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THE EViENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1933. Southern Conference Recasting Looms : College Athletic Amiability Increases POLICY STATEMENT || 20 YEARS AGO | pr(ReeTOWN PREP ECONOMIC TRIALS ATWEETNGLIELY MFEsssss QUNTIS LMBIG BETTER RELATIONS " Charlottesville th | General Program of This| coming pring, oo Princeton- Harvard Peace coming Spring. Basketers Promise to Par- ‘Work has begun on the new ball X Week’s Session Not Yet | D7k of the New York Highlanders allel Fine Record of Opens Way to Formation Knbwn to Schools. of “Big Five.” at Broadway and Two Hundred and Twenty-fifth street, s Frank L. Kramer, leading Ameri- Gridironers. can sprint cyclist for 12 years and now world champion, is to rope to seek further honors, Jack w:rho%.”ume right-hand signed with the ders. Buck Howard, Western High ath- lete, .and Billy Martin, Georgetown Prep, will enter Brown University in the Fall, according to reports. Aloysius basketers easily defeat- ed Epiphany. McCarthy for the win- ners and Gheen for lut}e losers starred. SPORTS —By TOM DOERER 'OWARD SHANKS and Joe En- gel, two of the youngest mem- the Wi ball bers of ashington team, signed contracts for next BEST BOXING MATERIAL (N N AND PHILA. EORGETOWN PREP, which swept through the last foot ball season with only one de- feat, also is going to cut a wide swath in basket ball, judging from the start made by Coach Joe Gardner’s proteges, The Garrett Parkets, who, prior to the holidays, won 6 of 7 games, piling up 260 points to 135 for their opponents, ' resume activities tomorrow, engaging the sturdy Emerson quint at Garrett | Park. | Stewart, center, with 86 points, is the | leading scorer so far for Georgetown Prep. Allen and Tom Keating, for- wards, have registered 65 and 49 points, respectively, and Capt. Nee, guard, has garnered 42, Hannon, Egan, Jim Keating, Mayock | and Sheehan are other leading mem- bers of the squad. Four other court games are carded here tomorrow. More than usual inter- est attaches to three of them. They are the Gonzaga-Eastern encounter at Eastern, the St. John's-Tech battle at Tech and the Central-Mount Joseph's | D) =y l of Baltimore tilt at Central. WHAT THE GRAY Kendall School and Takoma-Silver I RANGER GETNNG READY FOR ANOTHER. SHOT 1 UNCLE'S IN A BY H. C. BYRD. Southern Conference, as "] it is now composed, meets Friday and Saturday of this week at Richmond to give full consideration to the situation which now confronts it. This will be the first gathering of the big Southern athletic organization since the split at Knoxville, early in December, when 13 schools, composing the Far Southern group, withdrew from the South- ern Conference to form a new body. Not an inkling has come from any member of the present Southern Con- ference, made up of South Carolina, Clemson, North Carolina State, North Carolina University, Duke University, ‘Washington and Lee, Virginia Military Institute, Virginia Polytechnic Insti- tute, Virginia and Maryland, as to what is to take place at the Richmond meet- | BY LAWRENCE PERRY. EW YORK, January 10— Whether through stimu- lating influences of eco- nomic adversity on the one hand or on the other its softening effects, the fact in any case is clear that recent weeks have seen greater strides in the diplomacy of intercollegiate ath- letics than had previously marked a span of several years. The resumption of foot ball relations between Harvard and Princeton has been hailed in public prints as a stun- ning surprise; but it was no surprise to readers of this column, wherein more 2 Ll than a week ago it was definitely stated | S = = N/ J that a foot ball agreement between the | 4 ( i 3 Crimson and Tiger was close at hand. In this connectiont something more may be said. In official statements Monday it was announced that the Harvard-Princeton contract relates to the years 1934 and 1935, just as the Princeton-Dartmouth agreement is lim- ited to two years. The Princeton-Dartmouth alliance will run much longer than that and the Nassau-Cambridge entente probably will. It all depends upon the satisfac- tory completion of plans now being worked out for the “Big Five” merger— Harvard, ceton, Yale, Cornell and Dartmouth—a project exclusively an- nounced by this column some days ago. N AND READY To \WORK AT Low RATES, Too.. ole and Shipley, forwards; Morris, center, and Day and Banders, guards. Del Pratt, speedy infielder of the Sot& Louis Browns, is 24 years old today. KEEPSIE REGATTA ENTRIES ARE FEW Smallest Field in Years Is Prospect if Rowing Classic Is Held. ing. | 5t 15 known that some very divergent | opinions exist as to possible action on some of the questions due to come up, but what action on any of them the conference may take seems to be kept well under cover, if anybody has any JUBLIC high school series games be- . tween Eastern and Roosevelt at idea of what is to be done. T is not a secret that several colleges in the South Atlantic section were rather glad that the split at Knox- ville took place, because they felt that 1t opened the way to them for member- ships they have been seeking time. Just what may be done about increasing the size of the present organ- ization nobody seems to have the least | 1de ea.. ‘This probably will come up for dis- cussion along with other matters affect- ing future policy. It is likely that most of the discussions will concern the gen- eral policy that is to govern the body, but if anybody knows what the nature of the discussions are to be that person is giving a perfect demonstration of how to keep things to himself, In addition to holding the confer- ence meetings, there will be gatherings of coaches and athletic dirgctors to arrange basket ball, base ball, track and boxing schedules next year. Usually this meeting has taken place at Lynch- burg later in the year, but it was de- cided that it would be more convenient to hold it at this time. Also it is stated that arrangements are to be made for the boxing tournament and t ball tournament. But of all bits of news that may come from the conference meetings, in all probability the most eagerly awaited will be any statement the conference y make in regard to the split a ‘will state its position in regard to that and also, perhaps, make some announce- | ment as to the future. | ATHOLIC UNIVERSITY'S bflflfl-l By the Associated Press. EW YORK, January 10.—One of the smallest flelds in years probably will face the starter’s gun in the annual Poughkeepsie regatta this year, assuming the Inter- collegiate Rowing Association decides to hold the annual classic. Only two schools, Columbia and Cali- fornia, definitely are committed to par- ticipation in the 1933 regatta, although Navy “very probably” will be repre- sented. Cornell, Syracuse and Penn all are undecided at present, although definite announcement, one way or another, may come at the annual meeting of.the association here Thursday. Curtailment of all athletic activities / except basket ball and foot ball are to be considered by Cornell authorities to- night, and financial conditions may force abandonment of intercollegiate rowing competition for the year. Penn, which sent only a varsity crew to Poughkeepsie last year, and Syracuse likewise may decide, for reasons of economy, to pass up the famous regatta this year. Maxwell Stevenson of Columbia, chairman of the board of stewards, feels admitting the possibility that the date may have to be advanced and the dis- tance of the varsity and junior varsity races shortened. bai team entertaine wne cuastico |GOLF NATURAL SEEN ht in what it! expects to be one of its difficult games. ‘The lers think they can win, but only after a real battle. Wilson Teachers' College playsMaryland State Normal in the other e here tonight. | AMERICAN UNIVERSITY and | George Washington hit the trail 1r Annapolis tomorrow to meet Navy and St. John's. The former goes against what apparently is one of the most versatile quints in the East, while | the latter is to face a fairly difficult five. American U. is one of the three | schools that took Navy's measure last season and Navy will be more than | anxious to wipe out that defeat. The task of the local school is not easy at all.’ And George Washington, despite its | strong team, may find itself in trouble | on the St. John’s floor, although it is good enough to win. | URTON SHIPLEY, Maryland basket | ball coach, is looking forward | somewhat eagerly to the test his team is to have against Duke Thursday | night in Ritchie Coliseum. Shipley is | inclined to believe that Duke will be | about the strongest five he is to meet, | with the possible exception of Georgia and North Carolina. Shipley is fa- miliar ,with Duke’s style of play, as | Maryland has been meeting the Dur- | ham school for several years, and also Shipley watched Duke when it won from both George Washingion and Georgetown on a local floor just before the holidays, | UQUESNE'S ~short-passing _game | proved too difficult for George Washington's basket ball quint to | golve last night in Pittsburgh, with the | result that the Colonials dropped a 52-to-32 decision. George Washinglon was decisively AT MIAMI-BILTMORE Goodwin and Durand of Brooklyn Seem on Way to Third Clash in Final. By the Assoclated Press. CORAL GABLES, Fla.,, January 10.— Tommy Goodwin and Celest Durand, jr., of Brooklyn, having marched through first-round matches in the Miami-Bilt- more invitation amateur golf tourna- ment, face a possible renewal of their rivalry in the title round Thursday. Even though his medal score rose to 81, Goodwin defeated Bill Wallace of | Chicago, 3 and 1, while Durand, shoot- ing a medal 77, whipped Mack Pisher of Miami, 4 and 3. The rivalry between Goodwin and | Durand has become & feature of Miami amateur tournaments. A year ago Du- rand won the thirty-sixth hole to beat Goodwin, 1 up, for the Miami Mid- winter title, but this year Goodwin came g:c% to win, 8 and 7, in the 36-hole al. Goodwin is the defending champion of the Miami-Biltmore title. Shadows of the Past BY L C. BRENNER. ERE i5 a rare picture of one of the greatest pitchers base ball has seen—Waite Hoyt, who last year worked for the Giants, the club outplayed throughout, Duquesne leading | at the end of the first half, 25 to 13, ang, holding its margin despite the in- flux of many substitutes. | Wick Parrack and Forrest Burgess, sharpshooting Colonial forwards, were | responsible for 20 of the George Wash- | ington points, each getting 10. Except | for these individual performances, Du- | quesne’s zone defense consistently broke | up G. W. threats. Line-ups: Parrack. f. Burgess, ... g team opened its season in | gton. Va., last night and held | o strong Washington and Lee teem to ur-ail a series of bouts fea- | red by three extra-round matches, a can knockout 2nd a technical keyo. | h2 Generals were forced to win beih the 175-pound and heavyweight bouts, last on the program, to gain the deadlock. After breaking even in the first four bouts, Capt. Keener, 155 pounds, and Lyman McAboy, 165, sent the Old Liners ahead, but Martin of Washington and Lee knocked out Mc- Cann after a minute and five seconds in the 175-pound .class and Collins de- feated Farrell of Maryland in the heavyweight division. s Summary: 115-pound class—De Lasosss (W. and cision over Fluver. 125-pound _class—Carroll (Maryland) de- cision over Reynolds in_extra round 5-pound clase_Burns (Meryland) de- T3 pound class—Mincher (W. and L.) ng technical knockout over Wingate. -pound wiven 15 cla~s—Keener (Maryland) de- ra round. oy (Maryland) de- | Tou (W." and L) 5 sce. 3 min. . Referce—Denton’ V. M. i over Seraphine. | with which he made his professional start back in 1915, but recently re- ceived his unconditional release. This picture shows Hoyt when he joined the New York club. He was only 16 then, but a big boy for his age. He looks strange and gawky in that checkered uniform which the McGrawmen affected at tke time. Hoyt’s dad, Ad, the old minstrel, was a friend of McGraw's and brought the youngster to the Polo ‘WAITE HOYT. Grounds for a trial. Hoyt, jr., had starred at Erasmus Hall High School in_Brooklyn. | Waite now lives in Larchmont, | N.Y., where he is in the undertaking business. Incidentally, Hoyt, who hes pitch- | ed for the greatest managers in the history — McGraw. Miller Huggins and Conniz Mack—says 1 | geme's nd L) | (Copyright, 1933.) 4 sure the regatta will be held, although one last night at Ballston. | Prank Hug was the greatost. ‘ 3:30 o'clock and Tech and Western in the nightcap will be played this aft- ernoon at Tech. The McKinley five will be making its series debut. * Other games are carded between St. Albans and Landon on the American University court and Friends and Ta- koma-Silver Spring High at Friends. Emerson's five will mix with the| Catholic. University yearlings tonight at Brookland at 7 o'clock in the pre- liminary to the C. U. Varsity-Quantico Marine brush. Central now boasts two court wins | this season over the George Washington freshmen, but yesterday's 43-35 victory was not so decisive as that of a few weeks ago when Coach Coggins proteges scored, 68 to 19. Central was without Carroll Shore, but Buddy Nau and Bill Buri: did| much to make followers of the team forget that worthy, as Nau found the hoop for 17 points and Burke for 15. | ‘The frosh pulled to within three points of Central at 27-30 at the end | f the third quarter, after trailing 14- | 25 at the half, but the scholastics had the better of it in the final quarter. | Kane and Troup were high scorers for | the frosh. It was Central's fourteenth win in as many starts, Summary: Central (43). GF G. W. Frosh ( G i 1 Benefleld,| Grifith.g. Totals... 18 743 Totals. Referee—J. Mitchell (A. B.). 0 1 Gaining the lead at the outset and | holding it all the way, Washington-Lee High's quint pasted a 31-14 trimming | on the Takoma-Silver Spring High five | | nk Good of the winners with 15 | points easily took scoring honors. | Summary: Washington-Lee (31). G.F Pts. ] Takoma-S. 8. Totals... 14 Tot: Referee—Mr. Fitzpatrick. AMERICAN .DOG DERBY ADMISSION FEE OUT Association Also Waives Entry Tax, Calling on Reserve Coin to Put on Race. | By the Associated Press. SHTON, Idaho, January 10.— The American Dog Derby Association has taken cognizance of sports fol- | lowers’ slim pocketbooks and will make no admission charge for the 1933 race | February 22. Clarence F. Moyer, elected president | of the association at the annual meet- |ing. said about $500 remains from for- mer races and this will be used for | prizes, making possible abolition not |only of admission prices, but also entry |fees and other charges. | _ Young Don Cordingly of Idaho Falls, | winner of the annual Washington’s | birthday anniversary event last year, is among a half dozen noted mushers al- | ready entered in this year's race. %TWELFTH STREET “Y” WINS. | | . With Tcoblas and_ Glymph showing the way, Twelfth Street “Y” tossers | romped to a 54-10-16 victory over the | | Dixie Pilots last night. The winners | were ahead, 21 to 9 at half time.| Tobias scored 15 points and Glymph 12. AN BASY SPOT ForR THE KID HE WANTS TO SHOOT ING MOOD... - THERE AREGOING TO BE AOLDOUTS - BuT MOST OF THE Boys WiLL WANT To GET THAT SIGNED PAPER. BACK N A HURRY. WHO CAN ticte uUs THis YEART f LOT has been written here and there about the old Yale foot PUT IN HARRY BLITMAN'S SHOES.. Tom DoaRER- .. WiLL HELP | |GRID CURTAILMENT POSTPONED BY YALE Eight Games Scheduled for l9}3, With Six Major Tilts on List for 1934. By the Associated Press. EW HAVEN, Conn., January 9.— Malcolm Farmer, Yale chairman of athletics, has announced the Yale eleven would meet six major foot ball teams in 1934, postponing for at least one more year the proposed five- game schedule. A Farmer's announcement did not say whether or not any other games would be scheduled that season. The Elis will meet Pennsylvania in the Yale Bowl October 13, the first time those two teams will have clashed since 1925. In addition, agreements have been reached to play Brown, Army, Dart- mouth, Princéton and Harvard, all regulars on the Yale schedule. Last year, announcing a new athletic policy to be instituted with the intro- duction of the residential plan of class administration, Yale said the foot ball schedule would be reduced to five games. Eight have been scheduled for 1933. PEDEN BIKE TEAM SIXTH Canadian and Partner Advance in German Six-Day Race. DORTMUND, Germany, January 10 (#). — William (Torchy) Peden, Cana- dian bike ace, and his German partner, Jans Stubecke. have advanced to sixth place in the six-day bicycle race being contested here, with 63 hours of the grind gone. Schoen and Buschhenhagen, both of Germany, are leading. Makes Base Ball Men Hufiters | Strickland, Guide at Robby’s Dover Hall Lodge, | ’ Routs Out Game for | By the Associated Press. OVER HALL, Ga. January 10.—When the greats of base Lall come to Wilbert Robinsen’s Dover Hall lodge to visit and hunt and fish they call for John Strickland. All his life Jokn hag dwelt on or near this 12,000 acre tract. He has served as a hunting guide for many of the famous major league stars who annually come to spend a few days with Robby, the former Brook- lyn manager, John knows every foot of land hereabouts, where the deer runs are located and just wkere to place the hounds for a drive. It doesn’t take him long to jump a deer and what- ever luck these base ball huntsmen have often is due to! Strickland's adroitness at driving the deer out of the swamps into the open country. Strickland is one of nature’s noble- men. He has lived in this wild para- dise so lonz he almost t:inks as do the animals. H's conversation is filled with rustic witty and droll philcscohies. His vozel u!gy is one of wvcciiand axioms: “A partridge hunter may know he , Diamond Nimrods. is on a covey of fat, well-fed birds if they do not fly very far when they get up. “A barking cat squirrel in the trees is an old Indian sign that deer or otker big game is near. “A deer, when pursued by dogs, will follow a beaten track most likely, traveling an old run. It also relies more on its nose than its eyes.” Deer hunting is John's favorite sport. Like Robinson, he has a fine scorn for lesser game, wild turkeys and quail. The two are pals on hunting trips, John doesn’t quite understdnd all this depression talk. He naively in- quired of a hunter some time ago what it was all about. “There ain’t any around here,” he commented. “There are plenty of deer, the shoats are all as fat as you please, and the price of corn likker has come down a whole lot.” N. T. S. TOSSERS AHEAD. Pulling away in the sccond half, Na- tional Training School basketers de- feated the Liberty Loan quint last night on the Twelfth Street “Y” court, 23 to 14. The score at half time was 12-10 in favor of the eventual winners. .%}ho::y Loan plays Treasury at_the | University, 32. Varied Sports College Basket Ball. v Duquesne, 52; George Washington, 32. Duke, 58; Davidson, 14. Texas Tech, 29; Southwestern Okla- | homa Teachers, 35. Montana State, 43; Carroll College, 14. Washington State, 50; Meiji, 29. Oregon State, 32; Idaho, 31. Southwestern College, 54; Priends ‘Washington, 27; Grinnell, 21. St. Ambrose, 26; Buena Vista, 19. | Central, 41; Parsons, 25. Sloux Fells, 31; Augustana, 30. Colorado Aggies, 44; Greeley Elks, 36. | Wichita Henrys, 34; University of | California, 33. | Stanford, 22; St. Mary's, 18. | Indiana. 34; Chicago, 21. Ilinois, 22; Michigan, 17. | Notre Dame, 36; Michigan State, 19. | Northwestern, 35; Purdue, 28. Davis and Elkins, 65; Concord, 24. Butler, 31; Wabash, 27. Warrensburg Teachers, 42; William | Jewell, 25. | Geneva, 50; Bethany, 32. ‘Wisconsin, Towa, 19. Roanoke, 33; Randolph-Macon, 32. Emory and Henry, 60; Union, 27. Wofford, 37; Presbyterian, 16. College Boxing. Maryland, 4; Washington and.Lee, 4 (tie). College Hockey. Michigan, 8; Ontario Aggies, 0. A. A, U. Basket Ball. Oklahoma City Boosters, 42; South- | ern Kansas Stage Lines, 38. | Pro Hockey. | Quebec, 5; New Haven, 2 (Canadian- | American League). | St. Paul, 5, St. Louis, 2 (American | Association). | | One for the Book i BY CHARLIE WHITE ‘WO pitchers are credited with the remarkable record of pitch- ing a game of 20 or more in- | nings without issuing a single base | on balls, Charles B. Adams, pitch- ing for Pittsburgh vs. New York, 21 innings, July 17, | 1914; Cy Young, | pitching “for Bos- ton Red Sox vs. | Philadelphia, 20 in- | -nings, afternoon | game, July 4, 1905. | The first 1-0 pro- fessional league game was played by Chicago (1) vs. St. Louis (0), Na- tional _Association, May 27, 1875. Ty Cobb holds the American League record of making most runs, with a total of 2,244. The National 1,740, made by Lou Gehrig of the Yankees scored nine runs in the world series of 1932, equaling Babe Ruth's mark in the 1928 series. The credit for accepting most chances by a catcher in a game in the National League belongs to Vin- cent Nava, Frovidence club, who had 19 putouts and 3 a-sists, total chances, 22, June 7, '8%4. The Amzm:jn ELeu'ud e reco: !l' IA,Y :r“k. made Sweeney, New and_ Ossle 'ngost, Phila- delphia. | play. H.'V& Gor WA BUT ONF . by PIECE OF CANDY / g Just now, the writer knotty lchedu‘l; games among the occupying the moters. terests. A late November easily be arranged, but in other be_done. of sacrificing Yale as the last her foot ball program, whereas centest. ranged vised. THE SPORTLIGHT BY GRANTLAND RI WALTER CAMP AND THE OLD YALE SYSTEM. ball system of Walter Camp’s regime, but few in the modern school seem to know much about it. I recall a trip I took to Syracuse with Mr. Camp a year or two before he died. Syracuse and Pittsburgh were meeting in this game and afterward, on the way home, the guiding spirit o: | Eli in her many years of victory began talking about old days at-Yale. “‘A good part of the old Yale system,” he said, “amounted to thorough organi- zation. For example, after the last game each Fall there would be a meet- ing of the coaching staff. We would begin at once to study the material available for next Fall. It was our idea that we should have the system fit the material—not try to crowd the material into any fixed system. “If we had fast running backs to use, we wanted an attack based on,speed. If we had big plunging backs orf hand, we wanted an attack based on power. “But there was one feature we always kept in mind, and that was long, hard drilling in the fundamentals, especially tackling and kicking, and hard, aggres- sive charging in the line. “There is little use in any system where the men are not mechanically equipped to carry out the plan.” Hinkey and Heffeliriger. T was easy enough to see that two of Mr., Camp's favorite all-time foot ball stars were Frank Hinkey and Pudge HefTelfinger. I am not sure, but I think it was Walter Camp who first named Hinkey “the Disembodied Spirit.” “No one looked less like a great foot ball player than Frank Hinkey when he first walked on the field at New Haven,” Mr. Camp said. “He then weighed less than 150 pounds. But his fierce tackling and amazing ability to slip through inter- ference were astonishing things. “There were two secrets of Hinkey's One was an eternally flaming spirit. The cther was unusual leg pow- er, which gave him a driving force totally unexpected. He could break up mass attacks and, when needed, he could carry the ball with all the power of a 180-pound back.” Hinkey, it might be recalled, was All- America end for four years on Camp's selection. [} “Pudge Heffelfinger was the greatest guard I ever saw,” the Yale leader said one_day. “I recall telling him once that if he ever wanted to be a high-clggs guard he would have to get more variety in his play—that he knew only one way to vlay the position, one method of break- ing through. He asked for further in- struction and I worked out two new ways that he could use. “Pudge was not content to limit his practice to the field. He would per- suade fellow students to meet him after practice and work out other methods of charging and breaking through. Later on, I asked him if he had worked cut these two new methods I had given him. “‘Yes,’ he sfaid, ‘but I've got seven ways now.”” This is the same Heffelfinger who Te- turned 25 years later, when he was around 46 years old, and came near wrecking a Yale line. He left in his wake & broken collarbene, two half- dazed forwards and ancther badly bat- tered, and the Yale ccaching staff told him later he would have to do the rest of his teaching through a megaphone. This Yale star was still playing good foot ball when he had passed 50. The Big Upset. ‘T was around 1916, I think, that Wal- ter Gamp was invited West by Min- nesota to see at least five all-Amer- | 1ca stars in action. What Mr, Camp saw was the great- est upset in foot ball history. Minnesota was playing Illinois that afternoon. A great Minnesota team had crushed every opponent scores ranging from 30 to 60 to 0. With Wy- man, Baston and other giant stars, it had practically wrecked the Western Conference. Illinois hadn't done, so well. Bob Zuppke’s team had lost to teams Min- nesota had pulverized. The odds against Illinols were something like 50 to 1. game that Zuppke made his famous battle address to his team just before little Sternaman and others tcck the fleld. “Remember,” Zu] said fo his men, with all the theatrical effect he could work up (and h2 could work up plenty), “Remember th“.r: I Al:ltn&m’:mm and u are my court. us the deluge.” Wmlnfll won, 14-7. | { |4 ment in intercollegiate ern Conference, in which ern_Conference. vision, a greater unanimity in }f:mi in the new in its national as well as its Walter Camp had one of the most attractive personalities sport has known. He had a kindliness and a_gentleness and a charm of manner which made friends from one coast to the other. | aspects. Cardoza A. C. with Gol | Jackson leading the attack, A| Dunbar yesterday, 27 to 20. great athlete in his day, he was a|and Matthews were outstanding sportsman to his final breath. | losers, We're selling many more “Florsheims” than ever in this year’s Sale! OSITIVE proof that men are gradually learning by experience that Quality Shoes are most economical in the long run! buyers . are offered at Sale prices . . . a ‘real money-saving opportunity. FLORSHEIM Mens SHOES ® Good times are here for shoe . when Florsheim Shoes $6ss a A FEW STYLES 785 Back to $8 and $9 After - the Sale! is informed, CORN!!L has got to be cared for in a manner satisfactory to her pride and conducive to her economic in- e between. Dartmouth and Cornell, it seems, can respects some devious adjusting will have to It appears that Harvard In her agreement with Princeton has no idea ncunces that she will continue to ro- tate Princeton and Harvard in her final ‘This discrepancy in attitude could be and probably will be accommodated to the list of games among the Big Five | wher the organization is finally ar- and playing agreements de- NOTHER action of political mo- circles the break in the unwieldly Sout 13 univer~ sities—Alabama, Auburn, Florida, Geor- If through this there is better super- in sum, a 'mnzf directing be a fine thing for intercollegiate sport sectional CARDOZA DOWNS DUNBAR.