Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 May 1944 — Page 23
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The schedules: Oct. 13—Nebraska at Tofare at at Ohio State. Wisconsin. : ons ova a Purduss Wisconsin af Nov. 10—Iows at Illinois; Ohio Oct._39- Wissonsin at Biel : . : State at Pittsburgh; Northwestern Iowa at Indiana; Northwestern ; In- . . Sept. 22—Indiana at Michigan. Oct. 20—Tllinois at Wisconsin 0 lat Wisconsin: Indiana st Minne. Michigan; Purdue st Ohio State, Sept. 29—Tllinols at Notre Dame; [diana at Towa: SOFTEE oh) a. Oct. 26—Tilinois at Michigan; i It tt and |for 1048 ihe Seifierste out-of-bounds Kick. Northwestern at Indiana. Oct. 27 Michigan a Tineis Nov. 17—Illincis at Ohio State: Ne Duma at Iowa; Minnesota at 3 —- 1 ised when I heard Basketball coaches prepared ligibilit ; Towa Dame; O ' Ohio * : - NEW YORK, May 26.— The yun SEqii iop : he oi reiterated nee pis Oct. 6—Indiana at Illinois Towa at Notre 8: Ohio “|Minnesota at Iowa; Purdue at| Noo, al Minnesota; 3 Cats hve série 3 He Jom Be er True, his tentative slate providing 12 confer-| men and scheduling games with at Ohio State; Michigan at North-| Minnesota, Purdue western Michigan; Notre Dame at North-|Ohio unl a} 3 0 Cpt 1 they ig i hadn't been for h of the nine service teams. yon : s = = : western. consin at Purdue. how many different ways they | impressive but anybody could see hill yesterday, The Robért R. Emmet, com- di Nov. 24-TIlinois at Northwestern: |. Nov. .9—1ilingls at Towa; Indiana can lose a ball game for Lucky | he had great natural stuff.” Sompeting reached tem |mandant of the United Slates naval The Baseball Stan ings Purdue at Indians; Towa at Ne-|at Northwestern; Purdus at Minseolselle. Evans wondered porary impasse Ohio, Ilinois|training center, Great Laies, braska; Ohio State at Michigan; sota; Ohio BE Oe cating ularprise, Wie a mal d ied to book a|told the conference the Bluejackets W. L Pct. Ohio State seesns 3 1 ; 5 Wisconsin at Minnesota. Nov. 16—Ohio State at Ilinofs: only one incidentally, in which | io "uy pba) No, he wasnt. Ed |game with Purdue, but Ohio State|Would not use former professionals| yin 4g o 100 Chicago ny i it jowa at Minnesota; ‘Wisconsin at they are showing alertness, con- | oo Yankees had Lefty | finally reconsidered to prevent the|in their grid lineup this year. MinBesola 5 1 833 Games today: at |Michigan; Northwestern at Notre sistency and imagination, of Unie hole from making two long] The football scheduling brought wanssy i Northwestern, Ohio Sept. 28—Notre Dame at Illinois; | name. Jency ea I al Gouits on 8 milk dle; fof n w Bllermayens and Minnesota. about a resumption of the Notre| Niineis ..........5 2 . due. + Ghissgo 8 {Indiana at Michigan. Nov. 23—Northwestern at Illinois; baseball are following the feature ister; and lop ihe S308 J > re a directors intended to give Dame-Iowa series after a four-year| Northwestern .... : 2 55 Oe jometiuw: Ci » su | Oot BAH or ot ; Towa |Indiara at Purdue; Neb pi with keen interest. No one has ir greater stamina. Com- |final approval to the schedule today,|lapse. The Hawkeyes defeated Ihe Purge .......... I 5 moa ed oh Indiana (two |at Ohio State; Nebraska at Minne- Iowa; Michigan at Ohio State; ever figured out how many Ways | ,..nieq Gomes: “I drank so much |after which the delegates will wind|Irish in 193 and 1940. The 1 Wisconsin ....... 3.5. 4 die H Lin rears ah Notthrcfiors. (Mx sotota 20 Wistoasin. a ball game can be lost. By the | 0 + orted mooing” up the meeting with a faculty meet- schedule is tentative, awaiting the| Iowa ............ cE end of the season it is confident- Camtasia a. ——— eR
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1] I | 43
amazing. He won his first three games, then lost his next six, or rather the Giants lost them for him. Properly supported, he could easily be the leading pitcher in baseball, undefeated, and the current wow of the majors. In
Giants won't let him. A typical | example was the game against | the Dodgers under the lights the | other night. He rated a shutout but was beaten in the ninth
cheap fly ball and two Dodgers | scored.’
This was a game in which he | demonstrated the durability of | his backbone, too. He took control of every clutch himself, under more dramatic circumstances it would have been sensational. Ex- | ample: When Dixie Walket | opened the eighth with a triple, | Voiselle got the next three hitters | on mild infleld plays. That's the kind of pitcher he is. We recall Billy Evans, the old | umpire, now president of the Southern league, telling us about Voiselle at the world series last | fall. It seems to be generally over- | looked that the youngster was | discovered and developed by the, Boston Red - Sox. Evans was | running the Red Sox farms at the time,
s rs » : $ “ONE OF MY FIELD agents, a college coach named Bill Laval, tipped me off to Voiselle,” Evans related. “He had come across | him pitching for a cotton mill ! team in a place called Ninety-Six, | 8. C. I never heard of the place | but I went down there, looked at | the kid and signed him. What I liked about him was his fast ball, | What I didn’t like was his fraility: | He stood 6 feet 4, and was skin and bones, a fast ball skeleton. | “TI had him examined by a doc- | tor who reported he was miserably under-nourished. The doctor recommended a milk diet, two quarts a day for a full year. I wrote out a Red Sox check and instructed the doctor to buy ! Voiselle his own private cow if that would expedite matters. “Well, the kid gradually picked up weight—he's at least 35 pounds heavier now than when I first looked at him—and he automatically became a better prospect. He was still Red Sox property
Athletes Back In Good Standing
| NEW YORK, May 26 (U. P).—| The Amateur Athletic union closed | the Drake relays “incident” today by restoring to good standing all athletes who were in events with
Bob Steuber, a former professional football player and now a sailor at| the Towa naval pre-flight school. Daniel J. Ferris, secretarytreasurer of the A. A. U. said the ac-| tion was taken following assurances | from representatives of both the war} and navy departments that similar! incidents would not occur again, Steuber, who played briefly for one season with the Chicago Bears! before entering the navy, received special permission from coaches at! the Drake relays to enter the shot! put and javelin events, despite a warning from Ferris that any amateur competing ‘in the meet
would lose his status with the!
A. A TU. if Steuber participated,
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