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Show Utah Aggies Are Hopeful of Conference Championship 15.uk row I.indqiiist. left end; Worley. right puard; Gardner, rlht end; Olson, substitute; Cannon, center; Twitchell, left tackle; Waym.in, substitute; Crrx,kston, left guard; Magtlby, substitute; Cor.kwriicht, fullback; .lonson. substitute: Mohr. ri.uht tackle; Watson, coach; Spencer, nulxslitute; Anderson, substitute. Front row Gilligan, substitute; James, substitute; Petersen, left halfback; Larson, substitute; .Stkftl, quarterback; Barlow, Bar-low, substitute; Hanson, right halfback. ' ... Vi-n :V ; . .,-'-; ; - HANSEN ; ,v -U - "... i ' -. : : -' yr'' ' -H.B- ;t i Y :.., . -V: , '- -1 '- ' . ; d; ; ' , 1 . , ALLEN CONKMGHT DOUG CANNON DEL. C KDNER. y , ; - ,.-'-7 '"V'.ThsY'J f.V ' X 1 ?" ----.-..-.- - -r; I ,r ..T:-';--J i V'x::: ,r i . y -. r-- - r-;!'vv... - : .. 'S:--.: ; , . V , PfTZKSE-N . - V ' -'r.l- . 'rr . . ' ; v l-l J NZ OLSON -Gi, " - - ' ...... ; eTFEL ANDREHYJHOHRj LA'DQUST INTEREST INTENSE IN ANNUAL GAME BETWEEN UNIVERSITY AND AGGIES Predictions Are That 10,000 Will See Battle at Curnmings Field Thursday; Logan Team Must 1 Win to Share in Conference Championship; Champion-ship; Crimson Will Put Forth Every Effort to Live Up to Tradition. NEVER before has the in t ere oil eg -iare football reason in this stat-c drarca to close v.ith greater interest inter-est centered around the final tame, vrhizh this year will he p'ajed y n Thacksgivine !ay at Cumming3 field f cet'.veen the University of Utah, and the Utah Agrieultaral college elevens. V -Sevpral reasons enter to make the present season one of extraordinarv in-.terest in-.terest among the football fans of" the --.-'ate. First; of all, the Thanksgiving Viay game is between the two old grid rivaU of the tate, and this season for the first time in several years the Utah Ag?ie? are the favorites. In the sec-enn sec-enn place, the contest will yo a Ions vray toward settling the championship of the Rocky Mountain conference, and iio same in this state ever before did that. Moreover, the eridiron enthusiasts enthus-iasts have watched more lonely the trend of foot hali fortune this tall because be-cause the Utah Agsies have been wa-inj wa-inj a fight for supreme honors and have rot yet fallen down on any job they have undertaken. World Loves a Fighter. The disinterested spectator likes to see things change on evasion. At lsst. such is the characteristic of the American mind. Something of a thrill .runs down the back of men when they read of some people gaining their liberty liber-ty who have been oppressed for centur-is, centur-is, and similarly the imagination of the modern man whose veins carry red blood is etirred deeplv when a school which has been a consistent loser on the : football field suddenly puts a winnine a2greation on the jjridiron. If that st'aoof has wased a eood battle all the time, never Quitting the nphill fightT the sympathy which it wins in its day of trinmph" is all the deeper. And yet, men like to see football teams live up to the traditions about them. To know that eleven men hare desperation and abandon simply be-au;e be-au;e the men who went before them -ouht that way and then won against ""pponr-nrs th;-t' no one expected them A dfpat i. to feel th sense of con-9S, con-9S, i ::"t that the victor- rlu'melves feel. The approaching Utah -Utah Aezie game presents both thee phases. It has beT. vears since the Lopaa team ha won from Utah, and nver yet has it won on the "U" field. Year after yar the Aggie? have waged a losing fight. Even within the past four years thy fought they had a toam which could turn the trick, bnt the final whi-tle at the big game faund them always al-ways defeated. As to Tradition. On the other band, it has become a tradition at the University of Utah that no Crimson team should be defeated defeat-ed by the Aggies. The tradition has been broken, but in the main it has bfen lived up to, and it has been strengthened by thrilling victories which few people expected. When '"oa-'h elsoo Norgren first came to Utah to coach the ' ; U ' ' eleven he fonnd a situation similnr to that whb'h now exists. The Aggies felt so confident of winning in the Thanksgiving day game that they would have bet their hats on the result, and as a matter of fact did just that. The Aggies had experienced expe-rienced men in the lineup, as they ha've now, and the Crimson machine was composed com-posed of new men, aa it is now. With the prospects of an Aegie victory vic-tory before them, the Urimson buckled down to work with determination and won the game. The student body of the school supported the eleven with a spirit it had never before given even to winning elevens, and alumni members mem-bers from all parts of the state and the nation sent words of encouraee-ment. This year, with an Aggie victory once more threatening, the same spirit of defiance is arising at the "U.1' The students, the alumni and the football team are goinz into the matter in much the same fashion that they might prepare pre-pare to repel an invasion by the forces of Kaiser Wilhelm. Utah will fight furicaslv for its traditions, and the Aggies Ag-gies will fight equally fnriotisly and also confidently for th laurels which thev believe are at last within their jrrasp. That is why men who like to re real battles are preparing to see Thurdav's game. N'evrr before has the conference championship been bound up in the isue of a Utah-Utah Aerrie contest. (Continued on Fallo-wing Page.). INTEREST KEEN 1 'U4GGIE STRUGGLE! i (Crniim-.fd from r-.-.-fdics rs.) 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