Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 September 1942 — Page 27

By JOE

. Times 8 $

precedented. *

”.

nals Gef xt Hit its Ouf of | Their Ankles

ra: Base ”

‘WILLIAMS

ston; en 18-Mx Casey

»

A ahs ONE of the few ball ol : | base hits out of the ankles,” hissed : Way: ‘he has of putting over a point--like 1 ' “They aren't a ball club Southworth ' should 3 Jap saved _ next Qing » 3

« . . and such with, too.

nics fellows ‘to look ‘st and

amd, once on, 8 “de best hitters bunt, - They ‘against their getting to first safely ‘is 3 )

Sey hit and FUR, they squeeze. “THEY "TARE : very mean

J | Wot they should stop at first they go to.séton

adv in of

» Ti

top at second they go to third and all of. Eg mi

| Mr. Stengel was asked to explain the: latter. |

seem to have only one thing in ‘mind:and ‘that's: to get home. ~Per- |

_:sonally, I think they are merely

lazy. It wearies them to stay out

there on second or third. They like fo sit on the bench. They must

all be Southerners.” And then he

added seriously, “This is the fastest

ball club I've ever seen in my life; they are a bunch of Cobbs all

Tolled ‘up into one.”

. Purdue and Indiane Schedule

Practice Games Tomorrow

BLOOMINGTON, Sept. 18 «(U. <P) —Indiana’s football squad continued its intensive scrimmage sessions yesterday as Coach A. N. (Bo) McMillin sent his teams through a stiff aerial workout. The Indiaha mentor used his ace tosser, Bill Hilleribrand, in most of the offensive scrimmage with Pete Phios - and Ted Hasapes;, husky Hoosier ends, handling the receiving assignments. : In the defense workout; MeMillin substituted freely to find: a com= bination to stop what aerial tactics the Butler Bulldogs might use when they meet the Hoosier Sept. 26. { McMillin announced open practice drills would be held tomorrow with the first actual practice game scheduled to be played.

200 Eriter Allison’ Golf Pournament

More .than 200 workers have entered the second annual Allison golf tournament to be held Sunday: at Speedway golf course, * The field will begin teeing off .at}: 10 a. m. Paul Sparks, last year’s ellamp, will not defend i He is recovering from an opération.

. ara ——.

BRAKE

ADJUSTME

3

[1 WA ©

S £2 Ror Bree, Go Coea-Co

. scrimmage game scheduled for 2 morrow, Coach Frank Leahy | an-, i |Rewunced.

i EE i

LAFAYETTE, Sept. 18 (U. P)— Coach Filmer Burnham sent his

through a stiff aerial defense worksub yesterday in an effort to get his team ‘n shape to ston, the accurate

passes of Fordham's ace fullback, Steve Filipowicz, when the Eastern

Sept. 26. The tosses of the Ram ace are expected to provide one of the main problems for the Purdue mentor’s eleven. However, Burnham said he had assigned Assistant ‘Coach Mel Taube to instruct his backfield units on the same type of aerial defensive tactics which held Purdue’s opposition to 21 completed forward passes in last year’s eight games. Freshman Coach Emmett Lowery announced yesterday that his rhinie squad i$ rapidly rounding into shape

fi for theit-game with the Boilermaker

varsity tomorrow afternoon.

Eight Irish Injured, Call Off Game

£ ‘SOUTH BEND, Sept. 18 (U. P). Injuries suffered by eight reguyesterday resulted in the canof the Notre Dame varsit; X to-

“Latest casualties included La

{| Rymkus, left tackle; Bob Neff, right ; tackle; Capt. George Murphy, right y end; ‘Gitorge Limont, left halfback,

and ‘Owen: (Dippy) Evans and Bob

x Livingstone oth backfield men.

1 Rast night's leading bowlers:

Inarice Tutterow, Automotive

‘ee 084 " 0’Connor, Sturm Recreation .... 630 i Clark

zea . » C ; an yres 0 EE Universal -627 erbaugh; Priwy. Recreation 624 Smiser, Patkwa Bo Jesteation. 623 or John K . 618

h Furnite RI Allred, Cutiss- wr he Classic. 615 man, JH 61

el Es ahi Growers. «0 801

Vessagesenn

mney, Matinee

evseeseans 537 Hicks, Moonlite cessssiuve 522 a=-Cola .. «s BOO

mixed

Central alleys will “sponsor a

«| doubles: tournament tomorrow and Sunday.

. Ge Squaag wil roll at 3 p. m. each day. Call

alle M: Striebeck. Ch. 7081, to enter.

“Well, tty.

Purdue university football squad |§

team invades Ross Ade stadium-

Me

university of Cincinnati.

Delayed Action |

Ambulance Mired on ~ Gridiron After 11- - Hour Raine

LOUISVILLE; ‘Sept. 18 AU. P.). —‘You pays your money and takes what you get,” according .to the phrase, and it proved particularly true at Maxwell field last night as football fans got plenty of excitement but no football. The University of Louisville gridders waded through mud ankle deep on a gridiron soaked by an 11-hour rain to defeat Rio Grande college of Ohio, 25-0 in

four fights and a 45-minute delay. ihe ie - \ FOES REY ROE THE DELAY OCCURRED when an ambulance, driven on the field to remove an injured player, became mired in the mud. Charles’ Wiechsel, Rio Grand left tackle, was injured by .Bill Taylor, Louisville left halfback, as Taylor scaled the line of scrimmage for a 67-yard touchdown run. George Fultz, Louisville right end, was ejected from the game for fighting. Three other fights oceurred when mud-caked players insisted the wrong players were being thrown out of the game for fighting.

4 a3 (zenerous Sox

NEW YORK, Sept. 16.—According

808! to the clubhouse boys at Yankee 601 | stadium, the White Sox are the most generous tippers in baseball.

HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL:

Froebel (Gary), 12; Technical (HamClark -

"| Catholic,

mond), 7. SHasmond), 20; ‘South Bend

a game featuredby two accidents,

In Top Grid

|Game for State

iE By UNITED PRESS Hoosier high school football fans

{wet their first opportuntiy. for eom-

Neither Anderson nor Muncie have been hailed as world beaters,

“Jalthough both have been viewed as

likely first division clubs in the un-

‘|certain North Central race. But

Muncie, still stinging from a 13-0

The Butler Bulldogs .open their 1942 football season tomorrow afternoon in the bowl meeting Xavier One of Butler's starters will be Mike Medich (right) a South Bend freshman, at tackle, He is shown above placing his kick. At left is Boris Chaleff, freshman from Ben Davis,

South Bend Freshman Ges Starting Berth at Tackle

FOR THE FIRST TIME in 20 years a freshman will ‘start for

the Butler university football team tomorrow when it plays: Xavier |

university in the bowl at 2 p. m.

That's war-time football.

Freshmen are eligible to play varsity ball with all Indiana college

conference teams this year. The Butler rhinie is. Mike

Medich a 6-foot 2-inch tackle of

Riley high school, South Bend. He's only 18 years old and enjoys the rough. contact play. . There are 18 other freshmen, seven from Indianapolis and Frank Oliphant of Southport. The local boys are Robert Boaz, Glenn Chew, Joe Gatto, Francie Moriarity, John Sage, Vincent Shanahan and Ed Cornelius. Oliphant weighs 320 pounds. » =

Miss “Scatbacks”

Frank (Pop) Hedden, acting athletic director and head coach, and Walt Floyd, his assistant, are optimistic about the team’s play this year although they will miss their two fastest backfield men Boris Dimancheff and Billy Howard. The Indianapolis juniors are sidelined with injuries. Could be that Hedden is saving them for Indiana at Bloomington Sept. 26. Fifty boys including 10 lettermen are trying for varsity positions and only oné senior will start Saturday. He is Jim Gilson, the blocking back from Shortridge. The remainder of the lineup will include six juniors, three sophomores and one freshman, : The curiosity seeker notes that 10 nationalities are represented on the team: Bulgarian, Boris Chaleff and Dimancheff; Syrian,

"OVERBOARD, aA

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So SAAT PS Wie

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- Say’ Seigh "

Yes, i it's lighter than alt= | For TOUGHNESS i is- finished He'sdropped!

ws; you'll find ‘That this blend is designed

‘To give PLEASURE That cannot be topped!

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- SAY THE 2

CROWNS

| Skinner,

Emil Neeme; Jugoslav, Joe Kobda and Steve Stoyko; Hungarian, Bill Horvath; Italian, Melchoir Perrone and Joe Gatto; Irish, Francis Moriarity and Tom Broden; French, Dave LaVine; Scotch, Gordon Tanner; Serbian, Kovacevich; Greek, Sammy Condos, and then there is Ken Geiman, the former Cathedral player who says he is French, Dutch and German. In name only could the Bulldogs play the Fordham Rams’ tongue-twisters. EJ J ” The starting eleven tomorrow will include six Indianapolis high

school graduates namely’ Knute Dobkins, end, and Wally Potter, guard, from Tech; ‘Harold Miller, end from Southport; Gilson, Shortridge; Norman (Gobby) Williams, Manual, halfback, and Tom Sleet, the fullback from Crispus Attucks. Kobda, the sophomore center, was an all-state and -all-confer-ence player from Washington high school of South Bend. It will be the opening game for both schools. Xavier, coached by Clem Crowe, beat Butler, 40 to 7, last year and lost one game during the season. This year Crowe has installed tricky formations for his backfield. They are able to reel off plays from the T. box or double-wingback formations. Hedden says, “I got a few surprises for Xavier, too.” That is the fun of playing the first game minus espionage reports. The probable starting lineups for Sao are:

AVIER. Raven) Cap. Mergenthai Th

Tate “1-3 a Sheet - CEE ves eu Officials “atilies, referee apor; Rowns; ump

Bendix Brakes Beat Second Round Foe

DETROIT, Sept. 18 (U: P.)— Twenty teams were to battle today in the third round of the National

| softball championships, and loss of

a second ‘gamee would mean elimi-

|nation to many of them.

Bendix Brakes, defending men's

“| ehiampions from South Bend, con-

tinued their torrid pace last night by defeating the Detroit Metropolitan champs, Briggs Bombers,

| 4 to 1.

' DELAWARE

BLUE POINT >

defeat by Ft. Wayne Central; determine Ft. Wayne's power Of their own impotency in the battle with Anderson-——fresh from an easy victory over: neighboring Elwood. Washington Goes North Ft. Wayne North, opening its season, will face a team with, prospects of being one of the far-north’s better clubs.: South Bend Riley last

Wallace followers for a clean season slate and Wallace, in view of past seasons and pre-season promises, was no pushover. ’ The week-end’s top intersectional battle will bring together Washington of South Bend and Reitz of Evansville. The game. will be the beginner for Evansville. Other promising games tonight include Hammond High and Chicago Parker, Washington of Indianapolis. and Mishawaka, Ft. Wayne Central Catholic and Huntington, New Castle and Peru, Kokomo and Marion, Gary Froebel and Hammond Tech, ‘East Chicago Washington and Clinton and Brazil and Terre Haute ‘Garfield. -

Jacobs Matches| Featherweights

NEW YORK, Sept. 18 (U. P.).— When Chalky Wright of Los Angeles climbs into Madison Square Garden’s ring on Sept. 20 to defend his 126-pound featherweight crown against Lulu Costantino, it will be the first time Promoter Mike Jacobs has staged such a bout since Henry Armstrong wrested the title from Petey Sarron at the Garden, Oct. 29, 1937. Yet ballyhoo for the heavyweight title clash between Joe Louis and Billy Conn has virtually blacked out this bout. Not since the Armstrong era has the 126-pound division boasted a champion and contender of sufficient class to merit a garden main event—not until Wright and Costantino came along. The winner is expected to defend his title soon against: Willie Pep of Hartford, Conn. the sensational youngster who registered his 49th straight victory with a first-round knockout in his recent’ Garden debut.

- | Blackwell's

week dimmed the hopes of Gary]

1 Syracus

M ontreal, 7.2 + ‘ALTERATION A SPECIALIST SYRACUSE, N. Y. Sept. 18 (U. — : At P.).—The Syracuse Chiefs rocketed into the finale of the Internatior league playoffs last night by defeating the Montreal Royals, 7-2,/§ behind. the four-hit pitching" of 19-year-old Ewell Blackwell. It was fifth straight victory and his second playoff win. Syracuse will face the Giants at Jersey City tomorrow and Sunday.

diand return here Monday and Tues-

day to determine the winner of the Governor's cup Th Chiat ogistered tires runs in the first inning before starting

nh oo By hl lo ho 0 ch

Walst ay Wetd aw awameh wm Wasiaa

-|pitcher Ed Albosta could retire al

man. They put three more across 3 the third and one in the 8fth. Open Monday Nights Until 8 e) rr —— )

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