safety wins game for union team ,9-7

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Published-Every Monday by the Press Association of the St, Lawrence University
V|L.,XI V
CANTON, N . Y., OCTOBER 10, 1921
PLANS DEVELOPED FOR
A GREATER St. LAWRENCE
t
, IT MUST BE THE RAIN;
BUT WHERE ARE T H E : D oGS?
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ST.LAWRENCE TO MEET
SAFETY WINS GAME
FOR UNION TEAM ,9-7
• At last -the word has gone
Down-State-Team is. One of'Scarlet's
abroad, through tfie^-feline world
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t -.*.Traditional Rivals on Gridiron. ".
thjat Canton is again a safe stamp-,
ing ground for the battle-scarred
>7tQxti and his yowling mate. As a JOHNNIE
SULLIVAN CAPTAINrYEttOW
result-of
:the.
activities
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last
COMMITTEE APPOINTED TO INVESTIGATE
year's class - in. comparative an- Veterans of Fourj Seasons on Roches-IS.
Plans Will Include Enlargement of Ijatomy, S. L\. U. and it's immediate
ter Elevenj-Fast Game Expected
In a" hard-foiight battle,"ploughing * -Union started the scoring in°.the,
Campus, Means of Approach to -, • (vicinity b]a,s been, for some months;
through mud well over their shoe-top^, second quarter, when -Atwood was
a catless . desert in." a world well
to Grounds, and the Sites for
On Saturday, October 15, the Var- the^ Varsity finally went down to de- thrown behind his own goal-line for a.
stocked
with
wandering
pussies.
Location of. New Buildings. . <\
sity football team will oppose the (feat at~the handj of Union by a scorej| safety. .The Garnet had" fprced-.the
During the last few days, how•_:
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Rochester eleven in what is expected of nine to seven. Necessarily it wasja Varsity backward by superior lineever, there have been numberless
< Realizing that with the rapid
'to prove one of the best games on the" loosely played . contest — anybody's phirigmg, when Atwood decided to ,
reports of strolling.-,couples being
.. growth of the institution plans must
[ Scarlet's schedule. More than usual game until the final whistle. Both purit out of danger.- The Scarlet de- j'
waylaid by vagrant kittens mewing
be formed for the future, the. Board
interest is shown in this contest be- (teams? had frequent chances to score,-; fense was weak in this period, allow- j
. of Trustees at a special mpeting held .-for-'attention.; so, it is evident that* cause the down-state eleven is one of but neither seemed strong enough to
ing Union's line to break through .bethe cats.haye come back; | '
in the early part of September, took
the Scarlet's traditional and most :e'so- push the oVal over.
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fore Atwood could kick.. Toward the"•
Perhaps, the y'ounger generation
!
important steps toward .that end.
teemed opponents.
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Five minutes after the-play had end of the half Rinaldi, a Union halfr
of
catdom
yearns
for
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the
Miigher
Since the coming of Dr. .Sykes to
In 1911' Rochester won from the startedgit.was next to -impossible to back, intercepted a forward pass op
education. Perhaps these youngSt'. Lawrence a s ' president, '.. it has
Varsity by a score of nineteen to. five; identify*, ahsr of the- players, so com- his forty-five yard line and carried the
sters are made ofi.sterner stuff
come to. be generally recognized^ that
also in „1912 by thirty-two .to noth- pletely'plastered with mud were they;- .ball to the seven yard^line. Two line,
the] University'is now approaching the thian their ancestors and desire- to' ing. In 1913-'the Scarlet 'was igai'n- and the lar^e crowd that witnessed the
bucks, pushed the balL over, and the
:
gain a cat-heaven by martyrdom to
crest of a wave of development that
forced" to bow to thei Yellow, who piled' game.-was hone too dry, for the con- Garnet- quarter kicked the: goal.
science.
.
But
the
most'
plausible:
will sweep it .far beyond, the comup a thirty-three to nothing score; and t e s t - w a s .staged during a .pouring
• The Varsity'. scored in , the third
theory is the one which claims that,
paratively narrow limited field of the
again in-1914, when the Rochester- elev raip.- . The .scene was enliyened, how r period a'fter "Miller- recovered a f u m - v
these
are-kitten-reporterf
for
"Cat'
• past; • Both President Sykes and the
en won, twenty-six to nothing. •' I t was eyer,' by the presence 'of a St. L'aw-i ble by-Union ofi the twenty-five yard
Tales,* seeking copy on' thet highmejzibers of the Board have lately felt
not until'1917 that any football team rence -cheering section,; composed-of line. St. Lawrence' made first. down
ways and„byways of.jour fair; town.
that preparation for this" growth
wearing Scarlet showed up even with- about thirty alumni from... Schenectady by a-.series of line-plunges, dnd a., fifshould be immediate, in order to avoid
the Yellow of Rochester; in that^year and'the surrounding towns.
'•' ' teen yard pa'&s^ Atwood to Miller,
. the excessively Kit or miss'procedure
a scoreless tie was' played. The VarT . Despite the-weather, handicaps and; carried the ball across.. Miller kicked
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of'the past. If such steps were not
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sity team of -1919, however, finally the extremely slippery f condition ofi
Erom
that
time
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e
taken, thirty or forty years from now
1 the goal.
turned the tide,, defeating the Yellow" -the gridiron an.d of the ball, both
we-might have a campus irregularly
^k]
sjx.^to three. Last year's te^m re- teams displayed a tight brand of foot- ball s'ee-saw.ed iback• and. forth,' both',
covered, with buildings of all* shapes,,
jjga^ed'this achievement, inflicting u p . ball, and fumbles were comparatively teams fighting • savagely for' an , Opportunity to score again. Forward
and sizes, such as Syracuse now has,
•J- oh"' ^Rochester a Iwenty-four' to seven;"f\ f e w .
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passing and.-punting were resorted •&,'.
instead of well laid out grounds with Middlebury andj Rochester Suffc
teen' d e f e a t . ' - . . . ,
by b6th sides, after ineffectual . a t :
buildings of harmonious proportions
Defeat to Their More Powerful
'.. This year, it is-'confidentiy believed,
-tempts 'to -break through the lirie'.^.
and architecture.
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. Opponents, ^
will be signalized by another-victory
The Varsity line played air-tight-ball;
- Secretary Frank N. .Cieayeland,'77,.
for St. Lawrence. Rochester proved
had Union met with, such ar. harrier
has xaa^e^j^xeML5*ndy_of
the;.mat-' ' While the Scarlet .elgycn was .losing,
in ' the early part of, the game she
-ter, and in order that it may be dealt to .Union,, three of her future : op- ^it~in^fi+lof" Cornell in Saturday's
Yellow presented feeble
would have been held scoreless..
. with in an orderly and effective mari- ponents played scoreless tie games' game. The.
opposition1 to, the Crimson and were Delps McCurdy, '65, Was Prominent
;First Quarter^:
, rier has presented the following reso- and. two suffered idefeat.. .
Metropolitan
Lawyer
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lutions, which after considerable dis- -Cornell swamped Rochester by a" overwhelmed fifty-five. to nothing.
Union . punted to St. Lawrence'^
And although the Rochester players
"cussion were unanimously adopted.
score of fifty-five to .nothing, scoring
Delos McCurdy, '65, .for some time twenty yard line. After, failing An\
won their opening game with NiagaTa
eight
touchdowns.
Roehester
got
in
Resolved, That<a committee of three
(
past
the.oldest.living graduate of the- two line-bucks and a- passv Atwood
University . by .a . seven to nothing
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trustees be appointed by the Chair, some good forward passing - in,. the score, the game was slow and unin- College of Letters, and Science, died' pun,ted to Union's thirty y^rd. line.
to work in co-operation with the pres- final period,, but her line 'was-parti- teresting and showed rather crude a;s the ^result of an acute attack of St. Lawrence wasjierialized five yards;
ident .to investigate and consider the cularly weak throughout the ganfe.
heart disease at his home in Bejlport', off-side. Several line plunges, netted
football .playing on Rochester's.pari;.
two first dBwns for Union.' -St. Law." immediate and future needs and re- The Middlebury - line 'managed to
Last.-giear's captaiin. Bunny Harris, L. I., late' last Friday jafternoon.
quirements of. the college; that they be weather very successfully the Army's.' will b|jpSeatly missed in the RochesMr., McCurdy,. who belonged-to the rence- stiffened the iiefehse ;and
authorized to, employ a surveyor, a onslaught- Saturday, but failed to ter lime-iU'p. 'The two ends i n . the earliest days of St. Lawrence, before stopped the attack on the twehty-ifive
yard.line. Atwood punted. The Garlandscape gardner, and an architect; check Smythe's: dashes around end,
"Yellow'S'"formation, Green, and Cahill, the college, as s,uch. was really or- net brought the ball back,, and1 after
•that they prepare a topographical map losing by a nineteen to nothing score.ganized,,
was
graduated
in
-1865
with
are among'their best players,.but the
a few riiinutes of straight football -the
of the College Campus and othe.r prop- This, however, was a very creditable
right half-back, Jack Sullivan, i s their the degree of Master jof Science. He quaster ended'- with • the ball' in- the
erty, and recommend location on. the showing for the, Vermon-ters, as. it is-,
had
but
oneclassmate,.who
died
about
individual star. .
hands of the^-Scarlet. ?. Score, Union
same for sites for the'following'build- iikely- that they were uj> against the
The showing of Coach Sullivan's fifteen years. ago.' After- his g r a d u a l nothing, -St. JLawrence npthing,
Army's best warriors....
ings:
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tion
Mr,
McCurdy
served
an
appreii^
team against R. P. I. and Union is
1:: The Gunnison Memorial Chapel. 'The .'games.'between Glarkson and evidence that the Varsity will put up", ticeship in- the law office of the la-tej
=Second Quarter
2., A new laboratory building for Hamilton', between.'Stevens ' and Hav- a .stiff and presumably!wining fight Colonel E. C.' James, of Ogdensburg, . At the beginriing ef . the .quarter
the" Chemistry .Department, or for ei'ford, and between Connecticut State, in next Saturday's game, although it and was subsequently admitted to the Willet threw Atwood behind "Ms goali- I
and Trinity, all resulted in scoreless
:, Chemistry and Biology. I
bar. .J He -continued ^his -practice in line, scoring, two points on a safety^
will be a hard fought battle.
ties.' • The wet find', slippery' corfdition
. ' 3 : A new Gymnasium.
Ogdensburg for a time.' In 1869 Gov- Carpenter gained four yards through.
4.. A building, or. addition- to other- of the.' gr'uTfrb'ns probably in part- acernor J. T. Hoffman appointed him the. .line. St. -La,wrenee recovered a '
'. District „ .Attorney of. St. Lawrence fumble* on the. next -play. SJ^artly
buildings, tft, furnish additional- lec- counts f6r these ties, and such., re-' OWEI^D. YOUNG, '94,
HEADS RADIO DELEGATION County. He held this office for one. after, :Rinaldi intercepted a forward
ture* rooriis and other neqessary acco- suits give'"little basis for speculation
as to the. relative strength of the- • ' . - . - modations. »:'-.'I
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• : ' - A ' year, and it -is,.a notable fact that he pass .arid ..[by remarkable open-iield
teams".
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5. A-new Library."
Owen D. Yo'ung,.'9_4, is named in a was the only Democratic district at- running carried the ball to the VarS. An Infirmary. •
" • ' J-recent Paris dispatch as the head-of torney that St.- Lawrence County ever sity's seven yard line, following which
ORIGINAL "EBEN JHOL/DEN"
• T. -A Dormitory,, for Girls. - '
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the*American delegation -at. a» con- liadi ,
TO BE GIVEN COLLEGE ference in that city which is considerIn 188f) Mr. McCurdy went to New .first touchdown.' Heidorf kickedvthe
•8. An Administration' Building,
artd rsiuch other buildings as the coming plans for an" international wiret York City, arid later became connected goal, The half ended~?with the hall in
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mittee shall deem desirable.
The .original- manuscript of "Eben less company and development. of the* with thejprominent law firm of Green, the center qf the field. • Score, Union
• Also,' that the said .cohimittee . re- I-iolden," the work; which first won world's radio facilities. Mr.-Young; Vanderpbel, and Cumriiirigs. His repnine, St. Lawrence'nothing.'
port at the next meeting of the Board;) fame for Irving . Bacheller, '82, will recently returned to the United States; utation, especially in connection with
Third Quarter
froni
an
extensive
trip
thrdugh
.J-apan
realty cases,; rapidly grew, the famous
whether there is immediate need for be formally presented t.o the UniverSt. Lawr-encejkicked off 1g|"HeidorL
any of these buildings, and-if-so, for sity at special exercises to be held in and China in the interest.of the Gen- Tilden Will Contest,, 'which -he careral Electric Company of which he is- ried through the courts,: brihging hini Again Unionj'siarted her' fine plungwhich of them the need is most press- chapel Tuesday morning.
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Vice-President and. one .of 1 he most unusual reputation arid ultimately, ing tactics, bull fumbled' and lost the
ing; "and further, that the committee
At the Alumni. '. Chapel' exercises- influential members'.
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wealth. He was a member of t h e ball on the Var§ity's twenty-five yardrecommend ways and means for ac- held last June, i«Mr. -Bacheller anquiring funds for the erection of. said nounced his intension iof making this . Representatives qf the wireless in- New-York State Constitutional Cpn=- line. St. Lawrence made first down. T '-•
A "pass' from,A:twood to Miller ' for
buildings. 7*^'
* .1. gift.- At the presentation exercises' Dr. terests in the United States, Great vention of-1894, .
The body -was,brought Jto Heuveltori fifteen' yards parried the ball over.
The- committee appointed to take C. ,K. Gaines, has been requested- to Britain, France, and Germany are atMiller kicked the Ijoal. Smith kicked'
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jjup this matter consists of Frank ,N:. majke an address. Dr. Gaines. was tending the conference in 'Paris, which for interment.
^off to Heidorf, who ran the ball back
Cieayeland', '77, .chairman, Herbert F. very closely associated with Mr. has as its- object the .placing of the
Union had "two
\ . forty-five yards.
Gunnison, '80, and'" Mrs. A. Barton Bacheller for "many years, and his in*, wireless projects <oi the four countries OFFICERS OF MOHAWK
V K L L E Y CLUB 1921-1922 chances to,-scpre,-but failed; owing to
Hepburn, '86; and what is most neces. tiniatejcnowlisage of.thp authqr of this on a sound basis. Wireless facilities
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__ sary for„the continued grawth__bf-Str -particular book and of the circum- of the four^-nations. involved will be. ^President . . j
j:F.J$lcKinney,-'92 the remarkable defense of the ScarLawrence wilFbe carefully considered. stances under which it was written •pooled, but each country will retain Vice-President
'.-.-A. E. Adler, 9^ let. . Score, Union nine,' St. -Lawrence
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of its' own territory. . Ed- Second V. P. L-:•'.'.'. WS-W.' Trench,' '13 seven.
When their work is don,e the Univer-* will lend unusual interest to his re- full control
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Foui-th
Quarter
ward1 J. Nally and J. W. Elwood, pres- Secretary .:
•sity" grounds will be systematically marks.- . . '
, . .R. B. Eldridge, '1.5
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'• ident and secretary qf the Radio Cor•The lapt period "r°esolved itself into
laid out with 'a view to the future.
••Treasurer
.Ellen
Dewey,
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Thejiiknuscfipt, which is in- long
It is 'also, planned to purchaae_hjore-|(-bancl, is in the characteristic fine ver^ poration in America, as well as- a • Executive Cominiftee: -L. P. Hale, a punting and passing -duel, with St.
landT^anirKave an entrance from Main ticaniandwrfting'of the author; After large staff of experts; complete the '76, Ernest Robinson, -'09, TVIrs., Leon Lawrence consistently lout-kicking
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• - tho. presentation it.^ill be kept in an i American Delegation of which, Owen Rutherford, .'11, 'and Mary Ellsworth Union.
' D. Young is the head.
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nir-proof case in. Herring library.
Ji|versity Trustees Recognize Need
| p f Well Devised Scheme for th,e
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Muddy Field A t Schenectady Makes Straiglit^ -^
Fooftball IpaLpossible'—Scarlet {Scores Touchdown on Forward Pass^Gafnef O n Line Buck
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THREE FUTURE RIVALS
PLAY SCORELESS JIES
OLDEST LIVING ALUMNUS
OF S U A W J B C E DEAD
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