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B ISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1932 MARSHALL WELLSIS |NODAK GRIDMEN SET DOWN DEPAUL UNIVERSITY, 13 OUR BOARDING HOUSE SINGLE MINNESOTAN TOWINRECOGNITION Wolverines and Bucks Place | Three Each; Wisconsin, | Illini Represented By Ahern “WAIT UNTIL YOU GUYS GET A PACI OF TH’ CHUMP THY 15 GOING IN BUSI WITH, TO MAKE G' ALE ICE-CUBES! KAGE HE ‘TOLD ME MASOR. NESS INGER ~NERTLES AN’ GREEN I MET HIM 7 THAT TH’ RED TRAFFIC LIGHTS WERE FIRST AN YOU TOLD ME HE SAID HE WAS GLAD HE DIDNT THROW AWAY HIS BICYCLE RALPH PIERCE GETS TWO TOUCHDOWNS IN CONTEST AT CHICAGO Sioux Hand Defending Aggre- IS HIS NAME ~~ TH" TYPE OF GOOF WHO GOES UP ON TH' STAGE WHEN TH* USED IN MANDERS ON SECOND TEAM WIS TOWN OVER THIRTY YEARS PANTS CLIPS ~—~ WHE USES "EM NOW To gation First Defeat in Last Eight Starts Harry Newman, Michigan Quar- terback, Only Star to Get Unanimous Vote | Chicago, Nov. 21.—(7/—Ohio State's luminaries upset the all-star Big Ten | football team this year. | Although engulfed in an_ erratic season, the Buckeyes tied Michigan in placing players on the all-star team selected for the Associated Press by coaches, landing three berths in the line and backfield. Purdue placed two players while the other three posi- tions went to outstanding aces from Wisconsin, Illinois and Minnesota. Northwestern, which placed three players on the 1931 all-star eleven and two of them on the all-American | team, failed to land a berth. Ernest | “pug” Rentner, fleet Wildcat half- ALL-BIG TEN TEAMS | First Team i Left end—Moss, Purdue. | Left tackle—Wells, Minnesota. || Left Guard—Kabat, Wisconsin. ii Center—Bernard, Michigan. | Right guard—Gailus, Ohio State. HYPNOTIST ASKS FOR VOLUNTEERS/ AGO ~~ SAID THEY HUNG KEEP TH’ LEGS OF HIS PYJAMAS ; Sreax: ING SOF MR. NERTLE REG, U.S. PAT. OFF. © 1832 BY NEA | Right tackle — Rosequist, Ohio | Btate. Sa Right end—Williamson, Michigan. Quarterback—Newman, Michigan, Left. half—Hinchman, Ohio State. Right half—Berry, Illinois. Pullback—Horstmann, Purdue. i Second Team +! Left end—Robinson, Minnesota. { Left tackle—Wistert, Michigan. || Left guard—Letsinger, Purdue. = | Center—Oehler, Purdue. 1} Rigt guard—Varner, Ohio State. || Right tackle—Cassels, Chicago. Right end—Petoskey, Michigan. | Quarterback—Pardonner, Purdue. | Left half—McGuire, Wisconsin. Right half—Purvis, Purdue. | Pullback—Manders, Minnesota. Po back, received but one vote for “re- electioh” and that was for the secon team. Another stalwart on last year’ all-conference team, Jack Manders of Minnesota, lost out by a narrow margin to Roy Horstmann, Purdue's yardage maker. Harry Newman, spark plug of Mich- igan’s title drive, was the only unan- {mous choice of the coaches, who se- lected Purdue's drop-kick ace, Paul Pardonner, for quarterback of the second team. Paul Moss of Purdue and Ivan Williamson, Michigan, were heavy favorites for the wing positions. This is how the first team stacked | up in weight and winning perform- ances: Left end, Paul Moss, Purdue. Moss, ‘a 185-pounder in a six-foot-two-inch | frame, was one of the best wingmen in Purdue's football history. | Left tackle, Marshall Wells, Minne- | sota. A Minneapolis boy, who made) good at home, weighing 210 pounds | and standing six feet two inches, Wells was a bulwark of Minnesota's defense and offense. Probably his greatest game came in defeat—at Wis-| consin. Left guard, Gregory Kabat, Wiscon- sin, Although Kabat won an all con- ference berth in 1931 and was captain of his team, he did not clinch a regu- lar berth on Wisconsin's eleven until mid-season. Center, Charles Bernard, Michigan. Bernard, an unusually accurate pass- er, has been the leader of Michigan's! defense. Rounding out an inexper- ienced line, Bernard covered a wide, territory behind the line, intercepted forward passes and was a genius in recovering fumbles. Right guard, Joe Gailus, Ohio State. | ‘A six-foot junior, weighing 194 pounds, Gailus was rated as one of the fast- est thinking linemen in the game with an uncanny faculty for diagziosing plays, intercepting passes and recov- ering fumbles. Right tackle, Ted Rosequist, Ohio State. Rosequist was one of the big- gest players on the Big Ten fields, weighing 204 pounds. Powerful on} defense or offense and a pass receiv-| er par excellence. Right end, Ivan Williamson, Michi- gan. Williamson was considered as’ the greatest Michigan end since Ben | Oosterbaan. Tall rangy and fast.) and possessing a baffling change of pace to out-maneuver pass defenders, | he has been Harry Newman's iron| man, defensively and offensively. | Quarterback, Harry Newman, Mich- | igan. Rated by Michigan coaches as! the equal of the great Bennie Fried-| man as a forward passer and field | general, Newman has been the big cog | im Michigan's great march. | Left halfback, Lew Hinchman, Ohio; State. Hinchman came close to fill- ing the shoes of the immortal Wesley Fesler this year. He did most of the passing and punting and called the signals in many games. Right halfback: Gil Berry, Illinois. Smart, fast and dependable, Berry was one of the shrewdest generals of the year and one of the best open field runners, Fullback, Roy Horstmann, Purdue. Horstmann played three full seasons Horstmann Leading Scorer in Big Ten Chicago, Nov. 21.—(#)—By the mar- gin of one point, the 1932 individual football scoring cham] of the Thanksgiving Will Be Grid’s Finale |LASSITER LEADS YALE TO Ground-Gaining Passes and Stubborn Defensive Line Are Responsible | deluge and the full fury | great scoring wave of the 1932 season) he same time. The combined outburst swamped | the Crimson, 19 to 0, and | most decisive defeat Yale h: | ed its old rival in 30 yes Forty-five thousand spectators, jlashed by a rainstorm, sat huddled | through a mud battle that saw Cap- | tain John Wilbur's Elis redeem a dis- | mal season with a crushing triumph jin the 51st gridiron battle between these ancient foes. The smallest crowd that has turn- ed out for the game in more than a score of years looked on while the | Blue mastered the Crimson in every | department of football, scor touchdowns with air executed running and pe and wound up with the bii gin of victory since Yale's umph of 1902. In between the sensational attack ing exploits of Bob L Walte | Levering and Dud Par Yale's de- | fense four times took the ball on downs deep in its own territory. | After being halted three times in the j first half, once with only two yards | to go for a touchdown fense, led by the gallant Jack kard, crumbled. The Cambridge crev | threatened only once in the last half | and that was no more than a gesture. s hand- The chief honors of this Eli holi- day, which the boys in blue cele-! brated by tearing down their own] goal posts, went to lanky Bob L siter. He didn’t cross the Hary goal line but his running and passing were the main factors in each of the three touchdowns. Lassiter’s first pass to Dud Parker was good for a 28-yard gain in the | opening period and led to a touch- | |} down by Levering on a short buck as the climax of a 4: | vance. The next heave, to O'Connell, | | for 21 yards, failed to inerease the scoring but the third and last pa {to Martine with the ball on Hi ; vard’s yard mark. accounted for | period. In between these aerial attacks, ' | Army-Notre Dame, Brown-Col- 19-0 WIN FROM HARVARD) gate and Pitt-Stanford Games Are Features New York, Nov. 21.—(#)—The thun- ked the |” ean twisting dashes off tackle | accounted for 50 of the 55 yards the - {lls marched for their other score, (Nome stretch this week with an Ox Lassiter, skid- ——— ding 10 to 15 yards at a clip, was New Haven, Conn. Nov. 21—The| hauled down from behind by Cric- of Yale’s| kard within a yard of the Harvard] 2 goal but Levering easily bucked the | struck Harvard Saturday at one and|femaining distance for the fullback’s in the third quarter. second score. (By The Associated Press) Harry Newman, title for Michigan. Saturday Stars Michigan — Booted field goal that beat Min- nesota, 3-0 and clinched Big Ten [ceptional campaign. | are packed away for another season |big guns will be an impressive one—a Notre Dame, Brown-Colgate, Pitt- Stanford, Alabama-Vanderbilt, Ten- nessee - Kentucky, Georgia - Georgia Tech, Penn-Cornell, and Texas Chris- dering football herd sweeps down the double-barrelied program that virtually writes finis to the 1932 Once Thanksgiving day's contests and those of the following Saturday are written into the records only @/on an end run. few scattering important games wil! remain to be played before uniforms But this week's salvo from football's \fine array of important struggles headed by such pairings as Army- Joe Kershalla, West Liberty— Scored 11 touchdowns, scored five points after touchdown, as his team routed Cedarville, 137-0. George Fenton, Fordham — Blocked kick, resulting in safety that enabled Fordham to beat Oregon State, 8-6. Phipps, Auburn—-Sprinted 45 yards in fourth period for touch- down that beat Georgia. Bernie Masterson, Nebraska— Kicked field goal to aid in defeat tian-Southern Methodist. Coming up to one of the final mile- posts, here's how the situation shapes up. East—Brown and Colgate, owly un- {beaten and untied teams in the sec- tion, battle at Providence with prob- able recognition as eastern champion awaiting the winner. Penn and Cor- nell, New York university and Carne- gie Tech, West Virginia and Washing- ton & Jefferson are other leading of Oklahoma, 5-0. Mickey Vuchinich, Ohio State —His field goal in last four min- utes cf play turned back Bob Lassiter, Yale—His Illinois. running and passing featured Yale's 19-0 rout of Harvard. ‘Indiana Harriers Win Big Ten Title Lafayette, Ind., diana univ Noy. 21. ‘sity runners won the an-) ——()}—In- \Thanksgiving day rivals. Saturday, |Army will meet Notre Dame at the |Yankee Stadium here: Pitt, undefeat- jed but twice-tied, will face Stanford, and Boston college and Holy Cross jmeeting. South — With Auburn, heir-appar- ent to the conference throne, idle un- til its closing game with South Car- olina State Dec. 3, interest will center ‘on the Thanksgiving day games be- tween Alabama and Vanderbilt and Tennessee and Kentucky, and on the Georgia-Georgia Tech duel at Atlanta nual Big Ten cross country run Sat-| Saturday. urday with a score of 42 points. It was the fifth consecutive victory for the Crimson in this event. The other teams finished in the following order: Illinois, second 65; Minnesota third! 92; Purdue fourth 111; State seventh 133; 158, and Northwestern Iowa did not compete. | 3 No whisky will be made this year | the final Eli touchdown in the fourth | in any of the distilleries in the Scot-} new and the rest were periodic visit- Wisconsin ard ad-| fifth 112; Michigan sixth 131; Ohio Chicago eighth ninth 169. tish combine. ' | OUT OUR WAY vu MY HIGHSCHOOL Fy SUSIE ~ SHES GOT ME WOCZIE, AN’ Keeps ME BLLE HOO-HOO WH YEAH IT KeERS,, THEM IN NIGHTS, BLT wT PUTS ME OvT NIGHTS! IF THEY Ever GET ON TH STAGE WITH c= I MOTHERS GET GRAY. WILL LEAD SATANS Devils Lake, N. D., Nov. 21—)— Hilbert Smith, halfback, and Harold Reslock, end, were elected co-cap- tains of the 1933 Devils Lake high school football team at a meeting of 21 lettermen. Hunchy Rutten and Chester Peterson were captains dur- ing the last season. 2 In 1927 ten comets were reported by astronomers. Six of them were ors. By Williams WELL, Gwe THEM CREDIT FOR TRUING! REMEMBER, HES HAD TO LUSTEN TO OU TRYING TO SEA ee |will get together in their annual! 5,000 FANS SEE GAME Blue Devils Prevented From Scoring in First Half By Stubborn Line Chicago, Nov. 21.—()—Two short end runs by Ralph Pierce, quarter- back, gave the University of North Dakcta a pair of touchdowns Satur- day and a victory over DePaul uni- versity here, 13 to 6. Pierce took the ball around his own left end early in the first period and scored after a 5-yard dash North Dakota failed to convert the extra point. Shortly after the sec- ond period opened, Pierce again took chatge of the ball and dashed 3 yards around his own left end to Score another touchdown. The extra point was adced and North Dakota led, 13 to 0. few minutes later and scored on a long pass, Doody to Krause, a sub- point failed. neither team threatening seriously. starts. Only once in the last half was a (scoring threat made. DePaul’s stands went into an uproar as Stadler got to be a certain score. The dash net- 15-yard penalty on the home club. ball in the final half and was suc- cessful in preventing the Blue De- mons from scoring. Soon after the kickoff. Leidholdt, Dakota fullback, and Knauf, half,| plunged the ball to the DePaul 48-/ yard marker. Pierce took it 40 yards Leidholdt picked up! four yards through center and Pierce went over for the first score. The kick for extra point failed. | In the second quarter, Knauf knifed | through tackle for six yards; Leid-| holdt slipped around end for 20 and! Pierce added 30 more on anend jaunt. With the ball on the DePaul 8-yard} line, the Nodaks twice failec to gain} on plunges. The ball was slipped to Pierce again and he went over via the end. The try for extra point was successful. { DePaul dived through for two first !downs shortly after and Steffen itossed a long pass to Krause who ‘Joped 10 yards for th? touchdown The summary: Touchdowns: North Dakota — Pierce 2, DePaul —Krause (sub for Lyons). | Green Bay Eleven | Finally Stopped! both teams with Michigan's trio, Ber- Pass, M’Bri New York Giants 6 to 0 Verdict league championship finally has been checked. York Giant eleven, 6-0, Sunday. Bears to a scoreless tie. ‘The Giants, with their line the de- running and passing attack and re- covered a Packer fumble at midfield to pave the way for the only touch- riod. Passes took the ball across the goal line in three plays, the last one being a long heave from McBride to Flaherty. 4 ‘The Portsmouth Spartans and Chi- cago Bears, each beaten only once this season, remained in the chase by posting fairly easy victories. The Spartans overturned Boston, 10-0. ‘The Bears walloped Brooklyn, 20-0, with Red Grange, Keith Molesworth ick Nesbitt scoring touchdowns. StaBleton swept through the Chi- cago Cardinals, 21-7, M’Namara-Crossley Leading in! Bike Race “ Minneapolis, Nov. 21.—(?)—Closely bunched five days of riding, the nine teams In the six-day bicycle race here began the last day with but four laps separating the last place team from the three leaders. 4 Reggie McNamara and Al DePaul came back with a rush a} stitute end. The try for the extra! ‘The second half was scoreless with! A crowd of 5,000 homecomers saw! DePaul lose its first game in eight! away from his own 30-yard line and) weaved 70 yards for what appeared \ted nothing, however, for the referee called the play back and imposed 4 North Dakota, its ling outweighing the DePaul eleven, played defensive} ond period which turned the tide for ~ Michigan and Ohio State Lead in Placing Men on A ll- Big Ten Team TO 6 Wolverines Defeat Gophers, 3 to O Michigan Annexes Big Ten Grid- iron Crown By Nosing Out Traditional Rivals Final Standings W L T TP OpP Pct. Michigan ....6 0 0 83 6 1.000 Purdue ..... 5 0 1 101 20 1.000 Wisconsin ...4 1 1 105 46 .800 ‘Ohio State..2 1 2 37 34 .667 Minnesota ..2 3 0 41 36 .400 Northwestern. 2 3 1 99 55 .400/ Illinois . 240 43 94 334 {Indiana 141 39 70 250 Chicago 140 27 87 250 Towa . 0 5 0 12 129 .000 { Minneapolis, Nov. 21—(7)—It was fourth dowg, four yards to go for goal with 36 seconds remaining in the first half Saturday, when Harry Newman, Michigan quarterbacx, decided to stake his team’s chances for an un- disputed Big Ten title on his right toe. He booted a high placekick, it nar- rowly missed an upright, but soared safely over to provide the margin of @ 3-0 victory over Minnesota, giving the Wolverines the title and a claim on the mythical national football championship. Purdue, undefeated in the Western conference, is forced in- to second place because of a tie with Northwestern earlier in the season. A Minnesota fumble shortly before had paved the way for Newman's op- portunity to keep unblemished Michi- gan’s record of eight victories and no defeats or ties this season. The Gophers, fighting the desperate battle |of underdogs, matched defensive en- jergies in every period, led in the num- ‘ber of first downs, 3 to 2, had the highest total of gains and stopped Michigan’s dangerous passing attack centering about Newman. For Jack Manders, big Gopher full- back, playing his last college game, there was a touch of tragedy in the outcome, the final game of the season for the old rivals. Manders Outstanding He was, with Charles Bernard, Michigan center, the outstanding de- fense player on the field, but it was his fumble near the end of the sec- Michigan before 30,000 frost-bitten spectators, Manders caught a low pass from) center with the tips of his fingers} and as the ball slid out of his grasp, Bernard and Fred Petoskey, Michigan end, recovered it on yard line, Minnesota's 32- Newman's pass game was stopped at less critical times, but in the next) sequence of plays it counted for all} of the 18 yards it brought his team) A pass to Fay was) during the day. good for eight yards. Fay plunged for four more, and Everhardus lost four. Newman then.shot a pass down the center of the field to Petoskey, who was hauled down onl, short of the goal. ly three yards Fay lost a yard, le to Flaherty, Gives New York, Nov. 21.—(?)—Green Bay's astonishing march toward an- other National Professional Football and as Michigan faced its final down, with four yards to go, Newman dropped back to kick at an angle with Fay holding the ball. After his kick, neither team made lits way within 30 yards of the oth- er’s goal. Only once did Minnesota x s. DePaul | threaten seriously. That was in the lgepeners oi Finn| third period when the Gophers ac- Wick ie O'Brien j counted for all of their first downs, Malo lg Schuster | When Pug Lund, halfback, the game's \sauer c Gorsky |eading ground gafaer, broke into the Mahowald Sexton |OPen on a dash through tackle. Meinhover Cherne| Only Newman, coming up quickly} Frederick Lyons | from his safety position, remained Pierce Doody between Lund and the goal, but as Knauf Steffen | Lund, attempted to dodge the Wolver- R. Dablow ‘Oleani| ine, in an effort to go around him, he Leidholdt Jablonski| sipped and ended his 13-yard run North Dakota . 6 7 0 0—13) Without much effort on Newman's DePaul . 10 6 0 o—6| Parte ‘Turns Punting Duel Most of the game resolved itself \down to a punting duel between Re- geczi, Michigan fullback, and Lund, ‘in which the Wolverines easily led, javeraging 40 yards on 20 kicks, to 32 in 16 kicks by Minnesota. Twice Re- ' geczi kicked over 63 yards. Brilliant defenses were- provided by nard, Petoskey, and Wistart, left tackle, smearing Minnesota’s running game for many losses, and with New- man breaking up Minnesota's long pass attempts time after time. Manders, Wells, tackle, Robinson, end, and Captain Hass, quarterback, were equally persistent for Minnesota in breaking up Michigan running plays with statistics for the first half indicating the power of the two de- fenses. During that time, Michigan For the first time this season, the champion Packers ran into a club that could beat them as they sur- rendered to a surprisingly alert New In nine previous games, the Packers had won eight and fought the Chicago ciding factor, stopped Green Bay's down of the game in the second pe-| lost 44 yards while gaining 36 on rushes, and Minnesota lost 27 com- pared with gains of 28. For the game Michigan gained 85 yards including 18 by passes, while losing 58, and Minnesota gained 126 yards, including 10 by ® pass, with losses of 40 yards. Minnesota fumbled eight times, Mich- igan once. The summary: Michigan Minnesota Petoskey le Tenner Wistert It Gay Savage lg Bruhn Bernard ce Oen Cantrill ™% Koski Austin. rt Wells Williamson re Robinson Newman qb Hass Everhardus lh Lund Fay th Proffitt fb Manders 0 3 0 0-3 Minnesota o 0 o 0-0 Michigan Seong: Newman—field (placekick). eo James Masker, Northwest- ern; umpire, H. G. Hedges, Dart- mouth; field judge, H. B. Hackett, ‘West Point; head linesman, J. J. Lipp, Chicago. Massachusetts Star Still Leads Scorers (By The Associated Press) Lou Bush, of Massachusetts State, apparently has clinched the national individual football scoring champion- ship. Although held’ scoreless by Tufts last week, Bush’s 114 points put him far in advance of the runner-up, Ralph Graham of Kansas State, with 85, and Carroll Broderick, West Ken- tucky teachers, who holds third place with 81. ‘The long! in the Pig: Ten: Player College— Big pos g td pat fid total ders ‘ - Minn.....fb 86 7 0 cai Navy Holds Notre | Dame Stubbornly | In 12-0 Skirmish Middies Outfight Ramblers in Spectacle Before 70,000 Chilled Fans Cleveland, Nov. 21.—(?)—Notre Dame had what touchdowns there were Saturday, but Navy had the fight, and so the Ramblers could level the Middies only by a 12-0 score. Notre Dame showed signs of its great power but usually found it a stalwart Middy line that asked no quarter and gave none. There might have been better football games played Satugday but it is doubtful if anywhere as much enthusiasm was displayed as at this lake stadium. Seventy thousand per- sons braved a bitter wind to make up the midwest’s largest football au- dience this year. Twice in the second period the Raiders smashed over the Navy goal line, but after that a stubborn Mid- dy defense halted their fast running backs and played the powerful Ram- bler line on even terms when its goal line was threatened. The Middies surprised those who had expected Notre Dame to smother them under an avalanche of touch- downs, Notre Dame piled up 24 first downs and 310 yards while Navy was mak- ing 92 yards and four first downs, two of those by the penalty route. On two occasions in the fourth the Middies displayed a defense seldom shown against a Notre Dame eleven. Once the first string Rambler back- field had taken the ball to the 5-yard line but Navy stubbornness asserted iteslf and the Ramblers were stop- ped on the 1-foot line. Shortly after that Notre Dame again worked the ball to the 5-yard line with goal to go on four plays. And once again the Navy held the Ramblers for downs. second string Notre Dame players who supplied the 12-point scoring punch, Nick Lukats hurled a long pass to Emmett Murphy shortly after the second period opened and he wrig- gled through to the 10-yard line. On the next play Joe Sheeketski cut back eneougy center and crossed the goal ine. The period was only a few min- utes older when Lukats’ punt escaped Erck, Navy safety-man, and rolled to the 4-yard line. After the ensuing punt, Leonard and Sheeketski com- bined to carry the oval to the 19- yard line from where Lukats passed to Sheeketski in the last 15 seconds of the first half and went over stand- ing up. 'Middleweights to Battle For Title | Chick Devlin and Ben Jeby Will Meet in 10-Rounder Monday Night New York, Nov. 21.—(#)—Chick | Devlin of San Francisco and Ben Jeby jot New York clash in the St. Nicholas arena Monday night for New York State recognition as middleweight champion in the opening blast of a busy week of fisticuffing. Jeby and Devlin are the sole sur- vivors of an elimination tournament organized by Madison Square Garden. Devlin got no better than a draw— and some critics thought he was lucky to get that—in his opening match with Frankie Battaglia of Winnipeg, but Battaglia withdrew in a huff ot terms when a return meeting was sought. Monday night’s match is at 15 rounds, the championship route. Kid Chocolate, Havana Negro, hold- er of the junior lightweight title and recognized in this state as feather- weight champion, faces Eddie Reilly of New York in an overweight bout at the New York coliseum Monday night. Tuesday night, Baby Arizmendi of Mexico, recognized as featherweight champion by the California athletic commission, engages Varias Milling, featherweight from the Pl in @ 10-rounder at Los Angeles. Maxie Rosenbloom, recognized in some states as light heavyweight titleholder, con- New York, Nov. 21.—()—Sixteen of the naticn’s hundreds of college foot- ball teams still could boast undefeated records Monday but only eight had escaped one or more ties. Casualties during the last week were comparatively light as only three schools — Temple, DePaul and Waynesburg — were eliminated from the unbeaten list. Texas Christian leads the undefeat- with Auburn just 20 points behind. Colgate ranks third with 243 points fool aceon with St. John’s of Minne- sot honor of ha’ @ perfect defensive record. sbiid ITALIAN STARTS CAMPAIGN 21.—(?)—The Inno- It was a combination of varsity and | / ed group in scoring with 275 points, | ban: A. A. U. OPENS ONE OF MOST | QUIET SESSIONS IN HISTORY What Little Fireworks There Was Developed Sunday in Committees | New York, Nov. 21—(?)—Nearly 150 delegates from 26 district associa- |tions, from Maine to Florida, and representatives of 16 allied organiza- | tions assembled Monday for the opening of the 44th annual conven- tion of the Amateur Athletic union. Controversies were at a minimum and one of the most peaceful sessions in A, A. U. history seemed assured. The convention will close Tuesday with the election of officers. Most of what fireworks there were occurred in the closed meetings of 33 committees Sunday and out of these may come a fight or two on the convention floor. While the record committee was approving most of the 240 applica- tions for new marks placed before it, a stiff battle was waged before Ben Eastman’s sensational 46.4 perform- ance for the quarter mile was ‘ec- ommended for conventipn approval. Several committee members, notably Lawson Robertson, Olympic coach, questioned the accuracy of the tim- A suggestion that hockey be re- moved from A. A. U. control and an independent body be set up to have jurisdiction over amateurs, neo- amateurs and semi-professionals was voted down by the hockey and leg- islative committees on the ground the A. A. U. could not properly sanction any step involving other than ama- ‘teurs. The boxing committee took steps to discourage professionalism when it recommended to ban all “special” bouts and place all tournaments on an_ “open” basis. Chicago's bids for the national senior and junior outdoor track championships and the decathlon title test were approved. The record committee rejected two applications other than those ignored because superior marks were up for consideration. The 20.6 time Ralph Montague of the University of San Francisco turned in for 200 meters was rejected and so was George Ler- mond's 9:08.4 for the 3,00Q-meter steeplechase. Ss es \ Football Scores 4 ee eee ed BIG TEN Michigan 3; Minnesota 0. ‘Wisconsin 18; Chicago 7. Ohio State 3; Illinois 0. Northwestern 44; Iowa 6. Purdue 25; Indiana 7. EAST Yale 19; Harvard 0. Wooster 7; Dennison 6. Hampden-Sydney 25; St. John’s (Annapolis) 7. William & Mary 25; fmory & Henry 6. Pittsburgh 6; Carnegie 0, Rutgers 18; Springfield 0. sity 6. Bucknell 6; Georgetown 6. Fordham 8; Oregon State 6. Syracuse 0; Columbia 0. Baltimore 0; Alfred 0. Maryland 6; Washington & Lee 0. Tufts 6; Massachusetts 0. Albright 6; Lebanon Valley 0. Villa Nova 7; Temple 0. Swarthmore 6; Dickinson 0. Lenna Military college 0; Muhlen- berg 0. Delaware 6; Haverford 0. | Holy Cross 0; Manhattan 0. Army 7; West Virginia Wesleyan 0, LaFayette 25; Lehigh 6. Marines 39; Presbyterian junior college 0. Wesleyan 13; Rochester 0. MIDWEST North Dakota 13; DePaul 6. Nebraska 5; Oklahoma 0. Kansas 19; Kansas State 0. LaCrosse Teachers 12; Upper Iowa 0, Coe 13; Iowa State Teachers 7. Creighton 34; Wyoming 0. Towa State 34; Drake 13. Case 14; Oberlin 0. Michigan State 7; Detroit univers sity 0. Notre Dame 12; Navy 0. Gonzaga 12; South Dakota 0. Wabash 0; DePauw 0. Hillsdale 7; Hope 0. Ohio U 25; Ohio Wesleyan 0. Defiance 12; Detroit City college 7. Carroll college 13; Idaho southern branch 7. Luther 27; Simpson 0. Augustana 26; Lake Forest 13. SOUTH 8t. Joseph's 12; Washington col- lege 7. Centre 21; Georgetown college 0. South Carolina 19; Citadel 0. Baylor 19; Southern Met 0. Texas Christian 16; Rice 6. tinues his non-title campaign at Sac-| Geneva 19; Westminister 0. ramento Wednesday night, facing} West Liberty 131; Cedarville 0. Tony Poloni of Reno. Randolph Macon 14; Roanoke 0, Bhepatd collet 40; Gallaudet 0. Only Eight Elevens Bim (ngham-Southem 1; Hows seq] | ard 0. Undefeated, Untied] “iitane 26; sewance 0. TW Wie 1; Southwestern (Mem< Duke 7; North Carolina 0. FAR WEST * Montana Mines 98; Billings Poly 0, Willamette 6; Whittman 0. y 0, ; Occidental 14; Pomoria 13. Whittier 46; Santa Barbara State @ WINS HARRIER CLASSIC East Lansing, Mich., Nov. 21—(7)— . by a record-l achieve- of Tom Ottey, the blond Phila- State's. cross Led ment By using gas, can be stained an attractive brown. Boston college 21; Boston univer- . -