Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 October 1941 — Page 9

Coach of the Wetote 2

mn Stiner, the

Of Oregon State, Is Little Mentioned, Well Remembered

By JACK GUENTHER United Press Btaft Correspondent

NEW YORK, Oct. 15.—Far from the crowded croséroads The pn ?

agents’ drums throb loud and long,

to national fame for the simple reason that every season he must spot his richer rivals everything but brains and sweat. Out of this group, from the Far Northwest, the United Press selects as football's coach of the week—Lon Stinér, the giant-killer of Oregon State.

For the past five years Oregon State squads have been undisputed masters of their back-country bailiwick. For the past three seasons they have finished no lower than third in one of the roughest leagues in _college football—the Pacific Coast Conference. Yet only twice he became a head coach eight ATS 0 has the mame of Lon ine pi Pa the headiines of the P) nn, Once It Was Southern oat.

The first time én October, 1933, the year he Schissler at, the Beaver helm. On uss occasion a Southern Californias shad swe

Portland . V Trojans ‘went home w tie, their string broke gon State men who played 60 min- - utes them wit stitution, The second time was day when another tes

pions of 1940 and to head -the Pacific again. This time 5 weren't content with B anked th

Washington Stanford has been highest hurdles are

they hold just as g if not a better one,’ else to f the Rose Bowl.

b teams in the Conference which never has stormed the walls at Pasadena. Under Schissler the

Beavers had defeated only three|

maior I opponents in five years. w

at 38 a powerful fel-| mmo

ds, has

on who weighs 230 In bis

done better, much better.

eight seasons, he has lost only 28|

of - 83 games. this, he has 3 hued alche + He had to. Year after year he | has the smallest squads in the Conference. Stiner gets few players and must make them go a long ways. As a result, they receive more

In doing mist.

individual attention than most men. |.

_ Stiner and his assistan and Hal Moe, both O, 8 - uates, work hard snd long

asian, dim Dixon C. grad~

; drilling L' fundamentals. Few squads block M and tackle better than the Beavers. |

* Btiner usually develops a fine first team, but too often he is forced to watch it bend before superior manpower because he lacks reserves, ne paid. he Hasina, Roh e captained the eb., High School team twice, matriculated at Lombard College in Galesburg, II, and after two years

transferred to Nebrasks where he!’

captained the Huskers and received many votes for All-America. When

‘Sh

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.|are so evenly matched that he can’t mistake,

cceeded Paul |going

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| Tonight's schedule includes, Bain~

Gear

‘Giant Killer’

tolls many a coach ‘who rarely rises

Schisslér, who. conchied Stiner moved fo | followed to work as He remained in that he moved u Today,

13 and 7-year-old ‘children. He em= phasizes that this is but the fourth week of the season and the teams

afford to make even Instead of discussing

and of gott-=which incidentally, he pla \Jin the low 80's. pay Stiner’s nly spectacular tribytion to football has Tens play. He used thig in whipping Fordham, 9-6, in 1933, It consisted of ‘ the Oregon * State tackles meeting an attempted conversion by th their six foot, six inch center, Clyde Devine, at the opposing place kicker. P. 8. Devine blocked that kick.

| Shaymee Out of Net ‘Warm-Up’

The two-defeats-and-out warm-up tournament at Pennsy. Gym sent

last night as the Shawnee A. 0. bit

the dust of the Wells County Ine de elents, 30 to 27. the are the El Lis, hn beat George J. Mayer, 30 to 17, and the Allison Ramblers, | who trimmed the East Side Ram2 | blers, 47 to 30. e vs, Bilver Circle Bar, S-W vs. Allison All Stars and . A. Blue Prints vs. Indiana

Bowling Notes

600-and-better ‘pintopplers last night included: Baird, Pkwy. No. Beas AP po senses 817 Septane e58 Bohm, Allied Printing... .., estes (Plister, W. 8. Classic...... censcssssecs 609 Wishmeyer, Pritchett ReC...ccveocoe. 658 Simons, I A. ©, Olassio. .convsinncess 851 Edwards, Pin Boys eesstegssses 849 Nordholt, W. 8. Classe. csanvsescsesss 641

s0e0ncsgsns Se0nisnensaser

E Le Boo. | ee Gai Hit ‘8; ee me

Ree. Mesamesntaseveress .

positon unl :

Stiner as listen to] Rose Bowl talk—not even from his|

lofty pros-| pects, he celebrated Bis victo: shooting a yan 7 by he

another contestant to the sidelines|

058 | with an explosive left hook

13| Archibald of Providence, 18 | lacked punch that éarned him the

Tltoo ring-wise for 607 | Billy Banks and earned a decision.

Joe Louis is weighing in again, but this time it was for the draft board doctors at Chicago. Dr, Herbert Nelson adjusts the scale, after which it was ssid informally that the physiqde which carried Joe through 16 successful defenses of his title was good enough for the Army. Incidentally, he weighed 216, a gain of 14 pounds since the Nova fight. Joe's draft beard expects to get a full report on the Champ Monday and an official classification will be Sortncoming either then or at the Friday meeting.

Apostoli On The Way Back WASHINGTON, Oct. 18 (U. PJ. --Fred Apostoli, whose smashing fists won him recognition as World Middleweight Champion a few years back, climbed another rung on the come-back ladder last night with an impressive six-round technical

knockout over El Brookman of Washinglon in a scheduled 10-round

A 10-round non-title affair be~ tween Chalky Wright, California and Maryland Featherweight Champion, and Chicago's Leo Rodak was the feature attraction but s hard-fought battle with Broo 4000 specta on their feet during most of the six rounds.

Apostoll, now with the Navy, floored Brookman for a short ig the second and continued hammering away until the referee halted the match. Apostoli weighed 169 to Brookman’s 163, | The Wright-Rodak bout, which went to the champion by decision, was slowed by frequent clinching and the California Negro, who weighed 127%, landed only three solid blows in the full 10 rounds. One of them in the fifth almost put Rodak down. Rodak scaled 133%. In 10-rounder, Moi}

another

featherweight crown but he was Washington's

Archibald weighed 125, Banks 131%. In the opening 10-rounder, Art

eo4 | Dorrell of Texas won from Frank,

Wills, ‘a local veteran. Dorrell

dake

reressndatnessene settee

&1 | weighed 148 to Wills’ 151,

—— on

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Fullbacks Lead i

Isbell-Hutson Dominate Pros

Times Special CHICAGO, IL, Oct. 16.~Western Conference halfbacks are being outshone in statistical performance by their fullback brethren, who have carried a large share of the offen~

sive load in opening conference en- |:

gagements. Bill Daley, the Minnesota powerhouse, leads all conference runners with his 186 yards against Illinois, a total which included a 72-yard

Brooklyn, touchdown sprint. Directly behind [league in

Daley, to t for most of the rushing

teammate, Bruce Smith, who hit 102 yards in 17 attempts. Then follow another pair of full. backs, Pat Hardet | o Wisconsin,

who ' averaged yards per try for 8 otal of 4 yards against Northwestern, and Iowa's veteran Bil who went through Michigan two weeks ago for a net of 83 yards,

Towa, and Jack Grad, Ohio Ohio ate heavy duty back who, in two nonconference games, has netted 147

games to games date have ob 101

SUMMARY OF TEAM STATISTIOS : IN CONFERENCE GAMES

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RILLING

oS the Gophers made | 90%. against Illinois, is his captain and

in Offense,

CHICAGO, Oct. 13 (U. P)~ ) Green

maintained lead over Frank Pilchock of Washington but the best Syerage 04 yards per try) belongs to n| McAfee of the Chicago Bears, the longest run Jards against the

7

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i

i height

|

Pp! Michigan nor Northwestern tested fully enough to lay greatness, it's on the rece Michigan has played three only one defensive ore

i

g

Michigan at

Michigan's great line features Al

| Wistert at tackle, Bob Kolesar and Merv Pregulman at the guards and Bob Ingalls at center. Its backs, Tom Kuzma, Bob Westfall, Dave | signs Nelson, Don Boor and Don Robinson, hit hard but may be weak on pass Selens because of lack ”

Michigan's strength (line pap) is

their long suit. Should be plenty of

scoring in this one. Pittsburg at Minnesota—Charley Bowser should ‘get a medal for heroism. . From his 40-to-0 licking at Michigan, he‘takes Pitt against a team that well may be Minnepic best since 1934.

riddled Purdue, with a new casualty in halfback Jobnny Galvin, faces a man-sized job against the rejuvenated Bucks. It's been two weeks since Ohlo State trounced Southein California. and in that time Paul Brown probably has completed ‘installation of a more complicated offense, Hopes are extremely high but most prefer to Purdue will be a a clincher. im Youell, Towa passer; leads the conference in

. of Dr. James Naismith, its invent |p or, with a suitable monument at

Purdue’ at Ohio State—Injury-|

passing gains and Bill Green, the

cates an improvement, Indiana at Nebraska—No place for LILIA ne las pd oo half pay id Ontlstian, Might he closer than Nebraska figures.

Begin Drive for Net Memorial

NEW YORK, Oct. 15 (U. P.)— The Golden Jubilee of basketball will ‘be celebrated during the next six ‘months: by a campaign designed to commemorate the name

Springfield, Mass. The celebration begins in Madison Square Garden Nov. 19 with a golden jubliee tournament that will conclude on Nov. 24. Four of the country’s outstanding amateur basketball teams -20th : Century Fox of Hollywood, National “A. A. ‘U. Champions; Phillips 66 of Bartlesville, Okla.; Legionnaires of Roanoke, Southern and Middle Atlantic’ Champions; and Ohrbach.A. A. Metropolitan Champions—-will pate: in the Metropolitan division. The ‘nationwide observance will include a drive for the establishment of a basketball hall of fame at Bpringfield--birthplace of the sport--which will include a mu-

. ol ly Tze nounce her amateur Shams, she de= clared. ‘s

To Turn Pro—if 4 LONG BEACH. Ol, 0% hl

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ey offered is suffive—then she may ree

her young b "Slain Sof horselt EE ———————————

Culver Prepares

|For St. Bede Game

' QULVER, Ind, Oct. 15~Rememe bering last year’s gridiron battle which found them on the losing end ‘of a: 7-0 score, the St. Bede (Peru, Ill.) eleven will when, they meet

seum and a model court.

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