Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 January 1941 — Page 5

Orr THE

BACKBOARD

By J. E. O'BRIEN

\

Coach Johnny Wooden was hurrying his South Bend .

Centra: Bears out of their brief playing togs and“ into the

steaming showers, while a couple of onlookers stood and wondered how much these long lads would have to duck

to get under the showers.

“Don’t forget that rubdown after your shower, Take a: good one,” warned Wooden. A undersized blizzard was playing hide-and-seek around the Beg Davis gym, and Johnny wasn’t taking any chances on his vertical greyhounds getting a cold or even the sniffles; Johnny: knows the valudble cargo he’s convoying this season. : “you didn’t see us at our usual game. tonight,”. Wooden said. “They wanted to play it the wild way and we were Villing, We're not that helter-skelter most of the time.” The Ben Davis homefolk, however, saw enough of the Central attack to more than satisfy them. Coach Herman Hinshaw’s Giants (definitely a misnomer in this instance), had & short frolic at the start of the game before the Bears could. stoop down and’ catch their

host’s numbers.

Those Bears Average 6-Foot-1

«After that, Ben Davis had to depend on sheer fight and spirit and that seldom is any match for a combination of height, speed Central’s first five is a cold, business-like corporation

and accuracy.

that averages 6-foot-1 and thrives on sprinting. The Bears will. proceed at a walk, however, and then open with a series of passes

you'd swear were just clearing the rafters.

This technique is. de-

signed to uncover Harvey Martens, Jim. Farner or Ed Ehlers: under.

the basket.

Undoubtedly the Bears resort to long-range artillery when they're pressed, but against the Giants they chose to drive as close to the

. bucket as possible before shgoting. -

While the aforementioned three

do most of the shooting, the Bears’ other two first-string hands, Parson Howell and Tom Rzeszewski, perform capably as floormen and

defenders.

Ehlers, incidentally, is also a big-league baseball prospect.

"The

17-year-old athlete who scored 11 points against Ben Davis, last summer played third base for the Conservative Life amateur team of South Bend, which finished fourth in the national Amateurtournament, The Lifers were the state champions, with Ehlers’ big bat leading the way. For a while he was a utility man with the

Studebaker A. C. amateur nine. -

The Bears, who have lost only to Huntingburg and claim among their victims Muncie Central, Ft. Wayne North ‘Side, Mishawaka,

Bedford and South Bend Riley, live a rigid life these days. of ‘bed each morning at 6 o'clock and to practice at 7:30 for a twohour sun-up drill before going to class. : Their chief contender for northern Indiana honors now is Goshen, and the two teams meet Jan. 17.

eye on that one.

Blue Devils Tardy Again

Shortridge’s Three Musketeers—West, Benjamin and Strack— r

It’s out

You might keep your

were late to work" again Saturday night but finally lassoed the

Lafayette Broncos in the best rodeo fashion. and janother six by the other pair exploded Lafayette’s 21-18 threequarter margin, and the Blue Devils took their sixth victory of the

Six points by West

season, 32 to 27. By an identical score Cathedral’s Irish won their

fourth game, this one from Danville.

Coach Joe Harmon’s shock-

Wgroop strategy put the Irish: behind at the outset, but the Shams rocks were in control at the halfway point and there they stayed.

: The up-to-the-minute rundown on city teams’

TP 162 255 150 250 “175 223

Crispus Attucks Shortridge

cco dbotoe Sacred Heart ....... Manual Cathedral " .....ccc00. Broad Ripple ....... Tech Washington setae

N ext Stop: Notre

211 113

SNwaRED eS O20 00020 90 ps TY

Dame -

Tony Hinkle can’t be happy ‘about his Bulldog’s date Saturday night with Notre Dame, but he can smile about their 57-to-33 victory over Xavier University of Cincinnati. Previously, Xavier had won five of seven games and had been averaging no less than 58 points per 40 minutes while Butler had lost

‘149

Av. Pts. Op. Pts. Per Per OP Gane Game 123 324 24.6 227 31.88 28.38 139 25. 23.17 227 31.25 2838 193 21.86 21.57 232 2738 29 168 - 24.33 28 305 30.11 33.89 211 18.83 = 35.17

Av, Pet. 800 150 667 625 S571 500 500 222 |i 000 |

its three previous starts and couldn’t hit an overstuffed davenport. ainst the Musketeers, however, Butler harvested a good two dozen field goals out of 89 seeds and sank nine of 16 free throws. The Musketeers fired 70 shots, mostly one handed from far court | | and connected on 11, the same number they hit in 18 free throw

attempts.

‘Hinkle used 14 players against Xavier and 10 figured in the scoring. He hopes the experience will give them more confidence against ||| the Irish, whose ball hall always is a jinx. Butler took a 55 to 39 | lacing there last year only to edge Notre Dame, 39 to 38, in the sea-

son’s finale here.

Between Fred (Red) Hunckler's opening pivot shot and Herb ill Schwomeyer’s closing long toss Saturday, Xavier. never showed the | |

slightest possibility of threatening.

The Musketeers forgot defense

for the sake of concentration on long shots. Meanwhile Capt. Bob | || Dietz, who finished with 15 points, and Hunckler were slipping under | | | to give the Bulldogs a 23 to 16 advantage at the half. Hl Jim McCray, senior guard, who had been benched in favor of sophomore Bob Fletcher, outclassed all Xavier attempts in the sec ond half with 13 points to add to his own pf the first period.

-

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State Cue Players’ Return to Action |

Competition is to be resumed lin the state three-gushion billiard tou! - ney at the Cooler parlor toniglit when Al Maloof, Indianapciss,

crosses cues with Hafford Hefzler, Angola, at 8 o'clock, in a 50-pcint match. Other games this week, |!

bert aS rrow-—Marriy Morris ‘vs. -Al Grit a= Wediesday—Phil Greenberger vs. Giny A Ramsey vs. Al Grogan. riday—Joe Pilt vs. Hetzler,

Harry Cooler, Ramsey, Morris and wir Neal Jones are undefeated in thine

starts. Best run in pre-holiday coiipetition was eight by Morris! and Ramsey.

Fish Game Leaders Install Officers

Dr. Herman G. Morgan wil ‘be

gues speaker fonight at the Mar-|"'

ion County Fish and Game Associa tions meeting at Muni¢inal Gardens, 8 o'clock. Installation of officers will tike place and a program arranged) by J| Al Hoffman will include a five reel|2 talking picture in technicolor. In 1940 the local game association released thousands of game fish in and around Marion County | and diberated approximately 150 qudil.

OUT OF-PAWN

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Our Capitals |

Hail New Era

|| (Continued from Page Four)

batted to keep the invadlers out, and hy the time it was over he had been credited with 19 saves, ['IMe summary: i

Jb il lis (2) nt AHAY0 Go

Smith . Calladine

pa liam olis) Mescatg, Bebling, McDonald, K. Ki Brown, Jennin McA tee, Keating; (Philadelphia) Aails S Collings, Boucher, McKay, | ing. McGully, Pechet. i#teferee, Norm Ramport; linesman, Stan LeCabe. ; / —Score by Pertofs— Indianapolis 0 2 Philadelphia : 0.1 "rst Period—No scoring. No in | Mecond Period Scorin I~ (Indianapolis) Keating (K. Kilrea), 10:01: Behling: (Jenings, McDonald), 15:41. . (Philadelphia) Boue her (McKay), 18:47. P’enalties—Jones (slashing), Collings and Jackson (rough{hE Polich (tripping). { Third Period—No scoring! il |8aves — Franks (India Bourque (Philadelphia), 7

AMERICAN LEAGUE Western Divisjon.

al enaltfes. Rape) s), ' 38;

Cleveland Hershey Pitt rgh EvRANKPoLis

Bn i1i¥al

LAST NIGHT a 1

| RESULTS { INDIANAPOLIS, 2:

ence, 5:

NEXT GAMES a ’ WEDNESDAY—New Hav’n at Cleveland, ‘Philadelphia at Pilishueed, Providence »

Provi

liiftional Starch.

annual

[irmicary:

| Drikold and Pure Oil will play for |

ihe state independent Class A ase ketball title next Suniay aftern al Pennsy Gym. The game be at 3 o'clock. Results + in

state | tournameht

| games yesterday: Quarter-finals— | Eastern Coal 28, Kingan Reliable 26;

Pure - Oil 49, Kay Jewelry 30; Drikold 39, Armour 31; Yorktown 35, Kingan of Indiana 30, Semi-finals—

||Pure Oil 48, Eastern Goal 30; Drikold 27, Yorktown 25.

# #0 Bush Feezle Mor.day - League

‘games: 7:15, Farm Bureau vs. Guarfantee Oil; 8:15, Kingan Knights vs.

R. C. Colas; 9:15, Pure Oil vs. Na-

i i

2 8

CYO Scores: Cadets—St. Joan of

fiIlArc 19, Holy Trinity!13; Cathedral 1122, Holy Cross 21

(overtime); St.

Philip 39, Holy Rosary 24; Little

[[lfMower 39, St. John 8; St. Patrick |28, Sacred Heart 16; Lady of Lour-

des 24, St. Catherine 14. Juniors— St. Ann 20. St. Thomas 11; Holy Trinity 34, Holy Cross 26. Seniors— Plaza Club 31, St. John 16; Holy Name 34, Holy Trinity 29; Cathedral 28, Little Flower 27; &t. Joan of Are, bye; Sacred Heart 25, Shamrocks 18: Crusaders 40, Holy Rosary 27; St. Philip 24, St. {Rock 21; 8t. Patrick, bye.

[Cage Scorsas

STATE COLLEGES

Butler, 57; Xavier {guncinnaty), 38.

Indiana State, 30;

OTHER COLLEGES

Wisconsin, 46; Nebraska, 31. Northwesterh, 34; Princeton, 23. Minnesota, 53: Montana, 38. , 34; Marquetie, 28. ; North Carolina. 41. 58: Rochéster, 41; ? heh - ennessce, 30. and ry. + 63; RandolphWestminster, 42; Youhgstown, 29. Case, 48; io Wesleyan, x Towa State, 36; Drake, 30. Presbyterian, 33; Steison, 31. City College of ‘New York, 44: Soringfield (Mass.), 37. Villanova, 3 it, 37. Lebanon Valley, 39: Moravian, 33. Michigan State, 31; Long Island Uni:

versity. 26. Omaha U., 40; North Dakota U., 32. 10%8S Mines, 58; New Mexico University

236. Southern California, 51; University, 2 Methodist. | 87;

Southern State Teaciiors 3 Texas Tech, 41; New Mexico Astle, Denver, 50: Colorad:¢ Mines, 33. Oregon, 76; Williame'te, 46. ‘San Diego State, 29; ‘University’ of ‘California, 28, University of Califorhia at Los Angeles, 45; St. Mary’s (Cal.), University of Washington, 56; Whitman,

Idaho, 45; Gon 20, Oregon State, Bor “utah Lyersity, 86. Stanford, 64: Utah Stat LOCAL HIGH SonooLs Cathedral, 32: Danville, 27, Shortridge, 32; Lafavette, 27.

OTHER HIGH SCHOOLS Burris (Muncie), 64; Riehinund, 35.

San Francisco East Texas 38,

Colum 3 Central (Ft. Wayne), 45; (uburn, 20, p= Teron (Gary), 41; Clark (Hamtond),

42; South Side

e), Jefrersonville, 29: Frankfort, 28. Hammond Tech, 49: Valparaiso, Elkhart, 36; Kei dali ville, 16. New Augusta, 30; Westfield. _s Tolleston (Gary), 29; Win 16. Michigan City, 5i; John Adams ‘(South

nd), 21. a’ Naorin Side (Ft. Wayhe),; 44: Decatur 80: Southport, 29.

Huntingburg, (Ft.

Warren Central, HIGH SCHOOL TOURNEYS Hope Invifational Mt. Auburn, 2% mare, Rock, 23.

Gapaburs. "8 27 (consolation). a oc oj'e, consolation Mt. Auburn, ho: He arksburg, 17 (final). Burlington Invitational 18; Ervin Township, 14. ; Youn Ame rica Pp. 30; Young Amtrics: 18

Fores ig 19; Burlington, 17 (final),

New. Salisbury Invitational Marengo, 29; Geor fe town, 14. Morgan Township, | 28; New Salisbury,

a1;

Forest,

Marengo,

EL Met zan Township,

Hermann’s Winner

In Schalk Classic CHICAGO, Jan.

tal.

out of the money. z £

Down the Mountain LAKE PLACID, N. Y., Jan. 6 (0) P.) —Bob Washbond Jr., son of the 1936 Olympic bot sled team member won the half mie, two-man novice: race down the Mount Van Hoeven: berg bobrun in 2:48.50 yesterday Muncoe Flagg of: Saranac Lake wai second. Three heats were run.

demand YY | KLE LINE; FOF SM J

Philadelphia 0 a al ue

Polich, Ware~

0-3

| Somehow you just don't think of Harpo ‘Marx, thet. old blond cliaser, ;as being a family man. But here’s proof that he is, in one of tlle few. pictures ever made of the comedian, his wife (the former niovie actress, Susan Fleming) and their son Billy. BEllly are shown visiting Harpo on the set of “Go West,” which will be

He attraction at Loew’s Friday.

Mrs. Marx and

| Hollywood

Dalton

Who Turns Out a Lot of Stories

Is One Writer

Trumbo

Hagerstown, 38; St. Mary’s (Andersen),| |

| of “A Man to Remember”

By PAUL HARRISON Times Special Writer HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 6—MOVIETOWN IS SO FULL OF FANTi) ASTIC yarns about important writers who seldom write anything excipt indorsements of their fat pay checks that I thought you might like to hear about a guy who really turns out stories which actually are

njade into pictures.

Consider, then, the record of Dalton Trumbo: January, the screen

r lay of “Curtain Call”; February, tlie screen play of “Bill of Divii cement”; March, an original, “I"he Man With a Shovel,” writtin and sold to 20th-Fox; April aid May, the screen play of “Kitty Foyle”; June, sale of the original sireen play, “We Who Are Young,” té Metro; July, wrote and sold an original, “The Doctor's Husband,” ti» Wesley Ruggles; August, sold his then unfinished novel, “The Femarkable Andrew,’ to Paraniount; October and November, virote “Somewhere I'll Find You” ahd sold it to Metro; December, sild an . original comedy, “The Viidow Wouldn't Weep,” to Warners, i ”

.». LA

| ANY TWO ‘of ‘those jobs would, hiave represented a: prodigious year’s work for the average author. Mr. Trumbo admits that viith all of them he toiled only about 40 per cent. of the time. | te found’ opportunity to visit the ranch house that’s being built §0 miles up-country; he and his

vrife did-a little traveling; and

lle also worked on another novel 4 serious task which he figures ihay take five years. {| Most of the time, though, he Just loafed. He creates by instinct ind perhaps for two days and nights will beat a typewriter until it gets a hotbox. Then he’ll relax litterly for. three days—and not hy making the Hollywood rounds, hither. Mr. Trumbo has a notion fre will get along pleasantly with Hollywood only so long as he reimains apart from the movie lsrowd. | ‘With his beautiful: wife (no ac~ itress) and a couple of kids, Dalton Trumbo lives in an imposing Beverly Hills house owned by Loiretta "Young and recently occuipied by Vivien Leigh. The gloomy, {baronial might have pleased the English lactress, but I should think it {would give this Colorado fellow

ithe jit'ers—the spaces being wide, | lout not open, .

! Ron 08

HE NEVER has been accus-: jtomed to having anything ‘made jeasy for him." When Mr. Trumbo {first came here he attended colllege, worked itried to write, all at the same time. ‘The bakery became quite a career lin the course of nine years, be-: ginning with a bread-wrapping imachine and ending with the poisition of “estimator”—calculating { just how. many pies, rolls and such {would be made each day. :

in a: bakery and

While estimating Mr. Trumbo

i wrote six novels and 90 short | stories before he sold - anything. | Then he peddled a few articles, | began reviewing movies (which | he hated) for a local magazine, | ghosted a 650-page biography for | $100, and became a reader in | the story department at Warner

Brothers. One day Mr. Trumbo was called

| in, raised from $27.50 to $35 a _ | week, and made a screen writer. 6 (U.P.).~The| Hermann’s Undertaker team of St. Louis today received the $1100 prize | i for winning first place in the fifth Ray ‘Schalk Sweepstakes bowling tournament with 4 4971 to-|

His first assi ent; Road Gang,” was one of th typical Warner-B carnivals of mayhem which attracted a lot of Susioriers out of

sheer, appalling brutality,

His first. big novel, “Johnny Got | His Gun,” ‘is in- its 10th edition Indianapolis teqms were off form. | Bowes Seal Fast, tournament defending chanips, rolled 3807; Falls City High Brus, £796; Marott Shoes, 3717; Herft-Jones, 3649. All finished

now, and Paramount plans a big production of the son-to-be-pub-lished “Remarkable Andrew,” a

‘tome of lighter tone. The author

is proudest, though, of his script:

and maybe “Kitty Foyle,” on ng he spent an unusually long e.

| “vicious, wild, untamed, unruly, undependable, tricky and dangerous.”

fare, negligent.

‘aspect of the place :

—that,

Young, Jones Sued After Accident

HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 6 (U, P).— Robert Young and Allan Jones have been sued for $56,900 by Dr. Hugo M. Kersten, who charged the Actor’s Riding Academy put him on a wild horse. Dr. Kersten, the complaint said, rented a saddle horse which was

If threw him off against a tree, and he was in the hospital for a month. Dr. Kersten charged that the Academy operators knew he was not a skilled horseman and were, there-

Mr. Young, president of the Academy, and Mr. Jones, vicé president, denied the charges.

Studio Suspends William Holden

HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 6 (U. P.).— William Holden has been suspended by Paramount Studio because he refused to .report to Columbia Studio as the star. in “Texas.”

says he is determined not to go back to work unless he gets one. Paramount claims he was offered a “substantial bonus” on completion of each picture which would amount to three times his weekly salary. Openl0a.m

iar AMBASSADOR

Gary Cooper ‘Northwest Mounted Police’ Nan Grey, Mischa Auer “MARGIE”

Open102.m.Va 15¢c to 6

oh First Indianapolis Showings * J M. Brow Bastin e Cowboy Joe’ - Range Busters “West of Pinto Basin” ysterious Dr. Satan’’-—Late News

NI) FN, A

He wants a salary increase and|-

‘Joseph Bloch Features French Works in Pleasing Piano Recital

By JAMES

upon arising. At any rate, it’ any of Mr, Bloch’s listeners regreted braving the weather. In the first place, they were rewarded with poised and intelligent playing. And furthermore they heard a program which was fresh and unfailing interesting. Whether the majority of pianists lack enterprise or fear the public's reaction is a moot question. But the fact remains that few of them bother to search the byways of piano literatute, and fewer still are armed for the search with Mr. Bloch’s good taste. ~ He =»: 8. AFTER THE BACH B Minor Partita and a Mozart sonata, Mr. Bloch. turned his attention to French music, playing Alkay’s “Le Festin d’Esope”; “Hommage a Rameau” and L’Isle Joyeuse,” +both by Debussy; Honegger’s Prelude, Arioso and Fugue on B-A-C-H, and a Scherzo by Jean Francaix. The recitalist moved .into Central Europe for his closing number, Bartok’s Rumanian Dance, but retreated for his encores to two items by Debussy. The music of Charles Alkan is so little known and Mr. Bloch’s enthusiasm for it is apparently so great that he included on his program a short note about the composition. The “Festin d’Esope” is the last of 12 Etudes in the Minor Keys by the 19th Century French composer. It is in the form of a theme and variations. And the program note’s mention of “titanic technical. difficulties” was scarcely necessary after a hearing of the

work. Mr. Bloch’s note also spoke of

it as “one of the great varieiionworks in piano iiterature,” and 1 for one am willing to subscribe to that statement. It certainly deserves a place in the virtuosos’ repertory along with the 32 variations of Beethoven, Schumann’s Symphonic Etudes and the Brahms, Paganini and - Handel variations.

doubtful that

» ” 8 IT IS A WORK of tremendous invention and equally tremendous demands. Color and contrast are abundant, and its cascades of breath-taking pyrotechnics achieve (as Grove said of Alkan’'s piano writing) “effects . . . carried to the verge of impossibility.” Mr. Bloch’s brilliant account of this music was. the afternoon’s high spot. But there was a solid satisfaction in everything that he did. The Bach Partita, one of that master’s more recondite musings over the dance forms, emerged with warmth and deep understanding, clouded only slightly by nervousness. And the Mozart, a gem—if a miniature one—was de-

JOSEPH BLOCH, one of the generous handful of talented young home<town pianists, gave a pleasing and convincing account of his musical progress in a recital at the World War Memorial yesterday. Nor did he lack for a capacity audience, even though a venture away from the home fireside demanded almost the fortitude of an icy shower

(his elusiveness that he would reject

THRASHER

Hvered with becoming crispness and delicacy.

” ” » 'THE SHEAF of 20th Century musit Mr. Bloch played with a particular understanding. Honeg-

ger’s polytonal idiom offered no snares, and the delightful grace with which the young pianist played ' the Francaix Scherzo should not be passed by without a special mention. Altogether, Mr. Bloch exhibited greater tonal variety, more individuality of style. and a firmer technical assurance than on his last appearance here. These, of course are part of a pianist’s coming of age. But since all young musicians don’t achieve artistic maturity, Mr. Bloch’s demonstra tion offered not only -an afternoon’s pleasure but g source of‘ satisfaction” to his many friends.’

Charlie Chaplin May Spurn Honor

NEW YORK, Jan. 6 (U, P.). | Charlie Chaplin indicated today by

the New York film eritics’ award designating him the best movie act or of 1940 for his performahce in “The Great Dictator.”

A telegram sent to his hotel here last Sunday notifying him of his selection and requesting his presence at the critics’ annual party tomorrow to receive the award, still was unanswered. Attempts to telephone him at the hotel were futile. It was rumored in film circles that he would ignore the party. The trouble, according to rumor, was that some of the New York newspaper criticisms of “The Great Dictaser? had hurt Chaplin's feelgs. The New York critics chose “The Grapes of Wrath” the best movie of 1940. Katherine Hepburn, who was voted the best actress of 1940 for her role ‘in “The Philadelphia Story,” will broadcast a scene from that film to the critics’ party from Dalals, Tex., where she is on tour.

CIRCLE

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TELL US

BUT DARLING, WE KNOW THE SCANDAL THAT HAPPENED IN INDIANAPOLIS |

THE PHILADELPHIA STORY |

and you ought to know obout the great M-G-M cost, headed by CARY GRANT, KATHARINE, HEPBURN, ond JAMES STEWART

ABOUT

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