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\ 0 STAR LOT CHOSEN FROM 11 SCHOOLS Output of Linemen Found Exceptional This Year. Passers Improve. Four nationally famous foot bail eoaches, whose dispatches have ap- peared in The Star since the start of the foot ball season, present here, by joint decision and after eonferences with other leading ooaches, scouts and erperts throughout the country, their all- America eleven for 1936, as well as a second or alternate all-Amer- ica team. The selectors, each rep= resenting a diflferent quarter of the foot ball compass, are Andy Kerr of Colgate, Ray Morrison of Van- derbilt, James Phelan, University of Washington, and Gus Dorais, University of Detroit. | First Team. End—Tinsley, Louisiana State. ‘Tackle—Widseth, Minnesota. Guard—Reid, Northwestern. Center—Herwig, California. Guard—Glassford, Pittsburgh. ‘Tackle—Franco, Fordham. End—Kelley, Yale. Quarterback—Baugh, Texas Chris- tian. Halfback—Parker, Duke. Halfbaok—Buivid, Marquette. Fullback—Francis, Nebraska. Second Team. End—Wendt, Ohio State. ‘Tackle—Moss, Tulane. Guard, Starcevich, Washington. Center—Hinkle, Vanderbilt. Guard—White, Alabama. Tackle—Hamrick, Ohio State. End—Daddio, Pittsburgh. Quarterback—Goddard, Washing- ton State Halfback—Meyer, Army. Halfback—Dickens, Tennessee. Fullback—Haines, Washington. HE foot ball year of 1936 was un- usual for the abundance of fine linemen it produced. In the past your all-America jury has had to scratch around, dig into files and cross-question scouts to get a fair line on the ends, guards, tackles and centers operating outside the members’ own immediate sectors. This to boil down the | ONTGOMERY, Ala, Novem- il | M ber 28—Two sustained | field to working size without hurting too many feelings and without over- looking too many talented linemen. It was a bumper year for tackles and especially for centers. By contrast, the backfield output was perhaps not quite up to the stand- ards of other years. One thing, though, must be noted about the backs of 1936. There were more first-class forward passers among them than ever before. Nearly every back of the front rank could throw the ball ef- fectively, and there was a correspond- ing rise in the quality of the pass receivers. PORTS. THE SUNDAY STAR, He scoot down the fleld. GAME REAL FIGHT Both Sides Fling Fists as Alabama Poly Defeats "Gators, 13 to 0. BY tho Associated Press. drives in the first half gave Auburn a i3-0 Southeastern Conference win over the Univérsity of Florida before 6,000 fans today. Fighting marred the game in the second half and Sivell of Auburn and Columbia, 7; Stanford. 0. Boston College, 13; Holy Cross, 12. St. John's (Md.), 20; Johns Hop- kins, 0. South. L. 8. U, 33; Tulane, 0. Georgla, 16; Georgia Tech, 6. Auburn, 13; Florida, 0. Mississippi State, 32; Mercer, 0. Elon, 39; Guilford, 9. West. College, Colorado Brigham ‘Young, 0. Southwest. ‘Texas Christian, 0; Southern Meth- | odist, 0. | Baylor, 10; Rice, 7. Far West. Nebraska, 32, Oregon State, 14. / San Diego Teachers, 19: Whittier, 14. Salinas Packers, 21; Los Angeles Koscis of Florida were ejected after | gyjidogs, 17. taking part in different fights that threatened to start a general melee. Auburn, with a game ahead New LATE BAYLOR RALLY Year day against Villanova in Havana, Cuba, played its reserves through the third quarter and part of the | fourth. | The first touchdown came at the end | | DOWNS RICE, 10TO 7 Also, the art of blocking ascended 0 of 3 93.yard march down the field Gernan Gets Touchdown, Makes @ew heights in 1936. Our all-America team for this year seems to us to measure up in speed, power, balance and resourcefulness to any that could be picked from the fleld. Of course, we cannot pretend to be infallible. Undoubtedly there are brilliant performers whose names have been omitted and who are the men we have selected. This weakness is intrinsic in the business of picking all-America teams. No one can hope to cover the ground without commit- | ting minor injustices or oversights here and there. Foot Ball Vastly Improved. Tflz caliber of college foot ball has improved so much and over so wide a range of territory in the last few years that there are literally | dozens of backs and linemen claiming the all-America pickers’ attention. It was with much regret, for instance, that we omitted from our all-star squad of two teams the names of ends like Kosak of Northwestern, Ben- ton of Arkansas and Schroeder of U. C. L. A; tackles like Scheyer of ‘Washington, Zager of Stanford and Daniell of Pittsburgh; guards like Pierce of Fordham, Montgomery of Princeton and Bassi of Santa Clara; centers like Hauze of Pennsylvania, Gilbert of Auburn, Ray of Dartmouth and Wojciechowicz of Fordham, and backs like Schindlar of Southern Cali- fornia, Isbell of Purdue, Uram of Min=- nesota, Sandbach of Princeton, Fa- lashi of Santa Clara, Handrahan of Dartmouth and Frank of Yale. But we think our team, as it stands, s a good one, worthy of all-America rating. The line, while not so heavy | as some of those in the past, is unusually fast and hard-charging. The backs are strong defensively and able in the blocking department, as well as brilliant at moving the ball. For the first time in several seasons, 11 different colleges are represented in the Afirst-string line-up. There was no bunching of talent this year. Every part of the country, nearly every big league school, had a candi- date to offer. Three Easterners make the team this year, as opposed to only one last year. There are three Boutherners, one man from the Pa- cific Ooast and four from the wide expanse which is called, for con- venience, the Middle West. Analysis of Team. ers look them over, one at a time: Tinsley—A popular choice for all- America honors in 1935, this great end came on strong in his final season for Louisiana State. In addition to his speed and his genius on the defense, he developed into a first-rate pass re- eeiver, There was no better mechani- eal end in the oountry. ‘Widseth—Minnesota’s giant tackle was on our first team last year, and continued to dominate the fleld. ‘Weighing 220 pounds and playing full time in nearly all major games, Wid- seth was outstanding in ‘s character- fstically strong Minnesota line. Reld—Northwestern had a line which consistently opened holes for the team’s fine running attack, and Reid, at guard, was the leading line- man in this department of play as well as on the defense. A big, rangy fellow, he had the speed of & bantam- weight plus a world of power. Herwig—For the second _straight year, Herwig stood out in a magnifi- cent field of centers. A bull's-eye pesser and a first-rate tackler and diagnostician, he gets the edge over others of his own caliber because of the 60-minute ball games he’ played from start to finish of the season. Glassford — The power house and after Mayberry, Florida's outstand- | ing player, kicked out of bounds on Auburn’s 7. Kilgore bucked over for | the score. | Another scoring drive in the second | quarter, led by Billy Hitchcock, Au- Jbum halfback, carried the Plains- Extra Point, Boots Goal in Last Period for Win. B3 the Associated Press. HOUS’X‘ON, ‘Tex., November 28.— The Baylor Bears scored 10 points in the final period today to de- WASHINGTON, D. C, ® George Furey (indicated by arrow) took the opening kick-off is shown as he broke through a pack of would-be tacklers to for Columbia in the-game with Stanford yesterday in New York and raced 79 yards for a score, the only one of the contest. AUBURN’ H_[]R"]A f""‘ il L.S.U. and Navy Share Day’s —Copyright, A. P, Wirephoto. Laurels, Former Bolstering By the Associated Press, Louisiana State's powerful Tigers captured the Southeastern Conference championship and kept alive their Rose Bowl hopes yesterday as Navy sank the Army, 7-0, before the largest crowd that ever saw a foot ball game in the East. Roliing over Tulane, 33 to 0, before nearly 50,000 spectators at Baton Rouge, Louisiana State finished its regular season with six victories and no defeats within the conference and eight victories in nine games against all competition. The only blot on the Tiger record was an early-season tie with Texas. L. 8. U’s triumph over Tulane en- abled the Tigers to nose out Alabama for the Southeastern title. Alabama, unbeaten in nine games, won five con- ference games, but was held to a draw by Tennessee. Although Washington's Huskies, Pacific Coast champions and Far Western color bearers in the Rose Bowl game at Pasadena New Year day, have not yet selected an opponent, the choice tonight seemed to lie between Alabama and Louisiang State, . Real Service Scrap. INJO CHAMPIONSHIP depended on the Army-Navy duel, fought be- fore a record-breaking crowd of 102.- Chances for Rose Bowl Bid Sneed Schmidt banged over the line in three tries after a Navy pass had been declared completed on Army's | 3-yard stripe because of interference with the Navy receiver. Up until that time Army had pushed the Sailors around scandalously. An | injury early in the fourth quarter to | the Cadet ace, Charles (Monk) Meyer, | removed most of the threat out of | Army’s attack. Two other Eastern games produced ! mild surprises. George Furey grabbed the opening kick-off and dashed 79 yards to a touchdown to give Columbia a 7-0 lead over Stanford's invading | Indians. At Boston Boston College | completed its first and an eminently successful season under the coaching of Gil Dobie with a 13-12 conquest of | | its traditional rival, Holy Cross. T. C. U. Loses Ground. TEXAS CHRISTIAN, held to = scoreless drdw by Southern Meth- odist, saw its bid for the Southwest Conference championship threatened by Arkansas’ Razorbacks. Arkansas, | which lost & Southwest title in 1933 because an ineligible substitute lines- man was used in several games, can clinch the championship by whipping | Texas next Saturday. | Meanwhile, Baylor's late-rallying | Bears knocked over Rice with a 10- | men to their final score, with the feat the Rice Owls, 10 to 7, and dead- | 000 packed in the Municipal Stadium | point splurge in the fourth quarter, equals or nearly the equals of the | Shifty ball carrier skirting end the lock Texas A. and M for third place | in Philadelphia, but it developed the | 10-7, and tied Texas A. and M. for { last 16 yards. i Line-Ups and Summary. 3. Florida (0 -~ Ramsey Kicliter Qnm2 . Koscis ~ Williams Mayberry HPEONIWACCEY BxT@EHQ Kilgore Score by periods: et 8 7 0 000 ‘ouchdowns. _Hitch- after touchdown, 0—13 | Auburn ing—" | cock. Kilgore: point | Fenton {placement). TOUGHENS GRID LIST Hampden-Sydney to Meet V. P. I., Rutgers Next Year. HAMPDEN-SYDNEY, Va., Novem- ber 28 (#).—Hampden-Sydney Col- lege’'s foot ball team will meet Rut- line with Coach C. A. (Yank) Bernier’s plan to tackle a tougher schedule than that played the past season. The schedule: September 25—Virginia, at Cha:- lottesville. October 2—Rutgers, at New Bruns- wick. 16—Swarthmore, here. 23— St. John's, at Annapolis. 30—V. P. I, at Blacksburg. November 6—William and Mary, at ‘Willlamsburg. 13—Richmond, at Rich- mond. 20 — Randolph - Macon, at Petersburg. 25—American U, at Washington. as well as strong and fast, Glassford was the keystone of his teams land attack, An Exceptional Tackle. FRANCO-—An unusual type of tackle, Franco’s underslurg build was reminiscent of a bulldog's. He played in the enemy backfield all the ‘time on the defense, pacing the best line Fordham has had in many years, and, on the defense, he opened holes | big enough to drive a truck through. | Superlative on diagnosis. Kelley—There is little remaining to be said about Kelley, the most publi- cized end, and deservedly so, of the last decade. He was an arch-oppor- tunist, an uncanny pass receiver, and & born leader. He was directly re- sponsible for nearly all of Yale's vie- tories. 5 n-n:h—m the second successive Southwestern foot ball with his bril- liant forward passing. He threw them straight and hard or soft and high, ignoring the men assigned to cover him and slow him up. He will go down in foot ball history as one of the hand- ful of players who revolutionized the game. Parker—The spearhead of Duke's attack all season, a wonderful punter, passer and ball carrier as well as an inspirational leader. Buivid—The chief threat of Mar- quette’s galloping offense and the best passer the Middle West has seen in years—in addition to which, he could handle any assignment that & back is calied on to handle. Francis—A dangerous, crashing ball carrier with speed as well as power, and a blocker and tackler second to none. Prancis was a backfield all by himself. He stands at the top of the gers and Virginia Tech next year, in | in the Southwest Foot Ball Confer- | sharpest kind of fighting before the | 0—o| | year, Sammy Baugh set the style in|. ence. A hard-charging Rice line thwarted Crooning Lloyd Russell in his final collegiate appearance, but could not ane | stop Bubba Gernand Yon | Christian Gernand caught a 15-yard pass for Baylor's touchdown. He kicked the Brofis | extra point to tie and 3 minutes later Mullins | booted a field goal from the 26-yard line for the victory. ‘The Owls scored in the first period and played to hold that advantage. Russell fumbled on the Rice 25 and Forbes recovered. Brandon plunged 10 yards and Vickers tossed to Neece for the touchdown. Vickers con- verted. Line-ups and Summary. Baylor (10). Clark | Navy capitalized on two breaks in the shap of Army penalties for pass inter- | ference to score the only touchdown of | the game in the closing minutes of the | battle. third place in the Southwest standings. In the Southeastern Conference Georgia overcame its ancient rival, Georgia Tech. 16-6, while Auburn was beating Florida, 13-0. Mississippi State ' easily trimmed Mercer, 32-0. Nebraska Beats Oregon State BY the Associated Press. ORTLAND, Oreg., November 28. —A powerful Nebraska foot ball team defeated the Oregon State Beavers, 32 to 14, in a spectacular, wide-open game today ¢ | before 15,000 fans. It was the Cornhuskers' fifth vic- tory in as many games between the schools. | Nebraska made only 7 first downs ‘it.o Oregon State's 15, but several of eece | its first downs were touchdowns. 8core by periods Bayior Riow - = B Baylor scoring—Touchdown, Gernand voint after touchd d_(place- ment): fleld (placement), Rice scoring. MISSISSIPPI STATE CONQUERS MERCER| Held Scoreless in One Quarter, Maroon Runs Up 32 Points in Final Contest. By the Associated Press. STAT! COLLEGE, Miss.,, November 28.—Playing before a final home- day crowd of 3,500 persons, the Missis- sippi State foot ball team today defeat- ed Mercer College, 32 to 0. Mercer held Mississippi State score- |less in the first quarter and three threats bogged down. But in the sec- ond period State broke ‘loose to score two touchdowns and the regulars with- drew, leaving the game to the reserves. Bob Hardison scored State’s first two touchdowns, one from the 6-inch line where it was planted by Ike Pickle and the other from 3 yards, ‘where it’ was put by Bernard Ward. Soon after the third period opened, Ward cut through tackle and raced 62 yards to score on one of the most spectacular runs of the season. Pred Walters, State end, engineered the fourth touchdown single-handed one minute later. Smith attempted to kick from his 20, and Walters blocked the punt, picked the ball out of the air on the dead run and went 20 yards to score standing. OTTAWA “BIG FOUR” KING Meets Sarnia After Foot Ball Vic- tory Over Toronto. OTTAWA, November 28 (#).—The Ottawa Rough Riders won the cham- pionship of the “Big Four” Foot Ball League today by defeating the Toron- to Argonauts, 17 to 5. ‘The Rough Riders' took the two- game play-off series by a total count of 22-6. A crowd of 10,000 saw the game, which qualifies Ottawa for the eastern play-off series against A Beavers Put on Hot Finish. a hair-raising finish, however, Midwesterners had rolled up a 32-0 lead. Pullback Sam Francis, Nebraska's all-America candidate, rammed the line for & touchdown on the seventh play of the game, climaxing a 50-yard drive. A few minutes later Francis passed 20 yards to Right End McDonald, who ran 6 more yards to score. Still in the first quarter Prancis passed to Half- back Douglas for & third touchdown after the Huskers recovered a Beaver fumble in scoring territory. Nebraska scored two more touch- downs in the third. A long pass, Howell to McDonald, sent the Corn- huskers to the Beaver 15 and Substi- | tute Quarterback Phelps passed to | McDonald over the goal. PFrancis | converted. Nebraska's final score was the most spectacular, Halfback Lloyd Card- 20 YEARS AGO IN THE STAR. THRB local colleges will close their foot ball seasons on ‘Thanksgiving day, George Wash- ington and Georgetown meeting il an inter-city game on the Hilltop, and Maryland going to Baltimore to meet Johns Hopkins. Howard and Hampton also are ready for their annual colored clash on the Howard campus. Although Jess Willard, the world’s champion heavyweight, does not care & rap for fighting again, his numerous managers who have & cast-iron grip on his services are hungry for coin. With the circus season over, the big fellow, who now weighs close to 300 pounds, is 'HE Beavers gave disappointed fans | slam-banging their way to two touch- | downs in the last period after the | In Spectacular Grid Battle well ran 58 yards through a broken fleld to the goal. Gray Passes for Touchdown. THEN the Beavers opened their passing attack. Gray threw to Mountain on the Nebraska 1 ahd Elmer Kolberg plunged over. With less than five minutes to play, the Beavers continued to rifie passes and smashed and ran to the Corn- | huskers’ 27. Gray dropped back and | threw s bullet pass to Mountain over the goal line. and Summary. Orez_St. (14). g ‘Hutchins Watts Wendlick Duncan Gray Swanson Score by period: Nebraska Oregon State Nebraska scoring: _Touchdowns—FPran- is. s, Cardwell, McDonald (2). touchdown—Francis (2, place. ments). _ Oregon _State _scoring—Touch~ flo"nv—xnlm, Mountain (sub for Swan. son). LEAGUE GRIDM EN CLASH Meets Trinity Eleven. foot ball games today, the Palace A. C. will stack up against Washington Cardinals at Duffy Stadium, Seat | Pleasant, Md., and Arlington A. A. | will meet Trinity A. C. at Ballston, Va. Both games will get under way at 2:30 o’clock. Palace gridders are seeking to avenge a previous 7-2 defeat at the hands of the Cardinals, who tri- umphed in the final two minutes of play, while Arlington will strive to reverse a 13-0 pasting dealt it by Trinity early this season. The Regal Clothiers drew & bye for today. NEW MICHIGAN CAPTAIN ANN ARBOR, Mich.,, November 28 (#).—Joe Rinaldi of Elkhart, Ind,, has been chosen captain of the 1937 Uni- versity of Michigan foot ball team, Rinaldi, center this year, will suc- ceed Matt Patanelli, also of Elkhart, who was adjudged by his teammates the most valuable man on the squad this season. ANY ANY &% AUTO i GLASS PROMPT DRIVE-IN SERVICE Toranto & Wasmeon, Ine. 1321°L S N. NA. 2966 NOVEMBER 29, Palace Meets Cards, Arlinfloni In National City League 150-pound | 1936—PART ONE. PUTS QUESTIONS TOA. A U, HEADS {Willing to Bury Hatchet if Others Do—Worries Over Status, BY ALAN GOULD, Associated Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, November 28— Eleanor Holm Jarrett, the bathing beauty who rocked the American Olympic boat this Summer, isn't going to Houston, Tex., next week, but she would like the ad- ministration’s forces to know what she thinks about the situation before they lock horns with prospective op- position in the 1936 convention of the Amateur Athletic Union with Avery Brundage wielding the gavel. “If they want to bury the Olympic hatchet, as Brundage suggests, they can do so without worrying me,” re- marked the girl whose dismissal from the Olympic team for violation of training rules shook the athletic world. “If, on the other hand, they bring open, I would like to have the officers mitted varying standards of conduct to exist on the trip to Berlin, why I was singled out for punishment when the so-called training rules were vio- lated by dozens of athletes, and why the star-chamber proceedings of the Olympic Committee concerning my case never were fully made public.” Insists She’s Inside Code. RS. JARRETT also is concerned about her status as an amateur. Despite an official opinion that she automatically has professionalized herself, first, by writing newspaper ar- ticles during the Olympics and, sec- ondly, by capitalizing her swimming | reputation in night clubs or vaudeville, | the backstroke queen insists she has violated no amateur code. “Whether I ever compete again as an amateur is beside the point,” declared. “Any and all contracts I have signed for personal appearances | | specifically provided my swimming record was not to be used in any advertising. Why would I reject the offers I have mercialize my swimming ability, if I did not want to remain within the letter and spirit of the amateur rule? Why would I spend my own money to go to court and fight an attempt to force me into going with a profes- sional swimming tour if I wasn't de- | termined not to jeopardize my ama- teur standing?” | There’s another point Mrs. Jarrett | would like to settle with Brundage, who acted to disbar her from any amateur competition in Europe, despite the fact that she had no in- tention of seeking to compete, under | any auspices, amateur or professional. | Brundage was quoted, om his return | | to the United States as saying: “Mrs. | | Jarrett wasn't dismicsed from the team just for drinking.” Misinterpreted, Says Brundage. THE chairman of the American Olympic Committee made the same statement to this writer, in | Berlin: | “I was misinterpreted,” he said to me in Chicago, where I told him Mrs. Jarrett had challenged the remark. “What I said or intended to say |was that Mrs. Jarrett wasn't dis- "mlssed ‘just for taking one glass of champagne.’ She was given a second | chance after her frst offense. She | defled the committee’s strict warning. She had only herself to blame for the action that the committee had no alternative but to take It remains to be seen whether a fresh chapter in the celebrated “Jarrett case” will be written in con- | nection with the A. A. U Convention, December 4-6. It is only one of several Olympie issues which may reach the convention floor, but it carries the most “dynamite,” if fully reopened. Who was to blame? Was Mrs. Jar- rett at fault, primarily, and was tke Olympic Committee justified in taking its drastic action? Satisfactory answers are difficult to obtain, because of the different view- points involved, if not actual preju- dice. Mrs. Jarrett unquestionably im- bibed freely of champagne and defled | official remonstrances. On the other hand, there was a lack of discipline from the time the gangplank was| i} | raised for the Olympic team’s trip to Germany. The atmosphere of tension | which marked final preparations, fund-collecting and team selection, | gave way to reaction on shipboard. Lacked Understanding. NDER different circumstances and with the ald'of counsel from long- Mr. Lewis J. Phone Columbia 3700 the Olympic arguments back into the | of the A. A. U. explain why they per- | she | received to com- | Mr. Thomas Powell SPORTS. Fanning “Casey” Of Ballad Dies Smcuaz. N. Y. November 28 (#).—O. Robinson Casey, reputedly the hero of the ballad “Casey at the Bat” died today. He was 75. Casey, noted as a hitter, was playing with the Detroit club of the old National League in 1885 and came to bat with the bases loaded in a crucial game. He struck out, tradition has it, and gave Ernest L. Thayer, a newspaperman, the inspiration for the poem “Casey at the Bat.” ‘Thayer, however, made the setting of Casey's downfall in a base ball “Flatbush” called “Mudville.” time associates who were missing on this trip, Mrs. Jarrett might not have been tempted to flout authority. Critics of the Olympic management hold that closer contacts and better under- standing of the problems of personnel would have produced better all-around discipline. Mrs. Jarrett’s appeal for a final chance was rejected for at least three reasons: (1) They considered the judgment sound, (2) they did not want to appear inconsistent under | pressure, and (3) they feared disci- | pline would break down on the entire | team if the verdict was changed or softened. ‘What most Olympic officials, includ- ing Brundage, did not realize, was that they automatically aroused Na- tion-wide reaction at home. This re- action was by no means all pro- Jarrett or anti-Brundage. Both sides of the case were aired thoroughly. Criticism was not confined to the forces who had fought Brundage in last year's A. A. U. convention. Brundage himself expressed surprise that he had as much favorable re- action or support for the committee's | action as he received, to offset oppo- | site views. | A fight for the A. A. U. presidency, |to top off whatever echoes of the Olympic trip develop in open meeting. | Maj. Patrick J. Walsh of New York, | president of the Metropolitan A. A. U., | jected to be opposed by the forces which opposed Olympic participation under the leadership of Jeremiah T. Mahoney of New York and Jack Raf- ferty of Houston. Mahoney and Raf- ferty were president and first vice president of the A. A. U. last year. Rafferty attacked Brundage’s Olympic ::’n:enhip and my ;nt yield willingly ny ceremonial effort to “I tl hatchet.” el HIGH SCHOOL CROWN TO FREDERICKSBURG Beats Suffolk Team, 27-to-8, for Class B Foot Ball Title of 0ld Dominion. By the Assoclated Press. UFFOLK, Va., November 28.—Fred- ericksburg High School took to the air today to rout Suffolk High, 27-6, and take undisputed possession of the | State class B foot ball championship. Suffolk, holder of the title for the past two years, scored the first touch- down but was unable to hold their | margin as the Yellow Jackets demon- | strated a potent offensive, both in the | air and on the ground. folk tally midway in the first period | of touchdowns to lead at the half time, 14-6. Ingalls, Predericksburg end, was the first to cross the Suffolk goal on a 20-yard pass from Heflin. Heflin went over svon afterward from | the 4-yard stripe. | C. Ingalls and Jones registered 6- pointers on aerials from Heflin in the last half. e IRWIN ON GRID AGAIN ‘Outlaw’ Brand Is Removed From Boston Redskin. BOSTON, November 28 (#)—The “outlaw” brand placed on Don Irwin, National Professional Foot Ball League was removed today when he joined the Boston Redskins. He will appear here in tomorrow’s game against the Pittsburgh Pirates. Irwin was allotted to the Boston failed to report. He was blacklisted when he accepted the more attractive financial- terms of the new American League. Cassidy Mr. Mr. C. J. O'Brien from which Brundage is retiring after | | seven terms of office, looms at Houston | is the administration choice. He is ex- | Humbert's 12-yard pass to Jones in | | the end zone produced the lone Suf- | The Jackets came back with a pair | former Colgate backfield ace, by the | club before the season started but he | B—7 Coaches Pick All-America Team : Eleanor Ready to Resume Fight Thrilling Run That Decided Big Gridiron Battle COLUMBIA VICTOR ON 79-YARD DASH Furey Returns Kick-0ff for Only Score in Battle With Stanford. By the Assoclated Press. EW YORK, November 28.—Co- Capt. George Furey's 79-yard run-back of the opening kick- off gave Columbia a 7-0 victory over Stanford on the frozen snow- swept gridiron of the Polo Grounds today. Using only 14 men as they did in the Rose Bowl three years ago, the Lions also duplicated the score of that me- morable New Year's day battle in the mud. Just as “Rose Bow] Al” Barabas was the hero for Columbia in Pasadena, 80 was Furey, last of a famous Lion foot ball family, the solo star today. | He drove straight down the gridiron untouched before most of the 20,000 shivering fans had reached their seats, and he cooled last of Stanford's numerous desperate passes in the closing moments. Throws Many Passes. STANBORD power, booted in gum- soled basket ball shoes and equipped with chemical hand warmers, carried the show from the half time inter- mission to the beginning of the final quarter. Stanford threw 32 passes, but com- pleted only 4, while Columbia, which relied most of the season on the pass- ing of Sophomore Sid Luckman, tossed | only 8, but completed 3 and outgained the Indians, 65 yards to 59, overhead. Neither team was able to fashion any effective running attack on the frigid turf. Stanford outyarded the New Yorkers, 120 to 86. ‘The almost-perfect Columbia pass defense and the magnificent punting of Hubert Schulze protected the one- touchdown lead gained by Furey in the first 14 seconds. In a game marked by unorthodox play, it was not surprising that it ended with only one goal post stand- ing Enthusiastic Columbians ripped apart the one at the other end of the fleld as the startled Indians launched their final futile overhead attack. Makes Lone Threat. STANFORD'S only real threat came at the start of the third period, when Joe Vollmer, Columbia safety, fumbled and Leo Ferko, Indian left guard from San Francisco, recovered on Columbia's 22 Here the Columbia line gave up only 2 yards in two tries and Columbia backs batted down the next two passes tossed by the Indian southpaw passer and kicker, Dick Brigham. Columbia played wise, alert ball, Even when the Stanfords broke through and blocked two of Schulze's punts, the Lions recovered, the New Yorkers' only offensive of the last half came when a pass from Luckman bounced off Jim Coffis’ arms into Furey’s hands on the Stanford 48. This was the only time in the third period Columbia was able to sneak into enemy territory. Coffis was a constant threat from the safety position. Line-Ups and Summary. Stanford (0) Columbla (7). Clark Schuize Bateman Coviello HAromIAOCCCy Hwmd0] 0HmR Lt [} Score by periods Stanford Columbia Columbia scoring: Touchdown—Furey. Point after touchdown—Waldo (placement). Stanford substitutions—Backs. Brigham, igna. Garnier. Columbia _substitutions —Guard. Pistolas: backs. Luckman. Seidel, cais: T H. _Pri (Princeton) (Philadelphia) (Pennsyivania) Palmer (Colgate) Statisties. Pirst downs ____ Yards Forwar ELECTRICAL REPAIRS Commercial Motors Repairs—Rewinding MILLER-DUDLEY/ 1716 144 ST.NW. NORTH 1583 Mr. Frank Logan Logan Motor Company 1419 Irving Street N.W. announces the association of Francis Buck Mr. Edgar Burns in the New 1937 Ford Sales Department Wm. J. Howard General Manager