Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
WASHINGTON, D. C, nening Stas. WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1930. tures- and Classified PAGE D-1 " Good Menu for Capital Grid Followers : Catholic U. Quint Schedules 22 Tilts TWO FINE GAMES SLATED -FOR SEASON’S WANE HERE Annual Cardinal-Colonial Tilt in Griffith Stadium ' “NTonight, Maryland-Navy Contest at Annapolis Tomorrow Hold Much Attraction. N BY H. C. BYRD. ITH the exception of the game George Washington is to play at Navy the Saturday after Thanksgiving, and two others in. Baltimore, the general run of local people who follow foot ball get their last opportunities to watch games to- night and tomorrow. This, of course, excepts the lucky few who have tickets for the * penn-Cornell struggle at Philadelphia on Thanksgiving, the Army- Navy \spectacle at New York and two or three other contests of And, as a matter of fact, the games here or in Annapolis this X or' at:ly&ote will come pretty close to winding up the gridiron season for a great majority of local people, because there are not any too great & number who can afford either the time or the money it cbsts to journey North or South Xox; 7this purpose. % o T TS B Sinrion | How They’ll Face In Game Tonight and Catholic University meeting at Griffith Stadium at 8:15. This marks ~. the end of the C. U. schedule. George W n has one more game, With Navy next week. Gallaudet also winds its schedule tonight, when it meets Prancis at Johnstown, Pa. No._C.U. G. WASH. No. "A great many people will go_from washing 8 Freatz . fon. 1o Aunapols o sec Nawy 27 O'Brien w, while others d_tomorro Wi 2 ._Fenlon 27. ..F.B...(c.) Krm'yer 63 Reserves: Catholic University—Shal- Oliver, 5; Hepburn, 7; Calla- han, Guarneri, 12; Nimphius, 16; Lo | stapleton, 11; Bilinger, 33; Bertonl, 2t Wi —Bill Vogt, 15; ugmem 16; Cl.rlin.,'gf: Jones, 23; Wells, smung,flzg: o (Boston University Capt. Prank Goet! J i _§ i § § g : g 32 1 1 B i Ig i Handling Tickets Big Job for Navy ANNAPOUIS. Md , November 21. If admission éotud be charged on the Naval Academy reservation indi- cations are that N-vumry!-.nd game tomorrow would a good charity affair in itself. Navy can provide about 23,000 seats, all available stands, bleachers and benches, but tomor- Tow's game is proving of such wide interest that the Athletics Asso- * ciation has been forced to follow a ticket plan. A block of tickets was furnished Maryland, but most of the distribution came through Navy. ther home games ai polis this season have been open to the public without membership tickets. Navy's schedule of 11 games this season, with 7 of them requiring tickets, has ‘antly taxed the asso- clation’s facilities for issue, and as a result the clerical force has been working into the small hours of the morning for several weeks. Membership ests for Army- Navy tickets ave il stafl has come upo: in this last-minute contest for charity. INGRAM FILLS GAPS INNAVY GRID TEAM Campbell to Be at Full and Chambers at Tackle Against Maryland. NNAPOLIS, Md., November 21. . Coach Bill Ingram has made a decision as to two of the play- ers who will start against the University of Maryland tomorrow. Campbell will start at fullback in -|place of Hagberg and Chambers will occupy Bryan's place:at right tackle. The weight of the backfield will be cut down to sonfe extent by this sub- stitution, Campbell’s weight, 172 pounds, about 15 below that of Hagberg. be affected, Cham- g 190, the few plebes of ity rating this sea- ed. YALE AND HARVARD lanova, although it is likely to have plenty of trouble doing it. The Blue #nd Gray has a better record so far tran the Pennsylvanians. It also has defeated opponents of a higher cglibet than any of those that have gone fown before the Villanova eleven. “ ANY of the games tomorrow are those in which old rivalries will % rippie on the foot ball pond. on e L 5 Harvard, that is another matter. g rd against Yale, no matter if they + had lost every other game on schedules, would still be one of the great games of the season. Such is tradition and prestige. Coast, Stanford- i Waaie ‘falayette and Lehigh, Purdue and , Missouri and Kansas, Delaware verford. Dickinson and Swarth- ‘West Virginia and Washington Jefferson are somewhat lesser HEADLINE N EAST Tight Contest Is Predicted _ Between August Rivals. Middies Hopeful. BY HERBERT W. BARKER, Associated Press Bports Writer. EW YORK, November 21.—By right of tradition, the forty- ninth gridiron duel between Yale and Harvard furnishes the East with its outstanding foot ball attraction tomorrow. There are other im) t contests -on the slate, but none of sufficient caliber to compete with the annual fray between the Crim- son and the Blue. The rival head coaches, Mal Stevens of Yale and Arnold Horween of Har- vard, planned only light work-outs at New Haven for their squads today. Both starting line-ups have been nominated and most of the experts have tossed aside their form charts and’ confined their advance statements to predic- Ations of a close game. Yale will line up with Flygare and Barres at the ends, Wilbur and Vin- cent, tackles; Lineman and Stewart, Loser, edenler; Hg:m, ; Ticknor, center; Hugu! ard, halfbacks, and White, fullback. At _Annapolis Navy hopes to stage a comeback at the expense of Maryland, and at New York Fordham, beaten by | 8t. Mary’s, would like to end its sea- son with a victory over Bucknell. Ex- pert opinion is that the Rams will do 50. New York University is a heavy favorite over Rutgers, but the Violets must stop Jack Grossman, one of the backs Eas ean pass, 1t is alsd e | should win. Idaho Kim and likely. that réquired to 3 extent as m%‘, Gt . and game, Campbell Ingrem will again start Byng, th District lad, and Torgerson &t ine end:, with Capt. Bowstrom at left tackle, Underwood and Gray at the guards and ‘Tuttle in the center position. Experts Size:U P Grid Struggles BY BILL ROPER. EAST. Yale-Harvard—Yale. Army-Ursinus—Army. Brown-New Hampshire—Brown, Bucknell-Fordham—Fordham. Haverford-Delaware—Haverford. Lafayette-Lehigh—Close. Navy-Maryland—Navy. Yotk University. Swarthmore-Dickinson—Swarthmore. Temple-Carnegie Tech—Temple. Villanova-Georgetown--Georgetown. SOUTH. South Carolina-North South Carolina. %&;uthswes‘:rn-sew&nze—&wmnee. ice-Southern Methodist — Mevthogm. R anderbilt-Alabama Poly—Vanderbilt. West Virginia-Washington and Jef- ferson—West Virginia. BY BOB ZUPPKE. MIDWEST. Notre Dame-Northwestern — Nof Dame. The Irish backs will wobng; turn the fide, though Northwestern has ice, Carolina— ) chance. bt onie State—Pesler's passing g may this game. Ohio’ State on g-per looks better, but Illinois has a Michigan-Chicago<— Michigan. The ‘Wolverines will win this 1o(w fi\:fl c?mfi’bmmp. g nsin-Minnesota—Wisconsin. close one in which anything m:x/n hnpA- pen. Purdue-Indiana—Purdue, speed and strength for the Hoosere Iowa-Nebraska—Nebraska. But prob- lbg little to choose between ‘em. ansas-Missouri—Kansas. The Jay- hawkers have the stuff - if they can put Kansas Aggles-Center—Kansas Aggles. Bo MeMillen will w; 3 Bo_Magi vant to show the Oklahoma-Oklahoma Aggies — Okla~ homa. A tight mtrxouu battle, with mfl. ut Missouri No- dl:.? loohd well against Michi State. Notre Dame State-Detrott — Michigan close one. . BY HOWARD JONES. California vs. Stanford — Stanford vs. Montana—Slight edge to T 3 Occidental vs. g ; 5. Pomona—Occidental by Southern Oalifornia - Washington— Wuflnumfl:tha.m' ‘hich fiel , Wi hMMwmmxhfidmm 9, Rever ol ton, ‘beat Stanfard A e i M t ‘being New York University-Rutgers—New | " | Camp No. 3—Walter Camp Arrives. BY ALAN GOULD, Bports Stor, Associated Press. HE war year of 1898 created I almost -as big an upheaval in foot ball as the Spanish- Am erican unpleasantness did in Cuba. The all-America arbitership passed definitely from the hands of Caspar Whitney to Walter Camp, although for several years the selections of each continued to attract national interest. Camp's closer connection with the de- velopment and lcgislation of the game widened his prestige. The year marked the inclusion of a mid-Western player, the famous C. B. Herschberger of Chicago, for the first time. The old barriers of the East were yielding, somewhat grudgingly, it must be admitted, to the rapid advanc the West in producing skillful and well trained talent. Hitherto, only Pennsyl- vania and Cornell had been admitted to the company of the old Big Three in’ all-America honors. New factors and influences were being felt. Western colleges capitalized the kicking game. Herschberger, Chicago's fullback, was an expert booter, but Pat O'Dea of Wisconsin was even better. O'Dea drop-kicked a 62-yard goal against Northwestern that year. The rules were in better shape, more generally lived up to, after several years of bickering. In 1895 two sets of rules existed, one sponsored by Princeton, Navy and Yale, the other by Cornell, Harvard and Pennsylvania. This was due to the refusal of Har- vard and Penn to dccept the drastic abolition of momentum mass plays, such as the “guards back” formation made famous by the Quakers. The latter car- ried their point and the new rules specified only five. men must be on the offensive line of scrimmage. The pres- ent rule requires seven. WH!TN'EY and Camp disagreed in three positions when it came to making up their 1898 All-Amer- ica combinations. ‘Whitney picked Cunningham of an for center, McBride of Yale for a halfback and Romeyn of West Point for fullback. Camp selected Overfield of Pennsylva- nia, Outland of Pennsylvania and Herschberger of Chicago for these posts. Charley Daly of Harvard, the terback cholce, later distinguished . self at West Point. He is the’ only man to represent two institutions on the All-America roster. Percy Haugh- ton, later famous as Harvard's head coach, was a tackle in the Crimson line and second-string All-America. INTERSECTIONAL games helped bring ‘ the . East and Midwest into 4 cigser relationship_and exploft the new stars being developed beyond the henies. _Chicago in XNIDMI w"gzgy came East nsylvania. , Gncrets Coopran. of Beiate: coached te - ran of ce- Sk for the first time in’ e test ends.of his time. elfinger-as tutor of the day gaine blizzard. one ofthe their annual Thanksgiving at Philadelphia in a raging. ‘Tomorrow—The Rules Tighten. ! TASK FOR TEXAS C. U. TO HOLD LOOP TITLE Horned Frogs Must Score Over Baylor, S. M. U. for Laurels in Southwest. By the Associated Press DALLAS, Tex, November 21— Nursing their first defeat in two years, suffered at the hands of the Texas Longhorns last week, the Téxas Chris- tian University Morned Frogs will face the Baylor Bears tomorrow at Fort Worth, still determined to win their second straight Southwest Conference grid title. Providing they can turn back the Bears, the speedy Christians then will have only to lick Southern Methodist on the following Saturday to repeat. 1 Anything less than a pair of victories may spell failure and see the Long- holding the conference cham- p, as the latter eleven is.an overwhelming favorite to win its clos- e ‘v‘i“m‘ the Texas Aggies on iving. ‘The defending champions will face a powerful crew tomorrow, a-team that has primed itself to knock the Frogs loose from their title aspirations Perfection of a defense to hold Leland, Prog sprinter, who turned last ear’s tilt into a nightmare for Baylor, as been stressed in the Bruins' prac- tice this week. In the only other conference melee billed tomorrow the Southern Meth- odist eleven will invade the roost of the Rice OI]M! Hm;,!".fi;d (:g:ch Jack Meagher emp passing ame in\whipping his' Owls into shape for the tussle. el iy, ONLY THREE CLASHES SIATED FOR ROCKIES Most Elevens Idle Tomorrow as They Await Thanksgiving Contests. By the Associated Press. DENVER, Colo, November 21 — Rocky Mountain gridiron warfare goes into the slack end of the season Sat- urday with only three games scheduled for the diversion of the foot ball faithful. The lowly Colorado College Tigers, .one of their worst -sea- Towa State-Drake—Drake. The Bull- | Fort this end Western State College aggrega- ‘mm' ing into the last game of going into the game o season it has had in Becomes All-America Arbiter in 1898 And Names a Midwesterner for First Time| The year of the Spanish-American War saw the first Midwestern foot ball player given All-America recognition. He was C. B. Herschl » Chicago: Uni- yersity fullback, given a place alongaide Brown of Yale and Palmer of Princeton on the m. Camp’s 1898 All-America Selections FIRST TEAM. SECOND TEAM. THIRD TEAM. End Palmer, Princeton A. Poe, Princeton Folwell, Penn. Tackle Hillebrand, Princeton Steckle, Michigan Sweetland, Cor’ll Guard Brown, Yale McCracken, Penn. Randolph, Pa..8. CenterOverfield, Penn. Cunningham, Mich. Jaffray, Harvard Guard Hare, Penn. Boal, Harvard Reed, Cornell Tackle Chamberlain, Yale Haughton, Harvard Fox, West Point Hallowell, Harvard Cochrane, Harvard Smith, West P. Daly, Harvard Kennedy, Chicago Kromer, West P. Outland, Penn. Dibblee, Harvard Herschberger, Chi. Richar Warren, Harvard . Benedict, Nebr. O’Dea, Wisconsin Romeyn, West P. , Brown Raymond, Wes'lyn Knutefs Blues Chant Bodes I11 . " For Wildtats in Grid Classic By the Assoclated Press. HICAGO, November 21.— That interesting Midwestern discus- sion concerning the compara- tive strength of good Notre Dame foot ball teams and the Big Ten champions will be settled—among other things—when the Irish and Northwest- ern meet tomorrow. ‘There is no reason for doubting that Notre Dame’s 1930 eleven is not just about as good as ever represemted the South Bend institution, and Northwest- ern is at least a co-holder of the West- ern Conference championship. History has repeated itsslf in so far as the current Western Conference delegate is concerned. In 1926 North- western shared the Big Ten title with Michigan and met Notre Dame in one of the greatest battles of the Midwestern | season. ‘The Irish won, 6 to 0, to win the argument that year. JTowa Won in 1921, Back as far as 1921, however, an- other good Notre Dame eleven was forced to bow to the Big “Ten title holder—Iowa. The Hawkeyes, coached by Howard Jones and represented on the gridiron by Locke, Parkinson, the Devines and Duke Slater, among others, squeezed out a 10-to-6 victory over the Irish. Saturday’s contest be a sort of “rubber” affair. Coach Knute Rockne yesterday start- ed singing in a minor key—Notre Dame is ready mechanically, but he is a little afraid that the rigors of that mur- derous schedule has taken too much out of his men, and that they will not have the edge necessary to slice through the bigger Northwestern eleven. All of which bodes no good at all for North- Cy | western, for whenever Rockne has sung blues this season Notre Dame’s next opponent took a lacing. Out at Northwestern the boys con- tinue to believe that Rockne has & right to be worried. Coach Dick Han- ley says that his teams go. Saturda; as they go in practice during the week. And he has described this week's drills as immensely better than any others of the year. He has wovked the Wild- cat line to move faster and has driven his backfleld combinations to produce greater smoothness. He figures that if any team can lick the Irish, Northwest- ern is it, and skbould do it, with 49,000 watching. Take Back Seat. ‘There will be other foot ball games in the Midwest—finals of the Big Ten season—but. they have been shoved so far into the background that the grid- iron enthusiasts generally, have almost lost sight of the fact that Michigan will go out to clinch its share of the Western Conference championship by | dEfeItln'gnChiCaxfl. ‘They have not for- gotten that in Michigan, nowever, and Amos Alonzo Stagg's Maroons will play in front of more customers tian they have in any two previous games of their scheduls. ‘The . proceeds of the game, over a certain amount, will ! to charity and a crowd of not less A ticipated. The outcome does not ap- pear to be in doubt, with Michigan Bruder Has Last Chance to Shine EVANB‘PON. I, November 21. (#). —~No member of the North- western foot ball team wants a victory over Notre Dame Satur- day more than “Hard Luck” Hank Bruder, Wildcat captain, who will play his last college game on his nty-third- birthday. = had some* we win . this to forget the - but Bruder said, “but if one, it 't, be hard ough Indk until Saturday deferred his night. any— m%mueu Big Ten record |un ulmltml go’s uniformly unsuccess- Indiana and Purdue will play an- other installment of the old oaken bucket with the Bollermakers lopsided favorites to add another “P” link to the chain that adorns the rustic cup. Ohio also is favored to finish its Big Ten schedule with a victory at the expense of Illinois. The Minnesota- Wisconsin and Iowa-Nebraska strug- gles, however, appear to be wide open. ALEXANDRIA JUNIORS WIN. ALEXANDRIA, Va., November 21.— A touchdown by Simpson in the second quarter gave Alexandria High School Junior Varsity gridmen a 7-to-0 vic- tory over the Pirate A. C. in their e at Baggett's Park yesterday. - 'sg;nldued"re extra p{am nny.mlk;e plunge. Men are “Cashing Foot Ball Games On Air Tomorrow By the Associated Press. (Eastern standard time through- N. B. C. Chain. WIOD, WFLA: , WMC, WHAS, WJDX, WOAI KOA, KGO, KECA, KOMO. (Announcer not yet se- leg s N Maryland— B .m.—Navy Vvs. Wiz, WHAM, KWK, WRC, WM, WJDX, WFAA, WOAL (Announcer not yet se- C. B. 8. Chain. 2:45 p.m.—Notre Dame vs. North- western—WABC, WFBL, WHEC, WPG, WCAU, WHP, WJAS, WTAR, WDBJ, WKRC, WWNC, WXYZ, WBCOM, ‘WLAC, KLRA, WDAY, WIBW, KRLD, KLZ, KPFY, KHJ, KFRC, WORC, WGR, (Announcer Ted Husing.) Individual broadcasts will be made by various stations, incl these: 1:45 pm.—Fordham vs. Bucknell . —Michigan vs. Chieago— JR. 2:45 pm.—Notre Dame vs. North- western—KYW; WMAQ. 2: &.I_I*—Ohln State vs. Illinols— WLW, "AM. 2:45—Nebraska vs. Towa—WOC, KFAB. 2:45_p.m.-—Wisconsin vs. Minne- sota—WCCO, KSTP. 2::} p.m.—Missouri vs. Kansas— 5:00 pm—California vs. Stan- ford—KPO, KF1. KOMO. ROPER GAVE TIGER 00T BAL SPRI” Dean Gauss of Princeton Says Retiring Coach Was WILL START PLAY ON NOVEMBER 16 Games With Maryland, G. W. and American Feature Attractive Card. REPARATION “for the bas ket ball season at Catholic University soon will get under way in earnest. With most of last season's varsity at hand along with members of the yearling team of a campaign ago the Cardinals are op! c. Chick Gagnon will coach the squad for the first time. A few aspirants who are not mem- bers of the foot ball squad have been working twice a week under Gagnon's direction. The whole squad will begin work within & few days, as the Cards close their foot ball season tonight against George Washin, L Twenty-two games ranged for the 3 ule witl open December 16, when Mary- land State Normal School will be met in the C. U. and close March 6 against George Washington on the lat- ter’s floor. Outstanding games are those with Maryland, February 6, in the C. U. gym; the annual home-and-home serles ° with American University and ‘Washington, and matches with Du- quesne at Pittsburgh, Loyola of Balti- mu;c‘f U. and St. John's at Brook- The C. U. schedule follows: December 16—Maryland State Normal. December 19—Rider College, Trenton, N. J. . 20—Manhattan College, New York. December 22—Knights of Columbus, New York. January 8—Benjamin Franklin Uni- versit; Y. January 10—Geneva. .:‘l'l:ulry 14—George Washington Uni- versity. January 17—Loyola at Baltimore. Big Man of Game. By the Associated Press. January 19—American University, February 6—Maryland University. February 9—Rider College. . P:0!'\1--!'1 11—Dugquesne, Pittsburgh, February 17—Geneva, Beaver Falls, RINCETON, N. J., November 21.— | pa, ‘William W. Roper, retiring foot ball coach)\of Princeton Univer- sity, is described as “the most vivid and forceful personality Ameri- can foot ball has known in our time by Dean Christian Gauss. . In the Princeton Alumni Weekly, Dean Gauss writes that Roper during his 16 years as head coach did not give Prince- ton foot ball a system as much as he instilled a spirit. i The fine ideal of sportsmanship which he inculcated had its reverberation upon the campus,” Dean Gauss writes. “Year by year the conduct of his men was higher "'hln that of the average dergraduate. “All _Princeton menh.uc to win, but no one wi fall to add immediately and emphati- cally that no one ever detested unfair dodges or dirty play more than he. “Coach Roper deserves to refire with all the honors of war, For his 16 years at_Brooklyn. T UTURTY 27—1th Regiment at Brock- hhnllg 28—Seton Hall, South Orange, N. J. March 3—American University, A. U. arch 6—George Washington, G, W. gym. BIBLE SELECTS STARS Eight Named for Western Squad in Charity Grid Game. SAN FRANCISCO, November 21 (#). —=8election of foot ball stars of the Midwest and Southwest to - sent the West in the annual East-West charif Decem! of service his name is and should be | back, written larger into the history of Prince- ton foot ball than that of any other | halfback, man.” The dean discloses that Roper ‘under a lashing of righteous indigna- tion,” shoved off the fleld a photogy rapher who offered to sell slow movies revealing secrets of a rival from which the coach was most anxious to win. homa. Several players in the Rocky Mountain Conference also will be invited with fllehhneeoffllefl-mlnal;:'d--: universities. In” - tremendously on these great “HAHN 47 S/ Styles that look like a “Ten Spot”! EEN as a razor blade. Big City styles that belong in good com- pany—and keep you well prepared for strenuous days, any sort of weather. Zippy wing-tippers—Collegiate Brogues—plain’ toes—and all the rest. Dark or medium browns and blacks—in * calfskins—Thistle Grains—Scotch Grains. We can’t say it too often—wonderful-shoes for any man’s $6.50! S pats To make you look like a banker. American makes. Best British or $2.50 to $5.50 Hose New arrivals, constantly, in our great featured group—novelty lisles and wool mixtures— Men’s Shops 14th at G - Tth & K T %3212 14th Saturdays Till 10 P.M.