Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 August 1944 — Page 23
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: Middleweight
Bouts Feature
Card at Arena
Six bouts, including a trio of middleweight scraps, will feature the weekly “Club Night” of the Hercules A. C. tonight at Sports arena.
The program marks the nintn|
summer show featuring “fighters who fight” and tonight's offering §s expected to produce plenty of action between willing mixers.
The complete program:
8ix Rounds, Welterweights—Billy Parson, Danville, Ill, vs. Cpl. Jerry Kiger, Ft. Harrison. 8ix Rounds, Middleweights—Bud Hershey, Ft. Wayne, vs. Tito Taylor, Chicago.
Five Rounds, Middleweights—Arnold Deer, Indianapolis, vs, Frank Rand, Indianapolis.
Five Rounds, Welterweights—Mike , Indianapolis, vs. Kid Watson, Evansville,
Pour Rounds, Middleweights—Fred Bailey, Chicago, vs. Bob Linn, Ft. Wayne. Four Rounds, Lightweights—A. C. Lee, Indianapolis, vs. Joe Poindexter, Indianapolis. *
Lee and Poindexter open the card at 8:30.
e Tonight
Ed Scheinbein (left), Mallory shortfielder, and Logan Kinnett, star Metal Auto Parts pitcher.
Metal Auto Parts, Mallorys Will Battle for County Crown
lowing a non-tourney preliminary between Madison Avenue Flowers and Curtiss-Wright men. The Metals, who were 1943 champions under the name of Allison Patrol, fought their way to the finals by eliminating Pastime All-Stars. Allison Gear,
The Marion county metropolitan area men’s softball championship will be decided tonight when Metal Auto Parts and P. R. Mallory Co. clash for the title at Softball stadium. The game is scheduled at 8 fol-
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Park Theater and Madison Avenue Flowers, while the Mallorys defeated Allison ‘Tool Supervision, Allison Red Rings, Curtiss-Wright and Camp Atterbury All-Stars to reach the playoff. With Hal Mahaney, star pitcher for the Metals on the shelf with a broken ankle, Logan Kinnett will be on the firing line. Kinnett was the winning pitcher in last year’s finals. He will be opposed by Tommy Lang, the Mallory ace. The girls’ championship was decided last night when CurtissWright took the title for the fourth consecutive year by winning over Beck Canvas Products, 7-4, in the final tourney game at Speedway. The winners blanked their opponents until the final inning, when two of their three hits aided in sending four runners across the plate, The Kingan & Co. sportsmanship award was won by Helen Neihouse, Beck pitcher. Winners of the men's title and the Curtiss Girls are scheduled for play in the mid-Western regional at FL. Wayne tomorrow night. The men's champion meets the Kentucky State champs at 8.30 while the Curtiss ten battles the Illinois title holders at 7. Probable lineups for tonight's game follow:
! METAL AUTO MALLORY {| MecClimen, 2b Layton, 8 Dible, rf Baird, If Briner, ¢ Stephencon, ss Coffman, ss Pryor, 1b Peyton, cf Shipp. 3b Bardash, 3b Scheinbe'n, sf Wagner, 1b Hogan, rf Taylor, sf Stull, ef Bises!. If ng. p Kinnett, p Carnine. 2b T . Pi win-Pivotman
Attack Lauded
LOGANSPORT, Ind. Aug. 31 (U. P.) —Advantages of the double-pivot {offense outweigh the disadvantages {of teaching the system to high school basketball players, Coach Royner Greene, whose Middleton, O quintet won the 1944 Ohio high school championship, said yester-
AND day. BOOK SouDeRs D | Greene, in a talk at the closing
session of the three-day 16th anELIGIBLE FOR CERTIFICATES nual Indiana basketball clinic here,
{asserted that the twin-pivotman attack's greatest advantage was the opposition’s trouble in halting it. The Ohio coach, whose clubs have won 144 games while losing only 24 in the past eight years, and Adolph Rupp of the University of Kentucky, demonstrated the double-pivot offense and also showed methods of stopping the twin pivotmen,
Hoosier Retained § As Braves’ Pilot ~
*1 6°
(plus tax) 6.00-16 BOSTON, Aug. 31 (U. P.).—~Man{vith your old #i®) agers of both Boston major league
baseball teams, Joe Cronin of the Red Sox and Bob Coleman of the Braves, were secure in their jobs today, after signing new contracts. Cronin was signed to a new threeyear contract yesterday, Red Sox president Tom Yawkey making the A | announcement a few hours before fh the Braves held a directors’ meeting here to rehire Coleman of Evansville, Ind. President Robert Quinn of the Braves said that the directors were “perfectly satisfled with the job Coleman has done.” Terms ‘of the contracts were not divulged but it was understood Cronin’s called for approximately $25,000 a year.
Bowling Holy Trinity bowling league will meet at 7:30 tonight at the Dezelan alleys.
TRUCK TIRE
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Lynn Waldorf Expects 50 for
First Practice
EVANSTON, Ill, Aug. 31 (U. P). —Coach Lynn Waldorf will begin building his 10th Northwestern university football team Saturday when he meets with 50 players at Dyche stadium for the first practice session in preparation for the season's Rs game against Wisconsin Sept.
ie lettermen, all Sophomores last year, will form the backbone of Waldorf's 1944 eleven. His name players of '43 have completed their training and gone into active service. The returning Wildcat “veterans” will include five backs, Bob Funderburg, fullback; Frank (Red) Clawson and Ben S8chadler, quarterbacks, and Hank Altpeter and Jack Harker, fullbacks. Harker was an end last year, but during summer practice was shifted to the backfield. Linemen returning from last year are Duane Sickels, end; John Kroeger, tackle, and Ray Justak and Frank Jagels, guards.
Favorites Win
In First Round Court Matches
FOREST HILLS, N. J, Aug. 31 (U. P.).—The going gets rougher in the national amateur tennis championships today following a routine first round in which the men's and women's fields each were reduced to 16 survivors and the only seeded casualty was former Davis Cupper Sidney Wood. The New York laundryman lost a 6-3, 6-8, 6-1 decision to Charles Oliver of Perth Amboy, N. J, in the opening round. The rest of the favorites progressed according to plan, led by top-seeded Francisco (Pancho) Segura, making his fifth bid for the title, and Pauline Betz of Los Angeles, women's champion. Segura polished off Pvt. Dave Johnsen of Washington, 6-2, 6-3, and today goes against Pvt. Dave Freeman
Second-seeded Lt. -W. Donald McNeill, Norfolk, Va., meets J. Gilbert Hall of New York, while Billy Talbert, Indianapolis, faces Pvt. George Ball, Ft. Bliss, Tex.
By TIM TIPPETT THIS TIME WE CAN start out optimistically and report that fishing is good at least at Lake Barbee. ~ “Several friends of ours were up there for 48 hours of fishing and
Andersson Wins STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Aug 31 (U. P.).—Arne Andersson, the Swedish school teacher, added a victory|} in the.2000 meters distance to his record of triumphs over Gunder Hagg today, beating him hy five meters in 5:12.6.
= OUT-OF.-PAW
Men's SUITS & TOPGOATS
while they didn't catch very much there was plenty of activity. While they were there it rained and the wind ruined any chances of landing any sizable fish. However, they report that bluegills stole their bait
SAVE—BUY BONDS
Hundreds to Choose From.
95
before it had a chance to settle and two or five pound bass are being pulled out of the lake at a good rate. Grasshoppers seem to be a preferred item on the Barbee fishes’ menu these days . . | just in case you can lure any away from what's left of your victory garden. s os
” Fish Catches Man \ ROSCOE SWAILS of the Davis Lumber Co. usually brings home a good mess of fish after A a day of angling. Not so the last time he was out however. This time the fish took Roscoe. He was on Freeman lake the other day and while rummaging in his tackle box laid his cane pols on the boat seat. Just as he was complaining to his companion that the fish weren't biting, he saw, out of the corner of his eye, the pole slide quietly over the side and begin streaking across the lake. For the next half hour it was nip and tuck with the pole leading the field all the way. Finally the pole was recovered and Mr. Swails pulled out—a 15-inch
Casters to Hold Annual Tourney
The Indianapolis Casting club will hold it's annual fall tournament next Sunday and the following Sunday, The distance plug events will te cast on the baseball diamonds immediately south of the tennis courts at Riverside at 9:30 a. m. The salmon fly and distance fly games will be cast at the pool at Riverside Fish Hatcheries at 2 p. m. Jack Moore whose casting in the salmon fly at the recent national tournament at St. Louis earned fourth place, will participate. Jack's long cast of 176 feet was close to the old national record which was broken by Bob Piros of St. Louis who cast 192 feet.
carp. To have his pole stolen by a lowly carp wasn’t enough. He went out that evening and the first gentle tug on his line cost him his leader, hook and 10 feet of line. The fish is still probably bragging about the man that got away. o ”n
Mother Hubbard item
AND NOW BACK TO ammunition for this fall and winter: Yesterday the WPB in Washington announced that they had re-
voked for the remainder of '44 the | ban on the sale of ammunition to !
hunters:
Well it happens that life isn't You just |!
as simple as all that. don't say O. K. buy all the nylons you want and then find a lot of nylons to buy. In the case of shotgun shells the local cupboards are bare. As soon as the revocation order was released in the papers yesterday sporting good stores here spent the remainder of the day saying sorry no have got. The local office of WPB hasn't been officially informed of yester= day's order as yec but it will make little difference until the stores here receive some shipments. Em-Roe’s informs us that they think the posibility ~of getting some stock is good, but at the moment sorry no have got. The new order states that hunters may purchase through Dec. 31, 100 rounds of - 22 rime fire; 40 or 50 rounds, depending on packaging, of center-fire rifle ammunition, and 100 shotgun shells of any gauge. Purchasers will be required to sign certificates stating that they are entitled to the ammunition. That's fair enough.
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Southeast Conference Urges
,| be awarded by each school on a
Unified Foothall Rule Book
BIRMINGHAM, Ala, Aug. 31 (U. P.) —Fallure of Southeastern conference officials to revise and streamline football: rules for the current campaign, made it appear today that Eastern colleges would be the only ones to operate under changed regulations until after the war. In an effort to standardize competition and to eliminate or minmize proselyting, the conference representatives proposed that a maximum of. 75 athletic scholarships
{ other conferences on unifying the rules. | The group recommended that student athletes attending colleges at government expense under the, GI bill of rights receive athletic) scholarships limiting them to room, board and laundry. They] also agreed that time spent in mil- | itary service should not affect a returning veteran’s status and all players with less than half a year of football participation be regarded as first year men
Full-Fledged Rider
NEW YORK, Aug. 31 (U. P).—| Bobby Permane, the nation's lead-! ing apprentice jockey, became a full] fledged rider today. The youngster, who brought iiome |
contract basic. The regulation would provide that a player be ineligible to play for /any other college after signing a contract to play for a conference member team. They tabled any action on revision of rules, calling instead for
a unified national football rule book based on a general tightening of pre-war regulations. They named a special committee to confer with
his first winner at Garden State |
park in Camden, N. J, on Aug. 31, 1943, rates third among the nation's riders for 1944.
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