Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
SPORTS. Powerful Service Team Will © “Shoot the Works” in Colorful Battle. W ESTERN MARYLAND rules a slight favorite to | whip the dashing ai night in Griffith Stadium, the battle starting at 8:15 o'clock. Undefeated in 21 straight games and with two victories over Georgetown in the string, the Green Terror is primed for one of fts toughest trials of the season. The Marines are powerful physi- ically, most of them have had more experience than the collegiaps and a number were standout| players at school. The Leathernecks have boast:d that | town didn't stop the Terror | uld. The Hoyas cidn’t. Both teams will be at full strength except for ihe absence of one Marine | = ar, Halfback Joe Bauer, former| Naval Academy player. Band Is a “7hopper. d best musical o % 'Anppebm' . & foot ball game in years will give an extra dash of color to tonight's show. The N. F. W. prize-winning musical outfit ‘will spur the Leathernecks. It has 140 .hflllplnd holds the national V. F. W. here mijll Marine foot ballers m-‘ THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON; D. ©; SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1930. ‘championship and other distinctions. s The Mlflnpe! will have a line averag- 190 pounds from end to end, with iter n K. Pressl ‘Tackle Ken *Truckenmiller and End Charlie Glick as its best bets :: stand off thed l;sulublu ort 1 [Ekaitis, Doughty Koppe and Wellinger, ‘Western Maryland's Y:Idlnl ball car- [ iers. % Toting the oval for the Gyrenes will | Peggy O'Neill, le' Gotko, George | mhermnél;idl:berpcw Bplll mg:leyi:oe Mca Cafirey, leman, Long an xkk:’m ‘hom is bountiful and wvaried ability, have been scored on only once. ‘They lost to Boston College, 18 to 7, but was doubt of the legality of the touchdown. Coll scored only three first on the Marines, yet the Eagles enough a bit later to extend the limit, Fordham eking in the last few minutes. d fire horse answering the Frank Goettge, beyond ques- the greatest of all Marine backs, His playing days are over, mere presence on the bench of master will be a help to the . If the Goetige of a few ‘were in the lineup tonight odds would be against the Green They'll Cut Loose. It promises to be a colorful game. The Marines have been playing nothing but | straight foot bell against their weaker ts and tonight will cut loose the works. They plan to gambie o the Jump.on ‘the Teror thel or 1tar-like de! é&::e will In:u: vxc{ tofy. Goettge says the present team is of the strongest defensively the 3 have had. - On the other hand, Western Maryland 4s versatile and powerful in every de- t. It proved this in defeating , 10 to 0. The Terror Fer- that day was a masterplece. always regards the Ma- Tines home team and the crowd will be -Leatherneck, buf Western will not want for supporters. Virtually its entire student body will at- = ! and this includes 2 nifty band. i“fiow Teams Face In Game Tonight W. Md. No. . Bates 25 . Pincura 29 . Benson 31 Lamb 32 . Barnett 27 Ekaitis 28 Doughty 21 "Wellinger 15 .. Koppe 24 Marine substitutes— Sitten (15), Cummings (21), McCaffrey (6), Rob- (11), Poppelman (8), Strong (3), (4), Golden (5). Popple (3! Paulsboe (14), Harrington Gann (12), Moe (24), ‘Western Maryland substitutes—Ham- Callaghan (12), Gealy (6) O'Lear, Wendlandt (33), Patterson (14), Willey Usinger (22), Hopler (3), Bru- (11), Lawrence (10). Clary (17), (18), Jones (3), Albrecht (16), Referee—J. R. Trimble (Dubugue). Umpire—E. J. Ryan (Michigan) wnmn Morse (George Washing. ). Head linesman—H. E. Arms‘rong ATufts). - Kick-off—8:15 p.m. | STRIBLING FINISHES * CHRISTNER IN THIRD | Bout Is Stopped When Veteran's Nose Is Split by Terrific Barrage of Hooks. B the Associated Press BOSTON, November 1.—William L. Btribling, jr., Ge s boxing pride, $trengthened his championship con- tender claim here last night when he Pattered ruggid K. O. Christner of <dkron, Ohio, for a three-round tech- Bieal knockout verdict The cool-headed Southerner fought in dmpressive fashicn, and had a wide lead his veteran opponent when he split Iatter’s nose with a barrage of heavy and right hooks halfway through ghe third session. Christner was cou sgeous and aggressive, but Stribling sharp-shooting left spoiled most of his sttempts to crowd insid: to land body punches, Meyer's favorite tactics. ‘The blow that damaged Christner's mnose landed with the same terrific force s the one that knocked out Otto von Porat and Phil Scott, Stribling’s last victims The Georg} was spat- with his rival’s blood when his left nw&Jm mark. p Brassil quickly de- Warm arguments to most of the top- rled heavyweights, was in no shape continue. L Arthur Dekuh, New York Italian t, who has been signed as Stribling’s f + oponent, at Atlanta, on November , won a decision over Big Bill Hart- 1 City in an eight-roun a“-‘l e 29; V. P. L, 27. Harvard 5), | Referee Johnny . elded that OChristner, who has given | "W Varsity, 16, 'HOYAS’ PRESTIGE ZOOMS AFTER SURPRISING WIN Grid World Stunned by Unbeaten Michigan State Team—George Wash- ington Holds Tuls: BY R. D. THOMAS. HERE was a song in the hearts of Georgetown’s foot ball warriors today, an ex- ultant tune set to the tempo of wildly racing feet that tripped a light fantastic on the sod of Griffith Stadium as the Blue and Gray sped to triumph over a hitherto unconquered foe, the proud Spartan of Michigan State. The sweetest Georgetown vic- tory of recent years is inscribed, 14 to 13, and beside the record is the name of Quarterback John Scalzi. On the way home from Tulsa, Okla., is another band of happy gridironers. The Colonials of George Washington, thought doomed to a drubbing by Tulsa University, came away with the highly creditable short end of a 14-to-6 score. f town's defeat of Michigan | State was a stunner to the foot ball | world. It reckoned as slim the chance of the Hoyas to get anywhere after they | had taken a 10-to~0 beating by West- |ern Maryland. When a defeat by West Virginia followed, those who check the | velative merit of the Nation's foot ball teams marked Georgetown down to | zero. A radical revision is in order as | the Hilltoppers set about girding for | battles with Boston College, New York | University, Villanova and Detroit, all ! strong teams. | Had Clean Record. The Spartan, coached by Jim Crow- ley of Notre Dame's Four Horsemen, came here with an untarnished record | | that included a scoreless tie with one | | | of Michigan's best teams and a victory | H! over highly-rated Colgate. It was said | y ‘that ny Georgetown alumni last night rather than |'suffer through a third straight defeat, | a humiliation not experienced by the | Blue and Gray in many years. The number of paid admissions was less | & | than 10,000. It may be that Halloween | celebrations also held down the attend- | ance. It was a squad of Stout Fellahs that turned back the Spartans, and the Beau | Geste of the lot was Johnny Scalzi. He | ti scored both of Georgetown's touch- downs and in a manner that vibrated | the spines of all present. In the second quarter he taok a 10- yard pass from Johnny Bozek and ran | 47 yards across the goal. It was a bolt | from the blue to Michigan State, which had strongly outplayed the Hoyas up to then, having kept the ball almost en- tirely in enemy territory and once hav- ing reached the 2-yard line. Team Helps Johnny. The second touchdown was a master- piece of ball carrying by Scalzi and blocking by his team. He took th> open- ing kick-off of the second helf and ran approximately 90 yards to the goal, with the other Hoyas clearing a path. It| was the second time this season that | the quarterback accomplished this feat. | Against West Virginia Wesleyan he ran | about the same distance to score with | the opening kick-off. Scalzi booted both extra points to |cap his performances and his ac- |curacy, as it turned out, decided the | issue. The Spaitans' first score was a well earned touchdown in the third period and it proved the invaders’ mettic. Stung by Scalai's second sensational marker they promptly got under way a l drive frem midfield that carried across |y the goal, with Fullback Ellowitz lead- | Fy ing the attack. One of his gains was | an off-tackle sprint of 26 yards. The score was made on a line buck by Halfback Monnett who shone through- out as a ball carrier. Victory seemed | assured the Hoyas when Grove's Grid VSirqu_gle; On Card Toda Y (With scores when same teams met last year.) College. | Catholic U. vs. New River State, at| Catholic U. Stadium, 2:30 p.m All Marines vs. Western Mary Griffith Stadium, 8:15 p.m Maryland (13) vs. Virginia (13), Charlottesvill American le. vs, St. John's, napolis, 1 Gallaudet vs. Medical Field Service Bchool, at Carlisle, Pa | "Howard U. vs. Virginia State, Petersburg. Vi Maryland Freshmen (0) vs. V. (0), at College Park, at| | at An- | at 3l p.m. Scholastic. Emerson vs. Tome Institute, at Port Deposit, Md. iscopal High vs. Gilman School, at | town player apparently had Fase com- | the Lil Dickinson last week. | be M. I| Victory Over Hitherto a to Close Score. placement kick for extra point went wide, leaving Georgetown ahead, 14 t0 6. Almost a Gift, The ) jpartans’ secorid touchdown re- sulted from a blocked kick in the last few seconds of play. Phil Mooney booted the ball and Center Meyers stop- ped it on Georgetown's 23-yard line, | Where Michigan State recovered it. The | Hoyas drew a 5-yard penalty for having | 12 men on the field and Grove gained | 6 yards to make a first down on the | 12-yard line. Grove then passed over | the line to Fase, an end, who made & great catch. Incidentally, a George- pletely covered and was in_easy tion to knock down the oval. Monnett place-kicked the extra point. Conceding that the Spartans’ second touchdown was almost a gift, they de- served a close decision. They scored 13 first downs against Georgetown's § and | gained 181 yards to 139 for Georgetown on rushing, and each collected about 70 yards on passes. A bit more power, or a little less fighting spirit by the Hoyas would have resulted in a Michi State victory by two touchdowns. Spartans reached the 2-yard line in the first period and in the second were held for downs on the 1-foot mark. Georgetown suffered heavily from penalties, its infractions costing 125 yards against 35 for the visitors. For the first time this season the Georgetown line showed a punch. The ends, and particularly Bob Brennan, were brilliant. Capt. Morris at center was & Rock of Gibraltar as was Mush Dubofsky at guard. - The forwards' splendid charging resulted in 45 yards | la | | | of loss by Spartan backs. | Thinking of Scalzi's great runs we almost forgot to mention a 50-yard gal- | lop by Mancell Gillis that punctuated | first period. Anderson | Brennan . “Monnett Nordberg Eliowitz Score by perlods: Georgetown_ .. Michigan Stae. > € Touchdowns — Scalzi (2). Eliowit: nts after touchdowns—Scalzi (2 Monnett (place-kick tions—Danieu for P. Moon Hudson. J. Rozek for MacZees, Streb, Buskirk T B berg, Slezak 7 014 1—13 Fase. dro) And: Bozek. Tremblay for Danner. dermeer. P. Mooney for Dani ry. for Katalina, ace c: s for | 2ulfor Referee ing, —Umpire— Price. Head_linesman — Mr. Bennis Field judge—Mr. Sprii MacZ Wall Ki Ul T ‘Washington after the first half, in what is said to have been the best. plaved game of ths y=ar out Tulsa way Billy Wells was the shining light for | George Washington, as he was against A 30-yard run by Pilkington scored cne tourhdown for Tulsa and was the principal ball carrier in a long drive that netted the other. Wells to Galloway, Line-up and summary: George W Position Galloway Hale ..... Demas . Chambers Bagranctt ey gt Earie g Dubie halfback Ralfback {Pullback C. Grover. lley). Benttie Umpi v Head 0CCOQUAN BO Beat Manassas. 4 to 2, Accidentally Kicking Goal for Losers. MA. SSAS, Va. November 1.—Oc coquan High School’s booters defeate Manassas Hizh's eleven, 4 to 3, in a soccer game here yest:rday. Davies and Pearson each booted a goal for the winners. Occoguan accl dentally kicked the Manassas goal. Line-up: W .Kite Sutphin Vetter . T. Kite Bowers Rossherry . Bradshaw Allaon”. B NBIth ...:.:.. R 4 stitutes: ' Manessas—Oook for = Rose Lyons for Cook. Roseberry for Allison. ‘oquan—Davies for Beach. Referee—Mr. Saunders (Manassas A. C.). AR CORNELL HAS NEW “PFANN.” Bart Viviano, stocky, hard-driving back, is called the nearest roach to George Pfann that the foot ball team has head in years, | (Los Angel ern Normal, 0. | CARDOZA HIGH BEATEN LSA was held scorcless by George Unable to Make Any Headway |cision to the Douglas High School of Dowe Tulsa. | Colling Howard | Dorsey Grisham | Burkett Revnoll | Wise G| Bowi TVolak | Bovie - ohes | Dougias kington | Lacker . B OTERS WIN |- | The Colonials drove to a touchdown | Dol |atter Carter recovered a Tulsa fumble, | | Rigsby . Fauber CLYDE POPPLEMAN, Halfback. JOE McCAFFERY, Quarterback. Local Teams. Georgetown, 14; Michigan State, 13. ‘Tulsa, 14; George Washington, 6. Western, 0: Eastern, 0. \ Devitt, 6; National Training School, 0. Georgetown Prep, 20: Gonzaga, 19. St. Alban's, 14; St. Paul's, 12. Landon, 12; Charlotte Hall, 0. Washington+Lee High, 20; Alexan- dria, 0. East. ‘Temple, 36; Wake Forest, 0. Alfred, 19; Hobart, 0. South. Elon, 12; Guilford, 9. Catawba, 12; Lenoir Rhyne, 0. William Jewell, 14; Missouri Valley, 7. Newberry, 6: Erskine, 6. University of Miami, Bowdoin State, 0. Simmons University, 13; Southwest- ern, i3. Ho;*nrfl Payne, 24; Trinity Univer- | sity, 0. Mwlnyland College, 12; New Mexico Springfleld Teachers’, 16; Kirksville Teachers’, 0. Southeastern Teachers’, 19; Maryville ‘Teachers’, 6. xetbhfl College, 20; Austin Peay Nor- Eastern _Kentucky ‘Teachers', 13; Morehead Teachers', 0. MeMurry College, 0; San Marcos Teachers’, 0. Midwest. Drake, 12; Washington U. (St | Louis), 0. Haskell, 13; Oklahoma Aggies, 12. St. Louis U, 33; Rolla School of | Mines, 33. Buena Vista, 14: Omaha University, 0. | Bradley, 14; Millikin, 6. | Carthage, 25; Illinois College, 12, Grinnell, 19; Creighton, 2. Loyola of New Orleans, 27; Xavier U, 6. Wesleyan, 7; Bethany, 7. Muskingum, 45; Marictta, 0. Evansville College, 20; Hanover, 7. st Trick Plays Should Be Used To Score With, Yost Asserts BY FIELDING H. YOST, (Michigan Athletic Director.) Written for Associated Press. | bluff buck which turns into & ck pass. NN ARBOR, Mich. (#).—Trick | The plays are intended to deceive the plays in foot ball are not cer- | defense in two ways—either to cause it ‘Why does ‘Old 83' AlWays | yhere the play does not go. make a score?” I was asked the morn-| A trick play would not work with the ing after the Michigan-Purdue game in ;&:laci:n;g ;;;m‘m;m its own 10-yard line, " N ' yritten- t | 14 points and a minute to play. which Michigan's most written-about|,, oo capable of getting the margin play worked for the final touchdown. | of'14 points would wait or the play to | Nene of the trick plays, “Old 83" in- | develop. cluded, make touchdowns every day, but | _ Three plays at Michigan have the tricks bring enough points to keep | scored many touchdowns. “Old 83' is the best ki , folls I foot ball teams wide awake. One other | by the R by the “Statue of Liberty,” while the score of the Purdue-Michigan game was | third is known as the Minnesota & trick, a bluff buck by Yunevich which | ended as a forward pass. | the third is & buck and a criss cross, Trick and deception plays have been | ending in a long forward pass. a part of foot ball since its beginning. | The “Statue of Liberty” is used In 35 years of foot ball I have watched | against a team which is pressing the | passer, in fact against the best ends. an used this play to score a probably spreads, biuff pe. 100 such plays, including | split bucks, man in motion, spinner plays as well as the pass. The first two are well known, while | —Foot Ba;ll Games On the Air Today By the Associated Press. (Eastern Standard time throughout.) N. B. C. Chain. 1:45 p.m.—Dartmouth vs. Yale— WEAF, WEEI. WTIC, WTAG, WCSH, WLIT, WGY, WGR, WCAE, WTAM, WWJ, WOW, WJAR (an- nouncers, Graham McNamee and Ray Perkins). 2.45 p.m.—Princeton vs. Chicago —WJZ, WHAM, KWK, WRC, WIOD, WFLA, WSUN, KGO, KECA, KOMO, WBZ_(announcer, Bill Munday). 2:45 p.m.—Princeton vs. Chicago John Carroll, 30; Wilmington, 0. Transylvania, 6; Dayton, 6. | Mount Union, " 37;" Baldwin Wal- | Phillips University, 25; St. Bene- dict’s, 0. | Washburn, 13; Bmporia Teachers’, 6. Wichita University, 14; Hays Teach-, ers’, 0. . Pittsburgh Teachers, 27; n;w‘:;‘ 4 College of | ockhurst, 26; Wentworth, 19. | Carbondale ‘Teachers’, 19; -| rardeau Teachers’, 0. e o Tarkio, 14; Grand Island, 0. St. Thomas’, 58; Augsburg, Occidental College, 12; Redla Far West. L 20; University of California | es), 0. West Coast Army, 3 i y, 12; California L, 26; Rapid City School of | Yankton College, 13; Aberdeen North- | 0. nds U, 7. Stanford, Mines, 0. Southern Branch, Universit; | 103: Montana State Normal o0, 020 Whitman, 0; Pacific, 0, { Against Baltimore Eleven. * Unable to penctrate deeper than the visitors’ 30-yard line, Cardoza High School yesterday dropped a 12-to-0 de- | Baltimore. Bowie, fullback, and Dorsey, quarter, starred for the Orioies. o> T LireR sias e Bavis Dt Cardoza. ....Crelon Harvey Hil | Brown Dyson 0 0 Substitutions Cardoza s to Touchcowns—Bowie, Dorsey. -Keeling | Douglas—McKinney for_Collins. Gt Lasker, Barber fo, ise, Mc Cardoza—Rayton for For COLLEGE SOCCEli‘ Yale, 2; Dartmouth, 1. Will Mow Beards At Gridiron Tilt LEXINGTON, Ky, (P —Harold S. Ray K: K November 1 Independence, y., and Paul Howard, Howardton, y., will be shaved on the field be- tween halves of the Kentucky-Ala- bama foot ball game this afternoon. The two University of Kentucky students were adjudged winners of a beard growing contest sponsored by Su-Ky Circle, campus prep organi- zation. The awards were announced at a pep rally last night. Ray, who was awarded first place, will receive a large silver cup and Howard, second, a smaller trophy. The beards of both are black and their faces reveal a respectable growth after a clean-shaven start 10 en the contest began. chair will be moved onto Stoll Field especially for the occasion and a local barber will be honored with the task of ving the evidence of hoodfl students. s - i —WABC, WCAO, WNAC, WKBW, KDYL, WIBW, CFRB, KFH, WORC (announcer, Ted Husing). Among_individual broadcasts by various stations will be these: 1:456 p.m.—Columbia vs. Cornell 'Ol —WOR. 1:45 p.m.—Ohio State vs. Wisconsin —WLW, WTAM, WTMJ. 2:15 p.m.— Intercollegiate rugby match—CKGW. 2:45 p.m.—Princeton vs. Chicago— KYW, WMAQ, WGN. 2:45 pm.—Northwestern vs. neloctlo——WBBM, KSTP, WCCO. 2:45 p.m—Pittsburgh vs. Nebraska —KFAB. \ 2:50 pm.—Iowa State vs. Oklahoma —WOC, WHO. —K. 8. A. C. vs. Missouri —WDAF. entucky vs. Alabama abama vs. ‘WAPL. . 8. C. vs. Denver—KFI. Montana vs. California PO. Kentucky 5:00 p.m.—Oregon State vs. Wash- ington. THE SPORTLIGHT BY GRANTLAND RICE. Today's Round-up, ALE-DARTMOUTH—A week ago | conference game, where Wisconsin has | we rated the Yale-Army game | | as a toss-up. There Was 10| Cornell-Columbia—Cornell’s unbeaten | choice. ‘The score was 7-7 Rush | What is more, each won & game in the it a moticn pictures. That made double tie. | The Yale-Dartmouth game is almost in the same class, except that on this occasion the Green looks to have som:- Jihk‘.g on the Blue—just enough to win with. | Pennsylvania-Kansas—With Big Jim | Bausch in the line-up, what now looks | to be the best team Kantas ever sent anywhere has a good chance to beat | | Pennsylvania. Bausch is one of the | | best backs in foot ball. Out in the Big | Six section they rate Kansas 2s one of | the strongest aggregations many seasons have known. Alabama-Kentuck |of “the most decisive games in the Southern season. Which is to say it | will eliminate one of two strong, un-| beaten teams. Alabama has greater all- | around strength, with a big, hard- | charging line and a first-class set of | backs. The dope favors Alabama. | | Chicago-Princeton—Here is the strug- | gle to get up in the world. It has been | an indigo season for both. Neither has | had the material to match the opposi- | tion. Princeton cught to have the edge. | Fordham-West Virginia—This makes | Fordham’s fourth hard game in a Tow, | Yet Fordham's powerful defense should | be the winning factor. | N. Y. U.-Cainegie Tech—One of the | best games of the day between two | | high-class teams. ' Carnegle Tech looks to have too much experience for N. Y. N. Y. U. also ?:tlnt | his will be one inst Fordham it recession. 1 touchdown around O’Hearn, Cornell star flanker in 1912, He did not play against Michigan in 1913, but was back again in 1914, | the year he was named All-American |end. Halfway through the game the | Michigan quarterback called for the “statu play. An instant after the runner took the ball O'Hearn hit him with a resounding crash. “I've been waiting for that play for | two years,” he remarked as he helped | the shaken ball carrier to his feet. Michigan’s “Old 83" which I am | informed is the best known single play [in the United States, starts as a buck, | develops as an erd around run and | {turns into a delaycd pass away from | the point of bluff attack. Innumerable diagrams have been made of the play, but I have yet to see one giving the correct detal ‘Mc | | It has been used 30 years at Micl | igan. I supposed it has made 70 touch- “‘Old 53" is saved for a rainy day. | Onme of my instructions to quarter- | |a trick play at a poor end. Failing [to “sense” something unusual he migh! when it developed. | The good end, working under the is more liable to be drawn in. Cornell's O'Hearn, however, taught jon the same good end. Smart wingmén | | have memories. By the Associated Press. | BOSTON.—W. L. (Young) Stribling, from K. O. Christner, Akron, Ohio (3 Arthur Dekuh, New York, outpoint: | CHICAGO.—Jerry (Tuffy) Griffiths, | Sioux City, outpointed George Neron, outpointed Natie Brown, San Francisco | (8); Charles Retzlaff, Duluth, knocked | (1); Paul Pantalco, Chicago, outpointed | Harry Dillon, Winnipeg (8). | | downs, every one in major games, as ‘bntks and captains was never to run |wait and be in the way of the play high tension of a goal line battle, | lack of wisdom in trying the same trick FIGHTS LAST NIGHT Macon, Ga., won on technical knockout | | Big Bill Hartwell, Kansas City (8). | Greece (8); Larry Johnson, Chicago, | out Andy Shanks, Grand Rapids, Mich. | | ‘Wisconsin-Ohio State—Another hard | the jump and should win. | | team has too much for Columbia to face “ | and hold. Columbia has a fine back in Hewitt and Cornell has a star in Viviana. Sy:acuse-Brown—Here again are two | ong teams of the East in one | nip-and-tuck engagements, to spare. The advantage is slight either way, but what there is belongs to Syracuse. Army-North Dakota—No easy game for Army after facing llarvard and Yale on successive Saturdays. Georgia-Florida—You can check this one up for Geo:gia, but it will be no runaway. Marquette-Boston College—Marquette, still unbeaten, with a star in Halfback Sisk, looks to have a touchdown ad- vantage. Purdue-Tllinois—Another good chance for George Ade of Purdue to stand up and give three rousing cheers. Southern Methodist-Texas—S. M. U. | will have too much in the way of & passing offense for Texas to stop. Washington State - Oregon State— | Washington State was st:ong enough to | beat Southern California and Cali- fornia. That means Washington State rhould be strong enough to beat Oregon State. Clemson and Tennessee will have another hot skirmish, just about 50-50. | Notre Dame will romp over Indiana. Pittsburgh should have a slender mar- gin over Nebraska. This could go on for another hour ?c’“’ .?lrln‘%w o N tnn‘l?.mf!' Ne opyright, 1930, by North American News 5l 8- | expected to start his regulars, SPORTS. THOUSANDS CROWD YALE, PENN FIELDS Northwestern, Minnesota At- tract Many—Other Big Engagements. By the Associated Press, EW YORK, November 1.— Half a million or more | fans were intent on seeing Eastern foot ball games | today. A half dozen stellar attractions | on the program accounted for over 300,000 spectators. The Yale Bowl, with Yale and Dartmouth playing, was the magnet for 76,- 000. As many more fans in Phil- adelphia were attracted by the intersectional clash between Penn- sylvania and Kansas. Carnegie Tech and New York Uni« versity counted on having about 50,000 | to watch the renewal of their rivalry, | while nearly as many more spectators | at the battle between the powerful lines | of Syracuse and Brown swelled the list. | Two undefeated teams, playing in New York, contributed 60,000 or more. Columbia was host to unbeaten Cornell and mighty Fordham entertained West Virginia. _ Harvard drew thousands, although expecting no hard task with William and Mary. CHICAGO, November 1 (#)—Up at Minneapolis today 54,000 foot ball en- thusiasts bundled up to go to Memorial Stadium to watch Northwestern and Minnesota decide which should remain in the Big Ten championship. ‘The Gopher-Wildcat contest rated as the topliner of the Middle Western schedule, which included two other strictly conference games, and a trio in which Big Ten teams were involved. Purdue, with its remote chance of winning or sharing in the title, was at Illinois, while Wisconsin, eager to sal- vage as much glory as possible after its defeat by Purdue last week, was paired up with Ohio State at Columbus. Iowa had an engegement with the University of Detroit's Titans at Detroit. and In- diana was the guest in Notre Dame's new brick bowl. Purdue was the choice over Illinois, but the Illini were hopeful of hitting a victorious stride. Wisconsin, obviously powerful, was rated as too good for Ohio | State, which has won only one Big Ten match in three tries, while Indiana was expected to provide little serious trouble for Notre Dame. ‘The intersectional offering of the day brought together Chicago and Prince- ton in a game which was interesting mostly for traditional reasons. The record of neither was impressive, but | the Tiger hoped to even up the four- game series by winning today. Michi- gan had an open date. Dartmouth Determined. NEW HAVEN, Conn., November 1 (#). —Hopeful of scoring Dartmouth’s first | victory over Yale, an undeated high- | scoring team came to New Haven today. Dartmouth, which rolled up big/ scores against four opponents and | capped them with a 7-2 victory over | Harvard last week, was a slight favorite. Yale has been beaten by Georgia and tied by Army. Yale’'s chances for victory again hung on the slight form of Albie Booth, who was injured a week ago, but re- covered rapidly. Pre-game plans were to start Sullivan at quarterback, hold- ing Booth in reserve for an opening that would suit his talents. Yale sup- porters believed that if Alble could | make a few of his famous shifty runs, he alone could offset the superior strength of Dartmouth. Army Is Cautious. ‘WEST POINT, N. Y., November 1 (#). —A newcomer on the Army schedule, | North Dakota University, furnished the | opposition for the Cadets today in a game which was expected to serve as a breather after successive clashes with | Harvard and Yale. The Flickertails, although champions of the North Central Conference and one of the few remainihg undefe and united teams this year, were rated considerably below the powerful Army team in_strength. Maj. Ralph Sasse, Army coach, was not willing to risk defeat, however, and Expect Another Battle, PITTSBURGH, November 1 (#).— | With the spectacular battle they fought | here in 1928 still fresh in memory, more than 30,000 fans had purchased tickets for today's game at the stadium be- tween the colorful elevens of Carnegle | Tech and New York University. Each team has lost one game, Car- negie being downed by Notre Dame, New York U by Fordham, Both are in first-class condition for today’s tilt. | A’ Consolation Contest. Bausch Magnet In Penn Contest PHILADELPHIA, November 1 (#), —*“Jarring Jim" Bausch of the Uni- versity of Kansas was a magnet for today's game with Pennsylvania on Franklin Fleld. Bausch, because of his foot ball prowess and the recent controversy in the Big 8ix Conference over his eligibility, received more publicity upon the Jawhawkers' arrival here than did “Red” Grange, the “Gal loping Ghost” of Illinols, when he roamed Franklin Field a few years ;cot and sent Penn crashing to de- eat. Bausch is the big threat on the Jawhawker team, a 200-pound half- back on a hard-hitting, fast-movi versatile team that averages 10 pounds. were paired today for the fourth game of their intersectional series. Neither team has accomplished any- thing against ranking foemen, the Ma- roons even having failed to score against Florida. Wisconsin and Mississippl, their Jast three opponents, but the game was still the “Princeton-Chicago” game to alumni groups and a crowd of not less than 32,000 was virtual certainty. Of the three previous engagements, Chicago had two victories, while the Tigers' single triumph was one of the | most sensational in modern foot ball. It was accomplished in 1922 and Princeton came from behind in the final period to win by 21 to 18. The Maroons won last year in the East by 15 to 7. Would Upset Purdue. CHAMPAIGN, Iil,, November 1 (#).— Still_mathematically interested in the Big Ten foot ball championship scram- ble, Purdu¢ invaded Memorial Stadium today to battle Illinois’ twice beaten but still battling eleven. Tlinois, showing definite improve- ment between its conference _de- feats by Northwestern and Michigan, was hopeful of scoring an upset at the expense of the rugged 1929 title holders. Purdue, however, having emerged in good condition from its grueling 7-to-6 triumph over Wisconsin last week, was favored. Defeat for the Boilermakers, how- ever, would mean the destruction of their faint chance of sharing in this year's title—a chance which depends on Purdue winning each of its three conference tests and a defeat for every other eleven in the group. The prob- able attendance was estimated at 28,000. Badgers Are Favored. COLUMBUS, Ohio, November 1 (#).— Renewing a rivalry reminiscent of the golden age of foot ball here, Ohio State and Wisconsin collided in Ohio Stadium today, with the Badgers favored slightly to win. Each university won four of the eight games played between 1913 and 1820. They had not met since. Neither ap- peared to have any further “say” in the Western Conference championship race, Ohio having been defeated twice and Wisconsin once. For Ohio, Center Bert Nasman, Left Guard Sam Selby and Right Tackle lB:})dHlubrh;h‘wen not. l]l&flr;r :mlofllv hard game, but appeared likely starters. Dick Smith, Frank Lukz and Larry Fried probably will replace them early. Clean Slate at Stake. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., November 1 (#).—The perfect Western Conference record of each team hung in the bal- ance today as Capt. “Hard Luck” Hank Bruder led his Northwestern Wildcats against the Minnesota Gophers. The Wildcats were favorites, follow- ing their decisive victories over Ohio State and Illinois, and Coach Dick Hanley had his Northwestern squad in powerful shape. The Minnesotans, how- ever, were keyed to the fighting pitch which won them fame recently in hold- ing Stanford to a scoreless tie and were primed to stop Bruder, playing his first | game in nearly a month, as well as Russell and Rentner, the big guns of Northwestern scoring power. It was homecoming day at Minnesota and 54,000 tickets had been sold for the game. Notre Dame Has Breather. SOUTH BEND, Ind, November 1 ()—All of Notre Dame's men of ail nations were set for foot ball exercises today against Indiana’s scrapping but probably outclassed Hooslers, Fortified by victories over Southermn Methodist, Navy, Carnegie Tech and Pittsburgh, the Irish were not expected to find the battered Indiana eleven tough, and Knute Rockne planned to start his second or shock troop eleven. The reguiars also were down for time on the field, as were the third, fourth, fifth and sixth teams. Indiana had not defeatdd Notre Dame in 24 years and was not expected to astound a crowd of around 25,000 by accomplishing the feat today. The Hoosier line was in fair shape, but the backs were far from top power. Detroit Picked Over Towa. DETROIT, November 1 (#)—TH¥' University of Detroit foot ball team: faced Towa here today, its first encount- er in history with a member of the Big Ten. Detroit has run roughshod over all opponents thus far this season, piliny up 180 points, while 6 were ) against it. CHICAGO, November 1 (#).—Prince- ton and Chicago, both still tryihg to get started in major foot ball competition, | Towa's record to date has not been impressive, with three losses in four starts. ) Now on Tickets $3.00, FOOTBALL TICKETS NAVY vs. OHIO STATE November 8th Navy vs. Southern Methodist November 15th BALTIMORE STADIUM Sale at A. G. SPALDING & BROS. 1338 G Street N.W. $2.00, $1.00 CLOSING OUT SALE Our Lease Has Expi Dispose of USED To Be Regardless g ired and We Must All Stock CARS Sold’ of COST WALI MOTOR cCO. 1709 L St. N. y ; Open Everiggs Dec. 2280 and Sundays s CReRutIR> Green Terror Slight Favorite Tonight : 500,000 View College Foot Ball Today | am