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eorgetown Conquers Manhattan, 13-0: Maryland, W.and L. inScore | Keating’s 80-Yard Return of Kick-0ff Leads to By the Associated Press. . EW YORK, November 16.—The N ing to life with dramatic sud- denness in the second half, College a 13-0 drubbing in cold, wind- swept Ebbets Field here today before All 13 points were made by Co-capt. Joe Meglen, 190-pound kicking full- after the third quarter began and the other as the climax of a 34-yard fourth period. Quarterback Tom Keating, a 158- Jaspers on an 80-yard return of Sa- batella’s second-half kick-off to set up down. Keating evaded the entire green-clad eleven, but was overtaken he cut back to make way for a cross- ing blocker. len raced around his left end, outran the closely bunched Jasper secondary yard mark. He place-kicked the extra point. EGLEN'S expert punting that averaged 41 yards and served as Hoyas, likewise provided the build-up for the second touchdown. His long the Jaspers to their 10-yard line. Ferrara of Georgetown intercepted TWO TOUCHDOWNS Opening Marker. Hoyas from Georgetown, com- handed the Kelly Green Manhattan 12,000 spectators. back, the first less than a minute passing and running attack in the pounder, slipped through the startled the opportunity for the first touch- from behind at the 10-yard mark as On the second play thereafter Meg= and went over untouched from the 9- Meglen’s Kicking Big Help. @ great defensive weapon for the kick early in the fourth quarter backed Whalen's pass at the 34-yard line. The Hoyas struck out with a mixed run- | ning and passing attack to the 2-yard line. Meglen made inches on each of two stabs at the line, and it was first down just short of the last chalk- mark. Meglen made a high dive over the line for the second touchdown. He failed to convert. Keating’s 80-yard sprint that sparked the Hoyas to their first touch- cown virtually was a re-enactment of the dash Vic Fusia made for Man- hattan with the opening kick-off. Fusia raced 62 yards from his own 10- yard mark with the initial kick. Man- hattan’s surprise pass play failed and the Jaspers were forced to kick. Meglen quick-kicked out of the hole, the ball sailing far over the Manhattan safety and coming to rest | on the Jasper 10, clearing almost the length of the field. PORTS. Manhattan Takes Risk, 'A BIT later a Meglen punt found the “coffin corner” at the 2-yard line. Manhattan, gambling instead of kicking, almost yielded a score as Whalen was nearly downed running the ball out of the end zone. Then the Jaspers tried a pass, which was intercepted by Herron, but the Jas- pers regained the ball by intercepting @ Georgetown toss near the end of the first period. Manhattan's deepest thrust carried on a pass interception, a 15-yard end run by Whalen and a Downey-Fusia lateral. The Hoyas ended this threat when Meglen intercepted Downey's | pass. Manhattan put together three con- | kecutive first downs in the third period with Whalen and Tuckey carrying the burden of the attack, but down in ‘ their own territory the Hoyas stiffened &nd regained the ball on downs. Georgetown's line held together bet- ter than Manhattan's leaky forward | wall and the Hoyas appeared superior | efter Keating's great kick-off retur.. Line-ups and Summary. Georgetown (13), Manhattan (0) —Cavadin Kurtz “Cummings Buickley Kovach Sabatella Wheeler Berst Fridley Whalen | o WnTmEHe QHE SO KA HHY Georgetown __ 0o o0 7 | Manhattan 00 0 0—0 Gegrgetown scoring—Touchdowns. | len (2). Point from try after touchdown— | Meglen (place-kick) Georgetown ~ substitutions—Stadler for Bhuker. Nolan for Keating. Vaccaro for | Cummings Fuardo for Hardy, Noonan | far Cavardine. Barabas for Snvder, Keat- ing “for Herron. Curley for Stralka, Petrosky for Cummings, Tehaan for Frank, { Noonan for Snyder. Snyder for Cavadine, Nolan ~for Ferrara, Fleck for Frank, | Bhuker for Stadler. | Referee—H_E. Amstrong (Tufis) pire—C, A Reed (Springfield). men—V. A Schmid (Bucknell); Vergara' (Notre Dame) Statisties, Um- Lines- George First downs __ Yards gained ru Forward passes _ Forwards comple Yards gained. forwards Forwards intercepted by Lateral passes _ __ Yards gained. Iaterals Number of ‘punts___ 9 Distance of punts, yards__ 370 Run-back of punts, yards_ 18 0 mbles Own _ fumbles recovered enalties __ TS ards lost. penalties _ (Picture on Page B-16.) e G. W. FROSH ELEVEN PROVES POWERFUL| R 1 Sampson Runs for Three Markers | as Penns Grove Y. M. C. A. Cubs Are Beaten, 28-0. PINNS GROVE, N. J.,, November 16. —George Washington University’s freshmen provéd far too strong for the ¥. M. C. A. Cubs, winning by 28 to 0. Vick Sampson, fleet freshman back, raced for three of the visitors’ mark- ers and accounted for all four extra points. His teammate, Tom Birming, shared the scoring honors. Jean Sexton’s yearlings outclassed the Cubs in every department and found stiff opposition only in the first and last period. ‘The Cubs gained four while the vis- ltors registered 10 first downs, Line-up and Summary. 3 28). Cubs. | 0 | 2 | (0. 5 [been bolstered by the addition of Bill . Wright 014 14 0—28 00 0—0 Substitution; F Upper shows Bill Ellis of Washington and Lee trying to pass to Wade Sample but to the 5-vyard line in the second period, | it is knocked down by Louis Ennis, Maryland end, in the scoreless battle at College Park. Lower depicts Bill Guckeyson missing & Maryland touchdown by a yard after receiving THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. BALL TAKEN AT C, NOVEMBER 17, KNOCKED DOWN BY ENNIS X BY GUCKEYSON of Generals. LS. I.RUNS OVER CEORGIA, 13700 Counts Twice and Stopped Three Other Times in Sight of Goal. By the Associated Press ANFORD FIELD, Athens, Ga., November 16.—Louisiana State | foot ball power house, featuring a 95-yard touchdown run by Lanky Jess Fatherree, trampled | Georgia, 13 to 0, today as the Bulldogs repelled three goal line thrusts in a spectacular battle before about 20,000 | fans. i The convincing triumph of the Tigers from Baton Rouge, with thou- sands of Louisiana enthusiasts, headed by Gov. O. K. Allen, in the stands, virtually clinched the Southeastern Conference championship for the Bernie Moore-coached gridders. Louisiana outplayed Georgia’s Bull- | dogs nearly the whole route, checked | the only threat by the men of Harry| Mehre at the 5-yard line early in the | | opening period and accumulated its | } | winning points on Fatherree’s brilliant run and a four-quarter scoring sprint of 22 yards by Bill Crass, the pile- driving star, in the final minutes. The well-earned triumph of Lou- isiana, left only Tulane's Green Wave | between the Tigers and a clean-up | claim to the conference crown. Line-ups and Summary. Louisiana State (13). Georgia (0). Tinsley Mafleti Calhoun Brown Stewart Heiveston Rukas Shi | ¥_Johnson | McKnight | Moorehead | MO DIOEEY DmImEAG QRES Scors by periods: , Scops by verlods: _ o Georgia ___ 0 0 0—0 Scoring__Touchdowns. Fatherree, Crass (sub for Mickal): point. after touchdown, Mickal. e 0 0 PALACE, MARYLAND HAVE IT OUT AGAIN Crack Semi-Pro Gridiron Teams Strengthened by Former Collegiate Stars. PALACE A. C, only eleven to score on the undefeated Maryland A. C. this season, will take another crack at the District semi-pro champions today at Duffy stadium, Seat Pleasant, at 3 pm. Strengthened by the addition of Snail De Labre, former Mohawk and Apache star fullback, the Palace pig- skinners are shooting for an upset. However, the Maryland eleven also has Andorka and Norwood Sothoron, for- mer University of Maryland gridders. In a promising preliminary tilt, the Preshmen — Benson, * MncNeal, " Vincens. Soses:” Hore. i Maryland Preps will tangle with the Palace Preps in a 150-pound game WA OPIROREEY Trojan Air Raid Repels Cougars LOS ANGELES, Calif.,, November 16 (#)—In the wildest exhibi- tion of wide open pass-throwing shown by any major Western foot ball team this year, Southern California came from behind to beat Washington State, 20 to 10, here today. Forty thousand fans cheered lustily as the Trojans, after trailing 10 to 0 going into the fourth period, traveled the air lanes for three quick touchdowns to win their first major encounter of the season. COMMODORE LEADE DOWNS VOLS, 13T0 7 Geny Makes Both Touchdowns in First Win Over Tennessee for Vandy Since 1926. By the Associated Press. KNOXVILLE. Tenn., November 18. —Led by the flaming spirit and sensational performance of Capt. Willie Geny, Vanderbilt today de- feated Tennessee, 13 to 7, for the first time in nine years, before a crowd of 15,000. Unmindful of the sloshy mud cover- ing the field and the drizzling rain that fell during part of the game, Geny paced his mates to a dazzling triumph, scoring both touchdowns and shining in all departments of the game. The regime of Ray Morrison as Vandy coach was off in high style, his debut against the Vols resulting in a victory that Commodore backers have craved since their 20-3 decision in 1926. Since that time Tennessee had won six games and tied two. Line-ups and Sum:ury. It (13 nessee (7). b i ‘Humphreys ore by periods Vanderbilt Tennessee Scoring—Vanderbiit: Touchdowns, Geny (2); try for point after touchdown, Thr morton _(placement). _Tennessee: downs. Harp (sub for Derryberry): point after touchdown. Ditmore (sub for down, Harp (sub for Derryberry); try for SHOREMEN LOSE, 19-3 CHESTERTOWN, Md., November 16 (#)—Held to a standstill by a light Washington College team for three quarters, Pennsylvania State Teachers College of West Chester, registered three touchdowns and aedded an extra point in the last quarter to win, 19 to 3. The Shoremen started off au- spiciously when Tignor, guard, place- kicked 3 points in the initial period following a 60~yard drive through the visitors’ line, ———— BIG CENTER SEEKS JOB. W. C. Jones, former House of David center and forward, who is 6 feet 4 inches tall, would like to join & fast unlimited basket ball team. He may be reached at 915} G street. NO SCORING DONE BY VIRGINIA,V.P. Gobblers Are Staved Off in Second Half—Cavaliers Stopped Early. By the Associated Press, NIVERSITY, Va, November 16.—Virginia and Virginia ‘Tech battled to 0-0 in a con- tinual downpour here today. | About 3,000 spectators shivered while | they watched the Cavaliers and Gob- their first gridiron meeting with a deadlock that was by no means as sloppy as the fleld on which it was played. ‘The game marked the third time in as many meetings that the Cavaliers and Gobblers have played to a tie in Scott Stadium, where neither team has gained a victory over the other since the field has been in use. This also was the Cavaliers' fourth score- less stalemate of the season, the others being played with Willlam and Mary, Davidson and V. M. I The Cavaliers kept the visitors with their backs to their own goal through- out most of the first half and started the second half in a commanding po- sition, but soon fumbled themselves into a hole and spent the later stages of the contest doggedly throwing back one Tech thrust after another, Cavallers Quickly Stopped. API'ER Tech recejved the opening kickoff the teams tentatively ex- changed punts twice before Virginia opened an attack which carried across midfield. This gave the Cavaliers a strategic ¢ | 8dvantage which they held until in- termission, but without seriously threatening to score. Once A. B. Conner covered 20 yards with a pass from Wilkin, but Tech held. Soon after this pass Shockey broke through to partially block a punt by Cully Wilkin, which gave Tech the ball on Virginia's 35 stripe. Here Tech made its initial first down, when Mel Henry slipped over each tackle for 6-yard trips. The Cavaliers here showed the visi- tors what they might expect whenever in scoring position by rallying to take the pigskin 19 yards from the goal. Line-Ups: MO IO Dickerson RANDOLPH-MACON BOWS. FRONT ROYAL, Va., November 16. —A fast, smooth-working foot ball eleven representing Virginia Episco- dolph-Macon Academy here this aft- ernoon, 24 to 0. Williams, quarter- back for the visitors, ran for 35, 45 and 85 yards, the last for & touchdown [} a lateral pass from Charlie Ellinger. blers mark the 40th anniversary of | 1935—PART ONE. Two Futile Efforts in Battle Between Terrapins and Generals He got 5 yards but finally was halted by a number —Photos by John Mueller, Star Staff. OKLAHOMA 3-0 VICTOR Breeden Boots 13-Yard Placement to Defeat Kansas State. MANHATTAN, Kans., November 16 {#).—A 13-yard placekick from a sharp angle gave the University of Oklahoma & 3-to-0 victory over Kansas State here today in a Big Six Conference | foot ball game on a muddy field. Bill Breeden, Sooner halfback, kicked the goal after a drive started late in the first period, featured by a 13-yard pass, Breeden to Karey Fuqua. It carried to the Kansas State 7-yard line. On the fourth down as the second period opened, Breeden dropped back to the 13-yard line to send a sodden ball tumbling between the goal posts. INTERCEPTED PASS GIVES PURDUE WIN McGannon's Catch, 63-Yard Dash Beats Iowa, 12 to 6, as 16,000 Watch. By the Associated Press. LAP’AYE'I'I'E. Ind., November 16— Slippery Tom McGannon, sopho- more Purdue halfback, intercepted one of Oze Simmons’ long forward passes with & ‘“shoestring catch” and streaked 63 yards straight down the gridiron today to give the rejuvenated Boilermakers a 12-to-6 victory over the University of Towa. ‘The Boilermakers, coming back after three successive defeats, handed the Hawkeyes their second loss of the season. It was Purdue's third Big Ten victory and provided a satisfying day for 16,000 dad’s day visitors. The Hawkeyes seized on an aerial trust to tie the score after trailing, 6 to 0, at the half. Simmons faded back to his own 42 and un- corked a long toss to right-end Homer Harris on the Purdue 38. Harris easily outran the Boilermakers' secondary to score. CLASH WITH CHICAGO PARTY FOR.HOOSIERS Starved for Big Ten Grid Win, Indiana Gorges on 24-0 Triumph Over Maroon. By the Associated Press. . CHICAGO. Ill, November 16.—The Hooslers of Indiana, starved for Q| Big Ten foot ball victory, gorged 1 | themselves on a 24-to-0 upset triumph over Chicago’s Maroons at Stagg Field today. The Hoosiers, who had lost to Michigan and Ohio State and had a of their season, outplayed the Maroons with the exception of a few minutes in the first period and fewer minutes in the final. Jay Berwanger, the Maroons’ great half back, injured last week, was used sparingly, but was largely responsi- ble for whatever worries the Hoosiers had. He led & marc! first V.M.1. FUMBLE TILTTO DAVIDSON Alert Wildcats Win, 14-6, Covering 9 of 11 Muffs on Muddy Field. By the Associated Press. { | EXINGTON, Va., November 16.— Davidson College’s Wildcats hung up their fifth straight victory over V. M. I on Alumni Field today, prov- ing before a small, shivering crowd that they were better mudders than the Cadets. The final score of 14 to 6 Wildcats to follow the ball closely and ties. The Cadets outgained the visitors, registering nine first downs to six, but the great work of Billy Roberson in the backfield was offset by the alert- ness of the Wildcats plus the sparkl- ing running of Paul Pittman and Teeny Lafferty. Eleven loose balls slithered onto the slippery field and the Wildcats recov- ered nine times. The Cadets fumbled five times, Davidson miscued four times and two Cadet punts were blocked. Every time but twice a black- jerseyed Wildcat was at the bottom of the pile with the ball in his pos- session. Davidson Soon Gets Points. 'HE game was only two minutes old when Fields Young fell on Wayt Clark’s fumble on the Cadet 14-yard line. Two plays later Paul Pittman sprinted around left end to score standing up and then converted with a perfect placement. The Cadets came back to threaten twice in the same quarter, but fumbles stopped both advances, including one featured by a 30-yard gain on a ldteral from Roberson to Clark. Still another fumble gave the Wild- cats their chance for a field goal early in the second period, but Pittman’s placement was short. Sprints of 37, 27 and 18 yards by Teeny Lafferty kept the Cadets in hot water during the second period, but a fighting line stopped two advances and Clark intercepted a pass once on the 3-yard line to run it back 25 yards out of danger, Line-ups and Summary. Davidson_(14). Youns S MREORUIOCT Y 6-to-6 tie with Jowa as the high spots | V. Scoring : Davidson touchdowns —Pittman, Armfield. Points after touch- down—Pittman_(2), placement. V. M. scoring: Touchdown—Witt. TOURNEY AT BEAVER DAM. Out at Beaver Dam today a large fleld of woman golfers are to play in & turkey tournament. Ellen Kincaid, club champion, and Mrs. Ors Emge, runner-up, sre the favorites to win the gross award. | bid in the final quarter. Starting from | first down on the Maryland 20. There | picked up but 4 yards. SPORTS. 1 TERP OFFENSIVES CRACK NEAR GOAL Homecoming Crowd of 8,000 Sees Generals’ Late Bid From Placement Miss. BY JOHN B. KELLER. FFORT was wasted with reck- less abandon as the foot ball teams of Maryland and Wash- ington and Lee battled yes- terday before a homecoming day crowd of 8,000 at College Park and when all was over rain was the only victor. . - The precipitation that increased from a slight drizzle at the outset of the pastiming to a heavy downpour with the beginning of the second half routed the majority of the old Mary- land grads and the supporters of the visiting team, but neither the Terps nor the Generals could cross the op- posing goal or get themselves points in any other manner. There was enough thrown into the | game by the Maryland eleven to have won a contest ordinarily. Repeatedly | in the early going the Terps stormed down the field in a way to gladden the | hearts of their onlooking State’s chief | executive, Gov. Harry W. Nice, and | the host of Mystic Shriners there from | Baltimore to hold joint conclave with the Washington nobles. But when- | ever it had a scoring chance Maryland | MUEOPIION Y Lee get out of trouble. Terps got within striking distance of the Generals’ goal. In the first ad- | vance, they carried to the 6-yard stripe. Then they got to the 5. Finally they made it first down within a yard of the Generals' final line. But the scoring shot wasn't there. Generals Make Late Bid. MUCH credit goes to Washington and Lee, of course, for its brave stands under these trying circum- stances. Each time it wrested the ball from Maryland on downs to have Bill Ellis send it booming back up the fleld. But perhaps Maryland was | hurt by its peculiar choice of plays when so favorably situated as much | as by anything else. The Generals, who had penetrated Maryland territory but once in the | first half and then only to the extent | of five yards, made their one scoring their 40 the Blue and White battlers, with Joe Arnold and Jack Bailey lead- ing the onset, rammed their way to a the Terps braced and three plays Back went Arnold to attempt a goal | that spiraled back to Bailey, but the was a tribute to the ability of the | capitalize on their scoring opportuni- | n D% |12 yards to the Generals’ 38. Three 9| for gains before a pass made it first from placement. It was a good pass ball was slimy with mud and he could not set it well for the kicker. Bailey was given splendid assistance by the Washington and Lee line for they held back the frenzied Maryland forwards | long enough to give Arnold a good swing at the pigskin. The kick was low and wide of the |goal posts, however, so Washington |and Lee's only scoring chance was | gone. Terps Gain Well, Anyway. b ARYLAND clearly was superior to Washington and Lee in everything but the kicking game. It outsushed its opponent almost two to one, running the ball for 233 yards against 117 totaled the same way by Washington and Lee. It gained 14 | yards from 3 of the 10 passes it tried. Washington and Lee completed one of six heaves for a pick-up of 4 yards. The Terps made 11 first downs to 6 for the Generals. But the fine kicking foot that Ellis | swung more than offset too often the big yardage the Terps had gained. Fifteen times Bill socked the pigskin to toe it for a punting average of 46 yards. Once Ellis sent it booming along with the wind for 70 yards, to set it squarely on the Maryland | | goal line, from where it bounded | to a touchback. Bill Guckeysom, who |did Maryland’s punting, averaged 40 yards, but he got away nothing like most of Ellis’ kicks. Guckeyson, Charley Ellinger and | George Sacks were the big guns for the Maryland drives, although Cole- |man Headley's passes to Vic Willis and Lou Ennis figured in the early advances no little. Two Drives Flivver. THE first Terp offensive was launched soon after the game started, when Willis recovered a Washington and Lee fumble at mid- field. Ellinger immediately swept to |a first down, then after a Terp pass | was allowed because of interference by the Generals, Guckeyson and El- linger made it first on the 16. Ellinger again advanced, then tossed a lateral to John Gormley, who was forced outside at the 7-yard point. Maryland needed only two yards to make it first down, but Ellis and Charlie Brasher, the defensive flank- men of the Generals, and Duane Ber- ry, their hefty guard, collaborated to toss the Terps back on their necks. It wasn't long, however, before Guckeyson was leading another Magy- land charge from the Generals' 39. He reeled off 18 yards after slipping by the opposing right tackle. Then | came a desperate pass, Headley to | Willis, to put the ball on the Gen- | erals’ 11. Hard pressed by charging foemen, Headley ran around in circles before whipping the ball to Willis. Guckeyson broke through to cross goal, but the play was brought back to the 5-yard line as the referee had sounded his whistle when the pigskin toter had been bumped by & blue- jerseyed player at that point. Again the Generals braced and took the ball when a fourth-down pass with 4 yards to go missed its mark. So Near, Yet So Far. THE third Maryland stab at a score came with the beginning of the second period. Stonebraker, took a punt from Ellis and ran the ball back times Guckeyson drove into the line down on the 27. Three more off- tackle slants and it was first down on the 13. Sacks hit for 6, then tossed a lateral to Guckeyson, who reached the 1-yard line before he was hauled down by Arnold. It looked as though nothing would stop the Terps this time. But Guckey- son got nowhere with a try at the land lost 5 as Washing- tacklers swarmed all bogged down to let Washington and | Fo Three times in the opening half the | § B-15 less Draw 20 YEARS AGO IN THE STAR T!:cH vion the inter-high chame pionship yesterday by decie sively defeating Eastern, complet- ing an undefeated record in the series marred only by its tie with Business, W. F. Gude, president of the National Bowling Association, ad- dressed a meeting last night in Baltimore where a branch of the Atlantic Coast Bowiing Associa- tion was formed. One thousand Baltimore bowlers are expected here next Spring to roll in the A. C. B. A. tournament. Jim Shaw, Nat pitcher, is re- ported to be in a critical condition in a Pittsburgh hospital after acci- dentally shooting himself while hunting. e within a yard of goal and away went the ball to Washington and Lee. After that, Maryland never had a real shot at victory. 3 WxEEA0 QA i ~Z Gormley Substitutions: A mith, Stonebraker Sacks ser. Birkland. Wash Wilson. Anderson. Cox.. Jones. Officials Referee—Mr. Black (David- son) Umpire—Mr. Menton (Loyola) Linesman—Mr. Baker (Tennessee). fudge—Mr. O'Meara (Gonzaga). Statistics, Matryland — Fletcher, Wheeler, Yae: ington and Lee— @ 9 Pirst downs__ = Yards gained rushing__ PO G5 e ol T.C. U. PAéSES LICK TEXAS IN 28-0 GAME Baugh's Aerials Lead to Three Touchdowns as Frogs Keep Record Clean. By the Associated Press. AUSTIN, Tex., November 16.—Un- defeated Texas Christian Univer- sity's purple-clad juggernaut, led by Sammy Baugh, an uncanny pass bomber, trounced the University of Texas, 28 to 0, here today. Baugh riddled the Texas defense with his bullet-like passes. Seven of his 15 flips were good, three ending in touchdowns. Christian dominated the play with the exception of a few early minutes, when Texas forced its way to the three-yard marker. The invaders tight- ened there. The first Prog touchdown grew out of a 25-yard pass from Baugh to Walls, who ran 20 more to score. In the second period Baugh shot a 32« yard pass to Clark, then flipped one 11 yards to Lawrcnce for another touchdown. He shot a pass across the goal line to the waiting Meyer for the third counter in the third period and a blocked kick and a 31-yard run by Roach concluded the scoring. e RICE HARD PRESSED TOWINBY 17T0 10 Comes From Rear to Beat Texas Aggies, an Eleven Expected to Be an Easy Mark. By the Associated Press. HOUSTON‘. Tex., November 16— The Rice Owls, who had ex- pected the downtrodden Texas Aggies to be a set-up, left the fleld today happy to get away with a hard-fought 17-to-10 triumph, and remain in the Southwest Conference title race. The Owls were forced to come from behind twice to win by a single touchdown. The Aggies scored first with a field goal from Lindsey's toe, then kept Rice on the defensive through most of the first half. But the right side of the A. and M. line finally crumbled under the steady pounding of Bill Wallace and Buck Friedman, Rice stars, who worked the ball into scoring position for Mc- Cauley's touchdown late in the sec- ond period. The Aggies went ahead again the third period, when Schroeder carried the ball a yard through center for a touchdown, and Lindsey converted. The Owls, unaccustomed to being behind, sent Priedman and Wallace cracking through the Aggie right line and shoved the ball 59 yards up the field for another score and put the game on ice. — THOMAS 1S ELECTED ‘W’ CLUB PRESIDENT Former University of Maryland Athletes Honor One-Time Grid, Track Star. W. (KNOCKY) THOMAS, class “of 1928, was elected president of the University of Maryland graduate “M” Club at the annual gathering of the organization yesterday at College Park. Thomas was an outstanding ath- lete in foot ball and track at the Old Line school and following his senior year was chosen as & member of the all-Southern eleven which played on the West Coast. Other officers elected were A. A, Parker, vice president; Ernest N. Cory, secretary-treasurer, and G. F. Pollock, historian. Sports representatives named by the “M” Club were: Foot ball, Lindsay McD. Silvester; basket ball, H. B. Shipley; track, Joseph 8. Endslow; base ball, A. Kirk Besley; lacrosse, R. W. Axt; tennis, R. V. Halg; boxing, Harry Carroll, and cross - country, Charles H. Remsberg. Dr. Edgar B. Friedenwald and Dr., A. W. Valentine were chosen repre= sentatives at large by the organiza- tion. by s uid A ruriee 8 7 e \'THE BETTER TIRES CO. 1425 P St. N.W. DE. s628