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SYOXTS. BASKET BALL, SWIMMING, RING OCCUPY ATHLETES Georgetown, West Virginia Quints Clash Tonight, G. W. Meets Rider—Colonials Better BY H. C. BYRD. OCAL people interested in intercollegiate sports do not L have to look around very much this week to find some | contest worth watching. Between | now and Saturday night the six | colleges that have their plants here are scheduled to line up 15 times against institutions from the outside world, and some of | the competitive efforts should be about as good as are seen any- where. Beginning tonight with Georgetown entertaining West Virginia and George ‘Washington playing Rider College, lo- cal colleges face about their heaviest week of the year, as far as indoor sports are concerned. The competi- tions embody basket ball, swiming and bexing, with basket ball hclding the main positicn. Catholic U. vs. Wake | Forest, Marylend vs. Virginia and| Washington and Lee in basket ball and | Virginia Military Institute in boxing, Gallaudet vs. Western Maryland, Cath- olic University vs. Loyola, American University vs. St. John’s are some of the other contests listed. EST VIRGINIA, of course, has W good representative teams in all sports, and usually is able to take of itself pretty weil in any branch. £« basket ball teams at times have been briliant. In its game with George- town tonight in the Tech High gym- nasium it may be depended on to give the Blue and Gray a battle. However, the local school, if it plays at its top’ speed, ought to get away with the ong end of the count. George Washington may have some- thing of & tartar on its hands in meet- ing Rider College. The visitors come from a neighborhood Wwhere gocd bas- ket ball players abound, and, while on its home floor fIGeorge Washington has @ considerble advantage, may cause more trouble than is expected. Rider College so far has not lost & game this season to & college team, its only de- feat having been sustained at the hands of the Brooklyn Knights of Columbus five. This was by a score of only 21 to 25 and on the K. of C. teams own floor. ‘ORGE WASHINGTON followers GEn-unk that if they continue to play as well in t{le hekmxunm l;nzmgmwsy = tests last weel 12 :l:r}o:xlg)cxo?he remainder of the schedu%e without loss of another game. Prac- tically all the scoring against Elon was done from right under the basket, after successful short passes. ‘Washington has scored more mmezfir game than any of the other 1 basket mmup-mlolsnpflnum the 11 games played 5o far, of 8 fraction under 53 points game. Colonials opponents have averaged fraction under 31 points. So far as | ican Foot Ball Than Record Shows. the race with Fordham and Brown. The time was just a little too fast for the four that now wears Georgeown's col- ors. .Coach Jimmy Mulligan did not have any great hope that his men could win, but wanted to give them the op- portunity to compete. It is not often that as many points are scored in a major basket ball game as were scored Saturday at Annapolis by Navy and North Carolina. Navy got 66 and Carolina 40—106 points in one game. In fact, it is very doubtful if the records will show any other game be- tween two good teams with such free scoring on both sides. ARYLAND has another double bill this week, with Washington and Lee in basket ball and Virginia Military Institute in boxing. Down at ‘Washington and Lée January 14 Mary- land was defeated in basket ball by a small margin. The Old Liners are hoping to turn the tables. If the Feot Ball Rules Committee goes no further in making changes in the rules than will be recommended by the Committee cn Rules of the Amer- Coaches’ Association, then there should be little tampering with the code. The change recom- mended in regard to play along the side lines is not as good as might seem at first thought. It simply would mean that the whole strategy involved position play would be done away with, as far as the side lines are concerned. A part of a quarterback’s job now is to keep the ball away from the side lines, and there are many ways to get the ball back in the field other than to waste a play in deliberately running it outside to have it brought back in 15 ‘The Coaches’ Committee has recommended that anytime the ball is dead within 10 yards of the side line it shall be brought out 10 yards from the side line. Incidentally, that change wo;xld 1-uu1'!:i in I' hd::d ball and time out more times an ht think. Cutting down ogy&f’ penlmklty for clipping from 25 to 15 yards is rec- ommended, in order to have the pen- alty more frequently inflicted and the rule thereby more stringently enforced. The other recommendations involve de- claring a penalty for any ineligible line- man who crosses the line of scrimmage on a forward pass before the ball is passed, having no interference on a forward pass where is no bodily contact, have time 'kept on the side lines, as now is done in basket ball, and bhave coaches notified when the teams have had three times out. None of these recommendations if put into effect by the Rules Committee would have the least effect on the general aspect of the game. BURNS UP DIRT TRACK ball teams. The Colonials | Carey Held to Have Smashed All Marks Up to 100 Miles. OAKLAND, Calif., February 6 (#).— Bob Carey of Indianapolis, national|Y® Jnown, no other college in the East has | automobile racing champion last year, veraged es many points per game as ;‘he Jocal university. This remarkable rd, of course, is caused par- tially by the fact that George ‘Washing- ton has met e 6 POt Aing an_ example, but won the 100-mile feature race on the dirt track at Oakland Speedway yes- terday in what track observers believed three weak quints, |to be the record-breaking time of 59 bt Elon College Sat- | minutes 33.9 seconds. American Automobile Association of- the record is one that Te- | ficials, computing his average speed at the ability of the Co- flects it e oters o hit the spot with Jonial basketers the ball. regard to George Washington's Fhskec ball team, it seem that some- body the other day asked Jack Espey, who furnishes information to the local sports writers from the George ‘Washington viewpoint, “What is wrong with George Washington’s basket ball team,” and the question was productive of a good lecture. And in his statement Espey pointed out two or three very interesting things in connection ‘with George Washington’s record. Here is what he says: “You ask me what ‘h bevcvrong w‘:lt‘,l!; rge Was] n_ jusf ause. &e? g\u‘ gnmwm let me point out to you just what you don’t know about basket ball in asking such a question. 1In the first place there’s nothing wrong with our team. We've been playing good basket ball and we'll keep on play- ing good basket ball. Three games we Jost to strong teams, and we have lost only four, and these three were dropped by a total margin of five points. We| were beaten by Missouri, 33 to 30, a| three-point margin; by Duke, 35 '{) 34, a one-point margin; by St. John’s of Brooklyn, a great team, 36 to 35, an- other one-point margin, and of our other nine games we've lost only one, and you ask me what is wrong with George Washington. Ha! Ha! Like- wise, he! he! “And if that is not enough, consider that we are now playing without our leading scorer, Parrick, who in 10 games got an average of 13 points to the game. Yet we have won our last two games without him and come through with plenty of points, too. And I believe the team is battling hard enough to make up for his loss. Wewe playing hard, good basket ball. “Don't ask me what is wrong With George Washington's team. There isn't anything wrong with it, as you'd understand if you stopped to think a minute.” OME comment was occasioned as & result of Referee Heine Miller's de- cision in declaring Sides of Duke victor over Keener in the 145-pound class of the boxing meet between Duke | and Maryland Saturday night, and the | crowd, nearly always partisan in such cases, did not indicate approval, to say the least. However, Miiler's decision was absolutely just and right, and the best that he could have given Keener, under any possible conception of the bout, would have been & draw to go into a f-orth round. It is true that Keener . a clear margin in the first round, had he kept on pecking away w.. . his left in the second and third inst-ad of stepping in with swings with his right, probably would have won. It was in the second round that Keener lost the bout as he was caught flush on the jaw and went down for a count of nine. Under the system of scoring in boxing that counted so much | against Keener that to win he would have had to attain a clear margin in the third round, which he did not do. In regard to Keener and Sides, though, it is likely they will meet again in the Southern Conference champion- ships at Charlottesville the last of this month, as apparently there is no other boxer in the section good enough to beat either of them. And here is a pre- diction: When they meet the next time Keener will be the victor. ARYLAND at one time had a 10- point lead over Georgia Saturday night in the basket ball game, Which led the double bill, but could not 2old it. The Old Liners scored freely, but could not stop the sharpshooting of the Bulldogs. Maryland lost the basket ball game to Georgia by 4 points and tied with Duke in the boxing match. Earl Widmyer, Maryland sprinter, did mot win the invitation 50-meter at New York Saturday night, but that he fin- dshed .hird shows he did some real run- | | 100.7023 miles an hour, said unofficially broke every dirt-track record official Carey from 1 to 100 miles. Recognition must awalt checking of the time. Shadows of the Past BY 1. C. BRENNER. GEORGE GARDINER. HICAGO, which city in the days when boxing was at its height in this country, boasted of being the home of many of our greatest fighters, today retains its place in the fistic spotlight not only by hav- ing the largest indoor fight arena, the Coliseum, but by having among its citizens the largest number of former pugilistic luminaries outside of New York. Among those the Windy City harbors is George Gardiner, former Lowell, Mass., fighter, the first man to hold the V;?_fld's light heavyweight champion- ship. Gardiner in those days was a trim, well-built, handsome looking yor man, and today he doesn't I much different except that he has put on weight and has become a little flabby around the waist. The title was first established in the United States in 1903, with Jack Root as the claimant. Lou Hous- man put up a belt for a battle be- tween Root and any man who thought he had a chance to whip him, and Gardiner, under the guid- ance of Jack Curley, now America’s foremost wrestling promoter, beat Root in 12 rounds and became the recognized title holder. That's how the light heavyweight division was launched. Gardiner thereafter developed in- to one of the finest figl He held his own with the greatest light heavies and heavyweights of his time. One of his best fights was that with Joe Walcott in San Prancisco, in which Jack Welch, the referee, deolared the affair a draw, although most critics thought Gardi- ner had won. Other famous con- tests in which Gardiner was par- ticipant were those with Jack Mof- fat, Jack Johnson, to whom he lost a 20-round decision before the negro had gained the world crown; Kid Carter, Marvin Hart, Jim Flynn, Mike ‘Schreck, Al Kaufman and Tony Ross. ming. Widmyer beat Wyckoff of South- ern California in a semi-final, in itsel Ruite a feat, £ an'nlreg finished second in Today Gardiner follows fights only as a spectator. He is a cigar sales- man and is doing well in his line of ‘bustness. (Copyright, 1933.) in | [ Griff Ships Four, Picks Up Pitcher IDENT CLARK GRIFFITH this morning reduced to 31 the number of Nationals in reserve and probably will let out two more players before his club goes into training at the camp in Biloxi, Mis: 8. Four were shipped from the club today, but one was added. Those sent out, all to the Washington farm at Chattanooga under option, are: Howard Maple, catches; Don Musser, inflelder, and Waltér Cazen and Ysmael Morales, outfielders. ‘The new member of the Nationals is Lloyd Cassell, a semi-pro pitcher of Calverton, Va. Today's reduction leaves unsigned only 11 of the 31 Nationals on the roster. NO NPGRAW-GIANT FEUD, SCRIBES TOLD {Relations With Club Ever Good, Says Ex-Pilot at Base Ball Dinner. BY ALAN GOULD, Associated Press Sports Editor. EW YORK, February 6.—There ‘were no fireworks today im the wake of John McGraw's ap- pearance, for the first time, as the guest of honor at the annual ban- quet of the New York chapter of the Base Ball Writers’ Association, devoted annually for 10 years to mid-Winter frolic and occasion for putting the national game “on the gridiron.” The writers themselves lampooned the giants and lamented the departure of the “Little Napoleon” from the scene of action, after a stormy career, but the stocky, gray-haired man who won more pennants than any other figure in 'b:;‘blll .::d‘guys':pnpded“lh a ure - any :Mppon‘nu?flty he may have had to air real or fancied grievances. '-"I THINK I may say one thing,” he remarked, after recelving an ovation from several hundred guests and hearing himself described in a_telegram from Connie Mack as base ball's greatest manager, “and that is that T have never tried to influence the base ball writers. I have burned inwardly and outwardly at things they have written about me, but I have never quarreled with the means they used to reach their conclusions. “T served under three presidents of make it clear that I was treated well by all of them. I have heard talk Mr. Stoneham upon my retirement last year, but that was not so. I re- tired on my doctor’s orders. “My successor, Bill Terry, is a fine young man and a great ball player. I can only wish for him as long a career and as great » measure o(ds:t‘:;e‘:' :,:3 ent as I lence: 3 e snbge of the Glants.” ‘McGraw interrupted his annual vaca- tion in Havana to attend the dinner and be feted by the writers as the “man of the year” in recognition of his contributions to the game. He harked back to the days of the old Baltimore Orioles, recalled his trip around the world with the Giants and White Sox in 1914 and pointed to developments in the game, but steered clear of any controversial subjects. Y0 Branch Rickey, energetic fleld marshal of the St. Louls Cardinals, X fell the assignment of making base ball’s “defense” against current discus- slon about what is wrong with the game. He responded with an appeal for closer working relations between the club own- ers and base ball writers, called for “more enterprise” and insisted that the “cannot hide behind the de- pression.” As to salarles, Rickey defended the drastic cuts made by the ms:mus last year and this on the ground that ball players have been among the highest paid performers in any sport and felt the depression less than any others. New York Chapter's annual award to the player on a metropolitan team doing the most for the game went to Herb Pennock, veteran southpaw of the New York Yankees. SMITHSON "HAWK HEAD Succeeds Mackey as President of Athletic Organization. Election of Harry Smithson as presi- dent of the Mohawk Athletic Club to succeed Rob Roy Mackey has been an- nounced. Other officers elected are Louis Wer- ner, vice president; E. F. McCarthy, secretary; Patsy Donovan, treasurer, and Oscar Raily, sergeant at arms. — - Moriarity to Speak. George Moriarty, American League umpire, will tell public high school stu- dents of the glories of base ball tomor- row morning at Eastern at 9 o'clock and Roosevelt at 2 o'clock in the aft- ernoon. He will speak at Tech Wednes- d-y2 at 9 and at Western Wednesday at 2. the New York Gisnts and I want to|$% there was friction between myself and| YALE ON METTLE INBASKET LEAGUE Leader Must Face Strong Columbia and Dartmouth Teams This Week. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, February 6—Yale, setting the pace in the East- ern Intercollegiate Basket Ball League, faces two crucial tests this week. Winners of three of their first four games, the Elis must tackle Columbia at New Haven tomorrow night and then invade Hanover, N. H., for a tussle with Dartmouth’s Indians on Saturday. Neither assignment promises to easy, but no one is underrating the Elis" power now that they have beaten Penn- sylvania’s highly regarded machine twice within 10 days. Columbia now is tied with the champion Princeton Tigers for second place, each with two victories and one defeat, but both of the Lions’ triumphs were scored at the ex- pense of Cornell, beaten four times in as many league starts. Yale undoubtedly will be a strong fa- vorite against the invaders from New York. ARTMOUTH, however, may be & tougher obstacle. The Indians, although they've gained no better than an even break in four games, handed Yale its only defeat of the cam- paign, winning a 29-23 decision at New Haven, On their home floor the Indians should be even stronger, but Yale, too, will be much more foi able now that its attack definitely is clicking. The only other game on the week’s program sends Penn against (Cornell at Ithaca on Saturday. dropped three games in a row, two of them league engagements, but may be able to swing into the winning column against Cornell. The standings: P.for. P.ag'st, Yale ... 12! 3 Princeton Columbia Dartmout nn Cornell . ’I'HE Mountaineers of West Virginia will figure in both games on the Eastern Intercollegiate Conference schedule shis week. The Mountaineers first will meet Georgetown at Washing- ton tonight, with each team seeking its first conference victory after three successive defeats. On Thursday they travel to Philadelphia to meet the Tem- ple Owls, third-place holders. Neither Pitt, the leader, with four consecutive victories, nor Carnegie, second, with two victories and one defeat, will see con- ference action during the week. ‘The standing: = P.for. P.ag'st. 147 88 7 162 78 7% ARL NIKKEL, Yale forward, scored only one point against Penn as the Elis chalked up a 33-26 victory Sat- urday night, but retained his lead in individual scoring in the Eastern League with 39 points. Ken Fairman of Princeton retained second place with 35 points, with Bob O'Connell cf Yale third with 33; Bob Freeman of Penn, fourth with 32, and Lou Hatkoff of Cor- nell fitth with 31. In the Eastern Conference, Howard (Red) Rosan of Temple regained first with 47 points, 10 more than Don ant of Pitt and Bob Smith of 13 ATHLETIC EVENTS FOR NAVY THIS WEEK Wrestling With Michigan, Boxing With Lounisiana State High Spots of Card. Special Dispatch to The Star. NNAPOLIS, Md., February 6.—A program of 13 events next week for Naval Academy teams marks the approach to the climax of the Win- ter athletic season at Annapolis. Seven of these are for varsity teams, the rep- resentatives of every seasonal sport being in action, and six for plebe teams, All but one academy team will con- test at home; the exception being the basket ball five. which goes to Cam- bridge to meet Harvard Saturday. The fAive also has a game with the University of Virginia Wednesday, and the plebes meet Staunton Military Academy on Saturday. Navy wrestlers will have a chance of testing the ability of the Middle West in their sport by meeting the matmen of Michigan Saturday, and the inter- sectional character of the bill is carried out by the boxing match, the only eve- ning event against the team of Louls- iana State, which held Navy to four to three last season. STOVER DOG PORTLAND, Oreg., February 6 (#).— Roy Stover of McCall, Idaho, drove a dog team to victory today in the first TEAM BEST. Pacific Northwest Dog Derby held at Government Camp, on the slopes of Mount Hood, Oregon's Winter play- ground. BY JOE VILA. EW YORK, February 6.— John Honus Wagner, great- est National League ball player of all time, in the opinion of John McGraw and many other competent judges, is coming back to the national game, after 16 years of inactivity, as one of the coaches of the Pittsburgh Pirates. ‘This announcement, made by Pres- ident Benswanger of the Pirates, will be applauded by thousands of fans who remember Hans Wagner, the sensational Flying Dutchman, when he played shortstop for the Smoky City team which rolled up a great %une for, the late Barney Drey- It was in 1917 that Wlflh‘l:fl' played surpassed only b t. de record only by Capt. Ad- rian C. Anson, once famous man- ager of the Chicago White Stockings. ‘Wagner intended to retire in 1916, but was rersuuled to come back for a part of the following season. Al- though he started late, he continued to play a brand of ball that made Wagner, to Be Pirate Coach, In His 21 Campaigns Became National League’s “Greatest” best beloved player left behind him a record of personal worth and pro- fessional service never equaled by another player in the old circuit. In his 21 years of continuous playing he served but one flag—that first litted by Barney Dreyfuss in Louis- ville and later transferred to Pitts- burgh. ‘Wagner played in’ more games, scored more runs, made more hits and stole more bases than any other National League player in the his- tory of that organization. In addi- tion to those achievements, he batted .300 or higher through 17 consecutive pennant races, the s extending unbroken from 1897 to 1914. The Dutchman’s record showed ,a greater total of hits and Tuns than ever was scored by an- other National League player. Playing his first National League game with Loulsville in 1897, Wagner, when he permanently re- tired, had taken part in 2,792 cham- moxmnofiéonmu, scoring 1,766 runs and c ting 3,430 hits, of which 2,438 were singles, 640 doubles, 252 triples and 100 homs runs. During that long period he stole a total of 720 bases, still a National League record. It was not tntil 1914 that Wagner for the first time droppeds below the .300 mark in batting, his average for that season being .252, his lowest mark. The reeords gave l;l;z; -Mmeum bat average of 321, & shortstop never has been excelled. ' Alvin ] I | MR. MILQUETQASFH~CONSCIOUS OF THE AMERICAN CAMPAIGN, DECIDES o AVOID BUYING HIS DAILY BAG OF CHESTAUTS FROM THE | (TALIAN ON THE CORNER B nrei. . \ il ” » b g RULES COMMITTEE MEETS THIS WEEK |Six Adjustments Recomntend- ed by Coaches Will Be Considered. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, February 6.— The National Foot Ball Rules Committee goes into annual Midwinter session this week end, ready to study the means by which the game can be improved through alterations in the playing code. Out & their deliberations at Green Hill brook, , Overl Pa., PFriday, Saturday and Sunday, will come either a revised code or an announcement of sfiuuon with the rules as they stand. The chances are that the rule-makers will decied upon a few minor adjust- ments, but that there will be no such series of drastic changes as were order- ed at this time last year following the 1931 season when some 50 lives were lost on the foot ball playing fields. Rules Committee, in its annual report to the National Collegiate A. A., opposed gny radical alter- ations t}:en the code, of making the W ’ 16;{7 5 he (¥ SCHOOL BASKET PLAY FINISHES TOMORROW Tussle With Roosevelt Last for Several Techs—Central Apt - to Clinch Title. CH'S basket ball team, which will finish its public high school title play tomorrow against Roosevelt on the Tech court, will lose some high- class tossers by graduation before an- other season rolls around, but Coach Artie Boyd will retain several boys of proved worth around whom to build his next quint. The Tech-Roosevelt game is the last scheduled contest of the series. It will follow the Central-Western tilt, start- ing at 3:30 o'clock, which Central is ex- pected to capture without much trouble to win the crown clearly for the first time since 1928. Thomas, Wheeler, Olverson and Nau are among stalwarts of this Winter's THE LISTENING POST BY WALTER TR EW YORK, February 6.—Hav- ing just a few minutes before established a world record at 50 meters, Emmett Toppino natur- ally was 5 feet 5 inches of satisfaction. His brown hair stuck out to the circle of the compass points and his shining countenance was brighter than any of of the new electric lights with which Madison Square Gards equip for thenlfilru&m;? i o “What was idea in M 0 in that final heat?” asked mhh friends. “You had a couple of yards to spare and there’s no use straining yourself.” - “Well,” answered the New Orleans flash, in the limpid accents of Lou- isiana, “You see Widener had made fast led, better move rf along.” And he e Tech team listed to receive their di-| ¢ plomas before another season. Reich- hardt, another capable player, graduated a few nights ago, and Reed, who played with the team during the early cam- paigning, will not be available again. Red Daly, husky sophomore guard; Gillem, son of Maj. Gillem, head of the department of military science and tactics at the University of Mary- land, who plays forward, and Josh Billings, another forward, are amor youngsters who will carry on for Tech another year, and if present form means anything, will prove gl(h.ly valuable. Two games bnzln together livel: foes also are book w‘momm h’hnd; and Landon teams are to battle on the Epiphany Church court, and St. Albans will go out to Garrett Park for a setto with Georgetown Prep. BAUSCH TO COMPETE IN NEW YORK MEETS Olympic Star Informs A. A. U. He Will Enter Pole Vault and Shotput Events. By the Associated Press. b'EW YORK, February 6. — Jim from: Katams. it pas. motted ansas_ City, ot Amateur Athletic Union officials he will come east to compete in the New York A. C. games February 18 and the Na- tional A. A. U. indoor championships February 27. He will be entered in the pole vawt and shotput in both meets. Bausch, Qlympic decathlon champion and record holder, recently was awarded the James E. Sullivan memorial medal t;;x;he best athlete and sportsman for He has not competed in track since the Olympics, but has kept in condi- tion by playing basket ball with the Kansas City A. C. team. He has put the 16-pound shot more than 52 feet outdoors and has vaulted 13 feet 6 inches, e 70,000 SEE SOCCER TILT. a crowd of 70,000 yesterday. 20,000 was turned away seating space. ‘Wiedman and Costello in the pole e cxpected To do wel tors Gebrges are e; well for - town University. Catholic University basketers easily defeated Gallaudet. Horan for the winners and Rockwell for the losers were high scorers. District of Columbia National Guard basketers defeated the Aloysius quint. Hurley, McCarthy ln% "l:]nllt?v?n W!r:mmrl, . Whiting showing great form, the Washington Roller Polo Club defeated the Atlantic City Ng | jamas of motion which resembles a flurry of up- percuts—it un{: Seems as Jwfi:e of them sometime is likely to him in the nose—and his’ legm}'"nflhl like the blades of a propellor. PPINO and his pal and rival, Frank Wykoff, that likeable, lithe, ‘blond boy from the sun-kissed coast, had put”’on bright-colored track pa- the type young athletes wear over their suits, and were still cooling out, after the manner of a cu_li%l: of thoroughbred colts. second, third and fourth men in that 50-meter dash had finished as close as three fingers on one hand, but Wykoff had been the last finger, and so was none too well satisfied. The sprinter who has been called the “fast- est human” is not to hav- all start for together. “I certainly have something to learn ‘Wykoff. "Tre_spring. of ' . e a board track is entirely different from of a cinder track. Fortunately, there are three more meets ands per- haps I'l do better in the latter ones.” IT would seem that several things were demonstrated in this meet, things be newly im on the human race in spite of the constancy with which they occur. We are, for example, dargely a Nation of conservatives. We timidly permit ourselves to be overawed by an Achievement, or a reputation. But youth has erally demanding to shown. a avineibl, Jouth s OB, Temhs . says, , ? Well, lut'l:u“flxklloekllhlm.n”h So, when Bill Carr, world champion quarter-miler, was given a lead of 8 yards in the final 400 meters of the 1,600-meter college relay, we just start- ed to mark that race down in the University of Pennsylvania column. But Harry Hoffman of New York Uni- versity had other ideas. Give Carr a few meters in 400! blithely set sail for Carr and, if the race had been about one inch longer, he accustomed ing others reach first an objective they 1 would have beaten him. It was a lovely and thrilling movie of a Hoffman catch- ing a Carr, ND all during the evening, young- from next, few weeks. A champion, at his particular game, is the pest man in the world—until a better man comes along. BOX AT FORT HUMPHREYS l!cldhr- Hosts Tonight to Groves A. C. in Six-Bout Show. Fort Humphreys and Groves A. C. boxing teams will clash tonight at 8:30 o'clock in a six-bout boxing card in the Engineer Theater. Each bout is listed for three rounds. % Jurd follows: m"';'-fi'm:‘.ég‘ rh}.fipfi?'"-'f;' ey Hondt 3 Toves), vs. 168 B!lmnhrl’):‘ MA:I nglngl".mml% bby Jomes, 158 Loury, ‘135 ' (Groves), y Tt, 138 (Humphreys): Green, 124 (Grotes). ve. Jimmie 'O'Neil, (Groves), va. Frank Lis, 147 (Ramphreysy Stagg Would Play Old Rivals Again HICAGO, February 6 (#).—Amos Alonzo Stagg will feel pretty much at home if he can sched- ule foot ball games for the College of the Pacific with Southern Cali- and Cali- the coaches of which are for- mer Big Ten neighbors. Howard Jones of Southern Cali- fornia coached at Iowa, Bill Spaul- ding went from Minnesota to Cali- fornia at Los Angeles, Jimmy Phelan moved from Purdue to Washington and Bill Ingram went to California from Indiana via Annapolis. In addition, Tom Lieb of Loyola, at Los Angeles, coached at Wiscon- sin and Notre Dame and Slip Mad- igan of St. Mary's and Clipper Smith ;:)(‘m&nh Clara played at Notre .. Lou Bush, Man Nation’s Leading Grid Scorer Also Is Crack Goal- Getter in Basket Ball. By the Associated Press. MHERST, Mass, February 6.—There's no stopping this Lou Bush of Massachusetts State College Who ran up a total of 114 points during the 1932 collegiate foot ball season to clinch the Nation’s individual seoring ‘honors. As soon as State’s oot ball season of Many Points occupied until college closes in June, ‘This three-letter athlete also spends about four hours of e day his milif Joe | metropolitan cham| Mak B game safer for the players. The re- port did advocate restrictions on the ot te e S g ma one of the chief items up for play until the pass is thrown; suggested that whenever an agreement is reached between contesting teams, time may be kept on the sidelines by representatives of the two teams, thus doing away with a fleld ; Tecom: mended that, in the lntu’;’z"or stricter enforcement of the rule against - ping the penalty be reduced rmu?’ Es to 15 yards; that coaches i s o T ve out; o mended that interference hugt called . e \ these, the sideline play represents conche Tocommmndin a1y T8 coaches r¢ that in the future the ball be brought of the side of the fleld. Under the present rule, the ball must be carried ouf and a down wasted before ml:namhtmmmmg: e o o tion succeed the late Edward K. Hall. <1 SOCCER PLAY DELAYED Snow Forces Booters to Carry Over Games to Next Sunday. Capital City Soccer League games; prevented yesterday by tions, will be played next Sunday. Columbia Heights Grays will and Team standing: Columbi; Columbin B Marlboro vill ] Gait) s Concord . SCORES TENNIS UPSET Mako Beats Stoefen, High Ranking Star, in Los Angeles Play. LOS ANGELES, February 6 )— Gene Mako, 16, national boys' dmuglu tennis titlist, staged an upset here in defeating Lester Stoefen, sixth player in the United States, Om in the semi-finals o:n';hh;- Los Angeles 0 is a freshman at the University of Southern California. He meets El- bert Lewis of the Universty of Cali- é‘:fi: at Los Angeles in the finals next . Varied Sports Collece Basket Ball. Niagara University, 33; 32. U. C. L. A, 33; mmmum nia, 30. Lewiston Normal, 51; Whitworth Ool- ‘Toledo, 25; I Muncls (Ind), 18 G- PROFESSIONAL HOOKEY. National League. Detroit, 1; Chicago, 0. New York mfl‘l, 4; New York Americans, International League. Syracuse, 5; London, 1. Canadian-American League. Boston, 3; New Haven, 1, American Association, St. Louis, 7; Wichita, 1. 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