Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 February 1939 — Page 6

"Four Bouts To Be

. Minn,,-and Frankie Hart, 185, To1

| son of Miami will never miss from

_ Princeton triangle meet in Phila-

: row night. The headliner features a

' Chicago, and Orville Brown, Wichi ita, Kas

i | gether Jim McMillen, Chicago, and

defeat here at the hands of Brown,

By Eddie Ash GLOVES KINGS RESUME DRILLS

CHICAGO MEET IS NEXT HURDLE

TEE eight champions in the open class of The TimesLegion Golden Gloves tournament resumed heavy

firing in their training quarters today. . . « A week from tonight the Indianapolis’ amateur kings will be in

Chicago throwing punches at

the Stadium in competition

with teams from 46 other cities. Three rings will be used each night of the Tournament of Champions. . . . The 112, 118, 126 and 135-pound divisions will box on Monday, Feb. 27; the 147, 160,

. 175-pound divisions and the heayyweights will go to the

post on Tuesday, Feb. 28, and survivors in all eight divisions will compete on Wednesday, March 1. Weighing in and medical examinations will be held at the Chicago Stadium between 12 noon and 2 p. m.

on all three days.

# 2 ”

# o ”

ON Monday the Chicago show will start at 6 p. m. and

the 112-pound class will

lead off. . . . On Tuesday

the action will start at 6 p. m. and the 147-pound boys will lead off. . . . On Wednesday the starting bell will sound at 7 p. m. and the 112-pound survivors will lead off. Drawings for matches will be made each day at 2 p. m. . . . Eight-ounce gloves will be used in all bouts and each bout will be scheduled for three rounds of two

minutes each.

The following Indianapolis lads will go to bat the first night: Bill Cummings, 112 pounds; William Reed, 118 pounds; Bud Cottey, 126 pounds, and Milton Bess, 135 pounds. On the second night the remainder of the Indianapolis team will see action, as follows: Jack Durham, 147 pounds; Willard Reed, 160 pounds; Charles Duncan, 175 pounds; Eric Stone, heavyweight. Suryivors, of course, will don the mitts again on the third night.

2 2 2

” 2 8

0% pound allowance will be permitted in each weight at the Chicago meet, that is a flyweight (112 pounds) may weigh 113 pounds.

. No boy will be permitted to box

more than twice in one evening.

Cities have been divided into two groups for the first round in all

weights. . .

. Division has been made according to population and

Indianapolis is grouped with Cleveland, Cincinnati, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, Nashville, Omaha, Oklahoma City, Dayton, Detroit, St. Louis,

Kansas City and Chicago qualifiers.

The show’s third night competition will complete the quarter-

finals. . .'. Semifinals and finals March 10. #

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wili be fought at Chicago on

” 8 a

NDIANAPOLIS boxers will depart for Chicago Sunday morning and probably will share a private car with the Lafayette center

champions. . .. will be sent to bed for a long sleep.

The hoys will be entertained that evening and then

Each boxer in the Tournament of Champions will receive a

souvenir gold button. . . ceive a diamond studded gold glove;

. The eight champions (March 10) will re-

the eight runnersup ‘an emsrald

studded silver glove, and the 16 alternates chosen on the intercity

team to meet New York at Chicago studded bronze glove.

2 2 2

on March 29, will receive a ruby

” ” 2

OUR Indiana centers have yet to name their teams, but this job

will be completed by Wednesday. .

. They are South Bend,

finals tonight; Gary, finals tomorrow night; Lafayette and Michigan City, finals on Wednesday night. g - Alfred Osborne, Indianapolis flyweight” champion in 1937, was returned the winner in the Ji2-pond division in the Evansville

Golden Gloves tourney last week. . ville this winter.

2 # 2

. He is a CCC enrollee at Wades-

E # ”

p= for the Tournament of Champions at Chicago: Feb. 217, 28, 40 cents, 66 cents, $1.10; March 1. 75 cents, $1.10 and $1.65. . . .

For the Finals, March 10: $1.10, $1.

seats and $3.30 seats for the March

65 and $2.20. . , . The 55 cents

10 show have been sold out.

for tickets send money order payable to Chicago Tribune Charfies, ‘Inc., Golden Gloves ticket manager, Tribune Tower, Chicago,

Heury Card Lies Ahead For Indoor

NEW YORK, Feb. 20 (U. P.).— John Borican may give Glenn Cunningham quite a. race tonight in the 1000-yard feature of Newark’s Seton Hall games, leadoff meet in a week of heavy competition that will be climaxed by the National A. A. U. indoor championship Saturday night. Cunningham, invincible as ever in the mile, also is the world indecor record holder for 1000 yards. He set the mark of 2:10.1 four years ago after no special training for the event, so he should be well able to test the mettle of Borican, lanky Elberton, N. J., Negro, regarded as the niiddle-distance find of the year. The other meets leading up to the nationals include the 369th Infantry meet in New York Wednesday night, the "Columbia-Penn-

delphia Wednesday afternoon, and

On Armory Card

Four wrestling bouts will be on the program at the Armory tomor-

return match between Bob Bruns, Semi-windup action brings to-

Dick Powell, West Virginia, both heavyweights. In the two supporting bouts, Whitey Wahlberg, 183, Duluth,

ronte, Can., meet, and Irish Dan O'Conner, 224, Boston, and Joe

- Camphell, 215, California, come to-| ‘gether.

Last week Bruns suffered his first

who used his Indian deathlock to win the deciding fall. :

Breaks 2 Marks Set By Mrs. Thompson

NEW YORK, Feb. 20 (U. P.).— Two national swimming records hat Mrs. Katherine Rawls Thomp-

collection belonged today to a York Girl, Lorraine Fischer. ‘Miss Fischer bettered two short yurse records as she won the ptropolitan A. A. U. 100-yard astroke championship in the 25d pool of the Women’s Swimming pciation yesterday. She covered distance in 1:18.4, and en route was clocked at 50 yards in°0:34.5 } better Mrs. Thompson's respective 18.5 and 0:346.

Paddle Deadline

ntries in the first annual City Scout table tennis tournament, e held Wednesday at the Paddle will close at noon tomorrow.

Track Stars

the Veterans of Foreign Wars Meet in Boston. Five contenders anisred. for national honors appear almost cer-

tain of emerging victorious, Cun-

ningham proved again last Saturday night in the N. Y. A. C. games hat there isn’t anyone who can give him a race in the mile. . Borican took the half mile event for his seventh win in nine starts this winter. Glenn looks like a cinch to win the national 1500 meter title, and Borican the 10,000 meter crown.

In Same Class With Lash

They are in the same class with Don Lash at 5000 meters, Herbert Thompson in the 60-meter sprint, and Fordham’s quartet of speedsters in the 1600-meter relay. A. A. U. Secretary Dan Ferris announced another top-flight competitor had entered in Bill Watson, the big University of Michigan Negro, who will shoot for the broad jump and shotput titles. Including Cunningham and Lash, 1¢ defending champions have en-; tered. They are Francis Slater, Fordham, 1000 meters; Otto Kotraba, New York, 1500- ‘meter walk; Frank Ryan, Columbia, shotput; Dick Ganslen, Columbia, pole vault; Lloyd Thompson, Xavier, high jump; Edward Gordon, New York, broad jump; Irving Folswartshny, Rhode Island State, 35-pound weight throw; N. Y. U. 1000 and 1600-meter relay, and New York A. C. team champion.

6 New Marks Set At Illinois Relays

CHAMPAIGN, Ill, Feb. 20 (U. P.) —Wilbur Greer, Michigan State sprint star, added his name to the list of world record performers in the Illinois Relays today with a mark of 7.4 seconds over a 75-yard course during the 16th annual carnival Saturday night. His time equalled the record shared since 1928 by Notre Dame's Jack Elder and H. A. Russéll of Michigan. Although Greer’s exceptional time merely tied Elder's meet record, six|’ other carnival marks were battered in the shot put, 1500 meters, one and two-mile university relays, one

miles college relays and university mile team race.

runner, came through with two new records, himself, lowering the 1500 meters mark to 3:58 and the individual mile to 4:25.7. .

Strictly Hoosier

| Times Special 4 LAFAYETTE, Feb. 20.—Purdue’s

basketball squad is an all-Hoosier affair. Every member of Coach Ward Lambert's current team is a native of Indiana. The average dis-

Greg Rice, Notre Dame distance |

tance from the campus to the home of the

Troublesome

Illinois Team F aces Purdue

State College Basketball Outfits in 25 Games This Week.

BIG TEN STANDING

Pct. TP 875 335 450 329 667 625 S71 500 375 250 Iowa 222 Chicago 222

By LEO DAUGHERTY

Indiana University’s basketball problem is beating the flu and if the Hoosiers can whip that rap they're’ “in” as Western Conference champion. There doesn’t seem to be anything in the Big Ten which looms as hot as Branch McCracken’s Big Five and they've got only four more to bowl over. Of course, Purdue’s among the lot and when Branch takes the Crimson to West Lafayette a week from tonight, it will be—for him—like going to a party that you really don’t care a sip about. However, Indiana got the nod by a nose in one argument with the Boilermakers and we're saying they'll get it again, and in so say-

Indiana .... Ohio State ... Illinois Minnesota .... Purdue Northwestern... Wisconsin ..

[snsunreenisg

other side of the street when we spy a Purdue man. The Indiana team, whose temperature is running as high as its Conference standing, collides with Iowa down there at the Bloomington fieldhouse tonight. The . Hawkeyes, sharing the depths of last place with the Maroons of Chicago, have been

‘Ibeaten once by Indiana.

Nice Ride for Hawkeyes

Just about all that can be said about Iowa and tonight’s game is that the corn country boys will have

a nice ride and should enjoy it, hecause they are likely to find nothing else to their enjoyment down there except the classy floor. Piggy Lambert's Boilermakers move over to Champaign tonight for a duel with the troublesome but beatable Illini while Wisconsin goes to Minneapolis, champion boo town of the year, to meet Minnesota, and the bruised Wildcats go to Columbus to try off-and-on Ohio State. There isn’t much left of the Big Ten fight for either Indiana or Purdue, save their own little party. After engaging Iowa tonight, the Hoosiers have only to struggle with Minnesota at Bloomington, Purdue there, and Michigan at Ann Arbor on March 4.

Hoosiers a Bit Slow

* Purdue, after its trip to Illinois, has Michigan and Indiana at home, then goes to now second-place Ohio

State and winds up at West Lafayette against the very-much-spank-ed Chicago Maroons on March 6. We're just about as slow as the Indiana team was Saturday night in getting around to recording that the sick Hoosiers beat Northwestern, 44 to 37, while Purdue was bowing to Wisconsin, 32 to 30, in an overtime affair at Madison. Mr. McCracken found out a couple things for sure Saturday which he

before. They were that Junie Andres and Bob Dro are better than twofifths of his ball team. Without those ailing stars in the first half, Indiana came closer to being whipped than was comfortable for their hackers. It was 14 to 14 at the halfway mark and typewriters were poised for the recording of an upset.

Here They Come!

Then in came Andres and Dro. And with the banishment of Northwestern’s Voights, who is constructed like Everett Marshall, the wrestler, his aides faded into darkness. It was this department’s thought that perhaps even if it did mean

have been spared his efforts. Ordinarily he’s all over the floor, but Saturday night the Jeffersonville lad Slvays seemed to be yielding to his ches

ing column, but Curly Armstrong held high the point torch and peppered in 16 points.

well,

A couple statisticians were at Bloomington with a new kind of deviceand it recorded 3.85 miles of travel for Bill Menke during the. ball game. That’s some meandering. The games for Hoosierland’s entries in the Big Ten are only four of 25 which are on this week’s card for all state college teams.

night at DePauw and at home FPriday with Wabash. Oh! Did we tell you about Marquette bouncing Notre Dame around, 47 to 22? Butler likes to think about that one. The Irish are at the Fieldhouse on March 1. The week’s workout:

: TONIGHT owa at Indian Purd Tin is.

at Earlham at Ball State.

. TOMORROW ,Butler at DePau angville at Indiana State. r a Anderson at Ta Yor ery State. WEDNESDAY Akron at Ball State. Central Normal at Valparaiso,. THURSDAY Shurtleff at Rose Poly. = FRIDAY Wabash at Butler. i xr Huntin Shurtleff at Oakland ois. Hanover at Central Normal. : SATURDAY Michigan at Purdu Maan at ea Notre Dame at Marquette. DePauy at Earlham Sa maral iso at Manchester

ing think it's wise to dodge to the].

probably had a strong hunch about | mend;

i Carnegie Tech, 46;

the loss of a game, Andres could]: €%

He didn’t get around to the scor- |;

If Andres and Dro get well, well, |” {Indiana will go the championship st

18. Butler will be busy tomorrow

|his retired from baseball to “fecafe here and will not report to the

MONDAY,

FEBRUARY 20, 1989

Cracks Record SOMERSWORTH, N. H., Feb. 20 (U.P) —Clifton Cody of Manchester, N. H., clipped nearly 20 seconds off the world record to win the one-mile national snow. shoe championship yesterday.

Hawkeye Five Is Fl w-Figh ting Hoosiers’ Foe

Akron Team Here Tonight

Eastern Division Leaders Boast One League Loss.

The Akron Firestones basketball] team will play the Indianapolis Kautsky five tonight in the Butler Fieldhouse at 8:30 o’clock. This will be the second appearance here this season for the leaders of the eastern division in the National Basketball League. The Firestones beat the locals when the

two played here and have been beaten themdelves only once in league play. That defeat was given them by the Akron Goodyear quintet last week. Johnny Moir and Paul Nowak,

of the visiting team’s outstanding players and Moir is one of the leading scorers in -the loop. Indianapolis now stands in second place in the western division of the league, and is one and onehalf games behind Oshkosh. Firestones have a game average of 44.7 points against the Kautsky average of 42.2. The curtain raiser will be played between the Goldsmith Secos and the Royal Crown Colas at 7:30.

PROBABLE STARTING LINEUPS Kautskys Firestones 3 Young .....:. 2ufisiia 20 Johnny Moir 4 Sines fies 28 “Swede” Johnson ANA my e.....26 Paul Nowak 13 Jerry Bus 3 “Slim” Shoun REPLACEMENTS

ALL-AMERICANS — (9) Dave Williams, (8) Herman Schuessler. FIRESTONES — (11) Jack Oxburn, i) “Toby’” Tobin, (27) “Soup” Cable Rony wel, (10) Ted Migdal, “Rip” he lesen,

Net Scores

LOCAL HIGH SCHOOLS Broad R ipole, 30: 36: Zionsville, 30. Cathedra Warren Central, 27. 253 Camnbellsbure. 23. Park School, 44: Ral eigh, Silent Hoosiers. ‘46; Saered Heart, 30.

© OTHER HIGH SCHOOLS Arcadia. 25; Westfie'd,

Bosse (Evansville), 36: Decatur Central, 47; Central

80; Clark Hunitngbure, 29: Frinceton, 28.

ishawaka, 31; Elwoo . Pendleton, 25; Greenfield, 21.

14, Terre Haute, 18. Ry

e), 32. a (Gary), (Ham-

fie Rietz, Evansville, 29; Bickneli, 23. South Side (Ft. Wayne), 45; Salem, 19. Stilesville, 36; Ontaoe, St. ary’s o (Anderson), 45; St. Xavier (Louisville), 2 St. eri %o: Fair Oakes Washington, 28; rakes, 25.

STATE COLLEGES Franklin, 35; Ball State, 2 Indiana, 44: No orthwestern Jackson, Mich “4 Junior eo: 49; Concordia, Rt. Wayne. 27. Marquett e eh Notre Dame, 22. N. A. Huntington, 53, ‘Oakland Cit jot *aanovor. 38. Taylor, 10; Gitin, 28 Wiscony' in, 32; oo 80 (overtime), OTHER COLLEGES

Baltimore, Case, 59; Bald dwin-Wallace, 30. Chicago, 34: Michigan, 29. Cincinnati, 35: Marshall, 30. ( 47: Navy, 39. . Cornell, 46; Harv ard, 3% ' Dartmouth, 513 Princeton DePaul, Chicago, 39; relchion, 81. DeSales, 56; Wr LR 4i. "Drury College, 27; Culyer-Stockion, 20. Fairmount Teachers, 60; Be Glenville Teachers, 70; West Virginia

Wesleyan, 56. G College, 38; Washington (St. John Carroll, 47: Western Reserve, 46.

{ Tennessee, 34 (double (Pa.)

‘Mansfield Teachers, 37; Indiana

Teachers, Surray State Teachers, 42; Alabama Oaklahoma, 60; Towa State, 41. Ohio State, 53; Jowa, a. Pennsylvania, 40; Yal Rice, 39; Southern Meinedist, 3¢. Mary’s (Mich.), 5%; Ferris, 5 . Salem, 46; Ald Sis Broaddus Slippery Rock Teachers, a

0, Susquehanna, 46; Moravian. 29. Swarthmore, 46; Johns Hopkins, 3%. Texas, 41; Baslor oa: el, 40: Fen Toledo, 56; Davi Towson State Teachers, 29; St. John's

‘University ‘of Detroit. 50; Western (Mich.) State Teachers. 34. Villanova, 31: high, 29. Washburn, 35; a 31, Warrenshorg Teachers, 87: Missouri

Schaol of Mines, 2 ‘War . 5: Northern (Mich.) State

ayne, R86; Teachers, 45; Pittsburgh, 42. 43; Ohio Wes-

40.

Edin-

38. West, Virginia. avier (Cincinnati), leyan, 30

Pat Malone Retires ‘To Operate Cafe

ALTOONA, Pa., Feb. 20 (U. P).— Percy L. (Pat) Malone, often called “Peck’s bad boy of baseball” for his violation. of rules during his years of pitching ‘in the major leagues, open. a

Oakland club in the Pacific Coast League, he said today. For ten years he was a pitcher for the Chicago Cubs and the New York Yankees until his release by

formerly of Notre Dame, are (wo

basketball greats, is expected to be

Fieldhouse.

Paul (Butch) Nowak, regarded as one of Notre Dame's all-time

at center for the Akron Firestones

basketball team when it opposes the local Kautskys tonight at the

They Give Fire to the Firestone Basketeers

A former North Carolina. State star, Mally (Swede) Johnson is one “of the important .cogs in the Firestones’ scoring machine. He will team at forward with Johnny Moir, another Notre Dame product, in: this eve-

ning’s contest.

Bumper Crop of Prep Cage Contes ts

By United Press Weeks of hard work near an end for Indiana’s 800-odd high school basketball teams. Most of them finish their schedules this week-end and then begin priming for the

round of tournaments next month. Coincidental to the curtain-drop-1/ping ‘this week-end will come the pairings for sectional, regional, semifinal and: final tournaments. Drawings will be held Friday at the State Athletic Association offices and the results will be distributed to the state Saturday. As the season goes onto the skids this week, the schedules close with an exceptional -array of “top” games. The layout for tomorrow

nights appears certain to add more wreckage to the pile of lost hopes that has reached record heights this year. Where three of the State’s major teams had unbeaten records for the year a month ago, not a single club now remains in this bracket, excepting several small teams. The only big quintet with a presentable record is Huntingburg, the Southern club which has been beaten- only once. And only three teams can boast of suffering only two defeats, namely South Bend Central, Jeffersonville and the defending State champions, Ft. Wayne South Side.

Watch North Liberty, Gosport

* If you're watching for teams from smaller schools which have good chances of coming through the regular schedule undefeated, keep your eye on North Liberty in the yorth and Gosport in the southern half of the state. They have yet to suffer a setback. North Liberty, averaging about 50 points a game, can finish the season with 23 straight victories if it gets past Walkerton Friday night. This team beat Washington Clay of South Bend, 50-31, to annex No. 22 Friday. Gosport can-finish its schedule with 22 straight triumphs by overcoming Monrovia Friday. Getting into the major divisions, Huntingburg ended its campaign Saturday, winning its 21st victory in 22 games and rolling up a point total for the year of 668 to 462 for opponents. The final Hunter victim was Princeton, 29 to 28.

Jeff Faces Kentuckians

From the deluge of upsets over the week-end, the defeat of-South Bend Central by La Porte stands out. The Slicers handed the Bears their second trimming of the year; 40-38. On Friday the Bears end their schedule against Elwood. Jeffersonville, winner of 17 of its 19 games, including a 46-33 decision Friday over Bedford, rings down the curtain Wednesday against Male of Louisville, Ky. The state champion Archers of Ft. Wayne, with better an an outside chance of reaching the state finals again this year, beat Salem Saturday, 45-19, and end their schedule Friday against Gary Horace Mann. Three teams which have been stopped only three times all year include Muncie Burris, Franklin and

the Yankees foll the 1937 sea- |, son. Last —— with the

Wednesday, Friday and Saturday |

each added two scalps over the week-end, the former beating Knightstown (44-25) and Terre Haute (33-23), and Reitz stopping Sullivan (34-30) and Bicknell (2923). Franklin won its eighth straight South Central Conference victory over Rushville, 23-20. The Grizzlies face Indianapolis Washington tomorrow and Martinsville Friday to end their schedule but have already clinched the loop championship. Likewise, Reitz clinched the

Catholic Tourney Drawings Made

Times Special FT. WAYNE, Feb. 20.—Cathedral

High School of Indianapolis will not see action in the Indiana Catholic High School Athletic Association tournament until the Secor day of

the event. Drawings for the affair were announced Saturday. Ten schools will play in the tournament which will be conducted next Friday, Saturday and Sunday. The schedule is as follows: ’ FRIDAY 7:30 P. M.—Game 1, Michigan City vs. Collegeville, M.—Game 2, Evansville vs.

Huntington. SATURDAY 2:30 .P. M.—Game 3, Decatur vs. Hammond. ‘3:30 P, M.—Game 4, Anderson vs. Ft.

Ww . £750 M.—Game 5, South Bend vs. Inaianapols. 8:30. P. M.—Game 6, winner Game 1 vs, winner Game 2. SUNDAY 2 P. M.—Game 7, winner Game 3 vs.

winner Game 4. 3 P. M.—Game 8, winner Game 5 vs.

winner Game P. M.—Loser Game 7 vs. loser Game 8. 9 P. M.~Winner Game "% vs. winner Game 8.

Four Tilts Tonight In A. A. U. Tourney

The second half of the first round in the Marion County A. A. U. basketball tourney is to be completed at the Central Y. M. C. A. tonight. Four games are carded -as follows: %7:00—Hoosier A. C. vs. Indiana Central College Independents. 8:00—Y Seniors vs. Clifford Ind. Aces. 9:00—Lawrence Den-Zells vs. . Kempler Radio. : y 10:00—Lloyd’s Laundry, Butler University Bullpups, _ Quarterfinals will be staged to-

Franklin, vs.

‘morrow, semifinals on Wednesday

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‘Remains to Be Harvested This Week

Southern Conference crown by dispelling Bicknell. In the Southeastern Conference, Aurora clinched a title share over the week-end by beating Madison, 45-20. Aurora is in front now but Lawrenceburg still has a chance to tie it up. Rochested is in No. 1 spot in the Central Indiana loop as a result of a 25-23 victory over Plymouth but -is sharing the honor with Tipton. The title can go one way or the other this week. "beading games this week:

TOMORROW

Indianapolis Washington at Franklin. Gary Emerson at Hammond, Tech. East Chicago Washington at Hammond. Brazil at Greencastle. Elwood at Frankfort.

WEDNESDAY Louisville (Ky.) Male at Jeffersonville. FRIDAY

La Porte at South Bend, Washington. Walkerton at North Liberty. ‘Monrovia at Gosport. Elwood at South Bend, Central. Gary Horace Mann at Ft. Wayne, South, Franklin at Martinsville. Wabash at Kokomo. Ft. Wayne North at Huntington. . Frankfort at Logansport. Lafayette Jefferson at Lebanon. New Albany at Hammond. Alexandria at Muncie, Central. Anderson at Indianapolis, Shortridge. Ft. Wayne Central at Marion. Greencastle at Columbus, New Castle at Greenfield. Roches'er at Peru. Shelbyville at North Vernbn. Washington at Bloomington. : SATURDAY

Kirklin at Indianapolis, Park. Vincennes at Evansville, Bosse.

British Polo Star Injured Critically

PASADENA, Cal, Feb. 20 (U. P), —Capt. C. I. T. (Pat) Roark, Brit= ish international polo star, today was given an even chance to recover from a head injury he received dur-

ing a polo match at Midwick Field. Roark, playing with the Midwick

Squad against the British Inter~ national Polo Team yesterday, was crushed under his mount in the fourth chukker. He was carried from the field unconscious as 3000 spec tators looked on. The British team defeated Mid. wick, 12 to 7, largely because of the loss of Roark, a nine-goal player.

At Huntington Memorial Hos« pital, a staff of brain specialists ex= amined Roark and said he had suffered “an acute brain injury.” They gave him only a 50-50 chance.

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