Brown and White Vol. 18 no. 15 |
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brown and white takes easy game from the tartan lehigh easily defeated carnegie tech last saturday by a score of 25-0 the visitors line was weak and lax and cox found no difficulty in going through for long gains time and time again the best feature of the game in the eyes of the students was the fine return to form shown by the back field cox plunged through the line for ten twenty and even thirty yard gains while dunn and flick . continually skirted the ends for substantial gains straight foot ball was used throughout almost the entire game the game in detail : schmucker kicked off to bailey and the latter got to his thirty-live yard line harwig punted and when taylor fumbled black recovered the ball on carnegie's 30 yard line lehigh was unable to gain ten yards and the ball went to the visitors cann took schmucker's punt and reached carne gie's 50 yard line goyne gained three through the line and then a forward pass touched the ground and lehigh was penalized 5 yards harwig punted to blanchard and rouse tackled the lat ter on the 15 yard line schmucker took five through the line and then goyne intercepted an onside kick and fell on the ball on his 45 yard line goyne went through the line for six yards but carnegie stiffened up and forced lehigh to surrender the ball a for ward pass failed to gain for carnegie and when another was tried bailey jumped up and got the ball in the cen tre of the field harwig punted to blanchard and rouse tackled the latter on the 30 yard line a forward pass netted carnegie 20 yards before wood got the runner schmucker tried to punt but black par tially punted and bailey fell on the ball knox took five through the line and goyne reeled of three more around right end during the remainder of the quarter neither goal line was in danger and the period ended with the ball in carnegie's possession on their 20 yard line in the second quarter dunn cox flick and price composed a new back field while r wood replaced bailey at end the visitors put the ball in play on their 20 yard line taylor went through tackle for two yards and a fake kick gained seven more a forward pass failed to gain and it was lehigh's ball on carnegie's 40 yard mark price gave the ball to cox and the big fellow went through the line for 30 yards on the next two plays cox carried the ball ten yards for a touchdown price fail ed to kick the goal schmucker kicked off to flick but the latter fumbled price getting the ball and reaching his live yard line cox took ten through the line and flick circled dyer for 17 yards dunn failed to gain but cox bucked the line for 11 yards flick went around dyer for 10 more and then dunn was thrown back two yards by lloyd cox gained 23 yards on three line plays and dunn took six around kessclman cox's seven yards and i hick's short gain put the canal zone meeting of the american institute of mining engineers continued on second page backsheesh that one meets in the mediterranean is a relief there is some begging of course but we have met none that was offensive on the contrary as we were going through morro castle at havana — a uniformed cuban soldier on duty stopped our party and handed out notices printed in english read ing notice to the visitors of this post no charge is made for the privi lege of seeing this fort the pass which is given to visit morro cas tle is free of all charges the sol diers of this post are instructed not to make any charge for information or services rendered to visitors any person or soldier who makes any charge for information or oth erwise will be reported to the com manding officer beware of im postors luis more y del solar major coast artillery commanding officer mrs drinker and i are seated at the captain's table with a very pleasant company lam sitting be tween mr david w brunton of denver the eminent western mining expert — president of the institute and mr david williams ex-owner of the iron age at this table are also seated dr r w raymond mr edward w parker statistician in charge of mineral resources of the united states geological survey mrs williams and mrs parker and mr william l saunders president of the in gersoll-rand rock-drill company of new york it is this company which has been so kind in contri butions of mining machinery to our mining department mr saunders is eminently a good-na tured man i tested this trait of his last spring when prof eckfeldt handed me a letter to him from the manager of the company suggest ing that if we were through with our experiments on an electric-air rock-drill they had lent us they would like to have it returned i went down to see mr saunders to learn whether we could not hold on to the drill and the general manager mr elder who was called in explained that they want ed the drill returned as they had since this specimen was loaned to us added various improvements so that they did not feel that the drill properly represented their present product kingston jamaica october 30th 1910 to the editors of brown and white — we reached here early yesterday morning a beautiful harbor with a back-ground of cloud-capped mountains is is easy for even the lands-man to appreciate how satis factory a refuge and rallying-place this was for the buccaneers of old ■— from which to prepare — as we too are now preparing for a de scent on the spanish main but ours is a very pacific expe dition and the abstruse and learned papers that are being read at the institute meetings held aboard savor little of buccaneering days there have been so far three ses sions held for the reading of pa pers the first was opened by mr w a l>.throp lehigh 75 with a most interesting paper on the isolation of the old summit hill mine fire with black-board illus tration followed by s d warri ner lehigh 90 with an account of a fire in the calumet and hecla mine when he was superintend ent of the mine in 1900 and then by a general discussion of mine fires — their occurrence and the various modes of combatting them participated in by a number of members from the anthracite and bituminous coal fields — from the west — and from south africa — the discussion lasting over into and through the entire time of a sec ond meeting the third meeting was given up entirely to our prof richards very able paper on the electric fur nace production of pig iron in sweden a subject that attracted general and great interest prof richards spoke without notes and showed a most thorough and prac tical knowledge of the subject on the conclusion of his address ques tions of all kinds were fired at him from all sides all of which were answered without hesitation and with a scientific and practical grasp of the whole subject studied out by him during his visit to sweden last summer that made a most fav orable impression this trip has been exceedingly well organized by the officers of the institute and the various land trips have been perfectly managed i wrote you of our visit to havana — and i can now give you some of our impressions of jamaica the freedom here in the west indies from the incessant demands for the brown and white t etutr ttt\tti7""e t pqtt*v bethlehem pa tuesday november 15 1910 organ recital given in chapel a second letter from dr drinker vol xviii excellent program rendered by mr shields the organ recital given by mr shields the university organist friday morning in the chapel came to an untimely end in the middle of the program owing to an unexpect ed stoppage of the organ but those who were present were treated to some very fine music in the five numbers of the program which were played mr shields has an excellent command of the possibili ties of the organ which have been greatly extended by the recent re construction the volume and the tone quality of the instrument have been so greatly improved that the university can now pride itself on having one of the finest organs in the state it is to be hoped that mr shields will make another at tempt under more auspicious cir cumstances a few particulars about the or gan may uc ox interest fii<s action of the organ has been changed from tracker and tracker-pneumat ic to electro-pneumatic throughout the number of stops remains un changed but thirteen touch buttons operate them in combinations a crescendo pedal throws in the regis ters according to their strength and another pedal gives the full power of the organ the wind is supplied by a thrge horse-power organ blower and the pipes num ber 2500 the program was as follows : fugue in e flat st anne . back largo handel offertoire in f minor salome wedding hymn woodman chanson dv matin -> elaar chanson dv nuit . ) ' litany every soul at rest is sleeping schubert overture william tell . . rossini y m c a meeting on sunday evening the y m c a was treated to a very interest ing talk by dr j h hildebrand he is a man who strongly appeals to all college men being senior class president of the class of 1903 of lj of p stroke on the crew a member of the gym team and of the honorary societies phi beta kappa and sigma xi pie ex plained that spiritual life is the mo tive in all men's activities and it is not characterized by a hermit's life we need men with spirit in this life and the appreciative the lighting and the courageous spirits are what will help us succeed the meeting was led by thompson 12 continued on fourth page lehigh defeats carnegie tech no 15 cheering practice every day
Object Description
Title | Brown and White Vol. 18 no. 15 |
Date | 1910-11-15 |
Month | 11 |
Day | 15 |
Year | 1910 |
Type | Newspaper |
DPIX | 400 |
DPIY | 400 |
Source Repository | Lehigh University |
Coverage | United States, Pennsylvania, Lehigh, South Bethlehem |
LCCN | 07019854 |
Source Repository Code | PBL |
Digital Responsible Institution | Lehigh University |
Digital Responsible Institution Code | PBL |
Issue/Edition Pattern | Semiweekly |
Title Essay | Published twice a week during the college year by the students of Lehigh University |
Description
Title | Brown and White Vol. 18 no. 15 |
Date | 1910-11-15 |
Month | 11 |
Day | 15 |
Year | 1910 |
Page | 1 |
Type | Page |
DPIX | 400 |
DPIY | 400 |
FileSizeK | 2052469 Bytes |
FileName | 191011150001.jp2 |
Source Repository | Lehigh University |
Coverage | United States, Pennsylvania, Lehigh, South Bethlehem |
LCCN | 07019854 |
Source Repository Code | PBL |
Digital Responsible Institution | Lehigh University |
Digital Responsible Institution Code | PBL |
Issue/Edition Pattern | Semiweekly |
Title Essay | Published twice a week during the college year by the students of Lehigh University |
FullText |
brown and white takes easy game from the tartan lehigh easily defeated carnegie tech last saturday by a score of 25-0 the visitors line was weak and lax and cox found no difficulty in going through for long gains time and time again the best feature of the game in the eyes of the students was the fine return to form shown by the back field cox plunged through the line for ten twenty and even thirty yard gains while dunn and flick . continually skirted the ends for substantial gains straight foot ball was used throughout almost the entire game the game in detail : schmucker kicked off to bailey and the latter got to his thirty-live yard line harwig punted and when taylor fumbled black recovered the ball on carnegie's 30 yard line lehigh was unable to gain ten yards and the ball went to the visitors cann took schmucker's punt and reached carne gie's 50 yard line goyne gained three through the line and then a forward pass touched the ground and lehigh was penalized 5 yards harwig punted to blanchard and rouse tackled the lat ter on the 15 yard line schmucker took five through the line and then goyne intercepted an onside kick and fell on the ball on his 45 yard line goyne went through the line for six yards but carnegie stiffened up and forced lehigh to surrender the ball a for ward pass failed to gain for carnegie and when another was tried bailey jumped up and got the ball in the cen tre of the field harwig punted to blanchard and rouse tackled the latter on the 30 yard line a forward pass netted carnegie 20 yards before wood got the runner schmucker tried to punt but black par tially punted and bailey fell on the ball knox took five through the line and goyne reeled of three more around right end during the remainder of the quarter neither goal line was in danger and the period ended with the ball in carnegie's possession on their 20 yard line in the second quarter dunn cox flick and price composed a new back field while r wood replaced bailey at end the visitors put the ball in play on their 20 yard line taylor went through tackle for two yards and a fake kick gained seven more a forward pass failed to gain and it was lehigh's ball on carnegie's 40 yard mark price gave the ball to cox and the big fellow went through the line for 30 yards on the next two plays cox carried the ball ten yards for a touchdown price fail ed to kick the goal schmucker kicked off to flick but the latter fumbled price getting the ball and reaching his live yard line cox took ten through the line and flick circled dyer for 17 yards dunn failed to gain but cox bucked the line for 11 yards flick went around dyer for 10 more and then dunn was thrown back two yards by lloyd cox gained 23 yards on three line plays and dunn took six around kessclman cox's seven yards and i hick's short gain put the canal zone meeting of the american institute of mining engineers continued on second page backsheesh that one meets in the mediterranean is a relief there is some begging of course but we have met none that was offensive on the contrary as we were going through morro castle at havana — a uniformed cuban soldier on duty stopped our party and handed out notices printed in english read ing notice to the visitors of this post no charge is made for the privi lege of seeing this fort the pass which is given to visit morro cas tle is free of all charges the sol diers of this post are instructed not to make any charge for information or services rendered to visitors any person or soldier who makes any charge for information or oth erwise will be reported to the com manding officer beware of im postors luis more y del solar major coast artillery commanding officer mrs drinker and i are seated at the captain's table with a very pleasant company lam sitting be tween mr david w brunton of denver the eminent western mining expert — president of the institute and mr david williams ex-owner of the iron age at this table are also seated dr r w raymond mr edward w parker statistician in charge of mineral resources of the united states geological survey mrs williams and mrs parker and mr william l saunders president of the in gersoll-rand rock-drill company of new york it is this company which has been so kind in contri butions of mining machinery to our mining department mr saunders is eminently a good-na tured man i tested this trait of his last spring when prof eckfeldt handed me a letter to him from the manager of the company suggest ing that if we were through with our experiments on an electric-air rock-drill they had lent us they would like to have it returned i went down to see mr saunders to learn whether we could not hold on to the drill and the general manager mr elder who was called in explained that they want ed the drill returned as they had since this specimen was loaned to us added various improvements so that they did not feel that the drill properly represented their present product kingston jamaica october 30th 1910 to the editors of brown and white — we reached here early yesterday morning a beautiful harbor with a back-ground of cloud-capped mountains is is easy for even the lands-man to appreciate how satis factory a refuge and rallying-place this was for the buccaneers of old ■— from which to prepare — as we too are now preparing for a de scent on the spanish main but ours is a very pacific expe dition and the abstruse and learned papers that are being read at the institute meetings held aboard savor little of buccaneering days there have been so far three ses sions held for the reading of pa pers the first was opened by mr w a l>.throp lehigh 75 with a most interesting paper on the isolation of the old summit hill mine fire with black-board illus tration followed by s d warri ner lehigh 90 with an account of a fire in the calumet and hecla mine when he was superintend ent of the mine in 1900 and then by a general discussion of mine fires — their occurrence and the various modes of combatting them participated in by a number of members from the anthracite and bituminous coal fields — from the west — and from south africa — the discussion lasting over into and through the entire time of a sec ond meeting the third meeting was given up entirely to our prof richards very able paper on the electric fur nace production of pig iron in sweden a subject that attracted general and great interest prof richards spoke without notes and showed a most thorough and prac tical knowledge of the subject on the conclusion of his address ques tions of all kinds were fired at him from all sides all of which were answered without hesitation and with a scientific and practical grasp of the whole subject studied out by him during his visit to sweden last summer that made a most fav orable impression this trip has been exceedingly well organized by the officers of the institute and the various land trips have been perfectly managed i wrote you of our visit to havana — and i can now give you some of our impressions of jamaica the freedom here in the west indies from the incessant demands for the brown and white t etutr ttt\tti7""e t pqtt*v bethlehem pa tuesday november 15 1910 organ recital given in chapel a second letter from dr drinker vol xviii excellent program rendered by mr shields the organ recital given by mr shields the university organist friday morning in the chapel came to an untimely end in the middle of the program owing to an unexpect ed stoppage of the organ but those who were present were treated to some very fine music in the five numbers of the program which were played mr shields has an excellent command of the possibili ties of the organ which have been greatly extended by the recent re construction the volume and the tone quality of the instrument have been so greatly improved that the university can now pride itself on having one of the finest organs in the state it is to be hoped that mr shields will make another at tempt under more auspicious cir cumstances a few particulars about the or gan may uc ox interest fii |
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