The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 4, 1928, Page 8

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I'HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1928 30 Basketball SQUAD REPORTS YESTERDAY FOR LIGHT WORKOUT Brown, O’Hare, Spriggs, Lan- ders, and Jacobson Are Let- termen Back PARIS, MEIN HOVER GOOD; 12 Games Scheduled So Far; Season Opens Here Dec. 15 With Hebron Hoping for the same success on the court that they had on the grid- ron, the Bismarck high school bas- ketball Demons reported for their first workout last night. About 30 candidates reported to Roy McLeod, athletic director, at 4 bm. d were worked ligh Veterans reporting are rangy, and it is expected that Bismarck will have a large basketball team. great number of younger dida’ from the freshman and sophomore classes also drew uniforms, McLeod ellermen returning Srown and John O'Hare, Rddie Spriggs, Gordie Ben Jacobson, forwards. who are expected to play nic ball this winter are Bob Pa: Big Ted Meinhover. MeLeod expects | to groom the big boy, who measures | six feet seven in his stocking feet, for the center job, the position where Ted can use his great height to ad- vanlage. is a nifty performer also. The seven veterans would make a squad averaging «lose to six feet in height, though McLeod says some of the smaller boys reporting are going to make it tough for the veterans when the season begins. MeLeod will have no cl ball tournament this y irst team squad, The Demons, who begin their sea- son here Dee 15 playing Hebron, have scheduled 12 games so far for the season, meeting Dickinson, Val- ley City, Jamestown, Linton, Man- dan, and Minot. TOD MORGAN'S CROWN IS SAFE; San Francisco, Dec. 4.—(?)—The Junior lightweight crowd was| perched as firmly as ever today on| ‘Tod Morgan’s head and Santiago! Yorrilla, San Blas Indian, had only the memory of the bid he made for the title last night. ‘The pair fought ten rounds to what j p, the referee called a draw. Many ringsiders, however, credited Morgan with a margin in the battle. Neither did much damage, al- though Morgan had an eye partially closed in the ninth round. Morgan} scored heavily with right hands to the face and in the tenth sent the Indian to the floor for a no count. Bill Hargrave Is Best Pinch Hitter New York, Dec. 4.—The best man available on any American League club last year as a pinch hitter was Bill Hargrave, Detroit catcher, the statistics show. Hargrave appeared in the pinch role for the Tigers 27 times this summer and connected safely 10 times. The Jungle catcher rapped out four singles, four doubles, one triple and one home run. He was at bat 27 times. It gives him the respectable ayer- age of .370. ‘aw! i —_______-» | Fights Last Night | e@ — (By the Associated Press) San Francisco—Tod Morgan, junior lightweight champion, and Santiago Zorilla, San Blas Indian, drew (10); Frankie Novy Sacramento, stopped George Erne, Oakland (4). Philadelphia— Paulino Uzeu- dun, Spain, outpointed Big Bill Hartwell, Kansas City (10); ‘Tom Toner, Philadelphia, out- Iman, Beston Ky—Jimmy Fin- isville, outpointed Jack Toledo (12). Glen Hidy, Terre Haute, Ind., knocked cut Johnny Miller, Indianapolis (2). Newcastle, omg goes ' Chicago, out point: uis C: mio. Toledo G0). Frankie Cleveland, outpointed U.S. | We nter, oe . “ | ‘ago—Billy Freas, Gran Mich., knocked out Al K ik, Milwaukee (4); Al Greenfield, Chicago, outpuinted Harry Dublinsky, Chicago (8) Armand Santi lage, Sake: ou: inted Dann: mont, Chicago on 3 Retired Ratzlaff, Minot, D., _ outpointed Norman SUNNY JIM BOTTOMLEY IS NAMED Demons Repo \Great Teams Have Chance to Be Rolls Peanut 11 Miles With Nose A new world record for peanut-pushing we Bill Williams of Rio Rondo, Texas, who rolled eleven miles. It took Williams nine days to roll the p Rondo to Harlingen and he arrived two ahead of schedule, On the fourth day out an automobile ran over him, but Bill didn't mind that. MOST VALUABLE IN MAJOR CIRCUIT: ren as canes | LOOP MEMBERS - — net WILL CONSIDER Average Is ' By JAY R. VESSEL New York, Dec. 4.—(AP)—Jim | ‘Branham Resolution’ Is Fuel Bottomley has led and ted his | . fa way into the hearts of the committse, fT Fight of Baseball Leaders choosing the Netional League's most uable player for 1928, His reward] y is a trophy and $1,000 in gold. | Toronto, Ont. Dec, 4.—(AP)— Bottomley’s selection brings new| With proposed amendments to the honors to the cagey Cardinal first) draft regulations defeated before the ba cman, who was a big factor in the | National association of progessional two pennants his team has won in! leagues opens its annual convention ; | tomorrow, indications were that the hard for| fight on the floor of the convention the award w ndstrom.| Would be waged about the so-called Rattomley received votes and| “Branham resolution” which is an- Lindstrom 70. Bottomley was with-| other amendment dealing with the in four points of the highest possi-| draft. ble total, but if any one of the eight! , The committeemen had made a decided! America change in his ballot Lindstrom would! ¢" be bound iow by have won out. only t, have expressed The committee, consisting of eight| themselves at annual mectings baseball writers, voted before the! Toronte atisfied with conditions last world series. Burt Whitman of | 28 they ard io ‘the’ selec: eball| tion of players hy the majors, action changing the plan by ch the majors could draw on the minors for talent through the pro- j cesses of the draft would have to be | unanimous to make it effective, the amendments, formulated by the ma- jor-mincr “advisory council, are doomed. In the meantime, W. ranham, president of three minor leagues, the South Atlantic tion, Pied- mont and E: ‘arelina, all in the South A states, is going ahead with his plan to Cight for the adoption of an amendment provi ing for perpetual right to be d by play ball cont jon and the West- ‘ton, Writers’ result, president of the 23 Receive Votes y-one other i 5 Hogan, son, 16; Maranville, 14; Vance, 13; I y, 11; Hornsby, 10; Hartnett, 6; ayner, 5; Richbourg, 5; Douthit, Bissonette. "vers, Jima Whitney, id. fted 's signing their first base- s in leagues operating under the draft, regardless of their Pp le later affiliation with the clubs in leagues recognizing only the limited draft. The decision probably will not be reached before Th S the op- will be occupied | with formal organization of the con- | Yention and appointment of commi jtees. The report of the committees on the second day will bring the whole draft question to the floor. ‘S SEN YEAR Rr *Tied for first with Hack Wilson Cardinals, mention list are: Frisch, Sisler, Stephenson, Heateote, Bancroft, | Haines, Reese. Maguire, Walker. | a Welsh, Petts, High, Alexander, Sher:| Schoolboy and Light del. >. 6 Six tull_years of faithtul work| Trade Punches Today brought “Sunny Jim" the award.| Eyer since he broke into big league) Chicago, 4 baseball with the Cardinals in 1922| Roberts, Bottomley has been a terror at bat| puncher and a great defensive man afield, Average Is .330 x-year batting average is s a front rank pla: Dec. 4.—(AP)—Johnny | spectacular schoolboy 1 from Huntington, W. Va., ‘will make his middlewestern debut jtonight when he meets Billy Light, isturdy St. Paul welterweight, in a 10 round bout at 143 pounds in the is k er in! Hippodrome arena. istance hitting, and this year he; Both Roberts and Light are con- tied for home run honors, led the) sidered contenders for Joe Duadee's league in triples with 20 and plac: welterweight title. ; second in doubles with 42. Bot Roberts, who is not a great boxer ley’s homers for the season total 31,) but who nee deadly wallop, has the same number Hack Wilson of the ision since he started Cubs compiled. ak boxing a year ago, Bottomley piled up most of his hit- while Light’s only loss: of the year Ung honors in the carly part of the| Wve, Light's only ; Season. His success with the willow |fornia's soneetivney TeOmPsOM, Cali won many ball games during. that eriod that helped tide t' Jardinals | oer days of the late sac | Many Aces Expected in Golf Tournament over the dark days of the late se: Avalon, son when disaster threatened, d aster that struc in the world’s series, crushing the weary Red Birds. Cal., Dec, 4—(AP)—On a tiny gem jof a golf links which holds an open | Sesame to the golfer'’s greatest treas- ure—a hole in one—a $2,500 tourna- SS Did you know that— | ment Will be held Dee, 21 and 2: Santa Catalina Island, Beli ° i o » Chicago (6). "Wheelin WwW. Va— Young , Pittsburgh, knocked out u Ri incinnati (7); . _ OO The links offers the player si A voice in the eastern wilder- ness says Ellis, the Tufts quar- | chances to hole out in one, for two- thirds of the greens may be reached terback, is a better quarterback from the tee by the accurate driver. than Harpster, the Carnegic Tech quarterback ... And an- | Many of the cards turned in during: other one that John Thompson the three-day event that has drawn @ nationally known entry list are ex- of Lafayette is the best guard pected to be replete with “aces,” in the country... . The New York U. freshmen won all their The tournament will mark per- games this year .... And looked | haps the first time that a big money ‘2 event ever has been attempted on The pounder of this piece hi such a small course. The most dif- j the ¢ ritis, [PLAYERS OF 7 CLUBS PUT ON EASTERN TEAM Cagle and Strong Get Cinch Positions; Experts Disagree Little By BRIAN BELL New York, Dec. 4.—(AP)—Less difference of opinion than has been in other years was ex- pressed in the consensus of two score s who assisted the Associated n the selection of the 1928 stern football team. Sports and coaches who picked the 's in the east were agreed ‘largely on a majority of the posi- tions, Only one selection failed to include the elusive Christian Keener Cagle, the army halfback, and only two could not see Kenneth Strong, the fleet and powerful New York univer- sity star as a member of the back- field. Howard Harpster, Carnegie Tech’s sure passer and field general ran far ahead in the vote for quar- terback, and Paul Scull, Pennsylvan- ia's versatile captain, maintained a commanding lead for the fullback position, Chuck Howe, Princeton's great captain, was never in danger of be- ing crowded out for center for less than half a dozen experts over- looked him, Ned Burke won a guard position for the navy by a wide margin but ruce Dumont of Colgate was hard pressed by “Firpo” Greene of Yale and Captain Carroll of Georgetown. Two captains, Al Lassman, of New York university, and Bud Sprague, of the army, ran well ahead of their rivals for tackle positions with Mooney, of Georgetown, a clev- er kicker, a good third. Rosenzweig, Carnegie Tech end, was well in front for his place, with Ed Messinger of army lacking the Skibo's popularity but leading bar- rabee of N. Y. U., and Stinson, of Princeton, who qualificd for the sec- ond team. The consensus selections: First Team pos Rosenzweig, Car. Tech, Sprague, army Burke, navy Howe, P Second Team le Barrabee, NY U It Mooney, G’town Ig Greene, Yale c« Westgate, Penn Dumont, Col rg Carroll, G’town Lassman, N. Y. rt Grant, NY U Messinger, army re Stinson, P’ton Harpster, Car. qb Weston, Bos. Cagle, army hb Marsters, Dart. Strong, N Y U rhb Miles, P’ton. Scull, Penn fb Karcis, Car. LEE MEADOWS TO PLAY AGAIN’ Pittsburgh, Dec. 4.-— () — Lee Meadows, one of the few hespec- tacled moundsmen in organized base- ball, and at present on the voluntary retired list, will return to the Pirate lineup for spring training next year. Meadows asked to be placed on the retired list last season. He has neu- Donie Bush, Pittsburgh man- ager, has come from Leesburg, Fla., where Meadows lives, with informa- tion that the pitcher is in good con- dition, Good for Condition Walla Walla, Wash., Dec. 4.—(AP) j —Baseball ranks next to gridiron play as the best conditioner for foot- ball, says R. V. Borleske, coach at Whitman college. Borleske declires the judgment dezived from the ti sing of a ground baseball, that which comes from lo- cating the probable resting place of a fly ball and the exact cadence nec- essary to the execution of double plays help make better football play- ers. Conversely, he says, forward passing in football is beneficial training for throwing in baseball. On the Coast and Pacific North- west baseball is still a major sport, and some of the biggest gridiron threats are also diamond stars. Car- roll, Washington’s football scoring ace; Rohwer of Washington State, yne of Idaho, Maple of O. S, C. and Gould of Oregon are all baseball men. , Michigan Wins Trio Spurned Knocks Eddie Burke, Navy Captain, Was Kicked Off Plebe Squad at One Time When Eddie Burke went out for faotball in his plebe year at Annapo- is, the Navy coaches gave him a helping hand but he showed such a lack of stuff that they didn’t have time to bother with him and_ told him to turn in his clothes. He re- fused to give up the game, however, and joined his class team in the in- tra-mural competition, It wasn’t long before the varsity coaches were told that there was quite a football player out on the lot and Burke was called to the varsity squad. He made the team and was elected captain this year. He turned out to be one of the best guards of the year and it was his individual work that was a big factor in giving the Navy team victories over Pennsylvania and Princeton and saving the record of the team from a disaster. | BASKETBALL! ee! McLAUGHLIN 27; POLLOCK 24 Pollock, S. Dak., Dec. 4.—Mc- Laughlin high school’s basketball five won its third game of the sea- son here, defeating Pollock 27 to 24 in a thrilling contest. McLaughlin led 14 to 9 at the half. The summary: McLaughlin— FT PF Krause, f, Knodel, f, . Kimble, f, ... McLaughlin, c, tckley, gi s0ssse. Carpenter, g, ....... no Blouse wlonowou Totals... Pollock— <rueger, f, Meighk, f, Fétterly, c, Fetterly, g, Krueger, g, Jones, g, ° econ MISSOURI VALLEY CAGERS NUMEROUS Oklahoma, Kansas, and Mis- souri Have Cream of Basket- ball Outfits wlorcros wl oudone Col Ome rmR Kansas City, (AP)—The land where the corn belt meets the wheat belt and where wheat fields adjoin cotton fields, turns to basketball for its premier winter sport. Vagaries of the weather, peculiar educational conditions and adapt- ability of the sport to buildings available for indoor play combine to make basketball the supreme win- ter game of this section, particular- ly in Kansas, Missouri and Okla- homa. Basl:etball was invented by a Kansan, Dr. James T, Naismith, who still is a member of the University of Kansas faculty, and the game has a firmer grip on the sunflower state, perhaps, than on any other. Practice Begins Early Practice begins in the midst of the football season and the final tourn- aments are never completed before early April. Kansas and Missouri each have two score small colleges and uni versities, and Oklahoma nearly as many. All have teams and rivalry is intense. Small enrollment is not a handi- of Games by Kicking’ Ann Arbor, Mich., Dec. 4.—(AP) In a season in which field goals were exceedingly rare in scoring points, Michigan won all three of its games via goals from the field. Illinois and Michigan State f 3 to 0, while Iowa went down, 7. Gembis booted two of the goals, with Hughes, a substitute, getting tle cther. Furthermore, the — Wolverines managed to count just one more touchdown than they did field goals. In not a game did the Maize and Blue ga‘ier more than a single touchdown, and one of the four com- piled, that aga‘ist Ohio State, was on a fluke, Butzberger Mistakes nothing to say u akout the Oregon Aggies sock- | ficult hole is the seventh, a two ing the New Yorks... . And |shotter in if 7 figures. It is 340 what could be said.... Hornsby | yards ll to .a terraced green inhales a steak at every meal Strong, the 'N. Y: U. wow, was the only ball carrier that got by Harpster, Carnegie safety man, in four years.... . Tuffy Griffiths blew up from a fly- weight to a heavyweight in five years..... And he’s the son of a retired Iowa farmer...... ‘Who weighs 280 Barrabee, uphi, which is severely trapped. PaO U aA chert DOESN’T MAKE PERFECT Rio De Janeiro, Dec. 4.—(AP)— They swim every day in the year here in Rio yet swimming records among Brazilian amatew only of 20 years ago. HOCKEY THRILLS PRINCE I, hat is. ever lontreal, Dec. the fastest and finest. sport by. Don i on a par with the Olympic records} d 5-Yard Line as Goal Cleveland, Dec: “4,—(AP)—“Butts” Butzberger, Oberlin’s t ball-run- ner, pulled one for the book in a game here between. Western Reserve and Oberlin, rivals of long standing. With the ball on his own 42-yard line, Butzberger “ran through the opposing team. and merely had to complete his dash to make a he lown. But as he passed the five- yard strike he swung in and touched the ball to the t Butzberger had mistaken the De al ag i the ne Vos. Oe erlin Pi rougl the scor¢, the ‘only ‘touchdown’ Re- serve allowed ina dots é victory. cap, as in football, baseball and other sports that require reserves. There are always enough players for a basketball squad of eight, includ- ing three resetves. ‘omen, too, have teams at many colleges, while high schools find so much enthus- m among girls that they arrange ial tournaments for them. Expense Not Great xpensive gymnasiums are not ssary, although at the larger coll and universities, basketball is played in + wn halls, on dance floors, in opera houses and auditor- iums and in “cracker box” gyms. Every town, no matter how small, has from one to a dozen teams. A Rae school squad i pride of the village, and in the lar; er town, there may be an independ- ent team or two of old high school or college stars, le college towns literally swarm with te Sun. day schools, too, have basketball lei 5 ban on football in Kansas City several years ago, because of an un- usually large number of gridiron ualties, brought th to the fore here. High schools took up basketball as an outlet for emo- tions engendered by student loyalty. Many of the stars at the univer- sities of Kansas and Missouri were trained on high school teams in Kansas City or its suburbs. STRIB CAN'T FLY NOW. Tex Rickard given Young Stribling orders not, to.fly to any more fights. Tak> the trains, Tex" told him. nec ways the i (GEORGIA TECH SOARING HIGH BUT MAY LOSE Georgia Always Packs Tremen- dous Punch in Game Against Tech MANY UPSETS RECORDED Trojans Beat Stanford; Gophers Beat Badgers; Wit- tenberg Takes Wesleyan By HENRY L. FARRELL Georgia Tech, through the agency of a fine team and the pranks of a weird season that removed one by one the candidates for the No. 1 na- i inking, is in a fine spot now h the year as the only un- defeated and untied team of the major classificat: Georgia Tech, with only neighbor- hood games remaining against Ala- bama Poly and Georgia and a pos- sible post-season game against Southern California, is indeed in a swell spot if you look at it with a light heart. But you can hear some football men, who speak from painful ex- perience, say that Georgia Tech is in a swell spot to be knocked off and they don’t stutter when they recite by heart a list of reasons. Bill Alexander, the Georgia Tech coach, is too good a football coach and too smart a man to need a warn- ing that his ball club should not take too much for granted. Alexander and his club were on the giving end of one of the same kind of examples last year in which they proved the jom of the theory that a fair team can have one good day. Weak Last Year Georgia Tech wasn’t so hot last year and Georgia was one of the out- standing teams of the year, a team that was in the same spot that Tech now occupies. Georgia went into the game a heavy favorite and was umped off by Georgia Tech. It is possible that the Georgia boys have- not forgotten this and that Tech may be the one team that Georgia is all loaded up for. This piece is not meant as a warn- ing to Mr. Alexander and his boys. It is merely an excuse to talk about some of the things that have hap- pened this season when a team load- ed up for one particular game. There is no doubt that there is one game on every team’s schedule that the boys want to win particu- larly. In most cases it is a tradition- al game. In other cases it is a game when victory would command the most attention and summon the Greatest advertising. Take the Notre Dame-Army game this year. They are traditional rivals and they are also the princi- pals in a game that commands tre- mendous public attention. Knute Rockne knew before the season started that he would not have a great team. He knew that his boys might get better with ex- perience as the season advanced but the Army game did not come late enough. Notre Dame lost to Wisconsin and Georgia Tech with splendid humili and advanced upon the Army, r puted to be one of the greatest teams of all times. Notre Dame was load- ed down for the Cadets and plastered them 12 to 6. Navy Comes To The Navy, lacking the traditional game with the Army to point for, started out like it was going no- where to meet no one. The mid- shipmen lost the first three games of the season without scoring a point and there was nothing left to offer consolation but Pennsylvania and Princeton, two of the outstanding teams of the east. The midshipmen, with all the betting against them, knocked off Pennsylvania and Princeton and finished the season mi the feeling that it had done well, : Michigan ‘started the season with such a terrible team that Pop Yost denied it and ran away from the campus. Almost abandoned, the plucky squad went about its business getting .a little better Saturday by Saturday until it beat Illinois, which finally won the Big Ten champion- ship, and gave Iowa a lacing that prevented them from any possible tie for the title, vard had the alumni looking for a new varsity coach after bei mauled by the es and Pennsyl- vania and a tie with Holy Cross, but the squad looked toward the Yale game.. No Harvard team that beats Yale is considered a total loss and Harvard loaded up for Yale and won the game, shocking a lot of people who don’t read the box scores. Southern California Minnesota beat Wisconsin. Witten- berg knocked off Ohio Wesleyan that had beaten Michigan and Syracuse. Pittsburgh tied Nebraska and New York University. ruined Carnegie Tech’s championship hopes. All of which may point to a mor- al, that a little guy all loaded up for one big shot is a tough guy. is over ip io, A that oar mh The election and Hoover — er Ugh, Soak ’Em! see Members of Osage Tribe Get Their Thrills from When golf wes fi. the Osage Indians, the blanket In-| dians sneered at the idea of trying | to whack a little white ball around | with a stick, they who had chased | «Mroduced to} buffaloes and fought the pale-faces in other days. But they got inter- | ested and it is no unusual sight on the links now at Arkansas City,| Kas., to see Indians, garbed as Joe} Mills is here, playing golf. i CHICAGO COACH SCOFFS AT IDEA | |_OF RETREMENT| Chicago, Dec. 4.—(AP)—“Retire? | Absurd! I’m a young man!” | This is what Coach Amos Alonzo Stagg, the “Grand Old Man” of football, told the Associated Press| today in answer to the persistent | rumors that he planned to call it a day—his last day—on the gridiron. “Why, I’m only 66,” Stagg! chuckled. “I haven't missed a day’s| practice in years. I’ve got as much Pepper and vigor in me as any young coach I know. Ask my boys if I’ve! still got the spirit and fire neces- sary to coach a football team. Re- tire? I've been on the job for 37 years, and I feel as though I've got 37 more years left in me.” | That is the way the “old man” feels about it. And that’s the way | his legions of friends and admirers, in the sport and out of it, wherever football is played, feel about it. Coach Stagg refuses to express his opinion on the university’s scho- lastic requirements—the secondary school average of 85, for instance. As long as he is a member of the faculty of the University of Chicago, he promises to be loyal to its ‘stan- dards and regulations. Lloyd Thomas Named on Western Eleven, San Fancicso, Dec. 4.—(AP)— Three University of California play ers won places on the 1928 Associ- ated Press all-Pacific coast football eleven. It is the consensus of 16 outstanding critics from all sections of the coast. Southern California and Stanford each placed two men. The team: Ends, Phillips, California; Frank- ian, St. Mary’s. Tackles, Dressel, Washington State; Bancroft, California. Guards, Post, Stanford; Robesky, Stanford. Center, Barrager, Southern Cali- fornia, Quarterback, Maple, Oregon State. Half backs, Lom, California, Car- roll, Washington, s, Fullback, Thomas, Southern Cali- fornia. quintet will play Ohio State, cinnati and others on an extended invasion. the Southern Conference title four times in the past six year: championship team will rely versaries nearer home to prepare for the annual Ole Miss will have four of the five men on the title team back. al and the other forward, are returned. Laird will be back at the pivot po- sition and Allan handle the other forwa: also Notre Dame at South Bend as their principal intersectional foc. however, in the Plainsmen, runnei a year ago. of the great 192’ Dubose is returned for the center po- sition, but suce for the James twins, Ebb and Fob, as well as Akin and Crawford, crack for of Washington meen to building great court teams ang Orangemen through. Mississippi produced the championship team of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association. rt to McLeod for Initial Practice Upset By Inferiors, Season Shows MINOT POUNDER HAS EASY TIME BEATING BROWN Chicagoan Unable to Solve Ratzlaff’s Left Hand Of- fensive Chicago, Dec. 4.— (4) — Herma’ Ratzlaff, southpaw boxer of Minot, N. D., had an easy time winning a six-round decision over Norman Brown of Chicago in a six-round bout at White City last night. Ratzlaff had a six-pound advan- tage over his opponent, weighing 150 pounds, The Minot southpaw had a clear margin all the way. He stunned Brown with his hard left in the first round and thereafter won as he pleased. Brown was unable to solve Ratzlaff's left hand attack and ab- sorbed terrific punishment. Ratzlaff stabbed him in the face and stomach but did not carry a stiff enough punch to floor his opponent. BASKETBALL WILL BE HIGH-POWERED IN DIXIE CIRCUIT By HORACE RENEGAR Atlanta, (AP)—Southern college jbasketball, perhaps at a peak last year with high-powered teams in all sections of Dixie, will have enough old stars back to assure another bat- tle to the finish. Aside from playing extensive sec- tional schedules, many of the teams are planning to carry into the cast and middlewest. many of the schedules complete, a itendency |tional territory its evident with the Tarheels ably taking the longest hops. | Vv the court war With to ramble into intersec- of North Carolina probs Tarheels Are Good Coach Jim shmore’s vet! Cin- The Tarheels have won The University of Mi i ad- conference tournament. Ary ind Cary Phillips, twins, one a guard Selby will again Wildcats Also Strong The Wildcats of Kentucky will he back strong. They play The outlook is far from bright, ap of the Aubura p for the title ne veteran is left team. Captain Only must be found ards ch George Bohler, an alumnus State College, is Co: may be able to bring the As coach at College last year, he Trojan Coach Proves First Season Winner Los Angeles, Dec. 4.—(AP)—Leo Calland, freshman football coach at the University of Southern Califor- nia, disproves the belief that a grid- iron mentor cannot turn out an un- beaten team in his first year. has done it twice. He In 1923 Calland took over the freshman coaching reins at South- ern California and put his wards through a six game schedule with- out a loss or a assistant years. This year he returned to the freshman squad and disbanded his aggregation after playing a full sea- son of six games, without his team’s goal line being crossed, although held by California Freshmen to a 0 to 0 tie, piline un 157 points to zero for the opponents, Then he became coach for four varsity AS ANY _IMPORTED CIGARS TUNE IN DUTCH MASTERS’ MiNsTRELs Station New York, & Consolidsted ie> STATIONS Cigar

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