Sports

FOLLOWING THE BIG GREEN TEAMS

June 1933
Sports
FOLLOWING THE BIG GREEN TEAMS
June 1933

With Phil Sherman

The beautiful Spring afternoons of the month of May in these Hanover hills have brought forth many sports and many stories —some that quicken the blood with sensational performances and rallies, and some that are perforated with errors of commission or omission. But Hanover's threeringed circus marches on, and the scribes duly set down all that they see and tuck away for future reference things that are conjured to mind directly or indirectly by performance.

By all rights the Dartmouth lacrosse team belongs somewhere near the head of the list. While the year's span of Big Green athletes trooped across home and foreign fields this college year with only a minimum of winning success, the lacrosse team rose above the median which denotes mediocrity and blazed a sports trail of an undefeated season to date.

Yale during the course of a single season. And it is a long, long time since any Dartmouth sport team defeated the Crimson and the Blue in one fell swoop. Somehow, lacrosse as a game has never fired the public fancy—lacrosse and its similar fancied brother, soccer, have gone their placid way from year to year, catering to the specialist in sport, but providing means for hidden outlets in the makeup of countless athletes. So, this year, the college has become somewhat lacrosseminded, and possibly this reaction is due to the fact the Big Green Ten, as it now must be called, defeated both Harvard and

The technicalities of lacrosse escape usI can recall many games that I have seen on Chase and Memorial Fields—but the kaleidoscopic effect was that of twenty-four men running around with webbed sticks in their hands chasing an absurdly small rubber ball. There seemed to be no limit of bounds and no appreciable rules, but thrills were there and goals were scored.

But this year all has been changed. The rules cut the personnel to ten on a side, and Tommy Dent has benefitted by this change, for the weak positions of third attack and third defense have been eliminated, and a real team has been born of this change.

Therefore a raised eyebrow was in order when the Dartmouth team romped over Tufts 18-1, and followed this with a 12-2 victory over the Boston Lacrosse Club, an independent organization which numbers many stars in its lineup. Therefore the 6-5 victory over Harvard was real cause for celebration, and students began to wonder just who played on this amazing team.

True, several years ago, Dartmouth had beaten Harvard 1-0 in a sensational match when Harry Litzenberger, then a young fellow, scored the winning goal, but a six goal flurry on a team like Harvard was certainly out of the ordinary.

Then the Yale match, Dartmouth's brilliant aggregation going into the last minute on the crest of a 3-1 victory surge. It was now surely time to look over this team —and out of the group we find names like Dick Halvorsen, rated as one of the East's best by his coach; Ted Allen, scorer of two goals against Yale; Babe Shea, a really fine goalie whose work has improved fifty per cent since only last season; Capt. Charley Shafer, a real leader of a real Dartmouth team; John Donovan, the big football quarterback; and many others who have been out for and on the team.

So hail to lacrosse, and a banzai for Tommy Dent—it is only unfortunate that Dartmouth could not have had a longer and more extensive schedule in this sport.

Baseball Becomes Crucial

We have been having a grand time sitting before the microphone of WNBX—my sidekick Ernie Barcella and I—telling all about these Eastern Intercollegiate League baseball games to an unseen audience, and the only drawback is that we have to show strict impartiality when we so want to see a winning Dartmouth team. We are supposed to get just as excited when Pennsylvania pulls a brilliant play or when Yale makes a sensational outfield catch as when Dartmouth squeezes across a run or two on Princeton.

The crowds in Hanover for these games are larger then ever, and the interest has doubled in the past few years, but the Dartmouth record to date has been unimpressive save in the instance of a single abbreviated game. Idle talk and veiled rumors have been spread, much without foundation as the team has played unimpressive baseball behind the pitching of one of the finest athletes to wear the Green—Way Thompson. Out of a pitching staff which seemed promising at the start of the year, only Thompson has survived, and upon his shoulders has rested the burden of keeping Dartmouth in a middle position in the league standings.

The addition of Harvard was a happy move for the league to make, and at this writing the Crimson is tied with Columbia for the lead. Yale and Pennsylvania both looked strong at Hanover, and the Yale team, without the veteran John Broaca, who was summarily dropped in mid-season, should really deserve a great deal of credit for keeping the Blue well up in the standings.

But we are talking and thinking and writing of Dartmouth, and the whole situation in Hanover can be boiled down to a single word—unsettled.

Change in Spirit

Alumni must realize the change in sporting spirit at Dartmouth during the past several years. It was a bit before my day, but I can sense the iron decade of tonguelashing coaches and hard-boiled athletes brought up on by post-war conditions. Then the athlete was supreme, and like the motion picture stars and the publiceyed characters, felt it a duty to be loyal to his supporters in a way which might be called more vanity and self-esteem than a willingness to second himself to college spirit and team value alone.

It is felt that we are in a social era—that the days of the tramp athlete and the casehardened character are gone, and this situation is not peculiar to Dartmouth. Visiting teams have shown the trend as well as the Green, and the boy who plays football or basketball or baseball today is a different type than his predecessors. Perhaps with this change the idea of a winning team for the sake of victory alone is dying out.

Upsetting the apple cart of convention and rigidity of standards, as shown in this generation of college men, has resulted in a more informal spirit among the players on teams and a more carefree attitude off the field which has not yet been proven to be either harmful or a step forward. We do not rush in to condemn when the same circumstances are concomitant elsewhere. We only wait for the final judgment of the trend.

To get back to specific games, the month's developments have seen Dartmouth take two games from Princeton, one from Columbia, while losing to Yale, Pennsylvania and Columbia. To pick up the odd ends, the Green lost an early season game to Yale, and won a late game from New Hampshire outside of the league. The present position is fourth, behind Columbia, Harvard and Yale.

The Big Green won a wild and wooly game from Princeton 11-6, a contest which saw both sides commit six errors apiece, saw home runs hit by Roald Morton, Buster Snow and Bob Bennett, and Way Thompson go the route in a ding-dong battle. The Tiger's hapless team has yet to win a league game, so it was not too surprising to see Dartmouth come back to Hanover and deliver an 11-0 lacing to these self-same Tigers.

Miller Allows 2 Hits

Bob Miller pitched the Hanover game and held Princeton to two hits and from the viewpoint of the bleacherites was in superb form. The team has been shifting around with each succeeding game and inasmuch as this has been the Dartmouth policy it was not out of the ordinary to see Buster Snow moved from second to the outfield, and later moved to third. Loppy Rich played both second and third, and Capt. Tom Maskilieson gave up the third base position to emerge as a pitcher.

In pitching the second Princeton game Bob Miller undoubtedly hurled the best game of his career. But the experts did not lose sight of the fact that Princeton batters were prone to hit high, wide 3-2 balls many times, which would have been walks. In the main the new battery of Miller and Bill Clark did very well, and young Mr. Clark, late of Exeter, clinched his job for the remaining games of the month. His two doubles led the Dartmouth attack and added another left handed batter to the lineup.

And then followed the bugaboo of the first inning, an epidemic which stretched through three league games and which Dartmouth was unable to shake. Pennsylvania scored twice in the first inning on a triple, a hit and a run-down and those two runs were enough to win the game, for thereafter Way Thompson pitched magnificent baseball while a battery of pinch hitters and runners simply could not pull the regulars out a slump. Both Phil Conothan and Jack Hill, sophomores, came through as pinch hitters and possibly it was the latter's blow which won him a regular right field berth and added another left hander to the lineup.

Green Lineup Changed

When Dartmouth faced Yale the following day the lineup was again changed; this time Capt. Maskilieson relinquished his third base position to Buster Snow and Jack Hill took over the outfield duties. The change did not help, for Yale scored six runs in a wild first inning, and Bob Miller pitched all the way to the seventh inning when he retired with the bases full of Yales and nine runs over the plate in all. It was a nightmare for young Mr. Miller, and one of those days when nothing broke exactly right. The Green outhit Yale 11-8, but hits imply were not playing important parts on that particular Saturday—it was a succession of bases on balls, four wild pitches, four errors and eleven left on bases. And when Maskilieson took the mound for his league debut as a pitcher, it was all over but the shouting.

The Columbia double header was the high point of the month. A tremendous Green Key Prom crowd overflowed in right field—they hung on the football bleachers and packed the stands—and we yelled ourselves hoarse over WNBX while the crowd roared out its approval in the first game.

The situation in a nutshell was this- Columbia was leading the league and Ray White was the outstanding pitcher of the circuit. White had shut out Yale, Harvard and Princeton, and old timers scratched their heads trying to remember any college pitcher in the history of baseball who did that trick before. At this writing they can't recall any. He shut out Pennsylvania, and in all had hurled 24 scoreless innings in a row—up to the first inning of this particular game.

First Inning Jinx

The first inning jinx was at work when Frankie Spain threw the ball into the bleachers and a hit or two was sandwiched in to total two runs. But Dartmouth came back with one run when Jack Hill's fly scored Smith O'Brien from third.

Then Thompson and White settled down for a regular mound duel. The ice was broken in the sixth when Bill Clark tripled to score Rich and came home with the winning run on a passed ball. The credit for the win justly went to Thompson and he won the game despite fielding lapses and none too brilliant baseball behind him.

The surprise in store was in the second game when Jeff Tesreau sent Thompson back to the mound. Thompson two days before had pitched Dartmouth to a 16-6 victory over New Hampshire, pitching nearly seven innings of that game, and now he was going back for the second game of a double header after having won the first.

And he would have taken the second game had he had the support. Opposed to him was Bill Meisel, jokingly called "the other Columbia pitcher," and after Jake Edwards' triple with the bases full in the six cleared them, Ray White was sent back into the game. In the battle of strategy, you have to hand the palm to Andy Coakley, Columbia's coach, who saved his ace right hander for a situation just as this, for Dartmouth did nothing with him for the rest of the game.

When it was all over the Lion won the second game 7-5 and lost the first 3-2. With clean fielding Dartmouth would have taken both games, but the fielding was wretched.

Summing up, this 1933 Dartmouth baseball team has more potentiality than any team in the league but it simply has not been brought to the fore. The team hits well as a whole, but two or three positions are woefully weak. The outfield play is below standard, while the infield is ext remely unsettled. It is understood that there will be more drastic shakeups in the future, and the team that takes the field against Harvard will be considerably revamped.

Track Team Wins

Although the track team was swamped by Harvard in the annual dual meet, this year at Cambridge, the Big Green salv aged some glory by taking the triangular meet from Brown and Columbia in impressive fashion. In the case of the Harvard meet, when the Crimson scored over 90 points in taking their tenth straight, the performances were mediocre and only one record was broken.

But the triangular meet saw four records broken and thrills aplenty on Memorial Field before a huge crowd. Dartmouth scored in every event except the quarter and half mile runs and the Green total was 671/2 points against Columbia's 38 and Brown's 291/2.

Outstanding in the races was Bob Quimby, Green miler, who ran the distance in 4:23 3-5, a new meet record, and the performance of Frank Lepreau, Dartmouth's snowshoer turned track man, who ran the two mile in 9:41 3-5, also a meet record. It was Quimby's first varsity meet outdoors and he ran his competitors into the dirt in a well planned mile. He came from behind in the last 100 yards to nip Jack Keville of Columbia at the tape by inches for the best race of the afternoon.

Fred Curtis of Dartmouth tied for first in the pole vault with Joe Buonnano of Brown, football star, at is feet 514 inches, which was a new meet record. Incidentally Buonnano was the 1932 winner in this event and held the former record. The fourth record to fall was in the quarter mile when Kenneth Gilmore of Columbia led two team mates to the tape in the time of 49 4-5 seconds.

The only double winners in the meet were Al Hine of Dartmouth and Tom Gilbane of Brown. Hine took both dashes and the former Brown football captain won the shot put and the discus throw.

One fellow who deserves a great deal of notice is Norman Rand of the Green. Norman Rand was a legend at Salem High School in the days when Salem was winning intersectional football games, and when he came to Dartmouth a bright career was foreseen on the gridiron. But that old devil, ineligibility, came to the fore and he has been out of football. Now, this semester he is winning his spurs as a javelin thrower, and his toss of 193 feet 6 inches is no small throw for a 150 pound athlete. We will watch with interest this Fall as he puts on a Dartmouth football suit for the first time.

New Hockey Coach

Two sports have announced appointments for the coming year. Herbert C. Gill of the Choate School will be the new hockey coach, and Mr. Gill brings a wealth of schoolboy experience to Hanover next winter. Succeeding "Brainy" Bower, Coach Gill will take over an all veteran team whose only regret has been lack of ice. Mr. Gill's teams, including many of the Eastern prep schools, have won unusual success since the war, although a college venture will be new to him. He is a graduate of Michigan, and in addition to hockey is also an authority on football and baseball, playing on independent teams. The well wishes of Dartmouth alumni are extended to Choate School's loss and Dartmouth's gain.

An added incentive for the new coach is the recent announcement of a formation of an intercollegiate hockey league including Yale, Harvard, Princeton and Dartmouth. The trend has been toward a closer hockey relationship between these four schools for some time, and the next logical step would be an invitation to our Canadian brethren to join.

The freshman football coaching staff will again be headed by Pat Holbrook, whose first three years as chief of the first class teams resulted in no defeats. Assisting him will be Capt. Bill Hoffman of the 1932 varsity and Tiny Marsans, remembered by many for his jovial nature, good fellow- ship, and last year, for constructive coaching.

Other Sports

At this writing the tennis and golf teams have swung into their schedules which are necessarily behind the Spring sports in general due to the lateness of the season. With Willie Ogg leading the way, the golfers have defeated Boston College, Holy Cross and Harvard on the home links, with Hunter Hicks, Chester Birch, Stephen Ryder, O'Connell and Feinberg making the places on the team. Ogg's best round was shot in the Boston College match when he negotiated the home course in 68, an unusually low figure for this time of the year. His mates were gaining an 8-0 victory over the Boston team, following in the wake of a shutout against Holy Cross. Harvard took three matches but were defeated.

The tennis team has just started on a trip which swings through the entire Eastern sector of the country, but as yet no reports of matches are available. Baseball lost a good pitcher and tennis gained a fine player when Bob Roundey transferred his allegiance this month. The team is captained by Harold W. Smith, a Waterbury, Conn, student.

And Hail', Farewell

And so closes this saga of the Green Teams, which has been such a pleasant task to follow during the past five years with the MAGAZINE. The editors, always progressive in their outlook, institute a new sports system with the close of the year and a more consolidated and specific department will be inaugurated. Alumni contacts have been pleasant for this department and a sweeping thanks is offered to those who have written in.

Vanitas Vanitatum! Come, children, letus shut up the box and the puppets, forour play is played out.

Box scores of the league baseball games follow: DARTMOUTH PRINCETON ab bh po a ab bh po a O'Brien,lf 2 0 4 0 Neel,ss........ 3 0 33 Spain,ss 5 0 2 3 Borger,rf 5 1 4 0 Edwards,cf.. . 5 2 10 Bramlette,2 ..5 3 0 4 R. Morton,l.. 5 19 0 Purnell,lf 5 12 0 Snow,2 5 4 2 6 Kammer,cf... 5 1 00 Arthur,rf 3 0 10 Larsen,l 3 2 9 2 Maskilieson,3. 5 0 0 3 Follansbee,c. .3 0 5 2 Bennett,c 4 2 8 1 Knell,3 4 0 2 2 Thompson,p.. 4 ,1 0 3 Samuels,p 10 13 Wilson, p 10 0 0 Totals 38 10 27 16 Croul,p 10 0 1 Totals 36 8 27 17 Innings 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Dartmouth 0 0 4 1 1 5 0 0 o—ll0—11 Princeton 3 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0— 6 Runs batted in—R. Morton 5, Snow 3, Spain, Edwards, Bennett, Larsen 2, Purnell, Bramlette, Kammer. Home runs—Snow, Bennett, R. Morton, Larsen. Sacrifice hits—Larsen, Thompson. Stolen basesEdwards 2, O'Brien, Maskilieson, Snow 2, Borger, Kammer. Left on bases—Princeton 6, Dartmouth 7. Double play—Spain, Snow and R. Morton; Samuels, Neel and Larsen; Follansbee, Knell and Croul. Struck out—by Thompson 6, by Wilson 2, by Samuels 1, by Croul 1. Bases on balls—off Thompson 4, off Wilson 4, off Samuels 2. Hits—off Samuels 6 in 4 2-3; off Wilson 4 in 2 1-3; off Croul 0 in 2. Passed ball—Follansbee. Losing pitcher—Wilson. Time 2h 18m. Umpires— McDevitt and Wasner. DARTMOUTH PRINCETON ab bh po a ab bh po a O'Brien,lf 4 10 0 Neel,ss 3 0 4 4 Spain,ss 3 0 2 5 Borger,rf 4 0 10 Edwards,cf.. . 4 12 0 Bramlette,2.. 4 0 11 R. Morton,l.. 3 210 0 Kammer,p. . . 3 0 0 4 Conothan,l... 0 0 2 0 Larsen,l 3 1 8 0 Snow,rf 3 12 0 Purnell, cf.... 3 12 0 Rich,2,3 3 1 0 4 Follansbee,c.. 3 0 6 1 Maskilieson,3. 4 3 0 0 Knell,3 3 0 1 3 Keady,2 0 0 0 1 Gerhart,lf 3 0 11 Clark,c 4 2 9 0 Miller,p 4 2 0 1 Totals 29 224 14 Totals 32 13 27 11 Innings 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Dartmouth 4 0 33 1 0 0 0 0 11 Princeton 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Runs batted in—Snow 3, Maskilieson 3, Rich, Miller, Clark, R. Morton. Two base hits—Clark 2, Maskilieson. Stolen bases—Edwards, O'Brien, Rich. Sacrifice— Snow. Double play—Keady, Spain and Conothan. Left on bases—Dartmouth 8, Princeton 3. Bases on balls—by Miller 1, by Kammer 3. Struck out—by Miller 9, by Kammer 4. Hit by pitcher—by Kammer 4 (Spain 2, Edwards, Snow). Time lh 48m. Umpires— Kelleher and Couture. PENNSYLVANIA DARTMOUTH ab bh po a ab bh po a Shanahan,cf. . 5 2 0 0 O'Brien, 1f... . 4 0 10 Hendler,lf.... 4 0 0 0 Spain,ss 4 1 1 6 Hemeon,rf. . . 4 2 0 0 Ed wards, cf. . . 4 12 1 Kellett,ss .. . . 3 11 6 R. Morton,l.. 4 1 13 0 Powel,2 4 0 2 1 Snow,rf 3 2 0 0 Trerotola,c. . . 4 0 6 0 Rich,2 1 0 2 4 Freeman,l... 4 0 17 1 *Conothan. . . 110 0 Jones,3 4 1 0 1 Keady,2 0 0 10 Jackson,p. ... 4 3 17 tMiller. .. .. . 10 0 0 Chesnulevich,2 0 0 1 1 Totals 36 927 16 Maskilieson,3 2 0 1 4 fßoisseau.... 1 0 00 Clark,c 2 0 3 1 ITHill 110 0 Bennett, c.... 1 1 10 §Stangle 0 0 0 0 Thompson,p .4013 Totals 33 8 27 20 *Batted for Rich in the sixth. ßatted for Keady in the eighth. Batted for Maskilieson in the ninth. ¶Batted for Clark in the seventh. §Ran for Bennett in the ninth. Innings 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Pennsylvania 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0— 3 Dartmouth 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0— 2 Runs batted in—Hemeon, Jackson, Snow, Conothan. Two base hits—Jones, Conothan, Edwards. Three base hit—Shanahan. Sacrifice hits—Kellett, Maskilieson, Snow, Thompson. Stolen base—Hemeon. Left on bases —Pennsylvania 7, Dartmouth 8. Bases on balls—off Jackson 1. Struck out—by Jackson 4, by Thompson 1. Passed ball—Clark. Time lh 59m. Umpires, Gardella and Couture.

YALE DARTMOUTH ab bh po a ab bh po a Williamson,3. 5 12 2 O'Brien, lf... . 3 10 1 Kimball,!.... 3 1100 Spain,ss 2 0 2 3 Woodlock,ss .4114 *Conothan. . . 1 0 00 R. Parker,cf. . 4 1 2 1 Edwards,cf . . 3 2 5 0 Furculowe,rf.. 3 12 0 Miller,p 2 0 0 4 McKensie,lf. . 5 2 0 0 Maskilieson,p 2 10 2 Fletcher,2 ... 2 1 36 Snow,3 . . 5 2 2 2 Klein,c 0 0 7 OR. Morton,l .5 0 10 0 G. Parker, p..4 0 0 0 Hill,rf 3 2 0 0 Rich,2 4 2 3 2 Totals 30 8 27 13 Clark,c.. 4 15 1 Totals 34 11 27 15 *Batted for Spain in the ninth. Innings 1 23456789 Yale 6 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 o—9 Dartmouth 0 0 1 0 1 2 0 0 0— 4 Runs batted in—Williamson, R. Parker, McKensie, Fletcher, Edwards, Rich. Two base hits-—McKensie 2, Williamson, Furculowe, Edwards, Rich. Sacrifices— Woodlock, G. Parker, Klein, Fletcher, Edwards. Stolen bases—Woodlock, Fletcher, Williamson, Edwards, O'Brien. Double plays—Woodlock, Fletcher and Kimball 2. Left on bases—Yale 12, Dartmouth 11. Bases on balls—off G. Parker 4, off Miller 2, off Maskilieson 1. Struck out—by G. Parker 4, by Miller 1. Hits—off Miller 5 in 6 2-3; off Maskilieson 3 in 2 1-3. Wild Pitches—Miller 4. Hit by pitcher—by G. Parker 3 (Spain 2, Edwards); by Miller 1 (Woodlock). Losing pitcher—Miller. Umpires—Kelleher and Couture. Time 2h 23 m. (FIRST GAME) DARTMOUTH COLUMBIA ab bh po a ab bh po a O'Brien,lf.... 2 0 2 0 Siergiej,lf.... 3 1 00 Edwards,cf .. 3 0 10 Linehan,ss ... 3 0 2 0 Hill,rf 2 0 1 0 Brominski,c. .3211 Snow,3 3 1 2 3 Matal,2 3 1 13 R. Morton,l .2 0 9 1 Rivero,cf 3 0 3 0 Rich,2 2 1 1 3 Buchanan,rf .3110 Spain,ss 1 1 3 1 Seguin,3 2 0 0 3 Clark,c 2 12 1 McDowell,l. . 3 0 10 0 Thompson,p .2 0 0 4 White,p 3 0 0 3 Totals 19 421 13 Totals 26 518 10 Innings ...1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Dartmouth. 1 0 0 0 2 0 x 3 Columbia 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 Runs batted in—Hill, Clark. Stolen base—O'Brien. Left on bases—Dartmouth 6, Columbia 5. Struck out— by White 1, by Thompson 1. Bases on balls—off Thompson 1. Hit by pitcher—by White (O'Brien). Passed ball—Brominski. Time lh 45m. Umpires— Kelleher and Couture. (SECOND GAME) COLUMBIA DARTMOUTH ab bh po a ab bh po a Siergiej,lf 4 1 0 0 O'Brien,lf.... 1 0 20 Linehan,ss ... 3 1 23 Edwards,cf . . 3 1 21 Brominski,c. .3 0 6 0 Hill,rf 3 0 4 0 Matal,2 33 3 2 Snow,3 4 1 1 1 Rivero,cf 2 1 3 OR. Morton,l. .4 0 5 0 Buchanan,rf .3110 Rich,2 4 2 2 1 Seguin,3 3 1 12 Spain,ss 2 2 0 1 McDowell,l.; 3 2 4 2 Clark,c 3 112 Meisel,p 3 1 11 Thompson,p .2012 White,p 0 0 0 0 *Conothan... 0 0 0 0 fKeady 0 0 0 0 Totals 27 11 2110 Maskilieson,p 0 0 0 0 Totals 26 7 18 8 *Batted for Thompson in the sixth. fßan for Conothan in the sixth. Innings 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Columbia 0 1 3 0 3 0 x 7 Dartmouth 0 1 0 0 0 4 0 5 Runs batted in—McDowell 4, Buchanan, Siergiej, Edwards 3, Spain, Clark. Stolen Bases—O'Brien, Clark, Brominski. Two base hits —Snow, Rich, Clark, Buchanan. Three base hits—Rich, Edwards. Sacrifice hits—Matal, Rivero, Spain. Left on bases— Columbia 6, Dartmouth 7. Bases on balls—off Thompson 1, off Maskilieson 1, off Meisel 5. Struck out—by Meisel 3, by White 1. Hits—off Thompson 10 in 5; off Maskilieson 1 in 1; off Meisel 7 in 5 2-3; off White 0 in 1 1-3. Wild pitches—Thompson 2. Winning pitcher —Meisel. Losing pitcher—Thompson. Time lh 47m. Umpires—Kelleher and Couture.

Dartmouth's undefeated lacrosse team which captured the mythical New England championship by sweeping a seven-game schedule, including the strong Harvard, Yale and Springfield clubs. Left to right, Front row: Coach Dent, Halvorsen, West, Allen, Donovan! Frankel, Captain Shafer, Krans, Shea, Britten, Dickson, Hitchcock, McMullen: Back row: Asst. Manager Bryant, Dyer, Sweeney, Klinefelter, Ley, Hinman, Keenan, Harrison, Ramsey, Wright, Knott, Jacoby, Swander.

A 1 Hine, Dartmouth sprinter, winning the 100-yard dash in the triangular track meet with Brown and Columbia. Second place went to Lattimore of Columbia (second from left) and third place, to Spinney (third from left).