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SPORTS. Central High Looms as Winner in University of Maryland Scholastic Meet TEAM STRONGEST IN SEVERAL YEARS 40 Schools, 366 Athletes to Compete—Terp, St. Johns Stick Game Is Crucial. BY EDWARD A. FULLER, JR. ENTRAL HIGH, which has the best track team in sev- eral seasons, is figured likely to win team honors | In the open class in the annual Uriversity of Maryland inter- scholastic meet Saturday after- | noon at College Park. Eastern, which won top honors in the com- i petition last Spring, has entered‘ 22 boys, only 3 less than Central, | but graduations have exacted a heavy toll of the Eastern squad.| Tech, which will be represented | by 30, may show better than many | expect. - North Plainfleld (N. J) High is sending only 12 competitors, but they are reported formidable and may take the trophy back North. TOTAL of 366 athletes from 40 schools 1s entered. There will, as usual, be several events closed to _county high schools of Maryland. Ha- gerstown High won among the county achools last vear and will defend its honors, Competition will start at 1 o'clock with the flield events ard the track tests will get under way a half hour later. A ‘dual meet between the Maryland and Hopkins varsity teams will be run concurrently with the scholastic events. Following the track competition will come the day's high spot, the lacrosse | battle between Maryland and St. John's of Annapolis, which may decide the npational championship and the team that will go to the Olympics. N the scholastic competition there will be 22 Maryland schools and 4 from the District, 2 from Virginia and 1 each from New Jersey and Dela- | ‘ware, | An interesting new scholastic event | is the one-mile relay for the State | in which Ba]tlmore‘ ., Georgetown Prep, Gilman, | Hyattsville High and Greensboro High have entered. | ‘The half-mile for county schools has | attracted 19 entries and will be run in four sections. i ICHOOLS entered from Mlaryland, | besides those mentioned, are Aber- | deen High, Allegany High, Annapolis | High, Bel Air High, Boonsboro High, Brunswick High, Catonsville High. Centreville High, Charlotte Hall | School, Easton High, Emmitsburg | High, Frederick High, Laurel High, Tonaconing High, Middletown High, | Maryland Park High, New Wlndsm" ‘High, Reistertown High, Smithsburg High, Sparrows Point High, St. James School, Street High, Towson High, Marlboro High and Western- ‘Western High is another District school that will be represented. wu‘n High and Woodstock hester h will upbold Virginia's prestige. Delaware City High will represent that | State. NAVY USES SQUEEZE | PLAY TO BEAT G. U.| Works It Three Times in 6-to-5 Game That Is Won on Trio of Runs in Ninth. NNAPOLIS, Md., May 5.—Squeeze 1 plays enabled Navy's base ball nine to eke out & 6-to-5 vic- tory over Georgetown here yes- | terday before the largest erowd to &s- | semble at Lawrence Fleld this season Using the squeeze successfully on | three occasions, the Middies climaxed an uphill fight by scoring three runs in the last inning. T d e mara socked a home run and O'Rourke, | Rapp, Hutchinson and Carolan con- | tributed singles for & total of three | runs. | Navy scored three times in the sev- | enth and finished with three more in the ninth. Davenport pulled a squeeze in the seventh that netted the third Tun of the inning, and his squeeze in the ninth, along with that of McEach- ern, was responsible for two of the final o > P 2] Navy. Mastes McEa Daunis,1b. Hurley.c Kossler 3b Kane rf Cronin 2b Bunce cf Davenp't.p *Smith.... ot 58 Rapp.c Hutch'n,3b. Carolan,ib Carpen'r.p.. cerasmnrud | ROTPPOR cormccabar Totals...32 928 7 Totals *Batted for Kane in the ninth. Georgetown ....0 0 0 3 1 0 0 &VY ..........0 0 0 0 003 Runs—Cronin Bunce (2) Davenpori, _Evers. _Kiigallon. ke, Errors-McNamara (i ‘Three-base hit. [ 0 ) Stolen Sacri- fices. Kilgal- jon. Balk—Davenport Georgetown, &: Navy, 5. —Of Davenport_ 5. off Carpenter. 3 | by pitched ball—By Davenport (Hutchinson) Struck out—By Davenport. 5; by Carpenter. 3. Umpires—Messrs. Hughes and Brockman. HERNDON NINE BEATEN. HERNDON, Va, May 5 — Herndon High School lost to Oakton High, 16| 1o 11, for the third straight defeat this season. Although outbatted the visi- tors took advantage of the loose field- ing of the locals. > A ] oo asi om0 0 cooo0omman sscoccsccon® Thombiy.p 4 8 Totals 1 31 02 31 Thompson (4). ve (1) Qakton Herndon s—Thompson (3). C. i lure (2). Edwsrds, detsy Tate 7). Gates 7 e % . W. Bmith, r . Riley @), uble plays—Tate to Gates. 3 hiz to McClure. et irs 2 ‘innings: of th, 2 in | Losing pitcher— in % inning ‘Ompire—Mr. Aud —. PAGE MR. SINGER! ‘Montreal's second base pair are the @mallest in base ball. Doc Gautreau ds & G 5 and Herb Thomas, 5 Ro00s 5 5l o ined, ghortar. | lights got “Frenchy.” THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Order of Events In U. of M. Meets FIELD. 1 pm.: 1—Javelin throw, Hopkins vs. Maryland. 1 pm.: schools. 1 pm.: 3—Pole vault, interscholastic. 1 pm.: 4—High jump, Hopkins vs. Marvland. I1 p.m.: 5—Broad jump, interscholas- tic. 1 pm.: 6—Discus. interscholastic. 1:30 p.m.: 7—Shotput, Hopkins vs. Maryland. 2—Shotput, county high 2 pm.: 8—High jump, interscholastic. | 2 pm.: 9—Javelin, interscholastic. 2:15 p.m.: 10—Shotput, interscholas- tic. 2:30 pm.: Maryvland. 2:30 p.m. high schools. 2:45 pm.: 13—Broad jump, Hopkins vs. Maryland. 3 pm.: 14—Pole vault, Hopkins vs. Maryland. 11—Discus, Hopkins vs. 12—Broad jump, county TRACK. (Starting at 1:30.) 1—100-yard dash, county schools, heats. 2 — 100-yard dash, heats. 3—120-yard high hurdles, interscho- lastic, heats. 4—100-yard dash, Hopkins vs. Mary- nd. 5—100-yard dash, final. 6—100-yard dash, final. 7—120-yard high hurdles, Hopkins vs. Maryland. 8—120 lastic, final 9—One-mile run, Hopkins vs. land. 10—One-mile relay, interscholastic 11—220-yard dash, interscholastic, ats. interscholastic, 1a: county schools, interscholastic, rd high hurdles, interscho- Mary- 12--220-yard dash, county schools, 13—880-yard run, county schools. 14—One-mile run, interscholastic. 15—440-yard dash, Hopkins vs. Mary- 6—440-yard dash, interscholastic. 17—440-yard dash, county schools. 18 — One-half-mile relay, county 100ls. 19—2%0-yard low hurdles, Hopkins vs. Maryland. 20—220-yard low hurdles, interscho- lastic, heats. ; 2;71‘wu-mfle run, Hopkins vs. Mary- and. 22220-yard dash, Hopkins vs. Mary- land. 23—220-yard dash, county, final 5 zslfzzo-yn—d dash, interscholastic, nal. 25—220-yard low hurdles, interscho- lastic, fin 6—88 d run, interscholastic. h;.;;—sao-yud run, Hopkins vs. Mary- h‘zs—One»mua relay, State champion- ship. BELANGER IN COMEBACK Former Flyweight Star Will Try Fortune as Bantam. TORONTO, May 5 (#).—Albert (Frenchy) Belanger, one of the best of the flyweights a few years ago, is to attempt & comeback in the ring as a bantamweight. As with so many ring warriors, the combination of easy money and bright Six_months ago he disappeared into the North woods and joined a lumber crew. He has come back, tanned, heavier and well muscled, and has workouts in a local gymnasium. College, School Sports Scheduled COLLEGE. Today. Base ball—Duke vs. Maryland at College Park. Tennis—Duke vs. George Wash- ington at Columbia Country Club. Tennis—Maryland vs. Virginia at Charlottesville. Tomorrow. Tennis—St. John's (Brooklyn) vs. George Washington at Columbia Country Club. Tennis—Georgetown at Princeton. Tennis—Maryland at William and Mary. Saturday. Track—Hopkins vs. Maryland at College Park (to be run concurrently with Maryland interscholastic meet, 1 o'clock). Lacrosse—St. John's vs. Maryland at College Park, 4:15 o'clock. ‘Track—St. Joseph (Philadelphia) at Catholic University. Track—La Salle at Gallaudet. Golf—Georgetown vs. Willlams at Princeton (morning); Georgetown vs. Yale at Princeton (afternoon). Tennis—Georgetown at New York University. SCHOLASTIC. Today. Base ball—Tech at Gonzaga. Tennis—St. John's at Gonzaga, St. Albans at Georgetown Prep (Prep School League matches) Golf—St. John's at Gonzaga Tomorrow. Base ball—Business vs. Eastern, Eastern Stadium, 3:30 o'clock (pub- lic high school championship game) Base ball—Georgetown Prep at Friends. Tennis—Devitt at Friends School League match) Tennis—Western in Princeton in- terscholastic tourney Golf—Devitt vs. Gonzaga Saturday. Track — Maryland interscholastic meet at College Park, 1 o'clock Base ball—Charlotte Hall at West- ern Base ball—Mount St. Georgetown Prep. Tennis—Western in Princeton in- terscholastic tourney. Golf—St. John's vs. Devitt. (Prep Joseph at started | EASTERN BATTLES STENOGS IN SERIES Champion Favored to Clear Third Hurdle Tomorrow in Title Defense. I public high school championship, will go up against its third hurdle tomorrow when it engages Busi- ness in the Eastern Stadium at 3:30 o'clock. The Lincoln Parkers, already having conquered Tech and Central, are figured also to take the Stenogs. | Business has won one game and lost | two. It defeated Tech, which stands last, with three losses In as many starts, but has bowed to Central and Western. ASTERN HIGH'S base ball team, striving for its fifth straight Georgetown Prep and Friends are to meet at Friends in the only other dia- mond match listed tomorrow, In the Prep School Tennis League | Devitt and Friends are listed to face on | the Priends courts. Western is slated to begin play in the interscholastic tennis | tourney at Princeton. A ball game, Tech and Gonzaga, on the Gonzaga field, was today's schoolboy feature. St. John's and Gonzaga were | to face at Gonzaga and St. Albans and | Georgetown Prep at Garrett Park in | Prep School net league encounters. EHIND the stellar pitching of Bob Love, freshmen tossers of the University of Maryland won their | fifth game in six starts yesterday, | humbling the champion Eastern High | nine, 8 to 2. It was the Old Line cubs’ | third “win " over a Washington public | high school team. Love was to good for the Easterners, | fanning 13, eight in a_row. He al- | lowed only six hits and his mates gave | him _errorless support. Eastern used | Ienahan, Cleary and Hale. Score: | Maryland. AB.H.O Karrow.3b. 4 0 2 A > Eastern. > ] coromosoosmoroor Wya | Archer.1b DeBeatl. 1b. ofommmtmon russcsoroon! 2| cooramroocnauow=O | sworsousasseros! B G omiparionois] ecal | Eastern . | Maryland 5 | Runs—Karow (), | Archer, Chumbris (2). Love, Nolan.” Errors—J. Milis (4)," 3 gerald, Cleary. Three-base | Nolan. Two-base ~hit—Yowell Haydon. Stolen bases—McAboy (2). Wy | @y, Cbumbris, Bauer, "Love. Fitepatrick, | Gibson. MeAboy (2), Wyatt, Piizpatrick, oore, Pitz- 'ECH and Business, the other local nines to see action yesterday, turned in victories, the McKinley | tossers swamping Hyatisville, 21 to 2, | and the Stenogs nosing out Alexandris | | High, 3 to 2. | Tech made 21 hits, including home | Hyattsville made only four. The Business-Alexandria game was limited to seven innings. | Scores: ABHOA A. ] > o 515 ech wills1f. ., Beach.cf Viseinrf. | K.Nauss.| 0 o rsomswd 0 Gauzza,1b.. 1 Totals. . Hyattsville Tech .... Kernan,p.. Totals. . 10100000 350230086 Runs—Wills (3), Beach (2), (5). Nau (4). Tufner. Hurvetz (2), W iams, Crenshaw, Gauzza. Wilmeth @), ' Two-base hits—_Virnstein, Ni Crenshaw, Wilmeth. ' Th ade. Home' runs—Nau, Cr Virnstein. ~Saceifice—Nau. | Business. ABHOA. Alex. 073 Jenciert Mankin,If. Schre! Me ciiftet Fletcher. 1. Baber.rf Bruinn s Carr.2b Hudson.p. Totals | it 5] commusmnacso! »| comooomonoon; . T8l cocan ree- enshaw, ABH.OA 00 inerc 2 n.3b. Curtin.3b.., Abern.cf Ha; 54 1 4 0 1 1 [ 0 1 EET | Business Al ia Runs—Garner. Sherman. Fraydin, (2). Errors—Fietcher, Curtin bases—Carr, Sherman (2] Schneider. 'Pirst base on’ball 6 off Hudson. 3. Struck ou 3; by Hudson, 8. Passed ball curt Frayi EORGETOWN PREP racketers, de- fending Prep School League champions, decisively downed St. | Albans yesterday, 5 to 0. Summary: Singles—Cannon Reese dbfeated O Connor. 6 Doubles—Reese d 7 As aha O'Connor; 61, &1 McCaflrey defeated Bates and Ke and eble, 6. IONZAGA golfers were able to win only one of six matches yesterday from Takoma-Silver Spring High on the Rock Creek course. R. Berberich, who defeated White, 5 and 4, was the lone Purple winner. Summary: Keele (8 8) defeated Jarvis, Robinson (8. 8)_defeated” C._Berberich up. best ball (8 8. § and 5. Deane (5.8 0otested McMahon. 8 _and 6 R Berberich d ‘White, 5 and 4 best (G defeate: Bail (8 2 up, — = HUNGARY NET WINNER BUDAPEST, H\mz-ry‘_Mny 5 (®) Hungary won its first-round match of European zone Davis Cup play with Piniand, taking the doubles, 64, 63 7 and ¢ runs by Nau, Crenshaw and Virnstein. | France | au (). stolen | di 2| 6—3, to make the count three-love in matches Two singles matches remain to be played, but have no bearing on the result Finland presented only a makeshift team, its two best players being il Armless Golfer to Pl ay Here 7 Tom M’Auliffe, Holding Stick With Chin and Neck, Shoots in 90’s—( ASHINGTON will view the most remarkable golfer in the world. He has no arms. Tom McAuliffe of Buffalo, N. Y., who grips & golf stick with his chin and neck, but scores as well, if not better, than the average linksman, will spend a week here, beginning temorrow, in the service of the Fed- eral Board for Vocational Education Several exhibition golf matches are being arranged for him, as well as engagements to appear before student bodles of crippled children's schools, junior ‘and senior high schools, service clubs, social service organizations, hospitals and other groups. McAuliffe is rated the world champlon armless typist and pen- man as well as its best armless golfer. He has played many champion= ‘oming Tomorrow. ship courses in the low 90's, which is better than the average score. McAuliffe at 9 years of age lost his arms at the shoulders in a rail- road accident. To finish school, he learned to write by holding pen or pencil in his teeth. He learned his golf as a caddy and made the game his chief recreation in later years. He is now 35. While in school McAuliffe erved as & reporter on Buffalo newspapers. In this, too, he was lucrrullul. but ve it up to prosper in business. O imsell s pe-oduu of rehnbilita- tion, he is contributing his serv- ices to rehabllitation departments throughout the country rty-four States and the District of Columbia have them. There will be no charge for ad- mission to McAuliffe’s golf exhibi- tions, and, through the Federal Board for Vocational Education, he extends a particularly cordial invi- tation to Unksmen physically handi- capped. | No: '3 fron shot within 12 feet of the | | hole. HOW TO TORTURE D. C, THURSDAY, YOUR WIFE. MAY 5, 1932. —By WEBSTER I'M AWFULLY SORRY | HAVE TO LEAVE YOU TO-NIGHT, PET, BuT I'™M GOING 70 BE UP TO MY EARS IN WORK TiLL BREAKFAST TIME. I'VE GOT O HAVE DINNER WITH AN ACTRESS AND GETA LOAD OF BROADWAY GOSSIP, THEN IVE GOT TO COVER THE OPENING OF A REVUE, AFTER THAT | COTD A MOVIE ACTOR'S BALL AND THEN TO THE HOTCHA NIGHT CLUB AND SEE A LOT OF CELEBS, WISH | CoULD TAKE YOU ALONG BUT \T JUST CAN'T BE DONE, YOU UNDER™ STAND OF COURSE THE NEWSPAPER COLUMNIST WHO HAS BEEN MARRIED THREE DAYS LEAVES THE LITTLE WOMAN AND GOES To WORK — @932 nyTrBUNE e HILE the first annual in- \ )s[ vitation event of the Army - Navy Country | Club is working toward its final phase many golfers of EWa.shlngton are looking forward |to the twenty-second annual in- May 17, 18, 19 and 20. Invitations to a number of players attached to Washington clubs were being | received today in the Capital and 7| elsewhere. There is little likelthood that James D. Herrman of the Washington Golf and Country Club, who won the Chevy Chase event last year from B. H. Bur- | rows, will be able to play this year. Last year the likable “Jimmy” had a post at the Capitol, but last year he also passed his legal examinations and be- came a full fledged attorney. Shortly after the first of the year he resigned from Washington and went home to Dayton, Ohio, to practice law. He may come back to play at Chevy Chase, but if he intends to do so he has not told any of his friends of his intention. ‘The cups put up by President Taft and Vice President Sherman are the main trophies in the Chevy Chase Club tourney. The winner will receive a replica of the Taft trophy, while the - | runner-up will receive a replica of the | Sherman trophy. A list of the previous winners of these trophies looks like a “whos-who” in local and national golf, for a number of names famous locally | as well as nationally grace the massive pleces of siiver presented by the Presi- | dent and Vice President of two decades | | ago. gefeated Ascher. 6-—0.| Walter Travis, Thomas M. Sherman, | Warren Cockran, Lee Harban, Walter | Tuckerman, Clark Corkran, Cameron Buxton, George S. Lyon, Chris Dunphy, Roland MacKenzie, George Voigt, Mil- ler Stevinson and Harry Pitt all have won the Taft trophy. The entry list may not be as large as that at some other tournaments about the city, but | that it will be of high class cannot be doubted. The Chevy Chase tourna- ment always attracts the leading golfers of this section ‘The committee in charge of the tour- nament consists of Robert Stead, jr., chairman; Irving J. Carr, P. 8. Craven, | R. P. Davidson, W. Jasper Du_ Bose, | A. McCook Duniop, George H. Elliott, | C. Ashmead Fuller and Emmons S. Smith, jr. The Chevy Chase event is the last of the purely invitation tour- naments to be played near Washington | this Spring. | EORGETOWN has had the habit during the past few years of put- ting in the local golf field a flock of youngsters who can wield clubs with | the best of 'em. The historic Hilltop institution now appears to have another | star to take the place of Maurice Mc- | Carthy, Chick Beger and Mark Flana- | gan. For Joseph J. Lynch, the stubby lad from Boston, who won the qualify- ing round in the Army-Navy tourpey late yesterdasy with a card of 74, ¥ a freshman at Georgetown, and & new threat in local golf. Lynch drew a tartar today ip the first round of the tourney, however, for he was paired against none other than Harry G. Pitt of Manor, the Dis- trict title holder, who has a knack of | playing winning golf over any golf course. Late yesterday afternoon, as the sun was setting over the Virginia hills, young Lynch, who is a brother of Johnny Lynch of Argyle, came up to the eighteenth hole at the Army-Navy Club needing a 4 to tie Bill Pender- gast for the medal. He smacked out a | lengthy tee shot and then laid a high | He rolled the putt in for a 3 to score a 74 and win the medal. Pen- dergast earlier in the day had shot a 75 to take the lead from Craig McKee | and John C. Shorey, who shot 76s on | the opening day of the tourney. That first section at the Service Club | has a lot of names new to top-flight | TROUSER | | To Match Your Odd Coats EISEMAN’S, 7th & F Linksmen Looking to Tourney To Be Staged at Chevy Chase; ] Lynch’s 74 Best at Army-Navy | has broken the Southern Conference | | golf locally, and a few of the old | familiar names. Lynch is a newcomer. | | So are E. J. Carver and J. Hauber |and J. Jankowsky. Perhaps one of the | newcomers _ will - win. Scores of 19| | made the first flight, and cards of 89 qualified in the fifth and last flight, out of which four contestants were drawn. There was no play-off, for all | | the 79s got in leaving the 80s to drop 2 'vitation tourney of the Chevy |into the second flight. Chase Club, which will be played | First and second round matches were played today, with the semi-final and | final rounds carded for tomorrow. | 'IOMMISSIONER E. I. LEWIS of the Interstate Commerce Commission | went 20 holes yesterday to win his | semi-final match from Col. E. A. Hick- | | man in the competition for the Perkins Plate among senior golfers at Chevy | Chase. The second-round match in the lower half has not yet been played. ‘ | semi-finalists in the French High Commission Cup tourney at Chevy | Chase are H. C. Wick, Rear Admiral | € B. McVay, ir.; J. E. Parker and Col. | Harrison Brand, jr. Wick defeated D. | D. Thompson, 3 and 2, in the third round, while McVay took the measure of H. L. Merring by 4 and 3. Parker defeated Corcoran Thom, jr., 3 and 2, and Brand defeated Landra B. Platt, up. | FIFTEEN-YEAR-OLD lad, son of | a Washington newspaper man, is | the second perscn to have his | name engraved on the Walter Johnson | Trophy as the winner of the low net | prize in the tourney for the cup pre- sented by the “Big Train.” W. A. Shea, | & junior member of the Congressional | | Country Club, shot a 92 in the John- | | son Trophy event yesterday and, with a handicap of 23 strokes, won the net event with a net card of 69. The Johnson Trophy tourney was | the high spot of the opening day of the | Congressional Country _Club, which | marked the formal opening of the new tenth and eleventh holes and resump- | tion of Summer rules, Luther Steward, | jr, the club champion, came to_the | eighteenth hole needing only a 5 to | win the low gross award, but took a 6 on this par 4 hole to tie for low gross | with Melville Bennett. The tie, at 79, | will be played off next Sunday. Young | Shea got his second big thrill of the | day when he received at the dinner which marked the close of the day's activities a golf umbrella as his prize Ir?;fl the hands of Walter Johnson him- se Second low net went to Paul Shorb with a card of 99—29—T70. The women's event was won by Mrs. J. Marvin Haynes, who shot an 88 to an- nex the low gross prize. Low net went to Mrs. J. F. Dowdall, with a score of 96—13—83. M. Parker Nolan, the Congressional seige gun, poled three balls for an average of 2382-3 yards to win the men's driving contest. Nolan's three wallops totaled 716 yards, and he was far in front of the other competitors. Ed Morse was second with a total of 671 yards for an average of 2232-3 yards. The women's pitching and putting con- test also was won by Mrs. Haynes, Dr. John Shugrue scored the only birdie on the new tenth hole, sinking a putt for a bird 3 as his contribution to the opening day's festivities. Clark C. Griffith, president of the Washington Base Ball Club; Walter Johnson, Joe Cronin and Sam Rice attended the dinner, which was followed by a series of golf movie: BREAKS HURDLE RECORD. Moreau of Louisiana State University record of 15 seconds for the 120-yard | high hurdles. He topped the timbers at 14.7 this Spring. “BETTER USED CARS” Used Hupmobiles Re- conditioned Mean Lasting Satisfaction MOTT MOTORS, Inc, 1520 14th St. N.W. Dec. 4341 St. John’s Visions Win Over Terps NNAPOLIS, Md., May 5—Sev- eral shifts or at least frequent substitutions were noted in the line-up of the St. John's College lacrosse team yesterday as it went through its paces for the game with Maryland at College Park Saturday. St. John's, rating itself fully as good as last year, anticipates a vic- tory over the Old Liners. In fact, it is quite sure of itself. Ed Lotz, former Johnnie star who scouted Maryland against Rutgers, reports that the Old Line defense is “harder riding” than last year, although not, in his opinion, any more impregnable. Lotz gives the Johnnie attack an edg _fm_sgso_ A Racket DESIGNED ESPECIALLY for WOMEN | SPORTS. D-¥%° C. U MARKS BROKEN AS TRACKMEN WIN McGuigan, Flynn and Lauer | Lead as Gallaudet Is | Beaten, 85 to 41. } ESPITE the brilliant individ- ual efforts of Capt. Jimmy Rayhill of Gallaudet, Catholic University’s tracksters easily defeated the Blues yesterday in their shnual track meet at Brookland, 85 ¥to 41, Rayhill scored 17 of his team’s 41 points, but vieing with the Kendall Green star was a trio of Cardinals who shattered three meet records. Gale McGuigan broke his own track record for the 440 when he negotiated the distance in 494;. His former mark was 51%. Bingo Flynn heaved the dis- cus 122 feet 9': inches and Pete Lauer tossed the shot 43 feet 7 inches for the other marks. Rayhill won firsts in the 220 and pole vault, seconds in the 100 and high jump and third in the broad jump. Both teams are slated for action again Saturday, the Cards opposing St. Joseph's of Philadelphia and Gallaudet tackling La Salle. Summaries: 100-yara dash—Won by Lyons (C. U.); ond. Rayhill (G.); third, Barkley (C. Time, 0:10.1 220-yard dash—Won by Rayhill (G): ond, Barkley (C. U.); third, Hugel (C. U.). Time, 0.23.2 440-yard run—Won by McGuigan (C. second. Brennan (C. U.); third, Griffin U.). Time, 0:49.8. (New track record. mark, 0:51.2.) 880-yard " run—We on by Connor (C. U): second, Barron (C. U.); third, Travis (G.). Time, 2:05 Mile ‘run—-Won by McDonald (C. U.); sec- ond, Averhoff (C. U.); third, Campbeil (C. U). ‘Time, 4:48%. High hurdles—Won by Fraatz (C. U.); ). v (c old sec- | Mid-Washing No. 7 Is Unlucky For Navy Crews NNAPOLIS, Md., May 5.—Num- ber 7 fsn't looked upon as & lucky number by Charles Buck Walsh, coach of the Naval Academy crews. All three men who rowed in the varsity, junior varsity and fresh- men boats against Columbia last Saturday will be unable to compete. McMahon, No. 7 of the varsity, has not practiced since Saturday due to stomach trouble; Coffin, No. 7 in the jayvee, has the influenza while Hood, Plebe No. 7, Is behind in his studies. Coach Walsh is mot particularly optimistic concerning the Syracuse brushes this Saturday. Syracuse has many of the oarsmen back who took part in the triumph over Navy & year ago. third, Ladner (G.). Time, Won by Fraatz (C. U. t (G.): third, O'Branovich mp—Won by Frastz (C. U): sec o) Rayhill (G.); tl , Barkley (C. U.). Helant, 3 feet 11 tnch “won By Brennan (e u); < Beckiey (60, third: Reynin (Go): Distanos 30 feet 3% inches e b 1 (G.): Pinne- Pole yenlt—Won by Rayh nd White (C. U.) tied for sec~ es ynn (C. U.); sec- Gross (C. U.). nches Javelin n by Monaghan (G.): second, Walnoha (G.); third, Brennan (C. U.). Dis- tance, 161 feet 1 inch Shotput—Won by Lauer (C. U.): second, Walnoha (G.): third, Flynn (C. U.). Dis- tance, 43 feet 7 inch G. U. PREP GOLFERS WIN Defeat Tech, 8 to 1, Over Course at Garrett Park. Georgetown Prep golfers scored over Tech yesterday, 8 to 1, on the Garrett Park “course. = Hanna accounted for Tech's only win when he defeated Simm, 4 and 3. Summary Nee and 4: 3: Do sec. @) n Distance. (Georgetown Prep) defeated King. § Hanna (Tech) defeated S noghue _(Georgetow: ted De etown Prep) er, 1 up; 3 and 2: defeated Reaver, iday (Georgetown Prep) defeaied Walker, §_and 4 Carey, (Georsetown Prep) defestéd Hen- s0n. Prep) Bowle, tweiler up. ton Tire Co., Inc. Open 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Decatur 5700 14th 8 R Sts. N.W, District Tire Store 1602 14th St. N.W. IN CHEUY CHA GOODYEAR TIRES GAS - - OIL" OPEN 7 A.M. Pot. 2771 at CONNECTICUT¢ NEBRASKA AUES. COMPLETE SUPER SERUICE.. PREST-O-LITE BATTERIES. SPECIALIZED LUBRICATION... 10 P.M. TUNE IN GOODYEAR RADIO PROGRAMS STATION WRC ... WEDNESDAY, 8 P.M. 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