Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 October 1936 — Page 34
ForLowiNng with John W. Thompson Gray-Haired Gentleman From Kentucky Wears Latest
in Football Pants as He Drills Indiana for Centre Game Tomorrow.
OOTBALL
ALVIN NUGENT (sometimes referred to as Bo) McMillin, has the best pair of pants on the Indiana squad. Of course as head coach he has a right to them.
But this is no ordinary pair of football trousers. They |
are a Eleaming golden color, silken smooth, and would cause envious glances from many a Broadway chorine because of their tailored qualities. We don’t know how Alvin happened into this pair of pants. There is no showiness about the gray-haired gentleman from Kentucky who looks nothing like a picture-book eoach. He is, on or off the gridiron or practice field, smoothmannered and conversational (especially on other subjects than Indiana football), n ” s 2 2 & E ‘watched Bo putting the Indiana squad through its paces the other day as he primed them for the season’s opener tomorrow against his alma mater, Centre College of Danville, Ky. ~~ Mr. McMillin, it can be told without much observation, is boss during football practice. With Ralph Graham working with backfield men, Clyde Smith watching over the linemen, E. C. (Billy) Hayes, the track coach, and W. H. Thom, wrestling coach, tutoring | ‘blockers and tacklers in various parts of the field, Alvin | Nugent McMillin moves from one group to another. : A word here and a gesture there from the master suffices for most lagging aspirants. With more than 50 men on the squad, “Bo” seems to be able to keep his eyes on all the teams at once, noting where a blocking back is not blocking and where a ball carrier is running too wide, with uncanny perception, t # 8 =n ® ». =u 0 is not taking this Centre game for granted. Seven of Centre's football seasons have been undefeated ones. “Bo” played on three of those undefeated elevens. In fact Coach Kubale of Centre and McMillin performed together for Centre on the 1921 team.
’
ndianapolis Times
1
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1936
Fall Baseball School Charlie Dressen, manager of the Cincinnati. Reds, has 65 “students” in his fall baseball school at Peoria,
Ii. the enterprise,
Major and minor league magnates are sponsoring
LOBBY T ALK INTERESTS J JOE
Candid Shots From Polo Grounds
“Hot dog!” The
wife and children of the Giants’ president, Horace Stoneham, show a “consuming” in-
terest in the way their players perform,
Last year “Bo’s” boys of 11 to 0. year.
took .the Centremen by a score Reports have it that Centre is much better this We can report also that Indiana is improved. The Prayin’ Colonels from Centre have gone the brother act one better. T hey have Roy and Ray Neikirk, twin sophomores from Somerset, Ky. Although the boys probably won't see much action this season, they are expected to be in regu-
lar berths nose year. ”
OVE in i corner of the 1.U. practice. field the other day, Freshman Coach (Pooch) Harrell, ran his red-head-geared freshmen through a touch scrimmage. The frosh are numerous, not too promising. ; _ Among the newcomers is Marvin Huffman, brother of Vernon, Indiana’s quarterback this year. Marvin is well known to Hoosier sports fans, but as a basketball star at Newcastle rather than in football. 2 82. 8 ” 2 IN his 15 years of coaching, Bo McMillin has a record of 88 victories, five tie games and 35 losses. ~He told us that he didn’t see how any team could beat Purdue this year unless it would be Minnesota. After watching Indiana we took the remark to mean “present company excepted. ”
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Williams Spends Idle Day Eavesdropping Around the Hotel.
‘ BY JOE WILLIAMS ; Times Special Writer EW YORK, Oct. 2-—Eaves-dropping on the baseball notables as they stand around on
lobby waiting for both the weather man and Judge Landis to make | up their assorted minds about getting the series going again: The incredible Rabbit © Maranvill, who began playing = profes sional baseball back in 1911 and who now, his active days ended, is managing a team. in . the bush and brambles upstate, . . . “It ain't like being in the majors, I can , tell you that,” sighs Rabbit, . “but it : beats taking: in washing.” . . : You recalled the afternoon in St. . | Petersburg when the Rabbit, then with the Boston Braves, slid into home plate in an exhibition game against the Yankees and broke his ‘leg. It was a multiple fracture and one of the bones cut through the gray flannel of his uniform, a sickening sight. “By some strange freak of nature the Rabbit didn’t lose
consciousness, and when the players gathered around him he looked
How do you score an assist?
World Series Chatter
By United Press NEW YORK, Oct. Series notes: The weather man is kicking the Yankees around. He not only greatly enhanced the Giants’ chances of victory by giving skinny Mr. Hibbell an extra day of rest, but he broke up the Yanks’ stadium party for President Roosevelt. If {he second game had not been pastponed, setting the schedule back a day, Col. Ruppert would have been the genial host. But the TerryStoneham crowd have gotten all (he breaks so far, and the nation’s No. 1 fan will be behind the Giant du igout at the Polo Grounds today.
2.—~Worlad
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The 2500 fans who stood outside the bleacher gates waiting a chance to buy a ticket are still wondering about that postponement. Admittedly the infield was in bad shape, but it looked as hard as a billidrd table compared to the quagmire on opening day. “Fielders are liable to break their legs,” said Commissioner Landis in calling the game off.
The Giants’ management is hoping those 13,000 empties in the unreserved grandstands Wednesday were the result of overcast skies, but the boys around press headquarters blame them on the Jreisities om “sell-
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; » {up and barked, “Well, I got the run He doesnt. | home, didn’t I? Gimme a cigaret os (Turn to Page 34) out’ publicity, and point to the all- : : star game at Boston as authority for their belief. The fans stayed away from that one in droves for fear of not getting a seat. :
Additional: Sports. Pages 34, 35,36
World Series playlet in one act— : (Turn to Page 34) | :
their groaning dogs in the hotel
Joe Williams
DURING PAI
Greyhound Winner in Kentucky Stake
Times Special LEXINGTON, Ky, Oct. 2— Driven by Sep Palin of Indianapolis, Greyhound, winner of the Hambletonian stakes last year, established a new record in winning the forty-seventh renewal of the Transylvania free-for-all trot, which had a value of $3200, at the
Grand Circuit meeting here yeter-
day.
Greyhound’s time of 2:00 for the
third heat displaced the old mark of 2:00% established by Princ Laurel in 1934, and also equals his own world record for a third hea: made in August at Goshen, N. Y.
Angel Child was second ‘in stake, Tara, third, and Miss Kate B., fourth.
DECISION TO BEAUPRE ’
DALLAS, Tex. Oct. 2.—Piling up an impressive margin of .. points throughout the bout, Tom Beaupre, 193, Dallas, gained a decision over Benny O'Dell, 188, Miami, Fla., the main event of a boxing rio here last night.
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