Monday, Oct. 14, 1929

Football

Bewildered by Louisiana's trick of protecting the man with the ball, a nervy, inexperienced University of Mexico team in Mexico City lost the first football game ever played between a U. S. and a Mexican college, 59-0.

Pop Warner's eleven big Stanfordians baked Oregon's apple in three periods. Even the subs who got their chance in the fourth scored a touchdown. Stanford 33, Oregon 7.

Whenever Princeton passed, a purple shirt was in the way, but after playing even all afternoon Princeton stopped passing, slammed eight plays through the line to beat Amherst by one touchdown and the goal that went with it.

With backs squatting in double wing formation and a line trained to charge like a backfield, Yale skylarked more points away from Vermont than any Yale team has scored in any game since 1888, Yale 89, Vermont 0.

Bates never crossed midfield and got only three first downs against a Harvard line that has hardly been changed since spring practice. Harvard 48, Bates 0.

Five thousand Boy Scouts and 15,000 collegians in Madison, Wis., moaned when Colgate bustled to a three-minute touchdown, howled with joy when Gantenbein, Lubratovich and the Rabholz brothers put one over in the third period and another in the fourth. Wisconsin 13, Colgate 6.

Thirty-seven Army players substituted for each other so fast you couldn't tell who was in, but obviously Gettysburg was out, in spite of its one touchdown, Army 33, Gettysburg 7.

Frosty Peters of Illinois ran punts back half a field's length and threw passes that made rooks of Kansas' Jayhawks, 25-0.

Although the Navy ran four yards every time William and Mary ran one, their 15 to 0 didn't look much for a team only seven days from Notre Dame.

Four of Columbia's touchdowns against Union were made by one Ralph Hewitt, freshman captain last year, and the fifth when Hewitt modestly handed the ball to Joyce. Columbia 31, Union 0.

Notre Dame's Savoldi and Carideo vododyoed an Indiana team too slow to gain ground and too taut to yield it. Notre Dame 14, Indiana 0.