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Evenly Pitted Harvard and Yale Sextets Meet in Garden Tonight

Series Has Gone into Third Game With Overtime Periods for Last Three Years

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

Two of the most evenly matched teams Harvard and Yale have ever produced will meet in the Garden this evening to determine the Intercollegiate hockey championship. It is the fourth successive year that the teams have had to go into a third game to determine the series.

Tradition has been maintained so far this year and there seems little reason to suspect that it will be overturned tonight. Both teams are in perfect physical condition except for Dick Dow and both have outplayed the other.

Possibly the Crimson has hit its real stride and can again skate over the Elis but the past has shown Harvard and Yale particularly favorable to the underdog. And Yale is in that favored position.

In 1932, the teams played 80 minutes to end in a 4-4 tie to split the series; in 1933 Harvard won in overtime on Bob Saltonstall's goal; and last year Captain Joe Gilligan scored for Yale in an extra period.

Neither team has changed men or line-ups so the game once more depends on the gods, the coaches, and the players' digestions. Moseley's line will start for Harvard, followed by the "H" line and then Ford's attackers. The Elis will begin with Colby, Stoddard, and Mills once more and replace with Gagarin, Shepard, and Rodd.

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