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Show MANY 6R1DDERS CIPEIE (Oil SP POSTS TWO HOME GAMES ARE SCHEDULED THIS YEAR AT HIGH SCHOOL Only two home games are set for Bingham high school In Jordan Jor-dan district schedule: October 23 with Grantsville and November 13 with Cyprus. Twelve lettermen hav,e returned to form the nucleus of the team Coach Santistevan will build this year: Ensign Jensen, Blaine Wells, and Allen Cleason. Out of these Buddy Macke, Joe Watts, Allen Gleason and JackLar-son JackLar-son filled regular berths last season sea-son Large numbers of prospective gridders reported for tryouts. Joe Church, Syd Tregaskis, Emil Pol-lick, Pol-lick, John Yenyich, John Osoro, Nacho Ortego, Gam Carpenter, Pete Gerbich, George Austin, Eu-gena Eu-gena Peterson, Joe Fresh and Harold Har-old Bianchi are making strong bids for positions. Of these new recruits Fresh, Tregaskis, Ortego, Pollick, Jensen, Church and Peterson are trying to land in the backfield and Osoro, Carpenter, Yengich, Austin, Tripp and Gerbich are out to hu tle for line positions. Cbach Santistevan feels that the biggest team weakness lies in the kicking departments, where the graduation of Verl Peterson has left a good sized hole. So far most of the drill time has been consumed in blocking, tackling, and . pass catching. Transportation problems have been largely solved by the transportation trans-portation superintendent, J. M. Wood house. A bus is provided to return football players to Copper-field Copper-field and Highland Boy after practice. prac-tice. Eugene Peterson' and Allen Gleason of Lark walk to their homes every evening, showing the kind of determination that usually lands a player on a squad. Practice has been hampered by the Industrial League playoff. There will still be many evenings when practice will not be held due to the demand of U. S. Mines and Gemmell club for the field. Players Play-ers are looking forward to next year, when a fine schedule on the new stadium is anticipated. |