Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 October 1950 — Page 15

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“Section Two | [rum ~~ © SUNDAY, OCTOBERS, 1950

| Features, Pag e 23 te Editorials, Page 24

PAGE 15 |

vt FOOTBALL Brae Butler

SCORES Bqckers 75-1 _ Bows, 21-14,

STATE - : : Notre Dame .... 0 0 7 7% Victory Writes Purdue .........7T14 0 7-28 . ‘Finis’ to Legend Taylor ....ne0. 0 0 6 13—18| To Bohcats a (Continued From Page One) Huntington . vsses 6 0 0 0— 6! “game, but not without a rugged Butler Pasar saues 0 5 a 11] battle with as determined a Notre Ohio University.. 0 7 7 7-21 Bulldogs Score

Dame as ever went on the field. Ball State ...... “1327! . : . . Four times Notre Dame- halted De Pauw ....... 0— First in Tingling —o—0o Contest in Bowl

Purdue drives inside the 10-yard iii 7-20 By FRANK ANDERSON United Press Sports Writer

line. Tackle Bob Toneff and IPdiana State .. | Butler's battered football le- NEW YORK, Oct. 7

center Jerry Groom, who played South. Hiinols ... well every minute, were stalwarts on Indiana ......... 7 1 o Sy In But | Fa ; : ? 7/glons are wrap n tape. Bu 4 : i , ne | their 21-14 loss to Ohio University \ Ll ah Ford, the youngest Yankee

both Oe and defense. Con- lowa seebieeiaes Et MarONTROR {in the Bowl yesterday is wrapped | E% in courage. J

"oct. Mian Fla. at PURDUE Hanover _ Oct. 14—NOTRE DAME at Tulane Indiana Central . i The 31,006 fans who stayed 0— 0 away from Fairview expecting a

0 0 0 trary to last week Notre Dame Valpo . . 13 0 6 0—2¢0 Butler wake can take it from 6

did not tire. They played at top St. Joe were better in the third than at the 3000 who were present that 3 i 5 ; i 0 6—12 > straight World & any other time. i Wabast Te ts the report of the Bulldogs de- - TT <8 Pa Their fourth straight World But neither the backfield nor Wabash . —1% mise is grossly exaggerated. ; : ; 3 v tw TTI re the line had the capabilities of the 1llinois College... 7 0 0— 7 The plucky, stay-with-it band aly two unearned run: rushing Purdue backs, or the Rose Poly ...... 0 0 0— 0of Tony Hinkle gave the vaunted , § °C g surging Purdue line. Principia ....... 0 0 0— 7/Bobcats all they could ask in the, ‘Triumvirate’ - — == !'way of opposition. Not even the i : , Schmidt, Maceioli and Kerestes fact that the Ohioans were ’ " shutout. were a triumvirate of plungers Wisconsin 7 As one unger to another, Joe Di Maggio arected Yogi Berra, and pass receivers. Kerestes made [Illinois 0 81 yards in 23 trials, Maccioli 37 - oe in 15 and Schmidt 80 in 14. Only Sinnorpia re 8 La fullback Jack Landry of Notre coq re 19 Ts Dame could compare with these, Ohio State ..... 21 2 picking up 75 yards in 12 carries. Pitt . cone 0 0

68,008 Fans Sit in on Kill At New York

DiMaggio Blast Gives Winners Early 2-0 Lead

BY, 0 5 6 By CARL LUNDQUIST 3

0—2 Go —§

= 7 0 7 OE 7 0 0 0 0 1

ire ‘st d speed for the entire struggle an Manchester 1 Philadelphia Phillies. 5 to 2

Franklin

NEXT OPPONENTS

Oct. 14~BUTLER. at Ball State. Oct. 14—W. Reserve at Ohio

Hi

5 |coached by an ex-Coach of "the down with the tying run at |Year, Carrol Widdoes, fazed the —41'Butlerites. They struck first and they struck last. But in between those strikes they lost the game. ol ney par S

Even in First

I

Umpire Charley Berry is shown.

Hanover Downs Indiana Central 6-

1

we aaa

Purdue's line, too, was a stand-| Michigan ...... 6

0 0 1 Ford Was Great Dartmouth cess T 0 0 9

1

nw

Hinkle, who finds his. injury- » ridden squad is as thin as 3 Canterbu Win * newspaperman’ s wallet, must have given the boys a Rockne-type pep ‘talk before they took the field. 0— They played the Bobcats .to a 21—34 standstill in the first period. halt0— 0/ing a threat on their own 35. 7—21! Then the second period rolled

“13—34 In with Butler's heart in the van- sparked Canterbury College to a diana Central 6 to 0. [their last dying gasp, it

The Collapse gE ppp . Nor wester eee 0 Of an Empire - ~~ mol SOUTH BEND, Oct. 7 (UP)— _ MIDWEST

Statistics of the Notre Dame- Mich. State .... Purdue game: Maryland . N.D. Purdue Missouri .. First Downs ..... 17 18 SMU ... .. Rushing Yardage. 201 ORiahoma= Tr Passing Yardage. . 158 |mexas A&M. Passes Attempted. 21 Passes Completed. 9 Passes Intercepted 3 Punts ....... 3 4 Punting Average... 34 2 Fumbles Lost sees 2 Cincinnati ...... 7 0 14 Yards Penalized... 108 Louisville .. 0—20,

out with cel center Clinton Knitz, Marquette veess..13 10 18 10—46| Crawforth, cool as leftover cof- i ov to a sustained downfield a guard Joe Skibinski and tacklé Kansas State .... 6° 0 0 0— g fee spotted Schuesler on the Ohio grive from the kickoff, taking a Conference oe Jim Janosek the stalwarts. 3 20 and that was it. Schuesler y,n40¢ through the line. Court- ’ Purdue's second and third | Wayne in 8 TE ~20| gathered the ball in and scam- ney again scored in the third pe- Hanover ......... 8 0 0 {Western IIL St... 7 14 0 0—21/pered over the Bobcat goal line ioq this time on a right ena Indiana Central. 909

came easy. After a — i Juibdowns rive. stalled on the {John Carroll.....14 14 7 13—I8 unmolested. Guard Floyd Jen-| sweep for some 15 yards. GIrish seven, Williams punted out Kent State ..... 0 0 7 0— 7inings kicked the point and the pariham's only touchdown Ball State Whips of bounds on the Notre Dame 41. Baldwin-Wallace 7 13 6 7—33 DUlIdOBS led for the last time id came in the final period wh WwW e. i Home in Three | Akron sansssncis 0 00 6— 6 2 gam From en ta t the Bobcats, 28-2 losers to yer after intercepting a. Ca there it was three phage Town State ..... 6 0 7 13— 6 Big 10 power Illinois last week, terbury pass a few RAT

0 0 Ei 0 0 0 4 0 0 7

w

Nit

NEXT OPPONENTS wt

{them all. Missing the shutout that

we

Quakers, 12-7 Ter 14—HANQVER. at Canterbury (N: RICHMOND, Ind., Oct. 7

| se al es So 2

oh as we

Te?

Kansas Colorado

Id

21—2718 and taking over. Capt. Tim

lays, the latter covering 41 yards |int flurry of trouble. _0—21Crawforth passed 19 yards to End | play x BY j1sto.a Hurry

NEXT OPPONENTS Willie Jones led off the

§ 14 Hanover at CANTERBURY (N:. from Hanover Quarterback Gary

w

q 0 0— O back Wayne Walls, 7=gg|sophomore, smashed to the 40.

Schuesler Scores

Dayton ......... 0

win of the season. utes remaining in the game.

to third.

him out.

MUNCIE, Oet. 7 -(UP)—Ball but he got under the ball

A Jas from uels to Schmidt|lowa Teachers .. 0 8 0 0— 3came back with a bang. Minutes earlier. The Quakers missed a State came out on the long end muffed it. Both Jones and pinch{later they began a drive on their prior scoring opportunity with a of a free-scoring duel today as hitter Ken Johnson streaked home ‘and Seminick beld up at first,

made 35 and Kerestes again | Abien, 7. Hilaaaie 7. EEA

unged Wi Th in e i a | ge Sram the two. Then 55 prkaneas A as Gollese 6. 132 and drove to paydirt, Quarter-| fymple on the Knights two-yard Er Sema P= 23 two| Caneten 21 Grime Tiler 1. {back Pete Norman's pitchout to fine, Oct: 14—DEPAUW at Oberlin yards as Schmidt ran in two [Gane , nell 18, 'Fullback. Quinn Stumpf making Score by periods: Oct. 14—Butler at BALL STATE

2m 25, Wash. = tries and Samuels Cos 27, Monmouth ia [the touchdown from 21 yards out. Canterbury ....

Schmidt for 30 yards and the Detson 26, Ott Onis ~ bern + score. yy amine a Conergy TOY, land booted the first of his three Ts Pauw. These counters put Purdue riends 13. Ster conversions and the game was Cleveland Broce

ling Colo. points in front, the largest mar-| Ed fo 3 tied, 7-7. Standoff Stop Steelers, 30-17 PITTSBURGH, Oct. 7 (UP)

gin any team has held against {Reason . 13, Wi 'standoff. Halfback Lou Weide- The Cleveland Browns capitalized second to lead 7-6 at the half.

Stengel Gets Boos

6 0—12 the rampaging Cardinals racked ter, singled pinch-runner

' Notre Dame since the wartime Millikan’ 26. Ancustans | “The ‘rest of the half was days when Army saddled the Irish | Minto, Bohra. 8 amestonn . $ as 2a with its worst defeat in history. | Missourt Mines 14, Maryville Tehrs, 0. Notre Dame rallied in the third North urst 0 . period. After Phil Klezek fumbled | Omaba, 2 26. Washburn 6 : with a fine punt that rolled out early in the period, Dick Cotter|St. , Ambrose 1: Jubugue o , recovered on the Boilermaker 10 Xavier (0 Ir Miami (a) and Williams passed to Jim Mut- Wheaton 35. Findlar's Reali 3. _scheller for two yards and a Western Hlinois 21, Wa ne 20. touchdown. Wilberforce 18. _Prai rie View 6. Five-Play Parade

The second Irish score resulted EAST

ball game in the final week.

spark a 30 to 17 victory over the seven points in the third period,

jand backfield did the rest. Butler stopped the Ohioans at| The Steelers’ only consolation clinch the contest.

lthe Bulldog 24 and then a few Was statistical. They outgained Score. by Periods the Browns, 334 yards to 266. and ‘Ball State ...... 0 7 7 13-27 | (Continued on Page i8—Col. 4) piled up 19 first downs to 15, DePauw . 6 0 7 0—13(Continued on Page 16—Col.

strike out pinch-hitter. Stan

dey rie 5 eT ‘=Indiana’ s D’Achille Connects On 91-Yard Scoring Play

yards. Billy Barrett ran 33 and Princeton John Petitbon rambled 11 for the Syracuse tiene 1 0 0 0—1 counter. Wi ft 13 7 6 0—26| Samuels, the star of the game, > — was responsible for the final Pur- Army St. * re o 141s 13—41/ due marker, pitching a pass to]. een ¥ Maccioli who ran 40 yards for the Harvard ........ 0 0 0 I— 1 Wi score with a total gain of 56 yards U0'Wmbia ........ 0 12 13 O23 on the play. : Holy Cross .... 720 7 T—41 Samuels, a 19-year-old sopho- Brown 0 7 014-21 more from Chicago, in addition to - : re] his sparking passing and signal Yale rer ol d 4 calling converted after every Pur- renin aba) due tally, Wash. and Lee... ¢ 6 7 T—20 Purdue Out-rushed Citadel on 0 : 0 0 o— 0 * Purdue's net gain for the day! Albright EN Moravian a was 359 yards, 201 on the ground, Amherst 14. Champlain. 5 : Smee Dame Bate 30 5 EEE RR n or: those . water determined but futile crashing] Celeate i1. W. Re runs by Landry and Barrett in| pre the .final 20 minutes the Irish Gas would have béen outclassed even. on the ground. Hartwiex fo. Juanita 0." It wasn’t Notre Dame's day at Hoard 25 oT any time, and Coach Frank Leahy| (ines aint 8, Iu... even before the season said itiLebanon Valley 30, Mublenbers 13. wouldn’t be Notre Dame’s year. Cowell (Rex x0 ho Mass. Maritime 0. | “We lost to a better team,” Maine 15. Vermont { {

Wes. 14.

fa ¥ Siwinriels St. 0 | .% Dickenson 0. | City i 1 |

. Middlebury 21. Hamilion 6. Leahy said. “We were outplayed! Morran 51. & incoln U. 3% . and outcoached, but not out- Ny. Aseies 6 Nail. Be pO 1 fought.” IN. Car. Coll. 13, Delaw: The lineups: : J Shethes LT anany 4 i I8t. Michaels 44,

NOTRE DAME Left Ends—Ostrowski, Kat {5itanten oF fa 7. 2 0

tish Left Tackles—Flynn, Zambroski, Zancha, Weithman oer etd 2%, 3 Left Guards—Burns, Boj. : In SVestminisier Center-—Groom. Right Gu rds— Wallner, Johnston. Right Tackles—Toneff, Dunilay. Right Ends--Mutschelier, RD yardi. Hel= oo

ws Kelly, wil * i uarterbgcks-— am Left bi cks—Petitbon a s Right <H foacks-—Barrett, Flood, - Bush, Marchand. Shades. Gob tad Re ndry, Cotter, Gander, Cap-

SOUTH

Rice v.--roeees THH ‘La. State Neh oe

Left Tete ok) eT! nsidize, | =

Eaters Bits, Reed. jo ce" B Faner. ie an : Suarterbacks Samuels Curtis; Schnaible, Bay lor ... 0.

q t Jat Maccioli, Klezek. Mississippi Shake. 0 y ii 0 : pis reste. Montgomery, Kas- Texas C. U. (... 0 7 © 6 1]

PURDUE Left Rds Flowers, Sugar, Bringer, ancsek. Con.

Peran. wi dg) : Arkansas ....... 0 0

i Bw LTT IE TE, Ae Mactil 3 Sehmidt. Muir Alabama ieee 7 8 0

hdowsia:_ Samuels 4. GEOTEIA + icresen@ 0 0 0—0 Io Carolina ..... 0 0 0 0— 0 TOW, ver Palls; Pi AT ers Missonippi —.... H 3 ’ 1-5 (Continued on Page 18—Col. 8) | agies Win, 36 20 7 (UP) 7 £ UP) Last Night's |

~The Philadelphia Eagles fired|

touchdowns of all descriptions, in- Foo “cluding a 103-yard kickoff return: tball ths id by Russ Craft, at the Los Angeles, Bape Lie! nr i aasvilied {

RA OTE i Oune® ne X wh Noll 1% Bxanaviie Memuria 0 Lov D'Ackle. {0

{ional Football Le Ta Fangs | obertson crossing th 8 30a ine, The play cored 31 yrs. ise il

urdue Upsets Irish; IU Tops lowa, 20-7

[IND Gridiron Yanks Whip Phils; 5- -2, Sweep Series. Lou D'Achille Passes

“iia Wisconsin Edges them all, pitched the mighty New Yorkers to their 13th World Championship and their sixth complete sweep of the opposition today, defeating the flat-tire

the side should have been retire prevented this 21-year-old beard less executioner from hurling

it Radcliffe ran 31 yards t& score | Yankee catcher, in the sixth inning after Berra clouted a home rum exciting at the finish, bowing out With an intercepted pass, and| Oo 1&-isconsin A INDIANA,

the fourth world series game won by the Yanks 5 to 2 yesterday. true to their nickname by going Ke at winning extra point.

The fighting Phillies made

—.. after Gene Woodling dropped {fly ball in left field that permitted out turned the'field into 100 yards | a two runs to score with two out the first half.

And as thel68,098 fans sat in the breaks would win. Wiscon-

MADISON, Oct. 7 (UP)—Dick/on the kill at Yankee Stadium Casten, a powerhouse freshman there was a firm conviction that fullback, plunged five yards for this calm and composed lefthander would some day go down as

. Knights Defeat Oct. 14—Manchester at INDIANA CEN. One Of the greatest hurlers

Faf them

(UP) the only score of the game today wanted so badly was no fault of ...h.q 88 yards in 13 plays to I —~Left half Bob Courtney as Hanover's Panthers edged In- (his own. For as the Phillies mas de n

g guard. Tue Bulldogs got to work 12 to 7 victory over the Earlham The touchdown was set up latc obvious that Ford would not have learly, stopping a drive on their Quakers tonight, the Knights sec-|in the fourth period on two pass let them score, even though he got freed to run, failed to add the

0—40/John Schuesler and then Half- Oct. 14-EARLHAM at Taylor Fox. Casten crossed the goal line ng s : Tor . B >| ninth with a long single and Ford, Danville ond Hoosier College Conference 4) only one and one-half min-'who walked only one bafter : ' struck out seven, let a pitch slip d in the. or frst 4oUch-| The loss was the Greyhounds’ and it hit Del Ennis on the leg Own. in. the opening period as. ais.g 1p year in Hoosier College! He got Dick Sisler to force

That left only one man to go and Ford had him on a long fly.

Thorpe Lichtenberg took the bal | DePauw, 27 to 13 he blow we by Andy a k

When Mike Goliat, a weak hit-

kamp kept the Bobcats "bottled on two recovered fumbles to, Both teams hung up another, gtengel—amid thunderous boos -brought in seasoncd Allie Reyii- | on the Ohio 10. The Butler line Pittsburgh Steelers tonight in a but the Cardinals came through olds. The Oklahoma Iridian had third sessions to score from National Football League game. with 13 in the final stanza tot; throw only four pitches “to yards out each time. The loss

pata. The first two were strikes

ram Photo by Johiy-Spickelmice and. J.

back, connechs with Halfback Bobby Robertson on a Bud heave i in Yorlerday = game with the Hawkeyes at Bloomington. inset Be Bel shows

Underdog Hoosiers to Homecoming Triumph

91-Yard TD Play in First Period

Sets New Conference Record By KURT FRENDENTHAL, United Press Sports Writer BLLOOMINGTON, Oct. T—Lou D’Achille, a flashy lefthanded sophomore quarterback with the right touch, today passed Indiana's underdog Hoosiers to a 20 to 7 win over Iowa in a Big 10 game before some 25,000 homecoming fans in Memorial Stadium. The pint-sized Beaver Falls, Pa., tailback set up the ————— Hoosiers’ first tally in the |first period and passed for their two others in the second. {His first touchdown toss, a pass

of 91 yards, established a new conference record. The previous record was established by Bill Butkovich of Tllinois who passed 76 yards for a TD to Ray Czicek against Wisconsin in 1945.

+ liinois, J] 106

‘Breaks’ Decide Battle in Mud

By REY W. BRUNE

United Press Sports Writer

Seven-Man Line In gaining their first league “HA TP TN " - - w HAMI AIC iN. Ai , Oct. ! victory since 1948, also over Towa. isconsin upset Illinois, 7 to 6,/tne Hoosiers employed a stubborn

on a rain-sodden field today i |seven-man line, led by game capwhen defensive line backer Bob vE Li NEXT OPPONENTS Oct. 14—Wisconsin at I John Coatta kicked the game- — g tain Bill Smith’ and Johnny Davis, which never let the Hawkeyes

A steady re id - eady rain that fell through-/ 0 within scoring distance in

of mud, and it became evident]

early that: the team which got And behind that stout line,

D’Achille, halfback Bobby Robertson and fullback Arnold Bowman operated with near clockwork precision. The Hoosiers sparkled particuin got them and took advantage larly with D’Achille tossing his aerials, but on the ground Iowa The first break came in the outgained them considerably. first period after Illinois haa Win in Air

fact, the Hoosiers gained only 95 yards on the ground against 219 for Iowa but outgained the Hawkeyes 215 to 127 yards through the air. point. | Towa couldn't muster a sustainPass Intercepted ing drive until the third period, The second break was the in- marching 80 yards for their only tercepted pas It was hard-| touchdown. The attack was spearcharging Ken Sachtijen, Wiscon- headed by rushes of Don Comin right end, who helped make mack, Jerry Faske and. Bill Reicit Early in the second period hardt, and was climaxed with two

NEXT OPPONENTS Oct. 14 WISCONSIN at Iowa Oct. 13- ILLINOIS at UCLA (N)

score Center Dan Sabino shoi| a bad pass back on the extra point try, and Sam Rebecca,

Ennis at second and Jones moved pjjingjs Quarterback Fred Majoripasses by quarterback Glenn

dropped back to pass. Sachtjen, Drahn, the. latter covering 18

Wie a proviem Grany Janne rushing hard, hit Major's arm as yards to Jerry Long in the end

. - . zone. Indiana scored the first (Continued on Page 18—Col. 6) time ana gained possession of the ball in the first period on nine

Par RT Period on nisl ark School Teo br Reha Bo . Loses, 12 to 7

ertson went over from the threeTimes State Serviee verted.

yard line and Danny Thomas conCINCINNATI. Oct. 7--Park Reverses Field

School of Indianapolis failed to mppan came D'Achille’s celehold a 7 to 0 first-quarter lead brated 91-yard pass play to Roband lost a 12 to 7 intersectional|o oon who reversed his field on

Jack tilt to Ohio Military Academy [Then Back Rupe Perkins came in Earlham .. 0 7— 7up a 27 to 13 victory over De- Mayo to second, Manager Casey the 30 and streaked unmolested ‘Stengel decided to take the pres DePauw broke the scoring ice gyre off his shining rookie, who [Tom the three-yard_time inthe] down when Bill Smith. Indiana's {with a first-period touchdown, but had won nine straight games for Ball State crossed the goal and the Yankees down the stretch be- - ‘made good its conversion in the fore losing his only major league

here this afternoon.

the rest of the way. -Jack Riser scored for Park

The crowd had hardly “settled

irs) pe riod a jar hing aiven alert game captain, intercepted Slatin swept the flank for the Fred Ruck’s pass deep in lowa CODVEr Sion dereitory. and } p'auille foot a — , . ouchdown aerial to Jim Gomory. tis The hosts Jo the second ana Iowa threatened again in the ’ : final stanza but Gene Gedman intercepted Drahn’s pass on the Indiana 18 and an Iowa fumble ended the visitor's - scoring ances. But the Hoosiers, too, failed to knock on the touchdown gale again in the second half when the game turned into a battle of two lines fighting every inch of the way, and into a punting duel between Robertson and Drahn. Robertson, Indiana's brilliant triple-threat, averaged nearly 13 yards in niné. punts, to 36.8 for Drahn. Iowa, preferring a ground game during the first half, changed tactics and tried the air lanes in the second half. Drahn tossed 20 of lowa's 23 passes, completing. nine of. then, while three were intercepted. D’Achille, on the other hand, completed eight of 14 aerials and had none of his pitches intercepted. Robertson’ .and Reichardt were the offensive big guns in rushing. i Robertson averaged 5.3 yards {in nine attempts, while Reichardt {hit 5.9 yards per try in 15 times he carried the mail. { The lineups i INDIANA | Lett ends—C. Anderson, Kovatch, J. Ander. son. M. Emith |Left tackles—Bosak. Matesic Left guards—Georgakis, Thor Roth. ! Centers Dolan, Becket. ns Right guards—W mith Right tackles—Tal 4 $50 Right ends—Craton, Winston, Quarterbacks—D'Achille, Petrauskas Left | oY backs — Robertson, -Gedman,

By Right “halthacks ~Gomfory. Da Fullbacks—Van Ooven. RL, Tutsle, IOWA Left ends— Long. Swartzendruber, Meyer. Left tackles—Johnston., Woodhouse, Patil.

as Park's second. The winless visitors also have fey one, h Park choot cee T0000 0— 3° Ohio M. : 6 0—12

sen, Loft guards Turner, Lage nter—Towne: {Richt guards- ET iaberd, Perrin, Fa ‘re “1d Right tackles—Bountz, Bradley “Jers | Right ends—Hofl, DeProspero, Car Hla. Quarterbacks—Drahn, Ruck, Britzmanh,

nester {Left halfbacks—-Commack. Fryauf. Rev eff Rizht halfbacks—Faske. Greene. Wilson; randt. Bristol. api Fullbacks- Refchardt, Riley.” Denning. STATISTICS

| First downs | Rushing yardage | Passing yardage Passes attempted { Passes completed | Basses, intercepted

—t rtp Jems ID TEDe

PURtng average oo. Fumbles lost Yards penalized

Oregon Wins, 21- 13

| EUGENE, Ore., Oct. 7 (UP)— | Oregon fought off a determined |and persistent Montana ground and aerial attack today to win its’ {first football victory of the sea{son, 21 to 13, before 12.211 fans at {Hayward Field.

Trojans Held to Tie

PULLMAN, Wash., Oct. 7 we) |—Heavily-favored Southern Cal iifornia could do no better than a 120-20 tie with Washington 8! College today as the Rogei ljinx continued to hold

gn Trojans, 4

“ 2.7