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Sports News. D. C. Colleges Busy This Week End PIT, HOVAS CLASH TOMORROW NEHT Virginia Visits 0ld Liners: Saturday—Other Events Are Attractive. BY H. C. BYRD. TTRACTIVE competition, es- A pecially in basket ball, again is listed by local col- leges for the week end. Georgetown's game with Pitts- burgh tomorrow night may take | a place among the best two or three of the year, while Mary- land's with Virginia Sathrday is pretty sure to be exceptional.‘ Maryland also is to stage a box- ing match, and there will be} games for Gecrge Washington, | American University and Gal- laudet. Pittsburgh last season was regarded 85 one of the greatest quints in the | country and, while it does not seem | to be quite so strong this season, nev- ertheless is not a mean opponent by | any means. If Georgetown takes the | measure of the Smoky City five it will add another feather to its cap, already having whipped West Virginia this week. ‘While Georgetown is meeting Pitts- burgh, Maryland will be staging an. Opposes Hoyas TALL PITT CENTER HERE TO- MORROW NIGHT. other double bill, with Western Mary- |. land in basket ball and St. John's in boxing. The Old Liners seem much stronger than Western Maryland, al- though it is the team to which Mary- land seems superior with which it al- ways has its. trouble. Western Mary- land and St. John's have been played off and on by Maryland since back in the 90's, and the latter some 20 years ago was the greatest rival the Black and Gold had. Saturday night Maryland hooks up with Virginia for the second time this year and a real struggle is certain. Maryland won the first game entirely on its more accurate foul shooting, each team making the same number of goals from the fioor. Virginia has been extended an invitation to bring up its freshman boxing team to meet the Maryland first-year squad, but it ic not known whether or not the in-| vitation will be accepted. George Washington entertains Balti- more University’s basket ball team Sat- urday night. while Gallaudet goes over | to American University for a_contest. | George Washington should chalk up | another victory, while American U. should be the favorite over Gallaudet. Only one contest of any kind is scheduled for a local college tonight and that is the basket ball game Cath- olic University plays with Virginia Folytechnic Institute at Blacksburg. | The Brocklanders have a better chance | to win from V. P. L than they had at Virginia OACH BRETT of Miami University | said while here with his boxing team that intramural sports in his school have such a hold on the | students that they are just about as enthusiastic over them as about inter- | collegiate athletics. Especially is this | true in cases of indoor games. He says that basket ball does not go at all, be- cause the students had rather be out- doors playing golf or tennis than to be | watching or playing on a board floor indoors. Brett is coach of minor sports at Miami and physical director. For several years prior to going to Florida Brett was wrestling coach at Washington and Lee and turned out some good teams. Down at Miami he is making good with his special inter- est in wrestling, and it is said that he hae some exceptionally good men. He is responsible for She statement that he has a heavywe®ht who can throw nine-tenths of the wrestlers in the professional ranks. Miami has in its schedule for next year a boxing meet and wrestling meet with Army at West Point and Brett says to “watch this heavyweight wrestler of mine, as I'll bet anything he makes the Olympic team this Summer and wins his Olym- pic matches.” At any rate, nobody can say Brett does not have confidence in his ath- letes. S USUAL, only 16 teams will be al- lowed to compete in the South- | ern Conference basket ball tour- nament, which begins at Atlanta the last of this month, but there is some doubt expressed that so many teams | will enter. It is said that some of the schools are so hard hit financially in their athletic programs that they are likely to forego the basket ball trip. | Of course, for the last several years the expenses of the trip have almost been defrayed by the receipts, but there is a rather pronounced feeling that the receipts this year may not run so well. Foot ball last Fall in Atlanta was al- most & frost in comparison to what it usually has been. NE OF the Washington and Lee coaches who was here this week takes issue with enybody and everybody on the basket ball situation in the South. He says that, no matter what may be said about the Far South- ern quints, Kentucky has the best team in the Conference. It is his opinion that Kentucky is at Jeast 50 per cent better than it was a year ago. when it was runner-up to Maryland in the Conference tournament and lost in the final game by only 1 point. ATHOLIC UNIVERSITY gave Vir- ginia quite a battle at Charlottes- ville last night, even if it dXd_ lose. 37 to 32. The Brooklanders were in the running the whole way. and had they made good on just a little bigger per- centage of their pet shots at the basket might have finished with the long end of the count. It was not thought that C. U. had quite an even chance to beat the Cava- liers, and they should feel well satisfied over their showing. If they can get a victory in the game with V. P. I. tonight they ought to come back more than satisfied. White kept C. U. in the running last night with 16 points. a 2 s g el o o o & Jankowski, Whelan, £.. Totals | soaanmos al oonommos 8l osBmsuos? Washington T #gainst Maryland last night the kind of team it has had in the last half dozen years. The Eastern Shoremen played well, but simply did not measure up. | B Maryland won by 36 to 16, the biggest margin by which either of the two schools has ever whipped the other. At Collegé did not vrcscnt‘w RUSS (BUTCH) OCHSENHIRT. ON THE SIDE LINES ith the Sports Editor L————By DENMAN THOMPSON. 4 NLIKE prosperity, the opening of Washing- ton's Bicentennial celebration really is just around the cor- ner. The date for it was set more than a year ago, yet it was not until recently that there was any assurance sports would be fittingly represented on the program extending over a period of nine months. It’s different now. With the belated appointment of William C. (Champ to you) Pickens as sports director, things have begun to hum, and the outlook now is that the Capital will be treated to a profusion of exhibi- tions and spectacles before another Winter arrives. With Pickens officially on the job for only a few days, plans already have been made to stage events in- volving practically every sport popular during the Spring, Summer and Fall seasons, both in and out of doors, on land and in the water. And with the avowed purpose always of present- ing the foremost exponents of the various activities, fruition of the plans will assure Washingtonians and the many thousands of visitors.here a truly red-let- ter year. One Bet Overlooked. At this early stage many of the events contemplated are in the purely visualized class, as sufficient time has not been available for con- tacts, much less definite bookings, but the entire field of games has been thoroughly canvassed as possibilities with the excep- tion of onc—the air. And there, it seems to us, is a bet entirely too good to e he * WITH SUNDAY. MORNING EDITION bening Star. WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1932. Sk FVES BATILE AT SLVERSPRNG Triple-Header Tops Night’s Schedule—Government League Meets. NDEPENDENT basket ball tonight | will be headlined by a triple-header | in the Silver Spring Armory, where the three Northern Prep teams, 130, 145 and unlimited class, will en- tertain. The 130-pounders will play host to the Athliso five, the 145-pound tossers will tackle the Euclid A. C. five md‘ the unlimiteds will oppose the Silent Five. A meeting of the 10 business man- | agers of the Government League en- | tries will be held at 8 o'clock tonight | in the Vic Sport Shop for the purpose | of drawing up the schedule for the isecr.nnd half of play. | | Scores of last night's court tussles: | District Amateur League. | Boys' Club, 23; Delaware & Hud- n 19, Saks, 52: Interior, 7. Community Center League. Adelphites, 28; Shade Shop, 26. Independent. | | 1 Northern Preps. 40; Howitzers. 29. g Columbia Firemen. 50: Virginians. 29. Knights of Columbus, 33; Sara- nacs, 31. Scholastics, 32; Swann's, 23. Brookland, 37; McLean, 17. | __Potomac Boat Club, 40; Tank School, |33 | Athliso, 31: Ingram, 2 4 Grifith Consumers, 28; Quantico | Marines. 26. | Benning Girls, 41; Park View Girls, | 22. “Y" Eagles, 47: Dukes, 15. “Y" Flashes, 46; Peerless, 12 First Baptist, 25; Brethren, 15. Post Exchange, 30; Tivoli, 28 Fort Myer, 53; Noel House, 19 United Typewriter Grays, 28; Mer- curys, 19. ” Silent Five, 47; De Molay, 25. | LOOP AFTER NEW TEAMS | iGovernment League Will Organize i Tonight for Second Series. ‘ Managers of Federal basket ball tears | that may wish to compete for the Na- | tional Federation of Federal Employes’ | Slver Court Trophy are invited to at- |tend a meeting of the Government League tonight at Vic Sport Shop at | 8 o'clock. | Among other business will be the ar- rangement of the second-half schedule. | NORTHERNS TO BE BUSY | Basket Ball Teams in Three Games | Tonight at Silver Spring. Northern A. C. basket bal teams will figure in three games tonight at Ta- koma-Silver Spring High School. The unlimited class tossers will face the | Silent five, the 145-pounders Euclid A. |C. and the 130-pounders the Athliso uint. The last-mentioned game will open the program. | be overlooked. Base ball, boxing, golf, tennis, track, rowing, swimming, diving and other better known pas- times will make a tremen- dous appeal to their devo- tees, but all are old stuff compared with aviation, still in its infancy, and for sheer thrills it possesses possi- bilities superior to any. With ample site facilities at hand and every assur- ance of whole-hearted co- operation from governmen- tal officials, a congress of flyers could put on a show here which not only could be witnessed by a far larger throng than could attend any other event, but which would provide more of the spectacular and sensational. Would Be Revelation. Progress in aviation for land planes as well as am- phibians is exceedihg even that recorded in the auto- motive world as demon- strated in the shiny new models with trick gadgets now appearing on the streets, and it is safe to say that even those who already are air-minded would find such a meet a revelation. An aerial rodeo, with races and maneuvers for the various types supple- mented by a stunt competi- tion with adequate recogni- tion in the way of prizes and acclaim for the winners undoubtedly would attract the most skillful and dgring pilots in the country and would earn the hearty sup- port of all interests, com- mercial as well as official, who have advancement of aeronautics at heart. That men some day would be able to navigate the air like birds probably wasn’t even dreamed of in 1732, but what could be more fitting that, it was only Maryland's third vic- tory in seven starts. As far as last night's game was con- hing to They ran Maryland led, cerned, though, there was notl it except the OId Liners. away from the visitors. 17 to 17, at intermission. Summary: Maryland (36). GF. Chalmers, Ronkin, { Flitzgerald Robinson Huey, &. romnos-ou! calomaronan Soro~tmoomon Referee—Mr, Meator, Ui Wash. College (16). .. GFPL than a demonstration of the possibilities of this greatest modern insurance of na- tional security in the cele- bration of the 200th anni- versary of the birth of the Father of His Country, America’s original advocate of preparedness? Come on, Champ, lets have an ozone circus. OLYMPIC REPRESENTATIVE. PARIS, February 11 (P).—Count Clary, president of the French Olympic Committee, has been named as repre- w—soouoa 16| sentative of the French government st Angeles. - - i the 1932 games st Los | as it defeated Hyattsville for the second GETTING SOME OUTSIDE ATTENTION. : Sleighers Take Chute at “Insane” S]—)e:ci —By TOM DOERER WHY, YOUNG MAN, You CAN'T BE THE SAME LITTLE FELLOW OF TWREE YEARS AGO = N- WD o 2 N @ COLLEGIAy, = =S \Nm\—\\.en“\tf MONTGOMERY LEAGUE | SHIFTS ARE UNLIKELY Leading Takoma-Silver Spring, Basketers Idle Tomorrow as Lower Teams Play. SILVER BSPRING, February 11— Montgomery County League games for Friday probably will not produce any change in standing, as Takoma-Silver Sfrlnl basketers, ieague leaders, are idle, while Damascus, the only team with a chance to overtake the leaders, should have little trouble in disposing of Rockville at Damascus. Gaithersburg probably will have to wait for its first league victory, as it has little chance of defeating Sherwood at Sandy Spring. Bethesda-Chevy Chase will attempt to clinch third ?hce. entertaining Poolesville at Be- hesda. In the Girls’ League prob- ably will go into undisputed n of first place at the expense of Pooles- ville, while Silver Spring. tied for the lead, does not play. Rockville vs. Da- mascus and Sherwood va. Gaithersburg are other games. ‘Takoma-Silver Spring will entertain | the Georgetown Prep team. Fifteen straight victories was the ex- | tent of Silver Spring’s winning streak | time this sesson, -23-14. Silver Spring Juniors gained their | first victory of the season, defeatin Hyattsville Juniors, 13 to 9. . Summaries: Takoma 8. 8. (23). Bozievich, 1 T Mogatt, 1 Clark, ¢. orb, Pritchar Leizear, Hyattsville Kidwell, Brown. 't. Woodward, e E!. com~noNa® oo~y ononmn? | | 81 Totals... Takoma 8. 8. P iy | essrsson: Woile W. Leizear, Keele, ¢ Turner, Shorb, oomnoomy | eornroonei ol onmnroonn? Xl ‘Totals. HYATTSVILLE HIGH WINS Easily Disposes of Solomons Hve: in 15-to-6 Game. | HYATTSVILLE, February 11.— Hyattsville High Reserves scored over Solomons High of Calvert County, Md., 15 to 6, last night in the armory here From the outset Hyattsville outclassed the visitors. Summary: Hyattsvllle (15), * G.P Urquhart. 1. Quantrille, f.¢ Cathoun. 1 Woodwa: Bolomons (6). | G g Sononecon Sonnuoso® | scoomooe0mom %l ecosnucoves! Company F basketers will play two games tonight on the armory court here. ‘The Soldier regulars will meet Naval Reserves of Washington. The Reserves will engage McLean, Va., A.| C.. 145-pounders in a preliminary at| 7:30 pm. | Eleven members of the Hyattsville High basket ball squad are eligible for the State scholsstic championship serles. They are Burdette Cogar, War- ren Kidwell Richard Lutz, Jimmy Rimmer, Harold Brown, Sammy Town- | send, Junior Bealor, Elwyn Woodward, Joe Bladen, Willlam McClay and Blaine Calhoun. Scene of the basket ball games be- tween Hyattsville High School boys’| team and Charlotte Hall and Hyatts- ville girls' sextet and St. Mary's Semi- nary tomorrow night has been shifted to the armory here. It had been plan- ned to play in the gymnasium at Uni- versity of Maryland. The program starts at 7 o'clock. ENTER OLYMPIC SAILING Four European Nations Will Have Yachts in Competition. LOS ANGELES, February 11 (#).— Southern California yachting officials | said they had received assurance that | England, France, Norway and Germany would participate in the six and eight | meter sailing races of the olympic games here this Summer. | Foot Ball Fatalities Narrow From 43 to 22 Actual Causes; BY MERLE OLIVER, Associated Press Staff Writer. NN ARBOR, Mich., February 11. —An investigation conducted by PFlelding H. Yost, athletic director at University of Mich- igan, has disclosed that of 43 deaths charged against foot ball last Fall only |ical 22 actually resulted from the game. Yost investigated each death and has submitted a report to E. K. Hall, chair- man of the Foot Ball Rules Commit- tee, for its meeting at Hanover, N. H,, which opens Friday, Of the 21 reported deaths which Mr. Yost belleves should not be charged to foot ball, two were caused by pmeu- TE! 22 who died following actual perticipation in foot ball games o were classified as seven players, seven from high schools, and eight “sand-lot” or un play- ers. Causes of death were given as follows: Fracture of cervical vertebrae, eight; cerebral hemorrhage, four; peri- tonitis, four; coronary embolism, frac- ture of skull, ruptured spleen, concus- sion of brain, one each. Two deaths as Yost Finds Submits Report stock of itself to see what risks may be eliminated and what safeguards may be raised to prevent death in the near future.” ‘Yost drew the following conclusions from the study: “(1) That the number of fatal in- juries is in inverse proportion to the degree of coaching, training and med- supervision exercised. “(2) That apparently it is more dangerous to play on the defense than on the offense. “(3) That the most frequent cause of death is fracture of cervical verte- *%4) That fatal injuries occur prin- cipally as the result of players being struck on_neck, head ord:bdomen by r hes, etc., diate attention, especially to prevent infections.” investigation showed that 12 yers were injured fatally while playing on the defense. Seven were injured on the offense and in three cases time of the injury was un- known. Only one report of & foot ball death that roughness was a con- tributory cause of injury. Yost offers four suggestions to make the e safer: “All -equipment should be designed not only for the protection of the wearer, but also with ideration for the safety of the opponent. “Players should be impressed with the great importance of paying imme- diate attention to cuts, scratches, abra- sions and other avenues of infection. “Great_attention should be paid by officials -to use of kyees and fictals who will penalize unneces- - rqughness” Whistle Doesn’ t Worry Quinn Thinks 5 P.M. Toot Breakfast Call: Hops Back to Majors. BY TOM R. JOHN QUIN PICUS (Old Jack Quinn to the trade) gets a hoist in the pay check from the Brooklyn ball club of the National League. Such a thing happening to such a man at such a time, playmates, is something to paste in the cook book. It seems all of 20 years ago when base ball was blowing the 5 o'clock whistle on Johnnie because of dis- ability, ancient intentions, poor curves and a heaithy batting epi- demic on the part of the opposition when Johnnie took his turn at the rubber. But Jack took that 5 o'clock quitting toot to be the 7 o'clock call for break- Aast, tipped the waiters and started off to help win a few pennants for a hand- ful of ball clubis. It is an old custom of Jack's, picked up when he was serving un- der Gen. Custer. Those were the days when habits were plentiful and did not cost so much. Batters have been trying to show him the error of his ways ever since. But you can’t teach an old In- dian fighter like Jack. He still is unfriendly to bat- ters. Old Daniel Boone taught him never to trust strangers who wore horseshoe scarf- pins and spats. ‘When Jack wants advice on a batter S he goes toa young- 4i-er man with a 8 flowing beard and R g o b@ : '»;M from headquarters. B TR You can't teach an old pitcher new hops. Mr. Picus started to scorn modern methods right after the Civil War. He began getting suspicious at the battle of the Alamo. | He was thoroughly old-fashioned when | he licked Sitting Bull. He started thinking for himself just before the battles of 1812. He was troubled with bad feet and knew the end of his base ball career was just around the corner. But he knew prosperity was around the same place. Both still are. He started pitching his slow ball with some veterans of the war with Mexico. Those old soldiers liked an older man's company. The Yan- kees got him when his fast ball had faded, his legs wobbling a his curve breaking in the grandstand. That was the year of his comeback. He shaved off his beard to fool Connie Mack and fooled a lot of American League batters at the same time. When he pitched in Washington, Sir Walter Johnson used to take Clark Grifith by the hand to sneak over and search for what was holding up Jack. Before the tour of suspicion had ended Mr. Picus usually had struck out most of the Griff club, slow-balling ’em into an afternoon siesta. Years before’ Jack had shown the world that it was he and Abner Doubdleday who invented base ball. takes _ information | DOERER It made the rest of base ball want to mominate Father Chadwick for president of the Three-Eye League | in retaliation, | But when Jack stepped off the mound the enemy was ready to agree Jack was rizht as the score, which was always in favor of the Picus people. When the American League want- ed to raise a monument in honor of Jack's aid in discovering the game he “Thanks, gentlemen, keep my age out of it and give Double- day the credit.” And from that day to this Jack’s age has been kept a base ball secret. Jack only thinks of it in his sleep. And he talked in his slumber with the Ath- letics two seasons ago. Quinn has pitched hundreds of major league victories, not counting those he 3 during _the vis and Clark expedition, Valley Forge and the Brandywine battle, Indians tampered with his records those days and In- dians monkeyed wih ‘em in the American League, too. | But_you cannot ©_ = make Brooklyn be- | lieve be is-old. Those Dodgers are | paying off on the last report of his age, which was lost in the great Baltimore | fire. The National Leaguers recognize his face, but they do not remember his pitching. Which 4s what is keeping nflssold boy up there laughing at the | Up there in Brooklyn the Dodgers still believe that Jack is young enough to come onto the field on a kiddie car and in rompers. They think he sits in his high chair and breezes fast ones down to the enemy. But they don't know that under those rompers is a Civil War uni- form. When the base ball committee on debility and pensions calls upon Jack he hops off his high chair, tweaks their noses, plays with their watches and cries for candy. They go back and report to Judge Landis that Jack is a model Amer- ican boy. | MOUNT FIVES PLAY TWO Boy and Girl Basketers to Tackle ‘ Kendall School Teams. MOUNT RAINIER, February 11— | Mount Rainier High boy and girl basket | ball teams will entertain Kendall School lcombtm!lans of Washington tomorrow afternoon. The girls' game will open activities at 2:30 o'clock. Mount Rainier A. C. unlimited basket ball tossers divided a double-header on the high school court here last night, dropping the first game to Mount Rai- nier Boys' Club, 19 to 20, after a see- saw battle, and winning the nightcap from Breniwood Hawks, 33 to 27. Ping Pong Knocks Out Boxer St. John’s Man, Who Fights at Maryland Tomor- row, Never Had Taken Count in Ring. NNAPOLIS, Md., February 11. A —Beware of ping pong. It is a dangerous game, ac- cording to Vernon Novicki, member of the St. John's College boxing team. Novicki has never been kayoed by a rival mitt slinger, but his team was obliged to forfeit in his weight Tuesday night due to a game of ping pong. Novicki, who fights at 160 pounds, 2150 is a varsity foot ball player and is training for the Olympics as a :%.mp and jumper, but all these ctivities ar, in his opinion, genile child’s play compared to ping pong. Just before a dual boxing matcl here Novicki challenged Roger Cobb 10 a ping pong match in a frategpity house. During play Novicki slashed nimself in the head with a paddle at the same instant he crashed into the wall near the table. The lights went out for Novicki and when time came for his boxing bout, Coach Joey Novak found his middleweight to be groggy and un- able to appear. Coach Novak has now sIssued nrgers"t.ghnmt none of his ringmen are al ipt pi N before the meet with the Uni vepr:n; of Maryland at College Park tomor- row night. PAGE D—1 RIDERS PUSH LUCK T0 HANG UP MARKS Tense Atmosphere Prevails at Olympics—U. S. Team Wins Doubles. BY EDWARD J. NEIL, Associated Press Sports Writer. AKE PLACID, N. Y., February 11.—There was tension in the air today and a hint of foreboding, a premonition of disaster, as the Winter Olympics entered the final stage, where the danger of death or grave injury on the jagged sides of Mount Van Hoevenberg transcended the nerve-wracking exhilaration of the Olympic bob sleigh chamionship. The first half of the competifion was ended, and in a measure, the treach- erous mile and a half sweep through ice banks and dizzying hairpin turns, zigzags and cross-overs, stood humill- ated, its dangers scorned and spurned by riders who slashed its sides at dizzy- ing speeds of 65 and 70 miles an hour to set records that 48 hcurs ago were considered not only an impossibility, but absolute insanity. There has been a universal feeling among the stecl-nerved international sportsmen who drive these 500-pound meteors at such speeds down the ice chute on the mountainside that the luck of the riders which Fas been good t Germans crashed within in practice, sending six to the hospital, two in critical condition, weuld end before these races were over and that grim Mount Von Hoevenberg would take its toll again. HE feeling nearly faded out yester- day as Hubert Stevens. as iron- thewed and frosty-nerved a giant as ever pilot>d a sled, whipped disdain- fully through such parelyzing obstacles as, “Writeface.” “Cliffside,” “Shady Corner” 2nd “Zigzag," to literally fly down the mile and a half stretch first in 1 minute 59.69 seconds, then in 1:57.68 to win the fifth Olympic cham- pionship the United States has ever captured in the 1932 games and sct & two-man bobsled record that should last for many vears Handicapped by a 4.28-second deficit he conceded Reto Czpadrutt of Switzer- |land in the first two heats, due to a slow start. Hubert and his even larger | brother, Curtis, had to make it up in two final heats while Czpadrutt himselt was turning in phenomenal time. They | took every chance that a tezm could | take, bobbing. heaving the sled ahead every inch of the way except when gasping for breath end holding on for | Iife in the curves, and then came down in time that would have been excep- | tional for the heavier, swifter, more dangerous sleds. T the end the Stevens boys, joining Jack Shea ss Lake Placid's own | Olympic_heroes, had whipped the 20-year-old Swiss University student | by a second and a half, a wide margin |in a g>me of such terrific speeds. The | remainder of the field of 12 represent- |ing eight nations were distanced and | the defending Olympic_ championship pair, Jack Heaton and Robert Minton, likewise were lost in the ruck of such onposition, although they did take third place. | Today it was the turn of another | local ace—calm, confident young Harry Homberger—to bear the brunt of_ the | foreign audacity, along with Billy Fiske, who won the 1928 four-man championship for the United States. Little fear is felt for Homberger. who holds the world record of 1 minute 52 seconds, made on this course, and who predicts that a sled will rocket through the mile and a half in 1 minute 40 sec- onds before the race is over. He has & surprise in store for the invaders. who have had the straightaways packed with snow. like European courses. Homber- ger likes to ride sheer, glass ice. He has been working, almost without sleep, for several days and nights per- | fecting new runners, a compromise be- | tween the sharp sgow runners of the Europeans and the flat, skatelike blades | of the American sleds. Secretly he ate | tached them to his sled yesterday and | when the two-man races were over | took his crew down the slide. He was clocked in 1 minute 472-5 seconds. }Resllil; St.anding In Olympic Games Two-Man Event. (Decided on total time.) Total times for first two heats Tuesdey, | | ‘ BOBSLEDDING. times for yesterday's two heats and com- riete_total times follow United States. J. Hubert Stevens and Stevens, 4:17.27, 1:50.69, 1:57.68— 8:14.7 | #3" Switzeriana. Reto Capadrutt and Oscar | Geler. 4:13.00. 2:03.52. 1:59.67—8:16.28 | ~ 3. United Sfates. John R. Heaton and Rob- et B Minton—412253, 2:04.28, 2.0233— | 4. Rumania. Lieut. Alexander Papana and Capt ~Dimitru Hubert, 4:23.33, 2:08.13, 2:03.02—8:32.47. | 5 Germany. Hans Kilian and | Huber. 4:26.35: 2:0562. 2:03.19—8 6. Iialy, Count Rossi di Bontelern and Ttalo Cosin. 4:23 55, 2.06 58, 2082083633, |1 B Max Lud- wig, 2 2:10.62—8:45.05. | . 8 Ttaly. Agostino Lanfranci and Gaetano | Lanfranci. 4:3355. 2:08. 2:09.11—8:50 66. | o2 'gium. Max Houben n Hrlhg f‘u 58. 2(_} ° 2:09 62—8:53 10. elziom, Christian Hansez Mags, 435 21350 fE T B ance, Louis Balsan and Armand De- lille; 43947, 2:13.56. 2,00 56—9:02.59. ustria. Hugo Weinstengel ¥ g ”E., Gudenus, 4:45.65, 2 N.,\F.lng.lsofiifi SPEED _SKATING. 1,500 Meters for Women. Demonstration Race. Three to Qualify for Final First Heat. n by Jean Wilson. Canada: Second: Dorothy Praney. i tes, ‘third, Eiizabetn Dubois, | United States, fourth: Florence Hurd, Can- ada, fifth, Time—2:542, Second Heat. s Potter. Canada: Helen e T P B R Molae Hattie Donaldson, Cunada, A{in.” Time—2:54 (new Worid Tec- ordy. Final. Won by Kit Klein, United States: Jean Wlison, Canada, secord: Helen Bina, United third: Geraldine Mackie, Canada, . (Leila Brooks Potter, Canada, fell near finish line.) Time—3:00.6. HOCKEY. United States, 8: Germany, 0. SKIING. 18-Kilometer Race. Sebastian 35.36 Huth and Wos Xit_Kiein Won b: o pion by Lt