Moseley is the widely heralded "hulahipped back" who is one of the most elusive carriers Harvard has had in years. His particular type of running has suffered peculiarly from the lack of adequate blocking provided by his teammates.
Replacements
Oakes, far less experienced, proved in the Brown game that he is a passing genius and a hard-driving runner. Quarter back George Blackwood and full back Bill Watt are two more players likely to see service as replacements.
In the line the situation is far more undecided, with both tackle positions and one of the guard posts subject to change without notice. Jim Maser will probably be able to start as one tackle and Blimp Spring is slated to be the other. Jim Gaffney will definitely be one guard and young Joe Nee will probably be given a chance at the veteran Charlie Kessler's post as the other guard.
Seeing Stars
Against them will be a Princeton backfield that will be studded with such stars as LeVan, Constable, and Sandback, a line that contains Stoess, Montgomery, Weller, and Ritter, and ends such as Lea.
All told it is a bad situation for an admittedly crippled Crimson team. As studied from the Princeton angle Harvard's chief hope is that a long career as a victor will have rubbed off the fire from the Tiger attack.
Prior to last Saturday's 26-0 annihilation of the Navy, Princeton seemed to be definitely off color. Then Fritz Crisler brought his team back into top form for that game. The problem thus is; has he been able to keep it there during the intervening week?