Evening Star Newspaper, February 2, 1933, Page 33

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Sports News BASKETERS, BOXERS OF NOTE T0 INVADE North Carolina, Georgia and Duke to Present Stars Against Maryland. \WO of the South's leading T basket ball players and a pair of its snappiest boxers will appear tomorrow night and Saturday against the Uni- versity of Maryland, whose events will feature one of the biggest week ends of the Winter for Washington colleges. The crack basketers are Virgil Weath- ers, all-Southern forward, who will perform tomorrow night for the Uni- versity of North Carolina, and Leroy Young, all-Southern guard, who will show Saturday with the University of Georgia. Both the ring stars will carry the colors of Duke University. Fred Lloyd, captain_of the Blue Devils, who won the 115-pound Southern Conference championship last year, is fighting this season as a 125-pounder and will meet Harry Carroll, who has yet to lose this season. EROY SIDES, rater by Coach Ad ‘Warren as the most scientific ring- men in the Southern Conference and conqueror of last year's Conference welter champion, Charlie Garner of North Carolina State, will meet a tough hombre in Berbie Keener. Keener not only is an excellent boxer, but a wicked hitter. He is the only letter man on the Terrapin ring squad. Sides last Saturday defeated Charlie Garner of North Carolina State, who won the Southern Conference cham- pionship a year ago. North Carolina has won seven of its eight basket ball games and rules a favorite over the Old Liners tomorrow night, the contest in Ritchie Coliseum | | starting at 8 o'clock. Georgia, champion of the Southern | Conference last season and now in the Southeastern loop, also looks upon Maryland as prey, although the Bull- dogs haven't been doing very well of late. The basket ball game Saturday night will start at 8 o'clock and the | boxing meet about 9:15. Gallaudet basketers are on a three- game trip, meeting Philadelphia Col- lege tonight in Quakertown, Upsala at East Orange, N. J., tomorrow, and Long Island University at Brooklyn, N. Y, Saturday. LL of the other local colleges will see action during the extremely busy week end, George Washington and American U. here and Georgetown in Baltimore, all on Saturday George Washington will entertain Elon College of North Carolina, Amer- jcan U. will play host to Randolph Macon College of Ashland, Va. while| Georgetown will go over to the Monu- | mental City to oppose Loyola in the | gymnasium at Evergreen in north | Baltimore. George Washington should take Elon v, Georgetown will be favored over Loycla, which has fallen victim to| Catholic U, while the American U.- Randolph Macon battle rates as a toss- up. The Virginians beat American U., 29 to 27, in a game at Ashland on January 19, so the Eagles will be out for revenge. EORGETOWN was in a last place tie with West Virginia in the East- ern Intercollegiate Conference to- day as the result of a typically close beating received last night from Tem- fleq!lmiversny. on the Tech high court, Both teams shot the same number of field goals but the visitors were more expert with free throws and therein lay their 3-point margin. It was the Owls’ second victory of the season over the Hoyas who dropped & 31-19 verdict in Philadelphia. ‘Temple ascured itself of finishing no worse than third place in the Confer- ence. Art Leibensperger's jumping. which gave Temple the ball on nearly every play, was an important factor in the Owl's victory in the nip-and-tuck game, but Red Rosan and Freiberg were high scorers with 12 points each. Rosan regained the conference scoring lead by 10 poirts with a total of 47. Georgetown and West Virginia will battle here next Monday to get out of the cellar. Following is the Eastern conference standing and the summary of last night's game. L 0 Georgetown .. West Virginia. Pittsburgh 4 Garnexte Tech! 3 mple.. ... . 3 Temple (49). Georgetown (41). Rosan. f. Murphy, ., 3 Gudd. 1. Parcells. { Leibensp'r, ¢ 0 1 1 Hargaden, 1. rown. §... Connors, ¢.. 3 Freibers. g.. 6 012 Crowley, Carolan, g.. Corless,'s. .. Totals... 18 844 Totals... 18 541 Referees—Mr. Menton (Lovola) aj 5 eferees M enton ola) and Mr. ARMSTRONG WINS AGAIN Victory Over Douglass Gains Tie | T, | somam | smoamaal for Conference Lead. Armstrong High basketers turned back another colored South Atlantic High School Conference rival yesterday, trougcing Douglass High of Baltimore, 26 to 16, on the Armstrong floor. As a result of its victory Armstrong went into a tie with Dunbar for first g::c with two victories in three starts. glass has won three and lost two, ‘Howard is batting .500 for four games, while Cardoza has bowed in all three | of its tilf Summary: Armstrong G Hager, f. .. Hayes f. .. ( Logan.f. ... ¢ Hall.c. . Mazee. c. Quarles. . " 2 Mitcheli. &0 Harrison . Covington. . Douglass (16). G.F.Pts Lawson.f. . 1 1 i Briscoe. . [ 1 Powell. 1. Patterson Lansdowne. omas. €. . Lampkin, g.. 8 0 i o 8 0 1 $ | Harrs.f 1| Edward, College, School Sports Program (All basket ball unless otherwise stated.) COLLEGIATE. Today. Gallaudet vs. Philadelphia Colle at Philadelphia. it ‘Tomorrow. Maryland vs. North Carolina at College Park, 8 o'clock. Gallaudet ' vs. Upsala at East Orange, N. J. Saturday. Maryland vs. Georgia - (basket ball), 8 o'clock; Maryland vs. Duke (boxing), 9:15. George Washington vs. Elon at G. W., 8 o'clock. American University vs. Randolph- Macon at A. U. Catholic U. vs. Baltimore U. at Brookland, 8:30 o'clock. Georgetown vs. Loyola at Balti- more. Gallaudet vs. Long Island U. at Brooklyn, N. Y. Wilson Teachers vs. Frostburg State Normal at Frostburg, Md. SCHOLASTIC. Today. Western vs. Washington-Lee High at_Ballston. Roosevelt vs. St. John's Freshmen at_Annapolis. Emerson vs. Staunton Military Academy at Staunton. ‘Tomorrow. Eastern vs. Tech, Central vs, Roosevelt, public high school cham- pionship ' game, Tech gym. First game, Eastern vs. Tech, 3:30 o'clock. Western vs. Charlottesville High at_Western. Landon vs. Georgetown Prep in Epiphany Church gym. Gonzaga vs. George Washington Frosh at Gonzaga, 8 pm. St. John’s vs. Leonard Hall at Leonardtown. Saturday. Tech vs. Catholic U. Prosh at C. U. (Preliminary to C. U. Varsity- | Baltimore U. game.) | " McDonough vs. Friends at Priends. Central Virginia Freshmen at University, Va. Georgetown Prep vs. Loyola High at Baltimore. BARRY 00D BACK IV HOCKEY BATILE Former Harvard Star Will Face Maryland Team in Baltimore Loop. By the Associated Press. ALTIMORE, February 2.—Barry Wood, one of the greatest all- round athletes developed at Harvard University in recent years, again has put on the skates and taken up the stick to participate in one of his favorite sports—ice hockey. Ed Gratwick, another ex-Harvard player, also has returned to the ice rink in the Baltimore Amateur Hockey League. Wood and Gratwick will not repre- sent their present alma mater, Johns Hopkins, where they are students in the Green Spring Valley hockey team in its son tomorrow night against the Uni- versity of Maryland Dental School. Green Spring Valley and the Mary- land Dents are tied for first place with three victories and one defeat apiece. league with four defeats. Valley officials said they had planned to use Wood and Gratwick during the second half, but when Maryland strengthened its team last week, the eligibility of the two former Harvard men was announced. Wood was a three-letter man at Har- vard until his graduation a year ago. He starred at foot ball, hockey and base ball and also was one of the honor students at the Cambridge school. Gratwick played college hockey in the days immediately preceding Wood's. The two recent additions to the 3|Maryland team are John Cuddy of | Bassin Cranston, R. I, a student at the dental | N, school and brother of Fred Cuddy, captain of the team, and Howard Orins, a pharmacy student, and formerly wing on the Providence Scarlets, New Eng- land champions of 1932, and at Brown University. FIRST WIN FOR SOLDIERS Beat Treasury Quintet in Colored Departmental League. Army War College Detachment basket ball team won its first game in the Colored Departmental League last night on the Twelfth Street Y. M. C. A. court, defeating Treasury, 40-32. The soldiers were in front at the half, 16 to 12. G. P. O. captured the other league fray, 38-25, from Liberty Loan. Summaries: Liverty Loan G. P. o T. Jackson.{. . Jackson.!. by canaend® comismsiy Lacey. Mickey.g. Totals War Totals ...16 638 Treasury. A G.F.Pts. Radcliffe.f. 4 B 1 2l mowswes Totals Totals .1 Referee—Xr. MANCHESTERS VICTORS Take Basket Game From Flashes in Last Second of Play. Manchester A. C. basketers defeated the Flashes last night on the Dunbar High School court, 31 to 30, in a contest that had the gallery on edge throughout. ‘The wlnnxngngonl was made in the last second of play. 7 Totals 2 .. 5 616 rT. - Rnows? | awoo! <l meocwnoom £l emooemonn! P -] Wtal ... 12 630 Total...... Colonials Tackle | Fast Charity Foe NEW YORK, February 2 () —A Dozen basket ball teams, twice as many as in previous years, will show their wares in Madison Square Garden February 22 in the big charity court carnival conducted by the Mayor's Official Committee for the benefit of the unemployed and needy. Afternoon and evening sessions will be held, with a price scale of 25 cents to $1 in the after- noon and twice as much at night. ‘The afternoon games scheduled are: St. Francis, Brooklyn, vs. Brooklyn College; Columbia vs. Wil- liams and Manhattan vs. Villanova. medical school, but will play with the | title quest in the first half of the sea- | Johns Hopkins is at the foot of the The Foenin WITH SUNDAY NORNING: EDITION o Star, WASHINGTON, D. C., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1933. Some of Dixie’s Best Athletes EASTERN TOSSERS LEAD CHALLENGED Must Beat Tech Tomorrow to Remain on Top—Central Plays Roosevelt. ASTERN'S basket ball team faces a big test tomorrow when it comes to grips with Tech at 3:30 o'clock in the first game of the championship double header on the Tech court. The Indians must van- quish the Grays if they are to keep ahead in the flag race, and this is thought to be a big job for them, especially in view of their poor showing Tuesday when they were extended to conquer Western 27-26 in an extra- period game, and the fact that Tech was barely beaten by Central. 'HOULD Eastern lose to Tech, it is figured it will be curtains for Coach Mike Kelley's charges, so far as the crown is coazerned, as Central, a 45-29 victor over Roosevelt in the first round, is expected to repeat over the Rough Riders. A Tech defeat and a Central win would put the latter in first place with six wins and one loss and Eastern would drop to second with six_victories and two defeats, Should | both Eastern and Central win, the for- mer will have finished its schedule with seven wins and one loss and Central will have six triumphs and one defeat snd will have to play Western next Tuesday. In other games tomorrow afternoon, Western meets Charlottesville High on the Western court, Georgetown Prep and Landon mix in the Epiphany Church gym and St. John's battles Leonard Hall at Leonardtown, Md. Gonzaga and George Washington Freshmen have an engagement for 8‘ p.m. on the Gonzaga floor. N even break ur games was the best a quartet of inter-high school | rivals could gain yesterday. Roose- velt and Eastern romped to easy wins, | but Tech dropped a thriller to George Washington freshmen and Western was beaten by Bethesda-Chevy Chase. The Colonial Cubs, on a long pot- shot by Leemans in the final 30 sec- onds, succeeded in downing Tech, 42 to 41, in a hair-raiser at Tech. Tech had a 24-17 lead at half time, but the shooting of Kane and Leemans for G. W. brought the young Colonials vic- tory in the late stages. Summary: Tech. Wiles, Gillum, 1 Qlverson, Dailey. & ‘Thomas. Nau, & Totals .. Totals .. 151242 ESTERN held Bethesda-Chevy Chase to a 15-11 score in the first half, but the suburbanites scored almost at will in the second period to hang up a 41-17 victory. Guckeyson, who scored 16 points, was the outstanding player. Summary: Western. s 11000 2 000 152220 3 Forney. c.11 0 1 1 Loveless, ¢. 0 0 0 McPherson, & 4 210 Schneider. g 1 0 Swanson. §. 0 0 O Bethesda A. o il = Brsotnal Corcoran, Bieri, 1. 1 [ lseswosres | noo! | hosarommesd’ 3 ITH Huck Cavanaugh, Billy Harris and Jce Sherman sinking ‘em from all angles, Roosevelt easily was the winner over Swavely by 57 to 30, in a game played at Roosevelt. This trio accounted for 43 points. Summary Roosevel Totals ... Swavely (30) G.FPts 511 0 Sherman, f Hayman, Cavanaugh, Black, €. Ahearn, §. Risley. 'g..". Curtin, & Totals... 2 Totals... 12 630 ILSON TEACHERS were unable to keep pace with the high-scoring Eastern_outfit, falling by & 41-to- 21 score. Bassin, Eastern forward, scored 14 points. Summary: Eastern (41). | mssexmsoassns Wilson (21). F. | Sotatacomiaons? 0 2Q! hBRNSDRA 29 ] Dean. § Baelin, ol sonsrnemar 2 o] SommmmmnQ! Totals... 19 Referee—Mr. Taylor. OT until the final minute of play was_the Mount St. Joseph quint of Baltimore able to register a field goal against Georgetown Prep, which rang up a 44-to-5 triumph at Garrett Park. Keating and Allan, with 11 points apiece, were the game's standouts. Summary: Geo. Prep. . Mt. St. Jos. Keaiing, 1 % Bewsie: T, G.F.Pts. ssle, 1.0, 0 0 Sullivan, 0 Henn, { o . e Stromberg, Roth’h'f McCann, g. McMahon, g. 4 McDonnell, Totals ...20 444 Totals ... 'OR the second time this season Gon- 7aga High scored over Hyattsville, winning yesterday by 29 to 12. Purple held a 15-7 lead at half time. Summary: Gonzaga. GF.Pts. 1 0 = n| ooc00soMs: @l zonosss: ol isnssssuss Hyattsville. G.F.Pts. Cain, f ST iarke, Hurley. g. Mostow, Donoghue, men easily downed St. John's yesterday, 36 to 9. Leon Esenstad, former Roosevelt High tosser, scored 10 points for the Hoya cubs. Summary: Geo. Frosh_(36). 's_(9). &g, St Jonms (D) # Q cromcwcornl >o0omi - oroMDS0050) os000wc0Mg; Totals 36 Referee—Mr. Daly (A. LONG shot by Lucas in half-minute of play gave son Institute a 36-34 triuph 5l cansmovssccmmaos o] soosomoss: Totals .. 2 5 9 B) final Emer- | Go oyer READY TO GIVE UP. eatures and Classifie Varied Sports BASKET BALL. Local. ‘Temple, 44; Georgetown, 41. Georgetown Freshmen, 36; St. John's, § George Washington Freshmen, 42; Tech High, 41. Gonzaga, 29; Hyattsville High, 12. Georgetown Prep, 44; Mount St. Jo- seph's, 5. Bethesda-Chevy Chase, 41; Western High, 17. Emerson Institute, 36; Woodberry Forest, 34. Roosevelt, 57; Swavely, 30. Eastern, 41; Wilson Teachers, 21. Other Results. House of David, 25; Nevada, 21. Kentucky, 42; Clemson, 32. ‘Westminster, 40; Thiel, 15. 2‘N0flh Carolina State, 39; V. M. I, Ohio Wesleyan, 45; Denison, 37. Indiana University, 56, Fals, Mexico City, 27. Central Missouri State Teachers, 29; Northeast Missouri State Teachers, 26. Notre Dame, 37; Carnegie Tech, 35. Doane, 28; Nebraska Wesleyan, 24. Furman, 35; Newberry 28. Erskine, 36; U. S. Marines, 32. St. Thomas, 30; St. John's, 25 (over- time). Coe, 39; Cornell (Iowa), 30. New River, 44; Fairmont State, 39. University of Cincinnati, 58; Ken- tucky Wesleyan, 36. Washburn, 56; Meji, 15. ‘Texas Tech, 37; Oklahoma City, 30. Maryville College, 29; Lenoir-Rhyne, 20. Alabama, 26; Georgia Tech, 19. Richmond, 37; Randolph-Macon, 32. ‘Western Kentucky, 39; University of Louisville, 31. Bethany, 27; McPherson, 20. Millsaps, 31; Southwestern, 21. Potomac State, 46; Concord State, 27. Luther, 37; Columbia, 19. St. Ambrose, 26; Augustana, 25. Shippensburg Teachers, 52; Elizabeth- wn, 36. St. Joseph's (Philadelphia), 27; Leb- anon Valley, 23. West Chester Teachers, Lo Salle. 30; Rapld City School of Mines, 37; East- ern Normal, 30. Concordia, 34; Moorhead Teachers, 33. Montana Mines, 40; Northern Mon- tana Normal, 25. Daniel Baker, 32; McMurry, 25. New Mexico, 50; Texas Mines, 30. Ellensburg Normal, 39; Montana, 15. PROFESSIONAL HOCKEY. Canadian-American League. Quebec, 5; Boston, 2 (overtime). Philadelphia, 3; New Haven, 2 (over- time). American Association. Kansas City, 3; Wichita, 1. Amateur Hockey. Baltimore Orioles, 7; Crescent A.C., 0. Sands Point H. C, 3; Summit H. C, 2 College Hockey. Minnesota, 3; MacAlester, 0. College Wrestling. Indiana, 19%; Michigan State, 4%. JOIE RAY BREAKS ANKLE Former Track Ace Falls in Dance Marathon After 41 Days. NEW HAVEN, Conn. Gampian_and. oy lon : fractured left kae in a fall last night at a marathon dance. He had remained in the dance 41 ‘Woodberry Forest on the Virginian's court yesterday. Summary: OLD FOES ENCOUNTER IN BOOTERS’ LEAGUE Columbia Heights Gmys-Marlbora! Game Features Sunday—May Decide Flag. OLUMBIA HEIGHTS GRAYS and | Marlboro, old rivals, face in the feature game of the Capital City Soccer League Sunday, on the Silver Spring field at 2:30 oslock. | The Grays, leading the flag race, will clinch the pennant by winning, and a | defeat by Marlboro, which stands third, | will eliminate that team from the title | running. In other encounters the runner-up | Columbia Heights Blacks will face, Brandywine at Brandywine and Gai- thersburg and Rockville will battle at Gaithersburg. Bill Lewis of the Blacks, the league’s | leading scorer, is expected to increase | his advantage. Fred Watson and Gump Bailey, who will oppose in the Grays- Marlboro game, are among others mak- | ing lively bids for individual laurels. CAVALIERS, GENERALS IN TRACK, FIELD MEET Teams Clash Saturday on Boards at Charlottesville—Virginia Boxers Travel. IVERSITY, Va., February 2—Vir- ginia's track and field men will have their first test of 1933 against ‘Washington and Lee in the memorial gymnasium here Saturday. The track events are to start at 7:30 p.m., the field events half an hour earlier. Capt. Billy Lauck, miler; Hunston Cary, half miler; Aldrich Dudley, quar- ter miler; Milton Abramson, sprinter, and Grover Everett, hurdler, are some of the runners who are being groomed by Coach Hahn and by Cumming, as- sistant. John Edmundson is being given spe- cial attention in the high jump. He has cleared the bar at a fraction less than 6 feet, and may better this mark. George Wyllie seems in shape to go over the high pole vault bar at 12 feet 6 inches. Of the mnew fleld, Griff Dodson, sprinter, and Charlie Bast, quarter miler, are showing first rate form. Virginia’s boxers, both varsity and freshmen, will see action against North Carolina teams at Chapel Hill Saturday. R. M. A. FIVE IS WINNER. FRONT ROYAL, Va., February 2.— Randolph Macon Academy defeated 5538 h School here yesterday, 45 to 20. Randolph Macon, leading at the half by only 14 to 10, outclassed the visitors in the second half. McFall, with 18 points, was outstanding. 3 Extra Periods Needed to Decide Chevy Chase and Western High Hfihtwelahb basket ball teams to battle three ext: 34 to 28. At the end of regulation play the An extra period ECOND half play in the Depart- mental Basket Ball League will open tonight on the boys’ de- partment court of the Central Y. M. C. A. With a view to creating closer competition, play in the second half will be in two divisions, with War Department, Reconstruction Finance Corporation, Interstate Commerce Com- mission, Post Exchange and Nav Hospital, the first five teams to finish | in the first half making up group No. 1 and Patent Office, Labor Department, State Department, Bureau of Standards and Weather Bureau comprising the second division. The teams that finish first and second | in each division will gain the right to compete in the double elimination play- off to be held at the end of the second half. War Department A. G. O. and Reconstruction Finance, which finished in a tie for first place in the first half, each with eight wins and one loss, and Interstate Commerce that was third, with seven victories and two defeats, already have qualified for the play-off. Games Thursday nights will be played in the boys' department of the Y and the Tuesday night matches will be staged on the men's department court. l Basket Ball Tips BY JOE GLASS. AM BARRY'S University of South- ern California boys have & very clever jump play on & held ball close to, or under, Southern Cali- fornia’s basket. It 'is based on good psychology. Say that center (4) is making the jump and is getting the tip. For- ward (3), & good, rugged boy, takes a position between 4 and the basket, facing toward 4. The other players post themselves as shown in the On the jump 4 tips to 3 and re- treats a step or two. No. 3 imme- to him diately shoots the ball back and 4 tries for the basket. one or two handed. Mother Froman’s Dli.nner Box Enough for four people. Delivered hot. ek 1 Call by or 9 AM. to ‘The first half standing: War Dept, A. G. O. Reconstruction Finan 889 | 718 | 667 444 | 444 .333 | 333 | a1 Weather Bureau. 2000 | ERO EAGLES drew first blood in| the battle with the Lustine-Nich- | olson tossers for the District semi pro basket ball championship yesterday | before 500 spectators in the George | Washington gymnasium. Bozie Berger's failure to convert both of his foul shots in the last 25 seconds | of play enabled the Eagles to eke out a 30-29 victory in the first of the three-game series between the two fives. | The Eagles held a 20 lead at half time, but the Lusnics rallied and it was anybody's game until the final whistle. Berger was awarded two foul shots, making good on only one. Quantico Marines took a thriller from Washington Cardinals last night in the Laurel Armory, winning in an extra period, 43 to 42. After absorbing lickings from George ‘Washington and Catholic University, the Gyrenes took on the Cards and were forced to come from behind to el ast s the end’ of regulation play. P eer ] OTHER RESULTS. Community Center Leagu® Tremonts, 48; Sigma Phi Lambda, 9. Mount Vernon, 52; Congress Heights, 17. Utah State, 43; Drakes, 26. m?e;‘zm & Hudson, 56; First Bap- Griffith Blue Coals, 73; Naval Re- serves, 18. ”Mercury. 40; Anacostia Business Men, Independent. Penn Tires, 38; Thompson's, 31. Calvary M. E., 65; Army War Col- lege, 29. Army War College Juniors, 30; Noel House, 17. Standards, 27; Simpson, 25. Northeast Boys’ Club, 54; Ennis, 31. Wilson, 26; “Y” Eagles, 15. Brightwood Greys, 35; Maryland Eagles, 20. Northwest Flashes, 71; Underwood Grays, 15. Company F, 37; Company A, 21. ”s-cnd Heart, 26; Blessed Sacrament, Whirlwinds, 56; Eagles, 38. Fort Myer, 20; H. F, 14. Games Wanted. ‘Whirlwinds, for tomorrow in own gym. Call Lincoln 1944 between 6 and 7:30 o'clock. Swann _ Service, with teams. Adams 2901. St. Martin’s 145-pounders, for tonight on own court. Call Potomac 0447-M between 5 and 7 o'clock. 145-pound There is one sure way that never fails to remove dandruff completely, and that is to dissolve it. This destroys it entirely. To do this, just get plain, ordinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. By morning, most if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and two or three more applications will completely dissolve and en- tirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter how much dandruff you may have. You will find, too, that all itch- ing and digging of the scalp will stop instantly, and your hair will d| f SCHEDULE MAKERS IGNORE REFORMERS Intersectional Tilts Galore Listed—Campaign Will Finish Late. BY WALTER TRUMBULL. OOT BALL, as well as base ball, now has its season of Spring practice and natu- rally foot ball's greatest statistician and intelligence offi- cer, Parke H. Davis, preiers to dis- cuss the pigskin rather than the horsehide game. Mr. Davis, whose findings in such matters as the length of runs, kicks and passes adorn every record book, limits his conversation on the topic of his favorite sport strictly to 12 months a year. : When, therefore, Mr. Davis calls at- tention to certain matters in the !Au!umn schedules, even those of us who | are thinking more of Spring schedules lend an interested ear, especfally as such schedules are filed with him far in advance. “The 1933 schedules,” Mr. Davis says, “‘as a whole reflect the effect of the de< pression_upon foot ball as a national plant. Managements have ignored the Ppleas of reformers aimed at a shortened season. Nor have they moved to elimi- nate games of a spectacular character which have no traditional justification, or intersectional contests. **QUCH colleges and universities as are not prevented by Conference rules, dual agreements, or faculty | | prohibitions,” Mr. Davis asserts, have scheduled games, and good strong games for the last two Saturdays in September, especially September 30. “And when it comes to int: ctional games,” Mr. Davis continues, “let me mention a few of them. Among those struggles which #hould draw the best gates are such contests as Army-Notre Dame, Notre Dame-Southern California, Minnesota-Pittsburgh, Cornell-Michi- gan, Nebraska-Pittsburgh, Georgia-New York University, Georgia-Southern Calie fornia, Georgia-Yale, Michigan Sta Syracuse, Army-Virginia Military I stitute, Army-Illinois, Northwesterne Stanford, Fordham-Alabama, Fordham= St. Mary's, Fordham-Oregon State, Princeton-Washington and Lee, Chie cago-Dartmouth, ~ Navy-Notre Dame, Navy-Mercer, Villanova-South Carolina and Boston College-Center.” Mr. Davis certainly demonstrates that there will be 2 number of good intersectional games. Most of us would like to see them all. It seems too bad that there is not a foot ball commission, like the boxing commissions, to assign dates and keep some of those games from conflicting, although Mr. Davis . | probably would oppose that idea stoutly. In spite of that. the betting is that he'd like to see them all himself. even if he does not believe them best for college foot bali. RMY and Navy, of course, purposelg cover 2s much ground with their echedules as possible. They are strictly national institutions, besides which they usually make the other fellow come to them, so that any ine terference with studies is not on their side. Other intersectional games re= quire scarcely more than an over night jump. But Mr. Davis also points out some other interesting facts. The first is how late the 1933 schedule will run. He says, for example: “Princeton, for the second time in history, will play Yale in December. The game is scheduled for December 2. Princeton last played Yale in December in 1877. That contest was waged on December 8 on the St. George Cricket Grounds in Hoboken, N. J. This one will be at New Haven. “And on the same late date,” continues Mr. Davis, “Boston College plays Holy Cross at Boston, Army plays Notre Dame in New York and Georgia and Southern California will line up against each other at Los Angeles.” It will not be until 10 days later, December 12. that Washington and Southern California will meet, while New Year day, 1934. will bring the Rose Bowl and East-West games. ‘There are a lot of night games schede uled for this season. Drake, Butler, George Washington University and Denver are involved in many of them, Duquesne plays some of its games at night. (Copyright. 1933, by North American Newse paper Alliance, Inc.) DUKE VISITS VIRGINIA FOR THREE CONTESTS Basket Ball Team Plays W. & L, Cadets and Tech—Big Squad Making Trip. URHAM, N. C, February 2.—Duke University’s cagers left here today for Lynchburg, where tonight they will open a three-game invasion of the Old Dominion by meeting the Washe ington and Lee Generals. ‘The Blue Devils also will meet V. M. Iand V.P.I. V.M. L will be met in Lexington tomorrow night and the Gobe blers in their stronghold Saturday night. Duke has won three of it four Conference gamese Duke cagers making the jaunt are the regular line-up of Horne and Hayes, forwards; Jim Thompson, center; H, Thompson and P. Weaver, guards; Bell, Lewis, Frank Pargoe and Clark. Vit and soft, and look and feel a hun- dred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It won’t cost you more than thirty-five cents (35c). fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky This simple remedy never fails.

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