Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 188, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 October 1935 — Page 23
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MINOR CONFLICT HAS ‘BIG’ ANGLES
U lien Tech and Manual Swing Into Action
Bozidar Sloshitrh . . . Trch Half Rack Sutherland Rates ‘Own’ \ Squad as Loser Saturday M&Sfr&mfi*
Sutherland Rates ‘Own’ Squad as Loser Saturday Panther Coach Declares N. D. Has Best Team Since 1930: Surveys Other Big Games. BY JOCK SUTHERLAND Htad Coach, University of Pittsburgh PITTSBURGH, Oct. 16.—Four intersectional games headline the gridiron schedule for Saturday, Oct. 19, and, since it is uppermost in my mind, I may be pardoned for discussing the Pitt-Notre Dame game first.
Our Panthers have been build - Ling up a lot of trouble for this season by defeating the Irish the last three years. Elmer Lavden’s boys have been pointing for us, and with an aggregation that I believ is the best Irish team since 1930, our team will have to be extremely lucky to w nithe game. i do not believe there is any question as to the strength of Layden's 1935 squad and I think the Irish have a decided edge. Ray Morrison gave New Yorkers a treat when he took his Southern Methodist Mustangs to the big town j last fall against Fordham, and he j will give them another treat with j Vanderbilt’s aerial attack Saturday. Rut Jimmy Crowley's Rams will have the last say in this one. Minnesota and Tulanc, two outstanding sectional leaders, battle this week in Minneapolis. Tulane is better after the Auburn defeat, but will find Minnesota coming back strong after a hard game with Nebraska. The Gophers should win. Michigan State should experience no more than the usual trouble in defeating Boston College. This has always meant trouble enough, but ihe Spartans have the edge. ” ana Service Teams Favored IN the East, the big battle will be between Harvard and the Army. Experience lies on the side of the Cadets, but Dick Harlow is making progress and may catch the Soldiers. The nod goes to West Point, however. Navy's speedy eleven will run into trouble at Yale, but if the Middies’ line holds up it looks like a defeat for old Eli. Lou Little is going to cause Penn a lot of grief. The Quakers have had two real battles in a row against * > rinceton and Yale, and Columbia is likely to defeat the early favored Penn team. Pop Warner's powerful Temple team will have too much speed and weight for Carnegie Tech Tartans, and will have the Plaid its third defeat of the season. Reserve strength will tell the story in this one. Brown Isn't having a good year, and It will be worse after Satur-. day, for it meets an improved Dartmouth eleven, just finding out what Red Blaik's system is all about. Holy Cross will have too much weight for Manhatt’.n, although Chick Meehan may pull a surprise. Three Big Ten games hold the interest of the Midwest. Ohio State isn’t going to find Northwestern very formidable, and
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the powerful Buckeyes should win as they please. tt tt tt Likes Boilermakers O JRDUE is still too powerful for A Chicago, even with Borwanger, and must be .ated a slight favorite. There isn’t much to choose from in the Michigan-Wisconsin battle. Both are experiencing bad years, and breaks will decide the outcome. Undefeated elevens will be threatened in the South. Despite the fact that Auburn has a fine team, I look for Kentucky to win chiefly because of Chet Wynne and his great ballcarrying back, Johnson. Alabama looks good enough to down Tennessee. Duke and Georgia Tech meet in a real headliner and Wallace Wade’s eleven has learned not to be surprised at anything the Yollowjackets may do. Another step upward for the Blue Devils. Georgia, bigger and better than in some years, will be a little too much for North Carolina State, where Hunk Anderson is doing a good job of building. There is little doubt as to what will happen when Carl Snavely’s North Carolina team meets Davidson. The Tar Keels are definitely one of the best teams of the season. tt tt a Champs Due to Fall IN the Missouri Valley, Nebraska gets a crack at Kansas State, holder of the Bix Six title in 1934. It will be a case of too much Cardwell and LeNoue for the Aggies. Capt. Biff Jones will keep Oklahoma on the winning path by beating lowa State, a team that has been having its troubles. In the Southwest, Southern Methodist will throw a real scare into Rice’s championship eleven, but there is still a little too much experience on the side ot the Owls. Texas A. & M. showed enough in holding Temple to a low score to warrant the nod over Texas Christian. On the Pacific Const, little Santa Clara will be heavily outmanned when it hits California, and the Bears are heavy favorites. Oregon State has little chance against the Trojans of Southern California. The real battle will be at Pullman, Wash., where Washington State's Cougars, with the advantage of a fine back field, will be ready for a Washington team that is looking forward to 1936 rather than this season. iCopyright. 1935. XEA Service. IncA
Herbert Schwomeyer . . . Manual THE forward pass, making it and catching it, is an intricate part of football and above you see a pair of Indianapolis’ leading high school grid players caught by the camera as they were in the act of doing their stuff along the lines of air attack. But these young men will be expending their efforts against each other Friday afternoon at Tech field when Manual and Technical clash in an old city public high school rivalry. Bozidar Stoshitch, half back, has been a main cog in Tech’s trio of early season victories over Wiley of Terre Haute, Morton of Richmond and Muncie. Herbert Schwomeyer, captain and end of the Manual Redskins, is an excellent pass receiver and defensive man. The game between the two teams is an annual Friday attraction for the coaches, athletic directors and others interested in football who are here to attend the Indiana State Teachers convention.
Pro Golfers Ready for Trial Rounds Begin Play in National Meet Tomorrow. By United Tress OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla.. Oct. 16.—The nation’s golf professionals made their final practice rounds of the Twin Hills course today preparatory to the opening of the national PGA tournament. The play for keeps starts early tomorrow and when the firing ceases the field will be reduced to the 64 low scorers. This group will then go on, reducing its number by match play until but two remain for the 36-hole duel Tuesday. There are 121 entries. In that long list are names of the old masters and the new generation. Walter Hagen. Gene Sarazen, Paul Runyan, who won last year; Horton Smith, Tommy Armour and a score of others represent the veterans.
War Hostilities Extend to South America Mat
Buenos aires, oct. i6.—a real grudge match is expected here when the Italian and Ethiopian wrestling champions meet on the mat tomorrow. The participants in what promises to be a fight to the finish are Luigi Rossetti, Italian champion, and Ali Mahmud, billed as the “imperial champion of Abyssinia.” Their meeting, which inaugurates the wrestling season, is expected to draw a huge crowd as there are thousands of Italians living within traveling distance of Buenos Aires.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Rebels From Dixie Sure to ‘Go Soft’ When Vandy Team Trots Out to Play Fordham Fans Melt With Emotion When They See ‘Kids From Back Home,’ Joe Relates; Steve Hannagan That Way If Old Purdue Is Mentioned. BY JOE WILLIAMS Times Special Writer NEW YORK, Oct. 16— A small, brave and not altogether sane band of rebels will be sitting in the stands watching the Vanderbilts of Tennessee play the Forahams of New York at the Polo Grounds Saturday. This won’t be the big football game of the day. Nor even of the East. It won’t hold a tiny, dim candle to Pittsburgh and Notre Dame and it won’t come close to the Yale-Navy engagement in touching off pre-game controversies. But to the Dixie expatriates on Broadway it will be pretty
important. They’ll sit up in the stands and watch the big-shouldered young men from the home country and between swigs get emotionally reminiscent about the old swimming hole, main street, the cop on the corner, the first mazurka in the moonlight, the night before the Sewanee game and . . . Along about dusk you'll have to wake ’em up to tell ’em who won the ball game and like as not have a fight on your hands besides, unless
you admit right off that Lee would have won if he hadn't been overmatched, and . . . “sure, those boys from the South certainly do know their football.” But the point is, in the beginning they'll be there in the stands oblivious to all other gridiron
Williams
enticements of the day, and when the broad-shouldered young men from the home country x trot out on the field, they’ll swallow hard and get a funny feeling around the ticker, and star 4 - wondering what is wrong with them. Persons who make a study of phenomena of this type report that even transplanted Californians surrender to such shameless fervors at the sight of anything that is remindful of the rains of Los Angeles and the fogs of San Francisco; and I have seen with my own eyes the urbane, starchy Mr. Steve Hannagan of Lafayette, Ind., melt into an emotional mass of Nostaglia at the mere mention of a Purdue half back. Don’t Get Personal All this is quite silly of course. And unnecessary. I mean the tremendous soul suffering and heart anguish the people in this city profess to undergo whenever a football team, a wild animal trainer or a one-man band from the home country comes to New York. The remedy should be simple enough. What’s that the fellow says? .. . “Why don’t you go back where you came from?” . . . Since this would apply to me, too, we’ll just skip it, if you don’t mind. And getting back to the ball game. It isn’t going to decide anything because both the Vanderbilts and the Fordhams already have been knocked off. But how many games do you see that decide anything, anyway? So that detail isn’t very important. May I pause here to present Daniel McGugin? In the matter of football. Mr. Mc--1 Gugin is practically Old Man Vanderbilt himself. After 30 years as head coach he resigned last year, explaining he hadn’t intended to make the thing a steady job anyway. He came to Vanderbilt after playing under Hurry Up Yost with Michigan’s fabled point-a-minute teams. Vandy Gc-es to Top Under Mr. McGugin, Vanderbilt soon became one of the leading football powers of the South, moving up by degrees to pass Virginia, which had previously made a national imprint by its performances against Princeton, Carlisle and Navy. It wasn’t until 1910 that the East got a close-up of Mr. McGugin’s football handiwork. This was the year the Tennesseeans invaded New Haven and held Yale to a scoreless tie. That same year Yale beat Princeton and held Harvard to a 0-0 deadlock. It can be seen, then, that Vanderbilt made an impressive debut. Ran Around Kilpatrick A little guy that wouldn’t weigh more than 140 pounds quartevbacked the Southerners that day. If you look close enough you’ll see him huddled on the bench in the middle of the Vanderbilts Saturday. He’s now their coach. Ray Morrison is the name. He’s just about the best quarter back the South ever dej veloped. One of the best the game i ever saw. as a matter of fact. Go I over to Madison Square Garden and I ask John Kilpatrick about him some I day. Mr. Kilpatrick, now the Garden's president, was at end the day Vanderbilt tied Yale. You got some sort of medal if you gained any yardage around Mr. Kilpatrick's end in those days. He was that good. You’ll find his name twice on the allAmerica teams. Morrison got around Mr. Kilpatrick's end a couple of times that day. Mr. Kilpatrick still says he was the best quarter back he ever played against. WINS BRITISH STAKES B'j United Press NEWMARKET. England, Oct.. 16. —Sir Alfred Butt’s Near Relation won the Cesarewitch Stakes today, ! prelude to the Cambridgeshire on Oct. 30, winding up a brilliant flatracing season.
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Butler Bulldogs Build Stiff Pass Defense for State Locals Also Polish Up Own Aerial Attack. Footballs flashed through the air at Butler Bowl again yesterday as Coaches Tony Hinkle and Wally Middlesworth continued to polish the Bulldog passing attack. Spero Costas, Butler quarter back, and Phil Thompson, reserve half back, were outstanding ball tossers. Coach Middlesworth is equipping back field men with a defense expected to smother the touted aerial drive of Indiana State, which invades the bowl Friday night. Indiana State’s brilliant passing pair. Bush to Miklozek, was broken up this year by graduation of Bush, but Wey has replaced Bush and is said to be as accurate with the pigskin. Emphasis still is being placed on punting. Jim Wulle, Luther Martin, Inman Blackaby and Waldo Stout are developing as the best hooters in camp. SHORTRIDGE RESERVES TRIP IRISH SECONDS A touchdown scored in the first quarter gave shortridge reserves a 7 to 2 triumph over Cathedral reserves in a game played at Riverside Park yesterday afternoon. Hall, left half back, tallied the goal for the Blue Devils, going over on an off tackle play after a 50yard march. Brown of Shortridge was downed in the end zone for Cathedral’s two-point safety. SILENT HOOSIERS LOSE Portland Takes Decision in Night Game; Score, 7-0. By Times Special PORTLAND. Ind., Oct. 16.—'The Silent Hoosiers football team of the Indiana School for the Deaf at Indianapolis dropped a 7-0 gridiron decision to the Portland High School eleven here last night.
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CATHEDRAL FROSH WIN Blocked Kick Paves Way for Victory Over Blue Devils. Cathedral freshmen scored a 6-to-0 football victory over Shortridge yearlings on the Cathedral field yes-
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terday. Joe Fitzgerald scored on an end run early in the game after the Irish had blocked a punt on the 10yard line. HOLBROOK TUNES PASSES MANCHESTER, O. Oct. 16 Minus the services or the injured
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Groomes. quarter back, but still determined to perfect an aerial attack and score the first grid victory of the season. Coach Beattie of Hoibrook eleven sent his charges through a lengthy workout yesterday in preparation for the Earlham invasion Saturday.
