Evening Star Newspaper, October 10, 1936, Page 14

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A. G. W. Now Eager to Face Arkansas : Trying Day for Capita Not Even a Hapes Could Go Places in That Mud at Griffith Stadium TIE WITH OLE MISS BOOSTS PRESTIGE Pixlee, Williamson System . Share Honors in Coming Close as Prophets. BY ROD THOMAS. ELL, bring on Arkansas. While thousands who saw the George Washington foot ball team hold Mis- sissippi to & scoreless deadlock at | e Grifith Stadium conjectured on what might have happened on a dry field instead of last night's soup of mud end grass at Griffith Stadium, the | Colonials today looked with eager- ness to their second major battle of the season, with Arkansas here next ¥riday night. 1t seems that nobody but the Co- lonial coach, Possum Jim Pixlee, and the Williamson System conceded George Washington more than an Alcarzarian chance to come away from the engagement with Ole Miss with anything better than a one or two touchdown defeat. “If we have a dry field and can throw that ball around,” Pixlee con- | eeded the other day, “we may fool @ lot of people. We may win.” The cold-fact Williamson System in its round-up yesterday in The Star rated the Colonials virtually on & par with the Rebels. Jim Wants Bad Weather. FOE those who still may doubt that | . W. has a high grade gridiron wmachine, the Arkansas game will be « stern criterion, provided it is played under normal conditions. Jim Pix- fee hopes it isn’t. He'd rather have ® night like the last one, for Arkansas this year is playing a style of foot ball which strikingly resembles basket | The Razorbacks completed 24 | ball. passes out of 41 last week against Texas Christian. In the rain last night at Griffith Stadium, the Ar-| kansas sharpshooters would have missed many a target. A downhearted band of Rebels rumbled back to Oxford today. Their epirits as low as the Colonials’ were exuberant, doubtlessly they sought Foot Ball Scores LOCAL. George Washington, 0: Mississippl, 0, ._7; Central, 0. 13: Western. 0. \ 0. Priends. 0. 1 15; Dunbar. 10. Armstrong. 6; Bates. 8. EAST. . 6: Bucknell. eneva. 0. Manhattan. 13; North' Carolina State. 8. 8t. Vincent. A: West Virginia Wesleyan. 0. 8t. Bonaventure. 51: Davis-Elkina. Néw River. 7: Morris Harvey. 6. SOUTH. Bretesn, 3 Brakae. 0 esbyterian. 14: fe. 0. Howard. 14: Lovola (New Orleans). 6. Stetson. 12: South Georgia Teachers. 0. Poly. 25; West Tennesses . 21: Union (Ky.), 0. Hiwassee. 9. Biltmore. 0. Lenoir-Rhyne. 19: Duke 0. Maryville. 18; Western Carolina Teach- rs. 0. Middle Tennessee Teachers. 10: Alabama TS, State T z Rolli South Georgia State, 13 DI Georgia Tech “B.” 0. Tennessee Junior. 34; Arkansas State. 0. Tennessee Weslevan. '19: Milliga Millsaps. 0: Mississippi Teacher: Union (Tenn.). 18; Cumberland. : Louisiana Normal. 13; Louisiana Col- lege. 0. Northeast Center. L. 8. U.. 10: College of Marshall, 0. Bethel (Tenn.). 0; Sunflower Agsies. 0. MIDWEST. Detroit. 46: Oklahoma A. & M. 12. Wichita. 6: Texas Tech. 0. Muskingum. 7: Mount Xavier (Cincinnati). tucky Teachers. 7. Ohio Northern, 0: Denison, 0. John Carroll. 34: Pindlay. 12. Depaul. 7: Davton. 0. Marietta. '18: Akron. 6: Kent Heidelberg. 20: Cornell (Towa). o, Teachers. 33: Eau ocnflue. 12: Cape Girardeau '.‘A: Eureks. 7. 0, "™19; Iows State Teach- fon. 2. Western Ken- S a. ‘ 2 Beloit. Claire stavus Adolphus, 27: Macalester, 0. Emporia Teachers 14; Washburn. ethany. 6 B Haskell Indians. 6 5 Jecitiyville Teachers. “20: Central Col- ege. ( 0 ‘Warrensburg Teachers. 13; Springfield Hamline. 0 Luth Braska Gentral, uther. 7: Nebraska L o Eastern ‘liinots” Teachers. 10 Oakland ty. 7. Concordia Teachers. 0: Hebron Junior. 0. Midland. 13: Peru Teachers. 0. Western Union. 34: Dana, 0. York. 3: Doane. 0 (Kans.), 0. Mankato Teachers. rs. 12, PO Bemidli Teach- e McPherson. 26: Ottawa. Rockhurst, 1R: Missouri Valley. & Chadron Teachers, 12; Wayne Teach- ers. 0. SOUTHWEST. Arkansas Tech. 27: Hendrix, 6. Arkansas_State Teachers, 26: ceilo A. & M.. 0 Chilocco Indians. 6: Murray Aggies. 0. Northeast Teachers. 13; Southeast Okla- Monti- oma. 7. | “’Ceritral (Okla.) Teachers. 18: Northeast to hang the upset tie on weather con- | ). 9: Southwest. 0. ditions. But figure this: The entire plan of | battle laid out by George Washing- | ton was chucked overboard on the day of the game. hoped to take the Rebels unawares on the spread formation attack that ‘The Buff and BI“E% was a sensation in several of their | John Tarleton. 00 North Texas chers. 18; Christian. 0. Daniel 'Baker_ 15: Austin. 0. New Mexico State, 41; Flagstafl Teach- ers. 0. Decatur. 0. Abilene ROCKY MOUNTAIN. Denver. 14: Colorado State. 7. Brigham Young I:lrl(, (‘_‘;rzrley State. 0. PA COAST. Linfleld. 21: Pacific University, 6. WASHINGTON, D. C, So slippery was the terrain—and the ball—in that scoreless tie staged by George Washington and Ole Miss last night both outfits found themselves ooze-bound. Here the lighter of the Gridiron Forecaster This is the day where Where bold soothsayers skid and shake— Where strong, unbeaten teams must spin And take 1t roughly on the chin— From Southern roost to Northern plot The dope is in a tangled knot— Goes Out on Limb as Week-End Battling Becomes Tougher. BY GRANTLAND RICE. FOREWORD. prophets quake— THE SPORTLIGHT |HiGH GRID TEAMS FIND FOES ROUGH Central, Roosevelt, Western Bow to F. U. M. A., Buliis, Washington-Lee. HUMPED by the twin evils of crack opposition and muddy SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1936. Hapes brothers, Halfback vRay, is shown being caught from behind by Ted Cottingham, Colonial guard. Dale Prather, the G. W. tackle, is shown in the foreground. < | Sports Program For Local Fans TODAY. Foot Ball. Catholic University vs. La Salle, Brookland Stadium, 2:30. Maryland vs. North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. Georgetown vs. Cincinnati, Cin- cinnati. Gallaudet vs. Bridgewater, Bridge- water, Va. Landon vs. St. Andrews, Landon, 2:30. Hockey. —Star Staff Photo. EAST QU OF DATE ONGRD, SHYSBELL | Running Game Is Passe in| Southwest That Demands | Smart Air Play. BY SCOTTY RESTON, Associated Press Sports Writer. |l Teams CARDS, LA SALLE HOLD STAGE HERE Terps Face Tough Tarheels, Hoyas Meet Cincinnati, Gallaudet Plays. FFERING Catholic Univer- sity’s huskies their first real competition of the season, La Salle launched its aerial maneuvers against the Cardinals to- day on a sloppy field at Brookland Stadium in the Capital’s lone foot ball attraction, starting at 2:30 o'clock. On foreign flelds, Maryland stacked up against a powerful North Carolina machine at Chapel Hill, N. C.; George- town will clash with Cincinnati tos night at Cincinnati, and Gallaudet squared off with Bridgewater College at Bridgewater, Va. While the Cardinals reigned a heavy favorite to trounce La Salle, undefeated in two starts, they never- theless were wary of an accurate aerial assault that bowled over Ni- agara, 27-6, and Canisius, 19-14. Of the seven touchdowns the Philadels phians have scored this season, five were culled from passes. With the slippery condition of the field, the game assumed interesting angles. Catholic University's cone ceded edge in running power was exe pected to suffer considerably, while La Salle’s passing and punting, the medium through which it hoped to upset the Cards, was not nullified to the same degree. Brill Has Good Passer. LA SALLE, coached by Marty Brill, crack Notre Dame blocking back under Knute Rockne, offered the Orange Bowl champions little opposie tion last year, dropping a 41-7 deci~ sion, but recorded a 6-6 tie in 1934 that still rankles in the minds of the present Card eleven. The invaders pinned their hopes on the aim of Harry Williams, left half- back, hub of their passing attack, and the talented toe of Capt. Joe Scairetta, quarterback, whose lengthy boots were expected to play an important part in La Salle’s defensive strength. Coach Dutch Bergman planned to start the same team that overwhelmed Shenandoah, 81-0, last week, although % Sam Pagano loomed as a possibility to take over Leo Katalinas' tackle berth. Maryland took the field against North Carolina seriously hampered by the absence of Bill Guckeyson, triple- threat back, who probably will not see footing, Central, Roosevelt :nd} Western scholastic elevens re- covered from their respective losses | EW YORK, October 10—Matty action for another week due to a hip Bell, foot ball coach at South- | injury. Newly discovered sophomore ern Methodist University, put| sensations in Weidinger, Meade and the blast on Eastern foot ball Hewitt somewhat offset that blow to e The only upsets that I know strat hich 5 E’Z'fifi .?x'mlf?fi;eé u;t;:a:fih: p:lss! Are those selections that you blow. e e Goramimis sea tne srnd | VIRGINIA TILT NAVY’S British women's team vs, Wash- ington All-Star, National Cathe- dral School field, 3. | and others—but Minensota has too several times in the early going last might, then abandoned it. Sampson Unavailable. counted heavily on their slip- i4 "pery little halback, Vic Sampson, | ®ut Sampson, bruised in the game | with Elon a week ago, was withheld | from the contest. This, however, may | pot have been a great handicap, for the brilliant little ball lugger of the other side, Ray Hapes, could go no place important. | And the Colonials ran into a totally | unexpected hazard. Armando Saltu- | relli, snapperback, whose passing was high-grade In G. W.'s victories over Emory and Henry and Elon, found the oval a greased porky and nearly ruined the Colonial cause with erratic passes. In the second quarter he was | relieved by a sophomore who never | before had played center in regular | competition—Albert Haringer. Four | days ago Haringer, in practice, | switched from guard. It seems now he will be a center henceforth. Sincerely sympathizing with Saltu- | relll was Mississippi’s 235-pound full- back, Clarence Hapes. *I never could tell,” said Clarence aftepward, “whether I was handling @ foot ball or a cake of wet soap. | ‘There wasn't much chance in there | for a faking fullback, a guy whose effectiveness depends plenty on fancy handling of the ball. A painted foot | ball, wet, is a wicked thing to catch | or hold. It's worse than just an ordi- | nary wet ball.” Fumble, Fumble, Fumble. 'UMBLES were numerous. George - Washington made 8 and Mis- | sissippi, 10. The tide of battle switched frequently because of them, but neither team moved within easy scoring distance. The Colonials made probably the closest bid for victory in | the very first minute when big Dale Prather, tackle, essayed a 3l-yard | fleld goal which was blocked, with Ole Miss recovering on its 24. Ray Hanken, flankman who justified pre- dictions that he would be one of the finest ends hereabout this season, gave G. W. this opportunity by blocking Billy Mann’s punt and recovering on Mississippi's 21. George Washington presented about the strongest combination of ends it has owned under the regime of Pixlee. Hanken was superb, but Allen Holt and Pete Yurwitz weren't far behind. None of the Rebel backs skirted the flanks. Even Ray Hapes, trying seri- ously for All-America honors, couldn’t gain outside. Mississippi's great tackle, Bruiser Kinard, was taken well in hand by Hanken and Frank Merka, blocking back. Most of George Washington's gains were made thtough or around Kinard’s side of the line. The longest zun of the game was Herb Reeves' a9-yarder which was made possible through the checking of Kinard and ©Ole M‘lll' giant left end, Buster Poole. Merka Okay in Clutch. TH! Colonials were in desperate 34 straits at the start of the second Muarter when Merka’s punt from be- hind the goal was deflected and went putside on G. W.'s 20-yard line. Merka Yeceived a low pass on the fourth down and that he got the kick away st all was commendable. It was a sure enough crisis, for a blocked kick surely meant a safety or a touchdown for Ole Miss. ‘The Rebels were held for downs 12 yards from the goal, a 5-yard loss on 8 fumble by Ray Hapes proving s life-saver for G. W. The rest of the action took place in the middle spaces. Mississippi scored six first downs to G. W.’s three and outgained the Colonials from scrim- mage, 971 yards to G. W.'s 67, but the Colonials lost only 17 yards from (Continued on Page 15, Column 4.) \ LAST ON HOME FIELD {Each Team Makes Last-Minute Changes—Middies Will Play Six Foreign Frays. Epectal Dispatch to The Star. ANNAPOLIS. October 10.—Virginia was to furnish the opposition to ! Navy this afternoon in the latter's final game on its home grounds. The | Middies will begin a series of six away- from-home contests when they meet Yale in Baltimore next Saturday. The Cavaliers reached Annapolis yesterday to find a downpour of rain and slippery field. Coach Gus Tebell decided not to take his charges out in the weather and used the wrestling loft at the top of the gymnasium for drill. Navy had some open-air prac- tice in handling a wet ball. Last-minute changes were made in each team. PFrank Lynch, rangy Navy tackle, developed boils and was to rest today, the powerful Duke Ferrara taking his place. Andy Conner, Vir- ginia running and passing back, was hurt in practice during the week and his place will be taken by Harry Din- ‘widdie. From the trio fighting for the No. 4 backfield position on Navy, Tom Ham- ilton selected Billingram for the fray. However, Charley Remann and Newell ‘Thomas were likely to get some work before the end of the game. -l HORSE SHOW POSTPONED. The second annual Indian Spring Hunt Club Horse Show, which was scheduled for today at Four Corners, | Md., has been postponed until 10:30 a.m. tomorrow because of inclement weather. Yurwitz Boasts Genuine Support ‘HE sister of Pete Yurwits, George Washington foot ball player, and her girl friend, who came from New York to see Pete perform against Mississippi last night, missed the game. ‘They met with an auto accident in Philadelphia and sold the re- mains of their car for $25, with which they paid their way to ‘Washington. Both needed hospital treatment, Miss Yurwitz having four stitches made in a cut lip and the other girl sustaining a sprained ankle. On their arrival here Pete or- dered both to bed at a hotel, and there they remained while the flankman played a game against Ole Miss that would have made ’em proud. HIO STATE-PITTSBURGH | Columbus—The_day's stand- | out—when it comes to all-| around strength on both sides—to the matter of national | ranking—and the toughest pick of | the day. Pitt has a fast, rugged line and a fine set of backs. So has Ohio where Pitt has a shade in defensive strength and Ohio State an edge on | attack. Ohio State has a slight jump in the passing game, and for | this reason gets the call on ' home grounds. | | YALE-PENNSYLVANIA — New | Haven—Pennsylvania will have to | face a much stronger Yale team than | the Blue line-up of 1935, which came from behind to romp all over the Red | !and Blue. Penn has a fine set of | backs and a smashing line-plunger in Kurlisch. Yale should have too much all-around stuff. Platt and| Scott will add strength to Eli's squad | |—and Penn will find Al Wilson hard | to throttle. Yale has the call. One Vote for Columbia. ARMY-COLUMBIA —New York— | One of the best games of the day. | You can’t miss action with Sid Luck- iman and Monk Meyer working on | opposite sides. Army will be as good as it was last year—possibly better— but Columbia should be far better. I like Columbia. FORDHAM - SOUTHERN METH- | ODIST—New York—Fordham will be better than a year ago, while South- ern Methodist has lost most of her 1935 stars. The Flying Mustangs are always dangerous with an air attack that is hard to stop. Last year it was an S§. M. U. romp. This time I figure Fordham should win. ILLINOIS-SOUTHERN CALIFOR- NIA—Urbana—a year ago Bob Zuppke bewildered the California Tro- jans with his flying trapeze and his whoa back—this year he has another team to beat—a far better team than Howard Jones has seen since his win- ning days. Zupp always is dangerous— but I don’t believe he has the man power to handle this 1936 Southern California model, which now is the leading Rose Bowl contender from the Pa- cific Coast. Ilike U.S.C. GEORGIA TECH-KENTUCKY— Atlanta—One of the feature games of the South. Both are stronger than a year ago—Georgia Tech especially. Kentucky rates among the better Southern teams—but Georgia Tech should have the call. - _ Stringing With Gophers. . M INNESOTA-NEBRASKA—Minne- apolis—Bernie Bierman’s Min- nesota Gophers already have taken one high hurdle against Washington. They have another this afternoon against a strong Nebraska team. Ne- braska has Cardwell ready—Cardwell many guns. This will be another hard Minnesota test, but the Gophers are the pick. DARTMOUTH - HOLY CROSS— Hanover—Holy Cross has been touted | as one of the best teams in the East— on a par with any leader you might name—the squad is big and fast and experienced. Dartmouth again has & | good line and a fast backfield. In| what should be one of the hardest battles of the day, Holy Cross has a slight margin. L. 8. U.-GEORGIA—Athens—Here again we have two of the stronger Southern teams. L. S. U. drew a jolt | last week in its tie with Texas. Geor- gla has a good first string—but not 50 many reserves. I think L. S. U’s greater re- serve strength should pull her through. INDIANA-MICHIGAN—ANn Arbor —In a recent interview Bo McMillin was willing to admit Indiana had her best chance in years. Michigan, after two groggy seasons, started off in de- feat again, with Michigan State too good. Michigan still has some dis- tance to recover the lost ground of other days. Indiana should win. ’I‘EXAS-OKLAHOMA—DSII!S —An- other hard game, where Texas, after her showing against L. 8. U, figures to win. AUBURN-TENNESSEE — Knoxville —Tennessee couldn’t beat North Caro- lina and Auburn rates among the best—so Auburn gets the pick. PURDUE-WISCONSIN — Lafayette —Harry Stuhldreher hasn't had time to get Wisconsin co-ordinated. It will be different later on. As the case stands, a good Purdue team, in spite of its early tragedy, should pick up the decision. Harvard should handle Brown— Navy has it over Virginia—Tulane has a bare margin over Centenary— and Notre Dame should slip by Wash- ington. Princeton has too much for Rutgers. T. C. U. is named over Tulsa, (Copsright, 1936, by the North American Newspaper Alliance inc.) NINES PLAY OFF TIE. Virginia White Sox and Georgetown A. C. nines, which played a 7-7 stale- | Wt mate last Sunday, will clash tomor- row in a base ball game at Bailey'’s Cross Roads, Va., at 2:30 o'clock. : . Sports Mirror By the Associated Press. 5 Today & year ago—Navy pressed to turn back Virginia, 26-7, with last-half rally. ‘Three years ago—Joe Cronin signed three-year contract as play- er-manager of Senators. PFive years ago—Cardinals won world series by beating Athletics 4-3 in seventh game. Van Mungo Is Cards’ Next Objective Cubs Held Dizzy in Giving Up Warneke—Fletcher Proves Master Signal Tipper. BY EDDIE BRIETZ, Associated Press Sports Writer. EW YORK, October 10.— ‘What were the Cubs think- ing about when they let Lon Warneke go? . . . From here it looks as if they just about sewed up the pennant for the Cardinals . . . Van Mungo is next on Branch Rickey’s shopping list ... The Card theme song has been changed from “Me and Paul and Parmalee” to “Me and Paul and Warneke” . . . But it still rhymes, Harry Danning, who spent all of last season in the doghouse, is among the Giants slated to travel in the big Winter shake-up . . . New Yorkers are pulling for the ‘Yanks to grab Casey Stengel . . . They want to keep Casey in the neighborhood. In the international boxing bouts here the referee spoke only three words . . . They were “box,” “stop” and “break” . . , The Ital- ians and Hungarians had been drilled to understand them ... Dore from the Coast says St Mary’s is loaded and that Fordham had better look out ... Coach Arthur Fletcher is taking bows for his nifty signal snatching during the series . . . More than once he tipped the Yank clouters on what was coming up in the clutch . . . London wants Lou Ambers for three bouts. That Cub-Cardinal swap was just a starter . . . The air will be full of deals before Christmas . . . ‘Today’s foot ball special: Pitt over Ohio State, Army over Columbia, Southern California over Illinois, Mississippi State over Alabams, Texas Aggies over Rice and Cen- tenary over Tulane. )‘. yesterday with a determination to iron | out irregularities before the interhigh | series is launched on October 20. Central, outweighed by Fork Union, | prep school champions of Virginia, waged a plucky fight that was rendered | futile only by its own lack of scoring punch in a crucial moment and a mo- mentary lapse in the second quarter that allowed Leo Bielski, 225-pound tackle. to fade back and flip a 30-yard | touchdown pass to Trevor Howell for a 7-0 victory. The local defending schoolboy champions advanced to Fork Union's 5-yard line late in the fourth quarter, when Bill Ickes broke loose for a 20- yard run, but the Cadet forward wall braced to hold for downs and Moyer punted out of danger. \ Central. Fork Union. La: = scari | Bielski Raloh Rizler Parker Ray Rigler Nikas hdown—Howell. Point after touch- own—Lascari _placement). ~ Substitu- ntral—Chamberlain lor 3 Swank for Mandis, Kurtz for Pox. Golds: Pork ki for De Muro, for 1. Mallory for Lascari, Howell for Rigler.” Lascar! for Mallory. Mallory for Howeli. Bozas for Lascari. Bartha for Ray Rigler. Lonnenberger for Trocolar. f- eree—Hoby O'Meara (Gonzaga). Western Riders Checked. WT!RN‘S prestige was enhanced despite a 13-0 loss to Washing- ton-Lee’s sturdy team, for in losing, the Red Riders unveiled a back in Carroll Price who probably will aid Morris Snead in ball-carrying duties. Western held the Little Generals scoreless in the first half, but suc- cumbed on touchdowns by Jimmy Pixx and Tommy Simpson in the third quarter. Western. L2 O RIIQ Wm0 Q- Touchdowns—FPixx. ~_Simpson. after touchdown—Anderson (placeme: Kemp or itk Whesier- s will Landis for “Welsh ern—McCracken 'for Farqual for Niklason. O'Hanlon for Ol for Snead. Roosevelt displayed unexpected power in holding Bullis Prep to & 14-0 count in the debut for both teams. The hefty Bullis eleven scored on a blocked punt in the first quarter as Ed Hahnfeldt scooped up the bounding ball and raced 33 yards for & touchdown and added another goal in the third period after a 55-yard drive downfleld. West- ar. Lynham liphant, Stone Bullis. Vi Touchdowns—Hahnfeldt (2). Points aft- er mnchdwn—-lleh1den (2). &lflflleflt. ubstitutions: Roosevelt—B,_ Smith. Pr, . Grimm, Brennan, 8} l\l}l Lenz, Armstead. Referee—Mr Holme: pire—Mr. Gritts (M man—Mr. Staffer (Maryland). REGALS PLAY TRINITY A. C. Regal Clothiers, who played under the American Beer banner last season, will square off with the Trinity A. C., formerly known as the Georgetown Boys' Club, in a National City 150- BY GRID BEATINGS | St. Albans, Friends Improve in Play, Despite Losses to Marylanders. ESPITE two shutout setbacks, two local prep schools were down in our league, and the two teams berth. sure today their foot ball teams were in for bigger sea- sons this year than last following highly respectable showings here yes- terday against a pair of strong out-of- | town rivals. Narrowing its second successive loss to a Baltimore team to ene touehdown, St. Albans was defeated, 6-0, by Boys' Latin, while a new Friends team held the warriors of Tome Institute of Port Deposit, Md., to & 13-0 score in open- ing the I Streeters’ season. Pass Beats St. Albans. LTHOUGH St. Albans trimmed Boys' Latin last year, yesterday's play was quite a comeback from the previous week, when the Saints were | beaten, 33-0, by Gilman, another Bal- timore foe. The visitors’ score came in the second period, and was a result | of a forward pass, Beeler to Galloway, who ran on 10 yards to score. Indeed, the closeness of the game left the Cathedral lads in an optimis- tic frame of mind for their first game against a Washington team next PFri- day, when they tackle the Woodrow Wilson High eleven. Boys' Latin. 8t. Alban's. _Naylor Richards Hustbedt ¥ s = all ki ‘Williams Hiltor % DT AT i Scoring: Boys' Latin—Galloway. stitutions: St. Alban’s—Lee. Romans Borden. Richards Wilmer. Rodgers. J. Dunn. ‘Wannan, Hooker Friends’ Best. TWO players, Hostetter and Abrams, spelled doom for Friends as they alternated in carrying the ball and divided the two touchdowns of the game between them. A plunge by Abrams gave the Mary- landers their first score in the opening period, while a long run by Hostetter carried him over the goal line in the . L Boys' Latin— Chn. ley Wannan, son of the director lends e Pome sistitiute- - Touchdowns—Abrai -(u:“{‘eueann—A GIRL BOWLING PRESIDENT. Special Dispateh to The Star. ALEXANDRIA, Va, October 10— Leona Chisolm has been elected the president of the Virginia Public Service Co. Bowling League. Sue Brault is the secretary-treasurer. Six teams will start competition on Monday night. Py | today before PREPS UNDAUNTED turning his Mustangs loose against Fordham at the Polo| Grounds. “It's five years behind time” he declared, “and they're no better in' {the West or Midwest. If I tried to| play foot ball in the Southwest the! | way you do, they'd boo me out of | | the league.” | Matty's criticism is that everybody | here runs with the ball. He has no objection to an occasional run if it's long enough. But generally it's a | waste of time. He thinks they should | pass. | “To hear people talk around here, you'd think they played ‘open’ foot ball. Why last week they had a game tossed 71 passes. Now that's passing. This vear I reckon we’ll pass the ball more times than we run with it.” l Demand Gridiron Basket Ball. PBELL. whose last team lost to Stan- | | ford, 7 to 0. in the Rose Bowl| game last New Year day, says South- | | west tans now demand this new “grid- | | iron basket ball.” | “Coaches can't get away with straight foot ball in the high schools. They do just as much passing as we | do. I think that’s why our foot ball | is superior. We have the best-coached | high school foot ball teams in the country.” What annoys Bell is that he says he never has had what he calls a good | passer. “Bob Finley, my fullback, is all | right, and I've got a couple ends and & guy named Myers who can peg it around a little, but I've never really had a great passer like Slingin' Sam Baugh of Texas Christian,” said Bell. “He's about the best ever.” Pigskin Sharpshooters. THE way he describes it, the kids | down in his part of the country put hoops on a pulley, roll them down a clothesline and throw foot balls through the hoop at 50 paces. Something’s bound to come of that, | Matty thinks. “They think I'm behind the times.” the Terps’ scoring power, however, Tarheel Star Out. JORTH CAROLINA also was with- out its backfield ace, Tony Cer- nugle, who led the Tarheels to touch- down victories over Wake Forest and Tennessee before being forced to the sidelines with injuries. Georgetown will encounter its first stiff session against Cincinnati, and Coach Jack Hagerty has changed in three places the line-up that buried Delaware last week. Mike Fuardo will replace the injured Red Hardy at center, Tom Robertson has gained All Vaccaro's tackle post and Joe Williams has Hagerty still has not picked a first team, but intends to base his selec~ tions for future frays on performances | in tonight’s game. Although walloped | by West Virginia and tied by Butler in previous games, the Bearcats are expected to offer more opposition than Delaware. Gallaudet was seeking its second victory in two years over Bridgewater and its first triumph under the coach- ing regime of Orrel Mitchell. N. T. S. LATE LOSER George Washington High Wins 19-8 in Last 10 Minutes. ‘ ALEXANDRIA, Va., October 10.—A lead that the National Training School foot ball team had held for three periods failed to stand up in the last quarter of its game with the George ‘Washington High School yesterday and the Presidents took the Washington eleven in camp, 19-8. Deanar produced National Train- ing’s touchdown in the first quarter which, with the safety which occurred when Cowper recovered a fumble be- hind his own goal line, gave the visitors an 8-6 lead after Cowper also had scored a six-pointer in the first period. No further scoring took place until the last 10 minutes of play when Respess | Spectal Dispatch to The Star. he grinned. “I don't let my guards or tackles pass very much.” many other genui 1934 %;-Ton tires. Dodge Chev. Chev. Chev. Chev. G.M.C. G.M.C. @ S Rear 30 M St. N.E. 1936 1%32-Ton dition. tires. 1932 1%2-Ton good tires. first-class paint. 1932 1-Ton Canopy and Cook accounted for a pair of touchdowns to turn defeat into victory. Unusual Values Now on Display at Our USED TRUCK PARK All these trucks are in first-class condition and can be inspected with ine truck bargains Panel; new paint job, good 1933 Y2-Ton Panel; new paint, new tires. Cab end Chassis; excellent con- 1934 1%-Ton Cab and Chassis; good paint, new Coal Dump Body; new paint, 1929 2-Ton Coal Dump Body; new tires and paint; condition. Top; mew tires, good et nE week over - MEt. 0505 inherited Jack Fleming's end 5

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