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3 3R e, = SPORTY, ... THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ©, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1928.° SPORTS: - Georgetown Faces Toughest Tussle of Campaign Against New York U. Tomorrow COLONIALS APPEAR INBEST TILT HERE Maryland Is Weakened for V. P. 1. Clash—Good Games Plentiful. BY H. C. BYRD. OT one of the local college approaches an easy game to- morrow. Even American Uni- versity, which plays one of the three contests scheduled here, is likely to get all the opposition it is for from Bridgewater College. does not take any stretch of the imagi- nation to understand what Georgetown is up against in meeting New York Uni- versity. Maryland, with a crippled team, is bound to have its trouble with Virginia Polytechnic Institute at Nor- folk, and Catholic University at Rutgers and George Washington against Wil- liam and Mary, here, may consider themselves to have done extraordinarily well if sunset finds them with victories to their credit. George Washington and Willlam and Mary take part in the best local game. And the game ought to be well played. William and Mary was barely beaten by Catholic University by 13 to 12, and the contest is likely to give something of a line on the comparative strength of George Washington and Catholic University, which meet in their game ‘Thanksgiving day. William and Mary is coached by Branch Bocock, former Georgetown star quarterback. And in- asmuch as William and Mary has a team that may be depended on to put up a good battle, and as George Wash- ington, if it gets its full strength on the field, may make a surprisingly good showing, the game may develop a lot more good foot ball than anybody expects . Hoyas Meeting a Tartar. Georgetown goes to New York to bat- tle one of the strongest elevens in the country. The Blue and Gray is not try- ing to fool itself one bit about the kind of team it must face and knows that it must put out all it has and more if it is to make the right kind of show- ing. New York University has a team that apparently is going at top speed, or was a week ago. Any eleven that can defeat Colgate by more than 40 points must be a real foot ball team. Georgetown, of course, has a good team. It has not done anything against the opposition it has had to indicate it might whip Colgate by s)‘ih a score as that, but it did beat Duke University by 35 to 0, a team that Navy barely whipped 6 to 0. If Georgetown takes the Gothamites into camp it will be a great thing for Hilltop foot ball. And it also will be a great accomplishment for Coach Lou Little. Incidentally, if Little beats New York University he may carry his team through the greatest season any George- town eleven ever has had, and such a result might bring to fruition the rumors that have persisted to the effect that University of Pennsylvania is anxious to have Little back to take charge of foot ball there. Little grad- uated from Penn, foot ball at Penn and nobody is more familiar with conditions around - Franklin Field than he. & e P At any rate, Georgetown is hoping for something of an upset in its game with elevens has anything that even LOCAL TEAMS. Georgetown vs. New York U, New York. George Wi vs. William and ‘ashington Mary, Central Stadium, 2:30 o’clock. Maryland vs. V. P. I, Norfolk, Va. Gallaudet vs. Shepherd College, Ken- dall Green, 3 o'clock. Maryland Freshmen vs. Vi ia Mili- tary Institute Freshmen, C Park, 1:15. Catholic University vs. Rutgers, New Brunswick, N. J. American U. vs. Bridgewater College, St. Alban’s Field, 3 o’clock. Emerson vs. Staunton M. A, Staun- New York U. It believes it has an out- side ‘chance to win, and when any Georgetown team believes that, that team may, depended on to put up & great fight.> York University prob- ably is not , and soft, in all regulars at the , 1 to play in at least part of it. Replacements Undecided. No decision has been reached as to who will take the ‘places of these play- ers. It is Hikely that Lombard will go to end from tackle to fill Heagy’s job, and Fisher fill in at the tackle vacated by Lombard, The ts for the vacant halfback itions will go to Parsons, Blackistone, Warcholy and Evans. Virginia Pol, Insttiute has one of its teams, its main strength resting in two fine sets of Lacks. Its’line probably is not as mogg as it was a year ago, but its backfl undoubtedly is better. It defeated North Carolina two weeks ago by 16 to 14 in & great battle, which would seem to in- dicate it_has something of an edge on the Old Liners, as North Carolina won gu;r;uwmmncrmmeyenhyu Every section of the country offers some good es tomorrow. The best ones scheduled in the East, except that between Georgetown and New York University, are to be between Cornell and Columbia, Yale and Dartmouth, Pittsburgh and Syracuse, Penn State and Notre Dame. The Penn State- Notre Dame contest is to take place in Philadelphia, at Franklin Field, in the absence of Pennsylvania, which is play- ing at Chicago. Yale ought to win from Dartmouth, unless the latter shows a great reversal of the form it exhibited at Harvard a week ago. Practically all these teams have been whipped, but at that they will put up mighty good foot ball contests. Every one of these should be well worth seeing, and, after all, none of the teams has been defeated in a game in which it failed to play good foot ball. Cornell lost & 3-to-0 game tp Princeton, Pitt has been whip- ped by two close scores and Syracuse by & margin of one point, and both Penn State and Notre Dame have gone down before worthy foes. Princeton Facing Trouble. Princeton journeys out to Columbus to meet Ohio State, and unless it plays better foot ball than it has shown in any game so far is likely to come back defeated. Ohio State seems to have taken a new lease on life this year and has been mopping up its gridiron pretty regularly with its opponents. Harvard has a set-up in Lehigh, if the result of the Princeton-Lehigh game two weeks ago is any criterion, the Tigers having whipped that school 41 to 0. Pennsylvania certainly should gain one victory in the Middle West for the East when it meets Chicago. The Quak: ers are not going to encounter any great opposition, if Chicago’s record so far {s a true story of its strength. Stagg's eleven has had rocky going right from the beginning of the season, when it lost two games in one day, and Penn certainly ought to come back with a scalp. Alabama is representing the South in a game in the Middle West, being at Madison, Wis., to face University of Wisconsin. but the chances are that it will give ‘Wisconsin more of a battle than Wis- consin ordinarily would expect from a Southern eleven. Illinois and Michigan are due to fight out their rivalry, al- though Michigan has not been doing well enough to indicate that it stands much chance of winning. However, the Wolverines have been coming along and it is not beyond the realm of possibility for them to hand Zuppke's men a jolt. "The biggest game on the Pacific Coast Alabama lost to Tennessee, ; ton, Va. Howard vs. West Virginia College, How- ard Stadium. EAST. SOUTH. Georgia Tech vs. Oglethorpe, Atlanta. Georgia vs. Auburn, Columbus, Ga. Vanderbilt vs. Kentucky, Nashville, Tenn. Sewanee vs. Florida, Jacksonville. Texas vs. Southern Methodists, Austin, Tex. Tulane vs. Millsaps, New Orleans. Louisiana State vs. Arkansas, Shreve- port. Mississippi vs. Clemson, ‘Oxford, Miss. Texas Aggies vs. North Texas Teachers, College Station, Tex. Tennessee vs. Carson-Newman, Knox- ville, Tenn. Atlanta vs. Morehouse, Atlanta. Birmingham Southern vs. Centenary, Bi ham. irming] Bishop vs. Texas College, Marshall. Bowl?:; Green vs. Louisville, Bowling Navy vs. West Virginia Wesleyan, An- Colgate vs. Wabash, Hamilton, N. Y. Maine vs. Colby, Orono, Me. ‘Williams ‘'vs. Union, Schenectady. Boston U. vs. Springfield, Boston. Drexel vs. New York Aggies, Philadel- phia. Duquesne vs. Westminster, Pittsburgh. Gettysburg vs. Dickinson, Harrisburg, Pa. Haverford vs. Franklin Marshall, Haver- ford, Pa. Niagara vs. Clarkson, Niagara Falls. lele;M vs. C. C. New York, Troy, Rochester vs. Oberlin, Rochester. St. John vs. Providence, Brooklyn. Schuylkill vs. Temple, Reading, Pa. Susquehanna vs. Pa. Military, Selins- grove, Pa. Swarthmore vs. Delaware, Swarthmore. Juanita vs. St. John's (Annapolis), Huntingdon, Pa. ' Thiel vs. Allegheny, Greenville. Tufts vs. New Hampshire, Boston, Vermont vs. Norwich, Burlington. SOUTH ATLANTIC. North Carolina vs. North Carolina State, Raleigh, N. C. Virginia vs. Washington and Lee, Char- lottesville, Va. V. M. L vs. Davidson, Lexington, Va. Duke vs. Mercer, Durham, N. C. Richmond vs. Lynchburg, Richmond. Wake Forest vs. Furman, Charlotte, G Johns ‘Hopkins vs. Randolph Macon, more. Western Maryland vs. Loyola, Balti- more. Mount St. Mary's vs. Washington Col- m Emmitsburg, Md. vs. Manchester, Richmond. Concord vs. Davis-Elkins, Portsmouth. Bluefield vs. Virginia State, Norfolk. Guilford vs. Atlantic Christian, Guil- Lenoir-Rhyne vs. Ma: Asheville, Parris Island Marines vs. Cumberland, Parris Island. Roanoke vs. Hampden-Sidney, Roanoke. Wosflwgd vs. Georgetown, Spartanburg, is between Stanford and Southern Cali- fornia, Howard Jones coaches the later | and Glen Warner the former, and bot! know how to turn out foot ball teams. Carolina Title at Stake. Down at Raleigh the University of North Carolina and North Carolina State hook up in their old rivalry. Last year North Carolina State got a victory by three touchdowns, to none, but the Chapel Hill men haveé been looking for- ward to getting even this week. However, North Carolina State may be better than its early season record has seemed to indicate, as Gus Tebell knows that if he can beat Carolina his season is a success no matter what else may hap- pen and no matter what has happened. He probably has brought his eleven along gradually with the idea of getting it in the best possible shape for what he considers his biggest game. Washington and Lee journeys to Charlottesville to meet Virginia. Both teams have suffered reverses the last two weeks, and each is pinning its faith on retrieving its fortunes at the expense of the other. Whatever may be the.re- sult of its game with Rutgers, Catholic University may be depended on to give the New Brunswick eleven the best it has. And in any game in which the Brooklanders have a fair chance, their fighting spirit will carry them & long way. Rutgers is likely to get a real bat- tle from the Brooklanders. s e Fisk vs. Tuskegee, Nashville. Loyola vs. St. Edward, New Orleans. vs. Rollins, Miami, Fla. ice vs. Southwestern, Houston. MIDWEST. Northwestern vs. L Kansas vs. Nebraska, Lawrence. Michigan State vs. Mississippi East Lansing. Missouri vs. ke, Columbia, Mo. Haskell Indians vs. Washington U., St. Louis. u Towa vs. South Dakota, Towa City. Towa State vs. Oklahoma, Ames. Margquette vs. Grinnell, Grinnell, ue vs. Case, Lafayette. Ohio Wesleyan vs. Wooster, Delaware, Ohio. South Dakota State vs. Creighton, Cle; Miami vs. Ohio U., Oxford, Ohio. Western Reserves vs. Akron, Cleveland. FAR WEST. Southern California vs. Stanford, Los Angeles. California vs, Oregon, Berkeley. Idaho vs. Washington State, Moscow, Tdaho. M?)ntlnl vs. Oregon State, Corvallis, Ne'm vs. California Aggies, Sacra- ito. Ufinn Colorado College, Salt Lake City. Wuhin‘ton vs. Puget Sound, Tacoma, ‘Wash. Arizona vs. New Mexico, Tucson, Ariz. Colorado "College vs. Colorado Mines, rolden, Colo. Colorado’ Aggies vs. Utah Aggies, Fort Collins, Colo. Brigham Young vs. Montana State, Bozeman, Mont. EASTERN GRID TEAM GAINS SOME PLAYERS Eastern, which is heading the public high school foot ball title race with two wins in as many starts, will present a strengthened line-up usiness Tuesday in Central Stadium. If the Lincoln Parkers trim the Stenogs they will have only Tech to overcome to as- sure a clean record for the series. Tech, however, is expected to prove Eastern’s stumbling block, the Maroon being picked by most eritics to land the title. Oxley and Burns, backs, and Healy, Spears and Beard, linemen, are new players who have joined the Eastern squad following completion of the first advisory period. Oxley, howeevr, prob- | ably is the only one of the lot who will i be in the starting line-up against Busi- | ness. He probably will play quarterback in place of Capt. Billy Wood, who likely will be placed at the end now occupled by Eaton Chalkley. scholastic eleven of the District grouj tomorrow Emerson Institute will stack up against Staunton Military Academy's team at Staunton, Va. Heading the schoolboy foot ball card here this afternoon was the Tech- Western public high school title game in Central Stadium. In other matches Devitt and George Washington Fresh- men were to meet at the Tidal Basin, St. John’s _and Catholic University Freshmen at Brookland and Gonzaga and Georgetown Prep at Garrett Park, {Md. A game carded between St. Al- ban’s and Dunham School of Baltimore on the St. Alban’s field ‘this afternoon has been cancelled. ! TIP FOR FISHERMEN. HARPER'S FERRY, W. Va, Novem- In the only grid game involving a|hold th FOOT BALL VICTORS PICKED BY EXPERTS Bill Roper, Princeton. coach, makes ;"::"“‘“ for tomorrow in East and uth: East and South. Amberst-Massachusetts Aggies—Am- herst. o Boston College - Manhattan — Boston Brown-Holy Cross—Brown. Bucknell- nova—Bucknell. Columbia-Cornell — Cornell by close score. Georgia-Alabama Poly- Gettysl -Dickinson—Gettys A M“{ehl;h—mmnl. Maryland-V. P. I—V. P. L Ohio State-Princeton—Uncertain. University Pennsylvania - Chicago— Pennsylvania. Pittsburgh-Syracuse—Close game. Penn State-Notre Dame—Cl odds in favor of Notre Dame. Swarthmore-Delaware—Swarthmore. Tennessee-Carson Newman—Tennes- see. Texas-Southern Methodist—Southern Methodist. Tufts-New Hampshire—Tufts. Army-De Pauw—Army. Navy-West Virginia Wesleyan—Navy. Vanderbilt-Kentucky—Vanderbilt. V. M. L-Davidson—V. M. L Virginia-Washington and Lee—Vir- Yale-Dartmouth—Close, Bob Zuppke, Illinois mentor, picks ‘em in Middle West: Mid-West Saturday. Ohio State-Princeton—The Buckeyes, with more scoring punch and season- ing in tough games, have an excellent Photos By BAker_ MARYLAND U. YEARLINGS TO PLAY V. M. I. ELEVEN! While the University of Maryland varsity eleven is at Norfolk tomorrow to play Virginia Poly, the Old Line year- lings will entertain the Virginia Military Institute Freshmen at College Park in a game beginning at 1:15 o’clock. Rooney, left end; Hayden, left guard; Faber, center; Wilson, right tackle, and May, halfback, are Washington boys wt:g! are slated to start for the Old Line cubs, OHIO STATE T0 ADD opportunity to win. Tilinois-Michigan—Illinois expects a tough onme against Michigan’s developed defense, which nelrlyui:ll; lisconsin scoreless. Northwestern-Minnesota—Northwest- ern will hardly have the scoring punch. Wisco -Alabama — Probably the Badgers, but Alabama will be keyed. Chicago-Pennsylvania — All depends upon Chicago’s physical _condition. Penn’s condition may turn the tide. Notre-Dame-Penn State—I favor the Irish because they probably have more dangerous backs. Jowa-South Dakota— A breathing spell for Towa, and they will need it after that Minnesota battle. Purdue-Case—A chance for the Pur- due substitutes. Nebraska-K a nsa s—Nebraska has every reason to expect a’decisive vic- tory. Missouri-Drake — Missouri has the edge. Oklahoma-Towa State—Oklahoma has more scoring power, but the Ames boys scrap. Marquette-Grinnell — Anything may happen here, but Marquette probably has a shade, Detroit-St. Louis—Detroit should be stronger. Washington-Haskell — Washington is favored. Oklahoma Aggies-Oklahoma City Uni- versity—Aggies have an edge, but it looks like a ball game. Howard Jones, South California tutor, “dopes” ’em for Pacific Coast: Stanford-Southern California — Do) favors Stanford, but battle should close. I do not give up, by any means. California-Oregon — Oregon has best backs, but California defense should em even. Washington State-Idaho—Should re- sult in great struggle, with State win- ning. u:)l;em State-Montana—Oregon State Pomona-Redlands—Pomona easily. FOOT BALL YESTERDAY. Howard, 6; Mississippi, 6. South Carol i Citadel, 0. __Wofford, 25; Presbyterian College, 0. PimlicoRaces November 1 to 14, inc. First Race, 1:15 P.M.—Admission. $1.50 Special Tri 0. R. R. Lv. Washi 40 AM, Due Balto. (Camden Sta)) 1250 P.M. requent Trains ber 2—The Potomac and Shenandoah Rivers were clear this ¥ Penns, R. R. “1.[:; B. & A. Electrio e TO ATHLETIC PLANT, By the Associated Press. COLUMBUS, Ohio, November 2—Foot ball, that built and paid for Ohio State University’s gigantic stadium, is to be utilized during the next 10 years to finance a $1,750,000 physical education, recreation and af ding pro- gram at the university. Announcement of the ‘was made last night after a meet& of the university athletic board. ‘The program calls for the erection of five new buildings and the inclosure of the sides of the stadium with steel sash and glass. The stadium improvements will cost approximately $100,000 and will be made first. Erection of proposed buildings in the order for completion are natatorium, intramural sports building, women's ?‘eld house, varsity field house and boat- ouse, Recent liquidation of the last of the indebtedness on the Ohio stadium, which originally stood at more than $1,750,000 makes possible a start on the new program. YALE HAS NOT LOST 70 BIG GREEN TEAM By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, November 2. — If Dartmouth should beat Yale or Penn State should beat Notre Dame tomor- row it would be the first time on record that such a feat had been accomplished. Here are the facts and figures on a half dozen foot ball rivalries, including these two, which feature the day’s pro- Yale won nine and Dartmouth not any in rivalry begun in 1884; one game was tied. day about the Georgetown-New ‘ankee dium count the s th of ‘Washington!| e defeated and untied. to develo] head. S; Penn won five and Chicago one with cne tle, since 1898. Notre Dame won one from Penn State and one game was tied in two meetings since 1925. Washington and Jefferson won fire, Lafayette four and one was tied, since 1898. Cornell won 10 and Columbia four, with one tie, since 1889. Minnesota won nine and Northwest- ern two, with one tie, since 1892, G. U. TO PLAY. WESTERN ' MARYLAND NEXT FALL Georgetown University’s foot ball team will meet Western Maryland next Fall on October 5 in Clark Griffith Stadium. The game will be the first on the grid- iron between the schools. Western Maryland, tutored by Dick Harlow, former Penn State and Colgate coach, has been turning out strong teams for several seasons. A. L. MEETS DECEMBER 11, CHICAGO, November 2 (#).—The annual meeting of the American Leaguc has been set for December 11 in Chi- cago by President E. S. Barnard. The Natlonal League will meet in New York on .the same day. TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats EISEMAN'S, 7th & F GLO-CO LIQUID HAIR DRESSING s ary as the eces have week by Yale and Dartmout all the injured fail to get into the game at New Heven it will look like a battle between a third-string Yale eleven and Dartmouth’s fourth-string. MANY GRID GAMES PUZZLE “EXPERTY” G. U.-N. Y. U. Contest Is One in Which They Are Slow to Make a Choice. BY HERBERT W. BARKER. Assaciated Press Sports Writer. NEW YORK, November 2.—Foot ball prognosticators were especially timid to- York Sta- W, incline in the general direc- University contest at the Y Experts tion of New York University, but there is no attempt on the part of any to dis- the invading ians. Both teams are un- New York University has come to that position by way of tougher opposition but Georgetown has piled up the greater number of points and has the better defensive record. ¥ Others Hard to Pick. Cornell's battle with Columbia is an- other that looms as an even-stephen sort of an affair. Cornell put uj derful display of defensive a won- oot ball inst Princeton last Saturday but the offensive was, and has been, woefully weak. Columbia, - which lost Hank Kumpf and a game to Dertmouth two weeks ago, does not seem nearly so for- ;{xéd;ble as it did with Kumpf in the eup. ‘There's Syracuse and Pittsburgh, too, wrinkles in any expert’s fore- Pitt has been beaten twice and yracuse was nosed out by Nebraska and tied by Penn State yet, both have powerful teams. The only difficulty is to_pick out the strong ger. n_State meets Notre Dame at Pen) Philadelphia in the only outstanding intersectional game scheduled in the East. The Nittany Lions battle Rockne'’s eleven at Philadelphia, taking advant- age of the fact that Pennsylvania.has evacuated Franklin field and departed for Chicago. Army and Col have not too much trouble Depauw and Wabash, but Princeton, an unbeaten team, may not return in the same condition after meeting Ohio State at Columbus. should of Bear stories have been ?revnlent all h camps. If better his fobacco t That’'s why so many men are turning to ®1a BriarTobacco “THE BEST PIPE SMOKE EVER MADE!" United States Tobaceo Go., Richmond, Ve, U, 8. 4 | - urapped: Every pipe smoker knows that t HOYAS ARE PRIMED FORVIOLET HORE Hilltoppers on Short End of Betting, but Are in a Fighting Mood. BY JOHN B. KELLER. EW YORK, November 2.—A nice, clean 1928 foot ball record seems in for a fine smearing here tomorrow afternoon. Up this way folks are loudly de- claring it will not be that of the New York University eleven. But the many followers of the Georgetown varsity team at hand seem to feel that the New Little's athletes tackle Chick Mechan's huskies in Yankee Stadium. They have great faith in their team, these George- town followers, and the stories of the great gridiron prowess of the unshrink- ing Violet they are hearing from every side isn’t diminishing that faith. Be that as it may, it does appear right now that Georgetown is in for its toughest tussle of the campaign. The Hoyas, unbeaten and scoring leaders of the Nation, will bump into another un- beaten team that has everything in its favor to continue its victorious stride, past performances and present condi- tion indicate. New York University will outweigh Georgetown, will have more and reputedly better substitutes available and will enter the fray with whatever advantage may come from having played teams of stronger caliber than thosc the Hoyas have encoun- tered. New York University Is Favorite. Consideration of New York Univer- sity’s accomplishments to date and a look at its squad of behemoths leaves no doubt as to why the Violet is a big favorite over the Blue and Gray. One can't laugh away New York University's wins over Fordham and Colgate, espe- Yorke s will be surprised when Lou|to revealed all his- foot ball-strategy' ‘in five games the certain. There' New York University, fully’ drilled New Yorkers: will find . in Georgetown ~ another smooth- g combination. Little's team is well versed fundamentals, and its' screened at- for the Violet tack may not. be so easy to solve. For the first time in: three weeks Oeonetuown will send into x.t:m ‘what now regarded as r eleven. Provincial and Tomlnlm at ends, Mooney and ‘Liston at tackles, Capt. Carroll and Cordovano.at and Wyni at.ceénter. - Hudak will ve- turn’ to the backfleld for the first-time since he was injured in a drill nearly . _With him behind the line will be Dwyer and Barabas ] g & 5 2 with Duplin directing: play. No_stars here, ‘verhnps, but a great lot of foot ball players. This was an easy day for- the teams that are to clash tomorrow. George- town's warriors, who reached here last night, journeyed to Yankee Stadium for a brief drill this afternoon, while the Violet was sent through its paces on its home lot, Ohio Field. Yes, it was & nice day for the boys, with liftle do. Tomorrow it will be different. FRESHMEN TRIUMPH . IN G. U. TRACK MEET That Georgetown University varsity track teams will have plenty of stréng material in the next few seasons was dermonstrated yesterday. when fresh- men athlefes swept the annual ‘infer- class meet on the Hilltop, finishing with 44 points. Sopohomores, with 29 points, were . second and - juniors seniors were .tied at 26 points. Presenting a well “team: the freshmen contrived to in all i o Beston: B frlor , & , turned in’ best feat of the day tossing 35-pound weight 53 feet'2 inches. Sex- ton, Incidentally, won three events to take individual honors. Downing, a freshman, staged -the cially the signal triumph over the up- staters, and again one can’t laugh away that New York University squad. It's about the best looking collection of hu- when Meehan sees to anything in a foot ball way he makes a thorough job of it. This doesn’t mean, of course, that Georgetown hasn’t a chance. Tha would be foolish to say in the face of what the Blue and Gray has done this season. Any team that can roll up a be something of a scoring machine, even though its opponents perhaps were not of very high grade. At that, West Virginia Wesleyan and Duke, the last two teams faced by Georgetown, were not weaklings. There’s much to be said of George- town'’s defensive ability, too. But seven points have been registered against it in its five engagements. And those points were made late in the West Vir- ginia Wesleyan clash, when an alert Bobcat scooped up a Hoya fumble and raced from midfield to goal. Several times foes have gotten within town's 20-yard line, but always foun a stone wall blocking further progress. Thus far, Georgetown seems to have been as thoroughly coached in defense ;s in attack, and that’s saying a great leal. Coach Little of the Hoyas has said that New York University may have been hurt to some extent by banking too heavily on last Saturday’s tilt with Colgate, that the Violet might have off color for the Georgetown test. Hoyas Will Not Wait. But Little isn't figuring greatly on such a possibility. Instead he's im- pressing upon his charges at the last minute, as he has for the past two weeks, that what does to- morrow will mean much more than any- thing New York U. doesn’t do. In other words, he has endeavored to make his gridironers realize that they must make, not wait for, New York U. to break. ‘Tomorrow will show how well the Hoyas have learned their lesson. Georgetown is to enter the fray prac- tically a starless aggregation, so well balanced has it been in its recent en- gagements. On the other hand, New York U. seems to be a collection of stars with the redoubtable Ken Strong the brightest of the cluster. this remarkable back, who is the leading scorer of the country, is hailed as cer- tain all-America timber. With Strong in the regular backfield are Hill, a de pendable interferer; Follett, rangy Capt. Lassman of the Violet is report- ed one of the finest tackles of the year, and Schneider is said to be as powerful a center as a coach could desire. The other members of the varsity are not far from stellar ranking, according to the ballyhooing New Yorkers. Quite a formidable array and one well coached, it would seem. Those who have watched the Vialet lt: lcfigg dl:ycl:t‘;e :;nt few foot ball ams p! e thorough drilling it has shown in its games. The rhythm is there, the team’s pu?ose is decisive and its tactics are sound, say these ob- servers. The huddle from which the team swings into action is carefully timed and works with asf smoothness, they add. 'Tis said there is unity of action offensively and defen- sively which is highly disconcerting to teams of equal power, but with a lesser degree of careful drilling. Sounds as though New York Uni- versity is just about good enough to romp to victory over any team that opposes it, doesn’t it? Well, George- town may have a few trick up its sleeve to spring on the Violet. Little hasn't h he better his smoke: o total of 240 points in five games must | 42 most exciting finish, when he closed -::lr&mtly in ti:e m:lt.; nmmw overhaul conquer Augustine, who, ) o ly, had won. vpatm ‘Summaries: 100-yard “dash—W ; second. Tntrocasso (sgphomore), ¢h ‘,‘5’(?3‘; Grggbmany e, Th4y ssconds. PEDT R R by Whaien {sentor). - o (freshman); 3407 by Carlin_ (freshman): rd, Ricca ird {2 second, s reshmany. Time. $315 seconds. i-mile ran—won Downing _ (fresh- Augustine (sophomare): Time, 4 minutes man); _ second, third, Hennessy (Janior. 130cyand” hurdles—Won by Farrell (so - e - a, 4mha=3r'§: Time, 1435 more); cecond, Leiberman fhird." Prickl - (treshmam . A0-yard ren—Won by Fitzgerald ( - man): «econd. Kel'v (freshman): Briers (freshman) Time. 2:0425 secon: Pols vault—Tied for first. Lingle (Ji ) and Cosh (senior): third, Bonniwell (f - T itius Shrow Wor by Seiton (haalor): . Distance, 141 fes J Bt e T FagTel senlen pisvance, 3L e 8 on i e e o SRR 2-mile _run—Won by ie (fgesh- 5?34:“ n). Time, 10 minutes 9§ Figh inmp—Won by ‘Sextan (junior): sec- ond, Carrigan (h’t‘hmw an); third, B\:I\nl'lll l(r'!h.mlill Height, 5 feet 7 inches. . ou : e iy g, Stout (sophomore). m:'t‘ance. 53 feet irches. 5 MARINES ARE WITHOUT. - ‘Tom Keady’s' Marine eléven: will] tomorrow, -as - the = clash ; with ] University ‘of Los. Am : wu' team will play - Washirigton in Norfolk next: Saturdsy; a S..C.-CITADEL PLAY .TIE: Get New U.:S.. Tires Now— Pay Later ‘Winter's - coming ‘soon giag '.'E,E H £y LH !f | i iih; ficid ) i £ sFre | GRID GAME -TOMORROW