Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 8, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 March 1936 — Page 36
PAGE 36
THREE Hoosier Cage Entrants Gain Second Round fteitz, Decatur, Anderson Score Victories Over National Foes. By T tilted Prt 49 CHICAGO, Marrji 20. —St. Xavier of Louisville, defending champion in the National Catholic scholastic basketball tournament, was eliminated in the first match of the second round today by De La Salle of Chicago, 43 to 21. CHICAGO, March 20. Firstround games in the National Catholic Scholastic Basketball Tournament were completed riday as St. Patrick’s, Elizabeth, Iv J., defeated Central Catholic, Lima, 0., 33 to 21, and the all-Indian team from St. Francis Mission, S. D., eliminated St Peter’s, Fairmont, W. Va„ 23 to 21. The second round will be finished tonight. Eight teams from the Middle West, two from the South and one from the Far West swept into the round of 16 yesterday. Tourney Record Joseph La Bauve of Baton Rouge scored 29 points to set anew tournament record, leading liis team, Catholic High School of Baton Rouge, La., in a 49-to-12 victory <>ver St. John’s of Jamestown, S. D, yesterday. / St. Mary of Anderson became the •third Indiana team to survive the first round, when it eliminated St. Mary’s of'Dunkirk, N. Y„ 36 to 26. St. Phillips of Chicago eliminated Minneapolis De La Salle in the other night game, 34 to 19. Other teams qualifying for the second round were St. Mary’s of Walsenburg, Colo.; Acminas of La Crosse, Wis.; Memorial of Evansville, Ind.; S< 'corge of Evanston, 111.; Column*: Academy of Dubuque, la.; Catholic of Decatur. Ind.; St. Joseph of Huntington. W. Va„ and Campion, of Prairie Du Chien, Wis. Other games today: He l.a Sail* (Chicago) vs. St. Xavier (Louisville. Ky.). Our I>ad.v of Victory (Lackawanna. N. ¥•> ts. Reitz Memorial (Evansville. Ind.). St. George (Evanston, 111.) vs. Columbia (Dubuque, la.). Catholic High School (Decatur, Ind.) Vs. St. Mary’s (Walsenbrg, Colo.). Campion (Prairie Du Chien. Wis.) vs. St. Joseph (Huntington, W. Va.). Aquinas (La Crosse, Wis.) vs. St. Phillip (Chirago).
Regulars Repeat in Indians’ Camp Tribe Veterans Win, 3-1, in Practice Tilt. Times Special WAUCHULA, Fla., March 20. Wade Killefer's Indianapolis Indians' “first team” tacked up another victory over the rookies in a practice tilt yesterday, 3 to 1, and ore set to begin their exhibition schedule at Arcadia tomorrow, playing the St. Paul Saints. Chief Killefer assigned three veteran hurlers to the rookies yesterday, but the regulars were not to be denied and pounded out enough hits to emerge on the long end of the score. Bolen, Tinning and Chamberlain took turns on the mound for the rookies and Elmer Riddle, Trout and Cloyd Stith worked for the regulars. Young Riddle, brother of Johnny Riddle. Tribe catcher, neld the rookies hitless and runless in three innings. Dale Miller, Hoosier business manager, reached camp yesterday after a fast drive from Indianapolis. TIGERS SEND HOWELL, LARKIN TO PORTLAND Bu Vnltcil Press LAKELAND, Fla.. March 20. Dixie Howell, infielder, and Steve Larkin, pitcher, today were released to Portland by the world champion Detroit Tigers. They will leave immediately for Stockton, Cal., where Portland is training.
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STATE QUINTETS OPEN STRONG IN CATHOLIC MEET
C’ville Up After 13-Year Absence
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F-’ront row, left to right: Dale Myers, guard; Jack Bushong, senior manager; Dick McGaughey, guard. Middic row, Koss Hahn, forward; Charles Lookabill, center; Don Kendall, forward; Robert Stafford, center; Joe Hartley, guard; David Thompson, forward. Back row, C. O. Deßard, assistant coach; Ed Campbell, guard; Don Sumner, forward; Ed Morris, center; Don Hartley, forward; Coach H. T. McCullough. (Photo by Hirshburg.)
Brown Takes Decision in Feature Ring Scrap Here BY PAUL BOXELL The old chatter about “what they lacked in ability they made up in willingness.” which usually finds its way into descripitons of amateur fiticuffers and amateur fights is waning in adaptibility as far as local
sciappers are concerned. In the first of a series of amateur fistic shows scheduled for Tomlinson Hall last night, boys of the local simon-pure clan uncorked a marked display of ability as well as willingness. Though knockdowns were numerous in the several bouts offered, only one knockout was recorded. This was due in most part to the resourceful fighting of the boys when they got in distress, and in some measure to the even pairings for the matches. Harry Brown, Beech Grove, popular iocal Golden Gloves welterweight champion, barely outpointed Joe Benna of Terre Haute in a closely fought four-round main go. Benna, champion of Terre Haute, gave the Beech Grove youth a stubborn battle all the way and probably would have commanded the decision had he not been the victim of two knc’kdowns in the second round. Os the three judges, two gave Brown the edge by a single point and the other by five. They graded 20 points to the round. Both boys were cautious in the opening frame, Benna outstabbing Brown with his left for a slight edge. Brown caught Benna with a sizzling right jab coming out of an infighting flurry in the second frame and the Terre Hautean went down. He was up after a single toll but ran into a left cross that glanced off his jaw but sent him spinning again. The spunky visitor bounced up with no count, danced away until his head cleared, then came back to put up a near-winning rally in the two final sessions. In other bouts, all three-round-ers. Johnny Benna, Terre Haute, decisidned Bob Blue, South Side Turners; Dick Lybarger, Terre Haute, outpointed Tommy Davidson, unattached; Ivan Hunt, Terre Haute, whipped George Hoyt, Puritan Bed Springs; Herman Walters,
I CLOSING OUT n ISeI Liquidators 302 N CAPITOL AVE • ON THE POINT
unattached, decisioned Dave Capahart, unattached; Omar Sensei, South Side Turners, decisioned Charles Bruck, Brightwood A. C.; Wally Ricks knocked out Bob Phillips in the first round. Bob Mudd, though knocked down by Myron Baer, Brightwood A. C„ in the second round, started and finished strong to take the verdict. Matchmaker Roy Wallace announced that another show would be held next Thursday night. COACHES MEET TODAY TO DRAFT SCHEDULES Spring sports schedules were to be completed today by state college coaches in a meeting at the Hotel Antlers, starting at 4 p. m. The affair is the spring meeting of members of the Indiana Intercollegiate Conference Coaches Association, with which nearly all state colleges and universities are affiliated. A business meeting of the group is to be held at 7:30.
TOURNEY ON AIR LOCAL radio station WFBM today announced arrangements for broadcasting the semi-final high school basketball tourney tomorrow at Tech gym. A play-by-play description of the two afternoon games is to be given starting at 1:45. The last half of the night final game will go on the air at 8:30. Len Riley will be the “man behind the mike.” Station WIRE announces plans to broadcast summaries of all games played in the four state semi-final tourneys as soon after 10 p. m. as possible, with Andre Carlon announcing.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
IT has been 13 long years since Crawforsville enjoyed a membership in the round of 16 of the state high school basketball tournament, but the C’ville lads made the grade in high style this time and are scheduled to tackle Shelbyville in a semi-final tourney tilt tomorrow afternoon at Tech. The winner is to face the survivor of Anderson vs. Connersville tomorrow night at 8. Coach H. T. McCullough's Athenians “proved” that 13 is their lucky number when they upset Greencastle in the re gional finals. Commission Sets Chicago Meetings Dates Awarded for Six Windy City Tracks. By United, press CHICAGO, March 20.—A squabble over dates for 158 days of racing at Chicago's six tracks ended today with a decision by the Illinois Racing Commission. The commission ruled Aurora will open the season with a 19-day meeting beginning May 1; Hawthorne opens May 23 for a 31 days’ session; Arlington received its customary meeting dates, June 29 to Aug. 1; Washington Park will run from Aug. 3 to Sept. 7; Lincoln Fields drew Sept. 8 to Oct. 10. and Sportsman’s Park will run off its 19-day meeting starting Oct. 12. Several tracks had applied for the same dates.
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League Fives Play Big Part in Net Meets North Central After Titles in Three Semi-Final Tourneys. (Continued From Page Thirty-Four) members of Kokomo and Newcastle tackle Central of Fort Wayne and Warsaw, respectively, in afternoon contests. Anderson is the lone Big Tan standard bearer ir the warfare at Tech's coliseum here, with the -ville trio furnishing opposition. Shelby/ille and Crawfordsville clash at 2, and Anderson goes against Connersville at 3. Three in One Thus, all three Southern Indiana league dynamiters are concentrated in the one remaining tourney. New Albany, Washington and Central of Evansville are the league ambassadors at Vincennes, but in their midst is a non-member which stands as a stalwart threat to barricade the loop’s road to the finals—-Martins-ville. If Coach Tom Rea of Washington doesn’t sleep well tonight, you can bet he’ll be thinking about the canny courtmen of Curtis. His Hatchets are first to collide with the Artesians. # # —And the littlest shall be the biggest or words to that effect. Martinsville, choice of this corner to cop the state title for the fourth time since 1924, is the smallest city of the 16 hangers-on from a standpoint of population. The downstate town has a per capita somewhere in the neighborhood of 4900. Though Central draws from only part of the city, the Fort Wayne quintet represents the largest population--120,000. Who said “in numbers there is strength?” n n tt A FEW dribbles in the back court . . . Family ties must be forgotten temporarily while Riley of South Bend battles Logansport tomorrow, at Gary . . . Bob McCarnes, assistant coach for Riley, is a former Logansport star, and his brother, Don, now is a mainstay member of this year’s Berry team. Talk about light practices—Kokomo takes the cake this week . . . Here's Coach Peedad Campbell’s program: .. . Monday, nothing doing; Wednesday, short chalk talk; Thursday, short basket drill; today, See the new Levinson LIGHT WEIGHT HARRY LEVINSON “ You Hatter
Guess Who’s Favored! Times Special SOUTH BEND. Ind., March 20.—Who never heard of Warsaw? Perhaps the team from the Land o’ Lakes isn’t well known in some sections of the state, but in a poll of fans being conducted here. Warsaw is running alongside Frankfort and Kokomo as a favorite for the high school basketball championship; Warsaw plays in the semifinal tourney at Muncie tomorrow.
a “complete rest”; r tomorrow, wonder what? . . . Anderson received its allotment of 1000 tickets to the local meet last Monday and by 11 a. m. Tuesday was sold out! . . . Disappointed fans are still storming the doors. (By P. B.) 18 From Indiana Times Special BLOOMINGTON. Ind., March 20. —With Indiana University's distance stars gradually regaining their stride after being handicapped by illness, the Hoosiers, 18 strong, will leave here tomorrow morning for Indianapolis to participate in the annual Butler Relays. The same squad, which gained third place in the Big Ten indoor championships last week-end, will bid for the Relays title, led by Dan Caldemeyer, Indiana’s only defending champion in the games. Caldemeyer, who last year won the high hurdles in the Relays, last week captured the hurdles title in the Conference meet. The Hoosiers are entered in every university relay event, and Caldemeyer also will participate in the high jump. Shoemaker in the pole vault, Baldwin in the high jump and Collier in the dashes are included in the individual entries. Mel Truth Indiana freshman who will run unattached, will be pitted against Glenn Cuningham, world's record holder; Ray Sears of Butler; Daily of Michigan, and Rice, Notre Dame freshman, in a special mile race. Trutt recently defeated Archie San Romani, national collegiate mile champion, in an indoor meet at St. Louis.
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Picard Shows Way Into Third Round Fires Sub-Par Golf in Open Title Defense. By United Press CHARLESTON. S. C., March 20. Setting a sub-par pace, defending champion Henry Picard of Hershey. Pa., led the field into the third round of the fourth annual Charleston Open today. Playing over the Charleston Country Club course, where he once served as pro, Picard added a 69 yesterday to his first-round card of 67, to lead the field at the half-
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way mark with 136. six strokes less than par for the 36 holes. Ky Laffoon, Young Chicagoan, whose 67 tied him with Picard for medal honors, “lost control” yesterday and took a 76. giving him a 36hole card of 143. Coming from behind, two Chicagoans. Frank Walsh and Dick Metz matched Picards 69 to share second place at 141.
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