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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 57

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57
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3 TOO HO JANS WIN, 1 8 TO 0 LOSE Bill Henry Says 0 i 9 HI mm BRUINS LOYOLA GIVES i i If CORBUS KICKS FIELD GOAL TO UPSETRIVALS Score Made in First Period PEE9 a c-J SUNDAY MORNING, OCTPHKK 1, im fEHHHl r. 4 WHO'S little all-American are you going to be on this year? Everybody ought to make at least one of 'em-it's a cinch the vay the boys pick 'em nowadays. The only guy to feel sorry for in the whole all-AmcrJcan situation Is the party who really conscientiously tries to pick one. He's In a tough KOSY IS HERE, THERE, AND EVERYWHERE It's players like Aaron Rosen-ber that make life miserable for the all-American pickers. Rosy Is too prominent.

He's supposed to" play guard-but the way he plays it, he isn't like any other guard in the whole Hide world. And certainly not like the guard position as played by his esteemed team-mate, Mr. Stevens. Yet Mr. Stevens is a guard.

And, according to a lot of folks who know, he's about as good a guard as there is in the country. si 1 fa 1 1 lit 1 1 5 4 -i i 'iih. mm f.fi -Ufiiti "A 9 i What do you make of this interference running, Watson? An unidentified Trojan player has launched himself skyward In an effort to nudge Jack Bouchard of Loyola out of the way. ine aiiempc apparency uu was jieeaiess, anyway, Decause hermit KiitzKe. tne ousy uon was carrying the ball.

It all happened in the second quarter of yesterday's game at the Coliseum. tacfcle, nas aireaay Drought down Inky Wotkyns, Trojan fullback, who ILLINOIS GRID TNORTHWESTERN UPSET BY TO MEET TROJANS HERE Home-arid-Home 'Agreement Arranged for 1935-36; UNDERDOG IOWA ELEVEN Hawkeyes Register Astounding 7-0 Victory Over Big Ten Favorites; Laws Tallies SOLDIER FIELD (Chicago) Sept 30. Iowa's Hawkeyes, beaten underdogs of Big Ten football warfare for four long years, snapped the championship hopes of a highly touted Northwestern team wih an as- S.C. Will Go East in Latter Year TROY GRIDDERS HARD STRUGGLE All Scores Second Halt in BY BRA YEN DYER Scoring touchdowns is often like kissing your best gal or opening bottle of After you get the first the rest come easy. Take yesterday's grid struggle be tween Southern California and Loy ola.

The Trojans had an awful time engineering their first tally. but get it they did in the third quarter and two more soon followed, to make the final count 18 to 0 In their favor. A crowd of approximately 65,000 fans sat through a tense first half during: which the battling Lions of Del Rey held their more highly touted rivals scoreless. Three times the Trojans knocked at the goal. but on as many occasions did the fighting Loyola gridders shut the door in their face.

Came the third quarter, plus two very distressing penalties which hurt the Lions like all get-out. Homer Griffith quick-kicked to Loyola's 10-yard line and Capt. Ford Palmer was Johnny-on-the-spot to down Eddie Xaesar in his tracks One play and the Lions were penalized to their 1-yard stripe for illegal shifting. CALLED FOR PASS Howard Whalen punted from be hind the goal and Griffith returned to the Loyola 33. The Trojans gained 9 yards in three plays and then Griffith was guilty of one of the many boners made by B.C.

slg nal callers during the day. With a yard to go he called for a pass. Jack Bouchard leaped high Into the air on Loyola's 15-yard line and caught the ball. This was a faux pas in itself for if he knocked the pigskin down it went to Loyola considerably nearer the Trojan goal. So Jack decided to get rid of the pigskin and after holding it momentarily shaved it from him as a thing to be shunned.

That, according to the officials, illegal. But in the meantime a second illegal play was taking place nearer the Loyola goal, clipping by a back and so the officials were In a heck of a fix. The Trojans had their choice of the penalties and natural ly took the latter, which cost Loyola 15-yards and put the ball on the yard stripe in S.C. possession. The infraction by Bouchard, coming on fourth down, would have given the Lions the ball 15 yards from the spot where he threw the ball away.

Such is the explanation by the four officials as to what happened. It's their word, not mine. At any rate, with the ball on the yard line and four downs to make a score the Trojans bent to their task and on the third crack Griffith whammed through right tackle for the tally. Palmer's conversion attempt was wide. OTHERS EASIER Now, the other two touchdowns arrived in due time and after considerably less sweating on the part of the Trojans.

True, they weren't easily acquired, but compared to the first the task of getting the others was fairly simple. Late Jn the third quarter Griffith stood on his own 42-yard line and rifled a lightning pass straight down the middle of Loyola's defense. Two figures ran for the ball. One was that of Gordon Clark, Trojan halfback. The other was that of this same Bouchard, who played a whale of a game for the Lions.

They leaped simultaneously on the 20-yard marker. Clark came down on both feet, the ball clutched tightly to his chest. Bouchard, missing his attempt to bat the pigskin down, reached to grab Clark but the Trojan halfback was already hot-footing it for the promised land. There was no one to stop him and over he went. Erskine failed to convert.

In the final period Bill Howard engineered the closing touchdown. Starting on the Loyola 46-yard line, the Trojans banged their way to a score in ten plays. Inky Watkyns (Continued on Page 3, Column 1) Horsemen9 Who WS. CALDWELL DROVE 89YDS (ST. LOUIS, fcOLORADO SPRinOS) Charley Hall sU-Or eiP.M.GHA I.

BY BILL HENRY STANFORD STADIUM (Palo Alto) Sept. 30. (Exclusive) A lightning sprint by Monk Moscrip to down a punt on the Bruin 4-yard line, a punt returned from midfleld to the Bruin 38 a magnificently engineered Stanford drive to the Bruin 8-yard line and a perfect boot between the posts by William (We Ought to be Paid) Corbus, and Stanford's tremendously powerful but horribly nervous varsity had a 3-to-0 victory over the U.C.L.A. Bruins before the first quarter was over. What matter if wave after wave of fresh, powerful young Stanford giants ripped and tore into the fighting Bruins defens3, only to be tossed back from the goal line like the ocean's tireless breakers by a sturdy rock-bound sea wall.

RAGGED FOOTBALL Of what avail that the tired, luckless Bruins maintained the virgin purity of the goal lins against fiery attacks that started from first downs inside the Bruins' 10-yard line on several occasions. Those three points from the trusty toe of Stanford's former student body president and All -American guard are all the story that ths record books will tell. It was the kind of football that you might expect when conference rivals are matched with the season only two weeks old. The Bruins had built up a strong defense. Stanford had concentrated on a hastily organized offense.

There were breaks, fumbles, plays that came close to perfection that they left you gasping a ragged but rugged exhibition. The whole story of the game waa told in the first ten minutes when the Bruins, after swapping a couple of punts, much to their own advantage, tossed an ill-starred forward pass that Stanford intercepted and gave the Indians the ball near the middle of the field. Before the Bruins could diagnose the situation. Bill Sim, who had been switched from his country running position at halfback to a heavy thinking part at quarterback for Stanford, uncorked a quick kick over the devoted domes of the Bruin secondary and Monk Moscrip, shooting after the pill at blinding spede, touched it down on the Bruin 4-yard line. Pants Livesay, standing deep in his own safety zone, rooted a towering punt almost to midfleld, but Acting Captain Meentz of Stanford managed to wriggle back to the Bruin 38-yard line before the whis- 1 WO U1CW.

(, .11 I BRUINS NAPPING HiUman caught the Bruins napping with a beautiful flat pass to Bill Sim, -which the blond heavy thinker carried to the Bruins 25. Here another bad break, an off-side penalty, set the Bruins back to their 20 and successive plunges by Hamilton for 3, Hillman for 2, Maenta for 3, Hamilton for 2 and then 2 again, put the Indians in posltloa almost in front of the Bruin goal posts7 and only 8 yards from the goal line. Corbus's kick was just a formality and it topped off the prettiest drive any Stanford team has put on in many a long month. The Bruins fought back bitterly, but when young Bobby Grayson was slipped into the Indian line-up they were soon in trouble again. Grayson's bullet passes on several occasions barely missed connections for lonf gains, although Mike Franko- vitch came just as close with 1 one wild heave that just trickled off Sinclair Lott's fingers on the Indian 25-yard line.

The big break came when Batea, Stanford center, intercepted a Bruin pass and ambled from his own 30-yard mark to the Bruin 28. Grayson smashed through for an 8-yard gain, but discovered that he had dropped the ball 5 yards back, where O'Connor of Stanford recovered it. Grayson smacked through a couple of other short but decisive (Continued on Page 5, Column 4) By Feg Murray SOMEONE PIGURSO lOlTT THAT Each of the 5 shots VthaT leO M1S6E0ONTHE last rouno of y- Dl LAUKCN MINI 10-J FRO, leo molxd ini one at the lucky ot at Inverness in tke U.S CPM IT- -aa? THE FlTH ACS OB HiS CAST5E7HC WDt OMS' AT CNEPRY VALLEY LLEVTtrt 1 ROCK OF GIBRALTAR HASN'T A CHANCE But what chance has young Mr. Stevens of making an all-American football team ahead of Mr. Rosenberg.

You're right absolutely none. Mr. Stevens plays a "standing guard" as contrasted with the "running guard" position played by Rosenberg. And he plays It mighty well. But while Rosy is running all over the field knocking opposing gentlemen right and left and getting into all the pictures, Mr.

Stevens is simply doing a Rock of Gibraltar act, back where he isn't noticed by anybody but the guys he's keeping out of the play. ROSY PLAYS A FLOCK OF POSITIONS Rosenberg, in addition to being very much in the limelight on offense when he leads the interference, is equally outstanding on de-lense. When the other team has the ball, Rosy doesn't play guard at nil he plays defensive center. And how he plays it! He loosens the bridgework, clavicles and vertebrae of anybody hardy enough to carry the ball for the other side. And, in several games last year, Rosy was playing tackle on defense! Where do you place a guy like that? STEIN OF W.

AND J. WAS ALL-AROUND MAN Rosy is a throwback to the days of Stein, the Washington and Jefferson captain whose team tied the Golden Bears. What a lad he was. He played end and tackle and fullback on offense not all at the same time, however and backed up the line on defense. Red Roberts of Centre was labout the same.

And Paul Robeson yep, the famous baritone played end, fullback and various other positions for Rutgers. Even Walter Camp said he was a real all-American. OTHERS PLAY TWO OR MORE POSITIONS And Rosy isn't the only guy on the Trojan eleven who rambles all over the ball park. "Take Capt. Ford Palmer.

He plays an end on offense and a halfback on defense, swapping positions with Brick Bright. Now, when a coach uses his men like that, it's tough on a poor guy who plays an inconspicuous standing guard position. Who may be playing that position as well, or better than Rosy (Continued on rage 2, Column 8) Golidoms (Four in One round AT ORuO "w- HILLS. ATLANTA.GA.l925: ri SKS JK I tU I i'Ji 1 ZfifS KjfJr I I "2 JAPANESE SHATTER RECORDS Olympic Stars Crack Tuo World's Marks in Big Meet in Tokio Pool TOKIO, Sept. 30.

(Japan's Olympic swimmers today broke two existing world records in an assault on universal standards in the Meijl Shrine pool, shortened to 25 meters for the record attempts. Masajl Kiyokawa, Olympic 1C0- meter backstroke champion, set a new standard for 400 meters back stroke of 5m. 30.4s., clipping 11.6 seconds from the recognized record of Toshio Iriye, also of Japan. Hidcko Haehata. second In the women 200-meter DreastsroKe at the Olympics, swam the distance in 3m.

4-10s. to clip three seconds from the record of E. Jacobsen of Denmark. The Olympic record is 3m. 6.3s set by Clare Dennis of Australia in defeating Miss Maehata at Los Angeles.

Tennessee in Easy Triumph KNOXVILLE (Tenn.) Sept. 30. (IP) Using straight football and with the second and third-stringers playing the greater part of the game, Ten nessee's Volunteers defeated the Vir ginia Polytechnic Institute today, 27 to 0, before 15,000 fans. Beattie Feathers, Vol backfield ace, scored two of his team's touchdowns. tounding 7-to-0 victory today.

Blanked since 1929 in conference competition and rated as just another underdog this season, the Hawks battered the Wildcats Into almost feeble submission, outplayed them easily, and then clinched a leng-sought victory in the final period as Joe Laws raced down the sidelines for 32 yards and the only touchdown of the battle at Soldier Field. Twenty-five thousand spectators watched the golden colors of the Corn State boys lifted for the first time In four years over a Big Ten foe. But the one player who gave them the biggest thrill wasn't Laws despite his victory dash. The big hero, standing out like a beacon, was a 190-pound sophomore named Dick Crayne. The husky Hawkeye ran the amazed Wildcats breathless with lightning dashes, and probably would have dashed over for four touchdowns except for a soggy neid.

Georgia Squad Takes Opener ATHENS (Ga.) Sept. 30. (P) Georgia defeated a ftard-fightlng North Carolina State football team in the opening game of the season for the Bulldogs here today, 20 to 10. A scorching sun necessitated frequent substitutions. FordhamTeam Crushes Foes NEW YORK, Sept.

30. (IP) Ford-ham opened its 1933 football season, its first under the tutelage of "Sleepy" Jim Crowley of Notre Dame, with a 52-0 victory today over Albright College of Reading, Pa. Diesel plaveo fte BRENTWOOD ANGELES) course in 76 stroke 5, sanding onome foot for each Shot Mi 3, 4 Speaking of Troy's Aerial Attack Grid Results LOCAL S. 18: Loyola, 0. S.C.

Frosh, 20; Complon J.C., 0 U.S.S. Oklahoma, 7: U.S.S. New York, 0. Fullerton J.C, 13; Pasadena J.C., 0. Glendale J.C 26; U.S.S.

North ampton, 0. Santa Monica J.C., San Ber nardino, 6. Chaffey J.C, 19; Lonr Beach J.C., 0. Webb, 18; Pomona Frosh, 13 Santa Barbara High, 14; Santa Ana. 12.

San Diego High, 21; Inglewood, 0. Hoover (Glendale,) 13; Ventura, 0. PACIFIC COAST Stanford. U.C.L.A., 0. California, 34; Nevada, 0.

California, 39; Washington, 32; Idaho, 6. Oregon, 14; Gonzaga, 0. 0. Washington State, 56; Puget Sound, 0. Oregon State, 20; Montana, 0.

Pacific, Columbia, 6. ROCKY MOUNTAIN Brigham Young, 25; Montana State, 0. Colorado 19; Charron, 0. Colorado Aggies, Wyoming, 0. Utah State, 28; Western State, 0.

MIDWEST Iowa, Northwestern, 0. Michigan State, 14; Grinnell, 0. Vanderbilt, Oklahoma, 0. Indiana, Miami, 0. Illinois, 13; Drake, 6.

Marquette, Lawrence, 0. Minnesota, 19; South Dakota, 6. Kansas State, 25; Emporia Teachers, 0. Case, 20; Ashland, 0. Capital, Toledo, 2.

De Paul, 19; Omaha, 0. Evansville, 16; Franklin, 0. Gustavua-Adolphus, 13; Carle-ton, IX Mansville, 34; Kutztown Teachers, 0. Milwaukee Teachers, 38; Elm-hurst, 0. Mt.

Union, Bowling Green, 6. North Central, Kalamazoo, 0. Ohio, 61; Morris-Harvey, 0. Ohio Northern, Bluffton, 0. Ohio Wesleyan, 28; Heidelberg, 7.

(Continued on Page 2, Column 7) THE NEW NATIONAL, GOLF CHAMPION. RfPRlNtIO FROM MV ca cMPT3 jT fl 20 ft putt TO5ET INTO fyff 'C -'llT uS-SSif I I NOW -G2 15 I -4 "VVV CHAMPAIGN (111.) Sept. 30. history the University of Illinois will Announcement that an agreement for a home and home series with University of Southern California had been reached was made tonight by Director George Huff. The Illinl wiU travel to Los Angeles in 1935 and meet the Trojans on October 12.

The Coast team will appear at Illi nois in 1936 on approximately the same date. Negotiations for the series were carried on by Coach Bob Zuppke of Illinois and Coach Howard Jones of Southern California, who will thus resume a rivalry that was spirited when Coach Jones was in charge of University of Iowa teams. Coach Zuppke by arranging a series with a Coast team is carrying out an ambition he has held ever since he entered the Big Ten field In 1913. As a high-school coach of the famous Oak Park team, Zuppke twice took teams to the Coast, defeating representative prep teams at Seattle and Portland. "The trip to the Coast will take our boys away from the classroom here only six days." Coach Zuppke said.

"Our feeling here is that this traveling experience is well worth while from the standpoint of the boys. I have believed that it was necessary to make a long stay In order to become acclimated." Three Illinois track teams have traveled to the Coast, two to meet University of California and one Southern California. The Southern California series will replace the Army-Illinois series which will conclude with the next year's game at Illinois on account of the Big Ten ban on competition with the cadets. GAEL FROSH WINS BURLINGAME (Cal.) Sept. 30.

The St. Mary's freshmen eleven defeated San Mateo Junior College, 6-0, here today. Katzmler made the lone tally for St. Mary's. Rule the Links 7 1 av r.

of ELEVEN (Exclusive) For the first time In meet a Pacific Coast football team EQUIPOISE SECOND IN LAST RACE Oscillator Sets IS'eio Course Record to Beat Sensation of 1933 Season HAVRE DE GRACE (Md.) Sept. 30. (Equipoise, C. V. Whitney's gallant campaigner, lost what probably was his last today, but it took a new course record to turn the trick.

Competing In the $10,000 Havre de Grace Handicap, the 5-year-old son of Pennant finished a length behind William R. Coe's Osculator after the latter clipped one-fifth of a second from the. existing record at Havre de Grace for the mile and one-eighth distance. A. C.

Bost wick's Mate finished third, a little more than a length behind Equipoise. The Wheat-ley Stable's Dark Secret, second choice in the betting, and recent conqueror of Equipoise in the Jockey Lold Cup race, was unable to do better than fourth. It was a heart-breaking race for the Whitney entry, which is to be retired to stud in Kentucky. Forced behind in the early stages of the race, when the field bunched, he gradually fought his way to the fore. Passing Mate on the stretch and apparently was headed for first place.

The crushing Impost of 132 pounds proved too much and Equipoise was unable to catch the flying Osculator, who carried but 104 pounds. The time of Osculator was lm. (Continued on Page 2, Column 6) the World HioSraV 2.6 ANt? J. 1 nocu V3. I evck siwce -rue was rt WON A BPANO VTV DOLLAR IN 1924" BY DRIVING FROM TVlE MAINLAND OF FLORIDA at tampa tt The Davis VD3 AW6 "TO-HAVE i vWDt.

DRIVES vJ "TOOK UP GOLF WMgN HE WAS 5 1 ft ftfcj? I AND BROKE 80 FPiNEHuRsr iyf Ifc if TOURNAMENTS -S if I AND WAS TWICE 1 'A AGUA formed mroueon orccLF. CALIENTE MT 3 DRIVES THAT CARRIED. RESRECTiveiV WHO I5 ONE OP THE MOST COLOSPUL OF ALL HA55N -AND i "TV iWwl eALLPlAVRfe AN Pitcher, kjZLJs- 300 VDS, 270 VDsfHfGH OVER TREES On A DOGLEG hqlc)anD 290 VDS (against A ERZ)l 1932 WALKER CI" ALL 3 Villf? ATMiOMfiHT.aMOOMLAijOiri'C.r m-r i WAT CARRIED AND ROLLED 30 YARDS' SQ Oii Van INS OUT A NSW tM hi L5 OfUi fed 1 I tr mat run moaM, im. on nm.tmmi ji wTGT I.

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