The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 26, 1929, Page 10

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DWAS CHANPIONS PT FOR ENCOUNTER | WITH FLICKERS KNG N IS CONFIDENT | a Bright Eye and a Warm FACK M’CAN romoters Today Making Final Arrangements for Thanks- giving Program | Just six feet three inches of brawn, m eye that a man likes, a warm grin, id a modest countenance—that’s salph Alexander, champion heav Yeight boxer of Iowa who meet: ek McCann, North Dakota's cham- fon, in a 10-round headline event to Thanksgiving card Wednesday ‘ight at the Dome pavilion. Alexander shuffled off a passen- | er train here yesterday noon, looked fround the depot platform, and got own off his stilts long enough to rab the hand of Promoter Fred J. wmith and wring it so hard that it ever again will be the same. Here Two Years Ago It didn't take Alexander long to et around the city to meet old ac- uaintance uck up when the EVaterloo pugilist was here two years go for a bout with the same Jack fcCann. But that bout two years go failed to go on as a terrific bliz- ard spoiled the best laid plans of Hiice and men. Mrs. Alexander did not accompany er husband here but may come; ‘Wednesday to second the Io’ dur. ng the fight, Ralph announced y afternocn. The heavyweight’s nhasa slight attack of influenza, he xplained, and the mother was not | Sertain whether or not she would be to come to Bismarck this time. Alexander went through a light Vorkout last night and it was appar- mt to onlookers that the Iowa corn- usker will have a big weight and zach advantage over the Flickertail. *he visiting giant weighs more than 90 poundis and is four or five inches aller than McCann. Both McCann and Alexander have adieated that they expect victory to- Norrow night and fight fans are xpecting a great bout tomorrow Dome Will Be Heated | Promoters today were making final Plans for the card tomorrow night. ‘romoter Smith announces that the | ome pavilion wil! be heated tomor- ow night and that all ring side seats or the card are reserved and sold by umber only. Tickets are on sale at the Grand nd Blackstone Recreation parlors nd Harris and Woodmansee's, Bis- qarck, and the McDonald hotel, fandan. All fighters on the 36-round card re professing to be in the best of ondition for the program, Smith ays. The complete program follows: Jack McCann, 181 Ralph Alex- nder, Waterloo, I Gunner Smith, Bi: mrie Baldwin, 145, Hazen, 6 round: Boomer Brooker, Mandan, i125, vs. fatt Hummel, Bismarck, 126, 6 ounds. Jackie Blue, Kalamazoo, Mich. 135, s. Billie Black, Kankakee, Ill, 4 ounds. Del Daune, Bismarck, 190, vs. Alvis 4 ;. Bismarck, 193, 4 rounds. Red “AcGerry vs. Sonny Schlosser, oth of Bismarck, 4 rounds. O. W. Roberts :nd Mac O'Donnell nll referee the matches. 3lind Athlete Wants a Letter (Seattle, Wash. Nov. 26.—(7)—A dind giant ambitious to gain his var- ity letter may some day stroke the iversity of een eon crew in in- ‘rcollegiate regat! With a good record in interschol- THE BISMARCK ‘1RIBUNE, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1929 BIG TEN MAY NOT BE naa —— ae =>) | PROBABLY WILL NOT PRESENT ITS REPORT Hawkeyes Are Not Surprised When Prof. James Paige Makes Announcement PLAN PETITION ANYWAY Failure to Dispose of lowa’s Trouble Will Hamper Bas- ketball Campaign Chicago, Nov. 26.—(?)— With its second petition for reinstatement into the good graces of the Western con- j ference ready for presentation to the | faculty committee on athletics Dec. 7, the University of Iowa may find the committee unprepared for action. Prof. James Paige of Minnesota, appointed last June to head a special committee to investigate not only the Towa case but athletic conditions in other Big Ten schools, last night said his group, which included Prof. Thomas E. French of Ohio State uni- versity and the late Prof. George Goodenough of the University of Il- linois, had not met and would not have a report ready when the faculty committee meets in Chicago. Towa Not St Towa athletic officials showed no surprise when they learned of Pro- fessor Paige's statement, and said they would go ahead with plans to present the petition asking reinstate- ment to competition with other schools. They planned to send a brief of their case to each member school before the Dec. 7 meeting. Failure to dispose of Iowa's troubles will force Big Ten basketball coaches to the necessity of revising the rotat- ing schedule which has been in ef- fect for several years, for Iowa will not be eligible for competition after Jan. 1, and the Big Ten championship season does not open until after New Years. Under the plan each school plays 17 games, five practice affairs and 12 against conference teams. The 12 league games are played on a | home-and-home basis with six mem- ber schools, and with Iowa out it would be necessary to make a new arrangement. This remarkable action picture shows Lamarak of New York University as he was thrown on his head by a University of Missouri tackler after a nine-yard gain in an intersectional game at Yankee Stadium, New York. ARMY-NOTRE DAME GO HEADS Alabama Plunger Gains Near Mile ATTRACTIVE EASTERN CARD eC TERE Rockne-less and Moynihan-less | Association Heads | Tony Holm Makes 1,293 Yards; | e « _| Gene McEver Leads Him Ramblers Are Favored Make No Decision for Top Honors by Public iis Relative Merits of 168-Game/ ‘Tuscaloosa, Ala. Nov. 26—(%}— and 154Game Sched- | Tony Holm, Alabama fullback, has di | Bained nearly a mile against Alas ules Considered | bama’s foes this year. | Latest records credit him with 1,293 Cornell-Penn, W. and J.West) chicago, Nov. 26—17—Still un- | Tennessee hes ourgained tim Casey ta | Agreed on the length of the 1930 5 | : Virginia, Brown-Colgate = schedule, American Association club | on ater yaied estes Games Come | owners today went into their second | yards than Holm but was in the Tene | Hie in an effort to settle the ques- neseee- Alabama game four minutes By HERBERT W.BARKER =| President ‘Thomas J. Hickey inai- | 8°" 4nd carried the ball oftener, New York, Nov. 26.—()—A number | cated the vod baer retain the io} tern football rivalries) ames schedule, although several ale he postiacneg ts anor Hoes of | Owners were holding out for a 154- | Sport Slants The college football campaign of 1929 started out to be a “Warner Charged Violating Rules year.” with wing backs and all the} Towa was t one of | 8ame campaign, because of financial spears Gerold ed ia rh Notre | losses suffered last season through Dame—on Saturday. weather postponements. Before the Cadets and the Ramb- Yesterday's meeting failed to pro- lers from South Bend, Ind., put on/ duce an agreement, with the 168 and | other trimmings, thelr spread inspired {competition with other Big ‘Ten their spectacular struggle at the Yan- 1 ie ae es ashe as of ®iby the scientific beating Stanford] schools after the annual Big Ten kee stadium, such ancient feuds as) iPb Seasom Being scussed at | gave the Army at the Yankee stadium |track and field championships last Cornell-Penn, Pitt-Penn State, Wash- | ‘neti. last December. Coaches who got an| June. The action was taken by the ington and Jefferson-West Virginia, ! 4 0. eve full of that massacre of the mili- | faculty committee on athletics, which Fi h ° f tary forces rushed back to install the | charged Iowa with having proselyted | 12! ts Last Night ‘A” and “B” formations made famous | and hired athletics and having main- | by Pop Warner. tained a “slush” fund for the support Somewhat belatedly it seems to|of athletics. Iowa officials immedi- and Brown-Colgate will have been fought again. Added to the program (By The Associated Press) Philadelphia—Johnny J: , | have dawned upon the experts that/ately started a housecleaning, and Ws / a Warner did it with man power, not | late in June made its first plea for will be such combats as Carnegie Tech-New York university on Thanksgiving day and the Dart- Philadel King Tut pti hist noted mirrors, and what began as a “War- | reinstatement. Boston,-defeated Henri DeWanck- | 2" year” now has developed into a | “Rockne season.” mouth-Navy, Vallanova-Temple, and Boston College-Holy Cross frays two} er, foul, (9); Pablo Blanco, Cuba, defeated Vidal a If Notre Dame, with its famous time should elapse before considering rerigr Gregorio, Spain, ‘coach fiat on his back most of the| relnstatement for Iowa. days later. Pitt's unbeaten and untied Panth-| ers, meeting Penn State for the in consecutive year, should gain its 17t! foul, (3). | victory in the series with the Nittany Buffalo—Jimmy Slattery, Buf- | {#ll with a badly infected right leg, | | Lions who have an in-and-out season] falo, outpointed Maxie Rosen- jeontinues its unbeaten march the | this year. bloom, New York, (10). i*Rockne system” will wind up the The Syracuse - Columbia battle is Chicago—Eddie Shea, Chicago, | Year in as great a blaze of glory as the ninth in a series that began in| knocked out Babe Peleco, New- | ‘t's Possible to ignite, “Rock” picked 1901. Columbia has only one victory| ark, N. J. (2); Johnny Burns, (this as his big year, and his “team and a tie to show against Syracuse's} San Francisco, outpointed Joe Hs destiny” seems to be convinced six triumphs and the chances are all| Packo, Toledo, 0, (8); Eddie An- | °f it. against a Lion win this year. dereon, Chicago, outpointed Mike |, The spirit of Notre Dame conquest Dundee, Reck Island, HL, (8). has been spread to amazing propor- Cincinnati—Howard —Mitehell, | t!ons by its coaching disciples. Purdue, Cincinnati, Knocked out Chet | Big Ten creme: for the first time, PITT FACES PENN STATE’ petition, with the belief that more Colgate seems to pack enough punch to avenge a number of defeats Smallwood, Terre Haute, ). Brown has pinned on the Maroons’ Omaha, Neb—Bearcat Wright, record since 1917. Notre Dame will be after its llth ‘victory over the Army when these Guo tae tek cat nea a i ye . = by on sa rivals of 16 years’ standing get to: baa ae vers, Louisville, Ky.—Jackie Cohen, New York, defeated Frankie ‘gether in the outstanding game of Graham, Utica, N. ¥., foul, (5). the week on Saturday. Knute Rock- Indianapolis—Lou Terry, St. ne’s Ramblers have won 10 of the 15 previous meetings; the Army four; Louis, Mo., knocked out Jack Ma- lone, Augusta, Ga. (3); Moan with one tie. Notre Dame, unbeaten Baumgartner, Ft. Wayne, Ind., and untied, will be a heavy public choice over the Cadets, who have yet Knocked emt Al: MeOey, 6t, Lams, (2), to win a major game this season. Baltimore—Al Friedman, Bos- veteran of the Irish wars, “Slip” Mad- igan, has developed one of the strong. est teams in the country at St. Mary’s, unbeaten, unscored on, and the only team to hold California's Golden ce to so ge as a tie, "s great line play in open the gaps for Albie Booth to Bd through is attributed to Adam Walsh, captain of the famous Four Horsemen Notre Dame. Of those great Stuhldreher at Villa- Notre Dame will be handicapped by the absence of Rockne, who is ill, | stic sports as a sprinter and a swim- yer, Howard (“Wild Bill") Dent, six- ot freshman, came to Washington in nova, Jimmy Crowley at Michigan State and Elmer Layden at Duquesne are all head coaches. Harry Mehre is the head coach at Georgia, only team and Moynihan, star center, who suf- fered a broken leg in the Northwest- ern game Saturday. Hi iit Coach Gwin Henry of the Univer. sity of Missouri does not differentiate between his four backs, to | them as “just backs.” 4 z i | z i i i i i t i rie nip ‘iil E i ff vi banned from athletic; it | tiant Ralph Alexander Reaches Bismarck for Bout’ Wednesday Night SAE RE DTT TELE ERT I a PREPARED TO ACT ON IOWA’S PETITION [SHARKEY NOT CHAMPION BUT | TOPS LIST OF HEAVYWEIGHTS NOH ENTAL National Boxing Association Places Boston Gob at | Head of Pack | eens | ACE LEADS MIDDLEWEIGHTS | All Titles Must Be Won in Ring Rather Than on Paper, Isaacs Says Cincinnati, Ohio, Nov. 26.—(P)— Jack Sharkey, Boston, was rated as the nation’s leading heavyweight but not the official champion by the Na- tional Boxing association here yester- The heavyweight title was de- association, said all titles must be won in the ring and not on paper and for that reason champions in several classes were declared open. American's foremost boxers wer: rated as follows: Flyweight champion, naro. Bantamweight champion, Panama Al Brown. Featherweight champion, Battling Battalino. Junior lightweight champion, Tod frankie Ge- Morgan. Lightweight champion, Sammy Mandell. Junior welterweight champion, Mushy Callahan. Welterweight champion, Fields. Middleweight champion, open, sec- ond Ace Hudkins. Light heavyweight champion, open, second Maxie Rosenbloom. Heavyweight champion, open, sec- ond Jack Sharkey. After ranking the boxers the asso- ciation made an effort to classify the national wrestling situation, eliminate all the self-styled champions, and Jackie day. clared vacant. | Stanley M. Isaacs, president of the Rus Berherm, of | Purple, Leader’ | Northwestern Fullback Finishes | Season Having Scored | 38 Points | Chicago, Nov. 26.—(7)}—Rus Berg- | herm, Northwestern fullback, finished {the season at the top of the scoring in Big Ten competition with 38 points, | ja three-point margin over Glen Harmeson, Purdue star. Art Phar- mer, who tied with Bergherm at 53 points, for scoring in all games, fin- | ished third with 28 points, | 'Texas Developing Dallas, Nov. 26.—(4)—Coaches of Texas universities and colleges no longer worry about drilling funda- mentals into their freshman athletes. The yearlings already are trained when they enter college. A state in- schools is the training ground from which Texas colleges draw hundreds | of athletes. Athletics in Texas has boomed since ago under the auspices of the Univer- sity of Texas. The unusual number cited as a result of the league's work. | available since the league began spon- soring statewide championships in football, basketball and track. class of competition has improved ac- Now state championships are de- cided every year in those three sports. crowned champions. E' prep planned to conduct tournaments in which champions of all divisions will be selected. Hawaii Planning Pacific c Olympiad Honolulu, Nov. 26—(7}—A_ Pan- Parga Olympiad in Honolulu that will follow immediately after the Olympic games in Los Angeles, in 1932, is the immediate object of the Hawallan association of the Amateur Athletic association. All Pacific countries would be tn- vited ta compete. ‘These countries are Japan, China, Australia and the Pacific coast states of the United The faculty committee rejected the’ impetus cess and profit that ery the na- tional championships nation- as ‘women's swimming championships Jurors Venired for Emmons County Court Linton, N. D., Nov. 26—Emmons December term & i ft ! HE a i if iF 2 D> I : i 5 EEE z oe 2 Fite i \Methodists Have a i approval to the game. charity game There are no disputed titles, no un- | North Dakota still is being considered very |88 an opponent for eli . Mary’ school in Texas has an equal chance |of Oakland or rem anuceriae and ALL-STARS 10 MEET ROCKY LOOP PRIDES Charity Benefit Football Game Arranged for Denver on New Year’s Day BOTH CIRCUITS OKAY GAME Jack West Will Build Northwest Eleven Around North Dako- ta’s ‘U’ Champions Denver, Nov. 26.—()—All star |teams from the Rocky Mountain and G e M North Central conferences will play a Many rid en jeharity benefit football game in Den- | Ver New Years day, it was announced today by Charles Yancey, chairman of the Elks committee sponsoring the contest. Jack West, coach of the North Da- kota university team, will assemble terscholastic league of 900 high ete North Central players in Sloux Both athletic circuits have given The Rocky Mountain stars will the league was organized eight years |gather in Denver under the jot Ike Armstrong of ae W. T. Van de Gfaat of Colorado col- of powerful football elevens in the |lege and Harry Hughes of Colorado Southwest conference this year is/ Agricultural college. Utah university; ‘The North Cental all star team will High schools throughout the state |be built around North Dakota ie have employed the best coaches | sity players while the majority of the ae wen a stars will come from ham| Universit es The |eleven. z oe oe Whether the all-star team is taken cordingly. |epends on a decision of Los Angeles + Who will sponsor a there Christams. of producing a title-winning team. 2 decision will not be reached until Abilene high, last year's state foot- | ball champion, boasted a line of 190 pounds to the man and a backfield or the next day. If North Dakota is selected for the Christmas game, West will take his averaging more than 170 pounds. |Flickertails to Denver Athens high, after winning the 1929 |back east. In the rier iter vit state basketball crown, took the na- invite one other coach from this cir- tional title in Chicago. |cuit to help him select and coach the Hard ’30 Campai Dallas, Nov. 26.—(4—With two in- tersectional games already .booked with Notre Dame and the Navy, Southern Methodist University next year will tackle the most ambitious football schedule ever arranged by @ Southwest conference school. Coach Ray Morrison aspires to a claim for the national gridiron title in 1930, In addition to the Notre Dame and Navy games, the Mus- tangs will engage five conferences its. A game with a Big Ten that one game would be played in ‘The Mustangs probably will play Navy in Baltimore, and it is hoped the 1931 contest to Dallas, stadium to hold 80,000 spec- planned by the Texas State [ ‘ TUNE IN on the Le Paling Radio THE FINEST IN YEARS LA PALINAS ARE NOW MADE OF 1928 TOBACCOS EXCLUSIVELY all stars. Twenty-two men will be picked from this circuit and assem- bled with the if tl - ines au < opening of the Christ. |Zup Says Brutes Can't Play Well Urbana, Ill, Nov. 26—Bob Zupp- ke, fiery little football coach at the University of Illinois, has a reputa- wis te test epigram goes this 3 “Football is 2 brutal game, but brutes can’t play it.” when some veteran brutes showed this fall. my - English Golfers every Wednesday night, 9:30 eastern time, ond each Sunday night at 8, over the Columbia Broadcasting System. GRADE CIGAR LA PA “AMERICAS, LARGEST SELL) ett «MILLION, AYD!

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