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D—2 SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR WASHINGTON, D. C., FRIDAY, OCTOBER_ 29, 1937. SPORTS. Week’s Football Battles Find “lvy”’ Cropping Up in Odd Places MAGEBEYDNDEAST Montana, Texas, Corn Belt, | South Renew Rivalries —By JIM BERRYMAN. SKEE]‘ SH[][”’ERS Picki AAW, YoU CAN'T HAVE A UNIFORM, FOOTBALL PANITS AIN'T MADE IN TRIANGLE SHAPES ! BUT. SIR, I DON'T LIKE T'PLAY IN My | GOOD CLOTHES | INTWO DAY MEET Events Tomorrow and Sun- day to Be Tune-up for East. By ANDY KERR, (Colgate Coach). Albrigit-Bucknell: Albright might sur- prise Amherst-Mass_State Army-V. M. 1: Army. i Boston College-North Carolina State Boston_ College t00 strong Boston U.-Washington U.: Boston U. Bowdoin-Bates: Bowdoin. Brown-Tufts: Brown Buffalo-Deflance: Buffalo. Canisius-8t. Bonaventure: Close. Isius. City College-Providence: Providence. Amherst. Can- ng Grid Game Winners Midwest BY GU& DARAIS, Detro Coach Marquette-Santa ant 3 Marauet Santa Clars Minnesota-Notre Dame THlinois- Purdue-Towa Ohio_State-Chie Ohio Btate. Northwestern-Wisconsin: Northwestern, Indiana-Nebraska: _Indiana Oklshoma-Kansas State: Oklahoma. Missouri Minnesota. ichigan. Michigan State. Western Reserve-Dayton: Western Re. serve. Drake-Grinnell: Drake 8t Louis-De Paul: 8t Louis Gornell-Columbia: Close one ahoma A. & M.-Texas Tech: by a_point homa A. & M. Delaware-8t. John's: St. John's - Drexel-Urainius: Guets Ursinus, St Fordham-North arolina: Fordham e i narrow margin Georgetown-Manhattan Southern Methodist U. Coach. Hamilton. Texas A. & M.-Arkansas: _Passes give one. Manhattan Hamilton-Swarthmore s A Ps Holy Cross-Temple: Osmanski in con- Arkansas home-comint dition gives Holy Oross e lorg 7% Toss-up. dge A La Fayette-F. and M.: La Fayette still AubuneRics Crimson Tide, unbeaten L o N. Y. U.-Colgate: Toss-up. oSTimeon Tide. Penn-Navy: Navy. g n Pittsburgh-Carnegie: Pitt Coiby-Maine: Colby Cornell-Maine: Coiby Hunting Season. RACK skeet shooters from the ‘ District, Maryland and Vir- Cornell Okla- CURLEY ENTERED OLD MARYLAND AGRICULTURAL COL* LEGE AT THE TENDER AGE OF 16...AND IN SPITE OF BEING ONLY A ZEPHYR-WEIGHT, BECAME A GRIPIRON STAR BEFORE HE WAS 18.... By DREW MIDDLETON, Assoctated Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, Oct. 29.—Ivy crops up in the strangest places.| Most football fanatics confine traditional games to the Big Three and their playfellows in the Eastern “ivy” league. Don't you be- | lieve it. There's tradition aplenty in | the tall corn and mesquite leagues. | ‘Take a look at Saturday's games. | Every one knows Princeton and | Harvard have been playing since short- ly after the Civil War. That doesn't ecut much sage brush in Montana, where they have a traditional fracas all their own. The University of on- tana and Montana State meet Satur- day in their thirty-ninth game. The University has won 26 games, State 7 and § have been ties. The series started in 1897, just 20 years after Harvard and Princeton, who get together again Saturday, had | their first encounter. But in 1877 the chief sport in Montana was buf- falo shooting and the Indians weren't from Dartmouth One of the East's most notable rivalries is the Dartmouth-Yale series, renewed this week, which got under way in 1884. The Dartmouths didn't get around to winning a game until 1935. They repeated last autumn, but the series still is topheavy with Blue triumphs, 15 to 2, with three ties. i of Long Standing. [ i ginia will compete for indi- vidual and team honors at the National Capital Skeet Club tomorrow and Sunday in an open shoot The champions of both Maryland and Virginia will be among the con- testants who will use the competition to tune up for the ‘quail, ruffed grouse e snd duck shooting season, which opens P“I_fl‘.tr;,:';‘a"""'d' within the next 30 days. R. P. L-Alfred: Alfred In the opinion of many experienced | RochesterHohartz HooR!. hunters the National Capital Club's| 8t. Lawrence-Northeastern No. 3 and 4 fields come nearer simu- Ly lating actual ruffed grouse and qualil Syracuse-Penn State: Syracuse. - Trinity-Weslevan: Trinity. v P 1 Hampden shooting than any skeet fields in the East. Another close after stiff Tennessee i 1 GIVE INTERFEREACE ! ALL [ HAVE T'DO (S STICK RIGHT BEHIND HIM ! North Caro Fordham Richmond-Du: South Carolina-Th adel .. AND WHAT A (GREAT JOB OF “BLOCKING” HE'S PONE FOR THIS GAME .. AND ALLOTHER. SPORTS AT WIS ALMA MATER .., St. Law- 1 Texe d P Villanova-Detroit: ~ Nip and tuck Texas Tech-Oklahoma A. & M. Detroit ans | wash’ Cgliege-Mt. 8t Mary: Mt Bt lsa:George Washington: Tulsa , | ¥ yanderbilt-Geoigia Tech: Tennessees Tomorrow's program calls for the| w “and J-Allegheny: W. and J e iy g ¥ ¥ o vo- | Western Maryiand-West Virginia: West ana State 50-hird 410-gauge individual and two L B DL By BT . man events to start at noon, with the | \U!Hnmfi-US;‘nr:j v;\ s ode Taland gCentensry. i : - | Worcester-Rhode Isiand: Rhode Islan . Bewane 100-bird individual and two.man team | 2rcqsiet ERoc - Stemeon 20-gauge matches to start at 2:30| o'clock | n American West. By JAMES PHELAN, (University of Washington Coach) California-U, C. L. A.: California, three touchdowns s, vashington State 10 to © regon State The 100-bird all-bore individual and Classes AA, A, B and C and two-man | team events will be fired Sunday. e Central, Western JOHNNIES IN ACTION In “Crucial” Tilt \"ITH elimination from the pub- lic high school football series title facing the loser, Central and Western were to clash today at Central Stadium at 3:30 o'clock. Central has even in two Washing- Stanford by a Curley : BYRD.. PRESIDENT OF UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND...IN WHOSE Conquerors of Hampden-Sydney Face Delaware Tomorrow. ANNAPOLIS, Md., October 29.—St John's, which broke into the win col- Lovol Maraquette: Santa Clara, liege of Mary's Sap Prancisco-Loyola: Pacific: Toss-up. Ancient Southwest Feud. THE Southwest can match this with a feud which is a little younger, but a lot tighter. When Baylor, cur- rently ranked sixth nationally, meets ‘Texas Christian Saturday, it will be their forty-third encounter. The series is all even, 19 and 19, with five ties. ‘The firing began in 1801 and the boys liked it 5o much they played each other 2 couple of times a season early in HONOR A SILVER ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION 1S BEING STAGED JOINTLY WITH THE ANNUAL " HOME -COM ING AT COLLEGE PARK TOMORROW ! umn last Saturday by defeating Hampden-Sydney, has another game in its class tomorrow, meeting Dela- | ware at Newark Johnny Lambros, injured running and passing ace, is in improved condi- | | tion. The team also will be better sup-| | plied with reserves. Several freshmen are coming to the fore. | Loyola University of Portiand-Linfleid: Port- lan Utah Aggies-Colorado Aggies: Utah Aggies Whitman-College of Idaho: College of Tdgho. Cajifornia Tech-Occidental: Edge to Tech. zona Pa- ArizonA-New Mexico Aggies Albany College-Pacific Univer cific. Nevada-California Aggies: Nevada Brigham Young-Western State: B. Y. U. in_scoring spree Oolorado Universits-Golorado Mines: o split starts, while Western lost its only series game to Tech Central was banking ball carrying of Bill Ickes and the defensive work of Charley Jones, center, to swing the decision. wk Western was depending chieflv on Morris Snead and Don Niklason, backfield threats on the ley the eentury. Towa State and Missouri reopen a eombat that has been going on since 1896, Saturday. This has been close, too. Iowa has won 12 games, Missouri 13, four others have been ties. This is a little closer than the Cornell-Co- lumbia rivalry, another storied Eastern series due for renewal Saturday. | Cornell has taken 12 games to Co- | lumbia’s 9, with three ties. The games at first were mostly easy victories for Cornell, but Columbia took command | in 1933 and has won four of the last | five. with one a tie. | The corn country is full of disagree- | ments that started in the handlebar- mustache era, and quite a few of them | are up for renewal Saturday. Wiscon- | sin and Northwestern, friendly enemies since 1891, meet with the Badgers aw- | fully eager to score their first triumph since 1021. They hold the edge, how- | ever, 12 to 6, with three tie games. BACKFIELD MAKE-UP HAS NAVY BOTHERED | Line Is Settled for Penn Game, but Blockers, Ball Carriers Are Doubtful. ispatch to The Star. NNAPOLIS, Md., Oct. 29—Head | “X Coach Hank Hardwick still is in | sTAM lNA A"D some d as to the make-up of Navy's starting backfield _against Pennsylvania tomorrow in Philadel- phia BUDDY MYER IS HONORED, | Art Franks. 200-pound blocker, and s ALL-LEATHER 'BRUINS CONFIDENT OF BEATING GIANTS | Masterson's Passing, Nagurski's Line Plunging Is Feared by Eastern Grid Pros. By the Assaciated Press | (CHICAGO, Oct. 29—The Chicago, Bears, 27 strong, headed East to- | confident of victory Sunday in their important National Football League battle with the New York Giants, leaders of the circuit's Eastern division. | The Bears, undefeated in five games, will work out Saturday morning and then attend the New York University- Colgate game Bronko Nagurski, who injured a| foot last Sunday against Detroit, will | be ready to head the Bruin ground | attack. AS CURLEY WEN SO WENT MARYLAND. WHEN HE RETURNED To THE AEARBY INSTITUTION IN [912 IT WAS A "ONE- ROOM b AFFAIR WITH 120 STUDENTS, BUT IN % 25 YEARS OF "BUILDING WITH BYRD, IT HAS BLOSSOMED INTO A REAL UNIVERSITY, BOASTING day, AN ENROLLMENT OF MORE THAN 2,600..... UNBEATEN REGALS ENCOUNTER TRINITY National City League Leaders Haven't Lost in Two Years. Torontos Meet Plazas. EGAL CLOTHING 160-pound gridders will defend an unblem- | ished record when they tangle with the plunging that has made the Chicago | Strong Trinity A. C. Sunday in the Bears the National Pootball League's| feature tussle of the National City strongest Western team is gIVINg | League. The game will be played on | Coach Steve Owen of the Glants| ., gaysion field at 2:30. after a tilt | lenty to think about for the game Em ‘Sunday. o between the Northeast and Georgetown rivalries, but cherishes the few it has. | Boys' Clubs One is the Washington-Idaho series, | e | The Clothiers, coached by John renewed Saturday. It has been going| GRID GAMES FLOODED |, . owaxi, former Catholic University on at intervals since 1900 and the star, top the city league heap with two Huskies are on top, 17 to 2 Among the less fabled Eastern rival- They have been undefeated and | Emmett Wood, the chunky Plebe back Buddy Myer, second baseman of the | of Jast year, are sure to be in the first | Senators, has been elected vice chair- | quartet. | man of the Mississippi Wild Life| The starting line will be Federation, a group of sportsmen in-| Left end, Fike: left tackle, Begner; terested in the conservation of fish|left guard, Player: center, Fincher: and game. Gov. Hugh L. White of | right guard, Capt. Ray Dubois; right Mississippi is chairman tackle. Hysong: right end, Powell Drake, Grinnell Ol Rivals, | RAKE and Grinnell also will get to- | gether for another game of a| geries that started in 1897 | Down South Tulane and M:mmppn.[ who have been playing since 1893, play again. Tulane has 14 triumphs to Mississippi's 6. Another pair of friend- | ly enemies. Vanderbilt and Georgia | Tech. also meet. They started in 1891 f | NEW YORK, Oct. (#).—The combination of Bernie Masterson's passing and Bronko Nagurski’s line 29 and %Qdy has the edge, 12 to 6, with two ties. | The coast, with fewer big schools playing football back in the '90s, isn't | numerically as strong in traditional | |One Postponed, Two Others May | . ries are those of Hobart and Roches- ter, an 1891 debutante, Trinity and Wesleyan, which began in 1885, and Be Erased in West Virginia. CLARKSBURG, W. Va., Oct. 29 (). —A college football game was post- unscored on in two years. Toronto & Wasman Auto Glass, for- merly the Palace A. C.. will meet the Rutgers and Lehigh, born in 1884 and still flourishing. They all meet again Saturday. And on the same subject Virginia Poly started playing Hampden-Sydney | in 1900. Hampden-Sydney hasn't won in 23 tries G. W".-Tulsa (Continued From Page D-1.) poned yesterday because of high water. Two other college games may not be played. The Salem College-Fairmont State | game at Salem was delayed inde:- | initely. Although the Glenville College | athletic field was flooded, Coach Natus | Rohrbough said the game scheduled | at Glenville tomorrow with Morris Harvey would be played if possible. West Virginia Wesleyan hopes to play Waynesburg tomorrow at Buck- | hannon, where rising water forced 50 | families from their homes. | SUPER-SPECIALS] FOR YOUR CAR THOUSANDS OF TIRES—TUBES TWO COMPLETE FLOORS OF THE MOST DIVERSIFIED STOCKS EVER i ASSEMBLED—ALL FIRSTS—1937 FRESH STOCK Manhattan in Fighting Mood. || Save 25% to 50% off List Prices on Standard ANHATTAN'S squad is in a rather Mukes—NdfiOflfl"Y Advertised vicious mood, hoping to employ Tires You'll Recognize—1937 Fresh Stock—Brand-New Paper Wrapped the Hoyas as a means of bouncing | back to winning ways after its 19-0 | A LIBERAL ALLOWANCE ON YOUR OLD TIRES $395 5.25x17 595 55018 defeat by Kentucky last week. The | Jaspers otherwise have lost to Texas 5.50x19 A. and M., 14-7, while defeating St. 465 525018 - 595 Eooxs Bonaventure, 21-12, and Michigan 465 5.25x19 €00x18 495 5251 6.00x20 585 55016 State, 3-0. Manhattan chiefly will rely on Vic 2596 5.95 5.50x17 6.50x16 18 MONTHS' Fusia, & crack back who has com- | ] GUARANTEE pleted more than 50 per cent of passes | Nationally Advertised—Standard Makes he has launched this season, using | Al Caruso and Capt. Jack Daly as targets 1938 0/0 Sales Prices From MODELS 4&» $3.95 to $10.95 LAy The injury bugaboo that has crippled | Georgetown again may strip the ranks | REPAIRED o Factory Adjustments of a regular. John Franks' starting All carry our— possibilities still are dubious. The 200- pound guard suffered a collision with ONE YEAR UNCONDITIONAL GUARANTEE $2.85 5.50x19 Bill Burke, another guard, yesterday and received a deep gash on the nose that required four stitches. Coach 375 6.00x17 ... 375 625x16 395 7.00x16 Jack Hagerty has fashioned a special headgear for Franks' use, but the AMERICAN STORAGE BLDG. TIRES MOUNTED FREE OPEN EVENINGS TILL 8 AND SUNDAY A.M. CONSOLIDATED SALES CO. Georgetown followers will look to Tommy Keating and Elmer Moulin to 2801 GEORGIA AYE. N. W, cOl. 4138 WAREHOUSES IN PRINCIPAL CITIES . iPhu Wine & Liquor team on Gon-| aga field at 2:30, after the South- west A. C. and Corr's Sport Shop bat- | tle at 1 o'clock. GOULD KATHANODE BATTERIES Guaranteed as long as vou own vour car. L.S.JULLIEN.I~c. 1443 P St.N.W. N0.8076 float parade between halves, with eight or nine organizations partici- pating. The game promises to be a hot duel, with Capt. Walter Mayberry of the *Gators and Jarring Jim Meade of the Terps providing the backfleld fireworks. Starting at guard on the Florida eleven will be Frank Kocsis, thrice all- | high performer at Central here and | now rated one of the South's finest | linesmen. | Dobson has shifted. his starting line- up only in one respect, Frank Skot- | nicki taking over the right halfback | post from Pershing Mondorff. 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Glider Williams New “No-Brush’’ Shave Cream Jead its attack. Keating returned *o| the line-up last week and was in- strumental in the Hoyas' game stand in recording a scoreless tie with Penn- sylvania, while Moulin has been con- fined to the sidelines with a sprained ankle. Varied Sports Hockey. Pittsburgh Hornets, 7; Detroit Redwings, 6. Cleveland Barons, 4; Philadel- phia Ramblers, 1. College Football. Bethel, 21; Sterling (Kans), 13, IN WASHINGTON 905 PENNSYLVYANIA AVENUE, N. W. OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS