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MacDonald Smith Wins Oakmont Medal P1 STURDY SOUT PACS TOUGH OPPOSITION I NASSAU GOLD EVENT Eight Low Participate in Com- petition for $2,500 Addi- tional Prize Money WINNER OPPOSES EACH ONE Laffoon, Mangrum, “Gaines, Cooper, Picard, Hines, Rop- er, Smith in Running Glendale, Cal., Feb. 4—(#)—With concrete proof uf his medal play abil- ity established Macdonald Smith set out Monday in an effort to prove he is at home in Nassau Gold competi- tion as well. The sturdy Scot from old Carnou- stie won the 72 hole medal competi- tion in thre $6500 Oakmont open Sunday by three strokes. He had a 275, five better than par, after fin- ishing with a 70 under discouraging | circumstances. But it will be a different story Mon- day as he matches his skill against the other leaders in quest of the title and $2,500 additional prize moncy. Under the complicated Nassau system. Smith meets each of the other eight survivors in three-some match play. His first round opponents will be Ky Laffoon, Chicago, and Ray Man- grum, Los Angeles, who were tied for second at the cnd of the metal com- petition with 278 strokes, two under par. With them was an amateur, Jack Gaines, a iocal high school bas- ketball coach, who staged a phenom- enal finish. Fourth place went to Harry Cooper, Chicago, with a 281; followed in sixth by Henry Picard, Hershey, Pa., North- South champion, and Jimmy Hines, New York, who has 283s. Bunny Ropey, the dark-horse star, from Kan- sas City, and Horton Smith, Oak Park, l., tied for eighth with a 284 total. A tie for 10th resulted between | John Revolta, Milwaukee, and Charles | Guest, Los Angeles, at 285. Ohio State Hopes to Defeat Purdue: Boilermakers Back in Lead Af-| ter Gophers Turn Back lowa Pace-Setters Purdue Indiana Towa . Ohio si Wisconsin Minnesota Minois . Michigan . Northwester: M1 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1985 FIRST, 'S SECOND 7 EGAD,LADS, INSTEAD Z OF OUR USUAL SQUABBLE OVER POST POSITION ON THE BATHTUB, | AH~T HAVE EVOLVED A METHOD, HAVING A SPORTING FLAVOR WHEREAS EACH [—-, OF US DRAW A CARD FROM THE DECK, THE HIGHEST CARD GETS THE TUB NEXT HIGHEST -YOU RE f LAND TONIGHT CUFFING KID! fF) TIME MASOR, AN’ THOUGHT tT WAS WASHING LOGAL CAGE QUINT CHALKS UP SECOND | ROAD-TRP VICTORY Ollie Sorsdah! Sets Scoring Pace Saturday in Game With Montana School Team McLEOD USES 10 PLAYERS High School Quint Had Previ- ously Scored One- Point Triumph Over Dickinson The Bismarck high achool Demons looked back Monday on a successful road trip in which they annexed their third and fourth consecutive and in doing so turned back the at- tack of one of their two Class B chal- lengers for the right to enter the state Class A tournament. ‘The Demons turned in a thrilling +}one-point win over the Dickinson ALL DAY To TUB= Chuck Hornbostel Breaks 600 - Yard Millrose Record Gene Venzke Carries Cunning- ham to New Meet Record in Wanamaker Mile New York, Feb. 4.—(#)—Emerg- ing from the pack as the twin sen- sations of the thrill-packed Millrose A. A. games Monday were (Chuck) Hornbostel of Indiana and Gene Venzke of Penn. Hornbostel's feat of smashing & world’s record that had stood for 10 years in the “Millrose 600,” not much more than an hour after he had annexed the 1,000 yard special in fast time was the outstanding individual accom- plishment of the meet, overshadowing Glenn Cunningham's third successive triumph in the Wanamaker mile, the box office feature mainly responsible for the overflow crowd of 16,000 packed in Madison Square garden Saturday night. 4 There was plenty of honor, how- ever, for Venzke who carired Cun- Charles! AAevVVvevnsene ningham to a new meet record of! 4:11 for the mile and led Bill Bon-| Chicago, Feb. 4—(4—Ohio State, a|thron, ex-Princeton star, across the surprise contender for the Big Ten|finish line for the first time in his basketball title, will try to do some-jcareer. Venzke was clocked in 4:12.2./ thing about bringing Purdue back to| Honbostel won the 1,000 yards with | the rest of the field Monday night at|® fast finish in 2:13, a second back of Lafayette, Ind. \the indoor record, and then shattered ‘The Buckeves were not expected to{Alan Helffrich’s world record of 1:11.6, | cut much of figure in the title battle, |S¢t in 1925, in winning the Millrosa} and may not ve anywhere at the fin-|600 with an electrifying sprint at the | Chicago . 173 ish. However, they were tied with Iowa and Wisconsin for third place Monday, at four victories and two de- feats. to win the title for the second con-} secutive year, tinally got back into the lead Saturday night by defeating Chicago 48 to 35 while Iowa, pace- setter since the start of the season, fell before a rousing Minnesota first- half attack, 36 to 35. Purdue held the top position with four victories in five games, with Indiana, Idle last week, second with three victories and one defeat. With semester examinations out of the way the race picks up momentum this week. In addition to the Buck- eyes’ invasion of Purdue Monday night, Chicago plays its return match with Minnesota at Minneapolis. In- diana, will sharpen its game against Vanderbilt at Nashville, Tenn., before resuming its conference schedule Sat- urday against Minnesota at Bloom- ington. Roosevelt Defeats Crimson Tide, 8-6 Roosevelt's sixth grade basketball team avenged a previous defeat by the William Moore and 8t. Mary’s Crimson Tide quint by winning a ,Bame played Friday at Roosevelt school, 8 to 6. Raymond Doun, center, caged two field goals and a free throw for high- scoring honors tor the winners. Dale Saxvik was the outstanding perform- er for the losers with one basket from the floor and an additional gift shot. Summary: Roosevelt (8) a wloonong EI wloorno wlormoo lisence alee olco-o- uranrres The Boilermzkers, strong favorites} | WINNING | BASKETBALL | am By Nat Holman Not In this out-of-bounds play, X-1 takes the ball at the side of the court. X-2 cuts in close to the side to re- ceive the pass, and flips an under- hand pass to X-3, who cuts in im- Mediately behind him. X-1 swings around X-2 and X-3, receives a short pass from X-3, and dribbles for the basket. O-1 will find juimself legally screen- ed by X-2 and X-3, Panthers Move Into finish. The Hooser ace was caught in 1:113. 5 ——_____— i 0 | College Results || Se (By the Associated Press) BASKETBALL Minnesota 36; Iowa 35. South Dakota State 31; North Da- kotah University 49. St. Thomas 26; Macalester 49. Superior Teachers 47; Stout 24. Ellendale Normal 28; Jamestown College 44. Hamline 37; St. Mary's 21. ie | Montana 23; Montana State 49. Duluth Teachers 438; Mankato Teachers 28. Mayville Teachers 40; Dickinson HOCKEY Michigan Tech. 0; Minnesota 3. WRESTLING Corneyy 19; Minnesota 13. | OUT OUR WAY You HOW sor \ Teachers 21. | Chi Campus League Lead ‘The Panthers, led by the high- scoring trio of Zimmerman, Fevold and Smith, have taken the lead in the campus league at the Bismarck high school. The Panthers with six wins and two defeats are closely pressed by four teams tied in second place with five victories and two setbacks. ° Dead- locked in second place are the Bison, Sharks, Chicken Pickers and Bear quints. Standings of the teams: Panthers . Bison .. Sharks icken Pickers ...... Bears .. Ghosts Gophers . Aces . Cubs ... Red Whsikers Or vaseunaag DAMM BWI I JUS' WANNA SHOW SHE LEFT 301 WON'T BE HGLLERED OLLERE! AT AN’ BROWBEATEN FER LEAVIN' TH WET SOAP IN TH! TH! WARSH RAG—WELL, SEVERAL THINGS—C’MON / WINDOW-SILL, i | Player Award by Ace of Cardinal Pitching Staff Apparently Not Taking Hold-Out Seriously New York, Feb. 4—(#)—Jerome H. (Dizzy) Dean has all sorts of en- Couragement for his announced holding out against the financial blandishments of the St. Louis Car- dinals, but there was every indica- tion Monday that not even the lanky, grinning pitching hero of the last world series takes the situation seri- ously. Accepting the plaque given him by the New York baseball writers asso- Iclation at its annual banquet Sun- jazzilng picture, | Berg, f day night, Dizzy, said he “didn't think Mr. Sam Breadon, Mr. Branch Rickey and myself will have any trouble at sil this year.” This came after Will Rogers had encouraged Dizzy to hold out not only until he got at least $30,000 for his 1935 services, but until he found out what the supreme court was go- ing to decide on the legality of re- ducing the gold content of the dollar. Broun Adds Thought Heywood Braun, columnist, also) spoke in favor of the Dean financial cause. He said not only ball players but sports writers were poorly paid. Postmaster James A. Farley, Mayor Fiorello La Guardia, Ford Frick and William Harridge, president of the jational and American ) e- spectively, also spoke as Dean re- ceived the award of the writers as the “outstanding player of the year.” Connie Mack was presented with a second plaque for contributing the most to the game during the year, and Walter (Rabbit) Maranville of the Boston Braves received the third trophy for his various services to baseball. discussing later Dean's announcement Saturday that he was holding out for $25,000 against the Cardinals’ offer of $17,500, refused to take the pitcher's attitude seriously. It is estimated that 500,000,000 pounds of explosives are used in this country annualiy, A mock Congress once was held by British soldiers in the House of Rep- resentatives chember of the Capitol in Washington. By Williams Midgets Friday night and then jour- neyed on to Glendive, Mont., to wind up their trip with a convincing 32- to-21 triumph over the high school basketball team there Saturday. Ollie Sorsdahl, performing well in the pivot position to which he has been shifted, was highpoint man on the Demon quint in the game Sat- urday. He caged four field goals and @ free throw for nine points before he was replaced by Leon Doerner. Croonquist, Owens and Cameron were deadlocked for second honors, each with a brace of baskets from the floor. Callahan was the best per- {former for the Glendive team, regis- tering seven ts. Coach Roy McLeod used his entire squad of ten men in the game at Meanwhile the Imps, high school reserve quint, suffered their second defeat of the season at the hands of the veteran Dawson team, 25-12, in a game played there Saturday. Summary of the Demon game at Glendive: Demons (32)— Cameron. f .. FG Fr PF | | | i 1 { i sal wonnund SF] woman nwon al uuwcoed al eonn-ecces Lovusend Slescunncauwn ay Championship With 275 — DEMONS MAKE CLEAN SWEEP, DEFEATING GLENDIVE, 32-21 OUR BOARDING HOUSE Canzoneri Boosts Title Bout Chances The title aspirations of Leo Rodak, sensational Chicago youngster, were temporarily halted by Tony Canzoneri of New York, former light- weight champion, in a bristling ten-round Chicago bout in which Can. zoneri won a unanimous deci ind handed Rodak his first defeat in the lad’s 23 professional fights. Rodak (left) is shown as he faltered under Tony's terrific onslaught. (Associated Press Photo) PICK-OFFS, PIVOTS, TIP-OFFS ’ BASKETBALL TROUBLE MAKERS 2 Tete for the bucket man to move Rulings Show backward inside the free-throw line. His point is that the defense would jbe willing to play the pivot man ‘cleanly as long as he stays that far jout from the basket (i.e. the free Se pe dil but that it's the ten- New, York, Feb. 4—(?)—Pick-offs, |dency e Pivot man to keep Pivots and top-offs! ae ‘crowding back to within “cinch shot” With college basketball this win- distance of the hoop that causes the ter making its boldest bid for recog- | defensive man to resort to the more nition as a medium of intersectional flagrant forms of holding and hack- Sporting warfare, these three ele- | 08. ments are found to be the greatest’ Difficulties with the tip-off, of trouble makers in, respectively. these Course, are more or less universal and Sections; east, midwest-and-south, ‘there has been much wailing for sev- and Pacific coast. .|eral years over the premium the tip- Basketball’s debut as a big-time at-|Off places on tall boys. But only in traction at Madison Square Garden|the Pacific Coast conferencé—where, here, headlined by New York U.’s|if anywhere. there ought to be no games against Notre Dame and Ken- dearth of tall fellows—have they done tucky—which set respective all-time |@nything about it. The Coast league attendance records of 16,100’ and 16,-/' Playing this season with the tip- 500—brought into sharp focus some Off eliminated except at the start of differences in rules interpretations e@ch period. theretofore suspected but not clearly] With these differences so plainly defined, marked, and several pi for AS ® result a number of coaches. larger baskets, higher baskets, small- have been quick to espouse more in-j@T basketballs and various addition- tersectional play—even advocating a 4! division lines across the court, like- national tournament—as a means of 'ly to come up, the 1935 spring meet- Intersectional Variance; Midwest's Play Is Foul in East eliminating sectional differences, Deen Brothers Win Sledding Title al Record by Better Than Six Seconds Lake Placid, N. Y., Feb. 4—(?)— Lake Placid’s famous bobbing Stevens brothers are monarchs of American four-man championships on Mount Van Hoevenberg this week- ord and 1.26 seconds off the single heat course mark. Steele High Cagers Down Medina, 28-16 (Special to the Tribune) Steele, N. D., Feb. 4—Steele high school defeated Medina high, 28 to 16, in a basketball game played here last week. Steele scored a field goal to take the tset of the contest and servers in various sections brought out strongly that the chief points of divergence——between east and mid- west—were on the screen play and the pivot play. The treatment of each is diametrically opposite in these two Sections. Reminds of ‘Short-Pass’ Attack Interviewing of coaches and ob ane be a hummer. ing of the nation’s basketball coaches Last of Baseball Deals to Be Made\i=: Let us have # look at (1) the screen| Yankees Admit Need of Slug- Play (also variously known as the “legal block.” the sliding block, and ging Outfielder But Deny “pick-oft”) ; 4 , In the east, this play is interpreted ‘Bambino’ Trade Rumor ‘as strictly illegal. Coaches and offi- clals reduce to as simple terms as Possible their stand by saying “the only time a player may commit a legal screen is in his actual handling (This gets back to the original “short-pass” attack wherein @ team moved down the floor on a se- “handings” of the ball from New York, Feb. 4.—(#)—Last of the winter baseball deals may be made this week when managers and mag- nates come to town for the joint major league schedule meeting Tues- day. Drafting of the schedules concerns only the owners, but there is sure to! be @ sizeable group of pilots around, since many of trem were on hand for the baseball writers’ dinner Sunday night and are sure to remain over for the fanning sessions that go hand in hand with ali baseball gatherings. The Yankees have denied have been approached with a proposi- tion to send Baie Ruth and several of his mates to Chicago for Al Simmons, the hard-hitting outfielder; but the Yanks have not denied they would luke to find an ex al z2F Hee aefes Sie block is that any player is en- titled to any particular square foot jugger lof floor space he wishes to occupy, if|to step into the Babe's old post in there first! But it becomes) right field. m any league—when the blocker has to shift his position, even U slightly, in order to pick off the de-| YOU'RE aw fensive man. ‘You Can't Stand There!’ Now in the east that premise doesn’t hold. No matter how station- ary the screening player it obvious that he is holding his tion so that a team: Clarence Struss, Pittsburgh Pirate recruit hurler, is known as Steamboat to the boys ... because he has a fast one that sizzles... . Two of the Chicago Blackhawks hockey team are lawyers when they're off the ice... Don McFayden and Alexander Levin- AREA big fellow at or inside the free throw line, his back to the basket, to re- ceive passes and either return them mates, pivot and teke aETEE i 0 they) Rt. TELLING ME | D ef day of bet 193. IN. D, SKIIERS PLACE IN MILL CITY MEET Connecticut Ace Takes First Honors With Record Leap of 205 Feet Sunday Minneapolis, Feb. 4.—()—Harold Sorenson of the Norfolk Winter Sports club, Norfolk, Conn., broke the north- western and central division records with a leap of 205 feet to win the Class A championship in the north- western ski tournament here Sunday with a point total of 212.70. Einar Fredboe, Utah Ski club, Salt Lake City, with leaps of 163 and 194 feet for a point total of 208.20, was in second place in Class A, followed by Sveree Fredheim, Norwegian-Amer- ican Athletic club, Minneapolis, with jumps of 156 and 201 feet for 204.95 points. Ronald Mangseth of Coleraine, Minn., was fifth, with leaps of 148 and 190 feet for 192.25 points. Paul Ablern, Cloquet, Minn., made leaps of 144 and 180 feet for 184.35 points to win first place in Class B competition. In third place was In- valid Johnson, Grand Forks, N. D., with jumps of 132 and 149 feet for 156.10 points. In the senior class, composed of veteran ski riders, Pedar Falsted, Ra- pid City, 8. D., won first place with Jumps of 150 and 186 feet for 1936 points. Bob Roecker, Duluth, with jumps of 80 and 85 feet for 150.15 points, won the junior championship, Class B summary includes: Invald Johnson, Grand Forks, 132-139—156.10, third; Hans Braathen, Devils Lake, 126-127—137.40, eighth; Walter Mel- Grand Forks, 121-140—131.30, tenth. i Junior: Eugene Comisky, Devils Lake, 78-77—138.65, sixth. Rangers Win 12th Straight Contest Detroit Red Wings Humbled by New Yorkers; Americans Turn Back Toronto lcci New York, Feb. 4.—(?)—Although the Stanley Cup playoffs still are a month and a half away, the con- tinuation of the New York Rangers’ spurt and last week's slump of the Toronto Maple Leafs already has given an indication that the old reliables of the past few years will be on hand again this season, battling as hard and evenly as ever. ‘The Rangers went on Sunday night to make it 12 games since their last loss by turning back the Detroit Red Wings 5 to 3. The Leafs ran into the New York Americans who had been losing games as fast as the Rangers won. After . 11 games without a victory, the A’s got up in arms and turned back the mighty Toronto team, 2 to 1, to end side Sunday night, dropping a close 3 to 2 decision to the Chicago Blackhawks which gave the Hawks a three-point margin over the Boston Bruins, who took a 3-1 beating from the Maroons Saturday. ‘The Montreal Canadiens battled Detroit to a 4-4 draw Thursday and moved on to St. Louis to tie the Eagles at 1-1 Sunday. Sr SUMMONS STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, COUN- TY OF BUR! URLBIGH, IN DISTRICT COURT FOURTH JU- DICIAL DISTRICT. First, National Holding Company of Casselton, North Dakota, a corporation, Plaintiff, Ibrock, O, bot, Rt. Rev. Abbot Aiexius Ea bbot Alexius Edelbrook, john Shanley, Bishop ‘Rupert — Beldenbi Bishop R._ Selden Brown, Luna Jones, M. P. Slattery, el’ P. Siatiery, J. G. Mill J. Gorton Miller, Alexander M Kensie, Augusta’ M. Miller, Au- gurte Mary Miller, | Nannie 5. Ge I. James’ Hedmark, mark, Arthur Hedemark, Hedmark, Ralph Hedemark, mer Hedmark, Helmer Hedemark, N Johnson, Napoleon ‘y B, Fost ‘os ni lcDonald, Jeannet: Alexander McKe! McKenai: John Caesar rae uahr ‘McRae, ‘atherine McRae, Mary ‘Cook, Jeannette McRa McRae, George P, all persons w to h or to the pro} the complaint, Defendants, THE STATE OF NORTH OD. TO ee ABOVE NAMED DES if tak: default tor the complai IYLAND & TFF. FOR PLAIN. the purpose of tite "and exciuding. fror 0 Eighteen (18) Block Thity, nat Pia yA sealti€ any’ of the eald defendanta® Hi lan . marck, Dakota, Al 114-3130 S/ecdeas, OF Pislntite, ano ek, s