Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
S USES THIS SEASON T0 REBULD TEAM Bergman and Pixlee, Happy Here, Have Never Con- sidered New Jobs. tion this season. The Blue and Gray squac gets out today for its first workout, but the {raining this Winter will be more in the nature of a development process for another year than intensive preparation for serious competitive efforts. Coach Jimmy Mulligan issued suits to 17 men last Friday, and told them to report this afternoon. Many more are expected out and it is thought that the squad will be augmented as the week goes on until, Mulligan es- timates, it reaches 50. “What we may do in competition this Winter.” said Mulligan this morn- ing, “depends entirely on the men we develop. However, as we lost virtual- 1y our whole team of last year, I do not expect that we shall have anybody good enough to send to the big Northern mesis except Al Kelley, our sprintor. He undoubtedly will take part in sev- eral. If we are lucky and build up a relay team that should stand any chance at all in the indoor intercol- legiates we probably will enter it there. ‘That right now, though, is not very ly. We shall haye men in the Pennsylvania relays, and maybe in one or two other outdoor meets, but, the ‘way it looks to me at present, our work this year will be largely o matter of building a team’for next year.” Georgetown, while it_may not have much competition this Winter, has re- built its outdoor board running track and provided the same facilities it had when it was turning out great relay quartets. OCAL college foot ball coaches are well satisfied with their jobs and have no intention of quitting for service in other sectiorfs. Rumors have gone around that Dutch Bergman of Catholic University and Jim Pixlee of George Washington mlg&}:ot go to this place or that place, but both said defi- nitely this morning that they have no intention of leaving the local schools and have not had. “Catholic University has been to me everything that any man could ask,” said Bergman, “and I have no intention of leaving. Furthermore, I have not discussed with any other school the pos- sibility even of acepting a job elsewhere. If Catholic University is as satisfied with my work and with me as I am with Catholic University then I am due for a Jong stay in Washington.” Jim Pixlee expressed himself along the same lines as Bergman, saying that he is satisfied with the treatment acorded him at George Washington and that he certainly has no intention of leaving. IOMETIME ago it was rumored that Pixlee might go to some middle western schol and that Bergman was seriously considering a job at Holy Gross. As a matter of fact, there have been no discussions about such jobs and neither has even remotely con- sidered lelvh:{yh.h present place. Jack Hagerty, of course, came here Jast fall really to t.:xk: charge of t&he Georgetown squad next season. Under that condition, and especially after lis- t to Hagerty talk about what he expects to do next year, it is hardly conceivable that he would even con- sider a proposal to go elsewhere. As a matter of fact, it is known that Hagerty i3 more definitely pleased to be at Georgetown than he would be at any other school. The same is_true for ‘Walter Young of American University and for Teddy Hughes at Gallaudet. Out at Maryland the same system has been in effect for twenty years, and any change that may be made there either this year or in some future vear is not likely to affect the general policy in the least. 'EORGE WASHINGTON is the only| local school with a basket ball | game scheduled tonight, and it | %\;IVS out at Pittsburgh with Duquesne | versity as its opponent. The Co- Jonials expect the stiffest kind of oppo- | sition, as Duquesne nearly always is | strong in the court sport. Coach Pix- | Jee will not make the trip, as he is still somewhat “rocky” from his recent | attack of the flu. | Maryland opens its boxing season to- | night at Washington and Lee. The Old Liners are to present a different line-up from that of last year, the only men | due to don gioves against the Generals | from the 1932 squad being Keener, Car- | .Toll and Wingate. Against W. and L. the 115-pound class will be cared for | by Gruver, 125 by Carroll, 135 by Burns, 145 by Wingate, 155 by Keener, 165 b: McAboy, 175 by McCaw, and heavy weight by Farrell. In two years of college boxing Mary- Jand has won only one match, th: with St. John's last year. It lost w0 Washington and Lee last seasor. oy | three bouts to four. Coach Harmany, | while entirely unfamiliar with college | g in this section, thinks his men | have at least an even chance tonight MARYLAND got oft Saturday night | in its Southern Conference com- | petition to a very successful start, | 8s it took Virginia Polytechnic Insti- | tute into camp by a one-sided score. | However, Maryland has a real task ahead of it Thursday night, when Dukz University comes here. Duke has whip- | ped both Georgetown and George Washington and will try hard to add to its laurels. Maryland naturally is not desirous of taking a beating and the result probably will be one of the best basket ball contests of the whole season. | AVING a great foot ball team un- doubt>dly has its drawbacks. Au- burn, which probably had the strongest eleven in the South last Fall, | still has two open dates on its sche- | dule for next season, October 7 and | November 11. Evidently, other schools ate not seeking with anv great show | of desire Auburn's opposition. Georgetown and American Univer- sity are back from highly successful basket ball trips. The former beat Canisius College and Colgate and lost to New York Univers only 3| points, which constitutes a better record | dor the trip than even its own backers /thought at all probable. The results | .of the trip is all that is needed to ighow that the Blue and Gray has resl strength and will prove a formidable opponent for all the teams it meets. 1American University swamped Virginia | Medical College and won by 1 point | from Hampton-Sidney and has every reason to feel proud of its accomplish- ment. BY H. C. BYRD. EORGETOWN plans to take part in very little indoor 1, GOPHERS FILL SCHEDULE | MINNEAPOLIS, January 9 (P).— Completion of the Minnesota foot ball schedule for 1933 with the signing of South Dakota State for the opening| game here September 30 has been an- unced. m'rm: completes tke eight-game pro-| >m for the Gopher eleven, which will | 1:0 play six Big Ten teams and P“u'l : E;fi g track and field campetl—‘ athletic traced directly to President Abelardo L. | Rodriguez and his great love for and | interest in all kinds of sports. Shortly | after becoming provisional president this Fall the President initiated the | move to provide federal direction and | encouragement for all kinds of sports. PORTS THE EVEN Georgetown Looking Ahead in Track : Guest Hard Pushed in Los Angeles Open Offers Too Poor To Draw Johnson | ALTER JOHNSON would rather remain at his Alta Vista home and tend his chickens than | accept any of the offers base ball | has made him since h> was relieved of the management of the Nationals. | “I know I can eat at home,” Walter said this morning. “Maybe if I went to one of the towns that have offered jobs I might have to get into the bread line. All offers made me are from clubs that are broke.” Johnson declared he knew nothing of the Jersey City managerial post which New York reports have stated he is to fill. International League club owners, who are to meet in New | York temorrow for an effort to- stabilize the wabbly Jersey City club, | are rumored to be ready to offer Johnson the pilot's position. PENNQU TIGERS IN STARTER ;Opens Basket Ball League Play at Princeton in Game Wednesday. \ | | | By the Associated Press. ! EW YORK, January 9.—Prince- ton and Pennsy ing contenders in the Intercol- | legiate Basket Ball League, in | which Dartmouth already has estab- | lished itself as an outstanding favorite, |lead the way into general competition |this week. Every team but Yale will get a taste of action, with Penn playing two games. The Quakers invade Princeton Wed- nesday for their first test and one of their hardest. Fritz Crisler's Tigers, with ‘eight straight vicfories hehind them, have plenty of scoring punch and are rated as one of the league's best teams. Penn has won four straight, showing a lot of power against Penn State Saturday. ‘The Quakers’ second game Saturday stacks them up against Dartmouth’s Indians, a team that was considerud to be dangerous and proved it last Satur- day by walloping Cornell, another strong quintet, 45 vo 21, .in the opening game of the league campaign. A second Saturday contest sends Columbia’s green team against Cornell at Ithaca. Dartmouth never was in danger egainst Cornell, bottling up all the Red for- wards, but Lou Hatkoff, who scored 12 points. The Indians, leading 22-13 at the half, never were less than five points ahead in the latter part of the game. Bob Miller, a substitute guard last year, topped the point getters with 15 points, netting seven field goals. Al Bonniewell, a sophomore, tallied eight e iits. stiwed rising um| owed surp! stren last Saturday in defeating Pbrdhn:-lq: strong team, 43-42, in a strenuous over- time game and may make more trouble for Cornell. MEXICO TO CONTROL AMATEUR ATHLETICS Department for Development of Sports Created by National Government. EXICO CITY, January 9 (P).— Amateur athletics - in Mexico, which have developed without supervision to a somewhat surprising degfeell central of efficiency, was brought under direction and guidance January the National Council of Physical Education taking over development of | all amateur sports. Creation of this department for the development of Mexico 1is Congress has been asked to appropri- ate 2,000,060 pesos to organize the na- | tional council, and establish branch of- | fices in every State capital. Shadows of the Past BY L C. BRENNER. ZACK WHEAT ERE'S one of your National League batting champions— Zack Wheat, who in 1918 hit .335 for the Brooklyn Dodgers, and dethroned Eddie Roush of the Cin- cinnati Reds. You may recollect that Wheat for nearly two decades was one of the slugging standbys of the Brooklyn outfit. He was a_member of the pennant winning Dodgers of 1916, and he was with them when they battled to the top in 1920. But Wheat had to admit defeat in his great ambition, to star with a world championship club, for in neither of their world series did the Dodgers come near victory—first against the Sox, and then against the Indians, Whedt in recent years has been farming out at Polo, Mo. While he was with Brooklyn he spent his off seesons on the farm, and when the Athleties give him his release, fol- lowing his having been cast off by the Dodgu. Zack went, out to Polo to stay there, He spends - able time in St. Louis, too—still vearning for the spangles again, ACopyrisht. 19i3.) ED SIEGEL LOOMS - AS TRACK BIG SHOT Swedish-American Sprinter Takes Spotlight From Olympic Stars. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, January 9.—Write in the name of Ed Siegel, the husky 19-year-old sprinter who wears the colors of the Swed- ish-American A. C, New York, as a young man to be watched during the rest of the 193% indoor track season. Siegel, who performed sensationally at the start of the last indoor campaign, teok over the job of providing the ex- citement at the opening meet of the new seasonr Saturday, the annual games of thie Columbus Council, K. of C. He swept the sprint series away from a flock of better-known sprinters and wiped out the listed indoor records for the two shorter évents, the 60 and 80 meter dashes. FTER being set back for a false start in the 60 meters, he. finished in 7 seconds flat, a fifth of & second ahead of the standard Bob McAllister set in 1927, then he did the 80 in 9 seconds, clipping a fifth from the mark he made last year. His mark for the | }on meters was comparatively slow, | | | | i 1, making » comebatk after a log | | injury had spoiled the latter part of | last year's indoor season and all the | outdoor running, took the limelight away from the Olympic stars, Leo Sexton and Joe McCluskey, and Harry Hoffman of New York University, win- ner of the famous Columbus “500” in a thrilling blanket finish. ¢CLUSKEY, the Fordham ace, had things all his own way in the 5,000-meter event, winning by :'bout 150 yards from George Barker of . Y. U. in 15:133, nearly a minute slower than record time. Sexton, apparently out of condition, made the best shotput of the evening, 48 feet 3% inches, but was more than 4 feet short of his world indoor record and he gave away such big handicaps that he failed to qualify. TRAPSHOOTING CLUB HAS BRIGHT PROGRAM Many Events Listed for Gunners STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., MONDAY, JANUARY 9, 1933 A TITLE ASPIRANT’S ROAD TOM DOERER ~ “Tom DoERER at Benning Range During' Remainder of Month. TEMPLE FIVE FACES TWO RIVALS IN WEST Tackles Carnegie Tech and West Virginia in Basket Ball Loop Tilts This Week. N attractive program for the re- mainder of the month has been arranged . for Washington Gun Club trapshots. A 50-target contest from 16 yards with trophy for high score is scheduled next Saturday. There also will be a trophy for high-added score on 50 | BY the Assoclated Press. targets. Two events are_carded on the $100 handicap contest, 16 to 20 yards, based on club averages. There will be trophies for high scratch and high added scores in a 50~ target shoot from 16 yards on January NEW YORK, January 9.—Temple's rather ambitious invasion of the West- ern part of the circuit marks this week'’s campaigning in the newly organized Eastern intercollegiate basket ball Con- THE SPORTLIGHT BY GRANTLAND RIC] CHAMPIONS AND THEIR CHANCES FOR 1933. No. 2. Gene Sarazen. funny part of it is Gene Sarazen definitely set out in the Spring cl: 1932 to win both the British Open at Sandwich and the United States Open at Fresh Meadow. Hundreds of golfers have dreamed about this double clean-up, but few have faced this two-ply barricade with the courage, confidence and deep determination Sarazen carried with him last year. I played with him at Fresh Meadow| “Anyway,” he said in reply to & a few days before he sailed for Eng- | query, “I'll be out there hustling to the land on the first lap of the double title | last putt. At least I'll give the old hunt, and while he offered no direct | game all I've got.” 'NAVY INTEREST KEEN "IN AMERICAN U. TILT | |Fagles to Be Met Wednesday Among Three Teams Beating Middy Quintet Last Winter. Epecial Dispatch to The Star. NNAPOLIS, January 9.—The Dis- trict of Columbia will furnish the two collegiate basket ball teams ' of Annapolis with three of their four | THRTEEN WITHN 5 SHOTS OF LEAD Deal Pro, After Two Sub-Par Rounds, One Stroke Up at Halfway Mark. BY PAUL ZIMMERMAN, Associated Press Sports Writer. OS ANGELES, January 9.— Charles Guest, a hometown golfer back from the East, was well on the way to | making good today. The dark, smiling professional from Deal, N. J., who grew up to his game here, held a one-stroke lead as the 52 survivors of the first two rounds .of the Los Angeles $5,000 open turned to the final 36 holes of play. Two par-shattering rounds put Guest into the lead with 139. He toured the tricky Wilshire Country Club course in 70 on Saturday, a stroke better than perfect figures and yesterday had a 69. With scores of 150 and better for 36 holes required to remain in the cham- pionship, and 13 within 5 strokes of the lead, it was Guest’s tough task of pound- gg par again today to preserve his ace. EE were within a stroke of the leader—Craig Wocd, Deal, N. J., who already has wen two Califor- nia Winter tcurnaments; Leo Diegel, from Agua Caliente in old Mexico, and Willie Hunter, Los Angeles, who once won the British amateur title before joining the play-for-} ranks, All had 140. Hunter, a delil player, plod- in {My with a 68, the the tournament to date. tered par for the 36 holes of play, although Fay Coleman, a former ama- teur from Culver City, Calif,, stood in Waco, Tex., had to be considered. ' were tled for tenth place with 144s, within stirking distance of the first-prize money. They were Fred Morrison, Agua Caliente champion from Pasadena; Horton Smith, Oak Park, once one of the l winners in the game: Eddie Loos, Chi- cago, who shared the lead on the first day; John Dawson, scratch amateur from Chicago, and Harold Sampson, Burlingame, Calif., cach had 144s. Three of the favorites were well down the list. Gene Sarazen, New York, open champion of th> United States and Great Britain, had 147. Macdonald Smith, three times winner of this tour- on-qualifiers, whica in- British amateur HIGH FIVES TO START comment, I could see he intended to ‘There is one angle of Sarazen's play opponents this week, American Uni- | 21. Two events on the distance handi~ cap contest also afe planned. A trophy for high scratch 16-yard scores at 50 targets and another for the high added-target count will be awarded January 28. Two events on the handicap contest, 16 to 20 yards, also are listed. S PEPS MILITIA SPORTS Lieut. Bean Plans Varied Action for Annapolis Doughboys. ANNAPOLIS, Md., January 9.—A ference while Pittsburgh's Panthers re- main at the top of the heap, idle so far as league competition is concerned. ‘Temple, which took a 43-25 trimming from the Panthers in their first confer- ence game last Saturday, tackles Car- negie Tech Tuesday and West Virginia Wednesday to complete its Western round. Although the positions of both these rivals remain in doubt because of the lack of early competition, the Tar- tans looked good Saturday when they opened with a 35-32 triumph over West Virginia. | In defeating Temple, Pitt strengthened plan to make the State Armory here a | its claims to the top ranking, but suf- place of physical education is being | fered a costly injury when Claire Cribbs, considered by Lieut. Robert C. Bean, |Star center, crashed into a wall. He commanding officer of the local ma- Was believed to have suffered a broken chine gun company of the Maryland | 8nkle. The Panthers piled up a 23-9 Militia. lead in the first half and never were in He aims to promote rivalry with |danger. other teams in such sports as boxing | Carnegie had a somewhat stiffer and basket ball, and probably even in |Struggle, winning in the second half on foot ball. The soldlers also are anxious | & spectacular scoring splurge by Smith, | to take up wrestling. | who rang up six field goals. At present Company M is sponsoring | a team in the Annapolis Basket Ball | League, which plays at the Armory. | — | | LACROSSE DATES ERASED | | | | | | Varied Sports PROFESSIONAL HOCKEY. National League. Contests With St. B . | Detroit, 3; Boston, 1. o John's Team. | Gpicago, '4; Montreal, 3. ANNAPOLIS, Md., January 9.—St.| New York Rangers, 2; New York | gghn's College lacrosse team, which will | Americans, 2. (Tie). gin practice within a few weeks, lost ional | two games over the holidays, but not Enternationsl Eeague, on the playing field. | Syracuse, 2; London, 1. During the Yule letters from Dart- ‘anadian- Leagu |mouth and New York University | mfifl o-Amcrloan = fived informing Athletie Director M. | Eoes %, Buiateliuinie, t Riges that contemplated trips American Association. were off, due to curtailment of athletic 2 e e St. Paul, 4; Kansas City, 3. alith Georgla and Georgla Tech | Amateur Hockey. ropping the game temporarily as an| Balf : - economy measure, the Johnnies' sched- | o]u‘}‘{‘:é::ey %fige’;uiwb&gfkfithfi et Professional Foot Ball. Portsmouth_Spartans, 13; Oklahoma City Chiefs, 7. BASKET BALL NOTES NLESS a carbon copy of Bozle Berger, twice an all-America Dartmouth and N. Y. U. Cancel | ule will be confined to Maryland, West | Point, Hopkins, Swarthmore, Washing- | ton College and a two or three game | | trip to New York. Spirited competition is certain to | tiractive game of e schedule o fat attractive game of the schedule so far basket ball choice, can be Un- | ypen the Bureau of Investigation and | earthed, Washington's most 1 Bolling Field tossers clash tonight at 9 promising rivalry of 1933 may have a o'clock an the Bolling Field floor. Bgnar 2 Tgl win the crown last year Inves- B iee 15! asanie, fosss Sotughib by HONS igation was forced to down the Avi- |ators in a series which was red-hot the French Eagles and the Lustin-|from start to finish. Both clubs again Nicholson quint, the Capital's leading are strong this year and figure to be | floor fives. Twice, yesterday and sev- very much in the running. | eral days ago, Bozie missed his game Another Government League con- with the French Eagles and both were | Depariment tossers and.the Crop Pro- | men TS AN 0- dropped. Osage Pros conquered the Eagles on the occasion of Berger's first duction quint. absence, but in a return game the fol- Scores yesterd: Northeast Boys’ Club, 37; P. O. P. of lowing week, with Berger in the line- up, the Frenchies routed the Osage| | Baltimore, 21, Sholl's ' Cafe, uint. Yesterday's loss, sans Berger, | ‘7% 14 ‘1. E 2 AQUnnuoo Marines, 39; Warrenton was to the Passon Pros by 27 t0 23. | A, C., 30, Lustine-Nicholson, which dropped its| Richard’s Colonials, 36; Brooks A.C., 26. A. Z. A, 28; Moseans, 12. | first game and then won four straight, Fort Myer Cubs, 40; Triple Tau, 20. has not been without Berger's ‘services | yet, but his value to a team never was McLean A. C. 57; Laurel National | Guard, 26. more effectively demonstrated than yes- :rd:y, "hf;lg he sunku{o;n’thfleld IOC-‘t-;‘ the waning moments of the game Terry's Service, 32; J. C. C,, 29. give the Lus-Nics a 32-t0-23 victory Terrg'l Betv!?e, ,35 {{.%tcc_ 224‘ over the Gettysburg, Pa. Fletwings.| Mercury A. C., 36; Ballston, 22, The two teams were running neck and e neck when Berger's flurry of basketers| Teams wanting games follow: | enabled the Lus-Nics to pull away. He| Lustine-Nicholson A. C. with 145- 1. pound quints.. Call Greenwood 2114. Potomac Business Men, with an un- scored 10 points in Play in the newly formed Washing- }l;r;ted team, for tonight. Shepherd Sholl's Cafe, for tomorrow. Decatur ton Amateur Basket Ball League will | get under way Thursday in the Hyatts- ville Armory, which will be the scene | 0032. of two games. Griffith Consumers will rmwm the Boys' Club and Company 43; Alexandria PFra- | | wi:m-lmlsl,‘ 1]«:« wgnuay,’ I;h gym. Lincol , between 6:: 7 o'clock, x own and tackle the | dence in 1933 than he ever had before. | give everything he had to the job of | that is worth recounting. His ability to picking up the purple toga dropped by | recover from sand traps with the heavy- Bobby Jones after his four-crown | soled niblick he uses is so marked that climax. in his match with Ouimet he pulled off There were two remarkable features | one of the most unusual plays ever to Sarazen’s play at Sandwich and at | known to golf. Presh Meadow in the two big opens. | Facing a certain green, which sloped In the first instance he proved “there | to heay underbrush just beyond, and is also courage demanded in front run- | not knowing the exact distance of the ning.” He set the pace from the start | shot, Sarazen deliberately played to a bunker to the left of the green, calling the shot in advance. and held it through 72 holes. At Fresh Meadow he reversed the Sandwich method by coming from be- | “And from that bunker,” Ouimet said hind in the finest finishing single round | later, “he almost holed his recovery.” championship golf has ever known. He| Next—Ellsworth Vines. played the last 28 holes in 100 strokes, | (Copyright, 1933, by North American News- 2 matter of 12 under even 4s. e e ever thirown ‘2t & goit ROk Sarases PENN,_YA—I.'E RESUME | GRIDIRON RELATIONS was hitting his drives so far and straight that he was using a spade mashie for | his second on hole after hole of from 390 to 420 yards. 1 OLF is the hardest of all games to i i i . G Boue i advance’ fom ana much’i(imne in 1934 Will Be First Be. iming and mental attitude can i change so-auicly Trom day 1o das. | tween Quakers and Elis uck can play a leading role. A vital i putt drops in—or quivers on the lip—or in Nearly Degade. hops cg; and th;n Sk = es an lies—good breaks and bad breaks—can make or wreck. ; By i Apcjital Rpms. Sarazen will train for the campaign | PHILADELPHIA, January 9.—The .‘;f Ty T s ::p&x: shrg s‘:‘:so season | University of Pennsylvania and Yale He has built himself a 22-ounce driy- | Will Tesume foot ball relations in 1934 | er, which is fine training for hand and | With a game to be played in New Haven in the third week of October, it wrist_development—and for the swing- ing_idea. | was said at the university today. He is smart enough to know that | While no official announcement of hand and wrist strength play a big | the game was made, Dr. E. Leroy Mer- part in any golf swing. | cer, dean of the department of Physical Gene also ex&m to have his stocky | Education, said the game had been ar- legs ready for the long hike; freshness | ranged. can play a big part down the stretch. “While I am not sure of the exact He worked for weeks, running up and | date,” he said, “it will be in mid-Oc- down outdoor steps, to have his legs | tober. comparing to our date with Dart- ready for the grind last Spring, and in | each case he felt just as fresh in the The game will be played almost nine fourth round as he did in the first. years after the last Pennsylvania eleven The double open champion has a |invaded the home of the Bulldogs. game which knows no weak spot. He is| Previous to that game the two schools long and straight off the tee with an|had not met for 32 years, their last apparent minimum of effort. He is a |game being in 1893, when both were fine iron player and one of the greatest | members of the famous “Big Four” of bunker players I have ever seen, | foot. ball—Pennsylvania, Yale, Harvard For example, in his match with Pran- 1 and Princeton. cis Oulmet, Gene was in nine traps, yet — >~— | WILL PLAY NOTRE DAME down in one putt nine times and on several occasions he almost holed his recovery shots. He is also a much im- proved putter, with a smooth, even nyio State Signs Two-Year Grid the year, he seems to be as completely | Agresnent Wik “Zell” equipped as one can be for the new COLUMBUS, Ohio, January 9 (@).— road. | A two-year home-and-home agreement officials. The first game will be played in 1935 at Columbus. mouth for 1933." touch. As he keeps In condition throughout Above all. he will have more confi- | for foot ball games with Notre Dame has been signed by Ohio State athletic He has thrown aside the changing| moods of overdepression and over- optimism he knew too often from 1922 | versity playing the Midshipmen here Wednesday and St. John's in Washing- ton Saturday and George Washington eomn;inw Annapolis for a game with St. John’s on Wednesda: ‘edny y. Special interest is being taken in the game between Navy and the Eagles, one of the three teams which defeal Navy during its schedule of 19 games last Winter. It will meet both of the others - this month—Pennsylvania at Philadelphia on January 21 and Mary- land here a week later. Navy has a great offensive team this year and averaged 50 points a game in the three contests up to this time. Saturday, against Pranklin and Marshall, it did not show quite the keen team play of the two earlier games as it had not quite settled down after the holidays, Coach Johnny Wilson will start Borries and Dormin, his crack for- wards from the plebes of last season, and will have Capt. Bedell and Lough- lin, both remarkable scoring guards. in those positions. Kastein, veteran center, hurt his knee early in Satur- day’s game and may not start. Decker. center on the plebe five last year, will take his place if necessary. St. John's has had a rather poor season. though it registered a victory over Willlam and Mary in an early game. The team is improving steadily, however, under Coach Val Lentz. ICE RINK ON GRIDIRON T0 RAISE IOWA FUNDS Students, Townspeople Pay Well for Skating on 0ld Hawkeye Foot Ball Field. 'OWA CITY, Towa, January 9 (#).—On Towa field, where once the Devines and Lockes smashed their way to touchdowns, University of Iowa stu- |dents now pay to skate—that the | Hawkeye athletes of this era may carry on. Hard pressed financially, Coaches George T. Bresnahan and Otto Vogel of the track and base ball teams, re- Spaclzalyfdanat i plat of thdlin the old foot ball field for use as a skat- ing rink. Punds will be used for buying athletic equipment and financing roac trips for e teams. ‘The coaches’ project has met with instant success. Without a suitable place to skate, Jowa students and townspeople have patronized the rink to such an extent that a full schedule to 1932. The Big Gamble. ARZEN expects to take his-shot at | the Pritish Open once more, and he | will be the leading favorite, with a good, sound chance to win. He will have rougher going at Chi- cago in the United States Open, where | he will find such stars as Olin and| Mortie Dutra, Walter Hagen, Craig ‘Wood, Bill Burke, Pred Morrison, Denny Shute, Harry Cooper and a flock of younger talent coming on. | The American test is now much harder than the British test. The days | of Vardon, Taylor and Braid have pass- | ed—and no younger stars have come | along to fill the gap. | ‘The fleld, in these big championships, | is now beginning to look in Sarazen's | glrectlufl as it once worried about Bobby | ones. Any factor which helps to scatter concentration on the ntian job can be important. Walter Hagen and Bobby Jones have won more than one big championship for this reason, as the leading contenders began to play them instead of pl CAMBRIDGE, Mass., January 9.— ships stood renewed today as The gridiron rivalry begun in 1877 ton and recriminations on both sides. J. Bingham, director of af ics at laying golf. said: 'ky, broad-shoul ements have been completed and Princeion, ovember 3, 1934, One of America’s classic and Harvard and Princeton scheduled was shattered in 1926 with unofficial Last night the feud was officially end- Harv: and Thurston J. Davies, “Arra (oot ball games between Har- played in Cambridge N and the second in By the Assoctated Press. most colorful athletic relation- home-and-home games with each other. charges of “rough play” against Prince- ed with a joint statement by William supervisor of sports at Princeton, which for two the first to be Princeton November teams. Harvard, Princeton Reconciled But for Two Years at a Time | 'O other official statement was forth- coming from the athletic au- thorities of either university, but it was believed that the ever-grow- ing sentiment on the part of graduates |and undergraduates of both, coupled with financial considerations, resulted in the restoration of the “big three” in_Eastern collegiate foot ball. ‘With the advent of Dartmouth-on the schedule of all three, athletic observers were pointing out today that with the reconciliation between Harvard and Princeton a new “big four” had been mmeil Prln’ lubt‘aun and Dlrt.m" &xth an- nouncs oo games each Howerer: the t for only wever, agreement for early Nc.ember games m Harvard has not withdrawn from its stand which was an official factor in the break—that of refusing to basis as Yale games, and to enter than two-year agreements at by rotating final into more a time, seems a certainty for - the H‘vkeyel COUNTY TITLE SERIES Hyattsville and Mount Rainier Clash Friday in Quest of Prince Georges Laurels. ATTSVILLE, Md, January 9.— Hyattsville High and Mount Rainier High basketers face Fri« day night at 8 o'clock in the Mount's ,ymmtheopenlnqmennhnrurh or the Prince Georges County cham- pionship. For the first time the Mounts are given a real chance to win the title. H, zmulelglgr’momfi hree [yal 2 games this week, enmunteflncp L’he Annapolis and Solomons sextets in liminaries ~-Chevy Wednesday afternoon at Mount Ra PERRY RANKED BEST OF BRITISH NETMEN Supplents Austin as Leading Ten- nis Player—Move Popular Among Racketers. official 1932 ranking lists of Britain’s lawn tennis players have been announced. The lists, each of which places 12 | players instead of 10, as was the case {in 1931, with figures in parentheses in- dicating the ranking of the players that year, are as follows: Prederick J. Perry (2) H. Wilfred Austin (1) 1. 2. 3. 4 b F. David (8) 6. A v 7. Baward R. Avory (10) 8. Ian G. Collins (—) 9. Nigel Sharpe (9) 10. Charles R. D. Tuckey (—) 11. Kenneth C. Gandar-Dower 12. Frederick H. D. Wilde (—) ‘Women. . Miss Mary Heeley (5) : Mre, Bieen P Whistin (m‘) I . Mrs. Elleen P. | Miss Kathleen o =) Betty Nuthall . Y @2 | ) accept | near