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SPORTS. G. U. to Meet Country Clubs on Links : Berkeley Is Apt to Get I. C. 4-A Games HOYAS CONTENDERS FOR COLLEGE TIME Beger One of Outstanding Players—Manor Cleans Out !ts Woods. BY WALTER R. McCALLUM. EORGETOWN UNIVER- SITY'S golf teamy which looms as a strong one this year, and will be cne of the favorites to annex the intercol- legiate team title, plans to ar- rahge a number of matches with local clubs this Spring. Fred D. Paxton, chairman of the Washington Golf and Country Club Golf Committee, already has been ap- proached on behalf of the golf team of the Hilltop institution to arrange a golf tcam match with a picked team of members of the Virginia club, and Paxton has informed university offi- cials that such a match can be staged shortly after the Spring invitation tourney of the Washington club has been completed on May 1. Similar overtures are to be made to several other Washington clubs, and mean- while the university golf team is seek- ing the use of one of the courses around Washington for practice. F: J. (“Chick”) Deger of the Shack- amaxon Club of New Jersey, will be one of the outstanding players on the Georgetown team this vear. Beger | played in several invitation tourneys about Washington two vears ago, and made s good record. He was runner- up to Page Hufty in the Indian Spring invitation event two years back and a semi-finalist in another event. Maurice J. McCarthy, mainstay of the Georgl- town team, has graduated from the Hilltop, but several other good" golfers, among them Jack Slattery, will be out for the team. The Hilliop team will start mext month a series of matches with teams from other colleges. Schedule Committee of the Beaver Dam Country Club is to meet nexi. Monday at the call of Chairman Maler, to draw up a sched- ule of events for the season. The com- mittee is to report not later than March.} Golfers who play the first nine at the Manor Club this vesr will find their hooks and slices will not be so severely lized as they have been in the past. 'nder the direction of Greens Commit- tee Chairman D. L. Thompson, much work has been done by way of cleaning out the wocds bordering on ‘the fair- no longer does a shot into necessarily mean loss of a stroke. Most of the work hss been done | at the fifth and ninth holes, both of which are dog-leg affairs. In both cases more room has been provided for the tee shot and the hole has been opened up for the second shot. That woods nine is looked upon by many golfers as a terror, Although not so long, it has | caused scores to mount well up because in the Dl"ll a mm' pllye‘d into ‘thle mwoodlu‘ eral meant playing out int e e % With the 1 ways, and the lucky he may still the thinned-out irees. Board of Governors of the Manor Club has ratified the dates for the 1931 invitation tournament of the club, which will be held June 16, 17, 18 and 19, and also has ratified the date for the District jundor championshin, to be played at Manor on September 2. That record of 24 one-putt greens in 36 holes, made by John Merritt at Co- | Jumbia & few days ago, is mot a locsl record, after all. Arthur F. Thorn of the Woodmont Country lub tells us | that s few years ago M. Shorey, pro at East Potomac Park, had 28 one-putt greens in 36 holes over the Columbia Country Club course. Shorey was play- ing in the qualifying round of the Pro- fessional Golfers' Association champion- | e AFTER SERVICE RIDERS Olympic Heads Comb Military for |yige the necessary tactics and strategy | Modern Pentathlon Team. Plans have been completed for secur- ing the best available competitors in the Army, Navy, Marine Corps and National Guard for the modern pen- tathlon event, one of the events on the program of the tenth Olympiad, that will be held at Los Angeles in 1932. are at the present time undergoing | training for this event. They are all | lieutenants, as follows: A. 8. Newman, Infantry; R. W. Mayo, Infantry; H. J. John, Field Artillery; T. J. Bands, Pield Artillery; C. J. Mans- field, Cavalry; M. R. Carter, Air Corps: B. W. Brady, Infantry, and George W. | Lermond, Infantry. ‘The 1932 Modern Pentathlon Games ttee consists of the following: Ma). Gen. Guy V. Henry, chief of Cavalry; Col. L. Kemper illiams, Lieut. Col. M. Robert Guggenheim, Maj. Harold M. Raynor, Capt. Karl T. Fred- erick, Mr. Gustavus T. Kirby, Mr. Carl Lehman. The secretary of the commit- Willilam C. Rose, who is on ‘War Department. O Will Try for Auto Mark EVENING “WIZARD” SMITH, AUSTRALIAN, NORMAN *WIZARD" AWAITS FAVORABLE CONDITIONS | | | | By the Associated Pres YDNEY, Australia, March 14.— Some time this month, when wind, tidal and other condi- tions are favorable, Australia’s foremcst racer, Norman “Wizard" Smith, will attempt to lower the world auto speed record. Using & powerful car which has been completed in Sydney,- Smith hopes to travel 300 miles per hour in his assault on the new 245-mile- an-hour mark established recently by Capt. Malcolm Campbell on the sands at Daytona Beach, Fla. The designer and builder of Smith’s car has had the co-operation of the British and Australian gov- ernments and many private com- panies. He is young Don Harkness, regarded as Australia’s most brilliant internal combustion engineer. On Ninety-mile Beach, near Kai- taia, on the northwest coast of the north island of New Zealand, the at- tempt will be made. The beach has a perfectly straight runway of 25 miles about 1,000 feet wide at low tide. ‘The motive power will be supplied by & 12-cylinder, 1,700-horsepower Napier, Schneider Cup type, aero engine, lent to Smith by the British government under a pledge of se- fi; general shape of the racer is THE SPORTLIGHT BY GRANTLAND RI The Main Factor. NE of the most interesting de- velopments of Yale's Spring | foot ball practice, mow under way, will bs the quarterback strategy, Yale is lucky to have as smart a field general as Benny Friedman on the scene, for it is doubtful if foot ball ever knew a smarter director than the for- mer Michigan star. There has been a feeling for some years that Yale has been badly shy in quarterback strategy since the aqays of Lyle Richeson on Mallory’s team. Since Richeson left the Eli turfl there has been no outstanding general to pro- that the modern game demands. Few realize the tremendous importance of & Priedman or & Carideo. Such directors are far apart and the team that gets on: even zpproaching this standard is lucky up to the hilt. It may be impossible to develop the strategy needed for a great quarterback | unless part of the genius is born within. | Eight officers of the Regular Army | But Yale feels that it is quite possible | to make a good quarterback from the instructions given the right school. It is for this reason that all Yale quarterbacks for 1931 be put through a thorough schooling during the Spring practice. This is something | that Yale, especially, and several other institutions have needed for some time. Houghton and Rockne. ROBABLY no two coaches ever worked harder over strategy than Knute Rockne and the late Percy Haughton. Haughton had s set of smart quarter- backs directing Harvard's attack through most of his Tule, and they were not the results of any accident. He Barry Wood, Harvard, Is Star In Classes as in Athletics Hmv.um has reason to bg proud | ball team. Here is a youngster | BY WALTER TRUMBULL. . of William Barry Wood, cap- | tain-elect of the Crimson foot | who plays varsity foot ball, base ball, | hockey, tennis and & few other games, and still finds time to get four A’s in | the latter was instantly rushed to a|are likely to break up a matinee at a midyear examinations. | That isn't good—it's perfect. | This boy must be a natural athlete and, what is even more remarkable, a natural student. His collection of let- ters is gathered, with perfect balance | and no overemphasis, from class room and athletie ficld. No kid in the coun- | try could go wrong following the trail | blazed by Earty Wood. | The six-day bicycle race is on at| Madison iare Garden. New York, which means that stadium of sporl is closed to such entertainments as hockey, | wrestling and boxing until the riders finish their long grind on the wooden saucer. Now actors and others whose jobs keep them up late in New York will have some place to go after work is over. A six-day bike fan is one of the most rabid of the fes. He will sit for hours, waiting for & sprint and a chance 10 yell, ROOKLYN seems Tobea place where dead arms come to life. Glenn ‘Wright was supposed to have a gripoled wing, But it returned to ita vigor, and posedly now Joe Shaute's sup- |erated on for an abscess. Robins in their fight for the flag. Most peculiar things appear to hap- | 'n in boxing matches between Billy Petrolle and King Tut. On one oc- casion, when Tut won, Petrolle was im- mediately taken to the hospital and op- Petrolle knocked Tut out the other evening and hospital to be examined for appendi- | citis. He is out of the hospital now and his appendix is still with him, but the Boxing Commission wants to ask a lot of questions before the boys get their money. There is no doubt that Tut was knocked out. Even if the commis- sion thinks that he @idn't do his best, it will be a hard thing to prove, for he certainly took a lovely sock on the chin. | OE McCARTHY has been putting the Yarkee pitchers through some strenuous fielding_ practice. This seems a good ides. In order to field ground balls, pitchers must stoop over, which is excellent for the waistline Meanwhile, Babe Ruth fs playing golf with the best of the pros and not doing 50 badly. ‘The Sultan of Swzt shot nine holes of tournament golf 1 under par. He did not do, so well on the other nine; but few do. Frank G. Menke has just issued All Sports Record Book for 1931. contains the history, as well as the rec- ords of each s . Menke has done a swell job of compilation, much appre- ciated by those of us who have con- tinually to look up records. It is the most valuable book of its {, known, being both informative and interesting. Lott and Van Ryn still are/winning tennis matches, They a) r to be the most formidable doub] team the Upited States has had in some time. (Copyright, 1931 by Morth American News- paper Alifance.) bis It scheol of | which Coach | Stevens and his aides are now launch- | | ing. quarterback | a complete departure from the ac- | cépted idea of a motor car. and in | some features it resembles the Gold- | en Arrow, in which the late Sir | Henry Segrave established a world | Jand-speed record of 2313 miles an | hour. | The streamlined body enables the | power of the engine to be devoted to | propulsion with as little loss as pos- | sible through atmospheric resistance. | The fan-shaped arrangement of | the engine cylinders in three groups of four necessitates a peculiar but attractive design in front, and the rear extends in the form of a long tapering tail behind the rear wheels. Two vertical fins at the rear act as stabilizers, Wizard Smith has called the car “the Fred H. Stewart Special” as a tribute to the wealthy Sydney omni- | bus proprietor who made the build-- ing of the machine possible. mith for 10 years has been Aus- | tralla’s ouistanding miotorist. For | three consecutive years he won every prize offered by the Royal Automo- | bile Club of Australia in his home | state of New South Wales, and the | transcontinental record of Australia | stands to his credit. | In this latest attempt special elec- trical time-keeping devices will be | used over a measured mile. Wizard, | using a first gear of 100 m.p.h., & second gear of 300 mph. and a third gear of 300 mph, will run for about 4 or 5 miles before reach- ing the measured mile. worked with them at every chance, on and off the field. As a result Haughton's quarterbacks | were among the smartest in the game. He refused to let them be ball carriers or to figure in any part of the attack ! | that might upset their physical and mental balance. He wanted them cool and clear- headed, strictly on the job of running a | foot ball team in the right way. | Rockne has had a slightly different idea. He has worked along the lines of building up such field generals as Harry Stuhldreher and Carideo. Yet these men had to be blockers and to be | strong defensive men against the for- ward pass. I recall a story Rockne told me years ago. He played a certain conference team and was beaten. In that game | Notre Dame made over 500 yards| again-i 90 yards. It was the complete | | inability of his quarterback to handle | the job. | ““There is no use,” Rockne said then, | “of making ali the ground had losing the game, After this I'll let the other | fellows make the first downs and we'll | try to win the game through strategy | and smartness. I believe strategy and | | smartness are a bigger part of foot ball than mere brute force.” | | Rockne has worked along that line | ever since. With the smartly devised offensive he had arranged it might have | | been of less than half value without a high-class quarterback. Yet it must be | | remembered that Rockne had worked | with Carideo for three years. The right plays and the material are first neces- sary. But smart quarterback play is then the scoring factor between two teams well matched in other respects. Quarterback Value. | 'THERE is another instance of quar- terback value. It is shown in the | case of Dodd of Tennessee. Dodd was a match for Carideo in this respect. If Dodd had been at Notre Dame and Carideo at Tennessee, Dodd would have been unanimously picked as all-America quarterback. In his three years at Ten- | nessee he figured in just one losing game, and on any number of occasions his keen directing strategy saved the day, several times when the odds were against him. The Old Wham. 'HE Athletics still have the old whack or wham. They still have | | Cochrane, Simmons and Foxx. And if these three have an off day Bing Miller or Mule Haas is not to be over- looked in a pinch. ‘They still need one more winning | pitcher to join Grove and Earnshaw. | but even - with moderate pitching the | big punch is still there. And no one team ever had as many batters who are always dangerous in a pinch. They have at least five ‘men on the Athletics who | moment’s notice, and the heavier the | pressure the more dangerous these five | are, |~ 1t Walberg happens to regain control and step into a pretty good year it will take a.lot of base ball to keep this dele- gation from its third pennant in a row. | And that doesn't mean possibly. 1931. by North American News- paper Alliance.) NOEL-HOUSE BOXERS WIN {Christ Child Team Bows in First | | Formal Meet, 5 to 2. Noel House boxers defeated the Christ Child boys last night at Noel House, four matches to two, It was the losers’ | first formal ring test. There also were | various exhibitions. | 85 pounds—Pat Cechint (N. M.) defeated Tony Capel 85 pou U Maxwell (N. H) defeated Ecneat Wi 35" pounds ~Jos Davis (N. H) defested MES Sobnds:—a tller (C. C.) defeated s . ©) dets ik, Bt oo Mider . 1 110 pounds— Russell Ward (C. C) defeated Jim Hughes, 115 poundr M. Cechini (N. H.) defeated | Myers Rosenfeldt | Exhibitions (No Deci; | end Clayto rey. 120 | ds; George Sullivan and Charles Hutch inson, 130 potinds. and Sam Minni and Bob | Winters, 146 pounds. Wrestling, |in the Wood Mike Stastulll and Leo Cechini (no de- cittom. STAR, WASHINGTO DUB SWEEPSTAKES FEATURED TONIGHT Bill Wood Tourney Shares Spotlight With Suburban at Mount Rainier. ASHINGTON “105” bowlers to the number of about 100 will blast away tonight at the Lucky Strike in the opening round of the Bill Wood Sweep- stakes. While they are at it in competition for sizable cash prizes, the experts of nearby Virginia and Maryland will be busy in the first annual Suburban 'Stakes, on the Mount Rainier drives. Only bowlers with league averages of less than 106, or of known ability that would place them in a class not above this group, will be permitted to shoot 'stakes, an event which last year drew 118 and was won by Bill Royall. Fifteen games will be rolled in each event, in five-game blocks, on successive Saturdays. The Wood entry fee is $5, plus cost of games, and the suburbanites will post $10 apiece, plus games' cost. . The lists for both tournaments to- night will remain open until 7:30 | o'clock. Astor Clarke, the Campbell Sweep- stakes champicn, will be a conspicuous figure in the suburban affair, with Henry #nd Oscar Hiser, Perce Wolfe, George Clark, Ray Gordon, Charley Walson, Tommy Walker, Gene Hargeti, Harry Hilliar¢, Hugh Waldrop, Chester Lindstrom and Russell Spillman among the dangerous contenders. The National Pale Drys, with a lead of 160 pins, will finish a series with the Georgefown Recreation team to- night at the Northeast Temple, The Rendeézvous team continued its drive toward the top in the District League by taking two games from the | Hecht Co. Although losing the second set, 2,679 to 2,694, the Colonial Ice Cream team came out on top in a home-and-home series with the Jersey Ice Cream roll- ers of Balkmore by 43 pins. There were no exceptional scores. The Fountain Hams won five out of six garnes with the Meyer Davis team in a National Capital League double- header. Final games in the Maryland's stakes at College Park will be rolled tonight. D. G, SATURDAY, MARCH 14, 1 9. FAIR AND FAST HAS A MERe FOOT Ba, STAR wWiTH &T\’SY. 3 BfiT}/ BETTY RECENTLY SET A - o NEW WorLD'S INDOOR RECORD OF FOR. THE 100vDs. IN BEATING STELLA WALSH. b, - Now WHAT CHACE HiSS 1 foSEC, NorTH T™E O P ——— —By PAP BINSON- THe PRETTY LTTLE WESTERN “cOo-ED’ 1S LYMPIC . 100 ~METR £ CHAMDION (/ ) Americanizing of Golf Terms | SURFACE TEAM WINS Arouses British Players’ Ire Bert Sheehy leads, with 583. A picked teem from the Baraca Class of the Fifth Baptist Church will be host to the Austin Class team of First Bap- | tist of Richmond, Va. at Convention | Hall tonight. Doc Cummings, Oscar | Bryant, Kettering, Holtzclaw, Jim and | Perce Ellett will ‘represent the Wash- ington church. A ‘star of the Rich- mond quint is Bill Inge, formerly of | ty. SEABROOK TOSSERS START. Beabrook A. C. base ballers will get | going tomorrow with a practice on Seabrook diamond at 1:30 o'clock. BY FRANCIS J. POWERS. RITISH golfers seem not only to have taken deep unbrage to- ward the United States for hav- ing adopted a new standard golf ball, but now some of them are lam- pooning us for what they style “Amer- icanization of golf terms.” | “It annoys me a great deal” writes | one Briton, who signs himself “Veteran,” “to hear my friends debating on the tee as to whether to take a No. 3 or a No. | 4 iron. Very soon the good old cleek and mashie and niblick will be words of the past, and we shall hear that the No. Thinned to N overdue wail comes from the PFrench Riviera, where Winter lawn tennis has been proceeding without benefit of Yankee highlights. Hence, diminished gate receipts and a gen- eral drabness, where in former years there was the sparkle of Tilden and Johnston and Hunter and Richards and Mrs. Moody, Mrs. Molla Bjursted Mallory and the rest of the American luminaries. ‘This Winter only two players, two American girls not of the first flight by any means, have been our sole representatives on the courts of the Riviera. Big Bill Tilden is now a pro and out of the dulcet amateur plane of Mediterranean Winter play. In which connection it might be remarked that Big Bill's defection has had repercussions world-wide in their scope. Prancis T. Hunter, another inter- national figure, is a mercenary now and so out of amateur competition. As for the outstanding amateurs, they are all youngsters, either still in college or making their way in the marts of trade. They have no time for disporting themselves be- fore admiring tourists on the Cote Fren;h Missv “Yank fiet Stars | Gate Receipts Cut as Ranks of Amateurs Are Youngsters. D'Azur. And no money, either. Hard times hit tennis, as every- thing else. Which -accounts for the absence in France of international players, both men and women, of many nations. Rene Lacoste was all primed to provide thrills at Cannes, Nice and elsewhere, but was stricken with appendicitis. Henri Cochet, however, has been playing there; the one and only reat attraction, whose 'contests acked zest because of inadequate competition. But a bit later players of this country will gird themselves for mi- gration. The latter rounds of Davis Cup play in which Americans will be involved will be held abroad and then, too, the challenge round will be played in Paris. So from the standpoint of international interest the Summer will hold a great deal for the Prench. And the English, too; for Davis Cup players of various nations, including the United States, will be on hand at ‘Wimbledon. Mrs. Moody will not— unless she yields to re from abroad—and this will be a great flaw in Wimbledon week. Tilden will be another important absentee. But all in all, the game of tennis has come to be bigger than any player or group of players. ROD AND BY PERRY HE latest “game census” by the Forest Service, United States| Department of Agriculture, | shows that most types of big| Alaska had most of the 3,500 grizzlies | | (including Alaska brown bear) remain- game continue to increase in the na- tional forests. In the last five years tie estimated number of antelope in the national for- ests has increased 35 per cent; of black or brown bears, 9 per cent; of deer, 32 per cent; of elk, 15 per cent; of moun- tain goats, 18 per cent, and of moun- tain sheep, 2 per cent, with decreases of 37 per cent in grizzlies, 86 per cent in caribou and 15 pér cent in moose. Unless more protection is afforded to the grizzly, said the report, other Fish Must Be Big To Draw a Prize 0 encourage better sportsmanship in angling $3,535 in prizes are being awarded by Field and Stream Magazine for the largest fishes caught during the legal open season. Six prizes will be awarded to the largest fishes caught in the following classes: Brook t. brown trout, steel-head or raimbow trout, small- mouth black bass, large-mouth black bass, muskalonge, great northern pake, Calico bass, lake trout, striped bass, bass, bluefish and The contest is limited to fish taken with rod, reel and line and with A;_‘pe*:‘lfi!d lure for certain classes of sh. Affidavits giving the length, girth and weight of fish, signed hl the per- son ing the catch by wit- nesses, must be sent the Prize Pis] Contest, 578 Madison avenue, New York Oity. MILLER States will be in the class of California, where this animal is now extinct. The Forest Service game estimates, as of January 1, 1930, showed that ing in the United States national for- ests. Montana had approximately 520 and Wyoming and Idaho more than 100 each. Idaho, Montana and Wyoming had most of the 5,150 moose. Elk were numerous in many of the national for- ests of the Northern Rocky Mountains, 82,670 being listed, with more than 28,700 in Wyoming. There were more than 50,000 black and brown bears, the California na- tional forests leading with 17,400. Ap- proximately 21,050 mountain goats, 12,300 mountain sheep and 10,200 ante- lope were found in Western national forests, Bevers numbered approxi- mately 106,660. b Of the big game animals, deer were most numerous, & total of 802,450 beirg reported in ' national forests of 23 States and Alaska. California led with 254,000 and Alaska, Arizona, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico and Oregon had more than 50,000 each. 'HE San Francisco Chronicle says: “As long as there are westrictions against the sale of game birds, fish or animals, there will be people who will be willing to pay for the privilege of Jhu:\;iu that game. market there will be hunters engaged in supplying it. Too many times the fam- ilies of the sportsmen who condemn the bootlegging of game the most are the ones who are responsible for the illegal practice. “Hunters who obey the game laws at all times, who never break limit regula- tions and only shoot during the open season, allow their wives to purchase quail out of season or in season and le when 1t is suggested that perhaps the practice is not ethical. A united front by the sportsmen and a demand that the non-sale laws be enforced would go & long way toward stop- ping the prastice.” as long as there is an avatlable | 2 wood lies at Sunningdale are as good as ever.” ‘To which an English editor agrees and scotches what he terms “wretched American slang expressions.” And then he adds: “Wherever we go we hear with increasing annoyance. especially among the older generation, these crude Amer- | ican terms. such as , 4, 5, ete., irons. ‘All Very Depressing.” “We agree with our correspondent en- tirely in that the ‘gocd old words’ soon will be shades of the past. It is all very | depressing. Surely the English language | is good enough in which to express one- self. We must not forget that golf was played in this country years before America heard of it. The terms cleek, | mashie, midiron and baflie convey some- thing to the ordinary golfer who is | and cleek shots. But pow with these irons from No. 1 to 10. inclusive. We are of the opinion that these historic names must not be forgotten nor al- Jowed to roy away.” . All of which the average American golfer will regard as very interesting, | but unimportant. He will concede that | golf was played in England long before | | we knew the difference between a niblic | & But upon consulting the | |and sickle. | championship records he also will come | to the opinion that the game has not | been played so well in Britain during | | the past 10 years. | None of New Terms Offensive. | We took the cleck, the baffie and the | | mashie from Britain when we adopted | golf and along with it such expressions as “sclaff, baff and dormie’—words equally as meaningless as | eagle.” It is quite obvious that with | veloped. Since none of the American | terms can be construed as offensive, | there seems no good reason for Britons |to get warm under the collar about them, They dp not have to play our. new ball, and they are under no obli- gation to use our expressions. They can call a No. 2 iron a midiron or a No. 5 mashie, but still Messrs. Jones or Hagen will play it with the same amount of skill. ‘The !)nctlce of numbering irons camé wi th the development of addi-| tate the use of the irons by the average player. enough when only five or six irons were employed, but when the number grew to 10 or more, it was found easier | than invent new individual designations. | And it is far easier for the average y number than by such names as mid- ; iron, midmashie and so forth. America has contributed much to the moderniza- | tion of the game—the ball, steel shafts, | etc.—and, for the most part, the worid |is satisfied with its share, including its | slang. (Copyright, | Wichita, Kansas City Teams Play in Tourney Final. KANSAS CITY, March 14 (#).—The aggressive “Henry team of Wichita, ns., will defend its A. A. U. basket ball title against the Kansas City Ath- letic Club in the All-Midwestern final of the national tournament here to- night. Two California teams—the Los An- geles A. C. and the Young Men's In- stitute of San Francisco—are matched in the play-off game for third place. ‘The Californians went down to defeat in the scmi-finals last night, L. A. A, C. losing to the champions by 20 to 3 and Y. M. I. bowing before the K. C. A. C, 17 to 23. | | numerical sets he must forget the old | 50 | historic sets and play his shots with “birdie or | {% the growth of golf in America a cer- | Neu | tain amount of new slang should be de- | p, tional’clubs, and the idea was to facili- | 28V The old names were good | DBriscoll to designate them with numbers rather | layer to determine the range of a club | & MEET FOR FLOOR TITLE I8 | Sims Averages 105 to Capture In- dividual Honors, With Hal- loran Runner-up. | With a margin of four games over its nearest rival, the Surface team won the ennant in the Bureau of Engraving and Printing Bowling League. Engrav- ing finished second. The individual title was won by Sims of Machine, with an average of 105, & | Section 9. The final figures. STANDING. | Surface ... | Everaving Section | taught to play mashie shots, baffie shots | Fesinn Section 1. Eection 5. SEEERETEER =oEaEEE BEIERER EgTERERY Eantgey: I BeEERERE iy ) BBRSSEUE B Q Somers ... Oberndoerit Mor.tgomery Burch J OSP4 sE3EEEEEsE —— bR ver . Johnson Hassett . Strotaers Py Y ST LEEEE 43 B3 222 G.-U.ANINE MUéT HURRY Play Within Ten Days. Realizing that there can be no loaf- | ing if the squad is to be in shape for its opening game a week from Monday against Washington and Lee at Lex- ington, Georgetown's base ball candi- dates, who took the field for the first time yesterday, planned to get out again today. About 30 reported to Coach | Johnny Colrick. Light work of & lim- bering nature was the order. With Paul Donovan and Butch Tier- rey, last season's first-string catchers, promises to be hot. O'Toole, Murphy Squad Reporting Yesterday wm:T missing, the battle for the receiving job | i, wilson ... Kilpatrick Elumenauer . Kulp Foule omsanBessEtt ool S e e 255 La Bai = ang' Orifice are among aspirants for the post. BT BUREAU PIN PENNANT : EASTERN SCHOOLS EAGER T0 GO WEST Only Yale and Princeton Op- pose Move Others See as Fine Gesture. BY LAWRENCE PERRY. EW YORK, March 14.—As a result of conferences fol- lowing the I. C. A. A. A. A. session here, it is now al- most certain that the 1932 meet of this great Eastern track organiza- tion will be held in Berkeley, Calif. Opinion among the membership grows steadily in favor of the trip to’ the Far West, chiefly because of its educational advantages for the young athletes, but for other reasons as well, including a desire to return the implied compliment of California universities in send- ing their track and fleld men East every Ybar, Harvard, it may be said, favors the trip and was moved go this attitude more by the wholesome spirit with which the invitation was extended than by any other factor. A certain note of genial kindliness characterized this bid. No reference was made to the annual Eastern visits of West Coast teams with the suggestion that it was time to turn about and be fair. This fine spirit of the Californians won Harvard and other colleges completely. Penn, Cornell Willing. Tt s Slwage et and ways been and in the relation of the athletic authorities of these two universities with their faculties the inviolability of this date unde.stand why it al time. | point better than that of Halloran of | i€ Precite o Proponents of the trip point out that of the 300 athletes involved L C: A. A. A. A, meet onl, the right to enter the O!ympi " Since one-third of these will surely be ’Plclflcwlfili‘m:i athletes, only 20 East- erners obliged to go to and then back to the coast. AR It is estimated quite closely that $53,000 will defray the tra penses and board of Pointers on Golf BY SOL METZGER. Getting out of the trouble the golf duffer gets himself into, has one consolation. It adds to both the -physical and ymental exercises of the round. At times, though, it does take some tall figuring to play one's ball. Sometimes there is no prece- dent to go by. Even the pros en- w:::e:‘ r;xlch situations. a) urray did a few years' when he pullsdhlsteelhoten:g: short fifth at his home club, the Roule Rock G. C. in Canada. He found his ball aimost up against a trec, with others so close there was no way to get at it. ‘Whereupon this 6 foot 4% inch professional spread his long arms around the tree and hit at the ball with firm wrists. It not only reached the green 25 yards away, but he got down his putt for a par 3. The pivot is the least understood phase in golf instruction. g2r has prepared a leaflet on the pivot which he will gladly send to any reader requesting it. Inclose & stamped, addressed envelope, (Copyright, 1931.) The Cambria-Majestic 1324 Euclid St. N.W. Two Rooms and Bath Reasonable Rentyjs BETTER USED CARS Special! 10-Day Sale! MOTT MOTORS, Inc. 1520 14th St. NW. ' - Dee. 4341