The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 9, 1936, Page 6

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sneeeeetans ‘Games CHAMPIONSHIPS IN | TWO CONFERENCES ALREADY DECIDED Nebraska, Northwestern Clinch Big Six and Big Ten Cir- cuit Titles Saturday Helped to Clear National Grid Picture Wolverines May Cause Wildcats Trouble at Ann Arbor Saturday LD POLLARD COUNTS LONESCORE | University Expects ie bln FOR NODAKS IN 196 DEFEAT Good Borang Team Red Wings, Am Four Veterans Form Nucleus AGAINST COLUMBIA! ead Hockey iin of Nine-Man Team Chosen by Coach Russell Minnesota Takes on Texas Sat-| Board of Governors Meet Tues- urday, Notre Dame Meets day to Decide Fate of New Strong Army Team York Americans HEAP MAKES YARDAGE AS WILDCATS BEAT WISCONSIN — -@| Returns Punt 70 Yards for Only Touchdown Against De- Paul Saturday Grand Forks, N. D., Nov. 9.—Pros- pects for another nationally famous boxing team at the University of North Dakota were looking bright this week when Coach H. H. Russell, head man of the mitt-flinging department, nominated his nine selections for the Idaho invasion November 21. Four veterans from the team that compiled an impressive record last year will be on hand to make up the nucleous for this year's team, with five newcomers ready to step into po- sitions vacated by graduation and through other losses. Among those who performed last year but who will not take up the gloves for the University again this winter are Ray Baker, ex-golden gloves champion who has turned pro- fessional; Owen Trickey, four-times golden gloves champion, who has not returned to school; Don Smart, who graduated; Marvin Johnson, who transferred to Valley City State Chicago, Nov. 9.—(7}—The DePaul university Demons, with Pat Howlett sparkling an effective running game and aerial attack, defeated North Dakota university, 19 to 6, before 2,000 Spectators at Wrigley Field Saturday. It was the first defeat handed the Nodaks in eight starts this season. Frits Pollard, Jr., North Dakota Negro .backfield ace, whwse father won all-American honors at Brown, returned a DePaul punt 70 yards in the first period to put the visitors out in front, But from that point on the Demons were in , scoring twice in the second and pushing over another touchdown in the third. Pollard’s brilliant dash came in the final minute of the first period. On the second play of the second period, Howlett, who replaced Phillips, passed 38 yards to Mueliner and then rifled another aerial 15 yards to the same receiver for @ touchdown. Kein’s conversion, only one of the afternoon, HUSKIES LEAD IN WEST Fordham Strengthens Rose Bowl Bid With Crushing Win Over Purdue Chicago, Nov. 9.—(?)}—Coach Harry! ny, a Stuhldreher’s Wisconsin eleven has| pareve ory eres aial Nea wo. lost five straight games but North-| americans le: their respective. western’s newly-crowned champlon- divisions, the National Hockey League ship Wildcats attested Monday that/ was quiet on all fronts, waiting for the Badgers haven't lost their spirit. |the fireworks expected in a board of Northwestern won its first undis- | governors meeting and the resumption puted Big Ten title Saturday by de-|ot ice hostilities Tuesday. feating Wisconsin, 26 to 18. But| ‘The governors get together in New before the final gun, the Badgers,/york in an effort to settle the dif- doped to fall easy prey to Lynn Wal-|ticulties, legal and otherwise, attend- dorf’s strong club, threw a real scare /ing the Amerks. With a tie and a into the nation’s ranking eleven. |victory to their credit, they head the Clarence Tommerson, Roy Bellin and|tnternational section of the loop. Howie Weiss passed the Wek The Red Wings top the American d division with two victories, the only club in the eight-team circuit sport- ing a perfect record. Following up their opening game victory over Toron- New York, Nov. 9.—(#)—Champion- ships in two conferences already de- finitely clinched by Northwestern and Nebraska, the dizzy football whirl moves on to new and decisive tests on widely separated gridiron battle- tronts this week. Last week's general engagement re- noved Tulane, Southern California and Washington State from the ra- didly dwindling list of major unbeaten ams and shed new light on the ‘ituation revolving about the mythical tational championship award. Today only Northwestern, Mar- juette and Santa Clara could boast izzy. Next Saturday Northwestern bat- tles Michigan at Ann Arbor. On Don Heap (22), fleet-footed Northwestern halfback, is shown making some high-speed yardage through the comparative scores the “Cats” will be yerfect records while Fordham, center of the Wisconsin line as Wildcats beat Badgers, 26 to 18, at Dyche stadium, Evanston, II!. Wiscon. strong favorites, but many fans who ea eare. DePaul @ one-point lead. Teachers college, and B Ben erect wa vtah Siate, Louisiana | gin playere whose numbers ahow are Capt. Golemgeske (71), Lovehin (48) and Jensen (68). Gapt. Reld of saw the Wolverines defeat Columbia evs aevur tact nient eithy o ioneided Howletng ee sare Again, put | Blanchette, varsity fullbeok, "whois Northwestern is No. 44. (Associated Press Photo) @& few weeks ago believe the Kipke- coached crew may give the titlehold- ers trouble. In the Columbia game Michigan's attack clicked. Against Pennsylvania Saturday it was im- potent, the Quakers winning 27 to 7. Gophers Play Texas ‘Texas invades Minneapolis, daring the powerful Gophers, and it :ooks like a hard day for the visitors. Min- nesota routed Towa, 52 to 0, Saturday in a remarkable demonstration of straight football power, using only one lateral. Without reverses, spinners or fakes the Gophers riddled the Towa line as 63,000 fans looked on, Towa travels ‘to Lafayette for a bat- tle with Purdue Saturday. Against not expected to be in shape in time for the Idaho engagement due to the late ending ef the football season. Veterans who are back include Carl Eckstrom, 133 pound lightweight, who tated as the sensation of the Uni- versity team last year; Carlyle Love- rud, 126-pound runner up in the featherweight division of the North- west Diamond gloves tourney; Gor- don Lee, durable fly-weight; and Joe Miltenberger, hard-hitting middle- weight, New faces on the squad include those of Johnny Boyd, 135 pounds, Bob Phillips, 123 pounds; Leo Tous- sant, 149 pounds; and Roy Christen- son, 169 pounds. Last year the University fistcuffers State and Alabama each still was un- waten but haq been tied once. Fordham, which all but assured it- elf of an undefeated campaign by Tushing Purdue last week and trengthening its chances of an in- ‘tation to the Rose Bowl at the same ime, will be idle this week. North- vestern, sure of undisputed posses- ion of the Big Ten crown for the irst time in history, should hurdle Michigan comfortably but all the thers are running into possible trou- le. 5-2 victory, in the only Sunday game in the loop, The board of governors in their meeting will try to do something about. the Americans’ franchise, which the league took over three weeks ago be- cause of financial difficulties. | Sports Round-Up By EDDIE BRIETZ, DePaul in position again with a 29- yard pass and seconds later Postaer shot another overhead into the end zone to Apolskis for a touchdown, Phillips’ kick being wide. The final DePaul score was made by Hehn on a three-yard smash after @ march from the Demon 40, the feature of which was Hehn’s 29-yard sprint off tackle. Postater’ dropkick eid for the point was low’ and The heavy, stubborn DePaul line bottled up the Nodak backs most of the afternoon, although Pollard and Horace Johnson, another Negro ball toter, got away for several good gains the end. Bismarck Group’s Application for Northern League Franchise Denied 14 SURVIVORS STILL REMAIN IN UNDEFEATED, UNTIED RANKS Loop Officials Find No Opening for Another Club in Present Setup New York, Nov. 9.—(?)—News: The Pirates were the first club to call the Cardinals’ hand and ask for a price on Dizzy Dean. P, 8.: They got no reply. ... Fred Perry may turn pro Briefly here’s how the week's pro- ram lines up: Army Battles Notre Dame East—Georgetown which maintain- d its unbeaten record by swamping Eau Claire, Wis., Nov. 9.—(#)—Her- Vest Virginia, 28-0, finds Manhattan, 3-7 conqueror of Kentucky, next on te list, but major interest will cen- sr on Army’s tussle with Notre Dame t New York and the second of the Big Three” classics, Yale vs. Prince- m_at Princeton. Notre Dame, beaten by Navy, 3-0 a Bill Ingram’s 26-yard drop kick, ill find Army fresh and ready. The adets used the varsity sparingly in inning over Muhlenberg, 54-7. rinceton which rolled over Cornell, {-13, in its most impressive display { the campaign, probably will be ated slight favorite over Yale, held > @ 14-6 score by Brown's gallant sfense. | The eastern program, in general, atures purely intra-sectional games. P arvard, which ran up a 65-0 count P 2 Virginia, plays Navy. Columbia, F taten 20-13 by Dartmouth, meets | yeacuse, which showed surprising rength in holding Indiana to a 7 score. Cornell and Dartmouth attle at Ithaca and Brown plays oly Cross, 20-13 winner over Colgate. Penn Meets Penn State Fresh from its 14-0 victory over yuth Carolina, Villanova plays Tem- e, which tieq Michigan State, 7: ’nn, which trampled Michigan, 27-' eets Penn State, trounced by Pitt. -7. Catholic and North Carolina North Dakota University Among Five Dropped From List Saturday New York, Nov. 9.—(7)—With five} list of undefeated and untied football teams showed only 14 survivors Mon- day. Powerful little Appalachian in North Carolina; Kansas Wesleyan, East Texas Teachers, North Dakota, and the sturdy defensive Cortland (N, Y.) Teachers all fell by the way- side in the Friday and Saturday pro- grams. Perhaps the biggest surprise was the shutout defeat at the hands of Catawba, which removed Appa- lachian from the list. Heading the surviving list were Western Reserve's high-scoring grid- men and the strong Tennessee Wes- leyan eleven, each with eight victor- les H Northwestern's Big Ten titlists and Marquette’s Rose Bowl hopefuls, in the mid-west, and Santa Clara on the Pacafic Coast, were the only “major” survivors. Records of the remaining undefeat- more outfits bowing out in the week- | end’s gridiron fireworks, the nation’s; Football Captain Thinks Baby Best Benches Self for Game to Pace Hospital Hall While Daugh- ter Is Born Indianola, Iowa, Nov. 9.—()—Earl Spicer, captain of the Simpson col- lege football team, gingerly rocked a two-day old baby girl in his arms at the hospital here Monday and decided that “she’s worth it” even though she did bench him for Simpson’s home- coming game Saturday. ‘The baby is Spicer's new daughter. She was born during the first quar- ter of the game, which the Simpson team lost to St. Ambrose College of Davenport, 18-0. Shortly before game time, Spicer learned his wife was about to have a baby. S “You must play if you think you must,” his wife told him. “But,” said Spicer, “she added: ““I wish you wouldn’t leave me.’” So Captain Spicer paced the hospital $5 meeting here. from Bismarck, was refused. The league directors again adopted the Shaughnessy play-off system for 1937, although in a slightly amended form, The amendment provides that} the club finishing first in the regular season shall no longer receive five per cent of the playoff receipts and that the players’ bonuses in the playoffs shall be cut from $25 for first place and $10 for second, to $10 for first and for second. Adopt Guarantee Plan ‘The meeting adopted a plan whereby home teams shall guarantee $15 ver scheduled game to visiting teams, this sum to be deducted from the visiting team’s share.of the gate receipts. Other actions of the directors in- cluded the abandonment of the all- star game, the appointment of a sched- ule committee consisting of Bruno Haas, Winnipeg; Frank Wade, Du- luth, and Dave Christensen, Wausau; the, official awarding of the 1936 pen- nant to Jamestown, N. D., and of the of the Northern man D. White, Eau Claire, was re- elected president Baseball League at the league's annual Barney Neary, Eau Claire, was re-elected secretary. In the face of almost unanimous cpposition to an increase in the num- ber of teams in the league, and with no franchises open, an application N. D., for a franchise Fordham's line, Purdue's Boilermakers For the first few minutes of the had no success last Saturday, Coach Noble Kizer’s team taking a 15 to 0 defeat. Nevertheless Purdue will be favored over the Hawkeyes, Ohio State, which rambled over Chicago, 44 to 0, goes to Illinois, and the Buckeyes are expected to take the Zuppke eleven into camp. Illinois did not play last Saturday. Indiana will be favored over Chicago in their bat- tle on the Maroon field. The Hoosiers defeated Syracuse, 9 to 7. Wisconsin entertains Cincinnati. Notre Dame, defeated 3 to 0 by Navy, goes against Army at New York in what ranks as one oi the big games of the week, Football : Scores Big Ten Minnesota, 52; Iowa, 0. Northwkestern, 26; Wisconsin, 18. Ohio State, 44; Chicago, 0. Indiana, 9; Syracuse,-7. Penn, 27; Michigan, 7. Fordham, 15; Purdue, 0. be fore you read this. The word is out something is going to pop at the luncheon Francis T. Hun- ter, former Davis cupper and close pal of Big Bill Tilden, is pitch- ing for the tennis writers, Perry will get $50,000 for joining the cash and carry boys. i}. Is that hay? ... Perry Henry Armstrong, Negro protege of Al Jolson and winner of the feather- weight championship (of California) from Mike Belloise, is heading east. St. Louis is the first stop... Jack Kearns is walking around town and the gossips say he’s flat. The scribe who wrote a column about Kearns | ing and Dempsey making up may be in- terested to learn it was the third time they’ve shaken hands since the feud started. ... Army and Notre Dame will play to a sell-out crowd of 76,000 in Yankee stadium Saturday. Rose Bowl: Looks like Jimmy won and lost with the North Dakota i State team, lost to the great Wiscon- , sin team, and scored a 7 to 1 victory i .| over the powerful Washington State Cougars. ‘Whether the south should establish f manufacturies was debated in North rounded | Carolina in 1831. | Yt No Exemptions! AT THE present pace, the Rose Bowl game quite probably will be Played by teams which have been beaten or tied. In this Year of Upsets defeat seems to detract very little from team prestige! South Auburn, 13; Georgia Tech, 12. Georgia, 26; Florida, 8. Crowley of Fordham can step up and ed, untied teams: make his best Sunday bow. If his ate, Carnegie Tech and Duquesne, hall until the baby was born and his gston college and Western Maryland by St. Regis playoff cup to Eau Claire; wife was asleep. Then he galloped alate en Forest, 0. Team w pts opp the legalization of the hidden ball Georg! Jd New cen evenly and Rutgers.) Western Reserve .. . 8 205 25 |OVer to the field in time to see St. Am- |trick which the league's by-laws had South Carolina, 0. York vet itey probably wil get the hee einer ee iersectional en-| Tennessee Wesleyan ..... 8 197 20 brose score seven more points on his| previously forbidden, and the election] maryland, 12; Richmond, 0. nod. Louisiana State and Alabama ms te top Saturday's card, Pitt| Carroll (Wis.) .. . 7 167 13/team. f of President White as the league's dele-} ‘Washington é& Lee, 27; Virginie! also are undefeated, but they haven't ly el petnya's Huskers, whose | Santa Barbara St. .7 163 19| “Which is worst, playing a football |gate to the national association's De-| poly, 0, played the schedule Fordham has. | Juries. \s ® conquest of Kansas clinched the | Middlebury .-...-.......+ eed a pondered. ea a baby?” Spicer |cember meeting in Montreal. North Carolina, 26; Davidson, 6. Our personal nomination is Ne- \ ‘ ‘ St. Benedict (Kan.) 6 161 i 2 i . 1 & Six crown, Minnesoia,, which |Shigpenaburg Pa.) Teh... 6 15d 6),,"Welhaving ababy ialottougher| | Application for & Blamarck fran: Aaa eerie saisiacippl| Cretan | ceaptet aE ee BRL M ere Northwestern . - 6 117 47 b chise was presented by a group of loc: ee 1 Northwestern to blast Iowa, 52-0, “But,” h “7 State, 0. sota. They have a real football club ays ‘Texas, strong Southwest con-| Marquette .... BT eee babes th & Brin, “Til men who asked that their names be] yississippi, 34; Loyola (New Or-| out there and if they beat Pitt this renee foe. E. Tennessee Tchrs. 6 70 0; z == [BOE Claloeed. They (eats Ney ACID) lagna) 0, week, you needn't get excited about Northwestern, which outscored Wis-| Kirksville (Mo.) Tchrs.... 6 66 22 Reealise they favored league ball and! “ Giemson, 20; Citadel, 0. it. sin, 26-18, finishes its Big Ten| Arkansas State Tchrs. ... 5 146 217 Art Buck Carroll had not consulted with the manage- Virginia’ Military, 21; William and| Laugh: Burleigh Grimes (at $10,- dictates! inference schedule against Michigan | St. Anselm's (N. H.) 5 91 4 9 5) reparete he joca eel Pre team with | wary, 0. 000) will get less for managing the 4¢@ then will have only Notre Dame | Santa Clara 5 87 7 ! ed Howard, 14; Western Kentucky| Dodgers than Casey Stengel (at $15,- we CLOTHIERS *FURNISHERS BISNIAROR NOOO 000) will collect for not mi the club... . The Dodgers haven't paid Casey for his '37 contract, and say they don’t intend to start until April 15. Then they'll send him a check every two weeks, just like they do the Teachers, 6, Eastern Kentucky Teachers, 13; Transylvania, 6. Centre, 18; Georgetown (Ky.), 0. Southwestern (Tenn.), 44; Birming- \ hurdle for a perfect campaign. tio State, which swamped Chicago, "+0, plays Ilinois; Chicago meets In- ‘ana, and Iowa piays Purdue in conference games. Purple Limited t to Western Pro Elevens 25 Plays Per Game Whip Eastern Rivals Tops High Scorers Brings Total to 102 Points, to Evanston, numerous throughou' Noy. 9.—Like Dr. Jock bureau of agricultural economics re- ‘Marquette, which barely nosed out) Chicago, Nov. 9.—(#)—In Sunday's es ham Southern, 7. Feighton, 1-8, on Art Guepe's 75-| professional football program all four| 76 for King, Hobart, |sutherland and Gilmour Robie, Lynn| st, John (Md.), 0; Hampden-Byd-| other players. | In the meantime, fed touchdown run, will find Mis-|yestern division teams—Green Bay, Closest Rival Waldorf of Northewstern believes in| ney, 0; tie. Casey must slit and twiddle, his \ simplifying football. The conquerors of Minnesota are required to learn only a compara- tively few, but effective plays. Wal- corf maps out his attack before each jcontest, and gives his field generals @ list of only 25 plays to use. Only 60 are inculded in the entire Purple bag of tricks, whereas Ohio State athletes, for example, are required to learn 150. Emory and Henry, 19; Roanoke, 12. Midwest icknell, 7. thumbs unless the club gives him per- mission to get another job. You see, he’s still under contract to Brooklyn, although they gave him the gate as Chicago's Bears, Detroit and Chicago's Cardinals—defeated eastern section teams, and only one result was close. Pittsburgh, leading the eastern sec- tion, bowed to Detroit 28 to 3; New York, in second place, was trounced by the Bears 25 to 7; Boston lost to Green Bay 7 to 3 and the Chicago Cardinals celebrated by whipping Philadelphia 13 to 0 for the Cards’ first victory of the season. tough. er Big Six in Action Big Six contests will send Okle- ma against Missouri and Kansas ‘ate against Iowa State. Oklahoma id Kansas State played to a 6-6 ‘aw last week. Kansas’ inexperienced Say will try to cope with Michigan New York, Nov. 9.—(#)—It's going to take a lot of catching up by and other ambitious touchdown-maker to take the nation’s high-scoring foot- ball away from Art Buck, the high- geared quarterback of Carroll of Wisconsin, this season. Buck brought his total for the campaign to 102 points Saturday by Pool Your Turkeys With the Farmers Union Cooperative Detroit, 33; Baldwin-Wallace, 66; Wayne U., 20. Miami, O., 18; Toledo, 0. Xavier (Cincinnati), 30; berg, 0. gains six yards, instead of ten, every ‘4 time he carries the ball, but No. 3 of Witten- ate. ‘i Zouthwest —Saturday’s program, tured by the Texas Aggies’ 22-6 at of Southern Methodist, left the aference race wide open with only Ylor, Rice and Texas out of i. The gie triumph marked their third tory in five conference games, one which was a tie. Texas Christian giked up its third victory in four ts by beating Texas, 27-6, and tripped Rice, 20-14, for a record. Southern Methodist id Arkansas meet in the ay sence game this week as T. C. U. Centenary, Baylor meets Okla- A. & M., and Rice eases off | Sam Houston Teachers. Texas & M. plays San Francisco on Arm- Day. Huskies Top Coast Loop ‘West—Washington's late rally Stanford, 14-14, left the Huskies puted in the Pacific The Bears and Packers each have won seven games while losing only one, easily the best record in the circuit. When Garcia Hits ’Em, They Stay Hit! New York, Nov. 9.—Ceferino Garcia; the little Philippine welterweight, probably hits harder than anyone else in the division, according to his rec- ‘d, So far, Garcia has had 60 profes- sional fights in the United States, and in every one of those battles his op- ponent has hit the flcor at least once, even Champion Barney Ross, who came near. being knocked out by the Uttle fellow last year on the Pacific coast. Garcia has kayoed 60 per cent adding a touchdown and four extra points as Carroll closed its season, undefeated and untied, His nearest rival, as the campaign heads down the stretch, is Fred King, Hobart fullback and eastern hope, who went on a rampage as the up- state New York college trampled Buffalo, to score five touchdowns and an extra point and bring his total to 15 points. Not oniy did he regain the sectional lead he lost several weeks ago, but he advanced the top eastern scorer from fifth to second place on the na- tional list. Cardwell Among Leaders Along with him as newcomers in the pace setting lineup were Davie Davis, Southern California quarter- back, and Lioyd Cardwell, Nebraska's Perry Expected to Quit Amateur Ranks New York, Nov. 9.—(?)—The word sped around tennis circles Monday that Fred Perry's signature is on a pro- fessional contract. Although all concerned refused to comment, formal announcement of the British ace’s decision to quit ama- teur ranks and play for pay was ex- pected at any moment, probably be- fore nightfall. Buivid Clicks on 50 Per Cent of Passes Nebraska, Ohio U, 10; Dayton, 6. Gfalo Wesleyan, 0; Cincinnati, 0. St. Olaf 6, Luther, 0. Ohio Northern, 13; Capital, 0. Case, 14; Oberlin, 6. Kansas State, 6; Oklahoma, 6. Marquette, 7; Creighton, 6, Denver, 27; Drake, 13. Western Reserve, 19; roll, 0. Butler, 41; Valpariaiso, 0. Western (Mich) Teachers, 33; Cen- tral Teachers, eae Kansas, 0, Liberal Advances Are Made Pooling from Nov. 7 to Nov. 14 Patronize your home cooperative nesota. . . ball for a short gain, then slid yards through the mud, the a nouncer announced; “Nagurski tying—safe at second.” ... Lou Am- bers has been offered $5,000 to fight Farmers Union Turkey Marketing Association 1700 Main Avenue Bismarck, N. Dak. Phone 1972 or 585 John Car- ton, Yale, 14; Brown, 6. Navy, 3; Notre Dame, 0. Pittsburgh, 34; Penn State, 7. Milwaukee, Nov. 9.—Ray Buivid, Marquette university’s great forward for the Pacific coast conference iead,! Passer, probably has the best aver- each with 30 points. Cardwell took age of completed tosses of any serial over the Big Six pace with 30 points, | 4rtist in the United States. passing Howard Cleveland of Kansas| The Golden Avalexche pitcher toss- Biate. ed 73 aerials in the first four games of the season, completing 37 of them. Only five were intercepted. halfback. Davis advanced to a tie with Ed Goddard of Washington state to Oregon State, 16-6, and |! his foes. n California, losing to Call- THIS 18 THE SPECIAL OFFER MADE TO YOU. Skunks The Season is now open. We pay highest market prices Tennessee, Tulane against Georgia, Florida against Sewanee. | Kentucky 4 plays Clemson of the south- em ference, z n “Battle tor Crown in South Records of the leaders by confer- gon Btate and Stanford, Call-| southern: Duke and North Caro-|ence or section: and Oregon, U. C. L. A. and/jina should settle for the conference} Group Player and Team 8 td * ‘ington State, and Montana and ip this week in their| Midwest (minor)—Buck, Carroll (Wis.) aD Tie SiS Bring Them in meet in conference games this| meeting at Chapel Hill. Duke ran|East—King, Hobart ee fb 711 9 0 76 Now!! . Santa Clara meets St. Mary’s|over Wake Forest, 20-0, and North|Far West—Welsgerber, Willamette . fb 7 9 13 2 73 ‘ routed Davidson, 26-6, iast|South (minor)—Wilson, Appalachian fo 7 12 10 7 Maryland ang Virginia Mili- |Southeastern—Davis, Kentucky hb 7 12 0 0 66 South Carolina, | Missour! Valley—Mande: fo 7 9 00 5 gb 6 8 00 @ -f 6 6 71 6 - 8 700 @ 1a too a @liminsted this week as/ standings with fon: one Southw hb 7 5 0 2 » ‘tackles Auburn. Alabama! defeat. Maryland, id Tarific .qb 75 0°0 30 by Georgia Tech. Jthet 12-0, is just behind with thre: and qb 6 5 00 30 ‘ bb 5 & 00 30

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