The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 4, 1935, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

BRWARGKS AERIAL ATTACK. PRODUGES ATH PBRIOD SCORE Elofson-to-Brandenburg Com-' bination Stars in 81-Yard Touchdown March RUNNESTRAND IN FORM| Speedy Minot Back Scores, | Then Tosses Pass to Grubbs for Extra Point By the margin of the point af- ter touchdown, the Minot Magicians maintained an unbeaten status in state high schoo! football circles here Saturday when they recovered a fum- ble in the first three minutes of play on Bismarck’s 3-yard line, pounded over the goal from there and then; completed a pass in the end zone to} eke out a narrow 7-6 victory over Glenn Hanna's hapless Demons. Incidentally, the Demons haven't made a point after a touchdown since the opening battle with Linton but never had that extra “1” counted as; much as it did when after an 81-yard! march down the field for a touch: | down in the fourth quarter, “Fat”) Elofson was stopped at the line of} scrimmage in the try for the extra} point. | That belated scoring drive of the} Bismarck eleven was one of the pret- tiest exhibitions ever seen at Hughes field and had the nearly 1.000 Home- ; coming fans, who braved the cold, in| a frenzy of excitement. The Demons took to the air in that | fourth quarter drive and completed five passes, without a miss, which, abetted by some good line plunging by Asa Dawson and Arlen Schultz carried the ball from the Bismarck 19 all the way down the field for the touchdown in a series of five first downs. Elofson to Brandenburg Elofson, as deliberate and cool as a college performer, stood back on deep punt formation and hurled those passes with deadly accuracy into the arms of his teammates. Bob Brand- enburg, rated as one of the outstand- ing ends in the state this year, prov-| ed the truth of that ranking when he reached up out o fa maze of Minot defensive men to grab three of those heaves, the first two for gains of 15 and 18 yards, respectively, and the third for the touchdown. Dawson took the first pass for a 13-yard gain and one, a short shovel pass over the line to Capt. Evan Lips,| was also completed for a small gain. Schultz crashed through the line on three trys for the initial first down of that long scoring march and Daw- son ploughed through for an 8 and! a 2-yard gain after the ball had been) advanced into scoring territory. Schultz, workhorse of the Demon; backfield, was the goat of the fum- ble which paved the way for the Minot score. With the echo of the timer’s whistle still in the air, Vern! Runnestrand quick-kicked out of; bounds on the Demon five-yard line. Schultz took the ball on the first play; in a try off tackle but was hit hard) at the line and fumbled, with Chet! Snyder recovering on Bismarck’'s 3. | Runnestrand Scores Jimmy Grubbs picked up one yard} through the line, an attempted pass| was knocked down and then Runne- | strand circled his own right end for the touchdown. The versatile Minot back, whose end runs were the fea- ture of the Magicians’ attack, tossed @ pass to Grubbs in the end zone for the extra point. The Demons halted the only other Minot scoring threat on their own 15 when, after three plays had gained only five yards, Bob Ilchen intercept- ed a Minot pass and returned it to the 25 before he was knocked out of; bounds. Coach Glenn Jarrett alternated; Runnestrand and Huntley in the Minot backfield and the end runs of these two speedsters provided the only consistent ground-gaining the Mag- iclans did all day. Bismarck had a net gain of 187 yards from the line of scrimmage while Minot had only 95. ‘The Demons made 12 first downs to Minot’s 9. The Demons’ forward wall, without the services of Lips who did not get into the game until he replaced Beall in the fourth quarter, stopped the Minot plunges without trouble but had difficulty bringing down Huntley and Runnestrand on those long end sweeps and allowed the Magicians to gain considerable yardage on the hidden ball play that beat Grafton. Beall Stars on Defense Buddy Beall, whose hard-driving tackles were a feature of the Demon defense; Lips, after he replaced Beall; Dick Shafer and Curtis Wedge, guards; and Jim McGuiness, center, were mainstays in the Bismarck for- Bud Monnes, guard, and The victory practically assured Mi- not of the: invitation to participate in the Sombrero Day battle at Aber- deen, 8. Thanksgiving day. Mandan, Lidgerwood and Wahpeton in the undefeated class but ‘Braves haye been tied twice and other two teams have not played of opposition that the Minot éleven has faced in its eight straight wins. , Bismarck has one game remaining its schedule, the second clash of ‘season with Coach McMahan’s at Syndicate field, Mandan, Day. The two teams Bismarck lof the third period carried the bali Fumble Provides M THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1985 agicians With 7-6 Win Over Demons Southpaws Will Battle in Main Go of First Legion Fight Card Tonight OUR BOARDING HOUSE LOOK, DOC [-- S'POSIN TM INA RASSLIN MATCH THIS IS HOW MY BOXIN’ COMES.IN—~YSEE , TH OTHER, MUGG GOES TO GET A HOLD ON ME,AN’ HE SWINGS A LULLABY FOR MY CHIN ~ "HA, 1 SAYS (S) O YOLIRE A ROWDY- ANDY, EH SD AN THEN 1 CLAMP MY LEFT | HAND ON TH BACK OF HIS NECK AN’ DPPERCUT MY RIGHT MICKY TO HIS CHIN! THAT SOFTENS HIMZ7TO FILL UP TH HOD-THEN 1 SHOULDER HIM AN DROP HIM IN A PILE ON TH MAT [--.NEAT, EH © HAVE ” CHANGED, MASOR ! By Ahern ROSCOE BUT \S \T ARTS EGAD,IN MY | DAY, WRESTLING WAS GRECO - "ROMAN | THE ANCIENT CLASSIC STYLE OF PHYSICAL SCIENCE | t Ramblers’ Win Features Week-end | Leaving 11 Major Teams Unbeaten, Campbell Chalks Up Initial! Touchdown in First Two | Minutes of Play i Sioux City, Iowa, Nov. 4—(Pi—; Morningside college tried in vain to! stop a determined University of North: Dakota team Saturday and the No-|} daks finally trimmed the hard-fight- ing Maroons, 28 to 7. The Nodaks plays began to click in the first period before the Ma- roons could get their bearings. Camp-! |bell chalked up the first touchdown | in the first two minutes after only} five plays had been called after the kickoff. | The Nodaks again carried the at-| tack into the Maroon danger terri-| tory in the opening plays of the sec: | ond quarter. Hughes punting onl; served to stave off the Nodaks ing which, however, finally was ac- complished by Campbell on a full | spinner over center that netted him} 60 yards for the touchdown. ! The Nodaks struck again in the same period, the second score being nailed up by Blanchette on a cross- back from the Morningside 10. Morningside began to come out of| its backwardness and in the middle; on a sustained attack to the 1-yard| line where Hughes dove over for the kick for the extra point was good. From then on the Nodaks kept the Maroons down and play was deep in} the Morningside territory. Hughes punt was blocked by Wright, and scooped up by Smart who romped the few yards across the Morningside goal line for the final touchdown of the game. ‘The Maroons gave the Nodaks their opening chance when Hughes re- ceived and lateralled to Graves who fumbled it on the 25-yard marker, Charbonneau recovering. Morningside Brandon Miller Barron Engebretson McNamara Fodness Rosenberg Karroll Clark UN. D. Falgren Chumich | Braverman Wright Johnson Gainor Smart Sullivan Campbell Graves Charbonneau Hughes Blanchette North Dakota scoring: Touchdowns —Campbell 2, Blanchette, Smart. Point after touchdown—Charbonneau (placekicks, 4). Morningside scoring: Touchdown—Hughes. Point after touchdown—Rosenberger (placekick). Substitutions: North Dakota—Ror- vig, Halvorson, Edick, Mackenorth, Blanchette, Wright, Monsrud, Char- bonneau. Morningside—Rosenbaum. | Referee, Doyle Harmon, Wisconsin; | umpire, Joe Weir, Nebraska; head) linesman, Joe Beha, Creighton. Braddock Goes Thru Here on Way West James J. Braddock, heavyweight the train stopped here Saturday night. Braddock is on his way west to ap- pear in a series of exhibition bouts on the Pacific coast. Sunday at Butte. Mont.. he offered to nay bis lown expenses for a benefit show in peat of Helena’s earthquake vic- Brandenburg Woodland Slattery McGuiness Shafer Welch Beall Elofson' Schultz, Tilchen. Dawson Braddock knew North Dakota as the state which reared Charley Retz- laff. He said, in his opinion, Leonard farmer would have little chance against Joe Louis, Detroit bomber, in their proposed match. \Victory Over Buckeyes Clinches | boxing champion, talked briefly with ;shut out four times in succession. Capital City sports enthusiasts when; the! NODAKS RUN ROUGHSHOD OVER Buckeyes, Gophers, Wolverines FIGHTING MAROON TEAM, 28-7) Detroit Pro Eleven : | Beats Chicago, 7-6'couapse of Ohio State's Chicago, Nov. 4.—(P)—It becomes ;f the maddcst football whirl in his- {more and more apparent, as the Na- | tory. tional Professional Football League | season wears on, that most of the fect records, marred neither by de- strength lies in the western division|feat nor tie. jof the circuit. The Green Bay Packers found; themselves in first place without even | playing Sunday, the Detroit Lions| having hauled the Chicago Cardinals | down by a 7 to 6 decision. The Chi-/ cago Bears move: up to a tie with} Detroit for second place by whipping New York, 20 to 3, at New York. Philadelphia defeated Boston Redskins 7 to 6. Brooklyn beat the; Fighting Irish Are Back in Limeligh | Notre Dame Comeback Under Layden | New York, Nov. ()—For the first | time in five years the fighting “Irish”! only Maroon score. Roseberger's place|of Notre Dame are back in football |G¢feated Marquetie power, so much so that they can look forward Monday with some confi- dence to the prospect of an unbeaten season and a possible bid to the Rose Bowl game. No matter what happens during the! rest of the season, however, Notre Dame's national following is setis- fied now that the coaching regime of Elmer (the silent) Layden, in its sec- ond year, has produced the results they have been looking for ever since Knute Rockne died at the height of power. Saturday's thrilling 18-13 victory! over mighty Ohio State was the clincher in Notre Dame's comeback under Layden. The Irish have put on many a great finish but none more electrifying or more dynamic thav the drive that finally overhauled Ohio State with only ten seconds to go. The possible loss of Andy Pilney, halfback hero of the conquest’ at Co- lumbus, may prove costly. Then agaiu it may only mean the chance for some other hidden star or bench-warmer to come through. This Notre Dame team unquestion- ably has acquired inspirational pow- ers. Between the halves Saturday the one-time “horseman” simply told his players they had “given away” two ouchdowns on intercepted passes, and that it was up to them to go out, and get them back. Notre Dame's record of six straight victories this season is the best since Rockne closed his coaching career with two undefeated teams in 1929-30. Thereafter the course of Notre Dame football zig-zagged until 1933 and the end of Hunk Anderson's tenure as head coach. That year the Ramblers lost five out of eight games. They were In the subsequent upheaval ang re- organization, Layden, @ star fullback under Rockne ir the “four horsemen” period, was called from his coaching job at Duquesne to assume athletic leadership. Last year Layden’s first team won six and lost to Texas, Pittsburgh and Navy. Victories, in succession this year over Pittsburgh, Navy and Ohio State removed any lingering doubt about the revival of the spirit of Notre . Northwestern, Army and played. NAGURSKI IS OUT- Grubbs, Huntley for Runnestrand, Doyle for Renstrom, Runnestrand for Huntley. Bismarck, Wedge for Welch, Snyder for » Lips for Beall. :; Umpire, Don jeast’s undefeated outfits to meet with jrow, meets Iowa's Hawkeyes. | Auburn Southern California remain to be Lead Big Ten; Kansas Tops Big Six Loop New York, Nov. 4—(?)—A week-end of intensive firing, featured by the Buckeyes, brought some semblance of order out Eleven major teams still boast per- By sections, advance prospects for the next big “push” are as follows: East: Syracuse, lucky to beat Penn State 7-3 with a last minute touch- down pass, seems most likely of the a setback in tackling Coiumbia’s Lions. ; Princeton should dispose of Harvard; handily. Dartmouth, still celebrating its first victory over Yale in 51 years, eases off with an intersectional game with Wil- liam and Mary. New York University should romp over City College of New York. Irish, Wildcats to Meet Big Ten: Victorious over Ohio State, Notre Dame's Ramblers mect North- western next. Minnesota, which took Purdue over the hurdles, to run its undefeated streak to 21 games in aj Ohio tate, co-leader with Minnesota and Michigan in the conference race, takes on Chicago. Michigan tackles Jlli- nois, Two powerful “independents,” un- and Michigan State, collide at East Lansing. Big Six: Kansas, marking up its second conference victory at Okla- homa's expense, is the undisputed leader but finds Nebraska blocking its path this Southwes Texas Christian's rout of Baylor left the Horned Frogs in top position with Southern Methodist, conqueror of Texas, the only other mee) defeated contender. | Southeastern Conference: Louisiana State's last minute 6-0 conquest ot left the Tigers tied with Mississippi for first place with two conference victores and no defeats. Duke Leads Conference Southern Conference: Duke, which halted a two-game losing streak at Tennessee's expense, leads the con- ference chase with three straight triumphs, but the eventual winner looks like North Carolina's Tarheels, who trounced North Carolina State. Pacific Coast Conference: Califor- nia’s conquest of U. C. L. A. left the golden bears the only undefeated team in the conference. They will need to hurdle another big obstacle this week in Washington. Rocky Mountain Conference: Utah {and Colorado University, jointly shar; ing the lead with three victories in a row, collide at Salt Lake City in the game that may decide the champion- jship. | Coaches Will Confer Here During N.D.E.A. All North Dakota high school cvches are urged to attend a meet- ing of the State Coaches association at Bismarck, Nov. 7. in an invitation issued Saturday by Harley Robertson, Minot, president of the organization. Important subjects are scheduled for discussion, according to Robert- son. Among them are proposed redis- tricting changes and the new eight- semester eligibility rule. The meeting is called for 10 a, m., Nov. 7 in the Bismarck high school gymnasium, in connection with the Educational association. THOMPSON GAINS TIE \of Wisconsin, and Ohio State's “Jumping Joe” Williams, co-leaders last. week, Monday shared first place jannual meeting of the North Dakota ' Chicago, Nov. 4.—(7)—John Wilson bd CONFIDENT HE CAN WHIP SIR RICHARD Commissioner Jimmy Moran to Personally Supervise Se- lection of Officials ‘What happens when two southpaws with dynamite in either hand step in- to the ring will be demonstrated here tonight in the 8-round headline bout of the first American Legion fight card which pits Dick Demaray, hard- punching Bismarck scrapper, against Jolting Joe Jaramillo, 20-year-old Denver youngster. The curtain raiser of the 28-round boxing program, first of its kind to be sponsored by the Lloyd Spetz post under North Dakota’s new boxing commission, is scheduled to get un- der way at 8:30 p. m., at the World War Memorial building. Commissioner Jimmy Moran of Mi- not will be here to personally super- vise the selection of the referees and judges and officiate at the weighing in of the fighters at 3 p. m. Fighters Work Out Jaramillo, M. J. Cooperman of Deadwood, S. D., his manager, and Joe Bitto, Scottsbluff, Neb. middle- weight, who fights Ernie Hethering- ton in the 6-round semi-windup, ar- rived here Friday night from Dead- wood and took imbering up workouts Saturday and Sunday. “I beat Demaray twice before and I can do it again,” Jaramillo said. The Denver battler got a tehcnical knock- out over Demaray in their first en-; JOE JARAMILLO IS ! BIG TEN SATURDAY Northwestern 10; Illinois 3 Minnesota 29; Purdue 7 Towa 6; Indiana 6 INTERSECTIONAL Rice 41; George Washington 0 St. Marys (Texas) 7; St. Vincent 6 Tulane 14; Colgate 6 Michigan 16; Pennsylvania 6 ;DePaul 9; Catholic U 6 Michigan State 12; Temple 7 Miss, State 13; Army 7 Villanova 13; Detroit 7 West Virginia 20; Wash. & Lee 0 NORTHWEST South Dakota 13; Omaha 6 Dickinson Teachers 7; Mayville 6 Carelton 12; Coe 0 Hamline 26; Macalester 7 — 6; Valley City Teach- ers (Mankato Teachers 7; St. Cloud Teach- ers 0 St. Mary’s 13; La Crosse 12 Dakota Wesleyan 25; Sioux Falls 0 MIDWEST St. Lawrence 7; Middlebury 0 Baldwin-Wallace 33; Case 0 Union 19; Findlay 13 Defiance 10; Bluffton 7 Marquette 28; Iowa State 12 Butler 20; Wabash 0 Central Normal 7; Oakland City 0 Tulsa 13; Kansas State 13 ‘Heidelberg 15; Capital 0 Kent 45; Hiram 6 Oberlin 3; Wittenberg 0 Milikan 24; Lake Forest 0 North Central 6; Elmhurst 0 Drake 33; Grinnell 21 Lawrence 37; Beloit 0 Carrol 3; Ripon 0 Til. Wesleyan $; Bradley 0 Doane 27; Yankton 0 North Dakota U 28; Morningside 7 River Falls 14; Eau Claire 1¢ 2 Nebraska 19; Missouri 6 gagement last year, but when re- matched the Bismarck scrapper was awarded the judges’ decision. Demaray will weigh in at about 144 with Jaramillo expected to tip the scales at 147. Hetherington, unbeaten since he will be seeking to lengthen his string jof knockout victories in tonight's fracas. Bitto, a rangy scrapper weigh- ing close to 165 pounds, will have nearly a 10-pound adavntage over the former Winnipeg boy and packs plenty of power to make the going tough. Gramling Meets Munyer Rusty Gramling, a third fighter from Hall's stable, battles Eddie Mun- yer of Rugby in one of the 4-round preliminaries and Leroy Purtell of Bismarck opposes Young Deatherage of Fort Lincoln in the other. Two three-round preliminaries will round out the card. Tickets are on sale at the Town Talk, Woodmansee's, the G. P. Recreation parlor, the Pat- terson hotel and the Memorial build- ing. Big Ten Elevens in Stretch Drive lowa-Minnesota, Ohio-Chicago, Michigan-lllinois Games Top Schedule Chicago, Nov. 4.—(?)—Ohio State's chastened Buckeyes, Minnesota and ; Michigan resume their drives for Big Ten gridiron honors Saturday. while the Notre Dame menace strikes into the conference for the third and Wichita 14; Emporia Teachers 7 DePauw 58; Hanover 6 Knox 7; Cornell 6 Ohio Wesleyan 13; Cincinnati 12 Kansas 7; Oklahoma 0 Monmouth 21; Carthage 0 Augustana 21; Dubuque U 0 Western Union 6; Beuna Vista 0 joined Isham Hall's local fight stable,| superior Teachers 8; Stout 0 Washburn 14; Haskell 0 Washington 33; Creighton 7 St. Olaf 20; Concordia 6 M. 8. T. C. 44; Bemidji 12 EAST West Liberty 23; Shepherd 6 Lebanon Valley 7; Penn Military 0 Dickinson 40; Allegheny 0 Duquesne 7; Carnegie Tech 0 Harvard 33; Brown 0 Syracuse 7; Penn State 3 Princeton 26; Navy 0 Dartmouth 14; Yale 6 Susquehanna 12; Washington coil- lege 0 ’S FOOTBALL SCORES Mt. St. Mary’s 47; John Hopkins 0 Hampden 27; S&t. Johns (Annapo- lis) 14 Montclair 39; New York Aggies 6 New York U 14; Bucknell 0 Columbia 7; Cornell 7 Pitt 0; Fordham 0. William 43; Union 6 Vermont 6; Norwich 0 Northwestern 6; Tufts 6 Bowdoin 14; Bates 0 Manhattan 65; N. Y. City College 0 Hobart 34; Rochester 14 Springfield 53; Lowell Textile 0 Rhode Island 23; Worchester Tech 6 Colby 12; Maine 0 St. Joseph 29; Delaware 13 Western Maryland 26; Baltimore 0 Boston College 20; Providence 6 Amherst 13; Mass. State 0 Clarkson 32; Buffalo 0 | Albright 12; Moravin 6 Rutgers 31; Lafayette 6 { Gettysburg 21; Lehigh 14 Boston U 0; New Hampshire 0 Trinity 7 1; Richmond 0 Maryland 14; Virginia 7 Holy Cross 34; St. Anselms 0 Geneva 7; Wash. and Jeff. 6 Waynesburg 20; Thiel 0 Wesleyan 12; Davis-Elkins 6 Marshall 14; Emory and Henry 0 Trenton Teachers 6; Panzer 0 | SOUTH Duke 19; Tennessee 6 Georgia 7; Florida 0 Louisiana State 6; Auburn 0 Hamilton 7; Swarthmore 0 Savages Defeat ° Comets, 7 to:6 Richardson Runs 50 Yards to Put Ball in Scoring Posi- tion for Dickinson Dickinson, N. D., Nov. 4.—(?)}—play- ing in the snow, the Dickinson Sav- ages defeated the Mayville Comets, 7 to 6 Saturday. Dickinson scored in the first quarter when Richardson, fleet halfback, ran 50 yards to the (Mayville 8-yard line. A pass, Robert- son to Nelson, scored for Dickinson, Richardson scored the extra point. Mayville scored its touchdown when Tuchscherer, quarterback, ran the jkickoff at the beginning of the third quarter through the whole Dickinson team for a touchdown. Mayville failed to convert the extra point, The sums mary: Dickinson Mayville Doering re Torson Schuler mt Whalen A. Weinch rd Lipp Crawford c Lee F. Weinch Ig Halpin Hul It Rostberg Nelson le E. O'Hara Robertson qb Tuchscherer Baggenstoss th Sasen Richardson lh Alfson Schmickrath fb Blore Substitutions: Mayville — Sewerud, Georgetown College 21; Louisville 0 |M. O'Hara, Little. Dickinson: Tavis, Alabama 13; Kentucky 0 Clemson 13; Mercer 0 ‘Tuma, Shjeflo, Wulfsberg. j — Vanderbilt 14; Georgia Tech 13 |BEAVERS HUMBLE North Carolina 35; N. C. State 6 Furman 35; Citadel 0 VIKINGS, 6 TO 0. Minot, N. D., Nov. 4.—(#)—Minot V. P. I 27; South Carolina 0 ‘Teachers college Beavers kept clean SOUTHWEST ;Louisiana State 6; Auburn 0 | arkansas 14; Texas A, and M. 7 Howard 7; Southwestern 7 Texas Christian 28; Baylor 0 Southern Methodist 20; U of Texas 0 ‘Texas Tech 14; Oklahoma A. and M. 0 ROCKY MOUNTAIN Colorado U 23: Colorado College 0 Nevada 12; Calif. Aggies 6 Arizona State 0; Pomona college 0 'U of Idaho 60; Montana Mines 0 Ricks College 7; Boise 0 ‘an eight-year homecoming. record jhere Saturday, winning from the Val- ley City Vikings, 6 to 0 in @ contest jthat saw the local team piling up 14 jfirst downs to the visitors’ one. Ramblers, Bears Lead Rose Bowl Aspirants Pasadena, Calif., Nov. 4. — (®) — Notre Dame’s Ramblers and Califor- nia’s Golden Bears Monday led the New Mexico 13; Temple Teachers 0 Utah 32; Brigham Young 0 Utah State 13; Colorado State 0 Utah 32; Brigham Young 0 PACIFIC COAST ‘Washington 33; Montana 7 Stanford 9; Santa Clara 6 Gonzaga 7; Washington State 0 Oregon State 19; U of Portland 2 California 14; U. C. L. A. 2 HIGH SCHOOLS Minot 7; Bismarck 6 (By the Associated Press) | ports Round-Up New York—All right, Mr. Layden, step right up to the head of the class and take a few bows for yourself... . Nice going out there, Saturday. ... What a wild football day all around. +». The fans still are dizzy. Also about a dozen coaches. ... twill happen? ... Are you asking us? On the honor roll are: Prof. Gil Dobie of Cornell. who cried his way into a tie with Columbia. «++ Maj. Ralph Sasse of Missis- sippi State, who took our Army for a ride.... Mr. Jimmy Crow- ley of Fordham, who all but skinned the Pitt Panther. .. . Charlie Bachman of Michigan last time against Northwestern. The “Scarlet Scourge” which lost some of its color during that almost. unbelievable final period Saturday when Notre Dame scored three touch- downs for an 18-13 triumph, comes back to the conference wars against Chicago at Stagg Field. Minnesota meets Iowa in the top game of the day at Iowa City, and Michigan tack- les its ancient foe, Illinois, at Cham- paign. Indiana plays at Maryland. Towa, held to a 6-6 draw by Indiana Saturday in the rain at Iowa City, is not completely out of the title run- ning. The Hawkeyes’ chances, how- ever, depend upon shipping Minne- sota—something they don’t figure to do—while someone else belts Ohio State over. As the race hits the stretch bend, Michigan, unexpectedly enough, ap- pears to be the prime threat to the hopes of both Minnesota and Ohio State. Since losing their opening game to. Michigan State’s strong eleven by a lop-sided score, the Wol- verines have come along to win four straight games. Showing continued improvement, they could cause the Gophers and Buckeyes a lot of trouble. Minnesota meets Michigan at Ann Arbor a week from Saturday. Ohio State tackles the Wolverines in the final game of the season’ the week following, also at Ann Arbor. Minnesota gave a truly convincing demonstration of power and speed in ;crushing out Purdue's title chances (Saturday, 29-7. With Clarence (Tuf- \fy) Thompson serving as the head ;man in the attack, the Gophers gave Purdue few opportunities to carry the ball, and themselves scored in every period. place for the first time of the year by whipping Illinois, 10-3. Michigan followed up its 19-7 vic- tory over Columbia two weeks ago, by taking a 16-6 fall out of Pennsylvania's highly regarded eleven at Ann Ar- bor. The standings, conference games only: T Pct. TP OP Ohio State 1,000 58 1.000 1.000 1.000 oot enna s L 0 0 0 0 1 1 3 2 2 2 erocconoce 667 500 250 000 000 000 in the Big Ten individual football scoring battle with Clarence (Tuffy) Thompson of Minnesota. The Goph- er iomore counted once against Purdue Saturday to boost his total jt0 18 points, te ergy. If we could burn coal complete- ly, 90 that there was no wasted en- ergy, a lump the size of a pea would take a large steamship across the At- lantic and back. Northwestern bounced out of last State, who gave Temple its first reverse. . And Harry Kipke, whose Michigan team beat Penn, which Fritz Crisler still insists is the best he's see in the East. With princeton and the Big Ten teams ineligible, Notre Dame and North Carolina stand out as the hot- test Rose Bowl prospects ... . unless Army or Duke spill them. How that Princeton team ever loses & game is a misery to us, as Ring Lard- ner’s Jacke Keefe used to say. You ought to see that bunch of fresh- men at Cornell. .. . If Gil Dobie sheds any tears next year it will be the kind Connie Mack used when he sold Lefty Grove to Boston. Mike Jacobs, who spends most of his time in planes these days, soon will have as many hours in the air as Lindy... . A Virginia sports writer who has covered five games this season has yet to see a touchdown scored... . The strange thing about that Car- nera-Neusel affair was that Primo actually looked good in spots. - Sid Luckman, one of the best schoolboy football players ever de- veloped in the Metropolitian area, is at Columbia, but he isn’t playing frosh football. .. . He’s concentrating on book learning and piling up a lot of credits to be able to run wild for Dr, Lou Little next year. . . . The jockey brother team of Laverne and Emler Fator is clicking on the eastern tracks. Did the brass hats at Princeton force Fitz Crisler off the airways? «++ The story is Fritz was told such activities were not consist- ent with the coaching post at Old Nassau and that in the future would he please restrict his ora- tions to the varsity football squad.... Anyway, it was a break for Jimmy Crowley of Fordham. «+ « He stepped right into Fritz’ place—and no programs missed. Highest individual honors in col- legiate livestock judging at the .|American Royal livestock exposition in Kansas City recently went to Robert Williams, Larimore, junior in the school of agriculture at the North Dakota Agricultural college. Wil- Hams scored 975 out of a possible 1,000 points. His record is said to be one of the best ever made by a stud~ ent judge at the show. jdwindling list of aspirants for berths jin the annual Rose Bowl gridiron jelassic. | Coach Elmer Layden’s crew from ‘South Bend not only stayed in the (running for the coveted bid but ; gained much ground over other unde- 'feated elevens by its showing against Fresno State 20; College of Pacific 7/ tough Ohio State. California sent University of Cali~ |fornia at Los Angeles to its first de- \feat and became the only team in the jPacific Coast Conference to keep its slate clean. Notre Dame must dispose of North- {western, Army and Southern Califor- {nia if Layden is to return as a coach \to the scene of his brilliant playing in 1925 when the late Knute Rockne’s |team smashed the hopes of Stanford 127 to 10. | The Golden Bears have Washing- jton, College of the Pacific, and Stan |ford to cope with, i While the East’s leading team was Dartmouth, Syracuse, a previous Rose tournament contestant, Holy Cross, jand New York U. have unblemished jrecords. One rejection from Princeton of a bid probably is all the voting it will be allowed in the matter. North Carolina stands alone in the undefeated list of the South, while the Middlewest has besides Notre Dame and the untouchable Big Ten. leaders—Iowa and Minnesota—little Marquette, In the Southwest Southe ern Methodist and Texas Christian jnave unblemished records but no jteam that Far West ever has been tendered an invitation to the Rose carnival. Zeh Holds Nation’s Grid Scoring Lead New York, Nov. 4—(@)—Ray Zeh, Western Reserve fullback, continued to lead the national parade of high scorers Monday with 86 points while Eddie Stanley of Williams scored four erage oe Union to push second pl: ces place with acd Rodgers of Mississippi, Williams Qhio State and Wilson of Southern Methodist moved into a tie for third pies, eet Davis of Kentucky, at 84 OUT OUR WAY WIE BG MAIL BOX! YOU GOTTA LEARN TO BE SELF- By Williams YEH—, IT I'M LEARNIN! YOU SOMETHIN: THE HEIGHT OF LAZINESS. Ney TRWILIAMS 7.M. 820. U. 8. PAT, Opp, 5 sf tect 3-5 <a 8 re Bs 3 r| 8 dl 8] te R

Other pages from this issue: