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34 NGTON, D. €. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 20, 1928 SPORTS. Fine Lot of Grid Games in Fast : Big Ten Ends Season With Bright Schedule QUALITY KEYNOTE FOUR TEAMS SEEK s OF SEABOARD LIST THE EVENING STAR. WASHI ROCKNE GIVES A REST TO OVERWORKED STARS| SOUTH BEND, Ind, November 20 (& —Knute Rockne has again ordered the rest cure for his shocked “shock troops” of Notre Dame. 'rge Ramblers, who have had to {15 DEATHS THIS SEASON FROM FOOT BALL GAMES NEW YORK, November 20 (#).—The | | death yesterday of Mark Carey, Fol- | | 1ansbee, W. Va., high school player, was | | the fifteenth fatal injury of the current | 1929 A. A. U. EVENTS WIDELY SCATTERED By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, November 20 —Widely ‘Warner Displays a New Play That Starts Tongues Wagging | By the Assoclated Press. BLACKWELL, Okla., November 20.-- Yale-Harvard, Carnegie-New | | ! Babe Hunt of Ponca City, Okla., who York U. Struggles Head Imposing Array. DY HERBERT W. BARKER, Associated Dress Sports Wr | Tsw YORK, November 20.—Qual- keynote of the Eastern college foot ball schedule this week Less than half the usual num- | are such attractions as the Yale-Har- | vard, Carnegie Tech-New York Uni- Princeton - Navy. Nebraska- | of the other major college saving their final battle for " Then will be held and Columbia, sburgh and Penn Sta Washington and Jef- Not even s important a geme as between Carnegte and New York ake much interest awa Havon. Both teams have been tossed nbout a bit rudely; neither has the semblance of a claim to any champlon- the Yale | For Ha on will be al success if it wins. same is true tory over Princeton delights only a little less than one over Harvard. | What-ever grip the Yale-Harvard | many an eager eve Will be cast in the general direction of Pittsburgh when Chick Meehan's Violets of New York clse yet has done—stop the rush of Carnegle’s husky Tartans. If the Violets can offer the outstand- negie can counter With a better all- around backfield of Harpster, Karcis. Letzelter and Moorehead, not 't Ted Rosenzweig. The line to advance dope, will be ext matched. with the edge. At Philadelphia another of the few | en Eastern teams, Princeton, Navy, which has a victory over to show for its battles with major op- | ponents. Although the Tigers un- doubtedly reached their peak for the heavy ones, to finish the season un- beaten, although tied twice. Nebraska's powerful Cornhuskers, week when pitted against the Pan- thers of Pittsburgh, will see at West | Foint what they can do with Biff | geason was suffered 10 days ago at the hands of Not Da; The Army | looms as a favorite, in view of ! ity rather than quantity is the ber of games are on the list, but there and Georgetown-Fordham. { between Pennsylvania n and West Vir Harvard duel at New ship honors. Yet 75,000 will throng | to a lesser degree at Yale, where a vic- battle has on the public in general, see whether they can do what no one ing scoring back in Ken Strong, Car- | tion that brilliant ball-car longing to the horde from Pittsburgh. lvania and a tie with Michigan Yale game, they will be favorites, and who stumbled around at Lincoln last | Jones' Cadets, whose single reverse this | the fact | that Nebracka made not a first down | in the sccreless tie with Pittsburgh. Georgetown, beaten only by Carnegie, #hould defeat Fordham by a score ap- proximating the 38-to-0 victory the Washington team pounded out last Among the other major eolleges, | Holy Bucknell and La- | avy favorites over . Providence, Dickinson pectively. year. Brown, REINSTATES JIM MULLEN CHICAGO, November 20 (#).—Jim Mui Chicago’s leading boxing pro- moter. was back in good standing with the Athletic Commission today, expensively equipped Loop gym- nasium has been taken over by Dave | Barry. former Canadian lightweight | State re-open the gymnasium to- § will give special attention s suspended by the com- | to pay the customary following ‘the recent Dav ne De Vos bout. He explained to pav because he was busy | the political campaign. His gy im was closed by credit he forgo in na Hagen Uses Are ‘ Swing on Putt PLACES WALTER HAGEM SLADE aE N FROMT é_ *POP * WARNER Coach Glenn Warner's new formation B (upper right), providing for two | acks and no quarterback, is a main topic of foot ball discussion on the Pacific | fulib: Coast. Bob Sims is one of the Stanford backs figuring prominently in the play. | BY RUSSELL J. NEWLAND, | Associated Press Sports Writer. SAN FRANCISCO. November 20.— Formation “B” is mystifying West- ern foot ball elevens this season— meaning that the alert mind of Glenn Scobey Warner is function- ing_as actively as ever. The noted Stanford University coach has dug deep into his bag of foot ball tricks to develop formation “B.” Always an originalist, he has created an offensive allack that is puzaing the opposition The newest brain child of War- ner’s is the resuit of three years’ experimenting. Those who know their foot ball say i promises to rev- olutionize the game in the sense that rival coaches are certain to adopt the formation. Based on deceplion and nourished on power, formation “B” has touched off the imagination of even the most hardened critics. To the ordinary observer, “Pop” seemingly has taken the razzle-dazzle of the medicine man. mixed it with the hocus-pocus of the sideshow magician, and added a dash of his own wizardry to pour out on the gridiron as puzzling an attack as the game has ever known. Spe¢ifically. Warner has created a new line-up formation for his team on offense. The old-time quar- | (1655 4P FULLBACK Q BATH FULLBACK SIMS | Stanford Halthack ® back position is done away with, Two fullbacks function. instead. They are the key men around which revolves a series of reverses, double reverses, fake reverses, passes and fake passes. All are masked play that is, contrived to keep the ball hidden from opposing players until the man carrying it hits his hole. The new formation has a short and long side of the line, with four men always stationed to the right of the snapper-back. An end and a guard flank the snapper-back on the left side. On the right are a guard, two tackles and an end. The two halfbacks are posted to the rear and slightly outside the ends. A close-up fullback stands directly in back of the center man in the line. the back fullback is in a direct line with the snapper-back. ‘The fullbacks are the “Big Berthas™ in the system—both In size and im- portance—and every. play of War- ner's starts from the same forma- tion. Twenty vears or so ago Coach Warner hid a foot ball under the shirt. of one of his halfbacks at the Carlisie Indian school and won a game from Harvard.. The foot bail rules committee got busy at once. ‘Pop” has kept them busy ever since. JEWISH CENTER HOST T0 BASE BALL MEN | Members of the Jewish Community | Center and their friends have planned an interesting and varied program for tomorrow night, when Walter Jjohnson, new manager of the Nationals, will be their guest at a stag affair to be held in his honor at the center Fred Pelzman, master of ceremonies. has arranged to have Wesley Eddy and Jack Donshue appear in the feature | entertainment numbers. Several of the most prominent local boxers are to ap- | pear in exhibition bouts ! Among those accepting invitations in | addition to Johnson are Clark Griffith, | Joe Judge, Lou Little, Bobby Reeves, Ed Evnon, Mike Martin, Sam Rice, Billy | Smith and Gerland Braxton of the Washington base ball club, LOUISIANA STATE GAME IS SCHEDULED BY DUKE DURHAM, N. C.. November 20 (4).— Louisiana State University, one of the | undefeated conference members to date | this season, has been added to the Duke | | foot ball schedule for 1920. The Tigers | will be played in the stadium now being built at Duke, November 9. | ‘The new structure, which it is believed | will be completed before the season opens next Fall, will seat 35,000 persons. & g WILLIAMS WILL COACH. PRO BASKET LEAGUE LISTS 168 CONTESTS NEW YORK, November 20 (#)-—The schedule of the reorganized American | asket Ball League lists 168 games to | e played by this season. Each team will play three home | games and three on the road against| each other club, according to the sched- | ule announced today. The first part of the split season opens November 22 with New York playing at Rochester, and closes Feb- ruary 10. The second half opens Feb- ruary 11 and continues until March 24, including 56 games, half as many as the first section. Four teams play their first game November 23. Brooklyn opens at Tren- | ton and Fort Wayne at Cleveland. Pat- | erson swings into action November 24| on its home floor against Rochester, while Chicago does not start until No- vember 28, when It goes to Fort Wayne. Several of Paterson's home games will be played at Kingston, N. Y. 1929 PRO GOLF TOURNEY | AWARDED TO CALIFORNIA CLEVELAND, November 20 (#)— Santa Barbara, Calif., was selected as the site for the 1929 title tournament of the Professional Golfers' Assoclation of America, by 30 members of the as- soclation meeting here. Although the definite date was not set it was decided to hold the event its eight members | Tuesday | tion alone. | separated sections of the American ath- | |letic realm will have a chance to pl: | host to one or more of the vario championships of the Amateur Athletic | Union in the coming year. Of the more fmportant events, | women's senior outdoor swimming meet | goes to Honolulu, the marathon and senior boxing to Boston and the senior | and junior track and field to Denver. | Awards made today at the A, A. U. con- vention, together with date when speci- fled. follow: | Men's senior and junior outdoor track and field —Denver University. July 3. 4 and 3 Men’s tenfor indoor track and field-No by epted by New York. nior and feld—No | indoor track oven Boston. April 19. (Annual Bos- the | try, 10-mile run and | an Association. prob- T countrs—Ohio Association. prababiy Cincinnatl F-mile walk (néw event)—Penn A. C.. Philacelphin | Nenfor Boving - Boston Juniar boxing —Chicago. Men's hasket. ball—<ansas City. Women's baskel hall - Wichita. Senior outdeor women's swimming | iy Hono- 1 ! - ‘nior_indoar women's swimming-—Wom- long-distance en's A C.. Chica | Women's mfl!b’v ",\‘\mrlflnr\n swim- ;"':‘u‘-n-:”:“‘fim‘m”‘n-lmmlnx No bids. st | | °Pffens indaor swimming—Metropolitan As- | o mpnstios—No award as yet. i | Sports et to be reached by the board | of governors in making the awards are | unior and_senior hand ball, women's | attdoor and indoor track and field, tug of war, wrestling, weight lifting. volley | ball, indoor base ball, squash ball and | pentathlon. BY CORRINNE FRAZIER. I ID-WEEK hockey activities will | center around the George | Washington-American Univer- sity game scheduled to be played tomorrow afternoon on | the Ellipse Field. It will be the second | game for each team, American U. hav- ing opened season last Saturday when she mei and bowed to Holton | | Arms in a close contest. while George | Washington was bested in another | opener by the strong cleven Swarthmore College - | Line-ups for the two teams will be | practically the same as in their open- ing games. The Colonials' line will| include Josephine Irey, Ruth Chind- blum, Alice Graham, Mary Sproul, Evelyn Folsom, Katherine McCallum, Maxine Alverson, Jenny Turnbull, Louise Du Bose, Elizabeth Zimmerman, | Martha Benenson and India Bell Cores. | American U. will be_represented by Katherine Severance, Barbara Evans, Rowanetta Alien, Delsie Appel, Beth Hill. Margaret ~Woodward, —Martha | Bricker, Mary Putnam, Elsie Sand- berg, Alfce Hetzel and Sedie Martz. “Vocational Guidance” will be the subject of the lecture to be given tonight by Leona Buchwald of the vocational | | guidance department of the public | | schools of Baltimore, as the fourth and | final address in the lecture series being | conducted at the Y. W. C. A, under the combined auspices of local recrea- tlonal organizations for the purpose of suggesting new ideas and programs to directors in charge of girls' activitie: The talk will begin promptly at 8 o'clock. Girl Scout leaders have found the series so beneficial that they plan to | hold three exira sesslons beginning next sponsored by their organiza- Speakers for these meet- ings have not yet becn announced, but Girl Scout aciivities will be the sub- jects discussed. The dates of the extra meetings are November 27, December 4 and December 11. Interclass basket ball honors at Park View School went to the 8B-1 tossers yesterday when they wound up their serfes with a_15-to-2 victory over 8A-2 on the Park View playground court. They had been leading in the league before yesterday's meeting and needed just this one more triumph to clinch the title. Mary Hoy captained the winning sextet_and played right forward. Ber- nice Driscoll held down the left for- ward position, Lucile Farris, center: Thelma Johnson, side center; Marian Bradburn, right guard, and Rose Rosen- berg, left guard. A pennant will be | awarded the team in recognition of its achievement. With an intereity contest looming on the horizon, the women's section of the Germania Club is busy organ- izing its soccer team. Wingfoot Club eleven of Baltimore will be its {opponent in the anticipated game, which s an annual affair between foot ball season. Carey suffered a blistered heel during } a foot ball game against Chester High School. Blood poisoning developed and the boy, who was 16, died yesterday. Of the 15 fatal accidents, only 3 in- | volved college players. These were Miles | Fox of the Naval Academy eleven, | James Fenton of Holy Cross and Leo | Goodreau of Villanova. All the other | victlms were high school or sandlot players. PLANS FOR 1929 SEASON MADE BY 3-EYE LEAGUE, DECATUR. I, November 20 (#).— Adoption of the five-player rookie rule, re-election of officers and abolishment of the split season were the high lights | of action at the annual meeting of the Three-Eye League. Other measures adopted at the ses- sion included a 140-game schedule, call- | ing for the opening of the season on | April 25 and the closing on September 8. | | WORLD RECORD SMASHED | BY ARGENTINE SWIMMER BUENOS AIRES, November 20 () The Argentine Olympic swithmer, Al- | berto Zorrilla, yesterday broke the world | record for 400 meters backstroke, swim- ming the distance in 5 minutes 472-5 | seconds. | The previous record. held by the! Belgian swimmer, G. Blitz, was 5 min- seconds. N SPORT should adopt a modified form arranged especlally for members of their sex. The modified rulings are favored, but it is | recognized by the Germanians that if they practice under these they will be at a disadvantage in their feature game, as the Baltimore team plays according to the international regulations. It is expected that a meeting will be held | in the near future to discuss the pro- | posed changes. Van Ness School dodge bell cham- from | pions who won the Gerfield division | title in the elementary school league series this Fall were awarded the challenge trophy offered by the pla ground department in & special sembly yesterday. Mrs. L. T. Leapley, principal of the school, who presided over the assembly, playground, who made the presenta- | tion. The cup was received by Virginia Gray, captain, on behalf of her squad, | which included Mary Garner, manager; Mildred Wheatley, Eva Simon, Dorothy | Davis, Vera Cornwell, Mary Cornwell, Marie Alexander, Margaret Sullivan, Mildred Rasmick, Theima Sidney, Mary Smith, Osid Deavers, Helen Jackson, Edna Doyle, Dorothy gyaln. Marian Leapley and Florence avis. ILLINOIS RIN.GS BAR “PUNCH-DRUNK” BOXERS CHICAGO, November 20 (#).—"Punch | drunk” boxers hereafter will be barred from Iilinols rings. All those suspected of suffering from | the ailment will be called before the Tlinois State Athletic Commission and | if found to be “"punch drunk” will have their licenses suspended. “Shuffles” Callahan, Chicago's hard- hitting middleweight, who will take four punches to land one, was the first to be examined. He passed the t R | champion, with an .800 percentage. as- | introduced Mrs. | Evelyn Sheridan, director of Garfleld | Martha Laten. | MIDWEST LAURELS Possibility of Quadruple Tie Exists—Wisconsin Now 1 Holds Lead. | BY PAUL R. MICKELSON, Associated Press Sports Writer. HICAGO, November 20.—By combinations of “if” reasoning four teams have a chance either to tie or win undisputed | possession of the Big Ten foot | ball championship in Saturday's grand finale. | Four times since 1896 the race has | | ended In a triple tie, but never hav | four teams been deadlocked at the | pinnacle. ) Undefeated even through its “suicide’ schedule, Wiscon: had _the | chance to win the coveted title by de- | feating Minnesota in the game- at Madison | Here are the “ifs”: 1If Wisconsin defeats Minnesota, the Badgers win the championship with a perfect percentage. 3 If Minnesota defeats Wisconsin and | Michigan defeats Iowa, the winner of the Ohio State-Tllinois game will be If Towa beats Michigan and Minne- sota beats Wisconsin and the Ohio State-Tilinois game results in a tie, Towa | | will be champion, with an .800 per- centage. \ 1f Wisconsin loses to Minnesota and | the battles between Michigan and Towa | and Tilinois and Ohio State end in ties, then Wisconsin, Tllinois, Towa and Ohio State would be deadlocked for the title, with a .750 percentage. If all games end in ties. Wisconsin | would be champlon, boasting a perfect percentage. | Badgers in Good Trim. | The Minnesota-Wisconsin game, the thirty-eighth between the rivals, will | be witnessed by a capacity crowd of | 45000 at Camp Randall, Madison. | | Coach Glen ‘Thistlethwaite gave his | men a light workout last night, but | plans to give them four days of scrim- | mages, starting tonight. Every Badger is in good condition except Bill Lusby, | halfback and hero of the Iowa game, but he will be in the Minnesota game. | Minnesota_will enter the game with- out Wayne Kakela, its veteran center, | but Capt. George Gibson will be back | at guard. The Gophers are laying = | defense against Wisconsin's passing attack and bolstering thelr fiying-wedge formations. Coach Bob Zuppke of Tllinois at last | 1s satisfied with his first-string eleven | and plans to make no changes'for the | first time this season. So decisive was | the Tllinf attack against Chicago that | Zuppke is quite_confident, for once, of | a victory over Ohio State. | Would Cheer Wilce. With Saturday's game the last for it coach, Jack Wilce, Ohio State plans to give him a send-off by downing Illinois. The Scarlet and Gray clad Buckeyes are in good physical condition, except for its fleet halfback, Byron Eby, who was slightly injured in an automobile accident Sunday night. Eby, however, will be able to get into the game. Northwestern may rely on an aerial attack to beat Dartmouth, although the Easterners have a powerful forward- passing game of their own. Purdue and Indiana will throw their | full front against each other in their traditional battle Saturday. Indiana’s crippled list has almost vanished and Harrell, kicking halfback, and Ran- dolph, center, will be back. - . Goingback Chiltoskey, a full-blooded Cherokee, is with the South Carolina squad. They want to change his first nam carry the full burden this season be- cause of the weakness of the reserves, | are underweight and badly bruised. Rockne plans to give them a rest until Thursday. They will leave Sunday night for their gridiron battle with the | Southern | undefeated University of California eleven. Johnny Niemiec, star halfback, who was injured in the game with Carnegie Tech Saturday, is back in school after a day and a night in a South Bend hospit Niemiec was struck on the head and for a time it was feared he would be out of the Southern Cali- fornia game. GOPHERS NOTiHEA\‘IIEST IN BIG TEN, SAYS SPEARS MINNEAPOLIS, November 20 (#).— Coach Clarence Spears of Minnesota contends that his team is not the heaviest but one of the lightest elevens in the Big Ten. “The colored effect of the uniforms our players wear has always provided an optical illusion,” Spears said, “and year after year Minnesota is referred to by sports writers as having one of the neaviest if not the heaviest team in the Nation. ‘'The Gophers weigh less per man than ‘Wisconsin, its final opponent Saturday, Coach Spears said. has a long string of one and two-round knockout fights to his credit and who i« regarded as a coming heavyweight con- tender, has met his master out of the ring and today has a permanent me- mento of the encounter. A knife gash, extending from Hunt's mouth to his left ear, which will keep him from the ring for two months, ai- ways will recall to the heavyweight that he lost an argument over the right-of- way on a bridge to an enraged farmer | here last night. | Hunt’s car sideswiped a wagon driven | by Jim Vickers, 40, a farmer. A com- | panion of the fighter jumped from th~ car and seized the farmer's horses | while Hunt himself approached thc driver. ~ Vickers, who said he feared » beating, went into action with hts | pocketknife to deliver a knockout biow |early in the opening round. He wa: | arrested, but Hunt said he did not wizh | to prosecute. FLORIDA GETS RESPITE. GAINESVILLE, Fla, November | (P.—Florida’s foot ball squad, flush-c | with victory over Clemson at Jackson- | ville Saturday, will have a respite of several days from gridiron drill, since no game scheduled until Thanks- giving day, when the team returns to Jacksonville to meet the Washington and Lee Generals. a\do ifs WRAPPED in Foil its HAND MADE it’s VERY MILD its LONG FILLER ifs BANKER SIZE and its ONLY, Daniel Loughran Co., Inc. Washington, D. C. Phones: Main 391-4292 Distributors Arcade Service Station 4 E.*_i.h 4th & Eye Sts. N.E. Lincoln 9351 W. A. Bobb 6th & H Sts. N.W. Frank. 7640 “Service With s Smile” Brookland . Garage E?‘..@.‘ 1000 Michigan Ave. N.E. North 1021 Eale Buchanan Battery Service me"f_b! 4601 14th St. N.W., Columbia 10216 AND GTROKES |these two clubs. The date has not vet been announced, but it is under- |early in December before the rush of SPRINGFIELD, Mo., November 20 _Otto Williams, former coach of | Winter tournaments in the West and BY SOL METZGER. Even the great Hagen has his put- lapses. although any pro will vou he is the best of all on the gree] The conclusion is that no putting method is infallible, unless 3t be the one ed by Bobby .Jones. ‘Where Hagen has had the edge these is in judging the speed ition of each green as he sixth sense tells him ety. ‘That cfore any golfer et amoul of to roll the ball drad n point a different putting Leo Diegel. who re- ed him in the P. G. A, or His stance is more nd all the finger tips of his hand are on the leather. He the little finger of the right finger of the left to legs and only used in the uses the arc swing. As he the ball will not leave the face until after 1t is stroked he pl ) ball (on the ing it back the le hole side), That gives him hole. He figures the putter at this v lifts it over the s it back of it. Then yihmic backswing in ‘control. A slight se and the stroke forward witi right on the ar ing into the ball slig side the line and the club following on out after the ball on the line, due 1o the left forearm following out on line after the ball. A fine printed leafiet containing nine illustrations on “The Art of Pitching,” has been prepared by Sol Metzger. If vou wish to have a copy send stamped, addressed en- velope to Sol Metzger,’in care of this paper. (Copyright, 1928.. | () ). South. the St. Louls Cardinals and last year | manager of the St. Louis Browns' Western Association farm, at Muskogee, Okla., has been signed as coech with | the Kansas City Blues of the American | Assoclation for 1929. | All officers of the association were re- clected. 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