Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 December 1940 — Page 5
J C. 2, 194
9 EXPERTS URGE | ECONOMIC UNION
‘The
VA KILLER SUSPECT & With
SEIZED BY POSSE
Stanford Indians’ T Formation Confuses the Defense as the Plays Start
Backfield Men Criss-Crossing
a
1 Standlee and gives it to Kmetovic,
Football T as Old as [
Model T Auto
"By ART KRENZ NEA Staff Correspondent :
- What is this newfangled “T” ormation used by the Rose Bowlound Stanford football team? - Because of the “T’s” use by Stanford and the Chicago Bears in their March to the National League pro championship, it seems due for wider adoption next year. A Stahford victory over Nebraska in the bowl game wouldn't do anything to deCrease its new popularity. © The “T" formation which has been shaking so many backs loose on the gridiron is no newer than the other model T which shook backs )se 20 years ago. For the “T” offense was employed before the football world ever heard of wingbacks, tailbacks and spinbacks. : Knute Rockne once used a form of. the “T,” dropped it when the One-second rule gave the defense time to shift to meet the attack. Success of the 1940 streamlined version depends on adept handling of the ball from center, expert éim- - Ing, finesse and a good passing attack. Passes must be a constant threat. The Bears used Sid Luckman, to spark the attack. Stanford uses Frankie Albert. From the “T” formation any one of the backs shifts to the left or right. A man in motion is used on every play exceut when punting. He serves as a ‘decoy pass receiver or carries out other assignments. He must come to a full second stop before the ball is snapped except when . only one man is in motion obliquely, which does not constitute a back- . feld shift (see diagram 3). : 8».
TO GET ‘some idea as to what Nebraska must stop in the bowl game, consider a few of Stanford's plays. The line is balanced. at quarterback, Hugh Gallarneau at left half, Norm Standlee at fullback and Pete Kmetovic at right half. On one pass play (see large diagram) two men are in motion. The right end moves out 15 yards and Kmetovic shifts to the left Winghack spot 10 yards outside left end. Albert takes the ball, fakes to Gallarneau who continues on out to the right flat zone, fakes again to Standlee who goes on to block the defensive right tackle, Albert then fades back to the left, passes to Kmetovic who has gone down from the left wingback spot. All this criss-crossing confuses the defensive linemen, who have their eyes glued on the men in motion. Diagrams 1, 2 and 3 picture three different line bucks. In the first—a straight power smash— Albert gives the ball to Standlee after Kmetovic has moved to the left wing. Gallarneau is in motion in diagram 2, and Kmetovic takes the ball from Albert and hits off right tackle. Gallarneau is in motion laterally in diagram 3. Albert fakes to
who hits to the right. In other variations Albert may
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SOME PLAYS RUN FROM
STANFORD'S *T' FORMATION
give the pall to Standlee after
faking to Kmetovic; or he may| The line|
start around end alone. must open holes quickly, as the ball carriers usually have nc inAerference. 2 8 8 DIAGRAM 4 has a blocker running ahead of the ball carrier.
time Stanlee is in motion to the left wing. Albert spins, tosses a lateral to Kmetovic as Gallarneau leads the way. What kind of a defense will stop all this? Ask Shaughnessy or George Halas of the Bears. Ask Ralph Jones,
It| coach at Lake Forest College, Chi-
is a wide sweep around the defen-| cago, which won the Illinois Col-
sive right end, but it may aiso go Jn the opposite direction. This
Bruins Buy Kitchen Unit for British
BOSTON, Dec. 26 (U. P.).—The Boston Bruin management announced last night that it had purchased a $2000 mobile field-kitchen unit, capable of feeding 500, for residents of Boston, England. The announcement was made prior to the Boston-New York Americans National Hockey League game which the Bruins won, 8-1.
FIGHT RESULTS
TLAND, Me., Dec. 26 (U. P.).—Coley Wea Ve: "of " Portiand, Knocked out Roxey Forgione, 160, of Philadelphia, in the fifth round of a scheduled 10-round
bout yesterday.
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legiate Conference. title with the “1.” It was Jones, incidentally,
who. added the man in motion to the “T.” It was he, too, who was freshman coach at Illinois when Halas played there. » ‘Whatever defense is used—a 7-2-2 or a T-1-2-1 or a 6-2-2-1— it's best to have the safety man pretty well back. : If he’s back far enough, maybe he can stop the ball carrier with a shoestring tackle.
Bowl Teams Back at Work As Gridiron Classics Near
By UNITED PRESS
NEW YORK, Dec. 26 (U. P.).— Four Fordham feotball regulars still nursed injuries suffered during the season as the team traveled by train today toward Dallas. to meet the Texas Aggies in the Cotton Bowl. Halfback Len Eshmont and end Jim = Lansing still had shoulder aches; end Vince Dennery was limping on a weak ankle and guard Tom Bennett has an eye infection. When the Fordham party of 57, including 31 players, left last night Coach Jim Crowley said he expected
all of them to be in shape to play idan. 1.
Vols Arrive
EDGEWATER PARK, Miss., Dec. 26.—Tennessee’s championship football team arrived here today to conclude training for the Sugar Bowl game against Boston College at New Orleans on New Year's Day. After yesterday's light workout at Knoxville, Coach Bob Neyland said “the team 4s a whole is shaping up slowly, but fairly well.”
9 6 : 9 He’s ‘Satisfied MIAMI, Dec. 26.—Allyn McKeen brought "his Mississippi State foot-
ball team here today to finish preparation for the Georgetown
game in the Orange Bowl, Jan. 1. He put the squad through a brief workout before leaving Starkville, Miss., yesterday. McKeen said he was “satisfied” with his club’s condition. Gene Rests BAY ST. LOUIS, Miss., Dec. 26.
— Coach Frank Leahy of Boston
College scheduled a stiff workout today-for his Eagles, who meet Tennessee in the Sugar Bowl next week. After their usual punting and passing drill yesterday, Leahy put the boys through a two-hour scrimmage session. Leahy excused All-America end Gene Goodreault, who is recovering from a wrenched knee, from the full scrimmage, but he did take part in the dummy workout. ®
Aggies at Work
COLLEGE STATION, Tex. Dec. 26.—Texas Aggies football players, back on the practice field after a two-day Christmas holiday, resumed preparations for meeting Fordham in the Cotton. Bowl at Dallas, Jan. 1.
Bulldogs ‘A-1’ TEMPE, Ariz, Dec. 26.—Arizona State’s Bulldogs leave today for their §l Paso engagement with Western Reserve in the Sun Bowl Jan. 1. Coach Dixie Howell pronounced his team in ‘“A-1” shape following their final workout here yesterday.
Red Cats Busy
CLEVELAND, Dec. 26.—Western Reserve’s Sun Bowl bound Red Cats resumed practice today after a three-day Christmas vacation.
Hoyas on Way
WASHINGTON, Dec. 26.—Georgetown’s Hoyas were en route to Miami today for their Orange Bowl game against Mississippi Coach Jack Hagerty and his
crew left Washington yesterday. ° :
| Evashevski I11 .
BERKELEY, Cal., Dec. 26. —Scrimmage injuries suffered by Francis Reagan. and George Muha of the Eastern All-Stars were regarded as minor ones today "by co-coaches Andy Kerr and Bernie Bierman. Reagan was kicked in the leg the
Jo Relieve
7 4 DS 0%:
first time he carried the ball and Muha suffered an arm bruise. More serious than either, however, was the heavy cold of Forrest a= shevski. He was confined to his room yesterday and his condition was being watched carefully in an effort to have him ready to go against the Westerners in the Shrine charity game at San Francisco, Jan. 1.
Stars Rained In
STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Cal, Dec. 26.—Western All-Stars, preparing to meet the East in the Shrine’s charity football game New Year’s Day, were getting behind in their practice today as rainy weather kept them indoors. They will continue practice in the Stanford gym until the rain lets up.
Holiday Over
MONTGOMERY, Ala., Dec. 26.— North and South football squads got back ‘to heavy work today following light Christmas Day sessions in preparation for the third annual post-season All-Star game here Saturday.
Rose Bowiars
State.
Fight Illness
(Continued from Page 4)
against having a back with a head cold in motion before the ball is snapped. A substitute will have to be given permission to speak in the huddle before one play is run, because the coach may have sent him in to warn a teammate that it is time for him to take his aspirin or to put drops up his nose. And when the two captains meet before the kickoff for the toss the one whose thermometer shows the higher temperature should be given his choice. His choice of goals, that is, because if given his real choice he might upset things by saying, I'l] defend the south bed in the Pasadena Clinic, and leave the game flat. - : Kerchoo! There I go! One more sneeze and they’ll have me starting the game at right guard.
Speed Ice Skaters In Holiday Whirl
NEWBURGH, N. Y., Dec. 26 (U, P.).—More than 200 speed ice skaters, headed by Leo Freisinger of Chicago, national and North American champion, were entered today lin the Middle Atlantic speed skating championships, scheduled for, New Year's Day. The races will be on a one-sixth mile oval course in the Newburgh recration park.
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‘By WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Sripps-Howard Foreign Editor
pire and the Western Hemisphere
economy was urged by Professors Percy W. Bidwell and Arthur R. Upgren in the magazine Foreign Affairs” today. “Hemisphere self-sufficiency,” they said, “is an impracticable dream.” We could and should improve our trade relations with Canada, the Caribbean’ countries and South America. But our products are not and can never be altogether complementary, hence we need the British Empire to round out our markets and sources of raw / materials. Even Japan should be included, inasmuch as she is in a vosition to menace such a far-flung
.
| economic entity.
Ask End of Restrictions
The professors, therefore, at these conclusions: 1. “American aid to Britain should be extended immediately by every means in our power,” even to the removal of the restrictions imposed by the Johnson Act and the Neutrality Act. 2. “To forestall the lapse of the English area into tightly controlled trade on Nazi lines after the war is over, we should set in motion now plans for an economic union which would include the Western Hemisphere and the British Empire.” This, the writers go on to say,
arrive
of preferential tariffs and an agreement looking toward the stabilization of Exchange rates.” The purpose of the argangement, however, would not be to build up a watertight bloc, with trade with the rest of the world reduced to a minimum. On the contrary, trade with other nations should be welcomed and the door left open to “all who love peace and freedom.” 800-Million Market Cut Professors Bidwell and Upgren point out that the Nazis have already brought under their political and military control practically all
of Continental Europe except Rus-
sia and the Baitic states. With 400,000,000 inhabitants, the economic potential of this area is enormous. “To find a combination of nations which would be equally self-suffi-cient and equally powerful, judged by the ability of their economies to sustain modern armies and navies, one would have to bring together practically the entire non-German world.” Unless completely defeated, they observe, the Germans will endeavor to monopolize European trade. This would be a big blow for us. For, despite a decline in our exports to Europe, the European area absorbed more than $800,000,000 worth of our manufactured and semi-manufac-tured goods in 1937, or 19 and 31 per cent, respéctively, of all exports in these classes.
+ Show ‘Easier’ Road The Germans will also intensify their competition in Latin America. As a counterbalance, we should be able to bring together the whole of the Western Hemisphere, the Dutch East Indies, the British Empire and Japan. “Our rival bloc would be scattered over the seven seas. Moreover, before it could be made to function effectively, we might have to fight a major war with Japan.” Better results, the professors believe, “can be achieved by less spectacular methods.” We: should dwell less on what the Nazis might be able to do and more on what we can do.
FRANCE PUTS BAN ON ALL FOOD QUEUES
VICHY, France, Dec. 26 (U. P.) — Paris police have abolished food sl.op queues in order to keep people from standing for hours in bitter cold weather awaiting rations, it was announced today. Hereafter patrons may make appointments, by number, for their food supplies, and food queues will be forbidden. It was believed that the system might be extended.over both occupied and non-occupied France in order to ®afeguard health.
ROSENDAHL INSPECTS BASE FOR DIRIGIBLES
WEYMOUTH, Mass. Dec. 26 (U. P.)—Capt. Charles E. Rosendahl, head of the Navy's lighter-than-air operations, arrives here today to inspect a site for a proposed five-million-dollar cirigible base. The Navy reportedly awaited only final approval by Capt. Rosendahl before taking over a 335-acre tract of land, according to Roland L. White; chairman of the Weymouth Municipal Airport Committee. The base would be used as headquarters for blimps and possibly rigid ships engaged in coastal patrol work, it was understood.
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WASHINGTON, Dec. 26—Eco-|§ nomic union of the British Em-|]}
ds an alternative to a nazified world | |
“would obviously include a system |.
be received by the bishop.
The Most Rev. John F. O’Hara, Catholic bishop of the military vicariate and a native of Indianapolis, greets Private M. D. Ilich after officiating at mass yesterday at Ft. Benjamin Harrison. Private Ilich, whose home is in Columbus, O., was one of several draft seleciees to
. 'That Dude’
CHICAGO, Ill, Dec. 26 (U. P.).— Sixteen - year -old Wilma Gainey doesn’t love “that dude” any more. So today’s she’s flying back to her parents’ home in Safford, Ariz, leaving behind a 44-year-old New York engineer who brought her here to wed. With Wilma was Emert Kempton, hard-bitten Arizona cowboy sheriff who came to claim her from the police and give to Joseph Ballaman, the handsome surveyor Wilma had planned to marry, a piece of sage Western advice. “We'd probably hang such a guy in Arizona,” Sheriff Kempton said. Wilma was arrested Sunday when she arrived wearing her light tan shoes laced up the sides and carrying the stub of a train ticket which
lice how she met Ballaman six months ago on a four-hour train trip through Arizona and had fallen in love with him. She said they had corresponded since they parted and planned to be married here.
Ballaman had provided. She told po- |
Wilma Loses Her Love for
and Flies Hame
Police arrested Ballaman at) his hotel and he was held. on an open charge after he verified Wilma’s story. * Sheriff Kempton arrived yésterday wearing his high-heeled boots and broad-brimmed Stetson to take Wilma back to her parents, who had
posted a $100 reward’ for ner. He
took her from the juvenile liome to one of the city’s best hotels, where he got her a room and gave her a
good book to read while he went to |.
talk to Ballaman, {
“What I want to know,” Sheriff
Kempton told Ballaman, “i§ why a man your age should pick on a girl so young and lure her away from her parents and home? It would be mighty tough on you if this had happened out in my country.” “I had no idea she was so! young,” Ballaman said. “And when I get out of this mess I'm going to go to Arizona and apologize.”” : “Partner, I'd stay out of Arizona if I were you,” Kempton said.
FARMER FREED ON BAIL IN KILLING
BEDFORD, Ind. Dec. 26 (U. P.). —Charles McPike, 66-year-old farmer charged with second-degree murder in connection with the fatal shooting of Fred Walters, 49, a Bedford boilermaker, was free today on $1000 bond, according to Lawrence County Sheriff John Peyton. Walters was shot when he visited the McPike home last Monday to attempt a reconciliation with McPike’s 29-year-old daughter, Ilene. Second-degree murder charges were filed against McPike by Prosecutor David F. Long, pending a grand jury investigation. James Walters of ,Terre Haute, brother of the slain man, told police of taking his brother to the McPike home. , He said he was in an automobile outside the- home when the altercation occurred, but that he rushed into the house when he heard shots. He and McPike carried the victim to the car and took him to his home,
TAYLOR ‘COMFORTABLE’ BOSTON, Dec. 26 (U, P.).—Myron C. Taylor, President Roosevelt's personal envoy to the Vatican, “spent a very comfortable night,” New England Baptist Hospital attaches reported today.
REPORT LEWIS RECOVERING WASHINGTON, Dec. 26 (lJ.P.).— President John L. Lewis of the United Mine Workers has been Kept from his office for several pays by influenza and a cold. He ‘was reported by friends today to be recovering. i
|Claim Combination of Bri-| .. IB | Tosses Gun Aside and Gives 2
Up Lying Flat on Ground In Tennessee Hills.
DECATUR, Tenn., Dec. 26 (U.P.), —Chatles Coates, Missouri fugitive and slayer of a Georgia highway patrolman, was tracked down and captured four miles east of here shortly before last midnight and was taken early today to Dalton, Ga., to be held for trial. His capture ended a five-day search by a posse of Georgia and Tennessee officers who had scoured
nessee River since Coates shot to death Corporal Fred Black of the Georgia patrol near Ringgold, Ga. Capt. D. Frank Simmons ane nounced that Coates, alias Charles Butler. threw his gun aside and surrendered while lying flat on the ground when officers approached. Simmons announced that Coates had stolen an automobile late yes terday and was attempting to escape when his path was blocked on the Decatur-Athens Highway. He and a companion wrecked the car in a ditch and fled again into the woods. : . Officers still were seeking the ° other man. Coates was said by officers to be an habitual criminal. Several weeks ago he and three other prisoners {led the St. Joseph, Mo., jail. ~ Last Saturday he was stopped by Patrolman Black near Ringgold on a speeding charge. Coates pulled a pistol and shot Black.
FIRE SWEEPS YAWL
‘MIAMI, Fla, Dec. 26 (U. P.).— Fire which followed an explosion in the motor swept the 64-foot yawl Vayu, owned by E. A. ‘Dunmore of Boston, just off the city yacht docks yetserday. Flames swept from stem to stern of the $45,000 craft before they were controlled. 4s
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