Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, November 03, 1898, Page 6, Image 6

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    58
TALE ALUMNI WHEEXKLY
COACHES ARE HERE.
[Continued from 54th page.]
flicted for holding in the line. West
Point had two excellent chances to
score from drop kicks, but both of
Kromer’s attempts were unsuccessful,
A succession of punts followed West
Point’s opening kick-off, on which Yale
was consistently gaining until McBride
fumbled Romeyn’s return kick and
Baender fell on the ball on Yale’s thirty-
five-yard line. A fifteen-yard end run
by Waldron brought the ball within
easy range of the Yale goal, but
Kromer’s drop-kick missed the post by
a narrow margin. Following Mc-
Bride’s punt out Yale secured the ball
for holding, on West Point’s fifty-yard
line. Short rushes by the three Yale
backs carried the ball thirty yards down
the field, where West Point steadied: her
defence and secured it on downs.
Romeyn punted and Yale had again ad-
vanced to West Point’s twenty-yard
line on her rushing tactics, when the
ball changed hands for holding. An
exchange of punts followed, McBride
and Kromer both making brilliant re-
turn runs. Pees
With the ball in West Point’s posses-
sion on her own forty-five-yard line,
Bettison made a pass’ over Romeyn’s
head and the result was a_thirty-five-
yard loss. McBride made a sensational
dash of twenty-five yards on catching
Romeyn’s punt which followed, and,
after four short plunges. by the Yale
backs, McBride was pushed across the
line for a touchdown. A punt out by
Chamberlin put the ball in good posi-
tion, but Brown failed to kick the goal.
Immediately after the kick-off by the
Cadets, time was called.
WALDRON’S SENSATIONAL RUN.
Romeyn’s return punt on Chamber-
lin’s kick-off gave the ball to Yale on
her own forty-five-yard line. On an ex-
change of punts and-two fierce line
plunges by Wear, who had been sub-
stituted for Gilmore, Yale advanced fif-
teen yards, when the ball changed hands
because of off-side play. On the next
line-up Waldron got around the left end
of Yale’s line for a sensational fifty-yard
run. With the ball within forty yards
of Yale’s goal the West Point backs
advanced twenty-yards more on short
plunges into the line, when Yale
steadied her defense and held the Cadets
for three downs. The backs made good
gains through the line and McBride fol-
lowed with a punt to the middle of the °
field. After short gains by Waldron and
Romeyn, the Cadets tried the quarter-
back kick with such success that Ennis
fell on the ball, on-side, at Yale’s
twenty-five-yard line. At this point
Kromer made his second attempt at
scoring from a goal from the field, but
the ball went low. An exchange of
punts followed McBride’s kick-out, and
Romeyn fumbling, Coy fell on the ball
on West Point’s twenty-five-yard line,
Yale had advanced to within four yards
of the West Point ‘goal on consistent
gains by the three backs, when there
was holding in the line and. the ball
went to West Point. Sullivan made a
return run of twenty yards on Romeyn’s
punt and from this point McBride and
Marvin alternated in line plunges and
end runs until thirty-five yards had
been covered and Marvin was pushed
across for the second touchdown.
Again Brown failed to kick an easy goal.
With a little over a minute to play the
Cadets kicked off. Marvin had made
two effective line plunges and Wear a
brilliant run of fifty yards around West
Point’s right end, when time was
called with the ball on West Point’s
thirty-yard line.
The line-up and summary:
YALE. POSITION. West Point.
PIODDGH ey) oe left-end-right __.__...... Baender
Punts gots oe leit<tackle-right.. 2222: Foy
BROW 82k: left-guard-right.__...-___ Ennis
J Lat. ER aS ee Center ess si ven 4 AS Bettison
Waearsnall--....2 5 right-guard-left___......._.. Burtt
Chamberlin. ..._right- f Heidt
erlin..._._right-tackle-left___.._._.. { Schull
Rr See tice rep right-end-left._..........__ Smith
SUE Oe, genie aad qaarter-batley§ .3f fe Kromer
Meetel.i5c) cs... left-half-right_______. Humphrey
i]
wate t gears f right-half-left _......___ Waldron
MET Ie sh  e full-back. ...- 2.2.2... Romeyn
Score—Yale, 10; West Point,o. Touchdowns—
McBride and Marvin. Referee—L. deP. Vaile of
U.of P. Umpire—Thompson of Princeton. Lines-
_ men—H. L. Harris, West Point and D. R. Francis,
Yale. Timekeepers—E. M. Adams, West Point,
and L. E. Stoddard, Yale. Time of halves—Twenty
minutes.
Yale 1902, 28—Brown 1902, 0.
On Thursday, October 27, the Yale
Freshmen defeated the Brown Fresh-
men at the Yale Field, by the large
score of 28 to 0.
The Yale team entirely outclassed
their opponents in weight and in gen-
eral knowledge of the fine points of the
game, but the Brown men _ played
pluckily. The majority of the defects
visble in the team’s work would seem
to be such as careful coaching and hard
- work on the part of the men them-
selves could remedy before the big
games. Rumsey, Adams and Ward,
made the largest gains for Yale.
The summary and line-up is as fol-
lows:
YALE 1902. PosITION. BROWN 1902
Cotte ee left-end-right......--..---- Hunt
Hart
SWAN o see left-tackle-right..........- Potter
Hookef 2). s,s left-guard-right-...._...-- Phipps
Guana. 25S: Gehter. i232. t=. Mason
bn as t Poa ys right-guard-left...._-..-- O’Riley
Ferguson.......--right-tackle-left ......--- Pevear
Abbottic.. 435-55 right-end-left-.........--- Shaw
Morrie cGs ss easci: quarter-back....-.....-- Briggs
ri AS bat te left-half-back-right___-.--- O'Riley
Adams ; :
eater Ta right-half-back-left. Pinkham(Capt)
Ranisey oo ec. Tl Date s  e SS Kendall
Score—Yale 1902, 28: Brown 1902, 0. Touch-
downs—S. D. Ward, 2; Rumsey, 2; G. B. Ward, 1.
Goals from touchdowns—Rumsey, 3. Umpire—
Mr. Townsend, 1900 S. Referee—Mr. Ely, ’98.
Linesmen—A. Y. Wear, Yale; H. S. Johnson,
Brown. Time of halves—2o and 15 minutes.
_— —_—
a. see
Athletic Calendar.
Saturday, November 5.—Yale-Chi-
cago Athletic Club game at New Haven.
Saturday, November 12.—Yale-Prince-
ton game at Princeton.
Saturday, November 19.—Yale-Har-
vard game at New Haven.
Hon. George P. Andrews, 758.
Hon. George P. Andrews, Yale ’58,
who has been renominated for Justice
of the New York Supreme Court, was
born in North Brighton, Me. At Yale,
he was the Class Orator. In 1859 he
went to New York and studied in the
office of W. P. Fessenden. In 1860 he
was admitted to the bar and immedi-
ately thereafter was made Assistant
United States District Attorney of the
Southern District of New York. He
HON. GEO. P. ANDREWS.
held this position through the dura-
tion of the Civil War, when the demands
upon the office were particularly oner-
ous. In 1872 he was made Assistant
Corporation Counsel of New York, fill-
ing the position under the administra-
tion of Corporation Counsel E. Dela-
field Smith and his successor, Mr.
Whitney. At the close of the latter’s
term of office, Mr. Andrews was made
his successor. In 1883, Mr. Andrews
was elected to the
-Bench, where he is
now serving his
fourteenth year.
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a
On account of extraordinary press of
matter the account of the Fall games at
Yale Field had to be laid over until the
next issue.
Supreme Court
A FOOTBALL
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If you want a rest and plenty of
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and see a Yale rush line whipped
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Fr. R. BLISS: &:€0,
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NEW HAVEN, - CONN.
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It contains nearly 300 portraits of artists and collegians, besides giving some account
(| ken men everywhere are invited to send for the Washburn Souvenir Catalog.
of the construction of Washburn instruments and a complete list of net prices.
First-class music dealers the world over sell Washburns, or instruments may be
obtained from the makers
LYON & HEALY, CHICAGO.