Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 January 1939 — Page 6
By Eddie Ash TREAT FOR LOUISVILLE . FANS
‘NOTRE DAME TACKLES KENTUCKY
2 8 .8
OTRE DAME'S hardwood hunters are to oppose the
PAGE 6.
University of Kentucky Wildcats of Lexington at Louisville Saturday and the contest is stirring up warm interest throughout the Blue Grass ‘and in Southern In-
diana sports circles.
J effersonville High has revised its schedule to give the
So simple... for Marion Cluggish.
boys the night off to sit in on the big college game and several other high schools will have their players there. Louisville is making a big splash over the attraction and the Irish and Wildcats are sure to perform before a packed house. . . . Southern Indiana and Kentucky sports goers seldom get a look at Notre Dame athletic teams and Coach George Keogan’s pastimers will have plenty of supporters in the stands. A rooting horde will accompany the Kentucky quintet from Lexington to
-Derbytown. . . . One play-
er the Irish will watch is Marion Cluggish, Kentucky center, who measures 6 feet 9 inches tall, and all in one piece. « . « At any rate, Cluggish is a
dangerous man around the
basket when he has the ball in his hand. It’s practically a drop-
in hot for the tall Kentuckian when he jumps a few inches
off the floor.
Joe Gillespie, sub for Mark Ertel, Notre Dame center, is from Cathedral, Indianapolis. . . . He’s a sophomore. . . . He pitched in one field basket to help defeat Butler in that 37-35 close one at Notre Dame the other night. The tussle against Kentucky is Notre Dame’s only action of the week. . . . Kentucky defeated the Irish but once, in the 1928-29 season. . . . Notre Dame has downed
the Wildcats three times.
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ELS NORGREN, who has coached Chicago University basketball teams for 17 years, was one of the Maroons’ greatest all-around
athletes in his college days. . .
. He won 12 major “C’s” in three years
° of competition in football, basketball, baseball and track. Norgren coached basketball at the University of Utah from 1914-17, his 1916 team winning the National A. A. U. championship.
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ARROLL COLLEGE of Waukesha, Wis.,, has not tasted defeat since in December, 1937; winning 18 in a row. . . . Hank Luisetti, ex-Stanford hardwood ace, accumulated 465 points in 24 games last season. . . . For the amazing average of 19.3. Bennie Borgmann, recently named manager of the Sacramento Coast Lease b ball club, used to be one of the best basketball players
in the busi George
inski, forward, still is dropping om n for Villanova.
. . . He tallied 296 points last season and was one of the top scorers
on Eastern hardwoods.
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HE Yankees and Dodgers are to meet in 10 exhibition games this spring in Florida and on the way North as the teams come up from training. . . . Not since 1926 have these clubs met en route from
the South. . .
. And the Yankees scored a grand slam in 12 clashes. . ..
It left the Fiatbushers' gasping before the regular season opened
The Yanks will train at St. Petersburg, where they have years, and the Dodgers will be found at Clearwater, a. i spot
for them.
n for
Joe Williams —
EW YORK, Jan. 10.—We may be wrong but we feel
fect.
the mechanics of Baseball’s Hall of Fame are imperWe notice only pre-eminent performers are being
enshrined, fellows like Cobb and Ruth and Mathewson. We have no argument with such selections but it seems to us that sheer artistry in performance should not be the
only basis.
* There are a number of approaches to immortality. A gentleman by the name of Kelly became internationally famous merely by sitting on a flag pole longer than any-
body else had ever sat before.
Cy Young and Larry Lajoie were remarkable performers and they properly belong in thie hall of hooray but we seriously doubt if in all the years they played they achieved half the headlines that came to Fred Merkle of the Giants the day he failed to touch second base, That’s our point. We feel the system of immortalizing baseball ivory on exceptional ability alone tends to ignore some of the most
celebrated individ fear the hall of h
in the sport. Unless this system is modified we sla, is liable to become a handicap to civilization.
It will discourage tiie weak of spirit from ever hoping to crash the sacred portals. And this is contrary to the best interests of humanity, it being generally agreed the strong do not need to be encouraged.
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8 5
E are among those who vote for the immortals each year and our votes always go to the players who made the headlines the wrong way. If necessary we would have a separate section in the Cooperstown Cathedral for these precious souls, who, either because of circumstances over which they had no control or because of their own peculiar mental equipment, wrote gaudy and bizarre chapters into the
history of the game.
True, it may be argued that the section would
speedily become overerowded with Brooklyn heroes alone but we would
dismiss this as flippant.
We would lead off, of course, with Merkle, whose failure to touch second base cost the Giants a championship. Another of our annual
nominations ‘is Heinie Zimmerman who chased Eddie Collins across
the plate with the run which practically won the 1917 World Series for the Chicago White Sox at the expense of the Giants. This was one of -the most astonishing foot races baseball ever saw—and one of the
most costly. 2
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UR nominations also include Roger Peckinpaugh who made eight errors in the 1925 World Series, to set a record which has never been approached. It was the most finished exhibition of futility the fall playoffs ever witnessed, and on this score alone Mr. Peckinpaugh,
who w recognition.
Nor should Eank Gowdy’s performance in the 1924 World Series
pecking and -pawing throughout the games, demands firm
‘be overlooked. This was the series in which Mr. Gowdy decided to give an exhibition of intricate tap dancing in his catcher’s mask while in pursuit of a capricious foul fly. The performance, artistically perfect).
contributed to the Giahts’ surrender to Wa
shington. Certainly no
right thinking person will argue Mr. Gowdy doesn’t belong.
Basketball Scores
STATE COLLEGES ia 29; Illinois, 28. we ana’ State, 42; Valparaiso, 27. ' Hanover, 35; Oakland City, 27. STIR coLuRgEs sconsin, ; Sichigan. 37; Northwestern, 28, Minnesota, 36; Iowa. 2] DePaul, 46; Duquesne, 40 Oklahoma Aggies, 23; St. Hamline, : St. Mary’
Louis, 18.
y 36; Tuls Soihwestern, tn 43; Oklahoma City,
aryville, 29; Missouri Mites, 26. oo de mts 2
Noreh Dakota State, 37; South Dakota
tate, 33
Loyola, 51; Villanova, 3 Greeley State, 47; aa State, 25. Baldwin-Wallace, 26; Kent State, 24. iram. 34; Youngstown, 32. New Mexico State, 58; A rizons Teachers,
Whitman, 49; Gonz 33. STATE HIGH SCHO OOLS . Josh , 43; St. Paul's; Marion, 12,
PROFESSIONALS
Rens, 47; Kautsky’s, 38. Oshkosh, 36; Sheboygan, 33.
Poor Pedalers
~ Torchy
TUESDAY; JANUARY 10, 1939
ae:
in dark suit, ran into Gerry Seeders
Airplane spin or the basketball court at Philadelphia. When Georze DeWitt of Maryland, No. 31
of Pennsylvania,
right, in white suit, Seeders turned and whirled him through the air, the ball falling unnoticed and Seeders drawing a foul.
By LEO DAUGHERTY Evansville Joe Cook always
around to imitating three Hawaiians, but the New York Renaissance imitated at least two basketball
teams ‘last night and it may have seemed more to the Kautsky AllAmericans. The famed pros zave the former college stars a basketball lesson at the Butler Fieldhouse, the grading being 47 to 33. It could just as easily have been up around 100 to 33 if the veteran }fat Jenkins and his younger aces had cared to make it so. For late in the game they took a peek at the scoreboard and then just toyed with fellows like Johnny Wooden, Jewell Young, Vernon Huffman and others. They didn't even take what seemed to be dead-
threatened to, but never did get|
sure shots. They preferred to show
the crowd just how good they were at passing the ball. And the crowd, according to Owner Frank Kautsky of the AllAmericans, numbered 6000, including those who came in on paper, but it looked larger by about 2000.
Teams Meet Tonight at Ft. Wayne
However, the Kautskys still gasping for breath, followed the Rens to Ft. Wayne today where tonight the same two teams will collide again and the Rens should win again unless they decide to sit down in their positions. This current edition of the Renaissance probably is the classiest basketball team that has appeared in Indianapolis in many days, barring not even the New York Celtics. The Kautskys simply were lost
ST. LOUIS. Jan. 10 (U.P.).—The New York Yankees, with five players named, domingted the 1938 AllStar baseball team selected for the Sporting News, rational baseball weekly, by members of the Baseball
; Writers’ Association of America, it
was announced today. The All-Star team comes close to
Young Grappler Tackles Veteran
After making rapid strides in professionai wrestling circies, Young Bob Bruns, 220, Chicago heavy? weight, is to face a more severe test at the Armdary tonight where he is booked in the main go against the experienced Iron Man Dorve Roche, 222, of Decatur, Ill The match calls for two best falls in three. Three weeks ago the pair met in a short eacounter and finished even. In other locai matches Bruns defeated Jack League, Ray Eckert and John Katan., He grapples barefoot style and is aggressive. Tonight's semiwindup will bring together Billy Thom, Indiana University mat coach, 180, and Walter Stratton of Detroit, 178, in a onefall, 30-minute tirne limit bout. Principals in the opening match at 8:30 are Roy Dunn, 217, Oklahoma City, and Jim Coffield, 219, Kansas City, Mo. Dunn is a former amateur ur heavyweight headliner.
Budge One Upc on Vines i in Series
PITTSBURGH, Jan. 10 (U. P.)— Donald Budge ard Ellsworth Vines moved on to Cincinnati today for
_|the sixth match of their cross-
country professional tennis series after Budge, pacing to an 8-6, 3-6, 12-10 victory, took a one-match lead toward the 1939 pro championship. A capacity crowd of 6600 tennis fans, who paid approximately $9000, watched one of the most thrilling sets of tennis ever played when Vines and the rec -haired former international singles amateur champion fought it out for 22 games in
‘| their third set last night.
merge |
Star Center Credits Success to Mates;
Times Special DETROIT, Jen. 10—Whenever fans . congratulate Bob Calihan, University of Detroit basketball star, who many claim is the best college center in the garie today, the ‘Titan cager has a stock reply. Says Calihan, “Shucks, I'm just lucky to be playing on the greatest basketball team this school ever had. Boy, good!”
Dedication Tilt Set
Times Special
LOGANSPORT, Jan.
are those other four guys 24
10.—The
5 Yanks Gain Places on All-Star Baseball Team
being an American League outfit. Eight players from the junior circuit were selected as compared with three for the National League. In 1937 honors were evenly divided, only 10 players being selected that year. Two hundred and forty-nine baseball writers participated in the poll. Joe DiMaggio of the New York Yankees led the list with 241 votes for three outfield positions. Joe Medwick, St. Louis Cardinal outfielder, was second with 233 votes, and Charles (Red) Ruffing, Yankee pitcher, third with 211,
Sixth Time for Two
Joe Cronin, manager and infielder for the Boston Red Sox, staged a comeback to win a place on the team for the sixth time while Charles Gehringer, Detroit infielder, won a berth on the team for the sixth consecutive time. Cronin and Gehringer as a result of the 1938 team vote, tied with Lou Gehrig, Babe Ruth and Al Simmons for the number of times selected, all being but one time short of the records of Mickey Cochrane and Pie Traynor, who have been named most often on the 14 teams selected. The team: Pitchers—Charles Ruffing, Yankees: Vernon Gomez Yankees; Johnny Vander Meer, Cincinnati. Catcher—Bill Dickey, Yankees. First Bas immy Foxx, Boston Red Sox. Second Base—Charles Seluinget Detroit. aie Base—Robert Rolfe, Yan-
Boo it Stop—Joe Cronin, Boston Red Sox.
nals. Center Field —Joe = DiMaggio, Yankees.
Right Field—Mel Ott, Giants. :
Basketball
The Indianapolis’ Y. M. C. A. basketball team beat the Kempler Radio Co. five, 69-29, at the Y Building last night.
The H. J. Ransbhurg quintet won two games, defeating the Stokeley Van Camps, 39-35, and the Progress Laundry team, 34-22.
Tonight’s schedule in the SmithHassler Manufacturers’ League: 7:00—Polk’s Milk vs. Stokely VanCamp. 7:50 Fashion Cleaner Aces vs. SchwitzerCummins Buddies. 8:40—Wilkinson Lumber vs. Linco Oilers 9:30—H. P. Ransburg vs. V Beveridge Paper. Results last night in the Cooperative League: Brooklyn Merchants, 81; Royal Crown Salvation Army, 41; Kingan Bol is 81.
DeGolyer Printers, 42; Waver oY Yoblesville Quakers, 23; Teiby
C
Results in the Sportsman’s Store Sunday. School League:
Brookside U. B., 25; Central Christian, Englewood Christian, 46; Victory Memorial, 19. -
Advertisement
Monticello - Logansport dedication]!
Left Field—Joe Medwick, Cardi- 5
Linwood Christian, 53; First Reformed,
Rens Flip, Tap and Punch Ball While Kautsky Five Looks On in Amazement
in trying to combat their passing. Pop Gates, Wee Willie Smith, Tarzan Cooper, and in fact all the- rest of the eight-man cast, did anything they wanted to with the ball at any time. They flipped it in front of them, in back of them, to the side of them, and over their heads. Time and again the ball was hurled nonchalantly to a spot where at the time there was no one, but a Ren always seemed to turn up at that particular spot at the same time the ball did. The Rens not only passed the ball, they seemed to merely tap or punch it into each other’s hands. The New Yorkers monopolized the sphere. These ball hawks possessed it probably for, four-fifths of the entertainment.
Young Flashes When Given Chance
They had the Kautskys groggy. At one time during the second half, Jewell Young, of whom it must be said that he certainly puts his heart into ‘his dribbling, crashed to the floor under his own basket and lay there for a full minute just watching the proceedings down the court. But for all of the walloping that
sions was the flash to watch. When the opportunity arose, he displayed his greatest forte, which is snaring the ball off the backboard and dribbling at Seabiscuit speed down to his own hoop for a shot from the side. Mr. Jenkins, who confided that he has been with the Rens during 15 years of their 17 in the wars, didn’t think there was anything unusual about winning last night's game, one of 136 on the Rens’ sked. “Speaking of something odd,” he said. “Why one time we were playing up in Norwalk, Conn, We were pushing the other team very hard and they were excited. “They were under our basket and one of their men passed. Just as he did, the man it was intended for turned his head, the ball hit him on top of the head and bounced Tight into our basket for two points or us.
Fat was reluctant to say so, but he whispered that he thought that
ball teams in the East than in the Midwest. - “Say,” he said, “I think it was we Rens who introduced give and go basketball around here. Give and go is what you call the fast break. Say, when we first came out here a good many years ago we used to be a sensation.” Just used to be, Fat? .. The summary: - Renaissance (47) FG FT PF Cocper, f
tes, ft ...
All-Americans (33) FG Fr PF
3 Soune. f 1{Sines, f 0 Williams, 0 Schuessier,
0 Wenden. R 0/|Baird, g Jen jon. _0/Huffman, Totals ...22 3 8 Totals Score at gisi-Renajstance,
COOH MHOOM
| RRS | Olt et Ds pt pt © | OF Ot et it BI
be KS > -3
27; All-
Referea-— Norris, Dayton. Umpire—Pitcher, Southport
Conservation Clubs Enroll in Contest
Eighty-nine clubs are now competing in the sixth annual crow control contest, being sponsored by the Indiana Department of Conservation. - More than 100 clubs are expected to be enrolled in the contest before the first month of the contest ends, according to Virgil M.
1 Americans, 1
‘Simmons, commissioner,
: . Purdue Matmen Win Times Special ’ LAFAYETTE, Jan. 10.—Purdue’s wrestling team, victorious over Armour Tech of Chicago, today awaited its first conference match Saturday with Northwestern. The Boilermakers took seven out of eight matches last night to defeat the Chicago grapplers: 29-5.
Auto AND DIAMOND
~ LOANS
20 Months to Pay
WOLF SUSSMAN, INC.
‘| Kixmiller, state’s
the Kautskys took, Jewell on occa-:
maybe there are better pro basket-.
DePauw's Ace To Be Guarded By Bill Geyer
|Butler Drills for Saturday
Game; Tigers Face Earlham Five.
Bill Geyer, veteran Butler guard, will be assigned to guard Herbert leading scorer, Saturday night when Butler and DePauw basketball teams meet in the Fieldhouse.
In last Saturday night’s 37 to 35|
defeat at Notre Dame, Geyer held Edward Riska, sophomore runnerup to Kixmiller, to four points, all free throws. Both Butler and DePauw are undefeated in Indiana College Conference play. However, DePauw has played five conference games while the Bulldogs have played only one conference foe. The Tigers also hold an advantage in season record having eight victories in nine games while Butler has won three of seven.
Indiana State and Hanover Win
: By United Fress DePauw will have a chance to get its scoring guns in range for the Butler Bulldogs tonight in a game at Greencastle against Earlham. ° This contest tops tonight's three conference games. The others: Franklin at Wabash, and Manchester at Ball State. Evansville entertains a nonconference foe tonight in Bowling Green. The week got off to a roaring start last night with victories for Indiana State and Hanover. State took Valparaiso, 42-26, and the Panthers defeated Oakland City College, 35-27.
It was the first conference tri- |
umph for State. Julian took the honors by scoring push shots at the start of the game that gave State a lead it held all the way. The game was rough and punctuated frequently with personal fouls. In the Hanover-Oakland City game, Tom Young of Hanover scored 15 points to set the victorious pace. Little, with six points, was the leading Oakland City scorer. At the end of the first half, the Panthers held a commanding 22-9 lead. The second team played most of the remainder of the game.
Mungo Is Added To Holdout List
NEW YORK, Jan. 10 . (U. P.).— Baseball’s 1939 holdout season was
in full swing today with Van Lingle Mungo, tenmiperamental Brooklyn fireball pitcher, the latest to join a tapidly growing list of discontented. Mungo, a perennial holdout, joined Jimmy Foxx, Boston Red Sox first baseman; Jimmy Ripple, Giant outfielder; and Buck Newsom, St. Louis Browns pitcher. Before leaving his Pageland, N.C. home today to teach at an Orlando, Fla., baseball school, Mungo returned a $5000 contract unsigned He received $15,000 last year for starting in 17 games, winning four and losing seven.
Fencing Coach Glad "He Isn’t on Fence
Times Special : . : DETROIT, Jan. 10.— Charley Schmitter, 1938 National Turnverein fencing champion in the foil and saber and a graduate of the University of Detroit, is glad that his Alma Mater’s fencing team did not schedule a bout with Michigan State this year. You see, Schmitter is coaching both teams and if they were to meet in college sontbetitien, it would put the coach on the spot.
25 Race Horses Die In New York Blaze
AMSTERDAM, N, Y., Jan. 10 (U. P.).—Twenty-five race horses were destroyed last night in a fire which leveled the Sanford Stud Farm. Manger-Trainer Holly Hughes
‘estimated the loss at “well over
$100,000.” Five of the horses—Galadore, Sunport, Phalasia, Supply House and Carbeck—were nationally known racers and jumpers.
Pug Is Injured CHICAGO, Jan. 10 (U, P)— Verne Patterson, Chicago Negro welterweight, was reported in “fair” condition at Columbus Hospital today after suffering a brain concussion during a scheduled eightround bout last night with Indian Billy Lee of Milwaukee.
Table Tennis Scores
Results of last night's local table tennis league matches:
INDIANAPOLIS LEAGUE (McClure Club) cQuay-Norris, 9; Le 8S. ‘Ayres ay Chain, 15; Power & Ligh L. B. Price, 15; Best Grand Lenn 3 3. . Binger Advertising, 10; Indiana Trust, 8:
PADDLE LEAGUE (Paddle Club)
Western Electric, 13; Feltman-Curme, 6 Fairmount Glass, 11% Becurity Tash 1 FarQuar Heating, 10; Barbasol, 8.
9 {us),
Pick Dehner Hail Demaret
As New Star
Smashes Way to Victory in Coast Links Tourney.
LOS ANGELES, Jan. 10 (U. P.).— Once each year a new golfing star is born somewhere along the California winter swing and today Los Angeles hailed dimpled Jim Demaret of Houston, Tex., as the man of 1939. : Demaret himself wasn’t on hand to receive plaudits for his smashing victory in the $5000 Los Angeles open championship. He was heading North to Oakland where late this week he will attempt to parlay his $1650 first prize into another in the Oakland open. The young professional rang up his victory the hard way. When all the rules said he should have played safe with his five-stroke lead, he blazed over the windswept fairways of Griffith Park in a par-shattering 68 and finished the 72-hole tournament with an aggregate 274. That score was 11 strokes under par, seven ahead of his nearest rival, and only one above the tournament record established by Jimmy Thompson of Shawnee, Pa., just a year ago.
Armstrong Faces Baby Arizmendi
LOS ANGELES, Jan. 10 (U. P.). —Hustling Henry Armstrong, who
defends his various and sundry
world boxing titles as often as Seabiscuit goes to the races, gambles his welterweight crown tonight against Baby Arizmendi of Tampico, Mexico, this most persistent opponent. It isn’t much of a gamble as such things are rated. The betting, what there was of it, favored Armstrong by a 2%-to-1 margin to retain the title after 10 rounds in Olympic Auditorium. But the wagéring was brisk that he couldn’t knock out the cocky little Mexican who ranks as the second best lightweight in America.
&
Silent Hoosiers in 2 Games This Week
After a vacation of two weeks the Silent Hoosiers basketball team is to return to action Friday in a game against Hope High School at the Hope gym. On Saturday the Silents will travel to Jeffersonville to tackle the Jeff reserves. ‘'Cpach Caskey sent the squad through a hard drill today and found the players in good condition after their long layoff.
Aussies to Play in
(U. P.) —Australia will challenge for the Davis Cup, international tennis trophy, in the American Zone again this year, it was announced today. Other countries expected to challenge in the same zone are Japan, Canada and Mexico. The American Zone winner plays the victor of the European Zone for the right to meet the cup holder—the United States in the challenge round.
Minnesota ....
Illinois ....
| 11—Columbus.
American Net Zone|
MELBOURNE, Australia, Jan. 10 |
PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 10 (U.P.). Davey O’Brien, pint-sized T. C. U. passer, tonight receives the Maxwell Memorial Club’s award as the “outstanding college player of 1938.
INDIANA AND CHICAGO FIVES SHOW POWER .
Jeemy Londos Couldn't Do Any Better
Hoosiers Trip Illini Quint as Maroons Win |
Hawkeye? Capt. Stephens | Registers 20 Points for Scoring Honors.
BIG TEN STANDINGS ‘W. L. Pct. 1.000 1.000 1.000 500 S500 500 500 500 000 000
Purdue Ohio State .... 1
Indiana ..... oe 1 Wisconsin .... 1 Towa. ........ ee 0 Northwestern .. 0
NN EEE OS
CHICAGO, Jan. 10 (U. P.).—They said before the start of the cure rent Big Ten basketball campaign that Indiana was one of the teams
was a pushover. Illinois and Wisconsin found out first hand last night, suffering their
gain. Indiana, bouncing back from a surprise licking by Ohio , State, handed the Illini their first defeat of the season, 29-28, in a battle of personal fouls, Chicago, which won only two Conference games last sea«
son, put the damper on Wisconsin, 28- 18, J
way tie for first place. On top now is powerful Minnesota which rang up its second. straight Big Ten triumph last night at Iowa's expense, 36-29. From a percentage
top honors with defending champion Purdue and Ohio State, which won their openers and will be idle until Saturday. Northwestern shares the cellar with Iowa with two defeats,
37-28. Stephens Paces Scorers
The Indiana and Chicago victories were the outstanding team
of the two-month battle for the Conference crown. No. 1 individual
scorers with 33 points in two games. Pick Dehner,
Indiana rally sparked by Bill Johnson and Bill Menke, who scored six points apiece, and Capt. Ernie Andres and Marvin Huffman, who tallied five times each. Illinois led 13-9 at the half and missed clinch= ing the game in the final seconds when two field goal attempts went astray. There were 24 personal
fouls. Badgers Try 73 Shots
Chicago presented an iron-clad zone defense which baffled Wiscon= sin. The Badgers attempted 73 field goals and sank only four, while Center Dick Lounsbury paced the Maroon attack with 10 points. Chicago led, 11-10, at the half. Stephens sank eight field goals and four free tries for Iowa, but his solo efforts against Minnesota were not enough to offset the coms bined power of John Kundla & Co.
the Gophers racked up their 18th straight victory in the last two sea-) sons. Center Jim Rae was the siege gun in Michigan’s victory over Northwestern. He hooped 14 points. Northwestern trailed from the start.
Southport Cage
The postponement of two games last month has necessitated a revie sion of the Southport High School basketball schedule, aucording to school officials. i The revised schedule: JANUARY . 29—Tech. 13—Peru. 28—Rochester. 20-21—County {’rney. / FEBRUARY 3—At Cathedral. 14—At Ben Davis. 4—Ben PNavis. 18-—At Garfield, T.H. 8—At Jasper. ‘' 22—At Delphi, 11—Cathedral. 24—Center Grove.
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STORES
first Conference defeats in the bare
the latest inflicted by Michigan,
achievements in the second round
performance was that of Iowa's Capt. Ben Stephens, who scored 20 of his team’s points against Minnesota. He now leads the Big Ten |
gangling Illinois | center, caged 13 points in vain as _ 4 his team succumbed to a last-half! #
Kundla connected for 11 points as.
.
le
to beat and that Chicago no longer |
The “upset” victories broke a_five-
standpoint the Gophers are tied for &
Card Is Bee |
{
®
Livingstons
Indiana Theater Bn
