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| Seven Title Contenders ‘WORE BLEND | RECORDS T0 G0 ON ~ BLOCK THIS WEEK Fordham Plays St. Mary’s Gaels in Big Intersection- al Tilt PITT FACES NOTRE DAME Purdue-Minnesota Tilt in Min- neapolis Will Be Clash of Giants New York, Oct. 19.—(4)—Still suf- fering from the shock produced by the astonishing results of last week's far-flung warfare, the football world drastically revised its form sheets Monday and looked forward to snother possible gridiron earthquake when the general call to arms next is sounded. Never in recent years have so many championship contenders been sum- marily removed from the ranking list in one comprehensive sweep. Seven major eastern powers, headed by Pitt and Princeton; Georgia Tech in the south; Texas in the southwest, and Denver and Brigham Young in the Rocky Mountain district, all suffered their first defeats of the campaign. Among major schools, here's the way the undefeated list shaped up today: East: Yale, Army, Fordham, Holy Cross, Duquesne, Villanova, George- town, George Washington and Cath- olic. Mid-west: Minnesota, Northwestern, Purdue, Notre Dame, Michigan State and Marquette. f Southwest: Texas A, & M. South: Duke, North Carolina, Tu- lane, Louisiana State, Alabama and Auburn. Far west: Southern California, Washington State, Santa Clara and St. Mary's. Rocky Mountain: Utah and Utah State. A radical revision downward in this list is certain this week as the fol- owing outlook reveals: Undefeated Teams Meet East: One undefeated record will go to smash when Fordham entertains St. Mary’s Gaels, far western power. Of the other undefeated eastern teams, Holy Cross, George Washing- ton, Catholic and Georgetown will Tun considerable risks. Holy Cros@ meets Carnegie Tech’s "Tartans; Catholic finds Mississippi's unlucky forces next in line, while Georgetown must tackle New York university. George Washington's foe will be Wake Forest. Duquesne should handle West Vir- ginia Wesleyan without undue trouble. Boston university looks over-match- ed against Villanova, tl Yale should be able to ease off against Rutgers. Army’s cadets look only for a good workout from Spring- field. Princeton and Navy will get to- gether in a battle of losers at Prince- ton, while Pitt seeks to regain win- ning form against Notre Dame. Cor- nell’s sophomore array will meet Penn f+ State, while Harvard confronts Dart- mouth. Colgate should stop LaFayette and Brown looks to be no match for Penn, cl fi fe si Intersectional Games it ‘The inter-sectional slate includes Columbia-Michigan, Centre-West Vir- ginia, Syracuse-Maryland and Man- Mid-west: Victors now in 20 consec- utive games, Minnesota's Gophers will be given a thorough testing by Pur- due’s high-scoring Boilermakers, Northwestern’s Wildcats face Mli-| nois; Indiana, unbeaten in the con-j ference but tripped by Nebraska, meets Ohio State. Marquette and Michigan State will clash in a game of undefeated and untied teams at Milwaukee. In the Big Six, Nebraska and Okla- hhoma, the leaders, collide at Norman in the game that may decide the title. Kansas plays Kansas State, while Missouri faces Iowa State in still ‘another conference engagement. Southwest: Texas A. & M. tackles Baylor's Bears and Texas plays Rice. Christian entertains Mississippi &tate. pt ti , [Lead in Southeast South: Georgia Tech shares the Southeastern conference lead with Louisiana State, each with two vic- tories and no defeats. Alabama, Tu- lane and Auburn traii with a victory and a tie apiece. Tech plays Van- derbilt, and Auburn meets Georgia, but the other leaders will be engaged outside the conference. Louisiana plays Arkansas; Tulane tackles North Carolina, and Alabama faces Loyola of New Orleans. Duke with three victories and North Carolina with two, are the leaders in the Southern conference. Duke's foe this week will be Tennessee. Far West: Washington, in undis- possession of the lead with ree victories, plays California. m State and Southern Cali- fornia stijl are undefeated both in and ut of the conference. Southern California meets Stanford next, while Washington State plays Oregon. Oregon State and U C. L, A. Meet in the only other conference TS eee Chicago Bears Win 5th Straight Game * Chicago, Oct. 19—(P—It was the Im GOPHER, BOILERMAKER GAME finest groups of backfield stars in the Big Ten collide next Saturday at Min- neapolis and the result may blast all pre-season Western conference foot- ball “dope” sky high. decisive margins of three games in as many starts, powerhouse in the day's outstanding grid battle in the midwest. consin and Chicago, showed a power- ful backfield in Cecil Isbell, Drake, Fred Stalcup and Wayne Gift. Minnesota has power and speed aplenty in Andy Uram, Julius Al- Phonse, Bud Wilkinson, Vic Spadac- and Moore. 79-yard run beat Nebraska two Satur- days back, and Alphonse stack up with Drake the Boilermakers have a pair of nary, Maroons bowed, 35 to 7. He did every: and if the Gophers stop him their vic. tory streak probably will reach 21 Coach Bernie Bierman’s team had urday, 26 to 0, hind to beat Ohio State in a 14 to 13 hattan-Detroit pairings. thriller, plays the rapidly-improving Illinois eleven. The Wildcats will be favored but Illinois, with several good sophomores, showed increased experi- ence and a stubborn defense Saturday to 9, after leading through the first half, plays Ohio State in a game which may be a battle of the air ence games, goes outside the Big Ten in hope of victory, meeting Columbia at Ann Arbor. and Iowa have open dates. The Bad- gers lost Saturday to Notre Dame, 27 to 0. making a great scrap of it in the first half before being worn down. ment to U. S. air commerce regula- onstrated their ability to navigate en- tirely by instruments and radio are permitted to undertake intentional ine strument flights along the civil air- ways. MAX BAER GOES FOR A NOSE DIVE The cameraman caught Max Baer, former heavyweight ring champion, in this undignified pose when he did a one-ear dive to the mat while refereeing a battle royal wrestling Max got mixed up with some of the bout in Boston. It happened when matmen and was tumbled by Tony Celli. (Associated Press Photo) MAY BLAST PRE-SEASON DOP Giants of Big Ten Clash in Mid- West Gridiron Headliner Saturday Chicago, Oct. 19.—(}—Two of the Purdue's Boilermakers, winner by opposes Minnesota’s The Boilermakers, in trouncing Wis- John Matheny, Gmitro whose brilliant ‘ini, Thompson, Uram, he Big Ten’s test, but in Isbell and touchdown-producers extraordi- Isbell, 6-foot, 185 pounder moved irom halfback to fullback, scored once against Chicago Saturday and passed |. for three other touchdowns as the hing well—ran, passed and kicked- traight by next Saturday night. ittle trouble defeating Michigan Sat- Northwestern, which came from be- in_a scoreless tie with Iowa. Indiana, which lost to Nebraska, 13 lanes; Michigan, loser of two confer- Chicago, Wisconsin Under the terms of a new amend- ions, only those pilots who have dem- +f Sports Round-Up By EDDIE BRIETZ New York, Oct. 19.—(#)—Whoever chased the Penn alumni off the benches rates three cheers in every book except Princeton's. . . Fritz Cris- ler said he thought they’d rung in Minnesota on him. . . Pitt “should of stood in Columbus” . . . Sometimes it doesn’t pay to get fresh with the guys from the other side of the football Sourdoughs Plan Nine Hole Course Ice Hazards, Polar Bears, Wal- rus Figure in Arctic Ocean bergs for hazards and illuminated the northern lights, has captured the imagination of hardy sourdoughs who once gibed at golf club activities in the United States. 5 The envisioned new course—just over the ice from the north pole— has supplanted the weather as the meat of conversation during endless nights of card playing at America’s northernmost settlement. Dr. R. W: Maurer, government phy- sician here and one of the eight whites in the Point Barrow area, said he “looked over” the - Arctic Ocean and found the nice icy place to out the golf course—right in the tee up another and penalise one stroke. If your ball rolls i front of a polar bear, you're disqualified: if you play it, Otherwise tee up another, If you're stymied by @ walrus can wait or chip over him. John Drake Holds Margin in Scoring Points, Leads Teammate in Big 10 Race tracks, .. John (Clipper) Smith, Du-| qj quesne coach, is turning down vaude- ville offers. . . Georgia Tech has thrown away those Pasadena time tables and gone to studying Alabama formations. . . Yep, that feller mumb- ling to himself is Francis Schmidt of Ohio state. If you happened to see Tulane wal- lop Colgate you got a fairly good left- handed idea of what Minnesota looks like in the flesh... You guessed it— the Monday morning quarterbacks are blasting Harry Stuhidreher for losing to Notre Dame. . . Tennessee is Hable to rear up and knock off Duke this week. . . Did Matty Bell of Southern Methodist pour it to his old boss, Ray Morrison, or did he pour it to him? And what about Washington State holding Southern California to a tie?, The Cubs have fired their bat boy. « Mebbe he is a candidate to man- fe the Dodgers. The bloods up at Harvard got 50 ited over Army’s Monk Meyer they plumb forgot their broad “A’Z” They were hollering: “Btop that »” just like us or- dinary fellers. . . The New York football Jints may jyst as well make up their minds to get themselves a line. . . Down at Fort Worth they liken Sam Baugh, Texas Christian's pass pitcher, to old Sam Houston. . . They say the latter never shot any whom have scored once in Big Ten po , | Football Results (By the Associated Press) Michigan 0; Minnesota 26. | Cornell (lows) 0; Iowa State 38. Morningside 12; South Dakota unl- versity 26, ° Gustavus Adolphus 13; Concordia 0. &t. Louis university 6; North Dakota university 13. Luther 34; Simpson 0. Eveleth Junior 13; Itasca Aberdeen Northern Normal 39; Ma- dison Eastern Normal 0. Huron college 7; Yankton college 13. Minot Teachers 7; Jamestown col- o straighter with @ squirrel gun than | er; Baugh can fling that pigskin. ‘The tuba ‘player for the North Caro- lina band inhaled 10 quarts of water during Saturday's broadcast, made in open stand during a driving rain. ...» Against Jorge Bresica, Joe Louis proved he can take ’em. .. Bresica hit him with a couple of beauts. .. What happened? Bresica was put to sleep for getting fresh. .. The provinces are yelling for a peek at Joe DiMaggio so the Yanks will make the most elab- jorate spring tour since Babe Ruth was in his heyday... Arkansas, Texas and Oklahoma will be added to the Carolinas, Georgia and Alabama on the itinerary. It's a pretty good bet Larry Mc- Phail will wind up as general man- ager of the Dodgers. . . He's taken living quarters in New York. OUT OUR WAY IF THAT WAS MOST ANY OTHER GUY, TH BULL O' TH WOODS MY EYE AND HURT MY. HAND RUBBIN! \ THAT'S TH TROUBLE Coe 0; Iowa State Teachers 21. Greeley State 13; Montana State 0. Duluth Junior Teachers 6. Teachers 7 (tie). mal 25, : Milwaukee Teachers 2; Plateville Teachers 0. Ellendale Teachers .6;. Dickinson Teachers 7. South Dakota School of Mines 6; Spearfish Normal 19. av WITH: THIS AGE OF SPECIALIZIN: HE SPECIALIZED AS & over. Ohio State. EARLY TOUGHDONN MARCHES AGOURT FOR BISMARCK WIN Drives; Coyotes Threat- en Once ‘Williston high football team 13 to 6 at Williston Sat- ternoon. hole in the same place on his try for conversion and raised the score to 13 to 0 in the Demons’ favor. failed to convert the . point touchdown and the final score re- mained 13 to 6. The touchdown play was Williston’s serious 17 AS. GAELS PLAY.IN FRISCO San. Francisco University Holds St. Mary's to Scoreless Gridder Recovers From Broken Neck Mernaugh Will Suffer No P: manent Injuries From Football Mishap Omaha, Neb., Oct. 19.—(?}—Ralph Mernaugh, 20, South Dakota state university end, who suffered # broken neck during the football game be- tween the Dakotans and Municipal university of Omaha here Friday, is making satisfactory progress, it was y Dr. Edwar ] Triple Threat. reported Monday b: Thompson of Omaha, attending phy- aician. of Mernaugh’s parents are in Omaha, and have said they probably remain until he is:able to travel. Dr. Thomipson said he believed Mernaugh would be well enough to travel in three weeks and would suffer no per manent injuries, would! been “1 i=wored HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL CLUBS ter and forced to retire from the game. Monday he appeared to be the only casualty of the game for the Don touchdown and two points and start- ed lateral-forward pass play that pro- duced winning score in 14-13 triumph Parker, Duke—His . punting kept Georgia Tech on defensive and paved way for Duke's 19-6 victory. Harold Hirshon and George Schroe- i others in 31-6 triumph over Denver. Colorado U. Pitcher Yearns for Majors Boulder, Colo, Oct. 19—(e)—Bill pitchers i " | ae ry il | i i f ef g : i 5 i i i : z F i ik E Ly i E i fat Ht GO INTO SEASON’S LAST Minot Plays Bismarck, Valley City, Cooperstown in Big - into closing dates, while the Minot and Valley City Hi-Liners LAP’ Harvard Coach Wants 33 Men on His Team Cambridge, Mass., Oct. 19.—Eleven proved Bismarck. Eleven Overcomes Williston Saturday, 13 to 6 TOY BALLOON EXPLOSION HURTS(95 ELEVENG STL "HAVE CLEAN SLATES E Ed in auee i np | | i neets & i if fi 00 00 00 00 00 OPO DUAR ARAMA ROE ~ REBsotaatiia Sessausestsageesaagessae Sesh saaosiio’ men no longer make up a first-rate] B. Allen college football varsity, according to Dice Nation of Harvard “We are not trying to develop only 11 boys,” says the Crimson coach. “We should have 33, Our minimum Tequirement to play our schedule is two equally strong teams.” ELLSWORTH HONORED a worth, in recognition of his achieve- iene it Arctic ‘and Antarctic ex- THIS 18 THE SPECIAL OFFER MADE TO YOU ~ Obvious Point! SOUTHERN California and Pitt, get the nod for the Rose Bowl, by the experts who do their pick- ing early. But that path of roses is strewn with many thorns—just CLOTHIERS * FURNISH BISAIARGCR WOO