Evening Star Newspaper, December 14, 1936, Page 35

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- [Covors vews ] @he Ebening WASHIN Star GTON, D. C, MONDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1936. Comics and Classified | C PAGE C—-1 .Owens Year’s Qutstanding Athlete : Tribe Winner in Rookie Race HERO OF OLYMPICS FARAEADINVOTE - Jesse Gets 170 in A. P. Poll While Hubbell, Second, Has Total of 61. (Note: This is the first of @ series of stories analyzing results of the sizxth annual Associated Press sports poll. It covers the answer of the country’s sports editors to the query: “Who was the year's outstanding performer among men in any sport, amateur or professional?”) BY ALAN GOULD. B the Associated Press. EW YORK, December 14—To his collection of four Olympic gold medals, as many oak trees, and the profits of his big broad jump from amateur to pro- fessional ranks, Jesse Owens today can add the accolade of recognition as the outstanding athlete of 1936. The sepia streak from Ohio State, erowned world champion sprinter and broad jumper in the Olympic games at Berlin, ran off with the ballots in the sixth annual poll conducted by the Associated Press to determine this year’s leading performer among the nen, amateur or pro, in any sport. Owens is the second Negro in suc- eession to achieve this athletic dis- tinction. Last year Joe Louis, the brown bomber of the ring, was voted the outstanding performer of them all. Owens Put at Top by 51. IPTY-ONE of the 65 experts con- tributing to the 1936 poll put Owens at the top of the list. With & total of 170 points in the final tabulations, Jesse nearly trebled the eount of his nearest rival, Carl Hub- bell, southpaw ace of the New York Giants and hero of the year’s longest winning streak. ‘Hubbell, voted the outstanding ath- lete of 1933, posted 61 points. Third place, by the siim margin of @ single point, went to Yale’s foot ball eaptain and all-America end, Law- yence Morgan Kelley of Williamsport, Pa. Kelley nosed out Max Schmeling, the German heavyweight who sprang the year’s fistic sensation by knock- ing out Joe Louis. The point totals were 33 to 32, although Schmeling re- ceived five ballots for first place, Kelley none. Others Get First-Place Votes. IRST-PLACE nominations, other- wise, included three for Hubbell, $wo each for Colorado’s Glenn Morris snd Qeorgia’s Forrest (Spec) Towns, s pair of Olympic champions; one each for Lou Gehrig, base ball’s iron man, and Dutch Clark, former Colo- rado College all-America quarter- back and pro star since then with the Detroit Lions. By sports, major league base ball Jed with five nominations for honors. Track and fleld showed four repre- sentatives; boxing, foot ball, golf and tennis three each. Tabulation of the poll follows, with points tallied on a 3-2-1 basis: 1. Jesse Owens, quadruple Olympic winner, 170. 2. Carl Hubbell, leading National League pitcher, 61. 3. Larry Kelley, Yale's all-America oot ball end, 33, 4. Max Schmeling, German con- queror of Joe Louis, 32. 8. Glenn Morris, world decathlon champion, 17. 6. Fred Perry, world tennis cham- pion, 12. 7. Joe DiMaggio, sensational out- flelder of Yankees, 11. 8. Forrest (Spec) Towns, world champion high hurdler, and Joe Louis, 7. 10. Jerome (Dizzy) Dean, ace St. Zouis Cardinals’ pitcher, 6. 11, Lou Gehrig, Yankees’ first base “iron man,” and Tony Manero, open golf king, 5. 13, Johnny Fischer, American am- wateur golf champion, 4. 14, Jack Lovelock, Olympic 1,500~ mmeter champion, and Dutch Clark, Pro foot ball star, 3. Scattering Votes. Two points each: Bob Feller, rookie pitching sensation of Cleve- land; Sammy Baugh, Texas Chris- For Local Fans TODAY. Basket Ball. Western Maryland vs. George- town, 8:30. Central vs. Georgetown Frosh, Tech High gym, 7. American University vs. Hampe den-Sydney, American U. gym, 8:15. Boxing. Hobo Willlams vs. Buddy Scott, 10 rounds, feature bout, Turner's Arena, 8:30. TOMORROW. Basket Ball. Bethesda-Chevy Chase High vs. Rockville High, Rockville, Md. WEDNESDAY. Basket Ball. Georgetown vs. Princeton, Prince- ton, N. J. American University vs. Mary- land State Normal, American U. gym, 8:15. Western vs. George Washington High, Alexandria, Va., 3:30. ROSE BOWL ADED BY BRONGS LS Some Edge Goes From Rival New Orleans Fray—Pitt Has Huskies on Toes. BY GRANTLAND RICE. AN FRANCISCO, Calif,, Decem- ber 14.—Washington, Pittsburgh and the Rose Bowl Committee should send a large vote of thanks to Sammy Baugh of T. C. U. The tall Texas sniper with the deadly arm and the equally deadly foot removed at least part of the glamour from a Santa Clara team that would have gone unbeaten and untied if foot ball’s Kit Carson hadn’t happened along. il As the case stands, the Sugar Bow! in New Orleans already is sold out and the Rose Bowl battle between Washington and Pittsburgh will pick up new interest. Rose Bowl Teams Well Matched. NO TWO Rose Bowl teams ever were more evenly matched than Washington and Pitt appear to be at this point, but Santa Clara will need more than the Bronks showed against T. C. U. to handle’ Louisiana State’s powerful squad. It would be a mistake to hold Santa Clara’s single defeat too much against her. The same fate has happened to Minnesota, Washington, Pittsburgh and most of the others. The fact that Santa Clara was both unbeaten and untied massed all the psychology against her outlook. Minnesota against Northwestern was nothing like the Minnesota of the other games. When you haven't been trimmed there al- ways is that one bad day in the offing, such as Northwestern in turn had against Notre Dame. Santa Clara was due, and that’s about the an- swer. Santa Clara can be a good bit better than she was against T. C. U. Huskles Respect Pitt. JWY PHELAN hustled back to Seattle to start his Washington Huskies under way. Jimmy had picked up too many stories about Pittsburgh’s speed and power to take any chances. “Washington should have played L. 8. U.” Frank Thomas of Alabama told him. “But you are getting just as tough a game with Pittsburgh. Don’t underrate that bunch.” “I don’t underrate anybody in this game,” Phelan said, “and that goes especially for Pittsburgh. I know how good they are.” (Copyright. 1936, by the North American Newspaper Alliancs, Inc.) Statistics Green Bay (21), Gal nt!nbzln’ kst Smith tian's star quarterback; Don Budge, | Bosto American tennis ace; Freddie Steele, new middleweight boxing champion, and Ellsworth Vines, pro tennis star. One point each: Ab Jenkins, holder of automobile distance records, and Ralph Guldahl, professional golf star. Previous poll winners: 1931, Pepper = Martin, St. Louis Cardinals’ outfielder; 1932, Gene Sarazen, British and American open golf champion; 1933, OCarl Hubbell, New York Giants’ southpaw ace and world series hero; 1934, Dizzy Dean, Cardinals’ pitching ~. sce, and 1935, Joe Louis, heavyweight boxing sensation. letes. i e MANASSAS AFTER GAMES, The Manassas Fire Department basket ball team is anxious to book games with local unlimited quints. Write R. J. Davis, Manassas, Va. P (Next: Outstanding women ath- | g, ) Touchdowns—Green Bay. 3 tenbein, Monnett, Beston: Kenther after touchdown—Green Bay. E. (2). Engerbretson (placement), Substitutions: Green erer. Schneidman: 3 suards. Kiesling. Goldenburg. Evans, Pai ekas: center. Butler: backs. Miller. Blood. Laws. Johnston. Clemens. Bos- ton—]1 . McChesney. B . ; conter™ al2meriny: Sutis. Seatcer CBIOL: 3 ering: . Rentner. Pinck- ert, Britt. Weisenbaugh. ith. “Temple. Referee—W. G. Crowell (Swarthmore). Umpire--Bob Gahn (Chicazo). g)tmn}fnu- —M. J. Mever oinnatl). Fleld fudge—William Halloran, Statisties of the Game. &l & aa e:em—oaqqg o " [ mage +Total yards i ards lost “Includes 888 FAVORS CAPITAL Buffalo, Cleveland, Philly Also Want Team—Lose Pro Title to Packers, 21-6. BY GEORGE E. HUBER, Staff Correspondent of The Star. EW YORK, December 14.—De- spite the competition of at- tractive offers from Buffalo, Cleveland and Philadelphia, ‘Washington still has a chance of being in the professional foot ball sun as the next home of the abdicated Boston Redskins, according to George Palace Marshall, chief custodian of the home- less team. One thing is certain, Bos- ton never will see the Redskins as long as he is in charge. Marshall, who came here to attend the round-robin draft of potential pro foot ball stars, in which he ob- tained ‘Slinging Sammy” Baugh, fa- mous Texas Christian quarterback, said he would rather take a loss in Washington—or any other city, for that matter—than play to a nice profit in Beantown. The feeling between the Washington laundry owner and the good Back Bay citizens is consid- ered to be mutual. The one major obstacle standing between Marshall's desire to take his wanderers to the Capital and the ac- complishment of that desire is Clark Griffith’s request for a larger cut of the gate than the Redskins’ owner is willing to give him, Marshall inti- mated here. Griffith, as the owner of the only available stadium in Wash- ington, holds the high hand. “Clark Griffith understands the sit- uation,” Marshall said. “We have discussed it fully. He was here in town the other day, but we didn't get a chance to get together. Buffalo wants the team. So does Cleveland and Philadelphia. I still lean toward ‘Washington, however.” Redskins Are Scalped. ILE Marshall was receiving nu- merous long-distance phone calls from cities anxious to have him lo- cate there, his young Redskin players were being taken over the jumps by the Greenbay Packers in the play-off for the National Professional Foot Ball League championship at the Polo Grounds here, the game having been moved from Boston because of the apathy of citizens there toward pro foot ball as dished up by Marshall’s boys. Both teams were making their ini- tial appearance in the play-off and the Redskins learned how they play foot ball out West, coming out on the short end of the 21-to-6 score. About 30,000 non-partisan Gothaites laid their coin on the line to witness the one-sided spectacle played in almost perfect foot ball weather. % The lone touchdown of the self- expatriated Bostonians came on the first play of the second quarter when Pug Rentner plunged over from the 1-yard line after he and his team- mate, Don Irwin, had advanced the ball from midfield by a series of line plunges and reverses. Later and more desperate attempts to score were fruit- less. Passes by Ed and Riley Smith were blanketed by an effective Packer backfield, and twice Riley’s punts were blocked by fast-charging lines- men. One blocked kick led to & Packer touchdown. Herber Is Scoring Star. TH! much-touted Greenbay passer, Halfback Arnold Herber of “un- known” St. Regis College, was directly responsible for two of the Western- ers’ markers. Early in the first quar- ter the Redskins’ pass defense, which for the most part consisted of “watch Hutson,” failed and the glue-fingered end received a perfect 30-yard toss from ‘midfield and raced the remain- ing distance to chalk up the first score. In the third quarter Herber threw a short one over center to Gan- tenbein behind the goal posts. The final six-pointer was made by Bob Monnett on an end run after Lou Evans blocked one of Smith’s kicks. Con- versions were made by Ernie Smith and Psul Engebretsen. CRACK GRID TRAINER MILWAUKEE, Wis. (#)—Some of the credit for Marquette’s highly suc- cessful (7 games won, 1 lost) grid sea~ son must go to Trainer Ed Rozmary- Gt s | noski of the Golden Avalanche. Only three Marquette gridders were out at all during the season. End i | Lee Muth missed four games; Guard Mike Czernecki missed one and Full- back Ward Cuff was out of two. Pro Hockey BY the Associated Press. National League. Boston, 4; New York Americans, 3. Detroit, 2; Chicago, 1 (overtime). International-American League. Springfield, 1; New Haven, 1, tie. Byracuse, 3; Philadelphia, 3, tie. Providence, 6; Philadelphia, 1, American Association. 8t. Paul, 1; Kansas City, 0. 8t. Louis, 1; Tulsa, 0 (overtime). (No games scheduled tonight.) CHAMPIONS MEET By JIM BERRYMAN CHARLIE OCONNELL, PRES. OF THE NATAL. DUCKPIN BOWLING T CONGRESS WAS AMAZED AT THE FALLING TIMBER ! LA GULL! FIRED THE OPENING SHOT--JUST A STRIKE-- - AND FOLLOWED IT WITH ANOTHER!. . BEN MCALWEE, OFFICIAL SCORER HAD AS TOUGH A JOB As THE PIN-BOYS CAPITAL GRID PROS INLOOP CROWN GO Defeat Richmond, 14-7, for Right to Face Orioles for Dixie Title. ICHMOND, Va., December 14.— The Washington Pros will square off with the Baltimore Orioles for the championship of the Dixie League foot ball title next Sunday following semi-final frays yes- terday in which Washington rallied to trim the Richmond Arrows, 14-7, and Baltimore trounced the Alexandria Celtics, 19-0. Although the site of the title tilt has not been determined, it is likely the game will be played here, since neither Washington nor Baltimore fans have supported the league. Yes- terday, for instance, the Orioles drew only 2,000 spectators, while more than 5,000 turned out here for the Wash- ington-Richmond game. The winner of the championship fracas will play the Brooklyn Bay Parkers, champions of the American Association, the fol- lowing Sunday. Ex-C. U. Stars Aid D. C. Team. FORMER Catholic University stars are responsible for Washington being in the title fight today. Tom Oliver scored for the Pros on the sec- ond play of the final quarter, while Hal McGann flopped on a blocked kick in the end zone for the winning touchdown a few moments later. Johnny Fenlon, former Washington ace, and Johnny Leys, 1935 Virginia captain, nearly wrecked Washington's hopes early in the tussle. Fenlon flipped three successive passes to Leys which ate up 75 yards and ac- counted for the first score of the game after six minutes of the first period. Thwarted three times in drives deep into Richmond territory, the Pros launched s successful attack late in the third quarter which was climaxed when Oliver sliced off tackle after a few seconds of the fourth quarter to score. Benner Boots Points. wn.us BENNER, former Univer- sity of Maryland end, kicked the extra point from placement after both touchdowns. & W ok ‘THE GENT RESPONSIBLE POR THE INTERESTING DUCKPIN ) i 3 EARLE ISTOCKIANG ... I MANAGER AND \" GENIAL HOST OF THE NEARBY DRIVES.... AsTor CLARKE S AN EXPERT AT APPLYING " BODY- ENGLISH™ HIS QUICK HIPSHIFT TO THB LEFT TURNS MANY A SPLIT INTO A SPARE-BREAK ! SIMMOAS... FIRST LADY OF THE DUCKPIN REALM..WHO YESTERDAY GAVE LOCAL FANS AN EHIBITION OF SRILLIANT BOWLING WHEN SHE TEAMED UP WITH RAY b .. ,.w.m,w NN AR VoN DREELE TO WHIP THE NATIONAL CHAMP, ASTOR CLARKE, AND HIS PARTNER, LORRAINE GULLL, IN A SPECIAL MATCH AT SILVER SPRING ALLEYS....... N SN THE SPORTLIGHT Foot Ball Pays Its Players in Thrills for Much Drudgery Endured in Practice. BY GRANTLAND RICE. O8 ANGELES, Calif, Decem- ber 14.—Foot ball, for those | who play it, isn’t all fun. There are the long drills in the dusk and dirt on the practice field, the painstaking learning of complicated plays, the discouragement that comes when plays go wrong and games are lost. But foot ball pays dividends in thrills no other game can match. A long dash for a touchdown—a smashing tackle in the nick of time— Comt Te Pava P a punt down the field that sets the opposing team back on its heels—a pass snatched out of the air—these are the rewards for the time, the energy and the heartbreak that a boy puts into the game. Sometimes these rewards come early. Marshall Goldberg of Pitt, a sophomore and lacking one day of being 18, became a na- tional figure the afternoon he ran riot against Notre Dame. Larry Kelley of Yale spent his junior and senior years keeping up with the pace he had set for him- self as a sophomore, when he scored touchdowns against Harvard and Princeton. Nevin McCormick of Notre Dame heard the roar of the crowd and saw his name in the big black headlines in his first year as a varsity player. & Sometimes the rewards are deferred. A boy trudges almost to the very.end of his gridiron days as just another el a number on his back, in every play, glow- 7i |ing at his team’s victories, suiering 14—14 9 — 7 0 i Touchdowns, Oli- ot after touchdowns, ents. Arrow—Touch- and yet missing the Furey of Columbia. 'IYIAT‘B the way it was with George Furey of Columbia. For two full seasons, and almost all of a third, ns: | they knew George on Morningside Harlqw of Harvard Voted All-America Grid Five Bowl Teams Use Notre Dame System—Mike Jacobs Has Inside Track on Big Fight. BY EDDIE BRIETZ, Associatea Press Sports Writer, EW YORK, December 14— If the Braddock, under contract with the Garden, walking hand in hand with the Twentieth Century. Dick Harlow of Harvard, rated all-America coach honors in the New York World-Telegram’s poil Heights only as the big brother of Ralph and Ed, who had made the headlines as Columbia players. DON'T suppose anybody ever took a richer toll of thrills from foot ball than Kelley. This goes even for Red Grange, because there were Sat- urdays when the opposing team stopped Grange, but no team ever succeeded in stopping Kelley for more than a few minutes at a time. No wonder there were tears in his eyes when he walked off the field in the Yale Bowl for the last time. The ex- citement was over, so far as he was concerned—and at a time when he still was enjoying it to the full. It is unlikely that foot ball ever was drudgery to Kelley. He must have looked forward to every Saturday confident that new and larger thrills awaited him. He was the man who couldn’t lose. Foot ball was high adventure and hé entered into it with a zest few other players have ever known. That was one reason he was a great player. Babe Ruth never tired of hitting a ball out of the park. And Kelley never was bored taking a pass on his fingertips and darting down the fleld with the ball. His wise-cracks, his boastfulness— these were expressions of his attitude toward the game. The day the Yale team entrained for Princeton, he cracked: “How are they going to keep me off the all-America team after what I will do to the Tigers?” ‘Whenever he stepped on a gridiron, the psychological edge was in his favor—but it is doubtful if he ever thought of it in just that way. He ——— have a lot of fun—and a lot of thrills —and he did. Maybe he wasn't the greatest end that Yale ever had, but there were moments when he looked it. These chiefly were moments in which, had he failed in what he was attempting, Yale would have lost. But most of the time he didn't fail and, when the play was over, they put a score for Yale up on the board. (Copyright. 1936, by the North American Newspaper Alliance, Inc.) Varied Sports PRO FOOT BALL. National League. Green Bay Packers, 21; Boston Redskins, 6. Dixie League. - ‘Washington Pros, 14; Richmond Arrows, 7. Baltimore Orioles, 19; St. Mary’s Celtics, 0. 2 American Association. Brooklyn Bay Parkways, 18; New Rochelle Bulldogs, 0. Exhibition. Brooklyn Dodgers, 100; St. Louis Terries, 0. : Los Angeles Bulldogs, 13; Chicago Cardinals, 10. PRO BASKET BALL. Heurich Brewers, 26; Alexandris Kendricks, 23. Dayton Bobbies, 40; Indianapolis Kautskys, 36. s S SIDELINE SPECTATORS ARE LIABLE To BE AFFLICTED THis WAY FOR CEVERAL DAYS.sserass KING OF BOWLERS > | BEATEN BY QUEEN Ida Simmons Pales Astor Clarke and Carries Von Dreele to Victory. BY ROD THOMAS. HEN 1da Simmons of Nor- folk seized the throne of Lorraine Gulli as queen of the Nation’s duckpin bowl- ers, the incredible happened, in the minds of thousands who thought the graceful Lorraine incomparable. Now comes the picturesque and comely Norfolk blonde with an accom- plishment truly remarkable. Before plant yesterday and last night, she made the No. 1 ranking male bowler of the United States, Astor Clarke, ap- pear to be just another pin shooter. Furthermore, in a mixed doubles, she “carried” to victory a man who once held the lofty spot now occupied by Clarke and who today is rated among the top-notchers of his sport, Ray Von Dreele of Baltimore. Ida Surpasses AlL AS MISS SIMMONS and Von Dreele defeated Clarke and Miss Gulli by 43 pins in & 10-game series, the Norfolk girl topped Clarke in six of the 10 strings, Von Dreele in eight and Miss Gulli in nine. With an average of 131-8 she was far ahead of the three other stars, with Clarke shooting at a 123-8 clip, Miss Gulli at 113-3 and Von Dreele, who was handicapped by a swollen leg, the re« sult of an automobile accident the day prior, averaging 109-6. Brilliant- as she was, however, the performance of Miss Simmons at Sil- ver Spring was not up to her highest standard. Early this season, in a spe- cial match in Baltimore, she averaged 135-5 for 10 games and a national record. But for a blown spare in her final frame yesterday afternoon she would have beaten her own all-time national record for five games—694— tober 5 and likely would have become the Miss first woman to top 700, a feat rarely achieved by even the best of male howlers. Norfolk Maid Has Stamina. M!SG SIMMONS proved not only her mettle as & duckpin shooter, but a girl of uncommon stamina. Saturday night she rolled in the Old and may offer another piece of cash for & Clarke-Simmons battle, and you sors P TSNS DUNER | ™ = GBS 196 PALE WITH BOB FELLER Tigers, Cards, Cubs Voted Among “Luckiest” Clubs , Landing Prospects. 4, BY SCOTTY RESTON. ™' EW YORK, December 14 ().~ The Cleveland Indians, Dee troit Tigers, 8t. Louis Care dinals and Chicago Cubs picked up the best of this year's major league prospects, an Associated Press poll of major league managers indi- cated today. Standout of the lot, of course, was Bob Feller, whose graduation to Cleve= land by means of bookkeeping withe out his having played for a minor league club was the source of consid erable excitement and worry at the recent base ball meetings. Aside from him there’s no single standout player, but the managers list the following as outstanding rookies: Cleveland—Pitcher Charlie Fischer, Buffalo, led International League with 17 victories, 2 defeats; Ton Henrich, outfielder from New Orleans via Mil- waukee; batted .346 in 157 games for New Orleans. Tigers Get Hitters. Drl'ROIT—RuiV York, first base- man from Milwaukee, hit .334 in 157 games; Chet Laabs, outfielder from Milwaukee, batted .324 in 157 games. Cardinals—Catcher Arnold (Mickey) Owen, Columbus, hit .336 in 125 games and was hailed as one of the finest re- ceivers seen in the minors in years; Inflelder Ira Smith, Houston, batted 313 in Texas League. Cubs—Joe Marty, outfielder, from Los Angeles, led Pacific Coast batters ‘with mark of .359 in 164 games. The energetic Cincinnati club and the personal scouting system of Man- ager Bill McKechnie of the Boston Bees also brought in some promising youngsters. The Reds obtained two outstanding boys from the Durham, N. C, club of the Piedmont League, Inflelder Frank McCormick and Pitcher John Vandermeer. McCormick batted .381, and Vandermeer won 19 games and lost only 6. McKechnie Picks Up Hurlers. cKECHNIE took time out in mid- season for a scouting trip and came up with two pitchers who stand near the top of the “AA” class. He got St. Paul's Lou Fette, who won 25 games and lost 8 to lead the Amer- ican Association hurlers, and Bill Harris of Buffalo, who won 15 and lost 11. Harris pitched two no-hit games in the International loop, one & seven-inning affair. In addition to Marty, Bob Doerr of San Diego and Eddie Joost of San Prancisco, both inflelders, were gene erally conceded to be the Coast League's top prospects. The Boston Red Sox got Doerr and the Reds Joost. One of Cincinnati’s best prospects, Catcher John Peacock, wound up with the Red Sox, who signed him after he was declared a free agent. DIXIE ELEVENS LISTED Five of Conference on ’37 Slate of Howard College. BIRMINGHAM, Ala., December 14 (P).—Five Dixie Conference foes will face Howard College’s Bulldogs in 1937 while they try for their third successive league title. Games with Oglethorpe and Emory and Henry replace contests with Loyola and Western Kentucky on the new schedule. It follow: September 25-—Alabama at Tuscalooss. October 2—Mississippi State at Starkville: 9—Mercer at Birmingham; 1 thorpe (probably at %23—@“!‘5&0 - at Birmingham: inghill at Mob! November 6—Southwestern at Memph! Emory and Henry at Bristol. 25—Birmingham-Southern at Birmingham, TEN GAMES FOR AUBURN Seven on 1937 Gridiron Schedule With Conference Rivals. AUBURN, Ala., December 14 (#).— Coach Jack Meagher of Auburn an- nounced a 10-game 1937 foot ball schedule for the Plainsmen tonight. The schedule, with one date still open, lists seven Southeastern Confer= ence foes, Santa Clara, Detroit and Loyols (La.) were dropped. ‘The schedule: . Birmingham-Southern st rnamn: 33 h at Atlanta; 30, Rice % 6. Tennessee at Birmingham: State l& Baton juge: 20, 7. Florida at Jack< State and Rice are new sonvillle. opponents. e e ANOTHER “IRISH” CROWE Emmett, Basketer, Keeps Family Going at Notre Dame. SOUTH BEND, Ind. (#).—Mike Crowe, a junior at Notre Dame, will be joined this year by his brother Emmett, former Indiana all-state high school quarterback, on the Irish cage team. The Crowes have been winning letters at Notre Dame since 1923, when w 1925 foot ball captain, won his The string of monograms was un- broken until 1934-5, when the chain temporarily ended. tal's ruling body of bowling will line up its forces in support of the giant Yuletide maple party. are the scores of the Sil- ver Spring match: Block. Afternoon—F¥irst e 183 1% 112 B4 10— 89 248 236 277 247 243—1.231 nd Block. Night—8eoo! x 17 187 130 118 198 &8 HEE M. W 260 228 243 308 011188 Totals. Smmave B L e

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