Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 October 1948 — Page 52
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PAGE 52 ~ Cream of Prep Grid | oo: Coming Up
Cathedral Meets Tech, Broad Ripple Plays Manual; Key County Games Also Sldted
By JIMMIE ANGELOPOLOUS Schedule makers apparently saved the dessert on the prep football mienu for the last—and rightly so—beginning this week. | Two intra-city grid clashes and a pair of county struggles will/ form. the cream of the card beginning Wednesday with each ev“pected to have a bearing on the city and county titles. In addition, two city-county feuds will settled and Sacred
Heart and Franklin Tawhuiip, both yet to taste their first vic- py tory this year, will fight to keep High School Football out of the Marion County grid Schedule This Week cellar. : Two encounters Wednesday willl WEDNESDAY see Decatur going to Danville Decatur at Danville, 1:30 p. m. ‘seeking to climb above the .500 Plainfield at Lawrence Central, mark in six games, and Lawrence| 7:45 p. m Central playing host to Plainfield. FRIDAY The Bears will mark time wait-|g ing for Pike Township to decide Booch Srove at De Davln, 2 2 mm the County title. by defeating Cathedral at Tech, 2:30 Speedway, something denied tie Crispus Attucks at Noblesville, 8 opposition in ‘seven games this " season and granted only once in Howe at Warren Central, 8 p. m. 24 games. Pike Township at Speedway, 8! Could Win Title ‘pom | A victory for Pike, with a 6-1 Sac red Heart at Franklin Town-| record, and a Lawrence triumph ship, 8 p. m. ] | over Beech Grove .next week Shortridge at Anderson, 8 p. m. | I would give the Bears the County Washington at Southport, 8 p. m.| diadem. : Pike tackles Speedway
SATURD Friday night. RDAY { Beech Grove will take on Ben Illinois Deaf School at Indiana RP Davis Friday with resultant bonus, Deaf School, 2:30 pm
Penn Defeats | School's
| strating literally where he's
points for conquerors of the ultimate winner of that struggle also slated to influence the final county
Standings will « Middies, 20-14
The city squabbles Cathedral and Broad Ripple try-| py ApELPHIA, Oct. 23 (UP) ing to bring their subsequent ’ . " th claim for titular honors next week —Fennsylvania, ‘stung by the to a boiling point Friday. The raw, red courage of a fighting beaten in four: city. .oon- Navy team, fashioned. a fourth: whe TENE Sor DLiS my. iia 1089.10
hurdler with the Bears,
‘Says-Former A
REN Tite vame; WAT % ENED Mi DO third RR epi Fas I. in the aati and Manual gon behind and defeat its third in four. have lost only once, a 6 to 0 ver-ig; Franklin Field. dic} to Washington, in six games. A 55.yard ‘winning march, set Wishington Plays Cards [up when Navy gambled on fourth] Washington, with a 1-8 record,/down in the final goes to Southport, holding a chose to run the ball instead of like Pinckert did in his day. 2.5 slate, Friday night, and kicking, was capped when Fran-|
Shortridge travels to Andersoh at the same time. Crispus At-/Sweep from the 4. What might explains the all-time Trojan great.
‘tucks, showing steady improve- have happened had Navy kicked “But now the quarterback can|
remain a mystery. the tine of scrimmage.
‘ville Friday and Howe, doing well Penn out- -gained the Navy, 214
try
222 Navy yards through the air against Penn's 57 made tingling, close game until
Only One Defense Play | . Sacred Heart, playing out of its the class this season, will look for “triumph ins seven games: and Franklin Township the same in eight. Saturday will fihd the Indiana ‘Deaf School clashing with the
| __The victory—Penn's fourth this © season--ran its unbeaten string +Bowl victories—and the 1931 na-
[tional championshi reaching to 1946 to 12 wins and t/Onal champ P. one tie. It was Navy's fifth re-| . "'¢ didn’t worry about defense,
verse this year. either in those days,” Pinckert|
its third victory in five starts. .. Iwas it.”
‘Georgia Tech Scored
‘Sheila Summers Wins Tennis Title [ay pay:
Sheila Summers took the PanATLANTA, Oct. 23 (UP)—Two|American women’s singles title them
quarterbacks with iron arms {today in a grueling 11-9, 6-2 vicbrought Georgia Tech back from tory over Dorothy Head of Ala.
Doesn't Blame Coaches that,” adds Pinckert. “What with] {those tricky. offenses . they've cooked up -and ‘then matching them with equally confusing de[fenses, they've little time left to teach a man to block and tackle.” Pinckert himself was the first blocking hack ever to make AllAmerican. For three years he was a key man in making Jones’ power-mad teams thé scourge of [the coast. | Pinckert doesn't think’ poor {coaching 1s the differences be{tween Big Nine and Pacific Coast conference football now.
‘day for a 42 to 7 Southeastern| Mrs. Summers won the hour: Conference victory over Florida long first set by breaking Miss! before 28,000 fans. {Head's nervige. in. the 19th Jimmy Southard and Joe E. and then holding her own service Brown, 170-pound alternate - field (after four deuce points. .gengrals, flashed in and out of She quickly ran out the second “tHE gaine 167” euch other Homie $e, breaRIng MISS Head's wervice! 20 to 30 times. They rifled Passes four times, three of them at love. with telling effect.’ They were the first sets Miss |Head lost in the tour; Ament,
Svadisyile hg Missouri Snows Under atayette High i, State, 49 to 7
EVANSVILLE, Ind, Oct. 23 (UP) —Evansville Central, a per-| COLUMBIA, Mo, Oct. 23 (UP)| “It's the material,” says Pinckennial Hoosier high school bas- —The power-packed University of ert. “The Big Nine's strength is " ketball power, looked like a| Missouri football team spotted in their lines—and that's where champion football club tonight, Iowa State a first period touch-/your great football teams are when it upset Lafayette Jerfer-(d0Wn today and then went to made.” son, 21-7, in an intersectional Work to roll up a 49-7 victory T Is Confusing game. |before 22,000 fins as the fancy| Easy-going Erny won't com-
|Tiger backs worked with precision pare the great T teams of the Oklahoma Aggies Win
behind a charging line. present decade to those tremenAbe .Stuber’'s Iowa State team dous single wing outfits of the STILLWATER, Okla., Oct. 23 went to work smartly, taking the 30's. (UR)—Oklahoma A & M smoth-/opening kickoff and marching 80, “I played under the single ered Témple, 41-7 today before/yards in 18 plays to score. The wing,” he explained. “The T, 20,000 homecoming fans who saw| Tigers. rammed back with three sometimes, is as confusing to me the underdog easterners collapse quick scores in the second period, as to the players.” after battling the Oklahomans to|added a pair’in each of the third] He admits, however, that the a draw in the first half. A & M| and fourth quarters and mean: 1947 Michigan team, a single wing
‘scored five times in the last two time fashioned a snappy pass de- eleven, could play ball in anybody's league—at any time. Al i eh
periods.
|fense alded by vicious line play. The
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equally proficient, continue to lead the county's high schosl grid sco has used his qoose-stepping vantage in pacing the county scoring leaders with 77 po nts.
Pinckert played on the awe- (kids, some SC grid machines of 1929- 8ot more on their minds now than Penn-dominated final period. 31 which thundered to two Rose to block and ts tackle.” holland,
Irish Win CrossIOWA CITY,
says. “Jones usually gave us one | (UP)—Notre Dame's cross-coun-defense before a game and that try team beat Towa today, 27 to
|28. What's wrong with the present-|
Irish rseventh and. 10th.
| 2421 N. Meridian ® 365 5. Meridian 643 N. ILLINOIS ST.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Caps Look Hot On Home lce, Record Shows
16 to 7 Goal Edge
Held at Coliseum With three straight wins on the
~ |Coliseum ice this season, the Inlooking |
dianapolis Capitols - are
% more and more like last year's
STILL HURDLING—Bron Weaver, Lawrence Central High high-stepping halfback, isn't confused, He's just demon. |New: Haven and how he hopes to a ad- |
Football's Too Confusing, _
— SL FHCREEANOR Sen (L RCT Prva A -.
srican’’
CEO ARCEUERT Ghee ER, the! FA Anrertea™ walthack in the days of Howard. Jowes powerhouses The Redskins pnfiq4ies, 20-14, before 75,000 fans at Southern California, thinks 1948 football is too complex: The burly star of the early '30's says today's footballers hit just as hard as any, but they're too busy worrying about ever- City of Brotherly Love tonight at period and changing offensive and defensive patterns to block and tackle the Coliseum. “We called a play by one num-| Wolverines he recalled painfully, cis (Reds) Bagnell scored on a ber and ran only one play off it,” |smashed SC 49 to 0 in this year's Rose Bow! tussle.
In case --or made the first down—must| switch plays even after getting to! {Cravath d
_, |Heller is bent on
version—except that Coach Ott leading his charges to a higher berth than the 1947-48 fourth-place finish. On the home ice this year the
_ |Caps have outscored opponents,
16-7, a fact partly attributed to the. fine net-tending of rookie
* {Terry Bawchuk. Last year the locals downed the first three op-
On the Ice
AMERICAN HOOKEY LEAGUE Western Division
pittsburgh J . Louis INDIANAPO)IS Buffalo ....
Providence Philadelphia . Shringfleld .
I Weshiastan i,
| RESULTS LAST NIGHT Buffalo 2 New Haven 2 Washington 0 Providence 3, Springfield 1 Louis 6, Philadelphia 0 GAMES TONIGHT
Philadelphia at INDIANAPOLIS 8t. Louis at Buffalo Pittshurgh: at New Haverg
Hershey 4, Cleveland 9 Pittsburgh 3,
Soringtield at Providence ¢ NATIONAL LEAGLR: © © mesLTs, FART MIGRT, Montregi 0... Detroit . (tie), AT DRE Ao Ohicago* 1 ; oo NS
a
»
now’ face the skaters from fhe]
Like Old Home Week And it will seem like old home | week to the Rockets, with: four former Indianapolis skaters in|
Trojan Coach Jeff the ineup. Local fans will recall oesn't know already, such names as Eddie Bush, Ken {Ern y points to poor downfield. “No wonder the kids sometimes blocking as the big single weakyards to 65 on the ground, butliook confused.” [ness in the present SC team.
[Kiirea, Steve Wochy and George Defelice. |" Along, with these veterans)
“But as I said, don't blame the llection of | Pinckert cracked. “They've Philadelphia Da ection
including Sammy Mul-/ 19-year-old is hailed as the
{who league’ 8
‘eastest skating forward. Goalie!
Country Harvey Jessiman, who started the
‘Oct.
He was eight and Sawchuk alternated in the their age. seconds ahead of Keith Brown, nets. Towa.
Brown's teammate,
captured
Only Heatrola has the famous, patented
fourth,
5s
23
Pinckert thinks that one's easy. Won the race: over the three-mile MEXICO CITY, Oct. 23 (UP)—| Fundamentals, or better, lack of course in 15.114.
“ Dick/mainly in position. play, Don’t blame the codches for McClanahan, was third, ‘but the came to light in Thursday's vic- finalist in the women’s city chamfifth, tory over New Haven are also pionship
season with two shutout victories, | was the predecessor of the Caps’ Sawchuk at Omaha last year. Offense still’ seems to be the {key word in the Caps’ camp with
Jim Murphy of Notre Dame Heller sending his boys through
shooting and scrimmage drills |yesterday. Trainer Lefty Wilson
Some defensive mistakes, which |
{being ironed.out. poy mc
6
1 t
Intensi-Fire Air Duct, It sends the heat into the rooms instead of up the flue.
ly]
Their fourth vietim-. was - Aha point.”
Philadelphia Rockets and, is the way it has always been’ in the Timberman family by mutual, strangely enough, Heller's boys|
left wing,
SY
_ SUNDAY, OCT. 24, 1948
Jets Appear Al Set for Opener Nov. 1
Play St. Louis Bombers At Butler Fieldhouse
By JIM SMITH Although the Indianapolis Jets don’t make their debut in the Basketball Association of Amerlica until Nov. 1, Coach Bruce |Hale has indicated that his startling lineup appears set. When the St. Louis Bombers meet the Jets at the Butler Fieldhouse the night of Nov. 1, Hoosier basketball fans will probably see Charley Black and Hale at the forward positions, Black starred last . season for the Anderson [Packers of the NBL. In pre|season exhibition games this sea|son he has looked good. | Hal Tidrick, recently acquired {from the Toledo Jeeps and Dick (Wehr, rookie sensation from Rice (Institute appear to be the first {line of forward replacements. Ray {Lurapp, Olympic star reported late and as yet hasn't worked his way into the combination. [ The pivot job will fall to George \Glamack, all-time all-American 'trom North Carolina. Hale is still looking for another tall man, but until he finds one, Black will be moved to the jump spot when |Glamack is on the bench. Freddy Lewis, long shot artist and one of the top scorers in the NBL last year, and Price Brookfield are listed by Haleas the |starters at the guard spots. Substitute guards are Andy Kostecka -= from. Georgetown, who may. also Home. 8e SEIKI. at SEAR PIN ‘Passagal jaya Veter
—
IN LOVE WITH HIS WORK—Wajne A. Timberman, golf 11 professional at Meridian Hills Country Club, fondles a set of clubs which characterize his daily work. His greatest pleasure in the golf game is not to win, but to teach the youngsters.
Just One Divot Digger ioaticfies Timberman Clan
By BILL PITTMAN Si ges HIRE § ERI prontsianaly mits inna on She gRIDe: eget it ‘only. by ‘constant association. : PREY IN Hot atwa ys the éase. NE A EAT spat player remy the Pacific coast, Sirs WERE TGA RET BAN 1 Ter PAR aan agY,.. “One golfer in-the-fami da. onough, she says: Ans thab!
Fteary: Sony WORSE rd and-guard positions. “Lacking heighth at the center who has held the. club junior] position, Hale expects to make up championship and shoots con- for this deficit by clever ball han-
sistently from 76 to 84. There are ding and speed to open up their imany more. scoring opportunities.
|agreement. Wayne Timberman, inéidentaliy lis the guardian of ‘golfing good {fortune at Meridian Hills Coun try Club, and after eight years » em ihre, Kiows ach of ‘the more! TIMBERMAN began his golt- Belgian Cyclists Lead {than 400 members, if not inti-| NEW YORK, Oct, 23 (UP)— {mately, at least by the type of ing career as a caddy at the The Belgian team of Louis Saen {golf bag he carries. |Terre Haute Country Club, He and Emile Bruneau still held a ® = = {played both football and basket- one-lap lead as the 68th InterTIMBERMAN differs from the p51; while in high school and for national Six-Day Bicycle Race gees An in tua} a year was a freshman football tonight inion, final hours. lis centered around the.,much- hopeful at Indiana State. eral school teachers concerning |younger set—children up to 15 He was offered the job as, rhythm bands” for kindergarten years. ‘assistant pro.at the Terre Haute ‘aged pupils. “Each summer since’ coming Country Club whilé in college THE CL ASSES are very suchere from Terre Haute, Wayne | that: first year, immediately saw|cessful. Last summer he ens has held what he calls “Swing the possibilities and took the job.'rolled 104. That means 104 fu|Classes” in which he teaches the He served his five years PGA!ture members of some golf club, rhythm. of the golf swing. The apprenticeship and became head and possibly a few great golfers. {1-2-3-4-5 continues throughout professional at the country club. Wayne has two children of his {the summer months and by ‘the It was then he began his own, Wayne Jr, 10, and Myra time they are through the chil-/classes for children, teaching Sue, 6. Wayne Jr. wants to fol{dren are able to play a decent them in the accepted method low in .his father's footsteps—as round of golf commensurate with common to all club professionals.'a football player, not a golfer. It wasn’t until he was made pro-{Perhaps Myra will inherit the fessional at Meridian Hills that Timberman love for the cool, he developed the ‘“by-the-num-| plush green and the long, trying bers". system.. The Timberman|fairway. But, as was said, one the past year. Pete system of teaching golf to chil- | golfer in the family is enough— Burkholder . is ..anather. protege. dren ‘came .after talking to sev: at one time, ;
| Donna Knox, a 13-year-old Timberman protege, was a semi-
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First res vitation fo the : Times Times’
Today bowl .the fi form a pic “Ing a’ thon The te age of 173 Case, both Leppert wi gives them Hazel W Mary Leppe on the Pe while Mar Lang work quintet. Ch The cha ‘this month Btars. The tation to wishes to imagine th than there Arrangeme contacting 7515 durin 8choen at 1
ladies leaj ‘They are i night of t Pritchett’s, in some go
The 10t] tournamen the first t vember, ’ cap meet Antlers Bq A $100 and lesser the numbe Participan bowlers, k have to ro The dea. 4. Evelyn Hansen w The fee is
Oregon EUGEN! Oregon sce tive Paci Joatball, ¥ ing Washi to 7 con ground at Brocklin's
GEORGIA ATLAN' little quart and {ron Tech bac quarter de Southeast over Flor
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