Evening Star Newspaper, April 10, 1932, Page 55

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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, APRIL 10, 1 932—PART FIVE 3 Maryland U. Teams in Double Victory : Marathoners Stretch Limbs Here Today “G” Club Guest U. 8. SEVATOR ACCEPTS BID TO ATTEND DINNER. TRACK, LACROSSE TRIUMPHS SCORED Washington and Lee Beaten in Meet, Washington Col- lege in Stick Tilt. HE Terrapins of the University of | Maryland proved a little too | good as mudders for Washing- | ton and Lee's tracksters and | ‘Washington College’s lacrosse team yes- terday at College Park, the Old Line | teams opening their seasons in a coid, driving rain with victories. | Maryland’s Olympic-conscious la- crossers splashed to a 7-to-1 triumph over Washington College, while the hivering thinclads upset the favored Generals by 6725 to 58'% The base ball game belwen Maryland and North Carolina was called off. | The steady rain and soggy track kept | the times and distances to & mmxmum,‘ but the meet was a thriller. Outcounted on the cinders, 34 to 38, the Terps' superiority over the CGenerals in the field events was decisive. ARYLAND was greatly superior to Washington College in lacrosse, although no real line on the Terps could be had because of the condition of the field. At times the ball was totally submerged in the water and it was impossible to handle it with ac- curacy. The Old Liners were sluggish in the first half, but speeded up in the second | and Washington Ccllege was able to | penetrate Maryland territority for only | total of two or three minutes. The Old Liners took a 4-to-1 lead in the first half. Skip Faber started the scoring after six minutes when he made a short shot into the Eastern Shoremen’s net. Ray Poppelman du- plicated Faber's feat before Chambers ©of Washington College sccred his team's lone goal. h'ed Nordenholz and Faber counted agein before the first 30 minutes were ROYAL S. ENATOR ROYAL S. COPELAND of New York has accepted an invitation to be one of the speak- ers at the eighth annual varsity “G" Club dinner of Georgetown Univer- sity the evening of April 20 at the ‘Willard Senator Copeland, a graduate of the Medical College of the Univer- sity of Michigan, is much interested in athletics. Plans for the dinner are going forward rapidly and indications are that there will be an attendance of not far from 1,000. Thomas A. Cantwell is general chairman of arrangements. COPELAND. College, School Events for Week COLLEGE. ‘Tomorrow. Base ball—Maryland vs. V. M. I, at Lexington up. | pMBryl:md snapped out of it in the second half and ?:mo;’lsu‘:‘lcd :k;é\ superiority over the invaders. FROnkin tessed in a pair of goals about | Tueaday. midway of the period, while Fred Stie- | Base ball—Mount St. er)s VS. ber finished the scoring & few min- | Georgetown, on G. U. fiel utes before the final whistle, Base ball—Maryland \s ‘Wash- However, the Terps mlge;(i n&ouhalql\ ington and Lee, at Lexington. the goal all dur.ng the I e ball | 5 many times being checked by & pool | Wednesday. of water in front of the netting or HTckr;ms—t{‘:;oi'gc Washington vs. Johns ping rom the sticks. opkins at Baltimore. e el Golf—George Washington vs. Wil- KRAJCOVIC, Maryland's great liam and Mary at Washington. grid lineman, led in the Terrapins' Fobdny conquest of Washington and Lee. He Y- accounted for 15% points, winning the Tennis—Washington and Lee vs. shotput, discus and broad jump and | Georgetown, here. (Scene to be tying with two Generals for third place | announced.) in the high jump. Lacrasse—Maryland Maryland outcounted Washington and ~ Tech, at Atlanta. Lee in the field, 3335 to 205, Saturday. Washington and Lee was the victim g = ) of a couple of tough breaks. but it was Base ball—Dickinson vs. Mary- well earned win for the Terps. Fin- | land. at College Park Klestein. crack General sprinter, was| _ Track—V. M. I vs. Maryland, at unable to compete because of an in- | College Park jured foot. The second blow for the Lacrosse—Maryland vs. Lexington collegians came when Phelps 8t Ath tripped over a barrier while leading the 220-yard low hurdles. The fall cost Washington #nd Lee first place, which | wouid nave shoved Piggoft of Mary- land imo stond plate 4 Fellovs of vs. Georgla Georgia, SCHOLASTIC, Tomorrow, Base ball—Central vs ton-Lee Hig, at Ballston. Tuesday. Base ball—Eastern vs. Western, at Eastern Stadium, 3:30 o'clock (Public high school championship game.) Base ball—Business vs. Freshmen, at College Park Base bali—Episcppel at St. Wednesday. Base ball—Western vs. Gonzaga, Gonzaga field. Base ball—Business vs. Monument Grounds. Track—Intcrclass meet at Central Washing- The score I~ the time was 52 to 47 vor of the Old Liners. Washing- nd Lee won five of the eight run- rack Summaries, 100 YARD DASE_wen by Edmonds (W. L. secong. @i 5 Reasor 5 e 10 seconds AKD DASH-"Won by Edmonds (W 501 L); third, | Maryland Albans. third, Band | derick (W. | Gladdeli | RUN_Won by Giadden (W. & third, Jenes d, Devenderf (Md.): ngtes 51 segonds. Bhure, (M) he,a D miy Swavely, High. T(nnh‘st. John's at Central. Thursday. Base ball—Emerscn at Eastern. Base ball—Central vs. Maryland Freshmen, at College Park. Friday. ase ball—Business . Stadl 3 ‘PHLII(’ high champi: game.) Bese West Base High Base ball—Bethesda-Chevy Chase High at Georgetown Prep. Teanis—Gonzaga at St (Prep school league match.) Saturday. Base ball—Tech at Washington- Lee High Base ball—Eastern Plebes, at Annapolis Base hsll—C Freshmen, at Ch Bzse ball—St. Albans berry Forest, at Orange, Va Tenni=—Eastern vs. Navy at Annapolls d): second Trum‘ui‘ M ). 'Time, 21 seco; num'rn'r Wor byLK'ur,mc fiey) sec- Stevens rd. Bailey (W u Krajcovic 0l L) 119 _ by scl cheil (W. & b Distance, feet ULT—-Tie for b!llk‘ Busick Aud )i Khl d, B (W. & L) and Wilson l\\ HIGH !lnm °x'n‘r L frst between Po OMd ) and Cook (W \nlrdtie amans . K 3 ball—Wash n all—Central at ton-Lee High at Alexandria John's > 0! nd. Bailey (M Distance, 148 feet vs. Navy Virginia Wood- Plebes, ‘Becona” defemse Thurd defense Toronto Hockey Goala: uumnu -Faber m Poppelmay, Nordentolz, & ORONTO, April 9 (#).—The To- ronto Maple Leaf S - Cup nal b y defeating the for the third straight time The score was 6 to 4. YOUNGS WIN ON DRIVES =TT | Take Husband and Wife Duckpin Event With 1,125 Total tonight New Grid Rules Effect Little ANATELR MATMEN STRUT THER STUFF A. A. U. Titles at Stake in Tourney at Boys’ Club | Beginning Tomorrow. | A MATEUR wrestling, the path once trod by many & present- | day professional star, will make its big splurge of the year, and | possibly the biggest in the history of | the sport here, tomorrow night at 7:30 | o'clock at the Boys' Club, where the an- nual District A. A. U. championships | will be held. Although six of the eight 1931 cham- | pions are slated to defend their titles, | this has been far from discouraging, for the entry list shows an increase of al- | ‘most twice as many contenders as last Tumormws schedule will call for the elimination of all except two finalists in | each class. Tuesday just eight um 'bouu will be on the program. HE increase in entries came as ro | great surprise to those in charge | of the annual tourney, for interest in professional grappling has been at a high pitch this year, though there is no more resemblance between the simon- pures and pro rasslers than there is be- tween day and night. Amateur wrestling, unlike profes- moual, bars the leg scissors, head scis- sors, bending of bones against the joints, full nelsons, twisting toe-holds, | rocking splits and elbow jolts, among other things. It sounds tame. But not even the finest-conditioned wrestler cares 10 g0 for more than 10 minutes under ama- | teur rules. UNLIKE pm(e&smnll ‘wrestling, bouts of which frequently last an hour | and even two or more, there is | no let-up in A. A. U. competition. A‘ wrestler must be struggiing constantly ‘ for each of the two contestants is timed, by stopwatch, the number of minutes | and seconds he is on top of the other After 10 minutes, if neither obtains a fall, a decision is awarded after con- sultation among the timers as to how long the respective participants were | on top. In case of a tle, two extra | periods of three minutes each are | DELL SIIO(‘KLEY llfi-mnfl l‘lA.l‘l BOYS' CLUB TOMORROW NIGHT. DICK WHITWORTH, To Defend Their Amateur Wrestling Crowns PAIR OF GRAPPLERS WHO WILL COMPETE IN A. A. U. CHAMPIONSHIP TOURNAMENT STARTING AT lGa ponnl oh‘ allowed, each grappler starting an extra | wi s == | DBROOKE QUNT WALTER JACOBSON 135 pounds, Walter Walacavage. heawwelght | of the College Park A. C. and| | of Georgetown University, are not tx-‘ pected to defend their titles. | In the 115-pound class, Dell Shockley, | formerly of Oklahoma A. and M. and | now representing the Y. M. C. A.. is a | | | favorite to retain his crown. Shockley, | | a former teammate of Earl McCready, now rated one of Jim Londos’ sumdmu ‘chanmgrr% placed second in the 1929 intercolleglates | Jack Kosowsky, formerly of Nebraska and now of the Jewish Community Center, will be the favorite to success- | fully defend his 125-pound champion- | ship, while McGrath of the Y. M. C. A. | has been installed as choice for the 135-pound title vacated by Jacobsan. As usual, most of the entries are in the 145-pound class. John Broaddus, star fancy diver of the Ambassador | Swimming Club, is an outstanding en- | |try and is expected to push the cham- | pion, 8. M. Wisooker, title | Harry Whitwos Clinches Pennant in Sunday Schoo| League by 24-21 Win Over Trinity. some time ago clinched their for !he‘second pennant in & row, overcame i ethodists, 24 to 21, at the Cen- Goldman, J. C. C. and Dic k‘:‘"f":{”.a i e .. C. A. will defend | '@ their 1 165 pound champion-| Mount Vernons captured second Xace ships, respectively. Eddie Paul, Boston |by overwhelming First Brethern, 75 to | Tech’ grappler, and one of the fostest |22, and Ubited Brethern gained third | onthe Y. M. C. A are the leading contenders for the 175- |44 to 17. | pound crown. In other gam:s Kenilworths defeated |""'Not much is known of the relative |Calvary, 44 to 15, and Calvary M. E. | merits of the heavyweights, but Sid |conquered Petworth, 27 to 25. Kolker and J. W. Brookhart are con-| Scores ceded the best chances to upset John| Calvary M. E. Bnl]nrd No. 2_heavyweight last year | 5 and a former Illinois University mat- . | man. 5 T}’E ;4 eight LAY ended last night in the Sun- day School Basket Ball League closely Petworth (35 GF asper. 1. uchanan, '{ c. | Brumb'sn, Bartlett, Scrivener, Booth, € M. C. A, team, coached by Kirchman, Olympic light- champion in 1920, is a e to win the tournament Jewish Co y Center teem picked for second place T Beys' Club and Gallaudet, cording to Clayton. w Racquet ge s who lack only in experi- next to proper condition, important factor in wres- | Hayden, & Broadbent, Gottwal Cal. Drakes . GF a0- | £28 instructor of L; Club, have M'Ll‘ 3 ahn, § Cogar, stling Tuneals, Totals ® Totals " | Little is known of the unattached | anteies Eldbrooke Qurand, ¢ Ty a Durvee. '« e INDIAN HEAD IS STRONG o Ellis Mitchell and Charles Otto|™™ N | Totals New Members of Ball Team. Breth INDIAN HEAD. Md, April 9.—The ; C. base bail team has be- ce with prospects of having onger nine than last seeson former athlete of St |fo apolis, and Clarles | ° newcomers to the Totals wt. Vernon M ¢ Trinity (21) " 0. & Totals | v Atonement Terry, f Mulvihill. 'f Weber Otto among 1rds are booking strong un- Brethren (%) % of Washington and vi- | M Mar John Sprague at Totals 022 WALKER NIPS PAYNE : i from Colorado, J., team to the indoor polo defeating Hun N1, 7% to 6, interscholastic fonship tonight ‘(l«xu of PX\XH(M. Beats Y. M. C. A. Champion in Change in Sport, Columbia and | e of Disrict & 8. 0. Tour 2 Wesley Miltner “ufl were ]endm( eoing into the final Iflolk finished secand with 2.169. Third place | was teken by Mr. and Mrs. Willlam | Quigley with 2,114; f-nrth went to Mr. end Mrs. Frank Mgshou, and fifth to Mr. and Mrs, Bert Lowna with 2,084, | Young shot 588 last night, while his | wife, the former Lucille Preble, contrib- uted 537 The winning with a handsome sil 8. Blick, promoter ul the eient ENGLAND SDCCER VICTOR Accidental chk Sccres One Goal in | By the Associated Press NEW YORK, April 9.—The new given a before the and of the the ball rules tryout and foot full were der the new rul when told to play as if under the ‘old, 8-1 Win From Seotland. | infringements wer Coaches Lou | Little and John F. (Chick) Meehan LONDON, April 9 (#).—England to ‘had to order their men to break the day defeated Scotland in an Interna- | rules deliberately in order to give ex- tional soccer match, 3 goals t0 0. | amples of the wrong way o play England scored one goal in the first | Walter Qkeson, commissioner of lhe and two in the second, one by Oralg, & | Eastern Intercolleglate Association, Scots back, who accenditally kicked the | which has charge ol assigning officials | to Eastern college gemes and who ref- | ereed today's s mege, said the game proved his con n that if a team is properly it will no. disobey # no unusual difficulty a1's games, ball into his own gosl. REACH FINAL AT FOLO. NEW YORK, April 9 (#) —Winston Guest, Amerjca’s renking ind polo ¢ player, could not be stopped tonpight as he led the Optimists inty the final of the Class A indoor cham:ionshifs defeating Penn Military College, 13 uu 10. Guest and his mates will meet the powerful Yale team in the final Wed- OTH teems us>d the punt in put= ting the ball into play on the kick-off. As it worked out, when | &. unt was lonr and high the receiv= | ing m merely let it roll over the goal | line and put it in play (rn the 20-yard Manhattan Show in L\perlment ney—Decide Doubles Teday. HANNING WALKER vanquished J | B. Payne to win the singles title they ran with it. | in the District A. A. U. four-wall on nassing of Inter- | pangpall tournament yesterday on the m U horten the | "like the “fying | Central Y. M. C. A. courts. Walker, de- was formed, how- | fending champion, captured the final h, 21— — under the old rules | ™o o - Gotencice Clinomen | _ Walker, in downing Payne, conquered 1ds on the head | the Centr: They had to | Year W was unable to compete o Muistrate prongrty | in the ¥ affair because of liness. which citkh Mt 25t Walker and Payne are members Vina provides & 15-yard | pyce and Paul Peariman of the ¥ | will engage Randy Myers and Tom | Charshee, unattached, in the doubles RAWLING twice was discovered and final tomorrow at nocn at the Y. L&‘nalmed and, just to show how it u ball carrier was ordered to fall down in the open field, then get |up and run again to show how lh‘ new “dead” ball rule works. The rule provides the ball is dead when other than the carrier's hands or feet touches the grou In commenung on the new rules, | Olkeson pointed that the fying block i'd by ea even if the would-be boe misted his man. The rule was dec’imned to pro‘ect the blacker, he said, and would b> called to show him he thad broken the regulation. The pen- alty is 5 yards. Okeson was assisted in candununl‘ the game by Ed Thorp, H. P. Von Kers- berg and Bill Crowley. Several other | officials also were present. l line. ‘The If it was low str.ctior ‘.Fren;'fi Oiympic Entry Now Sure By the Assoclated Press. ARIS, April 9—The French Olympic Committee teday an- nounced thet France definitely would take part in the tenth Olym- plad at Los Angeles next Summer and would send a team of between 60 and 70 competitors. ‘Tentative plans have been made for the team to sail July 4 for the States on the Lafayette. when Eldbrooke Methodists, who | am, and Al Cohen | place by swamping Atonement Luthcrtn,‘ | have been ——— FOR HAND BALL TITLE ' Yale’s Polo Team Retains ]ts Title EW YORK, N. Y., April 8 (A).— Yale's powerful polo team t night retained its intercollegia indoor championship, defeating the Army 16'2 to 13 in the final game at Squadron A Armory. Spotting the West Pointers the maximum handicap of 10 goals, the hard-riding Yale trio tied the score on the first play of the third chuk- ker with a goal by Lawrence “Chu” Baldwin and went out in front a minute later with a counter from a difficult angle by Mike Phipps. In winning its sixth intercollegiate in- | door title since 1922, the Blue out- fit dominated the play even more | than was mdicltcd by lbe score. G EVENTS LISTED IN'PENN CARNIVAL jOIympic Features Retained to Assist Candidates for important relays 1 mile, 2 mile, PH”ADEU‘!“A April 9—Ninety- versity of Pennsylvania relay All feature events of past programs |Olymple Team, it was announced. step and jump and the decathlon. {in the past the big meet will open Pri- Feature events on the first day's pro- The 400-meter hurdles, the 120-yard Friday 4 mile, shuttle hurdle and the 1-mile By the Associated Press five events have been listed for the thirty-eighth annual Uni- carnival, April 29 and 30, at Franklin Field. retained in an effort to | assist candidates for the United States These include the 3.000-meter steeple- | chase, the 400-meter hurdles, the hop, The rrugrnm is div 2d!d into 43 events for Priday and 52 for Saturday day morning with the first event of | the decathlon gram include the sprint medley, d | tance medley and the 440-yard relays high hurdles and the hop, step and jump are among the special events On Saturday the include the 880-yard freshman championship The large number of entries in the | college quarter-mile end half-mile re- lays will cause heats to be run in each event S0 far entries have been received from 81 colleges, 46 preparatory schools | 200 high schools, 38 junior high schools, |23 grammar schools and 12 parochial | sehools. WINCHESTER IN FIELD. WINCHESTER, Va. April 9.—Sun- bas ames will be featur n thi th & Assc 2o, e taciided, The el . com- 1 almost entirily of young men who work during th® week. | | | As | WASHINGTON CREW HUMBLED BY BEARS & ‘California Takes Varsity Con- test by Ten Lengths. Has Regatta Edge. | By the Associated Press. | ATTLE, April 9.—California | varsity rowers defeated Washing- ton by 10 lengths over a 3-mile course here today in the twenty- ninth anual regatta between the two ner's official time was \:!':\shmgmn was clocked in 18 \irs‘l(y victory gave California two of three races on the day’s pro- gram. The California junior varsity crossed the finish line 3 lengths ahead of the husky Javees, while the University of Washington freshmen were about 3 lengths better than Bear yearlings. Both thz varsity and Javee races were a procession from the start, | California in the lead. | The Washington varsity and Javee | crews were game, but outclassed, show- | ing the lack of preparation that months | | of bad water here had given them. | The Washingten freshmen jumped into a slight lead at the start and were | cvor neaded, plthough the Bear frosh were becoming nacing in the last hall mile wien their stroke caught a crab and killed their chances for the | race. ‘The winning boat was clocked in 11 minutes 41 seconds. California was 11 seconds slower. FAWSETT WINS SHOOT District Champion Makes 47 Hits in 50 Clays at Benning. C. C. Fawsett, District amateur trap- shooting champion, with 47 hits out of 50 targets, led the field of 11 that| braved the rain to fire at the elusive | clays in the weekly competition yester- day on the Benning range. The sched- uled 100-target program was cancelled. The Benning traps will be closed next Saturday. when the Washington shots will go to Baltimore for a 10-man team match in the series with the Oriole Gun | k¢ Has Right-Handed, Left-Handed Nines LACKSBURG, Vs. April 9.— pew under the sun te will e ln an effort to master e _portside shoots of rival hurlers. The practice is not new, but the act of calling an entire team from the field and substituting another nipe is novel, wuyt.h e least. Prob- ably it never has been done before in collegiate ball. NAVY 1S DEFEATED INLAGROSSE GAME Conquered, 5 to 4, by Mount | Washington—St. John’s and Hopkins Win Easily. Special Dispateh to The Btar. NNAPOLIS, Mg, April 9. — Navy’s lacrosse team lost a first- half advantage here this after- noon to fall before the Mount Washington club twelve of Baltimore, 5 | to 4, in the Tars’ first game of the sea- son, played during a severe wind and rain storm. Action was considerably h-mp-red by a nur-lmud fleld and 8| "th &m‘ eon'.eflnl lfl .qu-l amount of the flnfi. Morris leoled nm M the vis- itors, followed by Moncure's easy shot for Navy, another by Stinson of the visitors and the tying tally by Condon. | Nisewaner Ni in the .!;nd short- | seoring activity, while Thomum llld Turnbull of the Wolfpack count with successive goals tolu'd lhu iatter of the second half. Gerst- oke the tie with a goal from three minutes before the Navy (0. Porter presses um- ; M. et Monl .& ‘lcelor o( the sfimu .l AGEE HEADS FIELD = INTGHIE GALLOP! Examine Mt. Vernon Course, Over Which Two Major Events Will Be Run. BY R. D. THOMAS. MERICA'S main reliance in the Olympic marathon. Billy Agee, and a large fleld of Washington-Balti- | more runners will stretch their | legs today over the Mount Vernon Boulevard course, to be used in two big races this Summer. Today’s run, under the direction of the Knights of Columbus, will start at 11:30 o'clock, with the barrier a mile this side of Mount Vernon and the finish at the Knights of Columbus Hall, at Tenth and K strest northwest, a distance of 15 miles. There will be no prizes. The athletes gallop to Fourteentn street and Consti- tution avenue, east to Tenth and north to K. The same route will be followed in the District A. A. U. 15-mile open race to be held May 8 under Knights of Columbus auspices, with Charles Reynolds, athletic director, in charge. 'ODAY'S practice jaunt will cover a major part of the course measured off for the National A. A. U cham- pionship race, sponsored by The ) which will be held in late August. In this, Agee will be the defending title holder and eompeting against him, it is expected, will be a number of foreign champions, homewerd bound from the Olympics. The 15-mile race May 8, a Sunday, "lubeopentonllreguteredA A U runners and some of the leading dis- tance men in the East look forward to it. Whitey Michelson of Buffalo and Jim Hannigan of Boston are among the beiter known harriers who have Reynolds of their Intent to compeie. An atiractive lot of prizes will be awarded. There will honors and the other of the Dul\lclnlcolumbh title. The latter will go to the first Washington man to M A set of championship medals bnvcnbymeD&nflAA mndnnmm lrny“ bia 4 thlm ylnun . B Moncuu S Vilthst Goals — Ilollnl w“&m.‘l"’lfi s.nml;f.l:: buil l.l; rown, Huppman fluunn A% enomp- acrl-!n *1‘;‘:'1 paon. avy, Moucure, Condon, Uubnu*:mm—ua-uu T oms. wn? o marathon o-—euauz%‘ua "g:gl % ‘_‘Vh_‘r:‘l’:d-r NNAPOLIS, Md. A April 9—8¢. John's Couen stickmen crushed Vi celebration; J. Haley o( cmMml. Charles - P"o.lmmlcdmm n | R Harris The list is & Co. and Vi Smg)?‘w . c growing daily. BOUT 15 members of the Stonewall m&mml‘c Club of Baltimore will envlmm for several years. favered distance for liing Billy, who for three years has held the na- tiona! 15-mile title. eham) dce jaunt from Mount Ver- non will be a part of Agee's training | for the Patriots’ day marathon at Bos- Virginia lacrosse team here today, 15 to 0, Led by the all-around fine work scored eight goals in half and seven In the second. Virginia failed to gain a scoring | c)uxnce. Summary: L John's (19). Position. 0“{ . with | McCar M i Lrnet., ¢ X Auc‘rm « 3 W ’ug‘fmnuuom . Yons— Cnusuwkmz o, Klimore. Russe r5inge— ‘E‘ : Kilhe "Groack. Goon. Balin -nfiw Reteree—Mr. Mealy (Swerthmore). ALTIMORE Md., April 9.—Excelling og sition in every angle of Db} e Johns Hopkins lacrosse am staged a riot today at the expense ol t‘!‘\’e City College of New York to win, l Hunewmd Field was a quagmire, and the treacherous footing made good la- crosse lmpc-llblc Detg “Rosenthal | o 4 ns . X 1 Guild. D.mn JPBeeler; Lane. Packard ¢ - ortn all i3, MoLorman. Grochmal. Susstitutions Hovkins—Packard for Beel- er. Ives for Kneip. Orth for AR e N G o A |8 32: | for Van Pa Dr. A N 3 wir. Wageley (visitor). WESTERN AMATEUR SET Will Be Held on Rockford, IiL, | Links, Starting August 29. ROCKFORD, IIl, April 9 (#—The thirty-third Western amateur golf townament will bz held at Rockford gour;lry Club August 29 to Septem- er 3 The club was organized in 1900 It& fairways have a full watering system. “Festival of Youth,” on May 14, To Engage Thousands of Clty S Y singles champ for this | LANS rapidly are taking shape for the “Festival of Youtk,” to be P | 14, fram 1 to 5 o'clock, on the Mounment Grounds, which will feature | demonstrations by thousands of children of this city of every game played in the | Spring by the American boy and girl. BF Sibyl Baker, supervisor of the Municipal Playground Department, is chairman of the general committe in | charge of the program, which, accord- ing to plans, will be the largest of a !pom nature in the annals of the city. E festival, which will be the con- | tribution of the District's youth to the Bicentennial, will be partici- pated in bv boys and girls up to and mrough high sckool age, and clubs and other organizations also will tak: part. | 'From a point west of the Lincoln | Memorial to Fourteenth street, the | \{:un. people will give demonstrations tennis, base ball, track, horseshoe pitching, volley ball, basket ball, dodge | ball, schlag ball, archery, boat held Saturday afterncon, May Youngsters in Sports Exhibit g (on the Tidal Basin). miniature yacht sailing (on the Reflecting Pool), quoits, eroquet and gy nastics. A main feature will be a series of ball games among teams of high and private schools in and near Washington. It is planned to have 16 teams play at least | part of eight games during the alloted | time on the Ell.!pee diamonds. | Munlclpll Playground Depart- ment will start its annual Spring tennis tourney and the Y. W. C. A. Girls' Reserves will play the nnu of their net tournament. Sixteen of the leading senior and junior boy tennis players of the playground department's competition last year will give a dem- onstration. It is planned to hold a track meet for junior high school boys at the Lincoln Memorial. No team champions will be named, in line with the idea to make the program one of demonstration. | “Galf tournaments smong schoalboy |teams are planned and several organi- zations expect to organize teams for the racing | occasion. + | Referee—] Budnitz. Field Judge—Mr. Durin. POTOMAC, ARUNDEL BASKETERS BATTLE ' South Atlnuc Ghnmplnnl of Last| : Several Years Will Visit Here Tomorrow Night. BASKET ball game has been ar- ranged for tomorrow night in the George Washington Universit g{mnulum between Arundel Boat Clul Baltimore, South Atlantic A. A. U. champion for the last several seasons, and Potomac Boat Club A strong squad will be available to represent Potomac, including Bernie Lieb. Ben Zola, Bones Courtney. Bernie Phillips and Jack Blyll- of the B\lblh: high cl Eastern Noonan of Saks Clothiers and Charles Stansbury, Eston Barker, Everett John- son and Ed Cunningham, whe have regularly with the team. Afi- tomae Club nhleuc director, 2nd D1ck l(um. manager of basket ball, arranged the game, Dave Keppel will referee. NAVY STAFF TO RETURN Officials of Athletic Department All Due Another Term. ANNAPOLIS, Md., April 9.—Indica- tions point to the return of the entire | staff of officials of the Navy Athletic Department for the 1932-33 season. Capt. John W. Wileox is just com- pleting his first year as direotor of nth- letics; Lieut. Comdr. J. L. Hall, jr, completing his second lm as md\ule mfi and as { foot ball, while Omd! rvey E. Overiseh, g snd manager of 'vlvm still s his first | in numbers at least d d | Providence ton April 19, in which he hopes to for the American Olymple qualify of | team. I Bosto! wou! ‘Willis Lynch, the St. .{ghn s attack men umt)-or":q)u;gxm.t - e v snity in the olmple Liyout to be held Mav 14 on the East- ) Shore of Maryland. Wumrmn will be well represented, in the Eastern Shore run. With this and national \mmm '3’ rflnmpmump race to Jook forward to, -0 d.manea!unun 1s on th g e boom in this FREEDMEN’S FIVE LOSES Hospital, Baltimore, Gets Even in Series. Pmfldenoe Hospital stafl's basket ball team of Baltimore evened the serles with the Preedmen's Hospital staff yesterday bv conquering the latter, 13 to 12, in Baltimore. Freedmen's won the first encounter in the three- PlavedTn New York Gl Sekt Batudar, lew Yorl next Saturda; Summary: ¥ o Preedmen’s (12) Providence (13). Fete Johnson. b Harrls, 1. b 3. o an -n well, Totals Referee—Mr. Waddy. Sport Results College Base Ball Alabama, 28; Louislana State Uni- versity, 5. Illinois, 14, Bradley, 5. Auburn, 9; Georgla, 0. Columbia, 1; New York University, . _(Called at end of seventh.) Birmingham Southern, 8; Millsaps, 7. Georgla Tech, 5; Ogletharpe, 3. Indiana. 7, Northwestern, 6. (Rain forced the cancellation of the | bulk of the games.) Lacrosse. Maryland, 7. Washington College, 1. Army, 11; Lafayette, 0. Dartmouth, 9: Tufts, 1. Mount Washington. 5; Navy, 4. Princeton, 15; Lehigh, 1. John's (Annapolis) 15; ginia, 0. Johns Hopkins, 14; City College of New York, 1. Harvard, 2: Stevens, 2 Swarthmore, 9 N v York U, 1. Rutgers, 8: Boston L. G. ’1 Brown, 4. Track. eryhnd 07%;; 5815 “Auburs, 70%; Tulane, ulg Alabama, 77. Mississip] 7. Johns Hopkins, 65; sw-nhmor!, a, Vanderbilt, 78; Centre, 39. Guilford, 64%:: Lynchburg, 61%5. wl, os_:r t;nm’av5 and I-‘l‘lnry 31, na - Tec 3 ississippl College, 26%a. Georgia Tech, 82; Clemson, Kmtucky, 101'4; University d Loulse ville, 1545 Lehigh, 90%;; Dickinson, 35%. Pacific Coast Lesgue. Vire QOakland, Sacramento, N )llll-l. 4 Gait. North Carolina, 15; Rlnhm& ! WASHED 75+ Saturdays, Sundays and Holidays, "C Super Auto Laundry, Ine. T e

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