Evening Star Newspaper, September 23, 1931, Page 32

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THREE BABKS ] OF OPENING GAME Blackistone, Center, Also on Hospital List—Mills of Hoyas Pondering. BY H. C. BYRD. EORGE WASHINGTON will open its foot ball schedule ‘Saturday with three of its best backs on the shelf, two because of injuries and the other because of a minor opera- tion. . Carlin, Fenlon and Krim. melmeyer are the men unlikely to get in the line-up: The first men- tioned got a bad cut in an auto- mobile accident, the second has a sprained ankle, while Krimmel- meyer is having a minor operation on his nose. Coach John Pixlee this mornin, he was not certain whe would in the starting line-up for the game with Shenandoah, but inasmuch as he does not anticipate much trouble is not much about it. As the situa- tion stands now. thou{h‘ it seems that Jones will ggt the call at fullback to take the plue held regularly last year by, Krimmelmeyer, with Parrish and Hendrickson in the halfback positions instead of Carlin and Fenion, is pretty. sure to be the choice for quarterback. In the:line, Pixlee probably will send out Murray and Clarke on ends, with a possibility that Chambers may be in the latter's place. Badranoff and Slaird are fairly sure to be the tackles. with Usnick and Dikes guards. Conn probably will be in the job at center, with Frank Blackistone, generally re- gaded the best center on the squad, on the sidelines with a leg injury. ATHOLIC TUNIVERSITY'S squad leaves tomorrow night at 8 o'clock for its openjng game Saturday with Boston College at Boston. The Brook- landers plan to reach Boston Friday ‘morning and have a light workout there in the afternoon. Coach Bergman ex- pects to take about 32 men on the trip. The team is to leave immediately after the game and return here Sunday. While there may be a change in one or two positions, Bergman has just about- made up his mind as to his starting line-up. ‘The-two ends are fair- 1y sure to be Halloran at left and Howe at right: At tackles he will have Nal- lay at left and Gro- at right. Monacd and I d right, will hold down polmml with Ambrose at_center. The Brooklanders' backfield graduall ing into about as strong & could from Ol play quarter, with Whelan and D> Mello at haifbacks and Sheary at fu'l. There Is & pessibility thet Jenkowski may be | in De Mello's place. Jankowski r.as bee: cut with a bad shoulder, but is rounding in shap: rapidly and may be able to play by Saturday. is to bolster up his weight by shifting Flynn from tackle to fullback. Flynn is 8 feet, weighs around 190, and Is showng considerable - promise. If he Bergman is the only one of the four Jocal coaches whose teams open their schedules Saturday that iaces a real task. He must send his tzam against a more reasoned and heavier outfit, which probably has had much better weather in which to train. Rergman hes no thought that his team will prove strong enough to whip Boston College, but does feel that whaieve~ the result his men will show much better than last season, NIVERSITY OF MARYLAND is likely to send into its opening game with Washingtcn College Saturday just about the same combina- :'mm:nH}&neaupumm ring in most of scrimmages. In the une-l:me be seven seniors, & combination that most coaches regard as rather unfortunate, especially if seniors ever reach that condition of most of the lu.ne with the backfield composed of Chalmers, Woods, Berger and Poppleman. Faber, regular center of last year, is having difficulty with & knee injured last Spring in lacrosse, and apparently is not going to be in shape to be de- pended on as a’regular, 'OACH TOM MILLS of Georgetown, when asked to give his probable starting line: ur for ~Saturdey | egainst Lebanon Valley, replied that he cid not know what it would be. knew who will play the different posi- | tions, but that he has developed two, teims of pretty close to the same strength and is in something of a eal dilemma’ss to what to Shall it be his younger eleven, eager d anxious for the chance to show it it can do, or shall it be his more what it can do, Question. Mills 'is asking. himself and which he must answer, 'OACH PIXLEE of George Washing- ton says that he has far better spirit in his squad this year than last, thet the players are pulling to- gethér far more satisfactorily, have greater interest in their work at the university and are THE EVENING Resumes Grappling Here POPULAR DUSEK GOES TO MAT WITH ROEBUCK. OT on the trail of a match or a series of matches with Ray St:eie, Rudy Dusek, the colorful Nebraskan who drew ‘em in at Griffith Stadium a few months ago when he made three ap- pearances against Jimmy Londos, will return to the wrestling ring in Grif- fith's bell orchard tomorrow night to tackle Tiny Roebuck, whom Rudy hopes to use as a stepping stone to a Steele encounter here next week. Since his third defeat hefe by Londos, Dusek has dropped only one match—that to a comparatively un- known in St. Louls—Hans Kamper. The Dussk-Rcebuck bout, to & finish, of course, will headline a five- bout card. ‘The semi-final will bring together Pat O'Shocker, the Salt Lake City Irishman, and the veteran Mike Ro- mano. This also is a finish match. A third such match will have as the principals George Zaharias and Paul Jones, the latter the scissors expert who has recently returned to the mat after a long illness. ‘Two more bcuts will be added to the card tonmight, when opponents for Doc Wilson and Carl Pojello will be signed. Tickets are available at Promoter Joe Turner's Annapolis Hotel office. The first beut will begin at 8:30 o'clock. Women with escorts will be admitted free. Foot Ball Tips BY SOL METZGER. When Kansas University opens its foot ball season tomorrow at Law- rence with the Colorado Aggies the entire Missourl Valley Conference will have its eyes on Burt Ingwer- sen's eleven.. This should be a close battle. Ingwersen has some corking plays for his opener. Here is one of From a double wing back forma- tion and an unbalanced line the ball is to back (2), No. 3 and 4 run to the right and to 2's rear. No. 2 spins tpward 4 and fakes handing him the ball. completes his spin and then drives ht ahead through the line be- tween the defensive center and ri guard, both of whom. are doul teamed. Back (1) leads him In ortr to cut down a defensive half- a play 1s successful beume t.he f-n of 3 and 4 toward defensive left end usually pulls ']'Ae opposing fullback, backing up the line, out of position to the right, a move that clears the way for s buck. Tomorrow—Another play. ' (Copyright; 1481.) TECH PLAYER INJURED - Wohlfarth, With ‘Bad Foot, May Be Out for Season. Wohifarth, regular end on the 1930 Tech eleven, may be lost for the season ry, but Coach . Duke GLENDON, NAVY CREW |* ———— Resigns After 23 M on Job. ‘Walsh, His Assistant, Named as Successor. ANNAPOLIS, Md., September 23 (#). —After 23 years as head coach of the Naval Academy oarsmen Richard A (Old Dick) Glendon has resigned and Walsh, his assistant for the last four years. academy, came as a surprise. Until the academy rowing authorities received a letter from Glendon some time after the end of the 1931 season stating he would not return next year Navy had counted on as varsity coach. | 'Walsh has besn connected with crew work at the academy :since his mid- shipmian days. He was a member of after a a8, in 1927 to beomm coach of the plebe | erew. In commenting on his appoint- ment, Capt. John W. Wilcox, director of atkletics, praised him highly, uy!nl | his work with the plebe shells “has been first rate and in some cases ex- ceptional.” authorities ‘sald Glendon, who is 67, gave no reason for his - mmunn. He is at his home at South tham, Mass. During his regime the Navy won three-fourths of its races. His great- est crew was turned out in. 1920, when he won the intercollegiate regatta at Poughkeepsie and went {0 the Olympic twerp to win international Leander crew MOHAWKS TO GATHER New Aspirants Invited as First Drill Will Be Held. Mohawk Club foot ball candidates will hold their first drill tonight. The uad is to report at the club house, 515 Eighth street southeast, at 7 o'clock. New aspirants will be welcomed along with former members of the squad. the following are along with others Jennings, Prairie, L MacAtee, Scheffel, C. Goldblatt, E. C. Joseph, Moxley, L. Pound and Jeffries. & A, practice for Bnn' | ballers 1s slated | Rainjer Pield at 7:3 ‘Wolverine unlimity ot | are after a game for 3077. but according | ST eT™,. lo'oc » S evenicentn and B stre PENN AND PITT TQ.PLAY Betl, : | Arrange Foot Ball Game for Frank- mong Iast stringers expocted w get m Mat Matches By the Associated Press. NEW YORK —Kola Kwariani, 216, Rus- gla, threw Tommy Draak, 21 in 13:85; Herb Preei 220 drew with Steve Z l, 2! Poland, 30:00; Hans Steinke, 340, Germany, drew with Gino Garibaldi, 205, Italy, 30:00; George Calza, 218, Italy, threw Ivan Zernhora, 210, Russia, Sammy Stein, 200, Newark, threw Mike Romano, 203, Italy, 20: ¢ | , BALTIMORE_Jim Londos, 8t. Louis, | reems that it is not that Mills does m | 205, threw Paul Jones, 208, Houston, | | Tex., 32:00. New Yook, | 21:19; | lin Field Next Season. PHILADELPHIA, September 23 (#).— | Announcement has | Pennsylvania and | meet in foot ball on November 5, 1932. 2 Pennsylvania and Pittsburgh have m%louma the last game being in Pittsburgh won eight nms. Penn- sylvania one and one was tied. Battery and Ignition Service || Delco Batteries Creel Brothers 1811 14th St. N.W. Decatur 4220 ‘Th'e best and the most—100% pure barley malt packed 3 full pounds to the can with quality -in every ounce. STAR, | MENTOR, QUITS POST . This announcement, made at the| WASHINGT! BIGGER ANDBETTER TEAM AT HARVARD Fine Material and Casey’s Coaching Promise New Foot Ball Era. By the Assoclated Press. Mass, September 23.—A new foot ball era has dawned at Harvard, where & varsity team that appears big- { ger and better than any in recent years |13 being taught & new kind of gridiron game by Eddie Casey, new head coach. Casey's system, a combination of the | soundest ideas of several of the game's outstanding strategists, will probably be generally described as Warner-ish, | for many of its formations bear A strik- ing resemblance to some of the Stan- ford mentor's favorite tacties. y of - et hati s ine btaria and aie end andldnm. Casey hopes to unle the opposition with a clever but erus lfilck He is now trying to pe'rfect that will come out of a %rl .u-uuamt. Woed a Big Asset. ack ' Crickard, M‘nle ‘White oz:: Bchorucbln"lly are -vn:l:bl. there are plenty of replacement m’f'hz paumw of Ben Ticknor, All- America center le- two -euons has tly dam prospects, for has & nl botur-mm--wn'e ivotmen m CMI;I‘ Ounnlnlhlm, a tter man; Roger and John wood. will be succeeded by C. A. (Buck) |yony George Talbot and Henry I(nmn ro(ulm Jast season, dispose the guard problems nicely and at e v | ment Mal Baneroft, powerful oarsman, and Irad Hardy, & m-mmd.r under ¥ Griffith Stadium Grid Mecea Soon ON’I more base ball game, that with Boston here Sunday, and Griffith Stadium will be turned from a big league ball park inte the collegiate atmosphere of foot ball. Georgetown will get in oge lick Saturday in meeting Lebanon Walley, before the Nationals tucu in_ thelr base ball uniforms. Then, the Hoyas meet Western Maryland there on October 3 and the week Yollawlnl Navy will come from Annapolls to play Maryland in the game that is* arousing unusual interest. 1t is regarded as likely that the Nav; Ihryhnd it will set a vecord for foot ball attendance in the Capi- tal City. Tickets for the now are on sale at Griffith Stadium, scholastic ban keys to th tack'e berths. " Record Favered. Casey, needing the most of (nd’!or m."fae- aflomemlmdoan s favor on * cord, 200-pound track | captain, i Tast year; | Jack Healey, 205, and a former tackle; Leon nke'\‘leo. 195, another of last year's ineligibles, and Jerry Cassed: N e ve major bers of the Tld ‘They are, to Wood Tom of the erew, Al Lupi Cunningham, hockey. ‘The Harvard schedule opens with | Bates on October 3, and New Hamp- shire & week later. Then come, order, Army at West -Point, Texas, i Blrtuumth, Holy Cross and DETROIT ELEVEN UPSET De Paul Springs a Surprise With 12-0 Win Before 15,000. DETROIT, September 23 (#).—De Paul University of Chicago upsgt Uni- versity of Detroit last night to score & | Haywood 12-to-0 grid victory. It was the first time the Chicago team had defeated Detrolt, Fifteen thousand saw the game. i Dt Paul rushed across one touchdown and intercepted a forward pass to score the othe &hmnnflummofl, GENUINE “BuLLDURHAM last season, hold the | 1931 AHERN MUST BULD ENTIRE BACKFIELD Lynham, Reserve in 1830, Is Only Vet Ball Carrier—50 Candidates Out. BY EDWARD A. FULLER, JR. ESTERN HIGH'S foot ball hy Seaso ned Gridders. Western may arrange a b - Mlun': - wh‘ wmnp-nm—— 13 its time will be taken with high achool title games. Ii ml‘"l: uled encounter is with wuhm-m High November 20 at Ballston. Western's schedule October 2—00!1-'. at Consaga Stadium. October 9—Alexandria. High at Alex- o October 16—Business at Central Sta- October 23—Tech at Central Stadium. November 3—Bastern at Oentral 8ta- No.omber 13—Central at OCentral squad is large, number- | Stadi ing around 50, but. this means little. As usual, it contains few experienced players and it is up to Coach Dan Ahern to do much rebuilding. It is the backfield that offers the toughest problem. Jackie Lyn- ham, who was a reserve, is the’ |lone behind-the-line performer ,| from the 1930 squad on the job. _| There are, of course, a flock of aspirants for ball-carrying jops, but how good or bad they are Al:ern will not be able to tell for ia timi In the line Everett and Lawrence| Buscher are back and Greve may re- turn. Everett is an end and a good one, too, while Lawrence Buscher and Greve are tackles. In & word, all that Ahern has to do is to dig up.some seven or eight first- rate players, including s kicker and passer. MONG the. saasoned performers lost by the Georgetowners are Bob + Fletcher, who alternated in the backfield and on the line; Amidon, quarterback; Webb, fullback; Cochran, back; Pimper and Dodson. centers; and Groves, forwards, and Lathouder, tackle. it wo‘:l‘a:( on its field in the woods sev- eral blocks from the school, but hopes to get in its new stadium, two blocks from the school, Oc! Should the team make a creditable record and the new fleld be ready, now the Western squad is| November o] at Balisto 20—Washington-Lee High !n.s'.em Higls with: & exanoria 73"“" % b ared Saturday at'Alexan lhd nct s :sd:ennounced It vtu begin at 3:30 Jack Edwards, former Toch High | lete, who is out for vmlx'“m nu at Shown weil and_1s Jooked upon wh well ang looks I cnd-string fullback. - 42 m Paul Hinkel, erstwhile mnml foot ball and track luminary, Penn, along with his m Tom. Al Reichman, who made his mark on the gridircn and cinnerp-m at Me- Kinley, is at ‘Tom and Chester Miles, former nsm m.a athletes, are among others from this section at the Durham School, MERSON and National Training School elevens battled to a 0-0 tie o ll';”we 'memnt game of the Disteiod schoolboy season Training School feld, mguuy of Brown, right end, to hoid on & torwerd passes on the threshold of ths goal hurt Emerson, while fumbles s aiso dicapped the Training School eleven. B Pt 40 PRO GOLFERS IN TIE. QUINCY, Mass., September 23 (#).— Dave Hackney of Lowell and m‘flw MacAndrew of Quincy tied for the 36- hole medal with wm- of 145 in the second-round play of the New mlud Ben it minty B S Farrell Mamaroneck, N. Y., | pext in nu with 146. 3 NAVY USING THREE ELEVENS IN DRILLS: Fiv§ Veterans Are Nuoleus' of Varsity==Will Point for Maryland Tilt, NNAPOLIS, Md., September 23. — Having picked three com- plete teams as leading aspi- rants for the varsity, Rip Mil- ' ler, Navy head coach, has settled down to the definite task of getting ready for the opening tit with Willlam and Mary here on October 3. However, Miller has let it be knuwn thn Navy will take Willlam an d Mary and paint for the tilt '"h Maryland in Ofl.fllh !Mflhu"fl in on om To Match Your Odd Coats EISEMAN'S, 7th & F OIL FILTER RECARTRIDGE EVERT 55- MmEs LS. JULLIEN, Inc 1443 P 8¢, N.W. Abookletof24leaves of imported W\ cigarette paper at- tached to each sack NOW... w1y, cigar rette paper—150 leaves to the book— formerly 8’ Gendm“BUlL”DlmHAMTob‘eeonSFthheenmeof father, Percival S. Hill, into' the Tobacco business. For l4ynnhwul’nddutofno American Tobacco Company. ' The fine quality and popularity of “BULL” BURHAM were always subjects of great pride to him. Therefore, it is particularly gratifying to mmoflerthhinpommuvh'mdumcetodum public at this time. RACES TODAY Havre de Grace | et Siz Other Races BT B Bastern Standard Time and BEST 73

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