Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 October 1942 — Page 14

"SPORTS... ) 3 Ed di e Ash

NOTRE DAME and Indiana followers spent a

ant week-end discussing the antics of the Irish and son in their Saturday grid victories, and, of course, ‘abash fans crowded lustily over the Little Giants’ iumph at the expense of rival Butler. Purdue followers had another headache to shake off after having hopes brightened on Oct. 10 when the Boilermakers upset ihwestern. . . . But Ohio State Was a different problem and Pursuccubed Saturday for its third defeat in four starts.’ Notre Dame set off a keg of Irish dynamite or confetti and threw at the Iowa Cadets and the Seahawks were scuttled no end, 28 to 0. ‘Entering the fracas in the role of underdogs, the Irish beat off Ciides surge in the sirsh quarter and then Yook the complete play yay from their opponents and bounced back into the national footpicture. They came out of that sensational triumph as the wonder boys of the day on all gridirons. , . . The Notre Dame line surprised the ‘onlookers by its strength after the majority of grid goers had been ed to believe that the Iowa Cadets possessed a super forward wall, The Seahawks had marched straight through Kansas, North stern Minnesota and Michigan. , . . Prior to Saturday, in three is, Notre Dame was held to a draw by Wisconsin, lost to Georgia sch and then sounded a warning of its power by trouncing Stanford.

rish Make Good On Long Chances

. REPORTED injury-riddled, the Irish decided to gamble on long ghances, passes clicked, their ground game was superb, their defense worked to perfection and by the end of the half the Cadets’ d prestige was deflated. : Angelo Bertelli, the Notre Dame sharpshooter, stunned the Cadets by his accurate passes. . . » None was intercepted. . , . Five Jowa forward passes, tossed by Dick Fisher, were intercepted by the _ alert Irish who also pounced upon three of four Cadet fumbles. Leading Irish ground gainers were Russell Ashbaugh, Corwin [Dlatt, Gerard Cowhig and Bob Livingstone, . . . Standouts in the » were Harry Wright, right guard, who called the plays, Jim White, tackle, and Herb Coleman, substituting for the injured Wally smba, at center.

gill enbrand and McKinnis Star for Indiana

IN THE FIRST football engagement between Indiana and Pitt, the Hoosier eleven won, 19 to 7. . . . Billy Hillenbrand again lived up to his billing, threw three touchdown passes and also collaborated

Pittsbufgh grid fans saw Hillenbrand at his best and they also w Hugh McKinnis, fullback, who was hard to check. . . . He was Indiana’s No. 2 star of the day. . . . Indiana has won three and lost one, defeating Butler, Nebraska and Pitt and losing to Ohio State. The Hoosiers made 18 first downs to five for the Panthers. a « The winners scored in the first, second and third quarters, Pitt

‘Hoosier Ends Stall Pitt Running Attack

‘BOB COWAN tallied two of Indiana’s touchdowns and Ted Hasapes one. , . . Two long passes set up the Pitt touchdowh in the nd period. . . . The Hoosiers uncorked a diversified running attack that had Pitt guessing. When the Hoosiers needed a substantial gain they usually got it . out of McKinnis, the plunger. . . . Indiana’s ends, Hasapes and Pete Pihos, and Ed Bell, tackle, played the entire 60 minus. «s+ The ends stalled Pitt’s running attack.

Bucks Make 22 First Downs, Purdue One

OHIO STATE, undefeated and untied, held Purdue to one first down and was in complete charge of the game at Columbus. . . . The ucks won, 26 to 0, made 22 first downs and scored one touchdown period. . « . The galloping Bucks defeated Indians, in early season,

Gene Fekete, Ohio State’s sophomore fullback ‘ace, scored two touchdowns, Paul Sarringhaus, a junior, tallied one and George Slusser, sophomore, one. , . . The Bucks’ air tight defense bottled p the Boilermakers. . . . The Boilermakers failed to complete a single pass in 13 attempts. Wabash Hangs One On Butler

EVIDENTLY the Little Giants of Wabash are heading straight for the Indiana conference title, or at least a share in it. . . . They bowled over Butler in Crawfordsville, 6 to 0, for thelr Sind straights

It was Wabash's first victory over Butler's gridders since 1933. . « The Bulldogs now have lost five straight. After putting up a great defensive battle the Little Giants scored in the third period. . . . They recovered a Butler fumble on the ulldogs’ 25 and seftled down to work. Dick Neidbur finally lugged the ball ovér the payoff line. . . . The ick for extra point was wide. -

Football Results

record perfect. 2 =

-

teams with perfect records.

|the following clubs with clean slates: East—Army, Boston Sites Brown and Syracuse. South—Alabama, Georgls, Georgia Tech and TCU.

Midwest—Ohio State and Illinois. West—Santa Clara and California pre-flight. Six Are Tied

Six others undefeated but tied are Washington, North Carolina, Wisconsin, Georgetown, Penn State and Georgia Pre-flight. Going down to defeat for the first time were the Iowa naval cadets, Colgate, Tennessee, Vanderbilt, North Carolina Pre-flight, Duquesne and Washington State. Notre Dame turned in the biggest upset when, sparked by accurate Angelo Bertelli, it crushed the “unbeatable” Iowa cadets, 28-0. Previously defeated and tied, the fighting Irish hammered their way back into the national picture with a feat that Kansas, Northwestern, Minnesota and Michigan had failed to accomplish.

Coast Upsets

Other form reversals saw twicedefeated Duke blast unbeaten Colgate, 34-0; battered Mississippi State wallop undefeated Vanderbilt, 33-0; Boston college maintain its record with a 7-6 win over North |Carolina Pre-flight; Wisconsin rally to whip favored Great Lakes, 13-7; North Catrolina hand Duquesne its first setback in two years, 13-6; Southern California, beaten twice and tied once, end Washington State’s victory march, 26-12, and -junderdog Princeton deadlock Penn’s Ivy league crusher, 6-6. Alabama rolled to its fourth win by defeating Tennessee, 8-0, in the

STATE COLLEGES

Notre Dame, 28; Iowa Cadets, 0. Andiana, 19; Bi isbuish, hy

Tulsa, 40; Washington Louis . C. L. A., 21; Os htornia 0. h'% Unio (N. ¥.), Utah, 34 Ulan, Sate, 6 Virginia, "9 yg Pdi % we. w

estern Reserve, 12; Baldwin Western Hentushy Teachers, 9;

Western gan, Teachers, 6. Wisconsin, 13; Great Lakes, 7. Williams, 19; Bowdoin, 0.

HIGH SCHOOLS

7; Cleveland 7;

Bosse (Evansville), Louis), 7 (tie). South Side (Ft. Wayne), Catholic (Ft. Wayne),

hy p— Win Doubles

Montana, 0. Washington’ snd Los, 30) Himpden 87dHE a oat 14; Iowa State Aggies, while Baylor stopped Texas

‘Park School, 13; Elgin Military Academy, Silent Hoosier, 38; Indiana Boys’ School, (St, Central

Andy Bicket of the U. 8. N. R. and Frank O'Connell, city and public parks doubles champions, yester-

top game of the South. Other Southeastrrn conference clashes had Georgia romping over Tulane, 40-0; L. S. U. stopping Mississippi, 21-7, and Mississippi State halting

Forest, 3; orth Carcling Besi, o| Vanderbilt. Georgia Tech breezed

past Davidson, 33-0; V. P. I. tied favored Kentucky, 21-21, and in the Southwest T. C. U. continued to set

Tech, 14-7, and Texas polished off Arkansas, 47-6. Ohio State rolled on with a 26-0 triumph over Purdue as other Big Nine battles saw Illinois outlast Iowa, 12-7, and Michigan pound Northwestern, 34-16. © Minnesota came back with a 15-2 win over Nebraska and Marquette downed Michigan State, 28-7.

Stanford Trims Idaho

Santa Clara, an independent, scored its third victory over Pacific coast con\erence teams by halting Oregon State, 7-0. Other circuit victories, in addition to U. S. C.’s upset of Washington State, saw U. C. L. A. batter California, 21-0; Stanford trim Idaho, 54-7, and

Buckeyes and Mlinois Only Unbeaten Teams in Big Nine; Crimson Tide Rules the South

By OSCAR FRALEY United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Oct. 19.—Ohio State’s Buckeyes and Alabama’s Crimson Tide stood at the top of the national collegiate football heap today after another unpredictable week-end which left only 12 major

The list of unbeaten and untied clubs was slashed by more than one-third Saturday as seven teams suffered their first setbacks to leave

Washington bump Montana, 35-0. Army and Boston college battled for eastern honors, the Cadets whipping Columbia, 34-6, as the Eagles bested the Pre-flighters. Navy stopped Yale, 13-6; Dartmouth conquered Harvard, 14-2; Syracuse routed Holy Cross, 19-0; Brown nosed out Lafayette, 7-0; Fordham tropped West Virginia, 23-14 Cornell played Penn State to a scoreless deadlock; Indiana bested Pitt, 19-7; Villanova defeated Florida, 133, and Georgetown was held to a 6-6 tie by Auburn.

Scores After 101-Yard Run

NEW YORK, Oct. 19 (U, P.)— College gridiron stars of the weekend: : Angelo Bertelli, Notre Dame halfback, who kicked four points, passed for a touchdown and set up another in a 28-0 win over Iowa's cadets. Jack Wink, sophomore quarterback whose 101-yard run provided Wisconsin with its winning touchdown over Great Lakes, 13-7. Lean Gene Fekete, Ohio State's sophomore fullback who scored 13 points in a 26-0 win over Purdue. Halfback Mickey McArdle, whose broken field running and two touchdowns sparked U.S. C. to a 26-12 upset of Washington State. Bobbie $teuber, Missouri halfback who scored four times as the Big Six champs beat Kansas State, 46-2. -End Don Currivan, who made Boston college’s touchdown and played great defensive ball in a 7-6 upset of North Carolina preflight. Hurryin’ Hank Mazar, army’s siege gun in a 34-6 triumph over Columbia. : Halfback Billy Hillenbrand, whose passes netted three toughdowns in Indiana’s 19-7 conquest of Pitt.

Indiana Officials Meet Tonight

Dr. G. P. Silver and Allen Klinch will lead a discussion of new rules before a meeting of the Indiana

Officials’ association tonight at 7:30 yalp

o'clock at the Board of Trade building. ° Arthur L. Trester, Indiana High School Athletic association commis-

have been asked to bring their own rule books.

sioner, will be a guest. Offcials|S

Fullback Gene Fekete goes over for the first Ohio State touchdown Saturday against Purdue at Columbus. Purdue’s quarterback (No. 34) is blocked out for the score. Ohio State won, 26 to 0, to keep its - Durishhan and Dillon clash while Hasapes (No. 88), Bell (No. 78) and Dolaway (No. 3) look on. No. 1%

Big 9 Standing Ww

Ohio State.... 2 Michigan ..,. 1 PURDUE ,... 1 Wisconsin ,,.. 0 INDIANA .... § JOWR ....cce00 0 Minnesota ... 0 Northwestern., 0

Wabash Fights

For Crown

. By UNITED PRESS The Little Giants of Wabash college today perched securely atop the Indiana conference football stack with three straight victories and no defeats, Only Earlham and DePauw remained on -the Wabash schedule this year and prospects looked bright for at least a tie for the loop championship, won last year by St. Joseph's Pumas. Pete Vaughan’s Wabash machine

L TP OP 32 20 21 - 16 32 ° 32 12 20 41

Wed madd ®

conference lead Saturday by sinking the hapless Butler Bulldogs, once rulers of the league for six consecutive years, but now the victim of five jolting defeats.

Dowd Leads Wabash

Earl Dowd led Wabash to the lone score of the day with a long march that netted four first downs and a 6-0 victory. The touchdown represented the 147th point tallied S| against the Bulldogs this year. Previous Butler defeats were committed by Xavier, Indiana, Illinois and Ohio U. All in all, it was a gala Saturday for Hoosier secondary teams, as they lifted from the doldrums their record against out-state competifion. In the past two weeks the Indiana elevens have dropped eight out of ten intersectional tilts, but Saturday they won, four out of six. Only Valparaiso and Manchester slipped against the invaders. ° Valparaiso lost to Luther of Decorah, Iowa, 23-3, after piling up a perfect conference record of two ie at home. Manchester fell before a powerful team from Grand Rapids, Mich., 13-7,

Hanover Sinks Franklin

In two remaining conference tilts, Hanover proved itself a threat by sinking , 12-7, and the Indiana State Tedchers romped over a depleted Evansville Squad, 25-6. Winners over outside squads: St. Joseph’s Pumas defeated a rugged Illinois Wesleyan eleven, 19-7; Ball Btate downed Northern Illinois of

‘| DeKalb, 14-0; DePauw upset Louis-

ville for its second straight victory, 19-6, and Earlham’s Quakers turned back Deflance, O., 19-0.

ih pt hy

iii

Hanover ........ Indiana State Rose: Pol

COINVHUHNHSIIDM

Western: Rodeo

day won the state doubles title defeating Roger Downs and Ray Von Spreckelsen at the Meridian Hills Country club. After two and one-half hours of play Bicket and O'Connell won, 4-6, 6-1, 4-6, 8-6, 6-3, over the University of Illinois students. Downs and Von have enlisted in the navy’s V-56 service. -

Harter Shoots 73 In Final Tourney

Attracts 2000

A crowd estimated at 2000 witnessed the annual Morgan-Clark stables rodeo yesterday west of Speedway City. fis Event winners were: Ladies balloon race, won by Jane Garner; three-gaited (English), won by Ed Lohman; musical chair (men), won by Ralph Smith; steer riding, won|

Bowling and Pool

Fees to Be Frozen

WASHINGTON, Oct. 19 (U. P.).— Price administrator Leon Henderson today assured bowlers and pool and billard players that the fees charged for their pastimes will be’ controlled, by the government after

Nov. 1. Announcing plans to amend

OPA’s regulations fixing maximum

With Gross 83°

Panthers Beat Elgin, 13 to 6

Park School won its third consecutive football game of the season Saturday to remain undefeated along with Shortridge in the county race. The Panthers dropped Elgin, II, Military academy, 13 to 6. Robert Harris tallied both touchdowns for

Jn tte Sal Hioball suited golf)

Indiana beat Pitisburgh, 19 to 7, Saturday.

is Sotack of Pitt.

{Notre Dane Regains Followers By Toppling Powerful Iowa Seahawks, 28 to 0, in Upset:

By TOMMY DEVINE United Press Staft Correspondent

CHICAGO, Oct. 19.—Agile football experts scrambled today for places on the “band wagons” of four Midwest gridiron teams. After another week-end featured by a stunning upset of a heavy favorite, “grid guessers™ threw their support to Illinois, Ohio State, Wisconsin and Notre Dame as the section’s leading combin ingtions.

J

Illinois and Ohio State are the Midwest's only perfect teams. Wisconsin is just a step behind with four triumphs and a tie on its record and Notre Dame regained its followers when it toppled the powerful Nowa naval cadets, 28 to 0, in Saturday’s headline game. While the Irish were beating the cadets, Illinois moved on with a 12 to 7 triumph over Iowa, Ohio State trampled Purdue, 26 to 0, and Wisconsin turned back Great Lakes 13 to 7.

Outplayed Cadets

In other games involving Midwest teams Michigan walloped Northwestern, 34 to 16; Minnesota trimmed Nebraska, 15 to 2, and In-

broke a three-way deadlock for the diana bested Pittsburgh, 19 to 7.

After failing to live up to expectations in its early season games when it was tied by Wisconsin, 7 to 7, and beaten, 13 to 6, by Georgia Tech, Notre Dame came back Saturday to drop the Iowa Cadets out of the select list of the undefeated. The Irish, conceded scant chance in the pre-game forecasts, outplayed the great Cadet crew at every turn. With Angelo Bertelli passing and a pair of sophomore fullbacks, Corwin Clatt and Jerry Cowhig, ripping the Seahawk line, Notre Dame flashed a versatile attack that netted two touchdowns in the second quarter and one each in the final two periods.

Illini Shows Defense

Notre Dame’s line, led by Harry Wright, Bob Dove and Captain George Murphy, continually broke through to spill the talented cadet ball carriers for big losses and the

alert Irish secondary intercepted six |

Seahawk passes while permitting only 9 out of 21 to be completed. No e gets another chance to regain prestige this week when it faces Illinois at Champaign. Illinois showed a rugged defense to gain its triumph over Iowa. Trailing, 7 to 6 at halftime, the Illini went ahead in the third period when Don Griffin climaxed a 47yard drive by plunging over from the two-yard line. Late in the fourth quarter, Iowa marched to the Illinois four-yard line but Ray Eliot's outfit braced and took the ball on downs.

Purdue Stopped Cold

Ohio State’s triumph over Purdue was more one-sided than the score indicates. The Bucks scored in every period, with Sophomore Fullback Gene Fekete leading the way with: two touchdowns. Ohio State rolled up 22 first downs to Purdue’s one and piled up 301 yards by rushing to a scant 14 for the Boilermakers. . Wisconsin capitalized on two spectacular plays to beat Great Lakes. The first Badger touchdown came on a 62-yard off-tackle sprint by Elroy Hirsch and it clinching tally on a 101-yard run after a pass interception by Sophomore Quarterback Jack Wink.. Tommy Kuzma returned to action and helped spark Michigan to its decisive win over Northwestern. Bill Daley, Minnesota's great halfbac, was sidelined with an injury as the Gophers beat Nebraska but sophomore backs carried on ably. Billy Hillenbrand’s accurate passing accounted for all of Indiana's touchdowns in its win over Pitt.

Purdue Aquacade LAFAYETTE, Oct. 19 (U, P).— Patty Aspinall of Indianapolis, holder of the world’s breast stroke record for women, will feature the Purdue aguacade here Dec. 11 and 12 when she will attempt to better her

mark, it was announced today.

CAPTIOLS

On one Indiana play two Pitt men collided headon

Freshman Runners Beat Wabash 15-40

Freshman runners may give the Butler university varsity gross coune try team a perfect season this year, Saturday the Blue and White harriers took the first five places to beat Wabash, 15 to 40, at Crawfordsville, Only one more meet} DePauw, here Oct. 31, remains on the schedule. Fred Emmelman, former Manual runner, and Tom Haynes of Southport, led the Butler harriers against Wabash. They finished a first-place tle.

top-

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