! 4-yard Passes completed 14 14 heard him. But the hard- up more than a minor threat.! a dozen the Red- his 11 an encore Ralph Willis dropped the ball on touchdowns on a end run overpower Texas A&M, 48 to 6, Passes intercepted 2 2 running sophomore picked up anticipated hardly can be expected today. The 15-yard taking by Halfback Gerald Witt in Punts 6 3 67 Twice it was slightly past midfield skins will have an the line after a the for the 18th straight win average today Punting 43 36 yards in nine mighty rushes, and —once with an intercepted pass Jury of 24,000 fans looking on to .Chicagoansj' are out to atone for pass from Unger and the übiquit- ! second period and an 18-yard by the Spartans. Fumbles lost 3 l there was a suspicion decide whether their defeat, their third straight Bell, end Haluska-to-Carl pass in the Yards penalized . » 4(1 60 the official and again after A Virginia bobble 23-7 win![that ous Ed a great whether A stadium crowd of 49,123 and statistician had unwittingly cheat- on a punt, but the Colonials spent’ 1 over the Cardinals two weeks ago ! by Washington. The Cards have on offense or defense, recovered fourth. audience defenders ganged up on his re- Dick out of additional yardage was well deserved or a fluke. .only beaten the Redskins three for Penn. I Ohio’s touchdowns came on an a Nation-wide television ceivers. ed most of their time inside theirs The)' saw Michigan State power to a He included one touchdown burst own and not once did they put!|fans also will weigh the Red-! .times in 12 games. Penn had other heroes, too, 88-yard drive in the first period Michigan State Quarterback) six yards in his 30. with Borton sneaking yard for 21-6 lead at the half and add four jof efforts.’ ion drive of any moment. skins’ chances in the National; Today’s game marks the sec- among them a 205-pound full- a Tom Yewcic carried off the pass-j a up more touchdowns in the final ! “Little Mo” Modzelewski had The Cavaliers scored twice in 1 critical eye focused on the rookies.!, meeting between Curly Lam- back named Joe Varaitis from the score. That one was set ing honors. His most sensational of his finest afternoons and; It’s not a one-sided attraction,!] ond coached the invaders when George Rosso intercep ed quarter. throw pitch End ione )the first period by taking advan- , beau, who Swoyersville, Pa. Joe was a stand-; was a to Ellis many a Georgia ball carrier wound however, for the Cardinals, with ] last year, and Joe Kuharich, who year ago as sophomore Haluska’s pass from the 17 in the The game did not go as ex- Duckett that 81 yards j tage of breaks. They marched 65 out a a carried up in Dick’s arms. The Georgia yards the veteran Trippi, rookie frequent end zone, after which Borton pected in that the only Texas for the first of three second- 1 Charlie C-8.) but because of fumbling for a score. ground game, which had account- Ollie Matson and other aces in' (See REDSKINS. Page had been playing passed 37 yards to Fred Bruney A&M score, in the second period Although aerials added spice period tallies, the others coming 1 this season, sec- the ed for 800 yards in games, with ond fiddle to Don Zimmer. Joe to get the Bucks underway. came on a running play instead variety, running game three a 61-yard punt return and and the showed a net of 60 today. Badgers Lead at Half. of a pass. Ray Graves, the Texas the bread and butter of the after a poor kick put them on got his big chance today because was Modzelewski the 28. Zimmer was injured and he really A&M quarterback, was tossing Michigan State attack. Michigan Steals Ball. Tritium Fights Off Stretch Bid Late in the first session, the passes all afternoon but scored When the Bulldogs A 50-yard run and a score fol- made the most of it. Bucks made the first of their de- State powered 99 yards in 14 plays threatened big lrom 16 yards out by cutting to in the final period, Tatum lowing a fumble on GW’s 25 in The fullback did virtually!fensive stands, taking the ball on score all the during the around end when the Spartan (See SPARTANS, Page C-3.) rushed the first defensive team the third period finished the To Win Laurel's Selima Stakes work 73-yard, ,the 14 after Wisconsin had moved back into the game. The ball was touchdown parade, although a ahead of Flirtatious and returned touchdown drive that followed! ! from its own 37. Witt scored By Brian Bell, Jr. I George interception on the Maryland 22, and safety was added for seasoning ! $3.20. Bosseler’s of Wisconsin’s first touchdown early four Brookmeade Stable hare) downs later Maryland it be- in the final. may ! The Ogden Phipps’ entry of a Tryon pass near the end of the,,in the second period with his end Rusevlyan Sparks St. John's had first it from Bob Long Kicks Bottle Up GW. ; come up with another fine horse in and His Duchess went period. Bosseler picked off run, climaxing a seven-play, 39- cause Little Mo stole j Flirtatious pass Clemens short of a first down. Virginia’s long kickoffs and - Tritium, who took the richest; !off an even money favorite but it the on the four and got back yard drive, and Paul Shwalko, punts kept GW bottled up. Coach , apparent early to the 27 and then Varaitis took freshman halfback, booted the ex- T032-6 WinOver Northwestern Speedy Chet Hanulak made al- Selima Stakes in its 27 years became as as the the St. exactly a third Bo Sherman of the Colonials tried ) in; stretch that Tritium, second over. tra point to give the Badgers a St. John's High School con- idirected machine-like most of Mary- impressive fashion before a .back tinued to steam-roll through its John’s offense from his T-quar- land’s yardage with 115 yards desperately to get something work- ’ crowd choice in the betting, would be! Nine times big Joe barreled 7-6 lead. through the 1952 football schedule with terback spot with veteran-like ef- gained, mostly on the business ing with frequent substitutions in ( of 14,678 at Laurel yesterday. hard to beat. Ballerina broke on middle—sometimes Ohio snatched the lead at the a on trap plays, oftener the third period 32-6 victory over highly regarded ficiency. Last year he was a second end of pitchouts from the clever his backfield. Bob Griggle, Jackj ) Making only her second start,' top with Flirtatious on the outside on straight star of with a ¦ oucks. He knocked off 11 yards 64-yard march in six plays, cli- Northwestern last night in old 'stringer behind Bob Reese. Scarbath. Baumgartner and Hugo Valdesirri,.Tritium grabbed the lead at the and Tritium in third place along day were tried as quarterback the rail once, 14 another time and finally maxed by Borton s 44-yard scoring Byrd Stadium at College Park. The Johnnies scored first on For the the Terps gained replace-) 'three-eighths pole behind Ballerina. ments for Ray Leroy Court-! in the $25,000) I In back shot into the Princeton end zone toss to Cassady. Tad Weed. 128- 4,000 the third play of the second quar- 340 yards on the ground and again Fox; stretch ! the stretch the three A crowd of watched the event, withstood a chal-! from the - Ralph (Brother) today 400 jney punted for Fox several 'horses were five lengths in front two. George Sempier’s pound sophomore left footed Johnnies, led by Bob Rusevlyan. ter when Frye Maryland exceeded ini times;;) lenge by His Duchess and had plunged from two yards and all with a tremendous 454 yards Skinny Saffer and Don Green of the field and Jockey Ronnie try for the extra point was wide kicker, who contributed two extra 148-pound quarterback and honor over enough left in the mile and a final added another before the half on in all. [were given tries at halfback and ) Nash had Tritium moving easily, and it was this failure that made points and the field goal, student, win with ease their 14th test for two-year-old fil-! margin Georgia gave out after one Dave Logan and Joe Boland got : iAt the three eighths pole, Nash the Penn seem so thin on . converted and Ohio took the lead, straight victory and their 22d vic- a 22-yard pass from Rusevlyan good) I lies to win by a length and a lose it. Ralph Hawkins. Rusevlyan quarter. The Bulldogs moved 44 their chances at fullback. But [found an opening along the rail a number of occasions during the 13-7, never to tory in the last 23 games. The , to set j j quarter. The victory was worth Wisconsin wheeled 67 yards to up yards the Maryland 36 without nothing would click this after- ) and Tritium stuck her nose in second half. Johnnies lost only to Eastern in ¦it when he intercepted a North- to j $42,330 with added money. Ohio’s 11, but lost the ball on western pass. losing the ball Bilyeu 1 noon. front. She went quickly into a In all, Varaitis carried the ball 1 the 1950 post-season District with Fred $6.80, downs. After Ohio had punted again up middle, The Cavaliers got their first Trituim paid $3.00 and three-length lead until midway in 29 times for a net gain of 76 yards. championship since the 1949 sea- The Johnnies scored in gaining the Conrad Duchess, coupled the visitors moved from their opening wide plays and Brat- chance after taking a Fox punt $3.00 and His the stretch when His Duchess) Quite a few times late in the sec- ' out, son. | the minutes of the third Minsera on with Flirtations, paid 62.40 and (See Page C-9.) (See PENN, Page C-2.) (See OHIO STATE, Page C-3.) Rusevlyan, an honor student,; J (See ST. JOHNS. Page C-2.) (Set MARYLAND. Page C-3.) (See VIRGINIA, Page C-6.) 62.20. Mac Bea finished third LAUREL* 1 r *