Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 227, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 January 1933 — Page 11
.TAX. 31, 1033
Off The Backboard BY VEEN BOXELL
SO they tied the tinware on Sally Suddith! One of Indiana's best basketball Thayers has competed in his last E;g Ten basketball came Sally, whose right handle is Ar-' hold, and who was a sophomore | sensation at guard lor Indiana U. la t year, was declared ineligible to- j day by Everett
Dean, Crimson coach. The cx-Mar-tinsville flash has been playing with independent teams which charged admission at the gate. That's the charge—and they exile the guy for life' As reported by your correspondent several weeks ago, Suddith planned to reenter Indiana when the second
ts l 4 , , •fib*" > % V v \
Suddith
semester opened in J:n 'iry. It- didn’t return to sc hool this semester due to financial J troubles. Suddith would have been a big help to the Hoosiers. and one glance a' the E.g Ten standings will convince you that good old I. U. could stand a little help. But Dean had no other choice. ,W en the Big Ten schools voted recentiy to oust Blackmer and Break. lowa, stars, on the same charges, Euddith’s fate was sealed. Well, it's the Big Ten's loss. ana T',m Hinklf * Riitlrr Rulltloc* rol sl.inpfrt down hv I rckhlnn. hut the Fairvifw flii -n i.till ire vrrv murh in the raer for the Missouri Villrr Cnnfrrrnre rrown. To- j nicht. tho rambling Ulop warriors arf in St. I onia to ser what thrv can do about kit king linn White s Washington V. cagcrs light out of the title picture. Which will not be a* easy as it sounds. a a a NOTRE DAME will introduce a new star to the cage fans Wednesday night, Joe O'Kane by nam •. He played with the championship Washington ilnd.) Catholic team a few seasons back. He's tall, a siar on both offense and defense, they say around South Bend, and tv.ll make a real running mate for Ed Krause and Joe Vcegele. a a a 11 ERE will be chances galore A for upsets in the Indiana hard- ! wood marathon this week. A brilliant card awaits the fans, and right in the top spot is that Lruansport-Muncie struggle at Berry bowl. Since the Muncies knocked off Anderson they naturally will go into action Friday night as the favorite. but your correspondent is one guy who won’t be surprised to see Cliff Wells’ Berries come out on top. Os course. Muncie may be hitting the high spots now and take the Logans out for an airing, which will more than suit Tech, because a Bearcat win over the Berries will put Tim Campbell’s boys right on top the Conference heap—providing, incidentally, the Techs can knock off Frankfort on the same night. Beth T'ch and Logan have dropped one game, the Berries whining six while the Campbells have annexed only five. a a tt When Bedford upset Vincennes last Saturday three substitutes were in the startin': lineup. One of them played the entire game, and the others more than threequarters. The three varsity pastimers who rode the bench were Parham. Yeskle and Perkins. Black, one of the subs, captured hijrh scoring honors. A big nhakeup al o is under way at Washington. The Hatchets dropped two last week. tt tt tt SHELBYVILLE is strong for Shortridge. Shelby writers have labeled the Blue Devils *-rrat." The sportsmanship of Dick Robinson. Shortridge guard, Hon the Mack players and fans. When Shepple, Mack center, was injured during that great closing rally by the visitors. Robinson deliberately tossed the ball out of bounds, giving Shelby an opportunity to call time. That kind of sportsmanship isn't forgotten very eoon. Earlham Paces Slate Quintets Earlham continued undefeated in eleven games to lead Indiana colleges in basketball standings. Indiana Central continues to hold a close second place with eleven victories and one loss. Butler holds third place with nine wins and four defeats. The standings: \v. L t w L. Earlham ... }1 J Bali Staff S S Ind Central- . 11 1 Indiana U .44 7311 *IP r 9 4 N A G U ... 3 4 r.nt-al Normal 7 2 Huntlneton 2 3 .Df Pauw 7 2 Oakland Citv. . 3 5 Evanr-ville . .. 7 2 Wabash 3 6 Vsilnanio 5 2 Oarv . .... 1 2 Concordia 2 J Manchester 3 6 r ,. rf i p , 6 3 Anderson . . . 2 8 Indiana State. 6 3 1 „„■ ''' n a H ■' l er 5 3 Indiana Law .. 0 4 Notre Dame *> MUNCIE TAKES OVER MARION ROLLER FIVE P’/ 7 <•< Special MUNCIE. Ind.. Jan. 31.—Frank \V. Lang, Muncie business man, has acquired the franchise of the Marion team in the Hoosier Roller Polo League and future games will be piaved under the name of Muncie at the Muncie National Guard Armory. Two games will be played each week, one at Muncie and one on the road. Next Saturday night the club will epen the home season at the Muncie Armory with Indianapolis as its opponent. Lang states he contemplates no changes in the lineup at present, and that Fred Pence, goal tender, will continue to act as captain. ' MACKENZIE GETS JOB pi Tun s Special COLORADO SPRINGS. Col. Jan. i 31 Roland MacKenzie. former amateur star and Walker cup team i member who turned pro a year ago. j is the new professional at the Broad- | moor Golf Club here, effective j April 1. RESERVE FIVES CLASH Four reserve teams, survivors in the Marion county high school i second team tourney, tangled in ] semi-final games at Warren Cen- \ tral today. Ben Davis battled Southport and Beech Grove op-! posed Decatur Central. The win- j ners meet in the finals tonight , at 8. *
T_......:.... .. _ sembling and mellowing the greatest treasure store of choice American *r ; 'Sj§ gMfIKgfiSHHE C 'v
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
PAGE 11
