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ANBLIGIBLE BY NEW HAWKEYE ATTEMPT i aptain-Elect Farroh, Pape, | Affre, Nelson and Leeka Lost to Football ; BASKETEERS INCLUDED “tonference Officials Invited to Make Another Inspection in Near Future Towa City, Iu., Dec. 12—(4)—Reiter- ting its conviction the proper field f athletic competition for the Uni- ) ersity lies in the Western conference, | he Iowa board in control of athletics ast night declared ineligible 22 ath- 2tés and renewed its battle for con- erence reinstatement. The charges gainst the athletes were that they eceived aid from the now famous trust fund.” E ‘The list of athletes was not made wublic, but it was known five foot- P all players, Mike Farroh of Michi- ‘an City, Ind., elected ptain of he 1930 eleven last night; Oran Pape, P dubuque;. Pete Affre, Quincy, Ill; rving Nelson, Omaha; and Seward F eeka, Independence, Mo., were on , he list. | ; ‘Three Are Court Men F. Nelson, Farroh and Lecka are also / egulars on the basketball team. rd, which met in the after-| Elder. Yet this year he was about the greatest little ball carrier the Rambiers had. At the left below Jack is shown b King Say continued in session until touchdown run against Army. In the othe r scene he is showh scoring against Northwestern. HUSKIES CONSIDERING PHELAN, ‘Stop SPEARS, AND BERT INGWERSEN| Big fter midnight, drafted a resolution | _________. nviting the conference to “send a ommittee to Iowa City within the E T ck 73 future to review the situation uropean rai the purpose of ascertaining Athletes Invited shether essential justice due these faen may not warrant their rein- . ) The resolution was in fact a waiver f the right of the peas school Fo act finally on the el y i thletes, giving to the confetence = Olympic Talent Will Be ‘ Bc orig ectaber teettenton, é Made Here This Winter ‘While yielding this right, the board f) gain asserted its “sovereign jurisdic-/ New York, Dec. 12.—(7)—Some of " on the selection of the person- | the leading track athletes of Europe, ‘el of the staff and administrative | invited by the Amateur Athletic union } rganization at the university, there-| as an advance showing of 1932 Olym- fy upholding its right to retain| nic talent, are expected here this _ ™, Bresnahan as track coach | winter to add an international glamor lespite the disapproval of the con- ee a . Heading the procession is Stanislaw ] C. C. Williams said a thor- | piekiwicz, Poland, newest member of B ough investigation would begin atthe “I Beat Nurmi” club, who was moe into the cases of each of the 22/ not among those receiving invita- uspended ~thletes. tions from the A. A. U., but who is i ated quite a runner. Blames Past Administration * . in its resolution placed | _ Italy took :o kindly to the A. A. U. for the troubles of the on wan irrerularity Of Scther | €rnarl, half-miler, Louis Naccali, mil- An Advance Showing of 1932/ | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, DECE lowa University Makes Move Toward OATHLETESMADE |ARMOUR’S, CHRYSLERS, POWER A If you are a freshman and can run as fast as Jack Elder, you needn't feel hurt about being thrown off the frosh squad. For that’s what happened to his dazzling 98 yard Varnell and Campbell Send Wire F From Bismarck to Seat- tle Yesterday SELECTION TO COME SOON One of Three Big Ten Coaches Probably Will Succeed Enoch Bagshaw Seattle, Wash., Dec. 12.—()}—A dis- patch to the Seattle Times from its sports editor, George Varnell, says that Jimmy Phelan of Purdue, Clar- ence Spears of Minnesota, and Bert being con- “4 er, and Louis Facelli, 600-meter run- ess thine to pen Just | ner and 400-meter hurdler, will make trust f runction’ at the time of its » | the trip. Of the five nations invited, England is the only one so far to refuse. gees aetc? EE. ileg 8 i t { will be made within a week, Varnell said. —______———_+ | Sport Slants Football fame and fate seems to be about as fickle as anything else in sport. Consider the case of Georgia Tech, the Golden Tornado of 1928) that has slowed down this Fall to the Proportions of a mild breeze... . When Captain Peter Pund led his forces off the field at the Rose Bowl, Pasadena, last New Year's Day, vic- | tors in one of the most remarkable*of all intersectional games, Georgia Tech was King of the Gridiron. The Tor- nado finished with one of the few a bl ie Tee i i ah : i ee : # : i t il FE ; | it Hl E i sf gE ET if Bag. E E i é 3 & il t i Faull 3 a Hl | fal i i é E MILKMEN FIVE WIS 1842 VERDICT OVER WORKMEN ENTRANT Presbyterian and Company A Squads Lose First-Round Games by Forfeit See Him! ey | Elder No Good to Frosh—Now a Burdick Scoring Star Doc Burdick, veteran who scored five field goals, four of them in the second half, led the scoring for the Chryslers while Fay Brown counted three field goals and played a bang- up game at his guard post. Moore, former University of North Dakota football star, played more than half the contest for the veter- | ans, then was replaced by Van Wyk, ; who had played the first half as a} member of the high school club. : Meinhover led his team in scoring with three field goals but made only one in seven chances from the gift line. Eddie Spriggs, who joined the lineup in the second half, played a great floor game but the all-state | forward of last year was guarded closely when he was. in_ shoot! Meinhover, who will be eligi- ble for the high school team next semester, looked classier last night than he did at any time last season. Spriggs will not be eligible for high school compétition this season. The summaries: A. O. U. W. (12) rt. I CHRYSLERS BEAT RESERVES Doc Burdick Shows Customary Dead-Eye Form, While Meinhover Promises Armour'’s Creamery basketeers last night took an 18 to 12 victory from the A. O. U. W. entrant in the only circuit game played to take a lead in Bismarck’s commercial league. Two i. Ten Plea Now | Evidence of Subsidizing and Proselyting Athletes Asked a secunud ry eeeedeunens 8 pir] i é S| cuncuad li i Fi i eee E EF rroune arekt is cif i Hl a8 e Bye Fait i FH rf FE | i I | i A g L | i i i i ft | i i f i H HEE [ ' G 5 4 ee <i F o—e is EE if i L i A ie tt af nstatement in Big Ten ND LIGHT TAKE LEAGUE LEAD ‘17 MIDDLE WESTERN GRIDDERS WILL PLAY SOt UTHWEST ELEVEN to 8 advantage. At the end of the third canto the victors had only a 16 Les Pulkrabek and Art Pharmer, Minnesota, Accept Phe- lan Invitation GAME APPROVED FOR JAN. 1 Welch, Colrick, Gebert, Westra, Gembis, Calderwood and * Rebholz Included Lafayette, Ind. Dec. 13.—(4)— Seventeen football stars have ac- cepted Coach Jimmie Phelan’s invi- tation to compete on the midwestern team in the annual Dixie charity football game at Dallas, Tex., New ing | Year's day. Middlewestern stars who have agreed to play are Welch and Woer- ner, Purdue; Colrick, Gebert and Nash, Notre Dame; Wolgast and Walker, Illinois; Westra and Meyers, Towa; Pulkrabek and Pharmer, Min- nesota; Gembis and Steinke, Michi- gan; Calderwood, Northwestern; ‘Young and Lardner, Detroit, and Hal Rebholz, Wisconsin. Three more are expected on the middlewest squad which will meet an all-star team of southwestern players. Outboard Racing Is Florida Plan Clearwater, Fla., Dec. 12—(4”)—Out- board racing will be a major sport in the south this winter with early activities centering on the Florida coast. ‘The regatta season already has started with the first big event scheduled Jan. 6 when a 37-mile marathon will be run from St. Pe- tersburg to Clearwater. The new list of national records that operators of the “kickers” will shoot at is topped by a mark of 48.4 miles an hour made in class D-2 by H. G. Ferguson, driving his Blue Streak powered by a four cylinder motor with 32 horsepower. OO ————'| Fights Last Night | | ¢—_—______—___+ (By The Associated Press) New Yoru—Harry Wills, New York, knocked owt Andrea Cas- tane, Mexico, (3). Fabs, Jose, Cal., (9). POLISH STAR COMING Stanislas Petkiewicz, long distance runner who beat Paavo Nurmi over .| a six kilometer distance recently, has left for New York, where he will run five races. Petkiewicz is a student in the law school of Warsaw university.