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SPORTS. Defense Calls for Individual Ability BY SOL METZGER. Defense in basket ball pretty much resolves fitself into individual abil- ity. After all, teamwork puts the task squarely up to each player. To prevent scoring by the opposition the player himself is thrown upon his own resources. Team play sends an opponent for his basket. It is up to the individual concerned to circum- vent this oj pponent. Sometimes a dribbler is encoun- Bordeau, Hoya Boxer, Victim of Unusual Knockout—=G. U. Quint Beaten. ATHOLIC UNIVERSITY'S| interest this Spring will be | centered in its track team| unless Chick Gagnon can yank the ball team out of the| slough into which it fell last year. | ‘The Cardinals are concentrating on | their own indoor meet, to be held next Wednesday night, but look forward to eight events outdoors. Their outdoor campajgn will be started with a dual meet at Maryland April 9. They will be strongly represent2d in the Penn Relays April 25 and 26 and | in_tne multilateral meet in Balti- | more, May 14, opposing in the latter | Johns Hopkins, Loyola of Baltimore, George Washington and Gallaudet. | Following is the outdoor schedule: | April 9—Maryland, College Park, Md. | April 12—Wake Forest. | April 25-26—Penn Relays at Phila- delphia. April 30—Frosh vs. Maryland Frosh, College Park May 3—Temple, at Philadelphia. May 10—George Washington. May 14—Muituateral (Baltimore). May 17—Delaware, at Newark, In the meantime, interest in C. U.'s indoor meet is booming. A capacicy gallery for the 300-odd athletes entered 15 assured. Buddy Bordeau, Georgetown light heavyweight, is puzzling oaay over e manner 1n whicn he was counted out after being struck on the whiskers by Barnett ot Western Maryiand at West- minster last nignt. Georgetown dropped the meet, 5 to 2. To begin with, it was & new experi- ence to Bordeau to be countea out. A majority of his opponents have surfered . Bordeau was getting the better of it in the second round when Barneit sur- prised him with a crack on the jaw. Buddy went down. ‘The Hoya got up, or started to, but somebody advised nim to take a count, $0 he ook five and then rose to ms knees. As he was aboul 10 move erect Referee Charlic Short, suil counting, began wip.ng the resin from Bordeau s gloves and was still engaged in this when he reached 10. Wiercupon he raised Barnett's arm in token ot victory. The Georgetown supporters, and Lhey were nuinerous, thought Buddy wowd have conunuea but 10r the unusual action of the rei- eree. However, it didn't matter so far as the team result was concerned for the Green Terrors by tnis time had sewed up the decision. The Hoyas' two wins were scored by Capt. Cnariey Fish and Mike Tardugno, pair of aces. slepac 0. Western Maryland and Tierney of Georgetown, who fought the 160-pound_tinai of tae intercuuegiale cnampionship tournament .ast jear, had 1t out again Wit the same result. Kienac was e better boxer and won @ c.ar-cut cecision. In the second round Tierney went down for & nine count. Toe uumnlvm 115-pound Flater (W. on over Ma ) M) w cAllister (). ) won PO Found aecision over Borchers (W. M.). 160-pouna class—ilepac (W M. n_over Tier: yweight cla over Donalason (G.) by detault. Georgetown fell an easy victim to Columbia in the final Hoya basket ball game, played in New York, score, 45-17. A capacity crowd of more than 3,000 saw the game in which a three-man officiating system was tested. The referee supervised play from the center of the court with an umpire at each end. The umpires called an occasional foul overlooked by the referee. Other- ‘wise the contest went along in ordinary fashion. ‘The Hoyas would have taken a worse beating probably had not Coach Dan Meehan used his second and then his third stringers in the second half. The first ended with Columbia leading, 30-9. Georgetown scored only five field goals, ‘The line-ups: Columbii Schoenteid, 1. Middleton, 't Bende; iy Q Ll ¥ -} ] orcorunsoh 2§ al ormrosormoony H ;. Georsetown. Dunn. f. MeCarthy. . | sorrmoouons Sooommmmn oroowman® Referee—Mr. collegiate Associa Karl Wildermuth, Hilltop sprinter, will not compete in the Knights of Columbus games in New York tonight, not having recovered sufficiently from a hip injury. Both Georgetown and the meet, promoters are keenly disappointed. Karl would have been good for a size- able cluster of points "lnd he would ve been a star attraction. h‘leo Sexton will compete in the high jump and Eric Kjellstrom in the 60-yard igh hurdles. Carlin, Ricca, Burke and Briggs will run the mile relay and Julicher, Downing, Mara and Kelly the 2-mile relay. jon | | Maryland will have four men in the Southern Conference indoor track games at Chapel Hill, N. C., tonight. Quinn Wil sprint, Rerisburg will run the quar- ter, Linzey the half ind John McDonald will heave the shot. Tonight is a blank on the sports schedule of Washington collegians. SILVER—vS—P_R_ING QUINTET SCORES IN TITLE PLAY| | | FRE Spiing High basketers, champions of Montgomery County, today are awaiting their sccond test in the State cham- | pionship series. They won their opening match terday, downing Westminster High, Car- roll County title holder, 28 to 14. The line-ups: THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDAY, MARCH 8 1930, Track Athletes Have Big Inning at C. U. : Move Against Regular School Captains SCHOOLBOYS BAND FOR TOURNEY PLAY Eastern, Central Basketers Make Up Emerson & Orme Team, NE of the leading new quints hereabouts and one that prom- ises to go far in the A. A. U. | tournament starting Monday is | the Emerson & Orme team, whose line-up | for the tourney games will include, it | has been announced, such schoolboy | stalwarts as Ben McCullough, Bill Noo~ nan and Dallas Shirley of Eastern and | Wilbur Cross, Russ Lampson, Al Mor- | gan and Don Deveau of Central. Mount_Vernon basketers, leading_the Sunday School League, will engage Trin- ity M. E. five tonight in the feature of | a six-game league card at the Central Y. M. C. A, Three tiits will be played | in the men’s gym and three in the boys’ gym, the first contest on each card to start at 7:15 o'clock. The schedule: Men's gym—First Brethren vs. Cal- | | vary M. E, Hamline M. E. vs. Mount | Pleasant_Congregational. United Breth- ren vs. Petworth M. E. Boys' gym—Mount Vernon M. E. vs. Trinity M. E., St. Paul's Lutheran vs. Calvary Baptist Drakes, Atonement Lutheran vs. Calvary Baptist Sekards. United Typewriter Grays shoved Na- tion Circles farther into the cellar in the Independent League last night, con- quering them, 24 to 23, in an extra-pe- | riod game. The Grays were glven a rousing fight all the way. A foul shot | by Bruce Kessler, the lone point of the | extra period, gave the Grays victory. ‘Tremont A. C. basketers are after games with 145-pound and unlimited quints. Call Pete Ciango at Columbia 9214-W after 6 p.m. | | AF1ER tered who pivots to pass to a team- mate when the defensive player rushes him. The way to cover in this situation is shown in the upper panel of the sketch. At other times the dribbler cames down court. The individual’s job then consists of both driving him to a sideline and cover- ing him from his front. Often a try for basket may be stopped in 1ts inciplency, as an op- ponent takes a ngo..naA The way to handle that situation is sketched on the left. (Copyright, 1930 . QUINTS TIED FOR LEAD. MIDDLETOWN, Conn.,, March 8.— Wesleyan outplayed Williams at basket ball last night, winning, 37 to 23. As & result of this game the teams are court_opposition. Call Manager Carter at Metropolitan 5375. Naval Hospital vanquished Petworth Mets in a 24-to-22 struggle last night. points. Results of other games last night: Woodlawn A. 42; racks, 28. ¥. M. C. A. Hawks, 28; Montrose, 26. | Petworth Whirlwinds, 6; Park View, 0. | tary Academy, | Pilisbury | Earle A. C: is seeking insect class| N R. Ev | Waso w. Davis led the winners’' attack with 16 | Geary | azes rause |10 Marine Bar-| W. Camp. | Jenning this far to learn that the Arabs had their sports, and sports for I was reading in the Paris edition of the New York Herald of the tied for first place in the Little Three League. WITH W. O. McGEEHAN —— Touring Abroad }—— Arab Women Golfers. ES CHENES, IN TUNISIA.—It is strange how much misinforma- tion one can gather from reading and hearsay. I had to come | women, too; not all Arabs, but the Berbers. Before I landed in Norti] Africa I was told that the Arabs were far from a sports-loving | people. Consequently, while we were climbing up to the border of Tunisia, | preparations being made by Glenna Collett for the golf invasion of England. The article contained a catalogue of her clubs and de sc;lbed once more her remarkable stance and the power of her drives —for a woman. and what it had done to get the women of America outdoors, though why they should be outdoors so much, I do not know after traveling through this country. What roused me was a somewhat peevish ex- | clamation from the lady who is driving me on this studious tour. driving me. I looked up and saw no men whatever, but two women of the Berbers playing a round of what one might call Berber goit | for women only. They were breaking rocks, one on one side of the | road and one on the other. One of them looked just a trifle like Glenna Collett, and she seemed to be leading slightly. Just as I looked up she was taking el a few practice swings at & boulder. and || 1 ann eyt melgned race | the manner in which she addressed that | amussd, if one cares to make the offors | boulder reminded me vividly of Miss JELERS: 0T S4res 1o make the effort Collett at the top of her swing. When she brought the sledge down on the| 3,“:.:’:,:;‘ mg:n'&:f:‘:y;oflfi:"b’ boulder, she had a superb follow- through, ! The lady who is driving me discovered stance!”’ T exclaimed, with |!n the morning that the battery of the “What dmiration. “There is the|CAr was in grave danger of being over- impulsive rfect woman golfer, and she never | charged because of the mileage we had made through the cork forests, the | ad a lesson in her life. If Grantland Rice or Kerr Petrie could only see her!” | Djura peaks and passes and whatnot, | while cbserving the silently-stealing- | “What on earth are you talking sbout?” demanded the lady who is|&Wway Arab in his mountain fastnesses. | driving me, with asperity. “Golf,” I said quickly. “You were telling me that these Arabs were a morose people and that they had no sports. From what I can make out So she started this day's ride with the | headlights blazing for their full power to give the battery a rest or whatever it required. Do not tel! me that the Arabs those two girls are playing a crude Berber version of golf. That tall one is a ringer for Glenna Collett, or as near as she could be in those clothes. “But instead of the clubs I have been reading about, the driver, the brassie and the putter, she is carrying different implements. I think that I can make them out for you. She has a sledge which corresponds to the driver, a mattock that might pass for a mashie niblick and a little hammer that might | be called a putter, the.thing that she! have the inscrutable look of the East uf which so much is written. Every Arab we passed was pleased because he thought that we did not know that the lights were burning. They did not laugh. That is a violation of the Koran, but they grinned and they chatted to one another concern- ing the dogs of Christians who were buruning their lights out. I never saw faces more eloguent of enjoyment. The French colonials would try to breaks the little rocks with. Of course, Glenna Collett carries a larger assort- ment of clubs, because she is playing tournament golf for an international championship, while these two girls are playing for pleasure and recreation. {stop us and point to the headlights. | But not the Arabs. They were so in- tensely happy at seeing the Christians, or whatever we are, wasting their lights | that they would run to spread the news | through the village. Some of the uxori- | ous Arabs even let their wives in on the ERICK, Md., March 8.—Silver | 1 “Pleasure,” said the lady who is driv- ing me with a sort of sniff that I felt was out of place while I was in that Joke. It horrified the frugal French co- lonials, but I never in my life saw Arabs | poetic sort of mood. {[ROSE nirkana, | “Certainly,” I said. “They are only| So tonight I rest among the giant | breaking 18 yards of rock, which corre- | 0Tk oaks of this forest, the rest of a | sponds to our 18 holes of golf, and they | Man who has given laughs to some of will be through in time to cook dinner | his fellow men—and there is no higher by the time that the husband comes | Service. | acton I was roused from my reflections on the ancient Scotch game, & Dr “Oh, those miserable, miserable men,” exclaimed the lady who is | Sine SPORTS. FINAL ROUNDS REACHED IN PENN BASKET PLAY PHILADELPHIA, March 8. — Hun School of Princeton went into the finai round of the preparatory division of the University of Pennsylvania's inter- scholastic basket ball tournament yes- terday by defut‘:;l: Staunton, Va., Mili- Manlius School of New York won its thirteenth straight game of the season by beating Valley Forge Military Acad- emy, 48 to 22, to oppose Hun. Hagerstown, Md., High will meet Overbrook of Philadelphia in the high ELECTRICAL LEAGUE BOWLING AVERAGES 2 £ Dani D s =353 09200 W wesw 223 Buguuuyey n Elect. Contraciors. West. E. 8Supply Co Cen. Ar. W. No. 2 53 INDIVIDUAL AVERAGES. CENTRAL ARMATURE WORKS NO. 1 Barbi Moye: Haber, Robinette B3 Camp, E 3 EXIDE Wolst'holme. 56 66 1. Eskit Norton C. Eval Arneson vans n . Eskii POT. 103-16 10222 101-19 101-10 18 Weldms [ Noone Mcney Warren Kearny . Raup . 32 964 118 Vincent 63 9543 117 CATLIN'S, INC. 69 104-52 124 63 9328 129 Padgett o ELECTRICAL C! Kirchner o ELECTRIC SUPPLY 100-29 125 332 6 133 e WEST! Le: INGHOUSE ase .. etzler | Michigan and Tllinois t | | come dangerous challengers. This trio | WISCONSIN PICKED T0 CAPTURE MEET Badgers Impress in Trials, but Five Other Teams Are in Running. By the Associated Press. INNEAPOLIS, Minn, March 8.—Wisconsin today ranked as favorite to win the indoor track and field championships of the Western Conference up for decision in the University of Minnesota field house tonight. The Badgers swept into prominence 43| g a result of the trials last night, in which they placed six men in the four events in which qualifying heats were run. The meet, however, promised 0| be a wide-open affair, with six teams, | including Wisconsin, fighting for the | champlonship _honors. Ohio State, | hreatened to be- | qualified five athletes, with Indiana and Chicago placing four, and Minnesota | next in line with three. Towa, the defending champion, re- | turning to Big Ten competition for the | first time since its suspension, tied with | Northwestern and Purdue with two | qualifiers each. The Hawkeyes' chances | of retaining their title were dealt a | knockout blow by the decision of the athletic _directors to throw out the | | broad jump, in which Iowa, with its | Negro star, Edward Gordon, had hoped | to score at least 5 points. With the broad jump thrown out, the list of | events was reduced from 12 to 11. | The finals tonight will bring together | 200 athletes from each of the 10 uni- | versities in the conference. Record | holders in four events will*defend their | honors. The title holders are Orval| Martin, Purdue, champion in the hlll-’ mile and mile runs; George Simpson, | Ohio State, 60-yard dash champlon and holder of the world record in the 100- yard event. and H. E. Hayden, Chicago, | who established the conference indoor | record for the 70-yard high hurdles last year. Hayden undoubtedly will be forced to extend himself to the limit, judging from the performance of Lee Sentman, Tllinois, in the trials last night. man presented the only record perform- ance by leaping the high hurdles in 87-10 seconds to tie Hayden's time established a year ago Simpson will face his first major tiff of the season when he meets Eddie Tolan, Michigan's crack Negro sprinter, and Zack Ford, Northwestern sopho- more, in the finals of the 60-yard dash event tonight. Tolan, Simpson and Ford won their heats handily last night, with Simpson and Tolan turning in the fastest time, 6 3-10 seconds. BASKET BALL SUBSTITUTE SILENT FOR 80 MINUTES FAYETTEVILLE, Ark., March 8 (#).— An eloctrical storm and a clause in the basket ball rules caused Elsworth Chappell, Texas Christian University forward, to remain silent in a game for an hour and 20 minutes. ‘Texas Christian was playing Arkansas when Chappell was sent in to substi- tute. Just as the replacement was made a storm struck and lights in the gymnasium went out. For 80 minutes the players waited in darkness. They gathered and talked. The spectators talked. Chappell, how- ever, mindful of the penalty for open- ing his mouth before a play had been listened. Kuechle Chaney Bailey Snaw | it is with boat publications, they spread | Along the By Carrol SUALLY at this time of year| there is much exuberant scrib- | bling over the beauty, the de-| light, the freshness of Spring, U COLLEGE BASKET BALL. Columbia, 45; Georgetown, 17. Waterfront Klotzbach discovers a cute little nest of empty bottles, “dead soldiers” in the corner of the cockpit, left there by some of the same workmen that tracked up the | star of Hyattsville, meets Jackie Sim- run off, simply sat apart, waited and | all Nature smiles, etc., and so deck. out into much of the same thing—I | scuttles full of cinders from an am- believe their next issues will be the well | bitious railroad are scattered around the | g known “Fitting Out” numbers, wherein | decks and that the scupper pipes from | the cockpit are well clogged with the He also finds that about three coal | OHN P. EVANS, chairman of the| Bill Wood sweepstakes for bowl- | ! ers with averages less than 106, | tried his durndest, but was un- | able to break the duckpinners Labit of procrastination sending in entries. The lists were to have closed last night, but | Evans was still accepting applications today. They were coming in at a rate |that assured a record total, perhaps | 100, which would make a prize fund of $500. Competition will start at 7:30 o'clock tonight at the Lucky Strike. Evans has turned down three appli- | cations, presented by bowlers with few- |game averages less than 106. John knew 'em to be a lot better than their league records indicated and this is & tournament strictly for the middle-class performer. George Montzouris, chairman of the Greek-American sweepstakes, opening tonight at 0 at the Coliseum, had 25 entries in nd today and expected a last-minute rush. The Prince Georges County class B sweepstakes will be finished tonight on the Hyattsville Arcade drives, with Winifred Eaton topping the fleld. He has a 27-pin lead en Judge Aldridge, in second place, with Fiddles Holland trailing Aldridge by 26 sticks. ‘Tommy Walker, who shot 630 in the opening set of the College Park sweep- stakes, enters the final block tonight with & 56-pin advantage over his near- est rival, Kee, with Krenz and Waldrop close to-the runner-up. Youngsters will be in the spotlight at the Arcadia today and tonight. This afternoon “Red” Glasgow, 14-year-old mons, one of John Blick's proteges. and tonight at 7 o'clock Jackie will | take on “Ounce” Harrison, kid brother | of the well known Paul and Joe. | Another feature tonight at the| Arcadia will be the women's sweep- stakes. Northeast Temple missed a golden op- portunity to catch the leading King Pin team of the District League by | dropping two games to Convention Hall. Had the TemE]es won three they would | have deadlocked for first place. y Von Dreele, Baltimore ace, shot | anchor for the Hail and was mostly re- | sponsible for victory in one of the closest matches of the season. His set of 360 was high for the Hail, which won the first game by six pins, the sec- ond by four and lost the third by nine. But for Red Megaw and Max Rosenberg, with 141 and 131, the Temples would | | have dropped the final, too. | | Of the 10 stars engaged only Red | Megaw rose much above mediocrity. | Red totaled 410. Friends was second | high for Temple with 329. Convention Hall's set was 1,698 and Temple's one | stick less. | Mike Moran, best known as a base ball player, shot a game of 171 for Street Department in the Washington Gas Light League at Convention Hall, | yet his team was beaten by 15 pins | and by a girl! | Betty Dugan, only girl member of the league, dropped in a 122 string that de- | cided the issue in the second game. Miss | Dugan’s other scores were 92 and 127, | miving her a set of 341. Mike put every- | thing he had into the big game, his | other scores being 96 and 91. ‘The Petworth and Hyattsville juniors, all under 18, will battle tonight at Hy attsville. All woman bowlers are invited to at- | tend a meeting of the Washington Women's Duckpin Association _next | Friday night at the Arcadia, in which | | plans for the annual city tournament, | to be held at Convention Hall, will be | | made. Delegates from the (ollnwln§ Jeagues are expected: Ladies Federal, Wash- ington . Ladies District, Quar- Heavy Bowling Card Tonight Featured by Dub Sweepstakes Ladies, A. G. O. Ladies, Western Union Ladies, Kann's Department Store In- dependent Ladies, Ladies Agriculture, B. Y. P. U, General Counsel Ladies, Lutheran Ladies, Eastern Star, Ladies Public Debt and Veterans' Bureau. Su- bur ladies’ leagues are invited to send representatives. Teams, doubles and singles will be rolled by the American Business Club bowlers of Washington and Reading, Pa. tonight at the Lucky Strike, with _three games in each event. The Washingion team will be selected from Carr, Freeman, Scholl, Fowler, Severe, Thada, Lynn and Schweinhaut, with Freeman and Scholl, Cafr and| Fowler, and Thada and Severe pairing | in the doubles. A return match will | be shot in Reading during April. Brookland and Treaty Oak Chapters of the Eastern Star will meet Monday night at the Lucky Strike. With 94 pins picked up in the first five games, the Rice Bakery team | figures to swamp the Rice Bakery team | of Baltimore when their home-and- home series is finished tonight at Con- | vention Hall. Last year's record of 197 entries the newspaper men's tournament, start Tuesday at the King Pin No. 2, probably will be beaten. More than 90 entries have been received by Chairman John Evans from the Times-Herald outfit, which last year produced a few more than 60. The Daily News had only one representative in 1929, but this time plans to make a real showing. The Star, which led in entries with 69, will be back strong, as will the Post. No class of newspaper toller or em- ployes of other types of publications is barred. A newcomer to the field is the Book of Washington, with Pub- lisher C. C. McDevitt leading his own crew into battle, PLACOS AND POULOS TOP AHEPA ROLLERS Standing of Teams. in to Total. 1 69 137 360 2 Il 69 139 370 20 1.1 66 131 355 14 HERCULES. 69 139 68 152 6 131 D18133 HERMIS. 9 99 100-47 107-37 10: -5 85-2) Records. High individual es—G (Hercules). 107-37: Lefty Poulos, High individual game—G. Mantzouris He.cules), 152, High “individual set—Lefty Poulos (Her- mes). 374, High team game—Plato, 580, team se ercules. 1.854. irlkes—Gus ‘Placos (Hercules), 34; (Socrates), 26. Placos (Hercules). 144; us _ Placos 107-17. us gto) termaster Ladies, Internal Revenue “Higl s—Gus Andrew Panes (Aristotie). 130. Team Standing. Section A w | Mount Preasant... Golden Rule ... 51 Eiste armony Arlington Langdon How Odd Fellow Pinmen Stand Going Into the Home Stretch ELECTIONS LIKELY 0 BE PASSE SOON {Plan of Coaches Selecting Leaders for a Game or Period Favored. W TTHIN a short time selection of captains of sports teams at the end of the preceding season will be passe in high and prep schools here, according to all indications. There is a strong tendency manifest to have the coaches appoint leaders before each contest in the case of foot ball or for a week or so in case of basket ball and other sports. Proponents of the plan claim that there are obvious advantages to be gained by doing away with election of captains by letter winners. In the first place such a move effectually takes the matter “out of politics,” it is pointed out. Every one sup) to know anything about the situation agrees that fraterni- ties not Infrequently control the selec- tion of leaders of sports teams. As a result it happens sometimes that cap- talns are picked who do not meet the approval of coaches and do not prove capable leaders. Another advantage of selecting a leader for each game or group of con- tests is that the players have the incen- tive ot being picked for the honor to make them battle their hardest. ‘There appears to be plenty of ground for attaching less weight to the im- portance of early selection of captains of sports teams in the public high schools as well as prep schools in the Distriet. Announcement has just been made that Western will elect no captain for its basket ball team next season. Coach Moore will name a leader for each game. Gonzaga and St. John's basket ball quints will meet scon in a rubber game, it has been decided, though the date has not yet been decided. Each has de- feated the other once on the hardwood this Winter. The Purple conquered the Cadets, 27 to 26, in a hair-raiser last night to get back at its old foe for a 44 | 32-29 defeat St. John's handed Gonzaga earlier in the campaign. A nifty shot from scrimmage in the last minute of play by Bob McVean, Gonzaga forward, gave his team victory last night. It was a great battle. ail tive way with the lead frequently aiter- nating. St. John's was leading, 26-22, when Gonzaga started the raily that cul- minated in McVean's vital goal. The line-ups: Nola Buss| Holbrook, Py Fi Totals Jonn's agher, f. ther | G 3 H H 9 1 i St. John's lightweights, howéver, managed to overcome the Gonzaga little fellows in a 31-29 preliminary, another thriller. The Cadets contrived to keep” a few points ahead all the way. The line-ups: J. Lights. G PPts St Sattery, 1. Heal ol vecnrooo; 2l auamason® Totals ....13 339 Totals ntral will meet John Marshall High n(c};mhmcnd in foot ball next Fall in the Virginia capital and the Richmond cleven will come here in 1931, it has been announced. This game is the only contest so far arranged for Central for next Fall, but within a few weeks the Blue's card is expected to be com- pleted. Serious consideration is being given by public high school officials to the problem of arranging & new schedule of play for the championship basket ball series. Objection has been raised to the plan of playing two games twice a week, starting at 3:45 o'clock, which was followed this Winter. Play is over so late, it is pointed out, that all con- cerned miss thelr supper and the scho- lastic work of students suffers, as they are “tired out” after the excitement incident to the games. Fifty candidates for Central High's 33| golf team have reported to Capt. Francis Horton. Practice will start as soon as the weather permits. we shall find the same old hackneyed Y. ‘They gllnt beautiful word pictures of the ambitious boatiac bound for the club or boatyard all set either to paint up and clean up the boat himself or to order the yardman to do it for him. And all is sweet and pretty. Let's face the facts as they so often occur, not as they would have us be- lieve,. We start from scratch. The boatiac is on his way as usual. He arrives. He discovers that the canvas cover so carefully placed last Fall has been ripped and torn—the master minds around the yard having rammed | a bowsprit into it for a starter and torn off the after part so that they might cross over to another boat, leav- ing across your once clean decks a nice Tow of greasy tracks. He finds that the fenders he arranged for protection to his sides are misplaced—an owner with no regard for property rights has moved them over to another craft for Her protection. Passing boys have broken one of the windshields and he home from his discussion of Arabian | — politics at the cafe and all worn out.| There are no golf widowers among the | Berbers, so far as I know. Sport is never allowed to disrupt the Arabian home.” | BUT I was made to realize that I was getting too gabby quickly enough. “Oh, you miserable men.” said the lady who is driving me, and I did not like the way that she said it. I did not invent this game of Berber golf for women, and my attitude toward any feminist movement always has been| passive. “Can't you see that they are not en- ving that drudgery?” demanded the lady who is driving me. “Look at their & | 1 did. 'The one that looked like Glenna Collett naturally was not at al hard to look at. But I had nothing | further to say about anything. I real- ize at last occasions when I have opened my mouth and put one of my well-shod feet into it. “And you compare them to free American women on the links,” said the lady who is driving me with BY JACK FORRESTER, Winners of the Midsouth Open, 1929, This is ome of a series of articles written by jamous amateur and pro- fessional “golfers, telling how they overcame outstanding faults in their play. | VER since I can remember I've been trying to improve my put- ting. This phase of golf may not be as spectacular as others, but when you figure that half one's strokes on an average round are used | on the green it begins to loom up in its proper significance. I realized long | Forrester Got Putting Touch By Eliminating Wrist Action | while I was successful. I began to experiment with various sunc‘rs. 1 eventually shifted my weight from the left foot to the rij rht. cnn;r:rz the method of most golfers. Fo while 1 1t seemed I had ly suited bounds. l struck upon the only style reail to me, and my elation knew no ‘Then 'in & little while my putting be- came as bad as ever. AS a maiter of fact it got & darned sight worse. All my experimenting, it seemed, had done | me nnrye harm. I lost all semblance 0!1 touch—and you must have that above | everything. I finally decided that the secret of | urate putting does not_lie in the wrists, as so many argue. I eliminated wrist action entirely by placing my left ago that if T didn't | hand well under on the grip of the Something should be done about this. | Columbia. | Loyalty | Central Amity No. ‘3! Mount Rainier. same and that the rain and snow water has dripped lustily down over the motor, rusting it beautifully and putting the ignition out of commission. * Going below, he pokes about here and there and during the poking process discovers that three or four frames on the starboard side alongside the ice box have dry rotted and must be replaced— at quite a cost. His favorite wrench is missing and two of the lighting fix- tures have somehow detached them- | Fede Washington Fred D, St FOOT BALL IS HELD TO BE TOO INTENSE SAN FRANCISCO, March 8 (#).—W. W. Campbell, president of the Univer- sity of California, is of the opinion that. 1 MOUNT RAINIE! it i 1 1 1 1 1 1 3 6 41 ‘WASHINGTON. 6 2 selves and walked away. Words with | the boat vard keeper are of no avail. The keeper will be usually found with & ripe odor of spiritus frumenti about him and in no condition for lucid thought—all this it he can be found at all. Friendship Falls Church Records. m game - Mount Pleasant 3 1 sel—Mount Pleasan! individual game—Laughton. 157, den, 396. individual set—R. Bl est strikes—b. kileti, foot ball on the Pacific Coast, and espe- cialy in California, “has become decid- edly too intense for the good of the universities concerned, and especally for the good of the players.” In an article in the current issue of |the San Francisco Argonaut, weekly front. And so it goes Donaidson, 168. reatest spares. am E. Nash. 97 High ‘aversges—P Ellett, 115-20; Camp- bell, 115-19; P. Donaldson. 113-16. Individual Averages by Teams. (15 ames or more.) GOLDEN RULE, Commodore Bennett of the Corinthian Club has passed the word that the| dredging operations on the new club basin are to begin within the week and that the basin should be ready for par- tial occupancy within two months. This will be a great relief to those members compelled to leave their craft to the b tender mercies of the yard men. Their | Tobe departure may also cause a change in | the attitude of most of these same yard men—what with present crowded con- ditions they have been operating with a sort of take-it-or-leave-it manner, Service plus is unknown on the water | Campbell Here's another season at hand and nothing accomplished toward relieving ' 1. the crowded conditions of the channel | anchorage. No doubt there will be the same old overfiow beyond the limits, only this year it will be larger. No doubt that there will be the same old squabble over anchor lights on craft in the anchorage—which lights are quite useless, being totally invisible against the background of city and park lights. Every year there are a considerable number of fines assessed against boat- owners for failure to comply with this| regulation. The enforcement is spas- modic at best, and it has been observed that peculiar exceptions have been made by whoever does the inspecting. n 31 63 21 D62 26 168 17 3. Ellett Morgan Mossburg Blayloci 22 | Now | Soui “ | Giossoreniver . publication, President Campbell describ- |ed the advance of foot ball to the det- | riment of other college athletic activi- ties. He disapproved Atlantic Coast-Pacific | Coast games in term-time, with the fol- 97-20 | lowing observations: 9320/ “In my opinion, such games serve no T, | useful purposes whatsoever, and the 2033 | members of the traveling' foot ball 18 | squads sacrifice 10 valuable days to each | trip. Chiefly because the University of 10| Pennsylvania teams had twice in_the | preceding four years played New Year -8 | games in’ Berkeley, 1 consented to a re- 343 | tum game to be played in Philadel- | phia in October, 1929. GUS TEBELL RESIGNS TO COACH AT VIRGINIA By the Assoclated Press. RALEIGH, N. C.. March 8.—Coach G. K. (“Gus”) Tebell has submitted his resignation as head foot ball and | basket ball coach at North Carolina State College to accept a similar posi- tion at the University of Virginia, but | he has been asked to reconsider his action. | “"Tebell has been at North Carolina | State since 1925. He is a member of the national basket ball rules committee and is a graduate of the University of Wisconsin. Kkes thworth Bryant wio | ! . club. This transferred the pivotal point There is no longer any necessity for| from the wrists to the left elbow. ‘mnlnmlulng a broad channel, and the | Ordinarily this method would cause a anchorage might be widened quite a body sway, but I eliminated that by bit. throwing the weight well over on the| Pilings along the park wall with pub- overcome my weak- | left foot, touching the right only lightly | lic berths for pleasure craft would solve ness, but there still| to the ground. Since I discovered this | the whole problem, would pay for them- room for im-| method and gained control of it by in-selves and be self-supporting. A com- provement. My ex- | cessant mercial concern operated off and pre- Gordon . Crutchley W. Mason Poole some of that Scoltish scorn fre- quently gets into her annunciation— and more frequently of late, I am beginning to think. 1 did but I die not say anything more. | 1 have secn so many of the Indies of | my own, my native land, work quite hard in taking up the real game of golf. master putting 1 never could get very far in the competitive gam 1 have materiaily | 13 27 a7 a0 1 15 13 CROSON JOINT CAPTAIN | OF DUKE’S BASKET TEAM | DURHAM, N. C. March 8.—Joe 100-25 | Croson, former Washington Tech th 99-15 | athlete, who starred at center for 36-30 | Duke University basket ball team dur- 100-32 99-10 | 96-11 | 90-33 89 Harrice g0 Flzeerad s Totals ... Referee— Mr. Sherry. ] =.......,..« b o e DUNBAR HIGH QUINTET Tucker R.J. Bladen wis BEATS BALTIMOREANS' Dunbar High basketers today boasted their fifteenth win in 20 starts this seascn. They downed Douglas High of altimore, 19 to 11, yesterday in the | Dunbar gym. The lfi'\e-ups: ar k] ] Pis. Douglas. ts 4 § Morse. 1. [ Howard, 1 ysan, 1. 2 . Parker, ¢. 4 Rawlings, 2 §Innd. H Lee. 1. 0 regory, ..., 0 H 0 ol onosmsene ol onomsonce, 0iber girls seemed to be ha have seen them stand for a bawling out | | from a profane Seotch professional, and | { T have seen them walk over the links when every corn on their tender dogs | was screaming aloud. You can see that perience lot of other people, First I blamed r:ny trouble on the put- ter. I must have tried every kind manufactured, seeking the secret of good putting in | kind of suffering in Florida this time of | the year if you are the kind of person | who' likes to watch suffering ones and see clvilized women torturing them- | selves and their little dogs. | “But I am not ind of man. 1 do | not 1ik> to see any human being suffer. the clubs. Tha | T still can say here that those two Ber- | a fallacy common to all of us. But when faults crop up they do not originate in the tools we work with. ey lle probably | mously in my putting. is like that of a|experience will help others who haven't |again. Why should the boat-loving citi- | is | recommending this as a cure- ractice I have improved enor- It may be my been able to do themselves justice on the greens. | Have my point well in mind. The left hand under the shaft. Try that, and you'll see that you can't easily get wrist into the stroke,” Keep the weight almost entirely on the left foot, using the right only as a balancing point. I'm not 1, but it | did help mq | (Coprright, 1930, by North American News- paper Alliance.) nod time at their road gol Berber the f, .nflqnn'ul? tfllnk -mo Glenna Collett won When that made itself plain to me (Next: Abe Espinoss), sumably will operate from Haines Point Bladen' . | 96- 93-10 ing the season just closed has 1 zen be denied the use of the park. Is it a matter of cumshaw? ] = Col ‘The boatman is & hardy soul. Observe how he thrives under poor conditions, | Ehle We wonder what would become of him were conditions bettered. SOCCERISTS TO CLASH. Rosedale soccerists _will entertain North Point kickers of Baltimore to- morrow afternoon. at 1:30 o'clock on Rosedale field, a eEEEsE S . 2 | McPherson been 35 | re-elected co-captain of the 1931 quint -4 | along vlmhfloegrle Rogers, forw: of Asheville, . Both Croson and Rogers are juniors. —_— —— For' the first time Yale has sched- uled nine foot ball games for 1930. The big three rule held each school to_eight_games. FREEZEPROOF Radiators for all makes. it A WISTATES RADIATOR, FENDER AND BODY WORKS. Now. TSl TEEEE epnuESE o Crossman Haverty de)