Evening Star Newspaper, October 24, 1930, Page 47

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The Foening Star. 'WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION WASHINGT()N, D. C, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1930. PAGE D-—1 G. U. Favored Over West Virginia Tonight: Maryland-Virginia Tilt Draws Alumni FOES ARE PRIMED FOR STIFF BATILE Hoya Alumni Here From Many Cities for Homecoming Arclight Contest. G line-up, will enter its grid battle with West Virginia tonight at Grifith Stadium only & slight favorite to win despite optimistic predictions by the Hoya coach, Tom Mills. EORGETOWN UNIVER- SITY, with a revamped The Mountaineers, always keen against' Georgetown, have beez weakened no less than the Hill- toppers by '29 graduations and it will be recalled that last year’s score was 0-0. Play, will start at 8:15 o'clock. It be Georgetown’s homecoming game and one of the largest gatherings of alummni in Hoya history is expected. Bizeable delegations are here from New ‘York, New England, Richmond, Atlanta and other cities. Notables Attend. Tonight's crowd will be dotted with SE military color will be given the Silent Platoon of Fort Ed5.0 Egggg !9. = - e &¥ 'HARDY HOYAS LISTED FOR SERVICE AGAINST 2 JOE BANDZUL- Center foot ball players would follow the six already disbarred for participation in s “revolt” Hoya-Mountaineer Array for Battle . (No) Position. X Lett é‘f& ahaney Kom Gorman 8. B bariette “n. . umn (38). Dyer (53). Backs— 49), (s2), $ lnl-l e Alenty (4. King (8),. P. 8 8}, Wellsce 09, Danleu (23), {30), o Patterson e. | the school, tion this morning, but the impres- sion given by Colonial authorities was that the incident was closed. Dr. Cloyd Heck Marvin, president of the university, gave the boys their walk- ing papers after they admitted bav- ing demanded the right to keep money earned on jobs obtained for them by money which they had pledged to pay for tuition and board. The freshman team was hard hit by counted upon discharged players were Bo r 3 nine to mmm next yurl varsity. The nnh!n-on and d is receiving mu essages of the country commending him for his action, In the meantime, the varsity today was to put in its last lick of practice | for tomorrow's clash with Dickinson | at_Griffith Stadium. G. W. Forgets Frosh Foot Ball “Revolt,” Thinks of Dickinson any more freshman | a) um'flmmnm«n" terback ... (30) ‘Carter N!Iht aitoasi (36) Keimy's k......(48) Bagranoff Myers ). Sloan Green The Colonials are bent upon ‘!!fln‘ Rlllly 2 | even for a one-point trimming the Dickinson and | town). tzer | eleven in g i o & R feree— Orowe] (lvnrl.hmm R R 3 DI- (Lehigh). ilr.k fl D 115 p.m. NAVY WILL DEPEND ON ORIGINAL LINE-UP| Experimental Combinations Tried This Week Will Not Be Used Against Princeton. new players will not be thrown away, uuubewumnuy-m on ac- count of their work during the week, | nt into the team much more smoothly ln‘rlm mdecldad that his veterans will have & better chance against Princeton than any new set, though it still possivle that shock troops will be started in to take the steam out of Princeton #f possible. however, that Ingramn Wil start what he regiras wi regards as | his strongest combination and endeavor | sending in to maintain a fast pace by at short intervals. How They Line-up. * ‘This is the team which is expected to do most of the work tomorrow. Teft end, Steffanides; left tackle, Bowstrom (captain) ; left guard, Under- ht guard, Foot Ball Moral Help, Says Jones BRIDGEPORT, Conn., October 24 (#).—Tad Jones, former Yale coach, told a meeting of the University of Hichlun alumni here last night t foot ball cannot be overempha- , except * “probably in the news- »-pe “Foot, ball,” he said, “has become & national institution in our life and is being engaged in by the tough and rugged youth of the physical, mental and even moral type. Foot ball cre- ates a mental and moral rugge: cll which far surpasses physical rugged. It also exemplifies true loyal ness. college spirit. Give me a team com- players with mental and of moral courage on the 2-yard line, and 75 per cent of the time it will hold another team with physical runednm speed, abllity, on a goal- line stand.” X « %Mly tu\. Phiclteen (in, O'Brien (30, Oeials: Referes—C. . McClure (George- ‘Umpire—Edward Towers (Columbia). Hood inecman—Obaries Guron (Carilate). —_— FOOT BALL TONIGHT Seven Lamplight Games Are Listed MOUNTAINEERS ' Bop PDRENNAN- End Experts Size;Up Saturday’s Tilts BY BILL ROPER. East. Army-Yale: Yale. Brown-Holy Cross: Brown. for Eastern Fields. NEW YORK, October 24 (#).—The | East’s Priday night foot ball schedule boasts one major game tonight. West | Virginia’s Mountaineers invade Wash- | ington to battle Georgetown. Both | teams have been beaten this year, but should wage as even a battle as they did a yu.r uo. when a scoreless tie was the Seven ot.her Eastern elevens play tonight. uesne meets Catholic at Pittsburgh, Davis Elkins travels to Cleveland to face John Carroll and Geneva and Grove City battle it out at | Beaver Falls, Pa. ENICKS POSTPONE Euz. schedt grid night at GriMith Stadium. Midwest Elevens Are Ready For Big Contests Tomorrow By the Associated Press. HICAGO, October 24.—The very best wishes of Northwestern's Wildeats will accompany Illi- nois and Purdue Saturday in | their fost ba]l enideavors against Mich- igan and Wisconsin, respectively. Northwestern is reasonably confident of getting through its Big Ten schedule undefeated, but fears that Michigan, : | which it does not meet, will do the same : | thing unless the Illini win at Ann Aroor Saturday, thus, theoretically, doing the Wildcat out of an undisputed title. Coach Dick Hanley's eleven will meet ‘Wisconsin November 15, but would like Badge mnn::'u :go is undehl‘fl ¢ | but Norinwestern fgures o take care of thouse; | the Gophers a week from tomorrow. ' Jeserves to Face Center. ‘While its Dflndp'l‘l rivals are engag- [amous Colos to play dead for Northwestern is & nnn-emtmnce sffair reduced to the limbering up today. Mlchlnn took only & ueht ri)l yes- terday to t further inuries, while Illinois nnuhed m work for the inva- sion of Michigan, and had tflveung on its schedule for today. Wholesale in- )urlu hnve hampered pnctic- at Chi- d Coach Stagg early this week fleclded w let the Mississippi game take care of itself, with Princeton to be met next week. Purdue, Wisconsin Ready. Purdue and Wisconsin, which meet at La Fayette, wound up preparation in 00d shape for their important n.runu e Boilermakers did well ent vumdnya drill to_ be let ofl urly while Wisconsin's oflenu again func- umd properly. ising | will be halfback when Harry Pike was in the final practice, but in unusual number of disabilif mghwt-md.ml J:dd‘ e for duf urday. Notre’ Dame gnd. Ingians -4 ‘Too much man power. Bucknell-Gettysburg: Gettysburg. Carnegle Tech-Western Reserve: Car- a:gle Tech. Colgate-Penn State: Colgate. Columbia-Willlams: Columbia. Dartmouth-Harvard: Dartmouth. F. and M.-Muhlenberg: F. and M. Lafayette-Washington and Jefferson: Lafayette. Lehigh-Penn: Penn. ng-l’rlm:mn: Close. N. U.-Fordham: N. Y. U. Pitt-Notre Dame: Notre Dame. Syracuse-St. Lawrence: Syracuse. Swarthmore-Johns Hopkins: Swarth- | more. ‘Temple-Villanova: Temple. Haverford-Trinity: Haverford. South. Alabama-Vanderbilt: Vanderbilt. Mississippi-Chicago: Chicago. Arkansas-Texas Aggies: Texas Aggies. Sewanee-Louisiana: Bew-nee Oklahoma-Kansas Aggles: ‘Washington and Lee-St. John Wllh- lnnnn and Lee. ‘Tennessee-North Carolina: Tennessee. | Georgia-Alabama Poly: Georgla. Georgla Tech-Tulane: Georgia Tech. | BY BOB ZUPPKE. Midwest. ‘Wisconsin-Purdue: Wisconsin. No runaway like Penn for the Badgers, and Purdue has a chance. Michigan-Illinols: Michigan is the favorite, of course. The Wolverine line- men are stronger physically and can run faster. Notre Dame-Pittsburgh: Notre Dame. But Pitt may make the Irish extend themselves, and anything can happen in any game Indiana-Southern Methodist: South- ern Methodist. The Hooslers must travel to Dallas. Northwestern - Centre: Northwestern, A bruunnz spell for Northwestern. i: Chicago. Mis- oklshoml plays at home. Likely to be llhmlfl ane Drake. Their morale l(ehrun-mmhm State: Nebraska. BY HOWARD JONES. Far West. Southern California vs. Stanford: Stanford is undefeated and is therefore 'wumn;um Slight ashington Blaio va. Montana: Ooa- touchdo gars by three V8. Idsho Not much trou- ble for Jows and Ohlo State have dates which be util- f7ed for proction Dovedly Oregon U. ve. Pacific: Easy for £ ierler's p:u‘:. ‘|Yale-Army Tilt Will ON GRID TONIGHT Russeu_ DANIEU- Halfback 500000 T0 WATCH EAST'S BIE GAMES = Draw Crowd—Two Other Tilts Are Attractive. BY HERBERT W. BARKER, Associated Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, October 24.—Half a | million foot ball fans will turn | out for the East’s more than 50 games tomorrow, but close to !wmotmmwmbemmndtmom‘ half & dozen contests. In point of attendance, Yale's Joutl with the Army at New Haven, the all- | metropolitan duel between Fordham and | New York University in the Yankee | Stadium and Notre Dame’s invasion of | the East to meet the Pitt Panthers will | run s close race. These three games | should draw about 230,000 lpecuwrl‘l with 80,000 in the Yankee Stadium and | 75,000 apiece tn the Yale Bowl and the | Pitt Stadium. Some 120,000 probably will be dis- tributed among three other big duels— Harvard-Dartmouth at the Harvard Stadium, Temple,Villanova at Philadel- phia and Princeton-Navy at Princeton. Lagging & bit behind in point of attendance will be such classes as Brown-Holy Cross at Providence, Penn State-Colgate at State College and La- | fayette and Washington and Jefferson | in an indoor night game at Atlantic City. Syracuse meets St. Lawrence, Penn- | | sylvania takes on Lehigh, Columbia meets Willlams, Carnegie Tech faces | Western Reserve at Cleveland, Western | Maryland battles Loyola of Baltimore and Boston College stacks up against Dayton. One of the hardest-fought games o(! the day will take place at Gettysburg, | where the Gettysburg Bullets, con- querors of Villanova, clash with their bitter rivals, the Bucknell Bisons. Am- herst and Wesleyan meet in the firdt game of the “Little Three” series at Amherst. Bowdoin, with its best eleven | in years, confronts Colby. | VANDY-'BAMA CLASH AROUSES DIXIE FANS| Topliner of Attractive List of Con- | tests to Be Staged in South Tomorrow. By the Assoclated Press. 'TLANTA, October 24 —The clash of two unbeaten foot ball teams, Van- | derbilt and Alabama, predominates Saturday’s Southern scoreboard, but at leut four other tilts are tied for second in nnenl ln'zresl T| !I.n Tech in the Georgia first de(enu of lts 1929 title. The Tor- nado has had a crushing defeat at the hands of Carnegie Tech, while Tu- lane has been drubbed by Northwestern. Georgia, favored to wil conference crown, cl gal burn at Columbus, Ga., and Kentucky, another undefeated_eleven, faces Vir- ginia at Lexington, Ky. Tennessee and North Carolina wil] have a strong fol- lowing for their b-t le. The Mississip) &‘l undbr “Red” Cagle travel to Nonh Carolina _State, and Sewanee e:a. date with Louisiana State. M nd u a pre-game favorite to tflflm " will '.ry conclullom with Chicago on !tln NS PLAY GAME TONIGHT. CHICAGO, October 24 (#).—Coe COLLEGE PARKERS HIRE RAL SPECAL =2 Terrapins Plan to Build Up Contests With Cavaliers and Midshipmen. BY H. C. BYRD. LUMNI of the University A of Maryland, co-operating with the Student Govern- ment Association: of that university, have perfected plans for an excursion train from Bal- timore, College Park and Wash- ington to Charlottesville next week for the annual game with University of Virginia. The train is to leave Baltimore at 9 am,, College Park at 9:30 and Washington at 10, to arrive at Charlottesville at 1. Such low rates have been given by the Baltimore & Ohio and Southern Railroads that the entire expense of the trip from Washington is hardly more than the price of a ticket to some big games. Maryland is not making much of & secret of the fact that it expects its bigzest games in the future to be with Virginia and Navy. There is a natural rivalry between ‘things Virginia and things Maryland and a close relation- ship between them, and a rivalry on the foot ball fleld between the State universities of the two States seems to be about as natural a rivalry as could exist anywhere. Maryland’s game with Navy is taking on such proportions already that there is not much doubt it will be the big- gest game of the year in the State. Already there have been filed at College Pu’k applications for more tickets than have been allotted by the Navy. HE Virginia-Maryland game has an annual trophy for competition, given each year by Senator Mil- lard E. Tydings of Maryland. In the four years the trophy has been award- ed Virginia has won it once, Maryland once, and there have been two ties. Virginia whipped Maryland, 21 to 0; Maryland won from Virginia, 18 to 2, ngdwt::;uamumcwlmd It is likely that the exodus from College Park will be greater for the Virginia game than for any other the Old Liners are to plly. except that with the Navy. And it is just as certain that a big crowd vdll go from Washing- ton, with almost as many Virginia alumni as Maryland. Three years ago, | have to get their pasteboards from Charlottesville. IOROITOWN finished its training Way. EORGE WASHINGTON plays the other contest scheduled here this week end, when it meets Dickinson to- morrow afternoon. The Buff and Blue originally had the game booked for tonight, but chkimon reluaed to under _lights. thinks it has better than nn even chnnce | to win, and it probably has. ... SCHOOLBOY TEAMS 2 TRAVEL TOMORROW Devitt, Emerson Only Ones to Play—Four Clashes on Card Today. Scholastic foot ball followers here Play | will have to go far afleld to see District teams in action tomorrow. Devitt and Emerson, the only Dis- trict elevens listed, both are to ARYLAND'S squad, accompanied Mary’ by the university band, leaves tomorrow morning ‘at 8:30 Mil here for Richmond for its annual game with Virginia Milif Institute. The Old Liners seem to favored to win, al- though that is not by any means say- ing they will. The contests between them and V. M. 1. always have been too close for anybody to venture a pre- diction as to the outcome o! any one of them with any degree certainty. Maryland is to take its whou varsity squad, about 40 players, on the trip. ALLAUDET plays Baltimore Uni- versity in Baltimore tonight and Catholic University is at PI"‘- burgh, where it meets the Duquesn: Univenuy eleven. Gallaudet lhmxld C. better foot ball than 20 far this season, is in for another defeat. American University has no game. North the three big games are those at Yale, Harvard and Prince- ton. The one holding forth the greatest attraction is at New Haven, where the Am‘uem does bat- tle with the lldog. lost to Yale last yflr nnd h exh-ame anxious to get a { e long end of the score, and ff '.hlnks lt has a good chance to do just that. Dartmouth appears at Cambridge, and appears with just as powerful an eleven apparently as that whlch trampled a Harvard team all over the gridiron in 1929. Harvard, homcr. also seems to be a good a good deal that is colorful and attrac- tive. Neither team seems to have much advantage over the other. ITY OF PITSBURGH gets a chance to astound the foot ball Notre Dame. world by meeth So familiar have become with ele\en having the m-mln on the South Bend team in all probability there will hen Maryland went to virm.nh many | can persons accompanied team, and there is a good deal mon interest in the game now than there was then. The m.flc office of the University of mryhnd at Park has tickets in Ml-ryllnd for distribution to its alumni, but Virginia alumni will guhmm IM xandria Hllh !1 to 0. Last season Devitt routed Mount 8t. lnry'l Prep, 26 to 0, and is figured to again down the Emmits- burg boys tomorrow. Munmmzn Academy enmlly man- Washi scholastic ages to give elevens all ‘they are for, at least ln '.he way of opposition, and it vould to see Emerson tak delnt It will 8] , W mdr?:nunm to 0., Business and Eastern's school championshi) it out in Potomac to do to avenge the one-sids hung on it last * Iflmh wfluutmn?mnmh te is not likely en.h-rormu-m. UT in the Middle West interest seems to and\ center around 2 Tllinols, 'm,. byd s At Min- . m..am...mw‘:!'um Conference tilts. Ou'.lnmhr wen. "wduhhmmm and Uni qoxmmmm Stanford to Southern California llltml!!'lho‘ mawmmmmhm the greatest “WOT-A-MAN!” No less vigorous, pugnacious name is worthy of this new, burly, Collegiate model in popular “Specifications” and judge for yourself! “HAHN— SPECIALS” ‘Uppers: Zug Grain, most expensive 6f imported Scotch Grains, a heavy, oil treated leather in tan or black. Bellows Tongue: Extra full Bellows tongue, sewed in at sides to exclude water. Double Soles: Two full “stitched aloft” oak soles, oil treated. Solid Leather Heels. Yes, a Red-Blooded He-Man Shoe—suggesting no:less interesting, likable, aggressive, individyal—than its namesake, Art Shires! 40 other po style hits in the “ Special” group $6.50 lar ahn at Or, if you want to spend less, amother great value group at Men’s Shopl. 14th at G 7th&K *3212 14th (*Open_ Evenings)

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