Evening Star Newspaper, December 17, 1932, Page 17

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SPORTS. Duke Athletics on a Sound Basis COACH OF BASKET BALL LAUDS WADE Blue Devils, Who Score Over Hoyas, 35 to 30, Take on Colonials Tonight. BY H. C. BYRD. UKE UNIVERSITY, which last night defeated George- town in basket ball, 35 to 30, and which tonight meets George Washington, is building up a system of athletics | which very shortly, if not now, should be as successful as any other in the South. And this sys- tem, under the able supervision and direction of Wallace Wade, is on a sound basis, with a strong | theme of continuation. Last Fall Duke had an exceptionally good foot ball team, it now is Tepre- sented by a basket ball quint that prob- ably will stand about as well as any of the others in the South, and opin- ions at Duke are that the track and base ball squads ought to measure up to the standards of the two mentioned. Duke's victory over Georgetown last night is an indication of what may be | expected of it in the remainder of its| wourt schedule, because teams do noli come up here and whip Georgetown | without they have strength. Eddie Cameron, coach of basket ball at Duke for several years, gives almost the entire credit for Duke's new ath- letic organization to Wallace Wade. About Wade he says: “Wallace Wade is almost entirely re- sponsible for our present athletic or- ganization, which I consider to be as efficient as any other I know about. Wallace has taken the situation at Duke so well in hand that he already has co-ordinated the various athletic groups so that all are working together and with the same purposes. “There are no cross purposes as far @s we are concerned. He has widened and bettered the Duke schedules, so that we are meeting the best in the East and in the South, and in addition to_intercollegiate athletics is rapidly organizing intramural sports into a program of physical education so that in that field also we are having rapid | growth. Incidentally, in intercoilegiate athletics we are becoming more suc- cessful, and will continue to have our share of successes. EORGE WASHINGTON'S _veteran team_tonight entertains Duke on the Tech floor, at 7:30 sharp. With Duke victorious over the Blue and Gray, the game should be exceptionally attractive to all local followers of the sport. The Colonials could not have | had a better break, if they had or- | dained it for themselves. | If George Washington can whip | Duke the result will be regarded as a real triumph. Following the defeat by | Missouri, the Colonials could ask for nothing more than to whip the five that won from Georgetown. But the Co- Jonials probably will not have a very | easy task, unless the visitors suffer somewhat from their contest of last night. | HE two men who formed most of | George Washington's offense last | year and who were being counted upon just as heavily this season will be missing tonight against Duke. They ! are Forest Burgess, who is ineligible because of a Southern Conference rule | w1 pe the Intercollegiate Chess League, | prohibiting the use of transfer students, | of which H. M. Phillips is president. | and Wick Parrack, 6-foot 5-inch run- [ ning match of Burgess, who is ill. Jimmy Howell and Bill Noonan, | sophomores, will supplant Burgess and | Parrack at the forward posts. Noonan | is a former Eastern High School youth. | UKE basket ball annals are dotted | with deeds of youths who absorbed their basket ball on Washington cholastic teams, but if Jimmy Thomp- son's play with the Blue Devils Jast night against Georgetown was a fair sample of his value to Duke, his name belongs along with that of Werber, Councillor and Croson. | Jimmy was the hub offensively and defensively .of @ fast-breaking Duke | team which whipped Georgetown last | night. He was only one point shy of | scoring half of his teams’ total. | thanks to the former Western | opped off to an 8-point lead orgetown was able to find the hoop. The remainder of the half mainly was a case of J. Thompson Vs. Georgetown and it ended Duke, 24; Georgetown, 19 Duke, with Herb Thompson, brother of Jimmy: Weaver, and the rest of the smooth-working Blue Devil quint, held the lead during the entire second half. Tom Carolan and Ed Hargadan were most impressive for Georgetown. Summary Georgetown (30) Crowley, S Hargadan, 1. Parcells. { Duke (35). 3 H Thom so: Weaver, & F. Lewis, Totals. .. Totals... 1% ATHOLIC UNIVERSITY, which | dropped a 31-to-21 decision to La Salle College, at Philadelphia last night, moves into Orange, N. J. to- night to tackle Seton Hall. It will be the Cardinals’ third game of the cam- Ppaign. Catholic U. started impressively against the Philadelphians. running un four points on field goals by Montague and Galiher, but the host team hit its stride and was leading. 21 to 8, at half. 1010 30 Catholic U. ( . 101141 Totals.... 8 5% ALLAUDET'S performance in_de- | feating Maryland State Nor- mal last night, 24 to 18, was im- prescive. The Kendell Greeners flashed | smooth teamwork in the first half when | they tock a 1 -4 lead and thougi thev bogged down midway the second half. the Blues managed to hit their stride again and pull away. e Normal quint, hailing from Tow- son. Md., pulled to within three points | of the Blues in the second period, but | Capt. George Brown and Jimmy Ray- hill found their scoring eyes again and led Gallaudet from its slump. It was the third consecutive defeat for Mary- land Normal at the hands of local ag- gregations, having lost previously to | American U. and Catholic U. Summary: 5 ‘ d. State (1%). Gallaudet M. state (1%) Harris. f... Bur Revmi hila, & Matz, 2 AnRIE Rankin, ¢ Totals . Sle sy Totals.. Referee EAGLES ARE CHALLENGED. Northeast Temple gridders have challenged the Anacostia Eagles. Both Orrel | exhibition some evening durin | crosses the Pacific to the Orient. THE EV. NG _STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, Coast Teams Favored in Grid Tilts Today D. C. Men Slated to Help Lead -Maryland Golf Association BY WALTER R. McCALLUM. \WO Washington men are slated to be among the officers of the Maryland State Golf Associa- tion during 1933. Robert Stead, jr., of the Chevy Chase Club, who this year has Leen a vice president repre- senting the Washington district, is scheduled to become first vice president. His place as representative of tour- nament golf around the Capital will be taken by George P. James, chair- man of the Golf Committee of the Co- lumbia Country Club, according to an announcement today by the Nominating Committee of the association. The Nominating Committee is composed of Heywood E. Boyce, president, the Bal- timore Country Club; H. Prescott Gat- ley, president, the Chevy Chase Club, and John F. Davies, president, the Rolling Road Golf Club. The full list of nominees, to be voted upon at the annual meeting on Janu- ary 20, follows: For president. William Parker Hall, Baltimore Country Club; first vice president, Robert Stead, Jr., Chevy Chase Club; vice president, Bal_ timore district, Willlam D. Waxter, jr., Green Spring Valley Club; vice presi- dent, Washington district, George P. James, Columbia Country Club; vice president, Western Maryland district, Murray W. Crane, Fountain Head Coun- try Club, Hagerstown, Md.; vice presi- dent and treasurer, Nathan H. Kauf- man, Suburban Club of Baltimore; sec- retary, John E. Hurst, Elkridge Hunt Club. The annual meeting will be held at the Baltimore Country Club and will be attended by a number of delegates from the 10 Washington clubs Wwhich are members of the Maryland State Association. TEPS are to be taken, the associa- tion announces today, to bar from membership all golf clubs, which do not own cr lease their courses, under the following amendment to the associa- 1 “Any regularly organized golf club in the State of Maryland. minimum annual dues of $20. shall be eligible for membership. If any of the present member clubs fail to qualify under this section on February 1, 1933, they shall cease to be members of this association.” This section is substan- tially the same as the p in the constitution of the District of Columbia Golf Association, which bars from mem- bership clubs, which do not own or lease their golf course. It means that ciubs formed from groups which play on municipally owned or operated golf courses cannot become memoers of the Maryland State Association, and if they are at present members, they must re- sign their membership. The Middle At- lantic Golf Association is considering adoption of a similar section in its con- stitution, although this organization has no members at present who do not own or lease their own ccurse. The Maryland association, composed of a group. of “go-getters,” has stood for | years as a champion of cleanliness in | golf. It has been a foremest factor in the improvement of the game in this section and stages numerous tourna- ments each year throughout the State! One-third of its membership is made up of clubs near the Capital, even though Washington amateurs have taken only a small part in the tourna- ment. Each year it holds an amateur and an open championship, in addition to handicap events. This year, after | strenuous efforts, the Baltimore Coun- | try Club secured the national amateur championship. In the preliminary ne- gotiations, officials of the Maryland State association were aetive, and aided | greatly in securing the championship, | which was a highly successful affair. | udilitis | FJTHOSE golfers at the Washington | " ed by the freezing weather, are planning another tourney a week from today. This will be an unusual af- fair, for a prize_donated by the Har- rell brothers. Each entrant will -be required to retell the story of his most | freakish shot to Dave Thompson, the | club professional. Dave will decide to | whom the prize stall go, cn the basis |of the story told by the contestant. | There will be no appeal from his de- cision. A few days ago the club held which owns or leases its own course | o “{irkey tourney, which was won by and which requires its members to pay p_ w, Calfee. IN CHESS CIRCLES BY FRANK HESS has been quiet locally for some time, but there is pros- pect of increased activity. First comes the announcement that I. S. Turover, former Dis- trict champion, will give a simultaneous the last week in December at the Jewish Com- munity Center, Sixteenth and Q streets northwest. Bradley Beach, N. J, and New York tournaments and has given exhibitions here with satisfactory results. The pub- | lic has been invited to attendl this ex- | hibition. ‘The Capital City Chess Club will hold a handicap tournament. starting De- viz.: Class A, scratch; Class B, pawn moves; Class D, Kt, and Class E, rook. G. E. Bishop, president of the District of Columbia Chess League, announces that the District of Columbia cham- pionship tournament will start the first week in January. NTERCOLLEGIATE chess will come to the fore during the holidays, two tournaments being held at the Mar- shall Chess Club, New York City. First ‘The College of the City of New York was the winner last year. Other colleges competing were Columbia, Brown, New York University, Pittsburgh and Penn- sylvania. Then there wiil be the H. Y. P. and D. College Chess League tourna- ment. Princeton now is champion, the other_competitors being Harvard, Yale and Dartmouth. If all goes well, an intercollegiate chess congress will be held at Chicago in connection with the chess congress to be held there next year, according to the announcement of M. S. Kuhns of Chi- Turover has taken part in | B. WALKER. In connection with the reported death of Frederick D. Yates, the British | ex-champion, it is stated that in 1910 Dr. Siegbert Tarrasch, | master, objected to the inclusion of | Yates in the Hamburg tournament on | the ground that he was not strong | In that tourney Yates only |y victory in 16 games he played was over | | enough. Tarrasch. | | EXT year's international team solv- | ing tourney will be conducted by Hungary, winner of this year's tourney, in which 15 teams of 10 solvers each participated. The next tourney is the fifth, and will extend from Octo- ber 1 to31, 1933. The United States has | | cember 31, with the usual handicaps. | not yet been represented in these con- tests, but it undoubtedly could present |and move; Class C, pawn and two a strong team. End game No. 61, one of Alekhine’s | simplified victories: White—K on KR3, Q on K2, R on KB2, Kt on K4, Ps on KR2, KKt4, QB4, QKt3 and QR2: nine | pieces. Black—K on KKt. Q on Q2. | R on @5, B on KKt4, Ps on KR4, KKt3, | KB2, QB3, QKt5 and QR3; 10 pieces. Black to play and win. | solution to end'game No. 59: 1 | KtxPch, BxKt: 2 R—B8ch, KxR: 3 Q—B2ch, K—Kt2; 3 BxQ. and wins. If 3...K—K2; 4 Q—Bich and wins. CORE of game between Stoltz, the |3 Swedish champion, and Pirc. The | position is identical at White's | move 12 with the twelith game in the Alekhine-Capablanca match. The form- | er continued 12 PxQP. Stoltz should | have castled at move 15. Queen’s Gambit Declined. Pirc o1tz White Black. cago, president of the National Chess 7 B Federation. THE proposed masters’ tournament this month in New York City, with Dr. Alexander Alekhine, world champion, as the principal at- traction, has fallen through, owing to lack of financial backing. Dr. Alekhine is on his way to California, and then}r;e e recently celebrated his fortieth birthday anniversary. Dr. Alekhine is reported to have told Cincinnati players that he would rather play bridge .',hln chess as a pastime, and with his wife. If she wanis to play chess, it must be with some one else, as she does not give him enough competition to make it interesting. He | said he was a fair bridge player, and he thought chess helped his bridge game. His preference for bridge is be- cause the average chess player cannot give him enough competition. Golf Analyzed BY JOE GLASS. HEN you have learned to take the club back with the left arm and_hand so completely that vou do it unconsciously and automatically, the next detail of the backswing to be studied is its very start. This has much to do with determining the arc of the swing. An uprigit backswing means a ball hit high with distance sacrificed. It is desirable to have the arc of the swing as wide as possible. ~Also it should be flat at the bottom. You do not wish to hit down on the tall. RUNYAN TAKE CLUB PARALLEL WITH GROUND FROM ADDRESS To THIS POINT There is a brief interval after the clubhead moves back from the ball before the body begins to share in the swing—before the left knee be- gins to bend forward and in toward the right. This interval is impor- tant. During it star golfers—like Paul Runyan, shown above—take care that the clubhead shall go back straight and parallel to the ground. Some even drag it on the ground. This makes the arc of the swing wide and helps to produce flatness of swing when the club- head is coming forward through the 11 Study your backswing critically. See if you are doing as the experts teams claim the 135-pound independ- ant title. Call Lincoln 7127 « do. If not, practice to learn this detail. | 1f 27 RxQ_PxR: 29 Q_Kt, P—RG: 30 | @—R2'KR-Kt: 31 BxR, RxB and wins, & | pretty” ainish. G. U. FROSH LIST GAMES Most of 12 Basket Contests to Be Preliminary Affairs. Twelve games, most of them to be played as preliminarles to Georgetown varsity contests at Tech High, have been booked for the G. U. freshman basketers. Eastern, Tech and Central of the public high division are among teams booked. The G. U. frosh card: 1—St. Ji #—Alex 8—_Devitt, at Tech. 10—Central, at Central. at Eastern. Tech. ers, at Tech. Tech. —Eastern, —Tech, a March 7—Wlison Teach March 11—Central, at NAVY GRADS TO COACH Bauer, Henderson to Help in Win- ter Sports at Academy. ANNAPOLIS, December 17.—Two of the Naval Academy’s noted athletes of a few years past will act as assistant Winter season. Lieut. Joe Bauer, foot ball, basket bail and lacrosse letter man, now a Marine officer, will help with the basket ball team, and Lieut. Hariy Henderson, who won the middle- weight championship of the Intercol- legiate Boxing Asscciation in 1925, will assist with the Academy boxers. Licut. Bauer will report about Jan- vary 1. Lieut. Henderson now is con- nected with the Navy Athletic Associa- tion. = Pasadena Golfers Find New Hazards ASADENA, Calif, December 17 p (#).—Golfers and gallery at the Pasadena $4,000 Open Golf Tournament were kept busy yesterday chasing something even more elu- sive than pars, birdies and eagles. It was an insistent voice from no- where in particular. A woman with two dogs was mys- teriously ordered off the fairways. Quiet was requested on the eighteenth green, although no players were in "% situation became acute when Johnny Dawson, Chicago amateur, heard a distant voice shouting: “Hey, Johnny.” He dashed from the starting tee to the locker room and back again. Like an echo it came back again: “Telphone Mr. Dawson.” Johnny tried all of them without avail. He returned to discover & ventriloquisk | Golf and Country Club, undaunt- | the German | & coaches at the Academy during the | GENTRAL REGULAR Brunner Again Has Capable Squad—Two High Quints Win, Pair Beaten. AP HARDELL, Tech High foot ball coach, has an outstanding record for producing winners, but there are other coaches of schoolboy athletic teams hereabout Wwho have consistently turned out vic- torious teams. Fred Brunner, Central High swim- ming coach, has been tutoring strong teams so long as to become almost mo- notonous. This season his boys once more seem destined to garner many laurels, Yesterday they turned in their sec- ond win in as many starts, defeating tankers of Baltimore City College, 49 to 26. Central won six of the eight events. Wood was its high scorer, winning both the 50 and 100 yard free- style events. Summaries: on by City (Bernstein. ) Time. 1:5% n by Paskauskas Donald (@57 Yume £y (C)¢ third. Mac- 50-yard dash—Won by Wood (C.): sec- ond, Graves (C.): third, Reynolds (City). i free—Won by Baumgartner (C.): (City); third, Goodman (City). n by Snyder (C): n (C.); third, McDee (City). Si-vird iree—Won by Wood (C.): sec- lomie C): " hird, Resvolds (cityy. Won by Graves (C): C.): third, Barry (City) 3 50-yard ‘medley relay—Won_ by Central (Snyder, Slater, Baumeartner). Time. 1:34.3. r r second, 'HAT Tech has a reel scoring punch no cne now doubts. The Gray| | dribblers peppered the basket with | a will in routing St. John's, 57 to 36, on the Kaydets' court. It was McKin- ley's cecond win in as many starts. Reichhardt and Wheeler for the win- ners and Smith and Parkhill for the losers led the scorers. Summary: Tech ( Stanley, c. McCarthy. ¢ McCullod Daly. ¢ | ofverss Billings Reed. Totals....25 T57 Totals.... Referce—Mr. Keppel (A. B.). OOSEVELT'S basketers showed | plenty of the ol fight, but that wasn't quite enough, and George Washington’s frosh handed them a 40- 31 defeat on the Colonial court. Alferro | and Troup for the yearlings and Harris |and Grimm for the Teddy Bears located‘ | the hoop most consistently. Summary: | G. W. Frosh_(40) Roosevelt (1) | G.FPs & 2 Cavanaugh, 113 Plant { ax W 00 ‘SWIMMING VICTOR OKAY, BUILOING ToTAL LOSS. Two DRAGEGED OUT OERCOME ey SmMokeE. YeaH, | caN MAKE TH' BuLL Doa SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1932. THE CUB REPORTER MASTERS THE PROFESSIONAL TRICK OF BALANCING THE TELEPHONGE RECEIVER ON HIS SHOULDOER SPORTS. Illml"lflllfl"m' \ i ROD AND STREAM | BY PERRY MILLE OLLUTION has increased more than 400 per cent in the last 30 | vears, declared Stanton L. Dor- ey, sanitary engineer of the United States Veterans Administration | in a radlo address for Rod and Stream. He said that sewage is the used water supply of a community carrying domes- tic and industrial waste and in some | cases street washings, and that the | the menace to the water supply, the| over the chlorine demand of the water. but that a recent development may be used to remove tastes and odors, which is an activated carbon. Stanton said if you see some insects such as caddis worms, the nymphs of the dragon fly, May fly, Demselfly and certain other insects and plants you can be reasonably certain the water is safe for fish. On the other hand, insects in- dicating _sewage pollution are blood- | worms, the rattail maggot and sewage { 4 harmful eflects of sewage pollution is | worms. ‘What we need in the District of Co- o % creation of nuisance, the damage to!|jumbia is a sewage disposal plant so| 31 ' property values, the killing of fish. | that the city's raw sewage will not be Hayman, 4 4 Totals....11 B3l ENTRAL HIGH'S basketers are | | sweeping foe after foe from their | | path. Coach Bert Coggins’ boys put | the bee on the Washington-Lee high quint, 30 to 18, at Ballston. Bill Burke | was forced out on personals in the sec- |ond quarter, after, he had made 10/ ‘pom!s. Bone scored 9 for the losers. | central(a0) Smith. {.. .. Burke. £ | Melincoe. T 1 06 0 4 Bruner, it Totals. ... Totals. | Mr. ck Referee | ESTERN offered Baltimore City | W considerable fight for the first half | in their game in the Monumental | | City. but the home quint stepped out in | the later going to win, 34 to 14. Summary Pts. | Ruzicka, f.. Siegel. { Kraus, { Culley. ¢ | Ellinger. ‘& H'mphreys. & | Bellistri, &. . EEe Sonaoan? | 29M5=22:3953, EIEEEE) Totals ...101434 Totals ... hesda-Chevy Chase High's quint routed Priends Sehool tossérs, 50 to 10, on the losers’ court. Summary: -c. . 5. Beth.-C. C. s 1% Friends (10) GFpts Nichols. 2 Rover. 1 I.. Brown, Ferguson, Osborne. ' { REPRON. ) 999592201900y 2| maun Totals . Georgetown Prep managed a 19-13 win over Emerson’s quint on_the Boys Club court. Summary: Emerson (13). Scheele. 1. en, { . Prep. (19) Geo. Prep. (1) 0 T Keatin len. f. . Sy 2 Switt, & Totals. ... Rallying in the closing half, Hyatts- ville High tossers overcame the Kendall School quint. 16 to 11, on the court at Kendall Green. Mount Rainier High basketers went on 2 scoring spree to drub the Takoma- Silver Spring High dribblers, 35 to 10, at Mount Rainier. —e INGRAM SPEAKER AT A. U. Former Navy Athletic Director to Talk at Grid Banquet. Comdr. Jonas Ingram, former ath- letic director at the Naval Academy, will be the principal speaker at a ban- quct in_honor of this year's American University foot ball ~team Monday night at 7 o’clock in the dining room of the Woman's Residence Hall, on the campus. Basket Contest On Card Tonight Collegiate. George Washington vs. Duke at ‘Tech High, 7:30. Catholic University vs. Seton Hall at South Orange, N. J. o=k ol - @« Ball.g...... 0 1 1| | | chlorine to kill the bacteria Scholastic. Eastern vs. Alexandria High .at Alexandria. camage to live stock, impairment of | - recreational facilities gnd destruction of bathing places. Stanton, who recently returned to this country from a six-month study of sewage dispcsal plants in Germany under the auspices of the Oberlaender Trust, pointed out that Germany has | | a_population of abcut haif that of the . | United States but in area is only as | than in the previous year, which set a | large as California. Sewage treatment has been a necessity there form.many years. The public is perhaps better listeners, and said that the Prussian Bureau at Berlin-Dahlem is developing inexpensive plants for the small towns. TANTON pointed out that in a city of a half miliicn people the sewage works would cost $2.50 per capita, and a loading of one cent per thousand gallons of water consumed would pay interest operation and pay for the plant in less than 20 years without consider- ing possible profits to be derived from gas, sludge, and appreciation of prop- erty values. He said that undoubtedly 4 | profits could be obtained from trade wastes, and that Pasadena, Calif., last Winter made a good profit from the sale of sludge. Milwaukee, he said, re- cently reported that it cannot supply the demand. Stanton said that gas wastes, lye and caustic lime will kill everything in a stream by poisoning. Organic wastes such as domestic sewage, cannery wastes and milk wastes absorb the dis- solved oxygen of the stream so that fish cannot live. He said for years we have had clean water, and with subsequent disinfection & bacteriologically safe water, but in some places it has been | hard 'to get operators to add enough n account | of tastes. He said a badly polluted | water Tequires an excess of chlorine | Basket Ball Tips BY JOE GLASS. R. JOHN M. HARMON, Boston University'’s new basket ball” coach, is using a play this year from tip-off which brings fine re- sults when B. U.’s center is getting the better of his opponent. It hinges on sending both guards for- ward and transferring one forward back to defensive positicn after he has first feinted to take the tip-off. On the toss 4 (guard) breaks down-court_right of center and re- ceives the ball. At the same time right forward (3), after a feint toward the right sideline, wheels and runs in to take = pass from 4, whereupon he dribbles in'for a short shot at the basket. Accompénying movements include a feint to take the tip-off by left forward (2), who then passes cen- ter to a defensive position, and cuts to the forward court by 5 (guard) and 1 (center). After passing to 3, 4 also advances. Thus, if 3's drib- ble is interrupted he has three pos- sible pass receivers near him. In all there are four men on hand to handle rebounds allowed to flow into the Potomac River. | Stanton said a plant could be erected at a nominal cost. Washington certainly | | should have it. | HALF-MILLION fewer hunting | | | licenses were issued in the Unlted‘» States, including Canada, last year | record. Some States, however, issued | more licenses, reports the Bureau of | Biological Survey. Authorities on con- | | educated to its importance. he told his | ditions in the various localities, the bu- | reau suggests, may perhaps explain the | | variations from previous years as due | |to_the depression, to the drought of | 1930 and to change in license fees. | A large number of hunting fatalities | | and accidents have occurred this sea- | son. The United States may well fol- | |low the example set by Canada. The| | Department of Lands and Mines has imposed a maximum penalty, as pro- vided by the game act, in all cases against anv person who has caused in- jury to any other person by the dis- charge of firearms while hunting game. “The department ordered immediate cancellation of the hunting license of any person who has caused death or in- jury to another by reason of the dis- charge of firearms while hunting,” said the minister of lands and mines. “Fur- ther, the section of the game act pro- vides that the negligent parties shall not be issued a hunting license for a period of less than two years and more than five years has been rigidly enforced to the extent that such licenses have been cancelled for the maximum period of five years.” IONGRESSIONAL hearings are to be held shortly to determine what kind of department is necessary to co-ordinate all wild life conservation activities of the United States Govern- | ment, according to announcement of Senator Harry B. Hawes of Missouri. “Shall the new department of con- servation be placed under one of the present cabinet officers?” Senator Hawes asked, “or shall it be placed in charge of an undersecretary reporting direct to the President? Or shall it be in the form of an independent commission, re- porting to the President and to the Congress?” The new department, the Senator said, will reduce Government expendi- tures; co-ordinate and consolidate under one head all related Federal conserva- tion activities; provide a new source of revenue, contributed by sportsmen who hunt migratory _waterfowl; eliminate duplication of effort; unify and make administration more effective; extend and make more certain additional con- tacts with colleges, universities and fish and game administration generally. Now, Senator Hawes pointed out, the wild life conservation activities are scattered throughout the Department of Agriculture, the Department of the Inte- rior and the Department of Commerce, and that it is necessary for them to Teceive the co-operation of the other departments of the Government, in- cluding the Departments of Justice, State, the Treasury, Post Office, Labor and the Reclamation Bureau and the Federal Power Commission. Gamecock Tutors’ Jobs ih Jeopardy OLUMBIA, 8. C., December 17. mcouh‘r T ‘;t Jsout.h c-lmunmy lose eir jol anuary 1 or sharp salary cuts. “There may be no money,” the Record says it learned, “to carry on the entire athletic program of the university. Dr. R. K. Foster, director of stu- dent affairs, said he had sent all three coaches, including Head Coach Billy Laval, letters asking them what salaries they would accept next sea- son. Ceach Laval's contract, including | | Notre Dame Eager to Clash With | his salary figure, has another year to run. S tar Pin Tourney Dope in Nutshell | | | | O entry fee, bowler paying only cost of his or her games. Preliminaries: One will be held at_each bowling establishment | in Washington and environs, each contestant to roll five games, with | 25 per cent of the field to qualify for | roll-off. Entries for preliminaries close next Thursday. Competition to start De- cember 26. | Roll-off, at Lucky Strike, to start | January 2. | Handicaps: One-half difference between averages and scratch; men's scratch, 115, women's, 102. No bowler in_the men's division, how- ever, will be permitted more than 60 pins’ handicap a set and no woman more than 40. Handicaps will be based on last season’s averages | (minimum of 30 games) or, if a bowler was not affiliated with a league last season, on this vear's averages (at least 30 games). A bowler who has not been afiliated with a league this or last season will shoot from scratch. Prizes: Preliminaries—Each estab- lishment will have its own prize fund, made up of 25 per cent of the | money paid for bowling. The fund | will be split 30 per cent for first Pplace, 25 per cent, second; 20 per cent, third: 15 per cent. fourth, and 10 per cent, fifth. The high game for "the preliminaries, all included, | Will be worth $5 and $5 will be | awarded for high set. Roll-off—$480 | | 1 including 5 sach for High et s hlxpl;rga:‘rjn;h" details c i : tional 5000, branch 375. ' | KILMORE WILL LEAD ST. JOHN’S GRIDDERS | Backfield Man Is Chosenat Ban- quet at Which Letters Are Awarded to 70. ANNAPOLIS, December 17.—. (Mike) Kilmore, 140-pound halrg:?;?. was elected to lead the 1933 St. John's foot ball team at the annual athletic banquet held in Randall Hall last night. Kilmore, a Baltimorean, is a junior. Athletic awards were given to 70 Johnnies by Douglas Huntley Gordon, | president of the college. The mono- | grams were presented to the 1932 la- crosse team and the freshman and var- sity foot ball and cross-country team. A special monogram was presented to J. Dudley Digges, manager of intra- m\_x‘\:.all .spolrs. e only speech was made by Capt. elect Kilmore after he had been chosgn | by the foot ball letter men. Speaking | of the Hopkins game next year. Kil- more said the students would have to wait until the game before any predic- tions could be made. The awards: Varsity foot ball awards—Baucher, Capell, Casassa, Conn, De Lisio, Dona- | hue, Kilmore, Lamond, Calvin Lotz | ‘artee, Moore, Parks, Scheffen- | acker, Skordas, Ward, Weeks, Williams, | ‘Winston, Ziegler, E. I. Smith (manager). Freshman foot ball numerals—Archer, Blaisdell, Bruce, Gaeng, Hocges, La- | Porte, McCullion, McKinney, Pickering, | Pelky, Reed. Riley, Robinson, Sutton, | Taylor, Wohlfarth, Wingate, Young, | Jenkins (manager). | Varsity lacrosse—Lamond, La Motte, | MacCartee, Ramsey, Scheffenacker, | Wiliams, Athey, Bean, Carpenter, Phil | Lotz, Lynch, Morris, Nobie Russell, | Stearns, Trader, Ziegler, Purvis, Shry- ock (manager). Varsity cross-country—Joey Russell, Dunleavy, Sander, Daniel Hancock. | Freshman cross-country — Kennedy, McCullem, Boyd, Bailey, William Smith, James Hancock, Kibler, Gray. | Intramural manager — J. Dudley igges. St SEEKS CALIFORNIA TILT | Bears on Gridiron. Calif., December 17 (#). —Coach Hartley (“Hunk”) Anderson | of Notre Dame’s foot ball team is here to confer with University of California officials on the possibility of scheduling a grid game next year between the two institutions. “We are agreed on the desirability of such a nme,"; Ahnd!o(mn said. “The only question is that of finding & date nuufia for both teams.” PLAY DIXIE TEAMS Former Is Host to Georgia Tech—Latter Is Visitor to Florida Field. By the Associated Press. ERKELEY, Calif,, December 17.—With a wet field under- foot and more showers fore- cast, Georgia Tech's Engl- neers and California’s Bears clean up their 1932 foot ball slate today in an intersectional battle. Outweighed, outmanned and out- classed in the matter of seasonal rec- ords, the Southerners went into action as the underdogs, but fans who re- membered the outcome of the Alabama- St. Mary’s game a few wecks ago a cepted Tech’s short end position with mental reservations. ‘The consensus was that any team that could make one first down against 19 and yet defeat Alabama, 6-0, hardly could be counted out of the running until the final gun had sounded today. Alabama defeated St. Mary's, 6-0, in & post-scason contest in San Prancisco and early in the year St. Mary's played to a 12-12 tie with California. 'HE Bears took the field with a weight advantage on the line of between 10 and 12 pounds to the man. In the backficld California bulked larger but Georgia Tech had an apperent advantage in speed. Wide, open games were expected to be the order of the day, California switching to a passing attack after featuring power plays most of the sea- son. Georgia Tech's aerial offense has been the highlight of its play through- out the year. The teams lined ub with a record of one victory apiece in the intersec- tional series that began in 1929. Georgia_Tech defeated California, 8-6, in the first game, played in Pasadena as the annual Tournament of Roses fea- ture, while last year California jour- neyed to Atlanta to trim its rival, 19-6. Probable starting I Ggorsia Teeh. Po Ph Galloway AINESVILLE, Fi (#).—Univer: , December 17 v of California at Los Angeles ranked a top heavy favorite to de: the University of Florida in a “little Rose Bowl" foot ball game here today. It was “California day” in Florida by proclamation of the Governor and a parade of decorated floats was are ranged to precede the gridiron battle after the fashion of the tournament of roses at Pasadcna. Miss Elizabeth Brown of Deland. Fla., was named “Q of the day of cele- bration that brought thousands here and 17 sponsors assisted her. a festive occasion, but the s a little dampened for Florida E al! eing the Far-western team run thrcugh a smooth warm-up practice yesterday. Coach Charles Bachman of the Florida Gators, how= ever, sa:d his players were in “good con= diticn” and capable of giving a good account of themselves. Florida, with many sophomores on the line-up, was up against experience and e starting r Pos Muller . line-ups: i Florida. . Schirmer Starbuck \iacAn® Magizan . Brran erson . Brown . Hughes Basket Ball Notes are seeking more court clashes. Manager Bowers is handling the schedule at Hyattsville 1359. The Colonials won their eleventh straight last night, defeating D. C. Headquarters, Service Co., tossers, 27 to 13. Five games will be played tonight in the Sunday School League on the Y. M. C. A. courts. In the men's gymnasium Calvary Drakes and United Brethren will clash at 7:15 o'clock. followed by tilts between Calvary M. E. and Rhode Island Avenue and Trinity and Eld- brooke. Calvary Y. P. and Mount Vernon will oppose at 7:30 o'clock on the boys® court, followed by a game between Atonement and Kenilworth. Clark Griffith's scored a 35-to-15 vic- tory over Petworth. Colonial 130-pounders are seeking games with teams in their class. Call Georgia 5655. Bethesda Firemen and Rockville A. C. tossers will oppose tonight at_8:30 o'clock, 1 the Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School gymnasium. Teams in_the 130-pound class are challenged by the Dixie Polish five. 9;91; Manager McCormick at Lincoln ITH 11 victories in as many starts this season behind them, Richard's Colonials . A game for Tuesday night is wanted by the undefeated Rockville girls’ team. Call Manager William Sharf, at Rock- ville 54-F-14. HUSKIES WANT PHELAN Head Grid Coach at Washington to Be Offered New Contract. SEATTLE, December 17 (#).—Jimmy Phelan will be offered a new contract as head foot ball coach at the Univer- sity of Washington Monday, Graduate Manager Earl Campbell said today. Campbell did not divulge the terms beyond saying “We have made our most attractive offer.” Phelan's 3-year con= tract expires in Juno. Radiator SAUTO feiar : NATIONAL * SERVICE €0. INC. 2224 UTSTNW WRTH- 9033 1931 Chrysler “6” Sedan ‘6 wire wheels. fender wells, trunk rack. This car can hardly be told from new. You really must see it to &p- preciate its real value, $230 cash or trade: balance monthly. The Trew Motor Co. Plymouth-Dodge Distributors 1509 14th N.W, Decatur 1910

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