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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1932 JATTLE OF CENTERS MPTURES INTEREST THROUGHOUT FRACAS ‘ig Ted Meinhover of Bismarck Is Individual Star of Contest CORE WAS TIED SIX TIMES | en Jacobson, Another Capital | City Youth, Is Stellar Performer | Bozeman, Mont., Dec. 23 —(.?}—The ioux basketeers of the University of | orth Dakota eked out a one-point etory over the Montana State col- ge Bobcats in the first of a two- dq night. VA ON ACCOUNT OF WHILE YoU WERE OUT, A MRS,HENNEBERRY PHONED, AN’ WANTED To KNOW IF You'D PLAY TH’ ‘PART OF SANTA CLAUS AT A SUNDAY SCHOOL CHRISTMAS PARTY ¢ ~~HOW DO You RATE TH’ HONOR “IS IT BIG BAY WINDOW 7 There h the final ith four personal fouls. xe batile was even wi sult in doubt until the en From the beginni: center and Meinhover, fought througia ng duel. With huge leaps t to control the tip-off, er Was tly the bet- Yr. Mcirhover is feet, seven: ches Crain fect, three | times during the battle was the \\ HAW~THAT MAKES THREE | ENGAGEMENTS FOR ME TO ENACT THE ROLE OF SOLLY OLD ST NICK! AND THAT MEANS THREE PRESENTS FOR ME ~~ AND “POSSIBLY MEALS, YouR \\ ZS Santa ‘aus’ OFFICIAL .| UNDERSTUDY Nodaks Rally Late to Nose Out M FOR CENTERS: BISON CAGERS DEFEATED BY OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | \ A WE NEED You! HERE FOR CHRISTMAS EVE “I BOUGHT A SWELL HOLLY | WREATH TO HANG IN | TH WINDOW4AN’T || WANT YoUTo STAND | | IN BACK OF IT WITH | | Your ILLUMINATED NOSE STICKING THRU t | | 12-23 ore tied. During the last 13 min- es of play ¢ tally was evened ur times. At a! | : s = eee ee Garden Faces Strong Competition (GOLF AND WRESTLING MADE GREAT STRIDES LAST YEAR’ ts abate. The Sioux for the most part util-} 2d a short sing attack, close in e center und u entral point. With ¢ Meinhover consistently numerous goals through the} He was leading scorer of the ening with 14 points, The Bobcats worked a fast and] 0 wow : ‘ng-passing game but were inaccu-| New York, Dec. 23.—(#)}—The mon- te in their shooting. The game|°P0ly Madison Square Garden has as the first major collegiate contest enjoyed on prime heavyweight at- the season for either team. tractions since the days of Tex Rick- | y 0 aha epee ae cea aed was threatened from a new and d of the count until the last five formidable quarter Friday. inutes of play when they tied the| Boldly tossing his expensive chapeau dre at 25-25 and from then on it/into the promotorial ring, William a eee ised tee unos the lead! tarrison Dempsey announced Thurs- Although Meinhover and Ben J: bson were the big guns for the N iks, it was the advent of Pinkey ullen into the game in the second| df that turned the tide of battle.; ne red-headed forward did not Jack Dempsey Announces Plans For Schmeling-Baer Match Next June and Max Baer for a 15-round bout ome time in June. The site was not specified but Dempsey said it would be either New York or Chicago. Other cities will figure in the situation only if some art because of an attack of the flu,| unexpected hitch develops in Demp- it he was sent in to start the sec~| Sons uresent plans wd half and from then on the vis- |" QeyPrsent PADS. ms outmaneuvered the Bobcats yuu" te 4 th @ smooth passing game built | ost b ound the giant Meinhover. fies eee on Buvetti, brilliant guard, and Har- ‘hey W piste; el bae Seeaure, ‘ : ; the Garden had the best locations or n, forward, were outstanding for! ¢),, best fighter: bot tied beats, the former chalking up ‘He best fighters, or both, tied up e Bob : & UP with air-tight contracts. he points to tie for scoring honors | "No.2, Stn ‘Dempwcy. Jack I th Whitcanak, forward. Dablow ), ey: ae v ae Ss fighters—and they are good ones id Smith played well, at their gua + Saeed akan tt thelr guard safely signed and through his as- sociation with Tim Mara, he will have By Pee ee ae moon lus choice either of the Polo Grounds , Y night. or the Yankee Stadium should he de- have n in the past bu y he had signed Max Schmeling | sought to} s on them before | ie summary: |cide to stage the fight here. Mara Bene 38), ae a TP ‘has the two big ball parks under lease nth, rf a 1 1 for boxing and is duly licensed in this igi 1 0 2{State as a promoter. ec hiow, 0 1 11, Chicago, it was understood, is genu- Sagal 6 2 14/inely eager to stage the fight as a Daklow, 3 0 6 World's fair attraction and probably aith, If . 3 0 Will have some persuasive arguments * ee AN |for Dempsey’s ear, 17 4 38 The Garden, in the meantime, finds ee in a position where it has the veavyweight champion, Jack Sharkey, epee $ $ 9 safely under contract, but no out- Sia if. 0 0. 0 Standing rival for him to meet. Under ain . oe the terms of the contract, the Gar- joo a 4 0 A Cen is obligated to find some. one for Gatien, Paares) 1 4 4 Sharkey to fight by June 20. With wetti » is 3 3 9 Schmeling and Baer both unavailable, a ua the Garden will be forced to look a 6 37 elsewhere, possibly in the general di- Dakota, 11; rection of Primo Carnera. antana State, 17. cobson 3; Booth 3; R. Dablow sinhover 3; G. Dablow 3; Whit-| Personal foul nak 4; Hardin, Martin, Crain 4; eeden 2; Buzetti 2. Referee—Wood, Washington; ‘e, Ward, Montana State. um- .ssumption Abbey | Trims Hebron 37-10 debron, N. D., Dec. 23.—Assumption bey of Richardton defeated Hebron sh school's Brickmakers here 37-10. INCREASE AIR BUDGET Budapest.—Hungary has increased its air budget for the fiscal year of | 1932-33. About $1,314,000 has been Set aside for replacement of obsolete id worn out planes on the domestic air services. The entire amount of the budget must be spent within the country. ie to the inexperience of the al team the Abbey team jumped off @ commanding lead and was never lted until the final whistle. The ickmakers have three freshmen, one »homore, two juniors, and one sen- on the team this year, which will Good. NIGHT! OF ALL TH" LAZY STUNTS! Too LAZY To, TAuns ‘er some of the conference teams qu i A RIDE, ¢nty of competition before the year NW) HE RIGS over. APM, UP A Grove Xolling of Richardton was the out- VWYNAAON A Stick. nding player in the game, making field goals and a free throw besides ing in on every play. ~ The summary: “Richardton (37) Be PF TP ailing. rf 1-2 0 21 o 4 1-1. 0 9 0 0 2 0) 0 1-1 0 x e682 nas § 2 2 01 4 17 3-4 1 37 FG FI PF TP 0 00 90 21-2 0 5 0 0-1 1 ) 1 0-1 0 2 11-11 3 0 oo 9 o o1 9 4°25 3 10 “Fights Last Night Ses Two Sports Followed Football and Baseball in Withstand- ing Depression New York, Dec. 23.—(#)—Although intercollegiate football and profes- sional baseball generally are credited by the country’s sports experts with most successfully combating the box- office hardships of 1932, a striking feature of the Associated Press poll Friday was the testimony to strides made by two sports which have noth- ing in common—golf and professiona: wrestling. “Golf seems to have survived the economic slump better than any othe: sport in the southwest,” observes one jeritic, whose view is echoed in the East, Middle West and Far West by those who see the royal and ancient game now brought down to the level of the “ordinary pocketbook.” The depression is considered defi- nitely to have brought about a boom in public links golf, where the erst- while member of an exclusive county club, no longer able to pay high mem- bership fees and with time on his hands, now is finding enjoyment rub- bing elbows or trading shots with the catch-as-catch-can player. Independ- that locality, “has made a noticeable progress” while other sports have de- |clined or had difficulty in maintain- ing the standards of other years, Sports editors of the East and Mid- dle West, while some contend it is ¢ “racket,” nevertheless assert wrest ling has survived conditions and con: tinued to profit, while boxing has slipped backward. They base this on the claim that “wrestlers have been citing show for reasonale prices,” that the grapplers are content to work of- ten and on a percentage basis, also that they are better organized for business. In the East, wrestling is rankea next to football as the sport which has best reacted to conditions of the last year. Baseball tops the list only in the |Middle West college football leads in |the Far West and Soutn as well as |East. Golf runs second to football in more of @ year-around sport. The rating of the sports best sur-| the hope of punciing the ball across. | OUT OUR WAY OMIT Vans AINT LAZINESS TU Al IM LAZY ENOUGH NOT To WANT TO WALK , BUT A Got WHOS ence, Kansas, reports that golf, in Ga {i with the idea of strengthening smart enough to give the fans an ex- | », |the South and Far West where it is| Griffith will be on hand, if possible, INSURANCE... IT KEEPS ME OUT OF TH BUM AN PANHANOLER CLASS, IF ON IN My OWN MIND T AINT ASTIN FER NOTHIN’, AM 1? NO-IM 31S GOIN’ ALONG “TENOIN' “To MY OWN RAISE A HAND / PAY ATTENTION TD A Gove ON A SCH , WHY, 1 WONT TORN 'EM DOWN IF A FOX GiTS INA “TRAP, ITS TH Fox's FAUT, NOT TH’ TRAPPERS, uy Updlt cast ee viving or re-acting to the depression, based on votes in the Associated Press poll: College football. 65; baseball, 48; golf, 35; professional westling, 34: tennis and professional hockey, 14 each; boxing, 12; basketball and) horse-racing, 11 each; professiona!| football, 10. Jones Has Respect sou. resenes oo For Pitt Defense: Trojan Coach Points Out Panth-| ers Made Several Goal- Line Stands i Los Angeles, Dec. 23—(?)—Coach } Howard Jones is inchined to believe the | defense of the Pittsburgh football! team, which his Southern Californians | meet at Pasadena Jan. 2, probably is just as strong as that of the Trojans. At least he ordered another extend- | ed workout Friday on offensive drill | after concentrating on this part of his preparations for the game for two ys. i Although the Panthers are consider- | ably lighter on the forward wall than | the Trojans, three powerful teams— ; Army, Notre Dame and Nebraska— | worked the ball past the 10-yard line; and were held for downs. sa Anyway, Coach Jones has been us- ing Homer Griffith at fullback in the | secret workouts a good share of the Troy's touchdown punch. It doesn’t | mean that Griffith will start at full- ack. In fact, Homer is almost certain to begin the football festivities at quar- ter, going to full later when Irving ‘Warburton is sent into the fray. When | Griffith is shifted over in favor of | Warburton, Gordon Clark, the starting | fullback, probably will be moved to left half, his old post, because of his | blocking ability and experience. This switching cf backfield assign- ments means only one thing—the | strengthening of the .Trojan power) plays, and it is quite certain that when the Pitt goal line looms up, in By Williams || 1TS PRIDE. Montana State in 38-37 Thriller SOUTHERN ILLINOIS TEACHERS SEVENPONTRALLY [Ralph Greenleaf Makes Clean Sweep (IN THREE MINUTES | BREAKS 27-ALL TIE Coach Saalwaechter Uses North Dakota State Reserves Plentifully WAS BATTLE THROUGHOUT Roving Dakotans Have Four i More Games Before Turn- ing Homeward Carbondale, Ill., Dec. 23.—(P)—A scoring burst which produced seven Points during the final three minutes of play Thursday night gave Southern Trims Erwin Rudolph, Who Beat Champ in Last Game of 1930 Tourney New York, Dec. 23.—(P)—Undefeat- ed in 20 consecutive championship games over a span of two years, Ralph Greenleaf of New York Friday stood the unchallenged king of the nation’s pocket billiard players. Greenleaf brushed aside Erwin Ru- |dolph of Cleveland, 125 to 22, Thurs- |day night to finish the 1932 champion- ship tournament with nine successive victories and retain the title he won Hast year with a clean sweep of 11 | games. | Rudolph, who defeated Greenleaf | in the deciding game of the 1930 championship, never had a chance ‘hursday night. The champion pull- ‘ed into an early lead and finally end- ed the match with successive runs of 21, 34 and 44 in the ninth, 10th and |11th innings. one of his nine rivals in the current Not only did Greenleaf defeat every |” ,outspeeding the invaders from the | intermission. | |13; Southern Teachers 16. Illinois Teachers a 34 to 27 victory | tournament but he did so without be- over North Dakota State college's rov- | ing seriously threatened at any time. ing basketball team. | The closest any rival got to the cham- The game was a battle all the way | pion was the 125-78 score to which and during the second half the score | Pasquale Natalie of Chicago held him was tied five times. The Teachers, | Wednesday. Rudolph’s defeat dropped the Clevelander into a tie for second place with young Jimmy Caras of Wilming- ton, Del., and Andrew Ponzi of Phil- adelphia. This trio was to play off At the start of the second period | for that position Friday. North Dakota state rallied and in less) Greenleaf’s victory carried with it a than three minutes took a 19 to 16|diamond and ruby medal, a purse of lead. The teachers pulled up even /| $5,000 and 15 per cent of the gate re- again and the lead alternated until! ceipts, estimated at $1,000. with two minutes and 20 seconds : Illness Fails to left, the score was tied at 27-all. | Halt Hockey Star northwest, had many shots during the first half, but missed frequently and held only a three-point lead at the During the finishing drive field goals by Holder and Emery and a free goal by Davidson gave the teachers their seven-point margin. The con-| test was North Dakota State's second of a six-game tour. St. Louis univer- aity was beaten in the opener 28 to 17.| Chuck Gardiner of Blackhawks xX score: ‘ . North Dak. State (27) FG. FT TP| Goes to Hospital After Fine | v. ares : x 4 iH 3| Performance Olson, f£ 3 1 7 Weir, c . 4 1 9! New York, Dec. 23.—(P}—Hockey | Marquardt. c . 2 0 4/ players are noted as being a hardy, | T. Nicholson, g . 0 0 0 | courageous group of athletes and even ©, Nicholso 1 0 2| among these warriors of flying sticks | McKay, g¢ 0 9 0/ and violent collisions the goal tenders | Stinson, ¢ 0 9 9 \sre reckoned the bravest. 1 be = —,\ Chuck Gardiner of the Chicago Totals ............ +2 3 27 Blackhawks, the curly-haired, smiling x young Scot who has been voted the FG FT TP wWatiorial Hockey League's best goalig < 5 0 10\for the last two seasons, stands out| Davi oe 6 10 even among this group for the reck- | Bricker, c 2 1 5/less way in which he plunges out in! Ree 0 2 2) front of rival forwards to spoil their Eme! By A best shots. And a little thing like "Totals 2 10 4 ;@ bad case of tonsilitis can’t stop him. Chuck played a great game Thurs- |Gay night as his team defeated the = |Montreal Maroons, 4 to 1. He took Personal fouls: Denenny 2, Weir 3,! severe pounding in his efforts to Arthur 2, Olson 2, McKay 3, Stinson, | preak up the Maroon plays, had to Holder 2, Bricker 3, Emery. | stop once for repairs after an injury. Referee: Millard (Illinois Wesley-|qhen when it was all over he went an); umpire: Lutz (Centralia). ito the hospital to recover from a se- |vere attack of tonsilitis which made Irish Seek First zc. eve" before sme Roy Worters of the New York . |Americans, his leading rival for net- In er ur ‘ue minding honors, did a great job to de give the humble Amerks a 1 to 0 tri- umph over the Toronto Maple Leafs. Cecil “Tiny” Thompson, of. Boston, also scored a shutout but had a fair- Score at half: North Dakota Sta Notre Dame Has Not Been Able iHaverlock (c) ... STATUS IS Max, Underwood 4 While Comets Defeat Turtle Lake 25 to 4 Garrison, N. D., Dec. 23—In the race for basketball supremacy in the McLean county conference, the Max Cossacks remained in a first place tie with Coleharbor by overwhelming Washburn 44 to 4 and the Underwood Comets secured a good on sec- ae ae by defeating Turtle Lake Max's victory saw the defending champions outplay their opponent in every department of the game to score 22 baskets, with Postovit, vet- eran all-county guard, connecting 12 times from the field, while allowing only four field goals and two free throws. Underwood won its fourth game in five starts by obtaining the decision in a game that featured a ragged brand of court play. The summaries: Max (44) Boettcher (f) Samson (f) Henke (f) . Freotag (f) 8 4 Postovit (g) . R. Freitag (g) . Barnick (g) ... cOoBNOMON BI Totals .... Washburn (4) Kline (f) .. Starbuck (f. Fischer (f) Robinson (c Miettider (g) Kronick (g) . Dalbotten (g) . Norling (g) .. Totals ...... Underwood (25) Temanson (f) . Sayler (f) ... Tauer (g) . Snyder (f) Johnson (g) . loco ooSs | oonowunds wl ccooono-g ccroocod | cooronseyo| oscce0ce Totals .. Turtle Lake Schlichenmeyer (f) Lynne (f) .... Johnsonbough (c) Houstman (g) Brokofsky (g) .. Orman (g) ... wlocpooutt~ Totals . Grand Forks Quint Grand Forks, N. D., Dec. 23.—(P)— Grand Forks high school scored its. third straight victory in a campaign of revenge here Thursday night, drub- bing Grafton 31 to 9. Swamp Opponents; Cossacks Trim Washburn 44 to | plocourntalnouncoe’ wl coconneeda| onnmocom Beats Grafton 31-9) The Walsh} Seven Starts | | to Beat Boilermakers in | }y easy time of it as the Bruins over-|County club nosed out Grand Forks| |whelmed the Detroit Red ‘Wings, 7|for the régional title last spring. | to 0, to gain a tie with the New York| For just four minutes, the Bohn- | Rangers for the American division |hoffmen showed the kind of basket- ‘BABE’ DIDRIKSON’S EXACT IN DOUBT AGAIN | i Reinstated By A. A. U. Shortly After She Announced She Would Turn Pro New Orleans, La., Dec. 23.—(7)—It is up to Mildred “Babe” Didrikson herself whether she turns professional or keeps her present ranking as the outstanding woman amateur athlete —and nobody but herself knew her Plans Friday. The Texas wonder was cleared of charges of professionalism and rein- stated to amateur standing through the registration committee of the Southern Amateur Athletic Union Thursday, just after she had an- nounced plans to turn professional. Lawrence Di Benedetto, chairman of the A. A, U. committee, said the organization had received Miss Did« rikson’s resignation, but-her athletia future “is up to her” now. Friday Miss Didrikson was some- where en route to Chicago with her sister, Mrs. Esther Elam, and the trip lent credence to the belief she meant just what she said when she announc- ed, before the A. A. U. committee acted finally, that she was tired of | the investigation of her status and | bad accepted professional contracts, The charges of professionalism were based on an accusation that Miss Did- rikson had endorsed an automobile for advertising purposes. She denied the authorization and the A. A. U. committee, after examining evidence in the case, decided that was the situ- ation—that the advertisement was jused without her permission. | Immediately, the A. A. U, decided to restore Miss Didrikson’s amateur standing, but meanwhile she had re- signed her position with a Texas in. surance agency, announced plans ta jturn ‘professional, and started for Chicago. “I've never played a wait- ing game,” she said, “the A. A. U- |has simply been too slow.” | ‘Sectional Teams | In First Practices | East and West Grid Stars Bes gin Preparation For Jan. 2 Contest San Francisco, Dec. 23.—()—Foot< ball stars who will compete in the eighth annual East-West Shriners’ |charity contest heré Jan. 2 practiced | as units for the first time Friday. | The eastern squad, under the tute lage of Coaches Andy Kerr of Colgate and Dick Hanley of Northwestern, works out at Stanford university. The westerners train at Kezar stadium ee: which will be the scene of bat- le. Kerr and Hanley arrived with a squad of 21 players Thursday. Joa Kurth, Notre Dame's all-American tackle and 22nd member of the squad, already was on hand to greet his team-mates. He remained in Califor- nia after the Notre-Southern Califor- nia game in Los Angeles. Harry Newman, Michigan quarter back; Robert Smith, Colgate guard; Paul Moss, Purdue end. and Ray Horstmann, Purdue fullback, were Chicago, Dec. 23—(4#)—Notre Dame | lead. will try to stretch its basketball win- ning string to 20 games Friday night against Purdue, which it never has been able to defeat on the hardwood, although the Irish have made seven ettempts. The current Notre Dame streak was ‘started immediately’ after the Boiler- makers won their annual clash at South Bend last season. Friday night's battle will be staged at La- fayette and either Purdue's perfect record against the Irish or Notre Dame's string will be ruined. Notre Dame may be without. Cap- tain John Baldwin and Al McGuff, |guards, who have been on the sick list. Notre Dame's season record includes victories over Albion, Illinois Wesle- yan and Northwestern, the latter by @ 28 to 25 count, while Purdue has trounced Miami and St. Louis Univer- jsity. One other game will finish the Big Ten schedule for the week, Nebraska meeting Minnesota at Minneapolis. Wisconsin scored its first victory of the season Thursday night, easily de- feating Maryland, 22 to 13. on the lat- French Davis Cup Committee President Holds That Most of Criticism Was Unjustified New York, Dec. 23. — (P) — The French conduct of te ere Cup an nis challenge roun een. and the U. 8, last sufimmer is defended by Pierre Gillou, president of the French cup committee, in his annual report to the French Tennis Federa- tion, published Friday in American Lawn Tennis. Gillou recognizes there was consid- erable criticism of the way the match- es were conducted, especially the de- ciding encounter between Jean Boro- tra and Wilmer Allison, where the American was the victim, but holds Conduct Defended |*— ter’s floor. The Badgers led from the jstart, and worked up a 14 to 2 margin lat halftime. the criticism generally was unjusti- fied. French umpiring and lining, he said, was no worse nor better than in other places. He dismissed the sug- gestion that neutral officials be named. “We will thus continue,” he said, “as in the past, to reserve our right.to name the umpires, without necessarily excluding neutrals.” Gillou admitted that the dampening of the courts on the last day which tended to slow up the fast game of Ellsworth Vines, Jr., was excessive and mot done properly but pointed out that there was no objection made at the time by the players and that the slow court also bothered Borotra, who likes a fast surface and is at his best on wood, | Jamestown Cagers | Defeat Fargo 20-16 Jamestown, N. D., Dec. 23.—()— Jamestown high school’s quint handed Fargo high its first defeat in 31 games ;here Thursday night, 20 to 16. Fargo ‘has been state champion the last two iyears. Jamestown scored first and held a 5-1 lead at the end of the first quar- ter. Fargo rallied in the second pe- lod, and brought the score to 10-8 at ithe half, with the Jimmies leading. The score was tied at 12 at the end of the third period, but Jamestown counted four times from the field in the last period to two baskets by Fargo. Another Headliner Arranged for Fargo Fargo, N. D., Dec. 23) Hi-Liners Trounced By Aberdeen Cagers Aberdeen, 8. D, Dec. 23.—(?}—Val- Frankie Knauer, Milwaukee welterweight, will meet Howard Shiek of Fargo in a six- round bout which will share the dou- ble windup spot with Dick Daniels, Minneapolis heavyweight, and Tommy Pruett, Brookings negro student at en Dakota State college here jan. 2, Other bouts announced include ‘Aberdeen's defensive play was a|¥teddle Bloxide, Minneapolis n feature of the game, Valley City being | Welsht, against Billy Lier Gray, center and Duvall guard were | SERINE! themes , were land Ollie Bartlett, Genk dy orga? pone ee oe eran bantamweight, again Bad ‘Well- the offensive star, with 12 points, |!"6 of Moorhead, all over the four- Tribune Want Ads |added'to' tring the program to” 30 high Thursday night 32 to 10 in a contest a ' ball they are capable of, piling up an 11 to 2 lead against a bewildered Grafton quintet. After this, the game degenerated into a rough and tumble affair which resulted in 22 personai Busketball Scores | (By The ) Associated Nebraska 19; Carleton 23. ‘Wisconsin 22; Maryland 13. North Dakota State 27; Southern Ulinois Teachers 34. North Dakota University 38; Mon- tana State 37. Hamline 26; Superior Teachers 24. Aberdeen, 8. D., 32; Valley City, N. D., 10. Grand Fotks 31; Grafton 9. Jamestown 20; Fargo 16. among those arriving with the east- erners. Seven western squad members alsa rolled in Thursday. They were led by Dana X. Bible, Nebraska coach, who will act with Orin Hollingberg of Washington State in whipping the team into shape. They were Buck Koy and Harry Stafford, halfback from Texas university; Frank Christ- ensen, fullback and Jack Johnson, tackle from Utah university; Steve Hokuf, end and Lawrence Ely, center University of Nebraska, and George Atkeson, University of Kansas, guard, John Mead and his five sons ope. za the “Great Western” railway in les. The average violin contains about 70 parts. | SIDEGLANCES - - - By George Clark ce me, 7 1 te, h old ‘Sey pasogta are soths oad Sie 1 I just couldn't tell them I don’t this year.” t {