SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1949 THE MICHIGAN DAITL' PAGE SEVEN "BLACK 'KNIGHT' FOR MIDSHIPMEN: Army Crushes Navy, 38-0 ASSOCIATED PRESS PO%.TUR'E M.,. W!; v Santa Clara, Wildeats 'Win Bowl Berths Kentucky In First Post-Season Tilt MIAMI, Fla. - ( P) - Kentucky will meet Santa Clara in the Orange Bowl game here Jan. 2. Kentucky won the choice for the bright bowl spot Friday night by walloping the University of Miami (Fla.), 21 to 6. * * * KENTUCKY and Miami knew Friday night that a bowl bid rested in the balance as they staged one of the most spectacular games of the year in the Orange Bowl Stadium, where Miami's Hurri- canes play all their home games. Miami would have earned the Orange Bowl spot had it won. But the inspired Hurricanes could not blow down the opposi- tion of a more skillful, faster and surer team, and the Wild- cats clawed their way into the New Year classic. Kentucky won nine games and lost only to Southern Methodist and Tennessee this year. SANTA CLARA'S twice-beaten and once-tied team accepted the other Orange Bowl bid Tuesday while enroute home from a 28-21 defeat at the hands of Oklahoma. They will be the first Cali- fornia team to play in Florida's Orange Bowl. Santa Clara made two trips to the Sugar Bowl at ew Orleans, defeating Louisiana. State, 21-14, in 1937 and repeat- ing against the samle team in 1938 by a 6-0 score. Kentucky never has played in a major post-season bowl game. BRYANT'S arrival in 1946 lifted the Kentucky gridiron machine out of the conference doldrums. In four years his boys have chalked up 29 victories, 11 defeats and two ties. Their record this season in- t cluded victories over Mississippi Southern, 71-7; Louisiana State University, 19-0; Mississippi, 47-0; Georgia, 25-0; The Citadel, 44-0; Cincinnati, 14-7; Xavier, 21-7; Florida, 35-; and Miami, 21-6. They were defeated by Southern Methodist, 20-7, and by Tennessee, 6-0. *0 ii n-Aa 4 S - Middies Absorb Worst Shellacking in 46 Years PHILADELPHIA -()- A great Army team rose to the height of its awesome power yesterday to crush Navy, 38 to 0, in the most one-sided beating ever administer- ed in the 50 games played between the service rivals. A shivering crowd of 102,443, in- cludirig President Truman, packed in Municipal Stadium, saw the rugged Black Knights drive to a touchdown from the initial kickoff and then, under the brilliant direc- tion of Arnold Galiffa, rip and tear the Middies into abject sub- mission. * * * ONLY ONCE before in the his- tory of the classic did a team take a mauling to compare with that SPORTS HUGH QUINN, Night Editor absorbed by the Middies yesterday. That was in 1903, in the infancy of the series, when another Army eleven smashed Navy by 40 to 6. So completely outclassed were the boys from Annapolis that they penetrated Army territory only once, late in the third quar- ter, and then they were halted after 47 yards short of a score by the fierce-tackling Cadets. It was in every respect a com- plete rout for the Middies, just as it was a sublime triumph for the huskies from West Point as they completed their 20th straight game without having tasted defeat. Ar- my scored in every period, and to- ward the end her reserves were Late Football Scores .. . SOUTHWEST Arkansas 40, Tulsa 7 [exas Tech. 23, Hardin-Sim. 13 Texas Christ. 21, South. Meth. 13 West Texas 41, New Mexico 13 N. Mex. West. 37, Adams State 14 N. Mex. Military 51, St. Michael's (New Mexico) 13 FAR WEST' Colorado A&M 14, Colorado 7 rrT T I. 01T19 batting the Tars py abandon. around with hap- * * * NOT SINCE 1943 has Navy won' in this long series which now stands 27-19 in the Cadets' favor.' This one yesterday, though, was the one which will be longest re- membered when the men of the Army gather at the world's out- posts. The names which will be re- membered longest, probably, are those of Galiffa, the team's great field general from Donora, Pa., and Gil Stephenson, a dart- ing, wicked - running fullback from Columbus, Ga. Between them, they wrecked a Navy team which went into the contest thinking it had a chance to win. Stephenson, who was crippled a year ago and played only briefly in Navy's "upset" 21-21 tie, gained a full measure of satisfaction as he sifted through the Middies for three touchdowns yesterday. It was he, more than any other Army runner, who knocked the breath out of the Tar's in Army's 67-yard march to its first touchdown when the game was only minutes old. GALIFFA, finishing his football span at the Point, was. complete field general. Not only did he pass destructively, especially in the first half, when he connected on eight aerials for a gain of 101 yards, but he also carried the mail. Army's driving backs dug for a total of 310 yards with the ball underneath their arms. Navy's carriers picked up only 66 yards all afternoon. Had it not been for Art Landry, backing up the line for Navy, the score undoubtedly would have mounted much higher. Georgia Tech Nips Bulldog By 7-6 Count Fumbles Account For Low Scores ATLANTA, Ga.,-(P)--Bobbled balls and passes caught by the wrong side held down the score yesterday in a free flowing Georgia Tech-Georgia offensive battle which Tech won, 7-6, on the kick- ing toe of Red Patton. Tech's injured and braced-up quarterback Jimmy Southward scored the touchdown after Coach Bobby Dodd finally consented for him to run a play or two in this his final college game. * * * THIS WAS the first one-point Tech-Georgia game since 1933 when Georgia won 7-6, and makes this Georgia's worst season since 1939. Georgia has lost six games. Floyd Reid fumbled twice but he was a brilliant runner for Georgia. By far the best-to- watch play of the game was Reid's 42-yard dash from his six. A Georgia fumble later ended that thrust. Late in the third quarter little Jimmy Jordan brought back a punt to the Georgia 40. Nine plays later Tech had its touchdown. Patton's kick was perfect. NORTH'S FUMBLE in the sec- ond quarter handed the ball to Georgia on its 45-yard line. Sopho- more Mal Cook threw a high looper to Gene Lorendo. The Minnesotan took the ball on Tech's 20 and waddled across with Tech men firing at him but always missing. Bob Durand missed his kick. JAPWVMEN LEARN FIRE FIGH T ING- Tokyo women play hose on blazing building as they get practical experience in fire fighting. City's fire department turned over to women firehouses and equipment during Fire P'revention Week. S U C C E S S S T 0 R Y-When Humphrey Bogart heard Karie- Shindo, Los Angeles stenographer, try out for "Tokyo Joe," he gave her a role as a singer, hiring her family for other parts. Here she is, seated right, with her father, mother, sister and brother. GIFT BOOK SUGGESTIONS SMITH-Killers of the Dream HOWE-Call It Treason CHAPMAN-Rogue's March TOOMBS-Raising A Riot MAULDIN-A Sort of Saga O'CONNER---Hood, Cavalier General HOWE-A World History of Our Times MORRIS-A Treasury of Great Reporting HAYAKAWA-Language In Thought and Action IRVINE-The Universe of G.B.S. MOLLOY-The Best of Intentions STONE-The Passionate, Journey OVERBECK BOOKSTORE 1216 S. University Uerryo arsuthn set1o Upset of Southern Methodist P U 'W E R FOR GER MA NY -- Waters of Riss Creek ar' dammed to flow through a 4 -mile tunnel under two moun- tain ranges to Walchen Lake near German Tyrol border. It will increase Lake's power production by 100,000,000 kilowatts a year. F O X H O U N D S FOR I T A L Y.-Lt. Col.IR. Mainwar- ing (left), of Ireland, and the pilot quiet a pack of foxhounds sent by air from British and Irish clubs to huntsmen in Italy. FORT WORTH, Tex.-(R)--Lit- tle Lindy Berry, the Rock of Texas Christian, said his valedictory- to college football yesterday by pass- ing and running his team to a 21- 13 victory over Southern Metho- dist. Berry scored one touchdown and passed for two more as the Horned Frogs licked the Methodists for the first time in seven years. THE CHRISTIAN quarterback threw 27 passes and completed 17 for 250 yards. He also netted 31 yards carrying the ball. The game's top runner was Kyle Rote of Southern Methodist, who rolled up 102 -yards in 13 carries. All-American Doak Walker of SMU sat out most of the last half as the result of a leg in- jury. It was after his departure from the game that the Horned Frogs swept to the victory that gave Texas Christian a tie for third place with Texas in the Southwest Conference standings. A crowd of 33,000 jammed Horned Frog Stadium to watch the durable Berry, who has played 41 games in four years for TCU and gained nearly four miles -of territory rushing, passing, run- ning back kicks and kick-offs and returning intercepted passes. FOR SOUTHERN Methodist it was a bitter pill. The Methodists, picked before the season started to win the Conference champion- ship, thus closed out in fifth place with two victories, three losses and one tie. Southern Methodist scored first on a 37-yard run by big Kyle Rote with Walker kicking the extra point. Texas Christian tied it up in the second period on the passing of Berry. From the Texas Chris- tian 14 Berry threw to George Boal who tore his way to -the Southern Methodist 29. A pass from Berry to Jimmy Hickey made the touchdown. Homer Ludiker converted. THE HORNED FROGS tonk the lead early in the fourth period, scoring after Shankle Bloxom re- covered Rote's fumble on the TCU 49. Ludiker again converted. Southern Methodist roared back for 75 yards and a touchdown, but the Frogs added their winning touchdown late in the final per- iod on an 80-yard march. liii Xmas Suggestions LADIES' MEN'S WHITE FIGURE SKATES HOCKEY SKATES 10.95 up 9.95 up JUVENILE JUVENILE /,J/I/JUVENILE T M-III S I RTS SWEAT S H IRTS SHIRTS g SWEATERS 3.95-4.95 1.85 SKITS TOBOGGANS Groswold... Spalding Northland 4-, 6-, 8-Foot Lengths Nationally-Known Make H I S H 0 B B Y I S J U N K -- carving Chinese junks is the hobby of Hollywood film actor Milburn Morante. He makes them from sugar pine. Sails are made of silk, then varnished. .::kit , , w?_