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The Lincoln Star from Lincoln, Nebraska • Page 11

Publication:
The Lincoln Stari
Location:
Lincoln, Nebraska
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

fitfifitnlj nnf1 rei tirr irhft trrrt Thr i Irffitig ft rimh Ihrnttgh feUlrf brat the All-Amrrwan i oi nri thr nfrff l. friihm.9/ (rd thf eri es hvt CaJ Cool dar. LINCCLN StNPMt' STAR. Thr Ihr don't plag Star Sponglrd Ban- ntr ftriifr at i' hall (famrM in thr hall pl fur ohjtrf tf) thrir haldnf'F. LISCOLS.

SI SDAY. OC TOBER 18. 1931. nSSIf' yA' rrr- I '-rr'n Gnhho ihr rtc of ihe. fh, Spm- Aoii'ncn uot, the v-r.

nvj fh, hrt thr A'r rud thr it nnfs io rt hrn graftrri r. thr tip nf h.n Iftf Thr foothnd roarh uho pidd lg drciarrd that hr had of matrrial. all ra nf rhapr and fhr tfM hnrdrr than any nrhrduh. r- i-tf to a KANSAS UPSET BY MANHATTAN AGGIES Jayhawk Plumage Droops In Defeat Men Crowd Into leadership In Big Six Race By Dint of 13 to 0 On Lime-Lined Grid at Lawrence. hu Oct.

Kansas Aggies kept an untarnished record in the Big Six conference race t.Tday when they won a 13 to 0 decision over their rivals of old and the 19.W champions, the Kansas Jayhawkers. FKteen thou.sand pcTsons thronged Memorial Stadium to watch this rugged battle. thrill-seekers and Aggie were not disappointed in seeing tK Wildcats decisively prove their superiority. l.Htrral K. Grid Aces With Whom K.

U. Plans Trump Husker Trick After the scoreless first jienod. the Kansas eleven sustained a demoral- irtng blow which left It fighting in the underdog and appar- enilv removed the polish from work aa a unit The edge, if any went to the Jayhawkers in the initial quarter Srhaalce punted deep into Aggie territory early in the second quarter Fended bv nice interference. Auker. Aggie end streaked dov thr side line The Jayhawkers broke through and tackled the run- n-r.

but as Auker was falling, he heaved a lateral pa.ss to Captain Henry Cronkite, who was pulled down only after he had crossed the 26-yard line. Graham Goes From there Fullback Ralph Graham tOok the situation in hand and carrying the ball practically every time battered his way to a touchdown Rushed in his kick. Auker. failed to convert Taking to the air. the Aggies added another counter in the third period.

One of the Auker-to-Cronkite brand netted 26 yards and a touchdoa-n. This Auker try aas good. Aggies Potinee On Fumble. One other threat was made bv the Aggies. Camie Smith of trying a punt, fumbled and the hashy Aggie ends covered the ball on the Jayhaakers' 10-yaru line.

The Kansas line held like the proverbial stone wail, and Auker dropped back for a place kick It wa? partially and went aide IN THI ftir. MX SI I wrr 13. St Lawr.nr.—asn»*« IS; Ksn- sa. At I At OSIaSama, lA ArnaAsaA At H.br»«—C'oMrarSta ili Hfb- rafi lllatr flana. Lathrr At ton.

IA THl aiG At lawa luSiana, earSar. 14. At IS. RaiitS- At I At alr. 2'; C'htcafa At Aun State, 2A, Micbl- 1 is wrsT.

At Santa Drabr At 24. 2 At Siarman. Dame At 21, Renturky State. At 4.S. C.ror*rta»B eal- Al State, Wealeraii.

At SI. At aoater, Abran. At CiCtamblar The Kansas pitssing offensive ex- Renyon ploded completely and therein apparently lay the story of the Jay- haak defeat. In the first half. Smith shot the ball to Dumm.

with the latter behind the la.st Aggie defease man. But the ball escaped the re- waiting arms Kaasas completed only one pass in 10. and that gave but a 13-yard gam. The gies. meanwhile, were clicking aerially at the ratio of two out of three One paas scored a touchdown and another laid open the way for the second Forred to Retire.

Earl Poy, all-eonference tackle, was injured early in the second half and had to be taken irom the field Injured a few minutes later. Cronkite mas able to remain (Continued On Page Four SCORELESS TIE ON IOWA FIELD AI LIbrrt. Hilm- iMTtsn, f. At Cnpitnl At M. IS.

Mar- fitette At 22. Stmpann. At At Narmal. At ialin, 2.3, Anga- bnrg. n.

At Mllltary, At Sleeena raint, At Rneb la- lanA. At 20; Amer. C. r. At 21: ele.

Al fcleer Falla Falla. 14; La- Craaae fi At At 2S; t. At Central, 14; Inwa Wea- 14 At Teeh. 12; Teeh. At IlUnnla levan, Al Maar- bead Nebraska Wage Fine Fight Cornhusker Yearlings Drive to Two Touchdowns, but Varsity Men Register Win by Score Margin of 27-13.

BV GBEGG MrBRlDE. football stock for future years flashed plenty of promi.se Saturday afternoon as the Tniversity of Nebraska defeated the Husker fre.shmen. 27-13, in a well-played game at Memorial stadium. I-ed by Steve Hokuf, a two-year veteran, the fro.sh pave the varsity a plentv pood argument. The yearlinps were shaded only by a margin of two first downs and ch.V^ed up two earned touchdowns at varsity exjicnse.

Soph Itarkb Busy The first string varsity combms- tion of sophomore backs, working behind veteran forward was all that saved the day for the varsity. this outfit clicking for two touchdowns during the first quarter and duplicating the perlormance in the last period Against the second-string, the froRh more than held their own, scoring in each of thr two periods the reserves held the fori and pre- a stonewall defense that held the to a lone first down HiAof Are In Frosh Deck. Hokuf dominated the freshman picture throughout the game. He was the spark that set off the frosh fireworks and the loromo- tlve in the punting attack It was a large afternoon for Steve, the Crete boy doing most of the ball- lugging, and punting during the 40 minutes he was in the game. Thr Crete husker factored in the two frosh scoring plays, the first touchdown finding him scoring on a iateral pass play, while the second touchdown was a succe.ssful Hokuf- pass Into thr end xone Yearlings Asked No Quarter.

Rallying around Hokuf. the determined band of freshman warriors reiu.sed to concede the varsity an inch In fact, the yearlings were in thr thick of thr scrap with as much firr at the fmi.sh as at the start of the conte.st, The froah linr. a formidable aggregation on and off the featured a pair of fine tackles in Pflom and Hladky. promEslng in Bchlueter and Johnson, a good At Siottv Sorth 2ti f.aat Siouv Al l.i-nrva—íianna. 13.

Al Rnra b. I.aii» Al ontatarb, ti. Mama, 6 Al Faiil. Ravrnna At Maaan 2ft Mavan City. Al Taimaff.

13. AMbnrn At Hallam At 2.S. nllrfr II. Al Repabllran Rrpubliran City. Al l.inrnin—Mnrnh».

Abraham l.m- rnln iCn llltiflat. At I.lnraln—< oUrtr Vlen, Havrlarb. IX. 1. I a 1 ra- Al 2P At Cantral.

South, At moni. At Counril Blufta. Cantral Al I.ogan, 21; Rrnaon. At XI, F.maraon. At Sllvar Crrrb, Rivrt.

Al Shaltan At Baavar CHy. At 3b; Rrnfaaa. Al At Rlalr Al l.A*amont, 1 At ralr. Raarnrjr. fi At 2S.

Morrlll 1 Al l.a»rrnrr—l.aoranrr. 2S. 1. At falrbury. Al 4t.

At 12. rtallamoiith. At Oakland. 1. Al fi.

ccntcr in Mcier Bod Bomc sparkllnE At l.r»lBrton— Sorth riatla, 84. riraufftrrt Peck and tan. Th, tootb.ll outfit which the Univcnilly of will pit Nebraska Saturday, O'- and Madison, halfback, Bausch, center Smith, quarterback; Schaake. halfbck. BENGALS TRAIL BOULDER TEAM Missouri On Losing End 9-7 Score In Clash With Colorado.

NORLIN STADIUM. Boulder. Oct 17 Colorado At gcorcd a 8 tO 7 VlCtOrV OVCf, MiS- Hoosiers, Hawks Balked In Effort Break Into Point Column. BY l.EO H. IOWA STADIUM.

Iowa City. Oct. and Indiana, two of the weaker sisters of the West- ern conference, battled to a scoi le.ss tie today be.ore a Hawkeye homecoming crowd of 20.000. Indiana, slightly outplayed during most of tJic contest, staged a last-minute march which carried them mto the shadows of goal posts jusi before the game ended. But the Hawkeycs braced and.

aided by a 15-yard penally, had pushed the Hoosiers back to the Iowa 83-yard line at the final gun Tu'ice Iowa worked the ball inside 15-yard line, but a fumble cost the Hawkeycs their scoring opport unit midway in the fourth quarter, while the Hoocier line braced to take the ball on downs in the first period Hickman flaahv halfback, and Sanscn. driving fullba ik. had earned the ball to the 13-yard line. Threatened GoaL only threat before the last-minute march vas in the second quarter, a hen Dauer, veteran qua-terback, headed a Hoosier attack which earned the bal. to Iowa's 0-yard line.

Here the Hawkrye line held and took thr bsll on downs For the most part the contest 8 punting duel between Knz of Iowa, and Edmonds and Jones (Continued on Page Four.) 12. At AI hnm. 2. At Intiltutc, Albion. At IX; Mnn- At Chnrteatnn.

AI Northern. At Stnte Mirhicsn At Foreot. Normal. At Wichita IS. Ottawa At 21; St.

Faul Ruth- eran. At St Olai, Sit; Carleton. 6. At Tt CwrneK roUege. At Sae Bennett.

At 24; HalAorf. 4. At 14. Carrall. At Marietta.

At Brooking Dakota South Dakota State, k. Cy Sherman Dwight High Band At Nebraska Game There will be plenty of ransic in the Rir next Saturday while tho Nebraaka-Kansas football game is in progress at Memorial stadium. In addition in the Kansas and Nebraska university bands, the Dwight high school hand will he on hand, to provide music. The Dwight band, under the direction of Supt. lames J.

Liaka, includes 42 musicians. souri on the gridiron here today before a partisan crowd of 10,000 Ray Stenzil. 180-pound fullback, rushed from the Colorado bench late In the second period to replace Bob Nelson and made a perfect 25- iSUtting in vard place-kick to start the scoring. His kick was the margin of Colo- harity OOtOOlL victory. Joint action of the Big Ten and the third period opened conferences in giving ap- Pete Middlemist, swivel pj-oval to the playing of p3st-sea- quanerback of the Colorado team.

games, the receipts to go to the collaborated with Nelson in carry- relief of distress in the ranks of the WILDCAT POWER CRUSHES BRUINS Hanley's Regulars Grind Out Three Counters Against U.C.LA. STADIUM, Evanston. 111., Oct Wildcats of Northwestern unii'crsity were called upon to use all their ower here this afternoon to deieat a hard- fightmg University of California at Los Angeles eleven. 19 to 0. Approximately 30.000 fans watched the game in perfect football weather.

Northwestern had arranged this contest as something of a "breather between games with Nebraska and DamC OpenS idC Notre Dame and the first Big Ten game on its schedule. Coach Hanley; Jts Scoring inrottle sent SOONERSBOWTO LONGHORN TEAM Blanton's Goal Kick from Field Decides Game In Texas' Favor. FAIR PARK STADIUM, Dallas, Oct. 17 University of Texas Longhorns triumphed over their traditional rivals, the Oklahoma university Sooners, 3 to .0. a colorful contest here this alt- ernoon before a crowd of fifteen thousand.

The winning place kick came late in the fourth quarter, when Blanton of Texas booLQl the ball neatly between the bars to send the Soon- Maryland Classic ers down to defeat it was the only vhlch Blanton took part, as taken from the game im- IRBH TRAMPLE DRAKE GRIDDERS At 21; 14 At 20. At II. 0 AI Taelor. At tervHle. 0 At 13.

Benkelmon. At IX, Srhufler, At South CHy, IS. Ponca. At Hareard. At 25: At Broken Bow.

At Peru City. Peru Prep, S. At Sen 3t, Coneordla arademy, 0 At IS, Wilber, S. Friend Wilber At Terumoeh Terumseh, Nebraaka 0 Nebraoha City Te- runiaeh, 0 At Norfolk. 0 At IH; Cortland, I At Arradta Scotia, o.

At 13. Imperial, fi At 30: Pawnrr CHy, At 14, Stanton. At 14; Deahler. 0, At 6, Srotlahluff, At 12; Minatare, 1. At ID Culheruon At 12; Rimball 0.

At Dalton Dalton. 2.1; 12. At Haynr. II. At IS; Holbrook.

At 88, Sacrrd Hrart City I. At C'lty 20, Salem. 18 At F.win*. At Aurora, end material in Crawford, Peek and Jurkevic Pflum and Meier Durable, Pflum was the bright spot of the entire forward wall The Imperial huskv weathered the entire game, the Chase county product showing to particular advantage while the Husker reserves were doing duty. Franklin Meier, ex-Lincoln high center, also played the entire game, (Continued on Pour.) Long Shot Winner THF EAST.

82; HeaMrn 'ConUnued on Page Four.) BUCKEYES RIDE OVER MICHIGAN Be Surprised epidemir of featured yeoter- en thr foothall Harenrd camr from beh nd to ont Point 14 Io 13. irounced DartmouMi, 19 to S. lot thr first timr ISSS. surpruod wtth 21 to 14 Litilr Attbnrn blanhed GeM-fia Tech, Io s. aftrr 12 of detest.

Tennessee rrnshcd Alahuna. 28 Io S. thr latter'a of aixie pridiroBs tilianora upset thr wtshty Boston roilrgr It to t. In thr Interseetional rontest of thr dar. for ftrst and rutnod A.

A. for- tirih toolball ennf eraary by swampiny f'htraxo. 21 to in olaer re IM anderbili Mirbijan 1. Damr Drake CnrneU 33. Prinreton Florida 12.

Soothem Neihndtst 21, 12 Accies 13, Ransas 4. 1N At Ptttsburfl 4. At Weal 14; Army, 13. AI New Fork 21; 1. At Nrw Dartmouth At It: Delaware, 2.

At 33. Manhattaa, 4 At 88; Hohart. 1. At Clarkson. 4.

At 38; Nor- wlrh, fi. At 33; Prtaeetoa. 4 At New Preah, 24, Pena Frosh At 38; Florida. 12- At New Fork Fordham, 4. Holy fi At 13; Guard Arademi.

OHI state. With Cramer 4. At ISi Horcester, 4 At Nova. 12. Boston rol- lege, 4 At CoHete 4, Rea- taefcy, 4.

At Point, 12; American 4, At IS; Rochester, 4. At State Pcaa State, 4. At Gettys- barg, 4. At 24; Thiel, 4. At XS: Tafts.

12. At IS, CHy of Fork. S. At Brooklyn Laag lalaiMl Lowell. 3.

At Boston Geneva. Boston 4 At East 34; Cooper I Btoa. e. At A Jlettersoa 18i Western Marylaad, 12. At RhoAc Islaai.

4. At 1: Bowdoia, 4. At Hampshire. 18; Maine. 1.

At 4. VcraMmt, 4. At 84; Pena Mitt oettege, 4, At State IS: Martwick, 4. At 13; Mt. Si.

Marvs. 3a At Indiana. Teachers. 14; Clsrton Teachers, 4. AI 22; St.

Johna. A At Lnok haven 32; MillcrsvUtc. 13. At Salle. IS.

Moravian. 4. At 1, rrankihs- Marshatl. 4. At 32; Lehigh.

4. period, little George Stubei, the Rig-it off the bat, I take notice, an Missouri quarterback, who looked effort is being made down in the greatly out of place with his 150 Oklahoma region to wheedle the pounds among the 200-pounders on state university into an arrange- both teams, opened up inth his menl for a gi buliet-llke paases. versity or CMuahoma City university Full Pasa Attack. two tiistitutions with such ques- The first one to Charles Schiele tionable eligibility requirements and at right end netted 10 yards. On athletic standards that the univer- sity the Sooner commonwealth would not, in any circumstances.

consider meeting either of them in an athletic contest. westerners. fore a crowd of 35,000. Wildcat Regulars In. Drake, weak on the right side of Once the reeulars got warmed up.

the line, failed to stop the driving the trend of the game changed and Notre Dame backs, who went thereafter the California aggrega- through the secondarj- for long tion was not a serious threat. There drives. was too much power in the North- The Bulldogs were unable to western line and too much speed in penetrate the Notre Dame forward the backfield for the ruins to which either slipped through Vhat tha liniver- overcome. the Drake offense to spill the ball-i ment to form followers, who had athletic standards that the uni er thrill came in the carriers or ran through to the sec- bet heavily on Joseph E. 'Widener first period when Al Moore, who ondarv to pave 'he way for Notre entry of Mr.

Sponge and Curate. Clock Tower to earn first Dunlap Oklahoma and Burr prize of $10,500 by a narrow mar- Texas featuring the game. gm. Glastenbury was third and Backgammon fourth. The race was run in 1:38 3-5 over a fast track.

The race was a bitter disappoint- I Continued On Pape Pour.) And then cme cannot but observe that Chicago individuals, notably the mayor, have been beating their tom-toms on behalf of a plan to re-match Northwestern and Notre Dame in an after-season clash for chanty. From a xporting standpoint, this 'r latter prfiposal has somethinR to 16 aiTI -1 raiTipiCS UIl romnaend It. but 1 suspect that the OLD ELI SPOILS PARTY TROJANS CRUSH OREGON ELEVEN In Control, Crushes autborities at the Evanston insiito- Ten con- ANN ARBOR, Oct. ference for suggestions relative to 1 aided running attack H'hich lived up to Its advancA reputation today by Dig i en tSUre Of th. To Stond Gvound.

three Buckeye touchdowns and As a matter of fact, the pressure spent the aftemtxm smashing now being put on continued runs It was a smooth working backfield that opposed the Drake squad, Koken, Lehev, Schwartz and the others in backfield tcwk turns reeling off distance with sweeoing end runs or off-tackle smashes. In an effort to stop the racir -----------------Notre Dame backs, Drake opened IJ Turns On Current up with a passing ck. but this L1 UFIlb urrciii was ended quickly when Bernie Jn Smashing Deieat Lehey. Irish backfield substitute. intercepted a 20-yard throw from Of bpOarS Men.

165-pound h.lfbark. STADIUM was the outstanding ctar of the geies, Oct. Maroon, Yale Winning By 27 to 0. BY GEORGE KIRKSEY. STAGG FIELD, Chicago, Oct.

17 reeled off eral long classing Oregon in all departments big Blue team, play- runs that ended three touch- game. Southern California ing In the for tiw first Duke I defeated Coach "Doc" time in historv-. roUed up a to 0 footers, 53 to 0, today. over Coach Alonzo Stagg vantage as an open field runner, i -rH-rvian fortieih anniversarv University of' It was the Notre Dame line Orville Mohler, elusive Trojan Chicaeo eleven todav. which impressed observers with its quarterback, boosted his A crowd of almost 40.000 saw ability to stem the tide of Drake averse with two alma mater run rough olavers whenever an advcnce i Alhambra flash 47 from Battle of Straight FootbaU.

Both teams resorted to atraight football throughout, with Texas having the offensive advantage, making 15 first downs to two for the Sooners. Massad and Mahoney in the back, field and Graalman and in the line featured the Sooner offensive, while Koy, Stafford and Elkins, together with Captain Baumgarten and Cook, were outstanding for Texas The two teams were more evenly matched than any encounter be- tmeen the two scbools several seasons and it remained for Blanton to dash from the sideline to kick the goal, thus climaxing the defensive struggle of the two teams. Score by periods: Texas ..............................0 0 0 Oklahoma ....................0 0 0 0-0 Frisco Sells Many Stars thrfmah and running around Michi- versltv Ir'an affront to the Big Ten Coach alma mater run rough piavers whenever an aavcnce i gan gains of five, 10 and 15 ctmiefenee. Anxious to help a most shod over a pitifully weak Chicago terrttoir as vards with an inter- enough lands It HTis a debut in worthy cause, the Big Ten took the eleven that had to fight gallantly Kurth and Nordy Hoffman an mwr fm- iic sopho- to the charity game move- to keep Yak from piling up a bigger veteram. were to th more back.

1 lor fiiPHarlr m-nrrieK Oresron waS unable to stop the 11 make ment but made it taking total. caoacity. loucnaoam np a whole club with the excep- that action that only games be- i It was an unhappy celebration lor Notre fullback worries Oregon was unable of the pitching ataff. tween ccmferenoe teams would have the grand old man of the wer; more than offset by the spec- of Southern Califomia geals have had troBbk developinr more back bds End to Touchdown. Michigan fumbles early in the conference approval.

who was one of greatest ath- game paved the way for the open- i quesUon. fetes back to the m. was tog Ohio State wifuW to with oame on a end run by in another gridiron encounter, out the onoe ser- Craracr. who skirted the flanks for irish teum and its followers evi- tlireatened to score. tacular play of Mennkorich, Banas powerful backs by quarters: 1 and LeahcT'.

tCoottoued On Page Pour.) Hie Irish team and its followers evi 10 yards to croas the goal line. dentlv realize that the recent An Ohio fumble to the next period jess tie came at Soldier PYeld. Chi- looked much like a return of good cagb. wb a blom- at Notre favOT and placed the Michigan prestige, hence the desire to have it eleven in sconng positicm. Michi- out with the Hanlejnmen in another gan drove to five-yard line comimt.

and a first down. And then was then have an Idea that nwppeti. A moment later, 'Wiilam- Cwach pnteges are equally SOD (rf Michigan desirous to renew the argument. on Page Pour.j tConttoucd on Page Fotnrj. Ltmg By Yale.

On the other hand. Y'ale staged four lonir marches for touchdowns and riddled the Maroons defense with sma.shing drives and bewildering pas-ses Yale's four touchdowns resulted C0XC0RDI.4 LEADS JUNIOR COLLEGES HEBRON, Oct- la college of Seacard went into the lead in the Junior college conference rece today by defeating Hebron college. 13-12. Arkebauer and Lahse scored the Southern California. ,7 26 Oregon ..0 0 0 0 from drives that covered 55 touchdomms.

Beer twice, Nri yards and 65 yards. Chi- chalked up the two Hebron count( Continued On Page Four.) ers. Bears Turn Back Confarx. PORTLAND. Oct.

Bill rejuvenated 'ifornla Bears took Ihe Washington State into camp here this afternoon in a spectacular battle. final score was California, 13; Washington State, 7. California grabbed off a touch- dmm In the first period and as the (Continued cm Page Six.) pitcher. They appear io have ene now in the youthful Art Mr- Dongall. a southpaw.

He is young and heen on the job long, but he may be sold before the srinter is over. Among the big stars marketed for big money by the Seals in the last few years are Kamm, Waner, Suhr, Averlll. Johnson and JoUey. Sam Gibson, a pitcher, recently was sold to the GianUi, hot he was not a Frisco product. He was In the hig leagues before..

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Years Available:
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