The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 16, 1933, Page 10

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Eke Out 13-12 'HURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1983 Verdict Over Dixie University | Nodaks STAND OFF CLOSING PASSING ATTACK IN | INTERSECTIONAL GO) Big Ted Meinhover of Bismarck | Outstanding Lineman in Contest CANDIDATES FOR ALL-AM i ! i | ERICA FORGING WAY TO FRONT _By Ahern BERNARD, CRAWFORD Many Contests Saturday Will Have _ BBUCKLER AND SAUER Bearing on Conference Standings } IRON MIKE MIKULAK, OREGON laig Ten, Rocky Mountain, OUTSTANDING STARS’ POWERHOUSE, IS BIG THREAT {Francis ‘Pug’ _ : | HE Fullback Is Built Like Plow-| Southeastern and South- HERE TO FIGHT Horse But Speedy Like’ west Leaders Clash Mythicals : : Thoroughbred OUR BOARDING HOUE WHATRE YOU LOOKING FOR——~ YOUR TEETH “2—YOULL EITHER FIND THEM \N WHATS LEFT OF THE LEG OF LAMB, OR MAYBE THEY DROPPED INSIDE YOUR YEST/ THE WAY YOU AND SAKE WOLFED THAT DINNER, ITS A WONDER EITHER OF YOU COULD GET AWAY FROM 4), THE TABLE UNDER YOUR 1“? OWN POWER I-HM-M- <2) MAYBE THATS WHY 4 HMF~SUST EXERCSING, |Z MADAM—~YES, SUST EXERCISING ? + EGAD! 1 wines, NOT TELL HER ABOUT j LOSING MY ROLL OF J MONEY -~SHE KNOWS |) NOTHING ABOUT MY t PIERCE, CHARBONNEAU GOOD New York, Nov. 16—(4)—Although | the contenders are fewer in numbers | the race for sectional and conference ; football championship goes on with ed vigor this week. In Strong North Dakota Line Forc- ! —_—_— Los Angeles, Nov. 16.—A one-man ed Southerners to Play Open Game Dallas, Tex., Noy. 16.—(4’)—North Dakota university stood off a last-| minute passing attack to defeat the Dixie University Rebels 13 to 12 in an intersectionai football game Wednes- day night. | The Rebels scored in the first period | with an intercepted Nodak pass andj a 17-yard run by Jones around left | end. | The Nodaks came from behind in the second quarter, rolling up two touchdowns. Ralph Pierce, left half- back, place-kicked one of the extra points. A 22-yard pass accounted for the Nodak's first score, then Pierce cut | Joose on an end run which placed the | yall on Dixie's two-yard line. Jack Charbonneau, Nodak fullback, on the second play plunged for the touch- down. { Shortly after the start of the sec- ond half, after an exchange of punts, bird recovered Dablow's fumble on the North Dakota 10-yard line and | Minnehan passed to Cook across the | z0al ne. Bird failed in the try for point that would have tied the score The North Dakota team had a staunch line. Dixie backs were forced | to resort to sweeping end runs, or long! passes, { Ted Meinhover. giant right tackle for the Nodaks, broke through three cimes to throw Bird and Haswell for losses. North Dakota's second quarter as- sault netted six first downs to the) Rebels’ none and helped run their to- | tal to nine, as against their oppon- | ents’ eight. One of the Nodaks’ four; ‘asses was good for a touchdown and | another was intercepted. Dixie wni- versity tried 13 passes of which only three were completed. | ‘The lineups: | North Dakota | Reichert Olson Schwartz Bentz Gehrke Meinhover ‘fait Falgren Pierce mb Neunschwander thb Jones } Charbonneau fb Bird Officials — Utay, (Texas A. & M.)| referee; Stewart (Southern Metho- | dist University) umpire; Price (Aus- tin College) head linesman; Lipscomb (Center) field judge. Scoring—North Dakotan: Touch-; downs, Pierce, Charbonneau. Point | after touchdown, Pierce (place kick). Dixie: Touchdowns, Jones, Cook. Northwestern, Irish In Consolation Game, Dixie Roberts | Davis | Schmidt | Kelsey | Livingston Huntsman. Minnehan Haswell} Chicago, Nov. 16.—-:4)--Notre Dame} and Northwestern, which have much} im common in the way of football for- | tunes—or misfortunes—this year, plan} to make an important occasion of their meeting at Dyche Stadium Sat-; urday. The biggest point of resemblance is that each is suffering through its most unhappy season in years. The Iris! have one victory, one tie and f. straight defeats on the books. N 1 western has a victory, a pair of ties and three beatings as background for the game. Each figures that Saturday is the day to get going again, and the con- test has stirred up enough interest to indicate a near capacity crowd of around 40,000. PUNCH MISSI | Notre Dame, in scoring two touch-! downs in its first five games of 1933, gained 1254 yards, an average of 627 Baker | Stiner Would Have YOURE CRAWLING — EX S HAVING (1 7 eel Golf Professionals ‘Are Prepared For Rich Winter Tournament Grind Oregon State Gridders ‘Go Out and See Town’ New York, Nov. 16.—(?)—Lon Stiner, coach of the Oregon State football team, which so far has been beaten only by Oregon, the class of the West. has but one re- gret regarding this trip east to tackle Fordham. “It would be swell,” he said Thursday, “if the boys could just forget football and go out and see the town. They've earned it. But unf tely they've got to play Baseball Chiefs Consider Changes | > | Two-Score Amendments to Con- stitution Proposed at Galveston | | Galveston, Tex., Nov. 16.—(47—Two- score proposed amendments to the constitution of the National Associa- tion of Professional Baseball Leagues (the minors) were to be considered at the 32nd annual convention Thursday. And between second-day sessions the swapping and selling of baseball tal-| ent was expected to continue as brisk- | ly as it started Wednesday. The executive committee, headed by | | William G. Bramham of Durham, N.| C., association president, has not yet | decided on the many appeals brought efore it. Consideration of them was begun before the convention formally opened. The appeals involve Art Shires, Jim Lindsey, Charlie Wilson and Gordon Slade, who were fined and banished last year from the American Associa- tion for alleged violation of the salary limit rule. The Western League was definitely organized late Wednesday night after jan all-day and half the night meet-/ ing. The annual banquet will be Thurs- day night. Speakers include Kene- yards a touchdown. saw Mountain Landis, commissioner of baseball. ' | OUT OUR WAY [pie) YOU HAVE TO BREAK THEIR BACKS ? usmner. HEROES ARE MADE = NOT BORN. « - 5 a game Saturday, and from what I hear of Fordham, they'd better be good.” Stiner coaches this Oregon State team, one of the outstand- ing surprises of the football year. He's used only half a dozen sub- stitutes all fall. He tells his team before a game that they're going out to lose, not him. The result is they don’t lose, only to Oregon, and he sits quietly on the bench. ———" Ohio State Prexy Is Sad About Grid Columbus, O., Nov. 16.—(?)— A venerable man was sad Thurs- day. “All the fun is gone from football,” he sighs. | He is Dr. William Oxley Thomp- | son, president emeritus of Ohio State University and for 26 years active head of the institution. | Dr. Thompson has seen Scarlet | and Gray teams win and lose | for more than a quarter of a cen- tury. Perhaps that is why he fails to be perturbed because the 1933 eleven lost to Michiggn 13 to 0. “After all. it’s just a game, isn’t it?” he queries softly “It’s just a game, but they have taken all the fun out of it. It’s | an enterprise now. The time was when it was enough for our boys to go out on the field and do their best. If they won, that was good. If they lost—well, there was no disgrace in losing honor- ab!v in a good fight. It was all in the came. Tt wasn't a matter of life and death.” hts Last Night | (By The Associated Press) Cincinnati — Vincent Ham- bright, Cincinnati, outpointed Jackie Purvis, Indianapolis, (10); Paul Thobe, Covington, Ky., and Kid Wright, Richmond, Ind.. drew, (6), Laredo, Tex.—Joe Ruz, 132, Yu- catan, outpointed Johnny Cook, 136, New Orleans, (10). - By Williams ‘have reached stardom since Jones’ re- BR objecting to traveling caddies other |cuss word on the course or in a locker ‘a midiron, jeireuit, though they 14 Tournaments Will Pay Off About $55,000 to Best Finishers By ART KRENZ With two winter tournaments al-| ready behind them — the National | Capital Open at Bethesda, Md., and | the mid-south Open at Pinehurst— the nation’s pro golfers are ready to hit the winter golf trail in full cry, Including the two just played, there } are fourtecn tournaments scheduled tis year. ‘These contests wiil pay off about $55,000. or $25.000 more than last year—which indicates that the NRA influence has been felt in golf- ing circles. The choicest. plums of the campaign will be the Miami-Biltmore event, to/ ae held at Coral Gables, Fla., Dec. 8- 19, carrying $10,000 in prize moncy; | the $7,500 Agua Caliente Open, Feb 1-4; the Los Angeles $5,000 Open, Jan. 8-8, and the Augusta, Ga. Open, March 22-25, for which no prize has been announced, * OR OK Features of this year's trek of the pres will be Bobby Jones’ comeback in the invitational open he is staging on his own golf course at Augusta. | and trial of a proposed P. G. A. code which would ber traveling caddies, locker room squawks and “profanity on the course within hearing of spec- | tators.” i Jones’ comeback will be watched With interest. It will be his first tcurnament competition since his! voluntary retirement in 1930, and in the tournament he will meet the best of the world’s pros, many of whom tirement, One wonders what effect the new pro code will have on the game. There | doesn’t seem to be much ground for! than they keep local bag-tenders out of a job in tournaments. As for lock- er squawks and profanity—that’s go-| ing to be harder to stop than the code makers imagine, for a good, honest room isas much a part of the game as Old hancs are expecting to carn} quite a slice of dough in this year’s | were somewhat surprised by the antics of a couple of voungsters in the 1932 round. * oe OK Craig Wood, Deal, N. J., pro, led the} list Of 1932-1933 winter money win-| ners. This comparatively unknown Pulled down more than $4,000, topping Denny Shute, veteran. Third and fourth in line among the money win- ners were other youngsters — Paul Runyan, of While Plains, N. J., and Johnny Revolta, of Menominee, Mich, The latter, a rank outsider who made the trip south in a dilapidated old fliver, beat the nation’s best tal- ent in the Miami Open and took sec- ond place in the Miami-Biltmore event . * Ok OK The schedule for the year follows: Dec. 810—Miami-Biltmore Open— $10,000. Dec, 22-24—Pasadena Open—$4,000, Dec. 29-31—Santa Monica Pro- Amateur Open—$2,000. e Jan, 6-8 — Los Angeles Open — 35,000. Jan. 11-15 — Match Play Open at San Franci 000, Jan. 20-21 — Lakewood Open, Long Beach, Calif.—$1,000. Jan. 26-28—Riverside Pro-Amateur, Riverside, Callf_—$2,000. Feb. 1-4—Agua Caliente Open— $7,500. March 15-17—Charleston, 8. C., March 22-25—Augusta, Ga., Open, March 27-29—North amd South Open, Pinehurst, N. C. “UNWINDING” A HORSE It takes about eight weeks to con- dition @ thoroughbred horse for a race, and about the same time to taper ’ T-RWiLuAan; oa > ate him off, The latter process is called “unwinding.” VERSATILE CONACHER { COMPETITION HARDFOUGHT Petoskey, Larson, Maske, Wist- ert, Fehring, Gailus Big Ten Stars Now York, Noy. 16.+(#)—It's nearly | '10 years since the most famous ex- ‘ponent of the All-America died, Wal- jter Camp, but there appears no less jenthusiasm than ever in the rush {now under way to paste the all-star {football labels for 1933 on the stand- out players from coast to coast. It’s just an old American custom, jthe kind of an argument in which one jand all can participate, whatever the tcomplexitics may be in attempting to {name 11 men as the superiors to all jthe rest in a game played so widely jand so well in all corners of the grid- liron map. Its existence is sustained |by custom and encouraged by popu- lar demand. ‘The returns so far in the ninth an- nual Associated Press All-America) !consensus indicate observers have had more than usual difficulty making; their choices and then making them! stick. The competition seems to be 50} close and hard-fought this year that! there is little or no assurance that a, \ star player will look like an All-Amer- | ican two wecks in a row. i The reports nevertheless show a few | standouts, for consistency as well as exceptional ability. They include; Charles Bernard, Michigan center; Jack Buckler, triple-threat Army half- back; Fred Crawford, Duke tackle, and George Henry Sauer, Nebraska fullback. The list of All-America candidates to date is by no means complete but the following players have been most prominently mentioned in. Associated Press returns: Ends: Smith, University of Washington; Petoskey, Michigan; Larson, Minnesota; Geisler, Cen- ; Devore, Notre Dame; ske, Northwestern; Skladany, Pittsburgh. Crawford, Duke; Har- ; Wistert, Michi- Jorgensen, St. Mary's; *, Oklahoma; Fehring, Pur- Ceppi, Prineston; Kilcullen, Ge due; Yale Guards: Corbus, Hupke, Alabama; Rosenberg, Southern California; Gailus, Ohio State; Burzio, Carnegie; Jablonsky, Army. Centers: Bernard, Michigan; Del Isola, Fordham; Coats, Uni- versity of California at Los An- Stanford; Johnson, Pardonner, Pur- Southern Cali- , Columbia. Army; | Beynon, Ilinoi ' due; Warburton, fornia; Montgome: Halfbacks: Buckler, Army Fverhardus. Michigan; Put Purdue; Kercheval, Kentucky; Feathers, ‘Tennessee; Roberts, Tu- lane; Wilson, St. Mary's; Danow- ski, Fordham; Grant, Georgia; Sebastian, Pittsburgh; Nott, De- troit; Franklin, Oregon State. Fullbacks: Sauer, Nebraska; Lund, Minnesota; Mikulak, Ore- gon; Weinstock, Pittsburgh. f Around the Big T —> n | e —* (By The Associated Press) The weather is proving no help to teams preparing for important games, Michigan, Northwestern, Minnesota and Chicago having been chased in- coors . . . Michigan's injured line tars, Kowalik, Wistert and Savage, ‘obably will be able to play at least; part of the critical Minnesota game | . Bob Tenner, end, injured in the Northwestern game, will be in the Minnesota lineup against the Wol- verines . . . Wisconsin's blocking still Spears... Ohio State has done most of its work this week in the snow... Although they have won only one game, Northwestern's Wildcats have outscored their six opponetns, 25 to 22... Coach Hayes at Indiana still is Htouking for reserves... . Iowa will urday ... Purdue plans on plenty of wdsses against the Hawkeyes .. . Illi- nois’ injured captain, Herman Walser, Lopes to play against Chicago, at least «a few minutes. It will be his last ehance in Memorial stadium ... Chi- vago is spending the whole week on offensive drills. Minneapolis Bicycle Race Begins Tonight | Minneapolis, Nov: 16—(#)—Thirteen ;two-man cyclist teams composed of American and foreign riders pedal off Thursday night in the start of Min- neapolis’ third international six-day bicycle race. ! ‘This year’s event will be ridden on '@ track rebuilt with 18-foot high turns and banked sufficiently that riders can dive into them while rid- ing at top speed. Among the 26 entrants is Piet Van spring new plays against Purdue Sat- | 96° With the opening of the win- ter fight season, foreign bat- tlers are flocking to U. 8. shores. Above is the newest importation from Europe— Cleto Locatelli, Ughtweight champion of the continent, who is expected to appear in New York soon. FOLLOW % BALL IN FAVORITE PLAYS OF FAMOUS COACHES Try ART KRENZ NEA Service Sports Writer It is a fake spinner, run from @ double wingback formation with un- Powerhouse, built along the lines of speed undiminish: nearly every major conference ex- cept the Big Six, where Nebraska already has sewed up the title, Sat- ;|Urday’s games will have important tion, he has proved a potential All- America. | Punts and Passes (By The Associated Press) TOUGH ASSIGNMENT Chester, Pa—Although the Penn- sylvania Military cadets realize they are tackling a tough assignment when they play the great Army football team Saturday they're not dis- couraged at the prospect. we can raise up our-air game a few more notches of efficiency,” says Coach Jud Timm, “we may surprise the Army eleven.” The P. M. C. alr game, in- cidentally, functioned quite efficiently against Delaware last week. balanced line to the right. The ball}. is snapped to the No. 1 back, who steps over to the right and f fails to please Coach Clarence w.|and 13 Detroit players and igan State and it’s the for them. In their two sity play the teams have di sions. ;Kempen of Holland, holder of 24 victories in six-day bike contests. He jis paired with Jules Audy of Montreal. Torchy Peden, Victoria, B. C., will jmake his third 1 ocal appearance paired with Henri LePage of Mon- treal. 4 LEVINSKY DIVISIO! per cent, Hockey isn’t the only game Lionel Conacher, Chicago's Blackhawks’ new defense star, can play. He is a wrestl- je and a football player. ‘ King Levinsky; the “Kingfish’s” sister, Lena, holds 15, and Harold Seinman 110, The rest of the fighter belongs to | himself. bearing on the titular races if they don’t actually decide them. Perhaps the best of the struggles is on the Pacific coast where Oregon, usually an outsider, is the ranking team. The Webfoots are unbeaten so far, with four conference victories, but it may he a different story after Saturday's clash with Southern Cali- fornia, The Big Ten and Rocky Mountain conference races are cut and dried affairs unless somebody should step up unexpectedly and beat Michigan or Utah. Despite four straight con- ference victories, Michigan faces a tough assignment in Minnesota this week and Northwestern the next. If Minnesota, already tied three times but unbeaten, should be the one to conquer Michigan, Purdue might be Tight up there to dispute the lead with the victors. The Boilermakers have won two games and tied one in Conference competition. They face Towa this Saturday and Indiana the next. In the Rocky Mountain group, Uteh has won four straight games and Denver and Colorado Aggies are credited with four victories and a tie apiece. The Utes, perennial cham- Pions, face their two rivals in order, starting with Denver Saturday. Affairs are more complicated in the South, where any one of five or six teams may win the Southeastern Con- ference title and four teams still are unbeaten in the Southern confer- ence. Two of the latter. Duke and North Carolina, clash this week. There’s no chance to decide the Southwest Conference crown this ‘week as the only championship came brines together Texas and Texas Christian. A defeat for Texas, how- ever, would put it uv to the next week's struggle between Texas Chris- tien and Arkansas. which now leads with three victories and one defeat. “IRON MAN” LUND “Pug” Lund, Minnesota baci, has played 793 minutes out of a possible 840 in 14 games for the Gophers dur- ing the last two seasons. POLO FOR TITANS Detroit university is the latest to add polo to its athletic activities. Eyes Examined Glasses Prescribed The eye is an organ you can’t afford to tteglect. Dr. H. J. Wagner Optometrist Offices Opposite the G. P. Hotel since 1914 Phone 533 Bismarck, N. D.

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