Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 September 1948 — Page 11
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g to second 3¢ as Ralph -hit ball to to 1. The only Half a place by deto 2, while ir from Cin8 to 5, to ourth place. half a game ” American ite Sox shut 0, on Randy
STAR-—-Bul-ller © whose umph over id in undisfirst place gue race.
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‘championship. game was played at Victory Field. Joe Normington, classy righthander, who turned-in a two-hit performance against Kingan's on Sept. 19, was the winning pitcher. rmington yielded E but scattered them and in trouble in the seventh. Normington loaded the, bases with one out but forced the next two ‘men to face him to pop out. Kingan’s went out into a one run lead in the second, but Mallory passed thein in the third with two markers. After that Mallory just ran up its total. Score:
only
Mallory .......... 300-7 10 1! Kingan .......... 010 000 000— 1 8 3 Normington and Yovanovich, Toon; and Maes.
CITY CHAMPIONS—P. R. Mallory & Co. won the city amateur baseball chamfoating Kingan's Reliable, 7 to |. Members of the championship team are (front row, left to right) Harold Toon, Coach Pau} Stephenson, Bat Boy Jim Meyer, Leroy Davis and Bob Brammann: [second row) Bill Butler, Frank Baird, Slo Yovanovich and John Skiles; (reat row) Joe Normington, Dee Baker, George Butler, Walt Fields and Gene Briner. Absent when picture was taken
pionship Saturday at Victor
y Field, de
were. Homer Stull and Harry Fitch,
N. D., Purdue Is Game of Year
By BILL EGGERT The football game of the year belonged to Hoosierland today and although Notre Dame can still boast an unbeaten record in
19 games, Purdue can show no
disgrace for losing to the Irish,
28 to 27, Saturday at South Berd.
The final outcome boiled down to this—Notre Dame, who|From the press box it looked like, trailed in first downs and net yards gained by rushing and pas
ing, is consistently excellent in converting its opponents’ bad breaks into touchdowns. In the first period the Irish turned a fumbled . punt return into a six-pointer. In the second quarter, Purdue's -erratic punter, George Punzelt, got off a six-yard boot that sailed high but to the right into the stands. From the Purdue 36 Notre Dam ewent over in six plays to score. A third-period punt by -Punzelt was partially blocked by End Jim Martin. Fullback John Panelli grabbed the free ball and scooted 70 yards to score. After the first 10 yards he had four blockers. DeMoss Gambles Late in the final quarter Purdue's Bob DeMoss gambled with a pass on first down as he stood in his own end zone. The pass, intended for End Bob Grant was stopped at the scrimmage line by Al Smijewski, Notre Dame reserve tackle, who took three steps forward to score.
Purdue’s four touchdowns were preceded by one pass interception and three sustained downfield drives; all of which left the final score dependent upon the kicking toes of Steve Oracko of Notre Dee and Rudy Trbovich of Purue. ; i {FJ
© Oracko, who" missed Hix first)
| “three extra-point attempts, evened
his own score with a 15-yard field goal in the fourth quarter and was successful with his try after ND's’ fourth ‘ touchdown. Trbovich ‘missed the second of his four attempts, Both ¥ival coaches uncovered some éxperimental plays that showed their determination to
win. . Coach Frank Leahy of Notre
Dame used a baffling Double-T in the second half and the innovation presents a new twist to defensive problems.
Purdue confused Notre Dame|
with an on-sides kickoff after the Boilermakers had scored their first touchdown in the second period on DeMoss’ pass to Adams. Trbovich kicked off diagonally across midfield from East to West and Adams of Purdue caught the ball before it struck the ground. Officials ruled possession for Purdue although Notre Dame pro-
100-Lap Midget Race to Close
Speedway Season
TE HT The 1948 midget racing season
at the West 16th Street Indianapolis Speedway will come to a close Sunday afternoon with the
staging of a 100-lap champion- a
ship race. The announcement was made by the management following Sunday's feature T75-lap sweepstakes event which was taken
starting in the polé position.
Nuys, Cal, was third. of Kenosha, Wis.; Denver, Colo.
suit race. Indianapolis - remains
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persons. Haddad led all the way, |yeriny Gorgal,
study, tossed a 24-yard pass to End Bob Grant who was interferred with in the end zone by
Mike O'Halloran of Lansing, IH., finished second in the feature and Johnny Parsons, of Van
Heat winners were Paul Russo
Osceola won the Australian Pur-
in the lead in team standings with 1137 points. St, Louis is second with Parsons leads the individ-
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|tested. Football rules. state that the receiving team niust be given an opportunity to catch the ball. |The violation penalty is five yards which was not given to Purdue.
s-|they didn’t have a fair opporuntity|
to catch the ball. Panelll Gets Loose | Notre Dame went 40 yards to |score its first tally with Emil Sitko plowing over from the onefoot line. The Irish went ahead, 12 to 0, in the second stanza, after. Punzelt’s poor : boot. ' Sitko crashed through after Panelll had reeled off a 26-yard run to set up the touchdown. Purdue's Adams was running backward when he snagged DeMoss’ pass for Purdue's first score. The Boilermakers chewed up four straight first downs after the second half got under way and Adams and Harry Szulborski were finding it easy fo circle ND’s ends. Bob Agnew crashed over from the two to give Coach Stu Holcomb's boys a temporary 13-12 lead. , Notre Dame went back into the lead in the same third period on Panell's 70-yard run, added his three-pointer early in the final session then Purdue rew up within one point on DeMoss’ plunge after he had set up the play with a 51-yard pass to Neil Schmidt. Irish Widen Lead Smijewski’'s interception wid
fought back in the final seconds. DeMoss'
Notre Dame's Mike Swistowics. The ball was brought to the 2yard line and after Purdue. was penalized for offsides, DeMoss Bipped one to End Hartley Jeff! 0 looked lonesome in the end zone on the game's last play.
Tigers Buy Pitcher
DETROIT, Sept. 27
Rogovin from Buffalo.
1947 and year he
1948 seasons,
WASHINGTON
CLEANING Lastingly Odor-Proof Moth-Proof Clothes rate
SOUTH
702 Main, B. G.
Oracko|iq 7
ened the Irish lead and Purdue under-
(UP) —|2Y General Manager Billy Evans has Tenn. 18 to 13,
announced that the Detroit Tigers have purchased Pitcher Saul Rogovin played for the Buffalo club in the This had a record of 13
State's ‘Davids’ In ‘Goliath’ Roles
| I. U., Butler, St. Joe
Enhance Reputations i By United Pres |—The first week-end of heavy {Indiana college. football activity
the “minor league” clubs shared the gravy with the Titans. Thus, names lke St. Joseph's, Anderson and Butler were mentioned along with Notre Dame, Purdue and Indiana, the pride of Indiana's collegiate grid powers.
tion when the luck of the Irish held and Notre Dame battered to a scant 28 to 27 victory over the West Lafayette eleven in their opener at South Bend. on Indiana, relegated in pre-sea: son dope to a second-division spot in the mighty Western Confertence, pulled the sleeper of them all by upending Wisconsin's twetouchdown favorite Badgers, 35
St. Joseph's, which dropped its] preceding 13 games—the best iti
deadlocks——started the season as another underdog but celebrated its 1948 debut by throttling highly-regatded Ball State, 33-0.
Butler Routs 1. C. «; Andy - Butler's
studded outfit ' which may go places this year, found Indiana Central's Haosier College Con-|]
ference champs easy prey, for a 168 to 7 verdict. \
seven’ games invol {state opponents.
a 40 to 0 lacing at Albion, Mich: Well-regarded Franklin could do no better than play ‘a: scoreless tie against Canterbury, while Anderson's Ravens romped to a lop-sided 35 to 0 _victory over graduation-riddled Suriham. Indiana State barely edged Illinois. Normal, 9-7, on Bob Chester's fieldgoal,’but Rose Poly blanked McKendree, Ill, 12-0. The breaks favored Indiaha, but George Taliaferro, the Hoosiers’ flashp Negro halfback, spelled the difference. The former Gary Roosevelt star scampered 68 yards to paydirt in the first three minutes of play and crossed the goal-line on two other occasions, In other openers, Quarterback Ed Gruener sparked De Pauw to a 20 to 14 victory over Hanover, and Evansville celebrated its debut in the Ohio Valley Conference by nosing out Western Kentucky, 12 to 6. Valparaiso made it two in a row against out-of-state teams, trumping Luther, Minn., 19 to 6. wb ————————
Speedway Foursome Keeps Best-Ball Title
The four-man Speedway golf team retained its city best ball championship yesterday at the Coffin course, shooting a 66 for its fifth victory in the eight-year history of the event. Ellis Brown led the quartet to a one-stroke margin over the Sarah Shank and Meridian Hills teams, with three birdies. The quartet was rounded out by Walter Chapman, Fred Burnside and Fred Wampler,
WILLIS HERMAN’
Withers
could do last year was gain three|}
Mid - American}, o conferénce Bulldogs, a veteran-|f’
“* Hoosier "colleges won five ofl’
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SANTA MONICA, Cal, Sept. 27 (UP)~~Former child
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Science Service WASHINGTON, Sept. 2
Insects hitch-hiking in airplanes will be “taken for a ride,” in the!gead.
being conducted by the U.S. i partment of work out FOR BEST as well as they vg
Instead of subjecting the passengers) to a fuming wi aerosol
down and kill
Laboratory have been , and tests are now in progress on eral airplanes. As in the
. dowh of three minutes, the six-legged However, we are our ‘ 7 [fellowstravelers were All on thelriy,.., +, oriahle buyers to meet backs, waving their legs. At thei, payments and acquire
inte the bomb on landing, as at
deadly DDT- |
mosquitoes, grasshoppers, plant {pany’s bugs and Mexican bean beetles. |0OUD Life in the plane was far from dull—for about two uinies, du ing which the insects fon cted | ses peo ple are not the poisoned walls. Af the end their required
of a half-hour, they were all}
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