Evening Star Newspaper, October 18, 1930, Page 22

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SPORTS. THE KVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. ' Catholic U. Strong in Grid Game Tonight : Big Contests Dot All Sections Today REGULARS RETURN FOR LOYOLA TILT Cardinals Have Full Power for First Time Since Campaign Opened. \ ATHOLIC UNIVERSITY, ‘ with its first-string back- field intact for the first » time this season, will meet Loyola College of Baliimore to- night at Grifith Stadium at 8:15 o'clock. The Cardinals look for victory but a stiff contest. Loyola in its last game swamped Washington College, 33 to 7, having previously | lost to Rider College, 7 to 0. Handicapped from the start by in- uries to regulars, the Cardinals have ad rocky traveling. They took a se- vere lacing from Boston College, were beaten decisively by Franklin and Mar- shall and then by Holy Cross, but in the latter game they showed promise of | better things to come. First Team Smart. The Cardinals are capable of bril- Mant foot ball when all their first- stringers are in the line-up. Several won't be in the best of shape tonight, but it means a lot to C. U. to have them in there in mere playing condi- tion. The team is woefully weak in reserves. It will be the first game of the year for Fred Guarnieri, blocking quarter- back, who was a creditable performer last season. The return of Johnny Oliver to the backfield along with Carl De Mello is a great help. Bd O'Brien, right tackle, returns to action after a two-week lay-off. Loyola’s Threat. Loyola’s big threat is Dellaire, who is a particularly gifted passer, but runs and kicks above, average. The Cardi- nals will attempt to keep him well covered. This will be Catholic University’s first game under floodlights, but the Cardi- nals have had some experience in no turnal play, having had several work- outs at the ball park this week at night. Line-Ups of C.'U,, Loyola Tonight Positions. Loyola, No. gt end. _Curils 25 nter Plotezyk Simient pid. Ategucmack 11 13 Lyons . feh * Kane 3 12 Guarnier( § Bonaher 11 Sheary .. Catholic U. substitutes—Achstetter (33), Bertoni (24), Billinger (23), Cal- lahan (9), Conroy (18), De Mello (3), Flynn (29), Fraatz (8), Hepburn (7), ‘McGrath (14), Vezzozi (37), Kane (32), Maley (28), Whelan (26), Guarino (36), Herlihy (25), Nimphius (16), Quinn (33), Shallack (4), Stapleton (17). Loyola substitutes—Bell (15), Coon (22), Dunne (27), Ellis, (7), Nahn (28), Campbell (2), Duffy (16), Egan (12), Fleurent (1), Finnerty (8). Referee—Mr. Towers. Umpire—Mr. Schmid. Head Linesman—Mr. Kelly. Kick-off—8:15 p.m. WOODWARD TEAM WINS Shows Improvement in Beating Washington-Lee B Eleven. ‘BALLSTON, Va., October 18.—Show- marked Iumvement over its recent ith Western High, Wood- foot ball team triumphed over Washington-Lee High's “B” eleven 14 to 0, here yesterday afternoon. A forward pass, good for 30 yards, from Fred Birdseye to Daniel Moore netted Woodward's first touchdown in ! the second quarter. Frank Maniscalco made the extra point on an end‘run. A sustained drive in the fourth quarter | ended in Birdseye going off tackle for | ‘Woodward’s second touchdown. Birds- eye passed to Moore for the extra point. Singer, fullback, played best for the QUANTICO MARIN Show Way to Carlisle Grid Team | in 13-to-8 Game. QUANTICO, Va., Octoher 18.—Quan- tico Marine foot ball team conquered the eleven representing Carlisle, Pa., barracks, 13 to 6, here yesterday. Dailey, Leatherneck halfback, pro- vided the feature play when he dashed ES WIN ' | Kansas City, BY OSSIE SOLEM, Coach at Drake University. (Written for the Associated Press.) Another threat in the versatile Notre Dame offense has been added by Knute Rockne. It is a lateral pass, and its execution is camou- flaged by the fake of a short side spinner and criss-cross play. ‘The faked plays actually are run COLLETT, VAN WIE INGOLF STRUEGLE in Meet for Second Time Three Years for Women's Championship. | ; | By the Associated Press. 08 ANGELES, October, 18.—For the second time in three years Virginia Van Wie, one of the Middle West's foremost links stylists, today found herself pitted against Glenna Collett in the final of a | woman's national golf championship. “Miss Van Wie, from the Beverly Couns * try Club, Chicago, climbed to the heights in 1928, only to be ptunged to the depths by a 13-to-12 defeat by the great Glenna, who was winning her third national title. Two years have elapsed, during which | time Miss Collett set a record by taking | her fourth championship in 1929, while | Miss Van: Wie lost out in the second | round. Now Miss Van Wie is back to | challenge Miss Collett once again. ] The Chicago lass yesterday outdrove | and even outputted Mrs. O. S. Hill, | to win, 2 and 1, in the | semi-finals. Mrs. Hill also lost out in the semi-finals last year. | Miss Van Wie's triumph was not as | impressive as that of Queen Glenna, | who turned in the only par obliterat- ing round of the four semi-finalists to | Miss Helen Hicks, 5 and 3. | The fact that Mrs. Hill was off her | game may have been something of a | deciding factor in Miss Van Wie's ad- | vance to the finals, but the failure of | Miss Hicks to sustain her par-passing | pace apparently had nothing to do with | Glenna’s victory yesterday. The Queen was out in 40, ene under par, and fin- ished with a potential 77, duplicating 65 yartls in the second quarter to his team’s first touchdown. her own feat Thursday and that of Miss Hicks Wednesday. THE SPORTLIGHT || BY GRANTLAND RICE | Who Survives? IGHT of the strongest foot ball | teams in the United States of | America meet this today and the casualty list will be heavier | than ever by 4:30 pm. Here are the! games: | Notre Dame vs. Carnegle Tech at South Bend. | Harvard vs. Army at Bosten. Pennsylvania vs. Wisconsin at Madi- son. Tllincis vs. Northwestern at Urbana. These cight teams are not only un- beaten, but they have shown strength well above the average. They can all| step. And each one happens to be| meeting an opponent of almost equal | strength. 2 Notre Dame’s Test. It Notre Dame is to be beaten this | 220-pound Greek, is a human battering ram. Eyth is one of the best backs of the day. The line is strong and Steflen off first to confuse the defense. The sequence follows in this manner: In the criss-cross play, Schwartz, No. 1 back, makes a half turn to his right and gives the ball to No. 2 hack, who is either Savoldi or Mul- lins, for a wide dash to the short or weak side. In this instance, to the left, as the backfield is unbalanced to the right. This criss-cross, even if unsuccess- ful, at least should pull the opposing - tackle out toward his end to allow Schwartz the next time to spin com- pletely around, and buck the inside of the weak side of the line, after making a pretense at repeating the criss-cross. . By now Rockne expects the short side of the defensive end and tackle 10 be in a quandary, and they prob- ably are. So Schwartz again fakes the criss- cross to Savoldi, and then feints another spinner. By this time Caridco, No. 3, and Metzger, right guard, have had ample time to come around and harass the end, and Brill, No. 4, to come out and pro- tect Schwariz as he completes the turn and starts for the sidelines. As soon as Savoldi has got by the right end, Schwartz tosses him the ball over the head of the incoming cnd. Brill_continues on down the ficld to block the secondary. Grid Struggles On Card Today College. Loyola (Baltimore) vs. Catholic Uni- Velislt{ (night) Griffith Stadium, 8:15 o'clock. Maryland vs. St. John's (Annapolis) at High Foint, N. C. DeGa'uaudet vs. Delaware, at Newark, A Scholastic. Emerson vs. Staunton Military Acad- cmy at Staunton, Va. MARYLAND PARK HIGH IS SOCCER FAVORITE Hears County Title as It Beats Hyattsville Team in Keenly Contested Game. Maryland Park High School’s soccor team today rules a prime favorite to| win the Prince Georges County scholas- tic championship as the result of a surprise 3-1 triumph over Hyattsville High on Rosedale Playground. Hyatts- ville won .the title last season. It was the first victory Maryland Park High has scored in any major compcuuon‘; over Hyattsville. It was a red-hot battle all the way. Cecil Whittington and Noble Ward on attack and Alwin Schmidt and Goalie Lee Suit on defense stood out for Mary- land Park, For Hyattsville Warren | defeat her neighbor from Long Island, |Evans and Ernest Michaelson were most consistent. Hyattsville was the first to score, | shoving over its lone tally on I'fl:mflty kick in the first half, Evans booting the goal. Whittington later evened the score when he registered a penalty kick. Soon afterward Maryland Park worked the ball down to the Hyatts- ville goal following a& kick-off and Ward came through with a sparkling pass from scrimmage that was good for two goals and victory. ‘There was no further scoring. For the remainder of the game Maryland Park played a defensive contest and repulsed many desperate scoring_ attempts. | | As Told to | HIS 1s past history so recent that it seems impossible that everybody doesn’t know it. Still, | only a few have heard the story | and it never got into print. | Last year Dartmouth needed only a victory over Yale to give it its greatest season. | mendous score of 34 to 7, | down to New Haven a week later a 10- | to-8 favorite in the betting. The Bull- | dog was strong, end it had the great | Booth to match against the unsurpassed | Marsters at quarter, but the Big Green ! seemed to have the edge. | Yale beat Dartmouth 16 to 12. Ellis | of the Blue intercepted a forward pass | when Tommy Longnecker slipped as he tossed the ball, and made a long run to a touchdown. Tommy, by the way, got & great panning from a large sec- |tion of the press and public, for up to | that time Dartmouth was leading, 12-10. This was unjust. It is said by some of those who ought to know that if a cer- tain Dartmouth player had been where he should have been on the play the ss would not have gone astray. Then g‘nle would have been beaten. But Temmy had to be the goat. Perhaps there was another reason y the Green lost. Len Clark, first « - wh; Hyattsville | giring halfback, one of the mainstays of the team, because he was—among Maryland Park booters, who hadioxhnr things—that rare bird, a really previously heaten Laurel while Hyatts- ville was downing Upper Marlboro, wil battle it out next I'riday with the other group winners for county laurels. It is not thought Maryland Park will have a great deal of difficulty in trimming | Notre Dame waiting and the first of | can always be depended on to provide an attack none too easy to break up. the other group champions |, Robert Wilson is coach of the Mary- | |1and Park team. William D. Hines, The Other Three Games. oty A SiWayN B ENNSYLVANIA, with one of her|taken an active interest in athletics at | best teams, has now left the soft|the school, which was established in | pastures for the jungle on ahead. 1925, | There are Wisconsin, Kansas and | b ¢ PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE. Sacramento, 9; Portland, 3. San_ Francisco, 9; Missions, 8. 7; Seattle, 6. Los | these is Wisconsin, rated as cne of | | the strongest teams in the conference. | Pennsylvania moves on to Madison where her fast backs, Gentle, Masters, Greene, Gette, etc., vill need all they | have t0 make much ground. Neither Harvard nor the Army has yet faced any stiff opposition, but both get the | Harvard’s strength is well known, pro- vided the Crimson’s cripple list is put into shape. There has been a general | feeling tnat the Army must be weak | | with Cagle and Murreil missing, where- | as the Army will be stronger than it | was a year ago with a better all around | Fall by anybody, which may not hap- pen, it is as likely to be by Carnegie ‘Tech as any one else. Judge Wally Stetlen has the ma- terial this Fall, and he has a team | that carries speed, power and a be- wildering assortment of plays. He has the line and the backfield and two fine ends. Above all that, Carncgie Tech seems to feel each year that it can take the South Bend cyclone and put it in a cellar. Even when Notre Dame had the four horsemen, Carnegic Tech gave Rockne’s team a terrific battle and ‘came near winning. In 1926 Carncgie beat a strong Notre Dame team, 19 to 0. Two years ago Carnegie won, something like 27 to 7. Last Fall Notre Dame won by a single touchdown, 7 to 0. ie is unquestionably stronger than last Fall. It i largely a matter of stopping that South Bend backfield, headed by one of the best sets of backs the game has scen in years—Savoldi, , Schwartz, Mullins and Carrideo— to name cnly a few. ‘They are big. fast, rugged and equip- to put on any type of offense. But all that Notre Dame will meet a rival that is mlntonn. not_to make & ) good showing, but win, Kareis, the BY FRANCIS J. POWERS. distribution of backficld strength, with | teveral backs to handle iha job only one | or two men have ce ior four years. v Vo fine backs. are of help. | been favored to win | We nominate Flelding H. Yost | of Michigan University for mem- | tle this season, but | bership in the National Greens | Zuppke and Tlincls have upset & num- | Keepers' Association. Since Michigan n the past. North-|pcoon the construction cf the very ex- rn will miss Hank Bruder, | Pk o s et i {he midkt of a |cellent 18-hole goft course. that "lies | smalipox huddle. Zuppke has lost his | adjacent to its magnificert stadium and eniors, but Ilinois will b gearcd up |atnietic flelds Yost has become 0 ex-| {for this game after last Fall's defeat. | . g f1 b} | Tllinois will be one of the hardest hur- | Pert in the discussion of fescues, stolons, | ¢les in Northwestsrn’s campaign. | bent grasses end sand traps that it is| (Copyright, 1930, by North American News- | difficult to get him into any detailed| { aiscussion of the noble gridiron pastime. “See up there on that hill?” he bab- SETS PK&NGEECORD bled excitedly to the wiiter. “Those 1 a5 folks are e eighteenth | |3ay B. Grattan Scores on Halt.|imm s Pting o the &6 | | i Being consldegably interested in Yost's | Mile Track at Raleigh. | opnion"of the Michgan foot ball team, | RALEIGH, N. C., October 18 (#).— | your correspondent violently led him May E. Grattan, champion pacing mare, | Within the shadow of the tall fence that | | set @ new world record for pacing on a | inclcsed the practice field, from where | haif-mile track by going & heat at the | he no longer could see his greens and | State Fair races in 2:01. fairwa | She was driven by C. Earl Plttnan, Trenton, N. J. No. 83 play, did it?” ¥ asked. ST B M higan “83” Play Still Good, Despite Its 33 Years of Use NN HARBOR, Mich,, October 18.— | {1 | | great interfering back, was not in the game. Neither Coach Jack Cannell, or any of his men, ever alibied because of Clark’s absence; but the truth was that when he went to the hospital the night before the big battle a backfield that had been functioning perfectly lost more of its efficiency than any one not |in the know expected. 'N Cilark, on this occasion, centers a I story of courage which makes an epic of foot ball. It was too bad— but let’s don't get ahead of the story told by the great Al Marsters. For it was he who gave me the tale and thus paid tribute to his old team mate. “Talking of gameness,” said Marsters «I don't believe any one ever exceeded “Yes, and that play will score against ny teem when perfectly executed. You know, I first used that play 33 years ago. It's a greet scoring play, for it hés both deception and power.” ‘Weil, just what is No. 83? There have been many disgrams made of it and many expianations, but they all seem to vary.” asked the writer. “You're right about the many expla- tions of the play, here is the real cne. To make it plain I will use definite positions in the explanation. “It {5 run from a semi-punt formation It beat Harvard by the tre-| and went | The Gamest Act I Ever Saw Len Clark’s Heorism Is Great, but Goes for Nothing, By Al Marstars, Dartmouth’s Great Backfield Star, J. P. Glass. | that shown by Len Clark, left half- back for Dartmouth last year. ' “We had been having a big season, | and Clark was one of the reasons. He was a fine man all around, but above all he was a marvelous interfering back. | “Everything went well with Len un- | il we played Harvard. If you remem- ber they gave us a hard fight in the first half. When it ended the score was 7 to 7. “Barly in the game, while blocking, | Len was thrown hard. When he got up he had a pain in his side like a knife. Some fellows would have gotten out of the game right then and there He was gasping for breath, but he stayed in. “I_noticed during intermission he | was hurt. However, hs didn't admit it. “It’s nothing much,” he said. When the second half began he again. He figured the team needed him, | with Harvard showing so much unex- | pected strength. He stuck right through | to the finish, too. At least until we haw run up a big lead and Coach Cannell had taken out all the regulars and sent in a team of substitutes. “We went through hard practice in the week that followed, for the Yale game came right after the Harvard game. Clark was on hand every day. Nobody knew that he was in pain. However, his side was troubling him so much that he was getting scarcely any sleep those nights. He knew he was | seriously hurt, but he was bound he was going to play against Yale. We | realized we had our toughest game ahead of us. “We had our last practice at Han- | over on Thursday. Friday morning we | took the train for Hartford, where we were to stay overnight, motoring to New Haven for the game on Saturday morning. Fee | strongest line-up against Yale | and we were all in high spirits— all but Len Clark. | “Len was suffering more than ever. | He had hoped the pain in his side | would get better. After six days it was | much worse. “It was just a question if he could {hold on for another 24 hours. Then | the game would be over and he could take things easy. So he'd keep on grin- | ning and bearing it and not let any one, least of all Coach Cannell, know | whe't-agony he was in. | " “It was just too much. Late that night at the hotel, with the game he | wanted so badly to play only a few | hours away, Len got so sick he couldn’t | conceal his condition any longer. A | doctor was called in. He ordered that | Len should be taken to a hospital at |once For the first time, Len admitted that he had been badly hurt in the | Harvard game. “They X-rayed him in the morning. | He had three fractured ribs—that's all! “He spent the next three weeks in| the_infirmary. “We missed Len against Yale, might have changed the result of that game. fering for nothing.” The quarterback handles the ball from | center and fakes it to the right end coming around behind the line and to a halfback bucking through. Then he feeds it to the player in the back posi- tion on the formation and he, in turn, goes around right end. Of course, the play can be worked to the left end, but I used the right end to fllustrate the idea. - “When used at the proper time it’s just as good a scoring play as it was when the point-a-minute team executed it,for touchdowns. There's still a punch in many of the old plays, and even the Statue of Liberly fake kick that used “So Purdue fell for your moss-cove.ed i to be a part of the Michigan tricks can occasionally be used for gains.” rler Asks Nine Players to At- tend Meeting Tonight. A basket ball meeting will be held at the home of Dr. Hessler tonight at 7 o'clock. Nine players are asked to at- | tend and those unable to get there are {asked to phone Hessler at Columbia | 9333 before the meeting. | to r-port are Cody | Shapiro, Dave Keppsl, Shorty Harris, lJ(w Cx;uni Jf;; Gfl_!lz:m Louis Richard- son, Morris Denniberg, SBam Mindell | and H. Gubisch, & - was out there | CRUDE G. W, TEAM IN SCORELESS TIE Blows -Three OpportunitiesE to Defeat South Dakota | in Night Contest. EORGE WASHINGTON'S big, physically powerful foot ball team has yet to acquire the cohesion and mastery of plays | that make for success, otherwise the Buff and Blue today would be cele- | brating a triumph over the equally husky South Dakota Coyotes. | Instead an unsatisfactory scoreless | tie goes into the Colonial record. It might easily have been a three- | touchdown victory had the Buff and | Blue possessed a bit more offen- sive skill. Plainly its team is still in | the making. | Three times the Colonials got close | to the enemy goal, only to be frus- trated by fumbling or poor execuuon! plays. Coyotes Get Frisky. South Dakota threatened once. It drove from its own 32-yard line to George Washington's 19 in the third | period, but was helped mightily by two | offside penalties that made fist downs, | Demas put a ¢rimp in the advance by | throwing Adkins for an 8-yard loss. | A desperate scoring effort almost suc- | ceeded when Crakes, an end—and a | good one—got his fingertips on a 25- | yard pass by QuarterBack South, who, | by the way, failled to come up to his belyboo. George Washington presented prom- 1sing ball carriers in Wells, Catlih and | Kriemelmeyer, formerly of Tech High, | but their gains were made with scant | interference. The lines were too evenly | matched for either to make openings | consistently. Carlin got off a 20-yard | run that was a pip, skipping this way | and that with no blockers. It seemed the Colonials surely wculd | | score in the first period when a 44-yard | | drive planted the ball on the Coyotes' 9-yard line, but here Wells fumbled | |and the oval was recovered on the 15- | yard line by Crakes. Carlin’s Run Helps. 4 Carlin’s brilliant 20-yard gain was | part of an advance from midfield begun | in the third quarter after Kriemelmeyer | recovered a Coyote punt blocked by | Demas. Wells skirted right end for 12 _yl!\i.l and a first down on the ene- | my’s 40-yard mark as the qulrterl ended. In the fourth Carlin, Kriemel- | meyer and Wells carried the ball by ly stages to South Dakota's 8-yard | ine. Here Carlin slipped on a try at tackle and lost several yards, Wells and Cll'ul’; ‘!:l‘l;du at Dtue‘iikk and then Wells" pass ree) on the 1- o & -yard line George Washin 's third - tunity came late in the final qflm The Colonials much the better of an exchange of punts when meyer booted 65 yards. South kicked out from behind his own goal and Wells returned the ball to the Coyotes' 25- yard stripe. The Colonials’ advance to the 7-yard line was punctuated by the great catch of a forward pass good for 13 yards by Lyle Sturtevant, who played | well &t end. "Here George Washington | was held for downs 8 yards from a score. Part of the game was played in a heavy drizzle and chilly wind. Threat- ening weather set in an hour before game time and held down the crowd, but approximately 6,000 saw the contest, Line-up and summary: 3 | Geor Wash. (0). Positions. alioway Hale .. 1- Quarteri X Left haslfbac Right baltback” Syer .. Fullback | South _Dakota. ‘Wash Bagranoff, Bag- ers. Gunderson 1or 'Lever- for O'Brien, Tice for r alm, ‘Tice for Kramer, Berkowitz Wells, "Wilson for Demas, Penton for Kriex melmeyer. Referee—P. P. Magoffin. Umpire THREE HOT LTS Cartter and a sturdy fullback in Otts | L George Washington, 0; South Da- kota U,, 0. Tech, 39; Business, 0. Devitt, 32; Alexandria High, 0. Calvert Hall, 12; St. John's, 7. East. Duquesne University, 14; Howard, 9. South. Sew;.nec. 13; University of Missis- | Loulsiana | sippi, 7. Mississippl College, 39; Polytechnie, 0. Clemson, 75; Newberry, 0. Loyola South, 25; Loyola Georgetown (Ky.), 22; Union, 6. Southwestern, 24; Northern Missouri Teachers’, 13. University of Tulsa, 237; Hendrix- Henderson (Conway, Ark.), Pllgxbur‘ Teachers’, 13; Hi ers’, 0. Northwestern Teachers’, 14; Friends’ University, 0. Phillip’s, 16; St. Mary’ West Texas Teachers’, Teachers’, 0. Trinity University, 6; Denton Teach- | ers' College, 0. Missouri Miners’, 38; Missouri Val- Kirksville Teachers', 7; Warrensburg ‘Teachers’, 6. Simons™ University, 33; Baker Col- ge, 0. < 1okloahmm City U, 6; Oklahoma Ag- gies, 0. University of Louisville, 52; Bastern Kentucky Teachers’, 0. 2 Chillicothe Business College, 14 Kemper, 6, Lenoire Rhyne, 12; Milligan, 0. Catawba, 71; Fort Bragg Service Team, 0. Howard Payne College, 26; Austin College, 7. El Paso College 6f Mines, 31; Texas Tech, 0. Ashland, 12; Marietta, 0. Miami, 19; Denison, 6. Midwest. University of Detroit, 23; West Vir- nia, 0. Centre, 6; Xavier, 0. Drake, 20; Grinnell, 7. St. Louis, 7; Butler, 0. John Carroll, 39; Adrian College (Michigan), 7. Oglethorpe, 6; Dayton, 0. Heidelberg, 13; Wittenberg, Wabash, 6; Millikin, 0. Ohio Tigers, 0 (pro). Coe, 19; Monmouth, 0. Indiana State Normal, 18; Indiana Central, L 7. Evansville, 12; Oakland City, 0. ‘Willamette, 34; College of Idaho, 14. Central (Fayette), 19; Tarkio, 0. Muskingum, 14; West Liberty, 12. Blalé State Teachers’, 21; Central Nor- %Vow}ing Gr;:n.clos: Dd;?nee 6. ‘ashburn, 26; College of Em| 0. Haskell, 38; Wichita, i Findlay, 2 Baker, 61; Bethany, 6. 5 ot Capital, 13 terben, 0. Rockhurst, 26; St. Benedict's, 0. Far West. st. ’s, 21; i o 'l‘;ril University of Call San Diego State Teachers’, 14; Occi- dental College, 7. ooy le(?l{?m of Puget, 12; Linfield Col- lings Polytechnic, 59. Whittier _ College e, 39; Christian College, 1. BOWSTROM TO LEAD NAVY AGAINST DUKE Tackle - Elected Official Captain of Iid\diel for Contest at Annapolis Today. ANNAPOLIS, Md., October 18.—On account of injuries to players and a 1 | desire to try some new men, the Naval Academy varsity will be reorganized for the game with Duke today. o For the first time the Navy team will enter the fray with an official cap- tain, Robert M. Bowstrom of Grand Rapids, Mich,, ‘having been selected for that honor. | ZE. Towers. Head linesman—Cabt. Frank Goettge. Time of quarters—15 minutes each. Bowstrom has been regular tackle for three mwn:. i %Tech Grid Team Is Not Tested In Easily Defeating Business OW about Central, Eastern and Western? Followers of public high school athletics have a good idea as to the strength of the Tech and Business elevens following yesterday’s game, the series opener, in which the McKinley eleven was an easy winner, kick. From then on it was all Tech. The Gray scored its first touchdown early in the second quarter when Reich- man went around end. A little later Sachs plunged over from the one-yard line for the second Gray tally, following a 13-yard dash by Reichman. Tech scored in the third quarter after a. pass from Nelson to Sachs, the first to be completed by Tech, netted 25 yards. Yznaga took it across. 39 to 0. Now they want a slant at the Tn the TR e , arter Pisan other elevens. They'll see Central and |and Reichman ng' 2 rw“ehdg;l nAsperxt: Western when the Blue and Red clash | was the second fime Reichman. had Elesdly wlifltiernoon in C(-'nlmlLSLadlmt\';i crossed the Orange goal line. stern not get series action un g next Friday when it engages Business. | ... . Line-Up and Summary. After the opening minutes Tech, de- | it (% Position, Business (0). fending champion, outclassed Business | Kolker o ;- 3eille by a wide margin, its superiority becom- “ g‘flfllmln vee ing more pronounced as the game pro- | BAStEL gressed. Hap Hardell's charges looked | Harr E all thought we would have our | He | But he had borne all that suf- pear to such ‘good advantage against | Central and the other clubs is not so ! certain. With Dick Nelson, Al Reichman and other members of the Tech backfield gaining consistently, the Gray had Busi- ness on the defensive virtually all of the way after those opening minute around work by Vernon Johnson, 115- pound quarterback, and Bill Duryee, | rugged fullback, the hard-fighting Busi- | licked even worse. In the opening minutes Business staged its lone scoring threat when it achieved the Tech 22-yard line before | losing the ball on downs. Duryee took Kolker’s opening kick-off and brought it back to his own 45-yard line. Then he | zipped a pretty pass to Piant that netted |30 yards. Strasser, Johnson and Dur- | yee then alternated in carrying the ball | | to the Gray 22-yard line, where Tech | | got possession of it. . |~ A’bad pass to Nelson cn the next play scared Tech adherents, but that player seized the ball and managed to run it | out of danger. Then Nelson got off a nifty 40-yard | Kant_?,D.C.B?xir;g , Impresario, Dead | Eddie Kane, Washington boy who | rose from th: promotion of bouts between would-be boxers of strictly | local caliber to the management of | world champions of the ring, died | last night at his camp, near Petos- | key, Mich, Kane, dead in his early | forties, for the past 20 years had been identified with the boxing game. | Kane managed many fighters of | national renown, at times handling | Tom Gibbons and Sammy Mandel!, the latter once lightweight ('h;z~ | plon. He was in charge of bons when Tommy fought Jack Dempzey in Montana, several years ago. Had it not been for some nifty all- Racke ness gang probably would have been y plenty good, but whether they will ap- g r | Duryee ' of touc] 13 o .0 0—0 (2), Sachs, Yanaga, after t ns. sano, Aperti. Gormicy "(2), Ne! Plekets for ita joh: Isano fo Rhodes for Lanl Wohifarth for bson. BT for Duryee, Mills for Orme. oo = vers (Columbia). ~ Umpire—Mr. Brewer (Mar: — ; 3 BEomer aMaryland). " Linesmin—Mr. O'Meara Devitt encountered little opposition in drubbing Alexandria High, 30 to 0, in the Virginia City. The Washingto: piled up 18 points. Bernard and Harvey each scored two touchdowns for Devitt. Millard ac- counted for the other tally. Alexandria (0). Position, Jennier Lef: end nians Devitt (32) Rose Lett haifbac 2 Right haliba Lindsey ullback . Score by periods Devitt . , 4 Alexandria "] i | Touchdowrs—Haryey (2), Bernard (2), nillara. o Bofats Aiier {ouchdoune Hari to Schriner (forward pass), Harvey (plac ment kick). Substitutions—(Alexandriy Jacobs for Mendelson, Violette for_Jackso: Turner for Fritter, Luckett for Haywoo Peyton for Mendelson. Simpson for Routa- han, Petersilla_for Briun; (Devitt). Bradley for "Millard, Convelly for Hall, Ward for Childress, 'Referee—Mr. Dreifus (Tulane). In the game was confined to Hall 0 in which the scoring i the lnalt hmn.h' Calvert a grimly-fighting Jobm's_eleven yesterday i n-mmoe:". Mario Jullano counted the Cadets' touchdown in the fourth m‘,’ ‘when he grabbed a 40-yard pass Gene Augusterfer and dashed 30 . Au- gusterfer drop-kicked the extra point. Is | rino | their way to a_13-to-7 victory over the * ON EASTERN CARD | Carnegje Teefl's Invasion of ‘ Notre Dame Headliner of H_idwest Thrillers. EW YORK, October 18 (#).—The foot ball stadia of the East drew thousands of spectators today. Soldier Field, Boston, was | the scene of the biggest spectacle as two unbeaten teams, Harvard ana army, matched brain and brawn, Brown's 7. | great defensive outfit hoped to stop Yale 4; East Texas | and Albie Booth at New Haven, while Cornell invaded Princeton to battle Bill 's somewhat hapless 3 ew ‘:nrk University and Navy 4 tersectional opponents, Mis- souri and Duke, respectively, while two of the strongest contenders for Eastern honors, Syracuse and Pittsburgh, had a duel at Syracuse. Fordham, unbeaten since 1928, hoped to continue its streak at Worcester against another undefeated eleven, Holy Cross, while at Hanover, N. H., Colum- bia hoped for the best against Dart- mouth’s high-powered array. Temple entertained Washington and Jefferson and Boston College visited \:I;hn&v: lluih!hdfil‘phil, while Lafay- ette attemp! to halt unbeat - - R i wn_hoped to avenge the 7-0 beating it took last year h’\u:l.w 'Zn‘x Stardy Toe aé Bethiehern i G foe af lehem in Ge conqueror of Villanova. i Dickinson (N. Dak.) Normal, 0; Bil- e California | powerful nia, as its guest no teams had fl mvm Chicago’s defeating Florida, one elevens of the South, the Maroons were to the and eager to redeem themselves for their trimming the" S ponatn, "y FIELDS GETS KEARNS AS BOXING MANAGER Is to Be Groomed for Middle Title That Walker Is Likely riend Fields' foster father, will be provided for in the new coni § ngl R 9 tract to be signed earns left here today for Cleveland, where his protege, Wmflln. the present middleweight pion, will fight Johnny Risko on November 7. Kearns is Walker vacates it. SEWANEE GRID WINNER Overcomes Mississippi in 13-to-7 Clash at Oxford. OXFORD, Miss., October 18 — The Sewanee Tigers - forward o d University of Mississippi ye k| win'thetr first confertnce same {& tv years. The Tigers did all their sco: the second c]unner. when bulletlike heaves by Phillips resulted in the pair hdowns. In the final period Biggers of Ole in g 2039 | Miss made a 25-yard dash for a marker. HOLLYWO00D IN FRONT. SAN FRANCISCO, October 18 (#).— - | Pacific Coast Leaguc official standings, including g2mes of Thursday, Octo- ber 16: o358 ¢ ‘Team, Hellywood Cridder Injured In Evading Talk TECUMSEH, Mich., October 18.— ‘Tecumseh might have won that ali- important game with Hudson High if admiring schoolmates hadn’t tried to make a public speaker out of their A Tas Smith, the triple threa X th, the trip! t quar- terback and defensive star, can face eleven charging players without a quiver and has come through many a tough le unscathed. But Ahgm‘mlhe w him for.a loss yes y when he was called uj ': say a few words at a pep me bit gridirons, he fresh air, but as he ran downstairs :flh:pped and fell and sprained his So he hobbled alcng the sidelines htched his fentmnates take & 3010 . ® 20-to-

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