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SPORTS. Temes Is Test for Gevinson : Ring'Game Makes Strong Comeback VETERAN RINGMAN ST TOUGH FOE Meets 250 Fighters in 14/ Years and Never Has Been Kayoed. BY BURTON HAWKINS. potency of Lou Gevinson's paws, so authoritative that the mere breeze of a southpaw swing ficored a jittery foe in the Jewish scrapper’s last appearance, will be tested to & greater degree to- morrow night at Turner’s Arena when Joe Temes, & veteran of nearly 250 fights, provides the opposition in an eight-round feature bout. to serve as somewhat “'l;un-wm in the analysis of Lou’s fistic ability at this early stage of Gevinson's professional ring career. 1In this, his third start in moneyed cir- cles, Washington's youthful feather- weight hope will seek to regain the prestige that vanished so rapidly sev- eral weeks ago when he waved a men- acing glove in one Benny Wittler's face and Benny obliged by slumping to the canvas. Temes Never Kayoed. GWSON actually will be facing his first trial. True, he fractured Al Schaeffer’s jaw in two places in his debut, but then again nobody ever accused Al of being much more than & human punching bag. Wittler arose from the floor to be knocked out legiti- mately but his earlier fainting spell erased whatever glory Gevinson calcu- lated to garner by chilling the feeble Baltimore substitute. Within the ranks, however, those fighters who compose the corps of pre- liminary featherweights in this sector are convinced of Lou’s punching prow- ess. Lou Lombardi, who was scheduled to face Gevinson, was impressed so vividly he refused to make an appear- ance, necessitating Wittler's perform= ance. The 31-year-old Temes never has been knocked out. That alone should serve as some criterion of Gevinson's ability should he accomplish what “ nearly 250 fighters in Joe's 14 years of campaigning have falled to do. Temes admittedly is in the sunset stage of his clouting career, but still clever enough to warrant earnest con- sideration when he launches a blow. - BAR D BY R. R. TAYNTON. L. LEACH probably has made for himself & more enviable reputation than any man in ® the dog show superintending business. Starting from scratch 10 years ago, he bullt up an organisation and & reputation which allowed him to turn down as much business in the tenth year of his superintendency as most other organisations of this sort get In the course of 12 months. His recent announcement, therefore, comes 48 & great suprise to his many friends. Leach is quitting the lucrative busi- ness of superintending dog shows in order to enter the precarious field of kennel publications. And moreover, he proposes to maintain & monthly magasine with & free circulation and ‘make money at it! In 1937 he will accept just enough superintending assignments to get the magasine on its financial feet, after that he will devote his whole time to it. Leach started publication of the Kennel Club News early in 1936. Dif- startling show record. Owned Kennels. While the argument means little to Temes, except for the personal satis- faction he would obtain in trouncing Lou, the bout means much to Gev- | fneon, who has been promised & flo.rcl: i dogs, it has been sent free to dog ! w | » gt Freddy Miller, former featherweight champion, within the next few months should he whip Joe. From Miller it would be but one step to & match with Petey Sarron, present ruler of the 126-pound division. Sarron Ends Streak. 'AKONG Temes' victims have been Julie Katz, Roger Bernard, Baby Miller, Chino Alvarez, Eddie Burl, Charley Van Reedon, Tony Lopez, Jimmy Reed and Bucky Burton. After compiling & string of 13 consecutive WVictories in 1935, Temes lost to Sarron. Temes is employed in a Southwest restaurant as a bartender, while Gev- inson works for the Treasury Depart- ment. | In a brace of six-rounders, Mark | Hough, former international amateur | welterweight champion, will stack up | against COyclone Sammy Williams, | Jocal colored middleweight, and Pete | Andropoulous, New York welterweight, | will trade punches with Young Palmer | of Camden. Williams scored a tech- | nicel knockout triumph over Hough | last week. Frankie Floco, Baltimore bantam- weight, will meet Jimmy Clifton of Fort Myer in the opening four-rounder at 8:30 o'clock. Two additional four- round tiffs pit Doug Swetnam, local featherweight against Fenton Blight | of Baltimore and Sammy Meadows of | New York against Young Raspi, Balti- more welterweight. R " RUGBY SHOWS GROWTH Princeton Takes College Homors| Third Straight Time. Rugby continued to make new friends and increase in popularity in this country during the last season. Although there were no foreign in- vaders from Europe, two teams from Canada came down to New York to battle with local fifteens. Princeton retained its mythical eastern collegiate title for the third successive year and also showed a marked supremacy over the club teams in this sector. TITLE AT HAND BALL GOES TO CHICAGOAN Platak Defeats Marble on Court at Hollywood—Gordon and v - HAND BALL, at least the four-wall variety, “went Hollywood” in 1036, with the semi-final and final round matches of the senior national A. A. U. tournament being played in the four-wall court of the Harold Lloyd estate at Beverly Hills. Before a crowd containing many of L the national tennis champion, Alice in straight | fering from the ordinary kennel mag- | azine in that its editorial columns are | devoted to news about kennel clubs, shows and doggy people rather than exhibitors all over the country and | has been warmly weicomed by them. And going to that type of reader, there is no doubt that it offers unique possibilities for advertising by the manufacturer of canine supplies and the breeder of'’ high quality stock. Leach has courage enough—and pre- sumably, cash enough—to put his | theorles to the test. WWHEN the caim terrier. Cragwood | Gillad, first came to live with his | present owner, Mrs. J. B. Mackle, he | performed for her a service of such |wuhndin: merit as to win the un- | dying gratitude of the whole Mackle | family. Gilly was and is a perfectly trained dog as far as walking on lead is concerned. He never pulls or balks, | but trots along docilely at heel as a |good dog should. On this particular | | evening, which happened to be a dark, stormy one, Gilly was trotting, as| usual, at his mistress’ heels. Sudden- ly, right in the middle of the road | where Rhode Island avenue is spanned by an overhead pass, Gilly jerked backward on the lead, and, small as he is, dragged Mrs. Mackle with him a step or two, just far enough to save her from almost certain death under KS Aom OGDOM from the gloom of the underhead pass. ‘This feat was reported recently to Will Judy, who awarded the little dog & dog world diploma of honor. T!l premium lists for the sixty-first '™ annual Westminster show now are in the matis. In spite of the competi- tion of the Morris and Essex show for premier honors, a win at “the Garden” still puts the cachet of excellence on a dog. This year the show takes place on February 10, 11 and 13. Because space in Madison Square Garden is limited, and there is always a larger entry than can be accommodated, en- tries this year close on January 13, with & final closing date, after which no cancellations or changes will be accepted, of January 25. This is still the only show in the country which provides separate classification for every breed recognized by the Ameri- can Kennel Club, with impressive class prize money in every class, THI story of Shep, who waited for his master to return at the eleva- Champion Millio Dollar Sensation, Boston terrier, with a by Roy Routt of the Dee Cee tor entrance of St. Antony's Hospital, has beer told 20 many times that it has gone down into doggy legend as a tale of old. Yet it is only a few days since “finis” was written to that tale. On December 21 old Shep, who was young 8hep when Prancis Mc- Mahon told him to “wait there” in 1924, wandered out into the road. Stift and almost blinded with age. he lacked the agility to get out of the way of an oncoming car. A hospital attendant brought him back to die at the post which he guarded so faith- fully all these yea: IT MAY be the natural effervescence of youth or it may be just natural darn foolishness, but events and proj- ects in the Old Dominion Kennel Club follow in such rapid sequence that life cannot help being interesting for its members. Latest scheme to evolve | from the fertile minds of its mem- bers is & series of classes in obedience training, open to all. The classes meet Sunday mornings at some designated meeting place and under the leader- ship of & man well versed in methods of dog training and the rules for offi- cial American Kennel Club obedience trials, the dogs are taught to obey simple commands and follow a pre- scribed routine. Any breed of dog may be brought to these trials. A very nominal fee is charged, which goes into the special obedience test coffers of the Old Dominion Kennel Club. ¢ the wheels of a large car which came with great speed and no headlights Teams Increase, Gates Are Bigger, Spot on Olympic Program Gained. F FOR no other reason than they saw victory reward their long fight to make the game an offi- cial Olympic sport, basket ball's leaders and missionaries will earmark 1936 in their records as an epoch of unusual importance and brilliance. But there were many other ele- ments that contributed to making the year memorable to devotees of the pastime Dr. James Naismith invented | 45 years ago. The steady growth of the game in- ternationally as well as within the borders of its home country contin- ued without abatement. More persons played it in schools, colleges, clubs, settlement houses, community centers and out in the open. More persons watched it being played. Attendance Records Climb. A’rrlNDANOE records climbed in all sections of the United States. The high spot in this regard was the turnout of 160,000 spectators for the 10 intercollegiate double-headers played in New York's Madison Square Garden. It is estimated by Dr. Forest C. Allen of the University of Kansas, one of basket ball's most ardent and articulate aposties, that some 20,000,~ 000 girls, boys, men and women are playing the game everywhere in the world where court space can be found and baskets erected. No one has dared o guess the spectator accompaniment to this astounding activity. he M’nynu.munhemdu- putith’ the fact that in the United least, more persons play and 19% GREAT YEAR FORFELD HOCKEY America in World Focus of Sport for First Time. Bows to England. 8 PAR as women's field hockey is concerned, there never has been an American year like 1936. Sports historians often are obliged to strain to find anything special to mark off one year from its predecessor, but a backward glance at 1936 field hockey is & strain on the stock of superlatives. The year, in brief, brought recogni- tion to our players and hysteria to fans. It consisted essentially of the triennial international tournament, held at Philadelphia, culmination of two years of preparation and the oc- casion of America’s attainment of & new standing in the hockey world. For the first time America was the focal spot of world hockey competi- tion. The American team won the coveted place of second to England. No team but Scotland ever dares hope for more. Covers Wide Field. United States Field Hockey As- sociation’s debut as hostess to an HUSKIES HANG P |Gridiron Season Is Thriller; GREAT OAR MARK Duplicate Cornell Record of Winning Three Races of College Meet. ARSMEN of the University of ‘Washington ruled the college rowing circles, making a clean sweep of the Pough- keepsie regatta, varsity, junior varsity and freshman events, and continuing their superior oarsmanship to win the Olympie title at the Olympic regatta at Kiel. The Huskies, stroked by Don Hume and coached by Al Ulbrickson, rowed themselves into s remarkable racing machine, In all major races the eight invariably got s slow start and came from behind to win. Coaches have been saying for years that no individual coaching system ever again would be able to make ‘a clean sweep of the three races at the intercollegiate regatta on the Hud- a0n as Courtney had done with Cornell crews in the rowing past. But Wash- ington performed the feat last Sum- mer, winning the three events from a good field. With s remarkable finish drive, ‘Washington beat out California on the Hudson, with Navy, Columbia, Cornell, Pennsylvania and Syracuse finishing in order. The Huskies won the junior varsity race, leaving Navy, Cornell, Co- lumbia and Syracuse in its wake, re- apectively. Washington beat out Cali- fornia in the freshman race, with Navy, Cornell, Syracuse and Columbia trailing. Late Sprint Beats Italy, victory of the Washington oars- men in the Olympics was even more remarkable. Trailing for more than half the 2,000-meter distance and having a decided disadvantage in a slow outside lane, the Huskies put on one of their fiery sprints and nosed out the Italian crew by half a deck’s length. Germany was third. Wash- ington’s victory was all the more meri- torious because Hume, the stroke oar, and several other Washington sweep- swingers were not in top physical con- dition because of colds. Harvard ended Yale's string of vic- tories at New London, defeating the Blue by 5'; lengths. Harvard also won the freshman event, Yale's only victory of the regatta coming in the Jjunior varsity race. Two important coaching assign- ments were made at the close of the season, Harvard dropping Charley Whiteside and engaging Tom Bolles, who had coached the Washington freshmen for several seasons. Jim Wray, the veteran coach at Cornell, was dropped as another Washington coach, Franklin Sanford, was engaged to fill his place. Navy Gains Adams Cup. "THE East had one of its best short- race seasons, and each one of the cup events provided close competition. Pennsylvania’s two-year-old string of sprinting victories cante to an end when Navy defeated the Red and Blue in the Adams Cup event. Pennsylvania retained its hold on | the Childs Cup, defeating Princeton | and Columbia. The Quakers also took the Blackwell Cup race, defeating Yale and Columbia. Princeton won the Compton Cup in | the race against Harvard and M. 1. T., | and the Csrnegie Cup was won by | Cornell, with Princeton second and | Yale last. SOCCER INVADERS STIR Team From Palestine Helps Make | Season One of Best. Enlivened by the visit of the Mac- cabees, champions of Palestine, the year's soccer activities compared fa- vorably with those years when the game made its greatest strides. The United Foot Ball Association was represented by a team at the Olympics in Berlin, but was elim- inated in’ the first round by Italy, victor over Austria in the final. The National Challenge Cup com- petition oconducted by the governing body was won by the Philadelphia Germans, who, after a 2-2 tie at St. Louis, defeated the St. Louis Sham- Tocks at Philadelphia, 3 to 0. The first Germans of Brooklyn won the National Amateur Cup by defeating Castle Shannon of Pittsburgh, 2 fo 1, in the final. . OLD LINERS AHEAD IN STICK PASTIME Capture Collegiate Championship, ‘While Mount Washington Takes Club Title. ITY OF MARYLAND won the first award of the Wilson Win- gate Trophy, emblematic of intercol- legiate lacrosse supremacy during 1936. The Mount Washington squad of Bal- timore was the outstanding club 10 in the country for the second succes- sive year. An all-American intercollegiate team staged an unsuccessful invasion of Canada, losing three straight games for the Lally Trophy at Vancouver. Box lacrosse rules prevailed during the international contests. United States Intercollegiate La- crosse Association will send an all- American team on a European tour during this coming June. It will meet Oxford, Cambridge and the best squads in England and on the Oon- tinent. — SANDBACH TIGERS’ BEST Princeton Athlete Star on Grid, Diamond and in Basket Ball. | Navy. . . . Minnesota Again Ranked No.1 In A. P. Poll Despite Beating ! Foot Ball Aces one just laid away in moth balis. Starting with Minnesota’s Septem- ber invasion of the Far West to trim ‘Washington's Huskies, through the late October date when the apparently invincible Gophers met their Waterloo in the mud at Evanston, down to & bitterly cold December Saturday when & frightened rabbit, dashing 80 yards to & “touchdown,” provided a record crowd of 102,000 at the Army-Navy game with the biggest laugh of the year, the 1036 season rolled along its tortuous course in such.dizsy fashion that the experts finally tossed in the sponge and resorted to the blindfold test as the only logical method of se- lecting winners. Title Race Still Open. ENOOURAGID perhaps by & 15 per cent increase in attendance and receipts, the lads who whack each other all around the premises on 8 to 10 Fall Saturday afterncons put on the greatest gridiron show on record. There was a marked trend toward wider, not to say wilder, use of the pass, although laterals generally were less common than they had been in 1935. The result may not have been better foot ball, but it paid huge divi- dends in thrills for the spectators. Nor did it harm the box office. With such post-season duels as Washington and Pittsburgh in the Rose Bowl and Louisians State and Santa Clara in the Sugar Bowl still to come, the mythical national cham- pionship race must still be considered open. “National Champion” Loses, MONG a plurality of experts, how- ever, these games can do nothing more than throw additional light on Just which team deserves to be ranked behind Minnesota. Not the least of the season’s strange developments was the spectacle of Minnesota, despite its defeat by Northwestern after 21 suc- cessive victories, again selected in the final Associated Press ranking poll as the country’s No. 1 outfit. The final rankings otherwise placed mu State second and Pittsburgh ‘The sectional championship races saw Louisiana repeat in the South- eastern Conference, Duke in Southern and Nebraska in the Big 8ix. Arkansas, whose passing attack Was feared by all, ascended the South- | west Conference throne; Northwestern captured sole possession of the Big ‘Ten championship for the first time in history; Washington ran off with the Pacific Coast title, and Utah State topped all rivals in the Rocky Moun- tain circuit. In the East Pittsburgh generally was ranked at the top, although Penn and Yale both wound up with better records. Pot-Shot Review. HIGH'L!(}H'I'! of the season other- wise: Larry Kelley's “socoer kick” of s free ball that enabled Yale to beat The same all-America end’s magnificent catching of passes tossed by all-America Quarterback Clint Prank. . . . The upset cham- pion, Duquesne, which whipped Pitt and Marquette and was itself upset by West Virginia Wesleyan as well as De- troit. . . . Yale's 26-23 conquest of Princeton after trailing 16-0. . . . Baylor's 21-point fourth-period rally after Texas led, 18-0. ‘The furore that followed Pitt's se- lection as Washington's Rose Bowl opponent in view of the Panthers’ previous Rose Bowl record: Three games lost, total points, 20, against 89 for the opposition . . . Princeton’s request that Palmer Stadium be “no man's land” as far as drinking was concerned . . . Harvard's feat in tying Princeton, 14-14, and holding Yale to & 14-13 count after a dismal start. Fordham making one first down against Southern Methodist and win- ning on an intercepted pass . . . Andy Uram taking & lateral from Wilkinsdn and dashing umpteen yards for the Minnesota touchdown that beat Ne- braska in the last two minutes of play . . . Tom Harp's long runback of & punt that forced Duke to avcept de- feat by Tennessee and ruined an otherwise perfect season for the Blue Devils. The extraordinary ballyhoo which preceded St. Mary's Gaels' unsuccess- ful invasion of the East and Midwest « ... Fordham's seven blocks of granite pretty well chipped away by Georgia and New York University . . . That 20-20 tie between Indiana and Purdue after & scoreless first half . . . The East's remarkable comeback in inter- sectional games . . . Marshall Gold- berg when Pitt walloped Notre Dame and Nebraska . . . Wisconsin complet- ing 19 of 31 passes against Northwest- ern . . . Cornell's comeback under Carl Snavely . . . Ditto Wisconsin under Harry Stuhldreher . . . Biggest dis- appointments: North Carolina State, Texas, Princeton, California ... and so0 on, far into the night. ARGENTINES PROVE PROWESS AT POLO Americans Do Well Despite Loss of Open Title to Riders From Pampas. the | LARRY KELLEY, Yale end, who was the year’s most colorful player. GAYNELL TINSLEY, Louisiana State end, who was unanimous choice for all- America for second successive time. P. Photos. CROWN NONOFLY ATDUAE CAROLIA {Two Colleges Defend All Except Three Titles in Southern Loop. By the Associated Press. ICHMOND, Va., December 26. R —The New Year will find Duke and North Carolina as the defending champions in all but three Southern Conference sports, The Blue Devils annexed the big- gest 1936 plum, the foot ball title, for the second consecutive time. No circuit member was able to threaten seriously Wallace Wade's gridmen as they mowed down seven opponents, with 13-0 scores in the Davidson and N. C. State games the narrowest mar- gins of victory. North Carolina, defeated only by Duke, took runner-up honors for a second year. The Dukes also captured the golf and outdoor and indoor track cham- pionships. North Carolina’s trophies included basket ball, tennis and cross country. Virginia Boxers Supreme. WASHJNOTON AND LEE won the wrestling and swimming titles, while Virginia copped the boxing crown for the sixth straight time. The conference voted at its recent meeting here to abandon the wres- tling tournament, held at Lexington for the last few years. The Old Do- minion practically is certain to lose the boxing honors with the with- drawal of the OCavaliers from the conference. The ring event next year will be held at College Park, Md, with Maryland, Duke and North Carolina squads appeafing on a basis of pre- season information to be the major contenders for the mantle discarded by Coach Johnny Larowe's Virgin- ians. Duke took second place in last Yyear’s tourney at Charlottesville. Olift Perry, crack Duke golfer, took the individual honors in the 1935 meet at Hot Springs, Va. Ramsey Potts, ace of North Carolina’s un- defeated tennis team, won the singles trophy and teamed with Eddie Fuller for the doubles crown. Duke Scores on Track. 5 GECOND only to Duke's marked superiority over the rest of the conference brethren on the gridiron was the Blue Devil's sweeping track triumphs. In the outdoor event, Duke runners and field men doubled the points scored by second-place North Carolina, defending cham- pions. The closest competition for su- premacy came on the basket ball court where Phantoms of Chapel Hill nosed out Washington and Lee's lanky Generals, 50-45, in a thrilling climax to the annual Raleigh tourna- The conference does not officially recognize & base ball pennant winner, but Maryland’s Old Liners turned in the best record against member nines. LOOK TO DOUBLE BILL * LOUIS’ DOWNFALL ~ BOOMS INTEREST Good Showing of Invaders Also Proves Stimulant to World of Sock. BY EDDIE BRIETZ. EW YORK (#).—Max Schme- ling’s spectacular 12-round knockout of the hitherto un- beatable Joe Louis was the high spot of the most successful year boxing has known since the lush days immediately following the World War. ‘The amazing comeback of the for- mer champion overshadowed even the stunning upset the year previous of Max Baer by James J. Braddock, the ring's Cinderella Man and the most popular champion since Jack Dempsey ruled the heavyweights. It was & year of surprises which saw & record influx of high-class foreign talent in the heavyweight and light- weight divisions, the financial returns since 1932, mounting attend- ance figures and at least 10 per cent more active boxers than in 1935. Nat Fletcher, editor of The Ring Magazine and internationally known boxing expert, told this writer: “The revival of interest followed the unexpected kayo of the Brown Bomber and the extraordinarily good showing and crowd appeal of the foreign impor- tations, notably Gunnar Barlund of Pinland and Arturo Godoy of Chile among the heavyweights and Enrico lightweights.” One Champion Idle. WHILI Champion Jimmy Braddock was kept in enforted idleness by an attack of arthritis, which caused a postponement of his championship duel with Schmeling, the kingpins of | the other classes were active through- out. The year saw the dethronement of the popular Tony Canzoneri as cham- plon of the lightweights and the rise of Lou Ambers to the top rung of the 135-pound division. A new American middleweight champion was crowned when Freddie Steele of Seattle, Wash., decisively de- feated Babe Risko, who had knocked out Teddy Yarosz of Pittsburgh the year before. New faces also bobbed up in the | alwa; sion. Petey Sarron, from Birming- ham, won the National Boxing Associ- Miller of Cincinnati. A little later Mike Belloise won an elimination tournament and was crowned king in New York State. Henry Armstrong, & Negro, then defeated Belloise to be- come the recognized champion in California. Slm ESCOBAR of Puerto Rico, recognized as the American ban- tamweight king, went on to win the world title by stopping Tony Marinc of Pittsburgh, who previously had beaten-Balthazar Cengchili of Spain, bantamweight king of the Interna- tional Boxing Union. The other champions retained their laurels, although John Henry Lewis, the light-heavyweight ruler, went to | London to risk his against Len Har- won hands down. That the boxing revival was world- wide is indicated by the fact that England enjoyed its best year since the war and that several American fighters found rich pickings in tours of foreign countries. Besides Lewis' London invasion, dollars in his wanderings abroad and Petey Sarron, his successor, now is ‘mhxnz in in Australia, with fat | purses promised in England on the ‘way 3 Like Dempsey Ers. year produced s number of heavy hitters reminiscent of the lund the Finn, Freddy Steele, Harry | Balsamo, a new middleweight threat, |and Fred Apostoli. It saw the re- opening of many fight clubs closed smce the depression. Records of box- ing commissions from coast to coast indicate more shows were staged than in any year- since 1929. On the other side of the ledger, five figures closely identified with the sport passed on. Tom O'Rourke, formerly an ace manager and dean of New York offi- clals, died from & heart attack at the Louis-Schmeling fight in New York City. Joe Humphreys, famous as an announcer, died after a long iliness, Packy McFarland, all famous as mid- dieweights in their day, answered their last bell. Retains Team Honors in National Championship Meet. Its admission to the ranks of full Olympic competition sport for the first time lent special significance to the year 1936 in canoeing. The United States qualified a full team of 10 pad- dlers and was represented in each of the seven events at Gruenau. Ernie Riedel of the Pendleton Canoe national champion, registered the best "American performance—a third place in the one-man double-blade race over the 10,000 meters course. Walter Has- enfus of the Needham, Mass., Canoe Club placed fifth in the one-man sin- gle-blade test, which went to the Ca- nadian entry, Frank Amyot. Washington Canoe Club successfully defended its team title in the national paddling championship regatta on Lake Sebago, leading the rest of the American Canoe Association clubs by an overwhelming point margin. PRI TSR ANDREW NURMI DIES Takoma Park Resident Was Rela- tive of World-Famous Runner. Spécis] Dispatch to.The Star. TAKOMA PARK, Md., December 26. ~—Andrew Guspa Nurmi, 58, a distant relative of the world-famous Finnish Venturi and Aldo Spoldi among the | -muddled featherweight divi- | ation title from the veteran Freddy | vey in s bout which the American Lon Freddy Miller drew both erowds and | Dempsey era, including Gunner Bar- | and Billy Papke, Jim Clabby and|} W. C. C. PADDLERS LEAD. Club of New York, for many years the Olympic Champs Men, Teters—Yesse 3.'"!55 Baited Biater: 5 ers—AT .Ww ms, Btates, i o e, D] B 8.000 meters—Gunnar ert, 10, ters—Imari g b L. g e e, Poliet, ates. urdies—Gienn Hardin, United P 3 —p—— Sreat Britain, i . - i Son. Japan, eter relay—United Btates (Ji s, Raiph Metcalfe, Poy Braver snd 1.600-meter . s 3 G Mo e, 2T Decathion—Glenn E. Mo Units te: High axlmp—o;fienua" & fonnsons Datted :.}l:."llél:‘;_l:'fll I‘él'do"LuinlM Btates. Women. 100 meters—Helen gl-e;i.lem. United States. *400-meter relay_—United '‘States (Helen Bland. Annette Rogers. Elizabeth Robine son and Helen Stephent). g0-meter hurdies- é"k oids Valla. Ttaly. ump_—Tholys Cuak. ry. — Pl o A Dlacus—Clscla Mauermaser. Germany, SWIMMING. Men. 100-meter free style—Ferenc Osik, Hun- « -E‘.}‘n free style—Jack Medica, United l.m.’ura‘ém fres style—Noboru Terads, an. 100-meter, back stroke—Adoiph Kiefer, n 3 ’ogim::" breast stroke—Detsuo Hamuro, eter relay. free style—Japan (Yusa, . Taguchi. Aral). diving—Richard Degener. United States. Platform diving—Marshall Wayne. United Btates. Women. 100-meter free style—Rita Mastenbroek. Holland. 100-meler back stroke—Dina Sentf, Hol- 200-meter breast stroke—Hideko Maehata, apan lnn-:wleu; free style—Rits Mastenbroek, an | 400-meter relay. free style—Holland Springboard diving—Marjorie . Gestring, Uni ts Platiotm S ke —Dorothy Pornton il WATER POLO. *Hungary. United States Sinsle sculls—Goorav Beneter, Ge ustav aefer, rmany uble sculls—Jack Beresford ane ck Southwood. Great Britain AN Pair-oared with coxswain—Germany. Pair-oared without coxswain—Germany. sPour-oared with coxswain—Germany. red without coxswain—Germany. *Eight-oared shells—United States (Uni- versity of Washington). BO: G. Plyweight—W. Knlsex:“G!YMIHL Peithernelehi 0, Corsrionas” Argent. atherweigh. ASANOVA " Lightweight—I Harangi. Hur:llr;"n g speaux. Prance. Heavyweight—H. Runte. Germany. ! amacki. Fin- nd. Lightweight—Earolv Karpat! Hungary. Welterweight—Prank Lewis, United States. Middlewsight—Emile Poilve. Prance. Light hesvyweight—RKnut Pridell. Sweden. Heavyweight—Rristian Palusalu, Esthonia. WRESTLING. reco-Roma: Bantamweight—Oedom Zo: - BT CiEhl—Rustan PIInamackr T G . Bantamwelight—Martin Lorines, Muneary. Peatherweizht— Erkan. Turkey, Lightweight—Lauro Koskela. Pinland Welterweight~—Rodol! Svedberg, Sweden. Middleweight—Ivar Johansson. Sweden Light-heavyweight—Axel Cadigr, Sweden Heavyweight—Kristian Palusalu, FENCING, Fofls. Team—Ttaly. Men’s individual—Giulio Gaudin!. M| Women's _individual — Schacherer Hungary. Team—Ttaly oo Individual—Pr. Riceardi Jtaly. ber. onia. el Sal *Team_m: 3 Individusi—Endre Kabos. Rungary. BASKET BALL. Tnited Btates. FIELD NAND BALL. Germany. POLO. Argentins, GYMNASTICS. Men. All-around individusi—Alfred Schwarse Allfaroind team o Germany me Rorse—Alfred Schwarsmann. Ger- Qide horse—Konrad Prey. Germany ying rings—Alols Hudec. Czechoslovakia, Parallel Lars—Konrad Prey. Germany. Hopisental bars — Aleksanter! Saarvala. Pree exercises—George Mies, Switzerland. Team—Germany. " ™ h-st(:::relxmfin-;rhn'iu ez, United mllht’w!lllhb—mhmmd Ahmed Mesbah, Dt. Midleweight_Knadr ¥1 Toun. ;Light-heavyweight—Louis Hostin. France. Heavyweight—Joseph Manger, Germany. MODERN PENTATHLON, Gotthardt Handrick, Germany. CYCLING. l.mf‘\;meur scratch—Ton! Merkens, Gers many. | 4.000-meter pursuit—rrance. | 1:000-meter against time—A. G. van Viiet, Holland. 2.000-meter tandem—Germany. 100-kilometer road—R. Carpentier. Prance. Individual—Prance. Team—France. SOCCER. Ttaly, FIELD HOCKEY. *India. . YACHTING. llanolrg: lass—Holland (J. Kagehelland's Nurnl ). Star class—Germany (Dr. P. Bischoft's Wannsee Six-meter class—Great Britain (M. & Beliwille's Lalage) class—Italy (L. Reggios Ttalin), CCANOEING. 1.000-meter Canadian singles—F. Amyot, Canadian doubles—Czecho- 1,000-meter k singles—Gregor Hra detzky. Austr . by .000-meter Kayak doubles—Austria 10,000-meter Kavak singles—Ernest Krebs, rm: 10.000- and Li or Dsible _ doubles—Sven OJGDIMMKI’IIIG !rxclillu:‘wr&n. Bw%dell: e 1 anadian_ doubles—Vacla Mott] and enek Skrdlant, Ozecho- slovakia, SHOOTING. Rapid fire. automatic pistol or revolver. 23 meters—C. Van_Oven. Germany, Precision pistol. 50 meters—T. Ullman, weden. Smail-bore rifie—W. Rogebers. Norway, EQUESTRIAN SPORTS. Dressage. individual—Lieut. Heins Pollay. Germany. Dressage. téam —Germany Three-day event, individual—Capt. Ludwiy Stubbendor{. Germany. Three-day event. team—Germany. Prix des Nations. individusl—Lieut. Kurl asse. Germany. Prix des Nations. team—Germany, WINTER OLYMPICS, BOBSLEDDING. Pour.man—S8witzeriand (Plerre Musy, iver). Two-man—United States (Ivan Brown, Alan Washbond). PIGURE SKATING. Men’'s—*Karl Schafer. Austria. Women's—*Miss Sonja Henie,' Norway. Miss Maxi Herber and Ernst Baler, SKTING. +Birger Buud, Noi gfll ined, :efl'nhfl] and flnfl!fl Germany. en, Norway. land. combined downhill and slalom— Christel Cranz. Germany. —_— HEADLEY IS VERSATILE May Have to Leave Terp Tossers to Join Track Squad. .| Maryland varsity basket ball squad. He is s capable guard, but