The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 23, 1934, Page 6

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THE RISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1934 : Kipke Polishes Wolverine Attack for Illinois Game Saturday | COACH SAYS TEAM «(SECTIONAL LEADERS TO BE PICKED THIS WEEK--SUTHERLAND | te FESHSH OH WaerHaeHumae o@ PERE. Sake. ese WILL DEFEAT ONE BIG TEN OPPONENT Zuppke Drills Illini Against Michigan Plays; Works on Tricky Offense GOPHER BACK IS INJURED Northwestern Prepares for Ohio State; Wisconsin Tunes Up for Notre Dame Chicago, Oct. 23.—(#)—Everything points to a victory for Illinois over Michigan Saturday, but there is sus- picion that Coach Harry Kinke of the ‘Wolverines may choose the date for a try at keeping his promise to “knock off one of the Big Ten leaders.” After Michigan took that unex- pected 16 to 0 beating from Michigan State, Kipke said his boys were not as bad as they looked and would check in with an upset. He said the same thing, only more emphatically, eter Chicago blistered Michigan, 27 to 0, the next week. Michigan won its first victory of the season in conquering Georgia Tech, 9 to 2, last Saturday. That did _not qualify as an upset as far as Kipke was concerned, for he still insists one of Michigan's future op- Ponents, Illinois, Minnesota, Wisco! sin, Ohio State or Northwestern, will take a beating. To date, only Illi- nois and Minnesota of that group rank as leaders. Zuppke Drills Illinois While Bob Zuppke started drilling his Mlini against Michigan plays and polishing up his “flying trapeze” of- fense, Kipke resumed work on his battlefront. Willis Ward, who was not used against Georgia Tech, was in the Wolverine backfield again, where his speed and height are ex- ected to be valuable against Illi- hols’ tricky passing game. The usual easy Monday sessions ‘were in order in other camps except Northwestern. The Wildcat workout was lighter than any of last week's Grills, but it lacked a lot of being easy. Dick Hanley ordered up every- thing except scrimmage and hinted that Ohio State may be surprised at Northwestern's improvement by Sat- urday. Towa, which collides -with Minne- sota’s heir apparent to the Big Ten title, came out of the Iowa State up- set with no physical injuries, but with damaged morale, which Ossie Solem set about to repair. Kostka In Good Shape Examinations revealed that Stan Kostka, badly bruised in the Pitts- burgh game, will be ready to do ‘cme more line crashing for the Gophers this week, but Art Clark- son’s injured elbow may not heal in time for action against Iowa. Purdue still was hampered by in- juries, Fred Voss having suffered a fractured hand. Ed Skoranski, cen- ter, may be able to start against Carnegie Tech this week, but Ted » tackle, probably will be out until the Chicago game. Shifts in the Wisconsin lineup were indicated as Dr. Spears started prep- aration for Notre Dame. The Irish got off easy, but were due for stren- ‘uous work Tuesday, with blocking again one of the chief items. Kostka Is Rated Even With Beise in Gopher Lineup Bierman Will Use Fullbacks In- terchangeably; Attend- ance Record Predicted Minneapolis, Oct. 23.—()—Develop- ments flowed swiftly in football's flood tide Tuesday at the University of Min- nesota, as the Gophers, who aim to strike down Iowa Saturday, got going en masse on their newest job. Principal among Tuesday's affairs were the higher standing of Stan Xostka, storming fullback, who seems now even up with Sheldon Beise for ‘the post, and the fact the Gophers dn their fleet race for spoils are bear-| @—— bod home the golden apples in quan- Ys Coach Bernie Bierman, apprehen- sive now his Gophers might get too cocky for their own good, as much as seid Kostka, a riot by himself with the pigskin, at last is squared away evenly as a fullback with Beise after @ long pursuit of the veteran. Officials looking after. Minnesota's dollars and cents meantime injected Joy from the financial standpoint by flatly predicting an all-time record or @ season's attendance, a mark to be built on three virtual capacity fours and two other possible sell- Carrying on the chase with his breath growing hotter on Beise’s neck with each game, Kastka put on an- other wild steer act against Pittsburgh sppereatty to pull up on even terms with Coach Bierman indicating he felt that way about it. “One is about as good as the other,” Bierman said. “Each has something the other hasn’t got. We'll use them interchangeably.” Cavalcade, Equipoise To Meet February 26 \New York, Oct. 23—(—It and See at cv. Whieeye rane ae ; y's mighty Iit- te chestnut, Eaulpoise, match strides Now, I WON'T zs YOU #75 FOR T @iRCULATING PROFIT = © 1934 By NEA HAGGLE WITH YOu, MLAD TM OFFERING alt TM REGUS TOLD ME (TS HE DIAMOND RING—~AND WHEN ONCE 1 SET A PRICE, T WOULDN'T RAISE IT A FARTHING, IE THE STONE WAS THE GOLCONDA GREAT MoauL / #75 J~EGAD, WHAT TAKE HIM PAT OFFS SEAVICE, INC worth #300] A GUESS TLL SOME DAY HELL BE BROKE, AN’ TLL BUY IT’ BACK FORSI5/ ANYBODY \. 4 WOULDNT BREAK /} TH STANDING JUMP RECORD, THESE DAYS,FOR A#25 PROFIT, 1S WEARING A HAT ON SUSPENDED ANIMATION / up! hails from Louisville. Ky. Sprausr, center and captain of Indiana university's first eleven under Coach Bo McMillin, is the bellwether of the Hoosier line. He (Associated Press Photo) Stagg at College of Pacific Has | Brought Out a New Kind of Coaching San Francisco, Oct. 23—(NEA)—The old order passeth in Pacific coast football. The mighty are tumbling from their thrones; domination of the Big Three has ended, and a new, nore colorful grid cra has taken its place. Football coaches, in a nationwide | pel, recently voted Howard Harding | Jones of the University of Southern California the All-America coach cf them all. But were the poll to be taken now on the Pacific coast, Head- man Jones would rate ro better than Second string. Navy Biil Ingram of California wouldn't receive this mythical honor. eS would Tiny Thornhill of the | FOOTBALL UPSTARTS SURPRISE MAJOR WEST COAST ELEVENS hty Stanford Indians. Few Indians. Few ln ceast conference grid mentors would’ jreceive many votes on the strength of this year's showings. Amos Alonzo Stagg, football's grand cld man at 73, is the No. 1 man on the coast at this writing, and Brick Mitchell of Nevada rates a pretty close second. Consider, ard Spud Lewis of the University of San Francisco, They're toasts of the jfootball-minded far west. Aerial Attacks Click It's not of the close 7-6 score to which College of the Pacific—Stage’s team—held University of California that the boys are talking. Nor of the scoreless tie it is said they were offi- ciated out of against U. 8. C. It's the way the Pacific boys play; their aerial Stagg has brought a new kind of coaching to the Pacific coast. There is no barking, no shouting, in his system. Before a game his boys are on the | y, field warming up. A whistle is heard. Stagg walks on the field, gets down. on one knee and his squad. huddles over him. There he is, giving. last, minute instructions right on the play- ing field. Spectators laughed at the antics of Stage’s ends in the California con- test. Like a whirling dervish, one would suddenly arise from the line as, signals were being called. He'd dance off a few feet to the right, then backwards, then cut a figure eight— and while opposing linesmen watched him, the ball would be carried through center. Another “cannon fodder” coach was Mitchell, University of Oregon end in 16 and ‘17. For years the Nevada Wolfpack provided breathers for California, Santa Clara and St. Mary's. This year Santa Clara drove the Nevadans all over the field, scored at will and rolled up 40 points to Nevada’s zero. California adminis- tered a 33-0 thrashing. Then came St. Mary's, which beat California, 7-0, on the eve of the Gaels’ departure to play Fordham. Ten thousand kids—at a dime each—and 10,000 St. Mary's fans watched the impossible happen in the first quarter of that game, as Nevada scored against the Gaels and actually outplayed its stronger op- Donent. They sat stunned through- out the game as the scorned under- dogs repeatedly turned back scoring threats to emerge victors by @ 9-7 score, While the glorious fight of these Staggmen and Nevada tor a place in) the football sun was taking place, —_—_________. | University of San Francisco—coached by Spud Lewis, Soc Dick Hanley assistant—journeyed Corvallis, Cefeating a strong squad, 10-0. It's the year of the Purple Snow on the Pacific coast. Anything happen when College of Pacific a ‘Passe: tuat click; the color and spirit they |inject in their games. [or OUT OUR WAY WHUT'RE YOU BURNIN! TH! SACK, FOR, ICK? YOU'LL’ CHANGE TH! TASTE OF TH! MEAL. © 1936 or mea seavice, mc. DAT'S WHUT’ AH IS WANTER DO- AH- MEAN- UH-ti-- - “THE FRYING PAN AND THE FIRE. By Williams HAD ) / VAIS, F HIM WELL, FER YEARS, BUT TRwiwiams 3.00 nae. v8 par. ag for workout against the Reno squad |W! | Ore., a teebiaarned seeceeen ee (1S Oregon State! and | OUR BOARDING bebe By Ahern PITT MENTOR R, RATES BUT A JEWELER ARMY ABOVE YALE; GOPHERS OVER IOWA Chicago Should Have Little Trouble Beating Missouri; Dartmouth Favored ILLINOIS, OHIO SELECTED Stanford Indians Are Given Edge Over Southern Cali- fornia Trojans By JOCK SUTHERLAND Pittsburgh, Oct. 23.—(NEA)—Next Saturday, October 27, ought to be declared a legal holiday for football fans, for the bill of fare is one of the most appetizing of the year. Games of intersectional rivalry are not so frequent, but the leadership of various sections is going to be pretty well established by sundown. The two major intersectional bat- tles find Southern Methodist meet- ing Fordham in New York, and Chi- cago playing host to Missouri. Despite the fact that 8. M. U. is not having @ sensational season, I look for it to, give Fordham a lot of trouble. Chicago should have little trouble with Missouri. Yale and Army headline the east ern tilts, and once again I can see nothing in sight but a decisive vic- tory for Lieut. Gar Davidson's Ca- ets. And while Army is trimming Yale, another service team, Tom Hamilton’s Navy eleven, will find the going tough at Philadelphia, but. should come out on top of Penn. Favors Dartmouth After a graduated series of warm- ups, Dartmouth gets its initial test of real big league warfare when it engages Harvard. The Crimson omores are gaining experience, but not enough to stop the power at- teck that I look for Blaik’s Big Green eleven to unleash. Only Princeton and Columbia with Cornell and Penn State furnishing ar see can be called real fav- In the middlewest, Minnestoa, better than ever, will drive another spike in its title claims by winning over Iowa. Illinois is due to get a long-awaited chance to celebrate a victory over Michigan, unless Kipke's outfit gets back in a winning stride in s hurry. Ohio State should win against Northwestern as it pleases. Elmer Layden’s rejuvenated Notre Dame varsity is going to outspeed ‘isconsin. In the South a leader will be estab- lshed when Duke and Tennessee get through their argument. I think that the game will go to Wallace Wade's Blue Devils. Alabama's Crimson Tide has no easy row to hoe in its game with Georgia, for Harry Mehre's eleven comes back, but the Tide should Kentucky, Tulane Picked Other Southern games should see Kentucky defeating Auburn, Tulane walloping Georgia . Washington and Lee defeating V. P. 1, Maryland, much stronger than usual, beating Florida, and West Virginia cinching the state title by taking Davis-Elk- » Powertt Derlenced, will have slight over the Trojans. Given Workout For Bison Game First Traces of Over-Confidence Invade Sioux Camp; Leid- holdt Still Out Navy Football Team, Strongest in Many Years, Points to Army Game "A LONG KICK FOR NOTRE DAME! Andy Pliney, Chicago husky who Is one of Notre Dame's chief back. field threats, is shown getting off a long kick. A great open‘ torial Hrboned with an antelope gait, Pilney specializes in deceptive cha inges I anc direction while carrying the ball. His teammates call him “Hunn.” (Associated Press Photo) FOOTBALL THIS WEEK (With Last Year’s Scores) SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27 EAS’ Alfred vs. St. Bonaventure at Alfred Alleghany vs. Grove City at Meadville Boston Coll. vs. Providence at Boston . Brooklyn Coll. vs. St. Anslem at Brooklyn . Brown vs. Syracuse at Providence .. Bucknell vs. Villanova at Lewisburg . Buffalo vs. Toledo at Buffalo .... Carnegie Tech vs. Purdue at Pittsburgh City Coll. N. Y. vs. Drexel at New York Columbia vs. Penn State at Baker Field Delaware vs. Lebanon Valley at Newark, Del. Dickinson vs. Ursinus at Carlisle ... Fordham vs. So. Methodist at Polo Grounds, N. Franklin-Marsh vs. Swarthmore at Lancaster Hamilton vs. Rochester at Clinton . Harvard vs. Dartmouth at Cambridge Holy Cross vs. Colgate at Worcester Lafayette vs. Albright at Easton . Lehigh vs. Rutgers at Bethlehem . Maine vs. Bates at Orono Manhattan vs. Catholic U. at Maryland vs. Florida at Baltimore . Mass. State vs. Worcester at Amherst . New Hampshire vs. Springfield at Durham New York U. vs. Georgetown at New York .. Northeastern vs. Lowell Textile at Boston Pennsylvania vs. U. 8. Naval Academy at Pittsburgh vs, Westminster at Newcastle Princeton vs. Cornell at Princeton . Trinity vs. Connecticut State at Hart! Vermont vs. Boston U. at eitoaica Bs Washington-Jeff. vs. Waynesburg al Wesleyan vs. Amherst at Middletown Williams vs. Tufts at Williamstown Yale vs, Army at New Haven . MIDDLE Capital vs. Bowling Green at Columbus Carleton 8t. Olaf at Northfield . Carthage Bradley pt Peeaeee Chicago vs. ‘Missouri at Chicago Cincinnati vs. Georgetown Coll. at Cincinnati Denison vs. Case at Granville Denver vs. Wyoming at Denver Hiram vs. Mount Union at Hiram Iowa vs. Minnesota at Iowa City . Kansas vs. Oklahoma at Lawrence . Kenyon vs. Marietta at Gambier Marquette vs. Temple at Milwaukee Michigan. vs. Illinois at Ann Arbor Monmouth vs. Cornell Coll. ne epmonyn Nebraska vs. Iowa State at Li North Dakota Science vs. Jamestown at Wahpeton North Dakota State vs. North Dakota at Fargo .. Northwestern vs. Ohio State at Evanston . Notre Dame vs. Wisconsin at Notre Dame Oakland City vs. Danville Thr. at Oakland City Oberlin vs. Wooster at Oberlin . Ohio U. vs. Marshall at Athens . So. Dakota State vs. South Dakota at Brookings ‘Wabash vs. Butler at Crawfordsville ” ‘West Reserve vs. Baldwin Wallace at Cleveland .. ‘West Virginia vs. Davis Elkins at Morgantown Xavier vs. St. Louis at Cincinnati . FAR hapae Brigham Young vs. Western State at Provo California Tech vs. Laverne at Pasadena Fresno State vs. Santa Clara at Fresno Montana vs. Idaho at Missoula Nevada vs. Lag Ered at mene Pacific U. vs. itman al Stanford vs. Southern California at Palo U.C.L. A. vs. California Agri. at Los Angeles Utah vs. Oregon at Salt Lake City . ‘Washington vs. California at Beattle ‘Washington State vs. Oregon State at Pullman it Birmingham Alabama vs. Georgia ai o vs, Missouri Mines at Fayetteville Arkansas State vs. Cosy TE. at Jonesboro . Baylor vs. Texas A. & M. at Waco . Centenary vs. Texas Christian at Shreveport Citadel (The) vs. Davidson at Charleston V. M. I. v. Virginia at Lexington . Kentucky vs. Alabama Poly at Lexington . Mississippi vs. Sewanee at Oxford North Carolina vs. North Carolina Blate at Chapel mu TT} YOU'RE it TELLING ME Midshipmen, With Victory Over Columbia Lions, Loom Dangerous This Year New York, Oct. 23—(7)—! the service game. There have been some close contests since then but the famous 21-21 tie of 1926 at Chicago marked the last time the Midshipmen had a real chance to win. Check Unbeaten Sweep On that occasion it took all the ex- Perienced resourecs of Lighthorse Harry Wilson and Red Cagle to check the previously unbeaten sweep of a Navy team starring such stalwarts as Hamilton, Wickhorst, Eddy, ‘Cross and Hardwick. Meanwhile Army is due for its first major test this Saturday against Yale. Yale hasn't beaten West Point since Albie Bocth ran wild in 1929, scoring three touchdowns with elec- trifying dashes. The outcome, at least, will give a oo avy. Savages Defeat Foresters, 196 Dickinson Shows Great Im- provement in Blocking and Tackling at Bottineau Bottineau, N. D., Oct. 23—(P)— Showing great improvement in block- ing and tackling, the Dickinson State Teachers college gridders played Johnny Miler, 176, Albia, Ie, drew (0), retained title. Chicago—Tony Zale, 159, Gary, Ind., knocked out Frankie Misko, - 157, Saginaw, Mich. (6); Jack Gibbons, 116, St. Paul, outpointed Misko, i. Fargo, N. D. pane me Nes-

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