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F B-8 DOZEN HOT GAMES SLATED FOR EAST Undefeated Teams of Cornell and Columbia Meet—Dixie Leaders Coast. By the Associated Press EW YORK, October 31 —North, South, East and West, college foot ball teams sallied forth again today to further clarify pational and sectional championship alignments One outstanding candidate for na- tional honors, Notre Dame, was s dis- tinct center of popular interest, for the Ramblers were matched against Car- negie Tech at Pittsburgh in one of the big-time struggles of the day. spite & heavy mtersectional slate particularly in the East, there was just #s much interest in haif a dozen cru- elal encounters within the East, the Big Ten, the Southwest Conference and the Southern Conference. In the elevens, Cornell and Columbia, were uared off against one another at ;&url. N. Y. ‘ale's Bulldogs, improv- ing fast, tackled Dartmouth’s Indians; Holy Cross played Brown, Lafayette sought to hait Penn, Pitt tangled “with Penn State, Georgetown -was opposed 1o Boston College and Villanova stacked up against the tough Bucknell Bisons. IN the South a heavy conference schedule was topped by the meeting of Florida and Georgla’s rampant Bulidogs. Tulane and Tennessee, co- Jeaders with Georgia, took things a bit easier against M pl A and M. and Duke, respectively. Vanderbilt an- ticipated victory against Georgia Tech and Alabama hoped to stop Kentucky, unbeaten, but tied by Maryland. Vir- inia Poly was Maryland's foe and "m‘th Carolina played North Carolina State. Sewanee drew Louisiana State for another conference engagement. In the Big Ten, the struggle between ‘Wisconsin and Minnesota looked closest, with Northwestern, Purdue and Ohio State favored over Illinols, Chicago id Indiana, respectively. Nebraska ooked much o strong for Missouri in the Big Six and Oklahoma was favored over Iowa State, despite the improve- gment in the Ames’ outfit. Kansas went outside the Conference to clash with ©klahoma A. and . 'OUTHERN METHODIST and Texas were pitted against each other in the Southwest feature, the only other Conference game ‘Texas Christian against Arkansas. In the Pacific Coast Conference, championship mes involved Washington State and | was favored to hand Chicago another | State on the one hand, and Stanford and the University of Call- fornia at Los Angeles in the other. Colorado Aggles’ struggle with the champion Utah Indians headlined the Rocky Mountain Conference card; Brigham Young played Colorado Teachers and Western State tackled Den ver. The national intersectional slate, in ,_Virginia and Princeton, Aggies andy West Virginia, Miss! pi College and Colgate, Georgia State (Bowdon) and Davis and Elkins, all in the East; Syracuse and Michigan State, l%yoh (La.) the Midwest, and Texas A. and M.and Centenary in the South. THE SPORTLIGHT BY GRANT ‘Winners and Losers. T was an ancient foot ball fan He fixed me with his glittering “Who’ll win Saturday’s games clear— Cornell-Columbia, at Ithaca: Cornell and Columbia are about as evenly matched as any two teams you might find, but there is a bit of psychology involved worth noting. Last year Dart- mouth slaughtered Columbia and Co- lumbia bcat Cornell. This Fall Co- Jumbia was all set and smoking hot when Dartmouth arrived and there is @ chance the fire won't be blazing quite #s_highly as it was against the Green. This should be one of the star battles of the day, between two of the best feams now bounding along. ‘With Grenda, an important factor in the Lion line, missing, Cornell has the edge on home sod. ‘Yale-Dartmouth, at New Haven: The ncient Hanoverian jinx in the Yale ‘Bowl will have to switch over to bring Dartmouth through. Dartmouth has a good foot ball team, but Yale looks t0 be on her way up and this type of team is hard to stop. If Bob Lassiter plays up to the prom- ise he showed last Saturday, he will be # leading factor®in the afternoon’s en- tertainment. Dartmouth is sure to give all it has to crack the venerable hoo- doo, but I look for Yale to pull through sgain. Michigan-Princeton, at Princeton: igan has too much stuff for the r this ba Pielding Yost at Michigan was below form hio State and above form s, But any average form y between: should be enough to stop the Tiger that so far hasn't gotten Michigan foot ball team is no puff. It can play a lot of foot 00 experienced for the t two unbeaten and untied Albhough I tried to break away and reach the nineteenth tee. SPORTS. ! | Grid Tilts Today | For Local Teams College. American University College, American U. o'clock Georgetown vs. Boston College at George Washington vi. ITown st Towa City. vs. V. P. I at Biacks- Gallsudet vs. Penn Military Col- Jege at Chester. Howard U. vs. Virginia State at Howard U, 2:30 o'clock. Scholastic. Emerson vs. 5t. John's Preshmen st Annapolis. vs. Shepherd Field, 2:30 OLD RIVALS CLASH IN'BIG TEN BATILE | Championship Hopes Riding | on Outcome of Wisconsin- f Minnesota Tilt. | By the Associated Press. HICAGO, October 31.—Tradi- tional rivalries, with champion- ship hopes riding on the out- | come of one of the oldest, fea- | tured today’s Western Conference foot | ball schedule. | Minnesota and Wisconsin, meeting for | the fortieth time, were matched at Min- neapolis, and another week of life in the Big Ten titie race was the reward for the victor. They appeared closely | matched, with the Gophers presenting a fine running and passing sttack and the Badgers relying on a powerful line. A capacity attendance of 58,000 was almost certain. Illinois was at Northwestern, hope- | ful, but anything but confident, of vic- | tory over the Wildcats. Northwestern had not been defeated this season, while | Dlinots had dropped both its Big Ten | starts with Purdue and Michigan. | attendance was expected to reach 40,000. Indiana, highly encou by its one-sided victory over Chicago last week, was given an outside chance against the best Ohio State eleven in | recent seasons, with a home-coming crowd of 20,000 Jooking on, and Purdue | mauling before a somewhat exclusive | attendance of less than 10,000. Jowa was host to George Washington University and was expected to score its first victory of the season, and in- cldentally its first points. Michigan was in the East to open a serles with Prince- was a big favorite. Notre Dame was in the East, too, for its in- iial appearance of the season in that sector, with Carnegie Tech its opponent. PLAY SOCCER TOMORROW. UPPER MARLBORO, Md., October 31.—Upper Marlboro's soccer team will | entertain the Rockville eleven in a Capital City Leagu afternoon on the fair grounds here at 2:30 o'clock. A bang-up battle is ex- Marlboro's scheduled match e game tomorrow gon LAND RICE. who stoppeth one of three, eye, I could not choose but hear— | 2" he asked. I answered loud and Tennessee will be in for a hard and weatherbeaten afternoon, in spite of McEver, who is one of the best any| where you may care to look. Northwestern-Illinois, at Evanston: 4ll Northwestern, a team with a-fine chance to slip through the ‘year un- beaten. ‘Tulane-Mississippi A. and M., at New | Orleans: Largely in the nature of a | romp for Tulane. Georgia Tech-Vanderbilt, at Atlanta: | Vanderbiit should win, although Dan MoGugin has had a badly crippled backfield most of the Fall. Tech is below her usual average this | Fall. Pennsylvania-Lafayette, at delphia: One of the best games in the East. While Penn was smearing Wis- consin last week, Lafayette was run- ning up & neat count against W. and J. | | A good, hard game but Penn should | get by safely. | S. M. U.-Texas, at Dallas: Texas has been a terrific disappointment this season with a veteran team. S. M. U.| has been playing the best foot ball in the Southwest. S. M. U. should win. | Stanford-U. €. L. A, at Palo Alto: | All Stanford | | Pittsburgh-Penn State, at Pittsburgh: The Panther has a big jump on the Nittany Lion, in spite of the latter's recent improvement | | _Alabama-Kentucky, at Tuscaloosa ‘This is one of the hardest selections | of the afterncon. You can rate it as Phila- | last Sunday with Fort Myer was post- ' ed. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, . U.BO0STS STOcK - BY BEATING DUKES |Cards, With 20-12 Victory, | Succeed*Where Hoyas and Terrors Failed. ATHOLIC UNIVERSITY stood | out in bold reMef sgainst the gridiron background of Wash- ington today following & 20- to-12 triumph over Duquesne in & night | battie at Pittsburgh which followed an ‘.l‘mt equally surprising victory & week | previous over North Carolina State. | The Cardinals rolled up the largest total of points scored against the Dukes | this year, s significant achievement in | view of scoreless ties played by Du- | quesne with Georgetown and Western | | Maryland. | It was the Cardinals' fourth victory | in five games, they having lost their | opener to Boston College, Georgetown's | | foe of today, 7 to 26. From here out | | the Brooklanders figure to remain un- | defeated. They have yet to play Man- | | hattan, St. Prancis, Providence and | | Loyols, all at Brookland. The game with Providence on November 21, how- ever, looms as & battle. | UQUESNE was all set to stop Tom | ‘Whelan, the halfback whose bril- | liant efforts turned the tide against | | North Carolina State, but the Cardin- als had three other effective guns in a | well equipped arsenal in Carl De Mello, | Johnny Oliver and Bus Sheary, who | along with Whelan broke down a de- | | fense against which Georgetown and | Western Maryland had been almost powerless. | Oltver was hurt in the final quarter ;and at the Mercy Hospital in Pitis- | burgh it was sald he may have broken |an ankie. In this event the versatile litlle back finished his 'lnlt{ foot ball | career last night. He is a senior. Oliver, | incidentally, has been hampered | throughout his time at C. U. by m-y juries. Tom McNally, tackle and a er on the defense, also was hurt, it it is believed not badly. Cardinals scored in the first, | third and fourth periods, and the Dukes |in. the second and fourth. Dugquesne | was clearly outplayed, although it made {13 first downs to 10 for its enemy. THESE BoYs D. C., SATURDAY, A RAIN FALL FOR OCTOBER 31 COAL REGION HUSKIES WESTERN BURLIES NEw ENGLANDs LANKIES SPORTS. —By TOM DOERER TEAM TOOK To THE FIELD T RESEMBLED A CARNERA FAMILY PICNIC o - ONTZ BREWER, ONCE A COLLEGE W@:fla}_ GREAT, APPEARED SMALL AGAINS' TECH!S AND CENTRAL'S BOYS, AS HE SERVED AS AN OFFICIAL | “In the first Oliver passed 15 | yards to De Mello, who ran 15 across the goal. Dugquesne opened up its aerial offen- | sive going into the second quarter and drove from midfield to the 11-yard | line, where C. U. held. But after Oliver | kicked to near midfield, the Dukes got | going again and went on to a touch- down, Cristina making the final buck. HELAN was the central figure in| | C. U.’s drive to a score in the | third period, in which a succes- | slon of flashy laterals, line plunges and | trick formations bewildered the Dukes. Oliver carried the ball on a spinner to gain the last two yards. Dugquesne gained 34 yards on a series of passes to put the ball on the 2-yard line in the fourth quarter, and Zani- STANFORD T0 HOLD OLYNPIC TRYOUTS Final Tests for U. S. Track Team. West Coast Site Is Picked for | | Allegheny Back Not Ball Toter | By the Associated Press. EADVILLE, Pa., October 31.— | Foot ball statisticians in this section are calling attention to Art Balser, first-string halfback on Allegheny College' s undefeated team. He has not carried the ball this season. His running mate is Bob Garback, scoring ace of the team, and Art's Job is blocking out would-be tacklers. That's the answer. nelll carried it over. Edgar White, C. U. substitute, inter- | By the Associated Press. cepted a pass on aesne's 49-yard | AN FRANCISCO, October 31.— line to start the toward their final touchdown. Sheary and Whelan | Stanford University has been rec- gained the ground to the s 15- ommended by the American | yard line, and De Mello rounded left Olympic Track and Field Com- end for the scare. i 2 De Mello's all-around play and punt- 2 ing in particular made him almost a the American Olympic games field team. standout. The Cardinal line was ef- | Sam Goodman, Pacific Association ps.llnl‘:'!;?hm-n' | representative, announced here last Positions, Duguesie (12, | RIEN the recommendation had been BE.. Baker | made | as part of its procedure, was expected paiscolal | to adopt the recommendation. Deluca | The committec’s ‘action substitutes T"mlfl‘v‘ | Stanford for Los Angeles as the scene Zaninelll | for the final tryouts. The Pacific As- sociation, Stanford and California guar- anteed $7,000 to defray expenses of athletes traveling here, with Stanford in addition offering free use of its sta- dium, gymnasium and lodging accom- modations, Goodman said. Score by periods: Catholic Universit; quesne .. Touchdown: Zaninelll, 20| 5 612 Whelan, = Oristina. Oliver, ello, 'Points after downs— o (placement), Tlo (drop kick). Substitutions: Catholic Uni- versity—White for Ambrose, Callender for Whelan, Flynn for Gross, Jobn Lyons for Howe. Jankowski for De Mello, Dillinger for | Jim Lyons, Draldi for Monaco, Stafford for Nelly. C. 'McVean for Qliver. ~Duquesne ristina for Trambley, Venerri for Sinko, llivan_for Su Devinney. Antoon for Decarbo. Welnberg for re;, Murph Score 7-to-0 Victory Over V. M. I. Youngsters at Lexington. Pawlina for LEXINGTON, Va., October 31.— Earl Widmyer, former Hagerstown, Md., high school athletic athblete, led the Mary- lad freshman foot ball team to a 7-0 win | over the V. M. I. yearlings, 7 to 0. It was the secona victory in as many | starts for the Old Line cubs. Widmyer rushed across to the lone MARYLAND CUBS TRIUMPH Chacko for Cristina. Umpire—Al Slack. Vierling. Gridiron Results By the Associated Press. after a fumble had given Maryland the | ball on the V. M. I 35-yard line. It was carried to the 8-yard mark, where | the Cadets stopped three plays before (New Widmyer broke through to score. H |'pace-kicked the extra point. The lire-up aad summary: .M LFr. Q). Position. Md. Presh (1), Temple, 6; Washington and Jeffer- son, 3. Catholic U., 20; Duquesne, 12 St. Thomas, 34; St. John's York), 0. New River, 7; Seton Hall, 0. Glenville (W. Va) Teachers, Salem, 6. Pennsylvania Junior Villanova J. V., 0. Midwest. Marquette, 13; Mississippi, 6 Haskell, 26; Creighton, 0. Grinnell, 19; Carleton, 13. Parsons, 12; lowa Central 12 (tie) Towa Wesleyan, 7: Penn College, 2 Sioux Falls. 13; Dakota Wesleyan, 12. Superior (Wis.) Teachers, 13; North- ern (8. D) Normal, 6. - Indisna State Teachers, 19; Indiana Central, 0 Macalester, 13; Augsburg, 0 Omaha University, 28; York (Nebr.) 0 John Carroll, 6; Mount Union, 6 (tie) ‘Varsity, Speigel Terna Goldman 0 0 00 70 0 07 after touch- Substitutiol tackle, Baal halfbacks. Rylan: aryland), guard. De. fullback, Burns. Point ment), I). end. Folson -y, “Burgess my voe; nalfback, Colel | mittee as the site for final tryouts for| to the executive board of the | o | American Olympic Committee, which | meets in New York November 29, and, touchdown in the first three minutes | '6. W. ELEVEN MEETS | BIG TEN TEAM TODAY Tackles Hawkeyes in Iowa City With Statistical Balance in Its Fuvor. TOWA CITY, Yowa, October 31— Weary from their long westward jour- ney, the George Washington University |foot ball players arrived here yester- | day for a night's rest before encounter- Towa today. ng’tehkt;uz autls&lc‘n’} balance heavily avor an s squad reported {to be in condition, Coach James | Pixlee’s cohorts were tic. Whereas the Hawkeyes have yet to score their first marker and have been beaten in three out of four games, the | Colonials have scored in every game, rolling up a total of 117 points. | Probable line-ups: Towa. Position. LK Hil Laws Sansen NERS WIN. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., October 31 (#), The Harvard varsity cross-country team yesterday completed its third suc- cessive undefeated season by over- | whelming the Yale Harriers by the per- fect score of 15 to 55. '| Foot Ball Tips BY SOL METZGER. Dr. Jock Sutherland’s Pitt Pan- thers depart from precedent in going to Penn State today for their annual game with this team. For years it has been played at Pittsburgh on Thanksgiving day. Whether strange surroundings will upset their attack is doubtful. Here is a snappy for- ward pass that Pitt is using with telling effect. For example, scored a touchdown sgainst Notre Dame last season. . The ball is snapped to back (3), A dreey Dike | bers '+ | kicks were made from the 30-yard hne,‘ “r With the goal posts set back 10 yards, | This area’s foot bill squads do not have to doff an apologetic chapeau to any section of the country for the | behemoth proportions of its members. ‘Youngsters out to get a touchdown or curl an eaf for old alma mater in this territory are packing box size and kick | with both feet. This belt of bulky high school gridders may not extend any farther than from Virginia to Maryland | but mghe boys are plenty burly in this section. Pennsylvania coal region huskies, the Wests burly boys and New England’s | long, loose-knitted high school gridders | are just children growing up:when they |are compared with some of the high | school leviathans who are loose in this | neck of the pasture. | In the Tech-Central game at Central Stadlum ycsterday your observer was none too certain that Oregon and Wash- | | ington State had not been shoved in to | | Aill the date instead of two high school | elevens. | _ These youngsters were so bulky that | | Jack Gass, old Lehigh star, one of the | | veteran grid officials in this territory, says they were. And Mr. Gass has been BY WALTER | (O TATISTICS show that the long-| est drop-kick of the foot ball| season has been from the 34-| vard line. The longest place- those were good kicks. It would be interesting to know how | many goals from the field have been | attempted this season. There seem to be few kickers of the caliber of Haxall, Payne, O'Dea, Gipp, Eckersall, Brick- Watkinson and all those star booters of | | former days. One reason that the modern quarter-| | back prefers to rely on the forward pass |1s that he knows one touchdown is | equal to two field goals, and, if he doesn’t get away with a forward, the| | other fellow may. But another reason | |15 that few quarterbacks seem to feel | real confidence in their Kickers. There has been many & game this THE LISTENING POST ley, Thorpe, Capron, Moffat, Crowell, | D® | season which a drop kick would have | won. Yet, probably the hardest por-| | tion of the fleld from which to score | }}Iy rushing is from inside the 20-yard | ine. 2 | Whatever you may think of Dart- | mouth this season, look out for the | Green mext year. | I saw the Dartmouth freshmen play Tech and Central Powerffil Leviathans of Schoolboy Foot Ball'in This Territory. BY TOM DOERER: casting a critical eye on these Tech teams since the first session a great many semesters ago. “These boys are no infants, let me tell the world,” said Mr. Gass, elevating a chin to read the numerals on a big Tech man going toward the field. Mr. Dick Daniels, another official enjs g a man’s holiday, squinted with him. While out on the field, Mr. Towers and “Untz” Brewer, officiating, were lost in the array of beef and brawn out on the field. Yet yesterday’s display of power and brawn was not peaks for the District, said one observer. He opined that only a few years back could display a back- field that was big enough to shame a college line. ‘This section ought to be a field of | clover for the grid scouts out to show | good-looking gridders the best school | which to attend. Maybe the schools do | not function in that manner. But, | maybe, I am right just the same. What with the Vias, the Viaus, Clementses, Sachs, Cumberlands and a string of fine Virginia and District gridders to gaze upon, schools in this territory should not have to use a tele- scope to peer into other fields. TRUMBULL in the most valuable player award. They do not_often pick pitchers for this honor. When they do, the pitchers have to be good. Grove certainly is good. If Wilbert Robinson, so long with Brooklyn, becomes manager of another major league club, one of the main rea- sons will be the faculty Robby has of putting together a team which draws the gate. His teams always have color. And the gate is something which inter- ests club owners to a remarkable extent. Dempsey apparently wants to fight Schmeling. Sharkey wants to fight . Schmeling is said to wish to_fight Walker. It seems too bad that some of these rugged pugilists can't get together. (Copyright, 1981, by the North American Newspaper Alliance, Inc.) il e ot FIGHT FATAL TO COACH High School Mentor Is Killed in Clash With Official. STATESVILLE, N. C. October 31 ()—Ray Perdue, 24, Statesville High | School coach, was fatally injured yes- terday at Taylorsville in a fight with Garfleld Jennings of Taylorsville, head linesman for a foot ball game between Taylorsville and Perdue’s team. Perdue, native of Roanoke, Va. was brought to a hospital here but died on Irish and Skibos Top Day’s Foot Ball : Million Sought for Memorial to Rockne NATION' COLLEGES GO AFTER BIG FUND November 14 Set for General Service—A. U.-Shepherd Lone Game Here. BY H. C. BYRD. COUNTRY - WIDE drive is under way to erect at Notre Dame a $1,000,000 | field house as a memorial to the late Knute Rockne. The whole Nation is being organized, even to the most remote localities, every State having a chairman and every chairman having under him a number of team captains, As an example, Philadelphia’s or- ganization has been worked up so |well that it has more than 300 ‘[team captains for the drive, which gets under way next week and has | for its climax day November 14. It is planned to have a memorial service for Rockne between the halves | of every foot ball game in the country | the afternoon of November 14. This | service will be brief, but of such a | nature as to pay tribute to the best known of all foot ball coaches. i Chick Meehan, tion, is behind the drive and iy send- | ing circular letters to all other coaches | urging that they get back of the move- ment. The impetus for the drive is coming from Notre Dame le and from others closely associated with that R hoped i t 0] to raise the full million, of which $650,000 will be expended on the building and $350,000 held as an endowment, the inceme to be used to nulmv.:mr ;.he hufldm‘.] B t is felt generally that college and universities in Jvery section will get behind the pzovement, and also many of those interested gene: in educational jects will lend their help, It is a woeghy object, and Notre Dame in erectin, such a memorial to former coach will also in that way tribute to the development of athletics as & whole. The fleld to be constructed has hea for all athletic teams and also floors one of iggest things kind in the United States. MERICAN UNIVERSITY is the only local school on_its home field today. meet Shepherd College at 2:30 o'clock. weak, Unless Shepherd is exceptic the locak eleven is likely other defeat. to er an- With the exception of American Uni- | vemtyi ev:ry ofltegg local school is away on a foreign L wn is at Boston College, Cl&hnlmmvumy Rl Gorge Washington. s s Tomas e at Gallaudet at Pennsylvania Military 0:1.-' lege and mr{hnd at Virginia Poly- technic Institute. ORE big games are scheduled in the South this afternoon. Ken- tucky for the first time tries con- clusions with a far southern school, when it meets Alabama, Duke goes over to Knoxville to face Tennessee, Vander- "bilt meets Geory and Georgia tries Florida. ontest _between North Carolina State and North | Carolina University should be colorful. A big game that has been an annual affair for many years in West is to be played between and Missouri. Way back in the nineties, students at Missouri and Nebrasks looked forward to the meeting of their schools as one of the big events of the year and time has not lessened the im- portance of the game, at least not in their eyes. h H Princeton in one of several tional contests listed in the Princeton takes a great igan will carry the honors Arbor. Ohio State seems a than Indiana, while Minnesota Wisconsin appear about evenly mat 3 While Princeton meets Yalel;nd Hdlfl;llrd ar‘: to entertain mou an irginia. _The doubtedly favor the Dark Crimson. Other big contests in east are between Penn State and burgh and between Cornell and umbia. The meeting between the last mentioned schools to0 be of the best ever played by them. OXON HILL SCORES Soccer, Field Ball Teams Triumph Over Mount Rainier. OXON HILL, Md., October 31.—Oxon eams phed over Mount Rainier High combfiufl t i 5l E o uh i 8598sEs itions, at | soccer, 2 to 0, and at field ball, 10 t0 2. They ‘were non- The soccer vlcmwry was in m:a" ‘nature of revenge for Oxon Hill, which bowed to Mount Rainier recently in county title play. It was the second win for the Oxon Hill girls over Mount Rainier, ‘hey having also triumphed in the coun- ty competition. o Soccer. Oxon Hill (2), 3. Open mu g?:')m,“' Mt. Rainier (). ht iggling for Nassau. In|® t0sS-up and let it go at that Evansville, 21: Hanover, 6. who runs to the right rear. Back | ROXbUry, and unless some of those| the way and Jennings was lodged in the | W which I think Princeton will sbove anything the Orange . snd Black has shown so far. in, at Minneap- srd, fairly even game, sota predominating dnia, at Boston: An off- ja and an on-year Harvard stre Dame-Carnegie Tech, at Pitts- The Tartan tribe has alw © Dame should be at least downs better if End troopers. be more than two touchdowns. Georgia-Florida has the strong But Georgia has rd opposition all season. atnesv won't be any Winter res Florida has a_pretty Georgia should win, s tidy scrap Brown-Holy Cross, at Worcester hot Cross, N. Y. U 3 behalf of my friend. Doc ‘would lke to wish his at least an outside chance, but I believe they have it. And you can as far outside as you care to but with for | vs noved Notre Dame, but for all that S two Hunk Anderson s to lift the wraps from his South And this margin might Gainesville: Geor- r foot ball team and been good foot ball only | In conclusion: “Army and Navy both | seem safe. Fordham has no trouble ahead. Purdue will beat Chicago. Ne- braska has it on Missouri. Ohio State !is above Indiana. California should stop Nevada. North Carolina has an edge on N. C. State. Kansas and Okla- homa Aggies, about 50-50. | North ace. Inc ) American WASHINGTON-LEE LICKED | Out of Virginia Grid Title Race After Loss to Hopewell. | . BALLSTON. Va.. October 31 —Wash- ington-Lee High School's foot ball team today is out of the Virginia scholastic championship race as the result of a 25-t0-0 cefeat suffered vesterday at the hands of Hopeweli High here. The Little' Generals held the visitors scoreless in the first quarter. but in each period therea‘ter Hopewell counted. A scrap with just an edge for Holy - R at New vork: T L Aderhs N. Y. U. team is one of the best and Oregon isn't, this season. Tennessee-Duke, at Knoxville: Ten. Tou Dessee should beat Duke, but it is mo| 2= certainty. Duke started slowly eame along fast o beat Villanova team. and if WaDace has brought %t much further Ottawa, 14: Baker, 12 Bethany (Kans.), 0; Kansas Wes- leyan, 0 (tie). Friends, 12; McPherson, 7 Southwestern (Kans.), 0; Fort Hays ‘Teachers, 0 (tie). ‘Washburn, 20; Emporia Teachars, 7. William Jewell, 0; Missouri Valley, (tie) Northwest Missouri Teachers, 28; Mis- souri i | Central Missouri, 6; Southeast (Mo.) Teachers, 0. sRockhurst, 7. St. Benedict's, 0. Oklahoma City, 14; St. Louis, Southwest. Tulsa. 31; Phillips, 7. Southesst (Okla.) Teachers Norgheast Teachers, 7 Cameron Aggles, 13; (Okla.), 6. Carruthersville (Tenn.). 0 Okiahoma* Military, Aggies Freshmen, 0 Ouachita, 27; Hendrix College South. Presbyterian, 6: Newberry, 0. Louisiana Tech, 18; Louisiana Nor- 0 13. 21 East Central Junior, 33; 13; Oklahoma 6. | New Mexico Aggles, 45; Gila Col- e. 0 gcn ana State Freshman, 39; Billings Bethel PLAYER LISTS OUT Apaches, Mohawks Name Eligibles for Sandlot Grid Tussle. Players eligible for the Apache- Mohawk South Atlantic Semi-Pro Foot Ball League game tomorrow afternoon alu? 30 o'clock in Griffith Stadium follow Mohawks—Flaher! 2 Holland, Verdon, Far- sue. Himmelbers, Du Four, Byrne Murphy, Tracy, McAlwee, Boyd: Tobin. Mosko. ' Riley, Caldwell K. Meyers, Topper, Dugan, Antos BOOKS MOHAWK PREPS. ALEXANDRIA, Va. October 31.— Newton, pilot of the Virginia has bced his gridders for a with t+ Mohawk Preps of S h.. tomorrow at 2:30 ck on Shipyard Field. ror ches—Howell Mont, KABi]}ES OFF TO GAME. QUANTICO, Va., 31— October Quantico Marine foot ball team left | to meet the| today for Carlisle, Pa., Carlisle Barracks eleven tomorrow after- noon at 2:30 o'clock. DIXIE PIGS DRILL. Dixie Pigs will drill tonight at 8| o'clock on the Seat Pleasant Fleld. e U TIP FOR FISHERMEN. HARPER'S FERRY, West Va., Oc- tober 31 —The Potomac and Shenan- doah Rivers were clear this morning. (4) dashes to a point between him and the line to protect him should any defensive men break through. Back (1) helps right end (5) take the defensive left tackle. Back (2) breaks for the defensive left end, blufls taking him out and then runs straight out along the scrimmage line extended. This end is then checked by guard (6). The play looks for all the world like an end run and in uence draws forward the defensive backs to stop it, thus freeing 2. It is a quickly executed play, designed to break for a touchdown from any point beyond midfield. (Copyrisht, 19313 | young giants get tossed by the faculty, | | there is going to be plenty of weight | | and speed at Hanover. I was told that | treshmen line averaged, from tackle to tackle, over 200 pounds. | | Moreover, the Dartmouth Freshmen had a couple of backs who looked as| if they could do about anything a coach | suggested. | | Bob Grove has joined Walter Johnson | 20 YEARS AGO IN THE STAR. ; EMORIAL ATHLETIC CLUB has some clever track and field athletes in John Campbell, George Dowden, Dudley - Howard, Fred Reeves, Wilbur_Kellogg, Ossian Ryan, Marmaduke Dent. Raymond Miller, Owen Mead, William Warren, Sylvester Sheridan and John Rear- don. New members of the club in- clude Burns McCormick, Myron | Goldsmith, Harry Magruder, P. C. Nicholson, Arthur Reeves, Henry | Johnson, Ernest Kendrick, Keane, Norman Lipscomb, George« Stoner, Israel Snyder and Louis ‘Windsor. | Western and Tech are to meet in & public high school foot ball cham- game tomorrow. A loss for Western will put it out of the Wiley, Kraen! Howard, Lescola and Beauregard. Leading Tech players include Mc- Kinney, White, Lewis, Hzight, Knight, Heine, Peake, Eckendorf, Putoam and PFraser. Dunbar (32), Washi jail in Taylorsville under $5,000 bond | DPending a hearing. | Phelp: The fatal argument started near the | R¢vo close of the game's first half when | Perdue stepped to the side lines and | protested to the referee about a de- cision. Jennings resented the remark, and witnesses said, struck Perdue in the face with his fist. Perdue dropped, unconscious. Med- ical aid was given at once but he died t;l( concussion before he could lrrive‘ ere. He had coached here for two m“ and also faught history. He was a son of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Perdue, Roanoke. DUNBAR ELEVEN VICTOR nside left . Outside left . Score b : oron R’ elvee Mount Rainier Goal—Pheips. Rocker, Shepherd Martin, Time of Field Ball. Oxon Hill (10). Position. Mt. Rainier (2). Ehelps .. Goal " ier g 1 Sox. Lett. tujl s;:;};in‘z'uzlnfln-ii;um T Quill. - Referee—Mr. halves—30 minutes. rooke Mattingly GO0k ... ‘Inside left .. enter . o Inside right Outside right . Shows Way to Howard High in 9 32-7 Foot Ball Clash. Dunbar High School’s foot ball team walloped Howard High of Wilmington. Del, 32 to 7, yesterday in Walker Sta- dium. The winners held the whip hand from the start, scoring in every period. Line-ups and Summary. { Position Howard (1) 8 OO RS DTTOEHOT Q- 7 o Mins (4). Davidson. touchdowns—Armst: « ions— Lover ‘drop-gick) Subs Facker:” Retoroe— S, Goals—Taylor (2 wynn. ~Substitutio for ' Bless MADE HIS JOB SAFER Tyng, While at Harvard in ’70%s, Was First to Use Catcher’s Mask.