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SPORTS. JTHE EVENING 'STAR,..WASHINGTON, D.ACSWMONDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 1929.° SPORTS." Mount St. Mary’s Five at C. U. Tonight : Levy-Quigley Team Out of Duckpin Set BY H. C. BYRD. Brookland, and the latter with Virginia Polytechnic Institute, at Blacksburg. rebuilding year, Catholic University is having anything but a successful sea- combination when it faces Mount St. | Mary's and does not have any better does not indicate much success: It may happen, though, that Wash- ATHOLIC UNIVERSITY and Meryland are the local college The Maryland-V. P. L. game is the first of a trip which also involves contests son. And Maryland is not doing a good deal better. However, the two univer- than an even chance, if it has as good as that. ington and Lee, imbued with a sense of its own effectiveness 2nd greatness Maryland Starts Three-Day Tour Meeting V. P. I. on Blacksburg Court. basket hall teams with games tonight, the former with Mount St. Mary's on its home floor, at with Washington and Lee and Virginia Military Institute. Going through what amounts to a sities are not much disappointed, as | neither expected to be very strong. | C. U. will be against a fairly good | Maryland meets Washington and Lee again tomorrow night, and the drubbing it took Saturday night at College Park from the easy time it had beating Mary- | land last week, will not play up to its | real standard. In other words, about the only chance Maryland has to beat the Generals is to run into a case of overconfidence on the part of the latter. Virginia Military Institute is not near as strong as Washington and Lee, and | the College Park five ought to stand about an even chance in that game. Catholic University has another game Wednesday night with Fordham at Brookland, and if the New Yorkers have a team as good as that which represent- ed them a year ago the local school is likely to taste of another defeat. An- other game the same night will take place when Gallaudet goes over to George Washington's gymnasium to face the Colonials. No games are scheduled Thursday night, but Friday five are listed. George- towvn has New York University as its guest, Maryland is to entertain Norti Carolina, Catholic University has Ameri- can U. as its opponent, Gallaudet plays the Old Dominion Boat Club at Kendall Green and George Washington meeis Davis-Elkins here. Saturday night no contest of any kind is scheduled here, but Georgetown goes to New York to play New York University a second basket ball game in s many days. Catholic University's swimming team goes to Williamsburg il‘turday for a meet with William and Ty. Washington and Lee has about the best basket bell team in its history. About 14 years ago the Generals were Tepresented by a physically powerful five that had some real victories to its credit, but that team was not nearly so versatile nor so well coached as the one that now wears the Blue and White. ‘The Washington and Lee five practi- cally is made by Jack Williams, its elongated center. Williams is a bril- liant player and does everything there is to be done on a basket ball floor. Incidentally, Willlams is a great all- round athlete, having beem a star at end in foot ball and is an exceptional first baseman when he puts on a base ball suit. Dick Smith, graduate manager of sthletics at Washington and Lee and basket ball coach and base ball coach, has developed his team on sound lines. He has the men playing well as indi- viduals and as a team. Unless the Gen- erals strike a slump they should be picked to win the Southern Conference tournament at Atlanta in March. Inci- dentally, Saturday night they gave Maryland the worst beating the latter has had in basket ball in years, and did it on just an out-and-out better grade of play. R West Virginia University has under- taken to develop a boxing team. The Mountaineers s.arted the sport this ‘Winter with the sole idea of using it as & part of their physical education pro- gram, but Penn State came through and asked for a meet at State College during March, and West Virginia ac- cepted on condition that the meet be | informal. Probably there will be a lot | of very formal socks on the jaw for| many young aspirants for a college ed- | ucation, but if the meet goes through satisfactorily it is entirely probable that ‘West Virginia will arrange a full sched- ule next season. Dr. Walter Meanwell, basket bali eoach at Wisconsin and one of the most accepted authorities on the sport in the | United States, has an enviable record | in the Western Conference. He has| coached Wisconsin 14 seasons and won | 7 championships, and in 5 of the other 7 seasons was fighting for the title. ‘Wisconsin’s record of victories under Meanwell is 121 against 47 defeats. Fifty-nine games have been played with Team non-conference fives and 49 of them |p, won. It is interesting to note that Dr. Meanwell is a graduate of the Uni- versity of Maryland Medical School. Virginia and Washington and Lee still are at sea in regard to coaches of | their foot bzll teams for next Fall. The forme: apparently is in a process of general reorganization, while Washing- ton and Lee, with a well organized and smoothly running general system, sim- ply is looking for the right type of man to handle its foot ball work. And, in- cidentally, it may be that when Wash- ington and Lee announces the neme of 8 coach for next Fall followers of the | gridiron in_this section may get a real surprise. The man Washington and | Lee had hoped to get was Tom Licb, line coach at Wisconsin, but Lieb is going to Notre Dame to help Rockne.| Wisconsin gave Notre Dame a beating | last Fall. Rockne thinks that Lieb was Jargely responsible for it, and the astute Swede evidently had rather have Lieb working for him than against him. FORMER C. U. RING STAR | TO COACH LOYOLA TEAM | Loyola College boxers of New Orleans mre to be coached by Don Greco, crack lightweight and captain of the Cath- olic University boxing team of a season 220 Greco was a leading member of the Cardinal ring team for three seasons and also did considerable fighting in amateur circles here. up boxing for the first tim2. | HYATT AND SCHAAF TIED IN BASKET BALL SCORING NEW YORK, February 4 P).— Charley Hyatt of Pittsburgh and Joey Schaaf of Pennsylvenia are in a dead- Jock for individual scoring honors among Eastern collegiate basket ball players. In 12 contests the tossed in 72 field goals and 33 fouls for & total of 177 points, the same Schaaf has amassed in 17 games. Collins of St John's, Brooklyn, is third with 152 points, and Wineapple of Provigence Sourth’ with 141, 3 { Ea Loyola is taking | Pitt flash has | Left to right, front row: Charlie Millar, F. E. Wiler, Kit Eshbaugh (captain), Joe Canavin and Roland Atkins. Back row: Ed Cunningham, Timmons, E. L. Millar (coach), Lilly and Aman. B TEN RESUNES BASKET BALL W Race Afi’long Michigan, Pur- due and Wisconsin Promises to Be Red Hot. By the Assoclated Press. CHICAGO, February 4—The drive for the Big Ten basket ball crown this week shifts from low to high gear, where it will race along until the finish of the campaign, March 9. Four Conference battles, headlined by the clash between Michigan's un- defeated team and Ohio State at Ann Arbor Saturday night, lift the season from the lull that has prevailed for the past three weeks because of semester examinations. The other games are, Northwestern at Indiana, Tuesday, and Illinois at Chicago and Indiana at Towa on Saturday night. Butler College of Indianapolis, con- querer of Purdue, invades Illinois to- night for what promises to be a lively non-Conference skirmish. Only three teams, Purdue, Wisconsin and Minne- sota, will be idle during the week. The Michigan-Ohio State game will be an interesting barometer of what may be expected during the remainder of the championship chase. Michi- gan, which loafed into undisputed pos- session of first place January 21, when Wisconsin defeated Purdue, has been idle since January 14. If it defeats Ohio State by a decisive margin, it will not only allay fears of staleness be- cause of inactivity, but will become 2 greater favorite to win the title than ever. The Wolverines have a longer but somewhat easier schedule left than their principal rivals, Purdue and Wis- consin, which are tied for second place with five victories and one defeat. They have eight games left, but do not have to meet Purdue or Indiana, while ‘Wisconsin must play them at Ann Arbor. Michigan handed Wisconsin its only defeat at Madison, 31 to 23. ‘Wisconsin and Purdue have six games each to play, including their own battle at Madison, February 25. Towa edged into a tie for fourth place with Ohio State Saturday night by defeating Chicago in a thriller here, 23 to 21, while Ohio State invaded and defeated the Army, 44 to 30, in an in- tersectional game. The defeat plunged Chicago to the cellar with six straight losses. Standing of Teams. Ohi Northwestern ...l Tilinois ... Indiana Minnesota Chicago HOYA TRACK TEAM IN PAIR OF MEETS Georgetown University tracksters will show their wares in two meets this week. Jim Kennedy, Hoya freshman middle’ distance runner, will appear in a spe- cial 1-mile handicap race at the Newark A. C. games at Newark, N. J., Thurs- day night and a mile relay team in ad- dition to several entrants in the indi- | vidual events will represent the Blue and Gray in the Milirosz A. C. meet Seturday night in Madison Square Gar- den. BARNYARD GOLF TOURNEY DRAWS MANY CHAMPIONS ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., February 4 | (#).—State champlons galore _today were prepared to begin play in the na- | tional horseshoe pitching tournament, | | with Clyde Davis, Columbus, Ohio, pres- {ent title holder, leading the brigade. | .“Putt” Mossman, Eldora, Towa; | George May, Akron, Ohio, and Harold | Falor, also of Akron, are three former national champions entered. MANDELL BATTLES DAVIS. PEORIA, Ill, February 4 (#).— Sammy Mandell, world lightweight champion, will tune up his right cross and left hook again tonight when he clashes with Don Davis of Chicago in a 10-round bout. They will meet at 140 pounds and Mandell's title will not be | at stake. 8 e o State conmmnwunnad anwwwenmmalt i | SONNENBERG IN MATCH. NEW YORK, February 4 (#).—Gus Sonnenberg, former Dartmouth College star, defends his heavyweight wrestling o | in the Tech gym in final games of the 404 | Plonship series ‘TRIO of basket ball games stand out on tonight's amateur pro- gram. Probably the most spirited will be played at Central High gym at 9 o'clock when Woltz and Wi Gray quints engage in a Community Center League contest. Grays copped the first-half flag, but ‘Woltz's line-up has been strengthened by the addition of Joe Sweeney, Skinker Eagle, star and Gwynn King, elongated pivot ace. Another of these attractive contests is also booked for Central High gym at 8 o'clock. This fray will bring together Kanawha Scholastics, composed of schoolboy stars, and Harriman & Co., courtmen. Knights of Columbus and French A. C. quints will be involved in the other headliner in the Casey gym. The former team was eliminated yesterday when Plerce A. C. halted its winning streak at Hyattsville. Manager Bus Scanlon expects several of his French players, who have been on the injured list, to return to action tonight. De Luxe and Celtic teams of Boys' Club Unlimited League are to open a series next Saturday night to deter- mine the championship team. The former copped the second half flag, while the former romped off with the first half title. Manager Mansuy at Lincoln 8333-W is seeking games this week for De Luxe cagers. Manager Phelps of Dupont A. C. is seeking rivals with gyms playing in senior or unlimited class. Call Wis~ consin 3759 for arrangements. Skinker Eagles had to battle all the way to gain revenge over Richmond 3lues in Congress Heights gym yester- day, 42 to 36. A last-minute rally, with Sweeney and Bennie pointing the way, enabled the local team to win. Silver Spring Service Co. tossers won WOLTZ AND GRAY QUINTS MEET IN FEATURE GAME over W. H. West Co. five, 25 to 19, in the feature game of a big program at Silver Spring yesterday. Other games resulted as follows: Blair Reds, 22; Red Shields, 11. Woodside A. C., 27; Washington Loan & Trust Co., 14. Passaic A. C, 44; Fort Leonard Wood, 9. Stanleys, 16; Mystery Five, 14. Led by Falcome, who collected 12 boints, Harriman & Co. tossers won over French A. C. yesterday in Con- gress Heights gym, 22 to 18. Jewish Community Center Flashes found they had 22 straight wins after downing Baltimore Aces yesterday, 42 to 24. Gorman and Levine were the heroes of the fray. Stantens, who downed Casey Scho- lastics yesterday, 25 to 24, have canceled games booked with Kennedy Red Stars sg?fl?eck Seniors, because of conflicting Yeung and Gartland enabled McLean A. C. Cagers to gain a well earned 26- chmry over Petersburg (Va.) Y. In downing Dupont A. C. five yester- day, 33 to 18, Company E, District Na- tional Guard, basketers registered their eleventh straight victory. ‘Wanley was largely responsible for Pierce A. C.'s 25-to-21 win over Knights of Columbus courtmen at Hyattsville yesterday. To Underwood and Norton went the high scoring honors yesterday as Bat- tery A cagers downed Washington Preps, 43 to 32. J. C. C. unlimiteds kept their record clean yesterday by downing Phoenix A. C., 46 to 27. Kramer was chief scorer, with 8 goals from scrimmage. SCHOLASTIC SERIES T0 END TOMORROW Battle Between Eastern and Western for Runner-Up Berth Marks Finale. Central and Eastern and Business and Western will meet tomorrow afternoon public high school basket ball cham- In other matches tomorrow Gonzaga will entertain Georgetown Prep in the I street school gym and University of Maryland Freshmen will play host to Alexandria High at College Park. Eastern and Western will be battling for wins tomorrow in order to gain sec- ond place to Tech in the race. The Mc- Kinley team clinched the flag last Pri- | day. Eastern and Western each has won four games and lost three. Busi- ness, which has triumphed three times and dm}:s%ed four matches, to stand fourth, also will be striving for a victory, having a chance to finish in a three- way tle for second place, with Western and Eastern. St. John's is to entertain Benjamin Franklin University tossers tonight, at 8 o'clock, in the St. John's gymnasium. In matches this afternoon Tech and Catholic University freshmen were to mezt on the Tech floor, and George Ma- fon and Devitt had an engagement at the Y. M. C. A. It arrangements can be made, Tech | High's championship basket ball team will enter the annual University of Pennsylvania scholastic tournament at Philadelphia. Should the McKinley team compete in the classic it will be the first time that it has ever carried the school’s colors in the big event. OKLAHOMA FIVE AHEAD. KANSAS CITY, February 4 (#).— Oklahoma Sooners have flown their col- ors on the top rung of the Big Six basket ball ranking and defled the other five schools to displace them before the season ends in Mnrcrll‘. Oklahoma TAKES SOCCER HONORS. VALENCIA, Spain, February 4 (#).— Espanol Club of Barcelona won the championship in a finish match with Howard Cantowine of Towa in Madison Square Garden tonight, S 3 | Rangers sto WOMAN SHATTERS SKATING RECORDS Three World Marks Broken by Loretta Neitzel in Title Meet. By the Assoclated Press. MINNEAPOLIS, February 4.—Loretta Neitzel of Detroit today holds three | new world skating records and the wom- an's amateur senior outdoor speed skat- ing championship of America. Miss Neitzel set new marks in the 440-yard and one-mile events in com- petition, and then in a race against time established a record for one-sixth of a mile. Five seconds fell off the old time in the 440 when Miss Neitzel covered the distance in 39 2-5 seconds. The former mark was held by Mrs. Leila Potter of Toronto. The Detroit woman flash completed the mile event in 3:154-5, which was 3 3-5 seconds faster than the | record time of Mrs. Potter. In the race against time Miss Neitzel beat her own figure of 32 seconds for one-sixth of a mile, making it in 30 2-5 seconds. Miss Neitzel so far outclassed the field of woman skaters that she had | for the championship. Marie Becker | of Chicago finished second, with 50 points, and Miss Mildred Bjork, Min- neapolis, was third, with 40. | Allen Potts of Brooklyn, N. Y., won | the international men's senior outdoor title, while the intermediate honors went to Douglas Ellison of Chicago. SKINKER EAGLES LIST ! GAME WITH WEST FIVE| Skinker Eagles will entertain W. H. West Co. quint Wednesday night at 8 o'clock in the main game of the usual midweek card in Congress Heights Au- | | ditorjum. There will be a preliminary | | between Jewish Community Center | quint and a team to be named. . PRO HOCKEY STANDINGS. AMERICAN GROUP. w. 3 10 21 2 n . Detroit .. Pittsburgh Chicago . INTERNATIONAL Canadiens Americans GROUP. | 13 soccer foot ball championship of Spain, defeating the Real Madrid Sporting Club of Madrid, 2 to 1, b Maroons Toronto .. 3 s OLava aysgase .6 little difficulty in amassing 110 points | ! b. U. STAR PLACED ON SELECTED TEAM Wildermuth on All-America Track Aggregation as Best at 60 Yards. By the Assoclated Press, NEW YORK, February 4—With the Olympic games as an incentive to keen competition, few of America's athletes were able to win more than one place on the 1928 all-America athletic teams, selected annually for Spalding's Ath- letic Almanac by Daniel J. Ferris, sec- retary-treasurer of the Amateur Ath- lettic Union. Only Lloyd Hahn, Boston A. A. mid- dle.distance ace, who retired from com- petition after the Olympic games; Joie Ray, sensation of the year at the longer distances, and Frank Titterton of the Millrose A. A, New York, winner of two national championships, placed twice on the team. Claude Bracey of Rice Insti- tute, Texas, scored a double in the springs on the college team and Stanley Stokes of Baton Rouge (La.) High School won both hurdle places on the scholastic team. Ray Barbuti, America’s only winner of a flat race at the Olympic games, is placed on the college team as well as the national aggregation. Frank Wykoff;* California schoolboy sprint star, gained the unusual distinc- tion of making both the all-America team and the scholastic team. Karl Wildermuth of Georgetown has a place on the all-America team, being rated the king of the sprinters at 60 yards. ALL-AMERICA ATHLEIC TEAM. (o W-yard run—Karl Wildermuth, George- 100-yard run—Frank Wykoff, Los Angeles —Charles Borah, Los Angeles run—Launcelto Ross, run—Ray Barbut, A.C. 2%0-yard A C. , Yale. New York run—Phil Edwards, New York ~Llovd Hahn, Boston A. A. n—Lioyd Hahn. Boston A. Ray Conger. Iliinois A. C. Leo Lermond, Bostor ond, n i run—Joie Ray, Illinois A. C. ran—Frank ' Hitterton, Milirose ile run—Frank Titterton, Milirose ofe Ray. Iili les—Weems Bi A A C. in, New York hurdles—Steve Anderson, Univer- a1 Washington. ard hurdles—Frank Cubel, University rd hurdles—F. Morgan Taylor, Ii- linols A. C. Walking——Harry Hinkel, New York A. C. Standine broad igmp_Willlam Wérner, Greenwood Track Ciub, New_ York. Running brosd Jump—Ed Hamm, Georgla Standing hish jump—Harold M. Osborn, Tllinois A. C. Running “high jump—Robert W. King, Stunford University. Running hop, step, jump—Levi Casey, Los Angeles A. C. ‘ole vault—Sabin Carr, Yale. . shot—John Kuck. Los Angeles A. C. 6:1b. weighi—P. J. McDonald, New York 16-1b. hammer—Edmund F. Black, Univer- sity of Maine. l'lllclls‘lhé-'ADl’, Clarence Houser, Los _ throw—Charles Harlow, Los An- Kenneth Doherty, Cadillac A. ALL-AMERICA COLLEGE TEAM. ON THE SIDE LINES With the Sports Editor y DENMAN THOMPSON: AX SCHMELING'S de- cisive victory over Johnny Risko in their brawl at New York served to make ring sharps of the metropolitan district look pretty good. They insisted prior to the fray that the Teutonic importation bore all the ear- marks of a coming champion. For once, at least, the news- paper boys were right. It was not altogether the fact that Schmeling delivered against a formidable foeman that has projected him promi- nently into the heavyweight picture. There are other con- siderations, not the least of which is that in stopping Ris- ko he accomplished a feat cred- ited to none of the other con- tenders, nearly all of whom have tried it. Prior to Friday night “stop- ped by” was charged against Risko but once. Chuck Wiggins stands credited with a knock- out over the Cleveland India- rubber man, due to the fact that Johnny was unable to continue because of an eye cut that blinded him. Schmeling, however, gave the Ohioan the worst beating he ever received, having Johnny out on his feet when the bout was terminated to save him further punishment. The ham- mer and tongs manner in which Max kept after Risko would seem to answer the criti- cism that the German Demosey lacks the “killer instinct” of American Jack whom he so strongly resembles, and gives rise to genuine interest in what will haoven if he is pitted against Paulino, Heeney or the winner of the Sharkey-Strib- ling bout. * %k Xk K Reasonable Enough. February 1, 1929. Dear Sir: In today's Star you devote con- siderable space to the Navy-Notre Dame game scheduled for October 12, 1920, and the possibilities of having it staged in the Griffith Stadium. All fine and good, but— with all due respect to Mr. Rockne and his Notre Dame eleven—this writer among numerous other Wash- ingtonians voices the query of “Why not start a campaign to bring the game nchedule:"betwmlmm;r (;’wn Georgetown and Navy, for No- vember 9, 1929, to Griffith Stadium, instead of g over the possi- bilities of the N. D.-Navy tilt?” Last year Georgetown had one of the ranking elevens of the East and, in fact, gained national recognition by its splendid triumph of the high- ly touted N. Y, U, team, as the ban- quet given by the Veterans' Athletic Association at Philadelphia tomor- row night testifies. A noted au- thority on sports told this writter only recently that if Georgetown was lucky enough to retain Lou Little as coach for a few more years that Notre Dame’s supremacy among the Catholic colleges and otherwise would be seriously threatened. A Notre Dame-Navy game here Women in OUNT VERNON SEMINARY basket ball squad, which will represent the school in the an- with Madeira School in March, has been se- nual clash lected after several months of intensive training on the part of the interclass groups, from whose ranks the 'varsity team is chosen each year. Jeanne Street, basket ball manager, reports the personnel of the team follows: Susan Jane Wegener, Marjorle Boericke, Nancy Kling and Kathryn Bavinger, forwards; Marianne Steven- son, Susann Bradley, Eleanor Benedict and Guem Bacon, centers; Nora Glancy, Kitty Watts, Mary Elizabeth Haradon and Margaret Johnson, guards; Jeanne Street and Louise Linkins, reserve for- wards; Martha Alexander and Jane Cocran, reserve centers, and Katharine Street and Ione Foster, reserve guards. The game, which is scheduled for March 16 and probably will be played as usual in the Epiphany Church gym- nasium, is the only interscholastic fea- ture on the court program at Mount Vernon. Hence it is a gala occasion for the basketers. Eastman Schoel six will play Fair- mont School's sextet at Epiphany to- morrow afternoon at 3 o'clock. It will mark the second start for each of the teams. Warrenton Country Day School will be entertained by the Gunston Hall basketers in another interesting semi- nary game of the near future. The date has not been made public yet, but it is expected that the teams will meet from a financial standpoint might be a flop, whereas a like gridiron en- gagement between G. U. and Navy would be a certain sell-out. I notice the Naval Academy ath- letic officials have at various times spoken of the comparatively poor gates attracted for such big league tilts as Notre Dame and Michigan, which Navy has staged in Baltimore in past seasons. Why don't those fellows wise up to the gold mine right at their back door? Approx- imately 150,000 people applied for tickets to the Georgetown-Navy game staged at Annapolis in 1926, where only 30,000 could fight and squeeze into a small stadium built for about 20,000 spectators. Georgetown play- ing Pitt or some other big league club in Washington would not draw anything compared to the mob that would be drawn out to the Georgia avenue stadium to watch the Hill- toppers tangle with the Middies. Georgetown has the class for such a battle with an outstanding insti- tution like the Naval Academy and, best of all, the game would be a “natural,” even more so than the old G. U.-Virginia battles were. Let's See you newspaper boys do your stuff toward getting the proper pub- licity for such an event. It would be a big thing for both the fans and the town. Sincerely, WILLARD THOMPSON. * K ok x Mebbe So, Mebbe So. February 2, 1929. Dear Sir: Mr. Sharkey and Mr. Stribling, who are going to display their wares in a few weeks more, are already at Miami Beach in order to become acclimated, and incident- 2lly to go through a few preliminary workouts, for both are in good con- dition -and need only a few finishing touches. Having their training quarters in close proximity to each other they will be enabled to exchange those in- resting billet-doux more frequently, samples of which they have given us already. This course, if pursued, should be of great advantage to the Bostonian, who loves to indulge in these verbal affrays, which he seems to think necessary to put a keen edge on his training. Although Stribling has a greater number of knockouts to his credit than any of the other contenders, there is not one among them fit to enter this elimination contest. It is an easy matter for a man who un- derstands the fight game to knock out a fellow who knows little or nothing about it. The best men Stribling ever faced were in the light-heavyweight division, and even there he did nothing to impress us very much; he won a decision from Mike McTigue and lost to Tommy Loughran. Sharkey, on the other hand, has been up against real heavyweight fighters and won a fair percentage of the contests, but the winner of this fight, while eliminating his op- ponent, cannot claim the champion- ship as so many seem to think, for neither of them has yet proved him- self superior to Paulino or Tom Heeney, and Loughran is still to be dealt with, whom I really believe will be the victor in this elimination coné test, unless the bars are let down and Master George Godfrey, massive of frame and eager for the fray, comes to make his bow to the fight fans of Madison Square Garden. ‘Then look out! EDMUND MURPHY. Sport within the next fortnight. The game is slated tg be played on the Y. W.C.A. floor. Gallaudet College co-eds bowed to the Western Maryland College sextet, 32 to 27, at Westminster Saturday. The Kendall Greeners put up a plucky fight, but were nosed out in the final session. Elizabeth Mitchell did the heavy scoring for the winners, totaling 21 points. Rae Martini collected 20 of Gallaudet’s markers. Gallaudet was represented by Marle ‘Coretti, Rae Martini, Catherine Brown, Lucille Schaeffer, Margaret Du Bose, Mary Keohn and Vera Bridges. Western Maryland’s line-up included Elizabeth Mitchell, Eleanor Ebaugh, Dorothy Johnson, Charlotte Wheeler, Elizabeth Russell, Miss Brady and Miss Weaver. By CORINNE FRAZIER. WOMEN'S DOUBLES TWO-WAY CONTEST Limited to Gulli - Mischou, Bradt-Frere as Bowling Star Protests. I with much of the early cham- plonship savor missing. One of the teams that had expected to en- gage in this battle has been barred from the affair. Lorraine Gulli and Irene Mischou, representing the Arcadia, and Mar- jorfe Bradt and Marie Frere of the Meyer Davis’ establishment will meet. Rena Levy and Catherine Quigley, Col- iseum pair which recently challenged the other teams, were admitted to the match but later ousted from compe- tition. What promised to be one of the most hotly fought woman's duckpin matches ever held here has been rob- bed of much of its color by the elim- ination of the Levy-Quigley team. The original match booked between the Arcadia and Meyer-Davis teams looked attractive, but the three-cornered af- fair with 15 games scheduled promised as much rivalry as any bowling event in _recent years. Following the challenge hurled by Miss Levy and Mrs. Quigley last week, Managers John S. Blick and J. Willlam Wood of the Arcadia and Meyer Davis interests, respectively, agreed to make it a three-way contest, with blocks at King Pin, Arcadia and Coliseum. Star Bowler Protests. The ready approval of the alley man- agers was not sanctioned by all of the original contestants, however. Miss Bradt and Miss Frere welcomed the opportunity to meet the Levy-Quigley team, but the Arcadia pair was less favorable. Miss Gulli, recognized as ‘Washington's premier fair star, pro- tested against changing plans of the original match. She offered to with- draw as Mrs. Mischou's partner rather than engage in the three-cornered WO of Washington's Ileading woman doubles duckpin teams will meet next Saturday night | match. As a result, the match was reduced to its original lincs, the first block to be rolled next week, with the second three-game block the following week. Miss Levy and Mrs. Quigley have made it known that they will not meet the winners of the doubles match. They are seeking a reason for their expulson from the match. No one is likely to dispute Ray Von Dreele’s claim to a world five-game set record. The Baltimore ace piled up 756 pins in a doubles match at Recreation in_his home town Saturday. The best five-game set ever rolled on the District alleys, and which was recognized as the world record, was & 708 count recorder by Barney Spinella at Convention Hall several years ago. | Von Dreele’s mark is just 48 pins better. Baltimore bowlers are figuring what Von Dreel> would have rolled had he not slumped in his third game. After g>tting 166 and 156 counts, the Bowl- ing Center star, dropped to 144 and came back with 157 and 163 counts. Final arrangements for the match between The Evening Star tournament | man_champion, Clarence W. Taft, and the Baltimore Evening Sun champion, Bob Myers, have been completed. They will clash at Baltimore Bowling Center February 16, in a five-game setto, and return here the following Saturday for a second block at King Pin No. 1. To- tal pinfall for the match will determine the intercity champ. On the same dates, Bradley Mandley will clash with Gordon Scibel of Balti- more in another home-and-home singles affair, while Howard Campbell and Clem Weidman are meeting George Lang and Ray Von Dreele as the third feature on the program. Bill Inge, for a number of years prominent in local duckpin circles and more recently of Norfolk, will manage the new 48-alley establishment . being erected in the Virginia city by John S. Blick. The new plant will be opened be- fnolrleksepumber 1, according to Manager ck. GEORGIA TECH LEADING IN DIXIE BASKET BALL ATLANTA, February 4 (#).—Follow- ing is the record of games won and lost by Southern Conference basket ball teams in intraconference competition: Team. Georgia Te ec! Washington and Lee Tulane .. Two games are scheduled for tonight |in the junior division of the Washing- Intermediate loop. Roxie Athletic Club and St. Paul's Hine Junior High School floor, while Columbia A. C. and Eaglets will get together at 9 o'clock on the same floor. | Basketers and Gypsles are carded | to clash at 7:30 in the Calvary M. E. gymnasium, in the Intermediate divi- sion contest. No senior games are listed until Wednesday of this week, when | American Security & Trust C will play the Washington Athle . tossers tic Club | at Central High School. [ COURT STAR IS LOST TO EPISCOPAL HIGH ALEXANDRIA, Va., February 4.— Episcopal High School's basket ball team has been struck a severe blow by 100-vard run—Claude Bracey, Rice Instl- | the loss of Jack Mizell, brilliant for- tute. tute. 440-yard run—Ray Barbuti. Syracuse 880-vard run—Phil Edwards, New York University. o1y mile run—R. Kiser, Washington Univer- . 2-mile run—David Abbott, Tilinois. Cross country run—James L. Reid, Har- vard. 1%-yard hurdies—J. Ross Nichols, Stan- 220-yard hurdles—Frank Cuhel, Towa. 440-yard hurdles—P. V. Toolin, New Hamp- shire. lunning broad jump—Ed Hamm, Georsia ech. Running high jump—Robert W. King, Stanford. Running hop, step, jump—Homer Martin, Willlam Jewell College. Pole vaul Discus_throw—Eric Krenz, Sianford 161 . Black, M B! row—Wilmer Rinehardt. Indial sht—Norwood G. Wright, Col 3-Ib. Decathlon—Detroit City College. ALL-AMERICA SCHOLASTIC TEAM. grun—Frank Wykoff, Giendale ledo Libbey H. 8. 0. run_Herbert Moxley, Columbus (Ohio) Central H. 8. 80-yard run—William Bloor, Newark Prep School. < Willam MoNiff, West Phila- olic H. 8. R :’-7(" hurdies—Stanley Stokes, Baton ouge 3 dies—Stanley Stokes, Baton ning high jump—Henry Lasselette, Pu- ente (Calif.) H. Running broad lliam A. Carr, Mercersburg (Pa.) Academy. ing hoo. step. jump—Sydney Bowman, It—Lowell Allen, Salem (Ohio) -shot—John Kilcullen, Manhattan Prep 8chool (N. Y.). Hammer —Willlam Hoffman, Andover Vaul | -yard run—Claude Bracey, Rice Insti- | Ward, who is ill with the influenza. Carlin Peyton, center on the Alexan- dria High School foot ball team, which won the State champlionship the past | season, has tranferred to Central High Schoo 1 in Washington. A meeting of the managers of local unlimited basket ball teams will be held tonight at 8 o'clock at 317 King street to arrange plans for the city champlonship series. Columbia Engine Company is anxious to book games with unlimited teams having gymnasiums. Phone Billy Pad- gett at Alexandria 1774 between 5 and pm. Hoffman Clothiers want a game for tcmorrow night with an unlimited team having a gymnasium. Phone Jack Allen at Alexandria 2198 between 5 and 7 p.m. FIELDING RECORD DIES DANVERS, Mass., February 4 (@) .— Thorndike P. Hawks, who played'base ball back in the early days of the Na- tional League, is dead at his home here. He was 76 years old. Hawks played second base for the y, N. Y, club of the National League in 1879, and on July 30 of that year established two fielding records for second basemen that never have been ualed in the major leagues. He ac- g eq w-—Henry Laborde, Lowell W.!cepted 18 chances without an error— sco. Douglas Graydon, Little One record. Twelve of the chances were putouts—another record, H 1 BIG SOCCER GAMES WON BY 2.1 SCORES| Clan MacLennan vanquished Marl- | boro booters, 2 to 1, yesterday in the | semi-finals of the District Soccer Asco- | ciation’s cup-tie tournament to elim- | inate the losers from the competition. ! Arcadians scored over Gaithersburg, | Lm 1, in the only league game of the ; y. Next Sunday Arcadians will fmi Rockville in a postponed match which | will either put the teams in a deadloci for league honors or make Rockv the champion. b Marlboro went down before Clan Mac- | Lennan only after the hardest battle, | during which the losers missed dead- {ols_lklnz the score by inches several es. | CATHOLIC U. GRID TEAM SCHEDULES BALTIMORE ‘With the scheduling of a game for in the Brookland Stadium the 1929 Catholic University foot ball schedule is now complete with the exception of one game to be played November 9. | four Washington elevens to be met by the Baltimoreans next Fall. George Washington will be faced here October 5, American University at Baltimore October 19 and Gallaudet Ihem November 2. TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats EISEEAN’S, 7th & F o S Ld ton Recreation League and one in the | B | Tennesses Academy will meet at 8 o'clock on the | Ul October 12 with University of Baltimore | § Cathollc University will be one of | [ North Car Alabama North Carolina’ State.’. Kentucky Clemson irginia Vanderbilf i R Virginia Military “Institute Maryland Louisiana Stat: South Carclina . Virginia Poly .. ‘Mississippl A. ‘& M Alabama Pol Plorida Sewanee P PPN ) PLANSBY, FORMER G. U. STAR, TO JOIN BRAVES BOSTON, February 4.—Georgetown University’s former crack all-around athlete, Tony Plansky of Boston, will try to make the grade in big league base ball the coming season. Plansky, three-time winner of the American decathlon championship, has never played much base ball, but the Boston Braves, upon the recommenda- tion of John O'Reilly, Georgetown coach, will give him a trial. O'Reilly believes Plansky would have been one of the East's best college pitchers if he had had time to give to base ball while at Georgetown. No Embarrassment Bring Your Car Registration Card Get Your Tires 1234 14th St. N.! 2250 Sherman Ave. N. G624 Ta. Ave. S.E,