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Ratings Indicate Close-Fought Terp-Terror Duel A Couple “Chips Off the Old Block” MARYLAND ORTEE AV WILLIAMSON Western Maryland Is Near Foe in Rank—Line Given on Other Games. BY P. B. WILLIAMSON. EW ORLEANS, December 6.— Foot ball togs have been stowed away until next year at most colleges, but a few games remain on the schedule, with that between Maryland and Western Maryland in Baltimore tomorrow likely to provide as keen a duel as any. The Williamson system rating table gives Maryland the better ranking, but its superiority to Western Maryland, according to the calculations, is slight. The Terrapins stand to win the wind- up game of their campaign, with the Green Terrors having more than a fair chance to tie. Two Loops £nd Seasen. INAL frays in two big conferences are slated tomorrow, with one of the three major undefeated and un- tied teams of the Nation getting ac- tion. In the strong Southwest Con- ference Southern Methodist, that got its Rose Bowl berth with a splendid victory over Texas Christian last week, takes on the Texas Aggies. On the coast University of Washington and Southern California clash in a Pacific Conference game. Southern Methodist is the choice to maintain its unbeaten pace, while ‘Washington is the pick over the Tro- Jans. Texas Christian comes back to the foot ball wars in a game with Santa Clara at San Francisco and looks an easy winner. In other West coast games tomorrow St. Mary figures to spank Oregon, but a tie looms for the San Diego Teachers-College of Pa- cific at San Diego. The interconference game between Florida of the Southeastern circuit and South Carolina of the Southern loop at Tampa finds Florida a heavy fa- vorite. Pitt Picked to Win. LOOKING well ahead to coast games on December 14, St. Mary is the choice over University of California (Los Angeles) at San Francisco and Pittsburgh over Southern California at Los Angeles. University of Hawail figures to lose to University of Utah on December 14 and Southern California on New Year day in tussles at Hono- lulu. The Williamson system has had a successful season with its predictions of winners on the gridiron. In fore- casts of 2,170 games it has been correct 1,883 times, for a winning percentage of 86.8. PLAN A NINE-TEAM BASKET BALL LOOP Northern Virginia Tossers Will Start Early in January. Moncure Is Leader. NINE teams are expected to be en- tered in the Northern Virginia Basket Ball League, which will open its season the first part cf January. In addition to the seven league mem- bers of last year, the athletic clubs of Warrenton and Marshall will be asked to enter teams. Once again R. C. L. Moncure will serve as president, with Charles A. Clark acting as secretary. A fran- chise fee of $5 will be collected from each team, while a fine of $2 will be imposed upon any team forfeiting a game, unless notice is given the op- posing team by 6 o'clock of the eve- ning of the game. Home nights for Osakton will be Tuesday and Wednesday, except the first Wednesday of the month; for Aldie, Monday and Wednesday; for Falls Church, every night except Fri- day and Sunday; for McLean, Thurs- day nights only, and for Upperville, every Saturday and all Tuesdays, ex- cept the first of the month. Teams of Berryville and the Young Democratic Club of Falls Church also will be in the league. —_— FEATURES RASSLE CARD Bond Flips Koffman in Feature of Boys' Club Mat Card Tossing Mike Koffman to the mat after three minutes of grappling, Gene Bond, 165-pounder, climaxed the first intraclub wrestling program of the ‘Washington Boys' Club yesterday, at Third and C streets. Results: Class A. (Boys under 12 years) 85-pound—Joe Zanelotti decisioned Lewls Calaneris. won from 75-pound—Pete Shoporous Nick Lembris on a fall in 3:25. 85-pound—William Furr won from Albert Meckling on a fall in 2:26. Class B. fizg;gounu—l.u Drayton decisioned Willle mgs:]-n’ound—rr.u Genua decisioned Edgar so!‘g{:ndna—:mm Madron won from is Rados on & fall in 2: lgszoun!d—chlrlio Justis declsioned Amos Kellin. Unlimited. 6-pound—Lewis won from Tommy Marlow on & fall in 3:40. 135-pound—Clyde Hays decisioned Jim wis. 145-pound—Steve Mamakos won from Qliff Bond by forfeit. 165-pound—Gene Bond won from Mike Koffman on a fall in 3:18. Foot Ball Wind- Picked by Williamson System PORTS. e touchdown last season. Charley is & . . | Return to Saddle. trary, Raymond (Sonny) Whitney's first-string rider again next | his tenth straight year in the famous | however, for somebody to replace Al- in 1936. at Epsom Downs Friday. He still has his five-day suspension for rough rid- Walter Miller, who established the from the horses. Almost daily he is Hirsch Jacobs, America's leading charges ready for the Winter season | at Hialeah. planning to attend Harvard. |Signs to Ride for Tenth Year—Caperton Soon to By the Associated Press. ESPITE reports to the con- Workman, veteran Washing- ton jockey, will be C. V.| year. ‘Workman has signed a contract for | light blue and brown capped silks. The stable will have to look around, fred (Slim) Robertson, who will han- dle the Shandon Farm's horses Harry Caperton, apprentice jockey from New Mexico, will resume riding a good chance of leading the riders at the Houston track, notwithstanding ing. He scored 12 victories in the meeting’s first six days. American jockey record in 1906 with 388 winners, can’t seem to get away at Epsom Downs, watching the thor- oughbreds run. trainer for the last three years, has checked in at Miami to get his at Tropical and Hialeah Parks. He has some 28 thoroughbreds quartered 20 YEARS AGO IN THE STAR CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY opens the local collegiate basket ball season this week, meeting Mount 8t. Joseph's of Baltimore. As in all of their home games, the Car- dinals will play at the Arcade. C. U.’s biggest pre-holiday game, hows ever, is scheduled for December 32, when Colgate comes here to meet Fred Rice’s team. Three games are to be played in the interscholastic league before the Christmas recess. Business will meet Western, Eastern will face St. Albans and Central will play Army and Navy Preps. Six Armstrong players were on the all-colored eleven announced today. Hamilton, Holton, Spriggs, ‘Holcome, Bacon and McKenny rep- Tesent the school, which started out brilliantly but ended up by taking a defeat from its traditional rival, M Street. College Basket Ball St. Louis, 22; McKendree College, 19. Huntington, 27; Battle Creek, 26. Central Normal, 33; St. Joseph's, 22. Armour Tech, 44; Arkansas State, 19. Gustavus Adolphus, 33; Mankato, 18. De Paul, 31; Hamline, 24. Kansas State, 58; Washburn Col- lege, 38. Up “Winners” ing, while Brother John holds the ball. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1935, i back and John a guard on the team. Charles Brickley, sr., one of Harvard’s foot ball immortals (left), coaches Charles, jr. (center), on place-kick- He well may coach his sons, for he was one of the greatest field goal kickers of his day and an All-America halfbeck in 1912 and 1913. Young Charley apparently inherited the edu- cated toe, for he won three close games for Babylon, N. Y., High School with his expert kicking of points after And—needless to say—they're both —A. P. Photo, THE SPORTLIGHT Memory Teasers Given, Answered on Sport Greats in Same Breath. BY GRANTLAND RIC EVERAL correspondents have suggested we give them another shot at the query and answer— the who's who puzzle—or what happened and when department. This time we'll vary the normal pro- cedure by asking the question and answering it in the same or the next breath. Those who feel that way about it may read the query and try to guess the answer before reading the next few words. What champion was nervous and erratic in his first two big tests and then suddenly became one of the cool- est, most confident competitors in all | sport for the next 15 years? His name is Bill Tilden. Big Bill was jumpy against Lindley Murray and Bill Johnston in the United States championships, but after 1819 he ruled the court, both mentally and phystcally. What modern star can look back furthest to his first championship? Willie Hoppe, a champion at the age of 14 and still a runner-up more than | 30 years later in the last billiard test— | three cushions—which Welker Cochran put away. What golfing star was known as the best holerout from 10 to 15 feet upon the green? Jerry Travers, who was deadly from this range, where his amazing putting touch was a big factor in five national championships, although frequently he used a driving iron off the tee. Devine Had Grid Brains. WHO was Aubrey Devine? Well, Devine was one of the great quarterbacks of his time. He played at the University of Iowa in 1919, 1920 and 1921, his senior year, as captain, being picked for all-America on a team with Muller of California, Vick of Michigan and Kaw of Cornell. The Towas of 1921 were not beaten or tied. They licked, among others, Notre Dame, Tllinois, Purdue, Minnesota and Northwestern. Who was Clarence B. Herschberger? ‘The first foot ball player from the Middle West to make All-America, is the answer. He was a terrific punter. ‘He could tackle like a savage and he was a strong runner. His greatest year was 1898, when, as a fullback, he brought real fame to the University of Chicago. What was the name of Brown's great Negro halfback of nearly 20 years ago? Pollard was his name—Frederick Pollard. He ran wild in 1916, scoring three touchdowns on long runs against ‘Yale and three more against Harvard on consecutive Saturdays, in each case the only touchdowns his team made. He was an All-America, one of the few of his race who have been so chosen. What is the biggest foot ball arena in the United States? Soldier Fleld in Chicago. It seats 120,000, and for several games be- tween college teams more than 100,000 persons have jammed their way into EPRESENTATIVE foot ball games throughout the United States for [its immenseness. the remainder of the season are listed below. Excepting the University of Hawaii, the rating for each team is given according to the Willlam- son National Rating System. In the “prediction” column 1 means win for No. 1 team, 2 means win for No. 2 team and T means possible tie game. LOCAL. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7. No. 1. ‘Te: No. 2. ottt X X67.6)..nnnn MaToIARA BD.0) 1934 score. Kojac Still Record Holder. OW many would the Coliseum at Rome accommodate in its hey- day? About 70,000,0f whom 20,000 stood up. Who was George Kojac? If you don’t remember Kojac of | you can't be blamed. It appears he was one of the greatest ice skaters | who ever lived. He still holds the world marks for 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10| | miles. He made them all one day, | February 26, 1894, at Montreal. Even | | Charley Jewtraw, Eddie Schroeder, Irving Jaffee and Clas Thunberg have } not been able to touch Johnny John- son's greatest day. .What other great Negro foot ball nlayer was an all-America during the | War years? % Paul Robeson is the answer. Yes, Robeson of Rutgers, now a movie star, opera singer and author. He played ::d and was on Walter Camp’s 1918 | am. How many open and amateur titles (United States and British) did Bobby Jones win? Thirteen in a span of eight years, beginning with the United States open in 1923 and capping his achievements | with the famous grand slam of 1930. | His titles include five United States | amateurs, four United States opens (while losing two play-offs in addi- tion), three British opens and one British amateur. Lawson Little will have to bow to that | record. Heston Traveled Fast. WHAT foot ball player could beat the world's 100-yard champion for the first 40 yards? Think what that means. The foot all player was Willie Heston of Mich- | igan, who beat Archie Hahn, national and Olympic champicn, at every start over this distance. ‘Who was the fighter who was a fine boxer and a hard puncher, who was | dead game and couldn’t take a punch? This is a tough one. His name was Bombardier Wells of England, who was not physically equipped to take any punishment. With the ruggedness of Johnny Risko or Paulino he would have been heavyweight champion for many years. N Who was the best blocker in foot ball? According to Knute Rockne and many others the palm goes to Marty Brill of Notre Dame, who could have been a great ball carrier. His perfect timing and his terrific momentum at impact almost wrecked several of the best backs in the game. Brill was one of the few star backs who would rather clean up the road than carry the ball. ‘Who was the best all-around athlete who ever lived? Why waste time in any argument? Jim Thorpe—greatest of all foot ball players—Olympic star—and in the big league in base ball. ight. . by the North American Teve New: r Alliance, Inc.) Your Choice of these lnn:uc 1st I.il‘ Tires Even the great|Y. “Rest Cure” Given Squad on Eve of Final Clash of Long Grid Season. NIVERSITY OF MARYLAND'S foot ball coaches have turned in their suits for the season, but the ‘Old Line gridders will wear theirs once more before they are consigned to the moth balls. Jack Faber, Prank Dobson and Roy Mackert, deciding to let their charges idle today as the final tune-up for the Western Maryland game in Baltimore tomorrow, shifted to mufti. Maryland's gridders, given the “rest cure” after playing 10 games, spent just four hours in direct preparation for the gontest with the Terrors, prac- tically a post-season affair to help raise the money to build a field house at Western Mgryland. The Terps were on the field just af hour a day Mcnday, Tuesday, Wednesday and yesterday. Only Light Drill Held. ULLY one-third of yesterday's practice was spent in a touch foot ball contest in which Faber and Dobson took part. The other time was given over to running through signals and to defensive instructions. In the short drill yesterday it was indicated that the following would start the game: Louis Ennis, left end; Carl Stalfort, left tackle; Ed Minion, left guard; Frenk De Armey, center; Mike Sur- gent, right guard; Charlie Callahan, right tackle; Bernie Buscher, right end; Coleman Headley, quarterback; Bill Guckeyson, left half; Charlie Ellinger, right halfback, and John Gormley, fullback. Last Game for Many Terps. guard; Jack Stonebraker, fleet runner, and George Sachs, Ed Daly and Buddy Yaeger, other backs, doubtless will see action, as may Harry Gretz, the clever little reserve center. Ennis, Stalfort, Minion, Callahan, Buscher, Garrott, Sachs, Yaeger end Gretz, along with Tom McLaughlin, reserve tackle, will end their collegiate grid careers with the Terror battle. Waverly Wheeler, clever soph back, who has an injured erm, is the only dependable not in trim. He is un- likely to play at all. - WATER POLO LOOP Four Teams Again to Play for D. C. Title—Matches Listed at Ambassador Pool. FOUR teams again will contest the District of Columbia A. A. U. water polo championship, it has been announced coincidental with release of the 1936 series scheduled. champion; Ambassador, Baltimore Y. M. C. A. and Washington Canoe Club. All games will be played in the Ambassador Hotel pool, under super- vision of Richard Newby and A. Earle Weeks, local amateur officials. Following is the schedule: January—6. Garden Pool vs. Baltimore .M. C. A: 13. Ambassador vs. Washing- ton Canoe Club; 20. Baltimore LG K. vs. Washington Canoe Club; Garden Po3l vs. Ambassador. February—3. Baltimore Y. M. C. A. vs. Ambassador: 10, Garden Pool vs_ Wash< Cil . Garden Pool vs. 24, Ambassador vs. WILSON WITH HEURICHS ‘Whitey Wilson, former University of | Pittsburgh court star, will start with Ralph Bennie, Joe Croson, Moon Evans and Bucky Buscher when the Heurich Brewers pro basket ball team stacks up against the Bridgeton, N. J., Bears Sunday, at 2:30 o'clock, at the Heu- rich gym. Olmsted Grill and Coffey Sales will clash in a promising preliminary at 1:30 o'clock. - TAKES TWO0 CONTESTS. ‘With Timmons and Xander leading the attack, Congress Heights took two games in the Southeast Community Center League last night, trimming the Marvins, 46-22, and the N. C. G. quint, 24-21, GRIDDERS WANT GAME. Takoma Fire Department gridders would like to schedule & 150-pound eleven before hanging up their cleats for the year. Call Adams 4821. CHISOX SPURN FOXX. CHICAGO, December 6 (#.—He might change his mind later, but J. Louis Comiskey, president of the Chi- cago White Sox, sald he “wouldn't have Jimmy Foxx now at any price.” 48 :mut Shapes 1C WILLIS, big end; Bill Garrott, | STARTS JANUARY 6 They are: Garden pool, defending | SPORTS D3 in. Baltimore Tomorrow Berwanger Is Big Ten's Best | GRI] | T DRAWS Voted Ouistanding Athlete of Conference Sec: ond Year in Row—Owens Runner-up. By the Associated Press. HICAGO, December 6.— Jay Berwanger again-— by = mile. For the second straight year, but with a far greater mar- gin than before, the Dubuque, Towa, boy who became a foot ball immortal at the University of Chi- cago, today was named the out- standing athlete of the Western Conference in a poll of writers and experts who follow the oconfer- ence’s activities, Jesse Owens, Ohio State's “one- man track team,” offered the only serious opposition to Chicago's “one-man foot ball team,” but was buried under an avalanche of Ber- wanger votes, 41 to 20. Only two Foot Ball Needs BY BILL DISMER, JR. AVING severed his connections with Gallaudet foot ball after, a tenure longer than that of any college coach now in the District, Prederick H. “Teddy” Hughes views life today with the perception of an estimable general practitioner, re- tiring in the wake of the modern-day specialist. At the same time, Walter Krug, head basket ball coach and appointed yesterday to fill Hughes' shoes, won- ders if he, as another non-specialist, can do as ably. Over the period of years that he served Gallaudet faithfully and well, Teddy Hughes never had one honest- | to-goodness assistant. And when he | | thought the time had come to “let | | some one else try his hand” it was | only after 18 seasons during which he | had prescrived remedies for ends, ! guards, tackles, centers, halfbacks and quarterbacks with the thought of | carrying Gallaudet safely through major operations. Strong for Grid Game. REST assured of one thing. “Teddy” Hughes was not forced out. It was his own idea, conceived and pre- sented to the Gallaudet Athletic Asso- | ciation when the time came to “ap- | point” a coach for 1936. There is one unusual aspect about the Kendall Green athletic situation. Coaches are not “signed” for a period of years. They are “appointed” each year. Hughes has been so appointed | each Fall for the following season | since he first handled the team in | 1018. 8o, when the time came to appoint the 1936 coach, Hughes voluntarily, but quite unexpectedly, suggested that some one else be given a chance. Ad-| mitting that the boys had been dis- | appointed in their showing during last season, when the last three games of their schedule were canceled, the| spunky little mentor said he expressed | the sentiments of all the players when | he tabooed the suggestion that a foot ball team not be planned next year. Such a suggestion had been made by the faculty, but quickly withdrawn when the enthusiasm of prospective participants was revealed. The retiring mentor always has been s Gallaudet man. Graduating from its class rooms in 1913, the ever-op- timistic “midget” served five years as assistant coach, training the school’s reserve eleven before being appointed head coach and athletic director in 1918. He has been both ever since, still being the latter. Hughes' last winning season came | in 1928 when his team won four games | while losing but two. It was that year [in which the Kendall Green eleven | beat American University, then put-| ting one of its first teams on the grid- iron. Since then no Gallaudet eleven | annually has won as many games as it lost. Of course, when looking at his en- tire record, Hughes can point with greatest pride to 1918, the year in which he was at the helm for the first time. That season Gallaudet won four games out of five played, Catho- lic University being one of its.victims. A similar won and lost record was | made the following year, except that season C. U. earned a te. Shows Almost .500 Record. iNKXT year Gallaudet may have an | assistant coach. That was the | one thing that handicapped Hughes more than any other factor. For, with 35 men reporting for foot ball at the start of the last season, it became im- possible for Hughes to give them all personal attention, with the result that many of them became discour- aged and quit. ‘The game today is no longer a one- man job. Each position on the team requires individual treatment, and the more high-powered teams that Gallau- det met, the more Hughes realized the obstacles put in his path by more ex- tensive coached opponents. He is no specialist, he says, and any other gen- eral practitioner can do as well. Unofficial records show Hughes' Y%flamw etz PIBE SMOKERS ! the voting— Roscoe received six votes, Renner two. Berwanger, idol of millions who cheer for the “underdog” in sports competition, was called a greater foot ball player than even Red Grange by some of the writers. He was named the conference’s outstanding athlete a year after a close race with Willis Ward, Mich- igan's great all-around star. Ward also was a close second in 1933 to Duane Purvis of Purdue. Those in favor of Owens, the “Buckeye comet,” were high in his praise. “Specialists” In Coaching, Believes Hughes, Ending Regime at Gallaudet WALLY KRUG. elevens to have won almost half of the games they played. More than 30 victories were recorded, while not many more were lost. tempting the tasks of the Gallaudet coaching job—which are many! HEADS TECH HIGH CLUB Spencer Will Be in Charge of Circle T Athletes’ Dinner. Aubrey Spencer, former Tech High School grid star, has been elected chairman of the Foot Ball Committee of the alumni Circle T Club and will be in charge of the annual dinner, to be held Tuesday, December 17, at a place to be announced later. Officers of the club for the ensuing | year are Dunbar Goss, president; Artie ‘Wondrack, vice president; Sam Lank, secretary, and C. W. Rippey, treasurer. | S ONLY ROUTINE WORK AT BIG TEN CONFAB Sports Leaders Gather to Fix Con- test Dates—Grid, Court Schedules Made. By the Associated Press. HICAGO, December 6.—The men | who guide Western Conference sports affairs, athletic coaches and faculty athletic commit- teemer, gathered promised to be a quiet annual Winter meeting. There were no serious problems to be threshed out, according to Maj. John L. Griffith, conference athletic commissioner. Even the joint meet- ing of athletic directors and faculty | men was expected to be brief. Schedule making by swimming, ten- nis, golf, wrestling, base ball and track coaches shaped up as the most impor- tant ltems of the two-day session The 1936 and 1937 foot ball schedules | already have been arranged and a ro. | plan automatically tating schedule takes care of basket ball. Which is quite | a feather in the cap of any man at- | directors, | today for what/ MANY NOTABLES Nice, Jackson, Tydings to Be at State Battle—Huge Crowd Expected. ALTIMORE, December 6.— With Gov. Nice, Mayor Jacke son, Senator Tydings, Repre= sentative Cole, Gen. Gaither and perhaps from 25,000 to 30,000 other Marylanders looking on, the foot ball teams of the University of Maryland and Western Maryland Col- lege will meet tomorrow afternoon in Baltimore Stadium. All indications point to the biggest stadium crowd that ever saw a game between two State teams, to a brilliant and hard-fought battle and to the most colorful program generally the municipal horseshoe ever has had. Arrival of warmer weather and pros- pects for a good day brought a sharp demand for seats today. Midweek frigidity had somewhat held down the sale, All Goes to Fund. IT IS a most unusual game in that | * Maryland is receiving no share of | the receipts and no rental is being charged by the stadium. All money taken in, excepting the Federal tax, | goes into a fund to build a modern field house at Western Maryland Col- lége. Maryland is paying all of its OWn expenses. “It's the finest demonstration of sportsmanship I ever have heard of in connection with college athletics,” said Dr. Fred G. Holloway, new presi- | dent of Western Maryland. Both teams are in fairly good shape. None of the regulars of either team will be on the sidelines because of injuries, even though both teams have been through unusually difficult sched- ules. | Banking on Stars. VWWESTERN MARYLAND probably will rely again on the south- | paw passing of Leroy Campbell and a stubborn defense. Maryland doubt- less will bank greatly on the running and kicking of Bill Guckeyson, All- | Southern Conference halfback, but the Terps have other “big guns.” Both schools will have full cheering | sections and their bands on hand. Western Maryland students in busses, gayly decorated in green and gold, will head a huge cavalcade from West- minster to Baltimore at noon. It is expected 150 cars will be in the string, with a State police escort. ARMY RETURNS OLD FOES TO GRID LISY | Washington and Lee, First-Game Opponent, Among Them—Nine Contests Scheduled. By the Associated Press. WEST POINT, N. Y., December | 6.—Army’s nine-game foot ball schedule for 1936, just announced, will find the Cadets renewing relation- ships with four old rivals, and meet- ing two newcomers, in addition to | their traditional games with Harvard, Notre Dame and Navy. Yale is not on the schedule for the first time since 1920, but the Cadets will play Columbia for the first time since 1925 and play host to Colgate’s Red Raiders in the eleventh of a series that ended in 1915. | Washington and Lee, returning to the Army's schedule after a lapse of 20 years, will open the season Octo- | ber 3. Springfield, last met in 1922, will be the “breather” before the Col- gate test, while Muhlenberg will op- pose the Cadets the week before the Notre Dame game and Hobart the week preceding the Navy contst at Franklin Field. The schedule: October. 3, Washington an Columbia at New York: }7. Cambridge: 24 Springfield: 3 November 7, Muhlenberg: me at New York; 21 Hoba! Philadelphia. d Lee: 10, Harvard “at Colgate 14, Notre 28, Navy .S.JULLIEN.Iz. 443 P St.N.W. N0.8076 detail and same ex- pensive Cordovan— This new perforated Straight-Tip Semi-Brogue Cordovan is a Custom Classic, designed this season by Wylie & Peterson, leading Custom Bootmakers of New York. It challenges comparison because you cannot buy any more Style or any better Cordovan if you paid $50.00 instead of the Regal price—$5.55. The expensive Original and the Regal Reproduction are shown side by side on the “Compare Shelf” in all Regal windows today—and we don’t believe you can tell ‘Which is Which. A LAST TO FIT EVERY FOOT A STYLE FOR EVERY OCCASION REGAL@SHOES 915-917 Pennsylvania Ave. N.W. (Men's_Exclusively) Open Saturday Eves 1333 F Street N.W. (den's Bxclusively.) OTHER GAMES. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6. Miami. Fla. (53.2)--nnnwe Oglethorpe (20.8) SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7. - Bowling Gr.. Ky. (45.1)_ 1T Danville South Carolina (39, Rutgers, one of the Nation's greatest swimmers, you don’t know much about 19-8 | the fastest growing American sport. Besides innumerable intercollegiate -|and world marks, chiefly at back- 5 | stroke, Kojac has the honor to possess 0-20 | one of the few Olympic records the 137 | Japanese didn’t wipe out in 1932 at 5" | Los Angeles, the 100-meter backstroke. 34| He did 1t in 1 minute 8.2 seconds, which is also the world record. Where is the Grand American trap shooting tournament held each year? WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1, 1936. Sahattie DN Hawall -—meooeeoeeeeem- Sou. Californis (703).- 2 Honolull -oo-eeeees =e-| And who was John 8. Johnson, to ‘Williamson predictions on the Rose Bowl (Stanford vs. Southern Metho- | change the subject? @ist), Sugar Bowl and Orange Bowl gamesswill be announced later, *Well, i you dida't know thigons E;:,P‘Em. (e e Gives You SMOKE CONDITIONING u. 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