Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 March 1942 — Page 8

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INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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Home Folks Aid In Capitals’ 4 To 3 Victory Over Springfield

SPORTS.

By Eddie Ash

SAM LEVY of the Milwaukee Journal, who is president of the American association chapter of baseball writers, authored a spring piece on the Brewers in which

he relates that Manager Jolly

Cholly Grimm is willing to

let the rest of the league do the talking for him... at

this time.

And here, in part, is Levy's current sizeup of the Cream City’s

baseball situation:

Jacksonville, Fla., in December,

“Ever since the minor league convention in Charlie and his colleague, Bill

Veeck, aggressive president of the Brewers, have busied themselves building what they hope is a

winning ball club.

“While rivals have seen fit to list the Brewers of 1942 as a contender, both Jolly Cholly and Bill

have maintained a silent attitude.

It is no secret,

however, that Grimm and Veeck expect their team to get off to a flying start in the league race

April 16.

“If the Brewers were to start the season today

Grimm would have Heinz Becker,

at first base; Odell (Sammy) Hale,

German-born, second base;

Sw

Charlie Grimm

Eddie Stanky or Johnny Hudson, shortstop; Grey

Clarke, third base; Ted Gullic, Hal Peck, Harvey Storey,

Murray

Howell and Bill Norman, outfielders, with several others for emer-

gency purposes. “In the pitching department,

Grimm has Ray Campbell,

a

promising lefthander; George Blacholder, Roxie Lawson, Hi Vandenberg and Vance Page for a nucleus of his staff, with the usual batch

of youngsters.

Outstanding among the newcomers is Frank Marino,

a graduate of the Sally league, who clocked 19 victories—17 of them in a row—and lost only one game for Macon last year. “The catching staff includes Charley (Greek) George, purchased

from the Chicago Cubs; be the No. 1 receiver. “Of the newcomers,

are expected to provide the batting power.

Joe Just and Harry Griswold. George will

Becker, Hale and Clarke of the infielders

Norman and Storey are

also expected to contribute a goodly share of offensive strength

among the new outfielders. a big year, with Gullic, Old Reliable

Peck, according to Grimm, should have

himself, being up to usual par.

“Like all ball clubs, the Brewers ‘could use two more pitchers.’

And President Veeck is on the hunt

for them. Anyway, this is one

vear when the Brewers don’t have to beg for talent—they're amply

supplied in every department.”

Champ’s First Bout as Soldier Boy

WHEN JOE LOUIS faces Abe Simon in Madison Square Garden. New York, Friday night it will mark the champion’s first title

defense since entering the army

. The heavyweight champion

joined up after his bout with Buddy Baer in New York on Jan. 9. Louis defended his title for the first time late in August, 1937, after annexing the fistic crown from James J. Braddock in June of

the same year. . to date:

, 193% , 1938 » 1938... 1938...... 1939...... , 1939......JACK ROPER 1939 ...... TONY GALENTO 1939 ..BOB PASTOR 1940

Aug. TOMMY FARR Feb. April June 22, Jan. 23, April June 28, Sept. 20, Feb. Mar. » 1940... June 20, 1940...... Dec. 5, 1940 Jan. 31, 1941 Feb. y J941...<. Mar. 21, 1941 April 8, 1941 May , 1941 June , 1941 Sept. > 1948...cs Jan.

HARRY THOMAS MAX SCHMELING

.GUS DORAZIO

BUDDY BAER

LOU NOVA 9,

>. ah NATHAN MANN............Madison Sq. Garden....

JOHN HENRY LEWIS... ...

ARTURO GODOY......... JOHNNY PAYCHEK..... ARTURO GODOY..........

RED BURMAN.........

ABE SIMON........... TONY MUSTO...cc.vene

««.. Detroit . ese-S, BILLY CONN...cccaeennene Polo Grounds

1912. ....0 BUDDY BAER.........ce... Madison Sq. Garden

. Here are the Brown Bomber’s title defenses (20)

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Yankee Stadium

Stadium . Madison Sq. Garden.... Tos Angeles............. ..Yankes Stadium “e Detroft. (ii iste -Madison Sq. Garden .... ..Madison Sq. Garden Yankee Stadiom.. .......

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..»-Madison Sq. Garden Philadelphia

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Let's Whoop Er Up for Our Caps! ALL ROADS lead to the Coliseum ice palace, state fair grounds,

tomorrow night. . .

Rubber or no rubber, the hockey fans will be

there to whoop ‘er up for the Indianapolis Caps. Herbie Lewis’ boys went all out in Springfield last night to force

the final series game to their home rink. . .

big hand, fans!

Tomorrow's winner will receive $5000, the loser $3000. . .

. Go out and give 'em a

. The

winning team then will meet the winner of the current HersheyCleveland series in the championship playoff round, $2500 to the

winner, $2000 to the loser, best three

= = »

games in five.

2 ” »

NOW BOTH TEAMS have their backs to the wall, meaning

Indianapolis and Springfield in their bitter battle.

one to go! . . night—the playoff bars tie games. If tomorrow's fracas is tied at

periods), a regulation overtime of 10 minutes will be played.

Two apiece and

. There must be a winner and a loser here tomorrow

the end of 60 minutes (three + i

still tied at the end of the regulation 10-minute period, a 20-minute “sudden death” period will be in ordeg.

A “sudden death” agoal ; {4 stopped while new ice is made and

is terminated immediately on the scoring of If still tied at the end of the 20 minutes, play will be

then successive “sudden death”

periods of 20 minutes each will be fought out until a score is made. But this department thinks it will be “death” for the Springfield

Indians in regulation time.

Abe's Mother Thinks He'll

Bring Home the Bacon

By JACK CUDDY

United Press Staff Correspondent

SUMMIT, N. J., March

25.—Deep

in the calloused heart of

cauliffiower canyon there is a twinge of sympathy at the thought of the brutal battering big Abe Simon is virtually certain to receive from Joe Louis Friday night, but no such sympathy from the bosom

of his Spartan mother, Rose.

This dark-haired, pleasant-looking mother of the giant says, “I'm

sure Abe will bring home the bacon. Even if he doesn’t, I know he won't get hurt. He's big enough and strong enough to take care of himself against any man in the world.

“I have no fears fot his safety. He did well against Louis for 13 rounds last March, and he’ll do better Friday night.” As Simon concluded training today for his second shot at Bomber Joe’s title, was mother Ross planning to witness the battle? Mrs. Simon—a woman of medium stature who is dwarfed by her 250-pound son—said she wasn’t certain. “I may go to Madison Square Garden or } ye hear the fight on the radio.” she said. “I've attended several of ye s previous bouts in New York. No, I was never worried about him getting hurt—he’s so big. Ample Abe’s father, Max—a san-dy-haired, bespectacled butter and egg wholesaler of suburban Rockaway—accompanied Mother Rose to camp to sit in on their son’s training.

*

Schumacher Leads Butler Courtmen

Capt. Wilbur Schumacher, veteran of three seasons, will lead the Butler university tennis team in its eight-game schedule this spring. Other lettermen back this year are Stan Trusty and Jack Shackleford, each with two years’ experience. Five other candidates also answered Coach Warren R. Isom’s call yesterday. They are juniors Al Brown and Frank Parkhurst and sophomores Joe Kettery, Tom Neilan, John Shirley and Jack Wheeler. The Bulldog courtmen are holding daily practice sessions in the Butler fieldhouse in preparation for their initial contest with Purdue on April 10 on the Fairview courts.

BASEBALL

The Indianapolis Amateur Ba - sociation will hold ps monthly ‘meet

tonight & 8:30 o'clock house, gb, Cape te EL Flas

Gx <5 wi ee

"Lewis Goes Supersti

By EARL

to meet the winner of the Hershey - Cleveland playoffs for the championship of the American Hockey league. Last night's breath-taking 4-to-3 victory over the Indians here which squared the series 2 to 2 demonstrated to|° our Caps it pays to use every rabbit’s foot available. And they are going to use all these “feet” tomorrow

night. Before the game, Goalie No! No! Turner asked for a new stick. He had noticed that during the past season the team never lost a game in which he started out with a new stick. (In the two playoff games that were lost he had used old sticks). The Paraphernalia

Manager Herbie Lewis decided to co-operate with No! No! He put on a pair of grey wool socks which had been knitted for him by Mrs. C. H. McCaskey. 3551 Washington blvd., one of the Caps’ most ardent fans and the only one to come along on this trip. And the Duke stuck in his pocket a pair of black women's gloves which were sent to him by Mrs. Harry Tousley of Indianapolis, another Cap rooter, who said she had worn them at every home game last season. The fingers of the gloves are fairwell worn where Mrs. Tousley had her fingers! crossed. And Joe Fisher, Cap right wing, chipped in with his bit. He handed his gold ring to the Duke, Herbie carried

ly

{ Douglas.

Same Two Teams Play Here Tomorrow; Winner Will Meet B’ars or Barons for Title

tious With Articles From

Home; O'Flaherty Turns Hat Trick

RICHERT

Times Staff Writer SPRINGFIELD, Mass., March 25.—The jubilant Caps, having at last found how to entice old lady luck onto their side of the ice, left for home today to “finish off” the Springfield Indians on their own floor tomorrow night. It will be the fifth and deciding game of the Calder Cup championship playoffs and will determine which team gets

2 ” o

AMERICAN LEAGUE PLAYOFFS —First Place Prelims— (Best Three in Five)

INDIANAPOLIS Springfield (east) .. First game score: anapolis, : Second game: field Third game:

4; IndiSpring.

Springaed, Indianapolis, 10; ol Springfield, 6; Fourth game: Indianapolis, 4; SpringXT

NE GAME: Springfield at Indianapolis, tomorrow night.

Indianap-

—Semi-Finals— (Best Two in Three)

wen Lost Pet. Cleveland (west) 1 Hershey (west) 1 500 yoirst, game score: Cleveland, 3; Hershey, Hershey, 4; Cleveland, 1.

game: Cleveland at Hershey, to-

GAME: morrow night.

and McAndrew to the penalty box for five minutes. Then came the most prolonged period of agony for the Caps all evening. With both squads short a man, Referee Smith sent Heck Kilrea to the doghouse for hooking Bill Summerhill. That left the Caps with only three men on the ice to four for the Indians. Manager Herbie sent Behling, Ken Kilrea and Hal Jackson in to stop the Indians, which they did very well by a lot of fast skating, then Douglas and Jack Keating replaced Kilrea and Jackson and they performed what the Indians thought was impossible—scored a goal on their numerically superior opponents. Keating scored the goal, his fifth of the series, on a nice pass from O'Flaherty, not to be outdone, evened the score a few minutes later by driving one through a host of players and past Turner, whose vision was blocked. The Caps began to get visions of copping only the $3000 second place money for the series early in the third period when O'Flaherty scored

that ring with him during the last 23 games of the regular sea-| son and the Caps lost only two. Of course, all this paraphernalia] didn't win the game for the Caps but at least all the breaks didn’t go to Springfield as they did in the two games which the Indians won despite being outplayed by our Caps. Last night's victorious struggle is best described by that time-worn phrase “killer-diller.” The game was a “killer-diller.” Our Caps battled as hard as an Indiana high school eage squad trying to win the state basketball tournament.

Everything Happened

And the Indians didn’t see any sense to saving to make another trip to Indianapolis. Everything happened that can happen in a hockey game except the spilling of blood. Sandy Ross, Cap left defense, was the only casualty and that was only minor. His left shoulder slipped out of place during the first period as it has done often before and he stayed off the ice for the remainder of the game. But hell be back in tomorrow night. Perhaps the most unusual event of the eventful game was the “booing” of Springfield Manager Eddie Shore (Mr. Hockey) toward the end of the game. The Springfield fans themselves evidently got enough of Mr. Hockey's continual arguing with the officials over everything and anything. But Mr. Hockey covered himself with glory by making a fabulous stop early in the crucial third period. Mike Karakas, Springfield substitute goalie, was piled in front of the Springfield cage with several other players and a shot made by Connie Brown, Cap center, just dribbled over the entire lot, headed for the goal. Shore, who also was flat on the ice, raised up, batted the ball away with his stick. The entire Cap team groaned. The Caps went into the lead about the middle of the first period when Les Douglas took a nice pass from Dick Behling and drove it past Karakas for his fifth goal of the playoffs.

0O-0-h! A Tough One

Then Connie Brown stood the crowd on its toes when he got into the clear and shot the rubber straight at Karakas. But the disc hit the goal post and bounced away and the thousands that packed the coliseum here to the rafters sat down, breathing sighs of relief. Johnnie O'Flaherty, the star of the evening for the Indians, evened the score a few minutes later when he got into the open and drove the disc bullet-like past No! No! Boys on both squads were skating so fast that they fell and skidded all over the ice. Jud McAtee and Douglas both drew penalties in the first period as well as Jack MecPherson, Indian center, but neither team could take advantage of the other, Connie Brown and Hazen McAndrew, Indian defenseman, livened the second period by getting into a bona fide fist fight. Several other players on both sides, including Mr. Hockey, joined in, but Referee Ag

Fisher

his third goal of the evening for the Indians, sending the Springfielders into the lead for the first time. Seven minutes later, half-way {through the final period, Doug MeCaig, right defense, gave our Caps the shot in the arm they had been waiting for. He broke clear and unassisted, fired the disc from deep in the end zone past Karakas to tie the score.

Hec In Doghouse

Hec Kilrea got another two minutes in the penalty box at this critical point, but the Indians couldn't score. And then, with Kilrea out of the doghouse, the Caps, with only two minutes to go, made the play that won the game. Red McAtee fired one which hit both goal posts and bounced out in front of the cage. Gus Giesebrecht, center, followed him up and pushed the rubber past Karakas who was sprawled on the ice. But the game wasn't over by a long shot. The Indians almost scored in the closing seconds when Douglas and Behiing, beth thinking that the other was going to get the dise, left it in the open in their end zone. But No! No! saved the day and several Cap players fell on the ice directly in front of the goal. The Indians protested that the Caps were trying illegally to fall on the puck, but Referee Smith ruled against them. A mad scramble was going on in front of the Capitals’ goal when the ‘gun went off, “Whew,” said Manager Lewis after the game, “that was a close one. But I'll guarantee you it as the closest the Indians will come to winning this championship.”

Rascher Blitzed By Longson

Andy Rascher, the Hoosier grap-

| pler from Cedar Lake, Ind., made a

futile bid to lift the heavyweight wrestling crown from the brow of “Wild Bill” Longson, Salt Lake City, in the headline attraction of the mat card staged at the armory last night by the Hercules A. C. Rascher thrilled the crowd of 2500 fans which jammed the arena by taking the initial fall after 30 minutes of wild action with a cradle hold, but the Cedar Lake star’s threat was cut short when Longson applied a vicious pile driver to end the second canto in just seven minutes. Rascher was out cold and could not continue. The loser was allowed an extra five minutes to return to the ring, but Longson was declared the winner when the Hoosier ace failed to revive. Ray Eckert was the winner of the semi-windup clash by downing Vie Christie in 17 minutes with a back breaker. In the opening bout, Jack Hill defeated Joe Millich, of Bt. Louis, who substituted for Bob Castle. Hill won with a step-over-toe hold in 20 minutes. All the grapplers who saw action were heavy= weights.

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Suspended

Golf has been suspended as a minor sport at Butler university this spring because of a shortage of candidates, Prof. Warren R. Isom, head of the faculty athletic committee, announced yesterday. Only two men answered Isom’s call for candidates. They were Benjamin Nahmias and Wimer Wilhite. Neither had any previous experience on the Butler squad. Prof. Isom said that the sport would be resumed as soon as sufficient men reported to warrant the forming of a team.

17 Answer Ist Football Call

Seventeen gridmen have answered the initial spring football call at Manual Coach John Janzaruk expects 40

men in uniform for the season when potential track squad veterans and 20 or more new members come out later. Those who have reported thus far are Donald Wiebke, John Lex, Ed Keller, Harry Juday, Stoy Duncan, George Woessner, John Smith, Joe Stepanovic, Bob Swaynie, Bill Sebree, Bill Reed, Bob Piltz, Joe Lex, Bill Hogan, Ray Ball, Bill Day and Bob Mouser. Official practice will start April 6.

Supporters Aplenty

MADISON, March 25—Bob Ellis, 165-pounder on the Wisconsin boxing squad, can summon a pretty fair fight crowd out of his immediate family. He has three sisters and nine brothers.

Joe No! No! Turner . , . changed his stick.

Keating . , . scored his fifth goal.

ARCADIA, Cal, March 25 (U,

voice of Joe Hernandez still echoes through the empty barns and grandstand: “And here comes Malicious.”

Frame houses sprang up like mushrooms today as the army transformed the fabled racing grounds, once owned by “Lucky” Baldwin, into temporary quarters for alien and American-born Japanese who will be detained pending evacuation from the western combat zone. Stables Converted

Houses 20 by 60 feet are being constructed on the parking lot where shiny-topped autornobiles once stood during the winter racing season. Four hundred will be built and fenced in, and 100 will be ready for occupancy by next week-end.

Stables where such thoroughbreds as Challedon, Azucar, Porter's Cap, Mioland and Whirlaway were quartered, are being turned into tworoom apartments and into offices for contractors, architects and construction foremen.

Army officials emphasized that Santa Anita will not be a permanent detention center, but will be used only for housing evacuees until they can be moved to permanent sites inland. Santa Anita stood all winter as a reminder of the effect of the war upon civilian life on the west coast. For several weeks the nation’s top ranking thoroughbreds stomped in their stables and worked out on the

Aren't Fooling

By

last.

circuit. Incidentally, some critics Last season the Phils had the tional league since 1900. They won 43 games, lost 111 and finished 19 games behind the seventh-place Boston Braves with a percentage of .279. It was the worst Philadelphia team in 41 years and they've had some pretty bad outfits in Quakertown. As far as a visitor to the Phils’ camp can discover, the three major changes are:

Army Formations

1. A new and optimistic manager in 69-year-old Hans Lobert, who served as coach under his predecessor, Doc Prothro.

2. A new nickname — Phillies shortened to Phils. (The gag is they wanted to get the “lie” out of their name). 3. The club has learned to drill in army formation. In fact, the Phils are the best drilled outfit in Florida. Some wisenheimers are so callous as to say they'd rather see the Phils drill than play ball. They may have something there too. The Phils have made a commen=able record so far in exhibition games but they aren’t fooling anybody. They have good speed, a fair home run punch from First Baseman Nick Etten and Outfielder Danny Litwhiler, who is coveted by more than one major league club and on certain days will get goed pitching. That about covers their strength. What Rookies? But on the whole the Phils can’t look for much improvement and most of that will have to come from players they had last season. The rookie crop isn’t very formidable. Is there any wonder? Look where they get their rookies from—Williamsport, Pa, Martinsville, Va, Allentown, Pa. and Springfield, Mass. They have just two class AA rookies, Infielder Alban Glossop from Kansas City, and Pitcher Gene Lam-

FBrunswick Bowling Balls

BOWLERS’ OES & BAG Pay ac Seis 60e Went

~GRIBBEN ¢ & GRAY ILLINOIS ST,

Phils Look Good, but They

GEORGE KIRKSEY United Press Staff Correspondent MIAMI BEACH, March 25.—The Phillies (beg pardon, the Phils) will be better than last year but they'll still finish last—maybe a bad They almost have to be better because if they get any worse the National league will have to admit that it’s running a seven-club

Anybody

already subscribe to that opinion. second worst hall club in the Na-

bert, who compiled the undistinguished record of three victories and five defeats for Syracuse. How'd he ever get up, anyway? The pitching has some possibilities. The “big five” probably will be Johnny Podgajny, Tom Hughes, Rube Melton, Ike Pearson and the big lefty, Frank Hoerst, unless the Giants or some other rich club coaxes one of them away from Gerry Nugent. Veterans Si Johnson, Cy Blanton, Boom-Boom Beck and Lee Grissom are back although Grisson may be called into the army. Paul Masterson, who won 9 and lost 13 for Allentown, looks like the No. 1 rookie pitcher.

Litwhiler Best Ball Player

The infield shapes up with Etten, who hit .311 to lead the club last season, at first, Danny Murtaugh at second, Bobby Bragan at short and Merrill May at third, with Alban Glossop, who hit 301 at Kansas City, and Harry Marnie, back for another trial, as utility men. Joe Marty, last year’s center fielder, is now in the marines and Lloyd Waner, cast adrift by the Reds after hitting .292, has been picked up to play the middle garden. He'll be flanked by Litwhiler, possibly the Phils’ best ball player, in left and Stan Benjamin in right. An Warren will again be the No. 1 catcher.

Billy the Builder

DAYTONA BEACH, March 25.— Catcher Billy Sullivan, recently acquired by Brooklyn from Detroit, is a successful building contractor in Sarasota, Fla., during the winter. ee —LS Eas os air — A SA

CIGARETTE

BURNS

REWOVEN LIKE NEW

FINISHED

Mr. and Mrs. Taro Sato (Jones) Will Live at Santa Anita

P.).—The luxurious box stall once

occupied by Seabiscuit soon will be the two-room apartment of Mr. and Mrs, Taro Sato and their American-born son, George. Mr. and Mrs. Sato—the Japanese equivalent of Mr. and Mrs. John Jones—will be guests of the government while they seek new homes outside the Pacific coast military area. For the army has taken over Santa Anita park, where the ghostly

track awaiting a possible opening of the track. But the Fourth army command, which had ordered the park to delay its opening, didn’t give the goahead, and the 1942 meeting, richest of all Santa Anita's rich programs, was cancelled. For a while a skeleton crew of pari-mutuel operators were on duty, no bets were shoved through the windows and the clubhouse and grandstand were empty. The army has not yet decided how to use the luxurious clubhouse, where eastern millionaires and Hollywood film stars mingled and placed their bets at the $50 windows. The army concluded arrangements with the Los Angeles Turf club, operators of Santa Anita, last week to use the grounds on a rental basis, with the provision all construction be removed when it is no ionger needed.

Purdue to Play

G. Lakes Eleven

LAFAYETTE, March 25 (U. P.).— Guy Mackey, Purdue university athletic director, today announced the addition of the Great Lakes naval training station to the Boilermakers’ 1842 foothall schedule. The game will be played here Nov. 7. Mackey said negotiations are in progress for another game with a service eleven to be played either on Thanksgiving or the Saturday following. Addition of the Great Lakes team gives Purdue four home games this fall. The schedule: Sept. 26—Fordham at Lafayette. Oct. 3—At Vanderbilt. Oct. 10—At Northwestern, Oct. 17—At Ohio State. Oct. 24—Wisconsin at Lafayette. Oct. 31—At Iowa. Nov. 7T—Great Lakes at Lafayette. Nov. 14—At Michigan State, Nov. 21—Indiana at Lafayette.

l. U. May Play." Flying Cadets

CHICAGO, March 25 (U. P.).—~ Big Ten football—an anachronism since the University of Chicago withdrew from the gridiron two years ago—‘“adopted” two service teams today. The unofficial members of the new “Big 11” will be the Great Lakes naval training station and the naval aviation cadet unit at the University of Iowa. Conference officials announced that six schools already had approved schedule expansions in order to meet the service teams next fall and said others were expected to complete revision of agendas this week.

Sailors Open Against Michigan

Great Lakes will play five Big Ten opponents this fall. The Iowa City cadets, granted four opponents, continued negotiations for a fifth. Great Lakes, opening against the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor Sept. 26, will meet Iowa, Wis= consin, Purdue and Northwestern in a 10-game schedule. The Flying Cadets, coached by Maj. Bernie Bierman, will play 11 games, meeting Minnesota, the team Bierman directed to the cone ference title last year, along with Northwestern, Michigan and Ohio State. Tentative plans for a game with Indiana were under discussion

11 Football Tilts Carded for Irish

SOUTH BEND, March 25 (U, P.). —Notre Dame will play an 11-game 1942 football schedule, longest in 21 years, school officials said today. The schedule will include games with the Iowa City cadets and the Great Lakes naval training station, The schedule: Sept. 26 at Wisconsin; Oct. 3 Georgia Tech; Oct. 10 Stanford: Oct. 17 Iowa City cadets (site unde= cided); Oct. 24 at Illinois; Oct. 31 Navy; Nov, 7 Army at New York; Nov. 14 Michigan; Nov. 21 Northwestern; Nov. 28 at Southern Calie fornia; Dec, § Great Lakes (site une

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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 1942