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Show PROVO (UTAH) E V E N I NJ3 H ERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2 8, 1932 Y.U., UTAH, COLORED O AGS FAVORED S ATU : PAGE FOUR B Dope Changes Color In Tiger-Ag Fracas Most of Cougar Injured Players Back In Lineup; Tobasco Tedesco May Be In Game Part of the Time. CHOOSE FROSH ON HOOP SQUAD By .1. It. PAULSON Well, sir, here the Rocky Mountain Moun-tain conference football boys are at it again this Saturday, and the j fans and sports writers are busy with their calculations, which are likely to he about 75 per cent light - on a clear day. BriKhani Young university, with three wins and one loss chalked up,, is a favorite with this bureau of vital statistics and many others, to take the heavy Wyoming team for a cleaning by one, two or three touchdowns. Maybe not. Maybe Colorado College is better than we all thought and should have pushed push-ed the Cowboys under by that 13-6 score. Fewer Injured Play THORPE'S FOOT BEATS HARVARD Famous Indian Kicks Four Tries To Best Rated Harvard Team. District 5 Promises Fast Gridiron Tilts Next Week Four freshmen basketball players have been selected to become members mem-bers of the B. Y. U. basketball squad Coach G. Ott Romney announced an-nounced Wednesday following practices prac-tices the past week. George Gout ley, former Pleasant Grove center and a likely candidate for the vacant forward position; Emerson McComber formerly All-Idaho All-Idaho center for two years; Hugh Cannon, former L. D. S. star, and Wesley Atkin, Dixie high school, are the four chosen by the head coach. More intensive practices will be held next week, when the 12-man squad membership will receive more attention. Coach Romney has enough regulars, squadmen and new material this year to be an outstanding out-standing threat for conference hon- versity's regular quarter, Tobasco j nrs in spite of improved teams at 1 edeaco. Tobasco earned his nickname nick-name by being hotter than an election speech at passing, running run-ning and kicking. Tedesco is not The injury list of the Cougars haa dwindled from about six men to two and a half. Hutchinson, eserve half, is the only one defin-ery defin-ery out, as Kay Hart, fullback, and Glen Wilkinson, quarter, may see service in the game. Another injured player who has knit enough to be back in, at least for part of the time, is Utah Uni- (Jtah, Utah Aggies and Wyoming. Nine Lrttermen Nine lettermen are back this . . . . . . ...... .-I . I - I 1- i L 1 ft o n o i jccii uiuuuu v.au.u me ivot-oo only the sparkplug of the Utah j team wi I be built. Captain Byron team, he is the steeling wheel and part of the manifold. Tedesco will see some service in the game between the Injuns and the Utah Aggies at Salt Lake irt-urday. irt-urday. This game, for yeavs the "big game" of the season, is now just another workout for Utah. Betting at the present time is on points, and points alone. A popular popu-lar bet in Salt Lake and Logan is that Utah will not win by more than , three touchdowns some say four. The game that has the typewriter typewrit-er boys guessing is the one be tween Colorado Aggies and Colo-1 rado College. The Ags are playing i the Bengals on their home field ! at Fort Collins, as the home-com-1 ing encounter, and are especially eager to bowl over the boy from Colorado Springs. But the boys from Colorado Springs seem to have no desire whatsoever to be bowled over even by favored teams like Colorado Aggies. Wyoming couldn't do it last . week. Yet the Colorado Ags ought to do it, according to a flipped flip-ped coin which just came down tails' topmost. Nelson, Elwood Romney, Jim Hun ter, Fay Evans, Jay Whitman, Malcolm LeSueur, Burle Robison. Joe Johnson and Floyd Milfett will be aided and abetted by five junior varsity men of last year; Whit Ball, Harward, Kay Hart, Floyd Kotter and Frank LiComb. With these flanked by the four freshmen, and with other men having a chance to try for the t;quad by play in the intra-murat league, basketball prospects are ; bright this year. The junior varsity squad will be selected later fiom t'.ie outstand ing j layers in the intra-mural league and will enter a league with the "Y" faculty team and other strong fives in the region. U. of U. Students To Parade Tonight In Bed-Time Attire BY ART KRENZ NEA Service Sports Writer One of the greatest games Jim Thorpe ever played and one which eld Pop Warner, present coach of Stanford, will always cherish, occurred oc-curred on Nov. 11, 1911. On that day Carlisle, Warner's famous team redskins, went east to play Harvard. Har-vard. Early in the game Harvard pushed push-ed across a touchdown with its second sec-ond string. They kicked the extra point and the score was 6-0. (A goal was five points then.) The Crlm- American Fork-Payson Game Should Provide Pro-vide Plenty Thrills; Provo Takes On Improved Springville Eleven. A. yn p tp i j '"'' V L SALT LAKE CITY, Oct. 28 -(Special) University of Utah students stu-dents will make a new departure from the old traditions of the Utah-Aggie Utah-Aggie game tonight when they will vent their enthusiasm in Salt Lake's downtown with a pajama parade. The parade will start at the New-house New-house hotel, Aggie headquarters, at 720 n. m. and will conclude at 9 o'clock at the Victory theater, then to give way to a theater rally that will feature stunts, talks and cheering. Prizes will be awarded for the best boudoir attire and also for the be3t stunts. The pajama parade is j new to this section but throughout 4TRVS - -4 GOALS son relaxed a bit after this and. at a point where they were forced back to their own 13-yard line, Thorpe crossed them up by booting a place kick from a difficult position. posi-tion. Aeain Carlisle cafTtetLthe ball down the licld behind Thorpe's in terference. On the Harvard 43-yard line, Jim dropped back and booted another field goal, tying the score. Before the half ended he kicked the, third, putting Carlisle ahead by a score of 9-6. Carlisle, expecting the first squad, relaxed when they found the reserves in the second half and the Crimson managed to push across another touchdown, taking the lead, 15-9. Thorpe then got peeved. He began be-gan to run with the ball in the manner of a wild bull. He ran:7Q yards for a touchdown in nine plays, and made the extra point, making the score 15 all. Then Harvard held the Indians on its 48-yard line. It was fourth down, necessitating a kick. And following i3 how Thorpe tells about what he did: "As long as I live I will never forget that moment. I was tired enough so that all my muscles were related. I had confidence and wasn't worried. The ball came back square and true. With all the force and power I had I swung my leg and, as the ball left my toe. I knew the east and the found great favor. coast has west. Two tight games are In store for Region 5 football teams next Friday Fri-day when the race for the regional region-al title tightens. These two games are between American Fork and Payson at Payson and Provo and Springville at Springville. The other game takes Spanish Fork to Lehi with Coach Fenton Reeve's Spaniards heavy favorites to win. At the first of the season the Springville team would not have been accorded mudn of a chance against the Bulldogs, but the games thus far have put a different differ-ent light on the matter. While the Bulldogs have run into an unprecedented un-precedented streak of hard 'luck with injuries - and absences the Springville team has been bolster ing up - week by week until what was iegarded as a weak backfield is developed into a good ball-carrying outfit now. Springville Drilling1 Coach Simba Thorn is sensing a good chance to tumble the BulT-dogs BulT-dogs and Is working hard to smooth the rough spots in coordination coordin-ation between the backfield and the line for the encounter. The line is tough and has a slight edge on the Provoites forward waif, In Provo, Coach Glenn Simmons is more hopeful this week with the recovery of several injured players and the return of a number of absent ab-sent players who were not in the lineup against Tooele. The Bull dogs had two regulars in against the strong Harris outfit. Harris Back Leonard Harris, end. whose arm was injured in the Jordan game, will be able to start against Springville, although Eddie Peterson, Peter-son, tackle, still has his arm in a sling. One other thing that gives the Red Devils further hope of taking the Provo team down is that the Bulldogs will probably play Lincoln Lin-coln high on Wednesday with part of the squad. The Railsplit- Little Receives New Three-Year Contract At C. U. NEW YORK, Oct. 27 Lou Little, Columbia university football coach under fire recently by the univer sity aa;iy paper, was given a con fidence gesture Wednesday whei President Nicholas Murray Butler renewed his contract for three years at a $3,500 salary decrease. Little s salary is now $15,000 a year Little and the athletic administration administ-ration have been subject of investi gations recently because it was al leged t'nat athletes received the preference in jobs and scholarships and that they wers favored by pro-lessors pro-lessors in the classrooms. The rumblings against the ad ministration were started last veai by the college editor and later end ed in his discharge from the school He was reinstated with apcloeries and resigned again with scorn. Other rumblings at Yale will not result in t'he release of Mai Stev ens, head coach. Stevens, anxious to continue his medical studies was reluctant about signing las1 year. Amos Alonzo Stagg and Al- bie Booth have been suggested as successor. it was headed for the crossbar and sure to go over." It did, and Carlisle won the game 18-15. ters have shown a lot of fight in t'neir previous games and have a fair aerial game. They will make the Provo second string, which ie neaily on a par with the regulars, hump to win. American Fork and. Payson should stage a fast game at Pay-son. Pay-son. The Cavemen have shown plenty of scoring punch in their games thus far" and a varied attack at-tack featuring passes and running plays around the end. They are also 'aigh in kicking. Coach Stan Wilson's team has been improving Weekly since they were walloped by the Spaniards in the first game and have achieved the form expected ex-pected of them in pre-season dope. Thsi game should be a thriller i V. 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