Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 May 1938 — Page 6

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tlesville, Okla., before being sold to the Cincinnati Reds. . getting a chance to play, however, he was sent to the Cards in a deal for Jim Bottomley. . Houston, and finally, in 1937, to Columbus.

gets more good balls to hit at in the big show. . . . League pitchers are beginning to discover they'd better keep the good ones at a minimum when they face the Pirate star.

will be available for the fans tomorrow. council, composed of Commissioner Kenesaw M. Landis, President Ford Frick of the National League and President William H. Harridge of the American, will meet in Cincinnati to discuss the situation.

ing weeks wasn't something out of the blue sky. .

Kansas City INDIANAPOLIS Minneapolis Toledo St. Louisville .. Milwaukee Columbus

Philadelphia

New York .. Pittsburgh

Cincinnati ...

Brookl 200 020 MacFayden and Mueller; Fitzsimmons, Pressnell, Marrow and Phelps.

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WENNEINAV. MAV 18 1628

By Eddie Ash

RIZZO SURPRISES THE CRITICS

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REMINDS TRAYNOR OF MEDWICK

P from the Columbus Red Birds of the American Association this year came two likely-looking young outfielders, each armed with a contract admitting them to the National League baseball wars—Enos Slaughter with the Cardinals and Johnny Rizzo with the Pirates. Slaughter was judged a little better of the two, was hailed by A. A. observers as the prize package of the 1938 rookie crop. . . . Rizzo? Oh, he'd get along, they figured. . . . After all, he'd hit .358 with Columbus—20 some points less than Slaughter—and he seemed to know what to do and when to do it, in the outfield. And so John Rizzo, a quiet Italian youth from Galveston, Tex., went to Pittsburgh’s spring training camp labeled as “second best” of a couple of rookie stars. Now that the 1938 campaign is well under way, civicminded Pittsburghers have lopped the “second” off the label. . . . And Pirate fans, unlike the Flatbush fanatics who follow the Brooklyn Dodgers, are right a good deal of

the time.

» " ”

» " 5 VERY pennant hope the Pirates entertain this year is based on this stocky-looking rookie. . . . Pie Traynor has long contended he had too many left-handed hitters in his lineup. . . . What he needed was a solid right-hander who could tear the cover off the ball. The manager found just what he was looking for in Rizzo. . . . Arky Vaughan, Gus Suhr, the two Waners— southpaws all. . . . Rizzo supplies the balance Traynor was seeking. The Pirate manager points out a startling similarity to Ducky Medwick in the manner in which the young Italjan stands up to the plate. . . . Rizzo is 6 feet tall and scales 190 pounds, yet he looks stocky and somewhat squat. . . . His hands are plenty big, his wrists and fore-

arms powerful. ” un ” 1ZZO isn't expected to set a home run mark of any sort, but no one. will be greatly surprised it he leads the league in triples this season. . . . Three-base blows are his specialty, and Traynor doesn’t care if he never hits for the circuit. “If he continues the pace he’s been setting for the early weeks of this season we're going to be a ball club they'll have to worry about,” Traynor maintains. “And I don’t think Rizzo's is another case of a ‘hot’ start. He's got the eye, the rhythm, and the strength to keep hitting like this all year. And don't think for a moment he isn't helping out in the field.” The last is by way of an afterthought. . . . Traynor doesn’t want folks to recard Rizzo merely as a guy who knows how to swing a big

o s s

stick. . . . He's got the goods in the garden.

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u un un OHNNY broke into organized ball with Galveston in 1931, after starring in high school football, baseball and track... . In his first

season with the Texas club he batted .276, which was pretty good for a mere Kid.

He served subsequent stretches with Hutchinson, Kas, and Bar- . . Without

.. The chain gang farmed him to Elmira, later to

Rizzo says the biggest difference between minors and major is he But National

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Drs information about the manner in which tickets for the big league All-Star game in Cincinnati on July 6 will be handled, On that day the advisory

8

Immediately following the meeting, plans for the handling of

the ticket sale will be announced to the public.

Willard Hershberger, scrappy catcher purchased by the Cincy

Reds from the championship Newark Bears, showed why International League critics raved about him when he was given his chance to fill in behind the bat in place of incapacitated Ernie Lombardi.

Hershberger is a little fellow, weighing only 167 pounds, but he

holds his own behind the plate and rattles off a virtual barrage of chatter to bolster up his pitchers. . . crouching stance, but it is effective.

. At bat he has an unorthodox,

® = ” ETTING a new National League record by beating the 200 mark in the hit column for the eighth successive year ‘made 1937 a great season in Paul Waner’s batting annals. . . . The Pirates’

veteran pill puncher is shooting harder than ever this year for another 200-hit year because if he makes, it, it will tie him with Ty

Cobb for the all-time major league record. . . . George Barr's Hot Springs “University’ of Umpiring” placed his complete graduating class of 32 in positions on minor league staffs. . . . Prof. Barr, upon

taking up his own work as a member of Ford Frick's National League staff, stated that he had received requests from minor league presi-

dents for 42 men, 10 more than his senior class enrolled. Frank McCormick's power-pounding in the National League’s open- . . The big Cincy first baseman opened the big league season with a .404 batting average representing 2¢ spring exhibition games.

Baseball at a Glance

STANDINGS 000 002 001— 3 ® 2

420 042 00x—12 13 0 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Schumacher, Lohrman. Yalidenyers and WwW.

Pet | Danning; Walters and Atwood.

27 | 682 | 619 | AMERICAN LEAGUE y | (Ten Innings) 010 011 000 000 200 100

New York | Philadelphia

|

Only games scheduled.

15 13 12 10 6 6

0—3 % 1—4 12 Allen, Hudlin an

10 10 14 14 14

545 | Philadelphia 500 | Cleveland ..

| Thomas and Brucker: 300 | Pytlak. 300 | a | Washington 1 263 | Detroit 4

| Chase, Kohiman, Phebns, Kelley and R. | Ferrell, Giuliani; Kennedy and York. Pet. | 667 625 600 S71 485 421 333

292 |

1 2 Paul d

000 002 050— 7 7 101 304 40x—13 11

AMERICAN LEAGUE WwW. lL 16 8 15 9 14 9 16 12 10 13 11 14 17

Only games scheduled.

Major Leaders

BATTING

Boston Cleveland New York Washington Detroit Chicago Medwick, Cardinals DiMaggio, Yankees Trosky, Cleveland Hayes, Athletics Moore, Giants HOME RUNS Foxx, Red Sox Greenberg, Tigers Goodman, Reds Ripple, Giants Bonura, Senators Henrioh, Yankees .. Lazzeri, Cubs Keltner, Cleveland Ott, Giants

McCarthy, Giants Say Leiber, Giants

RUNS BATTED IN

Foxx, Red Sox Galan, Cubs Ott, Giants _........ Gehringer, Tigers . “eee. Dickey, Yankees ... . McCarthy, Giants

BEARS RETAIN LEA IN INTERNATIONAL

By United Press

The Newark Bears retained their 41; game lead in the International League today despite a 7-5 defeat yesterday by the Rochester Red wings. The Bears maintained their lead because the runnerup Buffalo Bisons dropped a 10-3 decision to the Jersey City Giants. The victory enabled Jersey City to remain in fourth place above Rochester. The last-place Syracuse Chiefs put on a seven-run rally in the | — third inning to defeat Toronto, 8-1, NATIONAL A Eo0—s 1» 1|and the Baltimore Orioles tri6 0 umphed over Montreal, 7-5, in a

13-inping battle.

NATIONAL LEAGUE WwW. UL 4 9 11 13 12 11 16 15

Pct. 818 | 591 | 560 | 480 455 450 385 350

13 Chicago

St. Louis Boston Brooklyn Philadelphia

TODAY'S GAMES AMERICAN ASSOCIATION INDIANAPOLIS at Toledo

(night). Columbus at Louisville (night). Kansas City at St. Paul. Milwaukee at Minneapolis (postponed; rain).

AMERICAN LEAGUE New York at St. Louis. Philadelphia at Cleveland. Washington at Detroit. Boston at Chicago.

NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh at Boston. Chicago at New York. Cincinnati at Philadelphia. St. Louis at Brooklyn.

Yesterday's Results

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION No games soheduled.

Boston

Indianapolis Times Sports

J

those box

PAGE 6

‘Eastern Clubs

In A. L. Race

‘Western Teams in National Face Task of Curbing High-Flying Giants.

By GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, May 17.—Heavy firing along the intersectional front was renewed today with the Eastern American League clubs playing the West and the western National League clubs swinging through the East. After these games, lasting through May 26, every club will have played in every other city. The two big questions were: 1. Can the almost solid supremacy of the eastern American League clubs be maintained? 2. Can the western National League clubs slow up the Giants and prevent the race from becoming a runaway? Going into today’s games three of the four first division clubs in the American League were from the Bast—Red Sox on top, Yankees third and Senators fourth. The

ond place, a game off the pace. In the National League the Giants have made a show of the race so far, getting a five-game lead on the field, but the rest of the eastern teams are in the second division, bringing up the rear. Behind the Giants come the four western clubs, Pirates, Cubs, Reds and Cardinals in that order.

Phillies Stop Giants

On their recent swing through | the West the Giants terrorized the | western clubs, winning six out of eight and taking five straight from the Pirates, Cubs and Cards. The

anybody thought they were or the western rivals are slow in hitting their stride. Some evidence that the Giants were “hot and lucky” during the first weeks of the campaign and are now cooling off was indicated by the 12-3 thrashing they took from the Phillies yesterday. Driving Hal Schumacher off the mound, the Phils collected 13 hits land broke the Giants’ five-game | winning streak. Klein, Corbett, Whitney and Martin for the Phils. Bucky Walters al-

his third game. Deb Garms’ double and Vince Di Maggio's single drove in three runs | in the seventh and enabled the Bees [to trim Brooklyn, 5-4, in the only other National League game. Danny MacFayden held the Dodgers to six hits in notching his second victory. Cleveland Moves Up

Cleveland moved into second place by nosing out the Athletics, 4-3, in 10 innings. Jeff Heath's double in the 10th drove in the winning run. He had previously driven in two runs with his first double. Willis Hudlin, who relieved Johnny Allen in the 10th received credit for the victory. The latent power in the Detroit | batting order came to the surface as the Tigers shelled Washington | [for a 13-7 victory. Rudy York hit | his fourth homer with the bases | loaded, and Charlie Gehringer hit | for the circuit with one on Vernon Kennedy scored his fifth straight victory to tie Lefty Grove for the lead among American League pitchers. The victory elevated the Tigers to fifth place.

Thesz To Tackle Rascher Tonight

Am Rascher, 218, Hoosier mat | star, gets his “big chance” in tonight's wrestling feature at the Armory where he will pit his skill, speed and assortment of tricky grips against Louis Thesz, 226, young St. Louis grappling ace. It is for two falls out of three. Rascher, after gaining some pointers when he saw Thesz in action here a week ago, intends to set the pace in tonight's match. Am figures he can “give and take” with his opponent and is prepared to make quick use of any “slips” on the part of Thesz. It is Rascher’s initial “big time” match since returning from a tour of the East where he won over such matmen as Abe Coleman, Jim McMillen and Chris Zaharias. The semiwindup sends Pat Kelly, 212, Tennessee, against Dorve (Iron Man) Roche, 220, Decatur, Ill. Kelly is undefeated in five starts here and hopes to “make good” against he experienced Roche. Gentleman Joe Cox, 230, Kansas City, and Henry Piers, 228, Holland, open the card at 8:30.

APPLING MAY RETURN TO LINEUP JUNE 15

CHICAGO, May 17 (U. P.).—The White Sox's prospects brightened today when physicians announced that shortstop Luke Appling, who received a double fracture of the ankle last spring, probably will be back in the lineup by June 15. The cast was removed from his leg yesterday. He suffered the injury mn an exhibition game at Los Angeles March 27. Earlier estimates had indicated he would not be able to play until July.

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Giants are either a lot better than |

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Now Supreme

only rift in eastern supremacy was |

TUESDAY, MAY 17, 1938

The racing cars are now being tuned in a safety zone behind the [ ing Kelly Petillo, center, and his aids tune up his racer after the 1935 pits of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, and the railbirds have to do | winner had turned a lap of almost 128 miles an hour, - Rex Mays, the

Tribe Battles Pilots to Let Qualifying Froebel Takes

| |

hit homers | | Indians wound up a poor sixth, but lowed only eight hits, in winning | | are soaring high in second place a

| Stadium under the lights Friday

| lost three.

Toledo's Hens

Indians at Swayne Field on Short Road Trip.

Times Special TOLEDO, May 17.—The American Association schedule changed on all fronts today following an open date yesterday and Toledo fans are offered their first glimpse of the Indianapolis Indians in the starter of a three-game series at Swayne Field tonight. The Redskins form the surprise team of the league and local baseball followers are anxious to see what Ray Schalk has concealed under his wing. Last year the Mud Hens finished a close second in the race and the

in the new campaign the Hoosiers

game behind the leading Kansas City Blues while Toledo is running fourth. Lloyd @ohnson, the slender southpaw with the slow motion delivery, is slated to receive the Tribe mound call in the opener against the Hens tonight. Manager Haney of the Toledo nine was undecided in his

choice. The Hen staff has failed to live up to expectations and the Toledo pilot still is experimenting with a mixture of veterans and youngsters. After three games here, the Indians will return home to meet the Columbus Red Birds at Perry

night. The Indians’ at home record is 11 victories and four defeats and on the road they have won four and |

Williams Matched With Harry Brown

A local Negro star, Dave Williams, today was announced as the opponent for Harry Brown in the eightround semiwindup of Friday night's boxing card at the Armory. They are middleweights. Brown has captured both his fights since turning professional and is busy at Roy Wallace's gym in the Board of Trade Building preparing for his next fight. He sparred six rounds yesterday, three with a middleweight and three with a heavyweight. The Beech Grove boy made a good showing here last Friday when he punched out a decision over Johnny McCoy. He displayed ability to hit hard with either hand and floored his rival twice. Williams has been showing to ad-

Trials Determine Dispute

Wild Bill Cummings, the pride of Indianapolis and Rex Mays, the California flash, will settle their difference of speed in the qualifying trials this Saturday on the Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Mike Boyle, Chicago backer of Cummings,

and Bill White, Los

Angeles sponsor of Mays, decided to let their side bet of more than $1000

ride on the speed their drivers make ®

on Saturday, in lieu of a third heat of the match race held Sunday. Racing under unfavorable wind conditions and intermittent showers, Cummings and Mays split the first two heats of six 1aps each and were set to run the third and deciding heat of 10 laps, 25 miles, when rain intervened, a wet track calling a halt to competition. The four-cylinder Miller cars which the drivers used for the match race must be groomed for other pilots of the White and Boyle racing teams, Chet Miller being on the Boyle car, and Babe Stapp on the White job. Cotton Henning, chief mechanician for Boyle, spent today in checking Miller's car, while Ernie Weil tinkered with the Stapp entry. Inasmuch as the qualifying trials will be of the same distance the third heat of the match race was to have been, the backers decided this would constitute a fair test.

“I still believe Mays can beat Cummings,” White said, “but I suppose we will have to be content with beating Boyle on Saturday, and then giving him a licking in the race.” Cummings will drive an eightcylinder nonsupercharged car which has gone 128 miles an hour in practice thus far. It is a new single seater built by Henning. Mays will do his driving behind an Alfa Romeo power plant, remodeled by Weil, and equipped with a supercharger. This has hit 127.333 miles an hour in trial runs, and Mays believes it capable of even higher speed. The coming encounter, then, will be a match of motors as well as men, for the mechanical genius of Henning and Weil will be utilizeds before the drivers get out on the track to settle the wager.

GOLFING

HE second local pro-amateur was held yesterday afternoon at Riverside. A large field, consisting of 19 professionals and 66 amateurs paced che fairways and roughs, and turned in some fine shotmaking. The team of Al Schaffer, Bill Reed Jr., Gus Novotny and Dick Collins stole the

show and led the field with a fine ¢

64, eight strokes below par figures. After a slow start they finished

the first nine holes with a 35, two under par. They managed to hi} their real stride on the 11th hole and fired the back nine holes in six under par for a 29. Gus Novotny paced the winners with an individual 69, while Bill Reed Jr. was second with a 71.

Three teams were tied for second with 65s. They played off for second, third and fourth. In the playoff for these positions all the members of the three teams teed off at the same time and marched dswn the first fairway. This led to compiications. Standing on the green one could see balls flying from all angles. As the players approached the green they had a time trying to decide which ball was theirs. Finally they got straightened around though and the team of Bill Simmons, professional from the American Legion Course in Kokomo, and his amateur partners, E. Shanley, Bert Bruder, Earl Miller and Bob

vantage in bouts at Detroit, Dayton and in Illinois and is reported in top shape for Friday's bout.

Police Score 9-to-4

Shook, took down second honors. Harold Harrison, Bloomington pro, and his team, Hugh Chestnut, R. K. Stafford and George Schaffer, took third while last place went to

Victory Over Moose

The Indianapolis Police team had added another victory on the right side of the ledger today following their triumph over the Moose, 9 to 4. The game was played Sunday at Riverside and the officers pounded out 11 hits and made two misplays. The Moose got eight hits and made three errors. Higgins, Wuertz, Marcus and Moxley formed the Police battery ! while Cook, Boyer and Ellis worked for their opponents. Graff, left fielder and Hines, first baseman, paced the hitting attack of the winners. Wuertz was effective on the mound and slammed out a triple at bat. Caufman homered with a man on to star for the Moose. The Police play the Indianapolis Times nine June 5.

Johnny Vaughn, pro at Anderson, and Harold Smith. Phil Renforth, E. D. Wells and W. Goodwin, ” ” » HE next pro-am will be held a week from Monday. If you

want to have a lot of fun, enjoy some good golf and improve your

game try to make it a date and test

your skill along with the others. The larger the field the more prizes

{there will be and the better the

tournament. Dale Morey, a new comer to Indianapolis from the southern part of the state, has been firing some very fine golf on the courses here. Yesterday while playing in the ProAm he toured the course in 70. Firing the front nine with birdies on the setond and fourth holes he turned in a 35. On the back nine he had a string of nine pars for another 35.

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Baseball

The Moose team wants a game for Riverside Park, No. 5, Sunday morning. Call LI-2152, The Falls City Grays Negro nine defeated the Medora Cardinals, 8 to

6. For games with the Grays write Ray Highbaugh, 2451 Wheeler St., or call CH-1592-R. Lebanon take notice. The Model Dairy team will play at Lebanon Sunday. They dropped a game to the Morgan Packing Co., 5-2, in their last start. Indiana teams wanting a game for May 29 write Bill Rider, 923 E. 19th St.

Glens Valley would like to book a game for May 22. Call DR.-7805-R2 and ask for George Vawter. The Valley team lost to Frankfort Sunday, 5 to 1. The Ajax baseball team will practice tomorrow and Friday evenings at 4 o'clock at Brookside No. 1, weather permitting,

The Indianapolis A's, Negro road team, is to practice this afternoon and Thursday at Belmont Park at 5 p. m. Strong state teams desiring games write Earl Smith, 762 N. Sheffield Ave.

The Southport Red Birds will play at Connersville Sunday. For a game June 5 write Ken Osborne, 1083 Hanna Ave. Last Sunday's game with the Crawfordsville team was rained out,

The Model Dairy team will practice at Riverside No. 2 at 3:30 tomorrow afternoon. All players are asked to attend.

COLLEGE SCORES Butler, 12; Wabash, 2. St. Joseph's, 7; Manchester, 2. Ball State, 10; Franklin, 2. Michigan State, 5; Armour Tech, 4. Missouri, 3; Oklahoma, 2. Holy Cross, 5; Villanova, 4. Tufts, 13; Harvard, 4.

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Track Honors

Qualifies Seven Stars for State Title Tourney.

GARY, Ind, May 17 (U. P).— Froebel of Gary, one of the mostfeared track teams in the state, today had seven athletes for six events qualified for the state track championships at Indianapolis Saturday. Froebel won the Gary sectional yesterday, scoring 48 points. Horace Mann, second with 441% points, achieved the best mile relay mark in the state this year as four quarter-milers went the distance In 3:29 3, setting a pew record. The Horsemen qualified seven men for eight events and the relay team. Lew Wallace was third with 19 points.

North Side Has 14 in Big Meet

PT. WAYNE, Ind., May 17 (U. P)). —North Side of Ft. Wayne retained

the Ft. Wayne sectional track and field title yesterday by defeating a field of eight rivals. The meet was postponed from Saturday because of rain, North Side scored 59 points. Central of Ft. Wayne was second with 34 points while Garrett was third with 25. South Side of Ft. Wayne took fourth with 19, and Auburn fifth with one point. North Side captured six events, including the mile and half-mile relays, and qualified 14 men for the state meet next Saturday. Central won three events and qualified four men, South Side qualified three athletes and Garrett five.

Dean Deal Seen as Boost for Browns

ST. LOUIS, May 17 (NEA)— Sports writers and fans here see the Dizzy Dean trade as the end of Cardinal baseball dominance in St. Louis. Attendance at the Browns’ games soared to heights it hasn't known for years. While the Browns’ new deal and spirit has helped, followers of the Red Birds feel that the swapping of Dean to the Cubs marks the date on which Sam Breadon and Branch Rickey turned St. Louis back to the American League. Dean may not win 20 games for Chicago, Breadon and Rickey may or may not have sold the National League pennant to the Bruins, but they seem to have put the Browns back in business.

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Good as His Word

The Chicago Cubs are the team to beat, Bill Terry has said. And unless

scores are deceptive things

that’s just what the Giants have been doing.

MAJORS RENEW INTERSECTIONAL " Railbir ds Kept Behind Barbed Wire at Speedway

STRIFE

DePauw Nine Leads Loop

Butler Knocks Wabash From Top Berth.

the second time this year, Butler University's baseball team had dethroned Wabash College from its leadership in the Indiana Collegiate Conference. The Butler nine had a field day at bat yestere day afternoon at the Fairview diamond and chalked up 12 runs while their opponents were held to two. The Butler victory, however, was costly, for the services of Dick Wil son, regular catcher, were lost indefinitelv. During a fourth inning rally, Wilson, a junior, was hit on the head by a fast pitched ball off the delivery of Harold Hester, Wabash hurler. Wilson was knocked to the ground and later was rushed to Methodist Hospital, At the hospital today it was said that young Wilson had recovered consciousness and was improving. X-rays have not been taken as yet to determine whether there is a fracture. Yesterday's game caused a gene eral shakeup in the conference standing. DePauw, with seven wins in nine starts, assumed the leadership while Butler and Ball State now trail by one-half game. Wabash skidded into fourth position, a full game behind the conference leaders. In winning his fifth victory of the season, Inmon Blackaby, Butler hurler, got off to a shaky start and was tagged for two runs in the first inning. During the remainder of the contest Wabash was allowed but four scattered hits while the Bulldogs jumped on three pitchers | for rallies in the third, fourth and fifth frames. Score:

| Wabash . 200 000 000 | Butler ..... 003 540 NOX

Hawkins, Hester, Davis Blackaby, Steiner and Wilson, Kubal Butler will play DePauw at Greencastle, Thursday, and Wabash at Crawfordsville, Saturday.

California Offers Rich Golf Prizes

LOS ANGELES, May 17 (U,P.) = Golf professionals who come West for the California winter swing this year will be greeted with seven tournaments offering $27,000 in guaranteed prize money, and pos= sibly $3000 in extras. There is one new tournament on the swing, a $3000 open event scheduled at Fresno, Cal., Feb. 3-4-5. This will replace a similar tournament last year at Santa Monica. The season will open with the $3000 Pasadena open on Dec. 28, and conclude with the annual openinvitational staged by Bing Crosby at Del Mar, on Feb. 11-12. Association members agreed to exempt from qualifications the top 30 players in the four big national tournaments—the open, the P. G. A., the amateur and the public links. Foreign players also will be qualified automatically.

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