Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 October 1942 — Page 27
P.)—Sam Breadon, president of the St. Louis Cardinals, said today he was “in no \urry” to ; select a successor to Branch ‘Rickey, who resigned as gen- | ‘eral manager to become presi“dent of the Brooklyn Dodgers. “I have no one in mind to succeed Rickey,” Breadon said. “That post probably will.be divided among several members | of our organization. Anyway, -you can rest.assured that I will not appoint an outsid : Among those prominently
; challenge—relatively - the. BANS Shit ently He. New rss Seat Gorse lan service ha: he Sm ands, fink of nav Some with the an ‘the|the A ot! calls ve ac-|p newcomers. a] were sq y the pure ¥ bs Oct. 30. with complished = a severe ' leveling-off wealth of new material, however,|draft but there are some spectaeular| from the Leafs. He of the clubs depleted by service| process throughout the league, The|Adams’ hopes rest chiefly on 11{newcomers, particularly Don Gal-|binatiohs of forwards losses, the National Hockey league, Lats and Detroit Red Wings still| members of last year's squad which linger, Bill Shill and Armand Gui-|good defense men, Paul reduced to a six-team circuit byirule as favorites to cop the cup. - |brought the Wings to the final play-|dolin. = Veteran Goalie Frankie will tend goal. = the absence: of the Brooklyn Ameri-| Toronto's replacements average off round. He has two veteran lines|Brimsek is along with seven ; cans, opens | 1942-43 season Jepiatsund 19 years of age and coach!and lots of extra defensive punch.iseasoned men. Cadet Football morfow night. Tega Hap Day said his biggest worry is| The potent scoring power that! Chicago Manager Paul Thompson {the truant officer. But Day has 10|was a of the Rangers, is|gives his club only an even chance! Tomorrow's C. ¥. O. cadet. Stars have been recruited by. the| veterans to steady his brigade and|absent. The New Yorkers, with the|to win a playoff berth, The Hawks| pall league schedule to begin services from every team in the|places a great deal of reliance on| possible exception of the Bruins, | were hard hit by the services: Ting! g.25 o'clock in the morning 1s league and with tne gaps filled by|defense star Bucko McDonald. Day, |face the new season with the great-| Thompson, former Bruins’ goalie, youngsters with an average, age of|Bowever, must build an entire new|est number of absentees of any out- may come out of a two-year re-|Joan of Arc vs. Os 19, it may take several weeks to|defense line to keep the Stanley Cup|fit. Nine stars of a 15-man squad|tirement to aid his brother. Piveland Arsenal sts. Flower mentioned for the position find a new doormat to replace the|and will . convert Forward Hank | have been lost and the team will be|veteran wingmen reported for prac- Holy Cross at Brookside: Our 1 ‘were William Walsingham - Jr, | | Americans, ‘out of ‘the league for Goldup into a backer-upper. A group built around the forward line’ of|tice but Earl Seibert was the only . Breadon’s nephew, Who is a | [ine duration. . of 15 rookies will supply the back-|Phil Watson, Lynn Patrick ‘and| regular defense man who returned.|of Lourdes vs, Sacred Heart | Cardinal vice president; Eddie | | ~The first games of a schedule that + Buzingld,| Coach Dick Irwin of the Cana-|Christian park; Holy Trinity w Dyer, manager of the Colum- will quality four clubs for the Stan-|TU the | rookie goalle, will replace Jim Henry. diens assays his clubs’ chances as| Philip's at Rivegside; St. Pali bus, ‘O., ‘farm club, and Joe | ley Cup playoffs—won last: season ¢ | The Canadian air force has taken|twice as good which means he ex-| vs. Holy Rosary at Garfield, and | Mathes, chief Sout. : ; by Toronto—will pit the New , York Manager Jack ‘Adams counts on |Boston’s high-scoring line of Milt|pects to finish third. He lost two|Catherine’s vs. Holy Angels at El Rangers against the Leats at To-' Wo factors to renew the ecsols iSchuniar, Bobby Bayer and Porty centers, tires Wingmen snd 8 de-! berger, Ey
Hasn't Forgotten Durocher
His first chore as the one-man Brooklyn brain trust will be to attend the major league draft meeting in Chicago Monday, but his most
pressing task will be the choice of
4 new manager. Rickey said that the possible return of Leo Durocher, current pilot, to his regular position had not been forgotten. “However, I am under the impression,” Rickey said. “that Durocher plans to enter some branch
: lof the services shortly, but I will
| Players Set
Pace .
not know definitely until I return
Rickey admitted that the draft status of the new manager would be an important factor because it was his belief that all men currently in 3-A face induction sooner or later.
‘A, Oct. 30 (U. P.).—United| -The list of candidates for man-
ay in the inter-American|Fred Fitzsimmons, Chuck Dressen, m ent I by the Cuban|Burt Shotton, Billy Herman and
federation at the Club Cutwo v. 8S. players suffered
Bill Meyer, but Blades’ name heads all the rest for several good reasons,
yesterday—Doris Hart and| He has been thoroughly schooled Mulloy, both of Miami,/in the Rickey method of managing |Over 400 scholastic athletes reprea Gonzales-Lavarga pairediwhile in charge of the Cardinals’ y to defeat Miss Hart and|farm teams at Columbus, O., and|Prep schools, will compete tomorrow
7-9, 6-3, 6-4,
Wednesday. Bertha Gartnia and Pepe
8-2, 9-1. Betz of Los Atigeles, Cal,
“with Joffre Echevarry, Cu-
8s champion, to trim Mirso and Ricardo Morales,
Cards from November, 1938, to July, 1840, and as a player was strictly a product of the St. Louis chain sys-
that setup. He played the outfield for 10 years with the Cardinals and took part in the 1930 and 1931 world series as a member of the Red
Tami’s Punching Favored, 9 to 5
NEW YORK, Oct: 30. (U. P.).— ami Mauriello of New York is favored at 9-5 to lick Lee Savold of Paterson, N. J, tonight in their 10-round bout at Madison Square Garden—a bout that will mean much in determining ultimately the “duration: heavyweight champion.” Mauriello, 22, is favored because of his youth, punch and recuperative ability. Savold will out-weigh him about 190 pounds to 184, but Mauriello is considered the sharper puncher and a man who can survive Punish ent much better than Savo. Tonight's Wilner meets Jimmy
Bivins of Cleveland at the Garden, ||
Nov. 27. The victor of that bout will have taken a long stride toward
jfes players continued to pace the/ager of the Dodgers also includes|the “interim” heavyweight title,
400 Boys to Run
In Cross-Country NEW YORK, Oct. 30 (U. P)—
senting more than 40 high and
com-{Rochester, N. Y. Hes managed the|in the sixth annual New York unia match interrfipted by
versity interscholastic gross-country event in the East. Bishop Loughlin Memorial high
I defeated Miss Lavarga and tem, performing with four clubs in school of Brooklyn, N. ¥. won the
team trophy last year. The George H. Barker trophy goes to the winning team and medals are awarded to the first 10 men and sets of
this morning that the two
Birds. medals to the three top teams. i y only singles match, Fran- Capable Manager p ; : by Durocher might not make a ost 8-4, 6-0. {smooth cog in the Rickey scheme : pone Game : . _ |since Leo the Lip is a counterpart The Shortridge-Cathedral Y Foashe anid of the boisterous MacPhail and the| |.high school football game, Sohn former Cardinals’ chief is the direct| 4 scheduled for this afternoon at R Fe d antithesis of Laughing Larry, the North side field, has been RKenew reu Blades’ record as manager of the| | postponed until Monday betion 1 of a “feud” between Cardinals—they finished second in cause of a muddy fleld [1930 and third the following year—|.| "Russell 8. Julius, Shortridge Tate) | ot imposing but he is a capable ‘ ? 1 j manager. An injury cut short his| | 2ihieUc director, announced MEN'S ALL-WOOL (Below) J
i232 for 601 to lead
major league playing cdreer and after a few seasons of minor league play he retired. In 1933, he guided Columbus to its first pennant in 26 years. He piloted Rochester in 1936-37-38 and after his brief tenure with the Cards, managed New Orleans in 1941.
schools, in order to “conserve their equipment,” would play the game Monday at 2:45 p. m. He said it would cost the schools $100 each to play in the mud.
It's 6 to 5 and Take Your Pick
Of Georgia or
Alabama
NEW YORK, Oct. 30 (U. P.)—Georgia’s streamlined backfield, led by all-America Frankie Sinkwich, drives against the mountainous line of Alabama’s Crimson Tide tomorrow in a battle of undefeated teams which ‘has divided the South and headlines the college football layout.
It's 6 to 5
d take your pick as the game between these two great
teams, both undefeated and untied, overshadows one of the best proA ———————————————
grams of the season. Featured sec-
‘tional tilts send unbeaten Army
Boston college, on its great record
against Pennsylvania's powerhouse|to date, ruled 2 to 1 over formidable with the Cadets & 6-5 favorite in|Georgetown. Ivy league games inthe East; ‘undefeated Ohio” State a|stalled Princeton, 8 to 5, over Har-7-5 choice over once-tied Wiscon-|vard with Yale-Brown even money ‘sin in: the Midwest, and U. C. L. A.’s|and Columbia-Cornell, 8 to 5, and ‘bawl-bound speedboys a 3-2 favorite] choose. . Once-tied Penn State was ever improved Stanford. ‘ 8 to 5 over West Virginia: Colgate, The Georgia-Alabama bout black-|7 to 5, over Holy Cross; ‘North
Guts Horde of. close games in the [Carolina Pre-fight a 3-3 choice to
.| hand Syracuse its first setback, and South. Other Southeastern confer-|g ov "co Mary’s even money.
4 Vanderbilt out as In the Midwest, Notre Dame, after
favorites et Auburn, Tennessee|> great comeback, was a prohibi-
tive 4-to-1 choice over the: Navy and Tulane. - Undefeated Georgia y Tech holds & 6 to 5 edge on Duke | LSSOUrl held a slight edge on
with North Carolina chosen over North: - Carolina State and Wake | Forest holding an edge on: Clem-|°
Great Lakes naval station iin Iowa Pre-flight holding 7-3
ver Indiana. Detroit's clean rec-||
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son. In the Southwest, undefeated T. C. U. is 8-5 over Baylor; and Texas and. ‘the’ Texas. Aggies both |, are 7-5 choices over S. M. U. and?
choice over. Iowa State, Ne-|| braska over Kansas and Katisas ‘ State over Wichita. : Three Pacific coast games, fn - dition to the U. C. I. A.-St pa Hi made California an 8-to-5 seover Oregon, WashingtonOregon State even money. and Monavn over Idaho.. In the en, Brigham Young, Colorado and Utah drew the nod over: Utah te. yoming and Coleads Staje, respectively.
we win oo Open ry Monday Until 845 P. M.
§ Your Tire Problems to
Swimmers Report At DePauw U. ;
GREENCASTLE, Oct. 30.—Four Varsity lettermen from last: year's
