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. Long Shots in Clutch Help Mailley Retain East Potomac Title Prank Mailley was on the verge of losing his East Potomac Club championship as he stood 2 down with three holes to play in the second half of the final yesterday. But he put together three ponderous tee shots and followed with accurate irons and a couple of good putts and beat Gordon Rainwater. 1 up. Mailley. a former hockey star, who almost turned pro this sum mer. won the 16th hole with a par and the 17th with a birdie to square the match. Mailley was in position for another birdie on the 18th, but Rain water messed up the hole and finally conceded before Mailley had to putt. Rainwater was 1 up after 18 holes last week and was 3 up after 27. Manor Club golfers scored a surprisingly easy 10-2 victory over Georgetown University’s golf team as the hosts used one schoolboy golfer and one of the better amateurs at the club in each foursome. The collegians particularly had trouble with Manor’s v*" 1 Res,—, „un Manor’s juniors na*'' . first: Hunter and George Thornton scored 2*2 points to '2 for Richard Quinlan and Charles Stricklen; John Grubb and Jim Whitaker split 3 with Gene Vickers and John Farrell, jr.; Terry Hunter and Dave Leahy scored 3 points to 0 for Mike Flynn and Gene Howerdd: Francis Yeatman and Louis Fuchs scored 3 points to 0 for Owen Mandville and Barry Bryon. John Maloney and John Lyon came through with 3 points in the final foursome to help Belle Haven’s golf team defeat Wash ington G&CC, 15over the Alexandrians’ course. Belle Haven had the edge in the first foursome where the pros played with the club presi dents. Tom Ryan and Jim Neal won 2 points to 1 over Earl Fling and Pete Ball. The Beman brothers. Del and Deane, the District’s junior golf stars of the past season, lost 2 and 1 to Claude Rippy and Tony Pololaski in one of the feature matches of the two-man team championship at Bethesda Coun try Club. Another top match found Ben Hartig and Jack Wil ton winning over Tom Manning and Jay Randolph, 2 and 1. Eddie Bean and Art Woodside posted one-over-par 73s to fea ture the turkey tournament at Prince Georges. Bean won low gross and Woodside low net in class A, deducting a 7handicap lor a net 66. Other winners were George Cilomeris, 78-12—66; C. E. Purdy. 83-14—69: W. E. Beck, 83-18—65; Dr. Charles Hageage, 91-23—68. i Bernie Lust turned in an 81 and deducted 12 handicap strokes to win Woodmont’s tur key tournament. Buddy Brylaw ski. Lester Rosenberg and How ard Nordlinger reached the semi finals of the handicap champion ship. with one match to be com pleted. Sam Daar had one of the lowest rounds of the season for a 15-handicap golfer, a 76. and won the A. S. Kay Trophy at Indian Spring with a net 61. Mrs. Nick Hollander and Ted Rutley had low gross with a 74 and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kadle low net with 79-25—54 in a Pine hurst mixed scotch foursome at Kenwood. Maryland to Remove Rockfish Creel Limit By th« Associated Press HAGERSTOWN. Oct. 26. The Maryland Game and Inland Fish Commission has decided not to shorten the season on black bass but it plans to remove the creel limit on striped bass next year. These developments came as the commission wound up a week-end session held here in conjunction w'ith a meeting of the League of Maryland Sports men. The commission also changed several trout streams from a temporary to permanent classi fication. There had been pro posals from some sportsmen’s clubs in Western Maryland to cut the black bass season by a month. But biologists explained the fish have completed spawn ing by May 25 and there was no need to shorten the June 1- November 30 season. The striped bass or rockfish creel limit is now 10 a day. This is to be'lifted next year. GWU Club to Meet The Lettermen Club of George Washington University will hold a meeting at 8 pm. Wednesday at the Potomac Boat Club. 3530 Water street N.W. All graduate lettermen are invited. You Be the Quarterback ANSWER 4. Double reverse. No. Too much ball handling and delay. 3. Trap Any ’delayed play is dangerous against the defenses used here 2. Field goal try. Bad kicking angle and the kicker hasn’t hit from the field. If kick is missed it's the Badgers’ ball on thq 20. 1. Pitch out. Has best chance to score or make first down You have good position for it. If it fails. Wisconsin has a bad kick-out situation. You may block the punt or get a good runback, and you have time for another series of plays. (Question on Page A-14.) (Distributed by The Resister and Tribune Syndicate.) . mffl Hg f ixiiSWSB - M at 1 Hf w JEB mmßmm t /US # aßp* Ig - m % vs; ' ' !b|[, v ft I Wmmmmih "Wm OF GRIME AND GLORY—Two Cleveland Browns’ linemen. Tommy Thompson (left) and Len Ford, from Washington, take a breather during the game yesterday with the New York Giants on the rain-soaked Polo Grounds. The Browns won, 7-0. APWirephoto. Redskins (Continued From Page A-14.) that put the Redskins behind the eight ball. Rechichar intercepted a couple of passes and kicked a 28-yard field goal to crown his day’s activities. Where he left off Huzvar picked up. It was big John’s lateral to George Taliaferro, after being tackled on Washington’s 18-yard line, that gave the Colts their second touchdown. Baltimore’s first six-pointer was a gift from Johnny Wil liams. The usually-reifable Washington halfback let Talia ferro grab a pass from Fred Enke on the goal line in the second period, giving Baltimore a 10-7 lead. Later in the game Johnny slapped down another potential touchdown as casually as you’d shoo a fly. It was too casual for Washington fans’ peace of mind. Otherwise, the Califor nian played his usual game, emerging with the usual black eye Bill Dudley's 35-yard field goal 17 seconds before the half dead locked the score at .10-all, and Charlie Justice’s 10-yard dash through the middle of the Balti more line early in the final period completed the Washington scor ing. Justice’s run pulled the Red skins to within three points of the Colts, but at that point Huzvar took over and wrecked whatever hopes the Redskins I had. Enke, who completed nixie of 24 passes, and Buddy Young, | who picked up 50 yards on 10 j tries for an even five-yard aver | age, helped Huzvar set up the final touchdown. Young got 10 yards on a reverse, putting the ball on the Redskins’ 17, > and Enke went 10 more to the four yard line on a quarterback-keep play. Justice’s running (Choo Choo | was second high to Huzvar with j 74 yards), a couple of romps by Julie Rykovich and Baker’s early dash made grandstand quarterbacks wonder why the Redskins couldn’t get a sustained offense underway. The same was true of the passes. Short throws worked but when Jack Scarbath and Eddie Leßaron cranked up for a long one they usually found a couple of Colts waiting with the intended re ceiver. WASHINGTON. Lfft ends —Taylor. Brito. Left tackles—Boll. Ntemi. Mod*el*wski. Lelt guards—Hazlewood Ramsev. Centers—Ulinski. Demao. titcid Riaht guards—Witucki, Cl»r’- Right tackles—Camoora, Lipscomb. Right ends—Dekker Teresmnski, Polsloot. Hennessev. Quarterbacks—Scarbath. Leßaron Left halfbacks—Justice. Baker. Haynes. Doll. Dowda. Right halfbacks—Rykovich. Barry. Aloan. Dudley. Williams. Fullback—Cloud. ( BALTIMORE. Left ends—Embree. Brethauer. Spin ney. Wingate. Left tackles—Marchetti. Blandin. Donovan Winkler Left guards—Barwegen. Pellington. Jackson. Centers—Ecklund. Averno. Right guards—Lange. Shark l- - Right tackles—Campanella, Finnin. Right ends—Ed weeds. Pooie. «•. Quarterback—Enke. Left halfbacks—Taliaferro fasefT. Miodtiszcwskv Keane Ri-.hf halfbacks—Young. Kalmanir, Shula Rechichar Fullbacks—Huzvar McPhail. Washington 7 3 tt 7 —IT Baltimore 3 7 10 7—if 7 Washington scoring: Touchdowns— Baker Justice. Conversions —Dudley i t2> Field goal—Dudlev. Baltimore scoring: Touchdowns— i Taliaferro <2>. Huzvar. Conversions— ; McPhail (3). Field goals—Rechichar j (2). Rain Delays Auto Race HATFIELD, Pa., Oct. 26 VP).— Rain forced the postponement until next Sunday of the 12V2- mile Eastern big car racing ; championship after one qualify ! mg heat was run yesterday. r All it costs is ‘U 5 Jokes just 2 minufcSi^ 'Miserable' 72 Shot By Ben in British 'Beat Hogan Day' By the Associated Presi FORT WORTH, Tex., Oct. 26 —Ben Hogan shot a 72 yesterday in what he termed “miserable golf’’ against golfers of Great Britain. His two-stroke handicap made Hogan's net score 74, and Britons j with 73 or better beat him. Ho gan will sign certificates for the I winners among the estimated 30,000 who competed against him. The number of winners won’t be known for a week or more. Hogan won the Masters, the National Open and the British Open tournaments this year. Pro Football (Continued From Page A-14.) came late in the second period and went to Dome Dibble, who ran five yards to complete a 47- yard scoring play. On the first play of the final quarter, Layne shot a long aenai down the mid i die to Ellie Cline for the winning j tally. By contrast, the Rams left the field at half-time on the long ; end of a 24-10 count on the ; strength of a 21-point second i quarter, but had to break a | deadlock in the final chapter. Bears Tie Score. George Blanda engineered two Bears’ scoring drives in the final period to tie the count, but the Rams promptly drove 77 yards in five nlays to go ahead, and added the clincher on Dan Tow ler’s 23-yard dash. The lone touchdown in the Browns-Giants came came early in tne second quarter when a New York penalty on Cleveland’s missed fourth-down field goal j gave Otto Graham another chance. He sneaked over from the four. The Eagles sent seven men j across the goal line in tallying j | eight touchdowns against the I Cards. Jim Parmer got two. ! Bobby Thomason passed for two, Adrian Burk for one, and four came on line smashes. The other was cn Tom Scott’s recov- ! ery of a fumble in the end zone. Pro Standings By *he Assoc ated Press EASTERN CONFERENCE. i , , . W. L. T. Pet. Pts. Op. Cleveland 5 n u i.otm 128 34 Pittsburgh ___ 32 O .Him lit 117 Washington 2 2 1 ..Mm 8» ion Philadelphia .... 2 2 1 ,:>im 134 113 i New York .14 0 .200 51 fl j Chicago Cards O 5 0 .000 72 159 WESTERN CONFERENCE. 'Detroit .410 .ROO 122 100 Los Angeles ... 4 10 .ROO 158 101 : San Francisco 3 2 0 .Him l ll * 117 | Baltimore __ 3 2 0 .HOO 87 104 Chicago Bears 1 4 0 .200 »2 115 Green Bay 1 4 0 .200 84 127 | Saturday's Results. Pittsburgh. 31; Green Bay. 14. Yesterday's Results. Los Angeles 38: Chicago Bears, 24. Cleveland. 7: New York 0. Detroit 14. San Francisco, to. Baltimore. 27: Washington. 17. This Week’s Schedule. Saturday. Green Bay at Baltimore might). Yesterday. Chicago Bears at San Francisco. Detroit at Lcs Angeles. Y orl i Chicago Cardinals. Philadelphia at Pittsbui-gh. Washington at Cleveland. ADVERTISEMENT. "I'm My Own Boss at Bendall" Robert ("Bob") ■?' lun ■Rry.: 1 -- Wmm Salr* Stall BgT. ''Ksill^e BENDALL pontlac mHnaHgll- It:;A Prince IK rag street mtM.Wm,. Alexandria Virclnla I can give you as much as I feel like on a trade for my 1953 Dual-Range Hydra- Matic Pontiac. I’ve been using this beautiful Pontiac for three months as a dem onstrator. It’s better than a new Pontiac because it's been broken in carefully. It carries a full new-car guar antee. If you want a better deal than you’ve ever heard of, come in to see me . . iSJjrt OVirlook 3-1600 Football Records Os Area Teams Gallaudet. Oct. 10— fi Wilson Teachers 0 Oct. 17— H Montgomery JC 13 Oct. 24 0 Bridgewater 7 Oct 31— Wesley JC Nov 7 National Agriculture George Washington 1 Sept. 26—14 Virginia Military ...13 1 Oct. 3 —2O North Carolina State Oct. 10 —2O Virginia 24 Oct. IH ii West Virginia 27 Oct. 24 7 William A*. Mary _l2 i Oct. 31 At Washington & Lee Nov 7 Maryland Nov. 14 At Davidson Nov 21 Richmond Howard i Sept. 26—33 Bluetield 6 Oct 3 0 West Virginia State 2o ! Oct. 10— o Virginia Union 2n Oct. 17 tt Morgan 4 1 I Oct. 24 0 J. C. Smith 13 Oct. 31 Ac Allen Nov 7 Hampton Nov. 14 Delaware state Nov. 26 At Lincoln Maryland. Sept. 10—20 MlssoUlt 6 Sept. 26—52 Washing ton & Lee 0 Oct. 3—20 Clemson 0 Oct. In—4i) Georgia 13 Oct. 1 7—26 North Carolina 0 Oct. 23—30 Miami • 0 OcL 31—South Carolina j Nov. 7—At George Washington I Nov. 14—Mississippi | Nov. 21—Alabama Montgomery Junior. i Oct. 3—37 Wesley JC. 0 Oct. in—2l Shepherd 10 : Oct. 17—1.7 Gallaudet fi Oct. 23—25 Montclair .19 Oct. 30—At Newport News (night) Nov. 7—Wilson Teachers Nov. 14—At National Agriculture Nov. 21 —At Naval Receiving Navy. Sept. 26—6 William and Marv 6 Oct. 3—55 Dartmouth 7 o t. 10—26 Cornell h Oct. 1 7—65 Prince on 7 Oct. 24 6 Pennsylvania 9 i Oct 31—At Notre Daml - 7—Duke 'at Baltimore! Nov 14—At Columbia Nov 28—Army 'at Philadelphia) Virginia Sept 26 fi Virginia Tech 20 i Oct 3 0 South Carolina 10 Oct. In—24 George Washington .. 2n Oct. 17— « Virginia Military .... 21 Oct. 24—13 Vanderbilt 28 Oct. 31— Duke >at Norfolk' Nov 7 Pittsburgh i Nov 14— At Washington and Lee. 1 Nov. 21— North Carolina Wilson Teaehere. Sept. 10— 0 East Carolina 4! Sept. 26—17 National Agriculture 12 I Oct. 3 0 Shtppensburg 28 Oct In— n Gallaudet .. e Oct. 17—12 Trenton Teachers 27 Oct. 23—24 Newport News 7 Oct. 31— At Monclaii Nov. 7 At Montgomery J C. Bulling Air Rase. Sept 12— 0 Fort Eustis 7 Sent 18— 7 Fort Lee 14 Sept. 26—12 Quantico Marines H i Oct 10—51 Army Chemical " Oct 17—"1; Fort Jackson 2‘* I Oct. 24—20 Little Creek 2 Oct 31— Fort Bclvoir Nov. 7 Fort Monmouth Nov 14— At Camp I.ejcune Nov 21— At Bainbridge. Fort Belvoir. Sept. 18—71 West Chester 6 Sept. 25—7 Kent State 6 Oct. 3 —62 Toledo 13 I Oct. 10—48 Marford Marines 0 1 Oct. 17—23 w ort Eustis 0 I Oct. 24—10 Jacksonville 0 I Oct. 31— At Bolling | Nov. 7 Fort Leonard Wood 1 Nov. 14— Fort Lee Nov. 21— Norfolk NAS Nov. 26 Quantico 'at Washington) Quantico Marinei. Sept 12—6 Cherry Point 9 Sept. 20—13 Xavier 6 Sept. 26—16 Bolling AFB 12 Oct. 4 —3l Dayton 0 Oct. 10—21 Fort Eustis O Oct. 18—17 Holy Cross 0 ! Oct. 74—35 Parris island 0 Oct. 31—. At Camp Leleune j. Nov. 7 Fort Jackson Nov. 21— Fort Lee Nov. 26 Fort Belvoir iAt Washing ton 1 Twenty years ago—Gabby Street signed a 1934 contract to manage the San Francisco Missions. ★ ★★★★★★★ GREATEST INVENTION SINCE THE SHOWER RATH! ! ★ ■ ★ ★ ★ L i s '* best part 7- iW.W'SB of th« gomel" we’vu heard l S' men soy after the shower at the club—when they use this wonder ful new kind of ofter-shower powder. It actually deodorizes your whole body instantly, and you stay fresh and ho inoculate hour after hour. This all-over protection is ail-bnportont! remember, you don’t iust perspire under armsl And this great body powder “insulates" your body *0 you feet cooler oil day, even on hottest, muggiest days. Makes your skin to smo-o-oth that friction from clothes it reduced like magic. You're pro tected also against heat rash, because this remarkable powder is antiseptic. It has the famous Courtley fragrance. Comes in the hondsome, handy squeeze bottle at only $1 plus tox. What gentle man can.afford to be without it? C BODY POWDER On Sale At All PEOPLES DRUG STORES ★★★★★★★★ Monday Morning Quarterback Told You So, Says Erdelatz; Colonials Roll in Vain By Francis Stann Penn, 9; Navy, 6. • The unbeaten Midshipmen finally met up with a fair-to middling football team and this was the result. Despite the fact that all of .... the scores— jgK/MtkL two touch downs and F a winning field goal in the last min- W ut e— stem med from er- >. t ors, Pe n n’s margin seem ed an accurate 1.- measure of Ji|, mj the respective more authori tative voice, Eddie Erdelatz. belonging to Head Coach Ed die Erdelatz of Navy, says so, too. “We ran up against a better Ivy League team than we’d been playing,” Erdelatz explained aft- j er the game. “We’ve been over- \ rated ever since mid-summer, ! when those football magazines started to appear, saying Navy was the cream of the East. { “I don’t know who starts those reports. In our case, I suspect West Point, fiut I { couldn’t refute a high ranking before my kids have even . played a game. When we only j tied William & Mary, 6.-6, I knew Navy didn’t have the team everybody seemed to expect. But then we rode over Dartmouth, Cornell and Princeton and I couldn’t say, ‘We’re really not good, they're just not up to par. ” Gets Practice the Hard Way. Penn, according to Erdelatz, is the Ivy League class. “They’re good. Navy was made a favorite. This was a mistake. Penn got off to a slow start because (1) it was meeting Vanderbilt, Penn State, California and North western; and (2) because Penn isn’t allowed spring practice. “Penn got its ‘practice’ the hard way—playing good teams. Penn’s got good material. It blossomed forth when we hit them. I wasn’t*surprised. If that | kid (Bob Felver) doesn’t get panicky and throw the ball straight up in the air. trying to get lid of it. we don’t score at all.” It is with no great relish that Erdelatz is regarding the forth- | coming game with Notre Dame, nor the Duke and Army games to follow. Sandwiched between the West Point classic is a con test with Columbia, and Erdelatz is forthright enough to pick his team as winner over the Lions. Philosophical About Fumbles. Navy's fumbles—four in all, and all recovered by Penn, two setting up scores—disturbed Er delatz. But he was philosophical. “You get kids and teach ’em how I to hold the ball and yet they let that ball squirm loose. It seems to hurt us all the time. “Penn was a better team,” Eddie concluded. “We went into that game as a favorite. We were the leading team in the Nation in scoring, they tell me. The trouble is that nobody seemed to figure that Penn had been meeting good teams, where as we weren’t beating anything special.” Erdelatz, however, had high praise for several of his players, t notably Tackle Jack Perkins. He was terrific all day. overshadow ing All-American Steve Eisen hauer. Next in Erdelatz’s book j was John Hopkins, the end who scored after grabbing that pan- j icky upward toss by Bob Felver. “I’ve got ends,” said the guy who was a pretty good end in his own right at St Mary's, “but I haven’t got the horses that a lot ! of people said I had. From here in . . . Notre Dame, Duke, Co lumbia and Army . . . it’s going to be rough.” It's Navy Day Today At Touchdown Club Today is Navy Day at the Touchdown Club, with Capt. lan C. Eddy, director of athletics at the Naval Academy, the princi pal speaker at the club's weekly luncheon. .-Among the guests will be three former star players at the acad emy. Comdr. Slade Cutter. Capt. Lou (Bullet' Kern and Capt. Barney Hunter. ADVERTISEMENT. CONSISTENT ’ “COUNTRY” Wm . 5&J® 8, cßßt' Enos “Country" Slaughter has a major league batting mark of over .300 for thirteen long years! The old pro knows the value of steady performance on the ball field. And the same goes for taking care of his car. “There’s only one kind of all weather protection for my car,” says “Country”. “That’s why I put ’Prestone' anti-freeze in my radiator at the first sign of cold. Then I’m set for the en tire winter!” Yes. "Country”, you get full four-way protection with “PRESTONE” anti-freeze—no worry about freeze-ups, boil away, rust-clogged radiator, foaming-off. No anti-freeze gives your car the same com plete protection. And one shot of “PRESTONE” brand anti freeze lasts all winter! Virginia's Losses Tempered By Prospects for Next Year By Bill Fuchs Vanderbilt, 28: Virginia. 13. Virginia meets Duke in Nor folk Saturday and Pitt the fol lowing week in Charlottesville. ! two assignments not likely to send Coach Ned McDonald into ecstasy But despite the fact that Vir ginia is having one of its worst football seasons, McDonald can : still smile. The freshman team at Virginia is responsible. “Next year,” McDonald says with conviction, “things will be j different. Our freshman team has eight or 10 real good backs: boys that could play varsity ball tomorrow. I can hardly wait until next year.” What McDonald means is he can hardly wait until this sea j son is over. ; Backfield Manpower Limited: 1 Rives Bailey. Joe Niedbala, Herb Hartwell. Henry Strempek, j jEd Nowles, Allen Barbee—that i just about made up McDonald’s I backfield manpower this season I j And you can scratch Knowles ‘ and Niedbala. Knowles, who was out for three J weeks with a broken blood ves- i I sel in his right thigh, is out again with a broken blood vessel in j his left ankle. Niedbala, sec ond-string quarterback behind Bailey, suffered a chipped bone in his hip and a broken nose! in the second quarter Saturday. “What happens if any of the , others get hurt?” McDonald asks. | “I don’t want to think about it. j I guess I’d have to put my line- J | men back there.” Gucpe Imperturbable. What has hurt Virginia this j season has been the absence of Melvin Roach and Herman Gat- ] ling. Both had two years of I eligibility remaining, but Roach ! signed a baseball contract with ! Milwaukee and Gatling got mar- j ried and left school. —— | Friendly Competition for Jobs Among Terps' Strongest Assets By Merrell Whittlesey Maryland 30; Miami 0 j One of the Maryland assistant j coaches says that in his opinion I competition for positions is a potent reason for the Terps’ success to s w f i date, plus an u n e x p e cted assist from | the new lim i ited substi- SBHPff'F * tution rule. Maryland is an undeieaieo ■MSHir football team K thus tai be cause 'he boys * on the econo team. witn about three P*™a§S|r®jS| e' x c eptions, j are pushing Marty Crytier. j the regulars for their positions, and the third team personnel is pushing the second. Above all, it’s a friendly com petition. Instead of forming j cliques, the players are hanging j together by positions—tackles | , with the tackles, ends with the ends, etc. There was a tend- j ency last year for the offensive | team to buddy together and the i I defensive team to be a unit apart off the field. This is the youngest, most collegiate looking of all of Jim Tatum's teams. The war vet ! erans have been graduated, i ; There are only three married men on the squad ißielski, Box old and Beightol). Tremendous Spirit. In observing the team with its hair down, so to speak, in the brief break from training | after the Miami victory, a num- i ber of persons quartered with i the squad at Miami Beach re- ! marked about the tremendous; spirit. Bernie Faloney has the best j chance to make All-American! and he's the most humble guy on the squad. Marty Crytzer scored his first touchdown in four years and his buddies have been ribbing him about it for two days. You would have thought Dick i Bielski's field goal in the fourth _ ADVERTISEMENT. AnH-Freem You're SET you 're SAFE^ youteSURE A cor°porat<°" J THE EVENING STAR, Washington. D. C. MONDAY. OCTOBER 26. 1P53 I McDonald could borrow a note ! from Art Guepe, his predecessor 1 at Virginia and now the Van derbilt coach. Saturday's vie- , tory was Vandy’s first, but Guepe ' doesn’t worry about winning. He j may be the most unperturbed coach in the business. He still [weighs the same (170> as he did while playing in the backfield at Marquette 16 years ago. “I’ve lost some hair since j then,” he says, “but that’s j heredity, not football.” Vanderbilt isn’t going any where this season, but Guepe,! thoughtful father of two boys j and a girl, insists there is more to football than winning. “You’re going to win some and lose some,” he says. “It may sound corny, but what I enjoy about this job is watching these | boys mature, watching them | learn self-disclipine, teamwork.” Erwin Jones An Example. Erwin Jones is a case in point. Fans here may remember Jones ! as a fine high school tackle with George Washington. Well, 'he is a pre-med student now and an actor—took the role of Mark ! Antony in the school’s presen tation of Julius Ceasar. | “Jones missed lire opening j game with Penn,” Guepe says, j 1 “because he had a bad ankle. He was out for practice the follow ing Tuesday and was in the hos pital Wednesday with appendi , citis. That knocked him out for i the next three games, but he was [ back out last Monday, ready to [ go again.” So Jones played his first game j of the season Saturday. Jones ; is a fine young man, says Guepe. i j That’s what makes the game worth while. Vanderbilt’s chances j against Georgia Tech Saturday | in Nashville? Not very good, I perhaps, but then, there are a lot of fine young men playing on i losing football teams. - -v | quarter had decided the na ! tional championship, instead of merely boosting the score from j 127-0. The players on the field pumped his hand, pounded his back and escorted him to the sidelines, where the boys on the bench surrounded him and con tinued the back-slapping. No Regular Can Coast. There’s a difference between Maryland’s first and second ' teams, despite what the coaches tell vou, but at the same time no regular has his job to the extent where his loafing and a spurt by the fellow behind I him wouldn't bring about a ; change. | The three players with the big- i , gest advantage over their substi ; tutes are Faloney at quarterback. [ Stanley Jones at right tackle and ; Dick Nolan at right half. Take Bob Morgan, left tackle ! and co-captain, as an example of \ j what can happen to a guy who j j misses a game or two. He was I out with injuries and Tom Breu nich took over and there wasn’t a | better lineman on the squad. ! Morgan still is fighting to get his ! job back, and he’s the co-captain. In the backfield there are eight players averaging better than ! five yards a carry. Fourteen different players have scored touchdowns. One of the most refreshing scraps for position is at end, where Crytzer is the only senior with the exception of Fred Heff ner, who is a punting specialist. Incidentally, for the three times he has been called upon. Heffner ! is averaging 44 yards. Paul Kramer, who caught one 1 pass for 51 yards against Miami, !is pushing Crytzer at left end : and Jim Kilgallen is pushing 1 Kramer. The other side of the (s£ l>&\ psjC l ) \SB*y "Maryland Football Highlights" MONDAYS 8:00 P.M. CHANNEL IV WMAL-TV # See the Terps in action on tho gridiron. Hoar Jim Tatum’s prodictions on tho coming wook-ond’s gome*. Every Monday-Channel 7-8 toS:3O p.m. • SPONSORED BY Suburban Trust Company A Strong, Friendly Bank with Twelve Convenient Locations Member Federal Deee.it Inis ranee Cerperetiee Saag ====='' ’== ** A-15 By George Huber William & Mary, 12; GW, 7. It sounds fantastic for a team to make 21 first downs, yet loso to a team that made only nine. But it happened to George Wash ington in Saturday’s game at Williamsburg and how it hap pened can’t quite be explained. The Colonials were playing their best football of the season and gained yardage all over Cary Field Stadium except inside the 20. So well did the Colonials control the ball and move with it that they had to punt only three times. GW’s passing percentage was much higher than in previous i games. Bob Sturm completed [four of nine attempts and Ray Fox hit with four of eight. The ball carriers—and GW has good variety here—netted 225 yards |to W&M’s 119. Despite all this, the scoreboard still said 12 to 7 for WA.-M. Danz Powers Through. Among the GW runners who did better than in earlier games were the two fullbacks. Norb Danz and Joe Boland. Once Danz made 24 yards just by plowing his way up the middle on a fine bit of power running. He shook off five tacklers—not dodged them or stiff-armed them—but shook them off. He was so hampered by tacklers hanging on his shoulders and hips and legs that he must have j taken 10 seconds to run 24 yards. On the William and Mary side of the line. Coach Jack Freeman has done a terrific job with his small (in numbers) squad. He used only 18 players—including a place kicker who made only one try—yet juggled them so well that only one player had to go 60 minutes. The W&M defenders had it i when the chips were down and ; six times stopped GW inside the [ 30. Twice the Colonials got as far as the 15 without scoring; they also got to the 13 and the 7, but were unable to go over. Among the numerous W&M players who deserve commenda tion are Quarterback Charlie Sumner and Fullback Bill Bow man. Sumner is a fine passer, and why he doesn’t go to the air more often is a mystery. When he did try that qpick route he was superb, completing * four of five tries for a total of 70 yards during one 79-yard touchdown drive. He also punts | —his average was 36 8 yards for seven kicks—plays safety and runs back punts and kickoffs. W&M First Downs Pay Off. About th6se nine William and Mary first downs The Indians made only five in the first half, and four of them were on that I 79-yard touchdown drive. They made feur in the second half. ; two of them while on a 33-yard touchdown jaunt after a long return of a kickoff, j One final word about GW. It sounds like a broken record to praise Center Steve Korchcck in I this, snace every Monday, but i that ooy again played one whale of a foo’.ba'l game Saturday. He made a fantastic number of ; tackles, intercepted a pass to set up GW’s only touchdown, j blocked one of W&M’s missed i extra-point tries, and bis of fensive blocking opened the holes for GW’s fullbacks. line is an all-sophomore proposi tion, including two Washington boys, Tim Flynn and Jim Par sons. Flynn was supposed to be the No. 1 right end but he was hurt at Missouri and Bill Walker moved up. Russell Dennis, a big, handsome, well-built young ster with tremendous potential, had his best performance at Miami and he’s back of Walker, clamoring for attention. Then there's Flynn, still favoring his injured shoulder, and Parsons. Flynn went to St. John’s. Par sons to Wilson. The latter snared a Boxold pass for 43 yards against the Hurricanes. That’s only the temporary placement of the ends, becaus# there’s juggling every week.