Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 November 1938 — Page 6

By Eddie Ash | STAGG RETURNS TO SHOW EM

N. D. IS STUFFED WITH TALENT

AMOS ALONZO STAGG, football's Grand Old Man, came

Indianapolis

por

Double King Dizzy his bank account is lively enough. He

Dean’s arm may be dead but

has completed arrangements for an

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PAGE 6

back to the Midway, and how! . . . . His College of the Pacific rolled over his former Maroons like a tidal wave. . . . It was home-coming for Stagg and he made the most of it, although his players carted the celebration a little too far by swamping the host team. : There is reason to suspect that Notre Dame played tongue-in-the-cheek football prior to the Minnesota game.

7

.... “And it had to be us,” the Gophers moaned while of-

fering a courageous fight. . . . Elmer Layden did a good job of hiding his strength but some observers at the Navy tilt on Nov. 5 caught the drift and decided N. D. was pull-

ing its punches. And with two games to

go maybe stoical Elmer has

something else hidden away under the Golden Dome. .. . Give him a couple of touchdowns and he goes into a shell and begins thinking up strategy for the next week.

2 8 8

touchdowns in the major

» 8 8

TURDAY probably set a record for points kicked after

games. . . . Plenty of sevens

were chalked up. . . : The Big Green fell before the Big Red’ and after all, perhaps Dartmouth missed the blocking of Heavenly Gates who hit the sawdust trail. . . . However, - Cornell is entitled to a big hand. . . . The Ithacans tied the

Big Green last fall, 6 and 6.

Butler came close to sending Coach Jimmy Conzelman to a padded cell. . . . Washington U., piled up a 20-to-0 lead and Butler rallied and was ahead, 21-20, before the Bears pulled it out of the skillet. . . . Conzelman is famous for his “coaches-in-the-doghouse” stories and dislikes the

aroma of the kennels.

tige of the Hoosier classic holds up.

” 2 #

OME Saturday and all roads lead to Lafayette. . . . Purdue, 0; Iowa, 0. . . . Indiana, 7; Iowa, 3. . . . Enough said. . . . The pres-

Ding, dong, dell, Monon bell, and DePauw retains it for another year after hard ns against a scrappy Wabash squad. all,

~~ Jimmy Ph former Purdue Southern Cal as a mild quake shook

coach, unhorsed the Trojans of Coast football. . . . Pest Welch and

Catton Wilcox, old Boilermaker aces, team with Phelan on the Uni-

versity of Washington grid faculty.

#” 8 8

#8 NB s

AVEY O'BRIEN pitched strikes again and Texas Christian E handed Texas its eighth straight setback. . . . The Frogs are undefeated and untied in eight starts and are doing a hop toward a Rose

~ Bowl bid. _

Ditto Tennessee and Duke barring late season upsets. .

. . Pitt

is‘the mountain in-Duke’s path. Tennessee has only Kentucky, Mississippe U., left while the Horned Frogs probably will take care of Rice

.and Southern Methodist in stride.

It was an unhappy Sabbath for Santa Clara, who was removed.

from the undefeated-untied bracket . . . Twice Sugar Bowl champion, it

by the Gaels of St. Mary's, 7 to 0. was the Broncos’ first defeat over

a long span. . . . The Broncos beat the Gaels lastfall, 7 to 0.

» 8 ”

# » s

PAcesall stove league: Frankie Frish had to quit the St. Louis scene because he would not kow-tow to Branch Rickey. . . .

Branch possibly wanted a manager

who would accept all of his sug-

gestions and reduce himself to nothing more than a field captain. . . .

Frankie found this intolerable.

It is quite certain that in Ray Blades, whom he has raised from a baseball pup, Rickey will find a man much more to his liking. For example, if the Cardinals should have a rookie catcher for whom it had been announced $75,000 had been refused, Blades may see to it that this backstop is used plenty—even if he isn’t quite ready.

Frisch was not so obliging. . . . gard to Mickey Owen. . . . Rickay

The situation developed with reneeded justification for the tre-

mendous publicity which had accompanied Owen from Columbus. . . .

But Frisch did not rate Owen ready

for the National League and re-

fused to work him. . . . That started the big Prisch-Rickey feud.

— And in This Corner

"GERMAN CLAIMS NEW SWIM RECORD

BREMEN, Nov. 14 (U. P.).—A

new world’s breastroke swimming

record was claimed today for Joachim Balke who was timed in 1:09.5

over 100 meters yesterday.

It was a half second under the record set

by Johnny Higgins of the United States at New Haven, Conn., in 1936.

MICHIGAN STATE DEFENDS HARRIER TITLE NEW YORK, Nov. 14 (U. P).—Michigan State College, winner of

the I. C. A. A. A. A. cross country

running championship for the last

five years, defends its title today against harriers from 20 other institu-. tions. The race will be over the five mile course in Van Cortlandt Park.

ST. MARY’S TOPPLES UNDEFEATED SANTA CLARA

~ SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 14 (U.

P.).—St. Mary's resurgence to the

football heights was predicted today on the strength of its victory over ~ Santa Clara, previously undefeated in 16 starts against some of the best teams in the country. Slip Madigan’s Gaels ended the Broncos’ victory

parade with a 7-0 shutout before Stadium. It was the first loss for Texas Christian late in 1936.

60,000 Sunday spectators in Kezar Santa Clara since their game with

Williams’ Optimism About | Cornell Based on Seniors

By JOE WILLIAMS Times Special Writer

NEW YORK, Nov. 14 —Putting qne little word after another—and

mostly about the Cornell can lose

Cornell-Dartmouth game: the Ivy League championship now. .

We can’t see how All the Big

Redders have to do is beat Pennsylvania apd somehow we figure that

will be simple enough. . . All along this season great teams young men ] supposed to win, oe Our optimis : team is, compose the average grid mentor’s attitude

we- have

in the East and naturally we were look so good against Dartmouth in a game they weren't

felt Cornell was one of the really delighted to see the

about Cornell was based largely on the fact the mainly of seniors . .

and we do not agree wit that seniors don’t care. . . . *

It has been our observation: that seniors want to end their football careers in what has been called a blaze of glory . . . after all they are still youngsters and youngsters don’t get blase just because they are ‘on the first team. .. .

More of Everything

As it turned out, the Big Redders won because they were the better team . . . They had more of everything . . . and usually this is quite enough . . . They were better in the line, better in the backfield, they were playing on their home grounds and this was one game they wanted to win more than any other. . .. That's a tough combination to beat . . . the Dartmouths were pretty good .". . as it happened, they weren't good enough . .. they were supposed to have a great backfield .. . but no backfield can look great ‘without sturay support from the

line . . . and that’s something the],

Dartmouths didn’t have. . . It is entirely probable that MacLead was the best back on the field put you couldn’t prove it... for the most part he was on his own . . He didn’t have the men in front of him to make the plays go... once gid some interesting and exciting things on his own. . . i

Unfair to MacLeod

But this wasn’t often enough to do the Dartmouths much good. . . . As a result MacLeod will lose much = as an All-America candidate, ‘which isn’t fair. ... One man will always have trouble beating eleven. “The Big Redders performed so nuch as a unit it was hard to tell vthing about the individuals. . . . course, we liked the work of the edictable Mr. Peck. oe g Redders. in the ball

Ee

ny

He put

in a while he broke away and.

in it. . .". In this instance the law ot compensation was working on his side. . . . things were coming to him which had eluded him before. ‘Much of the responsibility for the loss of the Syracuse game, the only game Cornell has lost this season, was placed. on the young man’s shoulders. . . . So it was nice to see him come along and do so well.

Eischler Shares Glory

We do not mean to say he was the deciding factor in the game because he wasn't. . . The fact is we thcught young Eischler was much more effective’ in the cause of the Big Redders because he was always in there sitting somebody’s face. . « . Nobody on the field played a better, more vigorous defensive game. . . . We were particularly pleased to see what a fine game Bob Gibson played at center? for Dartmouth. . . He's the son ‘of Old Will Gibson, the prize fight manager and from the outset we had a sort of sentimental interest in the youngster. ... We don’t know whether Old Will saw the game or not. . . . But if he did we’ll bet he got a bigger wallop out of seeing his kid manhandle the Big Redders from time to time than he ever got out of seeing Benny Leonard or Gene Tunney win a prize fight... . When you're a father you can't sit back and say, “Tear into him; he can’t hurt us.” . ... Somehow it’s a little bit different. a

Markets to Celebrate A victory dance for the Richard-

son Markets, champions in the Smith-Hassler ‘Senior Football

wom! “

SEVEN IN BAG, TWO

Minnesota battle at South Bend.

Jack Sommers (11), U. C. L. A. guard, tackles Howie Weiss (75), Wisconsin fullback as Mathews (55), U. C. L. A. quarterback, comes up.

MONDAY,

George Franck, Minnesota halfback, is shown at the end of a Gopher powerhouse drive in the second quarter of the Notre Dame-

McIntyre (68), Notre Dame center,

Ned

NOVEMBER 14, 1938 2 i

O’Brien (47), Irish right end, and

whey 1

De Rranco (55), Notre Dame left

guard, bring him down. The Irish triumphed, 19 to 0. Notre Dame's second team was holding the front at the time.

second co

Minnesota Is

Laydenites Face Northwes Purdue Come to Grips;

The winds that swept through

the line.” And his cry has found echo in

$18,000 house in Dallas, making his

stle.

Bumped Off;

LU. Enters Charmed Circle

tern Next and Crimson and Butler Loses Thriller and

Tigers Take Scrap From Wabash.

By LEO DAUGHERTY

the pine-studded groves of Lake St.

Mary at old Notre Dame today seemed to carry the whispering plea of Knute Rockne—the football creator—‘“go down the line, boys, go down 9

the heart of one of the old master’s = fondest pupils, Elmer Layden, and a new generation of gridiron warriors © to whom the name Rockne is a legend. That legion, shadowed by the Golden Dome, today stood as monarch of all that’s green and all that’s marked off in five, 10 and 20-yard zones, Hoosierdom again seems destined to provide the national champion.

rout of .the mighty Gophers under their shamrocks, victory No. 7, have only two more to go. | All the dope you can pick up points to decision over the Northwestern Wildcats next Saturday. And climate alone, save injuries, is the only odd they have to reckon with when the Golden Gate swings open- to welcome them to Southern California on Dec. 3. ‘The story of the Irish victory

WN

Times-Acme Photos.

The Badgers smashed out a 14-7 victory over the University of California at Los Angeles before 43,000 fans Saturday afternoon.

The city championship bowling tournament is to b= conducted this season under a handicap basis rather than the classification method.

A vote by members of the Indianapolis Bowling Association made the change yesterday at the annual meeting at the Severin Hotel.

The five-man doubles and singles bowlers rolling the highest pin totals including handicaps are to receive first prizes under the new plan while individuals and combinations with the highest actual pin totals will be awarded medals and be named city champions. Five-man handicaps are to be based on 75 per cent of the difference between the team average and the highest team average as of the last week in December. Handicaps in the doubles are to be based on 75 per cent of the difference between the combined averages of the pair and 420. In the singles event, 210 is to be used for the handicap basis. Lester Koelling, former first vice president of the Association and present acting president, was elected president. Other officers include Ted Siener; first vice president; Dick Nordholt, second vice president; Percy Henry, third vice president and Lou Fehrenbach, fourth vice president. Members of the executive committee include Fred Schleimer, Roscoe Conkle, Charles Bowes and Henry Zitzloff. Norman Hamilton continues to serve his term as secretary-treasurer. . Walt Heckman today held the honor of leading local keglers in the Times’ weekly list of bowling stars. In a seven-day’ period that saw the season’s individual high mark shattered twice, Walt banged out a massive 736 Tuesday night lo replace Carl McLear who had cracked the single record the previous night with a 734. The Union Printers Baseball Club quintet smashed the Printcraft

sizzling 3145 and swept to first place in the team counts. The Club pounded out games of 1056, 1002 and 1087 with Ed Stevenson rolling a 655, Bill Middaw a 656, Wendell Nave a 637, Perkins a 606 and Al Roesener a 591. ?

With the 660 minimum to achieve The Times’ weekly honor roll still in force, the list bulged from last week’s even dozen to 21 keglers.

The Shooting Stars

Walt Heckman, Allied Printing Carl McLear, Optimist Louis Fouts, Universal ' Jack Kennelly, St. Joan of Arc . Wilbur Holle, Evangelical Joe Danna

M Dave Killion Sr.. Al Shoch, Postoffice Ray Ch Indianapolis ..... B rohm, Universal Club Bill Dowdell, Citizens Gas oa ill Wischmeyer, Indianapolis .. Ed Roth, Pennsyl Gene Blanford,

League, is to be held at the Rhodius | Ef Sch

ty House Wednesday Koss

League’s five-man record with a|I

For the second consecutive time Burton Strohm joins the tenpin elite. Last week he stood fourth with a 686 rolled in the Interclub circuit

Blackhawks Lead Hockey League

: By United Press ; The | Chicago~Blackhawks, with four straight victories, headed the National Hockey League by 4 points today. The Hawks ‘kept their slate clean by beating Montreal's Canadiens before an overflow crowd of 16,246 at Chicago last night. Johnny Gottselig; veteran wingman, scored three Chicago goals. : The New York Americans move into a second place tie with the Boston Bruins by defeating them 2-1, before 14,750 fans at Madison Square Garden. Detroit's Red Wings suffered their third straight defeat as the New York Rangers made their season’s bow with a 4-3 victory. The standings:

Chicago N. Y. American” cceeceeees 2 Boston Toronto N. Y. Rangers ccecececes 1 Detroit sessscnes 0 Montreal 0 0 0 This - week’s schedule—Tuesday: Toronto at Boston, Detroit at Rangers. Thursday: Detroit at Montreal, Toronto at Americans, Rangers at Chicago. Saturday: Americans’ at Toronto. Sunday: Montreal at Rangers, Toronto at Chicago, Detroit at Boston.

T Pts. 0 .8

Conference Standings

Minnesota 3 +k Wisconsin Ohio State Michi; Nort. Purd Indiana .. seswesse Chicago ... ¢eeooee.. 0 INDIANA Confer. Games. All W. L.

. T. 0 0 1 I. 2. 1... 1 0 0 0

T. W.

CO 00 U0 UO pum fu fd fd jd jd

*Butler %Manchester .... 6 Hanover ........ 2 Rose Poly ..icc.. 2 Ball State ...... 5 Valparaiso ccceee 2 ¥*DePauw cccesee 4 Evansville . *St. Joseph's ... *Franklin *Indiana State .. Earlham *Wabash *Cen. Normal ... #Season completed.

ELINED EPAIRED EFiTTED | Women's TAILORING CO.

oto GW go Vd © CHHNOOHN NON NS SoS! © 1 bu 20 0 gy TN Wen ag ARID pn OO Wu CREO LMOHNS So oF

“ Men's And

. Hoosier Cas. .

Pct. Pts. Op. | L. Fo J50 45 12

4 | Wheeler

- | Falls City Barbasol

Keglers Decide to Try Handicaps In Annual City Bowling Tournament

tion with a 673 posted in the Universal Club loop.

The week’s highlights: Wednesday’s honor roll contained 54 keglers, 26 of them from the Indianapolis loop. . . . Amy McDaniel took the ladies’ high with g 594 series. , . . Harry Schornstein cracked down on the maples and hit a 610 in the Insurance’ League while rolling with his left arm in a sling. . . . Bill Dowdell demonstrated. consistency with games of 222, 225 and 225. . . . At Shelbyville O. C. Harrell, Moral Township High School principal, missed the tenpin hall of fame by two pins as he posted a scorching 298. . . . Charles A. Fox of the Indiana Bell circuit hit a 258 middle game, . . . Walt Heckman’s leadership Tuesday night was the third time he’s led the bowlers this season. . « . Dr. Garland Young shot an 11strike 278 game in the H. A. C. League.

. INSURANCE LEAGUE STANDINGS

QUE DO fob fo jh fk &

Und. Adjusting .cco.ee. 2 Equitale Sec.

0 book ph fk hf fh fk fh fn fh fd

Rd

Fid. & Cas. 40 Audit Bureau 370 «209

Don Johnson continues to pace the Indianapolis League keglers with a blistering 209 average while Ed

Striebeck clings to the runner-up spot with a ®207. Indianapolis League bowlers with averages of 200 or better are:

Ga. Johnson .... 30 209 Ed Striebeck 30 20% Murphy 30 205 Schonacker .. 30 205|F . 30 204|S ces 30.204 ( . ceseess 30 204! Kiesel : 30 203| Roberson .... vee 30 203

The Falls City Beer quintet holds

lla two-game lead for the League

teams although the Barbasols have a six-pin higher game average. INDIANAPOLIS LEAGUE STANDINGS : Ww. Ave. Beer ccccoseces 22 1008 Ciesesssesesens 1014 Herff-Jones Co. .. 95 Marott Shoes ..... 994 | Ajax Beer oe 1965 LaFendrich Cigars ... 994 Conkle Funeral Home . L. S. Ayres & C Bowes Seal Fast Russet Cafeteria .

960 Oc ccsvsscs 975 998 941 935

ARMORY—Tues., Nov. 15— 8:30 P. M. . _ FEATURING the 3 Casey brothers of Ireland

MAIN GO Steve (Crusher) Casey Tom Sawyer

la Bouts on Armory Card

Casey Brothers Are Feature Grappling Attraction.

Four bouts are listed for the Armory wrestling card tomorrow night where the extra attraction will be the appearance of the Casey brothers from Sneem, County Kerry, Ireland. Matchmaker Lloyd Carter completed his program today with the signing of Jim Coffield, Kansas City, to mix with Ray Eckert, St. Louis. . All of the Casey brothers, Steve, James and Timothy, will be on parade, but James will not see action. A formidable opponent was not obtained for him and he will serve as a second when Steve and

Timothy perform. Steve, the Crush-

er, takes on Tom Sawyer, former football player at the University of Southern California. They tangle in the headliner. Facing Timothy will be Joe Corbett, Seattle. In the other match, Buck Weaver, Terre Haute, will go against Kiman Kudo, speedy Japanese matman.

Galento to Fight Thomas Tonight

PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 14 (U. P.). —Two-ton Tony Galento, boisterous barkeeper from Orange, N. J. returns to the ring tonight for the first time since a pneumonia attack last summer when he faces Harry Thomas, Eagle Bend, Minn, heavyweight, -in a scheduled 12-

and today he annexes the 12th posi- round bout at Convention Hall.

Galento, colorful and aggressive, will rule a 2-to-1 favorite before entering the ring and will weigh-in at about 235 pounds. Thomas, a former college football star, blacksmith, minor league baseball player and farmer, will scale about 200. The man who walks like a barrel is ranked as No. 1 heavyweight challenger by the National Boxing Association and tonight’s fight ‘will decide whether. Galento lost his ability to take it when he was given a “nine count” by pneumonia—or “ammonia” as he describes it.

St. Catherine Team Wins Parochial Title

For the third successive year the St. Catherine gridmen are champions in the Sportman’s Store Parochial Schools football league. Their triumph, 14-0, over Little Flower yesterday afternoon at Gar-

so3 (field Park clinched the title. Wal-

ter Fisher’s thirty-yard run around

3lend and Jimmy Froelick’s forty-

five-yard dash accounted for the

358 two touchdowns. :

In Saturday contests St. Joan of

4! Arc won from St. Philip, 6 to 0, Holy

Trinity snubbed Cathedral, 7 to 0; Holy Cross crushed Lady of Lourdes, 14 to 0, and the Haughville Irish walloped St. Patrick’s, 26 to 0.

Butler Frosh Win Cross-Country Meet

Times Special ST. LOUS, Nov. 14—Butler Uni-

3u versity’s four-man freshman team

won the team championship in the National A. A. U. Junior cross-

202 |country championships yesterday in 309 | Forest Park. %

Paced by Elias Poulos who placed third behind Marvin Cannon of the Cincinnati Gymnastic A. A. and Reyburn Gordon, Washington University middle distance ace, the other three Bulldogs, Frank Wintin, Richard Griffith and Max Armer joined hands and finished in a three-way tie for fifth place, eight yards ahead of their nearest opponent.

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Its taste and quality and value add more friends every day. The green 15¢ tim is the best - buy for your pipe.

over the Gophers can be told in a few words: Notre Dame was by far the tougher team. If anything, Elmer Layden’s team exploded one of 1938's myths, that Minnesota had an aggregation of giants and relied on brute strength and that a rival coulds Use only brains and speed if it hoped to win. Notre Dame had more stamina, more strength and Minnesota never had a chance against the Irish line

Irish Defense Steals Show

urday afterngo history.

stole the show. downs seemed secondary.

the first quarter.

Herrington supertruck. Zontin

stint, and the Irish romped over.

forwards in‘ each case held.

receivers into open territory.

Zontini, Thesing,

gau, Sheridan, Hofer,

tive. brains and courage.

line. It"showed itself Saturday.

Those Irish, with that 19-to-0

at the o] Indiana had the ball on the Indiana

the. tall corn country, field goal would be .enough to win the game. Floyd Dean, his silver toe, and the young man place kicked one right between the up-rights and the three

had thrown it to him holding, kicked the extra point. : The Hawkeyes were out in front ning of the third quarter.

14. Irl Tubbs, chief strategist from thought a

So he injected therein

points looked bigger than the

stadium.

It looks like Purdue but they won’t do it on an empty stomach.

Bulldogs Bark But Don’t Bite Enough : Butler's Bulldogs barked loud at

St. Louis, but were muzzled in the last quarter and went to the kennel with a 27-to-21 defeat against them.

Tony Hinkle’s fighters were be-

after the first few minutes of play.

A few of the 56,000 fans in the South Bend stadium may have realized that they were watching Satn what may very well’ be, for all anyone knows, the greatest defensive team in football

Notre Dame’s forward wall—both its’ first and second string lines— The three touch-

The line, of course, made possible Zontini’s spectacular 84-yard run in It opened up a hole large enough for a Marmon-

cleverly dropped back behind his interference, the interference did its

The two forward pass touchdowns, likewise, were products of superior line play. The South Bend | ir ground long enough to shake the

It would be" ridiculous to draw from this picture the idea that Layden has no offense. He has a magnificent offense. His backs—Sitko, Stevenson, SagMorrison, Piepul—are big and fast and decepOn top of this they have

But the thing that makes great backs great is there. And that’s the

hind a 20-to-0 barrier as they came into the second half. Stan Crawford scooped up a blocked punt and ran 40 yards for one touchdown. Climaxing a 69-yard tour, Tom Harding tossed a. pass to Crawford for another score. Harding, in the final period, paced the Bulldogs on a 60-yard journey and Bob Connor retrieved a fumble and tossed to Bob Lanahan for a score. Butler was-out in front 21 to 20, but as darkness set in, Dick Yore of the Bears. twirled the ball to Bill Ferkecky in the end zone for the pay-off. : DePauw celebrated 50 years of football with a 7-to-0 anniversary victory over the Little Giants of Wabash. A crowd of 4000 saw Johnny i| Scott, the leading scorer in the Indiana Conference, race left end in the second quarter to win this chapter in the ancient feud. There was one in the crowd to-whom DePauw’s victory brought the warmest smile. It was Elmer E. Botkin. He was DePauw’s center in 1889 and he’s still charging through.

any trouble crushing the Earlham Quakers 21 to 0 at Muncie. Jimmie Phend, one of the State’s best point getters, garnered two more touchdowns. Swede Carlson scored the other Cardinal marker. . Manchester's Spartans eased out a T-to-6 verdict over St. Joseph's at. North Manchester. It was the Spartans’ sixth victory in seven Conference starts. Lieberum’s plunge for the extra point was the margin

Ball State's Cardinals didn’t have

And so it was not surprising to watch the bone-crushers from Minnesota resort, to deception—feints, reverses, sneaks—all the tricks that a losing team can think of. But always there was the Notre Dame line

of victory,

Indiana State’s Sycamores put

away a sound thumping with their 1938 aniforms. to Richmond, Ky. State Teachers polished them off, 36 to 17.

They went down and Eastern

sweeping up, to pick the ball carrier out of thin air and flatten him to earth for no gain or a loss. of Sophs Bring Crimson Victory Surprise! And it’s a wiFhing to Purdue, Just about the time that Indiana gets ready to meet

BARTHEL — the Tailor, hb

4 16

o

TED -XeoXe

Men's

SUITS

5s

Years Same Location West Ohio Street

Alteration Specialist

the Lafayette boys the Crimson lags raise their shoulder pads and stick out

théir chests. For a rehearsal of the renewal of this ancient spectacle, which comes off next Saturday, the In-| dianians beat Iowa. It was 7 to 3 at Bloomington Saturday. It was the Crimson'’s first]

Men's and Women's

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