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SPORTS | HAS CAPABLE MEN, BUT FOES STRONG Quite a Few Who Can Throw 16-Pound Missle More Than 52 Feet. WOULD YOU MIND TELLING 1T TP ME? | LIKE A GOOD STORY AS WELL AS THE NEXT ONE O.K. A WOMAN WAS ON THE OPERATING TABLE AND — OH, A STORY | WHAT WERE YOU HEARD To-DAY LAUGHING ABOUT JUST NOW, RPAYMOND? SHE ASKED THE DOCTOR IF THE ETHER WOULD MAKE HER SICK. "I DON'T THINK SO " SAID THE DOCTOR. "HOwW LONG WILL IT BE BEFORE | KNOW ANYTHING?" ASKED THE WOMAN, THE DOCTOR SAID "AREN'T YOU EXPECTING TOO MUCH OF THE ETHERR" MAY BE UNIQUE Unable to Get Competition, but Likes Game Too Well to Give It Up. By the Assoclated Press. SPORT S too mich fun to stop, despite lack of competition. Development of polo for girls at the University of Arizona did not seem to the co-eds a startling departure, although at the cutset progress was not propitious. Horseback riding is a major co-ed sport, m“l‘; every feminine student spending at “least a few hours a week on the bridle paths. Since 1922 the men’s Fo]o team has won wide attention, several times, coming into national prominence. ‘Two years ago the girls demanded their right to invade one more man's sport. Authorities looked askance, but capitulated, until in the first scrim- mage the overenthusiastic co-eds mixed polo mallets indiscriminately with the legs of their mounts, spilling horses and riders grotesquely. There were no casualties, but that was the end of feminine polo for a ST. ALBANS TEAMS SELECT CAPTAINS Lorton, McGee and Patton to Lead Gridders, Basketers and Diamonders. i OB LORTON, John McGee and | Academy. Ray Patton have been elected captains of the foot ball, bas- | Spring include O'Connor, R. Smith and Asher. Fation and Morton Freligh, jr., have been presented cups for winning the tennis tourneys held last Fall among students of the upper and lower schools, respectively. The Lions team has been awarded a trophy for gaining the pennant in the lower school base ball league, and members of the Baby Blues, a lower school diamond outfit, which played outside games and which included Ellis, Peter, Wood, White, Schulze, Bowie, Freligh, Holmes, Gray- son and W. Shippen, have received recognition. 'T. ALBANS enjoyed a particularly successful foot ball season, losing only to Shenandoah Valley Military In base ball the Cathedral School nine showed strongly at times, but its record was not as consistent as that of the grid eleven. Fair showings \UCSON, Ariz.—Arizona co- eds believe they can play | fos polo better than any girls | a Recklessness Ba; anywhere —if any other| ecklessness Banned. girls play polo. | FPTHIS season the petiticn was renewed, ket ball and base ball teams, re- | Were made in basket ball and tennis. spectively, of St. Alban’s School for | Robert Middleton, athletic director, l:: mxlyschwl year. | served as head coach of foot ball, and - | other mentors included Pop Jarman, BY ALAN GOULD, Associated Press Sports Editor. EW YORK, Jure 9.—It's no longer a matter of touch- ing 50 feet in the gentle art of hurling 16 pounds of iron shot from a 7-foot circle. The modern athletic gladiators | don’t take their sweat-shirts off now until they have dore better than that. They have passed 52 feet, at least a half dozen of them, since championship and a new record at the last Olympics, and it may take a 53-foot heave to capture the world record at the games in Los Angeles. John Kuck, the big Kansas farmer lad, launched the first 52-foot shotput ‘to win the 1928 Olympic crown. This world record stood less than iwo months. After he returned home, Emil Hirschfeld of Germany, who had tailed Kuck as well as Herman Brix in the Olympics, got a toss of 52 feet inches. INCE then, Brix, the former Uni- versity of Washington star; Harry Hart, the South African giant; Leo Sexton, former Georgetown all-around athlete, and Franz Douda of Czecho- slovakia, 21l have come at least within & half dozen inches of 53 feet. Hart, SHOTPUT CHAMPIONS. | . Distance. 3602 nd S A s°A ecord. World record. 52 s. by Hirschfeld. Ger- in fact, heave of 53 feet 3 inches, but his best competitive mark is considerably less. With the leather-covered indoor shot, Sexton let go a put of 52 feet 834 inches at Bostcn last Winter. The cable dispatches this Spring credited Douda with exceeding Hirschfeld's world record by a fraction of an inch. Brix holds the official American out- door record, 52 feet 53; inches. The chances, therefore, are that the U. S. A. will have to call upon its stal- warts for some fancy heaving to main- tain traditional Yankee supremacy in this test of strength and skill, Sexton, Brix and Harlow Rothert, former Stanford athlete. should do the heavy work for the U. S. A. EPT for 1920, when a brace of pns, Perhola and Niklander, top- in 1912 another American was featured by the struggle of ns. Pat McDonald, the New York ceman, and Ralph Rose, former | University of Michigan giant, now dead. | Rose for years held the world record | of 51 feet. He was striving for a third Olympic title at Stockholm, but his mightiest effort was unable by a nar- Tow margin to match the put of 50 feet 37 inches which gave McDonald an Olympic record. WELSH PLAYS JACOBS Rockville Star in Quarter-Finals of Maryland Tournament. BALTIMORE. Md.. June 9.—Bernard Welsh of Rockville, Md., today was to oppose Billy Jacobs in the quarter- finals of t and Tennis Cham- picnship T here on the Ro- v one game in the in the second. fanuel Martinez of Washington was cated by Allen Key, 6—0, 6—1, and Staubley and Frederico Sendel, e to Holden and Law in the doub! 3, 6—4. FISHING DATES STATED Seasons for Bass Begin as Early as June 15 in Virginia. RICHMOND, Va., June 9.—The open season for bass fishing east of the Blue Ridge Mountains begins on June 15 and extends until March 15, according to regulations which have been made public by the Commission of Game and Inland Fisheries. The size limit of inches. West of the Blue Ridge Mountains the fishing season will bezin July 1, to continue until December 1. The legal gize limit has been fixed at 10 inches and the daily bag limit at 15. LEONARD BEATS SAVIOLA Has Both Eyes Cut, but Has Rival on Verge of Knockout. NEW YORK, June 9 (F).—Benny Leonard, retired undefeated lightweight champion, boxed his way to an_easy victory over Andy Saviola of Bay Ridge in the feature event at the Coney Island Stadium last night. . Leonard’s right eye was cut in_ the first round and his left eye :n the ninth, but he had Saviola reeling on the verge of a knockout 2s the bell ended the final round. y;Lronard weighed 1502, and Saviols 4614, WINS POST NET HONORS Pvt. Scruton to Represent Fort Meade in Area Singles. Competing for the title of post tennis champion and the right to enter the ‘Third Corps Area championship matches at Fort Hoyle, Md., starting Saturday, Pvt. R. A. Scruton, Headquarters Com= pany 34th Infantry, finished first in a field of 36 entrants in the singles Just finished at For@ @eorge G. Meade. In the semi-finals Pvt. Scruton de- feated Capt. L. L. Cobb, 6—1, 6—4, and Maj. Alfted S. Balsam won from First Lieut. A. J. Evans, 6—1, 7—5. Scruton defea Maj. Balsam in the final, 6—3, 8—6, 6—0. NAVY ELECTS CAPTAIN ANNAPOLIS, Md., June 9.—Election of Walter H. Newton, jr., of Washing- ton, D. C, as captain of the Naval Academy track team for 1933 was an- nounced yesterday by officials of the Naval Academy Athletic Association. Theodore R. Vogeley of Butler, Pa., ‘was chosen manager. Grover Ferguson of Anaponlis will captain the 1933 Navy lacrosse team with Hillary Rowe, also of Annapolis, as manager. 75 | is credited with a practice | HOW STUPID OF THE DO THE WOMAN NATURALLY CONSCIOUSNESS P ©)932 K TRIBUNE, 19C. TO KNOW HOW LONG \T \wOouULD BE BEFORE SHE RECAINED | SHoULD'VE KNOWN BE TTER! cuEss | NEvER WILL LEARN! ctor! WANTED ~ From 73 to 77 Starts With BY W. R. McCALLUM. | HERE'S always a lot of heartache and tragedy in any major goif championship. For Harry G.| Pitt, the District title-rolder | from the Manor Club, the current tourney of the Middle Atlantic Golf Association at the Columbia Country Club, which entered its match play phase today, is just another golf tourna- |ment and one in which, strangely | enough, Harry finds himself cast in the| role of spectatcr in the most important match play event of the year in this| | section. . | Harry shot a 78 on the first qualifica- tion dav. At that time it looked as if 78 would be safely in, by a stroke or so, but the boys got so hot yesterday that they thrust out all the 785 and 79, and a play-off at 77 for one of the last few piaces in the first flight was only avoid- ed because Dick Davidson of Chevy Chase, who scored a 77. could not be reached for the play-off and auto- matically dropped into the secorm flight. So Harry Pitt, winner of numerous golf tournaments and top ranking golfer of Washington, saw himself relentlcssly pushed aside as man_after man came in and posted a score lower than his 78 | And just as Harry should have done. | he withdrew his card from the second flight. No champion should play in the | second flight. | UT even with Pitt out, this Middle | Atlantic is a representative cham- | ‘ pionship. No doubt of that. And | | Harry agrees that if he did nct play | golf well enough to qualify he should be out on the side lines watching others battle for the title he wcn back in 1928. | When you get a tournament in which | he leaders score 73 and the last-placers 77, and in that range are 16 of the finest | golfers in any large area, you have a | really representative field. “And that's | | just what the qualificaticn round skowed | as it ended yesterday. | | _Between the 73s turned in by Byrn | Leroy of Indian Spring and Tom of | Maryland—and the 77s which were the | last scores to make the championship there was a spread of just four strokes, which speaks volumes for the class cf the field and the excellence of | the sccring in the medal round. § | _Curtiss came in fairly early with his 73, three-putting the last green when | two putts would have given him 72. | Then late in the afternoon along came | the Sasscer brothers with their tying | scores of 73. But the real tragedy befell J. William Harvey, jr., chairman of the | Indian Spring Goif Committee. _Bill | Harvey came to the last two holes needing a brace of 4s to win the medal | with a 72. He took a 5 on the seven- }tecnlh and then needed a 4 to tie. He | put his seccnd shot within 10 feet of |the cup on the eighteenth green and | three-putted frcm that distance for a | 75 and 74, one strcke too high. The | tie will b2 played off, probably on Sun- day. | ATCH play rounds today found 2 ccmpleiely rcpresentative group | of golfers playing, with represen- | tation heatiest from the Washington | area. Down-State Virginia is not rep- | resented at all, however, as the five Richmond men all failed to make the first flight. However, there are three representatives of the Washington Golf and Country Club, which is in Vir- | ginia, in the first flight. Baltimore is represented by B. Warren Cockran, twice 2 holder of the title, and Ernie Caldwell, the long hitter from Hillen- dale. and Washington, with the single exception of Harry Pitt, has its best golfers in that first flight. One of them is goung Roger Peacock, recently returned home from Duke Uni- versity after a Spring spent burning |up golf courzes in Carolina. Roger | hadn’t played in several weeks prior to vesterday, but he was good tnough to | score a 74 just the came. One of the feature matches in the cpening round today was that between Peacock and Miller B. Stevinson, Columbia ace and | winner of countless tournaments around the Capital. Scores of 93—all but one—qualified | for the sixth flight, and Hugh H. Saum | of Columbia was unlucky enough to draw his own name out of the tourna- ment. The team trophy, played as a feature of the qualification round, was won by the Indian Spring team with a total score of 388. The scores were as fol- | lows: J. William Harvey, jr., 74; Sasefer, Roger | Peacock, 74; L. D. » 73; Elliott | First 16 in Mid-Atlantic Range | | Ing rcck bass has been fixed at over 4 Curtiss and the two Sasscer brothers— | A " vernies | | as Match Play | Pitt a Spectatorj Spicer, 85; Dr. L. S. Otell, 82. The team of the Washington Golf and Country Club was second with a total of 396, while the Chevy Chase Club team was third with 400, and Colu s No. 1 team was fourth with 402. The semi-final and final rounds will be plased tomorrow, with prizes to be pre- sented by President Donald Woodward of the association about 5 o'clock to- morrow afternoon. RS. L. O. CAMERON of Chevy Chase and Mrs. Jerome Meyer f Woodmont today were to play off their tie for the Herald Trophy, over the Woodmont course, at 18 holes medal play. They tied yesterday, both with net cards cf 76. Mrs. Cameron finished first with a score of 88—12—76, and Mrs. Meyer, playing her best round of the year, holed a putt on the eighteenth green that gave her a total of 91, with a 15 handicap, for a net total of 76. Other leaders in the tourney were: Virgin'a Pope, Kenwood, 92—11—81 Mrs. L. H. Hedrick, Army-Navy, 94— 13—81: Mrs. Phillip Cole. Army-Navy, 97—16—81; Mrs. Alma Von Steinner, Congressional, —11—82: Miss Florence Scott, Manor, 95—16—82; Mrs. Roland R. MacKenzie, Columbia, 98—16—82; Mrs. Theodore Peyser, Woodmont, 98- 16—82. Mrs. Jchn Upperman of Army- Navy won a draw for the last net prize. Mrs. J. Marvin Haynes of Columbia won the low gross award with a card of 89. Winifred Faunce of Manor was seccnd with 90. ‘ —_— EARLY OLYMPIC ARRIVALS| Three From British India Reach California From Orient. ‘ SAN FRANCISCO, June 9 (#)—Three members of the British Indian Olympics | track squad, under the direction of | Coach Ted Numbly, have arrived here from the Orient | ‘W. C. Dhawan, on whom strong hopes | are placed by British India to win the | hop, step and jump, is the only native | n of the trio. The others are P. ux and’ Meryn Sutton corint- ers. Sutton has been clocked at 9:4 for the 100-yard dasn and lo S€CONG. - the 120-yard high hurdles. Guaranteed Unconditionally 12 to 24 Months @ s 1234 14¢ST..NW, 624 PA.AVE.SE. 2250 SHERMAN AVE. CALIFORNIA JOINS CREWS ON HUDSON Gelden Bears End Long Trip and Take First Practice for Title Regatta. OUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., June 9.— The attentlon of rowing enthusi- | asts shifted yesterday from the ! Krum Elbow camp of Columbia University to the training quarters of two of the crews that may fight it out | in the last mile on boat race day for | the I. R. A. championship, and California. Syracuse The blue-tipped blades of the po-| tential champion crew from the Far West cut into the waters of the Hudson late in the day as Coach Ky Ebright sent his Californians up and down the river on a paddle of mor> than two miles to limber up rowing muscles that had been inactive during a five-day transcontirental trip. The three boatloads of powerful- appearing Golden Bears and a substi- tute boat of four stalwarts were pre- ceded on the river by a few hours by the four Orange boats of Syracuse. The | river buzzed with training activity fo the first time as Columbia’s five crews plied up and down the Hudson in both morning and afternoon workouts. The boating of the California varsity was: Stroke, Salisbury; Gregg: 5, Chandler; 2, coxswain, Graham. Clare and Dunlap were not in the varsity boat in the | Washington race several weeks ago. TROUSERS To Match Your Odd Coats EISEMAN'’S, 7th & F Balance Easy a Racking their brains for I -|means to prove their prowess, a | conclusion is being forced uponi them that their mere participa- tion in this strenuous man’s game may be unique. ‘The University of Arizona girls’ polo team, pronounced ready for match plny‘ by its coach, Capt. W. R. Irvin, has dis- ‘ covered a dearth cf opponents. Through their captain, Hortense Lin- | denfeld, the girls several months ago issued a preliminary challenge. Nation-wide came the enswers—hun- dreds of letters, lots of advice, but no | response to the defy. They stuck to their mallets, chose sides and played matches am-ng them- selves. The Game Is a Hit. | HE score of young wcmen who had overcome strenuous official objec- tion to the risking of their fair| persons in breakneck melees found polo QUTING SUPPLIES At DEEP CUT PRICES Pitching Horse Reg. sizeand wt. Goggles Tem popular styles to suit every quirement. 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Irvin finally was assigned as coach to organize & real team. For months the girls practiced faith- fully until Coach Irvin pronounced them ready to do battle with all comers. Matchmakers got busy; the girls gct proposa’s of marriage. “Wrong,” they said. “We only want | a1 ;éolu match. Anybody can get mar-1{ ried.” RENEW GRID RIVALRY ANN ARBOR, Mich, June 9 (#)— Cornell and Michigan have arranged a foot ball game for 1933. ‘The big Red team will invade the Michigan Stadium Octcber 14 after a lapse of 16 years in foot ball relations between the two schools. The Wolverines won the last encoun- ter by 42 to 0 in 1916. Lorton is a halfback, McGee a for-| ward, and Patton a pitcher. Bits Ches- ley was captain of both the foot ball and basket ball combinations during | the 1931-2 term, and Lorton was leader of the diamond team this Spring. Chesley has been awarded the coveted Robert Rice Memorial Cup, offered to the school's best all-around athlete. He | played foot ball, basket ball and base Irvine, McGehee, Dilley, Doty, Kessler, Rev. Henderson, Todd and Howison. Letters have been awarded as fol- ows: Foot ball—Chesley, Craighill, Lorton, Fletcher, Rafter, Stugrt, Keeble, Guy Castle, Bayne Castle, McGee, Davis, Smith, Cornwell, Cracraft, Shippen, Thom, Sterrett and Zurhorst, manager, Basket ball—Chesley, McGee, Lorton, Shippen, Craighill, Patton, Cornwell, | Ned Shippen, Thom and Frank Sterrett. ball. Jack Beard and Evans, manager. Base ball—Lorton, Patton, Fletcher, hesley, Henderson, Bayne Castle, Mc- Gee, Thorpe, Shippen, Sterre! ‘Thom, Nettleton and Holcombe, manager. Tennis—O'Connor, Stuart, Craighill, McGee, Patton, R. Smith, Asher and Steer, manager. Soccer (minor letters) — Gulick, Shippen and Craighill also will be miss- | Davis. J. W. Jones. Holcombe. Asher, ing from the basket team, in addition | Van Buren, Dates, Nettleton, V. Whit- to Chesley. The base ball nine, too, | lock, Emley, L. 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