Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 October 1938 — Page 27

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THURSDAY, OCT. 13,

1938

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

“INJURIES "CRIPPLE TECH SQUAD FOR MANUAL GAM

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James Van Der Moier (left) looks like he's ready to do alot of tackling for Manual at Delavan Smith

Field tomorrow

afternoon. Tech will be playing the same position.

Only Cheer Leaders Set,

Triumph Against Jeff At Lafayette.

‘By LEO DAUGHERTY If you believe Mr. Robert Ball,

§ | principal of football at Tech High i | School, ‘the only ones among the

Big Green who are ready for to-

§ © | morrow’s intracity game with Man-

Photos. Morris Mikkelsen of

Purdue and Indiana Seen in Close Tilts; Irish, Butler Picked to Win

By PAUL B. WILLIAMSON

Purdue will | subdue or hold the Fordham Rams to a tie, Indiana will hold the small end or even the score with Nebraska, and Notre Dame will defeat the Illini, according to the calculations of the Williamson Football System for week-end games involving Indiana teams. In other Hoosier contests Butler is given a clear path over DePauw, Hanover will beat or tie with Indiana State, Earlham will prove too mighty for Wabash, Manchester will show Ball State how it’s done and Franklin's Grizzlies will knock over Evansville, the predictions indicate.

EXPLANATION: Figure after each team is its rating according to the current Williamson Football Rating Table, published earlier this week. PROBABLE WINNER IS NAMED IN CAPITAL LETTERS. * means tie game or close outcome likely, and “upset” possible; R, means prediction contrary to rattoss F, Friday afternoon; FN, Friday night; SN, Saturday night; S, Sunday.

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1938, by ‘United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

the finals at Garfield Park to'capture the honor. Al Dunn and Bill Arnold were the semifinalists in the tourney which had 26 players. Coach John Moffat hopes to schedule * doubles: tournament soon,. he announced. :

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ual’ss Redskins at Delavan Smith Field are the cheer leaders. “They're all: hurf,” he moans. “Look at them. Everyone has some kind ‘of a brace on his leg or his arm or his shoulder.” The crippled Big Green's skirmish with the South Siders features tomorrow afternoon’s prep school pigskin calendar and really is the highlight of the week-end because it is the only contest between two city teams.

WEEK-END PREP FOOTBALL

Tomorrow Manual vs. Tech at Delavan Smith Field, 2:15 p. m. Washington at Southport, 8 p. m. Shortridge at Jefferson of Lafaye ette, 7:15 p. m. : Rushville at Broad Ripple, 2:45 p. m, 5 Morton Memorial of Knightstown at Park, 3 p. m. ll Indianas Boys’ chool vs.. Ben Davis, Stout Field, 8 p. m. Warren Central at Lowell, 8 p. m.

Saturday

Kentucky Deaf School at Silent Hoosiers, 2:15 p. m.

Cathedral vs. Elwood at Southport, 8 p. m.

Maybe the braces on all those Green warriors are intended to prompt Coach Harry Painter of the Redskins to smooth his mustache with satisfaction and happy anticipation over the outcome of the game. But at any rate, Mr. Ball, putting his charges through a strenuous scrimmage with the advice to be “as tough with them as you are with each other,” said he would like to start this backfield: Charley Berling at quarter, Charley Howard and Warren Huffman at the halves, and Leslie Fleck at fullback. Robert Burns has been taking Huffman's place during practice and is being groomed for action in case Huffman’s elbow doesn’t feel So good tomorrow.

Samuelson May Start

Dick Samuelson, who in previous games played end, also has been working out in the backfield with the possibility that he might do some ball carrying in | place of Johnny Higginbotham who is not in uniform because of injuries. Knute Dobkins has been getting a crack at Samuelson’s end job. Nick Huter has replaced Bob Teen at one of the guards. Teen has not been in uniform while he’s on the mend. Hefty Morris Mikkelsen looks like a starter at tackle in the place of Dave Bostic, another casualty. Others nursing rather serious bruises are Jack Stoelting, Jim Wechsler and Dave Morgan. Coach Painter might try a switched lineup against the Green. He is trying to make a halfback out of Eugene Crane, an end, and has

2 transferred Melville Davis from the 0 iil snapping position to quarter3| back.

Each team will come up with early records of one victory each against {wo defeats. Tech took last year’s struggle by a 26 to 6 rout. Getting back to those Tech cheer leaders. They practice just as hard as the football players and Tech’s cheering on Friday afternoon shows it. The chief cheer-er-upper is Keith Mullen, a senior. Dale W. Sare is the faculty sponsor of the rah-rah-rah department.

Shortridge After Fifth

The Blue Devils of Shortridge, riding high on the wings of four consecutive victories, go to Lafayette for an evening game with Jefferson. It will be the ninth meeting of the two and the “rubber” contest, the Devils and Broncos having split even in eight frays. The North Siders took last year’s game here by a 7 to 0 margin. Satisfied with Shortridge’s great running attack, Coach Robert Nipper has stressed punting and passing in this week’s drills. Johnny Allerdice, ready for action now after being shelved by injuries since the opening game, has been doing a lot of kicking, as have Kenney Smock and Fred Maynard. Allerdice, Smock, Bob Scott and Roger Sheridan have been given special attention in the passing workouts. Hugh Dalzell, lineman, who has been out with injuries, is back on the job, Washington's Continentals, with two victories in three starts, having bowed to Cathedral's Irish a week ago, go to Southport tomorrow night to renew their rivalry with A. E. Pitcher’s Cardinals, who have played

VORTEX

Moans Ball

IShortridge Seeking Fifth

mage in preparing for

the largest number of games of any city or district team, They have won only two of them, one of their victims being Manual by a 39 to 0 count. But the Cardinals lost to two other city teams, to Cathedral, 14 to 13, and Shortridge, 34 to 0.

Halfback Retr.rns

Washington's hopes for a return to the win column were boosted with the return to duty of Halfback Ray Jones. The West Siders weril through a heavy drill yesterday with passing and kicking being stressed. Johnny Sipe kicked 16 out of 18 field goal

tries. Southport will have full strength. Broad Ripple’s Rockets, satisfied with three triumphs in four trips to the post, having bowed only to Shortridge, have Rushville on their hands at the Rocket field tomorrow afternoon. Coach Ed Diederich has his worries this ‘week because Bill Taylor and Ray Baldwin are still unable to work because of injuries. While the Lions gave the Ripples trouble in their last two games, the locals took last year’s argument, 12 to 0, and won in 1936 by a 6 to 0 edge Coach Lou Reichel’s Park Red and Black, continuing its record of no defeats last year and two victories this, over the Frankfort Bs and Howe Military, kicks off at 3 p. m. tomorrow, against Morton Memorial of Knightstown at the Cold Springs Road playlot. “The private school boys appear to hold the edge over the invaders who have bowed to the Silent Hoosiers. Reichel has hopes of giving some of his reserve backs a real test in the game. They include Bill Clauer, Alder Breiner, Harvey Bradley and Bill Elder, all of whom have been pushed to heavy duty in this week’s practice sessions.

Giants in Night Game

Ben Davis’ Giants, having broken into the winning column last’ week with Plainfield a 26 to 0 victim, after a deadlock and two defeats in three other games, will light the lamps of Stout Field tomorrow night for an affair with the Indiana Boys School. Warren Central, boasting only a tie with Ben Davis in four games, travels to Lowell tomorrow night. Through a change in schedule, Cathedral brings Elwood to the Southport Field for a Saturday night tiff. The Fighting Irish have yet to lose one, having defeated Marion, Southport, Noblesville and Washington. Only one thing is worrying Coach Joe Harmon about this week’s assignment for his boys and that is that Halfback Harry Caskey, one | of his best, is still on the sick list. Jake Caskey’s Silent Hoosiers, after losing two and winning one, meet the Kentucky School for the|f Deaf eleven, on the local's field | Saturday afternoon. : Park School has played only two games, but Halfback Carter is the town’s leading scorer with five touchdowns. Harrell of the same team is the leader among the onepoint getters with five conversions to his record.

Coach Jimmy Crowley's Fordham Rams scrimthe Boilermaker nyasion

Times-Acme Photo.

Saturday. After bowling over two easy opponents, - ne team meets its first major ir agains} Purdue,

Fordham Defense to Get Test Against Boilermakers

By JOE WILLIAMS Times Special Writer

NEW YORK, Oct. 13.—There won't be much rabbit shooting on the

Eastern football fields this week-end. On the contrary, there will be|

nine or ten games where both sides

had better be loaded for bear. From

now on the game laws will be more humanely enforced. It will no longer be considered sporting to pop away at a cottontail es he sits on his

haunches whimpering for mercy. For the first time this year the Fordhams come into the ring with a wind up fighter. Up to now they have been working out on such blood sweating savages as Upsala and Waynesburg, two teams which positively do not entertain Rose Bowl dreams. Puraue will be a different can of peas. The Boilermakers were good enough to beat a tough Detroit University team in their opener and last week they held Minnesota to a 7-0 score, which practically amounts to a moral victory, if those things haven't gone out of date, Attack Supposedly Better

The Fordhams are supposed to have more bite in their attack this season due to the presence of a more diversified and speedy backfield. But there is no record that the Fordhams ever knocked themselves out with their own attack. To many it always has seemed the Rams placed more stress on defense than on attack. they had no alternative, consid g the kind of ‘linesmen they had. ‘But this season the stress has been on advancing the ball and whatever doubt exists concerns the defense, which will be put to its first competitive test against the Boilermakers. The resurgence of Brown has been one of the milder surprises of the new season. The Bears couldn’t win for losing last season. Even Tufts knocked "em off. But this season they started out by beating Harvard and fo:.lowed that with a convincing shutout against Lafayette. Now they come up against Dartmouth and the Indians from Hanover are known to be three deep in everything, including confidence.

Cornell No Pushover

It would seem that all Brown can hope for is a respectable showing; but even so Tuss McLaughry, the coach, has already demonstrated he can win a couple of games when he has any sort of material. This is the same gentleman the alumni wanted to boil in oil last winter, the objection being in the more conservative quarters this was much too good for him. Ossie Solem’s second year Syracuse squad faces a man eafing as-

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signment in Cornell. This could be the Orargemen’s toughest game of the schedule. They haven't been

they will have to go all out, as the English say, to win this one. In the early dope Cornell rates right along with Dartmouth and other Eastern leaders, although Carl Shavely, the coach, is disposed to dark pessimism. Whenever a newspaper man writes anything flattering about Cornell Mr. Snavely comes back with a pained objection ... “All yot're doing is making yourself look bad as a critic,” he scribbled across the newspaper article. But until Mr. Shavely’s pessimism is proved justified by subsequent horrors, we intend to withhold our tears. Our naturally virile appearance is not improved by tears, anyway. Some of the more sharp-eyved critics have already called frantic attention to the bleak state of affairs in the Big Three where, due to some strange freak, men have been reduced to mice. Princeton is green, Yale is still trying to figure out a starting lineup and Harvard hasn't vet bounced back from the Brown shocker. In the end the boys may have to be satisfied with whatever glory they can get by beating one another, and then challenging the Chicago Cubs in a post-season game,

called on to show much so far but|.

I U. Departs : For Nebraska

BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Oct. 13 (U, P.).— Indiana University’s football squad scheduled a light tapering off : drill for this afternoon after ‘which it will entrain for Omaha, Neb, where it will spend Friday night prior to the game with Nebraska University Saturday. The last scrimmage of the: week was held yesterday, with Coach Bo

McMillin endeavoring to smooth out his running and passing attacks. Eddie Herbert looked impressive aftér being shifted from halfback to fullback. Mike Nadeo was shifted from center to guard as Russell Sloss, regular center, recovered from

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