Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 November 1938 — Page 8
=
#3
: the customers vies
~ 10-round bout at the Arena.
UNFINISHED * GRID BUSINESS
The Brooklyn Dodgers are the only major league ball club without a presi-
dent.
8 » =
SEVERAL MAJOR TILTS REMAIN
NFINISHED business in the college football world includes scattered battles between major teams in the South, Southwest and Far West. . . It’s all over in the East and Middle West except Notre Dame’s date with Southern California Saturday at Los Angeles. The Irish won last year at South Bend, 13 to 6, in a thriller, and since both teams are stronger this fall the grid fans on the Coast probably will sit in on a “terrific”
encounter this week.
Catholic U. and South Carolina were frozen out at Washington Saturday and postponed the: tilt until today.
8 =» =»
8 8 =»
)THER big games left for a decision are Temple at Florida, Washington State at Oklahoma, Georgia at Miami, Fla., Southern Methodist at Rice and Mississippi vs. Tennessee at Memphis. . . . The three ‘top flight undefeated teams going to the post again are Notre Dame,
Oklahoma and Tennessee.
A “stray” big game on Dec, 10 will find Oregon State
battling U. C. L. A. at Los Angeles. . . . Then will follow
a cluster of bowl attractions to be announced later. ... A minor intersectional fray on Toledo U. to invade the Southwest to meet St. Mary's of
~ Texas at San Antonio. y 2 2 ”
this week’s menu calls for
8 2 ”
ANTA CLARA'S football season and its chances for a bid to one of
the bowl games were splattered today by a one-point defeat which might have been turned into a victory had Coach Buck Shaw ac- 3
cepted an offer of the rival coach,
troit, not to count the point after touchdown. .
second setback.
Gus Dorais of University of De- . It was Santa Clara's
It was a twist af fate which saw Detroit, by converting the extra point, defeat Santa Clara, which missed its try, 7-6 in their inter-
sectional game at Sacramento, Cal,
yesterday.
Dorais made the suggestion for eliminating the point after touch-
down several weeks ago. .
. He recommended that in case of a tie the.
winner be the team which gained the most yards from scrimmage. . Shaw expressed interest in the suggestion but let it die, so Santa - Clara and Detroit squared off yesterday under the regulation foot-
ball rules instead of experimenting.
. Santa Clara had 12 first
downs to Detroit's three and gained twice as much yardage: as the
Titans. ” 2 2
” 2 2
HREE loud cheers! . . . President George Trautman of the American Association fired up the baseball stove league today by
thformine the fans that plans are
under way to shorten the play-
offs in his league and the International circuit and also cut the Little World Series from seven to five games.
The proposed changes will come
before the magnates at the base-
ball convention at New Orleans early next month . .. Mr. Trautman has decided it’s useless to buck the big football games and big World
Series in early October.
Anyway, three-out-of-five game series will meet the approval of
goers and they turn to football for | ” o 2
The five-out-of-seven system wears out the sports
relief, ” ” ”
['T MAY interest fans to know that the name of Antonio Michael
Lazzeri still appears on the reserve list of the Cubs . . .
As you
may recollect, Tony some time ago said he was leaving the Chicago Cubs . . . Oscar Vitt says he wants Lazzeri.as his assistant at Cleve-
land.
Ben Geraghty, the Villanova infielder who was with the Dodgers in the Casey Stengel regime, has been acquired by the Senators. Mervyn Shea, the veteran catcher released last season by the Dodgers, has landed as a coacil win Detroit. ;
— And in This Corner
AMBERS FIGHTS CROSS TONIGHT
PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 28 (U. P.).—~Lou Ambers, Herkimer, N. Y., “Hurricafié®” who lost his lightweight boxing title to Henry Armstrong by a narrow margin, arrives at the first crossroads on his comeback
+ trail tonight when he meets Philadelphia's veteran Tommy Cross in a Cross, hard-hitting and elusive, offers Am-
bers his first stiff opposition since the New York fighter started his comeback. Ambers was a 9 to 5 favorite. .
REVOLTA WINS $5000 OPEN
COLUMBIA, S. C., Nov. 28 (U. P.). ~—Johnny Revota of Evanston, Ill, retained his No. 2 position among golf’s leading money winners today with the $1200 first prize in the Columbia-Ridgewood $5000 Open. Revolta’s 284 total for the 72 holes beat out Craig Wood, New York, and Harry Cooper, Chicopee, Mass., who had 285s.
THOMPSON TRADED TO RED WINGS BOSTON, Nov. 28 (U. P.).—Tiny Thompson, the National Hockey | —
League’s ranking goalie, was traded Detroit Red Wings for $15,000 and
today by the Boston Bruins to the an unnamed player. The 34-year-
old star is slated to replace Rookie Harvey Teno in an effort to bolster the defense of the Red Wings, floundering in sixth place.
Tipton’s Toe
Kicked Duke
To Victory, Williams Finds
By JOE WILLIAMS Times Special Writer
NEW YORK, Nov. 28.—Putting one little word after another; Duke
lina hills had a dream kicker. . .
didn’t have a dream backfield but it appears the Blue Devils of the Caro- . Pittsburgh lost this mighty battle
"* mainly because the Panthers had no rebuttal for Eric Tipton’s accurate
Panthers
toe.
Returning travelers from Durham insist that in all other respects the
were superior. .and® the figures of the game seem to bear them out. ... The Panthers
‘won everything but the decision. . . and it’s not inconceivable they would
“ have won this if it hadn’t keen tor: Tipton’s remarkable performance. .
This, of course, is somewhat like
saying Cefrino Garcia would have
won Foe Henry Armstrong if it ~ hadr’ ~ exhaustable
latter's inIn any
been for the stamina. . .
event, Tipton’s angle kicks kept the
Panthers bottled up in their coffin
corner most of the afternoon. ...
They were always struggling to get
" back in the ball game. . . .
~ Army-Navy Weather
Took Pioneer Stamina
"The most amazing exhibition of ' angle kicking we ever saw was when
Harry Kipke put seven out of nine out of bounds inside the five yard line. .. This was when he was
kicking for Michigan against Ohio
te. . . Tipton’s performance must have been something akin to it. . He put 17 kicks out of bounds inside the twenty. . . One went out at the five and this was the kick that paved the way for the only touchdown in the game. A few seconds later the Blue
‘Devils were storming through to
k a Pittsburgh kick which a g gent by the name of Perdue ell on back of the line. ow on it will be Sutherland “rather yan Stagg, who fears Perdue. . . he Army-Navy game was anremarkable test of the fortitide and rugged stamina of the aerican sports nut. . . . More than 0,000 sat out in the open in a raw, zing North wind to see the sts conquer the Middies. . . . e are times when we feel the character of the pioneers is saogerated, and Saturday was one
s was another of those games s the losing team won everyg but the ball game. . . . The sts won in the face of superior ds because they made the most of scoring opportunities and bea when they had to march to the game they went right out marched : don’t now yet ‘how young
Mr. Huey Long managed to complete his seventy-nine yard runback of a punt which gave Army its first score in the opening quarter. Two or three times it looked as if he was completely surrounded. And another time it looked as if he couldn't escape being forced out of bounds near midfield. It wasn’t until he cut back and
243
PAGE 8
MONDAY,
NOVEMBER 28, 1938
Middies Fight But Lose to Army, 14-7
Emmett Wood (27), Navy back is shown gaining four yards during the first quarter as Army defeated the Middies, 14 to 7, in the annual
Times-Acme Photo.
service game played at Philadelphia’s Municipal Stadium Saturday. More than 100,000 shivering persons saw the game.
ALABAMA 19—So. Calif 34—Howard 14—N. Car. St. )—Tennessee 32—Sewanee . 26—Kentuckv ... 3—Tulane ... Hy Geortia T..
149 .
ARRANTAS
—OK & M..T ged Christn. 3
33—Wichis . 9—V. 1.
i= Y iota . 40—Boston_U. ...0 7—Notre Dame .19 20—Frank-Marsh 12 34—Chattanooga 13 19—Princeton ... 7 14—Navy 7
AUBURN 14—Birm. Southn.0 0—Tulane 0 31 onnesses ewe 3-u St. oa Spe ch. Rie oe 12— Villanova ver 28—Louis. St. .... 23—Georgia 7—Florida .
110
BAYLOR 3i=-Souihwestork i Okla. & M.. ns A 14—Centenary
_T 35—Lovola. 1a, 21—Rice ....
-185
BOSTON COLLEGE
63—Canisius .. .12 13~Norihgastern -2
2 = Holy Cross .. 188
BROWN 20—Harvard ....1 20—Lafavette . 13—Dartm
outh.. 34 . 43~Ehode ®Isiand 21 - 48—Tufts 0
14—va le 36—Columbia ...27 203 Sek avs
al Aggies. . 20— L. A..
H=Washington .e 13—Oregon Stat T—S. California 17 20—Oregon 0 6—sStanford ...
206 CAR. TECH
49—Davis-Elkins 33—Wittenbers .
T—AKkro 20—Pittaburgh oi 21—Duaguesne .... 14—N. Car, St. .
headed for the center of the field | 17
that he began to pick up his block-|
ers. . . . From then on it was just a romp. ,.. . This was a spectacular performance but we don’t think it matched the Cadets’ comeback in the third quarter. . . . The Middies had tied the score and were in the process of pushing the Cadets all over the field. . At this stage it|_* didn’t look like a contest. Finally the Cadets recovered a fumble on their 19 and they reached down somewhere and came up with a rejuvenated spirit. . . . They didn’t stop going until they "had crossed the line 81 yards away with the winning touchdown. , .. The comeback of the team, the complete| change in emotion and drive and mechanics were perhaps the main features of the day.
Fordham Finally
Shows Its Power
There may be some news on the Sugar Bowl game today. . . . To repeat, it will either be Carnegie Tech or Fordham. . .. Against New York University Saturday Fordham looked the part of the great team it has been threatening to be all season. . . . For the first time the offense clicked perfectly. . . . There was more bite, more sustained drive to the attack. . . . This wasn’t a bad N. Y. U. team, but it had little to offer in opposition to the hard-hitting back and the fast-charging forwards of the Rams. . . . The score might easily have been much larger. . . . The condition of the field mitigated| jz against touchdown parades. . .
Market Eleven Meets
Members of the Richardson Market football team are to meet at the. Rhodius Park Community House tonight at 7:30 o'clock,
7—Cornell 39—Vi ina
12—STracuse . 27—Brown 3
154 CORNELL 15—Colgate 20—Harvard iprracuse ur —Penn ate . 23—Columbia ...
To DARTMOUTH 46—Ba
Bates 0 51—8t. Lawrence..
22—Princeton .... Brown
44—Dickinson” un ornell me I
254 DETROIT
i od Boston Col. .. Villanova ..
Talon Sonia Clara. . 6
Harvard ....17
14—Dartmouth werd
Records of College Elevens
DUQUESNE 84—Waynesbrg... 6—Texas Tech.. g~Piasrall ve
—Aubur 100
Gee 26—Ore!
13—Pittsburgh . . Mar
0—N. Car 1 oun 25—N.
186 G. WASHINGTON
9—Kan
88
18—Mer Noe Duke
72 38—Coll. Ss 12—1d
82 HOLY
225
T—Iowa
132
108
18—Geo. 0—Clem
6] 150
ot
0—Iowa 14—Mich.
. 35
Sew Miss.
pa }—Boston C. ... eorgia ; —Maryland ... I—Qeoreis Tech (
FORDHAM 47—Upsala
TL 0—Mississiopi .. §—Cllomsol vant
0—Kansas St. oT. C. U.
ary’s
Carol. U.
0—Buckwell | 6—W. Va.
GEORGIA 20—The Giada .
MISS. STATE 19—Howard
131
MISSOURI 14—Colorado 2 13—Kangas, State. 21 BI Stat, “os 0 5-10 6—Mich. State .. J—Qhiafioma ous 0 t. Louis ... 18 Runsas
NAVY
ale I eion ror 0—Pennsylvania 0—Notre Dame 1 I oe. 7—Arm 14
—| 126
NEBRASKA 7-—Minnesota . 7—Iowa State .. 0—Indiana 0—Oklahomsa .. 10—Missouri ....13
16—Kansas 0—Pittoburgh i
8 line State .
ren va
— | 108
YEORGIA TECH
0 "patie, 14 []
GONZAGA
Puget 8 0 ’s
nta 0—Toans Tech .
0—San 20 19—Toyola Lr "A. 20 12—Holv Cross .. ps
115 CROSS
28—Providence .. 46—R
KANSAS 19—Texas 1 0—Notre Dame .f 58—Washburr ... 0—Oklahoma
State..
7—Missouri ...
7—Nebraska ..
—_— KENTUCKY ~ 46—Maryville ... 66—! g
Tech ".. 1
on 0—Teancsses .
LOU. STATE eM ississiunt " Sd “oe
09 4 4 BILIDI DIB 4
MANHATTAN
6—S. Bonavent..7 19—nNiagara
s 0 13—West Va
MARQUETTE 0—Wisconsins . . 7—80. Meth
.27 pling
State .. State. “20
12—Arizona 20 2—Texas Tech 21
122
MISSISSIPPI 20—La, State ... 3 27=La. Tech ne
14—Miss. f—Vanderbilt ob ig 47—Centenary ..14
ash, «...0
3¢. Louis essed
CRE 5 ©
69 | 157
KANSAS STATE Northwestern, 3
NO. CAROLINA
14—Wake Forest..6 21—No Car. State.0 14—Tulane 1
— B. T 0—Fordham 20 Virginia. ir
NO. CAR. STATE
19—Davidson 1 0—No. Carolina.21 Alabama ... 14 Wake Forest 1
0—Duke 0—Carnegie T.. I) 94
NOTRE DAME 52—Kan. 14—Ga. 14-11 7—C 19—Arm 15—Nav ny 4 19—Minnesota .. 9—Northwestern
149
OKLAHOMA
sa Es State 0 1-Mistou ri
3 8% ate =o.
. & M.0 12 OREGON 10—-Wash. State..2 14—U. C. L. A...12 ees 21 cess 20 as val
6 vee 20 3—Washington . 0 0—Oregon 8S. ..19 “60 143 OREGON STATE
tanford 19—Oregon
i! PENNSYLVANIA 34Lafavetis aes ale
Princeton ... 1 Columbia Pe
0—Na' 13—Michigan os 7-1 tat 0—Cornell 89. PITTSBURGH Te Nireinia. 0 md 3
Is eos 3—Wisconsin .. a
nN —- “w
hw — _ Easissippt o. 118 123
ROSE POLY Evansville ..
22—¢ =" Le 7—Michigan 8, 7—San. Fran. U, 0—St. Mary's ... 6—Detroit <.oeee.T 97 26 29. CALIFORNIA 7—Alabama ....19
31—Ore| 13_Catifornia veel S Waslinston . 42—U. C. L. A. ..T 152
SO. CAROLINA 53—Erskine 6—Xavier
6—Georgia 19—Wake Forest. 20 25—Davidso Cameo oe 6—Villanova ....6 T—Duquesne .... 27—Furman 0—Fordham .... 'i3 86
161
SO. METHODIST 34—Denton Tea...T
STANFORD 0—sSanta Clara. .22 8—Wash :
23—Dartmouth .
9 TEMPLE
53/10 with about 25 yards to the goal
TENNESSEE 26—Sewanee
ome RTS . 14—Vanderbilt ... 46—Kentucky .... 229 TEXAS
0—Oklahoms ... f= ATkansas .
TEXAS A. & M. 52—Texas A. & M. 0 20—Tulsa
137
TEX. CHRISTIAN
13—Centenary .. 21—Arkansas ... 28—Tembple 3:7 . 31—Maraucite - ces 5s eoesl
7 uth, Meth. 7 53 . TEXAS, TECH
Suhoaod
Gonzaga 17—New Mexico. . _21—Marquette .
21 a
133
New Fall Hats 2
Full Silk Lined
85, LEVINSON
Your Hafter
.50
= Club Is
1 English Avenue Team Ahead
15 chants to a scoreless tie yesterday 6|at Christian Park.
0| fourth down pass to an end waiting in the end Zone failed as the “6 pall slipped from his hands.
0 the Holy Cross Crusaders to give
113 ka: place in the league.
i Girl Swimmer
¢| Patty Aspinall,
o| Athletic Club, broke the national 6! senior women’s indoor short course
17 tance, which she covered in 6:01.8,
3land in the 500-yard swim, which - 0 she covered in 6:53.8, as compared -?|with the former mark of 7:00.8.
VANDERBILT 20—Wash. ot L).0 12—W. Ky. Ee aay ..
WASH. (Seattle) 0—Minnesota .. Idaho
)— 13 14
0—Alabama .... “38
26 Wash. P state. .0
68 WASH & T—Hampden-8S.. 0—Virginia .... 6—W. Virgini §—geniucky sen 6—V. P. we RO Genus & Ma Na ‘ 67 WASH.
VILLANOVA
59—American Int.0 25—Munlenbers .
es 6 20—Manhattan .. 282 50
WAKE FOREST STATE
6 13—W. Maryland 20 _21—Davidson —e +0 —
Grid Winner
In Point System.
The English Avenue Boys’ Club 0| today held the championship of the
City Independent Football League by battling the Beech Grove Mer-
Because of a snow-covered field and a slippery pigskin, neither team was able to use its running attack to advantage and a punting duel ensued as the two teams played for a break. The Boys’ Club received their opportunity to score late in the first half when the Merchants’ tailback fumbled as he started to punt. It was the Boys’ Club’s ball, first and
line. : Several. line plunges failed to gain the required yardage and a
The Merchants punted out of danger. The second half was chiefly a seesaw affair with neither team threatening, The Shawnee A. C. forfeited to
the Holy Cross eleven a tie for sec-
The final standings: Boys’ Club IEEE EERE EEE EE EN NJ 600 Beech Grove ....ccoc000:0. 500 Holy Cross ....ecoec00000. 900 Shawnee A, .. 350
Sets New Mark
Times Special WEST LAFAYETTE, Nov. 28— 12-year-old swimming star from the Indianapolis
record in the 200-yard breast stroke here Saturday in the second annual Aquacade at Purdue University’s pool. Swimming against time for the first time in senior competition she stroked the distance in 2:55.4. The old mark of 2:56 was set by Margaret Hoffman in 1932. In addition to setting the national mark Patty broke the In-diana-Kentucky A. A. U. records for the 50-yard and 100-yard swims. Jane Cloyd, also of the I. A. C,, collected two Indiana-Kentucky A. A. U. records in the 440-yard dis-
as against the old mark of 6:09.8,
Anderson New Iowa Mentor
3 Leaves Holy Cross to Take
Three-Year Contract.
IOWA CITY, Ia. Nov. 28 (U. P.). —The University of Iowa Athletic Board announced today that Dr. Ewdard C. Anderson of Holy Cross has been signed to coach the Iowa Football team for three years. A statement issued by E. G. Schroeder, athletic director, said:
91“The athletic board by unanimous g|action has appointed Dr. Anderson las head football coach for three 3| years, beginning with next season. 0 The president of the University,
Eugene A. Gilmore, has approved the
=: | appointment. Dr. Anderson will in
due time submit to the board his recommendations concerning the rest of the staff.”
Succeeds Irl Tubbs
He will succeed Irl Tubbs, who came to Iowa from Miami in the spring of 1937 and whose teams won only two games during his two-year regime. Anderson will arrive in Iowa City tomorrow and will meet with the athletic board in the afternoon. Neither Schroeder nor members of the board would comment on the salary Anderson will receive here but it is believed to be in excess of $10,000 annually. Tubbs received $7800 annually and was on a year-to-year contract basis. He was notified a week ago today that his contract would not be renewed. “Anderson will be in full charge of football,” Schroeder explained. “No games will be scheduled except at his request and all details concerning football will be entirely in his hands. An open date on the 1939 schedule will be filled only when he has time to consider all angles.” Played Under Rockne
Anderson is expected to bring his two assistant coaches at Holy Cross, Jim Harris, line mentor, and Joe Shekeetski, backfield coach. The new coach, who played under Knute Rockne at Notre Dame, is a native of Mason City, Iowa. He signed the Iowa contract a week ago but had requested that no announcement be made until his Holy Cross eleven finished its season. The Crusaders completed their schedule with a 29-to-7 victory over Boston College Saturday.
Thomas to Captain ’39 Culver Gridmen
Times Special CULVER, Nov. 28.—J. B. (Blondy) Thomas, an end from Nashville, Tenn., was elected captain of the 1939 Culver Military Academy football team this week at the conclusion of the season. Lefty Guindon, Detroit, a guard, was renamed alternate-captain. Capt. Willis Maxson, of Wichita Falls, Tex., star fullback and leading scorer on the cadet team this year, received the Logue medal, awarded annually to the outstanding player during the season.
PRO FOOTBALL Washington, 15; Pittsburgh, 0. Nii Cardinals, 31; Clevelafid,
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VOTE TODAY ON ROSE BOWL DEFENDER
California, Trojans Await
Western Balloting Results; Irish Head for Coast Tilt
Layden Eleven Closes Season in Los Angeles Battle On Saturday.
NEW YORK, Nov. 28 (U. P.)— The end of the road is a week away for Notre Dame and anything can happen this Saturday, but today the Irish of South Bend still stand astride the football world. Undefeated and untied through a bruising schedule, Coach Elmer Layden and his boys went West today for a game with Southern California, an outfit that started the season slowly and then came'along with a rush that may end in the Rose Bowl. If Notre Dame falters in California, two other teams are ready to step in and claim the national championship—Texas Christian, the irresistible force of the Southwest, and Duke, the rock of Dixie. Five major teams remain unbeaten and untied as the season dies, and they rank about like this: 1. Notre Dame, 2. Texas Christian and Duke in a tie, 3. Tennessee, and 4. Oklahoma, . Duke Unscored On Notre Dame was idle over the week-end, and so the great adventure of the day befell the Blue Devils whom Wallace Wade coaches at Duke. Many an eyebrow had been lifted at Duke’s none too strenuous schedule and the word was passing around to wait until we Blue Devils caught a tough one. So they caught Pittsburgh at hy N.C, Saturday, and when the game was over Duke had won, 7 to 0, and had come through the season without having its goal line crossed. Nothing can happen now to spoil the perfect records of Duke and Texas Christian unless they get bowled over in one of the postseason bowls. Oklahoma and Tennessee are not so lucky. Mississippi, a tough team with one of the nation’s great backs in Parker Hall, plays Tennessee Saturday. Oklahoma has to get by Washington State ‘this week.
Redskins Remain In Pro Running
NEW YORK, Nov. 28 (U. P.).— Sammy Baugh is still pitching touchdown passes—so well, in fact, that his Washington Redskins, 1937 professional champions, were still in the running for the 1938 title today. Baugh tossed two touchdown passes yesterday as Washington trimmed Pittsburgh, 15-0, before 25,000 Capital City fans. The victory enables the Redskins to go into next Sundays game against the New York Giants with a chance to retain their Eastern title and meet the Western champions in the playoff. The Giants need only a tie to win the Eastern crown. In the Western division the Detroit Lions have a chance to tie Green Bay, needing only a victory over Philadelphia next Sunday to finish in a deadlock with the Packers and necessitate a division playoff. If such a playoff is necessary it will take place Sunday, Dec. 11, and cause postponement of the championship game between the East and West until Dec, 18. If Detroit fails Sunday, the league championship will be decided Dec. 11, with Green Bay representing the West. The Chicago Cardinals defeated the Cleveland Rams yesterday, 31 tol
Hohe Terms Are Bunched in Race
By United Press Only ane point separated the first five clubs in National League hockey standings today, with three teams deadlocked for the lead on points and two others tied for fourth. The Chicago Black Hawks and Boston Bruins climbed to the top alongside the New York Americans last night while Toronto and the New York Rangers remained stationary. : The Hawks nosed the Rangers, 1-0, with less than two minutes to play, while the Bruins buried the Americans, 8-2. In the other game, Montreal’s Canadiens scored their first victory in nine starts, beating the Detroit Red Wings, 3-2. The standings:
T Pts. Boston ....... eevee esses wv 1 Do iis ; 5 Chicago Rangers .. Toronto ... Detroit
- | Montreal
Opinion Widely Divided on Which Is the Better Aggregation.
LOS ANGELES, Nov. 28 (U. P.) .— It was six of one and a half dozen of the other today as the 10 members of the Pacific Coast Confere ence cast telegraphic ballots to determine whether California or Southern California would be the Rose Bowl defender on Jan. 2. On all sides were reports that one or another political deal had clinched the necessary six votes for the Bears or U.S. C.,cochampions in the conference standings with six victories and one defeat apiece. But none was authentic or could be verified until conference President Hugh C. Willett announced the de~ cision. The announcement found sportse writers .of Los Angeles and San Francisco sharply divided as to the merits of the two candidates. Local writers held that U. S. C. had de-~ feated California, 13-7, and had scored more decisive margins over common opponents in four ofher games. San Francisco scribes cone tended: that California was the defending champion and should not be deprived of the invitation while tied in the standings. Both universities issued statements that they were willing to let all
claims rest on the record. Each.
held that its team had a clear right to the Pasadena intersectional cone test and the $90,000 in gate receipts that go with it,
Four Eligible in East
While the West was embroiled in the long argument concerning its standard-bearer, the list of eligible Eastern teams was reduced to Texas Christian, Duke, Tennessee and, possibly, Carnegie Tech, the only beaten eleven conceded a chance. Announcement of an Eastern selection is not expected until the end of the week. The Conference universities which voted today were U. S. C., California, Stanford, Washington, Washington State, Oregon, Oregon State, Idaho and Montana. The latter two are full conference memsbers in every respect except that
they do not play a full gonzerence
football schedule.
Don Lash Still Harrier Champ
NEWARK, N. J., Nov. 28 (U. P.). —Indiana State Policeman Donald Lash “got his man” by a single stride to remain National A. A. U. cross-country running champion today. The former Indiana University distance ace came from behind with a mad dash down the snow-covered stretch to overtake Victor Dyrgall of New York’s Millrose A. A. and win the title for the fifth consecutive year. Lash, former world’s record holder at two miles, covered the 6%-mile stretch through Branch Brook Park in 34 minutes, 33.2 seconds. Dyrgall, who finished in 34:34.00, led the Millrose A. A. to a second straight team victory. Another exHoosier, Tommy Deckard, running mate of Lash, finished third. The Millrose Club placed all five of its
harriers within the first 14 finishers
for a low total of 29 points. New
York A. C. was second with 35, and
Manhattan College, I. C.-4-A title~ holder, ran third with 70.
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