Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 October 1940 — Page 9
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 9, 1940
A Hug-Press By The Angel beats Dusek
~ M. Tillet Is Very Hard to Contact
In the event-you don't know what bear hug and a press are (or is,| or it happens at one and the same | ime), ask Joe Dusek. That, or they, are what turned ‘him, of the great Omaha family of wrestlers, into another martyr] for The Angel at the Armory last night. | Mr. Dusek was all set (in the} dressing room) to achieve the first]
Hargrave
Hoosier Bob
By J. E. O'BRIEN IT was just a year ago that Bob Hargrave, Notre Dame’s first-string quarterback from Evansville, popped into pigskin prominence. Only a sophomore then, was entrusted with guiding the first team: against Georgia Tech and he marched his fellow backs twice through the
fall that any man in America has §&
t ned out to be the perfect devil | inside those ropes. And Mr. Dusek |
ent back to Omaha awaiting the | Il. to churn with more humble!
ver M. Maurice Tillet, who is The | ngel, but once again The Angel nd homely grunters. The only way you can get hold of | he Angel, on account he's built | close to the ground, is by telephone | and then you don’t get his number. § | The crowd, ‘and oh what a gate| r Mr, Lloyd Carter, tossed away nemptied popcorn boxes and | started to leave even before Mr. usek was counted flattened in the! second and deciding fall. ; There were some better bouts. Ole us Sonnenberg tossed George] Tragos, address St. Louis, in 16 min- | utes of perspiring. Ray Villmer, | who came from St. Louie on the| | same train with George, scored his eighth straight vietory here with | Len Mecalusco as his victim. Power- | house Frank Sexton, Akron, and Al’ velock, Toronto, called it even |
f
after 30 minutes of throwing each §&
other out of the ring.
Could Be Shorter
EAST LANSING, Oct. 9 (NEA) .— - Mat Szczepanski, Michigan State end, gave typesetters a break. by shortening his name to Sepanski. Dionysius Economopolous, sophomore guard, is still holding out.
Engineers for a 17-14 victory.
sentful of Mr. Hargrave's march as they were of Gen. Sherman's,
If the Georgians are as
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there should be an abundance of fireworks Saturday when the two teams come together South Bend. But to get back to Hargrave's part in that 1939 game. Steve Sitko's first-period field goal had given the Irish a 3-0
lead, Coach Elmer Lavden sent Hargrave. into action with
ond quarter. kick, two plays and Georgia Tech
| was across the goal with a 7-3 | lead. It was then Hargrave aligned |
his cavalry for two .drives of 65
[ and 45 yards, respectively, which | | required | and gave Notre Dame two touch- | downs.
only five plays
After receiving the kickoff on the Irish 35, Bob Saggau passed
to Lou Zontini for 23 vards. Zon- | | tini added six more, and the Irish | moved ahead for another five on | a fine against Tech. Joe Thesing's | | 25-vard getaway put the ball on | the six, from where Saggau drove | { the remaining distance.
A kickoff, a punt and
Thesing and
picked up five
Hargrave's judgment significance when completed its schedule with only one more defeat, 7 to 6, at
| the hands of Duke, and when an "alert defense held all other teams |
to a maximum of one touchdown. But don’t get the idea that
| young Bob can't pack the pellet
himself. During the last cam-
~~~ ~~ ~~ “THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES . Hargrave Leads the Irish
again at After |
the | first team at the start of the sec- | There was a blocked |!
apiece |
it was | . Notre Dame's ball 55 yards from | Hargrave called for a | Saggau-Bud Kerr pass, which was | | good for 22 yards. Zontini propelled for a first down. | | Saggau | Thesing went the remaining eight | to score, |
and |
acquired | Tech |
a
~
7
Notre Dame Still Has Lots of Work to Do, Says Layden -
Eimer Picked a Few Wrong Ones Last Week, but, Texas-l. U. Didn’t Surprise Him
Bowling
The new West Side Bowling Center comes through today with the No. 1 score, a 694 rolled last night by Paul Stemm of the West Side Classic League. Second goes to Clarence Boldt of the- Speedway . loop, who came through with a 687 at Sturm’s. The “shooting stars”:
Paul Stemm, West Side Classio . Clarence Boldt, Speedway Elery Corden, Bubble Up ....
SetetetOn
. EEA (oad al nd WUC hm
2x vl QO
ic ssic .
LO ciaessii B
v 4 n Recreation
, Industrial Jess Smythe, City . .... ; | Lee Royer, $t. Phillin’s No. 1 | Weiper, West Side Classic ........... Roy Kirby, Commercial H. Dew, Recreation ..|............... Vaughn Cook, Sahara Grotto
i | Clarence Baker, Speedway.
s ‘Central Normal Coach Layden At Home Saturday
Jeff Atherton, City The second Big Satyrday of college football was full of upsets, : | Ed Klee, I. A. C. Class tory over Tulane, Virginia's 17-14 over Yale, Franklin-Marshall's 23-21 Simmons, Recreation (I was on' Mike Sansone, Recreation { Holy Cross and Lehigh!) \ ; John Mencin, City ous was Georgetown’s 12-0 victory over Temple, my DI. Norman, Shrine ” | Logan, West Side Classic hardly be called an upset I picked the Hoosiers on WoSeh When I took Nebraska over Minnesota, I was umph, therefore, came as no great surprise the full margin of the Vols’ superority) is considered that was one of my guesses, too Times Special
By ELMER LAYDEN Notre Dame Football Coach oh : sen-| Toad “Wiltur. Specdvag sations, and thought provokers. : Ed Klee, I A. C. Cla; Generally classified as upsets last week would be Auburn’s 20-14 vic- 3 ‘Burrell, Parkway . .. over Dartmouth. My personal upsets would include these three plus Sap iiensen. City vein) L. S. Us 26-0 over Holy Cross and Case's 26-7 over Lehigh. Be Hae area : >. Hindel, West Side Classic . The rest of my selections which went awry I oN Bera Gite would call misses rather than upsets, The most seri- § Dwight Hiner, Sahara Grot ; ; 5 ; | Pfister, Fountain Square pick This means just one thing—Morrison hasn't a Raiph Gentry, Herfi-Jones passer The Texas 13-6 victory over, Indiana can | J. Zimmerle, West Side Classic ...... George Seal oi Schuck, the assumption that they were nearly as good as they M. Ranes, § were cracked up to be banking on the Indian sign which the Cornhuskers seemed to hold over the Gophers—the Minneosta tri- | | Way down South the complete subjugation of Duke by Tennessee (the 13-0 score does mot express ian upsel TI happened to be on the right side of that | one—by the flip of a coin Stanford, 13; Oregon, 0— I point with special pride, however, to my call onthe Pitt-Missouri| game, in which .-I predicted that Christman’s passes, more potent than|
9
“
— | Manchester at | Field.
souri, 13 Pitt's power prevailed over| Missouri's throwing |outmanned Pacific i . : If I seem to be gloating a bit over Cific in acpi play. these predictions that came true, it's only because I want to make you| ye had score tie] forget my half-dozen or more misses down. 4 our fourih by margins ranging from a touch-| down to two points.
players as Notre Dame until after the next: three Saturdays: Oct. 12 touch-| 19 and 26. will invade
the Warriors’
Stanford on the Upswing
la : en hy Several games Saturday provoke ur substitutes as teams, whereas|the opposition.
DANVILLE, Ind., Oct. 9.—Central
his running, would not be enough to win, but that Pitt would have to get| Normal College will open its home three touchdowns to come on top ‘The score was Pittsburgh, 19: Mis-| schedule Saturday against North olclock on Tiber
| Pacific employed at least as many The Warriors will be at home for
On the 19th Valparaiso camp, The mistaken impression of the While on the 26th, which is the annumerical facts—a common fallacy nual home-coming game, St. Joseph —resulted froi . our alternate use of | College of Rensselaer will furnish
The Warriors ‘starting lineup will |
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"PAGE 9 probably be Schwartz, quarterback; Boalbey, fullback; Clark, left half; { Allen, right half; Pilarski and JackIson, ends; Hess and Janeway,
‘tackles; Olin and Etter, guards, and ' Balcerzak, center.
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; lor in small groups. When we sent| | Stanford's 13-0 over Oregon Wwas|in our third ih players, the score {the second sign of the season $oint-| was 25-7 with only a few minutes ling to the way back up for the In-!jeft to play. The Golden Tigers (dians under Clark Shaughnessy, late! made their gallant fight not against (of the late Chicago. |superior numbers but against suU. 8. C, 0; Oregon State, 0. This: perior weight and individual ability. | |second straight tie of the favored i | Trojans signifies that Howard Jones ! : Po : is re-building slowly—an impression | paign he returned eight punts for supported by the report tha he is a total of 97 yards, the most |fiddling with a double-wing forma-! { notable being the 50-yard jaunt |tjon. he made late in the North- | aa)01and started the season with BASKETBALL | western game to set up the only pretty bright prospects in its own! Tonight's schedule in the ‘warm-' touchdown, class—Penn’s 51-0 defeat of Mary- up tourney” at the Pennsy Gym: | Twenty vears old, han seyed land, therefore, is new notice that 7:15—Drikold vs. Stewart-Warner. | Bob is an honor student in the the Quakers continue to mean busi-|3:13—Dual Temps vs. Kay's. | Notre Dame college of commerce ness. Texas A. & M., 1939 national oe Fir t Beveridge Paps. and as a freshman won numerals champs, made a similar demonstra-| savers. 17: K. siars. 14. | in three sports. He was out for | tion (41-6) against Tulsa, considered {iil Tov Mit. 45; Pure ou. 28, | basketball and baseball last -sea- 'a title contender in the Missouri ot ps Bee" 31; Mu. Jackson son and was awarded a mono- Valley. S. M. U.s 20-7 defeat of BASEBALL | | gram in the latter sport. He used North Texas Teachers is not as un-| The Franklin Cubs, who will play his 5 feet 11 inches and 180 | impressive as might appear — the at Austin Sunday, want a road game nds to win the spring practice | Leachers gave the Mustangs a Sunday, Oct. 20, with “the strongest | pounas toy bart Blockin tough battle last year. Cornell's 34-0! team in the state.” Anyone believing| { medal for guaries backs bio € rout of Colgate has double meaning he's got the “strongest team” may the secondary. nv. | —the Big Red is as good as has been! write James Campbell, 699 E. Ohio The only Hoosier on Layden's |oynected and this is not going to be!St, % starting (eleven, Hargrave at- Andy Kerr's year. | tended Memorial High School in | : . Evansville, In case youre not ac- Harmon Gets His Help 'Roines Alumni Give { gquainted that's thie preparatory | Michigan's. 21-14 conquest of! % . i | pigskin production line operated Michigan State "has paradoxical (Grid Equipment | by Coach Don Ping. : |significance. Tom Harmon Sepred| > Ping is regarded as something all the Wolverines’ points, vet this| Associated Roines Alumni of Man-! of a wizard at finding crack hacks game demonstrated that Michigan | ual High School presented the fresh-! | and numbers among his products is not a one-back team. Harmon's men football team with shoulder] the late Tom McGannon of Pur-- effectiveness ~ was sharpened and pads and shoes yesterday afternoon] | due, Len Will, first-string full- [pointed by the excellent work of in a brief ceremony at Delavan! back this vear at Columbia and two of his mates, Nelson and West-| Smith Field. | | the sensational Bill Hillenbrand, |fall, notably the latter. “When the| The Association was represented! who is expected to be carrying the spot was on Harmon, his mates car-|by Miss Arda Knox, sponsor: Charles 5 mail for Bo McMillin at Indiana ried the mail. When the Spartans Menges, treasurer and athletic com- | RI! SoTL. Vout shifted their attention away from mittee chairman: James Vander- | Bob miieh a three-sport star in Tom, the latter did his stuff. moere. committee member; Joe | TIRE SERVICE CO. io} hool. captaining the bas- 5 Exciting games were numerous Greenberg of the active Roines Club, | : . fh high sehovl,.cafiianing i |. asain all over the country. and Marion F. Clark, alumni presi- | 140 WwW Vi { St ketball team. He was oy en . | Among the standout performances dent, who made the presentation. | « Yermon . | state football hohars jn 1937 after oo 6 Purdue's and Michigan State’'s| The equipment was accepted on] > f playing with the 1935 state cham- | comebacks respectively against Ohio behalf of the athletic staff by wil- | Li ncoin 5107 pions. Hos " State and Michigan. And if Georgia Tech wants an q, 33.19 win over a veteran Mar-| Manual. ally in the anti-Hargrave cam- quette team not only was sensapaign it might call on Central tional put should be included among, | High School of Evansville. The the thought prdvokers. There's been | Bears were massacred by Me-. a lot of optimism radiating from! morial each year Hargrave played Madison. The Badgers apparently | with the latter. The point to all aren't whistling in the dark, | this is that Bob is the son of | Jasper Hargrave, Central High | School teacher.
Pacific Not Outmanned
| The Auburn-Tulane affair was a battle of daring, wide-open offenses.
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Butler Faces Another ‘Little Notre Dame’ Here Saturda
It appears as if Butler is going
season, : | In two of their three football games this season, the Bulldogs have ‘been opposed by the offensive “box” system, namely Purdue and St. | Joseph, whose coaches, Mal Elward and Joe Dienhart, respectively, played
for the Irish.
Now Clem F. Crowe, the first of meet the Bulldogs in:the first conseven brothers to matriculate at test played between the two schools. Notre Dame, and a member of the| Jmmortal Seven Mules, will lead his! pack of Musketeers
_ the Musketeers and already has
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from Xavier, is a Hoosier product from Lafayette. | University in Cincinnati to the But- And the family name, symbolic of ler Bowl Saturday afternoon to tradition in and around South
| Pitt-Missouri was brimming with [ thrills. Oklahoma and Oklahoma Aggies had the biggest and closest |scorefest of the day, 29-27. Inci{dentally, those Aggies look better [than ever for the Missouri Valley Y championship. | Notre Dame's opening against {Alonzo A. Stagg's game and clever Pacific team did not impress ob- | servers and showed us that we have plenty of work to do before we get lhoth attack and defense working smoothly. I do not, however, agree with those who reported that we
to play “little Notre Dame teams” all
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| scored 1940 | victories over George- | town College (Ky.) and St. Joseph. | The Queen City boys held the! { strong University of Kentucky | eleven to a 13-to-0 game two weeks | ago. The St. Joseph affair was a 19- | to-6 triumph and Butler in its | opener scored a 27-to-6 victory over the Pumas, giving the local Blue | and White team a touchdown advantage on paper.
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