Monday, Oct. 16, 1933

Football

Not for 32 years had Notre Dame failed to win an opening game, until last week when a determined University of Kansas squad repeatedly smashed Notre Dame's experienced line, held the game scoreless.

After journeying north for six consecutive years to be whaled by New York University, little West Virginia Wesleyan turned tables. A 200-lb. fullback named Len Barnum punched the ball to N. Y. U.'s 8-yd. line in the last period, kicked the winning field goal, 3-to-0.

"Doping" the Temple-Carnegie Tech game. Harvard Coach Eddie Casey wrote for the newspapers: "It should be an auspicious occasion for my old friend Pop Warner [Temple's new coach] . . . but do not expect him to run away with his game too easily." Carnegie, whose new Coach Howard Harpster is youngest in major football (26), scored three times on passes, once on a 38-yd. run, 25-to-0.

In its first game under its new Coach Reginald Root, Yale had a full afternoon's work to down a foxy Maine team, 14-to-7.

Princeton looked like a squadron of swift whippet-tanks as it rolled through Amherst for six touchdowns, 40-to-0.

Most of Harvard's substitutes got practice against Bates, 33-to-0.

In the last three minutes California came from behind to tie the score with a hard-hitting St. Mary's team, and kick the winning point, 14-to-13.

Just once Virginia advanced two yards into Ohio State territory. Otherwise, Ohio State found time for eleven touchdowns and three field goals--biggest score (75-to-0) ever made in Ohio State's stadium.

This file is automatically generated by a robot program, so reader's discretion is required.