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4 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1983 a Coach Crowley: of Fordham Awaits Alabama Invasion With Fear " . scouts Report 3, MOST IMPORTANT PART OF FOOTBALL GAME PLAYED IN LINE © TING, RAST BACKS, | ovr BoaRDING House By Ahern | pays ARF ALMsT [Nodaks Will Get Plenty of Rest - PRSERVES APLENTY : HELPLESS WITHOUT Before Tilt With Bison Saturday 1T AINT MASOR HOOPLE T WANTS Intersectional Affairs Will Play HUSKY FRONT WALL | ITS YOU, SAKE HOOPLE? YEHY REMEMBER THAT POKER GAME ‘Second Fiddle’ This ‘ Week-end | : 3 Baca | Coach Bill Spaulding of Cali- i | YES, MY FRIEND-~MY NAME 1S HOOPLE ~BUT TM NOT MASOR HOOPLE ? NO ~HES MY BROTHER! TM SAKE HOOPLE —WE LOOK ALIKE EXCEPT Coach Jack West Will’ Make Effort to Get Cripples Back In Lineup UP_AT FLANNIGANS LAST YEAR, AN’ YOU GAVE ME ACHECK FOR #S6 2S—WELL, IT CAME BACK'ON A CRUTCH YEH—YOURE Forks, N. D., Oct. Caan THAT MASOR HOOPLE HAS, mane university of Hort, Dakota geidters CIRCUIT GAMES NUMEROUS) (C GNC De nl oes TESUY EVEAP TOR? fornia Gives Idea of |e Seg oe oe ee HH MAKE GOOD THAT . Qualifications ! tween the two traditional foes here PLASTER, OR TLL —_—— i next Saturday, had off and Coach Andy Kerr of Colgate! Pulled Fast One Against New York U New York, Oct. 24.—(4)—Jimmy Crowley, hoping for an undefeated season in his first year as coach at Fordham University, awaits the in- vasion of Alabama's Crimson Tide with a little apprehension. His scouts have brought reports; from the gouth of a line averaging better than 200 pounds, a powerful, tricky backfield and adequate re- placements outside of that, they say, Fordham has nothing whatever to worry about. “The breaks will decide this game,” Earl Walsh, an assistant coach and seout for the Rams, says. For the first time this season, the well-known intersectional angle will Play “second fiddle” to conference eompetition. All ten members of the Pacific Coast Conference will square off against one another; so will the complete membership of the ‘Big Six; eight of the 12 Rocky Moun- tain Conference group, six of the eT hee, thie 4 \ NN 2 : N NM Ce Nesta patios on N\ SS lg ceven Southwest Conference teams, and virtually all of the big eastern and southern arrays. The principal exceptions include such intersectional rivalaries as those | vetween Fordham and Alabama; Pitt and Notre Dame; Princeton and \Big Ten Conference Elevens Will Stay in Own Backyards This Week ‘Washington and Lee, Syracuse and Michigan State, and Georgia and New York University. GIA Head Coach Andy Kerr and Cap- tain Winnie Anderson contributed some important master-minding to} -~——— the touchdown play that beat New; R I - Your University last week. | Before the game, Kerr called the G ID RON GHO T - officials aside, diagrammeda play and and said: i “We may use this during the game. There's nothing illegal about it but the man who first carries the ball might look as if he’s being tackled. Don't blow the whistle too fast.” The teams battled scorelessly through the first period and toward the close of the second Anderson suddenly turned to the headlinesman and asked: “How much time life?” | “Tl have to take time out to find out if you want me to,” the linesman \ ! | replied. “I'll take it,” said Anderson. Time was called and it was found | only one second of the half remained. Under the rules the clock did n start working again until the ball was snapped. Charles Soleau, Colgate! quarterback, called for Kerr's special Play. As the ball plunked into Jack Fritts’ hands from center the whistle, ending the half. blew but the play had to be completed. Fritts carried the ball. Bogdanski, right end. | inugged his place, stepped back and/ took a pass from Fritts and ran for; vhe only touchdown of the game. | | The most disastrous start in recent Notre Dame history calls attention to the fact that Rockne system still is producing winning results elsewhere, | notably at Fordham, Duquesne, Yale, Holy Cross, Alabama, Georgia and Purdue. Ade Cheski Winner In Grand Forks Bout: Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 24.—(Pi— Ade Cheski, Grand Forks welter- weight, made hard work of beating Frankie Webber, Minneapolis, in the | eight-round feature bout of the sea-|—-——————_______ son’s opening boxing card here Mon- Grafton, and Billy Straight, East day night. Cheski almost tossed the Grand Forks, fought four furious; decision away before he rallied to rounds to a draw; Eddie Gillespie,’ take the last three rounds in decisive Staples, Minn., knocked out Harvey | fashion. |Rusche, Grand Forks, in the second In the six-round sem!-windup, Clay- round; Billy Morey, Grand Forks, ton Ness, Grand Forks lightweight, shaded Fishy Brandies, Fargo, in four einively puoinied Vern Butler of | rounds; and Elroy Rushaw won over inneapo!: Im other bouts, Joe Dahmsted, | curtain raiser. OUT OUR WAY Members of the Cleveland Bulldogs professional football | squad are galloping ghosts on | the gridiron. The team wears uniforms on which skeletons | are painted and, as its games are played at night, the effect is fantastic. Above is Howard Kriss, former Ohio State star, shown in the weird garb, |Frankle McIntosh in the four-round | NTS AND SPARTANS ARE _____ LEADING GROUND.GAINERS Green Bay Packers Strongest Defensively in Profes- sional Loop New York, Oct. 24—(#)—The New York Giants and Portsmouth Spara- tans are waging a close fight for | around-gaining honors in the Nation- ‘al Professional Fogtball League, with halted by one tie and a loss, {the Giants holding a fractional ad-! |vantage right now. New York gained 1,455 yards in six gamese so far against 1,451 for Ports- |mouth, Boston, with 1,405 yards in ‘he Big Ten, would be playing such |six games, stands third while Brook-,°" important conference game. Min. liyn, with 660 in three, ranks fourth in'Sesota, a team that blasted cham- ithe averages. Defensively the Green Bay Packers still hold the palm, permitting the i pposition an average of only 135 5/6 yards. The Spartans are second with 152%, and league-leading Chicago Bears third with 154 2/5. * Around the Big Ten | go eens ane eee cereale (By The Associated Press) Varsity practice was called off in five camps Monday—Minnesota, Northwestern, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Ohio State Gillman, Gailus, Smith, McAfee and Wilson are on ,Ohio’s injury list ... Iowa had an easy day and studied new plays for the Minnesota game . . . Purdue fears Wisconsin’s line ... Indiana had a light workout with Wendell Walker in uniform ... Michigan limbered up . The Illini varsity won't start | Working out until Wednesday ... A crowd over the 40,000-mark may see jthe Iowa-Minnesota game jcago ran signals ... All Northwest ++. Chi- ern players are in good shape. CENTER KICKS ’EM Art English, first string center of the Amherst varsity, will do most of the punting for his team this year. Of course, a sub center will pass to him. PLENTY OF ROOM Harkness Edwards’ Walnut Hall sonable score, vace horse farm at Lexington, Ky. takes in 5,100 acres, By Williams SMACK YOU UNTIL PUT PRESSURE ON TACKLES You SWEAT 0 cies eae a Each Forward Must Have Par- ee =~ ticular Abilities for His | Position y | _By BILL SPAULDING Coach University of California at Los Angeles Los Angeles, Oct. 24—No football Ie 2 team has gone far nor won any chame Pionships without a smooth clicking | line. After all, it is the line which makes the ball go up and down the field. Starting with the center, the heav- fer the line the better so long as it doesn’t interfere with the agility and speed of the individual player. The center must be, first, an excellent | Passer, for each back has his own pe- cullaritiés and the ball must be passed to each just so. - If a back can depend on a perfect pass from center, he doesn’t worry about the ball and can use his ef- fort thinkimg of where he is going and how he is going to get there. Noth- ing slows up the ball carrier so much as to have a center in which he has! no confidence. “ra After the center passes the ball, he! must have poise enough and sufficient balance to protect himself against the onslaught of a defensive man. On defense, a center may be called upon to pull out of the line to make tackles on the wings and also to help| in the passing game. In other words, when a six-man line is used, he might become a second fullback so that a good center plays on the line physi- cally, and in the open mentally. { ee * | Minnesota-lowa and Michigan- Chicago Conflicts Loom As Important. | Chicago, Oct. 24.—()—The Big Ten | lootball conference stays in its own back yard this week-end to continue its annual business of deciding the championship, Four games, all confeernce tilts, are booked for Saturday. Illinois, unde- feated in the title race, and Indiana, Guards must be rugged and aggres- sive, and at ledst one must be able to pull out and run interference as fast as aback. He must be able to knock down at least one of the secondary idl defense. If he is a big man, he might are idle./run straight down the field, with the The focus of attention centers on dodging Towa and Minnesota at Minneapolis, te ab a aaa aha t. Little did fans and critics think that|" , good guard always will protect Towa, once considered the doormat Of|the center, who is helpless until after he gets the pass away. At least one guard is almost always used to pro- tect the passer of a forward, and ‘sometimes both guards pull out for this purpose. ; On defense, if the center is not of the roving type, one of the guards must be shifty enough to drop back and help on passes, take his place in the secondary defense .and make tackles on the wings as well as back up the line. To be a tackle of championship cal- iber @ good amount of weight is ne- cessary as he is the one who bears the brunt of the defense, and who is called upon to stop all plays directed at his side of the line. The: fact is practically all offensive plays are di- rected just inside or off tackle, put- ting great pressure on this position. A tackle should be.a veritable tiger. On offense he must handle his op- ponent, who usually is a guard, if the offense is to get any place—so the better the tackle, the better the of- fense. Some coaches run their tackles in interference, so speed is a great as- set, * * * iptonship hopes by tieing two teams, |will be up against a high-powered of- fense when it tackles the Hawkeyes. iowa has scored 71 points against three opponénts to far and is leading ithe conference race with two victories jand no defeats. | The next most important game probably is the Michigan-Chicago conflict at Stagg Field, at Chicago. Michigan sued is headed for enone title, but besides Chicago must dispcse of nois, Iowa, and Minnesota and Northwestern. Purdue and Wisconsin hook up in a game at Madison that should indicate Purdue's future this season. North- western will travel to Columbus to en- yage Ohio State which promises to be vough after its 13-to-0 spanking at Ann Arbor. The Wildcats, on the other hand, proved they had an of- ense last week against Indiana. is Chicago Apprehensive ' With Big Ten championship hopes, born after two non-conference vic- tories, completely out of the picture, football ‘at the University of Chicago ‘as back to normalacy this week. What visions of a title the Maroons had were blurred-by Purdue's 14-to-0 win, ! Coach Clark Shaughnessy. was not particularly upset over the Maroons’ defeat but he is a bit apprehensive of the game Saturday with Michigan. | He isn’t looking for a victory over the | Wolverines, but he does hope the Ma- roons will hold the Wolves to a rea- It_will be the 21st meeting of the ;_ With the exception of the Iowa- ITs VERY ,VERY INTERESTING AND . EDUCATIONAL. LOONT SEE Wr/ NONE OF YOu COWPONCHERS ENER Seem TO GET INTERESTED IN DIGGING IN THESE INDIAN WHT? Roo>r INL ASH CANS? WHY , Wes, YOU WOULONT THINK OF ROCTIN' IN A OTH ASH CAN, WOLLD Yor 2 THETS WHOT THEM \S OLD INDIAN, ASH CANS, e@ JUNK HEAPS. They MAY BE A THOUSAN YEARS OLD, WES, BUT THey'RE AGH CANS, JUST TH! SAME! THETS WHERE TH INDIANS “THROWED. ALL THER OF JonK, An Yow LUKE TO ROOT InN ‘EM! Minnesota fracas at Minneapolis, the ‘next most important game Saturday jis the Northwestern-Ohio State clash at Columbus. If the Buckeyes ex- vect an easy foe in the Wildcats they are sadly mistaken. Dick Hanley’s Cats have a defense that Ohio will find hard to penetrate. Wildcats Are Threat 1 Northwestern will scarcely be able 'o present an offense as brilliant and 1 D. Grid Schedule: 8 Jamestown at Mandan. Moorhead, Minn., at Fargo. Grafton at Devils Lake. Wahpeton at Oakes. varied as Michigan did to Ohio State | Saturday, but the Wildcats will be a| threat. The rivalry between the two teams is not an old one, but one of the most strongly contended. Ohio State holds a seven to four edge in the 1¥ meet- ings since 1913. thinks the Cate are due for Belfield at Sentinel Butte. Crosby at Stanley. st enn GETS ANOTHER CRACK AT THE CHAMP (HE'S LICKED REE) DEC.8, WHEN HE MEETS BARNEY ROSS, LIGHTIE KING, IN NEW YORK annette BARNEY BEAT HIM LAST YEAR WAS ON ‘THE WAY UP, AND BILLY, ONE OF THE MOST? SAVAGE MEN IN THE RING, IS HANKERING FOR REVENGE i Monday it is Untied will do little and of South Dakota State, the Si a chalk talk and Coach C. A. We said his main effort would be to the cripples back in the lineup. West blamed injuries stu E § § Z atte 3 be evista tS the blocking back job, Biving the right wingback ‘assignment to strengthen that side of the line. SCHOLLANDER TO PLAY IN TILT WITH NODAKS North ota Agricult college > |son. eave gtrea only @ light drill Mon- day as they began for their annual setto against the Uni- versity of North Dakota Sioux at Grand Forks Saturday. A few new plays and signal drill constituted the workout. The Bison finished their scoreless tie against the Superior State Teach- ers college at Superior Friday with- out any serious injuries. Casey Finnegan was highly pleased with the work of Neville Reiners at fullback and Sam Dobervich at tackle jin the Superior game, and proWably jboth will be in the starting lineup $} WHEN HE CHICAGO KiD’ Veteran Petrolle May Get Crack at Barney If He Can Make 140 Pounds New York, Oct, 24—(?)—Billy Petrolle, the old fellow from Far- go, N. D., can have a shot af the lightweight. champion, Barney ‘Ross, if he can pare his poundage down to 140 pounds, It won't be a title affair, be- cause Old Will, veteran of a dec- ade of fighting the best in several divisions, can no longer approach the 135-pound lightweight limit. He says he can’t make 140 and prefers 142 pounds, but Ross, a natural lightweight, insists on the lighter poundage. ate against the Sioux. ‘Wendell Schollander, passing back, {played a quarter of the Superior |game after having been out since the opening game, and probably will be ready by Saturday.’ Fights Last Night | = —___________¢ (By The Associated Press) Cleveland — Dick Daniels, 188, Minneapolis, outpointed Eddie Simms, 18114, Cleveland, (10); Jackie Davis, 144%, Cleveland, outpointed Sammy Mandell, 14714, Rockford, Tl, (10); Jimmy Vaughn, 13514, Cleveland, knocked out Battling Gizzy, 136, Pitts- burgh, (7); Paul Pirrone, 162, Clevelartd, knocked out Carl Montebano, 175, Pittsburgh, (8). ‘Wheeling, W. Va.—Mose Butch, 121, Pittsburgh, stopped Pee Wee Weghorn, -120, Cincinnati, ‘The bout is sought for the annual winter show of the Free Milk Fund for Babies, Inc., and probably will be staged at the New York Coliseum. The: former ar- rangement, whereby the fund joined with Madison Square Gare den in the promotion of the bout, has been discontinued. Petrolle whipped Sammy Fuller, Boston welterweight, here Satur- day night in a tune-up match. His weight, as he twice floored Fuller, ‘was 1421% pounds. TRADE TALK aie First trade talk since close of the 1933 byseball season involves Bill’ Cissell, Cleveland ' short- stop and second baseman, left, and Lloyd wn, Red Sox south- paw pitch The Indians, with- out a single lefty, are seeking Brown, and are willing to part with Cissell to get him, Punts and Passes portrait is of GLENN Be WARNER, HEAD COACH OF FOOTBALL at TEMPLE ‘ UNIVERSITY YELLOWSTONE PARK has an area of 2,142,120 ACRES. POLAND won the Gor don Bennett international bal- Mike Mitchell, 176, Bell 5 and Mike Bazzons, 170, Pitt: burgh, drew (6); Steve O'Malley, 141, Bellaire, O., and Bob Brink- man, 141, Wheeling, W. Va., drew, 6). Louisville, Ky. — Cecil Payne, 136, Louisville, knovked out Mid- get O'Dowd, 134, Columbus, O., @. ; El Paso—Lew Massey, 137, Phil- adelpia, outpointed Tom Herrera, El Paso, (10). Chicago—Davey Day, 140, Chi- cago, outpointed George Engle, 141, South Bend, Ind., (6); Adolph Wiater, 192, Green Bay, Wis., outpointed Frank Kettér, 190, Chicago, (5). Salt Lake City—Jack Fox, 187, Terre Haute, Ind, outpoin' Cecil Myott, 197, San Francisco, ALL-AMERICA ~ PROSPECTS i | H 1 Perhaps the work of Robert E. Lee, dr., will not have been in vain. ... The young halfback of Mercer Uni- versity, Macon, Ga., was in a tough spot this year... Here was the name- sake and descendant of that great southern general playing football for @ small school with little chance of gaining the headlines and All-Amer- ican mention .. . until Mercer sched- led Army and Navy ... The little . { 52 1. Yuy Out= + of pointed Willie Klein, 158%, New York, (10). Camden, N..J.—Gino Garibaldi, Italy, drew with Fred Grubmier, Towa (10). Montreal—Jim. 230, ‘Veronagn, Mo., drew with Don + 215, North Java, N. Y., The eye is: an organ you can’t afford to neglect. Dr. H. J. Wagner Optometrist Oftices the G. P, Hotelatnce tore Fg Ba eS: ey Bi wi5 75 neds We use Palr hhaipeuts, 25c, 130,