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Show Pl9 The Dragerton Tribune, Dragerton, Utah WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1251 SPORT LIGHT PHW Bowl Games Need To Change Methods By Of 1 S jp V, I , territory, from easily solved. Here is the solution play all the bowl games. But divide most of the money among the teams of t h e Conference involved. Dont give the winning or Bowl team more than all audited expenses and around $126,000. Or maybe profit. Let the Southern or Southeastern or Southwestern Circuit split the rest. no team The idea is should make a big profit out of Bowl games through overpaying, overscouting, oversubsidiz-in- g football players a, common practice today, where you can be sure the leading teams will be far overpaid. We can see no harm in the leading Bowls if handled under such conditions. I can slip a tip to the Sugar and Orange Bowls. They are headed for certain trouble if they maintain their present method. The Southern Conference has long been on record, 14 to 1, against Bowl competition. Vanderbilt is also heading a Southeastern revolt that is gaining considerable support. We are among many others who would hate to see the Bowls canceled through bad handling, when they might be carried on under smarter direction. $25, OOCf that As ; 7 - Ml! y Vs-- Things Are Now for postseason appearances One must get a Bowl bid to break $100,000 even. This is true and it is also a bad B fet are at least partly responsible the mad stampede to build up for thing. But if the big financial stake were scattered around the teams of the Conference there would no onger be any mad rush over to :o out for a winner, or to arrange Jowl schedules most likely to insure Bowl bids. No team is going to invest $100,000 or more in order to get expenses and $20,000 or $25,000. But when the surplus fromlbe Bowls is divided among many other teams there can be no complaint about financial concentration on a few. We have the feeling that those at the head of Bowl organizations and eading teams from various Conferences dont quite appreciate the movement now gaining headway against Bowl play. There is no denying the fact that Bowl receipts, from $100,000 to $125,- - 000, winning combinations. Cut down the financial killing and you can save the Bowls. We are strongly for the Bowls if properly directed, if removed from the taint of overcom -- - . ' will be in a bad way, ruled out by Southern and Southeastern Confer ences. iK It evening before that 1 3 -- Minute MCIIOn mlfe Pertatend-...- . and Inez had Come to spend a couple of weeks . with him. Inez was disappointed in the place. She had always thought of Arizona as a land of desert. Warm. Romantic. Nobody had told her that there were mountains in Arizona and that up in those mountains the temperature in March got well down below the freezing point. She probably wouldnt have remained a week if it hadnt been for Stan Seymour. Stan was a young engineer. A woman in love sees many things that others let pass by unnoticed. Lorelei, who was the daughter of had been in love with Stan since the day he arrived six months before, and he with her. Their love was unspoken, but it lay between them like a tangible thing. Lorelei was glad now that neither had put into words the thing that both had felt, for now there need be no explaining or embarrassments. Some day, she knew, the hurt that grew inside of her as she watched Stan yield to the polished charm of Inez Thayer would fade and vanish. So on the evening of March 7 Lorelei and Stan quarreled. And 0 T was warm that night of MartJ Tlie 7. Unnaturally warm. heavj . T-D- LEFT THE TI6ERS FOR IN 1927 HE WAS 41 YEARS OLD .YET HE BATTED .357 IN 134 GAMES, DROVE IN 93 RUNS AND STOLE 22 BASES 4- !.V 1 Iff 1 1 ' $ V v 4 SttUraMm H NEW NOSE PIECE . . . Delbert Sztnai, 11, helps his sister Andrea, 8, get a glimpse of her new look after plastic tubes were inserted through holes cut in her skull in rare operation that enables her to breathe through her nose for the first time in her life. Andrea underwent surgery at Temple University hospital in Philadelphia. KATHLEEN NORRIS The Psychoanalyzed Youngster ABSURDITY of sending an snows atop the mountain range d child to a psythe mine against the base of which me chiatrist struck forcefully when buildings nestled began to melt, and I on the morning of March 8 they be- first heard of it some years ago. gan to move, slipping down the Nowadays it has become quite mountain, loosening tons of earth common for children to be sent to these specialists. Poor children! and ice and rock. Lorelei was coming up from the One wonders what they think about rural delivery postoffice box with It. the mail. She heard the ominous You heard Mother and Daddy roar and stopped. A moment before quarrelling?: says the sympathetic she had seen Stan and Inez entei voice of the strange man. The litthe tiny engineers field office, and, tle girl, bewildered, but willing to without thinking she started running help, leans against his knee. She toward it, shouting at the top of her nods solemnly. And then you tore and cried lungs. your dolly into Men appeared from other build- pieces? ings and took up the cry, and before And then the psychiatrist works long a great crowd was racing down out the interpretation. It seems the valley road out of the path ol that the childs mother spoke of the onrushing avalanche. someone having a new baby and But Stan and Inez didnt appear the child was afraid it was coming in the doorway of the engineer to their house and that, as she, the office and Lorelei kept on running, child, was secretly in love with her screaming. Above the office was 8 father she anticipated that her sharp outcropping of rock. When the mother would perhaps love avalanche hit this it divided, anc Into Mgizes stones and earth were catapulted And so on and on into the mazes into space over the building. Lorelei had pushed open the dooi that the twisted mind of a diswhen this happened. She glimpsed gruntled old Austrian put into our Inez in Stans arms. Then a falling healthy American way of thinking. timber crashed toward them and According to Freud most girls are she screamed. Stan pushed Inei lealous of their brothers, and most away from him, and almost go) boys want to take their fathers clear himself, but it grazed his place in Mothers room. And the tears and tantrums of the nursshoulder and knocked him flat. transery, the vapors and discontents of For a moment Lorelei stood fixed. Then she leaped forward and the teens, the vague dissatisfacbegan prying at the timber. Helf tions of married life are all traceshe cried. And she turned able to that. me! desperate eyes toward Inez. There are mighty few books that At the door, Inez turned. Her I would undertake publicly to burn face was white. Dont be a In the market-placfor I believe she Save your- In free thought and free speech, but shrieked. Joolt Then the roar and crash the works of Freud are among self! became loader, drowning out them. Id like to prove to Freud her words. The first avalanche had started a second. Inez flung open the door and rushed outside. Stan pulled Lorelei down beside him and yelled into hei ear: Go on! Youve still got a chance. You cant save me! But she only stared at him in horror. Then she began picking up timber and propping them in a sort of lean-tagainst the one undamaged wail, V sheltering them, Rescue crews came in and were amazed to find the two alive. They pried Stan loose and carried him away on a stretcher. One of his legs was brbkeitL When he came out of the ether, Lorelei was beside his bed. She . tantrums of the nursery . . smiled and said, Shes safe. She got clear and escaped without a thaj; jealousy is a common failing bruise. among children, and that plenty of He looked at her and said noth- boys envy their sisters. Girls, who ing.' Then he took her hand and dont have to go to work unless they drew her down close to him. Its want to, who learrT things faster in Tnore important that youre safe school, who never experience the eight-year-ol- - o WHEN THE ATHLETICS V vc Tyv f IIHiHllfilIVV'aKVXA e, THE UNIVERSITY CALLS HIMMR.TOUCHDOWN-U.S.- A AND SUCH A TITLE MOST CERTAINLY BELONGS TO THIS NEBRASKA HALFBACK. HE LED THE NATION IN SCORING LAST YEAR WITH 157 POINTS- - 22 'S AND 25 EXTRA POINTS. A JUNIOR, WITH THE SI ANDV52 SEASONS TO GO, HE HAS A GOOD CHANCE TO BREAK HIS OWN SCORING RECORD o '?7rtxX Richard Hill Wilkinson Lorelei and Stfin quarreled. The real cause of the quarrel was Inez Thayer, Deke Whitmans stepdaughter. Deke was the . 'Mi spectators. each knew that Inez was the cause i 'v ; Michigan and Ohio State should outdraw any other tgams this sea son tor, two reasons they both have violent and enthusiastic partisans, and both have tremendous stadiums that can handle 97,000 and 78,000 of the quarrel, though both pretend ed it was over the matter of holding the annual spring dance in Redstone this year instead of at the mine. 1 'V!iX Drawing Cards on March occurred THE landslide the' was v s .'T FICTION By V : THE CORNER , 1 mercialism. Unless certain changes are made at an early date we feel the Bowls Jim Tristram, the mine foreman, Today the Southern Conference, the Southeastern Conference and the Southwestern Conference are all Before involved in Bowl bids. Techs acceptance of the Georgia recent invitation to play in the Orange Bowl, January 1, Bobby Dodds, Georgia Techs smart coach, said that, Only the 1950 Bowl win ners, Tennessee and Kentucky, were solvent in the South. They got over 0 X i. , f A An amazing number of letters have come to us both for and against Bowl games. Those against the Bowls are not all from the Ivy League country, or from the Big Ten or the Far West, where only two teams can be involved. Many come from the , South, The Cotton, Sugar, Orange and Gator Bowls involve a vast sweep 'C v. , GRANTLAND RICE NEW YORK & embarrassment of a voice that shifts from baritone to tenor in the most horrifying way, who dont have to shave or enlist in the army, and who dont get bald! Gee, theyre lucky If girls were smarter they wouldnt let a sour old ran tell them that they envy their brothers and fall in love with their fathers. Theyd burst out laughing instead. But the truth is, it isnt funny, because like all other theories the Freudian one has a basis in scientific fact, and with our American enthusiasm, in which we successively exhaust ourselves with the bicycles of the Nineties, with dancing with the Castles, with miniature golf courses and radios and television and motor cars and all the other things we do too hard and too much like everything else 1 over-develop- ed weve taken Freud too hard. All having been conceived and born by exactly the same process, and that process being called the sex relationship, it is not unnatural that much of what we feel and are stems from sex. , . Strange Doctors And instead of married folk lifting their lives to the level of respect and dignity, and giving their children a background of security, peace and affection, to ship these puzzled little folk off to strange doctors may well be to permanently upset their sense of Values. Nothing is ever going to take the place of a good home, good talk, good nature, good ideals In that This is our childrens only safety from the terrible troubled waters of todays thinking. Any woman who wants to give her children a priceless heritage needs only to love them and their father, keep peace and home fires burning, and solve the problems of the whole group with common sense, affection, and that worldly wisdom that all good fathers and mothers attain. A ridiculous and yet tragic situation along these lines has recently arisen in my neighborhood. The family consists of a father and mother, both rich, both rather steady drinkers, her son by, an home. earlier marriage, aged 17, his daughter by an early marriage, aged 8, his grandmother, in whose magnificent home tfiey all live and a young psychologist, aged 23. Fish Eater The Black Swallower, a small deep seaAtlantic fish, can kill and swallow whole a fish that is from eight to ten times larger than itself. 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