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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JANUARY 2, 1931 imson Tide Rolls to Fourth Rose Bowl Victory in New Year_Tilt — ———— SS ALABAMA ELEVEN SOUTHWEST WALLOPS MIDWEST ELEVEN 18-0 IN CHARITY GAME "oun JEWINGS TEAN ‘State Board Proposes Tourney Sites SHOW FECTIVE ie weioes , To Coach Alabama I Versatile Southern Crew Un- —————__—_____——* PLAYS OFFENSIVE PLAY dap Critics Hail Southwest Outfit! Haden Geach, tama. | A Wisconsin out-of-bounds block | as Greatest Assembly of play is diagrammed in the top half of this chart. (Fl) and (F2) run past Southern Stars each other in an effort to lose (F2's) guard. The man out-of-bounds, the ary Bhat ba bas play, bounce-passes to (F2) under the basket. On this pla; NET PROFIT MAY BE $10,000/tne guards snould shift men to pres vent being blocked off. { a . College teams employ out-of-bounds Buddy Hackman, University of plays in the following way: The quick ., eat pass-in for a quick shot, the block Tennessee, Wins Individ- play, and the pass to the back men !for possession. The quick pass-in play ual Scoring Honors ‘consists of speed and clever footwork | | - - By Laufer No Action Taken on Union of High School or Classi- fied Leagues Fargo, N. D., Jan. 2.—-Members of the board of control of the North Dakota High School Athletic league met in executive session here Wed- nesday, took up the matter of the proposed amalgamation with the state classified high school league, and recommended or proposed sites for district and regional basketball tournaments and managers. The sites for the 16 district tournaments are subject to the approval of the dis- trict committees, while the sites for the regional events were recom- mended. The proposed amalgamation of the high school and classified high school leagues was held over until the meet- ing of the high school conference at Grand Forks in April. The board will send out a questionnaire to mem- bers of both leagues for their reac- tions. A number of problems made final action at this time inadvisable ‘and each league will conduct its own basketball tournament this season as in previous years. ‘Those in attendance at the meeting here included B. C. B. Tighe of Fargo, president; J. C. Gould of Mandan, vice president; L. A. White of Minot, secretary and treasurer, and C, L. Robertson of Jamestown. Leo Domi- nick of Wahpeton, the fifth member jof the board, was unable to attend | the meeting. | The proposed district tournaments | and managers .are bed tak a Alabama will have a new grid coach | Bute; Fargo, C. C. Finnegan; Veney } and a new system of playing next|City, F. C. Spalding; Sent ae ear when Frank Thomas steps into| =. J. Cassell; Mandan, W. F. McCl lel- ithe shoes left vacant by Wallace} land; Bismarck, R. D. McLeod; Het- ‘Wade. Thomas, who learned his foot-| tinger or Mott, manager to be ap- ball at Notre Dame, has been back-| Pointed; Dickinson, H. J. Wienber- fe field coach at the University of} en; Grand Forks, C. A. West; Graf- | Georgia for the past two years. Wade ton, M. B. Zimmerman; Park River, halfback from Iowa, was almost the tis to become football coach at Duke | W. B. Simcox; Devils Lake, Otto Berg; entire mid-west offense, his passes university, while Thomas will assume Come See aad cBNA ' e vir 1 . Alab: ye ‘ , J. ON. : and fierce plunges accounting for vir-| ang the purpose is to get the ball in| his new duties at ama today Senreare \CarleGiitertson, -*- loosens Pass Attack in Second Period 70,000 WITNESS GAME Washington State Launched Belated Passing Attack in Last Quarter Pasadena, Cal., Jan. 2—()—South- ern football stood at a new high water mark today, swept there by Alabama's tidal wave which yesterday swamped Washington State 24 to 0. One large quarter, featured by three brilliant plays, and the Crim- son Tide surged to a record of two victories and a tie for the last six years of the Rose tournament fiesta’s 16-year-old classic here. Triumph left the south with three wins and no defeats, while in the previous 10 years the east and mid- dlewest managed to pull out with one ory apiece against Pacific coast onents. abama’s tide broke loose in the ad period and with a couple of passes and a 41-yard run burst wugh the dike of the Cougar de- ise with apparent ease for three aehdowns and the game. The contest had moved along at a standoff in the first 15 minutes. Coach Wallace Wade had scorned Washington State’s chances by start- ing his second team. ‘The scoring started with a reverse hich pulled Jimmy Moore from end. “e faded deep into his own territory ) ith the ball, and heaved a long pass ) John “Flash” Suther, yards over 1e heads of the Cougars’ secondary efense. No one was present to challenge the ‘Bama halfback’s jaunt Pactoss the goal. Dallas, Texas, Jan. 2—(#)—One of jthe finest football machine the south- west ever saw‘was being dissembled | \today,its purpose having been achieved in two brief, thrill-crammed hours yesterday. | For individual brilliance and all! jround efficiency, it is doubtful this| jsection ever will see a greater team Ithan the Southwest eleven that | jtrampled the Mid-West all-stars, 18! ito 0, in the third annual classic. |_ The defeated forces of Coach Bobi Zuppke, and the Southwest eleven helped create a large fund for the; \Scottish Rite Hospital for Crippled! Children here. Officials expressed | |doubt the net would be as high as a! year ago, $10,000, but it promised to! | approach that figure. } Coach Morley Jennings of Baylor | university, who assembled the south- iwest squad and whipped it into a! great offensive and defensive unit. won widespread praise. Zuppke's vehicle lacked both the} individual stars and the team work of ithe southwest. Leo Jensyold, driving | FRANK THOMAS As startled as the 70,000 who braved | t ly " | TC losaw tates tha doles coin hs. |) $$ + —______—_—- the drizzling rain a were, thelr sur- Se ERETacorieyERC aA He) play before the defense gets set. The, ~~ - Regional sites and managers tec- was |ceeniy donee didiw Mid@west. soore|nne” out-of-bounds play is used after ; | ommended are Fargo, C.C. Finnegan; later When Moore duplicated the toss ‘seem imminent. ‘That was when the |the defense has become set. The play} en eet | Jamestown, E. J. Cassell; Mandan, ike : y @ |for possession is used any time. | W. F. McClelland; Dickinson, H. J. bne-yard line. An intercepted pats a grammed in the lower part of the; West; Fort Totten, manager to be r —\period. Armstrong, burly Missouri |chart. The forwards line up side by, appointed; Minot, J. Ny: olenas: 0 ith his fellow end f 20-| > t il G s D oe 8 oO Li : ; tor cain. which put the ball on the etrore ains ecision ver ight Eaitiveiess para Puan in the third | A Purdue out-of-bounds play is dia- Tennis P. ro Ch amp Weinbergen; Grand Forks, C. on Pesatn, Pere iner eran tes ae Tpavcoubanress’sleaUhable: + Bi T [ rE tackle, offered a threat when he in-'side and spread, allowing the guard Williston, J. N. Urness, nders’ heads to nab the oval. John g PI Sener. to) 1g en agers Moorhead Fighter |tercepted pass and chased it back |to drive through for a close-in shot.|.. 5, g.| District tournaments will be held ampbell_ scored in ‘one plunge. a Reach Opponent Effective- 2 . i ie Cea almost getting away aoe one the Torwards|cries-croes Big Bill to Match Strokes With]... March 13 and 14. The regional Campbell’s qui cl y ow a W Th T | uch _,and the guard remains stationary. i ts heduled for March 20 Leuacular. He climaxed the scoring ly During Bout In ree ts eteats Fa gren) The individual hero was Buddy; ‘There should be a relation between Karl Kozeluh at Garden =| Sre3, "ine state tournament will plurge the fourth time he took the 3 |Hackman from the University ot Ten- | out-of-bounds plays and the regular in Februar: ‘be held in the new memorial build- Saar - jnessee. He was the mainspring of offense in order to get better execu- | y ing at Bismarck on March 27 and 28. hal after the second touchdown | Fargo, N. Jan, 2—\.P)}—Billy Pe- fing through right tackle, to sweeP | trolle, Fargo lightweight, won a ae. diana, Purdue and illinois | Zeck Qutpoints East Grand ti “Trophies for all tournaments were © | the winners’ attack, scoring two/ tion. One play for the offensive end a ouchdowns, one of them on a bril-lof the floor is sufficient. Players, New York, Jan. 2.—\?)—Big Bill} purchased by the board at its meet- ‘mgcathed down the sidelines on 4} cision over Billy . al ie 2 4 yecd touchdown canter for the) terweight, iy a eee te oad pout Beatihittsburghy Temple Forks Man in Feature lant 40-yard run, and throwing the |should know the play from different Tilden signalized the close of the old| ing here. | time; his goal from placement 2 | ;Pass that paved the way for a third! positions as it will be necessary to ' ,, pe =a vhs Fee exeancuted, on a@ boxing card here yesterday. and Bradley | New York Bout iscore. play them from time to time. jyear and the end of his sensational sen Orn. “Babe” Hollingbery’s| _,Petrolle was unable to reach Light | i “Louis Long, Southern Methodist,|” ‘The defense against out-of-bounds Career, as an amateur tennis cham-|*—~ Fichts Last Nicht ¢ rallied with the third quarter | © aucun and long range fighting: Chicago, Jan. 2.—(4)—The Big Ten fe ran 40 yards to the Mid-West’s one-!plays must be very alert. Defensive|pion by announcing Wednesday he| | ights Las ight ; ¢ even then “Ears” Whitworth was ay neal A resulted in which Pe- conference continued basketball | Grand Forks, N. D., Jan. 2—P— foot line after taking a short pass;men should stick to their men so will play Karel Kozeluh, the famous | big Iie to add three more points by Pet a u De ee the milling. comeback in the intersectional free- | L. Zeck, Moorhead, outpointed Eddie ifrom Hackman in the first quarter. {closely that it will be hard to put the|Czecho Slovakian professional, in a} (By the Associated Press) ing a field goal from placement ee % Pnygre e edge in five Of for-all of practice games by taking | Falgren, East Grand Forks, in the {Hackman drove across for a touch: {ball in play. Shifting is necessary onjspecial match at Madison Square Milwaukee —Tait Littman, Cud- hor the tide had been stemmed on rounds, the second being even. three decisions last night, one of feature six round bout of an annual;down. The play that led to the; block out-of-town plays. Garden in February. aby, Wis. knocked out George . 93-yard line. Petrolle weighed 140; Light 147. _ | them from one of the best teams in /New Year's day boxing card here. | Southwest's second score was a triple SSeS SSS Tilden Wednesday announced he| Gourtney. Tulane, Okla. (Sy. Marrs hig’ ting a losing game to the end, Charley Retzlaff, Leonard, N. D.. | the east. Zeck weighed 148 pounds and Fal- |pass, Brown to Hackman to Peterson, | Indiana Cagers had retired from the amateur fold to} Brace Flowers, New Rochelle. 'N. ~ \ygaxs.launched a belated pass- heavyweight, scored a technical} Greatest honors went to Indiana in , gren 148. {Texas end, who grabbed the ball from} isign @ contract for a series of edu-! ¥+ (10). Sttesk in the dying moments | knockout over Tommy Havel, of Pine its 27 to 19 victory over Pittsburgh on Judy Tuddy. of Grand Forks, light- |two interferers on the three-yard lin Beat Penn, 24-20 cational motion pictures, His match| juntus tron om tout trom adie City, Minn., in the first round. Retz- the Panthers’ own floor. The Hoos- weight. knocked out Sherald Kenard|Bethea. the Florida star. took it ‘argo in the first round of the ; across. | Philadelphia, Jan. 2.--()\—Indi: ‘has been, a source of discussion} Fargo, N. D-—B! Petrolle. sort ‘tosses which, took the ball to the jaw and overhand right to the |had defeated Pennsylvania in Phil- semi-windup. ; |" Heckman's, twisting tun for the fi- | grr c toe tiebetat Tan one among experts for aeveral years, will| Ealteomimeinted Billy Tagut,is¢. he four-yard line. Captain Elmer head. While Havel was down for the adelphia the preceding night, Kid Fettig. Grant Forks, 180, out-|nal touchdown was one to delight any | feated season, maintained its,take place prior to Big Bill’s de-! Mickey McFarland. wartz was stopped for no gain on Emon Anuar oe rare 27 see-| Purdue. champion of the western pointed Dickinson, Moorhead, 205, in | football crowd. Starting from about! winning form Wednesday by beating patture in March for Hollywood. | Chicago, outpointed K. 0. White, after the start of the round, | conference and a recent loser to Pitt, six rounds. the 50-yard line after failing to spot; Pennsylvania, 24 to 20. Penn led at There and at that time, Tilden and} Portland, Ore—Charley Belan- first play, but on the second he .. Seat i 3 " thed the two-yard line, only to) Rerree heb Moenck awarde the de- had no difficulty defeating Temple In another six-rounder Clayton ;« pass receiver, the Tennessee Ram-| the half, 11. to 8 then weakened and Bobby Jones, the golf king, will be at! ger», Winnipeg, Can. outpointed ible. Freddie Sington, the re- ‘Spud vate ra AEASeneaae a Patieay St night, 45 to 17, Ne: Grand Forks featherweight. | bler reversed the field, cut to the side | the Hoosiers won in a garrison fin- | work on neighboring lots. { teat Aberdeen, Wash. (10) ‘phy, Moorhead junior inois title threat in the con- n from Ned Feist. Grand Forks. [line and wormed his way past a half} ish. , Generally acknowledged as the; autartata Rewer. Pecsete: ‘with Kozeluk, a tennis “natural” that} Anderson, Chicago ( Sander, sophomore half- : a athe tl ing end of three | laff sent Havel sprawling with a left ters, undefeated so far this season, : of American ‘Bama tackle, | en the. ball to terminate the iehiwelgh won a decision over Kid \ ference this year, barely = ‘ idozen tacklers. a ae greatest of professional tennis players, (10). ri Rippatoe, Sioux City, Ia., negro, in| little Bradley college in Peoria, Il. 4 { ou a S WwW ul N. Kozeluh has defeated Vincent Rich-| w= Jone Santa, Portugal. few minutes later the final gun anor eee eee ee. (18 2» ae oa of Bradley missed a Heavyweights Appear ‘De arazen 1 ot ards in @ majority of thelr matches | ed Roberto Roberti, It- , , won from | free throw which would have tied the B T i i Ti i " Mextco Ci i ‘ Pati brawn, deception; Alabama ie Acereie ee _Ming. ! mote iiethe baat 30 seconds. | On Garden Fight Card ison 1rounce Defend Miami T itle in this poet Per eae trer, Letpervilies Pa knocked ont * in all these. That the L 4 er- | Cornell _unive: invading the ie as olnen © — | eetth 2 Salvatore Ruggirello, Italy (1). SDE Jmvaliant fight wasthe| Weight, had the better of Heenan | Buckeye state, defeated Ohio univer-| New York, Jan, 2—U?)—Heavy- 1 in Zi to 24) ,,m hs. Jan, 2 — Th ee re orne Of oe Owe ape inla cleats Soames, Bettalo, : a losin, io Sta versity | tai i is re G i ———— 4 circu- | - “iti a ent Ne Yo 81 5 @ to Ohio State university | tainment in Madison Square Garden | relton for the titst time cince 1926. even though it comes at a time when| Auburn, N. Yq outpointed Wentey Bud Welling, Moorhead bantam- | Wednesday. Brigham Young univer-_ toni i i ppl g' ight. ‘ | s , . Utah, lost to Wittenberg} Jack Renault. of Canada, one of Revamped A. C. Team Displays! Gene Sarazen, champion of the Big. Bill has ipaased eae See ec Re pects in the division a {event for four years, announced he| mar aE S outpointed — Jackie ooo imccts Pierre| Power: Bob Weir Leads had answered the more lucrative call| Dartmouth Again Wins iui Sink of the $10,000 Los Angeles open and weight, and Joe Dearmet of Sisseton, | sity, Prov ights Feature 3 8. D., fought a draw in the four round | college in Springfield, O., 43 to 36. the finest p! opel Rs half dozen 4 1 ——_____— MICHIGAN WINS * Charles, husky but slow Belgian A Hocke Race Tilts PURPLE DOWN ALABAMA | Ann Arbor, Mich. Jan 2—v)—| puncher, in the feature bout of ten Offense Play canceled his scheduled appearance) Winter Sport Trophy y Evanston, Ill., Jan. 2—4—North- | University of Michigan kept its slate| rounds. Renault never lived up to j here. { ‘raking a| Golfing gentry preparing to knock| Lake Placid Club, N. ¥., Jan. 2—! i ae er western won its fourth straight bas- | clean in major sports for the present | the expectations of competent boxing} Decatur, Til. Jan. 2 ‘oronto. Maple Leafs Defeat ketball victory of the current season | scholastic year by defeating Ohio| critics but has had some measure of jlead after 10 minutes of play, a re-|the top off Florida's current $25,000 (P-—Dartmouth won | the President | 7 as by beating Alabama. 32 to 10, in an! Wesleyan, 46 to 19. at backetball here} success in his latest attempt at «ivamped North Dakota Agricultural | golf program with the Friday inaugu- | Harding trophy for the second suc- | New York ricans for intersectional game Wednesday. Wednesday. comeback. ‘college basketball team managed to | hold a slender margin and defeat ration of the Miami open, took firmer | cessive year here Wednesday in the Third Flace 2 = : Sa —— | Millikin university, 27 to 24 here Wed-|of Sarazen's decision to seek laurels sports by piling up a 28-point lead grips on practice clubs as they heard | annual college men’s week of winter : wiete ‘nesday. It was Millikin's first defeat !in California. | over McGill, the runnerup. The mar- york, Jan. p——Three of || OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | in four starts, Of the 199 entrants. Johnny Farrell, gin cannot be overcome in the two ’s four gaynes in the Nation- The Big Blue team had things its|Mamaroneck. N. Y., former national | remaining events, scheduled for Hiocey were marked by lawn way at the opening, inolding ajopen champion, appears as one of the | Thursday. New Hampshire was third League, = tit ‘cece. rae ‘ jo ge in pogo AA see dee c Fou oF EACH Coach L. T, Saalwacchter surprised i go nemeeenmerin | Pale Dry pA pattie on the ice stt:| || rey MIUENTION Vex, |/ BRIDGE POPPED QUT) ( OTHER ~ LIKE | et ie aero saving Basketball Scores _| GINGER ALE an 2 eae 9 setamph. Aye tT WAS A SELF-LIGHTING | wt THE FIREPLACE A Bole nem iin the entire game with _Pairhead SB, A, yah, atti 24 PIPE ' a [ REMEMBER 2/ AND WAS DESTROVED! NECK ! ' and Schwartz on the Higham 4 Ente) a A E uATIL strom, regular forward, took Viv Mc-) indiana 24, Pennsylva 20. 1 ARGU Kay's place at guard, when the latter! Michigan 46, Ohio Wesleyan 19. a lancy started the warfare d Sot teams promptly joined in. TH” NIGHT Nou Rep rr \L HAW- HAW ~ AND home. It’s good. o major penalties came out of this or y ” = NIAGARA was ejected on four personal fouls. Ohio State 48, Cornell 24. H ap wile two more had been called UT. 2AM Ky Sue ee 3 ( DeMepe mete ion Zl pRrips! | Scoring honors went to Bob Weir, {i'3, Coll. © | pA Uy lier in the game. AM" BURA Nour U-TEMPORARY SET FOR SY” « r giant Bison center, who garnered fiv It y : PThe Montreal Maroons and Ottawa NOSE !~ HA HA ~ 17 Locks, OuT CF ‘field goals and three free throws for! your dealer can’t supply = 13 points. The real star of the game, | - | . you call patoreefore lect minute. goal By LeokeED jl, “HE COVERING eoley Smith gave the Maroons a 3 vp, Ut (oF A GOLF BALL? guard, whose defensive work was the | 2 triumph and a tie for the Cana- 4 outstanding feature of the evening.| fen division lead with their towns- PMCS Soo aces, octal He also made three field goals. one of | | en, Les Canadiens. Mine Ny} f which came just before the final gun. In the American division, the Bos- ‘ 1 3 with the Bison leading by only one/ THING SUCCEEDS LIKE: bx Bruins and New York Rangers ¢ s x e \ | point. SUCCESS— DON'T BE . sended Cag files the eam of y 2 i \ \PeThe summary: tf: goals and carried into an \ = \ Mil ‘he A Fertime session as a great Bruin . ) Na st A SUCCESSFUL FAILURE; back brought a 4 to 3 victory. : f Chicago Blackhawks ran wild he expense of Philadelphia to win W _ ‘aaes BAN ! Wood, 5 a ae i]s aint however, was Olson, slender Bison | MANDAN BEVERAGE COMPANY DON’T ORDER “LIGNITE” Might as well ask the butcher for “‘meat’’. 20 gg opher Hockey Team | Mussy Totals..... | H | Playing in Duluth | igen o of Or the grocer for | uth, Jan. 2.—()—The Univer- aka 4 ”, rf Rh Map the baker for ‘‘cake’’. | Conner, SAND 2Np, $5 ed Specify the name of ROERTS AND 200 Avy ee goods you want. nis hotel otters you attrac- 8 Ask for “Indian Head « ent location on SonveRt- GARDEN SHOWS PROFIT Lignite.”” i migna and the New York, Jan. Li lepeear rhida ean ioe | $1.50 to $3.00 | Square Garden corporation and sub- i e af | sidiaries Wednesday reported for the Deliveree ( Single {November quarter net profit of $11,- 4.00 | ; 414, equal to three cents a share Phone 12 Write or wire for against a net loss of $74,468 in the reservations. j preceding quarter and net profit of Occident @levates Co. $50,559. or 15 cents a share, Novem- 712 Crovs $t. Slomarek. ber quarter Jast year. ome adh i, aati