Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1937 — Page 22

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Sirtosky and ~ Corby Davis To See Action

Capt. Kenderdine Also Reported Ready; Leave Tonight for Minneapolis.

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Oct. 7.—A squad of 32 was selected today by Coach Bo McMillin to make up the Indiana University football team for the Hoosiers’ first Big Ten game of the season Saturday against Minnesota at Minneapolis. McMillin hinted he may change some of the selections following today's practice, a short. and final checkup drill. : The team will leave Bloomington tonight for Minneapolis by way of Chicago, arriving in the Minnesota camp at 3 p. m. tomorrow in time for a short workout. Team headquarters will be at the Curtis Hotel. McMillin said today that James (Jeep) Sirtosky, regular guard who has been out since the Centre game, would be able to play against finnesota. It is likely that -the same lineup that started against Centre

will start Saturday. Capt. Jick Ken- |X derdine and Corby Davis, who also | ott. 3b have been on the sidelines are ex- | pt te

pected to play. : Pe he team has worked this vreek

on mastering the offensive and defensive setups devised by the Hoosier coaching staff, and McMillin is confident the Hoosiers will force the Gophers to a tight battle. } Players likely to make the trip are: Capt. R. L. (Jick) Kenderdine, James Birr, Frank Petrick, John Widaman, Ralph Huff and John Janzaruk, ends; Charles’ McDaniei, Bob Haak, William Stevens, Robert Stevenson, Fred Nye and Gus Psalties, tackles; James Sirtosky, John Olmstead, Joe Szabo, James Logan, Tony Campagnoli, Mickey Maloney and James: Ellenwood, guards; George Miller, Russell Sloss and Sidney Weiss, centers, and William Anderson, Corby Davis, Frank Filchock, G. L. Fowler, Paul Graham, Don Heistand, Dale Tanner, Edwin Clasen, Vincent Oliver and James Zoeller, backs. The game also will open the conference season for Minnesota.

Jones Perfects New

Backfield Formation LOS ANGELES, Oct. 7 (U. P).— Coach Howard Jones juggled the University of Southern California line today in a last minute attempt to build something capable of holding off Ohio State’s Buckeyes. Jones has evolved a new backfield formation which he said has a magic potion against passes, and shifted three places in the line to right =guard. Phil Gaspar was ved up from second. string to varsity right tackle, and Dennis ou came all the way from the third string to varsity left énd. Local press box experts were not giving the Trojans an edge in Saturday’s game. Most of them figured the Buckeyes to win by about 13 points, mostly through the air. Their predictions didn’t make Jones restive. He announced he would start the same lineup he used in the Washington game last week, put under continual prodding, made three shifts. : Amby Schindler worked out in practice sessions yesterday throwing the ball to Wayne Hoffman and Mickey Anderson. Ohio State arrives morning.

Race Pilots to End Title Series Sunday

The dirt track auto championship races which were rained out at Frankfort last Sunday will be held this Sunday on the Frankfort Fair Ground oval. It will be the third and, final meet to determine the champion pilot driving on Indiana courses. Twenty pilots were on hand last Sunday and all but two indicated they would return for participation in the last series. Several Indiana pilots have an excellent chance to capture the title and the large trophy which goes along with it. Many out-of-state pilots are among the entries. The program is scheduled to start at 2.

SHORTRIDGE READY “FOR NOBLESVILLE

Both the Shortridge Blue. Devils and the Nobleville Millers will have nine seniors in their starting lineuns when they tangle at Joseph Field in Noblesville tomorrow night. This is the two schools’ first meeting in football. Shortridge scrimmaged for two hours yesterday. . Coach Robert L. Nipper announced that the first string will start with the possible exception of Emory Schlake, right end, who is still handicapped by an arm injury, The Millers also held a heavy scrimmage and signal drill yesterday afternoon, and Coach Glen W. Overman made several shifts in his first squad.

Baseball

The Seven Ups will close their season Sunday-afternoon at 2 p. m. with a game against Fields’ Tavern on Riverside diamond No. 1. Bill Wyss, Lawrie, Williams and other well known players will be in the Fields’ lineup. Kliene and Hazelwood will form the Seven Up battery.

The Marshall Giants of Kokomo want a game Sunday with a strong Indianapolis team. Communicate with Circus John at Kokomo.

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First Game Box Score

NEW YORK GIANTS

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Totals Berger batted for Coffman in eighth,

NEW YORK YANKEES : AB H Crosetti, 85 «.ovvevee 4 Rolfe, 3b .......es.

Lazzeri, 2b ... Gomez, p

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000 001 000— 1 000 007 01x— 8 Runs batted in—Mancuso, Rolfe, Di Maggio, 2; Dickey, Selkirk, 2: Lazzeri. Two-base hit—Whitehead. Home run— Lazzeri. Left on bases—Giants, 5; Yankees, 6. Struck out—By Hubbell, 3; hy Gomez, 2. Bases on balls—Hubbell, 3; Coffman, 4; Gomez, 1. Hits—Off Hubbell, 6 in 5%; innings; Gumbert, 0 in 0 (pitched te one batter): Coffman, 0 in 123; Smith, 1 in 1, Losing pitcher—Hubbell. Double plays—Crosetti te Lazzeri to Gehrig: Ott to Whitehead to McCarthy, Umpires— Ormsby (A. L.); Barr (N. L.): Basil (A. L.); Stewart (N. L.). Time of game —2:20.

Uses Memory To Earn Cash

ABERDEEN, 8S. D,, Oct. 7 (U. P)). —Tim Hurst, once a southpaw flinger for the Boston Braves, Pittsburgh Pirates and Brooklyn Dodgers, has an odd way of making a living. He relies on his scrapbook. This lonely man of 60 will trade an interview any day to an indulgent sports writer for as little as $1. An abdominal injury ended his four-year career as a major league hurler in 1906. Shortly thereafter he became an umpire. Ten years later a pop bottle flung by an irate fan put him out of baseball entirely. : The decision which brought on the pop bottle, he said, was a close one and was against thé home team. Later he staged a semipro contest and re-enacted the play to prove his point. The home team, he récalled, had the winning run on first base, and a rabid crowd was pressing against the restraining ropes, yelling for a score. ‘That man’s going to steal, and if you call him out I'll cut the ropes,” the manager of the hometowners told Hurst. The runner started with the pitch. and before the play was completed Hurst roared, “Yet out. Cut the ropes.” The crowd hesitated; then gave him a big hand.

Tech Faces Muncie In Conference Tilt

Technical High School and Central of Muncie will place at stake their chances for a share in the North Central Conference championship tomorrow afternoon at the local gridiron. Each team has met defeat once at the hands of Conference elevens, and another loss for either would remove them irom the championship picture. Last year the Green and White won, 8 to 7. Tech is expected to présent a patched up lineup. John Jehnson, regular center, is out with injuries, while left end Wayne Goodman and Tommy Wilson and Harry Adkins, backs, are nursing injuries which probably will prevent’ them from playing the éntire game. Robert L. Ball, Tech mentor, has stressed fundamentals this week, the lack of effective blocking being particularly in evidence in the Jeff game last Friday.

Football

The Brightwood Merchants will hold signal drill Saturday at 1 p. m. at Brookfield Park No. 1. Greeley and Cork please take notice.

Every World Series game has its big IF scene. Here it is in the first game. Vernon Gomez, Yankees’ star left-hander, is sare silding back to second when Mancuso attempts to catch him napping. If Bartell

NAMED ON INDIANA U.

7

hadn’t dropped the ball, Gomez probably would have been nipped in the bud. Gomez scored on DiMaggio’s single and the Giants’ doom was sealed.

A few moments later,

What, another Yankee run scoring? But no, it is only the hero of the first game of the World Series at Yankee Stadium, New York, crossing the plate in vain—Joe DiMaggio, whose crucial wallop brought defeat to the Giants when it scored the first two of the Yankees’ seven runs in the big sixth irning. He was forced out.

MANUAL CONCLUDES DRILL FOR WARREN

Manual High School's football squad has concluded preparations for its first home game of the season against Warren Central at Delavan Smith Field tomorrow. Coach Harry Painter directed a lengthy scrimmage yesterday in which Leonard Robinson, sophomore, and Eugene Crane, junior, starred. Robinson and Crane are battling for the left halfback starting assignment left open when Albert Osman, veteran back, received a fractured collar-bone in the Manual-Southport game. Manual will be seeking its first victory in three starts, having lost to Bloomington, 20-6, and Southport, 20-0.

Series Figures By United Press

New York Yankees New York Giants

RESULTS . First Game (At Yankee Stadium) Giants Yankees 000 00% 01x— 8 7 0 Batteries—Hubbell, Gumbert, Coffman, Smith and Mancuso; Gomez and Dickey. Winning pitcher—Gomez; losing pitcher, Hubbell, 3

SCHEDULE Second game today at Yankee Stadium. Third, fourth and (fifth game if necessary), Friday, Saturday and Sunday, Polo Grounds. Sixth and seventh games (if necessary), Monday and Tuesday, Yankee Stadium.

ATTENDANCE FIGURES (First Game) 1937 Attendance (paid) .. 60,573 Receipts ............ $234,246.00 Players’ share 119,470.56 Clubs’ share 39,823.52 Leagues’ share .... 39,823.52 Commissions’ share 35,138.40

UNCLE ERNIE WAS GOOD

BERKELEY, Cal,, Oct. 7.—~Claude Evans, University of California guard, is a nephew of Ernie Pinckert, former Southern California All-America.

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Aronson Clings To Roller Lead

Despite injuries to Hazel Roop which forced her partner, Wes Aronson, to skate her periods as well as his own in last night's Roller Derby session, the Roop-Aronson combine still held first place today by a slender margin, - x Aronson, Swedish favorite, staved off repeated challenges by his rivals in last night's racing and wound up the evening with a total of 39 points, two more than the total compiled by Grace Freid and Bill Cummings, second-place team. Standings of the leaders: Miles Pts. Roop-Aronson. . 489 39 Freid-Cummings ........ eres 4 Vizena-Nygra Youpelle-B. Atkinson

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Defense Stressed In Butler Drill

A defense against the Valparaiso running attack headed by Binfer Eggold, Uhlan freshman fullback, was to receive particular attention today as Coach Tohy Hinkle drilled the Butler Bulldogs for their opening

Camera Catches Highlights in Opener of Fall Classic

If you have any idea how a pitcher feels after being knocked from the box in a World Series game, you'll have no trouble identifying Carl

Hubbell, Giant ace, at Tight, this scene.

Woebegone in posture, he

slouches toward the dugout while Harry Gumbert, his successor on the mound in the first series game, warms up.

Newark Bears Take Si eries

Grab Fourth Straight From Red Birds.

COLUMBUS, 0. Oct. 7 (U. P)— For the second time in six years the Newark Bears today ruled the minor league baseball world. Newark climaxed a phenomenal comeback here last night when it downed the Columbus Red Birds for the fourth straight time to take the seventh and final game of the “Little World Series,” 10 to 4. The Bears went into the series a heavy favorite, but their cause appeared hopeless after they dropped the three games played in their home park. Moving here the club lived up to the claim it was the “strongest minor league team in history” and swept through four games to take the title. The Bears’ first minor league title came in 1932 when they defeated Minneapolis. Superior pitching was the deciding factor in Newark’s triumph The seven-game series : drew a total of 63,250 fans. The winning Bears split a purse of $13,361.10, while the losing Columbus players shared $8907.40. 012 033 001—10 13 1 Columbus 000 200 011— 4 9 1 Newark—Begzs, Page and Hershberger.

Columbus—Porter, MeGee, Macon, Chambers, Heusser; Grube and Crouch.

Vincennes Mentor

Heads Conference

VINCENNES, Ind. Oct. 8 (U. P.). —John L. Adams, athletic director of Vincennes High School, today headed the Southern Indiana Athletic Conference after his election as president at the annual fall meeting of the organization. Carl Eifler, Bosse High School principal, Evansville, was elected vice president and Raymond R.

d .| Miller, Linton, principal, was elected

A World Series still wouldn’t be a World Series without Babe Ruth, even though he no longer stars in the box scores. . He makes the. first game official above with his presence in a choice box, cheering the Yankees on to powerhouse victory such as his bat made famous. With

him is his daughter.

secretary-treasurer. Members of the league are Central, Reitz and Bosse of Evansville, Princeton, Vincennes, Sullivan, Bicknell, Washington, Bloomington, New Albany and Linton.

“FELLOW CITIZENS" PITTSBURGH, Oct. 7.—Politics put a crimp in Duquesne’s football hopes this year, following the announcement that Marshall Manuel, one of the Dukes’ tackles, quit school to run for political office in Cannonsburg, Pa.

POP HAS GOTTEN SEVERAL RAISES IN HIS TIME, EH?

HILADELPHIA, Oct. 7.— Glenn (Pop) Warner, who gets $20,000 a year for coaching Temple University football team, received no more than $80 for six weeks work as coach of the Iowa State team back in 1895.

SPECIAL HELMET BRINGS LUCK TO PENN PIGSKINNER

HILADELPHIA, Oct. 7— You don’t need a progran to_identify Walter Shinn, hey vétsity of Pennsylvania tackle. He wears a bright red helmet, while the rest of the boys don blue-striped - helmets. He considers it lucky. Coach Harvey Harmon made him wear a regulation helmet last year but changed his mind after Yale beat Penn.

Cubs to Rely on Curt Davis Today

CHICAGO, Oct. 7 (U. P.).—The Chicago Cubs, who finally broke the

‘White Sox city series streak after it

reached nine in a row, looked for another victory today from solemn Curt Davis, most effective Cub pitcher during the closing days of the National League pennant race. Right-handed Vernon Kennedy will pitch for the American Leaguers in today’s game at Comiskey Park. The Cubs won yesterday’s series opener, 7 to 3. Three-run clusters in the sixth and eighth innings routed the Sox after they had nicked Jim (Tex) Carleton for two runs in the second inning. The Cubs jumped on Ted Lyons and Bill Dietrich for 15 hits, scoring in the fifth, sixth and eighth. Hits by Billy Herman, Frank Demaree and Phil Cavaretta sent Lyons to the showers in the sixth and Joe Marty added another off Deitrich, scoring the third run. In the eighth, Cavarretta and Augie Galan hit in succession and Lonnie Frey banged a triple off the right-field wall. Frey later scored on an outfield fly.

Red Rolfe to Face Knife After Series

NEW YORK, Oct. T (U. P).— Robert, (Red) Rolfe, Yankee thirdbaseman, will enter St. Vincent's Hospital immediately after the series and undergo an operation for removal of a growth on his thigh, it was disclosed today. The growth has become so pain fyl, it was learned, that Rolfe is “coping” himself with aspirin so ne can continue to play. The growth—a calcium deposit— has been in his leg since birth. The thigh began to pain him recently, he said. “I have to get up every now and then and stretch.” Doctors believe the growth now is pressing on a muscle as well as on nerves and that it is affecting his eyesight. Significantly, his batting average which climbed steadily from 287 to .319 in three previous came paigns, fell off to .277 this year.

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