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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 9

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE BOSTON GLOBE MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16. 193G 9 Harvard, No Longer Ourbed Offensively, Oiil Find Vales Slid Team a Penniless Outfi JF I HOLDING OFFENSE COSTS HARVARD POSSIBLE TOUCHDOWN 3JS'4- 3 "'v 4 1 af i HARVARDS ENDS NEEDMINC Otherwise CrimsonTeam Is Ready for Yale ELIS POSSESS DRIVE WHICHWINSGAMES Only Dartmouth, With Difficulty, Has Beaten Spirited Yale f- 7 i jv to rush. So improved was the Yale defense that Princeton was stopped dead twice, once lost a yard and had one and two-yard gams. Between Yales second touchdown and the third, which came out of the clear sky on Clint Franks half-field-length rtss to that rare, surehanded opportunist, Larry Kelley, Princeton rushed the ball six times within its own territory, yet gained only a total of 14 yards. Yale at that time was battling successfully against the Tigers best, and with the New Haven team applying the pressure on its own WHITE CIRCLE ON RIGHT SHOWS DAUGHTERS HOLDING INGRAM A holding penalty ruined the chances for a fine Crimson getaway his teammate Vernon Struck, used his hands illegally on Bill Ingram, own 28-yard line.

With good interference all the way up the field, AFTER STRUCK HAD INTERCEPTED PASS him, both aiming to do away with whatever Navy should offer as an entering the over the prone he shot down the Middies sidelines, going downfield to the Navy 30-yard marker. Shown with Struck are George Roberts above him in the picture and Mike Adlis running near Navy noteworthy, on the Navy's 45-yard line, as indicated in. the white circle. Vernon Struck, shown by the white arrow, intercepted a forward pass thrown by Ingram on his Records of College Football Teams Note Next opponent in parentheses after each teams record Sailers Found Both Wing Vulnerable Spots By JERRY NASOX After Navys turbulent visit and subsequent departure, Harvard1' scanned itself with critical eyu; discovered no personal damage of any consequence after battling the1 seamen practically to a draw, and will progress this week through five days of optimistic preparation for Yale at the Bowl. In all matters but the score itself Harvard played even with favored Navy.

No Harvard team -in a decade ever looked better in defeat and old Crimsons rest assured that, win or lose down-yonder the Bowl against the. Blue, they'll get a run for their admissions from Harlows heroic henchmen. Crimson Makes Game of It Outmanned in material, handicapped by obviously inferior of- fensive backfield operatives, and committed to desperate measure because of a two-touchdown deflest-in the first half, the Crimson exhibited superlative competitive qualities and a sound working know ledge of the offense taught it to divert an impending rout into a grim battle to the finish. The Yale objective, as a result of this game at Cambridge and thg Elis Garrison finish at Princeton, becomes doubly cherished the first time in many moons. Harvard can dominate the Big Three in football by turning back Der tinvs Darlings.

Theres no doubt Harvard suffered horribly from the early dr-, fensive inadequacy of its end against Navy last week, and'thn department is in dire need of im-mediate repairs. Among other attacking strategisms employed Yale is the New Haven version Columbia's Rose Bowl scoring pla5 bewhiskered old KF-79, designer' to make defensive ends look bad. I' very often is successful in thz. purpose. The play of Harvard's line from tackle to tackle, excepting for infrequent lapses, was satisfactory against a celebrated Navy frontier.

One of the sailors best a short side reverse which' riddled both Princeton and Pen" badly, was so ineffective that i was soon abandoned. The play ri designed to capitalize on over-shif-'1 ing defensive forwards again Navys line and backfield shif Onlv Harvard's linemen had bee well drilled in how to space against, the Annapolis shift and Henry Adlis notablv, murdered the play the three times it was thrown at him. Cnd Play Most Effective Navy's bert ground gainer a sweep of right end, with Ingram DVQUESNi I 14 Wavnesbur 14 Rice 33 Geneva 0 7 Put 0, 0 West Va Wes 2 7 Detroit 14 1 26 Wasn Univ. 0 13 Carnegie T. 0 U4 16 (Marquette) FORDHAM 66 7 7 So Methodist 0 20 Wav nesburg 6 7 St Mary's 6 0 Pitt 0 15 Purdue 0 KANSAS STATE 13 Ft Hays Tea 6 31 Okla 7 Missouri 0 Marquette.

26 Kansas 7 Tulsa 6 OKlahoma 47 Iowa State 7 13 6 10 6 7 "55 137 (Nebraska) KENTUCKY 21 Xavier .54 Maryville 38 MI Geo Tech 39 7 Florida 0 Alabama 7 Manhattan. 7 Clemson 173 (Tenn) 0 3 0 34 7 0 14 13 6 "77 115 19 (Georgia) GEORGE WASH. 27 Emy-Kenry 0 39 Eion 0 0 Mississippi 0 I 13 Arkansas 6' 13 Wane Forest 12 6 Rice 12 20 Liavis Elkins 6 50 Catawba 168 36 (West Virginia) LA SALLE 27 Niagara 6 19 Cams! us 14 30 Catholic U. 14 30 E'on 12 3 3 Mt St Ma-v 6 47 St Mary.Mn 12 19 Chester 14 7 St Bon v're 14 GEORGETOWN 39 Delay are 9 Cincinnati. 19 BuckneU 7 47 Shenandoah 28 West 0 Manhattan 178 92 LEHIGH 13 Moravian 0 16 Case 7 6 Dickinson.

20 20 Johns pk 0 7 Penn S'ate 6 7 Gettysburg. 10 19 Rutgers 0 26 Muhlenberg 6 149 20 (Miami) GEORGIA 13 Mercer 13 I urman 7 La State 6 Rice 13 Auburn 0 Tenn 26 Florida 12 Tuiane 92 (Fordham) 114 49 (Lafayette) LOUISIANA STATF 13' 20 Rice 7 6 Texas 6 47 Georgia 7 13 M.ss 0 19 Arkansas 7 19 Vanderbilt 0 12 Miss S.aie. 0 19 Auburn 6 20 46 6 146 obstacle to the dash. The plan worked well, but Daughters impetuousness was not counted for and the play was called back to the Navy 45-yard line. Irwin Fike is shown MICHIGAN STATE 27 Wavne 21 Michigan 7 7 Carnegie T.

0 13 Missouri 0 7 Marqueie. 13 13 Boston Col. 13 7 Temple 7 41 Kansas 0 NORWICH 0 Dartmouth 0 Amherst 6 Coast Guard 0 -Midnlebury 6 Vermont 25 Hartwick 0 Trinity 58' 46' 6, 33 6 60 2, 136 40 (Conn State) NOTRE DAME 21 Csrres'e T. 14 Vah 27 Wisconsin. 0 Pitt 7 Ohio 0 Navy 20 Army (Arizona) MIDDLEBURY 7 Union 0 6 Colbv 13 Coast Guard 33 I 33 Norwich 39 St Lawrence 27 Ithaca 20 Vermont U8 MINNESOTA 14 Wash 7 Nebraska 26 Michigan 33 Purdue 0 Northwest 53 Iowa 47 Texas 0 0 0 0 A 7 0 15 89 50 (Northwestern) OHIO STATE 60 New York 0 Pittsburg 13 Norh Atiin 7 Indiana 2 Dame 44 Chicago 13 Illinois 1 139 180 32 (Michigan) PENNSYLVANIA 35 Lafayette 0 0 ale 7 7 Princeton 0 48 Brown 6 lo Navy 6 27 Michigan 7 19 Penn State.

12 (Wisconsin) MISSOURI 20 Cpe Gir du 0 7 Kans State 7 0 Michipn St 13 10 3ou.a State. 0 NebracKa 20 i 13 St Louis 7 21 Oklahoma. 24 71 61 (Washington Univ AVT 18 Wm Mary 6 19 Davidson 6 35 Virginia 14 7 Yale 12 0 Princeton 7 6 Penn 16 3 Notre Dame 0 20 Harvard 13 152 38 (Cornell) PENN. STATE -Muhlenberg. 0 0 Vi'lanota 6 Lemgti 7 Cornell 18 Svracuee 7 Pitt 12 Ptnn 13 7 13, 34 19, 86 I 95 (Bucknell) 103 741 (Army) PITTSBURG 53 Ohio Wesln 34 West Va 6 Onio Sta.e.

0 Duqjene 26 Notre Dame 0 Snrdnam 34 Penn State. 19 Nebraska 1 'Carnegie Tech) NEBRASKA 34 Iowa State. 0 Minnesota 13 Indiana 14 Oklahoma 20 Missouri 52 Kansas Pitt a 0 7 9 0, 0 1 0 19 139 35 (Kansas State) NEW HAMPSHIRE 66 Lowell 0 9 Bates 6 6 Maine 27 0 Boston Col. 12 54 Vermont 0 2 St Anselms 311 41 Cornell 0 Tvfts 0 23 Yaie 0 Springfield. 0, 132 PRINCETON i 27 Will, a ms 7 20 Ruipers 0 0 Penn 7 7 Navy 0 14 Harvard 14 13 67 137 76 I (Dartmouth) NEW YORK UNIV.

0 Ohio S'ate. 60 26 Penn Mil Col 0 13 No Car 14 7 Georgetown 7 46 Lafavette Ol 6 Carnegie T. 34 4b Rutgers 0, PROVIDENCE 27 Colby 0 6 Holv Cross. 21 6 West Md 13 2 St Anselm 7 0 Eoston Col 26 0 S' riogfield 39 6 Niagara 19 0 Rhone Isl'nd 19 144 95 a f' 7 7 Princeton Comes Again Leading, 20 to 16, Yale continued to pile up Jersey plays until that desperate Tiger rally just before the start of that exciting final quarter. It was not that, Yale lapsed as Princeton drove for the touchdown that produced its 23 to 20 edge.

Princeton put all it had into that last march of fully 60 yards. It was a great job, but there was nothing left. However, Yale had not spent its strength in its failing effort to prevent the Tigers from again dominating. What Yale had left was a more bewildering attack than Princeton had uncovered to regain its lead. This attack the worn-down Jersey-men not only failed to diagnose, but were unable to stop those Eli backs even when realizing what was going on.

Another thing Ray Pond told me on that train. Said Ducky. "I never fully realized until recently just how we Yale men regard the game with Harvard. There is a subtle something about that rivalry that goes mighty deep. We surely want to beat the Tigers tomorrow but where we desire to be at tops, is in that Harvard game next week." It never is an easy task to bring a Yale team back to top notch speed and form again after a game against Princeton.

But if Yale sustained no serious injuries to such key players as that great line-man. Bill John, end Larry Kelley, Clinton Frank, who is All America timber if the East has such this year, Ewart, Hess-berg, Wilson and that bounding center, Beckwith, the New Haven team is going to be tough to beat this week. Blue Nearly Caught Green Harvard has reason to realize a big improvement because of recent twin scores against both Princeton and Navy. But Yale all but caught up with Dartmouth, and in a fashion almost as sensational as at Princeton, where the Blue broke down a lead of 16 points and then another one of three. Between the game in which Yale beat Penn, and the last 22 or 23 minutes in which the same team was watched at Princeton, the New Haven outfit has very much fulfilled its possibilities for passing.

At the same time Yale has added a running attack which places tremendous burdens on the opposing secondaries who must realize that Larry Kelley picks most peculiar spots in which to do his stuff with Clinton Frank. Yale first fell off the track at Princeton but was running ahead of the locomotive at the finish. Harvard is on the upward trail also. It will be some football game in broad Yale Bowl this week. Yale has been winner over Penn, Cornell, Navy and the Tigers, and was going strong as the shadows were falling on the game with Dartmouth.

Harvard, which is still seeking that first major victory under Harlow. is now keen to play its best football of the season on Yale field. The Crimson still may be fearful of its defense through and around which Army, Dartmouth, Tigers and Navy together scored 14 touchdowns; but those four Harvard scores against the Tigers and the Middies well indicate that on Saturday Yale will face an outfit worthy of its steeL Southern Conference Team circle; he was spilled forms of Daughters and Ingram, the passer. Struck went 14 yards on the next play, trying to make up the lost ground, but Bill Ingram intercepted a pass from Roberts to break up the offensive. to Date ST ANSELMS 1 4 -Springfield 2-Y Ithaca 7 Providence.

31 New Harro. 3 9 Northeastn 46 Arnold TVLANE 7 Mississippi 0 Auburn 19 Centenary Colgate 21 No Car 22 Loti Tech. 7 Alabama 6 Georgia no (Sewanee) tNION Midaleoury 0 Hobart 0 Sw arihmore 8 Vermont 6 PI 2 Williams 7 Rochester. 13 Hamilton 137 4 (Holy Cross) ST THOM 1 13 nf la Tea 0 St Bonav i re 0 0 Can imus IX) 6 SlMary 6Tv2 i 3 8 Lebanon Val 0 It Mt bt Alary1 7 Spnogfield 0 13 St Vincent 6 24 7 0 33 0 0 53 50 39 SANTA CLARA 1 13 Stanford 0 27 Poril Ore) 0, 15 San Frncisco 7 20 San Jose 0 12 Auburn 0 19 St Marys. 0 10 Texas Christian) SO.

CALIF. 38 Oregon 7 Oregon 11 Ilunoi 6 0 Wash State 0 .4 Stanford 7j 7 California 13 0 Wash 12, 65 VERMONT 0 Williams (Dartmouth 0 Coibv mon 0 New Hairi. 13 Norwich 0- Arrher' 0 Mid ic bury 13 (Trinity) VILLANOVA 32 Penn C. 20 56 13 8 54 6 43 20 225 13 Detroit 13 Penn State 13 Western Md 25 Bn-ion Univ 0 RucVnell 34 So Car 0 Temple 109 45 (UCLA) SPRINGFIELD 0 St Anselm's 14 9 Northeastern 7 Rutgers 0 0 Army 33 no 32 39 Pt evidence. 0 (Manhattan) 0 St Thomas.

7' New Hamp 0 WASHINGTON 7 14 61 1 -2 Idaho 0 14 A 0 34 STANFORD 0 Santa Clara. 13 Wasn State. 7 Oregon 7 So Calif 19 A. 14 WSfh 20 Oregon St 19 Oregon S'ate 7 13 0 7 Oregon 0 14 Stanford 14 12 0 108 35 (Washington tc WASH. STATE 19 Montana 14 Stanford 14 Idaho 0 So Cal 3 OTgon 14 California 6 Or gon St.

32 13 14 7 14 6 14 14 i 6B, 80 (Columbia) SYRACUSE 31 Clarkson 0 7 Bian-Wal 19 7 Cornell 20 Mar ictnd 20 trn Ssale. IB 0 13 8 13 49 7 Indiana Columbia "52 (Colgate) TEMPLE 18 St Joseph 50 Centre 12 Mississippi 14 Boston Cel. Carnegie T. 3 Holy Cross. 7 Mien Sta'e.

6 lllanova 9 1 102 (Washington) WASHINGTON JEFFERSON jfl TVhanv 19 Grove City, (i Gave 6 BuckneU 25 Mane'ta II I 103 28 1 110 (Iowa) TENNESSEE 23 Chatanooga 0 6 No Carolina 14 0 Auburn 6 0 AidOoma 0 35 Duke 13 4' Georgia 0 31 Maryville 0 lu anaerbiit (Geneva) WESLEYAN 0 Coast Guard 3 Conn Sate. 29 Povvdon 12 Haverf-ard. 14 Amherst 0 T-iniv 7 Williams 32 33 Rochcs'er. 13, 143 46' (Kentucky) 1 TEXAS A. A M.

I 36 Sam Houston 6 3 Harain Sim 0 3 Rice 0 18 Tex Christ'n 7 Bay lor 0 1 0 Arkansas 18 1 22 So Mein 6 1 Ir ncisco 34 I 20 Utah WESTERN MD 38 'ihrmndoah. O1 23 Unsala 6 13 rrmirence. 6 ViM'inova 13 31 StMary's(Tx) 12 20 'Ta 33 8 Aihruth' 6j 7 Boston Col. 12 140 7 58 (Centenary) TRINITY 27 Hamilton 34 V. or (, Hobart 8 Conn State 2 i Wesley an bO Norwich 2C Vc-nicrt 7 Print ton 46 Hasprfnrd o0 om 6 T-Hta 13 T'nion 'Vrc1et an 13 Amherst 26 0 0 123 25 137 (Vermont) YALE 23 Cornell 7 Fcnn 2 Na 28 Rutters 7 Du.mouta.

14 Brown 2(i Princeton il7 (Harvard) 33 viooster 6 no i illi ms 27 1 14 Ey MELVILLE E. WEEB JR. It takes more than one night's sleep to dream about all the thrills and more fundamental sensations of Saturdays Yale-Princeton game in the Palmer Stadium. Traditionally Yale and Princeton are at their peak for aggressiveness and drive. Occasionally there has been a runaway for one outfit or the other; but for producing sensations the Bulldog-Tiger series stands to football as Ty Cobb still stands to baseball.

Yale Ready for Harvard While Princeton will this week strive to mend its fences so as to be prepared for this week's game with Dartmouth, the happy Yale football players will center their final attention on the game with Harvard. Navy scored three times at Cambridge and only once in its game with Yale. Bat what will concern the Biue this week is that Dick Harlows Harvard team, which willl be in the New Haven Bowl on Saturday. made steady marches of 57 and 67 yards for its brace of touchdowns against the Middies. At Princeton midway through the second quarter you would not have g.ven much for Yale's chances to beat the Tiger.

The Jersey team, to be sure, once had been stopped dead in front of its objective goal line. But a field goal followed and when the game was practically half way through the Tigers were leading 16 to 0. What happened to the Yale tearr. then, its change in efficiency on attack, was something that transpired among those blue, jerseyed players themselves. Their reversal of form was complete as they shot their plays through and around the perhaps too jubilant Jersey team.

Between the halves you may be sure that a later inspiration came from Ducky Pond; but it was the Yale players themselves who built the.r first great initiative, just as it was the boys themselves who made that thrilling and convincing rally at the finish, after the Tigers for the second time appeared to have taken the game in hand. On our way to Princeton Friday, "Ducky Pond said: "Yes, I think this team will go a long way toward winning the game tomorrow. Two years ago Yale, with just 11 men, had to play beyond its former self in order to hold Princeton even after Larry Kelley's winning touchdown. This year's Yale team has been spotty. Yet I feel that tomorrow you will see much in this year's temperament and action under pressure that you noted down at Princeton two years ago.

Tigers in Drivers Seat To realize how the New Haven team at last found itself againrt the Tigers you must understand that Princeton had completely dominated that second period. After the first changing of field ends, the Tigers marched 31 yards over Yale's ground to score one touchdown in 10 plays. Then almost immediately recovering the ball on Yale's fumble on us own 41-yard line, the Jersey team came down the field again flying this time and taking only seven plays to score. That made it 72 yards of rteady driving on the Yale half of the field to boast a field goal lead to one of 16 But w-hat did Yale do then? First it started on the Tigers 35-yard line after the spectacular runback of a Jcrrey punt by Ewart. Four plays brought it to the Tigers 21-yard line, and finally Hessberg's great side-splitting shot produced this tint of Yale's four touchdowns.

From there until Yale scored again to bring the Tiger lead to only three points once more, the Jerseymcn made only five attempts HOBART BACK KEEPS COLLEGE GRID LEAD Marcus of Bates Second for Scoring Honors NEW YORK, Nov 15 (A Although his team had no game scheduled, Fred King, star ball carrier of the undefeated Hobart team, easily held his place as high scorer in eastern football during the past week. A total of 75 points, scored on 11 touchdowns and nine extra points in seven games, gave King a of seven points over Barney Marcus of Bates, who completed his season with a four-touchdown splurge against Colby on Armistice Day. Joe Szur of Canisius and Dad-dario of Wesleyaq, who had 66 point totals up through Saturday, were tied for third place. Ken Sandbach, Princetons quarterback, took an undisputed place as the Easts leading place kicker when he booted his second field goal of the season against Yale and converted two points after touchdowns to bring his total in that department to 15. This broke a first-place tie with Red Chesbro of Colgate, who had booted 13 points after touchdowns before taking a week off.

Records of the leading eastern scorers; Player Pot Kmg. Hobart Mrtu4 Baes PjKidarl eslcyftn. HB Srur, Canisius Maa, Fadjen. TB Kobrosky. gipr.e, A.br'gr.t HB Babcock.

Rochester. fchirijte, RhodeIsland FS Ct bs.on, GifiMDe Tch.HB fwori. lac Leo. Dartmouth F1? Boeder, Frank-Marsh F3 irra. Penn H3 ler, Hobart HR Blrver.

Army 1 abror, VH r. Coleate HR ijr Dartmouth thertoa. Pena 03 8 7 7 10 8 10 6 9 Pst re Tot 0 0 60 5 6 7 7 1 7 7 7 42 7 0 0 42 in the second period of the Harvard-Navy game in the Stadium Saturday when Don Daugnters, In a zealous attempt to clear the way for NINE HARVARD STABS THROUGH IN STADIUM Seniors Play Final Home Game for Crimson Giving all they had and much more than was expected of them, nine Harvard seniors Saturday bade a sorrowful adieu to the Stadium, scene of many discouraging football conflicts for them in the three years. Capt James J. Gaffney Jr, Harvards most recent football iron man, ig the leader of this small band around whom recent Harvard football history has been written.

Gaffney has gone the route in several Harvard conflicts this year and last, but he war denied that privilege in his last Stadium appearance, when he became exhausted trying to stop the Navy advances. Pairing with Gaffney at guard ir another veteran, Charlie Kessler, who has faced injuries and ill luck and always came back to play a remarkable defensive game. Keso-ler, onl 20, through three long trying years with losing Harvard teams, has shown grit and painful racrifice. The third of the mighty trio at the center of the Crimson line, is plucky, dependable Bob Jones, who in three years of football, has missed but one pass from center. Jones has been a steady offensive center and while backing up the line on defense, has proved himself indispensable to Dick Harlow.

In the backfield four men will be lost and those four men showed the real goods in their swan game at the stadium. Little Georgie Hed-blom, fullback, who last year lost a position which he had held unquestioned for two years, last year was shifted to blocking back. He slammed and banged the Navy wall and practically scored the second Harvard touchdown single-handed. He has always been a flash on offense, but defensively, George has lacked much. George Ford is in the same position Hedblom is.

Last year Ford was Harvard's best kicker and one of the best wingbacks. But new men came up and he was forced into the background. He has been fighting, and although his third team position must make him feci chagrined, he has kept on plugging. Bill Watt has recently reestablished himself as a Harvard player. For two years he was all set, but late last year he lost out to Vernon Struck, and at the beginning of this year he was in the same boat.

He came back in the last few games and has set up a fine gaining record under Harlow this year. Mai McTernen is the fourth Harvard senior back who has played his last game in the Stadium. Mai has had no luck in the previous two years of his football career, and only this year has he forged ahead. Two other seniors took part in the Navy game. They are Mike Adlis, a tackle, and Phil Staples, an end.

Adlis played a bang-up game while he was there, continually coming through to set Navy runne-s on their heels. Staples has dup cated Adlis performance this year, playing in and out football. He has been a poor pass-receiver. But yesterday when that second Harvard touchdown meant so much, he caught the ball with all the assurance of a great end. Other seniors who won't be back are Graham Spring, Tom Choate, and Ed Simmons.

They did not play Saturday, but have been praised publicly by Harlow for their fight. northeasternUninjured BY GAME WITH CLARKSON Northeastern University football team came out of its hard tussle with Connecticut State Saturday in satisfactory shape and the men who played in that game are expected to be ready for tne clash with Lowell Textile next Saturday at Hunting-ton Field, Brookline. It is doubtful whether all cripples will return for the Lowell contest. Ralph Freeman, cer.er, and Zipper Bliss, guard, are doubtful starters. However, Arpold Keufman is likely to return to right guard for Stan Rogers.

The Lowell Textile game will the final one for Capt Jay Hart, 11 Chambers, back; Reid Mshaffey, back and tackle, and Alexander Fraser, end. Rocky Mountain Conference CALIFORNIA 14 Pacific 39 Cal Assies. 0 St Mary 10 7 Oregon State 0 6 17 0 Wash 13 33 ash State 34 3 3 South Cal. 7 28 Oregon 0 120 61 (Stanford) CARNEGIE TECH 7 No're Dame 21 0 Mich State 7 7 Temple Holy Cross 7 6 Purdue 7 14 6 0 Duquesne 13 24 61 (Pitt) CLARKSON 45 Hartvvick 0 Syracuse 12 Niagara I7pcala 31 Alfred 41 Buffalo 0 Lawrence 7 Boston Vmv 136 0 31 13 0 14 58 COLBT 0 Providence. 27 0 Middiebury 6 1 3 ermor.t 0 Tufts 18 7 Bowdoin 13 7 Maine 14 0 Bates 25 Wash Lee 27 Columbia 32 Harvard 33 Springfield.

7 Colgate 54 Muhlenbrg 6 No.re Dame 26 0 16 0 0 341 27 103 187 57 (Brown) (Hobart) COLGATE 0 Duke 54 Ursmus 2b St Lawrence 6 Tuiane 41 Lafayette 14 Army ARNOLD 19 Hartwick 0 0 Cortl nd Tea 34 0 Eates 20 9 Trerton 7 6 NortneEstm 12 7 Lowed Tex 6 0 St Anselms 46 41 125 Britain Teal ALBURN 45 Brogh'm-So 0 0 Tuiane 0 6 Tenn 0 6 Detroit 0 2i Georgia 13 0 Santa Clara 12 13 Gio Tech 12 6 Louisiana St 19 13 Holy 154 Cross 20 67 (Syracuse) COLUMBIA 34 Maine 16 Armv 28 MI 0 Michigan 20 Cornell 1 3 Dartmouth 17 Syracuse 0 27 0 13 13 20 0 73 138 (Stanford) 96 56 CONN. STATE 27 Brown 0 0 Wesleyan 3 33 Mass State. 0 19 Wor 6 0 Trinity 8 45 Coast Guard 12 3.3 node Island 0 14 Northeast 13 151 42 (Norwich) CORNELL 74 Alfred 0 0 Yale 23 20 Syracuse 7 13 Penn State. 7 13 Columbia 20 13 Princeton 41 6 Dartmouth. 20 139 Ha (Penn) DARTMOUTH 58 Norwich 0 5b Ve-mont 0 0 Hol.v Cross.

7 34 Brown 0 26 Harvard 7 11 Yaie 7 20 13 20 Cornell 6 (Florida) BATES 0 Holy Cross 6 New Hamp. 20 Arnold 19 Maine 6 8o" aom 20 Coloy 76 45 9 0 21 25 0 ICO BOSTON COLLEGE 26 Northeastern 6 0 Temple 14 12 New Hamp. 0 26 Providence 0 23 Michgan St 33 7 No Car St. 3 12 Vtest 7 96 43 (Boston Univ) BOSTON UNIV. 40 Amer 0 6 Toledo 0 6 Wash 0 7 Villanova 25 7 Miami 7 7 Kutgers 0 14 Clarkson 7 "39 (Boston College) 225 (Princeton) DETROIT 40 West St Tea 6 ViUanova 46 Okla 0 Auburn 20 Manhattan 14 Duauesoe 33 Buckr.ell 16 Xavier 40 BOWDOIN 14 Mass State.

0 Wesley an 6 Williams 13 Colbv 25 Bates 14 Maine 0 Tufts "72 32 ro 7 6 7 13 65 1 175 45 (North Dakota) DUKE I 13 Davidson 0 6 Colgate 0 21 So Carolina 0 25 Clemson 0 19 Geo Tech 6 13 Tenn 15 51 Wash f- Lee 0 1 20 IVaxe Frest 0 27 So Carolina 7 BROWN Conn State. 7 I Harvard 0 Dartmouth. 6 Penn 33 Tuits 6 1 5 ale 0 Holy Cross. 27 6 28 34 48 7 14 32 196 57 195 23 (No Car State) (Colby) CRISLER RATES TILT BEST HE EVER SAW PRINCETON, J. Nov 15 (A P) Fritz Crisler, coach of the Princeton eleven which lost, 26 to 23, to Yale yesterday, said today that the game was the most thrilling exhibition cf football I have even seen.

Until Saturday, he said, I thought the Princeton-Chicago game of 1922 (when Princeton won the mythical national champinonship, 21 to 18) was the most exciting, but Saturdays game surpasses even this in my estimation. One flaw besides the fact that Princeton lost was reported by the Nassau coach. Tom Mountain, injured in the game, was found to have a broken collarbone and therefore out of the lineup for the contest with Dartmouth next Saturday. Yale showed me the greatest Eli eleven I have ever seen," said Crisler. Princeton played its best game of the season, as did Yale, and if either eleven had been matched with another opponent I feel it would have defeated any team in the country.

One thing we must master, however. is pass defense. You can take it from me that we are going to work all week on this in preparation -I. T-v a 38 Amherst 28 Brow 0 Army 6 32' MANHATTAN 32 St Bonavtre 7 33 Niagara 7 13 Oar State 6 7 Holv Cross 33 0 Detroit 20 28 7 13 7 13 Georgetown 0 7 Dartmouih. 26 14 Princeton bo Virginia 13 Navy 14 0 J20, 98 165 (Yale) HOBART 0 Amherst 26 Union 33 Kan liton 26 Trinity 26 Denison 21 Rocnester.

52 Buffalo 164 (Army) HOLY CROSS 45 Bates 21 Providence. 7 Dartmouth 13 Mannattan 7 Carnegie T. 0 Temple 2(1 Colgate 32 Brown 145 139 67 (Villanova) MARQUETTE 12 Wisconsin. 32 St Louis 13 Kans State. 33 Mich State.

20 St 7 Creighton 33 Miss 0 0 0 0 0 13 2 15 6 6 7 6 6 0 21 130 (Duquesne) MASS. STATE 12 Eowdoin 14 Conn State. 13 13 Rhode Island 8 0 Wor 7 7 Amherst 33 20 Coast Guard 26 40 PI 0 0 6 0 7 I 01 3 I 13 1 0 29 (St Anselm's) ILLINOIS 9 De Paul 13 Wash Univ. 6 So Cal 0 Iowa 2 North west 9 Michigan 0 Ohio State "39 (Chicago) INDIANA 38 Centre 14 Michigan 9 Nebrasga 0 Ohio State 1 31 ova 9 Syracuse 20 Chicago 92 (Tufts) MIAMI (FLA) 44 So Ga Teach 0 Tampa 6 Bucknell 26 Rollins 7 Boston 20 Stetson 81 6 7, 24 1 0 13, i1 69 0 0 0 0 7 6 13 103 (Mercer) MICHIGAN 7 Mich State 3 Irdiana 0 M'nn 13 Columbia 6 Hanots 7 Penn 0 Norihwest'n 0 3 13 7 6 7 7 21 14 26 0 9 27 9 106 103 36 39 (Purdue) (Ohio State) carrying. The defending flanker was almost always burier by blockers, or so completely walled in that Ingram? flight was uninterrupted.

This put a heay burden on the defensive wingbacks. Oc- casionaliy Navy ran inside the end. with Kevorkian being pinnea in two or three blockers, and the end I being checked by ere. Reimam Pnd Schmidt were particularly ef-' fective running the ball on this Play. Harvard'? right flank which, cf course, was subject to less pressure, was adamant.

Less than 50 yards were gained through it all day. Mc-Ternang excellent support from a secondary position behind it probably escaped attention, but was great- ly responsible for Navys failure that rector. Whereas Harvard gave way to three touchdowns on defense Us own offensive pioduced exceilerd results and two touchlownr, almost a third. The Crimson faked, feinted and tricked the Middy line constant -6 ly with its ball handling. Its de-, ception gained it constant admit-7 tance through the oppormg but.

unfortunately, two seco.ndaric-ao refused to be fooled. They were. while they tvere participating, Bo- Antrim and Bll Ingram. Only one team played by Navy this season gained more yards rushing against it than Harvard, ana that was Pern. If the figures prove anything, and I thunk they do.

here, how Navys major opponents have gained: Yards Rushing HARVARD ...207 Notre Dame .,165 Pennsylvania .250 73 Yale 102 Eo agairst this common denomi-natcr Harvard suffers in comparison with Princeton and Yale onl'-as a defen r.ve footb-11 team. I widely outpained both cn offense versus the Navy. Pacinc ut Conference Notre Dame Will Draw 481,000 To Turnstiles Before Year Ends 47 124 PURDUE 47 Ohio 0 35 14 35 Chicago I 0 Minn 33 7 Corn" gie T. 6 0 Foroham 15 13 Iowa I 137 117 86 (South Carolina 1 NORTHEASTERN 22 Amer Int 0 6 Boston Col 26 7 Springfield 9 13 St Laurence 7 15 Rhode Island 12 12 Arnold 6 0 St Anselm's 19 13 Conn State. 14 (Indiana) RHODE ISLAND 32 Amer 7 Maine 0 6 Erown 7 7 Tufts 0 81 lass State 33 32 Nortneast rn 15 39 Wor Teen 0 0 Conn State.

38 19 Providence. 0 68 88 93 (Lo well Tex) NORTHWESTERN 38 Iowa 110 RUTGERS 13 Marietta Princeton (1 0 Yale Lenigh 0 Fo on U. 7 7 13 2 40 No Oak St. 14 Ohio State 13 IIUno.s 6 Minn 25 Wisconsin 9 Michigan 128 47 (Notre Dame) 1 13 (Ohio Wesleyan) as the Golden Avalanche buried Mississippi, 33 to 0. LONGEST F.UN Ace Parker.

Duke's All-American candidate, reeled off the longest gallop of the major football season by returning a North Carolina kick-off 105 yards. WORST DEFEAT Trinitys 63 to 0 victory over Norwich and Franklin Marshalls 71 to 10 track meet triumph over D.ckmson. FUTILITY Nineteen points would have won three-fourths of the games played yesterday, but they only soothed Texas pride. The Longhorns were trimmed 47 to 19 by Minnesota. Kelley the Great GREATEST COMEBACK Larry Kelley and his Yale mates turned that one in, wiping out a 16-to-0 deficit and beatmg Princeton, 26 to 23, in the wildest big game of the year.

GREATEST DAY The same Mr Kelley of Yale had that one against Princeton, probably clinching an All-America end berth. Andy Pupils of Notre Dame didnt do so bad against Army, either, robbing the 0 i 7.7.! North Carolina urman Washington 4c Lee Maryland Clemson Davidson Wake Forest I South Carolina Virginia H'chmnnd William Mary. Citadel MICHELL WILL CAPTAIN AMHERSTS 1937 ELEVEN AMHERST, Nov 15 Charles William Michell of Syracuse, was unanimously elected captain of the Amherst football team for 1937 at a meeting of lettermen here this afternoon. Michell, a junior, was co-captain of his freshman eleven and won numerals in basket ball and football. He was the only three-letter man in college last year, winning a third letter for his work on the mound in basebalL As a pitcher he won six and lost none, and crowned his achievements by shutting out Yale, 1 to 0.

In football, Michell has been outstanding on a team of seniors, and is Sabrina best offensive threat His accurate passing and fast and shifty running has gained many yards and accounted for many Lord Jeff touchdowns. Michell prepared for Amherst at the Hill School. Pottstown, Penn, and since coming to Amherst has been elected to Sphinx, seniop honorary society. He is also a member of Psi Upsilon fraternity. NEW YORK.

Nov 15 (A P) Notes, observations and nominations from the football press box: For a twice defeated team, Notre Dame is shattering all attendance records on its up and down sweep of the nations gridirons. For their first seven games against Carnegie Tech, Washington University of St Louis, Wisconsin. Pittsburg. Ohio State, Navy and Armi the Fighting Irish, who really have a flock of Irishmen carrying the hod this year, have played before 351.000 fans, an average of more than 50,000 a game. Sellouts are anticipated for their two remaining games 55,000 for the Northwestern and 75,000 for the Southern California encounters which would lift the seasons total to 481.000 for nine games.

Coach Elmer Layden expects to lose the last two games, giving the Irish a season of five victories and four defeats. Who said a team had to wm to draw customers? Saturday Nominations SCORING KINGS Capt Mickey Kobrosky of Trinity and Emilio Daddano, Wesleyan, were the hardest men to stop, each scoring four touchdowns as Trinity walloped Norwich, 60 to 0, and Wesleyan thumped Rochester. 35 to 19. PASSING GENIUS Ray Buivid, Marquettes buzz saw, lifted his ivic.rQueiK.-s vu aerial marksmanship average to .600 arms yesterday, but the intercepting ace of them all was Leroy of Marquette. Although a center, Leroy intercepted four Mississippi passes.

GREATEST SURPRISE Upsets were surprisingly few, but the one score that fooled everyone was the 32-to-7 victory of Washington State over University of California at Los Angeles. Another surprise was that the Pacific Coast ev.dentiy has made up its mind as to its Rose Bovl nominee Washington's Huskies. shouting: Fresh milk. whisky allowed in the stands. fresh milk.

No Defense Needs Attention Confident in its attack is secure Preparation for Yale will probably be to a great extent defensive. The end play must be brushed up considerably. It Is actually the only glaring weakness in the Crimsoi fortress. A defense must be rigged best adapted to Yale's harum-scarum attack. The covering of kicks needs som-attending to.

Roberts' fine was wasted too often by failure cu forwards to get down field. It ws Ingrams 20-yard carry with a which set up Navy's third score Perhaps it wasn't altogether matter of getting down field. Ther-were a lot of tackles missed unde-kicks. The blocking and -kling escape" -criticism. It was coi sistently goo enough so that the supply met th demand.

The latter department relapsed a few times in the open field but it was generally of cracklm; nature in scrimmage. Harvard's chances of beating Yal are considerably brighter than las season. And last Fail a fluke alone let Yale escape a tie. Or was it the luck of the Kelleys? Some Sideline Laughs FUNNIEST SIGHTS Elmer Layden keeping a six-foot, 250- pour.d gate crasher from slipping into the Army-Notre Dame game with the Irish team and then muir.b-l.ng: I sure could use that guy; the goal posts at Yankee Stad.um that were dismantled and carried away by groundskeepers within five seconds after the game to prevent Mule of two touchdowns, scoring the wild Notre Dame fans from one, adding two points from place-! capturing them, and the intrepid ment and lifting Notre Dame's hopes 1 milkman who drove his white wagon Princeton Stadium. of stopping Northwestern with a around the flawless job of quarterbacking.

INTERCEPTION ACE Hundreds of forward passes fell into the wrong.

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