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. . . SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON D, 0, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1936. SPORTS. ¥ A—-ls Grid id Biggies Risk Laurels Early : Speed, Bulk in Carolina Team for More Speed. BY LAWRENCE PERRY. A with great emphasis the mod- ern trend in schedule making, which ing for this contest since last Winter and now the cry goes from Snohomish plays South Dakota State the same day, a meeting which assumes signifi- Duke and Colgate this last Saturday in September, and Oregon State and plished besides winning all her games last year was to give the art of de- devised a special defense to check the Gopher machine. The stuff ranged Many Follow New Schedule Trend—Michigan Hopes FOOT BALL game late this month between Minnesota and Washington at Seattle marks sees gridiron leaders risking their prestige at the very outset of the sea- son. The Huskies have been prepar- to Yakima, “Beat the Gophers.” Which may happen; stranger things have occurred . . . Wisconsin cance when it is recalled that the Dust Bowl foot ballers beat the Badgers, 13—6, last Fall . . . and how about Southern California, not forgetting Louisiana State and Rice? One thing that Minnesota accom- fense a tremendous impulse through- out the midlands. Every coach that opposed Bernie Bierman’s machine from eight and even nine man lines to overbalanced secondaries and other wierd arrangements. Crisler Sees Yale Strong. FRITZ CRISLER thinks Yale will be about as difficult as any of the Tiger assignments next Fall. Any- way, it is the game that Old Nassau wants, above all, to win . . . Going back to the year 1933, Princeton has won 25 out of 26 games . . . Fritz thinks it is less worrisome to climb to the top than to try to stay there. Bernie Bierman went to Minnesota four years ago: he has not lost a game since his third year and in the last two years the Northmen have not even been tied . . . Harry Kipke, who has been a Summer yacht racer, has come ashore full of hope concerning Michigan prospects. To overcome a slowness which caused the Wolverines to be out- flashed by such elevens as Ohio State and Minnesota, he had a number of his key men work out with the track squad in the Spring and Summer. You have no idea, he says, how the boys have learned to pick up their feet . . . Aug and Ellis, returning letter men, have decided to give up foot ball. Which means that they are ambitious to enter upon some calling other than foot ball coaching upon graduation. What Ex-Gridders Do. 'AS TO the effect of foot ball upon the careers of those who play it, & curious person has looked into the present occupations of the great Bouthern California 1931 champion- ship team . . . Willlamson is coach and teacher of physical education at Kansas State Teachers’ College; Larry Stevens is about to take his bar ex- ams; Johnny Baker is head coach at Omaha University; Ernie Smith plays pro foot ball while working up an insurance business between seasons; Ray Brown is coaching at the Univer- sity of Cincinnati; Garry Arbelbide will coach at State Teachers this Fall; Ray Sparling is working in the en- gineering profession; Orv Mohler is in the oil business; Gaius Shaver is holding down a State job: Tom Mal- lory is coaching Classon High, Okla- homa City; Ernie Pinckert plays pro foot ball and off seasons is a sport- ing goods salesman; Jim Musick is in the sheriff’s office at Santa Anna. Woodrod Wilson Strode is a giant eolored boy. who promises to be a great end on the U. C. L. A. outfit | . . . Some close observing Southerners say that Auburn might clean up the | Bouth this year. JENKINS TO RESUME AUTO MARK ATTACK Rushes Repairs on Car That Made Several Records Befope Breakdown. By the Associated Press. ONNEVILLE SALT FLATS, Utah, September 8.—Ab Jenkins rushed repairs today on his mighty Mormon Meteor for another assault “Friday or Saturday” on world land speed records now held by England’s Capt. George Eyston. Some 40 records were reclaimed for America yesterday before break- down cut short the sandy-haired Salt Lake City driver's projected 48-hour run at the end of 12 hours. The streamlined, 12-cylinder car after 1,942 miles broke a universal Joint. “I've wired to Toledo for a new part and it will be here in a day or two,” Jenkins said. He was elated with speeds demon- strated by the airplane-motored racer. “I had it up to 175 miles several times, and am sure it would touch 200 without difficulty,” he asserted. Records retired by Jenkins included: Dists e - ance. . kilos 3. BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS, F Sports Program For Local Fans TOMORROW. Base Ball. Washington at Detroit, 3:15. Boxing. Olympic A. C. vs. Richmond, Va., amateurs, Duffy Stadium, Seat Pleasant, Md,, 8. THURSDAY, Base Ball. ‘Washington at Detroit, 3:15. ‘Wrestling. Joe Cox vs. Gino Garibaldi, fea- ture match, Griffith Stadiup, 8:30, FRIDAY. Base Ball, ‘Washington at Cleveland, 3:15, SATURDAY, Base Ball. Washington at Cleveland, 3. Track Interdepartmental meet, Cen- tral High School Stadium, 2:30. TROUBLE DOUBLED 10 HELEN JACOBS Thumb Injured, She Watches Kay Stammers Perform Almost Perfectly. By Lhe Associated Press. OREST HILLS, N. Y, Septem- ber 8.—Obviously worried over | a painful dislocation of her right thumb, Helen Jacobs faced today the serious possibility of losing her national tennis singles crown for the first time in four years. As if this injury were not disquiet- ing enough, the champion sat in the marquee yesterday and watched Kay Stammers, England’s hope, play one of the most perfect matches that has been seen on the center court in many a day. In beating Mrs. Marjorie Gladman van Ryn, 6—2, 6—4, Miss Stammers showed remarkable tennis form. She played with shrewd judgment on de- Hense, and there was more spirit and drive in her attack than she has| shown since coming to America. May Meet in Semi-finals. HERE it appeared Kay was un- fortunate in being in Miss Jac- obs' bracket at the start of the tour- | nament, the fact now seems to her advantage. She probably will meet Queen Helen in the semi-finals Fri- day before the hand, injured in a fall yesterday when the champion was practicing with John S. McDermott, has had much chance to rest. Miss Jacobs’ match with Mrs. Vir- ginia Rice Johnson of Brookline, Mass.,, was postponed because of the injury, but after her thumb was ex- amined by physicians, the champion said she would play today. In the quarter-finals today with the youthful Miss Stammers were two other young players, Gussie Raegner of San Francisco and Carolin Bab- cock of Los Angeles. Miss Raegner's conquest of Mrs. Mary Greef Harris, eighth seeded player from Knmas City, 7—5, 9—1, was one of the most | interesting developments of the tour- nament. She will meet Miss Jacobs next if the champion is successful | against Mrs. Johnson. After his magic performance in beating Gene Mako of Los Angeles, 6—0, 6—3, 6—0, England’s Fred Perry dominated the men's tournament more completely than ever. Vines Praises Perry. HE WOULD have beaten anybody in the world today,” said Ells- worth Vines, the professional star, after the match. Perry agreed it was one of the best days of his career. He made shots through sheer speed that probably no one else in the game could have reached. His ability to hit the corners at top speed was simply unbelievable. Perry's next opponent is Henry M. Culley, Santa Barbara, Calif, who eliminated last year’s runner-up, Sid- ney B. Wood, jr., 6—4, 7—5, 3—6, 6—3, in the upset of the Labor day program. Wednesday’s other quarter-final match in the upper bracket will pair Bryan (Bitsy) Grant of Atlanta and Johnny Van Ryn, former Davis Cup star from Philadelphia. Van Ryn, playing some of the best tennis of his career, met the challenge of Cali- fornia’s youthful Bobby Riggs and won, 6—2, 6—3, 3—6, 6—3. Grant, stubborn as the net itself, trimmed Plerre Pelizza of France, 6—0, 6—2, —T. Homer Standings By the Associatea Press Home runs yesterday—Ott, Giants, 2; G. Walker, Tigers, 2; Bartell, Giants, 1; Jensen, Pirates, 1; Gehrig, Yankees, 1; Saltzgaver, Yankees, 1; Gehringer, Tigers, 1; Goslin, Tigers, 1; Moore, Cardinals, 1; Higgins, Athletics, 1; Weatherly, Indians, 1; Averill, Indians, 1; Herman, Reds, 1. The leaders—Gehrig, Yankees, 43; Foxx, Red Sox, 37; Trosky, In- dians, 36; -Ott, Giants, 30; Di Maggio ,Yankees, 25; Averill, In- dians, 25. League totals—American, National, 534; total, 1,213, 679; TUPPKE ISERIDIRON REALM LANDMARK Great Record for Service, Success Is Compiled by Coach at lllinois. BY FRANCIS J. POWERS. HICAGO, September 8.—This week finds Robert C. Zuppke starting his twenty-fourth season as head coach of the University of Illinois foot ball squad. In a profession which produces heavy casualties, not many have equaled Zuppke's record for longevity and per- manency, and in the Western Confer- ence it has been surpassed only by two: Amos Stagg, who did 40 years at the University of Chicago, and i Fielding Yost, ;, who led Michigan g clevens for 25 seasons. During his term at Illinois, Zuppke has welded seven teams that have won or shared the Big Ten cham- pionship. His teams have a margin of victory over all confer- ence rivals except Michigan, and the Wolverines' advantage has been whit- tled down to two and may be further pruned this season. The past half dozen seasons have been rather lnn‘ | for Tllinols and Zuppke, but at no| time has there been any expressed dissatisfaction with his work and the man has become as much a part of the university as the walls of Memorial | Stadium that stand high above the fertile plains. Bob Zuppke. . Develops “Upset” Teams. ;NO MATTER what the caliber of | Illinois material may be, Zuppke | always is feared by his rivals. It's a legend throughout the conference that “Zup” can get more out of the ma- | terial on hand than any one in the ibuslneu and it's a rare season when | he does not produce at least one upset. Unlucky is the team for which Zuppke | points his sights at the outset of a season. Last year, with a mediocre squad, he made Southern GCalifornia Michigan and Ohio State his targets. He defeated the Trojans and Wol- verines and held the powerful Buck- eyes to a single, long-run touchrown. Next in seniority among Big Ten | head coaches is Harry Kipke of Mich- igan, and he is a juvenile, compared to Zuppke. Kipke is starting his eighth season as master of the Wol- | verines, but his run of four champion- ship teams, 1930-1933, is one of the best in the records of the conference. Noble Kizer has been at Purdue since 1925, when he came from Notre Dame and the Four Horesmen's line to assist Jimmy Phelan. He became head coach in 1930 and during his seven seasons the Boilermakers have lost | only eight conference games to top | the composite Big Ten standing for that period by a comfortable margin. Bierman Has Good Record. B!:RN!E BIERMAN is starting on | his fifth term at Minnesota and | he hopes his fourth undefeated sea- son. In his first season as leader of the Gophers, Bierman saw his team | drop three games, and the following year it ran into four ties. But through | the last two campaigns the Gophers | have swept over all the opposition to | win national championships. ‘This, Bierman's fifth Norse team, may be his greatest. Ossie Solem is starting his fifth campaign at Iowa, but, taking the Hawkeyes when foot ball was at a | low ebb at that university, he has pro- duced no champions. Francis Schmidt has lost only two games in as many seasons at Ohio State and his 1936 record should be no worse. At Indiana, Bo McMillin's third team may be the best in Hoosier history, and Clarke Shaughnessey’s fourth edition of the Chicago Maroons should be the equal of his first three. Lynn Waldorf will be doing his second season at Northwestern and the Wild- cats are scaled as the dark horse of the Big Ten race. Harry Stuhldreher, who was quarter back of the Four Horesmen, isthe baby coach of the Big Ten. Not much is expected of Stuhldreher in the first season at Wis- consin and he will be busy building for future successes, o NINES OPEN TITLE PLAY National S8avings, Account Oppose in D. C. Series Today. Battling in the first of a series of games to determine the local sandlot base ball championship, National Sav- ings & Trust Co. diamonders, cham- pions of the Bankers’ League, and Ac- counts and Deposits, Sports Center Government League titleholders, were to clash this afternoon on the South Ellipse dismond at 4:30 o’clock. With two defeats necessary to elimi- nate each of the 11 league champions entered in the series, competition is e to last for nearly three weeks as the clubs scramble for the title won last year by N. R. A. of the United States Government League. The winner of today’s encounter will tangle with the winner of tomorrow’s scrap between P. W. A, Departmental League champs, and Resettlement Greenbelts, Federal “A” League rulers. Collegians Start Poorly, But Vanquish Pro Grid Champions DALLAS, Tex., September 8. —Charging Chicago Bear line- men broke through the varsity All-Stars’ forward wall and blocked Abe Michal’s quick kick in the first few minutes of last night’s game here, but the rah-rah boys ultimately earned a 7-6 decision over the paid clan, and through the medium of another blocked kick. ~—Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. RATES HER BEST NETWOMAN HERE Mrs. Robinson Adds Crown at Army-Navy to Other Titles of Year. LTHOUGH 1936 rankings of District tennis players will not become official until the Rating Commiteee of the pro- posed D. C. Tennis Association re- leases them early next year, there were few today who doubted that Margaret Robinson would be the Cap- ital's No. 1 woman racketer when the | next season begins. Climaxing her successes in two pre- vious tournaments through winning the Army-Navy Country Club's Fall invitation eveni yesterday by defeat- ing Sara Moore, 6—3, 6—1, Mrs. Rob- inson added that crown to her title of City of Washington and Women's League champion of 1936. Miss Moore and Mary Cootes are the only other netwomen who have won local championships this year, the former winning the public parks title and the latter the District of | Columbia. But, in addition to the fact that she competed in neither of these, Mrs. Robinson’s claim to the local ranking position is strength- ened through conquests of both of these girls during the season, having eliminated Miss Cootes in the semi- finals of the City of Washington. Again Scores in Doubles. RS. ROBINSON also added an- other doubles championship to her season's string, registering her fourth tandem victory yesterday with Mrs. Barry Wood, wife of the for- mer all-America foot ball player of Harvard. Once again it was Dorette | Miller and S8ara Moore who bowed to Mrs. Robinson and a partner, losing by the scores of 7—5, 7—S5. Mrs. Miller and Miss Moore were losing finalists in the City of Washington and Women's League tournament against Mrs. Robinson and Edith Clarke. Miss Moore was in the running for the singles crown yesterday only through the first six games of the first set. After staging s great start to hold Mrs. Robinson to 3-3, the public parks champ collapsed and never recovered. She came back with Mrs. Miller, however, to give her conqueror and Mrs. Wood all they were looking for in the doubles encounter and held a 5-4 lead in the first set before the Robinson-Wood duo took three games for first blood. The eventual victors also were forced to rally from a 1-4 deficit in the second set to win by the same score. D. C. GOLFER IS LOSER Beck Defeated in Title Match by Kelly at Sherwood. SHERWOOD FOREST, Md., Sep- tember 8.—Vernon Kelly of Baltimore won the Sherwood Forest Club golf championship yesterday by defeating Ed Beck of Washington, 5 and 3. Kelly, a former Johns flopklm foot ball and golf player, was long off the tee and accurate in his approaching and putting, George Stewart defeated Bill Treuter, 2 up, in the first-flight consolation. Other final results: Second fliy ht—John Wnod lden, 2 n oore def Paul %Tll ki !‘ln‘fc" dy N O’'Conn latie — Gefeated Bt mulho 2. 3 and 1. Utah, Septembzr I—Un- daunted by a 400-foot skid while traveling 150 miles an hour Ab Jenkins, veteran speedway racer, /g.uuult on the records carried¥to England last July yesterday resumed his by Captt George E. T. E; ston. He cracked a number of them before me- chanical trouble forced him to postpone the 48-hour gri —Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. red-headed Minneapolis young- ster with the infectious grin and the power and skill of a golf genius, is going a long way in wom- en’s golf, but give her 30 more yards | from the tee—in other words, the wal- lop of Babe Didrikson—and she would | be the topmost feminine golfer of the | world. A thousand golf bugs from every club near the Capital agreed today that Patty is all that a golfing para- | gon should be: that the game of the likable youngster is hot stuff; that she | is a determined competitor; but they | also like to see the mighty sock from | the tee. Not that Patty looked bad in comparison with the Didrikson girl iu | the exhibition match yesterday at STALWART little Patty Berg. the Congressional, where the walloping “Babe” and Helen Dettweiler licked Patty and Betty P. Meckley by 5 and 3. but she would be so much better could she develop the punch Miss Did- rikson has. Patty captured the fancy of the gallery with her smooth stroking and her fairway-splitting shots (she never left the center of the fairway on any driving hole), but it was at the dis- son that the gallery marveled. The Babe really caught hold of two tee shots. She knocked the ball 300 yards on the first hole and socked it 310 yards on the fifteenth. Steadily Increase Lead. 'ROM the second hole, where Did- { rikson knocked her second shot on the green for a winning 4, the Didrikson-Dettweiler combine held a lead, which they steadily increased, winning the match with Helen Dett- weiler's 4 on the fifteenth. Two up at the turn, after Betty Meckley, usu- ally the most dependable of putters, had missed three short ones for halves, the twin-D combination won the tenth, fourteenth and fifteenth. And the larruping Babe put together two of the finest wooden shots you‘ ever will see on the par 5 thirteenth, where she nearly reached the green, 510 yards from the tee, and then blew a 4-foot putt for a winning 4. Patty Berg is a grand little golfer. As a kid of 15, only three years ago, she used to play hockey with the lads in her home neighborhood in Min- neapolis. Then she took up golf, and she goes at it with the same deter- mination and spirit of the rougher | be did she pack a little more wallop | | was 91. | course in 79 last year to beat Lily | Norfolk. | WITH 13 1ounuters entered in the tance-eating wallops of Miss Didrik- | Ewell sport of hockey. She is going to win | the national some day (she was run- | ner-up to Glenna Collett Vare last year) but what a golfer she would with her long shots. Of course, you can't compare Didrikson with any | woman hitting the ball in America | today. She simply is beyond the class | of women off the tee. She is very close to the best male professionals | when she takes her driver in hand.' And she showed it yesterday. Didrikson led in the scoring with an 82, which was about as close as you could get to the scoring. in these exhibition affairs, where putts are conceded. Patty was next with 85; | Helen Dettweiler, going for every | putt, was 87, and Betty Meckley, not | playing well and putting very poorly, | It wasn't the same Meckley | who stroked the ball around the same the diminutive ace Harper, from | tourney, the Middle Atlantic | junior championship will get under | way tomorrow at Congressional over the 36-hole medal play route. Post ‘entries will be accepted at the first tee up to 9 o'clock tomorrow morn- uu Pairings for the event follow: nd 1 pm.. Eric King. Army- Navy: Tuck Dettweiter Congressional. and Dave ‘Hunt Conressiona Congressional, and Byrne Buse, Brow: Congréssional: 10 Jack Pre frmy-Navy. " and Srevviona: illy Tomiinson. Richm: Billy Dettweiler Congressi o S Riehmond. ang_ Dick Myers. Manor. PARKEE NOLAN. Congressional Country Club champion, won the first flight in the miniature tourney yesterday. At Manor southpaw Tommy Bones shot a subpar 67 for & new course record in competition to win the President’s Cup tourney with a 36- hole total of 140. He shot 73 in the forenoon. Dick Myers was next with | 154—18—136. Bones phyed with a | six-stroke handicap, giving him a net of 134. He was out in 35 and back in 32, Al Schneider won the tourney at ‘Woodmont, finishing 1 down to par. . The J. E. Hutchinson Trophy at Kenwood went to Gloria Rogers, step- daughter of professional Wiffy Cox, who had 87—8—79. A. F. Keenan, C. Dutton and Clyde Argersinger fin- ished in a first-place tie. Billy Rochelle won the miniature tourney at Indian Spring, while at Beaver Dam P. T. Reese won the President’s Trophy with a card of 88—19—69. D. E. Mattison grabbed the major portion of the prizes in the driving and approaching and putting contests. . GIRL ANNEXES TWO SWIMMING EVENTS Ann Bono and Two Boys Lead in Receiving Medals at Meet at Columbia Pool. Tm’nr-m medals—gold, silver and bronze—are the proud pos- sessions of children of Columbis Country Club members today after a Labor day & ing meet at the Con- necticut avenue pool. Ann Bono was the only girl to win more than one event, capturing the 50-yard free style and the unlimited back stroke. Gene Gott and Jimmy Crowley won boys' events in addition to swimming on the winning relay Summaries: ~ BOYS' EVENTS. -0lds—Won by emp_ Devereux: Time, 18 geconds -yard race for 10-ye J!ll??y’"cr&'l:v second. third. Norma: 2 e for. 1%-year-olds—Won by owen "v'v‘ufi:m ineh o “‘58.,3.,?3 Face ?3[ fi-y;-r-om-—w 2itene!” Shird, 'gn-ynrd race Por M- n'r‘-‘:fi-—wm fly i MOIRE, B Time: 0 bec- qard, breastatroke, for \mnmmg— oims: mlflf pains Waer. Time. "flio-y‘ m'fl"—!‘ e e3¢ oS8y ng& o?;: Gott (“ )i 'fi»‘."hnl E l’ll-! EVENTS. lmn -. L m-gfll MM#_E':"E 20 YEARS AGO IN THE STAR JUMPING into a 4-0 lead, Wash- ington chalked up & 5-1 win over New York yesterday in the first game of a double-header, but lost & 3-2 decision to the Yankees on erratic fielding in the second fray. Harry Harper, seeking his fifteenth victory of the season and a $500 bonus, was to take the mound for the Nationals today, while Clark Griffith plans to use Walter Johnson tomorrow. Molla Bjurstedt, national wom- en’s tennis champion, continued her advance in the New York Lawn Tennis Club tournament yesterday, trimming Ina Kissel, Middle States champion, 6—1, 6—1, to gain the semi-final round. THREE MAT TILTS ADDED Support for Garibuldi and Cox for Thursday Slated. Three additional bouts were to be arranged by Promoter Joe Turner today in support of the Gino Gari- baldi-Joe Cox feature wrestling match at Grifith Stadium Thursday night. Abie Coleman, diminutive acrobatic twister, will stack up against Ed Meske in & 30-minute semi-final. e —— SPECIAL—THIS WEEK CARBON & VALVES 3‘.;-' : r%fm 50¢ cviNoe Wateh for Weekly Specials MchlMOTI' S GAIAGI COLLEGIATES WIN BY BLOCKING KICK Chibears Become First Pro Victims of All-Stars in 7-6 Dallas Fray. o7 the Associated Press. ALLAS, Tex.. September 8.— The college foot ball ranks boasted loudly today of their first victory over a profes- | sional eleven—a 7-t0-6 defeat hand- ed the Chicago Bears here last night {by the Centennial All-Stars before 25,000 fans. Heroes of 1935 from the South and Southwest featured the midseason thriller played in 90-degree heat at the Texas Centennial Exposition’s | Cotton Bowl. But it took a blocked goal kick off | the toe of Jack Manders, who had missed only 3 of his last 150 at- tempts, to gain the triumph. Mickal Gets Across. ' THE All-Stars scored first, in the third quarter. Rangy Jim Lee Howell, great University of Arkansas athlete, intercepted a dangerous flat- zone pass Gene Ropzani, Bruin half- back, tossed on his own 25-yard stripe and headed goalward. Ronzani caught him a foot from the goal. Stocky Abe Mickal, Louisiana don Manton, Texas Christian full- back, planted his try for point square- ly between the posts. Nagurski Evens for Pres. ABLE LEFTVERS CHEER NEW COACH | |Wolf Has Talent for Well Balanced, if Not Highly Polished Eleven. (Note: This is sizth of series on prospects of major college foot ball teams.) By tne Assoclated Press. HAPEL HILL, N. C., September Carolina will stake its hopes for the Southern Conference well-balanced team, although probably not as polished and versatile as Yne Nation. Carolina's new coach, Raymond ment in rebuilding a team that lost 11 letter men and boasts one of the most a Tarheel squad. On paper, however, Carolina bulks larger and faster than the eleven which ran wild last year until smashed 8—The University of North foot ball championship on another 1835 eleven which ranked eight in the (Bear) Wolf, has a gruelling assign- ambitious schedules ever attempted by potent. The first team is shaping up by Duke. Strong Nucleus for Team. 'AKING over where Carl Snavely, now at Cornell, left off, the one- time Texas Christian University coacn finds three-quarters of the brilliant 1935 backfield and a generous slice of the line gone. But there is some of the ablest of last season’s material re- maining to silver the cloud’s lining. The nucleus of the 1936 team 1s composed of Jim Hutchins, 205-pound fullback and a clever passer; Dick Buck and Andy Bershak, two flash- ing flankmen: John Trimpey, 225- pound tackle, and Van Webb, a robust guard. Other returning lettermen include Crowell Little and Dick Dashiell, speedy backs adept at tossing the pigskin: Pete Avery, 190-pound pivot man, Henry Bartos, a tackle who scaled 205, and Charlie Mclver, Paul Pendergraft and Ed Palmer, three hustling guards. Sophomore Talent Promising. IN ART DITT, last year's reserve, ‘Wolf has found a potent plunger who will understudy Hutchins. Four other good backs who did not see much serv- ice last year are Wallie Dunham. Gene Bricklemyer, Randy Cooner and Tom Burnette, the last a talented punter. There is much cream in the sopho- more renks. Tony Cernugle and Jark Kraynick, backs: Steve Maronie, 195- pound tackle; Bob Adam, a center, and Fran Gordon, end, are but a few of the outstanding 1935 freshmen. Wolf, fresh from the fields of Texas, where foot balls fill the air in almost every game, is going to stress a strong passing attack. The new coach has installed the double wing back for- | mation, an innovation at North Caro-_ lina, Team to Average 195. HE Tarheel forward wall shculd g i into battle averaging approx - mately 195 pounds. The backfield wi average 180 or slightly more. The schedule: September—26, Charlotte. ‘ October—3, Tennessee; 10, Mar |land; 17, New York University at New | York: 24, Tulane at New Orleans; 3. Wake Forest ‘Armv- | State’s triple-threat marvel, bounced | xort T TWARE B P somn ¥ r.mudmm(;m.u ¥ind | across on the nitial try. Husky Tal- | November—7, Davidson at Davidsor. | 14, Duke; 21, South Carolina at Co- | lumbia: 26, Virginia at Charlottesvill | (Next—Nebraska.) MEET ENTBIES SOLICITED. 'HE Bears took but three minutes to score. A punt exchange left the collegians on their 12-yard line. George Musso, giant Be: tackle, charged in to block Mickal's attempt- ed punt and recover on the 2-yard stripe. Bronko Nagurski, king of pro- fessional backs, whirled across. But Bob Reynolds, giant Stanford tackle, blocked Manders’ try for point. Coaches Matty Bell and Leo (Dutch) Myer, who led Southern Methodist and Texas Christian into the Rose and Sugar Bowls, re- spectively, New Year day last, fidget- ed like schoolboys on the bench as their charges played typical wide- open foot ball. SHOWPLAKES BY JACK FROST % BY LIEBMANN The old timers weren’t Managers of departmental tra teams which will clash Saturday a Central Stadium are requested to file entries immediately with H. E. Pryor, Room 0712, South Building, Agricul- ture Department. Pryor may be reached at District 6350, branch 2520. | BRAKES RELINED FORD $4.50 CHEV. '30-'32 PLYMOUTH Cliff’s Brake Service 2002 K St. N.W. WE. 1678 so hot. They keps cool by drinking cold Rheingold. Why don’t you? Rheingol ....that’s good beer Distributed by UNION DISTRIBUTING COMPANY 37 Pierce W N.E. Tel.: Me(ropolit-n 3430