Evening Star Newspaper, November 11, 1931, Page 29

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o | The Foen * ING EDITION Ty %im’. WAS HINGTON, D. ¢ WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER b 11, 1981, PAGE C—1 Flashy Gridmen Here This Week : Tulane-Georgia Tie Might Be Fatal to Them BRUBAKER, DOYLE ARE VISITING ACES St. Francis Is Keen to Beat C. U.—Hoyas Doctor Line- Up for West Virginia. ] to Washington fandom this week end, when St. Francis is met by Catholic University Fri- day night and Georgetown plays West Virginia in the Hoya home- coming Saturday, both games in Grimt%x Stadium, and the only ones listed here. St. Francis will bring Streese Bru- baker, who starred in the backfield of Western Maryland last year and the BY R. D. THOMAS. WO outstanding foot ball players will show their stuff l Eastern Hoping | To Extend Tech | | ASTERN HIGH figures to furnish | Tech a m;xch :;emerblt;uue in their postpon public high | oot ball championship ‘series game | tomorrow afternoon at 3:30 o'clock | in Central Stadium than is gener- | ally expected. A Beans Campbell, big Eastern tackle, who has been out of the go- ing, will again be on the job and Coach Mike Kelley is planning sev- eral shifts in his line-up designed to bolster it. The Lincoln Parkers, however, are by no means in good physical trim. MOUNTAINEERS SEE REAL BATILE HERE ‘Hope to Even Series With| year before when Western Maryland | was undefeated, and West Virginia will | display one Johnny Doyle, Who is ac- | claimed a human rifle with the leather his bullet. | Not_until yesterday, it seems, did Catholic University learn of the pres- ence in St. Francis’ line-up of Bru- baker, and the knowledge was a_tonic 1o the Cardinal squad. 1t had reckoned the Pennsylvania eleven a breezer and looked for little more than a workout Friday night. Hoyas—1932 Game Is Set for November 19. M West Virginia varsity foot ball team, which resumed strenuous ORGANTOWN, W. Va., No-, vember 11.—Armistice day is anything but a holiday for the | BASKET BALL LOCP Twelve Teams to Compete in Sunday School League This Season. LAY in the Sunday School Basket Ball League, which for more than a decade has provided | bang-up competition, will start | saturday night at the Central Y. M. iC. A, with six games scheduled. | Twelve teams, two more than last sea- | son, are in the loop. The new teams are Pirst Brethren, Douglas M. E. and Ken- | ilworth Presbyterian. Wallace Memo- | rial is not competing again. William Rohrer, United Brethren; Chick Prime, Calvary Drakes, and Prof. C. Edward Beckett, former director of physical cducation at the “Y” here, will serve in an advisory capacity. Here is the league’s schedule fcr the first halt, which ends January 23 November 14—Calvary Drakes vs. Atone- ment. Irinity M. k. Douklas M. E.. El Srooke vs Bir B ¥ vs. aouni Vernon. Calvary vs' Kenilworth, united Breiar M. E Ca November 21 y M. E. Moun . Petworin M. vs. Fifs Eldbrooke, Calvary 28—Kenilworth . Calvary Drakes vs. Moun ivary Baptist Y. P. Drakes vs. vs. Baes practice today in preparation for Satur- OACH ARTHUR BERGMAN was of | % a mind to let down on the practice | day's tilt with Georgetown at Grlmth} grind for the squad which has | Stadium, at Washington. | scquitted itself so well in recent games, | The Mountaineers received their | B B iy the ‘Cardinajs | Armistice day holiday Monday when | were given a brisk drill yesterday with | Coach Earle (Greasy) Neale suspended more of the same on tap for today. St. Francis is playing St. Vincent at Latrobe, Pa, in an Armistice day affair, | t is saving itself, it is understood, for | £hcounter with West Virginia Wes- t | leyan, won by the Mountaineers, 12 to 7. e C. U. Game, which it regarcs as the | “‘Soies Who saw the Hoyas bow before | big thing on its schedule. Incidentally, | Bucknell 7 o 0 Iast Saturdsy did not ahe ms:én‘tls are sald to have hope Of | rotyrn with any too promising reports campaign Georgetown on Saturday will| t5'a real battle Saturday enter combat conceded an even chence | ~ gix contests have been played by to win, but, win or lose, the game should | west Virginia and the Hilltoppers, one | be a corker from the spectator’s stand- | back in the Fall of 1902 and the others | point. With Johnny Doyle exciting the | annually from 1926. The Mounta:neers | ozone and Georgetown playing its usual | have won two, tied one and lost three | open game, some sensational scoring is| of the six games and stand a chance | cover from last Saturday’s hard-fought | M ! E. vs_ Eldbrooke. Fi YAy M. E. Caivary Ba December 5—Trinity M. E. Calvary Baplist First Brethren ‘vs. D Vernon vs. Calvary Dr Atonement. Petworth Brethren. M. _E. vs_ Calvary Y.'P.vs. Eldbrooke, ins M." E. Mount . Jeénilworth vs E. vs. United Petworth M. Kenliwortn, Calvary ary Drakes. Douglas 1. Atonement vs. E. vs. Mount Eldbrooke vs. Vs, on Decermber 19T Douglas M vs. B Bretnren vs. Eldbroo First Brethren, Ca Petworth M. E. C worth. December 26-—Calvary M. E. vs. Douslas M E. Calvary Drakes vs. United Brethren. First Brethren vs. Atonement, Mount Vernon s . P." Eldbrooke vs. 3 E. vs! Petworth M. E. M. E.vs. Kenilworth, First Bretliren. ‘Calvary i Atonement. aptist Y. P, vs . E. vs. Kenil: January 2 ¥ Petworth M._E. Vs, tist Y. P. vs. United Bref ment vs las Eldbrooke, Caly: January 9 Trinity M. E T0 OPEN SATURDAY in prospect. 'OMMY MILLS will make a couple change: in the Hoya line-up. Yourg Fred Callahan will plant his 6-foot- B-inch chaesis in center in place of Charley McManus and_Johnny Shim- mins will replace Leroy Bordeau at full- kack. Callahan and McManus have been considerably anyway, but llback change is something quite new. Bordeau has carried more than one man'’s share of the backfield burden all season and, being the type who puts his all into a task, has worn himself to a {rezz'e. Shimmins has come along rap- idly im. the last two games and, with Tordezu in his present condition, much under weigat, the substitute might be & werthwhile improvement. Johnny is #dert at knocking down passes, and Mills may have had this strongly in :l‘ll:d. teo, when he decided on the nge. Shimmins and Mike Stanley were Georgetown’s most consistent ground gainers against Bucknell and it is likely Stanley also will be used considerably Saturday. OHNNY OLIVER will waive a weak ankle and play with Catholic Uni- * versity, making his return much earlier than expected. But Johnny probably won't be called on for much more than calling signals and tossing v , his forte. The Cards are look- E: for trouble with Providence and Loyola in their concluding games and are counting on Oliver to do a lot to overcome it Notre Dame's squad, which will meet Navy in Baltimore Saturday, will work | to even’ the series this week. | Lasi year's game, played at night, ywas a brilllant and spectacular battle which the West Virginia eleven won by | the surprise count of 14 to 7. | The Mountaineers are familiar visit- ors at the Nation's Capital, played there annually for the last 5 bl However, next year's game with Owrfiwwn. carded for November 19, will played here, according to an- nouncement. GALLAUDET FEARED lCo‘chel of Annapolis Eleven Im- pressed by Blues Showing Against Marines. ANNAPOLIS, Md., November 11.—St. John's College is expecting a hard and even battle against Gallaudet Saturday when the teams meet on the local col- lege gridiron. Head Coach Talbott Riggs of the Johnnies, and his assistant, Leonard Lentz, were much impressed with the players of Gallaudet aga'nst the Ma- | rines last Friday, although the Wash- | ington eleven lost, 20 to 12. | The morale of the local team was considerably dampened by the 52 to 0 trouncing at the hands of Yale. Virtually the same line-up that ayed most of the game against the used with the | pl New Havenites will be having | Y. P. BY ST. JOHN’S TEAM| out at Congressional Country Club Pri- | exception of Nassauer, right halfback, day, but it's not a matter of moment | Who was injured in the game and may to the public. The Irish have arranged | be lost for the rest of the season. The for all possible privacy. The ad, 60- strong, will arrive at 8 a.m. Pi»ql:ny, at- tend church service at the Shrine of the Immaculate Conception at Catholic Uni- ersity, breakfast in the Card dining hall, then motor out to Congressional, CARDINALS DRILL DAILY Some of Basketers to Be Held Up by Charity Grid Game. Catholic University’s basket ball squad, which held its opening drill lb:st night um:t" diretcfinn of Forrest Cotton, mew court mentor, will continue daily drills, but will not have its full squaé until after the charity foot ball game here December 12, when the gridders Who play basket ball will be at hand. Ten candidates reported last night, including Joe McNerney, Joe Can- nazzarro and Joe Daly, forwards; Lou Spinelli, N. Cubeta, S. Cacciola and Paul Myers, guards, and Tom Dcnovan, center. WANTS SEMI-PRO TILTS Woodlawns of New York Would Play Elevens in This Area. ‘Woodlawn foct ball team of New York |status of Jim Parks, all Maryland guard, and Watson, backfleld ace, who have been ineligible all season, still is doubtful. There is possibility that either may play. ‘The game, originally scheduled for Saturday afternoon, has been changed to 10 o’clock in the morning in order that the Navy-Notre Dame clash that | afternoo: | tendance. Group A Holds Stage in Hyatts- ville Interclass Event. | MOUNT RAINIER, Md, November | 11.—With competition finished in Group | B of the interroom soccer competition | at Mount Rainier High School, play in | Group A started today and will be ccm- pleted tomorrow. The group survivors will face Friday in the title game Juniors were to mee: Vocational Sophomores today and tomcrrow the | winners will face Academic Sophcmoras | in Group A. | seven-B room was the victor in Group B, defeating all three opponents, down- | ing Academic Freshmen yesterday, 11 to 0, to land the honors. Seven-B scored over Vccation:l Fresh- men and Seven-A room. Tillie Scott scored five goals for 10 of the 11 City would like to book games with | points, with John Quill scoring the n will not diminish the at-| Previously, | semi-pro elevens of the Washington | other point in yesterday's game. |M E vs | Catvary M First Brethren. ak { uary 16-Trinity M. E. vs. Calvary | Drakes. Mount Vernon vs. Kenilworth. Eld- brooke vs_ Calvary M. E. United Brethren vs_First Brethren. Dougias Vs Pet- worth M. E.. Atonement vs. Calvary Baptist January 23—Douglas E. vs. Calvary Baptist V. P United hren’ Vs, Ato ment. First Brethren Mount ' Vernon. Keniiworth vs. Calvary Drakes. Trinity M E. vs. Eldbrooke. Calvary M. E. vs. Petworth M E M. Bret s, (QRGANIZATION of a basket ball league made up of teams from is planned and a meeting to further plans will be held Priday night at 8 o'clock 2t Vic Sport Shop. Treesury, G. O. P. Census Burea Agriculture, Union Printers, Naval Air structioneers are expected to enter teams and all other Federal units are invited to join. Vic Gauzza, president of the Departmental Base Ball League, will preside, assisted by J. Earle Moser, last season’s manager of the Census Enumerators. Vic's Sports Shop quint has been augmen by Jakie Goldblatt and Les McMeniman, it has been announced. The squad will drill Friday night at 7:30 o’clock, in the Takoma-Silver Spring High School gym. Reorganization of the Howard A. French Co.-R. F. & P. Railroad Co. quint has been started by Robert Mc- Donald, manager. Plars for the court campaign will be discussed by Northern Athletic Club, at a meeting Friday night at the home of Ted Otte, 5213 Georgia avenue. The team will enter the Boys' Club League. Monroe A. C. squad will get to- gether tonight at Central High School at 7:15 o'clock. ‘Washington Cardinals will open their season tonight, engaging Columbia Piremen of Alexandria, at 8:30 o'clock, in Central High gym. AMES with high school, college freshmen and unlimited class quints are sought by Alpha Delta | Omega Fraternity tossers through | Ralph Scrivener, manager. He can be | reached by telephone at Alexander 1700 1012 Prince street, Alexandria. Chevy Chase Gra; boasting Bill Evans, former University of Maryland | basketer, ard several other new players, are expecting a big season. They will scrimmage Friday night with ~Saks Clothiers at Business High and are booking through Manager Davis at Cleveland 4851-J | clifton Barbers, formerly Colonials, 145-pound tossers, are lsting games at Columbia 8836. Contests _with | sought by Bolling Field backatars. Manager Hager at Lincoln 5857. GRID GAMES SOUGHT. Northeast Motors foot ball team is | after a game for Sunday afternoon \a; 1 o'clock with a team having a field. Call Manager May at Lincoln 3275. unlimijed quints are b 3 Call area The New Yorkers are undefeated this gason. They downed New Rochelle, New ork Giants, last Sunda v Rochelle, 29 to 0. i James Badin, Washington representa- | tive of the club, is handling challenges | et 3314 Ward-r strect. ~r c~n be r-ached at Columbia 7591-J after 6 p.m. Y 2 1 Alexandria Notes BY LAWRENCE PERRY. N so far as personalities are likely to dominate foot ball games— and very often they do dominate very largely—the Harvard-Yale ALEXANDRIA, Va. November ll—‘ Alexandria High School gridmen will play the first night foot ball game in ' the history of the local fnstitution Mon- day when they face the crack Char- | lottesville Pives, from the Charlottes- | ville School for Boys, in the university city. - The latter team has defeated 11 of ‘the speediest high and preparatory school teams in Virginia this season. < Doggy Hamilton, former Cardinal A. ©. semi-pro star, has been signed to | coacgh the Del Ray A. C. to fiil the va- cancy caused by the resignation of Dick’ Allen, who is playing halfback for the Washington MohdAwks in the South Atlantic Foot Ball League. | % Pirate A, C. #nd the Virginia Juniors | il meet heré Sunday for the 135- “pound gridiron championship of Alex- | -andria. The contest will be played on | jpyard field at 2:30 o'clock. | * Qolumbia Engine Company cagers travel to Washington tonight for ent with the Washington at 8:30 o'clock In the Central l game on November 21 is likely to present a very interesting human | problem. | Barry Wood vs. Alble Booth—here are two players gifted manpually to an unusual degree. But as they dif- fer radically in physique, so it seems they differ mentally. ‘Wood is the inspiring leader whose personality fairly radiates from an embattled fizld. His voice, raised in leadership, is heard even he stancs, and you can feel the spell of the man, Booth is.more quiet. Actions rather than words speak for him. He spires men not at all in the role of the magnetic plumed knight, but through " the confidence which his presence gives to his team. With- out & word from him, immediately he enters a game even the casusl observer notes the tonic effect upon L] True Test for Grid G;eats Wood, Man of Words, and Booth, Man of Action, to Settle Foot Ball Question Soon. his eleven. The players know that they have in their line-up a man qualified to do any number of spec- tacular things which may well result in scores or lead directly to scores. And it helps It gives Yale very much of the feeling of the big-game hunter in the African jungle who knows that his weapons ‘are of power sufficient to stop anything from a charging rhino to a charging lion angered by wounds. Wood is gifted in certain direc- ticns, but lacks the blazing versa- tility of the Eli captain. On the other hand, he has an_irresistible appeal. Power lies in him to éraw out of a collective unit the best it has to give, and always when Har- vard plays one gets a sense of high- powered moral values. Will Booth, with his ability to pass, catch passes, run through a broken fleld, sprint’ off -tackle and drop- kick, prove more potent as a leader than Barry Wood, who cannot all that Alble does supremely well and yet can inspire other men to play over their heads? 1t will be terestin, the answer 0 this question, g to_learn varlous Government departments | Station, Army War College and Con- | between 6 and 7 p.m., or by mail at| OUTSHINING ’EM ALL. -By TOM DOERER. I — e —— i T | = I —— — . INOLYMPIC GAMES |Vote to Send Teams to U. S. Next Year—Nurmi Enters 1 Marathon Race. | By the Assoclated Press ADRID, November 11.—The Spanish cabinet has authorized the sending of a team to the 1932 Olympic games. The question of financing the team Is to be fixed at a forthcoming cabinet budget mesting. Spain is especially strong in fencing, | foot ball, tennis and track. | TOCKHOLM, November 11 ().— Sweden's participation in the 1932 Olympic games, both at Lake Placid, | . Y., and Los Angeies, has been decided m of eight long-distance ekiers, | jumper:, two tancy skaters and two speed skaters will be sent to the Winter games at Lake Placid and a team of 75 men will be sent to Los Angeles for the Summer games. Among the more prominent members of the Winter sports team are Sven Utterstron, famous long-distance skier; Gillis_Grafstrom, several times world and Olympic fancy skating champion, and Vivi-Anne Hulten, a fancy skater who has won many European awards, ELSINGFORS, Finland, November 11 (P.—Faavo Nurmi, world’s greatest distance runner, intends to compete in th> marathon at the 1932 Olympic games at Los Angeles and premased to do it in_under 2 hours 30 minutes for a new all-time record. The Finnish Olympic Committu has decided not to s:nd any representatives to_compete in the skiing events of the | 1932 Winter games. Nurmi has held every record from a mile up to 10,000 meters and has com- peted in three Olympics, but never at more than 10,000 meters. His speed decreasing with age—he is 34—Nurmi has been turning to the longer distances where his sense of pace and stamina count, 'APACHES WOULD GET EVEN WITH CELTICS | Must Score to Remain in Title Race—Other Sandlot Teams Are Keeping Busy. Apaches will be battling to even | scores for that 32-3 drubbing handed | them by the Celtics recently when the foot ball tes meet again Sunday | afternoon in Criffith Stadium at 2:30 o'clock in thelr South Atlantic Semi- Pro League encounter. Another loss for Apaches will just about put them out of the flag running. Griffith-Blue Coals, who are not scheduled in the Capital City League Sunday, want to book a team. Greg Gerdom 1is the manager and Atlantic 2639-J is his telephone number. Call between 5 and 6 p.m. Meridians will drill tonight at Towa Avenue Playground at 7:30 o'clock in preparation for their 150-pound Cap- ital City League game Sunday with the Northerns. contest for Saturday is sought b; Northeast Motors, 135-pound. eleven, Call Shorty May at Lincoln 3275 dur- ing the day. BASKETERS START WELL Team Takes New Name and Con- tinues Pace Set Last Year. Phi Delta Zeta Fraternity basketers, who, playing under the name of De Molay, won the pennant in the Inter- city Basket Ball League last season at | Laurel, Md., are launched on what is | expected to prove another highly suc- | cessful campaign. They have won the two games they have played this sea- |son in handy style. Last year their | record was 49 wins and 13 defeats and | in Teague play 17 victories and 3 losses. | The fraternity quint has booked & game with Alexandria Clovers for Fri- day night at 8 o'clock in Macfarland Junior High School gym, and Monday night will meet Bolling Field, Leading members of the fraternity squad are Emory MclIntosh, Willlam Sinclair, Richard Sinclair, Eimer Hall Edward' Anderson, Orville' Brown, Wil- liam Brown and Herbert Thayer, “;x;he team is listing games at North 4 IN THE STAR. T seems that the only place in the public high school title foot ball race to be decided will be the cellar post, which Business probably will get. Central and Tech are tied for first place and Eastern and West- ern for third. Wells of Eastern has been show- ing well at quarterback. Manager Liochot of the 1912 Georgetown University foot ball team now is looking to his schedule. Either Penn or Princeton may come here. J. Ed Grillo, Star sports editor, doubts if a man couli be paid a higher tribute than was Clark Grif- fith, whose retention as manager of the’ Cincinnati base ball team was asked in a petition signed by every member of the club. Griffith, how- ever, resigned to become manager of the Washington team. C. W. Hecox has been re-elected director of foot ball and J. E. Smith director of base ball at McKinley Manual Training High School. The ‘Tech principal has been asked to bring the need of a central athletic ficld to the principals of the five high schools at their next meeting. Such a need has been manifest for some time. American League Park, when it is available, is too expensive and Georgetown University field is too distant, it is pointed out. HYATTSVILLE GUARDS T0 BEGIN COURT TOIL Vincent to Again Coach Squad "That Will Start Practice Tomorrow Night. HYATTSVILLE, Md., November 11.— | Candidates for the basket ball team of | Co. F, 1st Infantry, National Guard, of | Hyattsville, will start practice tomorrow night on the armory floor. Jimmy Vin- cent, who has successfully coached the Guardsmen for several seasons, but gave way last year to Lieut. Samuel Cros- thwait, will again be in charge. Indications are that Vincent has a job to mold a winning team. The Doughboys have suffered a big blow in the loss of Johnny Costinett, who has been a stalwart at center and forward for the last five seasons. His enlistment expires this week and he has decided not to sign again. Co. F is after a game for the night of November 23 to open its season here, and Lieut. Hugh McClay may be reached’ at Hyattsville 521-J after 6 p.m. Other features are planned in connection with the opener. Norval Spicknall conquered his brother, William Spicknall, last night in the final of the indoor tennis tourna- ment among members of Co. F, which has been in progress some time on the armory court here. The scores were Members of Co. F will participate in a program of exhibition matches next Tuesday night in the armory. The ring sport is a part of the regular physical education program of the State Guards. y | 1 inute and think it all 3 BOXING TICKETS ON SALE{A?{:}S@’S v‘z‘u? r?x?d Mur?nett n:hug;"a‘ Benefit Show to Be Held Monday Night in Alexandria. Tickets for the boxing show to be held next® Monday night in Alexandria_for the benefit of the Alexandria Day Nursery have been put on sale at Vie Gauzza's sports goods store. QUINT SEEKING FOE. Mosean basket ball team, having the use of the Langley Junior High gym, wants a game with some 145-pound team for Friday night at 9 o'clock. Call THE SPORTLIGHT BY GRANTLAND RICE HAT chance has Southern | California or the Army of stopping Notre Dame this month? It all depends on | the weather and the fleld. I don't be- lieve any team in the country can hold Notre Dame on a fast or dry fleld, but it may be quite different in the mud | and rain. Notre Dame has an attack that de- pends largzly on quick starting, shifti- ness, feinting here and striking there. It places small reliance upon raw wer, But it is almost impossible to mix up a fast-running attack and a smooth forward passing attack in rain and mud. Inder such conditions the stronger and the weaker are about on the same level. It isn’t, in any way, as fair for one as it is for the other. Such conditions bring the strong down to the weak. It is merely a leveler. With good weather prevailing, Notre Dame should go unbeaten. On a wet, slippery field it may just as well be anybody’s game. A year ago about this time Tulane trimmed a hitherto unbeaten Georgia team, 25 to 0. About the same time a strong Holy Cross outfit mopped up Harvard, 27 to 0. Here were two ter- rific wallops delivered upon highly vul- nerable spots. On saturday Georgla faces Tulane again as Harvard moves against Holy Cross. And it might be mentioned that while Georgia and Harvard are both gc~., Tulane and Holy Cross are just as sii. g in 1931 as they were in 1930. Both Georgia and Harvard are nat- urally quite keen to wipe out these two 1930 massacres, and yet both will have to play better foot ball this Saturday than they played last Saturday to pick up anything that looks like re- venge. Both will need all they have, ‘Tulane and Holy Cross at this present stage are nothing to pick on unless the Ellckerl carry a lot of artillery into ac- on, ‘Two other unbeaten teams have some- thing to face in the way of possible re- venge. They are Syracuse and Temple, who so far have refused to take the count. Last Fall Colgate ran all over Syracuse_and Carnegie Tech did the | same to Temple. Now the two unbeaten tcams have the same two enemies con- fronting them, and while both the ene- mies have falien, both are still replete with high-class stuff, which is just an- other way of suggesting that Syracuse and Temple have about all the work chead they can look after in one after- noon. There will be nothing very light and fluffy about the coming ~Michigan- Michigan State battle, when you relax back as any fleld can show. In the meanwhile, Cornell happens to be another unbeaten team facing an opponent who copped the laurel a year ago. The opponent is Dartmouth, a good team, but a hard luck outfit up to date. And who can say how luck will switch from one week to another? There are even times when bad luck will suddenly grow worse. And at least an even break is needed by any team hoping to take Cornell. Notre Dame could come pretty close to playing four strong teams on fou different flelds every Saturday—an winning about three of the four. Manager Lou Feldman, West 4916, be- fore € o'clock this evening. A number of Harvard men are doing Cfiamp in One of Two Fights That Are Halted by Referees By the Associated Press. INNEAPOLIS, November 11.—A scheduled 10-round bout between ~ Maxie Rosenbloom, light-heavyweight champion, an® Jimmy Braddock, New York, was stopped in the second round last night and declared no contest after a sorry exhibition by the pair. Referee George Barton ordered ‘warnings. them out of the ring after several Members of the State Boxing Commission supported Barton’s action, suspended both fighters and ordered an mvestlxlmm of the bout with a hearing set for this afternoon. BOSTON, November 11 (#)—Paul Swiderski, Syracuse heavyweight, and Joe Sekyra of Dayton, Ohio, last night were ordered from the ring their sched- in the eighth round by Referee Joe O’Connor, who declared uled 10-round bout a no-contest. Swiderski appeared to have a ‘slight lead when the tame action was halted. He weighed 189 and Sekyra scaled 181, ( - T and it is possible even that may not be 1 irsinta no little murmuring about now—what | ¢ with rvard {1 Dartmout acing th and Holy Cross before the Yalie game. It is betraying no secret to state that Har- \é:id'ug&newommnmet urday Michigan took year fore the Harvard test. Just 13 years ago Maj. Frank Cavan- augh of Fordham had earned as much of Armistice day glory, and pre-Armi- stice day glory, as any one you will meet. As a battery commander he stood at the top. Thirteen years later is still coaching an unbeaten foot ball and one of the best. The major his men have a tough en- gagement ahead on Saturday, but the major and his men in war and foot ball have tackled some tough ones be- fore this without backing away. (Copyright, 1931. by the North American . Newspaber Allisnce, Inc.) RENEW GRIDIRON FEUD Virginia, V. P. I. Face Saturday in, Series Started in 1895. UNIVERSITY, Va., November 11.—A gridiron series that began back in 1895, when linemen used to be ball carriers, will be continued next Saturday when Virginia plays host to Virginia Poly- tecnic Institute in Scott Stadium. This eighteenth game between the Cavaliers and Tech will be the last home contest of the season for Vir- ginia. It is the next to last game on the schedule, which ends in Chapel Hill | prip, axx; Thanksgiving against North Caro- a. Scores of past Virginia-V. P. 1. games follow: L] . dgedetdnsg o an EUNE S <ges " Virsh Vl::l Foot Ball Tips BY SOL METZGER Northwestern’s powerful team, coached by Dick Hanley, will give Indiana plenty of entertainment when the Hoosiers journey to Evanston Saturday. One of Han- ley’s strong plays is tais center buck preceded by a spinner. From a double wing back forma- ticn with the No. 3 back about four and one-half yards from center the play is launched. The snap is to Bosocoucoooouncse ne1o=31 3, who spins to his left and fakes handing it to back (4) running to his right rear. No. 3 then reverses his direction and plunges through the opposing center who is double- teamed along with the defensive left guard. Note how back (2) and the center precede 3 to take out the de- fensive full, and how left end (6), after blocking his opponent tackle, cuts downfield to take the opposing s ‘Northweste us western’s h the line, l'ifl“n‘h: buck, one o It to into ‘the COULD TOSS TITLE INTOLAP OF VOLS Tennessee, Though, Must Win Over Vanderbilt to Hold Up Its Claim. By the Associated Press. TLANTA, Ga., November 11. A —Tulane and Georgia quite conceivably might pitch the Southern Conference foot ball title and national honors along with it right into the lap of Tennessee Saturday. A tie iIn their clash at Athens, Ga., would have just that effect if Tennessee upheld its end of the bargain by defeating Vanderbilt. If, however, Tennessee lost, which also is quite possible, the Southern situation would be in a hopeless muddle. Georgia, Tennessee and Tulane are the Southern circuit’s big undefeated and untied three this season. While the Georgia-Tulane game oc- cuples the spotlight as a probable means of eliminating one of the title claimants, the . Tennessee-Vanderbilt match at Knoxville, Tenn., is just as much a crisis for Tennessee, despite the fact :1!;;: ‘Vanderbflt has known defeats in The Commodores are undergoing in- tensive practice routine for the battle and Coach Dan McGugin says his squad is in better condition for the Tennessee battle than it was when beaten by Georgia and Tulane. But Coach McGugin is not too opti- mistic. Vanderbilt has not been able to score on Tennessee in three yecrs, al- though it has won 19 victories to Ten- nessee’s 5 since 1882. Three games were ties. Coach Bob Neyland is likewise in- clined to pessimism over the Center of Kentucky and Boston College Boston. matches today included Louis- ere. vacant tackle berth will go to Kaylor or Straub. LEXINGTON, Va., November 11 (). —Washington and Lee’s varsity has set- tled down in hard preparation for the ceton game Saturday. with ew 1f wny, Chtnges 15 the Froun g any, ci that beat V. P. I. last week assured the Generals & chance to bid for the State championship. D N. C.,. November 11 (#)- oevmuhosmk,w has played center, mm': his g o S career, has been mmmpolitlnn on Duke’s flr:‘bwelznn.‘o g PRINCETON, N. J., November 11.— ‘With the' return-of 11 Hiatvard Tasi to svop Ho Boety Hate o] Sat- urday, the Crimson will have no alibi. With the return to practice of George Talbot, star guard, Eddie Casey had his squad at full sirength except for the injured Bernie White. ‘WORCESTER, Mass., November 11— News in Holy Cross’ camp is bad. Don first-string fullback, is out of the Harvard game. Kelly's understudy, Hanus, is suffering from a shoulder in- and Coach McEwan has been rced to switch Griffin to fullback and it in at halfback. ILADELPHIA, November 11.—A new Penn backfield, consisting of Kel- e e lelines are Riblett, Raffel, Ford, Gette, Graup- ner, Colehower and Yablonski, in the Notre Dame au‘.“.'&. i WEST POINT, N. Y., November 11.— The Army has lots of backfield talent. Backflelds working on new_plays terday consisted of Carver, Brown, Kil- $Horb and Fieids. s S erb an , an 3 - o : tt, Johnson, WINS WITH LATE GGAL Bozievitch' Star as Takoma-Silver Downs Damascus Booters. ‘Takoma-Silver 00l soccer team to de- ascus High, 4 to 2, and win the Montgomery County championship here yesterday. The victors now will carry on in the State championship series, their first opponents to be announced in a day or_two. Line-ups and summary: Position. Goal Tak.-S. 8. (4 5 Eitchwrd e - open territory there and convert an fimmmmwnm []

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