Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 September 1938 — Page 14
MN By Eddie Ash
~ HARTNETT 1S DOING ALL RIGHT
LEE, BRYANT AND PAGE DELIVER
5
WR or lose in the National League's heated race,Gabby Hartnett has proved himself both as a manager and a competitor . . . The veteran backstop got the Cubs into a late season victory streak of seven games and they are giving the leading Pirates a merry chase in the last week of play. Hartnett made a smart midseason buy in Vance Page from Indianapolis, who has won five games, and Bill Lee and Clay Bryant came through for him in sensational fashion . .. Lee tacked up his 21st triumph of the campaign vesterday and with Clay Bryant has really put the Bruins back in the thick of it... Gabby will thank them in his big hearted way for putting him across in his first official time as a team pilot . . . Bryant is a 19-game winner. Chicago was the center of baseball interest today as the three tilts which are ex- . It will be a World Series
the Corsairs moved in for pected to decide the pennant . . all its own. 8 8 ” » » 8 HE Cubs are almost a cinch to hit a million in attendance home, barring rainouts during the current Pittsburgh set And the club officials report the best road attendance in vears ... All of which increases Hartnett’s prestige in the front office. After Mike Gonzelez, the Cuban, was elevated to manager pro tem of the St. Louis Cardinals he upped and told newspapermen they had been misspelling his name for 25
. +. It seems his name ends with a “2” instead of
at
years an Fred Haney left for his home in California at the conAmerican Association season without signing a contract to lead the Toledo Mud Hens again next . Both he and President Waldo Shank, however, declared there was no significance in this, although it has heen customary in the past to announce the rehiring of the
clusion of the
vear.
Indianapolis Times Sports
{ Better Late, Etc.
Lynn Waldorf is noted for having “November” foothall teams. Gabby Hartnett hasn't said, but it looks like
PAGE 14
TUESDAY,
SEPTEMBER 27, 1938
he has a “September” baseball club on his hands.
YDEN HAS CONFIDENCE IN GREEN ’ TEAM
~. |
| win or lose.”
[some willin’ lads.
| many goal uprights which dot old]
|
| {show ring colts.
N. D. Mentor tor Is Proud of His Inexperienced Squad
‘Loss of Twenty Lettermen Fails to Dampen Irish Hopes;
Eleven Faces Tough Nine- Game Schedule.
By LEO DAUGHERTY Times Staff Writer SOUTH BEND, Sept. 27.— “We're going to show up for all our games.” When Coach Elmer Layden says that, he expresses no fear over what his inexperienced Fighting Irish of Notre Dame might do during the ambitious campaign which opens against Kansas under the shadow of the | Golden Dome here next Saturday. “We're willing to play anyone,” smiled the thin | man 1 Who was one of | the immortal Four Horsemen. é&——mm mem— “We've always been willing to play | TOURISTS AGAIN any of them and we always will JioRansasialiNotioaDane: 8—Georgia Tech at Atlanta.
15—I1linois at Notre Dame. 22—Carnegie Tech at Notre
Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. ame, Oct. Nov. Nov. Dame, Nov. on. Dec. 3—Southern California at Los Angeles,
To be sure, he's the only one of] Four Horsemen caliber on the field—or rather fields—but he has!
29—Army at New York. 5—Navy at Baltimore, 12—Minnesota at Notre
Duck the countless footballs be- | ing booted and passed through the] |air and wiggle your way around the | Cartier Field and its broad subsidi- | 19—Northwestern at Evans|aries and you will see something | [like 150 youths on the varsity field. Then over on another section of | [the field there probably are another | Tt. Way 150. They are the freshmen—the | Bloat Ps Wayne Sasa [Blue and Gold warriors of tomor-|> g p
yarently has won the job as Notre —and as excited as a string of ! ; | Toaani ’ (Dame's 1938 regular quarterback.
Another Hoosier, Emmett Crowe from Lafayette—and the Crowe name is synonymous with Notre ame athletics—is bidding for some action at the quarter post, too. Steve Stevenson and kou Zontini are the probable regular halfbacks, There's an abundant life here
Layden Directs
When the whistle blows for exer-| lcises at the start of practice, it] [isn't any member of the football |faculty, but Mr. Layden himself, | who is in the center of the huge |
ring. And he's not just telling the {boys what to do, he's doing it with them. Practice |coach, concentrating on his backfield, has a keen eye on everyone's | performance. Everyone is “talking it up.” It]
(when it comes to fullbacks. No less [than seven are around. for the job, [At the current stage of affairs, begins and the head |p rotis Tonelli from Chicago seems to be No. 1 man. Following him |come Ohio's Joe Thesing, a regular last year, and big Ed Simonich. | i isn’ e y i D sounds like a big league bsesdy TRStS: 10 any UNI ON te same. van and Bennie Sheridan as half=Layden never stops shouting: “Get packs. Both are kickers, too. And those knees up. If I had a pail Max Burnell, who was expected to like you, Johnny, I'd use them. Get a gphsent this year, is around for that arm out there! You didn't|some ball lugging. Don't ignore look like any All-American on that gg, Sageau for the same kind of = tackle. Come on! Don't wait until jon. He's heen transferred from tt fous ball game to practice.” Hine:
If the boys let the chatter g0| go many football players arour silent, the coaches resume it and here one wonders how even tte
Hinkle Hooesel to Come it pretty soon the babble resounds all coaches pick them out. In addition over the lot again. [to Sitko for quarter, Layden has Purdue's Power. Layden is a bit worried, because gil] Hofer, a sub a year ago, and ——— of the 10 lettermen who are in uni-| ggphhie O'Meara from literary | form, only two were regulars last stamford, Conn. By the way, Johnyear, {ny Mortell is pushing Longhi for Ball State last Saturday, the foot-| But the chief worrier around is|ipe pivot post. ball season today began anew at the campus photographer. He's iry-| «It won't be a great team,” says the Butler University pigskin camp. ing to figure out how he’s going 10 Elmer Layden. But he doesn’t look In pointing for this week's game Set that whole freshman squad into like he’s lost much sleep.
|with the Purdue Boilermakers at One picture. | Butler Bowl, Coach Tony Hinkle is Johnny McMahon, Too
working to upset the Lafayette | : : : : : eleven and revenge last year's 33- | There's an Indianapolis angle here and he's one of the question marks
to-7 defeat. | of the team, That's Johnny MecMore than usual attention is to Edward: Mevinion
In Golf Derby [be given by Hinkle and Assist- | Mahon-—John
from Cathedral High School. MILWAUKEE, Sept. Sept. 27 (U.P.).— t 1 | |S ally ER “He can play football if he wants |J. Smith Ferebee, the Chicago brok=a stronger offensive machine to to,” says Mr. Layden. “His Kkick-|er who is attempting a 66-hole ; : ‘ | cope with the driving power of | ling and passing are good, but his|transcontinental golf marathon in with the Stivers High School at Purdue which trampled Detroit Uni- |TUnRIng is a little stiff. If he can four days, hoped to complete 73 Dayton, O., Saturday. | versity. 19 to 6. last Saturday remedy that and get rid of his shy-| holes here before noon, fly to Chi« Offensive plays, passing and kick- 7 Lively Rivalry ness, Johnny may play some foot- cago and play 72 more before dusk. ing workouts and an intra-squad | With a few ‘exceptions, the: uns | ball for us in this, his senior year.” | This would bring him to the 481=scrimmage were held yesterday as Certainty of starting assignments Win Sons es Be halen a Jeake um He on oe the Blue Devils resumed practice for the Boilermaker game has re-|CL attention from the he SHINE & alien. an ow. York tos
: {during the practice session. {morrow to collect some widely pub= : he 4 sulted in a merry scrap among all | = : Lisins + drut S hport, 34 to 0, sul : y ‘ $ ajy : i VA ARLE Sher Syulhing Southpor Ho has Promising candidates. Hinkle Yob=| Any coach who loses 20 major let- |licized wagers reported to total
he ._termen from his first three teams |$100,000. been out with an injured ankle, re- gly Will beep Ace Se Daghes has a job ahead of him and that| He limped badly as he finished his turned to the lineup. Ball State. This includes Guotais Was the jolt Elmer Layden took final round at St. Louis with the Coach Robert Nipper Cees : : Plain 1.¢t June at commencement. aid of automobile headlamps last
Toledo manager before he left for the winter,
» = -
off to a premature start , . , . “Prema e my eve,” Coach Mal Elward barked, “We worked to wi hat one and Detroit is nobody's pushover. I hope my boys are just as pt emature in later games as they were in that second the Titans 1 Angelo sihlanick plavs tackle on the University of Kansas and will ¢ Notre Dame Saturday. .. . He's a junior letterright end most of last seasen. off to a flying start by edging Texas by the basket19 to 18. last Saturday, the Javhawkers believe they 1ce with the Irish . They won three, tied two and Deadlocking powerful Nebraska, 13-13, and highlighted the Jayvhawkers’ 1937 season.
= PRESS di
” ”
said Purdue got
patch
hard 'S
1 Zontini, left, Notre Dame junior right halfback from Whites= | Steve Sitko, right. Irish junior from Fort Wayne and No. 1 contender . Va, started at left halfback and won a letter by his blocking. | for quarterback, will be 21 three days before the Northwestern game.
Lee Short of Alabama’ s Power Causes | Carl's Record Stanford Coach to Wince
Mi eleven
ville
all on irst string / tting ball score of stand a good 1 four
i08t ar beating Oklahon N
chal
6-3,
» »
8 2
= Jy ye Ohio State practice sessions daily he Indiana game at Columbus Schmidt will pick a thr The Bucks are fort:
10
Ry JOE WILLIAMS Times Special Writer NEW YORK, Sept. 27—Putting one little word after another: The | only question now seems to be who's going to meet Alabama in the Rose | {| Bowl game. . Tiny Thornhill, Stanford coach, saw Alabama beat | Southern California and came away in a mild daze. They played like a great team already in midseason form, mumbled Mr. Thornhill who added that Southern California was sluggish and the forward line lacked charge. . Gene Mako is trying to ger a Jon as an orchestra leader. This o- —" is the first time we knew orchestra,
ke Dive Seni visa Shor tr ee Drills any cone For Stivers Tilt
There seems to be sistency in sports these pod | Henry Armstrong won three differ-| ———— | ent ring titles, the feather, light! *and welterweight champions, in a space of 160 months . . . Ralph Guldahl put two National Open golf championships together and Don Budge won all four of the major tennis titles.
It certainly must be true that the |
working out in two chmidt bears down for . Out of this army of se-deep squad to send against departments and are Ten crown Yeas, 10 to 0. the Bucks going along doing their
been Q
S ®
S hopefuls have as Coach Franci Satu
Bill Makes It Victory 21 for Season, However.
rdas
IR re
§ warri the Hoosli fied in all cof rl . the Big upset by Indiana last for blood while the Hoosiers are feeling a hun will go places if the first stringers in action a part the time . Bring on that and it will be a battl ng to the opinion of close
the Crimson squad down Bloomington.
on NEW YORK, Sept. 27 (U. P).— Big Bill Lee, ace of the Chicago Cubs’ hurling staff, won his 21st game, improved his club's chances of winning the National League penbut fell short of his ambition a new record for scoreless inLouis
Despite the 12-tc-6 victory over
ana
int and h the)
are able to remain : 167g of
e, accorai s——"
cool observers
g
her ™ Ol
weat
al | | nant, 10 set nings in turning back the St. Cardinals in one of the two major league games played yesterday. Big Bill went into the game with, a record of 38 consecutive scoreless innings behind him. He needed eight more to tie Carl Hubbell's National League record. nine to beat it. But | he got only one, the Cards putting across a run in the second. They got two more in the eighth, the only Ly mu \ dividends from their 12 hits. The lively ball is killing off the pitchers Cubs bunched their nine bingles and - - - All Bill Lee of the Cubs could won 6-3. do was win four shutouts in a row. The victory reduced the lead of : . . Perhaps he doesn’t know it is ? the idle Pittsburgh Pirates to one Popular to have a sore arm... Jim 2 and one-half games. Crowley of Fordham picks Colum-=-In vesterdav's other game, the bia to beat Yale in the Bowl SatNew York Yankees, already champs urday . .. Says it will be too much |
= = 2
= 8 2
WNIE BUSH Lake Shore Country He shot
ATIVE
Ferebee Limping
I's newest magnate. proved the other day at Cl that he is out in front of the a the first time he had ever plaved Wi John Noonan and Carl
baseba here par 36 How a) ne
uh lcox, The Shortridge grid squad today entered its second day of heavy drill in preparation for its game
the foursor
“The ball is there soft, this game
‘as " Jaibe ting base hits
Bush chortled no umpires. Pretty
Baseball at a Glance
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
- 3 ) (Playoff Finals ASSOCIATION PLAYOFF
w L . 301 000 030— Y 9 St. Paul 3 1 50 100 800 000— 1 8
Kansas City 1 3 250 Brown and Silvestri:
Wicker, Bonham and {Winner of four games Eos | in-
AMERICAN
St. Paul Kansas City Herring, Klaerner, LaRocca, Makosny, Riddle, Ogrodowski.
Pet
is still ex-
Luckman. Charles Broderick,
ternational League playoff winner in Little World Series.)
AMERICAN LEAGUE Ww . 96 84 83 . 18
- 3
AMERICAN LEAGUE 000 021 H00—3 10 000 103 Ox—1 8
Boston {New York Bagby, Grove and Peacock: Glenn.
4 -~
Only game scheduled. NATIONAL LFAGUE
. 010 000 020—3 12 101 110 1ix—% 9
and Owen; Lee
New York .. Boston Cleveland Detroit $ Washington .. Chicago St. Louis Leeeiteas © Philadelphia
St. Lawnis Chicago Pavis, Hartnett.
Warneke
Only game scheduted.
v
1 2 > 5
" Columbus Races
NATIONAL LEAGU W 83 85 . 19
Pittsburgh Chicago New York Cincinnati Boston St. Louis roekivn Philadelphia
<
cor. v MBUS
Ind. 2
Sept. track automobile racing season to be held at {Sunday at
event
2 p. m. with
for the
TODAY'S GAMES ASSOCIATION PLAYOFF St. Paul at Kansas City (night).
The Central Kentucky, Ohio
group and Ww. rR C
ain
promoter. that drivers including Jimmy burn of Indianapolis. champion of the Central harles Ingles Greenville, Mays, Dayton, O.; Anderson, and Marysville, Md,
AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington at New York. Boston at Philadelphia. St. Louis at Detroit (2). Chicago at Cleveland.
NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittshurgh at Chicago. Cincinnati at St. Louis, New York at Brookivn Philadelphia at Boston
intend
events include three ation races, and a match race.
Ba seball
Dairy defeated Sunday, 16 Hevdon home runs games write St. or the dav
(2) lap el
jevent
2)
MAJOR LEAGUE ting
LEADERS
Model komo Whiteh ouse and State Bill call
during
The a Sunday Write or Ave,
wire R. Day,
LF oothall
The DeMolax
tant an
The Fal
tire ® n
i row. All players please report. grid squad will ing and at © p the
hold signal m. All Chapter
meet nee a game at home for Sunday. DR. 7803-R2 and ask for Vawter. Bottom is Vawter.
» tomorrow " + avers to House 10USE.
* ert pias report
asked to cal
Golden Bears w Side Craftsscored the uchdown on a pass in ute of play.
The Goodwill ere defeated by the South 19 to 6 n
onh
Edinburg Sunday. the Cubs write Emerson Cox, 52 N. Keyst tone Ave, or call CH. 386.
men per ig! <Q the
Sch \witzer- Cummins Stokels, known as the Brightwood Merchants, have entered the Senior League. All players desiring tryouts should see E. Baines at the Brighiwood playground at Olney St. and Robinson Ave. tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. Ungforms will be issued.
The formerly
Q 3
0
Sundra and
1 )
and
To End Sunday -
The grand finale of the 1938 dirt is the half-mile oval here a 30-lap Central States inIn-
announced Wilrecognized States; Oo; Les Johnny to
SixXa consolation
the Koto 4, with Moore nines Rider, HE. 4776
Indianape polis Cardinals want game with a state nine. 1639 Spann
IS City Hi-Brus will praciverside 1 at 2 p. m. tomor-
Glenn's Valley wishes to schedule Call George | 1}
The East Side Cubs will play at For games with
| City, | four series, | three straight games to finish ahead
the Saints taken the opening conflict.
| Fabian Kowal
| Haley,
|seevnth games,
hit hurling of young Atley Donald for been
{ toils hightly from 7
of the American League, beat Boston, 4 to 3.
Saints One Game ‘Short of Title
a= “i
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Sept (U P.) —St. Paul was one game from the 1938 American Association playoff championship today. Kansas with only one victory out of games in the final playoff faced the task of winning
of the Saints. St. Paul won last night's contest, to 1, four Kansas City pitchers being unable to stop the timely rallies of the winners. Art Herring,
7. — who pitched most of the game for
the Saints, was the winning hurler. Tony York and Ollie Bejma led the St. Paul batting attack. York made three hits, and Beima with a single and a double batted in three of the St. Paul runs. The victory was the third in a row for after the Blues had
Vic Frasier will pitch for the St. Paul club tonight with Marvin Breuer assigned to the mound for the Blues,
Bisons, Bears
Continue Battle
BUFFALO, Sept. 27 (U. P.).—The Buffalo Bisons called on pitcher ik today to turn back the Newark Bears and even the| series at 2-2 in the International League playoff final. Kowalik probably will face Johnny league-leading pitcher of the Bears, who hurled two victories over Rochester in the preliminary playoff, but who failed te down Buffalo all last season. Fifth game of the final will he played here tomorrow afternoon to {prevent conflict with the National Professional I.eague football game between the Chicago Cardinals and Green Bay Packers. Sixth and! if necessary to decide the will be plaved at Newark The Bears broke the 1-1 series | deadlock when they laid down a 14-! barrage behind the effective
series,
a 10-2 victory,
RITCHIE'S DAY LONG
{ leg National
man
{
Budge Says It's True
A brash news hawk disturbed Walter Pate's ire when he remarked that to lose that set to Mako in the Tennis finals Saturday. . So Pate, who is captain of the Davis Cup team, called Budge over, and said, “listen to what this guy says” . whereupon Budge laughed and replied, that's right I almost! did have to.”
The dear old New York Boxing Commission never would have per mitted a battle between Budge and Mako, who are doubles partners, room mates and friends of long! standing , The dear old B. C. would have charged that Budge was carrying his opponent, , . At that, there were times when the tennis
dropped to such a burlesque stage customers wished Budge!
the cash wold cary stay
Mako somewhere, and there with him.
New Derby Threat
Ed Bradley, the old gambling! from Lexington, didn't have a colt good enough to start in the! Derby this year but it looks as if ‘he has a right smart steed in Benefactor, . The is something of Connie Mack in the old gambling man. . .. He is always hoping to win one more Derby, and Mack
{is always gibbering about one more pennant, ,
Hank Greenberg never well in Yankee Stadium, so wh would Joe McCarthy waht to wa] Di Maggio for him? , thought McCarthy planned to use| Tommy Henrich at first when Geh- | rig quits. Which should be! sometime in 1950. » An elderly correspondent chides
us gently for suggesting that
| World Series should be put on at
|
i
=
Stark Ritchie is working his way
through law school by helding down a clerk's job at the Michigan Union. The former Waly erine halfback to 11,
GOLD MEDAL BEER
INDIANAPOLIS BREWING COMPANY,
FY
bargain prices because of the low quality of play in the National League this season. . . . “The dramatic critics tried to keep the p=ople away from Abie’s Irish Rose and | look how long that ran” minds + by the way, running? . .. Pie Traynor of the Pirates says.
“If we get into the series every- | thing may depend on how Johnny
Rizzo goes. . ., All year we have up when he was going well;
and down when he wan't,
Budge almost had to break al
has hit
the |
he re- | is it sti
{perimenting with various backfield combinations. The complete backfield has seen action in both of this season's games.
campaign this year with a 25-to-0 victory over Automotive of Cincinnati. Brilliant passing and |speedy plays resulted from the backfield of Henn, Cutshaw, Kelly and Sweezy.
Injuries Hit Broad ‘Ripple Rockets
The Stivers eleven opened their |
|
quarterback; | Tom Harding and Silvio Constan-| tino, halfbacks, and Bill Kreag, fullback. Hinkle's major problem is the re-! construction of a stronger forward wall than that of last week. The Bulldog gridders went through an extended drill of blocking, tackling! and dummy scrimmaging against | {the freshman squad yesterday. Fol- | {lowing the drill the players were! and the mistakes | that occurred. Purdue's invasion
will mark {ts
| The Broad Ripple Rockets today first appearance in Indianapolis for
wera without the services of Bill Whetmore, Bill Taylor, Vance Wilkinson and George Cornelius as the result of injuries received in the Plainfield game last Friday. Whetmore and Taylor have injured legs, Wilkinson has a nose
{injury and Cornelius is recovering |
| from a head cut. All are expected Ito be in the Owls at Seymour Friday. Coach Ed Diederich yesterday concentrated on mistakes made in last week's game and held a long serimmage in which Ray Baldwin and Howard Scott were outstanding.
Tech Grid Trio On Sidelines
Three Tech athletes were also on | the sidelines today.
Charles Howard is out with &n ang Lefty . Besides, 1/injured shoulder, John Higginboth-| goth teams had 68s.
jam is nursing a severe cold and | | Warren Huffman has a cracked rib. { The squad held a drill and serimmage for their |ette Friday. The game is to be the first in Tech's new stadium and has been set aside as Home Coming. All graduates holding life membershin in the Tech Alumni Association will
lineup against the ,.
more than 30 years. The oldest rivalry in the state exists between | these two schools, who first met in 1887. Since then they have battled | in 10 games with Purdue winning [seven and Butler three.
MILLER’S THREESOME BEST AT RICHMOND
imes Special RICHMOND, Sept. 27.—A five under par 67 gave Massie Miller. | Forest Hills Country Club pro, Jack! Moore, Richmond, and Steve Davis, Indianapolis, first honors in the
(pro-amateur golf tournament here
game with Lafay- §
|
be admitted to the game upon pre- |
| sentation of their
| cards.
membership
ELINED EPAIRED EFITTED
LEON
Men's and Women’s Clothes TAILORING CO. 235 MASS. AVE.
Sale! Men's
SUITS
and a DPTUATS >
Te T—— class in every way. Many of the country’s beet. Must not bs confused with ordinary outAWN garments. Sterilized cleaned. All sizes and
| FAIRBANKS
oe
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| { { | { |
213 E. Ee ton St. | aAhouse
vesterdayv.
Tommy Vaughn, of Pleasant Run, Indianapolis, and C. T. Brehm and of guards, and Augie Boss, who was tied on the third team last year, look Anderson |like the varsity guards.
Marion Coulter, Richmond, with Johnny Vaughn, \pro, and Phil Conniff, Richmond, | McCoy,
now,” | composed mostly of sophomores and great deal and that he was very {a sophomore is something like a tired, but expected to reach his goal. cub reporter. world on fire.
the first hits him from this side and somelone else from the other and he gets | {up sort of dazed wondering what
[shown moving pictures of the LG
| Stat y State encounter |right, but it takes him about three
'games to think the whole business out, doing the thinking? Well, winning ball games for you.”
| thing get him down. | ready to take the Irish from coast to coast, and that is their travel task in meeting the nine-game schedule.
Dame first Brown, a junior and a 1937 letter man, and John Francis (Shipwreck) Kelly,
is a cinch for left tackle, with Paul Ernest Kell, doing similar service on the other side of the line.
Indianapolis. second team last year, has Layden’s
“Can't tell a thing about it right night, .and said that his blistered he says. “The team will be right heel was bothering him a
He's going to set the
‘HIALEAH TO OFFER | $100,000 IN PURSES
game, but then et NEW YORK, Sept. 27 (U. P.) — Prize money at Hialeah track in ] Miami, Fla., will total more than $100,000 this winter, it was an=nounced today by Peter Widener, of [the Miami Jockey Club. Richest Istake will be the $50,000 added Wid.ener Handicap for 3-year-olds and | upward. Young Widener is expected to be in charge of this year’s meetthe ing while his father, Joseph E. Wide ener, recuperates from a recent ile ness.
“He goes in there all full of pep
“He comes back for more, al
and what happens while he's he isn't
Irish to Travel
But Mr. Layden hasn't lef
He says he’s OUTFITTERS TO MEN, WOMEN and CHILDREN THE MODERN CREDIT STORE
livingston
129 Ww Wash Indiana Theatee® . .
Is Opposite Us
Right now it looks like the Notre string will have Earl
anocher junior, at the ends, Ed Beinor, All-America last year,
native of Princeton,
Capt. Jim McGoldrick, who ranks | ith Notre Dame's “charm school”
Ed (Bummer) Longhi, with the
nod right now for center. Steve
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