Evening Star Newspaper, November 18, 1930, Page 34

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Py *“‘ BLUE ENCOUNTERS FINE TEAN IN WL ginia Eleven to Be lot Fri- day Is Filled With All- State Players. ZICE 1927 the “C” Club of Central High School has sponsored a foot ball game to close the foot ball season for the Blue. Each year members of the hustling organization have put on a bang-up contest, one briming with color. True, Central W has yet to win a “C” Club game, aving bowed to Central High of arlotte, N. C.; Princeton Prep|u '-nd Devitt, in 1037, 1928 and 102, ‘ibut, nevertheless, the'games have /been highly attractive. In mflm with its policy of bmk clevens for only outstanding Zdate, the club has. schedu;led the {nrmld- the h team of s ntra um y afternoon starting at 3:30 o'clock. ear the Virginians, who, like c Washington and Lee Freshmen, are as the Little Generals, finished a tie for B prep school tle of Virginia. is season they are __reputed an even better eleven, the besi 'E nc:. ever 0 represent the school. 8hould the Ballston scholastics win over urg High, soon to be met, mm assured of again finishing % mmaf mehe-vmv.heoldnommbn Cul n tou the Little Generals ‘m EVENING n'mn wnnme'ron WITH JONES GONE, PROS APT TO DOMINATE GOLF No Amateur Around Seems Capable to Taking Place of Retired Master of U. S. and British Links—All Praise Bobby’s Act. By the Assotiated Press. EW YORK, November 18.— Bobby Jones, master golf- er of all time, who hes re- tired from competition in order to make sound films, has left as a heritage a wide-open battle for the four American and British national champlionships he holds. Nowhere on the horizon at.p: does there loom any amateur wlm u-u go!flng gifts needed to duplicate Bobby's jprecedented feat of winning all four nntleml titles in a single year. Perhaps | ¢l here never will be another Jones. ‘The stocky Atlanta lawyer, alone among amateurs, consistently has beat- en the professionals at their own game. Four times he won the American open against the best pros and amateurs in game and thrice the British open fell to his amazing skill ‘With his retirement, it seems certain that the pros again will dominate both open tournaments for, certainly, ama- teur ranks contain no figure even ap- proaching Jones in shot-making ability or in steadiness under fire. It is a coincidence, and an odd one, that in the last few months, Qeorge Von Elm and Johnny Goodman, the only players who have beaten Jones in the American amateur in the last seven er's frank facing of the amateur prob- lem there can no&ln( but prum He prefers not to be in any twilight 20ne, but recognizes fflly the commer- clal application of the mouon pleture contract. It is a straightforward, un- eqtivocal decision and certainly neither the motives nor the attitude of Mr. Jones toward golf in its commercial phase can be criticized.” The New York Times comments that Jones “with dignity, quits the memor- able scene upon which he nothing common did nor mean.” Herbert H. Ramsay, president-elect of the United States Golf Association, through whom Jones' statement was mlde Pubflc, paid this tribute to the “He has un&uummubly during his career made the greatest competitive in the history of the game. Aside from that, though, his character and personality are such that he has become & popular world figure. - His withdrawal from competition will be greatly regretted by every one.” . England Regreis Retirement. ‘There were similar expressions of regret in England. Norman Boase, chairmah of the Royal and Anclent's Championship Committee, said that although he was aware that Bobby con- templated retirement, he was extremely sorry to hear it. “Jones was the great- est golfer of all time,” he continued, “a delightful man and a modest cham- years, both have announced their re-|pion.” tirement as amateurs. Von Elm beat Bobby in the final round at Baltusrol in 1926 and Goodman_ eliminated him in the first round at Pebble Beach in 1929. 1In every other year the Atlantan be | emerged the victor. country and captain of “another mainstay of the Mortimer, #ho 18 in better physical mummm has scored mmfi ‘season, and oa . O )lm?{ImQt Chase . Good! snd Via, all were all-State leucflonl last season 'and bid fair to repeat this year. Clements, stalwart center, is an- ble. -Lee will bring its entire cade band the n m the halves. n County backers of be on hand. Little Generals downed mmmmuwo, Gonzaga and Western, old foes, and ~ and Eastern, formidible P % tha-Calage Sivdium:and. the - um e ARt dium. St. Albans will entertain Christ Church School of near Richmond, Va., the same afternoon on the Cathedral School grid. /will play host to Wenonah, N. J. Military Academy here Saturday in a nm(n game of a home-and-home series. A college q Sy past it has met along with college teams, those representing high schools and inde- B pendent quints. th a flock of former high school and coll players among the 50 can- didates Bliss k 16oking to .a bright cam- In its openh; gamie of the season the Electricians will face an ‘alumni team made up of players from the District, Maryland, Pe; lvania and New York. Bliss will play all its home games in the $Sllver Spring National Guard Armory. * Here is the schedule: = December 6-=Alumni. Dne’gember 12-=Benjamin Franklin Uni- . January 9—Southeastern Urversity. January 16—Strayer College. January 17—George Washington en at George Washington. January 23—Georgetown Freshmen. January 30—Columbus University. February 6—George Washington Preshmen. February 13—Open. February IFBenjum\n Pranklin Uni- wersity at Benjamin Franklin U. February 20—Southeastern University. February 21 Freshmen 8t Georgetown. !vbruury 27—Columbus University. mrcn 7-stny¢t Couen COCHRAN LI L‘EADS HOPPE ORK, November 18 ().— ':lker coehnru spectacular play in the first t'o lkuyu of his 3,600-point match with Wi noppe for the worlds 18.1 balkline billiard’s ‘title found the lollywood ;I;Jr lumm his veteran rival cochnn won bot.h aft:rnoon evening bloch yesterday. In the first run of 118 enabled him to 213, while last night his M to 42, giving him an to 2556 with 10 more ln put ther a the second block for fi‘lnl'ul'&m?!v!p'oi inning of the first block. g5 gagRgEs éigég aE§E =8 E in the WOULD NOT PLAY ARMY By the Associated Press. o( wst Polnc Sy -an--kmrw §§ low | of blackest Hunter beat the All Praise Jones. Press comment on Jones® decision to | rance . | renounce his amateur status was almost uniformly favorable. The New York Herald Tribune called Jones’ decision “most understandable, most’ natural.” "th:g‘ in l{hu i ition vw}e nmu'ell; come prof opportunity to teac! golf through motion pictured?” the edi- torial continued. “For the Atlanta law- 8ir Ernest Hblderness, who twice won the British eamateur champio: sad: “Tt is a wise act. Most peopie make the mistake of retiring too late in their careers. Bobby is the finest ml;et in the world. Every one will miss . I hope he will return to England.” Rex Hartley, who with T. A. Tor- Jones and Dr. O. F. Willing the Walker Cup foursomes last Spring, was much & to hear of Jones' decision, “I am very " he said. “He ex- His absence will make the men's ehlm- plonship 1like the women’s without Joyce Wethered.” and | the hardest and grimmest an i It’s End of Trail for Jones, But End Is Good, Says Keeler BY 0. B. KEELER. (Written for the Associated Press.) TLANTA, November 18.—And so it's “Good-by to all that” for Bobby Jones and, incidentally, for this correspondent. Bobby's retirement from competitive golf is the end of the trail—the end of a trail that has carried us together a matter of 120,000 miles; three times to Europe and across the flelds of 27 major champion- ships. ‘When Bobby told me of his decision I couldn’t say anything for the mo- . T just stuck out my hand, and ‘we shook, pe 8 y. mdled.'l‘b. 's all there is—there isn't Seven Lean Years Dear, But in the long memories that remain lamour fades, there always will of the seven lean years; t fate and fortune .., wander if T'll ever win & champlon- ship.” And I said to Bobby: “Bon, you're the greatest.golfer in the world, and when you get that conviction into your skull, you'll win, not one, but a lot of them.” And Bobby only laughed: But Bobby evenlu‘:ly developed an ambition, which we now can talk about !r:ely and with no special show of mod- esty. After he had won the national open a Inwood, in 1932, and followed with the national amateur in 192¢ and 1925, he said to me one night: Jones Gets His Wish, “There 1s one I'd like to do, in golf. 1'd like to be national champion of the United States six years in suc- cession, emur amateur or open. Then I'd be ready to hang up, the old clllhl and let them all take a shot at that. ’fll ol course, it can’t be done. we both laughed that time. Of eouue it couldn’t be done. And now—well, now he has been na- tional champion of the United States eight years in succession—open cham- pion, 1923; amateur champion, 1924 and 1925; open champion, 1926; ama- tur champion, 1927 and 1928; open champion, 1929, and both open and amateur champion, 1930 Added w which he has been open champlon of Great Britain, 1926, 1027 and 1930, lnd amateur champion, 1930. ‘Thirteen major champlonshij most uncertain of all major sports, achieved n;n ;"sp:n of eight years, at the age of 28! It is the time to stop. It is a good end to the long trail. ‘There are no more records to shoot for. Bobby is the wfirst golfer to win five United States amateur champlon- ships. He has equalled the British and the United States record of winning both the teur which has been just uonnem Ena of Trall for Both, I have been with Bobby In his hours n, 8s after Willle in the of at it him the ‘was with him in |48 abou he failed by & single stroke to catch Sarazen in the national open of 1922 at Skokie, and when he lost by a single stroke to Farrell at Olympia in the greatest ph{;ofl on record, where each finished with two holes in birdies. And I have been with him when the mayor came out to meet the Aquitania, in New York Harbor, and later the Europa, when New York was fumng rm e sort of welcome that only New can accord to a conquering hgro— mau:hed only t‘)e last welcome home town, Atlanta, gave him when he came back from Interlachen last July. I've seen him lose, whue. in {n ‘good-by to all that,” I can nm ny what I've said to people all over the world, that they can see for themselves if he's a golfer, but I can tell them that he's a finer boy than he is a golfer. ‘The '.umult and the shouting have long puttis mever again will curl up and die at the cup, jzt outside OW that the amateur golf world | hes been turged upside ‘down by the announcement that Bobby Jones is to_forsake fur- amateur competition, 't seems fit- ker shots should be revealed to that now boasts sand M:u new, bigger and lighter golf ball. i changing. New methods are troduce to the world this new:(and yet old) golf shot, which any one can play and which 1s as effective in getting out of the sand as a 40-foot putt which finds the bottom of the tin. Freddie was asked today how many types of bunker shots there are. The acknowledged master of the sanded wastes smiled for a moment and re- plied, just as expected, “There are two types of bunker shots, the explosion shot and the chip shob.” “But what,” he was asked, “about that shot m play so ndmlnbly, where the ball 1l traight ug‘!rom a well opened face wmn ck spin, and ucuullu:uonulmnl-(wrlt )’ id, “that is not strictly a bus shot. It is in some degree a trick shot. But when it comes off, boy, how it makes that ball sit down. 1If it comes off correctly, I think it 15 the most effective shot that can of & bunker, But if lot of , and you've got to hit the ball hard. If you quit on the shot it will leave the ball in the bunker and if you don’t hit the ball ht, it will and bably mashie shot blck to the green.” One who has seen most of the leading yl.lym of the wofld—amateur and pro- elslonll—-u prepared to say he never nen any man play that type of Pndd.h IMA Olhnl’l try IG. t0 b.’nun. 8s apt to flub n hit it rul rnddu - average correct hits. So a new bunker i golfing world generally ac- cepts but two types of bunker shots— the explosion t, or blast, and the chip from a go:d lie in the sand. Tommy Armour, the iron master, has tried the snof with indifferent ‘success, Bobby Jones has tried it. Horton Smith has essayed the shot. They all have attempted to play it like Freddie. But no one has the accuracy from the sand of the little Columbia mentor with that sl shot, in which an am-hce slub slides right under the ltnl(ht up in the nr barely wnchln( e sand, and brinks it back 'ofl'wfllht'll-hllnm die has been seen hounh.nu dounotw-.lhouwtdhwnnn at Columbia, while other first-class golf- ers have flubbed them and left the ball in the sand Freddie ter of the shot, the world cessfully most ot tb' '"10 uhE | Gey f.lut something new in the way p Teams, wn vs. Villanova.. id vs. Navy...... Glllludet vs. St. Prancis Yale vs. Hatvard. Afmy vs. Ursinus New York U. vs. Rutgers Temple vs. Carnegle Tecl West Virginia vs. W. & Fordham vs. Bucknell Boston College _vs. Bos Holy Cross vs. Loyola (Md.) . Northwestern vs. Notre Dame. ilal'ln:‘u V8. omghfm.e chigan vs. cago Wisconsin vs. Mitinesota Iowa vs. Nebraska. Purdue vs. Indiana Drake vs. Towa State Michigan State vs, Detroit California vs. Stanford. Missouri vs. Kans8..oioiiiii.s Oklahoma A. & M. vs. Oklahoma. Kansas Aggies vs. @entte... Texas Christian vs. Baylor Rice vs. Southern Methodist. . Washburn vs. Southwestern. .. LOCAL TEAMS. Place. 1929 Scores. +...Philadeiphia nmpolu ROCKY MOUNTAIN. Colorado Aggles vs. Colorado Ool Regis vs. Brigham Young..... Vanderbilt vs. Auburn........ South Carolina vs. N. O, State . Oglethorpe vs. Mercer........ Fort Collins . Donver Columbia Atlanta . CLOVERS AGAIN SEEK BASKET BALL HONORS Return After an Absence of Three Seasons—Pratt Whirlwinds Will Reorganize. Clovers of Southeast Washington, who have recently reorganized their basket ball team after an absence of three seasons from the hardwood, will drill tonight in the Eastern Hlkh gym at 7 o'clock. Several players who formerly played with the club have announced they will again be on the jcb. Wiler, Adkins. Smith, Lilly, Aman, Robey, Timmons, Canavin and any other candidates wish- ing to try for the team are asked to report. Games for the Clovers are being ar- by Bob Ully at Lincoln 5845, rganization Tof ¢ the Pratt Whirl- wlndl. us-pvund District A. A, U. court champs last has been effected. Last season’s pllym and new candi- dates are asked to telephone Jakie Lewis at North 1813 without delay. Eldbrooke M. E. tossers will face Army War College quint tonight at the Army War College at 8 o'clock. Hank ryee is booking for Eldbrooke at clevehnn 5982, ‘With Jones and Letvin playing best, Saks & Co. basketers opened their sea- son with & 35-27 win over the Laurel, Md., National Guards in the Armory and | at that place last night. e DA, FAVORS BOXING IN D. C. - to Representative Hartley Plans to Offer Bill to L¥galize It. Representative Fred Hartley, jr., New Jersey, recently re-elected, has let it be known that he plans to reintro- duce the bill which would legalize amateur boxing in the District in the session of Congress opening next mu’l"‘h‘:'bfll is expected to be amended with a view to overcoming objections heretofore raised. of -STRAIGHT OFF THE TEE By: WALTER R. McCALLUM sand. Here the main idea is to hit an | inch or two behind the ball and bring the pellet out on a cushion of sand raised by the edge of the niblick. And almost every one has tried the chip shot mm wet sand, where the ball lies well , inviting an accurate chip as if from the falrway. The nlnp is & very difficult flwt Nine times out successful if it comes off. 'And it can be made to come off with sufficient practice. In the first place, the feet must be firmly rooted in the sand. Then the club must be gripped with the thumb and forefinger of the right hand off the grip, thus making the shot almost _strictly a left-handed affoir. The weight must be well forward and, most important of all, the club uce must be laid wide open so the face is almost parallel 'lth the sand. Then that ball must be struck hard. And this means hard. No babying of the shot will do. The aim must be to strike the ball on the bottom side, without ukmc sand, the club face literally act- as a scoop which meets the ball in the middle of the swing and lifts it out. When Freddie McLeod plays the shot correctly he just ruins his golf bl]l for the abrasive action of the tears scars in the surface of the blll as it jumps into the air with backspin. As played by McLeod, the ball is aimed to the left of the hole and when it hits the n it describes almost a complete circle, frequently com! back in a circle 3 feet or more in diameter. The shot is only played around the put'lng m, of when it is necessary et ball up qulckly with bite cn t, McLeod has had some rematkable successes with this shot. His friends recall a few of these shots played in England, at Pinehurst and at other laces where the onlookers gasped as e ball came up quickly out of the sand and died as q\llc:lJ on the put- ting green. So, sand wedge or on sand wedge, there 15 & golf shot which will be quite new to most players. What a shot it is when it comes off. AT shot didn't help McLeod '.h, other dlv however, when he es® play the best ball of four m hlnalcm &hyeu at Columbis. | started wn“zx out nine of 32, d, although e was out In 36, was so far down he couldn't catch them. Hugh MacKenzie, one: of th- four was around in 79, with a lot of d holes, and the pace was too h (vr Freddie, who succumbed ofl the seventeenth. seems to be knocking the ball ever, Over the soft mrwnyl ofr umhh yuurd-y he e on lndnfiuuxln! when the wwmnmnn,“h': '.’..-'-'-f&*..-a. fouk iy i ‘ fe and an easy | Wy icay the | Out Joe Glick, 1385, New BY SOL METZGER. Robert Zuppke, nn‘nou coach, has - & more or less lnd he's using rather simple foo Hhere's one of his ben pla; ays from the old balanced line & three backs in a row !ofmltlon Ball is snapped to No. 4, who starts to cir- cle the opposing left end, a gent who is turned in by No. 3. No. 4 swings in with No. 3, thus permitting mk No. 2 to cut to his outside fl,ht As trouble approaches No. a lateral to No. 2. If the play works to this point then No. 2 hn mm interferers to clean - ny the Ohio goal for him, two guards, ' Nos. 5 and 6, -nanulvo.lunk.not to mention the left end, No. 7, who can first stop the tackle and still get down held in to upend a secondary ba t. i WRESTLERS ARE ACTIVE 0ld and New Faces Will Appear in Two Shows Here. Several old and new faces will ap- pear tonight and tomorrow in t'o wrestling shows. Tonight a Rnllx‘ old-timers will le on Arcl ker’s Strand card, with Wiladck Zybsako and Pete Dallas mdln the list. Zybszko will tangle with Andy Bmg in t e feature bout, and Dallas wrestl with Jack Morrow in & semi-final. Other bouts on tonight's Strand card include Joe Montana and Joe K cken: schmidt and Mario Giglio and Ueorge Lanson. ‘Tomorrbw’s bouts at the Wash! Iann Auditorium will find Jim Londos. rec- nized hi the N, B. A. as world cham- plon, stacking up against Mike R.ornlnn Toots Mondt and Joe Vager, Tiny buck and Wanka zzlanlnk nnd Plt O'Shocker and Hans Bauer are in other matches. Two Basket Ball Games Already Listed for Laurel Bunday. LAUR'L Md., November 18.—Mon= A. C. of Washington will face Llurel National Guards, and Boys Club Standards, also of the National Capital, will engage Laurel Independents in basket ball games in the National Guard Armory here Sunday afternoon. Another contest to round out a triple- header is wanted for the Junior Guards, a 95-pound quint. Lieut. Julian B, Anderson, commanding ~the Laurel Guards, will receive challenges for the Junfors and also_would like to hear from Monroes at Laurel 134 after 6:30 pm. Lieut. Anderson is after & Mont- gomery County team to complete the nel for the Tri-State Basket Ball m, which plays its- games at the armory herl, d (WALKER LISTS CHRISTNER Will Make Second"Bid in Heavy Campaign on November 28. CHICAGO, November 18 (/). —Mickey ‘Walker, world middleweight chlm lun campaigning now for hnvyvenq ors, has been matched for a u~ro||nu contest with K. Ohilo, at the Coliseum November 28. It *will be Walker's second fight in hh hen wel'm campalgn, he having johnny Risko in Detroit re- culy @ By the Associated Press. PITTSBURGH —Tony Herrera, Chi- cago, knocked out Joe Glick, New York (7); Eddie Brannon, Pittsburgh, out- pomkd Ray Newton, Mansfield, Ohio 8. - PHILADELPHIA. — Johnny Jadick, Philadelphia, autpolnkd Tommy Gro- gan, Omaha, Nebr. BOSTON.—Andy O-lllhm, Lawrence, Mass., outpointed Sammy Fuller, Bos- ot | ton (10). MILWAUKEE. — Dave Maler, waukee, Prankle Wi land (4); ‘Tramblie, ted Sid Novak, Milwaukee (10). A, Okla.—] (Kid) Kiser, ‘Tulsa, outpointed Mickey O'Neill, Mil- waukee (10). Herrera, 1!!% knocked ork, in the seventh round of a 10-round mateh here last night. Eddie Brannon, 138, Pit Ne- O, Christner of Akron, | $ FOR MOST OF BOYS Graduations Wil Deplete High Sohool Squads—All Elevens Hit. BY EDWARD A, FULLER, JR. OTH the Eastern and Tech B elevens, which were to meet this afternoon in the Cen- tral Stadlium in the final and deciding battle of the public high school foot ball champion- ship series, will lose valuable play- ers by graduation before the 1931 ever, will retain a good nucleus for next season. In fact, Tech will than at the start of any campaign since Coach Hap Hardell assumed the reins. Eastern will have to get along with- out such nifty players as Red Wells, Flip Corridon and Mel Wade, backs; George Shorb, center; Kenny McAboy, end, and Sansbury, guard. Boys around whom Coach Mike Kelley must rebuild his team inchude Tony Pulmer, dashing little halfback; Davis, end; Campbell and Chalkley, tackles, and Woife, tackle or guard. Charley Mades, guard, the lone 1929 letter winner at hand the start of the season, but who has been unable to make the grade as a regular, also is IIIM 1o romrn a8 are several mnm QGoldman, gu has been lost through of 21. and Bachs, backs, and cnrlehn Bdwards (no relation G: Jake to in Meikeljohn and Wohifarth, ends; Rhodtl, guard; Bell, tackle, and leuh GflnuAnon also will exact heavy f the Business and Western M which flnlsh lerlu eom- its usual f 3 ‘The win gave lhwrdotmvmory.onem | twp defeats to make it wind up 1 in the standing, It was the foutth defeat in as many starts for , which was unable to score a le point in the serles, while its op- ponents were rolling up 97. Beven Stenogs are booked to receive the ol' sheepskin before another cam- w ‘They are Johnson, quarterback; Duryee, fullback, who quit the team some time ago; Plant and Mills, ends; Margolls, guard, and Cook, ‘center. acobson and Cavanaugh, backs; Reeves and Purr, backs and ends; Levy and Mastomarino, tackles, and an, guard, are boys who right now are expected to return to school ‘Mext Fall, Western will lose Everett Buscher, crack end; Bob Fletcher, who can pl Jjust about any position; Amidon, g terback, and Webb, Mlbflek. the cream of its team this season, end Cochran, back; Pimper, center; Heywood, en i and Greve, tackle. ‘Western players carded to return for | the 1931 campaign include Beers, Hil- leary and Lynham, halfbacks; Reynolds, | end; Lawrence her and Booth, les; Francis, unwudm Keith, oueln.-huv and Nye, guards, and Dodson, Western outclassed Business all the Way yesterday. With Stan Amidon, “mmek and Bill Beers, left hali back, heading their drive, the Geofge- towners ran _and passed their way to vlnnry over Business, which t.hrnunea just once and for the most ?ll’t lhough battling grimly, was on he defensive. A passing combination, Amidon to Beers, accounted for two touchdowns, | and Amidon chalked up the other pair | of tallies on dashes of 20 and 40 yards, after he had intercepted pluu e - end. WOULD PLAY THREE TILTS well exe kd Tom Webb to Beers thn netted yards set the stage for this second touchdnwn. b Buscher place-kicked the other. exm marker. A passing attack with Johnson doing most of the heaving enabled Business to gain'the Western 8-yard line, where 1t was halted by the whistle ending the ‘That was the Stenogs’ only eat. They, however, made a couple of fine defensive stands. In the third quarter they held on their half- foot mark and again in the same period on their 28-yard stripe. Line-up and Summary. Festern, @D, Business (0). eyw Score by periods: Western Business Po’f’“dhfl”m ichd uchdowns—. Bubstitutions: Linesman—Mr. Dunbar Hfih “gridders today boast their ‘sixth lhl!.ht win followhlg their coveted 19-0 victory yesterday over Car- doza High. Minns, Rohlnson and David- son scored ‘™2 touchdowns, all of which came in ihe first half. ton, Ourdoss (0). ‘- PITTSBURGH, November 18 (#).— & uchdowns—Mi | ot 8u llllu‘lolll ‘B Brown for Foster B D-.:K" B title set rolls around. Each, how- m have more seasoned boys at hand of k | garded as one of the y [the C. I A. o | their best exhibitions of the ” Club Game Real Test for Central : Tech, Eastem fo Lose Many Gnd Stars. A. A. U. SESSION GLOOMY AFTER MACCABE’S DEATH Athletic Body Mourns Passing of Former President, Stricken by Apoplexy—Sanctions Recprds and Prepares to Elect Officers, By the Associated m.' sudden death of Joseph | B. MacCabe of Boston, one of the best loved and most prominent members of the Amateur Athletic Union, ecast gloom over the concluding ses- sions here today of the A. A. U. convention. pOrt | the floor, uttering the wor the convention, but he 'ubmmad to the of Boston delegates, who de- clared MacCabe mnu have preferred work to go on unlnwrml pted. S At conclu sess] wr. wr%'fluela today as scheduled. Oc- g A pmml.nlnt nlm on the ym- m of vario hunplnmhi Va lll cl meeu m next year's ewnvem.lonIJ and the naming of 10 athletes adjudged the outstanding figures in amateur sport durln. thbn. st year, 7 acCal hlmu A .l president f.he James E. Sullivan Mt Oo: mittee, had looked lurvmrd 0 Announc- ing the names of the 10, from whom one will be selected later to receive the Sullivan trophy, a gold eup. In A. A. U. Since Organisation. hnllhmnmnolhh Mr. Mac- en. Danlel J. m A Fort rl‘html'mt I am not tnrl.ht"hlldd “T feel thltlol‘? wmwmwnuflm A U Not 24 hours h':;dlllnc(!lbe an able tarian uent lpuln aided in the organisation of the convention caucus and was about to go to another foom, when slumped to “My heart hurts.” 'He died a few moments after, d | gt about 10:30 p.m., without consciousness. A ummmol m.nyhuuvlfle:‘” ha teres! MacCabe was tor Anc publisher of the East m Mvmn. & weekly paj ond was » Massachusetis State Senator nnd ehumln of the Boston Republican "IM Against Brundage. Notevcnm 't of & battle over r-ldmey of A. A U. today stir up much enthusiasm among m delmm after his denth, mum that President Brundage 'mdfl nat be n-cleole( for l third term without a fight, 'hllh of certain New Yut" standing ofit mi Beach a] ‘o "fi the 1931 convention of the A. A, U, ‘while formal awarding of the cham- plmmEe events was r- Amve in the lfllln of the A, A. U. | Nebr MacOabe was mdmt ufl"’ 905 and lmflm:nd :: :he of his death was i ning the 8¢ | Gornmittee serve his Seventy-second birthday here tomorrow by attending the W meeting of the American Olympic As- sociation, of which he was a member. Although apparently in excellent with ice of mentmlmofumomc Frank r&“fim m"m a.m, vmnm thus becomes & ne' Am ‘Western, 27; Business, 0. Today's Game. Eastern vs. Tech, Central 15 o’clock. Other Serles Results. Tech, 30, Business, 0. h, Wi hltem 18; Central, 0. et \PENN STATE LEADS . AT CROSS-COUNTRY : | Wins Intercollegiate Team Title but Chamberlain of Michigan State First to Finish. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, November 18—Penn | &n State’s well balanced team has regained’ the intercollegiate cross-countty cham. Ty goes n, 20- yur—old runner from Michigan State. Chamberlain came from behind to win first place and cover the grueling l-mfle course, soggy from a three-dny rain, in 30 minutes 19 2-5 seconds, as compared took team honors Manhattan's 103. covered the t | course in 14 mm-m:m. HOWARD ADDS A CONTEST T e hirts, Will Go to Lynchburg Saturday'to Play Seminary Eleven. Jliowu; Enl;;?ltylv!wm“ team will go ynchburg, Va. to face the Seminary eleven in just added to & warm-i Lincoln classic ving day. Howard was well satisfied in hold- |n| Hampton to_a 13-6 vietory Batur- day. Recently, Hampton, which is re- best elevens in it Lincoln to a gave one of against Hampton. Howard four tmi held the foe for downs. wltmn uu 20- yard line and once on the 1-foot: mark. Tie Jones made the Bison touchidown as the result of a The Bisons compl: and 151 A, 1 scoreless tie. The B gained ards R ot -nlnut 241 for ynnmbton showed well on defense. 8 first downs, against 13 Tor Hamn Bouthwest I‘axu ‘Teachers, 6; Danlel Baker College, 0. Texas Arts and lndlutfln. 25; Bast ‘Teachers, 18; e b 0. Bam mom 18; North BUELL IS DEFEATED BY FOE'S LATE DRIVE Tramberia of Baltimore Scores Over D. C. Sorapper in Feature at Fort Washington. 3: of lnmmm h-t in :m late Buell, founds Sadie ‘Washington scraj It cards planned for the post and ntwnged There was plenty ol » though no knock-outs e!everl‘y. had the bett'r ually ::: on to wo:r down ingt welt lively battl were recorded, Buell, fightin of it in the morean Dis . ., 160~ 3 the over Buly ltrlnklur. l'u-wund ‘Wash- Silver Spring got lver g Belt of this eity in the hll‘dut‘teugm match. me the out- ‘willing mixers. Belih brok his hand In the sixth round but 3&!-:-194 nmug not only nmely Du ropes lnd onto the as the flml gong sounded. In.other bouts Tony Uraine, east. ‘w mud s "% v M- also of Wash! Toothmean, Bal sion to Whitey Say! lutA BOWEN FIGHTS THURSDAY | Washington Boxer Meets Mitchell Six-Rounder in Florida. Johnny Bowen, Washis boxer, will meet Young Mitchell b In a six-round Beach, Fla., accord- MACZEES LOST TO G. U. Halfback, Injured in New York, Is Out for Seasom. Intensive, preparations for its game 'uh Villanova next Saturday were be- n today Cieorgetown without the mvlcel ot 11l Maczees, dly bruised hl{; reotivod in the Nn York Univer- Ml-cres'm'h!onlyhmrydl TROUSERS Te Mateh Your Odd Coats EISEMAN'S, 7th & F v v

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