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#o} sae THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 193: North Dakota High Schoo! Football Season Approaches Swan Song eee t MANDAN, WILLISTON MICHIGAN WILL BEGIN BIG PUSH FOR LOOP TITLE SATURDAY STILL UNBEATEN IN CHAMPIONSHIP PLAY Grafton, Grand Forks and Devils Lake Each Has Lost One Game This Year “MILNOR, MAX EXTEND WINS Fargo Unbeaten in North Dako- ta But has Lost Three Tilts Out of State ated Press) pos Armistice D: wins and losses t nO Wahr Sioux Minn OUT OUR WAY SHE THROWS OUR BOARDING HOUSE Vid THERES A BIT OF TALK GOING AROUND By Ahern Bus |——THERE YOU TRY AN TELL HIM, ARE | THAT SOME SHARPSHOOTER, IS AIMING TO BAG Your. BANICROLL IN A PHONEY INVESTMENT { \. BE CAREFUL—~ IT's LOTS OF SIMPLE SIMONS “A WHO THINK TH VIEW 1S BETTER WITH TH’ HEAD STUCK THRU A LOOP OF ROPE “LET HIM ALWAYS OPEN SEASON FOR TRAPPING umMmy MoNEY/,~, ( GO Pur A O y amy AN HIS SALT ARE SOON HUMP SUGAR ED{ EGAD~YOU ALL SEEM VERY MUCH CONCERNED ABOUT ME!-HME DLt THANK You TO PLAY Your FIGHTING ILLINOIS MACHINE at mn Indians t Langden. at Stanley Warren, ineau Parshall Minn. at ‘ Bison Continue Winning Streak North Dakota State Wins Sixth Game, Defeating Moor- for t quest The for the head Teachers 31.—Prolonging of no defeats and no ties heir mpaign up to date, North Dakota Agricultural col- und out a 24-0 con- of the Moorhead state teach- ze Dragons on Dacotah field jay afternoon. victory, the sixth of the sea- on, Was accomplished diron and marked the home schedule, send. with a dy ¢ heir into the east Bi- played in an Atlantic Smash Maroons’ Hopes For Title Chance and Pull Selves From Depths 31.—(AP)—Iilinois Chicazo, Oct. fought Western conference football to score a startling 13 to 7 triumph over Chi go and wreck the Maroons’ hope Big Ten title Saturday. They call them the fighting and they had to fight to win first conference victory since when they defeated Chicago on scene of Saturday's upset. The Mar- oons needed less than two minutes and only four plays to hack their way to a touchdown, and in the second period the Ilini three times gallant- ly thrust back drives that seemed certain of adding to the Chicago total. Then in the third period they came out with a forward passing assault that revealed the cunning of Coach Bob Zuppke. Drilled to watch Gil Berry's shot at Pete Yanuskus, the } ns overlooked Frank Fros- chauser, sophomore halfback startin Mini their e too late, Starting on Illinoi’s 46- yard line, Berry fired three to FPros- chauer and the last one was good for 24 yards and a touchdown. Yanu- skus tied the score with his place- kick. With Chicago still upset over the suddenness of the Illinois raid, Berry staged the most sensational play of the game. Birn kicked, but Berry was ready, and snatching the ball on his own yard line, raced through the whole Chicago team for the winning touchdown, a journey of Yards. man be The Bison open their eastern cam- Leading Scorers | to the clas: paign ton of Tow on Friday and ¥. Sa favor the the the chan PORW CHOP Bones OvT FER TH BIRDS IN MU YARD LT aN MICE ee = NNN IW HAFTA HEEP CLEAN, SO EVEY TIME SHE DOES iT, TM GONNA THROW CANS FER 7TH’ IN HER KITCHEN SHE HASTA KEEP inst the George Washing- versity Colonials, in a night game at Wash- Ww a, Point, N turda; 's mi ipremacy in of the Bison was as large as most optimistic Bison partisan expect. The effectiveness of on offense was checked by wet underfooting and constant ges in the lineup. | | MOVED HERE. \ \ LAWN MOWER ACTIME TRYING SOME conquerors | BONE THAT WAS IN [17S aN Oo PoRKcHOP |. | | NEVER BEEN ABLE To \ CHOP IT UP WT THE HES BEEN ALL THIS |. (By The Asscciated Press) _ Lou Bush, fleet little halfback of Massachusetts State, has widened his | tional football scoring honors. | Bush scored a pair of touchdowns his season's total to 16 touchdowns i | defea | CHICAGO, MINNESOTA | INNEXT THREE TILTS | | Gopher Eleven, Improving Each | Week, Only Team Given ' Chance For Win | MAROONS IN SURPRISE LOSS Big Ten Elevens Won Three of Their Four Intersectional Games of Week Chicago, Oct. 31.—(4)—Michigan, | the only undefeated and untied team in the western conierence will open big push with an undisputed Big n football title as its objective this een the Wolverines and the mpionship stand Indiana, Chicago and Minnesota, and on the basis of recent performances, only the brawny ‘men from the north appear to have of halting the drive. Neither na, Which will battle Michigan Blcomington Saturday, nor Chi- ago, Which took a surprise beating from Illinois last Saturday, figure as jbeing anywhere equal to the task of ating the Wolverines. But Min- | nesota, gaining momentum with every ‘game, may be just the team to do the trick. “Petrolle Will Fight Canzoneri Friday = Lightweight Champion Rules as avorite Over Hard-Hitting Fargo Express New York, Oct. 31—\4)—Billy Pe- j trole, Duluth lightweight, will. get his shot at the championship against Tony Canzoneri Nov. 4, the New York boxing commission has decreed. Sammy Goldman, the champion’s manager, had refused to go through with the battle when he was refused | + Self out of the depths of 500 tickeis for the indoor fight after; having been promised them for the door scrap when it was scheduled but later postponed because of an injury to Petrolle. , Madison Square Garden provide the good seats for Gold- cause of the heavy demand for tickets for the indoor spectacle | and Goldma | with the bout. | The commission, however, orde! ithe fight on as scheduled and s , gested all concerned get together im- mediately and reapportion the Despite Petrolle’s many sensati al performances here, despite the ter- rific punch packs in either hand, Billy will enter the ring on the short end of the betting unless plenty of money is rushed to his support this weel There are two major factors to ex- in Canzoneri’s position of favorite idwestern veteran who has ugh lightweights and wel- indiscriminately — duri two or three years. One con- cerns the elbow injury Petrolle suf- fered in training and which forced! postponement of the bout. The other, tion whether Billy can weight without seriously | weakening himself. " Petrolle’s comparatively long lay-; off from competition due to his arm! injury probably has done the veter-| ar no particular good, The! w stion. however, is the more | 1 aled over 140 pounds a few days ago and he may have to, resort to heroic measures to get down; tof 136 pounds. Hi d ats Ww te | most effective fighting has been done at 139 pounds. | Canzonera, who won the title by! play the Army at lead over the field in the race for na-, KN0cking out Al Singer in one round} in November, | Frankie 1930, Petrolle, knocked out Billy's jagainst Amherst Saturday to boost| brother, in the third round in his) but the latter | most recent engagement. | couldn't refused to go through | ‘ While Michi; nn is meeting Indiana , Purdue, undefeated but tied y Northwestern two weeks ago, will mect Chicago on Stagg Field. Tlinois j will tackle Wisconsin at Madison, |Ohio State and Northwestern _ will | clash at Evanston, and Iowa and Min- {nesota will go out of the conference ‘for their games. Nebraska, leader of {the Big Six conference, will play at) {Iowa, while Minnesota will entertain {the University of Mississippi. | The Big Ten was shocked by two upsets last week. Illinois was not giv- jen a chance of beating Chicago, but | put up a magnificent battle to win by {13 to 7. Minnesota was not expected | to give Northwestern more than a stiff ‘truggle, but thoroughly outplayed the Wild in getting a 7 to 0 decision. Ohio e. the outstanding disap- {pointment of the conference season, | was held to a 7 to 7 draw by Wiscon- j sin. In_intersectional ‘conference had much the better of it, only Iowa failing to check in with a victory. The Hawkeyes were defeat- i, 21 to 6, a night game Frid. ‘Purdue and Indian ‘or less decisively. its first touchdown by season and trailed Princeton competition, the but Michigan, mphed more chigan gave up rushing this until the third period, but generated enough punch to win, 14 to 7. Purdue finally started — getting touchdowns as well as first downs, and walloped York university, 34 to 9, and Indiana did as expected in downing Mississippi State, 19 to 0. South Dakota Wins From Carl Eleven! Coyotes Push Across Touch- down in Third Period to Beat Northfield Team Minn., Oct. 31—(?)— Northf: e! South Dakota university won a hard- y ove! yy pushing cross a touchdown in the third period after a forward pi had brought the ball to the one-yard line. Dunn, Coyote halfback, made the} .winning touchdown on a_ plunge through the left side of the line. Carleton had decided advantage in ground gaining throughout, mak- earned 6-0 vic lege Saturday profited time and again from the superb punting of L. George Washington in | Carleton col- | + Outplayed By Notre Dame Three | Quarters, Cornered Panth- er Breaks Loose | Pittsburgh, Oct. 31.—(4)—The pan- ‘ther, regal jungle cat and football team alike, is most dangerous when wounded. Cornered, it bares its fangs | for the last fight to the death. A mighty Notre Dame eleven, hail-| ed the greatest in the land, found | that out for the first time Saturday jas the Panthers of Pittsburgh bat- |tered and groggy, lashed out in a dy- ing fourth quarter effort that stun- ‘ned the Green Grenadiers from South Bend, sent them reeling down to a 12 to 0 defeat and chalked on ; the pages of football history one of | the greatest upsets of all times. Driven like sheep before the charge of 11 shepherds in bright green, the | Panthers reeled through three pe- riods of a struggle that held a crowd of 65,000 breathless with fear for the home boys. Three times, once in each scoreless quarter, the Panthers staggered back under the drive of a team they say in the midwest is the best that ever came out of the In- diana university where Knute Rock- ne founded the greatest of modern football dynasties. Plight Grew Intense Each time the effort was greater, the plight of the hapless defenders more desperate. The great crowd, huddled against the bitter wind that swept the field, seemed only to hope that from somewhere the Panthers would summon strength enough to keep the Raiders from the goal line up to the end. H From somewhere came that strength and more. Into one mighty thrust Pittsburgh suddenly hurled every ounce left in the battered bodies of 11 youngsters who had taken every bit of Notre Dame's pounding for three quarters, almost without a single relief. Within the space of a single minute deep in the final quar- ter, the Panthers scored two touch- downs, and the cocky green raiders the play up to that moment fell | apart like an expensive toy dropped {from considerable height with the !mainspring tightly wound. Within | seconds, the remnants of what had | been a great team were scattered all | over the premises, | Bob Hogan, Panther quarterback, | who was one of the two to finish who |did not start, snared one of Mike | Koken’s passes on his own 27-yard line and Notre Dame pressed as it always has been doing. Warren Hel- ler and Mike Sebastian, ripped inside Notre Dame's tackles for a dozen yards between them. Isadore Wein- stock, a burly fullback, burst through center on a beautiful spinner for 15} | to the Raider 45-yard line. | Sebastian Takes Off | Then Sebastian, a substitute who! who had pranced so high dominating |. that gave Illinois first Big Ten vic- tory since 1929, after passing Froschauer for first score. Verdi Boyer, U. C. L. A—Blocked two Stanford punts, paving way for touchdowns that won 13-6 victory. Breezy Wynn, Tennessee — Booted field goal in last three minutes to de- feat Duke 16-13. Eck Allen, West Virginia — Scored all five touchdowns in Mountaineers’ 34-7 victory over Marquette. Stanley Saluski, Indiana—Averaged five yards a try through Mississippi State line, scoring two touchdowns. Allen Rogers, Auburn— Dashed 66 yards after catching Hitchcock's pass for winning touchdown against Mis- sissippi. Mike Sebastian, Pittsburgh—Scored Pitt's first touchdown against Notre Dame on 45-yard run. Ivy Williamson, Michigan—Blocked Princeton punt for touchdown that put Michigan ahead of Tigers. ° N. D. COLLEGE CONFERENCE Ellendale 7; Wahpeton 6. Mayville 19; Valley City 6. BIG TEN Indiana 19; Miss. State 0. Illinois 13; Chicago 7. Purdue 34; New York Univ. 9. Ohio State 7; Wisconsin 7. Michigan 14; Princeton 7. Minnesota 7; Northwestern 0. MINNESOTA COLLEGES St. Cloud Teachers 13; Hibbing Junior college 0, South Dakota university 6; Carl- eton 0. og Mary's college 26; Western Un- n 9. Gustavus Adolphus 3; St. Olaf 0. Does college 31; Itasca Jun- ior 0. Concordia 0; St. John’s 0. MIDWEST N. D. A. C. 24; Moorhead Teacli- ers 0. Valparaiso 31; Defiance 13. Miami 33; Wabash 0. DePaul 34; Omaha U 6. Dakota Wesleyan 6; Huron 2. Upper Iowa 6; Luther 0. Butler 14; Franklin 0. DePauw 32; Earlham 0. Illinois Wesleyan 26; Eureka 0. Superior Teachers 20; Eau Claire Teachers 6. Simpson 7; Parsons 0. Ripon 12; Lawrence 7. Nebraska 6; Kansas State 0. Cornell college 6; Coe 0. U, of Cincinnati 25; Wittenberg 6. Beloit 13; Knox 0, was taking the part of the ailing captain, Paul Reider, raced for Notre | Dame's end. | One halfback blocked out Paul! Host, Raider end and captain. Se- | bastian sped for the far sideline. | Quickly he cut back, stepping out of| the arms of three tacklers, and his, battered mates had time to get in| |front of them. With fiendish pre-} cision, they cut down the Notre| ; Dame secondary and Sebastian dash- | ed across the goal without a hand! laid upon him. i | It _was an amazing shock to No-; tre Dame and the great throng as ; Well but there was more to come, | swifter, almost, than it takes to tell. | Passing desperately, as soon as he} got his hands on the next kickoff, Al! | McGuff, a sub halfback, hurled ‘his! j Second effort straight into the arms! of Ted Dailey, one of Pitt’s mighty! ends. | |“ Dailey took the ball on a dead run! jas he came up from Notre Dame's | 25-yard line, and in a flash was over | the goal, | |Georgetown Swaps | | Pilots in Midstream) Washington, Oct. 31—(4\—In the! midst of the 1932 football season, , Georgetown university installed a | new coaching staff Monday with John | younger | ing 13 first downs to the Coyotes’ 7.’ L, Hagerty, 1925 captain, succeeding | | Thomas E. Mills, former backfield! |coach under Knute Rockne of Notre} i | Ss | Hanson, halfback. | Dame, as head mentor. | Be ie Ralph Gra-| | Led by Captain Tubby Nordly, who} Hagerty came from the New York \namm of Ransa Sits, Bie Seat iy MINOT |played a great game before he left) Giants’ professional team to take | with 79 points. 3 H with an injury late in the third| charge of a grid squad that has been| . i | period, the Carls threatened the/ defeated in three major games this! wees South Dakota goal line twice in the! year. He brought with him from the li Giants Maurice Dubofsky, George- By Williams | town captain last year. AND HES » SO TO GET ONE ELISE To Picry IT OF, TRALLIAMS, is ‘{onn WW tena eEIIAOE, Wi, 10-31) Each Unbeaten; Dusties Face| Strong Wahpeton Wilcats This Week (By The Associated Press) With its last conference gdmes d, Minot Teachers’ college idles | this week while Ellendale and Botti. ; heau battle in a contest which may | determine the championship of th | North Dakota intercollegiate footbal! | | conference. | | Minot has won three and tied one, | conference game while Ellendale re- | mains undefeated and untied after | two conference tilts. Ellendale’s Dusties will be playing | the conference’s cellar team, Botti-| neau, which has lost all of its three | | conference engagements. Minot has! jan open date this week and Armis- tice day brings its campaign to a} close against Aberdeen normal, a non-conference outfit. i | In other contests this week, James-| | town meets Valley City’ and Mayville | | plays at Dickinson. Wahpeton plays | host to the Concordia reserves, a non-conference eleven. ed, and a South Dakota pass, Clink-| The leaders: eh The standings: er to Bircher, put the ball om the 1- g td fg pat | W. L. T./ yard line. On the second play Dunn| Williamson, e, Mich...3 3 2 0 2 Ellendale .. . 2 © 0 plunged through the left side of the|Fay, hb, Mich.........2 2 0 | Minot :3 0 1/line for a touchdown. On an at-| Petoskey, e, fb, Mich.3 2 0 0 | Wahpeton. :2 1 1) tempted placement for extra point,| Horstmann, fb, Purdue3 2 0 0 | | Dickinson +1 1° 1/ the ball was fumbled. Robinson, e, Mini 3 2 0 0 12) | Mayville ...... 20S opt a i Peterson, hb, Wis. ....8 2 0 0 12) | Valley City ... :1 3 0| George Potter, junior and regular| Veller, hb, Ind. . 3 : A R 3 | Jamestown :0 1 1) Northwestern quarterback, may not! Potter, qb, hb, N’west..4 er | Bottineau .0 3 0 be able to play football next fall be-| Manders, fb, Minn. ...3 1 {cause his scholarship may require him | Lyons, e, Ind. ........3 1 1 1 10 Arnold Horween, one of Harvard's | greatest stars and later coach there, | works out with the Northwestern | squad cocasionally and is labeled the | “dollar-a-year coach” by Coach’ Dick ; Hollingbery’s Washington State foot- | | Hanley. L end, Nordly t) {before being brought down from be- ‘on the Carl's 24-yard line. sted his way 60 yards hind on his 14-yard line by Dyson, Coyote tackle. South Dakota held, however, and took the ball on the 6- yard line. Hanson punted to the 34- {fant line, but the Carls carried the ball right back to the 5-yard line | only to lese it again on downs. Another Carleton threat was stop+ ped when Groves recovered Slade’s fumble on the South Dakota 23-yard ine after Nordly had returned the kickoff 45 yards. Hanson's 45-yard return of Hill's punt gave South Dakota an advan- tage which it never relinquished. Hanson, who seemed in the clear, was overtaken and downed by Slade A pass, Clinker to Freeberg, advanced the ball to the 7-yard line, but Carleton’s line stopped four thrusts into the line and took the ball on downs. Hill's punt was jartially blocked, Freeberg returning it to Carleton’s 7- yard line. McLane, Coyote back, substituted for Hanson, plunged to the 1-2 yard line, but the Carls put up another great stone wall defense and took the ball on downs. Hill’s punt again was partly block- \to take’ his year of foreign study|® | then. ‘Fourteen ‘of the 40 men on Babe ball team are Californians. i | Mills resigned Sunday after nearly three years as head coach. His as- sistants, Frank Kersjes and John Carberry, also Notre Dame products, resigned with him, Hagerty, during three years on Georgetown’s squad, was rated one of the best backs in her history, Du-| bofsky played guard. The university | athletic board has named Charles | Brickman to the third varsity coach- | ing place. Brickman has been hand- ‘ling the freshman squad. i ———_—_ | | Michigan End Has i Loop Scoring Lead Chicago, Oct. 31.—()—So well was the scoring in western’ conference football games spread around Satur-; day that the 18 points owned by Cap- tain Ivan Williamson of Michigan continued as the best mark in the competition. Williamson was engaged in outside competition against Princeton, but no player in a conference game scored more than one touchdown, leaving the Wolverine leader still in front. | Saturday Star: |” (By The Assoc’ated Press) Gil Berry, Tlinois—Ran back Chi- ,cago punt 75 yards for touchdown (i D, State... 6 timore) 6. Washington U. 14; Missouri 6. Michigan State 27; Syracuse 13. Ohio Wesleyan 24; Denison 0. Ohio Univ. 27; Georgetown 0. SOUTH Tulane 6; South Carolina 0. Tennessee 16; Duke 13. North Carolina 13; N. C, State 0. V. M. I. 32; W: ton & Lee 6. Vanderbilt 12; Georgia Tech 0. Alabama 12; Kentucky 7. Louisiana State 38; Sewanee 0. Manhattan 20; Oglethorpe 7. Virginia 20; St. Johns 6, Auburn 14; Miss. 7. Howard 14; Southwestern of Mem-/ phis 13. { Wake Forest 7; Delaware 0. { Miss. college 13; Chattanooga 6, Georgia 33; Florida 12, EAST chan lll ‘WILL MEET INDIANA, Pitt Shocks Grid World, Beating Irish MINNESOTA BEATS WILDCATS IN HOMECOMING ENCOUNTER 1 aptrs Surprise Greatest Sup- porters By Showing Increased Power Minneapolis, Oct. 31.—(#)—Min- nesota unpacked a driving power- house attack, centering around big Jack Manders Saturday, and swept to a 7-0 victory over Northwestern before 35,000 chilled fans, to top off the Gophers’ homecoming festival. Four times the Gophers drove down the field but in three cases the fighting Wildcats stopped them only five yards short of the goal. Success finally crowned the Goph- ers’ fourth-period effort when Man- ders, temporarily in the role of sig- nal caller, changed the offensive strategy from running plays to passes. Starting from midfiled on this drive, a pass from Pug Lund, half- back, to Robert Tenner, substitute end, paved the way. The drive cli- maxed with another pass on fourth down with 18 yards to go, Tenner catching the ball on another of Lund’s throws behind the goal line for the game's only touchdown, Man- ders place-kicked the extra point. Northwestern, which had the ball in its possession less than one-fourth of game time, came back with a des- perate long-pass attack with Pug Rentner, its star back, doing the throwing. Twice receivers were clear and in the open on throws which covered 30 yards or more but each | time they failed to connect, and the best the Wildcats were able to do with their aerial attack was a total of 27 yards on two out of nine at- tempts. Minnesota gained 330 yards to 96 for the Wildcats. The power of the Minnesota running attack was evi- denced by its total gains from rush- ing of 266 yards, to 69 for North- western, The Gophers also topped the Wildcats with a 64 yards gained jon five successful passes out of 14 attempted. Only in the opening period and within a few minutes after the game began, did Northwestern threaten se- {riously outside of the steady menace {of its long aerial game. Al Kawal, a back, recovered the ball on Min- nesota’s 40-yard line after Lund had. fumbled in returning a punt. | _A series of gains and a 15-yard | Penalty assessed Minnesota gaye the Wildcats the ball 15 yards from the ;goal, its nearest approach through the battle. But Rentner fumbled and Bill Proffitt recovered for the Gophers. From this point on Min- |nesota was continuously making of- |fensive threats with the ball in its possession during the second and third periods nearly seven-cighths of the time, Just before the end of the first half, Manders, standing on his 59- yard line, passed to Butch Larson, | Gopher end, and the latter broke in- to the clear and crossed the goal line, | only to have the play called back : because of his own offside. Packers Continue Winning Stride in Western Maryland 28; Loyola Gal-| Vermont 19; Norwich 0. \ West Virginia 34; Marquette 7. Massachusetts State 21; Amherst 16. | Villanova 13; Bucknell 0. W. and J. 7; Lafayette 0. Boston college 3; Fordham 0. ! Davis-Elkins 27; Marines 6. Army 33; William é& Mary 0. | Rutgers 33; Johns Hopkins 0. | Maine 6; Colby 0. Holy Cross 8; Catholic U 0, } Pennsylvania 14; Navy 0. Professional Play Have Won Six of Seven Games, Tied Other; Seven Con- tests Remaining New York, Oct. 31.—(®)—The champion Green Bay Packers have faced every one of their National Professional Football league rivals {except Boston and only the Chicago Pittsburgh 12; Notre Dame 0. | Bears have been able to get as much Yale 6; Dartmouth 0. Colgate 31; Penn State 0. Lehigh 25; Muhlenberg 6. Brown 14; Harvard 0. Brown 14; Harvard 0. Susquenhanna 13; Swarthmore 19. Columbia 6; Cornell 0. Maryland 12; V. M. I. 7. Bowdoin 0; Bates 0. Wesleyan 7; Trinity 0. SOUTHWEST Rice 41; Creighton 7. ‘Texas Christian 27; Baylor 0. Centenary 7; Texas A & M 0. Oklahoma Aggies 7; Oklahoma 0. Texas 14; Southern Methodist 6. Tulsa 39; Oklahoma Baptist 13. Wichita 19; Hays 3. FAR WEST Washington 33; Whitman 7. Montana State 7; Montana Mines 2 Colorado college 3; Colorado Ag- gies 0. Utah 16; Utah Aggies 0. Brigham Young U 25; Wyoming 0. 5 caliorpls at Los Angeles 13; Stan ‘ord 6. Columbia 26;, College of Idaho 0. California 38; Nevada 0. Oregon 13; Gonzaga 6. Washington State 31; Montana 0. HIGH SCHOOLS ‘Wahpeton 12; Oakes 0. North Dakota State Still Among Unbeaten New York, Oct, 31.—(#)—The 1932 football campaign enters the crucia! November engagements with only 20 teams unbeaten and untied. Notre Dame, Harvard, Johns Hop- kins and Catholic university all suf- fered their initial defeats last wee« while Temple, St. Johns of Minne- sota and Wagner college of State: Island were tied. Colgate and Auburn jointly share the scoring lead among the unbeaten and untied teams with 195 points ir six games, Columbia ranks third with 186. Colgate and Southern California are the only elevens boasting un- crossed goal lines. The 20 teams which in Association |Press compliation shows neither beat- en nor tied include: Won Pts For Pts Against 95 a7 {as a tie. As a result the Packers were far {out in front of the parade with the season half gone. Of their seven games the Packers have won six and tied one. Seven more games remain on the schedule, one apiece with the Chicago Cardinals, Boston Braves, | New York Giants, Brooklyn Dodgers, Stapleton, Portsmouth Spartans and the Bears. So far the Bears have scored 84 points against 17 for the combined opposition. They swept through Stapleton, 26 to 0, Sunday and dropped the visitors into last place in the standings. Grove counted twice and Herber and | Bruder once each for the champions. | Portsmouth maintained its hold on second place by turning back the New York Giants, 6-0, in a well- played game. Two passes which | Dutch Clark tossed to Ebding and | Father Lumpkin brought the only Boars of the game in the first pe- riod. ";_The Chicago Cardinals swamped , Brooklyn, 27-7, with a three-touch- down barrage in the fourth quarter and moved into third place in the Standings. The game was all square ; at 7-7 as the teams began the final period but the Cardinals promptly pushed over touchdowns galore, Hill, Martin and Holmer all going across. Boston fought the Bears to a 7-7 tie with all the scoring concentrated [in the first- period. Red Grange | went around end to score the first touchdown for the Bears but a pass from Henry Hughes to Gyp Battles gave Boston the tying score, es, Programs at University of Iowa home games feature stories of former games with the day's opponent, writ- ten by captains of the teams of the former years, Athletic letters have been voted ta’ 44 men who played varsity football for Washington university between 1889 and 1899, Grandstand seats at the Hialeah race track, Miami, Fla., have been re- duced from $2.50 to $1 for the coming season, | Three Browns—Roland, Larry and {Gordon—are regulars on ‘the Brown university football eleven.