Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 February 1946 — Page 6
pounds, and middleweight, pounds, :
and Ace Freeman, New York, two
, In Gil LaCross of Boston. Fans
¥
in which to sharpen up the last show here and the the Chicago event. look at The Times-Legion tourtry list indicates there will be class matches fought Friday and perhaps 15 in the e starting time for this week's will be 7:45 p. m. instead of customary 8:15 in order to all weight divisions in both eliminated down to the r the title program to be 15.
ney
Head Fg :
All Must Weigh In remaining in the tourney to weigh in again this this means lads in both novice classes. The weighphysical examinations will at the Armory Friday aftertween 4 and 8 p. m. the weeks pass, the contesround into better form and more rugged. Last week's show the
BSE BERRI, EK rials
far and this Friday close tournament observers predict another expansion in the toe-to-toe ring warfare.
. As a matter of fact, boys in three of the novice class weight divisions probably will have to fight twice on
§
Friday's program. The heavily pop- | I* ~ ulated divisions are the flyweight,
112 pounds; welterweight,
¢ Finals to Be 15 at Armory Arena; 1 Booked This Week
i Times Sports
week and the remaining dates now
teur fistic classic will be staged at the and last at same aréna a week from
to give all the eager lads an opportunity
. =» =»
Gloves Tickets
Reserved seat tickets for next Friday's: fourth Times-Legion Golden Glove amateur boxing presentation at the Armory are on sale at the Bush-Callahan store, 136 E. Washington, and at’ the Sportsman's store, 126 N, Pennsylvania. Prices for the reserved ducats are $2.20 and §1.60. General admission tickets, priced at $1.00, go on sale at the Armory box office on fight nights at 6:30 p. m. Reserved seat tickets also will be available at the Armory on fight nights.
Cleveland Pin Ace Goes Big
CHICAGO, Feb. 4 (U. P.).—~John Quinzi, East Rochester, N. Y, was tied ¥ in second place today with Frank Sospirato, Cleveland, in the 34th version of the $52,000 Petersen individual bowling classic. Quinzi, recently discharged army lieutenant, was off big with a fivegame count of 1084 but faltered on the final three lines to finish with a 1627. He started out with a handsome 247, added 205, 174, 201, and a banner 257 but then was able to produce only 183, 174 and 186. Still in front with the 1652 he rolled last Saturday, was Chicago's Adolph (Swede) Carlson, who remained the man to beat for the
$5000 jackpot. best for sustained action Also highlighting yesterday's ac-|
tion was a 1618 posted by Frank Carr, Ft. Wayne, Ind, to gain thé upper bracket. The leaders after 41 of 85 squads:
Adolph Carlson, Chicago ............ 1652 Fran irato, Cleve. vis . 1627 John Quinzi, East Rochester, N. Y 1637 ank Carr, Ft. Wayne, Ind.
Charles Lausche, Euclid, O
Stan Wocjlak, Minneapolis . Al Walter, Thief FIER Lee Braymiller, Buffalo .. .
Chandler Says He’
s Above Hazing,
But Baseball Scribes Pay No Heed
NEW YORK, Feb. 4 (U. P.).—Major league baseball bigwigs climaxed
uneventful 1946 schedule-making meeting last night by
attending the New York baseball writers’ 23d annual dinner, at which Commissioned A. B. (Happy) Chandler said he felt he was no longer subject to “hazing”—and then was unmercifully lampooned. Chandler told the 1000 writers and their guests that he would com-
plete his freshman year as commissioner soon, and therefore would be a sophomore—above hazing. He has been bitterly attacked by some! writers since coming into office. But the writers’ skits had little mercy on the Kentuckian, Larry MacPhail of the New York Yankees and Sam Breadon of the St. Louis
$154,000 Fistic Gate.in Making
NEW YORK, Feb. 4 (U. P.).—This | week's national boxing schedule
Golden Gloves committeé
5 :
Times-Legion Go
olden
__ MONDAY, FEB. 4, 1948
loves
eet
Notre Dame basketball team
foreground (left to right) are Jo
Corley. Both teams have only
Irish dropped their first over the week-end to Northwestern, 56-55.
On the floor of Rockne Memorial hall here, members of the
discuss plays they'll use: Saturday
night against N. Y, U, Violets in Madison Square garden. In the
hnny Dee, Captain Bill Hassett and
, Frank Gilhosley. Inthe background (left to right) are Dan Gatens, George Ratterman, Leo Klier, Joe Sobek, Tom O'Keefe and Ray,
one defeat on their records. The
|
~ Once-Beaten Irish Pr epare to Go Violet-Picking
Sacred Heart Gets Revenge
Sacred Heart gained revenge for an earlier defeat, and Tech and the Silent Hoosiers were other winners in high school basketball play Saturday night. ‘ The Spartans trimmed B8t. Joseph’'s of Rensselaer, 50-33, at the South Side gym as Mike Zahn set a new scoring mark for the school with 26 points.
Tech came #om behind In the last period to shade Southport, 2723. The Cards led ‘at the end of the third period, 18-17. The Silent Hoosiers rapped Manual in a city series contest, 45-30. It was the Redskins’ 12th straight
|defeat for the season.
Noblesville held the upper hand
293 |throughout = in defeating Broad
Ripple’s Rockets, 49-38.* Only two points separated the teams at the half, but the Millers rolled to a 39-21 lead in the third period. In county play, Warren Central trounced Lawrence Central, 48-33. CITY SERIES STANDING (Excludes Tourneys)
The Hoosiers, who won the 19
year's event, . The nearest rival to the defending champions after a week-end of {action was Jett's Garage, who had 2221. In third®place is Merridat Beauty Shop with 2212; Davidson's Vassar Guild is fourth with 2190 and Christie's Drugs, fifth, with 2145. The Coal & Oil aggregation added a 283 handicap to its leading series to total 2883 and the top spot in the handica division, The Christie Mrs Bradley . five is second with 2762, Merridat is third with 2721; Jett’s, fourth, with
Tech . : .6 0 208 123 1000/2718 and Dougherty’s Homestead Sacred Heart ..... 3 1 120 107 .750¢ Howe : "31 106 99 Tat Tavern. fifth, with 20 Washington 4 2 242 180 .667 combination of Betty Dobyns Shortridge ese 32 165 148. 600) The 0In ook y first Silent Hoosiers ..... 1 1 63 61 500 | and Wilena Butler t over firs Cathedral ova 3 4 210 220 428 i th divisions of the douBroad Ripple 2 5 iss 227 .ags Place in bot h te Crispus = Attucks 0 2 40 51 000 bles event. Miss Dobyns, who was Manual 0 7.179 316
Bob Montgomery
In Easy Victory
NEW ORLEANS, Feb. 4 (U. P). ~Lightweight Champion Bob
Montgomery returned to Philadel- |
000 making her final local appearance
in a city tournament before changing her residence to South Carolina, had 556 and her partner 485 for a 1040. When they ‘added a .138 free pins they soared to the top in the handicap division with 1178.
In Handicaps
Cardinals. Chandler's Southern ac- Will be featured by a 10-round brawl |phia today, satisfied with his first ford are second in the actual scor-
cent and mannerisms also were subject of much of the kidding. In an address before the skits, Chandler paid tribute to Judge Kenesaw Landis, his predecessor, and said he intended to render de-
between welterweight Johnny Greco |
ring performance since receiving
and Beau Jacls at Madison Square ‘his discharge from the army.
garden Friday night. | With tickets topped at $20, their | slugfest is expected to attract a gate of $154,000—largest since Joe
states,
Brown-skinned Montgomery, who
pion by New York and affiliated won easily a unanimous
Louis and Buddy Bear drew $189,- |non-title 10-round decisi cisions as t and impartial as y h ecision over those of Al “and certainly as 700 at the garden for their return Bill Parsons, Negro of Danville,
final” -. Al Schact, former pitcher and for | many years baseball's leading comedian, received the Bill Slocum Memori#i award as the man who did| the most for baseball in 1945. He traveled to service camps all over the world to entertain soldiers and sailors, George Stirnweiss, American] league batting champion and! Yankee second baseman,
bout on Jan, 9, 1942.
An Orchid to Tho
Ill, before 5000 fans yesterday.
{ing with 1025; Margaret Skelton | and Gertrude Bradley combined for {a 1010 and third place; Mary T° ‘le
is recognized as 135-pound cham- | and Mary Jan Wilmoth and Bei. ice
Barnett and Eda Mae Schoen are tied for fifth with 980’s. In the handicaps the Tuttle-Wil-moth combination took over the runner-up spot with 1166; the Bar-
se Kokomo Cage Kats,
Now Stamped as Potential Title Contenders
By JAMES E. WALTERS United Press Sports Writer
Kokomo's tall Wildcats,
labeled shot, was as a potential late season threat|King figured he'd leave Conwell at
Key scorer for the Kats is lanky Maurice Conwell, a southpaw hotBefore the Richmond game,
awarded the writers’ trophy as/in the pre-season Indiana high home because of a cold. Conwell
“player of the year” in 1945,
Jones on All-Star | foo ’ Wrestling Menu ~The second all-star show of the indoor wrestling season is an- | nounced for tomorrow night at the Armory where the appearance of | Farmer Jones serves as the feature, Whitey Wahlberg, Columbus, O.,
frontline matmen, open the program at 8:30. The semi-windup is between Jim Spencer, Boston, and Maurice Chappell, Newark, N. J. Both are one-fall tussies. The “hillbilly” Jones, a favorite here, is up against a rugged foe
Gil for his skill and power, list him as a “pet hate” because his rough style. He was here i weeks Ago when he and iting Angelo won over Rene and Billy Thom in a tag-
we'll develop a lot yet.”
school basketball future book, came | into their own today.
The Kats, hampered by injuries and illness most of the way, hit their season peak Friday at Rich-| mond, routing the Devils, 55-31. | It was the “orchid of the week” performance in the United Press book and stamped coach Ralph King's crew as one of the midlands’ most potent state tourney standard bearers. Kokomo has won seven of its! nine starts since the New Year and | the only defeats—to Anderson and New Castle — were by Identical 38-36 scores. The Kats, who have another crack at Anderson this Friday in the North Central conference title game, now boast a five-game winning streak. King frankly admits he doesn’t know whether he has a “solid” state title contender. “We've got the height, the speed,
{
fair defensively,” he said, “but we're not as steady as we could be.” “We're coming along late again— Just as the team did that lost to Evansville Bosse in the state finals two years ago,” he added. “I think
King rates this year's team as stronger than his quintet of two
the hitting ability and we're pretty|
went along at the last minute, however, and tossed in 25 points. Crack rebounder John Platt badly injured a finger a week ago and he's still out. Wendell Maupin,
sizzling-hot Red a six-foot four-inch 185-pounder, is | clubs.
taking all-state Schwartz’ place at center. King credits him with much of the Kats' rebound and defensive strength “and he throws some in, too.”
Jack Kendall, clutch-shooting guard, was the only regular to return from last season. Two tall boys, Don Goodlove and Don Gevirtz, round out. the top six. ‘All were on the '44-45 tourney squad. With Kokomo's ending of a ninegame Richmond streak as the top feat, here are the other headline performances last week: 2. Marion's 20-25 upset of LaFayette Jefferson four days after the Broncos were rated No. 1 in Indiana. 3. East Chicago Washington's overtime defeat of : second-place Hammond high for the title in the western wing of the Northern league. :
4. Evansville Central's 36-33 over-
time licking of Jasper at Jasper, | keeping the Golden Bears atop the {Southern conference. . 5. New Albany's 35-33 home-floor triumph over Jasper, running’ the Bulldog winning streak to eight in a row, 6. Gary Roosevelt's 40-33 drop{ping of Calumet City Fractional, fone of the Illinois powerhouse
| 7. Elkhart's three-point win over {Squth Bend Central, giving the once-beaten Blazers a sure tle for
|the East-N. I. H. 8. C. title.
8. Columbus’ lopsided trouncing |of Rushville, assuring the Bulldogs
|
a share of the South Central cham- |
plonship. 9. Linton’s defeat of Sullivan, the Wabash valley champs’ 11th straight. 10. Bloomington’s termination of Indianapolis Howe's 10-game winning streak. Close on the heels of these was the 70-51 victory Wabash scored over Plymouth in what may be the deciding game of the Central conference race.
1.
|
IT'S TIME.
OIL AND GAS
years ago and, “although we haven't a Tom Schwartz we're better man-for-man than last year (when Kokomo won 22 out of 26
*
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WE STARTED FOR HOME,
Hoosier Coal Gains Lead in Women’s City Bowling Event
Despite the absence of their captain, Bertha Gorka, the Hoosier Coal & Oil took the lead in the team events as the 27th annual women's city bowling tournament got under way at Sport Bowl over the week-end.
up a 2600 three-game series in their Saturday night appearance in this
MORE COMFORTABLE
45 event with a 2501 total, stacked
nett-Schoen duo is third with 1142; Irene Collins and Eleanor Lavell are fourth with 1135 and Minnie Leonard and Alberta Shaffer are fifth with 1134. Mrs. Bradley, twice city singles champion, again took ghe lead in that division with a 593, derived from 199, 201, 173. In second place is Mrs. - Twyford, the Parkway instructress, who had 560; Artie Stepehenson is third with 549; Miss Striebeck fourth with 547, and Margaret Skelton and Alice Everett tied for fifth with 546's. Division Lead The latter added an 87-pin handicap to her series for a 633 and the handicap division lead. Mrs. Bradley's 573, with 51 free pins, and Mrs, Stephenson's 549 and a 75-pin donation gave the pair 624s
{and a tie for second and third cent victories over Ball State and Elizabeth Pfeilschifter had DePauw.
| places. [516 (93) for 609 and fourth, and | Mrs. Twyford 560 (48) 608, good for Miss Striebeck assumed the lead in the championship division of the all-events. Her 547 team total, 554 in the doubles and 547 in the singles gave her 1648 and the leadership. Miss Dobyns and Miss Striebeck are tied for the lead in the handi-
Butler Faces
Quaker Five
ketball squad will be after its eighth victory in 10 Indiana con-
ference starts this evening when it meets Earlham college. The tipoff is at 8:15 p. m. at the fieldhouse. Injuries and scholastic difficulties plague Coach Tony Hinkle and definitely have removed Bob King, guard, and Dick Heacox and Bob Liebert, guards. On the doubtful list are Arthur Cook, forward, and Jerry Cranny, center. The Bulldogs, running third to once-beaten Indiana State and Valparaiso, must triumph over the Quakers to remain in the title chase, In the all-over series between these two teams the Hinklemen have emerged victorious 16 times in 31 games. Earlier in the season Butler defeated Earlham at Richmond in a close game, 42-40. The Earlham squad has been strengthened by G. 1.'s who entered school*the second semester. The rejuvenated squad has racked up re-
Courtney Gerrish, former all-city | star from Washington high school, | who has shown up well in prac-| tice, will make his debut for Butler in tonight's game. He may get the call to start at center for the injured Cranny, the Bulldogs’ chief point getter. Probable starting lineups.
Butler ha Hartman «Forward ......... Patrick Cook or Humbert Forward .... Ranck Cranny or Gerrish Center .... » Wood
cap division with 1738's. Miss
Patty Striebeck and Sally Twy-| Dobyns had 1558 and 180 charity | Toes SEE
| pins, while Miss Striebeck’s 80 handicap gave her a tie with her Hoosier teammate, | Rolling on the final squad last right, Jack Schaeffer and Louie Ur-| | bancic copped first place in the] handicap division of the sixth an-| nual Dezelan doubles, which was concluding a run of three weekends. Other High Scores Schaeffer collected 627 and Urbancic 635 for a 1262. They added a 159 handicap for 1421 and top money. Bud Schoch and John Steele were runnersup in the handicaps with 1398; Les Miller and Frank Turk combined their totals for 1196 (144) 1340 and third; Vince Manno and R. Strickhorn, the Shelby, Ind, duo, was fourth with 1073 (261) 1334 and Oscar Behrens and John Kiesel, fifth, with 1263 (63) 1326. Schoch and Steele finished first in the actual scoring with 1296; Kiesel and Behrens were second with 1263; Schaeffer and Urbancic third with 1262; Harry Wheeler and Behrens, fourth with 1247 and Bob Earl and Emmett Byers, fifth with 1226. Earl's 666 won the prize for the top three-game solo series, while
.. Guard . Officials—Ray Lackey (Shelbyville) and
: ‘Martin
Guard inv Gettinger
yde Gentry (Crawfordsville).
Demaret Is
Golf Winner
TUCSON, Ariz., Feb. 4 (U. P).— The winter golf circuit moved on to San Francisco for the Texas
Open today after Jimmy Demaret of Houston won the Tucson Open
Do Butler university's. riddled bas-
They saved the best for the last
points, Ri « The Caps boosted thelr Western division bulge over Pittsburgh to six points and set the stage fgh a crucial encounter in Buffalo on Wednesday night when the league jead will be at stake against the Bisons, ; The teams battled through a rough but scoreless first period, marked largely by a bit of inept shooting by both and some fine work in the nets by both Tom Wilson and Tim Henry. Henry saved what seemed almost a sure goal on George Blake late in the period when the Cap winger went in on him alone. Wilson, too, was credited with a sure stop on George Pargeter under almost similar conditions while Andy Branigan was off the ice on an interference penalty. Tt was his second misdemeanor of the period and carried over into the middle stanza. It was not a costly one, however. Eagles Score * The Eagles broke up a Cap rush and turned it into a goal of their own at 7:42 in the second session. Bill Holouka went sailing down the left side of the ice and shot a pass over to Ken Kilrea. The Eagle cen- . » »
Hockey Summary
Indianapolis (5) New Haven (3)
alie -...ovecne Hen Right Defense Labovitch Left Defense ..... .Labrie Ler ..avesss Courteau Right Wing ....... Dawes Toft WING +. i.+ «ions 11 Indianapolis Spares—Seibert, Branigan, Blake, Rossignol. or aun, Bukovich, ting, Brown, Holota, Bashing Haven Spares—Milne, Pargeter, Kilrea, Hewson, Summerhill, Gooden,
ldup, Holouka, McPherson. Geldup —8core by Periods—
Indianapolis .L..ocoeiioves 0 0 5-5 New Haven ........eooocves 0 2 3-5 First Period Scoring—None. Penalties— Goldup (tripping), ranigan (tripping. Milne (high sticking); Branigan (interference).
d Period Scoring—(1) New Haven, Kilrea (Holouka), 7:42; (2) New Haven, Courteau (Bell), 16:36. Penalties—Bukothigh sticking); McPherson (high icking). Bukovich (elbowing). 3 SH nird Period . Scoring—(3) Indianapolis, swick, Douglas), Jos; 2 janapolis, Conacher (Douglas, SIndian P53: (5) Indianapolis, Leswick (Douglas, Conacher), 10:28; (6) New Ha11 (Courteau), 11:15; (7) New Ha{Summerhill}, Ba 22 New Gooden (Goldup, cPherson), 1446; (9) Indianapolis, Bukovich (Les wick, Conacher), 15:45; (10) Indianapolis, Conacher (Leswick, Bukovich), 19:17. Penalties — Milne (slashing); Courteau thigh sticking): Helouka (high sticking). Officials—Kealing and Russell.
Conacher (
ven, ven, Kilrea
Hockey Race
AMERICAN LEAGUE Western Division
% 15 7 at on 8 INDIANAPOLIS ... 25 7 Pittsburgh .. . 22 15 7 182 150 51 Cleveland ... 18 18 7 172 171 43 8t. Louis . 18 21 6 142 179 42 Eastern Division w T G.- GA a Buffalo ........... 26 14 6 204 158 Hershey in 20 18 6 139 151 46 ovidence ........ 15 25 4 157 190 34 New Haven ....... 9 27 R147 190 27
LAST NIGHT'S SCORES
INDIANAPOLIS 5, New Haven §..-y Cleveland 9, Hershey 5. . Providence 8, Buffalo 2.
SATURDAY SCORES
INDIANAPOLIS 5, Pittsburgh 3. Buffalo 3, Hershey 1. Providence 7, Cleveland 5. Bt. Louis 2, New Haven 1 NEXT GAMES
Wednesday—INDIANAPOLIS at Buffalo; St. Louis at Cleveland; New Haven at Pittsburgh. Thursday—Providence at New Haven,
rmy to Play Illini WEST POINT, N. Y., Feb. 4 (U. P.).—Army athletic officials announced over the week-end that they had completed arrangements with the University of Illinois for a home-and-home football series in—1947 and 1048. The cadets will travel to Champaign, Ill, to meet Illinois on Oct. 11 in 1947 while
yesterday with a score that broke one record and tied another. His 268 total for the 72 holes tied the tournament record set by Ray Mangrum in winning the meet {last year, and his seven-under-par 63 on the second round was a new record for the El Rio course. He finished four strokes ahead of Herman Barron of White Plains,
victory.
I. A. C. Tankmen Win
Indianapolis Athletic club swimmers won six of eight events to edge the Columbus Boys" Club team, 3630, in a meet yesterday in the I. A
Carl Mindach’s 287 was the best single game of the tourney. { Al Striebeck, tournament secre- | tary, announced tody that 1259 was low t# cash’ in the handicaps and 1150 in actual scoring. The figures are subject to re-check.
Miami Tennis MIAMI, Fla., Feb. 4 (U. P).— Billy Talbert, Wilmington, Del., yesterday defeated Pancho Segura, Ecuador, 7-5, 6-1 for the men’s singles crown in the third annual Miami tennis tournament.
»l
Bur you wiLL STILL FIND YOUR TRIP DOWNY TOWN
C. pool.
N. Y., and took down $1500 for the
the Big Ten team will come East {to play the army in New York the {next year on Oct. 9.
TIRES ® BATTERIES ACCESSORIES ETHYL GASOLINE [RecapPING |
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Capitals Come From Behind To Tie New Haven Icers; Lead Division by Six Points
By BOB STRANAHAN
at the Coliseum last night when our
Caps came battling from behind to gain a 5-5 deadlock with the New Haven Eagles before 8404 paying fans. All the Indianapolis goals were scored in the action-packed final session with Jim Conacher as the night's individual hero. He connected for three of the goals and also was credited with two assists for five .
ter drilled it neatly between Wile son’s legs from about eight feet out, Branigan was caught in tlie middle and couldn't guard both of the ine sweeping forwards. The second New Haven goal came when Paul Courteau slapped in a rebound shot after he and Joe Bell had wormed through the Indianapolis defense. It was a difficult angle shot from the right side of the cage and sizzled past Wilson about knee high.
Hoosiers Rally The Caps came back with thelr old fire and vigor at the start of the third period. It took the Seibert skaters only a minute and 47 sec onds to tie the score, once they really got their attack under way, Conacher fired in the first Ine dianapolis goal at 4:05 in the final period, feinting Henry out of posie tion in some of the night's clevere est stick work. . The fiery wiflger also received credit for the second goal when Les Douglas fired a long one from near the blue line and it was deflected into the nets by Conacher's stick, Little Pete Leswick jammed in a rebound shot to put the Caps into a shortlived 3-2 leadership at 10:28 of the period, but the Eagles squared things again on a “fluke” counter. The goal went on the record books as scored by Bell, but
TV1it really was kicked in by Wilson
as he sought to clear the shot. There was nothing fishy about the goal which sent the Eagles ahead just a little over a minute later. Kilrea slipped through the Cap defense and drilled it past Wil son. They added another to make ft 5-3 when Bill Gooden banged in a rebound shot. Eagle Edge Pared About a minute later the Caps trimmed this lead to one goal while Courteau was off the ice for high sticking. Leswick carried the puck into front ice and dropped a pass
{to Tony Bukovich in front of the
cage and the Cap winger beat it past Henry. Conacher almost scored while Holouka was off the ice for high sticking and then he finally cone nected for the tying marker when Seibert called on that line for the last bid. The crowd yelled when the Conacher-Leswick-Bukovich com= bination was pulled off the ice and these forwards went back after only a minute or so of rest. Leswick carrfed the puck into front ice and Bukovich tried a long shot with only 43 seconds of the game remaining. Conacher was in close to the cage and his stick helped the drive into the nets for the tying counter.
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their rating asf As the weste the odds shifted Jowans as a resi nesota Saturday. bled the Gophe fourth place. Chicago, riding streak in the c play as an unde the only Big Ter Towa still he b important, those Indiana, are at the Hawkeyes hs The title defend a home game S India
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