Newspaper Page Text
PAGE EIGHT
Football “Slain” Still Uncounted In Nag
“MAJOR" TEAM NOT
Intersectional ~ Program
This Week Is Interesting
All Over Country.
By HERBERT PARKER
NEW YORK.—(f)—They still
were counting the football slain
today.
After .a week-end oof frightful
slaughter, a national check-up re
vealed only three major teams
still able to boast spotless records
and only ecight others tied hut
unbeaten .
Briefly, the undefeated list
smong big-time footbhall powers
looked like this:
Fast: Fordham and Georgetown.
each tied once,
Mid-West: Northwestern ana
Marquette, unheaten and untied.
Far West: Santa Clera, unbeat
en and untied; Washington State
and Southern California, each tied
onte. I
South: Tulane, Louisiana Statc
and Alabzma, each tied once. |
Rocky Mountain: Utah State, |
tled once. '
More trouble looms for the un-I
defeated clan in this week’s prn-l
gram which lines up as follows: |
Fast: The intersectional nngle]
dominates the slate with three
teams from the Mii-West and |
three from the South moving in
to give hattie 1o Atlantic seaboard
powers. : ,
Fordhcm plays Purdue, Harvardl
will play Virginia. I
Boston College meets North |
Carolina State; Penn squares off |
¢galbst Michigan; Navy seeks to |
halt Notre Dame, and Manhatmn]
tackles Kentucky. v
Intersectional headliners wmi
find Coigate’s Red Raiders facing
Holy Cross; and Dartmouth tack-i
ling Columbia's Lions. ,
Georgetown's undefested status |
will be in danger in a tussle with |
West Virginia. i
Mid-West: Northwestern's 6-0 |
conquest of Minnesota in the rain
and mud at Ivanston not only |
snapped Minnesota's string of 21;
vietories in succeéssion and 28|
gemes without defeat, but estab- |
lished the Wildeats in the driver's
seat in the Dig Ten conference. {
With four successvie conference |
tritmphs behind them, the Wild- '
cals wil go after No. 5 against |
Wisconsin. Minnesata, tied with |
Purdue and Indiana for sm'nnd}
place, pleys lowa. g
Jdndiana entertains Syracuse »:snd(
Ohio State returns to conference |
warfare against Chicogo. "
Nebraska chalked up its third |
Big Six conference vietory in |
beating Missouri, 20-0, and I)l"l,\'}iz
Kanses this week.
~ HBputhwest: Teéxas A. and M.‘sl
~18-0 shellacking by Arkansas, svmi
“Bouthern Methodist to the top m“
~g: conference heap. 8. M, U. |
_i lays Texas A. and M. this week. |
Par West: Washington’s fifth |
straight conference triumph, “I
7-0 conquest of Oregon, left the
Huskies still on top. Wuashington |
State and Scuthern California are.
“indefeated but played each other
to a scoreless draw.
~_ Southern California plays Cali
fornia, and Washington plays
;fififianfnl'd. in the hig games this
weelk
South: Louisiena State's 19-0
,AE’@l]}])!l over Vanderbilt left the
;.i’glgflfs on top of the Southeastern
~oeonference with three victorics in
a 4 row.
;.,-A,Tw:"m' meets Alabama in the
- most important game although
: Lounisiana probably will be seri
ously tested by Mississippi State.
- Duke’s frightful 51-0 stampede
of Washington and Lee, at
Nopth Cuarolina’s 21-6 conquest of
North Carolina State left these
" two powers on top of the South
ern conference heap. Duk, in
vades Wake TForest this week,
. while North Carolina plays at
~ Dadivdson, nosed out, 14-13, by
_Furman’s alert play.
7‘ Rocky Mountain: Utah State's
failure to zet better than a score
“éxéss draw with Denver sent the
gfimies down to second place as
- Colorado University, bowling over
igfi'}}ald}*adn College, 7-0, went to the
Loy,
| Uthh gives Colorado University
‘n stern test this week.
kg . .
%Muhan Starting 4
- Gate Is Installed At
g .
~ Hialeah Park, Florida
e A
mEAH FLA, — (#) — The
53’, ian starting gate, believed
by Joseph E. Widener to be a step
“forwvard in the progress of Ameri
sean thoroughbred racing, has been
imstalled at Hilaeah Park. I
« Fidener, Philadelphta sports
mnd President of the Miam?
| Jockey club, tested the gate yes
“terday and pronounced it ready for
_the January opening of the Hia
\leah Park race meeting.
" "The new barrier iy to bhe used
“this season at Hialeah only for
. two-year-olds which nave not been
E‘»‘%W‘ from the old stall gate.
. _Whe gate permits the horses to
_Start from a standstill or grom a
Swalk. Six rope strands are stretched
i meross the track at a height of
" about 41-2 feet. The starter pulls
_a lever which released a spring de
fll&t jeks the barriers up ana
mhead at a 45-degree angle to a
~ height of about 12 feet.
" Widener believes the gate will
make for a fastér and fairer break
_and eliminate the danger of injur
- Jug hborseg at the start.
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Leading -their teains into the fray as the 1936 football seazon enters the home siretch in the first week-end of November, these grid~
ders are out,to give their all for their alma maters on Nov 7. Upper left is Dick Bowlin, ITowa quarterback, who leads an underdog
Hawkeye eleven against Minnesota in Minneapolis. Lower left is a Nowh Carolina State star who'il be right at home when his team
meets Boston Cagllege in Boston—he is Jge Ryneska, fullback, who hails from Amesbury, Mass. Kicking in center is Frank Goodin,
Oregon fullback.- He performs against U, C. L. A. in Portland. Inset below, Franny Murray, Penn quarterback, shows how he’ll:call
signals agaipst Michigan at Philadelphia; Kicking at right is Bill Mattis, Tulane halfback, who faces Alabama at Birmdingham.
Inset below is William Sanders, a tackle whom Southern Methodist will pit against the running attack of Texas A. & M. at Dallas.
|
. 1
U i |
I
Monroe Expected to Be!
. = oy ‘\
Easy Foe for High-Flying |
Athens Eleven. |
T |
By DAN MAGILL, JR. ;
Atheng . High Dbegins work fm‘l
Monroc High's Purple H\n'ri(':mvsi
(who, incidentally, haven’t won a
game this season) Monday after- !
noon with hearts light hecause |
the local Maroons, Tenth district I
champions, have established a
marvelous record so f{ar this .\‘“:'.-%
son. "Thev'r, undeteated in six |
2anmes., : i
They've whipped J-‘,:lsl;lm»ll»‘m.j
32-6; Elberton, 7-0; Decatur, 14-6; \‘
Lincolnton, 34-0; LaGrange, 1446 |
and Washington, 31-0. That's :x!
marvelous record. They've smro-(li
132 pointa .to their opronents’ |
measly 18. !
Here's how Athens and its I'nvs!
have fared in quarters so far this |
|eason: ;
1
Athens .. .. 19 47 12 T.I»I:iB’
Tone .. .. .. 6 0 0 i 2— 18
i
Leading -individuel scovers o |
date l'ulllri\\'l }
T P Total
J. Caoper tth) ... 4 2 26
Be. B'YADY (YD) .. .. 4 8 26 |
M ootheay 1) .., 0002 4 16 |
Jo MeWhorter (fth) . 2 1 13
3. Yuune B .. .0 2 1 13
Jd Thimn (' ... 1 2 8
Jo Ko 2avis (eh) .. ] 0 6
G. Kimbrell (le) .... 1 0 6
K. Sy tm) ~ .00 0 6
H. Seagraves (re) .. 1 0 6
. 2Btans (B e ] 0 6
{ 20 12 132
: Liast season's team, which won
the distrief title for the present
t.\larmms, had - disposed of in its
‘m-sl gix starts: Elberton, 13-6;
| Royston, 47-0; LaGrange, 32-14;
Washington, 34-7; Greensboro,
40-6; and Monroe, 43-13. Th, 1935
“Classic City” outfit had register
ed 209 points against 46 for its
adversaries.
Last year's offense worked bhet
ter than this year's, .uaccording to
thos, statistics, while the 1935 de
fense was much weaker.
Jack Cooper, Athens High's
_best punter, best passer, best
ground gainer, and best defensive
tba,.ck,fcarried the ball one time
against Washington High Friday
| —he just made 58 yards &nd a
l' touchdowri. The next time his
hands touched the ball, h, rassed
beautifully to Lamar ‘“Coot”
Bryant for the extra point.
- Since Cooper’s feat has been
brought to mind let's see what
~other Maroon backs did Friday in
the way of ground gaining from
- scrimmage. Here are official sta
tisties:
i Tries Geined Lost
J. McWhorter .. 8 63 0
Lorene . T 57 0
l.]’; K, Davis .. .. 4 M 0
e, Warwilek .. .. 3 19 1
!L. Bryant .. ... 2 18 0
M o Brey . .. .. b 17 10
o, e 14 3
IJ. M.. ... ] 0 1
’ i 36 239 15
“ 'The last time Athens High
l’fi!ayed the Purple Hurricane of
Walton ‘county was in spring
practice this year. Athens won, 9
‘to 0, the game being .called off at
the half due to rain, which made
the field too soggy te play on.
Madison and Athens Still
Unbeaten, Untied in 10th
| i sh
e | ]
I-l S‘l ul PAIEES PABK
e }
Bayou Tigers Lead Big 13
As Teams Steam Down
November Stretch. |
By KENNETH GREGORY 1
ATLANTA, —i{®P)—TFive foothall
machines of the southeastern von—!
ference weathered the first sixl
weeky of campaigning to remain
unconquered today in the argu
ment over the 1936 championship. ‘
Louisiana Staters Tigers, title-!
,winners a vear ago, placed the blg'
thirteen field into the I\‘mmmhori
gtretch with three uasily-:mnoxed!
victories and ranked as a distinct
threat te repeat for the crown.
I Bracketer hehind the Louisians
Ipnv\mljhnusca, each with two wins |
and one tie in, the hooks, were Ala-‘
bama's Crimson Tide, .r\uhurn‘s‘l
!I’]ainsmen and Georgia Tech’s En-é
; gineers, !
i Tulane’'s Gren Wave rounds ()nti
the " _unbeaten group, having
;\vhipped Mississippi and battled
i/~ to a scoreless decision.
; Next Saturday's slate of Intra
;cnnforenm': combats sends Louis
;iana, State against Mississippi
| State at Baton Rouge, Alabama
E»agalnst Tulane at Birmingham ade
iAubm‘n against _Georgia Tech :u}
| Atlanta, j
{, ‘When the scores of these hattles
are posted, the “experts” should
be ahle to come near naming the
1936 king of southeastern football
' Some of the handicappers who
i,fll‘e not hesitated of getting out on
;a limp, have starrea pointing to
i the November 28 skirmish at Baton
ißouge between Louisiana. State
}and Tulane as a possible Champ
ionship tussle.
E Both of these teams, however,,
iface tough oposition in the
imore formidable than in 1935,
j catches a big test in Mississippi
i State, beaten only by Alabama.
IThen the Tigers meet in order Au
| burn, Louisiana «college and Tu-
Ilane.
! "The Green Wave, a husky, fine
Idefensive and offensive club, en
!counters stiff oppesition in Ala
{ bama, which has beaten Kentucky
|in addition to Mississippi State.
Following the fray with the Crim
son Tide, Tulane faces Georgia,
Sewane and ILouisiana State.
The Georgia and Sewanee bar
riers unlikely will check the Greens
ies on the face of records to date.
Two other conference skirmishes
lappear on the carg, but these ap
‘paremly will have little or no bear
%ing on the title. Georgia , loser in
;lhree starts, meets Florida a 3
i Jacksonville and Vanderbilt en
gages Sewanee,
In other games Kentucky goes
{to New York for an jintersectional
fargument with Manhattan, Miss
lissippi plays Tl.oyola of New Or
‘.leans at Oxford, Miss, and Ten
!.nesse engeges - Maryville college
tat Knoxville.
| Scotland has a species of midget
sheep, which feed on seaweod andi
weigh only 40 pounds when full
grown. The species is prevalent
on Ronaldshay Island.
‘Maroons of Athens Farl
- And Away Best Team in |
} District, So Far i
| By DAN MAGILL, JR. i
As the sixth week of Tenth dis
trict footbal ended last Friday,!
lAlh(-ns High defending champion.|
end Madison High continued to |
poce the conference Standings. ‘
I Madizon stayed in the rupningf
{l;y beating Warrenton High - Fri- |
day, 13 .to 0 . and Athen‘%" High |
found Washington High easy prey,!
’winuing, 31 :to 4 ‘The ,I\Iaroon!
'rogulars played only three plays,!
(in which a touhdown and an ex-i
Itm point were made. : !
Lincolnton High produced the .
week’s biggist upset, swamping |
| Hartwell High's Nancy Harts, dis—i
In‘iot winners in 1934 and runners- |
up last year, by a 44-0 moasure.’
I'l‘he score was expected to he close,!
' with Hartwell a slight fnvorite,l
| but no one anticipated such a|
i‘(bonvinci‘ng Lincoln county cnn-I
i quest, )
Greensboro High's Tigers, for-|
’merly ranked second only to Ath-|
| ens High until dowred by Elberton|
| fligh, successfully began theirl
comeback campaign, winning from |
i}\Tonroe High, 12 to 0, in a stub-|
1!»0m1y fought imbroglio. |
{ In an inter-sectional tilt lasti
lFriday, Elberton High's big Blue
I])evilg, considered by many as thel
'sec:ond strongest team in the dis-
Itx‘ict——Athens being ranked at thel
ltop——rallied magnificently .in the‘
! second half to trounce Toccoa High,l
‘ 19 40.0. ;
Conference standings:
Team w L Pct‘
Atheng 3 0 1.000
| Madison 2 0 & 1.000
IGreensboxr'o\ 3 1 8 .750;
' Lircolnton : s 3 750,
Elberton 2 1 6671
I Warrenton 2 2 500%
| Hartwell 2 24 S
Washington 2 /3. A 0
I Lavonia i 2 .333
Monroe . 0 2 000 |
IRoyston 0 8 3 .000!
| Thomson » 9 000/
1 1
! TR S TR A |
:wf
% i i e ettt e
| ND-UP
SPORTS ROUND-
L L
I By EDDIE BRIETZ |
| NEW YORK.—(&)—Take thisl
gfo,. what it’s worth, but Barleigh !
| Grimes was clgseted with the |
IBrooklyn directors for three. hours
ithe other night . . . (:c%vex‘nor
| Hoffman of New Jersey, mention
‘ed as a possibl, purchaser of the’
| Dodgers, is not without baseball
iexperience . . . He once operated
| a semi-pro team and before that
I wrote baseball for a Perth Amboy
praper. The Giants were tite best
ldrawing home club in the National
' league last season . . . On thel
road the star attraction was the
I Cardinal outfit. I
| Football Dept.: Dick Harlow of |
. Havard _can step to the head ofl
lt‘nis bureau’s football class today |
1. . . His feat in holding Prince- |
gton to a tie is tops for the day in |
{ our book . . . Other coaches rat- I
; ing bows are Jesse Neely of Clem- |
| son, who ups2t Georgia Tech;l
JLynn Waldorf of Northwestern,
i who stopped Minnesota’s Btreak"
i and slick little Andry Kerr, whose |
| Colgate Red Raiders took our |
{ Army for a ride.
| Don’t leave out Louisiana State
. when you are picking your Rose |
| Bowl possibilities . . . Geneé Tun-
Iney and Jack Dempsey will ref
eree the bouts in the anm@teur
ishow Dempsey is staging for.a
West Side hospital late this
month. Al Weill, manager as Lou |
Ambers, is squawking about the
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
decision that gave Eddie Cool ai
win over Ambers in Phlliy. the'!
other night . ~ . Al says he got
“the- woiks” .. . .Funny thing
about those Philadelphia deeisions,i
New York managers sjust can’t}
wait to go back for mere of them. |
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; FIMES SOUARE ON ELECTION NIGHT (Associated Press Photo) I
> ]
I
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|
Ihe A P WI” e
. . 3
!
i ' I
L - i )o—the s
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS staff in the United States, augmented to SIW
. . ectiloll.
ever to cover a single news event—will report the returns of the electior i
: & : : . :oted Press army, With 2
Every precinct in the nation will be covered by this Associated Press arit
and accuracy. i
- ’ : . these returns’
Two hundred and eighty thousand miles of leased wire will carry these
and in pictures. ,
- > 3 ia nfchcs.
Even Uncle Sam himself will first learn the result from The A.P. disp |y perford®
2 § - N ¢te\ pc ' o
No other organization ever has performed and cannot this year adequd akes poss
o . - 2V ST ~r\f ¢ :
stupendous task which the support of Associated Press member newspape
I:l'Ahild
: = he W¢
The Associated Press Reports the News of t
oAbl X FOR :
g e ———
I .
. Nineteen Teams,
Big and Littl
I 1g and Litlle,
' Remain U d
! emain vunmarre
; NEW. YORK.—(£)—The ' storm¥y
!"nd of October left only 19 foothall
It(’um:«‘. large and small, inthe un
| defeated and untied class today.
i: b |
i The number of survivors just
| equals the number that were re-
Emuv(*d from the list over the past
iweek-end. Such outstanding (.ut—é
‘fits as Minnesota, undefated in 28
1 previous @ eontests, Army, Yale, |
!Holy Cross and }'uli:lnu\'“ sul‘t'm‘-x
fed "their initial setbacks. I”m'd—g
!ham and Utah State among the,
| “major”’ iteams were tied. ;
{ Reinaining to face the risk of;
i further upsets was Nm-tl:wwtm-n-g
| the only unbeaten and untied |
}team in any of the country'’s ;nn,im"i
j conferences, Marquetta anil H:mmi
iClara which also play in “higi
i]eague" cireles, and Western ]{o-{
serve and North Dakota, whose |
lr?ting 18 ot too far hr.-him].‘
| The rest of the survivors are in
Ithe “minor” ' class without :l!‘f_:‘ll-i
',ment. )
| Records of the mnation's unde-:
If@atod and untied teams follows: ‘
Opp.l
Team— W. Pts. Pts. |
Western Reserve ...... 7 186 251
Nabth akata ... ... 17 402 26
Appalachian (N. C) .. 6§ 263 9
Carrell AWid). ....... 6718 8
Kansas Wesleyan .... 6 138 16
Tennessea Wesleyan .. 6 134 20
%Santa Barbara State .. 6 134 12
Tast Texas Teachers .. ¢ 97 6
Eagt Tenn. Teachers .. 6 70 0
Mitaehary ... ... 8 T 0 8
|(‘.ol'tland ¢N. Y) Teach. b 140 15
'}Shippensburg (Pa.)
i Temlinps .. ... b 4 0
| Bt. Benedict (Kans) .. 6 ‘129 44
IN‘Drthwestern L LB9 e
iXßtramatees 0, .., 8 B 0 20
‘Sanla e . LoD B 7
| Kirksville (Mo;) Teach, b 59 22
lAl‘kansas State Teach. 4 105 19
{St] Andelm (N, H.) 4,4 72 20
B
PRESENT DAY GAln
I
GIME'S DOOM Sy
!
i ] (8 i
| g
i
i
; LR s
| Vandy Chancellor Sees
i
| Pro Football Beating Oyt
3 Present Day Came.
i e .
I By JOHN HIGHTOWER
| NASHVILIG, Tenn. —p)_ Phe
{t'hun('ullur of Vanderbilt univer
tsity, a leading figure in southern
;«‘liuv:m:m for almost jalf a..cen
;:m;\', predicted today if college
| football econtinues (o follow pres
lent lines of development it iy
lasS out of existence.
b It wills be replaced, said Dy, |
James H. KirklanA, by profession
tal football.
; As evidence of the fact that his
s prediction is already being fulfill
ie'll he cited (he dilemmas of many
csmall = colleges which are heing
!fm‘cod to decide whether they il
;nhnmlun the game, continue 1o
| play schools with which they can
' not compete equally or = spend
!nmney developing a team.
{ “The more foothal] develops as
33 public exhibition,” the chancel
(lor said, “the more it will be killeq
as a college sport. To see how
’this works out you need only re
inwmh(‘r what happened to base
i ball as a college sport when it
I\\'ns professionalized,
| “Twenly years ago it was open-
Lly safd ‘that football would never
%I.‘u-(‘uuu' professional. Now there
are professional teams in the
INm'th and KEast which are draw
!ing 10,000 to 26,000 spectators ey
ery game,
‘ “One result is that persons who
want to see sgpectacular games are
driving colleges into a semi-pro
| fessional attitvfle toward foot
{ hall,” ‘
| Regentment against over-empha
| sis of fosotball has joined with a
e Pt i
rli Annual cost aof. erime in the
| ITnited States has beep estimated
at $14,000.000,000.
MONDAY, yoyg
e
Dayig S
:3Col'fng
olleg, port op 4