Evening Star Newspaper, November 12, 1926, Page 40

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SPORTS WITH NAVY AND VIRGINIA Cavaliers Also Possess Fastest Backfield in This Sec- tion—Hilltoppers Are Experienced, But Old Line Combination Is Green. BY H. C. BYRD. EORGETOWN and Maryland face elevens tomorrow in the line-up of which are some brilllant players. Navy has in its line and backfield men who could make good on any eleven, while Virginia also possesses two or three performers of exceptional cali her. Probably no teams the Blue s Gray and Old Liners have faced th year have had more capable tackl und ends, Eddy 3nd Wickhorst of Navy are 6-footers and weigh around 200 pounds each, while Cardweli and Luke of Vir- ginia are In the same class. It is said of Luke a year ago that he was zoing to be the best tackle that ever wore Virginia colors. The Navy ends arve far bigger men than those who ¥ the flank positions for Virginia, but even with their-lack of weight the Virginia men are rated among the best in the South. Navy's backfield is not as fast as that of Virginia, although it probably is just as capable as far as all-round ability is concerned. It is said that Virginia collectively has the fastest Lackfield in this section. and possibly the fastest in the country. Both Navy and Virginia have fine teams. Any eleven that could heat Michigan is a zood eleven, and in like manner any | cleven that could win. 30 to 7. from a team that tied Princeton is a gond cleven. These are the twn main complishments that N, ginia have to thelr credi Maryland Eleven Green. Against these teams Georgetown iryland will place just the op- posite kind of elevens. Georgetown s a team of players who will match experience with experience, weight with weight and speed with speed. In il three of these things Georgetown cqual to the Navy. Maryland will the opposite relationship to Against Virginia's veteran and experienced eleven Maryland will place the greenest foot ball outfit that has worn its colors in years. Only in weight will Maryland match . and will have to overcome if it is to win. And the p that goes with greater ex- perience is real. Seven letter men will be in the Virginia line-up, and five of them are in their third vear of col- jege foot ball. Contrasted with this Maryland will have five men in the line-up in their first vear of college foot ball, two in their first year of any kind of foot ball. Laird, one of the probably will not be causa of an injury received in the Washington and Lee game. It is pos- sible that Stevens, Maryland captain, may be out, and one of the linemen i= not in the best condition and may ot start. However, it seems that the 1wo teams are fairly evenly balanced, though general opinion seems to be siving Virginia the edge because of jts wonderful passing game and its greater experience. Georggipwn against the Navy wgl have its strongest lineup on e #ield. Not a man is injured, nor is any man in other than good enough shape to Virginia backs, able to play be- and that Virginia people are anxious to see the team is shown by the way they have been getting tickets. Vir- ginians here, and especially those that were prominent in student life at Charlottesville, have been buying tickets not in twos and threes, but in blocks of ten to thirty. One Virginia man walked in Spalding’s day before | vesterday and asked for 50 tickets, with the remark it would be the first | time he had seen a Virginia team play since he left college and he was not only going himself, but take along all his_close friends. The Maryland and Virginia game is to begin at 2 o'clock, while the Georgetown-Navy battle starts at 2:30. Earl Neale, head football coach at Virginia, has this year brought Vir- ginia from what at the beginning was indicated as a disastrous season to what promises to be one of the most brilliant Virginia has had. Certainly the Cavaliers have had no season in vears in which they chalked up such an excellent result as was obtained in the Washington and Lee game last week. If the team does well in its ac- | remaining contests, and especially it it heats North (‘arolina Thanksgiving Day, Neale will have done ahout all that should he expected of any coach. Daniels, who may be in the starting line-up of the V nia eleven tomor- row, probably is tne biggest back in the South. Last year he was on the Virginia freshman team as fullback and before that was a star at Episco- val High. He stands about 6 feet 2 inches and welighs over 300 pounds At Episcopal, besides being a foot ball star, Daniels was brilllant with the shot and discus. Last year he was the mainstay of Virginia's freshman track and fleld team. Charlie Mackall, captain and guard at Virginia, is a former Western High School foot ball man. He also cap- talned the team at Western. Not only is he a fine linesman, but also is a star in basket ball, and incldentally a_splendid chap personally. He does Virginia’s kicking and enough of its forward passing to cover his punting. It is rather amusing, the position that Dr. Mackall, Charlie’s father finds himself in. Dr. Mackall is a graduate of the University of Maryland Medi- cal School and is a staunch supporter of all things Maryland—except tomor- row. For two hours tomorrow after- noon he will have Virginia's banner raised and would be highly elated to see Virginia win “Doc” Dunbar, who played at Mary- land back in 1902, came down from New York yesterday and said: I haven't seen a Maryland team play since 1 left school, but I'm on the job now to stay until after this one is finished."” Two Virginia men who will be here tonight to attend the Maryland dinner and who will remain for the game who : have done much for athletics at Vir- ginia and played the biggest part in the many changes wrought there in the last two or ¢hree years are Dr. George O. Ferguson. chairman of the athletic board, and Ellis Brown, grad- \ SPORTS. o . LOCAL :‘EAMS. eorgetown vs. Nav, nnapol .'Vzlr:“l::lm";:s. er;l:;u!nn’: Colle:: r‘l;.':n’i‘ol:h?mlm vs. George Wash- at Cefurfl Stadium at 2:15 k. Catholic University vs. Holy Cross at_Worcester. Gallaudet vs. Delaware at Newark. American University v Bridge- water Cellege at St. Alban's Field at 2:30 o'clock. EAST. Princeton vs. Yale at Princeton. Army vs. Notre Dame at New York. Harvard vs. Brown at.Cambridge. Cornell vs. Dartmouth at Ithac: Lehigh vs. Rutgers at Bethlehe Pennsylvania vs. Columbia Philadelphia. Penn State vs. Bucknell at State ollefe. Pittsburgh vs. Washington-Jeffer- son at Pittsburgh. Syracuse vs. Colgate at Syracuse. West Virginia University vs. Centre at, Purkembum. Virginia Military Institute vs. Ken- tucky at Charleston, W. Va. Ambherst vs. Williams at Amherst. Boston College vs. Haskell at Boston. y College of New York vs. Ford- ham at New York. Franklin-Marshall vs. Swarthmore at Lancaster. Geneva vs. Falls. Gettysburg vs. Mount St. Mary's at Gettyshurg. Hamilton vs. Union at Clinton. Haverford vs. Drexel at Haverford. Johns Hopkins vs. St. John's at Baltimore. Lafayetto vs. Susquehanna at Eas. ton. ”?A)’nll vs. Western Marylanc at Baltimore. Middlebury vs. Vermont at Middle- bury. Nl;l’lhlfllh!rg vs. Dickinson at Wilkes- rre. New Hampshire vs. Maine at Dur- an. New York University vs. Davis Elkins at New York. Pennsylvania Military Academy vs. Ursinus at Chester. Providence vs. Alfred at Provi- dence. Rensselaer vs. Rochester at Troy. St. Bonaventure vs. Niagara at Olean. Shmrlolm's vs. St. Stephen's at Brooklyn. 3 St. l{awrence vs, Clarkson at Can- on. Schuylkill vs. Blue Ridge at Read- nfi“ufls vs. Boston University at fts. ‘Upsala vs. Manhattan at East range. £ \\'ashim;':nn College vs. St. Joseph's at_Chestertown. Wesleyan vs. Bowdoin at Middle- town. Worcester Poly vs. Lowell Textile t Worcester., £ Albright vs. Seton Hall at Myers- at Grove City at Beaver vs. Thiel at Wellsburg. Buffalo vs. Hobart at Buffalo. Cinclnnati va. Wittenbers ai” Cin- nnati. onnecticut Aggies vs. Rhode Island it at_Storrs, East Stroudsburg vs. New York Aggies at East_Stroudsburg. i Marshall vs. Fairmont at Hunting- °Winona Tech vs. Rochester Junior at Winena. Chattanooga vs. ' Georgetown (Ky.) at_Chattanooga. Southern Methodist vs. Baylor at Dallas. Southwestern vs. West Tennessee Teachers at Memphis. Midwest. Michigan vs. Ohlo State at Colum- bus. ‘Nofihmiern vs. Chicago at Evans. on. ‘,\l':hmkl vs. Kansas Aggies at Lin- coln. Mississippl Aggies at Indiana vs. Bloomington. Wisconsin vs. Towa at Madison. Tllinols Wal at Urbana. Detroit Quantico Marines at De- t Minnesota vs. Butler at Minneapolis. Towa State vs. Drake at Ames. Purdue vs. Franklin at Lafayette. M.:ll.ssom-l vs. Washington at Colum- Crelghton vs. South Dakota State at Omaha. tl)etmlt College vs. Toledo at De- rolt. l.lr:’hn Carroll vs. Villanova at Cleve- and. North Dakota State vs. Concordla at 'argo. LE(. Louis vs. Arkansas Poly at'St. uis. Western Reserve vs. Ohio Wesleyan at Cleveland. Wooster vs. Akron at Wooster. Beloit vs. Kalamazoo at Beloit. Bradley Poly vs. Illinois Wesleyan at_Peoria. Cedarville vs. Bluffton at Cedarville. Coe vs. Carleton at Cedar Rapids. College of Emporia vs. Ottawa at mporia. Dayton vs. Ohio Northern at Dayton. DeKalb vs. Terre Haute Normal at DeKalb. DePaul vs. Valparaiso at Chicago. Hiram vs. Otterbein at Hiram. Morningside vs Nebraska Teachers at_Sioux City. Oberlin vs. Miami at Oberlin. Sioux Fall vs. Madison at Sioux Falls. West. California vs. Nevada at Berkeley. Stanford vs. Washington at Palo to. College of the Pacific vs. St. Mary's at Stockton. Colorado vs. Eolorado Aggies at Boulder. Denver vs. Colorado College at Den- ver. Montana vs. Whitman at Missoula. New Mexico vs. New Mexico Aggles at.Las Cruces. Occidental vs. Arizona at Los Ange- les. California (Southern Branch) vs. Redlands at Redlan Washington State Pullman. Wyoming vs. Montana State at Cas- T wl-‘l.ngsllfi‘ vs Tempe at Phoenix. Marines vs. Santa Clara at San Diego. s. vs. Oregon at s EPISCOPAL GRIDMEN IN ALEXANDRIA GAME ALEXANDRIA, Va., November 12. —Episcopal High School foot ball team appears in its last game on Hox- ton Field this Fall tomorrow after- noon, playing Shenandoah Valley Academy of Winchester, Va., starting at 3 o'clock. Alexandria High School and Wash- ington and Lee High of Ballston, Va, By the Associated Press. EW YORK. November 12.— While some alumni of Har- vard sought to restore ath- letic relations between Prince- ton and Harvard. possible new foot hall alignments were being discussed today as an outgrowth of the most sensational college rupture in years. An Eastern conference, a new “hig three,” consisting of Yale, Harvard and Dartmouth, and resumption of a long-discarded ' Pennsylvania-Prince- ton serles weré among the possibili- ties suggested. In the face of apparent determina- tion on the part of Princeton to stand firm in its decision, Howard Elliott, chairman of the Northern Pacific Rallroad and president of the Har- vard board of overseers, was joined by Yale men in opening wedges for peace. Yale News Optimistic. “We anticipate a renewal of friend- ship.” said the Yale news. Hope that authorities of the two institutions “will come together and bury the hatchet.” was voiced by EI- | liott, who said that the break “af- tects much more the graduates of these {wo hisforic colleges than dt af- fects the undergraduates.” Princeton and Harvard Rraduates all ‘over the country are closely asso- ciated soclally. In profesional and busi- ness life and in work for civic ad vancement, Elliott added, “and this unfortunate incident will strain these pleasant and useful relations and do harm.” An entirely different view of the sit- uation is taken by G. H. Chase, dean of the graduate school at Harvard, who looks upon the rupture as “bound to be a good thing." “It will put more life and good sportmanship in foot ball in the East,” he said. “Harvard, Yale and Princeton have been tied together too long in foot ball. This break will force an enlargement of their play- ing schedules and may lean to the formation of a big ten in the East.” The disclosure of Harvard's new pol- jey. adopted prior to Princeton’s break and stipulating that only the Yale game would be retained as an annual feature, is considered by some observ- ers as an impassable barrier. See Change As Helpful. In its statement the Harvard com- mittee on the regulation of athletic sports took the stand that “the play- ing of foot ball games against the same colleges every year has tended to keep the excitement of the contests at too high a pitch for too long a period,” and “"has exaggerated the part which _intercollegiate rivalry should properly have in a game.” No expression of regret is heard on “The Nation’s BIG THREE BREAK SURE TO BRING NEW RIVALRIES Yale-Harvard-Dartmouth Combine Is Hinted, While Princeton and Penn May Renew Relations. Larger Circuit Also Is Likel the Princeton campus. Dr. Charles W. Kermedy, chairman of Princeton's board of athletic control. summed up the university's position tersely: “The primary cause of our action Is the fact that Princeton has become convinced that competition with Harvard is clouded with suspicion and ill-will.” Pennsylvania, mentioned as an oppo- nent for Harvard and Princeton next year, severed foot ball relations with both universities decades ago. Discussion of a “Big Ten™ for the East involves Yale, Princeton, Colum- bia, Pennsylvania, Cornell, Dartmouth, Brown, Army, Navy, and possibly Syr- atuse or Colgate. Cornell, Columbia, Dartmouth and Pennsylvania now play interlocking schedules. GEORGETOWN AND NAVY IN CROSS-COUNTRY RUN An added feature to the athletic program tomorrow at Annapolis will be a cross-country test hetween teams of Georgetown and Navy with the finish hetween the halv The course will he at 31; miles and the start will he from the Academy Parade Grounds. Eddie Swinburne, captain, will the Blue and Gray colors along with Clarence Dussault, Sam Green- edge. Horace Horlihy, George East- ment and Kaiser. I PRO FOOT BALL RESULTS NATIONAL LEAGUE. Providence, 21; Canton Bulldogs, Pottsville, 10; Los Angeles, 0. New York Giants, 14; Duluth, 13. 2 COLLEGE FOOT BALL Quantico Marines, 41; Temple U., 12. Mercer, 55; Rollins, 0. High Point, 7; Guilford, 3. Colby, 14; Bates, 0. Carnegie Tech, 52; Juniata, 0. Lombard, 44; Chicago Y. M. C. A,, 0. Kansas, 10; Oklahoma, 9. Ouachita, 37; Tennessee Doctors, 0. Little Rock College, 21; Bryson, 12. Hendrix College, 36; College of Ozarks, 0. Texas, Southwestern, 6. Colorado Teachers' College, Chadron (Nebr.) Normal, 3. Regis College, 20; Colorado School of Mines, 0. West Virginia Wesleyan, 13; Broad- dus, 0. Florida Freshmen, 18; Freshmen, 13. Florida Southern College, 5 Georgia A. and M., 0. Little Rock College, 21; Bryson, 12. Arkansas, 28; FEast Oklahoma Marion, 0; Springhill, 7. Centenary, 7; Louislana Poly, 0. Simpson, 50; Des Moines Univer- sity, St. Viator's, 23: Columbla College, 7. AVaynesburg, 13; Duquesne Univer- sity, 0. Valley_City (N. Dak.) State Teach- ers, 12; Moorhead State Teachers, 0. Columbus College, 73; Aberdeen Northern Normal, 0. Mississippi_College, 2 Southern California, 1 gles, 7. Pomona, 21; Whittier, 6. Utah Aggies, IWestern State, 0. Ashland Coliege 0 Emery and Hen Carson Newmar Southwestern, | . 70,000 TO SEE GAME. Br tha Associated Press. Tickets for the Army-Notre Dame foot_ball game at the Yankee Stadium in New York tomorrow are at as high a premium as any games ever held in New York, not excepting Army-Navy conflicts. ‘A sell-out was announced a week ago and speculators. pricing choice seats at as high as $25 apiece. are reaping a harvest. The attend Auburn South Union, 7. Oregon Ag- . 14; Tuscum. 3. 40; Milligan, 12. Bethel, 7. TENNESSEE FACING BARRIER IN VANDY By the Associated Pres A grim fighting machine from Ten. nessee today put the finishing touches on a week of hard preparation for the South's feature gridiron clash to morrow with Vanderbilt. In close pursuit of Alabama for tha 1926 Southern Conference champlon ship, the Tennesseans will carry their unsullied record into battle tomorrow agalnst the strongest of the season. With Alabama a heavy favorita to humble the light Florida eleven and increase her season's winning record to seven victorles. fans turned to tha gama fight for first honors by tha men of Tennessee's undefeated squad. Georgia’s Bulldogs move on the stronghold of Georgia Tech fn an nual combat tq avenge the 3-to-0 de- feat administered by the Golden Tornado last year. The Bulldogs, confident of victory after a top-heav victory last week over Alabama Poly. will enter the fray favored to win from the battered Tornado. Tech's chances are lessened by the absence from the line-up of “Red” Barron, stellar Tornado back, now on the injured list. The heavy Sewanea aggregation advances on the New Orleans stronghold of Tulane, slightly favored to humble the lichter green wave. while Mississippi and Loutsi ana State University come together in a resumption of annual relations Stevens, stellar hack, is the center of a vielent Maryland attack to he launched against Virginia's Cavallers at College Park. Washington and Lee's hattered (Generals coma 1o grips with the pony express Virginia Polytechnic Institute. Kentucky's trial horse eleven engages the fiving squadron of Virginia Military Insti fute. rhe Mi bama Poly ard of the South into intersectional combat. The Mississippi aggrega- tion goes morth for a meeting with Indiana's lowly Big Ten hosts. and Marquette University's highly-tonted eleven comes South for the Auburn opposition ance is expected to reach 70,000, contest. When the thermometer registering around the zero mark—when roads are covered with sleet go his best. Navy seems to be in the same condition, and what should will determine the second athletic di et gria chamiplonship, Monday. aft: and snow—when howling ds and bitter cold cause the unprotected motorist to shiver and uate manager. The former is one of South be a great game Is in prospect. he last time Georgetown beat avy was back five years ago when Gil Dobie was coaching at Annapolis and Al Exendine was teaching the game at Georgetown. That score was 6 to 0. Jackle Maloney kicking two field goals. And tomorrow, with both teams presenting such brilliant and powerful lines, it- would not be a great surprise to see the game again decided by field goals. Tonight at the Willard the Univer- sity of Maryland !% to entertain a small group of Virgim. and Maryland men in Nonor of Dr. W. A. Lambeth and Dr. Albert Lefevre, who headed Virginia athletics for many vears and who have done more for the seneral betterment of athletics in the South than any other two men. iderable was written earlier in the week about Lambeth and Lefevre. but it is not amiss to reiterate that ton much credit cannot be given them for the splendid influences they have exerted. Very little will be done in the way of specchmaking. Chief Tydings. for- Maryland athlete recently elected to the United States Senate by the bizgest majority ever attained in a senatorial election in Maryland, is to t4lk for a few minutes and a reply from the Virginia men will be forth- coming from Dr. George O. Ferguson. chairman _of the general athletic board at Virginia. Georzetown's entire student’ hody will journey to Annapolis _tomorrow for the game with Navy. Extra seats have heen l‘,“-llh‘l‘ there is no king carve of all those that Persons that do not admitted desire have 1 s = will not be right he only Bve ahout 500 inithe Athletics Lou L The student body held a pep meet fng vesterday and enthusiasm ran hish. Georgetown feels its team has an even chance to beat Navy, no matter what others may think getown Tomorrow's game will he the first in which a Virginia football team has sppeared here in more than a decade, X WATTERS Genuine Imported Scotch Grain in Tan with Extra HeavySole. Speedy Young Men's Last | Greeners Con- | d | ning 1 f Director | the solid and progressive representa- tives in the Southern Conference and the latter is a man who has developed fine relationship for Virginia with many schools. - Both have done one big thing for Virginia in three vears, which has been to place Virginia in good relationship with its sister in- stitutions In the State of Virginia. And that has meant more to Virginia than anybody, except a few, realize. Gallnudet yesterday finished a hard ion of practice for its game tomor- with Delaware. The Kendall are hopeful of winning, though they realize they will have no better than an even chance. Coach Hughes is optimistic, but has told his team that it will have to put forth everything it has to finish with the big end of the scor se: row Catholic University is at Worcester for its annual setto with Holy Cross. The Brooklanders know the kind of team they are up against and are not laborinz upder delusions as tq the task that confronts them. They hope to win, but will be perfectly satisfied | to hold *“The Cross” to a low score. | . George Washington plays Randolph- | Macon College here. The visitors do {not seem strong enough to put up much of a battle against the local | eleven. though. as often sald, anything |can happen in a foot ball game in | these days. WASHINGTON GUN CLUB | HOLDS SHOOT TOMORROW Scatter gun artists of Washington Gun Club will face the traps at Ben- tomorrow afternoon in their ar weekly test, and as usual will ve for trophies for high scratch agded target handicap scores. Distance handicap events will be | staged after the 30-target race and, | doubles also are carded. RADIATORS, FENDERS BODIES MADE AND REPAIRED NEW RADIATORS FOR AUTOS | WITTSTATT’S R. & F. WKS. 319 13th N.W. 1423 P, REAR. . SHOPS Vanderbilt vs. Tennessee at Nash- ille. S abama vs. Florida at Montgomery. Washington and Lee vs. Virgin Poly at Lynchburg. i Louisiana State vs. Mississippi at Baton Rouge. South Carolina vs. Furman at Co- Carolina vs. Davidson at| Davidson. T:lh::‘e va. Sewanee at New Orleans. Alabama Poly vs. Marquette at Birm- ingham, R Forest vs. William and Mary Norfolk i The Citadel at Clemson. Cl ":“I'I‘l:::‘::i Southwestern at Ed- mond. g Flon vs. Lynchburg at Elon. Kentucky Wesleyan vs. Louisville | t Winchester. M oiahoma Aggies vs. Grinnell at Stillwater. . Oklahoma City University vs. South- east Teachers at Oklahoma Cit; Richmond vs. Hampden-Sidney at Richmond. Arkansas vs. Texas Christian at Fayettevill WHO'S WHO IN TRUCKDUM ‘»9 Motor Trucks Fr. 1170 228 First St. N.W. DURABILITY —we mine the ore and build the trucks. With lasting qualities in ind in evers step of the construc- up to a perfect product. ernoon at the Dreadnaught Park, in a game starting at 3 o'clock. The two teams met last Tuesday, but battled to a scoreless tie at Ballston, Va. Alexandria Fire Department Prep are to Play the Friendships team of ‘Washington here Sunday. Sunday #% Dreadnaught Park Alex- andria Fire Department is to play the Stanton A. C. St. Mary's Seniors have announced their opponent as the Immaculate Conception team of Washington for the preliminary to the St. Mary's Cel- tics-Washington Palace pro game which will be played in the Alexandria Armory November 20. SPORT MART RAINCOATS y ,"n.a Women’s | Green $6.95 Hats to Match, $2.00 E “Children’s | 1 Ccllegiate Slickers B bl el Hunters’ Supplies Lefever Hammerless Shot Guns, all gauges Ithaca Hammerless Shot Guns, all gauges A. H. Fox Hammerless Shot Guns, all gauges. $24.75 $32.50 $35 Also complete stock following shot guns: Parker Bros., L. C. Smifh, Rem- ington Automatic and Winchester Pump Guns, priced right. $12.50 Single Barrel Shot Guns. Automatic Ejec- tor, all gauges. .. .. $8.95 Always—there is an indefin- able elegande to a Snyder & Little Shoe that fits in with a gentleman's idca of good dress. Modish S itile Hosicry “Like a hair cut and fresh collar—you’ve got to have it,” says BOYD, architect he means GLO-CO LIQUID HAIR DRESSING ‘Whreae is the prosperous busi- ness or professional man who isn’t well-groomed? Glo-Coing the hair is a regular morning practice with successful men everywhere. It keeps the hair neat and in place all day. 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