42
YALE ALUMNI
WEEKLY
_ YALE, 12; DARTMOUTH, 0.
[Continued from 41st page.]
man. Goals from touchdowns, Sharpe,
G. Brown. Umpire, Mr. Lane, Harvard.
Referee, Mr. Robinson, Brown. Lines-
men, W. E. S. Griswold, Yale ’99, Mr.
Kimball, Annapolis. Timekeeper, Mr.
F. M. Wood, Boston A. A. Time of
halves, twenty and seventeen minutes.
—_——_+e—___——-
Football at Other Colleges.
Last week’s football work among the
other colleges closed with hard games
for most of them, and some surprises
were recorded, chief among them, per-
haps, being the defeat of Pennsylvania
by the Carlisle Indians. Pennsylvania
is generally expected to develop early,
and about this time has had, for the past
three or four years, undoubtedly the
strongest team of any of the colleges.
Although a good start was made with
five veterans and an army of promising
material, the eleven has been very ragged
in its work and has been scored on twice,
the University of Virginia making one of
these touchdowns by a 65-yard run
around left end. The weak point is at
guards, usually exceptionally strong on
this eleven. Although Pennsylvania won
with a score of 33 to 5, her play had no
life or dash in it. The game on Satur-
day at Philadelphia with the Indians
was expected to be hard and close, but
none looked for the result which came—
16 to 5 in favor of the Indians. Penn-
sylvania was outplayed from the begin-
ning at her own game, as may be seen
from the fact that she could make but
63 yards in the rushing game to 240 by
Carlisle, in the first half. Hudson,
Carlisle’s quarter, kicked one goal from
the 40-yard line, but the other touch-
downs were made by straight, hard line-
bucking which Pennsylvania could not
stop. Hare made Pennsylvania’s only
touchdown from a fair catch shortly be-
fore the second half ended, thus saving
a shut-out.
The other surprise of the day was the
trouncing Cornell received from the Uni-
versity of Chicago at Chicago, the final
score standing 17 to 6. Cornell was out-
pointed in every department of play and
her line was unable to hold. The physi-
cal condition of the Cornell men seemed
to be bad, as Captain Starbuck and three
of his. best players were obliged to re-
tire before the game was over. It was
the first meeting of the two universities
on the gridiron.
Columbia’s newly organized eleven
was introduced into the first class in the
game with Princeton at Manhattan
Field, Saturday. Before then, her
games had been with minor colleges,
where the score stood largely in her
favor, but beyond showing the team to
be composed of good, willing material,
nothing had been done to give much
indication of its real strength. Some
partisans said the visitors would be
beaten; others that they would be
scored upon, but the general impression
was that Princeton would run up a good
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large figure. That Princeton did no
better than 11 to o is regarded as a sign
of Columbia’s strength and not Prince-
ton’s weakness. The game was well
contested throughout, Wheeler, Palmer
and Poe doing the best work for Prince-
ton, the latter scoring the last touch-
down by a run of 40 yards, under some-
what similar conditions to that he made
against Yale last season. ;
Princeton played a game with Lafay-
ette at Princeton, Wednesday, Oct. II,
defeating them I2 to 0.
did punting for Lafayette kept the score
low. Lafayette is as strong or stronger
this year than last, when she gave Penn-
sylvania so hard a tussle and beat the
Tigers.
The biggest score of the week was
that made by Harvard against Amherst
at Cambridge, Wednesday, Oct. 11—
41 too. Yale scored 23 to o against the
same team two weeks ago. Daley, en-
tirely recovered from his injuries, was
in at quarter for Harvard and drove his
men at a fast pace. Most of the touch-
downs came through the hard, straight
kind of play. Kendall, at left half, made
the sensational play of the day with a
60-yard run. Ellis at right-half was
given a lot of hard work to do and is
regarded as a find who will go a long
way towards filling the hole left by
Dibblee.
West Point was unable to score on
Harvard at West Point or come danger-
ously near her goal line. The final score
was, Harvard 18, West Point o. The
figures of this game last year were 27
to o. West Point is, however, playing
in poorer form than for several years
past, and has had no professional coach.
Romeyn and Kromer, two of the men
who did much to bring West Point to
the front, and who were responsible for
touchdowns against Yale and Princeton,
are in the army, and their successors are
far below their standard. Harvard
would undoubtedly have scored several
times more, but for fumbling in the
back field, a tendency which has marked
the Cambridge players since their first
game, in strong contrast to the magnifi-
cent work in that department last year.
Other games played on Saturday were:
were:
(Me.) — Bates 12;
At Lewiston
Colby. o. :
At Madison (Wis.)—Wisconsin 38;
Northwestern o.
At Easton (Pa.)—Lafayette 57; Rut-
gers O.
At Providence. (R. I.)—Brown 23;
Campello A. C. 0.
At +: Pattiord
Amherst o.
At Williamstown (Mass.)—Williams
12; Union College 5. ?
(Conn.)—Trinity 0;
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a IB tl
Chamberlain Greek Prize.
It was announced last week that the
Hugh Chamberlain Prize, which is
awarded each year to the student who
passes the best entrance examination in
Greek, was divided between Henry Ide
Root of New Haven and Harry Brown
VanDeventer of Elizabeth, N. J. Hon-
orable mention was made of_ Eliot
Round Clark, of Farmington, Conn.
Sectiona
. View.
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No Flickering
Athletic Calendar.
Saturday, Oct. 21—Yale-University of
Wisconsin football - game, at New
Haven.
Wednesday, Oct. 25—Beginning of
Intercollegiate Golf Tournament at Gar-
den City, L. I
Saturday, Oct. 28—Yale-Columbia
joatbal! game at Manhattan Field, New
ork.
Saturday, Nov. 4—Yale-West Point
football game at West Point. |
saturday, Nov. 11—Yale-Pennsylvania
State College at New Haven.
Saturday, Nov. 18—Yale-Harvard
football game at Cambridge. The
Freshman elevens of the two Universi-
ties will play at Cambridge the morn-
ing of the same day.
Saturday, Nov. 25—Yale-Princeton
football game at New WHaven. The
Freshman elevens of the two Universi-
ties will play at New Haven the morn-
ing of the same day.
8 A EB Se ae Se
Phi Beta Kappa will hold its first
meeting, Wednesday evening, Oct. 25.
A SHARP POINT
can be kept on Dixon’s American Graphite
Pencils without breaking off every minute. They
come in 11 degrees of hardness and are unequalled
for uniformity of grading.
Can be bought at the Yale Co-op. and all
stationers.
JOSEPH DIXON CRUCIBLE C0., Jersey City, N. J
Writing Essays
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Terms, $5.00 for 100 notices.
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BRIDGEPORT BRASS CO., - Bridgeport, Conn.
A VALUABLE AND PLEASING MEMORIAL
OF THE DISTINGUISHED |
Rev. Timothy Dwight, p.v,, LLo.
THE PORTRAIT ETCHING
Peake Wont
James S. King,
AUTOGRAPHED BY
DR. DWIGHT,
Size 14 x 18.
Limited to Two Hundred and Fifty Artist Proofs, printed on
Japan Paper.
CHARLES BARMORE,
Publisher of
Fine Art Portraits of Famous Men,
10 Wall Street, New York.
% e
Co-Incident with the retirement of President Dwight this portrait will be a pleasing
memorial of happy days associated with Yale. Every graduate should have one.