Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 7

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Sports 7 Indians Face ougli ornell ale 4-1 Sonl hoiee S. Kates Over Kentucky Harvard in Breather THE BOSTON GLOBE SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 13. 1937 REPRESENT LITTLE SOUTHERN COLLEGE IN STADIUM DARTMOUTH DRIVES AT CORNELL HURDLE y''' Record Crowd to See Big Green Fight For Unbeaten Season Lineup at Hanover DARTMOUTH CORNELL. Miller, ..17 177 re.

Spang Dilkes, It 200 201. VanRanst Duckworth, lg.191 188. Hooper Gibson, 185 176 Stahl or 190 Hughes Zitrides, rg. .185 204 lg. Roth Schildgen, 210..

It, McKeever Davis, re 201 202... le, Holland Gates, qb 181 201... Eichler Hollingth, lhb.180 15.... rhb. Taker MacLeod, rhb.

184 188 lhb, Peck Howe, 167 fb. Brown Game starts at 2 m. Referee, R. E. Kinney, Trinity; umpire, T.

J. Thorp. Columbia; linesman, L. V. Novak, Army; field judge, E.

E. Miller, Ienn State. HARVARD TAKING NO RISKS TODAY: Strong Team Will Open Against Davidson With Game in Hand, Harlow May Experiment a Bit Lineup at Stadium HARVARD DAVIDSON Winter le 179 re Iverson Kevorkian 205 196. Warden Nee lg 198 1 rg IIiU Wilson 180 146...... Purdy Downes rg .188 186.

Goodman Booth rt 194 203 It Graham Daughters 181 194.. Ie Williams Boston qb ....191 159.... qb Dennis Foley lhb 161 150 rhb Stair Smith rhb ....188 165 lhb Davis Struck fb 181 174 fh llicks Referee, D. L. Daley, B.

C. Umpire, William J. Gainor, Lafayette. Linesman. J.

E. Coogan, Navy. Field judge, E. E. Allen, Springfield.

Game starts at 2 oclock. By VICTOR O. JONES With their most dsrgerous back, Teeney Lafferty, much improved and likely to play at least half the game, Davidsons Wildcats reached Cambridge in time for dinner last night on the eve of todays game against Harvard in the Stadium. Laffertys ankle has been improving with leaps and bounds, said Gene McEver, the former Tennessee All-America back who is coaching the Davidsons, as he prepared to take his men on a leg stretching expedition last night. He won't start the game, but hell be in there pitching passes and might play half of each period or so.

1 fyb Left to Right Teeny Lafferty, back; Frank Purdy, center, and Bailey 'Williams, end and captain, of the Davidson College football team which meets Harvard at the Stadium today, final engagement for the Crimsons before the Yale ame. Tigers See Fighting Chance, But Odds Are 4-1 on Yale B. C. to Face Heavy Kentucky Minus Only Worth at Center PURPLE HEAVILY FAVOREDJO WIN But Some See Brown as Keeping Game Close Entire Backfield of Bears Will Be Able to Play By JERRY NASON HANOVER, Nov 12 Cornell's red-shirted rushline, big puissant and primed to the hilt, is the most formidable obstruction lying between Dartmouth and an undefeated season. Tomorrow upon Memorial Field the Indians flying ball carriers will be formally introduced to that vigorous assembly of tacklers from far-away Cayuga and the episode will not only stretch the limited spectator facilities of the field to the utmost, but has already over-taxed the accommodations of this little college town.

Hanover Facilities Taxed Fifteen thousand people will pour into Hanover tomorrow morning and the advance guard has already taken over all living facilities. When 15,000 persons suddenly swoop down upon a community which normally does not exceed 3000 the pressure is terrific. There is hardly elbow room in Hanover in which to hoist a highball and this, on the eve of a mighty football epic, amounts to practically a hardship. The college authorities anticipate the largest throng ever to witness a football game here. But come what may in crowd or weather, Dartmouth and Cornell will engage in a titanic struggle, the outcome of which will either send Dartmouths stock rocking skyward the football marts or dispel the current opinion that this 1937 team Cl "Red Blaiks is a team of destiny.

Cornell, you see, has nothing to lose and a great deal for which to redeem itself. Dartmouth, undefeated, though haunted by the ghost cf the lately lamented 9-9 tie with Yale, has a great deal to lose. It is their 21st meeting in an exciting series which was launched at the turn of the century. Dartmouth has won 12 to Cornells eight, and there has never been such a thing as a tie between them. Both Strong on Offense Tomorrows game should be one in which offensive football will predominate.

Dartmouth is a "touchdown team. conscious at all moments of the gal pests at the other end of the field. Cornell has spasmodically operated under a similar tr.eory. George Peck, the mainspring of Cornell's attack and the man who shelled Colgate and Princeton, is fit and able for this game. He wasn't fit and he wasn't able in the Syracuse and Yale games, to which fact Cornell attributes its two defeats of the year.

Peck is the wingback, the most potent of the Cornell carriers, and the only one. in fact, who can match the speed and devastating drive of Dartmouth's Hutchinson, MacLeod. King, Howe, et al. But this may not be a battle in which backs will stand out. It may be a game in which grim defensive fines will divert yardage gaining into the aerial channels, where Fred Hollingworth.

the Dartmouth pitcher. and Whit Baker, Cornell's passer, eperate. Neither of these. teams has fully revealed the guile and efficiency of its forward-parsing game. Hollingworth is known to be a fine passer, and Baker, while he does not lean to distance, has shown deadly accuracy on running, flat and center-zone fiegs all year.

Cornell has an excellent kicker, ore or the best in the East, in Eli Hooper, the heavy-duty guard who lead the interference and does a twn-firved job of it on defense. Brud Holland, the publicized 200-pound Negro end. is both offensively and defensively a threat which Dartmouth is unable to match. Hutchinson remains the great question mark on the Dartmouth s.rie. He has not been able to take part in much of this weeks drill, and it is expected that Howe will be in the fuliback position.

Bv every code in the book tomorrow's grme should meet or surpass expectations. Both teams are fit and fcorh have supreme confidence in themselves. VERMONT. MIDDLEBURY MEET FOR STATE HONORS BURLINGTON. Vt.

Nov 12 The University of Vermont meets a highly favored Middlebury eleven tomorrow afternoon in the annual struggle for the state crown. Both teams have defeated Norwich decisively. Vermont, with two triumphs in even starts, must give away everything but weight to a Panther club 'hich has won five out of seven this Fall. The lineups: MTDDLEBURY Kirk end Winslow, encis; Anderson and Cridland. tackles; Jaqties and Kins, suards: Golenbeske.

center: Chalmers. Boehm, Guamaccia and Lrbenstem. back. VERMONT Berry and Levine, ends; white and Stone, tackle: Husin and Farrell. guards: Howard, center; Sunder-pnd.

Chorynak. Jones and Kimball, backs. he pack to tick No Breather, Say Visitors The rest of the Davidsons are all in good shape and ready to give a good account of themselves. They snorted at the local concept of the game as just a breather for Harvard and figure theyve got a chance. "We wouldnt come all this way just for a licking, said one of the players.

Harvard will meet the Tarheels with as formidable ary array as can be mustered. Capt Russ Allen, Bobby Green, Austen Harding and Bobby Burnett positively will not play. But Torb Macdonald, though he wont start, may be in there for a while. Dick Harlow plans to keep his starters, which include Vernon Struck and Chief Boston, 'regular full and blocking back, in until Harvard has the game in hand. Thereafter he may experiment a little with the Yale game in mind.

Two Juniors New Starters Two Harvard juniors will make their debut as game starters. One is Ben Smith, a converted end from Gloucester, who is starting his first game at right half. Frank Foley has been moved from right to left half to make room for him. The other new face in the starting lineup is that of Bob Downes, third-string guard, who gets his chance through Allens injury and the fact that Harlow is saving George Klein for the Elis. Bobby Winter, starting his first game this year at left end, vice Bobby Green, is a veteran sub who played more than half the Army game.

The Davidson band of 60 pieces, one of the crack outfits from below the Mason-Dixon Line, is due in Boston this morning after an 800-mile, two-day bus ride. They are bringing with them a couple of tons of genuine cotton and two little Negro boys to help them in staging their famous between-the-halves cotton picking number. For once the Harvard toot ensembles vaudeville hegemony is threatened, even though no experts give the Southerners any chance against the Crimson varsity. PASS GIVES ELI JAYVEES 13-13 TIE WITH PRINCETON NEW HAVEN, Conn, Nov 12 The Yale-Princeton junior varsity elevens played to a 13-13 tie here today. The Yale jayvees opened the scoring with a touchdown by Chuck Webster, and after the Tigers had gone into the lead in the third period on two touchdowns by Raincar, the Blue fought back in the final period, to knot the count when Macomber hurled an aerial to Brownie Brink-ley for a touchdown.

The summary: Y.ALK JAYVEES -Lussen. le: Star- buck. It: Tyler. Is: Day, Hopgnod, Rumbcrg, rt: Burnley, re; Graham, ah; Macomber, lhb; Gilhs, rhb: Wooster, fb. PRINCETON JAYVEES EckharcP.

rt Wathis, rc: White. Rogers, lg: Powers, It; English, le: Ratn-car. oh; Vanlangen, rhb; Schley, lhb; Blangill. fb. Score by periods.

1 2 3 4 Total Yale 7 0 0 6 13 Princeton 0 0 13 0 13 Touchdowns, Wooster. Rrinkley. Rain-ear 2. Points by goal after touchdown ho-igoofl, itainear (placements). Yale Substitutions Larsen.

Mestler, Thierman. Blair, Little, Blanchard, Lockhart. Cole. Taft. Princeton Substitutions Freeman, Foster.

Stokes. Meyer. Referee, Lobaugh. Umpire, Coogan. Linesman, Dole.

Time, four 15m periods. Lineup at Fenway Park BOSTON KENTUCKY COLLEGE McFaddcn 180... re Hagan Connolly 187 188 rt Skaggs Schwotzer 195 rg Boston Logue 172 100... Hinkeliein Kisstll rg 187 190 lg Sydnor or Reardon rg.193 Janusas .182 200 It IVts.se VVoronicz 187 175.... le Garland DiNatale qb C.175 180.

Robinson Jivclckin lhb. 175 185.. rhb Simpson Guinea 174 170. Davis Cignetti fb 187 165 fb Hodge Referee, F. X.

Keating, Fitchburg. Umpire, R. D. Ilaniells, Washington. Linesman, J.

N. Young, North Adams. Field Judge, B. Brewer, Maryland. Game starts at, 2 pm.

Robert. The lesser of the Davis twain was left behind in Lexington, Ky, nursing a slight concussion as a memento of his cluhs engagement last week with South Carolina. Wynne Not a Stranger All the active members of the Kentucky party, including the appropriately-named George Boston, a starting guard, are paying their first visit to the Hub, but Coach Wynne is not a complete stranger, though coming to our fair city in a new sporting capacity. His previous invasion happened when he was still an undergraduate at Notre Dame and a teammate of Dr Eddie Anderson, Holy Cross coach, on some of the late Knute Rocknes greatest South Bend elevens. Only Chet came as a track hurdler, not as a football player.

He came to compete in his timber-topping specialty at the annual B. A. A. indoor games and investigation of his admission that he "did all right on that occasion revealed he actually won the event. Thus the modest Mr Wynne will be aiming to keep intact his record of local victories, although in another field of endeavor this afternoon.

Last-minute advices from the Heights disclose that the Eagles are pretty well primed to write another chapter into their late-scascn comeback. Ralph Worth, the big blonde centre, is the only accredited regular definitely out of action and his post will be capably filled by his Malden compatriot, Leo Logue. Fella Gintoff and Al Horsfall, in the back-field, and Jim Kissell, in the line, may not start, but are expected to be on call in case their shoe-fillers in the persons of Ira Jivelekian. Pete Cignetti and Leo Reardon need assistance. HUSKIES NAME CAPTAIN AT GRID DANCE TONIGHT The Northeastern University football captain fer 1938 will be announced tonight at the Parker House during the Student Councils annual football dance.

Frank Meehan of Belmont, retiring captain, will introduce his successor. FULL TUFTS POWER READY FOR B0WD01N But Maine Champs Will Be Favored Today Lineup at Tuft Oval TUFTS BOWDOIN Dodwell le Newman Zimman It rt Broe Bennett lg rg Ashkenazy Day Nicholson Edwards rg lg Loeman Sherry rt It Corey Pearson re Ie Litts Collier qb qb Smith Griffin lhb rhb Soule Sweeney rhb lhb Karsokas Abdu fb fb Frye Referee, P. M. Swaffield. Umpire, IV.

Pendergast. Linesman, P. C. Rogers. Field Judge, J.

IV. Mooney. Game starts at 2 o'clock. MEDFORD, Nov 12 One of the oldest and keenest rivalries in college football will be renewed tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock, when Bowdoin, recent winner of the state of Maine intercollegiate title, invades Tufts Oval to tackle Lew Manlys rejuvenated Jumbos. This encounter will be the 40th between the two schools in a series that dates from 1888.

Tufts holds the series edge, but is rated the underdog this year. Still smarting from the 13 to 0 setback it suffered last year after being crowned Maine champion, the Brunswick aggregation is out to get revenge. No less than nine of the eleven Bowdoin starters have won their letters and two of the Walshmen were awarded All-New England honors last year. These two boys, Co-Capts Dave Fitts and Ashkenazy, will be the mainstays in the Polar Bear line. Fitts holds down the left end position, and in addition to his defensive strength, is a deadly pass-receiver.

Soule, Bowdoin halfback, holds the Maine state scoring honors and has proved the most consistent ground-gainer on the squad. He is closely followed for honors by his fellow halfback, Benny Karsokas. YALE HOUSE CHAMPIONS DEFEAT HARVARD. 14 TOO NEW HAVEN, Conn, Nov 12 Vanderbilt, Yales intercollege champions, today defeated Kirkland House of Harvard, 14-0, scoring twice in the final period. Kirkland House held the whip hand for three quarters of the game, but in the final quarter Hayes blocked a Cantab punt which was recovered by Spaulding at mid-field.

A short pass from Fred Burr to Les Wheeler produced Vanderbilts first touchdown, with Burr converting. Dan Peterson recovered a fumble at the Cantabs 20 a little later, and a pass from Burr to Peterson Jed to another touchdown, with Moorhead plunging over for the extra point. McClure and Mayne made long gains for Kirkland House in the first half, but the losers lacked a touchdown drive. Kuehn of the Elis broke loose for a 40-yard run as play ended. The summary: VANDERBILT Hauer, le; Merrick.

It; Hayes, lg; Atkins, Herrick, rg; Spaulding. rt; Wheeler, re; Moorhead. qb; Kuehn. lhb: Driscoll, rhb; Burr, i b. KIRKLAND HOUSE Snyder, re; Hew.

lit. rt; Arnold, rg: Keene, Gray, lg; Baum. It; Wood, le: Wills, qb; O'Kelly, rhb; Mayne. lhb: McClure, fb. Score by periods 1 2 3 4 Total Vanderbilt 1 0 0 14 14 Touchdowns, Wheeler.

Peterson. Points by goal after touchdown. Burr (placement), Moorhead (plunge). RAMS BELATED DRIVE DEFEATS FRIARS. 13-0 PROVIDENCE, Nov 12 After being outplayed in the first half, the Rhode Island Rams came back strong to take a 13-0 victory from the Providence College Friars today.

The first touchdown came after a 67-yard march in the final quarter, with Albanese scoring from the one-yard line. Robblee converted. Moge fumbled behind his own goal line and Pace recovered for R. for the second score shortly before the game ended. The summary: R.

I. STATE Medici, Smith, Rinoski, le: Petro. Belisle, It: Christy. Bryant, Costello, lg: Pace, Pullano, DePetrlllo, rg: Magee, rt; Whaley. Cooper, Pattee.

re; Robinson, qb; Duranleau, lhb: Albanese. Cupello, rhb; Robblee, Jawprski, Murphy. fb. PROVIDENCE COLLEGE Bamlnl, Ranahan, re; rivan. Haran, rt: Polak.

Johnston, rg: Eichner. McHugh, lg: Esie-lonis, Sweeney. It; Leo, Smith, Lyons, le; Bedard. Spinnler. qb: Gendron.

Mini- curci, rhb: Nugent, Shattuck, Fariseau, lhb; Vitullo, Moge. fb. Score by periods 1 2 3 4 Total I 0 0 0 13 13 Touchdowns. Albanese. Pace.

Point by goal after touchdown, Robblee (placement). RUDOLPH COMES FROM BEHIND TO WIN. 125-121 PHILADELPHIA. Nov 12 (A P) Erwin Rudolph of Cleveland tonight came from behind to beat Willie Mosconi of Philadelphia. 125 to 121, in 49 innings in the world pocket billiard championship tourney.

Jimmy Caras of Wilmington, Del, took undisputed possession of fifth place by beating Andrew Ponzi of Philadelphia, 125 to 34, in 20 innings. By GERRY MOORE Showing the usual Southern leaning towards beef and brawn. University of Kentuckys football squad of 28 men set foot on Boston soil for the first time in history yesterday afternoon and scampered through a light final drill at Fenway Park in preparation for its intersectional clash with the Golden Eagles of Boston College at Yawkey yard this afternoon. Confronted with the obvious original query. Coach Chet Wynne, Notre Dame 22, lost no time in adding his voice to the eulogies that had preceded the actual arrival of Bob Davis, the 170-pound touchdown titan of the Wildcat backfield.

"Bob is as good a back as I ever coached, declared the soft-spoken 1 Kentucky mentor without an instants hesitation, and that number includes Jimmy Hitchcock, who won an All-American berth when I coached at Auburn in 1932. "Both those boys are a lot alike, continued Wynne. "Hitchcock probably was a little better kicker, but I think Davis has a little something on Jimmy as a runner. All I wish is I had a dozen of each. Concedes Edge to Eagles Davis weakness, if any, in the kicking department will be remedied today by a lineup shift in which Wynne will insert Elmore Simpson, an 185-pound Alabama boy, at right halfback in place of Fred Curtis, the originally announced starter.

Simpson is the best punter on the Kentucky squad. One other shift from the advance lineup information will find Wendell Skaggs, 188-pound senior, answering the opening whistle at right tackle vice the 210-pound sophomore, Luther Linden. On the subject of the conflict itself, Wynne expressed the opinion that the Eagles should possess a slight pre-game edge entirely on the grounds that the local forces were scouted by Kentucky minions only in the Detroit battle of mud and the weather was such on that day as to send the Wildcat emissaries back to the Blue Grass state virtually empty-handed on Dobie technique. Somewhat offsetting whatever advantage is conceded to the Eagles on that score, the Kentucky mentor reported all his hands in good physical fettle with the exception of Cameron Davis, backfield running mate and brother of the rollicking College Football Today NEW ENGLAND Princeton at Yale. Cornell at Dartmouth.

Davidson at Harvard. Kentucky vs Boston College (Fenway Park). Holy Cross at Brown. Bowdoin at Tuffs. Amherst at Williams.

Middlebury at Vermont. New Hampshire at Springfield. Coast Guard at Conn State. Rensselaer at Mass State. Lowell Tech at American I.

C. New Britain at Arnold. Norwich at Trinity. EAST Notre Dame vs Army (New York). Nebraska at Pittsburg.

Michigan at Pennsylvania. Georgetown at New York 17. Syracuse at Columbia. Temple at Bucknell. North Carolina S.

at Manhattan. Washington-Jefferson at Lafayette. Wesleyan at Rochester. Muhlenberg at Lehigh. Maryland at Penn State.

Ohio U. at Rutgers. Wayne at Buffalo. Western Maryland at Canlsius. Clarkson at St Lawrence.

Geneva at Franklin Marshall. SOUTH Georgia Tech at Alabama. Aubum at Louisiana State. North Carolina at Duke. Tulane at Georgia.

Vanderbilt at Tennessee. Clemson at Florida. Sewanee at Miss State. Furman at South Carolina. V.

P. I. at Virginia. Toledo at West Virginia. Mississippi at Arkansas.

Texas A. and M. at Rice. Baylor at Southern Methodist. Texas Christian at Texas.

MID-WEST Northwestern at Minnesota. Carnegie Tech at Mich State. Purdue at Wisconsin. Indiana at Iowa. North Dakota at Detroit.

Beloit at Chicago. Kansas State at Kansas. Iowa State at Marquette. Oklahoma at Missouri. Illinois at Ohio State.

Ohio Wesleyan at Western Reserve FAR WEST California at Oregon. Gonzaga at Idaho. Colorado College at Colorado. Oregon State at So. California.

Wash State at Stanford. U. C. L. A.

at Washington. Lineup at New Haven YALE PRINCETON Miller 164... re Vruwink John It 215 215.... rt Tierney Castle lg 213 208.. rg Balentine Gallagher 182 180 Casey Miller 195 lg Bokum rlatt rt 154 230 It Toll Hoxton re.

...186 175 le Hall Ewart qb. .168 164. Harper Frank lhb. .190 Mounta'fb Wilson rhb. ..172 177 lhb White Colwell fb.

.200 188. Tiernan Referee, D. J. Maginnis, Cornell. Umpire, G.

II. Lowe, Lafayette. Linesman, D. Watkeys, Syracuse. Field judge, D.

J. Kelly, Spring-field. Game starts at 2 m. not taken lightly, and Yale is actually on mental edge. The Tigers did not even see Yale Bowl today.

Instead they found a lair at nearby Cheshire, where they had a short workout. Yale had it3 usual final polish drill on tomorrows battlefield. Tiger Coach States Case At Cheshire this afternoon Crisler was a man of few words. For Princeton, he said, it is a case of doing its best to make some final amends for two disappointing weeks. We now are forgetting combinations and shooting into the game a rearranged team which, we hope, will be able to do better as individuals than as a team.

"Yales late season strength is not underestimated by us, but fighting teams in football always have a chance, and that fighting chance seems to be about all that is left. I think our team will give a good account of itself tomorrow." Yale has made the most of opportunity this Fall. With a fine array of backs headed by Capt Frank, and with the outstanding punter in the East in Colwell, it has played impressive football in flashes and has gradually improved. Coach Pond now has confidence in his rushline and the Blues supporters are looking for final brilliant flashes from its great carrier and passer, Clinton Frank. NOTES FROM NEW IIAVEN Howard Casey of Boston and Dean Academy will get his starting chance tomorrow at center for the Tigers.

Yale leads the long series with the Jerseymen, 32 wins to 18. Yale has run along practically unchanged this year. Princeton enters the contest with very much a "gamble lineup. The Eli varsity, scrub and 150-pound teams all have been tied this year, but remain unbeaten. There will be 50,000 in the Bowl tomorrow if the weather is fair, but predictions are for rain Yales big hope is for a pair of early scores and then the opportunity to play under wraps with the view of saving its first stringers for Harvard.

M. S. C. MUCH STRONGER FOR RENNSELAER GAME AMHERST, Nov 12 Coach Ebb Caraways M. S.

C. eleven plays Rennselaer at Alumni Field tomorrow afternoon at 2 oclock, with the game featuring the Dads Day program. Between the halves attractions include the finish of the R. P. S.

C. cross-country run and the traditional sophomore-freshman six-man rope pull. States squad, after many injuries, is now nearly intact and will be able to furnish needed replacements. Caraway has been grooming two backfields the past week and plans to alternate them as units. Al Irzyk, quarter; Stan Zelazo, left half; George Niden, right half, and Howie Steff, full, is the quartet scheduled so start.

The other consists of Fran Riel quarter; Dick Towle, left half; Tap Tappin. right half, and Leo Santucci. full. Probable lineups: RENSSELAER Carl-on. le: Bentley.

It: Baumann, Is; Smith, Kingsley, rs: Richardson, rt; Fink, re: Shako, oh: Hutchinson, lhb: Ward, rhb: Andrews, fb. MASS STATE Morey, re; Blomberg. rt; Roberge, rg: Blasko, Linden, lg; Sievers. It: Rttdge. le; Irzyk.

qb; Niden. rhb: Zelaso. lh; Steff. fb. Referee.

J. P. Whalen. Springfield. Umpire.

W. L. Stearns. Springfield. Linesman, V.

H. Wall. Springfield. B. U.

41 HARRIERS WIN, 22-33 CROSS COUNTRY AT WAKEFIELD 1, Fredrickson U)s 3- Hoar (B 3. Scopo (B U); 4. W. Thompson (Wi; Thompson Wj sentient To7'G7 Burke' (W) Smith (W). Time.

16m 53.4s. ll By MELVILLE E. WEBB JR NEW HAVEN, Conn, Nov 12 Princetons football team, beaten by the Cornellians at the beginning of the year, and recently yielding 34 points to Harvard and 33 points to the Dartmouth Indian, will invade the Yale Bowl tomorrow. Old Tige is in different mood, a very different mood, than when he last growled his way through the portals of Yales big football saucer. In 1931.

the Jersey team ran roughshod over the Elis for a six-touchdown count. Last Fall, Yale turned the tables, winning at Nassau, 26 23, and so far this year has come down to the first of its objective contests tied by Dartmouth, but with victories over Penn, Cornell and Army. Fritz Crislers eleven will arrive in the Bowl somewhat as a mystery. Crisler Shifts His Men The Princeton coach has made wholesale changes in what heretofore has been his starting team. He has new men at left end, quarterback, fullback, center, right guard and right tackle.

The changes have brought added weight to the forward rank, and also increases the physical power of the Tiger back-field. But Yale tonight stands out as a 4 to 1 favorite to win. "Ducky Ponds eleven advanced into this big game in very full possession of its physical powers. Several times this year it has been hard pressed, but it has played its best football under pressure. It may be said of this years New Haven outfit that the Harvard game is the great objective; but the much-beaten Jerseymen are College Sports Results FOOTBALL Arkansas Tech Cf western (Kan) 0 Birmingham-South 38 Snrln Hill A Boston Iniv Fr ZO of N.

H. Fr 7 Bowdoin Fr 85 Fryebury A Coe 7 C.rinnell A Fort Hays State 7 3 Hasting. JO Icru A Howard Emory ft Henry A Kansas Wesleyan 18 Baker A Lafayrtte 150s 13 Cornell 150's A ereer JO Tampa 0 Miami Catholio A Rhode Island 13.. I) Nebraska Central 13 Dana A Otta a Bethany A Southwestern (La) 0. Tech A St Thomas (Min) 7 St Olaf 7 Tarklo 33 Missouri Valley 13 Vand'bilt (Tale) 14.

Kirkland (Harvard) A Wake Forest 24 Wofford A W. Va. Wesleyan 7 Salem A Williarp Jewell 13 Culver-Stoekton 7, Tgle 13.... Princeton 13 CROSS COUNTRY Boston Unlv Fr S3 Wakefield 33 SOCCER Bockntll 2 A A A A A A A A A A A A DcIawat 1 Princeton 4AAa(sissa Yilo 1 Wesleyan 4 Mass State 4 (overtime) Spgt Pass Specials By JERRY NASON Tale 14. Frineeten 0.

Syracuse A. Colombia 7. Williams 30. Amherst 18. Dartmouth 14, Cornell 7.

Minnesota 37. Northwestern 13. Harvard J9, Davidson 7. Miehlsan State Carnerle Tech 0. Indiana 7, Iowa A.

Boston Collrre 13, Kentucky fi. Trinity 37. Norwich A. Bowdoin 13. Tnfta 7 Tennessee 7.

Vanderbilt 0. Furdue A. Wisconsin A. Notre Dame 14, Army 7. New Hampshire 19, Sprincfleld 0.

Gcortia Tech 12, Alabama 7. Ohio State 7. Illinois A. Maryland SO. Fsnn State It.

Pennsylvania 7, Miehlsan A. Middlebury 37. Vermont 7. Pittsburr IS. Nebraska Duke SO, North Carolina 7.

Washinslan 7. lr. S. L. A.

A Louisiana 13, Auburn 10. Temple 14. Bncknell 0. North Carolina State 14. Manhattan 7 California 13, Orecon 0.

South California 3. Orrrsn Stale 0. Stanford A. Washington State 13. Lafayette 13.

Washinyten-Jeffereen (. 'Blue Flat Special. BLACK-ETE AVERAGE Klyht 100 Wrony 50 Ties 11 Lineup at Providence BROWN HOLY CROSS Nash, le 171 170. OMelia Larkowich, It. 194 19S.

Shields Manrodt, 197.... rg. Turner McNeil, 199 (C) Mawhney, rg.177 187.... lg, Bogdan Cioci, rt ,205 217. Delaney Finkelstin, re.

187 181 le, Histen McLghry. qb.195 187. Gallogly Atwell, 190 181 rhb, Giardi Reigler. 180 170.... lhb, Cahill Hall, fb 192 193.

Osmanski Referee, E. A. Geiges, Temple; umpire, C. J. McCarthy, Philadelphia; linesman, Fred Murray, Georgetown; field judge, Ray Barbuti, Syracuse.

Game starts ct 2 m. PROVIDENCE, Nov 12-Holy Cross rules a strong favorite to beat Brown tomorrow and most experts give the Crusaders a wide margin, but the Bears are primed for a rugged contest and there was a feeling in some quarters that the contest may be much closer than the records of the teams indicate. Brown looks for much improvement in its backfield play because, for the first time this Fall, all of the backfield squad is in condition, even if some members can go only limited periods. Coach Mc-Laughry will start the heaviest backfield aggregation available and, with replacements available, will be able to carry on as he had planned at the start of the season. Atwell, Hall, Riegler and Mc-Laughry will start in the back-field.

Riegler has returned to play after a long succession of injuries. Ends Not Yet Selected Foster and Bernstein, who have been in the opening lineupo in recent games, have not been demoted and will see plenty of service, the change in starters being solely to get the heavier men into the fray in the opening period. O'Leary and Blount, recovered from recent injuries, also will be available. McLaughry has two pairs of ends, Nash and Certuse and Progers and Finkelstein, but which combination will first take the field will not be known until game time. Cioci, veteran tackle, has regained his post and will pair with Larkowich.

Manrodt and Mawhinney have played all year at guard. McNeil ia due to be at center in place of Turcone, who was injured in the Yale game, although the latter is available if needed. The contest marks the 14th game between the teams in a series dating back 31 years. Brown has been victorious in eight games, Holy Cross has won four and one was a tie. The Crusaders won the last three games by respective scores of 19 to 7, 30-7 and 32-0.

NORTHWESTERN CRIPPLED FOR MINNESOTA BATTLE MINNEAPOLIS, Nov 12 (A P) A crippled Northwestern University football team moved into Minneapolis today for its important Western Conference skirmish with Minnesotas Golden Gophers Saturday before a homecoming crowd of 63,000 persons. The contest will find Minnesota seeking to protect its perfect standing in the conference against the Wildcats, who ruined the Gophers title chances a year ago. Lynn Waldorf, Northwestern coach, reported his squad in the worst physical condition since he has been at the school and said he probably would have alialf dozen or more sophomores in the lineup. The whole Gopher squad was ready for action. Afloat Boston Nov.

13-22 See 1938 WHEELER Fleet Now ILLUMINATED DISPLAY ON SUNDAY AND EACH EVENING Buy Now Save Money Pay as You Play NEW ENGLAND MARINE COMPANY 305 Congress Street liberty 44si i 1 4.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Boston Globe
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Boston Globe Archive

Pages Available:
4,496,054
Years Available:
1872-2024