November 8, 2000
From the
Editor
A few months back Edgar
"Geg" Buttenheim '44 mailed to PAW's office a copy of
a program cover and a ticket from the 1930 Princeton-Yale football
game. It was a nostalgic souvenir, but what was most remarkable
was the price on the ticket: $5.
That's exactly the price
fans pay for a game this year, 70 years later. If the cost of a
ticket had kept up with inflation, a seat to watch the Tigers today
in the new Princeton Stadium would be running in the neighborhood
of $50.
But from PAW reports
of that 1930 contest, the lucky holder of that ticket, Geg's sister
Martha, got her money's worth that November day. The Yale
game was the last of
an unimpressive season that saw Princeton start by beating a weak
Amherst squad, then fall in succession to Brown, Cornell, and Navy
before battling Chicago to a 0-0 tie. The Tigers again lost to Lehigh
before facing off against the Elis.
The Yale match was head
coach Bill Roper 1902's last game as coach after 17 years - years
broken up by a one-year coaching stint at the University of Missouri;
by a break to earn a law degree, serve in the Wilson administration,
and become a Philadelphia councilman; and by the college football
hiatus brought on by World War I - and his retirement was enough
of an epochal event to merit two two-page tributes, including a
long, thoughtful essay by legendary literature professor Christian
Gauss.
Gauss's essay was followed
by a five-page, breathless account of the game against Yale. Though
Princeton lost, 10-7, Harpur Allen Gosnell '12 wrote, "A game
was played in Palmer Stadium on November 15 which was without doubt
one of the most astounding and soul-stirring in all Princeton-Yale
football history. A Princeton team, beaten to pieces week after
week ever since the opener, suddenly in the final crisis became
a first-class football team." Before a delirious stadiumful,
Princeton's defense held the superior Yale team to a single touchdown
and a field goal, and the Tiger offense managed a touchdown and
even threatened from as close as Yale's four-yard-line with a few
minutes left, before being stopped on downs.
This year's game against
Brown, played October 14, held echoes of that fall day 70 years
ago. It wasn't the coach's last season, but his first. The house
wasn't packed, but Princeton was a decided underdog. The Tigers
thrilled their surprised fans with their inspired play and trounced
the visitors, scoring more than 50 points for the first time since
1991 (or, as the freshman WPRB announcer put it, since he was in
the third grade). And the seats were five bucks.
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