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Show light South has once again come 4 At the start of the ,seasona mf games'3 to GralSte Ind Bnghanfb? fe ' 'ft PSfc score of 7-0, 12-0, respectively; gmJSfe N ';-44Kt ! The big upset came when those f ! overly large players from. West SSE'S d'Scribing It by Frank Allan Reviewing the season's high-, high-, lights South, has once again come out of apparent obscurity, to show up as one of the better football schools in the state. At the start of the season the A gridders lost two non-league games to Granite and Bingham by score of 7-0, 12-0, respectively; The big upset came when those overly large players from West invaded the cub domain and were set back on their haunches by a lucky, for them, 13-13 tie. All these defeats, and in the case of the lat- ter a tie, were by way of the air, I but in the game with East, Leop ! ards passes were of no avail and it was only on a partially blocked I kick that the Eciders made their points. In the second game with West i as in the first, the bunch of South erners proved the statement, the S bigger they are, the harder they ! fall, to bp true. It might be said : that speed creates weight and if J any of you doubt me ask somebody some-body that saw in the "A" game i what happened to the tackier who tried to get Jackson as he was returning re-turning a punt. Courtesy Salt Lake Tribnue Here's Jack Okland . . . Modest and unassuming, he nevertheless is dynamite when lie tackles an opponent of Utah U on the gridiron. An alum, he will in all probability don the khaki of the army in the near future, which brings to mind the words of Douglas MacArthur, "On these fields are sown the seeds of victory ..." As for a prediction for today's game I would say it won't be anybody's any-body's game until the final gun. Personally I give South the edge. The "B" team started with a boom, died down, boomed again and as I write this I don't know whether they boomed for the fourth time or not. A lot of credit must be given to the lads of the "B" team, as they're a bunch of hard fighters and should give us a lot of good material for next year's "A" team. The "C" team? Weil after the impressive way they held Lincoln, which might easily be called the best B league team in the state, it's hard to say. I don't know whether the referees refer-ees at the first East "C" team clash were prejudiced or not, they're usually us-ually "right, but 247 yards denotes an abundance of questionable penalties. X X 4 ' 4' s v r3 A. 17 : x X X Xj-- - 1 5fh t' X X "T N 'rr;":A--. f.k'J: I 1 t2S"' . o & .s rrnv. v X v - . Kck , -V- j-- -7T7rrh p5j w X :y v JrZ'i N L 5 f x t: x r N-V X X ' , jBu oh X - X x I X. X. ?"'4$'CJ j N. X" X. fjiJl &i7 X X -V -V - r- V I N. X. f 6n i v . . ( N i ....j- i ir i x X L i X ltC 0.i -f X X X X . -i ' j ' I J I I X X Vhnvp ffraDh dravn in a hasty moment, illustrates action in the first South-East "A" encounter. Who beat who? This graph te,ls' ?"c;Ll nf;rh blocked kick started East's touchdown aunt. 1 SSL 1SLZSZ 'n-eaJ'Ih'e which fea.ured an change of j Pn Th Cub, bottled op East in the third quarter, while in the last quarter South's desperate drive and passing attack are shown. |