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Sports News Associated Press Names All-Eastern Elevens : Pitt’s Success Due fo FOUR TEAMS LAND THO PLACES EACH Group Honors to Pitt, Army, Cornell, Penn—50 Writers Collaborate. BY EDWARD J. NEIL, Associated Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, November 29.— Pittsburgh, Cornell, Army and Pennsylvania share top honors, each contribut- ing two men to the mythical all- Eastern foot ball team picked an- nually for the Associated Press today ):y sports writers. One fepresentative each from Colum- bia, For and Colgate, the latter the sole undefeated, unscored-upon team in the section, round out the first team. Group honors for the second team ‘went to Brown, with three nominees, but as a whole the choices for the re- serve eleven were more widely scattered. Columbia placed two men on the sec- ond team, Army, Cornell, Pittsburgh, Fordham, Yale and Villanova one each. PPARENTLY the severe injury of Dick King, Army’s great end, who suffered a broken leg in the Har- vard game, alone kept the Cadets from placing three men on the first team. As it was, King, rated almost unami- experts Mexican jumpingjack of Cornell, to slip to the second team al with Tony Matal, fiery, red-headed Columbia end. Cliff Montgomery, Columbia ball carrier, a splendid passer, kicker, field general, along with his ability as a broken runner. Mont- gomery was the general first-string choice over Bob Chase, Brown quarter- back, and received more votes than any other back named. 0 run with Montgomery from the halfback positions, the experts chose Warren Heller, mainstay of the Pittsburgh offense, and volatile iittle “Pick” Vidal of Army, who ran wild all season until stopped short by Notre Dame Saturday. There was little oppo- sition to the choice of Capt. Bart Vi- viano of Cornell for fullback, a power house back, whose line plunging and tackling have: been features of the “Howie” Colehower, a big, Roy Engle, great de! h Pennsyivania stalwarts, were far in front in the votes for the line posts. Milton Summerfelt, Army also overshadowed guard and his oppo- with 3 " Smith, Celgate captain and bril- )f:ntrmfillfl’:;d,mmwmm with Summerfelt. R the first time since the naming L b iy 3 a - back, and Tom Gilbane, at center, both of Brown—made the second team, along ver such te, Don Kellett of Penn, Mike of Piftsburgh, Jack Crickard o Chung Hoon of Navy and Ken of Army. Ralph Wolfendale of Fordhem and Steve Grenda, Columbia captain, were the second-team guard posts, 9-Ft. Bed on Sale As Giant Quits By the Assoclated Press. EXINGTON, Ky., November 29.— Universiy of Kentucky basket ball coaches were extremely interested this Fall when Brad Lair, former Monticello, Ky., High School star, enrolled at the university. Reason: ir was 6 feet 11 inches tall and used his height to no small advantage on the court. Adolph Rupp, head cage coach, considered the prospect so highly that he had constructed especially for the mountaineer a 9-foot bed, so Lair could sleep in comfort in his room at the dormitory. Came Thanksgiving. Lair by then had decided college life wasn't so hot and had returned to his beloved hills near Monticello. Now Coach Rupp either wants to sell the lengthy bed or find a bas- ket ball player to fit. He much prefers the latter. SORE ARMY SQUAD PRIMES FOR NAVY Cadets Still Feel Bruises Sustained in Defeat by Notre Dame Team. BY HERBERT W. BARKER, Associated Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, November 20— Franklin Field, in Philadelphia, may mark the spot where Navy beat Army at foot ball for the first time since 1921. ‘The thirty-second renewal of gridiron warfare between the two service acade- mies, to be held there Saturday, now promises much closer action than any critic previously could have anticipated. Army-Navy games generally are hard- fought affairs, of course, but until Sat- urday the Cadets looked certain odds- on favorites. But the picture has changed with a vengeance. Their crack array bludg- eoned into humiliating defeat by Notre Dame, Army's coaches now are faced with the herculean task of building up the confidence the Cadets will need to whip a fast-improving outfit from Annapolis. * Comparative notoriously misleading, yet the fact that Navy held Notre Dame to a 12-0 score while the Ramblers routed Army, 21-0, cannot be totally disregarded. Tm.l is small reason to doubt that Notre Dame was holding plenty of tricks in reserve when playing Navy before Army's vigilant scouts, yet even that hardly the almost W manner in which the Ram- lers plowed Cadets’ hitherto powerful attack Havy, & aty rate, must b gained avy, at any rate, m ve plenty of confidence as it watched the Army being smothered in the Yankee scores are S ung Hoon, ace Clark and Slack, all hurt. Although Army has gained an edge of only 17 to 12 over the Navy in their long rivalry, which began in 1890, the Tars have not succeeded in winning a —_— PING PONG DUFFERS VIE Class B Tourney at Shoreham Will Get Under Way Thursday. Play in the second annual Fall ping- pong tournament on the Shoreham courts will open Thursday night at 8:30 o'clock, when class B competition gets under way. This class is open to players who have never advanced in tourney play or played in open com- Biay ‘Segins by Glavence A Rees at the play by nce A. at the Shoreham courts, 1510 H street. The draw will be made promptly at 8:30 o'clock Thursday night, and every one entered will rhy that night. The date for the opening of class A play will be announced later. All play- s are eligible for this competition. A cup will be awarded the winner in each class by the Shoreham man- agement. game since they eked out a 7-0 deci- sion in 1921. They have held the Cadets to two draws in the meantime, ¢ | It more than 20 years, according to the B : e ‘WITH SUNDAY. Km‘ NG EDITION ing St WASHINGTON, D. C, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1932. TROANS SLATE FOR BOWL CLASH Will Get Invitation Tonight. Parley Also May Decide Eastern Eleven. BY PAUL ZIMMERMAN, Associated Press Sports Writer. OS ANGELES, November 20— L University of Southern Cali- fornia officially will be invited and is expected to accept the offer tonight to represent the Far West in the eighteenth Annual Rose Tourna- ment foot ball game. Out of the meeting between Rose Bowl and Trojan officials also may come the solution of the problem concerning Southern California’s opponent, but it is generally believed this information will not be forthcoming for several days. Michigan is favored in the list of four unbeaten grid elevens®from the East, Middle West and South. The others, in the order of possible choice, are Col- gate, with its goal line not crossed this season; Pittsburgh, unbeaten but twice tied, and Alabama Poly, potential Southern Conference champion, with a clean slate. ALUMNI of the Wolverine schaol have taken heart in the fact that al- though the rose tournament offi- cials sent out a feeler to Flelding Yost, athletic director of Michigan, no an- swer has been received. They believe that had Yost been in- clined to consider the appearance of the Big Ten champions at Pasadena January 2 impossible, he would have answered the confidential query in the negetive. D. S. McDaniels, president of the Rose Tournament Committee, said he had received no reply. One marked development in the sit- uation has been the stren, of Pittsburgh’s standing in the list of po- tential teams. Southern California nflolfl&re(m Colgate ncxt to Michigan, unofficially, but the showing made by Lh’e‘ !fim;hm in tifl'n‘.nl back Stanford might, for several reasons, cause Pitt to get the call. HOSE who favor Pitt over Colgate g;t;:d out that &he(mguu have opponents of perha; - er_caliber than the Redpemlé:flm::d that the tie games with Ohio State and N%brun do not detract from the rec- ord. Unless Michigan, Colgate and Pitts- burgh do an about fact, Alabama Poly i5 out of the running. Of the last seven games, the South has participated in five and the Trojans, who defeated ‘Tu- lane last January 1, prefer an opponent from, the Middle West or East. NAVY AND OHIO STATE ON VIRGINIA GRID LIST Cavaliers Schedule Ten. Contests for Next Fall—Columbia to Be Met in New York. NIVERSITY Va., November 29.— Navy and Virginia will meet next Fall in foot ball for the first time 10-game Cavalier schedule bus, is & newcomer to Vi grid cards and the first Big Ten eleven Lzhme: hh{ ;be C:‘;nnen since 1899. An- igh spot is an engagement with Columbia October 14 in New- York. Maryland will be met here November 4, and four other Southern Conference opponents are listed. Virginia's grid card: September 23—Hampden-Sydney. September 30—Randolph-Macon, October 7—Ohio State at Columbus. however, including a scoreless deadlock in 1923 and the famous 21-21 stale- mate of 1926. One other game, that of 1905, ended in a tie. 105,000 Due to See Trojan-Irish Game By the Associated Press. LDS ANGELES, November 29.— With 70,000 seats to the Notre Dame-University of Southern California game already sold, of- ficials of the Trojan Institution to- day said it was likely Memorial Coliseum, formerly the Olympic Stadium, will be filled to its ca- pacity of 105,000 when the teams face each other December 10. ‘Ticket sales increased following Notre ‘?X:’me's 21-0 victory over Army Sat- ay. Bradley, Whelan Get Honorable Mention in All- Eastern Line-Up NEW YORK, November 29 (#)—Selections for the Associated Press all-Eastern elevens follow: First team: Joseph Skladany (Pittsburgh) Jose Martinez-Zorrilla (Cornell) ... Howard Colehower (Pennsylvania). Walter Uzdavinis (Fordham). Milton Summerfelt (Army) Robert Smith (Colgate).. Roy Engle (Pennsylvania).... Clifford Montgomery (Columbia Warren Heller (Pittsburgh) Pelix Vidal (Army)... Bart Viviano (Cornell) Honerable Mention. Backs—Kavel, Carnegie Tech; Sebas- tian and Reider, Pittsburgh; Kellett, Pennsylvania; Whittock, Crickard, Harvard; Danowski, Ford- bam; Samuels, Rowe and Ask, Colgate; Brown, Army; McNamara, New York University; Pendergast, Manhattan; James, Princeton; Bush, Massachusetts State; Schlums, Wesleyan; Weinstock, Pittsburgh; Levering and Crowley, Yale; leau, Colgate; Chung-Hoon, Navy; Cadigan, Amherst; Chesnulevich, Boston_ College; Buonanno and Gam- mino, Brown: Kubacki, Bucknell; Tem- . New York University: Brown; Kopcsak, Yale; Anderson and Lee, g ; _Zanarins, 1 , Princeton; New York University; Nitka and Zapus- tas, Fordham;: Tosi, Boston College; Temple; | Bradley, | Princeton Dartmouth; Second team: Richard King (Army) .Anthony Matal (Columbia) ..Abraham George (Cornell) .Frank Walton (Pittsburgh) Stephen Grenda (Columbia) .Ralph Wolfendale (Fordham) .Thomas Gilbane (Brown) Robert Chase (Brown) Robert Lassiter (Yale) rge Randour (Villanova) ‘William Gilbane (Brown) | Wallace, Cornell; Kozma, Gettysburg; | Hemeon, Pennsylvania; Dailey, Pitts- burgh, and Karr, West Virginia. | _ Tacklee—Wilbur, Yale; Ellis and Prondecki, Colgate; Sokolis, Penn; Pike, Maine; Hardy and Bancroft, Harvard; Murdock, Cornell; Harvey, Holy Cross; Fortune Princeton; Armstrong, Army; Meredith, _Pitt; nton, Fordham; Migliore, Columbia; Schweitzer, West Virginia, and Leramouth, New Hamp- shire. % Guards—Hills, (Colgate; Michelet, ; cknell; Milne, . 0. ; Zyntell and ;_Fraad, Brown; De Carbo, Duquesne; Billings, Princeton; Jablonsky, Army; Esterly, Harvard; Sample, Carnegle Tech; Stoner, Gettys- burg; Resnick, Penn. Centers—Wilder, Columbia; ;_ Hinman, Princeton; October 14—Columbia at New York. October 21—Navy at Annapolis. October 26—V, M.T " November 4—Maryland. November 11—Washington and Lee at Lexington, govang ll;;!. P. I ovem] -North OCarolina at Chapel Hill 5 THOMPSON IN FRONT IN HORSESHOE EVENT Knocks Monk Off Top of Columbia Pyramid in Tight Match. Loser Leads in Ringers, EORGE C. THOMPSON, Fairfax County champion, was on top of the heap in the Columbia Pyra- mid Horseshoe Tournament today, but it was all he could do to get there. Thompson supplanted Jean Monk of ‘Washington in a challenge battle last night on the Columbia indoor courts, a contest the winner of which was in doubt until the very finish. Monk won the first game, 50 to 44, and dropped the next two, 39 to 50 and 46 to 50. The big Washingtonian, how- ever, had the satisfaction of throwing more ringers than his conqueror. He averaged 45.40 per cent ringers against 44 for Thompsom: Following is the summary: . R.DR. Pts. OPts. Pt 305 44 50 50 39 50 46 21216 95 18 144 12216 88 22 135 CA.RDOZO GRID CHAMPION | Scores Over Dunbar in Clash for Colored High School Title. Cardozo High School's foot ball team today holds the colored public high school championship, the result of its 13-7 victory yesterday over Dunbar High, in Walker Stadium. Dunbar won the 1931 title. A 30-yard run by Milton Robinson in the third period netted the touchdown that brought victory. Lamar Cardozo’s first touchdown in the second quarter. R. Willlams counted Dunbar’s touchdown in the final period. Dunbar (7). Position. Cardoso (13). k L E Dyson Rutgers; Yablonski, | % i . 'm"r B. <M. A tee. Facing a Mighty Mule Army, Stung by Notre Dame Rout, Rated Two Touchdowns Better Than Navy. BY TOM DOERER. Y confidants among the ex- perts inform me that it is safe to make it two to one that the Army is ‘going to be two touchdowns better than the Navy when they meet in the big foot ball ‘classic ‘Saturday in Philadelphia. ‘They reason, these wise fellows, that is not as good as it was to be by the bettors, prior to the Notre Dame conflict it still has too much versatility, too mu and too much confidence in itself to permit Rip Miller's just-fair Navy eleven to take it into camp. I think the goat is a pretty good ball is one with merely a fairly good de- fense, a pair of backs in Chung Hoon and Campbell, who might be all right if they get loose, but never have this year against good teams. ‘whipped by the Bend. They contend that the Yale and Harvard games gave the Army a slight case of ego, and that if it had gone into the Navy game with it, Rip Miller’s Hawaiian, and a few other boys not from the Isle, would have scoured upon the kaydet outfit. Army has come out of the Notre Dame battle rebuked. It is bristling after the whipping which came, at a time when the foot ball folks were be- ginning to feel that this Army outfit was being underrated. In its place, and feeling bumps administered to it last Saturday, the kaydet will go out to make the goat pay for it all, and so to fight that it Tegain some of the claim it held to the ht _before the South Bend avalanche struck. Maj. Sasse’s team came out of the Ramblers’ game wit] tnjury, which will énable it to present its best front to the Middies. While Rip Miller’s boys have had the advantage of being able to ‘scout the Army, themselves, in a game where the mule had to give all, Army versatil- ity should be able to overcome this advantage. ‘This Navy-Notre Dame game, which ‘some m7.ormynor.u.eulcom- parison for the coj scuffie, should thrown out. Notre Dame much power, ! grea club. But the experts say not; that it |the be forced to_bowl over a ¢ of good ma in Vidal, Summe: , Fields, et al. Yet, remember that tradition plays a great part in these Army-Navy strug- gles, and when that enters a foot ball battle most any thing is likely to happen, years u':&m Saturdey Cofall, & Notre Dame near Army’s posts, and 1-0, Notre Dame...It make the score was in the last few moments of play, and Dutch tells me it was one of his t thrills of foot ball...Oliphant, great Army all-America, had kicked the ball against the Notre Dame cross-bar for a touchback ... Then came the Irish trek, Cofall and Bergman, straight to Army posts...Dutch likes the Army’'s chances Saturday...Louie the Barber named 13 teams to come through last week, nine did it, three tied and Colgate tcppled Brown to give the Great Whattaman his one loss for the week...Whattaman’s all-customer team is due tomorrow...Something to annoy the grid reformers. Penn finds that the Gates plan of de- eniyhnu really has created more foot ball interest at the school and among its alumni and fans. . . . Dick Har- low is getting a good play in the Louie “All-Griffith Stadium” contest. The customers seem to know him. . . . Walter Johnson knows what this base ball business is all about. . . . Walter suggests that the majors assist the minors so that coming playing talent will not be discouraged. . . . William E. Benswanger, president of the Pitts- in his views on base ball pepping up, in & wire to the writer, has started to do that very thing in Pittsburgh at the moment, as you will read elsewhere. . . . Colgate statistick show -that it made 99 first Gowns to major oppo- nents; 21, to prove-that it belongs at the . . . . But bets are that Pitt the call to the Rose Bowl, because it is said to be a more colorful eleven, Bobby Jones and Wilbert Robinson burgh Pirates, who was_non-commital | to. Arter BOPRLING ought to make & good pair down there in Crackerland. . . . The silly season in wrestling still is on. . . . Stan Zbyszko, three-time mat champ, agrees to throw each member of three varsity foot ball teams for charity. . . . Stove League base ball gossips are worrying about what is golng‘w happen to Joe Cronin’s playing ability when his man- agerial duties start. . . . On any cor- ner, in any cigar store you will hear arguments as to the playing abilities of Tommy Whelan and Johnny Fen- lon. . And they end up with the score 0-0. . . . One New York writer believes the suggestion emanating from Washington, that base ball ought to pep up, is part of the ballyhoo for the testimonial er to Walter John- ‘Those wise cember 10, at Baltimore Stadi getting very amateurish press HOCKEY RIVALS FACE " IN,NATIONAL LEAGUE All Three Games Tonight Are Naturals—Bruins and Rangers Feature. By the Associated Press. 'YORK, November 29.—All three games on the National Hockey League schedule tonight involve rivals meeting for the first time this season. ‘The most important duel of the evening finds the Boston Bruins, pace- setters in the American group, battling the New York Rangers at Boston. The Rangers are last in the American sec- tion with five points, four behind the Bruins, but. can vault into second place should the Detroit Red Wings and Chicago Blackhawks be so obliging as lose. Detroit, tled with Chicago for second place in the American section with six points, stacks ‘up against the high- Montreal Maroons at Montreal while Chicago faces the Ottawa Sena- tors at:Ottawa. The Maroons and Ottawa, along with the Montreal Cana- diens, are tled for last place in the in- ternational group with four points, one behind the second place New York Americans and five behind the leading ‘Toronto Maple Leafs. is BY SAM MURPHY., EW YORK, November 20.— ‘William Benswanger, presi- dent of the Pittsburgh club, is going to.invade the feld of base ball fans this Winter to see Pirate Chief Goes on Stump To Lure Boys Into Base Ball tain to ban the radio, but the situ- ation in the National Comics and Classified —By TOM DOERER THE ARMY KEEPS tTs BIG 6UNS TRAINED OA CRUNG~HOON, SOMETHWG ELSE 1S UKELY To HAPPEN. HANE 10 COME. THROUGH A STIFF ARMY FIRE To GAWW THE HEADLINE S, AND THE CADETS ' GOAL LINE.., l/o it P 2| CHUNG-HOGN , ARMY'S UERSATILE ATTACIS MAY PEPPER THE GOAT's DEFENSE THE MULE IS SURE o 6 WTo THE NAVY SCRAP FIGKTING ’BAMA STOPS FOR DRILL Uses Los Angeles Field to Point for St. Mary’s Tussle. LOS ANGELES, November 29 (#).— Arriving this morning, the University of Alabama foot ball team works out this afternoon on the Universify of California Field at Los Angeles. The Red Elephants are en route to San Prancisco, where they play St. Mary’s Saturday. The team will leave for the v Bay City tonight. COLLEGE FOOT BALL. Oklahoma Aggles, 20; Texas College of Mines, 7. THE FLORS The WYNN Serviceably built of black or brown imported calf- skin—on a typical custom of “Bench-Made” PAGE C-1 Man-Power RUGGED STRENGTH 1S TELLING FACTOR Means More Than Coaching to Big Team That Easily Subdued Stanford. BY H. C. BYRD, AN-POWER! Since the time M when Tartar hordes over- raf Asla and left an im- print that remains to this day, that has been the answer to many a struggle of tribe against tribe and nation against nation. And even now, whether it be in annexing vast domain that once fell under sway of the Great Khan or in play wi ere one small group is hurled against another small group, that answer is little changed. Today, when two of 11 men meet on a barred fleld in what is called & foot ball game, the answer is about the same. It usually is man- power that decides the issue. Six times, for instance, Stanford teams came out of the West to meet the East ":: six smes hfnnnlrxd Man-power was great a i to be e e was that had the BT AR AN lumph. it gr‘ls lnzNev mk.y e o liant as been its Army fell before the m‘ufim ham- mering of Notre Dame's tried shock troops and fresh reserves fully as well trained and hardy. Generalship, tics, astute maneuvers count for little Wwhen confronted with consistently over- whéulmmg force. it on the Pacific Coast, Tumor has it, Southern California u': its line of victories largely brilliant athletes. It has good coach- ing, it is true, but no eleven without su- perior man-power could year after year attain such consistent success as have min-{:o”i?l‘{ all due respect coach~ , Wi Tres] 1 ing and the qualities of lfld‘:nhlp ar driving ability that coaches must have, man-power seems to be the chief ane swer to success on the gridiron. Withe out their very real superiority in mane Wwi; A;:bnmnb:ubum and Tennesseg would not now be domina ithern 0 the coach should ;vl}h]uut the men mlumm'.’mut elpless. power and de E Just how powerful an array Pitt had realized when it is Saime 11 1ised ouly ik men, Wi the men, center and fullback, as virtually its only support, playing well back. Despite this six-man line, with its loose support, Stanford never made & was against Pitt’s great lne can never e known co’mybody except those that, saw. attacks, L In this day of high-power especially such as Warner is to develop, such a defense as‘Pitt 'TANFORD'S defense could not stop Pitt’s attack. The - Westerners never were able to prevent the Pitt backs bresking through for (Continued on Second Page. HEIM SHOE Unmistakably Here is another Florsheim Shoe that jvat impressive example of what forty yeass of shoe-experience can turn out. It is difie cult to realize that quality of this 38 caliber may be obtained for enly t‘ *Open Nights Men’s Shops 14th at G 7th & K *3212 14th