Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
|, PAGE SIX | GOPHERS ARE ONLY HURDLE |. FOR BADGERS Minnesota Juggernaut Travels ; 4 to Madison for Big Game i Saturday i MAY BE TRIPLE-TIE} {ndiana‘s 6 to 0 Triumph Over Northwestern Was Only Loop Surprise Chicago, Nov. 19 , years of chasing, Wisconsin had the Golden Fleece—the Big Ten foot- ball championship—cornered today; but, just as in the*fairy tale, a dragon blocked its Minnesota's thundering horde, which has crushed its way for an average of four touchdowns a game this season, was the menacing dragon which the Badgers must con- quer to land their long-sought treas- ure, The battle, to be held at Madi- son, is the outstanding event of the Big Ten’s five-game program Sat- urday. Three Are Hopeful Defeated, but still hopeful of shar- ing in the championship pie, were Illinois, Iowa, and Ohio State. If Minne&ota, which was pushed out of the race by a pair of one-point de- feats, “should upset Wisconsin, at least one of them would rest on the pinnacle with the Badgers, who so far have nothing but a tie to blem- « ish their record. Iinois and Ohio State, which have been defeated but once, will clash for their big chance in an- other important game at Champaign Saturday, while Iowa will tackle the lowly but dangerous Michigan eleven at Ann Arbor. If the Gophers de- feat Wisconsin, Iowa defeats Michi- gan, and Illinois wins over Ohio State, or vice versa, three teams would be deadlocked for the title, a | condition which has happened 11 times since 1896. Two other games are on Satur- day’s card, Dartmouth's big green invading Northwestern, and In- jiana and Purdue clashing in their traditional battle at Lafayette. None of the games have any importance in the championship standings. Rising from a sea of mud and slush at Iowa field, Wisconsin pushed its way to undisputed pos- session of first place in the title race Saturday by defeating Iowa's here- tofore undefeated Machine 13 to 0. Doped to fall before the Hawkeyes’ relentless line attack, the Badgers outplayed their heavier opponents. Bill Lusby, Wisconsin's sophomore kicking and open field geni the star of the game, ou k Mayes McLain and sprinting 63 yards for the first touchdown. Casey, a substitute, scored the second touchdown when he fell on McLain’s fumble behind Iowa’s goal. Ilinois Finds Punch Illinois found its long-lost scoring punch Saturday when it humbled Chicago 40 to 0 on Stagg field. The Chicago team, which ended its sea- son with the game, was helpless be- fore the Illini attack. Outside of Indiana's 6 to 0 tri- umph over Northwestern, other re-| sults Saturday were as expected. Minnesota routed the Haskell In- dians 52 to 0, Ohio State defeated Muskingum 39 to 0, Purdue coasted through a 14 to 0 victory over Wa- bash, and Michigan had all it could do to defeat Michigan State 3 to 0. Saturday’s game between Minne- sota and Wisconsin promises to be @ battle of smashes against passes unless the field is soggy. And if Wisconsin wins, Coach “Gloomy Glen” Thistlethwaite will have brought the Badgers out of the foot- ball wilderness in his second year. MAROONS COP FROM TIGERS Des Moines, Iowa, Nov. 19.—(?)— Morningside college toppled the hith- srto undefeated Des Moines univer- sity football team out of the Iowa tonference title race on a mud cov- ored gridiron here Saturday and won a hard fought battle, 6 to 0. The victory leaves Iowa Teachers college of Cedar Falls Morningside the only undefeated eams in the conference race. Morn. ngside’s sole score was the culmin: sion of 9-yard sprint by Brink- nan, halfback, around right end ai tis subsequent plunge through cen- ver for the two yard line in the first seriod. Brinkman accepted Ker than’s punt on the Morningside 38- tard line when he started on his pet down the mud bespattered mealies aan al ie! ng no vind make kicking di dvantageous, The Tiger eleven had numerous thances to score but after lugging rae hel ge ara Aone itory, ir aspirations lumbles id offside penalties. FLASHER WILL 4 ie) + | a ERE THE BISMARCK ‘IT RIBUN Wisconsin Has Conference Title in Grasp After nother Win for Georgia Tech “Stumpy” Thomason, halfback of Georgia “Tech,” is shown here getting away with the ball in one of the many exciting moments of the Tech-Vanderbilt game, won by the former, 19 to 7. This victory means that the chances are very bright for the Technology boys to capture the southern grid championship. Gridiron Glances “Gridiron Glances_? HOVDE LEADING —_—___—_—_———- (By the Associated Press) East.— Carnegie, boasting stccessive Pittsburgh, Georgetown and Notre Boston college only neither beaten nor tied. FREDERICK HAS AVERAGE YEAR (Special to the Tribune) | victories over } Dame, tops list. Ds Frederick, 8. Dak., football team completed its season! with four victories, one tie, and two} losses, according ‘to D. Anderson,| ia and Army among other leaders, each suffering only one de- They defeated Ellendale and La: Moure, N. Dak., Britton and Aber-} deen Reserves ndefeated but tied by} twice to Leola, S. Dak. and tied] undisputed lead as re- yer previously un- The team scored 113 points to 21 for its opponents. je The season's record follows: with one de- | a, tied by Pittsburgh vy unchecked, remains at top in conference with four v: and Oklahoma improved standings with victories in latest conference games Southern Conference.—Five teams remain undefeated, but Georgia Tech, Florida and Tennessee, each wit i ight victories in conference e most impre 19, La Moure 0. Aberdeen Reserves 0.| BADGERS TAKE [OWA MEASURE Iowa City, Tov A courageous W within grasp of its first Western | | conference gridiron championship in | Yirginia Poly also unbeaten in con- erence competition. Conference.—Unive' msin eleven is umed lead with mingled with flurries of snow, the Badgers, tied but still undefeated, despite scoreles: oung in conference upset. Iowa team, 13 to 0, § slush, water and mire of a gridiron that resembled a puddle of mud. A cheering, pulse throbbing crowd ; of 30,000 sat’ through the drenching rain to see these teams fight it out in a what virtually amounted to cham- The Badgers, now leading the race, must conquer their | traditional enemy, Minnesota, in the , 7? ¢ final game of the season a week | their own scoreless deadlock. | St hence to establish themselves as the | frd added Washington to v unchallenged 1928 champions of the | 8" RABBITS BEAT GOPHER B TEA Minneapolis, Noy. 19—()—Brawn | €Nded its football season Saturday without winning a Big Ten confer- ence game, falling before the on- slaughts of the 1927 champions, Illi- | Pacific Coast Conference.—S ern California, by trimming Wash: fe: ington State, keeps pace with Uni versity of California, each having | Kick failed. three victories in conference race, | no defeats and one tie, the result of | at the kickoff and counted two first ; downs on prettv work by Holmes and Bruder, but from then on until the last quarter the Hoosiers dominated 4, Toco aren MH YORK Ws Noy. 19.—()—Chicago two undefeated pionship honors. ms, Oregon conquered Oregon State. | and brain, each of which functioned | well when the other was backward in presenting its services, gave South | Dakota state a 31 to 0 victory over the Minnesota B team here Saturday. It was the preliminary to the Min- | nesota-Haskell Indian game. When it couldn’t crack the Gopher It was an ideal setting to end such a disastrous season, rain falling dur- ing most of the game on an already soggy gridiron. The Illini, however, With Frosty Peters, Douglas Mills and Walker leading 1 Mills supplied the big thrill of the afternoon when he dashed 75 yards through the Chicago team for his Peters opened the at- tack in the first quarter dashing almost 50 yards for the first score. | He added two other touchdowns as the game wore on and Walker scored two, one after racing 25 yards fol- lowing a pass of 23 yards from yardage the Jackrabbit team went. around the ends cutting down or evading the defending outposts and carrying on through the secondary Two of the South Dakota touch- downs came from end runs two more on offtackle shoots and a fifth on a burst through guard. Most of the credit for the Jackrab- bits’ triumph was attributed to the broken field performances of Wert right halfback, scored two touchdowns on the three runs which totaled 111 yards. his first major effort of the day he : turned the left end for 40 yards run- | touchdown. ning the oval from his own 30-yard line to an equal distance from the Gopher goal. Three plays later after a pair of line bucks had advanced his | Ut; ; lead five yards, he ran around left | Nothing to offer in the way of an of- fense and its defense was almost as Nowack, Illini captain, kicked four out of five tries for points after 4 Peters tried the last kick after his third touchdown just before the game ended. Chicago was overwhelmed through- The Stagg-coached team had end again for the first touchdown of in the first | ‘STRONG LEADS ‘GRID SCORERS (By The Associated Pres’) Ken Strong, New York university halfback, apparently has clinched national football honors for this sea- CORNELL LOSES | TO DARTMOUTH: ‘ov. 19.—()—The Green ghost of Dartmouth, bare leg- ged, nimble footed Al aside his bandages Saturday. hitched up a pair of trousers that | skidded constantly on weaving hips, and with the hearty co-operation of Shep Wolff, soundly trounced Cor- nell’s staggering eleven for the first time-on Schoelkopf field. Not content with merely whipping |Cornell’s rugged but aimless array. |ences follov: Marsters and Wolff and their mates plastered it on 28 to.0. Only, once in the entire afternoon did Cornell, almost devoid of comnetent backs. threaten to stay the tide. When that lonesome surge died for want of downs on Darthmouth’s 5-yard lir> quarter, the Cornell. Bie ‘FETE GRIDDERS Flasher, N, D., Nov. 19.—Flasher’s | tossed footbail : squad. champions Strong tallied 21 points againgt Missouri last Saturday and now has a grand total of 139, 35 more than his closest rival, Chuck Carroll, of the University of Washington. The individual leader in each of groups or confer- the seven major East-Strohg, New Yorl: U.... Pacifie-Carroll, Washington South-Banker, Tulane ee sere Set it wh: 140. PURPLE DROPS “HOOSIER GAME Nov 19.—(P)— ion Bloomington, In | Indiana's cripples snapped in | Saturday to win their second confer- 'd one defeat, fol-' once game, nosing out the strong s_and Southern’ Northwestern aggregation, 6 to 0. was toppled from | Led by the sensational: plunging and running of Captain Chuck Bennett ain Conference. the Crimson outplayed the visitors in tah retains lead, 4 driving rain. ietories and no defeats, tie with Brigham | the Violets. the one that did not ring true. mission. COYOTES WHIP score of 26 to 6. As a result of the play, tl loop ranks. SOON TO BE HEAVYWEIGHT in 1919, now weighs 156 pounds. = ey NODAKS HANDED ‘alls, Mont., Nov. 19.—The Flickertails of North Dakota took af egal 4 to 12 beating here Saturday a’ the hands of Mount St. Charles of Necu men: 0. Helena in a game that started off in-} Maryville 18; a i nocently enough for the Nodaks but| William and Mary 68; Bridge-| praise this season is Walter “Bud” ran away from them before the final| water 0. whistle had blown. After the North Dakota had pushed over a touchdown in the | Mia opening frame with Kahl, carrying the ball, +4 Eaton of Mount St. Charles sent in| Flori his first string men in one bunch] Mercer . and the tide turned toward the Mon-| Maryland 18; Virginia 2. tana warriors. squad LOOP SCORERS Chicago, Nov. 19.—()—Routing s |the Haskell Indians, 52 to 0, Satur- iday, Minnesota took the lead in the Big Ten football race for team scor- ing honors from Iowa and Wiscon- sin, bringing its season's total to 172 | points. | Its star quarterback, Freddy Hovde, scored one of the Gophers’ jeight touchdowns in the game and |took undisputed possession of first [place in the chase for individual {scoring honors. In seven games, Hovde has scored nine touchdowns. Wisconsin clung to second place in the team scoring race by scoring points against Iowa and hiking $ season’s total to 148, while Iowa, vhich had been the leader for two weeks, dropped to third with a total The Saints then opened up with passes in this quarter and with Gar- ner and Good alternately passing and receiving, the ball was taken to the 10 yard line. the line oeatire ae a mi nell 0 swept around the end for the secon jlliam iS touchdown of the period and Good| }Villiams 40; Amherst 18, made the extra point with a drop- Wesle fan 12; Bowdoi ca Charles 20; North Dakota Gon son 12; Yale 2. arles 20; Noi akota 6, : At the opening of the fourth per-| Hamilton 8; Union 6. iod North Dakota uncorked its pass-| Colgate 30; Syracuse 6. i i : Dartmouth 28; Cornell 0. i ing attack which heretofore mae Connecticut ‘Aggies 24; Rhode and the performance of his reserves, Garner smashed then been kept under cover. interchanged in receiving|__ Island 0. and passing to make a show that| Williams 40; Amherst 15, equalled that staged in the preceding| Laurence 0; Carroll 0. period by Good and Garner. Penalty Helps Smashing the The break that won the game came i | in the second period after Holmer of Colo- | Northwestern had punted outside on Ruy in runner-up posi the Indiana 28-yard line. gh victory over Colorado next play, Bennett slid off the Pur- {ple left tackle, squirmed past the secondary defense with little inter- renee, and ran 72 yards for a touchdown. Catterton’s placement On the Northwestern started with a rush on the Mount St. pines Has) hinge panied itt ote men 6 ‘or the second Not akota touch- An attempted pass for score| St. Johns 22; Catholic Uo. after touchdown was grounded by a| Boston college 24; Canisius 0. Helena player. Charles 1 yard Smashing and passing the carried the ball for nearly three- West quarters the length of the field and|Hamline 19; St. Thomas 13. ts 4 yard| Nebraska 0; Pittsburgh 0. deprived| Iowa State 7; OVER MISSOURI | Yankee Stadium, N. Y., Nov. 19.— |(P)—Ken Strong, a rugged football player if there is one available in the country, Saturday showed the Uni- versity of Missouri and 45,000 per- sons why he is the leading scorer of football. New York university, the | W: team for which Strong puts forth his best efforts, defeated the striped | Bi Tigers from the west 27 to 6 and most of the glory that goes with that feat must be given to the hard rock who roams more or less at will for had the ball on the Saj line when the final gui them of a chance to come within g| Oklahoma 7; K: point of tieing the-score, i Mount St. rles = Ni Grinnell 7; wat Sts Charles North Dakote| Ohio Wesley V; Smith | St. Louis 12; Louisville 0. Kuchian | Denison 9; Cincinnati 0. McMillan | St.. Thomas 56; Cooper Union 0. ‘Tvedton| Butler 24; Earlham 0. Showers | Lake Forest Strong scored three of his team- mates’ four touchdowns and kicked all of the points after touchdown. He had a kicking percentage of 1,000 for one of his understudies missed Although Missouri scored first, the New Yorkers came back with one in the first period and two in the sec- ond to lead by 20 to 6 at the inter- Dow, Gelhausen for Gross. House for ines 0. Scoring: Touchdowns, Kahl 2,|!ndiana Central 13; Manchester 8. Brace 2, Good 1. Extra points, Good Officials: Referee, E. Pat Kelly,| Colorado Aggies 13; Denver Dartmouth; unpire, Denver; Chadron 31; W; ming 0. head linesman, Hicks, Kansas. =O "Did you know that— | $$ $$ het gave the r: off Bill Tilden be sold at auction for the fund 16 reconstruct the war-wrecked BISON OUTFIT Inman Field, Vermilion, S. D., Nov. 19,—South Dakota university rose to rent heights on the gridiron here aturday to smack down the North Dakota Agricultural college by a The victory marked tie ‘tirst tri- umph of the North Central campaign for the Red Shirts who, a year ago, won the conference title by vanquish- ing all opposition. It was a sweet victory for Vincent’ Montgomery’s crew, and a bitter pill for the charges of Stanley Borleske to evollony Coy- Hi ptail Scull of the Pennsylvanias is the greatest defensive back he living in sleepers for seven weeks ... He's scouti Dame in every ctes and Bison finish ther respective | Sout! schedules in a tie for last place in the the boys in Serene that California did soak the ithern Cal says that first, jounds wi m1} y ow weighs an players... And that Ray Schalk may catch once in a while for the Jints ... Jack ricks drove to Chicage in a brand ‘ied the spare wheel off with rl S| wheel wi b crowbar... Mickey Cochrane killed a bull moose the first time he ever shot at one... A few weeks ago in Canader. Games Td Pat Fg Total 19 25 139 8 10 #17 2 0 104 8 15 10 0 7 #13 6 0 6 8 ill 1. 62 7 2 6 0 7 9 0 0 Minnesota 52; Haskell 0. Purdue 14; Wabash 0. Wisconsin 13; Iowa 0. Mount St. Charles of Helena ohio State 39; Muskingum 0. Takes Measure 20 to 12 of Michigan 3; Michigan State 0. Indiana 6; Northwestern 0. Towa B 13; Illinois B 0. South | Texas U 6; Texas Christian 0. 4 Baylor 2; S. M. U. 0. PLAY AT GREAT FALLS|tulsa U is; Okiahoma Baptist U. 13, Virginia Poly 13; Washington and Lee 7. North Dakota Comes to Life|Kentucky 18; V. M in Last Five Minutes; on 4-Yard Line at End tian 0. Sewanee 6; Tulane 4. South Carolina 6; Furman 0. Missis: 18; Wiggenberg 0. 7; Clemson 6, ; Citadel 0. Maryville 18; Carson Newman 0. L. S. U. 13; Georgia 12. it Penn 34; Columbus 7. Villanova 14; Grove City 13. Lehigh 3. Vermont 6; Middlebury 6. Army 32; Carleton 7. Georgetown 12; W. Virginia 0. Susquehanna 28; Gallandet 7. Princeton 12; Yale 2. Schuykill 40; Albright 0. Frank Marsh 27; Dickinson 7. Kahl was|Manhattan 14; C. C. N. Y. 90. downed on the St. Charles 7 yard| Rochester 37; Rensselaer 6, Kahl carried the ball on the|SWatthmore 13; Ursinus 7. nex apiay, and ae penalty against Halleltene tor item 6. the Saints the ball was put in play Harvard s Hele tbe, Be can Springfield college 12; Providence 6.} as well, With four minutes of the final| Hobart 38; Buffalo U 0. period to go, the North Dakota squad|St. Bonaventure 25; Niagara U 8. began an offensive drive that the|Temple 6; Geneva 0. Helena players were unable to stem.| Boston U 12; Norwich 12. Nodaks| Drexel 13; Hanerford 7. 3, Kamas Ascios 0. ansas hit n 6. 7; Ohio U 0. St. Xavier lege 0. ‘ahi | Western Reserve 20; Oberlin 6. Boyd| Indiana Central 13; Manchester 8. Lux|Depauw 19; Muncie Normal 0. Schave}/La Crosse Teachers 6; Substitutions: Mount St. Charles} p, O'Connor for Gannon; Murphy for Ward, Evans for Thornburg. Good fe ; ret, Gross for McGillis, Garner ioe oe ee 6. 0 , Dakota—Jarrett for Boyd, Thoreson|!ndiana State Normal 87; Oakland for Lux, Tvedton for Miogdahlen, Schmidt for Schave, (Dubuque) 0. mn 14; Ohio Northern 0. Murtha, /‘ashiand 26; Defiance 13. Morningside 6; Des Moines U 0. Mount St. Charles 20; N. D. U. 12. HARD CAMPAIGN juin, ofters . 1. 6, Lenoir Rhyne 25; Atlantic Chris- Birmingham Southern 0; Spring-, hill 0. Millsaps 13; Southwestern Louisiana Duke 14; North Carolina State 12. In the second period the Saints pages (Annapolis) 46; Johns Hop-| State took the home team by sur- began a march down the field an ., " prise in the first period with a pass- vii ing | Texas A and M 19; Rice Institute 0. ‘ oe ee ae Seis cuerneae Abilene Christian 9; West Texas|ing attack. Combined with several Dakota penalty, the ball was brought|__ Teachers 12. “ to within striking distance of the| Tennessee 6; Vanderbilt 0. goal and Brace went across the line|Georgia Tech 33; Alabama 13. to tie the score. Columbus 25; Southern’ Normal 6, Poor punting on the part of North|Stetson 15; Miami Dakota in the third period gave the|Centenary 64; Louisiana Poly 2. Saints a welcome advantage. When|Washington Howard 7; Fisk U. 0. a Saint punt rolled out of bound on East the Nodak 1 yard line, Schave was|Navy 58; Loyola 0. forced to punt from behind his own goal and was able to boot the ball|/Harvard 0; Holy Cross 0. only to his 20 yard line. Brace, Hel-| Brown 20; New Hampshire 0. es eens foal eke bly be New York U 27; Missouri 6. he six yard line in a clever bit of| Springfield 12; vit 4 sidestepping dodging. Good then pringt uate went over for the touchdown but failed to add an extra point by Rutgers Carnegie Tech 27; Notre Dame 7. Tufts 31; Massachusetts Aggies 6. arsons 0; Iowa State Teachers 0. Oshkosh Teachers 14; Milwaukee 6. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1928 rr. ee One of Bob Zuppke’s young men at. Illinois who is getting quite a lot of olley, an end. Jolley’s work has King college 19; Milligan College 7.) caused many rival coaches to praise ississippi A. and M. 13; Auburn 0. him in the highest terms and also laced him in the running for has Nodak| Mississippi college 20; Chatta- All-Western honors this year. He Coach} _nooga 19. has another year of play after this one, substitute fullback, bodted the oval squarely between the uprights. plunges at the line the overhead game twice took the ball within the 10-yard line, but there the Wolver- Good added the|Hampden Sidney 13; Richmond|ines bucked up and turned back the point after goal and the score stood} U 0. Saints 7; Nodaks 6. The remainder of the period de-|Roanoke 26; Randolph Macon 6. m . veloped into a struggle in midfield] Arkansas 45; Missouri School of| The second period witnessed Grove, with neither team appearing to have! Mines 6. an_advantage. attack. A favorable wind aided the home team in a punting duel later in the period. State back, catching his stride in the punting department, his boots plac- ing Michigan at a disadvantage dur- in the remainder of the contest. The visitors’ final bid for a score came in the last period. Joslin,-mak- ing a one play appearance, attempted a field goal but the State chance for a tie count sailed away when the try zoomed wide of the standards. GOPHERS PLOW QVER HASKELL Washington and Jefferson 0; Buck- Minneapolis, Nov. 19.—(#)—On a dry, fast field, Minnesota tuned up for its game with Wisconsin next Saturday by romping through the Haskell Indians, 52 to 0, before 20,- 000 shivering fans in the final home game of the season Saturday. Coach Spears used two complete elevens, substituting every position, both in the backfield and the line, matched that of his regulars and showed two great plunging backs in Pharmer and Arendsee. It took one period to get the Goph- er attack working smoothly, and then it cut away for three touch- downs in, the second period, three more in the third, and two in the last stanza, with four points after touch- down by place kicks completing the scoring. cme Valley 13; Muhlenburg 0. tee Pharmer and Brockmeyer ere the starting Gopher ground gainers; then Kirk, Arendsee and Bardwell replaced them and did just The line was changed from end to end, but the Haskell rushes and plunges fared no better than against the regulars. Minnesota made 33 first downs, four by forward passes. Haskell got eight first downs, five of them in the first period. Minnesota made 439 yards on rushes; Haskell 97. The Gophers made 44 yards on forward passes, completing the four they at- tempté; Haskell made 96 yards in completing 7 of its 21 attempts. eller and Cross proved the Ha: kell’s best rushing and forward pass- ing threats. Their star punter, was hurt early in the game and was replaced. Weller made 63 18; Northwestern col- yards in 13 rushes and lost 20 in four; Cross made 14 in 4 tries. Other Byer rushes yielded 20 yards in ries. vwze,, (NODAKS’ EYES TURN TO COURT Grand Forks, N. D., Nov. 19.— Neckar. Naruial: 10; Schoo! “of Following the close of’ the football Mi 0. season Sat turday, the eyes of North Dakota's athletic fans will be fo- cused on Clem Letich’s basketball F fest Colorado U yy Colorado college 19,| team, which has one of the most colorful POET in the history of . school. : Colgsado teachers 58; Western Basketball prectice has already oarbers ifornia canes 3s Bt Ignatius 0. i ie us 0. Whitman 19; Idaho college 12. ° California U 65; La Verne college 0.| *° use two fives MICHIGAN WINS te 0.’ Utah Aggies 155 Montana State 7. Oregon 12; State 0. he" 'N, Si rd 12; Washit 0. , when the Nodaks meet the outhe "fr, Washington rae Ge b tetcb is Prep- is charges for the opening gates November 30 and December Wahpeton School of Science and Concordia College. Negotiations are under way to play both teams the same night, rising Letich a chance for the encounters. December 8 will find the Nodaks battling Minnesota, at Minneapolis. Besides. the. regular conference games, the Flickertails have a long road trip booked which will include Washi » and possibly Montana, tilts with the University of Chicago, FIELD G0 AL Minois, St. Louis, Colorado, Brig- BY , 4 ham Young University, California, " composing one of the most wide- Ann Arbor, Mich, Nov. 19.—(P)—| toread schedules ever attempted ty A field goal from the toe of Hughes the University. rovided the slim margin of a 3 t00/ " Prospects fora successful Victory of Michigan over its tradi-| sesson’are bright with: peactioniy tional home state rival, Michiegn all last year’s squad returning, aug- State college, in an almost me here Saturday. Rain, which | more performers. -] fell during most of the game, slowed mented a host of stellar sopho- varsity veterans are Letich, The down the play and drenched the| Lee, Valley City: Boyd, Boulder, Col- smallest ccna of the rad 13 lo; Brown, Valley City; Eberly, year. oO Outplayed in the opening period, | Jamestown; Solberg, Church’s Ferry, Michigan. braced to carry the oval | Kinn, Wah) 3 Smith, Dickinson? to within the State 15 yard line early | and Li: , Crookston. Coming up Th at] from last year’s freshman pis re | Jarrett, Schave, Larson, the goal posts. Hughes, sent in as} Stardig, Thoreson and O! in the second ree left end took ihe ball straight 16-year Chase University of North Dakota Drops Final Grid Game of Season North Central Conference 4ST SETB ACK OF South Dakota U.26; N. D. A. C. 6. GIANTS DEFEAT WARRIOR TEAM TO END SEASON Captain Arlen Schultz Scores Only Counter to Win School Title The Fifth Grade Giants clinched the championship of Roosevelt school last week-end by defeating the Fourth Grade Warriors in a hardfought football game 6 to 0. Captain Arlen Schultz, quarter- back of the Giant eleven, succeeded in pushing’ the ball across the line for the winning counter late in the last quarter after he had made sev- eral nice runs behind perfect inter- ference. The two teams had trained for al- most a month in preparation for the final contest of the season, accord- ing to George Cram, who officiated at the game. The lineups follow: Giants — Captain Arlen Schultz, quarter; Fred Green, fullback; Mil- ton Rosen and Dayton Shipley, half- backs; Robert Kling and Homer Cor- win, ends; Robert Hollopeter and George Dohn, tackles; Cecil Nelson and Wesley Burch, guards; and Leny Laskin, center. Warriors—Jim Burchart, quarter- back; Robert Carr, fullback; Wesley Lawyer and Earl Holst, halfbacks; Herman Miller and William Tillot- sen ends; Fred Schultz and Harold Fields, tackles; Delbert Cran and Benny Jones, guards; and Mitchell Nicola, center. Holst is captain of the eleven. NEBRASKA HELD BY SYRACUSE 11 Lincoln, Neb., Nov. 19.—()—Ne- braska, mighty gridiron machine of the midwest and topnotcher in the Big Six conference of the Missouri Valley area, nearly met its Waterloo Saturday afternoon. The Pitts- burgh Panthers, crying for blood, sneaked out from the eastern forests to the western plains, outplayed the Cornhuskers through 60 minutes of mud wallowing and gained a moral victory over the favored Nebraskans when a scoreless tie resulted. While 20,000 Nebraska fans braved a biting, cold wind, which set in early in the morning after 36 hours of rain and snow and sat dumbfounded wondering what had become of the crushing Nebraska team of the three previous games, these same huskers were striving to pierce the lighter Pitt line or elude its alert ends or able secondary de- fense. Howell, touted as all-Ameri- can fullback; Sloan, versatile half- back; Russell, the plunging quarter, all were held by this scrappy Pitt outfit, which emulated the Brown “iron men” of two seasons ago by playing through the entire game without a substitution. BULLDOGS LOSE TO TIGER TEAM Princeton, N. J. Nov. 19.—(P)— The Tiger welcomed the Bulldog to his own lair Saturday then leaped upon him with all the ferocity of the jungle beast and tore him to pieces before the greatest crowd that ever sat in on a Bengal holiday. Sixty thousand spectators, a rec- ord for Palmer stadium, saw Prince- ton sweep into full stride and con- quer Yale, 12 to 2, with a spectacu- larly versatile attack that had the Blue dazed, battered and badly beat- en when this 55-year-old classic came to a conclusion. Trix Bennett and Eddie Wittmer, two crashing, smashing backs who can do about anything they want to with a football, played the star roles in this “killing” that kept Prince- ton’s slate clear of everything except a brace of ties. Bennett and Wittmer, whirling around the ends, slashing off tackles and engineering a passing attack that completely bewildered the Blue, were the king pins of the Tiger at- tack all afternoon. Mike Miles, Nor- man, Requardt and a great rush line, led into the fray by Captain Howe, played their parts well. ATHLETES HEAD CLASSES Chicago, (AP)—Justin Dart, all- Western conference football guard, Walter Colbath, Olympic diver, and Frank Baker, end, are presidents of their respective classes, senior, junior and sophomore, at Northwest- ern University. HAVE GIVEN UP HOPE Detroit officials are said to have reached the conclusion that Sam Gibson, their b right-handed pitcher, will never a star in the American League. He may be let out soon,